HBE |NSUHANEHFHEG§E§LE§§ Money to Loans-4 011111 1615661688 6011111611165 11611168611160 Insurance effected ‘on Town, Vil- lage and Farm Property. The Victoria Loan and Incorporated under cap.1 Head Oï¬ice, LINDSAY, On town avd farm propexty at current rates interest. Costs moderate, and no delay. Debentures issued for periodsiof from one to cars for sums of $100 and upwards. ï¬ve. y Interest coupons attached. pxyable half-yearly it 4 per cent. Deposits of $1 .00 21d upward taken, with- drawable a: any time, upcn which currentltates of_i3terest will be 2.110 fled. John Magwood, Jamss L0_w. Lindsay Mamie Works Estimates promptly given on :11 kinds of cemetery work. Marble Table T>p3, Wash Tops, Mantle Pieces, etc., aspecialty. _ . Being a nraohcal workman, all shou‘d see he designs and compare prices before purcnaslng else. where. WOBFA --In the rear of the Market on Ca nbridge- at... opposite the packing muse. ROBT, CHAMBERS prefixed to fgmish. SAVINGS COMPANY 10 Savings Department ROBT. CHAMBERS Ticket; to all paintz'in Octavio, the North- west and British Columbia. Full information G. Cornefl, LINDSAY The Express Ofï¬ce, Lindsay Up-to-Date Our stock is new, neat and natty. No old shop- worn jewelry. M. E. Tangney, Fancy Clocks, Watches, Chains, Engagement and Wedding Rings, Silverware ~. T. R. Railway System Furniture and Undertaking Charges Moderate Opp. Benson House, ed to furnish aha neop‘a of Lindsay and aur- ' cmntry with MOSUIE‘N PS and HEAD- 'sroxn‘.s, bonh Marble and Granite. Repairing done promptly and properly at moder- ate rates. W. F. MCCARTY, Prettiest Goods in town} President 77 Kent-St., South Side. GEO. WILDER, No Solicitors’ . 169, ONT. Secretary Lindsay fl DR. TALMAGE’S TIMELY THEME. The Chase Furnished the Preacher \Vith the Text For a Graphic Description of the Refuge “"hlch God’s “ford is to Those in Trouble and Misfortune. Washington, ‘Oct. 15.â€"â€"â€"Thc gospel as a great. rcfreshmenpis here set. forth by Dr. Talmage under a ï¬gure which will be found particularly graphic by those who have gone out, as hunters to Jim] game in the mounâ€" ' ' ~ LA". Dan‘n1 \"ii 1_ “AS the ï¬e As THE ing‘. it saying “The slothful man roast- etn not that which he took in huntâ€" D v But one day David, while far from the home from which he had been driven and sitting near the mouth of a lonely cave where, he had lodged and on the. banks of a pond or river, hears a pack of hounds in swift pur- suit. Bccause of the previous silence of the forest the clangor startles him, and he says to himself, “I won- der what those dogs are after.†Then there is a crackling in the brushwood and the loud breathing of some rushing wonder of the woods. and the antlers of a, deer rend the leaxos of the thicket, and by an instimt which all hunters re- cognize it plunges into a pond or lake or rixcr to cool its thirst. and at the same time by its capacitv for suiftcr and longer swimnnng to ggt axxay from the foaming har- tic-rs. David says to himself: “Aha! That is myself! Saul after me, Absalom after me, enemies Without, number after me. I am’chased, their bloody muzzlcs at my heels, barking at my good name, haeking after my body, barking after my soul. Oh, the hounds, the hounds! 'But look there!" says David. “That hunted deer has splashed into the water. It puts its hot lips and nostrils into the cool wave. that washes the lath- ered flanks, and it swims away from the ï¬ery canines, and it is free at last. Oh. that I might ï¬nd in the deep, wide. lake of God's mercy and consolation escape from my pursuers! Oh, for the waters of life and res- cue As the hart panteth after the water brooks, so pantcth my soul after thee, O God." Some of you have just come from the Adirondacks. and the breath of the balsam and spruce and pine is still on you. The Adirondacks are now populous with hunters, and the deer are being slain by the score. Once While there talking with a hunâ€" ter I thought I would like to see Whether my text was accurate io its allusion, and as I heard the dogs haying a little. way off and supposed they were on the track of‘ a deer I said to the hunter in rough corduroy, “Do the deer always make for the water when they are pur- sued?" He. said: “Oh, yes, mister. You see, they are a hot and thirsty animal, and they know where the water is, and when they hear dan- ger in the distance they lift their antlers and snuff the breeze and start for Racquet or Loon or Saranac, and we got into our cedar shell boat or stand by the runway with rifle load- ed ready to blaze au'ay.†My friends. that is one reason why I like the Bible so much. Its parâ€" tridges are real partridges, its osâ€" triches real ostriehes and its rein- deer real reindeer. I do not wonder that this antlered glory of the text makes the hunter's eye sparkle and his cheek glow and his respiration quicken, to say nothing of its Use? fulness, although it is the most use- ful of all game, its flesh delicious, its skin turned into human apparel, its sinews fashioned into bow strings, its antlers putting handles on cutlery and the shavings of its horns used as a restorative, its name taken from the hart and called harts- horn. By putting aside its useful- ness this enchanting creature seems made out. of gracefulness and elasti- city. What an eye, with a. liquid brightness as if gathered up from a hundred lakes at sunset! The horns a. coronal branching into every pos- sible curve, and, after it seems done, ascending into other projections of exquisiteness, a tree of polished bone, uplifted in pride or swung down‘for awful combat! It is velocity em- bodied, timidity impersonated, Well, now, let, all those who have1 comimg after them the lean hounds of poverty or the black hounds of persecution or the spotted hounds of vicissitude or the pale hounds of death or who are in any WiSB Dur- sued run to the wide, deep, glorious lake of divine solace and reSCUe. The most of the men and women whom I happen to know at different times, if not now, have had trouble after them. sharp, mu-zzled troubles, swift, trnubles, all devouring troubles. Many of you have made the mistake bf trying to ï¬ght them. Somebody HE HART PANTETH AFTER THE WATER BROOKS.†RE FRESH MENT. meanly attacked you, V and you at; tacked them. They depreciated you, and you depreciated them, or they ‘overreached you in a bargain, and you tried in Wall street parlance, to get a corner on them. Or you have had bereavement, and, instead of be- ing submissive, you are ï¬ghting that bereaVement. You charge on the doctors who have failed to eï¬ect a cure. Or you charge on the care- lessness of the railroad company through :which the accident occurred. Or you are a chronic mvalid, and you fret and worry and scold and wonder why you cannot be well like other people, and yen angrily charge on the neuralgia or the larnygitis or the- ague or the sick headache. The fact is you are a deer at bay. In- stead of running to the waters of di- vine consolation and slaking your thirst and cooling your body and soul in the good cheer of the gospel and swimming away into the mighty deeps of God’s love, you are ï¬ght- ing a whole kennel of barriers. Some time ago I saw in the Adir- ondacks a dog lying across the road, and he seemed unable to get up, and I said to some hunters, “What is the matter with that dog?" They answered, “A deer hurt him," and I saw he had a swollen paw and a bat- tered head, showing where the ant- lers struck him. And the probabilis- ty is that some of you might give a mighty clip to your pursuers. You might damage their business, you might worry them into ill health, you might hurt them as much as they hurt you; but, after all, it is not worth while. You only have hurt a hound. Better be off for the Upper Saranac, into which the mountains of God's eternal strength look down and moor their shadows. There are whole chains of lakes in the Adirondacks, and from one height you can see 30 lakes, and there are said to be over 800 in the great wilâ€" derness. So near are they to each other that your mountain guide picks up and carries the boat from lake to lake, the. small distance be- tween them for‘ that reason called a “carry." And the realm of God's word is one long chain of bright, re- freshing lakes, each promise a lake, a very short carry between them, and, though for ages the pursued have been drinking out of them, they are full up to the top of the green banks, and the same David describes them, and they seem so near to- gether that in three different places he speaks of them as a continuous river, saying, "There. is a riVer the streams whereof shall make glad the city of God;†“Thou shalt make them drink of the rivers of thy pleas- ‘uresf’ “Thou greatly enrichest it iwith the river of God, which is full of water." But many of you have turned your back on that supply and confront your trouble, and you are soured with your circumstances. and you are ï¬ghting society, and you are fighting a pursuing world, and troubles, in- stead of driving you into the cool lake of heavenly comfort, have made you stop and turn round and lower your head, and it is simply antler against tooth. I do not blame you. Probably under the same circum- stances I would haVe done worse. But you are wrong. You need to do as the reindeer does in February and March-it sheds its horns. But Very many of you “he are wronged of the worldâ€"and if in any assembly between the Atlantic and the Paciï¬c oceans it were asked that all who had been badly treated should raise both their hands, and full response should be made, there would be twice as many hands lifted as persons presentâ€"1 say many of you would declare, “We. have always done the best “’0 could and tried to be useful, and why We become the victims of maligmnent or invalidism or mishap. is inscrutable." Why, do you know that the ï¬ner a deer and the more elegant its proportions and the more beautiful its bearing the more anxious the hunters and the hounds to capture it? Therefore sarcasm draws on you its â€finest bead;" therefore the world goes gunning for you with its best Winchester breechloader. High- est compliment is it to your talent or your \‘irtue or your usefulness. You will he assailed in proportion to your great achievements. The lH'SL and the mightiest Being the World ever saw had set after him all the hounds, terrestrial and diabolic, and they lapped his blood after the (‘alvarean massacre. The. World paid nothing to its Redeemer but a brainâ€" ble, four spikes and a. rross. Many who have done their best to make the world better have had such a rough time of it that all their pleas- ure is in anticipation of the next world, and the)r would, if they could, express their OWn feelings in the words of the Baroness of Nairn, at the close of her long life. when ask- ed if she would like to live her life over again: Would you be young again? So would not I. Omc tear of menmry given Onward I'll hi0. Life's (lurk wave fox-dud o'er, All but at rest on shore, x‘y. would you plunge once more,I With home so nigh? If you might, would you now Rotracu your way, Wander through stormy wilds, Faint and astray? Night's gloomy watches fled; Morning, all hcuning red; Hope’ 8 smile around us shed, Hcavcnward, away! lut what is a relief for all those pursued of trouble and annoyance and pain and bereavement? My text gives it to you in a word of three letters, but each letter is a chariot if you triumph, or a throne if you want to be crowned, or a. lake if you would slake your thirstâ€"yea, a. chain of three lakesâ€"~G-o-d, the one for whom David longed and the one whom David found. You might as well meet a stag which, after its sixth mile of runningr at the topmost speed through thicket and gorge and with the breath of the dogs on its heels, has come in. full sight of Schroon Lake and try to cool' its projecting and glistered tongue with La. blade of grass as to attempt to islatisfy an immortal soul," when fly. dug from trouble and sin, with any- MMWA AN-WARDER: Ll"«DS£‘V. thingflcss deep» and mgn uuu u- and immense and inï¬nite and etc! than God. His comforta-Why, it bossoms all distress. His arm- Wrenches off all bondage. His h â€"â€"it wipes away all» tears. Christly atonementâ€"it makes us right with the past, and all ri with the future; and all right v God, all right with man, and right forever- . A_1‘-‘ 110 {4193‘} T<lnE D right IOI‘evu; . Lamar-tine t ells us ‘hat King Nim- rod said to his ‘ three sons: ‘ Here and one is of clay, and another of gold. Choose now which you will have.†The eldest son, having the ï¬rst, choice, chose the vase of gold, on which was written the word “Em- " and when it was opened it scribed With the word “Glory," and taincd the ashes of those who were once called great. The third son took the vase of clay .1 :4. “ï¬nnfv hilt 'l‘ne Inu‘u Dun ~vv.- -___ and, opening it, fouud it empty, but on the bottom of it was inscribed the name of God., King Nimrod ask- ed his courtiers which vase they thought weighed the most. The ava- ricious men of his court said the vase of gold, the poets said the one of‘ amber, but the wisest men said the empty vase, because one letter of the name of God outweighed a universe. For him I thirst, for his grace I beg, on his promise I build my all. Without him I cannot be happy. I have tried the world, and it does well enough as far as it goes, but it; is too uncertain a, \Vorld, too evanescent a world. I am not a pre- judiced witness. I have nothing against this world. I have been one of the most fortunate or, to use a more Christian word, one of the most blessed of men-blessed in my parents, blessed in the place of na- tivity, blessed in my health, blessed in my ï¬elds of work, blessed in my natural temperament, blessed in my family, blessed in my opportunities, blessed in the hope that my soul will go to heaven through the pardoning mercy of God, and my body, unless it be lost at sea or cremated in some conflagration, will lie dOWn among my Kindred and friends, some already gone and others to come af- ter me. Through Jesus Christ make this God your God, and you can with- stand anything and everything, and that which aï¬rights others will inâ€" spire youâ€"as in time of earthquake, when an old Christian woman, asked whether she was scared, answered, “‘No; I am glad that I have a God who can shake the world," or as in a ï¬nancial panic, when a Christian merchant. asked if he did not fear he would break, answered, “Yes; I shall break when the Fiftieth Psalm breaks in the ï¬fteenth verse. "Call upon me in the (lay of trouble; I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me.’ †We are told in Revelation xxii, 15, “Without arc dogs," by which I con- clude there is a whole kennel of hounds outside the gate of heaven, or, as when a master goes in a door, his dog lies on the stops waiting for him to come out. so the troubles of this life may follow us to the shining door, but they cannot get in. “Without are dogs." I have seen dogs and owned dogs that I would not be chagrinod to see in the he'- venly city. Some of the grand old watchdogs who am the constabulary of the. homes in solitary places and for years have been the only protec» tion of wife and child, some of the shepherd dogs that drive back the wolves and bark away the flock from going too near the precipice and some of the dogs whose neck and paw Inndseer, the painter, has made immortal would not find me shut- ting them out from the gate of shin- ing pearl. I say if some soul entering heaven should happen to leave .the gate ajar and these faithful creatures should quietly Walk in it would not at all disturb my heaven. But all those human or brutal hounds that have chased and torn and lacerated the worldâ€"yea, all that now bite or worry or tear to piecesâ€"shall be prohibited. "Without are dog's." No place there for harsh critics or back-- biters or despoilers of the reputation of others. Down with you to the kennels of darkness and despair! The hart has reached the eternal \\ a- ter brooks. and the. panting of the long chase is quieted in still pas- tures, anh “there shall be nothing to hurt or destroy in all God‘s holy mount." (in, when some of you get there it: will be like what, a. hunter tells of when he was pushing his canoe far up north in the winter and amid the ice ï¬nes and a hundred miles, as he thought, from any other human beings. He was startled one. day as he heard a stepping on the ice, and he cocked the rifle. ready to meet anything that came near. He. found a man, burg-footed and insane from long exposure, appromx‘hing him. Taking him into his canoe and kin- hling fires to warm him, he restored him, found out. where he had lived and took him to his home and found all the Village in great exritement. A hundred men Were searching for this lost man, and his family and friends rushed out to meet him, and. as had been agreed at his ï¬rst upâ€" pearunee, bells were rung, and guns were discharged. and banquets spread and the rescuer loaded with pres- ents. Well, when some of you step out of this wilderness, where 3'0“ have been chilled and torn and some- times lost amid the icebergs, into‘ the warm greetings of all the vil-i 1agcs of the glorified, and your, friends rush out to give you weleoniâ€"- ing kiss,\tlie news that there is anâ€" other soul forever saved will call the caterers Of heaven to spread the banâ€" quet and the bellmen to lay hold of the rope in the tower, and while chalices click at. the feast and the bells clang from the turrets it will be a scene so uplifting I pray God I ‘may be there to take part in the , celestial merrimcnt. And now do you 1 not think the prayer in Solomon's Song where be compared Christ to a reindeer in the night would make an equiSitely approririatc peroration to my sermon, “Until the day break and the shadows flee away be thou like a roe 01' a young har. upon the mountains 0: Esther?†'gh and broad :nse and inï¬nite and eternal . His comfortâ€"â€Why, all distress. His armâ€"it off all bondage. His hand as away all . tears. His xtonementâ€"it makes us all Lh the past, and all right future, and all right with ‘ - A -"H-h than, and all SBHUILS HEâ€"UPENiNE Rigg’s Store is well supplied with new books such as: CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR 0P3 CPR cm 0030 SHGUTING CPR CPR CPR CPR “Kawartha Lakes†CPR Trent Valley Navigation Go. (LIMITED) THE will run Single Trip- a (0110's :â€" Lenve Bobcay n gt..." ........ ,..8.00 3.111. Arrive 0.: .in y a .............. 10.30 mm, nmme wm. â€"PLY1NG BETVVEENâ€" Bobcaygeon, Lindsay and Stun geon Point Big variety to choose from at Sturgeon Point, Single Fare, 35c. “ Return “ 50c. Bobcaygeon,$ingle “ 75c. Return " $1.00 GRAIN CAR RYING.â€"Amn¢ements can he made win) the Capu'm {or ailing a any point on the Lake for gnin. J. W. DIAMENT, Capt. I have made amngvmentn for placing an unlimited qumtit)‘ of Laws on 'Farm Prrpeny nt Five and Six Per Cent. Interest. A" Loans Vill be put. thumb with the least. possible delay and expenses. 81 N GLE TR l PS On and after MONDAY. OCT. 2nd, the WE MAKE"â€" Sewer and Culvert Pipes EHE flNEAHIfl SEWER PIPE [IE1 68:60 1-2 ADELAIDE ST. E.. “cram: AT MIMICO. TORON‘I" EPPS’S Bflï¬ï¬‚A EWSS 0000A 35 GEMS ‘13 951“ I § money. Wntes5600 word- wit}: oneflnï¬: mm mm rubber holder. highly pom}! Warmntgxittoï¬gxg'o entire “Won Yangon†bid if on w m ntsmn make money pm. Sun Z ymis; on; (33:74:51. 83.50. taut pmtpdwm_ Our caning}; dwmstoh a McFï¬rlané, 71 'Yoï¬de 78L. Toma“; L RIGGS, SEASON OF 1899. GRATEFUL COMFORTING Distinguished everywhere for Delicacy of Flavour Superior Quality, and Eighl y-Nutritive Properties. Specially grate- ful and. comforting to the nervous and dyspeptic. Sold only in i-lb. tins, labelled JAMES EPPS 8; 00., Ltd. Homoeopathic Chemists, London, England. BREAKFAST SUPPER Leave I' )r dnv 3t ................. 3.60 p m. m ive M. Bobuygoon 1t. . . . . ....... 5.30 pan. Will be loud in 911:: Mutawa. and Nepigun Districts. Good game is not more p'eqti_lul_ .apyyvbef'c. L- --I I nA‘A SINGLE FIRST CLASS FARE To :11 points Mattawa to Nepignn and Spam-b, Kippevu am; Temiskaming, Buck“ 16 Shsr‘uot Lake. m Prue- tsng, n†points sworn to :Qurth Bay uni on Muskoka Lakes from luv-v v' ---â€" Bouï¬rd t'iphéiéfsvwiu be so“ Octa- ber 2£th to No ember let, inclusive. Brockvxljv, Smith's Faun 5““ W342. When business paï¬srs throw h Tor- onto, no lower hue v'i'l be charged thtu regular remr: to 1010140 um: 95c. wdcd. Ail t'cke'ta gr ed to return Dccunber 13th. 1899. All Sizes from 4 in. to 24 in. Connections. -Readors __Copy Books. ’Drawing Books -â€"â€"Scribblers â€"â€"Slates â€"â€"Lead Pencils â€"-Pens â€"â€"Ink â€"â€"Envelopes â€"â€"-Writing paper -â€"â€"Lock Boxes â€"â€"P..ulers â€"â€"Rubber-Eraers -â€"Pen Holders Kent-st. Lindsay MONEY TO LOAN WRITE FOR PRICES; STATIONS IN CANADA TURION use. TAYLOR. Clerk cl Ycruiam, Robes: goon The beat fountain an ever sold {qr A ‘50 CPR 0P)? CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR CPR CPI? CPR CPR lamba- Royal Dental Cone; for Good Dentistry. .34. Graduate of Toronto University of Dental Surgeons. Every department of dentistry ‘ and ggienmflo planner at. modal over Maxâ€"gun's Drug Star; DR. E. A. TOTTEN nemnsr, "7 . Honor (it-dusts of Toronto Universit College of Dental Surgeons. y “(18°31 All the latest and improved branches of My performed. Chuges moderate newâ€, . OFF our Gregory'stgStoz-e, corner Ke t . mi Mâ€"Bl-ly. n “d “h DENTIST. - - LlNDSAy He studied the gas under Dr Cotton, of New Yo}; moor-131nm: of gas (or am teeth. Dr. gm mm. Neelmés thnthe has given me “a 186.41? persona without an midcnt. Dr. he)â€. uses the best local pain ohtunden. Bantam “ ads! teeth inserted st moderate prices. Plea. N .postalard More coming. 0600 Daily om the Simpocn House. Lindsay. _23 95““ °"’ mm“ 4‘ Nagem DR. ARTHUR DAY DENTIST successor: To me LATE an. Inn [ember of Toronto Dental College may“ University. A130 zmduate of American n.†loot Modern Dentistry practised in scientiï¬c manner. Crown and Bridge Watt 3 Specialty. Charge- madman U ml! residence north-(as: corner Pee‘ Mbddge-m. Telephone 51. - 60 COLLEGE-ST†TORONTO EYE, EAR, HOSE A50 THRO AT SPECIAUS‘ U to Gm! sud Surgeon to GT.. District. 0508 hours 1-0 to 12 1.122.; 2 to 4 8 p.111. Residence 30 Wemngw~ street. No. 43. U of Toronto Universitv Med‘eal Funny gndmte of Trait} Urivenitjc, Toronto. m: M: (1 College of Physician and Surgeons. 0!! Oï¬eeSomh-m corner Linda“ and Russel" In .IJ 8.0. Ofï¬ce and rwidneec Corner of Lilli mwnm Lioemisne of Royal (huge Physicals. and Surge n5, E 9 shunt) um [id‘s-11ers. Edmbur h. Suecx'ai attention gm Dbdvigery and diseases of rum-u Temp!!! U Othersnd residence. Raw: 91 Lina: ooddoor west of Ya the O‘Toe ‘~. -_=urs, 10.;30un. 1.30pm: mspm sud? toSp. J. SIMPSOK, graduate 0! Ln: v 01" ... moron“: Medics CAvUeg e u! ?h§szcisns sud S Ont- Lute of Bockwuud Am u a, ngsum Trunk Surcmn, Linden Dvmc; Lindsay try, «11. 1891. 7e the Dali Huuce, KLYH-b ANDERSON. DR. SIMPSON, mysmm 060:- and residence. new «11 . Lining. V ° SOLciw' for we 0. .:.~:: Lou: at Lowest. R ms. 0:} g;- S â€nth. G. B. HOPKISS. DONALD R. AXDERSOE Barri-tear. Solicitor 5c. 0506 musk!!! ‘ T " ‘° Sonci :. em, L‘:-'.t Cleu‘e of the Peace m 4“ Elect. 'ootol Kent. Strut. V Bum Notaries, (1;. i Bunk. Kent-6L, Linden) . Monty loves! rate; '1‘. STEWART. L. T. C Viacom md flie Bank of M *2 t' a lawns: cur-'6 onmoflmu Vinita-ct... Lindsay. *u MID, Barristers. x: and 3m Pdle. szosa) t Kent-0'». We m Awning LAC" u‘ now in sums large um 52 on the but terms sand 3: 1h: Interest. Wodonotiena- 1:5 8. J. McLAUGBLIN * Otkwood P.0., ‘ other ales promptly 3‘ onto. sues can be arr "5 tioneer. 083.“ m conducted in tug; as: w ll reasonably as in bar-hood. bipedal-cm ‘1 mdgtock ales. Temm ' " conduct. ales of 3.32 L's-tn We: wanna . MCLAUGH mix 1 utn nnrfls9r‘vï¬ \gdi" T x HOMAS Sn «f? 6m Csssa m_ f I". ï¬ï¬‚kfl i4 '~1 "E 9.9; 13%.? mkmï¬ p l’} t ’ ..... I have a large 3120; 1 meat on First 3on;gai Terms to suit borrows: OCTOBER 19m P. D. [DORE DENTIST, TEWART S; O’CONNOE‘ . NEELANDS .. A. E. VROOMANâ€"Oï¬}: . G S. RYERSON, _. JEFFERS. SURGEO) . A. GILLESPIE, CA. AS WHITE, GRADUATEO? P. DEVLIN, BARR H. HOPKINS. gummy garristcrs. «Stu. . WALTER? ï¬llysicians eta Solu' {.631 f OFFICEâ€"94 Kent smut amtioncrrs to!“ Ont. . unwise . Ofï¬ce h 3133. 9. {0'09 Um“. ycon'on. M \ RISTE Aucï¬opefl A ICDIAE'3 lone! 3' wu A: JACKâ€! 3" iTI MEL Ave WDEi 'va IL OI"