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The Clinton New Era, 1914-03-12, Page 3Palter R ..., h. -cif,. at 'NA -DRU -CO 'DYSPEPSIA rig TABLETS Proved of Great Value to Me" There is only one'explcnatirnrfor the' nntnbers of enthusiastic letters that we receive praising Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets, and that is that these tablets certainly 'do etre any kind of stomach • tioubie- IXere is a typical letter from bliss Eliza Arinsworthy, Cpnco, T7 S : "Itis with pleasure I write to inform ' you, that your Na-Dru Co Dyspepsia Tablets have proved of great value to toe.', I tried remedy after remedy but without any lasting good Ilaving,lioard ofyour tablets curing such cases as • urine I'clecided to give themi a fair trial, They proved sa:isflictory in my•ca e." The remarkable success of Na -1 ru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets is such a success as, can only cotne 'to an honest :remedy, compounded 'according to an exception- ally good formuln, from pure "ingre- dients, by expert chemists I f fon are troubled with your stomach just isle your Druggist about Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets, compounded by the National Drug and Chemical Co, cf Canada, Limited, and sold throughout the Dominion at Soe. a box. lee Robert Elliott Re-elected Reeve el Goderiek. Goderi2la, March 3. -Robert El- liott 'was ne-elected' reeve to -day by a majority of 230 over Alex Cooper; his only, opponent, His ek'odtion in January 'was the sub- jedt 017 tlrateatened court action, which did not take place because Mr(: Elliott resigned: It is not known whe4b1ier this lends the af- tfair or not. The votes cast were; For Elliott, 507; Cooper, 277, 1(6711 -ALDOL COMES TO CANADA Originated by Dr. Stohr, a 'fa- mous physician' of Vienna, Austria, i ephaldol is known and used throughout Europe and Great Britain: Now, backed by the (endorse- ments of hundreds of; physicians and hospitals, it comes to Canada to relieive pain and curd Rheuma- tism, Sciatica, Lumbago, Neuralgia Neuritis, Headache, La Grippe, Pe - veils and simile', troubles. Kciphadlo1 has xlzceived the highest commejndation fitpm 'the medical profession because of its &inset strengthening faction on the nestves, without injury to the heaf(t, and its lasting regulative and mutative effect upon the whole syshlm. Unlike other pain --killing remed- ies, Kephald'ol is absolutely harm- less. It causes no intestinal irrita- tion, and has no depressing effects Kephaldol will now bring to pain - wracked Canadians the, untold bles sings which it has already confer sed in 'disc Old Country -joy of pe,rfect life again to those who, perhaps for many years, have drag .ged through a tormental existence. Get a 50e tube of Kephaldol (tab lets at your Druggist's. Kepha1 dol, ,Limited, 31 Latour Street Montfs eat Plain, With "Punch" Some Essentials in Good Mercantile Advertising. In an inlfor'.xnal talk before the .members of the Twenty-third Street Y.M.C.A. advertising class, in New Yorik City, the brilliant C. Seitz, business manager of the New York World, gave the stu- gnats some practical advice on newspaper advertising. He declar ed that the daily plies& oPfers the most intimate foram of advertising in that it brings seller' andi buyer "togdther with the :least expendi- ture of time or money. "H`veI,y person reads Adis news- paper with a great deal of inter- est," said Mr. Seitz, rand we have s1eveloped She news 'side of ad- ves'i`.ising. "People look!to the 'department atone ads. dor their daily record of sales. It is a news account of the day's merhandising'and the prudent purchaser cannot afford to n:(gledt it. Good goods, good location and good advaaltising are three essen- tials in business succesls'.. "Tell the reader who you are, wheat; you are .and what you've go't too sell, and do it in simple, plain English, and you will have put into your copy the'punch' necessary to interest and attract the prospective purchaser. I am cut of sympathy with' the 'elabor' ate ad'smith." Thsi speaker also ''decbareld 'that while 'bhe .newspaper ad. can fill the tent, the customer 'won't come again if the 'show is hot up to the mark. Store service and hon- est goods roust be back of the ad, Rad Salt Rheum. Could Scarcely Do Work. BE CLINTON NEW SRA Tlxtirsti'ay, Vlareli, 19th, 1914, " ! Senator. Root for President: Boomed by Republicans Roosevelt's ' Former Seere- tary oI State to Enter the Field an1916 Washington, March 2. -Senator Root, of New' Yoi(k, 'for president in 1916. ;This is the. move on foot among" the Republicans who look on the Roosevelt's secrietary }static} as the biggest man in the 'floated States in a generation: A boom for him has been laun- ched and ,enthusiastically received and rt is believed that an active campaign will be und'erltaken this'. summers. Charges that "he, is a corpora- tion man are denied by his friends who point to his activities while, in the Roosevelt Cabinet as proof of his work 'for the people. Colonel Roosevelt has 'described Senator Root as "the greatest sta- t(e(sman, of his ';day," Skin diseases are invariably due to bad or impoverished blood, and while not usually attended with fatal results. are nevertheless very distressing to the average person. Among the most prevalent are: Salt Rheum, Eczema, Tetter, Rash, Boils, Pimples, and Itching Skin Eruptions. Burdock Blood Bitters drives out all the humor from the blood, and makes it pure and rich. Mrs. Ellwood Nesbitt, Apsley, Ont„ writes: -"I had Salt Rheum so bad ,I could scarcely do my work. I took'two treatments of doctor's medicine, but they did me no good. A friend told me' his wife had had Salt Rheum, and that Burdock Blood Bitters had cured her, so I got a bottle, and before I had it all taken my hand was better," Burdock Blood Bitters is manufac- tured only by The T. Milburn Co Limited, Toronto, Ont. MON,.C.-1-11-1U Rc.1oT Death of Sir George W Ross Continued From Page 1 Works." published by the D. Apple- ton Co„ New York; "A Resort of the Schools of England and' Germany" and "Patriotic Recitations for the Use of Schools and Colleges." In 1893 he was appointed chairman of the committee having for its object the preparation of a history of Can- ada for the use of the schools of this country, and, in 1897, served as a vice-president of the British Associa- tion for the Advancement of Science. He was also president for ,<ome years cf the Dominion Educational Asso- ciation. HONORED BY UNIVERSITIES. For his services in behalf of educa- tion, he received the honorary degree of LL.D. from St. Andrew's Univer- sity, Scotland, in 1888. The same honor was conferred upon him by Victoria University, Toronto, in 1832, and by the University of Toronto in 1894. In 1896 he was elected a fel- low of the Royal Society of Canada, and in the same 1 car was appointed one of the commissioners for the re- vision of the Ontario Statutes. FIe was a member of the council of the Toronto Astronomical and Physical Society, and was likewise interested in the Dominion Sanitarium Associa- tion, of which he was one of the founders. In 1886 he served :s a commissioner to the Indian and Colonial Exhibition, held in London, Sir George Ross was a member of the Government of Si- Oliver Mowat as Minister of Education from 1883. to 1896, and also served his province in the same capacity in the Hardy administration from July 25, 1896, to Oct. 18, 1899. On the resignation of Mr, Hardy, Sir George' Rosa took up the reigns of Governm'nt on Oct. 21, 1899, and continued an Premier with a! working majority untl' the dissolu- tion of the House on April 19,1902. On going to the country on May 29, i.nVr, air Gearee was susiuweu ay a small majority. On June 26, 1903, the Government, on a motion censur- ing 11. R. Gamey, M.P.P., was sus- tained by a majority of 4. When the House dissolved on Dec, 13, 1904, the standing of the parties was as fol- lows: Liberals 45, Conservatives 45, vacant 7. The result of the genes -al election on Jan. 25, 1905, was as fol- lows: Conservatives 69, Liberals 29. OPPOSITION LEADER AND SENATOR. Sir George was for nearly two years as leader of his party in tbe Opposition benches, He was made a Senator of Canada on Jan. 15, 1907, but throughout most of his term as Senator he took a passive interest In state affairs. Later he was elected leader of the Senate. As a public speaker Sir George Ross took high rank.. Among the best known of ,his lectures were the following: "Literary Factory in Our Canadian Life;" 'Formative Forces of Canadian FIictory," "Our National Outfit," "Citizenship and Higher Cul- ture" and "Preferential 'i:rade. He was a Presbyterian in religion and held the office ofelder in S'. Andrew's Church, Toronto. In 1896 he was elected a delegate from the general assembly of Canada to the Pan -Presbyterian Conference, hold that year in Glasgow. In the Dominion election campaign of 1911, Sir George Ross was one of the prominent Lib:.: is who opposer) the, entering . into a reciprocity pad`, with the Unite! States of.Amerie,t. Sir George delivered an address be- fore the Toronto Board of Trade and wrote two letters to The Toronto Globe dealing with Canadian com- mercial systems. He then advanced strong grounds against the comple- tion of reciprocity negotiations and in favor of closer Imperial and re- ciprocal trade relations. The address was printed and circulated through- out Canada by the Canadian Manu- facturers' Association as a document againstreciprocity, and it was, quoted by many Conservative speakers in i:he debate on reciprocity in the Houea of Commons. Ile said 'bat the British preference and reciprocity were mu- tually hostile. So much use was made of these arguments in the voinrnons that is with auaerteu. •u•Y some of the Liberals who supported the then Government, that Sir George Ross could not see beyond the bounds of Ontario. Some curiosity was felt as to the course Sir George would take after Sir Wilfrid Laurier brought down the reciprocity .meas- ure. Sir George did nothave to de- clare himself in the. Senate, for tbe hill nsver remelted that chamber•, end quickly stops coughs, cure) colds, and heals. the throat and lungs. -- 25 cents, he took no part in the discussion of the subject on the hustings. LEADER • OF THE SENATE. On Nov. 26, 1912, in the Dominion Senate, Sir George Roes, as the new- ly -appointed leader, delivered his first address, dealing in it with the question of Canadian support to Great Britain in the naval crisis. Sir George, on a motion in reply to the address from the throne, spoke for a Canadian navy, created by Canadians and manned by Canadians. Sir George Ross was knighted in 1907. Temperance people will re- member him as the first recognized leader of the temperance party In Parliament. In June, 1913, his "Reminiscences of the Political History of the Dom- inion" was published. In these pages Sir George proved himself a close student of human nature and his sketches of his fellow -members of Parliament are readable character productions. Sir John A. Macdonald, Edward Blake, Sir Alexander Mac- kenzie, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Sir Charles Tupper and Sir Richard Cartwright are among the many prominent politicians who come un- der review. Sir George was thrice married - first to Christina, daughter oe Dun- can Campbell, who died in 1872; secondly in 1875 to Catharine, daugh- ter of William Boston, and thirdly in 1907 to Mildred, daughter of John Peel, London, Ont,, and sister of the late Paul Peel, painter. Sir George leaves a widow, two sons and six daughters. Duncan C. Rose, mem- ber of Parliament for West -Middle- sex, is a son. LADY ROSS AN ARTIST. Lady Ross, who was a daughter of John R. Peel, of London, Ont., and a sister of Paul Peel, the great Cana- dian sculptor, is one of the most ami- able and ber': liked of the ladies of the sessional set. She is an artist of note, but since her marriage in 1901, she has abandoned the easel and giv- en her whole attention to the care of her husband, As Minister, Sir George will long be remembered by many for the "Ross Bible," which was a compila- tion from Scriptures intended for general use in Public and High schools. But there were few new things in education which Mr. Ross did not exploit. He was a tireless experimenter with a great and a Rowing pride in the "school sys- tem" of Ontario. There were educa- tors who maligned him for his ex- periments; and many who bless 1 him for his progressiveness, • He was never asleep. A tireless student of history and of constitutions, he made a name for himself as an oratorical teacher. His public speaking was of • the very first rank. No man in Can- ada and few men anywhere could so deeply interest a crowd in an abstruse subject by the power of ideas wedded to oratory. He was famous at home and abroad; in the United- States and in England. As a compiler of use- ful information he had few equals; in this respect being a real contribu- tor to historical knowledge; as much at home before a convention of edu- cator:: du-catori as on the stump before the electors; and dearly loving a fight. Alf INDEPENDENT THINKER. Althourh a life -lona Liberal. Sir George Rosa has always been -a man of independent thought, as is evi- denced by the fact that in the old days when his party was wedded, first, to free trade, then to commer- cial union, and later, to unrestricted reciprocity, he remained a firm and outspoken supporter of protection for ( Canadian industries. We have it on no less an authority than Colonel George T. Denison, that at a critical -time, when many of the leaders of his party were casting their eyes in the direction of Washington, t' men, principally Conservai-ves, who set themselves resolutely to stem the tide and turn 1t in the direction of active Imperialism, found an active supporter in the Hon. George W. Ross. Since being appointed to the Senate, Sir George has instated on pursuing an independent course, vot- ing against the Government majority upon several occasions. et Bumper. Crops This I Year ' by using the proper fertilizer - one containing from 6% to 10% of POTASH. Plants are like human beings; you must feed them properly if you,want them to thrive and pro- duce maximum yields. Fy ' You must feed them abalanced ration -that is, with the proper proportions of Nitrogen, Phos. phoncAcid and POTASH. Home Mix Your Goods and know what �you are feeding your crops. We will tell you hbw to mix and what . to use. Our stock of Nitrate of: Soda, Acid Phosphate, Basic Slag and POTASH is ample for j. your requirements: • Having purchased these goods right, we can'save you; money on all your fertilizer material: Call in and let us quote you. FrankW. E VA1NS CLINTON, ONT. 3;" erg ,ieeeleeeeeere_leeee The Death of Dr. Cook pert treatmentt nest. With the exception Oa bequest made in ,favor) of Mary Can teloni df Clinton, Ont„ aunt of the deceased, the estate is bequeathed to Goshen Hospital (Association, 'with the provision that the as- sociation shall properly keep a id!diving horse used bylahe doctor diming hie practice. , It is estimated the' total value of the estate is approximately 53,000, the bulk of it consisting of real estate at Clinton, Ont., which Dr. Cook inherited upon the death of his mother several'hnonths ago. This is the first will in which Go- shen -hospital is made a beneficiary. Dr. Cook was secretary of the al- sociation and had been actively connected with the enterprise since its incelption. Another Tribute 'Tine following excerpt 'from a letter writtiten by a professiolnal gentleman, a . resident; -of Goshen, shows how much Dr. Cook was ap- preciated in that place. "Dr. Cook was the kind of man of which this world has too few. He was a true gein(tleman. He was 'modest, and his integrity was never questioned. He might havve don ' a larger business had he been disposed to push himself forward; but he had too' much respect For his profefs- sion to indulge in anything that savored of quackery. He eeft many friends here and he was held in high 'esteem by his brother physicians." Ring Down the Curtain. He -I called to nee your father this afternoon. She (fluttering visibly) -Oh, did You? He --Yes; he bas been owing our firm a little bill for some time. The Truthful Promoter. ex to ut How can you Pset me P ,money into this business? I don't know anything about it." "Well, that was one of the reasons wiry I expected you to put money tri- pe, n The• family remedy' for Coughs and. Colds to it." 'Shiloh costa so itch and does so much t^ The Hotel's Curse. A curious story is being told of a big London hotel which is now beat- ing records for prosperity. When it was building all manner of mis- chances piled up the bill of costs, and things continued to go wrong. One of the directors, with some be- min, the nemilt. Inquired into the D T t�NK` SY E llomeseckers ExcwwiIoil To MaflitoFa, Alberta, Saskatchewan Each Tuesday, March 3 to October 27 inclusive via Chicago, St, Paul or Duluth WINNIPEG and return' $ 35.00 EDMONTON and return 43.00 From Toronto and stations North and West of Toronto. Proportionate low fares from stations East of Toronto Return limit two months Full particulars at any Grand Trunk Ticket office or write C. E. HORNING, D. P. A., Union Station, Toronto, Ont. John Ransford G. Son, city pas•sen- ger and Ticket Agents, phone, kle A. O. Pattison; station agent history of the land on which the building stood, and found thatit had once belonged to a monastic com- munity whose abbot, on being expel', h ground -bad1 cursed the ed, solemn Y and declared that no enterprise con- nected with it should prosper. Ascertaining that a monastery of the same order existed in Devonshire, the director went thither and pre- vailed on the abbot to go through the form of removing the curse, His fellow -directors laughed when he told them the story, but the hotel has prospered ever since. A Society Fad. The latest craze amongst women is to have their pet animals tattooed on their arms, ankles, shoulders or chests. Mr, South, a t:.ttooist, told an interviewer tie other day how ne first makes a drawing of the little favor- ite, which he then transfers to the body of the owner, and afterwards tattoos, with the aid of e_ectricity, I oto the skin, . "There Is quite a erase for women to have their pas tattooed on their arm," he said. "I have done this in the ease of horses, dogs, cats, birds, and even wild animals, such as lions and tigers. I recently tattooed on a woman's shoulder a phot: graph of her little pet rabbit. It is no un- common idea to have a 'lucky' pig tattooed on the arm. Both men and women come to me to have lucky pigs designed for them." A Monosyllabic Sermon, Rev. Dr. A. Smythe Palmer preached a sermon at Holy Trinity Church, Wanstead, England, in words of one syllable. The text was "The Word was made Flesh," and the preacher used nearly 800 mono- syllabic words. Bright Boy. e nettling up a globe before a bright little boy in school the teacher asked what country is opposite to ns on the globe. "I don't know, ma'am," was the reply. "Well, now," pursued the teacher, "If 1 were .to bore a bole through the earth and you were to go In at this end, where would yon come out?" "Ont of the hole," replied the pupil, with an air of triumph, -New Yor'ie Globe. _ Her, Test of Bravery. She -I would never marry. a man who Is a coward, 'de -Abort bow brave would he hove to be to meet your approval? She :Well, he'd have to have courage enough to-er-pro- pose.- Roston 'I'rnnscr'ipt. (With hockey now off the slate let's get busy evith baseball. on. N.[r. Monk.. Will Take Long Holiday Ottawa, Manch 3, -The resigna- tion of Hen. F. D, Monk caught the Eonse by su(prise, 'brae Speaker's announceten't' being thil first; inti- mation received by soany that,, the Jacques' Cartier contemplated such a step, 1 The ex-1-alinis'ber until 'recently expcieltled to rt eunee"h'is seat this session, but found that itis health would not pperrnit. His physician has now ordered him to tales a Prolonged • rest. This, Will mean a stay of. two or three years abroad. He le rjeportei to be 'suffering frlom:'an' afflication of the veins. No immediate bye -election, is looked' for in -Jacques Cartier. Mr. L. K. Manechal, a leading member of the Montreal Bar who has on sevexlal occasions. been mentioned dor public life, is spoken of as:the probable Conservative candidate, Mr, Monk's majority in the last election was over thietelen hundred He was 'elected the House in 1896 and had 'served untie !his with (c'tnawal, in 1912. He was Opposi- tion �. .Leaden in Quebec from 1901 until 1903. Children Cry FOR 'FLE1CHER'S CASTORIA eLEANING Tllf112 MMES 'J:r••r "ii1?o1 3 ' gym IN mr t-TOUSt OF TfORi)S,W READINESS ' FOR Tiff C)P Flt of pARualtNT '^• . The resignation of. Mr. Monk is taken to( mean his complete • ne- tirement from public lieand means the loss to Parilamen't of one of its .most picturresque• legates, Of Devonshire stock on his fath'er's side and descended from one Of 'the oldest French Canadian families on his mother's side, the retiring mem ber has many oil the beat qualities of the two races. He combines the artistic temperament of the Gaul with the mord judicial mind of the Anglo-Saxon, , While Mr, Monk has not been a shiningsuccess as politician, he p , has the respect and love of his constituents in Jacques Cartier, 'He is (al man of exceptional legal Acumetn. As al Pi(ofessor of Law in McGill, his lvorjlc has been mark tai spy by( 7Jgoic is likely to Wan- der; in 'rho wilderness. A public man must have sortie modfe'st pre- judices 4f be is to occupy a position of permanence before the people{, Na!tunally Mr. Monk is a Conservative, but his Conservatism stops short of Imperialism. In the Genesial Election of 1911, he jointed fosses with Mr. 13ourassa and made his campaign chielily against any measure of; sea-die'aleeice for 'this country. When Mr. Borden called him' to the Cabinet; he found that he was not comfortable. He object ed to an •emergency contribution to the Admiralty and, therefore he resigned his office and became a faleeelance Conservatit, generally fievorttble to Mr. Borden's policy, save in the mattes{ of •dere:Ince, ed by the grieatest carie, and his During the campaign of 1911 Mr. plane in 'the- Montreal ,Bar is an ( Monk was under great nervous honorable one. His weakness as a 1 strains because of the 'fatal illness public man has, been•' too much in- of his wife. He has never fully re belldetualiem, 'lather than too_ lit- aoveeeed flrom the shock of his tld. It is generjally accepted as a bezieavemen't, and has found it 'fact that the man' whose 'fine mind i quite impossible to undertake the pa(rmits him to see 'both sides of any question under discussion is likely to be hesitant and doubtful in drilining his 'position, vigorlous 'task of playing a lone hand politically. He will be mis- sed from 'the 'House of .Commons, and will have the sympathy both of his 'friends and foes in his de- par(tura(. He was by :far the best Sometimes the man who is led yen l linguist in the 'House. Caught it. A man with a very red face met a friend, on the .street and the following conversation took place: "Yon look warm." z "Yes; beeu chasing a hat "Did your hat blow off?" "It, wasn't my heti it belonged to someone else -there wad a pretty girl under It." "Did you catch it?" "i should say 1 dirt. 11y wife saw me chasing iti"-Naw York American. RIIEUI ATIS I DURING MARCH Victims Can Cure Them. selves With Dr, Williams' Pink Pills. 01.111 Dueling the month of March pee pie who are af'fl'icted with rheu- matism begin to have unpleasant' reminders ;of their trouble. The weather is changeable -balmy and springlike one day, cold, raw and pierleing the next. It is such sud- den changes of weather that start the pangs and tortures of rheu- matism, lumbago and sciatica go- ing. But it moat be bonne in mind that although weather conditions star{t the pains, the trouble 'is rooted in the blood, and can only be cured 'through the blood. Al,t the liniments •and lotions in the world can't cure rheumatism. Rub bing may •seem to ease the. pain while you are rubbin, but there its value 'end's'. Onlay by treating the disease through the blood can you cure rheumatism. That iswhy Dr, Williams' Pink Pills have cur- ed iso many 'thouoands of eases) oaf this trouble., The new, rich blood' these pills actually. make drives out the poisonous acid and rheumatism lumbago and kindred troubles are banished. Among the many suf, 'feelers 'from rheumatism' cured by this. medicine 13 Mr, R. J. Sinclair, of ,Gosen, N. Se who says. "About .err Iwo years ago i was laid1 up with eihe!umaitism, For two months I could not walk[ and had to stay in an invalid's chair. My feet were badly sevollen and my ening seem- ed to be paralyzed. I had been using doctor'o medicine for a long tame but it did not seen to help me, and the doctor finally told me that the( only thing that would cure me would be a change of climate. At this time I decided to give Drj. Williams' Pink Pills • a trial and got a (supply/. Alter I had taken them for a while I found 'they were helping mie, amts I got a further supply, and they •compl'e- tely cured• me, and I have not been sick one day since. I strongly re- commend' Drl. Williams' Pink Pills 'for this trouble." Ifs you suffer from rheumatism or any other 'disease of the blood or nerves, begin' to 'cure youreielf to -day with Dr. Willaims' Pink Pills which under a fair 'trial will do dor you What' they hayve done foe thousnads of other's. Sold by all medicine d'ealeris or by avail at 50 'cents a •box or MX boxes for $2,50 .ihtom The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. CLUBBING RATES New Era and Daily Globe $4.50 New Era and Daily Mail and Empire 4.50 New Era and Daily World 3.37 New Era and Daly Neevs 2.33 New Era and Daily Star 2.35 New Era and Feeney Herald and Weekly Star 1.8, Now Fra end' Weekly Witness 1.8e New Era and Northern Mes- senger 1.13 New Era and Canadian Farm 1.8e New Era and Farmer's Sun,1.89 New Era and. IDaily Free Press., morning " 305 New Era and Daily Fired Press, evening 2,85 New Era and Weekly Free Pres:I 1,85 New Era and Daly-AdeeiLlisev ;8•� New Era and 'Weekly Adver• - tiser 1,60 New Era and Farm and Dairy 1,63 New Era and Farmer's Advo- cato, 2.3.5 WELL WORTH WHILE Two Necessities eontained In One Opportunity . We are able to offer our own paper and the Toronto Daily Mail and Em- pire ---the two together - From HOW !ill Nov. 1, 1914, 2.75 We are determined to increase our list of subscribers, theretore we sub- mit this Suede argain Rate Send or bring all orders to New 'Era tffiee