Newspaper Page Text
THE GRANDEUR OP NIKKO.
A. JAPANESE CITY, THE IDEAL OF
BARBARIC BEAUTY.
.
The Grandest Shrine on Earth—A
Gate Gorgeous in Gold and Bronze
—Tho Sacred Bridge.
A traveler in Japan writes in the Hart
ford Courant concerning his visit to
Nikko in this wise: At five o’clock we
took jinrikishas and several days’ pro
, visions (for here we bade good-by to
- European food) and started on this, our
most delightful picnic in Japan. A
few miles from I tsunomiya we entered
■ through a granite torii, or gateway, the
approach to the shrines of Nikko, which
are twenty-one miles away. All tem
ples, as I have written before, must have
an approach through a grove of trees,
£ and the builders of Nikko, in order to
have their avenue the grandest that
could be conceived of, made it twenty
one miles long.
Words cannot express the tree grand
eur of this approach. Twenty-one miles
gentle ami almost straight ascent up tiie
mountain side over a road smooth as a
floor, with magnificent cryptomeria
(cedar) trees planted four deep on either
side of the way; trees two hundred years
old, grand, royal in their beauty, meet
ing their giant arms over the roadway,
making a god like shade, a running
stream on either side of the road, a re
ligious stillness in the air. It was
twenty-one miles of nature’s own cathe
dral aisle. Twenty-one miles of incar
hate rest, repose, religion.
The town of Nikko has nothing re
markable in it. but just beyond the
town we crossed a beautiful, dashing,
blue mountain stream and entered the
temple grounds. The stream is spanned ;
by two bridges; one of which is traveled i
by ordinary mortals, the other a red ,
Jacqucred span which once a year is I
crossed only by the high priest. The
only other mortal who has ever been al
lowed to cross it was General <'rant.
The Japanese love a warrior and so they
permitted Grant to pdss over their sacred
arch.
Nikko is the burial place of two of the
greatest shoguns or prime ministers
which Japan has ever known—lyeyasu
and his grandson lyemitsu. Their
graves and brbnze moxinments are high
up on the mountain side, and all these
grand temples arc simply shrines before
these two tombs. Other bronze monu
ments there are, and granite ones a thou
sand or more in the shape of lanterns,
but these arc here only because it was
an honor to be allowed a place in Nikko
for a monument. The real cause of
building all these temples was that the
shoguns were buried there, and the
grandest shrines on earth were erected
| in honor of their memory. 1 say grand
est shrines on earth, for where else in the
world are there built, scores of great
temples and gateways as approaches and
shrines for two tombs, the whole led up
to by an avenue of magnificent cedars
—twenty-one miles of shady, calm
grandeur.
After entering the grounds we walked
through the pebbled and admirably kept
walks, passing through several minor
gates, each beautiful and grand, till we
came to the great gate of all— Yoinci
Man—the name of which means “stand
all day and look upward.” Every part
of the gate is gorgeous in gold, and lac
quer, and bronze, and rich, elaborate
carving, and all so beautifully wrought
and harmonized that the eye revels in
the delight of color and carving run
riot. Day after day I went and looked
upward for hours at this marvel of
beauty. It lives in my soul now as the
most beautiful work of man that lever
saw. I will not except any.
, Passing through this we < ame to one
of the temples, and when I describe one
I describe all; forall are magnificent and
regal. The steps to the temple are cov
ered with hand wrought plates of bronze.
We took off our shoes and put on great
slippers that were allowed us, and en
tered. We were first shown the various
rooms set apart for the use of the Mikado
when he comes here, the priests,and such
guests as General Grant, who was here
M accorded the highest honors. These
rooms were approximately fifteen feet
square, and marvels of grand decoration.
The walls were painted, giving various
views of Japan, all sorts of tree shapes
and adornments of blossoms and flow
ers, and the whole lacquered with the
richeat gold lacquer.
The decorations were over two hun
dred years oid, and yet the gold and
Colors were as brilliant as when first put
on. The entrances were hung with the
most heavy and rich brocaded and em
broidered sila, curtains which Japan
could produce. The ceilings were
fit paneled with rich carved flowers and
birds, golden phea-ant being the pre
dominant bird. When they wanted to
introduce a sombre hue.they put in a
peacock or bird of paradise, and yet all
utis magnificence of color and gold and
carving was in perfect good taste, and
the general effect was quiet rather than
loud.
Passing through these rooms we
entered the great room of the temple,
and here my powers of description give
out; the floor matted with fine soft mat
ting, the walls gold lacquer, the im
mense wooden pillars lacque ed so that
they looked like columns of burnished
gold, carving everywhere, bronze worth
a king’s ransom before the altars or
shrines, immense curtains of silk and
uold—my mind wearies as 1 attempt to
write abcut this magnificence, which at
the time delighted my very soul as I be
held it, and left a calm and soothed im
pression throughout my very being.
Those were grand old men who built the
* temples at Nikko.
Alter leaving the temple we ascended
the granite sta rs up the mountain,two ,
bundled And sixty steps to the tomb of |
the Shogun. 'These stairs are massive
blocks of granite set in the bill sale,
uiou covered with two centuries of j
dampness and the balustrade was in im
mense sections fifteen and twenty feet
long, cut from, masses of stone and not
each baluster by itself. The Japanese
may be toy-like in some of their work,
delicate they are in their bronze and
crockery, but when they attack granite
their will, their soul, their conceptions
rise to the occasion. They treat granite
in granite fashion, and as a result we be
hold massive work such as one sees no
where else in the world.
When we arrived at the tomb we
passed through another elaborately dec
orated and lacquered gate, the bronze
doors opened and showed us the sacred
resting place ot Japan’s greatest states
man. This was situated in a niche, or
excavation, in the hill side, heavily
walled with masonry and shaded by
royal cedars which abound everywhere.
The tomb is a large bronze receptacle
like a cylindrical bank safe, with beauti
ful doors emblazoned in gold with the
arms and crest of the Shogun, and all set
upon a massive granite base. In front
of it stood a bronze incense burner,
bronze stork ten feet in height and a
bronze vase with bronze lotos plants.
SELECT SIFTINGS.
The brood of a single fly is about
c<so. b
The inhabitants of Borneo, will carry
j none but American umbrellas.
The pride of Kingman County, Kan.,
is a bull that weighs 4250 pounds.
A young woman in Rochester (N. Y.)
goes into a trance and sings in five dif
ferent languages.
A calf was born on the farm of
Michael Gibbons, Cambria County,
Penn., without the remotest sign of a
tail.
The other day, it is chronicled, the
schooner Borneo and the schooner Juliet
were anchored side by side in the harbor
of Belfast, Mo.
A woman in Terry County, Ky., has
a circular hole in one of her eyelids,
through which she can see when both
eyes are closed.
The Bank of England is the most ex
tensive banking institution in the world.
It employes over 1000 clerks, and its
buildings cover 8 acres.
Near Wabash, Ind., during the storm
of Sunday night, lightning melted the
hairpins on a young woman’s head, but
did her no further damage.
It has been determined that an Amer
ican ship builder constructed the first
sea going steamer that ever crossed the
Atlantic, the Royal William.
It may be interesting to chess players
to know the origin of the word “check
mate.” It is literally the Arabic es cheik
imat, the sheik (king) is dying.
A Nevada ranchman shot, trapped and
poisoned 4200 rabbits in four months,
and then figured up that about .’>ooonew
ones had come to fill their places.
A New York State man is making a
kite large enough to draw a buggy, and
he proj oses to be drawn around the
country in that manner this summer.
Out in Missouri, the other day, a col
ored man was sold into servitude for six
mouths for the offence of vagrancy,
lie was knocked down for six dollars
and a half.
Lawrence, Jesse and Thomas Ham
mond, brothers all, of Greecastle, Ind.,
arc exactly 71 years old—the only in
stance known where, triplets have at
tained to that. age.
In pumping out the stomach of a
would-be suicide in Des Moines, lowa,
the other day the doctors brought up a
three-cent piece, two buttons, forty
cherry stones and a marble. He was an
\ ostrich tramp.
When Philip Cassiday, of Omaha,
; Neb., was buried the other day, his pet
goat ran along beside the hearse, bleat
ing piteously, and was with diT.culty
kept outside the cemetery while the
! burial went on.
The albatross is the most devoted lover
and mate. Even when the female is on
the nest he will stand by and go through
the most extravagant motions, and ut
tering curious shrieks, which sound like
laughter, in return for which the female
gently caresses him with her bill.
'l'he King of Siam has conferred the
I order of Chulachonclao on his dentist, a
Frenchman. The decoration is ’he least
important of the four orders of Siam,
j and it involves the wearing of a cone
shaped hat of great weight on all public
occasions. Recipients of the honor are,
therefore, not always as grateful as they
might be.
A farmer in the neighborhod of
Corinth, Me., having been annoyed by a
number of hawks and crows which made
their headquarters in one of his trees,
i set a trap on the end of a long pole,
which he fastened to the tree in such a
manner that the trap was a little higher
i than the topmost branch. The result, at
last report-', was the capture of nine
hawks, three owls and one crow.
Riding in the Pope’s Carriage.
Once •when I was in Rome I found my
! wap, or rather lost my way, into the
I Vatican stables. There were hundreds
’ of carriages about, it seemed to me, be
; longing to priests and cardinals and high
| dignitaries ‘generally, and one great
: scarlet and gilt equipage, with a canopied
j golden roof, and bore upon it the arms
of the church, and in this carriage no one
i ever rides but the Pope of I'omc, No-
I body was in s’ght a few hostlers a block
: away busily cleaning a trim little
cardinal’s coupe, and so, with my heart
I in my mourti, 1 opened the door and
i popped in. 1 flounced around on thoje
j sacred seats ust as 1 have seen children
I flounce around on the seats of tho idle
I cafriages in the stables bac k of town, and
I bv-and by, when I could, Islipped away.
Nobody ever knew about it, but to my
dying day I shall A member with delight
my “dry” ride iu the Pope’s carriage.—
i A’nte Orban* I‘icayunc.
The Reason.
The city is constantly drawing upon
the country for young" blood, strong
muscles and active brains, to recruit the
ranks of earnest, effective workers in the
various channels of human industry. It’
is found that boys from the country can
be depended upon, where close, persist
ent work is required, and there is a good
reason for it. The average country boys
are brought up under conditions that af
ford a good appreciation of the value of
persistent work. A good crop cannot be
secured except at the expense of con
stant, unremitting toil. From the ear
nest streak of dawn to the last ray of the
setting sun, there is something that can
be done. It is not all drudgery. Much
of it is pleasant labor, but it is work that
must be done, and done thoroughly at
the right time, or it will not be made a
success. Habit frequently makes a man.
Miss Frances Williard’s suggestion for
all Prohibitionists to wear the white rose
in the campaign, caused a Hudson, Mass.,
military company to adopt the name
“White Rose Guard.” Their colors are
the stars and stripes, and a white flag
with the red cross of the Crusade and
the motto, “For Gcd and Home and Na
tive Land.”
From the Ex-President of the New York
State Senate.
State of New York, Senate Chamber, I
Alabn r, March 11, 1886. j
I have used Allcock’s Porous Plasters in
my family for the past five years, and can
truthfully say they are a valuable remedy and
effect great cures. I would not be without
them. I have inseveral instances given some
to friends suffering with we ik and lam - backs,
and they have invariably afforded certain and
speedy relief. They cannot be too highly com
mended. Edmund L. Pitts.
The farmer who belittles his calling belit
tles himself, if such a thing is passible-.
Are You Sick and Discouraged?
If so you are the case we want the address of.
We charge you nothing for a trial bottle. We
cure nine cases out of ten of chronic constipa
tion, diseases of the urinary organs, liver and
kidney troubles, malaria and all brain and
nerve troubles. Agents wanted in every town
The postage on one bottle is 25 cts. We leave
it with you to send it or not. We shall cure
you if you will give it a trial. It contains no
poison." Address the Hart Medicine Co., Union
ville, Ct.
And now it is said, Jay Gould is laid up with
a cancer.
A W Oman’s Confession.
“Do you know, Mary, 1 once actually con
templated suicide? ’ “You horrify me, Mrs.
B. Tell me about it.” “1 was suffering from
chronic we kness. I believed myself the
most unhappy woman in the world. 1 looked
ten years older than 1 really was, and 1 felt
twenty. Life seemed to have nothing in it
worth living tor.” “I have experienced all
those symptoms myself. Well?” “Well, I
was save 1 at the eleventh hour from the com
mission of a deed which 1 shudder to think of.
A friend advised me to take Dr. Ph roe’s Fa
vorite Prescription. Ididso. In an incredibly
short time 1 telt like a new b ing. The ‘Pre
scription’cured m-, and 1 owe Dr. Pierce a
debt of gratitude which . can never repay.”
Bowdoin College, Me., conferred the degree
of LL. D. on M. W. Fuller and Gen. Howard.
A Pill in Timo, Saves Nine !
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pel'ets are
preventive as well s curative. A few of these
“Little Giants,” taken at the light time, with
little expo so and no inconve tence, will ac
complish what many dollars and much sacri
fice of time will fail to do after Disease once
ho ds you with his iron grasp. Constipation,
relieved, the liver regulated, the Blood puri
fied, will t’orl Ify against fevers and all con
tagious diseases. Persons intending traveling,
changing diet, water and climate, will find in
valuable, Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pel
lets. In vials convenient to carry.
A walnut grove planted now would make a
good twenty year endowment.
If all so-called remedies have failed, Dr.
Sage’s Catarrh Rem dy cures.
Absinthe drinking is said to be the latest
alarming “fad" in New York.
Use Long’s Pearl Tooth Soap for cleansing
your teeth. 25 cents at Druggists.
If afflicted with - ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle,
Beck & Gregg Hardware Co,
Wholssalß Whs,
ATLaYNTTA, GrZk.
—DEALERS IN—
Wagon Scales.
KYWi-ito lot- X J riccH..£l
Do you want M Inspirator?
■ H / w X- n X- -
is /Z
3 Zr
h» ■- i I§ $
l css-/
WESLEYAN FEMALE COLLEGE
MACON, G-Jk..
Begin* 51st Annual Session October 3d. 1888. Tho
oldest and the leading college fur girls in the
south. All modern improvements looking to
health, safety, comfort and advancement of pu
pils in l iteral re. m e and Art. I'ure water,
mild cliim.to. nerous table, thorough teaching.
Apply early for eutalogne to
RE\ . ■ !• ts- I'. pr< rident.
Send fir a Catale.n<> f the
<'ol.l I’.GE OF
I'll Y>!< I \ X- VXD SI RtU’.OXS,
BA I.TI HOR F. M D.
whi h offers th «. i u <1 .- u I '• Me.l.e nr su!» r:"r
khvautages
Im. i'll< 'M VS OI'IE (D r'. il«> X How ar ISL
ltUA.ii. i*niv* I *>'-E. A'b'i I t.l h X I<• i Au,'v.- », Aicuv
MRS. DARTS TRIPLETS.
President Cleveland’s Prize for the three best
babies at the Aurora County Fair, in 1887, was
given to these triplets, Mollie, Ida and Ray,
children of Mrs. A. K. Dart, Hamburgh, N. Y.
She writes: “ Last August the little ones became
very sick, and as I could get no other food that
would agree with them, I commenced the use
of Lactated Food. It helped them immediately,
and they were soon as tvell as ever, and I con
sider it very largely due to the Food that they
are now so well.”
Cabinet photo, of these triplets sent free to the mother
of any baby born this year
Lactated Food
Is the best Food for bottle-fed babies. It keeps
them well, and is better than medicine
when they are sick.
THE MOST PALATABLE,
NUTRITIOUS, and
DIGESTIBLE FOOD.
EASILY PREPARED.
At Druggists, 25c., 50c., SI.OO.
The Best and Most Economical Food.
150 Meals for an infant for SI.OO.
O'A valuable pamphlet on “The Nutrition
of Infants and Invalids,” free on application. /
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., BURLINGTON, VT,
ever y
/WftFARMER’S
/IP WIFE
Sees some of her Poultry
I®,.’. die each year without
rAx bi’ knowing what the matter
BBWWir. ISjxA was or how to effect a
Trask, remedy if she does recog-
EhSmMili nize the Disease. This Is
®oEHSlvll/i I !i not ' rl f? llt . as at an ex
i AllW I ,euse of ‘-23 cents (in
IU a lOU-Pnge BOOK
giving the experience of a practical Poultry Raiser
(not an amateur, but a man working for dollars and
cents) during a period of 2.’> years. 11 teaches you
howto Detect and Cure Disiitscs; how to
Feed for Eggs mid also for Fattening)
which Fowls to Save lor Breeding Pur
poses; and everything, indeed, you should
know on this subject. Sent postpaid lor 23c.
BOOK PUB. HOUSE,
134 Leonard Street, N. Y. City.
FARMERS a > EVUIXES, Wood l*l:ui«n.
tpgyy SAW MILL 1 h
Hoge’s Improved ! /ztx 1
Circular Saw Alill.jl
With Universal
Log Beam Recti
linear Simulta- yAqTw j.IE
neons Set w<n-k
and Double
centric Friction I
Feed. Manufac
tured by the —ixw <
SALEH IRON WORKS, SALEM, N. C.
nLj , Dutcher’s-:-Lightning
FLY KILLER
I s ; e isily prenared an I
us«*d ; no danger ; flies don’t live long
r/ enough to get away. Use it early.
T freely ; rid the house of them and b ?
* at pence. Don't rake anythin® “jU't
rs good.” There is nothing like the genuine Dutch
vr s. FREI)’ K l>i T( HER, St \L ans, Vt.
UU Plantation Engines
With Self-Contained
GwßsoS^ll return flue boilers,
FORDRIVING
COTTON GINS and MILLS.
Illustrated Pamphlet Free. Address
„JAMES LEFFEL i CO.
SPRINGFIELD, OHIO,
Tm i _,j*w*e or no Liberty St., New York.
— joimes
FREIGHT
® Ton Wagon Scales,
* ron LeTers ' lre l Bearinga, Brou
Taie Beam and Beam Rox for
Every size Seale For free price list
P* d■ mention this paper and address
4 < ’BO* ® JONES or BINGHAMTON.
” BINGHAMTON. N. V
5 shot Qu n I vers.
io •
CD ( J
LL for i'rice Litt.
Seines, Tents, Breech-loading double Shotgun at $9.00;
Bingie barrel Breech loaders at $1 to sl2 ; Breech-loading
Ritit's $ ;.5O to sls; Double-barrel Muzzle loaders at .*V»O
to S2O; Repeating Rilles, 10-shooter, 3’4 to S3O: Rvtolv, r-s
fl to s’2o ; Flobert Rides, s2..'»otoss. (Junssent C. O. D. to
t 'camine. Revolvers hv mail to anv P. O. Address JOli.V*
VfO.VS GREAT WE-iTERX Gl’.X WORKS, PitUburg, Penna.
IZothma clßoa
nkxcrman Asthma Cure never/aik to give wt-EI
■ mediate relief in the worst cubes, insures comfort- SI
■ able sleep; effects cures where a ! othersfail J
■ triat conrincts the most skeptical. Priv'e eOc.
■ & 1 .OO,o£Druggists or by mail. Sample FR [3
Hiorstamp. Dm K. SCHIfFMAN, Paul, Minn M
yolnttodnee.will Bend»P«tr <rf«pl 1
IDEAL CRAYON-LH .iO. PORTRAITS
Cleveland-Thurman er Harrison-Merton
L ith Im. Oak Frame bon hr for Gko.P. Her -« <>n. Cincinnati t
f -id 2e. for List of Campaign requisites. £ J*aglnts \t anted
Greal English Gout and
OsCeiS St bjlSb Rheumatic Remedy.
Oval Box, 31; rouiitl, 14 Pills.
Cincinnati a julywq
Mr A OCT. 27 — '
4 mo c®—• •«■*■ >n-- w «» .-
CEJTEIIIjIWBjSWW
GRANO JUBILEE celebrating the Settlement of the Northwestern Territory.
I INSUR PASSE! ) DISPLAY. ~
tKAtR i ts v
EXCURSION RATES FROM ALL POSITS
DR. SCHENCK’S
MANDRAKE PILLS
CLEANSE the mucous mem
branes of the stomach and bowels of all slime
and foreign matter, start the secretions, assist
digestion and assimilation, nutrify the blood.
They relieve the liver of congestion, give it
a chance to extract bile poisons from the
blood, to make them into good bile, and to
secrete just what is needed. They do not
tear their way and irritate like most purga
tives, but they treat all the surfaces and or
gans, so that the entire system responds.
They are based on scientific principles.
They are entirely rational and natural.
They always do what is claimed for them.
They work on the system in the way claimed.
They work together for the greatest good.
They are not like new and untried medicines.
They need no praise, but only simple men
tion of merit.
Schenck's purely vegetable and
wholly reliable family medicines are for sale
by all Druggists. Every package has neatly
printed directions for use. If you would
understand yourself send for Dr. Schenck’s
new Book on Diseases of the Lungs, Liver
and Stomach. Sent free. Address Dr. J.
H. Schenck & Son. Philadelphia, Pa,
WEBER
PIANO-FORTES.
ENDORSED BY THE LEADING ARTISTS, SEMI
NARIANS, AND THE PRESS, AS THE
BEST PIANOS MADE.
Prices as reasonable and terms as easy as consistent
with thorough workmanship.
CATALOGUES MAILED FREE,
Correspondence Solicited.
WAREROOMS,
Fifth Avenue, cor. 16th St., N.Y.
MEMORY
DISCOVERY.
M holly unlike artificial wysteins.
Cure of mind whadoring.
Any book learned in one reading.
Classes of 1087 at Baltimore, 1005 at Detroit.
1500 at Philadelphia, 1113 at Washington, 121(5
at Boston, large classes of Columbia Law students, at
Yale, Wellesley, Oberlin, University of Penn., Mi civ
ignn University, Chautauqua, £c., Ac. Endorsed by
Richard Proctor, the Scientist, Hons. W.W. Astor,
Judah P. Benjamin, Judge Gibson, Dr. Brown, E.
H. Cook, Principal N. Y. State Normal College, Ac.
Taught by correspondence. Prosnertus post free
from PROF. LOISF.TI’E, 237 Fifth Ave.. N. Y.
MEN AND BOYS!
Do you want to ,
learn all about eh.
a Horse ? How
to Pick Out a
Good One f How
to linow Imper
fectioiiM and so
Guard atrainsi
Fraud ? How to
Detect Disease
and efleet a cure
when same is
possible? How
to Tell the Ar<‘ •'
by the Teeth?
What to call the '
Different Parts
of the Animal? r f
How to Shoe a Horse Properly All this,
and other Valuable Information rein tins
to the Equine Species can be obtained by
reading our 100-PAGE ILLUSTRATED
HORSE BOOK, which we will forward,
c p e o hL pn :,f’?"nV?y' 25 CTS. IN STAMPS.
HORSE BOOK CO.. IJJ4 Leonard St., N. Y.
WE SELL ALL AMERICAN
A BICYCLES.
And guarantee LOWEST PRICES.
A. W. GI .MP A- CO.. Dayton. O.
» Largest retail stock in America.
>2 in OTTO, factory price SfiO.OO, our price $40.00.
>0 in. “ “ “ 55.00, “ “ 35.00
18 iu. “ " “ 50 00. “ “ 33.00.
,i in. " “ “ 45.00, “ “ 30.00.
4 in. “ “ “ 40.00. “ “ 27.00.
Irder quick. Also2">o second-hand Wheels. Repair
-’• Nickeling. Bicycles Guns taken in trade.
1 PUBLISHERS OF NEWSPAPERS,
OR THOSE WHO INTEND TO BE,
WOULD FIND IT PROFITABLE TO
CORRESPOND WITH THE
ATLANTA NEWSPAPER UNION,
ATLANTA, GA.
H I?® C L'uieh them alive with
Fl IFjS* Styner’s Sticky Fly
E BbiSl&mW’ 3 PAI F.-t Sold by all drug-
■ gists or grocers, or mailed, postage paid, on receipt
!of 5 cents. T. R. DAWLEY, clanitfac
! Hirer, 57 Beekman st eet, New link.
BLOOD
Uri-nary Organs positively cured or no ‘ barge. Out.
• medicine is a preventive of Malaria and Yellow .Bever.
Full size sample bottie sent tree on receipt of 23
’ cents to prepay postage. Address THIS iIAK-T
JI:•.!>!(’ I\ • CO.. Fox J(H.
Pl to a dnr, Samples worth $1.50, FRE®
I.fuus not io: ler Cue h irstfs feet. Write
Uv Rrewster Safety R- in Holder Co.. Holly. M.ch.
GO 1« l> is worth s’>oo per lb. Pettit’s Eya Salva Is
worth sl.u<>o. but ii sold it -sc. a’uxby deaters,
la.N. U ‘. Thirty,