CHAPTER XI.—(Continued.) “Possession Is nine points of the law," I answered. “I am afraid It will be a difficult matter to eject Mr. Brans combe unless we can produce the col onel’s will.’' ‘‘Which we cannot?”—"Which we cannot at present?” “Then nothing can be done?" "I fear nothing, excepting to apprise the heir-at-law of the possible exist ence of the will made in Miss Brans combe's favor, and to warn him that It niuy any day be brought forward.” "Humph!" growled the rector. "And if it should never turn up—if, as I be gin to suspect, there has been some deep-laid plot—some rascality of which Master Charlie is, as usual, the head and front, what then?” “Then,” I replied, "Master Charlie will remain In possession." “And Nona will be a beggar," said Mr. Heatbcote sadly. “Poor child, poor child!" Ms Miss Branscombe at Forest Lea?" I ventured to Inquire presently. "No; she and Miss Elmslle are with us. Mr. Charlie’s bachelor establish ment was hardly a fitting home for her, and we thought It advisable that she should leave the neighborhood at present—at all events until we had heard your opinion.” "In the circumstances I should ad vise Miss Branscombe to retire," I said gravely. "Yes, yes, exactly," assented the rec tor. "In the circumstances as I now understand them—she must of course leave the neighborhood.” We drove on for some time after this In silence. I was occupied with rose colored dreams of a future for the dis possessed heiress—a future which had evidently not entered Into the rector's calculations, from the same point of view at all events. "If the fellow were not what he Is, the poor colonel’s original plan would have settled the difficulty,” muttered Mr. Heatheote, as he touched up his stout cob. “nut he was right—he was right; It would be a sacrifice not to be thought of- not to be thought of.” As he spoke we were passing the Forest Lea woods, which here swept - ’ '1 • f f • FORGIVE ME,” I CRIED. ”MISS B RANSCOMBE—NORA.” down to the edge of green turf border ing the road. From one of the glade like openings two figures emerged In front of our carriage, sauntering slow ly along on the grass, too deeply ab sorbed in conversation apparently to be aware of our upproach. One—a slim girlish figure, dressed in black gar ments, with graceful, fair head bowed like a Illy on Its stalk—was, as 1 knew at once, Nona's; and It needed not the rector's impatient exclamation and sudden, Quick Jerk of the reins to tell me that the slight, almost boyish figure by her aide was that of her cousin, Charlie Urauacombe. In an instant the half-scotched ser pent of Jealousy was roused again and stung me to the heart. All my sit doubt* and auspicious rushed back tike k flood Fool that I had been ever to dream of hope in the face of what I had seen and knew. There wm something of mockery In the elaborate* bow. returned by a curt nod. with which Mr. ('barlee Hum n nib* greeted the rector, and. a* ! toad It. a gleam of triumph on the handsome fair face in which I recog nised the fatal heaute de dtable I had beard described A paaalng glint pee of Mlaa Brans combe showed me a half startled, sur prised glance of recognition —n swift, shy blush In return for the grave how with which I acknowledged here The meeting had npeet the rector's equan imity aa much ae It had mlae He spoke no more until we turned In at the rectory gate rii4l»rKN XII Kona was not In the drawing room before dinner Mlaa K malts was and rwaeleed me wtth tearful cordiality ••Ji b n end change “* she whispered, "espec tnliy for the deaf girl Hut eh* way hack to the garden and Uwn "I he* your pardon air." he raid, alellly "Thai path lead* to the kitchen thla" opening a gate ‘ *|J| tahr you to the aide entrance lot t the halt " ' Thanh you." I anawered Oood night M U«d night Mr fort " I kn.hed up aurprue | at the auddeg change of tone ami manner The man a eyea me, mine • Widdringtoa*" I had aim at ga claimed hut that hi* hand t u hej mine on the gate latch and keeked Ike ward "You left thte In the .!<•« .art th . af»era. »n air " he Mid handing m* a le'ter "| picked It up a *. a | . the trap." I took lk. pap. r lr a k . i aa-.d on alth ano Her g> i .* ti Mr tnted aae In a wild *i,a« .» Wtddftpgtt* aai vn tk. Ira k »| the she Is glad that Charlie Is at Forest Lea.” And then she asked the inevi table question, which had come to be almost an exasperating one to mo— “Any news of the will, Mr. Fort?” “None,” I answered; "its loss Is as great a mystery as ever." It was not until we were seated at the dinner table that Nona slipped quietly In, and took a place by Miss Elmelle opposite to mine. There was a consciousness In her manner, a de precating timidity, as she met my eyes, which confirmed my fears. She was lost to me, and the Gordian Shot of the Forest Lea difficulty was cut by her hand, in a way for which I at least ought not to have been wholly unpre pared. The rector was called away on some parochial business after dinner, and I, not caring to Join the ladies in my per turbed condition of mind, slipped out through the open dining room window and wandered about the old-fashioned rectory garden, and presently out into the green lanes, sweet with the per fume of late-blooming honeysuckle and silent In the hush of evening’s rest from toil and labor. Love and courtship were certainly in the air of that corner of Midshire, and I was always condemned by some ma licious fate to be, not an actor In the sweet drama, but a listener and an in truder. For the third time since my introduction to the neighborhood I en countered a pair of lovers. They were leaning against a gate, looking Into a meadow, hidden from me until I was close upon them by a great tangle of traveler's Joy, wreath ing a Jutting bush of wildbrlar rose at the corner of the hedge. It was too late for me to.retire when I came upon the couple, so the.e was nothing for It but a discreet cough, which I had the presence of mind to set tip for the emergency. The woman turned has tily at the sound, and to my surprise I saw that it was Woodward, Nona’s maid. To my surprise, I say, foi there wa? something in the staid settled plain ness of the maid’s appearance which was incongruous, to my fancy, with lovers and love-making. Decidedly I fcc—et— cay. with Woodward under his influence, the secret was probably al ready his. How could I warn Nona— how save her? The opportunity was not far to seek. When I entered the drawing-room MUs firanscoir.be was there alone, save for Mrs. Heathcote’s sleeping presence. The Rector’s wife lay back In her com fortable arm chair by the fire, blissfully asleep. Nona Bat by the tea-table In the opposite corner, her soft-shaded lamp the one spot of light In the room. Her elbow rested on the table, her cheek on her hand, her pale, sweet face grave and ead. The eyes she raised at my entrance fell almost immediately, and a deep flush, painful In Its Inten sity, spread over cheek, neck and brow. “You will have some tea?” she said, beginning to arrange her cups with bands which trembled so much that she was forced to desist. Then sho folded them resolutely in her lap and looked up at me, making, as 1 could see, a strong effort at compasure, “Mr. Fort," she went on, In almost a whis per, “you are angry with me; and ycu have been so kind, I am soriy that you cannot forgive me now that every thing has come right. And I do want to tell you how thoroughly I under stand and thank you for all your kind thought for me, although I am afraid I must have seemed ungrateful In op posing you, and—and—all.” I bowed. I was afraid to trust my self to speak Jn«t then. And yet the precious moments-were flying! Mrs, Healhcotc stirred In her chair. “I wish you would believe that this— as things are now, I mean—Is the tey happiest thing for me, as well as right,” she added, bending towards me in her earnestness. ‘I hope you will be very happy.” I raid, conquered by the sweet humility of her appeal, whilst the wo:ds seem'd to scorch my heart. “Im am very happy," she answered gently. "Why do you speak In llie fti ture? I shall never regret—never. I could never grow to be so sordid, and I should like to be sure that you arc not vexed about It. We all owe so much to your kindness In those sad days." The rosy color flamed in her cheeks again. "I should like to fee! that we are friends." "Why not?” I responded, with un controlled bitterness. "It Is not for me to prescribe to Miss Branscombe what Is for her happiness. It Is to ba presumed that she Is herself the best— in this ease, perhaps, th? only—Judge." The blushes faded and left her white as a lily. Something in her look mad? me feel as if I had struck her a blow. “Forgive me," I cried, "Miss Brans cembe—Nona”—as she raised her shak ing hands and covered her face—"what have 1 done—what have I said?" And then—I do not know how it hap pened; I have never been able to re duce the next supreme moments to any coh rent memory—but her dear head wn» on my shoulder, my arms were round her as I dropped upon my knees by her side, and without a spoken word I knew that neither Charlie Brans com'-? rcr ary other barrier steed be tween me and my darling. She was mine, and mine only, and the gates of Paradise had opened to me at last. (To be continued.) .Safe Side. The unexpected humor which often tints the grave speech of the Quaker is well illustrated In a little story told of an eminent young physician of Pennsylvania at the time of the civil war. He had determined to serve his country and leave his practice at home, but met with grieved remonstrance from his mother, a sweet faced Qua keress. "I beseech of thee not to go to this war, my son!" she pleaded, her soft eyes full of tears. "But I do not go to fight, mother," said the doctor, cheerfully. "I am going as a medical man. Surely there Is no harm in that." "Well, well,” said the little mother, doubtfully, “go then. If It must be 90.” Then suddenly a gleam of loyalty shone through her tears, and she ftraightened herself and looked brave ly up into her tall son’s face. "If thee finds thee kills more than thee cures,” she said, demurely, "I advise thee to go straightway over to the other side, j my ion!" Iliekeus' Itcat Ninel. It Is well known among literary peo ple that Charles Dickens considered "David Copperfleld" the beta of hi* novels, but occasions when he actually express'd that opinion are so rare that It |s worth while to recall an Incident which happened while he was In 1‘hlla de’.phla. Mr Chapin, father of I»r. John It Chapin, the well known expert on Insanity, ws« at thst time st the head of 'he blind asylum here. Raised type for the bllrd was Just coming trto vogue, and. desiring to have one of Idckrnt' books printed In that way. Mr Chapin took advantage of sn In Induction to the great iuivell.it to ash him which of Ms works he considered the best, end non toned the reiattfi why be want'd *u know In-kens un hesitatingly answered. "Ivavld t'cpper field “ Philadelphia Record « »f • »tMI« IV I'altM. an •miiiii *urg»on of l»ukltn »ho ill*.I in 1*43 **« r*mark akla f«r lit* plain Jvaiing aiih kini**;f In kt* f** kook k* ka.H4 HirlM »• Ik* following ‘Pur Citing ln*ff* -it «It . f .r J«afhna*. I gn « r»r tailing klm k* «ji no mot* lit Ilian I tu. I gglana “fw n«*iking mat I know uf *c**pt Ikai ka j>ri -tt>ly ihoticki k* ili»l not pay ma *r* ngh I a* I llm*, | gitia**." t f ik* non ill • aniiital ytald of ytli* Sow iwwggslMM gnllwa* Ik* VahM ( • tlHa pro4o««a ana kail. 'TALMAGFS 8EBM0N. "THE IVORY PALACES." LAST SUNDAY’S SUBJECT. _____ ’’All the (larnirnt* Smrll of Myrrh, ami Alori, ami Ca**la, Oul of the Ivory ralaor*’’—front Hit Hook of I’wliut, Chapter ll, Irrtt A. (Copyright IK'S by Loula Klopxch.) Among the grand adornments of the city of Purls is the Church of Notre Dame, with its great towers and elab orate rose windows, and sculpturing of the last Judgment, with the trumpeting angels and rising dead; its battlements of quatre-foil; its sacristy, with ribbed ceiling and statues of saints. But there was nothing in all that building which more vividly appealed to my plain re publican tastes than the costly vest ments which lay in oaken presses— robes that had been embroidered with gold, and been worn by popes and arch bishops on great occasions. There was a robe that had been worn by Pius VII. at the crowning of the first Na poleon. There was also a vestment that had been worn at the baptism of Napoleon II. As our guide opened the oaken presses, and brought out these vestments of fabulous cost, and lifted them up, the fragrance of the pungent aromatics In which they had been pre served filled the place with a sweet ness that was almost oppressive. Noth ing that had been done in stone more vividly impressed me than these things that had been in cloth, and embroidery and perfume. But today I open the drawer of this text, and I look upon the kingly robes of Christ and as 1 lift them, flashing with eternal Jewels, the whole house is filled with the aroma of these garments, which "t-mell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory palaces.” In my text the king steps forth. Ills robes rustle and blaze as he advances. His pomp and power and glory over master the spectator. More brilliant is he than Queen Vashti, moving amid the Persian princes; than Marie An I tolnette, on the day when Louis XVI. ! put upon her the necklace of 800 dia ; monds; than Anne Boleyn, the day I when Henry VIII. welcomed her to his palace—all beauty and all pomp for gotten while we stan 1 in the presence of this imperial glory, king of Zion, king of earth, king of heaven, king forever! His garments not worn out, not dust-bedraggled; but radiant and Jeweled and redolent. It seems as If they must have been pressed a hundred years amid the flowers of heaven. The wardrobes from which they have been taken must have been sweet with clus ters of camphire,ar.d frankincense, and all manner of precious wood. Do you not inhale the odors? Ay, ay, “They smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory palaces.” Your first curiosity Is to know why the robes of Christ are odorous with myrrh. This was a bright-leafed Abys sinian plant. It was trifoliated. The Greeks, Egyptians, Homans and Jews bought and sold It at a high price. The first present that was ever given to Christ was a sprig of myrrh thrown on his infantile bed In Bethlehem, and the last gift that Christ ever had was myrrh pressed into the cup of his cru cifixion. The natives would take a stone and bruise the tree, and then it would exude a gum that would satu rate all the ground beneath. This gum was used for purposes of merchandise. One piece of it, no larger than a chest nut, would whelm a whole room with odors. It was put in closets, in chests, in drawers, in rooms and its perfume adhered almost interminably to any thing that was anywhere near it. So when in my text I read that Christ’s garments smell of myrrh, I Immediate ly conclude the exquisite sweetness of Jesus. 1 know that to many he is only like any historical person; another John Howard; another philanthropic Ober llu; another Confucius; a grand sub ject for a painting, a heroic theme for a poem; a beautiful form for a statue; but to those who have heard his voice, and felt his pardon, and received his benediction, he Is music and light, and warmth, and thrill, and eternal fra grance-sweet as a friend sticking to you when all else betray; lifting you up while others try to push you down; not so much like morning-glories, that bloom only when the sun Is coming up, uor like “fotir-o'clocks," that bloom only when the sun Is going down, but like myrrh, perpetually aromatic—the same morning, noou and night; yes terday. today, forever. It seems as if we cannot wear him out. We put on him all our burdens, and atttict him with all our griefs, and set hint fore most iu all our battle*, and yet ha Is ready to lift, and to sympathise and to help. We have so Imposed upon him that one would think Iu sternal atfronr he would quit our soul, and yet today . he address*# us with the >am* tender ness. dawns upon us with the same j smile, pltlea u» with the tame tom- ) passion. Tk»ro is bo it sin** III*- ttia for us. It la B>or« lim -r,»l t iu CtMir’i, tuors musical than Bitllinttk'i, mors coo qusr n* thso i'harl»-ms*n#B. iu rs s!o n«|**4 *nai»n It br*ath«s ottk all parfunt* Who Ilk* Jssus to »*t a broken boas, to pity a koto*its* or pkaa. to aorta a slsk man. to ink* a 1 printi*»t back slibai any n«l>il»i to ill-tmio* o rtwrirti «H pwasu-oi •Ilk irttM to auk* o h>«m»o onto ito«l not of Iks b>nt *>■ Ma, to snick Ik* tsors of M«*s *wrr*« ia a lackrrmatory tkat skull «***t bs krokoo* Wko ba* nick aa •>* to to nor asml. to*k a tip to kts* aoay no | surra*. sock a kua«i to snatch os util j of tk* ftr* to* k o foo| tw trampis oar , sksMsiaa, ink i koart to stout** ai< cur necessities? I struggle for seme metaphor with which to express him; he is not like the bursting forth of a full orchestra; that is too loud. He Is not like the sea when lashed to rage by the tempest; (hat is too boisterous, lie Is not like the mountain, Its brow wreathed with the lightnings; that Is too solitary. Give us a softer type, a gentler comparison. We have seemed to see him with otir eyes, and to hear him with our ears, and to touch him with our hands. Oh, that today he might appear to some other one of our five senses! Ay, the nostril shall dis cover his presence. He comes upon us like spice gales from heaven. Yea, his garments smell of lasting and all-per vasive myrrh. Would that you all knew his sweet ness! how soon you would turn from ail other attractions! If the philoso pher leaped out cf his bath In a frenzy of joy, and clapped his bnnds ana rushed through the Btreets, because he had found the solution of a mathemat leal problem, how will you feel leap ing from the fountain of a savior's mercy and pardon, washed clean and made white as snow, when the question nas been solved: ‘ How can my soul oe saved?" Naked, frost-bitten, storm lashed soul, let Jesus this hour throw arcund thee the "garments that smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia out of ivory palaces.” Your second curiosity is to know why the robes of Jesus are odorous with aloes. There Is some difference of opinion about where these aloes grow, what is the color of the flower, what is the particular appearance of the herb. Suffice it for you and me to know that aloes mean bitterness the world over, and when Christ comes with garments bearing that particular odor, they suggest to me the bitterness of a Savior's sufferings, Were there ever such nights as Jesus lived through —nights on the mountains, nights on the sea, nights in the desert? Who ever had such a hard reception as Jesus had? A hostelry the first, an un just trial in oyer and terminer another, a foul-mouthed, yelling mob the last. Was there a space on his back as wide as your two fingers where he was not whipped? Was there a space on his brow an inch squnre where he was not cut of the briers? When the spike struck at the instep, did it not go clear through to the hollow of the foot? Ob, long deep, bitter pilgrimage! Aloes! aloes! According to my text, he come3 "out of the ivory palaces.” You know, or, if you do not kr.ow, I will tell you now, that some of the palaces of olden time were adorned with ivory, Ahab and Sol omon had their homes furnished with it. The tusks of African and Asiatic elephants were twisted into all man ners of shapes, and there were stairs of ivory, and chairs of ivory, and ta bles of Ivory, and floors of ivory, and pillars of ivory, and windows of ivory, and fountains that dropped Into basins of ivory, and rooms that had ceilings of ivory. Oh, white and overmastering beauty! Green tree branches sweep ing the white curbs. Tapestry trailing the snowy floors. Brackets of light flashing on the lustrous surroundings. Silvery music rippling on the beach of the arches. The mere thought of It al most stuns my brain, and you say: “Ch, if I could only have walked over eurh floors! If I could have thrown myself into such a chair! If I could h-vc heard the drip and dash of those fountains!” You shall have something better than that If you only let Christ introduce you. From that place he came, and to that place he proposes to transport you, for his "garments smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory palaces.” What a place heaven must be: The Tuileries of the French, the Windsor castle of the Eng lish. the Spanish Alhambra, the Rus sian Kremlin, are mere dungeons com pared with it! Not so many castles on either side the Rhine as on both sides of the river of God—the ivory palaces! One for the angels, insufferably bright, winged, fire-eyed, tempest-charioted; one for the martyrs, with blood-red robes from under the altar; one for the King, the steps of his palace the crown of the church militant; one for the singers, who lead the one hundred and forty and four thousand; one for you, ransomed from sin; one for me, plucked from the burning. Oh, the ivory palaces! Today It seems to me as if the win dows of those palaces were Illumined for some great victory, and 1 look and see. climbing the stair* of Ivory, and walking on floors of ivory, and look ing from the windows of Ivory, some whom we knew and loved on earth. Yes. 1 know them There are father and mother, not elghty-two years and seventy-nine years, as when they left us. but blithe and young as when on thetr marriage day AnJ there are brothers and sisters merrier than when we used to romp across the meadows together Th« cough gone. The can cer cured. The erysipelas healed. The heartbreak over. Oh. how fair they are in the ivory palace*' And your dear little children that went out from you Christ did not let on* of them drop a* he lifted them. Ill did nut wrench on* of them from you No j They went ns from on* they loved well ! to On# wh»m they loved better. If I shoo'd take your little child and preee ! Ite toft fare agalaet my rough cheek. | I might keep It a little wktle; but wkea you. the mother, came along It would | struggle t« go with you And so you cloud holding your dying child wkea , Jeoue psseed by tk the room end Ike i Itttte une tprsag on* to greet him Tbs' i ts all Your t'ht.sitan deed did not go ; down into the dust, and the gravel, I . tad the mud. Though It rained ait that funeral day sa l the water cam# u,■ to | the wheel'* huh aa you drove out to . . the «*mcle*|, tt nr's no y*®*»en e to , them tor they e>. p, ».1 f .ite (he h ■use he * tw the keM there, fight into the I I j ivcry palaces. All is well with them, j All is well. It is not a dead weight that you lift when you carry a Christian out. Jesus makes the bed up soft with velvet promises, and he says, "Put her down here very gently. Put that head which will never ache again on this pillow of hallelujahs. Send up word that the procession Is coming. Ring the bells! Ring! Open your gates, ye Ivory pal aces!” And so yoUr loved ones are there. They are Just as certainly there, having died in Christ, as that you are here. There Is only one thing more they want. Indeed, there Is one thing j in heaven they have not got. They want It. What is It Your company. But, oh, my brother, unless you change your tack you cannot reach that har bor. You might as well take the South ern Pacific railroad, expecting in that dire "Ion to reach Toronto, as to go on in the way some of you are going, and yet expect to reach the ivory pala ces. Your loved ones are looking out of the windows of heaven now, and yet you seem to turn your back upon them. You do not seem to know the sound of their voices as well as you used to, or to be moved by the sight of their dear faces. Call loudpr, ye departed ones! Call louder from the Ivory palaces!" When I think of that place,and think of my entering it, I feel awkward; I feel as sometimes when I have been ex posed to the weather, and my shoes have been bemired, and my coat Is soiled, and my hair 13 disheveled, and I stop In front of some fine residence where I have an errand. I feel not fit to go in as I am, and sit among the guests. So come of us feel about heaven. We need to be washed; we need to be rehabilitated before we go into the ivory palaces. Eternal God, let the surges of thy pardoning mercy rc'l over us! I want not only to wash my hands and my feet, but, like sotn9 skilled diver, standing on the pier head, who leaps Into a wave and comes up at a far distant point from where he went In, co I want to go down, and so I want to come up. O Jesus, wash me In the waves of thy salvation! And here I ask you to solve a mys tery that has been oppressing me for thirty years. I have been asking it of doctors of divinity who have been studying theology for half a century, and they have given me no satisfactory answer. I have turned over all the books in my library, but got no solution to the question, and today I come and ask you for an explanation. By what logic was Christ induced to exchange the ivory palaces of heaven for the crucifixion agonies of earth? I shall take the first thousand million years in heaven to study out that problem; meanwhile, and now, taking it as the tcndereet, mightiest of all facts that Christ did come; that he came with spikes In his feet; came with thorns in his brow; came with spear3 in his heart, to save you and to save me, “God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life." Oh, Christ, whelm all our souls with thy compas sion! Mow them down like summer grain with the harvesting sickle of thy grace! Hide through today the con queror, thy garments smelling "of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of tbs ivory palaceo”! ORIGIN OF EXPRESSIONS. Many of the phrases one uses or hears every day have been handed down to us from generation to genera tion for hundreds of years, and In many cases they can be traced to a quaint and curious origin. “Done to a turn” suggests the story of St. Lawrence, who suffered martyrdom by being roasted on a gridiron. During his torture he calmly requested the attendants to turn him over, as he was thoroughly roasted on one side. In one of the battles between the Russians and the Tartars, 400 years ago, a private soldier of the former cried out; “Captain, I've caught a Tartar.” "Bring him along, then,” an swered the officer. “I can’t, for he won't let me,” was the response. Upon investigation It was apparent that the captive had the captor by the arm and would not release him. The familiar expression, “Robbing Pettr to pay Paul,” Is connected with the history of Weatmlnster abbey. In the early middle ages It was the cus tom to call the abbey St. Peter's |’» thedral. At one time the funds at St. Paul's cathedral being low, those in authority took sufficient from St. Peter's to settle the accounts, much to the dissatisfaction of the people, who asked, "Why rob St. Peter to pay St. Paul?*' Some gob years later the say ing was again u*»d In regard to the same collegiate churches, at the tlm« of the death of the earl of Chatham, the city of Umdon declaring that the famous statesman ought to lie In SI Paul s Parliament, however, Insisted that Westminster abbey was the proper place, and not to bury him there would be, for the eecund time. "Robbing SC Refer to pay St. Paul.” *•>»*•» Haiouii Kir Thu mat O'Cuanur Uwn, Mart., ha* lw*i (run th« room ha ltv*4 la till ku lialli at Curb. ba raua* b* u fur tb* »'r»«**b araii lb* a aib*r m r> rail* •*» II Kf Hal aataihrr ibaa *aa i*ar **«* '«b* «*!*• ul buataa lib It aa* wn b.«b la » ..«i* ;-•*• k |>iri la IVal • Ul* a a **•!« ( Il * la tb* iwuitlv** *4 a aua *b> b*l **»a bilbrt ua a lailrait