Uonfooh 3ournaL B SASOH. a it iirw, IU It to a terrible thin? to contemplate. It the dranmtistt are bound to light for many year to come. Qarte a number of routes are avail Ma for an Uthuina canaL The firm baa; to to take our pick and then at floe a Chicago piper mean by aJmlltlna; a forthcoming work entl ai "The Spaniarda la the War'' They Idler died from drinking alcohol at Camp Alger. It is al well to shake the bottle and then It away before using. Likely enough when hereafter Uncle faaa views the territory he's won he Indulge In that well-known Yaa expletive: "Good lands!" American enterprise begins to railroad In Cuba, It will be carl to bear conductors calling out the M of some of those stations. attain evidently doesn't understand he trst principles of business or she Barer would hare put two entire squad Saaa in soak without realizing a cent aw doing. A ML Louis paper says that "Agutn Ma wears a uniform consisting of a pad collar, a gold breast-plate, a wbla- a cane with two gold tassel." an the police? America Is also carrying the war Into Africa. Farm machinery and agricul- implenients made in the United are now leading the liuporta- i of the Dark Continent Oaa reason why the American army kaa handled Spain so severely is be aaaae the American is a rapid-fire sort a thinker. lie Is not forever talking at to-morrow, and putting off what be done. It is the quick think s Yankee and the quick act that him a formidable foe. ' The war with Spain has clearly dem at rated the advantages in naval en aagementa enjoyed by a nation taa: as attained Industrial supremacy at aeatpared with one In which little at aaation has been given to modern iu Taatlons. Comparison between the erican navy and the Ill-fated Span fleets cannot fail to impress the ob- wlth the iuimense superiority of former. Ittaty of direct testimony has been ftren tending tcprove that the Spanish, dais in Havana grew rich by war. Vfcey charged their government double arteee for army supplies, took bribes mat favored merchants and citizens. ammunition from government to the insurgents, and probably back pay fo which their own sol- were entitled. For these reasons was no persistent, energetic and amaVconsldered effort to stamp out the aabeUlon. Baeiproclty seems to be the order of tike day In language. , For years there kaa been an Incursion, or adoption, of aVeock words and phrases into English aamLCh. Now there is a similar incor paratlon of English expressions Into the current speech and literature of France. While we speak of "the beau aaaode," Parisians speak of "le high ttf;" as often as we mention a "soiree" ar a "matinee," they tell ua of "une live "clock tea;" and when we pronounce a thing "very chic," they respond that It la Indeed "tres smart." Is this an in Jcatlon that the universal language of th future is to be a polyglot? Unimaginative exactness, as the Cen tary Dictionary defines liberalism, ay not always be the highest form of "uth, but its practice would be a men tal tonic to many vagrant minds. In a well-known family whore the wife re aatly lay dying, an Inquiry came by telephone concerning her condition. Kaawing that the busltaod would hear Che reply, and wishing to save him the young girl answering the call that the patient was about the A little later the speaker felt a ftertle arm about her shoulder. "Your to not nearly so wel.," came the words. "You bad better call that up and say so. Try always to i exact truth." A more emphatic come from an old pupil of eatrlc President Finney, of The girl was In distinctly bad but meeting the President one raaponded to his "How are your "Pretty well I tbank you." 'Tut, a eaata his prompt reply; "isn't that Th JarwHa Chronicle of London i aaeat the subject of Jewish col- la Palestine tome of the rea- Why the mbllme porte of Turkey aot ffre bis assent to the move- The Sultan has 120,000 .Tew ns I th Turkey and 150,000 In Asia. taatead of sharing the opposition total that la shown In most of the ; r, European countries he has al- waya recornil them at among the aloed of hi people. They hold j " mawtaaf positions in nia arrul and t taw elrtl aerrlce, at well as In hi tn twaarjhola. Ue It also a coatrlbu tor ta th vgrloua Jewish charities, Ctat TlKttr'ifa Iwen frljtfitened ln(o rrSWPftce with the fre Inmlgratloo i XTW bt FatesOoa la oerlly n. r -!7l Tit Chronicle atys;, "The IT: '.U Z7Z tilt4 ita ground ' rsrinrrri. but It brlnltag '' . T'lww cat bean colr,ci "; rataar ttaa aa expansion of the area of liberty. True, IServia is magnanimous to Its Jewish subjects. But Boumauta has broken its own chains only to rivet them on some of the least offensive of Its own people. Its treatment of Its Hebrew population is a stultification of those powers which championed Its cause la the Interests, of freedom, and In BLrik!i;g contrast to the action of the Sultan. Then, again. Greece's alleged blow for Cretan liberty was accom panied by a wave of anti-Peani'Um, as the report of the Thessalian evacua tion showed. The imminence, too, of Russian predominance in Bulgaria Is a direct menace to the Jews In that principality." Ever since the war began Spain has been closely watched to discover what man of commanding abilities would be developed by this crisis in hi r affairs. It is an old maxim that great crises produce men equal to the emergencies, and in this country such a dictum ha been most astonishingly verified throughout the whole course of our history. But ail the men who have at tained high rank in either the diplo matic military or naval service of Spain have woefully failed when they have been put to the test of trial In ths war. Possibly Canovas. the prime min ister who was assassinated last Au gust, might have proved to be equal to the occasion had he lived, but since his death the only one who ha shown any capacity for meeting the difficul ties that beset Spain Is Campos, the predecessor of W ey'er as captain gen eral of Cuba, but who since his recall from the Island has held no important commission from hi Government At Governor of Cuba he showed too strongly the spirit of the nineteenth century and too little of that of the fif teenth to suit the Spanish cabinet he was recalled and the policy of starva tion Inaugurated by his successor was carried out That Campos is abreast of the times Is shown In a recent Inter view, in which he said that "it Is Im possible to have colotilul empire with out a navy aud without good budgets. It is Impossible to live on glorious mem ories that are preserved in old hlston calcal parchments." That Spain at tempted to do what Camrxs declared to be impossible cat.not be questioned. The histories of Greece, Home and Tur- key demonstrate the absolute truth of iampos declaration. T!i im art i 1 quarrels In Greece did for that countrv I what they are doing for Spain. Home lived for centuries on her past glories, and Turkey lost Egypt and her Balkan states by policies not unlike those w.;,.V. fc.'....:., .... . - "u,lu cpam a-ueiupiea to carry out' No man In the peninsula Is more loyal J to his country than Campos, but he has t stuweu the world g history to same mir- pose, and knows that iJpain has lost her empire by adhering to methods of government that have no place la mod era civilization. - in a recent address before the Lum ber Exchange of Baltimore, Dr. B. K. Kernow. chief of the forestry division of the United States Department of Agriculture presented many important facts, says the Scientific American. In the past it has been the custom of many lumbermen to look upon thj scl eniihc forester as their worst enemy but now they are coming to see that'll is au entirely erroneous view of the " niiuwui uiese experts ml without legislation n t .... .7 ! would be cut down Tn toe and Zt ; only would lumb,.r,n,n If 7 cupaUon, but the crest hu' .1 . . m this terriblu which .Wu. or iS Jl Kh"u! h" -Wvrt 80 paralysed Tre-s uni Uw,-a i . ' ' !' ll;!'J ahva-r iK'l in ought to k cuL" n n-v ; 1 Vn ly K"'J 10 "' comfort- .m rc al and MnduT, I ! '' l hMt v''ilh ,h" 'Jt that before aud all that the scieutiiic forester ,KVa is that the cuttlntr l.abt l,. ........ ... ; e done judi-1 c-iouhiy. The ignorant lumberman wh o t v.o w. io iue (Uture CUis d.ivi-n ; all of his foreais at our 'e, while me for- , et,ter cuts the tr es io as to make It a I Sent 'v S re .T" , P' ijri iindjijr, oere n uas liecome almost an exact science. In this country about n.Ow.iMXi acres of forest lands is owned by the State, and the yearly rev enue Is not Iets than f-),K.W). A lout 20,W,ti00 a.res of forest lauds is owned by private individuals, and their profits are almost as great During the last fifty years at least these revenue have been constantly on the Increase, owing to the more intelligent manage ment irrespective of the market price or material. Of course, forestry can be practiced successfully only'in a country where forcRts properly receive ade quate protection from tire. In the last few years many farms In New England have been abandoned because the land was no longer regarded as productive, though they would be considered so in other countries, where, people are lesa used to an abundant fertility. If, how ever, they are no longer capable of pro ducing crops, they could be turned to good account by the growing of tree, and many thousands of awes of land that are now useless would thus be made to produce a handsome revenue, while at the same time a large addition would be made to the diminishing liin. ber resources of our country. The fjtta in A merlon. r vi Bi-ieiui ji-ib a. jiatcn or .Trnuine Nile lotus flowers has flourished with-1 out care on the banks of (lie T?r'sln uirer, cir Jionroe, Xb higan. The perfumed water bhwsoum, si ppo-ed to fr-"nc thriven through all the sunueii cunages oi me Atmrican cll mAte, but no one knows how they go to the Knimn River. The flower it about eight Inches In diameter, and of a rich creamy color, with a dainty cen ter of golden yellow. Very few children have ns much frength of mind as they have of don't mind. Coatly appnrel doesn't always make woman look seat and attractive, WS WORD H E was only a l.y. not yet six - teen, but they were going to shoot him, nevertheless. The band of Insurgents to which he! belonged had been routed by the Army of Versailles, and, taken red-handed with some ten of his comrades, he had been conducted to the Mairle of the Eleventh Arrondisscmeut Struck by his youthful appearance, aud also astonished at the boy's eool- ness In this hour of extreme peril, the Commandant had ordered that the fatal verdict should, so far as he was con cerned, be suspended for the moment and that he Khould lie kept a prisoner until his companions had u.et their fate at the neighboring barricade. Apparently quite calm and resigned, his great eyes and his facethe pale face of a Parisian child showed neith er emotion nor anxiety. He seemed to watch all that was passing around him as though they held no concern for him. lie heard the Sinister report of the fusillade which hurled-bis companions Into eternity without moving a muscle; his calm, fixed gaze seemed to be look ing into the great "Afterwards" which was soon to become the "Present" to him also. Perhaps he was thinking of his happy careless childhood he had hardly outgrown It; perhaps of his re lations and their sorrow when they heard of the chain of fatality which had made Kirn fatherless ami had toss ed hitu into the seething turmoil of civ il war, and now demanded his life at the hands of fellow-countrymen; and. perhaps, he wondered why such things were. At the time war was declared he was living happily with his father and mother, honest working folk who had PI,r,'utl'l "' to a printer; politics never troubled that little household. It was not long, however, before the Prussians had siaiii the head of the family. The prtvatlonsof the siege, the long and weary waiting at the butch ers" and bakers' shops when the w outy dole of food was distributed In the rig ors of that terrible winter, had stretch ed his mother on the bed of suffering, where he lay slowly dying. One day when he had gone with oth ers to dig for potatoes In the frost Ixiuml plain of St Denis a Prussian hullet broke his shoulder, ;uit Rafter wards, driven partly by hunger, partly hy fear of his companions threats, he had enrolled himself in the Army of the Couiiijiiue. Like many another, fear and f.ar only had led him Into and kept Win In the ranks; he had no heart for a war of brothers, and now that his life was "about to pay the penalty he was glad that he could lay no man's deaih to his charge, lie was innocent of that, at anv rati i. ,. ... . """s t,p and suffered f ' S , " , Telf1 mM ha'1 l, m a ariA ot to think 1, .... ..... . '. . . .".- mini u liiijfi' tiuuirtft'j ii iMi.u.ftt . 7 , " ' ue ner, four days n;;o. ' Kit- - meaeaiti. rtenr inln " v. i r. , .,. , .... .. ... rnr il.lti you more. "Ak." !.,. n,n.,h .,.... l0'1 '-'T of liherty-bow WOuld rnu to r, f tit,,l !.... ......... i. i. .....i .!-.. 5 ,,,, ,, , imi-fc iiuij give life to I he hands that hungered for Ids life. He would rive his word, find he w.mij kg,.,, It -ryy nnt1 g;lve i t , li A yV DKATII SEEMS Bf.TTKIt THAJf SUCH A LIK." his toother and she, too, was dying lie had no one to regret To see ber again, to kiss her dear lips once more, console, encourage her, and leave ber hopeful-then he could face death bravely." He was In the midst of these sad re nVciloiis when the commandant, fob '0 ,'' -x,, ov.nJ ly several oflii'i.rH m, ,,,., .l,.i , t'' VV w. my fine fellow, you and I have a K-ore to settle; joy know what awolu you?" "Yes, mon commandant, and I am ready." "Itenlly? 8o resdy ns all that? Ton are not afraid of death T "'" than of life. I bare teen o m'leh ihe hut six months-such awful tliicgs-deniii seems belter than aucb a life," "I wnjfrf you would not lieslfafe If 1 gave you your choice. If I s-iid: 'Put jour orst riHit foremost nnd siw.w w? ' 7 - o of sigl.V yo ; wo Jd oo be off, 1 U warrant," J l a ' V, , rVv '-'y .'j 4 Ui OF HONOR. j "Try me. mon commandant, try me! j Put me to the proof; It's worth a trial, One more or less for vnnr mtn in shoot, what does It matter? One hour of freedom only, not more; you shall Ri-e whether I will keep my word, and whether I am afraid to die." "Oh' da! you're no fool, but you must take me for one. Once free and far away, and then come back to be shot Just as yon would keep an ordinary ap poiutment? You will hardly get me to , swallow that mv bov!" "Listen, sir. I beg of you: Perhaps you have a good mother; you love her, your mother, more than aught else In the whole world. If, like me, you were Just going to die, your last thoughts would be of her. And you would bless the man who gave the opportunity of seeing her once more, for the last time. Mon commandant do for me what you "UE FLEW HOUR." would pray other to do for you. Give me one hour's liberty, and I will give you my word of honor to return and give myself up. Is Ufa Itself worth a prom ise broken V While he was speaking the command ant was pacing to and fro, tugging vic iously at his mustache, and evidently struggling hard to appear unmoved. "My word,' he murmured. "This urchin talks of 'my word' as though he were a Knight of the Round Table!' He stopped abruptly iu front of his prisoner and asked, In a severe tone "Your name?" "Victor Oury." "AgeV" "Sixteen on the 15th of July next" "Where does your mother live?" "At Belleville." "What made you to leave her to fol low the f 'omniene"'" "1 or the liar.. us chiefly; one must eat! Then the neighbors and my com rades threatened to hhoot me If I did not march with them. They said I was tall enough to carry a musket My mother was afraid of them, and wept ana prayed." "You have no father, then?" "He was killed." "And where'" "At Bourget fighting for his coun try." the commandant turned toward bis stair as though he would consult them i at a glance. All seemed to interest and pity. "Well, then, It Is understood." the of tiecr said, gravely, after a moment's I reflection. "You can go and see your inotner. lou have given me your word or nouor to come back in an hour. C'cst bieo. I shull know then whether you are a man of character or simply a cowardly boy. I give you until even ing. If you are not here nt 8 o'clock I shall say that you are a braggart and care more for life than honor. Allons! Quick march!" "I liiank yon, mon commandant At eight I will be here," " "You are sure?" "Certain." "We shall see when the time comes." The boy would have thrown his arms about the officer In his wild Joy and gratitude, but the latter repelled him gently. "No, not now," he said. "Thl even ing, if you return, I will embrace you In front of the firing party," be added, grimly. "Off with you!" Victor ran like a hare. The officers smiled ns they watched him disappear. Twenty minutes later he knocked at his mother's door, and the neighlwr who was tending ber opened it to him. he started and exclaimed when she saw bim, for like every one else, she helieved him dead. He would have rushed to his mother's room, but the woman stopped him, "Go in .juietly," she said. In a low voice; "she is asleep. Khe has been very ill since you went away, but she is a llt- ue i uer now. The doctor said yes terday that If she could sleep she would oUU stronger; she must not be awakened. Poor thing! she wiil be glad to see you, for she has asked for you so often. When she was not calling you she was praying tbo Iwn Dleu to preserve you aud to restore peace in the land. Uelos! one would say He had abandoned tit. the bon Lieu, aud let men do Just as they like, u j awful!" But Victor, Impatient thought he beard 111 tinme called In a faint voice. He moved ou tip-toe lownrd his moth. it's bed, lie bad not been deceved-the ei !t Woutfiu't eves ver ,.,,, .1.1. ..VMV !" ; cried In lier faiu, we.k voice. Wlibout . word i lay djwn beside her, and her arms closed round him hungrily. And now the boy who had faced death so Impassively could do naught but sob. Now, In his mother's anus, he became a child once more, timid, de spairing. The sick woman, who seemed to gain strength from his presence, sought In vain to console him. "Why do you distress yourself so, my child, my best beloved?" she asked. "You sLiill never leave me again. We will throw that lteful uniform away; 1 never want to see It more. I will make haste and get well; I feel so much stronger since you came. Boon you will go to work again, and you will grow up and marry some good glrL The past will only look like a bail dream then, and we will forget It completely; com' pletely, dear." Poor soul, how should she know that her picture of a bright future oulj deepened her boy's anguish? She wa silent telling herself that the best waj to dry tears is to let them flow freely. She kissed him and let his weary head fall back on the pillow, and then she gave herself up to dreams of happier days store for both of them, Ictor s sobs grew lew frequent and less violent and soon nothing could be heard In the little room but the regular breathing of the mother and child. Ashamed of his weakness, the boy forced himself luto self-control, and when he raised his head from the pil low, once more believing himself stronger than love of life, his mother, yielding to the reaction which her sud den Joy had caused, was sleeping tcaeefully. The sight restored his energies. A ;.iud Providence, he thought had wish ed to spare him a scene which his strength and courage could not havi' iMjrne, and he resolved to go at once. Lightly he kissed bis mother's fore head, and gazed nt her earnestly for a few momenta. She seemed to smile, . , . ., . . , ... hf i rnmif fit t lu.n ha vv..,tt itr l-i 1 1 (. ..1! w ...j ... , ..... u i. v. , i t M uuiiivui; and returned to his post ns quickly as me had come, not seeing a soul he met nor daring to look behind him. "What! so soon?" the commandant cried, astonished. He had hoped, like the good -hearted man he was, that the boy would not retur n. "But I had promised!" "Doubtless, but why be In such a hurry? You might have stayed with your mother some time longer, and still have kept your word." "Poor mother! After a scene of tears ; jut of corns and bunions. It's the great whieh seemed to take nil tuy courage Ml comfort discovery of the age. Al tears of Joy for her, of despair for me- I ten' Foot-Ense makes tight-fitting or she fell asleep so calmly, so happily, '" easy. It Is a certain that I dare not wait for her to wake. ,f,ure, for -t'BK- cnllotia and hot, 8he fell anieep with her arms around :"rf' "''"T !?i ' 'Z "w i!,ii .t I ,1 ,, , , . iaT- f"0'" by all druggins and she rue thinking I should never leave her IlorMi By ma for2flC, , ,Bm Xrla, again; how could I have told her the package FREIC. Address Alien b. Olm truib Who knows whether I should ited. 1 Tlav X Y. nave nan tiie courage to leave her after doing so? Aud what would you have thought of me If I had not come back? "So I klxjfcd her, and slipped away like a thief while she was sleeping, and here I am. Pray God may be good to her as she has been to me. Mon com, tnandarit, I have one wore thing to ask to finish quickly." The officer looked at the boy with mingled pity and admiration. His own eyes were full of tears. You are quite resigned, then; death does not frighten you?" he asked. Victor answered him with a gesture "And if I pardoned you?" "You would .save my mother's lift?, too. nod I would revere you ns a sec ond father." Allons! you nre a plucky lad, and you have not deserved to milter as voti hflVA ftllHW Vr.ll alu.tt .... I. flrst-blen! Now go. and e ouleklv Join your mother, stiti iiive hw t. ways." As he spoke the last few words, the', officer took the boy by the shoulders ,,, ami pusneu mm away gently. It really would have l-en a pity." he said, half apoiogetiealiy, to his staff, ns he turned lownrd them. Victor did not run-he flew home. His mother was still sleepin" He would h-,rw le,.- m I . , ! d.irly have liked to cover her with - l BKCAMK OKCK MORE." kisses, but be did not dare to wake her. although her sleep seemed troubled. He lay down again besldo her. Suddenly she tat up. crylne: "Merovt Victor! My child! Oh! Merer I Ah! you are here; It is really your she arid. ed, waking. Her thin, weak hands wandered all over him; she pressed til m close to ber nnd rained kisses on his face. Then she wns shaken by convulsive tobt, which icior couiu not enlm. "Oh! my boy! my boy!" i,0 m0n,,pd, "I dreamt they were going to .hoot you!"-Htrnnd Magaxlne. Tlio tor I I Im rary. ' A good story Is told by (jo Jewish Messenger of a number of boy who were jiinyiug ou a Saturday iu front of on Episcopal church. Tim rector, tud tieuly came out of his parsonage and tidd the boy to be quiet In front of tin Ixrd't houtie, , That la all right, mister," told th l boys, "The I'rd Is not here to-day. He Is down this street nt the Jewish tyua gogtie." Stinke cliarmcrt ougbt to make excel. r a-5,Wi A Clllt.lt lent bartcudtia. Good Blood Makes Health lad Hood's SarsRpariila mskri go1 Hood. That Is why it cures so many linens tnd makes so uouir people tut letter ths a ever before. If you don't trU sell, are half sick, tired, worn out, yo cj be mads well fcy taking- eJ Mood's Sarsaparilla 11 Auirri.:'l Orextni' KmliciH. It, tix tut tW frapkHHi bj C I. Hot i A Co., hwA, Ms., j Hood' PMIe i'U Una flit ttetau. Making HI u (I, "1 e you're sdver'ism' fur a 'second Selp,' mum," ud the hutky trsmp whot 11 called. "If the work ain't too lard. mum. and the w:gei atl-t j actory, I'm wllliu' to tke the job, per rid in' " I "But, goodness alive!" interrupted) !;he matron, "I advertised lor a girl J V on't want any great, overgrown man tar ,Io a girl's work!" "I tee," rej iined the pilgrim, plaint-' rely. "P'r'aps you wouldn't mind aoftJ j mm the pain of this refusal, mum, by rjvin" a pore man some lean meat an' itrany or someihin' like that?" Why ihouldo't one expect to find tick m a watchdog? Hall' Catarrh Cure Is taken lritrnily, Price 75 cents. Why will men chew boarding-bouM aince pie and eschew ordinary hash? j Mrs. Wlsnlow'uMooTBiMO Bvsur for child rn totdilntr, loftm t!'t Rami, rcilucrs Inland bsUob, tll;i ln, eumwlndoollb. 'it buM Why are our losses usually much i lr to War than our victories? WA!Tio.-cof n4 hMtih a-i-p- m iinr.s. ijKi!imnin!Mii . . - v,..t. . , i. ... . , . . w , ii'i .'. M'l mi iniuviKUL, Why don't more pf-ople follow th ad rice they give to others? PIfo'i Cnr for Consumption I th best of sii GQuxh cure. ti-irg W. Boca, fauchr. La., August 26, l&Ji. Why it the WMt of the bread cait up n the wa(er s'sie? Hhakn Into Yonr Hhors Allen's Foot-Kite, a powder for th ;feet. It cures painful, swollen, stnart Hne feet aud Instantly takes the stina If lbs first word a t shy ppeaks begin sith a vonel, he will become famous. To have a ctrartge litie eh Id wander tu to yom lioo.ee, you ill hear good Dews, I -liHr-r- f l'C-lUl lOO VU1 I l-O Xlth a bt!tter nndettindirig- of tba trausint nature of the many ptaya , , w "J1"'1 , 0 P'J'" tort geuileetTortsuleaKaiite Torta i riirbtlv directed. the know ledie. tlmt . im f.M 1 tickets are not due to arty actual d ta ' lilbe dimply to a coiibt'm&tcd eoudl , , ' K',tr"' w'cli thu pleasant 3 x u ? "-V!1"1 Kv-m- ,ly romoves. That is why it js t'uo only ' reme.lv with millionof ?wi.,it;..- .r..L 'everywhere esteemed m highly by all wooviiue gin neaa . iu D.ineaclai lfectH tire durt to tie fact, tlmi . . is th one remedy which promotes internal ileanlWha without debilitutinff the trgana ou which it acts. Jt b t!ierefort til important, in order to get it beue-B'-iuJ. effects, Ui not when you par thaae, that you have the (renulne artl tle, whieii is manufactured by the CaUV fornla Pig Syrup Co. only and hold by 111 repuUblu druggists. If in the enjoyment f.f (j-fxxl betlth, :id tiie syst. in k retrular, laxative or )ther remcdius are then not needed. If Ifllicted with any actual disease, on nay bo commended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, ne should have the bcht, and with th s'cll-iuformc-d everywhere, fSvrup of Filjs stands highest and is mt lurvely ised and give most general satisfaction. "4 rVaef Tp oflht Highttt Onhft cjrceatct In Manufacture. WaiterBaRer&Cors Breakfast Scoa Aijsoltiklf Para, Delicious, Nutrition; .feiftlgstTtEnmcaTit.. """' joo rl tin Ctnalwi Attkk, fa m .a m. m wuKcailiK, MAS, kf. WALTER BAKER 4 CO. Ltd. Baraauuta ir. 1