Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1950 — Page 11

Rose or Blue Plaig

Matching eof i 959%, cotton.

A ———————— /

TTE

inside Indianapolis ay Sawada

“ALL IS well today. The ugly _ safe and here to stay. vation that can be banned to

stadiums forever, is not preferred of Americans. Don’t let enemies

rumor has been = " tnvestigated and now les dead The bathtub 1

Another thing, L..c oathrooin shower, au ..

fieldhouses “and by the majority of the tub mis-

lead you as they tried to mislead me. “In another 10 years you won't know what a Bathtub looks like,” said one acquaintance. “A shower is the modern fixture, Who wants to waste

an hour im a tub?” =

I don’t mind telling you that kind of talk riled me up. It's a vicious thing to say that spending an heur in a tub is a waste of time. Rub-a-tubbing is the most healthful way to clean up. Ask your doctor. -Ask your preacher. Ask your neighbor

if he's a tub lover. >

Friend Prefers the Shower

FOR several days, once bathtubs were on my mind, all sorts of vital information sifted to my

attention. A friend moved into an

apartment with

a shower instead of a bathtub. He liked it. Saves

time, he said. No, he didn't miss

tub-bathing.

“I jump in a shower now, turn the water on, scrub and I'm through in 10 minutes, Neo tub to fill; no ring to scrub out, no rinsing in soapy water. I wash with hot and rinse in cold in a

matter of seconds. Can’t beat it.

What were we coming to, the 1840s again? Certainly you know the bathtub had a most stormy beginning in the United States. The first

tub was used Dec. 20, 1842. That was in Cin-

All wet . AY rumor that the bathtub might

be disappearing from the American scene was

disproved.

. Combination Is Heppy Compromise |

nnati, 0. An Adam Thompson" was ‘the p

Indianapolis

Pongo he aise 2° We MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1950 PAGE 11 In 1843, an ordinance protibiiting bathing be- |

a Senate Ave.Y Marks 50th | Erwin Arvey

Boston made it unlawful to take a bath except! on doctor's orders. .

== sEveass Anniversary With Art Show ty alts rian to we

ambitions is to own a bathtub about 8 feet long: The kind that are featured in French Lick hotels. | The only: thing left to do was to get to the: bottom of the rumor. The Crane Company, 333] s ; Chi W. Market St., would set me right. ey're one! of the largest outfits in the country dealing with ono . go plumbing and fixtures. > Democratic Chief Henry Alfreds, manager of the plumbing de- i J partment, scoffed at my fears. In his opinion, | To Marry Starlet men more than women preferred showers but | Lila Leeds, Hollywood starlet rare is the home with only a shower. Combination tin exile, will be married to Erwin shower and tub, yes. | (Bud) Arvey, son of Jake Arvey, Sure, they had calls for shower installations. lc hicago Democratic leader. The But they were for basements or spare rooms in {wedding date was not announced. conjunction with a bathtub. Last summer there | When Mr. Arvey’s father was was a run on shower stalls but he also reminded {Informed of the engagement he me that the weather was unusually hot and sticky. {sald he didn't believe it. Later A shower is a desirable feature for a quick and| | {he said “But is his own boss.” refreshing rinse. Granted. = | Miss Leeds, a native of Dodge We went into the display room and Mr. _Alfreds| |City, Lowa, is barred from Calis turned me over to Betty Godfrey. The young lady [fornia until 1954 after she was are {rested in a Los Angeles marijuana raid with. Robert Mitchum, actor; Vicki Evans and a Holly{wood agent. A drunken driving charge also contributed to her exile,

who overseés the department was most comfort-|| ing. She opened my eyes with the latest in tab-| . | Both Miss Leeds and Mr. Arvey "Rendezvous," an oil painting by Mar ary Alice Barnett, Ba as been ric arr.

ware. Miss Godfrey told of a $75, 000 home out north lively study of a nightclub jam session. It is one of 75 entries in “incite the exhibit, which will be open to the public from 7 to 9 p. m. Believing that “people are es~

which would have four tubs in four different colors. - That's what I call real living. daily through next Saturday, and from 3 to 5 p. m. Tuesday and sentially . honest,” Mayor John Thursday. Brown of Medina, O., wants to

A pleasant surprise was the square bathtub. Tried it out for size. . Too bad Crane didn’t have| ! the tub hooked up with water for demonstrating. : let the, conscience of the motorist TREE ve his guide. He asked the city : council to Install ¢ash boxes at street corners. If a motorist overstays his time beside a parking meter he is supposed to fine

himself and drop payment in the conscience bax,

THE most ‘popular installation for homes today is the shower-tub combination. Miss Godirey says! men ‘usually talk up the shower when they come ; to pick out fixtures for a new home. Women talk | bathtubs. The question is settled with the com-| bination. The small child's tub in delicate pastel colors; sure made the old galvanized wash tub I remember as a youngster something to abhore. Kids| don't necessarily have to come out cleaner from! the ritzy tubs, but for eye appeal, there's no; comparison.

Setting up the first annual art exhibition at Senate Ave, YMCA are (left to right) Donald Hobbs, David Snyder and Joseph Hol“They won't go out” said Mr. Alfreds. “Bath-| day. The art show opened yesterday as one of a series of events tubs are changing color and shape but they're . commemorating the Senate Y's 50th anniversary.

Seymour Bagal, A on of Mr, {and Mrs. Harry Bagal, 3140 N, Merilian St, was graduated from ithe University of Miami, Coral { Gables, Fla., today. He received ithe Bachelor of Fy Laws degree. E, Mr. Bagal, a

not disappearing.” { Well, no use worrying about the bathtub any-| '{ more this week. There must be something else.

Mercy Slayers

member of 3road Ripple | Legion Post, flew

By Robert C. Ruark

NEW ° YORK, Feb. 8 — Miss Carol Paight of Bridgeport, Conn., took a pistol and knocked off her old man a while back, because she loved him

go and he was sick unto death of

cancer. For this

rather rugged prescription she has recently been on trial, with the doctors and lawyers and even

her mother talking temporary Paight, called “Ditty” when she i

insanity. - Miss s not waving a

rod around, is described as a very religious girl. I have no doubt that the insanity plea is sound

and will hold up. because it takes

something more

than a small helping of pity or anger to inspire a child to gun her own parent. But Miss

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Avhether or not she is convicted of

a second-degree

— murder charge, poses a certain problem, as do a

couple of doctors they've got up on charges in the

recent wave of mercy killings.

He'll Do His Own Dying

FOR INSTANCE, I would hesitate to ‘patronize

any doctor who has scragged an

the kindness of his heart, and were I romantically .

inclined, 1 should hate to take to

old lady out of

wife a lass who

had a record of knocking off the nearest and dearest when he felt bad. It may be bigoted of me, but one thing I would like to do on my own time

is die.

_The trouble with letting other people do you in, for your own good, is that sometimes your malady may not warrant such a drastic cure. I have seen people with bad hangovers who exhibited all the symptoms of - tuberculosis; - leprosy; heart disease, neurasthenia and even death, but they generally managed to cure themselves by keeping quiet and lying down. I sure would be unhappy if some member of my set fed me a .38 slug to cure me of my horrors when all the tithe my system is screaming

for a triple bromo.

snp ..»ce. 1 have heen fold hy. renutable. physicians. that it.

Is a fairly common practice to leave a few gross of goofballs within the reach of patients who are destined to die unpleasantly of incurable diseases,

_ om the oft chance the patient will

wish to hasten

2 co : ea b 28 missions with Pe 8 : § CLOT he Sth Army or” : 3 ik | Alr Force: during World War II Representative of water-color entries in the exhibit, which ‘He holds the Diswas judged yesterday, is "Regal Store," a study in light and con- ‘tinguished Fly- 4 trast by Ronald Jarman. Besides oil ‘and water colors, the show ling Cross, Air Mr Bagal also includes drawings, etchings and sculpture. . |Medal with three Oak Leaf Clustoh So eh ers, Presidential Citation with Oak Leaf Cluster, and two battle . {Sars He attended IU and

his departure from this dreary sphere. “This, 1 I believe, is. 'a kind of benevolent suicide and it at | : least leaves the choice of living or dying up to the candidate for extinction. But having your everloving daughter knock i you off, or your trusted doctor slip you an-artery-|: full of lethal air seems to be granting a touch too |

much power to an outside agency. There is al ways the angle that the patient might toss off a miracle and get well. There is always the possi-| 5g bility that he may want to hang around as long as |. possible, even if it hurts. There is no accounting) for tastes, and a man is dead a time, The trouble with people who knock off other! : people, out of their great humanity and wisdom, or even madness, is that they may contract.a vi-|: cious habit, and go about curing everybody the hard way. Nothing is so pernicious in the home as| an amateur physician, who prescribes freely. They! become annoyed if you do net use their pet potions and postrums, and I wish nobody about me who . -clatm# #bility to cure” the common cold with "& = = shotgun. oe Despite the modern allegations of swollen domes full of fuzzy doctrine, dying is still an important incident in a man’s life, and not some-} thing that shouid be tossed at him casually, like | a two-bit tip. Dying in final account, is important, to the corpse. He cometh he knoweth not whence, | " with no written guarantee as to where he headeth.| i » mR dim Motive Might Be Doubted "City Pet," an oil by J Junetta Inez Hunter, i a study in af

THIS DECISION, then, should be largely up tol mosphere and emotion.

George Washingion University.

“Short haircuts are out for iwomen.,” Stylist M. Louis of New . {York City told delegates to thé § Hairdressers’ Guild of Ohio held {lin New York. A woman can't crop her hair and keep her, femininity. “A man wants something ito run his fingers through,” he fv isaid. He predicted woman will iwear their hair about four inches i long on the nape of the neck this |spring.

RL - Bi . wh + Robert Penn Warren and Robid ert Rossen hive rived Screen Writers’ Guild s for the “best written Am n drama’ {21 1949 for Colu Pictures’ f ‘All the King's" Men" to open at [Loew's Wednesday. The awards (were presented in Hollywood be[fore 600 motion picture stars, {writers, directors and producers with George Jessel, actor; as mas"

i > $ Ee ad

Chuster-Grissom's-Still-Life™ is -an—snemple-of the show's

the candidate for corpse-hood and not arbitrarily] Photos by John Spicklemire, Times Staff Photographer. more conservative entries. fter oR peldmonles. Mr, Warrel made by an outside influence. There could be in-| . instructor, and Sister Mary Jane, first; Ronald Jarman, second, ana On the r Prize for the

» » 0 1, od 1 " stances in which the mercy slaying of a nasty old, Judges Nome 11 Prize Winners head of Marian College art de-|Jean Polley, honorable mention ove All ihe King's Men.

aunt might be motivated more by a lust for her | partment, judged the show. andi!for a charcoal drawing.

bank account than by true humanitarian motives.) ~~ And Those Who Gain Mentions |announces the winners | In commercial art, Miss Eddye| 4 os I do not indorse her motive or her excuse. Her| WINNERS OF il prizes and mentions “in the first annual art] First “prize in oy “went to] Willingham won first award, With] | gic:

killing of her father is to me a clear case of med- exhibition at Senate Avenue YMCA were chosen last evening as the jynetta Inez Hunter, second to|Alice Keno in second place. Miss

dling in a business which belongs exclusively to {art show opened. t honor-| Willin ham was winner also of the patient or to God. | Sponsored by the Young Adult Department of the Senate “Y.,” Mary Alice Barnett and Davi the en rize for Ipture. 2H Bertram Gardner, secretary, the exhibit is one of a series of events able mentions to Leonard Davis P SF Scupu

50th anniversary. | 88 |School and currently associate] {Saturday from 7 to 9 p. m. and | We’ re All Waiting By Frederick C. Othman’ A committee including Hale professor of art in New York Uni-| WINNERS OF water - color from 3 to 5 p, m. tomorrow and!

{commemorating the institution's; —~———lund Chester Grissom. -.. i The exhibit will remain open to {ist, graduate of Herron Art] {the public daily throtigh - next

Qh

Mr. Warren MF. Jessel

| Woodruff, odruff, Indianapolis- -born arts versity; Garo. Antreasian, Herron prizes were: + David F. Snyder, Thursday.

WASHINGTON, Feb. 6—The subject was tax

euts and, Oh Bo! Everybody in

i of. the Ways. and Means. —happy-except-Honest-Fohn-Snyder:-

His theory was if he gave in

fhe gold-draped Committee. was

one place, he'd

have to take in another, and the only people to whom he offered gifts without reciprocatory nicks,

were non-voters, namely babjes. On baby oils, tal-

cums, and lotions he'd remove the 20 per cent

tax—and then sock me an extra . grim, in" a pink-cheeked way.

. No Cut on Whisky *

tax on the light

. “te

_° HE OFFERED to cut his take on fur coats, “pear! necklaces, and suitcases to 10 per cent. He'd also cut the tax on railroad tickets, telegrams, and long-distance phone calls. But not one cent did

he offer to save the fans of movies, the drinkers : -- of whisky, nor the burners of midnight oil, like me.

I stared at the back of his weli-shaved neck in

a vain effort at mental telepathy.

My idea was to

e him to do something about electric light bs. But not him. He plans to continue allowing me to work all hours in order to pay my income

tax—and then sock me. an extra 1 use. The Secretary of the Treasury testifying suit read a statement

tax on the.likht

in his dark- blue

26 single-spaced

pages long. This took him one hour and a half, but he ended in, good voice, removed his rimiess eyeglasses (which could have stood a good polish-

. ing) and took a ong sip of water from a paper cup.

Theh' came the deluge in the form of questions

from congressmen who seemed hardly anything he said.

I got the idea that they intend to slash a lot

to agree with

fore excise taxes than he mentioned, no matter

what he thinks. Some of them

wanted to cut

excises first and worry about increases on corpora-| Cl tions and rich men’s estates later. Other prize winners were:

Rep. John D, Disgell, the Democratic stalwart] (doseph Mankiewicz, Vera Case from Detroit, said he “was” going to “dedicate “Him pary. and--Novelist. John. Klemp= “REI to getting aI the” Wartifié excises wiped seer ery Shimerient ry Fors Ssitirn the books, After all, h i d 0 n ‘em it promises * pice ‘A . of 175 Mil A t 3 [wanted her to go with. him tojcense plates. “All the way backito Three Wives,” Adolph Green stopped. And the war has been over a long time. | gonies o mie. vio ourney (Chicago but she refused, being home 1 suffered great pain and and Betty Comden; best Ameri-

he added, pensively. Mr. Snyder gulped. = : : “very. much terrified.” |agony and screamed for a doc-jcan musical for MGM's “On the These excise taxes bring Egu Ye goverment] ~ Described mn Deathbed Sratemerit She said she was forced to ac-itor.. . . They refused to stop. Ii Town, » and William R.. Burnet, -

about $4 billion a year. Mr. Snyder would reduce. “By PHILIP ¥. CLIFFORD company the three men in begged and sald to Stephenson to best. Anierican Western award for them only by about $600 million and while he fg+r————""—=="———== "Second in a series of hres A EE SC se =fStephensom scar tothe Union- leave -me me-—along—the- road some 20th Century. Foxa! Yellow Sky." about it, he'd put a $40 million bite on television] —— : {Station, En route to the station, place. . . . Stephenson . , , said he|

sets. That's an odd one. f.- AT ‘the time Madge Oberholtzer met D. C. Siorheiion] she said, she was detained in the thought I was dying. . . . I heard TWO bottles of wine-have-been:

Wh taxi |car while one of the men entered him say al aged for 30 years in Dr. E. J. en Congress was taxing everything in sight she was a girl of 28, and unmarried. {the Washington Hotel to pick rit gay 4 80 that. he, a on herman Jean in

in 1943 td, get money for the war, it put a heaithy|> , ; impost on. I rf od a ey YI + She was one of two children born to George and Matilda the tickets. lad getout of #7. [Wis., but fie doesn't plan to samwasnt any television then and so the law didn’t Oberholtzer, whose ‘home was at 5802 University Ave. in| Taken Onto Tein “1 They reached, Stephenson's [ple them immediately: bbl mention it. ; {home late that night. to tear down part of the house to Irvington. Once aboard the train, Miss get them. He said the bottles So television sets, as such, aren't taxed at all, | {Oberholtzer’s statement read, she When they drove in, the girl’s|8" *1€ hed in the flooring by though ‘Mr. ‘Snyder's hard-boiled collectors take, - Stephenson lived in a showplace, a Mecca for. state, City was taken into a drawing rbom mother was at the front door.|Were cached in y

the original owners when they left for a few days and didn’t {want their sons to find the wine. [Upon return they found plasters {had sealed wp the battles.

their cut on that part of each box which they con-ign ount liticians. T osm. sider to be a radio set. What this does to the book- jo d county polit he| keeping department of the radio makers is a scene of many lavish parties, pitecus thing: wiille all the tempers lost in trying/it was located at 5432 Unigure out” which bunch of wires is radio and! 10. which is. television would warm a hydrogen bomb |versity Ave.—four squares from

“by Stephenson and Gentry, The| {One of them stalled her while the “several times” and. ‘called for |jgtter, she said glimbed into an others concealed, Madge in a loft hér in hig Cadillac, ; {upper ‘berth while “Stephenson above the garage. On one occasion, her statement | pushed me into the lower and at-| The next day she was taken said, she attended a party at his|tacked me.” {home by Klenck, who told the house “with several prominent! Early the next morning she housekeeper, Mrs. Eunice Schultz,| pr. Josef Pieper, German phile

tzer resi to the explosion point. hs Manip Tobi of at-| people wheh both gehtlemen and [was taken off the train at Ham- that Madge had been “injured in|psopher, sociologist and author, : [theiy ladies were presen | mond. an accident.” {siting professor Ht d Butler, and for time | is serving as a Vv. gp Chances Are Excellent jiended ny Sh al scliol. he dial It was in this. house, “one of They walked the block from the Shortly thereafter, the Ober-|at Notre Dame. He was brought

THE LAWGIVERS will listen to the other gov-| the show places of Irvington.” genot to the Indiana Hotel. The holtzers, who with their attor- Notre Dame under the ausoo. secretarial work in a couple Oflu, ts magnificent piliared Perey was assigned to two_rooms| {ney, Asa. J. Smith, had beer out eprint Notre Dame ‘commite

ernment big shots on taxes in the next few days. lis business ho h n uses be. © o en they'll listen to the is of 1 Indianapolis business facade reached by a winding hut without a connecting door. .|scouring the neighborhood for the tee on intérpational relations 't

say th the excises are driving them into bankruptcy.! fore going. to work at the State drive, that the party which ended A this point, Stephenson, heed: {missing girl, returned home. They study : the inter-relations of re=

i ; : . : 2 She f Madge Oberholtzer met Ste- | " «“ " Score Arrested in. 21 Police Raids . |Faculty and PTA ie loner on ‘Jan. 12. 1935." Irvington 0492.” Madge called “Shorty,” came in; he had driven too long,” contacted Marion 5% LT lecture on “1 + “Police vice squads im Indianap- according to Capt. Ralph Cham- TO Play Benefit Game | Two months and two'days later| || oq - He said he was leav- napolis.

lis had a busy week-end as they ‘hgrassed gamblers and ticket dealers and customers, making 20 arrests, reports revealed today. Of 21 raids Saturday, 19 were made without search warrants and resulted only in confiscation

“James Coleman, 30, of 2139 N.| Hilinois St., Apt. 3, was charged

“late Saturday. aie i Cards and $26 Seized

“via i paige

dice: and $2.60

Barrow Ave. Ten were cha

3 PRR EVEN

bers, vice squad leader. Three! Biurr Aven for Chi d d h | U Stephens s order, be est. ue School faculty! . Jing for cago _and urge er pon ep nson’s order, be issued for Stephenson's arres he will tell the inside story of Socks od cards and $26 were con-imembers and PTA will play| Quick Rise to Power 145 come to his home on a * ‘matter | “Shorty” gave her $15 so that she, At the same time, however, he JD Command from a woms

In another Saturday raid bY|in the school Stephenson had been in Indianal © f his bod ds, Earl| tics.” The ch 1 was gymnasium for the|®'eP ne. o 8 yguar arlisome cosmetics, e chauffeur and in the presence of severa rsb a driver, later pers Capt. Chambers .and his squad, benefit of the Infantile Paralysis, {only three years but his rise to|Gentry, came by and escorted went with her. witnesses, drew -from. the dying pi ity and finally WAC

and ‘12 men arrested in 1421] jen teachers will be matched! meteurie. The girl's dying declarationjof buying powder, “I purchased SR]

a gambling house. The other ! ‘mothers. two,. charged with keeping gam-|preg hool’s PT {nor’s office and was considered the |Klenck, and Stephenson, himself, Around 4 p. m. she was found piood two friends were watching =a tbling house, were Roger Childs, ident of the schools PTA. P » blood. transfusion. But she died tw ‘with keeping a gambling house 47) of that address, and Lloyd: when police raided that address

ural banquet that January night] forced her to drink. . | come violently ill . Gentry and Klenck, between two towers a mile apart. Lawrence, 58, of 518 E. 16th st., Ship Movements > at the Athletic Club. + “TI didn’t want to,” she said, Stephenson, informed of what Es Mieusal, a on assault Each wopld- grab a wire, ride it. Capt. Chambers said. i New york Ph United Press ; i -In the days that followed their “but I was afraid not to do so she had done/ ordered the party charges, were ordered rearrested into the air as it was pulled, up, Sunday also was a i day as tad ngs Alres: i nivers. meeting, Miss Oberholtzer said in and I drank three small glasses to leave for ingingapolis immedi- for murder: [then drop to the ground. George 171 books of baseball tickets! Banta Lsabel 22. por. her deathbed statemept. Stepben- of the drink. This made me very ately. _, |didn’t turn. loose on his fast try were fiscated in 17_non-war- sare: XE ee pargeg “Bremen. sp - telephoned her ‘constantly. ill and dazed and I vomited.”. | On the 175-mile drive to Tidi-| TOMORROW: Ww: Trial, consti {and flew. 50 feet into the air. Then . rant Sie rel ad MLL Cnn” For Fort ghe- sald Be invited her to dinner, Eteghensen, - she declared, jasapolt “ they removed the iejund | Fight). - the fell. Doctors said he'd recover.

Chances of some sort of a tax slash ‘this season She worked for the State Supér-| in tragedy began. ling the girl's plea, “sent” Mrs.! {immediately called the family ligion, democracy and internaseem excellent and I don't guess I'll buy a new. iondent ‘of Public Instruction Called to His Home {Oberholtzer a telegram, saying| physician, ‘Dr. John K. Kings- national order. i » wrist watch until the boys make tip their minds. an! the fall of 1994 she was On the evening of Mar, 15, they were “driving through to pyry, .. Which is the trouble, according to the jewelers: ah — i . harge of the Young 1929. Madge, who had been to a Chicago, will take train back to-| : | George M. Blair of Detroit everybody's waiting while Uncle Samuel tries to Ba 1 Be ag Cirele, Sedaris movie Zwith a friend, returned to night.” And Gentry sald he would] Lawyer Demands Warrant | willed his 52-year-old parrot, Bob, decide how ‘far he'll take his hand out of his soples ae DR Ch to rural her home about 10 o'clock, Her send it. | Before evening, Attorney Smith, his $40,000 estate. “Boh's the citizens’ poeiets, * furnishe AGh00 8 ‘mother told her that “somebody| While Stephenson was hav- who had been told by the doctor only friend I have, he said. -

| people without access to a library.|

‘had been telephoning” her from ing breakfast, his chauffeur, ‘this girl will surely die before

Kay Summersby, Arish lecturer

{the number and Stephenson |Stephenson’s car up from India-| County: Prosecutor William H. Was Eisenhower's Girl Friday” -

she was dead. {Remy and asked that a warrant at Franklin ‘College: Wednesday.

basketball at 7 p.'m. Wednesday! At the time of their meeting, of great importance.” could go out and “buy a hat and called in a public stenographer, an's point of view. - Miss Sums

were confiscated power and prominence had been her to Stephenson’s home. She bought a hat, but tnstead| girl a detailed statement of ha aide for Maj. Gen, Ehnenbower, against the fathers’ group an nd! =A few months previously, detailed how, when she arrived/box of bichloride of mercury tab-| Several physicians attended George Reid's friends weren't teachers will play the Stephenson had managed toiat the house she saw that lets. "When she returned to tHe Madge Oberholtzer, and ' her mentioning: acrobatics to him toMrs. Ray Domroese is Place Ed Jackson in the gover- Stephenson's henchman, Ear] hotel, she took six of the tablets. ‘brother Marshall gave her alday. George, 14, of Atlanta, and

rged with visiting

- most powerful man at the inaug- had been drinking. She said they | |in a room by herself. She had be-lat 10:30 a. m. on Apr. 14. | power company crew string cables

- — meee, a ts - i : & : : 5 Fedo i EE L oaipee ll A