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^ ... 11 "HE TRAVELS j; FASTEST?"" | * ' ** ;i: i : | ? B- f?f ITiBPTU V IIV T f r D >7 A DJ CULADLin I. mibbbn || (Copyright.) Arthur Brooks was an ambitious young man. When lie married Theodora lie took her to live in one of the Jersey suburbs. The rent was low, and the neighborhood not too fastidious. For be It understood that Arthur's ambition ran not to luxuries, but to jhe accumulation of wealth. He was the type of man?the thrifty, saving type?who keeps a < couple of dime banks In constant use, one on his desk at the office wherein he dropped the ten-cent pieces which rightfully belonged to the waiter who < served him at lunch, the other on his chiffonier at home. On the chiffonier there was, too, a large papier mache orange for the devouring of stray pennies. Theodora, who was not "allowanced" in the orthodox, theoretical way, conceived the idea that the dimes and pennies which were dropped into the home banks rightfully belonged to her. And having discovered that a siim-bladed penknife was a safe ally, she filched from them sometimes so much as a whole dollar at once. Nat urally enough the home savings did | not accumulate very fast. But they had been married a whole year before Arthur Brooks detected his young wife In her pllferings. The lecture which he read her was mugnlfleent of Its kind. In a way, however, the force of it rolled ofT Theodora like water off a duck's back. . She was not thrifty by nature; she needed money, and helping herself to It was by far an easier and surer way of getting it than begging It of ( Arthur. "And why," he continued, ponderously, "should you need any extra I money? Aren't you fed? Haven't you, enough of everything?" "Plenty," said Theodora placidly, j "of everything but money." "But what did you need money for?" he persisted. Theodora flushed. Then she threw back her head defiantly. "Since you must know," she burst forth Indignantly, "I stole from you in order to buy baby clothes!" In this manner was Arthur Brooks made cognizant of his Impending fatherhood. The revelation came to hira in the nature of a distinct shock. He had i reckoned upon marriage, had fully .. counted the cost of taking a wife, but' he had left baby clothes and all that pertains thereto out of his calcula tlons. Indeed, It had been part of his Inborn thrlftiness which tempted him in the flmt place to get married. He had heard many times how a wife helped fellow to "get on." The wife, it seemed, always scrimped and saved, baked, brewed, sewed, washed, and Ironed for her board and keep. Perhaps In the Interim, eveu, she took in a little dressmaking from the more extravagant of her neighbors. That was the wife of Arthur Brooks' bachelor dreams. Somehow the dream was mixed up with a disconcerting reality. . It was a case of not looking before he leaped; of loving, perhaps not wisely, but too well. Physically, Theodora was lovely enough to tempt any man into marriage. Possibly young Arthur lost his head, and forgot to question her antecedents. For Theodora's upbringing had been quite different from his. In her father's household dime banks and papier-mache oranges were things unknown. So was a bank account. Her family had lived luxuriously from hand to mouth, and there was always a huge pile of bills waiting to be paid. But this Irritating fact in no wise lessened the number of gowns that Theodora and her mother bought, nor forced the family to dine on com- ; ed beef in preference to chicken, j There were theater trips in Theodora's antenuptial days, cabs, restaurant din- j ners, and wildly extravagant times at Christmas. Theodora's wedded life was quite different. They lived well within her husband's Income?unnecessarily so, it sometimes seemed?t^id to her credit be it said, that she did her best to take kindly to the new regime. Indeed, considering all that had gone before, Theodora did remarkably well, j She loved her thrifty husbaud and, in a way, she was happy. Arthur, too, Was liappy in a way. He would have been happier, perhaps, if matrimony had been less expensive, but saving was with hlra a constitutional Instinct, and his regrets did not reflect measurably upon Theodora. There were times when his love for her swept hiin like a tempest. Her clear brown eyes; her hair, satiny and smooth like the brown wing of a bird; her slender figure, moving so llthely to household tasks; her pretty white hands, which no amount of toil seemed to harden, were allpowerful' lodestones to draw him to her. And yet It could not he denied. Theodora, with all her physical attractions, was a horrible expense. There were limes when Arthur Brooks took to brooding over what might have been. If, for Instance, he hadn't married, or had put off marrying until a more "suitable" lime. He figured tip how cheaply he might have lived. It lo hadn't married! Heavens! How he could have saved! Even a cheap flat, with a wife who had uo sense of money value, nnd an Impending baby?how it ate into one's income! Arthui* Brooks realized that hfiJjad umde.a foolish. Qj.istakij.in mar | rylng go young." Naturally,' however, he did not tell this to Theodora. Be" was not unkindly enough for that, and besides, it was he vho had asked her to marry him. She hnd not been overly anxious at first. Arthur, though economical, was just: And then, as by a horrifying ralr> acle, the tiling happened. The little baby, for whose wnrd! robe Arthur's precious dime and penny bunks had been .rifled, at last arrived. It hovered for only one brief ?? ' a s? l-a *t.AM Hour id mis unioTeiy \>unu, uuu men, clasping Theodora's hand, wandered back again Into the great unknown from whence it came. They burled Theodora with her baby hugged to her bosom. The Hps that he had loved were curved In their wonted stuile; her hair, smooth and satiny like a bird's wing, was brushed smoothly back, and the clear brown eyes were closed forever. It was Theodora's mother who gave ; the money for a simple monument. She wanted to do that much, she said, for her daughter's memory; but she did not tell Arthur that she took money which should have gone Instead to pay a long-standing grocer's bill.- It i was easy to see where poor Theodora ; got some of her shiftless habits. And so it happened that Arthur | Brooks commenced life anew with I much i wisdom and no Incumbrances. It was a snowy night, and there , were gathered about the wide fireplace In the library at the club several men, rather good friends, all of them, The club Itself spoke eloquently of the wealth which supported it. There were long mahogany reading tablea lighted hv red-shaded electroliers.' great leather easy chairs, and thick rugs which cost fabulous prices. Only a rich man could afford to seek entrance here. Yet, as It often happens even among rich men, these friends, grown communicative under the gentle stimulus of their after-dinner cigars, were ; discussing the cost of living and the [ financial aspects of married life. One, a robust, red-cheeked old fellow, expanded genially for the benefit of his I attentive audience. * "I was poor as Job's turkey when I got married," hp asserted earnestly. "We had up-hill work of It for twenty yeurs, my wife and I. Just as soon'8 we'd get a little, something, there'd be sickness or a new baby to swallow the savings, "I've been In debt?many and many's the time?and my wife had to work hard?harder than I wanted to see her. But we've been happy. I haven't regretted a day of It-vio slrree, not one! I'd do the same thing over again, I'd advise any man to marry young, If he finds the ohe girl he can love. You see, It makes all the dHJTerence In the world when you have each other?" v ? A young man sitting near the fire | laughed suddenly. He rose, stretched himself lazily, and yawnedj "I don't believe it," he interrupted. "A man- -especially If he's poor?has no business to get married. What Is It they say? 'He travels fastest who I travels alone.' There's sense for you. j "What's your opinion, Brooks? I'm i right, am I not?" He turned for confirmation to an- ! other one of the party. But the man whom he addressed did not answer. Arthur Brooks pillowed his head In his arms on the polished mahogany table and uttered a stifled groan. New Forms of Ice.?Four nev forms of ice have been- produced, in the scientific laboratory, which prove that water can be compressed. Heretofore it was believed that water was incompressible, or very nearly so. But when these new forms of ice were made under various pressures and the Ice was seen to sink, the experimenters concluded the old theory was false. In there four forms of ice, the actual volume of the ice was less than that of the water and the ice sank when placed into a pool of water. From Ithls it was seen the icc was not only heavier than an equal body of water, "out that it was denser than the water 'from which it war. formed. This means that the particles of water in the ice must be crowded closer together than in ordinary water. To produce these new kinds of icc water was subjected 1o extremely high pressure and then Ihe temperature was lowered. The pressure ran as high as 300,000 pounds to a square inch, much greater than any pressure previously applied. 1 Under different pressures ice. froze " < * ? >,! nf. ill ILMU ujuvi mi uajo uuu vuvu tlic.se forms was heavier than water., One form particularly occurred over a wide range of pressures, from 67.00U pcainds per square inch to the maximum used, showing ' it to be quite a stable form. Ordinary ice is lighter than water because it is made up of crystals that form a lattice-like nppearance. It is i therefore more bulky than the water ! from which it is frozen. In the new forms of ice the parti- j elu, though arianged in a definite lat- j tice design, are actually packed closer together than in water. Such being true of water particles, it may very possibly be true of other liquids and. instead of being incompressible, tbey may be quite the opposite when the secret has been learn cel. I ?istnjiimin Frank'in gave this advice' to a young man: "Keep an exact account for some time, both of i your expenses ami your income. If you take the pains at first to mention | particulars, it will have this good ef, le'ct; you will discover how wonderj fully small trifling expenses mount up ! to large sums, and will discern what [ might have been ajid may for the fuj ture be saved without occasioning any I great inconvenience" GRAHAM. BQwfel i - CCfYliONT It VUTWI NjWtftl LWIOH ? ?? ' ~ = I THE CAMEL FAMILY. v r "Mr. and Mrs. Camel lived in the ? too," commenced Daddy. "Mrs. Cara<?l 1 was known as Babe, and Mr. Camel d was known as Cam. "Now there came to this fine pa r t a dear little camel and they called ? the small boy camel 'Baby.' " "Baby wt^s pretty big. He weighed s sixty pounds when he was born, so you see he was a great, great, great J deal bigger, than a'little boy or girl i baby; such as Nick and Nancy once f were! "But Baby was a real baby to his f mother Babe. I "His little humps were so soft, his \ grayish hair so pretty and babylike. r "His mother looked at him and said r to herself, . j \ " 'There have been several other cam- i els born In the too, but none of them g has been so beautiful as my Baby. h " 'You're my darling Bactrian Camel i Baby.' . ? "And the baby looked pleased and j contented that he was so much loved, i "'You're called a Bactrian Camel f Baby because your mother and daddy c 1 i I * "Every Once hi a. While." are Bactrlan Camels?and that means that we're of the family who always have two humps. "'That's the number of humps to j have! Oh yes, 1 wouldn't want to have less than two humps. " 'Two humps show a generous spirit, a most generous spirit. "Every once in awhile Cam Cjimel walked over from his yard and put his head over the partition where Mrs. Camel and Baby were and talked to her. "Cam Camel was out In the yard while Mrs. Camel and the Baby were back in the zoo house. Leading from that house in the back was another yard, but Mrs. Camel and Baby were quite quiet in the house. , "Mrs. Camel wanted to be alone with the baby and haVe mother-andbaby talks. "She liked to chat with Mr. Camel, but if he came arouud he would be Jealous, she knew.. , "So the zoo people had a board fence put up between Mr. Camel's yard aud Mrs. Camel's house where she and the baby were. "Mr. Camel could talk to his mate all he wanted to and she could talk tn film anfl ha could look at the baby. He liked to wander over from his ^ yard every few minutes or so and s gaze at the little camel baby. J "He liked to take' a great interest, K and he wanted to ask his mate, from ^ time to time, how everything was in jj her place?even though he could see. * "Yes, this was the way he liked it. ij He liked to be able to chat with Mrs. t Camel and he liked to be able to see jj his small son but he wns better off ? being separated by the fence-like par- jj titlou over which he could see but * through which he could not go. jj "For if he were able to go near the baby he might become Jealous and jj give It a shove or a push or an angry '* little bite. i "This way he was free from temj>- J tation. 3 "For Jlr. Camel liked girl babies !i best. He would not have been jealous :l of a girl baby, but he was a little jeal- Jj ous of u boy baby. l'nom +Via+ \fra Pomol IlkPfl II ^ boy baby better than she did a girl ? baby. "She would make a pet of her son while he would make a pet of his daughter. "Yes, that was the way it would always be?if there were a girl baby he would pet It more than Mrs. Camel and with a boy baby she was petting it more, and he was missing some of | the attention he usually received. "So he was pleased with the way ( things were. He could not act upon nny Jealous feelings he might have. He could not hurt his son?and looking at him now he knew that really he did not want to hurt him. "lie talked to Mrs. Camel and she talked to him. They had little grunting conversations and both were very happy. " 'Thov'rft Tint lcttinc neorle see me yet,' sale! Mrs. Camel. 'They're leaving me v.ith my baby and only the keepers are watching us. They're letting me get to know my baby and Illsdear little ways. They're not going to let me get nervous and worn out keeping my baby from the crowds who'd put their fingers through to | stroke him. That's all very well after i a little while, but at the first I want! to g-'t to know my baby go very, j very well and to have him all, all te n^self!'" ? Most of us know better but few'of us do better. .j y ? Legislation is always a fe'ti jumps behind the crooks. /j M k MARRIAGE IN PALESTINE t- , - | { Celebration Continuee for One Whole; ] I 1 Week. I, The marriage customs of Palestine lemonstrated recently In the wedding f one of the prettiest girls of Jerusaem, to a well to do merchant, arc | mong the most interesting cclcbraions of this ancient city. No person who is privileged to witless one will ever forget either the * rorgeous customs displayed or the ' hrjll of the music- and dancing lp- < luiged in by the guests. ' , I Not only tho respective families of I he bride and bridegroom but also the ntire neighborhood takes part in the 1 nerryraaking which generally lasts for even days. The celebration begins always on donday, and the wedding ceremony ' tself, always occurs at dawn on the ollowing Sunday. \ Invitatiom? are Bent only to those' rom whom presents are expected, lowever, any person may attend who Irishes. Presents are always in the tature of foodstuffs sucn as rice, 1 neat, sugar, coffee, flour, butter an0 'Onofn ViIao TV. ion a ra nr noooo ri? n >rovide food for the hundreds of ruests who flock to the bridegroom's 1 louse daily to tak* part in the sitting and dancing. Saturday brings the climax to all oy making. If the bridegroom's father s of even moderate circumstance, proessional musicians afe hired for the lay. Men and women in Palestine do not nix together, bften, due to the gen ral belief that women are not menally worthy of association. Conseluently it becomes necessary to enterain women separately. # On Saturday evening at 8 o'clock here takes place the shaving of the iridegroom, a feature of the enterAinment. ' Surrounded by scores of nen and women who keep up Inceslant maddening yells, which may be jeard for a mile around, the barber : indertakes the operation. This done the procession is formed, >ro<:eeding to the church with peo>le marchirg two abreast. At the ' lead come eight kawases (guards) Allowed by ten children carrying in heir hands palm branches and long andles lighted. Immediately after lobble four priests dressed in their :hurch robes and singing psalms. 7he bridegroom, accompanied by his 'ather and the best man, come next, railed by 200 or 309 men. At the end d the procession come the women and hildren. . j A similar procession having started .t aboyf the sam^, time from the >ride's place, the twp groups meet atj ome appointed place and proceed j ointly to the churAh. All ulong the j itreets men and \v(ftmeji, wakened by I he noise, lean out of.thoir windows to; vatch the bridal party. . ' ? if t *%f pSfiin g Before Christmas and W Thousands Dollars g. the Great Christmas.! 4 and Good Qualities ai y Us Turn the Trick? $1.75 OVERAL] S5 200 Pairs Men's OVERALLS?$1.71 <A heavy elastic backs?the famou LISTEN i g Fifty Dozen Men's Winter RIBBEI 32 , At the Garment whHe they la gjP 1,000 Yards 25 Cts. Unbleached PA. 3 $18.50 COATS 1 J2 Fifty-two LADIES' COATS?value; VI Men's $25.00 SUITS- At W Boys' $8.50 and, $10.00 SUITS?Splci Id 300 Ladies' OUTING GOWNS?Ea< g 18 Cts. HICKORY SHIRTING?Yai K 20 Cts. CHEVIOTS?Yard H I Case BLEACHING?AI i SANTA CLAUS 4 WITH LOADS OF TOYS?PLENT J* invite the friends of Santa Claus t I McCON jtf WE SELL FOR CASH I MILL PRODUCT See us for a good exe We have nice bright I OUR GINNERIES ARE THAN THEY HA\ ROLLER MILL J ! Grinds Wheat, Corn an i Feed, Chicken Feed, Hi Hay, Flour and Corn money. 11 DEALERS IN COAL AND | YORKVILLE COTTOI After the ceremony is performed, a general rush is then made to the bridegroom's house where a break'ast is served (by this time it being learly morning) to all. MANY FREAK NAMES North Carolina Children Have Some , Funny Names. If anybody thinks that freak names ire confined to' story books and that their possessors are.onjy the subjects bf Jokes, he has another, thought, com* ing, as Dr. F. M. Register, head of the. bureau of vital statistics of the Atatq Board of r Health, df ftafelgh,' p':C? Is toady' to. certify. .tit In looking over the list1 of children?] Ix>rn tHb first half of the year, Drt Register rait> aoroos such names as these. " ? " "Methodist Conference," "JtfHn the Baptist.''. "Nathan the Prophet,'A ' C^ca-Cola/' "Chero-Cola." These are not fictional characters. They are real, live, cryinj North Carolina babies, and their names are officially listed In the archives of the State Board of Health and Dr. Register stands .ready to verify them.1 But there were*some more, just as real. Everybody has heard of the twins?"Peter ar.d Repcatbr," "Kate and Duplicate." TheBC, too, hr.ve'lieen incarnated in the persons, of. fout North Carolina youngsters, two pair of twins. Perhaps the oddest name of all was: "Second Samuel, Second Chapter, Seventh Ver^." , Others out of thfe ordinary names found' In the card index were "Cape HatteraV "America," "England," "France," and "Belgium/' "Ugley Peacock," "Brotfrn Plgg," "Tumor Trouble." Anoher namo which is an pb' viation is "Fiona." This is a colored child found In the woods In an eastern county. Its name spelled out would be, ' Find the Owner." i OYSTER SHELLS You can feed your poultry on all the high price feed you can buy, but if you don't give them what they need to make egg shells, they won't lay. There is nothing that will take the place of shells.- Chickens need carbonate of lime and when fed on shel's they get the lime. Just think, two or three eggs wiir pay for a hens rations on oyster shellB for one year. BUILDING MATERIAL? / We have a first class line of building material on hand. Several grades of shingles. Galvanized iron 6, 7, 8, 9. and 10 leet length. Also paper roofing. Do not forget to sec us if you have a house to repair or build. We feel sure it will pay you. Wehave receivedour last shipment of wheat and seed oats. YORK SUPPLY CO, 1 Wholesale and Retail. SHOPPING DAYS | e Must Dispose of Many S i Worth of Goods Before jfi Season?Our Low Prices ?)| id Your Needs Will Help Look these over? ^ LiS AT 98 CTS. quality, two seams in leg, ** s SERVICE Brand?At 98 CTS. M &.T THIS ) SHIRTS and DRAWERS, st ? 35 CTS. 22 JAMA CHECKS?Yard _ 10 CTS. \T $8.98 EACH & b up to $18.50?At $8.98 ' ^[ < $15.00 Each ridid values?At ? $4.98 ** :h 98 CTS. $4 :d 10 CTS. _.v._ 121-2 CTS. Jj t - 121-2 CTS. Yd. ? HAS ARRIVED ft Y OF DOLLS, HORNS, Etc. We M o visit tfcis Store often. NELL'S! ONLY?NO CREDIT M !: I 1 1 ! ' i%* . . i hange of Meal for Seed. < HullS. IN BETTER SHAPE \ ! i i ' rE EVER BEEN, i i id Oats. Sells Flour, Hog ! Drse and Mule Feed, Oats, j Meal. Try us ana save t ICE. } OIL COMPANY jj > urn hi i now's the time to jjtabt yourbulbs we HAvr'a complete line of hyacinth*? ' ' ' BOTH 8INGL.5 AND DOUBLE?ALL COLORS; 8ACRED LILLIE8, TULIPS ANlJ NARCISSUS. - '? PHONE NO. 65. WE'LL ,AEAR YOU. . ^ tme rexall city phaemaoy j- * 8 STORE Proprietor Promct and Accurate Service CLOVER. 8. 0. II i* ,y. S.( ' I Special Premium k >i v. 1J : i Af?A1, Utter i 1 I THE YORKVILLE ENQUIRER'S ANNOUNCEMENT FOR 1922 | {I REDUCTION IN PRICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. II ATTRACTIVE PREMIUMS TO f CLUBMAKERS. \ In Chibs of Three or More Subscription Price is | ? 'I $2.26 Per Annum. ' I KEW SUBSCRIBERS GET PAPER TO JANU2 I ARY, 1, 1923,. FOR PRICE OP \ YEAR'S SUBSCRIPTION. II " --r II Now Is the Time to Subscribe and Now Is the I? Time to Begin Making Club. i . s. . 18 All of the hundred or aflore Clubmakers who j! have heretofore been assisting in the annual work p of renewing and paying for the subscription fist of j The Yorkville Enquirer, and others who desire to jj become Clubmakers, are ^rdially invited to par- jj tieipate in the campaign for 1922. T !| CASH PREMIUMS. jj The premiums for this Campaign will be largie- |1 I ly uasu, astoiiows: i One Hundred Dollars to the Clubmaker who returns and pays for the largest Club. Seventy-five Dollars to the Clubmaker who returns and pays for the Second Largest club. Fifty Dollars to the Clubmaker who returns and , Third LargerCtofc PREMIUMS FOR OTHER CLUBS. For TEN names returned and ptold for We will Vive theiClub- I i maker a year's subscription to The Yorkvllle Enquirer. For FIVE names returned and paid for, we will fcive th^Clubmaker a Three-Bladed Pocket Knife with Name and Addreslf on the handlp. . A LIBERAL COMMISSION, the-amount of yhlch will be made J known on application, win be allowed to all Clubmaker* who eject to take Commissions in lieu of other premium*. ' NEW SUBSCRIBERS AS A SPECIAL INDUCEMENT TO NEW eUB8CRl'SER|.~ clubmakers may offer to send them THE YORKVILLC .ENQUIRER TO JANUARY 1,1923, for the price ef yea^a subscription, in Clubs | at $2.25. A NEW SUBSCRIPTION mean* ten addition to the malllxwyiHefa , No kind of substitution by which the same group of -readerf may; ? have the use of the paper under the New Name 1* to toe recognised,, and no name that Has been on the mailing list since July last will toe counted as a NEW name. _ fJ'ir" CONDITIONS , IT IS DISTINCTLY UNDERSTOOD that the Clubmaker is. rt- ; nanciaiiy responsible for all names returned, until the same are paid for, The Clubmaker has the right 4o discontinue any unpaid auto- ya ficription at any time on paying for the same at the rat* of I,Cents a week during the time it may have been goihg to-the subscriber. All names not paid for by SATURDAY EVENING, EBRUARY^S. I 1922, at 6 0deck, p. m., are chargeable to the account of the Clutomaker returning the name. I'-fc NEW AND ODD SUBSCRIBERS count the same for the Cltih- 1 maker, either in competition or by way of commission*. ,1.. ^ BOOKS ABE MOW OPEN THE CLUB BOOKS ARE NOW'OPEN and New and Old Sub- ' scribeis may be returned as rapidly as secured. IT IS DISTINCTLY UNDERSTOOD that there caa be no trans^ (era of names frorti one Club to another after the names have been entered on our books. y. IMPORTANT INSTRUCTIONS IN SENDING NA^ES CLUBMA&ER8 are especially requested to write names and addresses plainly and in case of a name already, on our mailing list, it i^ desirable that it be written In the Bdme man- r nor as it now appears on the prlntecHabel. Clubmakers wlU confer $ " a favor if in sending Renewals they will begin the letter with "Renew" or in the case of a New name If they will begin with the word "Enter." That will save tho bookkeeper trouble in having to hunt 5 the list to avoid entering the same name twice. \ AND LET IT BE HEMEMBEREp. also that this offer of the pa- I per ut $2.25 a year will be withdrawn on February 18, 1822, and that I after that date the price will be $2.50 a year. | L. M. GRIST'S SONS, York, S. C. . f - ' - ? ??my?M?s ?? *??mmmm+mm \ . Mill illrtll SPECIAL DINNER SET OFFER J WE HAVE ON HAND A LIMITED NUMBER OF 31-PiECE DIN^ k NER SETS, WORTH $8.50 EACH, WHICH WE OPFfcft TO J CLUBMAKER8 PAYING FOR FIFTEEN ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE YOR^VILLE ENQUIRER AT $$?5 EACH. L_ j'v Those Dinner Sets will be delivered to the Clubmakers on demand immediately the Fifteen Names are Returned and Paid For, provided the limited number on hand has not already b^en exhausted.Otherwise we a;;ree to procure other Dinner Sets or Pay Commissions at the option of the Clubmakers entitled to the same. > ? i i .' .?<; ' I ' ? > V Tt; * L. M. GRIST'S SONS, York, S. C. - - \ $ * *'? ' 9 '* ' . s * . . t. ? M HwiM'WM^ug^ntiii'ww'UTut unwHintwmi IU 111 Ii>w I- m mm\ ?MiwMtk '