Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911 | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1911)
9 . r i i v 0T You'll be de- Jr lighted with the re- UYR J suits of Calumet Baking H oF Powder. No disappoints wfl B no flat, heavy, soggy biscuits, H cake, or pastry. afl H Just the lightest, daintiest, most BR uniformly raised and most deli- af BR cious food you ever ate. aV WL H.clxd til(titt reward World's jBm Bhw Purs Food exposition, ar R etituco. isor. gfy PUT YOUTH ON HIS GUARD Evidently Recital of Romance Long Passed Made No Appeal to His Feelings. "Charles." said a sharp-voiced wom en to hor husband in a railway car riauu. "do you know that you and 1 mice had a romance in a railway car riage?" "Never heard of it." replied Charles to :i subdued tone. "1 thought you hadn't; but don't you remember. It wau that pair of slippers ' presented to you the Christmas be fore wo were married that led to our union? You remember how nicely they fitted, don't you? Well. Charles, Due day when we were going to a pic nic you had your feet upon a seat, mil when you were not looking I took your measure. Hut for that pair or slippers 1 don't believe we'd have ever been married." A young unmarried man sitting by Immediately took down his feet lrom the beat. Ideas Magazine. No Excuse at All. X. C. Goodwin, the comedian, was condemning a new comedy at a din ner in New York. "Its climax." he said, "is false and unsatisfactory as false and unsatis factory as Uowndar's excuse. "Un Uowndar's return at a very late hour, his wile said reproachfully: "'You used to vow 1 was the sun shine of your life, but now ou stay iut niuht after night.' "'Well, my love.' said Rowndar. 'I don't ask for sunshine after dark. " Truth a Trouble Maker. A West Philadelphia man and his wife have separated. None of their friends know why. but one, being curi ous, asked the husband: "What was the trouble between you ! end your wife?" (. nothing much. She honuht a new hat for ?U0 and asked me . a. I thought of it. Ami I told lit r. T s ail." REASONED IT OUT And Found a Change in Food Put Him Right. A man does not count as wasted the time he spends in thinking over his business, but he seems loth to givo the samo sort of careful attention to himself and to his health. And yet bis business would be worth, little without good health to care for it. A business man tells how he did him relf good by carefully flunking over bis physical condition, investigating to find out what was needed, and then changing to the right food. "For some years I had been bother rd a great deal after meals. My food teemed to lay like lead in my stomach, producing heaviness and dullness and sometimes positive pain. Of course this rendered me more or less unlit for business, and I made up my mind that something would have to be dona Reflection led me to the conclusion that over-eating, filling the stomach with indigestible food, was responsible for many of the ills that human flesh endures, and that I was punishing myself in that way thai was what was making me so dull, heavy and un comfortable, and unfit for business after meals. I concluded to try Grape Nuts food to see what it could do for me. "I have teen using it for some months now, and am glad to say that I do not suffer any longer after meals; my food seems to assimilate easily and perfectly, and to d the work To: which it was intended. "1 have regained my normal weight, and find that business is a pleasure once more can take more interest in it. and my mind is clearer and more alert." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creel:, Mich. Head "The Road to Wellville." in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Kver nad ITae nfcove letter? A ei ne appear from time to time. Tkej fire cnnlBe, true, aad lull of koaui Interest. SB" fyMLi&r a-bBW" ""'' ABsmaRT BeT"I'-V The hens oueht to lay. U is the little things that count. Delightful April days and little chicks. Keep a sharp outlook for head lice and get rid of them. Give all of your fowls plenty of lre"h air and sunshine. Ewes Fhould not be used for breed ing before a year and a half old. llnn't food the newly-hatched chicks until they are about thirty-six hours old. Shorts mixed with corn meal and moistened witlisKimmiiK mattes a. nue mash. Although good ewes should be kept, it is not necessary that they be pure bred. It doesn't take so much work to care for sheep as for cows, and the work is pleasanter. A building 14 by IS feet is large enough for 30 hens. Keep it free from drarts. moderately warm, sunny. No food nor nourishment about chai coal not a bit. but it is a correc tor that helps the chicks digestion. Give the pigs exercise and sunshine from birth, but do not allow them to get damp nor to be exposed to the wind. Sunflower seed Is a valuable winter food for poultry, mixed with cracked corn, wheat and oats. The seed is rich in oil. The pullets should be brought to maturity as soon as is consistent with the normal development and body growth. Ten acres of timber, cared for, will return a larger profit, ultimately, than any other ten 'acres a western farmer can cultivate. Watch tho breeding birds and make sure that they are keeping in good condition. Give them an outdoor scratching place. As soon as a crop appears above ground it needs cultivation, both to kill the weeds and to admit the air to the roots of the plants. A wide-spreading shade tree Is a joy to sheep in the pasture field in summer, and a real rest out of the sun at noon does them good. The cows due to calve next month, if there is no bran or flaxseed meal on hand, should be given one peck of nubbin corn, divided into two feeds. The main crop of onions is usually grown from seed sown in the open field in rows 12 to 14 inches distant and thinned to three inches in the row. There is a vast deal of time wasted on many farms in traveling from one nart to another, the waste being due to the fact that the buildings are not centrally located. Produce commission men state that of late years there has sprung up a great demand for late fall-hatched chicks to be marketed in early spring before broilers are "ripe." A- young man who has had the ad vantage of a two-year course at a good agricultural college Is better pre pared for his work than the man that has never had this advantage. Give plenty or green food while the ground is frozen. Cabbages, onions, steamed clover, boiled potatoes and turnips, with a warm meal mash, are excellent for pullets and bens ready to lay. Roll the lawn as soon as the repairs have been made, to firm the soil about the grass roots. The heaving of the frost probably has loosened the top soil, which will allow the ground to dry out quicker. As the weather is still cold, not more than 11 eggs should be given a hen. When a larger number is al lowed, the eggs are not sufficiently covered, and those on the outer edges of the clutch are likely to become chilled. It must be borne in mind that not all breeds of poultry will sit and brood their own young. Certain breeds such as those in the Mediter ranean class (Leghorns), arc called "non sitters." and can scarcely ever be induced to sit. If you haven't one already, get ready to plant a strawberry bed. For a farmer not to have strawberries on his table is as bad as for a prosper ous poultry man to serve tough chick en to company. One dairy farm in New York state is equipped with a 12-horse power porta ble engine which operates at different times or in tandem a four-roll mounted husker. a grinder, a shcller. a separa tor, a belted pump jack, a feed cooker and a very neat and clean washing out fit for cans, pails and bottles. Stock breeding is an art. Droopy chicks usually means lice. Eggs may be fertile and yet not batch well. Wheat leads all grains as a well balanced poultry food. Eggs for batching should be gath ered at frequent Intervals. A suitabie place for storing eggs In tended for batching Is necessary. Thoroughly compact the soil about the seeds, and so hasten gcrmlna- (Inn There Is as much In the feed and management of poultry as In the breed. The nearer we can keep pigs of the same size together, the better thev will feed. If doing well, fall pigs may be weaned at six or seven weeks. If not. wait a little. The profit to be made on lambs dc- , pends much upon the care of the ewes before lambing. Although a large sheep may roll for more than a small one. it also eosta more to rear it. Better have a small (lock reared In romfort and all good, than a large flock and only a few good. The incubator is always broody n n needs is the attention oi the operator to start tne natcu. Ranking up around tho barn will help keep it warmer by shutting out the cold winds from beneath. Make friends of your turkeys, so far as you can, and it will aid you considerably in caring for them. Hurry along the tomatoes by trlnu mmg to one stem, and when the third cluster has formed cut off the top. Men of experience hold that more money can be made by breeding older ewes, as stronger lambs are more profitable. Keeping the drinking vessels clean and therefore free from disease germs will often prevent sickness among chickens. One of tho best foods for sitting hens is whole corn or corn chop, to-' gether with green food, grit and fresh water. One good thing to remember in the( raising of onions is that the gardener does not necessarily have to go to a warm climate. Remember that rows which run north and south allow the sun's rays to reach both sides of the plant a distinct advantage. A little shelled corn mixed in with the ground feed you give your horses will help to keep them from swallow ing their food too fast. One of the principal advantages of having poultry and fruit together is that there is not a rush at one sea son and a rest at another. Bring up this year's flocks of chicks in fresh-air coops and houses. You1 will have better chickens and less trouble from colds next fall. If sitters foul their nests or break eggs in them, clean up balance of thei eggs by washing with lukewarm wa ter and change the nesting material.' The requirements of the dairy cow are good, wholesome food, regularity in feeding and milking, good care and! treatment and plenty of open-air ex ercise. Topdress the asparagus bed with, bonemeal and nitrate of soda. These, are better than barnyard manure, as they do not introduce nearly so many weed seeds. The value of alfalfa in comparison' with prairie hay or cane is higher when fed to cattle that are to be sold, in the spring than when fed to cattle that are not to be sold. There is no poultry meat that, comes so near the flavor of game birds as the guinea fowl and for this reason it Is growing more and more in favor as a market bird. It Is common knowledge nowadays among poultry-keepers that charcoal has properties that make it invaluable as a corrective, or as a means of counteracting gastric troubles. For thin clay soils sub-soiling Is better than very deep plowing, be cause It does not turn the compact clay to the surface, yet at the same time loosens the soil to a good depth. Those who are making the most money out of beekeeping today, keep the bees working all the time. To do this necessitates a knowledge of the business beyond the mere handling of them. A second or third class lamb Is worth $n on the market. A first-class sells as readily at ?6 or 17. A profit in one case of about SI. in the other $2 or $3. No wonder some farmers make three times what others do. Wheat middlings are a very desir able grain food for sows that are suckling a litter, and mixed with other milk-producing foods such as ground oats, corn in limited quanti ties, tankage and oil meal to give variety to the ration, make excellent rations for the sows. Pigs are troubled by rheumatism more than by any other disease. Its work is so insidious oftentimes and its attacks so various in form that it is not recognized, but it may be set down as a rule that if the pig is afflicted by some mysterious malady, particulariy one that incapacitates it in some saaa ner. it is rheumatism. tOTSS:WKratt?Sft9MttWSSSKtt.S.ttWtttttt lj East $$$$$$$$ I am a simple Easier sown. With trimming nimng up aad dowa; my ' price, however, I must say. is always on the upward way. Tie wives and daughters fuss at roe, and twitch aad pull maliciously, and vow that I will never fit, aad jokers turn $$,$$.$?$$$$$ their caustic wit upoa aw sweep- &$$$$ $$$$$$$$$&$ mg curves and laws, and poke fua at my new designs, and say that 1 would quite be lost if k were not for my great cost The lovely women, though, are placed within me, squeezed to hold $$ the waist, and with relentless vigor laced until correctly they're encased; then forth they go, all out of breath, and tied and twisted half to death, but joyful when in some great crowd they hear remarks that make them proud such whispers as: "0, look at her!" 'i wonder who her modistes were!" and "How deliriously it swings!" or "Don't she choose the swellest things!" Again, the women lose delight when some one says: "She is a fright!" or "Mercy, what a horrid shade !" or "That dress is cheap ready made!" or"Heavens! Look at how she's laced!"or, "Ever see such awful taste?" And still I'm not the least to blame; she is the picture, I'm the frame. I try to rustle like a Worth, and try to look the best on earth. What puzzles me is why the men should growl like lions in a den whenever wife or daughter says she wants to buy me; why they praise my swing and hang and goods and fit, and speak of me with kindly wit, if I may chance to grace and drape some other wife or daughter's shape. Perhaps their view of me is dimmed when they see bow I'm gayly trimmed. S.$.$.$. .$.s. 'SJlNjSP'JWS,Vt'S'-S vv,',,fv',taxioax THE DAY AND a The Goddess of Easter a N a great cave in a moun tain of Thuringia there dwelt in by-gone days a goddess called by some peo ple the White Lady, by others Ostara or Easter. This deity had a large train of attendants, for it was her work to watch over and guard the souls of unborn children. When she went abroad. the kind goddess looked after the flow ers and the plants which sprung blooming in her pathway, and her in fant train, each with a watering-pot in hand, gave the thirsty plants water to nourish them. Though surrounded by all these lit tle ones. Easter's abode was not a noisy place. The goddess herself was renowned for her silence, and though she was gifted with foresight and knew all that was to happen in the world, she never revealed the secrets, which fate, with a kind hand, hid from man's eyes. To time and experience the White Lady left the harsh duty or dragging from youth's hopes the veil of illusion. For her, each moment as It came was full of its own interests, and she put from her the visions or the future. As typical of this silence which she wore as a crown, so freighted was it with wisdom. Easter was always accompa nied by a heron and crowned with heron plumes, the symbol of silence or forgetfulness. This beneficent goddess possessed also a magic fountain called Quick born, which was virtually a fountain of youth. So the goddess herself was always young, and her attendants, babes, birds, rabbits and flowers were always fresh and fair, like "lilies in the morning with the dew upon them " Easter was the goddess or spring, of the new life, of the resurrection, ard in her honor, the people presented to each other on her feast-day, presents of eggs, many colored, as symbols of the new life. The colors in the eggs were signs of the many-hued clouds REAL BLESSING TO MANKIND Easter Observance Meant Much For the Welfare of the Christian World. This is the time of Easter, the mov able feast of the church by which all the other movable feasts are arranged in the calendar, the accepted anniver sary of the central fact in Christianity and Christendom, the most joyful of all observances to the pious heart. To understand its spirit and the numberless customs and usages that have grown up around it notice must be taken of its origin and character. The crucifixion of Christ plunged his followers into despair, and this de spair heightened their joy when he rose again. In like manner, ever since the self denial of Lent and the solem nities of Good Friday, increase the cheerfulness and gayety of Easter. In some countries and at one period of the church's history this revulsion of feeling took the form of extravagance and even levity. Not only were the ceremonials and music of the churches sublime and sm ?& Sr "'"" '9Kf WfaaaVvRJaam. - T 'lis i i7ll P'n " " rifcn l l V w!1 AST 5nhm VVVVVVwWpVVV $$$$$$$$$$ $$$ THE GODDESS s Legend Pictures Her. that the White Lady spun. For spin ning was one of her great tasks, and many golden threads she wove into the lives of her chosen ones. Often, at nightfall, the goddess would wander through the darkened cities, looking at the work of the maidens. Where she found the spin ning carefully performed, she fre quently left a distaff full of extra-fine flax, or perhaps a golden strand of her own weaving. Hut where she found the work carelessly done, or neglected, she left the flax soiled or the spinning-wheel broken. Once a year the goddess took out her sacred car. and mounting it, went along the Milky Way. As she drove over the lands, all the coldness of win ter passed away and spring awoke in all Its gladness. The leafless trees shook out their tiny buds; the flowers raised their heads and smiled. Hirds began to twitter on the boughs and the rabbits began to run about. Then, too. little children came from their homes and played In the sunshine, and Easter, looking down, smiled to s?c the earth glnd with the same life that filled her cave in the misty moun tains. One time the car of the Vhite Lady was damaged. She told a wheelwright to repair it. and ror payment said he should keep the chips. The man was indignant, not knowing who the god dess was. and kept but a few pieces What was his amazement on the mor row, to find the waste wood turned to gold. But the pieces that he had dis carded he could not find. So he learned wisdom from his folly, as per haps we all most learn. As long as the goddess was dul honored she remained in her home, blessing the people. Hut once, it is recorded, she left her cave, her infant train dragging her plow, and took up her abode in a distant land. Then sorrow and mourning spread among the people, and in pity, the goddess returned and restored her patt favor and benefits. So the land was glad dened once more. magnificent, but the day was ushered in with the firing of cannon, and peo ple formally congratulated each other on the resurrection. Then, carried away with the excitement of the occa sion, there was much buffoonery, which perhaps It is just as well not to recall. One of the plcasantest usages of the day was the donning of new clothes, as a symbol both of the renewal ot nature and of the new hope created by the resurrection of Christ. There were long ages In which th observance of Easter was confined to the Catholic and Episcopal churches, while other Christian bodies viewed it with dislike or on principle condemned it. The Puritans in particular ab horred it as something idolatrous and sacrilegious. But little by little this prejudice has faded away until now some respectful notice of the day, if nothing more, is almost universal. So be it; everything that promotes joy fulness in the human heart, beauty and decorum in human life, -and thoughts of the love and providence of God in the human mind is a Mess ina to mankind. Spring Debility Felt by so many upon tho return of warm weather is due to the Impure, impoverished, devttaUxed condition of the Mood which causes that tired feeling and toss of appetite as well as the pimples, boils and other eruptions so common atthlsseason. It is cured by the great constitutional remedy Hood's SarsapariHa which effects its wonderful cures, not simply because it contains sarsaparil la, but because it combines the utmost remedial values of more than twenty different ingredients. There is no real substitute for Hood's Sarsaparilla. If urged to buy any preparation said to be "just as good," yon may be nut it is inferior, costs less to make, ami yields the dealer a larger profit MADE HIS ESCAPE IN TIME! Metaphors of Millionaire Found Ne Response in the Breast of the Farmer. The millionaire accepted the farm er's cordial invitation to ride, and with much scrambling gained a scat on top of the bay. ".My good man." said the millionaire, patronizingly, "this swaying, rolling, sweet-scented divan is a couch upon which I could win slumber and be ir resistible to the arms of Morpheus whenever 1 courted sweet sleep.' The farmer stiffened. "I'll hear no more of yur talk; I'm a respectable married man. an I'll ask you where you're goln so I can avoid the place." Dreamily the millionaire smiled. 'I'm gotting back to Mother Nature, who has been outraged and abused by me for years; I am a broken man, and she will forgive me and bring me back to health." The farmer stopped the team and pulled a three-tined pitchfork from the brace socket but his passenger was gone. Success Magazine. PHYSICAL WRECK RESTORED TO HEALTH BY 6REAT MO NEY REMEDY I feel it my duty to furnish you with ray testimonial as to what your remedy, b'wamp-Root, did for me when I was a physical wreck from kidney and bladder trouble. Some years ago I was not able to do any work and could only just creep around nml am satisfied that had it not been for Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root I would not j have lived. After using the preparation for one month I was able to work some and when I had used $8.00 worth of Swamp-Root I could do a good day's work. I used about $10.00 worth altogether and would not take $10,000 for the good that it did me. I consider it a God-send to suffer ing humanity for the disease for which you recommend "it, and have recommended it to many sufferers. H. L. HUGGINS, Welch, Ark. Personally appeared before me this 20th of September, 1909, H. L. Huggins, who ubscribed the above statement and made oath that the same is true in substance and in fact. vT. A. PAGE, J. P. letter la Br. UlmrACa. BtaftMriaa. S. T. Prove What Swsas-Reet WH De For Yoa Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham ton, X. Y.. for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. For rale at all drug stores. Price fifty cents and one-dollar. Truly Wonderful Cat. A wonderful cat is that owned by Mr. A. J. Gorringe, a tradesman of Ditching. Kngland. Mr. Gorringe has a bantam which lays her eggs in dif ferent parts of the yard, but his cat never Tails to And them. She takes the egg between her teeth, places it on the step, and rattles the door han dle with her paws until her mistress arrives to take in the egg. Not one of the eggs has yet been broken. Kyr Salve la Aseptic Taken Prevent Infection Murine Kye Salve In Tnlifs for all Kye Ills. No Morphine. .Ask DniKslsts for Now Size 2."ic. Val uable Kye Book in Each Package. Indication of Wisdom. "Why do they call the owl the bird of wisdom?" "It stays out all night and doesnt tell what it sees or does." Judge. LADiriS CAN WEAK SHOES oe slxe smaller after usIhk Allrn loot-Esse. th Ant'iM-ptic powdrr to ! shaken into tlio t-hors. It taakri. tight irccw ilMK-sfecl caty. (tirsrrktaat nimfort. Ittfiit' u'-.fiu For KRKK trial package address Allrn S. Clmsu-d, Lo Cor, X. T. We always like those who admlro us; we do not always like those whom we admire. Francis Due de Roche faucau'd. You are not treating Totirwlf or your family fairly if oii don't keep Hamlin Wizard Oil in the Iioum. It t!ielct substitute for family doctor and a mighty good friend in case of emergency- Why quarrel over religion when all men agree all men. that is, at the same grade of intellect? Garfield Tea will win your approval. It is pleasant to take, mild in action and very health-giving. It overcomes constipation. The proper time to do a thing Is when it should be done. Smoker like l.etvis Single Binder cigar for its rich mellow quality. A pleasant smile and a sweet voice re great helps on life's journey. A Poor Weak Woman As aae is tensed, wfll eadore bravely aad patieatly aoaieB which a ttroag amaa would five way under. The fact is wotaea are store patieaC tbaa they eaght to be oader each troablea. Every woaaaa oafat to kaow that abe ssay obtaia the moat experMoeed aiedieal advice free if charge sad ia akmimte eenfdeme sad privacy by writiag to the World's Dispensary Medical Aaseciatioa, R. V. Pierce, M. D Presideat, Baftale, N. Y. Dr. Pierce has beea chief consaltiag phyciciaa of the Iavalids Hotel sad Sartfical Institute, of Bufalo, N. Y., for say years aad has had a wider practical experience ia the treatment of women's diseases than nay other phyaictaa His medicines are world-famoas for their astonishing eficacy. The most perfect reset dy ever devised for weak t oate woosea is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescriatioa. IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG. SICK WOMEN WELL. The bust sad vcried symptoms oi woman's peculiar ailments are fully set forth ia Plain English ia the People's Medical Adviser (1008 pages), a newly revised aad up-to-date Edition, cloth-boaad, will be seat on receipt of 31 one eaat stamps to psy coat of wrapping aad' mailing sao. Address as r bovc. what did he meant aaadiaaaaaaM aar a v vvraaae City Man Grow all your own Tegs tables, I suppose? Farmer Grouch Most of 'em. W get some cabbage heads from the city. Laundry work at home would TM much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually Beces sary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric 1 hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear ing quality of the goods. This trou ble can be entirely overcome by uslag Defiance Starch, as It can be applied much more thinly because of Its great er strength than other makes. Classification. "Sir." said a little blustering man to a religious opponent: "I say, sir, do you know to what sect I belong?" "Well, I don't exactly know," was the answer; "but to judge by your make, shape, and size, 1 should say you belonged to a class called the lm sect." Important to Mothers . Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA. a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that It Pafiro tli a Signature of LJ(mC6A&ju4 In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Feeble Guardianship. "I wonder." said the Sweet Touag Thing, "why a man is always so frightened when he proposes?" "That," said the Chronic Bachelor, "is his guardian angel trying to hold him back." Stray Stories. Good breeding is benevolence fat trifles, or the preference of others to ourselves in the little dally occur rences of life. Chatham. Plants have movement without win, animals have the will to live, humaa being have the will to live divinely. A man doesn't have to be a deteo tlve in order to find fault. 9 Make the liver Do its Duty tflaatawWtl atoaudiaadbowekaranak. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER FILLS sefafrtafesuVc sclahzy brer t Sick Headache, aawl Distress after Eatiag. Saua psa Sawa dm. aaa phm GtRffURBatk Signature :i PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM aad toaatma aw an lamriant maau If vr Valla to Baator Orayl niir w jib inguini vviar. Can mip diarMM "-""-a- OcandaiJOOt Praarlra RUPTURE CURED in a few days witaeat paia or a i tieal petatjaa. no pay rum eoiM. marar tare. Dr.Wray.307 Boo ldg.,Omaha, Not). CWTCCDCTAafCC prize ulnrdnjcReideYal Olf Urol AAXd - rt seetl Corn, $UH per bu.. $2.50 prr bu. fur 2) bo. or more Order fruni this ail or 6end for catalog. AYR BK09., BLAIR. (HEKD CORN CENTER VV THK WORLD) NEBRASKA. BOX 14. PATENTS WatMl E.CaleBiaatWatb. lalo. 1.C uuokffraa. Hlaa eat ztlcreacea. Bmt itttclia W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 15-1911. this country. ddcO MrfariaksW BaVaK3hkrSa, aiaaaaWrifyrciN daaaduhr. ..TsBBBBBBBBlvnKilJrw CsCeawV fflTTLt Id-it'ifaPtaW I PILLS. tiesw T V osssssl 4p e'1"c-' S&L- ZBrT afSPJpL -.3 -j.. IX W:rL,.