WV THE DAY'S WORK. Do the work of the day m well As vnu h ivi llm uit tii ili' M 7 Iryfor the best- ior the best will Ml V li.it wan the etui in view. Always your best-it is cheap tn shirk; The beat makes the worker glad; And people remember the better work, Fai-pctting the weak ami b.id. They remember the fateful tool An well n the pcilcct suae. Scant is the rnetnorv for a fool, Or him who it i'lle Inn;,'. People remember th" honest few Who jjave of the boot they hut tthey will remember the good ou do, And always forget the bid. Do the work of the day as well Afl though it would eloc your toil. lie who a H'rnion in stone would tell Must ehi'i'l and earve and mini. Weak and lifeless, ()r (inn and trnr, Tito work of the day is et. People renientber the good we do The bad they will soon forget. lYewtenlay is n record mule, ClintiRiiic;, for good or ill; Hands to-day mtit be unafraid. Heady to work your will. Useless, tomorrow, to -..ully rite Plans that wete far front nitre. I People remember the good you do, ' Anil they foruct the pour'. W. 1). Ncbit, in lititimore American. mwh &tr- t: m 'Hiilph Mns.-on was a eoasuinptlvo. You knew It by Hie bright hop.'ful eye, the (lull pule shin, tttul the ttervotis ir ritable cough that accentuated Ids slightest speech and t'iti'Uctl his at tenuated frame. And his tempera Uicntnl vivacity m.-is due to the same iliond dlsciuo tli.'tt while cniiMtinlng life dazzles the scums with golden vis. Ions of longevity. Masson was night telegraph operator ut a small station on the Illinois Cen tral ltnllroad between Chicago and New Orleans. In a locality where pint; forests modllled the air with a Ionic of balsam lor hurt lungs and tin' dry. Handy soil furnished a chance for open air exercise. Masson owned a good horse anil at hours when he was duty free lie rode his race for HIV with zest uiid satisfaction. Kike all consump tive: his spirits increased as his Health declined, and he saw with feverish in tensity a long vista of future pros perity. Something peculiar in the mental make-up of the young operator was liolli ink-resting and battling to new acquaintances, but It was merely the expression of a cult which Is not yet one of the exact sctetices. but which has immense undeveloped possibili ties. Italph Masson was a student of psychic phenomena, a linn believer in telepathy and an ardent Investigator into every new occult theory, lie was himself a hypnotist, possessing a na tural gift, cultivated and developed by Hliuly and practice. At Harvey Sta tion he had small opportunity to Im prove this faculty, hut there was one family living a lew mile down the lino where he found a willing convert to his peculiar views, and what was more Important a valuable subject to carry them out successfully. Margaret Lansing, n girl of elgl teen, became Infatuated with the strange new power and gave Mii-mmi Iter intelligent co-operation when til an evening entertainment at iiu Utile dis trict schoolhouse, before lie went on duty, he gave an exhibition of his ; nud easily sent her Into a profound liypnotlc sleep. Her family and friends were present and gave their consent, looking upon It as a part of the evening's entertainment and see ing nothing serious In the perform ance. They were merely uinucd and incredulous when, laying his hand on lier forehead with a light torn-It, lie finld: "Go over to the station, go into (he Ofllce, ami tell me what you see there." He did not know that sin- could or IwotihT submit to Ihe tet; she had Houbtloss been there at .-nine I line anil might describe It from memory, and the test would be of no value. She 'dhl not respond quickly, and lie re peated the command. After a moment Bhu began lo shiver as with rear. , "What do you see?" "Two men who look like robbers. IT hoy are breaking open a desk-." I "Can you describe the men":" 1 "One is young and one is old. They .wear caps ami have handkeichlefrt tied over the lower part of their faces." "hook through the handkerchiefs and tell mo what you see." "The one who Is young has a re, mustache nud one eye Is gone. The HIB HAND WAH ON Till: KKV. other has white hair and a smooth face. They are working l" " hurry. rAh-li-h, they are caught:" Tho girl's breath was Indrawn with a sob. The hypnotist made a few passes over her and she t-auic to her eclf weals and exhausted. . "Somo of you fellows ao over to the 3WFt ' ' M. taitv vMwatraHtt! WfteiBHi r-JliHHtHTCraWrf Cfill wtlVtv , &. tip a il'D.v 'vf -lW ' IfflrlU station and see If die Is right," sug gested Masson, who was deadly pale and much excited. The Investigating parly soon re turned, for I hey hail met u posc which had surprised the n.Mcrs at their work. The men Ihey had cap tured were two tramps who were ex actly as the glil had described them. No one was more astonished than Masson himself, or more overjoyed, for it demonstrated as a fact the power that he feared might be fiction. When on other occasions lltilpli Masson followed up Ibis feat by oth er quite as wonderful, employing Margaret Lansing as a subject, her family objected. They argued that it would Injure her health, possibly wreck her nerves, and that nothing good would result from dabbling In mysteries., Masson was greatly disap pointed, for lie felt that the success of a great discovery depended on the girl. What might he not accomplish by her assistance? He might teach her to read the stars, to fathom the se crets of itillnllude! And here lie found himself unable to cope wttli the tlrst edict of parental authority. Tlie parents were undoubtedly right. They saw on their daughter's part an other kind of Infatuation, a growing fondness for this young man whose days were numbered. Science wuh nothing when put in the scales with their love for their child. Masson ap pealed to Margaret Lansing as a sick man always appeals to a healthy, sym pathetic woman. First, pity, then love. He who has brutal health can never know thu sweet recompenses of weakness. Your robust man has no charm compared to the pleading love of an Invalid. Italph had said to Mar garet that lie could hypnotize her at a distance. "I can bring you to me at any time by calling you and willing you to come. II will be impossible for you not lo obey me." She had smiled Into his bright, com pelling eyes with a faith and belief that were sublime, and held herself in readiness to go like a bird of the air when he called her. but unfiling came of It. for he had tried and failed. His mind could not control hers by any distant treatment, nud lie had never been able to reach her by either telepathy or hypnosis. One night when Masson was on duty at his station he received a telegram from Unwllns, ten miles down the Hue. : WASHOUT AT P.IHS- : : COK; WARN IVJO KX- : : PUHhS. THIS OFFICII : : CANNOT ItKACII T1I12M. : It was signed with the mime of the night operator at Hawllns, and there was hardly a half hour before the train was title at Briscoe. Margaret's father was station agent at that polar, but the cvprcsfc did not slop there, and he probably knew nothing of the. washout, and, no other train arriving until morning, he would be at home and asleep. It was live miles to llrls cue and raining hard; no horse could make the distance lu time to give tho alarm. And hundreds of sleeping men ami women were speeding to certain death. The young operator fell an uncon trollable weariness and lethargy creep ing over him, but he pulled himself to gether with a desperate effort that made every nerve tingle and vibrate. He was speaking aloud, although alone in his otllce. "Margaret! Margaret! Margaret! Get your father's red lantern; go down to the llrlscoe Itlver and swing a danger signal for the LVJO express. Go at once, I command you, my dear love! Go, go, go! hi God's name rise, from your sleep, Margaret, ami go!" The night express caine rushing on to P.rlseoo station when h'uglncer Preston saw far ahead of him a tiny red spark glowing. Instinct lu the man read its meaning before It. hud grown to proportions that signaled danger. The train slowed up with such unwillingness or steam and driv ing wheel, such a mighty groaning and grinding of the whole outfit, that the stubborn resistance threw passengers out of the berths nud brought the throbbing, shrieking engine to a stand still on the very brink of destruction where a white-robed figure with un bound hair swung with persistence and monotonous repetition the red lan tern that hail averted death. The train men wrapped Margaret lu blankets and carried her bewildered, distraught, almost lifeless to her lioim. where she fell unconscious into ncr mother's arms, while tho grateful pas sengers filled the hours they must wait with plaudits of her brave deed and talked of thu medal she should have aomo day. . . riir. nioiit nxruuss oamb itrsniKO on. And Italph Masson? When Ids as sistant relieved litui at the otllce at early morning his hand was on the key, but his head was bowed nud he' neither moved nor spoke. In that supreme effort he had found release. Mrs. M. L. Itayne, lu the Chicago Kccotdllerald. AUSTRALIAN SEA FISHINC. AurIIhc Kor SrlinitM'' N""'Cili Mor wiinu unit hluirk. Sea llshlng is the Alpha and Omega of most llshlng In Australia. We leave Sydney harbor aliout itimnigiu in n small tug. so as to be on the further Itshlug grounds nt daybreak. Now we are out between the bends, and at Inst a chilly dawn creeps over the sea. We are at rest, too, broadside lo the rollers, and It Is good to go up Ihe narrow companion and on deck and tlnd the lines we left neatly colled In corners over night. The two deck hands are busy cutting up the bait, a score or so of mullet, yellow-lulls and squid. We are ready, and our eight leads go al most together over the side, all on the same quarter, so that Ihe lines may stream clear of the tug and of each otner. Down they go, anil still (town, a good forty fat bonis, and the moment the lead touches bottom we hold on. A moment or two pusses nud some one Is Into a good llsh. which Is hauled and played on the thin line with great care and patience, nud proves to be a sil very morwong of six or seven pounds weight -a handsome enough llsh to the stranger, yet dubbed, with a sneer, "wrong color," by lis captor and his Australian friends. The discontented one seems In luck's way, for no sooner has he again baited his hooks -each line. I ought to hove said, carries two and a heavy lead that he is once more lighting with an even larger llsh, but the Hue sheers nway ominously near the surface, and there Is a general cry of "Shark!" as it Is Indeed seen that one of these white bellied, shovel-snouted brutes has both his hooks, hut Ihe tackle Is strong; there is nothing in reason to part so long as the shark cannot get the Hue between Its teeth, and it Is at last lifted bodily on the dr-Vk, live feet ami more of II, and soon clearing breath ing space -with the great sweeping strokes of its tall. The tlrst thth that I am destined to catch in these strange waters is as cu rious in name as lu appearance. "Nannygal" It. Is called, which Irresist ibly, though doubtless good aboriginal, reminds one of nannygoat, nud It Is of a brilliant scarlet, witli huge protrud ing black eyes. Very good entlng Is this same nannygal, but mure valuable on account of Its Invariably Itid'lcutlug the presence of a big seliunpper. No sooner, Indeed, have I hauled my nan nygal than one or two or the party in Rtnntly haul In their lines to see that the halts are right, and that a good op portunity may not lie lost. Kor we are not anchored In one spot. The Pacific Is too deep, the ground too rough, the swells from the south too sudden ami violent to admit of such a plan. On the contrary, wo drive with the tide over the reefs, a kind ol sehnappcr bat tue, and are thus enabled to go to the fish when they will not come to us. Good schnapper are now caught on all sides, and I must say that my tlrst really heavy sehnapper warrants all the hopes that I had based on a some what long and intimate acquaintance with his feebler cousin, the red bream of the Kngllsli channel. London Trav eler. Men Clirprcd I-'lorcncn NlRlitlnsuto. The late Sir John Steele, sculptor to Queen Victoria, was modeling a bust of Florence Nightingale, when nn of ficer of one of the Highland regiments which bad suffered so cruelly lu the Crimean, heard Hint the bust had just been completed, and was lu Sir Jolm'a studio. Many or the men in his com pany had passed through the hospital at Scutari, and lie obtained permission rrom tlie sculptor to bring sonic of them to see It. Accordingly a sqund of men one day marched into the big studio aud stood iu Hue. A They had no Idea why they had been mustered In so strange a place. With out a word of warning thu bust was uncovered, and then, as by one im pulse the men broke rank, and with cries of "Miss Nightingale! Miss Nightingale!" surrounded tlie model, and Willi hats off cheered the llgttre of their devoted nurse until the roof rang. So spontaneous and hearty and so inspiring was the whole scene that In after days Sir John Steele declared it to be tlie greatest compliment of his life. Sunday Magazine. Won't Spurn All Uin Trees. There is no slight Ignorance in the cry that Is so orten raised with regard to the removal or cutting down of trees lu tlie parks, and It lias recently bcuu displaying itself with certain trees that have been already, or tiro lo be, got rid of in the course of carrying out the Piccadilly widening. Ah a mutter of fact, most of them were so close together, that their branches In termingled, and any one acquainted with the subject known that tills Is most Injurious to the proper growth of the Individual tree. Tlie truth Is that in the public parks, as lu most private properties, plantations require, from time to time, to bu thinned out. It is rumored that It has been found necessary to remove some VM odd frees from tho gardens of lluekliighaiu Palace, aud iu Lord Uuthmore's tlino drastic measures had to lie taken with the overgrowth lu the Chestnut ave nue la the Hegeiifs Pari: with splendid results that are now abundantly ap parent on Chestnut Sunday. Pall Mall Gazette, lllesscd Is the peacemaker, for ho always gets the worst of It, .... People who deny that America has any leisure classes should observe the Immense number of people who al ways have time to vlsll any expos I thin that Is worth seeing. If science makes as much progress In the creation of mechanisms for transmitting the human voice during the next decade as it has lu the last decade Ihe time may come when a initti lu (Kkalnosa can take frum his coat pocket a little bell and "ring up" a friend lu Nagasaki, Japan. The London Dally Mall says there are still such heavy demands for horses lu South Africa that there Is no re-d reserve at the Cape. The Itrltlsh War Ollice Is becoming alarmed at the heavy cost ol' providing horses, and has again unjoined General Kitchener lo greater care in the ex penditure or,horsc ilesh, as the market is rapidly rising. Texas owns her own domain. A vast area of II Is pastoral and arid. When used tree and in common, the laud became bleak and repellent, its forage being destroyed. A steer could barely live on a hundred acres. Less than ii decade ago. against the oppo sition of the stockmen, Texas made a leasing law. Now an area of seven teen acres supports a steer. The range Is restored, and a proposition to re peal the lease statute would convulse the Slate, states a wilier lu the Tor uin, The Iternatlottes, whom (he tlrst Napoleon transferred from his bwn army to the throne of Norway and Sweden, are reluming lo the demo cratic ranks whence they originally sprung. The elder son. Oscar, some time ago renounced Ids rights to the throne to contract a marriage with one inferior lu rank, and now another son, Kugono, who Is following the profes sion of an artist, with a studio in the Latin Quarter of Paris, has applied for the assent of his father to a marriage with an American lady residing In the French capital, and for permission to resign his right also to the succession to the throne. The Medical ISccord contends that it Is Impossible to lay down any hard and fast rule of eating or drinking for ji body of people. The personal fuclor must be in every case taken in to consideration lu truth, it com mands the situation. What suits one person may be harmful to another, and If the Individual be possessed of ordinary common sense, he will not be long before he llnds oul what food or drink agrees with him, and regulate his diet accordingly. A dyspeptic who eats to excess, or partakes or food which disagrees with him, will, in the nature of things, sufTer; and, If ho lie wise, will alter his mode or lire. An Indication or the l rend of public opinion In France may be seen in tlie movement which Is now on foot In that country to abolish nil titles of no bility lu the republic. The opponents of titles of the nobility lu Franco point to the Tact Hint France is a re public, and argue that a nobility Is as much out or place there as it Is lu tho United States. After tlie general elec tion a bill will bo Introduced lu tho French Parliament, declaring till titles Illegal; and a strong effort will bo made to pass the measure. It Is esti mated that about half a million Frencmcn prolix the title of "Couut" to their names; ami It Is certain that a large proportion of these titles are assumed, and have no slgiililcauce lu tho blood or traditions of their bear ers. The attempt will be inaile to ap ply the French national motto lu a iiL-w direction by doing away with the nobility. It Is a sex to learn from, no doubt, but sometimes It Is perplexing, ob serves the New York Sun. Here was poor Colonel Nalrence of Ilyeres iu the beautiful south of France. lie had done his work iu the gendarmerie, hnd been retired, and was hoping to cud his life in comfort In his villa with ids wife. They had been long married and Avert attached to eacli other. Unluckily Mine. Nalrence was ambitious for her husband; a Scan torshlp became vacant aud she urged him to become a candidate. The Col onel knew belter tliuii to do that; he had run for otllce once and had been defeated, and he didn't care for poli tics any more. So (here were ani mated discussions In that family till one day Mine. Nalrence walked Into her own parlor with a revolver In her hand and shot Ihe Colonel dead, Then shu rang for a servant and told him to call lu tho police. They will prob ably call this nn emotional crime In Franco, The murderer may be ex tolled as a woman Brutus of political duty, It Is not altogether safe to be u. husband lu Frauce. ... QOQP JOAJDS AreWorlli I'nyliiR I'nr. The Good lionds organization or the Slate or New York has at last reached Ihe conclusion that good roads cannol be achieved except by paying for them, ami has Ihererore decided to press tor an iippronilatlou from the Legislature of jjH.OIKUHM) for the ciir lent car. the lull amount lo !. ex pe.ided upon the highways or the State. As a starter, and In the absence or securing anything belter, It Is to be hoped the ofl'oils of the orgaii'zatlon may prove sii ssfnl. If the appro priation of a million dollars I km' annum could be made continuous for n sulll- cieti: number of years, undoiibledly In due time Ihe Slate would find Itself li possession of tlrst class hlghwayii. t.'diillnuoiis appropriations, however, cannot be counted upon, and lu the ineanlliue Ihe sporadic mlllloni up pu printed will be so npread out over Ihe Stale as lo really accomplish no practical or permanent results. The great Slate of Ohio years ago solved I lie good roads problem, when lis Legislature passed n law divid ing the State Into districts und intik- intr It compulsory upon each district- lo build its own roads and keep them lu rei'i'ir. the lands themselves being (axed for tin si in proportion to the bem Ills received. The owners or the lands put up an energetic kick against (tie scheme, but the law stood the list, with Ihe result Hint Ohio today has Ihe inosi perfect system of public roads of not only any Slnte lu Hie I'liion. bill ol' any equal urea in ihe world. The roads cost the farmers a good round sum, ami for several years the burden upon the land seemed almost too heavy lo bear, but the end Justi fied Ihe means, nud now no farmer would be willing to surrender the roads and take back his proportion of the cost. The good roads have more than re imbursed the lauds for their cost, nud they nre there rot- all time to come, the keeping of t lieui In repair being to ti very large extent u labor of love. St. Louis Star. I'll mill iioiiK MukbiIhiii. lty the use. of eurcrully and sclen lllleally prepared bituminous cements, skilfully mixed with crushed stone under the direction of men who hnve had years of practical experience In handling bituminous materials suita ble for street pavements, a great Im provement Is made over the ordinary method employed lu construct lug ma cadam roads. The advantages of bituminous ma cadam properly constructed are lis dur ability, its being Impervious to water, frost proof In winter, nud preventing mud. dust and loose stones In summer. It makes a clean, comparatively noise- less and attractive roadway, while the ordinary macadam road In general use iu tills country soon wears badly under trallle. milking mud or dust, and soon allows Hie stones to loosen. A bituminous uiaciidiiui road Is wa terproof. It does not absorb the filth of the street, and prevents the washing by heavy rains to which the ordinary macadam road Is subject. Good nnd uniform results cannot be obtained by the use of common coal tar obtained from gas works lu differ ent sections of the country. In fact, It Is Impossible to secure a bituminous cement from the products or the aver age gas work's which will produce good result. The construction or this form of road way demands the services or experts iu this line of work". The onlluiiry coal tar lias been tried repeatedly dur ing the last thirty years. With a very few exceptions It has been a total fail ure. The crown of a road when finished may vary on different roads, or even on different grades of tho same road. from one-hair inch to one inch to the fool. Of course, no indexible data can bo given until the requirements of that speclnl road are known. Where the travel Is Ugh- good road can be built with six Inches of gravel and a light coat or crushed stone placed on tup. This works well on a steep grade. A Now KmttiKi-nry HruUp. A new emergency brake for electric cars is described lu a recent Issue of the London F.lectricnl Itevlew. It con sists or four shoes, of oak or beech, two being placed between the wheels Just over the rails on each side of tlie car. A small compressed-air cylinder is maintained by a pump inn from one of the car axles. When It Is nec essary to apply the brake suddenly the inotorinan simply touches a lever; In stantly all four of the brake shoes are Jammed strongly down against tlie rails. It Is claimed that this brake has stopped a trolley car going at the rate of twenty miles an hour down a sleep grade, within two of Its own lengths. tllilrlly ly AdvrrlUInt;. A London Journalist tells the busi ness men or thai community that the surprising success or Americans iu placing their products among the Kug llsh people Is chiefly due to the skill ami courage with which the Americans advert Ise. "They prove," lie says, "Ihe tremendous Influencu or advertis ing lu lis effect on tlie success of an Industrial nation," The article Is a striking tribute to the importance of publicity to business. Philadelphia Uftord. ... ... .. . JIOW tu 3UTRUN A DEAR. .Iiiftt Turk Alone u IlltUlilr, itml lln Will I'nll lltolc;ty tu l.cnMi.r-1, "Despite Hie reputation for ferocity that tlie mountain Hon has acquired, and perhaps Justly, he Is by no means the animal most feared by the prospec tors and mountaineers of my country," said n Colorado mail yesterday. "If a prospector Is passing along n trail ami lie spies u Hon lu his path he never even hesitates, for he knows that as soon us the nnlmi'l sees him it wilt clear out, providing, always, that II Is not n female accompanied by Its young, and even In such a case It is by iio means certain that she will show tight. "It Is altogether different with n bear, and If n mountaineer sees a bear on his trail he will go around IT he can and If he cannot, do that be will wi'.lt patiently for bruin to get out of Hie way. You see. the man that has spent years in tlie hills, as we call the mount ains out our way, loses much of the ambition or the sportsman, nnd he never wastes Ids ainiuiinlllon Just Tor Ihe pleasure or killing game. When he shoots it Is either to get rood or rot-self-protection. Consequently he Is lu no way anxious to start a row with a bear. Just because it hapiwiis lo cross his path. There are several reasons for this, but the principal one Is that It Is dangerous. Any man who knows about bears will hesitate before dellb ately starling a row with one. Hy tho way, would you like lo know how a man on fool can outrun a bear In a hilly country if he has a Utile start on him?" Upon being Informed Hint his hearer would lie very glad to get the Informa tion, even I hough he might secretly hope that an opportunity of testing Ihe method would never come, the Westerner coul lulled: "You see. a bear's forelegs are very short and his conformation is such thai, while lie can run up hill almost as fast as he can on the Hat, be cannot run on a straight Hue on the side of a hill. So when you are chased by n bear Just run along the side of the hill. Hears are game, and he will start nrtcr you, but while you are keeping on a straight Hue brulu will be going at an angle down tho hill every Jump. When you have gone some distance Just re trace your steps, and Ihe bear lu bis efforts to catch you will try to do the same thing only to find that you are gulling further from hint every min ute. It is a good system. I know, for I have seen It worked. 1 would advise you to try It some time, and If you keep running back ami forth long enougli. the bear will disappear from sight, still trying to get nt you." Mil waukee Sentinel. WORDS OF WISDOM. Subtle temptations need swift resist ance. The silent worker is sure to be heard1 from. Great treasures do not need large bouses. An addition Is not necessarily an in crease. Mud dogs should not lie taken by the tall. The hatred of the bad Is the halo of Ihe good. Most things tire easier to learn than lo unlearn. Tlie power or the heart Is the heart of all power. Tlie best men tire not always In tho biggest places. Preparation may be more than hair or performance. When the heart Is uplifted In pride It Is seldom broadened In charity. He gains no knowledge who is will ing to acknowledge what he does not know. You may lien Hie plague-city, but you cannot run from your own heart when it Is Infected. Ham's Horn. Queer Slimllpux Tout, A correspondent sends us a curious nud interesting account of a test for smallpox which was tried lu Ports mouth during tin outbreak which tool: place there many years ago. In a certain place In the town there waa a dcatli lu almost every house, while lu an adjoining street there were no cases at all. Tlie theory was pro pounded that the air of thu former street was Infected, and the authori ties resorted lo this test: They erected a tall pole at Hie end of each street, ami at the lop of each pole was fastened u piece of fresh meat. At tho end of two hours the meat lu the In fected street was rotten, while iu the other street it remained sweet and good for twenty-four hours. It would lie interesting to learn If there are other cases of the successful appllca cation of this test. Loudon Globe. lloth Count in llottte. The father was testing his little boy's kuowlcdgu of the story of Noah, which he had carefully rehearsed. The boy had been thinking hard, says thu New York Times, and bis answer to the tlrst question showed that he had at least tho virtue of originality. "Now," said papa, "can you tell me .how Noah knew that the waters had gone down'" The boy hesitated a minute, as If seeking for thu proper words to ex press himself; then ho said: "Noah knew the waters had gone down because the dovu camu back bringing ldin u pickle." Olives nnd plckka were synonymous terms lu the small boy's mind for things which come in bottles, and which he dhl not like. The woman who never lets her hus band out of her sight shouldn't com plain If ho Is f'osev .. ..... .. .. ii t -Tl I TIT ' ' tfi r f ' Wl w m rtl W- ks P n M V tt o o :o to H t .i I. .l WMs5T- rA'Mw mMMifefr isri-