The citizen. (Honesdale, Pa.) 1908-1914, January 11, 1911, Image 3

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    THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1011.
A Modern Ghipv.-i. ;!-c.
In nn nccount of tin' r.r.'tk of tlio
nailing ship Cnniiirron V,;,' on 1I:r
Island, Australia, It Is feinted that
when tlio vessol 'struck the captain
calmly tool: n clgnr from lib pocket,
bit tlio end off nnd lit It before order
ing the boats to bo launched. Even
this display of lack of fear did not en
tirely provent some degree of panic
among the men, however, and seven
men pushed off In tho port lifeboat,
leaving twenty-two to scramble Into
tho starboard boat. In splto of tho
captain's orders tho men In tho port
boat refused to come nlongsldc, and
those in tho starboard boat shouted
that if thoy did not put off tho masts
would fall on them. Instead of hurry
ing to tho boat the captain strolled to
his cabin nnd collected his paper3.
After ho had entered tlio boat ho
transferred live men to thu port boat
and. made for Tasmania, 100 miles
away. Ho and tho mates steered In
turn, while tho men balled with empty
biscuit tins, and forty-eight hours later
both boats reached land. Chicago
Kws.
Oddities of Cecil Rhodes,
no possessed few intimate friends,
and not even to all of them did he dis
close his hand. Merc acquaintances
disliked his moody silences, varied
with fits of rather boisterous fun.
Thoy considered him exclusive, mo
rose, rough nnd overbearing. And It
must bo admitted that ho wa3 a good
hater, violent when thwarted and at
times blunt to tho point of rudeness.
It is difficult to bo sufficiently uncon
ventional to shock a mining camp, but
he shocked it. In dress he was almost
disreputable. He seldom took pains to
ingratiate himself with any one, and
a man who too openly scorns his fol
lows must expect to suffer social os
tracism nnd to havo his character tra
duced. It would bo Idle to deny that
for a time there were unfavorable ru
mors in circulation regarding htm or
that he was in many circles unpop
ular. But, like Galllo, he "cared for
none of those things." Sir Levis Mtcli
ell. An Eccentric Bishop. '
Bishop Wilson of Calcutta had as
housekeeper a venerable lady who re
membered tho duel between Sir Philip
Francis and Wnrren Hastings on Aug.
17, 1780. On entering tho cathedral on
a Sunday morning, fully robed, lawn
sleeves and nil, and passing tho pew
where the old lady sat he would pause
and give her the "kiss of peace" before
all the congregation, nnd this although
ho had met her at breakfast
His sermons, too, were racy. Preach
ing against dishonesty, especially In
horseflesh, as one of the great English
failings in India, he went on, "Nor are
we, servants of the altar, free from
yielding to this temptation." Pointing
to the occupant of tho reading desk be
low him: "There is my dear and ven
erable brother, tho archdeacon, down
there. He is an Instance of it. ne
once sold mo a horse. It was uusouud.
'I was a stranger, nnd he took mo
in.' "
Scientist Who Couldn't Light a Fire.
Lord Kelvin, like Lord Morley, once
amused n Scottish audience with a dis
play of Ignorance. At a lecture In Ed
inburgh, with Lord Kelvin In the chair,
tho Duko of Argyll wns taken sudden
ly ill. "When tho aged peer was car
ried down to one of the anterooms,"
said n local paper, "one of tho first
things to be thought of was the light
ing of n- lire, and this task was tackled
by tho duke's host, Lord Kelvin. But
instead of placing some paper in tho
grato nnd some wood on that In the
orthodox manner ho amazed tho on
lookers by desperate efforts to kindle
a handful of sticks at a gas burner.
Ordinary mortals may bo pardoned for
taking some satisfaction In the fact
that even so great a philosopher as
Lord Kelvin did not know how to light
a lire."
The Thimble;
About 200 years ago a London gold
smith called Trotting made nnd pre
sented to tho lrndy of his heart on her
birthday anniversary a thimble of
gold, beautifully ornamented and
chased, accompanied by a ugte which
introduced the llttlo contraption as u
"token of my humble esteem which
shall protect thoso delicate, fair and
Industrious fingers from prick and
scar of needle head." That was tho
origin of tho thimble.
Fate of a Duchess.
Wo havo had excellent morals drawn
from tho substantial waist of tho Ve
nus of JIllo for tho admonition of the
fnshlonablo woman. But what can
we say about tho Duchcsse do Maza
rin, who (G. Duval tells us in "Shad
ows of Old Paris") "died In 1775 from
tight lacing, although sho had posed
for a statuo of Venus?"
Giving Him Carte Blanche.
A few years ago John Kendrlck
Bangs, tho humorist, told a number of
his Broadwoy literary confreres that
ho felt particularly elated over an or
der ho had Just received from Henry
W. Savage, tho theatrical producer,
for tho libretto of n musical comedy.
Tho play was produced a few months
later. During the long period of re
hearsals so much of Bangs' material
was eliminated and so much other ma
terial Inserted In Its stead that when
tho curtain went up on tho first night
not moro than half n dozen of I ho
original lines remained.
About n week later n friend, meet
ing Bangs, asked him If ho was writ
ing any more plays for Savage.
"Yes," replied Bangs, "Only an
hour ago I sent him 500 blank sheets
of paper and told him to go ns far us
ho liked." Irvln Cobb in New York
Tribune.
TAX ON WHISKERS.
When Englishmen Paid for Their
Dcards and Their Babies.
Now that we aro all crying out
about our heavy taxation I found It in
teresting lately to come across some
old documents relating to taxe3 of
former times and reigns. Allowing
for the difference In tho valuo of
money from ono period to another,
those ancients levies seem to havo
been pretty heavy and extremely
varied.
Our men folk may bo thankful that
they havo not now, as In tho days of
tho eighth Henry, to pay a tax for tho
privilege of wearing a beard, a tax
that was moreover a graduated ono,
the sliding Bcale being regulated ac
cording to tho status of the wearer.
A certain Sheriff at Canterbury, for
example, had to pay three shillings
and fourpence for his whiskers. Ho
would not have won much sympathy
from Mr. Prank Itlckardson. Queen
Elizabeth, with oven more stringent
notions on this subject, ilxed a simi
lar tax on every beard of over two
weoks growth.
At a later period it was decided to
place a tax on the birth of overy child
in England, and a sliding scale was
also employed here. The baby of a
Duko born In tho year 1095 cost Its
proud father 30, while on the In
fant of a commoner the tax was but
two shillings.
Widowers and bachelors who had
decided to retain the joy3 of single
blessedness were compelled to con
tribute to the State, and long before
the Harcourt death duties wero
dreamed of It was also quite a costly
matter to dlo.
Nearer our own day the window
tax was Invented by William Pitt, and
In tho reign of George I. it was neces
sary to havo a license to Bell hats,
and there was also a tax on hair pow
der, watches and clocks. English
Lady's Pictorial.
How Danish Farmers Prosper.
The Daulsh farmers, living as they
do on or near the seacoast, aro great
exporters of dairy stuff. England Is
so big a customer that tho Danes in
fun reproach their neighbors with
eating up their butter, and leaving
them only oleomargarln. "Yet," says
Mr. F. M. Butlln in "Among the
Danes," "they are not all of that way
of thinking, for ono old farmer asked
us if we could not persuade our fel
low countrymen to eat butter with
their cake.
"If you ask how the Danlsn farm
ers manage to keep pace with our
(the British) Increasing appetite for
Danish eggs, butter and bacon, the
answer is, they co-operate. The but
ter which is exported is made in
their co-operative dairies. The pigs
aro slain in their co-operative slaughter-houses,
and tho Danes are not a
llttlo proud of tho process. Ono dis
tinguished traveler complains that
during his stay in Denmark ho was
always being asked to como and seo
a pig killed.
"The eggs are exported by co
operative societies. If a Dane has
oniy one egg he can export It al
ways provided it be a good egg. No
mistake must be made about that.
Beforo tho eggs are packed for ex
port, down in the co-operative fac
tory on tho shore, they aro held over
a basin filled with electric light, when
all defects can be detected with the
naked eye. It Is no use for an old
egg to pose as a young one then. Each
egg Is marked with the owner's num
ber and tho number of his district;
tho owners of bad eggs are fined. No
less than eighteen thousand Danes
belong to this one society. Here, too,
butter is packed for the English mar'
lcet"
One Cauce of Forest Fires.
Cattle ticks aro declared to bo In
directly responsible for. the numerous
forest fires in the West, which have
cost scores of lives and property loss
amounting into millions of dollars.
Tho bite of this particular species
of pest Is believed to produce a malig
nant fever and In an effort to rid the
fo ests as well as their stock of these
insects the settlors havo been.settlng
fire to woodlands, according to H. H,
Chapman, assistant professor of for
estry In tho Yale forest school.
Washington Post
Arrival of Twins.
Every employee of tho Bank of Eng
land Is required to sign Ills name In a
book on his arrival in the morning,
and, If late, must give tho reauon
therefor. The chief cause of tardi
ness is usually fog, and tho first nan
to arrive writes detained by "fog" op
posite his name, and those who fol
low write "ditto." Tho other day,
however, the first late man gave as
the reason; "arrival of twins," and
twenty other late men mechanically
signed "ditto" underneath.
IJnnlc of England Notes
When the Bank of Englrn i n
returns to the bank It is never r
su'd. It Is cancel'od by bavin
signature of tho chief cashier '-
off After tho signatures aro in i
off tho notes are pricked off In '
rcg star and sorted' Into tlio data -Issue.
They are then placer
boxes In the vaults whore thy .n-
kept for five years, after wh ch h v
are burned In a furnace In th co i-
yard.
Coral Galore,
fronting the coast of North A
I us-
traiia is the Great Barrier reef,
largest coral reef In tho world.
the
It
1, over 1.000 miles long and 30 mllei
wide.
A duck of a girl can make a gooa
out of anj man.
Atlas and His Load.
Strictly speaking, "atlas" Is n vaW
nomcr for a map book, since 11 wns
not the world, but the heave na. that
tho "atlas" of mythology uphold. Mer
cator, tho famous Dutch geographer,
who made globes for Emperor Charlc)
V. of Germany, was tho lirst to una
tho name in this connection, choosing
It as a convenient and In some sort tin
npproprlnte title, because Atlas, tho
demigod, figures with n world upon his
shoulders as n frontispiece of soun
early works on geography.
Atlas, it was said, made war with
other Titans upon Zeus and, being
conquered, was condemned to bear
heaven upon his head and hands. Lat
er tradition represented hlin as a man
changed by means of Medusa's head
into a mountain, upon which rested
heaven and all Its stars.
In any case, Atlas was always asso
ciated with n heavy burden strongly
borne. Thus Shakespeare makes War
wick say to Gloucester:
Thou art no Atlai for so great a weight.
It is not difficult to seo how by an
association of ideas this camo to bo
chosen as tho name for a book of
maps which upholds and exhibits to
us the whole world.
Marshal Tureen and His Soup.
There is a quaint old shop in Loudon
which still bears the name of Samuel
Birch, the Drat purveyor of turtle soup
in the English capital. Amid all tho
changes of the city Birch's shop In
Cornhlll survives In the guise it woro
when its owner was lord mayor of
London In the memorable year of Wa
terloo. Samuel Birch achieved dlstlnc
Hon in many Holds. He was nn orator
and a patriot; he was colonel of tho
city militia and accepted with great
good nature his nickname of Marshal
Tureen; he was a man of letters, pro
duced plays that held the stage and
books that wero readable, though now
seldom read. Ono of his plays, "Tho
Adopted Child," was popular long aft
er its author had killed his last turtle.
His daughter married Lamartlne, and
ono of his sons, a flue classical scholar,
begat a family of scholars. Yet Birch's
claim to fame rests most upon tho
fact that ho was the man who made
turtle soup popular. City merchants,
templars from the inns and dandles
from the west end all flocked to Corn-
hill, the turtle house of all London.
rgonaut.
Reign of the Dandies.
In tho matter of dress wo have fallen
upon a decline since the days when the
Duke of Wellington was refused ad
mission to Almack's because ho was
wearing trousers instead of breeches
and silk stockings. Even Almack's,
however, had to admit trousers within
its closely guarded portals the following
year. When Gladstone was "up" at
Oxford the reign of the dandles was In
full swing. When Into in Ufo ho ro
visited tho university to lecture to the
undergraduates on Homer he was
asked by G. W. E. Russell whether he
noticed any difference between his au
dleuce and the men of his own time.
'Yes," ho replied, "in their dress an
enormous change. I am told that I
had among my audience some of tho
most highly connected and richest men
In the university, aud there wasn't ono
whom I couldn't have dressed from
top to too for 5." St. James Gazette,
A "Fast" Train.
'Speaking of railroads," said the
truthful man, "the ultimate word, in
my experience, was a certain 'limited
on which I traveled last summer. At
a point where wo wero making our
greatest speed a man stood at the side
of tho track with a moving picture
machine. I leaned out of the wludow
and called to him, 'How are you get
ting on?'
"lie stopped turning tho crank nnd
spoke with an expression of deep dis
gust.
" 'It don't seem to be no use,' he
said, 'nold your head still, please.
want to get a time exposure.' "Ev
erybody's.
The Burglar's Prayer.
Sir ncrbert Hisloy, speaking of the
castes of eastern Bengal at a moetlii;
of tho Itoyal Anthropological institute,
said a curious system of religious wor
ship prevailed amoug a caste who were
professional burglars. Thoy mndo n
space In tho ground, and a man then
cut his arm and prayed to one of the
earth gods that there might be a dart
night nnd that ho might succeed In oh
tabling great booty and escape cap
hire. London Standard.
No Whisker3 on His Sea Food.
Two colored porters paused to rest
a moment on their mops in a down
town office bulldlug recently. "Boy,"
said one, smacking his Hps, "did you
ever eat mushrnt?" "Mushrat?" re
turned tho other. "No; 1 never eat
any mushrat. Tho only fancy sea food
I ever fussed with was lobster."
New York World.
The First Automobilist,
Nicholas Joseph Cugnot, was tho first
automoumst. Many years ueroro Ste
phenson had introduced his railway
locomotive Cnguot, who was a mill
tary engineer, had made a locomotlv
for roads. His locomotive has been
piously preserved at tho Conservatoire
des Arts et Metiers. . Cugnot died in
ISO I. Ills lot was not that of many
geniuses, ne did not die In want. Na
poleou had secured him a pension of
1,000 francs passing rich on $200
year. In this respect tho premier con-
buI showed moro enlightenment than
he did In regard to, Fulton of steamboat
fame, whom he considered it Is dls
iresslng to write nn adventurer. Cug-
not's carriage was built to transport
arms nnd ho bad designed a service
gun. These achievements alone would
be a passport to Napoleon's favor,
London Globe.
Woman's Wo:L
Mllllnary Profossor Says "Ma'..
Vour Haa nnd Let Ballot Ca"
Photo by American Press Association.
MRS. EVELYN TODEr.
"I would advise women to make
their own hats and let the ballot go."
This was the pertinent answer given
recently by the professor of millinery
at the Teachers' college, New York
city, when asked for her views on the
'votes for women" question.
A professor of tho art of bonnet
making is n comparatively new chali
In tho college world, but that It Is a
lopul.ir course nnd a profitable one
from the pupils' standpoint one has
only to drop into the pleasant room
where the students work from 0 to V2
three mornings In a week to be con
vlnced of the fact that tho hlghbrowr.
iro looking to tbclr millinery laurelf.
as well as to purely mental achieve
mcnts.
The millinery course at this institu
tion Is immensely popular for two roa-'
sons first, because It Is practical ami
meets everyday requirements and, so
ond, on account of tho charming per
louallty of the instructor, Mrs. Evelyn
Tobey, who is a Barnard graduate.
The course, by tho way, counts for in
much as any of tho elective studies In
the college curriculum.
In the workroom there Is an nlr oi'
suppressed enthusiasm, an atmospher
ic fooling of everybody trying to do
her best, and the Ideal held up by Mrs
Tobey is a high ono.
"Wo never," she said, "let go our ef
forts on oven tho most hopeless look
ing hat. Wo alter tho shapo and rear
range thu trimming until the mo't
critical member of the class pro
nounces a satisfactory verdict on the
creation." And tlio weekly class crit
iclsms are dreaded by the pupil whose
handiwork Is tho target for tho aim's
of her sister workers.
Taking a special course under the
espert guidance of Mrs. Tobey ar -
college girls, society matrons, staid
housewives nnd pupils from fashion
able finishing schools. Tho work starN
In with the making of a real hat; do
signs aro first made In pnpor nnd then
carried out in fabrics. The first hat
made Is tho simple street model, nnd
next comes the dressy confection.
"Bather a good looking hat. Is It
not?" said tho professor with pardon
able pride, holding up for inspection a
stunning picture hat, the recent work
of an ndvnncod pupil.
It wns a study in Gainsborough linr-
constructed from royal bluo' satin cov
ercd with black mallnes and trlmmc l
simply with plaited ruffles of cream
colored laco banded with narrow linn-,
of sablo fur and n pnlo pink satin
rose tucked lovingly at ono sldo of the
wldo brim.
But Mrs. Tobey considered tho fat
ing of the lint and tho nrtlstic manner
of its manipulation tho master toiH
of the creation. And not the least
interesting of tho many wondorfn'
things done in tlio school Is tho miiklnp
of frames from n willow fabric that
Is damped and pulled nnd clipped Into
condition over tho wire foundrtlon
Indeed, the material Is molded and
shaped much as the sculptor models
his clay. Just before tho holidays tho
girls wero busily working on fabrle
neck and muff sots nnd lovely party
bonnets. Work of this nature fills In
tho hiatus between winter nnd sprint
styles.
Mrs. Tobey Impresses upon lipr
class that the study of millinery like
most women's work is never done.
Each senson brings its special needs
In tho basic laws of hats that tho suc
cessful artist must uccept or become
that dreaded of all things a sartorial
back number. Ono of tho girls pa
thetlcnlly remarked that sho was sure
ly becoming a ono Idea crcaturo and
that her dominating thought was hats
overy woman's chapcau, from a Bow
ery travestry of tho modes to a Fifth
avonuo masterpiece, clrilmcd her at
tention. Marriage Maxims.
Mnrrlago for lovo is risky, but it's
right.
Mnrrlago is either kill or cure.
Oddest of Queer Fishes.
A queer fish thnt ddes not swim is
tho "sargasso fish," known to sailors
as tho "frogflsh." It lives In that vast
mass of floating gulfwccd called the
Sargasso sea, in mid-Atlantic.
Its pectoral fins nre so modified and
developed as to resemble arms, and it
uses them for clinging to tho weed.
Very gaudily colored, it changes its
hues to match tho aquatic vegetation
by which it is surrounded, and when
the latter decays nnd turns brown it
assumes a corresponding shade.
The flsh lays its eggs in a Jelly-like
mass, which, absorbing a great quan
... .1 . i -
iny oi waior, uecumus mruu uuiua ua
big as the mother flsh herself, assum
ing the form of a narrow raft three or
four feet long and two to four inches
wide. New York World.
Parnell. ,
I never saw a braver man than Par
nell. Tho story of his downfall is ono
of tho most pathetic In history. There
Is a rumor that Captain O'Shea said
to Gambotta: "What are wo going to
Jo with Parnell? He is getting to be
a great danger to the country." And
Gambotta replied, "Set a womnn on
his track." And the woman, instead
of betraying him, fell In lovo with this
patriot, nud that was his undoing.
"Hecollccticus of Mrs. T. P. O'Connor."
To Discourage Him,
"George." said her husband's wife,
"I don't believe you have smoked ono
of those cigars I gave you on your
birthday."
"That's right, my dear," replied his
wife's husband. "I'm going to keep
them until our Willie wants to learn
to smoke." Chicago News.
IT GROWS HAIR.
Hero Aro Facts We Want You to Prove
at Our Risk.
Marvelous as it may seem, Bcxall
"03" Hair Tonic has grown hair on
heads that were once bald. Of course,
in none of these cases wero the hair
roots dead, uor had the scalp taken on
a glazed, shiny appearance.
Rexall "Oil" Hull Tonic acts scien
tifically, destroying tho germs which
nre usually responsible for baldness.
It penetrates to the roots of the hair.
stimulating and nourishing them li
is a most pleasant toilet necessity. Is
delicately perfumed, and will mil gum
or permanently stain the hair.
We want you to get a bottle of
Rexall "03" Hair Tonic and use It as
directed. If It does not relieve scalp
irritation, remove dandruff, prevent
tho hair from falling out and promote
an Increased growth of half, nnd in
every way give entire satisfaction,
simply come back nnd tell us. and with
out question or formality we will baud
back to you every peuny you paid us
for it. Two sizes, ."lie and $1.00 Sold
only at our store The itexall Store.
A. M. LEINE.
mm
ALCOHOL 3 PER OKKT
AVegelaltePrcparalionlbrAs
sirailaliiigihcFooiandRetjtila ting Uie Stomachs andliawcls cf
mi
EMw
PromolcsDigcslionjCkerfiil
ness and festContalns neither
52S.
Opiuni.Morphine nor Nigral.
Wtr? t i
2 11
NOT NARCOTIC.
JtmptotoUDcSWJEirmXEIl
flm4t.i Seed'
JkcStanit
WornSitd
Cmled Slyer
IHatuyrcai llamr.
Anerfcet Remedv forConslif a-
Hon , Sour Stomach.Dlarrtea
.
Facsimile Signature of ;
NEW YORK.
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
D. & h. CO.TIHE TABLE
A.M.
SUN
A.M.
A.M.
A.M.
P.M.
SUN
H 30
1C 00
10 00
4 30
(i 05
jj icarB- Infants and Children.
11 BliiB The Kind Yoa Have
mm mmrnnm
il ALCOHOL 3 PER OKKT.
mm
Albany ....
, ilincliumton .
10 00
A.M.
10 00
2 15
12 30
8 30
2 15
, Philadelphia.
1 20
2 0i
7 25
tj 15
4 40
5 30
1 20
2 OS
7 10
7 55
.Wilkcs-llnrre.
....Scranton....
P.M.
A.M
P.M,
P.M,
A.M.
Lv
5 40
5 GO
0 03
0 15
9 ia
6 20
(i 30
2 05
2 15
2 1
8 45
65
H m
0 18
...Carbondnle....
.Lincoln Avenue..
, Whites
i Purview
, Cunnun
... Lake l.odoro ...
.. . Wnymart
K cene
Strcno
Prompton,,..,
Kortcnlu
,,...Keelyvllle
.... Hoiieedale ....
5 51
u a
li 11
a 3i
(i 62
(i SH
2 3;
6 17
!l 42
U 48
2 43
2 4!l
2 52
2 57
I 24
6 'IS
0 i
6 32
835
6 3!)
6 n
K 46
6 00
7 0
2
B 32,
a 6i
7 07
7 13
67
10 (X)
0 3
7 Hi
2 50
3 at
3 07
3 10
3 15
(I 30
10 0
7 20
8 43
10 0H
7 24
7 27
9 4
10 11
9 60
9 65
10 15
7 31
P.M. A.M.
P.M. P.M. A.M. Ar
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
ytie Kind You Have Always Bough)
Boars tho
Signature
JOSEPH it WELCH
re
The OLDEST Fire Insurance
Agency in Wayne County.
Office: Second floor Masonic Build
ing, over C. C. Jadwiu's drug store,
Honesdale.
I MARTIN CAUFIELD
Flartrynav rt n A TJl
1.1CJ1& aim iuiii-
ufacturer of
ARTISTIC
MEMORIALS
Office and Works
1036 MAIN ST.
HONESDALE, PA.
:::mj
ARRIVAL AWI DEPARTURE OP
ERIE TRAINS.
Trains leave Union depot at 8.25
a. m. and 2.48 p. ra.. week day
Trains arrive Union depot at l.t 0
and 8.05 p. m. week days.
Saturday only, Erie and Wyoming
arrives at 3.45 p. m. and leaves at
5.60 p. m.
Sunday trains leve 2.48 and ar
rive at 7.02.
Always Bought
Bears
Signature
of
THE OtNTHUn COMPANY, NCW TOHK CITY.
HONESDALE BRANCH
P.M.
.V.M.I
3ba
10 GO
BUlV
2 00
10 GO
12 40
B 45
8 15
3 63
7 31!
7 32
P.M.
7 15
G20
7 31
7 33
A.M
10 20
9 37
4 05
3 15
2 25
1 35
P.M.
10 05
Ar
A.M
P.M
P.M.
12 nl
12 071
P M.
8 05
1 35
1 25
5 40!
5 30
5 24
7 5
7 50
7 XI
7 25
7 19
7 17
7 12
7 09
7 05
1 21
12 03
1 03
12 60;
6 08
11 41
11 37
6 01
5&;
12 61
11 1
12 49
12 43
4 61
11 29
11 23
11 20
11 10
11 12
11 09
4 48
4 45
12 40
12 3G
12 32
12 29
12 25
4 4
7 01
4 37
4 34
6 68
6 65
4 40
11 05
Lv A.M. P.M. P.M. A.M. P.M.
Bears the L v
AM
of AW
A a Use
p For Over
Thirty Years