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THE WEEKLY LEDGER fl. GAFFNEY, S. C., JANUARY 2, 1890. 5 “I’LLTA KE THE SAME” ONE OF ARTHUR IRVING CLYMER'* SERMONS ON DRINKING. PmcHc* •* Yrcfctln* m i'.r++* KtII- Makaa Moa«j Fer the i:«ntBeUrr AJkd MUery I■ ■ouiPt What T*k«t Mea Ut taliiaa A •»od W ord Far tha Ble? *U. TK.vT.-Wor aato him that |lreth hM krotkar Ariuk. I believe that three-fot hs of all tha trouble that liquor make' cornea of treating. If it were not the fas! Leu to treat, there would probably not lie nv re than eue or two bars where now are flye. And the good money that goea now for treating would go then for better things to eat and wear and books and papers, and deeds for homes, and ean- eeled mortgages—and more happiness. And millions into savings banks. Children now getting their education in the streets could go to school, and wives could have decent clothes, so they would not ba ashamed to go to church. All this dues not apply to yoa ? T.ry possibly—I sincerely hope so. But do you treat? You see, I am thinking about your brother, who after a (lass or two may not have the firmness to call a halt, as yon do. What, with him. may be the result of a ten years’ exchange of liquid cour tesies? You may come out apparently ■one the worse (I say nothing about your children, to whom you may have communicated a taste for spirituous liquors), but how about your brother? Do you see whore your big heart, your ready dollars, your mistaken kindness, may have put him, in his weakness? And do you realize that upon your shoulders rests a part of the responsibil ity for his loss of character and self respect, his neglect of wife and children and business and body and soul? There arc men to whom this sermon ten years ago would not have applied any more than it docs to you today. But now I Where are some of them? You kuow you can pick them out. Some broken in body, mind and pocket book—some banging around tbs bars, or on tho streets, or looking in ▼ain for places—some in their graves. And they were once promising young men—business men, clerks, commercial travelers, lawyers, officials, men of brightest minds and finest prospects. Done for! Men's mistaken kindness and their own ever increasing appetites betrayed them. How much less many a man would drink with only the barkeeper for com pany. It would be too slow to bo endur able and the liquor would tast^ flat. It isn't always a craving for liquor that takes a man into a saloon. Ho is sure to find some of the boys there. If ho were to know they wonld not l>e there he wouldn’t go himself—not nearly so often at least. A desire for congenial company, some relief from the tedium of business, “a change of scene, ’ ’ are the causes that often lead men aud boys to the wrong place. Ten thousand times better the public library,tho reading room and gymnasium of tho Y. M. C. A., or Just out into God’s sunshine for a little while. Are the parks too far away? A wheel will take you there. I say it seriously—a bicycle may eas ily be your moans of salvation. Bicycle riding will wake yon up, brace you up, limber your joints and do you more good than coffin varnish. It isn’t the kind of “braciugup” that tears yon down, make., you nervous, restless, craving, cuts short yo’ir life! Give the wheel a chance—give your self a chance. (And then incidentally yon won’t be getting your weaker brother into trouble by tioating him—or mistreating him— and placing him under obligations to spend on you the wages that you know his wife should have.) I repeat, there are plenty of men, who, with only tho “barkeep” for com pany, would drift away from tho saloon almost as naturally as they drifted to it in tho company of their friends—that is, those on whom the venomous appe tite for liquor had not fixed its fungs! For them but little hope. Some, but not much. When a man has uncon sciously or consciously grown to be a hard drinker, ho may still quit—possi bly. But by that time ho either doesn’t w r ant to quit or ho doesn't try to quit. He doesn’t quit, 000 cases out of 1,000 —that’s tho sad fact. Nothing less than a bichloride of gold making over will ever help him. A man whoso body and mind are crippled by drink cannot successfully fight whisky. It is strong, cunning, devilishly per suasive, commanding I It is bound to come out of this un equal match on top unless the man has a will power out of a thousand. Now, think of these things, these fearful possibilities, tho very next time you start out to take a drink, and thou —don’t! Stir up your conscience! Think of that weaker brother, aud of what you may be doing for him, to say nothing of yourself. Don’t help put him on the road te the devil. Hunt him np and take him to a bet ter place. Do that for him—bring out the beet manhood there is in you. You have seen liquid poison dealt out to bright, promising boys, and you have not been moved. Are you a father? It would have turned your hair gray aud broken your heart if one of those boys had been your dear sou, your own brother or the husband of our darling child! Then, by nil your hopo of mercy oa tho last day, don't put liquor to your brother’s "Woo nr to him that giveth his brother drink." Avraun Irvino CLYMjta. TROLLEY DEATHS. A tltdical View of the Mortality From Klrrtric Line* and Ollier Caune*. Chicago has been called the "most blood guilty city on earth,” because of the gn at uumber of lives annually lost through railroad accidents. The Chi sago commissioner of health reports, iu 18V4, 804 deaths from this cause, aud ke blames the "gradecrossings” for the mortality. Iu Philadelphia the num ber of deaths from railroad accidents recorded by the coroner in tho year 1894 Was SuC; in 1898 it was 216, aud in 1892, 208. For tho six mouths ending July 1, 1895, 106 cases are reported. In Chicago nearly 50 additional fatal railroad accidents were not recorded as such, but were returned to the board of EXCISE QUESTION. REV. MADISON C. PETERS’ VIEWS C>» SUNDAY LAWS. Local Option, Me Thinks, Would SoItc th* Problem—CV*l*tlan* to a Man Will Figtit the Rom Po.yor—The Party That Favor* Vnnday OpeMag Will Commit Suicide. Sunday, Sepi. 15, found Madison C. Peters in his New York pulpit. Tho Sunday excise question has been the all absorbing theme. This is what Dr. Pe ters had to say, among other things: I believe local option is tho solution of this Sunday excise matter. But let us have local option by wards, not as a whole city. The voters of the slum dis- CANARIES FOR CONVICTS. tricts who would vota unanimously for health under the head of "fracture of Sunday opening are poor specimens to ♦he spine,” "surgical shock,” etc. determino a question of home rule. Of the 354 fatal accidents occurring if a man sells liquor on Sundays in Chicago about 45 were from street cars and tho balance from steam rail roads. Of the CW} deaths in Philadel phia in 1894 67 were from street cars; aud for tho six ivouths of 1895 55 deaths on tho coroner’s books are charged to the street railways, includ ing the trolleys. Man? of the cases in vestigated by the core ir occur among tho employees of the mad and are in cluded iu these statis ics. The city of Brooklyn has but 70 deaths from rail road accidents recorded on its coroner's books for the year 1894, and yet during the late railroad strike in that city its surface trolley companies were accused of great recklessness and gross disregard for human life, and tho coroner's clerk in a letter to us has limited his figures to the records in his office. Chicago has 8,000 streets crossed at grade by steam cars. In Philadelphia we have not quite so many grade cross ings, and yet several hundred more than we ought to have. Tho trolleys have added a considerable number of deaths to tho mortality list, but tho grade crossings continue to furnish the greater number. While tho trolley is deadly on the one hand, it is on tho other hand a therapeutic agency of no little value, and must exercise a beneficial influence upon the life and health of the com munity. What was formerly only pos sible to the wealthy—namely, a ride into the country—can now be indulged in by the poorest inhabitant, and what can be more health giving, after the hard work of a hot day, than a long ride iu an open car out into tho surrounding country? The young people have trolley excursions instead of dancing parties Tho children of the poor districts are taken on an airing instead of sweltering in hot rooms, and thousands are benefit ed that never were before. While ws bemoan every unnecessary death, and believe that every precau tion should be taken by the railroad companies to prevent accidents, yet we feel that tho newspapers are more in terested in tho sensation created by their records of trolley deaths than in the real welfare of tho people. If they would iw faithfully and as graphically record each death from diphtheria, or typhoid fever, or tuberculosis, deaths as clearly preventable as trolley deaths, and due largely to neglect on the part of both the individual and the com munity, they would do a good that would be w ider reaching and that would aid in materially lessening tho mortal ity rate of our city.—Medical News. N*w Florida Canal. One of the greatest projects ever At tempt! d in tliis state is tho reclaiming of 10,000 acres of land by the Meadow Land improvement company. The land which this company is reclaiming is a cypress pond near Orange lake, between Cilia aud Spa its, near the Alachua coun ty line. The land is to bo reclaimed by digging a canal 15 feet to 30 feet deep and 60 to 80 feet wide at the top. The eanal will run from tho pond to the Ocklawnhn river, a distance of nine miles. The completion of the company’s eanal system from the Florida Central and Peninsular railroad on the west through the tract, a distance of 11 miles, to tho famed Ocklawaha river on the east, will give a water route via canal, Ocklawaha and St. Johns rivers (regu lar lines of passenger aud freight steam ers ply these great inland waterways? to the Atlantic seaboard. This will in sure a competitive route aud correspond ing low freightage for marketing crops. Tho canal will be free to settlers.— Gainesville Sun. A Conditional Gift Deetlnod. The Episcopal diocese of Milwaukee has refused a g*ft of 0, C0C Bmliup Nicholson has formally notified Francis Keene that it is impossible for the Epis copal diocese to accept tho offer of the Keene homestead for hospital purposes. Tho action of tho bishop was on the ad vice of the diocesan hospital committee. Though the committee has not given np hopo of ultimately securing a hospital for tho Episcopal church in Milwaukee, the prospects at present ore anything but bright. It would not accept the gift be- eau-e of tho condition that the hospital should always bo known as the Keeue hospital.—Chicago Tribune. Illuminated Life Preservers. The steamer Katahdin carries a new life buoy, the invention of Chief Con structor Hic’-born, aud it is attracting | much attention. It consist* of a copper cylinder bout into u circle, and from the sides depend two cylinders containing a chemical compound which as soon as tho life preserver is thrown into the wa ter gives forth a light—the result of chemical combination. This light not only enables one straggling in the water to Hud the buoy thrown to him, hut en ables his shipmates to find him after he has reached tho buoy, should ho go over board in the nighttime.—Bath (Me.) Times. War r allied. Daughter—Mamma, if I must write to Mr. Brown about his extortionate bill, should I say "Dear Mr. Brown?’’ Mamma—Certainly, iu the circurn- I stance*!—New Rochelle Life. i clandestinely and feels that the judg ment of the law condemns him, a high moral end is gained. To legalize Sunday liquor selling would make it respectable. Tho saloon stands today an acknowl edged law defying, disorder producing, crime breeding power, aud there are thousands of good citizens who are not temperance men who will not allow the saloons further freedom, and tho Chris tian people will to a man desperately re sist Sunday saloons, and if wo are whip ped we will continue the fight with all our might, day and night, and arouse a public sentiment that will slay and bury the liquor traffic with its fpce down ward, as tho Welshwoman proposed to bury the devil, so that, if It should chance to come to life again aud try to scratch its way out, it would only bury itself the deeper. The party that will dare to *urreuder our Sabbath to America’* political dic tator, tho saloon, w'ill commit political suicide at the next election. This war npon oar Sabbath is a for eign war. If foreigners will not assimi late with ns as American citizens, if they do not admire our Sabbath and Christian institutions, if they want so cial incendiarism aud sabbatic disorder —a go as you please Sabbath—they are welcome to enjoy it by recrossing the Atlantic! But if they stay here we de mand the enforcement of that central truth of statecraft—the liberty of the individual subject to the sovereignty of tho state—the subordination of individ ual rights and privilege* to tho general good. These are integral element* lu a stable national life. Bartholdi’s statue of Liberty on Bed- loe’s island, holding in her right hand a torch, should hold in her left hand a volume containing the laws and customs of the land, aud before tho right hand bo extended iu welcome require, upon bended knee, the left hand to bo kissed as a token of submission to our laws, customs and institntions. It is a war upon our political institu tions. In countries where the Sabbath is most profaned, like Spain, France, Itaiy, Bavaria, society is grossly im moral. In .Sabbath observing England, Scotland and America society is found in its highest moral tone. Pick out the hamlets or cities, or wards of cities, where are the lowest moral conditions, and there, just in proportion, is the Sabbath desecrated. An eminent judge of the United States supremo court forci bly said, "Where there is no Christian Sabbath there is no Christian morality, and without this free government can not bo maintained. ” Blackstone says, "The Sabbath is of admirable service to the state, considered merely as a civil institution. ” Some years ago De Toequeville, the distinguished French statesman, was commissioned by his country for the purpose of studying the genius of our institutions. In reporting to the French senate ho said: "I went at your bidding and passed along their thoroughfares of trade. I ascended their mountains and went down their valleys. I visited their manufactories, their commercial mar kets and emporiums of trade. I entered their judicial courts and legislative halls. But I sought everywhere in vain for their secrets of success until I enter ed the church. It was there, as I listen ed to tho soul equalizing and soul ele vating principles of the gospel of Christ as they fell from Sabbath to Sabbath upon tho masses of the people, that I learned why America was great and free, and why Franco was a slave.” In tho dark days of tho French revo- lution, "tho shabbiest page of human annals," as Carlyle calls it, the Sabbath was trampled in the dust, and a tenth day of rest was substituted without di vine sanction, and so frightful did soci ety become that the iufidcl authorities had to institute tho divine Sabbath and public worship to save the metropolis and the kingdom from utter desolation. Franco is yot reaping the sad fruitage of her folly, and she will never have a permanent republic until she quit* her roaring, roistering and rollicking Sab baths and devote* one day in every week to tho recognition of God. I be lieve that tho security or disaster of American institutions depend* upon the issue of the Sabbath contest. Tho end of the Sabbath would be for the United States the beginning of the reign of Mammon, Bacchus aud Venus, and finally overwhelm us in temporal and eternal rain. From inch a fate may the God of Lexington and Gettysburg deliver ns! Michigan PriHonrr* Kcc)! Them For Com fort ami liaise Tlimi For Profit. Convicts in the Michigan state prison have many more favors than those of ■almost any other penitentiary iu the United States, and it is tho belief of the management of the institution that for this reason tin re are fewer outbreaks of lawlessness than are found elsewhere. Among tho favors granted to them here is that of keeping and caring for birds. There are fully COO feathered songsters in Michigan’s principal penal institu tion, all owned and cared for by tho convicts, aud as soon as daylight ap proaches on bright mornings their sweet notes are heard in striking contrast to the natural feelings of their owners. Many of tho most hardened criminals, who from their general appearance and history would not bo expected to care for anything of a refining nature, ten derly care for and caress their little pets. More than three-quarters of the cells iu tho prison contain one or more ca naries, and they are also found in vari ous shops throughout the institution. During tho day the cages are hung out side the cells to give the birds light and air, but as soon as tho convict returns from work at night the cage is taken inside. This practice has been carried on in tho prison for years, and tho officials say that instead of any detrimental ef fect being noticeable the little songsters have proved a benefit, as they not only give tho cells a more homelike appear ance, but they also wield a decided in fluence in the way of humanizing the most reckless and hardened criminal. Besides being permittet to keep the birds for tho sake of their company and influence, the convicts are also allowed to raise them to sell, and many a dollar is credited to the accounts of the prison ers from this source. Of course tho con vict handles none of tho money real ized from the sale of tho birds until lie is discharged, but it is placed to his credit iu the prison bank. It is interesting to walk up and down tho prison corridors and note tho differ ent kinds of canaries iu the cages, and more particularly to note tho different methods adopted by the convicts iu car ing for their pets. All styles of cages are to bo seen, and while one bird is provided with a veri table palace of a home and all the luxu ries known in the bird world tho one in front of the next cell will have sim ply tho plainest wood or wire cage and only the ordinary seed and water hold ers. This is also true in the shops, and the character of tho convict can in al most every instance bo safely estimated by the care he gives his feathered friends. Through the day tho music of tho birds is hardly noticeable, although it can ho heard more or less at almost any time, but on a bright morning the song aters are pleasingly noisy. One of the officials who has been connected with tlie prison for years says that when ho first came to the prison the music of the birds in the morning made him wild, but he has now become so accustomed to it that the place would bo terribly silent without it.—Jackson (Mich, j Letter in Chicago Record. A Swam of Loo sat*. The greatest swarm of locusts (grass hopper*) ever known invaded Cape Col ony in 1797. They were driven ont to sea by a strong wind, and then the waves beat them back on shore, the bank of insects thus formed being from 8 to 6 feet in depth and 50 miles iu length.—St. Loois Republic. Bravo. She—Ob, I love to hear yon read your poems. It makes me realise how brave yon are. The Poet—Brave? She—Yee, brave. Yon said yon took them yonraelf to the publisher!.—New York Ledger. THE FALL GARDEN. Protecting Seeil From Son nr.<1 Rout- ins Itains—W! :t l<> I'iaut. Provident gardeners h:;vo already done much work in tho fall garden iu the way of putt ing the soil h: : ou(l;tiou. Those with long experience cpp-.-ociate that it is intensive gnrdeniiur t hat nays. Most gardens cover too i. •.<•!» ground and receive too little ferlii.zcr and rul- j tivatiug. The following hints from | Florida Rural is t can hardly fail to j , prove helpful to many: Seed beds should be raised a few j inches above the surrounding surface I aud shaded and protected from burning j j sun and beat ingrains. Best results have 1 ; been attained by having the shades be- i tween three and four feet above the lyd. ! It is preferable to use fertilizer or grain | sacks as a cover. It is well to prepare ! i these sacks by sewing together, and after J they have m rved their pnrpi -o in the fall they can he put away .o b ;1 again as a protection from fro: i in ,ho winter months. The seed should bo sown thinly in the beds and covend ;x- | cordh’g to the size of (he seed. Wiilr v^f ry small seeds wo find it bed to cover | them to the depth of one-half inch with | finely chopped sphagnum mods instead i of with soil. i Tho whole range of vegetables, ex- | cept melons, eggplant, pom beau.', coin j and pumpkin can be planted in the fall ; garden in Florida. As to asparagus, if i seed is to be planted, it is to he done ; during September or October. If routs are to be used, which is advisable in small areas, plant about Nov. 1. Wo advise tho use of the Palmetto variety. Any variety of bush beans can bo'suc cessfully grown in almo.-t any part of Florida and the southern portion of tiy gulf states, if planted by Sept. 15. Sow in drills two inches deep and four to six inches apart in the drill, varying in accordance with the robustness of tho variety planted. When about to bloom, draw tho earth well up around tho stems. Sow beets in drills closely and thin out to six inches apart when well grown. Good germinations of beet seed are seldom obtained during tho hot weather of September, and it is advis able to leave this crop go until October. A good crop of cucumbers can bo grown in tho fall by Sejitember plant ing. Tho hills should he made four feet apart each way and a shovel full of well rotted manure or muck compost v. or!, al into each hill. Peas may ho planted in Florida during any of the fall aud win ter mouths. Iliimllins Surplus Honey. In handling the heavy surplus ar raiigemcnts full of finished honey on the Simplicity hives, an Iowa contributor to Tho American lice Journal use s a "beueli screw elevator. ” It has four three-eighth inch rods bent in at the bottom ends and hang to the Cu Prove tli • merit of Hood’s Sarsaparilla—posi tive, perfect, permanent Cures. Cures of scrofula in severest forms, like goitre, swelled neck, running sores, hip disease, sores in the eyes. Cures of iNilt Itlieuin, with its intense itching ami burning, scald head, tetter, etc. Cures of Boils, Pimples and all other erup tions due to impure blood. Cures of Dyspepsia and other troubles wher* a good stomach tonic was needed. Cures °f Rheumatism,where patients were un able to work or walk for weeks. Cures of Catarrh by expelling tho impurities which cause and sustain tho disease. Cures of Nervousness by properly toning and feeding the nerves upon pure blood. Cures Of That Tired Feeling by restoring strength. Send for hook of cures by Here’* n New Mosquito Itcinedjr. An « nterprising young man, who is part owner iu a boathouse down tho liver, claims to have discovered some thing that will be of inestimable value to mankind if experience proves its worth. The inhabitants of this down the river boathouse were nearly torn to pieces by mosquitoes every time they at tempted to sleep in tho house at night. Screens seemed to he of no avail, and it looked at one time as if the house would have to be abandoned. Finally an old lady who lived in tho neighbor hood told them that she had not been troubled by mosquitoes for several years. Her remedy was astonishingly simple. She discarded all screens, and threw tho windows wido open at night. Across tho open paeo of the window she stretched a piece of red ribbon about two inches wide. “A mosquito,” said she, "cannot be induced to pass that ribbon. Why it is so I do not know, hut I know the natives of India take this means of hafiling the vicious mosquito. It works to perfection hero also." The you::g man followed instructions, and now declares that there has not been a moi quito in the boathouse since tho rib bon was stretched across the doors aud windows. —Philadelphia Record. I in prove a Library for Harvard. The Harvard library looks just now like the ruins of rome ancient Gothic cathedral. Its churchliko walls—and, by the way, all visitors to Harvard nat urally mistake the library for the chapel—now stand at night like ghost ly sentinels guarding tho thousands of learned and unlearned volumes buried there. But iu the daytime there come throngs of artisans, who are doing their best to make tho library a perfect sepul cher for books aud students. Where five men were previously accommodated, there will soon be room for ton, and tho enlargement of storage capacities for books will be also carefully looked aft er. In short, Harvard is at lust to have a library bnildiug iu some measure adc- quate to her reputation as a scat of learning and to the size of her library, which now numbers nearly half a mil lion volnmcs.—Boston Transcript. Th* Faure Faintly. The French president and his family generally live simply, although observ ing so much state on ceremonial occa sion*. The other day Mine. Fuuro was late for dinner. President Fuuro grew anxious and paced tho dining room, re peatedly asking the officer iu attendance where hi* wife could be. The cook grumbled that the dinner would spoil, and nil the Elyseo was upset. At last the missing lady appeared. "My dear," she said to the president, "I am so sorry to be lute, but the omnibuses were so full that r had to wait inch a time for a seat." . Fuuro had never thought . of told * carriage when she went i oat •hoping.—New York Trltyg* EM* VIEW OF SCREW EMiVAToR. four corners of a frame. This simple and cheap contrivance has been a snuivc of comfort and a saving of Hindi heavy lifting Tho case willi which it can lie manipulated and tho snvpiiso it can es tho bees at seeing their season’s surplus soar heavenward, without nppaicnt cause, would bring a grin on a solemn face So gently is a full case raised that scarcely a bee ever leaves tho combs to interview the delighted operator. Nun patented. Growing I'lunt* by Klrctrirlty. Interesting experiments in electro-hor ticulture are being conducted at several of the experiment stations, different sys tenis being tested Guo of these is the direct application of ehvli icily, fur tlished by a dynamo, to the plant itself and to the soil in which it grows An other is the distribution of atmospher’c electricity among plants by a similar method Still other tests are being made with both arc and incandescent electric lights for supplying tamliglit, so to speak, at night At the Ithaca (N Y ) experiment station Professor Bailey, by aid of elec trie lights burned all night in green houses, forces plants to do both day work and night work Him light as well as at moaphero and water is necessary for a plant’s development Tho electric light resemble* sunlight in its composition more than does any other artificial lighi Artificial lights arc found to produce much the same effect upon plants as does sunlight, ouly in a smaller degree Effect* of Tils Drainag*. H. M. Tracy of the Mississippi *ta lion, in his report on the effect* of file drainage, says: "Tho station fields which have been tile drained have in creased their annual yield fully 50 per cent us a result of tlio work Theso drains wore also found to lie a profit ablo invostmeat on all H'.ils which re main wet until lute in the spring on ac count of theirconipact subsoil, or winch are rendered heavy aud sour by con tinued seepage from surrounding hill lasdf.” Sarsaparilla To C. I. Hood & Co., Proprietor*, Lowell, Mass. u r-vii er‘-the best after-dinner IlOOU S PlllS pills, aid digestion. 25c. • u. R'l'P'A'N'S u Wxi The modern stand- u ard Family Medi- </) cine: Cures the in > common every-day 3 ills of humanity. u TRftOC z o 1 Cut Prices i ritiii in>, VUU Shot' ! ■|-:i , :• I II l- l of Jiimr'i-.y I will srll Ih'V CotMiS and No- V Prices 12' -f '.b .1. Mil .it :u, -.oim for : I ..Mi iliii I.((I it ills Ml." Ill !.||\ ii. tor for . .. H I'!,-. I V .leans for I2‘ .e. r 2V .1 t-aiis for 20c, hOe ■ .leans ftn - 27 1 ■<’. • . . I.:: l.r.i Hills for Stoo c . i d m on down. . . Ready Hade I’iini--. Sliirl-.. Shoes .and Bonis in pro- r.ortIon to iihovo B"st ail wool t-'lanncl 15 to 22' ; eonls. . tiiV'- iii<' a call brfnre btiylnif Yours respect i ully. !. M. PEELER. PIEDMONT AIR LINK. COMiESSED SCHEDULE OF PASSEXQn A nr' I.' iiuntl Yes i'hi ml Nn.SM •Yo.12 No. 18 ito.sa Oil l.er «, Iblli. !)>ii y Dully Daily KSUU Dally to. il> mu C T. i.o 111 11 15p 7 60a 4 35p 4 OOp “ A'i.iita E. 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