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Show iKm ire. EES?.'.:: mi CALIFORNIA GRATIS. : )' DUMCA1T, OenercJ jlerv.httudisc, Hat, , iw-.is- Lri;' HardiK--. ,i.ni Bcloni i;: tj-.Store, at any otl.t; Count of Iha--. Lartt . $ - Ferron class. tu, in in the l'-i'- t , - r l'.wrj'tliinj i n- r.hocs, , Slim: South - - Utah, Hans Larsen & Co. r THE .SANPETE l iShinole Dealers I tocahd in C, mile C'nnyon. ft Son. G At Lowrry Lve-order- Only the cliM.est timber used. Jf(t lit I Utah . COAL! COAL!! Coal at the Uanti Cheap and Go'Kl e Canyon, 4 miles Coal Mine. south of Manti. 3,50 per ton f Coal at the mines ofonly Lima, only 25c. A anperlnr quality berteL Selnl rates given on large Six-mil- per BirDi,Tll0MA.Co. I FAHIV1EW HOUSE to h. V - yiasr f Co-o- Corner west p scrvaswaaTieas CAARM Commercial sample rooms furnished. S.J. rail. ms UIK PhOIKIKTOR. SANDhKSON, dbb. NEXT! MsH; Sperry, TWO DOORS NORTH OF PlG-.Willes- CO-O- P . ':dealer ix- Tula, 1 iotunv'iC.EK ER AL MOBRCHAXffDISE. 11. Studcbaker liras. Agents fo Wagons, Carriages and Carts. Agentl (or Amos Whitneys SteeftMowers and Reapers. 1 JTAH. Latest I Office, - - QiBna, r jun MBoKJefwral I Utah: co,op DEALERS V; IN Merchandise1 I biY GOODS, fJSroceries, p5bTECI3Sr tfor the Cooper Wagon (AM dMcCorniickllarhinery. uiAii 9 ts, . a..- note e ordee Lxn THEY ARE GROWN IN NEARLY EVERY PART OF THE STATE. Hun b SWfso Candy E. 1st C01 St. Oity, HPTeaX. uitvtxetutc.fs cWvV M Aim. la tkr ViMM at see.aos ealM aso.oeo Acrm la of Wla a tm at tms enea I bars no donht that it will surpriM even graps and wine growers thseunlTea to know that than an innstad in vineyards and wine oellan in the United State over tlU.OUO.OuO," said CuL IL Uanlurr, special agent C the wnsns ofiloe fur the collection of statistics relating to viticulture, a branch of agriculture whiidi has never befunneaind any official attention in this ooontry. I find by atatiatioi, which an now collected iur the first tuna, said CbL Qanl-nothat than an la round numbers 400.000 acres of land In this country planted to vineyards. This is an increase of 100,000 acres In vineyard area during the past ten yean, and an incieaae of over 10,000,000 a year in the capital invested. Of the ana of bearing vines in the country California alone haa U0,0o0 acne. Including 05,000 acres of raisin gripes. That state also has of the total Investment of capital nearly fH.OOO.OGO. Between 00,000,000 and 40,000,000 gallons of wine an made in the United (States in a year, of which California prodnoea more than half. the grapes of California of the go to the wise press. Poor-fifth-s grapes grown in all the rest of the United (Rates an for table use. California alone grows the rsisin grape. I spent time months in California giTiiig official attention to its viticnltnral interest. Although every county in the state produces grapes, the principal counties of the vine an Napa, Sonoma, Fresno, Santa Clara, Ban Dlago, Ban Barnard! na and Los Angelea, although then an many others of mom or lass importance. The conn ties of Fresno, San Bernardino, Ban Diego and Tnlare comprise the gnat raisin district, and cure 2,000,000 hoses a year, a product worth at least 13,000,000. The grapes grown for raisins an the Unseat of Alexandria and the Unseat del Qardo Blanca These conn ties grow huge quantities of wine grapes also, end the sweet wines of California oome principally from that district. Fresno county 23,000 sons of vineyards, Sonoma 21.000 and Napa 18,000. The grape grown in California today include every variety that haa made the vineyards of Europe famous Tim cultivation of the grape in California dates back to the days of the old Spanish friars, the Franciscan fathers, who brought with them bom their native land cuttings of a grape popular there. Juit what the true name at the grape waa nobody seema to know now, and very few can, for while them am in bearing today some of the vineyards or vines sot oat by the jolly Franciscans a eentiuy or mom ago, the grape is not in high esteem nowadays. It haa always been known as the mission grajie Thu old mission vineyard supplied grapes fix the table and the wine pnaa in California until a comparatively short timo ago. Then a Hungarian grape known aa the Zinfandel waa introduced. This newcomer waa handsome, proved to be a generous prod non, and took the popular heart proved to be an unfortunate one, for it seemed so easy to grow the Zinfan-dthat everybody planted vine yards. When they began to bear they bon with a vengeance. The marke ts became choked with grapes, and prices went down to disastrous figures. It became apparent that the Zinfandel was an inferior grape after all, and to cap the phylloxera came down on the Hungarian importation and bon It away, vineyard after vineyard. No new vineyards were replanted with the Zinfandel, and the vine is being replaced with the choicest and hardiest varieties of wine grapes from the famous districts of Europe, including Cabernet Bauvignon. Carhanet Franc, Tamat, Merlot and St Laurent grapes from the Bordeaux districts; Ma taros grapes from Palos; Bomlllona and Banvignons from Santana; Pinot and Petit Binah grape from the Burgundy districts; Johanniabergsrs, Trammers and Franken Rieslings from the storied Rhine; Oiiseeloe grapes from and the rich Bargers from McsoHa It is from these grapes that tiis wines of California am pressed. The . famous Challoss and Fulls Blanche, cognac grapes, are also largely grown, the wine from them being made into brandy. Then then an the rich 8panieh Hnscata and the favorite Hungarian table grape, the Flaming Tokay. In no other vine region in the world an oil those splendid grapes found growing ride by aide, and they make of California the wonderland of the. vine. California has the largest vineyard in the world and the most extensive wine cellar. The vineyard is in Tehama county, on Benator Leland Stanford's famous 56,000 acre farm. II contains 4,000 acres. Among the enrioritiea of the California grape region is a vineyard that may well he called the smallest in the world aa regards the number of vines, for it has bat one vine. That is a moat remarkable one, however, for its branches extend overs space of 12,000 feet, the cane being a foot to diameter. This extraordinary vine is over seventy yean old, and waa grown from an eld miarion catting by a Mexican woman. It haa bom grapes every year rinee it waa two yean old, and is good now they claim for six tons of grapes a year. I waa teld that dusters weighing aeven pounds had been picked from this ancient relic of the miarion days. The phylloxera, which daring the past few years played great havoc with California vineyards, is bring gradually but surely overcome. - The inferior varieties of grapes upon which the past feeds an being rooted out, and the choice foreign varieties, which an subject to it, an protected against it by grafting cm native wild varieties, known sa resistant vines, or vines - which the phylloxera doss not affect- New York Bun. r, Seven-eightha- . it el Mal-boc- k, e, - JMNDREWS&CO., Iilfe oftbel M 0F4CHICAG0, ILL, j, VlUXlTACTC RKHS OF Furniture and App:ira Mints idling of Desk, Hoard Ilells.Hlack u-- Also D .nk alk. etc. midOpcru Chair. 8IGHTLE38 BUT NOT ts, Etjg. U aC.tttsk ran he seen at tl L stfSSL H- - HaAi.FOMi), aTTL' Box D7, Monti, Gen. AgL Txanzx asm LUATOTisiKG, ITThIi K'llitkm now Untidy, Aliookitfovor xuupsKiw.ciTiBganre itifurM.ittuii rf vilidtii nilTiriiH,ni ihaunnj - cf'cvnr uewMptiier miln the of lu?Ttl1t3y- piwwy l'" th cto1 per Hue fur best ptporw gf the turn WUhmMtmhnm rrrnlln lit hiwn of acts with nnree liy tbs Iwh fur hUvp)MHnB Mke lists iNttfi! nfdaily.roHtttry vlllagG lAlill! oners of rsiiste U WJdiis pewi.nr !'.nFii sli kuwtteei (boss wtshtan lnxsnnnt Metetisl wtfb A seisll araosM of moner. .Slums Mbahur I p TWO GIRLS WHO WENT ALONE FROM u IIMa-t- b UtltaM Aleace-Lrarain- ttcKet Us never Iuk-- l.la Ix.iruofx Wl,. ,1 tr:ui qaii-t:ready to return beside a pcauut aland and the ven a ILutim-- sirtvt der to tell him wh--car comes. This car pa bis store, aud he intuitively knows wlk-- it is opposite his home. Hu jumj from the car while it is iu motion, lie walks about bis store aud turns sharp comt-rwithout mishap. He can walk straight to a dour aud grasp the knob without fumbling it, or trip down stairs as lively aud as gracefully as a young woman, and never nukes a miscalculation when tvochiug tbs last step. Ho i a candy maker and cukes all the candy he sells. Aa is naual in cases of blindness, the lorn of this mans vuiuu has quickcn d liis ise of feeling and hearing. When hia ayes went out of business their available assets appear to have been transferred to hia ears and finger tips. Hia ability to locate objects by sound is wouderful. This waa demonstrated one night when a burglar broke into his store. The robber left 1 tastily with a leaden bullet in hia anatomy, aa spots on tli Hour inured the next morning. The blind nun handles a revolver cleverly aud shoots accurately for one so heavily handicapped, locating the object to be aimed at by sound. Chicago Tribune. HELPLESS. Tha Active Baslwess Ub af a Chicane Mas Whe Is Whally BllaS. The wonder of West Harrison street is a blind man, William F. Bnachick, who lives at 1113, whan be conducts a rvtaQ cigar and confectionery store. A carnal observer would not be apt to discover that the storekeeper is totally blind from the manner in which he moves around and shows off his gooda Mr. Bnachick keeps hie own aoeoimta, waits on the customers, takes In money and hands out change aa deftly aa any saleswoman in n down town atoret He seldom mahaa mistakes in handling coin, and if anybody wen mean enough to try it would not be an easy matter to pan counterfeit coins on him. Hissenaaof feeling is keen, and perhaps maro so as a result cf tha ataneo of aighL He hands out any brand of cigars asked for, and his sensitive linger tips light upon the right brand of chewing gum without any fumbling. Hia eyes, which an not concealed femn trier, are a beeutifnl dark blue, and a stranger looking into them would not guess that .they wt-- an nttcHv naalsas. - Mat Altayathar Madam. The opinion bald by many people who have never had their attention especially turned to the work of Jean Jsoquee Rousseau is not that he was a benefactor of his kind, but in reality he was one of the first apostle of the modern methods of education, and it is only after nil this lapse of years that hi id ess have come to be widely adopted. It is lie who once said that we earns into tho world ignorant, but with capacity; that education begin at birth; that we learn incredibly in the first years, and that as impressions supply our first knowledge those impressions should bo of the best and should 1m presented in the tight order; that the first cry of a child is a request, tha second a command; that destract-tvenee- s in a child la not cruelty, but activity; that tlie sin of children is their weakness; that strength brings six nit virtue, and he who can do all things will never do wrong things. i This we see to be undoubtedly good lessoning in the light thrown on the subject of late years, and understanding now how greatly our children are affected by what they see ns to be we comprehend more fully what Thales meant when ho mid that men must live in the consciousness that all aroitnd them is filled with gods, and that this should keep them more chaste than if they wen In tho holiest of temples. Harper's Ba-aa- r. Aa Eaten Ob Tamm. On the occasion of the visit of President Harrison to Topeka, Kan., the hotels, restaurants and hoarding houses were overran by the great crowd. People ckunorud fur food aa tlie crowd clamors to get into a circua, and guards were placed at the dining room doom to keep back those who cotdd not be at once accommodated. A gentleman who had tried every public place found at a lata hoar in this afternoon a restaurant in an rat of the way place. He went in and asked if he cotdd be fed. The proprietor said he had been eaten out. ' I'll give you a dollar for a glass at milk and piece of pie," said the stian-g- Aint got no milk and ain't got no pie," replied the hungry proprietor. What's that in that showcase isn't that pier asked the stranger, pointing rat a pumpkin pie. Tha proprietor looked at it ia a languid manner and answered: "That's all we have left for my family. If I sell that they wont get anything. I'll give yon a dollar for the pie, aid the hungry stranger, growing desperate. The proprietor took rat the pie and was in the act of handing it over when his jaw opened and about half tha pie disappeared, the other half being handed fiver to the stranger, who refused it. ; Sell it far a quarter, said the pi man, realising now that hia chance .was growing smaller. But the stranger refused tha ragged moiety and went away sorrowful and aa hungry aa when be came. Chicago Tribune. , RIm for School Children. We all know how much greater is tlie need at children for sleep than of grown persons, and how necessary for their good it is to he able folly to satisfy this need, hut how great it is generally at any particular age of the child la very hard to define exactly. The amount varies under different climatic conditions. In Sweden we oonrider a sleep of eleven or twelve hoars necessary for tha younger school children and of at least eight or nine hoars for the older ones. Yet the investigations have Shown that this requirement lacks much of being met in all the classes through the whole school. Boys in the higher classes get but little more than aeven hours in bed, and as that ia the avenge it la easy to perceive that many at them most content themselves with atm leas sleep. It ia also evident from the investigations that the sleeping time is diminished with the increase of the working hours from class to class, so that pupils of tha same age enjoy leas according aa they are higher in their classes. It thus appeals constantly that in schools of reto tively longer honn of work the sleeping time of the pupils is correspondingly shorter. In short, the prolongation of the working hours take place for the most part at tha coat of the time for sleep. Profeeeor Axel Key in Popular Bcienoei Vnbtr Both Doorm ; The golden rale, Do unto others you would have them do unto you, is violated in a petty fashion in New York which is intensely irritating. Many people when finishing their houses neglect to put the numbers on properly, with the result that stnuiger in search of particular residence wander np and down the street cursing Tolubly. This sbeolnte neglect of the law, however, is nut as irritating as the practice of painting the name on the outer doer and omitting it over the inner door. Until 10 o'clock tho greater number of storm doom stand open. The light from the -- hall chandelier illuminates the inner transom, but tha rater one is a dull blank, on which nothing can bo read. You stare at what you know are figures, finding yourself utterly unable to distinguish them, and you am reduced to the ignominious course of ringing the bell and asking what tha number is, which invariably ptoduces on the face of tha uervant who appears an expression of a conviction not flatter, tog to your sobriety. Good Christians there be who put the number on both transoms may their homes be exalted and their example imitated! New Yurie Telegram. la Search at m Mama. To end tha long dispute which hss been waged with reference to the right designation of tha metal which is now assuming such importance, it is urged that the largest producers in the world fever the form aluminum, which also haa the advantage of greater brevity, and that therefore foreign scientific journals and scientific men should fol-aeiui-Iiglit- Alnlm PARIS TO FAN fRANCISCO. They Mada Ills Trip la Tlie Salt. Lake Music Dealers. i asl Isalit and Wav Sick While 320,000 if Days Tbrj I'latalag tha St alar, Ssl Thay Uaaaivad tha Bast at Attautlaa (nsu Auericun girls have that pluck which makes them admixed by ail tho world. Thu follow Lig is a story of two youug woiucu who iu..1e a Hying trip from Pari to Bau Francisco. The sisters were at slIunjI in Paris, and exjscted soon to be met by relativist. One forenoon they received a cable telling them to Uaa-Ha- i!i- - Capul, F i:niM. some hrne as soon a possible. The oldest girl ia about twenty years old. She immediately sent far time table. While she was examining these her sister was packing five trunks. Miss F discovered that they could get a steamer from Southampton which was to sail the next day. Bite posted to her bunker's, aud hurrying back joined 8 her sister iu packing. At half-pathat night they were being whirled rat of Paris. Neither of the girls slept that night. When they arrived in Lutidon at waa 8 oclock in the morning Mias F forced to do some shopping, for however rapidly women travel they make time to do a little baying, and ia this case they had started so suddenly that tide was absolutely necessary. The American sisters caught the 12 A0 o'clock train for Southampton, not having luul time to eat luncheon. Four hours later they were on their steamer, tired end hungry and sleepy, but OM St!t In uso OUANT. V.I'kE.i-ThS- . yyri.0ui Silt Lekt Cit. St. , h Utah. rrtaMeat. H.;Kit SI. H ILLS, Cullin'. Dirsotera- - Ch-- a. a. Suites. Juswt F. Kmilk, W. Ciaiioa, di. H.Ruwr, hapkl Auralum U, C.naaa, Frank V. Tayter, PSilo T. F.navortt xpaararCUwioa aluaKonteb Kifbard W. I anas Haary A. Wvtltey. sealTW dayaaita payaM am dsasaA Lnui BiDnay oa approved araarity. imvaS exekaaf oaali pnaclpal peiata. Pais par Mai. s tavlau dnuaiu. Compounds iaiaefoi IbMwia qiurMrty. Aid wiate jroar Itmuioaa, i ! ( v.i.mm ris. . rur, w. c. , itam, BURTON, GARDNER CO., iHcoaroiUTspj Weber Pianos, 35,000 in use. The Attention of the Farmers and General Fabric ia Directed Particularly to our Combination Fence (or ita Cheapnesi, Durability and Guaranteed 'Satisfaction. Orders by; Mail Receive Prompt at tendon. Send for Price List, TUX OCEOM. waa fair. When tho young women reached tha steamer they were utterly exhausted, and at once went to bed. This set tlio stewardess to grumbling. She wanted tho girls to appear at the dinner table on the first day at least Oh, dont urge na to go to dinner again, cried Miss F wearily, and then she told t. 3 woman tlie experience through which they had jnsl passed. Yon poor little duare, said the woman, at once becoming gentle, and for tlie rest of tho voyage she neglected every one else to look after the brave little American Indies. Men and wntni-- joined in little courtesies mid attention to tho two girls. One old crusty Englishman seemed to taka offense if any one monopolized their attention. He became their loyal guardian and walked around like a great protecting liiastiff. It was lie who stood on the deck with thorn on the day that the girls tamed their eager eyes toward the Btatne of Liberty. The new friends of the brave little American ladies advised them to stay in New York fur one day to get a little rest They would not listen to such pleasant urging. The ttewardefls actually wept over their to harry on to Bon Fraud sea Lumber,r Only get one night's deep, aha pleaded, hut the girls had been tidd to come home aa soon as possible, and they were deaf to all entreaties. The steamer was at her pier at 4 A0 pi m., and a train left Jersey City at 6 A0 p. m. In that two hours tlie girls thaie Inafa exleft tha. ataamar, amined by the custom house officials and were driven to tlie railroad station. Their adoring old Englishman, who did nut look aa if he bad moved rajiidly in forty years, fretted and bustled around the trunks when they were being opened. Ho was in mortal terror lest tha girls would miss the train after all. Ha stamped, got rod in tha face, puffed violently aud finally recovered the baggage with a cry at exaltation. The train which started westward that evening carried with two white faced young women the good wishes of a shipload of passengers. No woman hat an American would undertake such a thing, said tlie Englishman, looking at two bite of of white lace where two handkerchief fluttered at the car window aa tha train rolled rat of the station, and, he added, no woman bnt an American orald aucoeed in such an undertaking. For the benefit of those who are interested to know how the trip ended, and to satisfy those who like to follow transatlantic records, it may be said that the yonng women reached home ia safety. Togo from London to their home in San Francisco took them just twelve and one-hadays. New York Tribune. hl lf ImiMhl Cental-felt- . Onr rations while in Richmond we estimated at two to four ranees of beef and six to eight ounces of good wheat bread. To supplement this we made counterfeit greenbacks, which we were sometimes able to pa on unsuspecting guards. Once, by ratting rat the figures from a ten cent scrip and with a little blood gluing this over tha figure one in a dollar greenback, myself and three comrades bought with this bogus ten dollar bill ninety loaves of good bread, and it waa the only timo while I was in the Confederacy that I mailt a full rneaL Century. Taa(h Bote. Mrs. Cnster reports a story related to her by a frontiersman which may be taken aa an amnsing illustration of very solemn truth. The teller at the story had stopped at a cabin to got a supply of milk. The family consisted of a mother and several strapping daughters. Aa the traveler sat by the fire the shriveled old mother bent ovrr ilio fireplace puffing at a day pipe, perfectly stolid, and silent, till ouo of the girls came in and stood at the fire trying to dry her homespun dreaa. Without raising herself, and in drawling tone, the mother said presently, Sol, theres a coal under your - In no more animated tone, and without even moving, ths daughter replied, Which fat, mammy? The girl had ran barefoot all her life over the shale and rough ground at that country, and the rod hot coal was some time in making its way through the hard surface to a sensitive tissue. The rrodorl of the lllknm. The thread of the silkworm Is so small of them are that an average of forty-tw- o twisted together to form a thread of common sewing silk; that of the spider Two is. many diameters smaller. drama of spider web by weight would, ifatretclM-into a si might line, reach from London, England, to Edinburgh, Scotland, a distance of over 400 miles. St. Louis Republic. Faahlaa's Slaves. Husband-Y- on women are regular slave of fashion. Wife I know it, my dear. What It yon wanted me to do for yon? Husband Oh jw, I forgot. Those two 'ft Moulding i; Sasli, Doors, Combination Fence, Cedar Posts, Me. TASD, GOB 8tb S. ft! Bn. UP TOIFIV II OFFICE OPPFOSITX THEATBE Everything Jiusical at Ccalter & Snelgrave'tAti. Vain Street, Salt Lake City, Utah. CATALOGUES FUSE Money! Money!! !2 TO LOAN ON wwwfc VEBbv iBVMMB T9lw&Sv59SS3 -B- Salt Lake City, Utah. JOHN LOWRY SON, GENERAL SOPPLYHOUSE DHT GOODS, GBQOEBIES OIsOTHIXG SHS Y- o-hVERY EASY TERMS. We hare plenty of money pauiculara call on or write to W.DJSHVL1S, Baby Carriages. to loan on good security For full BED BOOM 3tanaon&phraim. EEO'VO wwvtm cwy, LUMBER AND BUILDING CO., B WHOLXSALK Lumber, Lath, Shingles, ets, WINDOW, DOORS. MOULDING and BLINDS. all BUILDUP suits. wwvw. taUL MAUIU I-K- Pick- and , Furniture, LOMBARD. INVESTMENT CO. XO REST FOB TUEV. Cut- CO i IkCF.BWllJ Every oue on tlie vessel was must kind to tlie young women and lauded their pluck to the sides. Tha voyage would for this reason have been made pleasant for tbem, but their harry and lack of sleep, together with their nerve tension, made them easy prey for mans mortal enemy, aeaeiokneM. From the time the big steamer left England until she swept np Now York harbor the weather waa uncompromisingly rough. Not one day A it. JU. S&e Ba:,k kinds- - of immh Wa carry the Iergeat Stock The people of the south will Doora, Windows, Eto., from Promptly attended to. Office C. and D. R. G. Depots. ' - south of 8alt lake City. do well by buying their Orders by mail ua, and yard oppoaite the V. il1IuiriIS5D,. JaraeiM. Robbins. - Joha P. OMatiMn. SOUTHERN CENTRAL semr STatios. 1 W carry the heaviest and: moat varied atook at . merchandise that can be found i within the Territorial limits at Utah ia proportion to the apace wa oecupy. We are alrenfe overstocked and with constant arrivals wo an vary mnek pnenat for tlie want ef more room. Rather than build any more at pna eat we will sacrifice on onr already low mice in order to intouw the desired reduotion of stock, hehca we offer yon the of ew cot Ais VRLtcaa; an Ribbons, Lacea Embroideries, Bummer Dreaa Gooda. Qtoan ware Tinware and a wida variety of Miaoeilanaona Owkivanaaa, Notions aud other Novoltiee. Wo buy STXSIi BABB W1B1 nCarLe. Wa also carry a foil line of sizes in JfAXM, talfCB fivir. Tran ROBBINS&CHRISTENSON & SSa a GUNNISON, UTAH. Qi 1W 15 btA ot IW Via,! . motley qa n4s li M. G. RALPHS CLASH SCORE. a foil ' Ha keeps line of Goods, Confectionery, Groceries, Canned Goods, Dry KEEP ON HAND FULL AND COMPLETE UNIS OF Dry Goods, Clothing, Glassware Stationery, Cigars, Tobacco, and makes a Specialty of Hats, Caps, Boots and Gents Furnishing Shoes, Goods and 1 j Boots and Shoes, Carpets, a Curtains. Wall Paper, Grocer- - : CLOTHING. Mount Pleosant, TTtctii. ies and Hardware, - AT WHOLESALE Tholasala and Ifotsll Dealers In Ap RETAIL, Staple and Green Groceries, r. BTOi Highest ash price paid for all kinds of Grain and Correspondence Solicited. 2& E. Centre Street, Prodoa. FROVO.UZAZZ 'Hoat T. G. WEBBER; WoeA Superintendent, Z.0.M.1 Scnxv&vfoavrveYUfc Vcowvrcvet vst VO oV Yiiftogfe BARNES, LEWIS Dens lauds man, C. M. Nislsen da beadata varer CO.,! |