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The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-11-20, Page 6ix>Ra Adv ice -Tinges. � rING IA1Vf ONTARIO Every Thursday Morning J. Isogan ..Craig, - Publisher ula;;crption rates --r One year $2•Q0• `ala nronth:S $1.00, in advance.' To U. S. A. $2.550 Per Year' Advertising rates on application. Wellington Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Established 1540 Risks takiai, on all class of insur- a7ice at reasonable rated Ont. Head Office, Giie'ent Onttghasn A,U'NER CQSp%NS1 Aarent J. V1%. DODII Ttado doors south of Field's Botcher shop. FIRE LIFE, ACCIDENT AND HEALTH INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE P. 0. Box 366 Phone 46 WIiNGHAM, ONTARIO J. W. BUSI.FIELD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Money to Loan nisei Office—Meyer Block, Win: Successor to Dudley Holmes J. H. CRAWFORD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Successor to R. Vanstone Ontario "Wirigham, - J. A. MORTON BARRISTER, ETC. Winghani, Ontario DR. G. I i. ROSS DENTIST Office Over Isard's Store H. W. COLBORNE, MD. Physician and Surgeon 'Medical Representative D. S. C. R. Successor to Dr, W, R. Horribly Phone 54 Wrotham DR. ROBT. C. REDMOND .i+t1:.R.C.S. (ENG.) L.R.C.P. (Lond.) 'f?PIYSICIAN. AND SURGEON R. L. S'ITEWART DR. Graduate of University of Toronto, 'Faculty of Medicine; Licentiate of the Ontario College Of Physicians and Stargeons. Office in Chisholm Block Josephine Street. Phone 29 DR. G. W. HOWSON DENTIST Office over John GGalbraith's Store. F. A. PARKER OSTEOPATH All Diseases Treated Office adjoining residence next to }t glican Church on Centre Street. Sundays by appointment. Osteopathy Electricity Phone 272. Hours, 9 a.nt. to 8 p.m. A. R. & F. E UVAL Licensed Drugless Practitioners Chiropractic and Electro Therapy. Graduates of:'Canadian Chiropractic College, Toronto, and vT.stional Col- lege, ' Chicago Out .of town -and night calls res- ponded to. An business confidential, Phone 300. ANCYI:NTS. VALVED SA141rTaf.TIO11',-, Crete Bad Welter and Sewage Sanita- tion 4,l00 Years Ago. Nature's law deereee that water shall seek its level and flow down- hill. Present day hydraulie engineers defy this law and force water to ilo'w anywhere mankind wishes, Water Rots through miles of pipeline to tb.e lavatory of the urban and cuburbau home; from the bottom of wells to. the bathrooms of farm houses; and' from barn loft storage tanks to drinking eups. watering troughs, and to the milk house in the dairy bairn.. It is of interest to know that while the developeaeart of sanitary water supply systems;, available at a price within the reach of nearly aU homes, has taken place recently, yet four thousand years ago, on the Island of Crete, there was an ajpreeia.tieu of water and sewage sanitation eatin not found in massy pas of the to- day. Historians believe that the cul- ture of ancient Carthage, centre of world trade in 300 B.C., was made possible to a large extent through rather eomplete water sewage sys- tems. Each home of any importance had its own cistern; and an aqueduct mote than fifty miles long supplied several reservoirs with water from the mountains. This supply of water eneouraged its liberal use by citizens. and is an explanation of the eomparatiwe ab- sence of plagues aad pestilence from Gee City of Carthage. home, in its height, also was a centre of develop- ment in sanitary practices. Lead was used in the piping and some of these pipes found recently are capable of withstanding a test pressure of 250 pounds per square inch. Public foun- tains and baths required water to be piped more than fifty miles In some instances. J. ALVIN FOX Registered Drugless Practitioner CHIROPRACTIC AND DRUGLESS PRACTICE ELECTRO -THERAPY Hours: 2-5, 7-8, or by appointment. Phone 191. J. D. McEWEN LICENSED ;AUCTIONEER Phone 602r14. Sales of Farm Steck and Imple- ments, Real Estate, Etc., e inducted with satisfaction' and at moderate charges. THOMAS FELLS AtICTIONEER REAL ESTATE SOLD A thorough knowledge of Perin Stock Phone 231, Wi ti ghant "BLOND" INDIA.NS. '1'rxveitri :fn Centre Brazil Could Find No Trace of Then. The myth of a tribe of "blond" Indians ou a tributary of the Guapore river, along the boundary of Brazil and Bolivia, has been exploded by J. Tozzi Ca.lvao, Brazilian explorer, says an article in the ..New York Herald -Tribune The existenee of this tribe was first reported by Lient.-Col. P. H. Fawcett, British traveller, who met an undetermined fate in the northern jungle country in May, 1925. Col. Fawcett, however, never saw them and was, in fact. 'trying to find the mythical tribe when be disappeared. Calvao, who is widely known in the United States, has spent nine months coursing the rivers and jun- gles of Brazil as assistant to Gen. Candido Rondon, who had been cheeking the boundaries of this coun- try with Venezuela, Peru, Colombia and Bolivia. Gen. Rondon with a cinema operator .is now checking boundaries with Paraguay, Argen- tina and Uruguay and will not return to Rio de Janeiro for some• time yet. "`The bine-eyed and red-haired In- dians, supposed descendants of a par- ty of European adventurers, have been talked about from time to tihte among Indian tribes, and I believe that these tales were the basis of Faweett's start'," Calve* said on his return. "Gen. Rondan made special inquir- ies and he is an Indian. himself, but we could discover no truth in the blond story either in the Guapore section or aaywbeere else. There are `light' Indians in Brasil, those who live in the great forests where they Neve little su shine, but their hair and eyes are dark as the giaias 'radians." RICHARD B. JACKSON AUCTIONEER Phone 613r6,Wroxa'ter, r.r aaasass R, R, 1,Gorrie. Sales'conducted any- where, and sittisfactii'i guaranteed. >'•uar• n xntecd. DRS. A. J. & A. W..IRWIN l7ENTISTs Office ,1VTacDanald flock, btingltam. A. J, WALKER 1+URl+II TUR1 ANIS FUNERAL StIZ"4r'ICE Ch. J. Walker Licett: ed Funeral Director and Eli'r'bainter. lilac Phone 1.06..ti Res, Phonic 224, Funeral Coach ]1t.1t AL minAil There Hen Been Three Distinct An- cient Aaueerfeaa Civila mt3ons. E'videnee has been found of three distinct atriei.eRat American civilixa- floras, the oldest about 3,000 yeasra, in the Lowry ruin, Southwesters -OW: - credo, The excavation : were made by a1d museum itinhaeittlogieed ex= peditioa, under Dr, Isatel "Se Martin. Two large Items.,` beat described as large, single rooms, were uuserthed, Dr. Martin reports. One was eon:- structed on the ruins of the other. Material then found, with that from several large burial places, will be sent to the museum for a new hall of archaeology. The ruins are the larg- est in the southwest, and were un- touched by previous explorers. On the walls of the kivas were paintings depleting the religion an domestic habits of the people. "Great was our surprise," writes Dr, Martin, • "te ,find fragments of perfect paintings still adhering to the walls of the upper room, They probably had not been exposed to the light of day for three thousand yearn. All were perfectly geometric, and were executed in black. and white. The information obtained Prom the lower room was of even more import- ance. The paintings were in better condition, and were similar iii design to ancient pottery, representing light- ning, rain, and elouds. This is the first time such designs have been found on king walls" CAM ApVANC1SwTxldl ;S. Copyright by Charles Scribner's Sons WHAT HAPPENED SO FAR Bud Lee, horse foreman of the Blue Lake ranch, convinced Bayne Trev- ors, manager, is deliberatly wrecking the property owned by Judith San- ford, a young woman, her cousin, Pollock Hampton, and Timothy Gray, decides to throw up his job. Judith arrives and annoeurces she has bought Gray's share in the' ranch and will run it. She discharges Trevors. The men on the ranch dislike; tak- ing orders from a girl, but by Subdu- ing, a vicious horse and proving her thorough -knowledge of ranch life, Judith wins the best of them over Lee decides to stay. Convinced her veterinarian, Bill Crowds-, . is treacherous, Judith dis- charges him, re-engaging an • old friend of her father's, Doc. Tripp. NOW READ ON-- lorenetin. "Si; gross.-, That's riding, • right along, bui do it my way and 111 gamble yott r'ny own string of horses —1311d they're worth considerable more them a thousand --that 1'11 be hack, heeled, at six," sinus looked Judith, quick. at dee , hint hard in the eye, heard his plan, and three minutes later Butt Lee, a revolver in his shirt, rode away from .the." ranch -pause, headed toward Rocky Bend. Judith already had cal- ed. up Tripp, and the veterinarian hint- self, leading the fastest, saddle -horse he could get his hands on at brief notiee,•was also riding toward' Rocky Mend, from the Lower End, five miles in ;tdvanc.e of 'Lee. at the start. He went at a gentle trot, consulting his watch now and that, So Bud• Lee; riding as oncethose hard; dare -devil riders rode who, o car- ried across the land the mail -bag of the Pony express, ,overtook . Dec Tripp and changed to a fresh horse at the end of the first ' fifteen, 'Miles. The cloek at the hank at Rocky Ridge Marked forty-three minutes after two as Lee; leaving a sweating horse at the door on 'Main Street, presented his check at the paying teller's vein-. dew. The money ie a small canvas bag, was ready. . "Hello, 'Btid;" and "Hello, Dani,". Thursday, November 20th, 1930 ed at him the most wonderful, rad- iant siiiile that the long horseman had ever seen, She gripped his lean, brown bain h. " 1,3ud, yound're it ersbzicic.l" she cried, Mrs, Langworthy had just come out with Hantpton, Trevors and the major, Judith t.tirned' from Lee to Trevors, but managed to keep half an ey.e en Mrs, Langworthy. "You see, it's pay day with as, Mr. Trevors," she said quietly. "And when pay day comes we pay our'men at six o'clock in spite :of h--1 and high water!" Bud :Lee, leading his horse away, turned for a word. "A man killed a horse for me today," he :said svery gently, and his eyes rested steadily upon Trevors; "If 1 ever get hint, or the pan who' put hire up to it,' I'm going to get him right," On the Blue Lake ranch there was more than one maim ready to scoff at the idea of a robbery like this one, frank enough to voice the suspicion::- "It's lust a stall for time!" 'So much had last week's rumor done for then, preparing them to expect something that would set: asidethe customary monthly pay day. But whenthey had seen Charlie Miller's bruised head and Was the beginning and end of the con- heard his story; when they ,had sat versation :which ensued, Lee did not on their horses and looked' down at stop to count the stoney. He drew the animal which had been ,shot un - his belt up a hole as he went back to. the door, found a fresh horse there fighting his bit and all. but lifting the stable -boy off his feet, mounted and sped back ;along Main street. Judith was to send another 'fresh horse for him so that he could not fail to be back at•the ranch -house by six o'clock. As Bud Lee, riding hard but never without thought for the horse which ..carried him, began the return trip, he drew the heavy -cal- iber revolver from his shirt and thrust into 'his belt. • Ghe read .wound in and, out ra among the:.lirnes, always climbing. Lee ed on, his .eyes bright and keen; watch- ful and suspicious of every still mshad- ow. ha -ow or: 'stirring' branch. From the 1- of,the n'mountain, before he again fo'l lowed:' a winding . road back to the river's side, he saw a horseman riding a distant ridge; the sun glinting -pon the rider's rifle. • thought Lee. "Old Carson: himself, g "Looking for the hold-up man. Shucks1'. They'.11 never find him this trip:': • Aiiother anile, .and Bud Lee was riding, through, a , clearing, with' the tall. ; cliffs ,..of.: • Squaw Creek canyon looming high on his left, when "sud- denly and• abswarn- ing, vvittiotif • ar ing, his horse; screamed, gathered it- self, for' a wild plunge, staggered, Stood a moment trembling terribly, then•, with ei low .moan, collapsed Un- der: him. Lee swung out and to one side, landing clear.as the big brute fell. He did not. understand. He had ridden the animal hard but certainly' not creek," she told thetas swiftly. "Get some men together, 'Carson, and try to head the robber off." "That's on the leve?., Miss Judith?" demanded Carson' slowly. "Of course it's on the level!" she cried impatiently. "Oh; I know what you're thinking;. I'mn going to phone immediately to the bank at ' Rocky Bend and have another man sent out with store' Money. You can count upon getting your pay at six. o'clock.".,{ ei told yob, didn't r muttered:Car.. son, "that I wasn't 'worrying 'none personal? But if T •w•as .you. 1'd be sure have the.Money on tap." With that he'_left her, going hastily to round up what 'risen' he could find and get them into their saddles., Bud.: Lee, his eyes still 'on her, stood where he was. "Well," demnanded the girl, •"aren't- you going, too?" Suddenly angered by his leisurely air, she added cut - ti ' , '"N t afraid are you?" ""I was thinking" Lee answered Bad' xevia, Judy," he began. "It, sure look as though you were getting your share.": "What is it Doc?" she broke in sharply. 'Tell mei" "It's Charlie Miller. Hurt, No, not i bad, Thrown off his horse,. back in Squaw Creek Canyon, And—robbed." Quickly he told. her salt that had happened. Miller, hastening back with the wage money, was riding through the narrow gorge when a man sprang out suddenly in front of him. Miller's horse, shying, swerving unexpectedly, had thrown him. 'Be- fore he could get to his feet the bag of gold under his coat had been torn off, his revolver wrenched away and the highwayman, his face masked with a red bandana handkerchief, had run into the thick timber, "Charlie just walked, in, reeling like a drunken man," Tripp concluded. I am sending a posse: of men front this end to try and bot the Stick -Up man. You'd better do the sante up there." For a moment Judith sat staring at the ' telephone duly. Robbed of a thousand dollars, and in broad day- light. >ht. A thing "like this had not oc- -- curred an the Blue Lake for a dozen ('lenencean's Wise Dog. •eirrarkable slur;!• of be- longing to the late M. Clemenceau, whieh used to hire eabs, has been told in Paris. This animal—a fox terrier --as indepeedt,nt as its mas- ter, used to go for long rambles about. Paris. When the dog tired it would jump into a stationary cab and sit down, As often as the driver turned it out it returned, until the driver became sufficiently interested t0 ex- amine its coilar----whieh bare the name of its famous roaster. The driver, anticipating a liberal tip, 'in- variably drove it horse, Mlxol-Up Animal. After a seareh lasting len months, the latest zoological riddle has been found in New Guinea. It is an ani real two Oat which, .spas• a f?P'ds 11It bn ..4'7 Tfittfeielfkh ,d por•cupiittr.; a pouch:like a kangrtroo`ts, )Wess under- ground like a mole, lays eggs bu suckles its young, and yet adapts ttts self to temperature like a, reptile. Pour of these extremely rare rrea- turee are called prooemidnate nirroa,. Culp y • "Mayne Trevors!" she gasped, For, suddenly, she thought that she untler- stood the significance. of the rumor which bad twice in a week conte to her. Trevors himself was on the ranch right now. clinched. Yes,'Tr triple purpose: '.r Hampton against it, to establish an witness Juditlrrs at sir o'cicick she away with an +ex ng y: a r , der Bud Lee, they were silent. And, besides, when long after dark they carne :in behind Carson front a fruit- less quest, their, pay was ready for them as formerly, in gold and silver. Trevors, with little to say to any one, took his departure in the fore- noon, extracting from Hampton the promise to ride over and see the lum- ber camp some day soon. Judith, held at the office by a lot of first -of -the -month details, did not get aay until close to eleven o'clock that morning. Then she rode. swiftly dolve the river, a purpose .of her ,own in mind. Just below the Lower End settle- ment she came upon -Doc Tripp.. He was in one of the quarantine hog-cor- :rt{Is, his sleeves rolled up; a •puzzled look of worry puckering his boyish face, "What's up, •Doc?�" 'asked Judith, "Don't know, Judy. That's . what. gets my mad up. Just performed. an autopsy of one of your Poland -China gilts." "Found it dead?" asked Judith ""Killed it," grunted Tripp. "Sick. Half a dozen more are off their feed and don't look right. A man's always afraid of the choleiaa, And," stub- bornly, ""I won't believe it! There's been no chance of =infection; why, there's not an infected herd this side of Rocky Bend, a. clean hundred miles from here." "Not getting' nerves. Are you Doc?" And Judith spurred on down the val- ley. Before she came to the spot where Bud Lee's horse had been shot she hard enough for this. And then he came upon Lee himself, A rifle across saw and his eyes blazed with anger, his arm, he was looking up at the He had heard no shot, nothing be -cliffs of Squaw Creek canyon. gond the metallic pounding of the ""Well, Lee," she said, "what do yo,t shod hoofs on flinty road, but there make of it?" from an ugly hole in the neck the He showed no surprise at seeing saddle -horse was pouring .out its her. and answered slowly, that far away look ai + his eyes 'as though he wood.. .. _ ,- , '?� "Smokeless powder and a 1laxim"were •alone still and speaking "simnlily. silencer!" muttered Lee, his, eyes tak- to Dud Lee. ing note of the ten thousand possible "Using smokeless powder nowa- hiding-places on the cliffs. days is a handy thing for a man In his ears there was a little whine shooting under cover," he said. "Then as a second bullet sang its way by rig up your gun with a silencer and tis head, Again he nought to locate get off at fair range, half a mile and the marksman, again saw nothing but crag and precipice and brushy clump, f'le took time for that thing which came so hard to hint, sent a bullet from his own revolver into his'horse's brain,, and then slipped out of . the clearing into the shelter r, if the pines. '"'i'wo ;stiles left to the border -line," he estimated it. "Afoot." Stiff from the saddle, he moved on slowly' for a little, Pan as his mus- eles,aresponded and warmed to the of r'l, he broke into a trotting run. +t'cir the second time that day t c lfeard the while of a bullet, He thottgttt'that the shot carate from the cliffs just at the head of Squaw Creek canyon, ' But he could not be sure. He'd' make the climb '� tomorrow and. sec about it, Now, he'd keep right -on moving. Little used to travelling ex- cept :'or a hor'se's hack, he was. shot through with odd rains when at last he cause to the border -line fence and the waiting horse. Tommy Ilttrkitt held it for him while Lee mounted, "Somebody tip on the, cliffs, •head. of the canyon," panted Lee. at Toni- toy's amazed expression when Lee citcne'running into sight. "Killed my horse, Go after. him, Tonirny. Tell the.' other, boys•" And at. he went, pounding 'out the last fifteen Miles, the canvas bag beating against. his side. Judith, . in the courtyard, watched him 'ride in. She looked swiftly at him front the watch on her wrist. Her eyes brightened. It lacked seven minutes to six, As Bud dropped the canvas bag into her hands s1ie flash. A Man Had Sprung ,Out Suddenly. "that h stick-up gent will coolly, t! at t e i most probably figure on a -play like that. If he was real wise he'd mosey' alone; toward Rocky Bend and pop off, your second man, Two'thousand bucks a day would make a real 'nice little draw." t 'th :c+torsed frotvninga. 1 c cvurs was hero with was truth in that, If Trevors really Hui' two fists , judt 1 ocure' `favor -with were behind this, he would have Y a possible need of alibi for himself, to discomfiture, when' must turn the men Buse. CHAPTER V planned ahead. "If you'll do my way," continued i.;cc thoughtfully, "l'll have just en- ctugth tittle to roll a smoke and sada C J ale little old C;1irxrax. 1-1e's in the; stow i ldouble-crossing you? 'Even if a smart headed man had planned lanned the hold-up. bac now. You're not afraid rrf arty Y�+� , 4 rr' he„ C"yrf£s, , ,`-,,1>i wayitic tr't.;;figtire' on a play like this.. +1�. Slicrls� Jil,. � Y,1; , . •i . yr '" i ,.. ° He'd think we'd have a Rocky Bender Is' ltcaven 31 was �ttst' noon!' 1 , feet, bring it 'out or else' wait until to - bright ntf; to too feet, her eyesg' and ran down r to the iriari°ow." ` cl < n Iran brigtht a t ' rein tt t from the "It won't do," she decided quickly, smer. s cltaarter�a Coming t . '. 1:e "J ,want that money here at six corral tiva;rc, C,irSan artd I3ud e r,roll mune has &clock." IV1r11er with the pay y "Eighty n - horse ' r ltelcl utp and robbed -at. Squaw •mtrilCs, Mused the l i a Acura s�rQMacH. IU•w'!i!a�tli;l S'f?; :1l !i! 3 csi�utr+c PHILIPS ay mAGNIte.., For'ifroubles' due to Add INoleee Acer. 5romeem ereereURN ,. HEwoACHE GASES -NAUSEA 0.. its nit algLas EXCESS acid is the common isaust of indigestion. It results in retie and; sourness about two hours after t tt-r ing.. The quick corrective is an ilS,ii. which neutralizes acid, '1'he best corrective is Phillips Milk of '1I. r nesia. It has remained standard with physicians la the 50 years since its. Invention. One spoonful of Phillips Milk of. Magnesia neutralizes instantly many . tunes its -vulpine in acid. ilarn.less, and tasteless, and yet its action is quick. Yon will never rely on crude, methods, deice you, learn how quickly this method acts.. Be sure to get, the genuine.. "Milk: of Magnesia" has been the U. S. . Registered Trade Mark of !bit Charles H. Phillips Chemical Com- ppanyand its predecessor Charles H. Phillips since 1875. saddle, "I'm going up there to havea little look around," ' In an instant the girl was at his side. , "I am going with 'you," site said simply He looked at her curiously. Then he shrugged his shoulders. An ang ry flush came .to, the girl's cheeks, but she went on with him. Not a word passed between 'them during the en- tire hour required to ` climb the steep side of the mountain and come under Indian Head cliffs. Here they stood together upon a narrow ledge pant- ing, resting. Again Judith saw Lee glance at her •curiously. He had not: sought to accommodate his swift clilnbing to a .girl's gait and yet he "Pretty Steep Climb Prost Here lip." Hie Remarked. had not distanced her its the ascent.. But in Lee's glance there was nothing of approval. There were two kinds- of women, as he had said, and' .., tip, with a telescope sight, and `it's! „, ,,.. ! "Pretty steep climb from here up, real nice fun picking folks off!" "`Ito remarked bluntly. "For a velley man or a cobble• pounder, maybe," Was Judith's curt. further remark but sat staring amp at rejoinder. Thereafter r they did not speak a- the cliffs, Judith asked: s. “what else have you 'learned by", gala tintih, after nearly another hour,.., } they at last came to the crest of In- coming back down here? A tything? "All of that spells preparation," suggested Judith, He nodded. When be offered no "There were two mien, anyway. 1'd guess, three; The one who .stuck 09, Charlie and then drifted ,while the drifting was. good: Then the :two. other aspet's' that tried to wing are," "How do you know that?" "My horse that was shot, he ex- plained, "got it in the left of the neck. Now, lookat that hobs iii the little fir tree yonder," Judith saw what he meant now. At this point Lee yesterday :had heard the second :bullet singing dangerously. near. ear, It had struck: the fir,anti plain- ly p 1 had been fired from some point off 1:o the right of the canyon. 'Briefly hewent oat to gi 'ei her the rest Of the r.esttlts'. of his two-hour seeking for something definite. • 1f She'd ride -on a little' she'd :come to the spot where his horse had been killed; she would see in tate road the signs - where, at Tripp's orders, the carcass had been dragged away, Prom there looking off to the left, up them cliffs, she would see the spot Which Lee believed had harbored :one 'oJ` the riflemen, "Indian Head," broke in Tttdith, gating upward. "Eircl', Lee, 1'11 bet tt horse you're right. > "Mid," said Lee, swiegin g from the digin 13e'ticl And here in the eager - mess of their search, rewarded by the• signs which . they found, theyforgot. both of thein, to maintain their re. • serve; In the clump of brush, close to the outer fringe, a man had lain on his belly, no longeragothan yesterday. Broken twigs showed it, a small bush. 'crushed down told of it, the marks of his toes in ,some :;of the softer soil. proclaimed it eloquently. And,t had other signs been required, there they were, Two empty brass cartridges, where the automatic ejector had thrown there several feet away. What Ambition . D d for Joe tee had its 3oh in ti etory. Though hard, *w It was l d, lie *worked Cheor1u ' early and: late, because he wanted to • lie tti foremnitn with larger pay in ot" der that he might give his wife b.mid,. children it better home, Chen he be- vel •to"feel extra tired, rouidn't sleek wasweary ail• day long and hilt ghees • Pained hini,, 'Uue date' he taietedd t his job, The doctor, said be had y' one eiiranee .ir recovery team hie tlesut- bit eonsumptton—and( that, WAS to , be treated t he 1lfu$Ooka :iOgkita r tt t for Consumntlree. So in was Jot that it hae tttkerr • atlm tit two yeare, to build ,hinq up to atir grist like normal, batt he ho b to be &bib to return hone econ:'end taut) up 01100 Mere the duty Of sutitmortrmre his family, icor einek, nuolr Aral thigs,' ,'our hub- • seri stun is tpk*'Nd. Gtrilk : tit b Caen;•, ssrJt� s.!� rrruoli a'>y, d e+aiX :tai.�, Amd11, ','lair Caliget 1414 ►t,, VOt .tot