The Trail of the Dead: feta THE STRANGE EXPERIENCE J OF DR. ROBERT HARLAND By B. FLETCHER ROBINSON (Copyright, 1905, by CHAPTER X. Gradon's chair Toppled to tho ground ns he ro. In three strides ho was out of the door. I turned to Mossel with a demand or an explanation. "Walt till Hcrr Graden returns," he grunted sulkily. I have the strongest objection to thoso Billy tricks of secrecy with which the professional police endeavor to magnify their most simple discoveries. 1 was spe.ikiuguny mind strongly on the subject when ntyrconsln reappeared. "Ilalfo'J what's the matter?" he asked. 1 explained the position, while the fat German chuckled in an oily, irritating manner. ; "Is nor. the ofllcial always the same? said Graden, with a grim smile. "Come to the liaht, Itobert, and I'll explain." It was certainly an ingenious discovery they had mad?. Upon the page upon which the map -should have rested were several slight, indentations, evidently the result of marks made upon the lost paper by a pencil with a tine point. With great care my cousin tbre out the correspond ing map irom his" guide book and fitted it into ttto vacant place. Then, turning it slowly back, lie drove a pin through the thin paper at the spots Immediately above the indentations on the page be low. "The devil take him!" he cried. "Look. Mossel. This doesn't help us, after all." It was true euough. The pin-pricks showed, first, Lemsdorf; then a cross road some ten miles to the east: and then Dromberg, to the north, on the Berlin-Thorn, nnd Gnesen, to the south, on the Poseu-Frankfurt railways. lie had evidently been measuring and calcu lating indecisively. "Do not troulde yourself, Ilerr Gra den,'' 'said Mossel, with a wave of the hand that had more than a suggestion of patronage. "There arc still telegraphs. 1 will have him detained at whichever place he reaches. I shall return in half ii n hour to a good supper, I trust, Mr. Landlord." We followed lihn to the outer door, which opened to a writhing wilderness of snowtlakes. for the fall had recom menced. The policeman titrned up nisi collar with a grunt ot disgust anu uieueu into the darkness. We turned to meet the face of the landlord, white and drawn with n terrible anxiety. "My son!" he gasped. "Whqt of my son 7" : "Heaven pardon mel" cried Graden, "I had forgotten him!'" "This man he drove, that is about to be arrested is he a criminal? - Do not spare me, nieiu Ilerr." "Your servant our driver to-day will be telling the tale in your kitchen, -of the death of the Prof. Mechersky, of Castle Oster. This man, whose name Is Marnac, killed him. That is why we pursue. Yet, my friend, I see no dan ger for your sou, unless " "Unless what, meiu Herr?" "Unless he refused to assist In the. escape of a murderer." "He is an honest boy, a good boy, but very stubborn. His horses were borrow ed; he had promised to return them to night. He would never consent to drive this man to Bromberjr or Gnesen, which is at least an eighteen hours' journey. Oh, meiu Herr, mein Ilerr! what is hap pening out there in the snow?" "We are in the hands of Providence, my friend," said my cousin gravely, lay ing his hand on the landlord's arm. "You can do nothing but pray that it may be well with the boy." I was very sorry for Reski. As I made-ray toilet in my room upstairs, the danger of his son grew upon me. Kate, accident, Providence whatever you choose to call it is a strange thing, for Indeed it chooses its victim with a fine Impartiality. When I entered our supper room, I found my cousin equally disturb ed. s "This is a bad business about the landlord's son," he said. "I've a good fmind to follow the sleigh, though it's little good that would do." "It's an awful night," I grumbled, for Indeed the wind was shrieking in the roof like a lost soul. "You're a queer chap, Itobert, with your confounded mannerisms," he said. "Yet I'll wager you'd be the first to be off into the storm in a matter of life and death." It was not exactly complimentary, but I let it pass. Mossel was delayed. It was close upon twenty minutes more before he arrived, a snow-swathed, stamping bear of a mau, whose curses preceded him as ho rolled down the passage to our room. 'What's up, Mossel?" Graden demand ed sharply. "The wires, mein Herr Graden, the wires! Potztausend! but this storm has brought them down like clothes lines," "A special train, then." "They have not an engine In the shed. I have been to see; it was that which delayed me." Graden drew a sheet of paper from his pocket and glanced at It swiftly. "There is not a train till ten Jn the morning," he said. "Ho will be at Brom berg, which Is tho nearer town, by eleven at latest. This is a branch lino, and we could not get there- under three hours. - It is now seven. An old man as he ! could hardly travel through such a night without stops for food. Again, this lad who drove him may havo refused to pro ceed. We must chance it, my friends, and follow." "I thought you had already so decided when I saw the sleighs at tho door," eald Mossel. "Sleighs, Mossel? ordered no sleighs!" "Well, they're there. Two troikas with tlireo good horses apiece, Come and see for yourself." Tho policeman had spoken the truth. On the leoward side. of the porch two sleighs were waiting. Tho light from the open door behind us shimmered on the drifting snow and flashed on the bells about the horses' necks. It was bitter ly eeld, and I was turning to retreat Into and J. MALCOLM PHASER Joseph B. Bowles) the hall when a man wrapped In furs moved out of the darkness. It was the keeper of the tun, his faco grey-white, like the underside of a sole. "Whoso sleighs are these?" asked Graden sharply. "Mine, Mr. Englishman, mine. I fol low to save my boy." "And the horses?" "The best in Lemsdorf. They are private teams, lent by those who had pity upon my sorrow." . "May we come with you?" "I would ask for .nothing better, mein Herr." Inside of ten minutes I was ready to start, with a borrowed cloak flung over my thickest clothes, and a huge hunch of bread-and-meat iu my hand. Quick as I had been, Mossel and my cousin were already dressed and In consultation. We were to drive to the cross-roads, they told me, and then separate, the ono sleigh, with Grnden, Mossel and an ex perienced driver, taking the road to Uromberg, which, being the shorter, was more likely to be the one Maniac had chosen; the other, containing the iuu keepcr and myself, was to follow the Gnesen road. 1 was not particularly pleased at the prospect of parting with my friends, but I made no objection to this plan. We entered our sleighs, roll ing ourselves in the rugs. "Are you armed?" Graden called across to the innkeeper iu his little seat before me. "Yes, mein Herr. Do you go Erst, for you have the better team." The chase was up indeed! As we passed on to the plain outside the town, the gale that came charging out of frozen Russia leapt upon us with a howl of furious joy. The llakes that rose from beneath the curved runners and the beating hoofs tied spinning Into the night. The sky hung low and black and starless above the white sheet of rolling snow. The little sleigh bells grew silent in the heavier drifts, breaking out again where the track was harder. A hun dred yards ahead the sparks of Gra deu's pipe flashed as they kindled in the wind. The fall had almost ceased. My driver sat squarely before me, with a rein iu each of his fur-gloved hands. I could not see his face, but from his pro jecting head and hunched shoulders I could imagine how he looked, peering 6ver his horses into the night, with fear gripping at his soul. 1 must admit that for myself I was in a condition of petulant discomfort. The slightest movement seemed to give en trance to some new draught that chilled my arm or ran trickling down my spine. Xow and again a flake of snow lodged in my neck or ear and melted icily. Tired, cold and hungry, I lay amid my rugs, cursing the folly that had led me to take a hand in a business that should have been left to the police. I had the keenest desire for a quarrel, but being to all con versational purposes alone, that reliel was impossible. CHAPTER XI. Within two miles of Lemsdorf we hud left the plain for the forest. The moon was obscured, yet a faint light filtered down from above, finding a reflection iu the suow, and emphasizing the black pillars of the pines that went sliding by. There was now no trace of our companions save the marks of their run ners on the track; over the woods brood ed au utter silence, broken only by the swisli of our sleigh and the murmur of the bells rising and falling In a low, monotonous melody. It was as if we were passing through the waste places of a dying world. One of my feet began to grow numb, and when I turned about that I might shelter it, the snow that had gathered on my collar plunged down my neck, so that I shivered with cold. But on the whole I was reasonably warm amongst my wraps, and a feeling of drowsiness grew upon me. It was Reiki's voice that woke me. We had halted iu a dim clearing in the woods. A score of yards away the sec ond sleigh was waiting. Evidently we had reached the cross-roads, where we were to part. "Any tracks?" shouted my driver. "No," came Gradeu's answer. "The wind and the fresh fall have cleared them away. Are you all right, Robert?" "I am exceeding uncomfortable, if that is what you want to know," I shout ed back. Indeed, it was a silly question to ask me. My temper was not Improv ed by a distant chuckle which I attrib uted to Mossel. " "Cheer up, Robert!" continued my cousin. "If you run across him, you must do your best Reski will see you through, never fear; but I don't think there is mucli chance of your coming up with him, for he will have taken tho shorter route which wo follow. Auyhow, remember that the rendezvous Is at tho Drel Kronen.' at Thorn. If you catch him, telegraph there; If tho wires are down, Bend a messenger. Do you under stand?" "You are perfectly lucid." "Well, good-by." Tho snow spurted from under their horso's hoofs as they swung on to the north road. Then my driver shouted to his team, and wo, too, rushed forward, but on the other track curving south and east. For a mintito I could hear their bells tinkling an echo In tho dis tance. Then they died away Into si lence. My Interest in tho chase suddenly ex panded. Now that my cousin had desert ed me, It seemed an ugly, dangerous business. Marnac would stop at noth ing, that was certain. Supposing wo should chance upon this d eg p era to ma niac, what then? My driver was arm ed, and had the appearance of a bold, courageous man. Was ho so In reality? I stared up at his back and wondered. Wo had traveled tho half of a mile, when from tho black of tho forest be fore us rose a cry, a fierce, chuckling bay that sent tho horses plunging across the road. In the solitude of thoso Ice bound woods It sounded the more threat ening, tho nioro utterly maltfc'naut. I Bprang to my feet, gripping Reski by tho shoulder, "What Is that?" I cried. "Wolves, mein Herr." "Will they attack us?" "Calm yourself, mein Herr," lie an swered grullly, his eyes still set on the track beforo him. "Tho winter Is young, nnd their mouths nro not empty. Tho pace of tho horses had dropped to n slow trot. They ndvnnced stlflly, with staring eyes and cars pricked forward I remained standing, peering across tho driver's seat at tho whito track that ran dimly away between the banks of pines. Suddenly from a snow-powdered thick et beforo us there burst a chorus of low snarls that grew Into the short, angry barks of dogs disturbed. With a jerk the horses stopped, trembling and squeez ing themselves together with the fear that was on them. "They havo something there," cried Reski, and there was a shudder In his voice. "Otherwise they would not bo so bold. Take the reins, mein Herr." Ho thrust them into my hands and jumped from the seat. Ills pistol flash ed, nnd 1 caught a glimpse ot forms scur rying over the snow. Then the darkness fell again like a veil. "What have you found?" I shouted. "Under the trees it is hard to see," came back his answer. "Perhaps I was mistaken. But wait." He struck a match, nnd his tall, thin figure sprang out In silhouette as ho moved slowly forward, shielding the light witli his hands. "Here are tho footprints of tho wolves it was here that they gathered. There is something by tho tree. It Is not a log ah, no! but It Is not n log. though it lies so still. I fear to approach how I fear! Havo mercy! It is n man! It is Ivan, my sonf' We were on Marnac's trail the trail of the dead. . At last-it was nil over. Alone, for I dared not leave my hold upon the fright ened horses, Reski carried his son to the sleigh and laid him there beside me, with a rug across the face. He had been killed from behind, poor lad. with a revolver shot in the back of his head. He had refused to proceed, and Marnac iiad not hesitated. That was plain enough. I thanked God that we had been In time to save hint, from the wolves. Yet there had been but a short delay. For when Reski had Keen his, dead be stowed upon tho sleigh, he had taken the reins and sent his horses forward. He did not speak, nor did I offer him con solation. Hut as I watched him sitting above nie, peering ahead like some old teak figure on a vessel's bows, there was a grim intensity about the man, a fixed resolve that was strange to witness. So we fled through the night, down the interminable avenues of pines, hearing our dead with us. It was one o'clock when v.n lit upon a wayside inn. Our clamor aroused the landlord, who directed us to where a ket tle simmering on the stove gave a warm mash for tho horses and hot coffee for ourselves. Ho was sleepily incurious, nor did lie inquire what was the thing beneath tho rugs which we carried witli us. But he gave us news. Marnac hnd left there less than two hours before. He had been greatly delayed by a collision with n tree, and some rough repairs hnd been necessary. One of his horses, too. had been slightly lamed. Yet Reski showed no unusual interest "in the tale we heard. He spent his time with his horses, grooming and soothing them. It was not till they hail rested three-quarters of an hour that he called me out from my seat by the stove, and again wo swept away upon the chase. It was at dawn that wo sighted him. tr. ..... t, ..lW.il.t n, n Imu ttlmir n hlfipk M.M.V 1, 41 19 M JIIHMIif. . w..n 1 I . speck in the white riband of a road.) Above him, long flakes ot orange ciouu were slowly brightening and deepening in color. As he topped the hill, tho sun came peering up over a moorland heaped with tumbled drifts. The sky Hushed and faded to a deep cobalt blue. So day came. It almost seemed as If our horses un derstood. They increased their pace without a touch of the whip, tugging at tlie frozen, twisted reins. As they, too, rose the hill, Reski shouted to them, and they stepped briskly forward. The fresh snow luvjl frozen, and wo traveled well, the surface crackling us we crushed over it. We were less than a quarter of a mile from him when he turned nnd no ticed us. Wo saw him spring to Ills Jeet and lash his team, but the off-sldo liorse was running stiilly and his pace scarcely increased. Ho leaned down, fumbling and searching at his feet, while ho held the reins iu one Hand. After that 'he did not hurry, but drove steadily forward, glancing at us now nnd again over his shoulder. (To be continued.) Ill Ikluliuntll. Amber Pete So thai- was a icnl dude out hero from Newport 7 Bad Bill Yes, an he was tho limit. Why, when he went to shako hands with mo he held one hand 'way up la the air. , v Amber Pete What did you tlo7 Bad BUI Why, I thought tho galoot was making fun of me, bo I pulled out my gun an' made him hold up both of them. To u nil Luck. Merchant (to applicant) Yes, I ad vertised for a boy. Where did you work last? Boy At Blnnk'fl store. Merchant Why did you leavo there? Boy I got fired for belli' too prompt. Merchant That's queer. Prompt ness Ib an admirable trait. Boy Yes, but tho boss said I was too prompt about goln' home even ings. Tried to Obey. "Didn't I tell you to never come hero again?" queried tho Judge of tho in-! cbrlnte. "You did, Judge, an' If you don't t'lnk I tried to obey you Just look at do iioso an' clothes o' do cop that hruug mo,"--IIouBton Post. No More Dictation. "Old Gotrox has hnd a terrible tlmo with his stenographer," "Why, I thought ho hod married her?" "He had." Houston Post. 3 Kcoiiomlsliiw Orecn I'ooit. When green food Is senrco or dim cult In obtain It pays to plnn somo way so It will not be wasted. Tho follow ing description Is of n feeding ox tfi.it works well. Cut two pieces for the ends, each twenty-four Inches long, getting proper curve by nig " mn' pass. .Make the back of tho holder or thin boards four feet long nnd twenty four Inches wide nnd null one end (tig uro r.) In plnce. hinging the other end, using small straps of leather to hold It shut. Cover the holder with coarse mesh wire netting nnd bung It l convenient plnce high enough so tho fowls cannot roost on it. yet so thoy can feed from It readily. Use hangers of wood, tin or lonthor ns Indicated In the cut at figure (1. This little feeding tco.NOMicAi. myn.No IIOX. box will enable the fowls to pick at the green stuff, whether It Is clover, grass or chopped cabbage, without any danger of soiling or wasting It. Such conveniences nre Inexpensive, but save an Ininien-'e amount of time, us well ns food, so poultry keepers should use them whenever possible. Indianapolis News. To Kill Simimfrna Hoot. Says one writer: Sassafras Is ouo of the worst peats that tonic farmers hnve to contend with. It may be grubbed year after year and every root taken out that can be, nnd still there will be roots left thnt will sprout up, nnd soon the sassafras will bo thicker than ever, and tho area of sassafras brush will ho enlarged rather than diminished. No amount of grubbing will permanent ly rid a Held of sassafras. Tho most successful method of fighting sassafras I have ever tried Is to cut off tho sprout at the top of the ground nnd to pasture with cattle and sheep until the roots die, or If the trees are large, .peel them two or three feet above tho ground and pasture until the roots die. If the land Is plowed and tho roots broken, they will sprout, but If pas tured close the roots die In a few years. Vitality of AlfuUa Ncril. A remnrkable test of the vitality of alfalfa seed Is rcixHted in bulletin No. 110 of the Colorado Agricultural Ex periment Station. It Is generally con sidered that seed must be perfectly new In order to come up f reply. In bulletin No. U5 of the experiment station, joino tests were- given of seeds ranging from one to six years oh). Dr. Ilcnddcu has retained samples of the snine seed and tests have been again made when the seed has been from eleven to sixteen years old, and the tests havo shown that from 88 to Otf per cent germinated. Tho screenings showed less vitality, tho first quality of screenings running from 50 to TJVj per cent; second quality, 118 per cent, and third quality, -10 per cent Kerllllty of Wnoil AmIim. All farmers know that wood ashes nre valuable as fertilizers. But this value, as many know, Is due very much to the material from which tho ashes come. Thus, ashes made from hard wood are more valuable than ashes inado from soft wood. In fact, some ashes from soft wood havo not enough value to make It worth while to bother with them. It has albo been found that tho value Is largely governed by tho part of tho tree from which tho ashes aro made, it Is declared by chemists that tho nsh of young twigs Is of more vnluo than tho ash of the trunk of tho tree, while the ash of leaves Is still more valuable. Mllklnir by Miiclilnery. In tho dairy department of the agri cultural college at Manhattan, Kan., they have for nioro than a year boon successfully milking cows by machin ery. Tho milking ninchlno Is n queer looking uppnrntus, driven by a gnsollno engine. When ono Is fastened to a cow It milks nway In splto of nil tho kicking nnd cavorting tho cow mny do, Water for Work Horae. Qlvo work horses a pall of water In tho mtddlo of tho morning and tho aft ernoon. They will bo better for It Help them along and you will havo hot ter satisfaction. Tiles and hot weather mako them cranky nnd poor. Give them a few carrots and a little grass now and then ClftutMltiK llnrk ( fruit Tree. Hvory tree lit an orchard should ho washed at lenst twleo n year with strong soapsuds, hut thero will ho no necessity for scraping them, Tho cat erpillars should ho destroyed as uooti ns the nests nro seen, which will end large numbers with ninnr.lng rapidity; the escape nf n slnglo pair moans thon snnds next season. Ono of tho best nslstnuts to nn orchard Is tho llttlo wren. If farmers will glvo him prop er protection by constructing boxes with entrances so Rtnall thnt no bird but a wren can enter, tho sparrow will be unable to drive It nwny. An the wren Is an active nnd busy creature, It destroys n large number of Insects In a very short time, and, ns It Increosei rapidly under favorable circumstances, quite a large number of them mny he secured and Induced to remain In tho orchard, If proper facilities are nf. forded for their protection and aecdtn modatnlou. I.ocimt l)rt royor. InArgcutlnn, as lit Africa nnd Asln, the locust Is a name of dread, though not to anything like the same, extent, and In South America thero has arisen a hopo of combatting tho destroyer which may prove of enormous vnluo In regions nioro liable to devastation. I .urge numtwr of locusts were found dead and microscopical examination showed that they hnd been destroyed by a natural enemy a bpccIch of fly which nto Into the Iwrty of tho locust, and there deposited Its lnrviu which de veloped Into n life prodigiously multi plied. Kxiwrlntents nro now being made to test whether this lly can thrlvo In regions which are recognized ns tho Incubating places of tho locust. The Argentine agricultural department Is breeding tho tiles for this purpose, though under cffectlvo control. l!rnn Don't l.lUn Ncvr llnmo. Fowls nro very fond of their homes and dislike being moved to new loca tions. If eggs art- the object It Is most important that birds should not Iks moved from pen to pen, ns It will de lay egg production and also diminish the supply. Pullets for early laying should, If posBlble, he brought up with. In sight of their future laying run or pen. On tho contrary, If It Is wished to delay the laying of n pullet, nnd to encourage growth for prlw? purposes, Iter home must be changed often. A sitting or broody hen mny be Interfered with by removing her to a now sceno and fresh companions a more reason able and humane way of checking her maternal Instincts than that of half drowning her, shutting her up In dark ness or resorting to other cruel meth ods. Sbuttrr for llnrn Window, Sliding windows In n ham, such as nre frequently used for throwing ma nure through, nro hardly ever quite light, and iiiiicu cold air Is often al lowed to rush In upon the animals In side. Tho American Agriculturist sug gests tho use of this shutter, which Is made of matched board and hinged at the top so that It can bu let down at night to keep out cold air. Tho shut ter Is sot nt au angle so that Its own weight will keep It closely shut; or It may bo shut flat against tho casing nnd be tightly closed by a hook. I'oIiiIn on IlMlnlfiK Oeaur). Have ono gander to four geeso, no more. Glvo them n good run. Do not try to change their nests, but lot them set where they lay. Tnko first eggi and set under hens, as a gooso will sometimes lay thirty to forty eggs In tho season. Goslings slioJd not bo al lowed to run In water or tall, wet grass, hut should havo a good grass run, grass thnt Is short and green. Feed dried bread moistened with milk, cooked dry potatoes or cooked corn meal. Do not feed them too much at first, nnd mix somo grit nnd sand with their feeds. Ilnup Iluinndy. Tho fowls should ho placed in a dry, warm and well ventilated house, and havo plenty of fresh water and scalded bran or other light food, Tnko of fine ly pulverized, fresh-burnt charcoal nnd of now yeast each three parts, of pul verized two parts, of flour one and one half as much pulvcrlzod cayenne as flour. Water enough to mix well, and roll Into balls or pills tho size of a us zelnut, glvo ouo three times a day. Pumpkin for l.HHiba. Pumpkins nro good feed for Iambs In tho fall, especially whon thoy are trou bled with paper skin, caused by worms Iu tho Intestines. Thoy will eat them If thoy aro sliced or cut and sprinkled with salt, but It Is hotter to provide flat-bottomed troughs with compart ments, each being large enough to re colvo tho half of a muankln cut Iu such fashion as to have the pieces II flat with the Inside tmpemest. HAIt.V WINDOW HIIUTTKR. 1 UJ lEllIUIIH UUUW.I ! fflWJP,. Willi H 'M URIIBBB 3' ., 7MWW ' H I SIB I I l a I I I -WBIV HB HBB i n i naofiim evevs ll.'W -llndl. 10.- -Sir William UM...M r . II aillA Vl( 1'in.r It fOlftt.l Yt .... l . -' ' I HI fa ft' 1 a i nriM rt i j nwf Mwrtjr of h iu..: i -on i. Of ( eonrrt W'.M ' . 1 lUWfQTUQ - - " VtKUL itiK "III U Ilin 1 ,111)3 n iut T commercial In if " wwwwin m o--1 uc iiuionc uttrttr Om, lortl. UOtltl.. IfN ilor it . oj., Mm. iiuscrrant tttirti ir oi i.unuaiioo2j. Tmn. ; lSltl l'url tn...n UAH. n - - ..w.ftau, iWUIiq mjt rendered to FarrsraL iirmiuiii; in me trim war. 187? ..! ...! .1. iv. ...r.h. .... i!..i.t !.,.. . , " .... ..rau'.iiii'i .nr. h 1S82 HrltUh occupy Purl StH it jit -f i nurz i-niini 188:1 Completion of the N'onfei ..III.. II I . - . L . ,t..J.. . fOCM I -- 1. . ... .f- . t . . 1 . .... I.. U-...I 18Sf Mr. MnrbrkVi atnw muted (o iwna nerritaiSe for 1800 Interet on mow; la' Sir jnii u) iu i. ti mi iw 180.1 Attempt to MMMiDite f'r.'.tKi nf Vermuth. IK!) I .Jntiunritf minister to horn niimiod. i.onr. v nrk mill on Awrias nrhool at Foochor. Chici. ik!i7 I'ft-miieni uorua oi viam Kawtinateii. 100,1 Lord Sallnbury, print : L'nnlaml iltoil. 1001 Mrn. MnybrJdr, after rtws HriRll.b prlMD, mM ii r . t . lit . At Hi win! Ail . . litrni uaiiio vt mm I, .,..--.. tlllKtUni ft&d JlNS - ( The Illble In Forrll UiM Jill" uriunii ' -- now distribute the Scrlptuwb ri. . tt.ltt.1i mnA er tlinn -nw ianguR:. . . ..i..1 unt r It U4 Mem irceni:u - iiuillll. 1,1 I illllllMU. rvinin oi me mum y'"t; .1..... arrowroot W W mil uriHAii mm v. -- Knmmnt It erf. IU i"" t va. iinv mr iiiu .. . u ..i...riuiii have we nwi i L:, , Dmt ilurlnff the luW lliey have Rrovvn -f . Christian cnuio nod to ' -i 1... Vnl i nc e H' Hlnu.1 ior T1--v.m i.e m rrnti'rn ii. iu liuv n 1111)10. .. i ,.i....i ntM.d nro boitffil .....I. Jllhnr ininsn "- bles in diiToreut I'" "'.; , ,tl barley, (W, Pte. (wM More 8lr.c Th0 laws recenuy r , nltlon ot ?; 17i tTtW wit 'w-- - - lMMt mm ft nur. Ill rruiiiw ...a , commercial an WJ ! ft wl.onlnanyca.e7tbj liri'MlUlL(U . . ..nl I rest uo nw - ,. Wutw.; otner uay, . I, fttjiori s new Hunu-jr . nmv annua I"" " ..l.l.lmv nxCCDt l - -..-I or handle M .1 An mi j I Ml II LL I'll " . II MiAM ! f .Kniim ni am - li " .iiert ens." it homo or imported. m iHni, for violations a - -a employers or corpora . llil'i-il 7 U II." -....i llVO!l"i" 7 .....mil All"""" fnurB llc wu ronort of int.crD .' . Kit " r trinmiSat.frp .7 Indicates uo ,, ",i.k tH MM II'IIIIUII , I m nn uu . Industrial n"-- . nieric ..Hfl oo u tot alcohol in . .i vu i runwuciv f ... it iv - ... -Atini ui - .ill fiarsa iwi"--