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Our money :inning books, vranby men who know, tell y"a all about Potash They needed by every man w:ho c 7-. a fie~ld and a plow, and who rt desires to get the most out I of them. Tiwy t ar Send postal Card. . :ANKA1.1 WORES ?New Yourk-ts Nar:an street. .!"ante.. cs.-'.: sou. Eroad Sit. OscJiake&So MiANUFhACTURERSIL OF -Z : Doo rs, Sash, Blinds, -oun an d Buildin: :at enwi, CHAR LESTON, S. C. sh WihtA a o ra. ...5d ancy fL:aSs a Satecialty. Y\%l alt THiiEN CO3ME OR SEN D TO U S. We have the best equipped Tailor imtz Establishment in the State. We handle ofigh M cti oel we carr y h bes lieo 5s or msprmnen e h we'are ad f. Sthe wpI c rd yo L L DAVI BROOIK Ce .orKg &Wntwot Sts., OHARLSTON - S. C. 9 ohn has~j evreulledsi. Notin~'g ande supassiit ONUMTIONPrice O; s oWen~ds and 5Cors.0 AHE Perfe For SEl TO and Cuhvtre Lung Trube lo The h. BLre rgSoe Ict~nigetion t Cas ieso a~tari ets r i of ti he AFo or moyar t hrasi be en osdta wCatarh ofl they tomac cuendgeo mCor. membraneintg th stoahn exposthen neavs ee teqstoah, t as ing thin can seer urpas inta.o reAee aifammaio Toft mucou dyspe anLungoac Troubles. Prepare byc E. itCl. DTWial B OCaotte fI. The R. B. Loryea Drug Store. MoeytoLoan. oWoite.onDgetant case cautrowe Banksmebrnesliimmtetohand eAsstheonrves 'ot soah, hs:?. us-0 igTh- gand o secrtn havin movted ino : nt e es yof natu di s t ion. Thss Gu~ olcion Dyspeia anCpomtre renes ally ivn. ai oftemcu dysppsi andallstomchrotu-ndlies. KodolHigNtY WP. YoLLIAt1 Makete tomcSePeset. Sotc ii. Rgula se. $ .0. Ao ns tiesrv . rear yt: . it eWT T :. & C. C. DAvis.I Mon s;ey toDa LoaL::. ARNY ATOLw MWhoi uANIG, &. C.ilro .-Wowys a~m~ nd sol me! >ors buinc' L a, MANNINGt S. C~ie' TiiNIX Iuex'No..\ S.. m ~ m !nhWnrk i h imre' im CHARM OF THE OVERHEARD Strange Fascination or Remarks Nol Meant For Our Ears. Why Is it that the legitimate conver sations of our associates. to which we have harkeued from the beginning and which we are predestined to follow slackly to the end, should so often fai to interest us, whereas the interrupted remarks we overhear and which were never meant for our ears, fill us %vith the liveliest curiosity and concern? Thc breaking off of a serial story is a trial to most men's minds. But we know that another month will bring another number. The inevitable breaking oft of a causerie in which we have nc share fills us with a sense of hopeless and irremediable loss. I once over heard an old English lady say, witi slow emphasis, to a friend: "It is a charming book, a charming book. It is just the kind of a book you would want to give to your dressmaker." And for fifteen years I have speculated in vain as- to what that volume was. Apart from the manifest indiscretion of giving any book to one dressmaker and thus withdrawing her attention from one's clothes, the only appropri ate literature I can think of is the in structive history of Ananias and Sap phira, and that has ceased to charm. A man waiting patiently at the glove counter of a New York department store heard one young shopwoman say to another as she handed down a boa of gloves, "Maria told him downright she'd have nothing more to do with him, and she called him a poison faced adder, he gripped her in the waltz that scandalous." This was all! Customers clamored for attention, and the confidence ceased at this point. But the force and rich ness of the language, the liveliness of the allusion, captivated the hearer's soul. He confessed that for years aft erward, when he was waltzing, with ecorous reluctance under the compel ling eye of his hostess. memories of Ma ria's partner would assail him and he would find himself envying the adder the mysterious nature of his enthusi asm. It sometimes happens that fortune favors us beyond our deserts or our de siris, and the conversation to which we have no right to listen, but which we cannot well help hearing, goes on as tranquilly in a railway carriage or on a steamer deck as though we were not in close and helpless proximity. English travelers are particularly ex haustive in their confidences and par ticularly indifferent to their surround ings. In one hour on a Como boat I have learned a whole family history, full of purely domestic features-how Dan had been sent to school at Lau anne because he was so troublesome ind the school so cheap, and how Con mie (a sister-in-law, I think) made the "castle" a most unpleasant place of residence, and how' Laura, with her three children, came to stay a week lust when granny was dying, which was, to say the least, inconvenient, and :ow the trouble between Harold and disfife lay entirely in the bringin~g up f the children. At this point the de als bee-nne too intimate for repeti ion, though there was no question of vithholding them from my ears. I felt like a fellow countryman who once raveled from Bordeaux to Paris in the ~ompany of ir young Englishwoman, er sister, nurse and child. "I entered hat railway carriage." he said. "an in ocent American bachelor; I left it ca pable of running a day nursery, an in rant schoal or a mothers' congress." ignes Repplier in Life. The Celtic Affirmative. In the speech of so highly developed i people as the Celts there is no equiva ent to "yes." Thus it happens that iou' shall never hear an Irish waiter 3ronounce the shibboleth "yesslr" of ~is English confrere, for he Invariably 1xpresses an aflirmative by some such >hrase as "I shall, sir," "It is, sir." Blackwood's Magazine. CRUSHES THE LIFJ The most loathsome and repu iving things is the serpent, and the most degrading of all human diseas< serpent sinks its fangs into the flesh through the entire body. Contagious ulcer, soon contaminates every drop whole system. Painful swellings aj copper colored splotches break out become ulcerated, and the hair and e3 are mild compared to the wretchednes stages of the disease when it attack: body. It is then that Contagious B1 ness. The deep eating abscesses at the whole system is corrupted and p< this serpent disease tightens its coil antidote for the awful virus is S. S. E p osed entire1' destroys ever: blood and ren dry up the sores and drie int di Sendforourhome treatment boc advice or special information. This' THE SWFJ 'rhe big cigar hangs over the Ztle building where maCAPER! maeaspecialty of compounding S They keep a full iine of . Medicines and S They carr-y a line of high gra -well as the biggest Cigars. SLook for the sigr UThe +Prescriptih CAPERS & Cl Goans~ Made I can len< on Recal R Ieal Est. on long on er wr M A N N I I l THE SILVER STATUE. A Strange Story of Odd Happenings In a Bohemian Village. M. de Blowitz in his memoirs men tioned this little story of his birth place, the quaint little country village of Grunberg, an out of the world nook in Bohemia. The church, a poor mod est affair, possesses a life size statue of St. -John in massive silver. Curiously enough, the statue has only one arm; hence this strange incident. The statue had been stolen and recovered as if by a miracle by the falling of a priest's cross during a procession of lamenta tion into a deep pool, where in recov ering the cross they found the statue. The thieves had hidden the latter, but had taken away one of the arms. As the sacred burden was taken back into the church the archway over the door gave way and fell straight on the shoulder of a peasant, the last person in the procession, and cut off his left arm. The crowd immediately sur rounded the wretched man, yelling: "He's the thief! He's the thief! St. John has punished him by cutting off his arm!" There was a terrible mob from all sides. The people attacked the peasant, and in a minute his clothes were all in shreds. They were about to drag him along and hurl him into the pool without having asked him a question and without even hesitating as to whether or not be was the real author of the theft when the old priest interfered. "I alone have the right to command here," he said. "Do not touch that man." The crowd fell back a little, and the priest went on speaking. "You are in my church," he said, ad dressing himself to the peasant, "and this is an inviolable and sacred place. No one has a right to touch you here. Stay inside the church, and do not leave it, for once outside you belong to human justice." And the mutilated peasant remained there. "IIe was in the church all day and all night," continues M. de Blowitz, "and he was still there the following day when I left Grunberg. "Five years later, when my voyage through Europe was accomplished, as I passed through Grunberg on my way to my native village, I saw at the door of St. John's church an old man who had lost his left arm. He was on his knees at the threshold of the sanctuary, which he had never dared to leave lest he should be torn to pieces by the people." Tourself. Ask yourself, young man, all sorts of hard questions aboift yourself; find out . all you can about yourself. Ascertain from original sources if you are really the manner of man you say you are; if you are always honest; if you always tell the square, perfect truth in busi ness deals; if your life is as good and upright at 11 o'clock at night as it is at noon; if you are as good a temperance man at a fishing excursion as you are at a Sunday picnic; if you are as good when you go out of the city as you are at home; if. in short. you are really the sort of man your father hopes you are and your sweetheart believes you to be. The Real Thing. Sportsman-Any good hunting in this~ part of the country? Native--Lots of it ISportsman-What kind of game? INative-No game at all. Just hunt ing.-Illustrated Bits. The Natural Part. "She seems to be a natural flirt," he said. "Natural!" the woman impatiently replied. "There's nothing natural about her but the framework."-Chi - cago Record-Herald. He who is most slow in making a pr'omise is the most faithful in Its per formance.-Rousseau. OUTir sive of all - vilest and is Contagious Blood Poison. The ud almost instantly the poison passes Blood Poison, beginning with a little f blood and spreads throughout the pear in the groins, a red rash and on the body, the mouth and throat brows fall out ; but these symptoms and suffering that come in the latter the bones and more vital parts of the >od Poison is seen in all its hideous Id sickening ulcers and tumors show ,isoned, and unless relief comes soon and crushes out the life. The only It is natu,'e's ,'emedy, comn of vegetable ingredients. S. S. S. vestige of the poison, purifies the oves afl danger of transmitting the 'others. Nothing else will do this. 1remedies, like-mercury and potash, ase, but do not cure permanently. Ia and write us if in need of medical ill cost you nothing. PECIFIC CO., ATL ANTA, GA. he Big Olgar.| dewalk in front of the modest lit- 9 resciptions. Toilet Articdes. e Cigars, including the smallest as of the Big Cigar. In + Dug +Sio[e, L, Proprietors, Money on jLoans M1adec .te at i-eas- on1 Real .erst and Es a t e. ime Call te to me. H.~.Gr-. Attorney at Law. A TRUE GHOST STORY THE REMARKABLE EXPERIENCE CF BISHOP WILBERFORCE. Singular and Important Disclosure Made by the Quiet Clerical Guest al an Engixh Country House When Addressed by the Bishop. The following remarkable ircident it the life of the late Samuel Wilberforce bishop of Oxford and afterward of Winchester, is related as absolutely authentic, and the good bishop himself is said to hqve many times rehearsed the story to his friends: On a certain occasion the ,worthy bishop had accepted an Invitation tC stay at a country house not far fron London. Entering the drawiig roon previous to dinner on the evaling of his arrival, he noticed a priest, evident ly of the Roman communion, sitting by the open fire and taking no part in the general conversation. The bishop was somewhat surprised at not being pre sented to the priest, and his astonish. ment was great when a few moment later dinner being announced the guest, retired, leaving the priest at his place by the fire. The hostess having as ,signed Bishop Wilberforce the seat 0 honor at her right hand, as soon as at opportunity offered he remarked: "I beg your pardon, madam, but may I inquire who was the priest we lefi sitting apart in the drawing room?" "Ah, you have seen him, then?" re plied the lady. "It is not every one who has that privilege. I cannot tel you who he is or whence he comes For many years this specter has haunt ed the house and grounds. It has, it fact, been a tradition in the family. He seems to do no harm, and, although he appears only occasionally, we have be come quite accustomed to our friendl3 ghost." "How very singular!" remarked hi; lordship. "'But have you never ad dressed your priestly specter?" "Indeed, I have had no opportunity, nor the desire, for that matter," re sponded the hostess, growing pale. "May I take the liberty now?" in quired the dignitary. "With all my heart, your lordship,' replied the lady. The bishop arose and, returning to the drawing room, found the priest where he had left him a few minutes before. Having no fear, the bishop said kindly: "Who are you, my friend, and why are you here?" The specter seemed to sigh deeply and say as though to itself, "At last!" Then in a hollow voice, addressing the bishop, it continued: "I am the spirit of a priest who left this world some eighty- years ago, and I am here to impart to any one who will- receive It a secret which died with me. I could not rest in my grave while a great wrong was being done which i1 was in my power to right I have been returning all these years in the hope some one would address me, for it was not given to me to be the first to speak, All men have shunned me until now, and It is your mission to do my bid ding. I was a priest of the church -of Rome and was called to this house eighty years ago 'to receive the con fesion of a dying man. He was the soe possessor of a secret the knowl edge of which would alter materially the entail of this vast estate, and in his death lie wished to repair the terrible wrong he had brought upon his kin. "At his request I wrote down the confession word for word as he gave il to me and when he finished had barely time to administer the final sacrameni of the church before he expired in my arms. It was very Important that] should return to London that night and in passing through the Ubrary te leave the house~ I concluded it would be safer not to carry the paper or which was written the confession away with me, but to place it In some secure, unseen spot, where I could obtain i1 the following day and deliver the docu ment to the person for whom it was in tended. Mounting the steps to the bookshelves. I took out a copy 01 Young's 'Night Thoughts,' which was the first book upon the uppermost shell nearest the last window, and, Insert ing the paper carefully between its leaves. I replaced the book and depart ed. A horse was awaiting me at the door, but ere we reached the cntrance of the grounds lhe took fright. I was thrwn and instantly killed. Thus died the secret of my confessor w~ith me. Nc one has disturbed that book in all these years, and no one has had the courage to address this messenger from the un known. The paper will be found asI have stated, and It remains for you to correct the injustice which has sc long been upon this noble family. My mission is over, and I can rest in peace." At the close of this remarkable speech the specter faded gradually from sight. and the bishop was left gazing into space. Recovering from his astonish ment, BIshop Wilberforce went at once to the library and found the book ex atly as Indicated by the specter. Is its secluded corner upon the top shelf, thick with the dust of ages, evidently the book had remained unmolested many years. There was the document ust as described, but now faded and ye'llow. The secret of the confession never became known to the world. The good bishop regarded It as a confidene from the spiritual world and always ended the story with the assurance that the priestly specter was never agaIn seen. It Is a fact, however, that about the time of this extraordinary occurrence the magnificent estate in question passed into possession of a re mote member of the family who until then had lived in obscurity. Two Tests. Wife -Before marriage a man is known by the company he keeps. Husband-And after? Wife-By the clothes his wife wears. -'Cown Topics. CA.STORIA. Beas the The Kind YiU Hlave Always Bought A Chinese Wedding. In. China on the wedding morninI presents are sent to the bridegroomr and among them always a pair of geese. These are not sent as a jest, but as the emblem of domestic peace and faith fulness. In the evening the bridegroon: and his friends convey the bride to hei future home. On arrival she is liftec over the threshold, on which a pan of charcoal is burning to prevent her bringing any evil into the house witi her. She then makes obeisance to thi assembled1 guests and takes food It ompany with her husband. At this meal they share two cups of wine, out with bitter herbs In It and the othei sweetened. This is to symbolize thi sharing of each other's sorrows as well s joys in their married life. n- .The Kind Ynn Hav Alway Rnught INDIAN MAGIC. A Trick that Mystiied Lord Lytton and One That Didn't Work. The following story of Indian magic was told me by the person to whom it was told by the late Lord Lytton. I give it in my own words for the ex cellent though humiliating reason that I have mislaid the manuscript. When in India Lord Lytton often sought out conjurers. but never saw any but the usual feats, such as the mango tree trick and the basket trick. The method in each case is known, or at all events plausible explanations have been given by Mr. Maskelyne and other experts. On one occasion Lord Lytton liked something in the looks of the conjurer who was perform ing in an open space before his house. After the ordinary exhibition his lord ship asked the magician if he could not do something more out of the common way. The man said he would try and asked for a ring, which Lord Lytton gave him. He then requested an offi cer to take in either hand a handful of seeds. One sort was sesame. The name of the other sort my informant did not know. Holding these seeds and having the ring between his finger and thumb, the officer was to go to a well in the corner of the compound. He was to dispose of the seeds In a certain way-I think on the low wall round the well, into the depth of which he was to throw the ring. All this was done, and then the magician asked Lord Lytton where he would like the ring to reappear. He answered, "In my -dispatch box." of which the key was attached to his watch chain, or, at fll events, he had It with him on the spot. The dispatch box was brought out Lord Lytton opened it. and there was the ring. This trick would be easy if the Brit ish officer was a confederate of the juggler and if he possessed a dupli cate key to the dispatch box. In that case he would not throw the ring into the well, but would take it into the house, open the box and insert the ring. But this explanation Involves enormous Improbabilities, while It is unlikely again that the conjurer man aged to insert a duplicate ring Into the dispatch box beforehand. Lord Lyt ton then asked the juggler if he could repeat the trick. He answered In the affirmative, and a lady lent another ring. Another officer took it, with the seeds, as before, and dropped the ring into the well. The countenance of the juggler altered in the pause.which fol lowed. Something, he said, had gone wrong, and he seemed agitated. Turn -Ing to the second officer, he said, "Did you arrange the seeds as I bade you?" "No," said the officer. "I thought that was nonsense, and I threw them away." The juggler seemed horrified. "Do you -think I do this by myself?" he said, and, packing up, he departed. Te well was carefully dragged, and atlast the lady's ring was brought to the surface. That ring at least had certainly been in tl'e water. But had the first ring been as faithfully con signed to the depths? Experts will be of various opinions as to that, yet the hypothesis of confederacy and, of a _duplicate key to the dispatch box is difficult.-Longmanl's Magazine. To Annoy Napoleon. A curious anecdote is Illustrative of the disposition of Talleyrand. It was resolved that each of the allied powers should designate a commissioner charged with the surveillance of Na poleon at St. Helena. Talleyrand proposed to the king for this office M. de Montchenn, described as "an Insupportable babbler, a corn .plete nonenity." On being asked why he had selected this man, Talleyrand replied: "It Is the only revenge which I wish to take for his treatment of me. However, it is terrible. What a pun ishment for a man of Bonaparte's stamp to be obliged to live wIth an ig norant and pedantic chatterer! I know him. He will not be able to support this annoyance. It will make him ill, and he will die of it by slow degrees." Possibilities of Translation. An English writer made an experi ment recently of the gain and loss of translation. I heard that L. would write my "life" When I gavc up my breath; I felt that this indeed would add A new delight to death. This was translated Into another Ian guage, then from that into another, and so on until a dozen versIons had been made. Of course there was a different translator each time. The last version read as follows: Dear. in my song you stil shall live Though under earth you lie. Ah, had you now that grace to give I should not need to die! -New York Tribune. People Who Do Not Whistle. Arabia must be a heaven for those whose lives are made a burden to them by the whistler. The Arab maintains that a whistler's mouth cannot be puri fied for forty days and nights, and they assert of the whistler that Satan has touched his body and caused him to produce the offensive sound. Then *there are the natives of the Tonga is lands, Polynesia. who hold that it is a si to- whistle, as it is an act disrespect fulto od.Even in some districts in north Germany villagers declare that if one whistles In the evening it makes the angels weep. Woman's Unhappy Lot. Since the world began it has been the custom of man to hold woman respon sible for all his misfortunes and at the same time to accuse her of absolute ir responsbility.-New Orleans 'Times Democrat Down, Not Up. "Did any one call me up while I was out?" asked the butcher. "No," replied the boy, "but a cus tomer whose meat for dinner hadn't ar rived called you down."-I~ouston Post ' oxnt: or Prade. "Why don't you try to do something for your country?" "My dear sir," replied Senator Sor ghum. "I am doing all I can for my country. I am going to at least spare it the disgrace of having posterity say that one of its most prominent officials died in comparative poverty."-Wash ington Star. Precedence. "I was married to that man once," said the first Chicago woman. "To Mr. Marryat? The Ideal Why, so was I," replied the other. "You don't say? Were you before or after me?" - Catholic Standard andI Times. Now, Wasn't That mean? Mrs. J.-I wish you wouldn't snore so. M'r. J.-I have to, my dear; otherwise the other boarders would hear you. Columbia J'ester.. Beas te Tqhe Kind You Have Always Bought Your Banking? NO MATTER HOW SMALL, NO MATTER HOW LARGE, Will receive careful attention AT THE BANK OF CLARENDON, MANNING, S. C. This message applies to all. a Tr. We are equipped with a BURGLAR-PROOF SAFE and a FIRE-PROOF VAULT, which with conservative management insures the ut most safety to depositors. Don't forget that we pay Four Per Cent. Znterest on time deposits. THE Bank of Manning, MANNING. S. C. ABO -ALL DON'T HIDE YOUR MONEY. It isn't the best way to keep it. Lots better to put your dollars in THE BANK OF MANNING. BuLggies, Wagons, goad Carts and Carriages REPWAIRED With Neatness and Despatch -AT R. A. WHITE'S WHEELWRUIHT and BLACKCSMITH{ SHlO. I repair Stoves, Pumps and run water pipes, or I will put down a new Pump cheap. If you need any soldering done, give me a call. L AME. My horse is lame. Why? Because 1 rid not have it shod by 1R. A. White, the man that puts on such neat shoes and makes horses travel with so much ease. We Make Them Look New. We are making a specialty of re painting old Buggies, Carriages, Road Carts and Wagons cheap. Come and see me. My prices will please you, and I guarantee all of my work. Sho~p on corner below R. M. Dean's. R. AWHIT E, MANNING. S. C. GO TO For the best Repair Wor~k on Wagons, Buggies, Carts etc. Eoseshoeing a Specialty. You can get an allround job of first lass work on Horseshoeing for 80 ets. See me and get your work done first ass and cheap. C. JACHSON, Manning, S. C. N orthwestern R. R. of S. C. ! i.: T.mri: No. 7. In dreet Sun d y, J1 an. 10 19'M 1'.tweeen Sature r aL!Il C:arn '. Mixed --Daily excpt Suiit.L., Soth boun d. Nith bona io. 69. No. 71. No, 70. No. 08. i'll A M A M P M 25 9 36 La.. Suimte~r . . Ar 9 (00 5 45 27 0 38 N. W. Junetu 8 58 5 43 47 959 ...Dalzell... 825 513 7 05 10 10 ...lkrien... SQ00 458 7 23 10 21 . .liemberts . 7 40 4 43 7 30 1031 '.. Ellerbee .. 7 30 4 28 750 1100 Xolty Jantn 710 425 8 00 1110 Ar. .(Camden. ..Le 700 4 15 (S C Ex Depot) PM PM AM P3] Between Wilson's Mill and Sumter. Sothond. Northbonrna. No. 73. Daily except Sai'day No. 72 P M Stations. P M 3 30 L~e.......Sumter..Ar 12 30 3 33 . .Sammerton Junction.. 12 27 3 47.........Tndal..........11 55 4 00......... Packsville........11 30 425............ilve...........1100 500........afiliard.......-.102 5 15 ...Summnerton .... 10 15 5 55.........Davis..........9.S 6 15.........Jordan ... .. ....0 00 700 Ar..Wilson's Mills.. L 340 Be~tween .Millarud and St. Fant. Daily except Sunday. Sothbrna. Northbound. No 73. No. 75. No. 72. No. 74. P M A M Station s A M1 P M1 4 35 10 20 Le Millard Ar 10 45 5 00 4 40 10 30 Ar St. Paul Le 10 35 4 50 .M A M A M P M TiHOS. WILSON, President. Kodel Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. .NTICi E- OUGHFARJEoFA VEL E ween thE NORTH ANDSOUTIh Florida.-Cuba. A passenger-serviceunexcelled for luxury and comfort,equippedwith the latest Pullman Dining, Sleeping and Thoroughfare Cars. For rates, schedule, maps or any informa tion, write to WM. J. CRAIG, General Passenger Agent, Wilmington, N. C. CAROl LINAO N CEENT CO1 CHARLESTON, S. C. Sole Sel n g A gelts I ILJAIAN Fire Brick, Fire Tile, Arc Brick, Bull-Head and All Special Tiles. ALSO FINEST PREPARED FIR CLY. Carioad Lots. Less Than Carload ' sGLENN SPRiNiS. rr =.MINERAL WATER Nature's Griatest Remedy FOR DISEASES OF THE Liver, Kidneys, Stomadhi and Skirn. Physicians Prescribe it, Patients Depend on it, and Everybody Praises it FOR SALE BY w. 33RO~CW1% efa CC. A\egetablePreparationforAs- AlasBuh i ming hea-~ Ber h SPromotesDigetionCheerful-Sg Iness andRes. nitains neither o OpiumMorphtine nor~mieral. Nor "NARC OTIC. dionSurSmachD Worms,ConvulsionsFeverish- ' ness and LOSOF SLEEP. FrUy Fac Sitie Signature of NEW E YOORK.M EKIN OF IiT O TOn CALL A ~ oftast. Itislmpoyastthoght that thelenseshb centeredatard ~ NEER Dn wThy eas GHEESSNTdispatcAh..N...C..C... GoodyiSighm." I A cordiim invitation To be ued is vry muchanmatte of tE. AI. it man, ghWE JEWEa E tefAes setIA. prpel onnn imsBok perfctl cetd. a ntr how C.areo ypesa0 E . .ON . 9.Dgsswhtyuet NEVERJAA&A1AAiA~AAAL H~I .I~RYADr Tl