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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1920-01-01, Page 2• t s • • 4s. dli• P • e ,e • Car Kept Clean Has Longer Life. `The engine of a car can be mis- treated frequently before it begins to romplain, but the finish can be mis- treated once or twice—then there is no finish left to' mistreat," says an Vaal Old Men in Recent Wars. I NO RELIEF FROM The world war has been called a young man's war because young men filled the ranks, but it was also an old man's war because old men were in command hardly one of the distin- guished military leaders having been under, while most of them were over fifty. Foch, Joffre, Pershing, Haig it and Rin.d bur ve 11 in the neigh - stronger the butter the better. en g a a borhood of sixty. Among the govern - should be laid- over the spot ind be ment war leaders, Lloyd George; permitted to stand for half an hotir11 Clemenceau, Wilson and Orlando are when At will soften the material and allow it to be removed with a piece! all of mature or advanced age, Hoover th be of cheesecloth. • expert. Holders—Loops made of webbing gl dnguished Englishmen in command front (wit t e exception of to wash a car will go further towards and big washers make admirable hold- a . ruining the appea!aire than any other ers for parasols and fishing rods or ' • the government, at home, ranging in Kitchener), as well as in charge of - ' la Aare hernalia age from sixty to seventy. On the Keep the Hands Clean—A little alone among e greatmanagers - ing youn as forty-five.. The same was true of the Boer war, all of the "The lack of washing and the es: and fastened to the bows beneath the eential knowledge af not kn'owing how top near the sides with small screws t the • h h dung. The varnish ef a new car as benefited and hardened by walling with clear cold water, but mud that is allowed to dry -upon the body takes commencing any machine work will the oil from the varnish,and leaves the greatly facilitate cleansing- the hands finish mottled and streaky. Dirt is with soap and water when the job not the only enemy, for gases from is done. the garage and even the atmosphere of some towns attack the finish of the oar that is not frequently washed. "Begin by cleaning the top. Take a Boer side Kruger was seventy, the vaseline iallabed on the hands before .same age as Von Moltke when he won the Viancp-Prussian War:- The poet -1 warrior.d'Annunzio is fifty-six. Going' further back, however, we find a dif- ferent story. Grant was most success - Increased Mileage— A veteran ful at forty, Sheridan at thirty-three, motorist who has achieved a remark- able record for tire longevity claims Stonewall Jackson a thirty-seven. that he has done so by the use of over - /good stiff biush and eemove the dust, size tires, ,fittcd with Anterliners and -then either sponge or use a soft cloth the common size inner tubes. The ex - _54t11 warnk miter and pure soap. A periment would not be very costly at -Chamois kW especiallrfor tius- pur- any- rate - 0e 'wlfl- tele tO hasten the drying, Glycerine for .Clipping Clutch— nd the top tirn-t nOt 1 fol(lt 7 aly. c.;ritne of the 'best quality applied Nelson was thirty-nine at -the victory of the Nile, Wellington thirty-fo t Assaye and the Duke of Cumberlan PRESENT IL C. L NO PRICE DROP IN SIGHT SAYS BRITISH EXPERT. Normal Pr9duetion is First Necessary Before Balance, Can be Reached. The world can expect no relief from the high cost of living ,and the short- age of commodities until the wide- spread social and industrial trest has disappeared and tile war shatter- ed economic machinery has been put in .order, according to Charles A. Mc- Curdy, parliamentary secretary to the Ministry of Food, says a London dos-, patch. • McCurdy expressed this view during an interview with a cor- -respondent of The Associated Press, and added that he was not particular- ly optimistic over the chances of any marked betterment of the situation in the near future. 'We ve Bolshevism at one end •of the world and widespread strikes at only twenty-five when hirbecame com- the other," said Mr. McCurdy, "and mander-in-chief. Napoleon was a re- not until society resumes its norma nowned -kilitary figure _ivhile yet in , course -can we right economic condi- the twenties, as were Sulius Caesar, tion .the • — THE COST OF THE GREAT WAR- , WAS $337,946,17 • Lou of Life in thf Four Years Estimated at 10,000,000— Indirect Colts of the World Struggle Were as Much as the Direct. It is now pOssible to bang together the final figures so far as they can be ascertained for all the belligerent countries. and to estimate the total direct cost of the war. It will, how- ever, probably never be possible to state precisely how much the world has spent in prosecuting the Great World War, since .the break-up of states like Austria-Hungary, Russia and even Germany, and the limited participation of countries like Brazil and Portugal and some of the smaller belligerents, have-mitide it all but Ins-, possible to secure' complete figures. Even the expenditures of the principal belligerents are far from exact, as the accounts have nbti been closed and ex- penditure d are still being made which may properly be credited to the war account. But in such a gigantic sum ,as that presented z,brothe 4tinal aggro, gate cost of this war no great differ- ence will be made it some of the smaller items fail of exactness. The nelusion.s 'nf this sin* are _present: eri " an aPprotimation. to the truth. it 'is 'flissiougli7i, dry - t. !Iss 7sather fa,olng or cone 'clutches • .• . r is Mfrs I it is bell, 'probably • "The upholstery, if a clotb, is best gives the "take hold".iihich +Linen Although.the o cleaned by sponging with water con- lacking. If the dutch is fierce in tak- ?resent Is supposed tbe pre-eminent- taining a little salt and alcohol. If of ing hold add a little -graphite to the Iy the age of young men, the more leather a woollen cloth dipped in clear glycerine. recent wars have witnessed a major - water to which a few drops of am- Radiator Lealgs—Radiator leaks are sity of men of advanced age in supreme command both at home and in the movie has been added is best. often very hard to locate, especially "In cleaning the body, be sure to ea_ when -they are little ones. In these field' move the nozzle of the Nose and flew circumstances empty the radiator the water over every part of the body. completely and blow smoke into ilt Wise Men Say— This will serve to wash off most of through a jeweler's , blow pipe. This That the worst thing you can do the dust and also loosen the mud. In will -discover the location of the leak. tor some men is to praise them. cases where the car is very dirty It is A little soft solder on the end of a That it is as easy to buy experience best to do this and then let it stand wire will enable you to reach places •as it is difficult to sell it. for a few minutes before going over it where common soldering cammt be' That experience is , a dead loss If again with the 'hose. Then take a saft ,carried out. you don't sell. it for more that it cost sponge and follow the hose over the you. ..__ • , . body. If ,certaan portions are grease- That none are so- fond of secrets spotted these should be washed sep- as those who do not mean to keep arately ...wAh pure water and castle them. Such persons covet secrets as a spendthrift covets money—for the purpose of circulation. That existence is the privilege of effort, and when that privilege is met like a man, opportunities to succeed I the 1. . t.will 1stiNeklas, - _.i -.,l bfushes will get . When a goal seam is being mined, come faster than you can use them. ' at the greitse in eee.,L.sible corners.' only the best coal is cut. The inferior That the best help is not to bear the -. - In the case of the 'heel hubs, care stuff is left, •and so are spaces called troubles of others for them, but to in- spire them with courage and energy to gnit working into the bearings. The chamcis used on the body should never be used on the running gear, a separ- ate cl:amois being kept for this lone The Deaclly "Gob." lie principal causes of colliery dis- soap, but except in this one instance asters are inflammable gas and dang- soap of any kind should be avoided on erous dust, says an English writer. the body. • A coal mine is often a very dry "The road oil and grease that col -'place, and the fine coal dust which lect on the runnirg gear require.dilr- floats in the warm dry air makes, with erent, methods of removal and also . it a highly explosive mixture. should be used to prevent water and "goats" or "gobs." The inferior coal gives off gas, and as the timbering gets rotten and gives way, parts of the roof of the "gob" fall in, causing cavities. In these' frauds is to cheat oneself; all sin is purpose. A heavy accumulation should! cavities gas acculnulates until theyeasy after that. Always bear in mind1 . never be taken off by dusting. it . g. become regular gasometers. Mean- i this worthy saying:."To thine own self u a be made to flow off with the' time, on the floor of the open parta:, be true, and it must follow, as the hose. If you wish to use a body polisIP1 of the "gob" coal dust accumulates in l night the day, thou canst aiot then be bear their burdens for themselves, and meet the difficulties Of life bravely. That the first and worst of all beware. of the many inferior grades great quantities. false to any masa.", ' In the "gob" there is not only waste .on the market. If any, you should use the xiiry best grade nbtainable." Practical raragraphs. Ste .t Circuited Plugs—The short a'reuiting of a spark plug that causes iniefircs is seldom at the spark gap. Oily surfaces cf the porcelain collect and rctain metallic wear porducts .which invite -the current to avoid the gap and prevent the spark jump that is needed to get ignition. The quality of spark plug makes no difference. coal, but also waste timber, so if by chance one of the men should slip into the "gob" to indulge in a quiet smoke, here are all the materials for a tec,- rible explosion or an awful fire. Needless to say, smoking in a mine ,is 'a most serious offence, entailing pot only-Nlismissal but also heavy punishment., Yet, even if none of the men are guilty of such carelessness, Nature herself may take a hand. Coal left in pillars is liable to take fire, Thai the art of give-and-take is one of the greatest accomplishments of life. To interpret the words and deeds of others at their best, to be slow to take offence, to give generously of ourselves—this is to make daitly lifjA a stream that blesses as it flows. VA' 'food -situation' the 'future; in view of the fact that the whole econo- mic structure of the world has been so badly dislocated. There is hardly -any' factor of business that is stable, And we do not know what wages are to be. As a result of these conditions the regular chaniief distribution are disorganized, and until they are normal it will be impossible to tell what effective supplies there are as compared with.the world stocks. "While it „is true that America, Great Britain and some other coun- tries are sufficiently supplied now so -that there is no distress among the -people —yet- this compa.rative- abun- dance is in reality a fictitious one, and may not last. Great sections of the world are actually hungry because of the impossibility of distributing sup- plies properly, If the channels of Ms- 16tribution were open and the econoinic conditions were such that foodstuffs could be purchased by those countries which need them we probably would findlaurselves faced with a shortage in many things. "For example, if the peoples of Cen- tralEurope shoulde n position next. year 'to purchase the meat they need there would be a world shortage of several million tons. It is improb- able that they will'obe able to buy, hut it is impossible to predict so far in advance. • I believe that a year front now things will have been brought to a head, and that the world will be fac-. ing its most critical time. "There are those who tell 'Me that I am wrong in my outlook and that there will be no shortage, but I can figure it no other way. There certainly are many countries now which are secur- ing far below what they need in the way of foodstuffs, and When the time conies for them to buy it will be im- possible to refuse them their fair share of what the world produces. We Beavers Are Increasing. People in the Maple Creek and Kamsack districts in Saskatchewan; cannot let one part of the world starve while another section has plenty. exact sab • 'tiled° at this time. The total money costs of the war for all the then belligerents hai'e been competently estimated by the Copen- hagen War Study Society' at $18,785,- 000,000 for the first.year and $33,066,- 000,000 for the second year. For the ,third year the costs were estimated by another authority at $39,247,900,000, giving a total for the three years of $91,097,900,000. According to figures compiled Iv the Swiss Batik of Geneva, the fourth year of the war cost as much as the other threaPtogether, or about $90,000,000,- 000, so that by August,I., MS, the four years of war had cost the world $180,- 000,000,000. The average daily ex- penditure on,- war for the first four years was $123,000,000; .duritti--the year 1918 it rose to $244,000,000. At this rate the war was costing more than $10,000,000 an hops.. It must be remembered, howe-ver, that the world- wide inflation of the currency which was taking 'place immensely increased the money costs of the war with each succeeding year. It should be noted that all the fig- ures thus far given cover only the direct rne'nessouillays of the countries involfed and -do not take into account the. indirect cost, such as the destruc- tion of property, the depreciation of capital, loss ot production, interrup- tion to trade, and similar items. It has been estimated that these would amount to as much as the direct cost. If this estimate, which was made early In the war and is undoubtedly too high, be accepted, it would bring the total cost toall the belligerents to about $370,000,-000,000. And in this stagger- ing total there are not included the ex- penditufes or losses of neutral na- tions, which have been very real and where beaver a have increased so rap- The.-a-erfaces must be cleaned to res.. either through grinding pressure, by idly as to become a nuisance, captured tore proper act:on. the absorption of oxygen, or by real 132 animals whose skins sold for A Dust Cover—A dust cover made spontaneous combustion of carbon $804.35. This proves that trapping of unbleached muslinlar e enou h to and iron pyrites. - - - as a profitable side -line in Canada g cover the car with the top up, is a The only remedy is not to leave anyl not confined to the taking of muskrats. rood investment. When propertsliel- "gob." The newest system is to work As beavers live in established houses they are easily hunted and were in danger of extermination when the law for- their protection was passed. The beavers have increased very late& and it is hard to estim,ate when considerably dining the 3, -ears of their this temporary condition will vanish. protection, and the permission to hunt America next year may be an importer them in the north country has been a of meat instead of a big exporter. See tremendous help to the Indians, to what that wild mean to the rest of -.... WItssi the lean rabbit years usually ' ami the world. ei.•an famine. Rabbits usually die off -On the other lia,al, production has be it *crippled in many tOtintries In ter cannot be chtained you can depend all the coal clean out, and to fill the upon this cover to protect the car from space created with ashes, sand, slag, rain, sun or dust. It may be folded i• any similar material which is avail - and pieced under the rear cushion. Spots on Varnish -7 -The best sub- stance with which to remove spots from varnish. such spots as are made is pumped up and used all over again by road 641 or tar, is butter. The1 to carry down a fresh load of material. able. The stuff is carried down through pipes, mixed with water, and the water, after has done its work, _ •••••••■•••11., How Brides Are Crowned The cuatote. ef crownieg the bride with. a wreath of aonie kind is ob- served in neariy all parts of the world, the usage varying but little, even though there ace few other cptunion customs beet -vase of variaition of ideals and degrees or• , Where flowers are readily obtainable, flowers are use a for this purpose, hot (elite a variety of flowArs are used, the choice being dependent on , what the particu- lar nation regards as most symbolic of the retewing life and fruitfulness of spring. England. France and America find orange blossoms •the ideal fiewers for their brides, whilepink carnations and red roses deek. the brides of Spain • Must Return to Normal. "There is another factor to be con- aidered also. Where production has been stimulated during the war it must ultimately revert to normal. It Is not natural as it stands. In the United States. for instance, the meat production has been artificially stimu- ,4th tome scourge or. plague peculiar to their kInd every six or seven years, tliir case the process of getting back to normal is likely to be slower than and as they are the chief food of the • in the case of the 7'a r.Fttmulated pro- . The bridal wreath in the Ionian Isles fur-bear.ing animals—the coyote, fox, "In Europe as a whole thre eis an actual shortage of 11 per cent. in sheep and a larger shortage in pigs. Be- (ause of this, Europe would have to -import 3,500,000 tons, of. meat this coin- ing year, if it. were ‘to return to its j)(4.war consumption. n. to wheat, the exportable surplus of the world is down corn - times this is a difficult matter, and pa"red with that b fore the war. Itn- always to the Indians the second year , port requirements at the same qme are of the rabbit scarcity means famine. up. The same thing is true of butter and in some countries its consumption The camel has been known to pull ' has been increased by the lack of mar - 100 oun d t t en miles anh •fout o r garine. There is also a sugar short- I . Is made from vine leaves. 11 Germany the wreaths are of mYrtio, though in the Black 'Forest hawthorn Is used, and in Bohemia rosemary is the favor- ite. •In Pesth ribbon tint! artificial flowers are blended .in a gay tnass. Switzerland' makes its 'bridal wreaths of white roses. . A few nations tise crowns rather than wreaths, and the Norwegian, Swedish and Serbian crowns of silver I are sometimes very handsome and I even beautiful. In Bavara and Silesia there may be seen bridal crowns of fine wire, gold, glass beads and tinsel, lynx, wolverine—this seriously affects those whose living depends on trap- ping. The first winter after the rab- bits die off, fur is abundant. The ani- mals which have lived on the rabbits are made reckless by hunar and are easily trapped. The second year, those that have not been trapped move to new fields and the trapper must move his line of traps. Some- Iuc tio n in some cases very serious, not the loss of human We, nor of subsequent burdens such as pensions and allow- ances. Loss of Human 'Life. The loss of human life and the race deterioration resultiiig from . war are the most appalling and permanent costs of the war, for they affect not merely the present bat are traceable through future generations. Reliable information as to the death toll is dif- ficult to secure during the progress of the war for Military reasons, but after, the smoke of battle has cleared away and the necessity for secrety ceases - fairly accurate data are to be had - Owing to the- large number who even yet are listed as "prisoners or miss- ing" a certain eleisent of• conjecture will probably always be present, even in,ithe most- calefully complled,•111tiai statistics. The best information et hand gives a total death rolrfor all beligerent. countries of approxiinateli 10,000,0007.-- • • From a pnsely enssmts standpaiSIL eased '‘nd tnalmed entails a -greater burden than the loss of life itself. It Is too early as yet, to procure informa- tion sufficiently accurate and detailed to permit of classification of the "wounded" in the range from total disability to slight injury. It probably will be years, possibly generations, before the full cost of the war in suffering and race deterionition can be measured properly. ' 'Summary of Property Loss. Belgium .. $7,000,000,000 France 10,000,000,000 - 1,250,000;000 1„500,000,-900 Russia Poland ... • VAGAIMNDS OF THE HEAVENS STRAY COMETS APPEAR AND. DISAPPEAR. These -Celestial Visitors Are Still Surrounded by a Veil' 0( Mystery. The , ilarvard astranomisat otosierra- tory unnounce.s the .appearaace Of two - new ccnncts.,in the skies. • Such.celestial visitors ,are always in- terestirig, if only for the reason that there is so mach of mystery. about them, They emerge, from the depths of outer pace',' and inost of them. pre- seattly, denit rt. then there is one tligtswings for a wltile itbout the sun in an' elliptical ()shit,. but sooner tat later it breaks up or takes flight in- to' 1110 C0611lie Void, disappearing for- ever. Undoubtedly Jupiter,.the. largest of the outer planets, catches a good many vometsi-deawittgAhein into our system. • Attiattett - 'by •-•the ,autt, they sweep around that luminary, and then out and ,away. • When. held for a while, ttr 'move 'along oval paths so as to - and -again -with re, -- Th•as nia%uS. a circuit, of the sun every seventy-siX years. Its last appearance was in 1910, *hen it proved a disappointment, being a mero remnant of its former self. Serbisr;_ Albania; Monte- negro 2,000,00,001) East Prussia, Austria, Ukraine ..... 1,000,000,000 Italy .. 2,710,000,000 Rumania 1.. 1,000,000,000 British Empire 1,750,000,000 Germany . 1750,000,000 Total $29,960,0Q0,000 Loss of Merchant Shipping. ShipPifig losses during the war have been carefully Teported and official statements have from time to time been given out. The British Aiitsiralty office has published accurate statistics on ,the losses of British and Allieal and neutral. tonnage, but that of the Cen- tral Powers is 16 -ss exact, as official announcements are either lacking or else confuse seized and interned with sunk tonnage. As seizedsandsintern- ed vessels do not represent a loss, but merely a transfer of possession, these should not,sbe, counted in estimating the property.losses resulting fsom the war. The direct costs. were estimated at $186,000,000,000: The indirect costs are now seen to have amounted to al- most as much more. DIRECT AND INDIRECT COSTS OF GREAT WORLD WAR: Total direct costs, net 4, $186,333,637,097 Indirect costs: Capitalized value of human life: Soldiers c.Civilians Property losses: On land Shipping and cargo • Loss of Production War relief Loss to neutrals $33,551,276,280 .... 33,551,276,280 - 29,960,000,000 ' 6,800,000,000 45,000,000,000 1,000,000,000 1,750,000,000 Total $151,612,542,560 Total indirect costs 151,612,542,560 (Wand Total ' 4337,946,179,657 dropped off 4,200,000 tons in Europe since 1914. The cane sugar produc. tion of the world meantime has in- creased only 1,800,000 tons. "In discussing prices, we must con- sider the meaning of the 'phenomenon in North America, where there is no food shortage, but an exportable sur- plus. The food supply is above nor- mal. and yet the prices have advances! ;tiniest proportionately v.ith the in- crea!-;e in Great Britain, which is large- ly an impel ting cduntsy. Thia C111.101,1A situation makes one realize that in estimating food prices the economic effects peculiar to foodstills are not the determinating factor, lett econo- mic conditions as a whole. "There seerna to be. tentleacy itt and profits on consumption of goods— food, clothing, etc., to a greater ex- tent than on the purchase of raw ma- terials for the extension of industry. It alay be partly due to this consump- tion that goods 011 the whole have such an unward trend since the arntia. tice." • Medihe :cal fees ,all over tUn.ted Kingdom are being raised, the. increase a/a/el-aging 50 per cent. The white inhabitants of Papua are protesting against taxation ‘vithout •reciresentostion in the Australian par- liament. The new Royal Mail steamship Al; mansora. the largest on the 7otite, Icayes on, her Aaiden voyage r, Bra - Terrified All' Europe. • In 1066 Halley's comet had an as- pect so terrifying that all Europe was alarmed -by the blazing portent in the sky, its head being as blg as the full moon. That was the date of the Nor- man illVaSi011 of England, and the marvel Is pictured on the .1.3ayeux tap- estry then -wovsn. Again in 1456, when. the Turks started to overrun Europe, it hung in thehaavens like a scimitar 14-1kliren. tay peopl'e now living in our own country remember the great cornet et 1861, whielrp*tended above the hori- zon. to within a short distance of the pole star, spanning one-s.ixth of the sky. Even more remarkable was po- nati's. cOmet, three years earlier, whose tail stretcha ed clear cross tho heavenly Vittl1t. it had a smaller sup- plementary stall projecting froni the head above the..main one: • A cometr usually consists ora bright lindens, Or head, stfrrOntided by 11, m luinous envelope, with a tail that streams off into space. In 1S11 there. appeared '‘a. huge'kite, with a head at Ii?ast 1,000,00(1.miles in diameter and a, tall more. than 130,000.,000 miles long. I3ut some comets havrno heads, and ?titers passeSs no tails.. The comet of 1744 had six tails, spread out OVN* the sky like a vast fan. IN'hItt 1E; a comet made of? Nobody knows. knows. At all events, its structure:la. a mystery. The. spectrosci.pe has proved that comets contain- hyd,vogen, ca,rhon, sodium and iron. Their tails are probably gaseous, but even this is uncertain. The head quite possibly is an aggregation of widely separated meteors moving as one Fragments. of- Nebulae ltsThe surmise has been ventured 'that comets %lay be detached fragments of nebula? --those patches of brightness in the sky which are imagined to be fields of nietepric matier, possibly dos- t make fitt#11- and planets some day. • A comers tall 'is of tenuous 11111e terial that faint stars can be4conan through it. It does not necessarily trail behind the head; indeed, it may be at right angles with the course tha head is pursuing. But alWays It streams directly away from the sun, as if driven off by- some electrical or other force. It has been sald flint the tails of half a dozen oomeG euuld be packed in a dress suit case. What makes the' comet so brigh? t' The mai mainly, whose light it re. By fleets. ut ud noubtedly•it gives out a light of its own. ,sitstias .the appean. ance of being incandescent..Professoe Young, of Princeton, has suggesta4 -that each particlamentributing to the make -tip of a comet'a head may carry an envelope of gas In 4)1 h- words, that the celestial wanderet i_ictu:Oly Tlie 93111C authorityasty, thai tire 1 ,gas -lit.' head of a comet of sesanasse id•size probably weiginemanyntflliens of tons. Sepirese that' one asf these of the skiea to ,.,!,7,br f•iir and atryse she earth. . ?sell th:ag .ases.it 4441. 14' diffiisss, •1 ,n,•••!1 perlulr or14 vi]es sse ss it might' saisiii tsistitet sulitharsess es. -011-011a p/1,4Y1:1., 'N••tVelilnil. 1 491 written• --\I (11,. 'i rt 111e ettnet ,foiltIr • I e1..447;.. 101: .1111 Oce 41 1;`7.11t • '.'11: 1,1';1,1 f'''f''' t.14J 4e- , • yi ir 1 trile !tt,11 1110.(:)titinPirt* ----- intjt. J44144-4;:*(0- this ;•1 ()lira tonn;',0 Itp_ _left while in Athens line filigree work is . used. twelve hours.. age,beet stigar product on in January. The has many ccun tri es to expe tid War wages s i .•••••••••••••••••.....1 <ott..-r -1 PRomi) ro tmEr.-r i'm TEN ',Jamul -Es Lege Now- BRINGING- UP FATHER Oc TELd- HER 1 `ili---TZ-1. COOLtik-vT 4;1• P.Ne.'s\`f il=cr7.1-1 klik`t- DEAR - t50-1- DET/NIN 'THE. OFFicE• oFrIcE Ati`( 'coo77't=12.-F ,TiVIEEt.tit. :SR ! t.OrI Nc.i1 KtiON-1 "(OUVE s,f4 /NS PNLL. A211f;HT- I Art .FP SOr.: OW. LOOK - mR. Till ficIsc toSirkti-E,40b:001T0:`f_ W H4EEN FOLLO- 14 • '4' .1.11111•11111..11011•111.1.11146111•11/11.NOMMIIM....011111111.15.•• k • • 1 t 4t: see! it !...A• rdic" tiotgi