The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, May 30, 1907, Image 6
v s - - v?c ;r*: fi
? *r/4!n E? ri4MSrtanM?)n \
| sl,. riiiKimm s \
n made from native roots and herbs. I
Q received such widespread and unqua
fil cine has such a record of cures of fe:
p Miss J. F. Walsh, of 32S W. 36th !
?j E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound
b restoring- my health. I suffered f
S dreadful headaches, dizziness, and
H medicine soon brought about a ch<
B me up and made mc perfectly well.''
jS Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable C
such as Backache, Falling and Displi
9 tion, and organic diseases. It is inv
I and during the Change of Life. Itcu
I General Debility, and invigorates th
I Mrs Pinkham's Stendlr
H Women suffering from any foi t
fi write Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Maw
Official Everywhere,j
v i $1.25 Each* I
For Thirty Years Standard of the World.
Everything for the athlete. Unirorms and equip- |
uent for every athletic sport. Six new catalogues
V- Free tQ any address. Free.
BOOKS YOU NEED--10c. per copy. Postpaid.
Ho. 1, Spa.dlng's Official base Bah Ouide.
No. 2UK, How to Play Base Bali. i
Ho. 2?J, How to Bat. So. 2J2, How to Run Base?. *
Ho. 280, How to Pitch. No Z&. How to Catch.
1 Ho. Z& How to Play First Base.
* -. Ho. X36. How to Play Second Base.
. Ho. ZK, How to Play Third Base.
i'V ,21a 2to, How to Play Shortstop.
Ha 224, How to Play the Outfield.
Ha 281, How to Organize a Base Ball League, Manage
a Base Ball Club, Train and Captain a Team
end Umpire a Game.
Send for new Base Ball Catalogue FREE.
Base Ball Goods for Boys Especially, ;
/ Mai! Order Dept.
j A. Q. SPALDING & BROS., 1
126 Nassau St., New York.
light SAW MILLS!
LATH AND SHINGLE MACHINES, !
SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND I
GASOLINE ENGINES.
| Try LOMBARD, ACgSSTA !
' WOOD, IRON AND STEEL
'
t . ALL KINDS OP BELTING AND MILL SUPPLIES
' Imbed Foundry, Machine and Boiler Works & Supply Store|/r
AUGUSTA. GA.
Ik ' (At22-'07) I
- ?
I A Summer
I in Your I
Don't swelter this
i 193 summer with the temWm
perature at 110. Get
B a New Perfection
II Wick Blue Flame Oil
| a!i H Stove and have a cool
jjp 5j I kitchen. The (
I NEW PER
I Wick Blue Flame
|?'; produces a working flame instan
?9 concentrated heat, no soot, no dirt.
I H level, ensuring a uniform flame.
R stove warranted. If not ;
Hjjfr nearest agency for descriptive
of brass throughout and 1
constructed; absolutely sz
power; an ornament to an>
If not at your dealer's writ
STANDARD
INCOl
* ? M?BH?MBM?H
i Cures Chills;
^L & Malarial Fevers '
%CttlLLS^ ,^1 (
iifi^^ ant? i
THE SWISS SCYTHE
EASILY THE KI.VGOF ALL MOWIX6
v Sladis IF INTERESTED WRITE TO
the UAfiiUG CO , Tracy City Tenn. J
?? .
f>:
' . . . /
WOMEN SUFFER]
Many women suffer in silence and fi
drift along1 from bad to worse, know- p
ing well that they ought to have S
immediate assistance. gj
How many women do yon know 5
who are perfectly well and strong? ?
The car may be easily traced to H
some feminine derangement which |
manifests itself in depression of E
spii'its, reluctance to go anywhere H
or do anything, backache, dragging |
sensations, flatulency, nervousness, J
and sleeplessness. H
These symptoms are but warnings
that there is danger ahead, and un- E
1/icc Vtoo/lArl r> cn-fPnrmrr nr C? H
serious operation is the inevitable ?!
result. The best remedy for all &
these symptoms is a
Vegetable Compound 3
vo other medicine in the country has |f
,lifted endorsement. No other medi- n
male ills. . 3
St., New York City, writes:?"Lydia 9
i has been of inestimable value in Eg
rom female illness which caused 9
dull pains in my back, but your E
mge in my general condition, built B
ompound cures Female Complaints, I
icements. Inflammation and Ulcera- S
aluable in preparing for child-birth B
res Nervous Prostration, Headache,
e whole system. B
ig Invitation to Women |
i of female weakness are invited to I
, Her ndvice is free. j|
NOT BAD, EITHER.
"You are beneath my contempt,
sir." . ?
"So are you beneath mine, and I'm
piling on more every minute."?Philadelphia
Ledger.
FITS,St. Vitus'Dance: Nervous Diseases perKtv
T*W IHino'C ^Arrii
mau^uu 4jr uui tu v??w ?'v# - ~
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,U31 ArcuSt-JPhila., Pa.
NOT MARKED DOWN.
"I'd give a good deal for a fine
louring car."
"Ycu'd have to."?Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
To improve the general health, take Carfield
Tea daily tor a tijne; it purifies the
blood, eradicates rheumatism and many
chronic ailments, and keeps the health
good! Garfield Tea is. made of herbs: it is
Eiaranteed under the Pure Food and Drugs
aw. Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y.
COULD IT BE POSSIBLE?
She?Don't you feel well, dear?
He?My head feels, heavy. Do you
suppose those biscuits you made
could hav-e gone to my fc?ad??Yonkers
Statesman.
If you watch for the items on Argo.
Red Salmon you will find some very
interesting things about Alaska and
the Salmon industry, of which very
little is known in this country. "Argo"
is a household word wherever
this Salmon has been introduced.
Genius is the ability to sell what
you have done for a good price.
HICKS'
CAPUDINE
\ IMMEDIATILT CUKK9
3 j Vw headaches
Jfeh srooh* up COl*DiS
BKmIB IN o TO t* HOURS
Scab 18c. At DnWm
^MW?M
" Vacation
Kitchen
: 00 Cook-Stove I
tly. Blue flame means highly psj
Oil is always at a maintained |Q
^Made in three sizes. Every ||j
it your aeaier s wiue iu uui
r is the best lamp for n .
^ all-round house- g|
hold use. Made ||
beautifully nickeled. Perfectly g&
ife; unexcelled in light-giving 8|
r room. Every lamp warranted.
:e to our nearest agency. ||r
OIL COMPANY, ||
UPORATED P
Tsmlthls !
iL TONIC
Standard for 45 years: leaves no bad effects |
ike quinine; pleasant to take; children like it, g
seldom fails to make permanent cure. *
Guaranteed under Food and Drugs Act of June I
30, 1906. At your druggists; or sent prepaid I
>n receipt of price. ?
IRTHUR PETER & CO.. Gen'l Agt*. Louisville. Ky. 5
Fortune knocks once at a% man's
door. Misfortune knocks often.
Argo Argo Argo Argo Argo Argo
Argo Argo Argo Argo.
A little learning is a dangerous
tiling, but a lor of ignorance is still
more dangerous.
j Thirty Things to Remember
By JOHN' TRAIXOR.
j !. Ilemember that work is only a
means, character is the end.
That sincerity is the foundation
;y till honest work.
.1. That sorrow is the price most
men pay for lasting: attainments.
4. Thai you label your own work.
That no one can hold yon down
if you are determined to succeed.
0. That, every man is destined to
do something worth while.
7. That seven roads lead to Rome.
5. That most people judge you by
first impression.
f. That few men succeed until they
try.
1U. That hard work is no small
part of genius.
11. That it takes no longer to say
IVllJU W \Ji Ud L 11 (XIX 111UL vui.
12. That the only way to keep
your credit good is by paying your
debts.
13. That k is easier to do good
v.-ork than poor, if you once learn
how.
14. That the more difficult things
are to accomplish, the more worth
while.
15. That a sensible employer is
more anxious to push you ahead than
to hold you down.
16. That you are one link in a
great chain.
17. That ambition develops, selfishness
thwarts, body and mind.
IS. That rules are necessary to a
business as laws are for right government.
19. That you can't learn anything
in a day.
20. That the fact that you ar-e
being employed is a promise of good
work.
21. That your boss often appreciates
your work, but does not find;,
time to tell you so.
22. That time progresses and
methods change.
23. That it is legitimate to talk
about your goods as long as you tell
the truth.
24. That there is only one way to
sell goods; place them in the market
to advantage.
25. That many a man might seek
you as a customer if he could find
you out.
26. That only cowards are afraid
to venture.
27. That even angels are impatient
once in a while.
38. That it is foolish to bear
a grudge. Unkind feelings are not
marketable.
29. That it pays to dress well, even
in business.
30. That every workman thinks
that if he were the boss he would act
differently.?Chicago Tribune.
Saved the Situation.
She raised her head from his shoulder
for a moment.
"Do you believe that exercise and
lotions and toilet preparations will
improve a woman's looks?" she
asked.
He pressed her blond curls back
upon his chest.
"They couldn't improve the looks
of some women," he said.
"Whose?" she asked.
"Well, yours and Violet Cochrane's,
for instance," he replied, thought1
*
"I don't understand ? she said,
raising her head for the second time
and chilling him with a look. "We
are not at all alike."
"I mean," he replied, turning her
head for the second time and thinking
quickly, "that your looks couldn't
be improved because they are perfect
as they are, and that hers couldn't
be improved because no amount of
work could make hei) pretty."
And the firelight flickered knowingly
^s she sighed a great sigh of
contentment and relief, while he
drew a deep breath.?Penny Pictorial.
Will Makers' Whims.
The late T. Bevan, one time M. P.
for Gravesend, who directed in his
will that his body should be cremated
and "the ash residue ground to powder
and again burned andydissipated
in the air," is one of many men (and
women) who have made equally remarkable
arrangements for the disposal
of their mortal remains.
An angler who died recently directed
that his ashes should be carried
in a bait can and scattered from
a boat over the surface of his favorite
stream; Mrs. Ernle-Eiie-Drax directed
that her body should be embalmed
and placed in a glass panelled coffin,
for the reception of which a circular
mausoleum with stained glass dome
was to be built; while, at his own
wish, the body of one of the Lords
Newborough, after twelve mouths'
interment, was exhumed and reburied
in Bardsey Island, the reputed resting
place of 20,000 saints.?West
minster Gazette.
k
Platform and Policy For AH.
Fellow Pilgrims! Now that the
Sun has started out on the fifth towpath
of its existence our motto hereafter
will be: To tell the truth
though the heavens take a tumble.
To have a newsy paper?taken and
paid for by the people. We will be
orthodox in our religion?with a firm
belief in purgatory for delinquent
subscribers?and paradise for those
who pay up. Our policy will be to
love our friends and brimstone for
our enemies. We w>ll advocate?one
country, one flag, one wife?at a time
?and if you want us to live in pomp
and oriental splendor?-you had bet]
ter come in now and subscribe. In
! fact, now is the propitious time.?
Stanley (N. D.) Sun.
In 1906 two cats inherited $20,000
each from B. F. Dilly, an eccentric
millionaire.
r-" Lime For Egg Eaters.
Professor J. E. Rice, of Cornell
University, Ithaca. N. Y.. in the
course of an address at the poultry
institute at Guelph, Can., said one
of the results of withholding lime
from pullets was that they ate all
their eggs. When lime was supplied
they guit the habit. This may
account for not a little of the eggeating
about which so many farmers
I are now complaining. ; v,
i - . j a 4' -
i _ . i_. i _
Egg-Eating Eiwls Cured. I
There are several ways of handling
egg-eating birds. They usually behave
all right as soon as they get
out where they have more room and
fresh air, and the shells grow harder,
so that all works together to effect
a cure. Pending this, darkened nests,
raised so that the birds cannot stand
and look into them all the time, are
helpful. A cloth bottom is sometimes
placed above the real bottom
of the nest, having a slit for one egg
to pass through. In extreme cases an
egg has been smeared or mixed with
bitter aloes as a lesson of let-alone,
which is said to be effective. We
have this difficulty occasionally toward
spring, but seidom do more
than to provide abundant exercise,
good food and dark nests. If the
sinners can be spotted it is well to
coop them by themselves for a time,
as such a vice spreads rapidly, especially
in an idle flock. Nests may be
effectively darkened by tacking a burtop
curtain at the top edge, to hang
four-fifths of the way down, just so
the hens can push them aside easily.
?C. S. Valentine, in the Tribune
Farmer. v
Humus in the Soil.
Professor Whitney, of the Bureau
of Soils, says humus acts as a sponge
in the soil and absorbs toiic poisons
which are given off by the plant
roots. However this may be, the
farmer must add humus to his soils
to make them produce good crops.
There are several ways in which hu,
ipus is increased in the soil. To
make the matter clear to those who
do not understand what humus is it
might be well to state that humus is
the dark-colored mold left after organic
matter or vegetable matter has
decayed. Then in the light *>f this
explanation farmers will understand
that any organic matter turned under
and allowed to decay will form
humus. Barnyard manure, straw,
stalks, etc., the plowing under of
green growing crops, such as clover,
cowpeas, rye or any other crop used
generally for green manuring will
add humus to the soil. The lack of
organic,matter is usually noticed by
the soils becoming out of condition.
I They run together and cake after
heavy rains. When such a condition
occurs the farmer should spare no
p^ins to add this" highly essential
part.?Weekly Witness.
Surgery For Trees.
The successful treatment of trees
by surgery is the subject of a report
made recently by a botanist named
Eberhardt to the Academy of Sciences,
in Paris. M. Eberhardt has
practiced it, he says, with entire success
in Indo-China. He has often
performed operations on tea plants,
mulberry trees, orange trees and
other tropical plants.
Experiments in cold climates have
not met with much success so. far,
but it is believed the system can be
used with advantage in the southern
regions of Europe. The operations
are not amputations, neither are they '
mere subcutaneous injections, such
as have been made successfully in
Europe for the cure of some parasitic
disease of plants; they are surgical
in the strictly modern sense.
The method is adopted when the
trees are attacked by insects which
penetrate the bark and deposit their
eggs in the wood. The long-horned
beetle is a serious plague in indoChina.
The larvae hollow out galleries in
the tissue of the trunk and branches;
these interrupt the circulation of the
sap. and the tree speedily withers and
dies. . /
Eberhardt's method consists of
opening up the gallery with a scalpel,
removing the larvae with a forceps or
curetting instrument and then flushing
out the cavity with an antiseptic
fluid, consisting of forty parts of
gylcerine, 110 of formaline aud 850
of water. Three or four washings
are given at intervals extending over*
about fifteen days, and at the end ofthat
time cushions of vegetable tissue |
begin to appear along the edge of the
scar,which heals completely in from
six to eight months. It is essential
during the first two or three months
to protect the wound from light,
which seems to stop the formation of
new tissue.
I
When the trunk is so seriously attacked
as to render so radical an operation
undesirable, M. Eberhardt
pricks the cavity in the tree with a
trocar, to which he affixes a syringe
and injects a solution of ISO parts of
formaline, sixty of glycerine and 760
of water. This he forces in until the
cavity is filled to overflowing. Either
the larvae come to the surface, when
they are extracted with the forceps,
or else they are poisoned.
Two injections are usually made at
eight days' interval. The formaline
hardly seems to penetrate the woody
fiber beyond the surface broken down
' by the parasites. The wound heals
In time, and the tree seems to suffer
110 damage from the treatment, while
J its inevitable destruction by ihe parai
site is prevented.?New York Sum
iaffft*
>w. \
Convenient Fountain.
Once in a while we see among the
mass of inventions and contrivances
presented by our farm and fruit and
poultry papers one that needs no second
look to tell that it is an ideal fixture
for the intended purpose. A
glance shows that it will do its work
and do it better than any other arrangement
can.
And now I come with my little
contribution. It is a poultry water
fountain, and my excuse for describing
it to your readers is that it, too,
fills the bill better than anything
else of the kind. Fill it in the morning,
and your chickens, little or big,
havp a ennvpnipnt snnnlv nf pIphtj
water for the day.
Cet your tinner fo make a straightsided
gallon bucket, of tin or galvanized
iron, with a cover soldered on
airtight. Cut one side loose from
the bottom for a length of four or
five inches and hammer the loosened
side back toward the centre of the
bottom. As it goes back the edge
rises, and when you have an inch to
an inch and a half of the bottom exposed
the edge will be about threeeighths
of an inch above it.
To make the water seal, a strip of
galvanized iron or tin, three-fourths
i 2.
(1); Before Strip is Soldered On. (2)
Finished. '
of an inch wide and as long as the
cut in the side, is soldered around
the edge of the bottom and at the
ends. The cone-shaped dent or depression
in the side of the bucket
1 J 4. Jl i. +U ? 4-n
snouia eAutJua uvu-iinius ux no
height.
There are many poultry fountains
made on the same principle, but none
that I have seen or heard of that so
completely protects the water from
filth. As there is no extension from J
the original circumference of the
bucket nothing can drop in the water
from above. The drinking place
seems small, and it would be small
for a cow, but is not for a chicken.
Often I have seen five and six grown
hens drinking from it at once. .
To fill it, hold the opening under a
faucet or use an <jld kettle with a
spout, or submerge it in a larger
bucket. To empty, lay on the ground,
opening down.
For little chicks, set it on the floor
or ground; for those of larger growth,
in a winter pen or scratching shed,
set it on a block eight or ten inches
high and turn the opening away from j
the most active scratching operations.
Try it. It will save you lots of work
and your chickens many a thirsty,
hour when you are absent, or when
they have your pans or open fountains
scratched full of chaff and dir-t^
It is not patented, and any tinner can
make one for a little more than the
cost of a gallon bucket.?E. J. Baird
in New York Tribune Farmer.
Farm Notes.
In a clover country a farmer wno j
owns a rreed liuller can make from $3
to $10 with it, net, by hulling for his
neighbors.
A good tool to cut turf around
trees and along borders of walks can
be made from an old hoe. Bend the
shank out straight and sharpen from
both sides. ?
Iu calculating the size of the silo
which you will need, the Cornell
University bulletin says that it is advisable
to estimate than an average
1000-poui^d cow will consume about
forty pounds of silage per day.
If you do not know how handy i
they are, attach chains to your man- j
gers, the hitching post, and wherever j
you want to fasten a horse. Have a j
good snap in the end of the chain I
which can be quickly attached to the j
bit rein.
When ventilating poultry houses or j
hog houses, let the ventilator take in I
air about twelve inches from the bot- i
torn and carry it up to within twelve j
inches of the top before the next
opening is made. The ventilator
should run diagonally through the
house.
A good hog fence can be made by
nncto fhrofi fppf his"h sixteen
Ovllllijj ^/VWVw vm* vv * . ^? feet
apart. Run a barbed wire three
inches from t,he ground and another
on the top. Then nail on good strong,
wire netting thirty inches wide. Draw
all tight, and this fence will last a
long time. :
An Iowa farmer suggests that a j
good way to prevent the dirt from i
getting to the oil bowls of the old- j
style disc harrows is to attach pieces j
of one-quarter inch gas pipe so they '
extend up from the oil pipes through j
the box, keeping them closed with j
wooden plugs. A blacksmith will do !
this work at small cost.
One quart of mash to twelve grown !
hens once a day is the proper allow- j
ance?if you insist upon feeding a !
mash. If you will conform to mod- j
ern methods, however, and feed your \
mixed meals and clover in a dry state, j
you need not fret over how much to !
feed. Put in the hopper and let- ?ach j
hen choke down all she will. It's the '
I natural way. */
, / . ..
''
s
: \ ;v*
,
A NATURAL MISUNDERSTANDING
"I really believe," said Miss Mattie
May, "that I'm not capable of criticising
anything I see on the stage except
the gowns. 1 saw an N actress the
other night who had ratner a pretty
gown, but the yoke spoiled it'4?-?- f
"Jove! you don't say!" exclaimed
Knight Stanz,- the tragedian. "Who
threw it?"
"Threw what?" ' %
"The yo-lk."?Philadelphia Press.
? ?
SULPHUR BRINGS HEALTH.
Purifies the Blood and Clears Up the
Complexion.
Everybody needs to take Sulphur at
this season. Nothing like it to purify the
blood, clear up the complexion and remove
"that tired feeling." Bdt the only way to
take it is in liquid form. Hancock's Liquid
Sulphur taken internally is the best Spring/ ?
tonic. Applied externally Hancock's Liquid
Sulphur quickly cures Eczema, Tetter, and
all Skin Diseases. Hancock's, the only ' .r ?
Liquid Sulphur Ointment, removes Pimples,
Blackheads and Sores, and gives a
beautiful soft, velvety skin. Your druggist
sella it. It cured Edward D. Herring, of
Frederick, Md., of a bad case of Eczema, ' f
and he writes: "My face is as smooth as ' j
an infant's." ?
All-about-Sulphur Booklet free, if you
write Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore.
yj
IRISH HOPEFULNESS. f
Sure, Things Are Never So Bad but
They Might Be Worse.
The Irishman sees everything ?
through rose colored glasses, says a
writer in the Guidon. He is sup- ^ \
ported, too, by a simple, sturdy faith,
a spirit of resignation and unwordliness
worthy .of the saints of old.
The dread blight had fallen on the
fields in most of the. district whfere - g
we were visiting in Ireland, and the
potato vines hung limp and brown. .8
No word of complaint was spoken, and ?
when the likelihood of famine was '
mentioned the answer came: , 7I
"Danger, ma'am?-. Yes, there is, in- Y
deed, but,God is good. He'll find a ;f
way."
So, too, about the hay. The sum- :M
mer had been terribly wet, and for j >
days the new mown hay had laid on
the ground. It was an anxious time. - ^ *
"What will you do," I said to Mike,v
"If this weather keeps up? , Your vhay
will surely be ruined." v * . ;^||
"Oh, please God, it won't keep up," fj
he answered. "He'll send us a bright YY
day soon, just to see how well we'll /M,
useit."
"What a glorious night, Mikey," I '
said to the boy, as he and I and the v:
donkey drove home under the August ;'Yf
moon.
"A fine night, indeed, ma'am. Thanks
be <to God for giving it to us!" Y / ?
They showed us, on the road to
town, a gentleman's place where, in
a stretch cf what not long since had f*
evidently been thickly, wooded -land, f\ Y
stood stump after stump of giant ... Y
trees. Four or five years ago, when
the winter was exceptionally long arid- coM,
the peasants suffered from scareity
of peat. They begged this landed '
proprietor to sell them wood; offering
not only to pay his1 price but to fell }
the trees and carry them off. He ?e- * : ?
fused. Again
and again they bejjged, for
the suffering grew intense^ but he
' 1 > > u. \ a - :v;S
W0U1Q not let ms iiauu ue uiaucu. vuc
night there came a wind so frightful
that it seemed for a time as if the
"big wind" were blowing again. la
the morning the highway along this
proprietor's domain was impassable.
Huge trees, blown to the ground, lay
across the road, for a distance^ two
miles, and the forest beauty was a
thing of the past. The town aufthor- '
ities ordered the obstruction cleared :
away, and the peasants got for nothing
more than they had been refused
for pay.
" 'T-was the hand of God was in
that, ma'am," I was told, "for, wit>\ ^
all the wind, not a poor man's cot was , J|
harmed, nor another tree on the countryside
only those. God always looks
after His poor."
A BAD RECOMMENDATION.
Lady (in draper's shop)?And is
this color also genuine?
Assistant?As genuine as the roses
on your cheeks, miss.
Lady?<H'm! Show me another one. i
Tit-Bits.
DR. TALKS OF FOOD \ J
Pres. of Board of Health.
______ i 7'?
"What shall I eat?" is the daily
inquiry the physician is met with. I
do not hesitate to say that in my /judgment,
a large percentage of disease
is caused by poorly selected and
improperly prepared food. My per- '
sonal experience with the fully-cooked
food, known as Grape-Nuts, enables
me to speak freely of its merits.
"From overwork, I suffered several
years with malnutrition, palpitati9n
of the heart, and loss of sleep. Last
summer I was led to experiment per- sonally
with the new food, which I
used in conjunction with good rich
cow's milk. In a short time"after I
commenced its use, the disagreeablesymptoms
disappeared, my heart's actinn
became steady and normal, the
functions of the stomach were properly
carried out and I again slept as
soundly and as well as in my youth.
"I look upon Grape-Nuts as a perfect
food, and no one can gainsay but
that it has a most prominent place in
a rational, scientific system of feeding.
Any one who uses this food will
soon be convinced of the soundness
of the 'principle upon which it is,
manufactured and may thereby know,
the facts as to its true worth." Read,
"The Road to Wellville," in pkgs.
"There's a Reason."
" ' ' ''