‘nr*- 'c. IjR-' i' / • . 5« «• 6 <*» ■ ”SS • . . • , A *■ vn; ■<v Ex<-cutc.rs >.,ituu =. ' by »U<- J«ar. Uirt* {AiTtsijjerin u^7^Stic‘v ’im£i> Canl*- tjct •'seizing 8 I id' yunr. . 00 ii [ulitical ch.vvci-r or inibvulual m-i • uc.vtdiittf to th- iih. .Vf raW; [ ,1 with the niimh.-r iii iiiaortious tu.- i till thrlV. ami charged according Ci m« per liar- for ••vrry iujDrtion. ceding l‘ !i l;nd». fifty cents a Dqunre. ft. junior. ■ I f* iWrimoi|.i3 jfdr evt% ns When the shc’j ‘ Pop ! 'goef I -PltUy girli|| Simper.ap fiU frotn,ouj Pop I g*>< Cupid fun? •b’ flaai«— Unfikcatß o * arson— ' Vi'hu. ii gißccrtniu height, Pod !' parson. Quite '.hrd Mu lie Into sunj Pop: \whsn > "■Roun Out u? Pop) > T ■ brandy / Ami gastric tub#, candy. { ' All earth can yield V* to calm it; | pB aml then > . ti it I” swear— Kli^^B' e whipper; l V •P ; «' itoatw ith»n! . «bile „ 1 ftr k’o?- OllNDt AjM&l Cii'ia.—.tsjbw cu,i iVnl <i Jo®! M'c£l of JU& ruoil ■• To pitenJ n legHfoffjunbottl' “ To mmeh c •trots arn. “To iuiuein9*' “To fattjs “ To cute bog'" 1 ’em in bogs, smoko 'f®* "To ketpcsttkj bair off dose W " To preveO l *®! b<-f yourself,' or "To makef “To • ral**’ P o9 ' borVpoultryyft l^ L* |^Tb e faUof»fl Wjii-jgooU lo#p f WttandpPl 4*Jr'^liSSS ■ * Bcfiott thifflWSSi jij&kA WiHftijgJ . 'JCB^but:g(®SP F wuit Mgfeh ?.!■ iM mm Br*- ‘ Wk NA TRIBUNE I’ubli.-lifit «nd I’wflrieWw. ilaUy in advance,) SI M* a: the expiration of tbb tlnio \avrr>ti'i.va. 1 insert i‘>u $ SEE- W 2 do. ■ 3 do. $ T,y. * » 70 I (HI 100 - 160 200 160 2 00 2 60 >» UiH.ii three 1 months, 26cents pet 1 6 monthm <4 3 tin ' 4 00 P 00 >- oo In 00 i t oo 26 0-7 mo»y> i digestion ; Ifuirly cracked, bueation. iigli ami blush — Con. sir ft-pouting lips, (answer. t the honeymoon— colors— [ goods tills, Idullura. I shown its anil rner, (may-be). .ppy world, baby. bunfester’s heels, ilipper. ?es next door, .prison fear is out, reason the stairs, loment fuetc-r, jelling underneath. ,e plaster little hoy. indotr Ungers; unto his nose, fingers. neighborhood, ire enacted; ima is scolding him, distracted. [RAL AND jUoMESTtC Re tedeted the following ngri »• recipes, for the special K Just give them a pe- ,in cattle,”—Cut their-’ ofs. iw,” —Worh in er-cup flowers. Lent their heai a a grist-mill, p \Vc»tera bo| jhnice; if of •dm lice,” —Si eking herself, dry- en,”—Get ago —Cull at youi night time. ■am on a lati pbe parties ii [Willing and S engage t; ■ illinalyi . OCUOtt. paade WillingTjtiit®- ■ 1 • ,' V-. .} f .shot went right at&ny. ; | - -- * io»| i. the'ot] m* £9s S/. "? could i , ' i?> . i Skicct Ilfom. - THE CABUIED Ills own BVSDIiG. i In 'he dulle-t. part of the dullest coun try in England is situated the little demi- , semi-iashionahle bathing town of —Bless me! —I was almost betrayed by a mere j force of habit into the imprudence of cul ling it by its name , I Ui up; .1 a lime there happened to j the -aid little town, a very dull bathing I season —evey town on the coast beside was- full of company, bathers, walkers, don key-riders, auuuterers audvpebble gather ers. y et the luckless tqVq of -was comparatively empty, i Huge placards with “Lodgings to let” stared every'bddy in the face, from eveay window in every j direction, 'things of course were very flat, all tanks of people were malcontent. The shopkeepers were croaking; the pro prietors of lodging houses in despair! and the few visitors who had ventured thither in hopes of making pleasant acquaintances and dissipating their dullness wore sick of! etnui As for that class of incurables, the resident inhabitants, they, for the! want of some better amusement, applugi themselves with redoubled to their favorite win ter recreations of cards, and the most in veterate scandal of each other.! In this state of utter stagnation were things at when, one very; hot day in the middle of August, a stranger was seen to enter that worthy town corporate. In the dearth of anything in the shape of nows of variety which was felt so sensibly at i—, an arrival of the stranger would have been considered a seasonable mercy, could be have been approached without | the direful risk of contaminating gentility by bringing it-iiito contact with some thing beneath it. ' But this stranger en tered the town in. so questionable a shape, that the very fourth and fifth rate castes in stood aloof, holding themselves a peg above him. Even the shop-keepers, mautna-makers, and waiters at the taverns felt their noses curl up intuitively at the sight of him. The groups of loiterers col lected: at tbc- doojp lemptoua comments on htm't© he pursued 1 vwir. §‘s DM 7 00 ,10 00 U 00 14 00 1W in) 4) i 00 1 75 10 Ooi hia way, and the fewfasfcionabiWi thiit ches, on which were ,ated two Or mscor were vto - be seen in the streets oast, super- those important people who hud from time cilions glances of tarelesssulperlority immemorial invested themselves with the him, for’he was on foot and-alone, attired dignity of the head persons in the place: in a coat, waist-coat, and in short, a whole it is hardly possible to suppose such pco+ suit of that sort of nuxed'Clo^h-called pejp- pie ‘would condescend to exchange a low per-and-salfc color, with a black silk hapd- remarks with a stranger of whom the only kerchief tied about hU in a hauti'oal particulars known were, that he trudged style ;he wore huge pulled o4er into town carrying his own bundle, wore his knees, and to , complete the picture,; a thread-bare suit of pepper-and-salts, unq carried a lmge,hundleiiu-a jred sijk lutnd- ! slept at the (dolmen Lion, kerchief, at the end Of a atbut oaken cud- These worthies did not allow him time gel, overt his shoulder t ' ' to make their acquaintance) but path an Such was his dressy yet to close obser- air as if they dreaded infection, they lose vers of character, there was something and departed, fs ot the least tin ’’ l oo=ei wholly out of the .common way about the by lonely pedestrian. ®...... preesion’ of cool dr —evinced for bis soci? i > lis large grey eyes, t la his j ger proceeded to make hi/^ et , U the prevailing set < ? tlt home on the bench as * m atcli, nity towards him. comma- inheritance. lie die- 'ctime bold enough to ' *? ty ox w itb an apparat eycn if he had no , lightcdacigar; and; a weapon of offe with grept a^parer above mentioned. jtsTfae • ■ Af hand that betoken /**• in 3 fi rs on the pro; and power of mm s hone cd his cigar, 'p , There certain. . . other bench something in the i eristic l though tri' his handkerchief 0 ! . tlu of 1 pants, f’ gait, that savoured la > hud his Lvcn his way of mdus not the look of a have sturdy indfepend' - at' dcred his bundle cd that he const bystanders as a cuco. Yet there forcibly arrested one ; people who wo selves that they ing at once, neyetf look at him & The first step h* ,rietoiv ot . as though in his foe® 5 ie villa t*‘;the no® find arooi tis bundle- —, oven Ji y . But he iet had passed sh>- : sfe°£ know, that . aid a few of hejfald ill* Smuihe jUfin. the little corpora. S. Afact; typrudential doubts of thci probability of his carrying any rawd of that, shape and co - StbM W jeret^rftote^ -\w foot in the* hi Our pedr even of 0 K place w* seem ’ •I# 1 ' ' ( ,- i . raiar- 3a-,£k ‘i MAN WHO Jt ‘ not ojvn t 0 ‘'ohf him wort! u ss turned •' ras ti 'gh r- /U 1 iiild and f gentec cabin,!»/ shelter y ALTOONA, PA., The witness of h -ssovereigiij to which the stranger as a (jernier ; reso^/appealed, procured him a isuppcir And bed, and all things needful for!rest- and refreshment, at a small public house, whose crazy little creaking sign promised to travellers Good entertainment ibr inan and beast.” The next morning, being disencumbered of the pn popular bundle at t|i© end of oaken cudgel which he stilll either grasp ed or flourished in a most nautical fashion, he entered the reading room. . ,“ it is no use pitting down yojar name, sir, for you cannot-be admitted here,” was the answer he received from the pert su perintendent of this place ot fashionable resort. ' “ Not on my paying the usual terms of. subscription ?” deinanded the stranger. “No sir, we cannot admit persons ofyour description on any terms, sir.” A , “ Persons of my description ?” repeated the stranger, most emphatically grasping his trusty cudgel,; “and pray, sir, of what description do yop suppose me to be r? ‘The Jack in ofjfice surveyed the sturdy stranger with a li.-ok in which contempt and alarm were oddly blended, as he re plied: “ Gan’t exactly! say, sir, but I am sure none of our subscribers would choose to associate with you.” “ How do you; know that, you saucy Jackanapes?” said the stronger, becpm r ing a little choleric. “ Why, sir, bceause. sir, we niako a point of being* very select, sir, and never on no accouiit admit persons of your description/? “But it seems you do not know of what description 1 am.” “ Why, sir, no' one can expect to keep these sort of things a secret.” “ What, then, is it whispered about who lam ? And what does that important per sonage, everybody,say.” “ Oh, sir, that; you are %hrokon-down miller biding from his creditors.” ■ And here - he cast ashvewd glance on the thread- i bare of the straiiger.— The stranger regarded/ him for a liioment with a comic expression on his | made him a profound bow, and walked oil. ] Not a whit humbled by this repulse, the i stranger repaired to the place of geucrah jiyoftuuuulc, -atej.possession .of a va cant place at thjs end of one of the oeu ■ pet 'd tw' - th: if # /set of loxiug istily dispatch ing one ot the a few courteous to its occu id a gentleman-}, but jU cither of a blasphe- Uiituro, they could not ;d with a greater appear .ution by the ladies, who at the liberty the pepper-and ean had taken, while the gentle ;vcd with a most aristocratic dc , that he laboured under a xgis . addressing those ladies. . jir,’' said tW stranger, “ you are right; ,ok you for persons of politeness and evoleuce. Itiscovering my error, i crave your pardon, and retire. , .. , Although any reasonable person might hive been satisfied from these specimens “f the mlmbitauts off rthalitwas no sport for a friendly .unknown individual tl pitch his tent in; still,- -‘the imm who dirtied his own bufidle persevered in his endeavors to find Some iibcrul-imuded per son therein, kef iron* high to low, a geu orai feeling of suspicion seemed to pervade .ri-r rosidbd in tho town a\vuole week with-- ' out fittdffig a singlfi Qjtccptiop. 2*ay. worse , hostess ofclhe Goldcfi Lionserved up these oil dite with ..all tiieir ; vanatioi^ and da%- to S°®|v at deate? in in every thing that wasaaid: to_the proj*-' dice of h<* gfiesi,. who 'BhfiWcd so mucJi good taste as k and hfifore he conkuujbd ! she prudently m&i business was always earned on at the (i,W; shQ® do'so a da«k| Mi® ,t9fj^^BU9h| BODtta life.— bail air of liouJ- .sliOW of fhe for junu, •was in t~ , ia-, r.T. ...^ THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1858. / * V „ < * ftfca* said the stranger, dryly pointing with his dak stick to the hieroglyphics, with which the bar was giaced. “Why, sir, to be sure, these are all ’sponsible persons,” stammered Betty Pa- Her {Tiicat muttered to liimselt as lie passed into the street. ... " Rather hard that my credit should be worse than that of J ack Smith, and Toni Balls, and the rest, of Betty Pagan’s cus tomers. Faith I must be a most suspic ions looking fellow ! To be sure, reports like these are of a nature to give the death blow to my vanity, if that were a failing that could be cured by mortification. lam an ugly dog, I am aware, but I did not know that my phiz was ill looking enough to indicate an old smuggler, abrokeu down miller ( but for that the pepper-and-salt may be thanked,) a fraudulent bankrupt hiding up from his a returned convict, and a man having married three wives, has run away from them all I” The habitual good temper, and light hearted gaiety of the stranger wasruffled j and there was a compression on his brow, and an angry glow on his check as he entered that notorious, gossip shop, the Post Oflice. The mail Lad just arrived, and the letters having been sbrted, were delivered to theii respective claimants.. But ihercs was one letter that had not been claimed, whioh excited general cyriossity. According to invariable diurnal custom, all the towns-peoplo who had nothing to do, were assembled in or near the Post Office —those who expected letters, to re ceive them, and those who did not, to take note of the epistles directed to their neigh bors, and obtain, if possible, some clue whereby to guess their contents —either from observation of hands, or seals, or hap ly from the expression of the countenan ces of the recipients, or some hint or ex clamation during persual. The unclaimed letter was of a most tempting appearance, sealed, surmounted with a coronet —to the Right Xlou. Admi ral Lord A B— and franked by the Duke of A Many were the^ surmises offered on the subject. (Valid it be possible that a man high lank meant to honor them 'with his presence for ’ ilKr season: ' But then he had not engaged iud'rings. A o matter, there were plenty disengaged. The most noble duke evi dently supposed that his. uncle was actual i ly there and it was impossible for so great a man to make a mistake. Lord A -■ j R, —— would doubtlessajrive that day with !, his suite. It would be the salvation of the | (own for the-season to be able to announce { sudh im arrival in the country papers—the presence of my Lord, was perhaps a prog nostic of a visit from the duke and mighty iiuchess. AH present were, impressed with the ne cessity of calling an immediate town meet ing, to propose presenting him with the freedom of the town, in a gilt box, which polite by this time, the Ul’Ws town tvere there were some whose curiosity to *• co “““i Want Epistle was so great to .w-tiaj Item into tbe.ondonvox J>, — 4 —in reading all that was come-at-able in his hh£r; but the W tohlcA so ajs'to baffle the most expat in the worthy 4't of round-readings. II ow far the ardor of making discover ies would have carried some of th . e,u {“ ,u not prepared to say— perhapslitimighthdvt led .to felonious attempts on the smictit) 1 of the ducal seal and frank, had not the I stranger (who had remained an uuuouced ! lis teiicr m the crowd, ai,d the letter passing from hand to hand throueb n large circle) now stepped into the midst, and yaking a low bow, said “ (rentlcinen, when von have amused yourselves sufficiently with that letter, 4 Vill thank you to hand it over to me, its rightful owner.” , . , • ,®. To you exclaimed tne whole town and corporation in a breath looking uuul- I teruble things at the thread-bare pepper and-salt, of the independent individual be fora them. v “ W c are surprised at your im- I nudlmec in demanding this letter, which is 1 Ufd by the mkp of A -and ad dressed to Admiral Lord A- W • “I am he, gentlemen, returned the stran-er making a sarcastic obeisance aU 1 “ I' see you do not think that the 1‘ *ou of a duke can wear such a_ coat, and ciotv his own bundle on occasion. How ever; I see one within hailwhocan w’Uuqss to my identity. Here, you Jack Brace kyprdf have you forgotten you rold cpm- yotJT honor! No, no, my J#* ('Lordship 4110 moment Lseenyoujbut Ir^ I memlbcreil your honor's humors too well to Ee leathered many a hard gale together, fd o*. , 4»d »ow „, ; Continued I»ord A. .. P Ire; hot Batisfiedthat the me- here are, I tru&, Boffiment prow - m ■JiaPtuttUv ■;.,v ! .>< *- I±. ‘ v < J^i!£ •j] &J-. ,c * , -VVT f. **-.*, v ■’i.w-' ' ■•■ tv ? ".- - ■■• -'>•,' < : . iv ‘rf. bjsw^23K "The post-master immediately handed him the letter, and began a wning of the most elaborate apologies, which his Lordship did not stay to listen to, but walked back to the Golden Lion, leaving the assembled population of- mute with constertia* tion That afternoon, the whole corporation, sensible too late of ciiror,,waited in ahpdy on Lord B -to apologize f6r their mistake, and to entreat him to honor the town with hia presence during the re mainder of the season. Lord A- B „ . was busily em ployed tying up his bundle when the dep-, utation entered, and he continued,to adjust it all the time they were speaking. When they concluded having tightened the last knot, he replied as follows : “ Gentlemen, I entered your town with every intention of thinking well of its in habitants. But you will say that I came in u shabby coat, carrying my own bundle —and took up quarters at a paltry ale house. Upon my word it was the only place where you would give me admittance. Your reception of me would have been dif ferent had I arrived in my carriage. Gentle men, I doubt it not, my rank, fortune, and equipage will procure me respectany where | from people of your way ot thinking. But, gentlemen, I am an old fellow as you pee, and sometimes try whether I can obtain it without these adventitious distinctions; and the manner in which you treated mo, while I appeared among you in the light of a poor and most Intensive stranger, has convinced me of my error in looking for liberality of construction here. And now, scntlemcn, I must inform you that I estimate your polite attention at the same value that I did your contempt, and that I would not spend another night in your j town if you would give it to me for noth j iug,' and so I wish you a very good morn- ing. As his lord ship concluded, he_ attached his red bundle; to the «“<* of* w bludgeon, and shouldering It, with a droll look at the d’.o Uifitt-rd corporation, he trudged out qf town with the same air otVsturdy indepenr deuce with which he had trudged iq. ’4, ’ac sagacious town and corporation re mained thunderstruck with adventure, "However, their conduct ig the affair had been too unanimous to admit of their re criminating on each other the blapie of this unlucky mistake; so they caniOtoth ew resolution of making the best ota : ha« busi ness, and digesting the bitter rebuke as well as they might; moreover, they deter mined that their town shpgid JR.Qt lose the credit of a visit front so a personage, and; duly announced in the county papers, Lord A— > s arrival and departure -torn the town of Locis Na>oi.eon a Boars. — A wri ter in Grain’s Magazine lor January has come toward with some, important revel- convicting the occupant of thp Jmperiar throne of the basest im posture. J i —Ue |W,Ttfc ~ Htu tS5*. | turyjjf the Kepubllo'*** I A. good story ia told of a Michtgao* farmer who 1 recently went do***' to IlHlr-t i S ‘‘lllS-[ . and woo<jri'r> > A . - t - ... I iitiK r „. , .1 v, -*i JT 1 11 . i»»t• T by 8. Auttia AiUbose, £aa. $3,00. > Vi f*V tj|"‘~ I ,, ' orelol (- m alms °v j The wort irtO&lly distinct from tb» AlCtfejttt^' : JW,. .1 I. Thi-.in/ S lr( :.? f fninit in' career oi PwM°®- and crnbjUs** mud vahmble acdlrrt>f«|rtC(|fctt«|l vw. sBSI|!S* fr sou in her dying moments, . £ L .IAL JioSEY self upon the French people as a genuine tunt j ro( j dollars! Here’s v ; Bonaparte, and succeeded m reaching Uic c - ftarge five pe f ce nt a month, as you wahty\yyQ^ >> 1 throne. that leav ‘ust forty dollnMi>^- The t-t'Tv is well told, and the objec tions that 'would naturally be suggested, are skilfully disposed of. M Uethjir n will excite so much attention as pre tended discovery of the son of Louis A, Vi., in the person of a Mr. Williams, a tew years ago, remains to be seen. BtAtTiF'-i- Metavhor.— Henry Ward Beecher, in one of his “star” papers in the Now York In<f'2>cn<h-nt, says: •\Vo luivo known men, upon whose "'•rounds waved magnificent trees of cen turies growth, lifted up 'into the Uir with v;ist breadth, and full of twilight and mid ,p lY ,—who cut down all these mighty monarch*, and cleared the ground bare; and then when the desolation was coni: plete, and the fierce summer sun gazed tuU into their face with its fire, they bethought themselves of shade, and forthwith Set qut a generation of thin, shadowless sticks, pining and waiting until they should stretch out the* boughs with protection, and darken the ground with grateful shad ow. Such folly is . viv tree of life, the shad and at/ instead, und their own planting, 1 be? broad enough to. boughs sin of the air. SQT Bishop Mar thp humor %*•. cpacliman was oju®* .tyjjsifTeaa iw- to > oxw' ;'<riSidB,v^^; ..or.*-. ; Cft', -•- 1 *■*-1 it'J* \ A ■■ . * ; . EDITORS AND PROt > RIETOB§. John Anderson, m3r <!•* Tins exquisite ballad, constructed if Eobert Bums out of a different and some what exceptionable lyric, has always left something to be wished for and regretted r it is not complete. But who would TOlt* ture to add to a song of Burns? Aaßurus left it, it runs thus: — John Anderson, my jo, John, When we were first sequent. Your locks were like the raven, Your bounio brow was breqt'/ But now year head’s turned bald, JohJW> You# lochs are like the snow; But blessings on your frosty pow- John Anderson, my jo. John Anderson, my Jo* John#- We dam the hill thegitherj And mony a canty day* Johiv / We’ve bad wi’ane aaithor:/ Now we maun totter down, John, But hand in band we'll And sleep tbegither aVtbQ foot, John Anderson, ijoy Jo. Fine as this is, it does not quite satisfy a contemplative mind: when one hag gone so far; he looks and longs for some thin'l'' more —some thing beyond the foot of thehill. Many a reader of Burns irnimt have felt this; aud it is quite probable that many have attempted to supply tho defi ciency ; but we know of only > one success in so hazardous an experiment. This - is the added verse:— ; \ John Anderson, my Jo, John, - x. When we Lave slept tbegither The sleep that a’ moan deep,- Johtr, We’ll waho wi’ano anitheri J And in that better warld, John, < Nao sorrow shall we "know .* • Nor fear we e’er shall part again,.- John Anderson, my jo. > Simple, touching, tfue—nothing ting, and nothing to spare y precisely ha»J^% r monizing with the orlgmal stanzas, and proving them by the fact of completing them. This poetical-achievement isAttri buted to Mr, Charles Gould, a gentimmyu— of our town, whose life has been oluhfljp devoted to the successful combination; <n | figures —but not figures of rhetoric. Thh,,' 4 verse was written some years ago, but rit has not'hitherto found its way into prniit; yet it well deserves to bcincorporatedwith ’ /,'M J ' -u the original song in any future edition' f Burn’s Poems, and wo hbpe some publish* f ‘ •* er Will Qtt, .tlua .: Journal. Post.—An old xnucH addicted to going sleieip' in oth^a : ■ \l| ■—a Habit which she avowed shccould J|9 not Help; One a ■ Jm ß to take place in the; churchof which' was i^piibymember/uad she W-'-Wm informed her family that-shewas going ' it. Ohe of her daughters said to her,**li is no use for you to go to church--ryou . \ | will bo sure tp go tO vsldep/’ “I care if I do,” she replied, “ I shall Hi at my post.” it for a year, , .av. -<?a . r *-- coming to you/' Borrower—‘‘Then if I, ; wanted it for two years, th< r/a be some- 1 thing coming to you, eh!” ' ■ s Something “’Salutary” in Kansas —We have received d the J£ansM Herald, puWiißsJ at r o&affi| tomie, K.. T. It is opened with what t* editor calls a “Salutary.” Good. ItjT high lime something salutary was ced into-Kansas. Slating .—dtphn Phoenix iayaofsleigh ing that this mode of eph sidcred a great amusement ih tho Being particularly dangerous to'lite and limb, and usually terhunating pulmona ry consumption, the pastime is v.cry prop erly called slaying. ~ c -. : ; a man m long i , - # as he is getting up iri tlid vfOtW. A 1 W bf wealth only pays bis .fcatchtf I # year. Let bad luck bill will' w | | ahd hnngry ) |fe; btoTfZIS, ." ‘i.Vl Kxww Shoes. ' : ;■ '■- '■ f - ■ BMAWX3 * Midi ** * p«wwi within* ’lgJ mil finmin» our itoefc. we efeSS & ■ J ■ irtods, and nill take f 4 & may give ns a Alt •• P “ Mnre « ■ l >^,_jgk...^ll T O T OCT'A. M urMI 050 'tf'T NO. 1. , r KV KS AND T.v^r. Ortngoi anrt L»>mon» ft> atora i«>» v ■ 't«rta». Apply to ••'.« ;T--* *< SHOE^OXWt,: Wm EfT- vv; >« • ' ,-:V ■ ■-*- • j: r . "fc •. J J I •’* ; OT-. * viv’; 'C , } : / s / ' ' , / / “ij ‘j-V \ , f l i 1 r*" V*. .• • * A ii jf" •? A,*,* F':i 9-fUll •2b* .o*^ if* ifete. ,00 $>W £££^l 7v t . * .- . ;*k- *e : • «*"• 3S I- I *' .' ' '■’M, * ■„<& M ■m l hm •■.viy / -a 3 . <]£>-< ,*1 • •-& ,:*■ ■ •.a* m :S|l i c* ■ . *i K>' ' -jlife rn.\ jS? 1 - ■ • t -\ H, \ •feu, i •‘J'g bi- w v r^ ! .-,w ■• . *y ' .r/Jt- , 1 ‘‘inf ■ -»• , 1 1' H
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