u. gitading, "UNCLE 614'S' OENTI'.2iNIAL ODE. Oh ye_ T'cinvers 1 what a roar, Such was never heard before , — Thundering, from 'shore 14 shore; "Uncle :Sam's a hundred Cannon boom'anti trumpets bray, sciugak and fonntains play-- 'Tis his great Centennial day-- `, "Unele.Sam's a hundred I" Stalwayt men and puny boys, Maids and matrons si•ell the noise, Bi'ry imtby lifts its voice— -- "Uncle Sam's a hundred 1" Nervous folks, - who cote on quiet, Thoughthey!re half distrieted by it, Can't hellytn r ixing in the riot, "Unele.Bant's it-hundred'!" Brutes that walk and birds that fly, On the earth Or in the sky, Join the universal 'cry, "Uncle Sam's a hundred r WellOnippose he is—what then ? Don't let's act like crazy meh, q t l,l' utit we take to tooling when -"Uncle-ellaml a hunnied !" There he stands—our modern Saul— Head and shoulders above all ; Yet. "Pride goes before a fall," . E'en though one's a hundre& "What's a hundred in our day ?" Foreign Uncle. Sam will say "Let us sit arid watch ,the He is but a hundred. "Granted :he's , a shapely youth- 7 Fair " and .ruddy forsooth, He's too yottng—anit, that's the.truth .Onlyjust a hundred! , "When he's.,twice as old, pardio, he easier. to foresee What will bebis.destiny; .Now be's but hundred. "When he's played his boyish pranks, Should be seek to join our ranks We'll reflect. But now- 2 -no thanks ! Wby, he's but a hundred. Yes, our uncle's years are few He is young—the charge is tine ; Let us keep that fact in view, Though he counts a hundred. Don't let's tempt lim i t° ignore: . 'Warnings . that have gOl4,betore Perils both by sea and shore, • Now that he's : a hundred. Let us strive, with earnest heart, Each of us to do his part, Su that he, may 'seapethe : smart, Seeing he's a hundred., Awl with solemn, grateful thought, 01 the deeds that he has wrought;... - Guided, cherished, favored, taught,' k • Till he's reacbed'a huCidred. Let us, as we vaunt: his worth, I Mingle soberness with mirth, While we shout to all the earth, "Uncle Sam's a hundred !" EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS. . . Reviewing the history 'of education in this country, in his address at . .the opening of the National Educational As,sociatioil in Baltimore President Phelps gave the following statistics "Prior to 1776 but 'nine colleges had been. , 4t• tablished, and not 'more than I five oithese, We are told, were in a really efficient 'condition. Now more than four hundred institutions , bear ing the titles of 'college' and 'university' , are distributed throughout forty of the St4tes And . Territories, with nearly 57,000 student 4 and 3,' 700 Professors and teachers: : Then little was done for thc. higher educaticM of Women.. , Now there' are 200 'female senitnuries, with 22,444 students, and 2285 . ieethers.:. Then, Bays a writer in the .2Vezo png;tirid Jourhad of Llucation, for June 10, '1876, protessionai schools were almost unknoWn. : The candidate for the honors )nif 'the law; the ' dignities =of the ministry, and, generally speaking, for the toils of medical praCtipe, wig -obliged to 'pursuehis studies under 'pi) . 'Vate Jtitters. ' Nsw - .there are 222 professional schools of the various classes, excluding teachers seminaries; with, 23,280 stu dents and 2,490 K, instructors., Now 124 are re. ported in the United'' States I alone, with 54'405 _ students eau& - 996 , instructors: , - Then there were no commereial colleges!; now 127 stein operation, with 23,030 students; and 5721-teach elt—Then secondary and preparatnry schools had namely a name by which' to live ; bow 1„ 122 are said .to . - exist, affording instruction . to . 109,593 pupils,and giving enpleyment to 6,16 . 3 leachers. The ' :kindergarten, - that last ' , and , best of educational inventions, is a very, recent' importation. In 1874 NI e :wgre blest with::9s of these- human nurseries, with 1,06 OPUS and 125 teachers. ,May. ' their. numberi rapidly increase, "We have no , means „ of ,giving the', school . Population of thse earlier days. ' It 11'not,iike ly that it was ever ascertaiiied.' , Now thirty seven States and eleven territories report, sin Inregate of more than thirteen ' millions, Or , more than four times the total population of the country' in 1776. Then the sehoOl‘ enroll= tent was, of course; unknown; Now .it amounts au the, figu eseotable res or 5,006,60: hen the schools were scattered, and their : Dumber was , correspondingly_ restricted,, .N9w they are es,tlulated to number 450,000, mules' employemploying2so,9oo teachers... - ITh`elotgl inc_ _G* of the public - schools is ,gived, t $82;009,000 ; their expenditilres at; 75,000 an d the value of their property at ,5165,00p.0 , . The figores i thus, far exhibited 'sea tO in icatel w6t'ivoi have done ; there are ,otilers which till us with . impressive , emphasis that , ivh.lch we have _ ~not, done. With i sehool 'pe`pulition of100,1)00;' as reported, we iisi,'iti _.actual enrollment 'of L .” 8 . 019 9A 0 9 0 -,...= The 44int l i e el arlAitOriPlilif iii census of 1870; above the age of ten Years, was :round numbers, 5,500,000. Of thel3l3 more than 2,000.000 were adults ; upward of 2,000, 1 fioo more wire from fifteen to twenty-one years of age, and 1,000,000 were . .between ten and teen years 'old. Of _the number between fifteen and twenty-one years it is estimated that about one -halt, have passed the opportunity for educa tion,atid 'since it, is well understood that a large proportion of thp children in this country leave the schoolS perhaps at an average age of ten or Ovelve years, the conclusion IS irresistible that thousands of thine who, are reported as illiter ates between ten and : fifteen years of age will forever remain 4so. Ot the 930,0b0 illiterate persons between fifteen and twenty-one years of age who have passed their,opportunities for instruction, 137,000 are in the Northern States, 15,000 in the Paiftc and 778,000 in the. South ern.". i. • , . A writer in the Saturday` Review, upon our honeymoon cus t oms, ,attacks one of the most absurd produeltsl of our civilization._ He is re ferring especial 3f - to wedling . journeYs ; hut really, frOm the beginning_ to the end, the tre menduous ado hat is made about a marriage; the vast amonn of parade and ceremony`; the publicity; the f ss, the excessive expense --:-all these things ma e a marriage samething-which women delight in, but men loot upon with fear and trem ling. The wedding journey, however, upon brror's head horrors accumu late: 'ln this m nstrous fashion' we condemn, quotingi the la guage of the Saturday Review, "the untbrtuna 43 couple to a penance which would try the d cpest affection and irritate the sweetest teniper." And do any , of us know id how often the eepest affection, succumbs to the tremenduou trial ; or how frequently the sweetest temper is thkreafter soured for life.' it. is notorious tha travel tries severely the most confirmed,trien ship ; and it brings to the sur face all the mo t unamiable qualities ; we pos sess ; that non who are less than angals can be serene, tend r, considerate, amiable, enter taining, amid the dust. the heat, the confusion. the. whirl, the tigue; the inriumeiable nerve exhausting con. itions that pertain to travel : and-these tryin', experiences come at • a time when two perso 1 s are for tle first time &liver ed solely into •ach other's , society—at a mo ment when the strangeness of a new, relation ship Is troublini. the heart, and the appreben- sion of an unkn Ivn future is filling the imagi nation with. any ' surmises ; they 'come just when the o er-strained n .„ yes need Telax ation and peace, when -thp e.ag: ' • 'cast is solic iting only for s ',apathy and ca 11. No, what is it that usage prescribes ? I i;'eclatesthat a young couple sl ould in . this in t ,sacred hour of life, be subje ted, to the •curio Is regards of strangeis in ca s and _waitrs in hp' , that 'dismal 'hotel p rlors and dreary hotel' apart . Ments are the , n arest_apprciach.to domestic se 'elusion anddcomfort that can be secured ; that excitement, movement, flurry, and fatigue ahall I make up - erkeh d y's record. This is what usage sets dovin #sth programme for newly married .. folk.• The mai 'el .is, that it is the bride and the bride's frien s of her own sek that demand rigid and uniforin 'compliance with this usage. It isnOtorious tat ft woman will submit to ev ery su ff ering an( undergo every penaltyrequir ed by fashion. IShelkWill sacrifice, her beauty and comfort Of ress, and jeopataiie ter.dear est prOspecis . 0, life, .to the. requirements of usage. . \ A_ wedding, t •ur may have• unto \ ld discom forts ; it may e. barrass her modesty,, endan ger her cotlnubi 1 bliss, injure her health, lay the begil?nbigi of bickering* and differences; it may have eve : known\ disadvantage, but it will be insisted 'upon if society utters its be hests to •that . iect. It- is women who, are speciallyAnxiou. that marriages should Mlliti ply, And yet it 1. women who . have given the wedding cerem •ny such elaboration of display at td loaded it ith such, costly expenditures, that Marriage, - ith a majority of men, is ren dered impossibl.. Fashion, or common sense . or some other I power, should dictate that marriage ceretrionies Ouglitto be simple and, un• ostentatious, . and that after -the ceremony is . performed the calm 'orsonae Sweet seclusion is' absolutely" 'necessary, not only. for the future. health of a %vita whose nerves are already over strained jby the, , xcitement of ''what is, to her a tremendous eveut for the foundation of an intercourse between -the newly united couple that shall be sw et and lasting. Have any of our peOple the - urage to defy usage, and act 4,3 according - to th ir, own inclination' at this im- TiOrtant period it soems, ;ACeording: to - the writer inr , the .tt'aturday Reviegt, that in England Adevice is sometimes, eniployed by -which Mrs. Grunday.is bot satisfied and defeated. •We q uote front the 4 rtiele referred to • "When Hod. e and his sWeetheart crown their pastoral l . res in the quiet old country • _ . , , . • . . . church, they. en jo y a walk in their finery and white cotton glOsies, and - then take possession of thecot beside the wood, and settle down at once to connub ial,oin comfort. But , they have chances of . happiness denied to their_ richer_ neighbors. It i \a ,matter almost of moral duty certainly of superstitious strictness, that when r. the squire mar es' the rector's daughter, 'or my lord marries m - lady; the first month of mar Fled life must 6 passed-in the - dis Comfort of foreign hotels, o the still less endurabale &Solo. Lion of English inns, as if to strain, to the ut most:the strength of their fiewly-Made bonds. Dlow and thet.,,llt, .is trup t a bridegroom may .know hetter. Be has, perhaps, been married before, and-doeinot -foret Iris old eperiences. When the carriage_ rouriti,. and hii, bride and be,.ainid,shOwers of sliPpera, and rich; and, ether aelTheleSS manifestatiohs of the - inanity of the' Wedding-Oests, step in and are whirled away; he driires i 'out by one 'kite; and,‘Oter a short excursion over the hills returns by tire other, treading•on the heels of- the-departing.— put nuch ''ii contrivance reqUiree bonsiclenti)le toyetbeught. Papa ' and mamma glut be per- Suided 'to liik;lttlit: Tbg e mot be no eve ,niog naff, and -t c e junior branches of the fiord lv mist bm Arpttished elsewiere undor various ems* Itest,..!"4.contemplate some mach ` es; HONEYMOON. cape from the tyranny of 'usage, but few there be that can accomplish' the fulfillment of their scheme. My lord. sometimes borrows a friend's house, and exchanges_ the 'prying glances -of waiters for those of private domestics ; but his fate is little different from _that of Ins less-dis tinguished neighbor ; ,and when modern moth ers grumble at the decline of matrimony among eligible young men, tlicy forget that qnany a. man who could walk coolly to the cannon's month, or even undergo the amount Of cere monial required by: the .social usages of a vil lage, cannot, even if he' Would, face the long and bitter agony of a - fashionable wedding,the preparations, the bridesmaith' lockets, the set tlements, the bishop and three. other' 'clew-. men, the , sexton of St. .george's,' the dreary mirth of the. briakfast, the -speeches, the prea entsi and finally , the four white horses, the down, drawn blinds, the railway station, the luggage, the • horrors of the midde passage, and the- yawning desolation of the Wedding The device of slipping round and entering another gate is not practicable with us '; but, at least a resolute bridegroom, might have a se cluded cottage' where, add Usist that big newly won spouse, shall • pay the honeymoon there, restful and peaceful in his compankinship,rath er than;be dragged a weary round of exciting public travel, the cynosure of • every eye, the marked out of the irreverent, with possibly the young store of affections rudely shocked by the exigencies of sorely tried temper anq much weariness of, mind - and body. "CHARGE IT." A simple little sentence is this, to be sure, and yet it may be considered as one of the most insidious enemies with which people have to deal. It is very pleasant to have all the little commedities offered for sale in mar •ket, and it is sometimes bard to deny one .self of the mime when , they .can ne obtained by saying "charge it." But this habit of getting articles,however small the charge may be,with uut paying for them, keeps one's funds in a low state most of the time. "I have no money to-day, but should like the article very much," says a young man, who happens to go into a store and, sees something which sfrikes his fancy., "Never mind," says the gentlemanly clerk, "you are gopd for it." "Weil, I will' take it and you may charge And' so it is that- little accounts are opened at one place and another, till the young man is surprised at his liabilities, which though small in detail, are sufficiently huge in the aggregate to reduce his cash materially when settling day comes: In many if the cash were required, the pur chase would not be made, even had the persGn -the money with him ; butAo some, getting an article" charged does not seem like - parting with an equivalent. Still when pay-day comes, as it always does, this illusion vanishes, and. a feeling •is experi enced of parting: with Imoney and 'receiving nothing-in return. I -1 4 - if them is an actual necessity of making a Purehase, and the means are not at hand, there is a reasonable excuse to obtain - the same on credit ; but when the 'article can-be dispensed, with until payment can be made, it is much to the advantage of the - purchaser to do so. HOW PEOPLE „E3ECO3Ik By eating too -much and too fast ;, by !mai- , lowing imperfectly masticated toad ; byltaking tno much fluid during, ; by drinking spit- its and other intoxicating drinks freely:; by keeping late hours at night and sleeping too late in the morning ; ,by_, wearing clothing' too tight,io as to relax the circulation; by w l earing thin shoes ; by neglecting to take sufficient ex ercise to keep the hands and feet warm ; by neglecting to wash the body sufficiently to, keep, the pores of the skin,open ; by.exchanging the warm clothes worn in a warm root} during the day for light costumes, and exposure it i leident to evening parties ; by, starving the : stomach - to, gratify a vain and_ foolsh passion for dress ; by keeping up aconstant excitement ; .by fretting th'e mind with borrowed troubles ;. by employ ing quack doctors and swallowing qualck nos, trums . for every imaginary ill ;. »y taking meals, at irregular int,trVals. THE INFLUENCE, OF EATING .r . tiptior:r CIELIRA.CTER: - ' `Dr. Everett deliiered a. lecture .upon i health at Boston, maintaining that eating had a very important bearing upon individual character and: temperament, morally and socially, and fully subscribed to the sentiment an animal can be correctly judged et feast. The`doetio ed his subjeCt into easy Parts. and dwelt nr;op . the great prevalent of . eating too, f4.st, and . said,thst thoUsandi Were annually hurried into dyspepsia and its disagreeable accompaniments and into many other mSladies, by ibis system. Se discussed lueidly, the custom of much drink; ing while eating, and held in common with the. great physiolegists that it was preferable to drink after eating, or at least to drink- ery fit- . tle of any liquid "during ' mastication:; ire clear. ly shoWed that over•eating was, the source of facial and even bodily disfiguresients; .. fie was col th 6 opinion tha4 men, as a rule,,wet:e guilty Of sin against nature. Many menoerinips the majority of men, ate more thau.they needed , pr. could rea4ily digest, and of, necessity I nature, rebelled* various Ways against the, burden some impbsition. • • , • Dregs Olainlk—the thinnest spiv • bubbles wear' the gaudiesteph?rs. Real sorrow.=ls ainiost as difficult .to - discover as real poverty. ' ' • We value little that which coats to 110 ir0111);e• tcOnaiutaixt.- • - -,, :I.s' industry. • Teak they - prhne,_favor r itnpf :for tnni. ...-:. : ,: .. r - r: :::,', ; : l.. ;:, ."'..-.. - :; -, :::i-:t- , .•..- _.... -,..:. , .•. , .. , ..:':- . .,- . :',',::: 1 :- •-•-• 2-,-.--' Discretion inalma is more than eloqu'enoe.,, M=MVE 11=1:=2 ~':~i The attention of the readers of the Dixocitkr is to the cad ! that READt9ASH is take* . in exOshite !' , 94),:yuftNiflrvft_ig,OF.l.;:i'L'lg•ip - s, at the abc.ve named' place, and also to the fact that . gctol!s_bought 'atlas way will prove' eatiefactory because, TM CO If The long contiuned depression in business circles' call for cash transactrons manufactruars. and bought close for cash canjhe sold at low.prices. satisfy- yourselvis of this fact, whenat Singhaniton,Carra l ist exaritine the general etk of FUrnitureiud prices at 16 Chenango street. May -81. 1876., 4 tt 0 0 C 4 IN* ;1 .. 1-3 .1,000 MEN, 'WA.NTED,-.A.filiii.:l with * Greenbacks, to buy the best made, easiest-running, and most durable Wagon ever made tor thc mono? • ' , THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT OF PLATFORMS ) _OPEN AND TOP , BUGGIES., AND PHATONS, EVER OFFERED TO THE CrIVENS •OF . NORTHERN PENNSYLVANIA. . . Particular attention is called to. our Standard Platforms. We claim to, make the best Family and Farm Wagon, combined, ever offed for the money. . Each Wagon Warranted as represented. We employ none but experienced mechanic's. Selecting best of stock cash and pay cash for labor, and we have reduced the prices, as follows: No. 1, Platform.l% Spoke, 1% Axle, 13i Spring, I Tap Bn_ggies, Piano Box or Shell body or Broad , 2 seats, - _ i .1 - - - $ll5 00 I' Box, with Enamel Cloth, Top and Damask . , Add for Trimming;ss to $8 ; Break $7. . ' Lining, Patent wheels, - \ -' - IMO CO , ?lubber Top, Broad Clothing' Trimming,sl7s ttl No. 2, Platform IAC Spoke,33‘ Atte, lisi Springs, ~„_. Leather Phaetons, top and Broad cloth Trimming 41:5 Leaves, Drop-tail board, 2 Seats, - 812500 Patent Wheels - - - • - en duk , . "Add for Trimming: $5 to $8; Break $7. , • ' . - • w O O %Fir , We claim this the most *eonveniel t and dura ble and cheapest wagon in,the market. l Qpen Buggies. prices range from $lOO - to $l6OOO 1 according to trimming and painting. ac. . *D. D. \ Montrose; May, ; 3tl, 1876. R .. . 1 ---....- -•1 IN i C'T PZ '''S 1 tj ... .......; V<, . a• - 0.1 _ - • ' of Pc 5 t ... 0 0 ,ii , fyil - i•- = 0 PI 0 0 0-0 =. irc7= . ..' em • • - • 0" .e. aa 4 •0 ' +' ' ' ' ' 0 11 a , 6 1= ,-.. 0 • .11 ? Itg ' ,;'4" ". 1 0 • 1 le I, , .....g-,a ..-..0 0 0:- gri. „ig, ji ANC . 1 t 1,,, Om • a, , Q ( cl.-. - " ' v-4 •PI 11 Cr. ~ .1:11 c o ki till :, • r. e . c, ......, , ''' 0 ,c 5 l ' X Cr; E poc• an et et CIS 2 el A, egr . 0 : : ih4 ED„,, , 4a -1 .-, z , a 2 t. , , ... V 0 ~... ,= 0 v; b .• . ; . 6 2.2, 5' . F 4 'i. :O.IH <1 . (2, 5 I pi . mk I •••• 0 ...P MI 0 vi a" * i... 1. $4 l ' ' r 4. 5. hi ......„..,. 0. .... _0 0 ,0 0 Is t-; .. 1 wi . • 5 2.... ..0 .. , .. • ~ ~.,...1•0 tr., , iv -- - -,. :111ra • ' '*o ;IL . s„, is ,d.. . I.■ - • ' tr ' . 4 —I • w r I 14 "CA g e a t 1 .; N gP r fk 4 m w IT! a. s-3 m • • - 0 "C rots Eiv r to • I.a ... C pp , =" 2 p..— ?" .. 1 gt. • . a 0 0 •••.- F . 0 - < .4Cr. Z.". CI '1 Pi co g - ; u•til 0 e+ attO 41 ao~, o c ; " .. bo . , ;01 • .re e .1 13 V SO 0 $ 2lO 1.4 is a 4s, 11:1 CIA. lABELI3E-NN-g,T,T . , * . 0.0.;,--41NGHAMTONi AL9O A MERCHANT REPLtritE ods „have been bought within the aft few weeks, for CASH, at. SI Vert . low price, thereby vet then the other estabitshmentstin the city ; who we carrying stock' ht s,t grub h rotes: - '804" 74,413, 1111 L, 116 -- - 1 ietuYl • . YOUR .WAGONS, --', 0.,6,4 ~.- . .--.,..R: pms, ANA:I3 E . 001:113 i : i -., :; :- :: - : ~:: . , - ,.- i i, l. , i i .._.,...: ~. ..,. .._„,.,„,.,..:!.... w..:ousTgßuouT,,q4R.Fimim , o i i. ,:,,., ~,-.:„.;,,...„.-_.:.....,,,.,,,,,„.:•.,-1._..- ' . 4'::, ;; . '; - : , :". , :: ' :i 1 1 - .- ..!.b PRICE lair . Reßairlng doee on shell -nottio, : theapek: rain the ehapeet; ~ - . . ~ . . ' . r Pint:chum Phietoni -'. , ~'. ' - , I .„ -- - " "'' ' BO 4' le& 4 : f '" ' ''." ' C'... - ' 4.• ' : ' '44 16 1 ULM • X WSlCtatt . ' ''' ~ 0. - '',. ` lc "' ' l'irt r. , from sup iil - 1 . - - , '-:,: - - ;:;. 160 -4 . 44, ' Swell bodraieighe ' ,if ~.- :,-. • ' . - • Its . . . • • BLACKSAIITHING ' • ' • - - - ', • ••: ' ' i -;`, . -..., ' , It To- oboe per SpallileW t ' - •'''• ' i ' • 4 ' ' ..‘ "' .go .-, corkepdset. ~. r. : , - ... --. .'... - . -,:-.,, '1.40. ' set per spin " - • t . •'! -. , • -." . • 100 At : work itiarrstite42:- . 'Van ikell' ii,eimlite'iti,' l ON* ‘t!!... , •PA',X, 111 M 1 . 1 4011 1414 01, 41 4 l';‘ , •:::-' ,:-!---. • s.i. -If -,'.f - ,L.. : . , . . ~ '-• . ' ••,- ; 1. ,'. W I : OVITALIUQVII • • '' `--• ..- rd, 4p;11*, 1 16,-lit' ' '-''' '''' --. '-- • - • - • " ••. ?,,:it'rt',:.,. - 'i. ‘-.., ' ?,..ft• i; 2-, - .;. -- .::-.:: • -., --,- , 13132.6312.Evria:tcpia, TV".' "E"' _ • . BOUGHT gill? MB 1617.1111CLASSI3EL 11376. A_N - NouNcEmENT 'robbers vnn :'ALL .:- , fili.t ,:::1444TESir.c,TYLIF.,4 ~:-:'. ;Ajki'D',- ; ,4VALIT.iEgi.,.:-. . -:: ,' ,‘... 'AVERY -,CROUNSr. Manufactory at Spnngvile, and Repository on Public , Avenue. Montrose. Pa. If you desire to pur chase, examine our stock, and if none are on lurid to'suir,we , can make to order at same prize SEARLE,. Proprietor. 210 o ,cll 1 5 . •c ,: ... t4 . ":',•:,. i...:: . „ • oits• - .1in...3, . -, CR ~.. a 4,-. , • v:::!, .. - z, e l ,-: 0,4 : -1. . , . _ ••• _ eD . - , g rao • , CD i q "•`: t 4 ../ P'..„ cn co ts , 4 • • 41 .. ••• sis aii , , • ___ go ,:f • . ,:, . = . ~ . 7, , . -,• .1". 'g . 4 --, '- - i;.. Pr - :.: • ra of Me Woolens, TAIMBING : ,,figTAIS 1 0 1 1,.,Nt: 4EB MONTROOB,PINWii - '1; - -- 1 40.11 N 8: TATIBPLT4, ,PROP',I4 . - • , . • ‘ 2, • , • • ati4e l l , llid iiiektisave die noothkot . tik the Xontroseafillwity, tie , ROUtolidigli Asa kO W. 141110.41:' • „„, CiSI IS OFFERED. .; f , IXIRE,TUPVIIII;:.'-') , ~ • . NUM 1111114, la= 0:4 1.16 Plim E'"'+ inee 4 Cal Sit. . (c. 104 to , 1:3 m c+ o pi - 3 \ _~~, FK ~'` ~~,~ OS 0 ma -> ~:, 4 , -, 7 1, , 1 , :'!;1.':i:' . .4:!'...1.,' ::::. MESS