CHAS. L. SATJER, GRAITD SCRIBB -:''.f s!i.i'v:: J -mk PE-RU-NA STREHGTHENS THE ENTIRE SYSTEM. Mr. Chas. L. Saner, Grand Scribe, Grant Encampment I. O. O. F. of Texas, and Assistant City Auditor, writes from the City Hall, San Antonio, Tex.: "Nearly two years ago I accepted a po sition as secretary and treasurer with one f .the .leading drygoods establishments of Jalveston, Tex.' " ' . The sudden change from a high and dry altitude to sea level proved too much for me and I became afflieted with catarrh nd cold in the head, , and general debility to such an extent as to almost incapaci tate me for attending to my duties. "I trout induced to try Pe-ru-na, and after taking several bottles in small done 1 at pleaxed to say that A watt entirely restored to my normal condition and. have ever since rec wttMr" Tided the -use of Peruna to my friends." CUARJUt TEED BY A $5,000 BANK DEPOSIT R. R. Fare Paid. Notes Takes 500 FREE COURSES Board at Cost. Writs Quick a GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon. Ga Products Basks picnics bom enjoyable by Baking me preparation easier. Easier to csrry; easier to serve; and just light for eating as they come from the can. Ubby's cooks have first pick of the best meats obtainable and they know bow to cook them, as well as pack them. If you're not going to a picnic soon you can make one tomorrow at your own table by serving some sEced Luncheon Loaf, ft is a revelation in the blending of good meat and good spices. Booklet free. "How to Mai Good Tiiu8 to Writ Ubby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago "When a man lets a eollar button fall and brags that it didn't roll under the bureau, it's a sign he is a pur jurer. So. 2S-,06. AGGRAVATING ECZEMA. Troubled Badly For Several Tears TVllh czms on Limbs Another Won derful Cure by Cutlcura. Tor several years 1 was troubled bad ly with an eczema on my limbs and wrists. .Physicians in ( several toTms had pre scribed for me without giving me any re cults. I had often used Cuticura Oint ment and received relief temporarily. In 'the spring of 1904 I took the Cuticura Re oJvent Pills and used the Cuticura Oint ment for about five weeks, and at the end of that time there was not a blotch n me anywhere. This spring I took a few vials of the Cuticura Resolvent Pills as precautionary measure, and will con tinue to do so every spring simply as a spring tonic, as they are so easy to carry rith you, and they certainly fix your Wood for the ensuing rear. I now use only Cuticura Soap. The Cuticura Oint ment and Pills certainly cured me of an aggravated case of eczema. St. Clair Mc .Vicar, San Antonio, Texas, July 6, 1905." The sick sinner's sixth sheep is SICK. TITS.St.TitU3 DancerNervons Diseases per manently cured by Dr. KU ne' Great Nerve Restorer. 2 trial bottle and treatlso fre?. Da. H. E. gusi. Ld., 931 Arch - jt..lJhila.,lJa, The salary of the Mayor of New ork is $15,000 a year." Mis. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teethintr.softens theRums.reducesinflamma Uon, allays pain,cures wind oolic,25c a bottle Home has been entered. or sacked more, than forty times since 390 B. C. Says the Atlanta Constitution: The Panama Canal is fraught with such weighty interest to the. -country, and specially to the south, that its type of construction should not be settled liastily or without mature delibera tion. But in view of the attention al ready given this phase, and the fur ther fact that the time is approaching Trhen indecision may mean expensive nlelay, wisdom and expediency seem to indicate the necessity of a congres sional declaration before the expira tion of the present term. SOUTHERN FARM TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANTER, Facts About Plant Food. . Manufacturers of fertilizers make a great mystery of the art of mixing the various ingredients that go to fill np their 200-pound sacks, -writes E. M. Landsberg in the New. York Evening Post. They tell the farmer that it is necessary to have skilled labor and high-priced machinery to effect a per fect mixture, but a few experiments will soon convince any farmer that he can easily equal the best efforts of the factories and" save a substantial sum on each ton. 4 The process Is very sim ple. The farmer empties on the floor of the barn the sacks of the various materials he is about to. use,, spreads them in alternate layers in a, pile, shov els the whole over and under thorough ly for" fifteen minutes,, throws the re sul t through la" screen, sacks it up again, and he is ready to apply it to his land. v ' " Screens are easily made and are ex tremely useful; they reduce the chem icals, etc.J to a perfect form for drill ing, besides insuring a thorough mix ture. A strip of heavy wire cloth, four holes to the inch, is nailed to half-Inch boards, making a slave three feet wide by five feet long. Say a farmer wants to apply to each acre of cotton 500 pounds of 8-3- goods, and instead of paying from $25 to $28 to a dealer, he wants o, mix it himself. He pours on the barn floor in front of the sieve a, sack of sixteen per cent, acid phosphate, two sacks of cot tonseed meal and half a sack of kainlt, Acid Dhosuhate will cost him about $15 a ton; meal he will probably have on his farm, but we must reckon it at $25 per ton; kalnit will cost $12.50 a ton. So a ton of . fertilizer made ac cording to this,'-a common formula in the cotton regions, will cost him $18.50, a saving of from $7 to $10 over the manufactured article; furthermore, he has absolute assurance of the contents of his own goods, something he can never kuow with the ready-made fer tilizers, unless he goes to the expense of having them analyzed. . . . Most fertilizers and most soils need a higher percentage of potash than the ceneral run of "soods" furnish. But as soon as the farmer tries to buy any thing other than the standard analysis he must pay such high prices that lie usually drops the idea. By mixing at home he can make any formula he thiuks necessary, with only a slight in crease in cost. -- Suppose he tobacco farmer wants an 8-4-7 goods (eight per cent, phosphoric acid, four per cent, nitrogen and seven per cent, potash). Materials needed are: One thousand pounds sixteen per cent, acid phos phate; 300 pounds dried blood; 2S0 pounds sulphate of potash; 420 pounds gypsum or plain dirt. . The blood runs about fourteen per cent, ammonia, and costs $50 per ton. Sulphate of potash runs fifty per cent, pure potash and costs about $60 per ton. The farmer must pay the dealer from $30 to $35 per ton for 8-4-7 goods; he can mix them himself for $23 to $25 per ton, saving from $10 to $12 per ton on their cost. These - materials can probably ha bought enough cheaper than the com mercial fertilizers to allow the farmer $8 or $10 for his work. . Clover, vetch, soy beans, cowpeas and similar crops will furnish most of the nitrogen a crop upeds; ground bone or acid phosphate is a cheap source of phosphoric acid. But potash can be restored to the soil only by the use of kainit or sulphate or muriate of potash. It is usually advisable to supply the growing crop with twice as much pot ash as ammonia, and a slightly larger quantity of phosphoric acid. It need hardly be pointed out that since the manufacturers have to buy all their potash in Gerniany they do their best to make theA farmer believe he needs but little of it on his lands. On stiff clay' soils, when growing wheat or cotton, kainit prevents rust, also damage by frost and drought. To bacco, potatoes, strawberries and pea nuts need a iieavy percentage of pot ash. ' Corn Meal vs. Corn and Oat Meal. O. G. B., Burk, Va., writes: I wish some information about the meal made by grinding in corn with .the cob. Is there any value in it for feeding either cattle or horses? . We have fed corn and cob meal to several classes of stock with good sat isfaction during recent years. If corn Is cheap, say less than forty cents a bushel, it will hardly pay to grind it, but when it gets over fifty cents a bushel, it seems to us that grinding the corn with the cob is profitable, partic ularly as a machine can be purchased that "will do this work fairly well at a cost of about $40. Corn and cob meal in our experience gives the best result when finely ground. This necessitates very often passing it through the ma chine twice and setting the' burrs uir closely the second time. Corn and cob meal has given us about ' the same value, pound per pound, as pure corn Items of Interest. New buildings, the construction of which was authorized in Norfolk the first six months of 1906, are valued at more than $1,000,000. Few of the per mits granted are for buildings of more than moderate size. The shortage of Irwin Tucker, pres ident of the Newport News Savings Bank, who committed suicide, was about $30,000. 'i STOCKMAN AND TRUCK GROWER meal. The cobs have MUQif iaXJiutrl- i tive value, it is true, but corn meal is a heavy, concentrated . food, ; and when fed in large quantities it is often not thoroughly digested and assimilated by live stock. The benefit from grinding the cobs with the meal is thought to be due to the lightening of the meal, somewhat, enabling it to be completely digested and resorbed.. ,. Our experience briefly summed up 13 about as follows: A bushel of corn and cobs weighs about seventy pounds; a bushel of corn fifty-six pounds. By grinding the corn and cob, therefore, we. have aJQed practically one-fifth to the feeding" value of a bushel of corn meal. This is an item to be carefully' considered in all sections of the coun try where corn is high priced. Khox ville Journal and Tribune. f Succotash. The American Indian gave to the world a dish composed of green corn and beans variously compounded, and its name was, and is, succotash. More recently our agricultural and live stock experimenters have utilized this, name for mixed feeds for live stock, and fed to them green. Corn, pease, oats and barley were sown together with satis factory results in the way of food, but produced no second crop after the first one was cut off.. This was in some ex periments made at the Agricultural Experiment Station, y Later on, corn, pease, oats, rape and millet were planted together and a successful sec ond crop was got of rape and millet, provided the first crop was cut with a scythe and not grazed off. These ex periments have been carried on in Michigan owing to the great necessity there for green crops for soiling dairy cows. With us in Louisiana a supple mentary supply of forage is very fre quently "needed before the new hay crop comes in in the regular way, and it might be that some of our experi menters, or some of our experiment stations, could lay the plans for us by means of which we can successfully produce green soiling crops at the ear liest possible date in the season. It has been usual in Louisiana to sow corn broadcast, or drilled in close rows, for such purposes, but so far as we know, we have not yet gone on to the point of succotash, which we ought to avail of if it can be made as successful here as it seems to have beei made at the Michigan station. Louisiana Planter. When to Sow Cowpeas Peas should not be sown until the ground is warm. If sown earlier the seed may germinate, but if cold weath er follows the growth may be perma nently stunted. The best fertilizer to use on peas is 100 to 150 pounds of high grade acid phosphate, or basic slag, with twenty-five to fifty pounds of muriate of potash. An application of 300 to 500 pounds of agricultural lime will sometimes prove" helpful. The principal objection to the use of this kind of lime is often the cost. The manufacturers ask an exorbitant price for it, but it is in a convenient form to apply. Nitrogen, as a rule, is not necessary for the pea crop as the peas generally produce an abundance of nodules, enabling the plant to feed freely on the nitrogen contained in the atmosphere. We generally prefer to sow the peas in drills, say twenty-four inches apart. An ordinary grain drill may be used, stopping up two out of t every three tubes. Cultivate ligblly with a weeder or any surface working implement until the vines begin to spread. Peas sown in drills do not tangle so badly and stand up-better; hence they .can be cut for hay to better advantage. Professor Soule. Black Pepper For Poultry. There is as much difference in the effect that black and red pepper has on chickens, as there is almost between wheat and corn. Red pepper acts as a hurtful stimulant, black pepper as a wholesome corrective. Chickens and turkeys that are fed black pepper al ways thrive. In the writer's experi ence, whenever I have a chick that seems out of sorts;,- the very first thing I do is to give a grain of black pepper. Of course, the chick must have grit, that is good and sharp to digest it well, but sharp grit must always be at hand, if birds would in any measure thrive. Poultry Life in America. Never Overdo the TMnr. The experienced strawberry growers of the county will plant the sr.me acre age this year as they did last, notwith standing the fact that the season just past has been one of the most success ful in the history of the county.' The growers who. have planted strawber ries for years, plant the same number of acres, each season. They never over do the thing on the strength of a Kery flattering season. We trust that our farmers will give strawberry growing a trial and will find it profitable enough to continue. Lake Butler (Fla.) Star. News Items. Virginia druggists are said to-be violating the law regulating .the sale of poison. . . . . William Jarvis, a farmer - near Charleston, W. Va., was shot and kill-' ed by his wife. . " " The Administration has decided to pursue a firm policy in Santo Domin go to protect the fiscal policy which the Senate failed to ratify. - C Syllyisms. , Read thflf following quickly and your friends will be . amused : Simple Simpkinsx sung a song of sixpence " as the, sun shone silently on the shoe shop sign. . Sarah sells sea shells sewn up in a sheet. - ' Break the hands that bmds you blindly before breakfast. ) -' ' A peack s of-pealed pears put , into a pale pink pitcher. BLOATED AV1TH DROrsr. The Heart Was Badly Affected When ' the Pat ient' Began Using J loan's Kidney Pills. "" Mrs. Elizabeth Maxwell;-of 415 West Fourth St., Olympla, Wash., says: "For over three years I suffered with a dropsical condi tion without be ing aware that ?it ,was due to kidney trouble. The early stages ; were principal ly backache and bearing down pain, but I went along without worrying much until dropsy set in. My feet and ankles swelled up, my hands puffed and be came so tense I could hardly close them. I had great difficulty - in breathing; and my heart would flut- ter with the least exertion.. I could not walk far without stopping again and again to rest. Since using four, boxes - of v Doan's ; Kidney Pills the ; bloating has gone down and, the feel . lugs or distress have disappeared." " Sold r by all dealers. 50 cents a box. " Foster-Milbum ' Co. Buffalo, K..Y. PLENTY OF MATERIAL. "Why is that strange blond so popu lar with the college girls?" "Sh! She assists them to arrange their 'cozy corners.' " . "Ah, she has an artistic tempera ment?" "No, but her father owns four junk shops." Chicago News. Call at the Drug Store To Day, Get a bottle ot Dr. Biggers Huckleberry Cordial for Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Children Teething, etc. At Druggists 25c and 50c. Disappearing Forests. The National Hardwood Lumber As sociation at its recent meeting in Memphis . adopted a report that pr lented the dire possibilities of the de-' Btruction of Ihe forests in the short period of thirty-five years. It was es timated that there now stood in the Dnited States in the neighborhood of 1,475,000,000,000 feet of lumber, but. :hat 45,000,000,000 feet of lumber, was being cut every year. The report re -commended the immediate prohibition of log exports and exemption from 'Axes of tree plantations. Attention uras called to the desirability of State legal enactments along the last, line, and some constitutional provision by the general Government of like effect. Mention was made of the custom pre vailing in France of requiring a tree :o be planted for every tree cut down. From Iaily Consular and Trade Re ports. Keflections of a Bachelor. It is easy to say what you would do in another man's place, but when it comes to doing the proper thing in your own place well, that's dif ferent. "We alwaj's say we don't want our friends to grieve after we are gone and they don't 'after the novelty wears off. - - Silent Sambo slumbered safely on the shifting sea sand. So. 2S-'06. DOCTOR'S SHIFT Now Gets - Along Without It. A physician says: "Until last fall I used to eat meat for my breakfast and suffered with indigestion until the meat had passed from the stom ach. "Last fall I began the use of Grape-Nuts for breakfast and very soon found I could do without meat, for my body got all the nourishment necessary from the Grape-Nuts, and since then I have not had any. indi gestion and am feeling 'better and have increased in weight "Since finding the benefit I derived from Grape-Nuts I have prescribed the food for all of my. patients suf fering from indigestion or over-feeding and also for those recovering from disease where I want a food easy to take and certain to digest and which will noc overtax the stom ach. "I always find the results I look for when I prescribe Grape-Nuts. For ethical reasons please omit my name." Name given by mail by Pos tum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. The reason for the wonderful amount of nutriment, and the easy digestion of Grape-Nuts is not hard to find. In the first place the starchy part of the wheat and barley goes through various processes of cooking to per fectly change the starch Into Dex trose or Post Sugar, in which stite it It ready to be easily absorbed by the blood. The parts In the wheat and barley which Nature can make use of for rebuilding brain and nerve centres are retained in this remark able food, and thus the human body is supplied with the powerful strength producers so easily noticed after one has eaten Grape-Nuts each day for a week or 10 .days. "There's a rea- son." Get the little book, TTellville," in pkgs The Road to - vv vt;: KM3 & C03 PLETEST BUSINESS BUILDING Features of W. L. Douglas Adminis tration and Jobbing House. The dedication of the new adminis tration and jobbing bouse building erected at -Brockton,-Mass., by the W. L. Douglas Shoe. Co. as a part of Its mammoth manufacturing plant at Mon-tello- was marked by the thoroughness ; and : attention to detail characteristic of the firm in all its . undertakings. As the new building is said to be the most r complete and-convenient of any ever' built for a commercial house in the United 'States, so were the expres sions of , appreciation Jby the many per sons, who visited it for inspection1 sin cere and of a highly congratulatory nature. The dedicatory:, program included, open house from 11 , a. m. to S p. m. with concert by the Mace Gay orches tra and the presence of a Boston caterer , to attend to the "wishes of alL The building itself afforded a feast 'for the eye, especially the offices, which are marvels in many ways. - Fifteen thousand invitations, were sent, out, in cluding over 11.000 to the retail dealers In the United States whd. handle the W. . L. Douglas Co. v shoes, the : others' going-to ; shoe, manufacturers and all allied industries in Brockton and vi cinity. Mr. Douglas will be glad to have anybody who is Interested call! - The . new M building, Is ; situated just north of the No. .1 factory on Spark street, facing - the Montello railroad station. Its completion marks the. es tablishment , of a modern up-to-date wholesale jobbing . house and office building. Mr. Douglas has long con sidered the advisabllty of a. jobbing house,' not only for the purpose of sup 'plying his own .-retail' stores more read: ily, but that the 11,000 dealers through out the United States handling the W. L. JDquglas shoe might be able to ob tain"' shoes for immediate 1 use withC greater facility. . Under the present system all shoes are manufactured to order, and cus tomers, .sometimes lose, sales waiting for shoes to arrive. With the. new Job bing house they will be enabled to have their hurry orders shipped the same day they are .received, which will be f ar more satisfactory to the cus tomer and will result in a largely -increased business to the W. L. Douglas Shoe Co. The new building is 260 feet long and 60 feet wide and two stories In height. The jobbing department will occupy the entire slower floor, while the offices will occupy the second floor. Leaving the new jobbing house on the first floor, the main staircase as-cends-to the second floor level in two divisions separating on the first land ing and meeting again upon the fourth, where the large Palladian window is situated, which appears over the ea , trance. . v , ' At the head of the staircase' in the' mosaic floor appears -the word "Atrium," the name of the inner hall, planned and decorated after the man ner of the central apartment of the Pompeiian house. This room is direct ly in the center" of the main bhilding, being 26x68 and 16 feet in height, and Is lighted by three large ceiling sky lights of classic design. Around the atrium are placed the private offices, where the heads of the departments . are located,, with their assistants. Beginning at the right of the main entrance, in order, are those of the C, F. Richmond, buyer ; H. T. Drake, general superintendent ; Hon. W. L. Douglas,-president; and H. L. Tinkham, treasurer. They are finished and furnished in mahogany and are. ensuite. Mr. Douglas' own room oc cupies, the southwest corner of the building, and is a very handsome apartment. To the left of these comes the room of C. D. Nevins, assistant treasurer, Mrs. Marion Shields, cor-respondence- clerk, and the store de partment. On the east of the atrium and open ing into this hall are two alcoves sep arated by mahogany counters, the fronts of which . are plate glass and grilles of bronze. These are the offices of Warren Weeks, paymaster, - and Harry L. Thompson, the bookkeeper. The next in order to the left are two rooms i : devoted ... to e. 'credit depart ment, one the private office of A., T. Sweetser and the other occupied by his clerks. The next two offices are those of . F. L. Erskine, advertising manager, and his assistants. The three other rooms completing the outer wall line of the atrium are the reception room to the left of the staircase hall,' directors.: room and lavatory and the sample room. Here are located the telegraph instruments, telephone switchboard and booths for use of guests. The directors' room is a fine cham ber occupying the space in the north west corner of the building. "This room is finished and furnished in ma hogany -.and; all appointments are in keeping. Here hangs a portrait in oil of Mr. Douglas, the president. The last room in . this series Is the sample room,' also in mahogany. On center with the entrance and be tween, the bookkeeper's alcove and the credit department is a hall leading to the general bookkeeping room, where is located the host of clerks which this huge business employs. , ' I '! Austria-Hungary, has 13,000 medical men. j you cannot spend years and buy the knowledge required , cents, xou want tnem to pay tneir own way even u yuu weici) wy them as a diversion. In order to handle Fowls Judiciously, you must know som- -thins about them. To meet this want we are selling; a book giving the experience -of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 23c.) twenty-five years. It was written by a man who put all his mind, and time, and money to making a success of Chick- . en raising not-as a pastime, but as a business arid If you will profit by his twenty-five years' work, you can save many? Chicks annually, and make your Fowl earn dollars for you. The point is, that you must be sure to detect trouble in tha Poultty Yard as soon as it appears, and know how to remedy it. This book wlil teach you.. It tells how to detect and cure disease: to feed for eggs -and also for. fattening; which Fowls to save for breeding purposes; and everything, indeed, you should know on this subject to maKe it profttab1-. Sent postpaid for 'twenty-' Ova cents in stamps. BOCK PUB7-HLNQ HOUSE. 224 Leonard SU New York Cit EXPEBIEHCEOFMISS MEBKLEV- Sh Wu Told Tbt air'Oper&tlon Wm Inevitable. How She E2acapd It. . . . A v fr " When a physician tells a woman suf fering .with serious . feminine .trouble that an operation is necessary, -the very thought of the knife and the .operating "table strikes terror to h.er hearty and our hospitals are full of women coming' for just such operations. . , , . There are cases where an operation is the only rsaource, but when- one con siders the treat number: of .eases cl menacing female, troubles eured ,by Ly dia" E. - PinkhanVs Vegetable Cos pound after physicians r have-, advjaed operations, no woman should submit te one without first trying the Vegetable Compound and writing: Mrs. Pinjthaa, Lynn, Mass., for adrice, which is free. - Miss Margret Merkley, of 275 Third Street, Milwaukee, Wis., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: -v. W ;v4'r , "Loss of strength, trem Bervonapate, bnnfinir nains thronch the celvic OlVftOa. bearing down pains, and cramps compeUea -roe to seek medical.advice. . The doctor, after- trouble and ulceration and advised an 6pfcra tion. To this I strongly objected and decided to try Lydia E . Pinkham's Vegetable. Com pound. The ulceration quickly healed, all ' the bad symptoms, disappeared and Ivaa once more strong, vigorous and welL" Female troubles are steadily on the increase among wome. If the month ly periods are very painful, or top fre quent and excessive if you have, pain or swelling low down in the left, side. bearing-down pains, don't neglect yqur self: try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. . In order to advance the prico of sugar, weakened by general overpro duction, a systematic reduction of th cultivated area has been encouraged in France.. - E It, acta immtdiatslr INDIGESTION and t AfiniTV wk to know its (rood. It cor AUlUlli HBADACHXIi AL80 XiJ rwuoTiuc the cause. 10 cents. You Cannot all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of the mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sore mouth or inflamed eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely cao cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,checks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for ft Mnine ills ever produced. Thousands or women testify., to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. , Send for Free Trial Box : THE R. PAXTON CO- Boston, Mm. JV o TH 1 jsc so Good rRV'SSIA" pon.TRT FOOD, ' )& hen lay more erar. cores cholera and roup. rHVSSMN LICE KILLER, llqald or powder, kill Ilee and mites frlce 85e an oOc; by mail and T5c. , Poultry- Boo KaeK PRUSSIAN REMEDY CO. minn"l" Medical Til LANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA Jm atlvactfccrra for practical iustruction, bota la ample laboratories and abundant hospital material, are uDeqr.aied. 1 re access la given' to the .great Cbaritv Iloepital with 900 teds and 30,000 patiiBta annually. Special instruction is given dally at tb ' bedside V t he sick. The next session begins Octotr 18-lvs. For catalogue and Information, address -I'KOF. 8. E. CHAILLK. M. D.. Dean . P. O- Drawer, 261, NEW ORLEANSTU, So. 28-'06. li afflicted with weak Thompson's Eye 7atsr WINTER Wheat. fiO Bnfthelft Pr acre. Oaralo?e and xample FKEE-SalzerMced tn.,iias A. V., Lat'roiw, Vl. EARN MONEY 4JFJJFgltb: unless you understand them and know how to cater to their reauireaients. and dollars learning by experience, so you must . by others. We offer this to yqu for only 25 CAftiU'DME jl'1. ii.lt frJ I Department

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