HARBOR OF REST.
It was noon of a mi&uinmer day;
The air was like gold in the high-vaulted
skies
As I rode through the sea-port town,
Sniffing the cart-loads of sea-weed that
crawled up the street,
Driven by sea-lads lusty and brown
The cart-loads of sea-weed wholesome and
sweet,
And the wagons of salt-marsh hay.
Blue as the arch overhead
Blue, blue were the inlets that tempted my
eyes
Over ridges of marl and loam,
Till I caught the lisp of the tide as it broke
on the beach,
Lapping the pebbles spotted with foam.
Whose millions of sea-shells crumble and
bleach,
And the waste of the sea is spread.
Motionless glistened the bay
Motionless, too, lay the sunny white sand;
Not a trace of sorrow was there,
Ifo wreck to sink in those sparkling treacher
ous seas,
Or cloud that burst on the hot blue air,
But fishers hanging their nets to the breeze,
And the children ruddy with play.
Tho wind blew warm in the west,
And far from their green stable birthplace,
the land,
Asleep on the tide lay the ships;
Far in the offing they lay with their indolent
sails,
And the kiss of the brine at their lips,
Like souls of the weary snatched from the
gales
To a purple harbor of rest.
Hark ! 'tis a voice like a flute
A voice like a flute in the morning of time
From the cliff where the sea-weed lies:
Hark 'tis the sailor's lass, with her young
brown breast half bare,
And tho lids dropping over her eyes
While the wild fowl stoop to listen and stare,
And the lizard creeps to her foot.
O seafarer tost by the seas,
Your bed has been laid amid coral and slime
On the awfnl floor of the main,
And your sweetheart loiters and laughs in
laughing air
As she waits for her coming in vain;
For her are the waters of trouble and care,
But yours is the haven of Peace.
-Dora Head Goodale, in Harper's Weekly.
A KING'S PETS
BY DAVID KER.
"People come out here and fire at a
crocodile and miss it, and then go home
and say it's bullet-proof," said my cou:
in
Koualeyn Gordon Cummlner. the fa-
mous "lion -killer" of South Africa. The
""bullet-proof" theory, at which the great
hunter laughed, would have little chauce
against the lire-arms of the present day;
but no one can pity the "Timsach" (as
the Arabs call this river-pirate), for a
more hideous combination of cowardice
-and ferocity, vast destructive power and
revolting physical ugliness, does not
exist on the face of the earth.
Moreover, the crocodile is so skilled at
"playing "possum" that, like his terrible
cousin, the ground-shark of the Ilea Sea,
he is often felt before he is seen. In the
Nile or the Ganges (as I can testify from
personal experience) you may at any mo
ment see a floating log as you think
drifting slowly toward you with the cur
rent ; and you will probably pay no par
ticular attention to it until it comes
within twenty feet or so, when it whirls
round suddenly and darts straight at you j
with a rush that lashes the muddy water
into yellow foam, revealing all in one
moment the scaly, mud-plastered body,
huge notched tail, horny snout, and
small, cunning, cruel eve of the croco
dile! But of all the "crocodile experiences"
which have fallen to the lot of Mrs. Kcr
and myself, the most memorable was
certainly that which befell us in the
Hindoo city of Jeypoor, or Jypoor, on
our way along the ede of the great
northwestern desert of India.
"Xovv I think of it," said Mrs. Ker.
as we sat at breakfast in the veranda of
the snug little "Kaiser-i-Hind (Empress
of India) Hotel," upon the steps and
balustrades of which the drifting sand of
the desert had crusted itself like brown
sugar, "this is the place where the reigning
Maharajah is said to keep a tank full of
pet crocodiles in his palace, just as an
Englishman might keep a basin of gold
fish."
"I wonder if he throws them a man
every now and then, to keep them in
condition ." suggested I. "If so, I hope
they make an exception in favor of news
paper correspondents and reviewers, as
being in the chawing-up' line like them-
selves; out as a Kind critic was gracious
ly pleased,to observe that no man alive
could swallow my stories, perhaps a croco
dile may not be able to swallow them
either. Anyhow, we must go and see."
We did so, and saw, during our in
spection of the town and palace, quite
enough to have satisfied us, even if we
had not seen the Maharajah's charming
pets at all. The whole city looked just
like a nuge piece oi comectionery, tne
houses being all bright pink, with snow
white cornices, so as to give the exact ef
fect of an endless perspective of mon
strous wedding cakes, recalling so for
cibly the German legend of the bread-and-butter
house, with its cake roof and
sugar windows, that I felt half inclined
to break off a piece of the nearest build
ing and bein to eat.
In front of the splendid hospital built
b? the Maharaiah in honor of his friend,
Lord Mayo (murdered by a Moslem fan
atic in 1874, while Viceroy of India), ex
tended a spacious and well-kept garden,
on a broad patch of smooth, green turf,
in the centre of which two native
' 'elevens" arere playing a Hindoo cricket
match. The extraordinary antics of the
players who had evidently just begun to
learn the game and trie wondering
comments of the puzzled spectators ('who
were divided in opinion between suppos
ing all the performers to l)e stark mad
and regarding the whole affair as some
peculiar religious ceremony) set us both
laughing till we could hardly stand ; but
just then there came an interruption
which made us grave enough.
A thin, care-worn man. in the dress of
an ordinary Hindoo peasant, followed by
five or six others who seemed to be his
friends, approached us with a low
salaam, and holding up the wasted, sick-
; ly-looking child that he carried in his
arms, entreated me to heal it with a
touch a feat which he evidently
thought quite within the power of one of
the wonder-working '-Inggrez Sahib-log''
(English masters).
The poor fellow's imploring look, and
the silent, wistful appeal in the hollow
eyes of the poor little sufferer itself, made
me long for the power of working mira
cles as I had never longed for in my
childish reading of the healing exploits
of mediaevel saints or magicians. With
some difficulty I contrived to explain to
the afflicted father that I was no "Hakim''
(doctor), and advised him to carry his
sick child into the hospital, in front of
which we were standing, giving him at
the same time a silver rupee (fifty cents).
Th Hindoo acknowledged my present
with another profound salaam as he
turned away; but I could see that his dis
appointment at my refusal more than bal
anced his pleasure in my gift.
A few minutes later we came up to the
main entrance of the palace itself one of
the architectural wonders of Rajpootana.
Nor was the famous building unworthy
of its renown, although here, not less
than in the city below, the pink battle
ments, white cornices, and fantastically
carved turrets disturbed us with a haunt
ing vision of French candies. Even with
out its wonderful accumulation of striking
details, the mere height and size of the
great structure would have sufficed to
make it remarkable. Beneath the colder
skies of Europe this truly Eastern lavish-
ness of barb iric decoration would seem
extravagant and absurd; but when seen
uuuu tins lui imiii tropical miumiuic unu.
this riotous luxuriance of tropical vegeta
tion it was emphatically k 'the right thing
in the right place."
Even here, however, the sturdy spirit
of Western civilization had forced its
way, and the matter-of-fact traces of it
which cropped up here and there amid
all tins romantic splendor nan. a very
grotesque effect. Through a deep,
shadowy, fretted archway, worthy of the
Alhambra in the days of its pride, we
caught sight of a printing-press worked
by Hindoo printers, running off sheet
after sheet of primers and books of refer
ence .or the native college and school of
art established in the city by the Mahara
jah himself. The vast, many-pillared
"Durbar" (audience hall) had as its centre
piece, a huge, clumsy wooden packing
case marked with the label of a well
known Anglo-Indian railway company.
Above the door of a bed-chamber that
seemed to have come bodily out of the
"Arabian Nights" figured a lithograph
portrait of the Empress of Austria! An
English billiard-table stood conspicuous
in the midst
flashed back
of a curtained hall that
the sunlight from walls
wholly formed of tiny countless miiTors;
and from the centre of a paved court,
j with carved Eastern gateways and walls
frescoed with green peacocks (the Ma-
j harajah's family crest), rose a monster
gas-lamp, which our Hindoo guide
pointed out to as proudly as if gas had
just been invented and he himself was
: the inventor.
But as we went deeper and deeper into
this wonderful place, all these modern in
j congruities melted away, and the whole
j scene became thoroughly Oriental once
1 more. The panorama of Che palace
garden itself, with its shady walks em
i bowered in rich tropical foilage, its mar
ble fountains glistening in the sun, its
dainty little pavilions, and its gorgeous
i flowers drooping languidly on the warm,
i dreamy air all framed in the bold, rocky
! outline of the distant Aravulli Hills,
, which shut in the charming little Jev
I poor Valley carried us back at once to
I the far-off days of Haroun Al-Raschid
! and Mahruoud of Ghazni. And when we
! stood in the. middle if the inner court
yard and looked upward, we saw above
us a seemingly endless mass of carved bat
tlcments, marble columns, clustering tur
rets, curtained balconies, flower-crowned
terraces, sculptured cornices, and bright-
ly painted walls, piled up against the clear
blue skv like the ridges of some mightv
mountain, while high over
all this blaze
of many-colored glory floated from the
topmost pinnacle the golden standard of
Jeypoor.
But all this time there was no sign of
the famous "pet crocodiles" of which we
had heard so much, and we were just be
ginning to wonder whether they might j
not be, after all. a mere traveler s tale,
when our Hindoo guide suddenly hurried
us with marked alacrity up a broad mar
ble stair, on to a raised terrace nearly
midway along the garden-face of the
palace, and then, leading us forward to a
low white parapet that ran along the fur
ther side of the terrace itself, pointed
over it and bade us look down.
At sight of the horrible pit below, we
j both drew back with an irrepressible j
1 start and shiver of disjrust. What we i
beheld was just What we had expected
and had come purposely to see; but s
frightful was the sudden revelation of thii
foul, slimy pool, crawling with monstroui
and hideous reptiles, in tne very midst ol
this splendid palace, with all its graceful
architecture, and beautiful ornamentation,
and glittering pomp of Eastern luxury,
that had we seen a herd of swine rioting
in a fashionable drawing-room, or an
African gorilla sitting in all his squalid
ugliness at a Ministerial dinner-table, we
could hardly have been more utterlv
startled and shocked.
The beautiful white walls over which
we were leaning inclosed a black, dismal
pool of thick, muddy, lifeless water, from
the slimy de; ths of which steamed up
ward throusrh the hot. breezeless air a
sickening stench of ratk foulness and
decay. Above the thick, oily surface,
low banks of glistening black mud rose
even,- here and there; and on that con
genial couch lay basking the horrible
reptiles which the Maharajah's strange
taste had preserved and nourished as
"pets." Some lay outstretched on the
mud banks in the full glare of the sun,
torpid as gorged snakes, but giving a
sudden snap with their cruel jaws ever
and anon, as if they were dreaming of
tearing some living victim to pieces.
Others were wallowing in the sullen
waters, above which nothing could be
seen but their scally snouts and long,
saw-like tails; while others still were
completely hidden. betraying their where
abouts only by the huge brown bubbles
that crept lazily up to the stagnant sur
face.
Just below us, the hugest of the9
foul creatures lay asleep on an islet ol
mud, half in the water and half out.
Wishing to stir it up, I threw a large
huge stone at it, which rebounded from
the scaly back like a hailstone from a
roof; but the monster never moved. Mrs.
Ker flung another stone with no bettei
success: and then two of the Hindoos,
seeing what we were at, joined in the
bombardment so lustily that the mud
bank was studded like an almond-cake
with stones of all sizes ; but to all appear
ance we might have built an entire house
upon the plegmatic crocodile withoul
disturbing it in the least. At length one
huge stone hit it fair in the nose, when it
finally condescended to wake up, stretched
itself, yawned, and waddled lazily down
into the water, while its flat, seal' head
and mud-besmeared body, its narrow,
cunning eyes, short, clumsy limbs, and
ungainly movements formed a picture
more hideous and repulsive than the ugli
est demon ever imagined by Dante.
At that moment a tiny English child,
having escaped from its ayah (native
nurse) while the latter was engaged in
watching the crocodiles, scrambled up on
to the parapet that overhung the tank. It
was horrible to see how, the moment the
poor little victim appeared, the whole
surface below was alive with flapping
tails and gaping jaws, as the monsters
caught sight of their prey. Scared by
the tumult, the child grew dizzy, stag
gered forward, and in another instant
would have fallen headlong into the ter
rible pool, when one of the Maharajah's
native gardeners, an active young fellow,
sprang forward and clutched her by the
arm just in time.
"Crocodile know how man-flesh
taste!'1 said a tall, gaunt Punjabi beside
us. "When old Maharajah reign, that
time plenty man throw in here, croco
dile plenty much fat. aha!"
This speech, and the ghastly grin that
accompanied it, were all that was
needed to complete the horror of this
frightful spectacle; and, turning away
with a shudder, we hurried from the ill
omened spot as fast as we could. Frank
Leslie's.
WISE WORDS.
Any one can act natural by keeping
still.
Every throb of the heart is a new
birth.
None but the rich can afford "dear
friends.
Competition is a necessity to the activi
ty of life.
The only "fall of man" is when he
falls behind.
Education that restrains the desire to
learn is false.
Nothing great was- ever achieved with
out enthusiasm.
One of the sublimest things in "the
world is plain truth.
Of tame beasts, the worst is the flat
terer; of wild, the slanderer.
Charity and personal force are the
only investments worth anything.
Whatever you dislike in another per
son take care to correct in yourself by
the gentle reproof.
Avoid him who, from mere curiosity,
asks three questions running about s
thinS that cannot interest him.
Who is wise
evervonc. Who
He that learns fron
is powerful? He tha:
sroverns his passions
Who is rich. H
that is content.
Affectation is certain deformity; b
forming themselves on fantastic models
the young begin with being ridiculou'
and often end with being vicious.
Sweetness of temper is not acquire
but a natural excellence, and, therefore
to recommend it to those who have i
not, may be deemed rather an insult thai
advice.
Women never truly command till the;
have given their promise to obey, anc
they are never in more danger of being
made slaves than when the men are ai
their feet.
LULU AND LITTX-n BE&
'Lulu played two summers,
Little Bee, one"
Such the tender Psgend
That was traced upon a stone
In a bramble-braided corner
Of a graveyard, gray and lone,
Near the old home of my childhood,
In the darling days a-gone
"Lulu played two summers,
Little Bee, one."
I was but a boyish stroller
Of the fields when first I read
The quaint and tearful record
On that tablet to the dead:
I have passed the chiseled marblei
Stretched skyward to the sun,
To muse upon the meaning
Of the mystic lines that run;
"Lulu played two summers,
Little Bee, one."
I did not understand it then,
But now ;tls all so clear,
God knows my foolish fancy needs
No cold interpreter;
O, poet-mother ! never bard
That ever breathed has spun
A strain of sweeter pathos
Than your poor heart has done
"Lulu played two summers,
Little Bee, one.
Chicago News.
HUMOR OF THE DAY.
Red hot A boiled lobster.
The lovers' favorite actor Mari-us.
"The board of arbitration" A shingle.
Riparion diseases The cataracts of the
Nile.
The pretty housemaid is the lily of the
valet.
The original "salt union" Neptune
and Amphitrite.
Smartness is knowing how to "catch
on;7' wisdom, how to let go.
A poor widow One who can't remain
unmarried any length of time.
An electric spark Making love by
telegraph. Washington Capital.
A drill is a bore especially to the of
ficer in charge of the awkward squad.
Life.
A John Mary Ann is the latest name for
a man that pushes his baby about in a
perambulator.
A good resolution is a fine starting
point, but as a termiuus it has no value.
Scranton Truth.
What a quiet, economical world we
would live in, if it, were not for the move
ments of the under jaw !
"Does the wind always blow this way,
mygood,man?" "No, it don't. Some
times it blows the other way."
One of the interesting experiments in
popular chemistry is when a youth feeds
his flame with ice-cream. Time.
"What are you digging, dear?" "I'm
going to plant mashed potatoes. I like
'em better than the other sort." Life.
There is always room at the top and
when a small man gets there, he only
serves to set off the surrounding vacancy.
Judge.
The most unfair thing that happens to
women is that enoasrements are so short
and marriages so long. Binghamton Re
publican. Remorse is a good deal like a wooden
leg. It may help you on your way, but
you always think how much happier you
would be without it.
;Tis the church-bell in the steeple
That to worship calls the people;
'Tis the church-belle in the choir
Calls the young men to admire.
JvAga.
The auctioneer is no more liable to in
sanity than anybody else, notwithstand
ing the fact that he is almost continually
in a more-bid mental condition. Wash
ington Capital .
A shoemaker hung out a new sign, and
then wondered what passers-by found so
amusing. His sign ran as follows:
"Don't go elsewhere to be cheated.
Walk in here." New Yorh Tribune.
Prospective Tourist "I am going
West because I have reason to believe
that it's a good place to settle in." Re
turned Tourist "I am not so sure of
that. I lived there ten years myself, and
never paid a bill while I was there."
Ph iladelphia Inqu irer.
There was a little boy
"W hose name was ' ;Quick."
He knocked off some apples
With a stick.
The apples were so good
That he ate 27,
And now (if he was good enough)
He's in heaven.
Dansville Breeze.
Simpson "Well, my boy is through
college now, and I guess I will start him
in one of the professions." Sampson
"I think he will make a good physician."
Simpson "Why?" Sampson "In the
next two years that boy is going to have
as fine a set of side whiskers as you ever
saw." Terre Haute Express.
John Loss (consulting a clairvoyant)
"My watch has been stolen, and I want
information that will lead to its recov
ery." Clairvoyant "Cross my palm
with a silver dollar. (It is done and the
clairvoyant falls into a trance.) Your
watch is in the pocket of a bad man. Find
him; cause his arrest, and the timepiece
will again be yours." Jewelers' Weekly.
Weeping Widow "You are sure, Mr.
Boneplanter, that you will conduc every
thing in a satisfactory manner?" Emi
nent Undertaker "Have no fear on that
score, I beg of you, Mrs. Billhope. Of
all the people I have buried ia my long
and successful career I am proud zo say
that not one ever raised the slightest ob
jection to my work." Terre Haute Ex-press.
Half-Rate Exrirnleoi.
The Chicago & Nortb-Western Railway of
fen exceptional opportunities for an inspec
tion of the cheap lands and irrowinsr business
centers of Iowa. Minnesota. Nebraska. Wyom
ing. North and South Dakota, Colorado and
the Far West and Northwest, by a series of
Harvest Excursion, for which tickets will be
so d at half rates, or one fare for the round
trip. Excursions leave Chicago. August 8th
and :0th, September 10th and 24th, and Octo
ber 8th. For full particulars address K. 1.
Wmsox. (reneral Passenger -Agent Chirac s
North-Western Rai way. Chicago, Dliaoia.
Immense steel boatsare being boil! to ply in
tixe lasesi. Three under construction in one
yard at Bay View. Wis., will cost J1.0U0.000.
A Family ;.i chcring.
Have you a father? Have you a mother
Have you a son or daughter, sister or a brother
who has not yet taken Kemp's Balaam for the
Throat and Lungs, the guaranteed remedy for
the cure of Coughs, Colds. Asthma, Croup anil
all Throat and Lung troubles? If so, why:
when a sample bottle is gladly given to you
free by any druggist and the large size costs
only 50c. and $1.
In the New York Central Railroad Company
there are 10,000 stockholders.
Harvest Excursions.
The colden harvest time Is near, and fortun
ately the facilities for enjoying it are ample.
The Chic aoo, Rock Island Sr pArinc Hall
way will sed Harvest Excursion Tickets to all
points in Kansas and Nebraska (west of but not
on the Missouri Rlr-r),Colorado, Indian Tcrr .
tory. New Mexico. Texas. Wyoming, Utah.
Idaho, Dakota, Arizona. Northwestern Iowa
and Southwestern Minnesota at onk fare rou
TBK norND TKIP. Dotes of sale September
10th and 34th and October 8th, 18; return
limit, B0 days from date of sole, thus ntFnndlng
opportunlt es for investment or the location of
farms and homos in growing eot;on of now
country Htrcti as wrbk ickvbb bevokk orreHKi),
the territory to boose from being very much
larger than that included in the scopo of any
similar previous excursion, Thb so m n vest t
Bt'i.E thain or toe Rocg IsuANo are com
posed of elegant Day Coaches. Pullman Palaco
Sleepers, Free tteclinln, Chair Cars and Din
ing Cars to and from Omaha, and via Kansas
City and St. Joseph through the most desir
able portions of Kansas and Nebraska to Den
ver, Colorado Springs and Puebl . where di
rect communications are made with diverging
lines (also at St. Paul) to all points la tho
States and Territories above named. For
more detailed information call on or address
John Sebastian, General Ticket and Passen
ger Agent, Chicago, ill.
The municipal debt of the city of Now York
is close upon $100.000,COO.
"Mamma's Blttti' Better.
There 1b gladness in t be household;
The shadow fades away
That darkened nil the sunshine
Of ma iy a summer day.
"O, mamma's getting better,"
The happy children cry.
And tho light of hope sblnes bright again
In tho loving husband'3 eye.
In thousands of homes women ere "sick
unto death" with the terrible diseases so com
mon to their Sc x. and it would seem as if all
the happiness had one out of life and tho
household in c n-equence. For when the wif
and mother suffers all the family sailers with
her. This ought not to be, and it net i not be,
for a never-failing remedy for woman's aii
mentB is at hand. 31any n home h is been
made happy because the shadow rf disease
has been banished from i' by the pottnt power
of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription the un
failing remedy for all weaknesses and diseases
ptculiar to women.
SfiOO Reward offered for an incurable case of
i Catarrh by the proprietors of Dr. aje's Rem
edy. 0U cts. , by dru gcsts.
A late estimate places the total population
of the earth at L41,423,.ri00.
When Dohbins's Electric Soap was Hrst made
in 1SG-1 it cost '.Zd-cmm a bar. It is prrr.in.'lp
same ingredient.;-- and quality note, and uocsn t
cotthalf. Buy it of your srrocer ai.il jiiv-urvo
your clothes. If he nabn't it. he will get it.
THERE are 1430 barons in Germany.
"There is a tide in the affairs of men which
if taken at the flood leads on to fortune." If
your all'airs are at a low ebb now. don't fail to
write to B. F. Johnson & Co., 1009 Main St.,
Richmond, Va., who have plans that will en
able you to make money rapidly.
The most prominent physicians in tne city
smoke nnd recommend 'TansilTsJPunth."
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son's Eye-water. Druggists sell atJ&c.per bottle
Why Don't
You take Hood's Sarsnparllla, Jf you have Impure
blood, have lout your appetite, havo that tired
feeling or are troubJed by elck headache, dyspep
ia or biliousness. It has accompli, bed wonders
for thousands of anllctcd people, aud, If given a
fair trial, Is reasonably certain to do you Kod.
"I have been troubled a great deal with head
ache, had no appetite, no strength, and felt as
mean as anyone could, and bo about my work.
Since taking Hood's Sarsaparllla I have not had
the headache, my food has relished, and seemed
to do me good, and I have felt myself growing
stronger every day." M. A. Brmnutu, 1 Grand
venue, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. L HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Poses One Dollar
NYS U 36
ELY'S CREAM BALM
GIVKS r.ELIEF AT ONCE FOB
COLD IN HEAD.
CURES
CATARRH.
Apply Balm Into each nostril.
ELY BROS., 66 Warren St., K. Y.
and "Whiskey
lta our ed at h urn e rrl t li
out pain. Book of par
ticulars sent FREE.
JktlM&h. O. Office Ott Whitehall fct.
PEERLESS DTE8
Are tho BEST.
BOLD by DEt go ism
NEW
TREATMENT.
ABA LT 10,
P in I l ar applied at the
Holland Medical and Cancer Institute, Buffalo, X. V
removes Cancer without pair, or use at k.iife. Scor--of
patients speak In unqualified terms of pralne ol
the success of this treatment. Write for circular.
HOLLAND MEDIC INE CO., Duffa lo, N.
Dr. Lobb,
After ALL others
fall, consuft
328 N. 15th St.
PHILA., PA.
Twentv Tears' continuous practice
ment and cure of the awful
practice in tne
fit! effects of early
vice, destroying both mind and body. Me
and treatment for one month, Five Doll nr
securely sealed from observation to any aulan-'-
Book on Special Dlweawea free.
I prescribe and fBlly
dorse Bl ti as tti
Bpeciflc forthecerta .' "
of this dieaae.
O. H. LN'ORA H A M M.
Amsterdam.
We have sold Pig C; '
many years, and ft
riven me oest u. -
Faction.
i mm luiva
CANCER
Cim In
AmmW TO 6 DATS. SB
Mfcprxsyd set t
Ef xrdot'orfeylA
UnuCanictlSt.
Bl. fill-, trimi JBff
Cfctefo. J J
Si. 00. Sold by iwogs-3"