Newspaper Page Text
Scrofula on His Head
vYhich became a mass of corruption, spread sa
tit got Into our little boy's eyes. The sore*
Clarence II. Crockett
l oyer his neck and we thought ha would be
' find. The doctor* failed; we gave him Hood *
•rsaparllla. Several bottle* cured him after
i aehad despaired of his ever getting well. H#
• •» now • bright and healthy child. D. M.
; ^toczKTT, Jr., Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
Hood’s^ Cures
Tvon when all other preparation* fall. Bo surs
fc. . 3 get Hood's and only Hood’s.
Hood’s Pills should be In every household.
A PSYCHIC CYCLIST.
BY J. H. CONNELLY.
f ' Copyright, 1586, by American Press Associa
tion. 1
With suspicion and dislike Miss
. Kate Craig, seated oil tlio porch,
»*ayed Mr. Fita-Maurice Rodney, the
: sleek, well groomed, good looking
. gentleman entering the garden gate
<m company with her host, Mr. Poy-
ion. She had preserved the faculty,
r -summon in childhood, hut generally
lost in later life, of intuitional
"knowledge of character, a truly psy-
cfaic sense, and was wonderfully cor-
irect in her judgment upon those
with wllom she came in contact.
Hut almost anybody would have
•said sho had certainly made a mis
take in the case of Mr. Rodney.
‘Generally ho made a decidedly fa
vorable impression. He not only
looked \well, but bis manners wore
excellent npd oven distinguished.
And ho was believed to bo rich. Tlic
pretext of an important land “deal”
liad brought him to Danfield and ac- j
■{uaintance with Mr. Peyton, and ;
." hough there had been much delay |
a'xi consummating that transaction |
.•ii was not to be wondered at, since
lie had become too much engrossed I
with paying court to Miss Selina
Peyton to care for mere sordid busi
ness. Yet Miss Craig was innately
conscious that ho was a rascal and
once hinted as much to Mr. Peyton i ards save an innocent
•'-•Vi's; 7ie and* jiapa are arranging
for it now.”
“As I said, you have my best
wishes. I think marrying is always
more or less risky, and in jour
case”— .
••Selina!” called Mr. Peyton from
tho porch, and tlio girl, responding,
went into tho house.
kato seated herself on the porch
steps and remained there alone un
til Mr. Rodney, going away, awoke
hor from a reverie by his courteous
"Goodnight.” Then she went in.
All the family seemed to have al
ready rotired, and after a glance in
to tho empty parlor she started to
ward her room.
Something glittering on the floor
near the hall hatraok caught her
oye, and she picked it up. It was a
little blue satin ribbon, bearing the
initials “F. R.” daintily embroider
ed in gold thread—Mr. Rodney’s
hat mark. With a sensation of dis
gust sho flung it down; then, after
a moment’s pause, picked it up
again, muttering, “It is worth try
ing anyway,” and ascended the
stairs.
As a mem hor of Dr. J. R. Buchan
an’s “psychometric class” Miss
Craig had, three or four years pre
viously, developed hor inherently
strong perceptive faculty and had
often, from contact with material
objects, accurately described the ap
pearance, character, mentality, as
pirations and even the habits and
Associations of persons quite un
known to her who had possessed or
worn those objedts. Even scraps of
writing had conveyed to lifer acute
psycliio sensibility clear impressions
of those by whom they were writ
ten. And now she piurposed trying
by this faculty to penetrate the evil
mystery she divined in the man her
friend was about to marry.
Holding tho ribbon in her hnnd
and occasionally pressing it to her
brow, she was quickly conscious of
two distinct but entangled sequences
| of improssions conveyed by diffor-
i ent personalities, a man and a wom-
| an, as if tlio fabric bad been satu-
j rated with the auras of both. First
she studied tho woman and lmd a
| clear impirossion of a tall, handsome,
! imperious brunette with a hold face
I and Hashing black ej’os, wlio beliov-
; eel licrself that man’s wife and was
| verj’ jealous of him. And she bo-
I liovod sho knew where to find that
I woman, though sho was less confi-
j dent of this, since such perception
involved other powers of tho mind
with which she was less familiar.
Her impressions of Mr. Rodney’s
I real personality wero at least as
vivid as his knowledge of himself
! could have been and confirmed the
i justice of her resolve to ,at all haz-
irl from tho
What the Editor Heard.
A STORY FROM CAYUGA CO., N. Y.
■Has Pennell, of Niles, K, T., Veils of a
Miracle of (He Nineteenth
Century.
(From the Cayuga Co., It, Y., Independent.)
Hearing through Messrs. Allen & Burch,
druggist* of Niles, that Mr. Silas Z. Pen
nell, a respected citizen of that town had
been cured of a bad eass of sciatic rheuma
tism by tho useof Dr. William*’ Pink Pill*
for Pal* People, the editor of the Cayuga
County Independent determined to know
the truth of the matter and went nut to
Kile*. Mr. Pennell is % firmer and has •
seat and comfortablo home near Niles. We
asked Mr. Pennell if it was true that he had
been cured of a bad cue of rheumatism by
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pill*. He said that
three year* ago in August 1891, he wu
seized with (ever* pain* in the hip, just
where the iciatio nerre U, which gradually
ran down hi* leg making life a misery to
him but not preventing him from doing
some work on the farm. Soon after he wa*
loading hay when ha slipped off th* load
and hit hi* hip on the wheel.- After this
ho wu worse, suffering great agony, and
for some time was unable to do any work.
He took such medicines as his physician
prescribed and improved somewhat so that
he could help some around the farm again.
About Thanksgiving time he wu helping to
put away some barrels of cider which he had
made, when he strained himself and again
became helpless. He then tried another
physician who felt confident of curing him
by the use of the electric battery and medi
cines which he prescribed. Hut failure was
the rcyult, he got no better, and another
physician was tried ami treated him for
some time. By'this time his whole body
was affected. Sharp pains would start in
his hand or foot, run up one side of his
body, over his shoulders and then down the
other side and then pus off for a short time.
These pains would return regularly, affect
ing his whole body, and nothing seemed to
relieve him and he began to despair of ever
being well. In the spring of 1892 a relative
in another county read of a case very simi
lar to Mr. Pennell’s, which had been cured
by Pink Pills, and sent the article to him,
asking if it did not suit his case. It was
very similar and he determined to try them.
He commenced taking Pink Pills and soon
felt better, the pains became less violent
with longer intervals between them. Ha
felt encouraged and persevered in their use
and soon beoame able to work on the farm,
and in April or May ho felt so free from
pain that he considered himself a well man
again. He saj-s he lias probably taken 20
boxes and able to do as gopd a day’s work ni
any other man, and wc can say that he
lookslikua hale and hearty man who had
never known sickness.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the
elements necessary to give new life and rich
ness to the blood and restore shattered
nerves. They arc for sale by all druggists,
or may be had by mail from Dr. Williams’
Medicine Companv, Schenectady, N, Y., for
60c. t>cr box. or six boxes for $2.50.
'the wheel wns 'brougmr sno
-very mildly. Ho received the idea
so 1 adly, almost seeming to deem
hor Buspicioii a sort cf sacrilege,
that slio was fain to pass it off ligbt-
iv aa a jest, philosophically reflect
ing: “After all, what is it to mo if
he swindle.-; my landlord, who wish
es it and is oils it as a lesson? Hut, I
am sorry for poor Selina.”
Mr. and Mrs. Poyton wore infr.tr.-
•i-ated with tlic man and wished noth- a frame?”
lug more thou that ha should marry ‘ <«oh, yes,
their daughter, while she—a gentle,
shame and grief of becoming his
: wife.
"Is thero a town named Fair-
mount near here?” sho asked Mrs.
Peyton tho next morning.
“Not very near. It is HO miles
! away.”
j “lias it a, queer, little, old fash-
| ioned inn, with, a tall post beforo it
hearing a big blue sign, swinging in
Tumeent girl, with a dominant in- iVouask?”
Tho Eagle tavern, a
Revolutionary relic. But why do
Ktinct cf obedience—would never
-,avo dreamed of rebelling against
.* hen- manifest wish, even if sho had
. Had n dislike for the man.
To avoid mooting her bote noir at
• he dinner table Miss Craig mount-
ad her bicycle and wont away for a
If bong rile. Ton months in tho j’ear
: aLo was a citj T schoolteacher, and
the exhilarating freedom of long
r xaral rides during her suipmer va-
* cation was not simply enjoyment
Taut ecstasy to her.
At dusk sho roturnad, and as sho
; nnd Selina stood together at the
.gate in the gathering darkness, with
"£ieir arms about each other’s waists,
.rho latter whispered timidly, “I’m
: going to be married.”
Kate was startled, oven shocked,
and remained silent until tho pros
pective bride whispered in a tone of
■gentle reproach, “You do not seem
ftlad.” Then, trj’ing her best to
: ‘make some such response as would
expected, she could only say ova-
. -lively: “Indeed you have my very
best wishes for your happiness. But
't was surprised. Is it not a littlo
; sudden?”
“Yes. It was not to bo beforo fall,
Ant. Mr. Rodney must go out to
California on business, to bo gone
"iiree or four months probably, and
wishes to tako mo along. So wo are
tea be married tomorrow. I suppose
may as well he at one time as an
other.”
‘You do not seom very enthusias
tic about it. Do j’ou love him very
much?”
“Oh, I-don't know. He is not ob
jectionable, and mamma says ho is
* very good matoh. I suppose we
will bo as happy as most couples
- are. Mamma says so anyway.”
is ta be tomorrow?.!’
“Only to know if I ‘dreamed
true,’ ” laughed the girl, turning
away.
Sho had no more doubt. Hor per
ception, as well us her impressions,
had been correct, anft sho know
where to find Mrs. Rodney. But—30
miles away! Could sho go thero and
return with her beforo tho wedding?
If tlio woman had a bicycle, and if
she could ride it well, it would not
ho difficult for them to got hack by
1 o’clock. But “ifs” aro always dan
gerous. "What would bo her limit of
time? “Two o’clock,” sho was told,
was sot for tho ceremony. “Good,”
sho said to herself. “He shall not
wed toclaj*. ”
Tho coachman told her tlieyrayto
Fairmount, and immediately after
breakfast sho sot out upon hor
wheel. Tho road was somewhat
hilly, and her task proved harder
than sho had expected. But sho was
a good rider and made tho run in
20 minutes less than three hours,
which, under the circumstances, was
doing well.
So clear had been her psychio im
pressions that when sho entered tho
parlor of tho Eagle tavern sho rec
ognized at once in a woman who
met her thero tho person sho sought
and said to her in a tono of sympn-
tlij”, “111 news makes the hearer un-
welcomo, but 1 hope j’ou will blamo
mo ns little as possible for what I
come to tell you.”
“I can tell better about that when
I hoar what it is, ” replied Mrs. Rod
ney suspiciously.
"It is about your husband.”
“What do you know about my
husband? How do you know I havo
one?”
“No matter about that now. Ido
know, and my knowledge oonoerns
you vtfry iiiatorianj’.
"Who aro you anyway?” angrily
demanded tho woman, whose unrea
soning jealousy made hor suspicious
of every woman who oven know tho
man sho claimed. But Kate’s an
swer metaphorically swept her off
hor feet: “Wliilo you aro wasting
words ho is about marrying another
wife. By 2 o’clock he will do so if
you do not care to prevent it. ”
“What! Jerry! Marry another
wife! Wlio is she? Wheroisho? Let
mo get at him and you’ll sec if I
prevent it.”
“Hois 30 miles from here. But
that is not much if yon can ride a j
safety.” !
“Of course I can. But my wheel
is in tho city.”
“Thou wo must biro one. It is tho
only way to got there in time.”
‘ ‘ We can do it in two hours. Heav
ens! It is nearly noon now!”
They consulted tlio landlord, hut
though there woro plonty of bicy
cles in town ho know of none to ho
hired, and tho best ho could do
would ho to hitch up a team that
“ought to get thorn to Danfield by 3
or 4'o’clock.”
“That seems to ho tho best wo can
do,” said Kato ruefully.
But when he had gone out to or
der tho team tho wife said: “No,
something more. Give mo liis ad--
dress, and if there’s a telegraph
from hero I’ll mako tho wire hot
with a message that will stop his
marrying.”
“A splendid idea! Why didn’t I
think of that?”
“Because he isn’t your husband,
I suppose.”
They found tho telegraph office
easily enough, and the operator was
about to aoaopt Mrs. Rodney’s mes
sage when suddenly ho remembered
that “the wire to Dnnflold was
down,” and nothing could ho got
through. Of course they perceived
no connection between that fact and
the pantomimo of a man who stood
behind them, shaking his head and
showing a $10 note to the operator.
They were not ovon aware of tho
man.
“Fato is against us,” muttered
Mrs. Rodney as sho turned away.
“The devil alwaj’s helps Jerry.”
Hardly had they regained tho tav-
ern when a man camo oiforing to
hire them a wheel, only, as it was a
man’s wheel, the rider would have
to wear bloomers, he said.
“That’s all right,” replied Mrs.
Rodney. “I’ll havo them by the
time you get the wheel hero.”
With tho aid of the landlady’s
sewing machine sho quickly trans
formed a dark petticoat into a pair
of baggy trousers, whioh sho tied
about her ankles with strings. Her
silk skirt she rolled in a tight bun-
die, to bo carried behind her and
dan*!«rfi era tic isurwy’i end, and
wnen
mounted it at once.
Tho hills were hard to climb and j
dangerous to descend. Each woman
bad several falls, but neither was !
seriously hurt, tho worst damage be
ing a scratch on Mrs. Rodney’s brow
from which a little blood tficklcd.
Neither of them noticed that a man
followed them on a wlieqj all tho
wnj', the same one who stood behind
them in tho telegraph offico.
A few minutes beforo 3 o’clock
they readied their destination, and
Mrs. Rodney donnod hey silk skirt.
Tho smart and respectable appear- ;
ance it gave to her lower half con- |
trusted so violently with her bedrag- |
gled, disheveled, goro dabbled and
mud caked upper half that Kate
could not refrain from laughing,
but her own plight was littlo if any
hotter.
Mrs. Peyton, who met them on
tho porch, cried out in alarm: “Good
gracious! What has hhppened? Oh,
I’m sorry you went out.”
“You will he glad of it directly, I
bopo,” nnswerod tho girl seriously.
“Has tho wedding taken place yet?”
“Oh, yes. Half an hour ago.”
Mrs. Rodney sprang forward, hor
eyes blazing, and hoarsely demand
ed, “Do you mean that Mr. liodney
married somebody hero today?”
“Why, certainly; yes,” repliod
Mrs. Peyton, retreating a littlo bo-
fore tho frightful looking woman.
"Ho married my daughter.”
“Hocouldn’t. Hois my husband!”
Mrs. Poyton shrieked- and swoon
ed in Kate’s arms. Several persons
ran out at her cry, and Mrs. Rodney
slipped into tho parlor unnoticed in
the confusion, followed by the pur
suing wheelman, who stealthily ap
peared from the shruhberj’.
Tho enraged wife strodo quickly
to where Mrs. Rodney stood sur
rounded by guests and burst into a
torrent of denunciation. “You
treacherous, lying scoundrel!” sho
hurled at him in a voice vibrant
with fury. “I’ve caught you, havo
I? You thought j’ou could fool mo
with your lies. So this is your big
bank cracking job, eh? Marrying
another girl! Where is sho? Show
her to mo. I want to tell her who
j-ou are—what sho has married. You
lying thief!”
The'respectable company stood in
petrified horror. Tim bridegroom at
bay, nervod by desperation to a mas-
torlj’ effort at bravado, exclaimed in
assumed astonishment, “Who is this
crazy woman?”
“What! You don’t know me, Jor-
ry! And I’m crazy, am I? Not half
as crazy as you’ll he when I land
you in state prison for bigamy.”
"I’ll get an officer,” ho cried,
starting for tho door, in hope of
flight, hut at his second step that
pursuing wheelman stopped him,
cheerily saying, “For fear sho might ,
forget to press tho bigamy charge,
Jorry, I’ll just scoop you in myself
I for burglary." |
Jerrj r sprang hack and attempted
to draw a revolver, but was clutch
ed, “hack heeled” and laid low in an
instant with tho man kneeling on
his breast. Wifely fealty; overcom
ing sense of wrongr, moved Mrs.
Rodney to hurl a heavy porcelain
vase at the officer’s head, but luck
ily her aim was bad. When tho pros
trate rascal had been handouffed, |
his captor explained:
“lam John Lawrence of tho Now j
York doteotive force, and this man, i
known to j’ou as Mr. Fitz-Maurice i
Rodney, as I understand, is Jerry j
Donohue', bank burglar, confidence
man and accomplished all around j
crook. He’s wanted for the South
Elkton hank robbery. We got his !
pals three days ago, hut he was so |
woll covered wo might not have run i
ncross him for a long timo if I hadn’t j
suspocted where Molly was going ;
when sho slipped out of town. And *(
ho camo near getting away as it was.
If he had got that wire you wanted
to sond, old girl, he’d ho far away
now.”
As Jerry already had a wife his
marriage with Selina Peyton was,
of course, void. In prison he sadly
reflects that he was “ruined by a
woman,” but, like most men mak-
lng such retrospective lament, does i
not really know whioh particular ;
woman did the mischief.
for Infants and Children.
T HIRTY t«*»’ sMsrrattoi of Castoria with ths patssnaf sf
million, of psrsoai, permit wa to apeak of It without
It la mtqmastlPliably tho Boil remedy tor Infants srad CUMm
tho world hw sw known. It la harmlosa. CMldron llfco It, It
gifts thorn health. It will sotp their Utss. In It Mothora hare
tff fi«ililat whioh la ateolately info »»d practically perfect as a
sblld’s modlolno,
Castoria destroy Worms. t
Castoria oll»y Feverishness.
Castor!* prevents vomiting Sony Cord.
Ccstorla onroa HHarrhcsa and Wind Colic.
Cststorla relieves Toothing Trophies.
Castor!* cores Constipation and Tlstnlsaty.
Castor!* neutralises tho effects of oarhonlo *cld gas or poisonous air,
Castoria does not contain morphine, optnm, or other narcotic property.
Coatorl* assimilates tho food, regnlatcs tho stom*oh and howols,
giving healthy and natural sloop.
Castor!* Is put op In one-size bottles only. It Is not sold In itslfc.
IJon’t allow any one to soil yon anything else on tho plea or promise
that It Is “just as good" and “will answer every purpose.”
See that yon got C-A~8~T^)*R-I-A.
Tho fao-simllo
signature of
Is on every
wrapper.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
January 23, 1894
30 2yrs.
Lewis Blount.
Jas. B. Edwabds, Jr.
BLOUNT & EDWARDS,
-Lessees Of—
The Pooser Machine Works,
Ilepair and sell
ENGINES, BOILERS, COTTON GIN
NING MACHINERY, PUMPS, PIPE FIT
TINGS, VALVES Ac., &c.
Will repair safes, scales, bicycles and electrical
appliances. Contract for scientific plumbing,
steam and gas fitting, and the erection of -private
water and gass plants either in town or country. Will make me
chanical drawings, contract for moving heavy machinery or build
ings in any pait of the state. Call to see us or write to us and we
will give it prompt attention. If you have second hand machinery,
which you wish to sell write to us and we will find you a purchaser.
Satisfaction or uo pay.
Julv 22, 1895
BLOUNT & EDWARDS.
Milledgeville, Ga.
1,000,000 People Wear
Its Shoes]
HAND
SEWED
PROCESS.
$5.ooi
Wear IV. 1>. Douglas shoes and save from
*1.00 fco *3.00 » pair. All Myles and
Widths. The advance In leather has increased tlio
price of other makes, hut the quality and pi ices of
W. h. Dooslni shoes remain the anuie.
Take nosubstitute; sec that name and price is stamped
on sole. W. I.. Moualas, Kuuoktu.n, Mass. Sold by
FRED* HAUG.
July 1,1895. 1 5m.
CITATION.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County:
To all whom it may Concern:
J jKS. Ctellu M. Case, bv her Attorney,
.iTI p. D. Snnfotd, having in proper form
applied to me for permanent letters of
Hflministnitlo!) on the estate of C. L. Case,
late of suit! county. This is to cite all anti
singular tlu* creditors and next of kin of
C. 1-. Ouse to be end appear at my office
within the time allowed by law. and show
cause, If any they can, why permanent
Administration should riot bo granted to
M i s. Ottilia M. Case on C. L. Caso’s estate.
Witness ray hand official signature,Nov.
4th, 1895, M. It. BELL, Otdlnary, B. C
The wife of Mr, Leonard Welle, of
East Brimfield, Mass , bad been suf
fering from neuralgia for two days,
uot being able to sleep or hardly
keep still, when Mr. Holdpn, tf e
merchant, there sent her a bottle of
Chamberlain’s Pain Halm, and asked
that she give it a thorough trial. On
meeting Air. Wells the next day
he was told that she was all
right, the pain had left her witii u
two hours, and that the bot'le
of Pain Balm was worth $5.00 if it
could not bo had for less. For sale
at 50 cents per bottle by Culver &
Kidd, Milledgeville, Ga.
The New York Hun says the squir
rels and the Democrats caught thun
der on election day. The President
went hunting and'all the rest of the
Democrats took to the woods.
$200 Offered Free!
Office First National Bank,
Nashville, Tenn., April 6,1S95.
Prop. J. F. DRAronoN, Prns.Drauoiion’sPrac
tical Business College, Nashville,Tenn.
Deaf. Sir :—The time for which you deposited
$100 three months ago to-day as n forfeit under
your proposition to give $ioo to any charitable
institution in Nashvllleandjioolo any Business
College south of the Ohio River, if you could not
show more written applications for P.ook keepers
and Stenographers during the PAST FIVE
MONTHS than any other Business College south
of the Ohio River could show in the PAST FIVE
YEARS, has this day expired, and, no demand
having been made, tlic same is now held subject
to your check. Respectfully,
W. F. Bang, Cashier.
N. B.—A certificate of deposit for the above
was published in the daily papers of Nashville,
the Cincinnatii Enquirer, the Alluvia Constitu
tion, and thirty thousand circulars, giving the
colleges three months’ time to accept.—-VarA-
viHe Daily American, April g, 1 •.
Write Prof. J. F. Draugbon, Nashville, Tenn.,
for his free Catalogue.
CITATION.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County :
To alt whom it may concern.
T F. BELL (a creditor) having in prope
Y( * form applied to me tor permanent let
Lers of administration on the estate of Ha!
Lofton, c., late ol said county, this is to
cite all and singular creditors and next
of Kin of Hal Lotton, to be and appear
at my office, within the time allowed by
law, and show cause, If any they can why
peimanent administration should not be
granted to J. F. Hell (a creditor) on Hal
Lofton’s, c., estate.
Wltnest ray hand and official signature,
November 4,1895.
M. K. BELL, Ordinary B. C
Bowling (*reen Business College*
B usiness, Short Hand, Penmanship, Te
legraphy, elc., taught. Beautiful cat
alogue Free. Address
CHERBY BROS., Bowling Green, Ky.
Aug. 12. 1895. 1 6m.
W, H. Leonard has just received
a fresh lot of hams, which he is sella
ing at 11 cents per pound.
WANTED-ANIDEASSSMKK
BURN* OO., Patent Attorney* Washingte*.
D. O., for their $1,800 prise offer.
CHATION.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County:
Court of Ordinary, l
November Term, 1895.1
E S. VINSON, Administrator of tho cf -
• tato ol Mrs. H. C. Vinson, deceases,
and also Administrator on tho estate
Mrs. E. C. Vinson, de bonis non, has made
application to tills court for leave to seh
all of the real ostate In said county be
longing to tho estate of Mrs. M, 0,*Yinson
and E. 0. Vinson deceased. 1
This is therefore- to cite all persons mi
terested to show cause, if any they’ cab, at
the December term of tnis court, 1893, whj
said application should not be granted.
Witness my hand and official slgnatnri
November 4th, 1885. „ „
M. It. BELL. Ordinary B.G.
Citation.
GEORGIA, Baldwin Coonty.
To all whom it njay concern:
Vf ARTIN V. Harris, c., having In proper
iVI fprni applied to me for permanent
letters of Administration on the e 3 '* 1 ’®,".'
Martin Harris, c„ late of said county
This is to cite ull and singular, the creu
lors and next of kin of Martin Harris, c«
to be and appear at my office Within in-
time ullowed by law and show cause-
any they can, why permanent Aaminisir
lion should not be granted to Marun
Harris, 0., on Martin Harris s, c„ ■
Witness my hand an official slgnata
October 31st, 1895. . „ r
M. R. BELL, Ordinary B. t-
DR. «. M. CLAKkE.
—Diseases of The—
m, NOSE AND TNROM
OFFICE PRACTICE ONLY.
Glosses fitted to suit any condition
the eyea