T*- V * -v; 5 mmrnm ?AW, Stock Not proving Faust st; m ,:/S*%. r'-:;" '" "• ;* -'-r-"~V':." "'"'• -;"-r:~' '• •••_",; .• .,'/.{v; " , -7; V"- .. ' ".. - '•••"'.• •--•;••• -• * - - . • - ^ .. . * >*<-•%\ , . . . : s ' t, •*»* •&? *• ** < *1*118 KcHENBY PLAIHD£ALEK« MteMBUTRYV *' *tu *fk »••• <.». ;."*. *•*• . f „-i5 *• . * * ' to Pteac Portal of Peace Is a concrete structure In the form of a gateway. It is located at Blaine, Wash., and was dedicated September B, 1921, In honor of the peace between the United States and Canada, which had lasted for more than 100 years without a break. The memorial, which cost $40,000, stands 100 yards from the' international boundary where the forty-ninth parallel meets Boundary bay. Green'* August Flower The remedy with a record of fiftylight years of surpassing excellence. 411 who suffer with nervous dyspeplia, sour stomach, constipation, indigestion, torpid liver, dizziness, headaches, comlng-up of food, wind on stomach, palpitation and other Indications of digestive disorder, will find GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER an effective and efficient remedy. For Bfty-elght years this medicine has been successfully used In millions of households all over the civilized world. Because of i^s merit and pop- Blarity GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER is found today wherever medicines arc •old. 80 and 90 cent bottles.--Adv. High Percentage of Low Grades Caused by .Poor Breeding. by tha United Stat* Qf Agriculture.) In spite of the numerous methods of stimulating the improvement of live stock and in spite of the increased profits which come from such Improve' ment, says the bureau of animal industry, United States Department of Agriculture, the need for such improvement is still apparent on almost every hand. Go to any of the public stock yards, say the government observers. and you will find only a small percentage of the meat animals in the highest market grades. Only about 5 per cent of the cattle received al Chicago, the largest live stock market, grade as prime .or choice. Sometimes insufficient feeding keeps down the grade, but the principal cause of the high percentage of low grades is poor Ha* Many Meaning* phrase "in limbo" may be taken to mean an indefinite border region in the Intermediate state, nearer hell or heaven according to the class of souls there detained; a place of confinement ; a prison; a place, real or imaginary, to which things worthless or foolish may be relegated. •top the Pate. The hurt of a burn or a cut stops when Cole's Carbolisalve is applied. It heals •uickly without scars, fcc and 00c by HI) druggists, or send 30c to The J. W. Cole Co., Rock ford, UL.--Advertisement. Ancients thought there were demons •nd hobgoblins in the air. There were; ihey were germs. taONARc& DUTCH FROCK** COCOA . WALITY jfor 70 Year* " IWtD, MURDOCH 6 CO. ° mm Chicago - Boat-- -PftttUi^i -- Wfwlbilc Permanent roads anagoad investment Why --•»»'-- America^ Mutt Have More Paved Highways Almost every section oi the United States is coofronted by a taffic problem. Month by this problem is becoming more and move serious, Hundreds oi cars pass a given point every hour on many oi our state and county roads. Downtown city streets are jammed with traffic. Thmk. too, how narrow many cf oar toads ate, and how con* paradveiy iaw pavad highways than aw ta p»ci|Miihin ID or steadily increasing a umber dan. If tha motor vahfcls tan eontfcne giving the eccnoaaic service of which it is capable, we nraac have move Concrete highway and widen tboeer tetsol population. Every dttaen should Mgbwayraadsoi hie cow with his local authorite. Your highway offirials will da thnr part if given your euppan. Why postpone nwering dris need? An early start) PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION Ui West Wesbfajgton stieet CHICAGO •4 NatiommlOrgtmiitritm to J mdSatmd 0» Um* ofCumm Offices in 29 Qdae Dairying Hampered.. Similarly, the dairy industty Is ham I'ered by many inefficient cows. The uverage milk production of the dairy cows in this country Is scarcely two thirds "that of the cows In some foreign countries, and less than one-third that of the well-bred and well-managed dairy herds here. Horses, mules, sheep, goats and poultry are equally in need of improvement. Better Breeding Seen. At the same time the Department of Agriculture calls attention to the possibilities for animal improvement, it does not overlook the fact that far sighted and energetic stockmen and farmers have done much In the direction of better breeding and have de veloped thousands of herds and flock* to which the foregoing comments do not apply. Nevertheless, the average quality and productive power of American live stock are said to be much lower than need be in the light of what is now 'known of animal breeding, feeding and management. Warning Issued Against Quack Poultry Remedies Poultry men will do well to investigate certain remedies claimed to free the poultry flock of mites, lice and other vermin, according to a warning issued by H. C. Severin, state entomologist of the South Dakota State college. Advertisements have appeared at various times claiming that these remedies sold in tablet or liquid form, when placed in the drinking water, would rid the flock of both external and internal pests. These claims are ridiculous and unreasonable, according to Severin. He finds upon examlna tiftn that the liquids consist of either lime-sulphur solution, which is the ordinary orchard spray, or is only a slieep dip. The tablets are composed largely of calcium sulphide with characteristics similar to lime-sulphur solution or else contain sulphur mixed •with Iron rust Poultry men have been paying as high as a dollar an ounce for this material when in reality it should cost less than two dollars per gallon. The claim is made that the fowl will get the remedy into their food tube by drinking the treated water. From there It is supposed to go into the blood system and then to the skin, where it destroys the mites. Such a claim is unreasonable and entirely unwarranted. Acreage Grown to Com in 1924 Shows Decrease Eighty-four per cent of the acreage growi^o corn in 1924 was used for grain, as compared with 86 per cent in 1923, according to the United States Department of Agriculture. The total area for all purposes was 105.012,000 acres of which 87,838,000 acres was used' for grain. Another 6,090.000 acres were cut for silage, and 11,084,- 000 "hogged down" or used for forage. Much of the 1924 corn going Into silos was unfit for luisklng, as it was Immature or frosted, the department says. Ordinarllly much of the corn cut for silage could be utilized for grain, if desired. The immaturity of the crop also increased the quantity cut for forage. Cheaper Grain Ration The high price of corn has caused cattle feeders to look about for a cheaper grain ration. This situation demands a careful study of the feeding value of different feeds and combina tlons of feeds before Investing. At prevailing prices of feeds, the cheapest and best grain ration that can be (ed fattening cattle consists of a combination* of corn, six parts, and cotton seed cake or meal, one part, these proportions by weight. There are many feeds now being offered that may cost less per ton, but they cost considerably more oa the basis of actual feeding •aim. Now for Next ear's Potato JCrop Every Grower Should Arrange to Get Best Seed. or the bumper potato crop Just harvested, 454,000,000 bushels (a record for the United States) and the relatively low price obtained, many farmers will be inclined to delay consideration of next year's planting, says Prof. E. V. Hardenburg of the New lork State College of Agriculture at Ithaca. This Is poor procedure, he declares. He cites an old and fairly safe axiom--"plant potatoes when seed Is cheap." Good seed is available In abundance and at relatively low cost Therefore, says Professor Hardenburg, every grower of potatoes who has any doubt about the quality of his seed stock should arrange at once to get the best strain of his particular type as close to home and as cheaply as possible, even if it is his near neigh bor who has it. Successful potato marketing begins with successful potato production; high yielding and high quality potatoes cannot be -produce* without good seed. A very ordinary bill of 'potatoes' producing only* two average sized tu bers (eight ounces each) when spaced 3 - ieet by 18 inches In the row will yield at the rate of 161 bushels an acre. Yet, he points out, this is 50 per cent above the average yield of New iork state. The reason? Too many missing, weak and diseased hills lu our potato fields. Yet figures and common sense show that it costs as much to plant, cultivate and spray a poor stand as It does a good stand. , The potato Is one of the most expensive field crops grown, principally because of the high labor and fertllirer cost of production. Better yields from a smaller acreage Is one of the best ways to lower cost of production, and this means better stands of healthy, high-yielding plants. Well selected seed potatoes will outyield average seed stock by 50 per cent, demonstrators all over the country have shown. Durlns the past season the department of vegetable gardening of the state college of agriculture tested 47 Strains of the best Green Mountain, Kural, lind Irish Cobbler seed stocks available in order that the relative yield and disease content of even these might be determined. Several of these seed strains showed no disease whatever. The average yields of all strains of Rurals, Green Mountains, and Cobblers, were 380, 342, and 24? bushels per acre respectively, and growers Interested in obtaining new and better seed potatoes for next year's planting should Inquire early either from their county farm bureau agent or from the department of vegetable gardening of the state college of agriculture. OF REJOICING AND LAVISH REPAST Timothy Hay Is Losing Caste Among Dairymen It Is too bad. This old friend of farmers, timothy hay, is moving to the rear benches. Competition Is becoming too strong for him. Even now, litis back almost in line with good oat straw. Most discouraging, indeed. At the Michigan Agricultural college, tests were carried tin to determine the relative value of roughages In the cows' ration. On the basis of a cow weighing 1,200 pounds It took Just one pound more of the concentrated feed to make up the difference between the feeding values of timothy hay and oat straw. ( - The cows receiving an allowable of 12 pounds of timothy hay also had W pounds of silage and 11 pounds of a grain mixture containing 4 pounds of cornmeal. 4 pounds of ground* oats. 2 pounds of cottonseed meal and 1 pound of oil meal. The other group of cows had a quantity of oat straw equal to the timothy hay fed the first group, and one more pound of the same mixture of grain, plus the quantity of silage. If clover hay is substituted for the timothy, then only 9 pounds of th» grain mixture is needed. With mixed hay the grain requirement Is 10 pounds; while with alfalfa hay the quantity of grain is cut to 8 pounds. Tell Sex in Geese The sex In geese can absolutely be determined providing one will exercise a little time and observation. The gander is generally slightly larger and coarser than the goose with a longer, thicker neck and larger head. The gander also has a shriller cry than the goose. Some geese raisers claim that they can distinguish the geese by the body shape. Handling Gumbo Soil The best plan of handling heavy gmnbo soli which is well drained, is to seed It to alfalfa and leave it In a crop like alfalfa, which requires no cultivation, for as long periods as possible. Heaviness of the soil can also be improved by growing sweet clover and by adding manure or some other form of organic matter. The incorporation of organic matter is a much more practical method of Improving It than the application of lime, says L. B. Call, head of tlie agronomy department, K"""" State Agricultural college. RBMRctste (J, CHICAGO, NO. 7- .Feeding Rodent Pests Pocket gophers, prairie dogs, and ground squirrels are estimated to eat K.OOO.(HiO tons of grass a year in Arizona alone. Even at 50 cents a tan, this grass would be worth $4,000,000. Featuring this message the biological survey has prepared and distributed a poster in Arizona, which also asks, "Why feed rodent pests when you can kill them for one-half cent each and then produce mot tie and aheepr In 1925 higher yields will mean lower unit costs. • e • Business must do for farm iparketing what science is doing for farm pro* doction. „ ., • • • Sweet clover will produce more pasture to the acre than any other legume. • • • The farmer who says, "I don't know j where my money has gone," should keep records in 1925. Alfalfa pasture is Hie Hfj first green thing on the farm In the spring. and remains green all summer. • • • 8ome folks say to put a bowl of apples on the table and keep it filled. But a better plan is to keep it emptied. ; • • • -- * Soy beans pre remarkably droughtresistant. They thrive with great vigor through seasons when corn Is a drought-stricken failure. • • • Soy beans have no special soil requirement. If properly treated they will grow on any type of soil that will produce any standard crop. . • • • , If the hay crop is short, a nice crop of sweet clover can be harvested after wheat harvest, about September 1, which makes the finest kind of hay. Fijian* Celebrate W hole-H eartedly. Hi Fiji, which hue tn*| r»t»hr*t*<t 80 years' of British rule, amid public rejoicing, the art of feasting has, according to Sir Maynard Hedstrom, commissioner from Fiji, been brought to a more robust pitch than in any other country In the world. On the anniversary day nearly ev ery village in the 250 Islands of the Fijian group had Its ceremonial feast, at which enormous quantities of food were divided among participants who have been making the event the chief topic of conversation for many months Hospitality and good-fellowship Are Inborn characteristics of every native Fijian. They are characterises that have been handed down to hiiu from long lines of savage ancestors, who. when not engaged in lighting their enemies, delighted to entertaiii their friends to lavish repasts. In his everyday eating the Fijian is frugal enough, but upon ceremonial occasions all his Inherited traits come into play, and he organizes feasts upon a Gargantuan scale. In the center of the feast ground, upon a structure of bamboo, the foot! is thickly piled. The delicacies are numerous and romantic; pigs roasted whole, wild birds stuffed with spices, baked snakes, taro, yams, pineapples, and all the luscious fruits of Fiji. About this edifice the guests group themselves. They sit on their haunches. My in ruffles of dyed feathers and kills of colored cloth. They maintain a rigid and respectful silence, but every brown dace Is turned upon the stack of food with an expression of the keenest interest and pleasure. To and fro about the stack move the masters of ceremony. They scan the food and the guests witli anxious eye* for theirs Js the difficult tusk of making a fair division. A tactless distribution of the food may very easily cause serious offense or even lead to blows among the guests. At a recent feast a huge shark, wrapped up like a mummy In palm leaves and baked whole, formed the supreme culinary achievement. The method of catching the monster was spectacular In the extreme. From his canoe a valiant native lassoed the shark by the tail and then played It like a salmon, until, exhausted, it fell an easy victim to the speurs of bis frien#*;v:-- Actor*» Ready Wit As a young man. Walter l'rlcbard Raton had the good fortune to he; - the 'famous comedian, Peter F. Dailey. spring one of his best Impromptu Jokes during a burlesque performance of •The Merry Widow." In his book, "The Actor's Heritage," he describes the scene In which Dailey Is leaving a restaurant where the prices were something terrific. As he was making bis exit, the comedian accidentally stepped on something and started to fail. Being an extremely heavy man, there was actual danger. The other players sprang to catch him and the audience gasped. Hut he righted hliuself and then in silence stoo]>ed down and picked up a tiny object on which he had slipped. The play stopped. In an ex|>ectant silence, Dailey drew out a. pocketbook. counted the money In It and then deposited the total sum la the heud waiter's hands. "Here," he said, "to 93*2. 1 stepped on a bean." Ym* and No Tommy had been looking forward to Wednesday, on which day the druggist promised to give all the children a bird with each chocolate soda. Wednesday arrived and Tommy hurried to the drug store so he would get his "prize" before they were all. gone. When he paid his check he looked at the clerk and asked whether he might hare his bird. "Why." answered the man behind the counter, "You got a swallow, didn't you J" It was a very sad but a very Impressive lesson to Tommy. He decided the old saying, "nothing for nothing" was the truest ever spoken.-- Indianapolis News. B**t Not to Bm Hatty The earth is neither round, fiat, square nor hollow, but is crooked and shaped Bomewhat like a dumb-bell, sa.vs Charles Sarles of Elmlra, N. Y. This Is too bad, because it means that all the old geographies in the schools which show the world to be round will now have to Le thrown out. Perhaps, however, it will be wise not to be In too much of a hurry about it, as some one else may shortly tell us that the earth Is three-cornered, or shaped like a doughnut or a string of sausages or a bunch of bananas.--Pathfinder Magazine. Poking'* Trolley Line The first trolley line in China's capital was recently opened with great formality, and with the drinking of tea. After an address by the chairman of the French board of directors and Chinese officials the eight gaudll.- decorated cars started on an inspection trip over the new road, which Is limited to the western part of the city. Other tracks are being laid. Opposition of the rickshaw men^pras overcome with the promise to build factories In which they would be employed when thrown oat of work by the street cars. Day of Small Town* Coming in America? the modern city is doomed Is the rather startling statement of Hon-- ry Ford. According to Drew Pearson, writing in Automotive Industries, Mr Ford declares that in the America of the future there will tte no ni«nini(i)h collections of skyscrapers and teeming t enements in which millions of people are cooped within a few square miles of territory. Iustead, the country will be traversed by chains of small towns clustering around individual factories and inhabited by people who will divide their time between factory and farm. The picture of the America of tomorrow which Henry Ford paints, says Mr. Pearson, is a particularly rosy one. In his fiplnlon* the passing of the big city will mean less crime, less poverty, less wealth, less unrest and less of that fierce, nervous strain under which myriadfe of our city dwellers live today. Something like this, agrees the Philadelphia Record, will have to Iw brought about in order to correct the growing monstrosity of our big cities. There are some four hundred of tlies»» In the world whose populations exceed one hundred thousand, says the Washington Post. In Mr. Ford's opinion: "The overhead expense of living In such places is becoming unbearable. The wist of maintaining interest oo Sehts. of keeping up water supply, sewerage and sanitary systems, the cost of traffic control and of policing great masses of people Is so great as to offset the benefits of the city. Thfe cities are getting topheavy and are about doomed. * "Industry in the future Is going ts be organized on a big Scale--somewhat along the lines of the vertical trusts Competition, however, will force big Industry to move its various parts to the country, where lubor Is steudy and overhead costs low. "At the same time. It Is nonsense to say that because tl»e dtles are overcrowded everybody ought to move to the farm. There must be a balance between the two. The farm has Its dull season, when the farmer can «-ome Into the factor}', and the factory has its dull seas«>n when the workmen can gCt oui on the land to help produce food."--From the1 literary,Digest. ' Find City of David Excavations In progress for six months in Opel, close to the area where stood the Jewish temple, seem to have revealed this as the indisputable site of the city of David, according to Itev. J. Garrow Duncan, director of the Palestine exploration fund. His explorations have led him to what he I* convinced Is the eastern side of David's city, where he has discovered not only a wall 27 feet thick and which he has traced for 200 yards, but also a magnificent tower of David. He Is certalr he has discovered the real Jeltuslte wall of the fort, width was standing when David took It in the year 1000 B. C„ says the Kansas Cliy Times. The discovery of the remains of the ancient city of David is of great Interest to archeologists, who have long delta ted'" 1 he location of the original site of ancient Jerusialem. Mr. Duncan «ays in addition to finally settling the |H>int. lie has been uhle to prove the site where David's city stood has been continuously Inhabited for more than live thousand years, some of the pottery unearthed at Opel belonging to the cave-dwelling period of three thousand years U. C. and before. But Not the Collection Sntkit Gulch, a metropolis of the great open spaces, had at one time supported a small church, but the population had slowly dwindled until It was Impossible longer to collect enough money to pay the parson's salary. The parson, therefore, doffed the cloth and established a lunch room near the station. One Sunday, night a traveler who had regularly passed Snoot Gulch dropped In at the lunch room and or dered supper* After having waited for more than a half hour without being offered \more than a glass of water, he called to the former parson. "Yes," replied that gentleman. - "I was Just wondering, parson, said the traveling man, "if you had cut ont the Sunday evening service."--Judge. Huge Illuminated Croat As a silent preacher, a huge cross, fashioned with steel beams after the manner of a skyscraper, has been erected on the heights of historic Mount Royal at Quebec. Electric lights will make the emblem visible at nighf, and because of its huge size and location on the lofty summit, the cross can be seen from a considerable distance even by day.--Popular Mechanics Magazine. Expert Evidence Corporal Stoggs (giving evidence) --I was on canteen duty at the time, sir, and I was in the row when the room began--I mean, sir, I was in the room when the row began--and 1 saw the accused. Private Noggs, whom I now identify, deliberately strike Sergeant Snooks. But the sergeant was too smart for him, sir; ha kit first Airbrake Thirty Year* Old The airbrake, the Invention of George Westinghouse, which revolutionized railway operations, Is now more than thirty years old, and It is used on more than two and a half million freight cars, not to mention all passenger cars on railroads throughout almost the entire world. This is the only railroad device that lias a universal use throughout the world. An Up-to-Date Proposal "Darling, will you make me the bap> plest of men in three letters meaning eternal bliss?" "My answer Is two letters meanioeteraal freedom.* . • Real "Dog* of The saying, "Let loose the dogs of war," once had a meaning. In the Middle ages dogs were sent out toward the cavalry of the enemy with kettles of burning resin on their backs, the odor, smoke and flame of which naturally excited the horses. A stoat Jacket of leather underneath the kettle protected the dogs In case tha bet resin was spilled. Often Work* -"Almost every girl wants te a rich man." "There aren't enough rich men ts go around. What's the next stepf ^ "Marry what offers and nag him e[ the ladder."--Louisville Courier-Jour nal. ,, . The Truly Worthy Man A truly worthy man should avdll naming himself; Christian piety annihilates the worldly me; worldly civil ity -hides and auffpreaacs IL--Poscai. Children Org; 5W}^\\\\VVVVVVVV'*'>' CUSTOM wwv "S mh MOTHKRFletcher's .Castoria is especially prepared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic attd Diarrhea; allaying Feverisftwesa arising therefrom, regulating the Stomach arnT Bowels, aids the assimilation oi 'Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Absolutely Harmless-No Opiates. Physicians --rcrywhcrc rccontn=n4 £(, How Herbert Tree Cot - Out of Bad Situation Wo book of memories of the latter tmrt'of the Nineteenth century would he complete without its quota concerning Herbert Tree. The late Sir Herbert was eccentric, "often deliberately and of set purpose." writes the author of "Some Victorian Men," "When in America he foolishly accepted an Invitation to address, privately. a fashionable audience. He completely forgot his promise until the time had arrived for him to appear. Naturally, he was totally unprepared. He rushed Into the large assembly room, crowded with expectant admirers, and observing a large mirror hanging on the wall at the hack of the platform from which lie was expected to give Ills address, dashed up to It, put -out his tongue tind surveyed the. reflection with dismay, striking an attitude of horror, und crying out dramatically: Tm III! I must see a thn-tor!' vanished from the building.'.' PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Rpm«>?esi Dudraff-dtapi Bair hlw Rostores Color aad B'«u!TtoGr»u4F*MU Htoeo60, c and tl W at Dl«e«hU- Chan Wta .fiBSS-N HINDERCORNS Bpnwfn Coras, C4* l -S.-. Ptr RTrtTlfi *11 M.n m Wanted It Tranalated Purchaser--What Is the charge for this battery? Oarageman--One and one-half volts. Purchaser--How much ta~ tiuit, In American money ? -- Amherst Lord Jeff. Compliments are so rare that Ihe false ones are believed. c(r., stops all p&to. ensure* eomfoft to Stsu. HIMOX Chemical Works, PTTEKUFM, H. T. Southern Farms For Dairy, Poultry. General Agrictifc tnre Farms range .">0 to 100 acres, goo# land with new house, barn, fencepk mild climate, etc. $2,."j00--eaelfe balance easy terms. Chamber df * Commerce, Rufaula. Alabama. Mixed Street Planting In a certain Cnllfwr.la city, where up to the present time all planting has been at the discretion, or better notion, of the property holders, soma queer combinations arise. For ex staple. the east side of one block shows one palm, an oleander, six elms, six tulips, one vacant lot frontage, twe umbrella trees, four maples. ona» Canary island palm and a walnut I Across from this mixture there are but 12 trees: two umbrellas, foilf palms and six elms. Another frharaCN terlstlc block runs four grevitlea^ tAvo maples and four lindens. Across are two maples, two chestnuts, tw» elms, six blank spaces, four han» thorns and two elms. Now Isn't thai a fine example of uniform planting New York Times. SAY "BAYER ASPIRIN" and INSIST! Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for Headache Neuralgia Lumbago Rheumatism Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proven directions. Bandy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets--Also bottles of 24 and 100--Druggists. iaWl Is lb) trade mirk of Ba/«r Haautectars ot MoooaceUcacidMter of StlicjUadl Colds Toothache Neurihs IAXATXVES and cathartics imiiifr J temporary relief only. Their coo. tinued use leads to permanent injury. In time, says an eminent physician, an almost incalculable amount of harm ia done by the use of pills, aalt% oudBGal wataMfc castor oil and the lika Bhysicians advise lubrication font Internal Cleanliness Medical science has found at last in Jobri» cation a means of overcoming constipsfr tion. The gentle lubricant, Nujol, pen** trates and softens the hard food wastjfc and thus hastens its passage through ani oat of the body. Thus, Nujol brings ia* ternal cleanliness. Niflol ia used in leading hospitals and is prescribed by physicians throughout tUt world. Nujol is not a medicine or laxa* tive and cannot grip* Like para it is harmless. Take Nqjol regularly and adopt tfafr habit of internal cleanlineea. For aale bjr •11 druggiflfe Nuiot UC.US.MT.ON; For Internal Cletmlmess •Wft'-Sii - .•« - ' - " ' -• irua A.1 -1 Mm