Loading...
The Huron Expositor, 1930-10-31, Page 2`_',a �1 ,.15 1 I,J" :rx-,�Ia ry rv,, , Ir: fill..-I.t 1s. , egl:ry" f5 rK^•.;l> �t -' 'tN .<k' Y 1� rp,rn:? 4 R 'f :n:� 'St h.^,. y. , tr A' hY K d. ,., .. •N tt t a 'c;`71�i F kin,,: `��� t .14,: i ,t N a t i y f��:,;?r: v. •..,1 l'... FadLI i i:Nr'v '.ijt .,1. t{. AeJ f I 1. C. .f ,1. { i. r 1. 9.f' l4. �4I �'. I. I'. , 1,�' INF i ,u,v , : ; .! iv ,," d "' , ''y 2 1 1 kT .•�I '{1 R'll �.2 �,, � 1. 11 ...-,,.. -a _ .. , _ . A ,:+, 41 :...... ,rf. ^y-ae! ,f rte ..11 (c�I'1,,. t'61ma rl . s^''�RrSr' �,.. .. 411 I - 1i�t 1�11 4'+iii'•. .y, 'yy Y.. p. C n I'll 4' t. .v� at, '.rf.., , ',. -i,. , l 7,, , . .... , ::... �:., , .. , k r: r lac I 1 .! i �., %li.. . h, ..{3 4.u1 I, .`11 'MI' .. tn1*.X� f -: .. Aq ayn�i� ,n,�M 11 aa y o•M 1.::':17'i� ., . , .. a, �. ..n. ... .,. :.. .... .... '.'� ` 10'ren��,'A. .Y� ,, . .w.ei t YH ry ,out ■AA■�� �� I , j�Y� .. tl'ie hs atL ::� :t s and tensions.. In th rden he "^1, I n�i, }; �iAe S^'' Ft.41 p' 1'i4 ve ,,on 'Nlow in his Lo . : ' behalf, , 3. >rif ill i }1." in A.as a at mpt at xeT i r fkk stance, and fled', like th.. rest. Then I"I 1.t o:� it. f 4 r': 1 Y { r. 1 1, r .V . wills l +,I . u a waxin 'holder, he went to the palace Tae tacit to g Tells of Pleea.0 ,. ';;Home a ''i,I£ 1' 'h :; +, .. .. • 1 .° ,m, „ e hi est and crowded around "���i4 �� 4 �{,ar i ,� }, � •. of th glt pri Sr��eg Swrft iielief. iln;�;,li rh `Itrtyl�.+ "` .lie (ire (Jerkin' 1$:25-27.. But these, ?�11 `1$5I r I` . abruptly presented with questions re- o�x�a h �`roublea-i'ndi- fi." E i+ s ctin his relationship to Jesus, he So-ca!lied St _ 11 g gesti'on, dyspepsia, gas, sourness, etc., ,', til r, � denied thrice, and at last with an p bbl mne cases out of ten, are in r,& y �} , -, oath, that he a er knew him. It need- evidence of ",too much acid' in the 9 RNACE NOW ed but a look from Jesus to rev>all his stomach'" souring the food causing �,''n'� ,,.'l boasting assertion -"Even if I must the formatiatn o was and starting acid l l y ,�ll� r,. ;., die with thee, yet will I not deny indigestion. 11 ;ip';;` thee," -and turn the flood of repent- ance capon his soul. Gas di'atends`the stomach and caus- k Thera was never any break in his es a full, oppressive burning feeling a" ) 'I'1 „pro d.ml .Iw'w ylll; �iy�` �I�IhPu�'IF Lord''s confidence in him. To him, known as heartburn, while the 'acid �' - p��Ipl�� We have years Of expe.r- irritates and inflames the delicate . . �, first of the apostles, did the risen r s ," , �.. ienCe i II ofl'erin OU � stomach lining. Get rid of Gras and tl. �', y Christ appear (1 Com. 15:5) and when Acidity, and you get rid of Indiges- indui°I the thrice - ,P11 (,p k �; New Idea Furnace. Is by the lakeside of Galilee, „ tion " a �opl�f„ , repeated question. "Loves thou me, P P hP�i��II I��Ill� IN heaviest built where re- brow ht out the three answers full of To stop orprevent revent the sourness and I'lla , A a -...:..- I il:. IIVII�II�II g gas, to neutralize the stomach acids c uired w i t h wonderful humility and love, the tender com- Wl 1 ' "" �`"� lands, "Feed my sheep," "Feed my and keep the stomach sweet and free heatint; capacity and res- from Indigestion, a teaspoonful or a,Usr Iambs," proved that his restitution four tablets of �Bisurated Magnesia HEADY . uE sonablp 7�deed and instal- was complete, (John 21:15-17 To should be taken in a little water after FLA'NGE0, ✓ p p )' FIRE PUT .- led by mechanics. the erring but repentant apostle was V'1111 - given the leadership of the entire eating .or whenever gas, sourness, pain church and the honor of martyrdom. or acidity is felt. This quickly sweet- ' ., ,'dl ., ens the stomach, neutralizes the acid - DEEP . ASH Pm We are always pleased (Condensed from The Encyclopaedia ity, shops the pain and is ha irnless to figure your job of Religious Knowledge). and inexpensive •to use. l-Bisurated Magnesia, powder or tab- _.:� - __�_'. lets .Only, can be obtained from any WORLD MISSIONS drug store and 'its daily use keeps the The Glowing Ember of Prayer stomach in fine condition, enabling it ., to do its work without the aid of arti- 1. ,,�I,l,'- f t 'IFC° .�INF,;.� la . ,, s'li'• a' .,,'..1 I.. . ,A , I -�-m� i. T ^ , {*�-^-j -^�.- Speaking to the African women a- ficial digestants. bout the reading for the learning of a Clothes Wringers, $6.00 Scoop Shovels .... $1.85 word of the Word of God, I have re- minded them of those mornings when they wake to find the fire dead on the Red Star Hand Washer ...... $18.00 floor of the hut, and of how they must hideousness of an open culvert at the then go to that neighbor from whose mouth of the tunnel 'beneath them. So Granite Wash Boards ......... 75C - roof there rises smoke, and of •how the ra:1way people covered it up by with the ember they have begged .building a dummy house. From the Galvanized Wash Tubs .. $125 to $1.65 they hurry (back to ,the cold hearth. railway track it is simplay a 'blank, As they 'go they breathe upon the em- wall; from the Gardens it looks like ber lest it die. If it is a live ember, a well built house, complete in every Buggy Lanterns, large size ...... $2.50 how soon the fire shines, painting the detail. walls 'of that house with light. If The house has been the scene of Geo.A SELLS & SON a many practical jokes. Not long ago the woman with the ember has dallied•, hundreds of invitations were sent out and coming to her house she finds by same jester to a party there. Mean- • the ember :gray, even then she does not de's'pair .but blow's upon it, cher- time it is always providing puzzle's ishin it with 'her ,breath until it lives for trade canvassers and, others who HARDWARE, PLUMBING $,y FURNACE WORK g ask policemen where to find the again. ll the Women, en letter pox and the door bell that do . . - ..... a . na that ember, - - -..-. ,tq Pot C?Nlst, --' is like the word of God in our ht-_ . There are mornings when we wake to • - I find our hearts cold -there is a dead - SUNDAY AFTERNOON I After meeting Jesus, he became a Fess and a staleness there. Now it ARE YOU USING UP YijLJR disciple, but resumed his occupation is, if we care for the peace of our- NERVOUS ENERGY?. (By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.) until some time after this, Jesus gave selves and our families, the servants him that final call which made him in the house and the companions in Do you feel tired? Are you troubled Come, Holy Spirit, come; henceforth an inseparable companion the office, that we must beg the em- with headaches, a poor appetite, irri- Let Thy 'bright 'beams arise; and apostle. His house was a kind of ber, And well we know the neighbor tability and a lack of ambition? If Dispel the darkness from our minds, rendezvous far the disciples, and he whose fire is as constant as the stairs, so, it is probable you have been using And open all our eyes. was one of the three who saw our If there is a fire in our hearts it is up too much nervous energy - you Lord's most private experiences and there we got it; and if there is a chill have been going ful'1 steam ahead Convince us of our sin; miracles, and heard his most private in our 'hearts it is from neglect of without feeding the nerves. Then lead -to Jesus' blood, speeches. Peter comes before us as that first; and because we do not beg Nerves that have become weakened And to aur wondering view reveal a sharply defined, type of the Gali- the ember, or having begged it we .and shattered through over -work or The secret 'love of God. leans. well-intentioned', trustworthy, have not cherished it, letting it fail worry .need nourishment - the nour- I Joseph Hart independent and courageous, but also while we were 'preoccupied with the ishment gained through rich, red susceptible to new impressions, and things of anger, the things of sorrow, ,blood. Good blood feeds the nerves and PRAYER by nature disposed- to changes accord- the things of the (body, the things of gives them greater vigour and vi - We thank Thee, our Father. that ing to fancy. Our Lord looked below gossip -yes, even the things of gos- tality. though we often fail to render unto the surface, and knew that whe.q once sip. For such as these we have not No other medicine has been so suc- 'Thee the praise,and honor due unto the decisive impulse had been given spared our breath, while the ember, cessful in treating nervous disorders Thy Holy Name we have the assur- to that life, nothing could stop or de- that was to. warm ourselves and our as have Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Their ance that Thou dost love us ever. fleet the outflow of the energy of the fellows, has dimmed as we carry it. sole' duty is to enrich and renew the Though we deny Thee, Thou art grac- warm-hearted disciple. He would be Whose ember is this dying on the ,blood.. That is why they are the ideal ious and wilt restore us if we repent entirely his. Peter's history proved ground' in its .bit of broken pot, while nerve tonic. They are sold by medi- athe woman who begged it has turned .cine dealers or b mail at cad cents a nd seek forgiveness. May Thy loud the correctness of our Lord's intui- Y constrain us for Jesus' sake. Amen tion. He identified himself with his aside into the forest? box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Muster. He was the leader andFor such a one and it is you and Co., Brockville, Ont. S. S_ LESSON FOR NOVEMBER 2nd spokesman of the band. From his :t is I -there is a breath that will re - lips came the-emp"hatie answer found viv'e the ember: Remember the Lord _ Lesson Topic -Simon Peter. in the first part of to -day's lesson, Jesus! , If your ember fails because Lesson Passage - Mark 8:27-29 ; ' "Thou art the Christ." But it cannot .of the things of sorrow --remember PAT OBEYED Luke 22:31-34; John 18:25-27; 21:15 1 be supposed that no earthly hopes the Lord Jesus who was acquainted pat was applying for a job' at the to 17. mingled with Petr's faith in the Mes- with grief. And if you are a person Ib1•acksmith's. The smith agreed to Golden Text --Acts 4:13. siahship of Jesus, nor that he at once of anger, so that you are dreaded ,by try him. Peter, always called by the Lord, understood how the sufferings of Vose you love -remember the Lord g "Listen," the 'blacksmith said, "I'm Simon, was born in. Bethsaida but af- Jesus could lead, to the for that Jesus, how He did not strive nor cry glory rnor shout about the streets. And if going to bring this horseshoe from ter his marriage lived at Capernaum, should follow. the fire and lay it on the anvil; when and with his younger brother Andrew, Peter was honest in his intentions you are a person of envy, so that y ge I nod my head, hit it hard with this carried on the trade of fisherman. He for we know how vehemently he as- You cannot pass the traders house hammer. was an adherent of John and Baptist serted his devotion, "Lord, I am ready without a burning wish to possess the Pat obeyed his instructions to the and by Andrew introduced to Jesus. to go with thee, both into prison and bright ornaments that are there -re- letter the blacksmith never rodded member the Lord', how for our sakes He became poor. And oh! if you are his head again. a person of spiritual sloth, so that you - --- - slowly, slowly turn to the Word of .::'•:* God where the Lord waits to meet THE MODERN METHOD x. f you --remember how often you have ..••. I rejoiced to meet Him there, and how The 'barrier of distance is a thing He did then do for you according to of the past. Now miles are no handi- His promise, making all things new. cap, for the telephone is a lightning %Y.:.'?•• o Yes, even the pot where you must for- voice-4bearer. Over 70,000 times a y '�' ' j •:> ewer be cooking --dor who other than day the people of On and Que- ...:.; .,: - �.. ::'X -.:<.• Himself minded the fire and broiled bee place out-of-town calls. It is a >. �+ 'N .•; r; the fish on that morning. when His constantly growing habit. And 'an ;, %? K?'' friends returned from the fishing, hav- inexpensive one. ...>.•.�� ?' so-• ing caught nothing' ', ' '¢.i Who but Himself was first at the '" N` `""' well where the Samaritan woman ..... , :-, ' �'" KING OF DETECTIVES FOUND must forever be drawing water and he never thinking to be meeting the `THE YARD' COLD • Saviour on that old path? . Who ,but Himself, passing by the W. J. Burns, America's greatesi Different from tax collector's bureau, wrote on His detective, admires 'S'c'otl'and Yard im• pad: "Follow Me?" menselyl. At the same time he think: every other Oats Who knew better than He the price that it has features that could be im• to a farthing of the least of fare, and proved upon. He finds the prevail- Q1141cx1304 who else knew the exact fortune in ing atmosphere there rather chilly. the widow's handl? "If there is any person. who shouk . S There is a light late in the window be received without suspicion at Scot- UAKIER. OAT and all the village is sleeping, who land Yard I think I can say without but 'Himself looks in at the window boasting that I am the man," ex - COOKS IN 2!/Z IbYINUfES AFTER THF. WATER BOILS and says: "It is the third watch"- plains Mr. Burns. "It is fairly vel oil amd blesses the watcher? known even in England that I am` nc . Perhaps she is reading the Word of friend of criminals and that I have God., I tell the Bulu women. She has put more bad ones behind the bar: - been in the kitchen all day, or in -the than any obher pexslon in the w orld office all day, or in the school, and And yet whenever I have had to pa} now she is alone' and she reads the a visit to Scotland Yaird I have hac ...... Word of God. to overcome what amounts to a spill =' N :• outer office ��- he ra 'n ? Perha s of hostility in the out :;:':1-:::�::�:;:%;';�:�:':::;:s:.:�::::•:::::::r::.:::::;•r:�• whom is s For P Yi g P �y;`'•iso.:,•'>``':r�:`%�• i B nature I am a genial sort. �- I hell the Bu1u women she is praying Y - �- or those who serve on. like to smile my way through. I hay. 1 - for u and f y. �! Y o �'�'1 !�tl� in her little book about the not had much experience in coaliF€ I ••' Reading work of God in the world and the my heels in 'outer offices after I haul r: ?t1°• i'ri: sent in m card to the official I wan :�:'? ::;t :.,>: names of His seiwants, she prays.- Y '•',.,.. iii Jean Kenyon Mackenzie, in Women to see. In Scotland Yard, though .-.. i?s ..11 :1 •i ti:; the have never taken an chances.' ' C I I ■1 ICI _ , I and Missions. Y Y 4 ,tea p��r $. +' r SONS go' W . & While on a visit to Englund some 0 years ago Mr. Burns was requestee LONDON HAS HOUSE ONLY FIVE by the American embassy to investi gatet e disappearance of a young FEET WIDE Amerman. In company with a hi'gl diplomat Mr. Burns went to Scotlan4 Could you believe that in London Yard for assistance. He asked t4 there is 'a five-stbrey house complete a'� Sir Edward Henry, who was the; with front door, windows and balcon- chief commissioner. ies, but only five feet thick from front They waited, and waited, and wait to back and possessing no keyhole, ell some more. door bell, fetter box or in'h'abitants? Detectives came and went, stare Well, there is, and if you want to see at them hard, but still no invi'tatio it you have only to ask a taxi-driver came from the commissioner. to take, you to No. 23' Leinster Gar- Eventually Mr. 'Burn's got up an diens. H'e will probably think you are strode through a door marked "Striel pulling his leg, for most, of them know ly Private" and blundered at a start all about it. led-l*oking mAn sitting at a diosk: how h much, longer are you c Here is the story of this queer house "Say ow li g y g that isn't a house at all. Many years ing .:to keep the American ambaasa ago the Underground Raff*a'y' built a dor waiting to 948,e Sir Edward? lam:' line through Leinster Gardef ,% one of finding his chair •pctetty 'haul sitthi London's mdat dignified residential out there, and so Am i." tittgrters: The lnha'b tangy Of the Our. The mentio 1161. the American air defts rateotbd 0401'etuEl', a •shish' the bas's6A' 0r-6von ,,.[Ou6h it wasn't -a p q >; . . r thp. ''Alp! ssa or, but only leis re- 'resentn'ti'v .. • lie 4f icials : to ction Within three minutes the nterview ith t e grecs. commissigner Pas in p� s. I Sir ttlw . rd' �xmscilf proved to be cost geuia . ! % promised to let Mr. ;urns ',have 0the information the i'ard eguld unearth. $4Nonp of it has yet reached me," smiled 'Mr. Burns, long after, T h e rung man turned up later in another country, He had, got into some money ;rouble and skipped. But if Scotland Yawd had happened to get hold of nim they wouldn't have given him a ;older reception than they gave me." Speaking of the Volstead Act, which has brought quite a bit of grist to his mill, Mr. Burns had this to say: "I( never had a drink of alcohol in my life until prohibition came in. Then I dict' like everybody else: I tools a little for medicinal purposes." .. el' r.; ` s, 1. .r. .N. .. +�.x1,11 't .t . . N11 1 Come in today for a demonstration of ` the new All -Feature. Radio. 3 a �� SOUTH AMERICAN JAGUAR KINGo..M �M OF THE JUNGLE R ICI .. "King of America's Jungles" is the 4 . , name given to the jaguar of South t America by J. L. Buck, a veteran wild ,; animal collector and tamer, who h Here is a Set that, writes for the New York Tribune It is beast ��I I the. For, magazine. a _which ap- sets pace pears to halve suffered from a lack 19 3 0 - 31 -, W - tls of expert observation on the part of naturalists. There -are conflicting. all the advanced stories about it. The late Col. Roose- velt, who hunted it extensively, says U 1 features proved by that it is one of the most ferocious $ radio engineers, of the 'great cats. William Beebe, who 7 has seen many jaguars, insists that it and in cabinets of is harmless and is the most benevo- lent of the 'panther tribe. Mr. Buck I ° h I - d e I u x e quality. ' is of opinion that the truth lies half- 1 and artistic design= way between these extremes. He says the jaguar is both ferocious and mild. ill Where the beast is hunted most, tea;.,- Super -Shielded ' which 'happens to be in the hottest I IV Chassis regions it frequents, it is savage and y a killer. Where it is not hunted its ' 7 benevolent naturehas a chance to ex- Normally it is devourer -tube screen marvellous pand. not a of human flesh. Beef is its favorite. MODEL 117 grid, selectivity, per - But it has been :known to kill ar-d de- f e c t reproduc- vour men. On the other hand there This beautiful tion. ;:'# is an old story, well, authenticated, - de luxe cabinet which tells' of a group of South Amer.- ican children playing all morning of Colonial de. Super -Dynamic: J with some strange beast that ap- sign with hand, Speaker proached -them trustfully. They ramp- i' some grille. ed .together and' the children switched n i m i i s it sportively with little sticks. Then i a Lyric quality, OF., L in its excitement, as it appeared, the .¢d tone. scratched one of the young- blood. The -frightened . Price, less tubes sters and drew child screamed and the elders came to see a nearly full-grown running jaguar disappearing in the 'bush. ��� There is another story generally ac- cepted about a jaguar playing for t some time with a group of dogs as a 11 cat might play with a litter of pup pies. Nevertheless the dog is one of the favorite dishes of the jaguar. The South American natives fear the jaguar, but regard the puma, a some- what smaller cat, much as the sea- men regard the albatross. It is the A. W. DUNLOP, SEAFORTH ',�y,, friend of man. The Indians insist X 41' that if the jaguar follows a human being a puma is pretty certain to fol- - Manufactured by Mohawk Radio Limited, Toronto low the jaguar to protect the man. Vimy Supply Co. Limited, Toronto, Distributors Mr. Buck has a d'ispositioni to accept at least part of this legend. He, tells - - of camping at night and hearing not far from his fire the distinctive cries human being's. In any event, some- himself from the shelter of a small of a jaguar and a puma. In the morn- times he will shirk combat from a 'bush to the 'back of a bull, tearing ing as he resumed his journey he beast much smaller than himself. He with teeth and claws until tha bull found both the beasts dead. They will take to a tree and 'perch there falls, weakened from pain and loss of had destroyed each other, but it is for hours until his enemy 'passes. He blood, and is devoured. The peccary, not ,plain, flattering though the as- will attack a bull, a boa constrictor or a kind of wild pig, is another favorite, sumption would be, that regard • fora puma, -but will, if possible, choose dish, ,but some times the peccariem Mr. Buck drove the puma to, a fatal his ground and manoeuvre for a fav-' kill the jaguar. They attack in a display of knight errantry. That the orable position. He is the terror of body and though two or three of them jaguar is extremely curious about a the cattle raisers of South America may fall in the onslaught they asu- man, especially 'a traveller, is well because of his fondness for beef, and ally persist until they have gored an& known. It will follow him for miles Mr. Buck has seen him suddenly hurl stamped the life out of their enemy. or even days, making no effort to attack, but apparently finding his movements and his appearance of ab- sorbing interest. Mr. Buck says that of all tho ani- mals in the jungles of North or South America only two are a match for the jaguar in strength. One is the boa constrictor, the other is a bull. He omits the grizzly, which we should Bring New Rooms think to be supreme among the beasts a on this continent. The jaguar ranks to Your Home next to the lion and the tiger in the cat tribe. It is spotted stomething Ig _ t like the leopard but probably is not ° with Gyproc nearly so dangerous, the leopard hav- i11 / J [ ing 'one of the worst reputations in the animal kingdom so far as cun- I I W. WORK -ROOM for you A ning and ferocity are concerned. It larger I -a play -room for the is a lanimal, 'being, in fact, youngsters in the basement. . about 'three-quarters the size of a tiger, from which we should assume An extra bedroom or two in . i it to weigh perhaps three hundredthe Attic. These are now pounds. Unlike the lion it is a great 1� possible in your home at climber, and one of its favorite meth- 4 little expense. t ods of hunting is to crouch on the 1 limb of a tree over a jungle trail and The new Ivory coloured i then hurl itself like a thunderbolt up- Gyproc Wallboard that does' on an animal passing beneath. It is not burn and needs no decor, l almost amphibian, being by far the :� anon when panelled) will ' �i best swimmer among the great cats. It has been known to swim after a give you additional space i.n , s �- , raft upon which cattle were begin' your present home. ferried to an island for a change of Easily and quickly applied, 4� �„ , pasturage, leap aboard the craft, , stampeding cattle and herders, and structural) strong, 1t pro- y g p -� then paddle off, towing a cow. vides fire -safe walls, ceilings Watching one night at a salt lick and partitions.' Mr. Buck saw evidence which satis Your dealer's is fied him that the jaguar, though an name , individualist, unlike the lion, yet listed below. Consult him . ,� A`` p play. h value of team la understands the a today a y nd ask for full infor- �. - A jaguar came down to the lickdrag- mation regarding Gyproc ging some animal with him, and after Wallboard or write for in- Gf • having enjoyed himself at the salt, � was about to return to the jungle terestin free book "Build- g >,•J� when a larger jaguar appeared. In ing and Remodelling with s• , a moment the pair were fighting. The Gyproc." �� f ' furious conflict did not bast long and s I f ` 11 ) ended, when the first jaguar limped a- GYPSUM, LIME AND t way leaving the other to enjoy the - prey that had been provided for him. AY.ABASTINE, CANADA, The next night the first jaguar with LIMITED r i its mate and two cubs appeared at pays I the salt lick. The cubs were chased . Ontario � back from the open by the mother and ` i the two jaguars then rolled about in the Isand caressing each other. Upon l' , :4- this pleasing domestic scene the lar-WeNlft,w.vger OV � `� • , : jaguar of the previous night sud-, f gel , i' denly projected ,himself. The other i jaguar leaped upon him and the fight , i' was renewed. In the midst of it the . „ s < Ii 1 female jaguar sprang up to help her "' iv; - mate and adith tooth and claw ,pro- , „i . ... ,1 t � 4. `: - eeeded' to make the fur and blood fly 41 i � , a° from the intruder. In a fever minliltaa It' .t� ., ,. u�:' 4°�• � f ' a it i I he had' had enough and disappeared in -. ^ ,r .. . ;i "- - the jungle, Thein the cubs emme gid g .a I g the jaguar family had a soft, of } p r,�mw�, x I;,= 1 - I° .::n p.. 41 �4 At4a V.t ".f yaynd ? pienic. The jaguar, sfiyg mt. Bucy; is ,*a- t a 1 or "a a,rs ire r,. '�ftr r, y�.; a �.> �4f ;'r Ala A., +', W '" �w zrr'.° 40ri�. ISer atrlett perhaps pe.:, : _ , � ,I, . ... .., 1. .,,,... , !( ..r.,: _, 1=, er : to ",'.$ii ..,'ct,; sir `th@" :.tit rl , r►p r a �` - ai++irir car' ws�.l�..�..�..�., , J:' ',Lr. I 1t 14'� 3' !tet f• I, P w S Sri (. n+ �1„11� kl �•I'.li, f:.% M .i �t,, 1 1 k ..,. ,.. M1 •' .,.., •.' Ii' ., ! t :, ..; s'S_: f.:ffi. r -...., ( -, , .✓_, :.,fy4. a,-;.1..it ..:,.� .,.�_36�:u. ,, L. _.. �: ). „t ..u.a�k......,..e'. 1 { ,.:}.. ,l l t x 1. rc t •i�},�i tit II 7 -v. ,h� ,i 41 ... ( r , ^1 . A I .;,. , - ,,, ' • t . ^'SM IN .' •i A. :: k f..,..sw.,m w f ..rr. ..4.l.lp: t C,r•n,•�F 1c:br,,.i ,:, ,� ,s....:�',M ruc,/...,R,.,,, ...h ..:...,l. f.t •.,.,,...rfS. hr,,. ,�: ,.�',>S;�L,...:a�a. .A ,631,,,,w,. v.;. .,9.,._ „ ....1.. �,„ �..v. ;....� .�.. Wit.,I;* , I G i n? =ii '* h 4fi.,