tmwmtKJ mmvmw 'WW'WilMWii'J' ' ""i 1 1 mwtw Miniui fti '. ms ' 11 w-'WT' "-" JWH'f " m ipum ff " H J ' J',' 1JW MWBWPPPiliWipWiWflWPIp ,.! ... -. T . VI tr - ? EVENING LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1916. m5miMm& . 1 & DRILLS AND SHRILLS VARY CAMP i LIFE "SOMEWHERE IN TEXAS" Odd Incidents o Routine and Pleasure Detailed for "Folks Back Home" Troopers Assembling Zoos of Scorpions, Lizards and "Sarpints" By CARL L. Evtntno ledger rr. PAHn. hv. JnW 1. Innumerable temmlnr Incidents are maklnir camp life mon the Philadelphia militiamen more than a series of drills. Communications to mothers, wives and sweethearts describe ome of the "funny things" of camp rou- f tine and pleasure. It Is possible to chron. t Icle some of them for the benefit of the yhltadelphla reader. These Items are hot . from the front, FIELD HOSPITAL NO. 2 Bergeant Packard Is att work. The "honey boy" of the camp Is Jtorrlo Jtopp, the Hotmesbunr singer. William Peacock, of Tacony, Is raisins Mexican mustache. Folks back In Tacony will bo surprised ihen they learn that Fred Cants has be iomo an animal trainer. rtobert.Gresham srats more mall than arfy !tse els in F. II. No. 2. , Thomas Keenan, of Cheltenham, Is the , Utiamplon all-around, catch-a-catch-can 1 ater. Sergeant Donat, of Cheltenham, is rals i fns a Carranza. The mules In camp tremble when Ser t ireant B. F. Datezell, the chief mule eltln er, approaches. COMPANY B ENGINEERS A big bottle of lemon Julco drlpplnp on Corporal C. P. O'Connor's pillow caused I kirn to thins It was raining. A lemon shower ' wouldn't bo surprising on tho border. A wicked rattlesnako, chased by Ser- Seant O. Abbott Hunt, Jr., D. E. Irvln, immy Boyd. George Mllholland, Mcrrltt Sooth and "Top" Haydcn Into a pllo of fnesqulto, turned out to be a loirust. Tho rookie guards are still watching out tor Mexicans on the northern outskirts of Camp, which Is good old U. 3. soli. A new species nt Mexican milk snako tins been discovered by sergeant William Bradford, who for a minute couldn't do- i eido whethtr or not the candle was a fcnake. Gerrit H. Bargcr Is not a German spy. Bo's a Hollander, you bet. Castlo, tho mascot, Is a pure Mexican fceehound. That's what he's called, be cause ho bees Instead of bays. Corporal John Miller keeps the 10th Squad bUBy acting as maid for tho dog. -Such things as sand floas, burrs, etc. There aro SO fountain pens In camp and ao Ink. Sergeant J. P. Holllngsworth la raising a goatco. "Glvo It time," he remonstrates. "Vernon Castling" on the mesa, with prairie dogholcs and rattlesnakes to watch with one eyo Is dllllcult even for William Cochran. "V. Carranza" Drinker, known on Chest But street as J. B., feels very much at homo among tho mcsqulte and sago brush. "How many of your men aro sick?" asked n regular army medical officer, who evi dently expected a campfut of invalids after a few days under this Arizona-Texas-Mexico sun. "Kono, sir"; said Captain J. Franklin JJcFaddon. They're calling Edgar C. Felton tho 'Tel low Kid" becauso his head became ochre tiued when ho had his hair shaved off. Perhaps ho does, and perhaps he doesn't took like Villa, but they're calling William J?. Davis "Veeyah" Just tho same. "O, look nt the prairie hound," exclaimed JJIcholoo Blddlo as a prairie dog Jumped ut of Its front door. Schofleld Andrews Is bald-headed until It develops that he's merely Joined the clipped fcead squad. Harry "Punky" Piatt Is as red as ever. Harry Nellson is called the b.b. of the fcoop. Ask Garner Mann what that meansT "Amonr those" who have mustaches 'are Cene Newbold, "Eggy" Felton and Private Davis. Robert McLean is looking for his 126th (lorned toad. Somebody called Charles Wetter and Will iam Cochran wanted to know why anybody $ras saying "Donnerwetterr "Business is good, even here, I see," stated Francis lioyer. 2D REGIMENT The detachment of the medical corps with the second battalion somewhere along the border, consists o(Jteutenant Frank Balrd, Sergeant Walter W. Wright and Privates lt.ee. DeHart, Waggner and Shcppenhelser. Their duty Is to follow the battalion wher trver It goes. All the medical men are armed and ready for business. "Cap," the ollve-drab pup mascot of Company D, Is like a cat It always comes back, A few aays ago It came back even after Captain Ituddatt and Private Plant took It half a mile and presented It to Company F, of the First Regiment. The dog was home before the two presentors jarera. TItOOP G Troop G wants a dog, monkey or any bther animal suitable for a border mascot. First Sergeant George W, Boyle is mascot attendant. James Knlpe's "illness," which came from eating, caused a regular Boston tea party. Many cans and boxes of fancy food were condemned and "thrown overboard." Now, on hardtack, etc, everyone Is sub. listing and feeling well. Fred Bartlett and BUI Ralston are mak ing a, collection of horned toads and scor pions. Privates Wollery and Lamb are volun teer cooks, and a good pair they make, "I miss swimming on this mesa," slgha First Sergeant Oeorge W. Boyle, George Macgregor has spent 11 years In Mexico and speaks the language like a real "pick." Ha left there hurriedly some weeks ago and now he's ready to go back to fight If necessary. Another Troop Q man who Is on his old atirtplng ground la Corporal Reynold Cox, who was with the marines at Vera Cruz. Corporal Francis O'Brien U the veteran aesa man. H. Franks, who formerly was seen la the jie!hiorhood of 8?t Land Title building, tjI to. visit 1 Paso frequently. So he's a kadx nua hcni-ward bound at night. York boys In Troop Q want their friend? in Voi K to write them. First Pennsylvania, CWMry, m. hum. xny aro ramp k. Wfct. Jwh BiUtr, H, It Wiser, and ZEISBERG Staff Correspondent merdtne, who saw 18 years' service In the regular cavalry all along the uoraer. 3D REGIMENT John J. Dalley Is neighing In his sleep, according to Company D boys. He attends D. When "Luke McGlook," better known ns Wesley Long, of the hospital corps, put on An officer's uniform because he had no other, the rookies saluted him. First Lieutenant It. H. McCutchcon, of the hospital corps, sidetracks the Ice cream wagons and then tho boys generally have ice cream for dinner. George G. Koch's bed was right over a hill belonging to some nnts, who evidently wanted to attach themselves to the hospi tal corps. The bed Isn't thero now. After wandering about the mesn for hours Ed. Malone returned to tho hospital tent and announced that ho hadn't seen a mllo of It ho would swap for an Inch of Phllly. The "wounded" are being brought In by "Spot," tho red cross dog of Lieutenant C. G. Stclnmetz, of tho hospital corps. Tho most seriously "wounded" wcro Ser geant William Handel, who was ambushed by nnts, and George G. Koch, sniped by a cactus thorn. Manuel Green, of Company M, wants to get back to Philadelphia. Sho lives thero. James "Irish" Boyland Is wondering what 17th and Dickinson looks like, as ho sits In his Company B tent. Lieutenants Harry B. Williamson and II. J. Inman, of Company G, aro raising mus taches ns part of a pact with Captain Arthur S. Frltzlngor. Their Buporlor offi cer had ono for 20 years, and when ho ro moved It they wcro obliged to sprout their, according to th!r agreement Seven Gray's Ferry lads In Company C are George McCuslter, Hugh Boyland, Oeorge Mink, ltobort McKcan, Jnmos Cof fey, Joe Redding and Corporal Leonard Brcnnan. An ant went on n rnld and bit Jimmy Coffey, of Company C. When William J. O'Brien, of Company D, returns to his homo at 1813 Wharton stroet, he will suprlse his family with a zoo, which contains Bnakes, lizards, horned toads, scorpions, centipedes, chameleons, Gila monsters, nnts nnd other varmints. Ho Is being run n closo second by John J. Daley, who hns everything but a scor pion In his Company D tent First Sergeant Marley, of Company D, Is now a leutenant; Sergeant Fcldman Is a first sergeant; Private John 11. Daley, formerly a policeman nt 15th street nnd Snyder nvcnuo, Is a sergeant, and Private Murphy Is a corporal, Company C lad3 nccuso Corporal Fendal of shaving Corporal Brcnnan with a pair of Ice tong?. 4TII REGIMENT Boys of Comparrj M hnvo not forgotten to send messages concerning their camp llfo to the folk3 back home. They are on tho border, but they havo not lost track of all the "doings" up homo. Tho Bethlehem tobrcco fund has become famous. Tho boys aro making good use of tho camera which Mr. ConradI, the Beth lehem photographer, gave. Ho sends the films, they tako the pictures nnd send them to him. He does the developing and puts tho pictures on postals which are sold for benefit of tho men, who get moro tobacco from that fund than any other company. Sergeant Roy Woodllng has received a notice from the Owl Club and from the Knights of Malta up home that members aro all excused from paying dues while at the front. The fellows think that Is pretty white of tho bunch; They hope that clubs In other cities nro treating their members as well as Bethleham boldlers are being treated. It would be a pretty hard pull to keep up club dues on soldiers' wages. Elwood Standt, whose homo is In Easton, but who worked In Bethlehem with the boys nt tho Bell Telephone Company and who enlisted from there, wants to send his regards to the bunch at the Boll. Ho says he la lonesome without them and the wires. Perhaps tho hardest worked thing In this company cxecept the kitchen stove and the spigot Is the desk used by Sergeant Wood ling. Tho desk Itself is a clever arrange ment that looks like a suitcase when it Is folded. But It opens In the shape of a desk. In It Is an Ingenous contrivance for Ink, which screws up so that the ink will not spill. Some of the boys from Company K want a few notes sent for them. The K boys are from Lancaster. J. L. Denlinger, who goes to tho Stevens Trade school, Chester Barr. "Top" Sergeant, of Company K, nnd a silver weaver by trade, as well as Ivan Reich and Samuel Mehaffey, the company trumpeter, send greetings to the folks down Lancaster way. Edwin Lundy, a machinist with the Fidelity Electric Company at Lancaster, who la also In Company K, says he has actually forgotten how the whir of a ma chine sounds and that he cannot stretch his Imagination to remember Just how to start a machine any more. Field Hospital, No. 2 Here's somebody hoping the rumpus down here will be over by September. He's Hugh Charnley, of 7779 Frankford avenue, Holmeaburg, who Is to marry Miss Mar garet Taffe, of 3722 Knorr street, Tacony, on September 25. John Garvin Is president of the I Decline Club on hard work. H. D, Butterworth. who was married the night before the field hospital left Tacony, was "kidded" for a week because he re ceive no word from his wife. It's all O. K. now, though. Frank Garagues Is the hardest-working man In camp. Adv. Company B, Ergineera Corporal Jack Collins has a black Car ranza beard. Jimmy Boyd, of Haverford. has captured 27 chameleons and three rattlers. Three new corporals are C. P. O'Connor, J, Wesley Galloway and John Miller. Speaking of snakes and lizards, James Russell Rock said; "I don't mind them X 'There's a plate on fat yon ai ui lut jfansGom esfautanfs af Uom extkloe Paoular prl U. S. Won't Allow Ration Contributions for Guard WASHINGTON, July 18. FOR the information of persons who nto thinking of making con tributions toward helping out tho rations of State troops, tho, War De partment has issued the following: "The solicitation of public or pri vate subscriptions for the purpose of obtaining funds to augment tho ra tion as issued by the Government to tho orgnnized militia and National Guard in the servico of the United States is not favored by the War Department, inasmuch as tho army ration, which is furnished to such troops, is ample for nil purposes when properly used. Officers and enlisted men of tho army and of the organized militia and National Guard in tho service of the United States arc prohibited from taking part in any such soliciting." coming Into tho tent, but I do object to being crowded out." Skelton Ltndsley caught a Mexican kan gnroo rat. Michael Hendricks has declared war on Mexican snakes, both human and reptilian. Ian. Company B wants cigarettes "20 for IB cents." They wero calling General Bould nnd Private Bock tho cnmlly klng3 when they got a "corner" on 15 candles nt 5 cents each. Hut they changed their minds when tho plutocrats distributed packages of to bacco, the gift of Mrs. M. J. Bould, FATALLY WOUNDED MEN SHOT TO END MISERY, SAYS DOCTOR Former Germnn Red Cross Member Says It Was Humnne PITTSBUliair, July 13. With forehead scarred and ono . ilo of his body peppered with 27 pieces of capncl, Dr. A. Hammond, late of tho German lied Cross nnd pos sessor of the Iron Cross, today gave some Interesting light on tho manner of lighting and of handling tho wounded on European battlefields. Doctor Hammond Is hero on business nnd to receivo medical attention for his wounds, several of which have not properly healed. In speaking of soldiers hopelessly wounded In battle, Doctor Hammond said: "It was customary to kill them. Wc had to do It out of mercy, If you wish. Chloro form nnd ether wero too precious to use, so wo wero ordered to attract tho atten tion of men wounded beyond a chanco of rocovery to something nnd then blow tholr brains out. "It seems revolting, but In tho end It was nn act of mercy. And really thero was nothing clso we could do." Doctor Hammond received tho Iron Cross for saving tho life of Captain Hlnkcnhoff, at Verdun. COMPROMISE FOR $4000 IN CASE OVER BROKEN CHESTER BRIDGE L. H. Le Baron to Accept Chester County Commissioners' Offer. Won ?8000 WEST CHESTER. Pa., July 18. Tho Commissioners of Chester County havo agreed to pay L. II. Lo Baron, of East Fallowfleld township, 4000 In cash and to pay tho Costa of tho caso In lieu of $8000, nwared Lo Baron by a Jury In Lancaster County, when the caso was tried thero re cently on a chnngo of venue. Several months ago n team carrying Lo Baron nnd two others went through n brldgo over tho Brandywlno which had been weakened by a storm. All tho men wcro Injured, but tho others adjusted their claims when a settlement was offered by the commissioners. Le Baron, however, fought tho matter through tho courts nnd had tho case transferred to Lancaster, where tho largo verdict was obtained, but declared excessive by other Justices. It Is said tho offer mado will bo accepted. OHIO TROOPS REFUSE BREAD Unfit, to Eat, Say Cleveland Grays. Censor Appointed CAMP WILLIS, Columbus, Ohio, July 18. The Cleveland Grays, Cleveland's crack military company, now Company F of tho 3d Regiment, are Indignant They refused nbsolutoly to eat tho bread that was served at breagfast today. Fifty loaves were thrown 'out and the men left company's mess to dlno at the restaurants. Last night they appointed an official "bread censor." He Is a baker by trade. That tho bread was unfit for food was the charge that the Grays made. Investi gations aro under way. Governor Willis visited the camp. Immediately there after came Improvements. NEGRO HIGHWAYMEN CAUGHT Attacked Two White Men on Main Street of Seaford, Del. SEAFORD, Del., July 18. After attack ing Otis Smarte and Lee Johnson, two young white men, on the main street of Seaford with glass bottles as weapons, George and Clarence Andrews, negroes, were run down and placed under arrest by Chief of Police Ollle Wright and Elmer Jones last night, after which a fine was Imposed by Mayor Walter B. Rohlnson, who ordered the ne groes to leave town to avoid further trouble. Johnson was severely cut on the hands with broken glass, while Smarte escaped with slight bruises. WALL COLLAPSES; TWO HURT Men in Serious Condition After Acci dent in Reading READING, Pa., July 18. Two men were seriously injured here today by the col lapse of a brick wall of a building that Is being wrecked at 4th and Cherry streets. George R Boyer, 39 years old, Buffered a fracture of the right leg and numerous cuts and bruises on tho body John Ruff. 60 yearB old, suffered a Jaw fracture. They were rushed to the Homeopathic Hospital, where they are reported to be In serious condition. a L'AtflttmJ-r-& rrr.i&.-; hH.-mV r nimiiii' ..?' &s$wte Excursions Eve CG 7.10 A. H. 2M CbesfiDl ON Additional Train to Atlantic City Sundays.30S:M. 2D BRIGADE CHIEFS IN CAMP Gen. A. J. Logan nnd Maj. E. Lowry PARODY TELLS WHY MEXIC0.S0UGHT PEACE Philadelphian Writes Song De " scribing the New Attitude of Carranza II V a Staff Correspondent EL PASO, Tex., July 18. At Inst tho reason Vcnustlano Carranza has adopted a moro friendly attitude toward tho United States Is known. Tho news was first an nounced nt Camp Stewart today In tho form of a song. Company M, of tho 2d Regiment, of Philadelphia, Is responsible for tlio change of front which tho aged First Chief has undergone. Company M achieved what diplomats feared was Impossible poaco. Tho manner In which It wns accomplished is told In the last lines of Company M's song, which runs as follows to the air of "Quakcrtown": Th-ro'n a lot of men ' Krom Company M 'Vha hntl to nay cooaby. 8o:i o were rich at. some wro poor. a nono too prouil to dlo. V- loft from l'hllly nay To help out with tho war; Hut when Company M sot there Carrancu Rot a HC.iro And we noer had to go to war, Tho shrewd nnnlyst and nuthor of the poem U Daniel Hussey, of 1527 North 22d street, a private in Company M. Now that tho song Ii known nbout enmp every ono agrees with Its statements that it, every ono In Company M. And It Is with pardon able prldo that th mn of that company, as they chnnt thlr cor-pany anthem, Imng Ino that whatover bandits may be lurking In the mountains across the river tremble nt the though that Company M, of Ph'la delphla, It on the border. SULZER OR HANLEV TO LEAD DRYS; FOSS OUT OF CONTEST Fusion of Drys and Orphaned Progres sives Still Unsettled ST. PAUL, July 18. The prohibition political situation apparently had simmered today to a contest between William Sulzer, of New York, nnd J. Frank Hanley, of Indiana, both former Governors of their respective States, Ex-Governor Eugeno N. Foss, of Massa chusetts, who was looked upon as one of the strongest candidates, has decided not to make the race, according to messages re ceived from tho East by leaders today. The proposed fusion of tho drys nnd Col onel John M. Parker's orphaned progres sives was still up In tho air today. $20,000 FOR ARMORY SITE LANCASTER, Pa.. July 18. At a meet ing held last night by Grand Army men. the Lancaster DIUslon of Naval Volunteers and patriotic organizations, steps were taken for raising a fund of $20,000 utth which to purchase property on North Queen street from tho Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany ns a site for a National Guard armory. Tho State will glvo $50,000 for the building Itself. SHIRTS Made to f5 Order Of IIh Woen Mudrtis I'erfrct Fit Guaranteed. Call writ or phon Wilnut :m. Rie-Mur Shirt Co. fa'n-Bt. ir SiattSL Ftrrits Vi M ) WBJiW K I'hotn hy HvenlnR l.edccr Stnfr Photographer Hines nt headquarters, El Paso. HUGHES WILL INSIST ON PACIFYING MOOSE Candidate Will Recognize Pro gressives on Western Cam paign Tour nniDGEHAMPTON, N. Y July 18. Every effort to prevent serious defection on the part of voters of the Progressive party will be bo mado In arranging tho details of the campaign tour of tho Middle West and AVost, on which Chttrles E. Hughes, tho He publican nominee for President, will start on August C. On this point Hughes Is de termined to stand firm, It is said, and tho old guard leaders aro not to have every thing their own way. Tho candidate has been showered with Invitations from various cities asking him to make addresses. It Is understood that there have been evidences of some friction between tho old-lino Repub licans and tho Progressives concerning the details of his trip, While thero will bo no Important changa In tho earlier plans, Hughes has placed tho details In tho hands of tho Cnmpalgn Com mittee of 17, on which thero aro sK prom inent Progressives, with tho understanding that tho commltteo r.hall recognlzo tho Re publican national committeeman in each State where tho nominee is to mako an ad dress, and work with him In Ironing out all differences. Ho will Insist that all steps taken shall bo with tho purpose of bringing harmony and a united party. fcsiP The Folly of "A Year's Earning" Instead of "A Year's Learning" Said a father: "John's had a pretty good education. He's seven teen now I can get him in my friend Smith's office where he can learn business right at the fountain head, and earn six or seven dollars a week. Very well. Mr. Suppose we carry this foresight a little further. John earns $300 the first year and spends a year or lire. The second year he has become a fair general clerk, being bright and anxious to learn. He receives $8 a week now. Two years gone. The third year he is promoted into another department and "picks up" a lot of detail. He can do "most anything." But there's Bob, the new man just John's age and just from PEIRCE'S. Bob doesn't know so much about Smith's business but he know3 Butintst the scientific kind, that begins with a capital and, not to pun, employs capital, needs capital, conserves capital and ends with bigger capital than ever ! So Bob gets real things to do he knows banking and accountancy and the intricacies of finance and commerce. He hasn't the $700 that John earned, but he has the wherewithal to get that and much more Knowledge 1 And so he draws $12'when John gets $10 and $16 when John gets $12 and all the time a bigger and better job. Figure it out yourself! Oh, yes ! Time was when the errand boy "worked himself up" to be President, a la Horatio Alger, But that was when they used gaslights, and horsecars, and pushbarrows, and added long columns with the pen, and used copying presses when they didn't dream of motor trucks, and adding machines, and filing systems and till that. Come now Hadn't John better invut those two years In preparation Instead odpindintime in futile earning ? Send for 52d Year Book. Address JERSEY GUARD DRILLS AND GETS INSTRUCTION IN DESERT OF ARIZONA Camp at Douglas Improved and Systematized as Men Start Making Most of Opportunities WEST'S GAMES LEARNED Special Correspondence Evening Ledatr DOUGLAS, Ariz, July 18. Tho New Jersey campflre Is beginning to look more like n genuine military enmp. Tho system atizing of tho various departments Is pro ducing good results. Supplies are arriving from the Quartermaster's Department at El Paso nnd tho men nro receiving equip ment which has been lacking s'lnco the mobilization of tho State troops at Sea Girt. As tho development of tho camp pro gresses tho health of the men Is receiving greater consideration. One Important step In the safeguarding of the men's physical fitness is tho rigid inspection of food car ried on by War Department Inspectors. HOUSES WELL CARED FOR. Tho welfare of tho horses Is also re ceiving considerable attention. It wns found thnt tho first location of tho corrals was on low lnnd and too closo to tho rail road tracks. They hnve been moved to a point on the opposlto side of tho camp, where they will ho nwny from tho con fusion of tho railroad lines. All nro being inoculated. With tho advent of tho rnlny season Ufa has taken new vim. Tho men, free from tho oppressive heat of the desert summer, are going In more energetically for tho routlno duties of tho enmp and nre even de voting sotno tlmo to strenuous outdoor exer cise nnd sportH during tho cooler hours. Ilnscball tenms nro being orgnnized and tho men nro taking to the Western sports, such as lassoing nnd broncho breaking. wmiinraiiiiiMiiiM .esevenrus Qotliesare so Well iaiiox'ed that their style is Yegr attractive. lh Tropical Weight Suits for Men Norfolk or Sack Coat Models Eight to Thirty Dollars Closing hour 5 P. M. Saturday 12 noon. Jacob Reed Sons 1424-1426 CHESTNUT STREET nuiiiiiM Foresighted - Father ! THE DIRECTOR S; AflllO rift &' QvSstiffiMmr 3circc octwol PINE STREET WEST OF BROAD PHILADELPHIA In Mexico they have killed and been killed so much that they are used to it, says Porter Emerson Browne in his satir ical article about "TheMexicanMess" in this week's Coll :-S a copy lers 9r TUB NATIONAL VTSSKLT Many of their feats amnio tho Western cowboys who come to watch them. As nn evidence that the guardsmen nro slated for a long stay hero, tralnlonds of cordwood ure being shipped In for cook ing purposes. DniLLS AND SCHOOLS. With tho return of good weather and tho Improvement In the condition of tho men, the troops havo got down to drills nnd rou tlno work that wcro Interrupted by tho ter rific rains several days ago. Seven o'clock drills aro tho order of the day and the men enter Into tho work with zest. The middays aro usually somewhat depressing on account of tho heat, but tho nights are delightfully cool for sleeping and tho men get up In the morning with tho first sound of the buglo at 5 o'clock and get tho little duties about their quarto attended to dur ing tho crisp Drift hours of tho day. classes every day. Palm Beacn Breezweve Linen Mokair Snantung Silk fc3 PP 1..... rZff0 sz I t rat 4tKaM8). J. A. sau. a&4 throughout ta cltr Returning from Atlantic, Cty 9.00 P. 31. ilfillflllllilllllllllliilljlllllli iffiSiJiilT, w m, l1 "Win . I I - .m iM"Wi-- ' if-"B i i' I UlCUfWBrwng-i,!. jJL vUwt Ma t $rga.t A. W BUI-