The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930, January 31, 1925, Image 13

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    Patnrclny Evening, January 31, 1925
THE EUGENE GUARD
Pago Three
(Continued from ps two.)
T. ' iinnl.nimiiRf. Mm. Anna
Jim. -lr,' (.r. sinrsliumn, Mra.
SfiLTlU Mr Dor. Hunter.
jrttli. 1'ad.lock Mr., aim
torilnr. I. ley. Mrs.
Mrs. Margaret Kndi-
ro"' -Vr::. ... r. Hill. MrB. Jcn-
CaHlci'l, '";... ..,, ivillinnm. Mm.
iSriTAnV'-o. Mrs. Marie Wll-
imrorv. J'r. ,
m m. r.ertriHlo Bonnls-
Haiti' .'r:.,. ,...,- Mm. Mary
jUriwH. Mi"" ... ,,,,.,,,(,
ciSett. "'' M2".,,""0r W"80n'
juvenile Dance, Gala
iff!, r liiven on
Tuesday Night
... . j. .. can-fr and merri-
Jnt mrrc in on" cnt than in the
?,iv Tuesday evening when
t".blv c-lub members frolicked and
.
"es for all the nnes ,.
: .well as Ibo advance inodela for
"l08 t0 come were displayed. Them
n rompers and overalls, knickers
, coveralls, gingham pinafores, an
nul 01 CallCO, anil Yltiii" .."- ...
ii . ;i..r.linc conelom-
Sons and mixtures of styles and.
7co"rse. all the dashine ties, flasb
L hair ribbons, bespattered arrays
of freckles, anil lousnu " ......
that made tlic cofltnmcs eomnloto.
I .rue pla.iues with all manner of
. .. i ' ..:f urn; nn ihein were bung
I irounil the room, while slides, swings,
n,l teeters gave pienry oi
for all the eighty or more "young
mors" assembled. For favors they
-iron iunming ropes and fly
back rubber balls. All-day suckers,
nop anil cookies were served to fent
upon Instead of a dance feature gnm-"
ps were pinyeii numum i
farmer in the dell, run for your sup
li'or MB and numerous others,
llnsts for the evening were Dr.
i mil Mrs. Waldo Adams. Mr. and Mis.
' Ilelbort Oberteuffer. Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Chapman, Mr. aud Mrs. II.
B. Until. K. Large.
t L'-limnrv 'J-t the flub will snon-
for another interesting affair, this
time a dinner dance, with the officers
of the group acting as hosts. The
rninmitlee in charge will consist of
Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Happ, Mr. and'
Mrs. Wilson i. oriey, .nr. mm .n.
iiaMl.t fti-nilv. Cpot-ire K. Love. Mr.
aud Mrs. Kenneth Abies.
m
r- r a...a..n I! Rlilfllat U-UU D linfi.'
(ess of the week, entertaining Mon-
.fn.nMn f.ii itinlitltMI'M OF tile
llmefa Uriilge club at her home. Mrs.
Ilratlley especially invited Mrs. YV. W.
Yne of Portland, Mrs. Claurl Kldridge,
Mrs. Harmon Anderson, .Mrs. Zella
llarger, as gueslB for the afternoon.
tin two weeks Mrs. Seth I.araway will
entertain the club.
Aloha club members will he enter-
aineil on Tuesday, of. uext week by
Mrs. Henry 'Tronip at her home.
After three weeks stay in Mursh-
Ifielil Mrs. Frank McTnggert returned
lo Kiigcne at mid-week.
Mr. and Mrs. White
Sponsor Party
rriday iNight
Last evening at their homo Mr. and
I.Mrs. Herald li itc entertained ut uue
f the week's interesting affairs, in-
mug a group for a dinner aud uard
itrty. f.arly spring daffodils aud pus-
y willows were gurgeuusiy arranged
centerpieces at the small tables
d. After dinner the parly played
ante.
Guests for tlic evening were Mr.
ad Mrs. Frederick . Stickels, Air.
ad .Mrs. Herbert ltoome. Mr. and
Firs. Frank Jenkins. Mr. mid Mrs.
van S. McCrciidv. Mrs. llnrvnril
iMimrc, Mr. and Airs. Jack UciicfJel.
DnRFNl
A flirewell ilinm.r tv,i lict.l Kim.ltir
t ihe lioiue of Mrs. Ada Jennings in
""iir i Jlrs. Uosetta Pitcher who
ft Mi'uiluy for l.u Conner, Washing-
"P, Wlieri. hIip will b,h- ..-hi, l,r
paugliier, Mrs. Janie Jeuks. Mrs.
inner is well known on ltow Hiver,
iviug (.punt her early life in this vi
aiiy. Hiose iiresent for the pleasant eve-
ns Were lr ltlt..hnR l..A.. nn.l
fj'e Land. Jr. and Alrs.W. A. Land,
T'as and U, I. l.un,j. Ore Olliver of
juiage lirove, Hill Pitcher, Oirin
and, (leorge Pitcher, Xorvnl Newell,
uouge, Florence Ijind.
"r. and Mri. vii,, r..ffno ....
Enatr hosts on Monday evening ask
! their guests, .Mr. and Airs. YV.
""!, -Mr. and Airs, (ieorge P.
'ititicock.
' a
Monday Dinner club members were
'' of Mr. and Mrs. L. II. .Sigwart
norae this week.
' "iniiiuiiig their Interesilng study
"e hlnv. "ll-,inl. " . 1
, him, inriiiutrin ,i
BKP.Iii.nrn . . .i.i. . .,
, ..' . uiiR weeg Wltn
( l.,luin L. Knapp lending the dis-
i"r me aucrnoon. Scenes
. three nn.l r...... t ....
r . ,', i, oiri oiiu prc
"' nd discussp,!.
.
'""ru.tivc aud interesting
'"at was ih,,t of the A. A. U. YV.
" tcilny t the i,,k.,. . i..
t"? B" S'n at twelve-thirty o--
, ' 1 lnn Staveley of Turn
r po P ... ,
1 n.i i . lecniring on
nl-.sl. Ye.tcrdsr. Today, and To-
imluA' ""'"rta and Mra. I,. .1.
i r.k , ht''"e to Monday
, '"" niemi.ers at the home of
"'r Monday.
it.. ,or sprlno
I r " m.Ho on
mien lt ! .Iffvpg,
l.'Z Prrt.,-nl f,.r ,rnt. ,inr, it
XQUgJjQUTH
Mme. Georgette Declares the
She
p 1 i!
" BY MME. GEOKGETTB
Your mouih in what you niiiko it
that's my unim.lifii-tl statcinent of
fact and I stick to it. .
It in much more apt to toll the
...nu ... uiv not miking uinn
when you art. It rcfloeta your cvii-Iyou
leism or your optimism, your lax
ness or your inhibitions, your enthus
iasms or your despair.
It. more than any other feature,
is YOU. Your eyes may change only
their expression. Your nose requires
.a surgeon's knife to niter its lines,
and your ears are bound to stand pat.
but your mouth is yours to mold,
whether you want to or not.
You Can Keep it Beautiful
The fresh, beautiful mouth of a
girl of l(i may be more beautiful at
40, or may have lost its beauty all
depending on the character develop
ment and the mental attitudo of the
possessor.1
One of the asknowledged beauties
of the American stage, about whose
Deautitul mouth many writers have
waxed particularly eloquent, was nev
er considered a beauty at all until she
became the pupil of a famous theatri
cal coach who taught her how to re
nj'ld her mouth.
Eventually this actress, who wan
ambitious and extremely intelligent.
trained her mouth - into lines of
beautyf by-coiisctous effort until she
CYNTHIA GREY SAYS:
HY CYNTHIA GREY
(Copyright, l!lo, NEA Service, Inc.)
JJKING1XG up a family of children
is n simple task compared with
keeping up with them when they're
grown.
Any mother who wears giddy Jmts
chosen by her oldest unmarried daugh
ter can tell you that.
So can her sedate neighbor whose
young son talks glibly about suppress
ed desires and Freudian complexes as
if they were a new kind of tenuis rac
ket or hockey stick.
For in thcc headlong days the boys
and girls have gone , blithely ahead,
with Ihe curiosity of a herd of young
deer, to find out all about things that
their parents never dreamed of dis
cussing. The young set is doing exactly as
it pleases.
v It is marching off b." itself in an
other Children's Crusade.
lint this crusade is not toward the
Holy Land as the one in the tenth
century was.
Its way leads rather to the Temple
of Jazz whose doorst are wide open
nn Sunday as well as the other days
of the week. And there the hair-oiled
youth and the lip-stieked girl strut
nightly the new dances that had their
origin around African jungle fires . .
. . dances that are not even distant
relations of the minuet, the waltz or
the two-step, that Mother and Fath
er knew in their salad days.
"This is the Age of Urnss," Arnold
Daly, the actor, told me upon a time.
"The holder and 'brazier' you are
these days the better for you. The
modest atid timid arc lost in the
crowd.''
Mother's Day Different
Hut, you see. Mother was brought
up in a day when the more lwMlcst
and timid a girl was the more attrac
CLOTHES ON THE WOMAN-THEN
CAN MAR OR MAKE BEAUTY
Mouth Speaks Even When Milady is not Talking, And
Tells How to Keep It Lovely
Mme. Georgette Shows How to B eautify Your
Rained a rcnutntion of hnving a most
beautiful mouth. What she did, oth
ers way do.
Reshaping the Mouth
, The muscles about Ilie mouth are
very
j ami wrinklp mark their fall,
arc very caroful.
up lest j
Keshapiug the mouth into Hues of.
beauty is an individual problem. You
must first discover the mental habits
that are responsible for its luck of
beauty. Worry and pettiness bring
lines and droops. Cruel thoughts or
impulses will draw it into an uncom
promising, unattractive line.
sin ti f;..Uf n...ut i,a . ,
tal one. Then here are some direc
tions for remodeling that will help
muscles that have been allowed to
sag.
Just How It Is Done
Take a generous bit of cold cream
in each hand and beginning in the
center of your chin, mold upward, us
ing all your fingers but the little one. ,
lo this gently, working upward to
the ears. Actually work the flesh up,1
using short strokes and a patting
.
Ill-' lllt-m.
Then, starting again at the chin,
work up from the jaw toward the
nose, with a rotary motion.
With the middle finger of each
hand, gently outline the mouth itself,
tive she was ... or was supposed
to he.
Here, for instance, is a description
of a "nice" girl hy Pe Morgan, who
was one of Mother's favorite writers
li years ago:
"SJie came floating, or falling into
his arms, and only his embrace saved
, her from falling on the gravel."
Fancy Mint. Iorothy-of-Todav! He
, ing so overcome at the mere sight of
j your lover that you would all but
taint away as you ran to meet him!
It seems absurd, doesn't it?
And yet that sort of girl was more
easily understood by Mother than the
kind we have with us now . . . the
girl who telephones to her best beau
to invite herself to the' movies with
him when the spirit moves her: who
can roll a cigaret with one hand like
an Arizona cow-puncher: and who
knows the music of Irving Ilerlin as
Mother knew her Moody and Sankey
hymns!
In the last 20 years the world has
not only moved. It has turned itself
upside down. Everything has chang
ed. And Mother, alone, moving nhnut
from the nursery to the kitchen and
sewing room, ha heen unaware of it.
Vacue rumors of change may have
found their way inlo the circle of the
Ladies Aid Society, but Mother wns
too busy sewing shirts for Chinese
babies to pay much attention to them.
And then quite suddenly her chil
dren were grown up. And they were
the New Generation, with a ven
geance !
Girl a. All Alike
Mother's brow was knit with deep
thought when she came upon rouge
and eye-brow pencils and strong per
fumes in . Daughter's top drcssrr
drawer.
She was shocked when she saw that'
Daughter rolled her stockings down
like Huster Brown nurd to wear hi
socks. Moreover, Daughter refused
WOMAN l)tD
TO MAkt
THE CLOTHE.
Mouth.
working it upward at the corners and
bringing the fingers together in the
middle of the upper lip. Do this
very gently, avoiding any tendency
to stretch the skin. If the corners
and hold the corners up for
few
minutes, '
If your face in inclined to be a
trifle too round and you do not wish
to add another fraction of an ounce
of weight, do not use cold cream to
massage with, but dip the fingers in
water instead.
Do Remodeling at Night
When you linve finished your mas-
! nage, wrap a bit of ice in a Turkish
towel and go over the area you have
just remolded with the ice. If your
skin is inclined to be flabby, dip the
towel in a mild astringent. This will
cause the skin to contract and will
gradually do away with the sagging
of the flcslr.
It is well to do this remolding of
the mouth just before you retire. If
your muscles arc relaxed as you sleep.
there will be no wrinkles forming dur
ing your sleeping hourH,
During the day from time to time,
look into your pocket mirror and see
t i...,. ... ..., i.
; Jlini UJ" JWIUIV lIMIIIIllft JUIll IM"-
i Instead of reaching for your lipstick
; to make a Cupid's bow, make your
muscles do the work. Pretty aoon,
j you wont need the lipstick!
I (Copyright, W2, NEA Service Inc.)'
to wear a corset to her dancing par
ties that began at 0 and ended long
after midnight.
She was any thing but Mother's iden
of a "nice", girl. And yet all the
"nicest" girls were just like her . . .
every mother's daughter of them.
And Mother saw tlyit if she was
to go on being a Guardian Angel to
her family she'd have to learn their
language, dress as they thought she
should- dress, and know about Urn
things that they were thinking about.
So she took Daughter's advice on
smartness in clothes, and she began
to read Junior's kind of books and
see his kind of plays.
I think she mut feel as the hen
who hatched the duck's eggs felt when
she saw her "chicks" swim out on the
mill pond, and realized that they were
going to try to get along without her.
Only Mother knows that her chil
dren can't get along without her . . .
that they need her more at '2(1 than
they did at 2. And so she is hard at
work everywhere keeping up with
them.
Is There An Affection
Merely Platonic?
Query la Raised But Not
Anewered In Play
HY JACK Jl'NGMEYEIt
NEA Service Writer
KW YORK. .Ian. HI. The old con
troversy as to whether or not
mere platonie affection is possible be
tween a beautiful young woman and a
haiylsnma young man is fervidly re
vived, if not conclusively answered, in
"Enticement," a picture made for the
late Thomas Ince by Director Arch
aiuhaud. '
The producers wisely made an in
terrogation of the theme so that both
idealists aud cynics may find conten
tious support in the film. The cyn
ics, however, would seem to have the
edge.
Mary Astor exerts the fascination.
- NOW
TSL WOMAN
The compoHite impresses of Miss A
i tor's previous presentations is one of
j modeM, almoNt timorous ingenuous
ness. 1 n "Knt iceinent" she reveals
' a surprising physical allure, ctnpba ,
i sized by the sumptuous mountings
and the remarkably fine lighting and
photography. She comes iridescent,
ravishing, from Ihe cocoon of former
roles to play bavoc with the two men
between whom sho tries to divide her
heart.
Kor one. played by Ian Keith, she
feels a plntonic devotion free of any
Rer implications, and both believe
that he reciprocates iu kind. Toward
the other, acted hy Clive ltrooke,
there is a romantic bopd soon to cul-
io rnai marriage sue inuuigN m mm
more friendly play-time with her
"platonie" man when they meet again
i at a Swiss resort. Confident in the
sanctity of their "friendship' she in-
sists that they go alone to a mountain
I lodge, defiant of nil conventions and
j thre she is disillusioned.
I The picture pointedly reiterates the
fact that most men judge a woman's
character by the conventions of con
duct (now in such flux that the inno
cent little jassx babies have a hard
time being understood), ltoth the
male prinripnls in "Enticement" jndpe
the girl thus. Mary, Innocently, as
I the picture would have us believe.
; boldly overnteps the danger line.
( aught at the edge of a mountain av
alanche, she is injured. Is carried to
the lodcc. tantalizes friendship tieyoinl
endurance, and is then shocked to find
it no longer mere friendship. She
flees In terror and marries the other
man on the affrighted rebound.
It is a bold story, told however
without offense. And in defense of
innocuous affection it may be said
that it is much harder ot dramatize
than the more fervent brand hence
perhaps the verdict against the for
mer in this picture.
Miss Astor is vivid, piquant. It i
her most captivating role; It should
materially increase her fnn mail, and
stnrt sharper competition for her ser
vices. The film is invested with glorious
and diverse backgrounds of natural
beauty, ranging from the Cnnadian
Kockies to the California beaches
the Alps and English strands, by cour
tesy. A contrived avalanche amid the
snow peaks is a realistic thriller. The
photography is uncommonly fine, ver
ging on perfection. The picture is
one of the most diverting among the
recent releases which pretend only to
tell an interesting story without frills
of treatment or high flights of fancy.
I Familv Menus
(Copyright, 102."!, NEA Service, Inc.)
Hreakfast Stewed figs, baked
hash, graham muffins, orange marma
lade, milk, coffee.
Luncheon Haked rice, lettuce
sandwiches, apple sauce, ginger bread,
milk. tea.
I n'nner Hnked flank steak, scal
loped potatoes, mashed turnips, onion
and citrus fruit salad, lemon sponge
whole wheat bread, milk, coffee.
These menus are so shnplo and
tho food so wholesome that every
member of the family old enough to
appear at the table can partake.
Some mothers may prefer to sub
stitute a Iamb chop or scrapped beef
for the flank steak, but the average
4-year-old child will not be harmed
by enting a little of the meat without
the sauce.
Baked Rice
One cup rice, 8 cups boiling water,
2 teaspoons salt, 4 eggs, 2 table
spoons butter, 3 cups milk 1-2 cup
grated cheese, paprika.
Add salt to water nnd, when boil
ing rapidly, add rice. Hnil rapidly for
20 minutes or until the grains are
soft. The ago of the rice has much
to do with the quickness with which
Hie rice cooks. Drain and pour sev
eral quarts of boilinj water through
rice. Drain while beating eggs, Heat
eggs well. Add butter, one teaspoon
salt, milk, and cheese. Add slowly
to rice and turn mixture into a but
tered baking dish. Hake in a mod
erate oven until the top is delicately
browned.
Baked Flank Steak
Two pounds flank steak, 2 sweet
green peppers, 1-2 Spanish onion, 2
sprigs parsley, 1 teaspoon salt, 1-8
teaspoon pepper, 2 cups canned toma- i
toes. j
Remove membranes from steak and
trim neatly. Grease a dripping pan a
little larger than the steak with beef
suet. Remove seeds from nenners
and parboil for five minutes. Hub
off thin coating and mince flesh very
fine. Mince onion and parsley. Huh
tomatoes through a coarse sieve to
remove seeds. Combine vegetables
and season with salt and pepper. Heat
dripping pan very hot and lay meat in
It. Tour over the tomato mixture,
cover pan and bake for one hour in
a moderate oven.
Onion and Citrus, Fruit Salad
Two oranges, I grapefruit, 1 1-2
Spanish onions, 2 canned sweet pep
pers, 1 tablespoon salt, 1 tablespoon
sugar, conked cream mayonnaise, 1
bead lettuce.
The salad 'Is arranged in a salad
bowl or on individual pistes, but the
dressing Is not mixed with vegetables.
It Is served from a smalf dish.
Dissolve salt and sugar in enough
Ice water to cover the anion, cut in
small dice. I,ct stand two hours.
Drain and dry between towels. Wash
and dry lettuce. Uue a salad bowl
with crisp dry leaves. Add a layer
of oranges cut In thin slices, sprinkle
with diced grapefruit free from skins
and pith. Garnish with sweet pepper
cut into tiny bits, and serve very cold.
AND NOW
COOK BOOK IS FOUND TO BE
A RECIPE FOR MATRIMONY
Story of How Senator Burton K. Wheeler Found Hit Wife While
Selling Guides to Culinary Skill
4r m tt
JD Uft on
Wheeler1
'WASHINGTON. Jan. 3t. You'd
never think it of a cook book
Among the instructions for manu
facturing boiled parsnips nnd baked
radishes Burton K. Wheeler found
the recipe for matrimony.
Nobody knows just what the recipe
was but he tried it out, and Mixs
Lulu White, daughter of a middle
west farmer, became his wife.
It happened when the Montana sen
ator was working his way through
law school at the University of Michi
gan. That was a hard grind. Wheeler
had been graduated from a business
school near his home, at Hudson,
Mass. Then he bad worked in Hos
ton as a stenographer until he accum
ulated enough shekels to start on a
course of higher learning.
Hut the accumulated shekels didn't
go very far at Ann Arbor, and he had j
to piece them out with what he could j
make waiting on table at college,
tending furnaces nnd cutting lawns. 1
Came summer vacation, and anoth
er idea for making money flashed
his way. With a satchel full of
cook books for sale bo toured the
middle west,
Hy day he would trudge from bouse
to house. At night he -would take
lodging in some friendly farm. And
in tho course of his wnnderings he
came to the establishment of Farmer
White.
The Whies weren't In the market
for cook books, but that didn't inter-1
fere with their hospitality. They
asked him to come in and rest his
weary bones, and Wheeler gladly ao
EUGENE COLLECTION AGENCY,
774 WILL. ST. PHONE 000. W. H.
BLOWERS, MGR. tf
Hall's Catarrh
Medicine Sl'dt
it rid your syitem of Catarrh or Deaf.
ness caused by Catarrh.
Sold by drngftth for Ml 40 ytm
P.J.CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. Ohio
Xa V? if-jr XIC COOK HO 12LW
k Overstuffed
3 FURNITURE J MfU?
Overstuffed
FURNITURE
Makes the Home Beautiful
Ileal upholstered chairs not only
adds to tlio beauty of tho homo but
it gives solid comfort.
Get Our Price
Special New Price
On Beds And Springs
See our display of bed room furni-ituro.
f JOHNSON
cepted the offer, intending to push on
in the morning.
Then he met Lulu White and
tayed a week.
After his graduation Wheeled set
out tor iSau r rancisco, but by the
time he reached Montana his funds
staged their customary act of running
short. He stopped at Hutto to earnj
inuie iiiuui-.t, uu il. nil a .uiiv.u lun
practice within a year, decided he was
more money, uuiii up a inriviiiK juw
Great Pianists
Music to be Heard at
Laraway s
Afternoons From 2 to 4 Daily
You are cordially invited to hear the great Ampico
Artists playing "Ko-Anactcd" by the wonderful
true to lifo "Ampico Reproducing Grand Piano"
in our music storo room. Come hear this marvel
ous instrument stay as long as you wish it is
absolutely free.
' Godowsky Bauer Levitzki
Rachmaninoff Kreisler
Ornstein Volavy Krftita
The Ampico
Knabe and
Flschsr
Laraway's
New Laraway Building
Furniture Co.
685 Willamette
! pretry well off right where he was,
i and remained. ...
Hut while he waa buay preparing
hriel'H iu Unite hig thoughts atrayod
bai'k to liio White farm bki-k to tho
girl ho had met on hirt took book
peddliuit lour. Ia 1!KI7 be took her
as his companion on an expedition up
to the altar.
The rndinK of this atory abonld bo
and they lived happily ever after."
At least they've bad 17 yoara of
penccful married life and fivo children.
Are French Women Best
IIome-Makers?
Mary Borden, Authoress, Is Of
Oolnton Thev Ar.
Mary Borden,
JTEW YORK, .Ian. 28. French
women not only lead the world In
styles
They can also set the fashion in
home making.
Mary Harden, authoress, an Ameri
can woman, says this. Since her mar
riage to Hrigadier General Spears,
English liberal, she has divided her
time between Paris, London and
America, and should be able to judge
these three untions impartially.
"Rut few foreigners get into the
real French homes nnd they do not
realize that tho same art and work
manship goes into their daily life
which is exercised to make their
styles 'Unique and fascinating," she
says.
"Every woman, despite her station
can cook, sew and keep house, an well
as be charming. She also has an ex
cellent business sonse and can make
her money work.
"Tho British woman, fundamentally
dislikes housework. If she can, she
will hire a housekeeper but if too
poor she will neglect housework.
"American women are not partic
ularly good housekeepers because
they don't have to be. . Delicatessens,
factories and machines do her work.
So Bhe spends most of her time bar
ing a good time.
"You hnve only to seek the Eng
lishman, Frenchman and American at
tho table to realize the different home
conditions.
"In France you will sot find the
woman so interested in politics as
the English woman, or as interested
in causes as the American.
"Hut you will find her exerting so
strong nn influence in her own home,
because of her housewifely virtues,
that you wonder why the English and
American women do not learn the les
sons the French, woman has mas-
l"ea.
Bruiwlck
Vlctrola
Phonographs
and Record!
iVtJv 1 II
?'hK 1 5
I V("v, -v I
ii r-tH -V ; J I I
it.
I i!hm,. lh coat
'Hi. h..1-""' Slf
ft It), - '-nun round
i-n I, ' , ""row tab eiirndinit :
I '' '""nlli, the fe:i
11 l Terr