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Show -". ,, 'in, , 1'. JUAB COUNTY TIMES. NEPHI. UTAH Htoroszn to tiie be made In the same manner and In all respects as in or may be provided by In the case of election of State oflaw RESOLITIOW NVMBKR ficers. EIGHT. Sec. 4. If adopted by the electors of the State, this amendment shall take effect January 1, 1917. Proposing- - an amendment to Article 13, Approved March 20th, J915. of the Constitution of the State of Utah, relating to revenue and taxaSTtTR OP VTA II. tion. KniETtRV OK STATIC'S OFFICK, lie it resolved ty the IjCRlKlatura uf I, David Muttson. Secretary of State s the Stats of ITtuh, of all , the Stat of Utah, do herhy certify member elected to each of the two of the foregoing is a full, true and that houses concurring therein: correct copv of SK'NATK JOINT RKSO. Section 1. It la proposed to amend UUTION NUMHKH KMHT Article 13 of the Constitution uf the un amendment to Article 13 of proposlnsj the Oon tftute uf Utah, so thut the same will stltutlon of the State of Utah, relating read as follows: to revenue and taxation, as uppears of i. The power of t.x:!tlon shall never record In my office. t surrendered, In Witness Whereof, I hsve hereunBuspojidml, or conlruct-aaway. All tuxes shall he uniform to set my hand and affixed the Oroat rpon the same class of property within real of the State of Utah, this 2nd day the territorial limits of the authority uf August. 1U16 levying the tax,, and shall ho levied DAVtn M ATTSflN, and collected for public purposes only. (Seal) Secretary of State, I. The Legislature shall provide by law for an annual tax sufficient, with other sources of revenue, to defray the PKOPOSKn AMKNDMKNT TO TUB -CONSTITUTION. IIOI SK JOINT ordinary expenses of the jLstltnated aV year. For the Lj Vr each fiscal RKSOI.ITION Nl'MUKIl MIX. paying the Stat debt, if sny there he, the Lagisluturo shall provide A an amendfor levying: a tax annually, sufficient to Joint Resolution ment to Section providing 17, Article 7, of the pay the annual interext and principal of such debt, within twenty years from Constitution of the State of Utah, rethe final passage of the taw creatine lating to the duties of the Auditor and of the Treasurer. the1. debt. There shall be exempt from tax- Be It enacted by the Legislature of the ation property of the United States, of State of Utah: the State, counties, cities, towns, school Two-thirthe members electand ed to each of of all districts, municipal corporations the two houses concurring lots with the buildings therein : fublic libraries, used exclusively for either reSection 1. That It Is proposed to ligious worship or charitable purposes, amend Section 17, Article 7. of the Conand places of burial not held or used stitution of the State of Utah, so that for private or corporate benefit. Ditches, canals, reservoirs, pipes end the17.same will read as follows: The Auditor shall bo Auditor of flumes owned and used by Individuals or corporations for Irrigating lands publle accounts. The public moneys shall bo deposited by the Treasurer, unowned by such Individuals, or corporof the Hoard of Exations, or the individual members der the supervision taxed aminers,a. and as provided by law. thereof, shall not he Sec. The Secretary of State Is mo lonsr ns they shallseparately be owned and used exclusively for such purposes: hereby directed to submit this proposed to the electors of the State provided, that mortgsges upon real and amendment at the next general eleclluu In the manpersonal property shall be exempt from " """" ner Inprovided by law. exatlon; and that the taxes of the Sec. 3. If adopted by the electors of or abatdigent poor may be Inremitted manner the as State, this amendment shall take ed at 4'ch time and such effect January 1. 1917. by law. nay be V'- ld-Imshall not Approved March liih, 1915. pose taxes for the purpose of any KTATH Oil" I'TAII, eounty, city, town or other municipalIn gECRETAHV OK KTATK'N OFFICE. vet recorporation, but may, by the corporate authorities thereof, of State I, David Mattson. the power to assess and co- of the Slate of Utah, Secretary spectively, do llect taxes for all purpose of such cor- that the foregoing I a hereby full, true and correct ropy of IIOCSU JOINT Ri:sOL.U-TIOporation. . The surface ground of nil mines NUMllKK SIX providing an and niluinK claims, both placer and amendment to Section 17. Article 7. of rock tit place, containing or bearing the Constitution of the State of Utah, gold, sliver, copper, lead. Iron or other relating to the duties of the Auditor valuable metals, after purchase there- and of the as uppears of recof from the United States, shrill be ord In my Treasurer, of rice taxed at a value not greater than the In Witness Whereof. I have hereunto therefor. set my hand and affixed the irat Seal price pild the United States unless the surface ground, or some use-part of the State of Utah, this 22nd day of such mine or claim, is of thereof, for-- other than mining purposes, and August. 11. DAVID MATTSON. has a separate and independent value (Seal) Secretary of State. for such filler purposes: in which case wild surface ground, or any part thereof R4 used for other than mining purInjuries From Poor Lighting. poses, shall be taxed at Its value fir Must MMiple are Rulilotl In tholr or- iich other purposes as provided by law; and all machinery used In min- dlnury octloiiN mid the precision of ing, and nil property and surface Im-to their movement, by the seiine of Klght, provement upon or appurtenanthave mines and mining claim, which and muriy acriilontM rcult In Kpltt of m. value separate arid Independent of such mines or mining claims, shall be safety devices oud educatlonul otimtaxed ns provided by law. All lands lialfriiH, tieoiurte workers are uncertain containing coal, granite, stone, mnrbla, of or misjudge their relation to the gypsums, nyx, gs. oil, or other valuable mineral deposits, Immediate environment for the reason ether than those enumerated above In that they cunnot see well enough. this section, after purchase thereof Many more, however, ocrur because from the United States and all propor the operative working In a spot trlitht-l- y Improvements uponhave erty and surface such lands which appurtenant to ll'uralnuted or with a bare lamp a value separate and Independent of all such lands ehsll be taxed as provided shining Into his face so that his eyes by law. In addition to the assessment are Into a poorly-llluml- of the surface grounds. Improvements nateddazzled, steps spnee to which his vision doe and machinery of mines and mining claims, all mines and miningfce claims not quickly adjust Itself, or because taxed proceeds shall producing net at a value not to exceed three times be has a headache Induced by eye euro net proireds. strain, and therefore has an Impaired An accurate ststement of the and expenditures of the public mental as well as physical rapacity. moneys shall be published annually In or because of weariness, lassitude and such manner as the legislature may other Ills that Inevitably follow In the provide T. The rate of taxation on property train of overworked eyes. Engineerfor Plate purposes shall never exceed ing Uerazlne. on each valuatlen of dollar mills eight Not to be apportioned as follows te f axece-mills on each four and 9 Pump long, In dollar of valuation for general Stat In when primitive the beginning-on mills exceed three purposes: not to district man wanted to lift water from a loweach dollar of valuation for nna-hner to a higher .el. or to transport It purposes: not to exceed mill on oarh dollar of valuation for that part of the any little distance, be carried It In high school purposes, hoot puran earthen Jar, or In a crude pall mad Hist tss portioned to high to be of bark or skins. It poses shall constitute a fund wasn't very long, shall and school fund'' called the "high fm apportioned to the cities and school however, before the first spark of InIn schools district ronlntainlng hlah ventive senlua beg-ato burn and probthe manner the legislature may pro. ably one of the first mechanical deAnd whenever the taxable vide within the S'ate shall amosj.t to vices ever produced by man was a rste Four Hundred Million .lollara. pump. Man needs but little water for r shsll not exceed five mills ojeaeh to himself, and he needed even lea In of valuation: unless a Increase such rate, j.c'lng the rat those distant days, so what bo reduring which the proposed and the. b" first eunmltted quired for drinking or cooking was same shall be "f the ijualined elec- easily carried in a Jar. It was only to a vot of rato as, In the year next when tors of th water had to l.e lifted and carelection, shal I have pild jrn assessed preefl" to them within ried for agricultural purposes that a pravk-- t ' majority of those fortunate, and the Irrigation reshall vote In fsvor the pump was born. euiiiK theroon m eueh manner as may be quires enormous quantities of water Lrrof. Vldea by law and pumps are absolutely necessary s. 1 ne masingm prom nut "i pun-li- e monev. the same tor any when It has to be raised from one level by law. by sny to another to water the growing crops. purpose not authorised l be deemed a felpublic nfflrer, be ony, snd shell punished as provided law, but part of such punishment Centrifugal Pump Beat. shell bo disqualification to hold public An electrically driven centrlftirnl offl'd No mad, pump effers many advantages over all roprlatlon hall er snv oxapt pemlif ure authorised hf the other kinds, foremost among which Is whereby the espendltures Iils1'ire. of the ft me, during anv fiscal year, Its adaptability to automatic or rehall rri'H the total tat then promote control. The mere throwing of for a vided for by law, snd erpll--1thand switch will strt or stop the e eu-appropriation or mahr.sr lu'ii the iVg"it-ifpump. Pressing a button conlarjest shall provide f levying tax. oot exceeding the rates trols the smaller sizes. Kor pumping M((idt of this article, to water from mines and In similar Inallowed in Pilon expenditure stallation these pumps are provided per eu'h at proprlation or wxhln srh year This provision with automatic control. When the waeh11 not apply tn sprroprlat ions or to Insurre' tlor,, ter reaches a certain level the motor In tefendir.g starts and f1d tbe ftte. or pump It out. Instances the t n'ted Ptatea tn time of war 10 Nothing m this constitution shall are on record where mine ptimp and the legisla- ffiHr dtivltic motors have teon to eo totally ture fron providing a stamp tax. nr a on occupation, sul.merced for days, but have pumped las ltree.e or ffsn'Me. tste Is tliemselvea clear In a few hours. ftf t Tt to gire ht fpropoitlon or newspa to b p'lM'.h'-- In at Start of Coffee Industry In Java. tn the where In every per lo 12 Hie only source of t pr-iine- i mn a .e printoi par.r rre- - . for two the next gen- - eoffcej supply was Arabia; but In fh shall be that year Governor Van Iloorne of 'v. J tjn prepoeltlos) Tl' this Five the Initrh Bst India company reto elects Sjkrltt-election for ther ceived swime coffee Ot the rest ! froin trader, All nftlclsl trroval of A at elctlon shell hare who plied between the Arslusn gulf t,ilr. therein th words and Java. These seed were planted rriT.ie,t or II e th a rr r r et of Arto-lyif and thrived so wall ttint the Indusfvjt r,r'!totion. relatiog to taxation. be try of coffee-proTe "No." erd srisll otherwise fng soon made Java ele-toan srrd ib"r!ttd to the pret one of th richest nndr law as be ty beprcl'1'd rotint-ed- . the control of the historic Dutch East end baiiot shall en"1! rmv-t- 4 tereoa India cotnjrany. srd rt-rrAnfEumMEXT OFFICIAL sen at h joi.vr eojiyriTirrioiv. FAILURE OF BRAKES CARE MUST BE USED IN PACKING APPLES District.- losnua hfi - - i' is" v , , v N RUNAWAY U. S. Expert In Charga Experiment Mr. Jones. County. County Commissioners P. J. Fen nell, J. W. Whltmore. Perry 13. Fuller. Clerk Patrick J. Conner. Recorder Will L. Jloyt. Treasurer T. H. G. Parkes. Assessor flay Newton. Attorney J. il. McKuight. Surveyor V. E. Eklnff. Sheriff Angus It. McDonnell. Judge of Juvenile Court T. H. Bur ton. Probation officer James E, Mem-m- station N l hydro-carbon- Shoppers Killed and Maimed When Two Street Cars are Precipitated Thirty Feet From Bridge to Railroad Track Below GRADINQ AND PACKING APPLES U. lf dol-fa- rui-osltlo- tracks The atandtird apple barrel la 20 Inches between heailn, diameter of head 17H Inches, circumference at bulge 04 Inches. It holds three bushels. All the barrels should be curefully "faced." The quality of the tipples lu the "face" should not mislead the buyer, but should be a fair sample of the contents of the puckae. Corrticateil circular cardboard la often used ncalnst the top and bottom of the barrel to prevent bruising the fruit. These cun be purchased at from 1 to 2 ccuts u piece, according to quantity, iind are a good Invest incut. The "fuce" of the burrel Is made by placing a series of circles of apples In the bottom of the empty barrel. The bottom of the barrel forms the top when the packnpe Is headed. When the first circle around the outside la completed, the next circle Is placed. This clrclo being Muuller, It will contain several apples less than the larger circle. The "face" Is completed by finished In the same manner. The face should be firm when finished, with each apple setting firmly against the other. The apples In the fuce are placed with th stem end next the burrel head. The remainder of the barrel ll quickly filled by a half bushel basket "Uiick" the barrel after each basket Is emptied, so that It may be compact ly filled. The burrel should be filled In thla manner until within u few Inches of the top. The "tall" or "crown layer" Is then placed. It Is placed with the, stems upward iind should project Inches above the ends of about the staves. The center should be a lib tie higher. A corrugated jmper cup Is now rut on next the barrel head. A Imrrel press U used In forcing the head down. The top hoop Is removed and the second hoop slightly raised. :reut care must be used In gettluh the pack firm. Apples shrink, aud If the barrel Is not well "racked" whllo being filled. It will become slack, causing the fruit to bruise. Apples fur storage should be packed and placed In cold storage ns soon as possible after picking for best result Farm Life. LATE SUMMER HINTS the place kept clean. Tickers nre disgruntled nnd do poor work where they have to wude through weeds and briers wet with dew or autumn rains. The grower who gets Into tits orchard now sees anything else which Is U'3 matter with tils orchard, has his tvttcctlon called to anything which ueetls to be done to Improve It, and learns a good lesson for next year's operations. Dead limbs take a great deal of water from growing apple treea. They are ia the way at gathering time and make the whole crop look diseased. If caused by canker, the disease will spread to other parts of the orchard. Irune them out now and paint the wounds. Water sprouts and surplus llmna take too much water from the trees In time of drought ;, prune out those which are not needed on the tree and save the water for the ripening fruit; fruit won't mature well where shaded by sprouts. The crop shows tip bet ter where the tree Is kept pruned, admitting sunlight and air, and enables the buyers to see the fruit better. These statement are not guesses or mere opinion. They are some of the thing that have been proved by careful test at the Missouri agricultural experiment station. FOR ORCHARD WORK s, one-hal- Cleveland, Ohio. Two persons were killed and more than thirty are In hospitals as the toll o( u bridge tragedy here early Tuesday evening, when two street cars collided on the West Third atreet bridge, cnunlng It to collapse and precipitate the cars thirty feet to the llullinure & Ohio railroad IN ORCHARD. Picking Made Easier if Weeds Are Kept Cut Remove All Surplus Limbs. Apple (By J. C. WW1TTKX. Missouri Agricultural Experiment Statlaet.) Mow the tall weeds and summer grasses In the orchurd, allowing them to lie as a mulch under the trees. Apples color and mature better, especially on tho lower limbs. If the growth under the trees Is mowed down. Green weeds and summer grasses exhaust moisture from the orchard soil In a dry time; a mulch on the ground saves soil moisture. Fruit buyers pay better prices for apples In clean orchards; they can see the fruit. Its quality shows up. It looks easy to handle. The man with a neglected orchard never gets what his fruit Is worth. Cut off the llmh that blights before It begin to decay. That may save the life of the tree. Apple picking Is made easier If the weeds are mowed In the orchard and te-l- MOW WEEDS TO AID FARM'S APPEARANCE s sh-il- y r-- e er-nditur- e 'r fil slst p-- vt .. td ln-o- t te Si k m. ' , ''-.,- ,, , . '' j. ...,;..,..-.-w ... A . . - f - -r -: ...'. . v S lt Hl lon l" , . '"J . -- e. - - f gral )prsl m-- L- - sd prions reff4. Referring to the Cow? It I id that a irrsvetone fwsr this Inscription: "lfre lies the body of Ramnel Ilolden, who dif-- suddenly end tmevpecteslly by being kicked to death by a cow. Well done, good tod faithful servant P d for Epsom talta. npeom salts ha been found hf many t be excellent for setting ths folnr of a delicate fshrlc. Just add a ter spoonful to each gallon of ter and yosir garments, even those tnad of ewrpe and other woolen mat Hats, will wash easily without losing their color. U Eaeeptlon. TVenptatntng never get ynn Safeguarding Locke. said tTe man who has a fondSmall TboTjgtt to be cr tried In a for trite rsstlm. "Oh. I doVt pocket I a new device to brevet bow arVrtit ttat answered the being turn ex "I complained of being looely keys on the In Me doers from the outside. ' tasct sad got a wife.'' aay-taln- has-wan- COUNTY MUNICIPAL FICERS. Mayor Alma Hague. 11. Councllmea A. Belllston. Thomas llailey. James Garrett, JrH Mark Iligler, George O. Ostler. Recorder A. V. Cadd. Treasurer J. II. Latimer. Attorney T. H. Ilurton. Marshal Samuel Linton, Jr. Justice of the Peace Win. StouL Street Supervisor Jaa. Ii. Riches. Quarantine Physician Dr. T. D. Rees. liuilding Inspector I. IL Graca,'Chlef of Fire Department N. A. ' Neilson. Superintendent of Water Works A. J. Cowers. Members of Roard of Health Dr. T. D. Rees, Alonzo Ingram, Win. G. Ornie. Sexton C. E. Bigler. LEVAN TOWN. President Board of Trustees Truatee.s M. W. Mangelson, S. P. Taylor, Alex Peterson, George Neilson. Marshal Nells Mortenson. Justice of the Peace Neils Schow, Health Officer Henry Hendrlckson. Juab District Board of Education I. II. Grace, President: J. E. Taylor, Vice President; A. P. Paxman, Clerk; W C. Andrews, Treasurer, and John T. Kay. ROBBED. Paying Teller Missing and Accused of Taking $15,000. Salt Lake City. Warren C. Man- gum, 33 years of age, late paying tel ler of the Continental National batia, has disappeared. With him went a EAST COUNTY PRECINCT OFFI. CERS. l,Ae more than 1 15,000, according to the officials of the bank. Tbe Mona. money taken consisted of Ave 11,000 bills and other currency of smaller de Juattc D. O. Young. nominations. Health Officer N. W. Ellertsoa. The money, the officials said, was Nephl. , all taken September 30, the day upon Justice J. 8. Cooper. waa demoted from which Mangum Constable H. T. Knowles. Health Officer Dr. T. D. Rees. paying teller to a position In the Levan. bookkeeping department. He obtained the money, they say. by falsifying the Justice E. W. Peterson. Constable Rlcbard Iversoo. clearing house receipts. Officials of tbe bank, as well as friends of Mangum, are at a complete Modern Woodmen of America N loas to explain hla action, as Mangum 10.700, meets every Tuesday evening had been a trusted employee for years. at Woodman ball Visiting Woodmea welcomed Roosevelt and Taft Shake Hand. CHARLES STEPHENSON. Consul. New York Former Presidents J. IL LATIMER, Clerk. Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft met according lo ached u at the Cnlon League club TuesI. O. O. F. No. 16 meet every Satday nlghL The most matter-of-fac- t urday evening In I. O. O. F. hall. Vi greeting took place. Itoth men ex- Itlng brothers cordially Invited to at tended their bands at the same time, tand. HERBERT ROBERTS. N. O It was aa If each had agreed that he JOHN 8. COOPER. Secretary, "would not speak first," for, as in Ih same breath, both blurted out "Howdy do." LATTER-DASAINTS' MEETINGS. Japanese Prime Minister Resigns. Toklo. ount Okuma. the prime minister of Janan reslrned Tuesday. owing to bis advanced age. The mem bers Of the cabinet also tendered their resignation to the emperor. The premier la said to have stated that he would rronimcnd to the emo'-rothe Tal.aaki of Viscount appointment Kaio. as his successor. Fifth German War Loan, Ilerlin. t'trofficial forecasts of the amount of subscript ins to t!ie fifth German war loan Indicate that il will riceed the total of the pending loan. An Investigation by the Hcidisbank some days aeo showed total subscrip tion at that lime of more than 6.t09.- K.0,000 marks teredo. Tcnas. Mexico's quarantine against chillren tind'T 15 ears of ae. on account of infantile paraly si In the I'nited Ptates. was lifted on WEED SEED GETTING NEARER RIPE EVERY DAY. Editor. at ructions from Mexico It Sunday School. 10:30. well-drsrg- , South ward at Hiirh School building; Nephl ward at Tabernacle; North ward at meeting bouse. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Sunday school at 10:30. Thos. H. Burton Attorney at Law Public OT.ce In IV Kms 1 Notary. and 2 Osllor It, Tacoma-Peattl- 1 e pot-tio- w. FORREST Ls City. It will take less work to mski understood the order revokes the on a If for number of croj year at all border points. than If all that weed bad not beea quarantine harvested. If you still have that weed Tran Ceea Into Ditch. crop to harvest yon will have to Taooma, Wash Between twenty Weed seed I getting nearer and thirty persons were injured, three hurry. ripe every dny. The hot. dry weathef of tbem seriously, when the ha hurried ripening Instead of DelaLimited on the Puet Sound ting It. P.nr pulling time I coming Klectric company's line ran nfo an ' and tbe horse weeds In the fence rows open switth and went Into the Citch. jare getting harder for the mower of scythe to handle, but there I soma Falling Walls Kill Fireman. cons!fiot tn tbe thought that there Omabs While firemen were work It still time to do a great d of good Ing In the tmoldefing rains of a 'and that too early mowing might have of th packing plant of Morris let ttie weed Come tip aud Suak aa Co which was burned, the south wall otlisr ere; f seed. fell, killing one and eeriosn'y injuring know I weedst Then your farm I worth more and yoa are a better neighbor and a better citizen than If yon had not. Everyone think more of tbe farmer and farm If he sees the weed neatly mowed a b) drives along a road. As he passes the end f the line fence? he sees a fence row. Dot a weed row, and the same Is true f the cross fence. Does thl describe your farm Then rabbit shooting may hot be so good oa It fteit winter, but buyers will offer yea core a a acre oa It because tbey Alma Dal by. he' By J. O. RANKIN. Missouri Kvperlmsm Have yo mowed those OF. NEPHI CITY OFFICERS. Quarantine Litted. e;'in rs ,' .( Pe'-rtar- r ejr.1 i i" j EAST m. South M. I. A. Sunday. 7 p. Ward Hbth School building; Nephl ward at Tabernacle; North ward al meeting house. Primary South ward evsry Tun day al Tabernacle; Nephl every Friday at Tabernacle; North ward al meeting house every Friday. Newsboy Assistant to Judge. Priesthood meeting every Monday Passaic. X. J I sador S hlettcr. a 16 year old newsboy, who has saved evening at the Tabernacle and Notts $fc00 from the sales of hi papers. ward meeting house. Reef Society South ward first an4 hereafter will be associated with fhlrd Thursday In each month at 1 Judge f'ostello In the administration m. Nephl ward first and third of Justice In the tity court here. His p. in each month. Nortk Wednesday career will be utilized by the Ju'lge aa ward first and third in ears' Thursday en example for the wayward boys month, at respective meeting house brought before the court. ua-n- h County Infirmary Thomas Vlckers. County Physicians Drs. Rees. D Steele Dailey, Jr. below. BANK ot t Superintendent when a The accident occurred southbound Scrunton road car carrying a crowd of women shoppers home at the rush hour iiroke away from the motorman on a hill approaching the bridge and tore down upon the north approach to the bridge just as a north bound car reached tho same point. The runaway car Jumped the track and struck the northbound car. The combined weight of the two cars and ;he shock t the collision was too much for the wooden bridge, which sagged and then gave way. Kiln a Waddiugton. a telephone op erator employed by the Erie railroad, saw the accident from where she sut at her switchboard and turned in a call for assistance, doctors and the within Hundreds fire department. earshot of the scene heard the shrieks snd crlea of pain and terror as the cars carried their burden, for the moat part women, to death or injury. The work of rescue began at once. Those who had not been seriously In ured extricated themselves and then gave aid to those less fortunate. It was not long until thirty had been taken out and carried to hospitals. Some probably are fatally Injured. SALT LAKE District Blackett CROWDED CARS COLLIDE ON CLEVELAND BRIDGE, CAUSING IT TO COLLAPSE. a Courtesy of Missouri Agricultural Kxpsrlmsnt Btation. Judicial Greenwood. Attorney K. II. Ryan. W. L. Cook. Stenographer State Senator J R. KdKhlell. Lawrence: State Representative two-third- f Fifth Jud.?e. CAUSES DIRECTORY. 7 HO76L Trevellrtf Men. tagaaUy egsrlaead traaa ai4V Headquarter "r BldjT. fee tloa. staasa kaat, talk. t& lMsk sasata aa4 sma aaei t aVasaaex Paaaa 21 taa sarf r DONT BORROW Trie Times from your r'gM when you can get it for leu tKaa Three Cents Per Week |