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TWO SWORN STATEMENTS. Df Interest to Suffering Humanity— Well-Known People Testify to the Merits of a Popular Remedy. (From the Tribune, Minneapolis, Minn.) Dr. Wiliams’ Pink Pills for Pale People ‘ave brought joy into the home of G. N. sel, of 303 Hennepin Avenue, the well- }own Minneapolis decorator and painter. over ten years Mr. Bensel was afflicted with scrofula in an aggravated form,causing running sores to continually form on the back of theneck and extend up into the hair, and to-day he is cured and happy—twice happy we might say, for his daughter who is now fourteen years of age had the terrible nervous affliction known as St. Vitus’ dance, and has also been greatly improved by the use of Pink Pills. In relating his experience to a Tribune reporter, he said: “I have had the annoyance nearly twelve ears, combined with not a little suffering rom scrofulous tumors on the back of my headandneck. Itried many remedies with- out receiving the relief desired. I bought some of the so-called ‘‘sure cures” now on the market and still suffered. It was after persistent efforts of a friend to induce me to use Pink Pills for Pale People, that yield- ed, and now cannot express my thanks fit- tingly to that friend for his persistency. I mow these pills are a good thing for scrof- ula,you can see for yourself by the dry marks and red spots left on my neck, where for- merly were eruptions that emitted matter and the vilest humors of the blood, Now they don’t even itch, and 1 believe that I am practically eured. a nt to tell you aboutthe great bene- fit my daughter, who is now fourteen years old, also received from the use of Dr. Wil- liams’ Pink Pills. For two years she had St. Vitus’ dance and we did eveything we could hear of to relieve her, but have never found anything that equals Pink Pills. She has used four boxes and is nearly cured. We have great faith in them and will continue their use whenever affiicted. (Signed) “Gzo. N. BENSEL.”’ | Sworn and subscribed to before. me this Zth day of September, 1896. : T. E. AnpReEws, Notary Public. “This is to cer that I have had a very favorable experience with Pink Pills for Pale People. Hayesuffered more or less for seven ye: ‘ith inflammatory rheumatism and neuralgia pains, sometimes unable to walk for three weeks at a time, and in one instance had such intense pain in the stomach and around the heart that I thought each hour for three days that it would be my last. Having seen articles in the papers about your Pink Pills, I concluded to give a nd have used ten boxes with marvelous results, Have felt better the past month and more free from pain than for many years. I shall continue their use. (Signed) “Evra Piper ” 2721 Penn Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 7th day of September, 1896. i T. E. Anprews, Notary Public. Pink Pills contain, ina con- ull the elements necessary to ss to the blood and Dr. William: densed form. give new life and richn restore shattered ner ‘They are also a specific for troubles peculiar to females, such as suppressions, irregularities and all forms of weakness. They build up the blood, and restore the glow of health to pale and sallow chee In men they effect a radical] eure in allcasesarising from mental worry, over-work or excesses of whatever nature. Pink Pills are sold in boxes (never in loose bulk) at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists,or direct by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. Position. She—My brother Tom played witk your foot ball team, didn’t he? She—And was he a full back or halt —Neither. He was—er—a draw- back.—Boston Traveler. $1.00 FOR 14 CENTS. Millions now plant Salzer’s seeds, but millions more should; hence offer. 1 pkg. Bismarck Cucumber .....---15¢ 1 pkg. Round Globe Beet . -10¢ 1 pkg. Earliest Carrot ... -10c 1 pkg. Kaiser Wilhelm Lettuce.....15¢ 1 pkg. Earliest Melon .... -10¢ 1 pkg. Giant Yellow Onion . 1 pkg. 14-Dey Radish . 8 pkgs. Brilliant Flower Seeds.....15¢ Now all of above 10 packages, in- cluding our mammoth plant and seed catalogue, are mailed you free upoD receipt of only 14 cents’ postage. 25 pkgs. Earliest Vegetable Seed.$1.00 21 Brilliant Blooming Plants.....$1.00 John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis. w.n. True to His Faith. h, colonel, I didn’t know you evel drank water.” “It is distilled watah, sah,” said the 1 stiffly, ed by a through placed betweer th ‘0 to 120 deg. above and mounted on hea x6 inch cardbos in d and green, by mail, free to a dress on ‘ipt of two cents in st to pay postage. To be sure the free distri bution 0 thermometers is intended the to advertise the celebrated Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure (see advertising columns) but nevertheless they will be found to be useful as well as ornamental little artieles for the home or office and well worth ¢he little trouble and expense of seading for them. The common belief ‘that the fine white bread contains less nutriment than coarse brown bread is a mistake. So says M Girard, the eniinent Parisian chemist. Cascaretss stimulate Mver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe, 10c. An automatic tire-pump, connected with the bicycle saddle, is the latest invention, Whenever the rider is bounced on his sad- dle air is forced into the tires. Awarded Highest Honors—World’s Fair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. qalces BAKING POWDER A Pare Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. 40 YEARS THE STANDARD, FARM AND GARDEN.| MATTERS OF INTEREST TO AGRICULTURISTS. Some Up-to-date Hints About Cultiva- tion of the Soil and Yields Thereof —Horticulture, Viticulture and Flori- SWEDISH corre- spondent of the Al- banyCultivator has this to say about trees in Sweden: We can have little idea of what an immense ex pense and trouble keep- ing up the fires ina Swedish gentle- man’s country house entails upon the occupier. At Gardsjo, which, being a farming school, was, of course, a large es- tablishment, 400 fathoms of firewood were consumed yearly. It is true the occupier got this for nothing out of his forest, excepting the ex- pense of cutting, splitting and the like, which was no trifle. It was reckoned that 1200 days work, at 18 cents per day, would be occupied during the year in providing firewood only. As soon as the ground becomes frozen in the autumn all the men living in a true forest district betake themselves to the woods, armed with their axes and ske- ders, and provided with meal, herrings, cheese, horses, sledges and fodder. They have already dug some holes in the ground about two feet deep, over which they build a cover, with an opening for smoke. This sort of hut is called a kuja, and here the woodsmen live through the winter, and seek their homes only ona Sunday. Every morn- ing they go out into the woods to fell the timber and drive it into heaps call- ed “tunnar.” As soon as the snow has become set, and the ice on the lakes frozen hard enough to bear, they draw the timber from the forest to the near- est draught of water, or to some place with a high perpendicular bank, called a “loop,”.down which they shoot the perhaps there is no tree more useful to the inhabitants of the north. For implements, building, and even for fur- niture, it is greatly in request, and the outer bark, which is easily stripped off in the spring, is used for a variety of purposes, from thatching houses down to the soling of shoes. No sole is 60 warm or stands better against the snow than this, They are called “hafver,” and are sold in little bunches of 60 strips. They have one peculiarity, that of never rotting. The birch bark rolled up, or even oblong pieces of fir bark, are much used for floating nets, instead of corks. No tree is so valuable in the young fir plantings as the birch, for it is of quick growth and serves to shield and foster the more valuable trees that grow in the same forest. At the age of 10 years the birch is hard enough for fire wood, and no forest tree answers 50 well for this purpose, containing, as it dces, so much heat. At 30 years it can be cut down as underwood, and at 50 years it has attained its full growth. As the birch trees are cut down the more valuable trees are left. The birch thus pays for planting and preserving the beautiful trees which fatten the land, while the birch when planted alone impoverishes it. Sallow, willow and mountain ash grow freely both sides of the Tornea River, which di- vides Sweden from Russia, within the polar circle. The alder is met with as far north as 63 degrees. Flower Beds. és It is perhaps a little early to talk of spring planting; put it is not out of place now to consider what you intend to do, and lay your plans, so there will be no delay ‘when the time comes, Says an exchange. There is no invest- ment you can make that will bring a larger proportionate return of pleasure than a small sum devoted to flower seed. It is a good time now, while the men have leisure, to prepare the beds. If the ground is poor and the subsoil compact it will pay to dig it out at least two spades deep and fill in good soil. When it is done once it is done forever, and an occasional top dressing is all it will need while you live. The men atid teams have leisure now; this work can be done wherever the ground PLOWING IN THE ORKNEY ISLANDS. OLD MOORISH PLOW. logs upon the ice. Among these work- men are a better class, called timber markers, who superintend the whole work and set the owner’s name upon each log. The horses stand through each winter by the side of the huts, without any shelter, nor do they appear in the least to mind it. All liquors and quarreling among the men are strictly forbidden. Mr. Thomas Meehan of Philadelphia, when in Sweden one sum- mer, remarked the curious custom prev- alent there of stylingall treesexcept the pine and fir tribes as “leaf trees” in- stead of deciduous trees. This arises no doubt from the fact that the pines and firs are incalculably more abundant than others, and that in a vast area hardly any leaf-bearing tree is seen, save the birch or salix tribes. The pine requires more air and light than the fir, consequently if the trees stand close together the stem is always free from branches, which then, as it were, form a crown on the top. The pine reaches a greater age than the fir, and. comes to maturity later the further north it grows. In Wermland they are full- grown at the age of 180 years, in Dala- roe at 210 years, but in some northerly tracts they do not acquire maturity un- til they are at least 300 years old. For fire wood the pine which is found here is much better than the fir, as it burns much brighter and leaves a better glow. For good fire wood the natives cut the trees down in winter, when all the sap is in the stem, split it in the spring, dry in the summer, and bring home for burning in the following autumn, The birch is the most northerly of all the European forest trees. It grows higher up than any other tree, and even in 60 degrees north latitude it is found at an elevation of 2000 feet above the sea. Where no other tree can grow the birch reaches the height of a man, and even at 2500 feet elevation some few bushes are met with, though after that it grad- ually dwindles to a creeper. The cloud berry ripens at this elevation, but no higher. After this all bushes cease to grow, and the ground is covered only with a brown fell vegetation of lichen and moss. The only berry that can ri- pen among the lichen is the crow berry. ‘The Laps of North Sweden never‘pitch their tents higher than about 800 feet below the perpetual snow region. To say nothing of the beauty which the clear green leayes in summer, and the silvery stem of the birch in winter, add to the northern forest landscape, is not frozen. If the soil is fairly good throw out a spade deep, and then take’ out another spade deep and haul it away, replacing with good surface soil from the woods or fields, mixing in some sand, if needed, and some old manure,-or chip dirt from wood pile. A bed prepared in this wav. if the wa- ter does not stand in it, wii produce a vigorous growth and abundant bloom in most garden flowers, and well repay the labor. Some few kinds do best in poor soil, or in special locations, but the great majority thrive best in a deep, rich, moist, but not wet, loam. When such a bed is once prepared it needs only an occasional top dressing to keep it in fine condition forever. Management of Brood Sows.—A man bought a brood sow and put her where the manure was kept. She dug a hole in the manure for the little pigs, then lay down and crushed every one to death. A few days before the sow-was due to farrow she should have been removed to a pen with a solid floor, covered with suitable material. A rail should have been put around in- side of the pen eight inches to a foot from the floor, and about a foot from the sides of the pen, which prevents the sow from lying snug against the sides of the pen, and perhaps crushing her little ones. We must take all the precautions we know of in order to save the little pigs, as our chances for success will then be much improved, Let us remember and profit by this and other mistakes, not only our own, but those made by others as well. Mis- takes are costly, so why suffer loss by repeating one we know of? Better keep arecord ofall heard of and commit them to memory, then the thoughtful farm- er will steer clear of them. Better still, send them to this department, and they may help some one else.—Practi- cal Farm Journal. Capacity -of Soil.—The roughest and poorest soils we have possess a certain natural capacity, and by proper tillage and the proper application of manures can be made to produce good crops, and yet, the strongest may be brought down to a point where production is unremunerative. Six per cent of the sheep in Ohio are returned as pure bred and grade Cotswolds. ‘TTREE-TOP FISHERY. Pleasant Place from Which to Fish on a Midsummer Day. : “John, John!” shouted the rosy lit- le wife of my host in central Florida, ‘rom the’ honeysuckle porch. “John, f you’re going to have fish for supper it’s time to go up the tree,” relates she Philadelphia Inquirer. Well, now, I’ve fished for all sorts of fish and in some odd places, but ‘hus far I never climbed into a tree © get them, but I didn’t ask any fool- sh questions. John simply replied over his shoulder, “All right!” and we sontinued our walk through the frost- olackened orange trees, which were just deginning to recover, those that were alive at all, from the havoc of the pre- seding winter. We passed beyond the plantation and through the cool shadows of a “ham- mock,” where cypress and palmetto trees were matted together and a wind- ing creek was bridged with a single log. Somewhere along the path John }Picked up his rod and a can of bait. Then we came out upon the edge of the bayou. Laze alligators floated at a lit- le distance or stuck their noses out from their mud beds in the rushes, and having satisfied themselves that ‘neither John nor the stranger had a ; gun they went on dozing serenely. A heron flapped away and rested himself in a convenient tree. A moceasin snake rolled from a dry log into the water. None of these incidents dis- turbed my friend, who led the way se- renely to the foot of a big tree over- | hanging the still waters of the bayou. Up this tree we walked by a regular series of board steps, and at the top we crept upon a well-fastened _ plat- | form, thoroughly shaded by the thick drapery of moss pendant from the framework branches; and, thus en- sconced, John proceeded to business, and in half an hour we had the finny wherewithal for a delicious supper. John enjoyed and I suppose still en- joys a practical monopoly of fishing in that lake, for no one thereabouts owns a boat, and, anyhow, the alliga- tors don’t approve of boats, the shores are too sedgy and water too shallow for casting, and “fishing trees” are not found in any considerable number thereabouts. So I borrowed John’s primitive tackle and thus earned the right to boast that I had fished, among other methods piscatorial, from a tree- top. LET THE NEW WOMAN GO! Rather Than Have N» More Comforta- ble, Fat Old Ladies. \ When all has been said and done, when the new woman has become an established personage among us, and has advanced in years as well as in ‘wisdom and honor, there will still be one thing for the world to regret and sigh for—we shall have no more fat old ladies, bless ’em! says Scribner's. ; For of course the new woman trained from her youth in the most approved and effective methods oi physical culture, with all her superior knowledge of how to control bodily conditions, to put, off flesh and take it on at will, will never, even in her old age, commit the error of growing stout So that, when the present generation of old ladies, our mistaken—some might say misshapen—aunts and grandmothers, are laid to rest, there will be nobody left to fill their wide armchairs by the fireside (the new grandmothers will probably be in the gymnasium) and the world will know a want which no superiority of the new woman can satisfy. This loss wil! not be felt at once; it will steal gradu- ally. upon us as the shadow steals over the lawn, and there may even be some in those progressive days “so thin and long.and slim of mind” as not to rec- ognize it as a loss at all. But these persons will be the ones who never knew in childhood—for it is upon the children that the loss will fall heaviest —the blessedness of having a stoui aunt or grandmother within whose eadiance of serenity and good nature they crept as into the sunlight when the world suddenly turned a bleak and sheerless face upon their souls, Uneducated Mathematical Prodigies. Zerah Colburn, born in Vermont ir 1804, at the age of six was a mathema- tical prodigy, though he was without even ordinary intelligence in other di- rections, and was a degenerate, with supernumerary digits on both hands and feet. Tom Fuller, a Virginie “lightning calculator” of the last cen- tury, was an illiterate native African o! prodigious power of calculation. Asked how many seconds in a year and a half he responded in two minutes, 47,304,000, how many seconds a man had lived who was 70 years 17 days and 12 hours old, he answered in a minute and a half, 2,210,500,800. Dase, an otherwise ex- tremely dull-witted German, was 2 “mathematical genius,” who, for ex- ample, multiplied corréctly in fifty-four seconds 79,532,853 by 93,758,479. Paper Cannons. To add to the number of astonishing things that are made of paper, Krupp, the great German manufacturer of can- nons, has lately completed a number of paper field pieces for the use of the German infantry. Their caliber is five centimetres, or a little less than two inches; and the pieces are so light that one soldier can easily carry one, But the resistance is greater than that of a field piece of steel of the same caliber. It is not expected that these paper guns will replace those of steel. They are intended for use in situations wEere the movement of the field artiNery would be impracticable. John Brown’s Daughter in Want. Mrs. Annie Brown Adams, last sur- viving child of John Brown, is living in direst want in northern California, Contributions for her relief are asket, Patents Issued. List of patents issued last week to Northwestern inventors: 1 John M. Bloom, Butte,» Mont., shoe string! fastener; Andrew Gruenberg, Minneapolis, Minn., runaway horse check; Christian Jensen, St. Paul, Minn., mangle; Godfried Laube, Hu- ron, S. D., trace holder; Rosella KR. Reilly, Newhouse, Minn., wateriig vart; Samuel J. Turner, Minneapolis, Minn., cigar lighter. T. D. Merwin, Patent Lawyer, 910 Pioneer Press Building, St. Paul, Minn. Thirteen In Rome. An observing tourist who visits Rome and walks through the streets is deubtless surprised that there are very few houses bearing the number “13,’ nearly all the houses that should bear that number being marked “12B” or “144.” Nor is the supposition re- garding the fateful 13 absent from seci- entific and phlegmatic Germany; for the other day a merchant in Berlin ap- plied to a magistrate of the district to have the number «f his shop changed from No. 18 to No. 13B. The magis- trate, however, refusi d to grant the pe- tition. In Frankfort, on the other hand, the owners of buildings bearing the number 13 are allowed to change the figures upon a simple application to the proper authorities—New York Tribune. NO-TO-BAC FO> FIFTY CENTS. Over 404,000 cured, Why not let No-To-Bae regulate or remove your desire for tobacco? Saves money, makes health and manhood. Cure guaranteed. 50c and $1.00. All druggists The metal in the big bell of Moscow we'ghs two hundred tons, and is valued at $350,000. If You Have Eye orEar Trouble Come to us, Free examinations. Half rates for treatment, No hospital bills. New cure for deaf- ness, Guarantee all eye operations. St. Paul Eye & Ear Infirmary, Merrill Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. The Largest Boiler Plate. The largest steam boiler plate in the world was recently turned out at the KXruppe works, in Essen. Germany. Tis dimensions are as follows: Length, 38 feet; width, 11 feet; thickness, 1 14 inches; surface, 429 square feet, and: weight, 37,600 pounds. Compared with this gigantic steel plate, the one re- cently rolled by the Stockton Mailea- ble company of England, sinks into in- significance. This plate, which was announced by the makers as the larg- est ever turned out in England, mea- sures: Length, 74 feet; width, 5 feet; thickness 3-4 inch. Its surface mea- sures nearly 370 square feet, and it weighs 12,3 pounds. To remove-peach stains, soak the article- in milk for forty-eight hours. Benzine rubbed on the edges of carpets. is a sure preventive of moths. IT’S CURES THAT COUNT. Many so-called remedies are pressed on the public attention on account of their claimed large sales. But sales cannot determine values. Salessimply argue good salesmen, shrewd pulfery, or enormous advertis- ing. It’s cures that count. It is cures that are counted on by Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. Its sales might be boasted. It has the world for its market. But sales prove nothing. We point only to the record of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, as proof of its merit: 50 YEARS OF CURES ; Always fold a dress skirt side out for packing, and it will not go easily wrinkle. | Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound, or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be de- stroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous sur- ‘aces, We will give one Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F, J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 5c Hall's Family Pills are the best. Selfish. Jobson—I'd rather you wouldn’t give me a Christmas present this year, Al- mira. Mrs. Jobson—Jonathan Jobson! Why? Jobson—I can’t afford it.—Ilustrated Monthly. To Get Out of the Way When trouble is coming, is obviously the part of common sense. An obstruction of the bowels is a serious obstacle to health. To get this out of the way is an easy matter with the thorough laxative, Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, which, although it affords relief, never gripes and convulses like a drastic purgative. Dyspepsia, malarial, kid- ney and rhemuatic ailments and nervous- ness yield to this genial family medicine. A Result of Matrimony. “Do you mean to say, Chumley, that you spend less money since you were married than you did before?” “That’s what it amounts to. I have | much less to spend.’”—Detroit Tree Press. A Very Popular Calendar. Few people in these busy days are willing to live without a calendar to mark the pass- ing of time. This fact, no doubt, accounts for the calendars of all kinds, colors, shapes and sizes which flood the mails at this season, Among them all the one that best 1 suits us is the one issued by N. W. AYER & Son, the “Keeping Everiastingly At It” Newspaper Advertising Agents of Philadel- phia. We have just received our new copy and are fixed for 1897. 1t is not difficult te see why this calendar isso great a favorite. The figures on it are large enough to be read across a room; its handsome appearance makes it worthy of a place in the best fur nished office or library, while it is business: like all the way through. The publishers state that the demand for this calendar has always exceeded thesupply. This led them ears ugo to place upon it anominal price— cents, on receipt of which it is sent, post- paid and securely packed, to any address, Such a Joke on Arthur. Mamie—Oh, is was such a joke on ‘Arthur last night at the Christmas party! Gertie—What was it, dear? ,. Mamie—He thought he kissed me un- der the mistletoe, and he didn’t at all! Gertie—The idea! Mamie—Yes! It wasn’t mistletoe. It was holly!—Illustrated Monthly. Salzer Seed Company Ahead! So enormous has been the demand for Salzer’s seeds in Texas that the John A. Salzer Seed company, La Crosse, Wis., sent out a special train on Jan. 11, loaded with seed potatoes, grasses and clover, seed corn, cats, etc, to be distributed among its Southern customers. Proved. Miss Von Bikenstein—Mr. Pemnyfel- low, you are not opposed to women wearing bloomers, are you? Mr. Pennyfellow—No, indeed. You know the good old French pvroverb, “Honi soit qui mal y pants.” ‘Twinkles. N. W. N. U. BLOOD POISON QUICKLY CURED WE SOLICIT THE MOST OBSTINATE CASES Primary, Secondary or Tertiary permanently cured in from 15 to 35 days. We eliminate all poison from the system, so that there can never be a returnjof the disease in any form, Parties can be treated at home as well as here (for the same price and under the same guaran- tee), but with those who prefer to come here, we will contract to cure them or refund all money and pay entire expense of coming, railroad fare and hotel bills. OUR MAGIC REMEDY has been many years in use and never failed ‘lo Cure. Since the history of medicine a trne specific for BLOOD POISON has been sought for but never found untill our Magic Cyphil- ene wasdiscovered. This disease has always baffled the skill of most eminent physicians. We solicit the most obstinate cases and challenge the world for a case we cannot cure. 00,000 CAPITAL, behind our unconditional guarantee. Absolute proof sent sealed on ap- plication, 100-page book free. Have You Copper Colored Spots Sore Throat, Pimples, Aches, Old Sores, Ulcers in mouth Lee Falling, write COOK REM- EDY, CO., 307 Masonie Temple, Chicago, Il. WRITE US FOR OUR 100 PAGE BOOK SENT FREE COOK REMEDY CO. fing Satzer’s Seeds are Warranted to Produces PrfJohn Breider, Mishicott, Wis. SCE rue MEAT. eam ony ID ease E AMD FATRAC To SMO PR. OPIUM: 22 DRUNKENNESS Cured. DR.J.L. STEPHENS. LEBANON PISO?S* CURE FOR? 555 GURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS a Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use P fe] __intime. Sold by drugs CONSUMPTION. 2 No. 5—1897. SPRAIN | cctwuat ST. JACOBS O1L=——— = — You'll find out what they are when you... | m use crutches. [ i is when you put the crutches away, completely cured. fot 25+ so¢ ple and booklet free. Ad. STERLING ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED tre"never crip or eripe’ wat couse any he sre DEWEDY CO.’ Chicaco: Montcea, Cam, ot Nen Yorke en DRUGGISTS the Ideal y aman dstte Pasa