h": Pours. A regal-r meeting of the town fathers was held in the council chember on Mon- dey evening. The members preeeat wees new: Rey, Dam-reeves Wine:- and - - ,_ "Aâ€"nn“' 'I‘nnchbum, mg quantum afloat. new: 9", LIV" -â€"v. v Grendel). end Gonna. Connolly, Touchburn, moo, Baboon, Lack end Fee. The minutes of lab mule: meeting wen reed by the clerk and on motion they Wv-v ‘7â€" COMMUNICATIONS. thet he so Peel-st. end would ley the his terrace on in martenâ€"Referred to the ï¬re Ihmglee end water committee with power to not. From Junee Dawn .96 othore, eating thete eldewolk be bull: on Divlelon-snâ€" Bofemd to street end bridge committee. From the echool board, relative to texee onthe lot bought. trom Mrs. Heenen for e ey ground for the eoet word echooLâ€" Re- erred to the ï¬nance committee. ___..,.,_ rm- nu: TOWN 930933“ 002.!- toured!“ rent the some by the month, The committee reqneeted authority to luv:e the make: Conn. Ronsoxmluinnan. read the report, which dew. entirei with applications for tile, sidewalks 3nd itching rumâ€"The upon m adopwd. LINDSAY. we 0’ m. H Ill. “wonâ€"v, _â€"_ ._ , queen’s square. which hid been thvorobly considered by the committee and council. Since than it hud been discovered tho: the town hon just void $156 to: the house on it man: to Mr. Heruhey or not. The sum 'VV‘ _. Very low velueuon. De -reeve Gunman. evoke et consider- eble ength in fever 0! oloeina the deel with Mr. Hetllhey. who. he laid, deserved to be extended 3 helping head ...... Their pronoeel wee ï¬nelly referred back to me town pgopetty committee for further eon- Iâ€. uvu v- J 7 , «593m: Wntorworks Company, wns third time. 3nd By-luv No. 564. spamming Mr. John Kennedy waterworks ‘ A ï¬rm. In mm. artist: I: :«II III - 3323. ‘8 3!: 88:9 35o F 88. 9.33 on 90 15.9 b Zuzanaâ€"h I331. 33% chaovumooqo gang-8892â€" p b?» DYI-IIIIII no. 9’. wm-oo 5 0.89.3 55¢ 58...... 2 Eu. :E. 63%.. nmmaonoo noun :5 no! ‘15:. \ ‘lbotnlbh fr]? 0’. 3-5- “layerâ€. und "'0 motion was tor eonddonuon. -UVW u, Wurqvvvv .. â€"-- -._w, 7 7 by Dem-mu Momma this council denim no exotooo m profound oympothy with the suffering resident. of the ï¬re- uupt any 0! St. John's Newfoundland not! that the an o! 3100 ho oontrlbnud‘ onto! the town Inna. nod tonndod no tho mum: at tho allot (nut-Curl“. noun ton. 'rnn ACID. Don-mu Cmnnu. point.“ out um unpmoncmoro woo but one moon In thohonufottho and. “night ho cannon: to on: not octoon’o bond aloo- who" nnd clooo tho Institution for tho moot. Action won «(and until next Cocoon thon mod It ho! under- uoodthgto _ noodnclontgbohom 7 LINDSAY TO_V_VN COUNCIL. m don. w. m n. dam of III. hm «mum who and an Atlantic «bl. sud hem» two mum. anon. MM! mm “damn-mush. bun-un- mm vow-9'». 943393“? “' ' [and b;7l§og.-tpiovo ermuoondod ,____ -1.-. .51. “-All _â€"'â€"' râ€"â€" '_._-_ , Manor-Ind WWW nummtmmmmdmuuu «ah-um.“ m by the am"! “lowly mind Ion. m hM'JmM out. The Mo: 34 I. F! !d' m 11:19de all conviction: :u to: much for tho â€â€œ95“, old an." ad huh-1.,“ an" NJ‘vth-mhumndmuuoo! month-ho unumdmmnuouur. Mflowmmmm Mil). SEVERAL BY LAWS. ~an No. 561. wovlding to: the cloning man “Mm-It. 39d conveying reeve_ Gunman. 0F OF SYKPATEY AND mmu. JULZE-LE'E‘: Mmï¬ 'm" ' fidoptéd. m 133me LID-U. 'â€" â€" , mugged e urge fortune. 1o mom-nu In . enheequnt dete he le enppoud to hove met menu-d Cobden. who Imam! moon's!- geuon hle term: no the question of noble oommnnleetlon. Reticulum the matter ee . joke es the t1me,lt wee not long before F. N. Glehotne’e well-known eoheme ot‘ cehle connection between Cenede end Newfoundland etmcted hle ettentlon. I! this were poeelble, en wee the amnion to Englend, end, otter meny names the ettempt won et leet «neon-fol. Then money poured Into hle hende, end et one time he wee supposed to be worth $50,000.- 000. Much of thle he lost, so eleo e [ergo portion of the mllllone which he mede out o! the eleveted reeds of New York. S 111 he had large meem, end hle chermlng home in Gremercy Perk wee one at the meet hendeome end complete In the Unlred Stetee metropolie. Sixty-ï¬ve tlmee Mr. Fleld crossed the Atlantic. end e bney eventful career he indeed hed. Yet the clue n! his llte wee nnepeekably eed. end well lllnetretee lhe mnteblllty o! hnmen gunmen end human pro-parlvv. A curious place that we looked into on our way across the city of Canton was a Chinese bank. where the counterpart of the brisk young cashier, tellers and accountants of our home banks were sit- ting in pigtails, and the long blue blouses of gentlemen and scholars, shoveling sil- ver Mexicans from basket to basket, and letting them fall on the stone floor with i a deafening ring and clatter. A Chinaman 1 can do nothing quietly, and noise is hi: i necessary accompaniment to every action 1 Every one of the pewtery-looking dollars‘ is weighed and stamped by the bank,rung i on stone slabs and fully tested, and there i are baskets full 0f fragments, halves and n chips of silver dollars that pass as smu- , er coins. These scraps and bits 0! silver pass current by their weight. and their purity is tested by 15119 ring. The Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking corporation issue paper notes of different values that save one from carry- ing loads of these clumsy Mexican dollar! about with one, but the bank notes are as clumsy in proportion. They are all over six inches long and four inches wide, of a tough, ï¬brous per, as thickas blotting paper, andas abby as so in h dirty calico, which they chiefly resemb Those diploma-sized notes of the Bank of Eng- land are small and compact by compari- muu mo Dam“ “A.“ vvâ€"‘â€"~V ' - son, and every common-sense traveler cries for Mitkiewicz and his syndicate to come with the great bank and do away with the ugly Mexican and the clumsy English notes. A great proportion of Chinge talentg Amust he employedzin U111†0016A“: mwv â€"- -__‘ _ Judge eomgfeiting Chinese (johns, to from the numbers about and the wax-ines- with which every_ one accepts one of the 24‘ ‘--_-A W10“ Wmuu owes] vuv â€"'v-:_~ V coins. A most clever counterfeit passed off on me was one that was plainly pure silver and newly minted. An expert rap- ped it sharply with his pen-knife, and the top fell off like the lid of a box, and dia- closed an interior of pure pewter ï¬lling in the thin shell of silver. At the Amerié can schedule of wages, two dollars of I silversmith’s time had been used to plane oï¬'insthinshaving thetopof the dol- lar, dig out the solid part and ï¬ll up the cavity with lead, and bring the deceptive seventy-cent dollar down to a silver value at ten cents or lamâ€"Cor. St. Louis Globe A STATISTICAL obtained by man has been taken from placer deposits, and our American exper- ience has been no exception to the gener- al rule,†ream-lied ain- experienced min- . , _A_‘_ -_,1 rule, Lcumnvu. u... 'â€"r'*" , \ in operator in speaking of the past and fugure of this valuable product the other evening. “Previous to 1847 our total old production amounted to $12,000,000 ’ut between 1847 and 1887 about 31,- 750,000,000, were contributed to our stock of gold. Of this nearly three- fourths came from placer deposits. In 185056 we obtain more than $50,000,000 Ber annum in gold frothe placers of alifornia, and almost nothing from gold- bearing veins. Now, with an annual pro- duction of $30,090,000 about one-half is VVVVV __ 1.-- from placers. Our own territory has been so thoroughly explored that no con- siderable superï¬cial deposits of gold are likely to be discovered, and nearly the Emma thing can be saidof the entire world. “In the northern extension of our west- ern mountain ranges in British Columbia and Alaska there are probably important deposits of gold. It is likely, however, to come from this region in a. moderate but perean stream, and not in a flood. Great difï¬culty will attend the working of those mines on account of the cold, long winters and the difï¬culty in trans- ' supplies. Unless the minu should prove richer than expected there may be a. dearth of gold in the near fu- ture. In this Allegheny belt of moun- tains, in this country, there are large de- posits of gold, but they are difï¬cult to nun :_j___L_ -nA mmvnmnm ï¬x Still industry and peneveranee may make them pay a proï¬t. Menoo may be expected to turn out 01,000,000 s year, but no more, The west coast of South America 'elds little silver. ‘ ‘ ‘Columbia, enezuels and Brazil hue, on the contrary, always been producer: of gold. It is estimated that from Brazil elone more than $1,000,000,“ in gold were obtaineddur‘ the ï¬rst 300years after the advent of e Portuguese. Co- lumbia end Venezuela are now yi ' shout 84,000,000 each snnuelly and ttle :nore than that can he expected intln uture. luv.â€" v1 “Auctrelie produces about 830,000,000 3 an and we can not hope for more then £000,000 email from Alis.‘ The: will cover it all. don’t feu- thet you end I will ever Iufl‘er from c famine of gold, but unleu the North America: de- posit: ere richer then is expected some one will emfâ€"N. Y. Ma“ and Earns: “Probably nine-tenths, of all the gold 7! l- 1--.. Gm": â€"I_t bu boon utimptad. that s man wuld hue to consume 1n flex-y twenty- !our hours, Iixty-Iev'en foot of 3 saw nine feetincircumfmoe, in 9:11th can a much in proportion to his bulk to the rod-bran, who-o daily food in consider-m! :- uinlent to In oath-worm fourteen eat :12. nailing In CM!“- mine in Gold. L m owns my mun.- nsnxa mama. - - v_., USU my Study, if you have intellectâ€"4m some young men who don’t know whether they have any or notâ€"improve it. Many hard-worked men have acquired profound educations by heing studious dunng small intervals of lemure. Get an hour a day ' half‘of Evyzxiï¬Ã©an get no more. Devow u... .. it to study of the Biple, and divide the thirty ramming minutes, ash-enemy, botany sgciillgeology. Do this Summons menu nnvnmrnnnmonm m AMERICA um anorn. W5 0' Us J w"; - V in life with the principle. man, come what will. ‘â€"I h glint Wrecks pre need a fter our earth Bad ceased to be a molten mass, are the - â€"- mL an“ int-tall Ma cemu W uw u mv.--â€" ___,V, ' herd, crystalline and much contorted Ibcks named by the late Sir W. E. Logan Laurentian, and which are hu-ghely deve- loped‘in the northern parts of t e North America. and Europe, and in many other regiOns. So numerousand extensive, in- deed, are the exposures of these rocks, that We have good reason to believe that they underlie all the other formations of our- continents, and are even world-wide in their distribution. In the lOWer part of this {great system of rocks. which, in some p at least, is thirty thousand feet in th ckness, We ï¬nd no traces of the existenceof {my living thing on the . - u , ___A.:-.‘ 1“ 6L- Laurentian rocks are found Which indi- cate that there were already land and We. ter, and that the waters 3nd possibly the land were already tenagtcd by living be- â€" - _L:-L oer, auu umu qu u..-..-- .____ ‘ _ land were ahead haunted by living be- ings. The great god: of limestone which exist. in.thi.s part of the system furnish mostly oï¬ganieâ€"thnt is, they cows; 01 accumulatedremains of shells, corals, and other hard parts of marine a. ' which arecomposed of calcium carbonate, which the animals obtain directly from their food, and indirectly from the cal- careous matter dissolved in theses-water. In like manner great beds 0! honore ex- ist in the Laurentizm; but in later form- tious the determining cause of the accumu- lations of such beds is the partial deoxi- in the Laurentisn limeBtOnes. which in- dicate the presence at least of one of the lower types of marine animals. Where animal life is, we my fairly infer the existence of vegetable life as Well, since ’ ' .,,4__ Jew: cm- _ r’ea of others have tried that came ï¬xing this winter and failed. If you are trotting glong mth your hands unto your - L L_ L‘__; -_ .mMï¬- “V""% ‘-""'D ""“ a ‘ ' " . - - ears, and you attempt to turn on icycom- er, the equilibrium is destroyed and you might as ~well sit down. He sat clown. A dozen or more pedestrians laughed ‘ hearti- ly. He looked indignant, of course, and. went off wï¬h enmJured expression of countenance, One of those whohsd witnessed his discomï¬tum' followed overtook him, and said: - “Beg on, but you fell down back there. gaudthe crowd butme laughed. I didn't. I never do. " The victim looked at the manin s cold, clamniy sort of way for a. few seconds and then went on. He had not gone s hun- dred feet when he was overtaken, and the man said: You may think I di'd, but I didn't. Sonia of ’em yelled out: He! he! he!’ and . - ,,L 1â€"... -A‘nm'l emwnw UL Vvscwv-v my .__ , the plantis' the 01:1 reducer of food for the animalâ€"Su- illiam Dawson, I'M Popular Science Monthly- some tittered;1ne-ne-nus pun wan m I always am.†i You'goon, exclaimed the fallenman, In high dndgeon. But you fell down. And what of it. But I didn't laugh. I never do. a don’tyantyouto lay upanything W me. ‘ Theotherwalkedonagain, buthewu once more overtaken and appealed to: . Youwon’tlay it up against me, will LVI "V:- v on- Kyou? When yo; "vre'n‘t 531m some 'of the cgowdkughed till they nearly went doublc but I n‘ever smiled. Never do. One Seller cicclorodo :- anaemia cuicully “1:03 stumpooftrou. Inotoodo! doutothcgrmmdthootnpo‘oro hon dzhhnfutï¬ï¬mthom new! whcnthomowioupcn‘flopclnd. §v§e§i>§7$or§i cured of rhomï¬n. ' ï¬lm W?! 053mm $93â€th A .__‘_ I... .A 1.6: in cans Coma“. Tile Oldest nooks. ï¬e Didn‘t Mll- have 3 mm LINDSAYIONT; POST 3w this man baton 1’ Witnessâ€"‘ Yes.’ ‘Hnd he came before you went? ‘ No.’ ‘Is thelpyour eggs what you say was-tale? ‘Would you lave recognized than a you had seen them before they were but here 7’ , ‘ $es; I would have knowed they! ‘ Speak grammatic. you mm ; It ain't mp0: to my ‘ have know ;' you shpnld by ‘ have know! 'â€"Cincinmti Enquxrer. couragement. It is better to help then v hinder, but the ham- i; onions shimmy thmwarailroad trainofl the lit†A ï¬reman was trying to reach from the top of a ladder a poor woman who ran imploring help at the window of a burning house. One among the crowd below cried : ‘ You can’t do it, come down.’ He was already sufï¬ciently discouraged by the GM ti, Was somewhat bln'ned and almost cho ed by the smoke. He began to descend, and was leaving the woman to her fate, when a man shouted: ‘Give him a cheer.’ The vast crowd made the air ring with their eneo ement, whereupon the ï¬reman atop again ascended to the window, and, aided by the cheering of the multitude, wrought a seeming miracle and brought the woman Iafelï¬to the ground. ‘ ‘ve him a cheer' a good motto.â€"Chriet Church Quarterly. - Portions of Old Home are now (13 posting, notnbl the Ghetto, or Jo ' gnu-tot, and ow Rome in incrownglo nab thatjta gyoat uprising Buildingl look - ‘7 V__L unn- ‘. mu: um nâ€" O"'" _r_._ _ not unlike those of No; York, w re it not for that poetry of color-pinth ow. term cotta and pale blueâ€"m 17 oh the‘ Italianuo much delight. Greet chenga‘ are going on over the Eternal City...» eevatiom in the Forum, and elsewhere, are being liberally pushed, and sanitary measure: enforced. Whole streetsofï¬no buildings are replacing ruin and ' and.ui£itathree hundred and eixty churches were not enough, St. John Inter-an, where all the pope: are grown- ed, hubeen enlargedtoasurpnnngw tent, while St. Paul beyond the walls, which to my mind is quite a: splendid ai St. Peter's, has now a complete facade. us how to behave in society, how to do- mean ourselves at the church, the theatro and the lyceum. But the place above all others wheres man or womanshould know how to oondgxct themselves with pro- priety is at home. The greater portion of even person’s social life is‘spent at home, every rson'a socuu an m spew. m. mum, and, erefore, it is a logiml deduction that, if good manners are essential to mu- tual happiness, they slould be brought into use at home as in‘ society: am III-Smut â€"4 111W uac av nun-v u. .â€". _._‘. The great secret of home. happiness in the absolute repregaion of‘ hunger. Then .a‘..;:â€". unv uuwouw -vr- -_v_ V , are much more eloquout an?! efl'ective ways of expressing disapproval, than by an outburst ofâ€" angry words. If your brother leaves the dooropen, never tell him of it. Go and 01188 it without a word. If you tell hime it, it. sends s nervous quiver througl his frame that will culminate in abut of temper ex- pressed. But if you class the (100» your- self you give him a sibnt object-lesson that he will not forget. A housewife’s fgog igusuallngood, arid MO“! : mm fail: in ngoodbut diï¬eult - 1.- _~,A,-,,,_ - niobium i'ebgls, The true art of living: to hve with- out friction ; never 5c (1 wise man or woman an scold most P°‘ tently and efl'ectively ad without sum 3 wortâ€"Yankee Blade. Abontdght yarn I w you from want hm. P... deucdblnï¬ow .11! wonderful m di- coxn lately cured me I I unlblo one o! cum or am rhenm. I alt now tau you win: Mann-Imus have , done for me. On .. mmupjm ifs-UM†u Onixo‘u. Budtor“no'w and! 55.60“» .- "I.†W u; mv-ut. .u Dino m_ Caxton. Thereareirmummbhkwkï¬'mhfh I BURNING SURE LEG Outicurg Caucus Remedies. Give um I cw. napplneu- a nome- model-n Home. ‘lvent exercuo of the to dlow for the z. â€1......“ ." one, or even Inch mil eventunlly followâ€"Inn. Ivaâ€"v mpg-1601's worked. did ' '0'†den-hi! amount of nuhms nï¬uiaw‘ °h ï¬re lace hmwithonhï¬e wood-y rdiq oft e v: mmmor, and the min“ ' dad km come to hold am. A oom- welcomes her visitor m thro ' shudfnlof ' eoonelinto oï¬re, than, inspires]: theix- cheery blue. tho qouip and the c ntmr flow merrily on. 35-69.†E; Eund a ‘W" four :00: wide by sixty fget. 10% W113 twelve 7 .m k in wood ï¬n- Ml ' cumming Olen-mm replace inn withouï¬lle Ymkg4 DAILY FOR ROCHESTER O 1.9mm PC mm .m l’. 0. Turns. Aunt. um - NORTH KING cmu nos WA! A! prune-moat Pom. ‘ mum um aim-Inc 1-nt we! 94 $09-9- OldChEm â€"A traveler}? JG} ESTURION AXE ONTARIO STEAMBOAT COMPANY consume an MAY, No other brand of Tobacco has ever en: joyed such an immense sale and popularity in the same period as this brand of Cut Plug and Plug Tobacco. Oldest Cut Toéaao manufac- turers in Canada. 0U) CHEM (CUT PLUG.) CutPlng.lOc. gnome-10¢- ilbl’lngJOc. Wigwam 7’. 121th MONTREAL. (PLUGJ Navigaflon. “In“! mm inwoodï¬aflkï¬! fugg. m u lot-o“- Nails, far and Building Pager, gBUILDERs. Two portable Waterous Engines, l2 h. p.; in working order, for sale cheap. Apply to FASHIONABLE For Spring and Summer, . «IIETTAIGIEYpIG’ Just Receivedâ€"American Straw Shapes in flats and Bonnetsâ€"with Trimmings to Match. Io Trouble to Show Goods. Wk WALL PAPERS â€maulggï¬m sun: Finest lines of Boy’s Express Wagons GOFFIIS, GASKETS AND SHROUDS Furniture Dealer and ALWAYS IN STOCK. a was manual, m. an 14. ramâ€"n 1y momma-mm nmmclroan Arumnnnounm m. In! 19. 1891â€"108. _ fins O'Brien. G. A. Methemll. 50â€â€1 ONE DOOR EAST BENSON HOUSE. Putty, Loo/Is, Hinges, etc., etc. MILLINERY' 323m. :7, P. 13:19:} J0}!!! MAXI/IS. BICYCLES. The HUHBEB SAFETY, ROVER SAFETY, and the PBIOHO SAFETY. J. BIGGS, Kent-st, Lindsay, Rom. um. mumps. nnnucrlol ll BA'I'Es. mailman mm Al!) EMA! 1'0 1.!" mm. m mummy. 81MB LIIE. } mm mm NEW YORK and GLASGOW mm» yaw.†mu am M I. the m d Imus sgnLER WE: : Mm: “a mama; “me murmur â€a“. ï¬mmwmm. mm 4 23rd Day of July. 1892: NOTICE TO CBEDII‘ORS. non-rum P1900. rm cmuamtwlmw New A dvertisemen ts. a..." 'â€" m“‘"i£iim MQEJL mama-um! >. s. PORTER. Mud“ Trough Eggs. “a: u LINDSAY. um autumn. Founder SERVICE 0! fâ€"hbmher's ‘fï¬n CANAD) " ‘nvnsrunm; â€â€ï¬‚'flfl (caud- lag-ï¬ne memo-elm: m In Inn] W â€"â€" 11738] M Inn “3â€": â€"w 'â€" ' Wm. B. L. an M1 ,1)“ Louis anur 0 mt is believed [c I c of Mexico ( â€Olin,“ h mum in #_I.‘I lhn MAOM â€"_â€"â€" Bounsu. t â€"M d. u s! Brain. m n.-- 'lngnchol. the now: “ w guillotlncd .1 ,a. body 0! u mun M river non Lew: .15. body of on not new†w» foul :..n|gmeen deaths tr “anthem cum: rlâ€"cincrleo Unwfln'n I flammd In a cute MI! n'flht‘ “J.“ I. reported the M m hvlnz been dcl "qua-Eton. in. Ontario ROVOH w 810. 000 w the rel‘ â€400313:er- -1. Astnkhtn :5: 94 “with cholera in one‘ up the disease. Jawu'd Comm)â€, sum», w» km: rat Jervis. 5-Y- .13.. loam: tube h- mmuof «51.3; not!!! to $20,0U' ’- wife of a mum Km do 15 Bounce. w 1.“ week. 41’. Cyrus “117ml PM of the Aunt! Ck city on Tuetday. -A numb" c! cam: Wiles ue din-cumin“ H o Cstholic Cnuuou -â€"'n|e dunno; a‘ h’u wins from. 3M] .nnlvldma escme‘ â€"chenl men v~rr~ -decflon no: c'. ‘m “and. Th“""’- ' V‘ ‘ -chulg-I A \\ J ' “at: eulcwr 53' ‘ r1 w 'u Ormtmi 5w: mm sud hr r crme -â€"A nix-yestâ€"old be)" 1 any un into me are Wednesday evwinfl 5' .Jmc Fiewellinsz. a my. 00%.. was in-tsn ah: whale pin-hick hl -Sevenl employee! but in Newark. 5-3‘ “y . g“ cxp.o=ic -NemeCon}o:. owd “(0.3qu 511313.} “wankâ€"e into the med that the .A .uvme steamel m at the was {I m City of CM -A workman mme my 0! In: week in m at construction '- drowned at the .Tthody o! Erna: Cm Monroe“ dro‘ has picked up at * "only 21 years at u â€"Noble Kinney. a !I . formerly. it 1'8! mum suicide 2)! M river below I W Herald, 80 ma. tmly of I in. wu- kmcd by A can, Man. the -A terriï¬c storm HI the 0! Manitoba 0: a. doing a great 5 atom. 3nd â€"'.l'ho toul number "at the Mcameai 3 “lb. ended Jam 34 m tor the some De“ â€A! More steal! lake Pearls. 111.. do -An clam-year 016 mu cf 35 Migvh unhol- ot the pun- u bodie- huve no {I -A whollfule uh po co upon ta city Wedneedc! Ila-pm keepers am -1'ho C. P. R. exv . I! wn spa-cub“ us, momma nn 0‘ “PM Mann. In 1 lu- otonn. The! â€of. â€"Four employ-ecu o ‘ Kimmie. two m M on: In 3 rowbol -L W. Pub. shoe “Intact! onlclde 1 m. Discour- ‘muvo “to In: 8h†been the can ~0¢flae two hund “in New York « “a "my“ ‘3} In. h: “min juveni -no Itflklna ml: more trout “I. (ox-waded to god nu Mod :1: Shoohc -On Sunday st A ~ Rhoda. two yo‘ '6.“ of I 223'!“- Thex '0" W people were â€dun: 5: Sum! ’TheVSpgnlahr you}. Enos-V oi bu '. FRIDAY. Mateo . ghl