Cif DAILY gened every afternoon, from the office of a< EXAMINER PUBLISHING CoMPANY, tn the adorn House Building, Queen Street, ~ SUBSCRIPTION. } Tu Leapree DatLy News A or P. E. Isianp, i ‘ RATES OF elt Al | f xAR : -@ Read = oe Loran iia. fuHREE MONTHS One PTs. 646eetens 00H0eseebesnébece - OSa+ fer? post paid to any part of Canada or the United States The Weekly Examiner Friday morning from the! is made up of matter is jesued every ALY EXAMINER THE DAILY. EXAMINER. TERMS : Four Dollars a Year publishers’ office. It @hich has appeared a first-class weekly newspaper d fail ofthe a (atest hews. FOR CALENDAR APRIL, 1+ 6, } gast Quar 4th day, Sh 1l.7m. p. n New Moon, I3th day, Oh. 10.3m. a. m. First Quar, 20th day, 6h. 34.3m. p. m Fall Moon, ?7th day, 9h. 34.7m., a. m Bay of Wook. | = | Sas | ie : rises sets Water +, Seen as Le mi} A Mm aft } Ve ines lay 15 43 6 24 0 46 2) Thurscay | a2] 25 | L 36 5 Friday 40 j Zi 2 29 4} Saturd y 38 25 | 3 34) 5 | Sunday : 2? aH 6} Me Ay i 31 1 6 Il] | Tuesday | 32 mi ote Bi W: eday , 3s 9 $ | Thurscay |; 28 6 oe {@ | Friday Zt 6 i 2 23 *t 1 Sat rday | . 7 9 55 [2 j Seoday => 39} 10 26 13 | Mooday | 2t | 40] 10 57 % Tuesday i 19 | 4l Ii 29 $5 | Wednesday 7 42 morn 16 Thursday i LS 44 s «4 7! Frida | 4; @ } O4t 18 | Satarday 27 i6 | l 24 ¢ | Sunday |} lol 48] 214 $01 Mooday i 8 49 3} S| toniay =| t| 50) aaa 92 | Wedaesday 5 | 2 5 45 93 | Thorsday Lo Se ET 4 aM Fri 1ay i 2] : o 9 25 | Saturuay | 0; v 53 26 | Sunday } 4 58 57; 9 39 37° Monday 87 58 10 22 98 | Tuesday 6) 89, 8 $9 Wednesday 541;7 0 ll 49 30 | Thursday }452}7 2; aft 34 PE, Island Railway Onand after THURSDAY, 5th December, , the trains of this Railway will run daily Sundays excef ted) as follows .— Trains Outward. rains Inward. Bead down. Read up. PM AM Ps Ae Bee FOB. .cces Charlottetowr 310 3010 $m 719 Roy 7J ‘tier 25 9 50 | 417 886 North W re 2(4 96 ‘= BD Pl insane Hunte River 149 851 6G 8&3 115 817 SE ia caneons nan 1 07 8 Og 27 iceens F own «232 53 7h Sa? 93 ........Kensington ......1258 728 6D 10 Ary Lyi200 70 San nersils ) aM 1250 Ly$ {aArwso AM A Il. ....0+- Milsoomehne....... 10 10 li «++» Wellington ee Pl wdaedue Port Hill 94 BOb- scccesee O’ Leary 8 $ 58.......,.Bloomfield........ 7 34 COee cenencccth PO. 204 cece OD , eee | PM A M AM 2 30..... Charlottetown lt 30 250....Royalty Junction....10 10 Dit chsencesse NE, oi. decces 9 37 5 ry Ly $05 Mt Stewart 410 Ly} r $80 § 22..........Cardigan....... 736 5 45 Georgetown 7 16 PM M 405.,...Mount Stewart § 55 443 .--.Moreil. S17 Si... St Peter's ........ 7 #3 5 57 Bear River....... 7 03 6 40. -.- SOuris 6 PM 4M iM AM Tic ccusccscds cones NOUN, 66000 cove 7 50 Pires os -.«-Cape Traverse cobcue re _M AM iTaiue «rerun by Eastern Standard Time McDONALD, D. POTTINGER, Superintende: t, Gen Mer Govt. Rys, Charlottetov n Raiway Office, Dec 1, 1895. STONE FOR SALE Atthe Mount Edward Quarry First-class Stone can be delivered ata #onabie price, any eontract 0: §, Moncton, N B. rea- thickness or siz: to suit HENRY SIVAN. andi—Im err os A. ey - << as. i a ar oO = x ee a Pad tt. . “7 = % gee ” “a Pe ee ee ze Stem Winding Watches are now as cheap as Key- Wind formerly were, are much more convenient and give less trouble to the wearer. We have a large stock and will ‘sell low. G.H. TAYLOR. meh i! — BOARDING & TRAINING STABLES Grafton Street, Opposite Court House, JOHN M NICHOLSON, Prop’r. Having opened a public Stable on Gratton Street, I am prepared t> take Ger tlemen’s horses and Colts at all seasons of the year to board, train, break or keep in road condition for immediate usé Horse CUpping also at le-4edto Terms reasonable, Ni ovzi-dy&w 3m in the Datiy editions, and | interesting j , VOL 35. 4--— - — “This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men, having to advise the Public, may speak free.”—Enuripides. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. ISLAND, TUESDAY, APRIL 14, 1896. a nh ian w snipes Single Oopies Two Oents NO 238 A COMPLETE STOCK! —————— i°y a Complete Stock of Clothing we mean a stock where young and old, rich and poor, great and small, may each select their respective stylee. ‘Khe mest complete in Assortment, the most complete in Qualit in Price. The manufacture of Ready-to-wear Clothing has g own apace, and is one of the things which smacks of the UP-TO-DATE, combination of the Newest Cloths and Latest Cuts. Such a stock is ours. y, the most reasonable The Clothing for Spring is a beautiful Intending purchasers should in- spect the stock of the Fine Clothier before buying elsewhere, as it is a genuine eye-opener. McKay Woolen Company, the Bargain Corner. Desirable Business ® pne NORTH SIDE QUEEN SOU. For Sale by Auctis T am instructad by the Executors of Estate of the late John Trenaman, } to sell by Auction, on the premi-:es, on Wednesday, !5th of April, 189 AT 12 O'CLOCK, NOON, That desirable property situate on | north side of Queen Square, having frontage of 58 feet on Grafion Street, a extending back 160 feet and 84 fe-: rear, being one of the most desira!.'¢ ness stands for sale in the city. sold in two lots, as shown on handbills. Terms —Ten per cent. cash at sale, an the balance in 39 days. R. BEATRSTO, Auctioneer. pat tu th sat guar eod DONT FORGET that une place to hav: WATCH R® PAIRED PROMPTLY and as it should be done is at W. N. TANTON’S. Late of the employ of W. W. Wellner Great George Street, NEAR QUEEN SQUARE WE WISH all our friends to know that we are still on CONNOLLY’S WHARF, and intend remaining there for this vear at least. We would strongly advise our Country friends not to Kili their horses after coming long an mech30—135 your journeys, by hauling Lumber over bare streets, when they car come to this Wharf and load their sieighs so conveniently right on the ice, which they cannot do anywhere else. Good stock now « LATHS, SHINGLES, & and CEDAR POSTS galore. JAMES BARRETT, mchl6 Connolly’s Wharf. hand. “ARDS Sr ne ama TENDERS. = Sealed Tenders will be received at the Kpiscepal Residence until noou on FRI DAY, the 17th day of April, A. D. 1°96, from any person or per-ons willing to pur- ; chase the building now known as the Old St. Dunstan’s Cathedral. Building to be vemoved within forty days from let day of May, A. D. 1896. The New Cathedral Building Committee do not bicd themselves to accept the high-| ¢ tor any tender. For ali information required apply at the Episcopa] Residence. By order of Committee. STEPHEN T. WHITTY, Secretary Episcopal Residence, Charlottetown, P. E. L., April 8th, 1896. 135 tldie guar pat Sale of Property in Char- lottetown. To be sold ty Public on THURSDAY, the Thirtieth day of April, instant, 1495 a: twelve o’clock, noon, in front of the pre- mises, that valuable property fronting on the north side of Grafton Street, occupied by Mrs. Peahe and adjoining the proyerty of Doctor Taylor, having a front on Gra*- ton Street of 84 feet and extending back 87 feet, together with the house and build thereon. Terms :—One-half of the i»r- chase money to be paid at sale, and the bulance can remain by mortgage on the property for three years at five per centr. interest. For further particulars, inepec- tion «f house, etc., apply to the under- signed at his office in Charlottetown. E. H. HAVILAND. R. BEAIRSTO, Auctioneer. apé——dy 2aw 15 faglish Manures UPERPHOSPHATES AND CHEMICALS. Sole Agents for P. E. Island for THE BRADLEY RRTILIZER CO., the largest concern of the kind in the srid. We have a large stock, on hand and to arrive, of -ese well known MANURES, and can refer purchasers to any of our very best farmers who have been using them © years with very gratilying results. We can also supply the same goods (Ground Slag) as fered by our would-be competitors as “ English Fertilizer’, st at least 20 per cent less price than they now ask for it, but it the same time we would not advise its use, believing that roe GENUINE EnGuisu MANURES AS SOLD ONLY BY US are much | Prices, Pamphlets, ete., on application. AULD BROS. Chorlottetown, April 8, 1896~—2aw (25) & wky the best value. ~ eee $18 Tyke Serge Suits, Bisley “ Other English Serges, $14 and S15. Spring Overcoatings in all shades. Hats, latest sic ides.. ’ Spring Suitings in almost all shades. the and best. Collars Ties, and all kinds of Underwear. Nobody can sell the same quality of goods cheaper. Everyone knows that we can make and fit all right. JOHN MACLEOD & CO., TAILORS. Charlottetown, April 9, 1896—246 & wy inportant. Navi — ——_— 2 Vdc | Messrs. Hodgson & Bros., one of the largest buyers and exporters of Cheese, have appointed J. D. Bell their Agent tor this Provine, and in this connection he will keep all tur. nishings required for the manufacture of Butter and Cheese— 14} Seamless Bandage, Renret Extract, Coloring. Brooms and Brushes, Dairy Thermometers, Dillon’s Milk Book, ete. ‘* Cheese Companies will do well to place their orders at once for supplies required. Alsc on hand, a number of Milk Cans and Vats, Presses, Curd Mills, and all other goods furnished on application. JOHN D. BELL, Montague. April 10, 1896—dy & wy Burrell‘s English Prepared Paints. Last December we ordered one and one- half tons of these celebrated Paints for Spring Stock, and in March we had to send a repeat order for another ton. WHOLESALE & RETAIL. FENNELL & CHANDLER, Charlottetown, April 7, 1896—dy 1S ! A LITTLE CHILD LED THEM, ——. ~ How Husband and Wife Were Held Together by a Baby Daughter. The ventilating shait of a Harlem flat is responsible for the publicity of a touching episode, from which the true names are purposely omitted. Mr. and Mrs. Jones had for several months been living under strained con- ditions that cast a cloud over their | home, which threatened to break ina ; storm that would disrupt the little j family of three members. Last week the breaking point was reached, and husband and wife agreed that a sepa- ration was the only possible course. But there was a little daughter, Eva, five years of age. Which parent was to have her? It was decided that the child should answer this question. ‘*Eva,” said the mother, as she was seated near the ventilating shaft, hold- ing the child’s hand, while the father, with contracted brows, was standing at the other end of the room. ‘“‘My dear little daughter, papa and mamma are not going to live together any longer, we are going to separate and go far, faraway from each other. We can’t be happy in the same house. Now, my child, we want you tosay which one of us you will live with. you must choose between mamma and papa.” The eyes of the little girl filled with tears as she turned them on her father, who had averted his face with bowed head. then, but was apparently in thought, very deep for her little experience. She loosened the hand that held her and moved quickly toward her father, who turned with outstretched arms and a smile of triumph to welcome her. A deep frown settled on the mother’s face. The child did not then break her silence, but taking her father's hand in hers, led him with a tender force which he could not resist to the other end of the room. ‘Papa and mamma,” she said, as she held a hand of each. “I want to live with both of you. I must have you both. Now kiss, make up and be happy. Please, papa and mamma.” The appeal wasirresistible. Mr. and Mrs. Jones were folded in each other’s arms, and the three for a moment were in tears, which smiles of joy seon banished. A Steamship’s Momentum. The motion of a steamship ona calm sea is sosmooth and steady that one hardly realizes the tremendous mo- mentum of the vessel under his feet. A collision, even after the engines have been slowed down, gives a startling revelation of the energy of motion. The time required to arrest the motion of a ship and bring it to a standstill can be accurately determined by cal- culations. These calculations have been recently made for several well- known ships. To stop the Etruria, whose displace- ment is 9680 tons, horse-power 14,821, and speed 20.18 knots an hour, two minutes and forty-seven seconds are required, and during the process of stopping the ship will forge ahead 2454 feet, or nearly one-half a mile. The United States cruiser Columbia, with a displacement of 7350 tons, 17,991 horse-power, and a speed of 22.8 knots, can be stopped in two minutes and fifteen seconds and within a space of 2147 feet. The cruiser Cushing, United States navy, whose displaceiwent is only 105 tons and horse-power 1754, with a speed of 22.48 knots, can be stopped within a distance of 301 feet and in 18.4 seconds. In each case the | vessel is supposed to be going at full speed, and the stoppage produced by reversing the action of the propeller,— Railway Review. A Mechanical Horror. A most remarkable clock belongs te a HindooPrince. Is is the strangest piece of machinery in India. Near the dial ofan ordinary-looking clock is a large gong hung on poles, while under- neath, scattered on the ground, isa pile of artificial human skulls, ribs, legs and arms, the whole number of bones in the pile being equal to the number of Wones in twelve humar skeletons. When the hands of the clock indicate the hour of 1 the number of bones needed to form a complete human skeleton come together with a snap; by some mechanical contrivance the skeleton springs up, seizes a mal- let, and, walking up to the gong, strikes one blow. This finished, it re turns tothe pile and again falls te pieces. When 2 o'clock, two skeletons and stood |} She did not speak | — = al Re Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U.S. Gov’t Report YA7FAE ABSOLUTELY PURE ES a Baking Powder spring up in tne shape Of TWEive Sat ie : j ah tons and strike, each one after the other, and then fall to pieces, as before. —Johannesburg Machinery. MUST BELIEVE HER. Thousands of Others Have Made Similar Declarations. -ALADY COMPLETELY CURED. Ske Used Paine’s Compeund, Celery —— REMARKABLE INCREASE IN WEIGHT. The Great Sprirg Medicine for Building Up Weak and § ckly Peopte. oe The surest and most positive cure an the world tor disease is Paine’s Celery Cor- pound. Itstrengthens and invigoreces the A CHINESE BANQUET. Extraordinary Variety of Fish, Fiesh and Vegetables Served in Thirty- seven Courses. Here is a first-class Chinese dinner in thirty-seven courses, as described by e writer in a London newspapér : Course 1. Pyramid of ham and car- rots in oblong slabs. 2, 8, 4 and 5. The same of mutton, boiled pig hide, grilled fish rolled in sugarand boiled fowl dipped in soy sauce, 6. Shark fin shreds in pickle, served a la hay-cock. 7. Eggs stowed away in lime till they | had become black. 8. Peeled “water chestnuts,” the root of a sort of lotes. 9. Cakes of cranberry jelly,very stiff, and piled in pyramids. 10. Sliced boiled carrots and turnips similarly arranged. 11. Pinnacled pyramids of green olives kept in place by bamboo pins. 12. Ditte ef greengages soaked in wine. 13. Ditto of tamarinds; and 14. ditto of pieces of dried red melon, 15. Small piece of pastry rolled in brown sugar. 16. Sections of oranges, toasted melon pips and monkey nuts. 17. Small boiled dumplings with sugar inside, pink tops. 18. Patties similarly filled, forall the world like mince pies. 19. Baskets of pastry filled with brown sugar of the sandy sort, 20. Packets of pastry filled with i mince-meat, folded as for post. Now for the real “pieces of resist- ance”—eight big bowls containing: 21. Sea slug rissoles, the enjoyment of which was spoiled by information as to what they were, though certainly no worse than oysters. 22. Mutton stewed to shreds cut two inches long. 23. Fish tripe in white soup, not at all bad. 24. Stewed duck; 25, stewed shrimps; and 26, stewed lotos seeds. i t run-down system and builds up quickly | flesh. tissue, bone and muscle. No other medicine can so fully and quickly meer the desires of the sick and diseased. It shouid be borve in mind that -hevreat: of diceas> ‘s in the blood and nerves. The pec ulia: composition <f Paine’s Celery €om- pousd enables it to reach all the cesbres where @tsease 1s working, and it coon. ban- | ishes all pain and trouble. At this +eason Paine’s Celery Compound! is a heaven-sent blessing to every mervous.. ' weak, debilitated and sleepless meortnl. i The diseases that have held men, and women in bondage during the wisten can now be effectually removed by she-use of | Paine’s Celery Compound. If you are truly aod earnestly seeking: | for renewed health and jong life, let: the example of Mrs. Lloyd lead you to: give: are certain to reap the same happy reeults that she and thousards of others bave- ex- perienced. Mrs. Joseph Lioyd, of Ganan- oque, Ont, says; “I feel it my duty to tell vow what.| Paine’s Celery Compound has done for me. was always a sufferer trom nervous de~ bility and very bad headaches, and: found it impoesible to obtain regular rest and sleep. “Two years ago! read of your- Paine’s: Celery Compound, and bought a bottle of it. After] bad used it I found I could get rest and quiet. I have used altogether seven bottles and find myself completely cured. ; “Your medicine purifies the blood and without it in my house if i: took dollar. “Before using Paine’s Celery Compound my weight was only 100 pounds; pow ) weigh 141 pounds. Iu this not sufficient reason forme to praise the Compound highly ? my last cine | waa treated by the doctor&, but never received any good. Five of mv friends are now using your great medicine since they have seen what it has done for me, get up and strike, while at the hours of uoon and midnight the entire heap “I wish you to use my statements, regulates the system; and I would not be?! ‘| Others followed suit and lost. 27. Sliced chicken stew; and 28, red sturgeon stew. Then came eight smaller bowls: H 29. Clear soup, styled on the Chinese menu, *‘Mouth nourisher.” 89, Raw pig’s kidneys cut into the shape of an open flower. 31. Stewed shrimp’s eggs; and 92, balls made of sliced ham. 33. Ducks’ tongues stewed with ham, many dozens of them. 34. Sliced pigeon stew, the bird be- ing cut up like a joint. Thirty-five and thirty-six I failed to analyze, though I ascertained that the one was called in Chinese *‘The Three Silken Strings,” being composed of pig’s tripe, ham and chicken, and the otier ‘Precious Shield Hooks,” the composition of which I could not learn. 37. Last, but not least, with the ex- ception of huge bowls of rice brought in to fill up the corners, the dish that Paine’s Celery Compound a fairtrial.. You. | in these lands takes the place of bread —a sort of sweet pilau called ‘‘The Eight Precious Things.” Better Than the Egg Trick.’ Something far better than the egg trick was shown at a card party in } Twenty-eighth street a night or two | ago. The exhibitor declared himself to be a reformed gambler. He had made much money out of the trick and did not mind letting a few friends know the secret. He arranged two whist ‘| hands from the deck, in one of which '| there were six trumps and in the other none. ‘The cards being spread out on the table, face up, he bet $100 that he could take either hand and beat any man in the room holding the other. A young whist player tried him with che trump hand and lost. Then an old fellow took the other hand, which he said was the stronger, and also lost. It made “Before I knew of vour valuable iedi- -: no difference who had the lead. Fin- ally the old fellow tried again and won. He had analyzed the play. It is not safe to bet on the trick with a first-class player more than once. With two players evenly matched the trump hand will always be beaten.— 8 7 they may be of encouragement to othe ye New York Tribune. = ~ ete LBWIS'PHOTOGRAPAS None Better ! None Cheaper ! For Fineness of Finish and Artistic Posing, LEWIS’ PHOTOS are unsur- 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. feb20 ORIGIN OF THE BOERS, A P.eullar Mixture of Hollanders and French Haguenots. It is extremely interesting, at the resent moment, to imaquire as to who nd what the Boers really are, and vhenee comes thix heroic and stub- worn defeuse on th-ir rirhts which has xalted these South African agricultur- Stsintheeyes of the world. After he revocation of the Edict of Nantes xy Louis XIV., numbers of Hugue- nots in 1688 left France and settled in Cape Colony under the Dutch, who then had possession of it, which Gov- ernment at that time denied the very privileges tothe Huguenots that their descendants and those of the Dutch have until recently denied the Johan- nesburgers, which has led to this un- fortunate revolt against the Govern- ment of the Transvaal, as in the eighteenth century it led to the French exodus from Cape Colony, Two centuries ago, when the Hugue- nots in Cape Colony presented a peti- tion to the Governor for electoral rights, Van der Stell was enraged, and dismissed them with a severe repri- mand, *‘to restrain their French im- pertinences,”” which had a parallel in Pretoria lately, when some reasonable appeal for representation by the Uit- lander was “received with jeers” by the members of the Raadzaal. In1709 the use of French in addressing the Government on official matters was publicly forbidden. In 1724 the Church service in French was permitted for the last time, and seventy years after the arrival of the Huguenots in South Africa their children ceased to speak French entirely. When the settlers could no longer endure the tyranny of the Dutch, they “trekked,” or tracked, into the interior, and it is, therefore, quite as likely that the Dutch-speaxing Frenchmen are more entitled to be called the owners of the Transvaal than the Dutch themselves—that is, if we consider, as civilized nations do, that the original native has no territor- ial rights whatsoever. If the original Huguenots have been deprived of their language, they have not been deprived of their names, and those we find all through South Africa: Du Plessis, Malherbe, Rosseau, Fou- che, De Villiers, Du Toit, Malan, Mar- ais, Jourdan, Mesnard, Du Pre, Notier, Le Febre, Cordier. Retief, Le Roux, Thereon, Hugo, Le Grange, and dozens of others. What arethe names they gave tothe homes they established if not French—Normandy, Le Parais, Lamotte, Rhone, Champagne, Langu- edoc, etc.? The name of the Com- mandant General, Joubert, is French, and heis probably also a descendant of one of those who, in 1688, exiled them. selves from France for the sake of their religious liberty. The names of the Boers, De Beer (not Van Beer), Du Toitspan, whose farms were despoiled when diamonds were found in Kimber- ley, are obviously of French origin, se that it would appear that the Presi- dent of the French republic has more reason for offering sympathy than the German Emperor. —London Sketch, “Boy-Like.” The Des Moines, Iowa, Mail gives a laughable instance of a boy who was ““boy-like” to the last degree. He was but eight years old, and he was sick in the hospital. One day his nurse told him that the first snowstorm of the season had come, and that everything was white and beautifal. The poor little fellow’s eves sparkled for the first time in many weeks. “I wish I could see a snowball,” he said, plaintively. “So you shall, my dear,” said the ‘kind-hearted nurse, and in a moment more a snowball was brought in and laid near the bed, the boy viewing it with manifest delight. The nurse was called away to an- other part of the ward, and she had gone half way across the room when “whack!” came the snowball between her shoulders, while the boy gave a shrill yell of delight, and hid under the bedclothes as if fully expecting the at- tack to be returned. The nurse was teo much amused te be indignant, and joined heartily with the other patients in the laughter that the mischievous little patient's perform- ance created. PRUSTRATED IN HIS ATTEMPT £0 DEFRAUD. A Substituting Druggist Who Wished a Lady to Buy Common Dyes When She Ask- ed for Dia- mond Dyes. — Some druggists and dealers make it a point to push on their customers cheap and worthless dyes when the Diamond Dyes areasked for. This contem ptuble work is carried on from day to day merely fur the sake of profit. The crude and poorly prepared dyes are made trom auch common materials that the dealer ie enabled to buy them at very low prices, and of course endeavors to sel! them at the same price as Diarsond Dyes —ten cents per package. When the dealer sells a package of the adulterated dyes he makes as much profit as a sale of three ow of the Diamond Dyes would give in. Mrs. Nelson Malcolm, of Teeterville, Ont., says : -r “Iam a large user of Diamond Dyes’ and went into a city store last week to buy some. The druggist insisted that I should take another make of dye. I told him I would acvept no substitute, so he handed me the Diamond Dyes that I asked for.” Beware of substitutes when buying dyes for home dyeing; see that you are supplied with the D.amond Dyes, No crank keys to annoy you on Perfects or Garden Citys. Calland see them.— Dawson’s Bicycle Depot. Soh taper ge ex ate aha Epes te eo i mE a ae am OF aS 2: Sees eee NY Pate ERPS 4. TIE QE mm aay me aes a... ee er Mgr Ae pe cabscite samt a Tg A OMI Pie wre a sym