Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 2A, Ligonier, Noble County, 6 March 1922 — Page 3

!v:& : : : 1 AT | BN ))| e FI AN TN AP = =G t , éfii?l" ?I%‘*@ £ "‘"‘W‘“f‘éj Fos = IRy G ’ . “Give Me a Winchester Tool - I . | | Every Ilime =~ - Men who make their living by their skill with tools find Winchester Tools special refinements of design, niceties in finish, sturdy construction. They gmduce more and better work at the end of the ay. o . | Vel For the skilled mechanic or the “handy man” Winchester tools are made to save his time and temper. - o |

|- - : ‘ An‘e ‘ - ; - Winchester Nail fiammer-——Forg-ed from crucible steel. Perfect hang and balance. Claws will grip and pull a headless nail. Patented . “interlocking” wedge preveuis head working loose. : e T ) Winchester Screw Drivers—/Bladesof one piece of chrome steel. Held firmly in handles by: special “lug and motch™ con{,—» struction. Made to stand up uunder hardest use. -

- Other Winchester Tools of Exceptional Service ~ Nail Hammers, Wrenches, Auger Bits, . Saws, Pliers, Files, Etc. WEIR & COWLEY Established in 1864 Phone No. 67 wHe WINELHTESTER sToRrE Sl

Auctioneer Will Answer Calls Anyvhere - Phone 16000 Q Ligonier ~ Indiana Mrs. Ehzabeth L.emb Elecfi-ical Fficial ahd Scalp Massage Manicuring, Shampooing . Hair Tinting and Hair Dressing Marinello Tollet Preparations - Hair Goods - - GLASSES Accurately and Scientifically Fitted. Broken lenses replaced. - Mrs. L. P. Wineburg

T.H. AMELING Ligonier, Indiana . ~_ /PHONE 338 ' General Contractor ~and Builder ~ Estimates Furnished “All Kinds of Repair ' Work Done

LEARN TO _ DANCE All 'Latest Steps Taught Tuesdayjand./ Thursday} Evenings Regular Meeting Nights |;, - Arnold Elson Phone 18, Ligonier

For Sale—good little house. Inquire ot E. D. Smith, Pl latf

Winchester Slip Joint Pliers— Accurately fitting joints in position to give greatest leverage. Sharply milled teeth that grip zmg hold. Several sizes -and patterns for the mechanic or the automobile owner. . < ] <T=ma "‘v"in(‘}zofitél’j Chisel—Made from .a _solid piece of crucible steel from tip of blade through the socket. hickory handles, leather capped. Assortment of patterns and blade 2 - ¢ _ widths. r

_ IR . R\, J/ K ‘ ‘A k ' :2; . 1 %@ e | ://‘;I;I : & i ey ; i LX< N : Bein’ a dog wouldn't be so bad If it didn't have to lead a human being around with a string. :

Overdid the Part.

There is one smart Chinaman staying now perforce in northern Mexico who, but for a slight error, would be enjoying a residence in the United States. Arrested for attempting to enter illegally via the Mexican border, he tried to palm himself off before the conrt, according to United States Commissioner A, J. W. Schmid at El Paso, Tex., as an old resident of Seattle. So well had he been coached In the part that the federal attorneys could pick no flaw in his apparent knowledge of Seattle, names and places. In desper‘ation, the prosecution finally asked if he had ever known Julins Caesar up there. .Yes, the Chinaman had heard of him-often. Did he remember Mark Antony, and how he acted as state's witness at the trial of Caesar’s murderers? Yes, he remembered Anthony well, and the murder, too, and was only a little hazy in his mind about the trial. Ten minutes later he was on a Mexican bound trolley.—New York Evening Post. '

$60,000 for Cats.

Cats all 6ver the world will benefit from the $60,000 obtained by the sale of the Ewen homestead, in New York, writes a correspondent. The lady, Migs Caroline Ewen, who o¢cupled the house for years with her two sisters, had a passion for caring for cats. It was her dream that every cat should have plenty of catnip, and a comfortable backyard fence to play on. -She devoted her life to establishing sanatoriums and relief organizations for stray cats and when she died she left all her estate, except 8500, for carrying on her work. She cut off her two sisters in~her will because they were not sufficiently enthiusiastic about cats, The money for rescuing the cat populatlon of the world became available when ber nephew recently settled his consent to her will out of court. > Hard Bleeper. . Hill—ls Dill an experienced traveler, ~ Mill-—I should say he Is. _He's got to the point now where the guard has 8 terribje time waking bhim up when the train gets to it destination—Lon-

LYCURGUS DID NOT “BELONG”

Old Gentieman Wrong in Classing Him as One of Seven Wise Men : of Greece. :

The seven wise men of Greece, whose names and sayings have come down-to us from antiquity, have been distinctly secondary in renown recently to the several score wise men of the nations gathered here in the conference on the limitation of armaments,~ : But the anclent wise men are not forgotten. Here and there are men who treasure the sayings which those worthies handed down to us. They are keen on the proper prenunciation of their names, and know to a degree in which Greclan state they lived. One of these scholars came In last week to settle a dispute, says the Washington Star. Several of . his friends, in whom the flne flower of learning had not withered ‘any more than it had in him, were disputing about th®se seven wise men of Greece. “They could only think of six,” declared the gentleman, nodding his white head. “I sald the seventii was Lycurgus. Am I right?” : y “The seven wise men of Greece, not having figured In the news for a few years, it was no easy task to locate them. But a fat volume finally gave them up—and Lycurgus was not in the list, : Bias, Ohilo, Cleobulos, Pittacos, Solon, Thales and Periander were the seven wise men. Everybody remembers Solon as the man who got off that really tremendous saying “Know thyself.,” OCleobulos i 8 credited with a good one too., “Ayold extremes.” This latter is the famous “golden mean” of Hpicurus. R : “And to think I would have put Lycurgus in that list!” exclaimed the old gentleman., = ;

VAST TREASURE WAITS FINDER

Hidden Somewhere In the Sudan Desert Is. Osman Digna's Store . of Gold and lvory.

In my travels, when a young girl in Bgypt and later In the Sudan, in Ismailia, I met with a woman who had fled from the Sudan during the war with the British. ' She was related to the once famous Osman Digna, the mahdi’'s general and most trusted friend. . She related the following, which I translate: = : Every year Osman Digna used to take 50 Sudanese men and load them up with ivory, goid-and precious stones which the mahdi obtained from traders from the Congo. He led these men in a march which lasted three days into the wilds of Khartoum, to a mountain where was his cache. When everything was. put in safely, they ‘start%d off to return, but halfway another trusted man, named Mahomoud, met Osman Digna with & hundred.men, who killed everyone of the men used to carry the valuables. When that deed was done they returned to the mahdi, walting for the next. year’s caravan. 7 Osman Digna consequently was the only man who knew the cache. When taken prisoner he was offered a large sum of money to conduct a party to the place but he absolutely refused to speak. The last I l3&111‘(1 of him he was still lingering in prisen in Cairo nearly blind and insane.—Montreal Famlly Herald. ; <

For Twenty-Seven Cents.

An unforeseen interruption of travel occurred on the West side elevated railroad one morning Igst week. A ghort, somewhat stout, middle-aged woman ambling her way to the downtown platform at Ninety-third street dropped her purse, as well as her ticket, -in the box. The son of BErin whose speclal duty it is to see that tickets are dropped in the box trled to extricate the purse with a wire. He failed and then the woman wanted to try. The ticket seller was called out. Potential passengers were held up. A crowd collected. Varlegated remarks enlivened the occasion. Finally a mechanic was summoned. He took the top off the box and recovered the purse. It contained 27 cents. Travel had been delayed almost an hour.—New York Sun, :

Church Treasure Recovered.

An Italian 'ice cream dealer in at-' tempting to dispose of a solid silver cross for $60,000 in Glasgow disclosed: the whereabouts of a Thirteenth cen-| tury church ornament worth $500,000 whieh disappeared several years ago from the Church of Borgo Collefagato, near Agquila, Italy. The evidence presented in court was’to the effect that the cross was one of the. most valuable antiquities of Italy, and was thought to have been smuggledout of the country by an art collector. The ice cream vendor’s effort to sell it at a $60,000 figure arouséd the susplclons of an antiquirian because of its greater intrinsic worth. The Italian contended that it has been in the possession of his family for genera-’ tions, that it had been lost in the~ earthquake at Messina and “had been recovered by him from the ruins.

“pPerfect 36” Is No More.

The perfect 88 bust is no ‘more, writes a sartorial correspondent. In the days of her prime, before flappers owned their own clgarettes, she flourished. Now she 1s gone, forever, In her place is the willowy creatyre with a figure like a twelve-year-old boy and dresses that are suspended from sharp. shoulders. The fashionable. figure now, is smaller than the 36, more undeveloped. The stylish girl accentuates this thin, wispy sppearamce. . CHARLES V'INKS AND SON . ; G NcaDesleE R ‘Monuments, Vaults, ‘'Tombstones, -

LIGONTER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANE.

SHOULD EAT MORE CABBAGE

Diet Experts of Corneli’s Cellegs of . ‘Agriculture Recommend tas . . Article of Agriculture,.

. Experts at Cornell’s college of agriculture at Ithaca, N. Y., urge a wider use, of cab'bage‘, asserting ‘that this suqzulent vegetq‘ble should be more generally included in thé diet. It is rich in iron and other mineral salts and contains a' small amount of growth-promoting substance. Cabbage Is eaten much more by the Spanish, French and Italian races than by Americans, largely because Americans do not know how to cook it, it is contended. ' : : “Cabbage,” says a statement from the college of agriculture “plunged into bolling salted wdter, and cooked uncovered for 20 minutes, no longer, will be a dellcate light green color, tender and easily digested. Long cookfng, in a tightly-covered kettle, produces a dark, brownish mess in which chemical changes have taken place that make it almost indigestible. . “Food specialists at Cornell suggest bolled cabbage served with lamb, mutton or beef, escalloped cabbage with cheese sauce, fried cabbage with mineced onion, cabbage cooked in milk and water, or baked with hamburg or frankfurters,~lady cabbage, sweet or sour cabbage, or filled cabbages. Reclpes for these dishes are found in most cook books. - “For salads, cabbage gives an almost endless varlety; with apple and onion, or with onion, celery or caraway seed, with green peppers, tomatoes, carrots, salmon, shrimp or even - pineapple shredded cabbage makes an excellent combination. In general, cabbage salads are hest served with a bolled dressing.” B

-MAY BE BONES OF PRIESTESS

Bkeleton Found Near Smoking Crater of Kilauea Believed to Be Last - " of Her Order. :

The skeleton of a woman, belleved that of the last of the priestesses of the Hawalian fire goddess Pele, whose' traditional home was in the Kilauea volcano on the island Hawall was found recently in a carefully prepared ¢rypt not far from the smoking crater. ~ The tomb was found in the western sector of the main wall of the great outer crater of Kilauea, where once stood a great temple . dedicated to Hiiake, the sister of the goddess Pele. Nothing now remains of this temple. The last. occaslon upon which it appeared in history was when it was visited by the Princess Kaplolanl in 1824, when the royal Hawaiian Christian journeyed to the volcano for the purpose_of uttering: deflance to Pele. The journey formed the motif of one of Alfred Lord Tennyson’s poems. Local tradition says that the princess was met at the crater rim by a haggard priestess—the last of her line —who came from her abode in the ruined temple near by and made one last attempt to overawe the*princess and to appeal to her fear of the supernatural. : e . The tomb, belleved to be that of this priestess, was discovered immedigtely below the site of the temple. The position of the bores indicated that she had been buried in a sitting position, ~with her back propped ‘against the wall, with her head placed so that her sightless eyes were in line with a small orifice immediately in front of her and in a direct line with the mile-distant fire pit of the volcane.

* Fear Extinction of Chamels. - Extinction of chamois in the mountains of Savoy in Italy and Switzerland, is threatened, just as the buffalo disappeared from the western American prairies, and animal lovers there are preparing to petition their governments, demanding the protection of the chamois. An investigation of the Grenoble district showed that the war was responsible for the new devastation of the chamois. Before the war only a few mountaineers took out hunting lcenses. In fact, compara‘tively few of them could bear the expense of buying a good rifie. After the armistice, however, thousands of veterans returning to the Savoy mountains took with them rifies and good supplies of ammunition, which proved useful in combating the Increasing cost of living. So general has hunting now. become in the . mountains that departmental officials say that unless these nimble animals are protected for at least two years they will become extinct inside of 20 years, =

Holds Blue Ribbon of Atlantle.

| The Mauretania ig still the greatest l of all Atlantic flyers, and she stfll: holds the blue ribbon. She has made the North Atlantic crossing (westbound) in four days, ten hours, 41 minutes, at an average speed of 28.06 knots per hour. During the war she averaged 27.04 knots: per hour in a day’s run of 676 kpots, and has also, for part of a voyage, averaged the f high speed of 27.47 knots. A few days 1;&30’ the Cunard liner Aquitania made the passdge in five days, 16 hours and 57 minutes, which is the best time made by any trans-Atlantic steamer since the war, while the White Star steamer Olympiec made the trip in - five days, 18 hours and 18 minutes. { - Not Wholly Ungelfish. She—Does -the fact that I have money mdke any differénce to you, GERreBLY v ent st .. He—Of course it does, my own, It is such a comfort to know that if I should dle you would be provided for. - She—But suppose 1 should die first? | -~ He—Then I would be provided for. { SCALP TREATMENT | * Shampooing and Manicuring - - RO e e IS b e e R Dr. Gants Residence; One Door South

QUEER “HUMOR” AT WEDDINGS

Ordeals Undergone by Bridegrooms in Some Parts of ‘Scotland and in -+ Old Austria,

In parts of the Scottish highlands there has long been in practice a ceremony called “creeling the bridegroom.” After a ,marriage friends take the bridegroom in hand. They tie on his back a creel or basket and fill it with stones. Then he is forced to walk with his heavy burden through the entire community, followed by men to see that he does not drop the creel, even for an instant. The bride can ransom him by coming out on the street and kissing him in publie, but if she is a shy person the bridegroom must make the full rounds with his basket of stones. The ordeal is made worse for the man because the conductor of the ceremony is the last person previously married, and he naturally takes revenge by making the creeling severe, T ’ A widely followed custom is to make the bridegroom fight for his bride. in a battle sometimes mimic, but as often quite stern. ' In parts of old Austria this was dramatic. Immediately after the couple appeared from the service they were surrounded by young men in masks who tried to separate them. Once separated, the husband had to fight to regain his wife. - If he was unsuccessful. he had to pay ransom. Then to make matters wors&'%—for the bride as well as the bridegroom—the wedding “feast” included cake sappetizingly mixed with cow hailr, egg shells and hog bristles. Man and wife must eat of this cake to bring good luck to thelr cattle and poultry, :

DELIGHTS OF LIFE IN LONDON

Fog Frequently So Thick That the Strongest Artificlal Light Cannot Pierce It. '

- The worst fog in 20 years was ex‘perienced in London when 900,000 tons of soot were suspended in the atmosphere in which 7,000,000 people attempted to live, work, and worst of all, to get about, a short tifiie ago. The possibility of reaching one’s destination was ascertained only by the laws of “probability and chance. Fire engines called by duty went through the pitch-black streets preceded by a man on foot with a lantern. Busses adopted the lesson of the wagon trains that crossed the Western plains during the gold rush and traveled in convoys of nine or ten, also led by a man on foot with a light. The busy traffic centers were marked by from. four to ten huge ' acetylene torches which pierced the surround‘ing darkness for not more than fifteen feet. Accidents were innumerable. Prince Henry attempted to motor from London to Whittlebury for a hunting engagement, and. after narrowly escaping two collisions then decided to spend the night at a halfway house. A freakish incident occurred when “two women, lost within two squares of home, were directed by a blind veteran whose misfortune made him impervious to fogs in a district he knew by heart. . £ St

Nigerian Products.

- A Nigerian trade review shows that goatskins used in making the finest boots, go mainly to the American market. Palm-kernels from the south, especially Yorubaland, are extricated from the shells by hand. Before the war mosk of the kernels went to' Germany, whence in consequence Great Britain had to import a large proportion of the 01l required for making margarine. The export of palm ker nels is over 200,000 toms, while that of palm oil is over 100,000 tons, The 01l supplies work for men, as the ker nels for women. It enters into 'the manufacture of soap and candies. The value of the tin ore production is be tween one and two millions sterling The distance of the tin fields from the coast is a handicap to the trade, Railway expansion has made things easier the light railway to Bakura, built for the purpose, having proved .most ser viceable. Sol o

Old Man’s Marital Philosophy.

A ninety-year-old bridegroom ,starteé his ' sixth honeymoon walking part way from Wilnona, Tenn. to Cincinnati, Ohlo, with his twenty-six-year-old bride, as an example for other young married couples. “Ninety is a lot more sengible age to get married at than nineteen, like a lot of them young snips do,” he sald.. “When a man ig ninety he has good sense, so he don’t make mistakes. I started marryin’ when I was twenty-three. I'm sorta getting used to it by now. When you haven’t had more than one wife you don’t know anything Mary Jane, his wife, sald it was love at first sight. “He met and married me in an hour,” she sald. “He wanted some one to do housework and I said I would take the jéb. Then he asked me if I wouldn’t marry him.” : :

Sharing Honors.

Three-year-old George had long admired the huge American flag which was displayed across the street on the -different gala occaslons. . : A His father had now made him happy with one just like it and it floated out splendidly. = Ham el e - QOut on an early morning call Miss S—— of the house across the street was asked by George whether she did not think his new flag wonderful. “Yes, indeed,” said Miss S—=. “De “you know why your flag is up thie week?” (It was G. A. B. week) = . Very earnestly, he replied: “You _bet, because yours Is."—lndianapolls

Sale Bills

Pam 1 v«- _:i%{fl/ A B N , ) &2 95 3 . S &%) 1)/ 7y Y é o 5 vy ¥ ; / :",-""’ Y /)/ ) o~ /’\ (N 7 ¥/ ~ AN/ - : 7NN 7 WILL START YOU RN 4% ; ///\ e ~ ST A A .h.& 2 ) = y : 2P A Z T Y\ SR j | 4 AR ] . : F : / ":.;1" ’@ : R ' SLK ‘ s /,/ < ,w ING g¢LUB o® / el next Xmas $/ ot/ £ 00 e ' <! I RWVAV! youwill have Spdem "l [ AL surNOWD AV 0 4N R S s ~ DEPOSIT ONE DOLLAR EACH WEEK FOR 50 WEEKS AND YOU HAVE $50.00. YOU CAN EASILY SAVE R DOLLAR AR WEEKAND WON’T YOU BE GLAD TO HAVE THAT $50.00. o THERE ARE CLUBS WHERE YOU DEPOSIT 50 CENTS A WEEK, OR $5..00 OR ANY SUM---AR CLUB TO FIT YOUR PURSE. OR YOU CAN BEGIN WITH 1 CENT, 2 CENTS, 5 CENTS, OR TEN, CENTS AND INCREASE YOUR DEPOSIT EACH WEEK. IN FIFTY WEEKS. : ] 10-Cent Club Pays $127.50 5-Cent Club Pays 63.75 » 2-Cent Club Pays - 25.50 ~ 1-Cent Club Pays 12.75 ‘ ~ YOU CAN BEGIN WITH THE ILARGEST AND IDECREASE EACH WEEK. THERE ARE NO DUES. LYOU GET BACK EVERY CENT YOU PUT IN. ; . COME IN AND ASK ABOUTIT. Z - Make Our Bank Your Bank We pay 4 per cent. interest en saving deposits ‘ and Saving Accounts. Farmers & Merchants Trust Co

General Ordinanece No. 72

In relation to sanitation.

Be it ordained by the Common Counci] of the city of Ligonier Noble County, Indiana : o Section 1 That whereas the Board of Health of the city of Ligonier Nobie County, Indiana has provided and is providing for the ganitary disposal of garbage -accumulations, and has provided for the collection and disposal of such garbage, therefore, it'is hereby ordained by the Common Council of said city that each and every person maintaing a house and residence in said city shall provide a water tight metal receptacle of not less than twelve gallons capacity and with a tight fitting metal cover for the reception of the . garbage from such house and also a barrel, box or other container for cans, broken dishes or glassware or other like rubbish, conveniently placed for the collection of such garbage and rubbish by the city collector thereof. : Section 2. Such receptacles shall be gp provided and ready for use on or before April Ist, 1922, ; Section 3—Any person failing to comply. with the provisions of this ordinance shall upon conviction be fined in any sum not less than one dollar or more than ten dollars. Section 4. This ordinance shall be in force from and_after its passage and the legal publication thereof. Passed and approved by the Common Counecil of the city of Ligonier Moble County, Indiana this 23 day of Feb. 1922, b Clarence E. Denning, Mayor Attest:T. E. Jeanneret; City Clerk.

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT.

State of Indiana, Noble County,, SS: Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed administrator - of.the estate of Edwin H. Buckles, deceased, late of Noble County; Indiana. = . - L

Said estate is supposed to be solyvent. L : v

- George ‘W. Buckles, Administrator. W. H. Wigton, Atty. o IAW

Having sold my farm I will offer at public auetion on what is known as the Will Buckles farm 5 miles south of Kimmell 3 miles west of Wolf Lake. Commencing at 10-o’clock on Wednesday March 8. o The following property to-wit: ' 6 Hores and Mules 6—Span 6 yoar, old mules weight about 1200 Ilbs. sound and good workers, bay gelding road horse 5 years old weight 1200 lbs. bay gelding 7 years old weight 1800 Ibs. sorrel mare 5 years old wgt. 1600 Ilbs. gray gelding 6 years old weight 14001bs. < ' i 2 Head of Cattle 2 Roan shorthorn cow 5 years good milker, roan Shorthorn heifer coming 2 years old. - 1 63 Head of Hogs—Pure bred Duroc Jersey boar immune, 8 pure bred Duoc Jesey sows, one pure bred Poland China all are double immune and due to farrow as follows: Poland sow Mar. 22 3 Duroc sows Mar. 21-22, 2 Duroc sows Mar.-23, 1 Duroc sow Mar. 29, 2 Duroc sows May 1, &3 shoats weighing from 65 to 90 pounds. 9 Head of Sheep—One pure bred Shropshire biick, 8 head of young Shropshire ewes due to lamb April Pe R e 7 About 100 Rode Island hens and 5 ~ Farm Machiney—New Idea manure spreadéT good as new good Weber wagon, I H. C. 7-14 disc good as new MeComick mower 5 ft. cut, 20 tooth spring tooth harrow, Oliver riding cultivator, Gale —walking - breaking s o double set: of workhas: ST ee R Neel O T e

It you need ia ani sea.

PUBLIC SALE.

der cash in hand. On amounts above this credit of six months will be given, buyer giving bankable note bearing 7 per.cent interest from date of sale. 2 per cent discount for cash. - ‘ Se o < GLENN 'W. CAMBLIN Al Goss Auctioneer . - ; : H. G. Earnhart, Clerk. : Lunch will be served by Ladies aid.

- Put a Blue Devil in your bath tub —he will promptly steal the rings. 12 i L isask

- For Sale—Searchlight hard coal burner. Bargain if taken at 'once. Phone 65 o Ib2t

_For Rent—6o acres nedr Cromwell Indiana. Immediate possession. Straus Brothers Co. - G Shat

You can’t be an expert on orders =~ and use Blue Devil Cleanser in your heme:~ ' - L la2t

English Architect Advises its Removal From the Historic Structures of - Oxford University. |

Ivy, a picturesque adjunct to the lanscape in covering old buildings and which has been s 0 greatly admired by American visitors to the historic towns of England, is doomed. It is asserted that not only is the ivy highly in-| Jurious to the buildings which are covered by the vine, but that, in scores of cases it destroys more beauty than| it ‘creates by obscuring examples of| fine old architecture. In Oxford, especlally during- the last few years, many of the old college structures which have been covered for generations with masses of the glossy green,| leaves have been entirely denuded | of every vestige of ivy and the work! is still going on. o Bdward Warren, an English architect, In writing of the architecturall improvement to old buildings by re+ moving the ivy covering, admits ing the London Times that he has been responsible for the removal of a large; amount of Ivy from Oxford walls., | “I.am its declared enemy,” he says. “It should be permitted to grow upon* no walls but those of uninhabited| and uninteresting ruins, or the rough| walls of flelds or gardens. Ivy Is a terribly insidious fog to architectnré” its acid secretions destroy the mortar, of the joints, reducing it to incohesive, sand, its fibers and its tendrils push thelr way between the Joints, its clinging branches grow and swell in every available hollow and crevice, bursting ancient moldings and shattering -carvings, penetrating thick walls if given time, lifting copings: and pardpets, and stealthily and steadily disintegrating the work of man’'s hands, while it smothers its proportions and its beautfes. i g ke ¥ s 2 : £ ;:a ' i ; : M"f | ‘ o PR {M- o % i | AR FoE : et TR T L b= it l ‘ T T e i gw?-.r”&m B RI TR S AL i AR R e T @%3 , ‘eapltol ? y Washi g