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The Brussels Post, 1920-1-22, Page 3Practical Paragraphs, Acid Proof \Wood. ---When the ster- no battery is carried in a wooden box there is always trouble from the acid slopping over and eating the, wooden box, Wood may be made proof against acid by painting with a mixture made of six parts wood tar and twelve parts resin, These ingre- dients aro melted together in an iron kettle, after !which eight parts of finely powdered brick dust are stir- red in. The surfaces are first thor- oughly cleaned and then painted with this mixture warm. An Obscure Knock.—A knock dif- ficult to locate is sometimes caused by one of the pistons touching a shoulder in the top of the cylinder, because the packing between cylinder and crank case has been worn thin. Obviously a thicker packing will cure the trouble. Drilling Glass—The car owner who finds it necessary to drill holes in glass will succeed if he uses the fol- lowing method; Grind the points from one corner of a small three -cornered file on the bias from the other. Phiee this in a bit such as is ueed in wood work, Place the glass to be bored on a smooth surface covered with n blan- ket of similar material. Begin to bore the holo exactly as ,if the sub- stance were wood. When a slight bole has' been made surround this with putty and fill the dam thus created with turpentine to prevent heating. Do not press too hard on the drill in boring. Don't Use a Reamer.—Never use a reamer on the ineide of a pipe. The scale inside a pipe, caused by the flux used in welding or brnzzing, is as hard as glass and will turn the edge of any reamer that was ever made. Using a Wrench. —• A monkey wrench should never be drawn back- ward from the jaws, as this move- ment is likely to bend the bar, The wrench should always be. pulled to - war's the jaws, Pipe Joint Cement: _-•A mixture of. ten parts of iron filings with three parts of chloride of line mixed to a paste with water makes an admirable pipe joint cement. The mixture is applied to the joint and the clamp and becomes solid An twelve hours, A Squeaky Sprng.—•In cases of ohrotically squeaky springs, try jack- ing up the ear so that the "•eight is removed from the spring • .._1d then soaking these lat'cr with kerosene. Rnn the car for a day or so to let the kerosene soak in and then saturate the spninrs with some of the old oil that has been drained. off from the crenkease. After a day's run wipe off any excess oil that shows to prevent the collection of unseemly dust. Bearing 'Trouble.—The average car owner does not realize how slight a bump may have a disastrous effect on tide -car's mechanism, The writer re- cently found a ease where a compar- atively slight bump against the curb bent a rear axle shaft, and this in turn caused excessive wear of the inner face of the right end roller bear- ing, so that the entire bearing had to be replaced, Rattling Doors.—In the case of a rattling door the defective part can be detected by the simple expedient of holding each in turn while the car is xunning. Adjustment of the clear- ance between the spring bolt and its. reeoss will cure the trouble. Distilled 'Yater.- -Distilled water is, 1 of course, absolutely essential for the ' storage battery. It is pot always possible to procure this easily and any car owner can make his own dis- tilled water by means of a very sim- ple apparatus. have a length of an- nealed copper tubing coiled, so that ,it will fit in a dishpan. Connect the end of the copper tubing with an ordin- ary tea kettle by means of a short piece of rubber tubing. The other end of the tube is curved so that the water passing down will drip into a bottle or other container. The dish- pan in which the coil rests is fill with ' cold water, frequently renewed to keep it cold. The water in the tea I ]settle is boiled and the steam' so pro- duced passes out of the spout into the tube, through the coil, where At is cooled and condensed back into water again and is finally collected for use in the bottle at the end of the copper tube, Oil Shield.—Vaporized oil that i conies through the breather is blown out An a mist, covering hood and en- gine and making an abominable mess. This trouble may be cured by fitting an elbow of soft rubber hose over the ( breather pipe. A tin pipe is fitted over the other end of this elbow long enough to reach down into the dust pan. to which it is fastened. In this way the vaporized oil will be carried away from the engine and hood. I Protecting the Bench.—The motor - 1st who does considerable bench work, may be glad to know that it is pos. sible to protect the bench from exces- s sive wear by placing on it a pad con- ' sisting of crest iron disk, hollowed out at the centre and filled wlsth lead. This will act as a sort of anvil for a long time and when the lead gets too badly battered it may be removed. The Hindu Sand Trick. A 1nvetifyhcg ir;.'k that. was long kept secret by the Hindus consists of elne.:u;c ordinttry sand in a basinful of seater, stirring it, and then taking out the sand In handfuls, apparently per- ,. 'ectly dry. �Po prepare for the trick put two pounds of tins silver sand in a frying pan and heat it well over a clear fire. When the sand is thoroughly heated, place In it a small piece of grease or wax of about the consistency of a ,•paraffin candle. Stir It well so as to Mix it thoroughly with the sand while it is molting; then lot it cool, If you 4 place this sand in a basin of water it Will appear to,be perfectly dry when you take it out, because the grease or wax coating on each particle of amid repels the water, The success of the trick depends on using Just enough wax. You must be careful not to use so much that the spectators can detect it by examining the sand, A Modern Yarn. Young Sailor: "On my last voyage I saw waves forty feet high!" Old Salt: "Get out! I was at sea for fifty years and never se* 'em that height!" • Young Sailor: "Well, things aro higher now than they used to be. Look at the price of bacon, for in- stance!" Why Not Earth Houses? The way to own a ]tone at a mini- mum of expense is to build it of ma- terial already on the site. Earth for instance, Tile requisite earth may be had for the digging, and there is nothing to pay for transportntion. Int England this idea is being taken up, with the expectation that the building of ram- med -earth dwelling -houses on an ex- tensive scale will heip importantly to solve the housing problem, bricks be- ing scarce and expensive, We have our•own housing problem In this .country, and it is daily becom- ing more serious. Why not use ram- med earth for building? A house of this material costs one- fifth as much as a brick house of the acme aims, It 18 quickly erected, and, being finished with plaster, is hand- some. Furthermore, it is an enduring structure, and is rat -proof and mouse - proof, There are in European countrles many such buildings that date actually from prehistoric tittles, In parts of France and Spain this simplest of all methods of house construction has long been practiced, and recently it has been adopted with great success in South Africa and other British colonies, Planite are.sot np of edge to form a mold, and the space between is filled with earth, which is thou ram - mod as tight as possible. The ram- ming, of course, can be done much more advantageously and cheaply by machine; likewise the digging, If the subsoil bo clay, the latter, mixed with straw and "puddled," fur- nishes a first-class material, utilizable in the sauce way, This is what is called in England' "cob building." The birthplace of Sir Walter Raleigh was a cob house, and it is in as good cow dition as ever to -day, Foreign Meat Needs. The present slt.ualton ne. regerds 111 European require au'n t.a for mettle from outside source: is nnpnrallelc.'l, tliere being cc serlous deficiency as an outcome of the great war which de vested several countries. A few days ago J, 11. Mc('urdy, member of parliament and parliamentary Recce tary to the British ministry of food, remarked that a 1trl'alnblo Inc meat imports appeases Inevitable, if Euro- pean countries have any available money to spend thls year. Ile said that it is a situation full of moque", and more menacing by the fact tluct a great meat trust elands ready to ex- ploit the position to its own advant- age, a group of North American pack- ers already controling a large part of the surplus meats of the world. Mr. een'dy thereupon makes a stirring appeal to the Bridal), farmers to pro- duce more meats and foodstuffs and asks for more protectiou for British food producers. He says that Britain will need this year more than ono mil- 1 lion tons of meats and the remainder of Europe three Million tons, while the exportable surplus in Australia, Now Zealand, South Africa and South American countries only amounts to 1,210,000 tone, British stocks of cleat -Producing animals are greatly below pre-war tines, and the total livestock of European countries has been lowered by at least one-third by 1 the war. It is certain that there is going to be a vast field for Canadian furtner-stockmen to feed Europe, CROSBY'S KI S No Comparison. Alive in the Sun '1'be rankest siert of selfishness is surrender to the "blues." For melan-; chulh,, except in a hermit, is the must' pervasive of maladies. It coats a chill and breeds a despair 0s it walks about; it infects a company, poisons' the light and (Millets the Lure wells of Iicg'piac'es told spoutaneoue glee. In-; stead of giving way to the "blues" we ought to yield only to the spirit of higlihaarted courage that keeps us . merry , with a laugh, whatever the odds. The =lute you are found to be, cheerful a thousand will rise up to give you battle and to prove you . wrong; but. there are tens of theme wale who will be grateful and will bisect you. 'Those who reaisted will be in tine converted; they will join the throng that llnd the palatable medicine of a smile, and so achieve the cure of the many ills that dwell with the megrims and the darkness. Nothing is more irritatlug than to be told wheu and where to be glad; it la like being prodders to applaud. • Artificial warmth, like artificial ice. "Dea0ril'e the auto you saw talking Is wanted only for our bodies, not for to the prisoner," said the judge to the our snots. We cannot read In a book witness, how to be joyful and then sally forth "I don't know how to, sir." "She is pretty," replied the grand - "Did he tools like any of these law- 1 ingly by rule and recipe. Nor dues It yore?" insisted the judge. "Did ha create i'represeible mirth in tis to par- took like me?" use the Book of Martyrs, 6o much "Oh, no, sir!" said the witness. "He ` \worse off than we, 0r 001110 dulcfal looked like an intelligent gentleman.. tome about people supremely hely but repellently uniniman. The man whose presence enlivens Growing Pains. present-day city of that name) was I The term growing pains formerly founded and excellent stole-pavedmeant--and still means to niany • roads across the isthmus were built.' people—a vague aching or pale in the Oyer these roads, carried by pack 'muscles or joints of children, es - trains, passed all the spoils of con- pedally those who are growing rapid-' quest sent to Spain from Peru. Parts ly, which comes on without apparent of them can even now be traced for I cause and continues for an indefinite miles through the jungle, and are in period. The fact that normal growth :. a fair state of preservation• is never accompanied by pale, and Philip II, wished to cut a canal that pain 0f any sort in ,,any port of a . across and when his engineers balked, child's body indicates that something' referred the matter to some Domini- is wrong, often fails to shake the can friars. They searched the Scrip- popular belief in this fallaey; nor are tures for enlightenment and quoted people much to blame for It. Not the text, "What God bath joined let long ago physicians held the same be. no man put asunder." Hence it was lief• to be inferred than an attempt to In a medical treatise that was an separate North America from South authority, and deservedly so, a guar- America would not meet divine ap- ter of a century since, a chapter is proval, This opinion settled it for devoted to the description of growing Philip, and the project was laid on the pains: and although at that time ear - shelf. tain medical men were becoming skep- tical of this affection, they were the more advanced of their profession. Many a lame person to -day is a living witness to the prevalence of this be- lief among doctors in his childhood, for in the great majority of eases growing pains are an expression of rheumatism, of neuralgia, or of tuber- culous disease of the spine or joints. Rheumatism in childhood is a very serious disease, not so much because of its severity as because of the mild - nags of its symptoms, Tbo pain Is often very slight, and not Infrequently it is confined to the muscles of one or more of the extremities and spares the joints entirely- The attack may be of short duration; and when, after a few days of limping or complaint of pains in the arms, the trouble goes away, the mother may congratulate herself that It was nothing but grow- ing pains. But meanwhile the rheu- matic poison has been at work inter- nally, and the victim is handicapped for the rest of his life by a crippled heart that was injured at the time the pains were felt. Narrow Place Between Seas Christopher Columbus was told by the Indiana of "a narrow place be- tween the seas," and, looping for it, he paid a visit, on his fourth voyage, to Limon Bay, which is to -clay the Carib- bean entrance of the Panama Canal. Balboa landed there in the year 1500 (having been driven from Spain by importunate creditors), and,marry- ing the daughter of an Indian chief, he dwelt on the isthmus for thirteen years before he decided to make his way across and discover the Pacific. It was an arduous journey, which, made on foot, occupied twenty-three days. One of his companions suggest- ed to him that a canal to unite the two oceans would be a worth -while project. Not long afterward the city of Old Panama (some miles northeast of the The Mysterious Walking Stick. That is an extraordinary story that Mr. A, A. Milne tells about a British officer, a spiritualist named Mullins, who inherited a walking stick from a. close friend who had been killed in battle. Mullins believed that with the stick he had received a spiritistic message saying that the stick would save the lives of many of the bat- talion. A few days later, when Mul- lins's battalion was held up by a Ger- man machine gun, a tall, thin man ap- peared on the extreme right and climbed oalmly over the top. It was Mullins. He carried no revolver; his tin hat was .00 the back of his head; his coat collar, for some reason, was turned up. Both his hands were in bls pockets and in the crook of his left arm lay the famous stick, With an air of pleasant briskness, he walked toward the Boche machine gunner. Ile neither hurried nor dawdled, He just went to the ma- chine gun. die had a hundred and ilfty yards to go, and from time to time he drew his right hand out of his pocket, fixed his glasses more firmly on his nose, and returned it to his pocket again, That Boche machine gduner• may have thought Mullins was coming to surrender, The astonishing spectacle may have disturbed his aim. The numerous heads that popped up to gape at Mullins's back may have kept him too busy to attend to Mullins, There may have been other reasons -- I do not know—but at any rate, Mul- lins was not hit, When Mullins was a yard away from the machine gunner, he took his right hand from his pocket, withdrew the slick from the crook of his left twin, and in a friendly way bit the German over the head with it. When the man collapsed, Mullins picked him up by the collar, shook him to see if he were shamming, dropped him, replaced the stick In the crook of his left arm, fixed his pensees -on his node, took the man,by the collar agatin and started to drahim to the British trench, Once or twice lie got a little confused between the stick, the 1 cs- oner and hie glasses, and he hesitated between dropping the stick and fixing the glasses with his left hand and dropping the prisoner and fixing them with his right. But in the end he ar- rived safely at the trench with all three possessions. Once there, he handed the prisoner over, and then stood beaming down at the company commander. "Well," he said, pushing his glasses firmly on his nose, "and what about the jelly old stick now?" Life's Balance Sheet. Statistics show that out of each 100 young men twenty-five years old, fifty- four will be dependant upon friends, relatives or charity at sixty-five years of age; thirty-six will have died; five will be supporting themselves by work; four will be wealthy; one will be rich, Nature is our greatest teacher and experience a close second. If we can't learn from these two masters we must pay a dear price for our stupidi- ty, Nine out of every tan people earn more than they need—a sad commen- tary on the intelligence of civilized mankind. To Drill 1 -toles Through Bricks. In laying steam, gas, or water -pipe or electrical conduit, it is often neces- sary to drill holes through brick walls, and many persons are at a loss to know what kind Of tool to USO, An ex- cellent tool fon' title purpose is made of a piece of water -pipe with saw - teeth filed in the end with a triangu- lar saw -file; this end is then slightly belled cut on the horn of an anvil, 111 ase, title drill is struck with a hammer, and revolved slightly after each blow, removing the drill from the holo occasionally to free it of the chips and the core. It will cut a nice clean hole through a brick wall in a surprisingly short time, When the teeth become dull they can be sharp- ened with a saw -file. Character is what we are when 110 0710 is watching us, BRINGING UP FATHER is he who begins with thankfulness because he le alive. He woke to the same suit that came through silken bangings at a rich inan's window. lie went out to the day that is impartial- ly divided among all the sons of men. Ile had a work to do, as every matt has a task, though not every man ]tae found it. And lie has not done the whole of his duty until lie has gone about his calling, be it high u1.' humble, bn a mood of good humor that no hard leek and no shucking casualty can permanently alter. Ito you not believe that this man, whose laughter la as the music of the meanings of the spring, has burdens and troubles and crosses? He is the 1;ruuuriet out of the depths of the at factions of a man of sorrows, ac- quainted with grief. Harry Lauder's ;,u\ver to cheer. 115 to sympathize, was the greater after Ire lost his sun. The 011pea1 ` of the man was intensified when it ceased to be an appeal for' himself. Invite the world to scrutinize your hapless case, to audit the bill of par tieulars in your uncolsectable account against humanity, and --with its fin- gers in its ears like Ilunyan's pilgrim on the rust --it will flee from you. Aek'; the world to listen while you spit a' tale that charms it from its aged tits - tresses rind beguiles it from a grist and sordid struggle, and it will cor_ne to you, and listen, and he your friend. Its premiums are bestowed on joyful• Hess. "He who is bitter is beaten." Sometimes a slight pain is felt in the knee, and the child limps for a day or Iw'o. By and by Ire complains of another brief attack in the knee. Af- ter several such attacks, each a little • longer and more serious than the pro- ceeding, a doctor is called and diag- noses hip disease, of which pain in the knee is one of the must constant symptoms. Of course, every child has little aches and pains caused by bumps or by overusing hi ;cloy in r play, from whieh he soon recovers But these are not growing pains, for; they have a definite cause, entirely i apart from the absolutely 1101111x1 and therefore painless process of growth. , A Hymn for These Times. "Thy Kingdom conte; Thy Will be done." --Matt. 6:10. I•'ather, to Thee we turn, For Thee our spirits yearn. 0, help us now to learn And do Thy will. Blest Saviour, in her need, Thy Church's welfare spec 1, And give her grace to heed Thy word and will. 0, bid her forward go, Thy truth and love to show, That all the earth may know Thy blessed will, From East to Western shore, Rich gifts and graces pour, That men may love Thee more, Through good and ill. Bid strife and discord cease, Bring in Thy reign of peace, Make righteousness increase. Thy word fulfil. Great Spirit, hear our prayer, Enfold us in Thy care, And shed forth, everywhere, Peace and goodwill. —Bishop Reeve. Wanted: A Name to Designate a Bachelor We have "Miss" and "Mrs." to dis- tinguish between the unmarried and the married welters, but all Men, whet - ever their social state, are lumped as "Mr.," which, therefore, really con- 1 voys no meaning et all. The social convenience of being able to know at, once whether or not a woman is mar- I ried or single is meet obvious, and there are equally good, if not better, reasons why some distinguishing title I should be given married and uamur-' vied 111e11, It is difficult to grasp the .onditien of society, raised high above barbar- ism, where titles other than those per- taining to office were unknown, and it always pezeIes an intelligent school- boy to read a speech in Greek or l.atill" history wherein conte rough fellow will address a great pe•iecnagu by his barb name, as "Thomas" or "Jones," without the slightest idea of familiar!. ty or disrespect, but it was well along in history before more courtesy title I were used at all, 111111 thea to hot a limited extent. "Lora" and "Lady" Because Fh P 11, ed. Ile waa a than of e.c 1 ri' er "''', Tits grizzled heir end '11•.11)1 1)1'1 jee l face were 11 faaltl,i:tr •;ght 111 1,11,1 ellulF- e1 chert'. Ile Led 11;4 1011011 vile,' to brant of, but, as 1'7: et/id, "w II 11,w Lots all a\£ety", '1.',e 0',+ to 1)5 111') 1111'0 do our bit ;•' tenet 1.,e only boy lied been ora of the beet singer, 1', 'deft choir. Ile; was very well known to 7/:;-,i t the congregation, for he inter,. -e•:':.1 his membership seriously, and he ,,,;•y friendly with ail whoa he met De- mise he had 0110 great talent, the art Of talking naturally and unaffectedly and freely about the things of the -soul, those who had boys at the front or far across the world were always glad to speak with him. "Well," he would say after the ser• vices, "we've prayed for them again to -catty, so eve can carry an easy mind. The Lord will have them in his keep- ing." His simple words carried great comfort, tor all knew hew much his only son, who was at the front, meant •to this man. Whenever anyone asked ]nim what he heard from his son, he would reply with his brightest smile, "I Have prayed for my boy morning. noon and night since we parted. I have no fear of what may happen. The Lord knows best." The young minister was grateful for 41111 good clan's serene faith, which way a constant inspiration to the lit- tle nmanmunity of souls. 11 he could not sing very well in the choir, he was 111nt5clf a perpetuul song of hope. But one morning the minister found him- self faced by the task of break:.1g the news that death had claimed auother Only soil, The lac] had been killed in action on the Somme, With sinking heart the minister made his way to the good man's hone. He held in his hand the lettar from a chaplain who knew- both, the lad and the father. "Was there, per- haps. presumption and sin," 11e W011. tiered, "in so strung and assertive a faith in prayer, that it should be visited whit so cruel a reward?" He trembled foe tate effect of the news, not merely on the man but en the whole church. Ile found the 11100 at. home. The same bright, nappy faith was shining iu his eyes, a brightness that did not flinch even at the sight of the sad, set features of the minister, It was never unnatural, sonleilcv, to mention Scripture to this man, al -d se he began, "Do you remember that beautiful verso in Romans that sneaks about God giving up his only Son free- ly for us all?" Tlten quietly he spoke of the chaplain's letter and its con- ' tents. Per a element the gond nuo:u covered his eyes. I"1 knew hue. you have praye 1; " said the minister. "It is very Hard." Quickly the hand fell from the eyes; I quickly those eyes searched tit. minis. ter's face, "Sir," said the father, "you mis1ndersti:ltd. 1Y Learn is grieved because it will ba re longer till 1 see my boy , cel n, but nut because I doubt God's Tuve. l;ec:o:•e I prayed --just bemuse 1 1st halt morning, noon and night ir, til • Lori's ]lands --1 knew he can 011b hay gone by the Lord's good will, and 1 . it con- : tent. If I had not prayed, thc',..u)eel• I might have felt that ‘„nly man's wicked will had done tills titin • but as it is"—he lifted his eye:: t+• heaven —" 'Thy will be done'!" A wave Of rever'mre mid 11441.1011011 poured into the minister's er, .1; he knew he had Ilateued to a ;; a erO- phetic word of God. On .the following Smelt „ 111;111 of faith" was in his usual pees as the choir. Why Life is Worth L t 1::114;. sufficd in Britain for a long time, these titles (Haford and Lhaefdige) really meaning simply "loaf -owner" and "loaf -giver," and being applicable to heads of households, whether mal' • - ried or single. but by common con- sent being applied only to persons of rank. It is not until the thirteenth century that we find "mnyste; ' Any one who has considered the sub- ject lightly must have been pnlazled by the number of French tends for kiesh'p iu English—nephew, niece, eosin, uncle and grand. The origin of "Miss" is curious, and oddl enough, nn rhnost exact date can ho assigned when It first came Mtn 1180. Tile was 1600, wh011 notable women of doubtful reputation and un- married were so called, the "mists" be- ing a flip abbrovintion of "klistress," a title of respect fur both married and untnarriect women. The word "Miss," however, tilled so long felt a want that. the nubile seized upon it, iguiiring its earlier conitcrtions, and within fifty years it wa.; wall esteb- 1ish0d, The old Arab who refueeet :laic an operation to restore 1115 ,, `c•ht. on the ground that he hrtd :..110 511 much of the world he ewe, ,:..•.l of it, ought to h+eve lived In titer011 age. For, verily, there new to bo 50011. Who 17,,,,;7w not want to live a few eeess Just to see what 0001, ,,.,i :: ee,• tangled conditions that e\k1.:•.;'• Pick un any copy of .1111, n.or.11.;1.,:rr, and glance at the headl1, .\ 1 .011 wars going 011, :t thou +.1 :,• ;;Idu a• Gone In the 4ife1r1 of 11..1 :::'i ,.,• tions, a minium, etiange statelier' ludo wltich the lace lea'; Wen, see meets money In the world it !s a '011 don to carry it around, it •;04.;15; a r erkot. basket full of money for 0 market har- kct full of vegetable,. --that 1, the car, rent price of foodelel4t- -with ,,er; • body complaining. and set the elites bringing in millions of donut:: worth of diamonds, the shrew trued to the roiling with luxuries, the streets and roads jammed with plesuseve care- and are and folks refueing to work tar less 1 ,..: than a dollar an hour. Verily It is a strange condition, aid it is going to be worth all the suffering it octt11 ter live on, just to etre the finish. We used to imagine that If we. 1.V, re old 1(114 disabled, and had novel' a penl'ty In the world, and suffered from ani manner of physical infirmities, see would pray to be taken away, to ob. thin eternal relief from it all But wo have changed ,ur mind in regard to it wo want to live however bur- clensomo life may Nemo; indeed, It 101nr5 to us that we wound bo wilt- ing io undergo ell inerawe of phyelcai torments a few t"tats longer, out ,e• 511e01 curiosity. We , th:cl 11111,41 interested in how the w ' id is 11110v goiug to sit,di 1 '..,, t, for 1.r.., are optima tics one. E, 1.1 ! i:Y+_ ' 11.111 -t will ,t 1.1)11 1 10 71 11 „•er. •1'N SO GLi\b`(OU SON•- IF IN THE CAN Do ARE, i1ACk • THERE IS ANY woRLD1 ,`II Il4 n cl THANKS- •. do rHER DEAN- --`--"..,'" WELL• fi0 `foOvE (SEEN I "oveRYHETop.ret-t'? AN'VOU'vE SEEN OECORATEo FOR CRAYEc@Y- d "i a i I'v1. f3GEN ALI. THitoU4H `CHE 19f GOLLY- YOUR. NOiF1ER 1S PROU0_ OF YOU' I/�:;• i �" YOU 6iwT ----1 UAD-THERE 1, ' I,. ISN'T ANN', WELL -WILL ASK HER TO LET y MC C1 Ci OUT TONIGHT? PdI)('0At7-I'Vc OT ONK, ' WOUND \ e 4+ STR.iI�E _ 1,)•� ° -1r�L '�'/t fir' (1 r c f I , ii ' r' J �- ., f^'KF• 1 , r b,J1\j r ' y, " _. ,.� ' ' lig;' „' , . rr�. �� IH11V4 511E . ), ' WOULDN'T dF �'u Lin FOR -� h1E^ f 1I, ..-.,...., � I- ✓/- Iill 1. !1 1 s d ' .. ow ruI +i' 4 •/ -- F14FITi1V' FoiR`f0U' JUST ASY ME- t 1' ( 1 u III Il 4 i I i`N IIIII/ —D - '''"'`�,�' i��i i i , t., is hCV4J: rt C j• '® .. •,,.. rP' • ('. SO (;, fr ..g , , tl' �, 1' �t3. a ltl, t ., i '... F it 5 II ./ w it yYe 'I ._ si,,.I l �11��Ij1`ll F ,� 1 I Ii .' Ihh '- III II 1I,.y1: ' ;`gyp{ • V'r • ; y'ti. •li Ilii I\•. �I ;di, •'^s +� 'Ifh'. ._ il , . WO: II�� r,l.. Intel .,. Il ll .11111+. diA..,"„�A1g �7; ,'.c•3* �(j ,F (j a/'"m a° .r" P I' „,! i tiJ' n �.'yiµN. r• °-'1 {'(1 1 ... - YI,1� ` I Irl I.I.'IT/ 777771111 1, ` ,1 2 i •P I., 4 `�11J c //1 1.4, k, Fe•'..1 'y.�'V m ' I, ryl ,Ili ! __— mrrAAon'gY ! 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