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Stella's Dignity. "Glenn paid me a dandy complimnit last night, mother -one that will please you, too," said Stella I arding. "He was talking about the girls in this block and how disgusted the boys were getting with them. He said the trouble with the girls round here was'1 that they had positively no personal I dignity. and he never seemed to take into account that I lived in the block myself. But he made up afterward 1 for forgetting. He said not much. he guessed, he didn't mean me; that I was noted for my dignity with all the fellows, and he'd often heard them1 speak of it. What do you say to that?" Mrs. Harding was listening with motherly satisfaction. "How did it happen to occur to him that you might be applying it to yourself'" she asked. "I put it to him straight. I just waited until he stopped for breath. and then I said, 'Well, jiminy, Glenn. is this a slam?" "Stella, what a speech! There's no dignity about that!" "Oh. toot. mamma!" was the laugh ing response. made without the slight est intention of, disrespect. "That", just the way we all talk. Things like that don't count on dignity one way or the other-not in our bunch. It's how you act, don't you k-now?" Youth's Companion. Foxes' Scalps and Salvation. Some years ago at a session of the legislature of Kentucky an effort to repeal the law offering a bounty on foxes' scalps was made, but was de feated by the -appeal of a member from a mountainous and sparsely set tled region. "Do the gentlemen want to deprive my constituents and me of the benefits of hearing the gospel preached?" he demanded, with indig e nation in his tone and overspreading his rugged countenance. "We are all Methodists up my way, and our preachers won't come without we can give 'em chickens, I know. We can't raise chickens unless the foxes are killed by somebody, that's sure, and there ain't anybody that can afford to spend their time hunting foxes and get nothing to pay for it. So, gentlemen, if you repeal this law you'll be de priving my constituents of the benefit of hearing the gospel preached; that's the way it looks to me!" The law was not repealed at that session.-Ar gonaut. * Hairs and Feathers. Hairs are found on almost every thing that grows, and, if we may so call the fine fibers of asbestus, they even invade the mineral world.. From a piece of mineral asbestus quarried from the earth and looking like a stone with a satiny fracture the silken fibers can be rubbed with the finger till the lump is worn away. Secure a feather somewhere-it will be nich better than a picture-and you-41ll see that it has a ain stem or midrP Along each side of this ex tends the thin par, known as the vane. Look closely and you will see that this vane Is composed of-tiny feathers, call ed beards, fastened together tbrough out their whole length from where their bases join the midrib to their tips. You can easily separate one of these from the rest, when you will see how like a tiny feather it is, with what seems. a flue fuzziness along each edge -St. Nicholas. Astronomy. If there were any money to be made in astronomy- everybody would -be studying it. About all we can see is figures, and these are so big that- they stagger the understanding. Every child In the United States knows how to find the north star (Old Polaris) from the pointers, of the dipper, but nc child can appreciate the statement that this -star Is distant from the earth 210,000, 000,000,000 miles-two hundred and ten trillions! The Twentieth Century Lim Ited, traveling at one mile a minute, would have to run without stopping for 479,000,000 years in order to 'trav .erse this distance. If light really travels 187,500 miles a second, a ray from the north star would be thirty six years in reachng the earth.-New York Press. Wouid Not Pay Charges. He was an impecunious nobleman -with air castles in sunny France. Aft er much deliberation he sent the fol lowing note to the pretty-heiress: Dear Miss-I love you, but dro not kniow how to exEpress myself. How 'would you advise? ,COUNT DE BUST. And the heiress penned the follow inlg: Dear Count-Express yourself any way you wish except C. 0. D)., as you are not worth the charges. --Chicago News. More Worry. "It used to be my ambition," said the business man, "to accumulate a for tune and then retire." "Well," answered the friend, "haven't you realized it?' "No. I've got the money, .. c I don't dare retire. I've got to stay awake night and day to keep somebody from1 *taking It away from me." A Safety Match. "Papa, what is a safety match?' Mr. Henpecked (looking carefully to see if his wife is within hearing)-A safety match, son. -is when a bald beaded man marries an armless wo man!-Short Stories. Couldn't Lose. "Things seeni to be coming your way of late." "Couldn't be any softer if I was the hero of a poker story."-Kansas City - Journal. Steadiness of national-charactergoes ,'wthdirmpess- of-foothold-Onf-thesoil. DavId Starr-Joi'dsn. The Cheerful Undertaker. A most amusing thing occurred one evening upon our arrival at a small town in New Zealand. We found awaiting us at the station the local carriage and pair' with the local un dertaker as footman. He was garbed in his usual funereal suit of black, but he had substituted a white tie in or der to relieve the situation somewhat. and, evidently with a desire to dispel any morbid Impressions he might oth erwise have created, he commenced to whistle a selection of the most cheer ful tunes he knew, while he held the door open for us and helped us into the carriage-Clara Butt in Musical Home Jburnal. Revolts at Cold Steel. "Your only hope." said three doctors to Mrs. M. E. Fisher, Detroit. Mich., suitering from severe rectal trouble. lies in an operation," "then used Dr. Kings New Life Pills," she writes. "till~ wholly cured." They prevent Appendi *ottis, cure Constipation, Headache. 25c. at Dr. W. E. Brown & Co., and J. E. Arwant. The Frenchman Looked Innocent. Some time since, in a Tremont street tore in Ioston, a nervous little t: renchman brushed against a pretty 9 rifle of vase ware valued at about t: :14 and succeeded in getting several u core more pieces out of it than had 0 ,one into its making. The floorwalker ed the abashed Parisian aside and 1-4 4ylitely explained that the broken vase n nust be paid for. Monsieur fetched a iandful of small silver and copper, I nostly foreign, from his pocket when b .e was told -the value of the trifle. I "Mon Dieu," cried the Parisian. "70 b ranes!" At this he took out his bill V )ook and discovered a fifty dollar ex- e >ress draft, which the floorwalker in- t ;tantly seized upon, to the unspeak- n ble horror of its owner. After deducting the value of the T -ase the former handed the man his P :hange and dismissed him with a floor valker's blessing. The express draft m reached the bank in due time, with o our others as fraudulent, but the vol- 1 tile little Frenchman had departed b outhward with the swallows.-Bohe- o nian Magazine. 1 Followed Suit. On the day of the admission of M. t Rostand to the French academy the a tuthor of "Cyrano" and "L'Aiglon" S gave a breakfast to a few of his a riends, the guest of honor being Mme. Bernhardt. The actress was dressed in i handsome gown, which had been nade expressly for the occasion. At P :he end of the breakfast she arose and t n an impressive manner took a glass, a ield it high and said. -I drink to the 1 ,reatest of French dramatists, M. Ro-: tand, and I drink after the Greek t anner!" She then poured the con -ents of her glass over her head and I ,own. . Two of Rostand's small sons were itting at a side table wearing new relvet suits, also made for the occa Ion. In the silence which followed s Bernhard's dramatic tribute the elder )f the boys arose and, imitating her manner, said, "I'drink to the greatest Jf poets, my papa, and I also drink in the Greek fashion!" and straightway celuged himself and his small brother with the contents of his glass. A Scene Not In a Play. An extraordinary scene took place In the Princess' theater, London, on the night of the first production of Charles Reade's great play, "Never Too Late to Mend," Oct. 4, 1865. During the prison scene a large quantity of water was thrown over Miss Moore, who took the part of Josephs, the character done to death by the warders. One of the critics, Mr. Tomlin of the Morning Ad vertiser, rose from his seat and pub licly protested against the unnecessary cruelty. This aroused almost a riot aong the audience, and the action of the play was stopped for some con- 1 siderable time. Fuel was added to the fre by George Vining, the lessee of the theater, who was playing the part of ( Tom Robinson and who made a most Imprudent speech, in which he prac tically insulted every critic present, with the result that the theater was left severely alone by the press for i many months. The play, however, : turned out to be a popular success and had, for those days, the phenom enal ruh of 140 performances. Reading In Bed. "Boys and girls under eighteen should be strictly forbidden to read in bed," says the Lancet, on the author ity of Dr. Hugo Feilchenfeld ~of Ber lin, who declares that in the case of young persons whose eyes are. not fully developed the practice is likely to induce myopia. While young peo ple run the greatest risk, the Lancet thinks that reading in bed is unde sirable for persons of any age and states that "in the case of aged, ani ous,worried and bedridden people, to whom it would seem cruelty to deny what may perhaps be almost their only luxury, for fear of inducing some slight error of refraction, care should be taken that the light is sufficiently brilliant, the eyes being shaded from it, and that the patient lies on his back with head and shoulders raised." Wellington's Tact. There was an army of generals as sembled at Paris in 1814, and when the various Austrian axgl Pi-ussian gener al who had been beaten by Napoleon came crowding round the Duke of Wel lington and expressing lots of compli ments to him for having never been beaten by the French the duke pleas ed them Immensely by saying, "Ah, but you. know I never met Bonaparte, and I have always looked on him as being as good as 40,000 men." How Indians Catch~ Monkeys. In South America the Indian take a cocoanut and eut a hole in each end just large enough for the monkey's paws. Then they fill the middle of the1 nut with sugar. When a monkey comes across the shell he thrusts in| one paw and, finding sugar, he pushes| In the other. He closes both paws on the sugar and then will not remove either for fear he shall lose the sugar. Then, while he cannot use either paw, he is easily caught. A Chinese Story. A Chinese barber while shaving a customer's head drew blood and put one of his fingers on the place. Again ie made a cut and put down another finger, and so on until he had no more fingers free. "Ah," said he as he paus ed in his work, "a barber's trade is dif ficult. We ought to have a thousand fingers"-Scrap Book. Apt Pupil. "Didn't I see the grocer's boy kiss you this morning, Martha?" "Yes'm. But he ain't to blame, mna'am. 'Twas the iceman set him the bad example." Cashing Up. "Have you ever played poker with your son-in-law?" "Only once," answered Mr. Cumnrox. "It wasn't very satisfactory." "Did he win?" "No: he lost. But it merely resulted in my having to write him a check so that he could indorse it over to me." Washington Star. A Slander. Member of the Woman's Christian Temperance Ujnion-Did you write this notice of my lecture on "The Demon Rum?" Editor-Yes, madam. Member of the Woman's Christian Temperance UUnion-Then I would like to know what you mean by saying, "The lec turer was evidently full of her sub Foley's Honey and Tar clears the air passages. stops the irritation in the throat, soothes the intlinmed membran es, and the most obstinate cough disap pears. Sore and inflamed lungs are healed and strengthened, and the cold is expelled from the system. Refuse any but the genuine in the yellow package. Guarding a Nail. A gentleman in Jerusalem told me xat he found a Turkish soldier on nard in some part of the Church of ic Holy Sepulcher, where It was not sual for a sentry to be, and inquired E him why he was there. He pointed to a nail in the wall and plied. "It is my duty to watch that all." Asked why, he explained that the ,atins or the Greeks-I forget which ad driven the nail with the view of anging a picture; that a rival sect ad furiously objected, saying that it as an interference with their prop ety and wanted to pull out the nail; 2at thereupon the Turkish govern ent had intervened and set him to -atch the nail and see that no picture -as hung upon it and that it was not ulled out. To allow the picture to be fung ould have been to admit the claims f those who drove in the nail. To al >w it to be pulled out would have een to admit the claims of those who bjected to the driving in of the nail. 'herefore the nail must be preserved nd the picture must not be hung, and : see that this was so an armed sen 7y must watch day and night. For ught I know he may be watching till.-Rider Haggard's "A Winter P11 rimage."_ Traced by a Bluebottle Fly. The great objection to the use of oison for rats .is that they retire to heir homes and die there, to become nuisance and a menace to health. riends of the writer were compelled D have the floor and wainscoting of heir dining room removed for this eason. A wiser man, knowing that a air of poisoned rats had got under his oor, summoned not a carpenter, but a aturalist, to his aid. They knew that he rats were under the floor, but the lifficulty was to fix the spot There eemed to the owner of the house no .ternative to the removal of the rhole floor; hence his appeal to the ature detective. The latter would tot hear of the floor coming up. He ried out for a bluebottlefly. One was aptured unhurt and turned loose in he room. After a little preliminary tawking the bluebottle darted to the loor and remained on one spot. like pointer which has found game. "Your rats are under there," said he naturalist. They cut down through hat board, and there were the rats. ew York Mail. The. First Pantomime. John Rich has the credit of produc ng the first pantomime ever seen in Engand. This was performed on )ec. 26. 1717, at the .theater in Lin Loin's Inn Fields. Rich had found him elf unable to compete with the legiti nate drama at Drury Lane, so he be. hought himself of the comic masques xcasionally performed in London and ombined with their scenic and me. hanical effects the maneuvers of the pantomime ballet. The result was 'Harlequin Executed," which the ad rertisement of that day described as 'a new Italian mimic scene, between t scaramouch, a harlequin, a country 'armer, his wife and others." There vas all the business with which we sere familiar from childhood, huts urned into palaces, shops into gar lens, houses into trees. Of course the 'earnest student of the drama" pro tested against this innovation, ,but arlequin, Columbine & Co. have aintained their hold on public favor intil the present year of grace. He Knew Them. This was overheard in the lobby of . big hotel In Cincinnati when a bus oad of traveling salesmen came from he station. Every man of ~them as e signed the register paused to shake iands with the hotel clerk-fatherly >ld fellow who .had been there many rears. "Ab." said onze of them to the lerk, "Ws a good thing you're still on le, Uncle Dave. I don't think the house could run without you." 'Couldn't it, though!" said Uncle Dave. 'You fellows would come in here, and f there was a strange clerk you'd ay, 'Where's Uncle Dave?' And the 21erk would say: 'Why, didn't you dear? He died a month ago.' And :en you'd say: Well, I'll be darned! bat's too bad. Say, when 'll din aer be ready?" Dressing the Sponge. When sponges are first torn from he sea bed they are of a dark color mnd living. By tramping and pressing them with the feet a milky substanlce :>ozes out, whereupon the sponge dies. They are then Immersed in the sea l'or a space of eight or ten hours. The :lark, skinny substance Is then remov .ad by scraping, and gradually, through relening, drying and bleachinag, they take on the fine yellow color which tharacteizes many of them. The Office Boy Instructs. Contributor-I should like to leave these poems with your editor. What is the usual procedure? I haven't done any magazine work' before. Of fce Boy-Well, the usual custom is to leave 'em an' call back in a day or so an' git 'em.-Exchange. In the Dark. Unle Joe-Yes, Teddy, it is quite possible that there are people In. the Little Teddy-Well, what becomes of them when there isn't any' moon? Savage. Caller-Sir, I am collecting for the poets' hospital. Will you contribute anything? Editor-With pleasure. Call tonight with the ambulance, and I will have some poets ready.-Judge. It is grdat eleverness to know how to conceal our eleverness.-La Rlochefou Prescribes Dr. Blosser's Catarrh Remedy. Dear Sirs-I first used your Catarrh Cure it the case of my son, who had chronic naso-phar. yngeaI catarrh, with great benedit to him.] aften prescribe it for other of my patients. anc [ hink it is quite the flnest remedy for catarrk that has ever been placed on the market. Thanking you ror past favors. I am, Yours very truly. M. J. D. DANTr/LER. M. D.. Elloree, S. C. Dear Sirs--Your medicine is -:inning fast it this country. It has effected some remarkabb eures. I do not Icnow~ that it has failed in ont instance where it has teen fairiy tried. Very trulv yours. Rev. T. H. AI.LEN. Lexington. K y. Dr. Blosser's Catarrh Remedy is for sale h3 H. R. Boger. Manning S. C. A month's treat. ment or tI.00. A free sample for the atsking A postal card will bring it by mail. An Added Attraction. "Ah. Eflsie, it is flne to be married to an officer-such a beautiful uniform and so many decorations!l" "Yes, and, besides that, he'll have a band at his funeral."-Wahre Jacob. Foley's Orino Laxative cures consti. paation'and liver trouble and makes thi bowsis healthy and regular. Orino ii superior to pills and tablets as it doei not grie or nauseate. Why take any thin els. W.E. Bown Co His Wonderful Method. "You haven't been married very long, have you?" said a guide at the state capitol to a young man who was signing "Mr. and Mrs." in the register for visitors at the desk at the en trance. "How did you know?" demanded the young man. "Oh, we get used to such people here and can tell them every time," was the response. "You haven't written that name with "Mrs." very long, have you? I believe I can tell how long you have been married from the signa ture," the guide continued. "Well, we haven't been married very long, but I don't see how you can tell from the signaturd' How long has it been?" "Well, let me see." The guide picked up the book and scanned the name closely. "You have be-an married flve days today," he said with an air of cer tainty. "That's right, it's five days, but I don't see how you can tell." The young wife had been sitting on the marble bench during the colloquy, and not until the couple went out of the building did she tell "hubby" that the guide had accosted her in the same way and that she had told when they had been married.-St. Paul Pioneer Press. Bavarian Distances. In the Bavarian highlands signposts along the' roads, instead of stating the number of mile; or kilometers to the . various villages, give the amount of time which the average pedestrian will T supposedly take to traverse the dis- J tance. This is merely an official ex pression of the -very general custom of the peasants in the region, who invari ably tell inquers on the roads not C how far it is to a place, but how long it takes to get there. Not only that, but they make the system still more T unsatisfactory to the stranger by a lit tle additional eccentricity of their own. For instance, one asks, "How far is it to Oberammergau?" "A small half hour," will be the an swer, or 'perhaps "A good half hour" or "A big half hour." Which is puzzling until the stranger learns that a "small half hour" means twenty-five minutes, "a good half hour" thirty minutes, "a big half hour" thirty-five minutes, "a small three quarters of an hour" forty minutes. and so on. An Economic Protest. "Did I understand you to ask me if I wanted work?" asked Plodding Pete. . "That's what you understood, If you understood anything," answered the u woman with a cold, steely eye and- a square jaw. "You've got some wood that needs chopping, I suppose." "I have." "Lady, I'm surprised at you. Don't you know dat de trees gather moisture gradually an' by slowly lettin' it into de ground keep up a steady water sup ply? . Don't you know dat when you leave de hillsides naked an' bare de 4 water comes down in a freshet, same as beer from a barrel wit de head stove in? Don't you know dat future generations Is. goin' to miss de umn brageous protection overhead an' dat our grandchildren is liable to be at de mercy of a parasol trust? An' you want me to chop wood! Lady, I'm surprised at you!"-Washington Star. His Saturday Night. The pretty, broad faced, blue eyed woman was tin how it happened that her husband came home so late of a Saturday night. "When he goes to get shaved for Sunday," she said, "he waits so long for the line that gets there before him that he goes to sleep in the chair while he is being shaved. Then the barber, who is a friend of his, lets him sleep as long as he likes after he has fin-4 ished with him. But I don't see how he can fall asleep with a dangerous 4 razor scraping all over his face. I couldn't Could you?" "It isni't the most plausible excuse I ever heard," said one to whom the question was put, "but it ought to pass ! on account ol' its originality.":-New York Press. Coloring an Abyssinian Bride. Western brides have an easier time than their Atyssinian sisters. On the occasion of her marriage an Abyssin Ian bride has to change her skin. From ebony she has to become the color of cafe* an lait To accomplish this the expectant bride Is shut up in a room Ifor three months. She is covered with Iwoolen stuff, with the exception of her Ihead. Then they burn certain green. and fragrant branches. The fume.s which they produce destroy the orig inal skin, and in Its place comes the new skin, sort and clear as a baby's.: The elders of the family feed the young woman with nutritive force meat bells. IPrecocious Punctilio. "So you don't believe In Santa Claus?" "I didn't exactly say that," answered the little Boston girL "But I don't p; prove of him. I understand that he calls after 6 o'clock and doesn't wear: evening clothes."-Washington Star. Not So Sharp. "That Is as sharp young man your daughter is going with these days." "Not so sharp as he thinks he is. He thinks he Is going to stick me for a home and puncture my bank account, but he isn't"-Houston Post Figures Don't Lie. Hoax-Men live faster than women. Joa-That's right My wife and I were the same age wl'en we were mar ried, but Im fifty now, and she's just thirtyone.-'.lustrated BIts. Won a Wife by His Skiti. Action was a Grecian painter of about the time of Alexander, and he won his wife by his great work. He painted a picture called "The Nuptials of Alexander and Roxane," which was exhibited at the Olympic games. It created such a stir that one of the judges cried in admiration, "I reserve crowns for the victorious athletes, but I give my daughter in marriage to the painter Action as a recompense for his picture." Action was one of the art ists who excelled in the art of mixing colors. He could not go to the nearest store and purchase them, as artists do C R. Kluaer, the Jeweler. 1060 Vir ginia Ave., Indianapolis. Ind., writes: "I was so weak from kidney trouble that I could walk a hundred feet. Four bot tles of Foley's Kidney Remedy cleared my complexion, cured my backache and the irregularities disappeared, and I can now attend to busmness every day, and recommend Foley's Kidney Remedy to all sufferers, as it cured me after the doctors and ether remedies had failed." No aCnU1 heo- k fMni -9-0 Manning, S. C. apita o ...... . $40,000 irplus.........-... 40,000 tockholders' Liability...... .40,000 otal Protection to Depositors. $120,000e " PRESIDEN1T W_ W_1 A LITTLE TALK PAP 'ith our President or Cashier vill soon vince you of the advisability of anking with us. THE RESoURCES nd connection of this Bank assure safe ad profitable management of all your usiess. APPAREL SHOP OR MEN ND LADIES Everything of the best for the personal wear and adorn ment of both sexes. We fill mail orders carefully and proniptly. )AVID ZUT FITTING ~OMPANY, Charleston, S. C. .BANK OF CLARENI We solicit your banking bus natronize this safe and stron; tinued growth and operation as a dollar, speaks for~ itself, We want to be your ban customer, (come and see us a] vou are, come and see us any -9 'doa good thing for yourself. Interest Paid on BANK OF CLARENc Cures Biliousness, Sick Headache, Sour Stom ach, Torpid Liver and Chronic Constipation. Pleasant to tale I IC 0 0 S t A ne Penl Untouched Fo: cc ~ Peruv South Carolina. ERKELEY COUNTY. CLARENDON COUNTY. Notice is hereby given, in accordance ith the requirements of law, and specially or Section 34 Volume 1 of the livil Code of South Carolina, that the dersigned intends to make an appli tion to the Honorable the General Lssembly of the State of South Caro na, at its coming session, for permis ion and authority to erect and main in a proper* bridge across the Santee tiver, from some point on its property n the North or East side as may be of aid river in Clarendon County, to some oint on its property on the South or Vest side as may be, of said river in erkeley County; in the locality of its fill Plant: and connecting the said Mill laht with its property on the other ide. ANTEE RIVER CYPRESS LUMBER COMPANY. December 5, 1908. Eat and Grow Fat FRESH MEATS AT ALL TIMES. EVERYTHINGGOOD TO EAT. Sive us a Trial. lark & Huggins. ~TATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, Qounty of Clarendon. y James M. 'Windham, Esq., Probate Judge. jHEREAS, David E Geddings made Isuit to me, to grant him Letters of idministration of the Estate and Effects f Norman L. Carroway. These are therefore to cite. and ad nonish all and singular the kindred nd creditors of the said Norman L. Jarroway, deceased, that they be and pear before me, in the Court of Pro ate, to be held at Manning on the ~1st day of January next, after publica ,ion thereof, at 11 o'clock in the fore. ioon, to show cause, if any they have, hy the said administration should not >Gven nder my hand, this 2nd day >f Jannary, A. D. 1909.. JAMES M. W.INDHAM, [SEAL.] - Judge of Probate. )ON, Manning, S C. iess. It is to your interest to bank, Four years of con without the loss of as much does it not? ers, if you are not already a >outrit and tell us why. If how. It is never too lateto ;avings Deposits. E)ON, Manning, S. C. axnve Fruit Syr W. E. BROWN & CO. imittmmimtmmmmmrnnmmmmmmi Livian Guano a by the Chemist or the &Manufacturer r TOBACCO )TTON, TRUCK _ ian Guano C orporation CHARLESTON, S. C. SIm.V.-ma lmo; E all O* IK COE. Lower Prices than we qu.ote mean but one.thing- %f. the .goods are of inferior quality- I!' - Remember, Mhe best is none too good.' And the best isthecheapes - be it Dry Goods or Groceries VIP BRING YOUR ~CJB WORK TO THE TINES OFHCE Iakes tidneys and- Bladder Right - OTW AIA ManZan Pile Remedy IILS RELUElES WvHEN OTHERS'FAIL SHVNSAON stops the cough and healslunga eetotecmor fhe Cleanses the system i IALTLS thoroughly and clears SHV(*D sallow complexions of' HMO)N .,pimples and blotches. 'nwtheansad 131 It s uarntediach.s.ittd.u.wih.a ey coiae i omfrtiofn Ge1. ALe &TLSo, SAING A0D SH A MPIPDTNG .Dors, Shanss Blnds ~~$ Mouldinandli atcrialto -S s Wexgtsnded.ds Waingn ac Time s s Block.ty 8:30. Visit Saresh inds, CH~ ARLOETNASRC