The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, December 29, 1909, Image 4
S;,-i;5?s Vi-rio: S i'1 ' '5?5:rt'' V t f '.s- rv-1 Cstf L. i ev !-! -. ' . .- r . t. --- to Slss-r-if ''4s'-f & . "'- .. i- V r. i. i y . - ItH V- II I, t Eh! 1 v-?- Columbus fourttaL Ooli tkot Welr. GaaaaUiatadwith tkaCotaafcac That April L Mk vim taa nan ueaacr aimm i use. Ararat at the nn-rlaa ataii ... .n DCDAV. DBCCMBEK . IJ. TBOTHEM ft 8TOCKWXLL. Propricton. fMMtofteb.l.lMi I aJ wJ to i ml niMiBhfir. DuMXHrnHUAJICM Majpoaa IMa an wUl eoBtiaae to neato this Jearaal aatil t i all irmoim at to arid. If tea o set noV TBksahail awmMmsnOBS1 ftsa aaaaaftnanSP VMf mt tortha Sbae paid for aaa eaptrai, pi It. CHAM6B IN ADD; iiailia.taaMraM.a to dra taak old aa aU as ttotr CULTIVATE CHEERFULNESS. Don't go around with a chip on your shoulder waiting for someone to knock it off to start something. Nobody has any use for a man or a woman with a grouch; everybody's afraid to speak to yon for fear you'll snap at them. We all have our trou bles; it's a busy world and few people have time to listen to another tale of .woe; we must each solve our own prob lems and what cannot be helped must be endured. How much easier to commence the task with a smile, to put on a good front and look cheer ful; don't cross bridges until you get to them; then proceed hopefully and not grumblingly. If you do this you will be surprised how easy that seem ingly hard task will be accomplished. If you think your employer is not paying you sufficient wages, don't get dissatisfied and grouchy, don't go around doing your work sour-faced and glum, making you feel uncom fortable. The world does not owe you a liv ing until you have proved your worth. Forget your grouch; go to work with a will; do your work so well, watch your chance to do little tasks that -lighten your bosses' burden, assume little responsibilities and by compe tent, efficient work make yourself so valuable to the concern that they can't do without you. Then you will get a promotion and raise in salary. If you had no failures, you would not under stand what success means. So much of one's success depends on your personal equation, the possession of attractive qualities, and upon your personality. You can cultivate a helpful spirit -of cordiality, of large miadedness, a broad, generous way of looking at things, it will be an inesti mable advantage; helping you to get along in the world. Who does not appreciate-to meet the person with a frank, cordial manner, while it is positively depressing to meet with person of icy, formal, suspicious man ner. A glad hand and a cheery man ner does lots of good sometimes. We may not be able to give rich gifts but we can donate our friend a cheerful -countenance. Worries kill more people than work. Today is yours, tomorrow never comes; then greet the world with a smile. Effort does not promise success, but it is a long step toward it. Fit your self for the opportunity; when it comes, if you are prepared, you can grasp it, make the most of it. Chances for ad vancement to the top of the ladder . never were so plentiful as today. If you are a clerk behind the coun ter, greet your costomer pleasantly, if the owner, of a large establishment, address a cheerful word to those in your employ occasionally; they will extend the cheer and good will to those whom you wish to secure pat ronage from; or if the person of means who does not depend on the general public for the support of your business enterprise, lend a cheerful countenance to all with whom you come in contact, it may brighten more dark skies than dollars and dimes promiscuously scattered. It will add to your personality, your regula tion and your character, if you will cultivate cheerfulness. I recall a Methodist pastor who used to go up and down the .isle of Lincoln stores into the office buildings or factories, his face wreathed in smiles, and without the formality of an introduction to each, his cheerful, musical voice would burst forth in such as "Helo, little girl!" To " Were you at 6unday school yesterday?" or "Were you at church Seadnv? Why not?" On the street or in the church pew, the bootblack 'and shop girl received as many words of comfort and cheer as the society peer or moneyed individual who sup- iajl that church. His words of kiadarss and cheer influenced many Lifc is a aeries of adjustments. From the cradle tha grave, living is jaaty process of learning how. 9ftX BBBnBJB... rw r taper, or Biaaaar wi to mfcatthae few HkmZSam la paid. Am thow that MfMK fcM BMB MMiMd B t JaB.!.!, We arc told evary lininK so jatverbe - w r - j " ' . will Tat attMJer you: at yen eaavMip maae tne world more pleajaat ,by not pfaeiag cloads. in the koriioa of y oar fellow-, workers' sky. Cultivate asmile, prac ticecbeerfulaesi, shine forth in a sim ple, kindly aatara, .that i does eae good to look apon yonr face. I'd iaugh today today is brief, '1 I would not wait for" anything; I use today that eaaaot last, - Be glad today aid sing. By Alice 6. Johnson. THE COOK VEMMCT. Having examined Dr. Cook's evi deuce of bis discovery of the north pole, the committee of the aaiverafty of Copenhagen throws it aside as worthless. The committee does net say he did not reach the pole, only that proof is wanting. It is yet possible that Cook reached the pole. It is remotely possible that he should prove as much to the general satisfaction. But either chance is small. If he was not a knave, deliberately delaying his exposure till he should harvest a for tune from American publishers and American audiences, then, he was a simpleton to expect such evidence as he presented, to .pass scientific scru tiny. If a knave, his claims are fraud ulent; if a fool, valueless. How should a mental wreck, however honest, know that he had been at the pole? Such are the probable justifiable assumptions at this stage of .the case. It is a pitiful spectacle of Cook, a humiliating one to the Danes, and a rather absurd one to the American people. If Cook did reach the pole, being yet too ignorant to prove the fact, it is one kind of tragedy to him. If he is a convicted confidence man, his case is yet tragic, though less re grettable. Which is his case we may judge, perhaps, from his final disposi tion of the fortune he is said to have reaped from his claims. The manifest interest of the Danes in approvingCook's claims makes their decision the more crushing. They had dined and doctored and decorated him, and their own decision is made in the face of the fact that it involves their own deep humiliation. The Ameri cans who paid absurd prices to hear Dr. Cook lecture were the undiscrimi nating crowd. In Denmark royalty and scholarship had combined to credit Cook. They will be less trust ful again. One of the tragedies of the business is the trail of cynicism, of im paired confidence in human integrity, which is left behind it The matter is not yet at a satisfac tory conclusion. Perhaps that cannot be reached except by analysis of the mind of Dr. Cook; and the human mind, unfortunately, is in deeper twi light, a harder region to explore than even the poles. But we should like to hear from Dr. Cook. We should like to see him submit to an examination by alienists, psychologists, and logi cians, that such crude chart of his mental geography as is possible might be drawn. Then with Cook finally disposed of it behooves us to turn to his rival, and if his dattf prove con vincing where Cook's did not, hail Peary with due honor as the discoverer of the pole. State Journal. LEE'S' STATUE. Statues are nothing to the fame of a man as great as Robert . Lee, or George Washington, or William Shakespeare. Lee's fame will take' care of itself, and the Virginia delegation in con gress is right to risk no unseemly wrangle over the statue. General Lee would not wish it History will give Virginia and Vir ginia's great sons their full due in the fullness of time. Let the narrow and ignorant few pass in peace rather than have an opportunity to insult the memory of the nobles exemplar of nineteenth century manhood. Leave the niche vacant where the statue was to have stood. At the fun eral of Junia; the sister of Brutus, the effigies of many other great Romans were displayed; but Tactitus records in an immortalpassage of his wonder ful Latin that the effigy of Brutus was seen the mere because of the verv fact of its absence. Norfolk (Va.) Land mark. NORTH AND SOUTH. The interests of north and south are identical. .Commercially,- iatellect ually, morally their people have the same aims, the same tastes, the same ideals. It would be a blessing if the historians would drop the civil war for awhile, and the disputes between New England and Virgiaia or the Carolines over the exact meaning of phrases that have lost their meaning could cease. A southern newspaper baa lately been resenting the use of the phrase, "a war for the perpetuation of bondage,'' and a New England news paper has been proclaiming its accur acy. Let it pen There is no more bondage, and north and soath are working in uaison for the same cause, the good of the whole country. New Tori Times. v-s .. -r . .---.. - v elosnl aee ttaauveT I v&iii BBBaa aaanaBuaKaBv i aajsaia -a evas aa -paakjaPw FWaaTaiaPw WBI aav .. x aUMB4UaVkE? naaakBaBiBSBv in b IN bA J Weto.rWW0. i PWJhll W f i ' '- : ' - 'MB?i?ML " One hundred million of inhajntaptrf Such U thandveace estimate made by the Census Bureau of the papulation of the United States in 1910, iag to an article by Rene To count them and reckon tap their asaaifbld activities giving, as a prea erly taken census must, a -complete picture of the people and their d"ing 'will be an enormous task. There will be 330 supervisors, appointed by the President to look after, as many geographical districts and in Washing ton alone at least 3,000 additional clerks will be employed. These clerks, three fourths of them women, will be appointed through th Civil Service iO)mmheion,' which will hold ewmisjations for the pstraese be fore long ra every tote and -territory. Any person male or female, who is not afflicted with tuberculosis, will be con sidered eligible. As-a matter of course, there will be a tremendous scramble -for the jobs, which pay from $600 to $1,000 per annum. .. When the first census of this.coun try was taken, in 1790, the work was done by 650 employes. To gather and put together the data of the census of 1910 will require the servi-. ces of an army of nearly 70,000 men and women a number much greater thant the entire population of New York and Boston combined at the time of the taking of the first census. Ababy is born every twelve sec onds, and, thanks to this fact, about 2,500,000 fresh citizens will be added to our population in the census year 1910. The passing bell will toll every twenty-three seconds, ushering 1,350, 000 Americans out of the world dur ing the twelve months. Every twenty four seconds a marriage will occur, giving expectation of filled cradles, and five of these latter will be supplied with occupants every minute during the year. So huge has the population grown that the taking of the census of 1910 would be a job nothing short of ap palling, were it not for the recent in troduction of machinery into the busi ness. It is reckoned that the mere tabulation of the sex, age, nativity and occupations of the people, if made by hand, would consume, for these' four items alone, the entire time of 100 clerks for eight years. But most of i the work is now done by machines which may almost be said to think, and which, when the facts are once gathered by the enumerators, attend to the task of putting them together. The Census Bureau is buying a large number of machines of entirely new patterns, which are a great im provement on any apparatus of .the kind hitherto known. They are run by electricity, and so perfect is their operation that if the clerk makes a mistake, the contrivance stops auto matically. The tabulating machine CHRISTMAS TREES AND CON SCIENCE. - A few years ago there was a terri ble outcry against the Christmas tree as an assault upon the natural resour ces of the country. Today when we know more about forestry than we formerly did, we have the assuring information that Christinas trees are not at all the drain upon the forests of the country they have been pictured. In fact, it is estimated that all the Christmas trees used in American could be grown on a farm of 1,600 acres. With this reassurance we shall 'probably trim our Christmas trees and light the tapers with an easy con sciousness that we are doing nothing to make posterity regret our precedence in the matter of time. The Christmas tree is more general ly used in Germany, a land where practical forestry has made great strides, than in-, any other Christian land. We mav -feel assured that if the Germans use Christmas trees, it is because the forests can afford them. But let us not overlook the fact that Germany has Christmas trees in plenty, because Germany plants trees. She has better and cheaper Christmas trees than we have, because she raises trees for the purpose. Minneapolis Journal. : 5As touching Mayor Dahlman and his aids, this is about the situation. .Neither he nor they have willfully, maliciously aad feloniously neglected to enforce the law touching die adjust ment of the lid in the big town by the river. Omaha covers a large territory, and contains many places licensed to deal in firewater under the statutes aad ordinances regulating the If something stimulatine has served here and there a minute or two after the gong sounded, H has been against the orders of the -board of ire and police, of which the mayor is a ssember ex-officio, and not through their connivance or in conformity to their desires, aad they are all agreed as to that The governor therefore Bacsriarlhelwerkiag day of seven will handle ,sj asaar as' 415 eards a jsjarf V-jggliJnsl JQ ainnte; hut the actual work is about 85f . This is average of 80,000 or 90,000 cards ia a hours, meladinf; As the census returns aome ia from the numerators ail over the country, hi the shape of filled in blanks, the they , contain rill be card The facto ia question are. copied on the cards by peaching holes, and the posttiea of each h)le iadioates its significance, so that no writing is required. Thus for example, a few holes will tell that the individual rep resented by a card is white, of male sex, 45 years old, magged, a teacher by profession, able to read, write and speak English with the additional information that he was bom ia Eng land, that he has been ia the United States tea years, that he is a natural ized cititen, and where he resides. 8ome of the new tabulators have ad ding machines attached to them to. prepare statistics of agriculture and certain other arrangements of figures bformational. Another novel device 'is an automatic.sorter, which separates the cards into classes, electromagnets controlling their passage through' a series of chutes. Indeed, all of the mechanism from beginning to end de pends upon electricity, the current being made and broken by little metal rods which pass through the holes. ia the cards! The enumerator employed togath- er tne Acts tor tne census of iviu from all parts of the country' will number 65,000, and all of them will be menr-save perhaps a. Jew, who, for some special and particular reason, will be of the geatler sex. Some women did this kind of- work for the last census very efficiently, but ordi narily it is too rough, not infrequently involving quite a little hardship of one kind or another. 'The busines8ef putting the foots together, however, after they have been collected, will be intrusted mainly to women. The Census Bureau .is now a per manent establishment ia Washington. It is kept running, with a compara tively small force of clerks, all the1 time whereas it used to 'go out of existence after each enumeration of the population (was -.accomplished, springing up anew and suddenly every ten years, like a gigantic mushroom. As things are at present arranged, however, the plant is always in exis tence on a small scale, mere is a skeleton organization, so to speak, and this is readily expanded, when the occasion arrives, into a huge and effect ive machine for the gathering of facts. Such an expansion is now beginning to take place, and within a short time the machine will be in full operation for the taking of the thirteenth census of the United States. The Union. , did right not to bring ouster proceed ings, under the Sackett law, for the tendency of such a proceeding would have been to make the lawless more prone to evil than ever. The fact is Jim Dahlman is better qualified to grasp the lid in Omaha" and hold it down than any man in Douglas coun ty, because he is a particular friend oi the wide-open element, and they will sacrifice to please him; when they would resort to almost any subterfuge to thwart the efforts of those on the other side. Moreover, the mayor said when he visited the governor, that he had witnessed no violations of the eight o'clock closing law, from which we charitably conclude that he doesn't violate the proprieties by look ing straight ahead when it is just as easy to fix his gaze oar the ceiling, or peer through the" window at the sur ging throng on the sidewalk below. Bixby. The Chiefs Crrer. Goron was chief of the Parte poHee when the foUowius; Incident took piece: Lombroeo bad written a nook in IttfJ on criminality among women, so reus the story, and when It was finished wrote to Goron to send nlm "forthwith- some portraits of Parisian wo man criminals. Anxious to please the writer, the package Waa made up and started on. its tour to Italy. Ween the book came out Lombroso sent a copy, handsomely bound, to Goron. who saw bis sift acknowledged on tne first page, 'it was a scholarly book." said the chief, "and would have had a large sale but for-an error on my part. (The pfcturefe came oat ot the wrong drawerof my desk. They not criminals at all. but women had applied Tor barksters'i! a new edition bad to be printed, to make good a police mistake." An ExehamaefXatirtaBlas. A couple of asm got Into a warm ar gument aad finally came to Mews. After tne fracas a spectator remarked: A soft aaswer rurneth away wrath, and vice versa. We should all ?keep polite toogaea la aur, beada. -OeJy last night I beard a very fat man say with a loud laugh to a bowlegged friend: "Jim. old man. yen look aa if yeal been riding a barrel!! M aAni yea. suspnid Jim sourly, look aa If you'd swallowed one.' " averas speed in JJtl&G&P ?vfiL , lBBBM-BBa. aaaaSBenBaaBaamavk J2amlan anss aWSIIP'PSIistollo.'tl lPfjL SsansKr ;HBHa2anaa mtyjyai-- --nayusrsnv" snaBaaaj02BnjHBSLriSaianwa BaaaBBBBBBasannno s kbaBaBBBaaarfaaBj QBy"' - Hip Ntw Yiir to All, aad to ail oar best wishes for the nxt S6 dajs We bespeak your orders for nour lor 19101 and assure, yoe taat hej will receive our most prompt and care fat nitration. There can be' n qntinn as .to the superiority of the WAY irN brand, aa thousands 6it daily users will attest. - Join tlto'ranaeor stufld flour users by orderiaf a sack et WAY fJT fidur. MLHWV MUW IrtLS 3t YEARS OF SUCCM6. Pollock, Co. Oflcrfsjisifff for Catarrh. 'The M$pnir.Dats " Nothing If fc FeDaC -; When a medicine esTeots in a very laraaj aad when we oiw? on our own personal will cost. the user nothing It ites notrj completely relieve catarrh, it is onTH reasonable that people. sboaM believe sis, or at least put our claim to a praetfc eel tost,, when we take all the risk t These are facts which we want Ihe aeV pie to sebstaatiate. We want them to try Retail Mucu-Tone, a medicine pre pared from a prescription of a physician with whom catarrh ws a specialty, aad 'Who has a record of thirty years of envi able eueeess to his record: vWe receive wore good reports about Resell Mueu-Tone.than we do of all other catarrh remedies sold in our store aad if store people only knew what a thoroughly dependable remedy Rezall Maeu-Tone is, it would be the only eatar ;ru remedy we would have any demand for. ; Rexall Mucu-Tone is quickly absorbed and. by its therapeutic effect .tends to djsjafsct aad cleanse the entire mucous sssmhraasoua tract, to destroy and re move the parasites which in tare the membraneous tissues, to Bootbe the irritation aad nasi the soreness, stop the. mucous disobarge. build np strong, healthy tissue and relieve the blood and system of diseased matter:- Its influen ce is toward stimulating tlw mucu-cells, aidiag digestion and improving nutri tion until the whole body vibrates with healthy activity. In a comparatively abort .time it brings about a noticeable gain in weight, strength, good color and feeling of buoyancy. We urge you to try Rexall Mucu-Tone beginning a treatment today. At any tune you are not satisfied, simply come and toll us, and we will quiokiy return your atoney without question or quibble. We naive RxU Muou Tone in two sizes f0 cento ud $1.00. Remember you can obtsia Rexall remedies in Oolumbus on ly, at Pollock & Co's. store on the cor ner. A Sacred Bath. The number of queer things the vari ous peoples do in the name of religion ere legion, but no sight is more odd 'then .that which may be witnessed on Badrtnath. a peak of the Himalayan range In northwestern India. The peal: kwme 2&901 feet above the sea. and at an altitude of 10.400 feet there is built a sbrine of Vishnu overhanging a great tank fed by water from the sacrei thermal spring. Annually about lfijOOQ pilgrims climb the weary path to the shrine, and every twelfth year. whep the Kumbb Melab is celebrated. the number Increases to at least 50.000. Arriving at tne sbrine. the pilgrims adore the great Idol, liberally fee the Brahman priests and bathe in the sa cred tank. Thisjatter performance Is eUgbtly etartllng. as men and women. absolutely nude, plunge nto tbe water with cries of Joy until the entire tank to a seething mass of humanity, re sembling very much tbe familiar "wig gtetatta of an infrequently emptied rain herre!. New York Times. Why He Hadn't Triad It. X party was encamped on tbe Bear .river In eastern Utah, when a pros pector came along one, morning on a mule. He bad bis jaw tied up and at trst seemed Inclined to pass on with out a word. On second thought, bow ever, be halted and gruffly queried: "How fur to Salt Lake?" Three hundred miles." . '"Humpbr J8?" Traveled far?' ' ?' "About 200 miles." Get your Jaw burt?" !No; It'a just an infernal toothache. nnd I'm e-ridlng five hundred miles to get It pulled.' We Invited him down, and one of tbe crowd got a piece of string: round tbe tooth and jerked it out as quick as you plcasr After the overjoyed man had ceased dancing about I queried: "Why didn't you try tbe string before-starting out on such a long ride?" "Best kind of reason, sir. 1 hadn't nary a strlag." A King'a Old Clothes. The posthumous ssle of tbe ward robe of King George IV. of England realised J75.00U. Ureville. who at tended the sale, says tbat tbe king "hardly ever gave anything away ex cept bte linen, which was distributed every year. There' are all tbe coats be has ever bad for fifty years. 2Wi sanes without number, every of uniform, tbe costumes of all .the orders in Europe, splendid furs. naueses. hunting cents aud breeches. Bis profusion iu these articles was uatounded because be never paid for them, and his memory was so accu rate teat one of. bis pages told me be reeeilerted every article of dress, no matter how old. and tbat tbey were alvmya Mehie to be called on to pro duce aome particular coat or other ar ticle ot apparel ot years goue by." :v5yV (BPPplieiae raatee that it PPaSaSBHnali &igHSjnnnnnnmi bbbHHbsbbbH! H3aTaTaTaTaTaTflMf7 fViSnnnnnnas xv anmmmuni i aBTaTaTaTaT&fV?". vjPennsanH rvnummmnjcsVxisBBWi vafefafafafBrJl; !t'BBBBBBBBNvvnnnnfa "vBBBBBBBBv"- xt v" dJFSSBBBBBBKs S BBBBBBBBfeL.-sj. :-x'.yiwsKiBMBBMB "-BBBBBBBB9BB ' : vsvlliMflP2:SaBBBBBBBl - manmuBcftgaw7aB4gnnKnmu 'aTaTaTaTaTJBTaTavnajsmmmmBnBnmmnn laaKawfwKI . BTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaTaH . rP-BtHmsBBaWsJmaBBR ('aarJBrJBrJBrJvSlBBBrnBrJMHm 5 - A! !&&! Ss&Bk. rs3S5-j5tW J1 c.s . fi-v'W Mr . Cluuu B UanluUnm of the Ernest Fisher players, who hiattelf sueh a favorite ia Golumbaa last NoTembdT.. Mr. Fisher aad ale aeosm ptiahed aseoriates will be at the North Theatre all of next week. hi' "X tmmmmmnittBmnK BTanBaTaTaTaf&m?' SBVBBBVBBBVBBmar javJaSFK sfeafafafafafafafafisBfafaKiS' IfBTafafafafafaFjaBTafafafsnb-- rMBBBBBBBBBBKT BBBBBBBBBBl I i; r.uamBsmmmamnamammnBmmni i FURNITURE About Our New We are showing on the floor at the present time our new line of Bed Room Furniture in Circassian walnut, mahoffanv. bird's ere manle. eolden oak and the good tomnUtaonqrjarteioak. . w oj m Z In beds we have something new in wood in the Ver nis Martin and enamel finishes. The first time these goods were shown was in Grand Rapids last July. We can truthfully say that at the present time we can show you a larger line of 'bedroom goods than we ever carried before.. ... In kitchen cabinets we fave just received a line of the Springfield make, the best we ' know of, in prices ranging from $18.50 to $40.00. We also show the. Mc Dougalline of sifter bin cabinets. Pedestal extension tables, 42 inch round tops, we are selling now for $11.00. These are first class tables in oak and ash, solid woods, golden oak finishes. Genuine quarter sawed oak tops on these tables at $14.50 and $16. HENRY GASS 219-21-23 West Eleventh Street , Columbus, Nebraska COAL 9 Pocahontas Smokeless Illinois, Rock Springs and Colorado Coals at prices that will interest you. Let us figure with you lor your winter's supply. T. B. Hord Bell 188 Let Us Prove To YOU Hurt You Want This Minneapolis Heat Regulator We can provide it aad -prove, that if you have it installed, -you :won'teeU it for what it cost you.' Let Ua Take the Kek If you are not sarJafied, and kd not do all we claim, we will take if and give your money back. We Handle the" ia This ' We know this ia the beat HeatReaj lator made regardlees of price, and we know the price puts it within the reach of every household. Furnace or Boiler-All Kaaskef FsjeL "Saveeke Coots A. DUSSELL & SON Columbus, Nebraska ooiAjmbtjs MEAT MARKET We invite all who desire choice steak, aad the very best cuts "of all ether meata to call at oar ssathet on Eleventh street. We also handle poultry aad nsh aad tlaesefou. S.E MARTT&CO. No.1. - Oolaaahun. Nr. Hints and Mules X- nav a car of choice broke horses, and mules, aad will aell them reasona ble. I will ak bay mules. horses and JOHN RANDALL. One half mile northwest of Gslambwa. TALK Line - Grain Co. Ind. 206 i hnsW H " "sT annmLi!'' ' m BO" I B1-;. ff ' SMV I smmmmmV: I BmaKI Banrnmaamm nsmmEaf '' ' 9nsBB. Bammmwiif '1 tSaPnYsn AaYsK ! p!i -SSBEf BaVnW'fJBnr 'naannnnmeaVBmshvW m nf JEP1IbsbW nmengapa"a mmmnmnmnmnmrnnv m ZWV"Vent?l TaV TaWanBBnfsBBnfsr BKJSjhU Hra BaCavTSSJBSSSSSSSSS A M 1 ! 's 1 i y i v . vr" ife ,,- S t J? S-'j s 'CssSfeS Xjtfyf-i "X .-i & aSe -&'&&&? jj J&t?&&S"- Jt $cZ Z-&fceS- ,rV. - i-S .-fi , j