HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1928-09-13, Page 6The Greatest Day of the War
August Ste, 1918—When Victory DAwnedl
rials threw MS Fourth Army' under
HewBaleen against Prince Rupprecht,.
'1'heteeu lneantry divisions and three
at .cavalry ,against twenty German
dtvielous, Four hundred and tweutY-
ono British tanks swept orwer'dl,
1,950 British gaps, field and "heavies",
supported the attack over a front o'f
20,000 verde upon the Albert- Moreull
line. Deem our right eight French
dtvisioua-•-roughly 14,000 men-ible
loWed into action.
The surprise of tee enemy was com-
plete, So swift was the British at-
temk, So utterly unexpected, that
tones went clean through the enemy
lines and captured" here a regimental
ofTheers' mese at breakfast,there the
complete staff of a divisional H.Q.
Mutiny In German Ranks
By Meseeill A, r,OIll lleT'T-SMITH
(Anther of '"The leetrent frail
Mous," eta.)
"August 8th, 1918; wee the black
day of the. Garman 'Army he the lea -
tory of this War."
it that clean-cut sentence of hie
memories General Ludendorff set
dowu his realization of Ger;lnany's im-
pending doom. Fora little While the
end ;night be staved off. There wag
still a garitibler's chance of holding to
fortified lines throughout the winter,
of rebuilding behind them against the
following spring, But in Tile heart of
hearts Ludendorit knew that it was
the beginning ot the end, •
A War -Weary World
It was a day epee which the eyes of
all the leaders upon both sides were Behind prsesed the lutantry :Eng'.
opened It was' the day ween Marshal lisp and Scots, Canadians and Awe
Foch also saw clearly. The whole of trailaue. They crasbed into the 'li-
the mighty German allied structure lases behind tlae enemy linos, seizing
began to crack, Five days later the enemy troops as they tumbled, sleepy-
Raiser had given, instructions for eyed, from their billets. Through the
Peale° nego lati0ns to be opened, if village into the harvest fields beyond,
possible , through the Queen of the Germans dropped their sickles to
Netherlands. mouut machine-guns above the up-
How did the two sides stand On standing grain. -
"We were completely overwhelm-
ed," Ludendorff 'Bas said. "Six or
seven battle -worthy divisions were
completely broken"
British cavalry actually advanced
twenty-three miles and captured roll -
swung their romper into a grim, ing stook far behind the lines. Trench
teeth -set resolution. They stood at warfare was broken at last, •
their most dangerous -for an enemy,
Locked In Stalemate
But the opposing forces were lock-
the eve of that momentous day?
The whole world was war -weary. The
British peoples, desperately .driven by
the submarine menace and the dis-
asters of the previous March (Halg's
"back to the wall" message), had
But, most ominous of all for Ger.
many, came now the first open signs
Of insubordination and mutiny. Re-
ed in stalemate, Neither side was tiring German troops, meeting a
able to move towards' a decision. Yet, fresh division going gallantly into ne-
fon Britain, there were gleams of tion, shouted out upan them: "Black-
light. The enemy submarines were legs!" and "You're prolonging the
now being swiftly and surely hunt- war!" Phrases like that. Not only
ed down, America was beginning the men, but the officers also. Little
to boil her weight. wonder that Ludendorff, looking
In Germany, the people had now be about him and taking stook, found
gun definitely to lose faith In the that thenceforward- leadership must
prove no more thali an "irresponsible
game of chance," and that "the war
Near East things wore going badly, must be ended."
Also there was continued serious and 1 The Avengers Unleashed
complicated trouble with Russia and Haig, for his part, reported the
the now Bolshevist regime. But Ger• capture of 13,000 prisoners, 300 to
many still clung feverishly to the 400 gena, and vast quantities of ant -
hope of peace by . the winter -her munition and stores of every deserip•
peace. I time
Gin ace at the Western Fronts In sack fashion, then, appeared the
through the eves of Marshal Foch, and dawn ot final victor;. Much stern
you will see how he and Marshal Haig , fighting was yet to follow, But the
built the victory of September, 1918.. avengers were now unleashed, and in
Allied attacks had always ended in i mighty bonnets they leaped forward.
one way -"wearied troops were met ;Once the first -cracks in the German
by fresh enemy reserves." The at- i stronghold appeared the whole vast
tack went on hammering at one Iron building swayed over, tottered, and
door because it was 0 difficult to con- I crashed to its doom.
vey elsewhere the intricate machin -1 A hundred books have told the
ery of communications, big guns, and story of those last days. Brit, when
all the paraphernalia of modern war. all is said, we come back to the in -
reiterated promises of their leaders.
There Was sullen suspicion. In the
Into the Open Again ' contestable fact of August Sth. If it
"We must get movement into it," I were the supreme genius and high, ply, tion applied by the axles to the
said Foch. "I shall strike at a point.' leadership oe Foch which conceived He said that the now industry would balasam bed that is arranged between own peculiar aantriebwtice :- but there
The moment we meet the iron door tgradually wheels. The' trick et the trensmis-
the plan of victory, it was Douglas be increased to include a logs. rte'.d• not be may. 'strife or bitter criti-
I shall instantly attack at another Haig, his first lieutenant, together complete line of vegetables and that sign consists in the variation of the _ need•
point, 1 shall keep the enemy for with the plain British soldier in the the flgheries of the British Isles are inclination of the inertia hub with V. 7. Th entire pima reale inti
cisme
ever under surprise. Te will rush ranks, who put gat plan into exe0n- being enlarged s0 as to supply the do- the engine torque and road resistance, •mlately with Ge d, who •aroma can give
his reserves about to meet these at• which automatically varies the throw
tion and bre a it to a triumphant mastic market with canned flab. tlee
V increase. uOarri. on the inssgo at
tacks. I shall gradually wear down The National Food Canning Council at the connecting rods, consequently !
those reserves. i was organized in England two years the rotation of the wheels and the labor to the eralbjeet of reward for
speech: of the car. This automatic work dans; aril. elates theft dtll'•erenee
For many months Foch had had ago. Canting machinery was par- in function, wile. net interfere with thea
this strategy In wend. But he had to transmission is combined with .gear- x fit return coalise'tooach of thecae who
i tit chased in the United States last year
banes. It was thelass differential and a planetary ro-
wait long for his c to equip 10 factories in England. Or -1 " faithfully le.q a la Vo gift
coming of the "tanks" whieb at last ganization of the council was due di -'verse -gear located on the rear axle. s °`. V. 10. Paul nbangea the s5rliles and
reedy to the difficulties English argri- l Advantages of his automatic trans- represents the church es a building,
gave him the clinch. Here was the 4y, K ,1111
needed weapon of mobility. Foch culturists have been experiencing and missio never gear transmission are wore he haat the -duty et cedes the
seized it and broke up the whole sys- to the fact that so many industrial listed by M. de Lavaud as follows: foundations egad 'et now rests with
tem of trench warfare. Ile got bat -I Ordinary down grades can be negoti- h tk othrena to sere that the right kind od
workers in England have been idle, ' m
while the British Isles have offered a ated, even with full throttle, without strtscinrae is peered on tlhili fowndatirna
tie into the open again. e �\1 , �, The following veala'rn siva a vivid pitc-
From the middle of .Tuly the Allied good market for canned geode pro- I noticeably changing the speed of the tare of the ddf%rt int material wlidch
attacks, upon these strategical lines, G� / duced by workers in other lands, Sir , engine. It Is impossible on level' I s r inlay be heweed'liar ibis work. vrhime
r !stretches or on up grades to accele- , # �' of these are perishable, other three
began to develop. We were figcting //// ,,+ Edgar said.
oar again over the Marne and Diane �� � }ate the engine beyond normal speed f + s ;; are imperishable, and era long the lire
country, where we had won the de- r, �. vi s rate
the transmission. Stalled engines ; x,iry ti will conA. to tetsb them. Each Corina
Russia s Bumper Carvin Crops • are impossible- The power of the au- PNibi 1 {ffuunrn fpaardsb:lau ehoul�d! ;see to et that
chive battle of 1914.
ams • , aria To Remove F amine rlienace tomobile is controlled entirely by the
(
"NOW WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?"
The little fellow seems to be in a scrappy mood, but the bull pup looks down on him lu a condescending manner
Canning industry A Gearless Auto t Balsam Beds Are
in Great ins;i'itah to A now transmission for ,automo- Ret Outdoor
d biles that eliminates shifting et gears'
was described to the Society of Au- flat ground by merely thrusting the
s
Be Develops and automatically changes speeds Balsam beds are often made' on the
England. Hopes to Reduce Im-
ports, Increase Employ-
ment, Says Sir Edgar -
Jones
Sunday School
.es on
September 16. Lesson Xlie-*Pau
Writes to elle Friend's in Corinth
1
Cele 1; 10-13: 5-11; 21.23
Golden Text -Behold, how flood and
how pleasant It is for breathren to, '
dwell together hs unityl-Psait1
133: 1.
ANALYSIS
I, THD RANGER OF DIVISION, 1 ;10-18.
IL UNITY WIT',!I VM11111Y, 3:5.11•
IIL THE IHEt1IYAGE OP CIURISTIANS,
21-28.
INTRODUCTION -Thew 'letter tai one of
else your great evangelical Epistlesof
Panel animals written dueling bits V8slt
of bite 'al to Lfph.sus in A.D. 68.
It was cleaned by the serious faults
lent; avb'aam which land men crit
ansomag eh converts eh Cor jnblt.
L este DANCER OF DIVISIONS, 1;1'0-18.
V, 10. One of the unfavorable qual-
ities of the Greek chateatrr was Hr.
abilddtty to work together With obla,erb.
Each Omsk city comaeithered only its
own aeslereet and was uineob'-e to join
w:lbh ether c'i'ties, even in bimee when
threaten.t1 by a coennsons f'oso These
same teta:lenei�es ,,,appear in the
church,
V. 11. It was Sena member of the
h'oupehold of Moe who head informed.
Paul of the Feud outbreak of quarrelling.
en Corllnith.
V, 12, Four dlletl'not parties existed
among them. people, each; of them ap-
pealingg to some groat mean ae theta'
leader. Sonia claimed to have Piaui as
(their guide. The next clique pretend,
ed to f'ollew Aplolioa, who viae a -pul-
ish�ed Alewanldh sis .echolar familiar
with the teachings of Greek phril-
dsophhy and who. was postress'od with a
Wonderful gift of eloquence. The third
touiotive Engineers in Quebec, recent- butt-ends'of the twigs into the ground, party chose as their ch'ampleon Peplum
ly, by its inventor, D. Sensaud de' sloping them toward the head ot the or Peber. The foua+bh party semis to
Lavaud, a Frsnoli engineer,' Antonio-, bed. 'Phis is of course
the correct have olaimedl that they SIOOSS were
biles run on the streets of Paris fitted system tb use, but unless there are true to the gospel and they said' that
with this new transmission have Icon- side -pieces or logs to hold the twigs all abhor parties did not possess the
vented M. de Lavaud that hie device' in place, much of the comfort of a real grace of G1od,
New York. -Great Britain, wh1°h is not only sound technically but can balsam -tip bed is lost- SIy own eye- V. 13. We must not oonnlu,da that
has been importing from $125;000,000 be applied commercially, to motors,tem of doing this, and which I hay° the differences in these'parb1as extend.
to $160,000,00 worth of canned foods vehicles. Development of the trans.' never seem •carried out, is to place two ed to those whose nines they adopted.
each year, will liege industry this summer to There W8* rag such d13431ron between,
building u a tannin to sup mise on has required seven `Years.. logs lengthwise, spaced three or four Pawl and Apollo and Pabee, who
a g P gSays Science Service's "Daily Science feet apart, whichever distance is do= aysorhed' to�g>.tltir,r in haermonluyy.- Thio
ply its home market, according stoe
News . Bulletin (Washington): I sired, and to fixe 'these logs in place fact iw' Obear frwm tea ind4gnatiom
Sir Edgar le. Jones, chairman of the "Because with ordinary gent -shift with pegs or stakes driven into We with whi'dh paul.ei asunrms there end tern in blue and rod on a steel ground.
National Food Canning Council, who cars, the driver never operates 'eon- ground on tho outside of them. End dlsardans. He know ptrrfectly well that was done from a bit of an old shawl,
arrived here recently tinuously at the most• efficient rela- Pieces can also be arranged in this such party eplr:t v ave Ua be and it was finished at the bottom awl,
lie said that the yield of 1,000 acres tion between seed of engine and manner and the space inside of the thee' death blow le • 1 .a• en life
ith
p ,n n be filled with balsam n,md progreee. eller e. ,este is amen- a most elaborate and lntricade bead
of peas would be tanned in England wheels, M. de Lavaud charmed that togs Ch. then r ;''ally a unity. Party +,;,rife contra- fringe. Another design. was taken
this summer and, from this compare tine automatic transmission vvSll in- t..;ra Ch. -t into the ground. Tic e coats tae taacime of lams. from an old shawl, probably from-In-
tively small start, sponsors' of the crease the average speed possible being an outside resistance, the twigs dia or China, that had belonged to
t d le t0 rtt9ll rYAay II. UNITY WITH VARIETY, 3:5-11.
Mme. Breville's mother.;This show-
ed red flowers and green leaves
springing from black stalks on a
background of gold beads.
Quite different hi style were seine
bags with • medieval designs on them.
One of these in silver beade with,a
pattern in blue sbaded from' pale,' to
dark was very effective, as was an
aumoniere in black, and, steel, and
gold on silver.
AI typical Persian design was car-
ried out in silver beads en steel, and
vhowod a bottler of gold, and then an- -
other border ' with a pattern in
amethyst, which color was repeated
in the tip of a twisted fringe of silver.
One of the lovelist designs, of shad-
ed pink flowers lu clusters with ap-
ple -green leaves on a silver ground,
was ,copied from a piece. of old bro-
cade. Equally beautiful for color
was a bag with shaded red convolve
las on a wide band of silver with a
border of petunia patterned with
gold an either side and a gold ringe.
`The gilt metal and cut -steel tops
of the bags aro made.by an ex -soldier
who started he a small way, but
whose business has increased little
by little until it has become a very
important one.
Variants
Besides the all -bead bags, various
beaded novelties are made, a popular
one being a bag of brown silk ,with a
band of cretonne decorated with col-
ored silk and silver ribbons and beads
on a pattern of tiny roses. Another
model, that is well liked for evenings,
is round in shape and covered entire-
ly with loop fringes of white beads
tipped with black or color.
the saint forgot awful 1 k for a man and a sire to l.ad'emti of the ails rc parties, l.t them Attractive bead neck chains are
ten. The hog never looks up to him get married up. In an airplane? rather remenJ rot vow a lees an mane-
before.
inade, to match the bags, one in gold
that threshes down the acorns. He: Not any more ofars for aro the opportunities, whirl; await with a scattered red -rose design be-
ltivem ing very effective. One of the newest
taught you to swim, and now you'd a man than to bo married on the (/, 6^a g
drown me, Danger Past, God is fo'r .nround. t by loving Father en
ideas is beaded shawls. At example
gotten. �_ heaven. Alit that Life dcnlbamns its open en black crepe -de -chine is recorated
Ito bh.m., and cvmr d'eatlr itmelf vvill nae
Bead ,Bag:
mild Old Shaw1a
London -•-There le g bevel bag Inapio
fancily run by '1Mreteeh women la
Paris that le a triumph of horele
enterprise, The head of the °ca ern
le Maclaine Braille, who with mer
three sister's, wig. help her, wag lett
en her owls reemerges owing to the
vicleeitudos of the war.
Last year they obtained the co.
operation oe ant lenglisbwonnee
Madame Bodot, the widow of a French
officer, and through, her instrumental-
ity Some of these beautiful and nub
clue bags have found their way to
England where they have been great•
ly appreelated by the Queen of Fing
land �'ho has bought quite a number
of then.
The 'deters began by doing bead-
work for other firms, and then decid- •
ed to start a business of their own.
The metal beads- used were chiefly
made in France;; but ae there are only
a limited number of factories, ditflcul-
ty was experienced in getting heads
in sulil-alent quantities and In the
colors regnlrod, Nothing daunted,
Madame Breville secured a loan 7.
through, the French War Widows' As-
edeiatfon, started a .bead factory, and
has now paid back every penny of the
loan. °
The mouse of the bags is due to
their' beautiful designs, for which one
ot the sisters is_ responsible. She
Visits. the museums. Cluny, Carnava-
let and the Louvre. Up at the top of
the Cluny Museum there are the moat
beautiful laces, brocades, and em-
broideries, and she goes there ane
gets permission, to use her clever pen-
cil in making sketches, In ;hie way
site acquires all -ports ei ideas which
She works out in`patterne.
Many 8ouy'es Yield Designs
One of the bags which Queen Mary
bought in England' was called the
"Toile de .Tony" bag because its de-
sign• was copied from one of the fam-
ous "toiles." It is in a diaper pat-
tern with bunches of pink and yellow
roses encased in a triangular sur-
round of gold beads.
se charming bag with a small pat -
movement believe an industry will be
developed in the British Isles that will
produce, within a few years, at least
one-third of the amount of canned
foods now imported. He describes the
move as the first definite attempt to
establish a vegetable canning indus-
try
ndus-
t y in England and said that it would
and effect a fuel saving of more than Will have no en er 3 3 V. 5. Petal's iemedy for there fee -
and
per cent. in. general and some 40 to the silos and the full spring of the I imus .ndemcy Ie to sltovv how all 1111 -
arranged cent. in thee' dense traffic areas of twigs is thus preserved within the man wcrkmlen are mere inlstruiryents.
Cities. A long transmission: shaft is arranged area. If you have never in the hands of God who or'untenes
tried this system before, you will be f d controls, ail things. Gad its bike
driven directly from the engine andsurprised with the possibilities !n it
rotates an inclined inertia hub,' a liushmndn:,an who hes mwny dlfYer-
whicli changes the rotation of the as a sleeping proposition. Itis a hun- oast laborers and vrhoentrusts some
r, Bred per cont. improvement over the special tank to each of thet'rs.
not only provide employment avenin- ,shaft into reciprocating motion. Con old method. Likewise the body being V. (i. Paul'•s task is that of planting
netting the inertia hub with the drive tax
ally for thousands of workers,ibut of the rear axle are rods which, by pressed down between the logs helps new churches en •cllatFemene_p hs of the
would be a decided contribution to- t hold the warmth and will prevent Gentile world. Apol1os came after and
ward increasing the domestic food sup-
acting on roller ratchets, translate the ° ° e did the waterlog' dr cul'tiveati!on. Each
You from ,chins to either side. In
back -and -forth thrust into rotary mo- is n'ocemmary. Each ma may shave
other words, you "step put" in the its awn ap.ciad worlr, ma make eta
close.
Victory," as Mr. John Buchan has
said "was won less by genius in the
few than by faithfulness n e
many."
The humor, humanity, and stead-
fastness of the British' sailor and sol-
dier represented. the true guiding
spirit of that victory. -"Answers".
With each day our advance bac � heirs work may �Ihand the beet Why,
�y yl le.y I therefore, waste precious time in this
more sure. In twos and threes enemy y 4 �� Moscow -The prghoect of bumper th"Acce +t ,r
holdings were taken. By July 24th /ttys �%! C ��� � grain crops throughout Russia has i "Acceleration, particularly to usual � partisan don,iliot? Let each one buihd
a / ;.- ,. I faithfully his, own part and leave the
Foch held 25.000 Prisoners and 400 ��j > J+�.:a; postponed for a year at least a sola- speeds, is much better than with gear ; rest to God.
guns from the drive. But the enemy'; tier 0' the Soviet farm problem. Itransmission. The car coasts freely
III. THE HERITAGE OF CHRISTIANS,
was still making a brilliant retreat, i ` ? Along with publice•Ilen of stetistfcs down -hill."
Nn•ANt<
MAruHALL
NO GREATER RISK
She: Don't you think It 1s an
21-25.
with many a hard and successful ] came . a government pronouncement -�— V. 21. Insboad of. baanting about
countervattack. IV August 6th he assuring the farmers that the severe Ingratitude their own hareem and cri!luoiz•I•Ng the
was holding the Line of the Aisne r;; x191 �' communistic measures resorted to The river Passed a aw u r s
b I t d
that had been held just our years ; ,sc a_ ,,:, last year, famine,
the titles faced a feed
But the initiative now lay bread famine, have been definitely h I I k
everywhere with the Allies. It was abandoned.
neon that day that Foch was created
a Marshal of Prame
STICK 'EM UPI
"1 asked a man in Chicago how
far It was to Michigan Boulevard
"What did he tell you?"
"He said,'What doyou carat s
le as far as you're going,'
Half the secret of being a good
22. All bhe good, thins in this
c,world are sen a a
Thursday, August 8th, dawned In Honesty
a thick, rain -soaked mist. The most this
1 Honest and courageous people have
v very little to say about either their 1 Arthur was What common sense tolls s destroy g
elaborate precautions had been taken''
to deceive the enemy. At 4.20 a•m., courage or their honesty. The sun
afber a terrific bombardment which baa no need to boast of his bright -
wiped out the enemy gun emplace-' speller is in knowing when to eon -1000s, nor the moon of her effulgence.
wants as though with a great sponge, I sult a dictionary. I -Hosea Ballon.
"How did you know 'Arthur
awful
¢towed'?" "He was having
tight with the dean!" "How does that
prove he was drunk?" "The dean
wasn't there at tho time'
with applique leaves in autumn shades
u their heribn e. °Musst bias and is edged with red beads and clue-
about the physical universe is flatly• overcome the power of death. The tare of berries made of gold beads.
contradicted by what science tette us,
freedom ansI priv'blege of iht Chris,tars
lovely `evening shoes are en -
four. tran4 are anaatlnlg. But all depexads Soane covered with silver beads. A
. upon acoepbanlg Christ
Lord Ba ..„ sleeveless, camper made entirely of
bead wont is the very latest idea.
Whal
a Shock,
and Jeff Has a Weak Heart, 'Too..;
Scots Osiris Excel ,
In Stock Judging
Aberdeen. -The three first prizes
were won by girls as judges of cattle,.
horees and sheep at the Highland and
Agricultural Show here recently. Des-
pite ;the fact that there were only 10
women entrants out of a total ot 106
In a steels judging contest, the firsts
wen},.0o the vvomelh
ieteon teams wero entered for the -
teant competition -two each front
Glasgow and Aberdeen Colleges of
,agriculture and one from the Edin-
bIlleeeh College and 10 teams from.
young farmers clubs. The young
i`uriges vs Pit 1: rlcled with a batch of
cards on which fha>•,�'ad to mark
the
order in 'Which they 6Dun , had
animal; stood in merit, -$dee
afterward to be compared with tib-,
•$Ie card's placings to see how nearly
they accorded or ItoW far they differ
ed,the competitor who most nearle.
corresponded with the stewards' fig-
ures securing the most points, These
W13.0 saw the judging were amazed ae
the thoroughness Of the girl judges.
c.
o :
s^r<--
°ri'T
5 ci
azfir�;
e G
:1 .._�-
_
,.- 1, .y
`?' �'
I g'
',n
kr
i
tie
6 WHPiC'S int
P- 'tIMe,MUTf!'
'f IAA "II1�II
� i"j
an a� n. £l "
k',. ? ','�h s''
/r.
rVrr
ley , d �vy� �
a r4g�''%�r'�--,00A
„y ri.t aj�7:ri
-:----,-,----•
1 .r��
r �g '�� N
e
• ''>,.µ.�l• .�
/�,
�,,r ' /
n
1,3
i�`'. ?
T'
�er i 'r!.
�'.'+''"� ,}.� S :.} �• "',•
w. )i .Fr
v
,.. rA F 2.
`I!:II
j•Il• I
11
,,,t1iI
:YI
I�
,_
,,u� I
lelb A TALI.
GUY SOAK A' ++' •� J,
wATtH Hetes._
TH i .off. v ''
It4cieTh4
rf .A _ ..
.v..r;..- y� ^ A �
+.. -_ tl %: ...
'
,7n:
JEFF, MAYBE YOU AIN'T S7ecDY
ENoueli To LAND AN END
TrIEN I'LL TiPAE 'You 'MULE
sou RUN ARouND THE
L�tP
�'
� THAT.
_�'' as WA XI..
Posrelote ON The leARVARie
vodradu.
Steele: SLIP me Yovt3
e
!,.d;" ==
.
L _
,
4.'
rehmt lieW FAST
WATCH f
_
tcea , e ,
to
�Oi c
••torr'
Alec `fou.
Ccos
k FP • �>r ';.,
+
- "•�r.
tillik
1�
\�`
lA:
,jx.,_..
-_-
r
•A1AfT NEMER
teem TIMED,
NIVTT.
•c,.1
o-
ti ' .,
"'..dry
r3
a'DGO
M++
�fr`l
`i
I•
L
-.�i.%
.e
..,
., n'18t?E
�4I
e 1
v1 "
■■rr.Isa'
I
`,I},I
rte:
l,• t�,
A k
er:
...e J:fr✓ '
�. '�,
�
$' r
.•�,�'
vt r,•.
;IX-..
� '•� a
y//, _
f'//
'FA / 1
_
'_-z"1 '> -
,.
rd -
•
,
G ' '
t t4 F'
t 2•
y c�
;, 1 , , tta+e
'„.n,� , _<•�^
'.> �r iJ%%',,,n: •1..
l�`I” _"f: U",!..--4,vfrk",/, _'.:•v;-Yi''^"
t, . •,`r; 4 -' 11,1 . '-I},.... _--
t fid ''�-++,,''��y}y}••••i••- rr
-rt.',
T <I<[- ... `\I �a'mi,�
t /r� ,mom ..b.y
��`1
`'j�' �"� r'ts i"i
4
,. 4 "(PAVt5-LINleulit.74,....1161
ee '-fit '1
-e .3 rt s/„,•.2
_ '�rAI.Q
'' �^, Sa,'.x ! 'ka 4-,nld 4 —
� � , ..�` _
-.� J=•� 'A., tf , ( .. jEq�
O:J `1 ..h5 !' l / ,,., . ,l ”
ate,.
•eC.�� a Cr,=
rsr'„ry
.•mgr'
y mr
.,
:v.; ,
Let
Jv,s,1
I ILII 11111„ 'J
»lex
wN1> ,�
�et:.jN
"?, •
..•
c. -p„ gIIX'tt•
_, �Illllll ilUlim lllglf
.��
''� s
+_-_
. ”`--�i'
Ill .
1 n�
A"=M,.
N.r',:;+111
::,t. VIII
-
�•,-.,h>7.f;•..
•�
+lith liI UIIIIIIIII
-�C
d /.
° d
IS I,
�
•p"-V-Y..•✓N,ri
_
y ;f+
yrj;.
h +$•,
�'c w.`r' r
+r
tz;:' I.�
t ti D
+n l e,s°
„ �f -. ,
' �� yf � M
�%
_vr.,'
'�M�-o>a.
,.,+
\��-'.
,
`����
% �lll+` e11, � #'
.. ', -, y
' , �:,, '� ryyyy�!!�
\ �. J1'
�. •r .:s .