w0FFi-rfim v JFF -"StrF .iV-w- JL5L folNG IiBPGBB PHtgADBIiPHIA SATURDAY. JANUARY 1, 1916. m 7 """fai KAZAN MISS COFFIN, MAIN LINE GIRL, MAKES GOOD RUNNING GIFT SHOP & JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD ITfyvaTy1 f " Y Convrlcht. 1014. lh - tlolibs-Mtrrlll company. Thorpe romt' couth from the fron Northland to wed. Wllh him ho brines his Tt dK Knmn. also cnlled the Wild Do because of his flrreeti. Kitrnn Hen alklnir fit a room when . Irobel, Thorpe' flunctc. mshos In nnd fulls on her knee beside him. Thorpo shouts a narnlnir, but ,h does not heed. Kazan, llci still, cory muscle n-milver. Ncer. beroie hnn nny rerson dared ,to touch him so with ft whip, nut this tlmo he does not snap. Isobel then nlaj tho piano nnd. tho ilosr comevnnd lies at her sldo. As das pss Ksian's atlachment for, her grows. Thorpo nd Isobel wed and with Karnn start back to tho North. They are met by Mc Crendy, n ulsnt Etilde if brutal appearance. Xnsan remembers McCready as the man Who murdered his former master. The trio start northward and from the ery first McCready stealthily follonfl, Thorpe's bride with his rjes. Tho first nleht he, begins drlnklnc Next mornlnK, Isobel Is sltltnc on the sledge, her looso hair tailing about her shoulders, when McCready comes up be hind her nnd buries his hand In her treses, Katnn seeing the movement, leaps nt Me rrpntv Mho springs back Just In tlmo. Thorpe, thinking the dog. has. sprung at Isobel. selres a whip ami liegins lashlnp ihlng nnd Kazan, irnuci pcizi" nwi pu a mum nhhtnir tells htm of McCread's advance. The second night McCready, drlnkn again. Ijite at nlRht Kazan sees him disappear among the trees nnd return with n club, McCready arouses Thorpo nnd tells htm ho has he-ird sonic ono prowling about the camp. Tho two rtlrnppenr. but the guide re turns alone. Ills fare Is like n beast's. Ho rushes Into the tent where Inobcl Is sleep Ing. The next Instant Kaian hears her calling his mnster. Tho great dog throws his whole up'-ht against the leisli and It parts nlth a snnp. CHAPTER Ill.-Coi.tlnued. IN HA LP a dozen bounds Knznn mode the tent nnd ruslicd under tho flap. With n snnrl ho was nt McCrondy'n throat. Tho first Bnnji of his powerful Jaws wns death, but he did not know that. He knew only thnt liU mistress wns there, nnd that ho was flRhtlnc for her. Thcro enmo ono choking Rnsplns cry thnt ended with a terrible sob! It was McCready. Tho man unnk from his knees upon his back, nnd Knznn thrust his fnnRS deeper Into his enemy's throat: he felt tho warm blood. The dog's mistress wns calling to him now. She was pulling nt his nhacfiy neck. But ho would not loose his hold vr-not for n long lime. When lie did his mistress looked down onco upon tho man and covered her fnco with her hnnds. Then she sank down upodAIio blankets, She wns very still. Her fnco nnd hnnds were cold, nnd Knznn muzzled them tenderly. Her eyes were closed, Ha snuggled up close against her, with his ready Jaws turned townrtl tho dead man. Why was sho so till, he wondered? A lontr time passed, nnd then sho moved. Her eyes opened. Her hand touched him. Then ho heard n stop outside. It wns his master, nnd with that old thrill of fear fenr of tho club ho wont swiftly to the door. Yes, thcro wns his master In tho flrollRh and In his band ho held tho club. Ho wns coming slow ly, almost falling nt encb step, nnd his fnco wns red with blood. Hut ho bnd tho clubl Ho would bent him again bent him terribly for hurting McCready; so Knznn slipped quietly under the tent flap nnd stole off Into the shndows. From out the gloom of tho thick spruce ho looked back, nnd n low whlno of love nnd grief roso nnd died softly In his throat. Thoy would beat him nlwnys now after that. Even sho would bent him. Thoy would hunt him down nnd bent him when they found him. From out of tho glow of the lire he turned his wolfish bend to tho depths of tho forest, There were no clubs or stinging Inshes out In that gloom. They would never And him there. For nnother moment ho wavered. And then, ns silently as ono of tho wild crcn turcs whoso blood was partly his, lie stolo away Into the blackness of tho night, CHAPTER IV. FREE FROM BONDS, THERE wns a low moaning of the wind In tho spruco tops as Kazan slunk oft Into tho blackness and mystery of tho forest. For hours ho Iny nenr the camp, his red nnd blistered eyes gazing steadily at tho tent wherein tho terrible thing had happened n llttlo while before. Ho know now what death was. Ho could tell it farther than man. Ho could smell It In tho air. And ho knew that there was denth nil about him. nnd that ho wns the cause of It. Ho lay on his belly In the deep snow nnd shivered, nnd the three-qunrtcrs of him that wns dog whined In a gricf-strickcn way, while the quarter that was wolf still revealed Itself menacingly In his fangs and In the venge ful glare of his eyes. Three times tho man his master camo opt of the tent nnd shouted loudly, "Ka il I Kazan Kazan I" Three times the woman camo with him. In the firelight Kazan co;Ul see her shin ing hair streaming about her, as he had seen It In the tent, when ho had leaned up and killed the other man. In her bluo eyes there was the same wild terror and her faco wns white ns tho snow. And the second and third time, she, too, called, "Knzan Kazan Kazan" and all that part of him that was dog, and not wolf, trembled Joyously nt the sound of her voice, and he almost crept in to take his beating. But fear of the club was the greater, and he held back, hour after hour, until now it was silent again in the tent, and he could no longer see their shadows and the Are was dying dawn. Cautiously he crept out from thethlck gloom, working his way on his belly to ward the packed sledge and what re mained of the burned logs. Beyond that sledge, hidden In the darkness of the trees, was the body of tho man he had killed, covered with a blanket. Thorpe, his master, had dragged it there. He lay down, with his nose to the warm coals and his eye3 leveled between his forepaws, straight af tho closed tent flap. He meant to keep awake, to watch, to be ready to slink off Into the forest at the first movement there. But a warmth was risincr from out of the crav nsh of tho Are-bed, and his eyes closed. Twice three times he fought himself back into watchfulness; but the last time his eyes came only half open, and closed heavily again. ' And now, In his sleep, lie whined softly, and the splendid muscles of his legs and shoulders twitched, and sud den shuddering ripples ran along his tawny spine. Thorpe, wh was In the tent, if ho had Been him, would have known that he was dreaming. And Thorpe's wife, whose golden head lay close against his breast, and who shud dered and trembled now nnd then even as Kazan was doing, would have known what he was dreaming about, In his sleep he was leaping again at : the end of his chain. His Jaws snapped like castanets of steel-and the sound awakened him, and he sprang to his et, his eplno as stiff as a brush, and bU . snarling fangs bared like ivory knives. He had awakened Just In time, here waa movement in the tent. His master was awake, and If be did not escape ' - He sped swiftly Into the thick spruce, and pimea, nat and hidden, with only Vr v a hawlns from behind a tree, lie knew that his master would not spare i . Tbteo tunes Thorpe had beaten nun for snapping at McCready. The last time be would have shot him if the girl had not saved him. And now be had rn1)?Cready'a throat. He had taken the lifefrom him, and his master would sot spate him. Even the woman coold ot save him. "" gas sorry that his master bad returned. fda zed and bleedtnir after hi , had tornlSIcCready' Jugular. Then hi would haV had her always. She would ' nave lorthIm, She did love him. And i " wpqiq tove followed her, and fought or er alaj-E, ftn4 died for her when ' ha t-mo cjtne bu, Thorpe had come - lrn- tot; forest agalri and Kazji had slunk nwny nulckly-for Thorpe meant to him what nil men mennt to him now: Tho club, the whip nnd the strange things that spat fire and death. And now Thorpe had come out from the tent. It wns approaching tawn, nnd in his hand ho held n rifle. A moment later the girl enme out, nnd her hand caught tho man's arm. They looked toward tho thing covered by the blnnkr-t. Then she spoke to Thorpo nnd he sud denly straightened nnd threw back his liend. "H-o-o-o-o Knznn Knznn Knzan 1" ho called. A shiver rnn through Kazan. Tho man was trying to Invelglo him bnck. He hnd in his hnnd tho thing that killed. "Knznn Knznn Kn-n-n-nznnl" he shouted again, Knzah sneaked cautiously bnck from tho tree. He knew that distance meant nothing to the cold thing of dentil thnt Thorpe held In his hand. Ho turned his head once, nnd whined softly, nnd for an Instnnt n grcnt longing filled his red dened eyes ns he snw the Inst of the girl. Ho knew now thnt ho was leaving her forever, nnd thcro wns nn ncho In his henrt thnt hnd never been there before, a pnln thnt wns not of the club or whip, of cold or hunger, but which was greater thnn them all, nnd which filled him with a desire to throw bnck his head and cry out his loneliness to tho gray emptiness of tho sky. Bnck In tho enmp the glrl'n voice quiv ered, "He Is gone." Tho mnn's strong voice choked a little. "Yes, he Is gone. Ho knew nnd I didn't. I'd give a yenr of my life If I htuln't whipped lilm yesterday and Inst nlRht. He won't como bnck," Isobel Thorpe's hnnd tightened on his arm. "Ho willt" sho cried.. "He won't leave me Ho loved mc. If he wns savage nnd terrible. And he knows thnt I love him. He'll come bnck " "Listen!" From deep in the forest there entne n long wnlllnR howl, filled with a plaintive sadness. It wns Knznn's fnrewcll to tho woman. After thnt cry Knznn sat for a long time on his haunches, sniffing tho now freedom of tho nlr nnd nntchlng the deep block pits In tho forest about him ns they fnded nwny before dawn. Now and then, since the tiny tho traders hnd first bought him nnd put htm Into slcdgo trncos nwny over on the Mackenzie, he hnd often thought of his freedom long ingly, the wolf blood In him urging him to tnko It. But he hnd never quite dnred, It thrilled him now. There were no clubs here, no whips, none of tho man-bensts whom he hnd first lenrned to distrust and then to hate. It wns his misfortune that qunrtor strnln wolf; nnd tho clubs. Instead of subduing him, had ndded to tho snvngery that wns born In him. Men hnd been Ins worst enemies, They hnd beaten him time nnd ngaln until ho was almost dead. They called him "bad" nnd stepped wide of him, and never missed the chance lo snnp n whip over his back. Ills body was covered with scars thoy hnd given him. He hnd never felt kindness, or lovo, jn tll tho first night tho womnn hnd put lcr warm little hnnd on his bend nnd hnd snuggled her fnco closy down to his, whllo Thorpe her husband hud cried cut In horror. Ho had ulmost burled his fangs In her white fle.'h, but In nn in stant her gentle toucn and her swtct voice hnd sent through him thnt wondoi ful thrill thnt wns his first knowledge ol love. And now It wns a man who wns driving hlm from her, nwny from the hnnd thnt hnd never held a club or a whip, nnd ho growled ns ho trotted deeper into the forest. Ho came to the edge of a swamp as dny broke. For a tlmo ho had boon filled with i strange uncnslness, nnd light did not quite dispel it. At Inst ho wns free of men. Ho could detect nothing that reminded him of their tinted presence In tho nlr. But neither could ho nmell the presence of other dogs, of tho sledge, tho lire, of compnnlonshlp'nnd food, nnd so fnr back ns ho could remember they had always oeen n part or ins lire. Hero It was very quiet. Tho swnmp lay In a hollow between two ridge-mountains, and the spruce and cedar grew low nnd thick so thick thnt there was almost no snow under them, and day was like twi light. Two things he began to miss mote than all others food and company. Both the wolf nnd tho dog thnt was In him de manded the first and that part of him that was dog longed for tho Intter. To both deilre3 tho wolf blood thnt was strong in him roso rcsponslvcly. It told him thnt somewhere in this silent world between the two ridges there was com panionship, and that all ho had to do to find It was to sit back on his haunches and cry out his loneliness. More than once something trembled In his deep chest, rose In his throat and ended there In a whine. It was tho wolf howl, not yet quite born. Food came more easily than voice. Toward midday ho cornered a big white rabbit under a log, and killed It. The warm Mesh and blood was better than frozen Hall, or tallow and bran, and the fenst ho had gavo him confidence. That afternoon he chased many rabbits, and killed two more. Until now, he had never known the delight of pursu and killing at win, even though lie did . t eat all he killed. But there was no fight in .he rabbits. They died too easily. They were very sweet and tender to eat, when he was hungry, but the first thrill of killing them passed away after a time. He wanted something bigger. He no longer slunk along as if he were afraid, or as If he wanted to remain hidden. He held his head up. His back bristled. His tall swung free nnd bushy, like a wolf's. Every hair In his body quivered with the electric energy of Ufa and action. He traveled north and west. It was the call of early days the days away up on the Mackenzie. The Mackenzie was a thousand miles away. He came upon many trails In the snow that day, and sniffed he scents left by the hoofs of mooso and caribou, and the, fur-padded feet of a lynx. He followed a fox, and the trail ted him to a place shut in by tall spruce, where the snow was beaten down and reddened with blood. There was an owl's head, feathers, wings and entrails lying here, and he knew that there wero other hunters abroad besides himself. Toward evening he came upon tracks In then snow that were very much like his own. They were quite fresh, and thcro was a warm scent about them that made him whine, and Ailed him again with tn.it desire to fall back upon his haunches and send forth the wolf-cry. This desire grew stronger In him as the shadows of night deepened in the forest. He had traveled all day, but he was not tired. There was something about night now that there were no men near, that exhllaiated him strangely, The wolf blood In him ran swifter and swifter. Tonight It was clear. The sky was Ailed wth stars. The moon rose. And at last he settled back In the snow and turned his head straight up to the spruce tops, and the wolf came out of him In a long mournful cry which quivered through the still nlaht for miles. For a long time ha sat and listened I after that bowl, tie haa founa voice a voice with a strange new note in It, and it gavo htm still greater confidence. He had expected an answer but none came. I He had traveled in the face of the Ind. and as he howled a, bull moose crashed through the scrub timber ahead of him, his horra rattling against the trees like the tattoo of a clrur birch cluo as no put distance between himself and that cry, Twice Kazan howled before be went on. and he found joy In the practice of that new note Ho came then to the foot of a rpugn nose. ano. mrueu uk u wi ui swamp to the top of it. The stars and the moon were pearer to. btn there, and on the other ld of the jid;e he looked down upon a grent sweeping plain, with a frozen lake glistening In tho moonlight and a white river leading from It off Into timber that wns neither so thick nor so black as that In the swamp. And then every muscle In his body grew tense nnd his blood leaped. From far off In the plnln there came a cry. It was his cry the wolf-cry. His Jaws snnppcd. His white fangs gleamed and he growled deep In h s Ihront. He wanted to reply, but some strange Instinct urged him not to, Thnt Instinct of the wild wns already be coming mnster of him. In the nlr, In tho whispering of the spruco tops, In tho moon nnd tho stnrs themselves, there brenthed a spirit which told him that whnt lie had honrd wns tho wolf-cry, but thnt It wns not the wolf cnll, CONTINUED MONDAT. $50 HILL FLUTTERS OUT 13TJI FLOOIt WINDOW; CAUGHT IN AIR Captured by n Hotel Porter Before It Touches the Ground A JBO bill wns swept out of a 13th floor window of the Bellcvue-Strntford by a playful breeze. This ,vnB while the New Year's revels were, ns some neonln nav. nt their height, nnd those who say that usuniiy pronounce, "Height" with the Anal "h", There wns In thnt bill tho capac ity for giving New Year revelry at the height of 13 stories, and If thnt wns what the money wns ror tho ewner wns not going to lose the chnnco to spend It. As the J50 bill fluttered nnd Bpun nnd whirled In spiral1) toward Brond street ho rushed to tho phone. "St-bt-st-stop thnt tfSO bill," he stut tered to the clerk nt his desk 13 stories nenrer the centre of tho earth. "I nm prepared." renllcd tho clerk. j calmly, "to stop anything except n bill. ir mo uiu is ror you, I trust that jou will pny It without a murmur. By this tlmo the o had reached the third Aoor nnd wns twirling nearer and nearer to Its logical doom In a wasto pnper cnn. The stutterer fumed over the wire. "Th-th-thnt's what I want to pay my b-b-blll wlththa. $50 note that Is d-d-drop ping d-d-down from tho window." Then the clerk sent a po.'ter out Into Broad street nnd the porter deftly cnught the JM bill nnd returned with It nonchalantly to the desk. It was sent up to the 13th floor. ALAS FOR FINNEY'S TOES Mrs. Castle's Dancing: Pnrtner in Un pleasant Mixup in Broad Street Tho valuable toes of Olln Finney, who dances with Mrs. Vernon Castle whllo Vernon Cnstlo Is on his way to drop bombs on (lermnns, hnvc been stepped upon. They have been trodden upon by Ob, no, no, not that; not by Mrs. t'nstlel but by "a big. burly sort of person," who was celebrating tho New Year by dancing about the sldcwnlk. They mixed It up a little In Broad street. It was reported, while merry mukcrs with horns looked on, never miss ing a note ns thoy watched, blowing. Mr. Finney got a scrntch under tho eye brow, n soiled collar nnd a dirty boot mnrk upon his spnts. He gnve tho burly one sovcral blows, but could do llttlo damage, as the latter wore no collar or spats to get soiled. FARMER SMITH'S P?HPPP Ijnpuy &tto Ienr to tlje &m'nJoto Club, nub a great bi$ toelcome to 1916! GOOD-NIGHT TALK Dear Children A very dear lady said to me the other day: "Why does the sun rise?" All children's editors are very wise and SUPPOSED to know EVERY THING. But in all my life I had never stopped to nsk myself: "Why does the sun rise?" I have seen its gold rnys rise as though from the ocean itself. I have seen the sun rise over the mountains and across the plains. But why? The sun, dear children, rises because it HAS TO! Remember that when you want to lie in bed in the morning. The sun HAS TO get up and is never, never late. So let it be with you. If you HAVE TO do something you don't like, just remember dear old Father Sun who never tires who never uses an alarm clock. Remember that if Father Sun forgot to rise just one thing would happen it would be the END OF THE WORLD. Whatever you have to do, DO IT! FARMER SMITH, Children's Editor, Evening Ledger. FARMER SMITH, The Children's Editor, The Evening Ledger, Philadelphia, Pa. I wish to become a member of your Rainbow Club and agree to DO A LITTLE KINDNESS EACH AND EVERY DAY. SPREAD A LITTLE SUNSHINE ALL ALONG THE WAY. NAME Address Age School I attend Our Postoffice Box Welcome, another pair of twins, Beatrice and Cecelia Mayerson, Thompson street. A very sweet letter accompanied the picture. It says: "My sister and I are twins. We have read the stories in the Evening Ledgek and have enjoyed them very UEATitlCB AND CECELIA MAYBHSON. much. We are going to hold Rainbow Club meetings at our house once a week." Rose Conforto, South 13th street, wrote us a very nice letter, She is only 9 years old and we are quite proud of her. Rose Fisher, North 4Ui street, is very aaxlous to send pUl Quits Idleness and Easygoing Life to Enter Real Busi ness Declares Every Girl Should Learn How to Do Something FORTY years ago girls with any social standing at all wero satisfied to lead Idle lives until they were married or to sit nt home nnd let their nearest mate rela tive support them If they didn't marry, meanwhile bemoanln. tho fato that pre vented them from having all the frills and furbelows they wanted. The girl of today Is nn entirely different type. If she has not what Bhc wants or If tho family fortunes nro temporarily or permanently Impaired sho goes out nnd seeks a Job or starts 'some money making schemo for herself. Mnny girls grown tired of society's frivolous demands hnvo gladly given It up for the more purposeful world of business. Of this latter typo Is Miss Elizabeth Collin, ono of the several Main Line girls who have recently gone Into business for themselves. Miss Collin hnd devoted a great deal of her life to tho study of music, but sho realized that It would nvall her little as nn Income producer, so she decided In spite of her family's opposition to start a business for herself. Through a friend she obtained a tiny shop In West riillndclphln, which hnd been used for a Christmas sale, and there for the Inst two years hns not only done a successful business but hns mndo a name for her shop In the nenrby suburbs ns the best place to buy dainty Rifts. Miss Coffin, with a true business sense, felt the need of such a shop as sho cards to the shut-ins. If any more club members would like to do that, the club will gladly furnish them with the names of little ones who would be t happy to receive their bright little messages, Mary Heaney, North 27th street, sends a lovely little note on her very own stationery, Many of her friends have joined tho club and wo trust that each one of them will be faithful to the postoffice box, Francis Lee, Pemberton street: "I am very glad I joined the Rainbow Club." So are we, Francis, our heart goes pit-a-pat every time the mail man comes in with his bag full of new members! Honor Roll (For wtek ending December 18.) Otto Kaufman, .Butler st. Madeline Cuneo, Salter st. Elsie Birchey, N. American st. Lottie Caya, Fairmount ave. Esther Hill, N. College ave. Rose Arata, New Market st. Marizita McKeon, Merion, Pa. Harry Steffler, W. York st. Hannah Hymen, Richmond st, Mildred Dl Santi, Carpenter st. Ifjl planned; sho know that tho women of West I'hilndclphin would be glad of a chance to buy gifts nnd baby clothes, not uly lit reasonable prices, but In a quiet place wlii-ra every thing was at hand, so she made icndy to supply them with Just such nn opportunity. Her Arst Idcn was to get the services of so-cnlled "decayed gentlewomen" for the line sowing, but she found through prnctlcnl experience thnt girls who were nccus tomed to working regularly were moro satisfactory nnd she now bna a corps of Spanish sewing girls who do ex quisite work. Miss Collin believes that no matter whnt a girl's station In life or whnt her future prospects are, sho should bo taught somo business or trade, even If sho never uses It, "You cnn never tell," she said, "what Is going to happen. I have known girls who had everything henrt could wish or money could buy suddenly And themselves with nothing but some expensive clothes, through denth or fnlluro or something. And those snme Rlrls hnd to stnnd the most humiliating things from friends and relatives, because they could not enrn their own money and hnd to rely on tho kindness of others for their very living. "Of course," she continued, "lots of girls become social secretaries or com panions to elderly relatives; but that, somehow, does not seem to mo like really earning your living. It Is more like dis guised charity." RAINBOW CLUB The Story of a Raindrop DOWN! DOWN! DOWN! The afternoon was dark and little Willie Raindrop found himself slowly slipping, slipping from the great big black cloud which hung in tho heavens. Suddenly he felt himself whirling through the air, but as he went toward the earth he became rounder and rounder until he felt like a little ball. Looking down underneath he saw a tree. "00! Oo!" ho said to himself, "I hope I don't hit that awful-lookng thing." But before he knew it, he had land ed gently on something which looked to him very much like the blue sky. Then he said out loud: "Perhaps I fell up and landed on a piece of the sky." "Oh, no, you didn't," said a sweet vojee near him. "You landed on a violet." "Excuse me," said little Willie Rain drop, "you were so blue that I thought you were the sky." "No, indeed," said the sweet little voice, "but I stole my color from the sky." They were quiet for a long time, then Willie Raindrop said: "I wonder what happens next!" "You must be patient," said the violet with a sweet voice. "By and by you will sink into the deep moist earth and then come out into the bab bling brook, flow on into the rippling river and then to Mother Ocean where you may stay for a year and a day and then come back to your home in the sky." "How wonderful!" exclaimed little Willie Raindrop. By this time it was night and the clouds overhead began to pour down other raindrops once more and soon another little raindrop joined Willie, and sure enough he sank into the deep, soft earth and began his long, beauti ful journey. We shall hear more of little Willie Raindrop as he nestles there in dear Mother Earth. Do You Know This? 1. What is the matter rwith this sentence? "I'm alright," (Five credits.) 2. Without using the same letter twice in the same word, how many words can you build from TYPE WRITER? (Five credits.) 3. What is the smallest State in the United States? (Five credits.) The names of those who joined the 1 Rainbow Club this weet will be found j on page 13. i. ofwhorn Thomas W. Lazvson said: "I would rather own his God-driven pen than Rocke feller's and Morgan's com bined fortunes." of whom the Australasian "Nation" saidz "He will be the pathfinder for an army of conquerors." of whom the London "Academy" said: "As a figure, as a person ality, a force, he has no living H 99 "tq i ival Lo of whom the Houston "Chronicle" said: "He is a torpedo shot from the torpedo tube of the twentieth century and aimed at the obstacles that stand in the way of the twenty-first century." of whom the Portland "Oregonian" said: "He is a new King Solomon and with a dash of Robert Louis Stevenson." -Mttbe'NAMED.in-- Tomorro PUBLICIb LEDGER Man 9 WtS J "i i t , '