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Dr. Maiden's Uplift Talks By ORISON SWETT MARDEN. ~aws b nsamre Jewssesr uIassm DO NOT DISCHARGE THE BOY. 6- Edwin Booth once scolded one of his supers for the careless way in which he took his part. "Look at me," said Mr. Booth, "why don't you do as I do?" "Ah, Mr. Booth." said the man. "if I were you I would not be carrying a spear for one dollar a night." Don't scold the employee who doesn't always do things as you would do them. Remember, he has not your experience, Judgment or pres ent ability. If he had he would not be working for you. Don't" fire" the boy who has disap pointed you. Think how you would like to have some one treat your boy who happened to make a mistake or to do some foolish thing. Do not throw him out. Take all interest in him. Try to arouse his ambition. Tell him of your struggles to get a start In the world and how important C it is to do everything to a finish. Show him that every letter he writes, that every well done thing is a step to something higher. Did you ever think, Mr. Employer, what it may mean to you to discharge a boy or girl, perhaps In a fit of tem per or for a trifling offense? It may seem a little thing for you to disharge employees, but it may be the turning point in their careers. It Is a most unfortunate thing for young people, who are very susoep tfble to dseouragement, and who are the victims of their moods, to be dis charged. They sometimes become so dishsartesed they think it is no use to try to do their best Some empers m y that their time is too valuable to spend breaking in Se hens, and the discharge a boy upon the sahtest provopation, for a lttle Ilsta a bander, caelesmeas. They do not nmlis that this may sit him. eamember that you can persuade a boy, youes a lead him, Into almost amythIng but t s very difficut to drive him, if there is anythingt i Perhaps the ba you want to di eharge has not had the love and ear, the tnder inlueeaas i his homer which your boy has had. In iet,, he may have no real home at 'alI, s lhave it. His home my .wt have a vicious Inamees upon him: Are you are there is nothings in hil wilh yet ma k,4as sut, mplqers sheloud resort to every possiboe bedleant betore disehare lag help. Sometimes ust a st. tle o eoragement,.a wte praise, when an unruly empijoe dea well, wil re sult In woNdefMl i ovement. Only rsetly the' manager of a large departmet store told me that hae d been so tlrd wltlthe sta plib the arlesenmes and apparerst sadlerese of a gt eer that he made up his nad ha must disaUre lhe. a. hae talked with her &ad &, wins her, but found that it did smeo g as good. He caled her into the o loeo moe maing to ell her tht he would have to let her go. While talk las to her, hwever, he asked her why it was that she eould not do better, and she tod him that she didn't like th'"wk I was doing; that if he wo pet her La the silk department he weld d she would do better. He made the eperment, and ho be 1 eam a mnnt ldr. Io teak a great ltertt a sels; t b~aet, Lhad am a. meet prt enheewletd of te a. . t aes d wers The gls to new a ehr e the silk departmea~ t at a Iage salar, ad her emploeer as' she ha beoome indspenasble to the Instead of frint a emaployee who hea tried you perhas past endurame change him about, try him in dltferent paoeLtous. He may develop genus. IHe may now be a round peg in a a b hole, and aIter he has found his place he may Prove very valuable to ou; but if you discarge him it may disorage him from trylfn. Many me sem to think that they an treat thedr hlp la ay way; that they an sold them, hound them, nag them, ied t Ittlt them, and use all arts o slave4rttns methods tIn their treatmet of them, and yet et ther best service. While ther is now and the a eonm blentlous pwa who tries to do his best under alln eLmekstae, thare m a thLeand who will sve bake what the resev Aetm end reNetle are pretty na ly equatn thi worl. As a rle, people a as eback tn our own sol. ITey win pet hack radnen with adnes, ht with hate and grat tode with contempt. TODAY IS YtOUR DAY AND MINL smiel pesentage of the posmlae hap spine out of ae be rnsser ame wating be that Wradlee of tamgw *he they halleo ther waetesn a ther dasites and the thingo hat mliiwem ad harms them and et esm wll e oUniated and oly the ased thas th things that make o bow. e ll remae. Do n eve r rllse, yo who em basang sheet tmorow and Ms weudeM posbmim that it w lel iSt Ibs today, that the glamou m'e RIehscai YIUemltea d muelh tog a ema bmtW. may: "'he @5cm attm teI Ismuret br am* mth d utmlugl l a bow whih U @5wwi tam. eat. be mawc cm e owal bumsms a tergs white sies. Sw igk us the but Plo a U· k#. a r -,ry which your tmaginato puts In t vim be gone when you reach it, that the mirage which you witness today Come from the dlstanoe, but that when you arrive it will be gone, and you will And only a common, ordinary day practically a duplicate of this com mon, ordinary day, through which you are now passing? The trouble with many of us is that we are walting for the ideal con dition before we enjoy ourselves. Somehow we cannot seem to manage to extract satisfaction and enjoyment out of the day that is so full of cares, anxieties and the humdrum routine of life. We are dreaming of that Utopia somewhere in the future that will have all the good things, the comfort, the conveniencbs and lux urles without the annoying things, the thousand pin pricks and the little annoyances, the fretting and the wor rying and the anxiety of today. We are dreaming of the condition when our family will all be well, when we shall be strong and healthy, vigorous, I and when we shall be rid of the things I that harass. But there is no such Paradise I awaiting us. We are really now in t the Paradise which we pictured in I our dreams a few years ago. We all are in it. This is the future we looked forward to when we were in I school or college, when we first left home to start out in the world for 1 ourselves, and is it materially different 1 from yesterday? Is it not the same I humdrum sort of life, with the same anxieties, the same worries, the same I cares that we had then, and probably many more? Life is made up of days, each one must be a success or the whole is marred. The habit, there fore, of resolving when we start Out each morning that the day shall find us a little farther ahead, a little far ther on, is a wonderful help. Lio as a whole will be a success if each day is a success. "Today is your day and mine, the only day we have, the day in which we play our part," says David Starr Jordan. "What our part may signity in the great whole we may not un derstand; but we are here to play it, and now is our time. Thi we know; it is a part of action, not of whainag. It is a part of love, not cynicism. It is for us to express love in terms of human helpfulness." Today l the day that hods the ke to your future. What you do today you will likely do tomorrow; what you are today you will be tomorrow, with simply one days growth or one day's etrosressln.. Today is the buleda-board of what you do tomor row. By what philosophy ean you idle away your time today, waste your enera, squander your force, and do your work like a drudge, and expect a magnificent harvest of sucmess, properity and happines from seekh a roesg? Today Isthe seed you are sowing for tomorrow's harvest, and if You sow seeds of carefalmne, aco racy, energy, seal ad enthusiasm, if yoU sow optimistle good cheer, help ful saeds, you will reap the same kind of a harvest tomorrow. Evelutlen of Moder Trade, In a jewelry store more tha fifty years ago, John Wasamaker was bry lag a present for his mother with a few dollars of his earnings. "'l take that," he sid. pointing to a dainty jewt and handing out the cash a little proudly. As he spoke, he saw aneae shiny sonmthing that pleased hibm stm more, even though it came higher. "I think I'll change my mind and take that one instead," he aid to the man, who had not yet wrapped up the first selection. "It's too late now," sanped the jeweler. "You've bought this and you moust keep it." Doubtless it Ihd been a stoc a _lo time nad the lsa it fal t sou that he had worked it o. It ws as afuqt to the yn purchaser, but it was the a. seption of one of the bi poilices tin the Wansmaker system. The Jewelers attitudo redectd trade eoadidtuse pior to 'dl. but al this wris masse in the Wanamaker idea, whoeo enreator has lived to Ms his cavieos adopt ed as busatness aiors. One pie. for goods and the return of purhases has revoltionised retail trade t eo lan I Philadelphia, where it met with bitter opposition, but in all parts of the conuntry. John Wa-nnier was see of the first 'merchants to recoglse the privilege of the Amercan weman to change her mind.-"A Modern Bas naes Oeral," by Flynn Wayne iA National Magaze. pire Away. A acompany of territorials were at the rtne. The usual marker had not turned up, but a deputy was mon fond in the person of an old worthy well known in the district who oca sonally ated a aubstituto in seek hrcumstn~es. The rt e roud was about to be fared when the emptai, lookai towards the tarset, was al. most atupefled to ms the aewly-e gaPsd marker right in the Ine of fire. "St8p firin!" tnz he screeched, as he hasted to whern the old man stood, almly smekain "Yoe bMhernga idiot!" he yelled, as he approached "Do youa bow you were within an ae of death just nowt" "Och, y" was the reply. "lat fire a'. Ave marked for yar squid eere."-Lado'l TBItts Ys,- sail the luseln ent., "I ea an iemr wLhen that sn am w 15 test muse." "And now it lsa't mare thea five." "Y. It jt oes to che tht we have't been sgehag our e of t he rivers and harbors aaepiadtoea." ow was subdafs Jo5ae sieing Iee dappenard wft the baa. It will probably be year. before thle as ter le flly cleared up." Rtpes e a es6 as Sstel. aeseat prlmeats show thut an and rope l as setreg as soi bar .rel weigh r wetK whun, a seater belt Y lees bsp paer e.t a aeras, aseeempet is h .ase wI. l aws w woar trt as Mt ýset sa r ast, ater iI ý sh dafI I ws awre aa BOY 1S KILLED II FIGHT WITH SHARK Young Turk, a Fancy Swimmer, Makes a Heroic Struggle Against Aquatic Enemy. ALMOST WINS COMBAT Crowd at Lake Pontchartraln, La., Sees Death Struggle Between Youth and a Man-Eater, Rescuers Arriv Ing Too Late. New Orleans, La.-Peter Kontpou las, a seventeen-yearold Turk, a fancy swimmer of remarkable abil Ity, gave a large audience at Lake Pontchartrain 20 minutes of unsched uled thrill and horror when he was fatally attacked by a man-eating shark while doing his swimming stunts in the lake. Kontpoulas had been doing his swimming tricks 100 yards out from the throng-lined shore for 15 minutes before the excitement began. Suddenly, the water about the boy began to churn. The lad was seen to throw up his hands and then disappear. The water became violently agitated, and the knowing men In the crowd which lined the shore yolled: "My God! A shark has attacked that youngster!" Clear-headed men in the crowd ran up the beach a quarter of a mile to get a boat to go out to the assistance of the youth. The rest of the crowd, helpless to aid the struggling swim mer, watched the death struggle of the nervy Turk in mute horror. Out on the lake, the expert swimmer was making a terrifie ght for life The shark first caught the man by the right foot. By beating the water hard and by strenuous squirming, the Turk freed himself temporarily from the jaws of the man-eater. Bravely he struck out for shora In another minute, the shark, again a its back, With the Right Arm of the Swimmr In Its Jemws made for the boy. This tUm h got a grip eo the right leg of the youth. Again the battle in the lake raed fat and furiousl, the boy and the shark both chrning the water like padd whbeels. Again the boy td himself from the monster of thed By this time the men who had garoe for a boat were putting out for the scoee of battle In another two minute, the spe~t tors saw the shark make another luns for the swimmer, but this time they saw the Turk avoid the eo-rush tag monster. WhLen thd shark passed the youth, the lad struck out agali for shora The lad was seae to swim at leaset ffte yards wilth great speed. Agak the white, uag throat of the sea brte was seen to shoot aout ofI the depths, this time with the right arm of the swimmer in its uncom promisnLat Jaws, Men in the ecowd yelled: "Merelful God! The shark's got a big taste of blood now. He'll never quitt the fght. The boy is dome for!" Using his left arm and his legs to the best of advantarge, the boy stran gled for frgly two minutes uaderneath and oe the surface of the water be ar he eol4wruet himself away from the tainous man-eater. The men in the boat were ptshtg nearer and nearer, bat were still a coaside able distance away from the sceae of battle. Weakened, but with mag nlifeent spirit, the boy was seea to put again for the beach. This timo he swam longer than he had after previous attaeks. Sddenly, however, the lad was sees to rise bodily aout of the water. The shark had made a rswift fank attack and the people a shore could see the boys right side in the aws of the man-ster. With ubriedled fury the boy attacked the shark, freerg himself agatn firom the moster. Agatn, he tried to strike out for shore, but his stroes were weak. As the rusers n tohe boet reseled the lad, he was just golas dowa ~r the second timea He was uncomaselos when haaled Into the boat, dyis from les o@ blood and a overworked heart before the eraft reached alore. U. . Wa eepital Praised lomdoa.-The Time describes the Amerle. a ambulene ea.- t Int the Pastour la cest eatety bt a oomanttes of Ameearns as one or the bout eqipped and mast ramrk able war hospitals In aspe "Its epldlid wel nt is ulo l Dy news na s* k-ne 'n deserves as tah hats a s .s ea thi solideo U be dLi·m RABID PRIIE WOIL ATTACKS TWO MEN Texan' Lp Torn Off a De psrat Fight With a coyot. Austin, T.--rwo of the most e traoidliary cases since the estaeMshb meant of the Pasteur institute In 'Au tin have Just been registered In that instltution. W. H. Whitley, a rmer of Electra, Wichita county, and his son, seventee, arrived here for treat ment against rabies. Whitley sad his son were attacked recently at anight by a coyote, sad both are sufering from wounds, sev eral of which are serious. The elder Whitley has about eighteen wounds. The ceanter of his upper lip was Mbt ten of, and there is a wound in one arm penetroting to the bone. The othb caught the Animal by the Throat. er wounds are oa his face, arms ana body. The boy has nine wouads, the most serious one being on his hand. .Whitley was attacked while be was asleep oa a cot In his barn. Hewas awakened when the wolf bit him on the lip. He caught the almal by the threst and foughtdesperately for tall half an boar, the noise from the scuf Se awakening Whitley's son, who also was sleepin to the bars. Whil his father anad the coyote bate tiead youg w tarted to tie house for asstan -but before he had run s yards from thae arn the wolf escaped from the clutch of Mr. Whmly overtook the boy and a t tackedJam. The boy nally fought oR the beast Whitley was sesm-ousedou when ald reached him In te opainio of the physicians at the Pasteur Institute there ti no doubt that the coyote was aIicted with the rabies, and double treatment was giv ea Wbtley Ad his son. CAT IS HEIR TO $1,000 Calif ia Weman's WIII Qvee Tabby Kidaeys and Cream Per Ife. Pasadesa, CaL-A cat inherited $1,0e the other day, and is to have kidne aed ream three times a day r the rest o its llfe. It can have its but ts late ltress, Mrs. Nellie Ross, thui thee full meals a day would he enough. especally as the cat Iq gettig old. Its me is Tiger. and its anestral hom was asn ash barrel in the reer f a nelghbor's yard. It was 1, yaars ago that Tiger rubbed its eyes open in n ash barrel la the rear af the home where little Mary Peter lived, aross the street from Mrs. Rrs. Mary wat eat aad looked at the barrel ce morntng and reported to her mother that tbe stork had eartainly been kind to Tsergs mama. There wre six or ten kLt tea to the stodks eredit. 8he wat directly aoes the strt and told Mrs. Roes tat she had a gift to maks, mad with a little sob and mu clutchI t at her skirt, Ja preseated Tiger, thea unnamed ad unloved. Mrs. Res never liked ats, her friernds ay. But Mrs. Ros' mother, Mrs. Mary SeriptUr, and her ant, Mrs ames Gower, wue bln with her, ael the two elderly wome took a tancy to tim ndesired lafunt.' The two old wma petted ad eared for the kitte, aa thiag were lux arious in £he Ross household. M Mrs. Ross had sold be hoe in Chca o Potter Palmer, d the site where It one stood is now the ladles' entrance to .the hitorle.r Te sale ave to J M. Ross ad- his wie $P5,000. Mr. Scripture ed.alne yers ago, and ave rears later Mrs. Gowey died, laeynv Mr.m.s al And as Tiger had bee. dear to bsth of the dead, Mrs. Rosscared fr tho cat, liked It, thean orew go attash to tho peasper nag Tier that she was more loyal even tan Mr rslatives. Sevral weeks ego MYa aoss sad saddaeal. the ether day hrali was read ad the Unle. Natihmal and Sc. lags bank of Easearse learned that Kt is executor. ad that ib the previsiss at the will the first $1. of the es tate wasu aet sulde fr the care pt TIer, and Mrs. Leulo M. Adams, 102 Walnut street. Berkeley, is to be tihe caretaker. Briueh Pliesesre Saoer. Veale-Rport. from rovise. perta et Au trhBunagry let that Si Ink prisoner ef wer le been su' eoted i meal itsaees to hah treatmt. They have ee. esee. etly fd ad bly edr hdmed am, to smaniary ce , l Men? s-lnso ass, beens ms $guld8 to vapiggs ig n eIIn sir. As Mk srr0u sm m ias AS TO NAMI(U6 EXPERT ADVICE PROM DuPARr MENT OF AGRICULTURL Cases Where Rendered seer o Veal Fat MaI Be Substid for Bet. ster--4aduhlae Variety late the Ceaeetles. There are, generally speaking only two kinds of cake made by the Amert' a houasewife: namely, spong cakes and butter cakes: The former nev) have butter In them and a re qrat ly raised entirely by means of eg. The eggs usually provide the only moisture used. but when eggs are es pensive, economy sometimes demands that water be added and baking pow der aed. In the latter kind. butter Is generally used on account of its Savor. Its effect on dough Is to make it tender and brittle instead of tough #ad elastle. Sponge cakes are mixed diferently from batter cakes and should be baked in a cooler oven and about one and one-fourth times as lot. The tests and rules for baking are the same for sponge cakes and butter cakes. Gingerbread and other highly spleed eakes may be clased as "bat ter cakes," but for economy's sake pure rendered beef od veal fat ma be substituted for butter as the laTr of the fat will not be so evidean a In other kinds of cake. A cooky also comes under the class of "butter cakir," any butte cake recipe being applicable to cookiet If only onethird to one-half the amount of milk called for Is used. The dough should be rolled out on a Soured board. Cookie should bake in a slow oven for 8 to 10 minutes. Mach vprlety an be made in cakes by tntroducing fruits, nuts, spices or different Savoring extracts Into the dough, or by asing oly the w.ite Of eggs for white cakes, or a larger num ber of yolks thap whites for yellow cakes Brown sugar may be used for dart' fruit ake. Pastry Sour wll make lighter ad more tender cake than standard Sor. If standard Sour Is used take two tableepoofuls less for each cupful measured. In maing cake only e granulated or powdered sugar should be aed as a rule. One the kbutd thee matrials in ay case should be employed. in preparing the p'ans for ake they should be greased wl with butter er lard or lHe with par~ paper. Bright, new pa will not need to be buttered for sponge cake and if let unbuttered a mre deicate crust is formed. If a wood or coal re Is ued thee should be a small modrate d are, but em that will last wtthM much additon through the baksi Regulate the oves long enough be fore the ake is to go In to hav the dampers adeited s they are to 10 main thrugshet the baking. It this Is not done the dampers mrut b chaaget to regulate the heat during the baking, adthe cake wil not be so well baked. Most akes can be at once removed from the pan when baked. but very rleh akes and dark fruit cake will be Sable to break lees allowed to stead about·lve mx utes. Sp'Iy Chip Sese. To make chill-mse eat 84 tomatoes up i small pieces and cook as for the table. Run twelve grse peppers and eight onions through the mat ebop per. Rub the tomatoes through p sieve or colander and have the pep pue ad aens redy to edd to the tomatoes, wth twe oaLeeop. l eah oof grom cinnamonu g clove anod allapieo, t Mbespe fls a f lt alnd trea a orsf ie viaear. Mis all tegeer asd bol ir thre hoars Put,r wh hot, ln she used Jars or bottles an keep in a ecool pace. Nutmeat leque. One paint scalded ul. ems ad a quarter cuptls o ar, oan eg. eme sant tblespoorna l Sour, squarter teespouaful salt, em quart thi ceam, ne tabespoo fsl ,,, alil. , on tao spoonful aloe d estreot, emehslf cup r l of maParoons, ao ds oad pee auto. Mix the auger, er ead sal, dd thde ~ (slightly beate) ad the scalde maik: cook in a deuabe boler , mnutes, stirring cossna, lyat firdea, col, .dd the ream, rall and a mead ntraet; straine ad olor with Ieta res advd the mamarss braeesm in small pieees, add pats shopped be and fress wl t*apple polshe. ont twe pneaple m sles mda tChm sia e ath. a eler wt m h emek uIce. (This helpa toring ouat the Savor.) Pare ripe, le i n esud, aremove eavery partule of the ter white, divide l t bo seetas ad eat each seton in two. Tess it a ls bowl with th plnesaple spenkle wt poeme tuger sdo ,reat ever ita cair twe ome lisue oysters wb a aik peoanfl o mted btter, na ml beates egg. onethid the balk dr bread Swith eau and ~er form bo tbal and bae tea r inte , tes i a rwnme serve n hlr ster shoes with a a pap gar ish. Seat tegsa et the whss of two a . Add to ttheses genes i uar a ndr 6 ' aK is uLLk i wse alp fm tmhe epson. in a he ,, eve n . . 9ia f r a aser eassage FAT '·uT~LT1 ·~rtL~U r. .·~~. Z C HICAO.-"aor De" saams tied s posy to t ars the other ay. s eaina , wig led iat. black" ad with rt aMe aJg·Helet o aS . we the ypark" was r ,oe Sdat tho altar t .o lwas the hWi~ din- the aras a*"s "norhye knocked * t th Bismark Paetetk ia the day an. get trall for the Holy uhtty-Iru t street at so e e head no hit on foot. Late In theheste sidae bower, "serems wa something doin b10l140 the ACabs-ox battle First a tan, draged lag by a pant. eder nde ad drives r a its apparance. A big banne was stretched across its ldes groom this weleome admoatles: "Don't weakesn, 'anmo.' " At its heels came a "hungry ye" German band plisping ridinga in a "ripple wagon" drives by a ned-coated nage. A pullingt a chain of 12 "cla-sap" charlots, ame nest, sad is Ng of hundred yelling, plugs.h aed cowhers led by "w:" :ar ney. As mnarshals of the "ieoradmp" a there wre s'" sbart "Spus" q'ady and "Skinny" kemny. EUve young nward cently went to work in the packinag buese, was on thoe job. The cavalcade drew up in treat of the church and awa.4 was about lvo o'clock wh be arrived in a bg touring ea Miss Mary Cowman. While Rev. D. D. ishes was "tyag the knot" iside the lassoe. The bridal party poes 'remtnrag theobd their getaway, but in vain. urrenaded by theo ei paraded to the yards at Root sad alsted streets asa made a little speech he was permited to ho. Hard to Keep the C se Out of the, tm uBnie" States, en theas * atlea ia elad isd.. hat mast stry awake every mt in the year, as si Detbrt aver. tar Jo China m is wily, and John Chilmas is shrewd whm It emes to a realiastlen K pea pmses. fre the days at "mret lt Kearmey" in ga Feaseo dews to nerotse sem-issafg eS aase" estmeate that a mame numb. oa .. Wiador to Detroit, adthesese a to various dest *a L year In a year at. Withal, the fmUi.sw. auhersties av s e "art" oin th, ,e san e" er s.ma** oo wh,, ~ rS and ert the woulde ruestden a ls thor. lives s aadth seaent sia hene ea es sansr ou a arses States' e1dais uladily p a ides - eit. known as eao h of s a "ad' end of treosle Ho Iara smsasmaary e d a rsg e United liate-e has al b ha a h o his peaies" a nrrested aSl. iesad swete, ho s wery, hm, sew he is a nlab thlmin t 4mbibh t Abuul The plan semariay Iseds o i Weesn , ad^ _S _ er twelve Chinese to g e' hin laadr er slg Tie An of either Sa or Sa Itspaid e agspeiqat ea mo y s bed Uoi ashe i o me W my t Me across th Psasn river. e usaeas" $stv in Sast. In any mtees ym wfi m who ws eases . ., at se poaint aoesg the waeV f oeat where eas ame l Mi erOr1hl. . t sw O3LNaNs, LL.-Th eat i ***l ,m t 19 he Sisee oaf rats atbSe eares. of ee tens ea sre .a2 o o June 1s a ase ofr bam psge was amsne ahime eep o gob _rd r.a .----.le . ethes ease o merseds a e pngue. A he-ais ev.erwe. e a a9_ w ,it a t. i a h e The rats me being e- t ir,m-s e swa a_ epsert radm,*l.s weren hu .i A mm - as mear as ITN sa fa a ragle we al Thinssmbs o rod ents him ms ed r se mengs human have dla lage n a 4i. e a -ow amesa hoems sr aemeaIms, te Weoed a umntrwed. A sfy dars age a Yhsm It aC rea eas sbad sad ia the presses no oses its S im heatinge It is a hamisem jib in raest as amlde New Oresma. Who R i bees ui a in i o as dnee of t IPei heath wainq a sme Ms seed no that thaY elmr the prnl ama ay in e seS er ohs haga tee olsty iag shbuV Se iddatises am beg laid in hte rs t NI wa Igrouul-As themeor tad astes. She '· e treets eswee wat it aisesiwh *d tham. sea them ajigpes see them aerasse a ar ae ssm hat a at f themnee teir giassums a 3ea Wed ad8 i was qe pet to . Miaed aid mseamed i emer La, e w ks mL emiantsam. seat aspemir tat h as endu a t leatiw