â€" “'5_‘ â€" aha Ts attess of _ A" F MeC ‘ C s to . | abe o result :up to # ime hes| [ ~‘"’1a‘.v int on d * CR e e en mt s srestion of & factory in Berlin was the rantisg by popular vote of a bonus of 5,000, _ Bince that time active and â€" unite efforte have been put forth by townspeople and farmers for the . _purpose of obtaining contracts for a . ‘sufficient amount of acreage for beots «%o warrant the company in the erection _ f the factory. An enthosiastic meotâ€" â€" ing of farmers was held at the © office _ Of the company on Queen St last pight â€" for the purpose of ecmming up the it of acreage available. This « meeting was addressed in an able manâ€" ‘"her by L. J. breithaupt, M.P.P., Dr _ Shuttleworth and others with the most gratifying results, no loss than 647 teres being contracted for on the spot. A hundred acres was coutracted for by enée new organization alone, known as the Bloomingdale Beet Sugar Syndiâ€" eate. . Another syndicate of ~enterâ€" prising business men of Berlin have sontracted to furnish 1000 acres of beets for this factory. There is now every reason to, believe that the acreâ€" age subscribed for the proposed sugar factory has reached that point that mesures its erection in the town of Berâ€" lin. . The approaching convention of Lib érals in the North Riding of Waterloo to be held on the 5th of December, promises to be one of the most harmâ€" onious meetings ever held in the hisâ€" tory of thisâ€"association. ~ The Ontario Legislature, it is said, has been called for the 8th of January. ‘The legislative term expires March 31, and it is probable the intention is to finish thersession before that time 2o the Act passed last year for the extenâ€" sion of the term, if necessary, will not be brought into requisition. . Indicaâ€" tions would point to an election some Aime in May or June. _ In the new apiculture, the length of the bees‘ tongues is of importance. The longer the tongue the greater is the honeyâ€"gathering capacity, and a new French apparatus, the glossometers is designed to aid the apiarist who, by judicions selection, seeks to develop a longâ€" tongued race. . The apparatus is simply a glass vessel for syrup, with a lid having numerous perforations, and a floating scale to show the height of a liquid when the bees just reach it through the holes. It is estimated that the ordinary bee can draw sweetsa from a depth of a quarter of an inch, mnd that selection can increase the range a twentyâ€"fifth of an inch. In an address before the Bankers Asâ€" sociation of which he is presidont, Mr. E. D. Clouston gave some very interâ€" esting statistics rogarding Canada‘s eommercial operations which furnish striking evidence of the thrift and proâ€" gress ofthe people. He said: Placing the population this year at 5,400,000, ms indicated by the later census reâ€" turns, I find the foreign trade per head to bave been $71.50 in the fiscal year, 1901, as against $45 in 1891, $47 in 1881, and $49 in 1871. _ The deposits of the people in the joint stock, governâ€" ment and savings banks have fisen in steady progresslon from $19 per head in 1871, to $27 in 1881, $40 in 1891 and $74 in 1901â€"most striking eviâ€" dence of the practical prosperity of the people. The amount of money emâ€" ployed in the daily business of Canada, ’m subsidiary coinage, is now _ $11 per head, whereas 20 years ago it did not exceed $7.70 per head. These examples of thrift, enterprisa and comâ€" : mercial activity might be maltiplied by â€" raference to railway earnings, to indusâ€" ‘ Atial developments, to the productions of farm, forest, fisheries and mines, to . postal and insurnuce statistics, in short to all those standards by which the _ material condition of a country is Galt : A Toronto gentleman dn m'::tordny as a. represchtaâ€" " of Queen City capital and waited f 8. Hogg & Co. In fomm § members of the firm he vi p area west of Galt which until thownnfortunate fire of last spring was ‘bein d for the manufacture cf peat fael. This Toronto man made an inâ€" ‘$pection of the eitoation and, it is said, made overtures for a purchase, . As wet nothing has been done, but an anâ€" incement may be made in a fow days ‘The Toronto man will return next wook. TO PURCHASE PEAT WORKS EDITORIAL NOTES. rat Methodiat Church, Hami{lâ€" & $1,000 Sunday last ttnrdl me of enlarging the seating MeNab, son of Jobhn lature at the coming electi< div sicn was well repressuted. ‘~The election of oflcers resulted as follows :â€"Prosident, R O McCulloch, Galt; Vieeâ€"Presidont, John Beott, Galt; Seereâ€" tary, °C R Hanving. Preston; Treagurer, J M Irwin, of Gait, with a large Exeeutive In choosing ‘he candidute the fellowing gentlemen were nomipated:â€"Robt Seott, Dr Rudford, Geo Pattison, W & Plum, Louls Peine, J P Jafftay, Pr Vardon, P 8 Howell, & Puddicombe and W A Kribs, The laiter was the unsnimous choice of the convention and accepted the nominâ€" 't,b.. B o byslandl 148 ) Autc s d In the évening a mass meeting was held which was addressed by J P ‘Whitney, Opposition leader, J J Foy, MPP., W A Kribs, the candidate, J P Downey, of Guelph, candidate for 8. Wellington and J Monteith, MPP,, for South Ferth ‘The Teething Period Dangerous to Little Ones and Very Trying to Mothers. What mother does uot look forward with dread to the time when baby shall be teething? At that time baby is restless, feverish and irritable, and freâ€" quently there is some disorder of the bowels snd stomach. _ ‘The poor little sufferer is fighting one of his first battles in this old world of pain, and if not aided in his fight may be overcome. Every wise mother helps the little sufâ€" ferer as much as she can, and the motherd who have been most successâ€" ful in this respect have found that Baby‘s Own Tablets give just such as sistance as the little one needs. . Mre. W. J. Wright, Brockville, says:â€""I have used Baby‘s Own Tablets quite frequently, and am much pleased with them. I find them especially satisfacâ€" tory during baby‘s first year. I have used them in teething, in vomiting, in colie, in indigestion, and in the disâ€" orders of the stomach and bowels usually accompanied by restlessness and fever. The action of the Tablets has always been all that could be Baby‘s Own Tablets are a sweet, pleasant,little lozenge that all children will take readily. They can be crushed or dissolved in water and administered with safety to even the youngest inâ€" fant. Guaranteed to contain no opiate or any of the poisonous stuffs that make the soâ€"called soothing _ medicines dangerous to litt‘o ones. If you do not find Baby‘s Own Pablets at your drugâ€" gist‘s, send 25 cents to the Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicice Co., Brockville, Ont , and & box will be sent you by mail \ post paid. (From the Bay City Tribune, Nov. 15th.) A incresse of over $50,000 in the Noâ€" vember pay roll for sugar beets and chicory over last year is the record of the local sugar and chicory ‘companies for th‘s year. The pay roll for the beets and . chicory delivered during October aggreâ€" gates: $362,727. The local banks are stocked with go‘d and silver coins and bills in stacks to meet the tremendous deâ€" mand which will be made Curing the next few days. The following pay rolls as furnished by the various factories : Bay City Sugar Co., $118,460 Miehign Sugar Co., T9,767 West Bay City Co., 122,500 Germanâ€"American Coâ€"Operâ€" ces a‘ive Co. â€" Michigan State Chicory Co:, United States Chicory Co., KRev. T. Albert Moore, pastor of Zion Tabernacle, Hamilton, has beon invited to remain a fifth year by the pulpit sapply committee of that church. He has accepted, subject to the usual conditions. Assessor Patterson, of Galt, pats the population of that place at 8,002. The total assessment on realty is $2,602,095 and an personalty $170,050. The old Lang farm has been sold to Mr. Ed. Dubrick, by Mr. Johsn H. Scbmidt for the sum of $2,925 cash. The farm consists of 55 acres, and was purchased several years ago by Mr. Schmidt‘s father, for the sum of $1,500. According to a Cloveland paper, there is a warm factional dispute on between members of ths East Madison Avenue Church, which centres about the head of the Rev. Alexander Jackâ€" son, formerly of Galt. The factional bickerings existed. in the church when Mr. Jackson arrived and his pastorate has not had the effect of oil poured on troubled waters. « Too bad to scee the health and beauty of a young girl fade away. This often happens to girls between the ages of twelve and twenty. â€" Girlhood ought to be a time of perfect health. Pale bloodâ€"a.blood diseaseâ€" is a common enemy of good health in our girls. Tota) Scott‘s Emulsion is having remarkable success in bringing back the roses to those pale faces, s ~t that they get it. All the mental and bodily trouble that go with pale blood are relieved by this treatment â€"=Scott‘s Emulsion. Mothers of pale daughters should ;see CASH FOR FARMERS BABYS HEALTH PALE GIRLS $362,727 18,000 9.000 DPORVET mE CCE £" 290 s Oe / L las fnances are required to carry on the zub-umuoddldnnlmxh money mflnllmh""“ the following considerations which any 3m‘~mï¬umu the following consider which any one . who bas paid due attention to educational questions can vouch for! . ._ L. Is rot the study _of the td’fltzoï¬o ....:?:'."u- nl f““ d reet the ‘z.-b-m ‘ 1: g, a th og which. but. benefit the pupiles under bls ehrr when reâ€" lieved of his specia) duty 1 am bold to say, as one who hus been in the rauks, that the benefit his pupile reâ€" seive through his determination to carry out the rrtnelplu he has been inculcating, will moe than offset the disadvantage â€" suffered by the p3pils through a change of teachers for a few months 2. ‘The varigus assistants are all im bued with the idea of th:ir responsiâ€" bility as practical instructors of those in traiping when the l:#l’ are sent through the various divisions to obâ€" «rve and learo. Is nyth!n‘:‘ulcn- lated to bave a better effectâ€" than this â€"OB MODELLITES, ASSISTANTS AND pupirst Is is likely that any extra pains these assistants have taken durâ€" ing the term, will not benefit them as teachers during the rest of the yufl" 3. I do not believe that the pupils lose anything by becom!uthong;‘wu of tho,mod:lï¬tel for the time they are under the charge of the latter. _ Each modellite is resigned a special lesson to teach and I am quite sure few teachâ€" ors in their after experience, prepare the lessons they are teaching from day to day, any better than these aspiring teachers in embryo whose every lesson effects their find] standing. Added to thisggotive there is the knowledge that the teacher in charge of the particular division is for the time being an Inâ€" spector and those who bave passed through the ordeal can assure you the effect of the system in general is wholeâ€" some. 4. Added to the above consideraâ€" tions is it unreasonable to suppose that all of the teachers© of the town schools are put upon their mettle by the knowledge that they are virtually a part of the machinery of Berlin Model School and thus should give a prestige which without the training feature they would not possess. y Might I say, by the bye, that it does seem somewhat of a misnomer that the Galt school should also be called a County Model School and that no great hardship would be done anybody by making this the Model School for Waâ€" terloo County. _ We have a veteran educationist o} provincial reputation at the head o the Berlin schools and for this reason as well, it would be a loss to the county to have those seeking this training be compelled to go elsewhere for what could be got here. _ _ _ k Hoping that men of the same broad views as those who supported the present system will continue to be elected to cur School Board I am Yours sincerely NED. BIBLE CLASS FOR THE ELITE. Chicago, Nov 19â€"Wellâ€"Rnown woâ€" men on tbe North Side, especially along the Lak« s..v.o drive, Bellevue place, Astor »tâ€"eet and North State street, are oxps.iencing a revival of religion, which has resulted in the establishâ€" ment of a "Bible Class for the Elite," with William R. Newell, <assistant superintendent of the Moody Bible Institute, for a teacher. This class meets at 11 a.m. every Saturday for six weeks at the hall of the Lincoln Cyeling Club. _ 0 ROYVAL ALEXANDRA HOSPITAL. . ‘There were present Saturday about fifty women, who represented in the aggregate possibly $50,000,000. Such smart turnâ€"outs, such stylish hats and rare feathers, such tailorâ€"made suits and elegant gowns have not been seen at a Bible claes before for years. Fergus Newsâ€"Record: We are glad to be able to announce that Her Majesty the Queen warmly approves of the benevolent purpose of the hospital now being erected in Fergus by Dr. Groves, and has been pleased to ex press the pleasure it will be to her that it should bear her name. It will, thereâ€" fore be known as "The Royal Alexandra Hospital." It is indeed a proud disâ€" tinction and not only Fergus, but the county also, is to be congratulated on receiving this distinguished mark of royal favor.â€" Ours is the only ~hospital in the Empire which has been so honored, and we trust it wiil long go on accomplishing a great work for the slck, suffering and poor. Toronto Telegramâ€"*‘From the way the different elubs are waking up the coming season promises to be a banner one for hockey, and it is worthy of pote that while old clubs are reurganâ€" izing and new ones are oprtnï¬n. up, there is no wild rush to get into the township leagues.â€" The W. O. H. A., practically the leader of the side line organizations, is so far troubled with two :Erlhaxlm for membership, its two standbys, Berlin and Waterâ€" loo, while the others are whistling to keep up their courage as md watch the stampede towards the O.H.A. Its no use talking, the ean of the side line league had set, and the few clabs on the outside had better get in out of the gold before the frosty nights set in." No, Mr. Telegram, Berlin or Waterâ€" loo is flot whistling for clubs to enter the W.0.H.A. There will be eight or ten of the fastest intermediate teams of the province fyrm the Western Association this . season, . where they. are «Gertain of . . receivâ€" ing fait dealing, a _ vistue unâ€" %o.n.n. and the organ, The k The name of Rev. Donald Guthrie, D. 1)., of the First Presbyterian church, Baltimore, Mo., bas been.mentioned in cot nsotion with the ‘pastorate of Fifth of our Paine‘s Celery Compound DOES THE GOOD WORK. A Cured Man Says: 4 "It would Mean the use of Pages to Tell Oneâ€"Half of What. Paine‘s Celery Compound Has Donefor Me." That lxr‘t and noble geniar, Proâ€" fessor Edward E. Phelps, M. D., L. L. g;.‘tho discoverer of Pt‘l:dn Celery pound t years e his o&mflpmnbda‘ he m: w of suffering and diseasge. Years of severe tests and tens of thousands of precious lives saved, have all combined to make Paine‘s Celery Compound the present day popular family medicine. . Paine‘s Colery Compound has triâ€" ::?hd over numberless cases of foul deepâ€"seated blood diseases. It ofâ€" fectively cleanses the blood, braces the weak nerves, builds up fleah and a conâ€" stitution capable of resisting. sickness and disease. Mr. A. E. Hammond, Mansonville, P. Q , cured by â€" Paine‘s Celery Co r pound, writes thus: C «Some five years ago it was my sad misfortune to be affiicted with scrofals sores, of which I had five on :one leg and three on the other. These were ranniog sores for four years. In addiâ€" tion to this L was taken down with rheumatiem in the small of my back so badly that I could not get off my bed; and to further intensify my | sufferings, I had sick headache in the worst form "«While in this condition a friend of mine, Mr. Perkins, a merchant ¢f this place,sold me a bottle of Paine‘s Celery Compound, with the express underâ€" standing that if it did me no good I should pay nothing for it. _ C "‘In accepting this offer,I had no idea of ever feeling under any obligation to pay for the Compound, as I had no faith in its doing me good. To my very great surprise, however, I grew better; and by the time I had used three bottles I was as well as ever, and what I never expocted to see was realâ€" ized, viz: the sores on my legs were enâ€" tirely healed. "It would mean the use of pages to tell oneâ€"half of what Paine‘s Celery Compound has done for me. This marâ€" vellous cure has been in effect for nearâ€" ly a year." That Mr. Carnegie should have atâ€" tempted to bribe the Principal of Queen‘s by an offer of a donation to advocate the annexation of Canada to the United States was totally incredible, and is now declatred to be false. . No one who knew Mr. Carnegie could imagine that he wouild be guilty of anyâ€" thing ot the sort. _ He is an interâ€" pational man. He seeks, while he does good witl his millions, to promote international good will, and has never shown the slightest disposition to tack political conditions to his gifts. . The air at present is full of appeals to antiâ€" American feeling, the object of which is to baffie reciprocity negotiations: The Christmas number of The Delineator is about the first of the special Christmas issues It is A beauty. The cover is a most artistic production, showing a bemutifully gowned woman, standing gracefully in & brilliantly lighted salon. Two charmâ€" ing love stories, one by Cyrus Townâ€" send Brady, plenty of advice regarding Christmas gifts, timely pointersâ€"~on cookery, winterâ€"time care of plants, all the fash‘ons of the day interpreted inâ€" to simple language, can be found in the Christmas number of The Delineator. It is a splendid magazine, satistactory inside and out. There is no magazine for women at present published that is more practical in all its pages. . As a Xmas gift itself, it bears its own reâ€" commendation A TORONTO LADY‘S STORY Suffered From Backache So Severe She Could Hardly Raise Herself in Bed. sHE THANKS DR. PITCHER‘S BACHACHE KIDNEY TABLETS COMPLETELY CURING HER AND GIVING HER NEW LIPE AND ENERGY. There are hundreds of women in Torâ€" onto and thousands in Canada to whom life is an absolute burden on account of the unceasing ache in the back, the AN INCREDIBLE STORY. | Blood are Quickâ€" Jy Cured. day C ' -t-mom.u-n was - extreme with a reâ€" prosentative of the bet ieal of the Twinâ€"City, who A a‘most breathlcss interest ) oonuumu_(&) sill dn‘â€"flb of the proj utsidp .mm which xml selections were recelvod, the strongest tribute of appreciation was paid at the close of the programme. < So completeâ€" ly had the audience yielded to the magic charm of their playiog that it was some time after the last vibrating mnote of the last selecton had died away before the audience could realize the spell had been broken. The Fadette Woman‘s Orcbestra hail from America‘s centre ef culture, Boston, and they nobly sustain the highest traditions of the p‘ace.. The impression they give as one Observes them at their work is most pleasing, no point of coloring or grouping bc_gc pasgéed â€" over . to make _ their eoncerts a feast for the eye as well as the ear. In their playing there was & upity that is ‘rare..even ~among the most pretentious orghestras ané their precision â€"was remarkable. â€" In attack they were firm, the gradation delicate and floxible, and they possessed euffiâ€" clent power to make the «whole build ing reverberate with deep and thrillâ€" ing harmonies. t = Mra. Caroline Nioho“l:, the‘conduactor, is a most interesting personage: & wowan of broad education, wonderfal maguetism and tactfol to a high degree. No orchestra lcader bas ever appeared in Berlin with playors under more perâ€" feet con:rol. ‘Theze was but one mind visible throughou* the performance and that one the mind of the conductor. Her wielding of the baton was digniâ€" fied and devoid of all unneceesary motion, but so thoroughly were the s‘gnals understood and so perfect was the sympathy between the orâ€" chestra and leader that she could eway them at will. After the grand selec tion from the opra "IPagliacei"" Mre . Nichols gave a notable exhibition of tact which won her every heart in the sudience. . After responding to the firss encore by an airy rendering of the popâ€" ular song "The Honeysackle and the Bee", and seeing no signs of the storm of applause abating the orchestra struck up the "Soldiers of the Queen" with a vocal obligato, and played it with a fire and dash that.overwhelmed the audience with patriotic feeling and it was some minutes after the conciusâ€" ion of the number before the cheering and haudâ€"clapping subsided. â€"â€" â€"_ Admirable taste was shown in the arrangement of the programme, which while containing several very heavy numbers, the general effect was airy and breezy. The "Death of Ase‘"‘ from ‘‘Peer Gynt" by Grieg was a deeply thoughtful number, : faultlessly executed, and calculated to stir the deeper buman emotions. ‘Among other numbers were a March by Gruenwold, Gillet‘s Gavotte "Entracte" Overture to "Mignon" by Thomas and Puerner‘s descriptive _ composition "Imps and Goblins" which was most realistic. s & Mrs. Mary Rouckâ€" Wilezok, . the solo violinist who orent four years in study under Prof. Dr. Joachim in Gerimany, â€"_ is .& finished artist. Her rendering of the andante and allegro moveinents of Wienawski‘s Seventh Concerto: were .. beyond criticism. She has a simplicity of manper that is charming and ber violin expresses deep feelings beyond the power of mere words. _ > ___ .__ In "Little Lina" Mrs. Nichols has & capital entertainer. . Besides being & most clever child impersonater in her artistic posings she was the personifiâ€" cation of grace. ‘ irritability, bladder and urinary troubles, who are reticent about mentioning their ailments to anyone. Miss Mildred Rogers, mezzo sopran, sang several numbers very effectively. In the cantabile from "Sameon et Delila"â€"Saint Smeus she was perbaps the most eftective. . While her voice did not seem powerful yet her singing gave evidence of much careful training. To all these kidney and backache sufâ€" ferers Dr. Pitcher‘s Dackache Kidn:z Nablets come as a veritable boon a blessing. The{clur out the cloggedâ€"up kidneys, cure the backache and urinary troubles, toll away the burden of pain, and give health, strength and energy. Miss: Anna â€" Defoe, a young lady whose address is 355 King street west, Toronto, recently wrote as tollows : "For a number of years I have had kidney trouble and btclu‘.h‘ so bad that in the morning I could htdiy nbea:y. self. A severe dragging pain would me in the small of my back, and I had no appitite, aud often Km& from severe headaches, and a general breaking dfl of the entire system was the result. z:\.h to Dr. WW% :‘&uu |=:‘ 4 so hi . asil ch #eyâ€" Mlaï¬d o get better, until I was Fabl tan lnn in ue miln e A o‘nru .L; hws @4 j dishex." > * 14 y oi e es must sccompany all orders Ma‘kse remittance Nob.‘u‘mn-dmcmomno x P. 8.â€"The camw.rdgn&h and nearly all weeklies will . in the balance of this year free to all new yearly subscribers. .. . SUBSCRIBED CAPITAL + â€" 0+ > > ,0 DEPOSIT WITH DOMINION GOV‘T > i © 117,] All Policies Guaranteed by the LONDON & LANCASHIRE FIRE m% Assets of $16,306,638. * o j: THE ONTARIO MUTUAL LIFE ACompany ()F POLICYHOLDERS * 2 w BY POLICYHOLDERS * / FOR POLICYHOLDERS % u&um OF NEW PUSINE:8 ’:C:Mï¬n:“-’- > m’gi for the Sist, J I ues =m%§ï¬y.ï¬.mfl e CIGAR STORE A Delightful Bmoke. Musical Instruments Of all kinds, Walking>sticks and sporting goods are among Near the Railway Track, Waterico . â€" PHOTOS â€" ‘THIS MONTH ONLY. The Mercantile Fire J. DOERSAM, simply unequalled and indispensable. 3: If you are not already a sulneribarf, to the most helpful, best printed and 3: bumif-lzmudfumar'lp:ru p publi we invite scrutiny a F; published, we invite scrutiny of a sample copy. Aponcudwiflhh‘ it free. THE WILLIAM WELD CO., Limited, p;s‘.;m e reagh argprctt cpne. Amas Number, «* * MAKE THE FARM PAY One that you‘ll appreciatcâ€"is always the result when you use our choice tobaccos,. Get a doszen and Save a Dellar. FARMER‘S ADVOCATE our specialties, Marr & Melintyre Alfred Wright, Secretary. T. N. Hail, Inspector, _ THE MUTUAL LIFE _ are giving a big reduction DOERSAM‘S INSURANCE COMPANY. DAVID BEAN, Goo. Wegenast, ~ _ W.H. Riddell, _‘ â€" WA ERLOO, ONTARIO. Eeocomical Mutual Fire Amount at 'ï¬ig‘f" K Government D: posit Net Assots 1st Jan. 1900 INCORPORATED IN 1863. l Total Assets 8ist December ‘09 WATERLOY â€"MUTOAL _ Dominion Life Assurance CoOMPANY. NEAD OFFICE, â€" WATERLOO, QNT. in mw OsiUON. bolidity, progress and equity are our an past C3 We have increasod n Osfiiet from 6291.000 to 100000 .. *â€" We have increased Paid . lhlholn. "&mnn&'oï¬n hap Oap r We have placed all our old business on at 4 cent. Reserve Standardâ€" _ FIRE INSURANCE CoMPANY _~~* * BOARD OF DIRECTORS, Geo, Randall, Req., Waterioo, 8. Snyder, Keq., * William Snider, Keqg., â€" " 4 Geo. Disbel, Kaq., o J. L. Wideman, Keq., Sh. Jacobs. Allan Bowman, Req., Preston, P. K. Shants, Preston. Thomas Gowdy, Req., Guelph. James Livingstone, Keq., Baden. h auany e 2M Mutual and Cash tems. _ ___ _ _ Frank Haight, Manager, R, T. Orr, Inspector. Meesrs. Bowiby & Clement, Solicibors, ‘Wna Snider, [ BUOKBHERROUGH & OO‘Y, Agents The 20th Cen finds Comâ€" 4 io a spremtnd position® Seourity of Can Progress in 19080 orF BERLIN, Â¥ Organized 1871. CS OFFIORRS ; ++, THE ... o ons â€"â€" $ neePics 4 al ce Uof