Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, February 08, 1905, Image 4
BISHOP OWES
AND LIF
(Ministers of All Denominatio
Join in Recommending
Pe-ru-na to the
People.
PuftUr Hpcalcinii caftcclnUy r.rpni
the thr?at nod branchial iiibi-H
catarrhal ajJ'ccManr.
Breathing tlit? nir of crowded assi
blies. and tin: necessary exposure to ill)
nir whirl: many preachers must fa
makes catarrh especially prevalent ami
their class.
1'erunu lni* become justly popular anic
tlicni.
> The Bishop's Strr
J Ti. II. Hnlscy, Bishop C. M. K. C
* "I liave found Perttna to be a gi
t \ritb this terrible tllm>'inr for mm
X been using l'erunn, which linn relieve
? "I have tried many remedies am
J for them, I'ut I J'ounil not bum ho
* ffieat medicine, f'/riinu.
? "1 /eel hure thai I'crttna Is u
* but it Ih alrio a blesslm/ to ho rf ert
t "Every individual who suffers w
* a magnificent and sovereign remedy.'
*
!>?-. <i-.. ^ *
m uim la niv IIIH31 prompt nnil SU
rcineiiy for catarrh that can he taken.
Afaiii/ a }>reii(;/(?r / ?.< been able
*>i ??( / U i s en;/(if/< men f* #?nI}/ been nmc J
keeps on hand a battle of I'erun
eeady to meet any enter ye nop tin
win y arlMS.
iO^OOOPiants for I6c.^
Mori' (rardem and farina are planted U> rd
^^^^^.Salrrr'a Uei-da than any other In MJj
Amoi Ira. There la reaaon fur tin*, tl
Cl wi own over 5,000 MTM for tho pr<?v <
Hr'ailn^hin of >"ir wnrrnnled arrdi. m
Wknin I : li-r to Induce you to try them. >.o m
mako )olMha following Ulipio
For1B Oente Pomtpmld A
-f'YV \lOOOFsrly. Bp<1lu?an.l LstSlal>l>S||?** Uk
I I l\ I'JOOO Kino J a ley Turnips, WM
I f|/ttooo HitMkUi CoUrj.
v iiyi eiMHi iiuh Naur uiibm, Jm
M pil 1OO0 SplrndM OnlooOj
I [) 1O00 Rir* LimIabi Mod! )? *, 12A"
f 1000 <.lurlou?lj Urllllaot Kloooro.
Q A I A Ivor o novn packagr* contain uffl- ^
I BL sclent need to ?row 10.000 plants, fur- W\
B Ka InUhlnff buahfilt of Urllllmit m%
|H I flower* and lota ami lot* of choice /w
|H H I vegetables, together with our great [U
H| I catalog, telling all about Flower*,
iH BB I l:. . Small Fruits, etc., all for jgi
fjl 1 Uo In BtsmpB nnd thli notice. K
Ulg 110-pago catalog alone, 4c. M
Vml\\x\ iOHH A. 8ALZER 8EED CO, *
IIIII IJ 1t.o.L. La Crosse, Wist '<
LAZY LIVE!
"I And Caaoareta ?o ?or><1 tha? I would nn?
without thi'Ui, 1 wua troubled a grout ileal w
torpid liver and headache. Now atuco takl
Cu..arvta Candy Cathartic 1 feel vory niurh belt
I aliall et-rluiuly recommend them to my frlot
aa the heat modlelno 1 have over aren."
Anna llatlnot, Oaboru Mill No. 2. Fall lilvor, Ma
U The Bowels ^
CAN OY C ATMA/mC ^
Pleaannt. Palatnhle, Potent. Taate flood. Po flni
Never riloken. Weaken or(frlj?', 10c. ?< MV. Not
Bold in hulk The |<?nnlnn tablet atnmpod C! C
Uuaruntnvd to euro or your money hack.
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 6
ANNUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXE
corn fields
!$) ARE QOLD FIELDS jg
?r to the farmer who underSi
stands how to feed his 1 '
crops. Fertilizers for Corn
must contain at least 7 U ^
Ph per cent, actual V |
I Potash|
wa Send for our books?they \/|
(FJ tell why Potash is as necessary Vj
5 to plant life as sun and rain; n
sent free, if you ask. Write n
Zm ' OERMAN KALI WORKS f
New York?93 Nassau Street, or ^
CUJL Atlanta, Ga.?ia>, South RruaU St.
GDcoA
Thompson's Eye Wai
Field Seeds
Country merchant* nnd fanners can -n\f
to |?et ?-oiu t>y writing the Nmhvllle 1" .>'1
Ci>.. s?ali>tllo.*Tenn., for *;*>< i a I ca-lt i>M<
The only wtrietly cash field aced house in
Mouth Write today
NASHVILLE PRODUCE C<
J. J. ODll., M;tiui|;or.
mm
5 HEALTH
E TO PE-RU-NA
IftAfiS
The Ft .ends of Pe-ru-na.
Despite tlie prejudice* of tlie tnedicn
profession against proprietary medicines
3 the clergy have always maintained i
strong confidence and friendship for l'o
nina.
They have discovered by personal ex
perienee that l'eruna does all that ii
claimed for it.
i
ng Tribute to Pe-ru-na. ]
hurch, Atlanta, Gn., writes: <
eat remedy for catarrh. 1 have nttjj'crctl\
rr tintti ttrcnlfi pears, until since 1 have]
d me of the trouble. i
il spent a great deal of hard-earned money ]
effectual It i the cmt' of catarrh as the j
<>t otilita triumph of mall cat science, 1
tt<i h it ntn till tf. ]
ith respiratory diseases will find LVruna ]
L. 11. lialsey, lip. V. M. K. Church. !
ire We have on file many letters of recom
mendation like the one given above. W
to can give our readers only a slight glim|>s<
'?e of the vast number of grateful letter
a. Dr. Hartnian is constantly receiving, n
at praise of his famous catarrh remedy, I'c
I runa.
It ,aaa ,a^av a.?a .a >-n *- ,-*-<.a,.a
5 WHAT'S THE USE OF
-f SAYING "GIVE ME A
i 5-CENT CIGAR," WHEN
3 BY ASKING FOR A : s
f'CREMO"
YOU GET THE BEST
3j A.rv.vr r-rriAit iv
I j ~ AMERICA
^ "The World's Largest Seller" |
____ ^ >ii't#,?^fVt,>T,'tVvVVvTvT' V >Tt"Tv'Vv'v
Gantt's Planters and Distributor
WE GUARANTEE THEM.
^ BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
iS | Wrltr for and Catalo^u*.
y ' GANTT riHQ. CO., Hacon, Q*
OI
S
? It is understood that the protoc
! between the United States and San
Domingo will be submitted to the Se
ate for ratification. So. G.
AN OLD MAN'S TRIBUTE.
An Ohio Prntt llnlMtr, 7S Vw?r? Old, Curt
of a Terrllilr Caar Afte.' Ton Yeara i
Hufftrlng.
Sidney Justus, fruit denier, of Me
tor, Ohio, Rays: "I was cured by Doun
Kidney Pills of a severe enso of ki
ney troutdc,
SIDNItT JCTBTrS. often 1 COIl
hardly straighte* my hack. Theachii
was hn<l in the daytime, but just i
bad at nipht, and 1 was always Inn
in the morning. 1 was bothered wl
rheumatic pains ami dropsical awe
Inp of the feet. The urinary pnssap
, were painful, and the secretions we
_ discolored and so fr?H? that often 1 hi
^ j to rise at nlirht. 1 felt tired all dn
I Half a box served to relieve ine, ai
J,,!;1 ' three boxes effected a permane
I cure."
lll,; A TRIAL FREE- Address Fost<
j Mllhurn Co., Huffalo, N. V. For sr
*' by all dealers. I'rice oO cts.
V
OUR NATIONAL LAWMAKERS
The Senate and Houee Regularly at
a Work?What They are Doing.
The agricultural appropriation bill
was considered in the House, but the
debate turned principally on the topic
of restricting the railroads in the matter
of freight rates. As if impatient to
deal with the subject, the Hepburn
bill, although not before the House, and
which probably will not be for several
days, formed the basis of the discus-,
ion. A feature of the debate was the
statement by Mr. Williams, of Mississippi,
who Bald that on the subject of
revision of rates the Democratic party
was committed without addition or subtraction
to the recommendations of
President Roosevelt in his recent message.
The Democrats, ho said, were
j glad to have the President's views,' bcl
cause it was Democratic doctrine." it
ought, he said, to be Amerirnn doctrine,
and he said he was only too glad
that the President was more of an
American than a Republican or Demo?rat.
"We will, tocmark his tracks on
this subject." declared Mr. Williams,
amid great applause, "and," ho continued,
facing the Republican side, "wo
will call on you as American citizens
to help us tocmark them."
AtV IVIIll.m. Int... " ? * '
..a., m uiiuuio tuivt iioan icu it U9 Hid
belief that railroad influences were felt
In the Senate at the same time the
so-called Cullom bill, establishing the
inter-State commerce commission, was
substituted by the Senate conferees
for the so-called Reagan bill. The
latter bill, he declared, would have
fulfilled the requirements.
Mr. Hell, of California, asserted that
the Hepburn bill was so worded as to '
b?- indefinite as to what constituted a
easonable rate.
Consideration of the agricultural bill !
had not been concluded when the I
' House adjourned.
| Agricultural Bill Parses House.
The House Friday pascd the agricultural
appropriation bill without material
amendment. During its considera*
tion the usual discussion of the provision
for free seed u.stribution was inJ
lulged in. Mr. Lilly, of Connecticut,
? characterizing it as petty larceny.
Mr. i'ou, of Nortli Carolina, wanted
the appropriation increased to $400,000
[ and offered an amendment to that
J sffeet at the same time remarking that
it would cost more than that to in
lugurate President Roosevelt. The
intendment was rejected.
J The present system of the AgriculJ
tural Department in publishing cotton
? reports was denounced by Mr. Livingt
ston, of Georgia, as damnable and
' shameful, and he pleaded for some one
to submit an amendment requiring
e that the reports shall he published
b every two weeks, in order to stop
? gambling in cotton. He would, he
1 said, have offered surh an amendment
himself had he not been "thrown down
and turned out of doors" when he
f brought in a resolution of the same
V character some time ago.
? Eulogies upon the character of the
\ late Senator George F. Hoar, of Mas\
sachusetts, practically engrossed the
time of the Senate. There were lf?
? speeches by as many Senators, includ\
ing Senator Hoar's colleague, Mr.
V Lodge, and his successor. Mr. Crane.
After the conclusion of the memorial
? services, the Senate adjourned out of
i. respect to the dead Senator's memory,
i- Among the speakers were Messrs. Dan?
lei. Bacon and Cock roll.
? Mr. Pettus took aecaslon to speak
especially of Senator Hoar's fairness
to the South in the period succeeding
? the war, saying: "He was throughout
* ii <111 a man 01 innnite compassion, of
V comprehensive sympathies, of nohle
V and unselfish impulses. He was a par{
tisan without rancor, an antagonist
* without bitterness, a friend without
reservations and conditions, a coni
querer without vengeance, a loser without
resentment."
Charge Against Catholics.
Sensational disclosures in relation to
the alleged use of Indian trust funds
for the support of sectarian schools
were made by Senator Bard, in a statement
to the Senate committee on Indian
affairs. Senator Bard addressed
the committee after the statements had
been made by S. M. Bros!us, agent for
S the Indian Bights' Association, and
Francis E. Lupp, commissioner of Indian
affairs. Senator Bard addressed be
had been visited by Dr. E. L. Seharf,
an agent for a Roman Catholic Mission
1. Society, and asked to use his intluence
? with Republican members of Congress
. looking to forwarding the interest of
1 Catholics in getting a diversion of
Indian trust funds for the support of
Catholic schools on the reservations.
? He quoted Dr. Seharf as saying that if
the Republicans would agree to bring
? about the desired legislation, the Catholics
would see that twenty congressto
ional districts in which the Ropublln.
cans were weak were carried for the
party. Dr. Seharf was said to have
given the names of the districts, together
with the number of Catholic
voters in each, and names of the priests
mi who would look after the agreement
0r and deliver the necessary votes to carry
the districts,
u- Senator Teller said that if It was
B proven that the statement of I)r. Scharf
was made in earnest, then there was
more cause to complain of the interference
of the Catholic Church than
the Mormon Church in political affairs
of the country.
ie Gen. Miles and President Davis,
k- The treatment by General Nelson A.
er Miles of Jefferson Davis, President of
e- the Confederacy, during tho time he
(j. was a prisoner at Fortress Monroe. Vn.,
ro was recalled in the House when Mr.
Williams, of Mississippi, the minority
rt> leader, tried to secure the adoption of
the Senato amendment to the House
id provision regarding retired officers
Id serving with tho State militia. Messrs.
Hull, of Iowa, and Hay, of Virginia.
iltl both members of the military affairs
lVe committee, endorsed the Houso pro- I
vision, making it retroactive. The latter
declared it was Democratic doctrine to
save money and for ihat reason exiled
08 upon the Democrats to stand by the
r<* committee. Mr. Williams' motion to
ul agree to the Senate amendment, which
y. does not mane the law concerning relid
tired officers retroactive, was lost?71
nt to 171. Tho 1>111 then was sent to conference.
The postoffice appropriation bill was
<r" debated for an hour, but its consideral'e
tlon had not been concluded when thQ
House adjuorned.
4
'* *
FTTfl nerrannentlr oar?<l. No lit* or norroBSnessafter
first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
NerreRestorer.t2trlal bottleand treatise free
Dr. R. H Kmxk. Ltd.. 831 Arch St.. Ptdln., Pa
There are 12,520 boy* and 4059 girls ia
the industrial schools of Great Britain.
To Care Cold In One Dae
Take Laxative Urotno tjuinine Tablets. All
druggists refitnd money if it fails to cure.
E. \\. Grove's signature is on box. 25c.
Ante are ihc most brainy of all creatures
in proportion to size.
Mr?. WInslow's Soothing Syrup foreblldren '
teething, soften tho sums, reilncos inflammation,
nlluys pain, cures wind colic,25e.abottlo
The town of Charlottenburg, near Berlin,
has an open-air school.
Plso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible
medicine for coughs and colds.?N. \V.
Samuel.. Ocean Grove, N. J., Fel>. 17, 1900.
The sale of automobiles in Busaia is
growing rapidly.
A Guaranteed Cure I'm- filet.
Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
I'iles. Druggists will reiutid money it Pazo
Ointment tails to cure in ti to 14 days. ."illc.
A niece ot lancewood an inch square will
stand a strain of.2000 pounds.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Won!ford's
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. Sold by all
druggists, $1. Mail orders promptly iihed
by l)r. K. Deletion. Criuvfordsville, lt;d.
There are 44,900 hotels in the United I
States.
GRATEFUL TO CUTICURA
Ifor instant Krlii-f ami S|icpily Curp of Haw
and Scaly Humor, Helling i>ay and
N iglit? Suffered For Mouths.
"I wish you would publish this letter so
that others stlffering as 1 have may be
helped. For months awful sores covered
my taee and irvk, scabs forming, itching
terribly day and night, breaking open, and
running blood and matter. 1 had tried
many remedies, but was growing worse,
when I started with t'uticura. The tirst
application gave ine instant rebel, and
when I had used two cakes of L'ulicttra
Soap and three boxes of t'uticura Ointment,
1 was completely cured. (Signed)
Miss .Nellie Yander Wie!c, Lakeside,N .1',"
Mnenront Wlirnt,
fnlger's strain of this Wheat is the kind
which laughs at droughts and the elements
and positively mocks lllack llust,
that terrible scorch!
It's sure of yielding SO bushels of finest
Wheat the sun shines on per acre on good
111., la.. Mich., Wis.. <)., l*a? Mo Neb.
lands and 40 to tit) bushels on arid lands!
No rust, no insects, 110 failure. Catalog
tells all about it.
Jl'ST SF.ND ASt) THIS NOT1CK
to the .John A. Falser Seed Co., La Crosse,
Wis., and they will send you free a sample
of this Wheat and other farm seeds, together
with their great catalog, worth
$100.00 to any wide-awake farmer. [A. (J. L. 1'
Seven of the greatest mountains have
never been climbed.
There Is nor" ' '.i' arrh in this section of th?
country that: all <>.lev diseases put together,
and until tie* las. i -w years was supposed to
heiiicural'le. Foe a great many years doctors
pronounced it a local disease and pri'serilied
local remedies, and by constantly failing to
cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable.
Science Inn proven Catarrh to be a
constitutional disease and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh
Cure, manufactured bv F. .4. Cheney ?V Co.,
Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure
ou the market. It is taken Internally In doses
front lOdrops toateaspoonful. It acts directly
on the blood and mucous surftt'-es of the
system. They olTer one hundred dollars for
any ease it fails t > euro. Send f-?r circular*
and testimonials. Address x. J Cuuxtv
Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 7.">J.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation
Tlioro^ are 29* mi'.cs of railway in t lie
Conso Frte State.
Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweat Cum
and Mullen Is Nature's great remedy Cures
Coughs. Colds. Croup and Consumption.and
all throat ami lung troubles. At druggists,
25*u, 50c.-&ud $1.00 per bottle.
Luck Premium Book
B
B
|H mate it the most widely i
have been sold (many ord
for a single factory in the i
yBI plan?to furnish the best
wHR Good Luck is the best Ik
Wfk est, whitest, sweetest of
leavening force, to tli
It is the most econo
any other baking
Luck let us km
THE SO
H ~** HUT
'r^SclxfCarload GOOD LUCK'BA
gpj cut out tmis car and sa
rfl qood for valuable art)
?*d each can. Addrens- Th? De
^ 1 ''
P U T N AM
J * olor more t?rl wit * <r nuil t.-.-'rr color* 11.tin .1
| vulta. A ?k denier or wo will : Mid ;nl ; ??d u: Uc a I
Women in C
Appalling Increase in tt
Performed Eacti T
Avoid Them.
fllsilf
CJcing through the hospitals in oui
large cities one is surprised to find sue!
a large proportion of the patients lying
on those snow-white bods womer
and girls, who are either awaiting
or recovering from serious opera
tions.
Why should this be the case? Sira
ply because they have neglected them
selves. Ovarian and womb trouble:
are certainly on the increase anion)
the wtfmen of this country?they ereo|
upon them unawares, but every one o
those patients iu the hospital beds ha<
plenty of warning iu that bearing
down feeling, pain at left or right o
the womb, nervous exhaustion, pain ii
the small of the baolt, leucorrhoea. diz
zincss, flatulency, displacements of th<
womb or irregularities. All of tliesi
symptoms arc indications of an un
healthy condition of the ovaries o
womb, and if not heeded the penalty
has to be paid by a dangerous operation
When these,symptoms manifest them
selves, do not drag along until you art
obliged to go to the hospital and sub
mit to an operation ? but remembc
that Lydia K. l'iakham's Veget&bli
Compound has saved thousands o
women from surgical operation;)
When women are troub'ed with ir
regular, suppressed or painful metistrn
at ion. weakness, leucorrlnsa. displace
mentor ulceration of the womb, tlia
boaring-down feeling, inflammation o
the ovaries, backache, bloating (or flat
uleucy). general debility, indigestion
and nervous prostration, or are bese
with such symptoms as dizziness, lossi
tmle, e.xeitabiUty, irritability, nervous
Lydia E. PLikham's Vegetable Co:
wA' %T YW aX lTf3
?WfT?~
f r l I lake-Down
Don't spend from $
much less money j
sy/M uown repeating b!
1 outlast the highe:
besides being as i
ttlvlf dealer can show you
t FSEEt ?"
'Wy, WINCHESTER REPEA
RIPAKSTAnrT.ES atb the hart
ftrptia imtlicln? rvor made a hundml
milllo.tsof ihetn ).avot?cen bo*'*
inailDc|?ycAr. CouiliMtloD, hoort*
r >V yS/ burn, rick h-ddache, uixzinoss. bad
wBS^^oUV-y^ ,n ruh.poro Ihto. t and avrry lllnc?A
nrialntr from a disordered M- inuch
an< relieved or cured l?v ltipons Tabill**.
tino will k'-nerndy k?vo relief
within t'vnnty minute. Tha live rent pockat;*) is enough
for uu ordinary orcatlon. All <lmK-u'i?th soli thornso.?.
^bunPrei
Yoisir CEjoIcc ol
? Valuable ArMcl
the freight-car coupons on Good Luck Ra1
beautiful pieces of jewelry, tlic list include
1 and handsome things for the houso. Y01
rou'U he surprised at their value. Five
>r full description and pictures of the who!
in each can. The positive purity, the
ID LUCI
chosen of n'.l leavening agents. Dnrinj
era coming in for car-load shipments), t
vorld. Thi< i9 only the inevitable result
baking powder in the world at the lowe
cause it is purest, because it produces the
' baking. These results urc due to its unec
e fact that it contai;.^ 110 adulteration wlia
tnical because it takes l,ess to do the worl
? powder. If your dealer doesn't sell
ow, and we'll sec that you are supplied at
UTIIERN MFG. CO., Richmond, 1
3 Tbt. ta tlie
KING POWDERf^ijJ^ J coup on to.in
iVC IT. THEY ARC Jfl . S M?Ch can.
CLES.SEE LIST IN BW I
PARTMtNTSTOM Org? 4. I
851 ftCHHmo V.v tlJi A WCj %tmJ
SJgSsgy
?'jjT
FADELB
iy orln-r <l> i? Oil" |i r |>aok'i 'f u lorn ?llk wool u<l <
acV.u.v Wr.te Jul tr .vi '.-.vl-l'i 1*. jm l>ji\ 151
Jut Hospitals
i? Number of Operations
Tear?How Women May
r ness, sleeplessness, melancholy. "nlli
gope^and "want-to-be-left-alone" feelf
ings, they should remember there is one
i tried and true remedy.
T The following letters cannot fail to
- bring hope to despairing women.
Mrs. Fred Seydel, 412 N. 54th Street,
West Philadelphia, Fa , writes:
i Dear Mrs. Ptnkham:?
' j * I was in a very serious condition when I
f ' wrote to you for advice. I had a serious womb
P I and ovarian trotiHl.. at?<t I sml.l >wit furrv a
f child to maturity, and wru? udvis.-d that an
1 operation vtiw my <mlv hope of recovery. I
- j could not Ih-at to think of going to the hospif
tal, so wrote you for advice. 1 <li?l at; you lust
ruct?*l me "and took Lrdia 13. Pinkham's
1 'i'cjrctahle Coir.jxiuiul; and I am not. only a
* weU woman to-day, but have a beautiful bahy
3 girl six months old. I advise nil sick and
u suffering women to write you for advice, na
. you lmvo done so uutch for mo.''
r Miss Ruby Mushrcsli, of East
^ Chicago^, Iml., writes:
. Dear Mrs. Pinkham:?
"I have bmm a great sufferer with irregular
menstruation and ovarian trouble, and about
three nionthsagiv the doctor, after using the
r X-R&y on ma, said L ho>l -w uln-oss on the
e ovaries and wouitl have to have an ojx*ration,
f My mother wanted me to trv I.ydia K. Piukhatn's
Vegetable Compound as a last resort,
and it not only saved me from an vibration
but made mo entirely wvlL "
Lydia E. P'nkham's Vegetable Comt
pound at once removes, such troubles,
f Refuse to buy any otlxcr medicine, for
you need the best,
i, Mrs. Pinkham invites all siek women
t to write iter for advice Her ad vice and
i- medicine have restored thousands to
i- i health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
rapound Succeeds Where Others Fail.
WESTER
Repeating Shotguns
SO to $200 for a pun, when for so
toucan buy a Winchester Takehotgun,
which will outshoot and
st-priced double-barreled Run,
?afe, reliable and handy. Your
one. They are sold everywhere.
r ItO-Pxje Illustrated Catalogue.
TING ARMS CO. NEW HAVEN.CONN.
i ohn
___ _. ... m
SSjjtl
Iting Powder can
's attractive articles
a can get them easily tLi:\
of the premiums are ?BRl
le list see the littlr flood
pcxiect wbolesotneness of
? Baking M
^ Powder |g
; this year 16,145,114 pound*
which is the largest business I^N
of the original Good Luck flV
(St price?10 cents a pound. KSK
i than Hr
:ss DYES
*t ?t ton H|UH]jy wrll hii 1 ! y->Ar:ilktt?c<l to *iv*? pcrfwt to*
hud Mli Color*. Mo.NUu, lUU'U CO Uui u^iilp, Mo?