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JL the iiofffly eey^ld, Published Every Thursday, # CON WAY, S. a, JUN^ 1,1393 I Imcal NKWR I 1 Miss Lutio Mayo has returned h/ from a visit^toThe family of Rev. Mr. Willoughby\in Marion. Emanuel Cribb, well known in the lower part of the county died at Port Harrelson last Sunday. - V i o f uT lauu May wood has boon appointed tmuuipin-pen inspector from Charleston to tho North Carolina line. t o Mr. Ij. F. Sarvis and wife passed through town )$i8t Monday on their way to spend the summer at i'rosf pect Harbor, Me. An Excursion will run from Con way to Georgetown next Saturday under tho management of \V. F. w Hardee and others. Mess. ?T. M. Oliver, J. (). Norton, \ ^ W. S. McCaskill, Jr., Frank McGou/ jV gdn and J. II. Parker, have gone on a^fishing t:^y to Wachesaw lan (ling. Adj. Gen. Farley has issued a spe cial order giving the time for com^ pany inspections. lie will be in 'O Conway to inspect the Horry litis( \ sars on June lCth. U'. <??? % " ; Wo v/io'n to call the attention, of L vheHiusinesa. men of the community to the fact that wo have just received a new and assorted lot of station_J ery, and are prepared to suit you in price and quality. s ' 0 ft . The families of Mr, F. G. Burougha, B. G. Collins, E. W. Nol y, D. T. McNeill, are spending a / iw day8 on the beaeh at Singlef /oil's Swash. Mr. J. U. Barker also u.' Accompanied the party, ^ \ o " I. V. Tyler, of Aiken, is (lead. n<\ i ^jfras taken sick in Charleston in tlni ttendaneo on United States Court togf'ti the celebrated railroad cases with a carbuncle and had to return home, r _, T>''^tiallv resulted in blood-poisoning 1^- -- **t /id death. ?^'~ | Mr. Joseph 10. Singleton's dweli ling house was burned last Thurs day, It is thought that a little ne11 / \< gro girl during the absence of the V family living there, accidentally * dropped some fire upon the lloor. It Nearly everything contained in the V \ house was lost. iiV , ??? f J Our readers who are afllictcil with de?. 'less should not fail to write to *>r. A. Fontaine, Tacoma, Wash,, f6r his circulars giving affidavits and testimonials of wonderful cures from prominent people. The doctor is an . _ aurist of world-wide reputation. See his advertisement elsewhere. Somewhere in Conway has originated a team that challenges Socastee. The game will bo played at \ Laurel Hill on Thursday 8th. It is , expected to be (rt^of the features of ^ fig tne K. of II. Excursion. Socastee j ' lias on her books of some years ago La// the Conway tearp debited with one licking; it will certainly give Conway a clip nee. The weather was very warm last . week till Saturday when a liffht ? ?"" V? . " V shower refreshed the gardens vory 1 much. Sunday night and Monday &tF night there wore refreshing rains ^ the weather turning . quite cool. Whether this has hindered the farmers in cleaning their cotton and corn crops we don't know, but tb? j, ^gardens are al^ looking better. l' I 0 y j The Secretary of State has issued ( / a charter to "The Bank of Conway." The directors of the bank are: B. G. Hp Collins, J. A. Mayo, W. It. Lewis, C. P. Quattlebaum, F. G. Burroughs, I J. A. MoDermott and Robert B. I Scarborough, B. G. Collins was decmP ted president, C. P. Quattlebaum vice president, t). A. Spivey cashier and Secretary, and Robert B. SoarborW\ ough attorney.-r-Columbia Journal. I . v?? V The train carrying the remains of t* ex-President Jefferson Davis from A Now Orleans to Richmond, VTa. for ^ final re-interment is met at every * station of the route by as large a concourse of people as the density of . I the population will permit, men, wo* I men and children with floral tributes | to the.dead chieftain. At some of the small stations the men are drawn * ' up in line, and as the train rolls by |jl ^ fire a saluto. The floral offerings & are said to bo profuso and inagniflA; v',- > Vv :|5 # ' On l??8t Thursday evening, at the hoil8* of the brides fnthor at Red i Bluff, Mr. J... Pitikney Mucklin and Miss Amanda E. Cox were united in the holy bonds of matrimony by Elder W. S. McCaskill. EntTOit IIkhai-D: As it has been some time since 1 have written to you, I'll send you a line or so from this part of the world. We are having some very dry weather just now; the wheat and oat crops in some places are looking like harvest boforo time, like starvation is comintr. Rut we tnav have a rain shortly and crops will turn out well yet. There is a great deal of cotton niul sorghum made in Jones County. Sorghum cane is better forage than fodder or shucks and is more easily made. 1 often think that the sa van nahs in I lorry would make more cane than the stock could eat. We have had a pretty hard winter but Ios? few stock There was plenty of grass and the cattle come through all right When heel fly time comes it is right funny to seo a herd of cattla?feeding quietly and all at once break and run with tails up for water to get rid of the flies. The ranch men and cow boys are begining to "work their horses and cattle (gather them up and brand them). They work Sunday as well as other days. Some of my friends told me, when I left Conway, I would he a ' \ 11 i / i i i ?. . cow-ooy, out i inm i uon t want any in mine. The longer I live hero the hotter I like it. I have not yet seen a man from the old States who wants to go hack. But the ladies hate Texas. This is said to bo a hard year out hero, but 1 don't think its any liar der here than in the old States. W e expect to get a railroad from Albany out through Jones Co., and that may help us a great deal. 1 I am still on the mail line and j have a b'g time. I would like to see all you folks dowu in Horry, hut ' don't want go back to live, if I can help it and I think I can. Why is < it that Cool Spring, Bayboro, Poplar < and all those places don't write more? I would liko to hear from 1 them. I often get letters from persons ' inquiring about health, wages, etc, in Texas., I received one from Mr. C, O. Harris of Beaufort, N. ('., but having lost his exact address, I havn't answered it. i My advice to men in the old states ( would be this: When he has a good farm, paid for with no papers on it and can get a living out of it, let 1 him stay whetc lie is. If he hasn't i these things, lot him use his own judgement. I am getting along very well myself I have always had to work and always will, I guess, 1 am used to it. : I'll stop here and if this does not find its way to the waste basket I'll try again. Yours, II. L. Holmks. Anson, Jones Co. Texas. April, 181)3. Miss Bryant's Visit. Mrs. Bennett, nee Gerald, after taking a siesta, wont to the depot to meet her protege, Miss Bryant. Miss Bryant aoon proved to be a great talkist and a soidisant belle. yShe is thought by some, to boa parvenu. Formerly she lived in the country and still uses some of"Tho patois of that district. She called on me the other day and spent quite a while. 1 suppose she thought; she was dressed alamode but she looked rather taudry as she i wore a soupcon of nearly every color in the trimming. She was constantly alluding to her almamater where she studied phonography. i She spoke of her father's being a saunterer when a boy and when a youth, was quite a dude wearing j nobby suits front the metropolis, but as he became older, he located in a thriving city and becamoan optimist. She quizzed me about my antique bricabrac and said it Was unupie. i She then UiW'me about her ride on toboyyan with a socialist, while iu that, she stayed with a Fenian family. In order to reach the town, she had a ride several miles in an omnibus. After several sirc/l young men, one of whom had orated recently in a town whore oleomargarine was made, had taken their seats, the party started on their ride. One said he felt liko saying, "Ilallalujah!" but just then a casuality happened for ho fell into a snow drift "You know," f/uoth she, "tho latest and it is that Mr. L, has joined a /?/ i J n a i\ *\/< J 1, t LI- ? * ? 1- * - wviK no n y/utf (t((irr//6 HI IJIfl riglllH (as he says.) lie figured as a mugxoump in the campaign of '90 and when ho received his mandamus he was as disgruntled as a pessimist would have been a nihilist,'1 she continued, 4"gave me a rebus and I am so much of an ignoramus I can't read it but a friend of mine who was an acrobat but is now an agnostsc told me the answer was a shibboleth of sorno quorumShe then proceeded to tell me about one of her friends who recently married an anarchist just for his sterling. k'At the time i of her marriage she was an employe as saleslady, but when they first met, she was a type writer. Me is a great interviewer but uses vulgar expressions such as "the ^Dickens " on account of which I show some sang froxd towards him." % "I recently visited a distinguepoet's home und road Ins last poem which is considered as his chef <fa-uvre and is a nam de /dame. lie gave me u celluloid box which had been found in the debris of an old town. While there, I read the description of the hegira of the Mohammedans. I also passed through the wilderness in which a miserable waitress killed herself with belladonna. Sne then asked if 1 had heard that dames Lewis, alias Howe having tried to prove an alibty made his affidavit and skcdadled away on his bicycle like one who bad no gum/dio)i to send, as he said, a cablegram. 1 asked her if she had read the item in the paper on currentncss and on account of it, some men had met in their rendezvous and determined to boycott the paper. Others here tried to put preventatives in their way. but, -nevertheless, they are rampaging the country and destroying the I telephone. \ 1 asked Miss Bryant to play a piece but she begged to be excused. On tny telling her she was ,'nr.reusable, she played a spirituelle piece on which the composer made a bonanza. The finale was very brilliant. The lirst time site had heard the piece, a crank was telling her escort about a rate person's bulldozing an idiot for destroying her coupon, lie showed very much sang froid to the music. He also told of his friends getting a bonanza as lie thought, but it was an ignis fatu^s of bogus tnonoy. Thus saying, she started home. "As the weather is so incertain and I am misaffected I will not attend the picnic to morrow, for if it should rain we would bo in belter skelti ,v* We have been to so many 1 am already blase. My chaperon has received her /tat to be present. 1 must go shopping as J am neoding somo oClw. <1 i . uuu nini imuu uie huiou saying she did not like to say good bye. She left declaring she had enjoyed our Ute a fcto very much charging mo to go to soe the ics' exercise that afternoon and then lo the /cirtnesa. ^ The Mute Pessimist's Journey. Ily tin* Muto Pessimist. I left the fields where the curso of Herod's temple rests, where no stone rests upon another, and no two inches of territory have the same level. From tho land of oily, greasy, towns and red glue country of creeper, by no means Virginian I departed. I traveled through many unfenced fields of Alliance cotton, through many villages of seeming idleness and came to the centie of the universe. It seems that by force of Fate some years before Capt. Tillman's election to the Governorship, a point on Supt. MoBee's railroad, coinciding with the centre of the universe was selected for the common facing point of u n?1:_! x. . i "Winn Will uuiiuuiJi. 1Momi u<r snort n of the centre of the universe could have acted so perfectly as an attracting pole for South Carolinian noses; for we are a great people. By courtesy of the railroad schedule I stopped here. My attention has so often been called to the extreme central ness of this place, I could not but be struck with the proots of the fact. Standing upon the Croat House top one cannot but notice how exactly the dome of heaven tits over the nilimi TliP la ovu/itlu 4l-vn ? - .??v? * n. i?v? ig v .\wgn y liivsumo distance on all sides, and by calculation the zenith equals the horizontal radius. What further proof that South Carolina is the greatest State in the world. Of course tliero must be warmth in this Centrality; no reason need he given. Distributing this heat, there are four great outlets, North, South, East and West, with sundry other in and out-lots, including blind ditches, not found in any description of the abode of Milton's hero. I was tolerably cool under these circumstances; for 1 sacrificed a lock of hair for the propitiation of Mrs. Grundy and the climate. Erom there I proceeded 011 my North-eastward way. 'Twos Sunday morning, I awoke in the Feminine City of South Carolina. I had almost begun to revolve my reeollec tion around iny past experiences, when my conscience, though usually very healthy, awoke and reminded me of the day. For this reason and iny Spanish chivalry, I am very particular about saying anything in these premises, especially about incendiaries. Of the name, I still have the remnants of a cherished memory; a great respect and love for its sweetness and floral influences; both carefully hidden in my trunk. My de^'dencc keeps me from mentioning the dreadful fires that have raged in the fair city's heart. In my extreme modesty, I am posi tivo my strictly imagined and poetic opinion of this town cannot he far wrong. At least I know I can commend to the whole world one class of her citizens. Modestly as the fair named city would elect, I proclaim that no class of men can be found more distinguished for forethought and good nature than the 1? s olass of hotel clerks in our Feminine city. In this class may ho fount men whoso kindness and considers tion is unsurpassed; whose hearts gi out to a guest in such feeling throbs that they find it all but impossible to snatch him from the sweet obli vion of hotelity to tho hurley-burloj and worry of an early departure 01 tho uve o'clock train. What com mon man or drummer in this degen orate ago can comprehend such grea1 hearts and Stupendous kindness! On Monday ntoriiingl traveled 6n I passed through the glistening white soil of the upper cornor ot llorry and rolled on into tho outei darkness of North Carolina. On i xuvoikij nullum^ i rvuppcurcu in Horry, tlio of Carolina and at last in Conway the of Horry. Who can say how good the fate, how.fortunate the circumstance that separates Horry from adjacent counties by a strip of North Carolina? Ye who know, speak forth the truth. From those interested 1 promise a hearing, , Itueklen's Arnica Salvo MM% . I CI I ? x uu ijusi omve in me world for Cuts, Bruises, Soros, Ulcers, Salt, Khoutn, Imver Sores, Tetter, Chap ped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and till Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed togivo perfect stitisfac tion, or money refunded. Price ,25 cents per box. For sale at E. Norton's 1 )rugstorc. B,?ood'C f ,r. aN rzr.s * * a ere. Y.-..U . I.as done for other; it will <' > i ; \ v.i. 15o sure to get Hood's f > i ; : ! : Wilmington MarketWilmington, N C., May, 22. Spirits Turpentine, 201, cents per gallon. Kosin, 85e. per bid. for strained, good strained 90c. Tar, $100 per bbl. of 280 lbs. Crude Turpentine, $1.00 for hard and $1.55 for Yellow Dip and Virgin. Peanuts, at 7<> cents to 8o per I bushel of 28 lbs. Cotton, Low Middling, (J Id 10 c., Middling. 71. N EW ADVERTISEMENTS* DEAFNESS, Its Causes And Cure. Sclent ideally treated l>\ an aurlstof worldwide reputation. Deafness eradicated and entirely cured,"TIT from 20 to 30 years standing, alter all other treatments have failed. I low the dililculty is reached and the cause rnmovud, fully explained in eir culars, with allldnvita nn<l tertimonials ol cures from prominent people, mailed free Dr. A. FONTAINK, Tacotna, Wash. ! HAIR^BALSAM Jfl Clean..-. ami lie.iiilifni till* hair. R* Promoter a luxuriant growth. SatfTOy* Never Falls to Itentore Oray Rffctvv Ilalr to ita Youthful Color. KWlMl ?Curtt rcalp direterr A hair tailing. iOc^ana $1 00 at QrngKi.tr The Consumpttvennd Feetolo ami an who fuiTrr from exhaunllng dUeaaer rhoiihluro Parker's <Jlncc? rtinlo. It eurct the vortl Couch. Wi-ah I.uurt. Oeblltty, Iudiftfrtmn, Female Wrakm-M, Illn-uinatlrm and l aio. fc (I. HINDERCORNS. The only ture cure (br Coma Stoiu alliJttiii. Main walking c??y. IjcU, at i'ru^unrt?. ^JiTURF 3 ( SCHENCK'S Rei"cDY \ ? FOR t&r m ANDRAKE Liver ) L,VERp,LLc Complaint \ ===== ?\aORTH SENDING FOR1)11. Jf. M. HCIIENCK lion published a book 011 diseases of th< LUNGS, LIVER AND STOMACH which ho will mail freo post paid to all applicants Address, 1?I{. J. II. 8CHENCK & 80N, l'hila., Pu I KEEP COOL inside, outside, and nil the way through, by drinking A HIPF^? Root This groat Tcmpornnce drink; - 'V'V'l is us lioalthrtll, as it is pleasant. Try it. They all Testify /KHwTVvv^tti World?Renownod old llmo simple 111 | j\ romody from tho Georgia III I \\ ]/ swamps And fields has VI | I jm Jgono forth to Iho antipodes, ?iW^LrB astonishing tho skeptical and confounding tho theories of those who depend solely on tho HNflf .... [ physlclnn's skill. Thcro is no tdood taint which ltdoes not Immediately radicate. Poisons outwardly absorbed or tho result of vile diseases from within all yield to this potent but simple remedy. It la an unoqualed tonlo, builds np tho old and feeblo,cares all diseases arising from irapuro blood or weakened vitality. Bond for a treatise. Examine tho proof. Books on " Blood and Skin Diseases " ntalled fro*. * DruggUta Soil It. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Oa. jj JSTotioe. . sorru caromna,-ttoiuiy cot n TY. 4 Tho undersigned hereby give notice th*t they huvo been duly commissioned 3 by Hon. .1. K. Tlndall. Sect. of State, . ? Board of Corporators tor "Tho Bank of Conway" (organizing,) and authorized to ' open Books of Subscription to the Capital Stock of said proposed Bank. Notice Is given also, that Books of Subscription to said Bank will be opened at the olllee of Itobt. B. Scarborough, Conway, S. on Thursday, May 'Jfith inst., and will be t here in charge of the undersigned, open to the public, until the requisite amount of stock is subscribed, and the Bank or ; ganized. Capital stack Jjt^O.tKM). Shares each, payable in Installments. B. (1. COLLINS, 1 KVAN NORTON, j Board of tl. rt. WA 1 VI, ) W. I?. LEWIS, { Corporai It. B. SCARBOUOUUll, \ J. A. MvDJiUMOTT, I tors. May 21th, 1803. The American Surety Company OF NKW YOIiK. 2,000,000 Oa,plta,l; ? 1 Why ask your frloiuls t?? become your surety? Wo arc propareu to make ofllclal hoiuls . for County ofll.eors, and also for Kxocu i tors, Trustees, Administrators and Bank olllclals. Cull on or write the undersign- ^ ed for partieulors. HOBT. B. SO Alt BOKO I (ill, J Resident Att'y for American Surety Co. Conway, S. May 24, 1803. Mortgugc Sale. STATU OF SOUTH CAROLINA, llOHHY COUNTY. I'ndor ond by virtue of the power and authority in us vested in and by a certain mortgage to us executed and delivered by \V. II. .Johnson on the 27th of May, 188-i, wnich is of record in tlio ofllce of it. M, . (J. for Horry County in liook of Mortgages No. I, pages 121 and 125, Wo the undersigned, will offer for sale before the Court house door in Conway, S. C., during legal sale hours on Monday Juno 5th, 1805, all and singular that certain pi 'co, parcel or tract of land situate in the County and Slate aforesaid, being . and lying In Uallivnnts Ferry Township and on the East side of Cousin Swamp, waters of Little Fee Dee,River, containing fifty acres, more or less, and hath the following bounds: On the West side by the said swamp and on other sides by lands of Margarette It Skipper, Canni Johnson and Mitchell AleCrncken. Terms of sale cash, purchaser to pay for papers. Com.ins A: Mruitocuits Mortgagees, April 15th, 1803. ROlimr CAMr\n HJLYY UUUJJB. ?o? r i i. 1 have just re- ^ ^-r~^ ccivcd tlic largest |m'VTT^ i stock of goods over f brought to this placef consisting ol i .^"v Dry Goods, No9f>2 . tions, Shoes, Hats, Groceries, Hardware and lots of ^ ^ other goods too nil- ? mi'runs 10 ineuwoii, CT--i) s?^' ^ : I ho very lowest j cash prices. CJ3 ? ? 1 Mease give me a call and seo for your self before purchasing else \ where, as I am confident I can save you money. Thanking you for past patronage and soliciting same for the fturo I am yours very respectfully, Yours for trade, IP. HARDEE, Adrian, S. C. CUIJ/UM'S wmswrtm a a.mx via n / us. And sustain their reputation as the Grandest Birds in America by winning every prize offered in this class at all the important. fall and winter shows in the strongest competition, The great judges of America, Felch, Pierce, Habcock and Brown, have given them the highest hon or* for years. A grand lot of young birds for sain. Kggs in season at $3 for 13, jf5 for 20. Circulars free. J. A.CULLUM, IMdge Springs, 8. C. / \i. f +m.r %.-* * a. w $ J. T.Stone manufacturer of all kind of Furniture. Bedsteads, Bureaus, Tables, Wash Stands, Wardrobes, and anything in the furniture line made to o.der. Also old Furniture repaired and made to look new, COFFINS. Made and trimmed in the latest style, of which I have 20 years experience. 1 have also ordered a nice lot of tine coffins and trimmings, (live me a call. \ ? .1 T. StONK. Conway. 8.0. *3T?t0 Jf^.cvgh'xnta and fiarme ^SAYINGS BANK,* of IVI a vion , S. C., ('onlineneed Itnsincss Aiifrusl ISS0. CAPITAL STOCK'PAH) IX - $t10,000.00 SURPLUS - - 10,000.00. We enjoy every facility for haudliug with perfect sati.sfn< (ion account* of iner- v chants, farmers, oftlcors occupying a fiduciary capacity and others. llOUJiV COl N I V liusiness Is especially solicited We have daily mail communication with Conway so that your business can bo transacted with promptness. We pay interest on deposits left with us for three months at the rate of four per cent, if left six months, at the rate of live per cent. Correspondence solicited. W. II CUOSS, Cashier. W..T. MONTOOMKKY, President. 5-251W PATRONS AND FRIENDS. And IJcfitha s <>( (he 'II I0K AU),' Wo fool that \w know so many of you in a business way, that if gives us 'neouru^onient to seek a largot outlet for our NI CK*N K W S)I' It IXC, S T( K'K ?kf ? * ' * ? i # ? - <J? W A . f V.? . ?. .J * . . . n the sections visited by this medium?the "IlEliALD." We can semi ^ou samples of nice things for the season, I III ESS (.1001 IS, ami THIM MINOS, also send when desired, Napier, etc \>ro >lnkc IjIuUch' Suits to Order In fact we have what may be called AN IvM POIIIIrMt for Indies. R. AM. MclNTYRE, Wilmington, N. C. Letters Promptly Answered. Meh. 15, 1803 Wm Shepherd & Co., 232 Meeting St., Charleston, S. C. IDIEL^IlLilEIRS 11ST . 1 ' ^ (!'// < ( ^at zi1 v'//. Ih)()r. Gfi 11 )ert X^o ttei? Co., COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ?xasr? Itto#ii:in. Snirils T11 menfiuc ;in(1 C'aftCoiiii. .. *1"^, i^ri ,-J %iik . - A ^ w w ^ x-? .... . V / w' ^ J VW ^ Coii^i^nmoiits Si>Ii<'itod. 164= Front Sroet, ISTew ""STorlc. THE OIJ) RELIABLE FIRM OF BURROUGHS & COLLINS, IS THE PLACE TO GET TIIK WORTll OF YOU It MONEY, anil to secure bargains that will surprise you. We are constantly receiving new goods every week, which wo will sell at Iloc'k Bottom l'ricosi , Don't forget to call and examine our immense stock of clothing and let us quote you prices. Wo can sell you a nice suit of clothes at very low figures. If you want anything in the furniture line, give us a call and look over our stock of llu'reaus, wash Stands, Bedsteads, Chairs, Hound Deaf Center Tables, and the famous 'New Home," and "Domestic" sewing machines. Don't fail to buy one of our :BIG KOCi^iNa CHI^lIKS, so that when you are weary you can rock yourself to rest. Our lino of trunks and valises are hard to beat. We keen constantly on hand the best grades of llotir that comes to Horry County at prices lower than ever before. A large lot of red rust proof oats just received If you want to buy a good cook stoke or kitchen safe go to Burroughs & Collins A lot of Scotch Plaids and Bedford Cords just received, besides a largo assortment of Cashmeres, Worsted, Ginghams, and Flannel goods, which are going low indeed. Our stock of shoes are complete. Wo think we can suit you In quality: style and prices. Wo also keep the fanurtts MWS m&m mom* which arc gaining in popularity every day. We have a lot of ladiesnico button hoots, which we will close out at the astonishing low price 85 cents. A CHOICE LOT OF FRFSH GROCERIES A 1 1 i t I 1- A /Mwuys KHj?v on ruuiu, oesmes BUGGIES, ROAD CARTS, HARNESS, SADDLES, AND A THOUSAND AND ONK TII1NOS, too numerous to men tion now, which wo will sell cheap for.cash. Please give us a call and see for yourself before purchasing elsewhere, as we are confident we can save you money. Yours for trade, MJUOUGHS & COLLINS. ^ M A Rclievti ?ll ?o?fi\ft?of tlx Mnrr^n memhrmi I A Ml cuf??COHOKRH<MA ftodGI.HKT la to*<!?/*. Ho 1^1 IA ftJ ollwi tn*ln(it rkuuit< Nrrttcauvt stricture Of gnflB |\||l VJIT iPX twiiiiicTr