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The Clinton New Era, 1880-04-29, Page 3PW - W -F11111 F�__w I--- ­ 0FR1r_MW,1_V _711 - I , I* I , I . . ., . . ) I �,� . . . � . k . ----7.��--�-------.--�--.-----�-- , . __ . 7 , - I I P � I 0 . I .1 . ­ FARR AND , CIA111019, '40 "'Line wwot which 'bay wore try'48 'O PCOWCU V014WRIN. runlous )RUJIMICANX. I exterminate by the odd of the Israelites whost . � they WOTS, In liondails. We must always Aev-Willlongi Auld, of Glargow,haolb.00n F911,0041 J130yapow"on ;a Issmisawelol . boor ship in mind, that we manura,lind ould. :,ordaluod to, she church and parish of OAT- V114swou.0- Great Xwes of J,Alo-A 4pitings In the Field and , - vats All the woods we do not destroy, Illsortla] , A. ock. . , 4 Whole wqwn lucirciled to Ike proun ... . I Airounsli the Hoine. vigilance lithe price we paylot the extermin. , � 11 - � I . Rev. Ohirloo S. Russ*], of Falkirk. lism been � , -11arely a Dozelm Houpps ]Left Islande � I ation of woods. Alected minister of she Rains Established fus-scores of Ireople )KIlled UU4 11 �� The N. Y. Tribune says � I Wheat Is iinable church. '. , . l[lumdreds Woundtd, I (Compiled bys rractioal A srioultilrist.) to bear our torrid summers. It must mature The Free Church congregation .of Colette . OT, Louis. April 19.-Paneoge,ro Who page - . .rSsIt t1to Garaen.�Gardens should be before She beat of July, We are oblig.ed to got Read of now varieties its the old ones have, elected the Rev. Charles D. Key, of Inuarlelthen, to 601401'r minister. ad through Marshfield loot night I yoport $list 6 80 a furious hurricane struck the place 4mltod,,voiry liberally, for by so doing you will , -have no, worm-eaten radishes, maggoty become worn out, from localities where the season Is ohorter, and more pinching than Sherlif Macpherson was formally Intro. :t nd levelled All the town lying west of the I I onions, olub-footed cabbages, or any other vegetable grown In It injured by wor* our own. So with other onroalso, I A correspondent in a rural district writes:: duced, to the faculty by Slieriff Nicholson at . ,. I . %be X(tkondbright Shoriff Court oil the 261h . . contra square. The do brio immediately.took - Are The flames could be aeon at half a 11rub, I Infest the m" � p, or any varm n that soil. . . I A great deal hao, been Paid respeolinK salt as . . �, III$, . dozen points the Passengers. " Forty dead b bodies were talon Out, Many are supposed Every one that raised asparagus knows, the nec000ltyof uoingosjt abundantly. OnOcAn . manure. Last year I oowed suporplibophate I at the . rate -of 400 lb a. per acre oil my wheat, It is stated that Mr. Dam. MoDowall has been offered X50 for Mr. Gladstone's letter i b I .1 . 0 a buried in she ruina, or burned. There . :cArcelY 1110 ,too 1011011- Many W740 grow � I also Rowed omit Alongside. as slim, rate of which he read as the late meeting at Kirk- are also many living still imprlooned In, tba dabrio, All the physicians in the towil are abbages know its value when applied to the ­ - roots- Or growing hasilo ; link every one, does , . I twelve bushels to the acre, and oil the differ- . a 0 a a ke once I could 1508 was The phooph t t r d Cowan, The, whole, herdrof shorthorn. cattle to- killed exempting two. There is, great need of doctors to attend over 2W wounded. Arelief - � not know that g.rowing, onions may be buried under a all, leaving only the topo out, and that thil.lMd ,,,, littlot at _fi;et; 4t harvest I could longing to the Doke' of Roxburghe will be , train with 20 physicians. and- I turge I o� end. w hrifohy, while alimaggose not moo any digere-na'a a% all. The coil was I , aravoll I intend to Pow salt, on all in .Y. Y dipposed' of by auction at Kelso, in inly next. . I :ipplieq left Sprin�$field this morning. The torm is general in southwestern Missouri, � or worms will die or disappear-yok such is the fact. Baltraiie4 with wood asheoJn shoproo . who&% next spring. The Glasgow police force consisid of 1,052 . and other places probably suffered . damage, . portion of I one 99 salt to four of wood coined, 6 W brood mare.ou a Colorado ranch lost bsr persons, 'including 7 superintendents, 25 . . Violent hall and rain acopmPanled by wind. , applied at the rate of,a handful to the contra colt this spring and appeared to be, deeply I . . lieutenants, 35 deteosivep, 41 InSpeo 1. I 11 I . tore, 59 At Gray's creek, near Jtfferson city, four . . of each hill, of corn immediately after plant- ing, will supersede use of acaroorowe and d over the cirg,umetance. She was I =oholy and deprbased in spirits for come � serseanto and 847 constables. I Mr. Alexindeg (Jarmlehael, who was for � or five houses, were. blown down, a � prid a nutil. ber of peroopo Injured, one house was blown . ,the coal tar,ap 40 worm 6r crew will touch it. be. aw � and then her cheerfulness returned. , � 21 years walking postman I . between Van. across the Misuouri Pacific railroad track, . aides giving the fertilizing properties of the I . . _ � it was dineovored that abie had adopted the I -Offspring of another animal as her own. 'The . fermline and Halbeath, hae-died at-Downle. . villa Crescent, at the advanced i age of 71. NoL warning being, given the train ran into it, I demolishing the locomotive and say ortly" . Compound. Afriondreaidinginnamesto1w.no . , Otsego coun�y,`Who had broken up four ourionspart of the matter is thaf hei choice I ' The'Fox)h bridge is Intended to be 7,400 1 wounding the priginser and fireman. � . Acres of oward, upon which to plant per I u, had fallen upon a calf which she had outland aw.iftomiu,realmother and Rankled with feet In length.from Shorn toollore. Thetwo- . A Springfisild despatch says.& hurricane pas,eed a f6w miles south pf here last night, found it tq be So very w.r.y that he dared I not plant it, until I gave him the above rii, the greatest carn,. The calf was' apparently great control ,Pa.$ will be each 1,600 feet Jn � � I n m gth. The piers at either end will be doing immense damage, and killing, a great oolps, which Ile used after planting. In the � happy, and followed its tooter mother with loser. . number of people. Fifty deaths tire reported � fall he sold we that, although his lot had great affection. When the call was I away fr , om the mare she made a strong fight . A live now. organ hag been fitted up in the on theJames river.aix miles south othere,and a grmat many pozoone are ' missing. A train woods upon three aides ol it, he did loot, loose a single hill by worm prow. The loot to � I to retain it, and relapsed into her forpor Wee% Parish churolip Aberdeen$ by Messrs. I I dampstolier says he. found a tairible looking -or worth remembering. . melancholy condlti6n for it number of days . .1 Willis & Done, London. The cost, Pomp country from Northview, even miles west of �. Value of Sviamp Muok.-Hometime ago we after its logo. � I :C700, has been B:ubscribed by the congrega- tion, ; Marshfield, to the latter �101inte. Treed three . I I I . - remarked that an more of swamp muck of good - . . The New larld"Ilt I�ordo. . � � . The soliol#ro:of the Aberearn public school, feet through were torn entire .1y out of the groua& Telegraph poles wore twisted off, ,quality three feet � deep, was actually worth I I ' Lord Besconsfield has deferred to 'the L' Inlithgowaffire; have propenied Mr. Da�wooin, Everything was wreo6d.- -Marshfield im §25,004. No doubt Such a statement is our. . prising. So was the statement of Dr. Lawan, � Queen's well h I nown dislike to make poor men peore byhiseboice of Sir Arthur Guinness, Sir on q completion of )aim 40tli year as a topolb'e'r, with a. very hand4onle waln.at writing demolished, 'brick us well as frame buildings being torn down. A reillettraiteleft Lebanon , of England, tbat a ton of .bran fed to cows . than its cost in manure, Ivor Quest, and Sir Lawrence Palk for places deak. . .1 1. . . (or Marshfield this morning with fifty dpotore, 1 returned more Swamp muck; free from o4nd, contains 2 per in the upper House, They are all rich, but The death is announced of Mi. John Bell,. nurses and helpers mild full 13 upplies of pro - . eout., or * 40 MR. of nitrogen in a ton. Nitrogen none of them are retuarkable for ability, and no regards the last two it would be difficult to ofthe,well knowix firm of J. & M.P. Bell & Co.,'Glaegow Pattery, Staffurd street. Mr. Visions, clothing wad medioine. , A new Catholic church at .0 aba,' ninety miles from is worth in the market 25 cents a pound. 80 � that a ton of mwamp'MUOR is actually worth � . - discover, Any soit of public-service Which they have ever Tendered. . Sir Arthur, on the other . I Bell had one of %he largest and finest pollee. 't as of paintinge in Glasgow.- . to here, was blown down'. I . A.Lebanon special Pays the tornado which . . . .410 for the nitrogen in It: All that le needed . is to work up the muck, so as to make the hand, has. liko'his father before him, Who To- stored St.Patriok'a cathedral and its surround- . . . . A marriage is wonoundod between Mr- caused much frightfpI havoc at Marshfield loot night passed entirely through Green and nitrogen available. An acre of Swamp muok . three fact di.ep contains 2 600 tons, and ,Inge, at a cost of near §1,000,000, been a James H(.zi�r, onljo4a of Mr. Win. Hozier . lishire and Lad' of Mauldelia Castle, L%nar Y . I wing. the course 0 Webster counties, folio I . I . . I the I . ' would require -eight: months to draw out.. at very munificent citizen to Dublin. An idesi � , has prevailed that no mail actually engaged. ldary� Cecil, Becond daughter of the Makquis of. I ja R, moo river, in a nor$heasterly direction. It ruck the St. Louis & Dan Francisco rail - ton loada a day. 10ow pereons realize .the � I, trade is ever raised to the peproge, and I Exeter. . . way in forty p1does and left it 'nehr F rwnk�p -value of thef6rtiliz1v g elements of common waste matterewhiall lie under khoir fact, and that Jf Sli Arthur had continued to be a porter brewer that would have been a bar to An Pildreas signed by 800 women of Edin" burgh is about to, be ,forviarded. to' the station, 110 miles this bide of Marshfield, The latter place presents a terrible appear- t4e innumerable tons of matter that maybe his elevation; but, iii point of'faot, it mauu- Difoheas of Edinburgh congratulating her I . phog. Not More than a dozen bouBes 'are aAllable for fertilizing purposes, and shut lecturer sits, or lately as - t, in th - a House of imperial highneas ou the recent eacsl?o� Of unharmed in the entird town. The courkp - I --ranch �of-tlye--idla--sn:d-negleated-mr�tozisls-- . I -.-- i;id I 1p � er, w - hoe I a I- -L K, zii7ft,o- _j_6io_oii 61 - L'o-i'd * Bi- 1-116rifelf-L snd,ber-father-. ­­ -, � - � - -­ I - I , house and many other buildings took fire. - represent avant amount of wealth.-Ameri-. -can Agriculturist for April. mills at Belper are w . orld-famous, and who . I .-The. Ayr Adverticer Informs us that April The Scene and effects were most dreadful. At . insisted, on.)taking big title from the place � came in ploamutly in the county, and that one heaso two children were found dead . a . ..qu Milk ss� Poultry Food. -We .have been which gave him the .means to acquire work lo well forward in the farming' die. the other still alive. The; parents could not trying milk an poultry food'during the winter . it.. Indeed,* so much has *,the $boat- .trials, wherni Beed time has been early and, be found. , In another ease a woman was lost and can confidently recommend, it to villagers I name., element been houbted - in the. good. . . . I OntirelY. ' Shp, seems to "ve been � carried and farmers who keep Ono or more cows for British 'peerage that as - far back 8i . � I A deputation from the Free Church congre. away bodily. The wind Stripped bark from family nee. Where butter is made and i1im' '1385," E dward . 111. deated William -dO 13 gallon � K4th, Waited- om the Rev. It, Mplood, the tides and lifted the others'entirely out of Lmilk is plenty, it is a. very valuable addition Pole his i beloved merohant,1E arl of Suffolk. and in the name Of the congregation Pp. the ground and the iolegrapI4 poles and wires . to the fare 61 the poultry.yard.. One main Sir'Arthur Guinaessi besides being a great sented hini with a phaeton, a pony, and a set were carried hundreds of rods into the woods 1-1 difference between winter and spring laying capitalist, is a great land owner. Sir Ivor . ofbilvar.mounted.harneso,, . and tied and knotted among the limbs of 'the . is owing to the absence of -animal food in Guest's father, of humble oilgin, acoumulated� , . The me . morial stone of Kelvingrove United trousua though -they . were ootton strings. winter. The milk Supplied this and is do. gre Ith Trom'ths, Dowlals iron works Presbyterian churqh was laid on the 27sh ulk.. Everithing posaWe is. being done to assist I 1, vourad With oagernPos. Thb shim and butter. Wn"hwh": rented on long lea" " a -very low by the Rev. Peter Rutherford. It is expected and Rancor the wounded at Marshfield -and milk may be poured into'the feedinj trough rate .from the Maiqais of Bute. Railwi my that the church, which, when complete will' other plaoq,o. . Physicians throughout,the . - , and kept constantly bythe fowlo,,or it may extension. caused. a demand n6vor antid- 00AA415,000, will bd opened early in May. � country aro' flookiii,g to the points most .. . be mixed with so ' WIded weal of various graino. pated, ,and Sir. 'John profited accord. - , . I . Injured. . . . . . . . Indian meal is a good ration once a day, but 11 iDgly. His first -wife, I a nob6dy., dying, A$ a'late .meetl 09 :Of Winton Place Bi U- Telegraphic communicatl6tr-wit-liManefield it should be varidd with oat or rye meal, and. �he married the Very, clever daughter congrIegation,Kilmarnook,it was agreed to was .restored. to -tight, . and the. following, -1 __ with whole -grain of wheat, backwlieatOr , I .of an earl, and his family have achieved great bracts memorial stained-glhos window be- . ' despatch received. . . barley. In a worm room with a good month- . ' opial importance. Sir Ivor is mari4ed lo a 0 . . "his'broiller bind the pulPit .in honor,of the late posi6r, she Rev.:Dr. Batligato. was also resolved . . -'Advioes doming in constantly from. dif. 'showing orn expoeur a and loot I light, there is no I .. - , ` , - difficulty Iii gatting plant goggalromearly, � dukele'daughter., and ,to another I . . . duke s,daughter,,.and one.cf1lis sisters is Lady .It to advaned,the, Rev. Mr. Dinholm's salary. for6nt parts of'the. country many were -killed or injured in remote diaiiiate. It �pullels, and tbx*o is the kU when eggs are. I � � Layard. Sir. Lawrence Paff-lii 'a L Vain" � Z50. �makiDgAt'X30Q. � ,,:,' _ ,--..1-,.-1- , �: - I is believed. -many firmeral families buye been _ 1. __` -��,of-C�r43o.t-market-valae.-.--Lelier-,in-.the:,aoaion�,--ambitt'ou6-man*f-6t-no-foroo-,exceptperi3isten6y- - , 'efforts , --In proposing- the. toagi-of ­L6ra­and . Lady . I deStroyod And, no 13- ' t-yat roported'ex even.. � : .when the broods come off, milk, which will. 'excellent inhis to, got a,- peerage, whicalime Rosebery's health, at a medtling of representa- wounded on James riveillind this afternoon;. then be more abundarit, will be'an been the pim.-and L end of. his being. His tives, of the Liberal party*, Mr. Gladstone paid and five at Many field. At the latter place all -feed for chickens, turkeys, and -all kinds of grandfather, made a' fortune in the East a high tribtfto to the w4lvhich Lord Rose. is confil'sion. The people are so ez7bited it is. � . young poultry. and will giv� qdite- ad godl Indies in, the ..good old nabob, ' days,-, bery bad done ,for the'Liberal cause. He had almoit imponsible to got any intelligent returns as when fed to pigs. . I � I f obtained a - baronetcy, and boughi a already, ho.said, written hisname upon.th� report. Many families homeless -and , . - I . I Canker wormtj.-;[amesWolverton,Gt;mebyi .Iargo,Ostate in his native .county. This heart of Scotland. - - � I - . I I ,Are have taken refuge in the -station and empty, had considerable experience with the canker-, . had formerly belonged to the Chudleighsi a . . At a ra. eating of I . he . lectur era . of the Min . to . cars standing at the Station fjoint. The roome worms, and tried three ways of -combatting them. Hd found the use of pitch -tar -not ,notable family .(of which the" notOr'Oua . bigamist, the Duchene of Kingston, was a . House Medical. Soh6ol, Mr. Geddes was of the court house areetill Standing and have boon converted into smorgus. The schdol , coal -ter -the Runless and venn,'ticieful. After member), now extinct. , In a happy hour Sir 6leatec, to the vacant lectureship on natural hiat6iy. Mr. Geddes wo o forme ly demon- building is used for a hospital. Up to 7 P.m. 1. a few days the tat hardens.dnd it becomes ,Ldwrence's'grafi'dfather bought property at . I - IT itrator of physiology in University College, . they have a death list of 78, and a Prospect, . necessary to make a fresh applicatiom He also used Parts green mixed with ,water, Torqua VIIlaie.Y,Iin Devon, thim a more fishing f has aince'devoloped into a Very London, and mote'recently of zoology In the of increasing it before morning.' Mariy' are Yet missing. A number of people hsv�,bden' . applying it with a garden pure I p.* This must .fashionable watering plead, and Sir Law- University of e . , . buried of whom no record I'd. kept, , Itle be put- on very early in, the men. Sort, as soon � 6' , . grandson ;iill probably..have on reno .a . - The:Rev.. Harry Stuart, of Oathlaw, died' . . imposoible to got a lint of the dead, but it is' . . as the budo buret, also the mischief willhayff noome of some Z 50,000 a year from, it when mt his residence on.the INh ult. Mr. " S�uart supposed come' seventy-eight persons are - been done. He also irled fall ploughing- . . . . any in the end. of 'Ookober-4ith a view .of eases fall in-. . � 11 .1 � . . . - I . � . - , . had.been minister of Oathlaw.for a great many yQui, and at one time took."a very killed.' . . I I . I , . I Ci:j1GAG ' .. o, Ill., April 19­13peolals 'from the I opening up- and exposing the chryealids, and � 1 . . .., The. Mind in Eclipse, . I . I ' active'�ark in ameliorating the'e6ndition'Of the farm laborer, 6opeolally with reforonoo to the various points show the storm last night was thought thisbad a beneficial effect, - � � . I Lawn.- Nothing !a it0o'Pl6asing than ah . . ' At &.recent meeting of the Medloo,Legal I Society, in New York, Dr. George M. . bbthy'eygttrn. He was also -for many years Forfar very gensial and disastrous, throughout. 11 I Illinois. At Decatur, - tree were uprooteil, expance of, smooth*, rich, green, nioely-kept grace. The lawn shoula.be one of thelea- .Beard read a paper on I The problems oll'insanity," j4'which -It -.paradox plipplainof -prison. : - : :* " A beautiful specimen of phot6gieptio art' � � barns blown down, cellars filled with water, and barns blown over. ThestormatOitawa . tares of everypleasuro ground, nomatter how he said: IS a of . a itronomy that She sun may best be studied .- , . I has just b6ch. issued by aii U dinburgh photo.. . gr6pher. It - represents Mr. and Mrs. Wed. was one of 1he severest ever 6perienced. 'One We - ineos'buil ding'. - was unroofed, and a limited inuxtent, and in laying-ont'the walks . and drives they,shoulpl, not divide the lawn during an eclipse . . � * and in Ps yeholog Y thu may be studied beat When it is eclipsed' stone, the Marquis and 'Marchioness of ' portion of the gas works destroyed. -At . . more than Can 9 hal d. In making a lawn' . .mind Insanity to a disease'of degrees ; there is ii � i .. Twooddide, the Earl of Aberdeen, the -Earl alid'Countess of Rosebery, Lord' and. Lady 0 Warren the cyclone did th iIsands of dollars ' of damage. Several houses. wore blown the soil should be first thcrouRhly�manur6d, aftdr which, for. heavy soils, Kentucky blue plain odividing linb. between' sanity and insanity, Insanity may be -divided -into two . Ren.y., L,,d � William Douglas, Mri' Robert downi Miles of,feriess and milthe 'bridges . I .grass should be sown -in abundance; for light kinds -intellectual insanity, embracing fortns� Jarditio of CaBtlsixiilk, and three or four othergentlemeb. all gracefull grotiped,a�d Y are gone. .At Whions, the storm was the severest in years. Tre' ' . so and fences wore soils red-tople best. - lt� Is. well to Pow the � Read in two or more directions, thus peouring In which there are delusions, and emotional . in which there are no delusions. . each fi.gute.forming on excellent likeness. I . . , thrown down ' . Much propertywas destroyed, . a more even .dietribdtion land thorofore.,u, . . r: . .Insanity, . . Insanity'le a barometer of. civilization, and . . . . . : The other, Sunday a pain fal; incident t ook No one wao seribualy injured'. Thq,moroury. � . fall 54 0 'in ton. bours.� . lietter turf. i . , . . . - A Jdriey Cow'g. Record. -It I I a not rare to I as we advance higher in the arts an d sciences so will inominity � become,. tiore 'prevalent - ploopfri,Burntislan.4 parish church.'. While the I Rev.J. Mi Thomson, the pastor,,wbo Was . � ., - . Two'* cyclones- passed Over Dhvis o6unty, I I find a heavf milker amongi-Jerse . y .cows, . .yet the average is by nb meauS extia idinary. among us;,,'Intonse�applidatlon, brain *work, ana.h�dopr life tire the agencies which mosf only inducted ton -d4ys previously,' was . pleaching,' he suddenly fell back Into the �Iowla, lh�i night. , One passed' through she town of Stiles, twelve!mileo .Routh, of Bloom.' . I Possibly a true - record of a Wfioloolierd of frequently btin� it,%bout, With Ravages or , - pulpit in a -fainting condition* and'had so be. - field,' - unr6ofing houses and, barns, destroying outbuildings, and prostrating' fences Jerseys as to weight of milk. would fall below I that of a herd of natives. oven, and'greatly barbarians there is little or none of it. The intellookumlincliviti of the women.of to.dij carried out. H6'dlbd in she course . Of ths, - ­ 11.1 avolating. Mr,d, Thomson 'wad 'for, tw,en y and 0obards. It left the path of destruction . . I below that of an Ayrshire herd. - A ITotable � in another'great cause of insanity. Wbit years chaplain in Abe army at Calcutta, and twenty miles long, varying froin fifty to'thrac hundred yards wide,' and Was.acoompanied � record of an English Jorany cow, however, is I ' � the . mother is, so will this child be in' 'tY 'in was held in high 00toom by's wide oix6le Of . I . I . . , friends. : - . ,bY terriflo,thunder,.liglAnink, heavy hall-'arld worth recording.' The bow is I Lane,' owned byMnSimpoon. Iii 1876 she gave 8,985 Oil intenser degree. -In � 1. aftni in. creasing'most perceptibly In Europe Ana . " . Xhe death is annonnecid, in his ,100th t fLoodi of,rald.. Another"Pasood foij - grea . . lbo.; in 1877 8,202 lbs.-,. In . 1878, 8.368 Ilan,; I . - America among the poorer classes. civil. . Your,. of Mr. Charlos Winchester, advocate, miles north of Bloomfield. Its track wag' markedwith the.same states of destruction. I an average o I 8,518 lbs.'par year. or equal to n daily average of more than 23 lbs. or 11 ization'grindi hard.eat on the. poor, shutting them. up in 010,08 houses, with bad air and Aberdeen. Be, was the - author of many pAmphlots, and in his' latter years devbted . . NO loss of life is reported, but the loos -,of pro.' is very The do ' -ash, - __ -quarlo.. One of the most conspicuous char� ' poor foodi-and 'compelling- them to struggle 'big timewholly to -the oludy-of-Ifterature. Ire perly gkbat. mager ' atViab Ind.., by the storm early this . I acterlaties',of a Jers�y now is her piroiotenoe � . . in milking, And although, she. may not give - , forexistence. The brain cannot Always bss'r� up under the strain, for-they,hava fewrecica- -publidlied, in particular, a pamphlet regard-. ing the- return 05 the Jews, in Which he .00(rasioned morning, is estimated At 66,000. � A rinort . . so great a yield, yet by hanging - on during -300 or,330 days -she makes up by persever. tiond and amusements which cali bdjndulged in for the relaxa,tion of their minds.- A - otrove. to ,prove that the Enillsh ' ne.661111waia ODMPOkd of the losit tribes of Israel, and the 9 ays 1,01iristian people awoke and prepared - . ,for death.' The storm on the lake is reported anee what others do by more doplous but less diagnoeter in cases of insanity is most'diffioult, � greatest literary effort of his life was the to have ,been magnificent in its fury, , but I 01011810 . nOd little loan ad yet reported, . continuous milking. - If there wire only more Jaroeyo like this one I I . i The PhYsiciall must know the subject . Psychologically ; know he thinkiii What he publication of a translation from the French of, the �Chsvaller Johnotonela account Of the MAT18IiF1RLn,"Mo,, Abril 21.-Sev6lity-one' - I , . Leaves of* Rhubarli.-Ever einco I tasted thinks, and all about hie general die.- . invasion of Prince Charies Edward. I victims of'04turday's Storm have been buried- -twentY.fivo or more are dying. 1160 are I in Brussels seven 'years ago, the, delicious pooltionj passions, etc. The , probabili. tics 42 the -insane. The lots Mr. Moir, of Calriibrog7le. Aboia .And sod'ottely wounded. A babe about 18 months oish which can be made from rhubarb leaves, . I hive urged upon all my friends to try it, Of Ours case of persons depend greatly upon the advaboo. dednobiie, for a consi4orable number of years, occupied the., farm. of Cairsibeogiet, on the. old, whose mother was killed and friends all I wounded, won found yesterday in a And it has been almostuniverpally-6pprociated by those who like spinaob', so, when ment 0 the disease.*hen the treatment to , begum 'It is better, if the . patiefit pan be. estate of Haddo House, and dufing part of: � *that time engaged actively in the breading of' raVino . north of, the town,. where it lay all nighf, Another 2 'Was I Tapered, rhubarb leaves resombp1toperly a that . Nalicate vegetable very closely, ofilypossospi6g treated but of,the Asylum, And if hQ is not or isolated 'altogdthor from the pure shorthorn battle. His herd had attained a very considerable' reputation, the Stock child, years lold,' . yesterday' afternoon found III 6& tree top, wher& - � . a aligh-Gy more icia flawk, 'Whie'li, however, _confinbd world -narootiou -add -attip6fyifig jbinedies -being held- in * ROO(F estimation � by f awme�_-O. It— had­­beou --nearly ­-twentimfour hours, considerably -' bruised. It ' was is moot refreshing. To prepare the leaves for the table, the ones only Should filloula not be used When their use can be avoided' Until sconiparativoly- short time Ror several yours past. Mr. Marr had been in - an enfeebled staid of health, having onflared . . to -day claimed by ita parents, who live three miles from South town, It is . ,younger I ' be used ; after taking out the ribs and coarser our inventions have tended. to an iner . op.00 � ,from paralysis. ,He was a man of very . reported that from.80 to 40 Persons have been killed by parts, the leaves abouldbetreated similarly to opinach. After boiling, they be Tatbe , r than .to a decrease I of insanity. 01 late, . howe . ver, the inventions have considerable intoillgono6i -being An S. M, of Aberdeen Univdraity, and took a heou inter, spurs of the tornado in the country, and that must phSood through a fine gieve, and4hen served . been in, 4he , - opposite - direction, , sA in various questiong, political, eccleminsti. the town of Corsicana, in Barry county, to no badly wrecked no this, -- up either With a little buttet'on toast or with viole brown gravy, - , tending to give us -more ease and rest, as, for example, the tolophome, elevated oal and social. In 1868 he wrote a prize nyn I The Condition of the Agricultural I FouT SmITu, Ark., April 21. -The tornado . . MrSORMANHOUS JOTTINGO.' . I and the electric light. - If the latter is per.. feated, it way also enable us' t breathe a Populatioll, Paid tho' best means of anieliorat. � ipg their. efate,'morally And 000lally., * on Sunday canoed great havod, especially At Oak Bower, where five Persons were -killed The shell of the ObODBUIlt is so hard and, ,. purerair. Anib3proV'6daystemoof'oduoation, - -, .1 . . . and many Injarod. Twenty-six hou0so were . durable that it dan gaive an excellent purpose with less I cramming,l would tend to reduce I I I , . . 0 wept away. I � . I I I no a hanging basket for ami�l plants. If cut' the increase of laosuity. The eclipse of tile I. �he ooteing summer hat for women is to � 75T. Louis, April �1.-Advloos from Texa, across in the middle, a ,single shell- will'inake, ind damn - t, be predicted like the colipse of " b be of straw. It will be knocked In on the I 00diltY toy that the town of Lycking 1: two,baoketir, it is perhaps more artistic to the -sun, bu with study, men may learn to front, J firiImed In, on the back. shoved in . on entirely destroyed, exempting throo lioness, . remove One-third of the space of the Shell and deteet it irl'it first stages, slid if treated . each side ana'hicked in on top. .Then the Py Sunday's storm. Three hundred paroond use the keet., The aboll of !tool! is I rustic I estly, it ne-Noda'relybecoma Serious. . rim will be jammed up all Around to make are homelomA, one life 168tand seven perooni And harmonizes with plants. . I I , the whole 'effect harmonious, it will be wounded.' Damage, 050i000. ' Flax requires a dry, deep, -loamy- coil, thor8uably unabrdrained and subsoiled. A 9 Here, Porgeant, arrest moll exclaimed an excited individual its .he rushed into the , trimmed .with strips of Shoot ,tin, turkey wings, old fruit caus and debris generally. It in I � . ___­- . . �'. __ , The Parialwa tolls of 'a woman, who found . long Reflea of years Of experience show that do% should not be grown on the came land nearest station house. I I have shot a in'sin ; he is dead by this lime, suaI have an economical kind of hat, as, it can be made by taking a boy's Old Straw hat, running out a. way to prevent ,grinkled, Shosqueezed OhOubt than once In five yearoo and that the beat r6tation is as follows Virai, - perhaps --- - - -_ come to give myself up., ,,Welll if this ionvCtoo the indignant Wheal -barrow Over It A few times and a I it 11 chinj ell whatever comes handy, Out the juice from the bulbs of,movoral white lilied q nill she had obtawea about seventy ., I L , gross second, case; - third, potatoes or turnips ; much,' said officer, 1 Now, you go, home, 1 toll you, and mind . I I Do yon ever expect to zaake a howopf,per .grammes Of liquidi to: which she added an equal,quantity, of the boat honey Slid thlrty� fourthi wheat ; fifth, flex -i sixth, clover. . There isnothing which holds 4o the coil your own.busine so and wait till We find you., Illaw Nock'o now novel to called I San. that, Will Suit gVerYbody P a veteran editor was melted. 'Not Sir,' W060 the AnSWor, land �five grammes of. pure White malted wax, Those substances,'bbing well mixed, formed with much pertinacity tin woode.L . I& is prob, ,able that the E gypliand are to -day. fighting rf probably because ho. think3 It will be I . I-dotilt want to. A newspaper that would Suit.. overybodywouia,,'k be worth readigg,l. . I a POWRA6, With Which she delloately,xubb-od, k her face night and I . . I . I I I . . . I . . . � . I . , road. .1 . " I . . I I ­ I . . . . . . . . I I I � I I . . . t. r. . . . . morning., I . I . I � L .. . . . 1. .. I � - . 0 . � � . t I I , . A .. . . . � JOTTINGS HERR AND THERE, I Thip XAovee# � ... I.. I—— -_ ­­­­ ------ ,-.--.-..,--�l-.-.-----"�--,�,,�,.,-��-"-.,,-��-..�.--,-. � I . Maro's a grave in yotid I I . - . . . . . A recent writer makes Ali English Phelphorif L At I X know It W -ell; , All IWOX 19=01164b � I . 1. �, . " 01 . I I . : I I :my that I lamb"is never good eating without I . r 4 J%t ,.��Ow .OIL I �, I . I . I urlohine.! I . I . I � . I . I 1. I . - � � I . � I . � I I I � . " � I . . - ­ I The, Rome Ruler Is described by an English , . . . I I o'er It bonds the weeping Near It runp a strewn, � Conservative NO 0118 Whole Ireland im 0 a 0 BY whose banks I M1229 it Weeping Erin with ai broken barp,r , On life's painful dreexa. An English nowspoporhag all advarliseraent I Oh I how doxk, and cold, and OAIIiO9 for Ian organist ,who. can also take the village blao.kerpith busineoo.P . seems the world to me, slucol saw that jravo�wlth Weat), the Willow tree, Large figures are going out of style in dressoo. DOW, of difforeAt sizes, a . nd the - , Not for me the birds wre idn . - I po Wdarl-go,' as they are called, of the fluent 'I, Sweetly in the grove, For no more theiratraina molo oprigo in bright colo on n . (Jell forUlthoughtfi of Joye. . . , f abries. I 1, I One of Gladstone's critics says that big I Mountain, valley, tilry. and, ocean, I Nown0joylvapart- speeches are devoid of literary Ability, and I I am dead to all emotLon, Frozen meour.my heart. Rio eDnooived in the spirit of an angry veatr y. � . luau, But he says that when Gladstone Is' From the once fair face of nature talking, to gain time his. excessive dilujion, of- , I thought works. upon his audience, so thes no _ Q .1. volluor-sbatlilled, . . A ,Wd ., joyless life has mademe Point is loot $0 the slowest minded, I,h t hat I were de&d I Paris, out. U. U. STRAIMB When the,Czarina of Rilro,is alighted from the railwsy.car whi . . iob took bar to St. Peters. ROME AND FOREIRN GOSS burg, oil her return from her last journey to Italy, She exclaimed, *Also I I have done I with travelling. Farewell I 'railroad". farewell _', Wabash is lighted by four electric law conchae and locomotives, My next conveyance which tire suspended at -a heighs oX I will be the Learne.1 I feet. , I . The wildest 4ream never surpagEad the Lord Rosebory, III addition to paying I romance of the widow of the third Napoleon . . Gladatonelo expenses, whatever t my my, be. -saillng frum England to tou8h at St. Holona for Midlothian, contributed 325,000 toward - On her way to look upon the Spot in Zululand the election for Southwark of Mr. Cohen, a where full the fourth and last Napoleon. The I � very able Hebrew barrister, who is a relative empress is said, am Shp left, to have looked of Lady Aoeebery. � � sadly broken, and her hair has turned gray. . Mr. T.R. Osborne,,& .member of the junior ,, Anew and curious case of death from class Of r Yale College, has at thiflearli period PolaoDing hike occurred in Philadelphia. A of him lifd proved bimseitaouace'saftil inven-m young woman ,who wore colored stockings tor. He has mode a machifie for bolting and oboes with copper mallo, had b6r'hJ36I flour by,the application of friotloni�j electril-, punctured by dne of the latter. Inflaturnsfion OitY."and hall already been offere&§S�,000 , .immediately dot in, and id a few days ilie 'for'liis iiiatent. "' , � .1 � . . . died. Physiciano do not know Whethop to . attribute the poisoning to.the stooking or. to ' Don I I waste your title in, clipping off the � '. branobeo,'oaid the woodi2sa to his son, I b . ut the nail, or to both. . . . , lay your axe at the toot of- the tree,' "d I . , The expression I 0. K ,1 signifying n1tright . th6-YOung Ma1ambilt out and laid his axe At. . is said to hAve oilginsteid'in the story alrou. the root of the. tree, like a good and dutitul latel by hie Whig oppoiatnts that President boy -and then want - a 1113hing. Truly. Jackson was so illiterate that he endorsed, , there is nothing so boantitul as filial obedl- . letters on the back 0. X , under. the impres. . once- -. . � . . 1, .olon that they were the Initials of 'all . Mr. Buskin, speaking of war, mays : 6YOu 1. . 11 The abrevistlon happens to be A . Janey Son aim sorry for the ' . ,.correct.'. useful one, and has passed into common . 11 I pain of others. - NOW I 011 -YOU jumi Win, -that if the usual ' ' � I abooptation. - � InJaPan is found, a beautiful fish which � I course of war, instead of unroofing pesoants' , I houses and ravaging peasants' fields, 'merely I has a sort of gun for bringing down insects. broke th.e.oblus, upon your own drawing -room It dogs not wait, like other fishes, for the fly I 1011(10, no war -Ill civilized countries would . to fell into tho water by accident. Seeing last a week.' . I . one lighted near the water. the chwatodon I gently appr . oaohes, and siming Its book. blown -4 - I . � , During the, past four y�esrs the Now York ; ip . . adrop of water with unerring atm, knooka city Department of Public'Worke has' added to the Crotoii water service- seventy miles of the unsuspecting fly off its perch"into tue stream and devours it, doubtless with A distributing pipes, making the present extent .. . relish begotten by its skill as a sportsman. of pi0o 480 miles. The Croton aqueduct SuPPlies.95,000,000 a day. The elevated I It is said tho.Japauese -amuse themselves by - watchingiligir captive 6haotodons shoot the . . railways coneumee 110 n I . , over hall �& in! I. ngAilo st � . � I I ;. _ nice preocuied to them. I I � daily. I I 1. . .. . . 1 . . . A Now York postman widoeen drunk the . - . Mathew McKay, of Oswego, N.Y., has been . I , 1i other eveningi- while on -duty, surrounded by I bothered at finding him clock stopped morn- . . a ar6wd of jeering idlers. Tearing Open his, Inge& He had it examined, but the repairer . . . letter bag -the- faithless carrier. seized its, con. could And nothing wrong. Hi.woitohed,and �. . tents and flung them in the ia6eo-df his tor- discovered , the family cat -to be the osusq of . I .. I . mon'toro. The incident ddoervesettention on themitchief. Attracted bythelickirig of the I account of the grot�Bque informality of this mode of - distribution, and also on account ot clock, she climbed up to'the shelf, pulled open , , the -door,, and pawed the hands Around 'the ' . . . : . � the exceptional nature of the offence. As, a . . .. 11 1. dial till it st6pi.ed. . . I . ­ . . I .Tula the Postman in eiary city are a con. Amanumoilpt supposed to have boon written . . . � . . oplenously sober. faithful and trustworthy by' St.' ]?star has lately. boon discovered' - ', % class. The postman is almost. luvarimbly� a . .0mong.the property qf.a.iiiiiiLiadmed Bore, ''. 11 . - . . . . favorite among the inhabitants of the district who died last year at JsrasaWm, at the age -of � I . . in which he gathers and distributes the mail, 109., The style of the wQrk�,,�"o' led,.to the . . . People like to rgoeive letters',' and the postman . olibluoiOn that it is outhientio, anC it is 1. ttated . , Who brings pleasant tidings naturally comes . I I that the London Bible Society, which. 1, . I "iti for a share df 'the good will excited by his- . - - L hen dispatched a committee to the spot, bull . .. . . . 'me8oQgOZ­Th6r6 "I " I , gtI ak�POIW kilof the -beat . ,offered Bore's heiriiho sum-of_�100,00040 . . ­ � `�� -'"�.� -1_ 1 F��­ '. .. Lis, -however, a powerful rival of the postman . ' " '977'= l� ­� its posies-slon. . The belie,lowever,'refuse to I , . in the admiration of the c I hildran and no'khety part with the manuscript, though it seems � V . .. I . . maids. , - ' . . that t4iey will allow -the . iooiety ft . I I . . . Hints About House clezining. � . - . I .probable reproduce and translate is. . . . . I . . 1. � Of the five daughters of Qaeen VietorK, I I . I I I Copperas mixed with whitowaill Put upon . I I the Princoos.Bestrice, the youngast, will soost , - - ;­ ' � . 1� " the cellar walls will keep'vi'imIrt away. - I - . T ,polish have remained the longest unmarried.-. 'The ' - � . .�.. . I , o stained flobro" rub- thein thoroughly once a week with beeswax and ' ,okown Princesi 'of , Germany married at 18 a - . the late Princess Alloo of Hesse wag marrih* -, - I . . . turpentine. . . ,. . ,., ,_ ,. . 1, . Hel.lebore sprinkled on the'ho6r'ht n-ight 'it I � - . when shawas 19; the Plinio as Helena maw. . . vied at 20; thd' Princess L'ouioe, who he&, , ' ' ' I . - . destrover cbckroaohes ; Ahey eat and are ... .. I until that time remained longest single, when I . I poisoned. . I �. I � . I . Strong. brine may be,tsid to aivantage in . � . she married the Marquis of Lorne. was about . the ionic age that her young sister io-that ' � . . 14 . I . .. r 'Washing bedsteads,; Adt' I alum Id also, good . 23.' It isnatural enough, that there should ' . . . for this purpose. . :_ __� ­.. . , Drain pipes and all plabes that are spur or be gossip,and rumors about the wadded late , . � . I of the last of thp�. quilitette. Rorahnoebasnal I . itipure may booldansed,with- lime water, . � been absent from Ahe - stories told about her, ' ' I '' copporas water or carbolic paid... :. When house cleaning be ojare itud take but the truth seems to ber that the Princess - . . . has chosen, up to this time, 4o be, the 001k. � I . .1 nutritious kood at least three times -per day fidan'fe and companion of. bar motber, U4 ..: . and it -will, go fat toivardo enabling you t0- .keep strength find temper. - - Queeni ralhor � than to lbave -Windoose . . ' . . . . . Carpets .should be thoroughli beaten on Balmoral ittid Osborne, without any' of the .,. " � 'daughters of the* widowed monarchs. . . I I � the Wrong - aide first And then on the right, � - ,- . � � - 1 . . . . .. .� I.., . I'� . . ­ . after wMall opotalrday be removed by the use. � . I .. . ., - . . Funnia . r � u.ing. ! . . I . of oxgdll or ammonia and water. - - .1 � � . ... . . - . . . . I . . . I I Where -hard finished walls have already , Likely td got beaten 0004,-9aijOts_ . : - 1. , .11 I . . heem kalsoralhed, the d oiled costs should be ' Jall� birds, aro-confined ha:&ilt os'zoo� . . � . . . . Washed or scrapedf, off before ,a. now one* is put on. This to the moot disagreeable pi art' - . , Gardeners find the A ".. , - . .1 . . . . ' # ,*6Athir.very apt .1 -�. - . '- . . of. the process. . I . The furniture should be covered, as Ame makei spote.-that ar� To- to mpring a leek. � _ :. . . ­ . . .. � � Tbo. last thing a:. Spiritualist Will. do -Give :., I . . . moved with dihiculty, eppecially upon ack , . . . . I . I . . � . I . I . . up the glipati . �, "I . . I . I . � _bI I -Walnut. - - .1 I . . , .1 . . In washing Painted walls it is ood, Plan a . . I A gap in, the carving. knife b6tokens that a . . . 1. . spring chicken has bein in tli6 house. ' . . . . . . � I .. � � I . toremove from ihibroorn everythit) ibatcan. � be-initired ,by otoom and th',J0w*h Ing obeets I . . RAcy.-Little Idaggio; ,:.Mary* dear; It' ' ". " � there is a collision,' I hope on 'train will " = . . . I . I .wrung. from hot water in the Ora. The 11) , r 0, . . _ . I . 4 win.� - . . I . . . . I . vapori condemning on the w - , moftensAhe I dirt, which may be *!ped off with *oollen .11 ­ I . . � . ­ I : ' ' 0 . , . The hen to a rev ngeffui bira. Always laying - " . . � I ' I . , , - � cloths ,wrang from soda water. Coilingethat i . for somebody.. .. . I I � . . C, , � , 1. world In -full The, .I I ­ 1. .1 - have b ' son duoked by-aAeromene'larop should -T,he of ,compensations. .- I . . . . . . I be washed off with soda water. . If she wall mO a prices go up the more we have Wooing . , ' � . � I . . about the stove has been omoked by' the _qalln for every thing. I . I I . . �. I . . . . . . . stove,* 'cover' the, black patches with gum The.phonograph Is almost.a forgotten I � . . Shellac, ,and they will not strike, through -efther . invention. It talked back and soon, became I . 1. piliat or kaloomine., I .. I unpopular. - , . . . . . . .1 . . Farnitui6 needs cleaning so much as other woodwork, It they- be washed with'warm .. . When a women wantd to be pretty she. . I 'bangs her hair, and when she wants to be . . . . ..- . I . . � . I soup ends, quickly wiped dry Arid ihori-wiped ugly'she bango the door . .,. I . .. I I I . I 11 I � . I . 1. A 'i with an oily:oloth. To'polish it r4b it With. rotten Stone and sweet 'oil. Clej� oil . . . . . the world is fall of gage, Yet the mothoir- . * . . . I . . : " - i, I and polish it � with a chamois 80"bO kin. For In-law -ranialfis the � chief support 61 negm-' � . - ' minotrol end -men. , , , . I ordinary woodwork use w4iting to rub the . -dirt off And ammonia.. Mortar and paint . _ Thielivily young ladies of Natal have gras. ." , , I � I t., li0`, ) may be removed from window glass with hot, admiration for the uniform of the English - I . . sharp vinegar. Grained wood -should be nqldiero; in fact, gayly the troop adoro� . . . . I . I waahod with cold i6a7. .. I . - Paint your plastered ivalle and :tllpy will I There is sloop for the OYbe that Is toarful6. � . . . A�balmfortliehdart atissftd�- . - I . . . I I � notaboorb odorsi You_Aikil. asily clean' .-L And a calm for the spirit that Is fearfuL , . I '.- '', Andlor.ovezy liver -a pad. . � '. . . .. . ... I . . i6ni with code, And Water. SoApandwater . ­ . . I . . I ___ ._ A western householder in filling up idn %, - I . I . � � spot them. . When paper and, plaster become eaturatedt-wikh Iffid'vid-30thifig- bilt'" btlifd append "hodulo under ths'polurail 1wh te-__ I ._ '' 3i ,b 1 I -- iorn;v 46S.AbOW-ciii6f 16 childre, Ora . . � . 1� . I __1_1�1--­ ­-, ., ;. removal will plewl them.., Insects., will not . ,in the �prlor I and,the other I UpBtairo. I . . I . I . 1�'. . I . harbor in pAnted walls. Before paint or Raloomine to applied to 'walls -every - crook. � . , . he Plifladelpbia News has' found's 4�re;_ I ined I q . I I . and crevice Should be filled with plaster qr . business man who asgorts that advir- . . . I timing is a humbug. �t' was doubtless 4his I . . cement made of'one part water to one. par 1. t ,allicate.of potash mixed with oommonwhit- . - - - I opinion that retired him. - I . - . � I . .. I - ing. -rbt the,kaimoinine put 6, quarter, of a "Thd clothing man -who lint it on -- '. ,� Lost money on his collato, . �- . " pound of wkii4o glue in cold Water over night* . But he who advert' Isod in tim6* I . and he�t gradually in thin morning until Mado $50,000. . . . I dissolved. Mix eight poundsof whiting with, I Wife (to her husband, who to eating a jujay . . h6t water, add the dissolved glue and stir . roast with great rAisb): I For'liesvenlo Pskov I . .together, adding hot water until about the . .we have both, forgotten that this is a " I . I consistency of thick crosin Use a lialsomine 'day.' Husband (salkily)': I You might have I , .. . I . 1 . , I / brush and finlob, via you'g�slong, . I I waited at least till IwAa through.' I I . . I . I 1. � I " , I . d I., . . I .. simma.1IINTS. . � The editor of the L& Plats (La.) Home I ' * '. ade and fork . , " 0 or "'Your 'p w goth . Preen, havIne an addition to his family, writes, I The otorm'-wind of the equinox I of A (1, . gab 6Y 1 , .. -'r "'. of b d dl _.dr....nd 0,1,..h.n talk, . I I I at Smiurdiiy -morning left at our house a "' And blister up Yen,: hwids. . � � I . I . . I Intle,oherob of the female pordlession. a kind . Now trim the vines. the bushes, too, . . . Of leap year tribute, an it were. We bow . And clear the garden patch, I Zo+t out the cook- a. do6alo-don, ­_ . I 0acefully to the dispensation. sharpen our. load pencil And call upon the delinquent W69d And let the chickens s6rAtch. . . . - . . . � .. ... .. � " . I subscriber to materialize at once., . 1. . . I I � . Pull tip the oarpotg rrdbi y6ur 1160roi. ; " � , I I And boattlioniviih astiak; . . I I 40h I mister,' said an old lady after a Full oir your windows, Opp Your doo ra- . . bicycle had passed her, ,just now I Reed a * Ilan tq tho doctor, quick I . . . waggon-WhOol innnin' away with a man. You kin believe it or not. I Woulduti if I . I For In the Apilug-tho post Is right.- I . , Like home i here is no place, . . � . hadn't good It myself., - � . 113at in, there's none go bad, orqia6i I � . I � . I . I .. . shorn Of every grace A - I I I I . . I � I r, , "*_ i, I I . . . - I I . . . . . � I . I I I . I � I I A � 11 I . . ,� � I I I ­ __1___­__­1._­.­�­_.. � ------ ­­ --.-- � 1___1-____---__--- ­­ __1___--_--- ­­ , 4 , ­ I—— ­­,�.­­­ ­­ ­­ _-___.'____.1 � ... I.. I—— -_ ­­­­ ------ ,-.--.-..,--�l-.-.-----"�--,�,,�,.,-��-"-.,,-��-..�.--,-. I I I , � . I . � � I I I I . I " � . � I I . - . . . . I . I % � . - � I . 1. �, . " 01 . I I . : I I . . I I I . � I �, I . I . � I . I . . .. . I . . . . . I I . . I . ,. I . I . I . - �JL . . . �, - 11 . I . . I I - I I � I L& I . I I I.... � ...­, 11-1-1- 1. I.. I I . I . I � . I . I 1. I . - � � I . � I . � I I I � . " � I . . - ­ I . � . J . I ­ � I