Newspaper Page Text
Br HOLD Bit ft WILLIAMSON.
VOL. XVIII.
R. E. HOE & CO.'S
NEW FALL GOODS!
Our stock embraces an immense variety of Dress Goods in plain
and fancy weavee—Coverts, Broad Cloths, Ladies
Cloth, PiDgalines Poplins, Whip Cords,
Crepons, Benga’ine, Chenille Dress
Goods, and Chenille Trim
mings to match.
Silks, Ribbons, Satins, Laces, Embroideries, Hosiery, Under
wear, Gloves, Men's and Ladies’ Mackintoshes, Blank
ets, Curtains, Rugs, Hassocks—All fresh
choice goods, at exceptional values.
ATT-n TbF) * n rees G°°cK with a very few
M K 'r KI(. Hc} excepti ns, will be cheaper than
ever, instead of higher.
New lot Ladies
Shoes just in—prettiest,
newest styles,
Qur Clothing Stock
Surpasses all former efforts. The goods wear well
and fit well. Over fourteen hundred suits to select
from, and they are going at a bargain.
We wish to call the attention of the Seminary girls to our
11 4 all wool $3 50 Blankets. They are Beauties.
R. E. ANDOE & CO.,
14 Main Street, Telephone 9.
GAINESVILLE, GA .
SELF INTEREST
Almost governsthe world, in one way or another. To this
self same interest we appeal now, In offering
you VALUES in
DRY GOODS, SHOES AND CARPETS,
which cannot be equaled else where. Do not neglect
this opportunity to buy bargains. Took at
a few specimen prices:
150 ladies all wool suits, tailor made,
from $4 to sl2 50.
200 Ladies Wrappers, from 50e to $2
26 Ladies Silk Petticoats, from $3 to $8
200 Ladies Plain and Fancy Satine Under
skirts, 750 to $2 25
300 Ladies genuine Plush Capes, from $2
to S2O.
500 Ladies Cloth Capes, from 50e to $lO.
200 Ladies Jackets, from $1 98 to sl2.
300 Misses and Children's Jackets, Suits
and Reefers, from $1.25 to $5.
Carpets, Mattings, Rugs, Curtains, Poles and Shades, at Unmatchable Prices.
DUE. MYERS <Sc OCX, ATHENS, GA.
SPECIAL —300 Ladies Wool and Silk Top Skirts, from $1 to sls.
% |
(. Who uses lgloheart’s Swans Down j
P ' Aj lA Flour is always sure that her bread j
S) it conies from the oven will be feathery* I
and as white as the flour from which it;
efli. i \ s made. A superlative patent flour, milled j
from the very finest winter wheat —
1 ' IGLEHEART’S i
Swans Down Flour
' e sweetest, the most wholesome and the most economical
that grocer ever sold. Ask for it at your grocer's.
IGLEHEART BROS., Evansville, Ind.
THE JACKSON HERALD.
THE DREADED
COHSEJIPTIO*.
T. A . Slocum. M. 0., the Great Chemist
and Scientist, Will Send Free, to the
Afflicted, Three Bottles of ilia
Newly Discovered Remedies
to Cure Consumption
and All Lung Trou
bles.
Nothing can be fairer, more phil
anthropic or carry more joy t-o the af
flicted, than the offer of T. A. Slocum,
M. C., of 183 Pearl street, New Yoak
City.
C mfident that he has discovered
an absolute core for consumption and
all pulmonary complaints, and to make
its great merits known, he will send
free, three bottles of medicine, to any
reader of Tub Jackson Herald who
is suffering from chest, bronchial,
throat and lung troubles or consump
tion.
Already this “new scientific coarse
of medicine” has permanently cured
thousands of apparently hopeless
cases.
The Doctor considers it his relig
ious duty—a duty which he owes to
humanity—to denote his infaliiable
cure.
Offered freely, is enough to com
mend it, and more so is the perfect
confidence of the great chemist mak
ing the proposition.
He has proved the dreaded con
sumption to b 9 a curable disease be
yond any doubt.
There will b9no mistake in sending
—the mistake will be in overlooking
the generous invitation. He has on
file in his American and European
laboratories testimonials-of experience
from those cured, in all parte of the
world.
Don’t delay until it is too late. Ad
dress T. A Slocum, M. C 98 Pine
street, New York, and when writing
the doctor, pleeee give express and
postoffice address, and mention read
ing this .article in Tub Jackson Hfb
<ld
AN TEA cures Dvspef.
I lif HtVI v sia, Constipation and Indi
gestion. Regulates the Liver. Brice. 25 ets
Gainesville Iron Works,
GAINESVILLE, GA.,
MANUFACTURERS OF
Stamp Mills, Saw Mills, Cane
Mills, Evaporators and
General Mill Castings.
MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS FOR
Engines, Boilers, and Improved Turbines,
W aer Wheels and Steam Pumps. Deal
ers in Wrought Iron Pipe, Fittings
and Supplies.
600 pieces Dresß Goods, 10c to $1 60.
50 dozen Ladies Underwear, at all j rices.
800 paiis Ladies Vici Kid Shoes, all
stjlep, warranted, at $1 60.
600 pairs Custom-mace Welt Sloes, at
$2 26, woith $3.
600 pairs cf the best Misses and Chil
dren’s Shoes in the city.
School Shoes, all kinds, to suit c very child.
600 pairs Men’s Bar and welt Vici Box Calf,
Calf, Willow Calf, Burt & Packard make, $3.
400 beys f cbocl Euitp, ages 4 to 14 year-*,
$1.25, $l5O, $1.75, worth double as much.
You’ll Never Know
j,ow comfortable a side-bar buggy can be made until
you ride in one that has the Thomas Coil Springs. They make the buggy
ride easier, hang more evenly and look neater. You can easily and cheaply
replace any style of side-bar springs with ii
The THOMAS
COIL SPRINGS A v £§,
The best carriage makers in the country now use them on
their best work. If your carriage maker or wheelwright /
won't supply you, write for full description and prices. / CT - k£3. \
The Buffalo Spring Sc Clear Cos., Buffalo, New York. I ! l
Griffith W elelr,
COTTON FACTORS,
We know that the best prices ard heaviest weights will always bring us
plenty of cotton to handle. We therefere, give our entire attention to our
customers in teres to. Liberal advances made.
DEVOTED TO JACKSON COUNTY AND THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY.
JEFFERSON, JACKSON COUNTY, GA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1898.
MONTHLY
SUFFERING.
women are
troubled, at
monthly inter- \\
vals with pains
in the bead,
back, breasts, a
shoulders.sides
hips and limbs,
But they need ISga
not suffer.
These pains are symptoms of
dangerous derangements that
can be corrected. The men
strual function should operate
painlessly. •
Mnefflai
makes menstruation painless,
and regular. It puts the deli
cate menstrual organs iu condi
tion to do their work properly.
And that stops all this pain.
Why will any woman suffer
month after month when Wine
of Cardui will relieve her? It
costs SI.OO at the drug store.
Why don’t you get a bottle
| to-day?
For advice, in cases requiring
special directions, address, giv
ing symptoms, “The Ladies’
Advisory Department,” The
Chattanooga Medicine Cos.,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Mrs. ROZENA LEWIS,
of Oenavllle, Texas, says:
“ I was troubled at monthly Intervals
with terrlhje pains in my head and back,
but have been entirely relieved by Wins
of Cardui.”
A Wonderful Discovery.
The last quarter of a century records
many ronderful discoveries in medicine,
but none that have accomplished more for
humanity than that sterling old household
remedy, Browns’lron Bitters. It seems to
contain the very elements of good health,
tnd neither man, woman or child can take
it without deriving the greatest benefit.
Browns’ Iron Bitters is sold by all dealers.
Your
Doctor
Knows
Your doctor knows all about
foods and medicines.
The next time you see him,
just ask him what he thinks
of
seotrs Emulsion
of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypo
phesphites. We are willing
to trust in his answer.
For twenty-five years doc
tors have prescribed our
Emulsion for paleness, weak
ness, nei'vous exhaustion, and
for all diseases that cause
loss in flesh.
Its creamy color and its
pleasant taste make it es
pecially useful for thin and
delicate children.
No other preparation of cod
liver oil is like it. Don’t lose
tirao and risk your health by
taking something unknown
and untried. Keep in mind
that SCOTT’S EMULSION
has stood the test for a
quarter of a century.
50c. and $i oo; all druggists.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York.
NEW STORE
IN ATHENS,
A MONEY SAVER,
KNOWN AS
litas Mi
SIB,
Clayton St., Two Doors Above Tal
mage Bros.
Just received two car
loads Dry Goods, No
tions, Hardware, Tin
ware, Glassware and
Woodenware.
CHEAPEST CASH
STORE IJY GEORGIA .
When you need an ar
ticle, and leant it under
price, don’t stop until
you get to the ‘‘ Variety
Store,” Clayton St , Ath
ens, Ga.
LAND FOR SALE.
Z. T. Niblack of Virgil
is offering his home
place for sale, It joins
the Davis place on
north, Doster on west,
Maddox on south, the
river on east. Place
contains 100 acres, 60
of which are in cultiva
tion, 25 acres being in
ottom land. It has two
good buildings—thatis,
enn be used for two
settlements--and is
convenient to schools,
mills and railroad sta
tion. Terms, SI3OO,
cash, or good security.
GEORGIA JACKSON COUNTY.
Notice Is her by given to all concerned, that
I have filed with the CJerk of the Superior
Court of said county, my petition address' and to
said court, returnable to the next term thereof
to be held on ihe first N otday In February
next, for the removal of the disabilities Im
posed upon me by my Irt'ermtirrlage with octa
vla Hopson, which application will be heard at
the court he use of said < ounty tt said teim.
This 9th day of Sept., 1898.
GEORGE UOPSON.
ADMINISTRATOR’B SAT E.—Agreeably to an
order of the Court of Ordinary of JacksoD
county, Ga., will be sold, at auction, at the
courr house door of said county, on the first
Tuesday In November. lt9B, within the legal
hours of sale, the following property, to-wlf:
A certain tract of land, known as lot No. 1,
containing thirty and six-tenth seres, mtre or
legs, situate, lying and belDg In the 465 district,
G. M.. said county. Ab -utfive a< res In culti
vation, fifteen aerts In original forest, and the
balance In old field
Also, st the same time and place, another
tract of land, known as lot No. 2, c mtalnlngone
hundred and nlnety-slx acres, more or less, sit
uate In said dls - rlct, adjoining same lands,
about twenty-five acres In cultivation, about
mty acres In old field, and the balance In origi
nal forest, with one tenant house.
And alo, at the same time and place, another
tract of land, known as lot No 3, adjoining
same lands, situate In said district, containing
one hundred and fifty-three acres, more or less,
about twenty-five acres In cultivation, about
1 hlrty-flve a res In old field and pasture, and
the balance In original forest, with one tenant
ant house.
All of said land Is fertile, well watered, and In
a community said of land are bound
ed as follows: On the north by F M. Parks and
Iberhart, rn the west by North Oconee River
and Mathew Watkins, on the south by Ruben
Web hel and J. H Carr, and on the east by J. R.
Carr and Mrß. Logglns. Sold as the proper .y
belonging to the estate of John O. Browning,
-’“ceased, for the purpose of distribution among
th heirs at law. j. c. BROWNING, Adm’r.
This Sept. 23,1898.
One Minute Cough Cure, cures.
That la what It waa uatfa tar.
BROKE THE BANK.
The Simple Countryman With Bright
Eyes Hypnotized the Dealer.
“Hypnotism is a mysterious thing
that is now claimed to lie used by
swindlers and charlatans in their
! devilish work as well as by repu
table men of science, but I have often
wondered why some shrewd gam
bler has not turned his attention to
hypnotism and used it as a means of
making easy winnings,” said M. O.
Burrill of Chicago, who was discuss
ing “ways that are dark and tricks
that are vain” with a party of trav
eling men at the Planters’.
“The nearest thing to hypnotism
in gambling that I ever saw was five
or six years ago at Grand Forks, N.
D. Quite a commotion was caused
by a stranger, dressed in the garb of
a country merchant, winning at a
single sitting $2,300 in Charley Mar
tin’s gambling rooms. This stranger
in the guise of a country merchant
dropped into Martin’s place and
gazed around at the gamblers. He
appeared to be greatly surprised at
the extent of the gambling that was
going on. I remember him well.
“He was slim, of medium height,
high forehead and bald head. He
was smooth shaven, with eyes deep
ly set and which shone with won
drous brightness. He tried his luck
at various games, with varying suc
cess. Finally he stopped at the rou
lette table and placed $1 on 17. The
little ivory ball spun around a few
times and dropped into 38. Ho did
not appear to care about gambling
any more and went into the saloon
adjoining. Soon the gamblers began
to go out for lunch, and he returned
to the wheel, where he sat down and
began to play light. The room was
soon cleared of all gamblers except
the man at the wheel. The player
glanced into the man’s face, and his
eyes fairly glistened as meanwhile
he placed money on different num
bers. A few men who had either
gambled their money away or were
out of luck came in and gathered
around the player, seeing that he
was beginning to play high.
“All noticed that the man at the
wheel seemed to be under some
strange influence and appeared to be
acting contrary to his desire. He
would whirl the little ivory marble,
and, regardless of the fact that the
player was losing, he would pay the
bet in the same ratio as if he had
won. The onlookers, of course, had
no sympathy with the gambler, and
they watched in silence. When the
last dollar had been taken from the
drawer, the player thrust the money
before him into his pocket, never
taking his eyes from the wheelman’s
face, and vanished through the door.
That was the last seen of the sup
posedly country merchant.
“The instant the stranger was out
of the room the man who manij)u
lated the wheel reached his hands ta
his head and shuddered. When he
discovered that the till was empty,
he swore that he had been knocked
down and robbed, but he was in
formed by the bystanders, among
whom were several well known citi
zens of the town, that such was not
the case. He was told that he had
been paying off bets for 20 minute*
in a reckless manner and that he
had not been robbed, but cheated.
“ ‘I don’t know how it was done!
I was hypnotized 1’ exclaimed the
man at the wheel.
“He could not be made to believe
that he was so oareless as to give up
about $2,300 unless he had been pul
under some magic spell, and many
of those present were firm in the be
lief that the man at the wheel had
really been hypnotized. Anyhow the
man declared he would thereaftef
be chary of all men with bright
eyes.”—St. Louis Globe-Democrat.
Oil— aSßS^l^
If it was only health, we
might let it cling.
But it is a cough. One cold
no sooner passes off before
another comes. But it’s the
same old cough all the time.
And it’s the same, old story,
too. There is first the cold,
then the cough, then pneu
monia or consumption with the
long sickness, and life tremb
ling in the balance.
Ayer’s
Cherry
Pectoral
loosens the grasp of your cough.
The congestion of the throat
and lungs is removed; all in- .
flammation is subdued; the '
parts are put perfectly at rest
and the cough drops away. It
has no diseased tissues on
which to hang.
Dr. Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral
Plaster |
draws out inflammation of the
lungs.
Adv/cm Frca,
Remember we have a Mcrtlral Depart
ment. If you have any complaint what
ever and aesire the best medical advice
you can possibly obtain, write the
doctor freely. You will receive a
prompt reply, without cost. _
Address, DR. J. C. AYETt. O
Lowell, Mass.
AnMsn Prayer Glazaea.
A writer to The Queen says: I
have in my possession a curious
plate of green glass, on which is
painted an Arabic inscription which
looks like a drunkard’s attempt to
epell Trilby with two r's and three
Vs. It signifies “In him we have a
defender, ” and thereby hangs a tale.
I was buyiDg some oriental curios
from a Syrian Mohammedan who
preys upon Christians in the Blooms
bury dietrict, and when I went into
his office to pay my account I saw
this mysterious looking sheet of
green glass about 1% feet long and
a foot wide hanging up. On the op
posite side of the wall, balancing it,
was a similar sheet of pink glass,
with a sacred Arabic inscription.
“Hello! What’s this?” I asked,point
ing to the green one. “That’s my
prayers,” said the vender. “Will
you sell me your prayers?” I asked.
“Yes,” he said, ‘you can have them
for 18 pence. Will you have my
pink prayers too?” The pink pray
ers were a good deal less aesthetic and
had a crack across them, so I de
clined, but as time went on I grew
very fond of the green prayers—they
interested visitors so much—so 1
went back to buy the pink prayers.
“The pink prayers are gone,” said
my Mohammedan friend, ‘but it is
no matter, for I have imported two
cases full of prayers, and the sale is
so brisk that I have raised the price
to half a crown.”
A Coal Pioneer.
Edmund Carey of Benton was one
of the early residents of Wilkes
barre and was born Aug. 12, 1822,
on a farm at the lower end of town,
now known as Carey avenue, which
has been named after the family.
His father. George Carey, was one
of the settiers who had the handling
of the first anthracite coal in Wyom
ing valley. He helped open a strip
ping in Pittston township, now
known as Plains township, in 1815,
and in the spring of that year loaded
a raft, with several others, and took
it down the Susquehanna to Harris
burg, where they sold the raftload
of 40 tons of anthracite for $lO.
They were discouraged at such re
muneration and left the transporta
tion of coal dormant until 1820,
when they took another raftload
down and failed to find a buyer.
They were so discouraged that they
dumped their load of blaok dia
monds into the Susquehanna at Har
risburg, and, as far as these early
pioneer shippers were concerned,
the opening up of a coal market was
ended.—Wilkesbairo (Pa.) Record.
Pork Dangerous, Veal Unwholesome.
“Pork is the source of trichina.
For this reason it should be cooked
thoroughly. Hogs are almost al
ways fattened so as to be actually
diseased before killing, and we find
here also a common source of tuber
culosis. It is also generally believed
that pork eating is a common source
of scrofula,” writes Mrs. S. T. Roret
in The Ladies’ Home Journal. “I
certainly know that persons who
indulge freely in pork have very
unhealthy, rough and easily irritat
ed skins. Veal (equallj T indigestible
with pork) may not contain the dan
gerous germs of the mature ox; the
fiber, however, is dense and difficult
of digestion. Unless it be thorough
ly boiled and chopped rather fine it
had better not be eaten at all. It
should never, under any circum
stances, be given to children.”
“Wardrobes Purchased."
It is better, I think, to give them
away than to sell them. Those that
have tried to sell clothes know that
not even books descend in value
quite so rapidly. Five minutes’
wear makes a coat secondhand and
reduoes its worth by some 90 pel
cent. Nothing is quite so disen
chanting as the offer of the dealei
who looks over one’s wardrobe. It
is cataclysmic in its paucity. Find
ing a dealer should be an easy mat
ter to the peruser of advertisements.
“Wardrobes purchased” is one oi
the commonest lines to catch the
eye, and every one knows the am
biguous wording of the announce
ment: “Mr. and Mrs. Resartus re
spectfully inform the public that
they have left off clothing of every
description. Inspection invited.”—
Cornhill Magazine.
Family Name*.
It is generally conceded by Eng
lish speaking people that such fam
ily names as Smith, Baker, Butcher
and Armor, arose from well known
occupations of someone of the early
founders of the families. It appears
that this custom prevailed in the
faraway past as well as in modern
times. The famous Latin orator,
Cicero, for instance, is said to have
derived his name from an ancestor
who was a famous grower of beans.
“Cicer” is the Latin name for a
small bean called lentil, which con
stituted a very large portion of the
food of those early people. Some
one of them appears to have been a
very famous grower of the lentils,
or, as they would say, “ciceree,”
and it is very easy to see from this
how Cicero was derived.—Meehan’f
The Danger.
“No,” said the confident youth,
“I shall not trudge along in the
beaten track. I shall not devote my
mind to humdrum duty.”
“What are you going to do?” ask
ed Senator Sorghum.
“I am going to strike away from
the beaten path. I’m going to leave
footprints on the sands of time.”
“Well, you want to be oareful. ”
“I have energy and ability.”
“Yes, but you want to be careful
too. Trying to leave footprints on
the sands of time has been the cause
of a lot of people getting stuok in
tt* mud.*•—'W—ihington liter.
Tram i 1.00 a Tara.
HISTORY OF ICEMAKING.
Singular Methods Followed by People Cen
turies Ago.
The most ancient method of mak
j ing ice is practiced in India. Holes
are made in the ground, dry straw
iB put at the bottom of these, and on
it at the close of the day are placed
pans of water, which are left until
the next morning, when the ice that
is found within the pans is collected.
This industry is carried on only in
districts where the ground is dry
and will readily absorb tho vapor
given off from the water in the pans.
The freezing, of course, is due to the
gteat amount of heat absorbed by
the vapor in passing from its liquid
to its gaseous form.
Another process was practiced in
the days of ancient Rome, when the
wealthy are said to have had their
wines cooled by having the bottles
placed in water into which saltpeter
was thrown, the bottles being the
while rotated.
Dr. Cullen in 1755 discovered that
the evaporation of water could be
facilitated by the removal of the
pressure of the atmosphere, and that
by doing this water could be frozen.
Nairn, in 1777, discovered that sul
phurio acid would absorb the vapor
of water if placed in a second vessel
separate from that containing the
water, but connected with it. This
discovery he put to use in 1810 by
constructing an apparatus for ab
sorbing the vapor of the water that
it was desired to cool or freeze. This
apparatus greatly facilitated the
freezing operations of a vacuum
freezing machine.
Jacob Perkins was the father of
what is now known as the compres
sion system, having invented the
first machine of the kind in 1834,
and as these machines, improved,
are at the present day more in use
than any other, a description of
Perkins’ patent may be of interest.
His apparatus consisted of au insu
lated vessel, in which was inclosed a
second vessel containing ether, a va
por pump, a worm and worm tub, a
tube between the second vessel and
the pump,another between the pump
and the worm, a third between tho
worm and the bottom of the ether
vessel and the neoessary valves.
As afterward constructed, the ap
paratus was made up of a jacketed
pan, within which was the water to
be cooled; uninsulated box in which
was placed the pan, a pump to ex
tract the vapor from the jacket, a
worm in which the vapor was con
densed after it left the pump, a worm
tub containing cold water to cool
the worm and by means of the lat
ter the vapor within it, and pipes
connecting the top of the pan jacket
to the pump, the pump with tho
upper end of the worm, and the low
er end of the worm with the under
side of the pan jacket. The refrig
erating agent used with this appa
ratus was one derived from the de
structive distillation of caoutchouc
James Harrison improved upon J t
cob Perkins’ apparatus in 1856, and
it has been further improved by
many others since.—Gassier h
Monthly.
The Two De Goncourts and Their Wo k.
They happened to belong to a fi tn
ily which was noble, though of re
cent nobility, and to have some
means, and this, added to their j re
ciosity, their horror of the banal mi l
the commonplace, their contempt
for people who sacrificed a tittle of
their artistic conviction to money
or the vulgar approval of the mi i. i
tude, oaused literary workers for
whom fate had not prepared the way
so agreeably and who were obliged
to take life more as they found it
to look upon them rather as elegant
dilettanti than as men of letters with
a mission. This was a bitter di ap
pointment to the brothers, who toiled
at their work tables like galley
slaves day after day, only going out
for a walk at 11 o’clock at night,
and whose intense earnestness about
their art was, whatever other criti
oism may bo made of them, unques
tionable from the start and splendid
in its integrity.
Convinced as they were that they
had a mission (which was to show,
among other things, that mode! n
life, with its increased complexitiei
and feverish intensity, needed to be
expressed in literature by a style
quite different from all those hither
to employed, a style that would bite
out the aspects of things as with an
acid and make them live), their tri
umph in this direction is the thing
that they will be remembered by.—
Scribner’s Magazina
One of the Ameer’s latest acts was to
order that funeral expenses be cut down,
because of a verse of the Koran which
condemns prodigals to the lower wo: Id.
A Healthy Man
Until the Crip Broke Down lbs
H ealth Hood’s Sarsapari: j
Cave Him Appetite and Sleep.
“Up to the time when I had the grip I
was a strong, healthy man. After that I
had uo appetite and was not able to
rest well at night. I decided to try
Hood’s Sarsaparilla and purchased a sup
ply. It has done me a vast amount of
good. I have a good appetite and can
■leep well.” Joseph M. Wardlaw,
Borne, Georgia.
“I have found Hood’s Sarsaparilla in
valuable for purifying the blood and loss
of appetite. It cures all eruptions and
makes me feel better in every way.”
J. A. Croel, Brunswick, Georgia.
Wonderful cures of Scrofula, Salt
llheum, Ulcers, Sores, Dyspepsia, and
other diseases, prove the great curative,
blood purifying and enriching powers of
HOOd’S S parHl*a
The best —in fact the One True Blood Purifier.
Insist upon Hood’s; take no substitute.
■ w ~ *-,,|| cure liver ills; easy to
Hood 6 PlllS take, easyteoperate.aea.
NO. 39.