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Show FRESH-AI- R grm? TREATMENT Most Potent Means of Restoring Consumptive Patients MB. to Health BAYSSON PUBLISHES RESULTS OF VALUABLE EXPERIENCE. A Former Dr. F. K. Walters In his study on monia. A solution of copperas (sulthe various sanatoria for consumptives phate of iron) will have the same recalls the open-ai- r life the keynote of sult. Lastly, the floor should he supsanatorium treatment. He further plied with absorbent litter, which says that the patient. Instead of being should be removed when It Is soiled. Kept In a caretully warmed room ven- Ventilation should he provided in tilated from other parts of the house, such a way as to avoid cold drafts. at cording to the popular notions of Small openings, which may be easily old, lives In the open air from morn- closed with a slide, may be made in ing till night, at all seasons and In all the outer wall mar the floor awd weathers. Lack of fresh air Is the similar ones near the celling, or In greatest predisposing cause of con- the roof, through which the foul air sumption; fresh air Is the most po- can escape, I'ure air Is of the utmost tent means of restoring him to health. Importance to the of Now this prescription Is very easy horses." to carry out In dry climates such as those of Egypt, the Alpine health reInsomnia. This very common condition Is sorts, South Africa or Colorado; but It requires special arrangements and most often due to six oclock dinners special precautions In a damp and or eating in the evening. To secure ralt.y climate. The credit of showing sound sleep, no food should be taken how this may be accomplished belongs after 4 p. m., or at least nothing more mainly to Hrehmenr, Rottweiler and than a little ripe stewed fruit, without their followers. The open-aimethod cream, and with as little sugar as posmay perfectly well he carried out In sible, better with none. Oranges or any climate which Is healthy for those some other juicy fruit are preferable who are not consumptive. for an evening's lunch. Avoid bread Aa Leon Petit observes: Here the climate and butter or milk, and similar artimay help the cure, . . . there It cles which digest slowly. Fruit Juices may hinder It; but it only exerts a and completely predlgested food subsecondary influence on the treatment." stances may be added In moderation. (1) Moreover, Just as the pleasantest Tea and coffee also produce sleepellmates are not always those which lessness. Sedentary habits conduce are best for healthy people, (2) so It to sleeplessness by promoting the acmay be that the most pleasant climcumulation of uric acid, which Is a ates for an life where the nerve excitant, and gives rise to restair Is warm and dry and little rain lessness and disturbing dreams. Mis are not best for those consump Said the wise man, "The sleep of lives who have later on to return tc the laboring man is sweet. Eccl. 5:12. a less favored place. It Is bracing Gentle by exercise fatigue climates rather than warm and equ- out of doors Is produced effectlv wonderfully able ones whkh have the greatest In A is a means of producing sleep. fluonre In restoring the consumptive prolonged bath, fifteen to forty minto health, In all but exceptional cases utes, or even longer if necessary, at For the open-aitreatment, a four- a temperature of 92 degrees to 95 d fold Ehelter should be provided against gret'8 F taken Just before retiring, Is wind, excessive cold, extreme sun heat an excellent remedy for sleeplessand rain. Wind raises dust, increases ness. The moist abdominal bandage, cough in consumptives, and intensifies consisting of a towel wrung quite dry tha chilling efTects of cold. The for- out of rold water and wound around eign sanatoria with few exceptions the body, covered snugly with mackhavs both natural and artificial shelter intosh and then with flannel In sufagainst wind. Cold within certain lim- ficient quantity to keep It warm, Is aO its Is useful to the consumptive; but exceedingly helpful measure In pn It should be a windless cold, and suitIn cases In which sleepduring ed to the individual power of reac- lessness sleep Is due to excess of blood In tion. As damp intensifies the cli- the brain. Care must be taken to matic effect of both heat and cold, the keep the feet warm. If necessary, ft chilly consumptive will he able to hot bag may he applied to the feet or withstand a lower temperature In a a moist pack to each leg. If the head dry than In a humid climate. ProtecIs kit, a cool compress may be tion against rain and snow will seem to most people an obvious necessity, although at Nordach rain Is often Still Saws Wood at SI. It Is not enough to provide The Rev. Jacob Chapman of Exeret, resting places In the sanatorium N. H.. Is the only nonagenarian, and which are protected against rain. At one of the few clergymen In New certain stages exercise Is Imperative, who saw all the wood used Hampshire and sholtered paths and open covered In their stoves for cooking and beatcorridors are needed for exercise In The amount of wood ing purposes. rainy weathor. At Falkensteln there used by a family dnrlng the long Sew Is such a corridor 200 feet loug. Hampshire winters is something ettve-mouI In places a here the sun's rays are yet Mr. Chapman goes out Into very powerful, as at Canlgou in the the woodshed every day and saws alPyrenees, direct exposure to the sun most enough to keep the parlor afid Is found to Increase the tendency to bedroom stoves weH as Well supplied, fever. Even at llohenhonnef on the ns to furnish what Is needed for the Rhine, which Is not far south, a large kitchen. verandah has been provided which in Mr. Chapman celebrated the ,t hot weather can be artificially cooled of his birth this week. anniversary a stream of water. Protection Though never robust, Mr. by Chapmans against wind and weather Is afforded physical powers are remarkably well Id most santoria by large verandas, preserved. A day seldom passes In which may be fitted with movable which he falls to cat a little w(od, (tasa screens, as the Adirondack Co- an exercise which he considers very ttage Sanatorium. In our own climate beneficial. In good weather he takes It would be useful to have a veranda long walks. His mind Is alert and jWlth a hollow floor, which could be hla memory very retentive. Wfirmed, as cold and damp ran be He was born In Tamwortb, and If more easily borne If the feet are 1827 entered Phillips Exeter academy, kept warm. Other simpler ways are of which he is the oldest living gradn the provision of hot bottles and warm ate. He was graduated from Dark clothing. Recumbency also helps a mouth chllege In 1833, and from Amt chilly patient, the blood circulating over Theological seminary In 1839 with less cardiac effort In this posi- For many years he was a teacher. tion . According to Dr. Welcker and Since his retirement Mr. Chapman Dr. Jacoby, the recumbent position has lived here, devoting himself t also favors the flow of blood to the geneaktgical research. He has writaplcea of the lungs. In most foreign ten a number of family histories, and aanatorla summer houses or sun contributed to serular, genealogical boxes are also provided; at Falkenand religious publications. Exchange. steln some of these ran he rotated according to the direction of the wind. Why the Body Needs Water. Dr. Rurton Fanning, In his experiSomeone has asked: "What would be mental sanatorium near Cromer, has the cause of death of a person whd modlfled the well Known shelters of drank no water?" This subject has untmals ,our seaside resorts by providing them been studied considerably; haw been experimented upon, and with reversible glass screens, It Is found that without water the) i ft) l.oo. clt . p w ami Mltburt ( (21 llcirtmnu lose their Her to eliminate the natFouler rthl In Atll'iitl Hvitl. f on riinitttr In the Truiiiiimt of ina- - ural poisons; they must have water ts order to eliminate them, otherwise the secretions become too dense. Stable and Conditions. Without water, the amount of urea "The condition and health of a which should be secreted becomes dihorse, say the National Builder, "de- minished. and so with the other sepend very much upon the kind of cretions. We need water, not only to stable It Is kept In. There are horses dissolve the food and carry It along, which suffer from disease of the eyes, but we need it to dissolve and carry from coughs, frotn scratches umt out of the stcm the poisonous and other skin discuses, all of which are worn-oumateria! of the body, after It produced by the pungent, foul air In has served its purpose. Water forms the stables. Farmers and others who a cireulutlrg medium for carrying hive horses will tike pains to keep back and forth In the systheir carriages and harnesses protect- tem, conveying nourishment to the ed from the strong amnionlcal air of various parts of the body, bringing the stables, lest the leather may he btuk the used up material and carryrotted or the varnish dulled and spot- ing It out by way of excretory ducts. The amount of water dally required ted; and at the same time they will wonder why their horses cough, or Is from two to three pints. In very or hot wouthcr a larger amount Is needhave weak eyes or suffer from other diseases which. If ed, as much water Is lost by perspirathey would only think for a few min- tion. If one's diet consists largely of utes they would readily perceive are the Juices of fruits, the quantity of due to tbs foul air the animals are water may he considerably diminished. compelled to breathe every night In Is Water a Food? the year while confined In close, badly The remedy is ventilated stables. Hutchinson, an English authority, very easy. The stable should be kept who has published the latest and best clean; this will prevent the greater work on foods. Includes water among part of the mischief, and It should be haul substances. Water enters the well ventilated. The floor ahould be body, not only as a solvent, but a desproperly drained, so that the liquid tined to become a constituent element will not remain on It, washed off at of the tissue themselves. Water adds least twice a week with plenty of wa- to th energy of the body by Inerc-Inthe power of the heart, and In ter, and then liberally sprinkled with activity floely ground gypsum (plaster), which other ways contributin' to combine wrlth and destroy the am of the tissue. well-bein- r out-of-do- r t Pronounced Dyspeptic Ita Now Kcjoice In Perfect Freedom from Miwrica of Indigcatlou. Thousands of sufferers kuow that the reason why they are irritable aud debepressed and nervous and sleepless is cause their food does not digest, but how to get rid of the difficulty is the puzzling question . Good digestion calls for strong digestive organs, and strength comes from a For this supply of good rich bbxxl. reason Mr. Haysson took Dr. Williams Pink Pills for the cure of indigestion. They have been my best doctor, lie I was suffering from dyspepsia. says. The pains in my stomach after meals were utmost unbearable. My sleep was very irregular uiul my complexion was sallow. As the result of using eight boxes of I)r. Williams Pink Pills, about the merits of which I learned from friends in France, I hnvo escaped all these troubles, and am uble again to take pleasure in eating. A very simple story, but if it lmd not been for l)r. Williams Pink Pills it might have been a tragic one. When begins w ith eating, fills up the intervals between meals with pain, nml prevents sleep at night, there certainly cannot be much pleasure in living. A fnul general breaking down must be merely a question of time. Mr. Joseph Ilavssou is a native of Frunce, but now resides at No. 2439 Larkin street, San Francisco, Cal. He is one of a great number who can testify to the remarkable efficacy of Dr.Williuius' Pink Pills in the treatment of obstinate disorders of the stomach. If you would get rid of uansca, pain or buruiiig in the stomach, vertigo, nervousness, insomnia, or any of the other miseries of a dyspeptic, get rid of tbs weakness of the digestive orgnus by the use of Dr. Williams Pink ITlls. They are sold by druggists everywhere. Proper diet is, of conrse, a great aid in forwarding recovery once begun, aud a little book, What to Eat aud IIow to Eat," may be obtained by any one who makes a request for it by writing to the Dr. Williams Medical Oo., Schenectady, N.T. This valuable diet book coutains an important chapter on the simplest Beaus for the cure of constipation. Normal Boy. A Topeka boy ate six dishes of ice cream and finished up on four bov a of chill soup. The doctors thought he had appendicitis and operatod on him. But he dldn t have it Kansas City Journal. AN AWFUL SKIN HUMOR, Covered Head, Neck and Shoulder Suffered Agony for Twenty-flvYears Until Cured by Cuticura. For twenty-fivyears I suffered from a terrible humor, completely covering my bead, nock and shoulders, discharging matter of such of fonstveness to sight and smell that I became an object of dread. I con suited the most able doctors far and near, to no avail. Then I got Cuticura, and in a surprisingly short time I was completely enred. For this I thank Cutlcnra, and advise all those suffering from skfn humors to get It and end their misery at once. S. P. Keyes, 149 Congress Street, Boston, Mass. e Jews In psteotw. TEA money Why throw-awaand comfort in buying poor tea? y Ymr CTtxw rvninw you r llkoBchUliittf 'll jM If you tool Bt When a maw regards himself as Irresistible It Is time to do some quiet Philathinking and delphia Bulletin. nicMhiji-.in- I on thiitii dunces I. Ill lint think. t ti ilnni w.ird glances x tiu e a di Ink - i turn .Slim- I ii liintl.ii m- - w W. II. l In n tri on the water glances, whip that hpfoip? N'iipi mind. M fariiv dancps. hh wh.it Will- - Just one mole. Did I tills- Tin- - mminlipiiin - ijpcwKlter x.ij lx niniiiiiK ail to "I'd. it dm ps me not: to Iwhat I want, think mail tut whan 4 nioiiinlinmihx I xiilil befOift tlic Is kiini king on the i dnoi J 3 () wil miii Imp mo wlicn Ini bald dinsou do It.,? wh did And I - - . I xa tin inure xmliPZ at TliK dool l ink ill im - moon - honk D w i!lip wc li.it e mixed sou Feed the cut zzzz. New l'uik Times no moi ' The m No moi p? ZZZ x mu Hid His Money in the Oven. Chief Burgess John Doll of Pine Grove. Fa., before going to the circus, put all his portable wealth, fl.000 In currency, in a cigar box and deposited In In the oven of his cold stove, which he believed would be out of commission surely till the Sunday baking should be done. But Mrs. Doll concluded to get the Sunday baking out of the way before her husbands return. So she heated up the kitchen stove, piping hot. When she thought it about right she opened the oven door, only to find inside the smoking ashes of a cigar box and something that looked suspiciously like "money It fairly crumbled as she to burn. touched It, but she got It out of the oven and smothered the remaining flames as best she could. The Burgess will aBk Uncle Sam to put on his best specs and see If he can', decipher enough of the ashes currency to redeem it, whole or In part Shocked by Parrots Profanity. The residents in the vicinity of fashionable Avenue A and Fourteenth street here will take steps to capture a cussing'- poll parrot that for several days has inhabited a tall tree near the house of Charles E. Annett, says a dispatch from Bayonne, N. J. Mr. Annett was greeted yesterday with, "Hello, uncle! Hello, uncle! Thinking one of his nephews was up the tree, he cried hack, "Better come down befoiw you fall," and the parrot answered, "Go soak yvur head, von hlanket.v blanii. blank." This angered Mr. Annett at. 4 he decided to chase the boy from tie tree. When he found that he had been fooled by a parrot hosaid thinga. During the day a policeman and a score of hoys tried to capture tlae bird, lot she flew to the topmost branches. There she was still "cussing tonight. - sible! Writ fur ovr Kftowtalro Hoot. OoMHMtt?. ton 'rnciuo. A. ftchLUIaf ft Servant Girls Havs Money. Ia I'.erniauy the number of servant girls who have savings bank account Is nearly three times as targe as that of shop girls who have them. TEA Wc take the risk of your finding our tea as we say, at your grocers. T ur g rur rrlurtu soar IIm nuwi.y It you SanV Center of Europe. Moscow Is situated almost la ths enter of European Ruts TEA Do you use Best? Hadn't Noticed Bird'j Absence. A curious incident happened In England recently during- a wedding. The vicar, supposing the party to he complete, began the servi.te, quite unconscious of the fact that the bride had not arrived. Instead f stopping him the bridegroom, best- man and others remained silent from sheer nervousness and presently, when the bride and her father, who had been delayed, httrrledly entered. The father quaintly apologized by saying: "Excuse me for Interrupting; some mistake has been made. Explanations followed and the service wis- - bogun again. Cat Helped Her Mistress; woman of very regular habits Is accustomed to go to the cellar for potatoes at exactly ll:20 a. m. each day. The other day a caller Interrupted her usual routine somewhat. The family cat' easily showed uneasiness and after a time disappeared. When the mlstrwa Inter went to the stairway In response to an unusual sound from that locality, she discovered that tho cat had already brought three moderate sized potatoes from the cellar and was thn struggling with a larger otm which sh-- i trying to carry up tho stairs by graxplng one of the sprouts in he? A Dover, N. H. Miol If wc know anything, we know tea. Hold us respon- Sugar in Ton Some Idea of the magnitude of rhe maple sugar Industry as carried on In Vermont nay be had from the fact that at tie single station of East Berkshire Herman Chaffee loaded twenty twi tons of the sweet and A. J. Croft h aded eight. Ar the same time one buyer alone has gathered up over forty tons of sugar and two carloads of sirup. The banner sugar maker of tuts section Is Norman Hoga-booof tfmth Richmond, who has .330 produced pounds from 2oo0 trees and sold the wherfe for G77.7u. Tarns Ruffled Grout. Out of U'o broods of ruffled grom-- hatched list spring by rof, Hodge of Worccsnr, Mass, four have winter fd and are apparently hetlthy birds In plto of the fact that they wert raised In captivity. They are tam and have the run of the Hoilg. piur like hens. They like ! kinds o It l hoped that they will mate and a second genera- fruit and bsrtles. and tion of tane "part ridges'' What a pity we don't all of usl Japantss Burial Cuitom. Japanese dead are burled la squatting posture, chin upon lines On the Road." ranks well up trs toward the hum of New England rmn Herbert Twentieth Eugene E. Lario, of 751 avenue, ticket seller in the Union StaYou are at tion, Denver, Col., says: liberty to repeat what I first stated through our about papers Denver Doans Kidney Tills in the summer of 1899, for I have had no reason In the interim to change iny I opinion of the remedy. atsevere to was subject alof backache, tack I sat if ways aggravated long at a debit. Doan s Pills absolutely Kidney I stopped my backache. a had never pain have or a twinge since. Co, Buffalo, N. Y. Price 50 For sale by all druggists. cents per box. cool-heade- e the other passionate and discontent are the fruit!1) battle. Keep serene, say j j trol myself and be a cheerful and all win go osopher WelH York Post. Ministers Are Healthy. In his book on Nerves In 0rd Dr. Schofield, formerly examfMr,j the British National Health Soc ' gives a table of longevity which sJ that the Christian mlnlstiy ),'! most healthful of callings. Foster-Milbttr- His Perilous Experience. arWhen the steamship Wellington she recently Francisco rived at San had brought a Japanese whom she been had he sea after at picked up standing four days and four nights, without food or water, on the bottom He had of a capsized fishing boat. the though center board, held to the A: Tour Dealer for Allens . A pewder. It rests the feet. Cureahw, len.Sore, Hot.Callous, Aching, Swo,,! Feet xnd Ingrowing Nails. MallD dn j IP gists and Shoe stores, 2f cents, no substitute. Sample mailed Kiru t A S. . Address, Mn. Winslows Soothing Syrup. rsilwMi to twilling, sofnina the I'lrai, fnr wind colli tttcibuiu. tan TWO OPEN WO'IU? Mrs. Mary Dlmmlck of Washington W How Lydia E. Pinkhams VegetaJ Compound Made Her Well. JC It in with great pleasure we pnhlit the following letters, as they conria lngly prove the elaim we have so man times made ia our columns that Mri '"Vlrtsa r Kennedj'ft Favorite Remedy ln enred me Bright Diiwwteanil u ravel AMfpb.yai' faliod." Mr A. J. Ulmer. Btirgnlll, o. II uo a buttle. Death to Unmuzzled Cattle. to the frontier of Nepal Is the mountain of Sandook-Phn- , which means In She Thibetan language, The hill of the Foison plant," or aconite. This plant Is so abundant, and so deadly In Its effects, that all sheep and cattle passing over the mountain are muzzled by their drivers Curiously enough only those cattle that are newly Imported from the plains are fatally affected. The natives believe that the sheep of the district learn to shtn the youngest leaves, which are the most virulent. A more likely explanation Is that they grow habituated to the drag by taking it in 3tnall quantities. Stray Stories. t LETTEF, IMPORTANT TO MARRIED sign-manua- I)vld LeUoy, N, f What Fatigue Really Is. Tiredness Is as natural a condition of life as Is the ability to perform work, writes Andrew Wilson In the Illustrated London News. It is natures signal that rest and repose are necessary In order to recuperate the vital powers. Think for a moment of (which the supply of nourishment means the giving of energy or the power of doing work) to any part. The healthy frame receives its due quota of food materials, and out of them builds np Its substance and obBut the tains Its working power. Is not constant. supply of energy Ifence, after a certain exhaustion of the store It originally possessed, the human engine demands more coal and l water. Fatigue Is the which authorizes the fresh supply. MIr. Olmsted, p Effect of Diet on Silkworm Silk worms fed on different W I1 produce Bilks of varied colors; tt a diet of vino leaves produces W l! red, and lettuce an emerald green. tpi sea was rough. SauuUuu,Illiyllu,eunMi Foot-Eu- - a XT Close Jl1rj.Aiary DimmicL Pinkhain, of Lynn, Mass., usfuUyqoiJ-tieto give helpful advice tosicktooa. Read Mrs. Dimmicks letters. Her first letter: . I Dear Mrs. Iinkham : I have been a sufferer for the years with a trouble w liich first nj3i from painful tncuhtriiatiim the paimwi excruciating, with inflammation aiwi aVv tion of the womb. The dontor seyi I Bit have an operation or I cannot live. Ikr; want to submit to an ojxration if I cac tr avoid it. Please nie." Mrs llir help bly Dimmick, Washington, D. C. Her second letter; Dear Mrs. Iinkham You will rememberray oonilitinavtui' Rfit Cron Hull Blue. I.arifu package I eeuta. The Kusa Co in puny, Soulh Lent), lad, last wrote you, and that the doctor an. must have an operation or I couiii not is I received your kind letter and followed j Bad Luck Sure to Follow. advice very carefully and ain now entiw I fear, said the lady of the house well. As my case was it aeemi as she gazed across the street on miracle that I am cured. 1 know that In health but my life to Lydkl not only moving day, that the folks who have PinkbaiusmyVegetable lcintomiii and to s Just moved out over there won't have advice. I can walk miles without an ttorf much luck. pain, and I wish every suffering wool They have taken away would read this letter aiZ I realm whit n the cat and the broom, the two things can do for them. Mrs. Mary DminurLM that should always be left ia a vacat- and East Capitol Streets Washington, B.C ed house. I saw Mr. Snorg bring the How easy it was f6r Mrs. Dimmick broom out to the van and I saw the write to Mrs. Finkhamat Lynn, Maa, eldest boy carry away the cat under and how little it cost her a twoa hts coat If the rat bad followed stamp. Yet how vaiuable waatherepit' voluntarily to tteir new home It would As Mrs. Dimmick says itswvodheflilt Mrs. Pinkhain has on fils thousuk have been all right. But when one the- above ml of just such let tors-amoves there Is no way of transferring offers ailing women helpful advise a broom without bringing ill luck." New York Sun. USE THE FASIOC i - a TEA Whoeveryou arc,? herever our tea for you; ;yback mney too. is Tour sraror rnarm your m mwj If , ou don't SXo Hrhmitui'r iim. FOR WOMEN. trout lid with ill? peculiar an their mx, um4 douche ii miiitlwoiy ccului. Thoiout Jily cImqi is, Icillad Hope ductuice belli mtiiinmit nn Mi soreoeii, euiei aucuribaeauid mui aiud- I .it London's Garbage. J'Mtini ii in powder lorn to lie d wvlved IP E About 8), 000 tuns of du.xt and refuse w rr, md in clr, noire, lie. one. euwiw Is taken awy In barges from London ir jeeononoul jun liouul aiutcctm tor ill TOILET A YD WOMEN'S SPECIAL Otf every year Foj vie at dnihtft'AtSu SOctti Trial Hoi and Hook of InotnKtton f ft Paxton Commiit TEA Good tea most ci us is. better than kni w. You may aswcllknowSchillinjjfsllest. Everylkind par ttiniwj I pkrtod-npky- . It hurt a woman's pride to havs another woman share with her a mao's attention. Owe m mum, or numey U yua itok w-- l' Lit Belle Photo Supply Co. Sill Liki Clip. Aititrewi Mall Or dors Dept hi sample, if you dont like it. im 4 pnM. Every jourul package cf Schilling s Host is a free T'tf mb tad dita. TEA UkeHrhllliii tooT.1 W 'f?M k In every man them U a disposition M',u"a aro jn mted Krml raised Forty Years Schilling's . Tiii- tenth. TEA Uk. ftrtiirin Tin- ay-on- Wcatd Aid Palestine Jews. Archibald Forder, known as tbs Arabian Livingstons" for his extens-Iv- e travels In Arabia, Is In tbs United States In the tnterert of the poorer sub-stanc- , An Unfinished Ode. IS Keep berene. When you come to think of ns do have a hard tlnTi' ourselves In order. Temper' selfishness, and longings and desires, all insltingto-; hearing, and down steps 1,, 1 orders control. Of course th ! the Intellectual whom means and little they know 0f the THREE YEARS AFTER. T. Brook merclnl travelers. having entered upon tho fortieth year of nmttiiunui servleo on April 20, During th nine be hnw been iT loved bv but two dtp frrrnt compnnli. the first engngemoH having lasted for over thirty yearn Vr Brook rojiies to retire at the end ve.nr TEA People think spices and extracts arc always dishon cst. No; they arc not. ,f When one man imr, nCLIABLCboldASBAVj,if T I tllcer (fold, illioni Ofldcn flssau Co. I" tMd.iirt-wand Hleh Or S NEW PENSION LAWS at' another It on. Apply So If llU ItMliluglua.D ATM V amirtni with Sirs tyes. dm Thompson's fc |