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in that way euitvam" more inten sively, and obtain a much larger yiell and profit per acre than by dry farm ing. CORPORATIONS SUBJECT TO PUBLIC CONTROL. When you go beyond this field of co-operation, you reach a field which is nov: largely occupied by large cor porations, which are exercising a pub lie use and for that reason subjCet to public control. I believe that eventually the public ownership of ali public utilities is in evitable in this country; but I am not a believer in the theory that we are ready to-day for municipal owner ship in all our cities or for the goverx ient ownership of all our railroads. Municipal ownership vxitlout muni cipal integrity may be a greater evil than corporate ownership, "and the last condition of that man be worse than the first." I believe that political honesty must come before public ownership, and that the only way we will ever get political honesty is to restore the great majority of our people to the land, where they will Jive close to nature, and learn the obligations of man to his fellow men, and the im perative need of public integrity, by learning to unite together to do things for themselves; BONESTY TIE CORNERSTONE OF CO-OPERATION. Mlan is the product of his environ Ment. Man will be what he is trained to be. And co-operation will train men to be honest with each other and with the public, because honesty and integrity in the discharge of obliga tions to one's fellow men is the corner stone of co-operation. Without it co-operation is a house built upon the sands. With such integrity, co-operation is a hOuse built upon the eternal rocks as a foundation. And so it is that your movement for the formation of farmers' associations, iz order that you may transact for yourself the business of selling your own soil products, is but a single thread in the great cable of co-opera tion which will finally warp our slip of state off the rocks, and draw it to a safe anchorage. The profits that you will make for yourself In the formation of these co operative associations, and their man agement, is the least of the reasons which should impel you onward in the movement. A CRISIS IN OUR HISTORY. We have reached a crisis in our country's history. It is a crisis threatening greater danger than when the cloud of dis union swept up from the south and the nation was drenched in the blood of a civil war. The cancer of corruption following in the wake of great wealth is eatilg out the vitals of our country. I have shown you that there is but one cure, and it is to men of your class that we must look for this cure. In training yourselves to "o-operate together to do things for yourslves that one man cannot do for hbimself, you are engaged in carrying eat a patriotic purpose just as noble as though you had enlisted as a soldier to shoulder your arms and march to the front and lay down your life, if need be. in repelling,. the army of a foreign invader. We are spending millions for forts and navies and to maintain an armyt > protect ourselves against the other nations of the earth. Our greatest danger is not from foreign nations. It is in our midst. It is at the very 'eart of our political and social life. And you who are here to-day are pioneers- in the great campaign which will result in overthrowing the cohorts of corruption which will otherwise destroy us. OPPOSITION A STIMULANT. I have been told that your move m'ent meets with opposItion. Those who oppose it are most unwise. It is the lesson of all p~eriods of the history of our race -hat reform movemients. movements fo- the betterment of man kind, even movements which increly purport to be for human betterment. ad are of questionable character. have been strengthened and built up acn:l perpetuated by opposition and per secution. No greater stimulus to the growth of your movement could exist than to Iiave it systematically oposd. Such opposition rouses the combativeness and aggressiveness which is in every man's being, stimulates him to greater effort, and encourages him to pecrsevere until obstacles have been overcome which would otherwise have caused failure. STRENGTH- COMES FROM STRUG',LE. It Is another law of nature that strength comes from strenuous strug gle. The strong arm is the arm that is used. The strong mind is the mind that thinks. The strong man is the man who has developed every flbre of his physical vigor by use. The stron: races of the earth are those which have survived oppression and over come great obstacles in their develop ment. Be not discouraged by any condition that may confront you. Be not discouraged even by temp)or ary failure. It is the history of all movements that failure must at time's bea part of their record. But as the wise saying has It: "Failures are but the pillars of sue cess." IL.LUSTRATIONS OF STCCESSFUL CO-OIPERLALON. What others have done. you can doi. if you want sweeessful illustrations of co0-operation among piroducers. go to California and study the workin of the associations which have been formed there among the fruit growers for the marketing of their prodluct. And the road to their success was aved with many failures. At first pseemed as though there were more f! ilures than successes. lBut they peorsevered. They were forced to swim or drown. They had to leacrn to :wrket their own products or have their industries destroyed. And they learned. And so will you learn, if vou will persevere and be loyal to your fellowvs anid to your movement. If you wanit other illustrations of successful co-oiperatorn. zo amonoga the co-(perative creameiries of Wisconin~i or MIchIgan, or go among the co-op erative canal comipanlies of Califorma~ er Colorado or Montana. If you want instances of gigantic -u-es in co-operation. go to England, to) :-eland and to Belgium and to Den mark and find it there. CO-UPER'ATIVE STORES IN ENGLAND. The growth of the co-operative stores in England has been something mnarvelous. Starting with practically nothing in the way of capital, in a comparatively few years they have built up a lUusiness aggregating mil lions of dollars a year. But they began righL They Igan at the small end. They lgan with the acorn and they gradually developed the tree until it has become a great strong oak. If they had begun at the big end, and subscribed a capital stock as large as their present capital, and gone out into the highways au. byways to hire men to transact their business, form ing a great organrLation in which no ian was trained to his duties, they would have failed hopelessly and miserably failed. And so would any great business enterprise started in that way. Co-operation can be no exception to the law of evolution. You nut begin with the seed and let it grow gradualiy. as they did in England with their vo-operative stores. TIIE MAKING OF MEN. The great central thought which sihould be the pillar of tire by night and the pillar of cloud by day to lead the American people (ut of the wilder ness of the corruptions and dangers of accumulated and :igregated wealth should be a great public movement in the line of "making men" rather than "making money." Our government is upheld upon the sboulders of its own people. And as our citizenship is maintained at a high standard of moral and physi cal st-ength on the part of our mcn and cur women, just to that extent will the strength of our nation be ma intai ned. If we would be sure of this, we must keep our young men from flock in to the cities. The way to do it Is to train them through a system of education wi''i will equip thei to solve the problems (f the country, and plant the idea in their minds that the country after all offers a greater stimulus for mental activity than the city. PROULEMS OF TILE COUNTRY. The most attractive problems of this generation :ur2 in the country. The building of good roads,. the build ing of better farm homes, the engineer ing problelms of the fan, the applica tion of power to the needs of the farm nd the farm home, the lessening of domestic burdens through better domestic arrangements, the construe ticn of rural electrie railways and rtra.l telephonies and farm irrigation sys;tens and the application of iachin ry to all thei uses of the farm. offer 1 field for effort and invention andi the application of energy to the farmer's boy which no city can offer to him; provided he has had the opportunities f education to qualify him to solve these problems. There should be in every county in this country a school where every f,:rmer's boy could. without going any farther from home than the county eat, learn to do all the things which [ have mentioned. AGRICULTURE AND MANUAL T AINING. We have schools where a part of his training may be obtained. The 'roop Polytechnic Institute at Pats a~ena. California. and the Stout Mlan ual Training School at Menominee, Wisonsin, are of this class. lUut, copled with them shoul lbe the agri cultural training which a boy gets at the Doylestown National Farm School, or in part at the summer school of the Wisconsin State University at Mad ison. And every girl should have :in equal opportunity to it herself for her duties as the mistress of a farm home. Out of such homes will come a gen eration of strong, conservative and1( i telligent men who at ill solve the great prolems of this people, and will s<>lve them so gradually and stea\liily that no radical methods will ever need to be adopted. They will put out of business the politi:ian who wants to ride in blood up to his bridle bits, like an erstwhile governor of Colorado, or the present day pl)Oitiian who seeks to ride io pulic OilicfJ on a wave of prejudice and champion the liclple's rights with his voice, while his hand, like as not. is in the pocket of some corporation. "P'ut not your faith in princes" nor in politicians. TChe Lord helps those who help1 themselves." So long as the peopie 'depend for re lief upon p)olitics, just that long will they lie disappointed. TIIE LARK IN TIIE MIEADOW. When they learn the lesson of the fable of the lurk in the meadow, and go to work to do things for them selves, talk politics less, and train themselves to do things by co-opera tion more, they will be surprised at the progress they will make in the. right direction. Politics, and a dependence on tile part of the people upion polities, are the hope and the salvation of the cor ruptionists and the trusts, and of every combination of capital which hives by skimmning the cream from te ind~ustries of the peoplde. If you want the ceamnII yourself you must do your owvn skimming. You miust not imagine for moment that what I have advoented is a mere theory. It is far more than that. It is a broad highway leadire us out of the social and political hog in which we have beeni mired down. There are instances here andI there all over this country where the seed hs been planted and is thriftily grow INDICATIONS OF TIIE MO0VE MENT. You see the movement at work in the increased interest in country life, in nature study in the school. inl the est alishmnent of such inlstitutionlsa the ID)ylestown1 Farm Training School in Peninsylva nia: in the Pingree Pt tato) latch idea: and the vacant lot farm lssocia tis which are working' it out in malny cities. You see It In the school gardens which are be'ing estal bied ins many places and in the increascd inter ist i aigricultural training as: a part f ur publile sch ool system. You see it ini the great uphuildiir of the Department of Agriculture as one of the component parts of our naonaln government and in the workI RED RU1MS A Temperance Lesson. (Cvpyrjghted by %o.' We were standing at the counter of a sumptuous barroom in San Antonio where Barclay and the two English men in the party had met by appoint ment. Barclay had a ranch to sell which the Englishmen, two heavy-set, redfaced, high booted fellows were about to purchase. I had acted as broker in the transaction and was well pleased with the price settled up on and anxious that no "hitch" oc cur to delay the immediate closing of the bargain. The bar-tender put out four glasses and a bottle of liquor in anticipation of our order and the two Englishmen and myself poured a good "three Eing ers" into our glasses, but Barclay hesi tated a moment and then said, "I think I'll take sarsaparilla." The Englishmen glanced at each other significantly. "We're not buying. oft drinks today, partner," said one. Barclay hesitatingly poured 'out a good sized drink and raised it to his lips and turned toward the English men who smiled their approval. A strange thing then occured. Bar clay took off his hat and looked into the crown of it for a minute and then set the untouched liquor on the bar again. "Gentlemen," he said, "You'll have to excuse me, but I cannot drink liquor." Todd, one of the Englishmen, banged his fist down on the bar and exclaimed:-"If you can't drink with us, you can't trade with us-that's all." Barclay turned to him, his face ery white, and said slowly:-"Then the deal is off gentlemen," Presently Barclay said, "I'll admit I should like to trade with you, gentle men, but the trade can go to the devil if I have to drink whiskey in order to make it. I will tell you why I can't drink liquor if you will listen a mom ment. You may think it took courage to refuse to drink, but I tell you it would have taken more courage to have accepted it." He drew a news paper clipping from his pocket book and laid it down where we could all see it. "That's exhibit No. 1," he re marked. For a moment we started in amaze ment at the great black letters which neclled thli word GUILTY. The arti le following said that John Barclay was convICted of murder in the first degree, but that sentence was post poned through respect to the prison r's mother who dropped dead in the courtroom upon hearing the verdict. "That's nice stuff for a man to read about himself, eh?" said Barclay,with MY ANGEL MOTT-TETc CAME TO COMFOlRT ME. feeble smile. He foled the slip, put it back in his pocket-Look and produced another which read "Bar lay to be hanged on the twenty-first instant." "Gentlemen," he said, "the immedi ate cause of those two notices was murder. The prime cause was-well, what is 'murder' spelled backward?" Without waiting for an answer he traced the letters of the word wsith his pencil in the order suggested: "R~ED RUM." An emblarrassed silence follcwed. "Gentlemen, the rum that I dr::nk m.rdered my mother. At that time," continued Barclay, "my mother and I were living in a boarding house kept by an old maid of uncertain means and temper. I had just returned from a cattle-trading trip and was regaling the boys' 'vlh a little up-country gos sip and some hot rum. I rememnber it was eleven o'clock at night. The whole scene comes back to me now: the bot rum-and-water laden air; the great stove, red with rage and energy. There my remembrance of the scene ends. hat department is doing to stimui~late m interest in agriculture and the pros erity of those en'zaged in it. You see it in the awakening inter st in co-operation everywhere, in g -o-o~erative associations that are b~em 1V ormed, in the rapid gouwthi of co perative cren meries and( c-oplerative roducers' associations of all kinlds. CRIUMPHI OF TIHE IRURAL LIFE. And the one thing which will make t more easily possible. which will tendl Lhe most to draw the c-ity' (weller to :he c-ountry and relieve the lonesome :aess and isolation of the farm ifre. are :he good roads, for whieh a great mo' e nent is now gathering force, and th"' ectric rail way systems wh)ich ar breading the rural districts in evey hickly settled farming section of our -'unt ry. All these are forerunners of the fima riumplh of the rural life and of a new ra in this country when "Meni-mak n& and not "Money making" will be iur untional slogan. A time Uk' this denwndu,'s stronr men. Great h':arts. true faith undo read'y hamls: Mnu wh''m thi' lust of' offic 'oe'.." Men wh''m the' 5lpoiis of (om l-,:enii(;t - MT''n who' pos's ''pinion and a wvii - Men wvh' haive honor, men' whio will nout \Ien whbo can stand becforec'dmunt Ad damn his treacherous flatteries with out winkim;; rail men sun-crowned, who live. above the fogr.I In public duty and in private thinking" If he will not sell Arbuckles' ARIOSA write to uS. We wIll supply you direct. You will get greater value for your money--a bstter pound of cof fee-full weight-thL.i he can sell you under any other naw e. Ie cannot sell Arbuckles' ARIO3. 1oose, by the pound out of a bin cr bag, because we supply it only in sealed packages that you can identify ever; time, which pro tect the coffee from the dust and ir purities that loose ccfee absorbs-and insure full wvigit. Coffee exposed to the ir loses its flavor, strength and purity. You cannot tell where it came from-neither can the groccr-he may think he knows-but he doesn't, and all you can ever kr.ow is the ce ticket It is worth remembering that outward appearance i. no indication of :e quality. Grocers as a rule are honest, trust worthy men who woul 1 not consciously mislead you. Whenever one of them advises you to take loose grocery store When I awoke I was horrified to find myself in a prison cell. The jailer stood at the door anc. cautioned, ''Re member anything you say may be used against you." A great dread sat, like a lump of ice, on my heart. I begged him to explain. Anything but that awful suspense. Thea he told me I bad murdered MissC., -he old landlady. "My trial was set down fir a. date about a month off and my angc' aoth or secured the best and ablest coun sel to defend me; but, best of all, she came to me in my agony and put her hand on my forehead, and then kissed me and told me that she believed me innocent. How she cculd logically do it, with evidence eno-igh against mc to damn an angel, I .lon't know, but -he did it with her woman's heart, and Ler woman's heart broke when, at length, the jury told har she had, been istaken." "Gentlemen," resumc d Barclay, after a pause, "I used to believe all lawyers rascals until that timi. But the way that man worked for me was nothing short of sublime. He labored with me day in and day out, morning, noon, and night, striving by all means known to philosophy, s.cience and prac tice, to recover fron the sensitive plates of my memory tl e picture print d on them by a ruin-anfeeb!ed spirit between the hours of eieven P. .L and two A. M. on the night of the murder. But it was of no use. E:idently the flms of memory had b 3en temporariiy esensitized by the s-:upefying influ nce of the alcohol. Anyway, nothing ould bring the drea ed pictures .of hat awful period to the surface. "I shall not bore yon with the har assing details of the trial. It was hown, however, that I had been dis overed in Miss C's room. I was on he floor in a drunken sleep when the ficers arrived, and was completely ressed, even to my overcoat and hat. Near my right hand, a s if I had but recently relaxed my hold upon it, lay my pistol. One of the cartridges had een discharged and the bullet found n Miss C's body fitted the empty shell. "My lawyer used to come to my cell nd implore me to use every trick and levice that I k-new to bring hack the :ain of events of tha;. fateful night, ut I could only gaze at him stupid y. So far I couldl go, but no further. t a certain point the cloud of obiiv on would drop before my mind, and Icould not penetrate it. I thought hat by thinking with great rapidity, nd running with e.cact sequence aong the chain of occurences leading up to a certain hour, the mental mom etum thus acquired n ight carry me hrough into the realmt; of my mental arkness. But it was without avail. ou can drive a horso at a furious ate right up to the hirink of a lake ut there he will stop, and not budge n inch further; and tle blackness of he lake in front of him is no blacker han the blackness of that hell-born eriod of five or six hours of obli-:ion hat confronted mc. 0. the huelple-ssne'ss f it all. I used to sit and watch; my awyer fight against such overwhelm ng odds that the admiration I felt for 1s skill would, at tines, so absorb e that I felt the part I was taking in he awful tragedy. "To make a long skery short, the ase finally went to the jcry. You: ave seen the newsparer clippings. he verdict killed my mother who hadi ever once left my side during the rial, except at night, an I then only to esume her plac'e the :irst thing in he morning. She had been hoping tainst hope. When mother' dropuedi lead, I offered a silent prayer or rratitude that she had not lived to .itness the last act. "On the morning of the twenty-first,: s the clipning says. I was brought efore the judze, an oil friendl of my ather. and sentenced to jO hangted by he neck until dead. Gentlemen. hre's an experience net many ever aol and lived to tell of it. W\ords ore ut feeble when one tries to descrii c "Talk about ftimely recuces in the~ ramas-all nicely plarne-d to occu ith the reenliarity of c ohkwork--Wh hey actua!!y had that aw~ful l1:ok " 1) rawn o'.er moy face. anod be ro ' usted beforo the governer's 'stay'ar iveol. I heard a cormon in the ~rowd and wondered r'th 'r impatient y what the oielay was thout. Then ands remioVed the rap and noosa. and was led baek to my cell. When I eached my cell and sat upon my bed couldn't realize what 11ad occuredl Lu pnede myself to rE whether,.l coffee. instead of Arbuckles' ARIOSA ue dcubtic-s bcievcs he is doing you,, favor, whereas he is really dcFrivin you of the most wholesome and deli cious beverage that you can buy. some thing bettr than anything clse he ca: sell you for ti-eprice. The sales o Arbuckles' ARIOSA Coffee exceed th< sales of all other package coffees in th( .,ted States combined. and the bus: n .s of Arbuckle Bros. excceds that o: the four next largest concerns in th< world, simply because the public ac tually receives better coffee for thei: money in Arbuckles' ARIOSA thai they can buy ii any other way. Arbuckles' ARIOSA Coffee is good to drink-it quenches the thirst anc tastes good. Most people need it. I aids digestion, increases the power ant ambition to work and it makes one fee like doing things-no after depressiun United States soldiers drink more cof fee than the soldiers of any other na tion. were really there, or my spirit hac come back to haunt the place. "Presently the head jailer came tc me and told me that a fire had taken place in the neighborhood the nigh1 before, in which two strange men werE so badly burned that death was bul a matter of hours with them. One of the men, when he was told that hE could not live, sent for the ministet and confessed to having committed the murder I had been convicted of. His story, which was subsequenzly confirm ed by the other burglar, was, substan tially, that they had come to ogr town in quest of proper prey. They had learned that Mliss C had many well-to-do boarders in her house, some of whom carried money with them in large amounts, and they had determin ed to rob the house. Time hour was late, and the night very tempestuous and black, the very elements seeming to favor the wicked purpose of those men. Their plan was to go to Mliss C's room and secure the keys of the house, after which they could loow' at leisure. Accidently, however, they awakened the landlady, who immedi ately set up such in unearthly scream ing that it was found necessary to despatch her without more ado. One shot was enough for the dastardly purpose, and the poor old creature, who had never done any other h.rm than to askc for her just dues, went quickly 'over the river.' The robbers then paused for a moment to ascertain if anyone in the house bad been arous ed by the shot. Concluding finally that the storm had drowned the re port of the pistol, they determined to leave at once, as the murder had so unnerved them that they had no thought of theft, but eared only to get away. As they were going out, however, they discovered a man lying in the hail at the landing, near MIiss C's door, in a drunken stupor. Then it occured to them to drag the man noise lessly into her room, and leave him there with a pistol on the floor near his hand. Their motive in doing this was to divert suspicion from them selves, as they were strangers in the place. 'When they discovered that I had a pistol in my pocket similar to their own, they exchanged catridges; hence the empty shell in mine. "Gentlemen, that is my story." Presently he said: "I know there's one question you all want to ask. You want to know what I've got in my hat that had such a startling effect upon me. I will tell you what it is.-it's a picture its not that of mother, nor my sweet heart, but,"-and he held his hat with the inside turned toward us. There was a picture there, one that caused us all to shudder, It was the picture of a gallows. Todd extended his hand. "The deal is on," he said. Didn't Keep the Appointment. A young American student at Prague fell deeply in love with a pretty Ger man girl and sent her a note propos ing a place of meeting. He wrote: "That my darling may make no mis take, remember, I will wear a light air of trousers and a dark cutaway coat. In my right hand I will carry a cane and in the left a cigar. Yours ever. Jake." The girl's father got hold of the note and sent this answer: "Dot mine future son make no mis take. I viil be dreshed in mine shirt sleeves. I vill year in mine right hand a club, andl in mine left hand I vill grasph a six-shooter. You vill recognize te by de vay I hats you on de heat a oape time twice mit mine club. Vait for me at de corner, as I have some dings important to inform you mit. Your frent. Heinrich M1uller." Query-Did the young man keep the appontmnent? ~ whichshoots 2ti ~~.~Z"~Z7 best grade of steel, tiniely nick - alnut, inust thieLtn for bm Achromatic Telecope-whv in h and du't ca., and i litedwi - mile away or thisa eleg~ant ly can made and full guairantee' clock. but a watch equ.linap to atifty dollargold watch or % e ~ ing'.4of our handomeOeweir t iesare positivelyir e be-t and bound to sell ata sit Eeryo: ~ 4one ormere from you astheya: t~'~')/4JYOUR NAME and wewill ,endtI Ssold, send the $:.0 you receiv choice of above articles the sa ~~~ ~~wri.e oa.1aLL 1Vt have other premiums :n o' If your grocer does not sell ARIOSA Llet us send you a Famnil Box. on receipt of $ I.-80, express or postal raoney order, we will send 10 pounds of ARIOSA in a wooden box, trans portation pad to your nearest freight station. The :.3pays for the trans portation and the coffee, which will b in the origrinal packages bearing the signature of Arbuickle Bros. that enti tles you to free presents. Ten pcunds ten packages-ten signatures. If you -write for it we will send free a book containing full particuLars and colored pictures of nearly 100 presents for users of Arbuckles' A RIOSA Coffee. The price of coffee fluctuates-we cannot uarantee it for any period. tAddress our nearest office, AIRBUCKLE BROS., t Water Stret. New York city, Dept.9 100 ricfi ae chicago. en., Dept 9. Lntirti Ave. and oood St., PittsburghPa. Dep 9 421 South Seventh Street, St. Louis, MNo, Dept. 9, Gray Hair Restoreded "WALNUTTA HAIR STAIN" Resutores Gray, Streaked or T p leached Hair or 31cstache c o u tentaneouy Givesand fromI Lghto UroU t o Black. Trade Do not wash or rub o. Con ark aina no polions and Is not sticky nor ::reasy. old by all dragis or e wil send Yon a Trial ize for 2e., posptaid, 'I r size (eight times as much)We. If your drepist don't se it send direet to us. Send Mte yeow WpMe from bottles purhased from a drggis and wre will give, you a ful-size bottle for nothing. w LUTTA CO.,.140.E oLNve St., St. IuNs No. Glorio st Hrsairroscb Gii h rown F oreaek A Wonderful Preparation Which Turns Back the Hand of Time-M~akes the Old Young and the Young Beautiful. Fre Saples of the Greatest Hai Tonic on Earich Distributed bya Well-Known Medical nstitute Teca ur yack thbadess Har MC saTpings.Maldieseso the Ocldso You 'alng and re yun ae 't itse orSiamlcoflor.raes Hi WeTonc wnt you itorkeutod foytis We ll-rown it t dyoua InRtOWNtEX mae cyo ur apy.uo ades arflig harfO ur n re sore Ay YEnor ae hair or toginutal Coarel. dntrlHi od Y ont want ao tostake our wtryigdt for wei.~ sh ilpe it to you datu on OWpNe Eand docnt wilsge yor antof mosney nless1 you long you h happyou rul. e ilg tog th aot alous and r atrlH od Thicnnojut maer a mistak in tryiiso m e shinp it it prepaide ator toswho eve aost o who ask kysrg thforiacetou moneysuesf yu fel esto yresults.,mk i on n stog make iot aheslyuightto ere. tond ghoe loyou hare sadfaytonr tra ou.ve witer beforte <rofi ncre iont.b iheree Tbica ustourha usedothe whair remedis orithotr ksuts. t Pe jtlooursesiyndt u Wu em will rtoe youhappy. mWatithngad Werng aketa you idssi to be.teanousian yoe more satisfacytun hal yourvowne ef xpeafurie treozrnt bcihearetestd .Hairu Grerus on et to will~ asnd ou pOur rineestill oket you avice ard haes doefr otpercs itrillhe cfto othr h ee akswerin allhinds onenwtrfritetsad wwIf you by rettturn ai. at your owrni eaee a funcoriaoratmentfatheotaprate concr rer at. We w ll as o srends o ku nwterean do.iltc andvowce ado it.Send ofgtetioihals fwe delnhd o.atnicts you nthine..Arinessi ful tencfitofog 2c. wtam havnbcorae dsert. d. You2 Ncit Paever rere answerin this RialRpetn i Rinlee fri ens whouton~n beon, moreo thyucne aie Ifpatd exo p want stcattu whair, iadf yourlid i agarrgetprtacerthilok3aedor oongersonar anabyof rarch imoipragd, ie to used etlp.t We impred ane Ithrorch C cuianno ae orieats ner 'tem wirdanteyo nd yur fiest knod' wath weican do . an owetd t.Sn >oaranc and dome kepti of.ua uwileee lightRed ith hatnr and copedtue n i oto ,ncluding. drtes itc. forull-coig c tm I norpeoatcea. hesei~? ovl-2~cth at hadsoe.ee otrd. a~r -e Rochap at tihpie. JuTiAsRtEND hem ltou by maceil. poctpaii. e o oi a ance aisnd you REEp yuour .