CAUGHT BY THE QRIP-- Of Lydia E. f Pinkham'o Vegetable Compound, - the SOUTHERN FARM RELEASED BY PE-RU-NA ureat woman'o Remedy for Woman's Ills. TOPICS OF INTEREST TO THE PLANTER, STOCKMAN AND TRUCK GROWER. flOTES x ... -. . .. .. , , . . '-t.- " - e ;,' j 'I "V I i I I. h-JSS6? na1,d5cin)e in vth world has received each Widespread and - BBWmea enaofsemej)t. ' v' . . ,' . MiI$",Sp31'H fcm1 twnfbles or such s luMStsuf grateful frieads s lia - Lydiar E. Pinkfcxmi's Vegetable Compound. IK wlU entirely ewe he rworst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian ; vSE Jflxatjaa 'Ulceration. FalUaff and HMsplacement of the Chge o?XiCfeIlS-1U V16Veakness and is peenliKrr adapted to to JjiiJ,B'2" otner ren r rthe world has ver lenown. It is almost infaiaifoOte M nch cases. It vaissolves and : expels tainoi tfrom the Uterus ia n, arW staee of de i vclopment. . '. . v - . " ''-" V-f , . w., ' WJala,SlzPme?'or aiisfal Menstruation, WeaJfcneBsof the Stomadk, disrestaon, BIoat;.JEtoaaiiwNe DebflL ' iityiquiciayyieldtaaEt. Womb-troubles: AiiiriTioMin WK or,i oni, .taiitly relieved aaafliDermanentlv nurorl r invigorates the female system, and is as harmless as water. " q,cli!y T?ff hearing-down Feeling; ractreme lassitude, "dont nd-" aleltfalone " feeUng.v excit3r iirritabilitv, nervous ;ne Diess, itness,ssleeplessness. flatulency, melanchdly or the blues " ..jsatfneadacheiae ae?sure indications; of Female .NWerikness or some ie . jranjgement of thepterus,which this medicine always jures. IKidney Complaints aadiBackachecffteiifheT wwxtthe Vegetable Ccnpcmwd Always cures. ' Thof. rr0meajiiseua tto accept anything else are rewarded a hundred ;i.aiousand txmes, for tfhey iret 'what -they Vani-Ha e. ld by Drugitets '.everywhere. Refuse;a!nub&titute8. " J ;: . vj- ' CALLFCXR : BY roiNAME IniiiliJftf MEANS MOKE !I3N ; f ZE20773IL BAUDS GDOI iREHt XiSSBSTS f , ---.--y. - -. 1 , : -rr-r TE&ere's a" worlu oT ? dKEwence -be-jtwsetDX faith and crafljifBtgd t So. .1 ' , . fares , to Salzer's &ci 4ia .heartiest ; en doFsement. Salzerfs 25ew BStotioeal Oats ; yea , in -lyo trom m) tot mo Oju. y per .cte inJ30 uiffereut !t8,and yuvMr. -iFawRcr, can beat tiis im 2805, .if ijwU wiU: ..edsisre pedigree see jbrefl inp ifijcough wustui.' sueeuuu ,vu uig yaeioa. j . - . . ftflzef& Beardless Barley jieHea i!31 bu! , lSdl9is Home 1Builderj&na.;v S00 Vbu. . ha ndrltfa6aroni Wheat- 7 s HBO Bui ; fialf.s ctocii ;BapeViii50Q6lft)s. : fjitontia;. Teosiate ; FddderiJKOiOOOllbs:1 Sflmfte3UioriIfe!larGfMt WfetihoHce the- John ' 'ffra v86 ;.-vaeir ujp .catalog ana Jots ' KiTTtnftTow's 8vcthKff g vrai fer rthUdron t tf rtVrwvsofterttliei gram, redrceKteffammiv-i tlon , Itays pain.Qftreis ivindedUg, .attle ,J do itf Ueve PIsnT Cure for Coflenmv. f fonba aaefHial for cob rlis and nlf a:tw r.BoTEo, Trinity Sorfnr?. Ind.i Teb. IS, 1964. , ,1 South Afrroft exoprts $25,000,000 worih c (diamond, t Tjondon annAliy' - ': ;j . ' . :To Cnre VoW U iOjto . 1GJce U xati ve BromojQu in uie Tablets; ; A tl ?its'-refukd money if it 'fa Is to' cure. ,-3i.'4Y rove's otgnathre. w orT hoi. 2pc, - tn 1903 we wece Switzerktti's best ' ce-' ' o"1?' uxed .in 39 minutes fey Woolford'a 4 Panitaffy Lotion. 'N'ever fails, -Sold bv all draepsts. 1. . Mail, orders: promptlv filled - Detehou; Crawfordggir Ind. ' JZ'Pf. de compuajyr jn.fche vcny cf Madras in-isSL 1 - ' - v ' ' ! .' ' '''"' . - ' Taylor ffherokee Remedy .of Sweet Gam and Mullen Sa Nature's groat remedy Ceres r Coughs, Cplds; Group aa$ ConsumptiohiLnd all throat and ian& troubles; At druccists fi5ft.rC3.aadLfl0 per boaid.: fett' . . :f : : : . Power From Artesfan Welf. . At St;ugustise,; :Fla., ; the only xnlll" in theworld' tljat " gets 'Jftj' pdv' i::i)umegi':iiaid:dttoe. hay i88Md; per acre. , It's wtanderfin. Uoy'a ln itenco - arTVA. n t.i. Carried -iSvvaroihtg fBees -Three tfftfea; kp'Deander Cordi. -a boy aged 14,' bit Redding, 51., waiked three miles 'With nrm from elbow down. He hived ti bees at home, wasstung only oiice on' ythe ? wrist, V -where'ie accIdentaHy rushe4'.-bX the hero oT theiroiir. People, docfliea t iHer In Amazement ; 4 JProneujKoea Jntrur&ble-Face Now Clear (8 Efp Thank. God J'or Cuticuca. Jlra. P. 2iackett,f 400 Van Bureai .i&L.,: Brooklyn, Ji. Jl,, .-says: "1, wish t. sire thanii far ithe.nwrvelows 'c'urV of my'moth' er, by, Caftcura. . -'Sire .had ra severe ulcer, wnichtr iLvBician3 rhad ijronounced .inoar ahle?! maa :iC errihie wsfiKiirenenfc, ;and people should stand ia. fttoazement and . look after her- jifter' tuere vas no hope from ito:sCbeiEa iSoap. :OSiba amd JMUs.-and qoV thank 'God, she is '.&mpIe1x;y4cred,:VHer' facets a smooth aiod selear: ever." - - ? George ililil. tvus wondering how itne apple got nto :thluinpiius. . BecTrse be poIieuwtn oh our fceat: prefers ,ft vttovoy;' tkiiained- Qtwen; CljarJotl... ? : ; From ;nrt : mbm wxt th e fCl ngvs mjnd ! began to twrtwrpw ifork . Jun. ; 1 W ofter w Hunared JoIlars Kewardfor i any case of sCiaaarh-thftt.ainnoi be cured by flfeU'sCatatrb Ume. - F : - J- OHEiBTkfCo., Toledo, Ou i We, Uss teraaderoijea, Tfeave known F. IT. ! Cneney (or ttoe hist J5years: and believe Mm ' perfectly h&sa&MM ?to.llihusiness transao- 1 tions and naataeiniHy :ttt)te to carry out aay ! oblisratioas nwd .by .their ftraj. . I AYest & TB54X, Wlicilesiae Druggists. Ite- ' ledo.u. . . ,r , . .-, WALDrxo, Xotiv ASabtW, Wholesale I Ball's qatarriiCie.iiAafeen tafernally, act ing directly upon the bhood and mucoussur faces of the system ICesifcimonials sent free, "1' fey?Sdtd"by:all:Pruj??ists. f . Take Hatl'H Fa,TiaSayJjPUts for eoqstipation. ' ' " - ' t. 1 1 i i ' i v.. .- . i "I bet 1 -get. iaJto (Diose trouble than any ; inanin this JStarte," voIbteered i the young: .fellow; -"aNotiiins in tlie tronble line overtook; ane.T; i'.'.VftbT, I'd fcbe-afraid to uiarry'---- ',': "What! Ain't jou maaarried?" .eiacu lated the elderly wa-ty- .""Box, you .don't 2 know what tfasa&le js." Louis xYilie Courier-JouruaL TTTS nermnntJy cured. Y fHw'n'r 7erwon ress after Ont av'3 nevf Br. Uae'i. Great : NerveEestoror.f 2trf a! bWtteand treatise froe J)r.IUH,ELrgT.td.,S3tArehat.vIhila.ya. ,: Tff pnrdpno fire ov comnwn feataa&s to Southern California. TtehiiW. ' fcindf RleetlinV or ProtrndinV Piles. fiK-niyrisrs vrill refund nrnn5r if Varo Ointmen t fa i-jg io; enfe in 6 to 14 daya. 50c. ' g A Formosa, man must 'iave .a license be fore he is allowed to smoke opium. . AiEUng thse who; have received the high est 'award the 'Grand Prize at St. Louis World's air, was the A. J. Tower Co.. the makere of the Fish Brand Slickers. Many 6f our readers '"who -went to the Fair,., will recall their fine exhibit in wHich. water proof garments were shown adapted to so many uses that 'Almost every department of the world s wrk was suggested. The Grand Prize was a deserved tribute to one of the oldest manufacturing concerns in the .country; k " v. - , - ' - The Mexican dollar is idisanpearinff from -Kiatioua cixcuJatioa, . Xhixty Years' Experience In Berry Fruit Growing. Thirty years old, in any one line of - business is quite patriarclifal, for this has been a generation of changes and frequent adjustments and: readjustments. It has not fallen to the let of many men to hold to one thing for so near the third part of the century. I consider myself fortunate' that fate has permitted me to bend virtually all the energies of my life to one thiiig, given me time and op- portunity to master it in proportion to my abilities- and to reap a reward that seems' to me greater than my deserts. And still more, fortunate am I in that I have had sons to grow up around me, profiting by my experience, to see more broadly and reach higher, making my plans and aimsK their plans and. aims,, but larger.. : But I am not writing a family' history, but a treatise on if rait growing. In that thirty yeilis I learned many things and had to unlearn many things. What I Jjad- to chiefly unlearn Vas that the old system1 of manuringffruits was wrong; - To "vS' ,,ahdTto my average contemporaries in those days manure was manure and fertilizer fertilizer. It scrirred to lis dimly, if at all, that as different animal's required different kind's f- food -and in Ufferent; prppor trons, so did different plants and crops. And I will .add that the less from illy Tjal&nced manure and fertilizer in those drk day s was enotmous,' aiid who will "be Ibold enough toj say that the dark xlays are eyen yet' entirely past with all -of us? The three fertilizing properties which experience has proven shoTild be added to the soil to make it productive are, as is well known, nitrogen, potash and phosphoric acid. AM X these are es 7sential, one as mneh as the other, but they are needed In different propor tions on different sells and for different crops, and their "blind and injudicious ;use works loss in many ways. As, nitrogen is the :most expensive "it is in that the greatest waste and loss occurs in the ignorant use of fertilizers The loss is greater rin berry fruit growing than in any "Other crop we have, because more jfer tilizer is used on this than is the cus torn on other crops and because the Joss in quantity anq 'quality through unwise manuring is .so great in this 'Crop. - ... My largest .crops of fruit hare ai rways come from the most liberal jiss of fertilizer when rightly proportioned. "My largest crops of disappointments ;haye grown where the largest quan .tity of ;iily balanced fertilizer was used. . My experience i that a perfectly "balaii ced berry" i-uit fertilizer should coutain at least :tvo and one-half times as much potash and twice, as much phosphoric r.cid .as ;it contains am .monia. My plan in planting strawberries, dewberries, blackberries, 'raspberries, -etc., is to apply .-'cottonseed meal in the drills before the plants, arc set at the rate of GOO to 00 pounds to the acre. 'This is sown in 'the drills and mixed with the soil and 'listed on just before 'the plants are set !ln winter or spring. After that no more nitrogen is nsed in -Tiny for ttr' nntif after - the crop; is'gath- cr?d the folio wing year. P . , :r:i I depe upon plenty of potash and pbosphoric achl ito make the fruif.; Nor haye 15 ever, failed in my " whole ex ;per!ence o make a good crop except -t)ao year when hail destroyed . about cnc-half. i I apply; pptusii:in the form "3f sulphate of potash, which is decid edly' the best frm for all kinds of rriiit. using about "100 -pounds per acre, msuaily. .mixed with , "300 pounds of .acj& phosphate or dissolved bone. This snixture I sow "broadcast over the plants during; late 'fall .-and. winter. It 'Will undoubtedly pay to .use a some Whxtt large quantity eof both of these if evtllizers. either bi-oadcat before the plants are set or else by 'Chopping in .around and between the plants during 'the summer or early HfLM. Potash and phosphoric acid, as flrey ;are much less :iktilert6 bef washed 0tFt, and lost than :ammonia is, can therefore :be more lib fera'ljy used without loss, as. most) of bevfertilityvof this kind remains in the o"l Hmtil itakeh upy the plants. 3111 add that 4he iaTgest yield of srtrawberrics which X eTrr heard of ibehrg made In this 'tate was grown Ijy imy self under the yteiB of fertil fecnrabove described. . 'IT: ' O. W. EJLckiSTAJLL. ISttrell, N.tC. J f-ew yarc ago we saw .Some red clay Jand, containing little humus, sun-Tled eight to ten inches. The work tsas done twith an eicellen tw horse subsoiler flrawn- by two mules. That .TCi; was thrown away.j Heavy spring rains solidified the clay The pe&l of th farmer tdoing the work was not according to" kviedge. He knows bettei now. He w23 notirepeat his er ror. But he is fully , convinced of the great1 value of suboiTing our clay ; News of the Day. j , It - has been calculated that; taking the population of the whole jsrbrld, there is pne newspaper to every 82,680 persons. ' The United States supports .12,500 newspapers, , of which 1,000 are dailies, these being round figures. Ger many has 5,500 journals, of which 8O9 are daily, . England takes second place In the European record with 3;T)00 news .papers, ot which 809 are daily. France lias nearly the .same number. lands. If he ca'n break one or two inches of clay with one mule drawing a diamond point tongue plow that is all Jae:wants on land with a light top soil. Following that ivith small- grain and peas he incorporates humus. into the soil and is ready then to break up two J inches more of the. clay. Tbtis by de grees in three years he will secure a ten4nch soil well charged with humus and capable of resisting heavy rains, or long droughts.. Land should never be subsoiled when the clay is wet and sticky. We saw' a field prepared for wheat this fall, f In, places the soil was shallow. ? A two-horse turn-plow was used. The wet clay was brought to the top, where it remains in clod, and it will be fthere next spring. Break only so much of the hardpan or, clay as can be incorporated with the top soil. This work should be done before the first of MchAnysnbsoiiin's that ; leayes the broken clay in' a mass is .worthless, as the first heavy rain will cause it to become soil again. Progressive farmer. . . . v -; - - Viliio of Cotton-Seet TWTeal. .;yV J A pound of cotton-seed nieaXIs wWth a pound and threerquarters of corn for. feeding ; cattle, but wlien cotton-seed meal is fed and the manure saved with reasonable . care, three-fourths of its fertilizer value may) be regained in the droppings. Can we continue to waste' three-fourths of the value of our cotton-seed meal, because, we- have not learned, and apparently do not want to learn, to raise and care for live stock? At present the price of cotton-seed meal is. based on its fertilizer value alone, but as its food value becomes better apprecia ted, the price will be deter niined by its combined fertilizer and feeding values. During the last ten years the price of meal has risen, from $15 to $25 per ton, and I predict that during the next ten years it i will ad vance tov?35, because it is worth that ti mount in comparison with the usual prce of other food stuffs. Can we af ford to Continue to use.it as fertliizer alone, at that pricey and ignoie and waste its feeding value? - We certainly need live stock to con sume this cotton-seed meal, for only by feeding it can we ootain its full value. The same principles are involved when we consider fhe disposition that should be made of leguminous forage crops. If is universally admitted that it pays to ?row cowpeas 'as a means 'of soil ircpTOvement, for, even whn the crop is cut f orhay; there Is -sfTJl left J:o the soil, In the roots arid stubble, from 82.50 to $3 worth of nitrogen for every, ton -of hay produced. But when this tn-cm is grown, wliat shaTl we do with N't$' Every ton -of this cowpea hay" is worth at least $10 for fertilizer, at the price we pay for plant food in cominer e'ia3 fertilizer.- Progressive Farmer. Subeotlins With One Horse. A farmer cume io us a few days n saying that you are always telling us to break the hard pan and sibsoil our land. You are no doubt 'correct, but what "is .a poof man with only, one horse to do? 'This is our advice to hiin :and all such farmers: Take pea stub l)Ie that is intended Xor cotton nest year. The leaves and remnants -of vines -are now on the ground. They should l)e -saved.. Usg .a sis-inch ho.ve3 .and Iaj- off the tows cotton wMth :as carjy as possible? AVhen this Is done, take a tongue or diamond point plow and .run in thet same f iu itow. That wiH brea 'the hard pan. Then do the same thing for the mid dle, leaving 'the freezes to pulverize the :soiL If land j intended for. corn, make the rows proper width And run the furrows in the middle. That re-' craires a little tme, -but it will pay any farmer cultivating lands. 'Another plan for one-hoEse farmers. Is .to swap lalaor. Buy two-horse-plows and har rows an commoja .and take 5t time about using them. Thej will soon be able to buy. another lioree, Two fa rm- erk oonld thus tmit-e. Charles Petty, ia Progreesly Ifarnier. Mniet Seed To all ry Totxl. r The following ii from the Farm and Fireside: ': The -cojmjaerclaii millet seed is abont as cheap as wlteat, and it is posslblfrfhat in tW fntter. It be come ;a gpeqial food for itir kinds of J poultry. Millet seed eontalirs more oil than corn, lt, leks starch, and is alsi more nitrogenous. Theladvahfage in its use-is that as the seeds are very small eaeh hen (is compelled to eat slowly, and must also perform con siderable, work before she can secure a full meal. Spch method of -feeding the fowls brings them nearer the nat ural conditions, required; as a portion" of the food wiU lie digested slowly and entirely before, all the food is. eaten. A quart of millet seed scattered in lit ter such as cut straws leaves or earth in tthe morning should " amply supply , fifteen hens until night, when a full meal of grain and other f pods may be given tor the finisli of the day. Hens scK kegt will give better results than if fed twice a day or oftener. - ' Odds and Ends. It is understood that Denver will be j. selected as the site for the army and navy Hospital which the j Federal Gov rheerfiil lrdlu rdlu dl dl dlu dlu dludl and for. which an appropriation of $50, has; been set aside.. The majority ofj the commission, in charge 'favors. -pen4 ver. although two members advocated' some site ia Arizona. f , '. Tbe West Virginia Legislature adopt ed a resolution declaring;. against any change in the tariff laws. La GriDDe IS EoidemiC Catarrh, I 1-fp i - . ;.. JL cultured and the ignorant, the aristo crat and the pauper, the masses and the classes are alike subject to la grippe. None are exempt all are liable. Grip is well named. The original French term, la grippe, has been shortened by the busy American to read "crip." Without intendingto do so, a new word has been coined that exactly describes the case-. As if some hideous giant with awful grip had clutched us in its fatal clasp. Men, women, children, whole towns and cities are caught in the baneful grip of a terrible monster. " Have you the grip? Or,- rather, hasHhe grip got voir? If so, read the .following letters These testimonials speak-for themselves ZZ'fj;?1 m CW58W i it. rc -e T : c i ren ki iiinr in i.j a. 1 vx 1 v-iiri 1 m . . . i grippe or its after-effects: A Southern Judge Cured. judge Horatio J. Goss, Hartwell, Ga., writes: "Some five &t six years ago I had a very evere spell of grip which, left me with sys temic ctarrh. Th attack upon the divorce' laws and upon divorce suits continue, in the pulpit and, to some extent, in the press. The real difficulty ,with re form is not the unwilUnhess of pub-! 'Ii bodies to act, says the Newark Sunday Call, but the feeling thait the remedies suggeisted for the unhappy growth xjf divorce are not satisfac tory, ' CONSTANT ACK1NC Bacls: aches all the time. Spoils your appetite, wearies thebody,- worries the jpilnd. Kidneys cause it nil and Doai4 Kidney Pills relieve and cure it. - H. B. McCarver. of 201 Cherry L, Portland, Ore-, in spector of freight for the Trans-Continental Co.V says: "IusedDoan's Kid- ney Pills for back ache and other symptoms -of ki ney trouble which had jRsmoyed me toi months. I think cold was responsi ble for - the 'whole trQuMe. It seemed to settle in my" kid neys. Dodn's' Kidney' Pirfs rooted jt out. It is several months since I used thera, and up to date there has been no recurrence of the trouble." '' ' Doan Kidney Pills for Bale by al! dealers. Price 50 cents per box Fos-ter-Milhurn Co Buffalo, N. Y. Justice Long Asleep. A man more than TO years was ar rested in Calais, Vt, a few years ago oa an indictment thirty-eight years old, . charging him with stealing a horse. " ' ' Sl.lmpT? M7 faee FM corared with pimpls 7J? riB er "r eonld nsmoye. I tried X?-fimJ-ret and.2 ny joy -when the Pimples disappeared after month's steady use. aLvejcommeiMled tliem to all my friends and ai a few have found relief." J C. J. Pnsch; m Park Ave., tfew York City N. Y. r2?a".nl- P'bl, Potetit, Tat Good, Do Good, &lHa.bmLk- -Tlirtilje tablet tamped CCC. trasranteea to core 6? your money back V , , OterUng Remedy cfo.,Cbicago or N;Y. 6oo AlillUfiLSALE, TEfl L1SLU0U BOXES If mflUcted with weak' eyes :ae Thompson's Eye Vster So. 4. ANTED-)d eseta State, Salemn to 99II f large lin- Tobaceo: permaoect ' PositToa. CCNTRAL TOBACCO WORKSCOPenieVs.V: y BesT For "A friend - advised me to try year Jfe- runa, which I did, and wa3 imraediBlie benefited and cured. The third boUi pleted the cure."-r-H. J. Goss. j Cured in a Few WeekauV T Miss Jean Cowgillj Griswold Opea House, Troy "N.; Y,, is the leading -with the Aubrey Stock , Co. She .wb&mm:. the following: , 1- j "During the . pas4 winter of 1901, I- awE1,' fered for several- weeks from' a seven tack of grip, which-left a serious catsxtSnfi -condition of the throat and head. ; - "Some one suggested Peruna. . As a TasSt: tf resort, after 'wasting much time and monry " on physicians, I: tried the. remedy Joutibr . fully, and in a few weeks was as well, asr ever." Jean CowgiU. . ; . , . . Saved by Pe-ra-iwu- sxuii. u ames XV. lti Hon, James R. Guill is one of tie oldesk and most esteemed men ofr Otoaha. SAl . - - . - fie. has done much Jo. make it what il 2. serving on public boards a number of 1 He endorses- Peruna in the followxi' words: i '" "I am 68 years old,, am bale1 send hearty and Peruna has helped' me attain it. Tw years ago I had Ja grippe my life was d spaired of. : Penina save me. J. K- GsaSL BetterItBetterPiTrg& J Better, peaches, apples, -pears maiH berries are Drodaced when Rciswii is liberally applied to the soil. To .jk suouic a iuu erop, 01 cnoicesc qosux, usc.it leriuizer containing not tuau 10 per cent, actual Send for omronceal hoolcs of Tnfiin i summ icruazers. due are ante treatises, bent tree ior the aikiairl OERMAtF KALI WOKS O '.OOOEnanfGfor!S:c3 ifore gardens smd'farms are; planted America. There la reason or tb)Ju wo own ovot-OjHM acre oor inefuw; a action or arwarrBiea Xttordee to nuuiee Ton to err w make you tne CoUOTmxi cedenteo; offer ' Forl&Gertta PostpafS ( 10M Earfn. and Lat COOO Fl fcier TaraFpa, i. ww Hniaauay ceiary. IOOO 8Ieakt ttWatoaa, ITOO Kara tmmtm KMUk SOW UitiOKIf BMUIsat Homi nlshlng- bnshela of brUlhrat ftowers and lots andjotsof hom J egetables, together w-ith tmrgrmt f T et&log, telling all aiontFlwejrv W, noses. Bmaii.jfrntkv9aMa4( ioc--, Uo instanpK-and ttiBa noticed 4L Bis. lVge caXiigime,o. v J0SB AlIER ttl&COi. WE GUARANTEE THErVT. i : BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, Write for Prices and Catalog;' ' " QANTT flFG. CO., flacon. Cfau. iohn White & Co. LOUISVILLE KY. S Established 1837 i Hteheit aarket prlee - i FURS and Hides. Weelea r.Cltt WUCtC All rice nut iiesi. eyrap. 't astes oodu in nmq. poiq py qroggty i'" ' ' i"r'T'"'ti'n"" B-. ill - ... . - -.mm v - WW mm X A 21 T3 ami i v'f. " V' i ' r