{ title: 'Chatham semi-weekly courier. (Chatham, Col[umbia] Co[unty], N.Y.) 1903-1907, September 02, 1905, Page 7, Image 7', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071125/1905-09-02/ed-1/seq-7/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071125/1905-09-02/ed-1/seq-7.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071125/1905-09-02/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn89071125/1905-09-02/ed-1/seq-7/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Chatham Public Library
l &x&erft \ springing from the shadowa into ib< sickly light pjt tho torches, I saiw—not twenty, a hundred, two hundred, men fl^f.~ «t.«i— 8tark naked> geaUculatln g ( grimacing, mouthing, laughing, shouting and danclnjr • -. ¥«•*-- In-rery-trathr'ln 16 degrees ot froit *t saw these naked bodies,' with bleeding faces, with large red holes gaping in - thej|r brwuMa, with deep, lagged cuts, with long, purple gashes closed with lumps tit hUck congealed blood.. . . crawling oyer the earth, Jumping .upon raw, bledlng stumps, some armed with revolvers and swojrds, which, they braudiahed, tbout- ^••^•^^/safft^that fighters obtained. Cpntwt In the xnlre would still waiioi 1 A^'S.toglodytes huddled In caves, ^^feS^SMft**!! :«id .action g3^,,^;AB4;ciiltrrates Igoorsnt sloth. j,^.\-\ — ^^^^*'V?*^''^'5 h » ckI «« oa slates; n&^tifl^Ms«B»^Bj»si;^snbls^ssloa :^*^'^»*;«Uts«S8itpB»saIlsifAhliif;- jng, And wsfclng—tofiaicts u»,\ wgoT** : ti*~ r>p \* extreme slmpWdty of con 'Satet'l I'-ITtfl III Mil 1,11111II11»» A'SxCW'! - ' i OF THE -M^-y % ~--- '^^(MiiJ«rbV>iau is not only the author of a them, in the morning they were dead ^^XfirUliant, .drama but ho is also one of ... In the morning all the wounded Ifs^\ -'the leaders of the Erenoh humanltu- \P°n the plain were dead! H^^^-rism'movemftn&l. He spoke again; '*'•'\••)\'*** ' 1 - \The next morning I was wounded y ^ijl HI[| 1,1 III! MM 1 HI ||H II !• myself ... a bullet smashed the joint ~7jp.-^Ji>f«.-_i _>-.., .of my left shoulder. . . . By a mlra- ^tW^Sff^ .1 * y f ,* g0 £ I escaped death, but I don't know LSj?r;ffl«t--a T»oliso: officer, a- captain who T „. „ . „.'. T _„.„„ . „ r ^-tiad. returned, wounded' from Manchu- 1 BhaU ever be cured - 1 am gomg to had corns to their help-but whom they did not recognize,' they cried 'Back! back' They were mad!\ After a silence, he addsd^- \Some shots were fired,; one of our men fell. What was to be done? We retreated. For many hours I remain ed with my escort at some distance from the crowd of the damned . . . their clamor rose higher still, then, little by little. It diminished . . . ceased. . . . The fre'uzy of their mad- neBS had sunk, the frost had gripped . And I tell you. ... I ask myself sometimes whether I too am not go ing mad, whether I am not already mad! \I would rather have died there!\ And while in the streets of Peters burg, Moscow, Vilna, Lodz and Bat- oum, while in all the rebellious towns of the vast empire, the Czar is com manding the soldiers to kill his people, that Is what he Is making of his sol diers in Manchuria.—London News. THE BUYING OF FURNITURE. kag .^the-.\most 'delirious imagination would \ Day or night, it is Impossible to es 'jSjEbeJncapabie of conceiving, even in the ^P 6 from the torture of that ghastly svvJ ~^2m* >- £f£nljghtoare. However hide- nightmare . . . always . . . always •Jj pus\ may; have seemed to us certain that bloody hums^trujrti_g«awjteg_*t-; .'dv /.epl'sb^es-j^fransmtowl hy Mm runiiC my test \ And always the madmen t-i.v pohdents-or the .different newspapers, I - • • the poor fools naked and bleeding *:4'{^Hb|;one\of them can approach the in- In the night. You can never know. %'4 ^1peiT*me ghastliness of those which xer*\told me, or which I will select -$\ one ' not having space in which to re- ''^ v >te.jthe'm all. And this.is not the t : ^os?terrible,'b\jt one can gain from it _ — J an 1 Idea ot -what others might Jxave \ been.. 1- dedicate this tale to the sol- /.i^dlers of all countries, and I leave the :_£w%jprd''t6-the : Polish captain and let •^|hJfci.J|sk the soldiers of the world if _ Vth'ey~are not sick of killing and being •^kijlea. '-.-\It was the evening after an engage- ^jfneat, which had turned out, as usual, 7~ T uttfortunate for us. We were in camp • Yfith gloomy faces, hopeless hearts -ind exhausted, bodies. Nothing to eat, no ambulances, no wood for the fire— ..'Nothing! A frost of 15 degrees below •iero,' which Bhredded the skin and • froze the blood in our veins to Ice. \jto, remain Immovable, to give way to virteep—was death. How many djed ' that night! Imagine, If you can, this .fearful thing—10,000 men silent, 1Q,- 000 'men motionless, not a voice, not a-breath. ragglers reaching--the- camp told at that they had heard in crossing the plain, to the right of them, every -^sirhere, everywhere, cries, piteous com- \ plaints, frantic appeals, desperate shrieks . . . -the- wounded, the poor wounded ones lost In the black night. They had fallen across some, but had — nothing upon which to carry them and left them there! . . . And what would have been the good? What -roodf . . . But I exclaimed: *We must go and bring in the wounded; we cannot let them die' there. .Who\ will go with me? No answer^ I t , spoke to the colonel—he turned his pack upon me. I appealed to a general •\rhevpassed by without a word. .A -surgeon of high grade, to whom I addressed myself, replied to me, 'And ^nfro shall we put them? We have nb ; stretchers! Let them alone!' Not -s^word of justice, not one ot pity, not one -even- ot horror . . . nothing but complete indifference, because this is w>ri because all these men, from'col- The Importance of Not Buying Mors Than )s Actually Needed. The buying of furniture is one oi the most difficult things in the equip ment of a home, and it' Is^a slngulai fact-that many stores which are load- ed with furniture to the roof offei little serious aid in' this most impor tant task. The furniture man has. o*C course, to suit many tastes - and meet many requirements; his wares are apt jto be most various and di verse. They consist, without excep tion, of goods of two great classes, good furniture and bad \furniture These he displays with so much art that the good 1B thoroughly mixed with the had. In his heart -of hearts he doubtless knows that the bad fur* niture is not worthy to sell; but h« probably regards a'- bad chair sold as a plecer of good business, and he calm ly leaves the selection to his custo mer. If the buyer cannot distinguish between good furniture and \bad it'is none oT his business. He Is there to sell goods. He very likely would not understand what was meant by the immorality of selling a bad chair or an evil-looking table. It Is obvious that the great rule In furniture buying is excellence—^excel lence of materials, excellence of style, excellence in utility. The word, in fact, sums up, In one way or another, about all the requirements that can be demanded of modern fur- onel to soldier, know that their turn nitare. There are, ot course, various iwillr-eemfr tomorrow. -But-by dlut of- degree's oi excellence in furniture, foi. hard, working I found a few old wheels, a single piece may he made ot good barrows, by dint of hot urging, this materials, and well made, to boot, and Prof, Korn of Munich has present*! * report to the Bavarian academy of sciences stating that he has perfected a System fer transmitting photograph* sketches and facsimiles of signatures over ordinary telegraph wires. Any photograph, he says, can be transmit ted over a -wire one thousand miles king l a twenty minutes. The steel bridge over the Pecos Riv er, Texas, Is a marrel of mschanlcat lifeless mass, this frozen brute-life, yielded a hundred men. We set out . 'w'ise night was very black ... we jiad lighted torches, but after we had moved foTWard for an'hour the cries 'f ofr.*t£e \wounded were better guides yet be thoroughly ill- adapted to mod ern needs and quite useless as a household convenience. Another helpful rule tav, furniture buying is not to buy .too.\ much. With persons of average means this advice •traction. It is considerably mora than three hundred feet in height and is 2,180 feet long, yet it is supported by stone pillars so small that it seems in credible to a beholder that they can sustain the enormous weight ot pass ing trains, which 'invariably stop on the bridge to allow passengers to view the structure and the bleak, desolate surroundings. A Russian timber dealer has discov ered a valuable mine of oak. it is iu a river of South Russia, in layers three or four feet deep, scattered over 150 square miles, and Its most striking feature is Its variety of colors, sup posed to be due to the variegated £oU of the river bottom. No fewer than twelve shades of pink, blue, yellow and brown have been noted, each log having its own uniform shade. Th« logs taken out have ranged from forty to two hundred feet in length and from fifteen to twenty inches in diam eter, and it Is estimated that mor« than 150,000, averaging seventy feet; remain. The Japanese excel in the making oi paper from the bark of trees and shrubs. Among the remarkable rarie-, ties are thin rainproof paper used in stead of gloss fpr windows, the oiled papers serving for waterproof cover- ings, and clothing, and the oiled tissue for wmpptng delicate articles. Th« bark paper employed for meal and grain sacks is not readily penetrated by weevils and other insects. Most in teresting of all, perhaps, are the tough papers from which tobacco pouches and pipe cases are made, these leather papers being almost as tough a« French kid, translucent, and as sofl and pliable as calf skin. Glass hives for the observation ot bees at work have been In use fot many years, and recently ants' nests have been on view at the Crystal Pal ace, London; now, a firm In London has actually put on sale a contrivance called \The Lubbock Formlcarium,\ which is really a portable ants' nest, which can i>e moved anywhere without trouble or inconvenience, and which, It Is claimed, will last for upward ot six years with ordinary care, The Mpo- cles selected is the small yellow ant, Formica ftava, and the nest is in closed in a frame ten inches square, resembling a picture frame, except that It must, of course, be laid flat, and the cover must be kept over i t except, when the ants are under observetloa The nest contains ants in their various stages, and some of the other insects which are associated with them, and it Is supplied w-ith or without o queen, and accompanied by full directions as to management This novelty has at tracted much attention aad visitors show much interest In the exhibition. JHALIM m REYTO. GOOD LUCK OF THE PROVINCE- TOWN AND NEW BEDFQfiD. MEN. The New England Copper Bottoms Come Lazily Homeward Loaded with Fat Freight of »8parutn\ and Ivory from the Sevsn Seas. \Thar sh* blo-o-ows!\ The ancient call, trumpeted * by leathern lungs from cloud-aspiring 'crow's-nests,\ rings anew o'er all the time-honored -/^bitc'k'Jllk'e. _ _ . W^^B®\'-\™ 1 Deaa 'f • housewife, intent on making her horns ^SW^C-^ at °W* a - attractive, is very apt to buy more Tn^s-hV^edaTanT-to-^' v^\ 1 ^,^^ wfilcbmay he quite unnecessarV. H ermine uo my .. _ v „ leave some tbjng ta The table or. chair charming today-may have any real utility not the change'_In ghould be awaited,.tor Justified. .The professor was delivering an elo quent address on cruelty to animals, and to illustrate how a little judicious forethought would eliminate to a great extent the sufferings that even small insects are subject to, said: \As I was coming through the hall to-night I saw a bald-headed gentleman very harshly treat a little innocent house fly which had alighted on his head. Now, if there was any justification top-stteh—bad- temper I would be\ quite Justified in indulging in It at the pres ent moment, for a fly has Just alighted on the back Of my head. Now it is coming down my brow; now it is coming on to my G-r-r-eat Pyra mids ot Egypt, it's a—wasp!\—Loa- fin Tlt-Blts. \Good Reason to Remain Single. • \You seem to like his attentions. Why don't yon marry hlmr* • \Because I lfke his attentions.\— Tvwa and Oonntry. ;Tn* fact that the \Jones\ part ol John Paul i Jones' name was ot his »wn_ selection \leads to the suspicion m«t'h« dld'wt^ntito be found. SENATOR .SULLIVAN ' •t - : */Hoiu^motb ^.^K8nmTmn ;>ofyjK«w! '\Xo\rk;:-k*mbeV^^^^ '''~' v f'V^?.th\i^I^m(^'tic. toms,\ come snoring homeward, bear ing fat freight ot \sparum\ and ivory from far southern seas. Again is profit accruing from a pursuit long deemed unremunerative, for the Phy- seter family has multiplied apace In recent years and sperm whaling is coming to Its own again. With the exception of the schoon er John R. Manta, of Provlncetown —four months at sea on her maiden voyage not one of the whaling ves sels now sailing from N-w England ports Is less than twenty-two years old. while many of the lot were built for other work The Ellen A. Swift twenty-two years old. and the Pearl Nelson, \twenty-three were codfish- ermen originally, the Adella Chase, twenty-nine, was- a mackerel catcher, the Charles H Hodgdon and Mary E. Simmons, forty years each, and the Eleanor B. Conwell. forty-two were Grand Bankers, while the Pedro Va- rela, forty-eight years old, was a rev enue cutter Of the tiny Atlantic fleet of the present, two were constructed In the 80'a. five in the 70'-», five In the 60's. six in the BO's, two In the 40's. while the bark Canton patr'arch of the whaling fleets of the world, made her first courtesy to Father Neptune away back in 1S36—sixty-nine years ago. All engaged in the pursuit are well preserved and In See fetMe however, and good for many more years of similar service, and the splendid suc-> cess achieved by the mass during the last three years presaprs the revival of the work and the speedv enlist ment of rcore. perhaps, newer, bot toms Some startling lucrative voyages have marked the progress of the bus iness of late. The Morning Star, the Canton, the Sunbeam and others of the older ships have excellod .their best previous records in point of phe nomenally rich cargoes brought home to swell the bank accpuat of owners and officers. Even the. smallest of the schooner class have \struck luck.\ and the renewed spectacle of lone whalers \boiling\ here and there oyer all the track of the sea from the Azores Bouth to Wa'lflsh Bay. west coast of Africa, reminds of the palmy days of the American whale fishery when \spouts\ were legion in all the western ocean. Take the case of the schooner Elea nor B. Conwell. That craft left Fayal, where she had landed her pre vious catch, early In October, 1903. to cruise south \sparmln'.\ The hur ricane that swept the Azores 'on Oc tober 9, caught her in its track, and stripped her of all boars, etc., driv ing her to Cape de Verde to report Obliged to proceed to St Kitts West Indies, to procure new boats and re pairs, she did hot resume whaling un til March, when she was rushed north to the Hatteras grounds. She found whales there, and in twenty-seven days after sighting her first \spout she was homeward bound, a full ship reaching New Bedford June 23. -with 400 sperm and decks still bearing traces of the last \cut the last whale having been: taken only four days prior to arrival. — -The hark Gatrton, whose sixteen months' voyage, ending September, 1902, yielded 2.2Q0 barrels of sperm a record equaling the best of the palmy day voyages, garnered might! ly among the whale herds south dur Ing the voyage Just ended, 2.350 sperm constituting her total catch from May. 1903. to August 26, last the date of arrival at her home port Tho bark Sunbeam, too, whose catch of the voyage immediately pre ceding'Is said to have beeii worth $G5,000, was a prime factor-of fortune, this lucky' box of a ship \reaching New Bedford on June 26, from a twen ty-two months' trip with a grand to- tail of 2,900 barrels of sperm, almost the banner catch, time and quantity considered, of the. entire whaling rec ord The' Sunbeam's-latest voyage, good ..for. ^145,000, proved a .money, winner 'ifrontgaA* to Z. -Whenf:\, «tfe.^entered fJrayal^rin •Ootob6i&. > 'JUft££c#nIy two Amontbii from home^ah^fcad \650 b»r- y$i»ft^'tipBTm «n- i »boB^';^.Wheh-next ;£h£!to r uchea thetet(Ap'ril7£i963), after Southern crulTOV , ^7^SSI''wis 1.375 Jb^JH^s Tbft-^ttii^mpViJraved-less pales In (the light of the masterly rec ord established by the bark Josephine on her present voyage The Josephine left New Bedford September 19, 1903. She cruised in the South Atlantic and Indian oceans last winter. She not 'only secured a rich haul of sperm whales, but found numbers of valuable bone-bear ing right whales In waters long un frequented by baleen hunters, and when she was last reported she had taken 1,200 barrels sperm, BOO barrels right whale oil and 7,000 pounds of \bone all worth ?61,000. the lot «• Atlantic \whale grounds.\ 'A» of -yorer-the New -Bugiaud -\copper~lrofr pmTgfrtr~6'ne year and\ \one day after leaving home. No less than 6,779 barrels of sperm oil were taken by vessels cruising In the Atlantic during the six months ending September 4,1904. It is not sur prising then, that one should hear In Eastern whaling marts the declara tion oft repeated, \Sperm whale is comln' to its own again\—Boston Herald. Thibet Poor in Minerals. The geologist who accompanied the British mission to Thibet reports (hat the country is strikingly poor in Valuable minerals. The largest yield of gold was .28 grain a ton of gravel, and there was no trace of coal or in digenous gems. The Austrians use a stone blotting- pad that never wears out. New York city is to invite Togo to visit it in 1907. A new' use has \been found for the mineral callad fluorspar in the manu facture of a very beautiful kind of glass. BEATEN NATIONS SLOW PAY. Modern Instances Whore War Indem nities Were Demanded The paying of an indemnity is com paratively a new thing. Before the Napoleonic wars nations seldom fought but for the sake of conquest The wiaiilng party took whatever it wanted in territory or In certain rights, but did not insist upon an in demnity During the sixteenth and seven teenth centuries the map of Europe was changed frequently, but the amount of money pa'd in Indemnities was very small. Napoleon conquered a laxge part of Europe, invented aH kinds of wonderful kingdoms and pro vided kings by recruiting them from his own dear family. But that was the worst that befell those countries, and besides clothing and feeding Na poleon's soldiers and going without English goods the conquered coun tries did not suffer otherwise finan cially Nowadays, as nations do not go to war to conquer territories, they have to be repaid in some other way, and as a rule the victors ask for full payment for their expenses The older way. however, was the safer one, for In many modern in stances the conqueror does not get his money. It Is extremely hard you know to get money out of a bank rupt State In 1877, when Russia had beaten Turkey, she asked an Indem nity of $160,000,000. the exact amount of the cost of the war Today, In the y^ar 1905, Russia has not yet re ceived half of that sum. In 1896, when Turkey nearly conqjiered Greece, slhe began by asking $50,- 000,(100. But King George's family kindly Interposed and the amount was reduced to $10,000,000, hut half of that sum fias not been paid to date In 1866, when Prussia, to the great astonishment of most of the Inter ested spectators, beat Austria and her five allies she not only asked for the amount of money the war had cost her but asked also for a few extra millions to punish Austria for the trouble she Sad given her Although the war lasted only two months. Aus tria had to pay $32,500,000 Indemnities have been paid in smaller wars in Asia. China has had to pay on many occasions, and does not seem to be any poorer for it. But the one enormous indemnity which is far ahead of any other ever de manded was the one France had to pay to Germany in 1871 And the wonder was that France, exhausted by a warfare almost entirely on her own territory, was able to pay the milliard francs in a few years. The indemnity was much more than the war actually cost the Germans, but let us not forget that Germany had to settle an old score. Napoleon probably had cost them Just as much A great amount of the French indemnity has not been used yet, and the purpose for which Bismarck used It princi pally was to develop the secret ser vice of the German empire.—Wash Ington Post. SALT RHEUM ON HANDS Suffered Agony and Hmd to Wear Bandages All the Time—Another Cure by Cutleunw Another cure by Cuticura is told of by Mrs. Caroline Cab|e, of Waupocn, Wis in the following grateful letter \My husband suffered agony with salt rheum on his bands, and 1 had to keep them bandaged all the time We tried everything we could get, but nothing helped him until he used Cuticura. One set oi Cuticura N>ap, Ointment and Pills cured him entirely, and his hands have been as smooth an pos sible ever since 1 hope this letter will be the means of helping other sufferers \ Is an Open-Air Life Healthy? Compared to other forms, ttealth Insurance is in its infancy, and. yet during its eight years of existence it has come to the conclusion and held on to it with dogged detrminntlon. that an \out-of-doors\ life is not the most healthy The health risk, ac cording to Its underwriters, varies with the accident risk The man who leads an active open-air life suf fers more from illness than the man Who stays quietly at home and takes cace of himself The fireman is as bad a health risk as he Is an accident risk The farmer an excellent life risk. Is a poor health risk In the winter he loafs In the summer he overworks. In the fall he breaks down and the insurance company sends its check —Wlllard Helburn, In Leslie's Monthly Magazine The London police have a collection Rf 70,000 sets of finger prints of crim inals TI P 35 Cardinal Gibbons says he ran think: of nothing more lonesome than tho man with an Immense fortune Think of the man without a cent, remarks the New York Herald. How ttjl are you? don't knovr. We'll bet yo» Czar Has Nest Egg. The Czar of Russia, it is said, has $25,000,000 Invested in English securi ties, and it is also declared that he would in an extreme cristv fly and Mve in England, as other monarchs have done before him Then he has a second string to his bow in the $6,- 000.000 Invested in American rails. Iron and coal FITSpflrtnanootlyoumd. No fits ornervous- ness after first day's usn of I>r. Klint-'s dreai NerveRestor«r,$2trinl bottleuii.l treatiserrse Dr.R. H. KLINE,Ltd .MIArchSt Pbila .Pa. Former Archduke Iv<'i>p'>)il lias become a private in the Swiso Arinv Mrs«,Wirj3low'8Soothtnsr Syrup for Children teethlnK,soften tho irums.roduc-tf* inflamiua- Uoxi.allays pain,our«s\viud <-otle, 2.x- a bottle Governor Mokea. nf New taxation ot bachelors ler-. Inior* lam pure Piso's Cure tor Consumption .«avo<l my life three voars afro -Mrs' TIIOMAH HOB- EBTS. Maple St , Norwich N \ Feb. 11 190 0 \Whistler is said to hnve had a hundred, sittings for one portrait Do Bees Hear? Some scientists assert that bees have uo ears and do not hear, but no person has handled bees for any length of time without being thor oughly convinced that bees can and do hear readily. Bees have certain signs which are emitted from them and which seem to he understood quickly by every bee within the hive. The hum of fear, that of anger, and\ of satisfaction seem to be fully un derstood by every bee In the hive. Did you ever notice at swarming time that when the queen has gone Into the hive how qulck-the hum ot satis faction is set up, and how <SVery~ bee?j seen falls over- one another hi Ki haste- to- .enter the hive?' TJurTng times ot great-JTear; or ^starvation, the xeep; seep, uttered by. the queens seems .to »be' understood/., by Y.: every b#e-Jnthe hive.,, It ira.jrere.-iV take .%t£$6njf. hf'..Jees.> IntoVtl ^darkHropin 4«*^e^i3^«'^«Srt, pia^ti^^wira'm*. ptEer tcprnercSHtri; Xtli^^'We'pa-.'; '•%u$jn !L ^Bf^tieeniitijth^. bee^wtl^e'a^l the/ DYSPEPSIA 'H»rlrie tafcon vonr wondirfal \raicaretn\ fot thM-e months and bomc entirely cured of •totnacb' catarrh and dy«wp»la.T think a word ot prajae l a doe to Caacareta 'tortnolr^onderfulrompotttlon- I hare taken nnmeront other to-called remedtea but-without avatl and I find that Cascare U relieve mora In a dar than all the older. 1 hav. taken would is a year.\ ~ Jamea McGano, Igg Mercer St., Jersey Olty, N. J k . 6esT for I —_ 0— The Dowels ^ CANOVCMNaKTlC Pleat ant. Palatable. Potent, Tart* Good.TJo flood. ild in bolt. The mine tablet atamped CCOO. aaianteed to care ar/onr money back. Sterltnc Kemedy Co.. CbSc*EO or N.V. ««. AMUAL SALE, TEN MilUON 10XES AXT1NE T0UET ,.Mt ANTISEPTIC §§? to»«^«-witk-tts;»a(BiiiliV^ t»tr seriate «« « doackViriaWrTc&asly aac- Wtftml. t^aajjflTclaaaawiMludl»*ax»reran. • Jate-U:lia^^Mtona.to kVdluolwa ia-porti •;Tr« \Bait'a*ci tattWtfoMFrew^ i «* PJSO S CURL FOR ,CONSUMPTION ^ «4irwtioof.from^bi.cb;3;i^^ r^r*\? \\^'7*~^>.isciiu^c bcxt,^. L^ S*^ • ,.>_«svi?~*x^ic^ c^Tt-'^mm ^m^^m ^^mm^m ^m^ lllllgg^g^l^^ —