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A BABY OF limn DEGREE,
VIIK INFANT DAUHIITER OF THE
CHINESE JWIMSITKU TO THE
ClNlTEO STATES.
VAr Felon Hint Have Been and Will He
(liven in Her Honor.
[From the National Republican.]
It was at the residence of the Chinese
Minister, and the representative of the
Jit’/ailtHcan had called to inquire about
-tlie health of the Minister’s baby daugh¬
ter-. Tsu Shan Puug, First Secretary
of Legation, had said that the very
young lady was in excellent health and
spirits and was growing rapidly. Then
the reporter said ho had a very delicate
question to ask, and begged the Secre¬
tary rot to be offended, but if the in¬
quiry was a violation of Oriental eti¬
quette to at once inform him aud they
would talk about the weather or some
other harmless subject, “It is custom
jtiv, you know,” continued the reporter,
. this country to publish quite min¬
ute details of the private life of bigli
lx> u babies, and-”
“ i understand,” said the Secretary,
over whose face there had crept a smile
of appreciation and amusement, “ you
•w-iiit to know about the baby’s feet.
Borne one has said that they are already
bound. I assure you that it is no such
tJimg. Her feet are just like any Amer¬
ican baby’s.”
“ IJut is it not true that the growth of
the feet of noble Chinese girls is stopped
-early in life?”
• « Certainly it is trap, just as it is true
that the waists of all high born Ameri
- earn ladies are compressed,” and the Sec¬
retary illustrated by compressing his
own rather slender waist with his two
Tia> ds. “To make the ladies’ feet small,”
lie continued, “is a Chinese fashion; to
make their waists small an American
fashion. It is a demand of fashion or
- enniom in both cases, aud nothing
mere.”
“At what age are the feet bound?”
“ iViien the little girl is six or seven
yean old. Tlie process is so gradual,
that, I think, there is no pain about it
whatever; no more than when an Ameri¬
can girl binds her waist.”
“Is there nothing peculiar, then, about
< fhc very early lifeof a Chinese maiden ?”
“Nothing in the world. She is just
like an American baby, About two
months ago the members of the Chinese
Embassy celebrated the day when she
was a month The old by celebration a dinner at Worm
ley’s. when next is in her honor
will tie she old enough to go to
School. Then there will be another din¬
ner. There will he no more festivities
for her then until she is married.”
“When will she lie old enough to go
to school ?”
“When she is seven or eight years
old.”
“I sy Tjose you mean by ‘ going to
school ’ tWt an instructress will be
brought into the family?”
“Not always. Sometimes a rich little
Chinese girl will have a governess in the
house, hut often several wealthy families
employ a tutoress together and send
their children to her for instruction. It
as a private school.”
Just then there came down from the
nppor regions of the house a long, vigor¬
ous, infantile wail.
“There,” Chinese said baby theSeoretary, laughing,
-“is a crying in good Eng¬
lish.”
“Ts she the Minister’s first child?”
i Oh, uo. He has several children at
home, but this is the first one and the
first, Chinese baby horn for in Minister Washington.
She is a great pet the and
his wife.”
“And would if she be of only all the boy Embassy, I
suppose, was n ?”
‘ ‘Oh, that makes no difference. Lit¬
tle boys and girls are treated alike. It
Is only when they are grown that our
etiquette requires the seclusion of the
ladies. ”
The reporter inquired with much cau¬
tion and fear of offending why it was
that the Chinese Minister’s wife did not
Keceivo aud did not go out at all,
“ That,” said the Secretary, “ is only
because she does not- speak English, and
it would be highly improper, according
to our etiquette, for a gentleman to
translate for her. Neither does the Min¬
ister speak English, and there is no one
who could translate for his wife.”
“How is it that the Minister cannot
English when you speak it so
well?”
“I acquired the language in Hong
Kong, but the Minister is now an old
■nan, about sixty-one years old; never¬
theless he is studying the language,”
Returning to the more interesting sub¬
ject of the ladies, the reporter suggested
that the wife of the Chinese Minister at
Pans was quite a favorite in society and
Went, out v--*-- .r
“That is,” said the Secretary, “be
«Mise she lias a very charming lady
-daughter, highly educated, and speak¬
ing European languages well. She can
translate for her mother.”
“Is the Minister’s wife the only Chi¬
nese lady here ?”
“Yes; the other members of the Em¬
bassy, if they are married, The must Minister’s leave
then wives at home.
wife has two Chinese maids with her.
but there is really no room for any more
ladies in the house,” said the Secretary,
laughing. He then explained that the
term of office of the members of the Em¬
bassy ‘six wars three years, after which they
bad months’ leave of absence iu
which to go to China and visit their
families before returning, if they did re¬
turn, which was optional with them.
The present is tlie second Chinese em¬
bassy, and there are but two members
of it who were here with the iirst Em¬
bassy. As the Secretary said, three
years is quite long enough to be separa¬
ted from one’s family. The seclusion of
the Minister’s wife lias not been gener
•ally understood, but the Secretary stated
that the reason given above was the only
one. She occasionally goes out riding,
but makes no calls and has no society.
The advent of tlie baby must have been
a blessing to her secluded life.
ft sarcastic looker-on in Vermont
Writing from an encampment of militia
*t St Johnsbury, describes the review¬
ing officers thus: “One is the Governor,
two are ex-Governors, and the other
seventeen all want to be Governors.”
God is glorified, not by and our all groans, good
foul our thanksgivings; good claim natural
thought and action a
alliance with good cheer.
A WICKED JOKE.
How the Oil Kxclian.e Ilude wai Imposed
Upon.
The members of the Oil Exchange are
a rather swell set of young men, hut the
lead in the matter of clothes is taken by
a youth known as “the dude,” whose name
is withheld for the sake of his relatives.
This dude strolled into the Exchange
during a dull hour, says a local paper,
and Solomon in all his glory was never
arrayed like one of him. To begin near
the bottom, his feet (the dude’s, not
Solomon’s) were encased in the glossiest fitted
of patent leathers; his trousers
like the paint on a lamp-post; his coat
had never a crease from tail to top; his
linen was starched until it shone, and his
collar was perfection itself and raised
his chin so that he could only gaze at
the floor at the hazard of cutting his
throat. But his tout ensemble, so to
speak, was completed anil set off by the
darlingest silk hat imaginable, with the
broadest and most curling of brims and
a beautiful bulgent top. Altogether he
was radiantly, dazzliugly beautiful.
Tue dude stopped near the middle of
the floor, struck an attitude much af¬
fected by garden stautary, and gazed
serenely and pityingly upon his com¬
monplace fellow-brokers. But horror of
horrors ! A rude man came behind him
and jerked the silken tile from his head,
and the next moment it was thrown to
the floor, had received a vicious kick,
and a dozen brokers were running aftei
it. They surrounded it, scuffed for it,
and away it sailed again toward the
ceiling with the entire membership of
the Exchange, save only the owner, in
wild pursuit. Bound aud round the
floor gamboled the merry brokers with
the hat before them. Now it was suffer¬
ing in their midst, then it shot over the
floor in desperate efforts to escape, only
to)be trodden again overtaken, trampled, kicked
and until it presented an ap¬
pearance as if it had been lain down on
by a cow and then spent a summer uu
der a dust-heap, and the gay brokers
were tired out and perspiring.
The dude during this terrible period
stood aghast, aud, with horror depicted
in every feature, turned in frozen despair
as the gambols of his wicked associates
led them to the four cardinal points of
the room’s compass. But when a grin¬
ning messenger boy brought him the
battered corpse of his precious dicer he
forced a smile which was only a desolate
mockery of happiness and remarked:
“Aw dawn’t care anyway. It was an
old hawt.”
Then the rude man who had torn the
tile from the unhappy adolescent’s head
approached and handed him the silken
hat uninjured, and thedude learned that
he had been the victim of a wicked joke.
An old hat had been substituted on the
floor, while the joker held the victim’s
tile behind his back.
And it came to pass that the noise of
unholy the Jaughter was so great as to jar
ticker into the tape-basket, and the
dude will wear a derby hat hereafter
while on the floor of the-Exchange.
A Romantic story.
Thirty years ago the American Consul
at Rio Janeiro was Henry Devon, who
had lived for a long time in Brazil and
acquired a fortune. Soon after her ar¬
rival in this country with her three chil¬
dren on a visit, about the year 1853,
Mrs. Devon learned of her husband’s
death iu Rio, and immediate steps were
taken to settle his estate. In the course
of the settlement it was ascertained that
but a largo sum of money could had disappeared,
no trace of it be found. After
the vain investigation was over Mr.
Deven’s confidential clerk, to whom no
suspicion was attached, removed to
Australia, where he had a checkered
career in the gold diggings. Last March
the clerk fell sick and was taken to a
hospital in Melbourne. Shortly before
his death he embraced the Catholic
faith and confessed that he had stolen
the missing §42,000. He was enjoined
to make restitution, which he was will¬
ing to do, and as he had kept up a cor¬
respondence with his old employer’s
widow for several years after the crime,
there was little difficulty iu tracing her
children. One of them, Mrs. Joseph
Ashhrooke, who lives at the Girard
House, in Philadelphia, has just received
a letter informing her of this history and
also of the agreeable fact that the clerk
bequeathed $25,000 apiece to herself,
her brother and her sister.
In a part of the country where the
long drought has been prevailing one rain of
the newspapers, in speaking of the day,
that had fallen the previous re¬
marked that, “while the showers were
copious, they were not sufficient to meet
the wants of the mill men,” but the
compositor made it appear “milkmen.”
“No, ’’said Mr. Dash Cutter, “I can’t
afford a new suit of clothes myself; it
has cost me so much for liveries for my
coachman and footman .”—Boston Post .
Thebe are houses where people are
bright without mistrusting it; there are
others where people are stupid in spite
of themselves.
IIoxv He Double,1 Hi* Trade.
Mr. Betij. W. Pah n, pharmacist,
G’obe Village, Mass, says that the
miraculous pain cure, St, Jacob’s Oil,
has greatly helped his other busine s,
a d ihe sates of the remedy have doubled
n one month. He keeps a large supply
dways on hand. Offi -ers of the Army
and Navy pronounce St. Jacob’s Oil to
be the g.eatest pain cure of the age.
When a light-haired man’s locks turn gray
he’s getting on to fifty. When they begin to
turn black he’s getting on to sixty.
The greatest Engine in the world is tlie new
Baxter portable, in use all over the world.
Descriptive circulars free. Address J. C. Todd,
17 Barclay street. New York.
The chasm that sometimes follows up wit
sarcasm.
Dr. R. A. Davis, 200 Jorallum St., Brooklyn,
says: “Physicians generally know no cure for
rheumatism and Bright’s kidney disease. Dr.
Elmore is tlie first to discover one. His Rheu
matine-Goutaline really cures both.
Carbo-lines.
Petroleum sheds its brilliant light,
In eot and palace seen;
And on our heads its blessing bright,
, From wondrous Carboline.
Nature loves truth so well that it bardlv ever
admits of flourishing. Conceit is to nature
what paint is to beauty ; it is not only needless,
but impairs what it would improve.
Dr. Benson’s Skin On re consists time, of intern;! and it
and external treatment at same
makes the skin white, soft and smooth. It
coutui*i3 xau i;i>xo 0 n 0 uS drugs. SI at druggists.
Affectation in any uart of our carnage is
lighting up a candle'to our defects, and never
fails to make us take notice of, either as want¬
ing sense or sincerity.
“/ am fruli/ thankful that I ever used Dr.
Henson* Celery and Chamomile Pills , for
Ihey cured my periodical headache .”—Mrs.
.[. it. Paddisoii, Point Caswell, >1. O. 50c.
What is next to the heart’s core of every
opera singer ? An encore.
Ladies’ A children’s Boots A Shoes cannot
run over if Lyon’s Patent Heel Suffers are used.
There are no better cosmetics than a severe
temperance and purity, modesty and humility, and
a gracious temper and calmness of spirit,
there is no true beauty without the signatures
of these graces in the very countenance.
Blenseman’s Peptonized Beef Tonic, the only
preparation tious properties. of beef It containing contains its blood-making, entire nutri¬
force-generating and life-sustaining properties;
invaluable for indigestion, dyspepsia, nervous
prostration, and all forms of general debility;
also, in all enfeebled conditions, whether the
result of exhaustion, nervous prostration or
acute diseases, particularly Caswell, if resulting from
pulmonary Proprietors, complaints, New York. Sold by druggists. Hazard A Co,
a man snouia never be ashamed to own he
has been in the wrong, which is but saying, in
other words, that he is wiser to-day than he
was yesterday.
Piles! Piles! Piles.
Sure rare for Blind, Bleeding and Itching
Piles. One box has cured worst cases of 20
years’ standing. No one. need suffer five rnin
utes after using William’s Indian Pile Ointment.
It absorbs tumors, allays itching, acts as poul¬
tice, gives instant relief. Prepared only for
Piles, Frazier itching Med. of private Cleveland, parts. Mailed for SI.
Co., O.
No state can be more destitute than that of
a person, who, when the delights of sense for¬
sake him, has no pleasures of the mind.
No hitig U'«e It.
No medicine has ever b.ieu known so effec
tual in the cure of all those diseases arising
from an impure condition of the blood as
Scovill s Sar.-apariila, or Blood and Liver
Syrup, for the cure of scrofula, white swell
ings, rheumatism, pimples, blotches, erup
tions, venereal sores and diseases, consump
tion, goitre, boils, cancers, and all kindred
disev-es. No better m ans os’ securing a
beautiful complexion can be obtained than
by using Scovill’s Blood and Liver Syrup,
which cleanses the biood and gives beauty to
the skin.
Y’ou can not do without money ; you may Uo
without a mother-in-law.
Dr. Sanford’s Liver Invigorator. Just what
name implies; Cathartic, Tonic. Reliable.
Whatever our place, allotted to us by Provi¬
dence, timates that for us is the post of duty. God es¬
the us not by the position we are in, but by
way in which we fill it.
“We always keep Piso’s Cure for Consump¬
tion in the bouse.”
“Hie, lime, hoc.”—The grammar is wrong.
The liic usually comes after the hoc.
MM WM
XWi
geriIm
CURES . Sciatica, _ . .
Rheumatism, Backache, Neuralgia, Headache, Toothache,
lumbago, LSnellin Spra 5 Ilru lacs,
Sore T1 1 roa 4 ;%, a*
Kll 1-I1M. SrnldM, Frost Bites,
AND AI.I, OTilEB 110IULV PAINS AK!> ACHES,
goldl>v Ih-iiKgiats and Dealersevorvwnore. Fifty Centsu ’J- tt^.
Directions in 11 Languages.
THE ATIAKLES A. VOBELER CO. 1.8.A
(Suoomiotm 10 A. V OUfcLER & CO l Ball imorv, lid.,
josffiFiSs As am invignrant, Stom¬
Hostetter’s
ach Bitters has re¬
ceived the most p@»
itive endorsement
from emminent
physicians, long occupied and has
a
foremost rank among
l*gja£ standard remedies. proprietary Its
alterative proper- of
ties as an
U9m disordered conditions
£of the stomach, liver
•and bowels, and malarial a pre¬
. .-S ri ventive of
diseases are no less
renowned.
BitteBS For sale by Drug¬
gists and Dealers to
whom apply for
Hostetter’s Alma¬
nac for 1884.
___ yAl li». G. and li th* qTKhntee*. remedy pleasantest, kidney.
vV tunni beat for
Tx/ lirei^ Gieeaaea. siomaeh. and only Madder real curative and blood
ever
x N discovered for acute and chronic
/kvXXWrx uxi'uIi.X' rbeunvatism^ gout, lumbago, sciaV
ica t u.uralgia etc. Has cured hope
less forms cases of rheumatic Bngbt*e disease disorders and dyspepsia 12 weeks—relieves In 3 weeks—«U
m 2 to
inflammatory in 1 day. Can refer to hundreds of relia¬
ble people cured who had tried in vain everything else.
Purely botanic, it; harmless, declines and nice to irink. Ask you!
druggist oining to get Kim if he Adams k Go., send to William ns for it—ta take N.Y
j else. ore, 10& st.,
Hon. Aleiaier h. Sientes
IS DEAD, but his
HISTORY OF TOE BSITED STATES
WILL LIVE FOREVER. For terms and territory for
the tale of N. this D. w» McDonald rk, apply to * CO., Publishers,
P. O. Box 2900, New Orleans, La.
THE &AA E W IC W
rAAfimn t-MH
p-n!u:s3°? FR'CE SJ' 1 0
-
WARRANTES I^CEfKSiaE^T
&CL0 3Y 6UL SC- MIV F. CStVBV
PROMINENT AMERICAM
fiffiRM BEIlffi giCKSEC5.FKIU
QISSOUhTTQ CERIEHS B C,-A.V;ȣ3S. _ CIF.CULA3.
REYN OLDS’
Li Iron ■XTXTorlsLSl,
D. A. Mulane, Manager,
P. O. Box 1690, New Orleans, Lx.
Manufacturers of KerooMs’ Celebrated
;
SSrS B?acksmfthi^j
Machine Work. SOLICITED.
tarnRUkSS uSLl
ROOFING AND BRIGHT TIN,
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-TIKT3MER8’ STUPFIiIEe.
Lowest Kates ot Freight and. Quick Time.
WM. SHEPHERD & CO., 128 Meeting St. Charleston, S.C.
Lay the Axe
to the Root
If yon would destroy For the can¬
kering nal pain, worm. wound any exter¬ lame¬
sore, or
ness of man or beast, use only
MEXICAN MUSTANG LINI¬
MENT. It penetrates all mus¬
cle and flesh to the very bone,
expelling all inflammation,
soreness and pain, and healing
the diseased part as no other
Liniment ever did or can. So
saith the experience of two
generations of sufferers, and
so will you say when you have
tried the “Mustang.”
NATIONAL
surgical institute
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
For the scientific treatment and correctios
of deformities of the human body. All appli¬
ances of made to order, experienced and under the direction
competent and surgeons. Pile*,
ta^E’rupTures^anTpardyrit, Send treated by ^
»pecial proved reply, methods. K. statement H. and receive
BOLAND. Sec’y.
/
J&tlcUltdU Ga*
AN ORGANIZED BUSINESS COMMUNITY
25th YEAR. SEND FOR CIRCULARS.
TO SPECULATORS.
R, LINDBLOIV! & CO., N. G. KitLLER &C 0 .
5 & 7 Chamber of 65 Broadway,
Commerce, Cl iic-ngo. New York.
GRAIN & PROVISION BROKERS
Members of all prominent Produce Exchanges in Ne w
York, Chicago, St. Louis and Milwaukee.
Wo have exclusive privute Will telegraph orde wire between T j u^- Chi¬
cago and New York. execute rs on on
ment when requested. Send for circulars lai cout: tiiiing
particulars. KOBT. LINDBLOM A CO., Obion hg «.
LADIES 9
Order Bridal Presents, Jewelry. Silverware, *c.
from.
J. P. STEVENS & CO.,
3'E“ , 'ELE3g,
Send tor Catalogue. ATLANTA, GA.
AH OPTICAL HOUSER For and business. pleasure
Si n
A NEW. original, cheap lantern, for proj eeting and en¬
larging: photographs, chrornocurds, opaque pictuiesMid
every body. Send for onrfu if aud free (fciu'ri ptive circular
Mukiiay Hill Pub. Co., Box 788, N. Y. City, N. Y.
gniypufc * DR.
A .
fs
m
K
v JIM
BEFORE—AND — AFTER
Electric Appliances are sent on 30 Days’ Trial.
TO MEN ONLY, YOUNG OR OLD,
"TTTHO O are are suffering suffering f from Nkrvous Debility
\ V Lost ’WastingWeaknbs Vitality, Weaknesses, La ck OF and Nerve all those Force diseases and JOI
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The grandest discovery of the Nineteenth Century.
Bend at once for Illustrated Pamphlet free* Address
VOLTAIC BELT CO., MARSHALL, MICH.
P ISO'S* Si
L) rt'BES WHERE All ElS£ TAILS.
I * Best O ugh Syrup. Tastes »od.
' Use in ur' by drmrtrists.
L m
is ^
’—
DR. DICKEY’S
Painless Eye Water
T^ELIEVES AT ONCE. Cures inflamed and weak
k Eyes ir^ a few boms. Gives NO PAIN. The
Remedy in the woi’ld for granulated lids. Price 2o
cents a ’yottle. Ask for it.. Kavo no other.
Dll. J. A. DICKEY, Proprietor, Tesis
BBISTOl, .
OPIUM "s "”axd Whiskey habits cured
IN THREE WEEKS.
For Pamphlets, Proofs and Terms,
Iddress. BELLAMY, in confidence, with Gaorgia. 3 cent stamp,
W. O. M. D., Atlanta.
* IS § U B 8 Iwl and W H I SKY' HABITS cured at
• » ■» home without pain. Book of partic
ulai s sent free. B. M. WO OLE Y. M.D.. Atlanta. Ga.
tO $20 £t,h°me. Hamples^worth•
A WEER. $12 a day at home easily made. Oostlv
outfit free. Aaclress True & Go., Augusta, Me.
a week in your own town. Terms and $5 outfl
Ovw free. Address II.Hallett Jc CO., Portinnd, Me.
TT r ANTED, experienced Bonk and Bible Agents in
\v every County. Liberal Salaries Paid. Address,
stating experience, P. O- Box Ui., Atlanta, Ga.
c-.. nw L. a. L. SMITH A 10. A^au, ralalino. III.
,
EMPLOYMENT &SS3&* Brsi- grad
Terms only *40. Write for circulars.
A. N. ..... ........ tmYKW
ill CD
iTirn 1 1 m ill v
Corner Commerce and Warehouse Sts. conyebs.
ilffilI ItTt'llJi' e
i«o K-C
—headquarters for all kinds of_
General Merchandise at Bottom Prices
GST* do Eell the NEW HOME Sewing Machine NEEDLES.^, Kqo.vw.
SEWING MACHINE , keep allk
'nds
H eadci uarters SttMssgy' the B
county.
fiarria yj .."-ly ~~
f*1
BY
J W I4AN6FOBD.
Garriages Wagons, Bugies, M
own make.
{— OO BE Ri’STCLASS IN REYEY pmimii
I keep o
cn
Repairing of Cannes, Wigons and Buggr-e*, Paub.ng and TV,
01 ail grade-i (Ion** on Rhoi t, notice. imm
ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE REPAIRED AS GOOD AS N:
have now on hand the largest and best stock of wagons of
make, bogies homemade ana of western build that I have ever can-m °
you want bargains you had better call. All who owe me for work ^ '
nestly request to come forward and settle promptly. I need the money
must have it. These who do not pay promptly will be given but ^
time. So you will please settle promptly. sin
It should be rememberd that My establishment is
m
fiO E— s ai
pc H5
SSrCOFFINS DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN CITY OR COTINT
Most Respectful!^,
J. W. LAM0F0RD.
BBT BY OTC &Bk 1
E8822”? afiwflwg 88.2128 881
--—-THE MOST POPULAR..—
ZPaZQEC‘Dm _©Zfiti&:&$§
~32} m 2 2272222210;
Wholsenle Siutnern Depot for ESTEY OEGANR. Stemwa;
Wvbir, Decker Brothers and Gate City PIANOS
—DEPOT OF—
SB JS 33 CS,
---It;PORTERS DIRECT FROM ETROPE OK
Violins, Guitars, Harmonicas Etc
STRINGS, BSTNobody AND underbuy ALL KINDS'OF Nobody MUSICAL undersell MERCHANDISE, us. j
>_An ub. can
Esteij Organ Company Atlanta Ga
W.H, LEE, AgcBt.
JOHN NEAL AND COMPANY,
----WHOLESALE & RETAIL DEALERS IN
ij® miff si
NOS. 7 and 9 SOUTH BROAD STREET ATLANTA, GA.
Special inducements offered to DEALERS aud others in all ov.'.de * 11
niture. A share of the of Rockdale and adjoining couiuies enit 1
patronage trial before making purc hase;
solicited. Be sure and give us a your
THE OLD RELIBLE FIRAM OF
S'"
^{ -DEALERS IN- )
C3h§^ H
O I
RAILROAD block GEORGIA
CONYERS,
Having been established for IS is, and carrying one 01 l :’
y.‘fl ooutry, se go i as ]q (> *
smallest and most complete slocks iu the we can
any, and we guarantee satisfaction. When vou want
DRY GOODS, NOTIONS AND CLOTHING,
Call on
J. H. ALMAND & SON.
Si m
SiSSi Mill
is
s mm hSHh 1
W'
i M HUBi
IIS11 lj 111
Ujj I li
mm. m '■|?j ! .)
.
WA 6 am f Urgan E'acfof'yV'ih
mwl’roduut EUROPE One QB AMERICA!
0n~ eva h n mnmtes.