&$&. .MI.MIHIIMI !! IIIIIWIIIWIIIIMIIIW ,11 HIMIIIIIW1IW ifl -w ,i iL hi i Mini - . ,!,,,,,, IIM . Tliiirli il'Tllli ii 'Hi MH illBn ill II iM il Hi 1 ML U4JULA1 3 1A1R1A3L I m THE umeught 1 .mH."- " ' n.lll Ml mnMVfWWHHMBMHiM ' Hl 0K r . i y ii hi in 'iirrmni i riTiTrnMWMnMTiiT-wiM rm-H-i-wnTf'fiiiir n i i t-- u1 m v, r.i rrtiA-'TWTiK'-m wi ? Imlra' litrT TmrnTtnnTTTTm?i' 'wSTir 'r mWfi I f' rl'l life WmIjwWP m m uwrtJiWJSfmvM wxs m to i i g , lwium ram aw "" -.- i. .. ....-.i m HIF7 vNW II II 'liiliJilllly v jy " viiy9 III 111 1 1 NwJH III llll'i5o. (i ' irn'r4jrtjtxfA nil I Hill I I il,n(7 y him m KEMaMBMMBIWKil ' 11 If v5 Rfmirj fflNZHART inidmATIOtid BY HtYvfitrenJ' (. M.bh liincH. HplnMcr mill gunrdlnn of ricrttiultt iuhI IIhIkhv. i-bIiiIiIIhIiim) mmi- inor ltPii(1ititirt(iK hi Hiintiynttli'. Arnold ' ArmmrotiK was found nhot to death In On- hull. (Jcilrmln ami lur Hume. Jnk ' Hullcy. IiiiiI roiiirrm-il In tho hllllard loom shortly heron- tlm itinrdiT. l)ct;;- tlVl' .Illtnll'KOM III rim-ll MlhH llltll'H of hold lng hark uvldiiiiiii. I'.tHhhr Halley of I'nii Armstrong's hank, dcriuu't, wiih turH'" fot fiiilit'zrli'iiiciit I'ntil Arim-lnniKii lll'lltll WIIH IIIIIIClUIK'CMl. ItlllHey'H ll.llirrj' Louise Ai-niftltnng, lol'l 1liilniy Hint whim Hhi Ullll loved lilm, r.lm wiih to in:irr im other II (Icxpliipcil tlmt Dr. Walker was Him num. Loultui wiih fmiiul iinromi'lmiH at tho Imltotii of tlm circular Htalii'iiHi' Mm sulil HOtiii'lliliu; liuil lirimlii'il by h-r Jii tin- ilarlc on dm stairway and nlm , related llalli'V Ih mimic-i-ted or Aim ' MlrotlK'H lllllrillT TIlOIIIIIH. till lllllKI'lU'l'P I it. wiih funnel ilfiiil with " ni'ti' 1" 'I'' ncikct licurlnK tin1 niimi "l.tiuli'ii '" i Inii'." A IihIiIit follinl out or m ",,,l'- f'li'i tho myHti'ry. Tlu HtuMoH wrn liuini'il. unit In tin iliirk AIIhs Imih'm Miot nn Inlruilcr. llnl'ny inyiitirlouub iih:iii pi'iiroil. Ills iiiilo wnw founil wtwl.i'il iy iv fri'lKht Iniln. II ili'vi'liipi'il Mulv y Imil nn itri:uiiii'iit In tlm llhriuy with n uonnin licforc hlH illMippi'iirniii'i'. N'v ! ilw-iipppin-H. MIkm Iiiiii'.i Iwirtuil llnlii' wuh nllvi'. Dr Wtillioi-'H fiifii lii'i'imii'H llvlil at mi'tilloii of tho iiiiinii of Nlti'i iirrlMK ton nvliSi'iui- wiih HiTiiiiil fiom n trump Hint 11 iiiiiii, Hiippiiicilly IIiiIhij. Imil "''''ii lmiiml mill KiiKKi'd iinil I In own Inlo nn mpM Imv far (liTlrmli' wni iiiln:ilim'. lluntliiK for lur. MIhm Innrfl inn lilt" " imin unit fnliitid A loiifi-ili-ruti' or l)r WlllUir UlllfcHHCll hla pint In tlm iiiyn ti'iv. Ilo iitiitril Hint tl"' Oim liiKt..n wii limn Imil hii'li killed, tlmt WlllUir fi'iilid lirr. ntid Hint ho Iwlli'Vi'il Hint 1'ujil Ann Htroim had Ihiii kllli'd hi it hand Kulilid liy W.ilkir llulfcy wiih found In n dW tmit hocpltnl. Paid ArniHlroti!; wan nut lll'llll MlFH llllll'M lllsrllVITI'll Hi'TI't rooniH In which 11"' TrinliTS' hank tn'tfitiiv wiih lii'llou-d In ln Mrn. WiitHiin, ilvltiB. Hiild kIu Idlli'il Arnold ArinHlniiiK. who yi'iirn Imfnrii hud nmrrli'il lii-r hIhIit iindi-r tin nil. in of Wallnri'. l.tuli-n Walliu'i' wiih horn of Hid inurrlnKii. MIhm Iniu-J iIIhi'iiv-ori-d a Bi-rri't pniii-l to , thi' myMi-rlciin room imil unwittingly locki'd h'iHlf wit i In. I)ntlii tho hunt for lur tlm nwiri'li ith ran iutohh Paul AiinstioiiK. Arm NtrmiK pltthfil rorward down tlm circular Htulri'iiHi'. liri'itlcliiK hlH link. In Urn -I'n-t room wiih found tlm Trillion hank loot, which ArniHttonK had taken. was lliilhuy'H Idea. Hint John Ualley coiUdUitlicliotibo tiB n utinluncr, and litit'RiiR his Invt'iitlg.ulonrt its lu could. Hirf Htiiootli upper lip liatl been Htifll oli'tit dlMKiilso. with 1i!h oliani;o of elotlii'H, and ti halrint by a country barbel". ho It was Alex. Jack Halloy. wlio had been our ghost. Not only had lie alanniMl Louise and hlniHcir, bo ad inlttod on the circular staircase, but he had dtiR the hole in the trunkrooni wall, and later sent i:ilzn Into hysteria The note Uddy had lound In (lor Irude's Kcrap-basket wan I'loin lilm. and It was he who had startled me Into unconncloiisiicHS by the clothes chute, and. with Gertrude's help, had carried me to Nouhto's room. (ler trade. I learned, had watched all nlKht beside me. in an extremity of anxiety about me. That old Thomas had seen his mas ter, and thouKhthehail seen the Sun nyslde Rhoat, there could be no doubt. Of that story of Thomas, about see Iiik .lack Halloy in the footpath be tween the club and Sunnyslde, the nlglit. I.tildy niul I heard the poise on the ilreular staircase -that, too, was riKht On the nlRht before Arnold Arnistioui; was murdered, Jack Ualley had made an attempt to search for the secret room. He secured Arnold's WELLMAN OF BALLOON FAME 1 1 (IImi mn Ik swffl Walter Wellinan, who failed In his daring at tempt to cross the Atlantic In the bis dirigible balloon America has had a career of thrilling adventure. Ho was born In Mentor. Ohio, No vember 3, 1S50, and Is of Kngflsh descent. When fifteen yenrs old lie established a paper at Sut ton, Neb. In 187! ho went to Philadelphia and abandoned the country nowBpaper field for the metropolitan. He had barely attained his major ity when he established the Cincinnati Evening Post. Goon afterward he became a free lanco In Journalism. , In the early plghtlos for a year or two ho was city editor of the Chicago Herald. He covered tho legislative sessions at Springfield and was sent to Washington as correspondent. At tho national capital he hcored freuuout newspaper tri umphs and soon won recognition for, his Judgment and powers of analysis, particularly in reporting political campaigns. Ills first voyage en discovery was made In 18D1!. when, commissioned by the Chicago Herald, he tbtabllshed the spot on which Columbus landed on San Salvador. Arctic exploration next cast Its lure about Mr. Wellnmn. In fifteen years he made five trips Into the frozen north. In 1894 ho led an expedition, reaching 81 degrees north. He placed many new Islands on the map and made such a valuable collection of scientific data that his second voyage north In 1898 aroused keen Interest among geographers. In MOO he announced that he would seek the pole by aerial route. Ho had a dirigible balloon built and It was taken lo Spitsbergen, but It turned nut to be detective and the trip that year iad to be abandoned. The next vear found Mr. Wellinan back at IiIb camp on Dane's Island, with a rebuilt balloon. A start was made September 2, but a furious gale came up and drove the airship back. A landing was made on a glacier. Two years later. In 1900. Mr. Wellinan was back for tho third time at keys from his room CHAPTER XXXIII. Continued. As Alex and I reached the second Hour. Mr. Jamleson met us. He was grave and uuiet, and he nodded com prchohdlngly when he saw the safe. "Will you come with mo for n mo ment, Miss limes?" he asked soberly, and on my assenting, he led the way to the east wing. There were lights moving around below, and some. of tlio maids were standing gaping down. They screamed when they huav me, nnd drew back to let mo pass. There was a sort of hush over tho scene; Alex, behind me, muttered something I could not hear, and brushed past me without ceremony. Then I realized that a man was lying doubled up at He Was Kissing Her. He and Louise hud no conversation together until that night. Gertrude and Alex 1 mean Jack had gone for a wnlk, although It was nine o'clock, and anybody but a pair of young geese fould have known that dew was fall ing, and that It Is next to Impossible to get ridof a summer cold. At half after nine, growing weary of my own company, I went down stairs to find the young people. At the door of tho living room 1 paused. Gertrude and Jack had roturned and were there, sitting together on a divan, with only out; lamp lighted. They did not see or hear me, and I beat u hasty retreat to tho library Hut hero again I was driven back. I Louise was sitting In a deep chair, the foot of tho staircase, nnd Alex was stooping over him. Ah I came slowly down, Winters stepped back, and Alex straightened himself, looking tit mo across tho body with impenetrable eyes. In his hand he held a shaggy gray wig, and before me on the floor lay the man whoso headstone stood In Casnnova churchyard- Paul Armstrong. Winters told tho story In a dozen wolds. In his headlong flight down the circular staircase, with Winters Just, behind, I'nul Armstrong had pitched forward violently, struck his head agaliiht tho door to the east ver anda, and probably broken his neck. Ho had died as Winters reached him. As tho detective finished, I saw Hal sey, pale and shaken, in the card room doorway, and for the Hist time that night 1 lost my self-control. I put my arias around my boy, and 'for a moment he had to support mo. A sec ond later, over llnlsey's shoulder, I saw something that turned my omo tlon Into other channels, for behind him, in tho shadowy cardroom. were Gertrude and Alex, the gardener, and there is no use mincing matters ho was kissing her! I was uaablo to speak. Twice I opened my mouth; then I tinned Hal sey around and pointed. They were quite unconscious of us; her head was on his shoulder, his face against her balr. As if happened, It was Mr. Jamleson who broke up the tableau. Ho steppeil over to Alex and touched lilm on the arm. 'And now," he said quietly. long aro you nnd I to play out comedy, Mr. Halley?" CHAPTER XXXIV. The Odds and Ends. Of Dr. Wnlker's sensational escape that night to South America, of the recovery of over $1,000,001) In cash nnd securities In the safe from the chimney room tho papers have kept the public well Informed. Of my share In discovering the . secret chamber they havo been singularly silent. The inner history has never been told. Mr. Jamleson got all kinds of credit, and some of It he deserved, but if Jack Halley, as Alex, had not traced llalsey nnd insisted on tho disinterring of Paul Armstrong's casket, if ho had not suspected tho truth from the start, where would the defective have been? When Hnlsey learned tho truth, ho Insisted on going tho next morning, weak as he was, to Louiso, and by night she was at Sunnyslde, under Gertrude's particular care, whllo her mother had gone to Hnrlmra KHz liugh's. What llalsey said to Mrs. Arm strong I never knew, but that ho was couuldornto and chivalrous I feci con fident. It was llnlsey's way nlways with women. . that j looking the happiest I had ever seen her. with llalsey on the arm of the chair, holding her clone. Tho next day, by degrees. I got the whole story. . Paul Armstrong had a besetting evil the love of money. Common enough, but he loved money, not for what It would buy, but for Its own sake. An examination of the books showed no irregularities In the past year since John had been cnshler. but be fore that, in the time of Anderson, the old cashier, who had died, much strange Juggling had been done with the records. Tho railroad In New Mexico had apparently drained the banker's private fortune, and he de termined to retrieve it by one stroke. This was nothing less than the loot ing of the bank's securities, turning them into money, and making his es cape. Hut tho law has long arms. Paul Armstrong evidently studied the situa tion carefully. Just as the only good Indian Is a dead Indian, so the only safe defaulter Is a dead defaulter. He decided to die, to all appearances, and when the huo and cry subsided, he would bo able to enjoy his money al most anywhere he wished. Tho first necessity was an accom plice. Tho connlvauco of Dr. Walker was suggested by his love for Louise. The man was. unscrupulous, nnd with the girl us a bait, Paul Armstrong boon had him fast. Tho plan was ap parently the acme of simplicity: A small town in the west, an attack of heart disease, a body from a medical collego dissecting room shipped in a trunk to Dr. Walker by a colleague In San Francisco, and palmed off for tho supposed iieail Danker. What was slnmlm? The woman, Nina Cnrrlngton. war, tho cog that slipped. What sfie only Buspeetcd, what she really knew, wo never learned. She was a chamber maid in the hotel at C , and It was evidently her Intention to blackmail Dr. Walker. Ills position at that time was uncomfortable: To pay the wom an to keep quiet would be confession. He denied the whole thing, and she went to llalsey. It was that that had taken llalsey to the doctor the night ho disap peared, lie accused the doctor of tho deception, and, crossing the lawn, had said something cruel to Louise. Then, furious at her apparont connivance. he had Rtarted for tho station. Dr. Walker and Paul Armstrong tho lat ter still Inmo whore I had shot him hurried neroaa to tho embankment, certnln only of ono thing. llalsey must not toll tho detective what ho sus pected until tho money had been re moved from tho chimney room. They stopped Into tho road in front of the car to stop It, nnd fnto played Into their hands. Tho car struck tho trnin, and they had only to dispose of tho unconscious figure In tho road. This they did as I havo told. For three '"how little days llalsey lay In the box car, tied hand and foot, suffering tortures ot thirst, delirious at times, and discov ered by a tramp at Jobnsvllle only In time to save his life. To go back to Paul Armstrong. At the last moment his plans had been frustrated. Sunnyslde, with Its hoard In the chimney room, had been rented without his knowledge! Attempts to dislodge me having failed, he was driven to breaking into Ills own house. The ladder In the chute, the burning of the stable and the entrance through the cardroom window all were In the course of a desperate attempt to get into the chimney room. Louise nnd her mother had, from the fit at. been the great stumbling blocks. The plan had been to send Louise away until It was too late for her to Interfere, but she came back to the hotel at C Just at the wrong time. There was a terrible scene. The girl was told that some thing of the kind was necessary; that the bank was about to close ami her stepfather would either avoid arrest and disgrace In this way, or kill him self Fanny Armstrong was a weak ling, but Louise was more difficult to manage. She had no love for her step father, but her devotion to her moth er was entire, sf ll-sacrillclng. - Forced Into acquiescence by her mother's ap peals, overwhelmed by the situation, the girl consented and lied. I-roiii s-oniewhere in Colorado she. sent an aiiouiiious telegram to Jack Halley at the Traders' bank. Trapped as she was, she did not want to see an Innocent man arrested The tele gram, received on Thursday, had sent the cashier to the bank that night in a frenzy. Louise arrived at Sunnhide nnd found the house rented. Not knowing what to do, she sent for Arnold at tho Greenwood club, and told him a little, not nil. She told lilm that there was something wrong, and that tlte bank was about to close. That his father was responsible. Of the conspiracy she said nothing. To her surprise, Arnold already knew, through Halley that night, that things were not right. Moreover, he suspected what Louise did not. that the money was hidden at SiiunyHide. He had a scrap of paper that Indicated a concealed room some where. His inherited cupidity was aroused Fnger to get llalsey and Jack Halley out of tho house, he went up to the east entry, ami in tne iniiiard room gave the cashier what he had refused earlier In the evening the address of Paul Armstrong In California and a telegram which had been forwarded to the club for Halley, from Dr. Walk er. It was In response lo one Halley had sent, and it said that Paul Arm strong was very III. Halley was almost desperate. He decided to go west and find Paul Arm sluing and to force lilm to disgorge. Hut the cntastrophe ut tho bank oc- cuned sooner than he had expected. On the moment of starting west, tit Andrews station, where Mr. Jnmieson had located the car, he read that the bank had closed, and, going back, sur rendered himsell. John Halley hnd known Paul Arm stioug intimately. He did not believe that the money was gone; In fact, It was hardly possible In the Interval since the securities had been tnkon. Where was il? And from some chance remark let fall some months earlier by Arnold Armstrong at u dinner, llnlley felt sure there was a hlddon room at Munnysute. Ho tried to sco the architect of the building, but, like tho contractor, If he knew of the room, ho retused any information, it got Into the house, armed with a golf- j stick for sounding the walls. He ran I against the hamper at the head of the stairs, cuught his cuff-link In It. and dropped the golf-stick with a crash. He was glad enough to get away without an alarm being raised, and lie took the "owl" train to town. The oddest thing to me was that Mr. Jamleson had known for some time that Alex was Jack Halley. Hut tho face of the pseudo-gardener was very queer Indeed when. Unit night, In the cardroom, the detective turned to him ami said: 'How long are yon and I going to play our little comedy. Mr. Halley?" Well, it Is all over now. Paul Arm strong rests In Casanova churchyard, and this time there Is no mistake. I went to the funeral, because I wanted to be sure he was really burled, and I looked at the sto"p of the shaft , where 1 had sat that night, and won dered If It was all real. Sunnyslde Is for sale no. I shall not buy it. Little , Luclen Armstrong Is living with his stepgrnndmother, who Is recovering gradually from troubles that had ox- tended over the entire period of her ' second marriage. Anno Watson lies not 'fur from the man she killed, and who as surely caused her death TliomiiM, the fourth victim of the con spiracy, Is burled on the hill. With Nina Carrington, five lives were sac- rlflcedln the course of this grim con apirncy. '1 hero will be two weddings before long, and Llddy has asked for my heliotrope poplin to wear to the church. I knew she would. She has wanted It tor three years, and she was quite ugly the time I spilled cof fee on it. We are very quiet, just the two of us. Liddy still clings to her ghost theory, and points to my wet and muddy boots in the trunkrooni as piool. 1 am gray, I admit, but 1 haven't felt as well In a dozen years Soiiu times, when I am bored, I ring for Liddy, and we talk things over. When Warner married Itoaie, Llddy sniffed and said what I took for faith fulness In Itosle had been nothing but mawklshuess. I have not yet outlived Llddy's contempt because I gave theiu silver knives and forks as a wedding gift. So we sit and talk, and sometimes Liddy threatens to leave, and often I discharge her, but we stay together somehow. 1 am talking of renting a house next year, and Llddy says to be sure there Is no ghost. To be perfect ly frank. I never really lived until that summer. Time has passed since l began this story. My neighbors are packing up for another summer. Llddy Is having the awnings put up, and the window-boxes filled. Llddy or no Lid dy, I shnll advertise to-morrow for a hous-'o In the country, and I don't care If It has a Circular Staircase. TIUC END. at the club and ' I,i,nps Inland with the America, again remodeled. When the start was made, tiner covering a' miles tne equinurator parted. Tlte big dirigtuic was toweu back to Its landing place, when a gust of wind carried It careening over the lec hummocks and It exploded. The discovery of the pole by Peary took nwny the main luro of nrctlc voyages, and Mr. Wellinan, turning his thoughts In another direction, an nounced lnst July that he would try a transatlantic voyage by nlrBhtp. This also proved disastrous nfter he hud covered over 500 miles of the dlstnnco to Kurope. In abandoning their craft the crew of the airship America lowered them selves Into the lifeboat which swung beneath It. Then they cast tho life-boat off and were nlloat on the sea. The airship, relieved of tho weight of the life boat, shot high into the air und was blown away rnpidly. Tho transfer ot the Wellmnn party from the llfe-bont to the steamer Trent, which picked thorn up, was made with great difficulty. LEADER IN PUBLIC AFFAIRS . IF Mm mm raMis j&?jyzz'A mm One of tho recognized leaders In public affairs Is tho Rev. Washington Gladden. For bnlf a cen tury In New York, Massachusetts and Ohio Dr. Gladden has been a great Influence In the churcb, society and politics. His friends declare that it is due to his Influence and efforts that public mornllty in Coluinlms was advanced to a higher plane. Prior to 18SI the state election in Ohio al ways preceded the national election by a month. Every four years on this account thcro was a condition of vast turmoil when tho different po litical Influences were at work. Dr. Gladden was pastor ol the First Congregational church of Co lumbus when ho set at tho work of public reform. Ills first appeal was for a chnngo In tho elec tion law. He wrote about tho evils of tho system, appealed to public men and sent out a petition tor signatures at his own expense A few dollars thus expended enabled him to arouse popular enthu siasm and his point was carried. . In 1900 Dr. Gladden, to deieat antngonlstic interests in tho Columbus city council, announced himself as an aldernmnlc candldnto and wns clocted. He served two years, taking on active ami Important part in stroet railway, gas, electric light and interurban policies. It took some bnnery to attempt to amend the constitution of a great state like Ohio, and time and energy to oppose n great political organization, but Dr. Gladden proved his mettle, and he Is generally recognized today as a great vital force In the uplifting of important community interests. NOW GOVERNOR OF NEW YORK I i Hunters Kill Dig Grizzly. The monstor grizzly bear that for years has been tanking many sleepless nights for tho farmers, miners and residents of, tho northwestern Trinity region hns at last been slain. This monarch of the forest and slayer of small domestic animals was killed by Thomas McDonald, a wealthy mining man who litis been camping ! along the Salmon range In Trinity. SInglc-hnndecl McDonald, who Is n mountaineer of marked ability, killed the boar nfter n lively tusslo. Tho bear weighed 1,000 pounds, and Is tho finest and biggest specimen over seen In tho Trinity mountain re gions. Tho nnlinal had for years de lied all efforts to capture or kill lilm. Maryvillo Correspondence San Fran Cisco Call. Lieutenant Governor Horaco White of Syra case became governor of the state of Now York when Charles R. Hughes retired to go upon tho Supreme court bench at Washington. For three months Mr. White will bo governor of tho Em pire state und. loglcnlly, he should succeed him self, the chosen of the people. But, though unanl mously nominated two years ago for lieutenant governoi, his name was not oven mentioned at tho recent nominating convention nt Saratoga. The now governor will do hla work for a brief three months, but his political enreor, once so billllnntly promising, his friends feel, is closed In all probnblllty. Holonglng to one of the most prominent and respected families In tho Btate, possessing nil tho ndvnntnges of ediicutlon and social position nnd wealth, with a record of II! years in tho state senate and with tho reputation of an orator und genial gentleman of the most polished manners. Governor White, nt the age of forty-five, flndB himself beyond the pale so far as further political proferment Is concerned, although thero may como a rehabilitation and a restoration to public favor In years hence. And nil this becauso of his Inmentnble connection with tho People's Mu tual' Life Association and League of Syracuse. Mr. White all along has maintained that ho did no wrong and that what ho did was In his capacity as legal adviser, but to the skirts of tho Ueutennnt governor has clung enough of tho onus of tho transaction to Injure his Immediate future politically. HEADS THE WOMAN TEACHERS Safe Offer. Jones Why on earth do you offer such n large reward for tho return of that horrid, yapping, Hiinppng cur? Ilrown To please my wife. Jones Hut such a largo reward will bo sure to bring lilm back. Hrown O, no, it won't. lie's dead. I drowned him myself. Stray Stories. In 1905 MIbs Grace C. Strnchan placed hersolf at the head of the army of women teachers at Urooklyn. N. Y In their fight, for better pay. Her ambition was to see tho day when her associ ates would receive nB much pay for their sorvlcoa as tho Janitors. Sho made her point plainer by demonstrating that tho average pay of women teachers nt Washington. D. C, wna not equal to that received by the city dog catcher. She is now president ot tho Iuterborough As sociation of Women School Teachers of tho City of New York, and has perfected nn Ideal organiza tion. As tho head of 15,000 women school teach ers alio Is trying to hnvo tho stnto of New York place malo and feinalo teachers upon nn equal pay basis. Three bills to bring about this wore vetoed, but tho light Is still In progress. Her groat effort has been to make the organization work ns a unit. Slio has been discouraged by business men and politicians, but n champion was found In tho lato Sonator Patrick H. McCarren, wlio Introduced hor first bill In behalf of the movement. Sho inalntalnB that women should receive equal pay with mon for tho, Batno work, nnd she is receiving a good deal of popular encourngemont. J w jjp v i...7'- L2tX; A ih 'jiVi'"?,-!.- i fmmnwtf Mmmmf w