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Show - " ' I tie -- t2' ' - '' .' 1 ,I ''.'4 ' ' G.-WhIt- ney, , .: ' .. .1... ' , -- '',' to the Act of Contrrees.fdArcht1117. , ,' ,,4. Entered at the Poototice of Salt Lake City as second elms matter according .' :. ',: 1 1 -, i ;.''i I ! t,'I'' .11.',.i- ,, ..., i,. , i,,, I.": '.'$:,' ,.....1.:; , ,,, 0 '' ' 4, . 1', v., ,ç .; t ". ;.',, p.4 .;,,,..: .: li '4" i. , ; i..... x.....i. '; , ' :: .... ,t,. 1 ;44.4., ......., ,... 4 ' - H 'The ;owl grim tell 'It is our Noel. And they echo the song of each clamoring bell. snow They shout In the darkntore over the blow. And through the world the tidings The bells axe the great glad Voice of the Lord. Le sweet accord :,..:. j And the winds are His angels ' Whose whispers surge and sweep through tbe Might ,' ',Where the watchers watt for the ancient Licht. .1!."Noell Noel:" Pings each sodden bell. From the dowers In the towers :0:dues a wild "Nooll"' ' t .,,, ..,..!''. ',..,J4'. 0 i ., 1' :; ' )17 , '' V, j ,. ,' "' 4.4, Hanson Towne. In Co Meets. ARK to each thundering hell. woel'" Singing "Noel' The jubilant chimes in ten thousand towers, Swing In winter like Iron Powers Lost In Ithe cold Dceember hour Irhey sing and swine. And the old Word bring. The wise old Ikleysego that never cites. Under the steadfast starlit skies. thy Charki ,:,, ' 1 'f' ' '- ,.., .4 ' 1..:.:. - I i..:,! 1: Ti: 4 r. : 'It .. lin .,.. , 40., t) yule-bo- nallnow It is by no means improbable that some future textbook, for the use of generations : s, - impression recorded IT Josiah who visited the Prophet a few days Quincy, before his martyrdom, is familhir to many of our leaders. Ile wrote: ..,91-- .1 tire-pbee- The 1 4;,.. , of the god . of the 8 Un over the winter.'! All hastened to light their torches and to kindle where the yule-log- s the fire in their this pew and froth had ben placed, name.sacred During the evening of thiS day it was customary for the head of the family to place and to make his hand on the roasted a covenant that he would rule his house faithfully and well, and to be just and indulgent toward his relatives and serevants. Then the members of the family and the servants promised that they wkild be faithful and obedient, and after this ceremony the boar WAS eaten and the mead drunk, and the evenint was spent with song and bright speeches. , Some Protestant churches have not taken very kindly to Christmas festivities, because of their pagannrigin. It is supposed that the Puritans of this "country intended Thanksgiving day as a substitute. It can do no harm, however, once a year to commemorate the birth of the Savior with song and appropriate addresses, telling the wonderful story and its meaning to the children of men. It can do no harm to open hearts and purees,, iegie4)04re him' fiy: That hi the Christ's Olen hour. - - 1..- ,L..1.--,,,--- 7, 1912 ' , ewe animal-magnet- ic And the tad worldJaints In the wonderful swell. The Voice of C;od firrp down the year, ,' bush our old discordant tears I best Him call. 4Kost! N4el! .... ;. 1, ... .,,. 'A time of Peace hath eome to ell!". ,.. ! ,.,. .. .: the moonlit bill. 'hakes Ills rapture . ,..;....,... :ITIs ,gler'y wakes onr souls. and thrills .1.. ,. ir, IteVOrd the werld, beyond the sell. .'' :.. .. i,ti, .. Tq borders of Inuiaensity. ..,yi ,, .Noell Noel! 4. 11 '1 ,..,; It is Clitlette own .hour! ', Iran flower ',.',,,. .; Thrmdere each" bell like en or.7.,,t.,,,-.--,....1Li- bniztmaz and foes concur, the Prophet Joseph was a commanding figure. He was strong and athytic, and notwithstanding all hardships bis physical beauty and stateliness never left him. His carriage was erect and graceful, and his movements majestic, though perfectly natural. There is abundant evidence of the impression he made upon strangers. A writer in tho rzw York Herald in 1812 said of the Prophet, that he is undoubtedly one of the greatest character's of the age. "In the present Infidel, irreligious, ideatgeological age of the world," he wrote, "some such singular prophet. as Joseph Smith is required to preserve the principle of faith, and to plant some new germs of civilization that may come to maturity in a thousand SOEL. 'r - ,.. i , ct..;,. 4 -- DECE3IBE1 , ---- ., : ,:," '' ! - , ! ; 1.2 )IANAGEIL DES131124 ,,.:,,'4:-- rli SATURDAY- DESERET EVENING !I ''. ..: ., t 7, , I -- ' 1' :: ' ' ' , i ' : , ' - :'''i-r--- .', ;, i 3 ,.......f .' - - ri 7I :' ' 101 : , - ar ' - . 1. (stxxvirs EXCI:Pira).) Comer, et South trample and' teat Templet Streets.. gait., 1.010' City j to- - acknowledge Jthe hand of, ,Providenct . , The Patriarch of oicl., in the days of his prosperitr; exclairted: 1 am not worthy Of all the inercies and of all the truth which Thou host shown unto thy servant; for with JO staff (only) I !r this Jordan, and now I am be. epoasmse edtoo ' ..... e' ithd-trif- 4 S 1 1,'s ',' . 1 1 :I, . (t.: ''',.; 1 1 I 7 I .' - ::....!:: ! ,' - . '' '. ,t-,- T11 ''.' representative of God on earth. The Temple )tad a great gate guarded by huge serpents; and "dragons with protruding tongues." Before the gate was a great tank for lustration, .. or the bronze sea" Thecidef parts of the ntavebrie''atni einincil.chamber" with its iölchr, Here the deity and his consort fed "upon white bread, honey, milk, Wine and untouched by ,firel-man-d pure butter"--food- s each day the pious ruled replenished their table." la the inner part of the buildingr was the harem, where the goddess Bau dwelt, at- There was a tended by "seven virgins." Areas and flowers,. beautiful of garde; ince in the cast shade, which .a pleasant b.iandtear'of.iiiikh was the "foUntain of pure water from which the gods drink." Musicians are mentioned who played on harps, pipes and cymbalsi and on the great horn of the God. Adjacent to the temple palace were BUN for cattle, including "the great famous bulls that none could pen, and the sacred cows of the Moon God." There were folds for sheep and goats and tame gazelles. Here, too, was the stable for the sacred ass Of the God, who drew his chariot arid the house of the driver. As to the life of the people, says the London Globe, there is it passage in- the.,,....;, ',,..7 ond cylinder which is of immense value, the day the divine king entered his new ,',."1 an octave of festival period of joy and peace, thus described: 'During seven days the female servant vas equal with her mistress, and the man rvant on a 'par with his master in his city. ,The strOng and the weak lay side by side. On the evil tongue the wicked words werechanrd to good and all evil was turned from the temple. AU paid attention to, the of Ningrisu ; the orphan was not by the rich, and the widow suffered not the mighty." This is a golden period and spite in coon leist'witithe conditions in the land of Ur at thetime of ,Abraham,-when,through- the' in--troduction of a foreign religious system, as stated in The Book of Abraham, blood was shed on the altar of ucrifice and persecution drove the servants of the true God to seek a, home in a new locality. - ec -- 1 , , ' ?: .. :, T. ' ', : , ; , - 1 , - t 'I, I t. 1 .1 :., 1 1 1 I- .,..,ii, , 11, 1 ,, s 31', f ., z - I 0 I, , i - it''';;'-',Iishe; d :'. 1' I 1. cf 1 i .: ;. - .: !,1,-,!- I m -- ;- , r; - e , i. 1 lic-thli- r ' ..: ;:! ' : ): I '''. ! z ,-- a pared of hie eo. fo IL:hi the ll evero.): et the :hrgatuti t ;fir, robrri tro,w11, eel Me Iwritei 'opinic theeri intent eredit ' row, tott.41 porno 'ent-e- , j: Ii 'ion.. PurPo the n and by th 4, "tt, toe Zria:i ,l'okly -1 , 4;14- ilh,0 Witni eredit the All ro'hili; "'Yu:" ill IteA hundrett-and-lifty;-it-iv- '- - the -- -- , Farr,- tempi that of tiu Porte' i cor "I" Won ,Idl or , lIrt the Oval pled' ated niliy-W-loc- ii: --- : Unci-lram-hilltitii- ---- - -.-- nf WSJ melt 'Jose trans 4:7 Wets Irater - ttrhtl" being reit': ; ryri7, wope gnarl ' He ; tqlgt,-- ; I I ' H tbarsn: stan i ::4 tt, . r :; 1 ' ' 'F. :Tin and - -- Abra iwed train ..Prop our I Dr rand : who weld Prop , - t, .,, lead! noc - ', i ! .,4 , 1 - 4' r , tt : , i I : ti In hien, , .. 1I from chide . , Is tir riot of ;' , ' that - -- 11 slit; - ,1' - 1 e eill"": eat Ito - - I Da ' I 1)y-th-e. on-Eart- , ng eflaroaswemds ::: l,' I end brood UNITED STATE'S NEW YEAR'S GIFT. ' ru the beginning of the New Year . - '' ' hal 13:17-18- r 4 peoph custoi , - Cod-feari- l' Dr. the IF etive Lathe well! . 1 gmith laaal , self-deceiv- 1 , . , ' bands.", . , This is , the right spirit. Many peopis aro eagerly, calling upon the Father in the day of adversity, but,f they for . get Ilim when all is weli. '. The rioneers of this 'atate were, like the' founders of the Nation, men and awomen. ' In .the beginning they fought hardships of every imaginabe kind. But in those dais , Prayers lascended from every home. Today there Is prosperiti. All is ,wellIt shouktbe a time of reflection; Israel was commanded: "Thou Shalt remember the Eternal, thy, Ced, that He it is that giveth the power to get wealthier,' ." (Deuteron. .) .And that commandment is as my ' important today as it was anciently. ' -iliic : ' ;.' yet unborn. will contain a question some;.:: thing like, thist What' thistorical' American towse 4110.Samirlittinddrtskii Iliiilailt of the nineteenth century has exerted the ,.. 7. ., ..:. . ru,' ., of 'competing with the Express , mo8t pOwerfat influence upoirthe destinies of .tet.11.,A,nrstt:r---,47,7;:rtfrImmeant no his And is it by Countrymen? companies.. At that time the parcel post las ,,. ! i !I COMMISSION GOVERNMENT. i y t; ' . possible that the answer to that interrogation goes into effect. ';' 1 NCE more the management of the may be thus written: Joseph Smith, the ;' :, II 1. By virtue of that law a parcel weighing Deseret Evening News takes great Mormon Prophet. And the reply, absurd as IS anniversary issue of The Christ- 1 , ounces or less is mailable at the rate four corn;men now most to e. seems the with doubtless in it living. presenting, i mu News contains so many excellent pleasure 21.'1 :: i tilt cent to their a for each ounce regardless of dis. ,: of the season, its anniversary may be ah 'obvious common-plac- e . pliments features that to enumerate them, in -i descendants." tance. Parcels weighing over four ounois .; ''' i ; edition., a brief editorial review, is not to be attempt: 47' i 1 are mailable at so much a poindeach frac. A man who thus Impresses his contemThe "Christmas News," as it is popularly ed. But among the many good articles of ' 1 , '''. ' ; not tion of a pound being counted is a pound-w- ith not Is ; i especially one of poraries celled, the beconie Interest journalattenhas which great there is one to i special '1'1' t '''' I defect. mental or a different scale for different distance& physical through any the Is of ... '''' features intermountain tion deals with region. istic called because it a subject ,..: A Smith was an instrument in the of vital importance to Salt Lake City. It deals ' 7z,' I' ' It is always welcomed among newspaper read- of four pounds, for fifty mils, Joseph package 1,,' !'i : ''costs you fourteen Centi; if you. went it to go ! era for the volume and accuracy of the in- band of God for the accomplishment of His with a subject which is likely to come up is l'r ;t formation' it contains. and Ili artistic aP- - plans and purposes relative to the preparafarther than 'fifty miles and any distance some other form, and in another forum, and I..; 1,, ; i: ,, establishment of the for the ; tions in,less- - than-- a necessary well that known its is and all cost i'. it ,: be citizens should .' conversant pearance, ia Intelligent He as ' on :;. '',',t Earth. came, heaven Utah and and kingdom of in behalf the cents, of thus eighteen hence ComWe with It. to on refer the computation' can neighboring the article , , be made for 'any distance that the'Parcel k 41 - '...;1 ''''' States extendi, broadly' speaking, to all parts the mighty angel in the Apocalypse with the mission form of government. ; '. -i :.i! of the world. For wherever there are Church "little book" opened, to proclaim a divine tobttaken.,'- There are, properly speaking, two of 7' -I to men ThatLwani,u lbethildreoot '.4 ! members and missions, the Christmas News tnevage It has been calculated that a saving to explatrunte Origin and nature of tI ': he which mission the faithfully performed looked of several million dollars will ite '' the for. this people form of -h i 7 government; the other sets Iv; eireetedbyrakcedlitel:" By the con. II t:,!,;!..:;' ,,1 ' i',ii :,' The present number, we believe, is in and for which he received a martyr's crown. forth what hu been accomplished under it i venience the new arr,angement more than the equal of its No other view of the Prophet Joseph accords during the present year. Both can be read it,:, i f,. :!'il.,11.1:..riery-respe- ( tiftere the pub. lie,- the saving': will be greatly In its contents and make-u- p it with the facts of his life and 'Oath. with profit. It 1 ; I.;; t: is the peer of anything of its kind ever pub:, In the second article, the author, Mr. ;enables a farmer, in any parf At the country k. ' !';' ORIGIN OF CHRISTMAS. in the West. to seAd Noble Warrum, shows that the beginning of up to a weight of eleven, t ' t ',; ,.''''' the commission form of government in this :' Throne; the Christmas , News the Fin'p. 0 ; pounds from lila vergr cloOr to an3r : :t :::!: i : ; I:, (4, IF,Yesideney, ofl the Church extends a cordial' DST people who should be asked to City was the beginning of an era of good a greatly reduced rate, and without having . kiii! I giVe an account of the origin and wM and to :greeting to the Saints, and the people every,-- we for carry it first to the nearest express office," which. peace, may say, the IA meaning of Christmas would say, bestritizens of all I ft ','where to whom their words shall tome; Their iiblib and classes had a.t.!t conalderable,dia... parties -:::',,:. ',,' message !rill 1be found in part limes 4 and 5.: ivithOut hesitation, that the festival-waelnearnestly prayed for years.- - Thie alone was church the one irr atituted, of '711', Th,CeSSence of itia: ,"Peace lbereused-to-be-so- me early of inestimable value to the City and the good. :opposition- on -f,.. 't 7 The centuries to commemorate the birth of our Tha 'thanagement'of 4:,,,. will, to allInf Coni--of I businesfi in merchants the the smaller settlpart proposition thi Mid, Jeitiffehrist. And this answer would inission has done well, in the savings it has 'AS- K-7 7-ements to the parcel post law, because it was ., There is not yet peace on Earth, nor be correct But only partly so. I '1 effected, and the efficiency to which it has thought it would injure their business': But : i ''). good will The 25th of December, as is well known, raised its various rt among men. For armies. are still this objection is no longer urged. The me,:, the departments, taped f r. '.." , r the birth of the facing each other ready for combat tcik death, is not the anniversarl-orchants have begun to .tmderstand that the and tire police departments. ,', still lighting for wealth, for divine Founder of Christianity. But nearly 3 c,andinen---armail order houses in such centers no New From a moral point of view the CommisSpecial attention is called to the place I York and 1,4 offices, for power, for bread. But as the every pagan nation with which the church sion, through the police department, has ac- accorded Chicago, which ,, they feared AS to women in this- early age. They roll on the ideal condition is drawing came in contact regarded the winter solstice complished all that could years could not undersell them, because, in exq 1 reasonably be seem to be given precedence. The wife and rivals, to addition It ',3,1,..:411 near. To the observer looking out over the as an important part of the year. At that,. pected of it Mr. Warrum calls attention to mother precede the prices charged by the big the husband and father, and stormy sea 1from the higher points of ob- - time, the pagans thought, the powers of na- - the fact that gambling has been fi there be the exiense of the would practically the' maid servant the man servant, and the houses, i. i the lights are just beginning to ture were awakened to renewed life and driven - , f:' :1',..)!,(:,servation, the rate. The difference between the parcel post beyond corporation limits; that Goddess is often mentioned before her i ;:1;', '1. show over the horizon, indicating that we activity, at the command of the gods, and houses of ill repute have been closed; that of the prices country merchant and of the ii k'..i,i,1.i:1 are nearing the goal of which seers find poets they rejoiced accordingly. That is the rea- saloons close At midnight and stay eland on order mail house on the articles generally i i , ;! ,,,,,:f. have 'sung and toward which mankind has I son why the church decided to observe the Sundays; that no member of the police force BLESSINGS FROM THE SOIL. carried by a country store would be so slight 14 ' as to make no difference in the tonsil store's :.q4 been steering, guided by the hand of festival of the nativity at this time of the has his hand in the pockets of the criminal '!, ,!4,,,f,'1 Omnipotence, from the beginning of the voy- - year., It adopted a custom already prevailing class, and no person is knowingly permitted i ARM Press, a live Chicago paper, re-4 :F",i'f'f,:, age. There will be peam on Earth and good and gave it a new name, a new meaning. Many to defy or evade the law. It may, he 'says, minds its readers of some of the The parcel post system, if all that is ' '.:11()! ivill among,men, as a result of the next great of our Christmas customs are of Roman, and It be questioned if there is a police force in blessings for ,which this Country is hoped for It is realized, is a great New Year's Mill more of Teutoriic, origin. t Step forward in our civilization. ' the United States Indebted to the .fatmers; The yield of the gift from 3.Inde SanC, as free from graft, as ;,,,-r,I',..,-', In the firm belief in this truth, The News Among our Teutonic ancestor i the- fes' earnest in the soil been has so abundant that there are not discharge of its duties or as ''T,; tival was known :as "Yulet and was cele;;;14 1' If you set a good example you won't hatch faithful to the public as is the present police freight cars enough hr the Country to move 0 lvihes OTTYOne a merry Christmas and an in t brated honor of rtbundanie who of was the : that mischief. god Freyer, happine8s, peace, and ,.,...;.i.-department of Salt Lake L'ity.- - These are a it. There are, we Are Told, 3,169,137,000 to rain preSideover fill and v,Incli shall supposed sunshine. oze the Earth day 'ilrosperity few of the many reforms brought about. bushels of corn stacked up; 720,333,000 There can be no pure:-Iovei.,q ,'. ;and cause it, and all it contains, to reflect the Great preparations were generally made-fostory in or: One year is a brief time in which to test bushels of wheat, 1,417,172,000 bushels of novel. i'i';!! problem li it. and household Redeemer. had a of Ataer its boar fatted with Every I :it 1 , iglory the efficiency of a new form of government oats, 224,619,000 bushels of barley, 414,289,- denaandaOftennilli,, ., ' gilded bristles, because Freyer was supposed Years are needed to bring results, where old 000 bushels of ,potatoes.., Not counting the i' v Where there is a municipal will there is s 171 r, THE PROPHET JOSEPH. to ride such an animal. The golden bristles conditions must be changed and new establ- rye, flax, bay and forty odd '..). zrgatvIlite were also considered as representing the rays , 't t ' ished.., i:, as the short time during-whic- h the farrnerilliiiPrOEc'el ihi; year, there far But,as Ji-'e. WORD about. the.Prophet of this age , surf. The- boar' Wilk' of Coirise, eaten the Commission has had charge of the is a total excess over last year's production 4,!,.;.;,. chief, signs of eit times seem to be lc,1105 is the on the principal day of the festival, in honor birthday anniversary -; :,.;114., 1 affairs of the City can demonstrate the re- of over one and ono-ha-lf ,i, budbeln,which calend4rs for 1013 23rd of December, is appropriate in of the beloved deity. i 1 '., Ic', ' it has increiie sults, ' 80 of about' per cent over tho Iiiin given aatisfaction. 9' 0 'there la no excellence without labor but The night between The 24th and 25th ' V.t1:0,1113.. edition of, The News.- - What manner of -record of the year previoui, and an increatio there is , of December, was considered the time of the t , :,i,,m.m was he? IN THE DAWN OF HISTORY. an)' imonnt Of labor without even of 11 per cent over Ithe best bumper year in :ititl Some place him in the class of deceivers. birth of the sun god. During that 1 l'' would require a bank cheek Of history, .410thers, rejecting this as untenable, suggest night many went out into the forest prominence given here these days about ten billions of dollars ,(810,000,000,000,' Colonel Sellers used to:say, "There are :'' I ! Pr'ithat he WaS, sincere but subject to illusions. and hung ornaments on the trees, es- "The Book of Abraham," one count itl) to compensate the American i'', 1.4:tr'."'isieit;;;: Millionn in it." The moneytrust magnates , ' :. of pecially the fir trees. In the morn- the standard works entirliprOdticil Of Iii fields, or- .8aY? "There are billions Ilt, 4.1 : ,.t 1 ',1rutiny. Both are equally absurd. A deceiver ing the people carried deccirated fir branches day Saints, makes a recent translation of chards and dairiest ' in this banner Year Of '', - -1;00es not- lay down hi4i life for his testimony. in their hands. Some 44 ' planted fir trees, and it, certain ancient Chaldean records of interest 1912. excellent to learn to labor. : .'' thing who enters t career a of upon was customary to send each other , deception ,. c 0,,,,i)ipe i ' the of to gifts our readers. these to ...'In and we wait records 'benefitl obtain 'too but But the material ern, not tho so to gain honor, wcalth, position. Joseph mans,,poople mis i ,. apples and nuts. in the afternoon the fires a partial view of the manners and '' a labor Is earl ; and the of customs ones. wait the end the result only ,t ., obtained neither, as men view those were extinguished in the big men of the Na,; 8lany of capacious !t '. ,1 , 1$mith the Chaldeans some time before the days of tion, who are directing the foreign and home mess. He mad$ enemies;; was driven from and ; . old young and in the field where Abraham. ' 1,, - '. c',' it,' Whin; ote the Country and forming publid ' I to place; wp.s misunderstotA, some- - a new wheel with gathered nine spokes, covered with 'Th 0 .'eosf of ' a iollego licitteation hilt In- -were it found in the 1,' ii';:times Men reared in rule jitirsguLd, -are his year 'final- and closesttasioclates; by ecs was, lSex7 fixed was to a stake. Young and old straw, 1 ...;rrairzrd i, a French tonsuir-whilfonpr,,os rierectirr thellitina-piop-o- rt idilbit thetbstALC:i,).71' iiAoPled by 0 tneralvialoilInd'Prpo;es which with a Martyr's M11 . MB joined in song to.the accompaniment of Mnile; otliving haa:i Does high college living me1,111,' ,.,' in the eouthera part of guide:tis as a Nation are giVtil MOre cavating at ';itilareerwassvot that of a decerver, often and the wheel:was turncel by means of ', ' . l'.. thinkini?,-- . :', 'e plild ropes Babylonia; They conslit of 1igifi,'But.:tx.0 he not, himself, deceived? fastened to of under the unobscurcd, star-li- i ' '''''''' ' 'z 1 : in ,, , from , it, east ' to to ,'' west, ' represent clay clozely covered with writing. The rea- the smoke;pollutcd 1 't someone bag suggested that he Wassan epilep- - r the course of the atmosphere of the 'big ii Servlah4.3Ateculcdiva the. sun, until the friction caused son why -i I' ;'''4 ; !lie. -- -they were not read bcfore Is chiefly,. centersstpomdato- n-he, ' gricpat on tic Adriatic to the :: straw' 1,9ignite,,,,T3 the ':':.:Lmi . . We accept with gratitude the maierlai O' grirtt jubilation, for it proved the victory the archaic characters- and the great European rowers. ,k the referred to. They shou14 lead-uinterpreting blessings . much w isdom and great diplomatic skill! . ,! - , , ):, An - , Was fluvial.tan language in which the text been copied inscribed., But now the text has Assyriologist, American an Br. by Ira Price, and a translation has been made by Professor T. Thuseau-Daugi- n. of a The records were the memorials I; ruled Chaldean priest and king. Guden, who 15 C. It Lagas, or Surpuna, about 2700 B. had found by these recordq that a temple been constructed at this place, .hich: base also the the palace of the king, who ' Publi'shèd Every Evening i I c ' - 14 - - i 1,:,..,, ts .,: ''' 1 ! - ji '('''' -- fA ., 4, what-acoth- at Iv(le-- it 1 I, ..of-th- , ', ,'' ;tri ! 4, '' 3 - . ,,t , . near-excellenc- e.. it test : 4 THE if otthilatter k , farmer-fo- r-the- , , - .. ItIsan , . . ...' i r fire-place- s, , ' : I , ,L . e ! , Tel-L- o, ! : two-iylinde- , . ', ' -. !! - .; 16 ,, - I 4 ,,. . . , - '' - : - -- ,. $(11511101C-- - l - - . ' , , -Iv - - s 7..1.14. ' ' , . ... 4 , " , " . - ..... .........-- ------,---------'. |