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Admiral Daaoat Show* Ita
< R^7Adt^aT hTthe
Gautote on Freffiffi and English navtes,
says:
•The speech of Mr. Chamberlain, the
campaign waged againsb us in the Eng-
Lto
STSglls^’merehantJ 6 menaced every
where in their interests, constitute dis
quieting symptoms which it would bo
puerile to ignore. The question naturally
arises, therefore, in everybody a mind, is
the French navy ready for an eventual
struggle with the English navy# As re
gards the numberoff‘ships now available,
as regards facility at concentration of
forces, the judisious choice and the pre
paredness of naval bases, our inferiority is
notorious. Since the application of the
naval defense act our neighbors have dou
bled their resources by constructing with
a feverish haste. They have been able to
launch within a single ?ear as many as
five battleships of from 12,000 to 1ft,009
tons, eight large cruisers and 83 smaller
vessels, so that the disproportion, already
great, which existed ■ between the two
navies has been enormously increased.
England can now put into line •* battle
ships of from 9,000 to 16,000 tons, 69
large cruisers and a very large numberpt
smaller vessels, among which should be
noted a numerous flotilla of very rapid
torpedo boat destroyers. Besides these ves-
serve to this already formidable force. ™ -
“What have we to set against this array ?
Sixteen new battleships, 8 good eqast de
fense vessels, about 10 old battleships of
mediocre value and 23 modern cruisers
Reckoning on both sides the vessels that
are of no use for service and taking into
account breakdowns and accidents, we
may say on the whole that the strength of
our navy is between a third and a half of
that of the English navy. The quality of
the smaller vessels ih both navies Is about
the same. The English vessels have in
general a look of greater strength, they
can go greater distances, and their ton
nage is greater, which enables them to be
better armed and equipped. Their guns
are well placed, but less powerful at an
equal caliber. The speed is usually infe
rior to ours and can bo less easily kept up,
in spite of the nominal figures to be found
in the numerous lists published in both
countries.
“In a word, the value of similar types is
approximately the same, but We remain
in presence of a crushing numerical supe
riority, and our inferiority Is Increased by
the inadequate preparation of stations out
side Europe. While‘ England is strongly
posted at the outlets of all the great mari
time lines of the globe, we are reduced to
utilizing a few indifferently placed posi
tions.
“We shall patiently bide our time, and
It will certainly come. Meanwhile we
shall organize an implacable system of pri
vateering against the trade of our eventual
enemy. I know not what dlpiMnatiSta
think of the convention of 1866, but as far
us sailors, let the English be assured be
forehand that we shall carry on privateer
ing against them, and let them take the
ruin of the maritime trade into their fuse
casts,’’ —London Times.
The Philippine Native*.
However lacking in intelligence the
natives of the Philippines generally may
be,' they could not with truth be character
ized as savages. There are in the Philip
pines between 6,000,000 and 9,000,000 peo
ple—probably about 7,000,000. Nearly
half this number inhabit Luzon, the prin
cipal of the group. The Tagals of
Luzon are a copper colored people, and,
like all the peoplq of the Malay family,
are short of stature. These Tagals are
the most advanced and influential element
of the whole population of the islands.
There are a great many very intelligent
and. ambitious men among them, men
who got their start in the schools estab
lished by the monastic friars, whose po
litical domination furnishes one of the
many grievances which have given rise to
the present insurrection. The Tagals are
as industrious as the Chinese and Japa
nese and more easily controlled and less
criminally disposed than the latter.
That they are entirely amenable to dis
cipline when they have confidence in and
respect for their leaders and advisers is
evidenced by the fact that for over a year
General Emilio acknowl
edged leader, was able to maintain good
order and comparatively good discipline
among his 40,000 or 60,000 followers and
under circumstances where chaos and dis
order would be the most natural condi
tions. lam not a sentimentalist—not the
sort of man to go into ecstasies of delight
over the profuse politeness and kotowing „
of the Japanese—but I have observed in'
the leading men and women a charmingly
courteous manner. Such characteristics
os rudeness, assumption or boisterousness
are entirely Jacking in their tempera
ment.—Review of Reviews.
Sunstroke Infectious.
Dr. L. Sambon, who- is considered by
The British Medical and Surgical Jour
nal an authority on such matters, says
that sunstroke Is infectious and is pro
duced by a specific germ.
Dr. Sambon’s theory is that sunstroke
ns a germ disease requires great heat for
its development, but is not directly caused
by heat. He maintains that sunstroke is
unknown in many of the hottest parts of
the world, nor in the temperate areas is it
prevalent in the warmest years or in the
hottest season of the year-f:" -.
Dr. Sambon concludes, from carefully
verified facts, that the geographicaldis
tribution, the endemiclty, the’obourrence
of epidemics, the characters of the symp
toms, the very definite lesions, Mie liabil
ity to relapse and other pointe in the nat
ural history of the disease are*strong
arguments for regarding siriasia as be
longing to the same category as yellow
fever, dengue and certain other tropical
affections universally acknowledged to de
pend on specific ffta-ms—germsTor whose
growth and transmission to man and from
man to man high atmospheric tempera
ture is necessary, but which, though oc
curring in, as* certainly not created by,
high atmospheric temperature.
Hot Ctood For the Boya.
The officer shook his head.
“I think,” he said, “that sweets of that
sort are not good for the boys. That kind
of a diet gets them out of condition. Os
course we are very grateful to you for re
. membering us, but I really think ft would
be a serious mistake to let the boys have
them.” •
“But what shall I do with all that I
have brought them?” asked the visitor to
the camp.
1 * Um—well—-ah—er—you miaht leave
it at the officers’ quarters, youfcww.”-
Chicago Port. >7 ow
‘.W 1 in
fHfi IW? WOMAN ftABBI I
I Mrs. HaanaU G. SoloaMat’a Appaarancd It
tha Pulpit «f a Chleago Byaago t ue.
I , The Jew,of Chicago are making history;
| For the first time in the chronicles of Ju
I daism, a woman has acted as a rabbi. Mrs.
Hannah G. Solomon, who was
ly before the congress of Jewish women,
recently hold in this city, is the woman.
incident took place in the only Jewish
temple where such a thing could happen
now, the Sinai temple, in Indiana avenue,
Chicago, the temple which, pnder Dr.
Htamh, has led the way in the liberal Jew
uh movement.
The house was filled, not with the young
P«n»®> who might; perhaps be supposed to
tl r ,nn T tlon ’ bat
ta»»n elderly people, who perhaps never
dreamed that their creed could get so far
from the traditions as to tolerate a woman
as a teacher. It was a new page in Hebrew
history— a page as remarkable as that
which chronicled the congress of religions
at the World ’s fair, when a Catholic bishop
prayetMjqfore a council of Jewish women.
President Fisher, the head of the con
gregation, and Professor Sohn of North
western university, sat beside Mrs. Solo
mon When she appeared in the Sinai pul
sit. There was not a vacant seat ih the
nopee, and there was not a disparaging
comment on the new rabbi. President
Fisher introduced tee “daughter of the
congregation” and said that he was pleased
that Sinai and its Judaism had advanced
to the point where b “daughter” might
Mund fn the place of a rabbi. He claimed
ft te be a triumph for Jewish womanhood.
Mrs. Solomon read from manuscript, tak
ing the work of the recent council of Jew
ish women as her theme. She was epi
grammatte and logical.
“The woman question is settled as far
as J this country Is concerned, " she said.
! f is all over. There are a great many
men who do not think it is over, but there
are also a great many men who do not
think the civil war is over. , They have a
Tight to both views. There is no law
against Ignorance of any kind. The man
who sneers at woman’s work and woman’s
higher natation sneers at most everything
“ItYas necessary for Judaism that
women organize and save the traditions of
Judaism. The women confessed they were
ignorairt of the traditions, and, the mothers
being ignorant, there was but little hope
that the coming generations would know
of them except as memories. The cere
monial beauties were becoming a closed.
“It has come to pass Chat the world is
asking whether any religion is worth sav
ing. There are many who have lived
aright without religion, but there are few
who can live aright without its influence.
It is the Jewish mothers who are going to
save the traditions of the ages, the prophets
and the philosophers of Judaism. Women
are more emotional than men and religion
Is the science of rational emotionalism.
“Jewish women have organized for prog
ress. They want to change the education
•C Dm three M*S to the three H’s—hqa<>
haadaad hgrt. The wontaujA iyttay ca«
hot afford io live as her grandmother did.
“ The ready made woman lias gone into
the past with the self made man, taking
with her the old subject for collegiate de
bate: ‘Reeelyda, That matriteony unfits a
man for business or a woman far advance
ment. ’
“The‘hysterical woman has passed away.
You will find her sleeping on a conch 100
years old and noting only each passing
hour as adding one to the daily calendar.
The woman who thinks, and, thinking,
acta, has come upon the stage to take her
place.
"The thoughtful woman would not try
to suppress gambling. She would first in
vent something to take its place. Provide
amusement better than gambling and
there woidd be no gambling problem. It
is a poor teacher who destroys and brings
nothing to take the place of the thing de
stroyed. Society can cure most of the evils
of the world by ceasing to attack them and
providing other things which shall make
the evils stale and flat in comparison.”—
Now York Sun.
Some New Things.
The use of a crossed drive chain run
ning over a driving pulley and an adjust
able idler pulley and then around a pair of
drums r. t tached to the front and rear axles
of the c-r, to be used instead of toothed
Marine in vroceUinff the ear. has just
Men patented. The power used is elec
tricity.
An invention which will prove useful
to ticket agents or any one having a large
number of tickets to be disposed of rapidly
is a case to hold the ticket, in the side of
which is a spring slide, which, when
pushed toward the end of the box, brings
the tickets out through a slot one at a
time, one side wall of the box being held
by springs in order to keep the tickets
pressed against the side.
One of the most novel excavating ma
chines of recent date has been patented by
a North Dakota man and consists of two
immense earth augers, attached to a port
able upright frame and operated by power,
the augers bringing the earth to the sur
face, where it can be shoveled to one side.
When the excavation is deep enough, the
machine is moved forward to a new seo
tMM of ground. Another style of the same
machine has a horizontal auger for boring
under street crossings, etc.
■ _Wo* j)®event corrosion of collar buttons
by contact with the neck a recently patent
ed butteh has the back madenfeork.
A reversible mall bag receiver and de
liverer, for use bn single track railroads,
has an upright rod placed tn the center of
the oar doorway, which can be turned in
either direction by the mail clerk the up
per portion having an arm for catching
tea-taati hag and the lower part A project
ing hook to deliver,a bag to » receiver at
the side of the track, the action, catching
the bag on the upper arm, releasing the bag
on the lower arm.—Chicago News.
As Tlaey See Vs From Xnglaad.
Here is one of WdRMTMee about
American customs that find credence in
England. It is from one of the leading so
ciety weeklies: “The professional brides
to tenor expense or to receive the cost of a
(Jussta
aaWE WIV uflW
tedtas who belong to the crahede la creme
oa New xcrir society me no,longer avail
afite for this purpose. Some say they are
not invariably up to the accepted standard
So it comes about that a good
looking, graeeful girl may earn W 0 and
aIL expenses for appearing fit one of the
fashionable matrimonial ceremonies of
Fifth avenue, the other day a fair bride
was followed to church by no fewer than
16 hired virgins to bear her company. An
excepttonaUy charming young lady can
command oven a bigger remunentkm, and
one of the moot successful of these femi
nine aeolytes is said to expect at least 9100.
She has oflMated tm 200 occasions and
sated 990,0®, m that her own turn may
vusy J '
Vtteuplanttat Mateltg
The wondere nf surgery will, it irnrr
never cease. Among the most important 11
achievetaenta la the transplanting of ,
musclee. This has teen suocearfully -
done in the case of a patient who had
for half a lifetime been unable to use i
one leg on account of paralysis occur- ,
ring in early childhood. The operation
is thus described: "A six inch long!-
tudinal incision is made on the inner
side of the thigh, with the middle op- i
posite the top of the patella. The sarto- ,
rlns is dissected out, cut off at its in
sertion, brought forward and attached
to the muscular fascia just above and a |
little to the inner side of the patella.
“The attachment must be made firmly
by splitting the fascia and drawing the
muscle through, so that it becomes ad
herent to both inner and outer surfaces.
Kangaroo tendon is used for sutures,
being the best material. The wound is
then closed, and the whole thigh is
bandaged, and finally a plaster of paris
bandage, or a long splint, is applied.
The patient is kept recumbent for two
weeks pt least, gentle motion is com
menced at the end. df three weeks, and
the plaster la entirely omitted at the
end.of from five to six weeks. This op
eration has been performed severaftimes
with great success, the only failures oc
curring where the muscles were imper
fectly attached. This state of things
was entirely remedied, however, in the
Jater operations. ’’—New York Ledger.
Guatemala. '
Guatemala might easily sustain ten
times its present population. The soil is
rich and easily cultivated, and, unlike
the other Central American republics,
there is plenty of labor. Some parts of
the country are quite thickly populated,
but the others are covered with dense
forests and a variety of timber, which
might be easily made marketable if
means of transportation were provided.
But, although Guatemala is much
farther advanced than the rest of Cen
tral America, her railway system does
not exceed 250 miles; there is no inter
nal navigation, and the wagon roads are
in a deplorable condition. The mineral
wealth of the country is supposed to be
large, but it is only slightly developed.
The mines are inaccessible, and, in the
absence of modern machinery, which at
present cannot be conveyed to them,
cannot be worked with profit.
The government offers generous in
ducements to immigrants. The land
laws are liberal, and efforts have been'
made from time to time to secure the
establishment of colonies and the pre
emption of public lands by private set
tlers. But all the accessible area is at
present occupied, find no foreigner can
expect to prosper in Guatenjala unless he
has abundant capita* Whisk will enable'
him to purchase at high prices planta
tions already developed.—Forum.
His Own Conaposltlsn.
A recent article in Le Figaro of Paris
Is devoted to the American colony in
that city. It says that the colony has
always played the important and bril
liant role in society chiefly because
most of the Americans were “ Ameri
caines ” “It is certain, ” continues Le
Figaro, “that out of ten ‘Americaines*
residing in p ~~tforrrr is but one Amer
ican. Affairs—‘business, ’ as they say
over there—absorbs the sterner sex in
tfae United States. In that country the
men have neither the inclination nor
the opportunity for much leisure, and
only pay us very short visits.
“While their wives install themselves
here, the ‘good’ husband only makes fly
ing visits and is very seldom referred
to in the elegant salons of the wives. ”
The writer continues: “I was at an
official ball not long ago, where one of
them was the hero of a curious ‘his
tolre. ’ He wore on the lapel of his coat
a brilliant star, which struck me as
original and somewhat curious in form.
Although very artistic, the order was
unknown to me. Some indiscreet per
son interrogated the Yankee as to what
order it was. The Yankee replied in a
phlegmatic tone, ‘lt is my own aopapo
rition.”’
Saveratittora B«a»p*rtea.
The Bonapartes always were super
stitious, especially the mother of Napo
leon. She always had a presentiment
that the rise and fall of her.fomily
would occur in the same century, that
the glory which was prophesied for
them would be followed by disaster.
And the prediction was verified. She
died in her eighty-seventh year, having
lived long enough to see the downfall
of all her children.
Napoleon I always feared Deo. 2 as
an unlucky day, and it is related of him
that before every important battle he
would throw dice to ascertain if be
were to lose orwin. The "red men”
whom he always saw going to battle
with him was a delusion that caused
him much suffering.—Toronto Saturday
Night
Net Worried About That.
Her Father—Well, if you are deter
mined to marry my daughter, I shall
offer no objections, but before you take
this irrevocable step X think it is only
right to let you know that I have de
rided to leave all my money to educa
tional and charitable institutions.
Glib Suitor—Oh, that’s all right.
I’ve got proof that you bet on a bicycle
road race once. It’ll be easy eneugh to
show that you’re of unsound mind.—
Chicago News.
Am IndlMtloa.
“Ha, ’* said tha ftatd but flwa iathsr,
*is, I fear, a young man of extravagant
Ikstes. ”
“Yes,” daughter admitted “*«
wants me for a wifs. ’’—Cincinnati En
quirer. ~
The largest cofffo plantation in Bra
ail and perhaps in the world is the Du
mont plantation, established by a
Frenchman in the state of Minas Ge
raea. The number of coffee plants in
1896 was 4,718,000.
The first sermon in Maine was deiir
ered at Monbegan Aug. 9, 1607.
.- ' •
tilingfcfrMtbiSg last ■
week jn a Diamond street restaurant. A ;
waiter upset a glass on tbo marble top
ped lunch counter, breaking the edge of |
the glass. The waiter carelessly tossed i
it under the counter and got another i
with a smooth edge for the customer he
was sorting.
“What do you de with glasses thus
slightly damaged?’* asked the customer
of the restaurant proprietor, relating
the circumstance.
“Oh, we give them away; have to
•get rid of them; can’t endanger the lips
of customers by serving them iu nicked
glasses. But why are you interested?"
“Why, I thought if you would give
me a few of the old glasses my wife
might use them for jellies. ”
“Give me your address and I’ll sew.
you some,’’ volunteert'd the restaurant
keeper.
The man with a longing for articles
without price went away gleefully, cal
culating mentally on how much he had
saved on jelly glasses. Twe days later,
when he went home from business, he
found 13 barrels in bis back yard. His
wife said she supposed he had sent them,
and she paid the man |4.T5 for deliver
ing them. When opened, the barrels
were found te contain broken glassware
and china of all soste. Nene of it could
be used, not even for jelly glasses. Au
ash hauler charged $2 for taking away
the rubbish. The man who wants things
for nothing has withdrawn his patron
age from a particular restaurant in Dia
mond street.—Pittsburg Ohronicle-Tele
«»!*• . , -
Questioning Is Not Conversation.
The man whe imagines that the art
of conversation consists in asking ques
tions spoils conversation as much as the
man who never asks any. People of this
description will interrupt a speaker as
frequently as they do in the French
chamber, and run anxiously from sub
ject to subject with their interrogatories,
like a cackling hen that is going to lay
an egg. Horace Walpcfle, when exiled
at Houghton, bemoans the existence of
such a pest in the person of an aunt.
Writing to his friend Sir Horace Mann,
he says: “I have an aunt here, q family
piece of goods, an old remnant of in
quisitive hospitality and economy. She
wore me so down by day and night
with interrogations that I dreamed all
night she was at my ear with, a who’s,
why’s, when’s ’ and what’s, till at last
in my very sleep I cried out, ‘For
heaven’s sake, madam, ask me no more
questions.’ "a
Dr. Johnson’s dislike of being ques
tioned is well known, and he gives the
classic refutation of the habit in his
9W iafodtabte style: "Sta,
is not the mode of
gentlemen. It is assuming a superiority,
and it is particularly wreng tp question
a man ebnesrning Wfcself. ”—Cham
bers’ Journal
Hope Cune to Him.
A number es persons were talking
about coincidences, when a clergyman
gave an instance in his own experience.
“When I was a very young man, before
I entered the ministry,** said he, “I mei
with a series of misfortunes and was
nearly discouraged. One day I was seat
ed on a bench in the' park of a foreign
city. My head was sunk upon my hands
and black despair covered me like a
cloud. I had abaut concluded to strug
gle no longer when a slight noise at
tracted my attention, and I glanced up
to see standing before mo and contem
plating me with big, solemn eyes the
most beautiful little girl I have ever be
held. ‘What is your name, my pretty
child?’ was my natural inquiry. *H«pe, ’
she answered in a clear, sweet voice.
Then she turned and ran away, and the
little earthly form whose lips had
brought me a message of comfort disap
peared forever, but the white spirit of
her same she bad left In my heart, and
from that day I prospered. My eldest
daughter is called Hope. ’’ —Exchange.
Corkers.
At a London club there is the most
unique pair of curtains in existence.
This portiere is formed of hundreds of
champagne, corks, taken from 'every
known brand of champagne, each of
which bears the tin top which adonied
it when the cork was in its parent bot
tle. The corks are made into strings,
there being 66 of them to each string.
Between every cork there are three big
Chinese beads of turquoise blue. Alto
gether there are 24 strings, and at from
12s. to 16s. a cork, the portiere repre
sents a total expenditure of about
£I,OOO. The corks are tied to a white
enameled pole, with fancy ends, and big
sashes of blue ribbon adorn the brass
knobs. The total effect is distinctly
pretty. What makes this unique por
tiere doubly valuable is the fact that
each cork bears the autograph of a fa
mous actor or actress of the present day.
—London Standard.
Nothing Plebeinn About It.
She was an honored member of one
of the hereditary societies and was as
tonished to learn that she was accused
of wire pulling in connection with an
election of officers.
"Wire pußingl" she exclaimed.
“Such an insult I Why, it is common,
positively common. People do that in
politico”
"Very true,’’ returned her husband
consolingly, "but in politics it is prob
ably just common, ordinary wire, while
I kava n« deatet in yanr so« the refk
enos was to the very higheri gvade es
f nsulated copper wire. ”
Naturally that made it seem differ
ent.—OMsago Post
How Tjhey !>• la DawMß.
“Up at Dawson City,” said a return
ed Klondiker, "the people seem strange
to yon. Now, while I was at a hotel up
there burglars mitered and swiped near
ly |600,006 in gold nuggets. ”
“What did tha boarders do during
all this excitement?" asked the clerk
"Kept perfectly cool," was the quiet
reply.—Denver Times.
Castorift in Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infonts
and Children. It contains neither Opium. Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute I
for Paregoric, Dropa, Soothing Syrups and Castor Oil.
. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty yean* use by
Millions of Mothers.* Cnstoria destroys Worms and
allays Feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour
Curd, cures Diarrhfoa and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves . 1
Teething troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency.
Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomacb
and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sloop. Castoria
is the Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Friend.
Castoria. Castoria. j
“CaMorl* is su excellent meSicine lor “CaMorla Hgo well adapted to chlMirc Z
children. Mothers have repeatedly told me that I recommend It as Superior to any «•
of He good etftct upon their children." acriptlon known to me." ’
ttr. Q. C. Osgood, Lowell, Mass. u. a. Ascwxa. .M.IJ , nrooklyn. N. v.
*' . ' ?<Bl
" The use of Castoria Uso universal and Ha "For several years I hare recommended I
merits so well knawn that it seerns a work Castoria, and shall nlwnve continue 1., .h. |
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the so as it has invariably produced U neurial |
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria results." \
within easy reach." > Ht»viw F. rascKe, M. n , KewVbrk citv. ‘
Caxlor Mabtym, D.D., New yorfc City. L ,
r ' “We have three children and they ‘ Cry Ibr ‘ ,i
“I prescribe Castoria every day for children Pitcher‘S Castoria.’ When we giw one a daw,
who are suffering from constipation, with the others cry for one too. 1 shall always f
better effect than I receive from any other take pleasure in recommending ttas beet 1
combination of drugs." . child’s medidne. "
Dr. L. O. Mcmoas, South Amboy, X. J. ’ . Rav. W. A. Coopza, Newport. Ky.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
- '-wrrrr." ? •:
SHOES, - SHOES I
IN MENS SHOES WE HAVE THE LATEST STYLES—COIN TOES,
, GENUINE RUSSIA LEATHER CALF TANS, CHOCOLATES AND GREEN
AT |2 TO 13.50 PER PAIR.
) IN LADIES OXFORDS WE HAVE COMPLETE LINE IN TAN, BLACK
, AND CHOCOLATE, ALSO TAN AND BLACK SANDALS RANGING IN
r PRICE FROM 7fc TO |t.
’ ALSO TAN, CHOCOLATE AND BLACKS SANDALS AND OXFORDS IN
j CHILDREN AND MISSES SIZES, AND CHILDREN AND MISSES TAN LACE
■ SHOES AND BLACK.
: W.F.SOB3SFE.
0 WE HAVE IN A LINE OP
‘ SAMPLE STRAW HATSJ
—GET YOUB —
JOB PRINTING
I
I
• •
[ DONE AT
l
The Morning Call Office,
I
I ' - - '* 1
We have just supplied our Job Offlte with a complete line oi Htshnnert
kinds and can get up; on short notice, anything wanted in the way oj
•' i ' ♦ •* '<<»£
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEA PH
STATEMENTS, IRCULARB,
ENVELOPEb, NOTES,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS
e
JARDS, POSTERS
DODGERS, kd., ETL
We e—ry xwt ine of FNVEI/VEn vti iT-yxZ : this trade.
Aa atlrac Jva POSTER U aay sixe can be issued on short notice.
Our prices tor work of all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained NB
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