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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1916)
TTIE nEE: OMAHA. FRIDAY. MAY 12, 1916. Health Hints -:- Fashions -:- Woman's Work -:- Household Topics ioim people neca clear complexions If you find yourself "left out" because ' rr akin. n'l wlBt clear, fresh complexion, oe Ret Inol Soap it leant once a day. Vah thoroughly with a warm, creamy lather c.I it, then rinae tie face with plenty of cold wafer. It does not often take many dayi of tuch regular care with Reainol Soap to ahow an improvement, be came the Keainol medication M and rtfrtthrt tlie akin, while the perfectly pure toap la tltamtngW. Ejesinol Soqp thoul U iiM by iillli ft'atnol Ontmant, In aevari m nubbmn y nanand (Mfllmanl a,,M bf ill atni gist, f f trial I, at, write U bapt MU. kuul, ftaiUawr. "No! I Said Calumetrm I wint what I aiV for I know what It would mean to go home without It. Mother woni ik chencee aha'a aura of Calumet aura of light, wholesome, tasty t- (nn of notltive. tint form remits- or purity end economy. I oej tty CALUMET If Baling Powder A I lay aside your V favorite brand once J fend you'll never go lurk to It. laiu met la the world e best BakinnPow- tier tt a rooder. ate in puce." Award h tm C-i ! rr- Hit tm Ommd Can. v.. ..) a 1" Being Oneself r nitna;i f. thwim. President V,'eiern l:rerv Unlve'jltjr. A lngular notion It la that anyone can permanently deceive other in respect to hie rrl character, Th notion la both common and persistent. Youth la In clined to believe it, Age li not entirely free from th fain Judgment, The Ig norant accept It eaally, an1 the wiae n4 to remind themeelve of the ef. reveal ing qualities of genuine character, One may af ea a part, but It la a pert only, and not the whole of onaaelf. The mk cannot he worn ell the time. Coun terfeit colna para current for a while, hut they finally come to the ecale of the mint end ere caat out. The lying llnfi dlarloaea hla lylr.g In waye of which he knowa not. The fraudulent practftlorer cannot long hold o it. It le leo Important, to learn that any attempt to le other than oneself la not only uli deception, but It la alio weaknea In one character and Inef fectiveness In gehievament. One la never too strong In hlmeelf, but to try to b other than htmlf raulte In dernnn Itidfed. It etsnde for the mlnua end polnte on toward th minimum. Nature never d'alg'f d on to b ether then he ta. If hr bed ao dalnd, etie would havx made film ttet other In the flrM ,lce; Nature la In rmt rreillvu ea we b the niot c nrvlnaT forn. f lit iiurr mil''jpiiy np ,n ei: 'iiirif oneaelf na tm l; I'tyron with hie lame nesa, lemb l'h hie atuttir, Keura t with hla eudden tun-made bllndneee. IM eenh meke Uie tnoat of hlmaelf under the con dltlone. It cotton threade remain ee cotton threede. Moat tieeful ere they. tl them not attempt any unauoreaaful Imitation of tk etrenda. If condltlone ere Inevitable, to efk to overooron them le waete. If condltlone are unchanarnebla, end ouaht to be changed or ramoved, the removing rney be part of Ufa a duly, "I have dnn the beat 1 could with the atuff whl'h nature gave me," aeid Jean Tawl Itlrhter. That le ell thet le r'tilrd of the pooreet end In weakeat, and that la re'iulred of Ihe rP hly endowed. With ell the trlt mph conelfta elmply In blng oneaelf, How Old is the Human Race? Would you llk to w er txvititl ful dlwtmwit or fine) wth at your reilntlve'e or trcm' world Ing, or miike handeoni'), Irwtliig wedding or graduation preent? Juno, (he great, month of wexJdiriK ant grad ual lone, la not very far away. Vour credit le itood with ua. lime in and eoloct anything rtlred and arrange) Icrme of aymeeit to atilf. i--rHanio Rlna 14k II4 anie. Lelila r-- twiim" ttn monailaa II a, Week. Tl Mm' Rind, flu nrhr. It If Midrtl 1k .HI4 KOi, fin prft , 4.50 ft Month. 1131- te Willi) rev tin n 1 I 4 tutrt tifiT ru ir. pmr pmnAm.nt. fin IM I n o b 4 reitmplalt Wll'l V 1.80 a Moath. rtrrj a Una tlwk nf eiamoad nnu, Ktirhra, (tie ati4 vlxiaum Jwlry. haM data, fanllr cuaa. aolld llrtrwaia in 4 ll- fHiKt aar. eut a', i'l'rka tollai arllilin hi Mil ana nmH placM, leather aeotfa, ana t full lock of aotaltlea- (ar that rath tiar et aa rhare arceuata. All 0 Oar Bear Oradlt Terme. ( tiilf Cttil ir I Utnitn Till HI rail ir ari' 1 tlluMmieit i"aiel"a Sn U. Plm roii(laa UK aa am aaleiinaa ' I TNI NATION L CKCOIT JlWUiRS Ea bros ica Z VLwZZ BOFTIS 1 ' i. rr. -. -wb'.. ... . J r T e I.. :'jt": ' i ' " 0 - .' flu,.- , j; v J fr . i t ' r .jP W , af,lidtua' a . V 7 V , . A ay .. . .... . .. . . . .i... IM The Sunday De b the only Omaha newspaper that fivee Ita readera four bi'c prtjea of colored eomlca. Tlir fiuifiHii .kull of ttclay ari'l tli hkull of u t:himifirtz', Not? f)i liff('r'nff! in frontal (lovplopinfiit, ity tttRHrnr p. kriiii. lfow old le the human rere? i thou eend, ten thouaand, twenty-flva thouaand, fifty thouaand, 'one hundred thoueend, two hundred end fifty thouaand, fv hundred tliouaand-theaa ere eome of the many enawere that have been given within th laat, century. Very few peraune now eept the flrat of Iheae eatlmatea, wlil'h formerly wng elmnat unlveraally regarded In f'lirlailan rnuntrlea na reatlng upon divine author ity. The evidence afforded by ology fie manda nrl run i,f lliouaanda of yrara nt leaat, lint th'a evidence la Incomplete and lnert for eevernl reaaona, one of whl'h le that It la difficult to ft, with certainty, Ihe preci location In th at rate of the etirih'a rruat of eome of the ancient human remain that have been found, while another la that there la dlaagreament among euthorltlea concern ing the character of the very earlleet of the auppoaed human remelii. A difficulty of another kind arlaea from the praollral linpoealMllty of accurately applying the men aura of yeere to th geologlral re-'otd. The geologlat Knoaa thet carfaln atrela were formed earlier or elter then certain other etrete, but he ren only meke more or lee probable eatlmetae concerning the number of cen turtee required for the formation of thoae etreta, There ten be no doubt, however, thet the human race la at leaat ten tlrnee older then the f:'i) yiar aald to hav elapaed alnc the creation of Adam. Every year the eldenea becomea clearer that eeverel aic;eaev rajya of men lived In Europe before eny hlatorlcal rcc orde wera mada or thought of. The great, primary division le between the men of the paleolithic or old atone age, and tho of the neolithic, or new atone ege. The paleolithic rare certainly lived during, or In the Intervale between, eome of Ihe later glacial perloda. when large reglona of the northern hemlaphere were more or leae covered with Ice, and when arctic, or aun-arctlp, rllmetea prevelled where novr temperate condltlone eitlat. Thoae early repreaenletlvea of our rare lived amnnget anlmela which are no longer fnmrt In thn femperata eone, ami many of uhlch have beooini extinct upon the earth. rrtnln epecleg of llnne, hear, hyenaa. and other anlmala, for lnaU,ce, are Known tu have been con temporal y with the men of the old atn age, and even to hav Inhabited aome of the ravcrna mhlrh were, then, the only permanent aheltera that man poeeeeecd Me know aa aurelv a n can know anything that men. reindeer, mammoth, I'ona, tleera, rlilniircroe, etc., lived to gether, at different (Intra, In aoulh wealeru i;uroe, where none of the ani mal mentioned are now found except tn tiienegei'lr-e one of Ihe areaieat puitlea about ear'y man la the fact that aoma of the very "Idcat human ekulla that have ben fnund etliUut a remarkable bvaln capac ity. Hmiie of the men of that, ancient time would eeem to beta had bra tin aa larg ea the eereg of today. Th -railed ""romgnon men' had een larger akulle then the average I'.uropean of our rier tut that er older whoa kuli raeembled thoae of apea or mnnkera. TMa different' haa 14 to the euppnal IH'ii that ther were at leaat two prln.-l. fal fact nf ear'y man, one greatly au- RCCKNT A ruiaroceN 4000 ft 400AOO ytart ftlOCENt spoof? icwoo yar MIOCCNK tvooo rt 0?poo ytarlj M90tM MM -HIOPITMtCV oLiooetNC IfjMO f t teciNC U eoooo year; (TYm it i , ii Ui' JiH't i,l I HJKUh h - n i . I II 1 I if , I r aiiir I V. t I I r- aUALL I ' ivTy' '" at I P f X " I . . A 'l?r; if-' r , LbftTMoanaoc V FfttMATII MRTNOQaAOC raiMATga tim et put woeLO ; MOMxeva - .iXMgV WOKLA l MDNniri A drawing, showing oik; viow of the rise of man, au nttpsk'd by the fimlinir of I'muifiils of skulls of past ages in certain strata of t lie earth's surface. perlor to the other. The entire atibjeut I uf faaclnutlug Interest, Inrgcly b'u. rauaa of the myatery wtildi It luvohta. Ther la an mo evidence thut tlio vny flret men like creaturva tm the cnrih eere of the ape-llko Hpectee, nd that thoaa having largo ekulla of thn true, human type cumo later. The oldeat remiilna anepeited to be human are probably thofe of the ecWt brated "plthecanthropua," found In Juvn, In ivni . An antiquity of ae imuh aa b'tlf a million yeare haa bcim enxlKurd to tliej fragment of a akull, Bnd a few other honea, which are ell thai could he' col lected of the Java "ape-man." Hut eu thorltlea differ in re:ild to the piw location of thla telle in the geological aerlea, although all are In ac-ord urn rernlng It very great antluully. A curlone fact U that many of the human ekulle of the new kluim aue ex hibit a peculiarity which tlltiiiMulha icriiln race of today In that they are "dolichocephalic," which meana "long- luailcil." Ruuiid, or ahort-headed men ore rfillfd "brachycephallc." Doth klnde co-cxlft today, but In noollthlo tlmea Eu ropo eeeiii to have been Inhabited al moat exclusively by the long-headg. There are unexplored deptha of pre history here which cannot yet be pene tietcd, but which ninke a powerful ap peal to the imagination, rrofeaaor Ar thur Keith, an Knglleh arohaeolnglat. cstinintta thut the ncollthlo period In Ku nipo probably Unfed Hbout 10.0H0 year, and that It win aucteeded by tho "hronae hkc" about !,0oo yeare before Chrlet. Alter that came the "age of Iron," lead hut up to th hUtorlc agea. liUhly lull renting la th fact that the t'mbe eo.natrucfd by men of the later done ege afford reaeon for thinking that a belief In the Immortality of th aoul enlnted among men at thet early time, Some of the Troubles of cm ' Engaged Girl The engigcd girl ha trouble of he own, new trouble, different from thoje of the girl wpoae love la not recipro cated and the wife ho doen't under atand her huehand. They ertee out of the peculiar clrcumetencea In which cou ple are placed and are ea troubleaimiu oa moat other trouble. HI old friend, for !ntnce, Of cour, they Ilk to aee him they ued to do, end. iit coure. hla fiancee want h'i.'. rather more than ehe uaed to do. If ie neglect ber for them the fair while brow I furrowed bv a frown and the dear young thing herelf le cold and dlitant, until ahe haa given h'm to under stand that eho conaldera It unfair lh.it ah ahould be neglected. Edwin rhoull rot neglect Angelina to apend etenlnga with hla frlenda and An gelina nhould not grui'jje to lidwln oc cealonel hum w'th hla rhuma. Olve and teke tnuat be the motto for an engaged couple. Edwin la often Juat aa unreonable. Angelina a time nitiet he wholly hla' or be wanta to know the reaeon why. Thl la taking a girl "body and aoul" and th eooner Kdwln la dlallluaioned the better. I Miring engagement da the conduct of Kdwln wllh regard to other g'rl moy not be all that could be delredj To be frank, he flirt. 'Naturally, Angelina te ent It end lei Edwin know, fhe ahould have In return a declaration that flir tation we not Intended and a proml that It will not occur again, uecaua If Angelina dlaepproveg of auch fhlim and Edwin doe not, well will they bv happy ea huahand and wife? Any attention paid to other glrla mint necearlly have a dlaquletlng effect upon the engaged girl henelf. lvtwln may have dlacovered that hie affectlona were not o entirely d!epoed of aa he pected. Me mny, In fart, have formed a audden and violent attachment for eomeone elae. Whether he haa or not, An gelina I apt to torture hrraelf with auch fear, for men hava often dlcovered nt the eleventh hour auch change In thein-eelvea. When thl happen the man ahould do the proper thing end confer to It, No good can come of keeping It aecret. If Kdwln'g love I given eleewhero It I certain that he will not marry Angelina. Hut he may lack the couraijc to apeak, end o go on putting off the wedding and keeping up a half-hearted courtahlp with a girl for whom he ha ceaed to care, and causing her agony by the change he aeea, but cannot account 1 for. , If a man suddenly dlaeotera that he care for another woman more then the la, I rf he Is engaged to, he cunnnt be held altogether to blame. Probably he wa ; qulle convinced that he loved A until he met H, It will biy heartbreaking to A to hear thla, no doubt, but would A care to go on with the wedding knowing what ehe doee? It te better for her to know than for Edwin to marry her out of a mistaken aenee of duty. Huch a marriage would men more agony for Ihe wife than a broken en gagement could mean for the engaged in. The buelne of breaking an engage ment la a delicate one, but It ahould not be ahunned on that account. Evin when It la not a qucatlon of a change of feelluga It may be nei:eary. A man'e proapeclg In life may have changed, and he cannot offer Iter the luxury that he would havo done. In auch a caae he ahould al leat offer to release her, and If ahe accepta the release, who can blame her? It la nice to think thet a girl I pre pared to be true to a men through all thing; but If a girl feel thet ahe cannot face poverty, or ta not dlpoed to wait yeare until fortune come, ehe should aay ao. We may say that It la a happy releaae for the man, but the girl la honeat, even though we deaplae her. Minrliva Your Own Business 1 Greatest Art apfciwsp aar as- ... arc- -"'i 1 3 a"" 1 V 7 -- ' jr. nw I 12JeialS0T3f J PH0DUCTS SBMHIISIlIffl O "0iXEirn BECOME AH5BIE XBffl ' U'eVaCarT'Ve,-' ;( rape .'ar . aa.1' ' t 'tS't't ' ' 1 Us. "tfc Advice to Lovelorn By Beatrice Fairfax. Klaalatr Game. Dear Mlfa Kalifax; I am to glva a partv, hut do not know what game are appropriate. Home of my frlenda y that they do not aee an" harm In playing one or two kllng game. I do not know how to entertain hit guet. What would in.. inciHi? Do vou think my Hand It the abue matter la cortt'j' I have expressed myself very fwquenlly on the euhject of kissing gamea. They are cheap, ellly end undignified. I'onl hev them at your party. A very Inter eatlng game that waa In vogue aeteral years ago might b revived. Cut popular arfvarilaoitienl out of the back of the magaslne nd carefully omit any printed matter to how ul what eacn picture t adverttmiig. Then give a prU te the person Identifying Ihe greatest number In he'f en h"ri ttm. Or vou might hte progclve partv wllh vartou ggine. such as pehl, authors, labia archrrv and other game arte ."erk tn toy etr n reeommend. V f at.....,.- WJ ,J Tlli.l .!llynl'll'PIW''IWaWI 100 Pure Dilute It Al You Like Alt children crave tht natural acid of ft tut; rvtithinn U ttrr far iW than rttmoMf'l tUtf juui ( irt t ft'' l t s jt l'i f-it;ter t, iUiifW.t; i uar J.le,t; tt.t ht v' I , hhm(, N : ef t!tu4 a Vill ' t.n ai't ). 'l . i.iy it 'it lHa Jeiti.lte Cm 'g m i ! i i '!. A M II t A t f4NTf A aw J ' ' . i w -a, na e lllm, rr Mt lifi I am aed rear. I ,t ft v r iiwnih. I d! m hi- . ,1 i.l . tf .-e iiil 'r tuaiM ea. Aa l ii.ol'Sh.l poalltnn la i.i.e liiat i'lm to 'be .oni.n i , iaa of -iii g"' b he . a that ,'tlii l'l a "'it - o perba.m iiwm'l ! si"1" 'gn 'f 'i'in in hi"1 ' a' i kn -ua , t t.ntr ! at. t bat 'n I". tl,Faf.., ki(.i I "' ' M ia it. In ( lta"lh'' I " i l,.t .. I .. I n a.(H'l " - " " If ' ,,,) i f .. -a l.- ," V ,., ... till ti.ir,,N 1 !, i t t'Ki )'' f l-4. he l ! ... , ,.l th a a'fn .. t If h .I tf ' i " ' " "I ! " ' lk tm ie e g mwmt Jtmttt i aa-f Apple Pork Pic fir C0MTANCK CLARKt. 'I - it tit 1 1 i.t t .., I H'i " t .4 - ' .- . " " '' v s I i M 'ea ,!(.,! II 1 .v . i.. , tm I. .a k-. Mi 4 I al l - ' t t t i a .-il I I ,. t t ! - ),4. M(. l 4 a-s - i" W v W iai Mfi . M a 4 . l a liawH O.al t . tax 4 .MM k. M aa.k t-4 a"-" a (a t a. . oat ("J l tta Wklewt He) ba a re ' lU t4 fWMe i aiaw ! t.ka4W tana tKf I Wlv'-M ! A 1TI t t'K I I t: ta en. n fi l tll'i ku fliittJaf a'1! vr t ' s t ki u t' e i . Tea f ''! Is i t hiS. leas , t "k I tu'ir lt a. y e, t nt fse . t"-t t'. H I'rg t , lff t k S ? a t ! (aatl !- g ( aa rr 11 II e ,v:i Tsae tke ' ft"! "'-ae It In lereit ( the 'lloa l asr-! iliad, (-f i !:! tka a tap? " x 1 a ( , !!' lever c-f utf ul afu , a I u'e ki'tf titer ' h 1 I - le gyii'ee. rteisat U '! ti, pier aRtr, natt( the ''l.i , lent, H t f iajier I ( i'Cl. fev.a. Ua t lk ft ee Ike i4 p-llL, e:'r It me ruae4 a.r, al ttaf H li fa ('' ua tatirft aal In !iu fvtf h a if a r. ! k.it, i ik4 ana ear'.', ( T rtofvw 'O'-f Ytgttthhi Sit,! 4 111. I . a, M . '.( I I a a a. m ' . i. . ,i i .' a i ' ' ,... li ( a- a " . ' I i i. - I . 1 1 -i . - . . a Mat.! a--1 fc- i - ' t . 1 .1 !,.. I . I ... ' I I. , n i i I a i al I - e..- I l n. . S I l a a . a t tn I a 1 , i l . ' ..,,. ha ( . . a t ,- f la ( . II a . i a a ii 'i a I j . I an Hi., a i ii l 1 I . a. . !..! ' ., j i h . I I i i 1 ' ' t i I j !-... !.. ia S'i1 t - I ..,. f - 'i --.' '. " M HI l M ' it. a . la a i a t I S (Ms ' l -- tH, e ' 'i;i I Br DonOTHV I)IT. A man asked me the other day what I considered the finest art In th world To this I promptly responded: "The ert nf minding your own buelnese," and I added with a sigh, "It'a an art that aeem to be beyond the greep of my own aex." And that ,1a a sad, d truth. 'Women cn learn anything else except to let other people run their own affair. That I as much beyond the average women aa a flight to the atara. It tka a. wo man or heroic mouia to arrive mi mm point of grara when ahe can behold an other Individual making a pie without thrusting her finger In It. Woman la a greut orlninel and unre conatructed Buttlnsky. Hhe alwaya haa been like that. ha waa built that we. And It alwaya hoe been her bene. Mie ha broken her heart over other people' sorrow. She ha lain awaits at nignr. and lost sleep over other people' worrle. She haa bankrupted herself paying other penple'e debte. Bhe haa brought on nervoua prostration trying to run other people' live, Hhe hea etlrred up more' heart burning end Jealouay and bltlernea and strife by not minding her own business than have been caused by anything elae In the world. Of courae, there are men meddlera, but they are few end far between. The ma nia for Interfering In other people'a nusl nes I distinctly feminine. The everege man feel that he he got about all that -be cen manage with hi own affaire end trouble enough of hie own without bor rowing hla neighbor'. The average woman gltendi to her buelneea In tHa Interval when ahe isn't worrying about why the Browne don't send their children to the public echool Instead of to a prlvale one, when Brown la only on a ealary, and how the Smith can afford a new automobile thl season. And Hie queerest part of It ell I that by some quirk of feminine logic this un warranted butting -Into other people's affaire I accounted a virtue by her In stead of a vice. A woman's definition of aelflehnea la mi Individual who attend strictly to In own liiiclnes.i mid who doesn't Interfere with iidvfcc when other people are In (rouble, nor pti scribe on hie own hook for a elck preon. This tno.itiI.ty to attend to her own busi ness end leave other people to run thelr.i, without any essbilance from her, goe.i a long wey toward explaining why women ao often fall In their undertaklnga. Kot instance, it la the principal reaaun whv so many "omen break down physically. They try to carry Ihe universe on their shoulder. . They could manage well enough H' tlielr ow ii work end beer with sufficient fortitude their on trouble, out woe., they add to that the accumulated r fllctlona of everybody with whom they are acquainted they collapse under the burden of woe. ti i. rfonihleaa a nlty tlmt Mra. Jones should be such a poor manager and o wasteful and etravegni. it. i to be regretted that young Blank does ..,. - t ,.ric ami siinoort hi widowed mother, ft la a crying ahame that the Grey beby ahould be fed on aaiter Krani ami beer Instead of aterlllaed milk, but, after all, the other women In the neighbor hood are not responsible for these af fair, and there len t a bleased thing the ran do about thern. ao why ahould thoy worry. Yet they do. . There Isn't a wife and mother for blocka around who Isn't wearing berse.f Into a fraesle over the way the Joneaea nd the" tllanka and the Clraye of their communltlee conduct their households, and ell to no purpose, for the Joneses and the Blanka and the Oraye don't want their advice, and won't have it at any price. Of course, when there la any need ol a Solomon, every woman feele capable of speaking right up and answering the call, but It la well to occaalonally re flect tbat other people are almost as capable of running their own affaire ae we would be, Thla la alwaya a eurprlae to ua, but It la a fact, nevertheless. There wee probably never a marriage when everybody In the, community dldn t feel that they oould have made a much, mora Judlcloua selection for both prtle than they bed made for themelvee, yet divorce 1 comparatively rare. Every one of ue I dead eure tht we could bring up everj body elae'e children much better than they are doing It, yet other people children seem to turn out about well a our own. W women generally afflict ouraelve about these matters. W are reduced to teare because Bailie T'eteig le going " marry the men ah want to Instead nf the men whom we think would llt her. W ggraat our oule because Mr Perkln let her bhy play In lb beck yard lth the cat Instead of having It folding paper mats at th ktndergaitsrt If the evmpathy levtsh on pop: who d'-n t need It nor deatre It, and tha mount of energy we pi'nd en oihee pople a affair could b applied t " on huetaee. should all bs ihtnlng easmp'es of uvea, IVvpt ' eondertng what the ur .f ill Uf le He main allractlon . that in a t-la -t oti sre d 1 1 rdi from pvtsrfrrmg neigitb'irs We never gt k know pa-'I't enongn f..e tham te .)! I.S l..t l'it ti S l.il '! r ' and n piDi-aa In eu g parti. Itia.1 In n. u i' ewn affalta In our -H wv lint II inrtal I -r ! I I t (i.i if far The mi iiliiH lll have a,nr I i - ii a . ' j. . n I mini -o l,..,,a i .1 II tall te n t i ' ,,lii ti.i ,i ao a 'linn t i ti Household Help la.. '. . a I 4'f ' - .,.. fi i. if, I- i t.i'i.r t' " '" 1 1 a t .a ie. 'i- I a k ' . a I k it l' e a a I . it ' ' ' jaj I' Ha "I v I'll ' it-,i i !- . ! " t i f t .1 li t I 'i t i I. yi I a i I' Mil v i t' ft I iii-" aa i . 'I a -i a'"' " . t ... '' .a.-l ! ' j t , aa-- - ii a I " k r I I " .... . ... ... i ..i & -1 i t ( i i le-i .' m a I ' , ai I ml r IN l-.h. i.-'' I 1 'ii,i i - :,'. la i e !.., b.u 111 J....., a.. I a , , .... - .(.,, i ) u'.i I.-. wtva a-1