The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 52, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 23 April 1936 — Page 3

THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1036.

Keeping Up fy_Sc/ent ej erw be O Bclsnee aervtco.—WNU Service. New Atom Smashing Device at Princeton Will Aid Science Cyclotron Will Be Most Powerful in Existence PRINCETON. N. J.—The installation of a cyclotron, calculated to bombard atoms with particles moving almost half again as fast as those produced by existing machines, has been started at Palmer Physical laboratory of Princeton university. The bombarding particles will consist of hydrogen tons, and deutrons or charged particles of heavy hydrogen. Results obtained from paper calculations and from a small working model show that they will travel with a velocity of 19.000 miles a second. Their maximum energy la expected to be twice that of particles from present machines. A large magnet, built especially for use in the cyclotron, makes possible the attainment of this high speed. It Is hoped that the machine will shed further light on the old problem of disintegrating the atom. Operator Is Protected. A breastwork of earth will protect the operators of the machine. Water tanks may also be constructed as an additional safeguard, as cyclotron experimenters are exposed to haxards somewhat similar to those the early X-ray pioneers faced. When the cyclotron Is in use the two vacuum tubes, which produce highfrequency oscillations at 20 meters, will require 50 to 60 kilowatts, as much power ns is used by a large metropolitan broadcasting station. The oscillations take place Inside the magnet, which prevents the waves from interfering with ordinary radio reception in the community. Drs. Malcolm C. Henderson. Instructor In physics at Princeton university, and Milton C. White, a National Research Council fellow at Princeton, are the designers of the machine' Both men participated in the pioneer cyclotron experiments at the University of California |n Berkeley. How Size Compares. Explaining how the Princeton in; stallation is expected to be the most powerful in existence, Doctor White said: “The tip of the pole pieces of the Princeton installation will be 35 Inches in diameter, irhite the most powerful similar apparatus, of Dr. E.O. Lawrence at the University of California, has 27Inch diameter pole tips. Since the energy of the accelerated particles produced Increases as the square of the diameter, we get 35 square divided by 27 squared or approximately L7. However. the more powerful oscillators at Princeton will perhaps permit operation, at higher magnetic fields than is no* possible at Berkeley so we expect, theoretically, to attain twice the present obtainable energy.** Language Scholars Trace the Alphabet Back to 2000 B. C. NEW YORK.—Three inscriptions by the ancient Etruscans, preserved in New York and Philadelphia museums, are helping to clear up one of the puzzles of how the alphabet originated. « The three pieces of writing, now among museum treasures of this country, suggest strongly that the Romans got the alphabet letters directly from the Greeks. This has been one of the weak and uncertain links in the long chain of evolution through which scholars trace the modern alphabet From modern letters—in which this newspaper is printed—the evolutionary changes go back through Latin alphabet, Greek forms, Phoenician, even farther back toward a still somewhat mysterious origin, perhaps near 2000 B. C. in the Near East. Origin of Latin. For many years, language students have argued over two rival theories as to where the Latin alphabet was borrowed. One faction said the R<»mans caught the idea from Greek colonists in southern Italy. Another faction thought that Rome's near neighbors, the Etruscans, were the people who gave Rome inspiration for an alphabet. Now, It appears that the Etruscans can be left out of the alphabet picture tn this direct line of succession. The Etruscans, who rose to power tn Italy about 800 yean before Christ, have proved one of the most baffling of ancient peoples to understand. The beauty of their bronxe craftwork and their other and their alphabetic writing—which to still incompletely understood—have lured scholars to try persistently to learn more about Etruscan civilisation. A new bit of information about a single Etruscan alphabet tetter is apt to be heralded as news of importance. Dr. Eva Fiesel of Tale university has been studying three Etruscan inscriptions at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the University Museum in Philadelphia, and she has learued something new about the letter X to Etruscan. This letter has heretofore been recognised to its place to the Etruscan alphabet, which, by a curious Etruscan custom, was often inscribed on vases or other objects. But how th* letter X aonuded to Etruscan words M ona could say. •

Ancient Treasures of China Beckon Research Experts Buried Cities May <. « Reveal Early W'HAT part of the ancient will next capture popular fancy? Opening King Tut’s wonderful tomb made the world “Egypt conscious” a few years back. Then the archaeological spotlight flared on Babylonia. Royal graves at Ur of the Chaldees were unearthed, and the world was awed to learn how much beauty, and how much callous barbarism, there was to a state funeral over 5,000 years ago. “What next?” is the question that archeologists are being asked. Those who are watching the Far East answer —"China.” For China is at last venturing to look under the blanket that hides her burled history. And already surprising objects are being discovered. Contents of burled cities and tombs are now clearing up points In Chinese history, replacing vague traditions with substantial facts, according to C. Martin Wilbur, young student of Chinese civilization, a fellow of the So cial Sciences Research council. Clews From Skeletons. , For instance, Mr. Wilbur explains, it is significant when Chinese archeologists dig at the old ruined capital An Yang, and find ten headless skeletons and, buried quite apart from them, the ten beads. These ten hap less Chinese were beheaded some time between 1400 and 1100 B. C. in the Shang dynasty to make a royal funeral, very much as royalties of Ur of the Chaldees and early Egyptian kings had courtiers sacrificed and burled with them. The ten skeletons have been found with hands in position, indicating that the bands were tied behind the backs. Thongs that held them have, of course, decayed. The tomb In which they were buried Is that of a king or ruler, judging by other evidences of a stately funeral. How this discovery upsets Chinese tradition Is explained by Mr. Wilbur: Human Sacrifices. “It was known previously that the Chinese practiced human sacrifice occasionally to provide attendants for rulers after death. An emperor, for example, might take his concubines with him to the grave. But tradition has always held that the Chinese merely copied the custom from barbarian neighbors. Now, tradition is discounted, for the evidence shows that China already had the custom in quite early times.” Discoveries of ox bones with writing on them, dating from the same Shang dynasty, have provided scholars with contemporary writings many centuries older than most of the history about that period. Such revelations are considered merely a beginning—now that China’s more progressive scientists have shaken off fear that they may disturb ancestors by digging into the deep past Texas Caves Visited by Prehistoric Man WASHINGTON. — The scenic Longhorn caverns of Texas were visited by prehistoric Americans. This is the deduction from ancient souvenirs of men found in the caverns by Dr. Charles N. Gould, national park service geologist. Unlike modern man's traveling trade mark, his carved initials, the prehistoric Indians left as "relics of their stay such things as arrow points, grinding stones, and many animal bones. Some of the meat bones were split for the marrow inside, good proof that men camped and ate at the site. Making allowance for the fact that the caves are of the “trap cave" type into which animals and objects can fall. Doctor Gould stated: “Longhorn caverns bear every evidence that they once served as shelters and probably as homes for prehistoric man." The caverns today are a state park, noted for their fantastic stalactite and crystal formations. Doctor Gould is continuing his study of the geologic formations, and hoping for further evidence of prehistoric occupation. Glass That Bends When Broken Has Wide Variety of Uses WASHINGTON.—Newest improvement in the popular laminated safety glass is to incorporate, into its bonding layers, material which has rubber-ilke characteristics The result? Glass which win bend when It is broken. If a window pane were made of the material It could bo taken out and rolled up like a rug after some small boy tried to throw a rock through IL ’ Wide applications are seen for the new material; in cockpit covering for military aircraft, driver** hoods tot racing cars, and, of course, the normal uses of ordinary safety glasa Secret of the robber glass is to ust a plastic resin material with flexible properties to the toner layer of the “glass sandwich" which makes safety glass. Acryloid, a chemical derivative of acrylic add* is one type of plastic tor thia purpose described in the latest Issue of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry here. Like other plastic reatos, AcryloSc, can be molded or maebi£.ed Into a wide variety of shapes tor different uses. A transparent violin la only one st many similar objects wbteh can be fabricated. «

McGoofey’s First Reader and Eclectic Primer I. 1111

THE STORY OF AGATHA 1— Agatha seemed normal as a baby. 2— She was even what was called a bright child. 3— She could talk before she was a year old and at the age of eighteen months she was so smart she could read Mother Goose. 4— Everybody Said she was wonderful. 5— She was very fond of music and dancing. When company came she always danced for them. 6— In grammar school she was the brightest girl in the class and the liveliest. She still loved to play and dance. 7— She took part in all the amateur entertainments, never falling to put on a dancing specialty. Everybody said she had a marvelous sense of rhythm. 8— They even called her a second Pavlowa. 9— Her parents gave her a musical education, too. and she could play the piano brilliantly. 10— She seemed to be a most talented young lady and great things were predicted for her. There was talk of concert tours. 11— But the pace back home wa* too slow for her. 12— She couldn’t wait, and so she packed up and "ran away to the big city, the land of opportunity where a girl could express herself freely. 13— Four or five years later some of the folks back home received news of her. 14— she had become a marathon dancer after a disappointing experience playing the piano in a nlkolet. MORAL: It all depends on the breaks. • • • CURIOUS FACTS FOR CURIOUS PEOPLE Seth P. Throttleponk of Wappingers Falls, N. Y., has been putting the left robber on the right foot for 45 years. It’s believed to be a record. There is a circus In Zanzibar which has no trained seals. Buggy-striping is among the poorest paid professions on Manhattan Island. A waste basket placed upside down to the average newspaper office will catch just as much paper as if right side up.The average pea pod bolds eight peas but no Qs. Only very dull mice will attempt to gnaw a hole in a wooden leg. s A very excellent apple pie can be made by leaving out the seeds and stems but it is very rarely attempted. Strawberry jam stains may be removed from a white vest by soaking tn gasoline and holding under a blowtorch. A banana can live six weeks without water. The best way to avoid family arguments Is to grind the cigar ashes into the rug with your heel before she notices them. The Indian is practically extinct tn large centers of population in the United States. see Oh, see the girt! What ,s the <irl doing? The girl is drivIng an automobile. Wfr Does the girl know how to drive an automobile? No, but she has been driving one for jmBH five yeara. What is she going to do now? She is going to make a left turn. How will she convey this warning to traffic behind her? You can never telL Doesn't she know that the correct signal when you are about to make • left turn is to bold out the left hand and point to the left? Yes she knows aR about that but she will probably turn without holding her hand out at aIL Suppose this-causes her car to be by the man behind? TTien she will leap out of the car with a most injured expression and exclaim to the other driver. “What's the matter? Don't you know bo* to drive a car?” Win she win the argument? Did you ever know a woman to lose one? Suppose the girt Intended to make a right tun instead of a left turn; then what *’ ml would she give? Then she -, old signal for a left turn. Are you sure? Positive i And what If she intended to come to SOME MINNOWS HEAVY 1 _. Although young game fish are commonly rolled “minnows.” technically speaking they are "fry." Minnows are • distinct kind of fishes with? stateless heads and soft fin rays. Usually minnows are small, but they may weigh as much ss 50 pounds. Game fish young are properly called “try ” after the Latin “fricare,” meaning a recently batched brood. One-inch game fish are “fingerlings number one” and so on, *-*—•-•*-*•

SYRACUSE JOURNAL

a full stop in fast traffic? In that case she would simply stop. Without holding out her hand? Absotlvely. You mean she wouldn’t hold out her hand at all? Not until after the accident. How do you explain that women always behave like that when driving automobiles? It’s all done by mirrors. • • * GRAMMAR TEST Which is correct: 1 — “The telephone operator got the right number without delay," or “It took fifteen minutes to get a connection and then it was the wrong number’’? 2— “The restaurant strawberry shortcake was full of luscious ripe berries." or “It must have been an optical illusion”? 3— “Europe will ultimately pay Uncle Sam all she owes him,” or “Europe shall ultimately pay Uncle Sam all she owes him”? And is it a goofy remark in either case? 4— “I drove the golf ball 380 yards straight down the fairway” or “I drived the golf ball 380 yards straight down the fairway”? Why are both statements implausible. • • • LITERARY TEST Check the words which properly complete these sentences. “I remember, I remember, the housewhere I was born” are lines found in a poem called“ The Shooting of Dan McGrew" “Sleep, Baby, Sleep"“Boots” Remember, I Remember.” “Fuzzy Wuzzy” was written by John Greenleaf Whittier Don Marquis Louis UntermeyerJoyce Kilmer Rudyard Kipling. Fitz-Greene Haltetk wrote “Barbara Frietchle”“Maud Muller”....“The Wreck of the Hesperus”“Marco Bozzaris" “Old Ironsides.” The lines “Not of the princes and prelates with periwigged charioteers, marching triumphantly laurelled to tap the fat of the years” are found In“ The Village Blacksmith" “River Stay Away From My Door” • .“The Old Oaken Bucket”.“Consecration” “Old Mother Hubbard.” • • • GENERAL INFORMATION Check the word or words that properly complete these statements: California orange* come from Idaho...Rhode Island CaliforniaLouisiana.....New Jersey..... Florida. Bacon is procured from cows horsespig* .fig tree*.....bluefish guinea hens. Violin strings are made from cigar buttsrabbits* feet catgutpeach stonesold shoescabbage beads. Pumpkins arevegetables animals minerals. Alfonso was formerly king of Russia. Poland Chile Mexico Spain East Lynn. Rumania is a country Ln Australia.South America Asia North America Iceland. A leading export of Switzerland is yellow squash...uncut diamondsshop «uey.<..... Swiss chocolatecoffee........ • .bananas. • • • PSALMS OF LIFE DeHberatiou Take living very calmly. Develop poire and pace; The tortoise, you remember. Came through and won the race. ’to nothing in a hurry. For haste, they say, makes waste; The belter-akeiter person Amasa taueb distaste. A certain sense «f timing In every deed and act Will help achieve perfection And make each step exact Don’t dash about too swiftly As If to break your neek; The over-active person Becomes a nervous wreck. Go slowly and unhurried About each task you do—(Your boss will then find some one To take the place of you!) THE PYRAMID OF CHEOPS The Pyramid of Cheops, largest ot the three great Pyramids at Gizeb, ortgi Inally was 482 feet high. Its bare covi era 13 acres. Erected by slaves STOP years B. O, it continues to arouse woni der. But the increasing gigantic pro- : portions of modern engineering prod- ! nets Indicates that 8.700 years hence there wiU remain hundreds of mono- ! meats to the present era that wUI dwarf the Egyptian structures.—Loe

WMSvnA /sapADVENTURERS’ CLUB “Twelve Stories Up” By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter. AGOING up! Take the next car, please! It’s an indoor aviator who’s come to tell us his tale of woe today—Distinguished Adventurer Edward T. McCrann, one of the best doggone elevator pilots that ever answered a buzzer. Ed jumps around almost as fast as that elevator he used to drive. When I first heard from him he was living in New Haven, Conn. Two weeks later, when I had occasion to communicate with him he had moved to Washington, D. C. IPs five years since Ed has run an elevator, and, he still remembers it aa one of the most monotonous Jobe he ever had. It was Just the same old trip, from morning to night. The same old buzzer ringing and the same people getting on and off in the same old building in Hartford. Only once did anything out of the ordinary occur—but Ed admits that that occurrence relieved the job of all of Its monotony for a few minutes. It happened about 7 o’clock on a June evening in 1929. Nearly all the tenants were out of the building. The superintendent came up from the basement and started looking over the elevator. He said there might be something wrong with it because he had heard a rasping sound in the shaft that shouldn’t have been there. Elevator Man Goes Up on Top of His Car. One look at the top tqld the story. Some workmen had been doing a job on the inside of the shaft They had strung a wire to furnish them with light and had left it behind when they finished. That wire tangled with the main cable, way up at the top, just where the cable came out of the heavy grate that supported the motor. The super asked Ed if he’d ride up on the top of the elevator to the top of the shaft and unfasten that maverick wire. Ed was just a high school kid then. He was lean and active, and the job didn’t look any great shakes to him. He consented readily. After all, it was something to break the monotony of that everlasting up and down trip. The super got into the car and dropped it down ~below the door level. Ed climbed on top, and up they went to the top of the shaft, just above the twelfth story. The super ran the car slowly as they neared the top. When it got close enough so that Ed could reach the dangling wire he yelled, and the super stopped the car. The car halted just even with the twelfth floor. Ed reached up and began untangling the wire. o The superintendent opened the car door and stepped out onto the twelfth floor. "Hey, Ed," he called, “I’m going down the hall for a screw driver. I’ll be right back." Ed yelled, “All right,” and went on with his work. The wire was fastened a little higher than he’d thought. He grabbed the grating under the motor and lifted himself up. His toes were barely touching the top of the car and he was straining his free arm to reach the end of the wire when he heard someone enter the elevator ! Il ffl VV 1 IEImW He Clung Perilously by His Fingers to the Grating. «elow him. Thinking it was the superintendent be paid no attention. He made another lunge toward the wire—caught it Elevator Descends; Ed Is Left Dangling at Top of Shaft And then, to his consternation, the motor began to whine and the car dropped away from under him, leaving Ed in a panic, clinging to the iron grating with both hands. > By the time Ed’s presence of mind came back to him the elevator was halfway down the shaft. He started to yell, but he was so close to the motor that he couldn't be heard above its noise. The elevator went clear to the bottom and stopped. The door clanged open and someone walked out Then everything was quiet except for Ed's cries. What had happened? Could it be possible that the superintendent had for. gotten all about him? Ed yelled again. The sound echoed hollowly in the long shaft Then silence—the dead, eerie silence of an empty building. And Ed hanging by his fingers 12 stories above the ground. “The seconds," he says, “seemed like years. Try as I might I couldn’t get my mind to working. It was racing like mad trying to figure away out but it never found one. There just wasn’t any. “The grating was greasy and I could feel my fingers slipping—elipping. Suddenly I beard steps in the hail and yelled again. It was the superintendent coming back with the tools. He must have guessed whai had happened when be heard me and saw the elevator door was closed He yelled something to me but I was so scared I couldn’t make out what he was saying. My fingers slipped a little more. Then I heard him racing down the stairs.” Superintendent and Elevator to the Rescue! Again Ed’s fingers slipped. He tried to hang on with one hand white he got a fresh hold with the other—and almost lost his grip altogether. It seemed like yeari—seemed as though be was bolding on with nothing but his fingernails, when finally he heard the elevator start upward and knew that if he could hang on just a moment longer he’d be safe. “There were tear* In my eyes," he says, “as that car came shooting up toward me. My body was covered with sweat, and I can’t say If it was cold sweat or hoL My hands slipped again a* the car came on. “1 didn’t have the courage to took down—didn't know bow close the elevator was—when at last, my clawing finger* lost their hold on the grate. I shut my eyes as 1 started falling. A prayer ran through my mind and—.” And then Ed came to a stop with a thud—safe on the top of the car, about six feet from where be had started. When Ed got off the top of that elevator cab he was limp as a rag. It wasn’t until next day that ho found a solution to the mystery of the moving elevator. A doctor on the twelfth floor came out in a hurry and, seeing the cab without an operator, ran It down himself. He had beard Ed yell, he said, but paid no attention to It “And If you could feel one hundredth of the horror I felt as I hung in that dark shaft,” says Ed, “you’d realize why I shiver Just a little bit, even now, when somebody mentions that doctor’s name." •-WNU Service.

SwccMa It to said that a man can successfully lie with his eyes, but not with hto mouth. The face to such an Index of character that the very growth of the latter can be traced upon the former, and moat of the successive lines that carve the furrowed face of age out of the smooth outline of childhood axe engraved directly or indirectly by mind. There to no beautlfler of the face like a beautiful spirit The want of mind lowers all the powers of the body; but so does an evil and debased mind which to still more wonderful. 1 Brian Brown. Desert in Maine The Maine desert lies within the village of Freeport. This desert to of comparatively recent formation and covers about 800 acres. The land was formerly green fields and pastures. The soil was shallow and the sand imdemlately beneath. The cause of the present condition to not definitely known-same say that grazing sheep cropped the grass to the roots destroyed the turf; others attribute it to fire. A second desert lies In the vicinity of Waterville, Maine. This Is much smaller. i

Find Castaway A Robinson Crusoe was discovered by the crew of the French windjammer Tolosa, on Rinca Island, 100 miles north of the Strait of Magellan, South America. He was clothed in goat skins and uttered guttural cries, though he led them to a natural spring when they indicated they wanted water. The mao appeared to be of Nordic stock, either Scandinavian or German, or possibly British. He to considered to be a shipwrecked sailor who has lost the power of spech, probably through never having spoken to a soul for many years. Plow Design* From Potatoes The plow Invented by Jethro Wood tn 1814—with mouldplate, share and landside cast separately—forecast modern plows. But Wood had great difficulty in getting workmen to mold hto plows as he wanted them. He was taunted with bring a “whittling Yankee” because he whittled away bushels of potatoes before he had a miniature model plow that suited him. Seward, Lincoln’s secretary of state, said, “No citizen has conferred greater benefits on hto cou otry . . . none has been more inadequately rewarded.”

Scientists Hunt Traces of Lava Bear and Rare Sheep California university authorities have undertaken to reconstruct the existence of two species of animals that once inhabited the great lava beds between the Sierra Nevada mountains to the north and the Cascades to the south. These are the lava bear and the lava sheep. Both have become extinct Scientists are convinced that at the time of the early settlement of California they actually existed, and they hope not only to establish this definitely but to find enough bones of the extinct animals to reconstruct skeletons and establish their relations with other species of bear and sheep in surrounding mountains. All inhabitants of the .country have been asked to send in any existing relics they may have of such animals, and eye-wit-ness accounts of having actually seen them. The lava bear especially is supposed to have been a small, brown bear, that passed its time in the caves and crevasses of the lava, that was exceedingly shy, and came out fronr its cavern recesses only at night. To keep clean and healthy take Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They regulate liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv. What Is Leisure? Leisure is not- Idleness. It is easy to define the latter. PRESSURE! Apply New Do Luxe Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads on any sensitive spots on your toes and feet, or on corn*callouses or bunions. In one minute discomfort will be gone! Nagging shoe pressure or friction ia stopped. New or tight shoes won’t hurt or cause sore toes or blisters. . Get a box of these flesh color, velvetysoft, waterproof pads today at yoos drag, shoe or department store. i vou Need More Pep? S. Schrack of Lx JO3 N. Oak HiU Ave., Janesville. Wls., said: "I became so rundown I was not able to work for a few months. I couldn't eat, couldn't sleep, alwayi felt tired and ‘all-gone.’ I learned of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. and started taking it. I took several bottles and my appetite was so much better and I could feel that I had new strength.” All druggists. ASHAMED OF PIMPLYSKIN Burned and Itched Until Cuticura Relieved 1 Victims of external skin outbreaks Use Cuticura for blessed, quick pellet Read this sincere tribute: “I was ashamed to show myself anywhere with the ugly pimples I had. They were caused by some surface condition and were very large and red, and also hard. The itching and burning made me scratch so that they bled. *T sent for a free sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment A few pimples disappeared and I bought some of the Soap and Ointment. It only took Cuticura a month to relieve me fully.” Miss R. Zebrowski, 18 Alder St, Bristol, Conn. *'■ Prove Cuticura today—and keep It always near you. Use for rashes, ringworms, burning and itching of eczema and other externally caused skin irritations. Soap 25c. Ointment 25c. Samples FREE. Write to “Cuticura," Dept 17, Malden, Mass.—Adv. No Need to Suffer “Morning Sickness” “Morning sideness”—is caused by an add condition. To avoid it add must bo offset by aikalit — such as magnesia. Why Physicians Recommend Milnesia Wafers * ‘ < These mint-flavored, candy-like wafers are pure milk of magnesia in solid form — the most pleasant way to take it Each wafer is approximately equal to a full adult dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed thoroughly, then swallowed, they correct addity in the mouth and throughout the digestive system and insure quick, complete elimination of the waste matters that cause gas, headaches, bloated feelings and a dozen other discomforts. Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of 20 and 48, at 35c and 60c respectively, and in convenient tins for your handbag containing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately one adult dose of milk of magnesia. All good drug stores sell andrecommeud them. Start wstag Hmm Mtefous, wHecthr* mtt-acW.gMtlylaxativ* wafer* today Professional samples sent freeto registered physicians or dentists if request is made on professional letterhead. Select Products, toe. 4402 23rd St., Loa* Istoad City, N. Y. M 35c & 6Oc botlies 2Oc tln * i I* OriS*"* Wafero ICLASSIOEP ABs] NOBTBEBN MAMMOTH. HUUECTED. I state Inspected, str*wberry Plants. Ba*vers. I alUe:'l&MA I deMtaatton.Brßie VaUev Narserr Brale.Wls. I .... * , 1 Wta. » . - _■ * K Git» SS: SS* HL Lataa Ave, • <• CMeasa* W-