Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 30 September 1889 — Page 3
t/l
1
*ttl«
•ON
,n
hXankets.
-i
ECIAL SALE
31 a pl^ets
fntinuis a short limp longer at the l!OST()X I'ORK. This i# one of those opportunities that *me but onee in :t thousand: now is tlie time the exercise of prudence and the cultivation ff economy if you need the.se goods for the Duiing winter visit us and buy now at a price will never hear of a«ain. Our syndicate ircha*t*d the entire production of one of the
than they can be bought in the Blanket
-ice, Ve hov- sonic of the ttne*t Blanket* made, in nit-. Scarlet, (irav. Bine Mixed in Light, Mcim and Dark. By buying Blankets now yon "ill nave from 50 cents "to Sl.00ajair. If vou not pre pit red to tuke them now they will be ored free of charge in til Nov cm fer I. by payiK a smalt deposit.
fAlil'EVIB'S BOSTON STOKE,
418 MAIN STREET.
CAIll'ETs AND I* N IT t' HE.
f."
jSLEGANT
1 MOQUETTE
AND VELVET
CARPETINGS.
We 'un !i"W show y»u a complete line
tlu1. above gotkIn with beautiful wide
orderH to inntch. Our stttck oi arpetu
tut never been larger than it is to-dnv.
A'hile
we have given increased attention
(he best grade of goods we have not
aejtlected to have in atock a full Hue of
ow-priced aud medium-priced good*.
OUR FALL
STOCK OF
FURNITURE
Jr |in coming in by fust freight aud almost
every train. New Sideboards have ar-
g, rived this week. Willow Chair# at all
price#. All «»f the new styles appear as
4J$ as they art* out, in our ntwk Wo till have made it out of the cost rules of our
i»^istabli«hment
or
to buv Furniture only
from thoseninnufaeturm who mnkegood
honeM
JJTWHIH.
A. Z. FOSTER'S
CarpetaiidFuniitui'ellouse
422,424 and 42G WABASH AVE
T1MK TA1U.K.
1 Alt.mun TJMK TABI.K.
m*
iv
f»^ *un.Urd time 50 intmite® slower th*n dlf Uwo.
jJM VAN'OAUA UNR. IP Ukavk
mn t»v
Wetr-!:«» i&l$« 3:15
||4!« U. W I.KAV* t»» K*t SO t:M W: t5 «m lt«t to p».
AHKIVK THR K**r Si TA mil*
I 2 iw m. I 5 \KMVt rWMI THK B» 1 ,ti! A l»
1V* ST B» 1 W I SIO T. 11, A I. DIVISION. I.KATK POR THK NOKW 4 Wi,
AMhtVK rttON THK N'oKTtfc- law JS 1«. I. A ST, I,.
T»I».»,
I tii*
:^fi-M" .rr' *?w
wion. I pressed excitement, and the anxiety was White Blankets, in-1.
price now
r.cnt.s
win-
^hit?Blanket*, 10 1. price now, *1.65 winter J?se
-^•jirlet Blanket*, lo-l, price now 82.50 winter b,l,'k-Hgue, and the locals did not hesiiice $3 oo advantage ot the situation. Iftarljjt Blanket^, 10-1, priee now $'2.98 winter Dougan struck out four men during the U«,8:t.50. I gJUiie, but at times he was hit hard leaflet Blankets, 10 I. price now gi.so winter 1 Kvansvilles played good ball all the
iA is:s: «p«»
UU, Itlld u» Train* arrive frmn the w»n»h iuwu. «nd H101* in,
S
€.. A E. I
Train* le*v# for the North at fc lA m: ta. ^n to and U:SJ w. Train* nrrtve from the North at 6:00 a va !©i» am ». JO attd *.»
i*»»- I Wws oC weatl«»r» VL &T. IL \rclnk«e«ii FAimr'n fervid idea for Tmiu* l«*rr for the south at 49 |jH, ^tAbiishtii^iU of an order mentli-
tt
H-* 5
Train* )«VE for ih« jiorihwe*! »L S-W|*nurcn OIJJWM.
,."•?"s:'
THE HOODLUM COACHERS WIN.
THE PIUTE YELLING OF AN IX.SANE MOIi DECIDES THE CONTEST.
Two THOVS.A I) I.oi N-Moi'TIIKT) COACHKRS 1)ISCONCKUT T11K VISITORS BY TlIElli lllDKOl'S HowLiNfi—KVANSVILLKTHTS KAI: ON TOP.
I:ist
rgest manufacturers of lihinkets in tiiis coun-i .. y,they sent ns I,.-**) pair* and in order to dispose
Saturday' afternoon the first of the championship series of games between Terre Haute and Evansville occurred at the latter city and was attended by a large crowd. Until the beginning of the third inning there was promise of a very close contest, but after that matters took a radical turn for the different. In this
inniu&
them quickly, we have commenced a speBlanket sale and will sell them 2" per cent. scoring
*'ie tail-enders tourul
Dougan for
three singles and two doubles, live runs. This threw the
great audience into a fever of ill-sup-
intense. After the fifth inning the out-
price. come seemed uncertain, but the Evanshite Blankets. 11-1, price now &..>0: winter
vjjjeg
jia(} se(.(mn}
U*
tlie lead and did liot
.Th.e Terre
I]aut 1
were several
times seized with a malignant type ol
Tlie way
through with the possible exception of Hill, who is credited with four errors and ought to be credited with several more. The double umpire system was tried, but did not pan out exactly satisfactory, Tally did very well behind the bat, notwithstanding the fact that he was crip1 pled up. With three hits Dougan led the
Terre 11 antes' batting. The score was: Kvansville, 1*2 Terre Haute, 10. YKSTEIUJA v's (iA MK.
The second of the championship series between Evansville and Terre Haute occurred at the former place yesterday and was a very rocky afl'air, the locals winning by 1- to The Terre. Hantes put up a very yellow trame, being unable to retain their heads under the persistent and distracting guying of the locals' multitude of coachers. Whenever Kvansville got a man on a base the wild, vig-orous-lunged mob would set up such a deafening howl as to drive the visiting team to the verge of mental aberration.
It was hardly a fight of one ball team against another it was more truly an unequal contest wherein a visiting team had a good club and a tumultuous mob of hoodlums to overcome. The only play of the visitors worthy of mention was a magnificent throw from left field by Conlev, cutting ofl'a man at the plate, (ilenalvin did
good
work taking advantage
of his nine opportunities. O'Brien and Cantillan were badly off, due to the merciless razzlt' dazzle. The visitors could not hit Crothers safely more than three times, one of those being a 2-bagger by Tullv. Donovan couldn't, freeze to Kiteljorg's delivery and after the fourth inning was relieved by Schneider. The Terre 1 Unites lost hope in the first inning, when thre' bases on balls, a passed ball, three errors, a wild pitch, two singles and the mob's able assistance gave to their opponents four runs, in the fourth the latter made three runs on three errors, two passed balls and a single in the tifth they made four more
011
three errors,
two passed balls and a single in the fifth they made four more on two errors, a sacrifice, and.two hits, one of which was a triple. They scored two more in the eighth on an error and three hits, having, out of their twelve scores, only earned one. The Tern* llautes scored one in the fifth on an error and two singles anil two in the eighth on three errors, a base on balls and a stolen base.
JfoTKS.
Conley won Dickhout's valise for the firnt home run in the games with Evansville.
Springfield takes the Inter-State league pennant for the series ending Saturday. The rest come in: Quincy, Peoria, liurlingtou and Evansville.
James yesterday: Baltimore 2, Brooklyn 7 Columbus (i, Atheletic 'A. The St. l.ouis-l.ouisvilIe and the Kansas CityCincinnati games were postponed on account of rain.
The Polytechnic club played its first game of the season Saturday with a picket! nine from the Crescents and several other local players. The game was witnessed by quite a large crowd, mostly ladies. Ilie game resulted 15 to 8 in favor of the picked nine, Schneider played a great game at third and everybody wits delighted with the amusement furnished.
HERE AND THERE.
King Malietoa's salary, befon' lie was dejMse«l, amounted to a month. Kaivtious Englishmen call the American minister's house in l/mdon Lincoln's Inn.
Mr. Selah Chanilerlain. of Cleveland, gave his beautiful niece $I0.0tK) as a wedding present.
Marion Crawford, the novelist, is ft handsome, stalwart man, who resembles no one so little as a literary man. He stands fully six feet high, is ruddy of face, broad-shouldered anid long-limbed, and can walk forty miles at a stretch.
An effort is lit'tng made to get Oliver Wendell Holme* to write an autobiography. He refuses on the ground that his works already tell as much of him* self as he earvs to have the public learn, and that he desires to sjen« his remaining years in comparative idleness.
Mennonites, of l^neaster wunty, I IVnn., selected a minister on Friday by drawing !©te. Twentv-one Bibles, one of which contained a slip of jiam»r, were I piaml on a table, and the candiI dates* walketl around and each took a
Uxftk. The one drawing the slip was ordained. l»r. Briand, a dktittmsish^l young Krvnch ph*sictan attarhwl to the luispiul at Killejutf, is reported to have elfeiioij «nue wonderftil cures of i^onsutnptton by ituHins of tlie colder cure, which ?«»nsi»ts mainly in gradually arcustouung the (latients to exjxwure until they are
rant monks in the Kngktul and the
•Ju m. I cnlwy the ... Train* arrive frowi Xorthw«#t at ll:» ]m$» ll«l. ©W.II if «nch
Kii«coml Church in I atUHl nnH'ta
-n .~I jxfm. '!"p*i^ I vwHSSP ..rfi
W»jiin*uM wwwiiiodaiWd. I' Mr*, harlotte t. tibour, tenueriy I forrkmi rh
.vrrhcfwm th«» *onth, v^htnifton| iimwiipnt of Sortwia. who lias Hve«i in kidn«-r»and s. datiou. a to. i«*u mnd ex pre**, tie for a number of is to be Uu?!f
giuwt of
Uv1
remain in this country for some time. Mr. Charles Wilbour, her husband, has become somewhat famed as an Egyptologist since his removal from New York, and he spends his winters in Cairo or A a a
In France, when a patient istincler chloroform, on the slightest symptoms appearing of failure of the heart, they turn him nearly upside down— that is, with his head downward and his heels in the air. This, they say, always restores him and such is their faith in the efficacy of this method that the operating tables in the Paris hospitals are made so that in an instant they can be elevated with one end in the air, so as to bring the patient into a position resembling that of standing on his head.
FOR THE STRONG-MINDED.
Mrs. Clara McDiarmid, of Little Rock, president of the Arkansas Woman Suffrage Association, will accompany her son to Ann Arbor, Mich., in the fall. While her son is taking the four years' collegiate course she will enter the law school. There is something very pleasant in the idea of mother and son thus pursuing their studies at the same time.
The Lawrence (Kan.) Tribune has the following good words to say of Kansas women: "Although in the front ranks of progress, and having held many important places, and being entrusted with many grave duties, the women of Kansas have never proved recreant to a trust reposed in them, and the first charge even of incompetency has yet to be preferred against one who has been entrusted with a public position."
Mrs. Mary Clement Leavitt, of Boston, who started upon a tour around the world as a missionary of the W. C. T. V. six years ago, has arrived in England from Cape Town, Africa and was given a reception in London on July 22d by the British Women's Temperance Association. She lias organized many temperance unions in the far-off countries visited by her, where none existed before, and has also done much to promote the White Cross and Social Purity movement.
The women of tlve village of Cooperstown, in Otsego county, N. Y. are no longer to be subject to taxation without representation. A section of the new charter granted them by the last Legislature provides as follows: ''Upon any proposition to "raise a tax or appropriate the same or to purchase property, all persons residents of said village, whether male or female, of the age of twenty-one yeaiv, whose names appear on the assessment roll and are liable to be assessed for such tax, shall be entitled to vote, and uo others.
FREAKS OF FASHION.
The fashion of wearing gloves to match the boots in color, so greatly in vogue in London and Paris, has spread to this side of the water.
A device for tlie setting of tables for small parties is to have the table round, with a low basket of flowers in the center and decoration of smilax reaching out to the edge in each direction like spokes of a wheel.
Each
guest has the space
between the outer ends of two of the spokes. At fashionable luncheons now for ladies egg-nog or some similar beverage is served in the skin of an orange. The pulp and juice are scooped out through an opening made in the top of the fruit, the mixed drink is poured in, ami the opening closed by the replacing of the piece of skin cut out. Then it is tied with a ribbon. The beverage is drunk by means of two straws, which, tied together with a bit of ribbon, go with each orange.
A fancy of women is to sleep in silk. They have long abjured any other wear for underclothes, and now there are being shown in the shops that cater to all the new whims of the sex sets of silk sheets and pillow-cases in all colors. With these go the beautiful East Indian blankets, woven entirely of raw silk, and down spreads covered with surah or satin. These sneets and pillow-cases are hemstitched, with a crest or monogram embroidered in one corner. Some of them have a delicate vine embroidered along the edge, or abroad band of A ranu work. They are of all delicate colors and white and black.
THE BONO O* THE SCYTHE.
Mowers, weary mid brown and blithe. What is the word methinks ye know, KridlesM ovorword that thowvthe
Sings lo the blndi»i of grass liclow? Scythes that swing in the grans and clover. Something still they sav as they jaw: Wh»t is the word that over and over
Sings the seytlie. to the Howers mid grun?
••Hush,' ah, hush!'* the scythes are saing, "Hush, and heed not, ivtid fall asleep "Hush!" they sny to the grasse* swaying,
Hush!" they sing to theclover deep. "Hush!" 'tis the lullaby Time issiuuitig, "Hush, and heed not. for nil thing* puss." 'Hush! ah, hush!" and the scythes are swinging
Over the clover, over the grass, Andrew Lain:.
WANTED.
ANTKD—Agent* for Prudential Life Inminrnro Comimny. Apply to F. s. HOK1'I.h H, superinteuaeut, \Yubusli A\enue: Room 4.
\NTKI»—Four good eoolts and twenty-five giris for general bouse work one llnck' smith. MRS. MARTIN. 430 Ohio street.
smith
T¥TANTEP—Girls.—Any number
W
reference.
ol
**»&$>*'•
Fsuitable
location.
I^Olt
FOR
overall
arid )*tntx maker* ran find steady employment by Applvlnic at onro MI ZIM HUM AN A STA11
No. 30 north Sixth St.
I N A re t) twenty year* old to work a! -.a a house. Apply 322 SoiiUi .'»th *trwt.
djwd, cleaned or repaired at J. F. Kr rai»rh'». Xo. Main street. Dyeing of iadie* drtsss good* a «pect#lty.
FOR SALE.
41
*n
onfcrwrede-i
«rwbk. it couM not be fonnded
by
a! V°5«Si5f"»
5'180,116
at IVlmor.H aX New York. fa«t pv*n in i*er honor. .toour nwnily nrttmwd from Kant|ie. and will RUMUG, HAMILTON 4 co.
A N'TKrv—Koor hitiiM? girls, two cooks, two cham Iter maids, two dining room jrlrK A CAMPBFLL GPTl A fit TPITP H^lltP atmicv. Apply at osrsouth Ninth«wt. wd
\lr .\NTKt—SltiwUnn hy flrst-elajw head If cook. AddnsK X. V.. DAILY XEWsoffiro.'
\lf A TKH-Jf'eeond-hand rlothinR, ete. If bought and #old. mnmina alwan on hand. J. EL (IHKKS, XJ6 and SK Ohi« iiticet
A KTEIMW people to fet their old elothes Old furntlurv'nii^e to Jw»k lfke new. Saihfac-
tot* on AVENUE
1^ «tw*t lwx.en a are »tnv(^ funjHlrf of
teenili
W. 1. St.Ar«ilTKR.
1
lt
JAt.K tf: North
witli a tvry rhilltnir response from ilie North Ninth una. Ativr imnuIeisfiSy ridi- |w*f Kn iriiob «tea, th«r Ohnrrhwaii
Ktrv-U
house on
Sti'! lot on .~yr«t8ore.:
M. I.AI OIRTFEII^
iaiu«t. dfcea»M of the 1: *»w. KK*h)er grocery,'
TERRE HAUTE DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30.1889. 3
FOR SAI.JS.
OK SALE—Old papers at 20c per hundred, for houseeleauing purposes Inquire at Dally News office.
FOK BENT,
IJOBroom
RENT—ROOM—Desirable furnished at ."1 South Fourth street, good
RENT—Furnished rooms for rent on Mulberry street to gentlemen or ladies. Call at or address the Nkws oilice for information.
1
JOK RENT—To a family without children, unfurnished rooms for housekeeping one square from Main street .inquire at NKWS oiiice.
[JO.U
1
RENT—Furnished rooms without board, centrally located, inquire at NEWSofllce.
J0R RENT—Two nicely furnished front rooms, front eutrancefNo. (i:M North Fifth street.
RENT—House with four rooms all modern conveniences, No. 91M North Sixth. Apply at VV. W. Oliver, No. 6:11 Main street.
I.
JOR RENT—Nicely furnished rooms with or without board. Enquire at 818 Walnut St.
MONEY TO LOAN.
MONEY
TO LOAN—Any sum easy terms. RIDDLE, HAMILTON «fc Co.
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION.
OA VINOS ASSOCIATION—Join the Terre O Haute Home and Savings association. We can furnish money at once. You can join this association at any time. No back dues to pay. Apply to J. T. SCOVELL, corner Third and Ohio street.
PROFESSIONAL.
DR. T. W. MOORHEAD,
Physician and Surgeon,
OFFICE, 12 SOUTH EIGHTH STREET,
Residence, 115 North Eighth St.
DR. VAN VALZAH,
DENTIST
Office in Opera House Block.
I. H. C. ROYSE. MARK R. SHERMAN.
ROYSE & SHERMAN,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
No. 517 Ohio Street.
L. H. BARTHOLOMEW. W. B. MAIL.
BARTHOLOMEW & MAIL,
DENTISTS,
(Successors to Bartholomew «fc Hall.)
529 1-2 Ohio St., Terre Haute, Ind.
SYDNEY B. DAVIS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
PATENTS OBTAINED.
Southwest corner 4th St. and Wabash Ave.
Have associated with me Mr. Geo. M. Davis, graduate of Rose Polytechnic Institute, who will examine inventions proposed for patents, prepare drawings, etc.
DR. E. A. GILLETTE,
DENTIST.
utS Filling of Teeth a Specialty. tctfcKeen's New Block, Cor. 7th and Main.
DB7C.TTBALLT™
Limited to treatment of catarrh, throat nervous diseases, tumors and superfluous hair,Uo South Slxtli street.
RAILWAY,
TO TUB
•v 3 EXPRESS TRAINS DAILY
L£4' FROM EVANSVILLK, V1NCKNNE8, .llip.^aTMRl HAUTI and DANVILLE
CHICAGO
WHENCE DIRECT CONNECTION
It mada to ail points
EAST, WESTu»a NORTHWE8T
Ail for Tkkcts tU Ckluga SatUn TOfocte S. E
I? or rttet, time tables ami information in detail, addrvu your ncamt Ticket Agant. WILLIAM HILL, Oen. Pas*, and Tkt. Agt
CHICAGO, ILL.
A•
LAinrotui., ucn. Ayi., eim ndutc.
1 11 1
JMIOI STF.RERS.
WALSH & S0UTHERLAND,
I
|}«u guaranteed. 418 Oti«rry Street,
iNXtTKANC AND REAL ESTATE.
W. M. SLAUGHTER,
Insurance Keal Estate Agent,
FIRE, LIFE and AO I PENT INSURANCE. Represw-ntln* mm*
of I!M CM9|mf« In th*
l-nued Suttee MII on at No. OHIO STREET.
COAL, ETC.
SMITH'S COAL OFFICE,
947 Main Street,
AH frsd«6 of Bitnminotw and AatbiaeiUi Coat.
STORAGE ROOMS and COMMISSION.
WHISKYS.
McBrayer, spring ........ '82 R. Monarch '82 The Head .N '81 M. V. Monarch '84
J. C. S. GFROERER.
JOB
mi
Office, with Dally New», 28 aoulh Fifth Street.
I do the printing for many of tlie largest business houses of this city, and this is enough proof that the work is satisfactory and prices as low as the lowest,
No trouble to give estimates.
LOAN A BUILDlfflB ASSOCIATION.
A SAFE INVESTMENT.
SUUSCKIHE FOR THE NEWS.
v• HEAD! READ!! READ!!!
'V .f-v v*v i5
.#
THE DAILY NEWS
OJ^Y 5yl QEfiJ5 pEi^ u/E^.
POCKET MAP AND SHIPPERS' GUIDE.
What's the Matter with Indiana?
When you can buy RANDV McNALLY & CO.'S NEW AND ENLARGED INDEXED POCKET MAP AND SHIPPERS' GUIDE OF THE STATE FOR OS CENTS!
It is an absolutely new map, just engraved, with additions and corrections to date. It is double the size of Rand, McNally & Co.'s old Pocket Map of the State, which it replaces, though sold at the same price.
The Map is 21 x28 inches, on a large scale, colored to distinguish counties, with a thorough and comprehensive index compilation showing, in detail, the entire railroad system, the express company doing business over oach road, and accurately locating all cities, towns, post offices, railroad stations, villages, counties, islands, lakes, rivers, etc.
The compilation designates the branch or particular division of railroad upon which each station is situated the nearest mailing point of all local places, money-order post offices, telegraph stations, and the express company doing business at the points where tho several companies have offices.
The map is folded and bound with the index and compilation in a flexible cover. Sent, post paid, to any address, on receipt of price, by RAND, McNALLY & CO., Map Publishers, 148 to 154 Monroe Street, CHICAGO.
SAL.OOX AND CHOP HOUSE.
THE CASINO
OUR LEADING BRANDS!
THREE STAR HENNESSEY BRANDY. FINEST IN THE CITY.
IN
Athletic and Aquatic Matters, Baseball, Cricket, Billiards,Chess, Checkers and other Sports and Pastimes of the day.
THE LEADING THEATRICAL NEWSPAPER!
THE LATEST AMUSEMENT NEWS WEEKLY.
Price, Single Copy, 100. Snbucription, One Year, ft. Order through your Newsdealer.
THE FRANK QUEEN PUBLISHING COMPANY (Ld.)f Clipper Building, New York City.
MACHINE WORKS.
PHCENIX FOUNDRY AND MACHINE WORKS.
'inth street, near Union Depot.
Terre Haute, Indiana.
if AXWACWRHRB OF
Engines, Boilers, Mill and Mining Machinery.
Architectural iron work a specialty. Dealers in belting, bolting cloth, pipe, hraas gwxla and all kinds of mill and machinery supplies. .Engine and boiler repairing promptly attended to.
PRINTING. ARTIFICIAL LIMBS.
(CE(j[S
The Indiana Jiarlnp, Loan A SttlMicg A*®~ i«»e«|«fd op *tock to »OBW of from 8TOVE8, CLOTIf IKU, ETC., ETC., at tltX) to I1.00S, «eeured by
firrt
froan one to ten years.
mort«a«e on
Terre Haute real eaUte. netting the inrartor#
per ernt, per jrw, wbieb laicrot will be paid to the holders of flock *etoi-annnalljr in cash. This Is the safest Innwtaest that can be made. No mortptffes lo look after or to foreclose lo f*t jtmr mmwf oat. and jroar lorsauaent
'f -i
SIP®
And Chop House!
1
CHARLES CARTER'S CHOP HOUSE.
Baltimore Oysters received daily. Fried Chicken, liaked Beans, Eggs, Cold Meats of all kinds. Everything neat and yiean. First-vlass cook.
SANDIS0N & BURNS, 677 Main St.
SPORTING PAPER.
NEW YORK CLIPPER
THE STANDARD AUTHORITY
CIQAR8.
Imported.
Domestic.
IIENRY CLAY. LOUDRES GRAND. ESTRELLA. Sl'AMSH STANDARD. I'RINCIl'E DE WALE. FLORA DE PALA8CO. GATOS' BOUQUET, RESUMPTION.
ai)d
TRUSSES.
Facb Trtua mada to order aud warranted. |ps®:e8
1 BRACKS FOR
Bow Legs, Curvature of tbt Spine and all kinds of ,..v Deformities.
Lewis Lockwood,
McKeen BJodt. Seventh and Mais Streate.
FURNITURE, STOVES, ETC.*.
HIGHEST CASH FRIOB PAID FOR
Second-Hand Furniture,
NELSON'S, ftO. 9 NORTH THIRD STREET.
UNDERTAKERS AXT EMBALMKIW.
aoraorr
H.
wuaor. BLACK
COB
ran
B. P. HA VESTS, Sacr. MeEeen'a Block. Upstairs
St
NISBBT,
Undertakers and Embalmers,
NORTH FOURTH 8T.. TERRE HAUTK.
MT AH oslls will rtoeJra prompt alteattoa Open daf and nigbt.
nnwiya
tj .1 en
Hit I 11 oral
it) win 1 M* ire
wan paid by V*Bh
