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n i cow Organization Formed terious Nature < Spreading - Columbia, Special.?The National Association For the Study and Pre- is vention of Pellagra was formally or- ev ganized Thursday at the conclusion th of a two days' conference on pel- va lagra attended by more than three th hundred physicians, the first meeting in; of national scope held in this country th for the study of this disease. Dr. J. ?jr W. Babcock, superintendent of the Inn South Carolina State hospital for cu the insane, Columbia, was elected president of the association; Dr. Wil- co liam A. White, superintendent, of the fj< United States hospital for the in- (0 sane, Washington, 1). C., vice presi- cr dent, and Dr. Geoyge A. Zeller. su- j,a perintendent of the State hospital for j.a the insane, Peoria, 111., secretary- a|, tresurer. Later a vice president for Gf each State interested in the movement will be named. An official pellagra congress, to he B; held under the auspices of the asso- fa ciation, is scheduled for June, 1910. an in Peoria, 111., which city was chosen (without a contest. . The association, following the pre- di sen tat ion of forty-odd addresses and yt papers by inen prominent in the moil- ,a ical profession, covering a wide range " of investigation of pellagra in the United States and foreign countries, in unanimously adopted the following s< resolution, presented by Dr. J. Howell Way of the North Carolina Board -1( of Health: p: Dr. Way's Resolution. "Resolved. That tins eouference ^ Tec* V the widespread existence (j in tlie United States and U ^>11 the national government fPity of bringing its powerful resources to bear upon the vital qucs- (? tions of its cause, prevention and con- n troL tI PEARY ENDORSED BY SCIE! . Washington, Special.?For having d reached the North Pole, Commander s< Robert E. Peary was voted a gold j! medal by the National Geographic w Society. N The board of managers of the So- st eiety acepted unanimously the report of its substitute committee of scientists, who had examined the explorer's records and proofs, and found theiu to be conclusive of his claim that he had reached the Pole, ci Report of the Committee. "The substitute committee, to p( which was referred the task of ex- th aminipg the records of Commander Peary in evidence of his having gr V. ,1. Il?l_ I i icauucll l IIC iiunu I UICf IU re- ell port they have completed their task, tli ."Commander Peary has submitted to this substitute committee his he original journal and records of observations, together with all of his \v instruments and apoaratys and cer- N< tain of the most important of the to scientific results of his expedition, st These have been carefully examined of by your substitute committee and of they are unanimously of the opinion to that Commander Pearv reached the jo North Pole on April fi. 1900. s| "They also feel warranted in tli stating that the organization, plan- to nirg and management of the cxpe- in FARMERS' JUNKET TO DUKHi Raleigh, Special.?The national tl It farmers' congress, now holding an an- w aual meeting here, was piloted to Durham to see the great tobacco factories of the American Tobacco Com- \\ pany and to Greensboro to inspect ci the cotton mills of the Cones. j m More than five hundred delegates, i w | coming from almost every State in'tl I BOOKWORM GOES HAND-IN r . Columbia, Special.?Pellagra an I \i hookworms travel hand-in-han d in 01 their death-dealing work. pi Where the pellagra is found, there p also may he found the hookworm, in I. manv cases, at least, boring his way p , to the vitals of tlie patient, and, un- li Alt AI I I tii iue nwiKworm is routed, the sue- b; ressful treatment of tlie coexistent di ella^ra is useless to attempt. The fc lttlc against pellagra, therefore, in- in clvss tlir training of the artillery 0 of the scientific world upon the hook- |> worm. sc This new development in the in- at RUMOR. ABOUT EX - PRESI New York, Special.?Another of M , tboee apparently absurd rumors that 1' ob up almost every time a prominent j1 RULfjets ont of tonch with the , orfd. went skipping < he rou-.-'fj ry Fndny ' I" rlent Jto?*<- ;t. f lis will-o'-tl. j . riap had it iha* Mr. Koo?-..\'c!t -r; i I. mmr killed in Africa and hirenuse of; v he dunp'.rs of African iu.i tm^r t ' < sli-j d yriaopr.ijled on the .< it ! mind by!d Br ^ . nm l to Study Its Mysatnd Check Its Sweep. "Resolved, That v.hile sound con in no way connected with pellagra idences of the relrtious betweei e use of spoiled corn and the pre lence of pellagra seem so apparen at we advise continued and svste itie study of tlie subject, and, ii e meantime, we commend to eori owers tlie great importance of full; 4 I... .4-11. 1.r u UI >u^ I.U1 II 111 m 111 nil* MilIK ui'llil ttinfr the same. "Resolved, That 1 lie work of thi nfcrence l>e brought to the atten >n of the various State ami Terri rial boards of health ar.d they sev ally he ur?red to specially investi te the disease, particularly as re rds its prevalence, and that the so see that the proper i aspect io corn products sold in the variou a4es lie had." In another resolution adopted. Di lbeock was recognized 4'as th titer of the movement for the stud id control of pellairra in America.1 Disease Attacks All. One of the most interest in jr at esses of the conference was deliv (red by I)r. Sara A. Castle of Merit n. Miss., who made tlie somewhr artling statement that of the man ises of pellagra which she ha ented since it was Hrst recognize i Meridian, six of the patients wer >cially prominent in the city, an re of these died. It is not nece; irily a disease confined to the poo cording to a prevailing jnjpular in ression,. declared Dr. Castle. All t cr patients were eaters of cori read and grit*. Slie stated als hat several of her hookworm p; cuts subsequently developed pe nrra and died. Dr. J. M. Buchanan of the Stai ospital. Meridian. Miss., addresse le conference on the treatment < ises in that institution. A numbi f other addresses were delivered s lie closing sessions. NTISTS RECEIVES MEDAL ition, its complete success and il ientific results reflect the create; edit on the ability of Command* oheiv ??. Peary and render hii orthy of the highest honors that tli ational Geographic Society can bi ow upon him. (Signed) "Henry Gannett, "C. M. Cliester. "O. H. Tittman.." Resolutions. Tlie resolutions adopted bv the S< ety were as follows: "Whereas, Commander Robert 1 earv has reached the North Poh le goal sought for centuries. "Whereas, this is the greatest get aphical achievement that this S( ety can have opportunity to honoi erefore, "Resolved, that a special meds awarded to Commander Peary. "Resolved, tliat tlie question r hether or not anyone reached tli jrtli Pole prior to 1009 be referre the committee on research with ir ructions to recommend to the boar ' managers a substitute committe ' experts who shall have authorit send for papers or to make sue urnevs as may be necessary to ir >eet records and that this action c ie Society be communicated at one i those who may have evidence c lportance.'' \M TOBACCO FACTORIES ie Union, enjoyed tlie junket, whio as made on a special train. Tit sitors were delighted with the reeej on given theni everywltefc. Ambassador Hryce and Secretai 'ilson of the Department of Agr tltur" at Washington, two of tl; lost remarkable men of the ag ere in the party and made shoi tlks in both of the towns. -HAND WITH PELLAGRA sstigation of pellagra was brougl ut Wednesday afternoon in an ah uper dealing with this disease pri a red by Dr. F. M. Sandwith, ( on don, Oresham professor i liysics, which was read before tl ltemational Conference on I'ellagi y Dr. ?J. W. Babeock, superintei snt of the South Carolina Hospit: ?r the Insane, and the prime movt i the organization of the meet in; >ne hundred and fifty pjrominei hvsicians and scientists from a ictions of the United States are i tendance. DENT ROOSEVELT FALSI tr. Roosevelt's magazine article iere was some uneasiness unt ouglas Robinson, Mr. Roosevelt rotlier-in-law, said emphatically thi i t< \ no stock in such reports. M . on branded the first vague r its of the day as false and wh< ;-rmed that later rumors had e (Mr. Robinson) had been a< by cable of Mr. Roosevelt at he authorized another vigoroi eniul. i * 1 r || WASHINGTON NOTES j ! i The Clark School for the Deaf at j . Northampton, Mass., is the largest ingle beneficiary under the terms 1 Df the will of tho late Gertrude M. Hubbard, who was killed in an au- 2 tomobile acident here October 15. In leaving $50,000 to that institution J she directs that it be used for the erection of a memorial building to her husband, the late Gardiner Greene Hubai;d, the founder of the Nation Gcorgraphic Society, in whose j n honor the present home of the insti tutiou was built. The corwning event of the visit to Washington of the Commercial Com- t 1 missioners from Japan, headed by r 15 Baron Shibusawa, came at the end i ? of the three davs'. festivities heie, i 0 when Mr. Matsui, counselor and charge d'affaires of the Japanese Embassy, gave an elaborate dinner ^ s in their honor at the Willard Hotel - Wednesday night. The dinner was l- given on the birthday of the Japanese ( Emperor. 1 * The question of granting naturali!~ ration to Turkish subjects is for the v determination of compeutent courts. n This is the attitude ol' the State Des partment as defined in a statement issued Wednesday and is taken to indicate tliac the deparetment is not " prepared to accept without question e the conclusion of the Bureau of Nat* v uralization tuut Turkish subjects are ,, not entitled to naturalization. On the ground that they have sent 1- circular matter through the United r- States mails exploiting the Hamburg I- State lottery, fraud orders have been it issued by the Postoftice Department y against Franz Steinbeck and C. J Schweedt, both of Hamburg. GerJ many. Loewenherz & Co., of Ham e burg, and Louis Gyrard, of Paris. (] have also been placed under the ban. 1 5r. Rich mineral deposits, principally i. coal, have been discovered by Gov- 1 ,f eminent agents on large tracts of 1 i- public land in New Mexico, and the 1 o Interior Department has withdrawn 1 j. from public entry class in that State 1 1_ approximately 102,440 acres pending ' classification. e ~? ? ! ,j A postal deficiency of $17,479.7<0, 1 an increase of $.">69,491 over last year ,r was announced in the annual report, of Merrit O. Chance, auditor of the 1 Postoffice Department, made public J Wednesday. The audited revenues 1 for the fiscal year ended June 30 last i * amounted to $203,502,383, an increase i Is of 0.31 per cent, over the preceding >ear. The audited expenditures in- . creased 6.07 per cent., including m losses by fire, burglarlv, etc. i le " -? e- A whirlwind tour of the city," a pilgrimage to Washington's tomb at Mount Vernon, and a sviit to the ( Congressional Libarry and the Cap- , A1UJ 4 l-? C A. J - A. MT. -L! 1... uui uucu me uisi uay m ? iisningion of the honorary commercial com) missioners of Japan. The commis- ^ sioners and their party were espec5. ially pleased with the Congressional e, Library and the Capitol, which were especially illuminated in their honor )- Monday night. The flag on the Cap> itol flew at half-mast out of respect r, to the memory of the late Prince llo. I il People who have recently delighted in the fact that the hook worm dis- ( >f ease was prevalent in the South, trot ie a good hard jolt here Wdenesdav d when it was reported that at least i. one hundred cases exist under the i d Aery shadow of the Capitol dome. e v The commander-in-chief of the h Pacific fleet reports by cablegram the i i- following*deaths in the fleet en route >f from Honolulu to Manila, where It f arrived Sunday: Roy E. Vermilyea, d Ilenry J. Smith, Otto Doerr. i "Tn the Western part of the Unit'* ed States the present demand for the ' frigerating cars exceeds any pos* e sible supply," says Vice President C. H. Schlacks, of the Denver and Rio Grande, in a dispatch to the InV terstate Commerce Commission, which has been calling the attention of some , |C of the Western roads to complaints J e? of inadequacy of transportation facil- j ft ities for perishable fruit. Imports into the United States J from the Philippines during Septem- | lt her, 1909, the first full month under ]e the new tariff, amounted to only , e_ $821,030, against $1,031,976 in September of last vear. All the imports j last month entered free of duty exe eept $426 worth. No sugar produced ,a in the Philippines was imported into 3 the United States during the month I though in September, 1908. the quan ,r t ity was 35,168,000 pounds. The 'ir August import statement showed 9.~j 856,000 pounds of sugar coming in j from the Philippine Islands free of ' dutv under the new tariff, as against 24,640,000 pounds dutiable in August _ of the preceeding year. To devise some means of defenso against aerial invasion, the bureau of ?,j ordinance of the War Department, it nt was learned, is about to begin a series r- of experiments of shooting at air e- craft with cannon. :n it Ormsby McHarg, Assistant Secred tary of Commerce and Labor, retired 'a October 30th from that office to bem gin the practice of law in New York and Washington. MU" I s- .\t : * ^ v, .; V i , ' ''fa .'. SNAPPY AND BRIEF terns Gathered and Told While You Hold Your Breath. SOME EVERY DAY HAPPENINGS Jrely and Crisp as They Are Oarnered From the Fields of Action at Home and Abroad. Thirty students a* the Georgia Miitary academy are still sick from the 'ating of boneless ham that contained ptomaine poison. Two of Wilbur Wright's students it College Park made a fly of G13-I uinutes duration Wednesday, exeeedng all amateur records and coming learly up to their tutor. Tom L. Johnson for 12 years mayor )f Cleveland, Ohio, was defeated in .he election Tuesday. It is said that the cranberry crop if Massachusetts is 32 per cent and hat of New Jersey is 80 per cent rreatcr this year than last year, mak ng someiuing 01 an impetus 10 me urkey Thanksgiving dinner. The "loving cup" presented by Mrs. Lindsey Patterson of Winston, N. C., for the best literary work for Lhe past year was won bv Mr. Clar?nee Poe, editor of the Progressive Farmer. It was presented on ThursJay by Ambassador Brice who at!ended the farmers' congress at Raleigh. The book on which Editor Poe a on the prize is entitled "A Southerner in Europe." The Seaboard Air Line Railroad is now restored to the management ol its regular officials, all of whom arc retained and the policies are to be continued by which the receivership made it a crowning success. A serious situation exists at Gassaway, W. Ya., growing out of an assault by a negro man on a white IVnYiitm Tim cnnnncml miilf w nort t "-u'r?I'?*.' was shot down while running to escape. Two others said to be accomplices are in jail and mobocracv reigns. Two military companies arc present but in answer to Gov. Glassl-ox's direct question the captain said liis men had voted to do all they could to save the prisoners except to shoot their fellow citizens. William Halloway. of Sioux City, Iowa, had lost his sight, llis son Tom had been away for some time and on visiting his father recently, the latter buried his face on Tom's shoulder and wept. When he wiped away his tears he could see his son. The Lakes-to-the-Gulf waterway* association mean to send 500 lobbyists to the national capitol at the next session of congress to urge action on the subject. Trespassing on railroad property in violation of law, says the Philadelphia Dispatch, is responsible foi 47.416 deaths in the I'nited States within the last 10 years, and along with these were more than $50,00( persons injured. Rougier. the French aeroplanist made a flight Tuesday at Antwerp in which he attained a height of 88( feet. The great national Farmers' Congress met in Raleigh, N. C., Thursday. Ambassador Brice from th< court of St. James was the prin pipnl speaker and greatly pleased hi: audience. Gov. Ansel, of South Carolina, or dered the dispensaries closed Friday and Saturday as a means of preserving the best of behavior while I'resi dent Taft was the city's guest. rru ? 1 a i ue xMiwonai association lor th? study and prevention of pellagra was formed at Columbia, S. C., on Tlmrs day night at the close of a two davi conference for the study of the dis ease. Olio Mueller who murdered Anv/i. Luther in New York State now con fesses to have murdered seven wives His motive seems always to havt been to obtain a few hundred dollars from them. Practicing physicians, heads ol medical colleges and prominent cdu cators will convene at New Haven Conn., on the lltli and 12th to consider means to lessen the mortality ol infants. A monument to the Confederal veterans of Granville, N. C., county was unveiled at Oxford last Satur day. Kentucky farmers not in the com pact are again uneasy and are arm ing against the outrageous barnburn inif night riders. Nine lives were lost in a burning banl? building at Johnsburg, Vt., or last Saturday. "orty-five fine horses and mu'c! were burned in a livery stable tlrat Pelham, Ga., on Monday. iwo men were killed and one wai seriously scalded in a freight wrecl at Hannastown, Pa.@, Saturday. Milton Mullen, an old man livin) near Rolfe, Logan county, W. Va. believing that he was going to die re vealed to his grand son the hidini place in the ground of $7,000 whici he had accumulated. It was firs thought that his mind was wnnder ing. The New York to Atlanta autoist reached Charlotte, N. C., Saturda; evening and left there Monday morn ing Not Sisters Now sad again yon ace two wbom pt? tag down die street who look like sisters. You are astonished tp learn that they an mother and daughter, and yon realise thai a woman at forty or forty-five ought to b? at her finest and fairest. Why isn't it sot The general health of woman is so intimately associated with the local healtl of the essentially feminine organs thai there can be no red cheeks and round form where there is female weakness. Women who have suffered from this trouble have found prompt relief and cure in the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It organs of womanhood. It clears ryes and reddens the cheeks. No alcohol, or .^bit-forming drugs is c Any sick woman may consult Dr. Pi held as sacredly confide t' * World's Dispensary Met CHICK9. A grassy enclosure aw main poultry yard Is bes Here they have the yard to themflplvpQ n nri v&r ill not Kn WKnrn,! Kv l)io grown chickens. FV?<i them Just as you would the earlier chicks, but par particular attention to having their soft feed. If you use ant. sweet and clean, for this Is the time of year that bowel trouMe Is easily gtarted in a flock. Probably more chicks die from this cause than from any other, , though lice are also responsible for many losses. The safest plan when growing small chicks in hot weather, s is to use only dry feed. It Is also necessary to keep the cocps scrupulously clean.?'Farmers' Home Journal. MUMYOX'S KM INK NT DOCTORS AT YOUR SERVICE FREE. Not a Penny to Pay For the Fullest > Medical Examination. If you are in doubt as to the cause of your disease mail us a postal re! questing amedical examination blank, ' which you will fill out and return to 1 ua. v/ur uuLiuis ?m ttticiiiuj uiufcnose your case, and if you can be i cured you will be.told so; if you cani not be cured you will be told so. You are not obligated to us in any way; i this advice is absolutely free; you are J at liberty to take our advice or not as ! you see fit Send "to-day for a medi, cal examination blank, fill out and return to us as promptly as possible, ] and our eminent doctors will diagnose your case thoroughly absolutely free. Munvon's, 53d and Jefferson Sta., Philadelphia, Pa. Unwritable English. "Did you know that there is at least one sentence in English that can ! be spoken, but that it is impossible [ to write?" asked a Cambridge University don. , "Yes. it's correct English, I suppose. and then again it isn't. Here , is the sentence, although I vow I don't know how you are going to write it: "There are three twos in .the English language.' You see, if you spell two, t-w-o, the sentence is incorrect, as it is if you spell it . either 'too' or 'to.' Catch the point. ) Really, it is incorrect to say it, alj though it certainly should he possible to express the thought. This thing lias set me going, and it simply goes to show what a tangle the English language is. There certainly is a word 'two,' and a word 'too,' and another 'to,' and they all three are pronounced alike?two. too, or to?which , makes it correct to say, 'There are ! I ''three twns." r.r "llirn.. <?wie " - "three tos" in the English langi wage." But what's the use?" Hardly in Keeping. ' "So you think these parlor social ists do not live up to their creed?" "I never saw one of them that wouldn't monopolize the conversation ; if he could."?l'ittsburg Post. ?' The curse causeless shall not come. = ?Bible. So. 46- '09. SOME HAHD KNOCKS Woman Gets Hid of "Coffee Heart." The Injurious action of Coffee on the heart of many persons is well known by physicians to be caused by ? caffeine. This la a drug found by chemists in coffee and tea. A woman suffered a long time with severe heart trouble and finally her . doctor told her she must give up coffee, as that was the principal cause J of the trouble. She writes: "My heart was so weak it could not do its work properly. My huss band would sometimes have to carry r me from the table, and it would seem that 1 would never breathe again. "The Rector told me that coffee was causing the weakness of my heart. He said I must stop it, but It seemed I could not give it up until I was down in bed with nervous prostration. : "For eleven weeks I lay there and l suffered. Finally Husband brought home some Postum and I quit coffee and started new and rl?h? Qinwi? ? ....? . got well. Now 1 do not have any headaches, nor those spells with weak heart. We know it Is Postum that helped me. The Dr. said the other c day. 'I never thought you would be what "yon are.' I used to weigh 92 pounds and now I weigh 168. "Postum has done much (or me and 1 would not go back to coffee again (or any money, for I believe It I would kill me if 1 kept at tt. Postum :i must be well boiled according to dlt rectlons on pkg., then It has a rich . flavour and with cream is One." Read "The Road to eHvlUe," found In pkga. "There's v Reason." Kver read the above letter? A new 9 one appears from time to time. They - are genuine, true, and fall of human Interest. * w*" / * ' ri|or and vitality to tho the complexion, brightena tho / -ontained in "Favorite Prescription." erce hv '" t, free. Every letter ir i ;n envelope. Address roe Pres., Buffalo, N.Y Important Matter. fioinp to ruarrv jaron T Why lie's up to ears in del "That doesn't matter. He's i'ery tall."?Ma? ?endorfcr lilall ECZEMA COVERED HIM. Itching Torture W'A Heyoiul Words? Slept Only from Sheer Kxhuustion ?relieved In 224 flours and Cured In a Month by Cuticurn. "I am seventy-seven years old. and .->otneyears ago 1 was taken with eczema from head to foot. 1 was sick for six months and what 1 suffered tongue could not tell. 1 could not sleep day or night because of that dreadful itching; when 1 did sleep it was from sheer exhaustion. I was one a mass of irritation; it wus even in my scalp. f The doctor's medicine seemed to make meworse and 1 was almost out of my mind. 1 got n set of the Cuticurn Soap, Ointment and Resolvent. I used them persistently for twenty-four hours. That night I slept like an infant, the lirst solid night's sleep I had had for six months. In a month I was cured. W. Harrison Smith, Mt. Kisco,. N Y Keh. 3 11K1S " Potter Drug & Client. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticurn Remedies, Boston. Mass. The friends of our friends are our friends.?French. PorCOIjDS and O.KIP. Hick's CiruniKi Is the best remedyrelieves the sciiiiiir rtuI frveii>liness-cures khe Cold and resloies normal coii.IUkuis. It's lluulcl?effects I ui mediately. lue., o. red iOc.. atdrui; stores The devil can cite Scripture for his mtrpnse.?Shakespeare. HOT FLASHES AllilOST GONE Woman in Aurora Gets Relief From Troubles by Taking Cardui, The Woman's Tonic Aurora, Ind.?"I was suffering from the change and had those hot H flashes and severe backache all the time. At times 1 could hardly straighten up. "I read about Cardui and got a bottle from our druggist and it helped me at once. Now the hot flashes have almost gone and I feel much better. "I have recommended Cardui t> several lady friends." You need not be afr^i*1 to take Cardui, whenever you feel that you need a tonic. Its use will not interfere with that of any other medicine you may be taking. Its action is very gentle and without any bad after-effects. Being purely vegetable and non-intoxicating, Cardtii can satctly be taken by young and old, and can do nothing but good. . Cardui acts on woman's constitution, building up womanly strength, toning up womanly nerves, regulating womanly organs. Half a ccntruy of success, with thousands of cures, similar to the one described above, amply prove its real. scicc.<i'ic medicinal merit. You are urged to take Cardui, the woman's tonic. It will help you. NOTE.?The Cardui Home Treatment for Women, consists of Cardui ($1). Thedford's Black-Draught (21c), or Volvo <&0c), for the liver, and Cardui Antiseptic (10c). These remedies may be taken singly, hy themselves, if desired, or three together, as a complete treatment for women's ilia. Write to: Bodies' Advisory Dept., Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chattanooga. Tcnn., for Special Instructions, and 64-page book. "Home Treatment for Women," sent la plain wrapper, on request. WANTED! * New or second hand lo-HI*. A. C. electric motor. Address L. M.. care box 007. Charlotte. N. C. Constip?1'"" "For over nine years I suffe constipation and during this ti. an injection of warm water ouc ? before 1 could have an action 1 , Happily I tried Carcarets, and tc . man. During the nine years i <, d Cascarets I suffered untold miser -: il pile#. Thanks to you. I am free j r* this morning. You can use thb suffering humanity. B F. Fisher ... lie Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. T. i Do Good. Never Sicken.Weake 10c. 25c. 50c. Never sold in bulk vine tablet stamped C C C. Qua. <ei cure or vour raonev back. 0 I ' GHBSSJU. A NOW BOO KpSlConsiim WmSLuS f REE TO ALL * P*yo, elnth bound msdirai l-n?k elmple lanruape ho-. onnrunrt.ute can ba onrail In rnur rwn L?m^ Write Mo;. TLj IVx.lt baa luteljr (r??. TOMKM?*N CO. Mil Water Wml. HtluinN Site Piper-Hangers & Painters torn ema mrtlt Inert ate ran NUMB with no antra InrwtinoatVy nllla? AUrrd Prate Prlan wallnoper W? want on* iom worker ,'n aaek tetnltr and to tkn flrnt worthy applicant wiM arad px? .a^fzrrr?fto.8s^^\?.,5w%T<5-lt tor ooatoatra to ooiort from. Wo off*r Tliort) Droits to cmr ropmontotivot Anwwor ontckly ikot JOf tmmr Btatuca arariy ry-. ??_ Sit^s ThompsoD's Eye Water