University of South Carolina Libraries
nm l 11 l B Bl Cppuriqhl- bu Edwirv Ralmpr ^ (Continued frofh last week) CHAPTER XIII. The Owner of the Watch. "So they got word to you I" Constance exclaimed; ehe seemed still confused. "Oh, no?of courne they couldn't have done that! They've hardly got my letter yet." "Your letter?" Alan asked. "I wrote to Bluo Rapids." she explained. * "Some things enme?they were seht to me. Some things of Uncle Benpy's which were meant for you Instead of me." "You mean you've heard from hlni?" "No?not that." "What things. Miss Sherrlll?" "A watcli of his find sump rolna nnH ?A ring." She (ltd "not explain the significance of thoRe things, and he could not tell from her mere enumeration of them and without seeing them that they furnlRhed proof that hla father was dead. She could not Inform him of that, she felt. Just here and now. "I'll fell you nhout that later. You? you were coming to Harbor l'olnt to see uhT" lie colored. "I'm afraid not. I got as near ur this to you because there Is a man?an Indian?I have to see." "An Indian I What Is his name? You see. I know quite a lot of them." "Jo Papo." She shook her head. "No; I don't know him." She fottnd a spot where the moas was covered with dry pine needles and sat down upon the ground. "Sit down," she Invited; "I want you to tell mo what you have been do "I've neen on trio noats." lie <lropi>ed down upon the moss beside ter. "Until yesterday I was n not Verj highly honored member of the Cfew of the package freighter Oscoda; 1 left her at Frankfort and came up here." "Is WassnqiMn with you?" "He wasn't oh the Oscoda ; hut he was with me at fust. Now, I believe, he has gone hack to his own people? j to Middle Village." "You mean you've been looking for Mr. Cnirvet In that way?" "Not exactly that." He hesitated; ' but ho could see no reason for not tell- ! Ing what he hart been doing. He had j not so much hidden f ?> >-. hor j;s;d her , fHther what he had found in llonjamtn Corvet's house; rather, he had refrained from mentioning It in his notes to them when he left Chicago because he had Untight that the lists would lead to an immediate explanation; they had not led to that, lint only to u suggestion. Indefinite yet. He had known that, ?f his search finally developed nothing more than It hid. ho nut at rt '.nst consult Sherrill and get Sherrlll's aid. "XV C fwond ?onv? \r. Miss Sher- j rill," he sold, "In the house on Astor street that night after l.uUe cai.ie." "What writing?* lie took the llats from Ills pocket and showed them to her. She scon- i rated and looked through the sheets I and rend the names written in the I same hand thnt had written the directions upon the slip of paper that came to her four duys before, with the things from Uncle Benny's pockets. "My futher had kept these very secretly," lie explained, "lie had them hidden. Wassaquom knew where they were, and that night after Luke was dead and you had gone home, he gave them to nte." "After I had gone home? Ilenry went hack to see you thnt night; he had said he was going hack, and afterward I usked him, and lie told me lie nan seen you agnln. Did you show him these?" "He saw them?yes." "He was there when Wnssaquarn showed ygu where they were?" "Yes." A little line doopened between her brows, und she sut thoughtful. "So you have heon going about seeing these people," she said. "What have you found out?" "Nothing definite nt all. None of them knew my father; they were only ? ? >/ , > "Nothing Definite At AM. None of Them Knew My Father." a ma re<1 to And that anyone In Ghicago had kaown their names." 1 I IrwiNP\yevs^^ clear I" She felt the bKteruess in his ! tone. "They have not any of them been able to make It wholly clear to me. It la like a record I hut has been ?blurred. These original names must luive been written down by my father many years ago?many, most of those people, I think?arc dead; some are nearly forgotten. The only thing that Is fully plain Is that In every case my Inquiries have led me to those who huve lost one, and sometimes more than one relative upon the lakes." Constance thrilled to a vague horror; It was not anything to which she could give definite reason. Ills tone quite as much as what he saltl was Its cause. : His experience plainly had been forcing him to bitterness against tils father; and he did not know with certainty yet thut his father was dead. "You'll lanch with us, of course," ghe said to Alan, "and then go hack with us to Harbor Point. It's a day's Journey around the two buys; bul we've a bout here." He assented, und they went down to the ttfltw vvti??rn flli> vv lllti> mill lii-otvn power yacht, with Ioiik, graceful lines, lay somnolently In the sunlight. A little bont took theni out over the shim| merlng, smooth surface to tin* ship; I swells from a faraway freighter swept under the beautiful, burnished eraft, causing it to roll lazily as they hoarded It. A party of nearly a dozen men and girls with an older woman elmperonlng them, lounged under the shade of an awning over the after deck. They greeted her gaily and looked curiously at Alan as she introduced him. "Have you worked on any of our bouts?" she flaked him, after luncheon had been finished, and the anehnr of the ship had heen raised. a queer expression came upon his face. "I've thought It lies! not to do that, Miss Shorrlll," he replied. She did not know why the next mo Illflll SIM' Mlllllll] IIIIIIIV <11 I 1 I I I I \ . The yacht was pushing swiftly, smoothly, with hardly a hum from Its motors, north along tin* shore. He watched Intently the rolling, wooded hills and the ragged little hays and inlets. Ills work and Ills InvestIgatlngs had not brought him to the neighbor hood before, hot she found that she did not have to name the places to him; he knew them from the charts. "Grand Traverse light." he said to her as a white tower showed upon their left. Then, leaving the shore they pushed out across the wide nioiitIt .of the larger hiiy toward Little Tra\ or.se. lie grew more silent us they up proaehed It. "It iR up there, Isn't It." lie asked pointing, "that they hear the Drum?"* "Yes; how did you know the place?" "I don't know It exactly; I want you to show tne." She pointed out to hint the copse, lark, primeval, bine In Its contrast with the lighter green of the frees about it and the glistening white of the shingle and of (lie more distant sulid bluffs. He leaned forward, staring at It, tuT.il ibe changed course of the yacht, as It swung about toward the entrance to the bay. obscured It "Seeing the ships made me feel Mutt I belonged here ot? the lakes," lie reminded her. "1 have felt something? not recognition exactly, but something that whs like the beginning of recognition?uiuny times this summer when 1 saw certain places, it's like one of those dreams, you know, in which you are conscious of having had the same dream before. I feel that 1 ought to know this place." They landed only a few hundred yards from the cottage. After bidding good-hy to her friends, they went tip to It together through the trees. There was a small nun room, rather shut off from the rest of the house, to which .she led him. I,eitvlng him there, flic ron upstairs to get the things. She halted an instant beside the door, with the box in her hands, hefore she went back to htm, thinking how to prepare him against the slgnlllcance of these rollcs of his father. She need not prepare him against the mere fact of his father's death; lie had been beginning to believe that already; but these things must have far more meaning for him than merely that. She went In and pat the box down upon the card table. "The muffler In the box was your father's," she (old hlm. "He had It on the day he disappeared. The other things," her voice choked a little, "are the things he must have had In his Dockets. They've been Ivlug in water ami Hand?" ' Ho (fuzed at her. "I understand," lie said nfler an instant. "You mean that they |>rove Ills death." She assented gently, without speaking. As lie approached I lie hox, she drew hack from it and slipped away into the next room. She walked up and down there, pressing her hands together, lie must he looking at the things now, unrolling the mulller. . . . What would he he feeling lis lie saw them? Would he he glad, with that same gladness which had mingled with her own sorrow over Uncle Kenny, that Ills father was gone?gone from tils guilt and his feur and his disunite? <>r would he resent tlint ileulli which tluiH left everything unexplained to him? He would bo lookliiK at the ring. 'That, lit leant, must bring more Joy thnn grief to hlin. lie would recognise that It must be his mother's wedding ring; If It told him that his mother must be dead, It would tell him that she had been married, or had believed that she wus married I *ay, nenaiog over the card tuble with the things spreud out upon Its top lu front of him. "Yes." He straightened; he wus very pale. "Would eobis that my father had In his pocket all have been more than twenty years old?"* She ran aud bent beside him over the coins. "Twenty years 1" she repeated. She was making out the dates of the coins now herself; the markings were eroded, nearly gone In some instances,, but in every case enough remained to muke plain the date. ul?ightecn-iilnety ? 180-1 ? 1880," she made them out. Her voice hushed queerly. "What does it mean7" she whispered. lie turned over and re-examined the articles with hands suddenly steadying. "There are two sets of tilings here," ho concluded. "The niutller and paper of directions?they bo longed to my father. The other things ?it isn't six moid lis or less than six mniifliu flint iiiuu'i'o i.. - 1 ? ...... ...VJ . v 111 nil I Ml mill water to become worn like this; it's twenty years. My father can't have had theae things; they were somewhere else, or someyone else had them. He wrote his dlructlons to that person?after June twelfth, he said, so It was before June twelfth he wrote It; but we can't tell how Ioiik before. It might have been In February, when he disappeared; It might have been any time after that. But If the directions were written so long ago, why weren't the tiding. sent to you before this? Didn't the person have the things then? Did we have to wait to get thorn? Or?was It the Instruct Ions to send thoin that ho didn't huvo? or. If ho hud tho Instructions, whs he waiting to reoolve word when they wore to he sent? Yon thought those things proved my father was dead. I think they prove he Is alive! Oh, we must think this out !" Ho paced up and down the room ; she sank Into a chair, watching hint. "The llrst thing that wy must do," he said suddenly, "Is to find nut ahout the watch. What Is the 'phone number of tho tologruph olllco?" She told hint, and he went out to the telephone; she sprang tip to follow hint, hut checked herself and merely waited until lie came hack. "I've wlrf'd to ItulYalo," he announced. "The Merchants' exchange. If It is still In existence, must have a record of the presentation 'of the watch." "Then you'll stay hero with us until an answer conies?" "If we get a reply |?y tomorrow morning ; I'll wait till Wo n. If not, I'll ask j'ou to forward It to mo. I must see about tlie trains and get hark to Frankfort. I <*im < i oss by boat from there to Manitowoc? I lint will lie qulekest. We must hegln there, by trying to thai out who sent the package" She helped him put the muffler and the other articles into the box ; she no* tired that the widdlng ring was no longer with them, lie had taken that, then; It had meant to him idl that shit had known It must mean. . . . In the morning she was up very early; hut Alun, the s?m'viiiiIs told her, hud risen before she lm<1 and lutd gone out. Tl ? iiiuriilii^. alter the cool northern night. was i ! ill. She slipped a MV 'nli'r on and went out on 11.venue up, looting ill out for him An ' 'descent hii'/o shrouded the hills unit the hny; In it she hoard a ship's hell strike twice; then another struck twice then another?and another lind another. The haw thinned as the sun grew wanner, showing the placid water of the hay oil which the ships stood iloiihie. She saw Alan returning, and knowing from ti c* direction from which he came that he milst have heen to the telegraph olliee, she ran t > inert liim. "Was there an uiiswrr?" she inipitrcd eagerly. He look a yellow telegraph sheet from his pocket an?l held It for 1 or to read. "Watch presented Captain Caleb Stafford, muster of propeller freighter Marvin llaleh for rescue of crew and passengers of sinking steamer Winnebago off Lons; point, Lake lOrle." She was hrealliing quickly in her excitement. "Caleb Stafford!" she exclaimed. "Why. that was Captain Stafford of Stafford and Kamsdell! They owned the Miwaka !" "Yes," Alan said. A great change bad mine over him since last night ; he was under emotion so strong that he seemed scarcely to dare speak lest it master lilni a leap exultant Impulse It was, wlilrli he fought to keep iluwii. " Whit t Is If, Alan?" alio asked. "What Is It about the Mlxvaka? You said you'd found sonic reference to it In Uncle Benny's house. What was It? What did you find there?" "The man?" Alan swallowed and steadied himself and repeated "the man 1 met in the house that nl^ht mentioned It. lie seemed to think I w its a ijhost that had haunted Mr. ('orvet?the ithost from the Mlwaka; at least he shouted nut to nic that I couldn't save the Mlwaka!" "Save the Mlwalal What do you mean, Alan? The Mlwaka wfl? lost with "8ave the Miwakal What Do You Mean, Alan?" all her people?offlcera and crew?no one know* how or wbare I" i ann't know yet"; Inif I think I'll Boon llnd out." "No; you can tell tt.e more now, A Inn. Surely you can. ( must know. I have the rl>:ht to kno"*. Yesterday, even before you fouml oilt about Ibis, you knew things you weren't telling ine?things about the people you'd been seeing. They'd all lost pontile oil (lie lakes, you said ;'lu;l you fouml out i more than that." | "They'd all lost people on the Ml! wuKu!" he said. "All who eould tell me where their people "were lost; a few were like Jo I'apo we saw jysterday, who knew only the year his father | was lost ; but the time always was the time that the Mtwaka disappeared!" "1 >isappeared !" she repeated. Her veins were pricking eold. What did he know, wlint could un.v 01 know of the Mlwaka, the ship of \, hleh nothing I ever whs heard except I lie heating of the Indian I?rum? She tried to make liiin say more; but lie looked away now down to the lake. "The Chippewa must have come In I early tlds morning," he said. "She's lying in tlie harbor; 1 saw her on my way to the telegraph oillce. If Mr. Spearman lias come liaek with her, tell him I'm sorry I can't wait to see him." "When are you going?" "Now." She offered to drive Mm to i'etoske.v, tint he already had arranged for a man to take him to tie- train. She went to her room after lie was gone ijnd spread out agr i on her lied the waleh?now the wal It of Captain StalVord of the Miwn i?with the knife and coins of more than twenty years ago whleh eame with It. The meaning of them now was all changed; she fell that; lint what t" * new meaning might he could not yet come to her. Something of It had < ome to Alan ; that. undoubtedly, was what had so greatly stirred liltn; bid . he could not yet reassemble her Idea . Vet a few facts bad become plain. A maid came to say that Mr. Spearman bad come up from Ids boat for break fust with her and was downstairs. She went down to tind Henry lounging in one of the great wicker chairs In the living room, lie arose and came toward her quickly; hut she hulled bef ire lie Could n v.o Iter. "What's wrong, dear':" "Alan t'onrad has bet n here, Hwiry." "Ii?? has? How was tb.it?" Sin- told him \v!Jile lie wa'cbed her Intentlv. "lie wired to hi Ufa In about the r i'.h. He got n ?\ ly which bt brought to me half an hour avo." "Yen?" "Tlic xvnteh belong 1 to Captain Stafford who was lost with the Ml wuku, llenry." Ill* made no reply; I. I walled. "Voli limy not have known that It was his; L mean, yon may not have known that it was ho who reseuod tin* people of the Wlnnoharo, l<ut you must huve known that t.'nelo I'eiitiy didn't." "Yos; I knew thut, < onnle," lie anawe I'd evenly. 'I'llen why did you let me think the witte|| was his ant' tliu' he must he? dead?" "That's all's the mill or? You had thought he was dead. 1 I iioved it was heller for you?lor evt y one?to believe that." She drew a lltt'e away from him, with liatids Hasped he. ind her Imek, Ku/.ini; Intently at liitu. "There was hdiik' writing found in I e|o Benny's house In Astor street? ft list of naiiu's III relatives of people W lit) llilll lost tliolr lives upon tlu? lake. Wiissn<]itaiii knew w 11ere those thin :s were. Alan soys lliey were given to hiin in your presence. Why illiln't >ou tell ine H hoi 11 tlllll 7" lie stralghtened :is If with anger. "Why should IV Herat ;e he thought thnt 1 should? What did he tell you nhoiit I hose llsls?" "Nothing?exrept that his father had kept theni very serrelly; hut lie's found out they were nutans of people who hud relatives on the Miwaka !" "What?" Iteealling how her hlood had run when Alan had told her that, Henry's whiteness and the following sulVusloii of Ills fiov did not surprise her. i mill lenou lo'iic ;ik<? not to stiirt stirring these mutters up nhout Moll C'orvot, iiml purti uliirly I told li!111 tliiit In* was not to liriiiK any of it to yoti. It's not - -a tlilny that a man like Hon oovorod np for twont.v yosirs till It drove liim eray.y Is sure not to he a tlittiK for n irirl to Know. Met it alone, I toll you." She stood dusked and perplexed KazltiK :it 1111>1. She never had soon him under stronger emotion. "You niisiiudorstood me once, < 'onnle!" lie appealed. "You'll understand me now !" She hud heel) thinking ahotit that llijustjee she Ian] done him In her CARDUI HELPED REGAIN STRENGTH Alabama Lady Was Sick For Thre? Years, Suffering Pain, Nervous end Depressed?Read Her Own Story of Recovery. Paint Hock, Ala.?Mm. C. M. Stegoll Of near lioro, recently related tho fol lowing Intonating account of her ro ' covery: "I was In a weakened con dltlom I was nick three yearn in bed suffering a groat deal of pain, weak nervous, depressed. I was so weak I couldn't walk across the floor; Jus had to lay and my little ones do th< work. I was almost dead. I trlec avery thing I hoard of, and a number o rtoctora. Still 1 didn't got any relief I couldn't oat, and idept poorly. ! bollovo if I hadn't hoard of and takei Cardul I would have died. I bough six bottloH, after a neighbor told m< what it did for hor. "I began to eat and Bleep, began t< gain my ntrongth and am now wel and strong. I haven't had any trou bio Blnce ... I euro can testify to th< good that Cardul did mo. I don' think there la a better tonto mad* and I believe it saved my 11/0.** For over 40 year*, thousands of wc men have used Qirdut auooeesfullj la the treetme>"^t many womaalj Rene hy p sy \ ;> I The purified are nausea !es as Calolabs a Beware of i: sold only in v/* packages hes ? r*i ? . * ft \ aiotaDs. & cifttfAi} / U yj># j <j? Jl S 1 i"" ? i thought?about bin chivalry to hb partner 11 ml t'?triii**r benefactor, wlu-n I'ltclo Kenny wns still keeping hh place ninon^ men. Was Henry now moved. In a way which she could not , understand, hy some other obligation to the man who lout? ap> had aided ' him? Ilmt Henry hazarded more thuii ! In? lin?) told her of the ii:ilun> of the , tliinu hid.Ion which, If she could Kiirs! it, would Justify what ho said? Sho had loado Alan promise to write her, if ho was not to rot urn, reyardlny what he Icarnod ; and a letter came to I hor on tlio fourth day from him in i Manitowoc. The post ollioo ompl<?\oo> i had no reoollocthai, ho said, of tlw I person who had mailed the pa.-Inure; i it simply had hoen dropped hy some one into the receptacle lor malltm; i pack a yes of that sort. Alan, however, was oontiiiuinK his Inquiries. Sho wrote to hjm in reply; in lack Of Itliyl 11111U lUolo i III 11< I|*l illlt to ."till , him, she related some of her activities j Mild inquired itltotil his. After she had ' written lilin thus t\\ la- replied. do scribing his lil'o on th? hoats pleasant ly and htinioroiisly; tlion, though slit itntnodlatoly replied, alio did tnd limit from him again. A now Idoa had seized ('oiistoneit'aplain Caleb afford was tanned among the lost, of course; with bin Ini<] perished Ids son, a Im?\ of three That was all thai was said, and all that was to he learned of him, tin hoy. Alan had heen three then. This \vie wild, era/.y speculation. The ship wa> lost with all hands; only the I nam believed in hy the superstitious am (lie most .Ignorant, denied that. Tin Drum said that one soul had heel J snvod. Ilow oould :i clillil of Iti!'?>? ha\o hooii s.'iM'd whuti stroni; nun. t< i llic I si sl 0110, hail porishod ? Anil, If In I liiul lioon snvotl, ho w:is Stafford's son I Why should I'nolo Hoiiii> liuvo son til in away and en roil for hlin anil ihoi I wilt for him and, liitnsolf dlsappoar ! iiitf, leavo all ho had lo SI afford': i son? ) Mr wan ho Stafford's son? Hoi thought wont luioU lo |ho Ihlu^s whirl had hooii sent iho Ihlim's from h i man's poohots wilh a wedding rim illnoiiK tl)i%Hi. She had holioxod tlm l Iho ring oloaroil tlio niolhor's iiamo in111 II in roallty only iimro Involvi It? Why had II ouino Ion I; hho this ! tho man hy whom. porhnps If had hooi givon? Hi nry's words oamo nirnin am 11 train to It's a ipioor oon ' oorn yoii'vo jmt f?*r Hon l.oaxo i aloiio, I toll you!" Ilo Know Hum > soniolhinu sihont Undo Honny whlol , luluht havo hmnclit on somo torrllih ( Muni; wliloli llonry did not laiow I>11 ( inluht giioss? ('oiisliinoo wonl wool j within. I'nolo Itonny's wlfo had lof J him, slio roiiioiniiorod. Was if hot tor f a ft or all, to "loavo it aloiio?" A tolograph onvolopo addrossod f< ' hor falhor was on tho tnhlo in tho hall : A sorvnnt told hor tho iuonmiiuo ha< oonio an hour hoforo. and that ho Inn telephonod to Mr. SherrlU's olthv, I>n j Mr. Sherrill was not In. There ?;is in I reason for her thinking that the mes [. sago might ho front Alan oxooj?l hi 9 presence In her thoughts, hut she won t at oneo to the telephone and en I lei her fat her. He was In now, and h I dlreeted her to open the message nn< > read It to him. "Have Borne one," she read alottd w your ;h urifying ] a ? e r<c *r <air? ^ I && yvaa \ " <*ma Hf * n/....yw.; . .. \ *t1>S .1&?-/? -" ; ' VA^''//'-/ and refined calomel s? safe and sure. No sa cl luce, calomel and sal imitations! Genuine C checkcr-board" (Slack iring the copyrighted V <=?<; t Packi ; COUNTY TAX State Ordinary County i. . IKDllUS Bridges 1 i Total . i , I Churn w , Marburg I Orange Hill I i'ats Branch lVe L)ec I SlufTord j Bethel Center I'oint ' Chesterfield Parker . l'inc Grove . liul>y Iiiloll i Snow llill I Stafford Yautfh.ui | Wnml.le llill lllaek Creek Center . t , Cm s Konus Mi a..... , *??V, * > ,'h,l<|i| liuhy Wi'xfdi'd Win'/o Zion lkill'alo Dudley Five Forks Manhunt i- I'aicelaiid 1* ' ins Zion An^elus 1 (.'filter Grove Clorks , Jefferson , Macedonia I I'lains Bay Springs *' (jicon Hill . Behind Middendorf Me Bee < l'rovidcnco i Sandy Run , Union Buy Springs 1 Bear Creek Bcthosda J unipor , Middendorf , Patrick i ' Pats Branch Branch s Shiluh I Stafford ' White Oak . ** ! Cat Pond 1 I Juniper . Ousley . 1 Patrick t ?i r> ^I^IIIVOTI * , t ? ? jt , in.1. | tealth pour . 1 til 3 %, >, :W . !mun tablets that 5ts necescary Is combined* ^alotaibs are c nd white) trr.rr'. n^rL Pk't. 1A, & f eg* ige - ? * LEVY 1921 12 miiis 6 mills 6 mills 1 mill 28 mills m r :7. r/. ~ ijf & ? S- 3- g ? a iL ? o sS {o o ? ? : ? ca i -* *"* 50 f. 2. S- w ? o 2 ! O C o tc -d ? j S I S- ? ^ c ? O 3 5 3 s I ? fr i . I 28 , 12 | 4 1V4 46 V4 . .| 28 | 8j 1 37 '4 - I ~s I 1V4I34V4 ! I ?j | lV4j37V4 38 I 3i 4 j 1 Vi j36 Mi ! 38 | ?| 2 1V4,3?V6 ? . .j 28 I 8 6 41 2H | 8, 36 . . 28 1(5 | , 4 V4 |48tt *X Xj 3j | 39 38 8; | J 86 .. 28 10, Gj 4 Vfc |G3Vi . . 28 8, 2) | 38 . .j 1!8 j Sj 6 j 42 ..| 28 | Kj 2 I 88 "I 28 ! 8| 2 | 88 ! 28 I 8, I 3G "I 28 I 1()i 61 43 ' 28 I lul 6| 43 -I 28 i 8: G| 61 47 I 28 ?| Cj 61 46 *1 28 1Gj &| 4 6j 68 I 28 f?| 4>* 6 68 ^ I 28 8| &' 61 46 I 28 8 ?; 61 46 I 28 8| 7 V41 6'48* I 28 ?| | 4 40 I 28 i ?i I I I 86 . . 28 8, I 86 2H 8! J 8g 28 16, 7 to 614 28 K| 8 ] 44 I 28 l HI 7 to | 43 to .. | 28 | *| 7 6 48 . . J 28 j 8 j 6 6 47 i 1 j 8, t? 6 46 ( 28 j I 9| 6 68 - I 28 I Kl a| | 6 44 ...|28| 8) H| | 41> . . 28 8( 0 6 48 -.28 8| lOj 6 52 28 8, loj 6 62 28 8 j | 5 6 47 -| 28 118 to | | 4 to I 6 67 ...28 21 6 86 *1 28 Hi 6 42 I fn I Ul /! I ? ' I "I "I o . .| 28 K 6 42 ,..128 8| 86 . . .| 28 111 39 ....|28 31 81 .. 28 | 8; 6 41 . 28 If, 4 47 . .. 28 8 8H . . 28 8 2 |( . . . 28 8 2 It . . . 28 8 6 4t . 28 8 6 41 ...28 8 II ... 28 12 6 44 ... 28 11 4 4* ( OA * I ; Q j 4