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Columbia Sentinel
PUBLISHED EVERY Tt’IKDAY AND FRIDAY
AT HARLEM, GEOnillA.
ENTERED AS BKOOND-CI.ABS MATTER AT TUB
POST OFFICE IN HARLEM. OA.
CITY AND COUNTY DIRECTORY
CITY COUNCIL.
J. W. FELL, Mayor,
j. C, cubby.
11. A. COOK.
W. E. HATCHER.
J. L. HUSSEY.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
G.D. DARSF.Y, Ordinary.
G. M. OLI VE, Clerk and Tr< .surer.
I, L. MAGHUDF.iI. Sheriff.
O. HARDY, Tax Collector.
J. A. GBF.EN, Tax Receiver.
W. H. HALL.Coroner.
11. It. HATCHER, Surveyor.
MASONIC.
Harlem Lodge,No. 276 F. A. M.,meet. 2d and
4th Saturdays.
CHURCHES.
Baptiat -Hervicee Ith Sunday. Dr. F..li.< are
well Sunday school every Sunday. Superin
tendent H'-v.L W. Ellington.
Methodist Every 3rd Sunday Rev. IV. 1.
Hhackleford, pastor. Sabbath School every
Sunday, H. A. Merry, Supt.
Magistrate's Court, 12Htli Disti let, G. M., 4tb
Saturday. Return day 15 days before.
W. it. Koucck, J. P.
1L... . . ““
George 11. Chur, hill committed suicide
in Kan Francisco by taking poison. In
n letter addressed to the Coroner he says
that he was driven to it because he had
been in ill health for years and unable to
work. And lie continues: “It takes
money to live and it requires work to
get money, and I am unable to work, too
proud to beg, and not smart enough to
steal. lam absolutely compelled by the
unfortunate circumstances in which I am
placed to end a life which has become a
burden to me.” He even appended an
epitaph which he had himself composed
and which he wished inscribed upon his
tombstone:
Here unfortunate Churchill lies;
Noliody laughs, nobo ly cries;
Where he’s gone, how he fares
Nobody knows, nobody cares.
It's a pretty cold blooded thing Ao
scientifically analyze and describe a kiss,
but Henry T. Finck docs it; and he
scQins to feel the magnetism of the sub
ject, by the way he concludes: “Kiss
ing, like every other fine art, has its
imaginative or intellectual side. Os all
parts of the visible body the lips are the
most sensitive to contact. Here the
layer in which the nerves and blood ves
sels are contained is not covered over as
elsewhere on the skin, but covered with
a leathery epithelium, so that when lips
are applied to lips the blood vessels
which carry the vital fluid straight from
the two loving hearts, and the soul
fibers,called nerves,are brought in almost
immediate contact, whence that inter
s'hange of soul magnetism, that electric
shock which makes the first mutual kiss
of love the sweetest moment in life.”
American genius has devised the idea
of electro-plating human bodies, so that
they cannot possibly decay. A working
jeweler in St. Louis has for several
months been engaged in the experiment
of embalming eggs, meat and vegetables
by plating them with gold and silver,
and is convinced that be can do the same
with human bodies. The embalming
adopted by the American Indians and
Egyptians he believes was far more diffi
cult than his electro-plating process.
Their plans shriveled upthe body, while
modern embalming preserves it about the
same size as in life for a long time after
death. A body thus embalmed, the in
ventor says, can within a limited time be
covered with an electro plating of gold,
silver or copper, and made to last for
ages. When thus plated the individuals
themselves could take the place of stat
uary. The inventor thinks it would be
pleasant in the coming years to be able to
gold-plate and keep intact upon beauti
ful pedestals all national celebrities. So
enthusiastic on the subject is the inventor
that ho asserts that metallic embalming
is destined to supersede carved granite
and br mzed statuary.
The Courteous Persian s.
The Persians are a very punctilious
race; nnd it is the sensible custom of the
country, in m iking a call, to announce
beforehand that you are coming. A
thousand and one little points of punc
tilio have to be olwerved. A certain
number of oujts of tea me de rigour,
three pipes at least have to be smoked, a
few whiffs from each; the rank and pre
cedence of every guest is rigorously ob
served. anil each visitor intrigues for.and
generally receives a I tile mo e than her
due. To omit to return n visit is an un
pardonable offence. The particular place
injhe npaitmeiit of each guest is regu
lated to a nicety, and many and bitter
ire the feuds onthissubjeet. • >'/. J,un«»'»
o'<u Ud.
Overtaken by Fate.
“Remarkable thing that about the
Guiteau curse," -aid one Austin man to
another.
“Yes, it is.”
“He said misfortune would i onic upon
all who had anything to do with his
trial.”
“1 know he did."
"A good many of them are dead al
ready."
“So I have read in the papers."
“No parallel for this is found in his
tory, 1 think.”
“Oil. res. there is.”
“What:"
“The fate that befell the assassin- ,>r
Julius Casar all dead, every one of
them.”— Te-rnn X; f/ays I
X CHAPTER OX RATTLERS.)
' WHAT OLD SIMON KENT KNOWS
ABOUT THEM.
( fleudy to Feast on Anything but
Hats, Bantam., and Ilogs, anil
Not to lie Trusted at All.
“Yes," said Simon Kent, the “rattle
snake king” of Clinton County, Penn.,
to a New Y ork 7’.mea corresp indent, “I
think I kno.v n few tilings about rattle-
I snakes. I ought to. I’ve lived next
do >r neighlmr to them for forty years, |
They're friends of mine, but I wouldn't i
trust one of them a single second if he
j was in reach of mo.”
Kent and n sixteen year old son live
alone in the .woods. The father is a man
of intelligence, but spends most of his
time in captuiing rattlemakes, which are
abundant in bi* local.ty. He has some
times us many as JOO of these venomous
reptiles in captivity at one time. IL'sup
plies side shows and mu-e uns with live !
tattlers and h has quite a trade in
* tanne I rattlesnake skins, which are med
extensively by manufacturers of fancy ar
ticles. He also sells large quantities of
* rattlesnake oil, faith in its elficacy ns iJ
liniment being general throughout this
part of Pennsylvania.
y “I've got a rattlesnake nt home,” con
tinue I the rattlesnake king, “that I
1 I have had eleven years. I ra sed him
i from th ■ time that he was three inches
long, and I think the world of him, but
he’s got his fangs in, and I know that he
would just as l< ivc so k them into mo
ns into anybody else. I call him Nico
demus. 1 have learned a good deal
about rattlesnakes during my long ex
perience with them, but 1 have discov
ered more things about them through j
Nicodemus than in any other way. I
Among other tilings I have found that
the rattlesnake ch inges its skin twice n
year in July and September and that if
they cau’tget to water while they're shed
ing their skin it will come off slowly and
in pieces, instead of peeling off in one
whole piece from head to tail. But I’ve
never caught on to just how they get the
skin off. I've gone to bed at night and
1 left Nico Icmus without his showing any
more sign of peeling himself than if he'd
been a stick of wood, but in the morning
his old clot lies would be lying in one
corner of the cage, and he would be as
bright, as an old-fashioned patchwork
quilt in his new ones.
“It is the general impression that when
a rattlesnake is shedding his skin he gets
blind. There is no mistake that his
eyes do get covered with a bluish film at
that time, but just put a mouse in his
cage and see how qnick lie'll coil up nnd
semi for it and hit it in the neck every
time. A lattlesnnkc always strikes for
the neck, and he always strikes his prey
j before In: cats it; but you may till his
cage with rats, or mice, or frogs, or any
| tiling else he likes, and he’ll never touch
one of them unless he’s hungry. He
kills only enough for one meal, and when
that is swallowed anything and every
thing that’s left can crawl over him,
jump on him and tumble him around as
much as it pleases and he'll never say
‘boo.’ The rattlesnake is not a wanton
destroyer, nor is he a glutton. Two mice
will make him an ample meal. 1 had my
pet rattlesnake ten months before he ate
a mouthful or drank a drop of anything, i
A rattlesnake has been known to remain
fourteen months in captivity without eat
ing and drinking.,and then all of a sud
den begin to find his appetite.
“There is no telling how long an ani
mal will live after being struck by a rat
tlesnake, and it may not die at all. I
have known a rat to die within six min
utes after Nicodemus sethis fangs in its
neck, and have known one, again, to live
I more than a day after being struck. I
turned a little bantam hen into Nico
demus’s cage one day, and when he
struck her it made her so mad that she
turned ami pitched into him so fiercely
that shedrove him into a corner bleed
ing like a stuck pig. I was afraid this
excited little fowl would kill him, and I
took her out as soon as I could. She !
keeled over an hour afterward, anil I
, supposed, of course, th it she was done !
for. withall that rattlesnake poison in
i her. but she lived three days in a stupor !
.' nnd then gradually, got well. That was
the only instance I ever knew of any
thing recovering from the bite of a rat
tlesnake without being treated for the
poisoning.”
“Except hogs, pop,” interjected the
rattle-nake king’s sou once more.
"(111, yes, except hogs,” replied the
father. "Hogs don’t mind rattlesnakes
any more than I mind Hies I had an old
sow once - do you mind old Jennie, 1
Bob? that was’ a terror after rattle- ;
snake . She could find the trail of one
ns surely ns the hound can find the deer's
track, mid she'd follow that trail till she
came up with the snake that made it,
and then the rattler w.i. her meat. She
didn’t seem to care for any other kind of
snakes, but she'd hunt rat tiers from the
beginning of tin--eason till the end. If
I could have taught th it pig to retrieve
sheM have been worth a good deal to me,
for the number of snakes she'd have
brought in during the season would have I
bet'll immense; but sli ■ wasn't on the re
trieve. She was hunting for her own
nceomin illation, and ate every snake she
caught, leaving only the head. I used
to find so many rattlesnake heads on my
tours through the wo ids that it began
to dawn on me that my old sow was
working dead against me by destroying
the - l ike crop, and 1 wax finally forced
to kill her for my own protection.
"I have tried the effect of Nicodemus’s >
bite on many di line t animals and birds,
and with the exception of the ba;i:a:n
and a cur do ; that I experimented on,
every one of them died, some very soon
after being bitten, and same not until
, three or four days had passed. lam
sorry to say that Nicodemus has a record
of one man. too. on his lis: of victims. |
As a general thing, 1 do not believe that
the bite of a rattlesnake will result fatally
t > human being-, but it did in this case.
Ti'e nun’s i a ne was Flint, and it was nil
his own fault that he was bitten, lie
w.n one of thus • over courageous, smart
fellows, who think they can doanythine.
He w i- at my pi n • one day and got to
toa*ing the snake Finally he poked his
finger through on ■ of the nr. shes of the
wire ut Ni odemu- When a rattlesnake
strikes il neve: misses its mark if what
it strikes at is within reach. There is no
movement in the w orld nny quicker than
n rattle-n iki - -trike The snake -triw's
at" Flint's linger and. of course, hit it.
In Iwo hours the man was il- ad. 1 hadn't
a drop of whisky in the hints >, and before
' it was possible to send and get some Flint
was dead.
“A human being meins to be the only
creature that suffers pain from a rattle
snake's bite. Everyother living thing
that I ever saw bitten by a rattlesnake
seemed to act as if it had been chloro
formed. Toucan hardly see where a
snake’, fangs ent r the flesh, and not a
drop of blood Hows from the wound. In- ]
fi immation sets in at once; the breath ;
begins to come hard and short. In ani
mals paralysis soon occurs in the hind !
parts. Tlic blood leaves the extremities
and lie omes thin. The heart of any
an md that dies from rattlesnake poison
' will always be found filled with blood in
a thin fluid state instead of being coagu
lated.
“I am a firm bel'cver in whisky as an
antidote for rattlesnake poisoning. I
have known seven different cases of per
sons being bitten by rattlers where
whisky was adm nister d promptly nnd
lilxr.illy, nnd not one was fatal. Besides
tli" case of the man whom my snake
killed I know of two others where tlic
victims died. They were both treated
by doctors, but whisky was not used in
cither case
"When anyone tells you that a snake’s
age can be told by the numb r of its
rattles, don't believe it. I’ve caught
snakes two feet long that had more rat
tles than others twice My pet
rattlesnake is eleven years old, and he
lias fourteen as nice rattles as any snake
fancier ever saw. besides a beauty of a
button at the end of 'em. It’s a very rare
case, too, where a rattlesnake gets to be
more than four feet long in this lati
ttl le."
NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN.
New jackets are much braided.
Strings again appear on bonnets.
Tlic newest red shade is old rose.
Ribbons are much used for dress dec
orations.
I lots, big and little, appear on some of
the new fabrics.
Hepped silks are combined with plain
with excellent effect.
Bengalines come in soft, dull finish,
with larger reps, this season.
Twelve women do inspectors’ duty in
the New York Custom House.
Pretty morning dresses arc made of
old-fashione 1 cross-barred muslin.
Apron draperies are now plaited into
the belt instead of across the skirt as
formerly.
Striped gros-grain in two or three
colors is a recent addition to the list of
dressy materials.
Velvet, faille Francaisc, Bengaline,
moire and gros grain will be leading
fabrics in millinery.
The banded bodice, which is in reality
a belted waist, is in high favor for toilets
of all descriptions.
White felt sailor hats with a wide band
around the crown are worn with flannel
dresses of any color.
Ribbons will continue to be used for
bonnet trimmings in widths from two
and a half to four or five inches.
Strips of black ribbon covered with
puffs of Maline net or lace are used to
i form square pockets on polonaises.
Night dres-es of striped percale, in two
shades of blue, pink or other color, are
novel and desirable for use when travel
ing.
The skirts now worn afford an op
portunity of making many changes in
dress by wearing different bodices with
' them.
Senator Sherman's daughter Mary, a
twenty-two-yc ir-old maiden, is said to be
as well up in public matters as the aver
age Congressman.
It is predicted that long velvet red
ingotes, with satin skirts, will be ex
tensively worn the coming fall. Indeed,
many velvets are now worn.
In Syracuse, Kansas, where they have
j elected a City Council entirely of women,
the sidewalks arc always kept in repair
and the streets swept clean.
The polonaise is the phoenix among
i garments. It is constantly “dying out”
; and as constantly “coming in” again. It
is now enjoying one of its periodical
revivals.
Another arrangement for touching up
a plain bodice consists of a detachable
revers of velvet coming from shoulders
to waist, with four folds inside them
, near the front.
The elegant Indian woman, “Bright
Eyes,” who is now Mrs. Tibbles, is mak
ing arrangements for a series of lectures
in London, on the wrongs of the North
American Indians.
Very high and very tight collars are
the fashion for out door dresses. Not a
half-inch of the fashionable woman’s
neck is visible now in daylight. It is
different in the evening.
The white stuff lingerie for ucck and
wrists is hcm-stitched with doubly or
j singly. They are in baxon or sailor shape
and the collar is fastened with a loosely
i knotted tie of soft silk.
The sailor hat has taken a new lease of
life. Some of the newest are prettily
trimmed with loops of ribbon at the
■ back, some e; et, and several being laid
on the crown, pointing toward the front.
With the advent of sashes appears the
graceful empire -ash, which isot soft white
surah. It forms a wide girdle around |
the waist and ties in two loops or below !
the other on the skirt, falling to the
feet.
Tailor made suits in their utmost se
verity of cut and finish are no longer the I
style. There is something yet that has a
little more grace and decoration which is
quite as stylish. It is the French adap
tation of the tailor e st nine.
Miss Cleveland, in her recent article,
"Patriotism." urges all American girls
to be as American as they can. She
heartily condemns the fashion of being
"very English, you know,” and says
th it is the beginning of disloyalty.
Plaid ribbons are seen on the models
for fall bonnets, and are always more or
less unbecoming, giving a mixed up ef
ect. They are pretty enough for young
girls' and children's hats, and for this
purpose also they will be used.
Tlic venerable Duchess of Cambridge
ha-, for fourteen years, been almost con
-tantly suffering front an incurable and
intense’y painful malady, but is seldom
heard to complain. Her ninety years
have not impaired the vigor of her miud
or the relative power of her memcry
DODGE’S C. C. C.C
Certain (Men Cholera Cure,
Eightycars of careful experiment and pains
taking research have resulted in the discovery
of an infallible specific for the cure and pre
vention of that moat fatal and dreaded ent-my
of the feathered tribo—Cholera. After the
' fullest and fairest tests possible, in which event
1 claim for the remedy was fully substantiated,
tie remedy was placed upon the market, aud
| everywhere a single trial has been all that was
required to prove it a complete success, rhe
directions for its use are plain and simple, and
the cost of the remedy so small that the saving
of a single fowl will repay the expense. Its
effect is almost magical. If tlic remedy is
Hven as directed, th e course of the disease is
stopped at ouce. Given occasionally as a pre
v < ntive, there need be no fear ot ( holera,
which annually kills more fowls than all other
diseases combined. It is trne to name, a Cer
tain Cure for Chicken Cholera. No poultry
raiser or farmer can afford to be without it. It
will do all that is claimed for it. Read the fol
lowing testimonial :
STATE OF GEORGIA,
DEI'AIITMESr OF AOBICVLTCRF.,
Atlanta, Ga., March 19, 1887
To the Public: The high character of the
testimonials produced by Mr. Dodge, together
with his well known reputation for truth ami
veracity, afford convincing evidence of the
high Value of the Chicken Cholera Cure he is
now offering upon the market. If I were en
gaged in the business, I would procure a bot
tle of his medicine, little doubting the success
that would attend its administration.
Yours trulv
J. T. HENDERSON,
Com’r of Agriculture.
Price 25c. Per Package,
Manufactured Exclusively by
a, 3* x>ox>g;e
No. 62 Frazier Street, - - - - Atlanta, Ga
For Sale by all Druggists.
SINGLE PACKAGE BY MAIL 30 CENTS
Also breeder of the beet variety of thorough
bred Chickens, of which the following are the
names and prices of eggs for setting. Chickens
in trios and breeding pens for sale after Sep
tember let, 1887:
Langehanss2.oo per setting of 13.
Plymouth Bocks 2.00 per settirg of 13.
White Face Black
Spanish 2.00 per setting of 18.
Houdans 2.00 per setting of 13.
Wyandotte 2.00 per setting of 13.
Silver S. Hamburgs.... 2 00 per setting of 13.
Amer’n Dominique 2.00 per setting of 13.
White Leghorns 1.50 per setting of 13.
Black Leghorns 1.50 per setting of 13.
Brown Leghornsl.so per setting of 13.
Game 3.00 per setting of 13.
C. C. C. 0. for sale by G. M.
Reed, Harlem, Ga , and W. J
ileggie, Grovetown, Ga.
L*tt.S.Wi, H.
THE GREAT
PIANO: OBMN
DEPOT OF THE SOUTH
Yu i .t~y. -
oosit ot ooet ‘oset ‘oizs ‘osit ‘soNt/d
SEEING
fs belfovinf. Behold tp mw® er®. Immense •
Bo it i®. end all nwd in our own Music and Art
pn*the%Se of PIANOS AND ORGANS
in which we lead all, and SAVE buyers
« °® instrument told.
IjIVE HOI SE! Right you are. Dixie’s bl&z
in« aua don’t oven wilt us one bit. W" See our
GRAND SUMMER SALE
gams ! Price® way down. Tonus oaoler than ever.
PIANOS SB to SIO Monthly.
ORGANS S 3 to SB Monthly.
BETTER YET!
Bl OUR ga
F SPECSAL i
SPOT CASH PRICES, with credit
until Nov. 1. No Monthly Pay
ments. No Interest. Buy in June,
July, August, or September,and
pay when crops come in.
Writ. for CiroaUra.
REMEMBER
Lowest Prices known.:
Easiest Terms possible.
Finest Instruments
Fine Stools and Coverst
All Freight Paid.
Fifteen Days’ Trial.
Full Guarantee.
Square Dealing Always,
Writ.to saved.
JJD!O 8? BATE
SOUTHERN »!■" , S ■ .
Home Council
We take pleasure in calling your
attention to a remedy so long needed
in carrying children safely through
the critical stage of teething. It is an
incalculable blessing to mother and
child. If you are disturbed at night
with a sick, fretful, teething child, use
Pitts’ Carminative, it will give instant
relief, and regulate the bowels, andj
make teething safe and easy. It will
cure Dysentery and Diarrhoea. Pitts
Carminative is an instant relief for ;
colic of infants. It will promote di- ■
gestiou, give tone and energy to the
stomach and bowels. The sick, puny,
suffering child will soon become the
fat and frolicing joy of the household.
It is very pleasant to the taste and
only costs 25 cents ter bottle. Sold
by druggists.
For sale at Holliday’s Drug Store
and Peeples Drug Store,Harlem,Ga. i
and by WJ. Heggie, of Grovetown, I
M . I. DELPH,
831 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA, - - - GEORGIA.
3 car loads COOKING and HEATING STOVES.
1 car load of GRATES, Plain and Enameled- 13, 14,15,16, 17,18,19 and 20 inches.
150 boxes ROOFING TIN, 20x28, standard brands.
5,000 FIRE BRICK, 15 bbls. FIRE CLAY.
200 Joints Terra Cotta Pipe, 500 Sets of GRATE BRICK,
1 000 pounds No. SOLDER. 500 pounds half and half SOLDER.
100 bundles SHEET IRON.
One car load Tin Ware, Pressed and Pieced.
Buckets. Cups, Dish Pans, Wash Pans, Milk Pans, Milk Buckets, Strainers, Oil Cans, Coffee
Pots, Pie Plates, Measures and Funnels, YVoodenwarc in great variety.
DUB
Has been sold for the past fifteen years giving satisfaction. Twenty different sizes. The New
Excelsior is very handsomely finished. We have a few Portable and Stationary Ranges-Bu,.|
and Iron.
Call or send your orders to 831 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
\V, I, Delph:
COTTON FACTORS AND COMPRESSORS.
AUGUSTA, GA.
Warehouse and Compress occupying block bounded by Washington,Twiggs
Calhoun nnd Taylor streets, aud connected with all the rail roads center
ing here by double tracks extending into our yards.
Moderate Charges. Drayage Saved.
Consignments Solicited- Liberal Advances Made cn Consignments-
OFFICE :739 REYNOLDS ST.,
Rooms for Several Years Occupied by Aufiusta Cotton Exchange.
E. ZR. SCHITEIDEB,
IMPORTER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN
Fine Wines, Cigars, Brandies, Tobacco,
Mineral Waters, Whiskies, Gin,
Porter, Ale, Etc.
Agent for Veuve Cliquot, Ponsardin, Uibar.a Wine Company,
Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association.
601 and 803 JBROA.D STREET,
AUGUSTA, GA.
AT
X H. EEABETS;
Call and examine my Stock before making
purchases.
X EL
Cotton Factor and Commission Merchant,
CONTINUES BUSINESS AS HERETOFORE AT
FIRE-PROOF+WAREHOUSE,
No. 19 Mclntosh Street, Augusta, Ca.
J®”Strict attention to all Consignments and prompt Remittances.
w. s. jessup. (Sign Red Front.) OEO - K - JESSUP
JESgyiP IBR©®.,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
Stoves and Ranges, Fireplace Heaters
Furnaces, Tinware and He use-Furnishing Goods. Sole agents for the Cel
ebrated “Favorite” Cook Stoves, conceded by all to be the best Stove ever
made. Roofing, Guttering, Spouting and Repairing done in the best man
ner by the best mechanics.
s3s Street* Augusta) Ca
CTMY 4
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants,
105 M’IRTOSKS-T. (Cor. Reynolds) AUGUSTA.GA.
Save money by sending your Cotton to us. Commission 50c per bale.
Insurance 10c. per bale. No other charge when left for immediate sale.
Consignments Solicited.
Litteral Advances made on ’Consignmentß.
JNO. U. MEYER, who has had several years experience, will have charge
of the Sales. Hoping to have a share of your business,
We remain, yours respectfully,
CTJEEY Ac CO.
Pure and Fresh Candies.
“VT7”E are making up our Fall Stock of CANDIES and can assure our customers that all out
VV goods are FRESH AND PURE, having none but the best. We manufacture our goon*
and know what we an- selling. Wo are expecting a large trade and shall b 3 pleased to see all
our old customers and many new ones. Headquarters for
Stick Candy, Fruits, JVuts, Etc.
DENNING & CO.
@W« WOSB
Having secured the Agency for the celebrated
Burnham Water Wheel
or eor B' ft an d South Carolina, lam prepared offer
inducements to parties wishing to put in wheels.
am a ' so prepared to do any kind of Mill Work, or re
Correspondence solicited.
CSAB r. LOMBASn.
ACOUSTA, GEOSqtA.
■ V oDe oost ot sls ‘sat 'oss ‘tzt ‘snroyo \