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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-11-06, Page 7irk t tl Ct "Newilayme." • W AAUNG IN A.F*W 1. Three "Now I lay me down to sleep." ixreo Women. Wito Aro Not Afraid Pf W11d How to -night fond mesnories keep, casts. Roused m, y_ soul their Wi.ggs�� of care, As•I breathe my childhood's prayer• Three women footed it in July and once I lisped it at her knee, August last from the Indult Ocean 200 Who is miles apart from me, miles to Mashonaland. Whey were mem- But her lips are on my brow, ers of an Episcopal order, says the New And the pant is with mo now. ':ork 'Sun, and were trained -nursers -Rent out: Once I almost smiled to see, o take charge of the hospital which has Words so simple learned by me 'been started a Ia that new country. • The All!'kly heart has found since then bishop of blaekonalancl expected that pro They're the mightiest words of men. p ,I„ , y vision would be made arleaery these -yo f, '=-Now;I laverre dawnto-sieep,` . -- women into the interior, but the force of I pray thelerd my soul to keep"; porters was unexpectedly small and, the Guard inci ira° am sin and strife, women said theywould endeavor to walk. licerp e �tiAG,10 way or life. Mira° extraordinary courage they Set out on "if I die before I wake, the journey. There was no waggon road May the herd my spirit take." and for much of the way no paths were Here all creeds clay meet and .blend Faith's beginning and its end. found The party suffered terribly Peace, my heart and chase to weep; at times from thirst. At night the bush was always alive with lions, "New I lay mo down to sleep." .�� - y'•-• arteee:ews'etraeT2'ases?.,.seir.1tinesh' as1.eese'ense• -` `l$yaTnnein;`=hvisnaln:n""l 1i:7�iIY'(ire'--''2L11d' e '' m Father t Father 1 this is rest. 1 animals. At one time the party 'observed —filar -tint Mabel Spalding• two lions drinking quietly thirty rods from b t b TEA TABLE GOSSIP. TIIAT OVERCOAT. Now winttay clouds do sweep the sky, And damp, raw breezes blow, o .awn -shop man's cold, steely oye, For to ! upon his groaning shelves Lie many a coat and cloak , Whose owners now must hump themselves To get them out of soak. —Enblan haat a Waterloo survivor. DIIruTIl:1l:lCu-. 11 1s lEnpevle #x Veron:M •in .the. Damp,. Valleys. The Milroy lectures this year were on the natural -history and prevalence of diphtheria The lecturer gave it as his opinion that soil and geological formation have something to del with it4. grevalemce_.r..that.,ihis especially common in damp valleys, and that in , Eng land it is most prevalent during the three last months of the year. The greatest number of the.persons at,_ tacked ai'e between; 2 and 12 Sears of age, and the liability is greatest between 2 and 5 them. The grata often exceeded twelve feet in height for miles and miles, and some days the little caravan marched through incessant rain. They suffered severely front tate dosertioi:1-11- their porters, and of the thirty -twit earri.ers with whom they started only four remained at the. end GI senhs enease, 'Y:ex '.xe• _:.iii "'WV' ,sleep in, and altogether thby made the joueney under conditions which would have tried the strength and courage of the stoutest men. They safely reached their •—Austra'Ila boafi 11 -in caterpillars. destinatidn, however., and they are the first -_alviiri'lra� c7il, ODin-a`rFeeea`siires. white nwomen to ii�ve ►ilrzde"such a , luurney- ' to the interior of the others travel- Manyattadfks of diphtheria are accom- panied by simple sore throat and tonsilitis, and many apparently simple attacks of sore throat have really an infections character. The Same fact has been noted on this side of the Atlantic. „1 " . sseichsammel'oelessore> tYiemin Ssalcsxn Clerk. scarlet fever as odrfieations of the same disease, and the occurrence of both at the , "'Tis sweet to be remembered," as every - same time in the same family seems at first one knows. But to be remembered for an sight to countenance this view. But the theory is disproved by the entire absence of diphtheria in several thousand cases of scarlet fever treated in the London fever hospital.. - -Hun —Hungary has 22,000,000 acres of forest. InAfrica, g Y ling either on steamboats or being carried —An old bachelor is always ready to tell on hammocks or chairs. you how you ought to bring up your chil- dren, —Queen Victoria has prohibited the use •el tobaceiwithinetheepreeincts-of-Windsor -Castle. THE REPORTER. Little night assignments, Little scoops by day, Make the sad reporter,' Prematurely gray. Chieapo Tribune. —Empress Eugenie was just 26 years of .age when Napoleon III. fell in love with her at a ball. —" I shall depend on your support dur- ing this campaign," said the trousers to the suspenders. —The dentist who -Announces that he will spare no pai d, nil teeth well is the man' to keep awn ` ss,„. Her father' tolled the bell And her inothe dusted out, Her brother blowed the organ And her sister helped about. But she was dressed in laces, And no work might her defile ; So they utilized her gown en -train For sweeping up the aisle. , World's Fair Plates. • Florida, at -the recent World's Fair eon Yentiorr, decided" -to . raise `$I00,000' Tor representation in Chicago in 1893. VIP THIRTY YEARS. ,1� 41, Johnston,, N. B., Mardi. IIS ig$9.- I was troubled for thirty IMAM with ...pains.-in,'U side, .wlii h iucreaaed .and became very bad. 1 used 1'�' i JACOBS 01 and itcornplete[y cured. I give it all praise." ?1 S. Th(. RIS `i ALL RIGHTI ST. JACOSS OIL DID /T." TIME BIGGiE9T Fedi,1 D. C. N. L, dl. 91 rsu.a�:.....".y'.'=_=a%''TMr' „tr."' r.,•.,:wfa':t'� + T- - nese ginner :•n�NL"3J'd:G".3 '.v:.P ewes s" -..en e*i7v.=r. pe e` �....es e , r wasegemhesseanteessnesteeseneesensinannieeneste satin' f.. A New;York company that manufactures self-winding .clocks has offered to furnish free of cost all the time -pieces that will be needed in the buildings during the Fair. The magnitude of the building 'operation now going on at Jackson Park can be sur raised from the. fact that an average of from thirty-five to forty cars of construc- tion material arrives daily. The Expo- sition buildings are rising with wonderfu rapidity. • . 'Between 340 and 350 men are employed in perfecting the landscape features of the Exposition site. It is the intention to make the grounds exceedingly beautiful by walks, drives, lawns, terraces, fountains, shrubbery and flowers. Several hundred thousand dollars are to be expended for this purpose. Tho women. of Illinois, who have the spending of $80,000. of the $800,000 which —Rosalie—Do you keep a diary ? Grace .the State appropriated .for its representa- --Y-e•s. I've kept one for the first week in tion at the Exposition, have •been granted, January for the past seven years. • for their exclusive use, ono -tenth of the —Queen Victoria is said to rule a, realm space in'the Illinois "Building, which, alto enibracin. r 367,009,000 subjects. This is a gcther; is something more than an acre and greater numbeof people than ever before .•a half. The women will make a separate sat under the shadow of one throne. —The Duchess'. of' Portland. has 950 women pledged to her Society -dor the Pro- tection of Birds. None of them will wear or encourage the wearing of any song -bird's 'plumage. ' —Among the exhibits at the Fryeburg .(Me.) fair, last week, were a plow that has been in use for 115 years, and 'a picture framed in a board cut from a. pine log 120 years ago. SEVERAL WISHHES. I wish I had a thousand tongues To sing my lady's•praise ; 1 wish I had a thousand oyes To sce her winning ways: I wish I had a thousand banks, With all, their legal tender— A thousand banks that I might buy • Itieh presents for to send her ; 1 wish I had a thousand hearts To squander love upon her. And I wish I had a thousand swords - To kill the man who won her. , ' The probable explanation of the occur - condition of the throat in a family, affected by scarlatina affords a spil favorable for the reception of the diphtheritic poison. . When diphtheria does occur in connection with scarlatina, it is almost always as a sequel to i -t So; crenthe-so -'ttiroasts rril'e to bad hygienic surroundings and imperfect drainage furnish excellent soil for diph- theritic microbes. Many eases of diphtheria end unexpect- edly in fatal heart failure, sometimes when the patient has seemed in a fair way to recovery. '-In - -such-- ..eases ar post -trier -tem examination reveals a fatty and granular degeneration of the muscular fibres of the heart. This fact emphasizes the need of prompt treatment to secure the speediest possible recovery. It follows, ton, that- in all cases, until complete recovery, everything should be avoided which 'makes demands on the heart, a very slight effort being often fatal ; and that the physician should always make a careful examination of the heart, and ad- vise accordingly.— Youth's Companion. —In Turkey, saloons are called Christian ,drinking places, because it is only foreigners, from nations called Christian, who keep them, and they are not allowed within two .hundred and fifty feetof a Mohammedan place of 'worship. —New York World : When Edwin Arnold appears in full dress his coat glistens with the orders conferred. on him by kings and potentates, which would, indicate- to .a certain ,kind of intelligence that literary fellers " are looking up. exhibit. The Palace of. Music' at the Exposition, it is now, expec ted, will ',stand on the great island formed by the lagoons, and will be surrounded by a magnificent garden of flowers, ten a :res or more in extent. This location is desired by Theodore Thomas, Musical Directorof the Exposition,' but has not yet been finally passed upon by the 'Board of Directors. The structure wil measure.150 by 250 feet, and cost approxi mately $100;000. A mammoth labor congress is to be 'held -in Chicago in 1393, under, the auspices of the Worm's Congress Auxiliary of the World's Columbian Exposition. John Burns and Tom Mann, who led the great London dock strike to a successful issue in 1889, have promised to be present, as have many other prominent labor leaders. Wm. E. Gladstone and Cardinal Manning have accepted honorary membership' and will submit their views in writing. T. V. Powderly, Carroll D. Wright, and limner - ether's deeply interested in labor questions, 'aro earnestly supporting the inovesnent. act of foolishuess ? Well, even that is sometimes moue in a, man's pocket. Said a New York gentleman'tte a Herald - porter : _ I Went-0thepostofiice theothepday to buy e dollar's worth of one ent t�►.;,. 'it flashed upon me that I had given the clerk a $5 bill and hurried off without my change. The next morning I went the first thing to the postoffice. • Tho stamp clerk was .servings x-long"11ae'"of`eustorrleT terak my place at the foot of the atring. How un- likely it seemed that he should remember me among the crowds th.rt had been at his window the day before ! As I got near him, however, and began to speak, he took up from the counter before him -four- $i .bills and -silently •gassed -them' through the -window. " Thank you," said I. "I didn't know but among so many fools' you might have forgotten me, : - " Yes, I might have," said he, as he reached out toward the Ilan behind me, " but you were the most conspicuous one yesterday. Twos, did you say, sir ? " 0, woman, despairing and wretched, • Dreading, vet longing, to die, Hear -the glad chorus that rises, Filling the dome of the sky: Sisters, be glad, there's help to be had ; No longer bo miserable, gloomy and sad ; Lost health. regain," rings out the refrain, "Poor creatures, be heathy and happy again.' How ? By taking Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, the world's greatest remedy', for all hinds of diseases'peculiar to women. It brings back tone and vigor to,the system weakened by -those distressing complaints known only to women, which snake life such a burden. .It restores relaxed • organs , to a normal condition. It fortifies the system against the approach of diseases which often terminate in untold misery, if not in death— which is preferable to the pain and torment of living, in many instances. -It is the great gift of scientific skill and reseal eh to woman° and for it she cannot be too grateful. .It cures her ills when nothing else can. It is guaranteed to give satisfaction or price ($1.00) returned. Absolutely sold on trial Ills arms with strong and firm embrace • flet dainty form enfold • And she aitt blushed her sweet consent„ Whenhe " And do you swear to keep the troth 1" She asked with loving air ; IIs gazed into her upturned face, "es, •by yon elm I swear," a A. year passed by, his love grew cold, 0f his heart shed lost the helm ; P'h,11.1.c n icl.,bls,.f+.1.111,:h t. ,be fant•wa s—thi', The tree was slippery elm. " Your Money or Tour- Life :" Shah a demand at the mouth of a "six- shooter," sets a man thinking pretty lively 1 With a little more thinking there would be less suffering. • • Think .of_the terrible results of neglected consumption ! which -might easily be averted by the timely use of Nature's Great Specific, Dr. 'Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The Genial Candle in the Stove. Imagination 'tie said, will work. wonders. This• fact was well illustrated in a Church evening and victims were ethe proprietor, was out his fully placed intim stove a lighted which shed a goodly volume of ut gave no heat. The first customer street store 1 many. -clerk ca, candl light, to arrive wore an overcoat: He -sat near the stove, but soon left the stove with the remark : " It's too 'warm here for me.' Victim,No. 2 drew his chair up to the stove with the remark : • " Feels good these even - Tugs." Then carne a portly and dignified gentleman, who took a seat near the stove. Said he : " One sensible man in town, anyhow:" Just then the proprietor of the store and a friend entered and took a seat. Presently it evidently became too warm for the proprietor himself. Ile partly opened a window, requested his clerk to close the draught of the • stove and then sat down again. When the stove door was opened they all adjourned to the street to get warm.— West Chester Local News. Consumption, which is lung -scrofula, is a constitutional disease, and requires just such a thorough and effectual constutional remedy ! Taken in time, before the •lungr- tissues are wasted, it is guaranteed aradical {-cure 1. Equally .certain in all, scrofulous affections end blood disorders. Large boti;les, Ione dollar, of any druggist j .. C Tea." 1►roLibited Newspapers. The postmaster has received notice that the following papers are non-transmissable by mail' in Canada, and if any ,come into his hands they arc to be sent to the • dead -letter office at Ottawa : Sporting World, Police Gazette, Household Companion,; Illustrated Companion, Welcome Fs•iend, of New York ; Sunday World, ,Detroit ;. Our Home and Fireside Magazine., People's Illustrated .Journal, Practical Housekeeper, Portland,, Maine : American Cottage Home, Americana Fireside and Farm, American Homestead, Am•eriran Ilobsehold Journal, Jersey City ; The Home, Boston.—St. Thomas Times. Tun Progressive Benefit Order is organ izing lodgt.:i in Ontario. Otte, we believe, was organized in Stratford on. Tuesday evening last. The New York Herald, in a recent issue, said : • George S. Duryea', State Commissioner of -Banking and Insur- ance of New Jersey, yesterday 'caused the arrest of Charles J. Brown, 'of Newark, for violation of the insurance laws. The pris- oner is the Newark agent. of.:the Progressive Beech!, Order,' and has, been doing business at No. 729 Broad street. This is the first,. attack on the short-term benefit orders in Newark, end it is expected .that it is but the beginning of an onslaught on the whole system. Nine charges are • made against. Brown. They are tor soliciting business for, a life insurance and health insurance • coin - •any, for recei'dng money in that com- pany's name and for doing a general insur- ance business contrary to the insurance law of 1879, which provides that all insurance companies operating in New Jersey must be incorporated under the laws of that State. The Progressive Benefit Order, it is alleged, failed to comply with this law. For each of the nine offences the 'lase prescribes k penalty of $500. Brown's bail was fixed.at $1,000 and his trial set down for October 20th. .Is this •the same Order that. is oper ating here ?' If doughnuts are cut out an hour before they are fried, to ellrrw a little time for rising, they will be much lighter. Try cut- ting at night and frying in the morning.. Gurney's : Standard : Furnaces Are Powerful, Durable, EconomicaL THOUSANDS INN USE, giving .every satisfac Write foracatalog the leading'1 articulars The E. 8 0. Gurney Co HAMILTON, ONT. - � !. Philadelphia Record.: The following is "Th.t 13nctor Hills Mamie Lean Wills,•• the wording of invitations h 1• n'vitations scent out for w at but Sage's Catarrh Remedy costs less than is termed a "0 Ten„", iu,Germantown : "A - one doctor's visit. Catarrh is a loitths'ome, collation and cheerful collection. of cunning dangerous disease, and the time has come capricesavill be completely compassed by a when to suffer from it is a dn.sgrac•e. No comely clique of charming country cousins, person of culture and refinement cares to who contract to courteously cater to cap- infiict upon his friends his offensive breath, tivating couples. The cuisine contains a disgusting hawking end spitting, and dis-• cutely contrived conglomeration of concoc- agreeable efforts to breathe freely•andclear tions. Cash consideration, 25 cents, don- . the throat and nose—hence the cultured and tidental currency or copper coins. Qonsid- refined use Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Bring that our citizens may .he confused And no wise and prudent man cares to run concerning the character of this collation,, the risk of leaving his. family without a pro- the consistent coarse is to come and C on tector, by letting his " slight catarrh " run Wednesday evening, Oct. 2Sth, at the into•seridus or fatal throat and lung troubles, Parish Building of St. Luke's Church. hence the wise end prudert use" Dr: Sage's Courses : Cereal catnpoundsl creature cheer, Catarrh Remed. rrhe proprietors of this chopped composition, crystally clear, cold remedy are se,, confident of its curative carved creature', encumbers, cider cured, A they 'have made a standing coagulated curd, country cousins' comfort, ,•rl. b crisp properties, t offer of a cannot cure. ward of $500 fora case they churned cream, China co ,cur y ! cuttings, clam chowder and congealed 1. cream." • Conversational Foibles. Lives there a girl with soul so dead' i .Who never to a man hath said: I don't like flattery. Other "girls may do that; but I'm dif- ferent. How many other girls have; you said that to ? Ho was an old Hanle of mine. Ner one can make.?ne. jealous. 'Ti ver belietie what a man says. I know I'm not:pretty ; but — Please tie my shoe. I hate a saint. I should say it, of, her, perhaps; but she Au Exacting Girl. d recently intervened • A Maine judge led topre- New York Herald : She—No, I will not vent a waste of ~orris. • Ile was sitting in marry you.„. chambers ; and seeing from the piles of He (bitterly)—Thanir., yet. I have done papers in the lawyers' hands that the first everything I Could to please you. (Veryc s w•as likely to be hardly contested, he bitterly.) Is there anything I can do for asked : „What is the amount in question ?” you before I leave you forever. "Two dollars," said the plaintiff's counsel. She—Oh, if yon scall} feel under olaiiga' "I'll la it," said the judge, handingover tions to me you may mention the fact that I the money.. " Call the next ease." L over have declined you to your friends. It will on Journal,save me heaps of tronhle. A great: naval exhibition ;.is to be 'held at Moro than $1,000,0011 was received in Liverpool next year, • London during the last; year in dog taxes. The new Lord Justice General of Scotland The shoes worn by Luther at the diet of is a prea'cher's soul and his name is James Worms riT Historical Museum at Dresden.reverent care in ��� nothing tncirick Bannerman Robertson. Only that tery Gracefully Turned New York TVoa'id : The marriage sof young Lord Duclley,'dthe son of the well- known English eauty, Lally Dudley, -brings to lighta pre tilittle incident. Wishing to inform his mother of his in- tention, he kissed her and said, as a gallant Son should : t' My dear mother, as I cannot marry the moat beautiful and charming woman in all England, it being forbidden"to marry one's parent, I have decided to offer my hand and heart to Miss Gurney." 101118111111111.111111111111.111111111111 .A.BE NOT e. Pur- gative filedi- cine. They aro a BLOOD nureDER, TOMO and REcoN- SrnuceoR,aSthey supply in a condensed form the substances actually needed to en- rich the Blood, curing' all diseases coming , from Poon and WAT- ER- 'BLOOD, or from VITIATED HUMORS in the BLOOD, and also invigorate and BUILD Ins,. the --Bnoon sad SnsTEM, when broken down by overwork, mental worry,disease, excesses and indiscre- tions. They have a SPECIFIC ACTION On the SEIMAL SYSTEM of both'men and women, restoring Lows vision and correcting all IRREGULARITIES and. SUPPRESSIONS. Didn't linmov iter A'lace. New Bork Tres : hired girl—And -hat do you give me notice for ma'am ? Mistress -You evidently don't know your place. . H. 0M.• --Ain't_ I always been respectful, mteam ? /M. --Yes, but you don't seem to know your place, for every time `you go out at night'it takes you till .after 12 o'clock to find it. A neglected case of cold in the head may cost you your life. Why run the•risk when Nasal Balm offers yell 0 speedy relief and certain cure. Sold by all dealers. Try it. COPP'S WARRIOR HEATER The most beautiful, economical, powerful hot air wood heater ever invented ; suitable for dwellings, stores and churches. Sold, by leading dealers. Write for descriptive cir ciders to the .manufacturers, the CO1'P BROS.,.Co., (Limited), Thtmilton, Ont. EVERYpl pS Who finds bis mental faa G��9 pities dull pt failing, or his physical powers flagging, should take these Pints. They will restore has lost energies, both physical and mental. should talo thersi. oressions and AVERY OMAN They cure all snp- entail sickness when ilu glceted moa inevitably „y®uar 'ty� �j rihoydtll:etlleSehe ro• `p9� iNiitl611 �y liyi !'boy �ylll curethe xo- stilts of youthful bad habitat, and stxeugthen the system. slnouid take them, YOUNG WOMEN These PLLLS ;sill make thorn regular. For sale by all druggists, or will be sent upon receipt of price We. per box), y g TIT.E". WILLIAMS' ML71'r CO. 73rorh.;ille. Ont. A family living near Augusta, Me., have menies them wheneverthey r} o to the city ich oonp Sun- days or market days. AGENTS WANTED ON SALARY Feir WE AR nna rvrr,'MrnorcnnovicA. Dt4,04. 0RnNU or cominisslon, to handl,., the New Patent Chem- ical luk Erasing Penefl• Agents making $50 per��week. 1Nonroo Eraser M't""g Co., LaCrosse, Wis. Box 831. SALESMEN. wsrashnNitlS-E'oIVttgt ore! ug NVhdlesale • and• retail trade.' Liberal • alary a •4 evpeilses •, paid.. Permanent position. Orley nth -ended for wages, advertising, te. For fall particulars and reference address CENTE.N1siLAL MEC. CU.. CII1C-GO, ILL. THE CANADA. BUSI'N'ESS COLLEGE, • 'Hamilton, Ontario. Established 30 year-. Tho finest equipped and ni°st succe Allan Canada. It has over a Thousand Graduates in busint so • . positions.• Send fin. hand I!ne catalogue to PrincipalR. E. GALt%AOHl it, 31;aruil o' 'pIl' =1 14 U UUEr I ABLE " POCKET LAMP « and CIGAR LIGHTER.' Post %!.•aid Glc.• i'g••nts wafted, Dealer 1 supplied Cirt•rilnr for stamp. Novelty Introduction Co., Ilex 515 A, i,alt, Ont. 1r, Nat cat i., r ,11•0 u, a', 1‘47, (.01,11 -'• '- 11)Vwa6.r l• it -1.4:. si ordln AU 1'099 in ,•.H in•::iy, •. 1 . g Losses o,-vnunnr•tm. it',•r, h I's , •t'Al ;, nu • 11 oIn- dlreretIop. it will irwhe..rntc r• •'. Segal UUCCCesaS•Uarantee, AUdrnar,�•7�!,•..•hIt MI.'0per . box Oanrani+[r,,eAlyd A'rai..-#t•nae,rletter tC Pure!da Choraiea' Co.. «+•aa""e��olt. (limy* coo �Jitir a {d"' ,:21.! t Srr• • 1}i1311)-kHtH0Al,iiltwr�! u ,rrvuue Ntx.. ew.. a ora ahAP •.,-r rnn3c arising. '.a;.`,:lPIIi1AIrE �iE er;F RCI' ifDY ier n,mnt 0r (It h.•r+t 0 I4 3 aro•13103. 1111, 3 POSITIVE li(tlflAl REMEDY inraninlre to Mob tt1•rntin, taro a. e. I+rlro 0rieh finnnvic Two Dollars, in ,,all form, Sent ln itnin, $eared pack. 3ea with 0,3303. 0normoes Bala Gr ARAV'rF 110 1•rili:N. PAD"Sealed pamphlet freta DR rOB:2i PEEEOY.BOE. b08.WLNDS08,.0• 7.VTIOn'of the lids, ulceration of the glands dim, weak- ness of sight, from any cause. As A 1.TP SALVE it is Unparalellcd, and should he kept on every Lady's Toilet and in gen tlemen's pockets for•iminodinte n' G� to teor.,ehappodhands atS •1 cold sores, pimples, t or roughness of the skin, its healing and soothing powers aro truly gold. golden Eyo Salmis sold r Pilea it is by all drh its ugglisin ts. Paso's Remedy fortaatarne Is the Best„ Easiest to (Tae and Chestnut. Sold by rl:•uggists or dent by malt, See. :clttne, Warren. 1'a., II! , A. beware of Initiations. NOTICE AUTOGRAPH ilk' 4 ' �1ro aaAri" B HE &e U!NI frir'jt'!•0 i�S t, 3 n 4