West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 15 Nov 1900, p. 6

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The abundance 01 the crop vario- ncoordimc to the oystern ot cultiva- tion adopted. and it is to be noted that the ntoriu told by early tuvolorl oi the prodigiouniy tort“. loll of Siberia mu only to oxcoptlonal years. At the preunt than. tho an- nual barn-t ad cereal crops in Siberin yields 100,000,000 ponds. or 2,880,960 sons. The harvest canal-u approxi- mately 0‘; Corn and our. 60 per cent; rye, 20 per cent; other cereals. 20 per oent. A‘ Wdusty ocean highway sounds al-l most incredible. Yet those who are (amilsiar with sailing ships know that no matter how carefully the docks may be washed down in the morning, and how little work of any kind may he done during the day. nevertheless,, it the decks are not swept at night- fall, an enormous quantity of dust wioLl quickly collect. 0! course, on the modern “liimcr” the burning of hundreds of tona of coal every twenty- !our hours. and the myriad: of toot (aisle daily, woulS account for aconâ€" “arable accumulation of dust, hat on a “wind-jamma,” manned with a Ina-en am or was, no mac-h dnat- . palm. agencies are at work. And yet the roaofib of sailing strip- show fiat they odhct more sea dust than do. 'a atcamar, which (a prohably M for by an. {act that whiz-i a. aunt-baa anoka hlowa olcar or! Q. .00 urge area of canvas h tho 0:51.: acta a adult Ordinary soil. before being lsft to lie fallow for s long period, can be plowed and sown for three or four years in succession; tho but black snrth can be cultivated from twenty- flvo to thirty your; South of the Tobolsh province there an fields which are know to have boon culti- vated unluterruptodly for mu hun- dred years. The gradual impoverishment ot the loll. however, be. compelled the term- ers to make use of manure. and on the northern borders of the cultivable none 01 the Tobolak province: the (olâ€" lowing rotation at crop: has been adopted; 1, rye; 2, nets, barley on corn; ,8 fellow. This zone contains approximately 54, 000,000 acres, with only 5,380,000 acres under cultivation. The system of cultivation in still primitive. The Land is first cleared. the trees are (ell- ed, etumpe are removed, or on the eteppee the nail in merely plowed. The ground 'I next sown with wheat for two or three yearn consecutively. It '- then allowed to lie inflow, and sub- eequently in again eow'n with wheat. This rotation is continued until the ground ehowe eigne of exhaustion The land is then left completely un- cultivated, and other fields are tilled. n! the government of Tomsk. Yenisei and Irkutsk Lying mat the Chineso frontier. It tho includes the region- watored by the Amur and the Us- nuri. aparnoly populated at present. but rapidly being settled by immigra- tion under the reduced rates on the Great Siberian Railroad. now com- pleted to Strotbnsk. out of Lake BaikaL Del and Irkutsk. leaving out of con- Iideration their most northerly dis- trict: and the mountainous portion. This comprise. at present the {our government: of ToboLsk. Tomsk. Yoni- outs can b. grown, and stock raising} may he carried 0:. Almost all of thof effort. 0! our colonic“ have been} centrnted hero. I Third. The cultivable zone. stretching south to the Chine-o tron- tier. IQ thin zone the summer: are warm and genial. Wheat, rye and Fiat. The-polar soon, or the zone of tho “Toondea.” otrotching from tho polar can to the polar circle, with g cums. oomowhet irregular, Var? station in th'a region is rsduced to; grasses, mosses and ig-zbens. The; coil is perpetually frost bound. ' Second. The forest zone, extend-z inc iron the polar circle to the [if-i tieth or the titty-titth degree of, Latitude, characterized by thick fora-ts interloctod by swamps. Theme b no doubt the climate 0! Siberia b more rigorous than that duyobher wintry inthe came lati- tude. The nothern shore is washed by the Arctic Ocean. whence the polar winds eweep unimpeded over the coun- try, while the great central Asiatic range lhntn out the warm southerly end Iouthenebu'ly breezes. Hence. the region of Siberia enjoy amore inclement and lens equable climate then place- ot corresponding latitude in Europe or America. except the anthem placer. in the interior 0! Oil-node. which however, profit in eununer by certain warm-air cur- rents tron Mexico and the Antilles. Siberia may be divided from north to south into three great zones. An Interesting men. In. I loot-t Wat i 9 Ian- do Ina. Usually w‘aa speaking d Siberia video- ot mowâ€"covered plains, ico- elad mountain- tnd not 01mm 01 dreary unto urine in tho mind’s oyo. However two than. viaiom may be of Siberia in (can). then no mat ter- tfln ph'ml within the omplro of the North. and uncanny publiahod book 0! Barn do Bat: give- some informa- tion about them that may interest. THE DUST 0!? OCEAN LITTLE'KNOW‘ SEER“. A sheep will swallow any liquid easily if it is given with care and in this way. Put the medicine in a small pitcher with a lip, set the sheep on its rump as if for sheering, then «hold the head raised, just a little, so i the fluid will run the right way, and {pour a little into the mouth. Then iwait until it is swallowed and give a little more. Pour the liquid into the side of the mouth. To give dry med- icine mix it with a little button or ’molasses or thick gruel and put it ’into the back of the mouth while the sheep is held as above directed. Tur- lpentine or any other strong ilavond liquid is best mixed withsweet milk and well shaken togethei, and given . in small quantities. Solid stu’f sho id be finely powdered and mixed with honey and butter, and the mixture rubbed on the back teeth. The head is held up a little so the medicine will not run out of the mouth. To mow in August and burn in September used to be the rule for killing bushes. The time required for those that are cut to get dry enough to burn gives the sprouts a chance to start, and they are again killed down by the burning. which destroys the vitality of most of them, and it some make growth after that time ‘the young wood is so tender that: it {ll likely to winter kill. If they eur- sze this shoe; would browse down ' the few sprouts that would show the next season. The sowing of 3‘ little .. white clover and grass seed on those E as they would 1n the spring, and when,: the weather becomes so cool that all danger of the seeds sprouting is past, sow lettuce, put out onions, then mulch with leaves, straw or manure from the barnyard. It leaves or straw are used, they may be held in place by covering lightly with boards. In the spring remove mulching, stick rad1sh seeds along the edge of beds, and you will have vegetables as soon as your neighbors have greens. EXTRA EARLY VEGETABLES. _Sometimes the spring months are wet, and the process of seed plant- mg :3 much delayed. In order to avoid this one may make up lettuce and omon beds in fall, just the same Some experiments made at the On- tario College showed that ground peas made one tenth more gain in feeding lambs for 104 days than ground corn and peas together, and one-fifth more than ground corn alone. In addition to this galn there was another In the manure from the peas, for the peas contain about twice as much nitrogen as the corn does. Of course, in all feeding the value of the manure is to be considered, and if there is no profit besides this it is sufficient to make it worth while to choose the feed which gives the best manure. The best mixture of grass for a eheeg pasture :3 10 pounds «ach of r: d top. blue grass, wh:te clever, mea- dow {came and pervnnial clover, commonly called pea-vine clovu‘. Where the land is inclined to be damp sow alslke clover quEte irevly; six or eight pounds of seed to the ecre with all the others will not. be too much. For a sheep pasture thick seeding is newssary, thus getting close growth and short fine grass. lFOI' farm flocks it will be a good thing to improve the pasture by giv- ing the surface a thorough harrow- mg to tear up the tough sod. This may be done so thoroughly as to sell-m to tear up all the grass. But it will soon reappear alter a shower of rain, and. if a liberal sowing of fresh seed is given the grass will take on new life. There is no necessity for plowing up a pasture to renew and Improve it. The best pastures in the world have never been plowed, but are as nature first covered than with grass. This; applies mostly to shcep’paezurefl. which grow thicker and better uzxdcr Judy-ions treatment the longvr they are m use. ¢ Some care 13 to be exercised in the feeding of alfalfa. This plant is ex- ceedingly rich in nitrogen, which, while it is needed for sheep to supply the demands of the fleece. yet it is not to be fed to excess. The feeding and breeding of sheep H! a fine art. It takes a lifetime to acquire it, and tha skillful shepherd. who is supposed to know it ail. real- ly knows himself that he is but mm a beginner in the an. Young lambs mey be taught to eat a meal when three or four weeks old. Fll'st get them to lick a little from the hand and they will be at one’s beefs after two er thr 0 ft tea of lime meal. SHEEP HUSBANDRY. Gnve the lambs a very little wisp of hue clover hay to bite at. They may soon be educated ln the way they should go by very little training. We. may take it as a rule that the lamb ml! pay for the food of its dam, and leave the fleece for the profit. The ewe always atnndl for its own value. KILLING BUSHES. On the Farm. Among its many peculiarities South Africa inckwdes the ‘fsneeze-wood” tree, which takes its name from the fact that one cannot cut: it with a saw without sneezing, as the fine dust (has exactly the effect of snuff Even in planing the mood it will some times cause sneezing. No insect, worm or barmcle witlltouclh it. It is very bitter to the taste and its speci- fic gravity is heavier than water. The cobor is Light brown, the grain very close and hard. 2" ?s ermine-looking wood. and talc good po'riph. For dock work, pier: or jetties it is a use- ful- timber, lasting along While un- der water. ' Dr. William’ Pintk Pills have re- stored more weak and ailing women and girls to robust health than any other medicine ever discovered, which in part accounts for their popularity throughout the world. These pills are sold by all dealers or may be had by mail at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $82.50, by addresshng the Dr. \Villiams' Medicine 00., Brook- ville, Ont. "Some time after my daughter's cure I was myself completely run down, and to add to my trouble wae seized with a severe attack of rheu- mnt'um. Remembering the benefit my daughter had received from Dr. Wil- liame' P'mzk' Pills, I decided to use them, and before I had taken half a dozen boxee I felt fully recovered and have been in the best of health ever since. My advice to all ailing is to Rinks; Is your wite eyer out of temper. Winks; Nonr; she has" an mama-um. mm. People." onoe purchased a supply. Before she? had finished the second box she noted; a marked change for the better; her' appetite improved, her color retur-n-! ed. the teeiiing of exhaustion had dis-f appeared, and by the time she had' taken half a dozen boxes she was en--‘: joying the belt of health, and all her old-time vigor had returned. Al- though her work in the Salvation Army is hard and exposes 'her to all kinds of weather, she has since been able to do it without the least incon- venienuce. Pink? Pills have had on Miss Huskin- son, called at her home to enquire in- to the truth of the rumor. After stating the reason of his visit, he was» kindly received by Mrs. Huskin- son, who gave him the following facts of the cure: "Some years ago,” said Mrs. I-luskinson, “my daughter Emma, who is now captain of the Nw-M'markel warps: of the Saivat'on Army, was attacked by malarial fever. She was winter a doctor’s care fora long time and although she re- covered sufficiently to go about, the after effects of the fever left her very weak and the doctor did not seem able to ‘put any life into her. She had frequent headaches, was very pale, and the least exertion would greatly fatigue her. We thought a change might do her good and con- sequently she went on a visit to Tor- onto. While there she was advised to try Dr. Wizhliamis’ Pink Pills and at’ Among the oldest and most highly respected residents of Orangeville is Mrs. John H‘uskinson, whose daugh- ter, Emma, has for a number of years been an acute sufferer from the after effects of malarial fever. A re- porter of the Sun hearing of the won- derful effects mhdvch Dr. V‘Vidlinm’s From the Sun, Orangeville, Ont. AFTER EFFECTS LEAVE THE VIC. TIM WEAK AND DEPRESSED; Illu l-mea llusklmon, a (Hpmln In an Salvation Army. 'l‘cih How sm- he. gained Health Through the Use of Dr. Williams’ I'mk l’llls. MALABIAL FEVER. prert poultrymen have tested tho effect of housing the chicks in c ose coops during the hot nights of sum- mer. There is a perceptible differ- ence in chicks of the same breeding thus treated and those assigned to coupe admitting ventilation, The ef- fect was enough to make it plain that those to whom plumage is a matter of moment must give due con. sit-teration to the pattern of the coop in which the birds find a hometdur- mg the growing period. COOPS FOR CHICKS.° It has been found thin‘t housing the~ chicks in unventilated nurseryOcoops hot nights hasoan inju°rious effegt upon the plumage. The nursery coops should be scoconstructal that there will be on free circulation of air through them at? night. This is not so important during the early spring months, when the "nights are cool, but it is something which should not be neglected during the hot months of summer. The slatted sides of the coop may admit some water in” a dashing rainstorm, but the chicks will be in no danger of drowning, and the interior can be quickly dried out when the storm is past by turning the coop over to the sun. place. would mdko (odd pasture where the bushes are'j’a nuisance. Dr. William' Pink Pills for Pale SNEEZE-WOOD. IAnd even, beyond this, on most of the great lines, particular empmyes are instruoted to feed daily, as a part of Uheir duties. certain cats in their part of the ship. And there is promotion for pussy as well, for any cat that is particularly amiable clever and interesting is permitted to enjoy the run at! the first or second or third class saloons, according to the popular vote. In this way cerâ€" tain of the first-alas saloon pussies have become quite celebrated. espe- cially on the long-voyage boats that go to India and Australia, and the stewards of the various classes are quite oommoniy eager to push their own favorite oat into first plaee. Of course, there are amazing favzorites with the staff of the ship that are fine hunters and do not seek society. When the ship is in port, aoertain man has the duty. of feeding the cats at regular hours and at entering rations in aback; but every out on the ship that has hm lung there seems to wait with. eagerness for and to recognize at once the professionai rat-catcher, ,,w1hio always goes to work in the head of ewy passenger liner when it ooméq to dock. and who hives by giddinc flips at m The With the statesmen religious pre- judioe is not so intense as with the common people. But they say that China’s true policy is to build rail- roads slowly, with Chinese capital, thus avoiding the incubus of a for- eign debt. And they look forward with dread to the economic problems that will arise whenâ€"tn a densely; populated land, where every morsel of food has to be fought torâ€"railroads throw millions of coolies, carriers, and junkmen out of work. Every iarge ocean liner carrying passengers has on board from six to ten cats, these being apportioned to And even, beyond this ,on most of various parts of thosihixp. as Wield as appearing on the vessel’s books for rations. The statisticians agree that there are four thousand miles of telegraph in China, but none of them dares to say how many miles of railroad are Ln existence, nor does any one attempt to keep track of the concessions that have been granted in the last few‘~ years and that may or may not be utilized. Many Chinese statesmen have sided with the masses in object- ing to these concessions. in 1879.! Li Hung Chang built an ex- tension of this road. In 1895 the gov- ernment carried it farther still. Now, as the Imperial Chinese Railway, it reaches from Pekin to Kin-(thou, and inch-ling two branches, 111088- ures about. four hundred miles. When the anti-foreign movement arose. another extension, running north- east from Kinâ€"chou a hundred miles, was under construction; and it was agreed that from Kin-cho'uâ€"which is at the. head of the Gulf of Liaotun-gâ€" the. system should be connected with the Russian line which is to run from Port Arthur to the Siberian railway, six hundred and fifty miles. At the southwest of the capital, most of tha railroads are at the “pro- jected" stage. There is a line from Pekin to Pao-ting, eighty-eight miles long. Chinese capitalists have plan- ned to extend this to Hamlmu. on the Yangtze River. An American com- pany has a concession to build a rail- road from Hanllnau to Canton. ' Thus the distance between Pekin and Can- . ton, twelve hundred miles, miy ulti-; mately be bridged. i Finally, by cautious management, the engineer put through a railway from the mines to 'l‘ientsin and kau, and it was afterwards extended at. the northeast of Kaiping, to reach new collieriea. The Chinese them- selves provided the capital. Milroade seem to flourish best in noi'thern China. Here they had their origin in the needs of the coal- minee at Kaiping, east 01 Pelkin, which have been operated since 1885. The English manager of the mines began with a little tramway to carry the coal eleven miles to the coast, thence to be conveyed by water to Tientsin. The trouble with this ar- rangement was that in winter, when business would have been most ac- tive. the river was frozen up. , UCRAILROADS IN CHINA. Poo-pie 8who know the Chinese as well as any qutaider canâ€"Which is probably géry superficially indeedâ€" tell its that mud): of the anti-foreign sentiment in~China is provcflmd by tlm doings of railroad-builders.‘ Ances- tor-worship is a part of the Chinese reiigion. When an erigineer dese- crates the sacred graves in order to lay out u route, he muses the popu- lame to fury. The first railway constructed in China was eleven miles long and con- nected Shanghai with \me3. An English company built it in 1876. The Chinese government tore it up in 1877. CEYLON GREEN TEA is more healthful than Japan tea THE FELINE CREW. ”Japgn tea drinkegs l" upon the Trams-Siberian Railway, in order to encourage emigration to the muntry. A ticket from Russia to 'Doboiak only cost 43. 6d.. and from Toboisk to any station whatever in Siberia the tareis only nine shillin I. 'Dbus the tripper own cover about 6 00 The Russian Government, says Dag- biad, Stockholm, has decided upon the introduction of specially cheap fares Even if he has earns on both feet. But he is a stronger, happier. and wiser man if he uses Putnam’s Pain- less Corn Extractor and gets rid of the unsightly corn: painlessly and at once. Sheâ€"”Oh. my tooth aches dread- fully! I don’t see why we can't be. born Without teeth." lieâ€""I think. my dear, that it you will look up some authority on that point. you will find that moat of us are." Australia drunks the teas of Ceylon and India, while Canada already drinks their Black tea. Drinkers of Japan tea should try their green teas. Up to date tee. merehants, the Salads Company, for instance, now sell them entirely on merit. “Middle-of-the mad men ” are only waiting for supplies. While "sit-on-the fence men” are waiting to see how the cat will jump. ‘ v_.r__ ,, Ladiés of Canada, we pray you aid the British planter. was that an an average the swallows covered adisstamce of 160 mines in 64 minutes. Ladies of Canada: Canadians, Australians and the splendid youth of Natal fought side by side with the Britinh tea planters of Ceylon and India. The world never saw such an exhibi- tion of patriotic sentiment as the At- rican war called forth. SWALLOWS AND RAILWAYS. The fastest trains in the world cannot at all stand a comparison with the flight of swallows. A Frenchman. M. Oomphngue, has made some trials with swallows in order to find out whether it would be possible to use them as letter-carriers. The result LET DEEDS BA'IIFY SENTIMENT. inns green corn. Hearing the racket. the wife ren, upset a four-gallon churn full of rich cream into a basket of chickens, drowning the whole flock. In the hurry she dropped a seven-dollar set of false teeth. The baby, left alone. crawled through the spilled milk and into the parlor, rutn- Lug abranod-new twenty-dollar car- pet. During the excitement the old- est daughter ram away with the hired man, the dog broke up 11 setting hens and the calves got out and chew- ed the tails of! tour tine shirts. Here in the latest am of the m whoon tpo stingy to take his home pa- per; A man0 who is too economical to oubscribe for a paper sent his lit- tie boy to borrow- the capy taken by hi: neighhgor. In his haste the boy ran over stout-dollar stand of bees, and in 10 minutes looked like a warty squash. Elia cries reached his father, who ran to his assistance. and fail- ing to notice a barbed wire tence. ran itnbo that, breaking it down, cutting ahandful of flesh from his anatomy and ruining afour-dollar pair of pants. The old cow took advantage of the gap in the fence and got into the cornfield and killed herself eat- I odd’sm 0,, medicine! Lat will cure Dia- betes. Like i Bright’s Dis- ease this: dis- ease wu in- !" c ura ble until :3 I DOdd’s Kidney Pills h‘ N cured it. Doctors themselves conteu that without Dodd' s Kidney Pills thcv aIe powerless against Dia- betes. Dodd 3 Kidney Pills are the first medicine that ever cured Dilbetes. Imitationsâ€" box, name. and gill, are advertised to do so, : flat the medicine that doe: Fate“ cats,” an the stoma!- call them. «never leave the rat man until begins finished his dmties. Large sums have been uttered Tor one saloon out 011% great liner and the Itlff have to‘guard it strictly tram iznquiéitive minimal-s. ixn whoseJuggage it has several! times been found. “A Him as a Man for a‘ That, ’ FORTY MILES FOR A PENAY. for aixiattor of thirteen shill; NEWSPZPER BORROWING. Dodd's Kidney'bnlé 3}} fihv cents a. box at all druggists. is _Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Colonist. â€""â€""vâ€" -'v _____.__ -vr _ - , _ “an“. Theirmlu use iii-£666.}. on Chou-9|, As; (our (10.1?ch 95min o Brit-onion. m oi? dédl'e‘r' tibia". nub. [Alum-fl ”compilation. Moll: Ndnfmnto. Con... Oaht moat, Tooth Forlorn, on. In" boon awn-40d 100 gods}. and! diploma {or pgpgdq: may nu. . e to Bear tint sq sited Bone, Wu“; A Back to Erin ‘- I Tho “ Bulmorul," Fro! In. “on": AVENUE HOUSEâ€"ygjlg-lmm A _ HORSES IN QUAINT JAPAN. They are always doing things in an odd way in Japan. so we are not: our:- prised to 1m rn that the Japanese put hate and shame of straw on the few horses they have. Even the ciumly (M dray horses stumble along in shoes of straw. This odd footwear in l w tied around the ankles with straw rope. and the shoes are made at ordi- nary rice straw so braided that each foot is protected by a sole about half an inch thick. The sales cost about 3””1 1 cent each pair. and each cart in 1 “BMW" supplied with act-ouch of new shoemi P‘ which are put on whenever the midi ones wear out. One pair of shoes; ‘ willl last for about eight miles of like“! travel. and so it has become the cul- tom to measure dietances by shoes, “'3'.“ one Japanese saying to another such or. "a and such aplace its so many sets (1 who“ away. This cart at direction! is understood. _---- as mercury will >ur-ely dearoy the sense, at small and rompietely denim. tho who}. ”we. whon entzring 1: through the mucous “the“. Such artmhn should never b. and 0:00,: on proscrlp‘ ion»; from reputable physician. .- sh. damage up y will do fate. (aid to the good 5‘! ll (-nn poambly derive from them. In‘l'a Cutout Cum, manufactured by FJ. Chennai (‘0..15- lodo, 0.. cumulus no mercury. and m Il- tornally, acting directly upon 0:. No“ fl mucoua burfacen of the system. I. My“. Mum- Guarrb (‘uro be sure you notch. . me. If is ukon internal Land mulch? Ohio, by I". J. Cheney 5:. ()0. WI.“ Beware of Ointments for Cutu'rh that contain Mercury. Through their members have testifi- ed to the great efficacy of Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor. It pro- vokes no [me of demarcation, scour- ing alike the good will of the highest and the most humble, and with strict impartiality, removing with equal celerity the come of each. Try Pit- nam's Corn Extractor. ' Adam must have been swift-footed. inasmuch as he was first in the hu: man race. The early Egyptians divided the day and night each into 12 hours, a 'cnlton adopted by the Jews or Greeks, prob- ably from the Babylonian. The day is said to have first been divided into hours from 8.0. ., 2‘33, “hen a sun dial was erected in the temple of Quirinnl, at‘ Rome. Previous to the invention of water clocks, B.C., 158, the time was called at Home by public criero. In early England one expedient for men- sming time was by wax candles, three inches burning an hour. The first perfect mechanica: clock was not made until about Al D. 12:)“. Day begun at sunfiae amongst most of the North- erm nations, at sunset among the 'Atbenlans and Jens, at midnight among the Romans, as with us m' b .n dmau’ Go , In. Mo". ‘00th 61mg." ‘0"- iafiifisfi as; cute. .2371 magi: for «inn-hm. 860.. bank. a throu bout the world. It'll. A confidence man is a man who in unworthy of your coniidenco. - “a... ”850“ SOOTHXNG SYRUP .- boon mod by moth." to: their iclnildreg (30min. II. to. by .| ‘ -LRI‘ _-A_ _ AL Â¥ 1'1)“ cinema )3 on oval-[bog qt the main 'thét’i'Vé Bidmwain'ihé'flz m and: flat one. a cold I. on. in The Dawson Commiééion Co CbYLON TEA. you and the ho-t Minute. thus them-.- an.” ~ nwpuhrity. In an m u. a. a. not an. A “A_ __‘ '1 H'Z Ll ARNED SOCIETIES r. c. wvm co.. If quallty count. for anytmng t»- 's" FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS Poultry, Butter, Eggs and other Produco. TIME MEASURED. If you have any correspond with un. WI want .00 OACI-om to supply our wade. a "the 011 rd: out- ! [mic I Let I. D L towâ€" The Lotte m7 comm: cmr ALFRED § Mahmoud and“ It a“ with burnt in the world h I [reality what We would an”! ‘ and it, was observe. vi all!!! n all human virtual more ; stmgthvn theme“. :- tics and experience (W. ‘ cum“. 7 '4‘ “mu m u- about M‘ "I11“ mm I'll“ 00.. It! “C. Buying the Bu at 50c on the S, i to sell Music a my other store i: LACE CURTAINS Dr. M. I. I I.” YOHGI If» Catholic Prayer ”3%.: loluimu Pianlu. Ituuur’. sud (11W MM Works. in: “an and" flu. 0.1;th MUSIC, 0H TREET METAL {giawufu ‘ I‘M OOBNIOEO Music Teachers Wanted Bhéop cud Ame-H “ill I 63 MIDI. t -ht’.prlou PARK. I CK ' LOCI)“ WW4! ‘W!’ II“... In.“ ‘ “Match. ‘0- Romond to W «a: ; [itch-o d m EPPS’ CHENILLE GU GRATE‘UL OOMFORTI THE MOIT NUTRITIOUL Buck to'Erin ii “tutu-diction“! BR EAKFAST ~ 8 U PPER. Postago. 10¢ c. LlMlm’ hand 0' III“ “ “though. You“ ROYCE

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