*f'iiJ»»«^«'«IBtJ«.j â- '"^^'fi^^-Hilfft.) *«;i*«ij»«»v. â- â- -iftSWfi*, CTLCHRUmfASCAl aents of, with jonia ;y, 135 xavetSt.I SALEâ€" LAMP Gli ler combined p for sample and l 0x35, A.aprioi,OiitJ SSS,AlSlTia*~" iborttaana and rlni? copy Com a Ameim Pnoe, I OR THE BEST Sl^ In Canada «o-d»y. " cents' leniM. D"" itively Cm«dl It fail. CtoprnM^f^ Sample muled m list, London, Onl QcssIntheaodG" d chance; will IW^ ,r particulaM »lWi«| «iil GIVSiy--j )]i!lil,OO..SlDelM I i«« oMt a feeling of diMatbfac- V-P^lS clnb, although they h»ve ier» »' '"Li to exhibit no signa oat«ide ?*^'*Thi« dis»atisf action had its 'f ^llsctjon of I ffioers and appoint. ^intke"' A Jay or two aftei li"-itteet. A day or two after I»"°7J7 Elder Jaueberry South, !»•« ^I?^neC*bift, Shinbone White, !H'^i!f1tet^ Rights Taylor. Lord ^[je^ioi J â- vVmtergreen Johnaon â- JjijggsMio the muket to talk over ^jtirocB) ne ChewBO offered the "^riDitwehev bin ignominoaily f !(*"'"'• jg President of de Lima-Kiln '^aL we refuse to take part in any •" ^^k'a ot dat clab nntU de rea- rf^°;ffdder Gardner am laid befo' K« were m»de by Shinbone White [^ T„^ S'uggs, asserting that the -fiSwbelmen of spirit mnat as- Tir independence or expect to be *;^_„ ^henama of William Tell iWupani eulogized, and the oon- JTrs MBg revolutionary Bonga and ate jl until a late '^o'l' I* .PBISGISG THE TEAP. L,„ Jir meeting of the club opened at Kthoar Saturday evenfag, with r.°^, Gardner on hand to sound the tri- r So far as appearances went all was â- nd contentment. Every conspirator "his Kit, and no action betrayed that fi, was brewiug. Brother G^dner M.letteriiihwliaid, and was about to r,ome comments when Judge Chewso Kr Chairman, befo' dis heah meetin' Llii any furder, I should like to make ItotiiM Gardner looked at him over his IdiclM in gr«** astonishment, and there *i, boa of excitement throaghout the iLitameetlngof a po'shun of dislolub. View days since," continued the Judge Itni unanimously resolved dat de Presi- j,fcliic!ub should be axed to tender bwignashnn, fur ackshun by de club." MB the Judge sat down silence reigned Uprems that Samuel Shin's chilblains L almost be heard growing. It was a liiiiderclap in a clear sky. "Did I nnderstand you to say how many jsixn war present at dat meetin' 7" asked • Pteiident when the silence had become j.ely painful, â- jidge Cbewao stated the number and gave le names. pAn N seben dissatisfied members, out )i total of 2S4, demand my reslgoashun ' ]fM the President in a voice which had JlBjii-iT edge to it. "Yes, tah I" I'When a majority of dis club frow out a litdtt a new President am wanted," said ther Gardner, "no trouble will be expari- iin securbi' my resignashun. Ssben sben limply repreeent a conspiracy, Dar ^eobylaw to puaish conspiracy, an' I tfore feel justified in takin' de case in my I hands." edescenled the platform and approach- Ithe Judge. The Judge called for his tndi to rally to the standard and die for bat not a man rallied. What f ollow- I fill be blank in the Judge's life.. His I knocked over three stools, broke a |Bip, brought down eighteen lengths of e-plpe and split a door. His head seem- I to bump everything for ten feet around, dlocktofwool went slowly floating to- itlie ceiling. He was finally picked np i given a lift through the door leading to letlley, and after the last bumpety-bnmp kUieitain had died away Brother Gard- b looked around and asked "Am dar any odder pnsson in dis hall who â- my resignashun!" ' No 1 No " shouted every man lut, hiclnding the six remaining con- Pr»tor», ntun well If any of ye change yer pjUtletoieknoy atde nex' meetin' " "STAXD OBES HEAH." ri think I kin discover de entire gang Mt a mistake," said the President as the Borcsaied "Elder Janebarry Smith, (nay itand ober heah." I'l-I doan' 'zictly like to, sah,"' stam- i^- tie Elder. "Iipecki not, iut I want dem hoofs to iBOTin' Clhigstone Cabifif, Shinbone r^, Sfate Rights Taylor, Lord John â- 8«an' Wmtergreen Johnson wili follow tvou." IHie men dragged themselves to the des- ' pot, each one looking as if he fuUy W to be hung, and when they were i in Ibe Brother Gardner said U3li,T3 1 his de k'rect number. P'raps JJiyoa m^y want to make a state- Jss.sah, I does " answered the five in r, Jp one of the band was ready to turn •*" evidence and peach on the Others. L t ' it came about widout any '|«MlmnB," continued the President. "I " my eye on dees yere chaps for de 'Wee months. Ltj," spring de huU six â- a war counted 'mong our hardest work- '0 man eber heard of one of 'em being ,{7'" OS was sick, an' deir fam'lies had no J*. j°' 8°°d clothes to w'ar. Judge J u^. °e fust to go. Some white man .T.^y it was dat he had to work a »,â- J "^^° o^'ierB didn't hev to do • w dat B,t h;m to thinkin' He was .fjjT'rterdat. I^Mr Smith was workin' far a doUar an' io.tefr*y- Some white man toled him Itiioiiki'y.* ' ^** his boss was grewin' Dffl?^ ^^°°^ "iat be must assert his ^^T' ^^ asserted, an' he heard hs/.. J*P; reckon he hasn't found rEh '""'«â- tol" *** l" owes his present w llsteniu' to the talk of some white IhMryan' sophistry hev bin Yon may hev noticed dat toil D**' '^* way he also hates "• tie will howl dat de rich am poorer, bat he turn de figgers ^J«'em, ' man .44.? for. job to help •^aoein-Vl"'® y«fe dupes, dey mils' fe^^P,'«l«bment altogether. Giveadam 't«etin'°^*° «ee 'em all de doah in back atde ante-room tP«onhi.°^*« 'lipped into the â€" «-» ilil«fi«»!?'"'l«* "oo**. Mid then "kto?!^""**"'"'â„¢*- In each case the •«1 trembled, as if a yoong earth qiMkawaaat«oA,aiid hb bo«ta hadaoiMttiBgtado ' tha A nw WOBDS. J^^^'!i doae ohapa war* op to mmtUn oaaMid falling. "It am de idler whrc«: apirea. It am de dlsooatented who break delawa. WhUe I doan* snspeok dat oonsSr- aoy wentbeyandde pnssens named, I w»ai to say a few words to you aU Demasosnes hev made de workingman believe in^q^r phUosophy and dangerona theoriea to atrike when higher wagea am refoaed. De odder nas seen dat he am at de mercy of employes. JVen when his own men am satisfied some odder g^ng kin oome along an' drive 'em out an keep em out until he am ruined. •'Conunon sense teach s yon dat dis state of ^Aira can't go on a great while lonser. Let a go home. ' THE HfiNDISH BIOUX- Tbe Terrible Mamacrlm Wblrh a Stalwart Soldier Was To.tared by ladlaag. The chief aent for me and gave me to nnderstand that I might go and talk with the prisoner. At the time I took it as a gracious favor, but later on I saw it was only the first step on the program of tor- ture They wanted to torture the poor fellow mentally as well as physically. I at once went over t j him. He was dnst-oover- ed and blood-stained, and evidently half dead of thirst. Before speaking to him I brought him a gourd of water. The vessel held a full quart, and he drained it to the last drop before he looked up. " My God You ara a white man I" he exclaimed, as he saw my face. " Yes, but a prisoner, like yourself." " Oh you will save me, won't you T These infernal devils are going to torture me I" I promised to interfere for his life, though holding out no hope that I conld save It, and tnen asked " What command do yon belons to T" " Gen. Sully's." ' ♦♦ Whw is It '• "I waa captured about twenty mflea from here, and we broke oamp this morn- ing." " Who waa your captain " " Capt. Smith." " What ia yonr name T " He promptly replied to the Iqnery, bat I cannot now recall the name ii waa like Sanlabnry or Slatterly. He had ti^e moat direful forebodinra of the immediate fatore and anxiety aad ill usage liad almoat driven him crazy. He waa a large, stoat man, with black hair and deep black eyes, and had Evidently been in the service for yearn. He might have been termed a game man, hot the fear of tortnre had made a child of him. At his eameat aolicitation I went to aeek the chief, but before I reached the tent a crowd cf warriors seized the prisoner and harried him to a stake driven in the clear space in the centre of tiie village. I saw that I was too late, and started for my lodge, but before I reached it I waa aeized by two bnoka and hurried to the atake and made to ait down on the graaa beside a tub-chief. The head chief had a seat a few feet away, and his countenance expressed the great satisfaction he antici- pated. The soldier's arms were tied be- bind him to the stake, while his legs were left free. Such terror and anguish 1 never saw in a human face before or since. He entreated me â€" he begged of the chief â€" he appealed to the Indiana to aave liim. He ofieredtolM a slaveâ€" a dog â€" to join them and fight the whites â€" to do anything on earth to preserve his life. I was half wild, but dared not even reply to him, while the chief and the spectators mocked him. At a sign from the ohieff the tortnre be- gan. The soldier, as I had neglected to htate, was stripped stark naked. The first move waa to cut a great alice from hia left arm just above the elbow. The pieoe waa held np to view and then thrown to the doga. The man shrieked and shouted, and tugged at his bonds, but while doing so a slice was cut from the calf of his right leg. Blood flowed so freely that I believed he would te a dead man in five minutes. Then his other arm and leg were sliced, and his calls for mercy were answered by tneera and laughter. Then, at brief intervals, the prisoner s ears, nose, and chin were cut off, bis hoAj cut and sla'shed, his toes severed from the foot, and brands of fire held against his legs and body that the braves might see him squirm and dance. Even now, fifteen years after, I grow faint at the thought, and I shudder as I recall his groans and shrieks. As I eat there before him I neither turned my eyes away nor fainted. There was a horrible fascination which I could not shake off, and the feeling was strcng upon me that I would be the next victim. The torture continued for a full hour, during which time the man never fainted once, and there waa sosuroely an instant when he was not pleading and begging for mercy. He was dyed in blood after the first five minutes, j.nd, it ran down untU the ground was satntated, but it was cer- tainly a whole hour before he gave up. Along toward the last, when he showed signs of fainting, the knives wtre appUed to a fresh part and the firebrands thrust against him, when he would revive. At length he fell forward, almost gone, and a wanior stepped forward and scalped hiin. This was » signal to about twenty boys in Wdltina, and they at once rushed in, each one armed with a knife, sad out sai â- lashed and stobbed, until what was left of the poor body resembled a piece of bloady beef. Daring the Antwerp Exhibition, juat oloaed, the pickpockets seem to have had a high old time. An faterestlng document r^erring to the nnraber of **• »'»'*^ wrested within the preomta of the exbiU- tionbaa inat been pnbllahed. .Altogettw 578 men and women have been intemiptea in an untimely manner In the jaxwM of their handicraft. Claaaed by n»onalltt», the BeJgiana ooonpy the place of «»?«'^» 234. but tiiey are mn hard by the Osrnans with 21L Then follow 63 of Dnt^ 35cJ Eogliah, and 14 of Prenoh n»*«»^*?- â„¢' Bniliah offendon were, aa a rale, «f»»»n- a^ attired, and were aU found to be l«^g- S in good hotela. while ^dr oompstotMa of oUier nationaUtiea had to be traced to the alnma of Antwerp, INVALIDS' HOTELeSURGICAL INSTITUTE No. 663 Main street, BIJFFAI«0, N. Y. _. ... â- â- â- IVot a Hospital, but a pleasant Remedial Home, organized with A FULL STAFF OF EIGHTEEN PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, And exclusively devoted to the treatment of all Chronic Diseases. This Imposing Establishment was designed and erected to accommodate the large number of invalids who visit Buffalo from every State and Territory, as well as from many foreign lands, that they may avail themselves of the professional services of the Statf of skilled specialists in medicine and surgery that compose the Faculty of this widely-celebrated institution. NOT AIRWAYS NECESSARY TO SEE PATIENTS. By our original system of diagnosis, we can treat many chronic diseases just as successfully without as with a personal con- sultation. While we are EUways glad to see our patients, and become acquainted with them, show them our institutions, and familiarize them with our system of treatment, yet we have not seen one person in five hundred whom we have cured. The per- fect accuracy with which scientists are enabled to deduce the most minute particulai-s in their several departments, appears almost miraculous, if we view it in the light of the early ages. Take, for example, the electro-magnetic telegraph, the greatest invention of the age. Is it not a marvelous degree of accuracy which enables an operator to exactly locate a li-acture in a sub- marine cable nearly three thousand miles long Our venerable " clerk of the weather " has become so thoroughly familiar with the most wayward elements of nature that he can accurately predict their movements. He can sit in Washington and foretell what the weather will be in Florida or New York as well as if several hundred miles did not intervene between him and the places named. And so in all departments of modern science, what is required is the knowledge of certain BmiiM nr *•(/""• From these scientists deduce pccurate con- uIGNS OF elusions regardless of distance. So, also, in medi- cal science, diseases have certain unmistakable signs, or symptoms, and by reason of this fact, we have been enabled to originate and perfect a sys- tem of determining, with the greatest accuracy, the nature of chronic diseases, without seeing and personally examining our patients. In recognizing diseases without a personal examination of the patient, we claim to possess no miraculous powers. We obtain our knowledge of the patient's disease by the practical aiiplication, to the practice of medi- cine, of well-established principles of modern science. And it is to the accuracy with which this system has endowed us that we owe our almost world-wide reputation of skillfully treating lingering or chronic affections. This system of practice, and the marvelous success which has been attained through it, demonstrate the fact that dise:is'8 display certain phenomena, which, being suIk jected to scientific analysis, furnish abundant and unmistakable data, to guide the judgment of the skillful practitioner aright in determining the nature of diseased conditions. The most ample resources for treating lingering or chronic diseases, and the greatest skill, are thus placed within the easy reach of every invalid, however distant he or she may reside from the physicians making the treat- ment of such affections a specialty. Full particulars of our origi- nal, scientiflc system of examining and treating patients at a dis- tance are contained in 'TIie People's Common Sense medical Adviaer." By R. V. Pierce, M. D. KKX) piiges and over 300 colored and other illustrations. Sent, post-paid, for SI -10. Or write and describe your symptoms, inclosing ton cents in stamps, and a complete treatise, on your particular discuse, will be sent you, with our terms for treatment and all particulars. OUR FIZSIiD OF SUCCESS. Throat AND Lung Diseases. Recognizing the fact that no great institu- Nl^ll iHRfllT "' dedicated exclusively to the treatment nMUy I IIIIUAI of chronic diseases, would meet the needs of the afflicted of our land, without the most perfect, complete and extensive provision for the most improved treatment of diseases of the air-passages and lungs, such as Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Laryng- itis. Bronchitis, Asthma, and Consumption, we have made this branch of our institution one of the leading Depart- ments. We have every kind of useful instrument for examining the organs involved, such as rhinoscopes, laryngoscopes, stetho- aoopes, Htirometers, etc., etc., as well as all of the most approved kinds of apparatus for the application of sprays, fumigations, atomiiatioos, pulverizations, inhalations, and all other forms of a ig p ro red medicinal applications. We pal" Diseases OF Digestion. 'e poUish three separate books on Nasal, Throat and Lung saeaaea, viz.: A Treatise on Consumption, Laryngitis and Bron- II airis price, postpaid, ten cents; A treatise on Asthma, or F^liiiiC giving new and successful treatment; price, postpaid, ten cents; A treatise on Chronic Nasal Catarrh, price, iostpaid, two cents. Dyspepsia, Iiiver Complaint," Ob- stinate Constipation, Chronic Diar- rhea. Tape-w^ornis. and kindied affections are among those chronic diseases in the suc- cessful treatment of which our specialists have attained unparalleled success. Many of the dis- eases affecting the liver and other organs con- tributing in their functions to the process of digestion, are very obscure, and are not infreqoiitly mistaken by both laymen and physicians for other maladies, and treatment is emploj-cd directed to the removal of a disease which does not exist. Our Complete Treatise on diseases of the Digestive Organs will be sent to any address on receipt of ton cents In postage stamps. BRIOHT'S DISEASE, DIABETES, and If iniirv kindred maladies, have been very largely treated, RlUnt I and cures effected in thousands of cases which had been pronounced beyond hope. The study and practice of chemical analysis and microscopical examination of the urine in our consideration of c;ises, with reference to correct diagnosis, in which our institution long ago became famous, has naturally led to a very extensive practice in diseases of the, urinary organs. Our specialists have acquired, through a vast and varied experi- ence, great expertness in determining the exact nature of each case, and, hence, have been successful in nicdy adapting their remedies for the cure of each individual case. The treatment of discsiscs of the urinary organs having consti- tuted a prominent branch, or specialty, of our practice at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, and, being m constant re- ceipt of numerous inquiries for a complete but concise work on the nature and curability of these maladies, we have published a large illustrated treatise on these diseases, which will be sent to any address on receipt of ten cents in postage stamps. INFE. Amm A TION OF THE BliADDEB, Gravel, Enlarged Pros- tate Gland, Kcteution of Vrine, and kindred affections may be included among those in the cure of which our specialists have achieved marvelous success. These are fully treated of in our illustrated pamphlet on Urinary Diseases. It Includes numerous testimonials from well-known people. Sent by mail for ten cents in stamps. Send for it at once. STBICTITRES AND VBINART F1S. TUIi^.â€" Hundreds of cases of the worst form STRintURF. I of strictures, many of them greatly aggravated W I niH I wiika I jj ^^jg (jareless use of instruments in the hands of inexperienced physicians and surgeons, caus- bue false passages, urinary fisfculiB, and other complications, annu- ffly consult us for relief and cure. That no case of this class is too difficult for the skill of our specialists is proved by cures re- ported in our illustrated treatise on these maladies, to which we tSfer with pride. To intrust this class of cases to physicians of small experience, Is a dangerous proceeding. Many a man has been ruined for life by so doing, while thousands annually lose their lives through unskillful treatment. Send particulars of your case and ten cents in postage stamps, for a large, illustrated trea- tise containing many testimonials. I_^^^^^^^ Epileptic Convnlsions. or Flta, Pa- ^^^^^^ ralyais, or Palsy, I^ocomotor Ataxia, NFRWflUS St. Vitns*s Dance, Insomnia, or inability ntniunw sleep, and threatened insanity, Nervons IIWCIVCC Debility, arising from oveistudy, excesses, and UloUdU. other causes, and every variety of nervous affeo- ^^^^^^^^ tion, are treated by our speciaUsts for these, dis- esaes with a measure of succeas heretofore regarded as impossible. See numerous cases reported In our different illustrated pam- Dblets on nervous diseases, any one of which will be sent for ten cents In postage stamps, when request for them is accompanied with a statement of a case for consultation, so that we may know which one of our Treatises to send. ZlZ_^^^^^^^ So alarmingly prevalent are those chronic dis- I^^^^^^^^l eases peculiar to females, and so famous have niSFISFS OF I our Institutions become for their cure that we UIObHVbv HI I y^g^ iQng agQ obliged to create a special depart- HfaMFH I ment, thorovighly organized, and devoted cr- HUltll. I tHwively to the treatment of these cases. The ^^^^^^â- â- ^^ physicians and surgeous in this. Deptotment have made these delicate disease tteir sole study. o^ *^ ^^^eds are brought to our institutions ftomfer distant Statea tar ^^specIaoSs, whether by letter or^person. is^ven the Sost^^u^^Hd considerate attratton Every importo^ J^we^ few which have not already baffled the aUU of aU the home physicians) has the benefit of a full Council, composed of skilled specialists. Our Department and rooms lor ladies in the invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute are so arranged as to be very privale, and free from the annoyances so common in other institutions. Send ten cents in postage stamps for our large Complete Treatise on Di8t^ase8 of Women, illustrated with nume- rous wood-cuts and colored plates. PILKS, FISTDLA IN A NO, and other dis- n eases affecting the region of the lower bowel, are rILC largely treated, and with marvelous success, by specialists, who give their whole time to the study T||||npe and treatment of this class of affections. We never I mwuno. tail to cure pile tumors, however large. When the â- ^^^^^^^^ patient can coine here for ti-eatment, ire irlll g^narantee a cure. Fortunately for suffering humanity, a method of treatment has been perfected and thoroughly tested m our institutions, by which in from six to fifteen days radical and ntrtect cures of the worst forms of piles are effected without causing any severe suffering. Send ten cents in stamps for our large illustrated 1"reatise on Piles. Hernia (Breach), or Kuptnrc, no matter of â- how long standing, of what size, or what the age nUPTURF I •' ^^^ patient may be (if not under four years), is â- iwi luiik. I speedily and radically cared In every case undertaken by oar specialists, -without the knife, -vrtthont dependence upon trnsses, nrlthont pain, and Tvithout danger.. Tuonitf AllflV There is no longer any need ol wearing clumsy, I nnUII HnAI awkward, chafing, old trusses,, which, at best, give TniiAnrn only partial relief, which never cure, but often inflict. I nUviaCo. great injury and induce infiammation and strangula- tion, from which thousands annually die. Umv There is ho safety in depending upon any kind of truss, nUI though, no doubt, every man who has suffered the agonies Cirr of a stiungulated hernia, and died, thought himself safe. OArt. Both the rupture and the truss keep up a mental strain and induce nervous debility and various organic weaknesses of the kidneys, bladder, and associate organs. CURES GUAKANTEED in every case nudertaken. Can any sufferer ask for greater inducements than these? Notwithstanding the great number of ruptures treated' in the three years past, many of them of immense size and of such a character that no other plan of treatment could possibly have succeeded, every case to wnich this perfected system of treatment has been thoroughly 'applied, has been perfectly cured. Onlv a few days residence at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical institute is necessary. Abundant references, by permission of those whom we have cured, will be furnished to any one wishing to call upon or write them. An illustrated treatise on Rupture sent to any address upon receipt af ten cents. Organic weakness, nervous debility, premature decline of the manly powers, involuntary vital losses, and kindred affections, are speedily, thor- oughly and permanently cured. To those acquainted with our Institutions it is hardly necessary to say that the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, with the branch establishment located at No. 3 New Oxford Street, London, England, have, for many years, enjoyed the distinction of being the most largely patronized and widely celebrated institutions in the world for the treatment and cure of those affections which arise from youthful indiscretions and pernicious, solitary practices. We, many years ago, established a special Department for the treatment of these diseases, under the management of some of the most skillful physicians and surgeons on our Staff, in order that all who apply to us might receive all the advantages of a full Council of the most experienced medical men. Ufr ncCTD ^^ °^^ °^ apology for devoting so much atten- Hb Urrtn tion to this neglected class of diseases, believing lln Ivni nev °^ condition of humanity is too wretched to merit nU ArULUbf. the sympathy and best services of the noble pro- fe^ion to which we belong. Many who suffer from these terrible diseases contract them innocently. Why any medical man Intent on doing erood, and alleviating suffering, should shun such cases, we cannot imagine. Why any one should consider It otherwise than most honorable to cure the worst cases of these diseases, we cannot understand; and yet of all the other maladies which afflict mankind there are probably none about which physicians in gen- eral practice know so little. We fully Eigree with the celebrated Dr. Bartbolow, who says, " I think it a reproach to our profession that this subject has been permitted. In a measure by oiir own indifference, to pass into the hands of unscrupulous pretenders. Because the subject is disa- greeable, competent physicians are loath to be concerned with it. The same unneoessary fastidlouBness causes the treatment of this malady to be avoided in private practice." We shall, therefore, continue, as heretofore, to treat with our best consideration, Bympathy, and skfll, all applicants who are suf- fra^ng from any of these delicate diseasea. ^^ ^. ^^ Our Ojmnlete and lUnstrated Treatise on these subjects is sent to any address on receint of ten cents in stamps. Alili CHRONIC DISEASES A SPECIAE.TT.â€" Although we have, in the preceding paragraphs, made mention of some of the special ailments to which particular attention is given by the specialists at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, yet the institution abounds in skill, facilities, and apparatus for the successful treatment of every form of chronic ailment, whether requiring for Its cure medical or surgical means. All letiers of inquiry or of consultation shoald be Bdareased to WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, Main Btoeet, BUTTAIiO. V. 7. V% â- i'iil: ^v.li• ' i 'â- -â- fj- Pflflia3 'I