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Sl.GOPer Year *THB WOMEN . . . STOOD AFAR OFF BEHOLDING THESE THINGS." T Ober-Asassergau of Aatriea, la the . sacred city in Christendom, and 1 la a tkne hours' ride of Now I ... Jl Mat a poetic Umeftt this, hot a tuiibto fact. Bethlehem, Pa., la the only city la the world to-day founded and named in eommemora tioa of the Saviour of the world?the Otly community consecrated entirely absolutely to His plant and pur Nowhere else In all Christendom save la Bethlehem, Pa., are Easter X}ay aad the other Christian festivals airtebrated with the absolute solemni ty, the sublime reality, that they are ?among the plons Moravians.' It Is one o< the stern Ironies of fate that the Baaar lection of the Redeemer should to-day be scarcely more than a half remembered tradition In the Bethle hem of Judcia, the city of His nativity. To sweeten this bitter irony was the purpose of boont Zlnxendorf In founding the town of Bethlehem In 1740. At the head of a-company of devout followers he laid the founda tion of a city which should forever, by word and symbol, -commemorate the acts of Jesus Christ and the Res arrection. Thus It L? that Blaster Day and Passion Week ere something more thaa sacred symbols to this pious Community, assuming as they do something of the nature of a holy -'drama, a divine tragedy, to be lived aad acted by them, not with the spirit Cf the Oberammergau of the Old. World, but with the sublime serlous aeas of the Lord's Supper. Wnck of the Passion is Holy. The celebration of the Moravian Passion Week begins the Saturday evening preceding Palm Sunday. All day long the town has worn an ex pectant air, the air of a great house from which Is soon to emerge a wed ding party or a funeral. It |a di*i ? fult to deaoribe the peculiar atmos phere that envelops Bethlehem on thle final day of preparation. The Whole city haa undergone a general fcousecleanlng during the preceding week. The windows of the quaint, Old-fashioned hoqses glisten In the Spring sunshine. The ancient bruss knooksrs have been burnished to tho brightness of molten gold. The red brick pavements and the cobbled gtraeta have also been scoured to the atmoat cleanliness. The weather vanes on the roofi of tho aharp ga bled houses, Invigorated by recent tombing done with polish, hurl de fence to the very sun. Inside the quaint, comfortable old houses the Moravian mothers and daughters have not been Idle. All week long they have baked and pre pared for the visitors of the coming Week, for they are women who. tu spite of all their deep religious feel ings, nevertheless look well to the Ways of their household. On Baturady evening, however, all the work Is done. Things temporal I gre put aside for thoughts splrltusl.! The long village atreets are quiet as ft churchyard, save for the occaslot al twitter 6t the early spring birds feslMlaf their nests In the buddlog pgple trees. ?uddenly, up the long, hilly streets ?oms* t harsh, sonorous note, and gaothcr and another, and In a ffw VUaatss the aurroundlng hills arc aaholng with a strange, swsst, subtle avsta. The atrangsr stops, thrilled 10 tho marrow. It might bs the tramp of Oabrlol on the Resurrec* tloa mora, so Impressive Is the street harmonious sound. It is the blare of the trombono band, playing high up In the church tower, and the mysterious strains are the opening bara of one of thoso ma jestic Oregortan chants which noth ing save a trombone can Interpret. With the first blare of tho trom bones the well dressed Moravian* tarn out of their street door? and gMike their way, In family groups, to the church. It Is a handsome church, with seat W?f tt CWrarj, lUf capacity tor Its two thousand members. It has long stained glass windows and a splendid, golden tubed pipe organ. Service of Rare Majesty. The congregation have gathered for the reading of the events of the day as set within the New Testsment. They arrange and seat themselves In "choirs," according to the age, sex and matrimonial conditions. The married men sit In onelmrtlon of the church, the married women In anoth er. the widows In another. A certain quota of pews li reserved for the el derly bachelors, still another for the younger men snd the boys. The young girls have their especial cor ner, the elderly spinsters have thelra, and the little boys and the little glrla thelra. The reading lesson which falls from the pastor's lips Is the story of Jesus raising Laxarua from the dead, and the Incomparable story of Mary and the alabaster box of precious ointment. The choir sings fcoft, me lodious music to the notes of trom bone and organ, and the congrega tion seek their bozqes to the stately, Mf. Attot 4M _ il?i< M turasi oat nil A wilt IN awful selemahy tk? Irat tiMU 61 daylight. At the m4 etf wkat toemi ttoritlt* ft Uttto ?Mk ?( ddyltoht flittts tbttngh (It ItliaM glaas ffti* easier* frttAHNk fit stillness to bow at the ttiittliij pMtoti <to fntooa?a?t?nr oil.kB??i toad, from AMr Mbaotlot of re pniwd emotion. The church and Um silent gatlon are bathed In a low and pro longed sound, aa of distant thunder. Deeper and deeper grows the sonsr ous thunder, and still deeper grows the hush on those who hear It. It seems that the pulses hare been tak en from all life, except thst which animates the great organ In the loft above. In the shadows that lurk about the great Instrument the chor isters hate bees noiselessly arranging thetntelvee In a compact body In the centre of the gallery, and at the of* gaolst'e signal burst forth Into the grand anthem. At the close of a brief service the minister gives a signal, and, with per fect order and despatch that comes from practice of generations, the con gregation flies out and forma In a procession heading toward the ceme tery. Playing a dirge the trombonists lesd the procession down the dawn lighted street,- and sftsr a few mo ments* walk conduct It toto the ne cropolis. The cemetery Is on a slightly rising hill, and the tombe. all of the hori zontal slab atyle, glimmer white In the early half light. The congregation, often numbering as many as 2600, flies Into the ceme tery by way of the broad, central ave nue, which Is lined with anetont elm trees. Upon reaching the middle of the avenue they branch off Into four divisions, each division filing off Into the intersecting avenue, and forming a compact hollow squsre about the area of grates. Then comes th^ Impressive crista. All the solemnity of the first resur rection morn Is here In the modern /to&mtr aetmuhem m * majestic measure* of the trombones In tbt tower, . Palm Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, Good Friday and Saturday are similarly observed by concourse to the ehurch, by the blaring of the trombones from the tower, by sobbing litanies and heart stirring columns of musto from the golden tubed organ and by the pas tor's reading of the corresponding events of that day-nearly nineteen hundred years ago. Thus tho week of the Passion draws solemnly to a close. The lit tie town lies under an Impenetrable pall?the pall that might have huug over Jerusalem tn the first Passion Wee*. Saturday night of Passion Week finds the Moravians early to bed. Man, woman and child all are under the Influence of the hallowed reeolleo tions whieh the many Impressive oer emonles of the week have awakened and revived. At midnight not .a sound Is to be heard in the whole town, un less it is the soreeohlng of an in* coming train to the railroad station, aeross the river. The religious con templations of the week make the sturdy, thrifty Moravians droam luoh dreams as the patriarch* themselves might have dreamed after long vigils with the stars. Sublime Raster Eltee. At two o'clock In the morning to the esrs of th*> sleeping town are borne the strain* of h d.-er noted chorale. It sounds to the drowsy dreamers as if it catno from any where, from nowhere. It is the trom bone band, marching through the darkened streets. Lights twinkle now from shuttered windows, the shutters are thrown open, the windows raised and grave greetings given to the torch lit proceeslon passing by. The trombonists are performing their ancient duties of awakening the devotees In time to assemble for the sunrise service. They pass on and on through tho thoroughfares of the town, stopping at various corners to discourse the weird but solemn and sweet Oregorlan hymns banded down from the very dawn of Christianity. They etop before the House of the Widows, whero the bereft of the com munity dwell together. They play appropriate selections there. They stop before the pastor's house and the houses of tho sacristans and of tho elders. It Is all very solemn. Impressive, beautiful. Even more than that?ft la sublime. That awakened by tb? early morn 8 city of Qethlebem, while these pious people stand thus, with bared heads, awaiting the sunrise. It la tenae. aw ful In lta solemnity, this spectacle of the living keeping vigil over the dead. What Is really but a few minutes' wait at the utmost?for everything has been timed to a second?seems an eternity to the watchers. The stillness reaohes the almost unbear able point when auddonly, without warning, the eholr bunts forth into a glorious awakening song, and Just then-the rim of the rlaing aun leaps UP from behind the town to the eaat. The eholr carols and chante In a very paaalon of Joyous triumph: Death, where is thv sting? Grave, thy victory? The most unimaginative aqd une motional among the spectators oanhot resist the powerful effeete of the min gled pathoe and triumph of the ecene. The soft, velvety young graaa spring* lng up everywhere between the flat, white tpmbs; the bursting buds of the leafless branohes overhesd, the breath of the mild spring wind, the solitary croous timidly peeping Its head through the chilly sod?all are sym bols to the Moravians of the day they commemorate. A short prayer ends ths service and the assemblage dlaperses, the young* er people to wander over the grounds, admiring the beautiful floral offer* lnga that have been placed on the re? cumbent stones, and the eldera tc hurry home to preparo breakfast and make necessary preparations for th? remainder of the day. Columns of silvery smoke aro purl lng forth from the snug looking kltch en xjiimneys of every dwelling, and from overy direction comes the savory odor of such a breakfast as only Moravian housewife knows how tc cook. But the feasting Is only temporary After breakfast they will again don their best apparel and go once more to the graves on the bill. Ren Fro It. "Apropos of Easter," said a mod ern farmer, "here are some hen fruit statlatlce for you: A five pound hen eata sixteen tlmee her weight yearly?that Is to say, eighty pounds of food, worth about seventy five cents. Her eggs number 1(0 or 175. They weigh six times her weight, or thirty pounds. Thejf are worth about (4.60. Thus, for every cent's worth of food you feed 1<?o a good hen,, els cents' worth of eggs ?one forth."?New Tork Frets. - IT WORTH *S.#0.000 Worth af:l HXilYK W ; SACRIFICED Cl iii tool Hit** Bmal Om* Ii Mmktd Ttom Neighboring Ti Fort Worth* tlx., Special.?Fan ned bj a a! iff Wind, a fire in the southern poriicn <? this eity Satur day afternoon iweit over an area of ten hloeka in length and seven in width, destrc; ed -property roughly estimated in ? ilue ^to bo in excess of $5,000,000, a>.d caused the death of aix persons. The Are, w' 'ch bfpkc oat in a fash ionablc rcsid ut diptriet, was beyoikl all contrcl within 16 minutes after it started, snd waa not checked until dynamite was rCsoifed. to, four hours later. * The spread of the flames was not cheeked until tbey had eaten their way to the Tcxaa ? Pacific Railroad rearvation on tho cist. Ou the south the fire wss cheeked at the Texas Pa cific passenger station, this steel and stcne structure forcing a bulwark that aaved the wholesale district of the city, whk h at onetime was. in im minent danger of ^it&ction. A patient whoaa identity has nnf been learned, periahqd in Walker'u Sanitarium und thrfc men were elec trocuted ami their bodies burned to cinders in the Sawder electric plant. Herbert Stacy irasyfitally b>med in an endeavor to save' his dwelling, and. a fireman fell from'a house top and' was killed. * It is estimated {fcrat -500 families are homdrsa. llaqy off these have Kne to Dallas, whftf-e shelter has en offered. 5 A party, of small j boys carelessly handling cigraaites I is believed to have been the caus# of the fire. GULLY'S PLAN. Would Sara Great Sams to Cotton. Farmers?The Warehouse Plan? No Faith in tt Bay Augusta Cotton Exchange -Hex Atlanta* Ga., Special.?Daniel J. Sullr, the one-time great eotton bull manipulator of New York was here Friday and set forth a scheme by whieh ho claim* $150,000,000 to $250,000,000 may be saved to the raiaers of cotton in the Sonth. lie said, "A minimum fund of $10,000,000, subscribed by the most conservative financiers of the United 8tates, is available to be invested in ?itch iron-cla.i securities as shall in sure the ability and the responsibil ity of the plan's promoters to redeem their promises and obligations to tho last detail. "The people of the Sonth will b? riven the first opportunity to invest in this proiect, if. upon receiving it, it commends itself to their judg ment." , The plan contemplates a chain of warehousos across the South. suffi cient to hold one-third of the cotton crop and tin reby enable farmers to store their cotton and draw small amounts upon it to enable them to sell at will i istcad of by compulsion. A Savannr.h special' of 8nnday however, says the plan does not com mend itself to the eotton factories there. They claim that the seheme ia not practieul or it would have been adopted already through the Far mers' Union without the aid of Sully. They claim that no Improvement may bo expected from this source, Killed in Dncl Wtlk Oflotn. Filxgerald, (la., Speoial.?Robert Gresliam was killed early Sunday morning iu r justo! duol with Chief of Police B. ubakcr and Patrolman Johnson. Tho man was hoinf hunt ad by the offers and flred upon tbenf from a hidiig idace In a dark alloy* The officers Jointly opened flro and Oreeham fell with four bullet wounds. Three-cornered Dncl In Stmt# of Georgia Town. Hazelhurst, Ga., Special.?Eugene and J. L. Williams, brothers, wore shot down on n street of this place by V. T. Stowers, form oily of Con vers, Ga.. J. T. Williams being proba bly fatally hurt. Tho brothers are members of the firm of Jarman 6 Williams. It was stated that Stow ers had given this firm a check: the bank would not honor; that Eugene demanded the money and a fight re sulted. J. L. Williams went to hit brother's rescue, it is sllcgod, when Stowors drew his pistol. Whole Jury Panel Unlit For Service! New Orleans, Special.?In the criminal district coftrt Thursday Judge F. D. Chretien dismissed th< entire jury panel on motion of Dis trict Attorney Adamd, who charged | that the panel as a whole had shown j itself unfit for service; that althotigl' the Stato presented clear case* against a nvnebor of accused person* I it was unahlu lo secure any convic | tions beforo tho jurora. THE NEWS W BRIEF ?f Interest Gathered By Wire and CM* GLEANINGS flOM DfLY TO DAY Uf INks 0#mU| Ere*ts af Mort ?r Last Uteres* at Hone ?i v; .. . ? The Chamber of Commerce of Petersburg have seen red an option ob the Index-Appeal of that eitj and will boy the paper in order to boom the city. . The two and one-half passenger rate on all railroads in Virginia exr eept the Norfolk and Western goes uito effect April 1st. Mrs. Mary Farmer was electrocut ed at Aubnrn, N. Y., Monday mom >ng for the roost brutal murder of Mrs. Sarah Brannon, last ApriL William Brant Eyster, of McKee Rocks, Pennsylvania, is now of the opinion that he is the long lost Charlie Rose. He discovered that his foster parents, who are now dead, were not his real parents. Charlie Ross was kidnapped 35 years ago. Four persons were killed and five fatally wounded near Pittsburg, Pa., last Saturday by a head-on collision. Gunjiro Aoki, a Japanese, and Miss Helen Gladys Emery, the daughter of Archdeacon Emery, of the Epis copal Diocese of California. Were married at the Trinity Church, Seattle, last Saturday. They came from California, where they could not be legally married. Three dry kilns just outside of Norfolk burned Wednesday, consum ing a fine lot of timhor, The loss ia estimated at $20,000. An offer for Willie Whit la to go on the vaudeville stage at $1,000 a week has been received by his father, who merely remarked: "They will have to go higher than that." Lawrence R.. Boyle, who had been for 20 j-ears'ftie staff of the Boston Gllobe, in a'fit of despondency last Saturday night, phot and killed hi* wife and himself. The State of Georgia has aban donod the former mctliQd of leasing convicts from the penitentiary and an order h?? been against putting chains on women convicted of misdemeanors. Dr. W. M. Adcr, a North Caro linian was shot and mortally wound ed in the late Indian uprising in Oklahoma. The Southern Life Insurance Com pany of Fayettcville, N. C., which came so near being wrecked by the Seminole disaster, has been absorbed by the Jeffernon Life Insurance Com pany of Raleigh, and policyholders are thereby secured and the stock holders get about 00 per cent of orig inal investments. In Raleigh, N. C., the eitizens Dem ocratic ticket wen Tuesday in a very exoiting municipal primary, carrying all before it but one alderman. At Cumberland, Marvland, last week, a woman dving of blood poison, ?n token of the intense love she bore for her nurse, requested a kits. Ths nurse complied, but caught the dis ease and died a few days later. The Confederate Veterans' Re. nnion will be held this year at Mem phis from June 8th to 10th. # San Francisco is said to be pnt ting $12,000,000 annually into slot machines. Tb? United States Commissioner at New \ ork has decided that Jan Jan* off Ponren was a revolutionist and Is not to he extradited to Russia for orimes committed. ^ A man *aid to have murdered a gi'l in Indiana 32 years ago, waa recently found living in Texts, mar rie4 and weajtby. Foreign Affain. Six thousand persons were rend ered homeless, and 30,000 domestic animals were drowned by latt heavj floods in Southern Russia. The French bark. Jules Henry bleu up at Marseilles Thursday and 1 i men were killed. It was a petroleum earrier and being inspeetod when it 1? believed the fumes of empty tanki oaught from the inspectors light. Tha last batch of U. 8. troops left Cuba Wednesday nocn to return ti America, leaving the islanders again to govern themselves. ^Accused of cmberrling upwards of $51,000 from tin Russian Govern ment, a man believed to bo Isaac Yakovlev Matsncnko was arrested in Philadelphia Tuesday night. Count Zeppelin and a small party asccnded in his airship at Fricder iokshsppn, Germany, last week, and were caught in a hurricane. One motor refused to work and he could not safely land until he upent 11 hours in the air. He then landod in a 35 mile gale. PASTEUR TREATMENT PREE But* Bout of Brtft to U|wHi| aft Columbia. Columbia, Special.?Colombia is to have free Paeteor treatment for thoee suffering from rabies or threat ened with an attack of this fright ful disease. 80 with the approach of the good old summer time cease to worry about getting "mad" dog bit. The free treatment is sot to be confined to patienta of this imme diate vicinity, but will be open to ?II of the people of the State. It will be provided for by the State board of health at its meeting here . Beit month. The board is to equip a laboratory, one of the finest in tho country, not only for the free treat ment of rabies, but it will alro be used to combat other infectious and contagious diseases. Caught With the Goods. Spartanburg, Special. ? Roland Parris, whom the city authorities and revenue officers have been trying to catch for some time, was Thursday convicted in the Police Court on the charge of transporting liquor and fast driving. He was fined $100 or HO days on the whiskey charge and $10 for fast driving. A case has also beea made out against him on the change of violating the Internal rev enue law. Parris is a white man, ainl has the reputation of being a general trafficker in liquor. Several weeks ago he and Special Constable John Miller engaged in a street fight over an old grudge about liquor and Mil ler beat up Parris pretty badly. Paroling of Prisoners. An important act passed b>' the last general assembly provides that the governor may at any time sus pend sentence or parole a prisoner if in the judgment of his excellency he may deom it just. The act reads >s follows: 'Section 1. Be it enacted bv the general assembly of the State of South Carolina: That hereafter in any case that may be deemed pro per by the governor he may suspend sentence or parcle any prisoner up on such terms or conditions as he may deem just in (he exorcise of ex ecutive clemency." - ... Arrested Por Cruelty to Birds. Greenville, Special.?A warrant was sworn out Saturday for the ar of members of the firm 0/ Hobbs-Henderson Company, one of the leading clothinar and dry Roods Stores of the city. The firm is charg ed with mutilating birds. At the opening of a big sale on Saturday chickens, around which were tied tickets colling for suits of clothes, were thrown from the top of the store to the street, about forty feet below Ip the scramble for the fowls thev were horribly mutilated, it Is alleged. The warrant was sworn out by thf local Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Th# cose was compromised. Smallpox in York. Yorkville, Special?Since tho dcalli of Kirby Pugh from smallpox in the York Cotton Mill Village, just out side the corporate limits of Yorkville, about two weeks ago, six oilier cases of the same disease have developed among those who came immediately in contact with the first case before the disease had been diagnosed as smallpox. All who have developed cases, as well as all suspects, have been segregated, and all others living in the village have been vaccinated and a quarantine is being maintained against the village by the Yorkville board of health, Greenville Will Not Go Broke. Greenville, Special.'?Late Saturday afternoon the Hon. Jos. A. McCuJ Ipugh, city attorney, handed down a decision to the effeot that tbe Manl. din bill wil| no apply to Greenville this year, because of the fret that the rykmMu BnAd? for th,i bG*?re the bill become effective. City conn dl will follow his decision and dlsre prd the law. It \% not known that 1 test cass will be mfldo. Department Offloltl Inspect Gaffnsy Dairies. Gaffney, Special.?Mr. R. II. Mason of the Lnited States Department of Agriculture, who is located ot Clem, wn College, spent Saturday at the Rtlleview Dairies with Mr. C. C. Riggerstaff. Mr. Mason visits dairies throughout th? Stnto and ndvincs how to conduct them on the most scientific and economical knes, makes sugges ions as to proper food, erection of buildings, etc. Mr. Rigg?is?afT savi that he obtained a lot of valuable in formation from the visit of this of. fieial and would advise others in hit line of business to confer with him. STOP AT GIBRALTAR Mr, Roosevelt Spends Several Hours There WOULD NOT BE PHOTOGRAPHED. The ex-President Steps Off For .a Short Visit?I* Attended by the American Oonsnl and Governor General of Gibraltar?Steamer Sails For Naples at 12:20 O'clock ? -Tells of the Alleged Awanlt. Gibraltar, By Coble.?The steamer Hamburg with Theodore Roosevelt and the metnbers of his party on board, came to Gibraltar a few minu tes. before 9 Friday morning. Mr. Roosevelt came ashore with Richard L. Sprague, the American consul, and nn aide-de-camp of General Sir Frederick Forcsticr-Walker, Gover nor of Gibraltar. Accompanied by the Governor, an aide, and Mr. Sprague. Mr. Roosevelt drovo in the Governor's carriage out along the North front and np to the limit *>f British territory. With Mr. Sprague Mr. Roosevelt then visited the Mediterranean iMub, where his name was entered on tho visitors' book. Mr. Sprague and Mr. Roosevelt t.ien drove back to the pier, whence Mr. Roosevelt went off to the Ham burg shortly after half-past eleven. The dock wns crowded with people, who gave Mr. Roosevelt an enthu siastic farewell. The Hamburg sailed for Naples at 12:20 o'clock. Mr. Rcrjevclt refucsd to be photo graphed and declined every request for anlnlervicw. Wednesday night at a dance on the I-tamburg. Mr. Roosevelt danced with Miss Ruth Draper. Before withdraw* ?ng for the night Mr. RoosevoJt ap peared in the smoking room and chat ted with the passengers for twenty minute#. When asked direjtly concerning the rumor that an attack had been made upon him during the voyage, Mr. Roosevelt said thai the only basis for it was an "idiotic, excitable Italian" used mgiy expressions to hiui whi'e he was on the bridge of thr? vessel talking to tho Captain. He said this man made no attempt upon him what ever and that ho wns promptly remov ed and con lined below the remainder of tho vojT.ge. As to Child Labor. New Orleans, Special.?The South ern child labor conference at its ses sion here adopted ro.?olu'ions cmtody ing a number of important recommen dations for legislation on the subject of child labor in the South. _ The following are the recommenda tions in substance: The errployu.ent in factories of no ch.ld under the of 14 years. The employment in a mine or quar ry of no child uuder the aae of 10 years. The employment of no child under the ago of 10 years in any gainful occupation except agricultural and domestic eorvice unless such child can read and write simple sentences in the English language. That no boy under the age of 10 nor gnl under the age of 13 y^rs, except in agricultural or .Ijmestie service, be employed between the hours of 7 p. m. and 6 a. m. An eight-hour day law for children nnder 16 years of age and for all wo men. Employment under the certificate plan. The employment by the State of proper officials for the inspection of all mines and factories with the pow er to prosecuto violations. latTone?U'^ 8nnitary ond re*l> Making the conference a pcrman Wit organization. f^nection with the reoommen. elation for employment under the ceis tineate system, the provisions pf tlm Kontucky law aro indorsed. At the morning session of tbo conj ference Oliver R. Lovejoy of Ne\y *oi It, general secretary of the Nat ionel I abor committee, made nn ad? i? tl'0 South won'? fftpltal, but that oapital must conform Lr!V?,nnbl? ,V',fufr* fo'' 1,10 Jfunrd. tng of tho welfare of chillrcn. Three Negroes Murdered. Elizabeth City, Special.?One of the bloodiest brawls that has ever been known in this section occurred Thursday night at Columbia, Tyrrell county, in which three negroes were killed and one terribly wounded. Nothing was kj.own of the trouble until Friday morning when a white P"?sing heard someone say, Don t cut me any more." Upon investigation dead negroes with blood still flowing, razors and guns wero round on tho ground, presenting a horrible spectacle. SURE CURE For AO Diimii off LECTIUG DITTOS STOMACH, ^Rttlok lUlUf and Core tow H?td< Th? b?*t toalo, Curitlv* V niMk * v.. ..?.??? Hb| Mh?, BtokMkt, DIxrtntM, H|^P Mtdlolac for IhtM'dU* WVER % AlMEiS HB lodftftitloB, Nilarlt, ^ B^r mt*. fOo. OuarutM.