Washington County news. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1903-1911, November 15, 1906, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    „eral Debility
COLOR SENSE IN ANIMALS.
, j aj oat there Is that feeling
¡oakes a burden of Itselt
not strengthen.
, tot refresh.
" " j w do, hard to bear, what
*
-vitality Is on the ebb, and
“ *?ystem suffers.
condition take
••««...ed ,o High Degree by
A h
hr
B i r d ..
A hypothesis that the sense of colors
Mrs. Flora Annie Steel
1 » new novel and especially by bird, tarnished
idy^r ^ ta ^ ltto n me* S° Vere‘ 8n « ™ - and f i n d*0“ 6 ° f the moat » « » t l i a l
sexual , ‘h! Darw,n,an
Hieorles
T he author herself l^ e M ^ th !, ' Vules- of
of sexual selection.
No Darwinist
o f which she writes.
regloD
doubt, that the brilliant colors of male
Mark Twain was once asked hv
birds are to attract the attention o f the
ox blood and gives vigor and
charming girl to u ,it„
awted “ T a
autotrr.nl,
^ t b . organ, and functions.
| a
u t o g r ^ t U
o n..............e
um ’
7 something
“ **“ “ « In her " " i i ' ™ » ’ ■“
W W —
1 liquid form or in chocolated through the .u ó ^
Lu,1Jurl*t looked
d’s Sarsaparilla
ss r,'“"1.“.. -
—
i
“ »>«*. a «* let who will h f c l e v ^
jgeee.aurllr.
11 hen he took u t>eu wi-1,1 "V
r’
-lAtt»—The oculist charged you $3 u lie” and signed his name ' T h i / Í !
» F » in oi •*n<1 out o f y ° ut carefully dried with th (
fb
be
f t ’. P-tty steep, isn’t It?
| which he
after
^ley—I thought so. till I looked keep In practice
* ’ 8-~ txeept t0
lu í
I f was
w i iv for
f n r ‘ ‘ removing
p p m o v in o - a
m
1
1-3, bill.
It
jubstance from the cornea,’ and of
General A. W. Greeley, Arctic ex
¡¡i,t costs more.______
Plorer, for many years chtof signal m '
cer o f the United States army and at
A d v e r tis e m e n t« .
jnt newspaper advertisem ent preseut In charge of the Pacific divis­
^ | d Great Britain in 1642. In ion. with headquarters at Sau Frau-
Advertising was done by public
The first printed advertisem ent
¿Mil was got up by the celebrat-
jter Caxton. It announced the
of a book called “T h e Pyer
jisbury.
ancient Egyptians, G reeks and
Lg vere the first to use
blIl­
ia tome of which w ere foun d on
, of buildings In I’om pell. It
(ti until the eighteenth century
¡¡ifjzlne and newspaper adver-
i became the recognized medium
M manufacturer aud buyer.
jfiviU And M r-. W in s lo w ’ s S o o t h i n g
.b lit remedy to u se f o r t h e ir c h i ld r e n
Hi loathing p er io d .
C trbln a
n a p tir e .
Lover— Blanche, you are the
girl In the world !
, Intellectual Sweetheart— While I
that such a remark as that Ger-
|based on inadequate knowledge,
loosed to regard it as indicating the
Uiiire and scope of your acquaint-
-tb the world thus far, and as auch
git it and hasten to express my
i appreciation.
Father a n d S o n .
her,” said the college mnn, on
in to the farm , “ I believe I ’ ll
jin at home during vacation
1 but seek some secluded glade
Mt my weary brain w here the
e twineth.”
t,” «turned the prosaic father,
stay right here an’ git all th’ se­
ll ’at’s necessary, an’ y ’ c ’ n rest
tber tired brains outen th’ hnr-
|kld, where the good tw ine blnd-
Tolcdo Blade.
t Vitus’ hanre nnfl all N erv ou s Diseases
itmanently cured b y Dr. K lin e ’ s U rie l
htorer. Send fur F R E E |2 trial bottle and
> K R Klin , Ld. #31 A r c h St.. P h il»., !■«.
Sever In Dayllicht.
it!" snapped the com plaint clerk
)P» office. “ You say you are s l­
athered wth poor ligh t?”
! no! not alw ays,” replied the
un.
, it I suspected. You only no-
then at certain times, eh ?”
limljf after dark.” — Philadelphia
r iH lI r lt e il T e s t i m o n i a l .
i engaged herself to five or six
jien at that summer resort,” said
1 vith the blue earrings. “ I don’ t
't was right, do you ?”
i not," answered the girl with
' made complexion, “ but poor,
was determined they shouldn’ t
® escape her this time.”
HOO Reward, $100.
iersol this paper will be pleased te
“ mere is at least one dreaded disease
«ce has been able to cure In all iti
ku ow ^ M
eternity. Catarrh being aconstltu-1
i. , ’ , ‘!n8 prepared a ‘ 'Handbook of
I olar Discoveries,” which Little. Brown
& Go., Bostou, will issue. This book
will contain a resume of Polar explor­
ations from the earliest voyages to the
present time, and Is based upon his
earlier "Handbook o f Arctic Discov­
eries.
The muterial has been brought
tip to date and a summary has been
added to the noteworthy achievements
o f adventurers In the frozen North
within the ten years that have elapsed
since It was published.
Booth Tnrkingtou, the author o f “The
Conquest o f Canaan,” and other popu­
lar novels, Is known among hig friends
as somewhat of a practical joker. A
good story o f his Princeton days is re­
lated In the Bookman. The managing
editor o f the Nassau Literary Magazine
at that time was a person who took
himself and his literary responsibilities
with portentious seriousness. He was
wont to deplore the lack o f suitable
material at his disposal, and to speak
In accents o f emphatic scorn of the
quality o f the submitted contributions
from which he was supposed to make a
periodical worthy of the senior class.
One day he found In his letter box a
poem which moved him to more than
usual disgust. “ See here,” he snorted,
contemptuously, to a group o f which
Tarkiugton was on e; "this is what
some fool freshman sends in aud calls
poetry. How am I going to make a
magazine out o f stuff like this! How
am I, I ask?” “Oh, th at!” spoke up
Tarkiugton. “ Yes, I sent that in my­
self.”
“ So you wrote it, did you?”
growled the managing editor. “ No,”
said Tarkiugton, sweetly, “ I didn’t
write it, I only copied it. It was writ­
ten by Tennyson.”
^ I T J S c h U i S , ii," its°curativ€ ed In their hostess' latest tome! Ito
toUcur“ Un8.'?d t e U r t Port does not say whether the masks
“ ’»li.
* saved the wearer» faces, but the iaupu-
^ C H E N E Y A CO., Toledo, Q. ter
([,1s supreme effort provoked
was happily undisguised.
Prank, at b « a a t .
A DYING GIRL’S VISION.
1 looking Gent— Friends, I am
funds to push the m issionary T h e D e n t h p l i . e e o f H er F ath er » « «
R e v e a le d .
foreign lands, am ong the be-
An unusually interesting Instance of
f'Wben, and It Is you r prlvl-
“ second sight” is reported from Ac­
In the grent work. Any
crington, Lancashire. A young woman
* 110 matter how sm all, w ill be
on her deathbed not only announced
her father’s death, but described the
’t you?
L
a,tracted
‘ b o * colors,
break the fruits from the trees or
Plant, carrj’ them off ,n d thus indirect­
ly assist In the dissemination o f the
seeds which they contain over large
tract, of land. And tbit function of
selection on the part of animal, pre­
supposes in them a certain aense of
color. Still, scientific documents In sup-
“ ¡f 8« hypotheses are rare.
Dahl, alluding to the scarcity of them
In an article in a recent number o f the
Naturwlssenahaftllche Wockenschlft, re-
la' f u lsome Interesting experiments
which he made with a monkey. He col­
ored some sweets with a certain colored
ve and some bitter substances with
that of another color and declares that
after a few attempts the monkey learn­
ed to leave without even tasting these
articles of food colored with the dye
which indicated bitter-tasting sub­
stances and seized at once upon those
which Indicated sweets.
Varying the experiments sufficiently,
he found that the monkey distinguished
nil the different colors readily save
only dark blue. Dahl calls attention to
the fact that Mayer has stated that
many savage tribes cannot distinguish
dark blue from black and that even
children do not distinguish this color
until later than all others.— Scientific
Am erican._________________
H ow J a rrin g !
A story Is told of a certain candidate
who was defeated for the nomination
at the first primary. He Is not the best
penman and his chirographs belong to
the Horace Greely school. He had oc­
casion to write a confidential letter to
a friend In SL Petersburg, and later
called upon him to see If he had execut­
ed his desires.
“ Did you get my letter? Could you
read it?” was his greeting.
“ I got It all- right,” replied the man,
“ and didn’t have any trouble with any
o f it except the postscript. That stuck
me. Showed It to everybody in town
—same result; they all read the letter,
but fell down on the postscript’
“ Great guns,” he gasped, "the post­
script says, ‘Don’t let anybody see this
Not long ago a writer o f modern letter!” ’— St. Petersburg Independent.
"fam e” called on u journalistic ac­
Cant S te e l.
quaintance aud proposed that he write
The first steel castings made In this
some bright, bitter, epigrammatic par­ country were railroad-crossing frogs,
agraphs attacking the author's latest made in 1807 from crucible steel of
novel. “ Why in the world should you about the same hardness as tool steel,
w ant me to do that?” inquired the as­ with a smooth surface, but honey­
tonished journalist. “ For business rea­ combed throughout, and far from per­
sons,” was the calm reply. “ My re­ fe ct The Improved Bessemer processes
views have been very favorable, but the were not lu successful use until fifteen
book doesn't seem to be going as well or twenty years later.
Now almost any shape which can be
as my last, and I think some hot shot
would do it good.” It is no exaggera­ in gray or malleable Iron can be made
For large and small
tion to say that the high road to liter­ In cast steel.
ary fame Is well-night deserted. But marine castings, and in car and loco­
the short cuts are so crowded that the motive work, cast steel Is taking the
adventurers bump oue another at every place o f cast, malleable, and wrought
step. Itumor has it that oue aspirant Iron, for many large and small parts
for Immortality personally visits every from couplers, journal boxes and
book stall in the large cities aud pre­ wheels to rods, truck frames, and loco­
sents an autograph copy to the chief motive frames.
salesman before his volume is market-
e d ; another makes it his business to
Procure testimonials from public char-
acters on every book he oners, and a
years ago a fancy dress bail was
stlf upon the blood and mucoui given lu Washington by an author
pa* j whose guests were actually requested
®tth by building up the constitution »« impersonate the characters portray-
' *®dj Pilla are the beat.
Wallace has asserted that to the fact
hat certain plants bear fruit of bril
ant color. 1. due their preservation;
father’s death not being known to any
0-O h. yes. I have taken In 1 body at the time. The manit a
•«««* to Pay my salary this tlon was Isaac Marsdeu’
w ho lived in Stevenson street peering
ton. HU daughter. 23 years old. had
“ tt’hst If yon get m ore than
been wasting away with consumption
■ four salary?
"My son,” said the strict mother at
the end o f a moral lecture, ” 1 want you
to be exceedingly careful about your
conduct Never, under any circum­
stances, do anything which you would
be ashamed to have the whole world
see you do.”
The small boy turned a handspring
with a whoop o f delight
‘ What In the world is the matter
with you? Are you crazyV demanded
the mother.
’No’ m.” was the snswer. "I'm Jes’
so glad that you don't spec me to take
no baths never any more.”
W ill Help« Sailor«.
A will o f the late Lord Iverclyde,
chairman o f the Cunard Company,
dated March 20, 1901. and believer to
be his la s t left all his property to th«
widow. But a later will, dated Nov.
9. 1902, has been found In a handbag
In his London office, by which $1,500.00C
is left to seamen's charities In Glas­
gow, Liverpool, Manchester, Belfast
New York and Boston.
h ‘ / T 68 b“ ck a cb e-
headaches, dim ness,
languor and distress-
tog urinary troubles.
Keep the kidneys well
h v ‘ this e v e n t
and all these suffer- said.
mgs will be saved yon. I About an
»■ -.
8.
A.
On S a tu rd a y she to ld
t lJ e w to were at her bedside that sbe
b" :
her flltber’. form,
had " * wlll flnd bis body in the water
I
100
,,
oswaldtwistle,” she
at Aspen bridge, Oswa
Moore, dleil.
•
Miss Marsden
found In
„
U„
proprietor of a res- ; the canal at ti
^
htër% - U > ° * » 0,117 M* ‘ L
tail rant at Waterville, Hb. L L
Me., says:
“ Before
using Doan’ s Kidney
. j. Pills I suffered every-
,’t that singular’ ”
, fey troubles for s year
I had pain in the back! “ W asn1 " “‘" ' ¡ ¿ % If,rolned the rail
r * 1"most continuous in the tleman Ml!eu
h ^ bad Just pur-
^ • « r y .11 the time.
A
way tlckeU which
<1 u!inX Kidn®y P iI,i brooght
chase<1'
n St the window was act
i itii™ * bept on taking them
"Tbe man
. didn't seem to
1 *ws cured.
I
unll.v po'“ *-
„ t0 want to
Sidney Pill* are wonder- think it Imp*^
1 r h l f 1°
.
| ride on this road. -Chicago
dealers.
50 cents s
• ‘‘hum Co., Buffalo, N. Y .
Herald.
The very name, Contagious Blood Poison, suggests contamination and dread. I t is tho
worst disease the world has ever known; responsible for more unhappiness and sorrow than
all others combined. Nobody knows anything about the origin of this loathsome trouble^
but as far back as history goes it has been regarded tbe greatest curse of mankind.
No part of tbe body is beyond the reach of this powerful poison. No matter liow pure
the blood may be, when the virus of Contagious Blood Poison enters, the entire circulation
becomes corrupted, the humiliating symptoms begin to appear, aud the sufferer finds himself
diseased from head to foot with the vilest and most destructive of all poisous.
U su a lly
the first symptom is a small sore or ulcer, so insignificant that it rarely ever excites
suspicion, but in a short while the skin
Dear Sirs :— I had a friend who had a bad case o f Oon-
breaks out iii a red rash, the glands of the tagious
Blood Poison and was In a terrible condition. H o
groin swell, the throat and mouth ulcerate, tried all the mediolnes he oould hear of, but. nothing did
him
any
H e went to Hot Springs but it w a s Ilk*
the hair and eye-brows come out, and often the other good.
treatments he Lad used, and he w as in despair
the body is covered with copper-colored o f a cure when he heard of S. 8 . S. After taking it for
awhile the sores all healed, his hair stopped tailing out,
spots, pustular eruptions aud sores.
and. continuing with it, he soon found himself cured en ­
There is hardly any limit to the rava­ tirely of this hideous disease.
JOH N L E S L IE ,
Rook ford, 111.
719 W . State S t.
ges of Contagious Blood Poison; if it is not
driven from the blood it affects the nerves,
I w as afflloted with Blood Poison, and the best doaw
tors did me no good, though I took their treatment faith­
attacks the bones, and in extreme cases fully.
In fact I seemed to get worse all the while. I tools
causes tumors to form on the brain, pro­ almost every so-called blood remedy, but they did not
to reach the disease, and had no effeot whatever. I
ducing insanity and death. No other dis­ seem
was disheartened, for It seemed that I would never be
ease is so highly contagious; many ail inno­ cured. At the auvioe of a friend I then took 3 . S. 8 . and
to improve. I continued the medicine, and It cured
cent person has become infected by using the began
me completely.
W . R. N EW M AN .
same toilet articles, handling the clothing, by
H am let, N . C .
a friendly handshake or the kiss of affection
from one afflicted.
But no matter how tbe disease is contracted, tlie sufferer feels the
humiliation and degradation that accompany the vile disorder.
Mercury and Potash are commonly used in the treatment of Contagious Blood Poison,
but these minerals cannot cure the disease— they merely mask it in the system.
A ll ex­
ternal evidences m ay disappear for awhile, but the treacherous poison is at work on the internal
members and tissues, and when these minerals are left off the disease returns worse than
before, because the entire system has been weakened and damaged by the strong action of the
Mercury and Potash. There is but one certain, reliable cure for Contagious Blood Poison,
and that is S. S. S., tlie great vegetable blood purifier. It attacks the disease in the righ t
way by going down into the blood, neutralizing and forcing out every particle of the poison.
It makes the blood pure and rich, strengthens the different parts of the body, tones up the
system, and cures this humiliating and destructive disorder permanently.
T h e improvement commences as soon as the patient gets under the influence of S . S . S .
and continues until every vestige of the poison is driven from the blood and the sufferer
is completely restored to health. S. S. S . is not
an experiment; it is a success.
It has cured
thousands of cases of Contagious Blood Poison,
m any of which had given the M ercury and
Potash treatment, Hot Springs, etc., a thor­
ough trial, and had almost despaired of ever
being well again. S. S. S. is made entirely
of roots, herbs and barks, and does not in­
jure the system in the least. W e offer a
reward of $1,0 0 0 for proof that it contains a particle of mineral of any kind.
If you
are suffering with this despicable and debasing disease, get it out of your blood with S . S . S .
before it does further damage. W e will gladly send our book with instructions for self­
treatment and any medical advice, without charge, to all who write.
PURELY VEGETABLE
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA, GA,
PUTNAM
FADELESS
DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye.
One 10c package colors silk, wool and cotton equally well and la
guaranteed no give perfect results.
Ask dealer, or we will send post paid at 10c a package.
Write for free booklet how to d y e .
»leach and mu colors.
MONROE DRUG CO., Unionville. Missouri.
“20-MULE-TEAM”
BORAX SOAP
Contains Pure Borax, Nature’s Cleanser
and Whitener, hence makes clothes
snowy white, hygienically clean and will
not injure the finest fabrics, shrink flan­
nels or cause colors to run.
SAVES HANDS, CLOTHES, LABOR
A M # G R O C R R f l . Free Sam ple fbr top from
pound carioon
Mule-Team B orax and dealer’s
name, your name and add res* and 5 cen h , mampfl,
Including 3 -' page booklet and Souvenir I* d u re ,
7x14in 10. olors K K F .k AiMrean P A C IF IC C O A 81
11UKAX C O M P A N Y , Oakland, Cal.
HOLD UP!
and consider
r i 3 H P O M M E L
knd S L IC K E T I
LIKE ALL
T O W f^
WATERPROOF
CLO TH ING.
Is m ade of the best
mdienals. n biac« w/ellow
lultt iMMitlfedand »Id ^
reliable dealers everywhere.
JTICKTOTHL
SION OF THE FISH
'W
®
Tt—T# CAMAgUJ*
JUTOWI. CO
ToaOMTQ. CAH,_______ MrTOq.nm.uiZ .
A Good Book for Six Cents.
It describes your own land, tbe im­
mediate region yon live in, tbe North­
west. It costs bnt the postage required
to mail it. It is printed on the best of
paper, is profusely illustrated, is tnll
of inforrra’ ion. It is rn table for yonr
borne, for schools or libraries. It ìb a
nice souvenir to send to yonr friends in
the Fast. It tells of Yellowstone park,
the Bitterroot mountains in Monhtana,
tb Qneniut Indians on the North P •
ctfic coast, tbe Colombia river scene y
tbe marvelous Puget eonnd region, a..d
Alaska. It will lie sent to anv address
for six cents.
The book is “ Worde •
land 1906,” published by the Northern
Pacific railway, and is for general dis­
tribution. Send six cents to A. M.
Cleland, general passenger age it, S .
Paul, Minnesota, cr as many times six
cents as you wish copies with proper
addresses and the little volnroe will be
promptly fot warded by that gentleman.
Don’ t wait. Tbe book has an object—
to educate and inf irm the public about
the Northwest.
Help it perform its j
mission.
L ondon
r iin v e y n n e e n .
’ Buses and ca r» cease running In
London at 12:30 a. in., anil one o f the
-easona why tbe labor men In tbe House
o f Commons w ant earlier sittings is
that they have no autos o r brougham s
and cannot afford calm, so w ould have
to walk home in all weathers if the
house sat late.
CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING
Portland Trade Direciory
Names and Addresses in Portland of Repre­
sentative Business Firms.
CHI. AM MKl’ AK A ToltH — We guaraniev I lie U. 8k
Heparator to be tin-lient. Writs lur frws i-aiaius.
Hazelwood Co., Fifth and Oak.
P IA N O S A O R G A N S —M any line Instrum ents ra»
v»Tt to us account r ckness or rem oval o f b u y e r
W rite for descr pilou o f p auo* now on liuo.k,
term «, etc. W rite today.
U iloerl C«x, l ’o n la m l
GASOLENE ENGINES ,
, non-
p o w e r fu lly w a r ra n te d , fl£>.
A ll Nixes a u d
st) les at lo w e s t p rices. W rite for c a t a lo g .
KLItRSON MACHINERY COMPANY
Portland. O reg M *
T I
BROS
W. L. D O U G L A S
*3.50&*3.00 Shoes
R E S T IN T H E W O R L D
W I.Douglas $4 Gilt Edge line^
caniotbeequalledatanyprice.
To Shoe /feulera:
W. I„ IxniKlaa’ Job­
bing lionne ia the most
complete In thia country
______ S end f o r CnhiloQ
“ W ith o e t."
for months.
.
About a week ago Mr. Marsden dis-
appeared from borne under mys^terious
clrcunistancs— that Is, no reason was
known for bis going away and nothing
tired b a c k s .
muld be learned of his whereabouts.
have a
great work to do
.....................................Marsden
was deeply distressed
W h en th ey
HUMILIATING - VILE-DESTRUCTIVE
Am the B o y V iew « It.
0—Well, that doesn’ t happen
when It does I apply It on
'•I—Toledo Blade.
7 o H b 00d p u r e ’
CONTAGIOUS BLOOD POISON
Don’t have a falling out with
your hair. It might leave you!
Then what? That would mean
thin, scraggly, uneven, rough
hair. K e e p your hair at home!
Fasten it tightly to your scalp!
You can easily do it with Ayer’s
Hair Vigor. It is something
more than a simple hair dress­
ing. It i* • hair medicine, a
hair tonic, a hair food.
T h . b ^ t kind Of a
“ Sold for over s i i t y y ^ ^ ^
f
IÜ B1NHU.
• FILLS*
_______
T I» German girl who presided over
tbe soda fountain In Heckelmeyer’s
drug store was accustomed to patrons
who did not know tbelr own mlnda, and
ber bablt of thought was difficult to
change.
“I'd like a glase of plain soda,” said
a stout man, entering one day In evi­
dent baste as well as thirst
“You have vanilla, or you have lem­
on?” tranquilly Inquired the young
woman.
"I want plain soda— without alrup.
Didn't you understand me?” asked the
stout man, teatlly.
“ Yas,” and the placid German face
did not change In expression or color.
“ But wat kind of alrup you want him
mltout?
Mltout vanilla, or mitout
lemon V
__________________ _
P n ic tlp a l
P la n .
Mr#. Wlserly— My husband need to
bring a friend home with him for din­
ner occasionally without giving me no­
tice. but I broke him of tbe habit
Mrs. Askltt— How In tbe world did
you manage It?
Mrs.
Wiaerly— By
serving
only
enough dinner for one.
Jfes.
•HOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL fRICKBL
M ^n’« Bhoea, * 6 to tl.fiO . B o y «’ Shoe«. M
to$1.26. W o m e n « lh «a, $4 00 to fl.60.
M .a« s ' Sa C h ild ren '« Shoe*. $2 36 to f 1. 0 0 .
T r y \V. 1«. D o u g in * W o im -r »’ «,
an t)
C h i l d r e n ’ « « h o « « ; f o r s t y le , fit n u d w e a r
t h e y e x c e l o t h e r n ia k c a .
II I could take you Into m y l a r g e
factories at Brockton, Mass..and sh ow
you how carefully W .L . Douglas shoes
are made, you would then understand
why they hold their shape, lit better,
wear longer, and are of greater vslu «
than any other make.
W h . n i » y o u I t v ., yon ca n ->M «ta W . t _
D ougla s ah'—*. H I, IU IM mod p r t c . la mtmmr , d
Ml t h . b o l lo w , w h ich p r o t e c t , you » y .l n a t h i g h
p r ice , and Inferior a h o c«. T n n o
t u t * . Ash y ou r d m le r h r W . I.. lyuuglua ahuae
and InfU t upon hav lo g th em .
F a r t C olor f e e /r f f u to d ; the« wfW o u t mmmr h o w .
W r i t , tor ( l l .a t r . f r d C a ta lo g o l I . P W y h a .
W . L D O K i l - A S . |> rp l
I S . H ra c k fm a . M u «
r . H. U.
W
Nu. 41
H K K w r itin g t o u l . o r t l . e r . p l ,
m e n t io n t h l . p n p e r .
M *