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1 COMMODORE NICHOLSON RECOMMENDS PE-RU-NA COM M (01 )C) F\ E S^in^r vH ! NI c bo la <in of i the United States Nary, in a letter from 1837 R street, Nortnwest, Wailiiogton, j). 0., says: "l'onr I'eruna han been anti <? uou* ?ur<( h\t mo man)/ of m y friend# and acquaintance* a# a *ur? vuve for catarrh that Jam cmirt nocd nfitmcunitlve qualltic* and I unhenltatl nql y recommend it to all prreone Buffering from that complaint.? Our army and our navy are the natural protection of our country. Peruna is the natural protection of the army and navy in thu vicissitudes of climate and exposure. We have on file thousand* of testimonials from prominent people in the army and navy. W'e can give our readers only a slight glimpse of the vast array of unsolicited endorsements Dr. Hartman 1s constantly receiving tor his widely known nnd elflci cut remedy, Poruna. If you do not derive prompt nnd satisfactory results from the use of Perfina, write at once to Dr. S. II. rJartnian, President of 1 lie Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. , - DIP nar^'diD i To better adt?rtt?e the South'a 1.h<IId| BiiiIdkii College, four aeholarahlpa are offered young persona of this county stlasi than ?ost. WRITE TODAY. fiA-ALA. BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon, Bi So. 33. Of Household Interest. Ilouseeleanitig is uot the pleasantcsl of the housekeeper's task a, hut none the less necessary on that nc count. In the September Delineator Isabel Cordon Curtis offers iu her scries, *4Tilt Making of a Housewife,'' some suggestions that will feud fo lighten ilie labor nod lessen the disagrcenhlcncss of the household duty. Other i;enis of domestic interest in ilie same number are illustrated eookery and a variety of receipt's under the topics 14 Delicious Cream Jellies," 44Decorative Color Salads" and "The Potato." In addition, Alice M. Kellogg explains 44 How to Select Finishing ilaid>*are" and Ward Mae),cod writes on 44(l_fOwing Dulbs Indoors." So. 1)3. Has Waited Long for Lover. High up in the mountains of North Carolina "Aunt Mlnty" Piers lives alone in lier little cabin. Foot passen St."!* minus" < "<* si-uieiueni oi sandy Mush usually find her sitting on tho steps of her cabin peering down tho mountain side. This Is tho manner in which she has spent the greater part of her waking hours for forty-two years nnd the object of her search Is .laeob Munhall, to whom she was engaged during the war days. Mnnhll was officially reported "missing." but lits sweetheart has nover in all the years doubted that he will return to her. HEART RIGHT W tl (Ml lt? Olllt Coflct. I.ife Insurance Companies will not Insure a man suffering from heart trouble. The reason is obvious. This is a serious matter to the husband or father who is solicitous for the future of Ids dear ones. Often the heart trouble is caused by an unexpected thing, and ran lie corrected if taken in time and properly treated. A man in Colorado writes: "1 was a great coffee drinker for many years, nnd was not aware of the Injurious effects of tho habit till I became a practical invalid, suffering from henrt trouble, indigestion and nervousness to an extent that made me wretchedly miserable myself and a nuisance to those who witnessed ray Bufferings. "I continued to drink Coffee, however. not suspecting that it was the Icr.use 01 my ui iicami, uw, on applying for life insurance I was rejectee! 011 account of the trouble with my heart. Then 1 became alarmed. I found that leaving off coffee helped mo quickly, ho I quit It altogether, and having been attracted by the advertisements of Postum Food Coffee 1 began its use "The change in my condition wns remarkable. and it was not long till I was completely cored. All my ailments vanished. My digestion was eotnplete ly restored, my nervousness disappeared. and. most important of all. my heart steadied down and became normal. and on a second examination 1 was accepted by the life insurance Co. Quitting Coffee and using Postum L worked the cure." Name given by Postum Co., Battle C'rcek. Mich. There's a reason, and it is explained In the little book. "The Itoud to Well llle," in each pkg. WITH AWFUL CRASH Department Store Collapsed Causing Heavy Loss of Life 20 TO JO KILLED; MANY DOOMED Large Albany Establishment's Entire Middle Section Crashes Downward ana inwara, casting scores or Its Employes on Its Four Floors Into the Midst of the Flying Wreckage of Brick and Stone and Timber. Albany, ,N. Y., Special.?The middle section of the hi? department store of the John G. Myers Company, on North Pearl street, collapsed early Tuesday carrying down with it over one hundred persons. Caught in a chaos of brick, plaster and wood beams, between 20 and 30 men, women and children met death. Twelve hours' frantic work on the part of the rescuers disentangled fifty people, six of them dead and many of the rest badly Injured. Three bodies were in sight at a late hour, but many hours work will be required to get them out. Anything like a complete list of the killed and injured will be unobtainable until the workers have made their way to the very bottom of the mass of wreckage. With few exceptions, those caught in the ruin were employes, a largo majority of them girls. The catastrophe occurred shortly after the opening hour, when barely a score of shoppers were in the store. A clock found in the derbis had stopped at 12 minutes before 9, showing when the crash came. The best account of the event that probably caused the ruin is given by the head of the crockery, glass and drug department, which occupies the basement. "The workmen were sawing at a wooden floor beam," said he, "which runs underneath one of the central pillars in the middle of the store. Excacavation for the cellar was going on about the base of the pillar, and I believe that jarring of the beam beneath it displaced the foundation of the pillar. The first thing I know two of the counters near the place where the men were working began to sag, several pieces of glassware slid off on to the floor with a crash. "I yolled to my clerks to run for the front of the store. The words were not out of my mouth when there came a creaking and everything around us began to fall. The wreck came slowly, however, and I think every one in my vp.itmvui. vamjjcu, oa i\ru ius workmen." The pillar which drew away supported the ends of two giant girders, and when it fell, the main support of the central part of the building was gone. With a noise that could be heard blocks away and which shook the adjoining buildings, nearly half the great structure, from cellar to roof, and extending from one side wall to the other, came grinding down. Into this cavern fell scores of employes who were working on the four doors above and lacked the warning which enabled those in the basement to escape. Some, however, were apprized of the danger by falling plaster ami saved themselves by rushing to the front of the s'ore or to the fire escape in the rear. Clouds of dust which shot out of the front entrance caused those outside to belftive that the store was afire, and a fire alarm was immediately turned in. When the fire department arrived they had plenty to do in rescuing those who were pinned under the top wreckage. They were joined by scores of volunteer rescuers, and within an hour 15 or 120 persons were carried out, none of them fatally injured. The volunteer rescuers and the firemen continued the work until exhausted. when their places were taken by a wrecking force numbering 300 men from the New York Central and Delaware & Hudson Railroads. These delved In the ruins all night, hut the work of rescue progressed slowly. When darkness came it was estimated that nearly 50 persons still remained in the ruins and that not more than half of these could surviee the weight pressing upon them. Fortunately the wreckage did not take fire. Some one hundred persons are still unaccounted for. but 50 of these are cash lx?ys, of which the firm has no record, and the loss of the St. Thomas Church Consumed. New York, Special.?St. Thomas Episcopal church, at Fifth avenue and and Fifty-third street, one of the most richly furnished religious edifices in America, was wrecked by fire Tuesday. Tha Hotel St. Regis is scarcely one block away and scores of the finest city homos In America are in the section of which the church was practically the center. The fire was confined to the church. A defective electric Wiring is supposed to have started the fire. The loss is estimated by Fire Chief Crocker as at least a quarter of a million dollars, pay roll makes it difficult to got anything like a complete list of many others. In all, the company has 400 employes. hut 50 of these are away on vacations. LOSS $200,000 TO $.100,000. The building which collapsed stands in the heart of the shopping district at Ncs. 20 nnd 41 North I'earl stred. It Is owned partly by the company and partly by the estate of the late David Orr. The loss to the company is estimated at between $200.,000 and $300,000. Ward Line Steamer on Florida Reefs. Miami. lift.. Special.?The Ward line steamer City of Washington is stranded of the reefs, fivo miles south of Fowey Rock light Wreckers have gone to her assistance. It is expected that the boat is lying in a very dangerous position, and that unless boats of larger size come to her assistance there is little hope of getting her off. It is said that the boat has a large and valuable freight cargo. TEXTILE HRR INTEREST' Notes of Southern Cotton Mills and Other Manufacturing EnterprisesThe American Cotton Co. The American Cotton Co. of , Greensboro, N. C., which obtained its i charter of incorporation several 1 weeks ago, has effected permanent or- ] ganir.ation with S. N. Cone, president; | Thomas Crabtree, secretary-treasurer, and J. H. Cutter, formerly with G. E. Dickinson of Savannah and latterly manager of Dickinson & Co., at Char I lotte, general manager. The stock- , holders of the company include I Messrs. W. E. Holt, Caesar Cone, Ju- 1 lius Cone and Neil Ellington, all well known to the cotton-mill men and cotton factors throughout the South. It is stated that the company will trail- i sact a general cotton business, and 1 expects to develop an extensive clientele in North and South Carolina. | The capital stock has been placed at i $250,000. I The Dixie Mills Co. The Dixie Mills Co. of Paduculi, Ky., has been incorporated, with capital stock of $100,000, by George C. Wallace, Robert B. Phillips and others. This corporation takes over the 1 Aldon Knitting Mills, which Mr. Wcl- J iace and his associates have been | operating under lease. The plant has i an equipment of 1111 knitting ma- 1 rliines and the complementary apparatus for the production of fine , gauge cotton hosiery. Mr. Phillips i nas been elected president; Mr. Wal ' lace, vice-president; T. L. Upton, see- ' rctary. ( A $200,000 Coton-Rope Mill. < It is proposed to organize a company with capiital stock of $200,000 J for the purpose of building a cotton i mill at Spartanburg, S. C. The plan is to erect modern buildings and install all the latest machinery for manufacturing rope, twine and other | similar goods from the waste to be i obtained from cotton yarn and cloth 1 mills in the Spartanburg district. Peter II. Corr, a well known cotton mill operator, Taunton, Mass., is interested in the enterprise, but no further details are ready for publication at this time. TEXTILE NOTES. A Shelby special says: "During the month more than 3,000 hales of cotton, which was held by farmers in this county, have been sold at 10 and 10 l-'2 cents, the sellers thereby realizing over $100,000 Several hundred bales still remain in the hands of the farmers, which they are holding for 11 cents. Cotton mills in this section are supplied with cotton and they are rejoicing on account of the fact that they are getting remunerating prices for their product. Two of the wealthiest men in Jackson, Tenn., are now negotiating for a hig cotton mill there. They state that if the negotiations are successful it will have a capital of $100,000, possibly more than that. Some $'2f>,000 of Jackson money will be put into it. The promoters arc from a distance and a representative has been here in conference with the two Jackson financiers. The cotton mill will be like the hig one in Trenton, to manufacture sheetings. 3t would employ a large force of hands. Five or ten neics of ground in a convenient location is necessary and the Jackson gentlemen interested are looking after that. The Banna Cotton Mills. Messrs. C. E. Graham and 11. L. Graham of Greenville, S. ('., referred to last week as having leased the Banna Cotton mills at Goldville, N. <? .....1 1 4l-~ v .j ?iufo viut'icu int" iiuw equipment they will add to that plant. This additional machinery will include 2."?00 spindles and co.rdroom raachineiy sufficient to take care of the new spindles Textile Notes. (Mann fact urers' Record) The Cora Cotton Mills of Kinprs Mountain N. ('., have declared a dividend of (! jK*r cent. The Wiscassctt Mills of Albemarle, N. C., has doclarcd a semi-annual dividend of 4 per cent. The Pillnur Cotton Mills of Kini?s Mountain, N. C., has declared a dividend of 11 j>er cent. A Washington, D. C., dispatch of recent date says: "The officers of the cotton assoc'm tion arc not a miit in the demand for the resignation of Secretary Wilson, of the Department of Agriculture. While Secretary Cheatham gave an ! interview Friday in supi>ort of the position taken by President Harvie Jordan, declaring that Secretary Wilson is incuni|H>tent and ought to he removed, Col. R. S. Peters, the vice president of the association, who is in Washington., made a public statement in defense of the Secretary of Agriculture in which he said: ''The cotton growers of the South have implicit contidenco in him.' t WHEN THERE IS ILLNESS. When there is illness in the family some housewives use, in addition, thick comforters of unbleached cotton, which can be easily washed. Pillows nnd bolsters are often covered with cheap cotton or calico to protect the ticking. AN EGG HINT. It is not generally known that eggs covered with boiling water and allowed to stand for live minutes are more nourishing nnd more easily digested than eggs placed in boiling wnter Hnd allowed to boll furiously for three and a half minutes. MENDING KNIFE HANDLES. "When the handles of steel knives nnd forks come off they can be easily mended with resin. Pour a little powlered resin into the cavity in the banHe. Heat the part of the knife that fits into the handle until it is red hot. md thrust into the bundle. It will become firmly lixod by the resin when It becomes cool. Protect the blade from the heat. SERVING POTATOES. A writer in the Housekeeper gives flie following way of serving potatoes: Imitation New Potatoes?Into a cheesecloth sack put small, round, peeled potatoes. Place the sack in a pan containing boiling milk and water In equal parts, sutlicient to cover the potatoes, with a little salt. Roil slowly till done, lift out the sack and allow nH_ tj\e liquid to drain off; then place in the "oven five "minutes Vr so while you are preparing a white sauce with Gutter, flour, milk and a little salt. Turn the potatoes from the sack into this aiul servo immediately in a leep vegetable dish. Quick Potatoes?Slice raw potatoes thin and boil ten minutes or so in salteu water. Drain, sprinkle with a lash of pepper, add small bits of butler and pour over the whole about half a cupful hot cream. Serve at once in i heated dish. Syracuse Hot Salt Potatoes?Boil the vegetables In a rather strong brine mid drain on a piece of cheesecloth stretched almost tight across the top of a pan. They Avill he covered with salt crystals and will be very mealy inside. * Fairy Gingerbread?Three eggs, onehalf cup butter, one cup molasses, three cups tlour, one cup sugar, two tea spoon fill a baking powder, one cup milk, one tablespoonful ginger, level. Bub sugar and butter topetlier, add epps, then milk and molasses mixed, then dry ingredients mixed. Bake in a moderately hot o, -m>. Banded Apples?Use six large apples. In paring, leave a band half an inch wido around the centre of each. Remove cores, till cavities with red Jelly, and spice if liked. Place In a baking dish, add one cupful water and sprinkle with one cupful of sugar. Bake until tender in a moderate oven. Serve hot, with cream. They may be served plain with their own syrup. Fricassee Chicken ? Boll In salted water until tender. Remove large bones, dredge with salt, pepper and Hour and brown in butter. Serve on toast Pour over it all a sauce or gravy made.of the broth (in which the chicken was cooked), thickened with Hour, one tablespoonful to a pint. Pel ery salt and lcuion Juice may be added. Puree of Green Peas ? One quart green peas, one quart water, one pint milk, one-half teaspoonful salt, onequarter teaspoonful pepper, one-half teaspoonful sugar, one tablespoonful butter, one tablespoon ful flour. Cook the peas in one pint boiling water until soft. Mash them in this, and rub them through a strainer, adding gradually a pint of hot water. Put on to boil again. Cook butter and Hour in a small saucepan, being careful not to brown them. Add salt, sugar, pepper and milk, using enough to make the consistency you prefer. Domino Cakes?Make a sponge cake, or any other simple cake mixture, and hake It in. shallow tins, making the cake about half an inch thick when .in.iL* rul ...lir.ii /.nnl lr.~ ..-1. I1.1 allow this to sot, then with n sharp knife out it into small oblongs about throo inclios long by one ami one-half inches whle; melt a little chocolate, and. with a small brush, paint spots to represent dominoes. If wished, tie* little cakes may bo split open and spread with jam before icing. Orange Pie ?One dozen sound oranges cut into thin slices. seisls and cores removed, covered with six quarts of water, allowed to soak for twentyfour hours; then put all on to boil; boil slowly for three hours; then add seven pounds of granulated sugar, and boil till clear; pour off into a crock, allow to set, and you then have the tilling. I.yie pie plates with puff paste trimmings, milking a raised edge, spread well with tlu? filling; bake; when done spread with an orange flavored custard; on it pipe a fancy meringue; brown (pilckly; serve. Tills is one of the most delicious pies it is possible to make. Berlin railways are running special "tree blossom" trains to the outlying districts to enable town dwellers to enjoy the spring flowers ami foliage. it PlTBp*nnan*ntlycar*d. If* fit* ornarrous b?m *ft*r first day's uh of Dr. Kilo*'a Or** Eorr*IUstot*r,f2trlal bottleand troatlssfr* r. R. H. Ki.mt. Ltd. .981 Arch 8t.. Phil*., Pa The guinea wis first coined in Cbarle IT.'s rei(tn. Mrs.Wtnslow's9oothtQ? Syrup forCbildrei toothluj.softou tu? ipims,reduces lnflamma Uon, allays paln.ooreswlnd colic, 26c.abottla Greenland now has nearly 12,000 iobab itants. Plso's Cura oannot bo too highly spokeno! as*oongh our*.?J. IV. O'Bbikk, 922Thlrt! Ats&uv, N.. Minneapolis, Minn., Jaa.6.1W3, Glass continuing manganese is slow] turns J violet by sunlight. F, F. Gateau's Sous, ot Atlanta, Ga? arc the ouly successful Dropsy SpecialistsIntht world. Hea their liberal offer In advertise mailt in another column of this paper The name "calomel" means "beautifu black." NO SLEEP FOR MOTMEF Baby Covered With Sores and Scaled* Could Not Tell Wliat She Booked Like?* Marvelous Cure by Cutlcura, "At lour months old my baby's face ant body were so covered with sores and largi scales you could not tell what she lookot like. Mo child ever had a worse case. Hei lace was being eaten away, and even hei linger nails fell oft. It itched so she coulc not sleep, and tor many weary nights w< could get no rest. At last we got Cuticuri i>oap and Ointment. The sores began ti heal at once, ami she could sleep at night and in one month she had not one sore or her lace or bo ly ?Mrs. Mary Sanders, 7W J Spring St., Camden, N. J." The modem conscience is mad | with a lever to throw it out of geai Pie I.nnemwn A Martinez Faint. Don't pay $1.50 a gallon tor linseed oil which you do 111 rendy-for-use paint. Buy oil fresh front the barrel at GO eenti I per gallon, and mix it with Longman <3 I Martinez L. & M. Paint. | makes paint coat about $1.20 pe ga'.lon. lames S. Barron. President Mancheate Cotton Mills, Bock liill. S. C., wi-itee "In 1883 I painted my residence with L. <3 M. It looks better than a great man; houses paiutcd three years ago.' Sold everywhere and by Longman i Id artinez. N'cw York. Paint Makers to Fifty Years. I Twenty-five thousand persons are em ployed in the \\ aii.li factories cf Switzes land. Most men are repentant soon aftoi the irreen apples are eaten. AMERICA'S BRICHTEST WOMAN. Mary K. LsaH Feels It Her Duty to lire ouituouil lloan'a Kidney Fills. Mary E. Lease, formerly political Inmliir Cit.1 nrni tne K'n ncno ,mn* nn tlior and lecturer?tha only woman evei who suffer from such diseases. Fron personal experience 1 thoroughly en dorse your remedy, and am glad of nr opi>ortunity for saying so. Yours truly (Signed) MARY ELIZABETH LEASE. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y Sold by all dealers. Price, 50 cents per box. Some people refuse to believe that the man who rocks the boat is any more of a fool than the one who wants to run an automobiles a miie a minute on the public highways, doClares tho Chicago Record-Herald. IMozley's I Lemon Elixir. | THE BEST FAMILY MEDICINE M For Constipation, Biliousness, In- M digestion, Sour Stomach, Colic, BS f Dtxnneaa, Headache and tnythmf Kvj S caused by a disordered I.iver. jag "That Drowsy Feeling" HB by putting your digestive organs njjfl HM to work, increasing your appetite, HI and, in fact, mates you feel like a F'lJ KM "MEW ^ lea 50c. and fr.oo par floftle SB at all Drug Store*. Onm Dose Convince*. WIIIUTrn Address of (1) persons & lira I P I |*? part Indian blond who sn "I* a* not livinw with any trilw <'J) of n.ell who worn limited In Kentucky (3) of mothers of soldiers wlio have l>eei denied pension on recount of their re insrriaue, (4) of men who served In the Fed orilarmt, or </>) ihe nearest kin of rue] soldiers or sailors, now deceased. NATHAN lll('KM)UI), Attorney, WhsIiIiik t on, II. V. BEST FO ftnlM* JM/VV I OUARANTEED CURB for al^oweltroc I blood, wind on the atomacli, bloated bowel pain* after eating, liver trouble, aallow akli I regularly you are alck. Conatipation killa i B start* chronic ailmenta and long yeara of at I CASCARF.TS today, for you will never get fl right Take nttr advice, atart with Casca I money refunded. The genuine tablet star fnp&T! [ Doctor Bflgiiam Sags : MANY PHYSICIANS PRESCRIBE Lydlm Cm Ptnkham's Vogotablo Compound j The wonderful power of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound over the diseases of womankind is not bey cause it is a stimulant, not because it is a palliative, but simnlv because it ia the most wonderful tonic and rccon| structor ever discovered to act directly upon the generative organs, positively curing' disease and restoring health and vigor. J Marvelous cures are reported from all parts of the country by women who have been cured, trained nurses who 3 have witnessed cures and physicians \ who have recognized the virtue of Lydia E. Piukham's Vegetable Compound, and are fair enough to give credit where it is due. If phyaicinns dared to be frank and j open, hundreds of them would acknowledge that they constantly prescribe Lj Lydia K. Piukham's Vegetable Comr pound in severe cases of female ills, as r they know by experience it can be reI lied upon to effect a cure. The following letter proves it. l)r. S. C. Itrigham, of 4 Prigham J Park, Fitchburg, Mass., writes : " It gives me (treat pleasure to say that I ' have fouiul Lydia E. Piukham's Vegetable ' Compound very ofilcacious, aud often pre' scribe it in mv practice for female difficulties. " My oldosi daughter found it very beneficial for uterine trouble somo time ago, and my youngest daughter is now taking it for a feC male weakness, und is surely gaining in health and strength. " I freely advocate it as a most reliable specific in all diseases to which women are subject, and give it honest endorsement." , Women who are troxibled with painful or irregular menstruation, bloating ? (or flatulence), leucorrhawi, falling, in6 fiammation or ulceration of the uterus, { ovarian troubles, that bearing-down feeling, dizziness, faintness. indigesr tion, nervous prostration or the blues, : should take immediate action to ward I: off the serious consequences, and be V restored to perfect health and strength by taking Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vegeta? ble Compound, and then write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn. Mass., for further free advice. No living person has hud p the benefit of a wider experience in treating femple ills. She has euided thousands to health. Every suffering woman siionld ask for and follow her i* advice if bho wants to be strong and well. CONCENTRATED : Crab a am vi ^imi u ! Water... A SPECIFIC FOR i 3*1 DYSPEPSIA, [T SICK HEADACHE, < CONSTIPATION. The three* "Ills" that inuko life a burden. I Nature's great remedy. In uao for almost a cantury. Sold by all druggista. CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., l.uul?vllle, K]r. I cossful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, tops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness, cures leucorrhcea and nasal catarrh. Faxtine is in powder lorm to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal and economical than liquid antiscpf.cs ior ail TOILET ANO WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box. Trial Box and Book ot Instructions Free. Thi r. Paxton Company Boston, Mas*. P> Dropsy 11 y Rcinnvpii mi swfiim^ ill Bio io ^ ' I dayx ; effects n pe rmanent cure /V in joto 60dnrs. Trialtreatment -ra^N given free. Nothingcnn be fniret Write Dr. H. M. Green's Sons, -2*rv7^m!'-. Soecialists, Box IS Atlanta.fla IB3EEra<hMni=fi3^diaBM CURIS WHIRL AIL [LSI FAILS. ?%j Boat Cough Byrup. Tutting >ood. L'so In (true. Sold by .IruggMn. fM w^xmnMsj^ns^ \ THEREIS MONEYS CORN STALK", tv*-tt,' for trep catalog I AMatldcn.Atlanta.<la So. 33. iKles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad Is, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples, l and dissiness. When your bowels don't move more people than all other diseases together. It tffering. No matter what aila you, start taking well and stay well until you get yojr bowels rets today under absolute guarantee to cure or nped C C C. Never sold in bulk. Sample sod