Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 March 1951 — Page 23

’£

Blue Room on Pennsylvania St., otheras Little Broadway, : been to bed. No, the place is not Portas Otho Addison and I

i fis

2 £ i

litte

an eye-opener. : reason for being there is what a lively spot is like merrymakers are gone, turned off and the stilled, and there are dead soldiers in the under the bar. + At that hour Otho isn’t talkative. The ant sound is the hum. of compressors. There are more lights on than usual. When the customers come in, the soft indirect lighting will be turned on. “1'You notice the odor of stale tobacco. A normal SiehKing voice sounds oud and hollow. Immediately you are convinced it takes people to give a place of business that warm atmosphére. The lack of noise and voices becomes’ oppressive. You think of a funeral parlor

25 iz

> Th

: :

58s fits

a

Lp i

+

:

' OTHO'S FIRST TASK is to set out the boxes of empties and turn up the drain boards behind the bar. The bar stool seems much too high. You stick out like a windmill on a prairie. * There is nothing cozy about the leather wall seats. The far nook, so desirable for young couples with serious talk on their minds, are as inviting as-a deep freeze. : : “7. After the empty bottles are set out, Otho puts all the chairs upside down on the tables. He has to wash thes metal table bases with soap and water, and -vacuum the wall-to-wall rug. Otho takes a philosophical view on the matches and tobacco ashes, bread crumbs on the seats and floor. “People spend their money in here to have fun. You have to expect some dirt on the floor.” ¢ © o

* HE HAS NOTICED ashtrays are being used more since the floor has been carpeted Guests were not as careful when the floor was covered with linoleum.

It Happened Last By Earl Wilson :

‘NEW YORK, Mar. § — Lilli Palmer — the beautiful ‘wife of Rexy Harrison—has become

a television star hy being a highbrow with a

_ neckline. dn these days when the television tendency im to raise the rating BY Jowaring the V another couple of ribs, Migs Palmer has held her standards —and her bodice—high. ~ : + “Why is it,” I asked Glamour Doll, “that you Anh't show your—er——neckline?” S% «1 don’t wear decollette dresses,” the gifted actress admitted, “because I haven't got epough. decollette dresses. ig “I'd have run out of dresses after my third §

show.” ¢ &

‘BUT SHE wants nobody to think she’s aiming shafts at Faye Emerson, the Princess of Plunge. I “It was Faye” she says, “who started me on television. I was on her program. She said, ‘You're so relaxed. Why don’t you have your own show?” “Much good talk had come to my good ears about Miss Palmer's program. I played a dirty trick. Asked my wife to give me her opinion. * For women are loath to enjoy the talents of other women—especially pretty ones. “It's a wonderful program,” the wife raved.

¢ oo ;

- THINKING she sriainly must not have seen 4£,-Y grilled her. “She talked for 15 minutes all alone. talked about Helen of Troy and did a scene from ‘Antigone.’ ...” - My feeble inquiry, “Ann who?” was drowned “1 was fascinated.” “Fascinatin’ Palmer,” I said to Lilli later. “What do they see in you?” “It eludes me.” She was in her dressing room at her show, “Bell, Book and Candle.” Her cat, Pyewacket, which assists her at being a witch in the John van Druten play, was meowing to be fed. “In my programs I'm not saying anything startling. 1 talk about the European countries T’ye lived in.

in,

Americana By Robert C. Ruark

NEW YORK, Mar. 8—The bulletin comes from Mexico that the ambassador ig feeling pretty poorly, what with the bronchitis®*and all, and hence won’t be able to fly up to testify before {He Senate crime commission, which convenes here next week. Our sympathies are all with Mr. O'Dwyer. Everybody has been feeling lousy, lately, especially people with testifying to do. Heart flutters are rampant in the land, as Sen. Ketauver barnstorms, and the wracking cough is endemic, as isthe rosy nose and seeping eyeball, I suppose the national resistance is lowered, due to mental depression, taxes, and general suspicion, making us all’ victims of one horrid malady or another. ¥t is just terrible that Mr. O'Dwyer can't make it, to answer a few questions about corruption under his regime, because people are generally unsympathetic to the ills of others, and suspicious too, since the wave of heart murmur has ravaged the ranks of Kefauver committee testifiers. It is getting so people summon the sawbones before they call for the mouthpiece. ; * & @

IN COMMON humanity there no real way

of saying that a person ain't sick; no physical

check up to determine the true extent of illness. A man who believes himself to be sick, is sick, and a man who says he is sick cannot be proven to be well. Not legally. +.My doctor, for instance, says I am twice as healthy as a chorus girl, and nothing is healthier than a chorus girl. But I have been dreadfully ill

for a month, with all the symptoms of flu, _

pheumonia, overwork, nervous exhaustion, brain fever, creeping paralysis, and no money. With Mar, 15 on deck the last is by far the most serious symptom, even if the doc can’t find it on

THE HOUR is 5 a. m. The place is the

Night

She -

Shrunk sp

We had a flash of excitement when Otho found a penny on the floor. There are days when he doesn’t do that well. : . TI asked if anyone ever tries to get in at that hour. The schedule at the Blue Room calls

early ‘for the porter to begin cleaning at 5 a. m. Some

spots do their work after the bar closes at midnight. Others after ‘they open up in the morning. No one pounds the front door. Otho asked if I ever needed a libation at 5 a. m.

Hoping Otho had never heard of the gag, I |

said any man who can’t get his fill by midnight and go home isn't trying, He laughed. ¢ * o

ow

MAN indeed is a gregarious animal. He has |

to have people around. He must have noise and laughter, the more the merrier. The place was so devoid of life it wouldn't drive an Irishman to drink on St, Patrick's Day. : A lot of willpower was required to keep from falling asleep. That's a terrible comment to make about a dispensary of hard liquors, a rendezvous, fun haven. * > o HOW UNINTERESTING it was to watch Otho vacuum the rug, attach another pipe to his air hose and dig up crumbs on the wall seats. How uninteresting it was to sit at a bar and have no desires. ” How interesting it would have been if the bar were packed and the bartender busy and witty. How interesting it would have been had I caught a glimpse of a beautiful face. The face that I saw at a barroom door. in New Orleans.

I tried a short chorus of “La Vie-en Rose” ,.¢i 34 “and I have a very un-

|derstanding wife. Besides — the queen always brings along a hus{band or boy friend. I insist on that for my own protéction.”

{t's Catching

Otho turned from his work a moment and smiied as he shook his head. : “Your voice would sound better if the ventilating fans were on, the organ was playing and a group of old college grads were singing,” {aughed Otho. "Youy sand real good.” 4 ps . PEOPLE MAKE the spot. Have everything as perfect as mechanical genius can make it, and without imperfect people yofl ain't gonna have

.ho fun.

Strange, isn’t it, a fun spot is a means to an escape. But you have to fill it with customers, other escapists, to he able to escape in comfort. “I'm going home,” I said to Otho. How strange the announcement sounded. And the conditions were so unusual, i

Lilli Is One TV Star With High Neckline

. “ONE WEEK I had some Michaelangelo sonnets. I didn’t even know he wrote sonnets till I started studying. - “I learn my poetry in taxicabs. The cabdrivers have started to recognize me!” Her handsome husband looked in. He was off for dinner. She was staying in, as it was a foul

night. :

* “He disapproved strongly of me going on television at first. Thought it was much tog much work,” she said. tnd “It is, too. I don’t even live at the moment. I hardly ever see my little boy.” * © ¢ AS SHE TACKLED heavy chocolate cake from Lindy’s, she said, “When I was about 18—long ago—I was a fat girl.” 3 “But gradually I wasted away. . When I met Rex I was already a fairly decent size.” She has a figure that makes other girls hate her. Her son, Carey, 7, is least enthusiastic of her fans. ‘His father watches with him. I ring them up afterward and say, ‘Well, what?’ “Carey says, ‘Well, it was all right, Mommy.’ “He isn’t allowed to watch television any other night during the week. I've been. brought up that way—poor fellow, now he has to be brought up the same way. “He is given the iron rule by his iron mother.” ® ¢ o

LILLI attended a boys’ school, in Germany. The ratio was about 350 boys to 50 girls, or 7 to 1. “I have never found a place since where there are 7 men to 1 girl,” she says, adding, “unfortiinately.” . ® > ¢ , WISH I'D SAID THAT: “The subway is one place where a woman is always treated like a perfect gentleman.”—Lilly Christine. ® © ¢ TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Peter Donald says a toastmaster’s a guy who stands up in front of a grapefruit and introduces a lot of other squirts who want to end up in the public eye.—That'’s Earl, brother.

Maladies Popular; Testifying -is Not

the electrocardiograph. It is symptomatic chiefly’

on the bank statement. Nobody, under questioning, says he feels fine any more. “Lousy,” he says. “Don't know what it is, exactly, but for ‘the past few weeks I ...” ¢ © o AND THEN proceeds to tell you in detail how his. head hurts and his heart burns and his arteries harden and his sinus aches and his antrums throb and his'feet pain and his tummy is upset. It is almost as if, at a given signal, everyone has prepared an alibi for whatever unpleasant contingency might affect him. The array of illnesses cited in recent resignations of cops in this town would stun the statisticians in Johns Hopkins. Never before, in the history of police, has overwork and sundry ill struck down so many, causing acute pangs in the conscience and immediate retirement. The persistent ulcer has become overpopular, too, as reserves face reassignment to the services. I just don’t know what's got into us. : It is inconceivable that some deadly secret virus is at work on 150 million people simultaneously, because I do not think that virus could gear itself so perfectly to emergency. In my own recent miseries, they seemed to strike with perfect timing—always on the eve of something 1 didn’t want to do. It may be that we are on the point of discovering a brand new disease; which hits only on direct order from the victim. > > THIS 1S A PROBLEM for psychiatrists, but speechlessness seems to have stricken people who are asked to talk on certain subjects before grand juries and congressional committees. As the patient learns to talk again, it comes out double. This is known a= ®ouble talk, signifying nothing. Forgetfulness, too, is a symptom of the times. People who used to have acute memories go blank when asked vital questions, Total recall has vanished, to be replaced by total amnesia. Curious. So again, we sympathize with Mr. O'Dwyer, down with the sneezes in sunny Mexico. We trust he will recover in time to testify in better days, and hope we live to see it. Pass the Kleenex, dear, Kerchoo! :

Many Small Businesses Facing Crisis

3 By JOHN W. LOVE ' 'Seorippe-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Mar, 8—Thousands of small manufacturing

here, but many do. They tramp

businesses.

‘Errol Flynn does NOT hold the \record for dating more girls than anybody.

Jack Bailey's “Queen For A Day” {show, has stepped out with 1591 |females in the past six years—all jon expense account, That's one a day on a 5-day week, with one /month’s vacation annually.

The Indianapolis

‘About People—

Sets Record 0f 1591 Dates In 5 Years

Radio ‘Escort’ Tops Errol Flynn

No matter what you've read,

Harry Mynatt, official escort on

“I like women,”*%aid Mr. My-

THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1951

oy

Spearhead of Task Force Paper Work Arrives

! i |

| Terry Kennedy was surrounded:

by expectant mothers in Battle

{

Creek, Mich., today. His wife, his

1 | { {

{

[for intoxication by giving the; Iowa City, Iowa, jail a new coat |

i

parakeets and five female goats are awaiting blessed events. The family dog just gave birth to a litter of pups. “I'm afraid to look in the goldfish bowl,” said Mr. Kennedy.

Could It Be?

From Miami Beach comes word that attractive Mrs. Minnewa Bell

Ross is expected to come out of *

seclusion today to prepare for divorce and marirage to Elliott Roosevelt. » California attorneys for Dr. Rex L. Ross Jr. Santa Monica, and for Mrs. Ross said no suit

has yet been filed. But Mrs. |}

Repeater |

Floyd Cook. dishwasher, today prepared to work out a $25 fine

of paint—just as he did two years ago for the same offense.

‘Why, Abe!

| ' An Englewood, N. J., housewife | |says she might get $100,000 be-| cause her great-great-grandfather

knew some secret—possibly romantic—in the life of Abraham Lincoln’s wife.

‘Mps. Elizabeth Anderson owns g&

eight newly-discovered letters

from Mary Todd Lincoln td" aer

great-great-grandfather, Abram

|warning “all this {s between our-|

{ {

fire ‘which had burned for two.

4

dust. Chief Kinzing blew it up|

| { |

{ question that no one could answer. “How am 1. going to keep my babies?” she asked. “I could have all the money in the world and not be happy if I Indiana didn’t have my babies home with me. God gave them to me. They're located at Ft. Harrison.

|

|

frustration so evident in Wash-| Korea, but especially so since ington these days. Most men in Jan. T when the real alarm spread | this predicament should not come through the ranks of the small Caught both the hospital and Mrs. |yg" yonn Henry, 15, Bobby Jo, |Jones in a seemingly hopeless fi-131, William, 8, and Patsy, 3. Mrs.|

{estranged third wife, Actre

Wakeman, which are not detailed, and the

selves.”

Stubborn Blaze In. Ch gers-crossed and said he believed he had finally extinguished a

months in a 50-foot pile of saw-

with 12 sticks of dynamite and doused it with 60,000 gallons of water.

Never Say Die

Mickey Rooney and his ss Martha Vickers, ; will leave on a second honeymoon in a few j§ weeks, MGM studios has an-" nounced. The couple, married June 3, 1949, separated} Dec. 6 when Miss Vickers charged the pint-sized actor didn't lke the ‘restrictions Mr. Rooney of marriage.” Now they want to “start afresh in new surroundings.”

Hollywood Oleo

Actress Barbara Stanwyck was escorted to a play opening by Producer Norman Krasna, an old friend, on her first date since divorcing Robert Taylor. She confessed she was ‘‘very nervous” about the occasion.

Actress Lana Turner says her popularity is becoming expensive.

Souvenir hunters have stolen the gold “LT” monogram from her car for the seventh time. Actress Ginger Rogers will stage a tennis exhibition Mar. 16 at the Shamrock Hotel in Houston, Tex.

mine.” The babies are Siamese twins, joined at their heads with no possibility of separation. They have lived at General Hospital since their birth nearly two years ago.

Their incredible survival has

in which there are - references to “ludicrous scenes,”

ichland Center, Wis., Fire; to Kinzing Kept his fin-

‘God Gave Them to Me'— . i ® ® { Mother of Siamese Twins | ployees is expected by the fall of his old “fighting” mood.

Sobs a $13,640 Question

2-Year Survival of Babies Joined at Heads Causes Seemingly Hopeless Financial Problem

By United Press LOS ANGELES, Mar. 8—Mrs. Willa B. Jones today sobbed a na] is needed for the Adjutant

{ | { {

| ~Times Photo By Henry E. Ie i THIS IS THE ARMY ?—These are some of the boys from the Adjutant General's School greeted. yesterday when their 4 ail pulled into Ft. Harrison. The greeters are Rosemary Huntsinger (left) and Mary Jo Browder. ! :

Wome Oe”

ie *

| i T | Some Improvement: . Ee awn is. Cited by Physicians. bi 3 One BEL poi Ah DY. 8 Sl 2 life today in General his. would-be-killer remained | heavy guard at the hospital. Patrolman Charles C. Bainaks, 35, of 1422 Exeter Ave. showed some improvement ‘after surgeons . (had removed 20 shotgun ote . |deeply imbedded in his en. : [His condition was still listed a8

i e.

{ { |

%

py

He primarily wants to teach the state's lawmakers the financial acute needs are for facts of life—that you can't keep workers and building spending more than you earn. - according to Harrison But he has given up, temporemployee utilization arily at least, any idea of blasting the legislature, although his close associates say he keenly feels

1952.

Most |elerical laborers, Mullendore, officer.

The increased civilian person-

_ ROUTE STEP REVIEW—Gov. Schricker and Col. Leland S. Smith, commandant of the Army's | Adjutant General's School, talk to-some of the 320 officers and men of the unit which arrived at | Ft. Harrison yesterday to make their new home. They came from Ff. Lee, Va. we SRN Lae ey Adjufant General School® | jutant General School ake Central Experts Reach Ft. Harrison xperts Reach Ft. Harrison ._Schricker, Military Brass Greet 13-Car Train; | | First Classes to Get Under Way Mar. 19 CAB Gets Request ~The spearhead of Task Force Paper Work hit here yesterday To Add 28 Cities . when about 320 officers and men of the Army's Adjutant General's] Ambitions of Lake Central Afr-'§ ’ School arrived at their new home, Ft. Harrison. lines to spread its wings over 28 Lonely Hearts | A 13-car train brought the experts on forms and records from additional cities were outlined to- LOVers Wait Chair !Ft. Lee, Va., from which the AG school is moving. They were day by John V. Weesner, execu- | SING SING PRISON, N. ¥T. greeted at the Ft. Harrison railhead by Gov. Schricker, a host of tive vice president of the Indi- Mar. 8 (UB)—Prison cl ocks ticked : re [military ease, the 28th Division anapolis airline. ‘away the last hours today in the {band and a bevy of beauties. “ lives of the two “lonel A College Joe | The contingent was under the he. Xpatsion Peques! has vers who killed two widows ad Assessor Being ‘command of Col. Leland 8. °° y presented to the , cpjiq for lust and money. i: Smith, head of the school. (Civil Aeronautics Board to service! Pudgvy Martha Beck and i Hunted by Police Classes to Start Mar. 19 ithe northern Michigan area and paramour, Raymond Fernan | = | First classes in the new loca- certain Ohio and Pennsylvania §aVe up all hope of escaping | "A “COLLEGE JOE" posing as tion will start Mar. 19, when an Points with scheduled DC-3 air- death tonight in the electric chair, today 1s being ¢Stimated 800 officers and enlisted liners,” he said. {They will die before midnight. a deputy assessor today 1s being Jo oi "wil be enrolled. By July “We have every reason to hope’ Their last chance of winning -§ 'hunted by police. 1 the school expects to have 2200 that Lake Central Airliners will commutation of sentence ! The six-foot, 190-pound youth Army and Air Force students become a familiar sight in these away lage night when the State told Mrs. Warren Fritchey, 3556 listed on the morning report. Cities in 1951.” (Fused to sin tls xin W. Wilcox St., that he was a After detraining the men fell 3404 Miles Dally Mrs. Beck is 31, and Fernandeputy assessor. in behind the band and marched: The airline now runs regular dez is 36. mee NR : ‘to the mess hall where they were flights north to Grand Rapids = When he could produce no PCE, ne : = identification, she refused him joined by Poh oy. Bostataes Mich, and south to Louisville. Kiwanis Club Speaker admittance, men's Center. Its planes fly 3404 miles daily. | Leonard W. Mayo, direétor of . So he blunily warnte her that Courses in personnel manage-| The expansion plans call for the Association: for the Aid of > oy return with a search ,,.,t machine accounting, ste- flights to eight additional cities Crippled Children, will be guest { Warrant. {nography, postal operations, spe-in northern Michigan as well as speaker at the noon luncheon of » » ” | SHE called the police {cial services and recruiting will 18 other points in Ohio and Penn-|the Indianapolis Kiwanis club .toP : be given at the school. |sylvania. morrow in the Claypool Hotel. They checked with Mrs. Nell | Hmm cemmetens : . < McCarty, Wayne Township as- { S ¥ H Bu sessor, who said she had my - Workers Needed { overnor i S uie Y: three male deputies. All of them At Fs Harrison A A N S k | are elderly men. % ssém Y mo e ears The fake assessor wears his An SOS for civilian workers - sandy hair in a crew cut. needed at Ft. Benjamin Harrison By IRVING LEIBOWITZ | Since the legislature closed up - 'has been sent out by Civil Service. There are some lessons in state shop Monday night, the. Governor io " . government Gov, Schricker would has maintained a lonely sun-up te officials. like to teach the state legislature. sun-down vigil in his office. A total of 6700 civilian’ em- Trouble is, the Governor is not in| He sees only the people it is necessary to keep him abreast of developments. ' At 67, he“still is more active than younger men. : The Governor still has his big white hat, brisk walk and -a wide grin. - But. Hoosiers are seeing less of both. The Governor aps pears at public functions now oAly that the 87th General Assembly when protocol demands. amt General School, the Army Finance ¢.,.4 to Jive up to expectations. Wherever he goes now, one and Center and headqyahiers of the! my ore was a time. the Governor sometimes two strapping stats Military district, all y0,14 have reacted more vigor- policemen are at his side. In the lously against legislation he felt past, he drove to and from work, . |was “not in the public's interest.” appeared at public functions with to care for them at home. She 18 Catholic Theater Once when another Republican- out any aids. /the divorced mother of five other Guild Pl n Pl controlled state legislature tried] The Governor’s critics say he is children whom she lodges in a|~ ans riay to loot his office of its control, he attempting to run the state as his two bedroom house that is barely] The Catholic Theater Guild will out-slugged the General Assembly own private business, without letlarge enough for them. present “The Honest Shoemaker,” and set 5 the ofies of governor 0g the PUle now at le {| The other children are Dorothy, as one of unprecedented power. | . by C. B. Gilford, graduate of the Get Personal Attention [they point out that he appears at CatholicglUnjyersity of‘ America,| Today, he sits quietly in his few public functions, makes fewsr

and service businesses, many of them new since the war, face early suspension if not extinction because of their inability to get materials. + If their proprietors could pick up defense orders they could then obtain materials, or so they think, bit the orders elude most of them. Big. companies supply the larger proportion of what the government’s procurement offices buy, and in time they will have much subcontracting to do. But the small fellows fear they will be closed: out: by then and their 1dbor hired away.’ «This is the clue to part of thelers’ in have been.

Jones works in a laundry. Mar. 10 ahd 20 at the Athenaeum. office, surrounded by huge stacks talks than before and sees the tor. the fabricators of ajumi May Exhibit Twins Included in the cast are Tip Of papers and bills, giving each working newspapermen less than. Shortage of materials and sin: RUM. | mye babies, named Yvonne and| Since , the twins’ birth, Mrs. Williams, Len Quill, Bob Mellett, and every proposed law his per- €Ver. Cube ; ability to get defense orders form | A160%: Reynolds and Kaiser came yyette, need the constant spe- Jones has received frequent offers Jack Malloy, Charles Johnson, sonal attention. He has-the as-| Enthusiastic followers of Gov... the chi out of the war with vast raw cialized care of a doctor, nurses from theatrical representatives Fred Gesler, Bob. Scheller, Paul sistance of the Attorney General's Schricker picture the Governor as e chief burden of the heavy |aluminum capacities and they in- and, physical therapists, Normal who want to exhibit them. Until McCaslin, Janet Myers, Sher Lee Office in picking flaws in the bills./a “martyr,” devoted wholly to thy mail these days to the two small|,. ested a horde of concerns in in all other respects, the twins re- now, she has rejected. them. Cheeck, Theresa Roembke, Joan In addition, he has ‘assisting interests of the state of Indiana. business committees of Congress. making all sorts of new products, quire exercise in order to survive) But today, hospital spokesman Cleary and Margaret Clark. im a local attorney, James They say he works day and night. The Senate's committee headed window" fraines, blinds, awnings, 2nd only experts can admin. said, she wasn't so sure. They Lorraine Monnin is directing Northam, who has earned the on state matters, has little time by Sen. John J. Sparkman (D. siding, roofing, foils and so on. | "ra said she indicated she may rev; the play. reputation among Statehouse ob-|for himself and Ma familys al a. Og Ia The. Senpe itt ty.| They must be guarded con- consider if the offers are still {servers as the Governor's adviser. Some politicians still think Gow, al Iva re-establis as year | e na Sou ee estl-'stantly because a suddefi twist open. [J Stol |and confidant. ‘Schricker will run for public office. | | e House committee headed by mates that of 18,000 establish- or pody motion by one twin could! “I want my babies home with I UTS@ tolen The Governor's executive secre- again when his term as goverpor. Rep.» Wright Patman (D. Tex) Imema in this field, about 14,000 pring death to both. me,” she sobbed. “But I don't Mrs. Elizabeth Timmons, 1010 tary, Arthur Campbell, answers ends Jan. 1, 1953. gid has beeri in existence since theliill be cut off Apr. 1 by the or-| The county estimates it has know what to do. I feel some- 8. Belmont Ave, reported that telephone calls, early days of World War II. . y

from office to office, Aint ‘nancial situation. ever more bewildered. Especially sad is the outlook Need Constant Care

’ dé ) screens callers; But the Governor i 3 3 | of thé National Production cost $13,640 to feed and care for thing extra for them in my heart her purse, containing $12, was and acts as Hasion man between had enough. His family, The committees’ mail and call- Authority which suspends use of the twins since their birth. ‘and I want to give them the love snatched early this morning as the Governor and other state offi- and close associates say he large since aluminum in hundreds of articles. Mrs. Jones, 38, lacks fhe funds they need.” 'she was returning from work. |clals. ft. ig]

!

2. Sy Ligh

Fy Ane

Pike

. oe.

\ : : :

a