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' r ! IWoman's Page If Perfect Cleanliness First Essential to Healthy Condition of Scalp and Hair Certain Circumstances Require Sham 1 poo More OftenIndian Meal Very Cleansing for Dry Shampoo Persian Garden Stockings With ; Minaret Gowns Hat Serves Double Purpose . K as Work Basket. 1 ); CARE OF THE SCALP AND HAIR. " In order to keep your Bcalp in hcal- I thy condition and your hair vigorous, I perfect cleanliness is the first essen- t tlal. , $ It stands to reason that if your face . , must be washed frequently to keep It 5-' clean, so must your scalp. Your scalp does not differ essentially from the i skin of other parts of the body. It ! needs intelligent troatment, that Is all. Much of the harm that Is attribut- & ed to the shampoo depends not so jtfft. much upon the frequency as the meth- J1 od. The girl who lives in a busv city fit m "ncre B0it coal soots float about will V IIP' need to wash her hair more often than th girl who stays at home In a coun- J J. try where hard coal or wood Is burn- ; I ed. And the girl whose scalp Is oily I will have to shampoo her hair more -often than the girl with dry hair. j j' You can see. then, that the hair j $ might bo washed under certain cir- j I cumstances once or twice a week, or ' you might be able to keep it fresh and :; j sweet oy means ot oruBnmg, dry snam rl l4 pooing, and sun and air baths for a I Z month without a regular shampoo. ' i But, as a rule, I think that once in ( two weeks is not. too often, j 7. The best effects of a shampoo can ' i ! j never be gained on cloudy, damp, or : , rainy days. The sun has a good deal ' j to do with the condition of the hair, . 'i and that is one reason why the hair ' , ) should never be washed at. night. Sometimes hearing is permanently af "5 1 fected by carelessness in this regard. Hair must never be done up until ,It : is perfectly dry. ". Should the ordinary shampoo not " be convenient some time when you ,.f1 are traveling or when the weather Is . '' i persistenly gloomy, freshen up the $ hair 'by taking a dry shampoo. There : 1 if is nothing better for this purpose than liw pulverized orris root. Part the hair 4J at half inch spaces and sprinkle the jt'lty powder generously on the scalp and 11 '4 $ through the hair," letting it stay for 3 :m half an hour. Then -brush out. Indi- j J an meal will bo just as cleansing, but I its odor is not so attractive. If you go to a professional sham I .pooer always use your own brush and comb, which you will, of course, keep clean and sweet. Many scalp and hair f" evils follow careless habits so com- mon in this regard. PERSIAN GARDEN STOCKINGS WITH MINARET GOWNS. The very latest stocking is a gay ' affair of finest thread silk printed from knee to toe in a Persian pattern 1 of interlaced flowers and leaves which 1 looks something like a richly colored Persian rug. These now stockings are exactly the thing to wear with minaret gowns and they are particu larly effective when worn with the new laced buckskin slippers whosc: black robbons cross the gay Persian' pattern. With the "buttoned street boot equally striking stockings are affected by young women who go in for sensationalism in . dress. These f stockings are In two colors, the upper ri part flesh colored and the Jower part 1 dark gray, black or somojother somber Hue. The dark"-part' of', the stocking i reaches-just abqvethe top of the but toned hoot and giyes the effect of a short sock showing above the boot ; fop- . HAT A WORK BASKET. ! ' Nearly everything In the world can be made to serve a double purpose if one only has a little ingenuity. Take, for Instance, the summer hat, the soft, floppy straw hat in vosue this year. This hat can be made into a work basket. 1 First rip off i all the trimming, then turn the hat upside down. Take some silk or cretonne to harmonize with l the straw and line the inside of the rk crown, making a tiny frill all around the edge. Put bias pieces of the ma t . terial here and there along tho sides -V of tho basket in which to insert, pa i pers of needles and spools of thread, , Make also a thimble case, which you i sew securely to the frilled edge. I a Rip off a section of straw -from the J brim of the hat and with this make 'i : a handle, or If the brim Is not wide enough use ribbon, with a bow at the top. The summer hat has become a useful article. uu EXCOMMUNICATED FROM THE CHURCH In its ls9ue of last night the Des eret News printed, on the first page, the following official notice: Excommunication. Today by unanimous vote of the council of the twelve apostles, Reu ben G. Miller was excommunicated from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for insubordina I tion to the discipline and government of the church. Salt Lake City, Utah, Jan. 29, 1914. FRANCIS M. LYMAN, In behalf of the council. Other than the general cause stated In the official notice, no information is at hand relative to the particular offense chnrged against Mr. Miller. The subject of the action described has been for many years prominent in the tterrltory and state of Utah. He has held high. church office and has been active in public affairs. nn FGLDEBGL OF 1F DAY PROPOSED BY SUPT. MILLS Editor Standard: In reading tho many articles published in the Stand ard, it causes a person to think and to wonder what will be the outcome of this half-day school subject. While we are about it, why not give the stu dents the other half day, and make their lives one great round of pleas ure, in not only furnishing them with shooting galleries! bowling alleys, pool rooms and picture shows, but furnish a complete outfit of sports, such as roulette tables, poker, high five, and other card games, with suf I ficient money to make it interesting, not forgetting the gun with which ev ery one of that class has-to enforce fair play. Be sports and have done with it! : - N6V; -laying- all jokes" 'aside, ! be lieve the American boys of today are not far different from what they were when I was a boy, and I can assure you that, if we could have had a half-day off, there would not have been much good learned the other half, for during the half school 'day we would be figuring on how best we could enjoy the other half. A great many young people do not realize the value of an education until it is too late, and unless there is something to Induce them to work for a higher and greater object, they will most as suredly lag In their studies. In my school days, we had six hours In the school room with the exception of 15 minutes recess twice a day, when we had all the exercise needed. Again, if one is fitting himself Tor a position in the commercial world, he should be eager to qualify nB soon as possible, but under the present sys tem he is 18 or 20 at graduation. If I change this to only half the time in study, how old will the boy be when prepared to assume a respon sible position in business? I say, have tho child attend school and cut out all of this folderol. (Signed) ENOCH PARR. 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T . 1 n NEIGHBORS AIE PRAISED BY OH. JIES-FIEK Excelsior Camp No. 3240, Royal NeigHbors of America, met on Janu ary 26th, 1014, In their hall in Ogden. The meeting was called for th after noon for the purpose of organizing- a school of instructions for all tho R. N. A. camps of the northern part of Utah. Miss Burkilla Pierce, State Supervising Deputy, was present for the purpose of .perfecting this organ ization. All tho camps of the northern part of the State were invited by the Ogden R. N. A. and a hearty response was obtained, there beins seven camps represented. Salt Lake Valley Camp was present in full force, to gether with Auxiliary Camp of Salt Lake. Quite a number of visiting members were- present from Idaho, Kansas, Nebraska, and Illinois. Su preme Physician, Dr. Anna- Ries-Fin-Icy, was present and gave an Interest ing talk in "What Fraternity Means." Miss Burkilla Pierce, of Boulder, Colorado, gave excellent instructions in the work to be done by tho various sohools of instructions which she la organizing; showed why these schools were necessary and how It increased Interest and working capacity of an order to understand perfectly the work of the order. A question box was also in order and much good came from Neighbor Pierce's answers to these questions. In the evening, installation of offi cers was conducted by Dr. Anna Rles western States, which was very pleas ing, and the drills under Neighbor Turner were put on perfectly and proved pretty and instructive. Neigh bor Sawyer, having been Oracle for four years, took her place as Past Oracle and was presented with a beautiful R. N. A. rug, by the mem bers of the camp, In appreciation of the great amount of work she has done. The officers for the coming year, are as follows: Oracle, Etta Ingebretsen. Vice-Oracle, Mae Felitz. Past-Oracle. India Sawyer. Chancellor," Esther Randall. Recorder, Lillian Newton. Receiver, Emma Shaunecy. Marshall, Ella Mitchell. Asst. Marshall, Nellie Shafer. Inner Sentinel Rose Day. Outer Sentinel, May Taylor.' t Musician, Leota Ingebretsen. After the meeting of the evening, a banquet to over one hundred was giv en, and the Salt Lake delegations left for home. ' The District School of Instructions was thoroughly organized by Neighbor Burkilla Pierce, and the first regular or annual meeting will be held at Salt Lake City, in June of this year. The Meaning of Fraternity. Dr Rles-Flnley spoke in part as follows: "Fraternity is a good word: It needs no explanation. It is an or ganization founded upon brotherly love. The very atmosphere breathes out charity to all associated therein"; not only charity in a material way, but charity of speech and charity of action. "Charity of speech is as devine a thing as charity of action. To judge no one harshly, to believe things are put as they seem to be, until they are proved otherwise; surely, this is quite as good as to build up churches, establish asylums and found colleges. "Unkind words do as much harm as unkind deeds. Many a heart has been stabbed to death by a few lit tle words. "There is a charity which consists in withholding judgment, saying noth ing, if to speak is to condemn. This charity hears the tales of slander and does not repent, then locks the un pleasant secret up In the very depths of the heart. Silence can curb or crush rumor. Then we have charity of action, which is the foundation on which we build. "We watch by the sick whenever and wherever we find them, whether of us or no; we bury the dead as tenderly as a brother, and wo com fort 1 the afflicted in their hour of trials, which must come sooner or later. "Fraternity suggests a community of interest where the welfare of each is the obligation of all. "Not for pleasure merely or for the sake of a common social endeavor but in the interest of business and trade, and of financial strength, tho idea of brotherhood is working Its way Into the world of men and wom en. People every where are realizing that no man lives to himself and that no man dies to himself. No industry, no house of business, no financial corporation stands by itself alone and apart. The person who sins against the business of fraternity, sins against his own soul, and he and his shall reap as they have sown. No city or state can live and prosper out of friendly relation with othor cities and states. How much lesH can fra ternity prosper when out of harmony with itself and fellow man. Tho lav ot evolution which brought organized society by progressive stages from the individual and family up to the tribe and the clan and on to tho state, tho republic and empire could not stop there, the nations themselves must join as one community and have "World's Peace," over which Carnegie has spent vast sums. They cannot any more live and prosper out of relation and harmony with one another than a. family can live and prosper out of harmon3r. "The processes of evolution can not be arrested. Tho law which to day brands as 'an enomy to society tho man who carries a dirk in his book to avenge his private wrongs, also holds as nations, "The law of honor is one law, the same for the individual, for tho na tion and for the world. Peace means prosperity and wo aro all deeply in terested in the physical and moral improvement of all the people. "The spread of disease, the' multi plication of the unfit, and whatsoever lowers the vitality or tends i to phys ical and moral degeneration are forces working against the very in terest whioh we aro branded to gether to conserve and promote. If like begets like, and blood tells, will wo gather physical vigor out 'of a generation bred from deplotod vital ity and diseased blood. la it any wonder that so many places of trust aro vacant or badly filled places iu business,. In finance, In .education, in the church, and in the Estate, where none but men and women of integ rity and power should stand? "Philanthropy has done much to remedy the evil, but remedy isrnot .prevention. Waiting fnn disease to arise and then attacking it is a great waste ot time, money and use less sorrow and suffering. "Modern science and medicine have come to the conclusion, after thorough research, that disease is the cause, direct or indirect, of vice, crime, insanity, pauperism, and .de fective mlnd6. The worst kind of our present day civilization. Ignor ance, dirt and disease go hand in hand. Intelligence, cleanliness and health form equally a logical se quence. The hygiene of schools and homes are tho vital requirements for a stronger generation; as, one man has said, educate, educate and again educate along these lines. "There is no substitute for the Royal Neighbors; there is no other as good. A protection for all mem bers of the family and a social club or place of amusement; a society that makes good all promises, a friend in time of need, faithful, steadfast and true, "For over eighteen years the R. N. A. havo been selling life insurance of such stability and. quality, and it has now grown to be the most popu lar as well as the largest of its kind, with a membership of over 310,000. "A. word to the wise is sufficient, and if you have friends that are about to take out life insurance, you know they owe it to themselves and their children to make a careful in vestigation and choose the best so ciety or company. This gives you the advantage to impress upon them the advantages to be derived from membership In the R. N. A, and have the satisfaction of helping both your friends and your camp. "There is a story told about a fel low that wouldn't join the church unless the minister would guarantee him a reserved seat in Heaven; and that reminds me of the man In Kan sas, who would not join a fraternal order camp, unless he was given a written contract not to increase the camp dues not oven to relieve the distressed members of his starving family. He was advised to insure in an old line company, for nobody ever knew an old line company to dispense charity to relieve distress or bury the dead. "No matter how good your health, how happy your life, and bright your prospects, there is one destiny for us all. " 'I shall pass through this world but once. Any good, therefore, that I can do or any kindness that I can show, let mo not neglect or defer it, for I shall not pass this way again."' oo QUIT 1ST 1E1 KIDNEYS BOTHER, Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder troubles you. No man or, wonfa'n-who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites tho kid neys, they become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness nnd urinnrv disorders nmriA frnm shif. glsh kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidney or your back hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharma cy; take a teaspoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acids of grapes and lemon juice, combined with llthia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus onding bladder weak ness. v 'Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful efferves cent llthia-water drink which anyone should take now and- then to keep tho kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, therebj' avoiding Borlous kidney complications. A. R. Mcln tyre. Advertisement, GRANTSVILLE LOSES TO SALT LAKE HIGH. Salt Lake, Jan. 31. The Salt Lake high school basketball quintette won from Coach Parker Pratt's Grantsville high school five yesterday afternoon by the score of Go to 13. The game was played in the high school gym nasium. About 100 students were present, mostly boys. It has been planned' to hold an assembly of the girls to arouse enthusiasm for the coming games with the Ogden high school and the L. D. S. The Ogden high school will play in the local high school gymnasium Tuesday afternoon, and Manager Harry Kilpatrick is try ing to arrango a return game at Og den. The game with the L. D. S. will bo played February 6 in the Descret gymnasium. The high school season tickets will not be good for the first game with the L. D. S., but the stud ents may use them at the second game, which will bo played February 19 in the west Bide gymnasium. Tho Salt Lake hoys had things much their own way in yesterday's game and made baskets at will, in the game at Grantsville January 9, the Salt Lako boys made a score of 53 to Grantsville's 13 points. The Grants ville boys wore not accustomed to the Salt Lako gymnasium and yesterday did not play the game they are cap able of putting up. uu JAMES JOHNSTON A CUB Chicago, Jan. 30. James Johnston, of the San Francisco team of the Pa cific Coast league, drafted by tho tract to be a Cub today. Johnston was sought by the Federals. He led the Pacific Coast league in stolen bases last year. Dumore Vacuum Cleaners We Rent them as well as sell them OGDEN ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. 2448 Washington Avenue Phone 693 I BE AMONG THE THRIFTY I walk right In and becomo personally familiar with the business 1 methods of Our Institution: Our money saving plan, and how 1 easy it is to start. The sum of One Dollar will do 1L Isn't that casy I Tou will be surprised how quickly this small Initial Investment will 1 grow, by your adding to It weekly. And we add 4 per cent Interest, 1 compounded quarterly. This is a great help to its growth. 1 D cqen Savin G5 Bank! Capital's Surplus $loo,ooo 1 M.S.Browninp Joint Watson L.R.EccIcs Clias. H.Bar ton I WILL THE PROGRESSIVE PARTY SURVIVE? i (Continued From Page 9.) velt was president were the most prosperous years the country has ever known, and part is due to the fact that, as between the growing abso lutism of Woodrow Wilson in the White House and the big-stick meth ods of Roosevelt, they prefer the latter rather because they think they know his worst, while they have by no means made up their minds what this cool person at present sitting on the throne of power might not do if he only get a conscience upon the subject. I do not know that this disposition is complimentary to the Colonel, and I do not know that it is uncompli mentary to the President, but I do know it is a fact. Behind the Curtain of 1916. But while there Is talk that the Re publican party will nominate Roose velt In 191G, it may be taken for granted that the present party man agers will not sponsor such a thing if they can possibly help themselves, and to guard against having such a contingency forced upon them from below may be one reason for the an nounced decision to limit the nomina tion by primary to those states in which it is prescribed by law. Yet even supposing that in order to save face and secure a hanglng-on place in the government for the next few years they were willing to swal low this bitter pill, they might about as well join the Progressives and be done with it, aside from the possible preservation of the party name, for it must bo remembered that the Pro gressive platform of 1912 was almost the personal platform of Theodore Roosevelt. As he made it emphat ically clear that he would not accept a nomination from tho Progressive party if it did not indorse his personal platform, it must be clear that he could not do otherwise than demand the same platform from the Republi can party. Query then, if the Re publican party accepted the Progres sive platform entire, would not so much of its Tory blood refuse to in dorse it that Progressives and Repub licans combined would be too few to carry an election; and since the sole object of the Republicans is to win the election, if they cannot win by taking Roosevelt and his platform, why take Roosevelt at all? "What I seem to Bee an excellent chanco of, at this distance from 1916, Is the Republican leadership blind, timid, self-deceived, with a patched up platform and a patched-up candi dateparading once more before the American people, flaunting issues that once had life but now have none, go ing through the forms of a campaign shouting the old shibboleths, parading the old ghosts, giving a final and con vincing demonstration that this great history maker is itself no more proof against corroding time th'an other parties have been. Its voto will be smaller than in 1912, but, nevertheless considerable.' the final, tribute which old men pay to a relic, as to tho sword they have carried or the uniform they have worn. But "the Republican party as a party will face the hour of its final dissolution. It has had great issues and they were the very greatest! It solved them with high courage, with patriotism, with statesmanship, with honor to the nation and blessing to mankind. But because It has done the old job It cannot do the new. This is in the very philosophy of life. Its organi gation crystallized round the deeds of its daj-. That day andi its deeds arc both gone. New issues have arisen, and the party has no new solutions. It does not even know that they are new Issues. It cannot pull the load. It Is a hunter that has refused the leap. It is an instrument which no longer lends itself to use. It goes the way of all flesh and of all par ties. Honor to its glorious past. Honor to Its brilliant names. Reverence for Its mighty martyrs! of whom almost there had been another. Respect for its local adherents where they are men whom we can respect but for its remains, a wreath and a mausoleum! Its blades are battered; its arteries hardened! its blood is water. Its day is done. As to the Progressive organization, if its present attitude toward the man continues, there is no power but Roosevelt himself, which can prevent him from being the Presidential nomi nee of that party. Whether a vic tory for the Progressives is possible in 1916 must depend upon how large a following marches with the funeral cortege, and upon the success before the people of the administration of Woodrow Wilson, concerning which it is entirely too early to predict, since there are yet more than three years of Democratic waters to bab ble under the bridge. TRI-STATE CONVENTION. Provo, Utah, Jan. 30. The Sunday school convention of the Alpine, Nebo and Utah stakes will be held here Sunday, February 8. The open ing session, from 9 to 10:20 in the morning, will be held In the college hall of Brigham Young university, and the remainder of the convention in the stake tabernacle. Luncheon will be served to all visitors in the B. Y. U. library at 12:30 in the afternoon. 1 TRE.E .TREjB 1 L$DEMARK v TREE 1 I TREE X REE 1 I RED DEVIL COAL I STANDS THE TEST I HOTTEST, CLEANEST and BEST COAL I THAT COMES TO OGDEN I WE ALSO CARRY THE GUM QUALEY ROCK 1 SPRINGS COAL. I FRANK MOORE COAL COMPANY j I West Side Wall Avenue Between 22nd and 23rd Sts. I I Phone 345 I "BEHOLD, I MAKE T H ALL THINGS NEW" H Fallen Race of Adam to Bi H Made New by Christ. H Man's Original Perfection T.he Reign of Sin and Death A Sad Spaotacl. Thousands of Millions Dead Hun drods of Million! Dying Weak In Body, Weak Mentally, Morally, Phys- ically Human Power Has Failed t Arrest the Malady Man's Only Hops Is In God Messiah God's Appointed IH Agent To Redeem, to Regenerate, t Make New Soon He Will Deliver the Whole Creation Nothing 8hall Hinder Blessings Will Be Outpoured. Il B Washington, D. C, Pastor Russell preached today in the Tom pie. His text was, "Behold, I mak& are typical of ser en great Days, each a thousand years long. At the beginning of man's Week he was per feet, as represented In Adam; ut dis- fl obedience to his Creator brought upon him the curse, "Dying, thou shalt die." IH Under that curse our race has gono -down steadily to the tomb the Bible Hell-Sheol. Hades. N'ext tlie Pastor showed how ineCfec tually man bag struggled against this curse of death. Today, he said, our race is assailed by more allments( men tal, moral and physical, than ever be fore known. Our jails, penitentiaries, asylums, hospitals, all bear testimony to this fact, he claimed. ETen the morals of the world he believes to be apparently at as low a state as could well be imagined, after all our preach- lng. and manufacture of hobgoblins, devils and hells to frighten humanity into church, religion and morality. JA Then the Pastor asked whether it is not time to acknowledge our failure and to cry to God for help ere we per- lsh as a race. Not only have we not converted the heathen world, but we rind the civilized world retrograding. Statistics show that crimes Increase IH amongst the heathen despite the preaching of eternal torture. Man's Extremity Is God's Opportunity. vM The Pastor next outlined God's great Plan of Salvation through the Redeem er. who died, "the Just for the un just," to open the way for man's re turn to God's favor. During the Gos pel Age the Savior has been gathering jH out an elect Ohurch to be His asso elates iu a coming Kingdom, In which IH He with His Church will reign for a IH thousand years. During that period IH Satan will be bound, to deceive the IH people no more; and the Redeemer will put down sin in its every form. The Savior's work at the First Ad' vent healing the sick and the blind. casting out demons and awakening the sleeping dead the Pastor showed was a foreshadow merely of the greater work which Jesus and His glorified Church will accomplish during the great autitypical Sabbath. These, as the antitypical Seed of Abraham, will fulfil God's Promise to Abraham. Christendom's Great Mistake. J The Pastor believes that the creeds of the Dark Ago3 are gross misrepre eentatlons of God's character. Many have taken these misrepresentations too literally. As a result, some have gone to Insane asylums; others have turned to pleasure and sin in their en deavor to forget God; and still others have been made unhappy as they thought of kind, good neighbors and jH friends who made no profession of Christianity. IH The speaker then sbowed that Chris- IH tendom's great mistake was that of 'M disregarding God's Word and believ- IH lng Satan's He. as the heathen do. God IH declared that the wages of sin would bo death absence of life. Satan con- IH tr a dieted this and falsified to Mother Eve, assuring her that there would be no death penalty. When death came, Satan and bis fallen angels perpetuat ed the lie by telling us that when our friends appear to die they really do come more alive than ever. In accept lng their testimony we have done what St Paul cautioned against. Evil spirits, he claimed, have seduced Christendom by giving feigned com mnnicatlons between the dead and the living. As Satan and his demon host havo full knowledge of human affairs, they can easily personate the dead. and through mediums, witches, plan chettes, visions and dreams, represent the dead as still alive. "The Pastor then drew a picture of the coming Messianic Kingdom. He declared that as the gross darkness llees before the dawning light of the New Dispensation we see more clearly jl where our mistake was. BIblo stu- jH dents the world over are studying afresh the Word of God in Its own light. Now they perceive that the jH resurrection hope is based upon the f&ct that Christ died for all. Bible students now see that the world's blessing will be a resurrection to human perfection a lifting up, not only from the sleep of the tomb, but also from all the weaknesses and im perfections of the flesh, back to the full image oT perfection lost In Eden. redeemed at Calvary, Thus our great JM Redeemer will make all t hi pes new. CHICHESTER S PILLS H Till: DIAMOND BRAND. JC UlESsS Ohl.cbos-Ure DlAmood Bmaafy H I'lIU In lied K)d Hold ractIUc IH 6fTC&fg hoiei, eeiled TntJj Ulua Rltboo. X jm H - UrntBUt. AiicfjiOiri.Ortk8.TEK F SOW BV MHfifilSTS EVERYWHERE Read the Classified Ad.