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$1,00( I-Icre's a Alillior However arid of imagination and spiritually minded a man may be, he is abnormal if bc bas not at ?ou?e time ;ndulged in pleasant dreams of great or suddon wealth, lt is ono of tho favorito pastimes of young men to clo^e themselves with great wealth in fancy, and see in the diluvia of their gossamer fortuno tho great things they would do, the great furore they would create, the great pleas ures they would enjoy. In the my riad commonplace instance there is a "woman at the foundation of tho dream, and the dreamer vividly pic tures bimsolf living a life of case and beauty and never-ending charm in the company of this ideal creature. Oc casionally the dream is woven around the sunken 'fortunes of a family and the imaginative one sees those dear to him returning to the affluence and so cial eminenoo whieh some orazy whirl of the wheel has swept away. Not infrequently the dreamer of dreams is a man with a powerful mind, brim ming with ambitions and craving for achievement. G He it is who sits in .Uenoo, gnawing his 'fingernails soli tarily, defeating mocking rivals and enemies, vanquishing pr?judices and inimical conditions whioh are fre quently the phantasmagoria of his Own introspective fever, with the magic aid of limitless dollars sudden ly plaeed at his disposal. Or it may be the simple man of unobtrusive, quiet tasteG, despising the monotony of the daily grind, revelling in the emancipation which fortune would be etow. Nor is the elderly or the aged man, with all the years rf disillusionment clipping his enthusiam, immune from these tantalizing visions. Shriveled by failure, soured by the indifference of the world and his own ohildren, his mind paints a glowing picture of the abrupt revolution should Jade Fate turn her golden smile on his autumnal yc?rs. One and all men dream some time of tho argonaut, thc eldorado, Borne subtle, imp?Doibl? alohemiatry. The ogre, want; the genie, destitu tion; the demon, obscurity, si! fade into the peopled darkneBB from whioh they are constantly emerging to tor ture the moments when fthe wi?i sod the ocursge lie prostrate, sou black depression lettlea down over the brooding spirit, '"How muon happier do you suppose Mids? and Croesus snd Monte Cristo ead Bf organ sud Bockefsller and Car negie and Astor and Vanderbilt were and are thoo the maa whose bank ac* count ia bounded by his monthly stipend and his mediocre ability? The conventional, petulant answor is, "SOB, yes, I know all that, but," cheerfully, 'Tm perfectly willing to take the risk/' Well, imagine you "took the risk" and wero olothed with unending wealth, what then? S E E D!i T I IVE E* vt ' ^experienced farmer has teamed that some gruinis require far differ ent abi? than ethers; some crops need differ ent handling than others. He knows that a great deal depends upon right planting at the right time, and that the soil must be kept enriched. No Use of complaining in summer about amis take made in the spring. Decide before the seed is planted. .,' *3Se best time to reme dy wasting conditions in the human body is be fore the evil is too deep rooted. At the first evi dence of loss of flesh Scott's Emulsion should be taken imme diately. There is noth ing that .will repair wasted tissue more Quickly or replace lost esh more abundantly than Scott'3 Emulsion. "It nourishes 'and builds up the body when ordi nary f o vd s absolutely . fad. . 7 . ' We tvHI send you a $tmptt frei,. J jes Be sure that thia 9 45Ssk *JL.' 1 picture in the form Ki * ?bel is on tho JfcKS?G? wrapper of. overy vPU?P?* yoi? buy ?moi*lon ?nl SCOTTI ; / Ww I BOWNE V ila??* 409 pearl street 'rJfaW-- >V.15?tf:;W?K-:>KBvV YORK r^H&s. . soc. end &T ; ? rfr*f*0 wtju XS.- > /M Cet??geij^ft^y?ajs^ai?jaj|kjaj^ sSBSSsrwMar.iHi e i ??? ? ^e* I ? m ?0* wsieS i m KS SS 1,000 ! i-?N ow Spend it. Voa would enter wealth with your same tastes, your same follies, your same virtues. A period of buoyant, ecstatic novelty would ensue-and baok you would drift to tho is rune old rut which you wore deeper and deeper when life's chief events were supper, dinner, breakfast, bedtime and pay day. Tho phyaioal and mental land scape would assume again its old-time tints-mollow and pleasing or sallow and foreboding. You might, if you were sufficiently selfish and callous, for a short time fight off tho share of euui aod self sacrifice which is tho lot of every man and woman under every condition. But as inevitable as sunrise, tho same gray monotones, tho same fitful joya and sorrows'-life's alternate platitudes and gingery epigrams would flock baok aod settle perma nently on your shoulders, the more vital aod iuoiatonfc for their enforoed absence. Eaeo and independence and ready command of money would be come speedily a matter of course, and it is not inconceivable that ia time you would come to envy the sturdy, unaspiring olod, whether he drives a plow, a peo, a bargaio or a herd of oattlo. Still, ts a pleasant thought. If it makes our gay hours gayer and our drab hourn less drab, our sins less scarlet and our virtues less boring - and doesn't sap will power and onergy and resistance-why not indalgo it? It's an intoxication which at least has the merit of no headache aftermath or nerves which have to bo placated with stuff from the apothecary's round tho corner.-Sunny South. . -^-A--. His Delicate Mission. "I have oome to see you. sir, on a delicate mission," said the young man, as he sat down on the edge of a chair and looked uncomfortable, as young men sometimes will. The old gentleman laid down his pen and looked curious. "What is it?" he asked. ::Weii, sir, you Lave two beautiful daughters," explained the young man. tb? old gentleman. j ?<T _..._? 4 V.l. MAM V.M.. >.il..J ? * |;i?ouiuw vila* /vu u.iu uuuvsu that I have been frequently at your house," suggested the young mao dif fidently. '.I h?ve noticed it.'* "Thank you, sir. I have bean paying attention to-io faut, sir, frankly; ?-I have been making love to one of you dough tors." ' "And-er-you would like to-" The old gentleman hesitated, and the young man eagerly wont on. "YeB, sir; thst'a it exactly. I pro* posed to one of them last night, and I-I-" "Which one?" interrupted the old gentleman. "Both are splendid girls, and ? . should hate to lose either -butwbich ono is it?" "Don't you know?" asked the young man, aghast. "Certainly not. I've Been you with both." . The young man sighed and reached for his hat. \ "I thought you might," he o aid. "I've been very attentive, and I waa _?J_I~ J_L*. M.MM.ttf < ...I.. BUIUVIIUIVB JU ?U?V? Ul^miu, .vvi.g they're twins j hut I got along all right until I proposed. And now now hang it al), air, if you don't knojr which doe accepted me, I don't! And I've got to begin all over again." Tit Bita. .m ' j -ir i Circumstances Alter Cases. Wy maid, Norah, went, to consult a fortune teller, and returned wailing dismally. "Did ah o prediot some great trou ble?" I asked sympathetically. "Ooh, mern, sich terriblo cowa!" moaned Norah, rooking baok and forth, wringing her hands. . : : "Tall me," I said, dishing to com fort the girl. "She tould mo thot me father works hard ehovelin' ooal an' 'tindin' foires fer a livin'." "But that's AO disgrace nor sor* row," I said a trifle vexed at such af fectation. 1:Gob, mern, me poor father!" sob* bed Korah, "He'a bin dead these, nino *-earar,-*-Aoswers. - Faith's f eivcr ia more than ef ferveseetee, " - Tde lights of the] world are not advertising sighs. . - Ho. can easily be fearless who dare pot m^^t?wl^ . ^- Love's njusio ia never perfect without tho chorda of pain. [rr He koowa no good w ho boa eta ho' does no harrnv > i?% Sow tho sand, nod yon reap only grit io your teeth? How Fast Can an Engine Travel? You watch thc locomotive and its train of cars speed down the valley or go shooting over thc plaiu, and you bay to yourself '. ' That's traveling at the rate of a mile a tuit;ute." in R!I probability it was not geing faster than thirty-five miles an hour, or considerably less than a mile a minute. You look up to the engineer io his cab ?ind you think his life an easy one. Yet one of tho oldest of them gaid to me recently: "Thc engineer who ia not. sober, who does not tell the truth and who doca not make a careful study of his work, oannot last in his work. I am bringing up my boy, who hopes to become an engineer, to be just as steady and reliablo as tho world would ask him to be if ho were try ing to be a merchant or a banker. "Engineers carry too many liveB in their bands to ever bc triflora." I realized this when I sat up in the cab of a great passenger engine haul iug' one of the new eighteen-hour traiub to New York, and saw by toy watoh and the milo posts, that wo wore running eighty miles an hour. Over nearly ninety tons of steel, iron, brass and steam sat the engineer, the mind controlling tho mechanism, j Every sense in him had to be alert, He must not only watoh the engine and its conduct, but every bit of the road ahead of bim, every signal dis played. ? His continuous speed is, of course, not eighty miles an hour; no train it the world bas auch a speed for an] great distance. The running tim? of the average passenger train in th< United States is about thirty fi?? miles an hour, and a few trains forty five mileB an hour, and cf a very fes from fifty-seven to sixty miles ai hour. The fautcat passenger trail time ever run was a single mile on tb? New York Central in a little mon than thirty-one seconds. Tho fast est mail time ever made waa fonrteei mileB in seven minutes, or a mil every thirty seooods. But one is going quito fast at fort; or fifty mileB an hour, even thougl the big ra nob inc may bo able for shoi distances to make as high as nioet, miloB an her. I remember on thi particular trip that I took, how, aftc the night had como on and we sti kept our high speed, suddenly, fe down tho track, a red lantern Sashe out across the track. If the engineer had not beon watol ing and the fireman been doing hi duty, they would not have caught tl norning in lim*v bot they V/Ol *l a~ it, and the whistle soreame? oui m tico io ?he ?sss behind the lastet that the train would stop. Steal was shat off and the air brakes quio) ly applied. From the huge drive: ?parks fljw as the shoes of the Drab look hold. Gradually but withoi jar or jolt the train esme to a stan still, and the engineer learned tb we had come to a bad pieee of tri' that munt b? ruo over very al o wi Then we started np again. Baok the sleeping oars half of the passe gera did not know why we stoppa and tho other half were sound aalee but the engineer was attending to I work. On another occasion, riding in t oab of an express engine and travel! Pt a very high rate of speed, I ea at the same instant the engineer di another engine coming toward us. was too late to stop either, but t engineer I was with put on mc steam and did all he could in. t short time he had to work in to havt tremendous headway when the coll ion should come. ? ; ^ It was ail kinds of a colli sion, ! we knocked the other engine off t track and into the' river, ?nd? wk our own mechanism was badly di aged, it held the rails and was able take ua to the next station? Not person on the train wa? injured. 1 or three days after, the accident 1 engineer waa called before bis dil ion superintendent, who said to hi "Pat, why did you increase >? speed so much and hit No. ?l hard?" V "Well, Mr. Gear, it was liks tl t had to think quick and think rip He was coming ?withOut a train an waa hauling the limited loaded * passengers. I figured if I could him hard enough I could hold rail myself and either atop him send him down the banfe^' "The president of the rOad^ ? thc reply, "thinks you showed..?; dorful good sense. Here's a cheek a hundred dollars from him, and? will get & two*weeks vaoation. K on thinking right and quick.'? So you can Bec that an engineer a great deal more to do in his o?h t appears on tho 6 ur fae c. He do ct much thinking wheo epoading hiB t and he travels fto fast that the bsa his class only work every day in tl ??w. Ev*V?f >u?>?V^i?^a iu ^ the other .two days tba oom pa would not let them? on tt*o g: that a-man doing whet they do t have a .rest, just ?o' often.; T! h i pb; ??r ade engineers ere 'paid thi day wages, but they climb; ; into I cabs only "between ten amt- fif d>ys each moath./.?b^v^bisS many of thom receiviug as rauch as seven to eight dollars a day. It ?8 not enough that ao engineer should know his eogioo and how strong and fast sho Ve. He must know thc road bcd, the raib over which he runs, *he signal towers, every station, the stops and the time table. Ho must understand also how ninny cars his engine can pull. AB an cngiueer said to nie: "1 was two hours and forty minutes late the other morning. Why? They gave mo two more cars to haul than No. 215 can pull and mako her time. After this they are not going io over load her." An engineer must have great faith in himself. When he is in doubt he eannot go baok and consult the con ductor, nor can he get off and look up the managers of the road. He must uso his own judgment and be extreme ly euro that he is right. His life work is apt to put him in the same frame of mind that an engineer friend of mine carries. He had just finished a 101 milo rido in 87 min utes. "Say," ?aid he to roe, looking up to his cab, "when you're in th*rr ranking time you've got to have faith and be lief in Ood, or. you'd never dare to try it." AMBASSADOR TO MEXICO. Dav?? EM Thompson, Recently Fro mot e<? From the Dnulllan Mission. David E. Thompson, who has been promoted from minister to Brasil to ambassador to Mexico, has risen from tho ranks through the agency of energy and uralns. Mr. Thompson Is a native of Hillsdale, Mich., and was born la 1854. When he was seventeen years old he sought employment lu Lincoln, Neb. He was unknown and almost penni less and was glad to get a job ai han dling freight as a truckman In the r.epot of the Burlington and Missouri railroad. He was soon promoted to bo a brakeman and then rose tp be a conductor. Nine years nfter entering tho service of the Burlington road Le was division superintendent of the en tire system. Meantime he had been saving DB much as possible of bis earu '\ JS"; f.- , ? . , , ?.- i&?g? :*!] >' ?_?y ,K -*'.'. ;-V: ...?. ??>'' 'iv' .'.?.?".! ' . .,, '. '' ' : . . - X*AVZZ> EL fnOUHOK, V* tagt and w?ifi~*i small mvestmenta. Everything bs. vfced seemed to yield ' food retaras, jay ?890 his private busi ness was cf ouch magnitude that hs decided to retire from his railroad posi tion and devote bimse If to looking nf ter his Investments. A ?ew year3 mora and he waa oh the list of millionaires. Six years ago the Nebraska legisla ture was. ??s*sed in selectihg a suer; cessor to William V. AUea in the United States senate; 'There was a prolonged cosiest, and Thompson ??as one of the leading candidates, coming} within seven votes of securing the honor. Frealdent Roosevelt appointed him minister to Brazil in 1002 and now advances him In the diplomatic s er vico by tendering him the post resigned by Ambassador .Edwin H. Conger. . Mex ico ls a country in which Mr. Thomp son ie much Interested,, and years , ago he showed this interest by making ex tensive Investments there. -':,/; Mr. Thompson is noted for his geh? eroslty. While tho Omaha exposition was in progress he sent sO the chll- - dren of Lincoln between ..the. ages-- of e?g?i wad. ?xw?szs tu ???> t??j ??K^V3 ^* the, show. Every Christmas he gives away ? "whole carload ot flour. Dt|jr.. lng his connection with the Burlington. road he established a system of ras-: taurants which yielded him a yearly rev?cue of from $IO,OCQ to $15,006. lt was only a ?hort time before be U. so near being chosen senator that there was a bigger rush than usual ia ono of tbes* restaurants one day, ; and* Mrv Thompson; vha thea r gaye them his personal supervision, chanced to bs on hand. Seeing that a group of men wera not securing attention, he step ped xm, took their orders and brought them their. food as if lt wera a mero everyday altair., They - did; not toow un Ul afterward that tfi?y had /;bimj: waited oh by a millionaire. Iy?$$ ' " "'" - . '?>?"' ' :: ; ; Lauded for That. V \. "Do you ^eny thai you ?re a tarh^> boat ?" ihterrnptsd a maa avW^I-i enc?. ?', \y ?jf?.'??oP thundered tho oraW? wW Was making a campaign for re election. **M?Te tt?ao;vb'n^?K;l haye bsejn ;';ooia polled to turo my coat into money to pay a groeery \b?ll, as many a poor but h ones*/man has had to do beroro mol?:'.'^;^^^^^.:IC:'.. ; ? . /The: applause 'teat '(oHo.#84 ?Hmp trem?n^bus,' ; ?nd ? ^?-^o^^mp? a^aa'iha^ had sexed tibi?!, ^uesiio^^tr^?y shoved rudely oat bf th*; h>lK^b^' O??0 Tribuoo. -.'"-J?y-* FOR THE LITTLE ONES. How to Toll Fortunen With Fairy Air* chips of Fate. Girls and boys as well as grown people like to hear what the futuro or the fairies have in store for them. The 'following is a new and easy way of finding what your fortune will bc ia matrimony- < It is a simple panie, using fairy airships made c leathers. Take as many fluffy feath ers as there are girls and boys i" the party and paste on each featl a prophecy written on a bit of p_ per, such as: Yes, no, sometimes, possibly, never, at twenty-five, prob ably, depends upon yourself, if I can, I'll try, when the time comes, of course, three times, before you know it, not if I can help it, cer tainly, doubtful, surely. Put all these fairy airships into a pasteboard box lid which you have previously punched full of holes. Stand on a chair, hold the box lid high and tell your guests that these ships you are about to launch will tell their fortunes-will they mar ry ? At the word "marry" launch the ships of fate by fanning vigor ously under the box lid with a large palm leaf fan. This will send the ships flying in all directions, and the boys and girls must endeavor to catch one before it falls and learn his or her fate therefrom. Fortuno Talling. Dp you like fortune telling? Here is a funny one. Take any pack of carda and say to one of your audi-; ence, "If you will Bit on the floor and place these cards in a circle around you I will tell you your true for tune." When your subject is seated on the floor moke him be very careful to form a complete circle. Thia will take some time: When he has final ly finished you assume a thoughtful attitude and say: "Your past is that you put the cards around you. Your present is that you are sitting in the center of the circle, and your fu ture is to pick up the cards. So get a move on you." Gs mo of Adjeotlves. One player writes a letter which, of course, he does not show, leaving blanks for adjectives. He then asks each player for an adjective, filling up the spaces in order as he receives them. The lpng?r the letter is and the more that play the greater the enjoyment of the gamo. After the letter is completed have him read the letter aloud, and it is likely to cause much merriment. Snowball Afire. Here ?B a pretty trick which ohouid be very eneciive at a winters evening party. The magician pre siding orders a panful of snow to be brought in from outside. When this is done he places the pun before .him on the table lix plain view of the company and rolls up his sleeved to the elbow after the manner - of all magicians. . 'The nmgieian now rolls the vuass into a Bice, big snowball., Then he asks for a taper (your true magician never uses a match) and turns the empty] pan .bottom upward, placing .' ?KB iwowiui.ti ?UBirau./:v.: .' v.. . ; ? the snowball on it: VBe ; standsjj a | .yard.:.- or^io^.?rom '. the pan and, stretching"forth.his arm, applies tho lighted taper to jtf& top of tho snow :bal?v^reere^js flash of fire, whictt becomes a steady. flame, and there is the snowball an*re, much to the mystification of the puzzled onlook 'era. ': ? .', r,1;/!1 " ;-::V; '? TJje, ''-y?i?fe-i?ii.:: 6<;."tlie'''"i?ck; ?.?^' ??^???f ?impi?. Tlie p?rson. who fetches yon the pan pf snow must be a con- ' ?federate,: ; wh^;.;cont?yes.vto ;f4ecoMe4m^ .j&e?rcfrfhr^ lingers 't?:ife? lump of camphor A? yon-^ The cam-; phb;^iM|p#^te, looksy&pm^ ^hei bf anoy>, and the shortest I eye wi not, detect jon as you aub it, into the s^opali.', Ot ahpW 0? about tho si?e and shape ot a chest put ; ancT bepushed" ihtb ]:ty?'i&#&. with the little end np.;^^5^^Mj Snoeae on ?ttend?y; an??so for danger: amSMKj on Tuesday, kiss a stran|t?rig^& ;- S4e*359 on We?njw?ay? get a ??tteri ? . Saoese on Thursday, coin* tiling- better: ; ^?*?ssa Tr^t'^^^.totmi^mi . ? ;'gatur<&yj;:f^:'*^ w. 111$^t^orkwields. :" tbe ?; weapons of 4>?or? r ? wi bs the y t? of aa?ce?s; anel ' wears the or?wh ^?;Iv4dio>y;^^^^^ ? 'jia You Have Always Bought, and which Sias bena ase for over 3? years, bas borne the signature et ?ry? - and bas been made under bis per*, /*>P>i/^4f^^*2^y ?ona* supervision since its infancy* *0t?8f7% /-ct?cSie/vZ Allow nb one to deceiv ? ?ron In tills. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are hut Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children-Experience ' against experiment? What is C?STORS? Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil; Pare goric, Bropy and Soothing Syrups? It is Pleasant* It? contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic* substance. Ita age is its guarantee. It destroys Worm? and allays Feverishness* lt eure s Dlarrhona and Wind. Colic* It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels? giving: healthy and natural sleep* The Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend* GENUINE CASTORIA AfcWAVS Bears the Signature of The Kind You H?ve iii ays Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TM* CC?TAUH COUPANT. TT MURRAY ?TUTST. Mt? TOMI CITY. , FARM LANDS WANTED ! PARTIES having Faims for sale VJ ill find it to their advan tage to list same with rae. Having cor nee ti on with one of the largest Real Estate Broker 'Associations in tho United States, I am . prepared to reach prospective purchasers throughout tho entire conn- . try; thereby insuring better prices and quicker sales than when en tirely dependent upon local purchasers for. a market. My bo 4oe83 is conducted strictly on a commission basis-co G als, no charge for services, Oones^ondeacs solicited ; and when in the city, come to see me and let's talk the matter over, no matter whether you want to sell J now or at some luture time. JOHN FBANK, Beal Estate Broker* Phone 246. Watson-Yandiver Building, ?ndersbn/S. Ot I' To afford von an onnoxtunity to bayo-^ DELIGHTFUL CHE?STM?B; MTJS?G And pleasure for tho rest of tho year w haye snade 8M0lM? Qood until How Yeart pay, eaMwf? Mantorne cases, beat quality toae and material, faHy war? ranted.. . . 7>; 7 7 77 Two Car Loads CBG?NS of our standard lines, may h& yours on easy terms at lowest possible prices. f?sapbaphones9'?ioIias9 Guitars, Banjos, Bte, , ?oaie ? see er^mlte us fer these' special prices, y TH? G ^ LOOK OVER THIS 8-IST,^^^^g SELECT Y??R H^iVlEi AND SE# ME! OITY pp ANDERSON. ' =8 Vacant Lota on Greanvllle 'atreat.. 1 Houes end Lot ou North Fantet. . v 1 House'and X*>1 '??;f5rasikUn*at4-'?^-4 1 vacant Iiot>fain at. ? Other Lota m various localities. ROCK MILLS TOWNSHIP /r ; l.'i?s.'.^^^'impro^?fl.. ?l-^lW^^^?-'^ 150 ??rm?, Improved. . '. ': ?':VI#:y . p tc N D LK r?N .T0^y?K$HI?,.. 8S acres, with ? room dwelling and out hoM***.'-'' '??'.T r.... ; i 1W) ?'KW, partly it? cultivation. 1?0 arree, two-story dwelling, barns and nciweary outbuildings. ''B?B?ft ;'; -.,; CENTREVILLE ttOWNSRlK ':H>. 'Vif.iil aerea, li?sproved^:##m^^^^S@ J 04 abres. Improved. issa^r^iinpirjnM SOOftoro?, ?ne lands, well ioop-oved w?* ba ?old to nott pcrohaaars, , v ?r ? 97 acres, im pro ved, good ? ta io ci cn lti ?'Smo^.yjff'iy:: ; 268 acree, well improved, good iwate*, goad dwelling and tenant houses. \%HSfl G room dwelling, barb, ?&o. '?^fitti TOWNSHIP, improved, .eeo acrc^ Improved. m aoraa, improved. BR O A D W AT TO ? 51 aerea,'In cultivation. SSaecroa. pood dw?llinga, barn. Wei) improved, in fina atete of cultivation-o good bargain. ' : SSd sortit in^Atl^t^on 7?A?^^ 108 aorea, tmn^vcoVV feill? '.' v 174 aerea, Impioved. : , vl*^^??:'.> ' F?&RL TOWNSHIP, v/.'*. r !2SB s?r^, Arborn - dwelling, 5 tenant hon??, bare?, &Ov~well Improved, good? %waw;>?^.laada>*rbt? &araala^~ :?iso aorta, u^?i^oaV. aore?, in good ?tate cultivation, .7?0t acre?, wal V improved. *\ 100 aotse, well improve. -.::-'. SGOaewa, 4 tenant dvt?lUngp. 138 acres. - V>3aHMaw?7 - ? V :\3ftcs?&noV^ If you want to buy or as?l come to gee me. li am in the Kcal Estate hu&?Re$s iTor^ihe ^ for thePeople,Ho encour^^ &~ ?ure hemes in the best opu^y ou <%rib. /> > fv