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HOW ABOUT THE WELL What Sort of Water Are You Drinking This Year. I? it Pure, Uso Plenty of it Inside and Out and You Will Feel and Look Better. "What sort of waler aro wo going to drink this year," is a question that concerns every reader of this paper, for upon the water wo aro going to drink depend tho heal Hi and even tho lives of very many of us. We commend the following extracts from a letter written to tho Progressive Farmer by Dr. H. K. Freeman on the subject of drinking water: "Tho water we drink goes to make moro than two-thirds of tho blood which Hows through, our veins. The blood has about four functions to perform. This stream ol blood is tho medium which re?oives from the outer world the different matters which go to make us well or sick. As it pnssos through every part of tho body, tho various tissues ol' the body take out of this ruddy stream the materials necessary for their nutrition and health, lt is tho med ium which takes up or asorbs tho dead or refuse matters from tho var ious tissues and carries this poison ous or dead matter to tho various or gans whose business it is to throw Off and put of the I ody tills (h ad ma terial, lt warms, moistens and in vig?rales the whole uod> when healthy. "Now you soo the need of pure water, for tho waler yoij dunk is makin two-thirds of tho blood from w hich so many fever and ague germs come. Mow about your drinking water? ls it pure? Many hundreds ?d' cases ol' sickness and death have been trac i directly lo contaminated waler. A . yoi! concerned about it? Do you I low I hat this water you drink is carrying hito your blood tho germs which it contains? That is just what is being done. And if lt. were U< 1 for nal ure's I'm ces while strong am vigorous, you would soon be sick. Hut let some of t hes nat ural forces get wrong, a sere' ">ose or a tap off, and you aro sn .v at once and i lu* doctor has to come and tighten things up and set these forces lo going again. This costs more, thou?h, than it does for von tn H???in uitu run In from all tho llttlo water j drains and especially through those nearest the top of the ground, and | ninny time? il gets in from the top of tho ground. Now this rush of water from the to]) and through tho earth's pores carries along with it all tho impurities in reach. Many times tho death germ is taken into tho well this way. Now whim you draw all this water from the well when it is full, you bring out the gonna carried in by this rush of wat er. We drew all ours out a few days ago and lett a pure stream of water rushing in near tho bottom. (Mean up about your well and raise the earth around it so Hie water will run off. Don't have pig holes and Chicken lades about the well. "I know of an incident or two which happened not so far from hore A tenant had a nice horse when he moved to a place where the well Water was bad. This horse soon af ter bogan to look bad and to Kel in bad condition generally. This continued during tho .var, ?md the man moved lo a place whero the wal er was wholesome and good. The horse soon gol back to his old self and remained so afterwards. This was true also ol' the family. "My friends, when your cow, hors?', pigs, or chic liens are nul doing well, examino your water supply, and make sure that is is all right. 1 was called to see a sick member of a larrie f nv:lly\ t at oboe iulvdiiod ? Im man lo (?eau up Uroi!till his home and lill up the puddle holes. He paid no attention to this advise. Several or the family wore sid; and one died during, that summer and fall. "If you feel bad and look had, ask yourself what kind of waler you are drinking. Have you done anything for the last three or live years to supply your family and stock with pure, sweet Mater? There are a great many families who look palo and bad all the time. Mindi of this is caused by bad, germ laden drink ing waler. All ol' yon readers who have not been in Hie best ol' health now for sometime, just look into tho condition of your drinking water. Then after yon know it is pure, uso 0 plenty of il inside and ont and \ou will feel and look botter." bares Deduced. The Atlantic Coast Hine and South ern Railway liaVO decided to reduce their passenger fare to :i 1-'.! cent;; a mile to go Into operation A pi il I. These roads, we are glad to stale have made this red ucl ion voluntarily in South Carolina Which will make the Having all the more thankfully recd ved by the people. It is always far better for tho rail roads and the people to work In harmony because what lu for the interest of ono should |>o for tho intorcat of tho othor. TUB PRESENT HOT SPELL. Is a Record Hrettker AN Ute Record WUl Show. Tho high temperature of Sunday wim a record breaker for thc first tiende ? Mareil, having ripen to Hb degrees. Tim previous highest temperature for thc same decade of tvlaroh waa 84 degrees on thc 3d and Ith in 1899. This was followed In about two days by a minimum tem perature of 31 degrees, causing what greenness that had appeared to turn to withered black. The highest Mareb temperatures in tlie last 21 years occurred on tho 2 2d and 23 in 189-1, followed on tito 24th by a minimum temperature ol' 2 4 degrees. Tho trees were groot! with tender fotingo, which was com pletely destroyed. Roses were' in full bloom and tho rare spectacle was pre BOUtod ol' rilli blown roses encased in a half inch covering of clear Ice, rain having fallen when the surface temperature was below freezing, in that year fruit was largely destroyed and many forest trees in which thc sap had risen burst their hark and died from the effects ol' the Hap hav ing frosen^beneath the hark. The present hot spell ls not gener al, the temperature in the upper .Mississippi valley having been from /.ero to ix degrees below zero Sun day and the line of freezing temper atures carried along the Rockies lo the Mexican border Routh of Arizona. The entire colton boll shared in tho unusually high temporal urea during the last few days. COL. RANKS HONORED. Presented With a Loving Cup Ry His < 'om m il ( ee. Thc1 Stale says om; of tho pleasant Incidents of the pres ent session ot i he general as sembly was the presentation Thurs day ol' a handsome silver levin?; blip to Representative ... A. Ranks ol' Or nngoblirg, the- chairman ol' the ways timi means committee hy the other members of that committee. Mr. Ranks has worked hard to make a record while in charg? ol' Ibis, one ol' most, important parts of tho gen eral assembly, and his committee has been an unusually harmonious one. Rut Mr. Ranks had not an inkling ol' the pleasant surprlso in store for him when the committee mel Th irs day morning. I Mr. Dick was selected to make the 1 nroconioftnn ?nt?ech nnd iu a few of his friends, ?bat be would on ac count of businosH reasons, hardly ask for legislativo recognition from tho baby county, "Calhoun." However, the other members of tho committee state that Mr. Ranks must come back, even if it is necessary to elect bim State senator and send him to tho upper branch of the general assem bly. The eu|) is a handsome one and is engraved with tho date und the en time membership of tho commit I tee. ' - THE USUAL CONTESTS. Filed Ry Dnntzlcr, Meyers ami Prio leavi for the Fees. March 24 is tho day Axe fot hear ing the contests filed for tho seals Ol Mess. Legare, Patterson ami Lever hy the lb roo negroes, win; claim ;<? have been elected to congress. Aaron P. Prloleau, who has been figuring Homo in the prints ol' bite, and who once figured in jail for robbing the mails, is contesting the scat ol Lo gare. Isaac Myers from som evy he e about Aiken, is contesting the .-.cat ol' Patterson, while A. I >. I Klutzier contests Lever's seat. All three of these negroes have contested before, :uid. finding it profitable, have done it again. They each get $2,000 al lowed hy congress to any one who liles a comest. Tlie wond'M is t lt it 1 there are not a dozen negroes over> time, instead ol' one in each district. All they have to do is to get up ami run, then (ile a notice that they were rightfully elected and cheated out of it. ll is md necessary to gel votes at ail. The election committee of the house, which will hear the con lestants, will have some fun ont ol' Hu- negrooH who appear before them and then vote unanimously to throw their cases away as being without any justification. Doing a Hood W'ock. Mr. .lames Henry Rice, te; repre sentative of the Audubon Society, is doinc, a gootl work which nughl io he encouraged by all who believe in protect lin; our miine ?ind other birds, The wanton Slaughter of game hirds hy huniers and tho killin: of song hirds hy the small hoy should he Stopped at all hazards. There are not so many mocking birds as there were twenty years ugo, and every thing should he d<me io encourage the nesting and raising of young hirds by these sweet singers which luive always been one of I he chorms (d' our Southland. Don't Ho Pooled. No gentlemen, don't flatter youi' self that Sining bas come to slay, because she has not. There h> some more cold weather to com? yet. 8WINDLKH AJUIKSTEI). "J. W. Bnynrd," Wanted In Aiken, Located in Philadelphia. J. W. Bayard who went to Aiken in tho g\liso of n "tourhit" a fow weeks ugo. i; nd, : "cpi cseu (in ; hlm-'olf w> bo tho close personul friend of Mrs. Mat tie J. Brown, of Philadelphia, secur ed $120 from Mr. 0. T. Holley, ot Aiken, upon a worthless check drawn upon tho Wilklnsburg National Bank and then skipped, has been located in Philadelphia, after considerable effort on tho part of the Aiken au thorities. Looted n Bunk. A telegram from Chihuahua, Mex ico, late Wednesday afternoon says that the Banoo de Minero, owned hy Ambassador ('recd has been robbed of $2115,OOO ll) Mexican money. No persons have been arrested. FRANK H. Hitchcock has resigned as first assistant post mat;) cr general. He will bc succeeded by Charles P. Cranfield of Missouri. Mr. Hitch cock will take charge of the Taft boom, and seo that the colored bro ther is kept in lino for his man. A WASHINGTON leitet to the Au gusta Herald says "there is no get ting around the fact that Senator Tillman is a very popular mar arnon? thc people at large, If ora may believe one-half of what lu hears concerning the South Carolin, senator from men who arc gathcroi in Washington from all parts of tin country during the sessions cd* cori gross. IN a speech ti ado by Bryan at Jackson. Mi is.; Said day, thc Ne braskan declared that money is being used by interests representing tho trusts and thc railroads to secure the election of delegates to the Dei - ver eonvt niions opposed to his nom ?nation for president. IT is a pity that the work of tl c dispensary commission has 1 eon in terrupted by the Ul i ted States Court, and We hope that the matter can yet be amicably arranged so as the good work being done by the commission ean bc continued. er eminent "defender of Liu; nation al honor" ?snow engaged in a tus sel with the sheriff and a bunch of legal wits. The idols continue to fal I. _ TllK three most popular and most thoroughly trusted men by the mas ses in the United States today are William Jennings Bryan, Theodore Roosevelt and benjamin Ryan Till man. SPEAK KR Cant en's little pri siden tial boomlet |has met with great encouragement by being endorsed by the republican committee of Guil ford county, N. C, Mr. Cannon was born in that county. SOMK papers are finding fault be cause too many candidates are com ing out, This is a free count , and every man who feels like it caa run for o (lice, and we don't think the gentlemen of the press should ob ject, A white man was acquitted in Barnwell ?>n the charge of murder but, The State says "now he is in real trouble, being charged willi at tempting td steal from the treasury. Murderers ami scientific grafters need not worry, but the while thief is frowned upon." THE Houston Pest says ''the anti Taft leaders who are expecting a boll in Texas ought to understand that our colored patriots do not whereas, resolute and bolt on hot air." The colored patriots of Tex as need not fear, (he Taft barrel will bo tapped on tho last sound up, THE News and Courier says " The difficulty of the situation is thal the independent Democrats have reach ed the point that (hey absolutely re vel in 'party treachery' 'p< t ildy' 'assistant Republicanism,' etc, etc." Thal is (rue and yet Tho New: and Courier wants tho party to fie eon trolled by that gang. THE Newberry Observer sava "who shot up Brownsville, 'f'Vxas? lats become tis lamons a ((ties ti on as Who struck Hilly Patterson? or Who killed Cock Robin?" We do not know who hit Hilly, but the Spar row confessed that he killed Cock Robin with his little bow and arrow, and wo aro sure Brownsville was Bhot up by the negro soldiers. BENEATH GROUND. In a British Columbia Gold Mine. Whon tho manager ot a gold mino at Roseland of*>red to biko us down wo accepted rt. Illy, aud it was only when w*> vrr< invited *o "step hi" ll,,.; wv it ... . I . ...-.bl bulli lill'. I UUKS WhlC.1 U.i - Ol ..J VACJI'Olg. We had lett t; boat at ..obson and come on to uo ?land to learn some* thing of lb >t VJ t minorai wealth up on which, wil i .umber and fisheries and fruit gi nv. . .. the commercial and industrial i itu: . of British Columbia is lo he built. ' ' tin" Contre Star tho sl.inl of th shaft is olio of about HO degrees anu t i.> \t. .dy ol Hie skip slopt ? back to th rn M s upon which it tails Into the depth* Which means that when tho ei di; t us are pin ned le.'.it ly in the liiuoc* its who nave entered first lind then sd vos tilted on Liiotr heels, their ba? i upon the cold, wet, rusty iron, ami held Mst oy tho ov erlying si nita ut human avoirdupois which fibs thc .ip lt was ai ll ' third door window that the nun stood who heard thc Op timist, j'.urryh by oil his long fall from th' root of thu twenty story skyscrai r, murmur to himself thai lt was "Al! rigi? -o far," lt ls at about that sta; ! Of h's downward journey, probably thal ae man who dcsccnuS a mine : ?: Hie flrsi time hogans l.o take thc rim ;1 view. His earlier mind ls <. mi elusive and dilllcult of unaly: .s. b ; at any rate if is nol cheerful. Sudden blackest darkness; the feelil of f "inc, out of Olio's hair; the will ting .eldo that, may snap; tho eugine mau .vh? may lot e control; an upwind .du '.eilig of tho soul IO lill befendint' l'o\\ ra; and then oblivion --an ph i ti e'-iVoh as it weie "i pas! thc i.|i nit. :- , one I. low Hi'? oth er, Of tho < .. I: Ut j. tll.n ?c.. itt d' op er ?md (iee; et; 'oVOl> IMP' " in slack cps -?pied .-i . . hu r'd'il h dy foi' a liioineilt a: ll II conn s to a stand and wc st ci out "You'll \ a ii j ?niidles," sayi| thc manager, ai ! on the threshold of I his new world o ' t Hu m proid?atOrr Hy, as upon m i It'll', lt isa wot id ol gray. Tile va !s before us and tho roof above, ipi id by lingo timbering, are gray. 1 lit d only al a neater view by th? I . uer of fho Imprison ed metals. ,'l tileries thal extend to righi ant h he ears walch pass us laden aita Ht men who neild be hind them ere t ray as the ore which they dump Iel ween the rads into a chamber ht >*A The electric lamps which linc : .ie roofs of tho galleries burn fray, a il ?'.?eme, and the. very air is gray, o : ho mountain above tho Kim ls ilv-' "? and thank Goo him.iclf with 1> own particular can dle. In a moment wo are In the gallorv. As wo ni?M Hin sharp current of ?lr the hot wax cutters over onto otu- fin gorg and we slant the candles hack lo the horizontal. Ai tho omi of a long gallery, where a second shaft descends, wo como out, penetrate a gloomy, narrow pa-sago In which heaps of oro li? walting to be trucked away, und crone...ng oater from below a lit Ho chamber, some 8 by S feet, blasted III the rock Hero, where thc air ls still full of tho odor of gelignite, is n driller at work with his machine. Wo squeeze ourselves Hat and bend lew against ibo slop 11^ walls and watch The heavy iron arm ?hoots out and In, striking the face of thc nick full srpiuro perhaps fifty times a minuto, every blow falling with thc weight of 1.000 pOHIlds, twist lu:; as il strike? as if lo bore through what il cannot break away. Tin? mau behind tho drill turns on un an impassive face No one .speaks or would bo hoard "or the echoes of the (ll ll Rf and Hind and the vibration ol' lb,, machine We wonder thai beneath such blows ami amid such din tho sleeping mast< rs ot gray underworld should not a-.\ 'le arn! bring the foundations down up on us. Al tho bottom of Hie shat! wo wait willie the men of the night shift Hash by u-', skip after skip, to ,.ieir work In tho low<r depths, and then wo a : o d rn wu out of ile- \ o .; ns we caine, London Daily News. Bread in Sixty Minutes. Reaping beean on a flelu of wh*al at liSoculey, in Worcestershire, ai ;? o'clock In the morning and was sol v ed as broad lust DO minut?: after The 'coon hunters of Throe Springs Huntington county Ibis state, recoil I ly treed a 'coon, shot it. atm then had a dog light under tho tree, and all the fun and excitement bolong!ng to a genuino "coon hunt, only lo lind lalor that it was Homebody's tabby cat. There are now in (?oriminy l lt; cities witli Special ?cllOOls for hai li. ward children. The total number ot I lioso schools is 203, end tue number of pupils is 13,100. Berlin lots ?i ol these ace: U.VO? \ schools. If you an' prosperous you will bo envied and if poor despised ; gel in Hm middle of Hu road lind turn mi steam. -Cuero Ile.ord. "How fast docs your automobile go?" "I CAn't nay," replied the motorist. "lt all depends on how many sher iffs we meet on t he rout c." Many a girl ?urroiulfiiB at tho plano furto. fltaould^Ho Instructed. Herman Kidder, editor of a New York paper, recently traveled through the South urging, BO the the New Orleans Times-Democrat says, the Democrats of this section to KC to it that Mr. Bryan is not i ? nm ; H <i ; I ? i > ( I ?I. ii; ,nti r vk.w with the Times-Demociat Mr. Kidder says: "I am convinced that Mr. Bryan can not carry a northern state, und 1 would like to suggest to our southern friends that they should not instruct their delegates for Mr..Bryan, hut that they should go to Denver uninstructed, so that tho Democrats all over the country moy consult and advise together in regard to the best man to put at the hoad of the ticket. Perhaps hy i that time Mr. Bryan himself will come to the conclusion that by his public utterances he has made him self impossible and will agree with the other Democrats in nominating a winning ticket." But why should the rank and tile of democracy leave to their repre sentatives the duty of doing what the rank and file should do? Tho men whom Mr. Kidder represents would,according to the Philadelphia Press, he satisfied with "anybody but Bryan." Why not trust the rank and file to say what the party's course shall be' So far as Mr. Bry an is concerned he has not asked und will not ask for the vote of any man or of any state. He does say, however, that it is the duty of Dem ocrats m precinct, county and state convention to instruct their dele gates as lo thc choice for the Dem oci ntie nominee. The New Orleans Times-Democrat puts it well winn in referring to Mr. Riddcr's "no instiucticn plan" it 'pays; "We (bir k that the will of the constituencies can not he made too plain. An ur.insti u< t <! convention would present boundless i ossibililh s of chicane. No candidato should be considered, unless his record will stand the pro! o of popular scrutiny. Under our primary system, we have can < d to jvdge ear du au s on their hierits and have forever foregone t he assistance of the middlemen who used to pack conventions and thwart tho people's will. We once labored under the delusion that United States senators could not be choosen without days and weeks of wrang ling in state legislatures. But, hap pily, all that hus been changed and we can not see why the democracy's standard-hearer should not he se lectee; in like fashion. Whatever is done, let it be done in the open. The dark horses should he kept in .? ."?.,_ ""A ort olinnlrl the lock . )\-' ? ai o ?m iii ho' (he I ii Tu?iuS la .' <. V. Shaw The Washington Herald says this obvious truth, uttered by the recent secretary of the treasury, and refer ring especially to thc republican sit uation in Iowa, is equally applicable to the country at large. Barty lines are broken everywyere. All well informed republicans like Mr. Shaw keenly appreciare that no "walkov er" is in prospect for 190K. Dissensions are the rule, not the exception. A great party is work ing at cross-purposes. It is at log gerheads as to mon, wide apart as to mensures; uncertain, undeter mined, and afraid. It is as a house divided against itself. Six months before Harrison's ov erwhelming defeat in 1892, possibly party conditions were as bad as they are today, hut certainly no worse. Roosevelt ism is almost, if not quitcas strong as ever it was, in spite of adverse material Conditions; but Rooseveltism, as everybody knows, is hot republicanism, and the only republican who, apparently can keep alive thc whole of this Rooseveltian sentina nt- - Roosevelt himself-has eliminated himself fr< m ti. j ie? UN niial i quain n. Mr. Shaw i nts it mildly enough when he .-a\. "w< are i.<>t likely lo have a walkover in HHS." Repub licans of somewhat less prominence are saying, "We shall be lucky if we escape def eal." They are fast com ing to believe, m fact, that but one of their number-Hughes, of New York-cen safely insure the party' salvation, aral Hughes, of New York, strange to say, is not to bc permitted to have the nomination, if ?tie administration can prevent it. Hence the clouds now hovering over the g. o. p. If the democratic party is really lacking in optimism al this momen tous juncture, as it. seems to bo, we can account for it only upon ono of two theories-either it does not read tho signs of the time aright, or made sick at heart by hope long deferred, its pessimism is become chronic. And the most hopeless type of nessi* mist, we may add, is thal, still too ubiquitous democrat who obstinate ly refuses to seo in William Jennings Bryan tho mun of the hour-the democrat of all democrats to whom in 1908the presidential nomination will be least likely to provo a forlorn hope. If Rooseveltian! passes, be prepar ed for Bryanism. Their Occupation ls Fraught With Pcrib una i ut?6 (Ly*. OF LONG EXIST ANCE No Marine Industry in These Days ? rings Such Hazards-Daily Dur ing the Scaling Season Hundreds of Men Risk thc Dangerous Ice Flows. There lb a Beni fishery which has had a far longer existence thad the fur-seal ilshery of the Paclltc, and en joys greater vitality, and mat is tho hair-seal fishery of Newfounuland and Labrador. No marine industry in these days brings such hazards to crows and ships us this om:. Haily during the Sealing season hundreds ot men risk their livos on tho hoes, and tho vessels face arctic "nips'' which often crush them. When the hunt op ens, stout steamers, bunt tor thia Ilshery and carrying ?.000 men, sall from various ports in quest of mighty Hoes swept south from Greenland. Somewhere andu these tho herds will bo found, tho mothers having mounted tue Ice to drop their young, which aro cradled there, thu parents lishlug lu tho adjacent wales for their BUD Blstcnce. The seal-ships must ven ture amid the dots for tholr quarry, and tho seal-men must hunt these "pinnipeds," as scientists call them across Iho frozen we e s, subjected to ail ibo ?n i lit; of -sich ti pursuit, w ith out lents or other sie io r. lire, or thc m.ans cd' making ?my, and no chame o:' retreat to (heir ships il a blizzard besets the n win n they :uo far from ike vessels, ami ofti ll they go six or eight miks across tue crys tal wastes in tho excitement ol tho hunt. The crews always start off at day break and remain out nil night. They are clad in flannel underwear and can vas outer garb, but carry no over coats, that they may travel tuc easier, and take along only a little food, for tho same reason. Heme, when bliz azrdH assail, they ?ru ill provided io defy them, and If th? storm ls pro longed, they cannot withstand tho ri gors ot a night ou the Hoc, with Its benumbing cold and guawlng hunger. Never a year passas but some seal ship will shelter tau or twolvo hun 1l4i.il two tn? ? I bf) ?Ovt) un' U i II,; ; Wi . st nail f*! i M'y {{?fif? lliotf .;.!.. tv dr owe ..'ri w '< ?. with .viech ? m MI fe .'';.* .O. OCj'l, . t \ ,v ?v i, es' to* ll;rei!A?' the annals of this industry befell tao crow of tho steamer Greenland on Much 29, 189?. Dp off Labrador at this tim* winter has by no means spent itu fury, and on this evontrul day, while her two hundred mon wero scattered over the floes, a blinding snowstorm began, with a startling drop lu the temperature, the vessel was driven helplessly seaward, and the hapless crew weie lou to tholr fate, no other ship being near and they hoing far from land. When tue tom post ended, after two days and nights, it w;is found that forty-seven had perished and sixty-three were se verely frostbitten, some so severely as to be maimed for life. The story of tho sufferings of the wretched par ly was appalling, A few years ago the steamer Huntsman was penned in a Hoe oft' I jil brader ami driven against a rocky islet, where she weill to pieces, forty two men perishing within an hour amid the contending he, leds, and fragments of the ves sel. The rest of the crew crossed tin? Hoes to ihe html; hut one man, named French, had laen h it behind, uncon scious. As Hie ship Struck, he was Hung against the rocks, having hi? shoulder, two Angers and two nhs broken ind his head bailly gashed. Kui he was wodgi d in a crevice, ?ind when consciousness returned ho crawled, with the aid of his uninjured hand, to the top of the rock, where lc ia;, for forty-two 'mars drenched hy thc spray and hnttereu by chunks of 'ce. lacking drink and food and agonised from the pain of his wounds, till the ice closed in solid and enabled him to malo his way to the coast, which he did safelv and ultimately recovered. That same man, aged Vt?, was seal-,.tinting this year, it being his ict'li consecutive season. 1! Record For Good Cows, .lames Miller, ol' S. hult/.ville, Lack awanna county, l'a., litis a beni of li? cows that yielded 15,631 pounds of milk In one month, an average of al most loco pounds a cow, or about ll? quarts ?1 day. Thc law s of Nih way who chop?: down one tinco saplings. compel a man tree to plant Tty emigration IO uro po loses 060,000 natives every year, and lu k.io samo period 200,000 rot lim. Ma's motto for framing: Keep busy and you won't have to read bookit on how to bo happy. When a man gets away from homo he can wear a bluo shirt with a red necktie,- if ho wants to. Some weddings aro little also than a drews ault cayo.