St LP mi F A Leaf From tlio Darkest Pages of tlie History of Darkest Africa. :MISSIOMKIESABEBLAMED For Turning a Eappy Kingdom Into an Arena for Bloodshed. CHRISTIANS BURKED TO DEATH And Machine Guns Mercilessly Turned on the Zealous Satires. ENGLAND TO ABANDON TDD CODNTRI 1 rWMTTES FOR THE DISPATCn.l "When Speke told the world of Uganda over 30 years ago, the Btory fascinated all Intelligent reader. He had found on the northern shore of the greatest lake in .Africa a people numbering over 2,000,000, "clothed from head to foot in native cloth, with a King whose fathers bad Bat on the throne he occupied when Queen Elizabeth vai ruling England, with an organized government that restricted the power of the sovereign, with a class of powerful nobles who ruled the provinces and composed the royal Cabinet and a peasantry that was happy and contented, thouch life was held very cheap as in all barbarous communi ties. "When Stanley saw Uganda 17 years ago he went into raptures over the fair land and perhaps described it as more beautiful than It is. Here, he wrote, was the place 'for irwAKOA's v'Xr missionaries to sow, in fruitful soil, the seeds of civilization that should spread through Central Africa. His glowing words fired the hearts of philanthropists. Protestant teachers reached Uganda inl877, and Catholic lathers two years later, to sow, alas, the seeds of dissension as well as of civilization. 'War Besnlts From Itelipious Rivalries. There is no doubt that the past seven years of civil war are the result of the religious rivalries and political discords en gendered by white men who went to Uganda to take blessings and not curses there. Englishmen and Frenchmen kindled a fire that they have been unable to subdue. In Uganda, Protestant and Catholic teach ers not only befuddled the untutored natives with their theological differences, but divided into sects and factions a simple people who had lived at peace with one au other. The bitterness and hatred thus en gendered have cost hundreds of lives. The teachers themelves have been dismayed to see their followers arrayed in hostile camps which they could not control. One day when Kinc Mtesa had the rival teachers before him he said to them: "You Protestants tell me that the Catholics make idols and worship them, and that God is displeased with such things; and you Cath olics tell me that the Protestants long ago deserted the true faith and are not among God's people. Between you both I don't know what to believe. Uganda did well under her old religion and I think I can do no better than to cling to the Gods ol my lathers." He kept his word to the day of his death, and it might have been better for his people if they had followed his example. Almost Destroyed a Catholic Church. One day as a Protestant missionary reached the town of Bufui on the edge of Victoria Xyanza tbey saw over 30 natives kneeling on the shore, waitins thejr turn to be baptized by Father Bouchier, who in three years had received bOO of their Iiipon O.Rubana aV i&rLj& ovj; -d-r"-5 ue r - s S-.7.7-. 1 . ik tram a "r w - & 'Dams VICTORIA NYAKZA Zmxui Ft. SSOOft. above the tea VxT Jm.vnni trm. iS.9Sn in milcn. IJUMiBn ' hi cfH&kosgo tsmeiRs k MYSDME mraD&a L3& Uganda. friends into the Church. Two weeks later the Protestant missionary attended Sundar service at a station of the Church of Eng land. "All the preachiae," he wrote "was against Father Bouchier of Bufui. He was accused of making gods with his own hands, of showing images of Christ's mother with movable eyes, of deceiving the people by pretending to work miracles. These things were told in good faith no donbt, but they were not true. Next morn ing a partv ot the converted natives started for Bufui to destroy Father Bouchier's church, and God only knows what would have happened if we had not persuaded the Rev. Mr. Marson, the missionary in charge, to overtake them and stop the expedi tion." Here was a mob of barbarians, "con verted" to the Christian iaith, convinced that their lathers had died with sin, be lieving every word their teachers uttered, Infuriated with the thought that Arise white teachers were leading their Iriends astray, and that men of their own blood.con verts to the Catholic faith were in league with the Evil One. It is easy to imagine the feeling of bitterness and hatred that deepened and intensified as the proselytes grew in num bers until it burst out in open flame. To dav, there seems to be in Uganda only the religion of the rifle. Barnlns Christian Subjects to Death. One may search the missionary records in Tain for evidence of good feeling and kindly co-operation between the rival bands of THEWARSO UGANDA i.rassai JJOha& r s I SESSE TTyeB S&tf &is&:::s&.' white teachers until the massacres of ISSo, when Mtesa's son and successor, King Mwanga, made war upon all the Christians and common persecution drove them to gether lor a while. Hatred of the whites who were dividing his country into factions in which ho had no share, and fears that other whites were coming to subvert his power and "eat up" Uganda, led Mwanga to kill Bishop Hannington and burn scores of his Christian subjects to death. A pic"""9 here shows one of the charred and black ened frameworks upon which the victims were slowly roasted- after their arms and feet had been cut oft. The annals of mar tyrdom show no heroism more sublime than that or the poor converts ot Uganda who died for their faith, when they might hare purchased life by renouncing It; and it is easy to see how, before and alter the perse cutions, such spirits, full ot ignorant enthu siasm, were filled with bitter hatred of those who, they believed, had espoused a false In 188T the Christians, still united by the atrocities theKiug visited upon both sects, succeeded in deposing him. Then two other factions came to the front Klwewa, another son of Mtesa, had no "oner been put on the throne and divided the offices among both Christian parties than the Mohammedan Arabs and the heathen "tt'aganda joined hands to reshape affairs more to their liking. PeaUi and Flight for Christians. They turned Kiwewa out of power, placed Kalema, another royal son. on the throne, and killed many of the Christians who took refuge, one and all, in Buddu, the touth. western province ot Uganda, while all their white teachers sknrried across the late to wait on the southern shore for the storm to blow over. Uganda was now undtr Mobam medan control and the prospects of the Christians were very dark. The poor fugi tive Mwanea took refuge with a half dozen of his 8,000 wives among the Cathouo Fathers, outh of the lake, and was de pendent upon them lor his daily bread. The bloodthirsty tyrant was now a sup pliant for charitv and friendship and in his dire distress he became an alleged Chris tian, and impressed the good fathers with his sincerity as a Catholic while, at the same time, he wrote to the Church of England teachers: "I have given up my former ways, and only wish now to follow your advice." , . . . Victory sides with that combatant in cakoes. Africa who has the most power and guns. Tlie exiled Chiistians in Buddu were gradu ally equipped with munitions bv Mr. Stokes, a former missionary, who had gone into trading on a large scale. In the fall of 1889 tbev were ready to take the field against the Arabs and their heathen countrymen. Mwanga was nominally a Christian. Both factions hoped he would side with them or at least give them a fair share of offices and power, xney ueciueu 10 resiurc uuu iu uio throne, and after hard fighting they suc ceeded. The church militant triumphed over the Arabs and heathen, and the white teachers, who had watched the fighting from islands near the northern shore, returned to Mengo and Bubaga and rebuilt their ruined churches. The Old Hatred Breaks Out. Even when huddled together In sore pov erty and distress in distant Buddu, the fol lowers of the Englishmen and of the French Fathers could not forget that they regarded one another as Anti-Christians, who could league together only when a common enemy tried to destroy them. In Buddu, tbey were on the verge of open hostilities, when a white man opportunely arrived and persuaded them not to kill one another, .for all were needed in the struggle to regain Uganda. When they found themselves again in power at Mengo and Bubaga all the old hatred flamed afresh. Politics were in extricably mixed up with religion. The missionaries were powerless to quell the fires of intolerance tbev hail kindled. The Englishmen hailed with iov the dar when an armed force from the coast arrived, early last year under Captain Lugard, to possess the country in the name of the British East Africa Company. Lugard saw the two parties rallying under different flags. The Protestants cirried the British flas. The Catholics sewed red crosses on white cloth, and this emblem waved above their assemblages. Mwanga had openly de clared himself a Catholic Each party clamored for the governorship of the provinces, for seats in the cabinet, for the thousand and one petty offices. Mwanda dared not wholly ignore the claims of the Protestants, but every office of power and profit he could bestow upon the Catholics was theirs. On the one side were 25,000 professing Catholics who deemed it their right, as the majority, to control af fairs. On the other side were about 4,000 Protestants, a hopeless minority, but strong in the garrison of Lugard's tort at Mengo, and his Maxim guns and mitrailleuses. The French Fathers, 24 in number, had eight stations along or near the shores of the great lake, while the five Protestant teach ers had only three stations. Tlie Immediate Cause of the War. This was, the position when on January 24 last the long threatened war broke out Each side BtiU says that the other was to blame. It is believed by the most careful and impartial observers that the responsi bility rests, not upon the natives, hut upon the handful of whites in the country. It was four months after long reports of the fresh outburst had reached Europe from the French Fathers before one word of explana tion came from Lugard and his Protestant friends. The fact is that the Catholics had the Kintr, the Government, the great ma jority of the nobles and the governing class. The Protestants were strong only in muni tions of war supplied by the British and stored in the Mengo Fort. To this party, overwhelmed by a hostile majority, the situation was becoming in tolerable. They were ready to seize any pre text to overthrow the existing order of things trusting that the Lord of battles would give the victory to the heaviest guns. A fight between two chiefs of the rival factions re sulted in killing the Protestant. Lugard demanded the cnief s slaver, but Mwanea refused to give him up, because, he said, the man bad killed his adversary in self defense. Thereupon Lugard "felt it his duty to appeal to arms for the maintenance ot justice." In the bloody days that fol lowed the Catholics fought hard but, for the mosPpart, tbey bad only spears to oppose to guns. Hundreds of them were killed. Scores of them perished in the lake when the fortunes of war went against them. The Tables Completely Turned. . They could not win against Lugard's machine guns, and thousands ot them took refuge with' King Mwanga on the Sesse Islands, whence they and ail other Catholics were finally banished to Buddu where they are living to-day. Every Catholic mission was destroyed and the French Fathers took refuge with the Germans at Bukoba. It is a remarkable spectacle. Twenty-five thousand of the Christian converts of Uganda have been driven from their homes bv the superior force of British arms. The King has been converted again. He has become "a good Protestant," and is once more on the throne, upheld there by "the same guns that banished hi in. Now that the bigotry, rivalries and blun dering of white uicu bare laid low the most wssm THE promising native State in Africa, there is talk of abandoning the country, just when the maddened natives, eager to flv at one another's throats, need nothing but the withdrawal of the British power to com plete' their own destruction. No wonder the best men in England protest against such a step. There ia little likelihood that the British Government will evacuate Uganda. "What it has done is to warn the East African Company that after Maroh 31 next it will not continue the subsidy witb- out which, the company savs. it cannot re main in the country. The company is ad mittedly incompetent to govern Uganda; but there Is as yet no reason to believe that Great Britain, after claiming sovereign rights over Uganda, will now abandon the. country whose recent history, shaped by the whites who hare lived there, is the most disgraceful scandal that has come out of Africa, Cybus a Adams. TOTAL ABSTIAERCS BOTES. St. Jortt's, of Thirty-third street, Is once more a reality. Columbus night or the Father Matusw was a literary success. Tine next meetine of the nnlon will be held at Dnquesne Hall. It Is encouraging to see St. Patrick's rep resented once more at the union meetings. St. Luke's, of Mansfield, has secured the Notional Convention of tbe Diocesan Union. The union meeting at St. Bridget's last Sunday was attended by all the local so cieties. St. Luke's, of Mansfield, m preparing to build a newiall. It.already has a complete gymnaswiri? The SacriM Heart will have a literary pro gramme ne'Jt Sunday. It will aim to be the banner society. All delegates are expected to come to the next union meeting prepared to vote on the field day question. The Sisters of Heroy at DuBols, Fa., are using the temperance tracts for reading les sons in the more advanced classes. Watches, Jewelry, fine diamonds, emer alds, rubies, sapphires, turquoise, opals, eta, in all tbe latest combinations. We set all our own goods and save you J obbers' profits. Call and examine the stock and prices at 11. G. Cohen's, 86 Fifth avenue. Stylish Suitings, Trouserings and overcoatings to order on short notice at Pitcairn's, 4M Wood streofc. Our goods and our prices are tie "open sesame' to the hearts and the pocket BOOKS OF THE PURCHASING, PUBLIC. J 1 I 1 Where ChrUttau Wert Burned to Death. CARPETS. ; 'J JMHl JHHFT Such a stock, such colorings, such a variety, such an as sortment; such prices. Multiply by three the strong points of any other carpet stock in town and you get some idea of what we are showing. A SPECIAL m 5,000 YARDS Of extra heavy Oilcloth, of a quality never sold in the regular way under 40c a. yard, will be sold this week at -25c A YARD- CASH OR CREDIT. BOTH ONE AND TWO YARDS WIDE. Our grand fall showing exceeds our expectations and ldxewise the expecta tions of our many cus TOMERS. : : : : mmmmmrmmMs, fiJMiiw-ig 'QtasKaKSBmkUMUnmnnBKIBdmiMm mmjatmmmmmLmMmimmmmmt-r, iyhi sM"nrsTn-iiei isinii mini m in nn mslssssssssssH iV' -?.3ar,-f wj PETTSBUBCJ- fnTSPATYmr'i NOTES AND QUERIES. The Bemarkable Power of the Jesuits and Their Ups and Downs. FBIDAY IS KOT AN UNLUCKY DAY. The Custom of Burying the Dead With the Heads to the Westward. WEBSTER'S TEIBUTE TO JOHN JAI The recent election of a new General of the Company of Jesus makes the question "Who and what are the Jesuits ?" timely.) In brief, Jesuit is the name commonly given to a member of the Company of Jesus, a missionary order of the Boman Catholic Church. The order has been of tremendous power, and its influence to-day in the Boman churoh,is far greater than the number of its members would seem to war rant The Company of Jesus was founded by Don Ignatius de Loyola, a Spaniard, who was converted while recovering from a wound received in battle. Converted In 1521, he studied for .several years, and in 1534 began to collect young men about him. In 1537 he gave the name "Company of Jesus" to his little band of followers. They offered themselves to the Pope as a special militia in 1538, but were not recognized by the Pope until 1640, when the bull Beglminl militantis ecclesiie was issued, confirming the company. The company was' made up on military lines; its chief was a General; absolute obe dience was required ot every member. Loyola was the first General, chosen In 164L The company has always been inde pendent of the Pope, yielding to him only when it chose, and has opposed and been opposed by him on many occasions. Al ways, however, it has come out ahead. When Loyola died in 1556 the company had 45 professed fathers, 2,000 members and 100 houses. But the company has not always had smooth sailing; it was expelled from Portu gal in 1759, and from France in 1767; they were expelled from Spain in the same year, and later from Naples and Parma, and fin ally, in 1773, Pope Clement XIV, in the bull dominnes ao redemptor suppressed the society. This bull gave is the reasons for the suppression the Jesuits' defiance of their own constitution which forbade them to enter into politics; their quarrels with local bishops and priests not Jesuits: their conformity to heathen religious usages in tbe East," and gave other reasons. The society at the time of its suppression had 22,589 members, of whom 11,295 were priests and 41 provinces. The suppression did not last very long; the society moved into non-Catholic countries, and existed in Bussia and Prussia, until Pius VII revoked the decree of suppression in 1814. Since then they have been driven out of one country o"rlv to return a few years later. Now, however, they are supposed to con trol the Pope, whose brother, the late Car dinal Pecci, was a Jesuit, and the various colleges ot the Holy See. The company is iwtisajxAM OILCLOTHS. 823. 925, 927 PENN AVENUE. mem'L in ii ii ' "" 111 susMSii r 1 , g n 1 divided into aix grade novjeevwho " be 14 years olds scholastics, Wjeare of age; temporal coadjutors, 24; spiritual coadju tors, 81 to 33; professed of the three tows, poverty, chastity and obedience; professed of the four vows the fourth being that or Ira pliclt submission to the Pope, 45 years old. It is an unsettled question if there is not a seventh grade, of lay members, "Jesuits ot the short robe." , Obedience in all things to the orders ot his superior is the Jesuit's rule of lite. I ought not to"be my own, but His who cre ated me," wrote Loyola In his "Spiritual Exercises," the elementary manual 'or the novice, "and his, tooby whose means God governs me, yielding myself to be moulded in his hand like so much wax. I ought to be like a corpse, which has neither will nor understanding, or like a wjall crucifix which is turned about at the will or him that holds it,or like a staff in the hands of an old man.who uses it as may best assist or please him." Of whom was it said, "When tire ermine or thejudlolal robe fell on him it touched nothing less spotless than Itself?" L Lawxeb. Of John Jay; in a little different lorm, however. ""When the spotless ermine of the Judicial robe fell on John Jay it touched nothing less spotless than itself," were the words uttered by Daniel "Webster at a dinner in New York in 183L John Jay was born in New York In 1745; was a mem ber of the first two Continental Congresses and of the Constitutional Convention of New York; was President ol Congress In 1778-79; Chief Justice of New York State, and MinUter to Spain in 1780. He re turned in 1784; was Foreign Secretary of the Confederation from 1784 to 1789, when, on the adoption of the Constitution, he be came the first Chief Justice of tbe United States. In 1794 he went as Minister to Great Britain and there made what Is known in this country as "Jay's Treaty. He was Governor ot New York from 1796 to 1801; from that time until his death in May, 1829, he remained In private Hie. Does history bear out the popular super, stltion as to Friday being an nnluclty davt W. G. K. This question.was probably suggested by the fact that Pittsburg celebrated Colum bus Day on a Friday. The day has cer tainly a very fortunate side in the history of this country, especially so far as Colum bus is concerned. The explorer may have properly arranged some of his dates to show his contempt for the existing superstition, but however that may be, it is certain he sailed away from Palos on his first voyage on a Friday; on a Friday he discovered land; arrived home again on a Friday; reached his paniola on his second voyage on that day, started for his home again on Friday, and discovered the mainland of this continent on a Friday during his third voyage. St Augnstine, the oldest town in this country, was also founded on a Friday. On the same day the Mayflower made the barborof Provincetown and on Friday, December 22, 1620, made tbe final landing at Plymouth Koclc George Washington was also born on that day, as were also those great statesmen of this century, Gladstone, Bismarck andDis raeli. Eaphael, the great painter, was born and died on Friday, and both were Good Friday at that Sir Isaao Newton, Martin Luther, George Stephenson, Fahren heit and the great Charles the Bold were all born on Friday. On Friday, April 8, 1646, A GREAT MOVEMENT - FURNITURE Is now poine1 on at our store. An unprecedented movement even for us, and we're always busy at this season of the year. Customers are moving in and out with such rapidity and taking so much furniture with them that only a con stant supply of new stock keeps the store from being cleaned out We like this, for it keeps the stock fresh and bright and this is appreciated by our numerous patrons. If you want to know how wonderfully far a little money , will go in making home attractive and inviting, come and examine our fall stock. The inspection will surprise you into a purchase. REMEMBER THIS: If you want aaything to brighten up your homes you need not wait until you have all the money it takes to get what you want before making the purchase. I "T Enables you to act at once and get the use of the goods -while paying for them. Neither are you asked an im mense advance, in price on this. account The credit business as conducted by us is legitimate, honorable, business like and respectable. Multitudes find it a great convenience. Don't waste any time in trying to beat our terms or our prices. Those wo have tried it say it cannot be done. ' sF; , iMiBiSSSSSSSBSSiSSlSSSSBSsSSSWBSSSSSSSSPsSSSSpBlSISiSSSSSSiSSSSS , flfc B&TTINta MAN The. Solemn man - "i iO feS "Tpjj jititM Trr Forcible.' MflM t 'fe bewildered rftrf. KB. MEANTWELL- CONSULTS SEVEEAl WARD P0LETICIAN3 AND WIXL NOW TOTE FOE ? the first known newspaper advertisement was published in the Imperial Intelligencer in England, and on Friday, November 28, 1814, the London Tana, the first newspaper ever printed by steam, was issued. On a Friday the Savannah, the first steam vessel that ever crossed the Atlantic, sailed from Savannah, Ga,, and the famous Great Eastern left the Irish coast with the first Atlantic cable, and reached this country on the same day of the week. Surely from the above list of very un lucky Fridays, enough argument could be made against the day's unlucky signifi cance. Why are people burled with their heads to the west, and what is the origin of the custom? C. D. Ii. The origin of the custom is unknown; IN - "TS& & : - - . XLi,"-0 aesJ Tl'i'afc T.tr Jss tf jH CUD T STSTI MtfaMMMMMisjJ -fife- TrUMortouS'-MqH TfrET ToiSHMAN from ages back, races" In all parts of the world have buried their dead with their heads to the west; not invariably, how ever, but with great uniformity. Probably the remote origin lies in the belief of an Immortality and a resurrection, typified by the return of the sun every morning. The dead are buried so that when the time comes they may face the sun which will wake them. The first pastor of the church at Easthampton, N. Y., it may be remarked, directed that he be burie'd with his head to the east, so that at the resurrection he might face his congregation; but so general is tbe custom of burying with the head to the west that this direction is noted as an instance ot me minister a eccentricity. Why is "Columbus Day" celebrated on EXQUI5 In Parlor Suits we are making a splendid exhibit of fine furniture, well made and upholstered in various degrees of elegance from the cheapest worth the buying to the finest made. All the latest designs of the cabinet makers' art, all the best finishes in the wood and the latest ideas in upholster ing are embraced in the splendid assortment of furniture for your best rooms. MORE STYLES AND BETTER ONES THAN ARE SHOWN ANYWHERE ELSE. A PHIffl CHAIR Is one worthy of the highest human ambition; but only a few can reach it We are offering something as fine as a Presidential Chair in our new and well-assorted stock of these goods. Every one we show touches a point away above the high-water mark. Only a winner can occupy a Presidential nair, and you'll find our chairs presidential in this sense that you are a winner if you buy one. We've Chairs little and big of every kind, sort and description. Parlor Chairs, Dining Room Chairs, Library Chairs and Kitchen Chairs. Between $1 and $100 we can certainly suit all comers in price. , 923, 925, 927 PENN AVENUE. 'r f" 1 on Oct4 October 21, IniteaoVof, or as well as. Because 'Columbus discovered land oif tuinhrr 14. which bv the new style of sal .culat'ne; days, months and years would be? October 21. Uf course, as tne discovery was made under the "old style," it if proper to celebrate that event on October 14. But Chicago wished to celebrate the discovery by dedicating the exhibition buildings. However, New York City was; to celebrate the actual discovery on Octoj ber 14, under tbe auspices of the United States Government, so Chicago, in orde that there might be no collision, decided to) dedicate the buildings or the 21st of thsj month. Who said "Let me make the songs of a nan .. .miTMniiint who makes tho lAwaf ' W. Q. W. Andrew Fletcher of Saltoun, a Scotch writer, in a letter to the Earl of Eothes,' wrote, "I know a very wise man that be1 lieved that if a man were permitted to maki all the ballads, he need not care who should make the laws of a nation." Fletcher was) born in 1623, and was educated by Gilberi Burnet, later bishop of Salisbury, one of the wise men of his time. Fletcher was a member of the Scottish Parliament, and traveled extensively; so, though the "very wise man" may have been Burnet, it is no impossible that it was some other per' son. What States will vote at the election next month under the "Australian ballot law?" , ILA.A. No State will vote for the first time iro.4 der the Australian ballot law unless tha' Baker ballot law be called an Australian. ballot law; but all tbe States which have; that law 34 in number will follow it at a Presidental election for the first time. J Massachusetts adopted the Australian baU, lot in 1888, but used it for the first time at the State election in the autumn of 1339. 1 The other 33 States have adopted the sy tem since the last Presidental election. Who were the commanders at Quebec De cember 81, 1773T W.O. The American commanders were General Montgomery, Colonel Benedict Arnold ) and Colonel Morgan. The British forces ' were led by General Guy Carleton, Govew nor of the Province of Quebec, and later i 1786 created Baron Dorchester. He was Commander in Chief in America when tha British surrendered at Yorktown, in 1781, and evacuated New York on Noyember 25, 1783. Do the Methodists outnumber any anil every other seoe of Christians In the United States. Ciistov.'- No; they come second. The Roman Cath-. olics come first with 6,250,045 members; the j Methodists claim about, 4,930,000; the Bap tists about 4,300,000. The figures for tha Boman Catholics are those of the census or 1890: tbe others are those of the denomina tional "year-book" for the present year. What is the orisia 6f the phrase "the dla, iS cast?" AL03ZO. 1 The phrase is very old, and comes of course from the game of chance where the players won or lost money by the turn oft the die or dice. The Latin expression is f alea jactata est, precisely the same as ours. Plutarch, who died about 120 years after Christ, describes Casar as using the phrase! when he crossed the Bubieon. It is one of 1 u no "' -: - - - I the proverbial expressions that have no j certain oriBiu- if you see anything kt our advertisement you'll find j it in our store. This is true to-day and-1 always. ! : J : r-? URE m THE PARLOR. arm Once having seen our stock WHEN YOU THINK OF NICE FURNITURE YOU CAN'T HELP THINKING OF US WHETHER YOU MEAN TO OR NOT. I I 1 gittfcU St. -JGairr? ?& 2 V' J 5 ? W2SBEL.