Many persons have Iheir good day and their bad day. Others re about half tick all the time. They have headache, backache, and are restless and nervous. Food does not taste good, and the digestion is poor; the skin is dry and sallow and disfigured with pimples or eruptions; sleep brings no rest and work is a burden. ye hat is the cause of all tbia? Impure blood. And the remedy? UTTtHlV tOQi It clears out the channels through which poisons are carried from the body. Vhen all impurities are removed from the blood nature takes right hold nd completes the cure. If there is constipation, take Ayer's Tills. They awaken the drowsy action of the liver; they cure biliousness. Their Marrcloai Raautr ua Hao-ra by tha Mlcroacope, The traveler In the far Kajtt. pausing through stone doorways, aerolled and curved with Araleaiue fretwork, en ters the eastern quarter of old Cairo. The streets are dingy and narrow, hut here rise the wonderful domes of the famoiu inoques "Tombs of the Mam eluke" exquisite In all grace and fan tasy of shape and color. The fretted Hides, a fine and delicate lacework of stone, the marvelous and ahlaiog play of light on beautiful tints, seem like a very dream of art. But enter the woods that stretch all ; about us and use the microscope that enlarges our vision, and lo, a mt won derful thing has come to pan! Winged beings, far more beautiful than the genii of the "Arabian Nights," have been here, and on the under hide of a common leaf, lu size no larger than a pin's head, are structure that fairly rival the mosques of Cairo In wealth of decoration and loveliness of color the butterfly ess. They are, many of them, dome-shaped like the niowjiica. and covered with a rich network, to filmy that It glitters in the suu like a diamond dew, but each of the lines lu a rib, buttressing the whole structure. Other eggs are shaped like tiaras or tur bans, and others still are like sea-urchins. Some are shaped like pyramids, and nil lend up In their decoration to a minute rosette at the top, sometlims deeply Indented, through whose open lugs life is received In the egg. The patterns are often as regular as nnv lireuliir rose-window or a uoinic cathedral." and the colors of the egg. b"glnulng with a pe.le g een the safest of nil colors lu the green wood, or white like many tree-blossoms, change afterword, us the dweller Inside devel- DEMAND FOR Af-HICAN HIDES ; fioieor im. .n . un.l the old expbit ntloti of the origin of t'ie Fklra of Man? Aoimala Ued for Va- j j,;iKue. that It was due to dirt and un rloiis I'urimara. sjlllitiiry condlliwis, is !n:idcU!ite, unit In Masuonnlnnd and Central Africa j lliat uJe ,.,. ,,::ri'f of the disease ie the trade In skins still flourishes, j Iimns to Ik- diMovend. As h:is I ecu though only the poorest of the Boer j observed elsewhere, the epidemics in folirtw It, anil they h:ive to trek north Africa are frequently piecrdul by a'! Writ tm o W have tin 1 Doctor. of oine ol llir n.'t itimei.l Bityn"ti.t in sh Vnitrd ! r!ilWlrli ' prU,'Hln In jntir r. 1p "U W..I to- aetv tfmnjt rii T. viUki c"i fill. i. t . VhK. lAWtll. .11 AM. 3t 75 POPHAM'S ASTHMA SPECIFIC 0!MI r5frf In nTt minutes, Ben'l .JKirilHLftHill ...... j 1 lon r,ni t of (I. no. Sl luiM(i.. a I Addn THOU, mrmis, i kux, ii. How's This! We ofler One Hundred Dollars Reward for any cne of t Rtan-lt thai cannot be cured bv Hall's Catar h i tire. V. J. ClIK.NKY & CO.. Props. Toledo, O. We the undersigned have known i. J. Cheney for the l"t 15 years and believe him perleetly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation nada h- their firm. Wasr ft TkcaI, Wboiealc Druggists, To ledo. O. , WLTmo, Hi A Masvis V bolesale I)nig -.sts, Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure it taken internally, aeting dire-tlv upon the blood and nincoiii tnrfucea of the system, i'rice 7!c per Soul. Bold by all Druggist. Trail snoniala free Uroni Mnlttiorn. Any complaint becomes cbronlc by neglect, aud rheumatism grows stub born by not using St. Jacobs Oil. which Is It sure cure and conquer the pain promptly. Kvery sufferer should use It. ops, into all kinds of brilliant and shin Ing hues, from salmon to orange. These eggs are sometimes found single, some times In regular rows one on top of the other, or strung together like a tie k lace of beads, or "girdling a twig li lit a fairy ring" There are Insects not butterflUs- that lay eggs In almost Incredible nuiu- licrs, say n trillion in a season! These are oft and perishable, and of short life. Where uu iuset's eggs have to stand the winter's cold they are usu ally covered or packed in a kind of cj ment. If yon look at these mere spicks throti.h a micros' oi e you will see ex- i iinlsite shells, clustered like gems or ; rolled in tuU'B, or convoluted In spirals nml circles. j .Many eggs are doubly protected, be- cause they are so fragile, anil are placed in still another shelter, as the eggs of the birds, pule bit)', or speckled. or pearly while, in close woveu nests, or the eggs of certain spiders In silky bells of golden yellow or purest white, hung among the blossoms. Vet It Is more common lo tlnd insect eggs bare and exposed to view. One day I saw what had seemed dust grow under a microscope Into crystal eggs, on which Insect-forms apiK'ared to lie sharply etched int seen through the transparent case. Then out skipped some lively, black-eyed wood-folk. Independent and alert, ready for a meal. They seemed fully grown at birth. I'hllauyU'hla Times. Fau'ta oi digestion cause disorders oi the liver, ami the whole system becomei dcrarii.' ed. HitsiN perfects the pro cess of digestion and assimilation, and thin makes pure blood. I'rice 60 cts, Palace Pharmacy. f the Tmpi.po. The hides of the larger bucks, such as the sable antelope, the road antelope, the hartebeest or any f the aebnis, are worth 8 shillings or !) s!i!lllti?s each, and there is now some thing to be made by selling heads and hnrns as curiosities. Leather maiV! from the skins of these big antelopes Is still in common, use in high-class boot- making. No one knows exactly what animal may not have supplied the up pers or soles of . footgear, and the possibilities range from the porpoise and the antic liair al to the blestsik and the koodoo. Three other African animals' skins are in commercial de mand for curiously different purposes. The giraffes, as everyone knows, are killed so that their skins may be made Into sandals for natives and sjambak whips for colonists. In the Soudan they are also killed for the sake or tueir hides, which are made Into shields. Many of the dervish shields captured during their attempt to Invade Kgypt under the Kmir NJuml were made of this material. The elephant and rhinoc eros skins go to Hictlieid. TieTe'they are iwd to face Hi" win-cN used in nollshlfiz stee cut cry. No oilier ma terial Is eqtially sji'sfaebiry. and H would be most d'.llicull to find a suli- stitiite. The rhinoceros skin n ' v. t ' filler ly that of the wh' ;i Now that this snc li s . Hie black rhinoceros of Ceii: . Africa N killed for the purpose. Ai :tch of tills ial-men--elv thick skin, which is not tanned but used In the raw state, never leaves Africa. It Is in great demand for mak ing the round shields used by the Arabs and AbvssitiiatH. A black rhinoceros' hide vields eight large squares, each of which will make a round shield two feet In diameter, and each of these sqeap-s, even In ill" Soudan, is worth The skin when scraped and pol ished Is i-mi-transi::reiil, like hard gel at'ti, and takes u high polish. Oiraffe skin Is even more valued as material for shields, as it is equally hard and lighter. Thus, while the South African giraffes are killed off to supply whips, those of North Central Af"ica are hunt ed to provide the Mahdi's Arabs with shields.- London Spectator. outbreak of the disease funong liven monkeys are affected by it. rats. DEPOPULATION OF FRANCE. Influx of Foreigner Prevent the De crease Becoming Appuricnt. The returns of the census for France, which was taken on March Z'J, lS.u, have now been published and compared with the statistics of the previous cen sus, which was taken six years before, on April 12, 18U1. A year ago the num ber of people in France was ds.JJS ,UtM, and at the 18.)1 census It was 38,0. 5 15'), so that in the six years the population of France had only Increased by i:?3,M ) persons. And even tins inning nic.e.inc Is more apparent tban real, tor it tins taken place entirely In the large towns, and is due to the influx of foreigners. such as Belgians and Italians, who are to be found in increasing numbers Hinontr the urban populations of France. in nnlv t went v-f our departments is there any Increase; In sixty-three de partments there Is a'positlve falling off. and this is more especially marked in the rural couimuues. Even more than in England docs the population flock from the country to the town, and yet we are always healing of the perfect nature of the French agrarian laws aud of the advantages of small holdings. The fact is, that small holdings tend 10 keep dowu the rural population, for the subdivision of fields has now got to such a pitch that any family at all often means starvation to a man and wire. For years past the French popula tion has only been kept from showing tin absolute decrease by the influx of foreign workmen Into the great towns, and yet the French allow the folly of tiie colonial party to drag them Into ridiculous enterprises abroad for the benefit of a fevy greedy officials and functionaries. A nation with a decreas ing population can never hold colonies, and the French may rest assured that sooner or later their colonies will go the way of those possessed by the sister nation, Spain. Loudon Olobe, . u .urn t . . ii k. Take Laxative Hromo Quinine Tahlet All druggists refund 'he money if it fiiU to cure. 'Sn The genuine has L. B. y. on each tablet. 1'Iioto.raiiliiiiK on Marble. A very pretty effect is gained by printing a photograph on maruie. which can be done in me ionowing way: An unpolished plate of marble must be coated with a solution oi benzine, otio parts; spirits of turpen tine, 500 pans; asphaltum, 50 parts, and pute wax, 5 paits. When this Is dry the plate Is exposed under a uug ali'.e, which will take, in sunshine, about twenty minutes. Develop wit h spirits cf turpentine or ben.ine awd ws) in plenty uf water. The next step Is to cover the piale where it is intended to be left while, with an aicolionc solution of shellac and im merse the same in nnv dye which is sulu le in water. After awhile, when enough of the coloring matter has entered the pores of the marble, it is taken out aud polished. re. ay Ma-es It liardeT. Mis-steps have made me worsi sprains, but It is no mis step to use St. Jacobs Oi'.. It makes a cure by strength- , euing, soothing . und conquering the' pain. Every hour's delay makes it harder to cure. j Diamond "C" Soap does nm sunn flannels and it leaves all laur.es in the most desirable condition. llanilT for Darnine. To assist in holding wearing app.'ire! while darning holes therein the materi al is stretched over a flexible tne':al ring, the ends of which lap each other and engage one of a series of catchos to expand the ring to the proper size A Liil.vtr Mrs. Hoffman Describe) How StM Wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for Advice, end Is Now Welt Diamond "0" Soap laundry soap that can or soft water. is a high grade he used in hard Dear Mrs Pinkham: Before oaiaf your Vegetable Com pound I M av great sufTercr. I have been sick fssr months, was troubled with severe pad in both sides of abdomen, sore feelia in lower part of bow els, also sufferea with dizziaessv headache, ui could Dot sleeps I wrote yon at. letter descrifc iDg my case anA asking- you advice. Twa . replica teu- : i . Ill 111 IT JU what to do. followed your direc tions, and cannot praise your medicinas enough for what it has done former Many thanks to you for your advie- , Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Cosar pound has cured me, and I will reconar menditto my friends Mrs. Fi.oKF.ica It. HokfmX.v.612 Roland St., Canton, Ok The condition described by Mrs. HofF maii will appeal to many women, jet lots of Mek women struggle on witat their daily la.-Us disregarding tb ttrgent warnings until overlakeo tjr actual collapse. The present Mrs I'inkham's esperts pnee in treating female ills is unparal leled, for years she worked side bysidas witli Mrs Lydia E. I'inkham, and tor sometimes past has bad sole charg-as I of the correspondence department mF her pec at business, treating by letter ns many as a hundred thousand ailing; wcrcco :!iTin;T a f iniHe year. f at -J" a Ail .WiV (!--' Handsome il as handsome very sel dom does. The motorman on a i ele' trie car is a nonconductor. The man who is dis atipficd witbhis work ia never happy, .Speaking I fireworks. David was the originol giant cracker. The man who starts to me-t trouiile never h ia to go half way. There are people who actually Isdieve their troubles m'eret otbers. In very clear water sunlight rene trales to a depth of over 1,500 feet. Neatly all skin iiseases are supposed to lie caused by tn croscopic insects. There are more theaters in propor tion to its population in Italy than eise wburo in the world. It said that hall hearings wete in vented by John Wyatt, an Encliauniau, in the year 17ti0. l he leaves of geranium-!1 are aid to be excelP nt fo- cuts and wounds where the nkin is uibbed off. AN AFFAIR & NATION It hs been sid of Amcricjknb ttut they &rctt& nation of dvpcpticb" &nd it is true that few &re entirely free from disorders of the digestive rt, Indigestion. Dyspepsia. Stomach and Boviel trouble, or Const. pt. on. Trie treatment of these tiisea.se with cM.ha.rtk medicmcb too often fjrvtes the trouble. Tli LOGICAL TREATMENT is the use of & remedy tht will build up the system, thereby ena-blin the venous ordn to &ct evs Nature mtenoed they should. Such & remedy is found n Or rtilh&ms Pmk Pills for Pfcle People Here is the proof. r iwtrolt thenr .tt fr sollir. wion- fmpnl.r .ml rffiornt lhii Ma - " . r- of CO H H ham, l. a. 4- Th'H A venae. Fa, L he w. . bo..kkp ..... .he .hulle nrna ho- f arrand ZSZ torln Will an..' Vink P.ll. for P.I. People, but v.r (...car Umr orden. for Vt ' "' f ( hr,)tl. dy.tM.pB. jr,.,r .wo year. r"zxz --'" - b-" couid m b"d,h.:i'Zi. . - "" ,,r, "i,mrm "m! :,,rre I. rarcetv clk or affi,. an I...I ah.l i. ur. or le. . victim Some , , J - .nll,lii while l other tone. I would be .t.rvlng. ".Tne. . remedie. ...t .hey woutd help opt, f a time A Mr ire.lmron i .... , w k for p., e peo)le, nn tfler lak- iurea I IZ the pi... ... rure dyw of lu wor.t f I a. ple.-d 10 recommead lhe."-Vrre(- .""' Tt dcnuine pMW> 6w&y Nm tht Ui 6m ( At 1 druMim. stt povtpMd mi9 . f In building next birds usually avoid the use of britfht-eolored materials, which would add to the ehunees of the enemy In loeutins them. The human syntem ean endure heat of 212 doej-eeK. the boiling point of wa ter, because the Kklu Is a had conduct or, and he'-auge the pernplrtition cools the body.' .Men have withstood with out Injury a heat of UUO degrees for several minutes. A curious disparity Is evident In the authoritative estimation of the heat of the sun. I'ouillet places It at 1,400 to 1.X0O decrees Celsius (Centicnidr-), Hte. Claire Kev'.De nt 2,MiO. I.onl Kelvin iind I'rof. I-iuiKley nt S.ihui, Sir Kobert Hull at IS.Obfl. Sporer at :s,7u0 aud I'ater I.eodle at lO.OiXl.OUl) degrees. At NiHlunkenl, in the northern prov ince of Cevlon. the abnormal rnlnfnll of Inches in twenty four hours! was experienced. Nedunkenl, eleven j miles down the southern road to Mill-j lnittivu. iind VS1 feet above sen level, . Is a small villne a little to the east I of the dividing rldo of north Central j Ceylon. An iiihijitiitlon of the P.ollee horseless earrl;ie. driven by u (jasolino engine, to winter use, is dici lbed In the Sjoleu-1 tilie AniiTleaii. Ir. Cn.s;ruin. of 2ue- j bee. Is the contriver of the new form of vehicle. In pl.-icc of the pneumatic tired wheels of t he ordinary I'.oliee car riage lie substitutes st-el runner for the forepart of the enn iuge, and n di iv lug wheel, whose lliu Is studded with steel points, for the rear purl. The steering apparatus ads upon the for ward runners. The gasoline reservoir, coiii iiiuiug seven quart, suihces for a run of fifty miles. European seieiilille pape:s publish In teresting accounts of the lifih series of International balloon ascents made In June last, ltallooiis, sou. ' manned nnd some ii'iniiintied. ascended siinub tuneousl.v from various parts of Ell rope, extending from Paris to St, Pe tersburg, and in far couth as P.o i p. An unmanned balloon wlilclr starled fiom Paris and dropped In Westphalia, reached n height of about ten miles nml recorded a minimum temperature of K'l degrees Fahrenheit, Iwdow zero. A balloon carrying 'Or. Bersnn from Peilln attained an elevation of about lS.tMKI feet, more ihau .tH" feet li'gher than the summit of Mont Hlalic. The lowest temperature thai he experi enced was between In aud 11 degrees below zero. Professor Koch, famous for his d s coverli for a cure of consumption, li.is recently been investigating the origin of the plague, and has discovered a pre viously unknown center from which It emanates. Heretofore three chief cen ters of the plague have lieen known, one in China In the Province of 1 1 una n, second in THs-t, and the third near Mecca In Arabia. The last-named II one of the most dreaded on account of the immense number of pilgrims who visit the holy city of Mohammed. The Dew renter of disease discovered by Profenaor Koch la situated In the In terior of equatorial Africa, behind tha German pmwetaloiM oa tha eurt coast, Weight or Deep Sea AVr.ter. When marine life began to command notice, the question of the depth to which life could extend divided scien tific thought iuto wun iiig camps. About 1MU it was generally believed that the btituymetrical limit was about 3M) fath oms, and some strange Ideas were .cur rent as to the physical condition of wa ter when under a pressure such as a denth of two miles would produce. It was thought that skeletons of drowned men or even heavy cannon and the "wedges of gold" that popular imagin ation places in the sea, tloated at cer tain levels, beneath which Is waler so compressed as to be Impenetrable. In (fact, water is almost Incompressible, and the weight of a cubic incn or it at the depth of a mile Is very little more than at the surface, but it was as sumed that no living being could sur vive a pressure which at 1,000 fathoms is about a ton to the square Inch. We ourselves live under a pressure of about fifteen pounds per inch, and are unaware of It. Indeed, we sometimes waken on a morning when the barom eter lias risen, say, half an Inch during the night, and consequently find our selves sustaining an Increased pressure of several tons not only without suffer ing, but with a positive feeling of buoy ancy and good spirits. On the other hand, If the tremendous pressure under wn.ch we live be relieved as by a sur gical "cup," severe injury may follow. Aeronauts suffer from this cause and marine animals dredged from great depth often reach the surface in a most lamentable condition, with eyes pro truding and viscera distended. North American lleyiew. Fin ftjfctlicra often make eorry jail bird. 'i ;e the silent man that is UFually Worlii iisiei ing to. thts boy witli made-over trousers tkm after his father, featan smiles every time he eees tw6 men trying to trade horses A sandbag in the hands of the hold up man is a stunning affair. Tue scorcher evidently believes in put ir.g his Bhoulder to the wheel. Truth is stranger than fiction to most lople probably becuice th 'y don't care 'or an introduction, C V) vi '$ SLICKER WILL KEEP YOU DRY. J5t ( orreci iu (icographles. The mo, e accessible poi i:n.s of the globe having be.-a explored, geogra phers are tmw correcting Iheir imper fect neor's. The text books and the lu lent maps represent the Arctic coast of Siberia us a tint, waler-tojikisl tun dra, but tills Hr. K. Hiklsh has just pointed out to the Russian Ceograph Ical Society is decidedly wrong. Only In the region of the Obi has the ArcH . low, flat Shores. East of the Yenesel to Ilering Strait, as early explorers knew, the (hvi.s'.s lire high, and in the east of the Kolyma even hilly, and there are only deltas at the mouths of the Oienek, the Lena, the Yiuta nnd the Indlghirka. San Finiicwco Chronicle. Don't he fooled with a mai-kintosh nr rubhercoat. If Vou wan. a coat J! JfM that will keep yotl drv in the hard fSliriest storm buy the Fish Brand Vl il J Slkker. If not for sale in your a town, write tor catalogue to A J 1 Own, Koston wass The St. Joseph and Grand Island It-Alias Oitj and Omaha Bailwayi SHORTEST AND QUICKEST ROUTES iRt THE AND QUICKEST TO ALL rOINTfl NORTH WEST EAST SOUTH kZ Union Pacfio 871161. AK Til K FAVOKITK .INKS To California, Orecon an1 (ill Weitern Point. or inlorm.tton ret'ar'ibot rule?-, etc., r.ll or, or addren neimt n rent or . M. Adkit, W. V. Robinion. Jk.. i'-n. !' Ai Ge.i'l M"Tifteer v.-n-. now lnepenlv. .nil rt how ertertlve line;reat niliitltiue lur itlihur lallis. (ilnn'n Siili-hur Siihij. Ulll tlalr aud Whlsknr I o. Iila:k ur Itruwn. r.oc. Li-g" pack. go paicnw rk or eilk pieces Kent for ene dime. If TVI Bravton Attol Vti'o-- Joiin D. Rockefe ler has let the con tract for the Urgest monolith evr quarried in the United States. Ic wil& mark the fanvly lot of John D. Rocke feller in Lakeview c metary, CIY laml, O. The monument will be fttt dioualy plain, but it will attrpct atten tion from its mammoth ei.e. The uioa-- ument will be fifty-five feet high frwnk the Use to the tip. It will be (sua teen feet equ"r at the base. It will be rcafei' on the same rulge the Gar field memorial, and will be the ceute of a circle of vaults lor the remains 0$ the Roekefell- r family, 1 Snow Statues Snow statues are the lat'eM' form or artistic freak, and their creator is M. Pierre Roche, a French sculptor of :-Nv pute. The Btrtlue is made of cojfrer, and in the base is a reservoir filiue fled carbonic acid used to generate .th . cold, and the moisture vMcli!;l8... ab-.,-' Btraeted from the atiuotsphere, . formir on the surface of the metal as a,, coat- ing of snow in the course of a few mo ments, and Ik pre-vanted from thawing by the freezing mixture. 4 A pre-ventive of Ffrer.- 10 preveui mra ii,-ht u'a auu t chimneys pass through iu flammable) partitions water Jackets of tin en? Ggbt metal are placed around the opeiiings. the solder of: the pockets.melting.in.jh? . heat and discharging the fluid o.i); tha, fire. They were seated in the parlor con rersin on the uncertainty of life. Sh -The future Is a vast, unfathomable mystery to us, isn't it? He Yes; auV we know is that we have to go ome Hme Voice from the library It woulit ! mit the convenience of this household. If you'd make it a little sooner urnw Lhnt Richmond Dispatch. D STCHT"'0"'' "r r'T rstarcci. Search free I A I tn I C(,l: imr ( i q K Si Wathingion.lJ.C CURE YOURSELF! Iw Bijr J for unnuurlh difcbargM, tnttaiuuifttiuu irriutioi.1 or ulcrtion M auiatsr. of UtUCOII B.IJll)lII, -.'St- -t ri... mnii P .nl nr Mlanrxija. roitiHtCTW !," r ti no. orSbottlM. i.7. Circular Mat ra Get Your ecnawHa DOUBLE C QUICK t Wnt6 dpt. O'FAEHELL, PeaiiOB kgtti, Waihiegtca, B.&, An It la in Georgia. The following Is a copy of a sljrn in a remote Georgia county: "A Few Bright Scholars Tnkln to Iern Wrltln, Spallin an riggers." A traveler, noticing the sign, asked the principal where he had graduated. The principal pointed to a cotton Meld near by nnd said: "Right over thar, sir; Ixdilnd a Georgia mule, under a July sun." AcoomrroUatlng. First Actor The people of Tough town have a bard reputation. Second Actor-Vey. I hear that this year cgg are to lie sold at the ticket office to accommodate the patrons of the theater. Life. Every man knows by his own experi ence bow many prom I sea of the lover are Oiled after marriage. Still, he goes on bellavlng what candidates are promising. Every d rainmaker beam a great dead about bunhanda who are not very gen erotia wllh tbelr money. Logic prorea or dlaproves nil thlnrs but It doesn't accomplish any of them. Lots of people who eMng te the aa ctwr of hope jo dowa In the ornd. LIO Bear in Mind that "The Gods Help Those Who Help Themselves." Seif Help Should Teach You to Use SAPO It 000000000 o In a Tourist Slooping Gar-- Penonally conducted via the Burlington Route tliat't the way to go to California. Why t Because you don't change cm ) you make fait time j you ee the fineit tccnery on the glnlie. Your car il not 10 expemively finished nor so fine to look at at a , palace sleeper, but it il just as clean, just a comfortable, just is good to . ride in. AND NEARLY $10 CHliAPER. The Burlington excursions leave Omaha irA Lincoln every Thonv day, reaching San Francisco Sunday and Los Angeles Monday, Porter with each car. F.scunion manager with each party, For folder giving . fall information, write to J. FRANCIS, a P. A., BtirHntrtoa Route, Osssaha, Nat). 300000000 o a o o o o o a a o o o o o ( y ococcocccocooc