Under the Rose =Zr~Boor" CAT'S EYE gpýNEY rp r TINE. I. . ,s` raltor By FREDERIC REDDALE (Copyright by W. U. Cbpnmau) 0 you think that dime L novel fiction is un- ai healthy for the juvenile te mind." queried Finney Valentine. "You are R right, of course; scarce- e ly a week passes that tt we do not read in the di papers of some young- - ster. or youngsters, W who fall into the hands a] of the law while en- it deavoring to duplicate b4 the feats of a bandit hero, as portrayed by is the blood-and-thunder m But you might go a step o0 and assert that there are t who are prone to fall under the 1 antence, and not be making an ol w asked the listener, scentt- P+ ' pgssible story.f ~ ei' the readers of that class fl s' a are not by any means con w fhe rising generation." replied ml Spector. "You may think it p. p t I am personally acquainted it pr Ireainent member of the New w ihr who seeks relaxation from a1 ,I l problems by devouring all al JImap detective stories he can ti ds lands on. Much on the same tl I suppose, that a tired busi- R ma takes in a light musical after he has completed his it of the day. But the lawyer's tl d-ssi't exactly illustrate my t A A man with a well-balanced PI tralned intellect would only w abeurd side of the melo- ci hero's exploits. But there " of men who read such stuff 1 s mat only enteRellned thereby, to It pretty seriously. Also, here o a reader of dime novels may It fairly ingenious plot which, hi It ts fireworks and trim- it t contain a hint of how to "4 a certain crime that could p ly worked out. The al , ngestion would be enough, that it suited the reader's a ft hstOane?" queried the listen- I Sthif-mocking, half-skeptical di was purposely intended d the farmer chief into unlock- c particular episode in his tl . Doubtless so shrewd p Jg msakiad as Finney Val- f ,s not fooled for a minute by h  Pq parsat ruse, since he 1l bly and knowingly. a was once a criminal event o 'pjrieUce which Illustrates ft to k hair," he explained. e a batten on his desk, after ii his indexed casebook, h ~ le No. 82." he said to ti who answered the bus- p he smoked medita though mentally going back a shriling happening in his " . In three minutes the r M. was placed at his el- b eat a sheaf of papers, f eattangs, and photographs, t mthe momentarily between u lagers, nodded satisfac a them is their place,. Sfres long and black Pans- 1 began the following story. f h  given here in his own r a hundred miles of the p kt Oslen etlcut and Massachu- p samy run across little vil- o rsal ssttlempnts that are t primitive sad old-fashioned a Wre in Revolutionary days. t hmbre you find the "aban- c that one hears so much c atrdays; they have been t " mostly by the younger p the old folks held on till p $d the grave claimed them, I sleared fields ran to weeds, a feances fell down, the apple I oed for lack of tending, and I and barns gradually a and there enough young r to keep up the village Is, and the soil, instead of I out, as we've been led to I yields Jaust uas good a living t while the hardy people go on f -teir sturdy lives, marrying in marriage, as though f and automobiles had 'eb Invented. t eaCh a place was the Connoe- I of Plssgh. about twenty a of Stamford. among the the Housatonic Val- I tin Piysgah was pres b a plain God-fearing way; I had no poor; there was a church, a Union I the usual stores, and one or factorise. itkVing farms of perhaps a 1 ~a hundred acres each adjoined , owned respectively by Valley and Merrill. Tom I i a Ialater of about twenty- I Sworked one of these I the sole heiress to the other cherming girl of twenty-four trth Merrill. It was the thing in the world for peopld to fall In love. mar tha nite the twin properties that's exactly what hap Sauth Merrill had possessed altors, but Tom Valley even- I i l57e to be the lucky man. i Cteor Photography. 5 by which it is possible to I ln two hours a portrait in I 2atural colors has been dis alall of color appears on the i exact tint of the flesh, I shades of the costume, 1 *& eolor of the eyebrows. point about the new Uld Mr. Hamburger, "lles in the Portrait can be taken Sa seond. Before this thee destrin a color por su tmsr an exposuer sf40 t Local gossip said that Mark Henniker, v another landowner, had been his hot- k test rival. a Well. Tom and Ruth were married. I º Remember, it was a primitive little t community. After the ceremony at a the minister's house the young couple fI drove home to the Valley homestead' 14 -such a thing as a wedding-tour b would have been thought a wicked y and useless extravagance. Besides. tl it was haying time. and Tom couldn't be spared. There was a wedding supper for the a immediate relatives, and before the n meal was well ended a large crowd ti of the villagers and neighboring farm d folks arrived outside the house to g give the bride and groom a genuine a old-fauhioned "Shivaree." There were all sorts of an uproar-beating of tin pans, blowing of horns, ringing of cowbells, shouting, laughter, and even firing of guns and piatols. Of course the young couple had to show themselves, and at their ap pearance the tumult and the shout ing broke out worse than ever. It was a cloudless night with the moon at the full, and as Tom and Ruth stood arm in arm on the wide porch they were in clear view. Suddenly there was a volley of firearms, and Ruth Valley was seen to fall back ward in her husband's arms. At first p it was thought she had fainted from the excitement, but in a few moments the bridegroom's affrighted shouts ap I prised those nearest that the newly r wedded wife had beetn shot! Some mis creant in the crowd had deliberately p "drawn a bead" on her breast! At Sleast-for I must not get ahead too fast-that's what became apparent p afterward. In the initial confusion it was thought that the shooting must have been an accident-some cheerful idiot in the crowd on the lawn, who "didn't know it was loaded," had I pulled the trigger and unknowingly p sped the fatal bullet. But when I got on the case the facts I already discovered put a totally dif ferent complexion on the matter, and I speedily decided that Ruth Valley's I death was a case of deliberate mur I der. There had been an inquest, of course, by the county physician, and a that gave me the hint. The missile I proved to be a soft-nosed steel bullet fired from a Krag army rifle. And r here was a remarkable fact: the soft Slead nose of the bullet had flattened and spread Itself against the girl's t corset steel; when examined it looked s for all the world like a cat's eye, even to the coloring of the pupil! r It was the steel cone of the bullet that had caused death, that having pene a trated the heart. The poor child probably never knew what hit her. Naturally my first task was to t search for someone who owned a a Krag army rifle-a rare weapon in a a rural community-this person also - being an excellent marksman. The , finding of a man who united these i, two characteristics, I told myself, a would be tantamount to spotting the murderer. But here I ran upon the first snag. The owner of the Krag was soon found in the person of George Ger a rish, a veteran of the Spanish war, who had returned from Montank the a previous autmun. Gerrish not only i- proved a complete alibi, but strenu 1 ously denied having loaned his Krag I s to anyone. Yet when I told him my I d errand, and together we had exam i. ned the gun, he unhesitatingly de 1- clared that it had been recently di. 1 h charged and that one shell was miss a ing from the full clip which it had I r previously contained. Gerrish elx 1 I plained that, living alone as he did, a, he thought it no harm to keep the u, gun loaded. However, he readily e identified the steel cone which had d killed Ruth Valley, and told me of y several similar instances of the queer ahpes sometimes taken by the "mush Srooming" of the soft-nose bullet. Also e he agreeds with me that some one, f knowing he was away from home, o might have "borrowed" the Krag on g the fatal night, though he wuas equally n frank to say that he had observed no g indications that his house had been h feloniously entered during his absence. d And until my call he had not noticed that the weapon had been moved from i- ts accustomed place on a couple of y staples over his hid brick fireplace. e Swearing him to silence, and to the I- lockin away of the incriminating - weapon until I might crel for it, my ; next task was to look for a good a markDman and a man with a motive n for the killing. To this end I went r through the male residents of the neighborhood with a fine toothcomb a with the idea, first, of eliminating 4 the sheep from the geats. SAll told, there were not more than n half a dozen names worth consider r- lug. Some of these had been among e Ruth Merrlll's suitors, but all, with ar one exception, seemed to have taken ar the result philosophically and gone Le about their business. This exception ar was Mark Henniker, wL.. had been r- overheard to boast that Tom Valley as wouldn't long have the girl, even after p she had promised to marry him. d Those who heard him make this n- threat thought he referred to the well n. known frail state of her health. But seconds-a long time when it is taken to into consideration that the slightest in movement would ruin the picture." s- Mr. Hamburger added that may English society women who wished ie to have their court dresses reproduced h, in their natural shades were already e, arranging for sittings. Sound Is Net Everything. in One of the speakers at a recent din a ner in the Bellevue8tratford, in di is cu'!ng Scotch writers, meat1mo Ia H- 3 n as having writen the "Boa a0 nle .,reef' Bush" omen of the dums the subsequemt rve t pat the remark In a different light to me. But a more important fact was that Henniker bore the reputation of being a crack shot with either rifle or pis toL In the hunting field, after rabbits or birds, he was never known to miss, said local gossip; while at the annual "turkey shoots" Mark Invariably car ried off first prize. Lastly, he had been seen on the outskirts of the crowd on the night of the "shivaree," though no one could remember notic ing him after the alarm had been given. This latter fact, of course, counted for nothing. In the confusion any one might have been missed or not counted. However, I made it my business to visit and interview Mr. Mark Henni ker. He lived on and owned a ten acre farm with his widowed mother. I found him in the hay lot driving a tedder. Taking my stand by the stone fence which separated the field from the highroad I waited until a 1 long turn brought him alongside. To him I was merely a "city feller," and l you can bet I appeared as green as they make 'em concerning farming. I never saw the farmer yet who wouldn't "spell a bit" for a yarn with a stranger, and Mark Hennlker was no exception. "He "Whoa'ed" to his I team and got down from the iron sad I dle to talk I found him a tall, gan gling typical Connecticut Yankee of about thirty, sandy-haired, frbckle .1/ / II -ý ' _ I 7,, I``~ ' 3?~t J5~ AýsAD2TU27' , .t12`t Z WNaFD ./ 17 faced, his yellow beard and mons tache stained with tobacco juice, i which he chewed lncessantly with working jaws, spitting nervously be- 1 tween sentences. His eyes were of a shifty blue, set dangerously close to gether, which intallible mark of a treacherous nature perhaps set me 4 against him, though I never allowed 4 personal prejudices to affect my judg- 4 ment. Well, we "gammed," to use a wha ling term, about the weather, the ereps, and farming in that particular locality. I mentioned two or three names of families in Pisgah with 1 whom I was already acquainted, allow ing him to suppose that I was a "two weeker from York." By degrees we got quite chummy, to 'which end a couple of my cigars helped not a little, though I hated to see him chew viciously on a good Panatella until the end was a frayed pulp. Gradually and quite naturally I led the way around to the recent trag edy, saying: "That was a bad job over at the Valley farm the other day." "Ya-as, ya-asa," drawled Henniker noncommittally, spitting among the weeds. "Were you among those present?" I inquired casually. "Ya-as, ya-4, I was thar," he ad mitted, but volunteered no more." "Queer sort of an accident, though," I remarked, a little more pointedly. "Ya-as, ya-as," came the lasy an swer. "Must 'a' been an accident, as y' say." "There was some promlascuous firing of guns and pistols, I've been told?" I ventured in tb effort to draw him out, and perhaps fet him to admit that he himself had been armed. "Ya-as, ya-as," he drawled for the fourth time, as one weary of the topic, and mounting his tedder; "some feller forgot t' draw his load, I guess! Gid dap!" And with a "So long, mister!" chinking by his pronunciation he was trying to start some joke, laughed, but the speaker, turning to Dr. Talcott Williams, who sat alongside, asked if the pronuaciation was correct: "It is correct," Dr. Williams an swered promptly. "You see," said the speaker, coa ttaulng, "I am somewhat like that boy who, when reing the ancient his tory, came to Ijycrgis and p nouaoed it liquor juiee.' YTe ea't always tell by the som d what is rea-. ty mesat."-PhfladiasbI Times, fang over his shoulder the team ad t the machine moved of on their long t circuit of the "medder." Well, I had drawn a blank so far as any definite result was concerned, but like a good many men In my business I am a firm believer In first impres sion, and I "had a hunch," as the slang 1 phrase goes, that Mark Henniker had fired that fatal shot from George Ger- I rish's Krag. But how to connect the j snaky miscreant with the crime was a totally different proposition. For a week longer I pursued my in vestigation in Pisgah. The only result I was a remark made by an old Irish woman named Biddy Mullaly, who in f6abited a little shack and eked out a living by doing chores for the neigh boring farmers' wives and raising chickens and pigs on the side. Stop ping to chat with her one day, I found her an inveterate gossilp, and when we touched on the Valley murder the old crone made no bones about speaking her mind. She knew all the antecedent facts-how Tom Valley had "bested" Mark Henniker, bad Cess t' him. "Oh, but that Henniker lad was a crool one," she ended, "and poor little Ruth le better be dead in her coffin than married to th' varmint, rest her sowl!" At this mention of my suspect's name I was all alert, you may be sure. "Do you think-?" I was beginning, when Mrs. Mullaly broke in, looking at me shrewdly and nodding her gray head sagely: "I wouldn't put it past him!" she averred; then, as though fearing that she had said too much she shut up tight as a clam. Of course it was only an old wom an's gossip, you'll say, and no evidence at all, but the sentiment so eloquently expressed chimed so exactly with my own private belief that I was more confirmed therein than ever. That night I resolved on a bold move and rather desperate one-to arrest Mark Henniker on suspicion and thus per haps terrify him into a confeslson. Next morning I swore out a warrant before the local 'squire and went with the Plsgah constable to serve it. We found our man in the barn and clapped a pair of hpndcuffs on him first thing. Then I read the warrant, n which I charged him circumstantially and cat egorically with having threatened Tom and Ruth; with having plotted to rob the husband of his newly made wife; with breaking into George Gerrish's house and stealing the Krag; and finally with having drawn a bead on the girl from where he stood in the outskirts of the crowd during the con fusion of the "shivaree"' and the pro miscuous shooting in the air around him. Finally, in the most dramatic man ner I could summon, which had more than once scared a criminal into cos fession, I opened my hand, exclaim ing: "Here's the bullet which seat the poor girl to her death; and you are the man who fired the shot! Better make a clean breast of the matter If you want to save your dirty seek!" Well, sir, the effect was electrical. I think that cat's eye effect I told you about, and which I didn't forget b point out, scared him most The skunk collapsed right there Uke a busted beg of oats. He fell on his knees and con fessed the whole plot, which was nst as I had outlined it in my mind. The thought that his carefully covered Roem to Suit the Frock. "I have had some queer things put over me," said a disgusted room clerk at a New York hotel, "but when it comes to a waman Insisting that the furniture of a hotel room match he frocks that is one too much. "I had tried my best to reserve a certain suite for a woman who was as rivitg from a distant city, and when she got here I sent her upstairs oea iant that for eonee I had gives her tums ohe weeud ike. She was back almost hbsdre the elevator was. "'Oh. these roems m ll met d at tract were so completely enpose thoroughly unnerved him, re ating me of Eugene Arm in the posm. "Now comes my point, to which .v been leading up all along," said Fiasey Valentine in triumphatt concluasm. "We toted Mark Heanikcr oR to the lockup. When there we searched him carefully, and in a greasy old wallet I came across a folded page torn from a dimnge novel entitled 'Black Dan's Re venge, or the Sharpshooter's Threat.' It told how the villain of the tale shot at the hero's sweetheart under almost identically the same conditioas that Henniker had take advantage at to get even with Valley. In the story the girl was only slightly wounded, but I suppose Henniker saw where he could improve on that. It seems strange that he should have kept the printed record, but it is likely that he deemed it safe from every one's eyes except his own, and perhaps found a certain amount of satisfaction In gloating over it and thinking how clever he had been to adapt the plot to his own benefit. "It goes to show how big a part timely suggestion plays in staging a crime. Ilennlker only needed the hint, and % hen it was furnished, acted upon it. So you see the fiery ten-cent Ac tion is capable of kindling an un healthy glow in more matured minds than those of the Juniors to which It is supposed to appeal solely. You my argue that Henniker's was an excep tional and isolated case, but I dare say there have been other lasta>e. At all events there esn be no 4debt t~t It was the blood-and4huatr llUt which pleated the hellish Ien the t e brooding brain of that osel and bhod. 6 headed Connecticut hayse"d." Big Trout. Among the biggest treat eagred within recent history pride a plo n belongs to the moalter at lack q Stenes, which weighed 23 posab sad a was caught on a hand .ImH in 13. a It was one of those big trout wideh & have taken to salt or partially mlt Ot water ("slob" or estuarile treat), sad al the ine cast of it made by Mr. Wsl- m loch and now in the Ply Plshers' b du shows that salt water agreed with it. Another big trout was eaught fa laugh i lnneli I 18 4. This weighed 26 pjads sad took a spoon belt. The Irish lakes have yielded several ish of 15 pounds or amore n reseant years. A trout of 21 poends wans caught In Loch Rasnoch in 1N64 by aa young lady, sad in the same year a youthful angler of tea got one t the t Test at Breodlands whicha weighed 14 pounds. The larest test erght in A the southera struems of lat, bhow ever, was the 18.pounder hm the ti New river, which fell a viotilm a b lobworm in 1)28. The record Thm as trout was caught in 1380 ad weighed A 16 pounds 16 ounces.--Prom the Jo nal of the Salmon and Trout Ased tlot Talk Weirs on the Brain. ' Dr. Sarafan of Italy sounds a wise p note of warning against folks ruining a their nervous systems by talking too u p much. True as gospel, lDrwin says it It were not for man's talking. prts, he t could get along with ooeshalf the brain b he now uses. This alone ought to p show how much of man's nervous a s- a chinery is set going when Mr. Men e I talks. s all,' she sald. "IT uranure is s t 1 the right color. I sever di4 )s wovi in red san I sve' a? red flem, and I iamply east My up Seim i Yea must live om smte withk r anhr f urniture." "RiDe yue elee Ta . a Sw oen a ri el inr iS N I .u I e might thinas I gt PAN FOR CLEANING SILVER Tableware la Quickly Srlg tende Whi Seaeee to soluelow Lab Aleso liminated. Every housekeeper knows how much work s entailed In keepiL sal ver clean. Furthermore, that this work must be dome frequently, as the wars tarnishes even when stored away.. A devies has been Invented by which the eleaniag can be dome In a fraction of the time heretofore re quired and without any scourtaing with powders or pastes A metal pan. with a grating Just above the bottom, is V4 partly illed with solutio of warm I 01 !. a it / I water and a tableapoonful each of a common salt and baking soda. TheL a pan is made of a material which will not corrode from the ction d these substances in the water, but this same action will remove the tarnish from silver i. a few miJ ted The y tableware le placed on the grating tn thpea a. rd allowd to remalin there for from one to two mtnutes. It warm water is used, and from Ave to tea minutes i the water Is cold. It Is then removed and wiped dry. leaving it as bright as new OLD NEW ENGLAND DELICACY Apple Semp Healthful and Appla Ing, Particularly During the Months of Summer. Pare, core and quarter one doess cooking apples, pour over them se cupful of biling water anad p whett they will begin to cook. Pit msa utes later add to the apples one aid a half cupfuls of molases and eook for 15 miautes more, while you prI pars a soft biscualt dough, slag two cupfuls ot Soar. oe beeping teaseen ful of sugar two level teaspeanls elf baking powder, and one teaspeesal of butter, rbbed anely late the Sear, sad milk to stir to a dough that tee seft to roll. Pt tis ever the apg pies, which should be tender, bmp met broken, cover the aucpa lowty ind cook Ia minulte without litiag theter. er. Serve with a het sauce. made bp C besting to a cream half a cupful at a better sad ce cupful of uagr, stib. ring in Just before usinas ems oeupfl it boiliag milk a$ , esseasoig of a satd naumeg. Huy two amd ue-baltf suds of mutto tat In the f and p it eapt, and save th rest. I get the cu be Jue, by running cesumbers through toed chopper ad. stralnalg: One en ofe petam dihdlved In cue quart of water. et It sa eid, e pint oft oaumber Jules, one.atft sp of borst, ten cants' worth Oli of sai bas, cne tablespoon of trga to mIhm it lather, six poueads or grease, mIlt year a us d and wbo It is ilopwgem d tarn the duodo (tn tagUthe) is a this stream late tohe grease, nag a te. tti s mM a is tgortb. tiem ,t gets I qd- tbsquar I Par ci upfU l of hellin, wai g Ievert woc pu u o sagr. i .,r I e fiO mhus theI eatu. UmaIm t beat the yes atUl thMk; n a~Id aw ad two aupbSt larWoliD I -withe two teaspopm t baag p"W e daer; add a plh salt sad s.e e- I a, pocul of lamer t las; them d M al t wtes, begste sel and drsp Sspeeal'ti two layer aoke pm; tb iL a qalk overn. W s ime masvs 1 lt to a warm pletter, eprend wth mar. Ssd sitrawtberris Pla ai i L top a thik meriagi u of bheater hites with ugar or whippeld m i it ad sugar. Arruange berris ealt l the eah. to leat Cream Cobo S To wash resm onlored materisls tw IelyteSa to tide tan.wahi , so that Iy they w ita i the rtich ceam cat I orgInal toI them, It Is only neesry a to pass them threoh cla warmi wa h , in rwt ih oreiss have bOega boed. 1 Wahte materials may he steeed toi i mab Uq tol fgive t Im a deease * rmms shae, md may whic have Il aded narly white shold rll to th * the for a bet tiume to resss tas 5 originl tit. Rtise sad anLsh i he I a Ia, w t tOseanut Pie, Seat ths gsu. avtang the white et oue e reaigue; add ive tablepoon sugar and a very ittle grated age I peel; reove the pulp of half an or g sage with a teaspoon aId add to above m mlatre. Ret oae cup milk with ha, I cp of desIceted aenoaut; add to Sthis bhalf a eup of old cream ad str sain to tab es malatur. U e* dap ie to piwlta rild pste, pea tW IItitI as ad bake slowly anti eied is Mue; e coor with merioge a wit .da eggI aid eo tablospoa of I , spribi a vaery little aosmiot er, tsp ad rtumr to oveI Ie a aIgt e sft Wmu s .p , . o A tanisheed Saresr h Bk *1e acoolly 1 ugsing u a salt, ehIs It al w . . .oi ;stuel fewmbsenIseI thee bea eg wise h dt, . s is co a s Cs~,., he. s Q- k, wtit. e g $p a WOMEN MAY AVOID OPEATIONS By tamq Lydh E. Plh*la' V*ogetaM Composud The follwing letter from Yr. Orville BRok pirove how awiue it ie r women oa submit to the dangerse of a urgical operation when It my be avolide by takiag Lydia 8& Pbahi s a Compound. sad came ha.n eatrfa woeu than betfre. Here i ear own statmemSt Paw Paw, Mich.-"Two years a I uadra severely with a ds. meat. I could beonm yeet te f or sevenmeoathe S thoutmch rellI at last sent a Ann Arbor for oprto.I was tbeehom~esuffering one than before. x 'A moter dd 4· to f da sad I d.it Today Isam well) sad and di aBl a own boasewest. I I my beah to I$pas . Planukha ` b Copeantaad aý aketo' gab oemplaihd to rIt." Lyft $. Pinlc a a'' vug Itat 02 td Bocs. r. B. No.5. Phwh 1w, If p a adenet alpa 9" L ~It'si Pllm..v"..a~t~ news ownsbbt~i I - itMQL **) rrs In.uw..u~.1asth.Ih. a se e A. bWb.e a weref I'r IeeelS Nul st s1e eJ s rie ofs a 5mb M use awi * bt Ue·Il~voft e.Ohe*# a r initoi Raisat * dry' a / tie be a a r W l a the I ` blrreas s ease. ýa th a a sy t allas heeM tiestu°4; a IWt iSI Rv a er ftalirM. hs . aV.uuw to so am : eg se e we - be'r ari f well war tkMs*( sea aold as userD sea sesese yu, I - asm ama. to awurte mit @** me teet e tms wetr sets an a steer r, 'Whp.e c al 37o a ne a piZ, same? u stua or as ets m ohldmmet a IS 441eas rsrs a e. 4 anagh prer as at aleaes at y-pbe,-4bw, T em7, ipspea ** weuW yes swa, y sor? & J Ks sir; rnt I uM $iP aenses A 1988 wbheni4u skews what It Mm "r late vreis cae has disagriei with me," wrte a matrem frm 3e S Its uIghtet posubuaent balad he so -b last see al, 12. S apap r a a dtbehes up am bd YC *The herisest wee vhes l4 aggh wt a stimk c amp , deftroyaig amy to petite s-e ae rme* sad U' tIritltakl samint m to a be. After ' ems of a thus attacks. so whas I sauly STsat5, I a r tcok n doses a gekt *; ces saMt t Poetma. SaIttriht to teo eutl I thad 1Me ·t 'adwt a meet parletehis mn i a'eS' f k owags. bet a feel as wefl Bt "AU m dLmuuts, the losIaens' sa -asp the iasseaterraorM ent of aa b tteei serousnesm ea Ir kIISei liampesred I e etord esr minie souy - amstes dietmee Sep. ri toie5 seseaihpr a Isreb olml Sa geos - ppeUWfs i ugala ftsems ieate wason I wstee t sus e.bietem. arem alvea by'alytte AQl astlarest, MIo ,.. t * ISs --a s Ki~. ~~; ~ ·'4iB~rt·