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About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 16, 1954)
A FAMOUS DECEMBER DATE Though most Americans do not give it much thought, about this time in the year of 1777, General George Washington set up camp for a winter which was to be one of the hardest which American sol diers had ever endured. It was on Decem ber 19th that Washington marched his 11,000 men to Valley Forge, Pa. . This was after the battles of Brandy wine and Germantown, after which the British had occupied Philadelphia. There fore, the encampment at Valley Forge was not among the most optimistic prospects, nor after a session of complete success in the military field. Washington selected Valley Forge be cause he thought he could protect Con gress, then sitting at York, Pennsylvania, from this location and because it was a highly defensible site. One side -was pro tected by the Schuylkill and another side protected by a steep precipice. While be ing quartered at this site and amid many hardships caused by deficiencies in the commissary and quartermaster depart ments, the Continentals were, neverthe less, formed into a disciplined army by the rigid instruction and training methods of Baron Steuben. Many of us give little thought to. this -momentous action and winter, a hundred and seventy-seven years ago. But it was to have a considerable bearing on the fu ture history of the world and a direct bearing on every inhabitant in what was to become the United States. It is well that we remember Valley Forge and that hard winter, and those heroes of 1777. We should keep in mind that, should this generation be called upon to undergo a . similar ordeal, it is the history and tradi tion of our people to exhibit their finest qualities in such critical tests. SIX MILLION CHRISTMAS GIFTS The Office of Foreign Operations has already started .shipment of over six million Christmas food parcels from the United States to some forty-four countries in all parts -of the world. This is part of a Christmas spirit being demonstrated by the United States to its friends and neigh bors this holiday season. The packages are made up by the For eign Operations Administration, and util ize surplus foods obtained from the De partment of Agriculture. Some 500,000 of them will be distributed to the armed forces overseas. The packages are estimated to be worth about $4.50 each, and contain a pound of butter, a pound of cheese, a pound of dried milk, one pound of dried beans, three pounds of rice, five pounds of flour, one pound of shortening and one pound of canned beef and gravy. All- of these foods, except, the beef, are surplus foods. Variations are. made in packages sent to the Near East .and to the Far East, to suit the taste of peoples in those areas. It is estimated that 2,500,000 packages will be sent to Europe, 1,500,000 to the Far East, 1,00,000 to the Near East and Africa, and about 1,000,000 to Latin America. The Government, in distributing these 6,000,000 Christmas gift packages, will certainly gain goodwill in every corner of the earth and it is only regretted that similar packages could not be distributed to the needy in this country. Such a program would raise many questions as to favoritism, cries of politics, and much bickering. In view of these dif ficulties, the burden of help f or the needy must fall on individuals, civic groups and local communities. There is not one com- THOUGHT FOR TODAY So cozvards fight, when they can fly no farther; so doves do peck the falcon's piercing talons; so desperate thieves, all hopeless of their lives, breathe out invectives 'gainst the officers. The Plallsmoulh Journal Official County and City Paper ESTABLISHED IN 1SS1 Published Semi-Weekly, MonJays and Thursdays, at 410 Main Street, Plattsmouth, Cass County, Nebr. Three Times Winner Ak-Sar-Ben Plaques foi "OUTSTANDING COMMUNITY SERVICE" 1949 1951 1952 "Honorable Mention" 1953 Presented Nebraska Press Association "GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD" First in 1952 Second in 1951 and 1953 (In Cities Over 2,000 Population) RONALD R. FURSE Editor and Publisher . WM. L. MURDOCK News Editor SOPHIA M. WOLEVER Society Editor VERN WATERMAN Advertising ojioju. micsm Entered at the Tost Office at Plattsmouth, Nebraska as second class mail matter in accordance with the Act of Congress of March 3, 1S79. SUBSCRIPTION RATE: $3.50 per year in Cass and adjoining counties, $4.00 per year elsewhere, in advance, by mail outside the city of Platts mouth. By carrier in Plattsmouth, 20 cents for two weeks. 1 Futses Down macsa Fresti Flashes You can always tell a rnarried man when he enters a house he wipes his feet on the door mat. A farmer's barn burned here recently and the insurance company declined to give him cash they rebuilt one exactly like the one that burned down. He came into town here the other day and canceled the insurance on his wife. One thing you can say about children: they never pull out pictures of their grand parents. Flipper Fanny, our dainty little con tour twister, says a wink takes but one fourtieth of a second and she can't think of any quicker way to get into trouble. The only thing wrong with that dollar that used to buy so much was most of us didn't have one. We always put off buying our presents early because a newspaper man never knows how many friends he'll have by Christmas Eve. We've got color TV at our house now wre painted our set pink. Nothing wilL make a man put his best foot forward faster than being caught out with another man's wife. munity in this country where there is not a real need for such Christmas charity. . We urge individuals and groups in this community to begin preparations early, and make this Christmas a day of obsery ance and giving to an extent never before achieved. If there is one needy family in this community, no matter how insignifi cant, left out, Christmas in 1954 will not have been a complete success in our area. Memory Lane J rs YEARS AGO Vr At a Boy Scout court of honor, Carl Ofe was advanced to second class scout and Cyril Kocian to first class. Merit badges went to Bill Edwards, Cyril Kocian, James Doody, Dick Jones, Charles New ton, Richard Wohlfarth, Jim Edwards. Star Scout awards went to James Edwards, James Doody, John Johnson and Robert Gaines . : . Charles J. Warga of near Platts mouth was champion corn grower with a crop of 155.190 bushels per acre . .'. An other high was by Charles Frohlich . of Eagle, 97.71 . . . Raymond C. Cook was elected to the position of King in the Royal Arch Masons grand chapter, and Rev. T. Porter Bennett re-appointed as grand chaplain. William F. Evers was named to the finance committee. ' .'. , OA YEARS AGO w Plattsmouth H. S. was awarded a placque by the Nebraska "N" club for scholastic standings of its athletes v . . Elected officers of the W. R. C. were Mrs. J. H. McMaken president; Mrs. Fred G. Morgan senior vice ; Mrs. C. C. Cotner junior vice; Mrs. C. F. Glaze chaplain; Mrs. L. B. Egenberger secretary; Mrs. ,Val Burkle treasurer; Mrs. Martha Peterson conductor; Mrs. Kate Morgan assistant conductor; Mrs. Susie Bates guard; and Mrs. Mary Spenser assistant guard. The Washington Merry Go-Round 'Copyright, 1954, By The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) DREW PEARSON SAYS: IKE WILL SEIZE RED CHINA SHIPS IF UN FAILS TO OBTAIN AIRMEN'S RE LEASE; CIA ASKED TO LOCATE MISSING SERVICEMEN.;. KNOW LAND'S RESENTMENT AGAINST NIXON CAUSED BREAK WITH AD MINISTRATION. WASHINGTON President Eisen hower has made one important concession to military advisers who have been push ing him to take strong steps in China. These military men are chiefly Adm. Ar thur Radford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and Gen. James Van Fleet, the Korea Commander whose letter on troop training contributed to Ike's election. What the President, has agreed to is the use of the U. S. Navy to seize Red Chinese merchant vessels if the United Nations fails in its attempt to free the 11 American airmen and two American civ ilians. - . Eisenhower's concession on this point came only after a long series of debates inside the National Security Council and the White House. During most of these de bates the President leaned over backward against his military advisers. The man who threfly backed him up was General Matt. Ridgway,;Army ; Chief of Staff, who has so emphatically dis agreed with Eisehhower' on reducing, the strength of the Armed Forces that he will' probably be retired on his birthday in March. But, on' the" question, of getting bogged down in a possible war in China, the two spoke the same language. Admiral Radford, however, is one of Do It Yourself, Son the most charming arid persuas- ' ive military men in the Penta- J gon. Very much in the doghouse i with the Truman-Administration because of his open battle against the Air Force, Radford sweet-talked himself into Ike's good graces during one short hour when Ike's plane refueled at Iwo Jirna during the Decem ber, 1952, trip to Korea'.1 Ike then took Radford on the rest of the trip and he's been with him ever since: . , v Easy to seize Reds 'Radford,' therefore, - was able to talk Eisenhower into a prom ise that the U. S. Navy would be used , to seize Communist China shipping if the U.' N. negoti ations break down. He did this in part by showing how easy it has .been for Chiang Kai-Shek's navy, reinforced by U. S. ob servation planes and using for mer U. S. warships, to capture Red Chinese shipping in the Formosa, Straits. - Red shipping has to . pass through the relatively narrow waters between the Chinese Mainland and Chiang's Formosa where it is easy for Chiang .to lay in wait and pick off , ships at will. - , Thus, without a blockade. Red China would , not be able to communicate between the vital- bj . Sheriff V.VAWA. Following is a letter sent out- on December, 1, by John Edgar Hoover, Director of the FBI to all enforcement officers: ''In a democracy, "the officer of the -law is a 1 man with .a . db versity of talents. One minute he is a diplomat, the next a handy manr-and ' then a-sales man. In the morning, he is an analyst or performs the duties of a doctor or a psychiatrist. In the afternoon, he may be a technician, an investigator, a reporter or a statistician. This man has responsibilities which do not cease, when his shift is over, and his personal conduct in or out of uniform, on or off duty," must conform to a rigid, special set of standards which many times may seem unduly onerous. - - -Yet the law enforcement of ficer is often the least appre ciated of our public servants. He has always', be en "a -convenient public "whipping boy" and, fre quently, dve to a variety of reasons, he. cannot defend himself from unwarranted and ill-considered attacks: Like many long-time law enfqrce ment officers, I' am deeply dis turbed when law enforcement is made the ..butt of unjustified criticisim. Those individuals who are prone to criticize have found that the desk of the po lice department is as good a place as any to lay the short comings of the community. The wrath of .' the blame - layers Is directed toward the police de partment when they learn that crime statistics show an in crease, let us say, in the num ber of rapes in their commun ity during the past year. It . is very easy for some individuals to heartily condemn the police department for allegedly fail ing to do its job. . . As law enforcement officers, we must make it our business to insure that our fellow citi zens are r aware of just how much of the burden of lawless ness should fall on our should ers. We cannot be expected tq make saints. out ol all the sin ners in the country but we can, through a properly planned program, guide our townsmen toward a ?' more intelligent awareness of the police officer's exact - responsibilities to the community. Let the public know that'we are anxious to cooper ate with the schools, the churches, welfare agencies, clubs and organizations in striking at the. heart of the crime problem.;- Such-' a policy will reap rich rewards." The following pamphlets on communism, prepared and re leased by the Committee on Un- American Activities, United States House of Representatives, J can be obtained from the Gov- ernment Printing Office: - 100 Things You Should Know : LAW ly important seaports of the South and those of the North, - ; about the same thing as cutting New York-Philadelphia-Boston oft , from Baltimore-Norf oik-Miami-New 'Orleans'. ' Note Ike was of the opinion that the U. .N.-mission would succeed and that a showdown with the Red China Navy would not be necessary. , Washington Pipeline The State - Department has drawn- up a secret list of 526 missing Americans 472 serv icemen, 54 civilians who have disappeared behind the bamboo curtain. The State Department ; is morally certain many,, are alive in Communist prisons', has asked Central Intelligence to lo cate them..,. If our agents in China can find proof these men are alive, Uncle Sam will make a vigorous protest in the United Nations, then follow up with military pressure if necessary : . . the French are missing 20,000 troops that the Reds were sup posed to repatriate '.under the Armistice agreement in Indo China The recent East Ger man elections revealed that the number of voters has ' dropped by 238,181 in the last four years. Most are refugees who fled to the West. . . .The administration is quietly trying to arrange for ORDER Tom Solomon About Communism. 25 cents per copy. Guide 1 to Subversive Organ zations and Publications. 35 cents -per-copy. Organized Communism in the United States. 35 cents per copy. All orders should be directed to the Superintendent of. Docu ments, Government Printing Office, Washington 25, D. C, and' checks or money, orders must be made out to that offi cial.. Funds must accompany the order. Do hot send stamps. Statute of Limitations Changed to 5 years. On Septem ber- 1, .1954, the President of the j United States signed into law'i a bill passed during the 83rd - f Congress. The" bill became Pub-1 kA If g I Icq AT lie Law No.769, effective Sep-!lVlUIVC UjC Ul tember 1, 1954. Section 10 of this' . k i !! bill provides" "(a) section 3282. VririAIIC Ksllllr C of title 18 of the United Statesj T Ul lUUd lYUIiVd Code is amended by striking, Milk can' just like- a pair out 'three and inserting in lieu of shoes, have a different type tnereof 'five', (b) The amend- for eacn occasion, ment made by subsection (a) f Kathryn Cooley, extension shall be effective with respect f 00d and nutrition specialist ' at to offenses (1) qomfnitted on or, the university of Nebraska, says after the date of enactment ofitne wise homemaker will make this ACT or (2) committed pn-: use of muk-fiuid, evaporated, or to such date, if on such date! conciensed or dry prosecution therefor is not baj- Use more skim milk in place red by provisions of law m effect of whole miik. it is cheaper pr t0 i5 U(ih a' . , and has all the food nutrients The efect of the amendment except the fat and : fat soluble to section 3282 of title 18 of the ; vitamins It provides less cal Umted States Code is to extend ; ories so can be used for drink the statute of limitations, .tor., ing. purposes for the calorie any offense, not capital, from ; conscious individual. 3to J years.- Thlj? will include f For cooking and baking non aU offenses investigated by thefat dry soiids -can be used FBL such as bank robberies, i in place of fresn f luid milk StOien car cases, etc., unless otherwise provided for by a spe cific statute. - Stolen Livestock Iowa. Six Hampshire gilts, weight 220 pounds each, V cut in Tight ear: Twenty hogs, sandy-red and white Hampshire markings Kansas: 1 - Brockle - facea cow, . 4 yrs. old, good jnilk cow. End of right ear clipped : 1 -whiteface -heifer, one yr. old, weight about 400 to 450 lbs'. Branded T on. the left hip lo- n . ,. cation: 1 . - . Whiteface yearling steer, weignt apout . oou ids. Branded T on the left -hip lo- cation: 1 - Black heifer, weight ituuui idu us., 6 yi. uiu, uiaiiucu O on the left neck location: 1 - Whiteface cow, .weight .about; 10G0 lbs: 3 - .Whiteface cows. or 4 yrs. old::-! - Whiteface calf,) . Keep an easy;to-wash rubber weight about 300 .lbs. iTwo not- hat near your back door during ches in" lower , left ear: 1 we; winter weather, -says Clara Whiteface 2 yr. oki; good quali-r ; Leopold, extension home man ty cow. -weight- about 800 lbs.: i agement specialist at the-Uni-1 - Whiteface .calf-, 1 month old: versity .of Nebraska. The family 1 - Whiteface cow, weight about can stack their winter boots and ; 700 to 00 lbs.- . I These livestock thefts look ; place last week. " ' - Sheriff Tom Solomon Cass County, Nebraska Chief Justice Earl Warren to address a joint session qt Con gress. The Federal courts are in such urgent need of increased appropriations that a personal appeal from the Chief Justice is considered necessary to dram atize the need For example, the Chief Justice second mos t important official in the lan-l doesn't even have a limousine. He must either rent er.3 or hail a cab to attend formal functions. Yet minor assistant secretaries, attending the same functions, drive up in official government limousines Ike and Mamie have ' four plush Presidential Limousines between them, and another three for hauling im portant visitors A total of seven. Maybe they could loan one to the Chief Justice. Mr. Nix vs. Mr. No The inside story hasn't been (eld, but Bill Knowland's break with the administration isn't a personal split with President Eisenhower. It's resentment against Vice-President Nixon. Those who know Knowland know he's so bitter against his fellow Californian that he will automatically oppose anything Nixon favors. Since the Vice President is the "Voice of Ike" on Capitol Hill, this has the phychological effect of putting Knowland at odds with the ad ministration 'cm' almost every issue. Also at the back of Knowland's mind, his friends say, is an am bition to succeed the late Sen. Robert Taft as spokesman for the GOP Conservative wing. If Ike declines to run again, Know land is convinced the Republi can party will give its next presidential nomination . to the most promising conservative candidate. This explains why Knowland, declined comment re cently as to whether Ike should be drafted. - - Or, if Ike does try for a second term, he may be forced to choose a-conservative running mate for the sake of party harmony. In either .case, Knowland would like to be .the. .most , available choice. . . Vice President Nixon, as the tail to the Eisenhower kite,, is obliged to go in the same direc tion as -the . President. . Nixon does his best to determine the direction and guide the Presi dnt. Frequently he has. It was he who for months laid down the appease-Joe policy. But, once the policy is laid down, Nixon faithfully follows the Eis enhower line. And once the White House lined Up positively against" McCarthy, no one worked harder behind the scepes against McCarthy than Nixon. .Knowland's friends swear this is the main reason the big, obstinate-Majority. Leader voted for McCarthy. If was Nixon, for example, who appointed the Censure Committee, , including its Senate chairman; Utah Sep. Arthur Watkins. Afterward, it was Nixon who persuaded Ike to congratulate Watkins. ; This.: public endorsement" of Watkins, plus Ike's press-conference remarks- opposing Know land's views oh .China, was in terpreted, , by . Knowland as a double-barreled public rebuke, engineered by Nixon. Knowland has always resented the fact- that Ike's chief liaison with the Senate has , been through Nixon, rather than him. In. the past, the .Vice-President has been more of a figurehead, with the Senate Majority Leader the chief contact with the White House. The way feelings are running, it may not be long before Know land and Nixon are openly call ing each other names. Recommends i F.vnnnmt.Prl milk- i-s.Qlsn chpan- er than fluid milk in almost every instance and can be used effectively for cooking purposes. When. buying milk it is cheap er, to get 2-quart - containers. Buy -milk at the store, if it is cheaper than to have it deliver i Pff tn -vmir dnnr Milk is a perishable food. Keep it cool, clean and covered. If you buy milk at the grocery store take it home immediately apd. p,ut-it in the refrigerator. It it is left on your door-step take it in as soon asit is deliver- i waive ih iii o.a ouuu 2.oii ucuvci' I tnke in as soon as it is deiiver stroy vitamins. Milk like other foods retains its food value better with good care. ! ir . u.l ep ivuuotr mar Near The Back Door rubbers in a convenient -spot there without causing damage. It is easy to sponge the rubber mat with a soapy cloth, and U saves a lot of tracking. THE PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA, SEMI WEEKLY IC'JRNAL PAGE FOUR v Sectiof B Thursday, December 16, 1951 By Stanley James. Journal Washington Reporter WASHINGTON, Dec. 26 Pres- ident Dwight D. Eisenhower is reported to be waiting patiently for 1957, as the first possible year when he can have a good G. O. P. majority and also ma jority leaders who will coordin ate their activities closely with those of the White House. There is genuine resentment in some quarters of the White House over independent actions of Majority Leader of the Senate William Knowland. Although it is conceded that Knowland has every right to his independent views, and that the Executive Department Was no power over the Legislative, it is felt that better coordination could be ex hibited by Knowland. If the Republicans regain a majority of seats in the Senate in the presidential election year of 1956, they will have to elect a Majority Leader in the upper body in 1957. If better teamwork is not displayed between the White House and Capitol Hill, it is entirely possible that Know land will have very serious op position' in that election. With a majority of Democrats (who will be in control of the 84th Congress) in favor of his foreign policies. Mr. Eisenhower has little to worry about in this field. But in the field- of do mestic legislation, the President will be able to make little pro gress toward enactment of the G. O. P., program in the next two years. - Thus it will be 1957 before Ike can gather another Republican team around him at 1600 Pen nsyvania Avenue. - Because of this situation, chances are much better for an Eisenhower reelec tion bid than they were before the recent election. Mr .Eisen hower would have been more in clined to ..step . down from his very demanding job had he com pleted most of the job of enact ing his program, by the end of 1956. That will not be the case, however, with the Democrats in control in the next two years. The President took his sharp est crack at the United Nations, with his recommendation con cerning the imprisonment of thirteen Americans, and his sharp rebuke to the UN stung that body into action. Put on the spot by proposals that he take the "wat Action'; of blockading China, to force free ing of the Americans, the Pres ident, has to restrain himself not to rush into an "impulsive" ac tion which might not be in the best interests of ' this country. Speaking, with deep feeling, and great intensity, the President explained his position to a group of newspaper men on December 2nd (among them a representa tive of this paper). The President told them to ex plain to Americans that some times the first flush of anger and. the. impulsive response to an outrage such as the Chinese announcement on the thirteen Americans was not the best course to follow .He noted that such Communist provocations were not without design to split the western allies; he also noted that an impulsive action, a war action, by the United States, might accomplish just that something the Reds hnvp hppn trying to accomplish for years.'! uut in rejecting a force move, the President put the bail squarely in U. N. hands. His statement that the U. N. could have no self-respect if it did not react to the Chinese action was strong talk, and it won atten tion. Now the move is being re- Indian Swine i HORIZONTAL 5 Scarce 6 Shoshonean Indians 7 African town 8 First man. 1 Depicted swine 9 It is found in J the-r-v Indies 13 Lively 9 Hebrew deity 10 Help 11 Mariner 12 Handles 17 French article 20 Answered 21 Pullman cars .24 Being borne 26 Bird 33 it has tusks 34 Interstice . . 14 Falsifier i 15 Insect egg ; 16 Royal . ; ! 18 Expire 19 Part of wbe" 1 20 Starts again ! 22 Note of scale 23 Nostril 25 Pillage I TJ Landed 1 28 Goes astray 29 Accomplish 90 East Indies (ab.) 31 Not (prefix) 32 Italian river 33 Tilt : 35 Feminine appellation 38 Incite' 39 Soaks flax 40 Anent 41 Attires- 47 While 48 Solemn promise 50 Walk 51 Swiss canton 52 Enthusiastic - ardor - ; 54 Opposites 56 Pedestal p$rt 57 Most, severe VERTICAL - 1 Fruit - 2 Beast ' . 3 Small piece 4 In (prefix) WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE I ported as a major step forward in tha cold war by U. S. repre sentatives abroad. The free world; especially England, has rallied to the U. S. protest. The Comrrmnists, it is now be lieved, are being hurt consider ably by their effort to stampede the U. S. into aggressive moves. The civilized courtries of the world resent the imprisonment of the U. S. pri.scners-of-var and are deeply sympathetic with the United States. The Reds may find themselves in the position of having nothing to gain by continued imprisonment and much to lose. The next possible action against Senator Joe McCarthy in the Senate is generally con ceded to be expulsion. But a majority of Senators think that action will never be taken, un less McCarthy , flouts members and committees' in shocking fa shion. There is no doubt that expul sion charges now would fail. Therefore, it seems to be up to McCarthy x whether the Sen ate is again stirred into action against him. McCarthy is ex pected to continue his probings into Communist dangers until the Democrats take over. And even then he will attempt to continue his investigations. But he will no longer head an official investigative body, and will be acting as an individual Senator. Whether he can remain in the headlines, on his own funds and as a single Senator out to do battle with the Reds, remains to be seen. And how he conducts himself in the next few months will determine whether there is another Senate battle over the question of punishing Joe. New Schedule Of Drivers Exams A new schedule of drivers license examinations has been announced by theN state motor vehicle division. The examiner will be in the Cass county courthouse twice monthly in January through May, and three times in June. All visits will be in the after noon, i ; In January he will be here the- 13thfand 27th J Feb. 10 and 24; March 10 and 24; April 7 and 21; May 5and 19, and June 2, 16 and 30. The Soviet takes action to spur efficiency in construction. Subscribe to The Journal NOW! WORLD WARD VETS STILL HAVE UNTIL JULY 25, 1957 TO APPLY FOR Gl LOANS. SO TAKE ENOUGH . TIME TO MAKE SUJ2 THE HOME YOU BUY 'S THE HOME YOU . WANT I',, h . 'i v.LVL.r. Lt.i For f&ll infor-mattm ronlAt viur nmrpit YETKKANd ADMIMSTKATIOX oH.c Here's the Answer . lA2gJE;A git M Mi xgraiNaj3.L'? oqjvio 15 ajfa an 1 1 im via jiair . avBajxMO A v . .-. . 1 g giTQ 7 3 3 j.g niv ? 3 a;.- j. Tfrs ""la si x vliN i miv 36 Gazes fixedly 37 Aid 42 Right (ab.) 43 Goddess of discord 44 Dispatched 45 Except 46 River in Germany 49 Small mass 51 Employ 53 Negative reply 55 Radon (symbol 1 i 5 b 7 ja I R lio In 1.2. ! . . 1 SfZZIZIZZ'1 " s i ' '' " I IT" ...w Lr'i25 """"" ' ' HO 7. Hi W3 Ihh Ihs " W I m ? H50 H ! 51 Si I A