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The Exeter Times, 1894-6-14, Page 3is "nIy the Scars Remain," Says HztrY Uw. QN, of the James Smith Woolen Xachinory Co., Philad elphia, Pa,, Who cern.. floc as follows:. "Among the many testimoni als which I see in regard to cor, twin medicines performing cures, cleansing the blood, etc,, none impress ine more than my Own case.. Twenty years ago, at the age of 18 years, I had swellings come on my legs, Which broke and became run• ning sores. Our family phy- sician could do me no good,and" it was feared that the bones would be affected. At last, my good old Mother Urged Me to try Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I took three bottles, the soros healed, and Y have not been troubled since. Only the scars remain, and the memory of the .Past, to remind me of the good Ayer's Sarsaparilla has done me. I now weigh two hundred and twenty pounds, and am in the best of health. I have been on the road for the past twelve years, have noticed Ayer's Sar- saparilla advertised in all parts of the United States, and, always take pleas- ure in tolling what good it didfor me." *Ayer's Sarsapariiiam Prepared by Dr. T. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Cures others, willcure you NERVE NERVE BEAl-1b area Heir wa- eavery that cure the worst cases of ]BEANS Nervone Debility, Lost Vigor and i7<.iling Manhood; restores the weakness of body or mind caused by overwork or the errors or ex,.ceases of youth. This Remedy ab- solutely cures the most obstinate cases when all other TI.ELTarEi(T8` have failed event() relieve. -old by drug• slate at ai per package, or six for $5 or sent by mail on receipt of price by addressing THE JAMES MEDICINE CO., Toronto. Ont. Write for pamphlet- Sokd in— Sold at Brownina'a Drug Store, Exeter, CENTRAL Drug Store FANSON'S BLOCK. eve A full stock of all kinds of Dye -stuffs and package Dyes, constantly on hand. Winan's - dondition Dowd- •er,, the best 5n the mark- et and always resh. Family r©cip- ees carefully prepared at Central Drug Store Exete Cs LUTZ.. FUL clue® BY t ; 1 .. mos. as, onion. Worst Kind of Scrofula; rutin Sins, -x liad,.an abscess on niy breast: zed sorefula of tho very worst kind, the doetore said,1 got so weak that Icoul dnot walk around d thehouse without taking hold of charsto sopport toe. ,The doctors treated ted mo for three year%`eld at Iasi; t said 'there %n o hopeo for Inc.lashed if x uyi ht take B.B ,B.andt q h ey said t would do MO no h 1 al7n " so tv x began to take It. and before throe bot to a were used felt greatbenefit, have now taken six Lottlea and nut ,tioarly well. >" flud Burdock. Blood Bitters a grand bleed purifier and very good for•children as a spring medioiue. NAB, aAMEs Cl3[ASiil, 'raikford, Ont, The Lord Mayers of London during the past twenty years have :collected a little .over t2,000,000 for charitable and batt• ,avolont purposes., E FARM. Study All The Conditions. To intelligently discuss the dairy subject. in all its bearings, we mush of necessity refer to all conditions so. long as those con. ditions prevail. It. must be borne in mind, as in everything else, low priced articles are 'frequently a failure, Ultimate and permanent success can only be insured by such liberal expenditures as the situation may require. As a rule, false economy leads the way to failure of those very features that are essential to permanent and satisfactory results. Investigation will show that one of the reasons, for the unsatisfactory results that frequently pre- veil in the dairy industry is dun to an in- sufficient study of the requirements and conditions, and consequently of the, imma- ture -plans. mnta-ture-plans. We ought to study well -matur- ed and complete plans, and make approp. riation aufoient to do the work thorough- ly, and that provision should be made to execute the work teeecouomioel as possible. The first subject of great importance in dairying is what breed and how to breed a dairy 'cow ? Breeding is an rt a hick is .governed verned byfewrules. rii a which, followed will give theo de- sired results. The first axiom that like will produce like, by which is meant that animals of certain peculiarities of form, color, oharacter, disposition, habit and quality when bred together, will inherit the general or mingled qualities of the parents. This is the point to be considered by every dairyman, who should learn by careful testa which are the best cows suited to his use. Then feed them liberally to develop their qualities to the fullest extent. Acow ought to lie fed on the theory that the more she eats the more milk and butter will bethe result. A cow is a maohine for converting food into milk and butter but cows are not alike as to capacity. Some eat more than others. Each cow' should be judged individgally as to her capacity. Breed them to males of known inheritance, and follow the same mode with their progeny. The male should be selected from some pure breed, and after careful scrutiny of the antecedents, and especially of his parentage. The bull is more than one-half of the herd. Good breeds are originated by care- fully weeding out iuferior specimens. If this process be not continued, the breed will degenerate. The next feature is how shall we feed them as economically as possible ? Of course this must vary as to location. What would suit one section would not suit another. Soiling is adapted for high-priced lands near large cities, where the market for milk and fine butter yield a sufficient compensation for the large investment of capital, and other expenses which relate to a highly improved location. It would not pay to pasture cows where land costs more than $100 per acre. The products of cheap land are also cheap, and where the land is more costly, necessarily the products are more expensive in proportion. Therefore the dairyman whose farm costs five to ten times, as much as that of a western or southern -farmer, could not possibly com• pete with him making butter or cheese ; the cost of transporting these products to market by rail is much less than the dif- ference in cost. Again, where the sum- mers are hot and dry, which quinkly burn up the pastures, consequently the pastures become bare„ and the flow of milk neces- sarily rapidly decreases. Therefore we must look to some mode to meet this em- ergency, and nothing will give the desired results better than soiling crops, which aro cut and fed to the herd. The result will be a large production of milk of the best quality ; the cows are therefore kept up to their fullest productive ability by abundance of this succulent food, helped by the use of such concentrated foods as can be purchased cheaply, and that are suitable for the production of milk and butter of excellent quality. If a farmer had a herd of twenty native cows, and bought a registered Jersey bull of good pedigree, he would get him money back again in a short time. Then he would have a valuable herd which would be improved in the cream and butter pro- duction. The.great bulk of the dairy pro- ducts of the country is from the native cow, which is a mixture of the Short -horn, Devon, Hereford and -Ayrshire, which have been brought here by the fret settlers and have been crossed'endrecrossedfor 200 years until the origin of the original parents has been - wholly lost, and therefore we have a mixed sort which we call the Native. I believe the native cow is capable of a very great improvement, if treated with the same care as are pure breedsThe traces of the. Jersey are seen in our native stock, in almost every part of the country, in a greater or less degree. Therefore, we have a foundation upon which, by careful breeding and management we might build up an excellent herd at very little expense.There is also a large per. centage of our native stock which -shows traces of the Ayrshire and. Short -horn blood which would make the best cows for the ordinary working milk dairy. Great care should be observed to .keep the cows clean ; if they are kept in a filthy state, the milk will certainly become tainted, and this taint will<surely affect the cream and butter. The situation to -day in the dairy demands a radi - cal change foam the old, trodden paths. The only way to success is in reducing the cost. Use the scales, tester and peneii, and only keep cows that are rich in butter fats. With the improved creamery apparatus and better managemenb,the process of the dairy is still going on to the satisfaction of all who are concerned. Milk and Butter Feeding. A good cow must be had in the first place and a good cow moat be .liberally fdd With the right sort of food, itt order to do good work for her Owner. But the dist}nc. tie differeuoe id ' the quality or quantity of q Y the milkit w 1 be very largely fixed by the individtual character a r 0 f the cow, . In look - in; at this question rightlywemust first consider the cow. Got herg i x ht and . fittedto her purpose, This is rho work good breeding and wiseearly management and training, ]ext comes the question of handling the cow aeeording to the demands of her dairy functions. She must be handl- ed, treated, housed and tethered accord- ing .to her nature as a reilk•gtver. Lastly enures the question of feed, the adaptation of her food to the work she has in hand to do. !Coo many men reverse the order of these facts, They pity but little attention to t . t ✓ i he zees fb pf r o q n he prover ]tatidlinb, and then thinit:bay are going to make tip for" all this oversight by feeding costly feed to an unfit cow handled in an unfit; manner, BALL-BEARING BINGES. They 'tenser the Door's Motions Positively Bqueakxeas, A ball.bearing door hinge? Why not? No squeaking of the door, no working up of thein P , no greasy butt coated with duet and BALL•BEARING trusaia,' lint, nowearing down of the butt and rub- bing on the threshold, no crowding and pushing to open the door; compact, simple, and. cheap. Surely it is a very appropriate use for ball bearings. The engravings show TRE PARTS OF THE HINGE. the whole thing in a nutshell. A is a steel plate washer,B tl.e guide, C the cover, and D is the whole bearing washer placed be- tween the two parts of the butt. THE TURPIN MITRAILLEUSE; with This Deadly Weaves in use the Oe• cupation or the Soldier' Will be cone. The man who invented that concentrated spirit of destruction known as melinite has been again exercising his fell ingenuity, if somebody is not mistaken. His last con- tribution to the happiness of his kind is alleged to be an infernal machine designed for wholesale carnage on battle -fields. The description given of it is vague, but leaves the impression that the implement is one of great efficiency. When in active eruption it would appear to resemble a geyser or volcano, vomiting a heavy shower of bomb- shells over a wide extent of country for a long. time. The shells are to be loaded with a delicate substance still MORE WICKED TA'AN MELINITE, whose fumes will kill all who survive the projectiles and the shock of the explosion. The thing is operated and gloved by its own diabolical forces. It is transported, loaded, and set going automatically. It throws its projectiles in every direction, but all its owners need be careful about is that they get far enough away before it begins to shoot. Emperor William is said to be convinced that the machine fills a long -felt want, and instead of ordering a dozen he is believed to have bought the patent outright. With a few of these weapons ready for the field the Triple Alliance ought to be invincible. If the Turpin mitrailleuse—the name by which this arm is known, in the despatches- should be the complete success that it promises to be, it will revolutionize war as machinery revolutionized industry. It will introduce the FACTORY SYSTEM INTO WARFARE, .. and do away with the soldier as manufac. turing machinery has so largely done away with the handicraftsman. On its own side. it will do away with the soldier by dis- placement, on the other by extermination. Until the secret of the invention happens to be betrayed or stolen or independently discovered and generally shared up, the occupation of soldiers outside the Triple Alliance will be to keep out of the way of the mitrailleuse. After that their .coups, tion will be gone, for when alI the powers have this labor-saving fighting machine they will not have much need for soldiere, as their battles can he fought out by the machines. So long as Germany has the monopoly of the mitrailleuse aid keeps to herself the secret of Herr Dowe's bullet- proof coat, she ought to feel easy about her military supremacy. Also, she has now Turpin, whose diablerieis probably not yet exhausted. a _ j It's a Great Country. Mr. Iludyard Kipling has become famous among men of letters, and, having visited all four quarters of the earth; his observations are alwaysinterestieg. Recent- ly he set foot upon Canadian soil, and in an interview that appeared in the St. Janes' Gazette, he is reported to have said on the subject of Canada :-" It is a great country, a country with a future. There is a fine, hard, bracing climate, the climate that puts iron and grit into men's bones? and there are all good things to be got out of the ground if people will work for them. What it wants is snore men and more money, Why don't Engliahmen think more of it as a field for English capital and enter- prise ? nterprise? Surely there is au excellent opening both fer the investing and the emigrating Briton there: Things don't perhaps, move quite so fast as in the States ; but they are, safer, and you are under the flag, you know, and among men of the alowee stock and breed, Send your folk to Canada; and if they can't go themselves, let them send eistheir 'moie -- lentoof it,, Mr, Kipling n evidently a plenty nf great intelligne and foresight. " , , How- to get a Sunl ilii Picture. Send 25-"Sunllghb" Soap wrapper, (wrapper bearing the words "Why Dees a Woman Leek Old Sooner Than a Man") to Lever Brea., Ltd., 43 Scott St,, Toronto, and you will receive by.posta prettypiotnres free from advertising, and well worth fram- ing. This is rin easy way to deorate your home. The soap is the best in the market and it will only cost lo. postage to acrid in the en. o- wrap ers,,if you leave the ends _p. P Write your address carefully, , .LU4l tlll a.! ,1,.1.!.11 .1.1.1ILE 1 RLB WHAT IS GOING ON IN THE PODIt CORNERS OF ThE GLOBE. OW and New - World Itvet'ts or 'luteres Chronicled !briefly--xitereatlug Clap ventngs of lteeent Date. Cologne has a 300 -year-old rase tree. Tranaparentleather is made in France. Great Britain boasts 17,430 locomotives An English bishop preaches regularly in hls sleep. Policemen in Saxony receive $1261 a year as salary,' Belgium was the first country to make hypnotism a crime, Osoar Wilde's fall name is Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde. The cost of the world's railroads is esti- mated at £5,736,000,000. Princess Beatrice is said to be an amateur actress of exceptional ability. The notes of the Bank of England cost exactly one half -penny each. There are 7,558 public houses in the county of London, exclusive of the city. In Italy the value of land is considered to be 34 time. the annual rental, Apedigree book of highbred oats has just been pabliahed in England. The Duke of ur $axe -Co t Saxe -Coburg Gotha intends g ofa i to farm on a large scale in Germany. In the colony of Natal tea continues to be largely grown in the coast districts. The bwo richest men on the turf are °the Duke of Westminster and Baron Hirsch. A new free public library, to contain 80,000 volumes, is being built in Manchu - ter. In Franca 67 per cent. of the people live on rye bread, only 33 per cent. on wheat bread. .. There are more houses in London than in Paris, New York, Berlin and Vienna put together. Several French islands in the Paci6 c Ocean are being rapidly depopulated 'oy opium. Queen Margaret of Italy is about to pub- lish a series of popular stories in one of the Roman reviews. South Afriga last year gave a profit of $20,000,000 from its gold mines, and $7,750,- 000 from diamonds. The British Postmaster -General says his department deals with about 160,000,000 newspapers annually. Madame Gabriel,, wife of the former fenc- ing master at St. Cyr, has established a fene- ing'club in Paris. Paderewski says he has made all the money he needs and hereafter will devote his time to composition. There are 614 gas undertakings in the United Kingdom whose paid up and bor- rowed capital is £65,10,821. The men in the Caucsasian settlement in South Africa outnumber the women by ten to one, and spinsters are rare. China is said to oontain numberless small societies of unmarried women who have pledged themselves never to marry. Max Kaufman, aperlin jeweller, has made a perfect ivory chariot with moveable wheels the whole weighing but two grains. Serious charges of brutality towards the natives of Germany's dependencies in Africa are being made in the German papers. The cotton crop of India for 1893 was< from 13 to 18'per cent. higher in the various provinces than that of the preceding year. The British volunteer forces numbered 219,300 efficients during last year, an in- orease of 2,000 over 1892, and 5,000 over 1891. The edibledogs in China are known by their blank tongues, and 4,500,000 are slaughtered annually to titillate the palates of the Celestials. The King of Portugal has just effected an insurance on his life of £40,000' with an English office, the risk being sub -divided among several r 1 co mpaniea. In oily Palace, Holborn, a watchman cries the hours nightly with the same formula in use for centuries past. " Past 1 o'clock, and a cold, wet morning." London's debt was increased last year by £1,200,000, and now amounts to £30,011,- 000. 'rhe revenue of the city for the last fiscal year was £4,623,000. At an inquest held in England the evi- dence showed that the dead man's life had been insured for $100 by the liquor dealer whose bar he chiefly patronized. Olive Schriener, the South Africanauth- oress, comes of a peculiar family. The father was a missionary, her mother her 7% now in a Roman Catholic convent. ' t - A decree has been issued in Belgium for- bidding any Belgian to capture or destroy frogs, to expose them for sale, or to buy or sell them, either whole or in part. Mrs. Langtry is at Monte Carlo. She was seen the other day attired in deep red ,with a black moire hat lined with ruby, and escorted by the young Earl of Rose. lyn. Pet dogs across the Atlantic are dyed to harmonize with the prevailing tint of their mistress's boudoir. Two shades of violet form the most popular coloring for white dogs. Oil has been struck in Someraet,England. Complaint was made, about the water taken for drinking purposes from a spring, and investigation showed the presence of petro- leum. Ia Prance, pearls and rubies are far more. fashionable than any other precious stone. Diamonds are chiefly worn all over a vel- vet or silk ribbon, which is tied around the neck. The large, white Yorkshire pig has be- come the favorite breed with Danish bacon factories and large numbers of them are im- ported yearly frons J ngland for breeding purposes. The estate of Elvedon, the seat of the late Maharajah Duleep Singh, which was offered for sale in 1876, and an offer of ;8500,000 for it refused, was sold afew days since for £150,000. The Popular Man. A popular man, is the one who doepn't forget that Yyou have a pretty wife, and d whenlieis talking abed women, and speak- ing Pe k•in about somebody who iegood.looking, says, But she doesn't o0 mPare with yo ur wife, John." A popular man is Dile ;,who will listen to a talo of woe from a woman forty-five years of age, not mind her crying, pat her on the shoulder, and advise her to be a good girl. A popular than is the concentrated essence of sympathy. Be has d Y a smile for everybody's `o , and words of condolence for everybody's sorrow. Foel it ? It doesn't n atter whether he feels it or not, my friend ; it's ]Wanner% make the man, Mad, more than any other, the pepular ratan. THE OUTLOOK 'FOR CHEESE. The ter841ah market 1 net Corrying °Yer a luox oe Inst Belason'S ttheese.f !here is good reason ter expecting, that. out cheese exports to the United Kingdoin will be least as great' this year as they were last, when they reached their highest figures, So far the weather has been fav- orable av o bl ra e to production UC''011'one d ti if`t on a mod - P1 c.ti erately, as it has begun immoderately humid, an abundance of pasture will be assured, The tendency of our dairy indus- try to become onel)ided will continne so long as the returns from cheese -making are much more profitable than those from .but- ter -making. Not only do the profits of cheese -making attract an increasing pro• portion of the total yield of milk to the heese factory every year, but they are an inducement to farmers to increase the number of their cows. Thus, richer pas -1 duceture, more cows, and a larger proportion of the whole yiold of milk are certain to pro• a A LARGER OUTPUT OF CRAM, While the supply is likely to be large, it is satisfactory to observe that'the demand. is also. The British market is not carrying over a barof est 1 season's cheese It is now practicallybare of all but second-rate stock, Some Canadian cheese of the new make is going forward, but of course it is fodder -made, and not to be compared with our grass -made staple. English prices are high, much above the figure that exporters can get when the shipping . season is fairly started. As British buyers expect ameter ial fall from present prices they are holding back and assisting the downward move- ment. Declines just now are not from normal prices, but from unusually high ones, and are not to be looked upon as discouraging symptoms. Canadian cheeses is assured of a demand on account of it quality. It is that which has secured it a constantly increasing sale in the United Kingdom, and it enabled it to outstrip the cheese of the United States, notwithstand- ing the latter's long start and strong foot- hold on the British market. Last year the United Kingdom took 1,046,704 long bun- dredweights . of Canadian cheese, a small', increase on its imports of Canadian cheese' of the year before; of United. States cheese it took 645,235 owts., while the year before it had 'taken 818,433 owts. This decline in shipments from the United States is not all to be credited to the superiority of our cheese, but part of it is to be charged to INCREASED CONSUMPTION in the United States, which has therefore less to spare for export. That dondition, however, is favorable to us,' inasmuch as it diminishes competition on the British market. It is not to be forgotten, though, that New Zealand and Victoria are now shipping -cheese to Britain, and are likely to develop a big export trade in cheese. British consumption appears to be expand- ing, and as times', look a little better in England than they did' this time last year, the consumption of cheese per head will. probably be larger. The United Kingdom consumes 237,000 tons of cheese per annum, that is, about 650 tons per day. Of this 146,000 tons is produced at home, the rest is imported. The imports have a demand, of about 250 tons a day to depend on for a market. ON A WILD GOOSE CHASE. A. Confidence Man Sends Two Canadians to California. Some weeks ago the mayor of a ,peacefnl pariah in the vicinity' of Montreal received a visit from a stranger just arrived from California. This stranger had known a brother of the < Canadian mayor in Cali- fornia, and the object of his visit was to inform him that this brother had died just before his departure, leaving a for- tune of some $10,000. The Californian impressed upon his host that he should at once go and look after this estate, and be- fore leaving the village said that he would communicate the same news to a brother-in- law of deceased in Montreal. It so happen- ed, however, that the man from the land of gold had not provided himself with suf- ficient small change to return to the city, and it was an easy matter for him to borrow $20 from the worthy mayor. On his arrival here the Californian did visit the brother. in-law, told him his story and left to visit some of his own friends, promising to , re- turn in is few days. The two relatives then met, decided to proceed at once to Califor- nia, an for that purpose borrowed $400 hard cash. When they arrived at their destination the first man they met was the one whose estate they were coming toemu e. He was in excellent health, and most happy to meet hie brother and. brother-in-law. The two latter at once realized that they had beenthedupes of a confidence man, who meanwhile had had ample time to escape. They returned to 14lontreal, minus their $400, but with a dose of experience worth millions. What Hit Him. Many queer things happen in war -time Sergeant Forbes -Mitchell, of the Ninety- third inetythird Sutherland Highlanders, relates what he calls "a rather laughable incident' which befell a man of his company named Johnny Ross. It was in India, at Luck - now, during the great Mutiny. Before falling in for the assault on the Be - gum's palace, Johnny. Ross and George Puller, with some others, had been playing cards itt a sheltered corner, and in some way quarrelled ovor the game. They were still arguing the point, when the signal was given to fall in, and Puller told Ross to .: shut up." At that moment a spent ball struck'Ross. in the mouth, and knocked out four of his teeth. Johnny thought it was Puller who he'd struck him, and at once returned the blow. " You fool 1" said Puller. "It wasn't I. that struck .ea, You've a bullet' in your » Y got mouth, And so it was. Ross put his hand to his spat into his four front teeth lips andi iti t ie at ones apologized to o d a bullet. 1 n Puller for having struck him, an dadded, ,t$., owataniInane a to bite my cartridges floor `.those weretho ':da s of „ muzzle-loadin _ cartrid es which hadtobe torn open en with the teeth when leading. Mist Timid—"Did you ever find a Mad' ander the 'hod ? [Vxi•s, Bluff—"Yes. The night we thought there were burglars'' in the house,/ found any husband there." children 'Cry for Pitcher's Castor"uCi ii r�ly, ,7vr�i „Tire HtiTs' ° CQMfORT� iON[ WASH DAY ATURE YIELDS ANOTHER SECRET! It has often been contended by physiologists and men of science gen- erally, that enerally,that nervous energy or nerv- ous impulses which pass along the nerve fibres, were only other names for electricity. This seemingly plans- ible statement was accepted for a time, but has been completely aban- doned since it has been proved that the net es are not good conductors of electricity, and that the velocity of a nervous impulse is but 100 feet per. second -which is very much slower than that of electricity. It is now generally agreed thatnervous energy, or what we are pleased to call nerve fluid,- is a wondrous, a mysterious force, in which dwells life itself. A very eminent specialist, who has studied profoundly the workings of the nervous system for the last twenty-five years, has lately demon- strated that two-thirds of all our ailments and chronic diseases are due to deranged nerve centres within or at the base of the brain. All know that an injury to the spinal cord will cause paralysis to the body below the” injured point. The reason for this is, that the nerve force is prevented by the injury from reaching the paralyzed portion. Again, when food is taken into the ,• stomach, it comes Tiioontaot with ,enumberless nerve fibres in the walla of this organ, which at once send a nervous impulse to the nerve centres which control thestomach, notifying, them of the presence of food; where' upon the nerve centres send down a supply of nerve force or nerve fluid to at once begin the operation o> digestion. But let the nerve centres which control the stomach be de- ranged and they will not be able to respond with a sufficient supply of nerve force, to properly digest the food, and, as a result, indigestion and dyspepsia make their appearance. So it is with the other organs of the body, if the nerve centres which con- trol them and supply them with nerve force become deranged, they are also deranged. The wonderful success of the remedy known as the Great South American Nervine Tonic is due to the fact that it is prepared byone of the most eminent physicians specialists ecialis of the age, y na and ;, and is based.. on the foregoing scientific discovery. It possesses marvellous powers for the cure of Nervousness, Nervous Prostration, Headache, Sleeplessness, Restlessness, St. Vitus's Dance, Men, tal Despondency, Hysteria, Heart' Disease, Nervousness of Females, Hot Flashes, Sick Headache. It is also an absolute specials fry 1 stomach troubles. C. LUTZ 'Sole Wholesale and Retail Agent for Exeter. Dn. MCDAIRMID, Agent, F2ensai. , ," \ •fay .eP l` `. C 'fi� •�Q p ,� , •ctT!f2r y, A l ] cc G , 0\ � 3 G d � o a 6 T 0'... S5 Vit. 0 �N)$% �C,Ca J 0 1S 0�', t3 ti 4r • a41,4•1 t . 1' nye li a%r' ._'�". 0 8 slloulll look to ilio l;,;hcl en t1zo.lto1alt If the address isnot 338, O It?RXi t;T., L01714iq, they ,try. tale' aeiSeeitateelawseem 4 eats, ttI ate utr,