The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, March 28, 1906, Image 6
TO FARM Tri
Great Government
Guy Elliott Mitchell of The Ni
Washington; March ?0, 1900. !
The man who eau provide bornea j
for industrious and strong-armed citi
zens is a benefactor to tho race. If
Representative Stccncrsoo, of Min
nesota, can puHh bis swamp reclama
tion measure to enactment into law
ho will bo deserving of the praise
of not only this but future genera
tions. , Ilia bill is a practical exten
sion of the old homestead idea, or
'father, perhaps, en application to the
vast arcaB of our swamp lauds of thc
idea embodied in tho national irri
gation law.
There arc in tho neighborhood of
100,000,000 ao/es of swamp lands in
tho United States, nomo 70,000,000 of
which have been suryoyed, and the
great bulk would make splendid farms
if tho excess of water wero drained
off.
Tho Stecnerson bill provides for
the beginning of the work of reclama
tion of these hugo areas. Thc meas
ure ia framed after the irrigation law;
it provides that tho receipts from the
sales of publio lands in the non-irri
gation States shall constitute a "drain
age" fund to be expended by the Gov
moment in great drainage works, and
further, that the cost of suoh drain
age shall be pro-rated among th:, land
benefited and paid back by tho set
tlers into tho "fund," to bo used
over again for additional reclamation
work.
.WOULD CREATE THOUSANDS OF HOMES.
This plan of developing tho inter
nal rosources of tho country and mik
ing homes of waste places is splendid
in its scope, and appears to bo entire
ly practicable and profitable. Take
for instance, in Indiana and Illinois,
Hero aro some 400,000 acres of the
very richest of bottom lands, but sub
ject to overflow. They aro worthloss
except where they have boen reclaim
ed through ezpensivo private drain
age works, when they have become
worth $100 and $150 an aoro. Yet it
is estimated by the government sur
veyors and engineers that the entire
system oould be effectively drained at
a cost in the neighborhood of $10 an
aore. The same can bo said of the
lands of the Bed River Valley in
Minneiota. These include the finest
grain and farm lands in the northwest
except that they are frequently over
flowed. It would be worth millions of
dollars to the farmers and Bottlers
?bo would oooupy these lands in
small tracts, to have a perfect system
of drainage provided. These exten
sive systems, however, especially
?here they rre interstate, seem to be
feasible for handling only by the gen
eral government.
The Steeoerson bill places the en
tire management of the works ia the
hands of the Reclamation Service and
the plan of operation follows very
HE above picture of the
man and fish is the trade
mark of Scott's Emulsion,
and is the synonym for
strength and purity. It*is sold
in almost all the civilized coun
tries of the globe.
If the cod fish became extinct
it would be a world-wide calam
ity, because the oil that comes*
from its liver surpasses all other
fats in nourishing and'iife-giving
properties. Thirty years ago
the proprietors of Scott's Emul
? sion found a way of preparing
cod liv?f *?il so that everyone can
take it and get the full value of
the oil without the objectionable
tafite. A'6^tt-8'Emulsion is the
best tiringfmthe world for weak,
backward chUdr?n, thin, delicate
people, and all conditions of
VJ 'Wasting andlpst strength..
1 . Sad ita;. mw ??ts?:*.. ' .. ,(.' . '
. j s??^ A BOWKE, canara
?*-*? VVLICBXJ STBKET, KEV roue .
. *--"m . .
iE SWAMPS.
Drainage l>ro;
uional Irrigation ...s* JO.
closely thu irrigation w^.k now being
done by that branch of thc Interior
Department. Government land?,
ceded Indian lands and private hinds
may be included in uny drainage pro
ject, but in each case the coat of thc
drainage improvement in to be borne
by tho owner of thc land and no set
tler can have draiuuge provided for
mor. than 100 acron, thus insuring
tho division of the tracts into small
farms which mu-t he actually settled
upon and tilled.
DRAIN Ad V. W??KK ALIIKADY IN 1*110
(JHKSS.
This work the Reclamation Service
is qualified to do at this very moment.
While primarily an engineering bu
reau it has, in all its great irrigation
projects, to deal directly with tho
farmer. It must outline a compre
hensive drainage system for each ir
rigation project, since there is as
rauch danger from too much irrigation
as too little, and to do this* the ser
vice has its own farm and soil experts.
Somo of the irrigation projects have
distinctively drainage features, in
fact are almost as much drainage as
they aro irrigation projects. In tho
Klamath project 11-10,000 acres, or
more than half of tho area of tho total
project, is rich tulo land oovcred by
eij-ht o/ ten feet of water, and is to
bc drained and converted into over a
thousand farms. Tho topographic
branch of tho Geological Survey, of
whioh thc Reclamation Service is also
a branch, has already run its lines
over many of tho great swamp areas of
the eastern States and as soou as the
Stccnersoo bill becomes law the Geo
logical Survey engineer" will bo ready
to launoh out into immediato activity
in drainage projects.
WOULD START WITH A MILLION DOL
LARS.
The fund provided by tho bill would
be small an .ooinpared with the irri
gation fund-it would approximate
half a million dollars a year and would
start off with about $1,000,000, the
receipts from the sales Tor tho fiscal
joar 1905 being included-but on the
other hand the cost of drainage would
not be so groat as that of irriga
tion.
The importance of this work of
wholesale drainage, in order to provide
homes for increased population, is
scarcely second in importance to tho
Irrigation work. It means that tens
of millions of sores of the most fertile
land imsginable, whioh bas lain idle
for ages, may be oonvertod from dis
mal and pestilential swamps and use
less bogs into highly prosperous
bornes, to become the garden spots of
the nation.
The Dutch have reolaimcd vast
areas in Holland from, the encroach
ments of tho ocean. Thousands of
families live and farm below the sea
level, gaining their seourity by mag
nificent foats of engineering and per
sistence. They now contemplate the,
drainage of the Zuyder Zee, reclaim
ing some 1,350,000 additional acres of
meadow land. American drainage in
most cascB would be far more simple
andJe&B expensive; it is simply a
quebii?? ?B i\> ni4Q?.?i?? ib? &St?OC W?ll
see the wisdom of setting its hand to
ibis work. . ' 1
AN0??1?R INLAND EMPIRE.
In Florida the everglades alone
almost solid muck beds-would af
ford an empire of gsomo 7,000,000
acree; in New Jersey and Virginia are
vast swamps, among them the famous
Di8mal[Swamp. In Illinois, which is
generally regarded es a well-settled
agricultural State, there are 4,000,000
acres of Bwarnp land; in Michigan
there are nearly 6,000,000 acres. Fer
tile Iowa bas about 2,000,000 acres of
Bwamp land.J In Minnesota there are
almost 5,000,000 acres of rich survey
ed swamp? ilands and Luge areas not
yet surveyed.? Arkansas has tremen
dous swamp arcas which could be
drained and made habitable and in all
there is a swamp area in tho eastern'
half of the United States whioh is
equal in extent to the great agricul
tural States of Indiana, Illinois and
Iowa, wit h.[three or four smaller eas
tern States thrown in.
If the Steencrson bill demonstrates
that the government can transform
Bwampo into fertile farm land and
that the settler or owner will pay back
to the government tho relatively small
oost of the improvement, there scorns
to he no reasoniwby.tbis work of cre
ation of value out of worthless waste
should not go on indefinitely and pro*
vide homes forsmilUons more of rural
population.
. : _-j - m m. ? -
.. It is folly to tell a girl that bard
work will enhance tho beauty of ber
ST. v. ' ' i', >...' ' w ?'
~ According to indications, ittakos
a quart of liquor to'drown a spoonful
of troubled
Hobbed of $432,000 In Cash.
Moscow, March 20.-Tho Credit
Mutual, one of tho largest banka io
Moscow was mysteriously robbed by
masked men at du?k tonight, thc rob
bers securing ?432,500. It waa an
extroiuely daring job. Tho facts al
ready developed ruiso the question
that the robbery was coin mit ted by, or
under tlie direction of, some one at
present or previously employed in
tbc institution. The bank is situated
Iiiuka street, in the heart of tho
city. The last of the clerks had just
departed, leaving an inside guard of
three men. wbilo under the porte
cochcre outside were a policeman and
tho house porter. Tho street was
crowded with people hurrying home
ward. According lo the story ui the
guards, in the twinkling of an eye
they were confronted with revolvers
in the hands of twenty masked men,
who entered silently by the matu
ir, which had been locked when tho
office force left. After a command to
thc guards to hold up their hands not
a v/ord waa spoken. The guards
were quickly bound and gagged and
thrown into a dark corner. Tho rob
bers then took up positions at all the
outrances and tho curtains of tho
windows were lowered. The chief of
the robbers, who directed the opera
tion of his associates by gestures and
without speaking, showed thorough
familiarity with the location of the
vaults. When all was ready he went
to the heavy burglar proof safe and,
with a few whirls of the knob, threw
tho combination of the look, the heavy
doors swung open and the treasure of
the bank was rovealed.
The plunder, consisting of gold and
silver and notes, was speedily thrust
into Backs. When a clean haul of tho
money had been made, not a kopeck
being left, the robbers departed as
silontly as they came, making their
exit through the main entranoo and
leaving no trace behind thctn. They
had been tn tho bank less thun half an
hour. Twenty minutes later one of
the guards bucoeeded in freeing him
self and gave tho alarm. The dumb
founded policeman and houao porter
who had been standing io front of tho
bank throughout claimed they had
Been no one entpr and lepvoit.
Contests Ku Mid Air.
Several applications have been made
to the Jamestown Exposition manage
ment for permission to operate dirig
ible balloons and uirahipB at the cele
bration in 1907.
For the first time in the history of
aerial navigation, air vehioles will be
used oommeroially, that is to oonvey
passengers. Hitherto all attempts to
conquer the air have been mere spec
tacles and havo subserved no useful
purpose GHcept in so far as demon*
strating tL*i ^osaibilitics of levitation
and dirigir?ity.
Only trained aeronauts have occu
pied places in the balloons or vessels
and ?no general public's interest in
the matter has always been that of
spectator.
At the Jamestown Exposition, if
the Company is satisfied that the air
conquerors are entirely safe, passen
gers ?ill be carried from the shore to
the ships and elsewhere through the
air. The aerial navigation is quite
dissimilar to the ascension of captive
balloons, whiotrbas hitherto' been the
only form of asoeosioo in which the
publia has participated.
Santos Dumont and several others
have proved the possibilities of direct
ing airships almost at will, and an
American inventor, Captain Thomas
S. Baldwin, has perfected an airship
until it is almost as easy to navigate
as an ordinary yacht.
In connexion with Capt. Baldwin's
effort to subjugate tho air, there are
two men who have been brought
prominently into publio notice as in
ventors of these oratts; Lincoln
Boaohy and Roy Knabenshue.. Wheth
er these famous air captains will eaoh
command a Baldwin ship at the
Jamestown Exposition or whether
they will he engaged by rival con*
struotoiB, cannot now be ascertained,
but both of them will be present at
the celebration and will direct air
ships. That they will contest for
prizes in speed and directness of
course is oerrvn, whether they are
employed by the samo concern or not,
but a far greater elements of sport
will be added if rival constructors
eaoh scour o the 9 cr vico a bf ooo o? these
men. .
Baldwin is not to bo the only in
ventor. There is another air copi
queror who has tiled already his ap
plication for a concession, ind prob?
ably there will be several others, so
rafe** andvcontests cf every sort over;
head. aro assured as?- features of tho
Tercentennial.
~ It's easier for a man to marry 4
woman for her beauty than it is to
live with har for tho same reason. /
-'liven the mau who objects to
stepping on tacks would liko to /waljk
all over tho tax-collector.'
-- When speaking of Amusement
circles it is proper to include cirons
nags. , ,
. - 'fte*tfi?;clothes; > wornani gsti
^^^B^^s^^ion out of old lot^
Southern Chivalry.
Maoy 6tories have been told of
Southern chivalry, but the palm ap.
pears to go to a btory told by a former
Governor of Kentucky while visiting
in this city recently.
Accordiog to tho narrator a genuine
Kentucky Colonel boarded a street
car, which was very crowded, and
somehow he stepped on the foot ot a
very pretty woman. Of course the
womau expected the Colonel to a
pologizc, just as did everybody oise
wno heard her give a mouse-like
squeal when the Colonel's foot carno
down.
And she looked as though she ex
pected aa apology, but the Colonel,
divining her thought, doffed his hut
and said: "No, madam, I'm not going
to apologize. When tho good Lord
was so gracious as to make women
so beautiful and charming and with
such wonderfully small feet that a
mau bas to tramp on them to find j
them, then I dou't think that an
apology-"
Tho compliment was too graceful
for tho woman to resist, and all that
followed was a smiling^ acknowledg
ment of the Colonel's gallant spceoh.
-Philadelphia Record.
He "Stayed In "
A loyal constituent of Senator Till
man's named Swate came to Washing
ton to see the Senator. He met him
just at noon on Monday. The Sena
tor had something to nay about Presi
dent Roosevelt and was in a hurry.
"Come around to the Senatorial gal
lery, Swate," Mr. Tillman said, "and
I will get you a seat there. After I
have finished on the floor I will come
out and we will have a visit."
The debate ran for two hours,
Swate sat patiently and listened. At
the end of that time he got up and
said to the gallery doorkeeper: "My
came is Swate. I am a friend of
Senator Tillman's. He brought me
here, and I want to go out and look
arouna a bit. I thought I would tell
you so I can get back io."
"That's all right," said the door
keeper, "but ? may no-, bo here when
you return. In order to prevent any
mistake I will give you the password
so you can get your seat again."
Swate's eyes rather popped out at
this.
"What's the word?" he asked.
''Idiosyncrasy."
..W'-haiV
"Idiosyncrasy."
"I guess I'll stay io," said Swate.
New York World.
A Business Transaction*
Ooo day a stranger went to a horse
dealer and wished to hire a horse and
a trap for a day's outirg. Not know
ing the man, the horse ?stier declined
tv trust shes is Ms haads: Tba
Btrsoger was determined, however,
upon having his drive, and proposed,
therefore, that he should pay the full
value of the horse and trap nu condi
tion that be sold them back at the
same prioe iu tho evening if he brought
them back safe. To this the other
dould see no objection. The hor?o
and trap were returned in good time,
aud after receiving back the sum paid
for them in tho morning the stranger
turned to go.
"Hold on," exoiuimed the dealer.
"You have forgotten tb pay for the
biro." ..
"Bfy dear sir,'\was the cool reply,
''obere is no hiring in the case. I have
been driving my own horse and trap
all day."
And the astonished dealer was left
to think the matter over.
- i o mt i '
- But the day worker acquires
more coin than the dry dreamer.
- Lven iosuranoo grafters think
politicians are a bsd lot.
- It i s tho man who has only half
achieved who makes the most fuss
about it.
THE PLANET JUPITER.
There Are Practically Wo Season* In
Thin Distant World.
Taking tho earth's mean distance
from the Bun at 92,70<>,050 mile?, *ho
mean distance of Jupiter from tile sun
will be 482,803,070 miles. The eccen
tricity of its elliptical orbit being
.04825, ita dlstnuee from thc sun at
perihelion is 450,507,700 milcB and
at aphelion 500,100.180 milea. Between
Its greatest and least distances, there
fore, there is n difference of 40,592,420
inil^s, or about one-half the earth's
niean distance from the sun. The In
clination of Jupiter's orbit to the plauo
of tho ecliptic bellin only 1 degree 18
minutes -li Kecoiids, or less than that
of any of tho other lnrgc planets with
the exception of Uranus, tho planet
never departs much from tho ecliptic,
nnd hence lt was called by the ancients
the "ecliptic planet." Its period o?
revolution round the sun ls ll years
314 8 days.
The inclination of Its axis of rotation
being nearly at light angles to the
plane of its orbit, there are practically
no seasons lu this distant world, and
the only variation lu the heat and light,
nt any point on Its surface would be
that due to the comparatively small
variation Ia its. distance ?rcm the ?ur?
referred to above. Its mean distance
from the sun being 5.2028 times the
earth's mean distance from the sun, it
follows that the heat and light re
ceived by Jupiter are 27 times {6.2
squared) less than tho earth receives.
Tho amount of heat received from the
sun by this planet Is very small, and
were It constituted like tho earth Its
surface should be perpetually covered
by frost and snow. Far from this be
ing thc case, the telescope 6hows Its
atmosphere to be In a state of constant
and wonderful change.
These extraordinary changes cannot
possibly be due to the solar heat, and
they have suggested the idea .that the
planet may perhaps be in a redhot
stale, a miniature sun-in fact, glow
ing with Inherent heat. The great bril
liancy of Its surface, the "albedo," ns
it ls called, and its small density-less
than that of the sun-are facts in favor
of this hypothesis. As the attraction
of Jupiter's enormous mass would ren
der the materials near Its center * of
much greater density than those near
Its surface, the latter must be consider
ably lighter than water and may pos
sibly he in tho gaseous state.
TO PARENTS AND TEACHERS
Let tho child choose his ideals from
the many that are presented to bim.
Boys and girls saturated with low lit
erature form low ideas, which cling to
them through life.
To tench concentration should be the
end and aim of all school instruction.
New York World.
Study the mild, find out what his
capabilities are and show him that ypu
take an interest In him.
Let thp children see how ugly low
ideals are aud then encourage them to
study the lives of great men.
The whole life and future usefulness
of a child depend largely on the way
his mind ls trained at school.
Many a child's life ls ruined by hav
ing parents or teachers who do not take
the trouble to understand his capa
bility. "!
It ls mora Important for the mother
to superintend her sous reading than
to Bee that ho wears the latest thing In
collars.
The character depeuds upon the
Ideals, and the ideals are the Btandard
which the parent or teacher sets before
the child.
Tho Minor's Inch*
In California the miner's inch IS the
flow of about 8,700 gallons of water
per minute. Fifty miner's inches are
equivalent to one cubic foot per sec
ond. The most common measurement
is, under a mean, pressure ot 'four
inches, through au aperture two inches
high and two inches above the bottom
of the box, tho plank being one and a
quarter inches thick and the height of
water above the.aperture three inches,
giving a mean pressure of four inches;
Each square inch of tho aperture* rep
resents one miner's ittcb, or about L2
cubic feet flow per mrnute.-r-Maxweirs.
Talisman.
- Eve o a cheap skate may dbfigure
much good ice. S,
- Be good and you?Fbe happy
maybe.'' .'
. -The good old sumner time is
coming by degrees. ?
-. If you would avoid; the fire, keep
out ol the frying pan. :
- Ope seldom - realises how much
worse the world is growing until he
heard twofold Bettlers exchanging ire
TODEUeATEW??
m?
1 It Makes Pale Cheeks Pink I
la a pure, harmless, medicinal tcnlc, ni sd o frou vegetable ii
Ingredients, which relieve fema?o pair, and distress, such a*he*dsc1*ey?aH
backache, bowe! acho, dizziness, chills, scanty or orofuse rnenstru- gi
ation. dragging down pains, etc. " |g| i
, ^rliit?b\?W medicine fer women, tho only 9
medicine inst is certain to do you geed. Try it B
_Sold by ?;ve-ry drugget in $1.00 bottles. .'^^P: B
WaiT? ?S A LETTES **YOD ARE FE?KB?D? ~*V 8
freely and frawtty, in sirius cc??i4- ti s?n^/v^tM Mrs. F. ? jon^. of B
tnce, telling us ail yr?r tyruptoias and Gallen, Tenn.; :B
^^^^ ^j^^S^^^^^^^^^^^
Legend of a Musket.
Mark Twain telle ?he following
story, related by a fellow passenger,
wbo, being bantered about his tim
idity, said be had never been soared
Ginee be loaded aa old Queen Anne's
musket for his father oooe, whereupon
he gives the following:
You see the old mau was trying to
learn me to shoot blackbirds and beasts
that tore up the youog corn and ouch
things, .so I could be of some uso about
the farm, because I wasn't big enough
t J do much. My gun was a singlc
barreiled shot-gun and the old man
carried an old Queon Anne musket
that weighed a ton, made a report like
a thunderclap, and kioked like a mule.
Tho old mau wanted me to shoot the
musket sometimes, but I was afraid.
One day, though, I got her down and
so I took her to the hired man, and
asked him how to load her, because
it waa out in the field. "Hiram,"
said he, <cdo you see thoco marks on
the stock, aa X sud a V, on each side
of the Qaeen'a crown? Well, that
means ten balls and five slugs-that's
her load."
"But how much powder?"
"Ob," says he, "it dou't matter;
put io three or four handfuls."
80 I loaded her up that way, and it
was an awful charge-I had sense
enough to see that, and started out.
I leveled her on a good many blaok
birds; but every time I went to pull
the trigger I shut my eyes and wink
ed; I was afraid of her kiok. To
wards sundown I fetoped up at thc
house, and there was the old man rest
ing on the porch.
"Been out hunting, have ye?"
"Yes^ air," said I.
? "What did you kill?"
I "Didn't kill anything-didn't shoot
her off-was afraid she would kick
(I knew blame well she would.")
"Gimme that gun!" the old mai
said, as mad as sin. -
And he took aim at a sapling 01
tho other side of the road, and I bega:
to drop baok out of danger. And th
next moment I heard the Queen Ann
whirling end Over end iu tho air, an
father spinned around on one bec
with one leg up and both hands on hi
jaw, and the bark flying from thc
sapling like there was a hail ?torn
The old man's shoulder was sot bac
three inohes and his jaw turned bloc
and blue, and he had to lay up fi
three days. Cholera nor nothing ell
can soaro me the way I was that tim
Rheumatism
is quickly relieved. acid prompt
oured by Dr. Drummond's Rheumat
Remedies. The internal remedy
pleasant to take, sots immedistel
does not disturb digestion, abd is f
rheumatism only in all its torturii
forms.. The external preparation 1
stores sim jolutSi draws cords si
hardened muBoles. If your droggi
is not in stock with thom, don't e
sept something elfe and bo cheat
cst cf s eure. Writs ta the Drat
mond Medicine Co., New York, j
their direct, mail proposition. D01
delay and suffer. You sra entitled
health.
Moody's Wit in the Falpit.
Rev. Dwight L. Moody onoe called
on a ministerial brother in'an eastern*
town, desiring to spend the next day,.
Sunday with bim. The minister wa?
agreeable, but said. that he wasjj
ashamed to ask Moody to preach.
"Why?" asked Mr. Moody.
"Walli" was the reply, "our people*
have got such a habit of going out be
fore the olese of tho meeting that it
would be an imposition on a' strang
er."
"I will stay and preach," saicb
Mn dy.
When Sunday arrived, Mr. Moody
opened his meeting and, then encour
agingly said, "My hearers, I am go
ing to speak to two sottu today, thc
sinners first, then the saiats."
After earnestly addressing the sup
posed Binners he said that they could
now take their bats and go. But thor
whole, congregation waited and heard,
him to the ead.-New York World*
An Unlucky Experiment.
If the story told in Life is true, Mr;
Brown made one telephone test he
would like to take baok:
He had just had a telephonic con
nection between his office and house,,
and was very much pleased with it,
"I tell you, Smith," he was saying,,
"this telephone business is a wonder
ful thing. I want yea to dine with
me this evening, and I will notify
Mrs. Brown to expect you."
Brown (speaking through the tele
phone)-"My friend Smith will dino
with us this evening." .
"Now listen and hoar bow plain her
reply comes b/mk."
Mrs. Brown's reply oame back with
startling distinctness:
"Ask your friend Smith if be
thinks we keeps hotel 1"
Eat What
Don't Starve or Die*, but usa ft j-o
na and Cure Your Stomach Trou*
Wes.
The average treatment of stomach
troubles consists of ; a rigid diet list,
which of ton half starves the patient.
Of course it would he foolish for any
one, who knows that some foods aro
positively harmful Sud,poisonous to
con tinue eating them, even white fol*
lowing the Mi o-na treatment, but in
ordinary oases of stomach troubles it
is/act necessary to starve or diet if
Mi-o-oa is faithfoly used, a tablet be
fore eaoh meal. , */
I This eciontifio remedy, for the ours
of eiomaoh troubles, sets upon the
whole digestive system, and strength
om? ?he organs so that they are ?bie
la digest soy food that ie eaten with
out fear or distress.
Evans Pharmacy hive GO much ooo*
fldonoo in the vower ot Mi-orna to
cs rc stomach troubles tfe& resultlo
ills, that : they give a guarantee, wit
every 50 cent box to refund the mon
ey unless it cures.
Thia Establishment lias been Selling .
J???2?^nw?mer, Miatakos will sometimes occur, and if ? inv t?mi .?
Jouna^ata^Bt?mer^
.?8? ?"? ^ say whh. pr.se, bat without boasting: that?&h^?^thW?^
?onooof tLe p?opio of tbi
sold Fnrnitttravat as OIOBO a margin of Sprent as wo w d?i?ir?oW^Sg
projenbytbo^
minty b*t in every Town in tbVtfHed^
Daron?, saved money by buying from ua, and you and your oWWra? ?an B!
money by baying ^
? - . -.?'"?'???"*"*.? ""'1 1 ..?.. . '"? *'?
S<S*:*%fij0???ff* ? :W^^^0'?^^im ela
?v TfV '-vJ^Jk TO* menV ?* PW**** The first .moa?
:V'?llM^^if?P^K V <dJj ^??fe^ E?r? ie caa eat
? Irfr ? ! ****** tytf??Uxta?ted sa^ed ie
.^rf'-^^^/g: Yo\i?e^in^e jf?.coc'd ,t|ir<l, eft
Come in to.eeo na, and let us te? jorrie abbat H.
We to?.so?d this Pains for m^y*^^ oU ^ bsen pleased ?
?t?V to Stak