-' A -i Star r: imaUw ia :Sts lBanVSSkitt Of Lav wk aa Bat i4i only .u Cmtvoi 5eS 8bT OtUW iilie, m UiOBfU ti, I'iaacribad, rad right irWUy. Jur yon know 'Vtjiattoer ou- r.wariiBra Bafa .N.toed remedy; li fe wbieh hu "HttaoMiidi ol iMBtod, TOW ;.tb, Will M Li mi oom da- .oyoBouotpmf. 'i iciwmnoa of erV "B klulL ajul lii(you tear 'ttMOB. it It! Mar. , im tmm nun, rwJO.000, ia tk Jbwt Mar Ui M - a opos B1 kt Mtf 'tkligootkMk. sill aJUMliowitt Ira !. Hit, Mnr Oclaaaa, w Already Bettlatl astral Jams? H ;(.' UMm waaMrtaaaf , H( cowiajt iwalara, kbor. ""Wiaa Wan, trratV costiawiU tajr of!oald m jij rtioa all tkf jjiit oW Mom S-IlTtr aa4 bow I. Oaa doMu liaglaadatlta , jrf wr BEFOBEI t vbB my face in a pale at the V a) fi overs too trew on my Xci, t at the close of the long, lone- jt ow you lorej me when I am taere; ta lou wati L over, and life o more. C"itty not before, friend; ob, why I Wre7 mhL?- of those flowers the bext and rarest VlMMtirai; casket in beauty and lioom: taja 9 af w my name mid the proudest F d fairest, Aa4 ajCia my going has left you in Aattalgat Colt-' - Hu- ar. Br4 i ikC" aada ..spaaaif. Vm atibnMtot imipawangara ara oirketaSordafor f v" Hr,4' ;l ; . V H .r CsataHt, . H- . v rrfrCKta, to Outarla, tkna CMtrta & ' ,. , ' ' Lir. tatov'- !) WO do. ivuma ot iaa tor M o aaartor quably rfai aawawtwaat uyoargroaarlgai jJtJrViraaa.-!- at M4 aHgaMf ,Tolao,e. 1 H : V C. aaotliing ran comfort the heart aat was ore: . CaB why not before, friend; ob, why a before? Yob pdBMBjato my grave wrth a heart al- , f Jkwat broken, ad at-iof the words you olt might Bare said: Taa Csjrfetb, eh! bow keenly, the words y . . aaold be spoken TWaat rannot till the dull ear of the BWd; araaa your voire cannot reach me oa Lethe's dark shore ' '.Thaawbynot before, friend; ob, why BOt before? Taa wtt akNI Of my songs, you will tell of H ' ! ' aij story, Aad BOBM the bright gurlund of oraise round my name; Taa ' Brown my cold brow with the laurel of glory. ' WkaB aia is the glory and useless the fame; Whta the poor heart is still and the longing is o'er, , Tkaa why not before, friend; oh, why ' , . BOt tiefore .' , , ' K. Dickens in the Inter Oceim. : A Vidow Bewitched. OliTarBeaucharnp liad been dead for ratbar more than a year. Why yKrj Vane had marriod him nobody could arer make out. IlewasHUclia thoroughly uncomfortable person tb&terenhiH money rould scarcely hftvt been a sufficient inducement to the moat mercenary girl in England to Consent to pass her life with him. Mr. Beauchamp had been in the habit of spending the greater part of hhVtlmein the pleasing occupation of coquetting with one fashionable physician after anGther, for, truth to tell, he was a malade imaginaire. The doctors found Mr. Beauchamp to be anything but a satisfactory pa tient for so fond was he of fresh woods ad pastures new that he had the playful habit of deserting his medical advisers just as they had begun to flatter themselves that a really full Iwttsred fool had come into their profasBiorjal net. Then Beauchamp Would try quackery and doctor him tt jrith one well advertised nos trum after another, so that the only wonder is that he lived as long as he did. ; Now, it was owing to the advice of Br Celsns Gorget that Mr. Beau champ came to marry Mary Vane. When she came out at the county ball In Loamshire he took her down to supper, and half an hour after ward proposed to her and was ac cepted. Young ladies of 18 years of ftS have a habit of accepting their first offer. A good many explana tions,., more or less possible, ha ve been given fr it; but the real reason, V0 doubt, is that the charming young creatures honestly believe that they will never be lucky enough td avn a second offer, and that .Cartfbre they will do well to make tsy whilo the sun shines. Now Sir Celsus had said to Beau chanp as he pocketed that gentle man two guineas and bowed him Out 'of the consulting room: "Why OjOnt you try marriago? You seem to-have tried everything else. Mind. I dost say I altogether recommend itttiil I throw out the suggestion; think it over." Eeaachamp did think it over. In deed, during the following week he poodend on the great man's advice day and night; and, just as he would save accepted anv otner panacea, so he swallowed $ir Celsus' nostrum and tarried Mary Vane. The nostrum f"3fc 'asarcely be said to have been Intfarly efficacious; for in less than ! months from the date of his nutrriage he died, leaving Mary Beau ahanp3,000 a year. She wns a roofland Kind wile to tne unnnppy I tl,;r,l- l,f ft,. nil gMflPH. WIU X viiuiii viiuv, Lillet fi.il, What killed him was a too liberal al lowance of somebody's electric pills aad somebody else s African elixir. ',,'. ' Capt, Graham was a hero of rom ance. , He had not a penny in the World, but he had black curly hair, fcja teeth were perfect and his features ajifcpirable. Moreover, Capt. Graham ICtxt to a good tailor, and his boots Were undeniable. For various rea ftas the captain had arrived at a ftrs of existence when it struck him lOKnlarly advisable that he should t'SKTJ money. He went down to Vhton and he put up at the Bed H5T He used to walk up and down taking's road and to stare out of vie windows of the club like a young Igoiv sneking whom ho might ttrbOT. Of course he came terrS a great many pretty faces, his mind he saw nothing half SO f JUcious fis that charming young Wt'tW, Mrs. Beauchamp; and ns fia a we;k of his arrival the Ji"X lady thought fit to enst uside 1 Weeds and delicate mauves, he t'aie more than ever confirmed in Ljfplnion. It is scarcely worth while going in to details as to the captain's ma chinations in obtaining an introduc tion to young Mrs. Beauchamp. Suf fice it to say that they were triumph antly successful. He was to her as a revelation. He came, hesaw, he con quered. He proposed to her one night upon the west pier. Miss Jen kins, Mrs. Beauehamp's sheep dog, was sitting within a yard of them; but then Miss Jenkins wns listening to the soft strains of a selection from "Dorothy," which was being played by the band, and "Queen of Sly Heart Tonight," as a cornet solo, distracted her attention from the subtler rendering of the same theme which was being poured into the young widow's ear by the enamored captain. Mrs. Beauchamp listened with pleasure to his tale. "I am a poor man, you know, Mary," said he. "I have little else but my good name and my sword to oflfer you, and I hardly know if we should have enough to live upon." He almost winked as he said the words, but they conveyed a noble idea of his own disinterestedness, as he intended they should. "We may have to wait, Mary," he contjnued, "and I may even have to ask you to go to India with me, for my regi ment is one of the next lor foreign service." Poor fellow, he evidently had noc the slightest idea of the three thousand a year. "I should not mind doing that for the man 1 loved," said the widow softly. And then he squeezed her hand, and then it was all settled in the most digni fied manner, and Mrs. Beauchamp became engaged to Capt. Graham. Two days later Capt. Graham went into one of the fashionable photo graphers and sat for his likeness and ordered it to be finished on porcelain in colors regardless of expense. He did not in the least demur at the five guineas which Mr. Halftone's assistant said it would cost. He only stipulated that it would be ready in forty-eight hours. At the end of that period Mr. Half tone was in the best of tempers us he inspected the gallant captain's por trait. "You have been very success full, Mrs. Smith," he said patroniz ingly to the "young person" who had done the miniature; "it is a speaking likeness. And now would you mind doing me a littlo favor? My customer is a very haw-haw sort of a fellow and insists upon the por trait being delivered by hand. There is the address Mrs. Beauchamp, 2A Regency square. You have honestly- earned five shillings, Mrs. Smith, he continued, as he handed her a couple of half crowns, "and a turn in the air will do you good." The pale young woman, in a well worn plaid dress, with great black, rings under her eyes, thanked her patron. "I am glad you are pleased, Mr. Halftone," said she; "I shall be only too happy to deliver the likeness." And she wrapped it carefully and del icately in paper. Then she put on a dowdy old bonnet and a cheap ulster, drew on her well darned gloves and started on her errand. When she arrived at 2 A Regency square she knocked at the door timidly enough; but there wns a hard, determined look upon the thin features and the great hollow eyes sparkled fiercely. She asked for Mrs. Beauchamp, and was shown at once as the young person from Mr. Halftone's. Mrs. Beauchamp was in the dining room giving the finishing touch to the floral decoration of a rather elaborate cold luncheon which stood ready served upon the table. "It is so good of you to have brought it. 1 am dying to see it." And she took a knife from the table and enthusiastically cut the string. "It is charming. It is capital." she said, as she gazed ecstatically at the picture. "Algernon's looking his very best.,' And then in her rapture she kissed the portrait. The pale young woman looked paler than ever. "I ought to be ashamed of myself. I really beg your pardon. But you see Capt. Graham is my affianced husband," said the widow confiden tially. "He was my affianced husband once," said the young woman simply- "What do you mean, girl?" said Mrs. Beauchamp, as she soizod her fiercely by the wrist. "The original of the portrait, mad am, is my husband, my miserable, unprincipled husband the man who left me to starve or to drag out a wretched existence to which starva tion would be preferable. The sor did wretch who preys upon the weak nesses of others, the man who hesi tates at no meaness, and who, from what you say, madam, is prepared to add bigamy to his other crimes." "1 cannot believe ii," cried Mrs. Beauchamp. "It is some trick." "Algornon won't deny it if you care to confront us, madam," said tho young person from Mr. Half tone's wearily. The tone carried conviction with it. Mary Beauchamp felt a bidl rise in her throat and the hot blood mount toher ears nsshe remembered that she, too, had called him Alger non only yesterday, and then she snatched the glittering ring from her finger nnd trampled it beneath hor littlo foot. Of course this wjis quite the correct thing to do under the circumstances, but it did not really hurt tho ring, as the Turkey carpet was comfortably thick. "If vou will permit me, madam," said Sirs Graham, "I will take caro of that ring, which, I take it;, come from my husband. That is his knock," she said confidentially, ns a tremendous rnt-a-tat solo was per formed on tho street door, "and if you do not mind," she continued, "as I am not very strong, I will sit down." "I beg your pardon," said Mrs.' Beauchamp, "I was very rude," At that moment a servant announced Capt. Graham. "I think 1 am a lit tle before my time, dearest Mary," he said effusively, as he held out both hands, half expecting that his fiancee would rush into his arms. He was totally unconscious of the presence of Mr. Halftone's assistant. "Capt. Graham," said Mrs. Beauchamp, very coldly "permit me to introduce to you this lady, who tells me she lias met you before." ; The young woman in black rose and confronted him. "Great heaven, Ada!" he exclaimed in his astonish ment; but he recovered himself in an instant. "You hve scored the odd trick, ladies!" he said, jauntily: "and perhaps it is fortunate for all of us," he added, with effrontery. "Honors are easy. I am afraid you will have to excuse me. It might be, better after all if I ask you not to press me to stay to lunch. You will doubtless have a great deal to say to each other." And kissing his finger, tips to the pair of them the captain effected a masterly retreat. ' That was a lesson to Oliver Beau- champ's widow she is not at all like ly to forget. She is etill single, for somehow or other pretty Mary Beau champ is verv hard to please. Per haps it is a case of once bitten twice shy. She is not an ungrateful woman, and makes Cant. Graham's deserted wife a lilnral allowance as in truth, is no more than is just, con-J sidering the abvss from which the. latter rescued her. That gallant of ficer, Cnpt. Graham, has long been compelled to leave his regiment, and the last that any of his former as sociates have heard of him was that he was nearly lynched as a welsher at Hampton races. They are a, very rough lot at Hampton races, and if ever a man stood in need of a new suit of clothes, it was Cnpt. Graham upon that memor able occasion. St. James' Gazette. Politeness In Church. Philadelphia Star. The real lady will always bear in mind the fact that the comfort and convenience of others are always en titled to consideration oh her part, and that consequently it is neither polite nor courteous to block a church or a lecture-room aisle by stopping to hold conversation, when there are perhaps a hundred or more behind anxious to get out. We saw two ladies in a fashionablechurch on last Sunday who were guilty of thisH breach of politeness. They did not, to be sure, come to a dead halt but they walked in front ot their fellow worshippers with the most provoking deliberation, and from their size fill ing the aisle and preventing others from passing. They continued the provocation down tho stairways and to the verv church door, coming to a dead halt on the outer step and continuing their talk, until the crowd behind would bear it no longer, and guve them so many indications of displeasure that they atlength stood aside and let the annoyed and im patient peoplo behind them pass. There was no intentional annoy ance; it was simply a reprehensible neglect of one of the plainest and most imperative demands of com mon politeness. Most peoplo who attend church, morning or evening, are anxious to get home as soon as the service is over, and when their wishes are interfered wtih, as in the case cited, there is created a feeling quite the reverse of the spirit taught by sermons generally. Ladies should always remember that church and theater aisles are not proper places for confidential chat unless it can be indulged without inconveniencing and annoying others. The vestibule or the pavement outside should be chosen for such a purpose. afawMnaatta has' efldall tfaefcrfft that haru cider it the bulwark ot otfr lib ertiea. A aiz weeks' electric exhibition (i ffi posed to be bald in St. Louia ot 6eptsa ber. A tobacco trust ia tba pfuf ngl' 6i Co nopoliaa. Boaton h&a loat $28,000,000 6y &0 Col lapaa ol tba copper trust. An English syndicate baa tioa?n$ e large Detroit breweriea for $70b,OOO; There i nothing ia the world wUcfi Ci gire prompter relief to all auBerera froac neuralgia than Salvation Oil. Prica only 25 cents a bottle. The recent cyelonea in tba Couth aad West have done terrible damage to life and property, but there's one comfort left the people clamor for Dr. Bull' Cough fcyrup. There ara but sixteen female doctors In Paris, it ia said. The president is said ta be a physiogno mist. We thought be was a Hoosier. The daguerreotype France filty years ago. was in rented in Oats aad bran are foods for the mare. the most suitable Pleasing HU Mother, Mr. Yandcrbilt, says Once a Week, has recently done a graceful act which shows not only the most thoughtful and considerate affection for his mother, but an amount of sentiment not often to be seen in rich young men at the present day. Knowing the partiality that his mother has always felt for her old home on Staten Island, where the early days of her married life were passed, and where most of her chil dren were born, he purchased the old spot, which had fallen almost into decay; has restored, renovated, and decorated it, as nearly as possible in the stylo of forty years ago, and has collected from the various persons to whom it had been sold nil the fur nituro as it was when Mrs. Vander bilt was taken there as a bride. Nothing has been forgotten or left undone, and on her return from her Mexican trip, this old home, beauti fied and restored, will be presented to Mrs. Vanderbilt for a summer residence. Expensive Repairs. The famous cathedral at Cologna has been underrepair for a long tiie and a largo amount of money has been expended thereon. Thus Vir tho government has contributed (i,'!-ir),2.")2 marks toward tho repairs, while enough has been raised Uy lot teries and otherwise to briMg the total expended between 142 and 1SS0 up to the enormous amount of 18,400,000 marks. Sim 1raucisoo Chronic!?. It is fifty years since the MnesachusetU abolitioa party was organized. There Is not much milk o! human kind ness in the pale of civilization. Dr. T. Hemak Bkehmbr, an eminent German authority, says: "Consumption is always due to deficient nutrition of the lungs, caused by bad blood." At the Brompton Hospital for consumptives, London, Eng., a statement lias been published that 52 per cent, of the pa tieiits of that institution have unsus pected kidney disorder. This explains why the proprietors of Warner's Safe Cure claim that tbey have received many testimonials which they have not pub lished, because of the incredulity with which they would be received were it claimed that Warner's Safe Cure cures consumption. But the fact is that if your kidneys be cured and put in a healthy condition they expel the urio acid and poisonous waste matter, aud prevent the irritation of the delicate substances of tho lungs, thereby remov ing the cause. When the effect is re moved the symptom of kidney disease, which is called consumption disappears, and with it the irritation which caused it. Queen Mary, of Bavaria, ia dying ol dropsy and cancer of the liver. A man that has horse sense may be the father of a donkey. If fflicfed wltti Snre Kt, ti Dr. Utsc Thomp; ecn't Eye Water. Drugging aril it. 2c. Kansas road. The Continental Divide Mining Invest ment Company, of Aspen, Colorado, is paying monthly dividends on its preferred stock of two cents a share, which is two par cent, a month interest to the holders on this in vestment. The treasurer baa twenty thousand shares yet that he is compelled to sell at one dollar a share. i Goy'a (London) Hospital Report, vol. 1, paee is found the statement r "Simpfe ibypertropby (enlargement) of the heart, eiecialy of the left ventricle, is Ictibd without valvular incompetency. Ia tiiis numerous class the cardiac is. SfcCotidary fa symptom j to the renal affec tion." Xhia explains why Warner's Safe Cure is effectual in cases of heart dis ease. It removes from the blood the kidney acid which causes the heart disease.- Fifty yT..rs ago tbe first normal school as organized at Lexington. Mass. JoytotheWorld! PERRY DAVIS PAIN KILLER for the entire eradication of all Pain EXTERNAL or INTERNAL No family should be without it One twenty-five cent bottla will do more to convince you of the efficacy than all the testimonials wo mifht present, and we have an abundance of this kind of evidence. ITS ACTION IS LIKE IIAGIC tor Coughs, Colds and Sore Throat, a teaspoonful of Puin-Knlertakenatthe beginning of an attack will prove an al most never-failing cure, and save much SUFFERING iND MONEY. PAIN-KILLER is an article that has combined in itall that goes to make a first-class family medicine. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. All Drug-gists sell Pain-Killer at 25c, 50c, aud $1.00 a bottle. City has sixty miles of cable la U83I coatneted BoeS PBtaaM Of tad type, ut was mates vrixjkt j, poissn two. nisspsnsw Lfrowiiir w or Mill the tuneu I took 7 snail suites 8. S. 8. wbldt cued wu eadrety, ana strB at Uu dreadful dawuo ku noma. Jta. 10. - IbbbvTlUsT&d. tv Wtls atsat had white iweffinc tTi Mtaaich ucxtaat that she vucsay w m m sii oat of kar lac. sat the doctor wat tpe eaiy reiisar K the bed for s loo tiaei Han lhas phaes of Ion canaw I reawabwBfe. I refused ojsrrifcaa Ah ullh mM 1 1 A laorchiTr K sjaxmzm If A Fob. II. "SB. Columbus, Oa; Book oa Blood Dineaaes sent f res. Swift rirscino Co. Dorrer a. A Quia, Q. for Qira PNlHToTEIIafriV TiaEekuVDumRCa-lUrrij-blo- ICKIIEADACHEI CARTER'S llTTLE VER PILLS. PoalMvelToured by tnese uuie mis. They alio relieve Dia tnu from Drippta,In digestion and TooHearn Eating. A perfect ram ndy for DizzinftM,Nanseal Xfrowstnesa. Bad 1mm in the Mouth. Coated Tongue.r-ain In the 8ide TUKF1U i,IVEB. xnej regulate tne Bowels. Purely Vogotahle. Price ZS ccnta; CASTES lilSICZHS CO., NEW Y0a Small Pill. Small Dose, Small Price. tic 00 a. CO Cn OO A MONTH can bo made l9iMI0 )wUiaMworkiT)ff fur us. Agents firefurred who can furnlnh a Iiut aid trive their whole Ime to the busluotw. Hpare motm'tUft may Lt profitably ftnplojri-d hIm. A few Tacaiu-lwH In townu aud cUleM. !. r. jolINSoN A CO., 1UW Main St., Hichmond. Va. N. R Pleaw ntt age and builneoa experience. Nev er mind about tending Htanip for reply. B. F. J, & Co. JOBNW.mORRII, Late Principal Examiner, U. S. Pensftoa Bureau,Att at Law. Waaktavten. Booeaarullr proaeoutc clalma -original. ncraaae. re-rsiiu. wiuowi . odiihtod anu uvmh- dent relaUTea'. Bxperlenoe : 8 reara Inlaat war, 1ft jearatm raaaioB vtireau, ana attornej ainoa men. PENSION COM CC C Wll I IRIi'C ?.?w Book Now RK APT. IBM of riflr IfM. d aiatory of w. o. T. U. ,aaeoia I Oea sraarantoed. Blr Inn fr For liberal terms and territory, addreria H.J.MiTRco..rui4.lhi. AGENTS WANTED. Amtotlomphr before taau ed ; We manufactaia to aell direct te private pr lei. and de Irer free or charm within 7M milm of Chiraoo. Hend for Oatalotrue. UAI. JtAlHEU. Mfr.. 1-M ClyWen lie.. atef. Baby Carriages ti TTTtT TTTT relief for KIDDER'S PSTILLE5. f ,hI? BSslwsWsWsWswBlssBBwHiiiaVXHsai Charleiitowu, Ma) $5 aadar. HamnlRS worth SC. IS FRKC. .Inpi mil undAr rjorann' feet. Write T4rw. star Safety Rein Holder Co..Hollv. Mien. OTHERS' FRIENR makes GUILD DII1TII ir IP USID FORI COWFIWaMlNT. Book to "Wotbskj" MailiduFbis. BBaDf-IIXD BBSDI.ATVB CO., ATLajTAJSA. Bold it all Usl-ooist. a n !f A Vli h u w u I PILLS Hie Great Lirer and Stomacb Remedy For tha cur of all disorders of the STOMACH, LIVER, BOWELS, KID NEYS, BLADDER, NERVOUS DIS EASES, LOSS of APPETITE, HEAD ACHE, CONSTIPATION, COSTIVE NES8, INDIGESTION, BILIOUS NESS. FEVER, INFLAMMATION of the BOWELS, PILES and all derange ments of the Internal Viscera, Purely Vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or DELETERIOUS DRUGS. PERFECT DIGESTION will be ac complished by taking RADWAY'S PILLS. By so doing Dyspepsia, SICK HEADACHE, FOUL STOM ACH, BILIOUSNESS. ETC., will be avoided, and the food contribute its nourishing properties to the body. Price 26c. a box. SOLD BY DRUG GISTS. If Storekeeper is out of them. remit to RADWAY & CO., NEW YORK. I prucrlbs and fnllT dorse Blf U aa tha oaly specific for tba certain curs of tliU diMase. O. H. INU R A H AM. M. D., Amsterdam. N. Y. We hav sold Blf Q lor mSDj raara. and It has given tna dsh 01 satis faction. D. R. DYCHK4CO.. Chlcaro. 111. 1.00. Sold by Drug tilt. r .CawelaWj 1 t fl1 TO PtTS.I I i ui iiruan. I I nrlaalytTOMt 1 'jruaOsalislOt. TiaaakssaSawViaral OBJffOHS Und that Plao's Cur for CmAUmption not only PREVENTS, but also CUKES Hoarseness. W. N. U., Omaha. 466-21. DETECTIVES Wanted la every county. Shrewd men to act under initructlon In our Secret Service. Kxpfrtrnce not Decenary, beod 2c. tnrnn. (arnnnan Detective Bureau Co., 44 Arcade, Clnt ItinitU, U. find Pico's Cur for Consumption THE BUST remwly for hoarseness nnd to clear thu throat. W.L.DOUGLAS$ WM Gontlomenlf Lcdies Wm Or aar atmj eka aaa1lM4 tnm thaw saa Rle ei. tkat aaaaet k inii fraaa Baalara, will mm m Mr aa-frae im ansa tha ittorr, ra rlrt at krte. sir rraasaleBt wkaa mm H ara mi aaaaiMS aa kattaak r Tlie mau who hai invcHtod from three WET HEN We oiler the man who wmiu service (not itjlc) a gsiriiteiit Ihut wtH keup aim orr in uie nrae lorm. to Ave flollam in a KubtxT Coat, and at his flrtt half hour exprlanett In a vrxa Bnd to nix vnrrow tnat a im hanlly a better protection than a moa quito netting, not only fecit chagrined kt hniiiaT tu hadlr Liknn In. but alio let 1ft If hfl dnca not look exactly Ilka mtM M III Coat Ask for the KIHH IJKAND " Si-icKta and uke no other. If your tt(irk3eper doe not havf the kih brand, scud for deMripttre catalogue. A. J.i wkk, w Nimmont St., iiosion, Miu.. it ii c&lled TOWKH'S HSH It RAND NLICKKK," a name familiar to every Cow-br all over tho land. With them tha only perfect Wind and Waterproof ,t u " Tower s rihh Itrand Wlicker.'' Jfiliiipisoscuni jev-rl IIPlvTig row bale by all phussists, 1 (