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I(:H I‘EE TH YEAR THE PRETTIEST, NEWEST NEWEST. j HlGHEST - GRADES. Millinery Departm’ntj NONE BETTER. - LOWEST PRICEs § Ribbon Department. The Largst o Fist 0 Ol Mo STER DREss G“&Bs s ALE Tho Greatest Stock in Omaba, ). L. Brandeis & Sons *“THE F AIR® ). L. Brandois & $ons 502, 504, 506, 508, 510 S. 13th St. 502, 504, 506, 508, 510 S. 13th St. | 0rosctants DressGocgs O €SS, Gi00ds Dept [ EVEROIDERIES GIGANTIC DISPLAY! Sw1ss Embrmdered Sklrtmgs I 3 9 Cg Millions of Yards: Thousands of Styles and Hundreds of Colors. 40 inches wide; beautiful work. 8 Cases Best Quality 1700 Yards 36-inch Wide TG el Swiss Embroidered Skirtings, CENTS CENTS ) CENTS D ¢ @ i 45 inches wide; YARD YARD; 5 YARD; ) d &> __Embroidered to the waist, | 5 N WORTH WORTH S e ek o] et Sl NI (e WhiTe Bubroitered Flomeiugy 19 C“ 1000 Remnants 2 Cases &40-Inch 49-inch Imported All Wool Greatest Embroidery Bar gnin Yet. AMERICAN SATEENS, INDIA - LINONS, |FINE CHALLIES SILK FlNISHEfl (HERRIETTAS, | Side Band Suitings, Thrnidered O |5 O C< T Onses AT Tach VRey Fine Cloth Seitings Fine work; good width for 12%c. 15¢. New CASHMERE, All Wool Henrietias, ML b Entorents Drosses All wool filling, newest shades, - = g Red and e Y. & FRENCH SATEENS,| INDIA - LINENS, / (fi\ggs; P Y- R 9 : E[mnm‘w‘,..k;w.,. BrTi C§ Cents Worth 156: N S oy COLORED EMBROIDERIES, Asv AN Wool Frenc In Red and Blue, Y (s W 10T Gom!smaimn Su.lmgs, Ll uer ' Tricots, | §ilk Warp Henriettas,| oo LACE CURT A| NS_ CENTS g AUCTION BARGAINS! 25¢ i YARD; . 7 FINE WHITE OR ECRU : ny B worth 30c = _ sgc - LACE CURTAINS - Bgc 5 = ___Three yards long; taped edges, 180 Pieces Best Quality tmported | 180 l"flflv:“‘d“;"::‘."" :’::‘Ip';"“CE Oheck BLACK ONLY?V o long; tap: g FRENOH SATEENS, WHITE - GOODS, 40-inci tmporeed Tartin e @f 8@ Exira Long Holnfrham Lace [}unanis, s 9 7 eenTe |ELAID SUITINGS | BLACK GASHMERE Grepe Gloth, sl_l I I ‘,T— ¢ Extra Good Quelity, DO B [l Nt rham lana Mirlaine (VG 6 A YARD; o MZLELY. | CENTS L $ 1 $2 29 Importe? Nottingham Lace Curtains $2 29 Worth 35c. &l Worth 30c. é D & " YARD. 81 and 4 yards long; worth $5, With 1~r~| an Bands to Match, Elegant designs; worth fully $2.80. 502, 504, 506, 508, 510 South 13ih Strect. THE FAIR" - 5255, © " “THE FAIR® J L Brandels & Sons! 502, 504, 506, 508 a.nd 510 South 13th Street 502, 504, 506, 508, 510 South 13th Sirect. 1 N iron, in @ Pullman car,at the rate of | shot in the battle hefore .\tlxmm, and L ] furnished a gratuitous food for .| THINGS WE CAN'T EXPLAIN, | floo “hn'h he and his w . ATRIP TO THE END OF TRACK, | ke mites m oe T vory fncbia hantthe oy rondy tosne | THE GLORY OF THE FORESTS. | fhe et s cbim ame® mem cuante L . | The sccond flor front is. vocupiod by v 3 iy 4 There_are more things in heaven and carth, 2 “One instance in the early construc- | part all necessary information, and he these humble dwellers of nm m'nn \n\ Horatio, Mr. -uul Mvs. Nichols. Mvs. Nichols tion of the Union Pacific road was the | went so far as to expose with ereat free- for ‘When the A i X Than are dreamed of in your philosonhy. declares she has heard footsteps at the First Raillway Excursion Cver the | method of getting muturiulk\;rougl‘xlt tlrln dom the correspondence he had hu(} General Brisbin Urges a General ;:fl \vn;tn‘m]w\ from As: Lh;.\ I]:lul —Hamlet. door of her apartments at night. the ground---the iron, spikes, and al with Dr. Durant upon the question of % 2 % brought ¢ custom with them, f T Marti vell-to-do farmer, is | Believing some one was trying to Union Pacific. that enters 1nto railrond construction. | substituting the Mud Creek for the Day Obaeryatiah ot Arbor Day, e ook upem yith | James Martin, a well-to-do farme g owno > oldes »- | annoy her, she has opened the ; AsImay have said before, thero was | line. He said that the change was — religious veneration. So, too, the | the owner of one of the oldest ‘h‘{'j“‘]“ Pkl s e e ty THE DISTINGUISHED PASSENGERS | no communication by rail with Chizago | necessary, and that while he did not | A HINT TO THE LEGISLATURE. reeks in this, ns in many other things | steads in Blount county, Alabama. The o 0™ gne pighy and the east direct, and everything had approve it altogether, it was the better of civilization, had an imaginative faith | place has been owned and occupied by to come tous by steamboat and river. | thing to be done and that it meant no 2 in trees and associated the lives of A Second Chapter of Dr. Miller's | One of the mostremarkable events in | harm to Omaha, Reasons were given | The General Thinks the State Could | superhuman though not immortal Reminiscences of the Construce nonuculioul with }his uu:}t‘lmfl ufl trans- | at length why this course was necessa- Well Afford to Offer Prizes for flnn«ql\\ “h :x‘elus ; 3 lI cannot hclli‘\'eL.II. : portation, I rccall, was the production | ry. Ihave always believed that it was p) a0 4 man wholly bad who has sympathy with = tion Days of the Union DyiDicant DoatsonalnE Onlout Ly oois ]| Dabs Gl Aot e andle e aatan theBluntigand Onitiva and loves & thing so innocent and beau- | and want of repair. About five years Pacific Railway. we called it (the bank of tho Missouri | need of mouey—there wasa million of tion of Trecs, tiful as tre exclaims the pm-t Low- | ago Jumes Martin married Miss Noel, river at Omaha), of several barges | floating debt at that time which Web- —_— 1 ev one of the belles of the county. The Vot ohihio TP, laden with that had been | ster Suyder, the superintendent, hardly Arbor Day. vain who plants a tree loll\n 2 h ng couple went to live at the old — X outhugf.tho U, B towed up the river from St. Louis, ndis- | knew how to manage, and in addition [ popr Ropixsox, Neb., March But quite aside from the poetical Martin home, and all went well until Dr. George L. Miller gracefully sub- | tance of over nine hundred miles, by | a threatened strike on the part of the | .- o JLXBOR S 00-y, MArch imagative sense of treo planting cur ago. Mrs. Martin, naturally mitted to another interview, and gave | the steamer Elkhorn, against the pre- | unpaid laborers. I returned to Omaha | [Special to THe Brk.]—As we approach | Ghioh s certainly very beautiful, is timid, heard a ghost rambling the reporter more of his charming | dictibns of all river men, who said that { and reported accordingly, Durant as- | the time again for 1\11bu1' Day 1n Ne- | the common sense view of the case, the ({;x-g\ h l‘hu._()lll house o‘nr-‘mulnlv. :|u|‘d behind him. The ghost passed behin reminiscences of early days: the feat was impossible of execution. | riving here and reassuring us,and the | braska, I feel like makipg an appeal to | ne u and usefulness of t in Ne- | was badly frightened. She told her | ¢4ho yod in her room and disappeared. “Iwas right in my first impression | L€ trip was made in nine days, but of | result is known, that he was acting in | the people to obserye it and plant more wska, Their influence upon our cli- | husband about it, bui he could hear | gho 15 found the door of her room us rig y T , | course the water wasin what wus termed | perfect good faith and that he com- [ 4}y ever before. Nebraska is the pio- | mate, llm increased rainfall resulting g, he said. The following night mysteriously onen often she had bolted it that it was in 1865 instead of 18 a good stage. pleted his railroad, and as 1 shall al- SRR | I from their planting. the protection they | Mrs. Martin heard the ghost again, aud | 5" 3he ‘ingide. A few nights ago Miss hegan the doctor. “I confounded the | = “The principal occupation of the peo- | ways belicve, by his energy and fore- | Ne€r state in tree planting and her give from storms, and their uses for m that time it became a nightly | T oo 'an artist; Miss Meeklin and Miss two dates owing to the fact that the [ ple of Omaha in those days,” continued | gight, saving the trunk line of the Pa- | ample has been follawed by all orn wood and lumbe a state where nu- e at the Martin - home. | Ganiain, teachers; Charles Lee. Miss general was here in 1866 as he was in | the doctor, “‘was watc h‘m;,"fm the arri- | cific railroad to Chicago and Omaha as | all, the states and territories of the | ture nas deprived gr denied us forests, \l|~ Martin ~ wanted to leave | 0% pBrother, and the tts wero 1865. General Sherma ached Omaha | Y2k of steamers, indulging in hopes of a against St. Louis and Kansas City. union. - The authar of Arbor Day, J. | are reasons cum&h why we should | the old home at once, but her having a card party in the Scotts apart~ - Genori SROran reached Omaha | \qiiroud across lowa, and observing the | ““This element of time comes in | Sterling M 15030 Nebrask 44 plant. husband objected, declaring the strange The game was brokon up by an October 10, 1865, and was met by a com- | progress of the construction of the rail- f y i i Blorking MogesEReNsbrasian, snd in ses heard were made by rats. Sev- 2 progress of ¢ onstruction of the ra now in connection with the riginating th 41 Lous! did I have al s thought Arbor dayv B 80.70) parition at the glass panecls of the mittce consisting of Colonel John Pat- | road. I remember to have made a flam- | original provisions of the charter or- | OFiginating theiheautiful custom,did | 1 1 SR ANE SHOLRALS o4Y | eral times Mvs. Murtin, so she says, Mheahosthad the baardadi i i i i sment November 29, 1865 more for the hauér.of Nebraska than any | ¢dme to early in Nebraskas if 1t were in | £ Rl R R g carded face rick, chairman, and other prominent | ing .announcement November 20, 1865, | daining, as I remember, that which- ) A 4 Y | May instead of April I think more trees | 5% & vding £ | of an elderly man, gentlemen, who escorted him to the | t0 the effect that thirty-two miles of the | ¢yer one of the three branches of the | other who has yet lived in the 3 through the wide halls and dark rooms Tt 5 4 2 3 vould k lintes nd that the tree 2 ap y . T Herndon house, tnen the hotel now the | Union Pacificrailway had been finished, | Pacific road first reached the 100 me state. Tree plu,,l}?g is honor, science | would dg botter. 1 submit this to the | Of the old house, and soon her nerves What Would Shakespenre Say? last week she was frightened while sewing in her room at eral generations of Martins, and the | about 11 o'clock by a heavy rap on the thansion, a large frame affair, is a very 0 n the next room heard old one, and is much the worse for age : uniped to her fost and ) paralyzed by the sight of the 5 >nt form of a man disappearing behind a sofa. Mrs. Scott, another ten- ant, says that while sitting up one re- cent night waiting for her husband she saw through the glass panel of a door the ghostly figure of an elderly mun, who seeméd to be dragging sumvthiugi‘ d and that the Elkhorn river had | dianshould be entitled to the subsid, f g S tEr and health began to give way under 2 York Morning Jous 2 Union Pacific hendquarters, where the | boen reached, 1t was before | for the main trunk of the road. It way | “1g the highest typs of dovelopment in author of Arbor duy and ourlegislature, | o strain, She bogged and pleaded | On, it Shakespearo were alive, and would late Lorin Miller, at the time mayor of | this that a groat exigency in the | vight here and on that issue that Omaha | Civilizetion. ~Colbert prevented -tho | and hone they will shange the time for | iy jer husband to move away from cross the mighty main, Omaha, formully welcomed the guest to | history — of “this ruilvoad arose | was saved by the energy, forecast and | useless destruction of the forests of the Ar R L“’“‘m‘ " et sty | the haunted house. buv he still refused, | ‘o sce the Jersey Lily play the wife of Scot, our city in a brief conversational | in respect to the lines upon which it [ yesolution of Durant,in ordeving this | old world and all Burope rose up to do | " 2P 0 ) uesday | N Martin was finally prostrated by land’s Than 5 ' " 3 f i . i in May. I ha 1 s thought it it A . 7 And spout high tragedy, as easy as rolli specch. A great ball was given the | SPould be built from Omaha. The con- | change of line, thereby cheapening | him honor. But if Colbert was honored | tho el kR RIS, Giot | her Tear of the ghost, and went to_tho | And spout high tragedy, us easy a8 rolling gencral in the hotel the next evening, | peror flict of opinion between Dr. Durant and | construction and enabling him to com- BT i e Bl sl ., 4 e home of her p to recover her 4 % o , inlog betmagh e Duryland ;‘lcl:(‘:ll\l:v.!‘l‘i:’-‘ntmlorly R {u'x mu.c,l:))bem(, 'lnslirumunnv\ in Beex N],\hl'l'lll l‘l.lnl:ll?::‘li'hi)w“;t {;n.[,)n,, ’?l.!utl Houlth and. swongth. Tar relatives | While shinitig in ner raiment lics a fro-fly October 11, at which ull of our leading | adoption of the new line as against the | tho firet moncys on the road. Then ail | YENUNE the wastewf forests, what shall | plunted with theiv own handsthe great- | ,,q friends joined her in unpeals to | o, if some tvening he'd drop in where the people hd the pleasuro of mepting him. | one'at fizst surveyed by Doy, now known | wia onay sailing. . Anybody could have | We 54y of the muswho creates forests. | est numbor of trees on Arbor day.” Let | R0y ifind 1o give up the old house, “Four Hundrod” mee #It was the next duy, Thursd and located us the Dey line. Great ex- | puilt the railroud after that. Oceans | All can share in the honor, and us Jon- ALy 4 A S | but he still refused, when feur of the | To sit in ease and comfort in a two “semo- T 2 2xt Arbor duy have $500 out of the s v 20| at: tober 12, that the ruilway excur citement was caused in the little com- | of money were at hand in the subsidies | athan Swift said, #*whoever makes two | "CX oy the naxt #400: the nowy | @host overcame love of husband-and | - leowtueats T T e v i [ munity by the discussion of this pro- | which the goverumenthad granted,and | ears of corn or.gwp blades of grass grow 12eA0: i Lhe DEXY | Nirs, Martin rof tolive with him | And sce fair Cora Potter the Landsome \bp‘end.inl, th track-eame. off, posed “chituge, and a committee was | millions wore made out of the construe- | on g ] sl NiEan 03 o next $100; the | i, “Martin tricd in vain to induce | 5, K3 boguile, f Egypvs gl 1 f 5 L vhers v 3 5 ) W 3 aga by 8 * | As the immo! Socere: BZypt's glows ‘end of tuack’ was a trunsitory place, m-pomu.d by the eitizens to go to Wash- | 1 s everyhody kno 2“ a s‘pu: of 9 ud “I'Jmtltux n:n(l.\“uuu .]x{ \\l‘“u‘)dll;:nmh\(‘l 1{[}:5"‘“'; “llu next % his wife to rewrn to the haunted house io_immortal Soceress of Egypts glow: rew before, §¢rms etter of man- an bearing the name, nowever, all through [ ington and prevent it. Mr. De Xt ¥ N, 1 butshe vefuse nlatew duy: . y enders that in ace i e - B time I will call your attention 2 o ) # to live, butshe vefu andatew days wy suspenders that in accents of the construction® At the time indicated | signed his position, General G. M. | to the great flood of April, I kind, and does péra essentinl serviceto | #0uum, and this the state ago he filed a suit for divor el i A 9 bearing upon Omaba inter his country thatk & whole race of politi- A AL BOONEITR Ry &1 ¥ ground of abandonment. | The awful ery of “murder” swould rend the the appellation from the farmer then | procurcd the assent of the then presi- - foars of destruction at the hands of | o = ” is i 5 uragement of tree planting - scented residing in thut vicinity, fifteen miles | dent of the United States, Andrew | Betlosne.’ f P51 clans puk \aeXIRRPEC L this.\e" true of less prairios: yes. it e affor One Sunday night, not long : e away from Omaha. The train was of | Johnson, to build hisline through Mud | 0 oo two ears of cormay two blades of gras 1y %5,000 ! mat while the snow and wind storm p The ©'r ncked Him Out, the “construction character and was | creek, whien increased its length and 8 how much mor@ighit it be true of a tree. | then be greatl ed, Think what | "3 ione iy New London, Conn., a |, The Rev. lsanc W, Hagley, pastor of made up of the locomotive General sidy ument to the . 8. 8. Fales, in the Home-Maker, “The troos wédh-forth on a time to | & stimuous o 'treo planting the | pp 00 ludy was awalkenad by o | Tabernicle Buptist chureh, Cumden, N, W. T. Sherman, named in honer of that h wee, us I remem- Murad’s natal night, annoint a king jever them, and they | hope —of = a reward = of W0 H X i A 74 OV 8 1., has demonstrated thi is as good gentleman. and dirt cars on which were 'y Wi sd by My, Deyas u ch fuiry brought a precious gift,— | said unto théofive tree ‘Reign thou | # vice p draft out of the state | buzzing sound i 10 was 1 with fists as he is at preaching, says a moutited boards supported by nail kegs and dishonorable, Our com- v and valor, kingl it over us.’” So Up 28y 1o ovory troo. treasury would give to our tree plant- | startled by a fur-off vol sating in | Philadelphia dispateh to the Chicago with buffalo robe upholstery serving s vas vory much stirved by s i love and wisdo's thrift, Be thou our but let the olive | ¢rs. I wouldbind them to keep th melodious tones. **\ Times. : seats, ortunately it happened at this | excitement, and the construction put | A% ““'l"‘“l oul Bevadipdam, - tree of peace. u’; honored of all in | growing for five years and prote up!” The lady oh lvlu-»lmnw-uvw Edward Mayer, a Philadelphian, and time that Dr. Durant, the great mana- | upon the movement was that Dur yEa SRR RS P RN A Ry this land of 1i of our from fire. or roturn the reward. mons, and was terribly frightened on | a friend, called on the ministe ger of the road, and Colonel Silas Sc was changin 5 ] He shall bave happiness,” she cried. The German Have a pretty custom of There 80 myien in this subject of | discovering that the house was on fire, | wanted to know if he had 1 mour, its consulting engfneer, were retly £ member of & fami y i tree_planting that when one gets 90 | The soot in the old shioned five-plave brother Georg He was tol here. and they were among the guests The uppy vears rolied by, One day i ting a tree ut Wk iting upon it he never knows when [in the kitchen, which was over a foou | the newly-murried , when Mayer on this as were Governor | tion of Owah u it was true 8 b ic stone; i p) mes forty days after | to stop, but I wish only to write a short | deep s burning, and the lames were | © ced to use terous lunguage, \ Gr . e ¥ ¥ £ 4 Snnmhh ¢ Paddock, Judue this account there wns great | Y% v dawn on that day [ letter this time, calling attention to a | shooting through the fire bourd, The | This caused the minister to ovder the Wil it was located at Sailing’s grove, taking | Dodge suceceding him, and Dr. Durant chief justico of the | unanimity here among the people l,,,};,‘.‘hfi"‘;u“_“,“;h;"\‘”w,;‘ 188 Karons, their singing gguu many parts of | matter so important. and I want the | lady soon avous:d the househoid, and | two men out of the house. Instead of hn itory. Sel " Kiteheook, Edward | against the chunge. 1 was sitting in Drow muny a furrow, 1 and deep, German, the top of the | letter short so that the country press | the fire was extinguished before any g out they showed fight and struck Creighton, . Poppleton and many | my editorial room one in the midst | And tilled witt, figures' of despaiv neavest hill op Bountain and hail the | can use it and help the good work on. | serious dumage wis done, v Bagley, more, "o ‘end of track’ effoctunlly | of it when Edward Cre alled and | The silent chambers of his sleep. rising sun withf sorigs and pacuns of | There is one thing I wish somebody | warning was given no one Y “That’s what you want, is it?” shouted Blopping our westward course. orutory | wanted me to startimmed: ) UiLiana aat o L AR (R ry of its warmth and | would do, and th , tell the people | th dy will doubt, and . 2 | the minister, and he hit Mayer a stuns was the order, and Generwl Shermun | York to see Dr. Durant and ascertain | Th, day8 came fravght with doep distress, and Flora. Why not | what kind of tree best to w warning it is probuble thut the house | ning blow on the nose, The nights th ever darker gl A " " was tonsted, and made & speech con- | the true inwardoces wnd cause of this | vl Musad i his estlcamens 5100 heru if in G iy, for if the Germans | 1 ka, Lvery week I Aters [ und sume of the occupants would have | The friend then pulled out a **billy” gratulating everybody upen the b innovation, und also to learn wh Entcred one morn his children’s room. hud ummug’ thank God for there, | as **Wha Ster- | been burned. and hit Mr, Feathwaite, ning of the geeat work of building llm result to Omalia would b Straightway from carc and sorrow fro they surely hage much more cause to | ling Morton, ex-Governor Robert Furnas - Sy father-in on the head. mu.mdmn)mu that he had had some- | order the same evening it was giv The bappy men thank Him for here. and others readily unswer this # el a v wiite went after Mayer aud a general thing 10 do with trying to beyin at the | and took coach at Council Bluffs for St. | For there his little ones in gle ‘The old Mexi@an Indigue even plant- | question und advise the people what to | o the oceupants of the hune fight ensued, The unknown man made other line in San FPrancisco many years | Joseph, On nrrivi i thero I received Played with tho gem upon the floor. ed trees on cel ear plant. JaMes 8. BRISBIN, | four-story house at 109 West Eleve effort 0 get at the minister, when 0. It was in the courso of this speech | telegram frem N gk aying s numed them afr their ehildr T R e i, PPy ST TR YR T P gyman was aguin cqual to the that ho expressed the hope that the | that Mr. Durant hi ul started for the Very Warin, Aztecs also uséd to plant u trec 7 | : 2 ; e e ? ous0 Wil | gccaison and hit him u blow - hetwoen ounger inen whom he uddressed might | west from New " New York World: Foreman--What born and it bove the | Nt te Be Ouidone by an Englishman, | the scene of o tervivle teagedy o few the eyes, which knocked him )u-u’m f‘veww, she completion of the rail- | g> at once to Fort Leave - fellow wrote that nome all about mush- 3 Chicago Tribune: Literary celebrity | years ago. It was here that Dr. Con- | long across the dining room table, way, and sald that be vould | CGencrsl Dodye in com | v’ and kissin' in *‘the twilight's twit- , ; | (scknowledging introduction to fellow- | nelly killed his two children by cutting | Both man made a rotrent and left the hurdly hope to behold it him- 1 of the Departme nl.ullhu Missouri | tering light?” He must a bin erazy. . if they did not author, *warmly, 1 am delighted 1o | their throuts and then killed himself, | house. ‘Ihe unknown man made good The polut of this story, and | Hu was, us he had been duri u® the war, iditor—Do _you mean that passion st held certain species | meet you, Mr. Haggard,” Through & gluss partition his wife saw | 15 e8eape, while Mayer was captured {4 his beon frquontly told, is thit four | chiof ougincer of the rosd, and 1t wae | poem by Amelie Rives, *Cozdense Love Ad Fellow-nuthor (with some haughti- | , sGE H E08 PRIEHOR 8 WHE B | 00 T 00ged i Camden lail, Mayer ears after the delivery of this spesch | supposed that from him I eould glean u | in One Foud Eiabr ; igfdays of the year. In |ness)—'My name is Haggard, My, | Mim kill the childven snd she ran. vio- | (000" Hiay the ministor's fath i)-n-rul Sherman himself rode over the ny facts und then return to Foreman--Yes, that's the felice. He V.In-\uguublu {ology the ‘oak and | Howells.” lently insane, into the stie The w hit him first. He is a booli-k Rocky mountains on the completed Pa- and await Durant’s arvival, ought ¢ be ushamed of himself. His | the beech neld! the first place, for the Literary celebrity (coldly |u.|~v., house is leased by George L. i Horricls, | and comes from & good family Tu o railroad, with two oceaus ivined by ound the general o sick soldier, | pomse nus melled three sticks of type, | frugal reason, perhaps, that they most | *'Call me Howells, if you please,” who sublets all of it except the fivst | boreugh, vear thxrm.y. giibdiadio. A S A A A A A eeetld