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ifT saved by friend's advice \bout throe years ago I suffered with >endicitis and after having an operation formed it left me with a severe case kidney trouble. I was doctored by sevI physicians and getting no relief I took advice of a friend and procured a botof Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. After ing the contents of the first bottle I felt ltly relieved and decided to continue it. er using the contents of three more dolbottles, I experienced a complete cure. cannot recommend Dr. Kilmer's inip-ltoot too highly to anyone suffer- ' from kidney or bladder trouble. Yours very truly, K. P. II IT. AM. Cartersville, Ca. .vorn to and subscribed beforo 1110 July 12th, 11)09. JOS. S. CALHOUN', Notary Public, *1. Co., (Ja. Lrltrr to 1 Kilmer A Co, thamlot, V Y. c What Swamp-Root Will Do For You nd to Dr. lvilmer & Co., Bingham- j N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will ^ ince anyone. You will also receive ' >oklet of valuable information, telling j bout the kidneys and bladder. When i ing. be sure and mention this paper, j sale at all drug stores. Price fifty- | s and one-dollar. GENEROUS. J? > Pedestrian?That brick you just ed hit mo on tlie head. 1 Bricklayer (on tho scaffold)? 1 nil ro.i aom If i i jwu tun nuvi? h. ? Million for Tuberculosis." * will be the third year that Red Christmas seals have been snhl national basis. In 1908 over )0 was realized from the sale; 9. nearly $225,000, and In 1010 $310,000. The slogan for this sale is "A Million for Tuberfrom Red Cross Seals." New state led the sale last year with 72 seals. Ohio coming next ,713.427, and Wisconsin third 770.112. In addition to these, Ivnnia, New Jersey. MassachuConnecticut, California and Island sold over a million each. inn yji .?? v> loiK.tne wmow oi Iway magnate, has appealed to renu of municipal research to tend her mendicant mail and to ler in wisely dispensing charity, not alone in discovering her> target of innumerable profesbeggiug letter writers. Miss r.ould has received in the last months 50,000 such letters ing requests for sums amount?2,000,000. Wedding rings and of marriage from povertyi correspondents are a daily of Miss Gould's mail. Childish Wisdom. ind then tlio seemingly casual of tlio little ones plumb imspirltunl and psychological Little Jean, for instance, listthe conversation of two adults ent interest, until one of the j (leaking of an unsatisfactory tpli, remarked that few niothe pleased with portraits of ldren, for the reason that the did not look to others as they e loving maternal eye. ean eagerly: ml children don't look at oth? as they look at their mother!" OUNO RIGHT PATH After a False Start. >0 I began to drink coffee, it time 1 was healthy and en* \ At first I noticed no bad om the indulgence but in >f time found that various were coming upon me. ation of the art took unto ; and nervous headaches, kid>les followed and eventually ich became so deranged that ght meal caused nie serious lysician's prescriptions failed ie and then I dosed myself nf .It r .? _ ... iiivviiv itiva l II 1 WLIS i nor* gusted and hopeless. * I began to suspect that cofic cause of my troubles. 1 exd by leaving it off. except mall cup at breakfast. This in" but .lid not Altogether redistivss. It satisfied me, that I was on the l ight, track, tve up ooffei altogether and use Pestum. In ten days I self greatly itnprovt d, my ady, tny head clear, my ki.Iting letter and bitter, r v* tii.n rat idly improving, n v nproved and the ability to ty tnoal without subsequent stored to rue. And this contains. off coffee and using Postum 'k no help from drugs, as 1 the use of medicines when use the food drink." Name Postum Co., Battlo Creek a reason," and It is exthe little book, "The Uoad In pkgs. j ;tio nlmvc letterf A new < from time to time. Tlie* 't trui'i Mild full of human COMMENCING THIS photograph was made In the L York, which Is being built by the built by private contract. The New \ States navy. ATWARO> * Water Commissioner Would Fix Limii. at One a Week. Question Has Become Burning One Throughout State of Massachusetts? Head of Board of Health Approves. RoPton.? How many baths docs a person require in a week? The above question is being asked by about every one of Lynn's 400,000 population, and the answers are varied ones. Some people claim only one is necessary, thereby upholding Water Commissioner Thomas Campbell. who has decreed that one bath overt sever day*, is enough. Discussion of the subject is not confined to Lynn, as the question has become a burning issue throughout the state. The water supply at Lynn became low recently, and Water Commissioner Campbell, seeking to care for the city's interests, asked that the citizens > >>< iuubiuciauuu me condition that exists. Chairman Michael Ward of the board of health said he approved of the suggestion. He felt that the comparatively few who had become accustomed to the luxury of a daily bath should sacrifice their wishes for the good of the many. Their abrogation would be for a good purpose, ho said, and redound to their credit. Chairman Ward went a bit farther and expressed the belief that many of the politicians at the city hall should practice the self-denial asked for. Ho said that they were devotees of the daily bath and declared that now was the time for the city fathers and other public ofllcials to show their mettlo by putting aside their custom of bathing daily and restraining themselves for the welfare of the public. Chairman Ward was asked point blank if he bathed daily, but ho would not reply. He is. however, the most outspoken of the city department heads and believes that the citizens should bathe infrequently for a while. Street Commissioner Mcl'lietras was the real brave man in city hall. He was a boomer of the twice a week plan and freely stated his conviction that experience would never disprove that twice a week would bo too infrequent bathing for any man. A lot of people havo been wondering Just what he meant, but his phraseology was so lawlike they still remain puzzled. Chief Thomas Harris of the fire department raised a dissenting voice in the general chorus of approving acclamation of the plan. He asserted vigorously that neither he nor the | other members of the lire department ought to be Included in any restrictions prescribing a weekly bath or a biweekly bath. lb; said that firemen had fo bathe after everv lire and ought to be allow L Hard Work ii Captain of Customs Cutter Talks of Trials and Perils in Fighting Moro Smugglers. Manila -The manner In which tho Mora carry on smuggling In the southern si'.s i.- systematic, according to (.'apt t?cddus o: the customs cutter Skua. He states that tho Moros havo an unusually high tr? o on the Tawi Tawl group, from which they can soo the coa t of Borneo. and also see the smoke of his cutter when miles away from tho spot. \Vh n everything is clear the smugglers make a dive for tho little group of islands that dot the sea between there and Zamboanga, and almost always escape mo even when I can sight them," said tho captain, "as they know that my boat in the host of weather can only make seven knots, and with the tide against nio in fine weather only two knots. "There is at least $.*>00,000 worth or textiles being smuggled from Bornca AMERICA'S GREATEST^ '5 J . * $>** * . :<yj* *> <y- - 2 ft ' 1 I i I f / - ; |]j^ 4\-p^-: 1 2-4^3>A7~7~L /VF-W irooklyn navy yard recently and shows government and. It Is said, will cost $2,0 !ork will bo the greatest battleship of /^BATHS' ed the privilege "or 6hould I say right," he continued. As for himself, he said that on his tours of the city in his automobile ho became covered with dust every day and that a bath had become "not a luxury, but a necessity." The discussion still rages and it looks as if the twice-a-week plan would be ndopted. It is said to be a decided I advantage, viewed either from a sanitary. health, or even moral standpoint. GARDENS LIGHTED BY WORMS Luminous Insects Selling for 50 Cent3 a Dozen Furnish the Latest Fad in London. I-ondon.?Glowworms are the latest thing in outdoor illuminations, and many people are adopting this novel way of decoratiug their gardens for tho summer. L. Haig, a dealer In glowworms, at his farm at Newdigate. Surrey. said: "The idea of using glowworms as 's a drvon for part ot surrey is particularly prolific in glowworms. "They are usually found adhering to longisli blades of grass, and so long as they glow are easy to catch in the hand. A fine night after rain is the best timo for getting them. x China Power i * People Have Ever Been Enormous Poultry Raisers and Exporters? Ducks Are Pickled and Dried. Hongkong.?For hundreds of years | China was the greatest poultry produc- | ing nation in the world, and probably this Is true today, not only as regards ( the total production, but also per cap- i if a use. Of the more than 300.000.000 . population of China, shown by the last census, there are few Indeed who do not In the course of a year consume somcthlncr t?i tho rr.ni. r.t r? v" K^' mil J chickens or ducks or geese?and certainly a large number of eggs. For considerable portions of the population poultry is the only animal food used, and for the more well-to-do classes it is an ordinary meat diet the year around. | Ducks are pickled, dried, tinned and otherwise preserved and shipped to many parts of the world to Chinese , who are away from a home supply. Eggs of all kinds are used fresh and [ are cured by burying in clay and lime until they acquire something of the quality of cheese and aro a great Chinese luxury. It is easy to calculate that to meet all these lines of consumption the output of poultry and poultry products needs to bo enormous. For the most part chickens and ducks are produced upon the usual ba- i sis of practically all Chlneso production?the family household?or at most , n Philippines Into the southern islands every year i 1 that with a good fast boat I am sure ; xnuM ... . .... I w uiuiuat an stopped. ir n were not for my 1 -pounder on the foredeck. I'd never land anything. As It Is, when we make a haul It is most always Chinese, as they can dump all their merchandise and drugs into the , ocean heforo we can reach them. On , nn average at least 300 Chinese aro , captured and deported every year. "Oh, yes. It is dangerous work. They ' t will got me some day," and at this ho j pulled out from underneath his bunk a ] heavy club and disclosed a .38-caliber j | i istol and a shotgun. "When In any i l Moro port, which Is quite seldom. I j always sleep with tho pistol under my pillow, and tho club and gun by my side, as you can never tell when they might slip up on you." Capt. Cleddus has been skipper of tho cutter Skua for the past eight years, three of which have boon at .Tolo, and two at Palawan. During all this service be has otten made as high ( 9READNAUGHT ftf ill I f ifl^ffM^li I u 1 %|rrl cWPH?0^2S^fcP I VOSP/C " tho "cradle" of the battleship New 00,000 more than any that has been 'he dreadnaught class In the United BRITTLE GIRL BREAKS BONES Fall of Very Short Distar.ce Always Proves Disastrous to Ruth Morgan, Aged 10 Years. Wilmington, Del.?Physicians In this and other cities are making a study of the case of Miss Ruth Morgan, aged 10 years, whose father, David Morgan, tenants the farm adjoining the Mlnquldale Home, near this city. Miss Morgan is thought to have unusually soft or brittle bones In her body, for within a yeur she has had i four slight fails in every one of which she sustained a broken bone. Her latest accident occurred when she fell one foot from a fence und broke an arm above the elbow. Last spring she fell from a step and broke a shoulder blade. Later in the summer she fell from a chair and broke nn arm. but this fracture was healed before the girl or her parents knew n b In ct nlmiil If Thrno n-nolr ^ ? c r r\ UIIJ Vililig auuuw 1U * ?? ?*6W she fell from a table and broke the other shoulder blade. Rattler Chokes Boy. New Haven. Conn.?While George Nash, n fifteen-year-old boy. was asleep in the woods here the other f I 'j A+\r+. Cleveland, O.?George Walken, who was driving a load of hay to town, was surprised when notified that the hay was on fire. George's descent to the ground was remarkable for its speed. The hay and hayrack were entire consumed. n Hen World a small faun. There are few families in China, even in the larger cities, that do not have at least some chickens. Near the ports open to foreign trade there are a few rather good sized poultry farms, as u rule. Ducks are raised in immense numbers on farms along the canals and rivers of central and south China and are much more common than chickens. One of the customary sights along the grand canal in mid-China, for example, is that of a Chinese iluck farmer in his boat watching his fiock feed in and along the canal. The ducks are trained to obey him, r.r.d armed with a long bamboo pole to guide them, he controls their movements and takes them back to shelter for the night. The surplus of poultry and poultry products which China enn export annually is Immense. Up to the present exportation has taken the form largely of egg products, mostly dried albumen and yolks. 1 i Police Billies of Paper. Lynn, Mass.?An order has been < placed bj the Lynn police department I for thirtv-slx policemen's "billies" < made of hard rolled paper. It has 1 been found that wooden sticks, for- < merly used, broke at times when violently thwacked over the heads of dls turbers of the peace. It 5s hope t! the \ paper clubs will have sufficient strength to cope with any condition y of affairs thnt may arise. ns 2.."f>0 miles a month cruising, and has assisted In several good captures. He recommends a fast cutter and two motor boats as a great improvement , aver the preseut equipment, and states that with these the Borneo coast could be patroled so thoroughly that smug* ' pling would almost become a thing >f the past. ! Dynamite Caps In Mail. Norwalk. Conn.?Some dynamlto i raps contained in a New York letur xploded In the electric stamping ma* i rhine in the postofilce. F. M. Miller, i clerk, was thrown tlat on his back, ind the office forco stampeded, believing an Internal machine had exploded. Fire followed, but was quicky subdued. I Bold Bandits Were Only Six. Denver, Colo.?Two six-year-old arefooted boys, John Aberly and John Shell, robbed the office ot a stone comany at Denver, while the Clerks were <t lunch. The vouthful bursrlars u?<h i plc':a\ to smash the desks aud thea tacked the Bate with It. i .i9: }? *r 'Morality = ;h< I ~~ rh By Rev. Guy E. Shipler pul A?akUat Rector of St. Peter* fL St. Louie M lnc s? < r. There Is In our civilization a class j ft women branded as moral lepers, pre :he presence of any one of whom roi would not be tolerated in our homes. ? Yet our daughters are allowed to mlnele freely with the men who prey upon these women; to receive them In sur homes?and toe often?to marry them. Such is custom and conviction, so totally an inversion of the teaching md practice of Jesus Christ, who ate with harlots nnu sinners, not to conione their acts, but to save them from svil. Let us nsk in all frankness, is It not Lime for the church to inquire rather more seriously into this matter of conscience and morality? Shall we 50 on being satisfied that custom and convention have said the last word on these vital matters? There are too many false Judgments of morality in society, as a result of untrained conscience. The thing we call convention is too often but a cloak for false morality. Custom and convention are made up of elements both good aau bad, though most of us. If a thina 1b conventional, adhere to Its pronouncements without stopping to question the right or wrong of it. Convention and custom are good when they conserve the good of the past; they are viciously evil when they cloak evil, and even worse when they so enslave the minds of the people that they stupefy all moral progress. There is a tendency In most of us toward legalism; this false use of the law, and the subtlest foe with which Christianity has had to cope. One of the most remarkable things In history is the speed with which Christianity morally "ran off the track" and allowed its freedom to become elaborated and stiffened into dogma, and then Into legalism. The church, which was to bring God and man together, became burdened with ecclesiastical machinery, which kept God and man apart What is the standard? Shall we frankly become legalists and accept the law as our standard of conduct? Or shall we accept what are called the average I Judgments of mankind?the consensus of opinion?as our standards? If so, what shall we do with the prophets; those men of vision who sometimes rise in our midst, to point the way to a clearer conception of truth than the average man has attained? And if we do not listen to the prophets?for example, those men of vision we have in our political life today?how can we hope to progress 1 as a civilization? Or shall we accept as our standard that which satisfies us? Or shall we accept that which wrong for the purpose jf its own A* moral choice. It has as a standard ID; not any exterior law, which means the Vj* reduction of religion and morals to y Jurisprudence and restraint; but it must have an inner law, which means freedom. _ Jesus Christ's most emphatic teaching, about which centered all else he i said and did, was the sacredness of the self. We have Christian morality then when we set before v the task of developing this self. This self- I loyalty is the only morality we know. 1 It is truth for truth's sake, not truth for expediency Conscience is the voice of God witnessing to eternal right within the individual soul. It is the voice of man's true self, and the true self is one with God. As our sense of beauty leads us on to things beautiful, so our moral sense should lead us to things moral. And, as in art. we turn to great'masters. whose genius has wrought in the world of beauty for the standards of valuation; so in the world of morals must we turn with ever-increasing earnestness and appreciation and longing to the master of men. And as our study of the great canvas reveals ever and anon some deep- i er truth that lay in the heart of the i artist, so our serious study of Christ must reveal more of the truth that lay j like gold in the depths of his heart. , It is for each one of us to say?for no , one else can say it for us?whether ' the light that is in us shall become darkness and so spread the gloorn of Itself through the hearts of humanity :>r whether it shall become a part of ~ hat light that lighteth every man that ^ bomath into the world. y WHAT ONE TESTAMENT DID Whole Current of Immigrant's Life Changed Through Perusal of the Scriptures. A Swede was recently coming into nir country through Ellis island. As le landed, a worker of the New York Riblc society stepped up to him, oteriiig him a Swedish New Testament. The Swede stopped, apparenty startled, and stared at the worker, aying: "Weren't you here twenty?ix years ago? 1 think you are the same man?yes, you are the same man." The worker told him he had een engaged for twenty-eight years '11ii;g tin Scriptures to the ira- H migrants and ching to each one a Look in hh mother tongue. "Well," said the Swede, "twenty-six years ago I landed here a strnnger, and you cave mo a New Testament in the Sue.: sh !... c ee. Just -\.\ you offered me one nev i read it, and through roadini it 1 I 'Tame a Christian. After a feu years I made up my mind : > becot . , r? acher, and or twenty years I have been preach ^ ing the Gospel In Colorado. It all ' run with your offering ine a New ^ Tost anient." The Word of God is ?f ill "quick and powerful."?The Lai ^ s.eran. j f'"^TW^vPbS^*' ? t ti " '^n *3>vXi liinnNH ^ . . .^/'*^' 'j *'*' ' h. A lantfwteh Filling. J fBH ~ Mali tt^ffMM '*^V ;"'J!^J ijflicloua ailing for sandwich? <F f "-B i|Mf j<A UhflnA >'. *mn la nutde by mixing equal M*W V ^^31 ' ft? oC cream cheese and snappy : WFEm *? i * * vtux French dressing to a ftj tjjrtftJSykjiS .Ja ootk Ptets, then stirring In It awk tefMwedPteMteMfcvteT^SS^ T* y >PPdd rgf peppers or chopped olives. a. is paste iteald be rery creamy and S t on thloldp^pt least a quarter of an ;'j| ^ ^ -- &ch ^ By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetaile Compound J The Change of Life is the most critlcBljifcaod of a j woman's existence, and neglect of health'6x1^^ t'm* J Women everywhere should remember that .1 other remedy known to medicine that will so success carry women through this trying period as Lydia1 Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native rootl. > and herbs. Here is proof: Natick, Mms^?"I cannot express what I went through during the Change of Life before tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- j pound. I was In such a nervous condition I ||f^ ^ flagS could not keep still. My limbs were cold. I ii| v [mm had creepy sensations and could not sleep >' A JjjgljM nights. I was finally told by two physicians ^sfrrT^lm'IrTii that J had a tumor. M1 read one day of the wonderful cures made J BHHWh'\V\v bv Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound WlfWv? ill\ Ji^ decided to try It, and it has made me a well mnrt n Min i woman. My neighbors and friends declare It has worked a miracle for me. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is worth its weight in gold for women during this period of life. If it will help others you may publish this letter."?Mrs. Nathan B. G re a ton, 51 No. Main St^Na+'^.Mnss. ANOTHER SIMILAR CASE. llMBj^Ijjl Corn wall ville, N. Y.?"I have been taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for some time for Change of Life, nervousness, and a fibroid growth. jfSk ;|** Two doctors advised mo to go to the hospital, but one day while I was away visiting, I met a woman who told mo to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I did so and I ? know it helped me wonderfully. I am very.Ml thankful that I was told to try Lydia : vJE^a Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound." ? Mrs. Win. Houghton, Corn wall ville, N. Greene Co. The makers of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound have thousands of such letters as those above ? they tell the truth, else they could not have been obtained for love or money. This medicine is no stranger ? it has stood the test for years. For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound hits been the standard remedy for //j '/^vi\\ female ills. No sick woman does justice to (l/[ ^ T^\\\ herself who will not try this famous medicine. 7/ Wat, \r iMflB*" ' .ivham inv;t? - ill sick women U\ Varrap /?) ber for -i v.c:- she has . . .."**w Ji -J- muitui) u;uii4 -itusact* i.vsi\ S SYNKiOT. i' ,-^Ji' ?r Plak Pye. Fplzootic * '' 2 Fvi" j? _ Lu ' ' 1 or.' uii Ftvcr //T-V\V\ "Aw A & Catarrhal Fever ( L L 1 i\\ \ Pororuraaoa poslUrepnr.aotWs no matter Dow horeasaaany sta*? ara mfaetag f ft | l ] 111 || Of nipoxi" Liquid itiim on the toiwu*, actaoo tbehkxkIand Qiairttoi axpeia tha If ?' *1 iH poisonous .form* from tur body OureslHiitempar id Idogs and Phaep and Ohoisrw la y \ ySkJ J /H7 ?*?ultry Utrjrestsot'lBK itse atoek remedy Oirss La (Irlppe atnooii human 'jflnn v. yjJk-g /*\J and laivflni Klilncv rcmwlv toe and II a twttla. H aM 110 a doian Cut this oA Keaplt Miow toyour dru,r(rlst who will ??t It foryou. Frea Booklet ~tl.tsin|iSS V/Causes and Curra hnocla' Agents wanted SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. 60SHEN. IND " ? ^ wm??n??? ?p^iipup?M?? ? Special Offer to Printe . This paper is printed from ink made in Savannah, ija. oy the SOUTHERN OIL & INK CO., Savannah, Ga. Price 6 cents per pound, F. O. B. Savannah. Your patronage solicited. W. L. DOUGLASS ~ 2.50, *3.01), "3.50 S M.00 SHOES / . Xjg, WOMEN wear W.L_Dougln* atyli.h, perfect !$?: '& fitting, easy walking boots, because they give ...? long wear, same as W.L.Douglas Men's shoes. ^ 1 HL STANDARD OF QUALITY MEMf FOR OVER 3Q YEARS ||pf "" TBI The workmanship which has madeW. L. .. pr / Douglas shoes famous the world over is Jf I could take you into my large fatfories I at Biockton, Mass., and show you how ^pv^.V. I carefully W.L.Douglas shoes are made, you - / L would then understand why they are warranted to hold their shape, fit better andgyygk, A jfjtBKftfch. wear longer than any other make for the price |?g?5V<1 CAUTION Rrnnlnr have W. I,. Dong-las\ / KEfflwlftCMB UnU I III IS imniB mill prtne ?t?mp<nl on hollninBMggM RaBMBPRMR If you cannot obtain W. I? TV>nglas shoes tn rour town, write for catalog. Shoe* sent direct ONE I'AIK of inv BOYS* SM.S2.ftO or front factory to w earer, all cYiarges prepaid. W.I.. WTS.no SllOKK will positively out wear Ddi'GI.AS, 145 .spark St., Brucktou, Maas. TWO 1'AlUSof onllnary buyt'ihost fou who are not well Why Not Rebuild Your Health? I A Reconstructive Tonic Known as | milam w1ll do it-guaranteed i *. Uii n>m. K*i em+ity imi *? Mr* u>? BUM H AVtth '*7 M'HUI IWllta. tt l? H k tUMlt V T*i'i * ?!* U ?*???*'? ** rulMiioi ? y ft 72 4. i/ln+m t?. Itnlit a?. C ?>" M . J* _ tfjr?r?T Omu <? >?t ?f tunut. ? *trk...rJ. < , r <r?l ft.,?9cok>kMv*i. MIIM IiWko* 0*. ? / /~tf~ ~ A Jl.-. r**?r???M HIm Bum, Bulitu 0. ?? ? '^i B? mw fmjkiM^prtraU 0?. ^ ?..r?ct*r?t. TskMo* ilWum Bin 3j II Mil *1\A I Tg-SvF^'5^=Sg.a,w' * || lYl 1L. /\ Ifl hiioij u+rM??*. i IM TT?M. krMMl V|. 0*. i r.**0*** a?ipMp obkrrtfc. 2 | BLOOD, BONE <wi S1CTV lixuwu lAilnjr ITUN. : t? Myggjg llhJj I iirniATIVl TOKtC J -l?luil, dM/tiifM* 7tutu. iD1 U. be- De?*ft J -.'* * ' 8 ^-^y^agy $1 a bottle II benelitted--noittfiifl If not, *gf"r *rw*ftrt J /hen Building Church, School or Theater reseating same, write for Catalog X9, mentioning class of building. Dealers, write fa* I ?ncy proposition. Everything in Black-boards and School Supplies. Ask for Catalog S?. ^ SKH AERICAN SEATING COMPANY, 218 So. Wabaah Avonuo, Chicago, lift* sHj^B