-‘UW 3" 192° »1 nr. cHl\ar.o'r'raTowN cuanolns .l ~ - _ p»\¢;g_g|=_vEN Pi' . , `”' " - M- sux. _,,.. .___'......u. , _ .,l..,.,.-a._. _ f “i.=it~1&iss=ss.u»‘~s___,,,_-_,',.,~ ,_ - .ii , ..-.'~.,.- ,1_~m&~;sm»o.m~.'-sswwwumw _ r if _ J , ' ‘_ < - ' ff '-'--_ .f 5- »_-'_ r i' V ’ I nnsa his ._ lu ¢n1, _ _ _ I Milady Beautiful l ' _ _- _~,____` * _ 1*/it carissuss ~ ,___ at _ ruiosv ian _ .1 6 I _ __ vie* rv" _____s_ m almost every other son; ot Bulgaria will have auto-bus lines. _ _ _ _. - _ womans wearing apparel, turnover i°”` ` EI\]0y lt. _ _ ` A \_ Lg enwm-Aged by changes in ny1e_ Britain is broadcasting Shaw's` ' ' ` hence the activity of the designers. plays' ----- 4* I-\i~\l THB SLEEVELESS MODE There is something very youthful FurFas/uons " ' In Boston (By Beth Barton) coat designers for the next season In Few women discard garments because filly Ire worn; they discard them be- cause they are out of style. Bo fur fl“’Ul°l'! mill rejoice that the vogue of the straight line in fur boats is on the wane, and the new "Princess" silhouette is in ascendancy. ind jounty in the sleeveless day- The “Princess” silhouette wiii not .imc irocks that have become so popular this season. Milady'g arms need not be white to be considered beautiful since the advent of the sun- :an vogue, but they lnust be evenly tinted and shapely. The arm that is pale and flabby at the top with iklh below the elbow discolored and :oarss-grained is not a beauty asset. The flabby upper arm is pai-|_,¢~_u- lhrly unlovely. The skin falls into ugly folds at the arnrholc when the trms are hanging relaxed, so that one feels that it should be allowed to take refuge behind a graceful bit of dra- pery. Both exercise and massage treatments are helpful in bringing flrmnoss and beauty to such arms. Almost any arm exercise will help re- place the fiaccid muscles with ijnn, supple ones. Here is n. simple sct of movements that can be :lone every lay: Stand or sit erect with arms held out straight in front at the ilioukier level. 'Stretch the arms well ind tense the muscles. Keeping the upper arms motionless, slowly bend the arms at the elbows, then bring the right hand to the left shoulder ind the left hand to the right shoul- s ler. Then slowly draw the arms ipart, keeping elbows bent until they r out at ac side of the bod at _only sell more fur coats because it is "the latest 5¢Yle:" it also uses con- siderably more fur for each single _garment and being luxurious in de- .BlBn. it seems to demand rich furs _for the collar and cuffs as well. The _new silhouette will be seen in the more expensive furs-squirrel, cara- cui, broadtail, mink, and `persl'm lamb. Trimniings will be fox, wolf, beaver, and squirrel. - Of course it is very likely that as soon as the new flare fashion is well launched in the expensive furs, the cheaper furs will be made up in the _same styles. But even this will add to the prosperity of the fur farmer, for thq rich collar and cuffs will have to of the better furs in order to set off the cheaper fur of the body of the coat. _ » Beside the new "Prin'cess"_ silhou- ette, the less pretentious flare‘cut is being introduced in the more con-' servatlve coats. _ ` ' For a long time the straight line coat, of "skimpy" cut, has been popu- lar. The vogue for it came in with the determination of ladies to be slim and svelte,-or at least to look as ‘nearly slim as the combined laws of 'heredity and health would permit. The trouble with the straight line fur i e e h y lhoulder level. Then fling the arms|°°°l' W” that 1° P'“""4 5° °“° wink' :ut straight and swing them back as ed- lem” 1” wld ur' ‘md s°m°' lar as you can, trying to make the ihoulder blades meet. Relax and re- times snow and sleet. It also partdd' over the knee when one sat down. One was frequently foroed to unbot- peat the exercise ten to twenty times. After the exercise period is a good "°“ th’ °°“t Whm’ ‘ming d°w“ 1°' time for the massage. Cleanse the skin with soap and warm water, rinse md dry. Now rub a little cream or olive oil on the palm of your left hind and with it massage your right arm. Give a deep, rotary massage movement for five minutes, your hand cupped around the arm. Now use a patter or your lingers to give a stimulating or slapping massage. Wipe of! the cream and sponge with a skin lotion. If the elbow, hand and forearm are darker than the upper arm you may either use I suntan lotion to darken the latter or you may bleach the lower part. A bleach-pack is usually more ef- fective than a lotion because it keeps moist longer. In making one for the arms mix the bleaching lotion of your any length of time, for the coat was cut so small that to sit with it but- toned meant that when one rose again there would be a peculiar and unaesthetlc bulge at the back. (The iladi-es who have had fur coau do 'this will know what I mean, As for ithe gentlemen, let me say that it was the samsprinciple in operation as that which makes trousers bulgy at the knee if they hsven't been f thoughtfully homes hum sitting down.) These inconveniences have made women realize that sometimes comfort is to be preferred to beauty, and they have begun to insist that there be plenty of skirt room in their fur coats. The result is that the flare from the waist is well established for next years' style. The hidden flare is al-10 choice with cornmeal or with fuiler's ,shown in many new models. The lat- esrth and spread it on the skin which_ W is s aught nan from amp ,me has been thoroughly cleansed and steamed with hot towels several limes. Buttermilk is a useful bleach, lllhoush it is slow in action, A buttennilk pack given daily for three or four weeks will do much toward bleaching darkened arms. An- Oiher simple bleach may be made of seam to where the coat buttons, al- ,lowing a little more freedom. Some- times the hidden flare is obtained by cutting the coat with a diagonal line from the right shoulder tothe left knee, so that there is s consid- erable overlapping of fur in the skirt, and yet the coat looks as if it °llE Dart of glycerine and two parts were cut on “_"_|sh¢, ,met of lemon Juice mixed into a paste Luxurious shawl mlm, ,mg ,uri with fuller's earth, Tomorrow - Beauty Questions collars that extend almost to the waist seem to be supplentlurf-l\'2 A“"'°'°d' . boyish collar too, even on some of A Morning Smile ' The day after McFadzean's funeral 611'! KUWM the coats that have almost always been severely tailored before--Such 8-! leopard, Persian lamb, and the seal- dyed muskrat. _ ` In general the tendency of wom- to return to the feminine Dgvid McA]| ter culed on mg and the llllilrloud hll Cl»lllBd'!hB '(5 widow, and, after some hesitation, Chilli* in 1"’ ‘“m°"“ "hd for he, h,md_ Even those few women .WM i>l'9f°l' 'Tm sorry. Dauvit.” slid she. "for W \“l°P °° th’ “Ve” "‘u?'°d :gf v I like ye well enough; but ye‘re late. U y°u'd really wanted me ye could have spoke long ago; ye ken it was anddreasossresolnsi/03 ¢p,_ Y of business to the fur farmer. 19? my new that nothin: is lmsrbfr fox scarf. common knowledu m me vm", with a neat tailleur than a tm.” week. no mn Mcndum Bilver fox is tlwsy.:__mo!;»_f_a.sl.ii°oi\:l:l:_. could” t ‘mul -. not only because t 0 pe s ge r. tiful, but also because black .is the ""_ *' i _h favored color for street wear. But ,;.. ~ ' `. - the lass expensive fox scarves, red. Oi' dyed, an also very popular-' ' gg may bg possible that fur will retuni to favor as a trlmminl 1°! die-lsss. some years ll° W0 _V°lll° get s little impetus when duropolh ¢iesi¢nm_ bell" illllll “WW fl” on sstin. IM lllillfffl Nl V°|‘l°"- 33'," me vogue was killed by the afore- mentioned "bvyllh" illllfi .°l‘ll°» md "_ hu nge ,gg com( back. Bill 90! that women’s clothes have roverwd to :minus una sus to plentiful ornament. it seem vm “N11 'N' fur may be used co mm lsrlllllf-I qua. nothing souls 'bo more Nw- tiful than s sapphire blue Wlvll Gill ummm with mr mimi. °v 0 14°” moe mia with outa# of Niall- ' as-» i__v_I_/°mf'f_"3 Realm -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -.°- Literature l mln 1 _DI _ pus: 1 _ . _ _, nl _yt Z-fy ll-1,... 4° if .- fr I p. 1 houetie has been sponsored by fur vienna hun bathing ca-“ret - B00n\€l°2.l'lg' Wh€l\ the FlltUl'€ Actually Germany has s book-of-the-month club. Tin mines of British Malaya are to i be electrified. _ 1 Corporal punishment in schools of London has been _aboiished._ Shanghai, China, is to have a large apartment building. , -_ l Postal savings in Japan now total i $875,000,000. Textile workers of Belgium have received a nve per cent wage in- crease. Watches are being imported into Egypt by parcel post. _ lv/h_o take out so much insurance that they kill themselves g to keep . \\\\iil:.|l |_\ Dopothy Di-x ____._.f_._‘;..“2_§._.____ What the Fashionable Extravanrice » _ » ' _'ron Dear _ 4, _ Skimping on the Present in Order to Lay Up Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished Prine ad is , , _ . . ’ . ,,,,,, ,,,°,,,dW,;"§_m’“;‘_§’a_“;’ r (mod ihlngs for the Future May Prove a With Every Pattern Comes and Finds us too Tired to BY Annabelle W01`tlllIl2't011 When is economy economy, and when is it rank wsstefuinessf Of course, every one above the grade of a moron is fully aware of the necessity of living within his income and laying up something for the rainy day that is sure to come to us ali. Sickness, bad luck in business, old age are misfortunes that none escape, and when these befall us, miserable, indeed, isour lot if we have to add to them penury and dependence upon others. But we can buy even the umbrella to protect us against the storms of life atftoo lligh_ a price. We can pay for it more than it is worth.” We c'an invest so much in it that it impoverisnes us' and becomes an extravagance instead of a proof of our thrift. _ , You see a frequent illustration o!` this in the men up their policies, and who never seem to .realize that,eve_n in dollars and cents they are worth more to their families alive than dead. ' _ Another common example of this is to be foundin the men who are to People of 'Great Britain bought 100,000 pianos 'ih the lose iz months. ing operations after s long shut- down. The new Frenh cruiser 'Tourville will make a world voyage; London girls are reviving water sports; including _ punting. Brunn, Czechoslovakia, will hold an exhibition of modern trade and business. _ ' _ ..._.‘__ The Australian Govemment will open up 8,000,000 acres 'of new wheat land. Germans are playing American saxaphones. _ Cannes, France. has ordered that all taxis have taximeters, Sunday sports contests in its public parks. Nearly 12,000 motorcycles were sold .ri Sweden last year. ' _American automobiles now lead for- eigncsrs in number in Czechoslovak. ia. ` India has 250,000 square miie, Q1 forest lands, according to u recent estimate. my in or _ve1vet, or rich brocade, must be m°4°_ CUSS' with sumo warm fur for lov February oveninn in Boston, and limousine shoes must, be edged with flll' .for the lrhlz rides from country estates into Boston for the theatre, or dinner in town. White iq; will be 5 favored fur for' opera wraps, though mink and squirr'e1'wlll still hold their own. ' An unusually rich and beautiful sort of opera and theatre wrap is made by lining s. Chinesemandarin coat with a rich fur. The mandarin coats, of gorgeous silk or brocade, trimmed with multi-colored embroid- _ery, are not very warm, especially for a winter in Boston. But ladies here have hit upon the idea of having their mandarin coats entirely lined with mink, muskrat or squirrel, and the result is s' garment of unusual beauty. distinction, and comfort. The Chinese themselves frequently line their clothes with fur, that is. the 'Chinese who live in tl-is north, and no doubt they would highly ap- prove what the American women are doing with mandarin coats. The best time to buy furs in Bos- ton is during' the month of August when _all the stones mark down their prices. Usually they allow lone to psy "on time," and offer to store the colt free in refrigerated vaults until called for. After August, the next best mouth in which to do fur buy- ing is Jdsnillryi lt the after-Ohrisb mss‘|’sles. ` _ Whoa will the decorative and sup- orlstively comfortable muff return? I. for one, would lin to plaid for its reinstatement. ;t`is far warmer th_a_n ani !°l’f~ _Of (love-for even the fur lined glove may restrict circula- tlonlshough to mire uisyéds sold. [remember that when I ss a child, muff, even in the hot summer. And many is the time one cold day in soma, that r buh I had s nies muff to match my fur coat. Why dotlnlt Patou' or Lmvin. or some- one when initiative would have s nelly far-reaching enact. desisn s sst;,nuf!. sad min it the venue ssslhi » Wales’ large steel plants are resum-| ` they were able to tackle their problems from a new ang): and to put fresh Edinburgh, Scotland, has banned; I could never he ported from my, anxious to get rich quick that they ne ver take a. vacation, or indulge them- 'selves in any pleasure and recreation._ They boost that they have`n't been l away from their onices a single day in ten years; that_the`y have no inter-I est outside of their business/and that they don't_ wsstethelr energies _andi thoughts on such frivolous matters ss golf `and fishing and _hunting and traveling, _ _» ._ _ _ You cannot convince such a man, not everifwhen he breaks down with! nervous prostration in his 40s, that it is his industry that hasbankrupted him, and that if he had worked less he could have worked longer, ahdthat he would have done better and more proztsbie work. _ But it.ls the truth. The man who used up all of hh energy and strength by incessant labor in his youth is just as much a prodigal as if he had spent hiswholé iortuhs oh' one big debauch. _ _ f ‘ . _ ' _ . _ ’2as2 'f ' 1 r 0 ; _ _/.S as -at’ ' .G< _ _*___ le' . l@`,___i ,__-‘pn _ ~. _*#1-5; _.757 / VA, ~ ~ *G ~ _. _ -ef ,' . _ 4 _‘_ tl". °";<9"°7‘5’Z'.. - 'f .1 _. _ 1 'ai ` / @’W'- -- extremely slender. _ The tiers are attached to a. two- piece skirt. They are cut circular: lower tiers lenlzthens the skirt. This makes it interesting because it kim- plifles the making. Tim upper gei- is stit:hed along dotted lines pi-0. vided for same, which affects hip yoke to keep the silhouette slender. The shawl collar in plain white crepe emphasizes the surpllze closing of bodice which is the beg; meg,-is oi detracting from width. The vestee and cuffs choose the white crepe. If is d€Sl8ned in sizes 16, lil years, 36, 38. 40 and 42 inches bust. It will make up lovely for all-day ocnsions in orchid and white tiny Bingham check, cotton volle or rajah silk. Pattem price is cents. Be sure to nil in size of pattern Ad- dress Pattern Department. The New Fashion Magazine is 15 cents, but only 10 cents when ordered with a pattern; ‘ ND. 2352. S129 .,........... . .. i i 1 i “After my baby was born l wail very weak and nm-down. [was not i ," able so do any heavy work but l had | l zo be around on my feet all day. The | sick (gr about two months. My _ mother advised Lydia E. Pinkh_a__|;'3 I Vegetable Compound and I sta ro rake it. You should have seen the change in me. I am now well and i taken the Vegetable Compound ever since ifl fee my eng? lacking. I also take Liver Pills s l End them a wonderful hel for consti&azion." -Mrs. James IE Robson-i,_ x 69), i Fmuz, Bmuii Columbia. strong and in good spiriu I havs_ I " Egg and Olive Sandwich ..< . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - . . ......... 2 hard cooked eggs, 1-4 cup chopped 'W - _rips olive, » mayonnaise. ~ _ ,. i ` Name i Chop the eggs and mix with oliver 1 u- _ 2 _.d maycnnals ..Spr-emi between slic' A printed t_ub silk ln enchanting, .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _S of W______ C__ hmm bread _ woes of sreen on a white bash- sn-eshsddress . _ . - ground__ Style No_ 2852 is B clever _ _ cream Chcese¢__;__i-;:___:asl>beff! Jsu tiered model showing smart wrapped I 2.... . . . . . . " ____ ` ‘ _ treatment, that will make you appear Make a thu' dm; Lndwmh' mu" " 2?. 1~ City ' Bm” cream cheese between slices ons snffl The men' who are still at the head off' their affairs in :their §_0s_ are,the men 'who have varied their work with play, and who have cultivated outside interests. From time to time they have dropped their work and forgotten i it, and when they came back to it, rested and refreshed in mid and body. pep and enthusiasm in their work. There is _no truer saying _than that all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. _ » Still another illustration of the way in which economy_may _become s boomerang we see daily in those people who have denied themselves every- thing 'they wanted at the time they could have enjoyed it, in order that they might have these pleasures at some future day that never arrived. for by the time they were ready to indulge themsieves they had lost their desires, They had got their nuts when they had _no teeth to crack them. _ You see peoplelwho love beautiful surroundings and who could adord 1 -nice home, but they put off building it until the children are grown, and then when they get it built the childrenare mai-ned and gone. _ You see people who long to travel, and they might as well go _as not and fill their minds with the memories of_ the wonderful things they have seen. but they keep putting it on and putt ing it oi! until they are too old and de- crepit to get a single kick out of it when they do at lab! start out on a tour. ______.__ You see people saving and pinching every penny, dellllllll ¢ll¢m5=lV¢° every comfort and nduigence to acre. pe together s fortune, and when they get it, it will buy them nothing that they wont. It is nothing but some scraps of paper in a bank box for their heirs to illht over when they are _ ' Y Y _ iwo and jam between' slices two an( °-“ lnree ' L [assorted cold cuts may be the' sub- ' ' ` ` < ' 7718 B_aS._etLunch Ismnmal dish mound which the reg. All sandwiches should be wrapped ` in wax paper to insure their keelillll of the meal is built-or a hearty salad By Barbara. B. Brooks . d-:viled eggs, or baked beans may fnsh' ` _ihe pieze de resistance. With a va-` 4 `_""" ' ` This is vacation time-3, period of ‘riety of sandwiches, and fresh vege- - cooked in the open, but others prefer F01’ llll-S Purpose there are many'1-4 cup chcnn~d celery, tomato soup types of picnic hampers equipped with! Mix dried bacf. cheese, and celery vacuum bottles for hot and cold_thoroughly and add enough tomato drinks, containers for sandwiches and _soup to moisten. Spread between slic- salads and enamel cups and platezcies bi' rye or bi-an bi-emi, If we are fortunate enough to own* ri-led mm .hd onion sandwich such 1 hhmper. packing the picnic 15 lb. smoked him, reasoned uhe_ basket is easy. However. many a de- friend quite brown, 2 large din pleirlesi ll¢l°uS DlCfll<= NPS-St has been Dl¢l¢€d l small Spanish onion, 1-2 cup may-1 with success in a common-market om-mis¢_ ` l>lfSk¢¢~ Put ham, picked and onion through i Cold baked ham which has been p, food ehbpper gi-id mix with mayon- glazed with honey, fried chicken or naise. Spread between slices of bread > i rest and recreation, What. more de-itables such as radishes. onions and . ` lightful vacation pastime do you know i tomatoes; and the addition ofa sim- E'!quette of than a picnic in s lovely sheltered _ple dessert of fruit and cookies. our spot, perhaps on the bank`of a wil- ipicnic menu is complete, » low-fringed stream. To some peoplei Some sandwiches which are suitable, picnic means a camp fire and a meal i for the basket lunch are: ‘ . simply to open bask-:Ls and have the‘ Dried Beer und cheese sandwich 111681 ulhready prepared. i if cup dried beef, ‘_-2 grated cheese, By Roberta Lee Q. When dining pt a' hotel oi place where dancing is included, what should one cioiwith the napkin wher- going to dance? A. Merely lay it on the table un- I folded, and do the same when leav- ing. Q. On what kind of stationery should acknowledgements to formal invitations be written? A. On white note paper, or white correspondence cards. ` Q. what does "bon voyage" mean? A. “Good joumey to you." Better dressers of Brazil are takin( to shoes with highly colored uppers. gone. They have wasted all the joys and pleasures of life trying to save. What extravagancei _ __._..__._ _ Women are notoriously unable to tell when economy is economy, and when it is sheer wastefulness, and some of their most flagrant sins of ex- travagance are committed in the nam e _of thrift. 1n.proof whereof con- sider the stock pot, the fetish of the saving housewife, into which goes, along with the scraps from the table, $10 worth of work and watchng in order to ssvs 15 cents' worth of soup meat. Behold also the bread puddinl ill which by dint of labor and eggs and milk and butter and sugar and spiced and raisins a few stale slices of bread are sslvtled it I1'¢ll» 05%' And no women beat louder upon the cymbals in _billing attention _ to their economies than those thrifty sisters who boast that they painted an entire set of fumiture themselves, or cleaned their rugs _instead of hiring it done, even though it brought a spell of sickness upon them that necessitated doctors’ and nurses' bills that came to ten timesshe money they saved. _-ii-i _ I _ __ Of course, a woman counts it unto herself for righteousness when she denies herself good clothes, but even this is riot llwlyl ¥09d 6°°i'\0ml'. li!- cziuse in a way a woman is an index of_ her husba.nds_ prosperity or his failure, and if she is shabby it is l. bad a_dvertise_ment_ fprhim-. I_v/ell lf€¢&1l onus heurlhg s doctor urging his penunous and Irumpy looking wife to _buy some pretty frocks. ' A _ _ \ "When you go about ill-dressed; you do me a. great _ln.lustlC0." he 8114. “for people are bound to think one of two things: either that I am so mean and stingy that I will not buy my wife ldecent clothel. or else that Iam such a poor doctor that I have nopatients and dont make enough money in dr!" yi-in properly. Don't think you are helping me by swing every cent. You are ruining me by it." . And certainly. many a woman'| economy has colt her a divorce. which is no saving any way youflgure it out. Por many s woman hu ovefW°rl¢¢4 until she made herself nervous and~peevish and-beea~too»t$rod to-ploy-with I h'er husband. Many s wife has scrirnped on the beauty shop and let. herself get old and ugly' before her time. Mdny a` wife has worn ugly bl-hd-m0-’ downs because they were cheap, instead of frilly chi_i!ovnl. and as the result of her economies lost her husband to hills woman Whil -hill |0089 Glluilllh -\° see that it was a profitable investment for a woman always to keep hersélf looknglikeagoodbsrgsintosrnan. ` ; _ _..___.._.... _ . as the question is still uhsmwoi-ed; when il e°_l>\\°my ceqmony. mi when is it rank waswfulness? DOROTHY DXX. ' ___ _ __ ~ _ Y ' ' Y ~ spoon salt, ld cup almonds, blanched _ _ 2 _ _ \ For ne Cook I and chopped finori mmhmauows select large. even sind tatoes a_nd bake until soft. Cut hai! lonnit- BWEE1' POTATO!! ON THE _ HALF-SHELL wise and scoop out the pulp. bush well. add milk, butter, soltand chop- ped almonds. Return mixture to the shells, -top with the manhmsum. out io halves, and brown delicately ~ia the ma som 'small mst soul. Blx baked sweet. potatoes, vs cup »milk, 8 teaspoons button' .lt tes- ... »,...i.. ..- UADB. BY TRI l(|l._l.8Rl~ O! QUAKII Pujed 'Kin 1: (jood, Too Qus‘:er Puffed Rice is p_hi6'e_;_le<\ and broken down. ed Rice is another de- licious dainty, full of the andy energy of ine white rice. For variety, keep bodi kinds in the house I P.iZ?~.}. ,_ Even Cliooseg" strain roved foo great and l was real i ' il i 1 _L .r l 2`|‘ _ i 3 1 l I A a ,ir fi ld »¢" *iii J ii 1 ri.;-a.~_.._, ._, _. I o l tes a Quaker Puffed Wheat ._ .won’r ear this, and won’t ear that WHEN children are inicky and choosey ...but crave for things that are none too good for them. Then let them have Quaker Puffed Wheat. . Serve it at any time of the day or at any meal. ` ` Use berries, jarnor jelly, or just milk or cream. These crisp and delicious food morsels make _,an instant-appeal to fickle appetites. Puiflng the whole wheat grains to eight times their natural size cooks them thoroughly and gives them a texture and a - nut-like 6-svour which children revel in. Millions of food 'cells are exploded in each grain. 'Rich food stores are released and made easy for diges- , tion. All the bran is retained but so concealed .you do not notice ic. ' Quaker Pufed Wheat tempts the lagging appetites of grown-ups, too. ‘Ar any meal or as s snack _ ._ between meals. ` Quaker. . < r Pu|=Fro_wH, - ... _ , ,- ,`.*_,,..~-i.~i..,.» i \ r " . . i l -O i \. u .| l§ ,\ .i 4 | l. il- ll? v,v i . f i lp X. 4? \ a;\ f ,I 79.2"' ‘W ,if ti l i i 1.3" ‘Li ' | i'° i -r P _i .i 'V .W-_,-_-=>_:__¢___~,;|¢l, .ii i:_ 6 1 ll , ig- »-.i i all ii ‘Ei ii i .<.i_ i i i 1 li, :V V .¢-si-_-_ 'E 1 it Qi' ,is I |` i tr, ‘ 4 i 1