_ ' . _,.' __ _,',W , w?) . . G- f' w s-." Cd A t4! I. If any [when orders " ppo: “not “and, In tttttgt [by all may", or the â€nut" may coming. " send ft until pu- 'lt'.tt Ittt nnd 'ell',,",'.'?,,', whole Inc-m Lb. or " 6 taken you the othee or not. not!" " be when “a. the othtte ox not Than on be no legal incontinence anti pnvnontinmudo. I. An, pox-son who tutu I "" tron Ibo put nice, whothu (“119th to hit “In or moth". or whothar he bu sub with“ " not in rayon-11910 for the pay. I. " I Inherit" orders bin "per to be tge, n a "rtaintirmr, and thopublisheé an no: to and. the sub-crib" u boum 'tt " t"; it if he “has it out oltho pom $0. " proceeds upon he groan. Ut' I In“ must '" for in“: In mu. Ohio East as it Chen or m1? Evin; ll BUSINESS DIRECTORY. First-Class Hearse. NOTAB‘ -tJg"ar,c'orom1_'rreteo MONEY TO LOAN. J. P. TELFORD 511mm summon jlf 3mm ih, W: Loan and Insurance Agent, Con- veyancer. Commissio or ate. Donn arranged without dost, Collection promptly made, [manna onset“. - To LOAN rtlowon rutuoflntorm mail on. door north of B. Icon Store Durham bNDEBTAKING Promptly tstundrd to. JAKE REESE. LICENSED AUCTIONEEB, for th Count of ager. am. attended to â€on. we] at Insoluble inâ€. -_ ___L__ ' LICENSED AUO'HONEEB for 00.; of Buy. All communications aild aresud to Lulu“ P. 0. will be momma attended to. Boeidqnoe Iiot19, Con. Township of 1Untine1n DAN. MOLEAN‘ W. L. MCKENZIE, Horse Shoeing Shop, Hand-made Waggons In the old stand. All hand- made shoes. Also Fire Insurance secured. OIIIOI. ovgn gqgv'ggtorln H"'" Totem 'BSUER of Marriage Licensee. Je, . tioueer for Counties of Bruce we! 0y. Turi/une.---) tu., Remove}. sisirt4iios JAMES LOCKIE, Bu opened out a tirst-o1tum Lowl- Miller, president of the Intu- natimtal mum: of Sunday school Wogkeu, is the father-in-law o! Theo. Furniture still tobe {and in Mi Old Sand opyuiu the Dalian showy. HUGH McKAY. MISCELLANEOUS. quhing of ill kinds promptly ALLAN mama, a 23mm! omen. rm WOODWORK In connection. A flrat-olass lot of (an mum's Srort Lt DURHAM. for sale cheap. LEGAL KRESS Mm Jam A, alum“; r. 03.: hole-a inn li' MCFARLANE moo Durham on DAN. MOLE“. There are so many little essentials about the curing of meats that we of- ten hesitate about giving any recipe un- less it has been tried and found relia- ble. We cannot say this for the fol- lowing, taken from a foreign exchange. but we give it for what it is worth: Wittireterence to cutting up and sell- ing great care must be taken in cutting the hams, as shapely hams always com- l mend a. better price than those badlyi cut. The quantities of various condi- , merits to the 100 pounds of meat are as i' follows: Two ounces of saltpetre well , powdered, three pounds salt, two pounds i, black or dark brown sugar; one pound '; allspice, one ounce carbonate soda; mix I well together. Rub the meat first1 with one pound of honey to the 100, pounds. Then rub with the mixture, us- i ing about two-thirds of the preparation l Then place it in a tab or vat with the fleshy side'up. The vat or tub should f be placed in a cool place, with plenty ' of fresh air. In twenty-four hours turn and rub again, adding a little more of the unused mixture, after which turn and rub once every torty-eight, h'ours for six times, using some of the mixture each time. It should be pack- ed closely in the vat, so as to raise the brine as high as possible. Always keep the hands and hams at the bot- ‘ m of the vat. After remaining in pickle tar twenty-one days, take out and scrub with a, scrubbing brush, us- ing hot water. After thoroughly clean- ing, soak in cold water for ten hours; then hang up in a dry place (not in ‘the cellar) where there is a 'good (draught. If flies are troublesome it is advisable to stop up any cracks or crevices with lard, then dust the hams over with a little Pollard, which will stick to the oily substance and form an artificial skin. After hanging from fourteen to sixteen days they should be ready for the smoke-house. The wall of the house should be twelve feet high, The smoke should be conducted \to the bacon as cool as possible. My smoke-house is thirteen feet high and ten feet square. I hang the ham and bacon close to the top, in rows about six inches apart. it usually takes about ten days to smoke properly, mak- omg a smoke every other day. After leaving the ymoirer-hoyg,se it is Kelli? mums my My.“ mm.“ -- w ___ go over the ham and hands with lard i.in4.po.llar.d, and stop up any place that ls likely to be attacked with flies. It " a good plan to place the bums and hands in muslin ba , taking care to lie them lightly at ti: top. Hung them In a “up page: I hang ‘my yagm; iii ii i'iiii"inrTjrGe -is"trirTg of 8x3 timber fiped to_the ceiling with 1.10??? screwed into them, and csusgend the bacon there until the wen her gets warm; then pack it away in bran and sawdust, which must _be dry, It should be taken out every six weeks and ex- amined,'and if found to be getting mil- dewed or to be sweating. it should be rubbed dry with a cloth; then add , little chaff to the sawdust or bran. If you use bran be sure that It is free of mite. If possible. keep the barns and bacon in an even temperature. Too much heat will cause the tat to melt and turn rusty, and if too damp it will sweat and decay. By curing and treat- ing your bacon by this process you will have an article that will always com- mand a. good price, and will keep for many years. The fat remains sweet, and the lean soft and savory. This treat- ment is based on a pig weighing goo pounds. A smaller one does not require to be kegt in pickle or smoke-house so long. A eavier pig would require to be kept longer. The longer you use the brine the better it is. It may require boiling occasionally, 9RhCI1CkI. FARMING. SOLD THE FARM: Our father has sold the farm, The hill and the flowery mead; The green where the chickens used to feed, And the barn where they nestled warm. The chambers resound at morn, But not to our father's voice; Another goes with his gleesomo boys, To mould the rustling corn--. Our father has sold the farm. The money is counted and paid, The deed is witnessed and sealed; And everything in each beautiful field, _ The wealth of another is made, The room where the children were born, Where Mary and Benjamin died, The roses and flowery borders that sighed. When the hearts that loved them were gone. Our father has sold his farm. Ol why did our father sell! Because on a beautiful day, The soul of our mother was carried away, l In the home of the angels to dwell. But Ol there are memories still, That sigh in the wings of the breeze; That glide o'er the garden and flit by the trees And rest on the brow of the hill. Our father has sold his farm. If the former has a peer in any walk of life he has only himself to blame. The farm should and could be so cub. tivated. managed and improved, and made so pleasant for the sons and daughters that they would be loath to leave it to follow other pursuits. There is no life which may be more happily spent than that passed in an intelligent farming community; none reflects more brightly the industry and intelligence of the operator. border that this may be done an established and contented disposition should be cultivated. The same amount of energy expended upon the management of. our farms and homes that is spent in'changing loca- tions and other unprofitable pursuits, the energy, thrift, economy in the right direction and liberality in feeding the mind would make our farm: blossom like the rose and be "rhings of beauty and joys foreverff Make gimprove- manta with' a View to permanency. Cultivate the soil with a View toward preserving its fertility. A' good subject never. gets old and too mush cannot be said ebout U'tvTPa' the fertility of the goil. T e (1me admonition of an old Benton tumor o thier son 'wns not to go in debt for anything but man. are. "Save the manure." should be written-in gimme letters over every barn door and Set on the farm, and the admaiition wild be heeded to its fullest. Extent. ~Orops should not be _ cultivate with the single desire for an (immediate ' return. The purpose of MAKE THE FARM ATTRACTIVE. CURING BACON. an increased fertility would, and will. be kept in the minds of all true farm- ers. Without this only mediocre suc- cess can be expected; without plus the tamer will want a new location, bat with it..he will not. Rotation_apd a variety of crops no _ .. . ___ 'r.. w,.,rrrhhfyr Seven lunch-ed Thouuld Mutual-um! will Modern Weapons and wen “ruled. The military forces of Turkey may be said to consist exclusively of Turks proper as nomad Kurds and nomad Arabs, although liable to serve, are not recruited, and Christians are allow- ed to pay an exemption tax. All Mus- sulmans come under the recruiting law at 20 years of age and remain in the service until 40. Of the twenty years (six are passed in the Nizam, or regu- lar army, eight in the Redif, or Land- wehr, and six in the Mustanfuz, or Iyandsturm. About 140,000 Moslems be- come liable to serve yearly, and of these some 50,000 pass into the Nizam and serve their four years with the colors and then remain on the reserve until the time comes for them to pass to the Redif. a great help in this way. My 11813an raised this year forty acres of cantor beans, the field being eighteen bushels per acre, and the net Pitt was 81.10 per bushel. It is one o the best crops fortho land that can be raisedthereop. The beans, which are planted and cpl- tivated like corn, are harvested with light but. constant. work at a an?" ex- pense. More of the residue of this crop IS left upon the land where it is grown than is the case with any other crop, and what is left is very beneficial. Stock peas are also a oaJunble crop to us 'Egyptians)," not so much on account of the cash value, which is not large, but for their universal feeding and fer- tilizing qualities. When planted early acrop of feed anda fair crop of green manure may be obtained; both of these crops endure drought and are bug proof. The total strength of the combatant forces of the Turkish empire is upward of 700,000 men. In 1887 Turkey obtain- ed a supply of large-bore magazine rifles, but these are now being convert- ed into small calibre, so as to take the 1 Hanna ammunition as the srnrrllrbt.srei (.3012 in.) Mauser rifles of the yeWier {Minn which were introduced in 1890. 'his latter, which is the arm of tte regular infantry, carries five rounds m the magazine, and fires a hard lend bullet, coated with cu ro-nickel, with a muzzle velocity of £139 feet per (wound. The rifle is sighted up to 2,000 metres (2,187 yards.) The artillery, which has been reor- ganized recently, is armed with nearly A00 guns, about 900 of which are new f?/,tfe Krupgés. the rest being older ruppe and 'hitworlh guns. That the men are available and that they would be well armed is certain. It is, doubtful if sufficient horses lit for ace tive service could be an lied to meet the requirements pt two iiiindred ttval: 1y squadrons, and nearly as great. a. number for horse and field batteries. Another difficulty is the lack of com- munications, and it is reliable that, owing to the want, of sufficient rolling stock on the railways, especially in the Amntic provinces, a large force could not be concentrated in any distant pay, of the empire toy many months. . B""" V. my yup-†-'-'- --. -__""- . The army is organized on the terri- toriul system, and the Ottoman empire is divided into six great military dbe trictu. Western and ssoytttny.irrttrp Arabia comprise-g aseventh distrigt, but its recruits are drawn from dis- tricte in Turkey. The f,tp1'.'d')r, of Crete and Trl ali are 1130 recruited from Turkey. $3011 of the six distrit.tts cummins an army of corps of two m- fantry divisions, a cavalry division, and c" her troops belonging to the Nizam. The Red†is also organized in twenty- two divisions, spread over the six dis- tricta. . A .- - _ It would appear, therefore, that, not- withstanding certain drawbacks in the way of a rapid mobilization of a.†the Ioroers of the empire, a powerful and well-organized army is at the back of the Sultan, and when the stand the Turks made for hours at the battle of Twwin during the campaign in Armen- ia in 1877 is remnant ered, it cannot be doubted that, in a struggle for the in- tegrity and independence of their country they would exhibit a military spirit and endurance not easily over- come. About The" Dress and theatetrttt at “’11ch The] Way Safely Work. . The dress of a fully equipped diver weighs li1)1-2 llr., and costs about 8500, First. of all comes 81-2 lb. of thick un- derclothing, then ‘fullows the dress it- self, weighing 14 ils.; boots, 82 lh.; mom strous things with leaden soles; breast and back weights, 80 Ilo.; and, lastly. the helmet, which weighs 35 lb. When the hull of the Great Eastern was cleaned by divers as she was being load- ed with the cable for the India sub- marine telegraph the contract. price tor the work was SI,800, and it was_c0m- pleted in six weeks "t twelve divers. The incrustation on er bottom was more than a, foot thick, and af.ter, it was removed she lifted fullytwo inches. The greatest depth at which a diver may safely work is 150 feet. There have been, however, rare instances of diving to 204 feet, and sustaining a. pressure of 881-2 ll). on every “Ru?†inch on the body of the diver. Diving was first incepted by the action of the elephant, in crossing a deep river, when lu.' swims beneath the water, elevating hm trunk, by which method he breathes. The pork bt a diver consists in re- covering lost articles, and slinging them 1n such a manner that they can be egal- Ivhauled up, cleaning and coppertng 511:5. bottoms, cleaning prczlpellers. an communicating by slate an voice. When able tc? work at a depth of 120 feet a diver 18 considered fully quali- fied. The flag ships in the British _ navy carry eight divers, and the cruise ers four each, tally equipped. King Otto of Bavaria is incurably mad, being afflicted with that form of insanity called "mathesis," and which, like that ascribed in Biblical history to Nebuchadnezzar, takes the form of the victim imagining himself to be either a bird or an animal. Other royal luna- ties are the Archducheas Maximillian' of Austria, better known as the ex- Empreas I?lsary,rtte,. of Mexico; Emperor William's 'pother-in-law, the Dowager Duchess of trhitrkthttgih)h"i',ii: tenburg. and Archduke Leopold of us- tria. The reigning Prince' of Lippe is likewise a madman and under restraint.- as is also ex-Sultan Murad ot Turkey. TURKEY'S EFFECTIVE ARMY. REGARDING DIVERS. A MAD KING. and _wt11, It is rather a striking fact that in the examination held at Oxford-ths great examination week of the univer- sity year-the fainting and similar de- monstrations supposed to be peculiarly feminine were confined entirely to the masculine candidates. The result, as gif/yt,' acquirement of knowledge. can on , be discussed on the publwation of the class lists, but the women students have every one gone through the ordeal nobly from a p ystcal 3mm of view, while one man collapse suddenly in a dead faint, and several retired temp- orarily overcome in laser degree by similar weakness. D SELF-PRESERVATION. Wealthy Old Gent-Whatl Marry my daughter? You are being sup- port-YI by Jour father.‘ - , . '"iiii'ftG"Li'u- sTi,Ouit my father is tired of supporting me, and I thought I'd better get into another family. Piles Cured in 8 to 6 Nighta.-- Dr. Agnew's Ointment. will cum all cases of Itching Piles in'from 3 to 6 nights. One apphcation brings comfort. For Blind and Bleeding Piles it is peerless. Also cures letter, Salt Rheum, Eczema. Barber’s Itch, and all eruptions of the skin. 85 eta. _ Friendship is the reciprocation of af- fection; and he who has none.to bestow has no right to expect any In return. HEART TROUBLE RELIEVED IN 30 M†ll YES. Wonderful Results Follow the Use of Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart. The good that Dr. Almew’s Cure for the Heart has done finds a riugugg echo in the hearts of thousands Ill Canada who have used this medicine. There are some diseases where prompt action is not absolutel necessary to avert quick disaster, {his is not the case with heart affection of any kind. 1Vhether this be chronic or sympathe- tic, or partakes of a more startlin character. he is a foolish one who 1dilli heitete to apply‘gn immefiete remedy. This remedy" iviil never fail to reliev'e in 30 minutes, no.mat.ter how long {standing or_disirtssing {he troublg may be. It Fa have heart disease and wish to live, you have only to use this great cure. At druggipus. For sale by all Druggists - We must ourselves ascend if we would lift others, and in this very upward elimbsng we are taking the first and most essential step in social improvement. ONE SOURCE OF PAIN AND SUE. FERING UNDER HUMAN CONTROL. An eminent specialist in studylng‘ profoundly the construvtion of the kid- neys and their diseases, as well as the diseases of the bladder and urinary pas- sages. has recognized the fact in order to treat kidney and bladder diseases successfully a remedy must be prepared especially for these organs, and one rich in healing poWers. After much research a remedy was found, which proved a. t.yrprise.evett to the manufac- turer. After having been used in gen- eral practice by several physicians, witht grand results, it was placed on the mar- ket. and is known as South American Kidney Cure: It never fails to give relief in six hours in all derangement; of the kidneys or bladder,_ Bright's di- serge, diabetes, inflammation or ulcer- ation of the kidneys. neuralgia, con- 't"i1gYiif,e; hemorrhage .and catarrh of the idneys, Inflammation of the hind- der, etc. At druggists. Some of the best families in Enghyyr have substituted boys for houseniaida, whom they have found 'uocompeten.thty1 msolent. The substitutes are chiefly from India, . ME OF THOUSANDS "I Wua a Martyr-tT, Sick and Nervoun Headaches. Caused by Contigu- tion, Unfit for Business on an v- erage 2 days a Week. "Some Pills Helped Me, But Dr. Atm new's Liver Pins at 10 cm. a Vial Cured Me. YThia is My Own Testimony and It's a Fact. Now I Never Late an Hour or Miss a Meal." . This in the written testimony of o well known Toronto jourmliat- on can have his name it you want it. B'. Agnew! Liver Pills. at. all drugglsta. 40 in a. vial. 10 cents. . For ale by all druggista. yijr issue" By all druggists. NOT WOMEN, FAINTED. ,--leere-e-"""'TT------=- _ -- v ___ PADEREWSKI’I sonnow. (THE JCPt A domestic grief has saddened the life of Ptuierewalrl, the famous pianist. " You must be a happy man, who can 18 mus give so much pleasure to so many peo- ln mat ple," said a gentleman who met him Th I mgtlyuaE, thet'. J? a pig'lgaw tet l mada‘yl MOW _-i-g..., r.“ w. I " V08. mntly at; luv. u... - ACT" "Yes." Pederewski replied; "yes. I am happy in doing that, but it u the only happiness I have.†Then, after a ehort pause, he added: ".yoierlytie! are not own: that my wife dl_ed some {nears afo, an that mypnli’ child is an curabe cripple. He " all I have in the world, end mzlwenlth end fame. can do ht,et,tt, not 'f for him. My only motive in's udying or the career of a £3wa artist was that I should at last eble to obtain the best medical ad- vice possible for .er soar boy. Alas! I have found it an idle team. And when the public, which is always so kind to me, apolgud me, , think of the little fellow ymz on has couch in the house by the eea whwh I have when tor him, and I feel how veln it all u." w... --W." ahort panâ€. he added: are not awn-3 that my {nears if). an that my . curab_e_ cripple. Heâ€! -- FOB sun The‘ EDGE PROPERTY. tn the Town of Durham. County or Grey, including valuable Water Power Brick Dwelling. and many eligible building Iota, will be sold in one or more Iota, Alla lot No. 60. con. It, W. G. R,, Township of Bentlnck. 100 acres odjom- lug Town plot Durham. Mortgage' taken for put pinch“. money. - _ O " - um. King Humbert of Italy had a hunch- back brother, Prince Otto, who died . few years sec. and his father had I brother who was not only imbecile, but; was born without leg- monstrosity, in tact. Tho present Crown Prince at Italy, who " soon to marry Princess Helene of Montenegro, is not only a dwarf, but also misshapen, the length of his body bung altogether out of proportion to has abbreviated Legs. tlet hie arms hang down below his noes. lilllllfll? Tllliii' SYSTEM illil il 1hllllllliilliiilf.,i,ll_t,'_ 1ljhli'i'"i'1i'E For sale by McFu'hne t Ca, Wholesale Agents for Ir Jrc. A f. tt T'.“:1\‘;‘Ivn. Ont., broth-x rl' t, . .5. clt “money dull, B.U., mounted by nervous headlchxs A victim of the trouble for several 7997*. - South American Nenlne effected u coyplgtg .cure. In their own particnlsr field few men are beter known thsn the Rev. John Wesley Bell, B.D and his brother Mr. Jslnes A. Bell. *he former mu tw ro- coxnized by his thousands of trie:.du all our the country as tho popular and able missionary tsuPeriutvndetst of the Roy 8.1 Tem lam of Tempcrcnee. Among the 20,066 members of thin order in Unt'trlo his counsel is sought on all sorts of oc- casions. On the public platform he is one of the strong men of the any, trattling against the (will of ligomperance. Equally well known is Mr. vii " other provinces of the Dominion, having been tor yesrs . member ot the Manitoba Methodist Conference q pert ot this time was 1,!."h',',t.d, in lunlpeg. His brother, Mr. antes A. Bell, is I [light] respected resident of Benet-ton. Where his tritium. though perhaps more cir- cumscrl then tt,tte, of his eminent brother, in none the on effectlre and productive of rod. %Ncent cornme- ever We won in; li ty of Irt Jones A. ii. hes bands , m rred by severe email of nervous qFi1, secon- psnled 2 Mtirtlt,t ho out do fit work w on trouble the hold at ROYAL DEFORMITIES. "e""--"'"""" _- fltrtt we a LL Ji?i; it? f HAMILTON 'ONT'. Arpt, to JAMES Evan. Edge mu. on 7/A " in "no "A---'". ___"-" which is always so kind to rd me, I think pf the little 3 on his couch In the house which I have taken for him, how "tn lt all U." County of 'ly proioted, In t': affected . recommended tiot. . [Ready to try um" d tow men f though he thought Rev. John ', list of proprirury i mother Mr. T a bottle of this tri mu or rm Beeond bottle of thc friends all and the work wa> I " and able own lung le. â€In the Royal American henna Luzon; the , my headaches url in Ont-trio 1 Intel: in a â€my, sons of oe- I not deprecate the l m he bone and social returrt' Ir, naming I world. but huw il; :enqonnce. I tor te work T olt ll other that out!) Artteyl EJRHES A, 'yt,';; 5 tiset5b'S' - OFFICI. a“ a. mum ms: . w you. I] "ttti; can. we: wronm{ and Office. Tuvalu. CAPITAL. Authorized ttat " "39.?! m. StandardBank of () W. F. Cowan, RESERVE FUN Sh,i'tdt1t Quboc, Minuet): haw - DUBHAM AGENCY, Annual Baking business ,rtudaagd collections mud. on " -ived and Interest I ta-tallowed on nuns- 1mm; up»: a tlt upwards. Prom pt “mutton w! my Mord“! endows†Imus at s dun-t them uud espeunuy w! chronic. an “an. s. ou.irori Mr. Bell? Tho In 1.: c t (enmity that hot an r b, Ir nrosh'lted. In t".'.s co (bin wh then. ,rei them, and when Id! of hrrd, ‘nl work, broakrn dowr â€grew as the wi. evils be in mama the root of the cue comm from; nem centers. Jn "we " once bl “can: give' to t or; and then thcr' qua: IIIOI‘. hes blood and berm“ "aria, are thimrs P. Cow-n. Geo. P. _ President. tui' “335. 22? s,,P,,',?,,1tptl,ty THE COOK'S BESIFRIE‘ D U N NS 5; e tr"'tu', ed "rr, BAKING ll kno, V (rm-I: “hug " M liioy -..----.pa.. n'----.-m tlrm ma TWENTY-slx was SAVINGS BAmt Linen? SAL: an (mail -ur It}. rt " work 1' WELL! A no“ ttymae '; i7siiiiiiGf " 5110'“ a ELL- tt " Ltble.5“;1 It“ , t i,'ii'i') g on m (ii.i'lli mt!“ T lite A " " on! (wr, titt 'r - . tttr, 51mm . at . -thnt I I hm. In", out one ark of bun iiiiir"i-n% Hm m . Eu.†tur 1 went r tw.bmln the 1lr'T.ull,,'ltutd1t "" it. Wau, you ma 1tlt'-iii'u't'ii;tii; /rg,tittlthiii, p0: uttr.no Muse 'lt,i'2fdiiiiiiyiiili " mmtrutatiott, Win; Hood', M DFGZCInm ett. It m dingo ted, Md u in ‘ W of th "I. III-clan, b tthe New ' kn tt mm with I - Mother-Mr at the prettiest p Lino. this return t [in (not. in B hen: “tapioca with dai In ad than. two 0 hr, and in can! I d nuns. the nu ' bit "is 2rd',',t. IT) 2, in akin ditch. well I filo white silk. t tghm 'tooo 84 ttr, honking " b up for the " every teach hoodlewotk in C0- Griike/y..A!'Y tTut,Ct','",','.dr th trdrtsw bin P, .thguoount. 't w." spill to prtrltt/.'.r. had a do yt all"??? If Fm? ire ting at." aid; MI 's Pills tltd If,†rr-ip.' [whim mill“- r, M ant and - CW " " in“ to 330m op M E! - - - at gtot III - bu wtmt mt my boom artisan. The Tub dc embm SATIN 'iF-'"" a well filled. work each n: in angry the an (dim. " from 'Jllt an tilting wil , um nib who] you do tttin aysh. petal iod [m while mm“ "ry'"'" mat laiii EYE mum utuh â€WIS! IN suid m mm 1 Pat, the a. the " up mere t, pom. I Rau- to aw he. natoount “can." um - unapu you! 'lt'? TIN Fe fiiF" gm. mow not! aid a do ta int Te n u "