H-A Advance 'of the ; ' (l3fcf& ! fyfA Rctrcat f ' ' J fflhMn fW Cigar Cohorts. fljW' III - v Yes 11 IS c0' ? h Swjs L! l Ml as never before. Tlic hiIi Q yslV K& l lrrice cf good cigars is helping drive them out of use. Millions NJ; I Blackwell's L Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco. It is the most popular Brand in the market. Smoked for over twenty. five years its fame is still growing- ELACKWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO CO.. DURHAM, N. C. '1ST QB8I INS FOR EARIEST THE MASON & HAMLIN tlr fuMiim Ortruiis .r Pianos for line them full opportunity to test Jl return it" lit dues not loiu'er want it. If he continues it 11 the n.r.rr'r:Lti! of rent nam amounts ta the price ot nt. It 'becomes his pkoi'ektt witaout fcktiikr vavmext. lllus ted catalogue, with net prices tree. lason & Hamlin Orgn and Piano Co liOSTON. NEW Family Student School 1 Library T V S-H-O-U-L-D Own a Dictionary. X f fWhimH be taken to THK INTE R M ATION AL. KXW FROM COVER TO COVXR. IA THE ONE TO BUY. i SUCCESSOR OV THS uivABRrOOZT). 2 r Tan year, spent in rcvinln. lOO edi- r..T i.x .... cM nnn ..uiui x Sold by all Etookae Hera. a. & hzaSIAh cu.. nujiianers, k Sprtngfleld. Mm, P. 8. A. k VDo not buy reprint of obsolete a Seasons. X k 4ftarSend for free pamphlet containing L tpeeimeo pace and foil particular. www wwwwwwwwoi OR MEN 0C1LV OUNG MENOLD ME3T tj. ill m ill iuils ur let atarteis Bf eutAU. f X) ThT aiaka fctraia 3ort M fre Uouilnt, b SHAKE OFFTHE HORRID SNAKES if gT op la 4Mrt.tr ud M.K lata a atrlf mil Waataai&Ba;TaaTteMUr:l OUR NEW BOOK ttNaltc4UM.upluu taa palloaophr ( Oiacas aa ASictioaa of tha Omrsna at Ma, and how by HOMc THtAIMtni, y oathaaa axlaiTlr asv va, th wr wr ravage or, iMt or PUln(5 M.nUood, ecacral aa K.ro D. bll1T. WaaSaaaa o Body aad Kind. Kflactt of Errora ar Ezaaawa. Btantaa o ratikaa Oner. bt furwl. BuirSt. In ii-r. Jito EBlarxT.d strtarth.aWKAK.UtDSyEI.OFEp SAKB PASTS of BODY aiada plain ta all latrtd. n r-.Kn iO Sutfc TnriuriM and Ponua Ciwnlxj.l. . .n wHu- th-rj-. for HcoK.ftiI1 .tpl.nM-o ri4 prwfc. riemeo:cal.co.suf?alo,w.y. UalihfuJ, Agreeable. T Cleansing. I ' - Cures gapped Eand, Wounds, Burn., Etc I Sezaovos and Prevents D an draft. 7I1ITE BUSSIAtl SOAP. Gecially Adapted for Uaa in Hard Watea I (:, . . - ,; -!- n: m t. 3;i jiii Sf.- . -Ji .? J'-"""'1 ' .: .'ni-:r" -ci: -m'; ' iruniienness lh2 Lk'Bor null, rsiuvejy .wre,, r A3:itntei.Q m. aAisir eaut stc;r:t ; hem be oin a cuo o coSee er tel. er ia arv rlcael woo. wiiuvui ios uuunoui m ; r" t i . . t. I. .tuni.iilff kinnlna and viit EVERir I INTERNATIONAL J DICTIONARY I T7A. A ' 1 1 AviA r"si I J eW e natient 19 moderate ""'" rtf. -Addt?" "J eonfideee . . Quality always the same. AN PAYMENT!,. CO. now oiler to nut an one of the perton three months, mvinir it thoroughly in his own lioipe to want it the instrn- YORK CI1ICAGO. Vouhg others ! We 0r Tea .Bewaedy AcJ XanirM Safety f 2Af f Mother mmd Child. " PflOTHER'S FRiEKD " JSeft Coolaoa"' ofita Pain, Horror nd JIUk. art.-alr.rrtiir b-ilof Vother'e Frlene" 1 ur-rti but Ittllr iAin.anl uM uoi xperince that waakai-aa afterward uaual in aurn caite. alra. ASiic UaOK, Lamar, Mo.. Jac 1Mb. iSMl. Sent by ei proas, chanroi prepaid, on raoetptof pric. tl.50 vr boult. boa u Hothera maUed free. -UAUFIEl.DBECUa.ATOB CO., ATLANTA. OA. COLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Chamberlain's Eyo and PWn Ointment. A certain cure for Chronic Sore Eye Tetter, Salt Bhenm, Scald Head, OL Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eczema, Itch, Prairio Scratches, Sore Nipples and Piles. It ia cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by .after all other treatment had failed. It is put up in 25 and CO cent boxes. SO LI1C WATER OR MILK. EPPS'S GRATEUL COMFORTING Labeled 1-2 lb Tins O11I3-. .f PSSHESS-HWBS ; M- t& b i'Kk'i rBible1 K'Xla'Vl Si !. Whi.p h. N ESS HiidsoisE9 CURED TvboUr Ear Cab t-OS imunf,n lar. wni. lur bovZ ot tmlal 11L.L. L73, iircans $l!. Want siarts. cntl'srue nxsiton A. J. i . 'ff PARKER'S ' ial HAIR OALSAM " : ri :J jT. ClaiKs . aiut Tiensririr thr hair. r . -V (., !'iiiii. ia k. Tti ti r-r . vowr. - t 5 aW.laaclMl.' fVlir-l I jjjic. )Artiliv, Iniictioii, paui.Tke iu time. 5 J est. H 1 1 i yi L V'C K K 'Cn m,Iv ,,irs cun' fot Cotr.t. How Lost ! How Regained! Kcor; THYSELF. Or SKtF-PRESEKVATIOK. A new and only (Md Medal PKIZK FSSAT onKKRVOOS and niYSlCAt. 1KBIL1TY, KKROR8 of YOPTII.KXnAUSTED VITAUTY, PRE MATURE DKfLINEi and all DISBASES end WEAKNESSES of MAX. 300 pages, cloth. riit; 186 inraJoafcle preecnptiema. only B1.0O jnail. doable aeaieo. xd Deecriptlye Prospect. cb with endorsementa SFREEIM of tbe Preas and toIub testimonials of the cu: ConanitAtion in traon or by miU. Kxpert treJUr; nwt INTIOLABLK Sr.CRKCT and CB TAIX CTRK.1 AiMrw. lr. W. D. Parfcer. or This Paabody Madiaal IoaUuite, No. Bolllncit St.. Boaton. Uaaa. The Frabody Medical Institute baa many imi. tatrtra, but noeqnaL eral'i. ', ,.)' ) .1 The Science of Life, or SeltPrseerration, la a , traur mora T3traM? Uum rold. Head It now, i rtrr WEAK aad N EH VOL'S man. aad team te 4- Cur -r; knpofn. Lota cf aToneoecf, Stmlnal A EmtstlOHS, brvmctmt. rrccxr6T. 8eff Distrust. Lo'l of Kemorrt, &e. WHI. not uua Q STrtOAig, VI tot- oug Man. r fVfce $1.00, 0 Sax3, Si CO. ; sr i :wt titcTnrrt C' ' , Lwoae Ave. - T. LOUIS.: - UO- ' COCOA 1 1 ! IIo.rlf-ly KuglUh Sparrowa. A Irrrrntf MTiftfnt ttf the English rrinT row iw .h lirl ia tolni K.'iiin Drooklyn fifils that tho lit tlo c reature in hi? tlxiricatic relationi inaiiy hauia.ii itruitK. Wlion the parrowrt; ' arj mating an-l buiMincc. th nialw rinks into iiiniiufi canee iM.tsido the f-:nale. When a ne t inS place is to b selected the m.ile ixjkH jj-.riTitily nliMit uii. I is realy to accent unythiriir that i'hiiuh to hand, but the li !i exansine.s eaeh proixisiHl . rite with , :: 1 ... . ....... .r.. I n.lii.u Wk m. 1 t-J IU. iil ii!!'' viitjr nniu.i tu-, l itJous or th V'l;i-e r jun, wind and rain, kihI finally decides the question with Hinall consideration for tho onin- '. loilS .f l.lT KJMll.SL'. Wht-ii the uer, is to lo built tlie house wifely c! uraetcr of the hen aain asserts its. If. Sho is busy all day long gather ing sticks and straws to serve as building maleri .S. Nothing is taken hajihazard, btit every stick or straw fits to n nicety and is admirably adapted to the end for which it is selected. A.s to tho male, he gives moral suiiort and little else. While the hen is devoting all her ener gies to the task in hand ho sits on a neiglilMring Ijough and encourages her with mnsic. Nor does she expect cr wish more at his hands. Now and then, apparently pricked by conscience, lie leaves his perch, picks up a clumsy stick or straw and earries it to tho scene of the building oiierations. But his contribution is seldom received with favor. The- hen usually examines it with the ill concealed scorn that wives sometimes accord to domestic perform ances of husbands, and in nine cases out of ten sho tosses away tho proffered ma terial as soon as the back of her spouse is turned. New York Sun. A Cowboy's Sense of Hnmor. A gloie trotting Englishman told me this storj': "To show you that the cow boys are not as bad as they have been painted in fact, that they are opposed to anything like lawbreaking and vio lence let me relate an incident. There was a poor clerk standing up over his books at a desk in a shop on the main street, and there was a cowboy riding up and down the street. Well, the cow boy saw the clerk and his sense of hn mor was aroused by the idea of shooting at him, d'you know. Those cowboys have a very remarkable sense of hnmor. So the cowboy npa with his pistol, d'yon know, and he shoots the poor clerk right through tbe head, killing him instantly. "Well, now, that sort of thing is very distinctly frowned upon by cowboys, as a rule, and in this case the cowboys held a meeting and resolved that the fellow with the lively but dangerous sense of hnmor should be hanged at once. They put a rope around his neck, and there being no tree anywhere in sight they hung him to the side of a Pullman as the train came rolling in. I've seen a number of occurrences of that sort. which makes me quite positive in stat ing that though they are a very rum sort of beggars they are really not a bad lot." Julian Ralph in Harper's Weekly, A Lazy, Though Shrewd Fellow. Tnlkinson a barrister and bachelor combined, by the way is a very sys tematic man. The other day he had his house fitted with electrical appliances. and friviiijr instructions to his servant Joseph, he said: "Now 1 want you to understand, Joseph, that when 1 ring once that means for you, and when 1 ring twice that means for Maggie, the housemaid. Joseph, who is the laziest wretch that ever accepted wages he did not earn liowed respectfully and withdrew. A little later the bell rang. Joseph never moved. Presently it rang again, and according to instructions Maggie came hurrying to her master, who was very angry. "Why didn't that rascal, Joseph, come when I rang for him?" said the bar rister bachelor disgustedly. "Why, sir," answered Maggie, ."Jo seph is busy in tho office reading your newspaper. Wlien ho heard the first ring he said to me, 'Now, Maggie, wait until he rings the second time, and then it will be you he wants.' " London Tit- Bits. Strange Cave Dwellers In Spain, At a meeting of the Royal Geograph ical society, of Madrid, Dr. Bide gave au account of his exploration of a wild district in the province of Caceres, "which he represented as still inhabited by a strange people who speak a curious patois and live in caves and inaccessible retreats. They have a hairy skin and have hitherto displayed a strong repug nance to miring with their Spanish and Portugese neighbors. Roads have lately been pushed into the district inhabited by the "Jurdes," and they are begin ning to learn the Castilian language and attend the fairs and markets. W. H. Larrabee in Popular Science Monthly. ' . ' The Growth of Kailroad Mileage. " ' In 1830 there were twenty-three miles of railway in operation in the United States. By 183d the mileage had : in creased, to 229 miles, and in 1S35 the country had 1,098 miles of railroad. The first through railroad from the eat westward was completed in 1842 between Boston and Albany, connecting at the latter place with the Erie canal. In the satne year the last link of the line from Albany to Buffalo was opened.' At th& end of 1843 the-total mileage bf all the railroads' in the country was 5.905 tniles,' orabout'500 miles mere than' there afo now in the state of Nebraska.' Edward Rosewater's Omaha Address. ' j j ( - ';:!. ( I "y ' The Flute I; Very OW.''j';i,r:''1, ' , , , The flute is', very old in its!'ir&iii.' bujj th flute of today is different ; froui thut of the ancients. It has been improved up 3h from "time to time, and the old" people would probably .fail ,to VecogLjz it n ow. The flageolet, which is some what similar, is credited to'-'Juvhruv abut 1581. Harper's You Peopl: o i ., Tall Men in Asia and A Trie. . The tallest men of South America are found m the western provinces of the Argentine Republic, :of Asia in Afghan istan and Kaypootana, of Africa in th. lughlands of Abyssiiiia'. Yankee Blade! ' The Kye nt Greek 8takt.ee. 'ProfeHor Ernt Curtius, the famous Grtt-k rucholaT luld j s i-cha-logint ii fb'ej Ciriverrity of 1 Berlm!, nnnouneed a few months ago that lie had discovered that the Greek sculptors ulways made the eyes of meu fuller and rounder than those of women. The alleged di.vo very Wits considered important, a it was be lieved that it would lead to a projKT classification of many of the unidenti fied heads nf Greek statues. The hopni. however, seem to have 1mm n premature despite the fact tiu.t Curt i us. who has been called "Tho Modu'U Gretk. . la thered them. Dr. (i reef, of Berlin, in a recent lec ture delivered before thoPrnsrian Aca.i- emv of Science, declared that Cur'.ius conclusions were wrong, as he had found flat, narrow eyes those of women, ac cording to Curtius in tho heads of Greek statues of men. He had also measured plastic representations of wou ' en with large, full eyes, in nature. added, there was no difference between tile eyes of men and women, lie 1: ;. . examined recently in Berlin the eyes o a hundred memlers of each sex an i had found that they were the same in shape, size and form. He thus 'upheld' the theories of Zinn and Sommerluig that tho Greek sculptors who gave a greater fullness to tho eyes of men than to those of women did not follow tho conditions of nature. New York Trib une. Plenty of Game In Maine. There has not been a year for some time when game was as plenty and when so little game has been killed and destroyed as during the past win ter. One reason is that the snow in many localities has not been deep, and at the same time it has been hard, hold ing up the deer and caribou and giving them a chanco to prefect themselves by flight. Another reason is that the guides and hunters have learned that it is for their interest to leave the game alone, especially during the deep snows. I have made it a point to see many of them in the early part of the winter, and tried to make them understand that it is for their interest for us to keep a good stock of fish and game, as they would get more business during the guiding season. The most of the game that has been killed the past winter has been killed in the back settlements, hunters using dogs to catch deer. There has been a story of ninety moose killed near our border line, in township 5, range 18. 1 believe the most of this yarn is false. 1 have been within a day's walk of the township this winter and I did not learn of any such business. In fact there are not mooso enough in that locality. It is near the Canada line, and this some re port comes from there every year. Cor. Portland (Me.) Press. Beekeeperd and the Government. Foreign bees without pedigrees may be admitted to the United States free of duty. The secretary of the treasury has so decided. Until the last tariff bill was passed bees from abroad came in gratis, as "animals imported for breeding pur poses." The McKinley law declared that this ruling should only apply to an imals "regularly entered in recognized herd books." Accordingly, bees were assessed 20 per cent, ad valorem, be cause they had no pedigrees. The tee keepers protested and carried their point. Some time ago the postoffice department declared that Ivees were "unniailable," on the ground that they would be likely to sting people if they got loose. The beekeepers secured the recall of this reg ulation, by proving that the packages employed could not be broken. Wash ington Cor. New Orleans Times-Democrat. Little Fear of Indian Troubles. A gentleman at Rosebud agency wri tes that the reports of dissatisfaction among the Indians there have been greatly ex aggerated. Since his arrival there two weeks ago he has traveled quite exten sively through the various Indian camps and thinks the Indians never exhibited a more peaceful frame of mind than at present. Nover did they take hold of work more readily or more extensively, and never did they take more interest in the care of their stock than the past winter, as can plainly be seen by the condition of horses and cattle this spring. So far as dissatisfaction with rations is concerned, if there is any such, the white emplo3-ees hear nothing of it. Cor. Min neapolis Journal. , Confederate Coins. There has recently been some inquiry as to whether the Confederate govern ment coined any gold. The question was referred to the Hon. Charles C. Jones, Jr., of Augusta, who telegraphs as follows: "The Confederate States, as I now remember, coined and issued no gold. A few experimental half dollars in silver were struck, but they did not pass into circulation." Charleston News and Courier. A Circus Tumbler lias a Fall. - A dispatch from Warsaw, Ind., says: "Charles Neff, a laborer in Lakeside park, while engaged in trimming a tree fell from its top to the ground, a dis tance of sixty feet, and was uninjured Neff ! is an old circus tumbler, and the agility learned in the ring saved his life. H6 fell on his liands and rebounded in the air ten feet, alighting on his feet without a scratch." "..'." .. A'; lawsuit has been commenced . in Marengo. Ind., iastween Edmund Waltz and El wood Stout, over the price of two effRs, . bought at v seventeen cents per. dozen. Two of the dozen were . rotten. and Waltz demanded a return of the price. . . i . , .j . . . , . A young man hypnotized at an enter tainment in Paris remained senseless for two; , days . and was . with .difnicnlty brougt back to consciousness. , . , , ... : A Missouri judge presented to the ex- Gonf ederate home fifty-eight cents, but they were very ' old ' coins and are to bo sold at auction! C-'H '-i; f-''';'. THEY DO N0T MARUY. "A " ' " : : WHY YOUNG PEOPLE FIND SINGLE BLESSEDNESS SO COMFORTABLE. If They Get Married They Would Have j to Make a Great Many bcrlflc-. or Ku They Think, and aa a Itesult Tliry i " 'Keep Away Trout the Knot of lljiuvia. j It is an oft repeated remark that New York is the finest place in the republic , to live in if yon are rich. But it is wor:Q than the meanest suburb. th dreariest of western "boom towns," th i dullest country village if you are poor. This is the criticism of tho person who does not contemplate life as a possibil ity or an agreeable possibility without society, in the narrow sense of the word: without the pleasures that come from money, without fho social standing that a good bank account gives, without 1 ing able "to keep up with the proce sion" of those who are well dressed, we): fed, well situated and well off. Singularly enough, those who demand these things who will not accept mar ried life without them are generally not well supplied with this world's goods. People who have been rich all their lives do not realize what it means to go with out their luxuries. Bnt people who have been ioor know jnst the wretchedness of having to wear patched boots and go without lunch: of having to walk long distances, because car fare "mounts up;" of having to refuse nice invitations, be cause they have no clothes or no means of returning proffered civilities. To these, poverty is a bitter thing, and they loathe it. Marriage, unless it means escaie from carping cares of this kind, they eschew as a hopeless evil. Better endure those trials that we have than fly to others that we know not of, they say. So thinks the everyday, gentlemanly, good looking, entirely personable young man of thirty, who draws an income of from two to four thousand a year, and is asked ont all over because he dances admirably and is good to look at, and never does anything gauche. So. also, thinks the pretty, well bred, well dressed, moderately bright girl of twenty-five, whose father spends six thousand a year and has five children. Both of these know jnst the way they want their lives to go. Ever since childhood they have associ ated with companions who have had more money than they have, and they know how nice it is to be well off. To be rich or to remain as we are, that is their motto. "When we make the great move,' they both think, "we make it to better ourselves materially, or we don't make it at all." . They do not want to be millionaires, bat they do not want to be really pinched anywhere. Their house must be large enough and be comfortable. It must be well fitted up no "sheet by night and tablecloth by day" for them. There most be servants enough to run it. This girl who has always been comfortably placed, but never luxuriously has no intention of binding herself down to do mestic cares, of dusting her own draw ing room and turning up hems in her own table linen. No; all that must be done for her. She has made her own dresses and trimmed her own hats all her girlhood, and she wants, when she marries, to change all that. Better to go on doing it in your own home, where it is all you have to worry over, than to do it in j-onr husband's, where you have to keep the house and take care of children as well. Thus the young lady reasons and re jects her suitors with a peculiar and good humored indifference. She has made up her mind that she will not marry a man who has a cent under five thousand a year, and is not above telling this to the soupirants, who take the hint and strive to realize the ideal. Tho young lady is quite frank. She is not in the least ashamed of her worldliness or de sirous of hidiug it under a veil of at tractive coyness. She is not mercenary . It is not riches that she demands com fort, that is all. If she is comfortable she will continue to be a very nice, at tractive person, but if she has to scrimp and struggle and fight -over ten cent pieces, and turn her old clothes, and have her shoes patched, she will not us responsible for her temper. She is a fin do siccle to her finger tips sensible where she might be romantic, practicnl where she once would have been impas sioned a person who is bound to maka a .success of her life and keep it on the lines that she regards as tho befst. ;The young man of her kind holds pre cisely the same views. Life with a be loved object sounds very charming, but it is not to be indulged in unless the in comes of himself and the beloved object foot up to from five to six thousand per annum. The beloved object on three thousand a yearis too expensive a lux ury. " He cannot afford it. What might have been a courtship dwindles . to a mild friendship. Not infrequently he tells the lady of his sad predicament and how impossible a matrimonial alliance would be on his salary. She condoles with him and they become friends, for no violent fires burn in their hearts an J friendship comes qnite easily to them. Marriage would mean a series of .sacri fices that neither is willing to make. They would have to live in a flat in Har lem and no one knows who has not lived in Gotham the horror in which Harlem is held or a second rate boarding house beyond Fourth avenue. Then come clothes and theaters.1 A New York womnn spends money lika water on her clothes. , She would mu h rather .be well dressed than well fe i.; She must be well dressed to be up wi;a anything. The moment she gray. shabby she is no longer of any impor tance. Then she may a3 well give up all the fun and consent to be relegated v to dreary insignificance like the old wivei of .the pashas. San Francisco Argonaut, ' Couldn't bo It. ; Dashaway Come around, old fellow.' and help me select a suit of elothes. Traver-Ceuldn't do it; possibly, oi man. You seem to forget that we beta 6 to the , same,, tailor. Clothier ; and 'nrnisher.' , . . , . . , ,. - T I KWI HY fvhARK. 'i -l!DKALf:ir37Jf'fVi ry ! ' ' ' , I O A. -WOO D -oTIiKMS CAS I To srl it id '!iii. lei s,utU lli'nl Htrei-t. 1 1 Iri'lioci- j I'LAT'I SM 1 1 "i , .IKKASK , K. h'KYNOI.DS, K.T'lstt rt'd l'hyp -hut .tii.l I liai iii;irlt Special attention j;ivcn to Oflict? I 'ract ice. kOCK ItLl KKS . Nail. p J. KANSFt jNr I.KAI.rU I- STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES GLASS AND QUEENSWARE. Patronage of the I'rablic Solicited. North Sixth Street, Plattsaaouth jCJR. A. SALISBURY . : D-B-N-T-I-S-T : GOLD AND rOKCKXAIN CROWNS. r. 8tlDway aBaratartlc for the palalast ex traction of teeth. Fine Gold Work a Specialty. Keckweod Block I'latutruouth, Neb. 217, 219, 231, AND 223 JAhlH 3T PLATTSMOUTH, NEIl. F. R. GUTHMANN. PROP. Rates $4.50 per week and up yOi.I) AND PORCKLAIN CKOWN! -Bridge work and fine gold work SPECIALTY. .!'.. STEIN A US LOO A 1. an well hk oUi;r an rtbeticnKivea forth' painless extraction of teetb. 0. A. MARSHALL. - Fitzgerald TTORNEY A. N. SULLIVAN. Attorney nt-I.aw. Will vivo prompt ti'tenrior. ',0 r.ll I'unnefS entrui-t-d t' lifhi. Oriicf it vr ion block, Eat Side. Piartmoutli, Neb. F6r Atchinson, St. Joseph, Lfaven j worth, Kansas City, St. Louis, ' and all point." nfth, eht ' j south or west. Tick- . I et9 sold and bapr- gagfe checked to' any ' point .in the I ' . United ;. : Sta te.i or ! Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO RATKS AND ROUTKS XT ! i I "-"f.i":lmfy--.' - . Call at Depot or address , C. TOWXSENO, G. P. A. St. Louis, Mo. J. C. Phiixipvi. ' ... .; A.; G. P. A. Omaha.. D. : ApoAR. At., Plattsmotith. - i Telephone, 77. ' - H II 1 ic j ir.q 1 J'Oo, f. i-i A 1.1 : ) 1 I. IT. 1