The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, November 27, 1913, Image 4

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REBELS CALL HALT DEMAND RECOGNITION BEFORE FURTHER PARLEYING END UNOFFICIAL TALKS Rebel Chieftain Preparing Manifesto Sotting Forth llis Position With Regard to Relations With the Vlilted States, Which lie Intends to Follow up With Vigorous Fighting. Francisco Escudero, minister of foreign relations in the Carranza Cabinet, asked William Bayard Hale, President Wilson's agent at Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, lato Tuesday to present his credentials before continuing further tlio conferences which have been under way there informally for several days. This was inter preted by many as a virtual demand for recognition of tlio Constitutionalist revolution beforo tho exchanges between tho Carranzaistas and the Washington government aro concluded. "For our part unofllcial negotiations are ended," Escudero said. "Wo have asked Mr. Halo to present his formal credentials. I would receive them as minister of foreign relations and transmit, mem to my cniei. we have been very glad to meet Mr. Hale on terms of friendliness, knowing of his previous investigations in Mexico, and in view of his relation with Mr. Wilson and Mr. Bryan. The Cabinet members on previous occasions met as individuals only. The exchange of impressions now has ended." Announcement was made that CJen. Carranza was preparing a manifesto setting forth his position with regard to the international and internal relations of Mexico, to bo given out at an early date. Reports of continued military successes have increased the confidences of the revolutionary leaders and their estimate of the dignity and internal importance of their cause. Clou. Carranza plans to move Ids civil end military headquarters back to llcrmosillo, Capital of the State of Sonora, where the Const it uionalist movement was born. This move, it was announced, would be followed by a vigorous prosecution of the campaign against Guaymas, the Sonora seaport on the Gulf of California, which still is held by tho Federals under Gen. Pedro Ojeda. Carranza's military chiefs are planning other campaigns in tho interior. The announcement of the Constitutionalists demand was a surprise. Xo ono on the American side expected a request for formal recognition of the insurgents, even in the event that permission to import war munitions from the United States was granted At tho beginning of the negotiations Gen. Carranza asserted that the Constitutionalists were not seeking recognition?in fact did not desire it ? and only wanted the embargo on the I ^ ^ i 1 ? f ^ l! n i 4 _ A jiupuriiiuuu ui anus uueu. cnangc had boon noted in the demeanor oi tho Constituionalists since the cap tpure of Jaurez and the suhsequeni success of tho revolutionalists tha have been reported from differen sections of tho republic. kills his partner. ? Louisiana Real Estate Man Chnrget With Shooting Partner. J. J. VanCleave, a real estate deal er of Shrevcport, La., was shot an< killed Tuesday afternoon, it is cliarg ed, by his partner, Ilervey Little, a tho result of a quarrel between Vai Cleave and Mrs. Little Monday ii which tho woman slapped tho man' face and was arrested on a charge o disorderly conduct. The charge wa withdrawn after a conference of al parties in tho offlco of the chief of pc lico and Tuesday Little and Va Cleavo met and wound up their pari nersliip affairs. Later tho men quai rolled. Little, it is alleged, shootin a i. it.. \ a vuu^iunvu unuugn mo ureast ail emptying his revolver in the body a tho victim fell. Mrs. Little is also b( ing held. Could Not bo Saved. Miss Edith M. Thomas, of Savai nah, Ga., a senior of Harnard co lego, New York, died Monday < anaemia, despite tho transfusion ( blood from four Columbia student Tho girl's father tried vainly to ol tain blood from healthy men, tlioug jhft Ralvnlinii Arm? ?/-??, 1/1 <!?-l M... .unvn ill lll.l VUUiU turn IJUL suitable. I Brothers in Fatal Duel. Tn a duel with pistols at Oakdal Tenn., Wednesday afternoon, Wi II am Jackson, aged 35, was shot ar almost instantly killed by his broth* Samuel, aged thirty. As William fc he fired twice at his brother, bol bullets taking effect. Samuel was r ported dying. ? Physician Shoots Salesman. Dr. W. T. Blam, former city phye clan of St. Louis, Tuesday afternor shot and killed W. T. Cramer, of Cli cago, salesman for a magazine, at tl Baltimore Hotel, in Kansas City, M while in a dispute over family tro ble. WOULD PUNISH THEM V MOB MEMIIKHS BUOL'GIIT INTO SPA KTAMH IU; CXK'RT. Grand Jury Asks Solicitor to Prosecute Tour Men Named iu Presentincut for ltecent Attack on Jail. Solicitor Albert F. Hill, of Spartanburg. Is called upon, in a presentment niado to Judge DeVore Thursday by the Spartanburg county grand jury, to prosecuto meinbcrs of the mob who on the night of August 18 last dynamited the county jail in an effort to lynch Will Fair, a negro accused of assaulting a white woman. Four men are named by tho grand jury as members of the lynching mob and bench warrants for their arrest were issued Thursday evening by Judge DeVore. "After careful investigation into tho assault on the jail," tho grand jury reports, "we find that certain parties, utterly disregarding tho lives of our otllcers and tho county property, did make an assault on tho jail with the intent of taking tho life of Will Fair. We present to tho court W. R. Belcher, Josso Wolfe, Bob Wilson and Robert Ward, and ask our solicitor to prosecuto them." Foreman W. G. Query, of the grand jury, declined to discloso tho method of procedure followed in tho grand jury's investigation, saying that to make it public might interfere with tho apprehension of other alleged members of tho mob, who are being sought. The grand jury's action is without precedent. Fair was not lynched. During a battle, which raged the 1 greater part of the night and in which three men were shot, Sheriff W. J. White and his deputies held the mob at bay and in tho morning spirited Fair out of tho jail and took him to the State penitentiary at Columbia. Ho was tried at a special term of court and acquitted, though his accuser, the young wife of a farmer, swore positively that he had assaulted her. Iler story was believed by the jury to bo an hallucination due to a condition peculiar to lier sex. i ? ? LEAVE IT TO TllEM. Brynes Says Congressmen Want Mexico to Fight it Out. Oongresman James F. Brynes, of Aiken, while in Augusta recntly, declared that if a poll was taken of the members of congress on tho Mexican situation two-thirds of them would very probably declare themselves in favor of lifting tho embargo on arms ami leaving the constitutionalists and 1 tho federals to fight it out among themselves. The congressman bases ' his opinion upon tho apparent temper of tho members when l\o left ' Washington, and could not say . whether tho recent developments, J when Carranza's minister of foreign relations demanded Bayard Ilale's - passports, thus practically demanding recognition of the belligerency of i tho rebels, may have had on the ) views of the congressmen. Mr. f Brynos does not belive that tho spec ial session of congress will bo adt journod, but that it will run right on t into tho regular session which begins t early next month. j ? ? CAUOLINIANS PROMOTED. ? Drelicr, Haskell and Jenkins Named 1 For Bettor Places. There was gratifying recognition - of South Carolinians in the list of I nominations for promotion in the - consular servico which the President s sent to the Senate Thursday. Julius a D. Preher, now consul at Port Antoi nio, Jamacia, at a salary of $3,000 s per annum, is named to bo consul at f Toronto, Canada, a post paying $4, g 000. Lewis W. Haskell, now consul II at Hull, England, at $2,500, is nami ed as consul at Belgrade, Servia, at n $3,000, and Douglas Jenkins, now t- consul at Gothenburg, Sweden, at r- $2,500 is raised to consul at Itiga, g Russia, at $3,000. d Lg Killed as Fortune Smiled. i- Looking through tho pockets of John Menabeck, 2 2 years old, killed in a mine near Washington, Pa., the coroner found ofllcial documents showing that Menabeck was solo heir 1- lo a fortune of $1 00,000 in Germany, )f which was to liavo been transferred to him next month. s. ? I). "lfard up; Better Dead." h Albert Zinkie. 4 4 years old. of Chi to cago, shot and killed his mother and himself Thursday. A note found bj tho police said that the deed waf committed becauso Zinkie and hh e, mother were "hard up and better of \. dead." td ? Shoots Companion. sll Illustrating with a loadod revolvei :h tho methods by which a gunman h e- supposed to "get tho drop" on a vie tlm, William Shockler, 16 years old of Philadelphia, shot Paul Ritton house, 16 years old. ti- ? ? >n Killed by Rattler. i- Pitton on tho leg by a large rattle 10 snake, W. A. Ilolieo, a farmer of tin o. Wimauma neighborhood, near Tara u- pa, Fla., died Thursday, twenty-fou: hours after the snake struck him LION IN THE PATH. i'liy the Democratic Currency llill Has a Hard Time. Tlio New York World thinks that tio foremost reason why financial cgislation is diftlcult is found in the net that the great banking interest > fairly well satislied with things as hey are. It will approve of no change hat it does not dictate. If it cannot iavo a central bank licensed by law, t prefers to keep tho rank growth of 11 evil system that it now has?a entral bank infact but not in name. To prcservo this instituion nothing las been found more useful than the luarrcls of tho people's representaives, their prido of opinion, their mwillingness to compromise, and the nany violent and irrational measures vhich such conditions necessarily iroduco. While our millions of dognatlc financiers dispute and fight, tho ew professionals keep all tho privieges that they have gained and reach jut for more. Tho first Hank of the United States lad a capital of $10,000,000; tho sec)iul, $3."?,000,000. These banks were considered so powerful, they were administered with such favoritism and hey were so offensive in their politi \il relations that tho Democratic pary for more than a generation waged A-ar upon tho very Idea of a central >ank and made it hateful forever. Yet without public approval or act of Congress wo have today what amounts to a central hank so much greater than either Hank of the United States as to make thoso creations of our early monopolists look like toys by comparison. While frenzied political financiers in Washington wrangle over tho details of a Hanking and Currency Hill, tho greatest concentration of hanking energy ever known goes blithely along, and through its spokesmen introduces new contentions calculated to defeat action of any kind. The World says the central bank already in operation is composed of five institutions owned and controlled by a compact and highly sympathetic Morgan-Rockefeller group. J. P. Morgan and Co., the First National Hank, tho Guaranty Trust Company, the Hankers' Trust Company and tho National City Hank have 118 interlocking directors in thirty-four banks and trust companies, with resources of $2,070,000,000. These arc the figures of Phillip ,7. Scudder, tho export. They ought to stagger every American. They ought to put reason and sincerity into the soul of every Congressman. They reveal tho lion in tho path of hanking and Currency reform. No wonder, says tho World, that Mr. Vandorlip is on tho stump pleading emotionally for plenty of time. No wonder that the men who created the existing central hank, Mr. Vanderlip's indulgent employers, ask nothing now but its legalization. No wonder that egotism and contrariness have deadlocked the Senato committee. SOM1-: POLITICAL OOSSIP. Talk About Candidates and How They "Will Tiino Up. Joe Sparks, tho Columbia correspondent of tho Augusta Chronicle sends his paper the following political dope: Administration correspondents art circulating the story about TJeut tlov. C. A. Smith and the governor Neither will fight tho other, accord ing to the reporters in the confidence of the governor. There will be a merry scramble foi places on tho railroad commission Tho term of Ilanks Tv. Caughman wil expire, and ho will not ask for re election. C. 1). Fortner, of Spartan burg, member of tho House, and Johi F. Ilolt, of Laurens, are tho only an nounced candidates. Mr. Tiolt is oik of tho leading citizens of Laureni county. Charles C. Simms, of Barnwell seems to be tho leading administra tion candidate, although an overntcb conference would entirely switch th situation. It is said that the loader of the governor's forces are "lookini out" for another man. They ma fight on John G. Richards, Jr., be cause he is the most receptive man ii the race for governor. "I believe that John Ti. McLauri will yet be a candidato for governoi 1 lie might have entered the senator!}! i race,If Senator Tillman had never dc ' livered his opinion." This is th . statement made by a man high in th canfldence of the administration. 1 is not believed that the governor wi lend his support to Senator McLaurii Tra B. Jones, former chief justio . of South Carolina, set a preceder 1 when he resigned from oliico to offc r for the governship of the State. Thei i are many people in South Carolin i who are wondering if John G. Kiel f ards Jr. will follow the precedent .1 resigning from the oflico of railron commissioner in his race for gove nor. Mr. Richards has kept his min r closed on this point. 3 ? Gin House Hums. Rurton Messcy of Rock IT ill Wei " nesday evening lost his gin hous which Is located on his farm, aboi two miles south of Rock Hill, wll its entlro contents, entailing a loss < - $3,000, without Insuranco. In add a tion to tho building and machiner - there were two bales of cotton and r carload of cotton seed in the bull . lng. WEST POINT ANI> ANNAPOLIS. Examinations Next Month to Decide Who Will Co. Senator H. R. Tillman announces a i competitive examination to bo hold under tho direction of Hon. J. E. Swearingen, State Superintendent of Education, at Columbia, at ten o'clock, on December no, 101.1, to till two vacancies in tho United States Naval Academy, at Annapolis. This examination will be open to all white ~ boys of tho State between the ages of sixteen and twenty years. A candidate must have been for at least two years immediately preced- | ing tho date of his appointment an actual bona fide resident of the State of South Carolina. Unless a candidate knows that he is nearly perfect physically, it will bo absolutely use- i less for him to go to tho trouble and expense of standing the examination, for tho naval authorities would reject him. Candidates will bo examined men- . tally in punctuation, spoiling, English grammar, geography, United States history, World's history, arithmetic, algebra through quadratic equations and plain geometry. ^ No formal application will bo necessary, but all candidates should pre sent themselves to Hon. J. E. Swoaringen at tho timo and place above . mentioned with tho proper writing materials. For detailed information relativo to the regulations governing tho admission of candidates into tho United " States Naval Academy, and for old examination papers, used in former examination, address lion. .T. E. Swearingen, Columbia, South Carolina, who will he glad to supply them. Congressman James F. Byrnes an- ' nounces that there will he a vacancy from the Second Congressional District. in the United States Military Academy, at West Point, next year, and that ho will appoint to till this vacancy the hoy from the Second District who has the highest average in the examination announced by Senator Tillman above. In other words, if a hoy in the Second District wishes to compete for the scholarship at Annapolis or at West Point, he should enter tho examination at Columbia on December .10. Tf he receives the highest average in tho examination ho can choose which scholarship he will take. Tf this average does not entitle him to the scholarship offered hy Senator Tillman, but is tlio highest obtained by any one from the Second I)ist i ict. ho can take the West Point scholarship. 80 take the examination for West Point a candidate must bo between tho ages of seventeen and twenty-two years. ^)X WAIt PATH. Fifteen Hundred Xavnjos ltally in Defense of Itenegades. 1 Fifteen hundred Navajo Indians have rallied in defence of eight renegades and are reported in armed encampment 011 Beautiful Mountain, thirty-five miles southwest of t lie Shiproek Agency, near Santo Fe., N. M., defying United States Marshal Hudspeth to tako prisoner tho out laws, who are wanted on Federal , warrants charging horse stealing, as sault and bigamy. Two troops of cavalry have been asked for by the 5 marshal and tho request has been referred to the war department to Major Gen. Carter, in command of the . border patrol. 1 It is feared that before the cavalry arrives tho renegades will bo joined r by many in command of the medecino men and of tho plural wife men, who 1 are reported to bo stirring tho Navajos to rebellion. Tho Indians arc fortifying a high tahlo mountain, tho j summit of which is approachable by only 0110 tortuous road. An investigation rlnrincr tlir? ilnu K,. .v. r.U1 a viv.. ouixib i,iiu vi(ij i> ? inu uiai nmn g and tho Indian agents showed that the Indians surrounding tho renegade leaders had rounded up their cattle ' and sheep, harvested their corn and otherwise made ready for a siege. The * Indians are led by Chief Black Horse 0 and 150 young bucks. Their encampK ment surrounds the Noel trading post ^ on Beautiful mountain. y The Dreamer Does Good. On the walls of one of tho rooms in tho Tower of London is to be seen 11 the fooling inscription: "To live with' out a dream, what is that?" It was written centuries ago and no one knows who wrote it. The man who ? has no dream or vision will never ac? eomplish much in this world. Tho It dreams of great men of former days ^ aro the realities of to-day. But for their visions the world would bo 0 distinctly poorer than it is. Lest any ^ mav think Hint nnlv ^ - - V.I.J i.1'- V/llll n have such Ideals anil make it possible 0 for their vision* to assume tangible form, let it not he overlooked that 1_ every one ought to have his dream of )y what may be and ought to be, and that his own life will bo enriched and r" the world made better if he seek* with earnestness and wisdom to make his dream an acruallty. Wind up Strike, fl- Tho strike of the federated tralm o, men of the Southern Pacific railroad lit was ended Monday when both side? th accoptod a proposal of tho Federa of board of mediation and conciliatior II- that tli^ railroad meet a joint com y, mittee from the engineers, firemen a conductors and trainmen's union foi d- the discussion of the 67 grievancei the men presented. CLASSIFIED COLUMN iuttcrcup Chickens?Three for $3. Monroe Workman, Burlington, N. C. <\>r Sale?Poplar and pine trees. Ad- __ dress James A. Clarkson, Hopkins, S. C. A'anted?Cow peas, all varieties. The ~ H. O. Leidlng Co., 144 East Bay, Charleston, S. C. A'anted to Buy?Ten Car Loads well berried Holly. Z. M. L. Jeffreys, ? Goldsboro, N. C. [furry! Choico Matings, Bombon Red Turkeys; four, $G; liens, $5; Pair, $9; trio, $12. Bombon Farm, Kemp Mills, N. C. White Wyandottes?Yearling stock for sale at sacrifice. Eggs for hatching. W. P. Causey, 1315 Dickens St., Columbia, S. C. Marry?Many wealthy Californians seeking marriage. Photos and descriptions free. Mission Agency, B710, San Francisco, Cal. Imported Indian Runner Ducks? $2.50 pair. Brown Leghorn lions, $1.25. Hettlo Newkirk, Willard, N. O. Special?Dure white and Exhibition Fawn and Whito Runners, $5; trio J Utility, $1 each or $10 doz. Mrs. J. P. Carroll, Hohennald, Tenn. Printer Pressman Wanted?For weekly paper and small job ofllco. Steady position; good pay to satisfactory man. Address J. L. M., * General Delivery, Charleston, S. C. For Sale?Frost Proof cabbage 1 plants; sure early headers, $1 per thousand. Frost Proof lettus plants, 25c hundred. W. Lykes, Lykesland, S. C. ! Toole's Pure, Early, Prolilic Cotton | Spo(1. TPrntta honvilv U/i1t.i<oalol. - - ' ?"V , ant. Holds record lino production. Supply limited. Writo now for sample and prices. G. L#. Toole, Aiken, S. C. For Sale?Good farms, all sizes, cotIon, tobacco and truck successfully grown. Coming section of Horry county. Ten to twenty dollars per acre. Ask us for list. Ream & McKenzle, Loris, S. C. Etigrave<l Visiting Cards and Wedding Invitation orders promptly filled. Writo for styles of engraving. Visiting cards engraved in scrip, $1.50 per 100 postpaid. Sims Hook Store, Orangeburg, S. C. Motorcycle Special Oil?Five gallon $3.75, once tried always used Goodyear tires, belts, chains, TIarley pijrts. Expert motor repairing. Everything for the motorcycle. Mail orders a specialty. Get our catalogue. T. S. Chipley, "The Motorcycle Man," Greenwood, S. C. Farm 1 1 Acres, situated Chester County, one milo from railroad station; good school and church; Seaboard road runs through farm; has nine houses, 16 plows open; plenty running water, plenty saw timber for all building purposes; fine pasture. What have you to trade for this farm? Fletcher & Smoot, McColl, S. C. I'so Gasoline Idgliting Systems?Individual or central generation, which have stood tho test. For particulars ask M. L. Poramer, Charleston, S. C. Our tanks ar.cl alrpumps (the latter also handy for Automomoblle use), aro unsurpassed for durability. Mantels and glassware for all lighting systems, tho very best at lowest prices. Order your supply from M. L. Pommer, 64 2 King St., Charleston, S. C. THm. M A f\ r\ _ - ? jrnrm tor suiu?iuu acres or nne . .farm land four and a half miles from Cope and the same distance from Norway for Rale, three hundred acres open land. Plenty of wood and a fair amount of saw timber. This placo can bo mado as fine a farm as thero Is In Orangeburg county. Comparatively level. Terms: One-third cash and the balance In five years with seven por. cent interest. For terms, and other particulars apply to G. 13. Kittrell, Codo. S. C. For Sale?Hope's Mexican Pig Poll Cotton Seed. Placo your orders early for this loading variety and increaso your cotton profits 25 to 50 per cent. A wonderful yielder; extra early; 40 per cent, lint of the highest quality; largest boll known; 20 bolls to pound. Plant It once you will plant It always. Special , prices for 60 days, threo bushels, $500. The demand will bo much j greater than my supply. Nothing but the choicest seed shipped. J ' D. Hope, Sharon, S. C. Girls Havo Hunger Strike. Two hundred young women stu. dents at Converse College, who startI ed a "hunger striko" at dinner Wcd^ nesday night as a protest against the 1 food served, Thursday returned to i the dining room for lunch. A dozen - had weakened at breakfast. "MerO, ly the desire of the young ladies to p try some novel experience was the a comment of Dr. Robt. P. Pell, president of the college. THE HORRY HERALD CONWAY, S. C. ' ? Published 10 very Thursday. Ill ltSDAY, NOV KM HI-: It 27, PROFESSIONAL CARDS. II. II. WOODWARD, Attorney and Counsellor at Law. CONWAY, U. C. 11. 11. SCARBOROUGH. Attorney at latw. CON WAT, S. C. H. U. BURROUGHS, Physician and Surgeon. CONWAY, 8. C. 1 ^ W. E. McCORD, Dental Surgeon CONWAY, S. C. RENE RAVENKL? I>and Snrvejing and Drainage flpirey Building Conway, W. 0. TRUSTS ITCIITINC IT. + LnUollett Seaman's Servitude Rill Has Their Eniuity. As was to be expected the great 3liip-owners are up in arms against the LaFolletto Seaman's Servitude bill. In their effort to defeat the bill they do not hesitate to read into the bill provisions it does not. contain. Hoes anybody know of any similar bill designed to ameliorate the condition of seamen or guard the safety of passengers that did not meet with the opposition of the shipping trust if the bill entailed an expense to tho trust? To be sure just after the Titanic disaster shipping linns of their own volition inaugurated some reforms because that catastrophe was so stupendous and revealed some defects so startling in their character that public opinion compelled action without waiting for tho finding of tho court of enquiry. But even then the companies fought against some of the most thorough improvements suggested. Beneficiaries of privilege dio hard, but they will die all tho same. In every case where reforms by legislation have been invoked tho shipping companies have tried to defeat the measures introduced in congress or in the British parliament. w iien in mat parliament me I'linsoil "Merchant Shipping Act", designed to prevent ships from putting to sea in an unsafe condition, was enacted in 1 870, a great hue and cry was made that its passage would ruin the shipping industry, but it passed and never lias British shipping been more prosperous than since the bill became law. So it will be with American lake and ocean shipping if the LaFollett? bill becomes law, as most likely it will. To be sure the companies will have to incur considerable expense to meet its requirements, but it all will bo in the interest of safety and humanity. If the companies fear it will ruin them let them cut down the palm gardens and a whole lot of other unnecessary luxuries 011 board ship over which in their wild competition they have gono crazy in recent years. Human life and welfare are of far more consequence than a lot of superfluous luxuries installed to pleas? wealthy patrons. Tax Collector Killed. Two farm hands of Media, Pa., arrested Wednesday on suspicion of knowing something about the disappearance of S. Lewis Plnkerton, tax collector of Edgemont township, near Media, confessed early Thursday that they had murdered him and buried his body. ? Suffers lleavy Loss. Mr. Henry Rprouse, who lives three miles from Jonesvillo, lost his barn, stables, corn, stock feed and other property by Are Friday, and unfortunately carried no insurance. Noah's Liniment isthelx-st remedy for Rheumatism, EQ^BEuQnM LfSfll Sciatica, Lame Back, Stiff IvMUlk \7| H Joints and Muscle*, Sore |i|&fllH&kl OflH Throat, Colds, Strains. | ?8?Va3l IH Wiiiawii C^UIS, Urutses, I^" jT.U Colic, Cramps, Neuralgia, HwjMTCN fl^B Toothache, and all Nerve, |\I|lllM| BHB llonc and Muscle Aches Ik III 11 |nl HH and Pains. The genuine lUJUUftEi EBP has Noah's Ark on every |l|'llu| j Ifl Hi package and looks like this H cut, but has RED bund on Tr.rw?-T? ^^B front of package and rot MM M NUT "Noah's Liniment ' always uMMtaa BB in REI) ink. Beware of 5^B imitations. Sold by all we"li"tsnr ^^B dealers, 25c., 50c., and $1.00. ^H| Guaranteed or money re- m*mm* ^^B funded by Noah Remedy Co., Inc., Richmond, Yfh V Sample free gn feqmti W