THE CLOSED DOOR. 2f you had come to my door alone, Love, my lord; Had I heard no fogtial) save your own, No voice bat vo ; Oh, how wide had door been thrown, Oh, how gladly the way been shown, Love, my lord! But I peerca from my casement cautiously, Love, my lord; You stood at my door with henchmen three I knew too well; Doubt and Di frust stared up at me And gaunt-faced, white-lipped Jealousy, Love, my lord. Ch. the house of my heart is over small, Love, my lord; A if T let You in I must let in all, 7 every one! 1d riot would reign in my quiet hall, giv I fear me soon would my dwelling fall, Love, my lord. You went who might never entrance win, Love, my lord; Strange that 1 thought it To bar my door; But a king comes ever with shout and din, And not alone had you entered in, wove, my ord. -— Lhee little sin sia Garrison, in Puck. eee i. Thirty-eight Men Repel the la t De fense of a Mountain Pass--The Robin Hood of Macedonia and His Exploits. | | | a | | | FIGHTING TO THE DEATI A BULGARIAN LEONIDAS AGAINST THE TURKS. "Attack of Thousands--A Gal- BY ALBERT SONNICHSEN RSA r SOG | Sr ro Te OR the past few weeks I! diers in »wyak had quietly marched © have been studying bits of ) up to Spalivo and surrounded it. Then I 1A reports that bave come in | a search party entered the village and L from Macedonia from va- | began searching the houses. The Al- B= 1ious chiefs of chetas, se- | banian shepherds, who had heard the cret agents and other in- | barking of the dogs, joined them. The dividual members of the organization, all regarding a certain incident which occurred some weeks ago down in Southern Macedonia, in the caza, or district of Tevgeli. It was much tele- graphed about gt the time and men- tioned in the European papers, but some of the main facts and all the details have as yet remained secret. Putting togother the dry official re- ports to the committee with the nar- ratives of several participants or wit- nesses who arrived here several days ago, and excluding obvious individua! exaggerations, there still remains the story of an event which stands out as remarkable, even in this country of sensational events. It is just such a one as you may find here and there in the pages of Herodotus—a second Leonidas in another Thermopylae, It is the story of how hirty-eight comi- tajis, well armec and well erntrenclied, for a whole day stood off the repeated attacks of 2000 regular Turkish soldiers, a horde of several ihousand bashi-bazouks, several hundred Alban- tans and a band of thirty Greeks. These numbers are quoted in the Turk- ish reports, Few people familiar with events here for the past few years have not beard of Apostol Voyvoda, known to the Turks and gendarmerie officers as Captain Apostol. There is a standing price of 5000 liras, or Turkish pounds, on his head. He is a small, dark, keen-eved man of about thirty-five years, who can neither r»ad nor write, and always signs his dispatches, writ- ten by his secretary, with a rubber stamp hanging as a watch charm. Were he a man of education, he would be one of the general leaders, for he is intellectually keen. But he is the Robin Hood of Macedonia. It is about kim that the story centres. A week before Lent Apostol came here to Kustendil, to recross the fron- tier some days later with several horse loads of munitions, Ie was going to take them to his cwna district, cache ikem in‘*the“mountains to use them as a reserve for the summer’s “fighting. With him were Save Michaeloff, his sub-chief, and thirty-eight men, On before the beginning of Lent, and his band avere in the Mountains. He wanted to get over into the Cherni-Dervent Moun- tains; between the two ranges runs the River Vardar. During the day he had sent a courier across the river to the viliage of Spalivo, asking the villagers to send horses for the ammu- nition. As was" afterwards known, the courier was stopped in the inter- mediate village of Stoyak, where a company of soldiers were quartered. And this is the reason he was stopped. A Greek shepherd boy, wandering ‘about the mountains with his flock, came accidentally upon Apostol’s band in hiding for the day. They took him prisoner, Now, every Greek is an enemy to every Bulgar, and for some moments the boy’s life was in danger. Perhaps it was his youth which ap- ealed to the chief; at any rate, he released Lim. The boy at once went to the village of Stoyak and reported Apostol’s presence in the nearby moun- tains, and later pointed out the courier passing through the village for Spalivo. The latter was arrested. When night came and the horses from Spalivo did rot appear, Apostol de ‘ded that per- haps the villagers had lost the war, so he and his men shouldered the am- munition bags among them, descended to the river, crossed it, end by moon- light had reached their destination, Spalivo. This village was several miles higher up the same bauk of the river on which stood Stoyak, where the day Apostoil Giavato soldiers were now doubly assured that they had Apostol and his band sur- rounded at last. Meanwhile, the pounding at the doors as the Turks demanded entrance to the houses, alarmed the village. I‘or- tunately, tie search began from the side opposite to that where the bands- men were quartered. Now, it is a standing law of the committee that the bands must never fight in the villages, unless absolutely cornered, so Apostol and his men, still half: clothed, gath- ered themselves. together, and deter- mined to break through the ring. ; It is probable that the traitor, who, as a Greek, hated the Turks only a little less than the Bulgars, had minimized the number of the band, and that the Turks thought they had only a band oi ordinary size to deal with, of’ from fifteen to twenty men. At any rate, Apostol and his.men had no ditHeulty in walking through the circle. * They retreated quickly up the pass through which the river runs until they could £0 no further. Behind them the bluffs descended abruptly into the Vardar; on one side rose cliffs, on the other below them, ran the river, a wide, swift stream just then, for the snows were melting, Before them the roc ko ground descended toward the village. From a military point of view, it was an ideal position for defense—and death, for no escape vras possible. j Day was daxning then, as the bandsmen bastily threw up three lines cf trenches with loose rocks and boulders that had once trimbled down from the heights above them. As soon as the Turks: were - able to locate their positions by the growing light, they spread out in fan formation below, and began to fire. The bands- men numbered just thirty-eight, for in the hurry there had not Leen time to ther in the two men who were in the hut with the ammunition. As was found later, they continued sleep- ing undisturbed, for the 7 urks had not considered the hut avorthy of search, and there the ammunition-and its two guards remained in safety dur- ing the whole day. The first line of trenches in the pass was defended by Save Michaeloff and eleven men. Fifty yards beyond and higher up fifteen men were stationed, and still higher up were Apostol aad twelve men, . ! Meanwhile the firing had bezun to attract to the spot the vultures ef the Turkish - army, the bashi-lazouks. These are a disorganized, irresponsibl: rabble, .who seldom fight but are - al- ways on hand to share the plunder. On occasions, they will sometimesgsup- port the troops in a charge, for they are well armed. These began to gather in great numbers now, and took up pesitions with the regulars. When the fight was two hours old a Greek band of thirty nen, commanded by an cficer in the uniform of the Greel: army, ap- peared and joined the Turks. Evidently the Turkish officer in com- mand had recognized the strength of Apostol's position, for hitherto he had ordered no attack. Meanwhile it had been telegraphed to Salonica. two hours away, by train, that Apostol was cornered and more troops were needed. But, anxious to gain the big reward on Apostol's lead, the Turk- ish officer determined to get him before his superiors arrived. En- forced by the bashi-bazouks, the Al- banians and the Greeks, he ordered a general char The Dbandsmen al- lowed the charging throng to come half-way up. four hand gren- Then ades were thrown and as many volleys fired. They also rolled down huge the soldizrs were quartered. On one side are 2igh mountain bluffs, on the other the River Vardar. But as the villagers had not received | ‘Apostol’s message, they, not expecting him. had made no preparations, First, they had allowed their dogs free, who noisily announced the entrance of the bandsmen into the village. Their bark- ings were heard by some Albanian shepherds a short distance outside. However, the ammunition was stored in an old, half-broken-down de- serted house, and two of the bandsmen were detailed to sleep upon it. Apostol, Michaeloff and their companions then divided themselves among a half dozen houses nearby. In h an hour all were asleep, save a of the vil- Jagers. who remained aw:ike to guard Meanwhile the sol- €gainst surpr boulders into the panic-stricken Turks. The destruction by the bombs was ter- { rific, for even the Turkish regulars, | fierce fighters as they are, poured down in scrambling retreat. * Having lost heavily, the Turks made no further efforts then to storm Apos- tol's position. But in three hours the reinforcements from Salonica began to in patiently ordered a command from Salonica, he im- general attack at once. The soldiers made a wild up- ward scramble, but again the bombs were blasting up the loose lava among them. That attack failed, as had the first. Two more equally desperate at- tacks had a similar result soon after. Then the Turks withdrew and began to open up a heavy fire on the rocks above, depending on rock splinters to destroy the insurgents behind their positions. These tactics, although costly—for Apostol and his men were slowly pot shooting individual officers wherever visible—were more success- ful. By seven that evening, at fifteen o'clock by Turkish time, the insur- gents had been much reduced. Another attack was ordered, before dark should give the few survivors a possible chance to escape. In the first trench only Michaeloff and three wen were alive, and they all wounded. In the other two lines of trenches were eight men unwounded. As this last general attack began the ammunit.on of the bandsmen gave out in a few last volleys. Then Michaeloff and his three men in the first trench rose, deliberatel; smashed their rifles over the rocks, destroyed their watches in a similar manner and drank the poison, which is part of every bandsman’s equipment, to save him from torture, if wounded. The eight men above killed their wounded comrades with their knives, and then made a break for the river. The Turks were successful. They had gained the position. The news was then telegraphed that Apostol had been killed. From one of the bodies were taken personal lotters addressed to him, a rifle with his name engraved upon it was found, and various villagers iden- tified the corpse. Later it was found that this was the body of Apostol's secretary, So well was the Sultan pleased with the 1 ews that he imme- diately telegraphed his personal thanks to the troops, and sent £350 to be divided among them. The gendarmes, the creatures established by the re- forms, who had taken part in the fight, were all prorioted. Next day Georgis Pasha, the Italian gendarmerie officer, commissioned there by the Powers, arrived and be- gan an investigation, It seems he was the first to question Apostol's death. At any rate, he sent for Apos- to's wife, who lives in a village near- by, and the dead having already been buried, he ordered them disinterred, that she might identify "her husband among them. She failed to do so. But several days after all doubts were settled when the kaimakam, or governor of the caza, received a letter bearing Apostol’s rubber stamped seal, announcing himself in good health, save for a sprained ankle. Of the wliole band of forty men, six escaped, two being the guards who watched over the ammunition and took no part in the fight. They remained with it until -another band came a week later and carried it safely off. Of the eight who broke for the river, three were drowned while attempting to swim across, and one, realizing that he could not even attempt it, drank poison. One reached the opposite Bank: and escaped, and is now here in Kustendil. Apostol and his three comrades crouched among some rushes in shal- low water, and escaped later in the night when the search was over. He is now recovering from his sprained ankle, in a secret hospital in the mountains. What the Turkish losses were in the fight is hard to estimate truly. Turk- ish reports only mention: two Greeks and sixteen Albanians killed. Vil- lagers of Spalivo say 1200 in all fell, but that is perhaps an exaggeration. Still, the casualities must have been heavy, otherwise such a large force could not have been checked for a whole day by thirty-eight men.—New York Post. ° : Rachel’s Sister Still Lives, Comparatively few persans are aware that the once great actress of the Comedie Francaise, Rachel, who died so far back as 1858, has a sister still living in Pavis. This sister, Mlle. Lea Felix, was hurt in a carriage acci- dent recently, but is now getting better. Mlle. Felix retired from .the stage fifteen years ago, her last ap- pearance being;as Joan of Are, in sarbier’s drama, at the Porte Saint Martin. She always retcined her fam- ily name of Felix. Mlle. Rachel, the great trageaienne, had four sisters and one brother. All her sisters were actresses, like herself, and had con- siderable sucess in the profesion. Lea Felix is, in all probability, the only one of the sisters now living.—Lon- don Telegraph. Noble Revenge. It was a hot day, and the dray horse and the thoroughbred carriage horse nappened to be drinking at the same “rough. “you're a perfect fright,” said the thoroughbred, indulging in a horse laugh, “with that hideous old straw hat on your head.” The dray horse looked at him, said nothing. Then, with a brush of his ample tail, he brusned a fly from the quiver- ing hide of the carriage horse, which the latter, with his poor little stump of a tail, was unable to reach, and dipped his nose in the trough again. —Chicago Tribune. A Curious Club. One of the most curious clubs on rec- ord has recently been formed by so- ciety ladies in Berlin. The principal condition of membership is that the applicant must be deaf. The club has over a hundred members, who meet regularly on-e a week in handsomeiy furnisheq rooms in the Wilhelm Strasse, where they converse by n of ear-trumpets and t and drink tea. but arrive. By noon twenty-five carloads had come, two thousand soldiers in all, Meanwhile the Dbashi zouks had streamed steadily in from the sur- rounding villages to the number of five thousand, some rep 3 say. That is probably an exagger and then, too, as far as actual g was con- cerned, most of th ows pmob- ably took up the p le of expectant spectators. Upon the arrival of the generai office: ‘Tunic Effects in Skirts. It is rumored that tunic effects in skirts are to appear with the first mel- ancholy days In fact, some ultra smart women are wearing them now. The bell-shaped tunics, short at the sides and arranged over a plain or flounced skirt, are the most attractive. Other tunic models haves a square apron effect slashed up at the sides, and for stout figures this style is best, giving long lines. If you think of having a woolen street gown made now, be sure that the skirt is cut in a modified bell or umbrella shape. Women at the Bar. One of the graduates of the Law School of Boston University at its re- cent commencement was Miss Edith W. Peck, a young woman of social prominence in Cincinnati, Ohio. It is said that she will enter the law office of her father, who is a judge, and at- tend to a general office practice. An- other woman to enter the profession of law is Miss Anne Grace Kennedy, a graduate of the Baltimore Law School and the second woman to receive the degree of bachelor of laws in Mary- land. She received in addition to this degree two medals, one for the best thesis and the other for being the high- cst grade student in the senior class. Is Modern Courtship Quick? An American lady has discovered that courtship is a swifter business than of old. This does not result, as you might suppose, from the increas- ing “hustle” of these happy ‘days, nor from the higher speed of the maidens of 1905. In olden days, when the lovers “stole a word or two between the pauses of a minute,” things dragged. Now that a “couple can golt all day undisturbed by a chap- eron * * * if a man doesn’t make record time” in courtship, why, blame the man. This is all very well. But in the days of the minuet they could, if we believe the romancers. put on the pace. Mistress Lydia Lan- guish would meet Mr. Roderick Ran- dom for the first time at tea, and be off to Gretna Green before supper. Golf is not in it. What She Embreiders. Linen buttons. Stamped chemisettes and elbow sleeves. Linen card cases to match her linen dresses, Stock ties of handkerchief linen, al- ready stamped. Towels for wedding presents, ing them a scalloped edge. A butterfly design on her underwaist and other lingerie. Handkerchief bags, which may be bought ready stamped for a quarter. Linen covers for heart-shaped pil- lows. - These have embroidery ruf- des. Fine white pique cases for the hand- gerchiefs, gloves and cravats of her male relations. Pretty collars and cuffs sets, which ome ready stamped on linen for thir- iy-five cents. And for the same price one may puy the entire little outfit wherewith all this may be done. giv- Cultivating the Graces. 2 Keeping up appearances may be con- sidered vulgar, but within rightful fimits it indicates a prime essential to successful attainment. In the mat- ter of behavior, if one wishes to ap- pear gracefulandamiable she perforce makes an effort not only to seem but to be amiable and graceful. The. rec- ognition of what is seemly is the first step toward its. attainment. With the decline of the kitchen and life in apartments, grand funetions and state occasions are being left to those with spacious homes and limit- less means. But the spirit of hospital- ity is not dead; only its outward forms are put upon a more simple and per- haps more genuine basis. Having eliminated from domestic service much that is superficous, and having gained a broader Knowledge of what constitutes the art of living, the housekeeper of the future will dispense her income and time to great- er advantage than she has done in the past and her hospitality will subserve more than a single end. Nor shall its leading feature be confined to the woman's luncheon on which occasion the family needs entertainment or shel- ter abroad until the dread hour of the function has passed.—Indianapolis News ‘The Ideal Guest, It has been said that women may be divided into two classes, that of the “born hostess” and that of the “born guest,” and that neither fits into the other’s role with any degree of success! There is one charming woman who is known among her friends as “I. G..” which mysterious appellation stands for “Ideal Guest!” It is so silly! And one can be a perfect guest if she orly tries. All you have to do is to be pleased with your entertainment, and try to help your hostess make things agreeable for others. Yes, I do visit a great deal, and I make it an inviol- able rule never to repeat in one house what I have seen or heard in another.” It is very modest and quite proper that the “Ideal Guest” should thus make light of her qualifications, Those of us, however, who have a faculty for observation know eof other require- easy for the maid as possible. When she leaves it in the morning the bed is stripped and the mattress turned to the air. When she leaves it for din- ner or supper in the evening, all her own belongings are carefully put away in closet or drawers, thus making no “picking up” after her—work which is wearing to the maid and which takes much time. The “I. G.” also re- members at noon, or when the guest room has the most blaze of sunlight, to close the blinds or drop the awnings, thus helping to keep fresh her hostess’ dainty furnishings.—Harper's Bazar. The Business Woman's Problems. Why the woman who works for a living is usually more nervous and in less exuberant health generally than the man who works, has been a matter for much discussion in clubs and news. papers, and without any satisfactory verdict having been reached, but there are those who do not find it hard to understand the phenomenon. The man who works usually does one sort of work. He is a physician, a law: yer, or a ¢lerk, and when he has closed his office door for the day, if he is a sensible man, he puts in the remainder of the time enjoying himself in what ever way best suits him. And the woman who works—well she is usually jack of a dozen trades and master of none. When she comes home from her office it occurs to her that there are a half a dozen pairs of stockings to be darned— and she sets to work forthwith on this nerve-tearing work. When the stock ings are finished, she is just as likely as not to sew on the lace that the laundress has ripped off a skirt, and she goes to bed with her head aching and absolutely unrefreshed. In the morning she remembers that there are a dozen little lace collars te be laundered, for they were much too fragile to go in the general laundry, and that afternoon she gives over tc the “doing-up” of these troublesome little things, adding a couple of white belts, three pairs of white gloves and a veil to the pile. When she has finished with these, her back is aching, and she is glad to lie down and read by the light of a distant and dim gas jet the afternoon newspaper, thereby . bringing on the ills that come from eye strain. She discovers the next afternoon that her hair needs washing, and she spénds a good two hours at this hard work. She doesn’t feel that she can afford the seventy-five cents or $1 that a hair- dresseir would charge her for this ser- vice, and which the latter can do much better than she can do it herself. and so she expends strength that is worth more to her than money, in half-doing this work. She manicures her own nails when she should be taking a nap, and makes shirt waists when she should be exer- cising in the open. She makgs cara- mels by way of fun, and fusses cover them until she herself admits that she is “half-dead.” : She finds things for herself to do that really needn’t be done, and by the end of the summer she is a limp and nerve-racked rag. “But I have to keep nice,” she wails, “and I cannot afford to hire some ona io do my mending and to groom my hair and nails!” It is, indeed, a problem how the busi- ness woman shall marage, but, never- theless, these are some of the reasons why she who works for a living is usually a thin and anaemic person, who looks haggard and old before her time.—Baltimore News. Widespread is the fad for so-calied odd jewelry. Pique collars and cuffs are a fea- ture of all summer frocks. Trimmings lead off with quillings of the same silks as the gowns. 1 Chiffon taffeta and chiffon cloth goavns must be included. Exquisitely embroidered imported blouses attract one’s attention at every side Ti 1 or robe gown. as it is calle this sc Dull gold gallons of various widths are much used in combinatoins with a brilliant color. The modified leg-o’-mutton sleeve is the favorite sleeve, says the Philadel- phia Bulletin. Under lingerie hats the hair will be seen to be garnished with pert butter- fly bows of crisp silk. to make life easier by far Of the making of collars, chemi- settes and cuffs, as well as under- sleeves, there is indeed no end. Using different linings make a lot of variety in embroidered dresses, for the effect is quite different with each color. 3y that silent agreement which is fashion’s Marconi stem, every well dressed woman, it seems, has ordered one or more black costumes. Several new kinds of pleated bind- and ruchings are shown; among > is one designed to take the place ments of the character she 1} med. The “Id Guest,” for | stmace, makes not | of in- | bal the care of ler room as! tl a neckband with a two-inch and a frill below to lie flat around the * generally doing. FARM FREIGHT ON TROLLEY ROADS Live Stock Shipments an Important Part of the Business. 2 One of the greatest possibilities of the interurban road lies in the devel- opment of freight traffic. It is well ftted for the transfer of farm produce and supplies for farmers and for carry- ing of package merchandise, and it can often give great convenience for deliv- ery and for the possibility of handling freight economically, especially in small cities. The Chicago, Harvard and Lake Gen- eva Railway has not only a large freight traffic of its own, but carries on an interchange of business with steam roads to a greater extent, per- haps, than any other electric road in the United States. Its southern ter- minus is at Harvard, on the Chicago and Northwestern Railway, and at Walworth, eight and a half miles north of this place, the road crosses the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway, thence running Two miles northeast to Lake Geneva, one of Wis- consin’s most popular summer resorts. One-third of the business of the road is in hauling freight. Freight cars from the railroads are hauled to sid- ings on the. electric road at a flat rate of $5 per car, and piece freight is trans- ported on a one-rate plan between any two points on the road for five cents per 100 pounds, no package being han- dled for less than ten cents. A freight motor car with a crew of two men car- ries package freight and hauls from one to four steam-road freight cars. There are six freight sidings along the road, mot including the company’s yards. Live stock shipments are an impor- tant part of the business. In summer refrigerator cars are run twice a week over the Chicago and Northwestern Railway for the benefit of creameries situated on the electric road, and last winter 3000 tons of ice were hauled from Lake Geneva for local use along the line. The company receives $500 per year for hauling mail two trips daily each way. Passenger tickets are sold by the electric road to points on the steam roads, and baggage is car- ried free. The power house is located at Murray, and contains two genera- tors of 500 kilowatts each. The equip- ment consists of ten motor cars and six trail cars. The maximum speed is forty-five miles per hour.—Massachu- setts Ploughman. Babu Horse English, Here is a Bombay native student's essay on the horse: The horse is a very noble quadruped, but when he is angry he will not do so. He is ridden on the spinal cord by the bridle, and sadly the driver places his foots on the stirrup, and divides his lower limbs across the sad- dle. and drives his animal to the mea- dow. He has a long mouth, and his head is attached to the trunk by a long protuberance called the neck. He has four legs, two are in the front side and two are -afterward. These are the weapons on which-he runs, Le also defends himself by extending those in the rear in a parallel direction toward his foe, but this he does only when in a vexatious mood. His food- ing is generally grasses and grains. He is also useful to take on his back a man or woman as well as some car- go. He has power to go as fast as he could. He has got no sleep at night time, and always standing awaken. Also there are horses of. short sizes. They do the same as the others are Tuere is no animal like the horse; no sooner they see their guardian or master they are always crying for fooding, but it is always at the morning time. They have got tail, but not so long as the cow and such other like similar animals.—Liverpool Post. Nothing Wrong on His Side. The man had been grumbling stead- ily for half an hour to his seat-mate, whom he had never seen before. He had grumbled about business, politics, war, peace, vacations, church, chil- dren, railroads, schools, farms, news- papers and that unfailing scapegoat— the weather. The man beside him had borne all that seemed necessary, and at last be- thought him of a way to silence the grumbler if such a thing were pos- sible. * “Are your domestic relations agree- able?’ he asked, suddenly, turning ap inquisitive gaze on his companion. “Yes, they are!” snapped the grumbler. “It’s my wife’s relations that make all the trouble.”—Youth's Companion. The American Horse. Au it is not the trotter as he is gene- rally understood which has practically superseded the hackney in the heavy- weight harness classes. It is an ani- mal which has some of the character- istics derided when the hackney was king—roundness of conformation, power and high stepping—the high ac- tion being dropped considerably when the horse is pushed, speed replacing it. © He is equally good in the show ring or on the road; does not require constant care to keep him well, and is useful for almost any occasion. In other words, the heavyweight harness horse of to-day is a survival of the fittest, and is the real American pro- duct, bred from the American trotter.— Country Life in America. A Jumping Hog. A jumping hog afforded amusement in the hog-pens at the stock-yards day before yesterday morning. Although the animal weighed 180 pounds it Yould jump board fences five feet zh. The speculator who bought the hog found it impossible to confine it to a pen, so the pen had to be covered with boards. According to much men who have been at the Log-yards for 8, was the first hog that had ever le a fence there.—Kan- sa: City Tim It is of pleated chiffon. Broo! Jones . gation: preach mornin pastor, Mr. L preach subjec vice.” “They and ey of goo We] fast I jstic t Paul's than t« liveth himsel pertail social to suc that tl the on for a er.” Int tration Josiah fifty y spun. needs weavi The fi inmat Then the br ture | mill a elect] vision the si many thing. But we De A hal munit and li in the beyon towns ties h the to cities fathe world on the Louis dishes peopl This great ganizi selves Fathe for sit pendi thoug ness and When and u but ¢ these lent | “Hous 1 i only iy, } crime freeh at th when bank futur every with ily as We nities fits a