Iflh‘ WEBB!“ l’nï¬ï¬ï¬‚lflm IVIIY “’80..th momma fl â€'5 III“!!! "I'M â€I. m "P M 1:03 Cunomcu will N l to an) Mn». fxceofpmu‘eJu I.00pe “In 0 o 9 o â€anpayabhm “VAMO'..or but) 2 h chat.“ " It)! so punk. Hie dateto whic vcr. nab-£69030!) 5 aid is denoted Mr [ho number on It: .11;er ï¬ght]. 0 PJPQY m g :.v. :meJ mm! alluscu .0 pad. 01609! at the own!) of the pruynclor. THE JOB. ° 2 DEPARTWEVT The Qhromole Contams Each week an epitome 0: » world's news, articles on t household and farm, 8' ‘ serials by the most papa 7m '0'"? Tu In no: Won. " Monsoon " Ten I: packed under thomkioi "I‘d dthe To: grvwrx‘s. .u‘. i: advertised and as a cam led the hast qmï¬tte! of Indian Ind cyloi Tue. or that mason they see that non. but N my fresh leaves go into Monsoon packages. ’ That I: why " Womqoq.’ the perfect 1'». can“ I 'd a! the same pruc as tuft-nut (ca. U9. ’h in t up in acz‘ r! rnddics of 54 1b., 3 lb. an) . lot . a sold in three mm.“ at 40c., .00. and and If vour grocv dms not keep a. tell Mano writ} -_o STEEL. HA TED t C0., "“613?th towing beam“ cosh. BRISTING AND SHOPPING D03 FLOUR,0ATMEAL and FEED THE SAWMILL fczfllx. 01.20rlfl Pl 0 r r #1 w Lflvu on 30.5. 2.. O. 2 _. anmczzum. FROM m rru nag-mi: rum Anyone man. a nac'h'a'nd down ption any ‘iclly met-Mn. free. whom" an invertim: 1. nobably Mable. (‘ommzmicativm strictly tandem ("dost annoy I‘vrsrc'm’nu: 1.2;! 9m. ‘ . \Va\.~h‘.::,ztgn ofï¬ce. vvvv â€"P:t';m. Talon tbl mum! notice In tho “Hull Illustrated. lumen arcnfvmon o; v pc'mnt ï¬e ‘ournal. WO?kY?.INMR :3." ' a'. r.‘ “at nx no» Pu. ï¬rflï¬unfi e1. pic. and 1'.) ‘ ~ I 0:: PATENT? am itâ€. Adar-cu We ar now prepared to do all k3 of custom work. MILLS on short-n notico and “Munich guaranteed. \ .. cor into my heart and let me die at 1““ mï¬mwl‘: 2:03“? once. You can not retnee.†One m other’a heart. I g Y trembling hand she laid on Me breut, She remembered how she had hid her} I . . unyhthiemwhnoutter .. . and mth the other careeeed hle hoganâ€, my. bluhtng hoe on he; . ‘ You are good and gentle. 0! heart, breut. nd uked' him if he was quite Kidney Pdhoothomerkdâ€"eo-e eithe- inlet; the prayere at your dymc mother euro he loved her better a“. Plume . I 9‘0 northern, the banality. bunt“!!! tandem-doub- e Lee! are on . . . Mire... mumb- . Mum‘s; {an mt): you, and I mll rent «1me in “Yea. my 9"“! little .weetheart, . â€co “m", o! â€a“ :d . edh thomod times better.†N h“ 1" “'“ “'1'" “m M °° _9$“t°.‘"'_“‘“ _ 2’4““? plied. mph-many. noun-c her of! at _ - _ A -n C (A-.. .A-A“ ‘--‘.-n- , g A I Ens-r SMEQTIHB mm HEM! TH! Tu â€ng To not 'rtA cu! DURHA M IS PUILIS‘ID R AND hmlmmmn. IRWIN. â€UP-3N 3 ask an epitome of the news, articles on the Id and farm, and by the most papular "‘.- ."..0U, TEA to: u infeï¬ot tea. completely ntocbod WW N: .V T‘ 'PE-i, than a "um: out FJSPCIB' my willingnela to on whatever they may can do to comfort you it, motbo r." it, mower. ' â€Heaven blcu you. {ecbly caressing his hands. “You make dent (old more easy to bear, only son 2" "My dear 811', in; over bun 38 Re: l" .110 cried, face and his I: a thousand- my darling. " sand the doctor, bend- mly, "I must. remind you your mother’s life hangs on a thmud. The least excitement, the least agitation, and she Will be dead before you can call for help. No mater what she may say to you, lia- len and acvcde." Rex bent down and kissed the pale agitated face on the pillow. ; "I will be careful of my dearcai another. Surely you may trust me,’ â€I do," replied the doctor, gravely. â€Your mbthcr’s life, (or the present, lies in your hands.†“Is it true. Rex, that I must die 3†she gasped. The look of anguish on his face answered her. red, clinging like a child to his hands, “my hapc and I am whispc strong white â€"-_ v trust are in you, my oniy son. 1 am going to put your love to the test, my boy. I beseech you w’say ‘Yea’ to the has: request 1 shall evu‘ make of you. Heaven knows, tax, I would not men- tion it now, but I am dying â€" yea, dying. Rex.†‘A _~.-LLA- 3’ ha 'fYou need not do replied, earnestly. anything you may 1"†But, as he spoke, he had not the faintest idea of what he would be asked to do. As he spoke his eyes caught the gleam oi the moonlight through the window, and his thoughts traveled (or one moment to the be- loved face he had seen in the moonlight â€"-how fair and innocent the face was as they parted on the night they were wedl The picture of that lonely "nnnu' alrl-Wlle. ROng home by her- -â€"-how fair and mnocent the face was as they parted on the night they were wedl 'l‘ne plcture of that lonely young girl-“1119., going home by her- self. brought tears to has eyes. "Wu there ever a late so cruel I" he said to himself. â€Who ever lost a wife on his Wedding-day I†"--v V‘â€" Surely there had never been alon- dream so sweet, so passionate or so bright as has. Surely there had never been one so rudely broken. Poor little Daisiâ€"his wife -â€" lying cold and still in death. Even his mother was to be taken from him. The feeble pxessure 0! his mother’s bands reculh d ms \\ andcring thoughts, â€Listen, Rex," she whispered, taint- ly, ‘my mum nts are precious.†He felt his mOLhcra arms clasp ‘closely xound his neck. "00 on, mother,†he said, gently. "ch, m) sun, ’she whlspewd, gasp- ingly,‘ ‘1 cuulu not die and leave the words unspoken. I want my race to live long generations after me. Your poor little lame sister will go nnmar 1 tied to the grave; and now all resta‘ with you, my only son. You under- stand me. Rex; you know the last re- qnoat l have to ask.†For the ï¬rst. time a cry came to tie“ lips; her words pierced like a Guard in ï¬le bean. "Surely, 'muthcr, you do not meanâ€" ' you do not think 1 could ever-†The very honor of thc thought mom. ed to completesy uuman him. "You will marry again,†she inter- rupted, ï¬nishing the sentence he could not. utter. “Remember, 5110 whom you loved is dead. 1 would not have ‘ asked 01': (or long years to come, but I am dyingâ€"l must speak now.†‘ "My God, mother I" be cned out in agony, “ask anything but that. My heart is torn and bleeding; have pity on me, have pity 1’ Great drops of agony started on his! bxow ; his whole frame shook with we had spoken. Marry again i Heaven pity him 1 How‘ could he, harbor such a thought (or. a single inetant, when he thought 01‘‘ the pale. cold race or little Daisy - his! fair young brideâ€"whom he I0 madly‘ loved, lying pale and still in death, like a broken lily, down in the dark, bot- tomleee pit which never yielded up ite terrible secrete! “Rex.†wailed his mother, teebly, gazing into his eyes with a enepenee heart-breaking to witneee, "don’t re. (use me this the tiret prayer I had \ever made. It you mean to refuse it would he kinder tar to plunge a dag- brow, and the blood conned thtongh Mania-lit} momentum. Bo mm the ‘ arm’s-lamb. †said the doctor, bend- gcntly, ‘I must remind hers lite hangs on a least excitement, the u, and tube will be dead to call for help. No she may say to you, lie- I, not doubt. it, mother,†he cstly. "I can not refuse I may ask! “71);! should not the 'le 0‘ â€031$, breut, ‘M ukwnlm '11 em Wu quetv tweet l,“ mather pure he loved her better than Plums m me, my eon; Burm.nt, the haughty. beautitnl' An; Lee ehall not bar Incite“. treat "Yea. my pretty little nweetheart, 3 Chan thousand time better.†he had re- at “ plied. enphatieelly, holdihg her of! at “a era’s-uncut, watching the heightened 3:21! 'elt celmly in nod his pellid reed throuzh n- In- f . The iook of terror on her face seem- ed to force the and words from his? lips, the magnetic gaze seemed to hold him spellbound. Be bent over his mother and laid his trash, brave young face on the cold, white (ace 0! his dying mother. "Promzsc me, Rex," she whispered. ‘ “I pmmse, mothcrI‘ be cr.’ed. "God help me; it it will make your last {moments happler, l consent.†v â€" wwâ€" u‘ uvâ€"v .., “Heaven bless you, my noble son !†whispered the quivering voice. “You have taken the bitter sting from death, and filled my heart with gratitude. Some day you will thank me for it, Re 3." bi â€l have no heart to give her,†he' said, brokenly. “My heart in with Daisy, my sweet little lost love.†Poor Rex! how little he knew Daisy‘ was at that self-same moment watch- ing with beating heart the faint light of his window through the branches of the treesâ€"Daisy, whom he mourned as dead, alasl deadr to him forever, shut out from his; life by the tech words of that fatally cruel promise. CHAPTER XXI. One thought only was uppermost in Duisy’s mind as she sped swiftly down still so dear to her. “He did not recOgmze me," ahc‘ panted, in a little quivering voice. "‘Would he have cursed me, I wonder, had be known it was 13†Down went the little figure on her knees in the dew-apangled grass with a sharp little cry. 56b, dear, Mm shall 1 do 1" she cried out in sudden fright. "How could I know she was his sis- ter when I told her my name I".A twig fell from the bongh: above her head brushed by some night-bird’s wing. “He is coming to search for me,†she whispered to herself. A tremor ran over her frame; the color flashed into her cheek and part- ed lips, and a startled, wxstful bright- ness crept into the blue eyes. Ahl tilere never could have been a love so sweetly truattul and child-like as little Daxay'a for handsome Rex, her nuaband in name only. Poor, little, innocent Daisy! it she had walked straight back to him, cry- ing out, â€Rex, Rex, ace, 1 am Daisy, your wife 1†how muck» sorrow might have been spared her. bud Poor, little, lonely, heart-broken: child-bride 1 how was she to know Rex! had bitterly repented and come back‘ to claim her, alas! too late; and how he mourned her, refusing to be com- forted, and how they forced him back from the edge of the treacherous shaft lest he should plunge headlong down the terrible depths. Oh, it she had but Eknown all this! If Rex had dropped down from the clouds she could not have been more startled and amazed at finding him in such close proximity away down in Florida. - A_ She remembered he had spoken to; her of his mother, as he clasped her to? his heart out in the starlight of that nerer-to-be- forgotten night, whispering to her of the marriage which had been the dearest wish of his mother’a heart. : She remembered how she had hid her lhappy, my, blushing lace on his lbrout, and ukedhim 'it he was quite '7‘; dimplod lace no plainly discernible in tho whlto, radihnt “alight. Daily mto'd her head on one colt, chilch hand; tad sued thoughtfully Up at the cold, brllliant star: thnt scanned the heaven- abovo her. _.- ISL "Oh, it you had only warned me, lit- tle stars Iâ€. she aid. “1 wu’ no happy then; and now life in no bitter!" ' A sudden impulse seized her, strong3 an her very life, to look upon bio face again. "1 would be content to live my weary lite uncompltiningly then.†she «said. “Without intent or purpose ahe walk- ed hurriedly back through the pansy- bordered path she had so lately tra- versed. The grand old trees seemed to stretch their giant arms protectingly over her, as it to ward off all harm. The night-wind tanned her flushed cheeks and tossed her golden curls against her wastful, tear-stained face. Noiselessly she crept up the wide, graveled path that led to his homeâ€" the home which should have been hers. Was it fancy 1 She thought she heard Rex’a voice crying out: "Daisy, my darling l†Bow pitifully her heart thrilled! Dear Heaven! if it had only been true. It was only the restless muzmur of the waves nighing among the orange-trees. A light burned dimly in an upper window. Suddenly a shadow fell across the pale, silken curtains. She knew but too well whose shadow it was; the proud, graceful poise of the handsome head, and the line of the; dark curls waving over the broad brow, could belong to no one but Rex. There was no one but the pitying ‘moonlight out there to see how pass- iit from the stem and placed it close ito her beating heartâ€"that lonely, starved little heart, chilled under the iwithering, frost of neglect, when life, llove and happiness should have been |{just bursting into bloom. for her. .. - , u 1.- . __...:I,..| id- lifo †aha "He said I had spoiled his life,†she‘ sighed, leaning her pale face wearily against the dark-green ivy vines. "He must have meant I had come between him and Pluma. Will he go back to her, now that he believes me dead 7†One qucsï¬on alone puzzled her: Had ;Birdie mcntioned her name, and would he, know it was. she, whom every one believed lyxng so cold and still in the bottomless pit 3 She could not tell. "It 1 «mid but see Birdie tor mument," she thought, "and bescl her to keep my secret I" Birdie had said her brother was soon going away agam. U "u'ow ebulé I bear it!" she asked herself, piteously. It was not in: human nature to see the young husband whom she loved so well drifting so completely away from her and still remain silent. “I Will watch over him from afar; I will be his guardian angel ; I must remain as one dead to him forever,†she told 1heme“. Afar oft, over the dancing, moon- lightad waters she saw a pleasure-bout glul ng swiftly ovor the rippling waves. she could hear their merry laughter and gay, happy voices, and snatches of mirthful songs. Suddenly the bum! struck up an old, familiar strain. Poor Daisy leaned her head against the hon railing of the porch and lia- , toned to those cruel words â€" the piece lthut. they played was “Love’s Young lDream.†Al, I L---- U16. mo Love’s young dream! Ah! how cruelly hers had ended l She looked up. at the white, fleecy clouds above her,'; vaguely wondering why the love of one! person made the earth a very paradise,l or a wilderness. As the gay, joyous music floated up to her the words of; the poet found echo in her heart in a; passionate appeal: l “No one could tell, for nobody knew, ‘ ' Why love was made to gladden a few ;‘ And hearts that would forever be true,‘ Go lone and starved the whole way; th rough.†Oh, it was such a blessed relief to her to watch that shadow. Rex was pacing up and down the room now, his arms folded and his head bent on his breast. Poor, patient little Daisy, ' watching alone out in the starlight, 'l was wondering if he was thinking of T0 PERSONS 0F LOW VITALITY----LO0AL AND GENERAL TREATMENT PRESCRIBED BY DR. CHASE. \Vith the very young nnd with (persons of lo dangers of la gripp’: a] Pneumonia of :1 Vicki! *~â€"-‘- ï¬ne] "Ill-ll Lu-w-_.__-_ _ _ Any honest and conscientious doo- bot will tell you that this combined treatmnt recommended by Dr. Chane cannot be amused as a means at relieving and curing In (time, and restoring tbs weakenogl and debilitateg body to its uacytomed vi- __.I To be Continued. walk- 51“ La Grippe. :er An Incident Io .u'an â€out“ “on Io Ila n wad-l light. “Looking one usht." cold the retired burglar, “from a dork hell into a dim- ly lighted room, Whose door was unju- I new in bed a women: and a child asleep. I‘m no judge of children‘a Ian and never was. but I should say tron» what I could see of that child’s itaoe and of ite form under the bed. clothes that 1t was 2 years old, maybe 8. It was 8108(3ng on the side of the had toward the front. "â€"- v “Asleep on the floor in front of the] bed on a snug little mattreu was an- other child ot about the same age as the one an bed or thereabouta, brought in there temporarily apparently for aome reason or other that I didn’t try to figure out. that being no part of my business ; but thls one on the floor was so placed because there wasn’t for both children In the bed. "As I stood there looking at them the child in the bed began to get rest- less, and inaminute it rolled out or twisted itself out somehow from under the bedclothesâ€"this waf'm summer, and the covering over it wasn’t heavyâ€" and rolled square up to the edge of the bed. It lay still there [or amin- ute and then rolled back a little, and I felt easier; but the next minute it rolled forward again clean. to the edge, and rolled over it a little farther and. hung there on. the edge a minute and than over it went. “And i thought sure it c was going to ram slam onto the t. and just knovk the breath out of ‘ that one, but it didn’t do either, it tell I on the mattress alongside of that one and never woke that one up and never I woke up itself. Well, I thought that t beat everuthing I ever saw in the ' way of folks falling- out of bed; but there was more to come. , "The'one that fell out kept right on sleeping, and it was very still for a minute or so, and then it begun to get restless again and rolled over on the mattress and edged the child on the mattress clean off onto the tloor, but 'even then that one didn’t wake up either; it kept right on sleeping, too om the floor, and the one that had {alien out of bed and edged this one : off the mattress now stretched out on :the mattress perfectly easy and set- ' tied into a quiet, gentle sleep. ' “But before this the mother had . woke upâ€"I don‘t know how she’d miss- ' ed the one in bed, but she had somehow â€"and she turned Up the light a little l and surveyed that scene on the floor! and understood it right away. Andi 3 she didn’t disturb the one that had 1 fallen. out, that was now sleeping l' peacefully on the soft mattress, but 1 she picked up the one that had been ' rolled off onto the hard floor and put " that one in the bed. So now the d childrenI had just changed places, and 'n a minute or two they were all set- 1 l- .t tied down again, peaceful and quiet as 8. before. W-v- '- “1 never was troubled with insomnia much mqulf, but wheneve; I do have a waketul night I always think of those blessed children, that could go to bed and go to sleep- and roll out of bed without ever wakmg up. TB! BBTIRID IUIOLAB. Mchggerâ€"Ot course. Noah must have taken bees with him. Thingumbobâ€"Oh, certainly. Mchggerâ€"Just think how they must have stung the animals. yhilo they flew about. - -0 I ._‘_-L I suppose I will have 'to give a good deal of sludy to my new surroundings, said the man who had just assumed his officxal duties. Of course, answered the political 'Thingumbobâ€"Oh. I guess Noah kept them shut up in the archives. “'hat is U to learn! Obedience. as a restorative and reconstructunt to hasten recovery from In grippe. end to prevent aerimu constitutional com- plications. Mr. W. H. La Blanoe. Bootield. 0nt., writes; “I was once a sufferer from caturrh. and while using Dr. Chase’s Cuturrh Cure I was recommended to use _nllo 'vvâ€"Vâ€" ETC-£11337: Nerveâ€"Food to build up the system I have found it ï¬re but preparation_ for strengthening the Ré'y"'ti£{ 115'â€; “sea. My Ben» were exhausted and I was too wank EARLY ADVICE. the first thing I will have L room System or posturing sheep by electrici- ’ t1. and experiments are being made K with it at the agricultural experiment I m CURE. “0 station of Michigan at Lansing. In re- l cent years nearly every town of any i size has been provided with an electric '. generating plant. and frequently u†wires are strung along country road! from town to town. This fact led Mr. , McNair to attempt the use of electrici- ' t,v on the (arm. For sheep feeding he ‘ devised a curious pen some 15 feet 1 square. built or wire and mounted on ; ‘ broad. flat wheels. This pen is design- ? i ‘ ed to run in any pasture. even though i it be hilly. Wires connect it with a; small motor stationed at one side of ' K the pasture. this in turn being connect- I ed with the electric wires from which ‘ power is derived. A turn of a button. and the pen slowly creeps across the‘ ï¬eld. This is the essence of the inven- tion. most. obstinate cool. and world for a use we act-DC 1 our tn FEEDING BY ELECTRICITY. Two lambs and part of the time an 1 old ewe have been pastured in the pen 3 during the summer at the station at?I Lansing. The iield is planted with lu- i eern. growing thick and heavy. The l pen is so arranged that it crawls the full length of the pasture in one month. ‘ K traveling about two feet an hour. At i the end of this time it is switched- around and travels back again. As it moves the sheep eat every bit of the i fodder. eagerly cropping next the for. ward side of the pen as it runs over ’ new ground. A bit of eanvas duck ll ! melanin an. EMISSIO tor .80“ “1 etc. m the can... 0 â€Wm ant-outbuildin- graham“? mun-luv -w 7 M And rotten all parts to a non-unlea- tlon. Ambition. life and one on noted. and no tools hint-o n I uno men. vary out in unaudi- :h'lnlnly-no oï¬roollâ€"g'ueo ordain: a success. 0 not who consult ||I conï¬dant-117. W. «I I bank bonds to â€to“ chin. hung over one corner of the pen so that i M‘gï¬ï¬‚gqg . Sana the sheep may be well sheltered. and. A'l‘i‘ltAh wk curious as it may seem. they have be- K i ï¬naï¬gg‘agh‘gn â€a come so accustomed to the moving 0! , unable to £1? FEE BLANK 0 the pen that when they lie down to sleep they snuggle up close to the for- ward end of the pen so that they may lie as long as possible without being KENNEDY‘ Km ' disturbed by the rear end of the pen as K (in. Michigan An. «a nun it creeps toward them. - .n I ,_-..._ . ___--I- “In“ When the pen has passed. the lucern that has been cropped by the sheep grows up again. and by the ttme the _ ‘-‘L ‘L‘ bbv vv u: “r w- -- pen has made its monthly circuit the pasture is again in good condition. The advantages of this electrical pen are that the sheeptare kept from running over. half eating and trampling down a large amount of pasture. and it keeps A_I_- -- the 311921) quiet. 30 that they take on flesh rapidly. The Flockmaster’s Inning. The only thing to do for the insatia- ble American taste for mutton is to “take something for it.†a lamb chop or a leg 0’ mutton, says The Breeder's Gazette. Comment has been recently made on the capital demand at this market for sheep and lambs. inquiry outstripping the supply and absorbing the enormous receipts with scarcely a ripple in the market. From Kansas City comes a complaint that packers are unable to get suflicient supplies of (at sheep to keep their killing plants in operation to full capacity. 80 keen has been the demand for mutton that pack- ers have been obliged to enter into competition with feeders for the range bred sheep that should by rights go in- to feed lots rather than to the sham- bles. Now that the run from the range ‘ is largely over. dependence must be iplaced on the supplies from the feed i lots. and it does not seem that the do» i mand at that market is likely to be 1 met. All this comes from the increase ~ 1 in the appetite of our peeple for mut- ‘ ton. Packers at Kansas City have planned to increase their output of ; mutton it they can obtain the raw ma- -- ' na‘ fa“ “lUllUU u tut; sâ€"u -___ terial. Observe the situation: Last fall so many sheep were going on feed that conservative heads feared for the tn- tnre ot the industry. The enormous numbers that came from the feed lot: during the winter and spring were lick- â€" ‘_A an- “Us In. .uv vv ed up at satisfactory prices. and now killers are competing with feedenl {or sheep. This certainly argues the ex- pansion and the permanency of the in- dustry. It is merely the taste of im- proved mutton that has wrought this revolution. The public knows a good thing when it tastes it. The industry is capable of considerable extension â€"â€" l 1“)- ner. Geflilc Over Wit. Fences. A wire fence is an ugly afl‘air to cross either by climbing over or crawling un- mu Iron W!" mos Agricnitnrist shows a heady arrange- ment where one must cross a wire fence occasionally and does not wish to lose the tension on the wires by cutting a gateway. This donhie atepiadder can he put together in I few moments and will prove a very convenient nfl‘nir. Itnok II". Feed stack hay before that stored in the barn to avoid lose. While the hay will dry out nearly as much in one piece In in nnother. there is n fer greet- er lose in teedlng value in that put up in stack. due to spoiling on top by the weather and on the bottom by damp. new from the ground. The Colorado experiment station found the ion to be 12.4 per cent in feeding nine in stack- ed hny and but 2.5 per cent in thet stored in horns. I difference of to per cent. Thus nine tone of h 2 at in the barn will feed us much 3 u 10 DO YOU FEEL TIRED IN THE MORNING noes Sleep not bring vidut ly-no «roan-hence our woodc- (ul success. No mm wbnt silo you. consult an conï¬donudly. W. on hr nub bunk bong-yo gun-mum.- Iiiburn'l Heart and New is almost certain to cum Graham. 3 we -koowu 1 Barrie, Ont, uyl:-â€"-“ I H deal of trouble with .1 yearn. I was easily-1‘“ “ “-IL‘-d- terribly new Nerve Pills bane done V“ tcm stron 'und vigorous; Milbum 3 Heart and NI 1 box or 3 for has n all mail. The T. Milkm- ‘ \‘lito. Ont. 6o? Ilcllm m. and sum 8:. DETROIT. I ICH. «(5.5 kw bi- ï¬fe. m "‘1 Enact of Wild Strum ’ There lino others-d7†â€I“ ‘ive to chfldm C04 0°“ '9 ï¬rewal- -. m, _ _ ¢_.:.L M Lnlm. M