University of South Carolina Libraries
? - - ...I, Mir ~ . ... .w ???... uammmasEsasssssxmmm^mmmmeai 3* I ?1 S ^ w M i.'Vi V W M V m* w 1. HDRmflRHISIIRfilRRI MB^UHMHU iE ISpR Gbpyriqhfr by Edwir\Balmer>??*-J (Continued from Inst week) = I CHAPTER XX The Fat* of the Mlwaka. "So this Isn't your house, JudahT" "No, Alan; this is an Indian's house, but It Is not mine. It Is Adam Enos' house. He and his wife went somewhere else when you needed this." "He helped to bring me here, then?" "No, Alan. They were alone, here? she and Adam's wife. When she found you, they brought you here?more thun a mile along the beach. Two women!" Alan choked as he put down the little porcupine quill box which had started this line of inquiry. Whatever questions he had asked Judah or Sherrill these last few dBys had brought him very quickly back to her. Moved by some Intuitive certainty regnrding Spearman, she had come north; she had not thought of peril to herself; . he had struggled alone across danger- j oua Ice In storm?a girl brought up as She had been! She had found him? j Alan?with life almost extinct?upon | the beach; she and the Indian woman, Wassaquam . had Just said?had brought him along the shore. How had they managed that, he wondered. His throat closed up, ami his eyes filled as he thought of this. In the week during which he hud kwn U- ?!-- ? ' - - * - - uvv.li VI. 1 v vi 1U1 uric, AIHII null IKU Hl'eil Constance; but there hud been a peculiar and exciting alteration in Slierrill's manner toward him, he had felt; It whs something more than merely liking for him that Sherrlll had showed, and Sherrlll had spoken of her to him as Constance, not, as he had called her always before, "Miss Sherrlll," or "my daughter." Alan had had dreams which had seemed impossible of fulfillment, of dedicating his life and ull that he could make of it to her; now Sherrill's manner had brought to him something like awe, as of something quite Incredible. He turned to the Indian. "Has anything more been heard ol Spearman, Judah?" "Only this, Alan; he crossed the straits he next day upon the ferry there. In Mackinaw City he hough.1 liquor at a bar and took 1*. with him he asked there aho'n trn:*> Into the northwest.. He has got.*, i-?ving all he had. What else couid ' ? do?" Aian crossed the little cabtn and looked out the window over the snowcovered slope, where the bright sun was shining. Snow had covered any tracks that there had been upon the beach where those who had been in the hunt with Mill luul Imun I dead. He had known that tliia must be; he had believed them beyond aid when he had tried for the *hore to aummon help for V.em and for hiinself. The other b-'.u, which had carried survivors of tne wreck, blown farther to the south, had been able to gain the shore of North Fox island; and as these men had not been ao long exposed before they were brought to shelter, four men lived. Sherrlll had told him their names; they were the mate, the assistant engineer, a deckhand and Father Perron, the priest who had been a passenger but who had stayed with the crew till the last, lhjnJamln Corvet had perished In the wreckage of the cars. As Alan went back to his chair, the Indian watched him und seemed not displeased. "You feel good, now, Alan?" Wassaquam asked. "Almost like myself, Judnh." "That Is right, then. It was thought you would be like that today. A sled la coming soon, now." "We're going to leave here, Judah?" "Yes, Alan." Was he going to see her, then? Excitement stirred him, and he turned to Wassaquam to ask that; but suddenly he hesitated and did not Inquire. Wassaquam brought the mncklnaw and cap which Alan had worn on Number 25; he took from the bed the newblankets which had been furnished by 8herrill. They waited until a farmer appeared driving a team hitched to a low, wlde-runnered sled. The Indian settled Alan on the sled, and they drove off. Tney traveled south-along the shore, rounded Into Little Traverse bay, and the houses of Harbor Point appeared among their pines. The aled proceeded across the edge of the bay to the little city; even before leaving the bay Ice, Alan saw Constance and her father; they were walking at the water front near the railway station, and they came out on the Ice as they recognized the occupants of the sled. Alan felt himself alternately weak and roused to strength pa he saw her. Their eyes encountered, and hers looked away; a sudden shyness, which aent his heart leaping, had come over her. He wanted to speak to her, to make some recognition to her of what he had done, but he did not dare to trust his volae; and she seemed to understand that. He turned to Sherrlll Instead. An engine and tender coupled to a single car stood at the railway station. "We're going to Chicago?" he Inquired of Sherrlll. 1^1 "Not yet, Alan?to St. Ignace. Father Perron?the priest, you know? ? * went to St. Ignace as soon As he recovered from his exposure. He sent word to me that he wished to see me at my convenience; I told him that we would to to him aa soon as you were able." NHS himself once more among the crashing, ?hn rgiiiR freight cars on the ferry and to see Behjamin Corvet. pinned uuild llin ' '- ir " UIC iTtct nOKC unit K|n-|IMI1K IIIIO U1B CUT of the priest. * ?*? * It was not merely a confessional which Father Perron had taken from the Hps of the dying man on Number 25; it was an accusation of crime against another man us well; and the confession and accusation hoth had been made, not only to gain forgiveness from God, but to right terrible wrongs. If the confession left some things unexplained, it did not lack confirmation ; the priest had learned enough to be certain that it was no hallucination of madness. He had been charged definitely to repeat what had heen told him to the persons he wits now going to meet; so he watched expectantly upon the railway station platform at St. Ignace. A tali, handsome man whom Father Perron thought must be the Mr. Sherrill wWi whom he had communicated nppenred upon the car platform; U?e young man from Number 25 followed him, aud the two helped down a young and beautiful girl. They recognized the priest by his dress and came toward him at once. "Mr. Sherrill?" Futher Perron inquired. Sherrill assented, taking the priest's hand and introducing his daughter. "I am glad to see you safe, Mr. Stafford." The priest had turned to Alan. "We have thanks to offer un for thnt you and I!" "I am his son, then! I thought that must be so." Alan trembled at the priest's sign of confirmation. There was no shock of surprise In this; he had suspected ever since August, when Captain Stafford's wateh and the wedding ring had so strangely come to Constance, thut he might be Stafford's son. He looked nt Constance, as they followed the priest to the motor which was waiting to take them to the house of old Father Benltot, whose guest Father Perron was; she was very quiet. What would that grave statement which Father Perron was to make to them mean to him?to Alan? Would further knowledge about that father whom he had not known, but whose blood was ids and whose name he now must bear, bring pride or shame to him? A hell was tolling somewhere, as they fallowed the priest into Father Benl tot's siuull, bare room which hud been prepared for thekr Interview. Fatner Perron went to a desk on 1 toolt therefrom some notes which he hud made "What I have," he said, speaking more particularly to Sherrill, "is the terrible, not fully coherent statement of u dying man. It has given me names ?also it has given me faets. But isolated. It does not give what entue before or what came after; therefore, it does not make plain. 1 hope thut, us Benjamin Corvet's partner, you can furnish what I lack." "What is it you want to know?" Sherrill asked. "What were the relations between Benjamin t'orvet and Captain Stafford ?" Sherrill thought u moment. "Corvet," he replied, "was a very able man ; he had insight and mental grasp?and he had the fault which sometimes goes with those, a hesitancy of action. Stafford was an uble man. Father Perron Went to a Desk and Took Therefrom Some Notes Which He Had Made. too. considerably younger than Corvet. Twenty years ago, when the conflict of competing interests was at its height, Corvet was the head of one line, Stafford was head of another, and the two lines hud very much the same connections and competed for the same cargoes." "I begin to see!" Father Perran exclaimed. " 'lease go on." "In the early nineties both lines still were young; Stafford had, I believe, two ships; Corvet had three." "So few? Yes; it grows plainer!" "In 1H1M, Stafford managed a stroke which, If fate had not intervened, must have assured the ultimate extinction of Corvet'g line or Its absorption Into Stafford's. Stafford gained as his partner Franklin ftamsdell, a wealthy man ??- I II ??f Corvet. The new Arm?Stafford and Ramedell?-projected the construction, with Ramsdell's money, of a number j of great steel freighters. The first of these?the Mlwaka, a test ship whose j experience was to guide them In the construction of the rest?was launched In the fall of 1885, and was lost on Its maiden trip with both Stafford and Ramsdell aboard. The Stafford and Ramsdell Interests could not survive the death of both owners and disappeared from the lakes. Is this what you wanted to know?" The priest nodded. Alan leaned tensely forward, watching; what he had heard seemed to have increased and deepened the priest's feeling over what he had to tell and to have aided his comprehension of It. "His name was Caleb Stafford," Father Perron began. "(This Is what Benjamin Corvet told to me when he I was dying under the wreckage on toe ferry.) 'He was as fair and able a man as the lakes ever knew. I had my will of most men In the lake trade In thbse days; but 1 could not have my will of him. With all the lakes to trade In, he had to pick out for his that traffic which 1 already had chosen for. my own. Hut I fought him fair. Father?I fought him fair, anil I would have continued to do that to the end. "'I was at Manistee, Father, In the end of the season?December fifth of 189f>. The Ice hud begun to form very early that year and was already had; there was cold and a high gale. I had laid up one of my ships at Manistee, and I was crossing that night upon a tug to Manitowoc, where another was to he laid up. I had still a third one loading up on the northern peninsula at Mnnlstlque for a last trip which, if it could he made, would mean a good profit from a season which so far, because of Stafford's competition, had been only fair. After leaving Manistee, It grew still tuore cold, and I was afraid the ice would close In on her and keep her where she was, so 1 determined to go north that night anil see that she got out. None knew, Father, except those aboard the tug, that I had made that change. " 'At midnight, Father, to westward of the Foxes, we heard the four blasts of a steamer In distress?the four long blasts which have sounded in my soul ever since! We turned toward where we saw the steamer's lights; we went nearer and, Father, It was his great ship?the Mlwaka! We had heard two days before that she had passed the Soo; we had not known more than that of where she was. She had broken her new shaft, Father, and was intact except for th it. but helpless in the rising sea . . " The priest broke ofT. "The Mlwaka 1 I did not understand all that that had me*.nt to nliu until Just t;ow?tin* now I fhlp of the rival line, whose lni'ldlng | mount lor hlui failure and defout! "There Is 110 higher duty than the | rescue of those In peril at sea. lie? Benjamin Corvet, who told rue this? swore to me that, at the beginning none upon the tug had any th<" nght except to give aid. A small line was drifted down to the tug and to this a hawser was attached which they hauled aboard. There happened then the llrst of those events which led those upon the tug Into doing a groat wrong. He?Benjamin Corvet?had taken, charge of the wheel of the tug; three a.en were handling the hawser in ice and wnshing water at the stern. The whistle accidentally blew, which those on the Mlwnka understood to mean that the liawser hud been secured, so they drew* In the slack; the hawser, tightened unexpectedly by the pitching of the sea, caught and crushed the captain and deckhand of the tug and threw tliera Into the sea. "Because they were short-handed now upon the tug, and also because Consultation \vn? nnoocoo??. ? . ..vvvoonij UTCI Wliai was to be done, the young owner of the Mlwuka, C'aptuin Stafford, nime down the hawser onto the tug after the line had been p?:t ?traight. He came to the wheelhouoe, where Benjamin C'orvet was, and they consulted. Then IVniamin Cor?-"? learned Mint the Continued next week.) _4t V. "ic quaii the standi . Goodri< < i f>V./? rv ^ricc c *p.r iA iaicv ' rtodrich sta : :: y X3 cod; ith 7 i rc, t! popular 30 >: 3 1 . r i .unci a toul il 0 s r.iC quality : Uv v ! !c u has made Ot \ .*sic ) f r dcpential i.t service, mileage ai TV" p- In.'pie has ! i.i ;lie I'.ty knovtr in the long rui r ~WL ItBB j L mm iXil,i. . -11 m <|WI lr^i Look ."or this Coo yoi.i :rc ucaitr's st injcvery trun. TiiL ^.F. GOODRICH Altroti - / . ' NOTICE OF ENROLLMENT IN CHESTERFIELD COUNTY Under the rules of '<! i Democratic Party a re-enrollment i , required for each election year and his is mandatory. The enrollment i ooks will be open at the Various e'abs on Tuesday, the sixth (6th) day of June 1922 and will close on Tuesday. July 25th. 1922. The Democratic Executive Committee respectfuly unci.; every democrat to enroll and under the rules of the Party unless your name is on the club roll of your precinct you cannot vote and must enroll in the club nearest your residence, cel..dated by the nearest practical route. The rules of the party further provide: "Each applicant for enrollment shall in person write upon the club roll his (or her) full name and immediatelv thereafter his (or her) age, occupation and post-office address, and if in a city or town shall write the name of the street number of the house in which the applicant resides, if such designations exists in uch city or town. "If the name be illegible the Secretary shall write the name beneath the signature of the appLiunt. In the event of the inability of the applicant to wrie he (or she) may make his( or her) mark upon the ro!', which shall be witnessed by the Secretary or other person then having the custody thereof, and if the Secretary shall fill in other requirements." Under the laws of the State and the rules of the Party the women have the full right of suffrage and they are most respectfully invited to enroll for the elections and their failure to enroll and vote would give other sections of the State a voting advantage. All democx*ats who are properly enrolled and who have reached the age of TWENTY-ONE YEARS, or shall become so before the general election in November, and who have been in the State TWO Y'EARS and in the county SIX MONTHS and in tho voting precinct 60 DAYS prior to the first primary to be held on 29th day of August shall be entitled to vote, provided, of course, they are citizens of the United States and of South Carolina. The following is a list of the vo'ting places, the Committee of Enrollment for each and the places where the books can be found: Cheraw, No. 1. Mrs. G. W. Martin, Joe Lindsay and L. C. Wannanxaker. Place, Town Hall. Cheraw. No. 2. J. J. West, H. T.j Caulder and x. ?. . ..vers. Place, Pollock's Store. I Pee Dee. II. K. Linton, R. C. Spease and John H. Wallace Place, H. K. Lin-1 ton's or the usual place Bethel. J. M. Kimeiy. D. S. Mattheson and C. C. Chapman. Kimery's stoi^e. j Brock's Mill. D. C. Caulder, R. S.' Parker and J. C. Brock. School house.' Grant's Mill. B. F. McBride, W. B. Atkinson and W. H. Caulder. Teal's Mill. . | Patrick W. A. McNair, D. M. Mc< Nair and D. F. Buite. Post-office. | Middendorf. II. C. Wilhelm, J. C. Catoe and W. R. Johnson. Depot. , Ousleydale. F. J. Johnson, Theodore Winburn and R. C. Baker. School House. McBee. R. T. Seegers, D. L. Guy and D. G. McPherson. Corner Drug Store. Cat Pond. J W. Ruthven, John A. Williams and Lewis Wilkes. School House. Shiloh. J. W. Merriman, Bryan ity only? ird for all :h Tires iot modify the one ndard. You can buy Silvertown Cord or i clincher fabric, and >t that you are getting avs. It is this quality v-.drich Tires unsurlility and durability nd value. put the real meaning i Goodrich slogan of i." drifh Tir** sicm nvpr ore. It means satissacjtion. [ RUBBER COMPANY i, Ohio TUBJJS ACCESSORIES ;:7z^rzjqr--;. r v'"; **VV.-V" J * "*T Renew your health by purifying your system with lalotabs The purified and refined calomel tablets that are free from nausea and danger. No salts necessary, as Calotabs act like calomel and salts combined. Demand the genuine in 10c and 35c packages, bearing above trade-mark. Odom and T. H. Douglass. School House. Bay Springs. J. W. Rascoe, J. A. Davis, and Daniel C. Campbell. Bay Springs School House. Douglass' Mill. J. L. Douglass, B. C. Wadsworth and O. H. Dougluss. Wadsworth's Store. Cross Roads. V. B. Waddell, J. H. Dalrymplc and W. D. Gulledge. Church. Snow Hill. W. C. Freeman, E. C. Crawford and J. F. Crawford. School house or usual place. Ruby. W. R. Eddins, J. S. McGregor and M. L. Raley. Bank. Wexford. P. A. Gulledge, I. R. Melton and J. G. Lowry. Lowry's Store. Mt. Croghan. W. J. Rayfield, H. A. Jackson and W. F. Hough. Bank. Winzo. T. B. Watts, W. M. Jordan and J. A. Taylor. H. Z. Outen's or the usual place. Center Grove. J. A. Demby, Roy Summerland and J. W. Jordan. School house. Pageland. C. F. Funderburg. G. W. Kennington and H. J. Ogburn. Mungo Bros, store. Dudley. T. D. Funderburk, Howard Funderburk and W. J. Funderburk. School house or usual place. Plains. G. W. Hinson, T. J. Rogers and W. J. Hicks. Hicks' Store. Jefferson. J. A. Baker, J. W. Miller and J. B. Nicholson. Nicholsons' store. Angelus. T. J. Knight, E. A. Middleton and W. L. Jordan. Jordan's store. Catarrh. A. M. McLeod, J. G. Holley and B. E. Funderburk. Funderburk's store. Court House. F. M. Cannon, T. W. Eddins and C. J. Sellers. Court house. The gentlemen whose name appears last on each committee will act as sec rotary. Let the word go out toa 11 the voters so that there will be 110 reason for anyone in the county being deprived 666 Cure* Malaria, Chills and Fever, Dengue or Bilious Fever, It kills the germs. 37 WANTED to communicate with some substantial farmer that is in need, or could use the services of an experienced farmer. Married man with family. Thirty three years of age. Now employed, but for good reason desire to make a change, which will be made known through either a personal interview or by communication. T. D. McCoy, 2t-27 Oswego, S. C. FOR SALE?Horse in good condition; price right; cheap, plenty of life. J. T. Wallace, Chesterfield Route ?, uox 1is. 4tp-28 | Tired U ^1 "1 was weak and run-down," jl M relates Mrs. Eula Burnett, of 4 A D<on, Ga. "I was thin and S| Just felt tired, all the time. S h I didn't rest well. I wasn't atti J A ever hunger. I knew, by M M this, I needed a tonic, and A || as there la none better than? R leuHii 8 The Woman's Tonic i , . , I began using Cardul," ^| S| continues MrB. Burnett. ^ "After my first bottle, I slept 14 WA better and ate better. I took K| ? four bottles. Now I'm well, A M feel Just fine, eat and sleep, K M my skin Is clear and I have S gained and suro feel that jjj tt Cardul la the best tonto ever w K made " ? Wa Thousands of other women M M hare found Cardul Just as A M Mrs. Burnett did. It should R H help you. Ofl ^ At all druggists. ^ THE HOI How to Make and Use 1 IV. RECE Broadly apeakfhg,the receiving s tuner, the detector and -ttoe^ receiver, the Instrument Is made up of several and used for a definite purpose. The aerial, which Is a wire des the continuous waves (always referi w \ f AHUM. I ZL, i J*rrjrcrojr i t S rv#g* (\ 1 S /rreg/Kg* Y) , F/f.7 \ i wise to Impress all users of reeelvln aerial and the higher above the groin ulthough an aerial 150 feet long and v every purpose. Moreover, It makes zontal, vertical or at an angle, provht roundlngs, and very good results ha\ up an air shaft or along the side of connecting the aerlul with the recelv and therefore a long lend-In with a s long aerial and short lead-In, which 1 hotels, apartment houses, etc., where u long and lofty aerial on the roof. I inn the Installation of aerials, let us ment nnd thoroughly understand Its The detector, without which It v the minute currents of waves which p part of the mechanism. There are known as the crystal detector and th mer, a crystal of some mineral?prel ter, a form of incandescent lamp with Of the two, the former Is the cheaper made sets, but It has limitations and 1 as the vacuum tube, as will he explal means by which the entire apparatus station or elsewhere and by means only by means of the tuner can the i "tune" with the waves carrying the s receiver Is merely a telephone receiv small set, Is worn over the ears exne sages. Figure 7 Illustrates In dlagramm positions In the set. but there are se^ to good results. of his vote in the coming election. The Executive Committee at all times wil be glad to give any additional information. D. F. Brock, M. J. Hough, Secretary. Chairman. Just 80. "You can't live your own life." "Huh?" "The butcher, the buker and the Inndlord keep buttlug In." Willing to Divide. Teacher (sternly)?Willie, give that chewing gum to me. Willie?I'll let you have half of it. tnwrr =7 COUNTY TA: State Ordinary County Roads Bridges Total Cheraw Marburg . . Orange Hill Pats Branch Pee Dee Stafford Bethel Center Point Chesterfield Parker Pine Grove Ruby hiloh Snow Hill Stafford Vaughan Wamble Hill Black Creek Center Center Grove Cross Roads Mt. Croghan Ruby Wexford Winzo Zion Buffalo Dudley Five Forks Mangum Pageland Plnina . Zion Angelus Center Grove Clarks Jefferson Macedonia Plains Bay Springs Green Hill . Leland Middendorf McBee Providence Sandy Run Union Bay Springs Bear Creek Bethesda Juniper Middendorf Patrick Pats Branch Branch Shiloh Stafford White Oak Cat Pond Juniper Ousley Patrick VIE RADIO I 1 [ft cQo Br A. HYATT VERR1LL 1 IVING SETS 3 et consists of the antenna or aerial, tha 3 but aside from the aerial, each part of other units aud appliances, each devised * fl Icned to Interrupt or catch a portion of red to In wireless telephone parlance hs 0. W.) consists of a single wire, for unlike wireless telegraphy, a number of strand or wires Is of no advantage In receiving. and still more remnrkable, It makes no difference whether the wire be hare or Insulated, for the C. \V. used In radio telephony penetrates solids of every kind. Indeed, a wire stretched around u room or through a hallway indoors, or sven n metal bedstead or bed spring, may serve as an aerial for receiving wireless telephone messuges, although far better . ?..?r oc uiai uy properly installed aerials out of doors. And here It may 1>? e sets with the fact that the longer the id the better will be the results obtained, veil above other large buildings will serve no difference whether the aerial Is horled It Is thoroughly insulated froiu all sure been obtained by aerials run vertically a building. So too, the lead-in, or wire ing instrument, serves as un aerial Itself hurt aerial will serve almost us well as a s a tremendous advantage to dwellers lu It is very dltlieult or Impossible to Install Hut before going Into details and descrlbconsider the rest of the receiving equipprinciples. vould be impossible to register or detect nss through the aerial Is a very Important two types of detectors In use, the first ie other as the vacuum tube. In the for'erably galena?Is used, while in the latespeclally prepared filament Is employed. 1 and Is used on most of the cheap, readys not nearly as satisfactory in many ways ined later. The third unit or tuner is the is made to pick up the sounds from some of which other sounds are shut out. for eceivlng set be placed In synchronism, or ouuds you wish to hear. The lust unit 01 er mude for the purpose and which, on u tly as In receiving wireless telegraph tnex. latlc form these units with their relative - ersl good accessories which are essential Not a Square One. Rub?Do you ever miss a meal? Dub?Oh. occasionally, 1 utteud ^ banquet.?I,lfe. Nothing to Hide. "Shall we say this actress Is being screened?" "I prefer the word filmed," snid her attorney. No Difference. Flubb?Is your wife temperamental? Dubb?No; Just plain contrary. ?New York Sun. When Hostilities Began. She?What was the date of the bej sinning of the war? I He?T' dav ' got mn?*Hed. 1/ t i?'t t* r * ^ LiW Y lyzi 12 mills 6 mills . .. . 6 mills 1 mill . 28 mills w F Ui TFi r* H S" ? 2- ? O o Jb & o o ? ^ ? o o ? ? W " " ? C 3 ? he 03 c rt> ?* 5^ c o jb < ^ ? a a. ^ O ?. sr a. o 9: ? te c sod a n b S 3 & 1 28 I 12 | 4 1* 45 Vs 1 28 | 8j lfc 87% 28 | 6 1V4 34 ft 28 j 8| lft 37 ft 28 3| 4 lft 36 ft 28 8j 2j 1% 39ft 28 Kj 5 41 28 8| 38 28 16 | 4ft 48ft 28 | 8! 31 I I 39 28 8! I 86 28 loj 5| 44 63 4 28 8| 2 38 28 8i 6 42 28 8| 2 88 28 8| 2 88 ....28 8, 86 28 10; 6 43 ....28 10, 6 43 .... 28 8| 6 6 47 ....28 8j 6 6 46 .... 28 16j 6 4 61 68 . ... 28 16j 5; 4',6 6 68 1 28 8, 6| 6 46 .... | 28 8| 8 6 49 .... 28 8| 74 6 484 28 8j 4 1 28 81 2\ 28 8| 36 .... 28 8j 36 28 16 j 74 514 28 81 8 44 28 8| 7 4 48 4 28 8j 7 6 48 28 8, 6 5 47 | 2 8| 6 6 46 1 28 16, 9 6 68 j 28 8j 3| 5 44 | 28 j 8| 8j I 49 28 | 8| 61 I 6 48 28 8 loj 61 62 ... .| 28 8j 10 6 62 28 8| 5 6 47 ....| 28 118 V6 j I 4 Vi j 6 67 28 2 6 36 .... 28 8 6 42 .... 28 8 6 6 48 .... 28 8 6 42 ....28 8 86 28 11 89 . 128 3 81 .... 28 8 6 41 28 15 4 47 .... 28 8 86 28 8 2 88 28 8 2 88 28 8 6 48 .... 28 8 6 42 ,.... 28 8 81 ..... 28 12 6 44 >.. 28 16 6 I 4T