> ee HRDAILY EXAMI Tuk Leapixe DatLy NEWSPAPER or P. BE. Ishanp, ssued every afternoon, from the office of ae EXAMINER PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the ood. 3 House Buliding, Queen Street. RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. ,-N ADVANCE) Owe YEAR coe nD ee NS soi 0c0sshdamcesedennnsiieasenee 2.00 THREES MonTHs - 1.00 OnE MONTH - 0.35 aid to any part of Canada or United States a y -ler Li The Weekly Examiner Friday morning from the cfivce. It is made up of matier which has appeared in the Daily editions, and faa first-class weekly newspaper—interesting Fent pos the je ‘asued every oublishers’ puodiuisoet VOL 35. ser.ate Read, ROOM de TERMS : Four Dollars a Year ee nearer EE HE DAILY EXAM “This is true Liberty, wien Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.” —Euripides. Single Oopies Two Oents CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, FRIDAY, i, a MARCH 13, 1896. 212 NO d fail of the latest news, NEWS OF ELECTRIC TY. | eer ‘a a a ee Pete er eens eee : eae ne A Simple Stree Car Track Cleancr. | In x Of STI track as ig $ is be 0 il j ties i \ con | ter w Ww th is | to ‘ s t s | snow S ) ra | ove : i T uv i suft V the | a rg tities of | SI \ r Ss ex- | ] | igre : \ ® = geht | . | yt S > I ) 0 pte | t 5 wn | i } tr . shes s me mint. | > } I SI ang ‘ j ‘ t x As r | go S s sa I c ed, | an Ww 01 ~ s ward | fr s sare made | of « I Ss a £ ilvan- | ized g ‘I s Z s the | bes S s s snow and ice vears The } brus pplied y make of | cay rais 1 ‘ Vv i} the 1 By tl Y ent of } ears $ Vice fa f snow is t ‘ Ss nd the cars | i t S Ss KE 1e | read e1 wi <pensive goes a long ways now-a-days. be. ONE DOLLAR In many cases it is worth almost double what it used to See the Men's Suits in our window for $4.50, $5.00, $5.50, $6.00, $7.00 and $8, and then give us your opinion ot the value of a dollar. The Suits above mentioned are only a drop in the bucket compared with the amount of Clothing we have in stock. See our Children’s Suits for $2.00, our Boys’ Suits for $2.50, our Youths’ Suits for $4,090, and our Spring Overcoats for Youths and Men. We have the best and largest stock of Clothing in the city. McKay Woolen Co., Bargain Corner. —_—- T. McKenzie, Tailor, with good room 9} tairs for work shop or store rcom, wild ing. TO LET. | i That large Shop, part of the “Londo Ouse” Building, lately occupied by « "Apply to HON. DANIEL DAVIES, L. H. DAVIES, Q. €., Executors Estate late Gco, Davies, Or to F. W. L. Moore, Sclicitor, in oct High Quality and Low Price. A little money goes a long way at Newson's Furniture Store, JOHN NEWSON, Ch’town, March 10, 1896. THE BARGAIN GIVER. i ae To ng snow into ic z ies a steel nose plow a f t dee I Is prov ide d W he n th f Si 1 ssary it is fixed : brushes, taking cf snow + ; 1) > } 0 i - = inches, the brushes ig of the res Che Axe k ns now ordinarily em- ploy Ss ir track work are 6 inches ec a 2 hes wide, with bris s s in t gtl v the brushes mproved track cleaner hat roffrom 18S ji sto2 feet, ig te heig f ur —— wit! x h « ol es and §S inches of bristles This, of cours gives a - . co : : E-O}" 3: en ace oe a e As Others See Us. Ti etty girls, perhaps six- a oe teen g 1 years of age, both Th s rE . } righten even tha] BUG Bicycle Acatemy and Roller Rink ‘ stan brighten even the ding of wa “oom, as the jostled «ach other this way IS NOW IN FULL SWING DAILY. an Ca eee How you enjoy the lecture? SKATING or CYCLING every afternoon. Engage- | Enjoy! Don’t 1 -! Tey. | ments may be made for private lessons to pupils any hour | fered agonies during forenoons. Evenings will be arranged for, with or 5 ‘W take 1 veh away.} without band, as the pubtic demand. A limited number of | 10W §s . ‘ . ° ° a : Roller Skates and Bicycle: to hire. Terms on apgention. | ‘fF and I’ve always sup- AT . P pesed |} \ 3 Ww pinG 4 : V -_i fy ER os ek. | “oe s all g on. He's a March 11, 1896—3i per-ect en ~ erence r “eewhat Md he ony’ ee eee er te } “Oh! I don’t remember ; but it was or . too utterly awful for anything.’ “fj { th “Can't you remember some of the ou may pall Wi a very | awful things 2” N ed! I didn’t even try to/},® b h d t t b erin Heya ones (IQ brush, and yet not be a | the é meat the only wi = I didn't faint ae s g 33 etacerey t painter.”---Carlyl Pevwvceorcny i | gpeat painter.”---Carlyle. peop! wful a “Youw vith Fred d von 2” i . [ Sagan Oe ee The secret of good painting is GOOD PAINTI, : I eV ercoa } lor ‘ : ‘ And you play to-night, I suppose.” The whole secret is right material. For your Yes, of c “a. = \ thin : : : i would bea fizzle if I didn't.” And the €pring Painting use nothing but our Pure Paint letter’ af eitaes Seatnees and unidulteratel Linseed Oils, The work will | ee aaa — be as good as ever when all trace of inferior | vers sentim vas on f sorroy : inti } ia eh cnis antiendd hesety deuia paints have been washed away. In painting, | be | k with w h she tried . : te sty scare left bv over- poor materials are dear at any price. wee! g H t I ex~- hos sitieche tides! PrP. B. NORTON & CO people a and while she fancied . B. i " 8: ring SU} by rotiy 7 1 1 ~ ° % ro ty nd the like, - 25 City Hardware Store. ser aud > 1 ly 1 t she might see herself as others saw her, : 4 The Wrong Word, There isin the city a certain young attect ) Ta ns who has comn ated tothe world his resolve to eschew its pleasures for the present. This d nation is by no means due to t f ofa cold shoulder being turn ard him by the fashionables, but « yunt of the numerous con- Versational slips that heis conscious of making. Telling of a certain useasion whe tin ze foot” more than usual! says: l talk to ze ladees and and | agreeable, and all at Once Zey co w quiet an 1 look at me £q var’ 2 I exclaim, *‘What haf I done ze ladees zey make answer ‘It is n u haf done, monsieur, but w 1 haf said.’ And zen I feel i decayed, oh, so decayed.” a E - ' His i | reminded him that } 1d made another faux pas and preceeded to explain to him the diffe: ent a} is of the synonyms, dé Cayed an rtified, and the despair ing fo plied: ‘*Haf I not told you I spik bad all ze time?"”—Wash- fempted by the Stamps. | I or ta 1 with a man who had Served a t in prison for embezzle- . a5 - ment. He said that the first step in his | i downfa = tamp drawer. The PREARSA RES Ss ler) h tore, as in many, helped ye { = s mps from this drawer J +0 ette using the firm’s b. i Sta What more natrral us | than \ i take a few inore Ry Stal ere dering some trifle bs ha H ig ade this sta and vn seeing | t efrom, how easy @ § * Was to take a larger amount when a 3B gains. ¢ nore expensive article was wanted. AZ The , *" " € the dollar’s worth of . Stamys t lar itself was nota : very long and then to large ; j i F Sella, Sellewel at lanath by discon A number of those beautiful and! | ery a) ft Ks : - Yanda prison! This was the man’s sot} . se ua story, and it set me to thinking — artistic Parlor and Chamber Sets e noe ing. ‘ ° : e — odd fancy pieces—which combine Fs : acne a c=. DIGESTIBILITY OF FATS. A Few Physiological Facts Worth Re- membering About This Important Matter. The human system cannot long re- main in acondition of health without the inclusion of fats in the dietary. On the other hand, too much fat quickly proves injurious and deranges the di- gestive organs. Persons of weak digestion, as well as) invalids, and children, have asa rule a distaste for fats, with the exception of a few of the more digestible, such as butter and cream. Cod-liver oil, says Youth’s Com- panion, is among the most easily digestible of fats, and on account of its high nutritive quality is one of the most valuable, especially to weak, irritable children who are inclined to nervousness, skin disorders or to winter or enronic coughs. Pains should be taken to make cod- liver oil assimilate where it seems at first to disagree with the stomach. A few drops only may be given in the beginning, and the quantity increased slowly, when after a few weeks it will often be found to be readily digested. This improvement is probably due to the increased vitality genereted by the oil, as wellas to the toleration acquired for it. Large quantities of fat taken with food cause indigestion. the fat forming a thin film about the particies, of food. In some nevert.eless, fat aids digestion. the addition of butter a roasted potato renders it less liable to form into large lumps in the Most persons have instances, rm Thus or creain to stomach. noticed that fats ina melted state are more indigestible than when cold. This is especially true of mutton and pork. Such fats are much more digestible wher thoroughly mixed with starchy food. Thus child- ren who almost always dislike fat will usually t pu lding, which, if tight and well-cooked, is nourishing enjoy su and wholesome. Fat is practically unchanged in the stomach, but is digested further along in the digestive tract. The fat of peef is especialiyv nourishing; that of pork is at its best when sliced thin and thoroughly cook- ed as in the form of bacon, which may usually be taken and enjoyed even by a delicate stomach. roast Fats furnish energy for muscular activity, and for the heating body. They are stored to some extent in the tissues, where they serve as a protection to the body and also as so much fuel to be used for bodily energy. Curious Things. The doctors of Topeka, Kan., say that there isa young negro in that burg who has the body and limbs covered wilh skin exactly like that of an alligator. The largest pure diamond, that be- longing to the Rajahof Mattan, weighs 867 carats. The one of next greatest weight, the Orloof or Orloff, weighs 193 carats. Blood in its natural state contains a surprising amount of pure air, amount- ing to nearly seven eighths of its en- tire bulk. of the | St. Jerome states that he saw Scotch- , men in the Roman armies in Gaul, who ate human flesh regularly, esteem- ing it as a great delicacy. In the human subject the brain is the 1-28 part of the whole body’s entire weight. In the horse it is not more than 1-400 part. The ‘World of Wonders” says that there is enough iron in the blood of 42 men to make a plowshare of 24 pounds’ weight. The word ‘“‘and” occurs 35,543 times inthe Old Testament and 10,684 times in the New Testament. A turnip with a human face was pulled from a garden in the village of Weidan, Germany, in the year 1628. A full account of this wonder and a splendid woodeut of the same may be found in ‘Miscellanea Academiae Natura” for 1670, page 139. A beam of light shoots through space | with the prodigious velocity of 196,000 miles a second, occupying eight min- utes in making its trip from the sun to oh . fue earth. A Comfort Sometimes. When health is far gone in *Consump- tion, then sometimes only ease and com- fort can be secured from the use of Scott's A blind man’s world can be measured with a can. Emulsion. What is much better is to | take this medicine in time to save your health. Raised the Subseription, Anamusing story concerning a recent occurrence in a Protestant c} the North of Ireland is tleman to preside, in hope that he would lead the list with a large donation. Much to their disgust that worthy, after a plausible oration, concluded by stating he would subscribe £5. huich in N going the rounds. The story goes that the chapel belonging to a certain district was greatly in need of repair, anda aed ing was called to consider the matter and open a subscription list. Natur- ally enough those in charge invited an influential and very wealthy local gen- Shortly afterwards a portion of the ceiling fell on the bald pate of the chairman, who thereupon much to the satisfaction of all concerned, immedi- ately rose and stated he would increase his subscription to £5). After the ap- plause which greeted this announce- ment had subsided, a pious old gentle- man seated in the body ef the hall was heard to exclaim with much fervor: Lord, strike him again !” “ —————— | A Lost Opportunity. One of the exhibitors at the Chicago show employed a young stand on a table and up @ COs- tume which consisted of a skirt having cords by which it could be elevated. Every minute or two she would pull the strings, and up would go the skirt, thus exposing a well-tilled pair of golf stockings, Of course this exhibit was frequented mostly by people who are not probable buyers. Finally one of the spectators accidentally glanced at the exhibitor’s face, and noticing that she was chew- ing gum, remarked to a companion: ‘Say ! there is a lost opportunity; some chewing gum manufacturer would have paid good money for a placard announcing that his was the chosen chew.” 3ut the other man gazed thoughtfully into the face of the crowd and replied: **I am inclined to doubt the value of such an advertisement as you propose, for I don’t think one in ten of the people are likely to notice that she is chewing anything. woman to show The Moon Princess. The Indians have a legend about the Moon Princess, whose fawn-| colored robe may be seen any} : a bright night. They also have a fan-} ciful explanation about the changes' of the moon, ascribing them to the journeying of the Princess to see her brother, the Sun Prince. comes the statement in an English} paper that both a man and a woman} can be seen in the moon, and at the same time. An amateur astronomer writes: **Would you see her at her best, let it be on a cloudless night as near full moon as possible. Use a good opera or tield glass. Be patient; some fail to see her at first. The face is in profile, and looks toward your left as you gaze, occupying half the surface of the moon; | the hair dark and coiled rather high. Her throat and neck are radiantly beautiful. Beyond her profile is seen the dark face of a man looking straight forward.” | Now! The Christian Chinaman. A Chinaman applied for the position of cook in a family which belonged to a fashionable church, The lady asked him: ‘** Do vou drink whiskey ?” No, I Clistian man.” ** Do you play cards ?” ** No, I Clistian man. He was engaged and found honest andcapable. By and by the lady gave a progressive eucher party, with wine accompaniments. John did his part acceptably, but the next morning he appeared before his mistress. *T want quit.” ** Why, what is the matter?” “Ta Clistian man; I told you so be- fore. No workee for "Melican hea- then !” te Animals Admitted to Paradise. In the East it is commonly said that ten animals were admitted to Paradise. (1) The dog Kratim, of the seven sleep- ers of Ephesus; (2) Balaam’s ass, which reproved the disobedient prophet; (83) Solomon's ant, which reproved the sluggard ; (4) Jonah’s whale; (5) The ram of Abraham, caught by the horns and offered in sacrifice instead of Isaac: (7) The camel of Saleb; (8) The cuckoo of Belkis; (9) The ox of Moses; (10) The animal called Al Borak which con- veyed Mohammed to heaven. The fol- lowing are sometimes added or substi- tuted: The ass on which our Saviour rode into Jerusalem ; the ass on which the Queen of Sheba rode when she vis- ited Solomon.—St. Louis Globe-Demo- and for crat. Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov’t Report al YEAS Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY PURE Not Alone the Culprit. | “Jedge, yoh honah,” said the de- | fendant, “I ain’t got much ter say fob | merse’f.” | “It doesn’t look as if you could | have.” “I done had de tuhkey an’ I didn’t buy ’im, but I has ’stenuatin’ cuchum- stances ter offah in de consideration ob _ dis here case.” ' ‘*What are they ?” “De fack dat dis here tuhkey didn’t know no bettah dan ter be peramb’la- tin’ ’roun’ right undah mah _ nose jes’ between Thanksgivin’ an’ Christmas. Ef I wus obercome, Jedge, by de ’cite- ment ob de moment, I’s willin’ ter b’ah de Gensequences. But hit do seem ter me dat sumin’ oroter be did ’mout de criminal negleck on de paht ob de tuhkey.”—Washington Star. The Man With the Iron Skull. A Mexican was condemned to death for stealing a can of kerosene. He was taken out by a party of soldiers, re- ceived a volley of bullets at close range and was left for dead. As soon as the soldiers had gone he sprang to his feet and walked tothe City of Mexico, many miles away, where he entered a hose pital. The doctors found three rifle bullets imbedded in his skull, but he was not fatally injured. Now the au- thorities of the town which ordered } him executed want him back, in order to shoot him again. But he objects.— Buffalo Express. wee A Curtous Instrument, A country lad who attended church ; once a month uSed to hear, almost every time he went,an old song in which occurred the line, ‘I will guide thee with mine eye.’’ The last two words sounded to him as “my nye,” many years he supposed a “nye” to be some kind of instrument with which people were guided, and, irom similarity of sound, perhaps re- lated to the knife family. GHATEFUL— COMFORTING, EPPSS COCOA ' BREAKFAST — SUPPER. “ By a thorough knowledge of the natural | ‘ laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of well selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakfast. and supper a delicately flavored beverage which | may save use many heavy doctors’ bills, Itis | by the judicious use of such articles of diet |! that a constitution may be gradually buit up | until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds cf subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever | there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nourished fTame.””’ Civil Service Gazette JAMES EPPS ¢: CO., Ltd, Homeopathic chemists, London, England. DOWT FORGET that ine p'ace to have | your WATCH RE- PAIRED PROMPTLY | and as it should be done is at W. N. TANTON’S, Late of the employ of W. W. Weilner Seer or Sr nt ce ere Great George Street, NEAR QUEEN SQUARE. Seed Wheat. Campbell’s White Chaff and White Rus- sian, grown one year from Imported Seed L oa the “ Warren Farm.” f JOHN NEWSON. aparE erates mch9—lin THE MILKY SEA. Mystifying Spectacle Witnessed by Sailors in the Pacific. In 1616 the expedition to the East In- dies under Martin Pring, when in the tropical Pacific, had one night what was to the members of that expedition a very mystifyimg spectacle, says Blackwood’s Magazine. They beheld the sea all about them pale and white, resembling a vast cheese vat, so that one might have imagined ** the Ship to have been sailing in Whey instead of Salt Water, it carried such a milky ap- pearance along with it. The Air and Skie at the same time look’d White and Hazy, without doubt doubt the effect of the reflections from the Surface of the Water so dispos’d and colour’d.” In February, 1881, Mr. Daniel Pid- geon, a very acute observer, witnessed the phenomenon of this ‘* milky sea” of the Pacific, when he says: “ The whole ocean from the ship to the visible horizon looked exactly as if it were covered with snow. ‘““The snowy surface evidently re- flected the light of the sky, for Venus, being very bright, threw a distinguish- able line of radiance across it, while the phosphorescent crest jof waves was now and then seen breaking above the layer of shining matter which overlaid the water.” He convinced himself that the appearance was due to a thin layer of mist, produced where the sea surface happens to be considerably cooler than the moist atmosphere aboye it, so that the air in immediate contact with the water is chilled below the dew point and becomes misty, while the air above remains transparent. It would be interesting to know whetherthesame explanation will apply to all displays of the ** milky sea,” or whether the effect should sometimes be attributed solely to phosphorescent ani- mals and plants, and, if not, whether in any case those sources of light con- tribute to illuminate the sea from be- low. Unique Way of Taking Stock. Mr. John Mouat, of Winnipeg, sends us the following: Apropos of your sea- sonable article on * Stock-taking” in The Grocer of 20th ult., reminds me of how an old shopkeeper in a country town in Scotland took his stock and struck his balance. When the time came he started off thus: ** Noo, lads, steek the door, and let’s get our stock-takin’ ower before ony- body comes in to bother us.” With a business-like air he began looking over the shelving, with the remark: * Well, there’s as muckle steck there as will pay McDonald & Co.,” eyeing each row of shelves in suc- cession.” And there’s as muckle there as will Fraser & Co., and as muckie there as will square Cameron & Co, and they twa or three shelves there will cover the few wee accounts due and a’ the rest’s my ain. Noo, boys, come up and hae your supper wi’ me.” If some of our merchants-would even take their stock in this off-hand way, it would be much better than none at all. —Canadian Grocer. square On the Care of Rings. It is never wise to wet rings that have stones in them. Of course all rings need to be cleaned from time to time, and diamonds, rubies, emeralds and sapphires will stand washing with soap, ‘Turquoise and seed pearls will change color if subjected to any such treat- ment. The majority of pearl rings have not the full, round, perfect pearl, which alone will stand wetting. Almost all pearls have at least atiny pin prick somewhere on their surface. and this, like a spot of decay in a tooth, will admit substances which will damage them. It is, therefore, usual to take off one’s rings when washing the hands. This is how many valuable jewels are lost. An old-fashioned but excellent preventive of forgetfulness on such occasions is to put the ring in your mouth. or at least between your lips, Then you will remember to slip it on your finger after drying your hands. a ~ ile ee LEWIS’ PHOTOGRAPHS ‘None Better ! | None Cheaper ! For Finenese of Finish and Artistic Posing, LEWIS’ PHOTOS are uneur- passed anywhere. Special attention given to CHILDREN’S PICTURES; also to Copying and Ea- larging Old Pictures. ENTRANCE ON GRAFTON ST., OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. fel20 HER THOUGHTFUL WORD. And How it Came About that She was Engaged. Women who shop a good deal won- der at the change that has come over the girls behind the counters of a cer- tain store in town, They all smile. They are all so polite and obliging. And it has all come about through a little story which has been going the rounds of the girls employed. On3 morning the news was sent from the notion counter to the millinery de partment, in less time than it took the electric change-carriers to make the trip, that Arabella of the glove counter was engaged. “Engaged! why, how funny. Such a quiet little mouse, and she never had any gentlemen friends,” was the cry that went out along the line of curly haired girls. But engaged she is, and this is the story: One day a yery ordinarily dressed woman stopped at Arabella's counter and mad a purchase. She asked Arabella if the package would be sent that day, and was answered inthe negative. Then the woman said “‘ sne guessed she would take it and not wait for it to be delivered.” Arabella, like the sweet-natured little thing that she is, called up to the girl who was tying the package: ‘‘ Put a good stout string on that bundle, Sue, for the lady has a good ways to carry it.” Of course that was a very common thing to say, and a very common girl said it, and a very common man stand- ing near happened to hear it, and he continued to ponder: ‘* Now, if that girl was ina pleasant room sitting by a table mending socks, she would look as pretty asapeach. She isa good- hearted little thing, or she never would have cared whether the bundle had a strong string around it or not—just the kind of a woman who would delight in having a man’s slippers always warm anda good meal ready for him. By Jove, I’m going to find out who that girl is and marry her!” And now Arabella is engaged, and all her clerk companions sweetly smile and tie extra strong strings around their customers’ packages. Bicycle Notes. The bicycle, which is made responsi- ble for all kinds of things, good, bad and in@ifferent, is now charged by a tobacco journal with having enslaved, at low calculation, 500,000 males who were formerly addicted to the smoking habit, and who have now abandoned it because it is difficult to ride and smoke at the same time. There is, of course, a corresponding loss to the tobacco trade. The journal argues that if these 500,000 males of the bike craze have weaned themselves from smoking only two cigars less a day—and this isa moderate computation--then the con- sumption of cigars is decreasing at the rate of 700,000,000 in a year. These figures may be exaggerated, but there is'nevertheless a perceptible decrense in tobacco consumption, and it is no dis- credit to the wheel that in that direc- tion it isencouraging economy. It has also assisted the cause of temperance by diminishing the consumption of in- toxicants. The rider is obliged to keep a cool head, and cannot, therefore, drink much ; the amusement, moreover, is so healthful that instead of creating a de- sire for artificial stimulants, it inclines the rider to innocent draughts, and best of all. to fresh and cool water, EEE a) Tired but Sleepless Is a condition which gradually wears away the strength. Let the blood be purified and enriched by Hood's Bar- saparilla and this condition will cease. “ For two or three years I was subject te poor spells. I always felt tired, could not sleep at night and the little I could est did not dome any good. I read abouts Hood's Sarsaparilla and decided to try it. Before I had finished two bottles I began to feel better and in « short time I felt all right and had gained 21 pounds in weight. Iam stronger and healthier than Ihave ever been in my life.” Jonm W. CovuGHLix, Wallaceburg, Ontario. Hood’s Sarsaparilia »: Is the Only - True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. Be sure to get Hood’s and only Hood’s, Do not be induced to buy and other. . Hood’s'’ Pills connate” te” — HAS NO EQUAL... For purity For cleansing power For taking out dirt Por dissolving grease For saving clothes For preserving hands These are some of the reasons why... Soap has the largest sale in the wosid, has been awarded 27 Gold Medals and other honors. Get The WA AWA AWAWAW AWAY + Qin eae AR Bia sae a <a Re ame ico MO ie ce ron mma ama im a MI a a ~auane Bae AR ag aa Vb ge es ag § cz aaa Siam -AgRaN tthe Bux - ES Ete red a thie th he pee Bi EL SE WOT we Jig ig ecg bella a = , 7 a ’ » ‘ Paes alert - me pe me Pe mer UE SP olen iin: or Quill Sa elininww~Ee, ee Pee