The Signal, 1894-5-10, Page 66
THE SIGNAL: GODERICH, ONT . THURSDAY, MAY 10. 1894.
R. W. McKENZIE
BACK TO THE OLD TOWN
ANO THE OLD BUSINESS1
I have purchased the Hardware Stock of
the ate C. Crabb, Bsq , at 50 cents on the
dollar, and have added unto it a fu line of
SHELF AND
'Heavy Hardware
C.
PAINTS, OILS, GLASS, &CA,
at Reduced Prices, caused by the lowering
of the Tariff. So that now I am prepared
to give my Customers better value than
can possibly be secured elsewhere. The
purchasing public know me well, and from
the large patronage given me while I was
here, I should say you knew me favorably.
I ask 'a renewal of your patronage, and
intend to please you better than ever.
R. W. McKENZIE,
CRABB'S OLD STAND, GODERICH.
THE SCIENCE
µ -OF MEDICI \ E.
viWONDERFtri. ADVANCES MADE
THE LAST FEW YEARS.
IN
MR. JOYS a...Otga% 01 TOtO!tT0 at1.ATVS
AN /treat/to. r. V/ tome IY'Tt&C,T -I-T-
Tttal.t tiateosee axe star RAC) OatAT-
Lt mutter KaL1ai . Asa.
Eram the Toronto Globe.
Very httie is heard by the general public
of the great discoveries to medicine, and
the countless scores of lives that are saved
by the advsocng knowledre of medical
.cieace. People who • few years ago were
left to drag out a miserable existeoce as
hopeless invalids, or helpless crippler, are
now, thanks to the advances medicine has
mode, restored to the fullness of health and
strength Mr. .Lobo McGovern, who re -
Bidet at No. 2 Alpha avenue, t0 the city,
• hss good cause to appreciate the truth of
l�..
;01tiove C•atemenu. %lr. Mct:ovum was
1'rmsrly l6 ws:tnt for agricultural imple
meati, and is well koow� io different parts
of Ontario. A (.lobe reporter who hal
heard that he had been restore( to health,
after an illness which threatened to leave
Wm a hepelees cripple, called upon him at
his residence recently, and was given the
following interesting account of his case .
"Ily trouble first &even," said Mr. Me.
jMyera, -two years ago whom I wet tlyi••••e-
in the Tillage pf Bolsi*, in the county of
L'rel. The trouble was all in m elbos
alai knees, and the doctors thou t it was
rheumatism. 1 ctutin't walk a wk with.
oat wanting to sit down, tad even to walk
ellen stain was hard work. it tllioted
me terribly. 1 was ell right in other ways
bas• for this terrible weakness. For • year
sad a half i offered from this, but by sheer
force of will held out against it, and man-
aged to pet a`out : but sic months ago 1
broke down completely, and bad to give up
any business. 1 then removed to Toronto,
a -id for three months after this 1 was in ter
r.ble shape. i was almost always oo0fised
to my bed, being able to come lows stain
ter • little while perhaps once • day 1
suffered all the time from a ternbleeoreaees
is the joists, and at this ionone' my •p
petite began to 1.i1, and 1 was only able to
eat the lightest food, and not much of Geo. I
1 oould tied nothtgg t% help me or give me
relief. All this e 1 was unable to do t
anything, and, b•. 1 not fortunately had a 1
little money lard by which enabled me to go
01.1 would hay• holo de dent upon my
faintly ter support. Well, while I was in 1
the terrible shape, m eldest .on prevailed
upon me to try Dr. �1'dh•mt' fink fells,'
and early in last .Idly 1 beg+e to us. them. I t
and 1 took them steadily .luring that mosth
and the two following mtaths Before the
Ent hos was 6wi.h.d i loran to get relief, f
and from that nut i steadily improved • itil
i emu able to diamtstind* the u,. of the
/'ask fill, feeling that 1 was fully resto: e 1
to health 1 am satisfied in my own mind , m
that had it sot bees ler lie. Williams' rink t
Ptl1. i west: boom still been helpless' and I T
estesri , and 1 have ranch resume to be d
thaakfM that my Bos persuaded rete to nes .
them ibask. to Ptak Pill. I awl now a
sew moa sad Wend sees to resume my
wet"
Or R ' Polk sans are • perfect
such diseases as rheumatism, neuralgia,
partial paralyiu, l000motor ataxia, St.
Vitus' dance, nervous headache, oerro:ta
procreation mut the tired feeling therefrom,
the after effort. of If grippe, diseases de.
pending upon'huwors in the blood, such as
ecrofu't, chrtnic erysipelas, eta fink Pills
give • healthy glow to pale and sallow coai-
plexions, and are a 'peel& for the troubles
peculiar to tl.e female system., and in the
case of nien they effect a radical cure in all
oases arising from mental worry, overwork,
or excesses of any nature.
Bear in mini 1)r. William* Pink Pills
are Id to bulk, or by the dozen or
hundred, and auy dealer who offers sub-
stitutes in this form is trying to defraud
pas and should be avoided. Ask you -
dealer for Or. WtUaams' l'ink Pills for pale
Peop'e and refuse all imitations and sub.ti
tate..
1)r. Williaina'Pink fills may be had of all
druggists or direct by mail from Dr. Wa -
liams !Medicine ('.mosey, Brock%ilk, flat.,
or Schenectady, N. Y., at 50 cents a box or
six boxes for $l 50. The price at which
these pills are sold makes a course of treat-
ment comparatively inexpensive as compar-
ed with other remedies or medical treat-
ment.
JAIL GUARDED BY A DESERT.
Beath frees Petranle.' Alasee Sete le Fel-
low tearare Frain les robes.
The Arima penitentiary at Puma is
unique +moor all other prisons of the coun
try in .. situation. 1t has the usual prison
wall and the customer; guard., but, act -00o
ing to the New York Sun, thus are merely
for dumb show. inside its walls are nearly
160 convicts, more than ball of whom are
servitor long terns for very rave crimes.
They are nearly all frontlentmen, quick with
the pistol and ready to take any risks to
wears their freedom. Fully one quarter of
them are Mexicans or half breeds, and there
are at least • score of Apache Indians, who
are regarded as more dangerous than any
of the other inmates. Thea fellows rage
against coofinement with the passion of •
wild beast in • cage, and were it not
for the extraordinary isolation of the pent
tent,ary, escapes or attempts at serape
would be recorded every week. As it is
the convicts know the almost absolute oer•
gaiety of capture should they get beyond
the prison gates. The convicts who come
from canon. part* of Arirona know that in
t'te thirty years of the prison's ezistaoce
truly one man has reached freedom across
the r.•rte! deesru that surround the prison,
while the bones of at least fifty who have
tried to gain old Mellon now lay whitening
a the depart.
The pri.os sta0ds on a high bluff at the
ascti.a of the Yuma and t olor&.lo rivers.
The only f.auMe avenues of escape tomtit'
r'tion are along the hoe of railroad or by
the Colorado river To follow the river ti
to Its certain of capture before the rosr,et
hes gamed • dutaaos of fifty piles To go
op or down the neer is to Weer. of recap
ore, for with the telegraph and the tele I
phone the authorities may head off any
(Crit',, in • few helms The only chaser
or the desperate man who yearns 1- r free
doe, is to strike across the desert to the
meth of Y ems sod make Inc the I $s of old t
Minter'Thte u • dutanoe of suety 100 1
deo over the most gedfora•ken territory
noluded withte tin bounds of the enentry.
he nursery, Brea in the winter, rises to 10
*green or 0d degrees in the shed., and to
sumer it frequestly goes up to 130 de
green Thera is •h.elstely an water. lairs
at • tris points, which ear he reached 'sly
by owe intimately acquainted with the rues
this dreary waste the prison officials kap
under regular pay two or three trained
Apache trailers, who are notorious for their
bloodthirsty character. Thea fellows re-
ceive the same pay for bringing in the ear
or the scalp of • fugitive that they get for
returning him alive. The consequence e
that when their paasious are •roamed by
pursuit they invariably stalk and kill the
fugitive. The convicts are fully aware of
this deadly Apache trait a0.1 they fear pct..
suit by these savageo more than they dread
the heat and thirst of the de,ert.
No oue has ever escaped these Apache
fiend, except a half breed Mexican, who,
about five years ago, escaped from the
prisoa grou.td, threw the trailer' off his
track by devices which outwitted even their
native cousin, and reached old !Mexico aft,r
almost unendurable lardsh.pa This fellow,
who was a man of unusual physique and
etamioa,owed his escape to the kndhearte.!•
nese of an Amencao rancher, who lived
near the line. This ranchmao, to telling
the story, said that one morale( he we.
surprised in gou.g out to his ratite coral to
find s man, with fact shriveled like an
India.. mummy and with clothes hanging in
tatters about him, standing by the corral
fence gnawing a green hide like • famished
animal Ile took the fellers., whom he sus-
pected at once to be au escapedcoovict
from Yuma,
ted
him with
a little milk and
brandy, and, •iter the fugitive had dept
forty eight hours, extracted from him the
story of his hirdship. He had bad absol-
utely nothing to cwt is me ,'l"Ir dare' tramp
t
ex' the 10ter101 of the 1".....1.•i sad.
few of the beans that grow on the Masi mite
els water was exhausted on the second day,
and he could only alleviate his thirst by
chewing on small pebbles, which he gather-
ed along his rout.. He escaped into :Mexi-
co, but died moos after, as • result of his
hardships.
The atrlgls of ladles eealplsg.
From the I'.ttaburwh Dispatch.
.lust when the mutilation of the dead by
tearing the skin from the head began will
never be known, for the origin is lost in :l.
mist of ages. the record extending tack be-
yond the mythical period of man's exist.
.ace. In the book of Manabees it is re-
corded that at the termination of one of the
buttes of which that bloody history is so
full the 'ictoriorts soldiers tore the skin
from the heads of the ean:;ntahed foes.
This would be evidence that the custom of
sealp taking was one of the iedalg.nee• even
of these people of whom we have reonrd in
the t epee
RI, that as it may, it is as established fact
khat the "atom is a universal one r, far as
savage man is concerned. Whether ethnolo-
gists ae build • them', of • common origin
of min from this or not, or whether this tae
be taken as an *eidetic* that the Indians are
descendent* of the tea leraelite tribes, be -
caw of their habits of eeceriag momenta
of hair from their (ellen enemies is .on,e.
,ing time alone an let.lop Re that as it
may, it is a fact that all Indian tribes, to •
certain cheat, tssalp their ertmai.e who
have fallen oh battle. Snse writers co the
subject of turban habits sod oedema deny
his, bet 1 believe that so tribe is abaolute-
y fres from the halal of having takes the
.etlp.
Rsrdeek Rlonel Ratters cure dyspepsia.
Rwrdnek Rifled Ritter" cert (1.smgpyen.
'bedeck Rktni Ritter• awe Rilk.sesesa
Burdock Real Ritter' own Headache.
Rerdoek RIon.I Ritter. eeleek all tb.
e sa r.tiene of the Rewda, t►ns earring
and stainer esoplaM .s.
IIHITJSH CBL GOSSIP
How Mr. Gladstone Appeared at
Sir Andrew Clerk Memorial.
the
HIS ENEMIES BECOME FRIENDS
The o1.1 Reanimates. is Maned to be •
venoms ►Itere le k..tl.b Polities
for ts.111ar N•e..ur►
Deal., db. I1.p.rled
isoir.rret.
l.oxt"N, May 7. --At a meta mutt
at wbieh Lord Salisbury, Mr. Balfour,
li.ncben and other t'ouserrative tendo
discussed the line of tactic* to be folio
by the Opposition, it was decided not
oppose tt:e second reading of the mist
tlou Lill, but rather to watch the
elsely,ui its subsequent stave.
Those who feared that hu rctirelo
from !oblto life would bring upon H
r
Gladstone just throe rrile wl.tch he d
signed to avoid, ars beginning to find tit
judgment justified. The t:rand UW
has aged loamy y. -art 111 the past flat
mouth* The pteture n.• monde at the U
Andrew ('lark u,em..rt..t meeting
Thursday was a piutul mite. Ile was
feeble, beut asci .geuan.u,, who leaned .apo
a stout dick even when addressing t
audience from his dour. His words we
brave, polished, well cu,weu an.t apprup
ate. Not • shadow bas et crossed h
shining intellect, out both *death and soi
'aro breaking. t•le i... -t ill. No speci
malady' is un.7erminin4 lei. wuarrell
vitrhty, but a gre.it change. which h
;trier too friends e$ii:,ore
t fail to
is making rapid progress. He has 1
interest in Iib. That is oration
F'tr sixty years ho found rest to nth
forms of activity-, and peace in new atru
glee. Work Isis been his only reenet:u
Fresh respe,rtsiitilites tooter tailed to rene
his visor. His friends are begiuui•tg
understand now what Sir Andrew Cis
saw clearly, that 4.r such a man to fold h
baud* meant despair and death. Ere
effort wit! be male tow to provide tl
warrior-state.nan w it It tasks slid ambit
o,iu
*efficiently imtrtaut to keep afire th
energy which craves an 1 feeds upon w
in lost tuts W041111.'..•,troy it. If bas et
thorium can be revive,(. Le may reuiat
many days • 6onre of what lb
Didion will be most proud. If not
thou nothing can long delay the end
The must remarkaole effect of Mr. Glad
stone's retirement has been clearly to
pbasized to connection with his first publi
appearance on '1'burrday. His enemi
have already become his friends Ile ha
completely ceased to be a partisan tiger
iu English polities. The Daily News sa
truly yesterday: '•1n a tow short weeks h
has outlived hatred, malice and ell n
charitableness. His fame stands as his
to -day as if it had Leeu pniriticd bj- o ha
century of the tomb. !loot great me
have to wait for such a t•iitdtcetion fo
passing the ping away of an entire generation
ppeal is to posterity. Ir Nr. Glad
atones' tale lbs m m .-' flaw fallen from th
eyes of his (lobo/mos almost at the ver
moment of his wuhdrewsl stun the pow:
tion which made him the most comrnaud
f
in figure in the world.'
The Daily Telegraph announces. Nen
the authority of Sir William Hereon rt him
sod, that the rumor that Sir William is
about to resign is entirely unfounded and
that he Inas not tie least intention of obeli his seat.
RIVER STE. ANNE DISASTER.
!gambit/sato Fear • Iteeeressee of theo
■.eewt Terrible Cat•elys.
u�
Mr.
re
wed
to
ra-
bill
eat
r.
e-
sir
Hail
..
r
01)
a
0
he
re
rt
is
ri t
o0,+
is
e.
oat
er
is
11.
w
to
rk
is
rr
le
us
at
hat
n
e
•
M
d
•
e
li
n
r
e
r
(,,-muco li..y 4-Jnd,ing from. all ti. -
reports of - the disaster at St. .tlben• .•u
far to hand, it is pretty evident that the
ratac:yam was entirely due to the under
mining of the ground by water above the
fall. when the earth was thrown into the
river and completely shot off the water
which was damned back till • depth of
seventy-five feet was readied. Then tbr
river changed its conn', and washed away
the earth for a mile autl • half long and
about a nide wide and to a depth of 1tYJ•
feet. There were seven houses carri.•.J
away and four Ines lost, boobies a great
number of domestic animals. The ricer
has Leen effectually blocked and ol.liged
to nuke • detour of at least three-quarters
of a mile from its former course, and does
dot regain its ane:eut 1ml for two lot:es
nown the 01.1 encamp
There 14 .and to be great danger of soo
oil• r ternbie disaster et any ,',n.nt.
Veto -day. L. the general surprise, the
water in the :o kine river wits (au topliars fallen seteral feet, Lot when the l'r•t.
emote of this 'widen ditaiunt{tau of IIt
volume was escertaitl.d, alarm once mote
took the place of icy among the local
population. It was discovered that the
river had again blooms blocked end that
4 gigantil sgm t�V d bound v, the
rel.__.
tat at. Mugu, oacatugpj `.: r•tet
and giving ries to • regular lake of set•eAl
nolo' in leuioh and breadth with a depth
of dearly 150 fee t. .Chem t!... dein fives
way, as it is feared it may a: any ir.AITAnt,
the cemsegnenees will be terrible, If nut
worm ihe,1 on Friday lest. Tse inhabi-
tants, however, have taken their precan-
tions and have r. moved from the neigh
borhood,
Med Frew the Fright.
Patna. May 7.-- 1 l.inb was erpl..1ed
in li.nrrhes with the intention of wreck
Ing the hors. of D.vrn, a civil engineer
for • mining compass). Nobody was in.
jur«I, but • Orontes .lied of fright half an
hour later
A ltewrreab Meer Maggot.
Aitrt!v, t'oI , thy 7.- A remarkable
na,pge•t has been taken oat of the Smuggler
mine here. It weighs 1,300 pnands and
contains silver to the value of $2,1',000. it
is the largest silver nugget ever known
and is almost pure.
T. e.,,wpt►N tide rawest* Canal.
Paan, May 7. -Th. Malin may. the
sums re.torsrt by 1)r. Cornelius H.,. and
11 1I. Faff.l and Mauch to the liquidator
of the Panama Canal Company will be the
nucleus .f tbe fresh eombtnation of capita
to eempieto the soma/
Th. Teaefwsse Awful Fate
Rmtus.liey 7.-A despatch from
Vienna .m thd .int of the Lugle,eb
toni.ta have bees taken and dead. The
y minted d of the party, a whoop boy, ie
reported to haw beds mussed alive
Os•holte eltmmK-R+A..s.
Naw Yost, May ik-The Cabello Rolfe
mer Sebald of Amnia" will bold he third
nss•kin al Pktubarg, N. Y , from July 11
t.. August 11 1104.
Taws D.streyed by rum
Cameos, Nev., Meg 7. -The *we es
Tahoe• 'se Mg t1wRlnsq
The Best Medicine.
J. O. IVILSov, Colitrattor and
Iinilder, Salpbu-r Nl•rim�t Teta.,
tilILt speaks of Ayer's Pills:
"Ayer's Pill" are Om beet mcdIelne 1
erne triad; and, in my judgment, no
better general Tomc.ly could be devised.
I have rtae.: ''mein In my family and
icoommettd.: theta to toy frirn,la and
employes foe more than twenty years.
To lay cert ' , knowb•.Ige, many rases
of the folio, .ut; complaint+ have been
completely a:.d
Permanently Cured
by the reit'• of Ayer's I'ilb alone: Third
day chills, /tttutl, sous, bilious fever,
nick lie el:u las•, rhrutu..Ilpm. 'tux, dye-
prp,ia.. unstipat.oa, mud hand colds. I
know that a trwd,•rato use of Ayer'+
1111x, runtinn.-.i for a few days or w.•ek.,
as the nature of the c pl:ttat required,
would be (coal as nblii• roue for the
disunion I have nau,.•,i above."
" I lore 1w4 n ecll:t:g snwlirine for
eleht y -ears, nest 1 can safely say that
Ayer's I'ills gine l. fico satisfaction
than any other fill I ever loll." -J, J,
Perry, t Pott*rleenla C. 11., 1's.
AYER'S PILLS
Pc. pared by Dr. J.C. Ayer d C... rowel I, Sfax,
Evory Dodo !ttoct!vs
Even a Orem ttlsskry Ceslth't Nal IL
A minister recently preaching on the Im-
portance of caring tor the body, which is
the temple of the Holy 1:host, spoke of
theta who defile this temple by saturating
it with tobacco sn-oke.. He meetioaed how
he had seen a brace monkey so his town•
tet up in a store with . rigor in his mouth.
The cigar was lighted, and by machinery
the monkey coati .Iraw the ewoke from
the cigar and purr it out agate. Toe works
stopped en one ocwion and the monkey
wee take.. apart to discover the cause,
when the works were found clorge.1 and in
a filthy cood.tion. The min:eter added
.. If tobacco smoke will stop the works of •
Wass monkey, what will it do to you!' -
l
.,u•'-
I too Lewis.
abll.b'. 11t•Irsee.
airs. 1. Hawk ins, t 'hat ta0ooga, Tenn.,
says • Shilol's Vit./dicer ' ave.( my life.'
I consider it the best remedy for • debilitated
system i ever used." For dyspepsia, liver
or kidney trouble it excels. Price 76 tents.
Soil by all drnggista e w
Dr. Fowler's
Extract of q ilei Strawberry is a reliable
remedy that can always he depended on
to cure cholera. cholera infantum, colic,
cramp'', di/witless, dyseatery. and all
loo.rue.s of the bovrele 1t is a pure
Extract
containing all the virtues of Wild Straw-
berry. one of the afest and surest.cars
for all summer complaints. corn
with other harmless yet prompt on
agents, well kuowu to medical sakes*+
The leaves
of Wild
Strawberry were known by the indans
to be an excellent remedy f -or diarrhea',
dysentery and looseness of the bowels;
hitt medical 'science has placed before
tie pobtic in Dr Fowler's Ext. of Wild
'Strawberry
a eompkte aro( effectual care for all
those distressing and often dangerous
complaints so cornnton in this change-
able climate.
It has stool the teat for 40 years, and
hundreds of lire* have been saved by its
prompt use. No other remedy always
Cures
somlber complaints so promptly, quiets
the pain so effectually and allays irrita-
tion so successfully as this unrivalled
prescription of 1)r. Fowler. If you are
going to travel this
Summer
he snro and take a bottle with you. It
overcomes mately and quickly the dis-
tressing summer complaint so often
caused by change of air and water, awl
is den a specific against sem-sickosea,
and all bowel
Complaints.
Primitive. Beware of Imitation+. and
substitutes sold by uassnmelos, defiers
for the sales of greatR ream
SYSTKM
AND news+ Trrg falr111Wm,
Specific and Antidote for
Itilpsee, weak and intpnvrish.d blood, dye
p gola,, elesplegenses,tpalpitabes of the
s
may, osilnplstil
neuralgia, fees of
demobsssoillls,i al
Wim► I k aims. femat.
'Amities sad egems1 istaltv.
LAM�A1'OiN, (000111, OIITARIO
J. M. MoLZOD,
resomesr ttai INossia tear.
Molemaosa. Rvsrsm Itsreesson esu bAsWod
re • in
es kirsir arse
SOME MORE NEW
WALL PAPER at 5c.
WALL PAPEIs at 7c.
WALL PAPER at lOc.
WALL PAPERS
The very choicest Designs and
Colors at the above Prices, with
Borders to match.
The very choicest and best
qualityof 121-2 c. and 15c. Papers
with Borders, Friezes and Ceilings
to match.
Ask to see our 25c., 36c., and
50c. Artistic Wall Papers ; only a
pleasure to show them.
PRAISER 86 PORTER,
glees' lWagvra Nell Telephone re.
Booksellers and Stationers,
HEEDS OF GENTLE SPRING -TIME
FOR HOUSE-CLEANING :
CLEILAX PURNITURZ POLI*+
makes ofd furniture look yew. You ono ay
ply it yourself. 1l cootie( be surpassed.
DZArs>ru.LL a see -PIPs VAR-
NIEL
Give the piper • coat nacre. puttied away,
and prevent ru►t.
PLOWU.S •ND GAADZIF BIRDS
lin p•okides.,
OUR CONDITION POWOER
For Ilur.t. and (attic.
ENGLISH HEALING 011
For all tut' and novae.
SASSAFRAS BLC00 ANO STOMACH
BITTERS.
OU LIVER PILLS.
Read our '• Huute-C'Ie:iling flints n Look et ery honer .,hou!•i .t
a1:.1 kev•p.
W. C. G00DE, C
SPRING AND SUMER
MILLIlYERY
\-
Ibit-io1 lately returned from a trip to the leading Millinery . arketa,
where 1 have been purchasing a stock of all that is new and artistic in the
Millinery Line for this $ea.aoo',i Trade, i atu now preparrsi to show you the
very
Latest Styles in Shapes and Trimmings,
A ('ALL IS RESPEC'TFt'LLY Sllf.ihITEO.
NIBO 0.11.11ERON,,
ersonal
Si•nno i, at hand, anal after Iluusetictaning you
- TEA OR DINNER SET
will want s
We have the Iarge,.t and C'I.,-,.pe,t Assortment in Town.
Before buying call and get prier*.
50 - TOILET _SETS - 50
\rot .l.•iign, to select from. Inflection inviter(.
031A.S. gra NA IRN.
WHEN OIJ STRIKE
a match and it doesn't light ----an-
other, with the same result, and so
on, you waste both time and money.
Yon don't have to
STRIKE HARD
with EDDY'S MATCHES nor to
strike often. One match, one light,
every time.
Eddy's Matches.
UNDERTAKERS.
J- BROP a r ell: SON
Hare added to their pnwtetnt besinee one of B. J. Nash's Latest Style
of Aty Hearses, also •be finest Iionic el funem d filydtiines in the cootie
and are sew prepared to oondues funerals at prbes ttsssostab1e
This department will be strictly attended to by his eon Wiliiasm, w10,
is the eePie1) of the late -D. Genies 4. the peat tee years, has a tier
knowledge of (1.e imam, oma, and by pt;' attention Lepel to share pert 01 IM
pmt patronage. Remember the piece--Weehet, es year way to the Pell
MVO tugs a oval
J. BRoPR a4 ltrN_ .