a 1R lk & | 1J 1¢ Don‘t be too cranky. Don‘t expect to revolutionize the world in a day or a year, or a lifetime. And don‘t try to bulldoze peopleâ€"don‘t make the blundet of risking the progress of the movement to any mere act of Parliament or the officers who are supposed to enforce it. Be your owm temperance legislation, and cultivate the sentiment in those whom you can influence. in the habits of Temperance wor feel discouraged h statut 1% row, is gradually shorn of his po has less nower to work with time to live thar the total a They who patronize the saloon 1 none of imis. But employers sobricty from their employees claim that a man casnot, as a ru alcohol and play for any length a suceess‘s‘ part in any depart human astivity. They assert mods e us of alcohol is a ch that morally and physiologica it should be remembered that these "lanatics" have seen the squalid homes tenanted by the slaves of liquor. _ They have seen the ships of youth rotting on the shoals of drink. They are aware of the fact that the moderate drinker of toâ€"day, if not the drunkard of toâ€"morâ€" Our _ wellâ€"edited â€" contemporary, â€" the Catholie Record, has a word to say about the somewhat lugubrionus humor of those who delight to satirize the temperance cranks. These same cranks, it says, "are dubbed fanaties and ridiculed to make a holiday for the good fellows who are jubilant enough while in their cups, and who, when the fires of alcohol are gone out within them, _ are, in their own estimation, fools of a very poltry type." Then it goes on to deliver some very senâ€" sible advice, which we offer no apology for reproducing: A | It should be remembered that tlwse1 fil on their investment or even ‘get their seed back.. As a display of business enâ€" terprise it is ahead of anything that we are doing along that line." Speaking of the "allâ€"red line" proposal, the New York Sun expresses the opinâ€" ion that while a speed of 650 miles a day for 20 days "is not a mechancial impossibility, it is a huge proposition even in these days of quick time and long distance." And it adds that "down at the bottom of the project there lies the important probable determinating question whether all or any of the Govâ€" etaments interested would realize a proâ€" A The stream of immigration is increasâ€" ing in volume. Canada wants some good immigrants, but she can afford to pick them; and we hope the Government will carcfully select them. Better keep our country for our own children than give away its richness to allâ€"comers without rzeard to qimlity. heavy loss to the parties immediately interested, but they involve the public in expense. ‘The Montreal Council has been presented with a bill of $8,000 for police services during the recent ‘longâ€" shoremen‘s strike. In Leeds and (Grenville counties many cases of smallpox have been discovered, and there is danger that the disease may be spread througout the Province, there having been practically no effort to isolate those affected. In some cases children exposed have been allowed to go to school. Strikes are a Iuxury. They not only cause great disturbance to business and Venezuela is acting awkwardly with Uncle Sam, refusing to pay debts due his people. One of these days Venezue!a will be getting into a broil with some other power, and then she‘ll be ready to lick Uncle Sam‘s boots to get his moral support. At a funcral at Rangoor, India, the other day, six eelctric cars carried the mourners and a band played "The Britâ€" ish Gienadiers," while atteondants seatâ€" tered rice and flowers, to the delight of those along the route. CUnited States settlers Canada in the last year 585,128 in cash and go« good kind of settler. «<URRENT CGOMMENT !, chermcal ot a food ; it ver of healt! s the verdict ~mend it to can exeuse ¢ re scP h 1 too 1 re n rha tates settlers who came to the last year brought in $19, eash and goods. That is a of settler. vn with wrecks, which or their eagorness in ps, â€" however, much s have br artistic is the most . happiness of the ph ) la i1 v U a day or a don‘t try to the blunder 1e movement ment or the t] on the part The paths t h the sober is open to a Ca SURSC . Minard‘s ort to 1 to re _ Quite a few graves, some of which have tombstones, have been plowed up, while in other cases some graves â€" in which bodies hu':‘ Il))le'en Eecently interâ€" red are unrecogn e and s any Indication is left of their wheluwbouh. Relatives of deceased persons who have been buried on the northerly alde of the East End Cemetery _ are very indignant at the action of the Cemetery Committee, which has had a large portion of the graveyard plozhed and converted into a potato ma$ "Mother, shall I say my prayer or nurse‘s prayer? The mother, not being aware that the nurse ever said any morning prayer, beâ€" came curious. "Say nurse‘s dear," she answered. Whereupon the little felow hegan solâ€" emnly : "Lord, O Lord, have I got to set un"" A mother told her child, a boy of five gurs to say his morning prayer to her. neeling before her, the little fellow asked : F " ‘Nasturtium seeds?" shouted the first man angrily. ‘It looks more like one of myr buff Leghorn hens.‘ "‘Oh, that‘s all right,‘ the other reâ€" plied. ‘The seeds are inside.‘" He Knew What It Was. ' A {hilanthropic Fifth â€"avenue lady, says Life, was visiting a lower east side Sunday school. To test the aptness of a particularly indigent cluster of pupiles she took the class in hand to question them. "Children, which is the greatest of all virtues ?" Not one answered. ‘"Think a little. What is it I am doâ€" Ing when I give up time and pleasure to coms down among you for your moral good ?" i A grimy fist went up. «"Well, what am I doing, little boyt" "Buttin‘ int*" " Hey, what the deuce are you buryâ€" lng in that hole there? ‘The neighbor laughedâ€"a harsh, bitâ€" ter laugh. "‘Oh,‘ he said ‘Tm just replanting some of my nasturtium seeds; that‘s "One beautiful spring morning," he began, "a suburbanite looked suspiciousâ€" ly over his hedge and said to his neighâ€" bor : 8. F. Hood, of the Department of Agâ€" rleulture, is trying to beat the Japanâ€" ese Camphor Trust by raising camphor groves in Florida, says the Buffalo Enâ€" quirer. At a dinner in Huntington that celebrated an unsually fine distillation of camphor leaves. Mr. Hood, the guest of honor, told a seasonable agricultural storyâ€"a story that should appeal to all suburbanites. "Yep; but it‘s too high, too high!t" was the precccupied answer, with a sigh. he Wall street &ssociates of the great "bear," James R. Keene, admit almost unanimously that the financier is selâ€" dom caught napping. They declare, howâ€" ever, that Mr. Keene is absentâ€"minded occasionally, and tell this story on him to prove it. Keene and his fellow "bull hlror." Washington E. Connor, were at the Keene country place outside of New York. It was a beautiful summer evenâ€" ing, and Connor proposed a â€" stroll through the magnificent _ grounds. Though the guest had left all the cares and worries of the street in the city, apparently the host had not. The two. started on the walk, but Connor noticed that Keene was strangely uncommuniâ€" cative. Suddenly the full moon appearâ€" ed above the trees, and Connor regardâ€" ed its splendor in silence for a moment. Then he turned to his companion. h "Iult't the moon beautiful, Keenet" his catalogue of woes, ending up with the question: "What should I take?" The reply was: "Take advice." A French doctor recently rid himself in an e%udly ingenious manner of a paâ€" tient who sought to impose on his good mnature. He was accosted one afternoon on a crowded boulevard by a lady noâ€" torious for this practice. She at once began to tell of ier pain in her hypoâ€" gastric region. To which the doctor gravely replied: ‘"‘My dear madam, I must examina Abernethy was, as we know, equal to the occasion when a wealthy alderman whom he met at a friend‘s house recited person who takes advantage of a casual meeting at the dinner table or elsewhere to importune him for counsel as to his l'ill.me:ltll.. It is not always easy to get _AMy dear madam, I must examine :m. Be good enough to take off your im ons * nal, every doeto ;lvn:"h;;lâ€"nâ€"n;l;;;t';;- periences with the economicalâ€"minded "Well," and Cornwall crimsoned. "We are all native sons together, and I don‘t mind telling you. She calls him ld..m’†him most would be to ask him how Mrs. Cornwall pronounces ‘chefâ€"fear.‘" "Hello, Bruce, old man! Glad tos:eo ou. Accept my congratulations! y gy the way, wllt does your wife call the fellow that drives her auto?" "Sh!" cautioned one of the group. "Bruce has only been married a few rnh, and the thing that would please "Ab," interrupted _ another, "here comes Bruce Cornwall. He‘s a promiâ€" nent member of Stanford parlor, lawyer and all that, and, besides, he runs a machine, so he‘ll know." "Not much," interposed a third; "it‘s ‘chefâ€"fear.‘" They were all native sons and the arâ€" gument was entirely friendly. "It‘s ‘showâ€"fir,‘" declared one. _ "Never,‘ insisted another; "it‘s ‘chawâ€" The discussion was over the proper pronunciation of the word "chauffeur," says the San Francisco Chronicle. d of these p.t‘. Abernethy was, : Should Appeal to Subordinates. Thrifty, at Any Rate. (Berlin Telegraph.) Her Choice of Prayer. Liniment nieg by Physicians. SIX SHORT STORIES. THE JOKERS OF THE WEELK Doctors Who Were Ready. ding to the British Medical Jourâ€" ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Too High for Him. I got to get up?" True dignity is really frock coat and a high hat. Fellow Sufferers * (Philadelphia Record.) "Excuse me, sir," remarked the weary wayfarer, "but I don‘t know where my next mealâ€"is coming from. "Neither do I," replied the prosperousâ€"looking indiâ€" vidual. +"My. cook left this morning, Scenery on the Rahâ€"Rah Boy. Every city sshool has its "dressy" boys who affect the bizarre and the ridiculous with the object of attracti attention, which, by the alchemy ?:S egregious selfâ€"estcem, they Sransmute into imaginary admiration. _ We all know the rahâ€"rah boy. He is the boy who wears the turnedâ€"up peg trousers that strike him above the ankle, thereâ€" by displaying hosiery that fairly shrieks. His coat is padded to give athletic breadth to his shoulders and a safety pin of familiar domestizs design holds ths soft collar in place. But his hatâ€" or that which passes for a hatâ€"is the crowning badge of adolescent dotage. It‘s a flabby felt, of any color, but with a section turned up for rakish effect, and the whole costume is set off by the hat band, which is a weird and astonâ€" ishing circlet of prismatic strata like the: crest of a scariet flamingo.â€"Kansas ‘ City Journal. "Nonsense! Two hours of sleep after you‘re called in the morning are worth more than anything else."â€"Philadelphia Press. Ask for Minard‘s and take no other. Best Sleep of All. "I see that an eminent physician deâ€" clares that two hours of sleep before midnight are worth more than six after that hour." Manufacturers of machinery and tools for irrigation ditches, drainage ditches and other land improvements report a remarkable and unparalleled volume of business. They cater to a wide demand which is steadily growing greater. They are in touch with the forehandedness and enterprise of the farmers who have prospered so much that they ae able to put much money into the betterment of their property. It will not do to estiâ€" mate the possibilitiese of American agriâ€" culture by its past or measure its future by the records of years gone by. There will be constant enrichment and improveâ€" ment _ and increased _ productiveness throughout the country. â€" Cleveland Leacer. Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. Spanking does not cure children of bedâ€"wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Sumâ€" mers, Box W. 8, Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send no money but write her toâ€"day if your children trouble you in this way. Don‘t blame the child, the chances are it can‘t help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by day or n‘cht. One of the animal curiosities of South America is the "oil bird," or guacharo. It breeds in rocky caves on the mainland and one of its favorite haunts is the Island of Trinidad. It lays its eggs in a nest made of mud, and the young birds are prodigiously fat. The natives melt the fat down in clay pots, and produce from it a kind of butter. The caves inâ€" habited by the birds are usually accessiâ€" blo only from the sea, and the hunting of them is sometimes an exciting sport. No Offence. First Stranger (on train)â€"Do you ever quarrel with your wife? Second Strangerâ€"Never. First Strangerâ€"Have any â€" trouble with the hired girl? Second Strangerâ€"Not me. First Strangerâ€"Donw‘t your children worry you at times? Second Strangerâ€"No, indeed. First Strangerâ€"Say, I don‘t like to call you a liar, butâ€"â€" Second Strangerâ€"Oh, that‘s all right. I‘m a bachelor.â€"Chicago News. 1 "Bought out a college fellow," was the complacent reply. "Just think how pleased that little girl will be when she sees all this truck and HMttle thinks how much wickedness she has won me away from!"â€"Harper‘s Weeklv. "Great Scott, Jack!" the last visito gasped, "where did t t â€"ou ga T , you get this outfit is reached. He has always been a quiet, studious fellow, but as r«;fitted the room gives the eppearance of the loungi place of a regular rounder. Tbu:g::'-g racks of long pipes, E:otognplu of acâ€" tresses are stuck about the chimney glass, a shelf of beer steins runs all the way around the room and a few feminâ€" ine gloves, handkerchiefs and fans are scattered about. «â€" SOLD BY â€" DRUCCISTS, CROCERS anp CENERAL STOREs 100. por packet, or 3 packets for 250. will last a whole season. FLY > PADS "â€"= Has Saved Him. There is a man in Pittsburg who will be married in a short while and will ocâ€" cupy the house a few rooms of which he has used during his bachelor days. He takes the greatest pleasure in showing his intimate friends about the place and is especially delichted at the astanish . is especially delighted at the astonishâ€" ment they express when his own "den" Wants to Show Her From What She What Trade Owes the Farmer. BETTER THAN SPANKING South American Oil Birds WILL GIVE FIANCEE PROOF. Harper‘s Weekly. killed a bushel Sokerâ€"I won $50 from Bings last night playing poker. Jokerâ€"Why, does Bings know how to play poker? Sokerâ€"Not yet.â€"Lippincott‘s. The average English girl of the upper class starts life hopelessiy slack and inâ€" different. In her more or less sheltered easy life she has no particular interests, no opinions, no temptations. The only excitement of her life is her marriage, and even that she takes very mildly.â€" Ladies‘ Field. Mange, Prairie Seratches and every form or contagious Itch on human or animals cured in 30 minttes by Wolford‘s Sanitary Lotion. it never fails. Sold by druggists. "Two Mormon boys went to scbool for the first time out in Utah," relates Conâ€" gressman J. Adam se>e, "and the teach er asked them their names,. . "‘John and William Smith,‘ the boys replied. S‘ops L"uï¬aï¬â€˜dfl Makes puny babies im U B o Hmcintal Colic use, Ask your anggie Nurses‘ «24 Mothers‘ Treasure dollars w:;th of ;ime by curing lameness escription. At d.alen?o?fmm 12 Natlonal Drug & Chemical Co., Limited, Buy a bottle of Proprietor Roxton ery Stables. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited If Sir Boyle Roche were might again take occasio that so long as Ireland r under oppression England deaf to Her cries â€"Rngtan Fellows‘ Leeming‘s Essence may happen at any moment. _ GE'E RggeQY fot’emergendel. Only 50c. a bottleâ€"and saves For Lameness in Horses 20 PC TR UHTC i!l"]".r. u From frozen wastes of po To deserts hot and sandy, He makes the world a better plac Our hearts go out to Andy. Where molten steel Hke water flo The flaming foundries write The story of his charities Upon the skies at night, And paeans in his praise will fill The capital of coke, Till Pittsburg furis forevermore Its bannerets of smoke, All ‘bail the laind of Skibo, then! He may not be a dandy, But he‘s a generous gentlemanâ€" Our hearts go out to Andy. limve cause to bless his nam And colleges and libraries Perpetuate his fams. He epeaks for universal peace From mountainâ€"top to wave, And never fails to well roward The gallant and the Srave. Marriage the Only Excitement T Twins on the Father‘s Sid:. Merely a Learner Yet What Sir Boyle Roche were still alive TCPRA sSsion England will remain cries.â€"Boston Herald. take occasion to obt Boyle Would Say. FIF TD C ERTITET TN Ireland remains silent Oe 00 C / eRMRRE remark knew. When the doctor came in the other morning the lad piped up! "Say, I want something to eat. I‘m tired of taking nourishment."â€"Bcoston Herald. Lady of the Houseâ€""You say you would like me to do a little sewing for yout" he Sign of Convalescence. The small boy had been very ill, but he was on the convalescent list, to the family‘s great joy, and this is how they knew. When the doctor camea in #ha ail * Altogether the lot of a census inspecâ€" tor is by no means a happy one, and it cannot be wondered at that many of them fight shy of the job. The task reâ€" quires no end of tact, patience and perâ€" suasive power, and considering the diffiâ€" culties in the way and the fact that the inspectors are empowered to hale recalâ€" citrant inhabitants before the nearest magistrate or mamour, it speaks volâ€" umes for the able manner in which the inspectors have tackled their delicate task that very few cases have been reâ€" ported. cile (On the other hand, the women, unlike their western sisters, do not consider age a thing to be ashamed of, and unâ€" blushingly admit, in some cases, ten years more than possibly is their age. The harems have been another obstacle to the completeness of the census, and in many instances the inspectors have had warm quarters of an hour with the surly and unwilling eunuchs who guard those portions of the Easterrer‘s domiâ€" LHâ€" Of course in a number of cases the naâ€" tives, not understanding the cause, reâ€" sent this intrusion, and some of the inciâ€" dents have been most awkward. Moreâ€" ever, yvery few of the fellaheen really know their ages, their idea of time being fixed by events. Thus one man‘s reply to the questioner was that he was a boy working in his fathers‘ field when Alexâ€" andria was bombarded, and another that he remembered seeing the "malika franâ€" sawiya," evidently the Empress Eugenie, at the opening of the Suez Canal. | To begin with, as the illiterate class is large, it is manifestly impossible to get [the forms filled in, writes a Cairo correâ€" spondent of the Pall Mall Gazette, So the Government has had to nominate an army of inspectors, who have been going from house to house and have powers to penetrate to the inner departments in orâ€" der to obtain full details. A Delicate Task in Egyptâ€"Discovering ’ Secrets of the Harem. _ The country for the last few days has been going through a series of questions and answers. It is the pericd of the deâ€" cennial census. â€" At home the taking of the census is a comparatively easy matâ€" ter. Every householder has his or her sheet to fill up on a certain night and the collector fetches it on his rounds, and there the matter ends. _ But in Egypt there are insuperable difficulties in the wayof such simple methods. i Removes all hard, soft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ringbone, sweeney, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, eowlu, etc. Save $50 by use of one bottle. Warâ€" ranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure ever known. Sold by druggists. There is no better preparation for good citizenship that regular employment in honest labor, even if it does not acquire the habit of walking with head always erect and learn the art of the scientific destruction of human life. Until human nature develops a uniformity of good inâ€" tentions such as mankind lias never yet wossessed it will always be necessary for lhe well disposed to maintain an organâ€" ized force strong enough to prevent vioâ€" lence by the ill disposed, and if they fail to do so the penalty will be terrible. But the nation which is content with its own boundaries and has no intent to prey on its neighbors may safely confine its miliâ€" tary expenditure to a maximum, for it will not be moilested.â€"San Francisco Chronicle. ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT __Get within four or five pounds either way of your correct weight for your height. Get the body, by degrees, into the best physical condition, but never make the process an absorbing pursuit. t All injurious habits, all use of alcohol, all overâ€"strain of body and mind should be resolutely broken off. off. vjf‘ry to be able to eat and drink anyâ€" thing, but in practice exercise a strict moderation. But at forty much may be done to secure long life if the will be thore. In food, do not diet. If anything disâ€" agrees eat less of it ratherthan cut it He owes to these his gross overâ€"feedâ€" ing, his silly habit of inhaling tobacco sm:k‘e. his overâ€"strained eyes. _ C The man of forty from the point of view of health is usually the victim of the infernal trinityâ€"ignorance, carelessâ€" ness and selfâ€"indulgence. eY . Some Suggestions as Set Down by & DIFFICULT CENSUS TAKING. has taken hold of my customers."‘ ‘‘They say it makes lighter ‘tastier, egflet'-xnined Biscuits and Cakes than any other they ever National Dru 2s of Canada, L used ! * StL George‘s Baking Powder The Army of Industry. WHEN A MAN‘S FORTY. | Send for our new Cookâ€"Bookâ€" free, 'f & Chemical Co, imited. Montreal Montreal l A Plutocrat on Plutocrats, (Canadianâ€"American, Chicago.) *"The whirling of time bromgs in its reâ€" wenges." The lHearst nowspapers find their raison d‘etre in the undue accumulation of wealth by anybody but Hearst, and their editors‘ work consists mainly in making life meournful for the bloated puitocrat by their daily objurgations. And now tae gentloman sent hbere by Hearst to ‘"‘run‘" Chicago is bimself in the toils of tne law, charged with conspiracy to form a trust. ‘This is enough to make Jim Ham Lewis weep. CHIPMANâ€"HOLTON KMITTING C0., Mire LElvod Tomc and Mira Ointment are also A mrrabnie on from P e Cheminie C 7}&.@“ * Co. e ied Tablets are to be had. They 'fluu..a es oanp e ie ues o L well werth living. 50c. aâ€"bozâ€"6 bozes, $2.50. "There‘s other flowers, too, that change. There‘s the cheiranthus chamâ€" cleo, that shifts from white to yellow and from yellow to red. There‘s the gladiolus versicolor, that‘s brown in the morning and blue in the evening. There‘s the coleaea scandens, that moves slowly from greenish white to a deep violet."â€" From the New Orleans Timesâ€"Democrat. Pahios: tos mos ared have thees :s Srap at TheE. B. EDDY CO HULL L â€"_ . _ digencies in all principal cities, ~~ "The bed by the hedge is the lantana. The lantana is yellow one day, orange the next and red the third. Its changes are slow. ‘"The one to the right is hibiscusâ€"hibâ€" iscus mutabilis. It goes through three changes in the day, from white in the morning to rose at noon and to red at sunset. !ltlmondd:-footnm.hmm‘brmhfluu an mlï¬h'dhdmmwҠI‘ NC ‘ GET OURPRiICES . _ ; "But I didn‘t know that any flowers changed their color." "Oh, yes. That bed you first mentionâ€" ed is the mutable phiox. At sunrise it is blue, and in the afternoon it is pink. _ FLOWERS THAT CHANGE COLORS. A SALLOW SKIN A Special Offer -IChCSS and Priscilla M]&,hm Strong as Gibraitar _ Limait of Strength PriMCESS Feyptna Li For Children‘s Fine Drem Little Darling ans Little PCt For Infaes: Lambe" Wool and Siik Tigs All Woo! 'houooloqw“'“- a Trade by the Kendall‘s Spavin Cure If Your Horse Gets Hurt? _ ought to be in every stable and barn in Canada. It prevents little horse troubles from becomini big onesâ€"and takes away all signs of lameness. With a bottle of Kendall‘s Spavin Cure handy, you are prepared for accidents that may happen at any time. If one of the horses should be kickedâ€"cut a kneeâ€"strain a shoulder â€"go lameâ€"have you the remedy at hand to CURE the injury ? Miss Valons, Instructor P. 0. BOX @1 BVUNOCOASL, OMT. ASK YTOUR DEALER FOR IMPERVIOUS SHEATHING TRADE MARK AEGISTEALO, o LIMITED, HAMiLToN, ontario, "What do you mean here, b . ota." "Bathing .iiu." r They vatl Bbe sbbreviatec year. this y® -â€"Wn"l'qm Herald. wâ€"â€"â€"â€"~~â€"@@G _ 4 mwu“wml- with horees or a steamboat explosion and probably an equal proportion of reâ€" wards. While the public must be amused there must be someone to amuse it, but the hard fact of the business is to supâ€" ply of omu;eu f: exceeds the demand and the majorit: stage yoarring girle will meet hothing but hardeblps* whan they try to embrace histrionic are or its amusing kJindrel â€"IMWbu@g m But there is excitement in a runaway ple warning that life on the stage is not all, planudits and roses, Those who read understandingly may know it is a hard life, full of disappointments to most of its votaries. There is excitement, it is between a "You knew he was & DuUIg!iar WhCn you married. him?" "Yes." "How did you come to contract a maâ€" trimonial alliance with such a man*" "Well," the witness said, sarcasticalâ€" mqnffldduduwdoou between a lawyer and a burglar." Hard Life on the Stage. ‘The daily prints are not without amâ€" Do.m WANT DMIVERED FRI PIANO FOR 81457 uxd 4er Sret Hiearnted cutuioges. _ _ WV Limited CANADA "Yes." m.-mnv&v-hthm x, and the prosecuting attorney was a cake. 3 for ase. Both a tollet scap and medicated seapâ€"for the price of une. Only ree, is just Witchâ€"Hazel and pure VEGETABLE cils. Hazel is._heals cutr and scratches â€"soothes chaking and skin | "Royal Crown" Witchâ€"Hazel Toilet Soap Lawyer vse. Burgler. Following Suit. and lining pur