Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 169, Hammond, Lake County, 8 January 1918 — Page 4
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
noble landlords their itnt v.itho; families- wives anl chihlrtn. "IN
in iH.'p or. .;f.'.
The Tarrtics .' .!' ihi :v
BY "THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING t PUBLISHING ft re so ground by tax- ar.d i-sr.cU.T.. in rt at ihst tl.t COMPANY. : are iim.blo to provide v. :wa and c!- viih rxany The L,k. r,,,, T,,Z;r.J s.t;ItdSv mi:r ordinary Ocer.ci.s of l,.,aio. cuci h-Si ai.y o.
m ;iit- poatoffva in jiammon-i, June j the thousand anil wii' comforts and coir, en'.ences of the ! A : . ,
I rii!eB'e.-!nl!ana Harbor, rfa'r eseept , Aiurm-sn i armor s jiOJae.
The peasant farmer often can neither read nor write;
UiUTlSU SOCIAL LEADER DOES HER BIT FOR WAR J777 RELIEF UAvAARS
Entei ,i
,e post office
Eat llM'-MO, N"o
S::nd v. ? T.tOX
"inv. l'.:tTf-.i at t "inLio- I;! is
The Lake Countv Times Saturdai and Weakly Edition, '-nte-ed t (he nostofflce In Hammond. February 4. 19U. i h Gary Kn:ns Tlnifj-l'n'H' evcpt Sunday. Entered at the rinir.f !'.,- in in rv, Apr'. I 1.1. tall. A!! un,lr the net ,.f Mat oh .1 1S.':, a !ipfon'1-c!si 'iin'tr,
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4 J.' Zx
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Government Regulation Solution of th Labor Problem During War
i Rector 15ui;.i.nc.
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. '.n:"R i. I n 1 irnea ndiana Harbor i'w) Healer Ind'ann Hirh.ir t Report or mM iv hi t In b "t -iv. n i,,t,! . . . '. '
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T!phv t S42-1t Tph,m IIS TV,-h?n ': A.lv.t. . T! fi!:in .'!; l'elf-phonfl 80-M 'i oiephonr j
Larger Paid Up Circulation Than Any Two Othar Papers in the Calumet Region. 'f yi'i lv a:;y troub'.o The Tune make cowi'.'.rit !:ut'.,l;ti'iy t.i the ; ula'.ion tlepa-tniant. Tit- ; ;mrs win not t. rcfivms-hiH : th return o "ly vuis'i ni a rt!! . or ti-'.tfi.- v.1 v. ill n not !?e anonv;ino':. rtjmmin'lort!'. ?iirt j'nf l i'.tv. .if s.iierI :rter!t pr'ti;.! t 1t.irrt - on.
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; his wife can neither lead nor write. They are too busy In ilu field? working that tho noblemen may receive thefr ; rents end live in luxurious laziness In Vienna ami ! r.udanp. - v Thes. same nob!ensen were instrunifiital in starting j the Kuropean war. President V"il5on r short t;tne a?o j , siusested that the Cnited Sta.'r? inrludo Austria anions i her enemies, nnd eoneres declared war ascainst that ! i country. Tho United States is fighting (Germany and j
Ausltia or tho ruling classes of those countries- -"be-i cuuse they are a menace to ci viiifation." '
The picture in the magarine -liows one way in i which they are a menace to ci vilir.at ion - our civilize- ; tion. at least. ', Over there the woaieti till the soil ami fel the-J . armi'-s of the etnpiie while the soldiers hurl xplosSes i and poison gas at America-, sons who have been sent i abroad to sea that centra! Kuropean standards of liv-j ;ng are not introduced into America by ?ome conquer-i ing kaiser either a VVilhelm or a Carl. This form of i so-called civilization must and can be defeated, and Uiej American farmer can strike his blow apains-t. it. by lend- i mft his morjey tfthe government for use in the war for' real civilization. !
TAKE IT EASY.
PALESTINE A DISAPPOINTMENT.
I ese ar- das that try men's souls, bir alter all; Whatever stlrrin; tales of history, bold romances of in which we should learn patience and cultivate the sen-1 the bible and religious sentiment attaches Io the Hly;tle are of making the "best of things. If we will only t I.snd, its redemption from the clutches of the Turks and j remember that it is far better to have our cold and! 'Jertnans draws attention to its physical characters- j stormy weather now rather than have it in May and1 tics.t Zionists may hope of there colonizing a great mass J June, perhaps it will make- the snowless unpleasaut. of the Jewish people, but It is hardly probable that in j It is hard to be philosophically tempered when con-' this material age of commerce and industry that a great , fionted with abnormal weather conditions, but we ruust ! power will ever be set down in Solomon's land. j think how much better it. is to have the coid kill off ihe' Palestine is about as large as our New Jersey. Yet j disease germs, rather than have sloppy, slushy days.! i' Is a country of valleys, mountains, and devoid of grass. We should think of the grand winter wheat, crop the I It possesses no Industries and there is no great trade j snow will make. We should think of the winter stocks ! !
'here. In historical and biblical lore it is immensely I the merchants have to sell. These and a hundred other ' ith I things should make us thankful for the snow, it won't Were one to be in this land he might recast in iotas- i last lung. Pe cheerful, ination, did he know his bible history, some of the im-'
pressive scenes that have been staged there and picture in th actual spot the characters who live in the hook , of the Holy W"rit. But as a plain, cold-fact business prop
osition even the snrewrjest merchants or toe Keenest ot
'1
- ".f :- J US'? .Vl.2f .: t. J : -. I f sV,V - sit- . s ir!L . -1 . , w V -A- J ' ' '
By ANGUS McSWEEJ
Lady Enid Vane. Lady Enid Vane, wife of Major Hon. Henry Cecil Van of the York, fchire Hussars yeomanry, has ben instrumental in raising thousands ot pounds for relief and comfort of the soldiers by charity bazaars and 'J.r entertainments.
Government action, incIldiIlg the formation of a definite labor policy to be fldherefl to for the feriorl of the -war is iieceg?arj to solve the labor problem. This problem is now the most intricate and troublesome vith -wh-i oh the nation is confronted. I-abor ehortage is hampering preparations in a'! directions. It ie preventing the effective carrying out of the shipbuildingplans of the government, reducing the output of munitions and ekrwitjr down the production of coal and other necessary materials. - Labor is fighting for an extension of unionism. So far as this yr- -vides only for the belter organization of skilled and unskilled labor, it bathe sympathetic support of the government. Capital is demanding not the abolition of the organization but th
suspension of organization rule? -which restrict production, j Frcrn the standpoint of governmental and public welfare it wou' 1 j seem to be necessary that both capital and labor should make concession, j and that until thep concessions &t made the difficulties under wh'ich the
nation is now struggling will continue. Regulations, have ben adopted by which highly skilled men wiU be cicmpted from the second army draft. This is expected to aid in keeping the production of necessary industries at a high mark. ft will, however, only slightly affect for the better the generally re -egnired shortage of skilled labor in all industries and it will not contribute except in the slightest degree to the solution of the problem of increasing at once the supply and efficiency of labor. It is in connection with this latter proposition that the fight between labor and capital becomes a serious obstruction to the betterment of gei;. eral conditions. So long as capital opposes an extension of the organization of labor, labor is not likely to make any concession, respecting the suspension of union rules. Hence the necessity of forcing both sides to make concession? and this can only be done by the government.
HOG ISLAND.
When the government expended $3T5.0".0'i to build the Panama canal, a project of construction that took sev-
tndustrial capitalist would find little to stir them. Fbr ; ,va,a "u "l Sl"u'!' w' "" men aT lue ruest
pusn. u wes thought to be a vast expenditure. Similarly, when the stel trust, had spent f 100,000,000 at Gary, creating a town and steel mills in what was a wilderness, the feat was accounted a seven-day wonder. Yet. the International Shipbuilding company is spend-
I 1 t" tW
1 L.
'he student of literature anil history and therefore of the scripture, his blood would thrill. Perhaps if may be done with varying success, but we fail to see how in this practical age folks are going to get hard-headed Jewish colonists to begin life anew in a country that is rich only in what it was in the storied past.
. 't i-iii,.i.i.iiaiiMi. m 'iiraiOniT il i6,'-.t.ijfi''n'""MJ' '" rni
I V ft wonder Jti cur own ar!les way j i ii v. .. ;
and let us "pet" that musket over there! t the gat of a German ccmeter
Let us get up a siantic petition if we j cago with the folio win
THAT DAUGHTER OF YOURS. She's a little bit of a ftirl now. Maybe she's just learning to creep a little and lisp a few'words that nobody can understand tut you and her mother. Perhaps she has just started to go to school. At any rate, her w?nts; are few and simple as yet. Put she is learning to want more all the time. Py-acd-by she will need nice dresses, a hish school, and perhaps a college education. If she's at all musically inclined she will want a piano and many le?sons on P. If you are a wise, forward-looking father you will bogm tday to save for the Increasing needs of your crowing daughter. If you have more than one daughter, if your quiver is full of them," your responsibility is proportionately greater. A Philadelphia rchool girl asked permission to quit ' hooi and co ta work. She said her father had been xilled. her mother was ill, and her brother. on half pay, o she had 'o help ,-upport the family. Might a series of misfortunes pu' YOUR daughter into a similar position? Or is your life insured, and are you building a bulwark of savings at the bank to protect her from such a possibility? This is frankly a sermon, hut it j short, and we t rust , as sweet ash's text.
ina: $27:..000,00 erecting a shipyard at Hog Island in the Delaware liver, near Philadelphia. . It will he a place where fifty ships tan he built simultaneously and where around 40,000 men will work. A few years back a $2T5,O.Vi,oor. project in America would have created a great sensation. Today it hardly causes a ripple. True the Hog Island project, when compared with the Gary project, is not so big in dollars, for the first fSO,O0O.O0fi spent at. Gary would represent $:'0O,000,000 or more today. Then material was cheaper, common labor was paid all tb' way from $1.2 3 to $2.04 and by a vigorous repression of labor unions skilled labor was had at what would now be called a ridiculous price. Today whether an industry j unionized or not it must pay pretty good wages. Yet ?27.'..oriO "(to for the Hog Ish.nd project is a whole lot of money, hut such is the value of the dollar now days that it attracts little attention.
M.O.N.; comes somebody
can save one soldier by speeding- up. 1 up.
It's worth trying: And ask th govern- j mailt to take over that car lne and i
i run ears enough and fast enough to Bt i
; all the time and efficiency from every j man employed on munitions In this tegi ion. i Patriotic ladiest You have done a -lot
' already but assist in this. I'atrioti': menj You have done a lot. but please do more, i And in conclusion. Mayor Brown, inha i vite and encourage men with trucks to
i;i Chi-
car-tion. "Ynl
you stiffs, your country nc? you JJLL. WOOD WA S HI NtiTON . CDi Towlo St., Hammond. Itii.
WHO tells us what a dark pas
j has and that makes us like him all the I fit up for carrying- passengers until the
better. ; street car company wakes up to their
THAT every time a man gets man KJ ,., ! responsibility, or w e make the move after the second he shows t 1 1 J t tiue cui.ure ! suggested.
'.LiUlAM punctured n;r Haary ew ( Yours truly. Years with ' fill w. Siblfv .t. BERT WILHEUI.
PICKIXG a wife, when he has reached ... . , , ! s-QLIIITs of liquid lire. , ; : THE age of 60? ,.,... t THAT PROHIBITION- AMENDMENT.
OTHER people have rTbtked
I.K5S and less sense
AYE pointed out to the w iff will, serious and sober conn' cnnnce
Y .ST IJ Ft DA Y that an Illm.-.u venter
a
ITALIAN' alum mine owner whoi -"ants an American representative '
XN XIOAKS TO MZZiX. Lotavi;!e, Ind., Jan. '. Ed.lor Times:
i L,verybj is interested :n something 1 . r. J - V.,J.. ....
wv. , nil, a ....i. t ti . uyu,. ,3 iu.li .SI'' J in the high cost or something to cat s the present time. There noth'.tis very strar.ge about the h i g"i i cost of foiikthing to eat. As everything is produc?d by l8bor and labcr costs about four times what it used to, so it costs about f'ur times as much to produce a bushel of potatoes or a quart of milk, as it did when men would work 12 hours a day for $1.00 and Co more work than you can get done now for $4.00. If people in towns are getting btg wages we farmers have got to pay tig wage"
i
an i to get workers, and if we don't get
WHERE WAS MR. HOOVER?
the i
A LESSON IN A PICTURE. There lies on the editor s desk a magazine with a picture in P that ouaht to be seen by every farmer in America. There is shon a bleak countrywide with two women plowing. One of the women is leading two lean horses, while the other is guiding an antiquated implement. Because ali the able-bodied men are at .war. these women of Galicia are tilling the field?. And they seem to be tilling theYn tvoll. Their broad backs and weatherlanned faces show they ate used to the rough outdoor toil. And yet, to us here in the central west, the picture somehow is no? p'ea?an'. There was a i;nie m the pioneer period of the United States when our great grandmothers did sometimes guide the plow. There even may be seen today a woman occasionally guiding the plow.- Hut social standards have itsen in the rural communities, and the self-respecting, up-to-date farmer will not permit, his women folk to get into the fields and do rough work. It is understood pretty generally nowadays ihat the women should he permitted to stay around the house and should b given every convenience and comfort that the market, can provide. Thousands of labor-saving
devices are being sold every y ear in our farming com-!
munmes. Americas tarmers do not. intend that their vives and daughters shall be subjected to the toil and danger met wPh in the fields. And this is right. It. means we ate a civilised nation, for civilized nat ions respect their women. j There is a lesson in the picture. Galicia is a prov-' tnce of Austria. The women there work in the fields i even in times of peace, because it js jnipossib'e fo- iheir
Tlie editor of the Jackson Standard makes ail
re?t of us jealous when he says: "We dined this evening with Mr. and Mrs. Arch Martin and will remember for a long time the toothsome and beautiful spread, perfect beans, the sweetest spring chicken and home made ham, ami the freshest vegetables of IflT's vintage daintily prepared for the table. There
were Jellies, cakes, applie pies and many other things.! not the least of which was honey from A. I. Eubank's ' bee garden. Some people boast of various accomplish-; ments of rtusic and literature, but 'this dinner was finer j
" i jjiviui m s'ui me or an epic, and until one can appreciate such a dinner they are not Qualified 1
to estimate any of the other,things named.
DROPPED dead while JfHOYELlNt.; ya! into the BL"T she refused M t.'ik'. with the gentle COMEBACK that ' every h you 'it XOT an inicutor." THINK of the suffering Ot" those guys out in Eos
WHO were overcome bj f
AND be happy. NOT beir.g allowed to throw an at weddings and HAYING worn out all our olu WE plaintively rise to inqutrWHAT jhall we do about it'.'
SHOULD
bad t line ! 1'olt astringents ; EVERYTHING around
i ii run ccthe h'.ra ly knows
Angeles
lie ifal
ns tight as a drum soon, WE have no fear for
Editor TIMES:
iear ?ir; cuhki??3 ues i - -- i
remember that this is a amendment for national prohibition to workers to raise the crops you fellows , be placed before the legislatures of the I in town could not get enough to cat if
various states ani snouia jo iifft'-j - i "vircj, thirls) of thn adopt it thvn it would! In regard to the high cost of living, her will fc be-ome a ia .Ie facto. ?ui-i-iwis thi f-.? fi.st thing the town people go to 1 tv.itnwirxr fates throurh their leKis-! kicking on is eggs, butter and milk.
GEttMANY after the war and refu'e
J i-uuies should adopt it: Alabama. Ari-j Any food is high or low m cost only in ; zn3. Arki.asa.t. Col ira ; , .' n.vrticnt. ; .to.np-.risn w :.h other foods cf similar Delaware, Florida. eor!. Jdah", i i:tur. Kggs atid butter are high com-
t feel sorry v a v
for he:
KOU sh w ill be turning out COP SET steel" and su5pcnder tons and things anil
MAKING as much money AS ever w hen hostilities cease. WE would like to be in Dallas AND be invited to one of THOSE possum-and-ta ters dinners A ITU corn pone oti the side.
in a post-bellum '''Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota. ' Mississippi, Montana. Nebraska. Ne-
; vnda. New Hampshire, New Mexico, i North Dakota, North Carolina, Okla-but-ihoma. Oregon. Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota. Tennessee. ' Texas. Utah, Vermont, Virginia., "Wash-
I
J EST about the time that
gt to liking sc'nebody
WE well
pi city
lngtcri. west lrgima, Wisconsin ana
j Wyt'rtiing OS; this would be unfair 1 proposition because these states at the ; last presidential election cast barely : r.noo.eoo votes out of l$.r0,000: of
these at a normal legislative election
only about one-half the votes would le east, say about 4.000.0(PO and there are oVwut mineo nort rorle in the Enited
SOME men dress up on Sunday jmt Sinx Do you think it fair that four BY putting on a plain tie million people should force anything
upon j'in.ui.i'i.oiiij people wnicn iiiey iiav not desire? In Germany one mil-
INSTEAD ot
LOUD one.
WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?
Secretary Eaker"? prompt assumption of responsibility for the delay in supplying the army with guns seems to
have been made with a sort of " what-are-you-going to -do- ! ABout the stxeet car service. about-it air. And the chances are that nothing can be 1 Hammond, ind.. .tan. 7. ion. done about it. Comparisons, however, are always in or-!lP,or TIMES: dr The SnanUh war laslprt onlv a fr-w wnnt),. -r.,1 .Ja i r'r-ar Allow J-'.e a little space to
Voice of the People
lien Germans forced that country into j war without the consent of 6n.eo J.OOO underlines, was that fair? I hope this ! country gets the Kaiser and the one j million followers beMr.d him before they stop. While I -believe in temperance ! yet am opposed to prohibition and all ' other like fads which tend to weaken
the stability of this country. No court- j
pared with other fods, but milk costs less than most other common foods and is more healthful than most foods and besides in itself Is a perfect food. At this time a good housewife is geirgr to know something about the nutrative value of the food she buys and make her purchases accordingly and according to the table I am going to giv here she will never fall to have a good supply of milk, and I believe this tabl is perfectly correct: If porterhouse steak is worth C12c per lb., milk per quart. 21c. If round steak is worth ZZc per lb. milk per quart. -Oc. If hamburger steak is worth 2o: ler lb., milk per quart, 19c. If eggs are worth 43c p-er dcz., milk per quart. Site. If broiler chicken is worth 33c l"f lb., rniik per quart. 50c. If fat fowl is worth SSc rer lb., mitts: per quart, IlSe. ti fat turkev ja worth 00c per !h, milk per quart. 'ic. If white fish is worth 20c per lb., milk per quart "C"-. If solid oysters are worth Cd'c lr
try is stronger than its weakest a' ts.j quart, muk per Quart, se. ' Lor e n.av' the United States exist and 1 1 If ham in worth 40c per lb
am ready to serve it in any way
it ! quart,
If cheese j-. worth per quart. 1"c
a result ot 'tie nenoencies then developed. Secretary
Alger was forced to resign his portfolio. It. is eighteen; on
months since congress appropriated money for the machine guns which our army will not receive until next April: and we have been nine months at war. Plain!-.
voice in)' feelings, as rr as the feel-!
'lings of thousands of Hatnm.T.d people j fr strer cir lines economize en tram
the standards of judgment w bi'-h prevailed in ITOS are
not operative cow.
he street car service Kien ii"
the Green Line, or all the public u
ties in the region, this service is the most unsatisfactory and WE MUST HAVE BETTER SERVICE: The reason for poor service is a prob-
' lem to the man in the street. Thre
i jeevi! to be m effort made to snppr-' I sufficient cars for workTS. in j-mng to OE effect of the high cost of highballs and kind- ' or from work, and. alMiourh th Standred drinks is to decrease consumption and derrease tb ! rd has Left) n.ero men on Its payroll
incomes of thos dealing i;i t l'.i-ni. That is a. st?p
temperance. Dut are condition wb'eh
menl's thoughts.
At any rate, the public is far f rom : needs rne VtOIti" hfdnlue All i -n a A. i t ae cti-nnn - '
our, action, and we will get the service, j In the Michigan City mayoralty! lr cnese, ,s tv, -, o r,i,f ..-.,,1 v. t i,i,, tii. ciini. r,f Afiitri'h.. milk per quart, be.
WOU.'I .UtV-t? 111,11. Vt UIC f'l i.aiiiuiv I of the constitution of the United States j which reads. "Insure domestic tran-1 quiliiy." The preatnble in f ill is asj follows: "We, the reople of the Unite! i
miiK per
Oc prr lb., iri'.k worth i;c rcr
by (crews ami cars, but nevr r'.n rctamerp. i'i-I and corpora t ion attorneys and the war
w ould b" c". or ami we still walking- if
we i to ltfw.
tov
i prohibitive for the poor and
the well-to-do exactly ide;i!
make drinking
"icrely more exj.'-ns'v- ; -ondition of iirohibltion?
thsn m 'illy, tb ' o are no fi'i.' car
''C ! rv,..- I.,f . &t-i,i ortrr-
('1i,:'it-i uknii Minium . ,i,
-vice even than there wis tine. . Th:" ice i,p . ause.j 1 . pewcr. I.-O'U of finance, or lack
it may be thnt the old
I public be dnrr r.ed" i-
t' snail not iu.-s a;iotii mo ice supply tor Ttl.l0r it may be that it pays better to have summer unless we hear that the price is to be raised ! 15" passengers check nainst one tram because the ice is too thick to cut. crews time-rather sirpl:- " a a extra
crew and give a tired man or lady witn :
1 a baby in her arms s seat: cr. it. may perhaps .:.(
llOWEVETt. the only way to win the war is to fight. , be that a little friendship for German ; manager. j kultur works in between the manage- The last musket
Now there are hundreds and later will i States, in order to form a more perfect I be thousands of patrons of that line union, establish justice, insure domestic! that wit! be working for Uncle Sam. ! tranquility, provide for the common de-j
To win the war it is as necessary to fer.se. promote the general welfare, and hae men pn the. job as it is to iave j secure the blessings cf liberty to ourmalerjsls on the jc. Surpese. for ex- t selves and our posterity, do ordain and amp!', sor-i plant on t be line was 1 o J s;(. Hish this c-'ist i t u i ion for th T'r.i'.ha e .i ci itiiii amount of liiun.tjons on ed States of America." Though ft is
tudy the compariseii- atifl
then buy plenty of milk and help ;euibon.e producers a; you know the greater lart of Lake county is producing milk. SAM B. l0 I "'.
Make It The Last War.
For Burning Eczema
on j ed
the. j ound in Fiance in 1Ai otivs, but i hold that the presmb'e is net an inde- ;
Greasy salves and ointments should rot
I T I 1 1 l - . j
at tha its in. n tot , r er ecu' ot tneir time on ' pendent source ot power to the le.ierai - w -nuinu.
la k oi' no'ii..it ." she t.jcen Line beine late, or f uthoritK, yet it l a ' a dr t ni'e weight i
f cars ; Is; re, ar rhoi-tage, nd the mimit ion ' and is an essential part of the constiiu-
llieory of "the1 did not Ret on the firing line for 105! tir.n itself, being to it what tho enacting
t the throt tic. day s, aiUl on the one-hundredth di a ! clause is to an ordinary law. Any state!
days, aitd on the one-hundredth day a g-M-at buttle started, the lack of that material might cost J.OOo or Hi.ooo lives, or. might even cost the defeat of the
whole Mt'iiiy,
while the ?alng would be per day to the street car
a i w a v s wins
war.
can make an alien a state citizen, but to become a United States c:ti.en, to vote. etc . they must first became naturaiizel according to the laws of the United States.
Some wag plated a large Sign over
F-cra any druggist for 35c, or $1.00 tor
extra large size, get a bottle cf zemo. When applied as directed it effectively removes eczema, quickly stops itching, and heals skin troubles, also sores, burns, wounds and charing. It penetrates, cleanses and soothes. Zemo is a clean, depenrtamv and inexpensive, penetrating, antiseptic liquid. Try it. as we believe nothing you have ever used is as effective and satisfying. The E.W. Rose Co., Cleveland, O.
PETF.Y DIXK Looks Like Henrietta Js Kidding- Us
By C. A. VOIGHT
w
f OH WH. AREWj't W ) I Al Oil- lllF-iw " 1 T" v
' .-wpji t- i i v. x r C it; t ,
.
ii ztf- - n ,t . fr a - .... - wsMnrnjp
ii i . , nc.t- t a a i i ii i i Mill r,Ar ir ,;Aor Ai.r i . j iMvia iz s
) I iff AT us- keep m WWW X n:r--ZZZr W.lf ... V
in . . .1 1 fSiT no or-w AJ V I , , . - f '-'s'rs. IJf llfif. fit . V
H
"BET
They Tmikj
of rRoresstowAvs
y& i
