v AO PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND THDTISDATS 1.00 A TEAR, DUE IN ADYANC1 J AS. G.'BOYXrS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER I Wadesboro, N. C., Thursday, August 4, 1910 Number 72 Volume 27 1 V . - - - . i . i. - . -. i . 1UI .... , i . M 1 . .K , 'Ml M 1 - i i Catawba College and Preparatory School Both sexes. Private rooms and board for ladies but under school supervision. Strong faculty. Special atttention to A. B., B. S. and B. L. courses. Fifteen Hundred Dollars Expended on new Laboratory equipment. New. furniture. Buildings renovated. Location ideal. Healthfulness unsur passed. Tuition rates very moderate. Board at actual , cost. Fall term begins Sept. 7, 1910. Write for catalogue. JOHN F. BUCHEIT, A.M., President, Newton, N. C. COTTON CROP OtJTLOOK. Memphis, July 81. Te Commercial-Appeal will publish .this summa ry of the cotton crop situation tomor row: The cotton crop deteriorated dur ing the week in Texas jnd Oklaho ma by reason 'of drought, but im proved elsewhere on an absence of rain. . The situation in Texas and Okla homa is fast becoming serious. Tern- I A LIVE Many people have tried so many remedies for eczema without being materially benefitted that they have come to the conclusion that there is no cure for this most distressing dis ease. That this conclusion is erroneous, and that Hobson's Eczema Ointment will effect a cure is shown by the following unsolicited testimonial of Mr. Venable Wilson, who for many years was a citizen of Wades boro. Mr. Wilson says: - "This is to certify that for nine years I suffered with eczema, and during that time tried numerous so called specfics for it, but without effect. But after a few applications of Hobson's Eczema Ointment I was completely cured. "V. WILSON. "Thomasville, N. C, Feb. 22. 1910." We sell Hobson's Eczema Ointment under; an absolute guarantee. If it does not effect a cure yo get your money back. - PMSQWD&Q COP'fJY- r lUhatDoYou Drink? If you drink Coffee you will find our Royal Blend High Grade always uniform in quality, packed in 3-pound sealed cans for the price of $1.00 per can. As a coffee of excep tional value and superior merit, we otter our Gold Medal Brand Coffee which is pleasing many of our most particular coffee customers. Packed only in 1-Dound cans for the price of 25 cents per can. If vou like a cud of good tea, try a small can of our White House Mixed Tea which is high gradend has perfect cup qualities. Hardison Co. MESSAGE TEACHERS. TO OUR Clarence H. Poe in the Educational iwii- tion of the News and Observer. - You have asked me for a word for . a -r-t r i ,4 T yoar iiaucauonai iaiuon, uu should like to send a message to our teachers. And my message to our teachers is simply thi9: You , can teach the elementary principles of agricultural science. There is no reason why a teacher should argue peratures were ' very high at . most that she is not competent to do this times, which makes the lack 01 mois- tnra mora acute. A eood rain im mediately would help the crop won derfully. The fields east of the Mississippi river are now neirlv clean and the cotton will be "laid by" In a fairly good state of cultivation. The plant is general'y small and Is no w, beginning to bloom freely and make bolls. It will be cultivated much later than usual and if the frost date is long delayed and the August and September moisture supply Is sufficient to enable the setting of bolls there Is yet hope for' a good crop. Without a late autumn reports indi cate a very moderate outturn in the valley and Atlantic states. v . WANTS HER 1ETTER UBLISHED For Benefit of Women who Suffer from Female Ills Minneapolis, Minn. "I was a great -from sufferer I Vj y ! female troubles which caused a weakness and broken down condition of tiie system. I read so muchofwhatLydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound had done for othei suffering women I felt sure it would help me, and I musl say it did help- me wonderfully. Mj pains all left me, I grew stronger, ana within three months J. was a perfectly well woman. "1 want this letter made publio to snow the oenent women may derive from Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. John G. Mold an, 2115 Second St, North, Minneapolis, Jmnn. Thousands of unsolicited and genu ine testimonials like the abre prove the efficiency of Lydia E. Finkham'j Vegetable, Compound, which is made exclusively from roots and herbs. Women who suffer from those dis tressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these facts or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to restore their neaitft. If you want special advice write to Mrs. Pinkbam. at Lynn. Mass. newuitreatyonrietterasstrictly confidential. For 20 years she has been helping- sick women in this way, free of charge, Don't hesitate write at once. IOHN W. GULLEDGE, Attorney asd Counsellor-at-Law and Real Estate Agent, Wadesboro, N. C. ill legal business will hare prompt and oalnstaMncr attention. Your sales and Dnrchases of real estate mav be facilitated 97 camnjr on or writing- to ma. wui aiso ent or lease your town property and farm' id collect tne rent ior tne sami & SfcCN ng lands and collect the rent for the ss Office over Wadesboro Clothing "Jompany's Store. Coffins and Caskets When yon want a nice Coffin ci C&aket. at a reasonable price examine the Una I carry. I have them from the cheapest to the i ce Hearse Is always in readiness, and every feature of the undertaking bnsi ness receives my careful atten ticn, whether day or night 1 also carry a nice liae oi BURIAL EOBES. S. S. Shepherd The Undertaker when (if she has studied the text book properly) she probably knows a great deal more of the "knowable, teachable things" about agriculture than of the "knowable, teachable things',' about history, georgraphy or physiology subjects which she -regard's herself as thoroughly compe tent to handle. The assumption, moreover, that a woman cannot teach the. elements of agriculture not farming, mind you, but simply the sciensiflc truths that have practical application in farming -unless she has-been a field hand is an absurd delusion. You don't need to be a centenarian and a soldier to teach history; it is not required that a teacher travel around the world be fore teaching' geography; she need not have written a book before teach ing grammar; ene need not have robbed graves and dissected corpses before teaching physiology. Why argue then th.it she must have brok en steers and - stemmed todacco be fore teaching;, the scientific truths about soil chemistry and . plant phy siology that have practical applica tion in the business of farming? You don't have to know how to hitch a mule to a plow in order to teach why it doesn't pay to plow deep1 and cut the corn roots, in two at laying-by time; you need not know bow to run a guano distributor in order to teach the effects of potash, phosphoric acid, and nitrogen in plant growth; you need not know how to cure cowpea hay to teach how nitrogen gathered.by the cowpeaa will enrich the land; you need not know bow to shuck corn to teach which type of ear has been found to be best for corn production; you need not have even milked cows In order to teach that the Babcock test win snow which dairy cows are paying and which are not; nor need you have, butchered steers- in -order to tell that with a Jersey cow and a Polled Angua,"the Jersey is better for the dairy and the Angus for beef. ' Interest your pupils in corn con tests, in school gardens,, and in all lines of agricultural demonstrations, Make your school smell of the soil. Let it root itself deep in the common everyday life of its people no longer a delicate and useless exotic, no Ion ger a hait-iueiess parasite, if you begin to fil) your pupils with enthu siasm for the work they have to do the boys for agriculture, the girls for domestic science your people will soon begin to rally around you; they will catch the contagion of the new spirit, and you can practically make your salary what i you want it. If half the agitation for increasing teachers' salaries had been directed toward making the schools more, ef ficient, the problem of salaries would nave been solved before, we were born. Teachers' salararies have been too small, and yet the public has paid the teachers as much as the teachers' services were worth to the public. The fault is not with either the teacher or the patron, but with a system shackled and chained with a thousand mediaeval traditions the machine the teacher has bad to work with. . . ' In every era and in every profes sion there is a chance for a man to ally himself with some great forward movement that makes for progress and human betterment. This is the glory of onr humanity; it gives to the commonest life a touch of the divine that not only does the great Father give us the power to become Ilia sons in the immortality of the after-life, but that here and now He gives to every man and woman the joyous and kingly privilege of becoming a co-worker with Him in some potent cause that is helping the world for ward "to that for-off divine event to which the whole creation moves." There 19 no man or woman so hum ble but that be or she may not make some definite, however simple, con tribution toward some movement whose ultimate success will mark an other milestone in the march of clv- lization ond human progress, ana by that contribution he or she has achieved the immortality which It Is the highest privilege of man to win. Especially do our teachers; It seems to me, have an opportunity to make their lives count largely by throwing their influence with this great move ment for giving the schools a more practical turn, for making them train for actual farnTlife. No other edu cational movement can mean so much because no other movement can affect so many people. For cen turies the farmer has been" neglected, but at last the "protest of the Judges of the world" voiced. by Markbam's "Man With the Hoe" Is finding a hearing and in this great mo. ement there is a thance for the teacher' to tawayfrom the purely conven tional weak of teaching a , certain number of children the date when Columbus discovered America, the length of the river Nile, bow to cal culate latitude and longitude, or how to conjugate the verb "to love," and find himself rather a fighting, soldier n a great movement which Is to car ry new life and meaning and color to the oldest and most important oc cupation of man. LIQUOR PAYS HEAVY TAX. D takes FEEDING WORK HORSES HtgU Llcns Mad Lseal 09tl ttnitt ItlMlll la 1901. Washington, July 80. It more than 110,000,000 In the large cities af the United States to pay li cense fees. - The extent to which drinking men help to pay the expenses of govern ment in the cities is indicated by a census report covering the finances of the country for the year 1908 in in the cities having a population of 80,000 or more. There were at that time 158 of such cities, but the- com plete figures were available for only 151 of them, and the figures showed that in those places the licensed drink ing places paid an aggregate of $41, 950,188. This was a gain of almost $3,000,000 as compared with the pre ceding year and of about $11,000,000 over the year 1905. The Increase was due to the large fees exacted by most of the cities. Of the drinking places sanctioned by law there are no fewer than 67,- 131, a decrease within three years of of hay and grain a day for each 100 about 4,000. The falling off was due pounds of live weight Is usually lareelv to the fact that r number of enough to keep a horse In good cities were "drv." Of the 158 24 working condition. Omts ad Brma 0d ( Kp wp 8trBgtn. Indiana Farmer. A great many people do hot realize the differ enc in size between the stomach of a horse and the stomach of an ox. The stomach of a large horse will not contain mere than three or four gallons, while the ru men or paunch, the" first division of the ox's stomach will hold about 60 gallons.. Consequently the horse must be fed a less quantity at a time and feed that is more concentrated. A horse worked steadily and kept in good condition is apt to be in good appetite an 3 to have good digestive powers. ' He only wants a little coarse food at a time. It takes him longer to eat his ration than the ox, because he must do all his chewing before swallowing the food, while the ox. relies upon rumination to pre pare its food for digestion. 1 believe that most people feed too much rath er than too little. About two pounds W01I AN LIVES 50 YEARS AS 1TAII Tb JHot Carton Book. Leslie's Weekly. ' Queen Victoria owned the largest single volume ever made. It weighs sixty-three pounds and is eighteen inches thick. Perhaps the most ex pensive book is the official history of the War of the Rebellion, issued by the United States Government at a cost, of nearly $3,000,000. "About one-half ot that amount was paid for printing and binding, and the rest for salaries, rent, stationery and pur chase of records from private indi viduals. It took ten years to com pile, and it consists of 110 volumes. Another costly book is the Hebraic Bible, in the Vatican at Rome. In 1512 the Jews offered Pope Julius II its weight in gold $100,000 but the Pope refused to part with it. r In the Chinese department of the T British Museum a set of 5,020 volumes con stitutes the largest book in the world. It is an encyclopedia of the literatnre of China from 1000 B. C. to 1700 A. D., twenty-eight centuries,: ahdtook forty-four years to compile. It was purchased by England for "$6,000. Only three sets are known to exist The smallest book in the' world, about the size of a man's - thumb nail, was made in Italy. It is the text of a letter written by the inven tor of the pendulum clock in ' 1615. Although it is four-tenths ot an inph long and a quarter of an inch wide, it contains 208 pages, each with nine lines and from ninety-five" to one hundred letters. bad become "no license" town when the canvass was made. The change was most m irked In the South At lantic States, and least in the Rocky Mountain region. The States claiming the largest number of saloons to the population were Texas, Wisconsin and New York, while Pennsylvania, Massa chusetts and Nebraska claimed the smallest number in proportion to the people to be supplied. ; , ' - Liquor licenses and tajpH formed more than 13 per cent, of the general revenues in the citiesof Ohio, and more than 10 per cent, in the citie; of California. New-York ,city re ceived $7, 927, 300. Chicago $7,252,- 687 and Philadelphia $lk969,459 from this source. - The only other' cities deriving more than $1,000,000 from liquor li censes were St. Louis, Boston, Cleve land, San Francisco and Cincinnati. When idle the amount of concentrates in the ration should be redaced "one-third or one-half. V.e Caa Cvaamcat, Bmt Taaoton llu., Dispatch to Baltimore Sao. The death yesterday of John Coul ter, for many years a familiar figure at the North End, revealed the fact that "John" was a woman. For 53 -years she had lived In the city with out her real sex being discovered. She was buried as "John," and In male attire. .. The deception was beenn by John's" mother in her childhood, and though she declared in after years that she should have kept skirts on "him," the youngster was allowed to grow up in male attire. Born in England, "John" came to this country when about 10 yeara of age. "He" worked In the stable of William Burke as a hostler for a number of years, and was later em ployed in a fl3h market. A great enthusiast over all kinds of sports,' especially baseball, "John" attended all the games, and was a royal rooter for every team that represented . Taunton. "John" Coulter was well known throughout Whittenton, where she lived. The smooth face and high, squeaky voice were often the .sub- Oats is the best all-round grain for hect of comment, but never of suspi the work horse. It contains a lar- cinn. WANTED Cord Wood, delivered at our brick yard or placed convenient to load on cars. Write as for prices. Watson & little Brick Co., Cheraw.S. C, R. F. D. No. 1. Acuta or Chronic WbtcbT No matter if yoar kidney trouble U acute or ctronio Foley's Kidney Remedy will reach your case. Mr. Claude Brow n, Key noldsville, 111., writes us that he suffered many months with kidney complaint that baffled all treatment. At last he tried Foley's Kidney Remedy and a few large bottles effected a complete cure. - He says, It has been of inestimable value to me." Pee Dee Pharmacy; Parsons Drug Co. Faxaal Appttil ta 14th, Cantury. Westminster Gazette. Female costume in the tenth centu ry was classical in its simplicity. The women wore long, loose, flowing skirts ' reaching to the feet and a draped "cote",' or upper - garment. Chaucer, who died 1490, when Hen ry IV was king, frequently uses the word cote. In the "Canterbury Tales" he depicts the sergeant-at-Iaw as . wearing a "medley cote", which no doubt means a coat of many col ors, while the miller he describes as wearing "a why te cote". It was in the 14th century that the word "gown" first . came into use. An anonymous author in no mild words finds fault with the fashion of his day. He writes that "the com mons were besotted in excess of ap parel, in wide Burcoats reaching to their heels, close befor and stxowting oat on the side, so that on the back they make men seem women, and these they call by a ridiculous name gown." '( As early as the 12th century wo men's cotes were made with; trains, and In the first quarter of the 13th century a bishop moralizes early on their vanity for wearing , trained cotes, some of which contained "sev en ells and a half." ger proportion of the elements neces sary for the making of muscle than any other grain, and produces more nerve and spirit. Bran should form ah important part of the ration, and for econoc?y'a sake a portion may consist of corn, but a work horse can not do his beet on an exclusive ration of corn. Corn is all right for fatten ing, but the horse is intended for work and what be needs most is the kind of feed that will make' muscle and give strength and endurance. While oats is the best grain feed for the horse, that la no reason why It should be fed exclusively. A variety of feed is not only much relished by the horse, but is absolutely essential to his best condition. He will do better on a varied ration, even though it contains no more actual nutriment, because the variety ap peals to his taste and that aids the progress of digestion. Oats ought to form the basis of the ration, varied by the addition of bran shorts, wheat, barley, corn and different kinds of roughage. Hay 8bould'be fed twice a day and the amount should be less than the horse would naturally eat if left to his own inclination. Clean, bright clover hay makes the best roughage, but this may be such other roughage as can be obtained. When not at work the horse should be allowed the run of a good pasture. The water supply for the horse is a matter of considerable importance, and in hot weather water secured from good wells or cisterns 13 preferable to that obtained from any other source, the water should not be given directly alter the horse has finished eating, as it is likely to carry out of the itomach a portion of undigested feed, which Is not only wasted, but the animal does not receive the fall bene fit of the ration. Ill health made it Impossible for "John" Coulter to 1 support herself, " and the overseers of the poor sent her to the city farm a few days ago. Superintendent Harvey said that the doctors found "John" to be a per fectly formed woman. Stops earache in two minutes; tooth ache or pain of burn or scald in five min utes; hoarseness, one hour; muscleache, two hours; sore throat, tweive hours Dr. Thomas' Eclectic Oil, monarch over pain. NATURE'S WARNINC. QUEEN SAAV'S READY WIT. Waalcaboro Paopla Blast Racogalaa aa4 Head It. Kidney ills come quietly myste rlus'y. But nature always warns y u. Notice the kidDey secretions. Se if the color is unhealthy If tbtre are settlings and sediment, Passiges frrqnent, scanty, painful. It's time then to use Doan's Kid ney Pills, To ward iff Bright's disease cr di abetes. Dun's have done great work in this locality. Mrs. E. MeCorkle, N. Hayne St , Mon roe, N. C, sajs: "I suffered for years from kidney trouble and my whole system seemed to be filled with uric poison. I fi nally procured Doan's Kidney Pills and they gave me great relief. I do not hesi tate to recommend Doan's Kidney Pills to other kidney sufferers, as I feel confident that they lire up to representations." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co.r Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. - Remember the tame Doan's and take no other. Art- ASHCRAFT'S Condition Powders -n? "Ask for the Kind PutJp in Doan W Relieves scar Btsmaca. .scf&sUsrt. XT Administrator's Notice. Haying'qualifled as administrator of the estate of W. H. Beverly deceased, late ot Anson County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or be fore the 2?th day of July, 19U, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted ' to said estate will please make immediate payment. This July 2lst, 1910. . t. jJiAKiiJN, Administrator . of W 11. Beverly, decease!. Notice to White Teach :. ers. - The biennial county teachers' In'sti tute and school for the training of the public school teachers of the county will be held in the graded school build ine at Wadesboro, beginning Monday. 15th day of August and continuing two weeks. The Uounty institute Law can be found in Section 4167 of the school I law, to which all who expect employ ment as teacherB of the publio schools are referred, Yon are required to bring all of the textbooks used in the public schools through the primary and inter mediate grades, as the institutes will partake lareelv of the character of the school and work will be assigned by the conductors to the teachers just as to classes in the ordinary school room, that methods of teaching may be better il lustrated in the concrete than in the abstract. For the primary work you will also bring, in addition to the read ers, some tablets and a pair of scissors. All friends of education and the pub lic schools,'' ' especially the County Board of Education and the School Committeemen of the general town ship, are invited to attend this institute as continuously as inclination and other considerations will permit. J. M. Wall, Superintendent Public Instruction. A Hard Haart. Detroit Free Press. Judge Ben B. LIndsey, of the fa mous Denver Juvenile Court said In the course of a recent address on charity: x " Too many of us are inclined to think that, one misstep made, the boy is gone for good. Too' many of us are like the cowboy. " : 7 "Ah itinerant preached to a cow boy audience on the 'Prodigal : Son.' He described the foolish prodigal's I as conditions extravigance and dissipation;' he de scribed his penury and his hus't eat ing with the swine in the stye; he described his return, his father's lov- preparation of the fatted calf, "The preacher in his discourse no ticed a cowboy staring at him very hard. He thought be had made a convert, and, addressing the cowboy personally, he said from the pulpit. .- My dar friend, what would u have done if you tnd a prodigal son returning home like that? " Me?' said the cowboy, promptly and fiercely, 'I'd have shot the boy and raised the calf,' " . Vlolcat Partisanship la tba Gotten Pit. New York Evening Post. Few can understand the Intensity of feeling in the cotton pit nowadays. Speculation has ceased to be s series of transactions in each of which there are two parties, one of whom, will be right and the other wrong in his judgment of fluctuations, without personal feeling. It has become a cause, into which enters partisan feeling of the most violent asrrt. The bull leaders hardly dare to tarn their backs upon the pit; they dare not leaye the platform. No sooner do they leave it or turn their hacks than scmebody tries to offer the price down, and if anybody succeeds in getting it a little down, be 1 likely to be thrashed for It afterward, out of school. Cotton will go up. or down warrant, but. nobody appears to think of that. said OLD PAPERS FOB SALE We have for sale a large number of old papers which are going very cheap- ly. Come quick before they are all j gone. ' ' Far llck Rallai Prom Hay Farar Asthma and summer bronchitis, take Foley's Honey and Tar. It quickly re lieves the discomfort and suffering and the annoying ayjftins disappear. ;I soothes and heals the inSamed air passages of the head, throat and bronchial tubes. It con tains no opiates and no harmful drugs. Refuse substitutes. Pee Dee Pharmacy; Parse 1.3 Drug Co. Wnaa Ha Aakad Far Pwasd. Mayor Maddox, of Atlanta, at a recent "shad breakfast:' "This glorious weather ia; bringing out the flowers and the tramps, par ticularly the tramps. - "A tramp knocked at. m lady's door the other morning and. said: . " Lady, I am starvin'. For the last 43 hours not a morsel of food has passed' " Oh, you poor fellow" said the lady. 'My husband has an old pair of boots upstairs. Y ait and. I'll get them, for yoo.' "The tramp bit his lip. " 'Pardon me, ma'am,' he said, haughtily; 'I knowjmy chia whis kers ii gettin, long, bift none the less I ain't no goat.' " Louisville: Time3. Itching piles provoke profanity, but profanity won't cure them. Doan's Oint ment cures itching, bleeding or protruding piles after years of su faring. At any dm 4 store. A Btorv ADDropriated From tha nal of Irish Royalty. The anger of King Colra was terri ble. Twas a fortnight before he could address himself to his queen or look her In the face and speak to her and what he come to say to her then was that she was a shame and a disgrace to him, but sure what could he ex pect anyhow when he was such a no torious fool as ever to marry a beggar of a race of beggars. "Get up," says he, "and dress yourself, and leave my sight and my castle for evermore." "Very well and good, me lord." says Saav, says she. "I'm ready. I was prepared for this, as you'll remember, before ever I married you; but," saya she. "yon remember your agreement- three back burdens of the greatest val uables I choose to carry out of your castle at my lavlnT "Thirty-three." says he. -if you like Twill be a cheap price to get rid of you." Thanky, me lord," says she. "I'll only ask three. And before I've got them out maybe you'll think Ifs enough." "What is the first back burden you choose?" says he. "A back burden," says she, "of gold, allver, diamonds and jewelry." In a short time the king had a bur den of them piled on her that near almost broke her back, and with It she went out over the drawbridge. When she laid it down and come back in again aays the king, saya he. "What will your second back burden ber "For my second back burden." says he,- "hoist up on me our baby boy." The king gave a groan that'd rent rocks. Bat he wasn t the man to be daunted before any woman. He lifted with his own hands the boy In whom his heart was wrapped up and, settin' bis teeth hard, put him on Saav's shoulders. She carried him out over the drawbridge. - When she come back again says Colm, says he, "Now then, name your third and last burden, and we're done with you forever, thank God!" Says Saav. saya she, "Get on me back yourself." King Colm and his good Queen Saav lived ever after the happiest and most contented couple that Ireland eTer knew, a. parable for all kings and queens and married couples la the na tion. Saav lived and died the wittiest, as her husband lived ever after and died the Justest and most generous. most. re?onable, sensible, aable and amiable kls it at Ireland ever knew. ETtrytcy'a : ' '- afaftw Ik ri t?9aw The Peace Which Passeth all understanding comes quicker when the obsequies bave been quiet ly and 'tactfully conducted. Much depends upon The Undertaker. May we suggest a . reference to those whom we bave served? It will disclose the character of our services more fully than we feel disposed to. We prefer to let othersspeak of cur work. We respond to calls at a..y hour. GKA.T EE 1 1ST OS Embalrr r and Funeral Director. Wadeeboio, N. C. , Phone 42 Buy Money Order O OP TEE Southern Savings Bank. Faacnlaad Wadaafeara AnaaaTtlla thereby keeping your money at home, Instead ot patronizing out side interests, as you will It you buy money orders ot the post o2ce or the express coaapany. W. F. Gray, d. d. s. (OriCX IK SiCITH & DUXLAP EL 1X5) Wadesboro, N. C All Operations Warranted DR. EOYETTE, Dzml Cc ep stairs over Toniliasoa's ir:.f