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About The Maupin times. (Maupin, Or.) 1914-1930 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1914)
'OULTRY and Dairy Produce of all klndi wanted. Write for our CASH OFFER Pearson-Page Co. rE0 SECOND-HAND MACHINERY Pouirht, io!d end exchnriRpd; engines, boilers, sawmills, etc. Scnri f.r Slock Lint and 1'rlcee. THU J. E. MAIU'lN CO., 83 1st St.. Portland, Or. jOLMES BUSINESS COLLEGE The school that trets you a Kood position. Thousands of Graduates NONE IDLE FREE INKOHMATION OLDEST MOST MODERN Washington and 10th Sts. PORTLAND, ORE. BLACK LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED by Cutter's Blaaklee 111 la. Low- prlred. fresh, reliable; prefrrred bj weaiern BiotKmrn oocaiHe tndy pre m ff tact where other vaccinal fall. Li Write bouklut and trillmonlalB. ,r,l 1 10-doM pkge. Blackleg Pilli (1.00 UiUVA tO-dol. pkge. Blackleg Pilll 4.00 T'w any lnltor, but Cutter's best. The superiority of Cutter products la due to oer II years of (poi-ialtzlnii iri vaocinea and aerumi only. Inllit on Cntter'a. Tf nmthtitinable. order direct. THE CUTTER LABORATORY, Berkeley, Calllsrnla. Business Hint. First Beggar Want to buy my car for $200? Second Beggar Can't afford to run it. First Beggar But after you buy It you'll look so blame sad you'll make more money. YOUR OWN DRIJGUIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine Eye Kewedy lor Ked, Weak, Watery E.veM and IJramllated Eyelids; Nu Wuiartin Just. Eye Comfort. Write for Hook of the Eye by uis.il Free. Murine Eye Reuieuy-Co., Chicago. The Advantage of Egotism. He The Bighedde is always think ing of himself. She Yes. In that way he always avoids having much on his mind. Boston Transcript, SUCCESS- Depends Upon Your Training Our courtses fn Shorthand, Pen manflhip. Business Training and Telegraphy will equip you for a successful business career. FALL. TERM SEPTEMBER BUSINESS COLLEGE. Fourth Street, Near Morrison. Portland, Or. We Guarantee Positions for All Our Graduates. Write Us, No Trouble to Answer. Reverse Action. Pat Kehoe gave a dermatologist 120 for changing his pug nose into a Gracian nose! Mike He did? Pat He did! Next day Callahan knocked it back into a pug nose agin fer nothing at all! Kansas City Times. Putnam Fadeless Dyes color more goods than others. War has one advantage over peace. In Germany nobody questioned the justice of mobbing an unsatisfactory orchestra. Too Easy. "Have you been able to meet ail the demands of your creditors?" "Meet them! I haven't been able to avoid them." Buffalo Express. It looks as though some of those French novelists and pugilists were getting a pile of cheap publicity out of enlistment. Rheumatic Throat Is Common Trouble Should Be Treated in Blood To Prevent Recurrence. There are successful Rargles that atop soreness In the throat, but to prevent their incessant return, the blooa must be put in order. The best remedy is B. 8. S.. as. it Influences all the functions of the body to neutralize the Irritants or waste products and to stimulate their excretion, through. tne proper channels. " Rheumatic aore throat Is a dangerous Indication, as it mentis that the blood Is loaded with more uric acid than the kid ney can excrete, and may thus lead to lerioua general disturbance. The action of S. S. B. stimulates cellular activity. It prevents the accumulation of Irritants In local epots. It enables the arteries to supply Quickly the new red blood to replace worn-out tissue. For this reason uric acid that finds the throat an easy prey to Its breaking-down Influence. Is scattered and eliminated. In other words, H. H. S. prevents chronic con ditions by enabling all the mucous llninrs of the body to secrete healthy mucus. Its Influence Is shown In a marked Improve ment of tlit bronchial tubes, whereby the husklnesa of voice with thick, grayish ex- Dectorations Is overcome. . p. w., wen diluted wirh water. leans a blood bath tinct It is welcome to any etomacb and at onct gets into the blood. S. 8. 8. Is free of all minerals ana con tains Ingredients wonderfully conducive to well-balanced health. You can get It at any drat; ttore, but do not accept anything e'se. There Is danger In tutistftutes. N. S. h. is prepared ociy dj The Swift Specific Co.. 528 fwlft Bldg., Atlanta, (im. flue Ifedlcal DeDt. will Cive you free Instruction bv mall on any tubject AX Diooa usoracrs. write looay. P. N. U. No. 37, 1914 yHEN writing to advertisers, pla tiew this paper- TO 1914 27 th I YEAR T GET THRILLS What the Staging of a Good Pho toplay Really Means. Actors Risk Their Lives to Secure the "Effects" Demanded Not Infre quently It Is Absolutely Their Last Appearance. Plunging overboard from a burning yacht which has been Bonked with tur pentine, and charged with dynamite; struggling on life rafts In a rough sea, racing an automobile over the edge of a dock diying with it and taking a chance on getting out such things put reallBm into the movies, give thou sands their antlclnated thrills and sometimes constitute the actor's last appearance, a writer in Popular Me chanics says. For often JuBt as real as the actual destruction of a ship is tne light for life portrayed before the lens. The staging of a photoplay which In cluded the burning and sinking of a small craft and the battle of those aboard It to save themselves, recently was undertaken by a producer. With out flames, explosions and the loss of the vessel, the picture would lack re alism. Unless men fought for their lives while the Are ate its way to the dynamite which would break the boat bmldshtp, reality again would be sac rificed. When the picture was run on the screen it lacked none of these qualities. Large quantities of turpen tine saturated the ship after it had been stripped of its interior fittings. lExploBives were placed aboard. It then had to be fired, while those who did the work took a chance. As flame land smoke shot mast high, the men Humped into the sea, were picked up by boatB, and carried a safe distance tway before the terrific blast tore the praft apart and sent It to the bottom. HAS WON HER HONORS EARLY Ethel Clayton, at Twenty-One, One of the Prime Favorites With Admir ers of the Photoplay. Ethel Clayton is one of the best- known Eastern leading ladleB. She piles her glorious Billy Burke type of hair high on her head and, in regal dinner gown and evening wrap, sweeps from her mansion to her carriage. Or may be she isn't sup posed to ever have seen a din ner gown, in which case she puts her lovely hair into a pa thetic knot at the back of her head, a cold-I o o k I n g shawl about her gingham shoul Ethel Clayton. ders and goe forth to the cor ner grocery store for five cents' worth of something to eat for the whole fam ily. All of this, of course, is in the pictures. Ethel Clayton was born in Cham paign, 111., grew up in the backwoods of Missouri, was later sent to a con vent school in Chicago, and from there stepped into a dramatic career. At eighteen she headed a stock company in Minneapolis, and now, at twenty one, is credited with many stage and film honors and the ability to run her own car. Films Race of African Dwarfs. James Barnes, naturalist and mov ing picture hunter with camera rather than gun, who has been camera-exploring in Africa, got back recently with 21,000 feet of film. Mr. Barnes and his party traveled about 5,000 miles, traversing Africa from West to East. Leaving the jungle at the Congo, they went over the old trail of Stanley and Livingston, meeting old chief Lobo, one of the Stanley guides. With the camera they caught groups of the Pigmy tribes of Du Challlu in "the country of the dwarfs." They found them a ehy lot, and it took sev eral weeks for Mr. Barnes to get well enough acquainted with them to in duce them to pose for the moving pic tures.. Later some of the little fellows became guides to the expedition. Biblical Films Barred. Prussia's highest court has ruled that no biblical films can be shown In the country. The Berlin police presi dent had prohibited the production of a film which gave some -scenes from the life and sufferings of Christ. The court sustained the action of the po lice on the ground that the Christian religion is a part of the public order which the police are hound to uphold. The court aleo held that such a film grossly wounds the sensibilities of re ligious people, particularly in view of the fact that It is given along with light and humorous productions. Studio Reproduced. In the forthcoming production, en titled "The City Beautiful," a comedy drama, a stage scene in a motion pic ture studio is reproduced. The scene depicts a green country boy who strays into a studio and walks on the stage in the midst of great activity. Players, property men, carpenters, etc, are seen engaged in their various vo cations. The entire stafT of two movJ lng picture studios participated in this scene. U-4 V U TO SELECT AND COOK FISH Precaution In Buying Always Neces sary Style of Preparation May Be Varied. In buying fish get the klndB in sea son, as this lessons the chance of be ing served with cold-storage products. Cold-storage flah may be known by the lack of brightness in the eyes. B'resh fish have clear eyes, red gills, the fins stiff, and the scales shining. The flesh should be so firm that when pressed by the Angers it should spring back. Fish showing Blgns of opposite conditions, such as dull eyes, liver-colored gills, etc., should be re fused. Fresh halibut is known by its pearl white or shining gray skin, firm flesh and pleasant odor. Some fish are at their best cooked In one way only, others may be served in a variety of ways. For instance, halibut may be baked, broiled, boiled or fried. This rule is also true of other white fleshed fish, as cod and haddock. Those fish known as oily are best suited to baking or planking, though broiling Is not to be despised. Under this head will come blueflsh, mack erel, salmon and shad. I think boil ing is the best way to cook salmon. Small fish Bhould be fried in deep, very hot fat. This will include smelts, brook trout, perch, whiteflsh, etc. Fry ing oil is best for the purpose, or one can use suet and lard, half and half. Pittsburgh Dispatch. Sour Cream Pie. One cupful sour cream, four eggs, one cupful sugar, one cupful raisins, one-half teaspoonful of cloves. Sep arate the yolks from the whites of the eggs and beat the yolks until reamy ; add the sugar, raisins chopped fine, the. sour cream and the cloves. Place in a double boiler and cook un til thick and creamy. Line a pie tin with piecrust and bake In the oven as for lemon pie. Fill this baked crust with the cream mixture and place in the oven until well set. Beat the. whites of the eggs with four table spoonfuls of powdered sugar, cover the top of the pie with this meringue and place in the oven to brown Blightly. Serve cold. Eaten with a piece of Bharp cheese, this is a de licious summer dessert. Baked In a Box. If you would like your picnic cake to arrive unbroken, try baking it in one of the five and one-eighth inch by eight and one-half inch tin wafen boxes. If the box is filled half full of cake dough it will rise nearly even with the top, leaving just enough room for icing. The cover can then be put on and the cake will arrive in perfect condition. A good recipe for the above sized box is the following: One cup ful of sour cream, one cupful of sugar, one-half cupful of crushed walnut meats, a level teaspoonful each of soda, baking powder and salt, one well beaten egg and enough flour for a stiff batter. Spice to taste. The cake should be baked in a slow oven until it doubles in size, then the heat should be turned on to finish. Fruit Sherbets. Red Raspberry Sherbet One box ful of red raspberries crushed and heated with a little water and the seeds strained out, one pint of water, one cupful of Bugar blended together and the juice of one-half lemon. Freeze. Pineapple Sherbet Three cupfuls granulated sugar, three cupfuls sweet milk, three cupfuls cold water, one cun of pineapple or one pineapple picked to shreds with a fork. Mix all togeth er and freeze the same as Ice cream Grape Sherbet One quart of milk one pound of sugar, one cupful of grape juice, the juice of one lemon. Mix and freeze. Delicious. Cheese Souffle. Cook together in a saucepan two tablespoonfuls each of butter and flour, and when they are blended pour upon them a half pint of milk. Stir to a smooth white sauce and stir into this eight tablespoonfuls of grated cheese, a saltspoonful of salt, a pinch of baking soda and a dash of paprika, Have ready four eggs, "whites and yolks beaten separately. Remove the cheese mixture from the Are and grad ually beat into it the yolks of the eggs; last of all fold in lightly the stiffened whites. Turn the mixture into a greased pudding dish and bake In a steady oven to a golden brown. Serve immediately. Roast Pork Salad. Take bits of cold roast . pork, chopped very fine, with a large quan tity of celery and the whites of two hard-boiled eggs. Take the yolks while warm, mash to a smooth paste and mix well with one teaspoonful of mustard, adding Bait and pepper to taste. Into this stir one teaspoonful vinegar, three large spoonfuls of melted butter, and mix all thoroughly into the meat. Edge platter with tips of celery or lettuce. Place salad in the center. Keep cool until sent to the table. Hungarian Ware. The new Hungarian ware with its vivid colors Is affective with willow furniture. This ware is made by the peasants. It Is of nondescript color, not white, nor yellow. The garish dec orations are of flowers and garlands in pink and greens. Basket Salad. Remove seeds and membranes from green peppers, cut In form of baskets. Fill with chopped wbi beans, cubes of red beets and stuffed olives. Use your favorite salad dressing. ENGLISH MIXED GRILL FINI DISH FOR ANY OF LIGHTER MEALS. THB Recipe That Will Provide Sufficient for Three Persona Devonshire Cream Another idea Wa Ow to English Housewives. A mixed grill is very popular in Eng land for luncheon, but it would be as good as a light dinner or supper. The following recipe makes enough for three persons: Three lamb chops, one-half pound of sausages, four kid neys, two tomatoes and a half pound of mushrooms. Grill the chops, sausages and kidneys together, Bllce the tomatoes and fry with the mush rooms. The mushrooms and the toma toes should not be cooked long enough for the slices of tomatoes to lose their shape. Arrange the meat on a platter, lay the vegetables around the edge, garniBh with parsley and serve. No gravy should be used with this dish, not even the juice from the mush rooms and tomatoes, or the flavor will be spoiled and the grill will look messy and unappetizing. Try this recipe some time when you have a few sausages or kidneys left over from some meal, and you will find that you have a new and excellent dinner dish with very little trouble or expense. Devonshire Cream. This Is just as delicious as it sounds and far less ex pensive. In fact, It isn't really cream at all, although no one would ever know that unless she were told, for It tastes like an exceptionally rich, thick cream. It Is used everywhere in Eng land, as it will keep for several days In a cool place and does not need to be kept on ice. Ice in Great Britain is a decided luxury, and not the dally necessity that it has become in Ameri ca, but even though the iceman comes dally 'to your door and your fresh cream will keep sweet for a day or two, you may find a jar of rich Dev onshire cream a convenient thing to have on hand. Two auarts of milk will make enough cream for two persons, and the milk left after the cream has been taken off can be used for cookieB, bo there is no waste. Put an earthenware pan of milk in a cold place for 12 hours. Then place It on the fire and let it come slowly to the scalding point; leave it on the fire for about half an hour, but do not let boll; then remove to a cold place and let it stand for Beven or eight hours, till all the cream is risen. Take oft the cream, which should be thick and clotted, and serve on fruit, tarts, cake, etc. For Plcnle and Camp. When you have a large cake of Ice and want a email piece to put in a glass you are somewhat helpless if you have no ice pick at band. But you need not be so. Use an ordinary pin instead of an ice pick and you can have the ice in pieces the size you desire. Press the pin into the ice as far as It will go, and work it back and forth slowly and steadily- until the ice splits. Then put the pin in a new place and make another cleft. In this way yau can break off piece after piece of any deBired Bize. Ragout of Beef. Cut two pounds of round steak Into one-Inch cubes; put two tablespoons of Buet into saucepan and when hot add the meat, browning on all Bides; Into the fat blend two tablespoons of flour, and then add one pint of water in which has been dissolved one tea spoon of extract of beef; add one tea spoon of salt and three-quarters tea spoon of white pepper and simnter for XV, hours. Stiffening Curtains. When doing up curtains at home if flour Is used instead of starch the iron will not stick so much and the curtains will have more the appear ance of new ones. One good table spoonful of flour for each curtain is sufficient. Mix the flour to a thick paste with cold water, then put in the tub and pour on as much boiling wa ter as required for rinsing the cur tains. Novel Salad. An attractive way to serve small bits of smoked chicken is to cut them into tiny cubes, put into a cup. and add enough seasoned gelatin to cov er. Put into a cold place to get firm. Unmold, cut into small squares, sprin kle with finely chopped celery, and serve, as a salad with a French dress ing, or a stiff mayonnaise. Good Hand Cleanser. Kerosene will cleanse your hands better than anything else after black ing a range or stove. Pour a little in the water, wash your hands In it, then wash them In tepid water and finally with plenty of soap and a stiff nail brush in hot water. Finish up by rub bing the hands with lemon juice, rose water or glycerin. Tcatted Cheese Sandwlchet. Cut bread as for any sandwich and place between slices a thin slice of cheese. Season cheese with salt and cayenne. Toast until cheese is melt ed, holding bread together. These are very good with salads of any kind where mayonnaise is not served. To Bake Potatoes Quickly. In baking potatoes, put a small pan of water In the oven and you will And they bake much quicker. " Repeater' 5moS(e!ess Shells. If you want a good low-priced Smokeless powder "load," Winchester Factory Loaded " Repeater " Shells will surely suit you. They are loaded with the standard brands of powder and shot, good wadding and with that same care and precision which have made the Win chester "Leader" the most popular and satisfactory high-grade shell upon the market. Some shooters insist that Winchester " Repeaters " are better than other makers' highest grade shells. A trial will tell the tale. Don't forget the name : Winchester " Repeater," THE YELLOW SHELL WITH Deceived. Little Willie was loft alone with sister's beau. "Mr. Chumpley," he presently said, what is a popinjay?" Sister's beau wrinkled his forehead. "Wh-why, a popinjay Is a-a vain bird." "Are you a bird, Mr. Chumpley?" "Certainly not." "That's funny. Ma said you was a popinjay, and pa said there was no doubt about your belli' a jay, an' Bis ter Baid there was small hopes of your poppin', an' now you say you ain't a bird at all. That's funny." Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Effect on the Boss. Hoax The fellows who work in a brewery drink all the beer they want. Joax I should think the boss would have his hands full. Philadelphia Record. He Doesn't Exist Here. A musical enthusiast is one who will pass up a ball game to attend a matinee performance of "Rigoletto." The Smart Set. Shake Into Your Shoes alien's Foot-Enne, a powder for the feet. It curat painful, Bwollen, smarting, sweating feet. Makes new shoes easy. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores. Don't accept any substitute. Sample b'KEK. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Hoy, N . X. A Plea of Guilty. "What!" exclaimed the teacher, "does no one know? What animal has bristly hair, is dirty all the time and loves getting Into the mud? A small boy raised a timid hand. "Well, Allan," said the teacher, "tell us what it 1b." "Flense, ma'am, said the little boy, reflectively, "it's me." Chicago Amer ican. HE BANKING' POSITIONS' are filled by many of our graduates who received their lirst training at our model banking office. The training is invaluable to both boys and girls, and is only one of the many special features 01 the lieutel School. Why not join our classes with a view to earnimr more salary? A position guaranteed. BEUTEL BUSINESS COLLEGE Taeormi, Washington. And It's Not in Baedeker. English Clergyman And when you arrive in London, my dear lady, don't fail to Bee St. Paul's and Westminster Abbey. Fair American You bet; I'll rattle those off, sure; but what I've been nankenng to see, ever since 1 was knee-high to a grasshopper, is the Church of England. London Times. How He Would Sell. "Yep, I've made up my mind to get rid of that auto I bought from Pete Haskins. Guess I'll let it go for $30 jest as it stands." "What you want to do that fer?" ' 'Cause It won't move." Cleveland Plain Dealer. 8unllght Intensified By Reflection from Ocean Beach and Desert Kund unrelieved by Foliage. vVinds and Mineral Laden, Poixonous Dust, all bring Eye Troubles in their wake Granu lated Eyelids, Red, Itching, Burning, Tired and Watery Eves, Impaired Vision and Eye Pain. Reliable Relief is found in Murine Eye Remedy, Mild and Harmless. If you Wear Glnxses, Try Murine. Doesn't Smart. Feels Fine. Ads Quickly. la an Eve Tonic compounded by Oculists not a ''Patent Medicine" but used in succes-ful Physicians' practice for many years. Now dedicated to the Public and sold at 50c Per Bottle. Murine Eye Salve In Aseptic Tubes, 25c and 50c. Hold by Dniftgists. For Hoolts, write to Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. While There's Life. ' "You will," said the attorney, during the course of their consultation, "you will get your third out of the estate." "Oh!" exclaimed the widow, aghast, "how can you say such a thing, with my second scarcely cold in his grave!" Green Bag. Prophetic. His Wife "But, dear, tell me why you want my photograph taken in cos tume?" Her Hubby "So that in three years you will look at it and say what I would like to say right now." Judge. " Acid Stomach, heartburn and nausa quickly disappear with the use of Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills. Send for trial box to 372 Pearl St., New York. Adv. Disappointing. "How's that book you were Just reading?"' "Oh, it's another of those publica tions in which a corking good title Is spoiled by the story." Washington Btar. THE CORRUGATED HEAD. Providing Entertainment. "Say, friends!" exclaimed the man who had come suddenly out of tut bushes. ' I've had all kinds o' trouble to get any fish to say in this part o the stream." 'Then I suppose you object to my fishing?" asked the stranger. "How long have you been here? "About two hours." "Catch anything?" "No." ' "Well, I guess there ain't no objec tion to your gettlu' out n a rock an' thrashlu' around a while longer. May be it'll help to amuse the fish." Washington Star. . L. DOUGLAS YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY WEARING W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES For 31 years W. L. Doualas has guaranteed the value by having hla name and the rola.ll price stani pod on the sole before thi- shoes leave tho fac tory. This protects the wenrer naaluat high price for Inferior shoes of other makes. W. I,. Oonijlua Blnti nrc always worlliwliat ymt pny fur them. If 1 coiiht show yon tlio lilKh grade leatlinra used and liow niiefnlly VV.L.DouKlna fltiot;a are made, you would thro nnilciBlnnd why they look lit'ttnr, lit loiter, hold lliclr almiie iin.1 wear lomti'r limn olln-r inukea for the price. II the W. I., llonuMB aliuca nm not for sale In your Trinity, order ilui'. l. Iriiin farlory. Shoes sent ereiy. wlnm). I'oBIHKe hi' ill (lie U. S. Write for lilua. lru(tLU 4'uliilou Hlmwlni how to unlrr tiy mail. W. 1. IXlllll.AS, aloSinuk Sl.,llrutklou, Jlail, Pluto's Pet. Cerberus was barking at the gates of Hades. "He's all right," Pluto ruminated. "But I do hope they won't tax me for three dogs this year." Even he had his troubles. Milwau kee Free Press. The Benefactor. Of all the clever men we know, The one we moBt adore, Is he who mado the one-step grow Where two-steps grew before. Puck. But there's another artful chap, Whose skill we'll not deplore, Ho put two slashes In the ekirta Where one appeared before. A Bird of a Rotprt. N "Here you are," scolded the -robin, "putting ycuir eRg In my nest and ex--peeling my wifu and me to hatch it You have a mU;hty bad reputation for your irregular habits!" "Oh, I don't know," saucily replied the cuckoo, "I never heard of any clocks being named after you." Chi cago Evening Post. IN ALL OUR There Is Hardly A Woman Who Does Not Rely Upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound. Princeton, 111. "I had inflammation, bard headaches in the back of my neck and a weakness all caused by female trouble, and I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound with such ex cellent results that I am now feeling fine. I recommend the Compoundand praise it to all. I shall be glad to have you publish my, letter. There is scarcely a neighbor around me who does not UBe your medicine. "Mrs. J. F. Johnson, R. No. 4, Box 30, Prince ton, Illinois. Experience of a Nurse. Poland.N.Y. "In my experience as a nurse I certainly think Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound is a great medicine. I wish all women with fe male troubles would take it. I took it when passing through the Change of Life with great results and I always re commend the Compound to all my pa tients if 1 know of their condition in time. I will gladly do all I can to help others to know of this great medicine." Mrs. Horace Newman, Poland, Her. kimer Co., N. Y. If you are ill do not drag along until an operation is necessary, but at once take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable) Compound. If you want special advice wrlt Lydia E.PInkliam Medicine-Co., (couUdentiol) Lynn, Mass, MEN'S S WOMEN'S f k $3.00 1 JS SHOES f v $3 vf $2.50, $3, $3.50 K'B.im $3.75, $4, $4.59 P'jL,' f$M and $5.00 i'.Ar JiCf BOYS' SHOES $VS $2.25, $2.50 JJM XhMM $3.00 i $3.50 JSOt'SJr ' 0ver ,C v'Vi "aA"i Stylus Aw,, IW 4 c-lrVldthi aaSfte. V a aabatltataa jfs 'J-wl '" mr !..!U.;;l'l!.!-Mi;i!i!.;.M'l!-j..!H-l .