When Not Don't swoat find frei, bat ko*p 000 l and tnko Hood's Sarsapurilla. This Is good ndvioe, as you will flud if you follow it. Hood's Sir3ar>arilla Is a first-class sum u.ar medloino, bocauso it Is so good for tho stomach, so cooling to tho blood, 80 helpful lo the whole body. Make no mistake, but got only HOOCFS S parM~la America's Greatest Med cine. Hood's Pills SEI t0 ifow 7 ® Tills? We offer One Hundred Dollny. Tnko Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. lioo. The Massachusetts State Society of the Sons of the American Revolution has presented to the Connecticut so ciety a bronze marker to be placed on the original grave of General Israel Putnam in Brooklyn. To Cure Constipation Forever. Take Cascnrets Candy Cathartic. 10c 0r250. 11C. C'.C. fail to cure, druggists refund money New Use for Peanuts. A new use for peanut is developing as the peanut butter industry becomes better understood. The product of the peanut answers in the place of ordi nary butter for the table use, and is said to be excellent for shortening pur poses, and for gravies, sauces, etc. In point of purity it is well designed for the use of vegetarians who strenuous ly object to anything animal. There is already a considerable demand for this butter substitute, and it is very prob able there will be an enlarged market for the nuts. At present the product of the United States is about 000,000 bags annually, and that of the world is U00,U00,000 pounds.—West Coast Trade. A Chinese Typewriter. A missionary at Tung Chow lias in vented a Chinese typewriting machine. The characters number about four thousand, and are ou the edge of wheels about a foot in diameter. Twenty or thirty wheels are required to carry nil the characters, and two keys must be struck to make an impression. The first turns the wheel, anil the second stops it at the required letter, which is then brought dowu to the paper. The ma chine Is complicated, but the inventor (Dr. Sheffield) hopes to make it more simple. There are 18,000 characters in the Chinese language, each represent ing a distinct word. The 4,000 in com mon use have been selected for the new machine. RELIEF FROM PAIN. Women Everywhere Express theh Gratitude to Mrs. Pinkham. rira. T. A. WALDEN, Gibson, Ga., writes: "DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM:— Before tak ing your medicine, life was a burden to me. I never saw a well day. At my monthly period I suffered untold misery, and a great deal of the time I was troubled with a severe pain in my side. Before finishing the first bottle of your Vegetable Compound I could tell it was doing me good. I continued its use, also used the Liver Pills and Sanative Wash, and have been greatly helped. I would like to have you use my letter for the benefit of others." Mrs. FLORENCE A. WOLFE, gi 5 Hulbcrry St., Lancaster, Ohio, writes: " DEAR MRS. PINKHAM: —For two years I was troubled with what the local physicians told me was inflamma tion of the womb. Every month I suf fered terribly. I had taken enough medicine from the doctors to cure any one, hut obtained relief for a short time only. At last I concluded to write to you in regard to my case, and can fav that by following your advice I am now pefeotiy well." rtrs. W. R. BATES, .Tansbeld, Ln., writes! " Before writing to you I suffered dreadfully from painful menstrua tion, lcucorrhoea and sore feeling in the lower part of the bo wels. Now my friends want to know what makes me look so well. Ido not hesitate one min ute in telling them what has brought about this great change. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound enough. It is the greatest remedv of the ace " A. PHILIPPINE ROMANCE. ADVENTURES IN THE ISLANDS OF A GENTLEMAN OF BRITTANY. De la Gironniere, Whom Dumas Once De scribed as a Phantom* Went to Ufa- ! nlla, Founded a Colony. Subdued Pi- ' rales and Married a Creole Beauty. j About the middle of the present century, -when Dumas the elder was at the height of his career, and the or igin of many an interesting piece of French literature was delightfully un certain, a couple of works appeared tha_t drew attention to the mysterious and far-off Philippines, In his "Thou sand and One Phantoms," issued seri ally in the Constitutionnel, Dumas made free with a fellow countryman who had been the hero of certain sur prising adventures in the Pearl of the Orient, and the hero thereupon not caving to figure as a phantom in a feuilleton, got out his "Adventures of a Gentleman of Brittany in the Phil ippines." Some persons, however, thought the hero would have been truer to life as the creation of Dumas; that a3 a real gentlemn i of Brittany he was only another living liar, and that, in fact, his romantic narrative was the work of a new Selkirk and Defoe combination. Paul Proust da la Gironniere was counted in the pedigree of an ancient I'iedmontese family that came over the St. Bernard and into Brittany in the days of Louis XIV., and soon be came rich enough to have access to the nobility and to contract "the most flattering alliances." Paul's father was born at Nantes, where his ances tors had held high office under tho c?own. His wealth was swept away the revolution; and he died on a piece of land owned by his wife. Paul's mother gave the boys such education as she could, and then they went to seek their fortune. One died in Mad agascar; another returned to Porto Hico to die in his mother's arms; the husband of one of Paul's sisters died in Mauritius, and another brother died while visiting Paul in the Philippines. Paul wns born at Nantes; he stud ied medicine; and thence, a mere stripling, he sailed as ship's surgeon to the Far East, embarking for the fourth time ou October 9, 1819, and casting anchor about the end of May, 1820, in the Bay of Manila. He lauded at Cavite, enjoyed the whirl of Manila society, studied the Tagafoc, went among tho natives iu tho mountains, began the cateer of sportsmanship that was to culminate in hunting tho stag and tho buffalo and in killing caymans and boa constrictors, and fin ally allowed his ship to go home and leave him iu the metropolis of the archipelago. He had resolved to become a resi dent physiciau. He faced the fanati cism of the cholera massacre of 1820, and he had a clean shirt iu his hat aud a dollar in his pocket. Finding a rioh old don nearly blind, he cured one eye aud made a glass ball for the socket of the other, and his reputation was established. Paul became Dr. Pablo, and surgeon of a regiment of regulars and of a battalion of militia. But when the leaders of the Novalles re bellion of 1823 were shot, he had oc casion to call a Spanish informer a coward, aud some time thereafter, having words with the Governor-Gen eral over a question of ethics, he re signed and was thenceforth a sort of surgical free lance to tho people of Luzon. The travels of La Gironniere in the island, though undertaken incident ally to professional duty or out of mere curiosity or a desire to go somewhere, are scientifically interesting, and will be as important to the historian as many of the manuscript accounts that are rolled up in the cloistral archives. He explored caves, lakes, mountain fastnesses and immense forests; slept in treetops and on the tidal sands; learned the ways of tho tribes and gathered legends; attended the Tin guian brain feast; sketched the interior of Igorrot huts and carried off the skeleton of a Negro woman. La Gironniero's most valuable con tribution to the civilization of the island was his colony of Jala-Jala. Before his resignation had been ac cepted, Senor Pablo, who was known among the natives as Malamit Oulon, or "Co'ol Head," had secured of the Minister of Finance a sito for a model farm in the mountainous peninsula that extends southward into the beau tiful Lake of Bay at the head of the Pasig. Here, with his devoted wife, and commissioned to subdue as he might the pirates and banditti of this wild region, he founded among these victims of Spain's extortion aud mis rule a prosperous and orderly com munity. Assisted by these industrious nud loving neighbors, and heartily seconded by the once dreaded Chieftain Alila, by a Malay-Japaneso priest whom the Archbishop had told him nobody could ever live with, and by his ever inspiring Anna, the "Queen of Jala- Jala," ho converted a forest and a malarial swamp into a thriving town surrounded with timber laud, pasture grounds, and rich fields of rice, in digo, sugar cane, tobacco, and coffee. His herds alone comprised 3000 head of oxen, 800 buffaloes and COO horses. For the introduction and per fection of coffee culture, he received a prize of S7OOO from the Spanish Gov ernment. Here he built a church and school, large warehouses and a manu factory, and the travelers who visited his colony wore hospitably entertained in an elegant residence that he erected for the comfort of the wife whose early death sent him back to France a crushed and disheartened man. Mine, de la Gironniere was a native of the Philippines, and it was owing to Paul's Creole marriage that he ob tained concessions until then obsti nately refused to foreigners. An American friend had called his atten tion to a young lady in mourning who passed for one of the most beautiful senoms of the town, and he had vain ly explored all the saious oi Bincdocn for an introduction, when one day, as ho was writing a prescription for a chance patient in one of the fine houses in the Faubourg of Santa Cruz tho sudden rustling of a silk dress was followed by the apparition of the lady. She was eighteen years of age. Her features were regular aud placid, her hair black and beautiful, aud her eyes large and expressive. This was Anne-Maria Favea, Marquesa tie las Salinas, tho wealthy and charming young widow of a Colonel of the guards who had married her when but a child. Paul stammered, got out of the house awkwardly, went homo iu a fever, called again, and six months later was the husband of au excellent wife. Her fortune, $136,000, invested in a Mexican venture, was seized by Colonel Iturbide, who became Em peror of Mexico, and was dethroned and shot. This excellent woman bore every trial with patience. She fol lowed her husband with the most un bounded confidence. She welcomed tho European visitors who camo to the colony, and she put clothes on the backs of the dalagas. Quietly she laid her little girl iu the grave, and uncomplainingly, as she bid adieu to the boy who was soon to follow, she went down into it herself. She was a teacher of goodness; the narrative of le geutilhomme bretou sinks to a song for the dead upon every mention of her worth; aud the cross of the Le gion of Honor, accorded him at the request of Marshal Soult, was little recompense for the other self that he had lost in the Lady of Jala-Jala.— New York Suu. SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. Altitudes are calculated from baro metric records aceordiug to a formula worked out by Laplace. Ozone, on account of its powerful oxidizing action on organic matter, plays a considerable part iu purifying the air. A system of 100 electrically operated clocks at Brussels, Belgium, has been in uso, with some modifications, since April, 1857. A comet has been discovered at the Lick Observatory iu the constellation Scorpio, about one degree northeast of tho bright star Antares. Liquid air mixed with powdered charcoal as au explosive has been tried experimentally iu the Peuzberg coal mine uear Munich, Bavaria. Tho machine-made American file has come iuto such sharp eompetitioa with the European hand-made imple ment that legislation against the American production may soon be ex pected. Two of the sets of negatives made by the English observers of the recent eclipse at Viziadrug, in India, have arrived in England, aud are being studied thoroughly by tho astron omers. A contract for 86,000 tons of steel rails and 4230 tons of fishplates, for use ou the Eastern Chinese Bailway, now building iu Manchuria, has been entered into with American manufac turers. Many manufacturers are using X rays to test coal that they use in their operations, it having been found that by turning the rays ou coal it can be told how much of it will remain as ashes after it is burned and how much will escape as gas. Cloth is now being made from wood. Strips of fine-grained wood are boiled and crushed between rollers, and the filaments, having been carded into parallel lines, are spun into threads, from which the cloth cau be woven in the usual way. Russia's Priceless Jewels. . "A whole guide-book devoted siin ply to the Hermitago could give no sort of idea of the barbaric splendor of its belongings," writes Lilian Bell, of the famous St. Petersburg Museum, in the Ladies' Home Journal. "Its riches are beyond belief. Even the presents given by the Emir of Bok hara to tho Czar are splendid enough to dazzle one like a realization of tho Arabian Nights. But to see the most valuable of all, which are kept in the Emperor's private vaults, is to be ro dueed to a state of bewilderment bor dering on idiocy. It is astonishing enough, to one who has bought eveu ouo ltussian belt set with turquoise enamel, to think of all tho trappings of a horse—bit, bridle, saddle-girth, saddle-cloth ami all—made of cloth of gold and setin solid turquoise enamel, with the sword hilt, scabbard, belts and pistol handle and holster made of the same. Well, these are there by the roomful. Then you come to the private jewels, and you see all these same accoutrements made of precious stones—one of solid diamonds; au other of diamonds, emeralds, topazes and rubies." American. Shut Out ot the Fhllippiuea. As is well kuown, America was su preme iu the Philippine trade from the opening of tho export business of the island on a large scale until within a few years. The reasons for the decline of American influence were largely tho drawing out of capital by the older members of the great American trad iug firms, aud their leaving the busi ness to younger members of their fam ilies, who found themselves with great responsibilities and a reduced capital. Gradually English firms, with abundant capital, succeeded to the bulk of the business. The last Ameri can firms in Manila were crowded out three years ago by Spanish intrigues, caused by the hatred of Americans growiug out of the Cuban troubles. This overthrow was managed by the thousand and one petty annoyances of legal machinery that the Spaniards exerted against American firms.—J Scribnei's Magazine. Oldest Postmistress In the World. Mrs. Brown, of Auehmithic, Eng land, was said to be tho oldest post mistress in the world. She died re cently at the advanced age of ninety three. Her appointment took place after the penny post was organized, and she was able to perform her du ties until a short time before her death. Bunting is the popular fabric for dresses, being light and suitable for wear in any weather, although, of course, the chief reason is that it is generally used for patriotic purposes. The material used in dresses is woven exactly as that for flags. The color in most demand is blue; army and navy being the shades most used. A Remedy For the Telltale Wrinkles. When fine Ijnes begin to show un der tho eyes, procure n small pack age of fullers' earth and mix it with an equal quantity of wheat flour. Take a little of this and mix it into a paste with clear water. Spread it beneath the eyes and let it remain an hour, then moisten it and gently wipe it off. For wrinkles on other parts of the face make a paste of white wax and oil of sweet almonds, and apply it as hot as can bo borne, using a small pine stick for tho purpose, that it may bo applied to the lino and nowhere else. —Woman's Home Compauion. Feathers in Outlna; Hats. Fashion decrees that feathers shall be worn in outing hats. Those for general wear, bicycling, golf and even sailor hats are trimmed with wings and quills. But the more elegant headdress for wear on strolls is deco rated with ostrich feathers. The plumes often have au addition of little tassels of plain black silk, and flat velvet spots are placed on white feath ers. Often the milliners go so far as to renounce curling altogether, as they are supposed to show to better ad vantage the quality of the featller if plain. White plumes are the most used. They are frequently shaded or laid over colored ones. The Corsage Sachet. One of the prettiest conceits in fem inine fancies is a butterfly of white bolting cloth, embroidered in the most elaborate pattern. It was sent to a recent bride and the sender declares Blie traced tho design from the wings of a very gorgeous butterfly her small brother made a captive. Certainly no artist could have devised one more odd or more beautiful. The scalloped wings are padded just a trifle, the sachet is put in, and the wings outlined with a double row of narrow Valenciennes lace.' The whole is outlined with pink silk. It is to be pinned on the left side of tho corsage, and gives the wearer a subtle perfume that is very fascinating." . . , —: 1—•, Tlie linby'a Sweater. Tho latest addition to baby's ward robe is a little white sweater, au exact copy of his athletic father's or golfing mother's. Such sweaters havo been sold for some time for children of three years old and upward, but the baby sweaters are something entirely now. They are very useful littlo things, and, being made of the finest, softest wool, are a great addition to baby's wardrobe. They can bo tucked under the ruffled pillow of the baby carriage, and at any sudden change in temper ature can be slipped on easily and without much detriment to the lace trimmed ruffles, and baby can be wheeled home without the danger of catching cold. Being all in one piece, with no opening except for tho head, they will not fall open at the neck and expose baby to tho dangers of bron chitis or laryngitis. Tho Clilc Thing in Belti.. Belts not only share honors with dress accessories for this summer's wear, but seem to claim more attention than the gown itself. We all wear belts, be we stcut or lean, bhort or tall, and no one seems to question their becom iugness. Jeweled belts have had such a long run, and are now made in such cheap imitations, that the belts of leather and plain metal are more used by women who must have something new. The old-time belting of colored silk in white, black and all the pretty shades of color are now again in vogue, and are simply fastened in front with a clasp. Just at this time, when war is tho talk of the day, the leather belt with a clasp in military style is quite the thing for the sum mer girl. It is usually quite large, and, if possible, must have a history of other war-days.—Woman's Home Companion. Gossip. Miss Mary L. Carter has been ap pointed postmaster at Williamsburg, Mass. The young women of the University of Chicago are to have a club house of their own. The Prohibitionists of Idaho nom inated for Governor of that State Mrs. L. P. Johnson, a business woman of Idaho Falls. Governor Schofield, of Wisconsin, chose Miss Maude E. Thompson, of Princeton, in that State, to christen the battleship Wisconsin. Tho Supreme Court of Ohio de clared invalid a law passed last win ter to legalize the appointment of women as notaries public. Miss Sophonisba Breckinridge, of Kentucky, has been made a fellow in the department of physical science in the University of Chicago. Miss Evangeline E. Whitney is the first woman to hold in New York City the position of assistant borough superintendent of public schools. Carmen Sylva is not the only royal poetess. The Empress of Japan also cultivates the muse and has dedicated a volume of poems to her husband. Miss Marie Jenney, daughter of Colonel Edwin S. Jenney, a promin ent lawyer of Syracuse, N. Y., has been ordained a Unitarian minister. The first Japanese woman to gradu ate from the University of California is Miss Una Yom Yanagisana, who has received the degree of bachelor of arts. Mrs. Zerisah Gould Mitchell, who died recently, was the last Indian princess in Massachusetts and was a lineal descendant of the famous Massasoit. Miss Jessie Parker, the new Mayor of Kendrick, Idaho, believes that the City Council is in harmony with her, and therefore anticipates no discord during her administration. Five thousand dollars has been given by Miss Catherine W. Brewer to Columbia University, New York City, for the establishment of a lec tureship of celestial mechanics. Rochester (N. Y.) University has decided to open its doors to women on tho same terms as men, provided that tho women of Rochester shall raise 8100,000 for the university. A fine library building, stocked with well-selected books, has been presented to Anaconda, Montana, by Mrs. Phcebe Hearst, widow of the late Senator George Hearst, of Cali fornia. Mrs. Margaret Sullivan, the first editorial writer on the Chicago Times- HeraUl, who is said to bo the high'est salaried woman journalist in this country, is spending her vacation at Edgemere, Long Island. Machines for aerating water have been presented to the Government by the National Society of Colonial Dames of America and the Woman's National War Relief Association, and Knickerbocker Chapter, D. A. R.,will make contributions toward the same end. . - tj Mrs. William R. Day, wife of the Secrotary of State, is the "first lady of the Cabinet." She and Mrs. Mc- Kinley were girls together, and are near neighbors when at home in' Can ton, Ohio. Mrs. Day, though an un assuming lady, has the charming qualities which promise to make her a popular and successful social leader in Washington.' . __ Seen in tho Stores. Colored lawn negligees. Homespun jaoket suits. Clan effeots in half-hose. Bordered sun umbrellas. Sandal ties for house wear. Lace barbs to use for cravats. String ties in bayadere stripes. Embroidered skirting flannels. Ginghams in prominent plaids. Printed piques and fancy duck. Satin stocks with a lace cravat. Plain and trimmed crash skirts. Black trimmings of every kind. Silk petticoats in ombre stripes. ' Washable white cotto'n face veils. Bordered taffeta for ruffled waists. Petticoats of gloria for hard wear. Combination bathing shoes and hose. Boys' Tarn caps in duck and crash. Net laco seen with a pattern in silk. Pineapple and Manila straw sailors. Ladies' hatboxes that hold six hats. Straw sailors of the national coiors. Bright green crocodile leather bags. Russian crash for house decorations- Small chatelaine bags for little girls. Children's sun hats of stitched lawn. Hat bands and belts in college col ors. Combination wing pieces for niillin cry. Small figured foulards for young girls. Foulards in small and medium de signs. Lavender bluo and bleuet shaded veils. Light-weight moires striped with satin. Turquoise, white and yellow quills, jetted. Striped denim draperies with scroll figures. Children's checked gingham sun bonnets. Colored lawn skirts and dressing sacques. Crash suits with embroidered all over dots. White pique suits with bands oi plaid giugbatu. Cadet blue pique and linen blouse and jacket suits. Girls' white serge dresses with mo hair or gilt braid. Cravenetted tailored gowns, long cloaks and capes. Dimity negligees with embroidery or lace garniture. Pique shirt waists having an em broidery of silk dots. Tailored cloth suits with pipings on all edges end seams. jS'i'i • •■#'rii'i'S 5 S'S'A'S''® Baltimore and Ohio engine No. 99, which has been Just laid aside at Graf ton, W. Va„ and will be consigned to the scrap pile, lias quite a history. It is one of the Ross Winans camel en gines and was built in 1851. There are only four of this class of engines now remaining. During the late war this engine was one of several captured at Martinsburg by the confederates, and hauled across the country by pike to Staunton, Va.. under direction of Col. Thomas R. Sharp. President John W. Garrett, after the war was over, hunt ed up Col. Sharp and appointed him Master of Transportation, in recogni tion of the ability displayed in that un paralleled achievement. There are 1,000 submarine cables in use all over the world, which have cost about $100,000,000. Beauty Is lliood Deep. Clean blood means a clean akin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathartic clem your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all impurities from the body. Begin to (lay to banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by tikiug Cas carets,—beauty for 10 cents. All druggists, i-ntisfaction guaranteed. 1 c, 2Ue, 25c, 50c. Italy produces more wine than any country in Europe. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, §l. All druggists. Sandwich, in Kent, was once a sea port, though it is now two miles from the shore. S PAINT rWALLSsOEILfNGSI I MURALO WATER COLOR PAINTS Si ■ FOR DECORATING WALLS AND CESLSKGS fr<>m yofir gr for or MURALO 1 ■ paint dealer and do j.dir own d-.irathiu. This material i,'.i II nil) I'IMSII to le applied K I well with'!- ] l U 'r h"*r'\vit H r* S as G'vmeiit. Milled in twenty-four tints and works equally as H I win""* eannot pnrrhMo this material E jj| THE JII'RALO CO., NEW BRIGHTON, S. I.'.'sEW YORK. R "Use the ?-?eans and Heaven Will Give You ihs Bljssia*." Neve? Nsglsci a L'saful Article Like 4 *l have been nelng: CMBCARETS for Insomnia, with which 1 have been afflicted for over twent;, years, and I can say that I have given mo mere relief than any other rcme- ! dy I have ever tried. 1 shall ccrtainlv recom- ' mend them to my friends as being alfthev are 1 represented." THUS. Gillard, Eirlu, 111. f CATHARTIC a x&swosvm MARK RIOJSTCINJD aSST^rSlckemWeakemor' £ ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... StrrHpy Rrrdy Coapany, Chicago, Montreal. >Vw Vorb. ::U HO-TO-BAC aarVTOg&k v .,- j j UNIVERSITY of NOTRE DAME NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. Claaaicfl, Let torn, Science, Law, Civil, Ale- i cliaiiicul and Klcctrlcul Knghiecring. Thorough Preparatory and Commercial [ Course*. Ecclesiastical students at special , rates. Itooms Free, Junior or Senior Your. Collegiate Courses. St. Edwards Hall, for I boys under 18. The 108 th Term will open September Otli, | 1808. Catnlogue sent Free on application to REV. A. MOKKISSEY, C. S. C., President. ■HmSA BTOPPEO FREE' ■ 9 Permanently Cured IS a ■ SK Insanity Prevented by B IB !El DH - "LIME'S GREAT ■ ■ w NERVE RESTORER PmlUtc cure for all *nmu , Fit* . RpiUptv. I ■i lurntl.t. .r V . :.i'.vil li' - P. N. U. 82 '93 " Tl r ANTED-Cae of bad health that It I P A X-S ' will not benefit Bend ft cts. to Rinans Chemical Co . NhwYork, for lo samples and lovu tcatlinoniala. Bicyclists and Dogs. It frequently happens that a bicyclist would like to drive off au annoying dog, but doesn't want to kill the beast, run the ri oiainless aT.; MAKES HILL CLIMBING mW% I WEASY - FOR GHAIH P f-iPI E MACHINES. IV 1 1 I. i Ihartforbs U j |Aj} •j j j Next Best. \t\ i / Other Moieli at p., . .wlw. \\ Low Prices. I ISIAN'DARD OF THE WORLD! POPE MfQ CO. HARTFORD.CONN. ART CATALOGUE OF COLUMBIA BICYCLES BY MAIL ADDRESS FOR ONE TWO CENT STAMP. QOOD AS COLDK ; Valuable Formulae: n. Men opportunity' incut vain -r.'rpti, 1 „ „mVI. VIS vYRvSJ",'n" ,-p"- ' "tlxl AMI. • ■fflro LATON \ CO., i'. IniuU tquare, New York City. FIENSIONTO •Successfully Prosecutes Claims. Lato Principal Examiner t-' fi. Ponoion Bureau, byraiuiuot war, lftudjodicatiujjola.Uie, utty since. H Best v uugb^6yrup.%aetoa^>^Ußci*i | MHE£K§E£E3Doi^E2^Q§[Z^nKfil