Try Alten'a Foot Kmie. A powder to be shaken Into the shoes. At this season your feet feel swollen and hot, and get tired easily. If you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen’s Foot-Kare. It eools the feet and makes wulklng easy. Cure* and prevents swollen and sweating feet, blisters ami < aliens spots. U< Ileve* corns anil bunions of all pain and gives rest and comfort. Try It to day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores for 26e. Trial package KHKB. Address, Allen S. Ol nsted, U Itoy N. Y, Cupid steals a base every time lover.-, look at the moon. rsHMKM/» nsaisu rots nr.tr in Thr beat. ut half the prints !l» Kforera will r* fund your money If you mrr not aarlnflrd. There* no wiftdom in thin world like knowing how to ke«*p your mouth slmi._ Nn-To-llar for Fifty ( r ut!* Gtj&nnMwd tnburco habit rurr*. make* wmlc dcu blroiig. biuod pure. f>Oc,$l AH rirutfirlfcifc Kv<*rybody dUHkt** 11 it* umn who in too (food to ti ll ii lit* to /liivt* ii frirrid. QQ* 0 t 1 There is a | ^ * $ Class of People ? Y. * ► • > Who are Injured by the use < J <, of coffee. Recently there 4» !! has been placed in nil the | | J | gnrccry stores a new pre- 4 | <4 paratloi called ORAINO, 44 j ’ rnnda of pure grains, that J | J > takes the place of coffee. < j 4 4 The most delicate stomach 4 4 J | receives it withou14lIstrcM, J | j> and but few can tell It from 11 * 44 C4>ff4?e. It doe* not cost over 4 4 | [ >4 as much. Children may J J < ► drink it with great benefit. < ► o 15 cent* ami 25 cents per 4 4 ] | package. Try it. Ask for j [ <► OUAIN-O. <► 44 44 i;Try Grain-0! j; 44 44 44 44 One Standard One Price Two short sentences Hint otesfl ■ (real 4-.si to every bicycle rider. The first denotes a qualify of ma teriel, coostrocllos end \ elegance which stands lor the world's patlero. The second emphasizes the lad that do one caa hoy an 1(97 Coluathla cheaper lhao you. dual remember these two facts. • 1896 Columbias, $60, Hartford Bicycles, dc except the Columbia, ISO, $45, $40, $50. POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn. ' catalogue free from any Columbia dealer; hr mall from u* lor one 2-ceat siemp. BR^ If SLICKER WILL KEEP YOU DRY. \JlJ) Don’t be fooled with a mackintosh 'Hr or rubber coat. If you wantacaatQjHg-f yMHfc that wilt keep you dry in the hard- Mif ’ est storm buy the Fish Brandi Sticker. If not for sale in your town, write for catalogue to a 'isl^EP A^^TOWER^Ir loss money. they can't be made llaa'I bay. unless you get the best A i heap krale Is the must cipeuslve Investment you rati make; it is unreliable, and means that _ sooner or taler you must buy again. IBn? only P a lennine. latest Improt ed MIMBANItk which will last you a lifetime, ami prove the rkeaaest In Ike end No our c an then dispute your we ights BBMABKOr l«ITATIO«»t FAIRBANKS, MORSE (k CO., 1102 Farrtam St . Omaha, Neb. iOIB m-alev Hepalred.i far Mit SO fait •• *ui mm at* m cMaa tar |l la ta.irttM MM. W,|.« f,«i tax. tar >44 i*l MliStCM IRUM fives CO . HIMOCIl ILL rNSIONS, t’ATl N . S. CLAIMS. a VMIVt, V**M 4*4 e* patents:: sssrsss MISSED A FORTUNE. VEN the wild rush (o California In '4!* hardly equalled that to Caribou ten years later. Surely L fcthere never ha* ’MfrO1, I been such a fren zied scramble for gold as that which filled (he harbor of Victoria, Vancou ver Island, with a navy ofantlquated,leaky craft, laden to the scuppers with a horde of dauntless adventurers, hurtling to reach the prec ious places of the Upper Frazer. These tipper regions are wild enough oven to day; forty years ago they were In the hiart of an untrodden wilderness, civ ilization had not penetrated further than the guns of the British cruiser* could reach; even the log forts of the Hudson Hay Company were not to lie h und In the remoter parts of that re gion, so aptly described years nflor wards t>y l,ord Dufferfn a* "A Hen of Mountains.” Gold was known to exist; Inland tribes bartered It with others nearer the coast for powder and lead, or blankets, and It eventually made Its way to Victoria; but where It was found, or Ir. what quantities, no white man knew, unless Indeed It was the bead factors of the company, und It was part of their duty to withhold all such matters from the world, that they might keep the great northwest a breeding ground for the fur bearing animals for all time. But one day a certain Jim Barker found his way up stream, dug gold dust from the bars by the spade full, and then a dozen Hud son Bay Companies could not have kept back the adventurers.' The rush had Iminin There were no woods, or even trails, save those made hy the grizzly and the blacktall; the Frazer and Thomp son were cruel streams lee cold and full of terrible rapids and eddies. But when did danger deter the gold seek er? The army of red-shlrted, big hooted dare-devils pressed on until Caribou and Its rich placers had been reached. Hundreds died on the way; disease and privation played sad havoc with the survivors; hut the rewards were In a few eases beyond the dreams of avarice, and the dogged fellows con tinued to work like heroes ull through the short northern summer with rocker and long Tom, ravishing the rich bars of the wealth they had accumulated (luring the lapse of aeons. Wages were $2G a day, paid In gold dust. It was barely a living pittance, (everything bad to be carried over 400 miles of rough trail on men’s shoulders, as the country produced nothing, after the game had been driven away, except “DEAD HEAT AND HALF FROZEN. gold dust—but of that there was great store. Potatoes cost $00 a bushel, flour $10 a pound; a pair of gum boots sold for $50; drinks were paid for In pinches of the precious dust—and some of the barkeepers had thumbs broader than ever miller possessed. A few men made fortunes, many manuged to pay ex penses, but the majority went dead broke. Then the awful winter was upon them. The mercury disappeared in the bulb; the river froze almost to the bot tom In the still reaches; deep mow covered the land, and burled the shan ties and tents of the pioneers. Men sickened and died like sheep with a murrain. One historian met 4,000 min ers returning on the Hukerfleld trail, destitute, barefooted, and despairing When the ice thawed In the spring the canyon of the Frazer was a charnel house. strewn with the bodies of the red-shlrted gold seekers who had met their fute In Its waters. A few if the most hardy struggled through tu the great bend of the Co lumbia river, and sailing dowu Its broad In mo in eventually found their way back to Oregon They wintered near the Arrow lakes, and with indom itable resolution continued prospecting uurtug the succeeding summer Trsce* of their operations arc occasionally found, hut though they were In a coun try tar richer than Caribou, they hnew It not Placers there were none, and the m>steele* of true Assure veins and smelling ores were beyond their hm They required gold In It* native pur ity something they could w#*h out * :th pan and rubber and riehang* for necessaries without further tumble |t was not there so they passed on Vet there were superl r men among them ttn* pioneer at least must have found rbh A mi on lied Mountain, oh ! the very sit* of what la now the la it * j min*, and stid- ntly followed it up to I the ssbnty of goeaan or "Iron h.'," that tar vspwesd for hundreds of ftet In a half hearted way. a* If he doubled the wisdom uf v estlng previous en*rar on a quarts lead he druse a shallow trial shaft hut alter going down a few i hrl heuwrns discouraged and abisl I awar karl to the datiew hails sad runs of the roast; probably his bones now bleach on some alkali desert, far to the south of the futile shaft he sunk on Red Mountain. Yet a few more shots, and he would have reached ore that would have placed all that wealth can buy within his reach. For more than a generation Red Mountain lay undisturbed. Wild ani mals alone wandered over the lofty mass of dlorlte. The grizzly nnd moun tain Hon owned It by turns; blarktall skulked In the forests at Its base; hlg horn skipped over Its crest; the white goat of the north chewed the scanty lichens on It* Heurred sides. Hut the treasure that lay In It* bowel* rested secure under the protecting "Iron-hat." nt through all those Ion" years a mao was growing up In the distant east who had been selected by fate as the Inheritor if the treasure hidden In the great Red Mountain. Born In Suffolk county. New York slate,K. 8. Topping was by turns sailor, miner, hunter, prospector, Indian fight er, anil scout. Topping saw western life In III! Its aspects, until finally lie drifted to West Kootenay. Soon, al though an alien, he found him tclf re ci-rder and constable In fact, "the government" of lhai lonely region. Prospectors were then beginning to stray Into southern British Columbia from Idaho and Montana, and such human driftwood formed the bulk of Topping's subjects, They were a little rough, of course, but "had men" were scarce, nnd the few that did wander Into West Kootenay Invariably showed the most profound reaped for the old Indian fighter, and took the first op portunity to remove themselves from hi* Jurisdiction. It I* a leaven of Just • uch men a* he that made life possible In the mining regions of the west; without them ranine and murder would have stalked unchecked from the Missouri to the coast. Topping had now found a quiet an chorage after his adventurous youth, and seemed likely to pass bis later days as many other mountain men had done, In an uneventful fashion. When a man Is fond of the wilderness and finds him self beside waters teeming with fish, and prairies alive with fowl, and where venslon may he had for the pressing of a trigger, he Is likely to he too con tented to make any very strenuous fftorts to change his lot. Hut that was six years ago. Read, and let me tell you how Topping fares today. One evening In the fall of 1890 he was startled by a violent rapping on the split cedar door of his cabin. He lifted the latch and Joe Hourgols and his "pard” Morris stumbled Into the little shanty, and dumped the hags of ore samples they hud been laden with on the rough floor. Dead beat and half frozen, they were yet full of enthusi asm over a wonderful body of sulphide ore which their trial shoots had dis closed at the bottom of an old trial shaft high on the flanks of Red Moun tain. They had staked out five claims, they said, and would give one to Top ping If he would pay the recorder’s fees on the lot. This he agreed to do, and In due course became the owner of what seemed the poorest prospect. It is now the famous Le Rol mine, One of the locations Is the War Eagle, and another the Center Star, each a valua ble property, but Inferior to the Le Rol. From that day Trail Creek, Topping’s abode, began to be famous. Events move fast In the west. Top ping was almost alone at Trail In 1890; today there ar-! hotels, stores, a smelt er, a railroad station, and steamboat wharfs, while perched on the shoulder of the mountain near the Le Rol has sprung up the hustling town of Koss land, numbering already 10,000, and in creasing In population at the rate of 5,000 a year. He- need worry himself no more about ways and means, but can buy all the Winchesters, boats, and pack animals lie may desire, anu still have an ample Income left—and what more can a frontiersman and old Indian fighter ask? The veteran Is a great favorite with his fellow citizens. And the nameless wanderer who sunk the shallow pit In the iron hat back In the fifties? What grudge had the blind goddess against him? A shot or two more and he might have been rich and famous. Hut the big air com pressors do not pant and groan in his service: a thourand feet below the sun light men are tolling, but not for him; the dump sparsles with fifty dollar ore, tut the proceeds will not be credited to his account. What Is writ Is writ, and in the Hook of Destiny there is no turning back to correct errors—but if the bare, bleached bones on the alka li desert could sgaln be clothed with flesh and revialt lied Mountain, they would weep to see how near the plon e« i of '19 came to finding his t£l Dor ado. < alttorula Ostrich riaisn. The Due Angeles papers say that In the mouth of April the heaviest con signnient of ostrich plumes ever ship ped from California was sent to Paris the Industry la no longer an experi ment In the •ing Pacific state \l ivady the business has sn Investment of |4»n»,ww, w itch ts likely to be aug mealed by n third during the tentins season The sales of plumage this yeei 1 from the ostrich farms st Pall brook ! l oronadu K ishelm, Pasadena P» ' noma and ila iia M>>n ca foot up u ' IIMiMi The petC'Ulage of proltt cm j Ike amount Invested ts targe enough ts i make the business profitable I* HciIhs. tturgter a Wife Halloa Htll* Hurgtgr Wet:. III be banged 1 Hurglnr s W ife W knt s up* tturgtai I m dashed if | am t pii mixed op in these crushed atre* a an 1 went an broke Miter my own bogee' | Pxgknnge (•Itliitf frutr Mdriiliip, A r.cgro passing under it scaffoldin' r/h< re some repairs wero going on, a brick fell from above on his head, and was broken by the frill. Sambo very (molly raised Ills head and exclaimed: "Halloa, you while man up dar; If you don’t want your brlel.p broke, Ji; : keep ’em off my head." Mercury. Try hralicO. Ask your grocer today to show you j s package of ORAIN-O, the now food drink that takes the place of coffee The children may drink It without Injury as well as the adult, All who try It like it. ORAIN-O ha* that r.eh seal brown of Moeha or Java, but It is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stom&cn receives It without distress. % the price of coffee. Hi cent* and 2a cents per package. Kohl by all grocers Taste* like cof fee. Iambs like coffee How to Heroine Wrinkled. If more women realised that strain' Ing the eye* produces wrinkles, inoto would exercise a proper care of the * valuable members Rending by it dim or falling light, coming suddenly from a dark room to u light one, or vice versa, overworking the eyes In any way, and last, hut by no moans least, wearing dotted and cross-barred veils • the «i and more taxing of the eyesight am of valuable assistance In tho wrinkle msiklng process. Nrtt In nn Approvin',; < niiRf lr> irr, A vl|forou<* Htomafti I* Mm* iff ■ 11<**t of rutin fliifti- Nmjlift I* >i icuur iiniy nf i|uli'i iif'rvi'R. minM'iilttf • lawildiy. u Inn 11 y it |u h ’ t lii* him I ii !'• 4»il ir liHiilt <»f iifrJy Thou* !i lint hI w;iy» 11 mil unit I'lMloWUM'illi *1* iiihv lit* nr jul» •»! I liroutfll I Im* •!«*• nf I» i 'n m nut* nf itu* lfl*Mt •*iT*■ l - U. i u v l/nrntil* iiti'l bln nl fiTtl 11 /.* ■ f> In I'AM i in Till** Him tonlf jiIvi foriiHi'n Hi mi- who tiv I! umiliot miilurlii himI r**till’dIi**» hlllou* iif ,•» founti|mi Ion mill rhi’iimiitlRiu. If«op for 1%«*ryour. In the grand duchy of Luxemburg person* desiring work or help have now only to send a postal card to the director of the postal administration In order to have their wants advertised In every postofllco In tho Ifrunu uu<:«i,y. Thun llutf V*r* To Buffalo ami return via the Wa bash It It. For the pages full to overflowing with delicious half toue pictures of one of Creation's most charming places of resort for citizens of the Great Republic. No stranger visiting Chicago should be without a copy of the "Souvenir of Lin«*oln Rark." It can only be procured by enclos ing twenty-five i25) cents, in coin or post age stamps, to Geo H Heafford general passenger agent, 410 Old Colony building, Chicago, III. __ It's What's In II. A bottle 116 feet high will be shown at the coming Bordeaux exhibition. The site of the bottle Isn't so Interest ing to most people, though, as the con tents of It. _ All you guess about difficulty in sell ing Stark Trees may be wrong II you wish to know the truth, drop a postal to Stark Nursery, Louisiana. Mo , or Uockport, III. Name reference* Cash pay to salesmen each wickk the year round. Outfit free-—takes no money to thy the work. Also wwnt ct.uu ha kbits get their trees free. 4a fcaajr Way. ’•How does Kditor Scrabbleton manage to gel such a reputation tor originality?" "lie wait* tilt all the other people have expressed their views, then disagree* with them."—> Washington Mat Dm I tSkSMS »#u **e tusks 1st! IM* Asa« To gull lulw’ib easily wad bit* vet. be nsg sellt*. full nf Ilfs, uertsend vigor, lake Nrr-To Ha»\ the sender-worker. Ibsl aiakee weak m I'ktaflS or New York No woman who lellrira In her hua I until heltevea In splritnalism. Hail s lalank t are Is a i usdllaii«s«l cure Trice, The. |.ove your enemies, hut dun I forget j yams frit tot * You feet cross amt out ef lea# tAkyt j Mo, saw year live* la stoggtah |H ko * | Nvsmi ike e ill ree.1I ate sad raw lore it j Me# eliI Price 46a ret fl isr Volunieer ,, ms-ssi is wealth | kOved avorsomi is pnisrly leil*«|l Harass# la ISa • r--#4 ro v-.« 14 a ar i.rrr <#* a #» 4 i- - MS rka* asriare# star M w steers nt'S- a Hr *a Mil* your hlrsdi a oyuare ileal, erea I if yet haw Ik# put hy it. Nebraska a «ir*at Wheal Mtat*. Thin year Nebraska ha* coin® to the very front rank a* a wheat producing *tale. with her splendid crop of ;'/>.<*X).(J(J(i bushel* of spring wheat, averaging over 2SI bushel* to tne «« re. ami bushel* of winter wheat, which will average 21 bushel* to the a* re. The table given lielow, which ha* b®«li carefully coiiipllwl. show's what will surprise many, that Nebraska stand* third among the stabs as a wheat produc er. ami it must l*e l»ourne in mind that the states that outrank her are almost ex clusively wheat state*, whereas Nebraska is a country of diversified crops, corn being her principal product. WlftTrKM STATICS WIIKAT CHOP. Actual figures for and conservative estimates for W7: 1^7 |m*r*» K».l.,r*r Send lor FKF.K $4.1(0 trial Ik.iiI* *ml iin*l<.*> tin. 11 II. KLIM*. I.td .w(l Akh at PhilBiieliik®, Pa To Cur# (:«na(l|ia(iori Forever. Take Crow-are t* Candy Cathartic loe or 26o. If C. C. loll Ui cure. druKKi»t» ofuu® money The cant nay® it in no longer proper to usc napkins at the table. I believe that l ino'* (jure 1* tho only mod leiiic that will eureeonauniptlon Anua 41 Itoae, Willlern«porf, I'a., Sov. 12. "Jo. There i* no perfume in the world eipial to the perfume from a barrel ol apples. Mra- Wlmlow'l Moollilng Mirup For*liiidr«’nt4*rtlilng,»«f»#n»tb*si»wi*' »#-«.l*.*»»irflrtm ujuHou, j9*»n, i urc-s wlud tulic. 'iU> • no* Lotus \Ve never know a loafer who did not have a lot of right* coining to him. Educate Tour Howell Willi Caacareta. Candy Cathartic, cure ronmlputlon forever. MulfC.C C fall. druiiKlat* refund moucy. All people who play the fiddle loot something alike. $100 To Any Man. WILL. PAY 9100 FOR ANY CASK Of WaikntN In Men They Treat m4 Fall to Cnr*. An Omaha Company place* for the fin*, time before the public u Maui* ai. Tnaarr MF.\T for the cure of l/atVitality, N«w-vmim and Heiual W'eaku***. and KaftforuLtuo wf Life Force in old and young men PU* worn-out French remedy < -onLajne ae Pho*phorou* or other harmful drug* It m a WotiiiNn i. THEATMEvr • magical ir« rtw effect* positive in it* cure All read***, who are suffering from a weuknm* ifco* blight* their life, • among that ineutal wawf pbynical suffering |»eeiiliar to |x*«t Mae* Food. *hould write to theHTATK M KliICAL COMPANY, Omaha. Neb and they w4I •end you atwolutely FKKK a voiualA* i paper on thee# disease*. and poaiti ve onjtdm of their truly Maoi'ai. Tkbathrrt Tt**w> and* of men. who have lost all l»o(»e «d a cure, are laing re*tored by them to a pe^ i feet condition Till* Maoicai. Thfatmfnt may •"» tah**» at home under their direction* or they wdl pay railroad fare and hotel bill* to all who (•refer to go there for treatment, if ttftwp tail to cure They a re perfectly rdi*Mt; have no Free Preprint ion- Free Free Harnple, or C O f> fid e They-See* 000 capital, and guarantee L> cum • very case they treat or refund every dcilaf # • *r their charge* may lx* il»|K*iiel *«» • ! brink to la* paid to them »b« u a cor* • •ff acted. Write them today ! i-- _ I --a HALL 5 Vegetable Sicilian HAIR RENEWER Beautifies and restores Gray Hair to its original color and. vitality; prevents baldness; cures itching and dandruff. i A fine hair dressing , it. I’. Hall & I'roiiii. Sr.atiua, N II. Hold l>y all l*ruggl»t». UNIVERSITY of NOTRE DAME* Notre Damn. Indiana. ClaMli n, !.**»! #*m. N«*l**m**, I Ivlf, 1 r-lmiilntl »"«l Eln frli iil I ugtu* F>r(tig. Thorougli rrF|»»rwinry «n4 ( HiiuiurrbM I f ourai’l. Ilral lir.'irtita «t >m*m IKomiu* Krt>*. Juftlnf in h»utor Vcar •■■'■*-***** Co', C*. tnl’rwItivHL t|S Tfi CSC Can be mad* working Irrak V*» • '* I'H/tiF# |/rr f* i r< d nr »**«r ' .W WbOM U4I»* Ui lia* frualltw |)pf VV IIL lirrllf* tl.uugf ft.*/ U | f Ot.Uato** *«a~ ■vl ’» CM* pi,,^ (,r*,.J l.lng* furU*«rft«M0 - city work »# wHI WMounirydiafrlrtc __ MCinuKU, I lib A Mala *U.» Kl»ii*w4.f«a fCCIfilIT DAIfl on order* of 2<*J0 m ^ » nClUtl I rilU |{noftr>g or iVgli ui»n ( Manilla Writ* for lampl*** and prize* Th* P*» >1 n iiilia It noting tompau). t uMJiiva* K.A HDADGV P*EW DI5C0VEHV; **— Y gtiftd r« ii»fMM>um *nwl rn». ~ fc**nd for book of O tint* .1 1..'- sort IO 1*11* Lre«itlii«'fil Ere*!, pr. H.H.OkKU’w Mi**. >uB—a.Wa AAIIIII MORPHINE and WHISKY Mint llrllU I11 'W‘ ' ' 1 * II K tar 4 «. VI ■ w afl MOmU*. lt*4>cll»in««.,MiU4HW.I*4» W. N. U. OMAHA. No. 33.-ltt«r|\. When writing To advertIwer*. kindly auaoa tlon tbla paper. 1 1 g. ""■""" ■■■-r? AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OK THE WORD “CASTORIA” AND “PITCHERS CASTORIA." AS OUR TRADE MARK. I, OR. 6AMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusettm. was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that has borne and does now //tr* s, *“* every bear the facsimile signature of (■Jusf^jgTciccn^U wrapper. This is the original "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," which has been used in the homes of the mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see tluit it im the kind you have always bought „ * an thm and has the signature ofwrap per Yo one has authority from me to use my name except The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. * March 8, 1897* ». Do Not Be Deceived. Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more permit* on it), the ingredients of which even he does not know. “The Kind You Have Always Bought** BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF | Insist on Having The Kind That Never Failed You? **** •«»»•%»• MBMIlf. Tl BuMM* BTmiT Nlw «*•« nt«. f WRITE FOR_— f HELPFUL HINTS | ■ A CaUlopti* of Itrjr thuda. Cloak* Clothing. Milhnvrv, H>«>t* and Shut*, kuruuurv Carfirt*. Curtain* Cnatkrry, (iUuwwarv. To>», lk>Ua and (k-nvral ll >u»v-furm*hing thud* IT COSTS YOU NOTHING j AND WILL HELP YOU SAVE MANY A DIME THIS FALL AND WINTER. : liTTENSON. WOOI.I F * CO.. lea.cworth, kaa*«*. *** **“***** ***“********r*jYTTr*rffiiTnT*rTfiTfmifnTfrrrit • • n"flw v atwitit u m i i.ittw mi. “THE COLORADO MIDLAND RAILROAD“ Hkh£M»i»iJ>lt!_O^ASm;aT >CIN> HY IN T H g WOULD. 1 *• ft** •**«"*>*■ hw H*il ..... f..,, r^w M «i Wu. i*. U at I ib* tt » . i«a Uf T Mg ti^NPVttUVi liraad Jaa.tWa «ag lbrhv,«« THt Mttat gaatoua m mmu t aatfa >3^v5t**. kaadvut* Ate,*. w. r. 14111%. Umttl Niuhm A—I. * . IWat.-f TEACHERS WANTED! *•4*4 to# ♦»> *****<. « • •* «•»»•«* *4 «M*«* k%«.4i*i*** m 4 • ! Itfekte 4- ,»#* W|**|k **■»**., j -**» * Itw >■ ■I’Mk ■Nt^.at** «* tv# l! 41* * Ft* tau***/ .*4 t# . .* • % M l ■ - 4 mMM* IMM 4 I tot* iWt • «* I «AMWPi •Am 4 •• ««4t ’ *#4 I#44 * •- A'%* ♦ #«•*» MN Aw4 imtrn<||S>i"W«l^%4 *» 4 f4 to* tat** »M MM •v*tto- *!«•*•• tot*®* % a tci* «it% »u«t4* * <4 a m# Vkb* » 4 •»#**» f •«»*»* « |f t > ■»a* gg n a > ■ *>4 W *■ • '•» M i %#k«*g(U» tot v »MiH tmiww* 1 * -*•#* i<*n4t •*«**•*% L-- •(*» 4-44 4m *mpMtw*4 «m ton mpMto