Scr EVENING EBDGER PHIIiADEEPHIA", SATURDAY, APRIE 15, 1916. ON THE FIRING LINE WHO ARE THE GLEAMING STARS? THE PHOTOPLAY- MAN-ABOUT- TOWN it r ft- r 9. I The battery of six moving picture machines antl one news camera that "took" the Moorish fort and town shown in the background not to mention the camera that snapped this photograph. Tho film under pro duction was Annette Kcllcrmann's now vehicle, made by the Fox Corporation in Jamaica. Tkeatncal No New Plays Next Week at Our Leading Thea tres New Feature Films Form Attractive Novelties JVW PLAYS KXICKIUMOCK Kit "Tho Bruto." First Philadelphia presentation of Frederick Arnold ICuminrr'ti diiimn In thrco acts. A story of the triangle situation from tf. sllRhtty different ntiKlo. Kmlly Smiley nnd John Wainer In the leading roles. AMl7l!lflX"Tp llmiw Next Door. The Arvlii! IM.ijrrf. with Virginia Hen nlng rnd (Jeorgi" Aivlnc, In this mod ern piny. coxnxuixa ',ir.s ' ZrWOl "Tin- Wooing o; Kve," with Laurolte Taylor nnd Phillip Merlvalo 1 A comndy by J. (lnrtley MnunerH. of an i Anici Iciii girl, who Ntnits to -uutanglo a houili'iUl tnlvup if an lhigllsh rela. tlve. .Mr. Aluiin-rs wrote "I'tg V My Heart." ZYHlC-"Aintw at Last" with Hoy At well, Hairy Conor, L"Uy Virl"o nnd John Oniric Thoinat. An o.ieietta, with the li'mU mlu ted by .Smith and Herbert; iuni' by Prunx I.Jhiir. An nmbllloit'i Vl."inono lint ottutlou of tho "Mcny Widow' scluol QAi:i:iCK-"i Vux t. ilortlso," with Luulra Drev. tiiant .Mitchell and Hen Molitisnn A ni I fnnc with much fun In It. photoplays. JSTAXI.EY Monday. Tujiday and Wed ncsJay. ".Milly Mulsp-Uellcvo." with Maig i-:itu I'l.uN. Tiiui iluv. Friday and ' jiiturd.iy. "Tl.'j Ited Wid m, with John jjui.-ymuto 0.i;G,l)':A Monday. Tueda and Wed I liftula". "! Aitaguau vmJi tin hi John- s'in Tim r til.iy. l'rul-iv and .S.itvnday, I "Till' Sir p: lug Stone ' with Frank ' K-.-omiu and Mniy Iti.la d pA LA C'L II mCiy. Tu.- iln p.ml Wednes day, "Aiuliij." with Piii.lui' l'ruderlck ' Tliursdn), Friday mid Saturday. "The .'.Heart of I'uuln,' with Lcnuru t'lrlch. fytCTOUIA Alonduy nnd Tuesday, "Waifs." Mith Jauo Grey and William Desmond Wednesday and Thursday, . "Tho Habit of Happiness," with Doug las Fairbanks. Friday nnd Saturday, "Tho Unlf-a-Milllon-Dollar Uriel.?." with -Hamilton llevtlle. Addd attraction all woek. Charles Chaplin In his burlesque on "Carmen." VAUDEVILLE. KEITH'S Maty Shaw In "The Dickey Bird," Amelia Stone and Armand Ka Ilsz In ".Ma mzelle Capilce"; Hello Ba ker, MnillHt; HuHuy and Boyle, come J dlans; Tnintfo Kajiyama, Howard's Ani mal Spectacle, Corbotte. Shcpnrd and Donovan, vocalists, Newbold and Grib b)n, Itlce, Kliner and Tom, gymnasts. ffXAXO Grubcr'a Trained Animals, Inez McCnulcy and company In "The Girl "From Chllds' "; Tlimbsr and Madison, ltyau aiid HIgg.s, In "Dlhturblng tho f Peace"; Harry Lo Clalr, Misses Ilofers ind Wood, SfiOflf? "The JIald and the Mummy," rat Nazano and company, gymnasts; Willie Zimmerman, Hlwood and Snow, the Four Harmonists, Htpley and com pany,. Winkel and Dean, Baby Ann, Hartley and Pecan. frllOSS KEYS First half of week. Klut ing's Trained Animals, Bessie Lo Count, Claude Vaux and company, Holden and Graham, Pratt and Pratt, -EMILY SMILEY Who will be seen with the Knick erbocker Players next week in a play new to Philadelphia, "The Brute." gjHE'NEXT MOnWNCr IT RAINS A FfVWTlFUL. Baedek er Dave Itoth. Lost half of week. Klut Ing's Trained Animals, Harry Krautz and company, the Thrco Ilosalrs, Six Violin Misses, Morlln, the Coter-Boulden Trio. IWRLESQUE. DUMOXT'HTiumont'B Minstrels, in Ba thes on matters of current Interest. The Educational Value of the Movies BY MACK SENNETT Thero Is so much that may be said on tho subject of motion pictures as an edu cational factor In modem civilization that I almost hesitate to discuss tho problem la one short article. Great as Is the present In structive value of tho lllm, tho most con servative students ad mit that It is In Its Infancy and, as a form of amusement, tho very fact that motion-picture production ranks fourth among the industries of tho Unltod States Is quite sufficient to prove Its stnndlng It is the combination of nmuse merit nnd Instruction' that is to be found In the motion picture of today that ns euros Us permanency. There was a time, a few years go, when tho man who pro vided for his family by working 8 or 10 hours a day, at a not exorbitant wage, found tho prohlem of paying for clean amusement n difficult ono to solve. Today tho ample supply of plcturo theaties, with admissions ranging from 5 cents up, an swers the amusement question "cry satis factorily. After a hard day's work tho head of tho family Is enabled to take his wlfo and children to a comfortable the atre, where, for a small amount, they enjoy well-constructed dramas, uproarious comedies nnd current news pictures ampli fied by good music. It Is tho news plcturo thnt has developed Into one of tho most valuable educational mediums of modern times, A very few years ngo we depended entirely upon news paper accounts of the happenings In for eign countries, frequently garbled, and sometimes purposely distorted, and Illus trated, at best, with reproductions of still photographs. Today wo see tho actual happening portrayed upon tho screen nl most as distinctly as the event Itself. We seo tho European armies marching to the front, battleships being launched, generals and rulers In Interesting mo ments, nnd a thousand and one other hap penlngs thnt bring foreign lands to our very doors. That Is one angle of the educational value of motion pictures. Another, and perhaps more vitally 1m portant department or screen education Is that used by private Institutions. In schools and churches the motion picture machine has become ia permanent nnd necessary as the library, not replacing It, but acting as a valuable auxiliary. In commercial and manufacturing lines the use of motion pictures In conjunction with the efficiency movement that has done so much to further the welfare of modern business has been of Inestimable value The new processes of manufacture; a new method of salesmanship, and kindred de tails, may be shown to multitude of men and women by the use of a few hundred feet of film, educating them along some particular line which formerly would have required a volume of exhaustive explana tions and many weary hours of study. The most successful shops, factories and wholesale and retail stores of today nnd that this method of bringing the latest and best methods to the attention of their employes are of mutual benent to em ployer and employe alike. In many ways the moving picture re places the library n families where books might be a luxury, In some Instances It would be Impossible for the poor man to possess many books. Today the family visits the motion picture theatre where, for a few cents, they see the greatest works of Action produced upon the screen by the best actors, with appropriate scenery and it Is real scenery, not the water-colored canvas of the old speaking stage. The Silent Art I Speech is the one thing that it 1 does not need. It is an art in i ' . ! lMMfifiW ' Jill ! 1 ! 11 11111JXEAJJJUJ111J.HM" . . i " i ' i - V r Tl - - - iJi-rr t'llmmm tmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmlwm twii '.''. .'. . .rt I1 ... . . '.'" ' ' - J.aTw,f1 wM.m ;Z &&& WTVWXZ mMi ?'. w) zxxM2 r-V 1 tTl , Js s - v jTf '.jrr. 'V. JlooO'y'Xy ' l V -t I -SJ f-VI 1 . 'X.i'l'XXy A11X. Vyj SS rSjf SSJSjSmM Movies As a Help to the Stage Actor . By ROBERT WARWICK I bcllevo that acting for the movies undor a good director Is a good thing for a player. Ono is npt to practlco a redundancy of gesture on tho stngo and tho movies correct that. There Is not the voice to fall back on when ono Is acting for the screen Gesture nnd facial expression must Indicate cpry emotion; sometimes It Is necessary to depend on fnclal expression alone without a move ment of tho rest of tho body, and tho ability to do this is an asset on tho stage. Then nctlng before the cahiera gives tho player poise. The space Is so much more restricted than on the stage that In scenes, particularly Indoor scenes, where thero nre sceral persons there muat ho a minimum of action or tho Ptitlro sccno would be spdilcd. In the samo scene on the stage, with Its larger nroa, fie characters might move about without spoiling It Thus tho camera gives poiso. Thero Is no reason why nn actor should neglect his olcn Just becauso he doesn't happen to be using It on the stage. All the time I tunc been In tho movies I have kept up the caro of my vblco. l-.very day I read aloud. When I read tho paper In tho morning, for In stance. I read aloud, giving ns careful at tention to each word as If I were ap pearing beforo an audience. In this way the voice may bo kept In shape. Of cour.se. If ho should fall under a poor director, nnd thero aro plenty of thorn, untold Injury might bo dono his art. That Is tho principal trouble with pictures the scarcity of good directors and of good scenarios. Fortunately I had good directors, and I think that I am a hotter actor than I was before I went In for tho movie thing. Musical Glasses svxpay. Arm, ic Concert by pupils of Bettlement j'luslo School. MOSDAY. Arm I, 17 Concert by the rhllndelpliln Orchmtra. with MlKcha K'mnn. ilollnlat. ns cololnt. at th Arnneiny of Music, for tho new pension fund of the orchestrn, Tt'.'SD.tr. AMI I. IK Hahn QunrtPt In recital at Wltherpoon Hall. VVR8DAV. APRIL 33 Joint plunn recltnl by Oiolp Gnhrltowltsch nml Hnrold Ilnuer at tho Aractomy of Muilc-. Choral t'nlon will lnir "The Cross of rire" rnntatu. lit the Metropolitan Opera House. M'nnXKSDAV. APRIL 311 Aline van Uarentzln In recital at Wltherapoon Hall. FRIDAY. APRIL IS John MrCnrmark In recital at the Metro politan Opera !Ioue. The Treble Clef concert at Wlthernpoon Hall. The Philadelphia Operatic Society will pre sent "Itobln llooit" on May II and 11', nt the Metropolitan Opera Houxe. The Effect of the Photoplay The plays of today must bo much better to succeed than tho plays of 10 years aso, and I think that it is becauso they hnve been affected by the actinp art and real ism of the movinpf-picture drama. J. Stuart Blockton. I Good Plots for J Photoplays Are In Demand i ft Can you develop a good plot along unexpected lines make it afford suspense, surprise, heart interest, hu man interest and climax? If so, it can easily be made suitable for a screen drama. Puttin ry in shape for sale, production is my n give you the h ed to make a sue laywright. Why not demonstrate now that yoi: can do what you have oi :n isaJd you could do? DANI LIS (Former ado Editor Lubin 'ompany) Transportation Bldgr. hiladeiphia g trursto arfd foif lAfrk.- I& p you ni Cess as a b Si 1 A ceh and there LEtHlF.n's rfint ipfth fhe movie on atom the peronontle behind "c nfrtunoornoon ineaxres nna ine jitms they siow. Kor Ine complete and accurate proarams of the coming week tee the PhO' ropiav ITinrf In ilondaj't Kteninu l.nbuicii. Those who Icued "The Silent Voice" when It was presented on the legttlmnto stage at tho Liberty Theatre, New Yorlt. last season, with Otis Skinner In the prin cipal part, will b'o Interested to learn that It has been produced In motion pictures, with Francis X. Ilushinnu and Mar guerite Snow In tho leading roles, nnd will bo tho Important production on Tuesday at tho Locust Two Paramount masterpieces to be pre sented for tho first time In South Philadel phia will be shown at the Alhambra Mon day, Tuesdny and Wednesday. John Uar rymorc will be seen In a role new to him, that of an accidental crook, or rather near-crook. Tho play Itself, "The Lost Bridegroom," Is classified as a comlo dra matic adventure, and that about as ac curately describes It as Is possible. Photoplay entertainment of tho highest class Is tho dally program for tho Great Northern Theatro during tho ensuing week. Tuesday the main attraction Is "Tho Typhoon," a lllm erslon of the drama In which Walker Whiteside scored one of his greatest successes. High-class photoplay entertainment, with plcnslng specialties of a varied char acter, will be Included In tho progrnms nt tho Qlrnrd Avenue Theatre. For next Monday tho main feature will be tho np penranco of Lillian Olsh In "Daphne and tho Plrnto." Tuesday, as nn extra even ing attraction there will bo nn amateur stage contest. Thursday will come tho usual ballroom dancing contest for cash prizes. Marguerite Clark, the dainty little nctress who hns won the hearts of the motion plcturo public by her artistry and her Irresistible Vivacity, will appear on Monday next nt tho lllnlto Theatre In "Still Waters," n story of circus and canal boat life, written especially for Miss Clark by Edith IJarnard Delano. With tho week divided Into three periods, each marked by tha presentation of ono of tho latest nnd best of photoplay successes from the producing centres of the Metro, AVorld and Equltnble Com panies, the patrons of tho Itcgcnt Theatro will look for high-class lllm entertainment next week. Tho press agent has the following to say about Thursday's attraction at the Huby: "It Is necessary to resort to every known subterfuge In order to divert tho crowds In Los Angeles streets when a sccno Is filmed When tho pictures of n Pfiri J& ALHAMBRA 12th. Morrl A Fnnyunk Ave. Mat. Dally at 2; Eve . T fe 0. VaudeYllle & raranVt Picture Dustin Farnum in "Ben Blair" ARCADIA CHESTNUT J1ELOW 10TII William Hart in "Aryan" Drl T C 32D AND THOMPSON ArULLAJ MATINEE DAILY DOUMLB TnlANOLE IHLL LILLIAN GISH in "DAl'IINB AND THR 1MKATI38" Ker.10 fftrECIJtjDGE''U RI IIFRIRD "00 N0RTH DR0AD ST- PARAMOUNT PKHSENTS Florence Rockwell in "He Fell in Love with His Wife" DPT nrZ-iTVIT' "!D ABOVE MARKET OfciLMUIN 1 Mata. 1:30 k .1;30. 10c. E( El. 0 130. 8, 0 !30. 15c. Florence Rockwell in "He Fell in Love With His Wife" 60TH AND CEDAIl AVE. CEDAR rARAUOVNT THEATMJ- lEATItE irr Marguerite Clark i "Mice and Men FAIRMOUNT 50T,DAnD ave. Mutual Maaterplcture Cey Prenta Kathryn Adams-Robert Whittier "A Bird df Prey" in. FRANKFORD 4711 FHANKFORD AVENUE Pauline .Frederick in "Ttfe Spider." X I - k Z 56TH ST. PatreS I fill. 8prucvEia. T to 11 Marv Pickford in "Poor tlttlPeppina" 52d St. B2d k Sansom Mata 2-3 O-to Evr 0:S0 to llA-lOc T William Farnunyin "The Broken Law" 'gP' "! germantown'tove: Mae Murray & Wallace Reid IN "To Have and To Hold" -iT rni7 BBTH k MARKET 3UB-7-&. VLAJOU 115,000 KJMBAIX ORGAN Mary Fuller in 'Strength of the Weak" J.Kvcru fiatiirrfdi nnd here i ihrouoH thr lerth the Evbxivo Photoplay Man.About-Town ennt damffltfgp ?xrx&m&mwA '2kaim29 s W v P&rV v "wfTSKAy I25 steamship ofllce wero taken for "Tho Code of Marcla Gray" a camera was smuggled up In an auto with the curtains drawn Two prop boys staged a "fight" In another direction so that tho sccno could be taken." Although over two years old, "The Daughter of the Hills," with Laura Saw yer In the lending role, is such an excep tional plcturo that tho Sherwood has ar ;-, PROMINENT OTOPLAY PRESENTJPfQ) jwzJM Booim THE following theatres obtain thtlr plcturn throaxh the STANLEY Ilooklnir Companr, nhlrli ! a Kiiarantee of early ttintflngs of 111 tlneit production!. All pictures rsrlewed before exhibition. Aik tor the Ihtmtro In rour locality obtaining plcturo through the 8TANLK Uooklnc Company. (PIP ADn AVENUE THEATB.E -"-i-' TTH AND OIRAIID AVENUE Bessie Bnrriscalc, Clara Williams and Robert McKill in "The Last Act" Great Northern SSnTv'Su FRANK MILLS and EDITH REEVES in "The Moral Fabric" IRIS THEATRE aM8igr?T0S' Virginia Pearson in "The Hunted Woman" IMDITDIAt Tl,.u 0th U-low Walnut Street Robert Warwick in "The Supreme Sacrifice" JEFFERSON 20T" 1,ETA8upn,N House Peters in "The Hand of Peril" MCTItO riCTUHE DREW COMEDIES LAFAYETTE " KEN81TNoaN ave. Mary Pickford in "The Foundling" I PATM7R FORTY-FIRST AND li.MLEI LANCASTER AVENUE Mary Pickford in "Poor LittyPeppina" T 1 It F R TVY broad and Li 1 JO E IS. 1 I COLUMBIA JP SPBCIALjpEATURE niOORAPH J2has. MaUes & Claire McDowell jT in RajLha-ThaTCrossed" 3 Lonfen Auditorium Broad Above Rockland Ave, jSaby Marie Osborne in "Little-lVIaryySunshine" t rtrncT q? and locust LAJVVO .JtfaU. 1:30 and 3:30, TjjCnet-a 0:80. 8. 0:30, 100. 15c jeanne lver in "One Day" Coming- Ethtl Earryroora In "Klaa ot Hate" Market St. Theatre ?3S Iet Olga Petrova in "The Soul Market" Sea "ORAFT" every Wedneaday ORPHEUM cLTENES. Jeanne lver & Victor Sutherland "Oneway" Added Attraction "GRAFT" 10th Eptaoda ranged to havo this romance of ancient Itomo on Good Friday. Tho management of the Olympla wishes It to be known that motion pictures nro shown thero every matinee nnd evening except Monday, the only eenlng tlat boxing reigns Souvenirs aro given nny at all tho matinees, and they comnrlso everything from pin cushions to booKs of poetry. yrfuimiiiiii Gmpomii r nRTPIUT 2D k WOODLAND AVE. UKXCIN I Dally Mat.. 2. Ee-, 0:50 to 11. EQUITABLE PICTURE Carlyle BJackwell in "The Shadow of Doubt" PAT APP 21 MARKET STREET r.rVLtt.Ej 10 A. M. to 11:15 P. M. Hazel Dawn in "The Saleslady" PAPlf niEOE AVE. 4. DAUPHIN ST. rIIV Mat. 2:15 p. ji. ng 0:45 to 11 Bessie Eyton in "The Cycle of Fate" PRINCESS AVorld Film dorp, 101& MARKET STREET Prcaenta Frank Sheridan in "THE STRUGGLE" Sea "The Olrl and tho Qame" ery Trmraday RIALTO OERMANTOWN AVE. VT TULPEHOCKEN ST. FANNIE WARD and SUSSUE HAYAKAWA in "The Cheat" DPrCNT 1M MARKET STREET KIwVxCaN I 11VUAX VOIOE GROAN H. B. Warner in "The Raiders" RilBV MARKET BTREET U IS I BELOW 7TII STREET Mabel Taliaferro in "Her Great Price" FIVE PARTS METRO SHERWOOD ""'bamore Matinee 2-5 P. M. Evening- 0:13 P. M. Theodore Roberts in "Pudd'nhead Wilson" SAVOY Iftlgg"- FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN and BEVERLY BAYNE in "The Wall Between" ipiQQ A 17TII A VENANOO STS. Blanche Sweet in "The Blacklist" VICTORIA ABOVE NINTH Ethel Barrymore ,n 'VAifig Eltra Added Attraction- "HT STORK'S DELIVERY." Fiaturlnt MACK SWAIN Authentic War JMcturea "S01IEWHERE IN FRANCE" CTVMI FV MARKET ABOVE 16TH cVntTnC-SST Wallace Reid and Virt'A' Cleo dgley in "The Love Mask" gb LIKE TO INTRODUCE you TO MY HU5BANP 'Amusement Batten : ........j Of lha manr productions which will b nt the Garden next wk AIcAridr Dumas' "Denlse" on Wednesday and "Be-t hind the Firing Lines o( the Europeatt War" are noteworthy. MarBuerlte Clark's contract with the Famous Players Paramount expires il&f 15, and this little star has nlready fllcnl fled her willingness to renew It for an other year. "Out of the Drifts," In which she appears, will bo at the Bluebird on Saturday. One of the funniest bits of work In the comedy "Eicuae Me," which will bo At the Grand on Thursday, Is when the min ister reverses his collar and performs a marriage after having been mistaken for a drummer. The Masterpiece Film Attractions an nounce the openlne of their office In this city at 1326 Vine street, Associated In this entcrm-tsa Is Sol Lesser, the young film magnate who purchased the United States right for "The Ne'er Dd Well," and Leon D. N'etter, connected with him fa most of his other enterprises. William Farnum, who has thousands of admirers, was the boy cornetlst of Buckport, Me, Unquestionably cornet playing can be ranked as one of ths vices; n qulto common one, In fact. II Is In "The Bondman"at the Jefferson on Tuesday. Prominent In the support of FannU Ward, tho Lasky star, who will bo seen at the Gcrmnntown on Friday and Saturday In "For tho Defonse," nre such well-known artists aB Jack Dean, Horace B. Carpenter, Camllle Astor, James Nelll, Gertrude Kellar and others. "For tho Dofense," a Paramount picture, was written especially for Miss Ward by Hector Turnbull and staged under tho direction of Frank lielchcr. Wlllnrd Louis, who wields a 44-calIbre revolver ns IHg Bill In the William Fox production, "Fight Inn Blood," Ib nn expert rlflo nnd rcvotxrr shot. Eureka patrons will see this "cannon" on Friday. Tho Broadway will show "Gold and tho Woman" on Tuesday. Mary Murlllo, who wrote tho scenario, makes crazy quilts ns a diversion. She declares that sowing Is tho most restful form of diversion for the woman who works with her brain. Charlotte Walker's next raramountpre ductlon for tho Lasky Company will b under tho direction of Frank Itolcher In, "Tho Woman and tho Law." from the pen of Hector Turnbull. 'The Trail of tho Lonesome Pine," her last play, wilt bo nr. ma inric on uruosuav Jack Harrymoro, iot admit that there Is any trut rumor that ho weeks prt dueling with a tho of tho sword-play scnes ln,5fcnrj coming to tho But those who Iilrmoufrf on Thursdn' comedian i tho scenes are doubt tintruth of tho state- ment. liST PHILADELPHIA k1ir C2D """1 MARKET STS. llli-' MAT. DAILY. 2 P. M,. Bau wuuLa riLM tresents Charles Cherry in "Passers By" OVERBROOK md "foIS-ay PARAMOUNT PRESENTS Dustin Farnum in Call of the Cumber lands rtARHFN FIFTY-THIRD AND UnrvLltll LANSDOWNE AVH. Viola Dana in "The Children of Eve" EUREKA 40TU arAnKET Jackie Saunders in "Shrine of Happiness" BROADWAY 82D n oheenwa TRIANGLE PLAYS "The Green Swamp" With Bessie Barriscale "LOVE WILL CONQUER" BALTIMORE BOTH AND I1ALTIMORB AVH trianolt: plays HELEN WARE in rnnss ounnrNTt" WEBER & FIELDS in "THE WORST OF FRIENDS" Nonin Broad Street Casino Suf0" Matinee 2.30, Evening 6:13. 8:15 and 0:39 Vera Sisson in "The Battle of Truth" BILLIE REBVE3 COMEDY OTHERS PFNTr IR Y En,B AVE. k MARSHALL lEUl 1 UR I MATINEE DA1LT "The Ruling Passion" With Wm.E. Shea SOUTH OI YMPIA BROAD AND ULl lTiri4 EAINBRIDan STS, WILLIAM FOX PRESENTS Theda Bara in "GOLD AND THE WOMAN" NORTHEAST STRAND Imi AND omAD Ava. Vivian Martin in "Merely Mary Ann" "STINGREE," 7th Episode KENSINOTON MTKmrk rnoNT st. and "PUBLIC APPROVAL" THREE PART8 "HONORED MONARCHS HER DEVOTED SON" TWO PARTS '.TUB DOOMED GROOM" Weekly Programs Appear Every Monday la Motion Picture Chart BY THE (jlATIONAU Wll r in ib icnc Ifttlclrf wrra neroxa ftnkyrg 1fcrK"in IlicciLClio IrWThVd to fi 4z eNsoasHiR y avmi- f o:? C; gggz & && $&m&r 4Vmm , && 1