.`_.__,__.;... _ . .- _ - gi _ " “"“"“'°"' H -1 4 -#_ 4--ni , 1"~r.:;h*q Eg '.4-#J ‘j °‘~. ’ KE, ‘*",°- "1 , , p not muon' 'rlsl R . ` . _ . Ars orrss 1 s -_ i _ '~ * H onnqos. 'I ‘ if . I , ____-, , isssanos _ f _ .i ~ __ . _ ., __ _ _ _ _ _ i.. _ _ iiuuornrows' . s i ' ' ; <;._. _‘v 0Nl’ BDEIATIDN .: _ __ _ __ ' _, ., , _ ,W ;, -i _ _ __ s-. _f __ _ _ _ __ . _ _ _ _ -'_ -» fl-`~ . -" \".! _lil-_FEll;l.sTl.0lSl .C __RiiTioii, ciiiisirrriowiv ~.=--ii-.sa-?l“&'vlR°-w°‘*i'llff3'B?l¥'”"*} "“"“'_P‘"“ ""9 _‘?’_‘4U~0f1°FE’hff¢WN»- M¢h31l>3Y'E1 NYARCH 9. 1914 nm of mn- rw "s.'*idiii°.ri1r.ie=i>iii'..e°.i.ei°° ~ '_..P (B HALI ret Bro attacks her horn morai nl ht hilt des after th 3 y0ll g ». n restedf will lac Murpl dead w said to 'i‘here w M ,-_-_-.- s Wgipgqn ___l___asiiu_|t__¢ii with _Hiimmar. L"..l_'_*il_*"llli_'.lll’;° LL.5"’_'!"_l!\'_|-il',l_'l __l_ff¢8i¢d Chvrilid " with the Crime. ' L li pecinl to The Guardian) FAX, March 8.-Mrs. Marga- wn, widow 50 years old, was d with a sledge hammer in 'e on William street, this and died of her injuries to- g . kull was frightfully crushed pits this she lived 15 hours e assault. James Murphy, _ Scotchman, has been ar- for the crime and to-morrow e tha charge in court. iy married a daughter of the ornan and family trouble is be the cause of the crime.l ers no witnesses to the tra- n ll _- Her 's f 1,5- 7 .iz __ I Died Shortly gedy. It is said that Murphy was “ut late Safufdlly night and when his EB*-llflled he quarrelled With the woman. Af- tl11'8@_n’clock this morning the W0'm*1"'s young son heard strange sounds from his mother's room and going in he found his mother un- C0"9Cl0\1B 011 a sofa with her head crushed in several places. Hs pslierl assistance and the police came. Piiy-‘ sicians haudaged the wom;n’s head and ordered her removal to tha hos- Dital. Sho never regained con- sciousness. Detectives found Mur- Dhy in another room of the house ‘l"€SBE<1~ They also found a hun.- mer covered with blood and hair, iii. ii The .s_ structio iirul is at the service preache D Lor s Father DrC nertati tl ns- ie the Cat the ins tu res fi d owe his disc Scripture is inspired of God and is useful t tiilferl f te l n ly rithy. interest with th und the he expo Mother r Scriptu gard th said, w man, th stagger the ina KFDSP B teaching the inl’iu man h moved ings an to .the hy the regarded 'I`he Bib Dortnnt e man llf staggsr to it, a Book se DONE. the Bib upon th tians. in the was str the very distinct that th Work o instrum whose f ing in s inspired C HIDE Ons ce this col order. psfr here. H01. ' llll. _Cllll’BlLl THE _Pill-Cllllllll iecial Lenten course of in n for n1sn.~st the l’ro-nsine- belng very' largely attended various services, and at the on Sunday evening when the' r was the Rev, Dr. Camp bell, t there w men DM The H he Rector of St. Dunstan's, as a very large number of sent. . 5 ev. Father Pius McDonald ofiiciated at the Rosary devotions which receded the sermon, and His d hip Bishop 0,'Leary and Rev. 'McLellan were also present. . ampbell gave u learned dis- mi upon the' Holy Scriptures 'Word' bf God-, in an Olllilihc ol' hollc teaching with regard to :~ _ lllration _ of the Holy Scrip- alid theconsequences that' from that doctrine, basing _ onrse upon the text, “All _ ri sd ed ,minds nlaycd _in the writing. After _ 7 t ~ b ' , s t l I o instruct and to correct roni the second epistle writ st. Psui to his disciple, 'rim The learned speaker held the I of his audience throuvhout e line command of language- lucidity ol manner in wh ch unded the attitude of Holy Church towards the Holy f es and her doctrines in re- ereto. The Scriptures. he ere a great gift of G04 to e magnitude of which gift them; and they recognised dquacy of their power to nd present tnoss scriptsrsl, s in the full`est light. All' ences that swayed the hu-‘ carh. all the passions that' msn n-nd all the ihspiral-1008 that led out and them in preacher plain th into th und the taments them, were there worked l described and presented to a thousand ways. The proceeded to refer to and ex- e divisions of the Scriptures' e Old and New ’l`estaments,‘ further divisions of the Tee-_ into several classes of writ- d hunks, showing in \‘0K0\‘d Old Testament divisions meds Jews how even those 11001118 the Scriptures as inspired-_ le than was this: a most im- tsnchlng of all sides of hu- , cldimingan antiquity that them when they looked in- nd _accepted by them as a nt by God for a divine DUF- Tho claim of insDll`i1l1l0“ T0’ le rested after all ultimately e acceptance of it by Cllfls' The -claim aplwnfed VB8“°lY old Testament itself. but iti ongly ,held by the Jews "Om beginning and there WB! 8 understandin! among them at hook was directly the' f God, written through thsi entslity of God by msn aculties were for the time be- beyahce; the more thai W2" the less part their own W .ADS f ~ Ci-_l55|F'_°_"',°.l‘ nt, r word each insertion is D0 . lima: Cslh must ,accomilhnll Minimum charge twenty-five -'-‘--‘----Y----_-.-_~.~.~.-4 _~_-_-_-_-_-_-_~___~___._,___,____._____.__:, giving- certain iefeiences in the l`l(‘l`|l1l1l1I‘ea themselves to hear out the clailu that those writings were 'lnslliicd 01 G00, and referrinv to the Inns existing tradition of ins Jews that there were books ilu their pos- session of sacred writings inspired by God that those books were de- livered to them bv the Holv Spirit- an opinion that was universal among that people at the time of Jesus-Dr Campbell went on to say hat Our Lord made use of those ooks by reference, and though He did not positively say they were in- pired, by the use He made of them He at any rate afforded to the Jews hat which seemed to them corrobo- rative evidence of their own tradi- tions, inasmuch as they held those books to he inspired; at any rate they understood Him to say nothing contrary to the belief they had as to the inspired character of those writings. ‘Tho Apostles used tbem` _;. ... ;~ _. -3_5 .. 3,000 Montreal Longshore- men Pefilioning for Higher ' Pay- Strike Feared. ' (Canadian Press) MONTREAL. March 8.- Serious trouble with the Longshoremen may occur when the season opens. They BFG PPBSGM-ing a petition to the shipping federation asking for in~ crease of pay to bring them into line with others along the Atlantic twist. Nearly 3,000 _men will be in- V0l.V%d and a strike would _tie up the entire St. Lawrence shipping service. Ellllllll llBl|ill lllSllillS Sill (Canadian Press) VANKLEEK HILL, Ont., Mar. 8_- Gustave Evanturel, charged with “king $10,000 from the liquor men as the price of li-is support in the 1\?Zl9llltUl‘€, as amember for. Pres- cott, decided on Saturday aftemoon to resign his sent. An effort is be- ing mnde on the part of the Liber- als to ‘get Henri Bourassa to run in his place. Htl. llllllll SIMPSUN moriing in St. Petsr's Church preach- ed the second of a sarlcsrof sermons on "sin," exhoriing _his bearers to a _i_r,ue_»realiz,ntion of sin and the head cl forgiveness. The sermon yesterday n thesams' ’way iis'0ur Lord did; -‘*i¢D|li_W;l!ih' “The Preaching of For- n the New Testament references were made in various places to the inspired character of the Scriptures; and one of the clearest was his text. The Fathers of the Apostolic age who left the w.ritings so us took up entirely the idea which the Jews ield of inspiration and were .very rigid with regard to the extent of it. It was not until they came per- haps tio the fourth century that they ' oticed any divergence whatever rom that idea of most rigid -inspi- ration, word for word, from the Holy Spirit. The Church had laid down that both Books of the Bible were inspired, that both had the same degree of inspiration, and that had been repeated from Council to Council; and as soon as there WHS any movement in a contrary direc- tion which would aim to lessen thc validity of the Divine Word or di- vids ii in any wav so that Hvms part would have more weiilhl- than another,-as soon as there was any movement in that direction. the voice of the Church was raised again and again to point out that the inspiration was full and that it was clear in all P11115. and l1\1‘8l» there was no Dart of Holy S°l`iP¢‘"° which could be said to be Other than inspired. To clear up the idea of inslliru- tion as it prevailed amongst them. he would say that inspiration and revelation were two different tbinili. and so long as 'they confused the two they would not have a clear idea of the one or the other and would not be able to ailVal1¢€ lf!- their study of the matter. Inspire- tion prompted a man to write d0Wn what he did know as well as those things which he did not know; 0165’ could well imagine a man under Di- vine inspiratlon writing down U10!! things he did know and nothing elsri, writing them now by sn imP“1°° end directing them to ci DUPPOBG which ns not from the Holy Spirit. I-f in that writing there came in some knowledge of a matliel' Of 'Bet which ns nad not by his °Wn naw" al reason acquired, that Would bv .-¢ve1ation_ The consequence of in- spiration than upon Hniv B°fii’l‘"° would be of course _ to make the scriptures, in the isnsnsss Of *hs Church, the Word of God. They did not call it the Word of God hs- cnuss it contained revelations. had tha Council nf Trent mldv “Ili '0'“lt° clear, but because it had been grit- tsn under the influence of _thc 01! Spirit. _ THE EXTENT C_iB‘.1N8PIRA'I‘TON. " ' ' n L' ubhtlon'and still It useiiotolobs <1 msptmuan “_ as to WM' for minor or_.of _ii;i'rcncss," the, text being taken from St. Llllle 21, 1648. "And he galil unto i.hem..._..that repentance and rernission of sins should he preached Simpson. "Last Sunday we consider- ed sin in itself, and we saw that it us. and sustains u and loves u universality of sin-all have sinned We thought of the_joy and peace and Paradise before sin entered and des n alnst the dominion of the spirit' the bond of union was hrokcn.and_ the perfedt trust and loyalty and sub- mission of man to his Muir.-sr came the home and the soul. Wars, world- iiness, uiiarrellings, poverty, sickness and death; and worse than all these we saw were the eternal fruits. The soul separated forever _ from God, having wilfully chosen the evil and refused the good while on earth." "We tried to realize what the re- demption of the world cost Our Blessed Lord. It needed His passion and death; the sacrifice of Himself, to remove the deadly lon-d of sin wherewith man was burdened. Then in the next place we saw that the forglvenesgof sin is set _forth in the Blhlc as the ons thing brought to us by our, Saviour. He was called Jesus for Hs was to save His people from their. sins; He was the lamb of God to take away the sins of. the world:I-Is shed _His blood for the re- mission of sins. After His resurrec- tion He commanded that repentance and remission, of sine should be preached in His, name. And the apostles went forth everywhere cull' irig..upon msn to repent that. their sins might be blotted out and _ de- claring _that .through this man. Jesus, is preached unto you forgive- ness of sins. _ _ And than ws had to hekiiowledgs that -although .the for- givlness of sms was man’s greatest tions for each one of usmt our death will," ln,~ whether we ‘have -obtained that forgiveness, the need was not fsltsl it should be, neither was the |mp0r|;gne¢ of the kqueliillm Nmlllhil. Thais seemed' to be no heemperibp- tion of the enormlty of sin. no -hot- i~or_.s,f it. “° mat »trsssl°.f° °'°\" come lt. Only isnt week I wu read ing sn article in one of the Church pang which said: "The fact is. P0111 ons* 'use and another the sense of sin is dying out in the world. It has slw I .been fashionslls to call sin byffvs names in _order to salvo the roflicfence and rob evil of its hein- ousnsls_0thfr influences are also at wo and we ses in the popilar im _.flu _ - theology of the dsy, and in the at- ill Sllllliilli ll Sl. PlTlll'SE ' _ 411.* His iisiii iwii For many years'_Premier of Ontario 'and Since 1911 Liberal Leader in Senale _.A1 TORONTO. March 7-Senator Sir col-ge Ross former Premier of On mornin! The late rllr George Ross was horn in Middlesex County. Ontario. Sept 14 1811 Hin matriculated in law at Albert University in 1879 and graduated LLB in 1883 was elected to the House of Com- mons for West Middlesex until ap- pointed Minister of Educatlioll i0r Middlesex in 1883 and re»elected nt every election since. He continued to hold the omcs of Minister of Educa- tion until 1899. Hs was called upon to for an administration and accept- ed the Premiership on Oct. 17, 1899. After the ‘defeat of the Liberal party at the General Election in 1905 Mr. Ross continued to lead the party until 1907 when he resigned and was called to the Senate. During the scs- sion of 1911--12 h? was chosen the Libieral leader in the Senate, succeed- ing the lute Sir Richard Cartwright. He was crested _a Knight Bachelor in 1911. Throughout his whole life he was a stalwart friend of temper- ance and was at different stages in his career identified with the educational religious and industrial life of the dominion. Hs was for many years a leading figure in Canadian Liberal- ism- and one of the party’s ablett de- haters. MARCONI PREDICTB SUCCESS » OF RADO-TELEPHONY The Rev. Canon Simpson yesterday' assd-although the question of quss-__ ROME, March 7.-William ,Marconi last night ‘delivered adecture » in- the Ancient Circus of Augustus 'before King;Emmanuel and .Queen Helena, all the notabilitles iqfitome, and n. great throng of tha public generally. Mr. Marconi’s._theme was the prog- ress of radio-telegraphy. I-Is predict- ed the early success of radio-telepho- ony, declaring that thehuman voice could be :projected ncross the ocean 1,, hm ,,ame_‘ among an nation,” be__by this method more quickly than a gimiing at Je,-lmalem; and ye are message could be sent ‘by cable. witnesses of these tmngs_». I During the lecture wireless. mes- .-we are dealing Wm, Bm and its sages received from the Cornwall remedy in these sermons,” said Canonl t““°'“» ""°ith"°W“ 0" H “P090 W a_steoreoptican. iKing Emmanuel warmly congratulated Marconi at- Wgg 1-35,1110” against God who made_ths end of the lecture. 5. .. 5| - - ` and desires our love in return. When THE REPLY OF GEN. HUERTA. i t I-If t defiance d """'“ _ tl;ll!s?esZeI-Isles law? We considered ttlliel MEXICO CITY- March 7~"G°“"°1 H“°"¢“- PHPINHK to a message from andcome short of the glory of God.'th° Unitm states “smug U P0 WDUM If we say _we have no sin we deceive*;§f|‘;,';gB_t';‘:_(lma‘:$:t¥Q”Bizgtfrlziil. _AP ourselves and tiis irutn is not in ii. »h,,,m_ remind it wmgd not °be _;n:,';'°: _ 11 tic as relations with these countries happiness of our first parents in are not co,_dial_ troysd it all. Then the flesh revolted ------...._--_........~...........,.__..__...,.,..,__, 5 - ' moral evil some thing more than a tendency tb gild the ugly thing ali over, for the very existence of sin is - prsviicsllv denied. By those ii.ing` ‘“‘,%_f“lY ti' “"l°;‘d(i th tem rl f_luad lives it is to as expects.-1 that econempae e pos c i ld fects of sin on the nation, the.church,ii,:“k‘xg3s br? ,sglheiive aonllngdongge D further in these days ani it is denied that there is such a thing as sin at all. The moral fuult is not denied, but the responsib_il.ty for it is, andi ,when once this is eliminated all ne- cessity for repentance is gone. ln- deed, repentance is not known in some regions `cf Protestant theology' and there is no room for it in some systems of philosophy." Why is this? Prinsinsllv. rthink, nscsuss ins portrntguslgast isnoit i;_s_is_t'ed upon as s 0l1_ e by 1; e u ters of the Gospel. it is left too much to mlssion_ ,sermons and revival dis- nourws. The ordinary sermon is too frequently. about being good ln a more or less indefinite sort of v\'ay.l I do not forget that there are many other subjeztis-hin.tths _iahristian iglig- lon upon w c i is _ o preac er's duty to instruct his flock. The faith- ful must bs edifled, and I use the word "edifled" ln its original sense, which does not mann to have their ears tickled with pleasant ilatteriel. but “fo he built up," as an edifice is built up, stone upon stone, stone upon stone. The faithful must be cdillsd and adorned viith Chrittisn' grsfisl. _But if_t1_is foundation ls not firmly laid in repentance _and for-1 glvsneq it will cr§|mhJs_.to the earth' nsfon i¢,_is completed. _oi-, to _ chshlsl ths,si's-._ils, the fruit of. the Christian llfe.1_¢ dtsmwhk and sickly bcfiohiel the plant .is unhsslthvhsad the plant 1.1 unhealthy .because of unforgifm ri, qudtsin is unforgiivsn Mbecs_uie forgl-vines: is not- sous-bc,-' s on givouus is not soughtbecsun it is not insisted upon as it sbouli be." 'Phe preacher urged the great lm- nortance of prayer and the strict ob- servance of the rites of the church. Thev should prav God to make them realise their fault .more and more, hs said, in conclusion. and make them long more and more to have their sins psrdoned through the precious blood of Christ. G _ _ ` - tario, died at eight o'clock this rain on Trafalgar Square this after- . , . ' . . . He t Mlllll THUUBLE Had Battle with Police. Sylvia Pankhurst and Ten Others Arrested- ___s (Canadian Press.) LONDON, March 8.-In a pouring noon, Millitant Suliragettes engaged in a pitched battle with the police. Omen and three men were arrested holding a meeting. Sylvia Pankhurst ii a promptly surrounded the cab and ¢ ter the taxi and sought to rescue the ll LONDON, CABLE, Maron s_- n._ Gordon Alley and Thomas Morris, Charlottetown, who are here seeking to interest the market in the sdlver fox industry, placed some stock of to persuade Londcfners of the great profits in the industry. iiiiiiiiiizi siiiiii ii iiiici iiiiiiiiiisi There was a large attendance at ,Bervice" vras held, presided over by His Honour Lieutenant Governor Rogers. The service hn\ing been opened with a musical programme, alle and in- teresting addresses were delivered by the Governor, Col. F. S. Moore, Mr. George E. Full and the Rev. 'I‘. Mar- shall. His Honour spoke on the bena- fit to the community of the prohibi- tion law. Home people, he said, ob- .iected to it; but if it wasfivrong to sell liquor. ii; was wrong alsoto nc- ease the sale. The very fact of hav- 3l|llllll§_llllS Ill T Sylvia Pankhurst and seven other bility lion. Hewitt liner/.ck of Brit- W _ rrlved in a taxi cab. Detectives C leader when ii, pitched battle ioliow. fiict that he is a French Canadian 1 fl would he had politics. P E l When the present two vacancies in the | | | "l“"Ut0 i1l`€ lillrd the Liberal iiiuivfitv circiimstniiccs that the i.lhcrnl ma- ' mmm' >o=wi»,o1=ini==»--i=isa-4; ',_,_3_- _ _ __ ’ __ _ _ “MPR _ - has iiiuiii iiiiiiii .iii iiiiii iiiiss = . 1_1 ,_ HE NEW LEADER ` Llll lr|llLlFllX.N.S. OF THE SENATE i Llliel to be Hon. Hewitt Bostock f Y o British Columbli. Liberal Dwind Majority Ruplilly ling. _._____*____ V. » (From Our Own Reporter.) i ivrs wiillii~twi»:ilir»ud in that port OTTAWA. March 8-ln iill l>l'o\iii-ini the Diilninioii. ’I‘hcrc is still iinotlicr feature ghhf, _ ish (‘-uln~mh‘ia will sliccnn-l Sir George i-nters into inc ciil<.iili»_tiuns that is The women; suffrage Association was Ross as Liberal l.e.i'.iur in filo l-`i-u- the right of the Commons under thi. te. Ori the death -_f .\ii' iivcliiii'illBritisli North America’ Act, to in. hoice of Sir Wilfrid l.niiricr rut Sir;( hoice_ Hon. Mr. Dnndurand would robubly he chosen now but for the ; nd two French Canadian leaders i the Senate will be but 19 Iu thc j l he Liberals will still have ii majority H f 12 and in the western group ii ¢; bling made this session for appoint- ing ninc new Senators for the West and when this is done the Conserva- nrtwright, Senator ilostock. was the-_yrrczise the number of Senators by six some claim eight) in case of ,, con. hustled it in th dir tl fH _ Geox' It ' t l b U '- 0I1t*U`i0 ill 1333- H0 WHS €1e°f°d li*-tiwuy Prison. \Igande(lfioi?i'linl) \b(l?c1Jll?e Housie\va(:Bc:lNTd0uupbvnmlr;_ ‘lrialxeili Lliyettwo ifi)¢°°“ "°“* °'l w.Aiken a sous. 1.. ii.; 2, apo. aiu shore to ascertain the cause of the _ gem |,0_ Mqntaguo; 3_ walker Bras., delay 'he was ambushed and captur- ;_5.|n¢h;ng_ 4_ walk" Bros., haun- ed. Plc escaped nninfnred. iinwsvenlcning; 5, Hugh Mselsenern, Newport. b\\t was unable to recover the bod- soo, 25-1. (leo. W. Aitken & Sons, li neuth. Sec. _.27-1, Geo. W. Aitken Kr Scns. 1.. Mont; 2, ceo. F. Mili- ish. Summerville; 3, Nathan Coh- rad, Stiirgeim; 4, Wm. Cain,Bun'.- merville: ri, walker Bros., Launch- inil. Sec. 28-1, Jus. K. Nicholson, Montague; 2. Montague; 2, Walker Bros_, Launching; 3, G, w, Aitken BIOS. L. Montague; 4, Malcolm Nic- holson; Victoria Cross; 5, Gao. Miar Georgetown. Sec. 29-2_ still- man Johnson, Georgetown. Sec. 30 -1, Nathan Conrad, Stur.; 2, John Howlett, Annadale; 3, Jus, A_1<}_ MncDCfnaIfl, Little Pond, “WHERE IS EARL GREY?" LONDON. March. 4.-“Where is Earl Grey?" is the 'question arising olit of an advertisement appearing in the Sunday Times, in which ,, re. ward is offered to anyone supplying an address where a cable message The advertiser, a msn a-amsd Wu. change of International Colonial Commerce. which disputes Earl the Dominion building scheme is pushed. It is understood the Ex- _change is now desirous of locating ‘EMI GRY in view of possible legal proceedings. The advertisement was offered to the London morning dail- ies. which refused to insert it. 7 ansrvai. or vrcroiuns. *Ki i TORUNTU. March 7.- Victorian, champions of ths,Paclflc Coast Lea- ZU8. arrived yesterday in quest of the Stanley Cup, BRITISH BHIPPERB ANDTHE CANAL. Lf)Nl')ON_ March 7.- British mer- chants and shippers iutei1d`using tho Panama Canal only when absolutely necessary if Wilson's appeal is not iicted upon. Minards liniment cures garget in cows. COIING EVENTS. ANNOUNCEMENTS. NEETINUS ETC. One cent per word each insertion is this column. Cash must accompany; order. Mlniiuuin charge twenty-five cents. "Rcv. Dr. McMillan of Cardigan rs- turned Friday from n short visit to Montreul.G , "Mrs, John Alfred McCorniu.:k, (leorgetown,_was|n passenger to the City l-inturday mornmg_(i. "Misa Blanche Trainor, Chailutte- town, returned from Georgetown Sat- urday. morning.G. °‘Mr. Eugene McEschern returned Saturday from Georgetown where he was visiting his old home.G. °°Dr. Gillis, formerly of Miscouche, left Friday by the Minto on return to British Colum’bi-a, where he has been in practice for some years.(}. "Miss Ruth C.impbell, Teacher in Georgetown came in by the George. town train. Saturday for a week end visit to her parents Mr. and Mrs. R. H.-Campbel\.G. °°INS'l‘l'l`fl'l`E.-The King. Edward Institute will hold lhere regular meeting ln Windsor Hull on Monday March Sth, at 7.80 lilr. P. Brodie will adress the meeting on Potato Culture. 1534-3-7M2lpd. these) tituill of many thinkers towards' Minard's Llnlment Cures Distempsr.ics of his comphnlons. Mont.; 2, Roy W. Bulpitt, Rose- lllnsrd's Linlment Cnrss Colds, cts. 4 I ' 4 l§i",..1 ffl." »Pf‘!"f?¢_\i s'§¢`»4`.'i»‘i't?‘..»\-I(»~`§?~‘- _si .- .og ‘ f 4 ii’ ._.'.’._ l' iii '.f};__'i_f' i:'._'-` - 'f»i_I.i i .‘.=li ,i_;iT4__-_ .. -ids ,»_» -1, ig. i‘~-' -. ._ ws' nz, _ ’~ l‘iE`a-.- ' -i . . 12412 ;,__.-> s-..s..~._ :ri X 'iii-` ' ~=.~.`-' -' ,_ if _ ,Q fi. .ii 2 l sl ; . ,__ _i