_ Thil Nation‘ has . a "sugarâ€"béet belt .‘ Its limits are defined by cliâ€" matic conditions chiefly; though even within its boundaries great variaâ€" Mions exist. : This belt ‘includes southâ€" © en York, the northern parts of temnnsylvania, Obio, Indizna, Illinois, \Jowa and Nebraska; the southern \ Ralf of Michigan, Wisconsin,â€"and Minâ€" ‘ mesota; sections of Colorado, lu:::) \ Utah, Wyoming, _ Montana, I + _ N ington, and Oregon, and . the eoast side of California. Within ‘this Aerritory, however, _ may be found ‘ Charles Moreau Harger in <the . («" New York Outlook.) new Sort ol agriculturist is comâ€" "% noticeâ€"the sugarâ€"beet farmâ€" 3 is as distinctive as is the r or the ranchman, and se his industry is yet to some in an e imental stage, keen e imches to his methods and HOUTW 18 YVOTUR $¢ _wast amount of soil on wme':: try will not â€" flourish, ‘ewing ther to the land itself or to its , while in other States f dike latitude may yet be discoys suitable conditions. uuâ€"ï¬â€˜:n" made . with farmers, and, in‘ "newer lands, asistance given to colonists to insure the, #aising of beets in large quantities. ike many other industries, in case© the farmer does not lead the manufacturer follow. Before , commiunity : produces beets it must ‘be assured of a sugarâ€"factory,;, and, ewise, a factory, with its cost of & ,000 to $1,000,000, would be â€" a if~â€"i%" â€"did~ not have beets for its full consumption. thirtyâ€"five hundred to five Woeak Stomach; impaired Digestion; Disordered Liver thousand acresâ€"ol beets annuaily . A10 M to make a factory profitâ€" able, and there is always a mutual * n ?-. .-A_.‘.;..,:‘“_‘_______‘ _ Sugarâ€"beet raising calls for careful farming. Wheat, once properly sown, ‘depends for its success on the weathâ€" q;m.om'ennihny,eoma %mtnrity without further attenâ€" # Afrom the farmer; so it is with ‘__These rows, cighteen inches apart, _ are cultivated wuntil three or . four deaves show on e@cW plant. ‘Then â€" comes the most . wearisome task of 5’; season.© Men, women boys . and .. gith are Chgaged to go over the _ f iinfifig the rows by hand so d t the beets are . seven . to cight dn apart and every weed is deâ€" â€" stroyed. weeders get about five ~qn ‘of an acre a day." To obtain labor for this part ofâ€"the task is frequently difficult. The whole terriâ€" tory supplying a factory must . be w . i practically _ at _ the same time.. The work is tireâ€" _ gome and unattrac In the Westâ€" + ern experiments the colonization . o! . foreign families is sought, that the fl;mg women may be induced _ eriter the iing . . not eag "»\‘:ghh Ey ' M comâ€" UD y"i 115'&‘%!%\-3 ‘ -m the _OI6IES _ hOV .. l“-,’..,.--,-,‘f The ‘:3 n TL § & m [" , and the Jand is i( 0 so Tacll ced me alic t c Ate ds isw 3 many of the more important crops of the agricultural sections ol the country. . Beetâ€"raising comes . nearer to the reaim ofâ€"truckâ€"farming, . and takes not only intelligent < ~manageâ€" ment in its general supervision, but requires much hand labor and minute mttention throughout the season. Beâ€" f of this it has seemed formidâ€" to ‘American: farmers, and. they ve but recent!y made rapid _ adâ€" n in its development. Clean ground, thoroughly pulverizâ€" ‘ed, capable of irrigation, or in â€" a 'u-‘ on ~where rainfall will be sufâ€" ent for steady growth, . is needed. ‘Between April 15 and June 1 is the Beedâ€"time. The seed used in . this ®ountry is imported~{rom Germany, whic 'uonstndp foremost in beet ugar production. It costs â€" fifteen cents ound, and twenty pounds are quired to the acre. Sown in. rows, the young beets come up very. thickâ€" m waste of seed material for which o remedy has been devised, though e ients with machines that will ; ECCC .-;'n-'- ‘Sutt of the beet ugar Beet Industry "iyg-. is fim by July 10, gl_ uï¬nmpflo‘. Out of the sunshine and the rain, _ with the sofl giving its aid in perfecting m » the * trame. These ‘ are K New Sort of Agriculturist That is Coming Into Notice. finde Sugar, the. apper 6t being frst influenced J<@ntire ro6t Becoming : matter, Two more me at â€" this period, tssâ€"drawn | implemeyts 2 four: rows â€"at t whe is aone"" ustt wonders upon the Vital 0 trengt are t y thousand. vl. 33 t K0 row plows, reaching down below the bottoms of the longest roots, . are drawn between the. *rows, loosening the soil and lifting the beets partly in their bed. Other, implements: that will bring the beets to the surface are sometimes used, but it is difficult to operate in â€" that way without bruising the tender beet. ‘After ‘the soil is Joosened men along and, grasping the tops, 1 sut the plant . with sharp bh.la tops are cut from â€" the beets; the roots go into one pile, ready _ for hauling to the factory, the tops into another. "It the farmer _ lives at a wJistance from the factory, he may toad his beets on cars, weighing" as 4e délivers; otherwise he ‘takes them to sheds alongside the factory. _A iew beets are picked at rtandom from ‘each load and serve as samples, being sacked for testing. Single roots ofâ€" ten ‘weigh seven pounds, and. four‘ ‘ pound routs are frequent. P leg The farmer is paid on a basis . of, he ‘sugar in the beetsâ€"$4‘a ton for beets ‘testing twelve ‘per cent. sugar, and higher as the sugar content inâ€" reases. Particularly fine beets may bring $6.50 a tom, The average is unâ€" der $5, but where, as on the tr:m ed lands, farmers in good years vest twenty tons ‘or. more from J acre, the income is large. {The farmâ€" er is, in a sense, at the mercy of the suger factory in that he . has . no other market; hence he inakes _ his contracts for several years in â€" adâ€" vance. e _ Properly conducted and under fay. ordble ‘cireumstances, sugarâ€"beet" pro® duction is profitable.© Take it, . for ley in .Cas Colorado, â€" ® € located soime iflihe ln factoties of the Nation.~ The soil and sunâ€" shine seem madeâ€" for sugar producâ€" tion, and the melting snows of . the Rocky Moutitains send down abundâ€" ant water to moisten :the fields. Farâ€" mers there have netted $125 an acte in‘a single yeam Three men can care for ten acres, except in the weeding season, making the lbot U:ll small. ‘The average production . of . the United States last year was>9.6 tons per ‘acre, selling at the factory for $48 to $54.. The average cost . of production was $30 an acre on land not moistened by irrigation, and exâ€" clusive of â€"the State bounty given in several commonwealths to encourage ‘the indust:y. The bounty is usually about $1 a ton for beets of & given %f : Against this ~rosy â€" view must be s Â¥ e S considered ‘the cost â€" of maintaining 4 e se zm the factory ‘through _ several months savn when thers are no beets to handle; Tari that â€" not: allâ€"factories are rin to their full capacity duting the . "camâ€"« olE 0 ‘ paign,*" as the cperiod of sugarâ€"nakâ€" . ing is called; that in every factory a 1 ies 530 0. (tae ldrge sum is investedâ€"$800,000° + to ‘t forget man | $1,000,000â€"togetherwith the task of .Don' £ T the old ledwcutin; the people and Tacing . the with the fish on his back. 'dmm’lflfllflfll and annoyances that For nearly thirty years he‘ aftict a comparatively new industry. has been traveling around the NI:; ;le :f‘v:::’ mmmmmg the k & hs wr.)rld'. and is still traveling) wmns the world‘s prodiction amf bringing health and comfOrt|par has increased 820 per éent. since wherever he goes. 1800(,â€:.:'« sugar increased only.. 100 To the consumptive he per cent., but beet suxat has a show" ; of 1,179 cent. In 1899â€"1900 brings the strength and fle“h;:'ie Tatert ‘stath tics At Nand‘ coverâ€" he so much needs. ing the principal tupbgrovl? counâ€" To all . weak and sicklyâ€:f;").::e ::Hnw‘ ‘p‘r.ohe c was id . o. ,359, e Chi * h.e gavesâ€"rich and product QZâ€â€œOM e‘m strengthening food. gar production is M thusâ€" To thin and palefl‘girsom United States, 7%,944 tons; COermany ‘he gives new firm and |1,790,000; Austria, 1,130.006, ‘Frunce, Children who first saw the old man with the fish are now grown upand haveâ€" children He sands for Scon‘s Eniot sion of pure codâ€" 0 Mo . C t e ï¬ i Ilrh: «$ on m ts :pn i.fl:zdy-’p .zxï¬ had ooo nsm hi‘ . 1106 Hik as. crop to be. 311,.328 ftoms. But while: thes$ ures seeim large, ~it should be rétmeitm~ bered that we imported from :other 124 Sorte Hico) 4.1400098, yoss. and ang Rico) .146 , and that the Nation‘s cons@imgSion of sw gar has doubled in the past eighteen years. Only 175,083 acres were put an average .*:%Ml‘ 114 cenk. ( 1997 9V 3 *i%1 ;Fw-bm in the . T i $30,000,000, and the farmers rece $8,197,000 last year for their bee ‘The Department of matgs the needs of the present year at 2,500, 8 sugar, of which â€"Porto Rico and wali will produce 400,000 sugarâ€"beet and ï¬ï¬ tons more, leav! a be imsported t :To the needs<of the Nation five hundt iactories are needed, and it: is~ . beâ€" lieved by miiny that oventually will be dbtained. Michigtw leads the industry, 1 w'h“c":‘"i"‘-“‘" tories; California: has t six,. Colorado SiX, N“nl__ï¬& New &T.'{i'(;ojs'm New Mexâ€" ico, Wisconsin, ‘ Washington, Oregen, one -cnuâ€"'. total of fortyâ€"sexen. The: Agricultufal tment that fortyâ€"two of %: were m last Some problems of nm-h&t.p{'o- â€"â€"wo guaranyeo LHe duction: are not yet solved. ©oAm *Famous Ac! that of the utilization of the ‘wasté. The SX wfl!hl This consists in the tops of the beets cook more \&heluvn_nt:‘thdlulditht : any other range m itself), pulp. that remains after th:n;‘&ctory has extracted ‘ the Â¥For salé by all en sugat from the root. The pulpâ€"â€"can| [ . d@AIOPS â€" ... _ .. be utilized as food . for cows, and P "thul make the industry assist dairyâ€" . ing. In Europe it is dried and manâ€" ufactured into a sort of cake that is hell _ } ¢Xcellent feed. The tops are general> ‘_ tm ly returned to the soil as a fertilizâ€" * ¢r,; though these, too, may . with proâ€" .*."'ï¬"u ‘“._:"l per management be used for feed.| § s ‘The avgrage farmer, however, makes Loxbont" * witk littleé use of these byâ€"products. . The ~voronto, *‘ YAM complete utilization;.of the.heet will | "MONTREAL. â€" st.3 make it more profitable.and add . to l on the Attractiveness of the crop: ( ‘ . The labor question is by no means ."" _\ a trifling matter in the development w 4 â€" of this industry. In . the . Westemm | grojate States, where the people like to â€" do ~Ar oA Tt Things on a N;m:n,lq mm.&ll::a ;====â€"â€"â€"__=-.l:‘=’ tiperations of wheatâ€"raisers & CR p *n accustomed the communities to tilled |_; Statés: |~*â€" 1008 m? covering hundreds and thousâ€" |California ‘11, 284 ands of acres owned by. a single inâ€";, Washington +#,800 dividual, it seems petty. dmd‘:ty“to‘o_m ardâ€"**$100 put ‘in the year cultivating a twenty ; Utah â€"«** :**‘* 18(600 or forty acre farm. In a sense it Colorado ©30 449 runs counter to the traditions of the ljebraska 9,280 West.. It is for this reason that the . Minnesota»® 4;500 | promoters of new Iactories send out Wisconsin © ;© 3,400 ) missionaries to secure colonists â€"_of Ohio 2,450 |foreign birth, even furnishing %New York 6,500 and‘ buildings if â€"settlers will butun"®Michigan ©98,000 ‘| dertake the business. The bounties ‘IlNlinois ® l offered by several States are evidence Indiania 29 {of general interest and also of a~reâ€"}> To diversity ‘agrical ‘dcognition ‘of the labor handicap: | West; to succeed a" w On the manufacturer‘s side there is‘ promi a of abundant‘ profit§ â€" Sugar , is a suiple; this Nation will not for many years manufacture enough for its needs; hence violent priceâ€"Ructvaâ€" troms are improbable.. Henty /T. Ox« mnard and W. B. Cutting, directors of the American Beetâ€"Sugar Company; said, in a letter written in 1899, that of their Nebraska plants, ‘"Grand Is+ land in 1898 made a profit per ton of beets of $2.89 on a tonnage ol 18,546 tons; Norfolk â€"made a profit of $4.50: per. ton on 31,000 tons, and=Chino a profit of $5.06 per ton on a tonnage of ~47,802 tons.‘‘ Regarding another factory they say that, based on opâ€" erations in Nebraska andâ€" California, the average price paidâ€"for beets â€" is $4; that $3 willâ€"coverâ€"the entire cost of ‘manufacturing a ton ofâ€"beets into sligar (producing about 250 pounds) giving a total ‘of $7.. Selling the suâ€" gar at 4 cents a pound gives a proâ€" fit of $3â€"a tom.â€" > rale The. older: factories . haye.reduced, the cost of production from â€"25} to 88 1â€"3 per gent., and the teachings .of dd-mul(;m‘nnbï¬uï¬z% retary u:- once â€"â€" the is invested in the industry , 4,000,000 LoD O£ y xto Rico and Haâ€" MW :oo,ooo and * the mometer is "-.3 growers 500,00 7?, eveby i ;l'm‘% ' P d s f\ + + ibroad. > om 3‘ $ ja&)a ation five hun ' d, and it is~ . beâ€" $ s it coventually , * 4 ? uj $ Michirdm leads } 1| W °â€"» wort . of to ~ To\ diversily ‘agricaultare; | as" in the West; to succeed a" waning ind . as in the lumber regibns of*Michiga®#, to adt another item‘46"%he “flfln‘l‘ list of products, "tedutthg its‘ need "ofâ€" importa tionâ€"â€"these tu’&n-ow»qm broader advantages=claimed¢orâ€" the sukarhect industty~ ~With® "a atge‘ ea "ada pted "by Boil ‘:d:‘m:: flt‘o tâ€"beet ‘r: $ th 1 in nbunda.ne:mn; hom'"'m- vestment, it will be strange=if* the United ~States‘ doesâ€"not | find ‘a way to make" the industéy© a~\*protmifieht and permanent one. abariie Meals cooked on a ‘Famo Active" are always on time. mnq-u‘m_chm_n the heat necessary for pogringny pustiouer Sisk. M. Welchel & Son, Paing‘s Colery Compound|+* Professor Edward E. Phelps; M.D., LL.D., has given to his profession a positive and permanent cure for_. all forms of, rheumatism now so on lh the autumn seagom. To \:‘rre\â€" matic, . this truth .should prove.. en, couraging and comforting. . Men. â€"and | women suffering intense qonh.tr:} a disease.: that frequently stiffens the. joints, cripples the limbs and its victims helpless, can ;be tu activity, vigor . and : «4 d iPd:u Oul:ry %:‘nr be used for A. weeks. C every reason, why sufferers should. pil & fï¬\ to this .best nedic ,ugut Irfends and -l:hn we used i with success, the. honest , ph 38 nmu:n-c it _ every , e "':'.-'.w"iï¬i'?;‘ . . Mrs. M. . Me .,em:lï¬ l M ‘lmt’ # fl'_! ? < Makes Pormanant :Oures In: Chronic and Comphoated Cases of Rhouw g1, * thb exact heat of the bven, and can be fuity‘ relfed upon â€"we guarantee them."" *" IT GIVES NEW LIFE TO HELPLESS AN D CRIP. PLED MEN‘AND®.> wWOMEN °° . The "*Famon s Active" will cook more with less fuel than ® any other range made. * For sale by all enterprising; «L l_bv a sufferer from rheumatism foan® The corte mss paint of mo hands were drawn «y in knots, ‘wHd 1 ARoetive NMakers of th6 Sunshine"furhacs Range. Tokonto, *‘~ vYANCOUVYER; "1008.© ©10017© 1900 T1,281© ©4,500 : 42,300 2800 1,200° : 1,400 ©$,100) ©2}200»~"2,400 18;600#19,500 # 1 1,200 30,419~"83,70010,800â€" a,280~‘#;825‘ *0,000 4:500 ©5,000%= ©3,000 $7,400 ‘ 3.000 2100 4 "6,500 39,000 "gyo0 MJ Miofmotion paid h mdns o+ atring art d T "i _1 eP d 1 64 ‘vm‘:"é.vc < 't?»" man Matte, Tahor ':'ï¬}l,,*’} t ie ue Chre 'mm’pi"“é e tiy. $5.53 endbater, grave}, § Â¥, $3.83; Joel PW m'c‘l.iflï¬l; cerral hss C onl ef _" y, . k -- 16 : o %@ ariin } 'mu'a.‘“;x:szv'g{?::a mador Sitikn. lt tï¬ toit. "ï¬h ichty,â€" labor _ roul‘“_x_.J s HABERE tReoals U R&ni Boci 5:00; Grant. §.. . Wâ€" 1 gg;?;ï¬gg%%‘_ t Te pavk, $198; 0. 8. ¢ tparenea s s 4 &m ’-‘glpa; ?giw .ieod'nhed' Â¥ ‘I‘Moved ‘by MY. . Shant?, i adfoueh mm‘s?%emi. c‘m% ay lst! At "ond. 0% l o0X in Cl â€" / , Moved by 3 wufm'a-wimi-hy,-i- Fretful and baby from zn and avalk it up and idown the fleor alk night» 11 ,40~4 moralizes. the, infant and, enslayes, the .‘\A,FE‘“, Baby ; dogs. aot cry. for: the Jun ! the thing; "it, cries . becayseâ€" it is not:, wellâ€"gepctally. becausa...its stomach is, soutr,; its,,.; little, bowels ?on%ncd.,‘iu gkin hop.and, feverish. _{eé) vm,ud it will_sleep all night, eÂ¥ ?‘ ight growigg.stronger in proâ€" portion... Just mt.mo&n need. is Sid in a, letter from. .. Mris.. Ju.. ~J. ‘abders,| Mazbleton,.Oue... who ©235} â€""} cangot say too Aavor ol ,&" *Own. .. Tablets, They. have t o tm Ba Yti,.bwe.‘%le 3wn brought favibt sleep.and .. m,‘.im neve: ‘ wx{ho\\} a bo% ; _ have , & TSally." Baby‘s Tablets cure all tnigor ailments ol little, ones, and are ites 4 no opiate or it sns oag ate sold at. * 38 1t ! is . 38 tig . rc ong . ; #ou te » Aake up J & wak F20 e“ keful tents a box by all déalers, or you can get them by mail, post paid, by inFRNGEMENTâ€"OF â€" A TRADEâ€" | F ',Afl“ wh a+| c ctesa t . Th an . on * , Coutt of s tried supite for " d ?:%W f tE ons on r t x L tE e in ‘ t forever restfaining ®| C. . "® boot and . shoe feaier â€" of" O@en Bound," froim ‘adverâ€" S crcringd o s . sitie * oous,"" it ~"The Sthet smow "rhe Charciiior . ano easts of ‘the ‘actidh. ©" °0 0. ~~ _ »*Bt géeme Wilkinton ‘was offéring 10¢ | Lany in a spiendid position. Security, }“k, shoes made bh" manufacturer :ld“h’l‘lpmd‘l’s‘::“' are Our u,mmm nathe Was someâ€" | watchwords. what "#i td the Siater Sho# We have incremsed onr ‘hwu Ca. â€" This maker ‘camé up from Monâ€" |‘Ompital trom $257,800 to $400, treal and kave etidence at the tria!, |; We have increased ï¬rwfl&pw ani‘ appeared "to ‘be looking after‘ the it frow $84,000 to $100,000, ; M Wilkinson" but the Chan‘| Wenave placedall our old business telior ‘after neating‘ the Gvidence deâ€" | on 4::«-&. Standardâ€". cidel that ho ohe, ‘dxcept "the‘ Slater *:fl an Govern _ * syoo Co." "had n}mwus the ï¬â€™h&vil m mé! .4%:‘, ¢ » um%“ alt j i6s from £ Geodk*: ""The ‘Slater" Snbs>> or imy Mi renged our Assets froth sith|lar "wamies" it‘ confiectiod ‘ y hoots "and sho6s, | and that â€"Wikihson fory mm an nat W tight to use &ny name" "or C o . Head same«: in ofnnection with. nostw"wnd |â€" B e seee s+ wick . â€" P ~tliimen seven years in arrearts jabty: w !:: 'I" """’":’;wn éoantry paper, who bad never had ptpulietions . %mym ‘good »ward to say for the editor, uk CHIRIKE a1 dtim 2+ m . * 1> in o .ï¬ > eR Pg_‘ t * a~. 5 is ..,“*a’.-A hm Writing direct to the Dr. Williams‘ Idte es grecinie, Ont.. o iCE 0 on . pa MISERABLE NIGHTS. hrondfanli w s sn S ol. theis a u ho2 v dists a1tache By :" m use w w css Câ€â€˜. : '«_ri.,». * &n ~A Emi aiSlon of coa Liver OM EDITOR‘S NOTE.._The Slocus ystem of Treatment for the cure 0 ousumaption, Puimonaryâ€"Troubles atairh Tbol\bootofï¬utéï¬bcflvdylfl% the progress ofâ€"‘this fatai: malady ‘ with the wonderful ;ymn of treatment whichh'_;nt;mrenogbnuo::: science for the cure onsumption for the cure of C.un:'-lm::uu conditions which pave the .way for Conâ€" sumptionâ€"that successful Tb iciley‘s wreateut sejeatihe pposema, Dr. T. A. Slbcum, whose liberality, ds:vur\l his ngmnmâ€"m cast throughout this broad land, has contributed most to the rout â€"of the most m,mqbgqmdml uyuudd:hthudo(d.athin.:lae“‘emdi Mnrmomfl?mnmhmx‘ Our Overcoat Sale _ The Sliocum Treatment consists of four distinct remedies for the cure of Con» BNTBPC To ad s esd MmWyum- ing diseases, and is based upon principles essential to:heow‘ctiaod‘,:neflo-. the rebuliding of the tissues, the overthrow of parasitic animai organisms and . the estabâ€" is proving an immense suceess |We are continuing . it so. that those who havé not b en among the delighted ones whom we .have tilted oot with handsotte couts still have a chance to buy. . We have been ‘obliged ‘to réâ€"ord.r many of the popular styles, so that needu‘t feir â€" getting lefeâ€"overs now. Fur| color of _ eloth, '% material and fashionable: shades we have unquestionably the cor thing. , Quality and sizes to fit all. : i¢ : y 2 o ie e THE FREE TRIAL _ ana eioaeic aiy aitnee Loreet aidsleove, with slash pooket and cuft and with yoke Clity ... ‘ Te mererity > l io o) ow . ce Men‘s overcoats from $5 to §15. < | _ oys insl Yout:h’ovorpodntm“hl t o y $s Axr: ‘ ’(?hluraq‘q_gvemmuh. t 68 %5 SERCTIATâ€"A fine raglanetfe, cheap atI$7) for only $5.98, in nice stee! grey eheviot, all wool clot The Twin City‘s Best Clothing Stere â€" ,â€" KING STREET wEAD OFFICz, * WATERLOO, ONT. The 20th Century fnds this Comâ€" w.mnum&dmb:hh T ntohwords. i 5e :-r Dominion Life Assurance Progreoss in 1900. Det 8. SAUDER & CO., OOoMPARN C CRN M Lungs, Bronchitis, THB, ... he the pimoâ€"_re=y_ u.t-r.or*.:.y, '-ri"' the | the case. s«‘ free epmedias Must four free 1 zu-updn':'-m ï¬-mestofh-lhhdl the departments ’d‘l'ht hnm‘thu.qbuiy all the "i'i-f-'ia}fm:-" arations embody all the monl t Commmyien cheâ€"tare abd pree â€"as well as for most of the chronic Ponp baving Aqumnet pacl . in c iming x on Dr. Slocum, they represent the of : the ‘sa skill and with wilt explicit directions. uie ns avied to tan ’ i are invited to test what this system. the Four Free Preparationsâ€"will be for= neeiet oc h4 yove mh mghta time write to the T. A. Stocum Cherai= cal 170 ww }w i p,n and une Bigcam Core) Wl Seprofpiin se â€" . __Pérsons in Canada u‘m’- free 1aï¬1hq,h‘:-dal papers will please send for to Torento, 2 | Mutual andâ€"Oagh Systems. Gtones Lame . â€" «/ «« WiewPres, Somn A. ROO# < «s aa oo iss lt a jailâ€"bird doesn‘t fiyâ€"it isn‘t his o# BMRLIN. ¢ga BERLIN as