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Making Tomorrow's World By tWALTER WILLIAMS, LL.D, NOT PEACE, BUT A SWORD Aden, Araba.-teaml- across the t Mediterranean sea, the latest view of f Europe was of the Italian peninsula I and of the Island of Sicily, where Me- 1 sina, earthquakeoverwhelmed, yet lies r in rains. Three Italian war vessels lay c at anchor in the southernmost harbor. r Coming to the coast of Afriaes at Port I Said. Egypt, northern gateway to the t Sues canal, the tremendous contribu- I tion to the prosperity of peace, which t the Frenchman DeLAmseps gave to the world, the frst objects seen were a dosen battleships of a French Med- 1 iterranean eet. Thus runs the Euro- I pean continent to naval display and all the expenditure that it makes neo esary. Blocktih the path of proF res by water Is the battleship, barring the highway to prosperity upon land the army stands and eves the air Is heavy with the shadows of war bal loose driven to sad fro above the earth. Europe Is an armed camp and the seas around are roadteads for the naviis to many nations. Europe's War Fever. "Shell we permit the Mediterranean ees to be a Prench lake ' says an Italian cabinet minister, and he pre sets to the new chamber of deputles a bill for $20,000,000 for naval con stractionm four superdreadnaughts of 3SA0 tons each. "We must not be eesliped by Germanay," declares the each matinister of war. sad promptly the senators and deputiee, amid fer vent appeals to national patriotism, eact nto law a measure providing for three years, Istead of two years Scompelsory military eervice. In Berlin a Zeppelan atirship, built arow edly for military use explodes, killing many persons. The war lord gives a military funeral with high honors to the deed, sends another airship to Sdat above the capital that all may see and orders others to be constructe ed with all poedi speed. The fever ish struggle between European nations sor the largest and strongest amy end navy shows tself in the articles I ermnn 11attlhlip ln Her i the press. In the debates In parllai n- , i thta is the street, in the gidrms a the oadways in the ps as the . And Is orer to gl Chimself waOever, which keep htm emhaasted for othe and better thinas, the ioropoea patiest taures himel to an almost ancredible amount He pays his money for an irritant unto trouble the while social progress lag and men and women and children iffor sr lack of opportualty to live. The Naval Propaganda. Upon the navy is today's larget es p te. Navy leagues are formed, aemetMes as In Germany with Impe rial patronage, In order to stimulate Iterest and create a public opinion whisk will supprt larger appropra iOEs. The press is used whenever possible, to g8ve publicitty to argu met for more ships and to stir na tional gride by statements, often n tre, as to what other nations are delnau or intend to do. ocial posi tise, eapti itmm oppressve rw striene, eeensrtble Ingomes are assred to oa2oers and men. Prop. lsoa a #In4s, trees autitc poe te tn e hIseM is sermo by navy . ohgIads In the plultb is employed. he appeal to pathtism. the argu mset that war preparations must be made in time of pmeae the queer theory that the more numerous and eas aded and dangerous the guns a nation bas on shore or a8oat, the less danger will there be of war. the Ittisa that commer is promoted by eanoa and armed cruisers and that army and navy of enormes etse are mosed Sor polies at home and abroad -.hes are among the reasons ad vasead for the colossal and constantly awls eslantta In it. Petersburg, a member of the ews staff of the Nevoe Vremya re lated a curious Itoleat of the eon eepts held by some Ruestan pea oaes et the wafond. The president f the pro evrill asembly called t o coiensil sees of the more peasants sear Xrasnolte Adh, the country residence of the , esplained to them the nationpl aesset ra streang eet and asked them to enhcribe to the fund They li teod attentively, debated the matter among themselves, and then, accord. tng to the story suggested that In stead of contributng money, they should eac speed a few days in pri o, their belif evidetly being that the suggested sheaription was In reality a ine. The Russian peasat was wiser te he semed, for this expeada r is a coasierable we Ui gee oeh ofr Navies mc Se N as. . eatha o t t sale.. of the world permit themselvee to be e fined for their navies are staggering. The naval expert of the London Daily Telegrapha great journals of Eu rope have naval experts, sometimes only in the pay of the Journal--fur nlshed the figress showing the total c naval expenditure for 1904-6 and the b total voted for 1918-14 by the princl pal nations of the world. They show theee expenditures: 1904-6. 1918-14. Great Britain.S205,310,875 $235,108.180 United States. 100,901,550 147,494,335 Russia ....... 691749,30 121.247,270 Germany ..... 50,520,000 115.195,920 Frano ....... 61,912,16 102,238.815 Italy ........... ,000,000 60,789,30 Japan ........ 10,10.740 49.304o.00 Austria Hungsary ... 13.077,300 o,oi03275 In the cases of Great Britain, the United States, Russia Germany. Prance and Japan, the totals this year are the highest recorded. The figures for the personnel are also the highest on the list, with the exception of those of Russia, which, after being about 70,000 in 1904 and 1905, dropped be low 45,000 10 1908, and are now 64,643. The British navy numbers 146,000, the German 03,176, the United States 67," f 907 and the French 63.596 men. Profits in Armament and CoaL The Krupp trials in Germany show to what lengths in bribery the great armament firm at Essen, through its 4 directors and managers, went In order to obtain contracts from the German Sgovernment. Indictments.were found a against the Krupp officers and agents, r. largely in consequence of revelations in the reichstag. by Liebknecht, a So a c.l Demorsat. They were charged wt bribing members of the military o . naval establishment between 1903 d 1913 and the disclosures at the trial proved their guilt. More than ti this, however, these disclosures gave a publicity to the enormous profts de y rived by the Krupp concern and a showed where the fnes from the tax payers' pockets went. The result I to strengthen the cause of the advo cates of disarmamel. Patriotism, which bluff old Doctor Johnson called the last refuge of scoundrels, is shown to be In naval expenditure argument the first resort of thieves. But war vessels must be operated and maintained as well as built-and here the owner of coal mines-and, more recently, since oil is used for fuel, the owner of oil properties-Is, it various ways and for his own per sonal ends. a sealous advocate of more and bigger ships. A dreadnalt burW 40 tons of best coal every hoar. British landlords draw royalty of 30 cents a ton for coal mined. Every British dreadnaught in use, therefore, means $00 a day to the owner Qf the coal royalty. The Naval Holiday" PropesaL "Perhaps that Is why," said Keir Hardle, the British labor leader, "some of the peers and their friends In the bhose of commons are so keen to in erease the navy!" Perhaps, also. tt is one reasoa why, the nobly eloquent al for a year's naval hobday. of OChurchill, Great Britain's rnt lord of the admiralty, as ee correspondlag to that of seertar of the navy held in President Wilson's cabinet by the distinguished Americas journalist, Josephus Daniels, fell. In many high European quarters, on deaf ears. MI Churchill's words are worth while quoting again and again, be cause, however appareatly Ineffective they are for the moment, they mark the beginning of a revolt among statesmen against the enormous ea pendltures for navy and army that is growins to large proportidas all over Europe, however concealed or belittled by the somalled "patriotic" or "aingo" press. The proposal I put forward in the name of the British goveramet," said Mr. Churchill "for a naval holiday is quite dlapi. Next ye -art from the Canadiam sips or their equivalent, apart from saything that may be uw quired by any development it the Medtrr shall lay idrw four great ships to Germany's two. Now we aay to Germany: If you will put of beginning to build your two ships for 12 months, we will put of in absolute good faith the buildng of our four ships for essety tLh same perzl.' " That would mean a com plete holday for one year as fr as big hps far OGreat Batai and Oer. many were concerned. He reesaoisad it weul et b- eposble far either Ger mar or Great Brital tb do rya aless th great powes agveed to de Ibewbe. "II sme arangoaemds were reaobsel tt emld eoly be t a teeiemmtes611 wsa an -e-- of negottions with other peat ow er. But supposein Ort Brtin anad Germany took the lead, do you not think there would be a good prospect of success? At the end of the year you would have all these great coun tries that would agree to such a pro posal st as gret and must a sounad as If they built all ships as at pres ent designed. Scores of mill Wa would be rescued for the progress of mankind." Mr. Churchill said he was quite im pervious to the objections that would be raised by the great armament Arms of England and other countries. "They must be the servants." he said. "and not the masters. Some people will try to Involve by suggestion the naval expenditure in a cloud of suspicion. Let them mock. I am convinced that a a reduction of naval expenditure Is necessary for the welfare of civiliza tion. It is a question that does not only afect governments and diplomats but concerns parliaments and the po- I pli We must not be discouraged by er, a want of sucoess. The time will of come when the present expenditure le and competitio in in naval armaments tri will be a thing of the past and when m the great naval powers will look back ire upon it with feelings of regret" The Pr significance of these words in the sin making of a different world tomorrow eat comes from tie fact that they are a the caretlly-.onsidered qtterunce of _s the head of the navy of the greatest sea power In the wrld. a Finance Against increased Armament, t Other forces are being brought to n r bear, though as yet vainly, in favor of limitation of naval expenditure Some--a larger number than the ordi t nary news-reports of the day Indicate --a number, too, that is growing in extend and influence, would substitute d a peace policy for arbitration by the sword and thus make unnecessary, ex cept for police duty, the army and the navy. Among the "pacifists," a the e advocates of world peace are are de scribed, it is interesting to Americans t to note that the European press classue e Woodrow Wilson, the president of r the United States, and Champ Clark, t n the speaker o the house of represen tatives. In Europe the financial inter di * eats of the continent have been more Seffective than the eloquent advocates of peace in preventing war. It is an A d open secret that two years ago these to financial Interests averted a general a war on the continent They are now I e becoming aroused to the evils result- w SIng from "the mad rush of incresing n armaments." ad Disarmament Sentiment Grewa&ig. s" Sentiment on the continent of Il- a rope is changing toward a saner policy of disarmament and of arbitra tion as opposed to ncreasing matltary a establishments and appeals to the II sword, thoush this sentiment has not t yet been able to expres Itself in po t ltlical international agreements and h legislation. The repeated strife in the ti Balkans is only an apparent exception In the general trend. The raw, un diseiplined peoples of the mountains set their neighbors' houses'on fre. That thb conflagration spread no far ther was due to the self-restraint of more civilised Europg and to a senti ment for peace, which was non-ex istent a few years ago. All this must be written with some reervation. Tmaltlatum of peace and inater a good will t not Imminent, but, notwithstanding the portentous figures of expense which have been quoted, there are signs of the dawn. Supremely suggestive perhaps, is the behavior of European nations in re cent crises of lnternationatdisagree met. Fifty years ago, twenty years, possibly ten years ago, these crises Would have resulted in war. Today is they have been settled by conference. v -The recent treaties have been written , with the pen and not the sword. The led smell of tobaooo smoke, not powder. wu Aid not what. a man says when noth at Ing is happeningl to him reveals his real self so much uas what he doe ted when something is happening to him. and And nations, which are but collections ad. of men, are i this, as otherwise, Ike for unto them. They are many men, but -I4, with the same mind. Church Influence for Peoe. glt The powerful a1d of the spiritual mr. group of the charch in Europe is east 30 for disarmament and peace. "The ery church exists under many names and wre, with doctrlnea and deeds much at the variance. Bet aside the large sectioa of a socaldle Christian church which drills soldiers in Ulster, Inspires blood' ritual persecutions in Russia, eses e statues to Moloch in Gerlqpay, and e worships Marm and Mercury, militar the ism and commere, everywhere. Unto in- these ho call theemelvse Christians tis Jehovah is a man of war and the tet Christ came into this world to brlg of not peace-bt a sword. The for n's consIderation of teporal power ad * afternoon teas at livirs, are ro helt im to das e ad1 over i his n's coattpeat of ro Veily, they an have their rewaru Ar they not ehep in alas-no.rdinary to Mars at a good lef stipend which emables them to dress rth in purple and fine linen ad are be- smptuosly every day? One meets tie and hears them in all European iada. ark It is another and diferent proup in an the church, in mosque and synagoe, a-in athedral and chapel, in monastery t is and mtsilon haouse, w..blh; inereas er Ingly potent and numeraes, pleads for tied peace and spiritual, as opposed to ago" merely temporal, things.. Almost or entirely a paradox is It that th*,trav the elers who look below the srtae, who sald go in and out amog the religious y is leaders of the Europea peopi, agrnpee trn that the spiritual forces are reasset at, iag themselves in a surprisng way ie and that, dppit the blatant material the Iom of the Buropean world of tody, i th world aof tomorrowis to be mado two. by and for the thins of the spirit wi la thisft lies large hbope for the two advocates of peae and human breth ol erhood. vea amid the throbbing of Sdl the wardrca he who listemsa may m hear "the ati, smel ~ vae" The o- mIghtiset or th spital leaders oi r uas urope is his balines, tm pops To GO-I an Amerlean Iealist, granted an an -d neo at the Vausman, aid the' naS i--. apea (Ctheloe doe: I hopo the Sis you- sgest iden will pead iW time --is a r eenmaming t self is Sia - t ts sad smi bur wer; were me rse $1l5 io th gagma ot me a" PARRO IiALLS ME pi ROL AT SGBOOUL Warfare Upon Twanm Clerty Solved by a Sadema'Iam c in Tnaes , pal PUPILS ARE ON TIME b lrd Lears Names of Yunus*t s WIthout Meeksh Trelo ud Ales Cl Masters Part of 1lptpilestio To ble, It Is SaId. s Id Brenham, Tea.--Mi Dorothy Book er, a charmin young shoolmistrs tor of twopty rears, hassed the prob* lem of having pupls In the rural di tricts attend school time for the morn roll can Miss Booker has trained a pet parrot sell the rol. la Professor Tom, a he b been clled since he began his dues, is as inter` esting bird to the ppils and tho y arrive on time to bear ism o0n names. There is not a p in hn lade pendence school who eNM i made to believe that Pnrteswr Tem deoe not know them by sight a well u by name. Miss Booker, when she acepted the school at Independence, near Brea ham, a year ago, was bothered by the pupils not arriving on time especially durlng the rainy season. She imme diately began to plan to overcome this, but was unsuooestful for a time. Some months ago a trained parrot was seat her by a friend who was touring South America Fortunately, the parrot had been owned by Eng lIshepeakIla people. No sooner did the young schoolmis tresa see the bird than she evolved the idea of training it. At first she did not have much success, but dil gent eforts brought the reward. When the process of training was first under way the bird was allowe4 s to sit upon a perch in the schoolroom I I and listen to the teacher call the roll. t r He was allowed to do this for two - weeks, and at rst always was re I g moved from the room imediately w after the roll call. Soon he was try- tl ing to call the roll with the teacher, - and in a short time was able to do . so by himself, u he found his efrts a r were always rewarded with a cracker. S After the bird first had the rotll 7 memorized it would persist in aswe h ne la the "present" or "abeent" after t t the pupils, but was soon broken of tl p. this habit. Now he sits, dignified, aon Ld his perch and nterrogates in his nasal e tones. "Willie Jones?" or whatever n the name might be, and looks to se 1 BB Ift the teacher marks the ld youn Jones "present" or "abse" st The bird leng ago learned the he tilicatio tables; that Is, the rst id few, and the tache cites this to the at errnag pupils when they are siow to on learn the "two times two," and that ch which followv. She declares noae of od' the pupile "wants a mere bird to learn Smo ruadily than the." AIDL UGHYLY CLAD WOMAN s Three, Mea Fight to Aeslet Vilst la S oer Ciaek in heet of Leadea. ear , - * nddlton .-.ladoaks latest sseinticr Ie the atomodle a weo smokain Sigarete and seani h dad. . da A lamp cleaner, edestrian and a ise se!sse eat ear mn r e s na to the *e brt qumr~e ed over whe ory should render frst aMd. Csunseleaked: as "Is It true the mema was drmeed for ouy in slk stoctkia shoss a4 da dust to elok?" or The witnes i't ,le, the ele, ev and coqal mihed be'ose there a tlme M be toAw no e i Iom me thres on butt ra eed wdeper ert. was these Iretee tied hIs view. ray Mr. Hame amdl Md he met the la. woman coming rn 8 r~ dane. are ey, cd 8et taS heg ave hera Sthe Tumble But Be s Un broken oth- New York -rplesd while rack otas a sta, barry Crel~ arabb a ny small bottl an sarted to run. A r detective tripped a, tot 0arnel held in th bottle igh seve ehis hsad as he To fell. Theie was a sso. It e a- Wlaned itreogaye~ Ine sla the rtehs -qu -i ormbner l hum beum me t~-ei . emmi a. ar et er sea, asslg*l b ei a - it* toge T at PISTOL IN MOUTH -REMOVES HIS SMILE Hotel Clark Takes It Seriously When Money, Watch and Strage Disappear. Chseago.-Drucs clark. clerk at a hotel Is st alghteeat street. prees4 Mghly on ats desk with his famer tips lad assae a asr of olltr expeelsacy wq a baggegise but sesaeagly prosperous itragr aS pea-be a early the other mor tas. vUea when the stranger rudely shoved aside the pen offered to hi. Clark was uruse& "Thought you wished to register. sir." he apologistd. "What else mn I do for you. sir" * "Now yo"ro talkn" said the visi tor. "Fork over!" Ho took two large revolvers from his pockets and samse both at the at Clark's right eye. "Ha, at ery ood., very good" laughed the affable clerk. "I wish dI wU . uAied m odth el'Ti't T lw c . p i I u clkp torn strsaigt ike ' "I you laugh any ore I' going to kill you." earnestly reared the s Swith the revolvers. shoving oe- of f the guns lato Clark's open a th r, "Now try eeplag year face straight!" - Clark tre4 sand sucoeded admr s ably. for he had a sadde hbunch the r. strangw wasn't Joking. He was surw b 1 thas ever after $7 cad a watch wi rhad been In his pockets west Into Ir the other's and the mas. the watch. Sthe revolvers sd the $left. a KILL A WOUNDED tRISONER TWAe New Jersey Pefleema Capture Mortally Injured 'Surglar" and I had His auWerlag. West Orange. N. J.-Two pelies a captured a burglar the other lnght. aound athe u tIit bed bep wetapy waaded. s an klle tor fad his l smsMerrg.. ` o Retnradea to his bhes on Valery - ead at aminight Thorwaf Jamse. an lrson workse eplape. eadt t strauge orles as the second boor. So id s wise and she fled ith her leases took a gs n on a clee and started up the statirs. ct a crash sesed him to retnire for second Stheugh Four poneemes arivoed sumoned by Mrs. Jesses. Two o weted enuside while two others a 1 tred. Tapy .went up the stars and aard these strane noases Draw- 1 ig their elvers they shounte: o *Sere suer. or we'll e?" no aswr imn. a the two blue a ia d to th pitch drk SA mow roma an een souree knoke o Patroamn OCanons bat. I I his met sat was dscbarg : eJ t then the h other polcmn m .ad tah posh button ad switched on a Sood d eled etri i ht They lcoked l. enthe swo, lung rom the walls. TMh lrit poleene stard around agan ad -h* tah oyti was solved. Parheod ea to a ol ierwas a wild 6dl It radl bat fown to the rm m o the storm aso ot had mprisone tself by knockia ta a t stick woc propped up the window. O'Connor's bullet had struck theo dc ke theo le It w e til a Is PICKS POCKET WHILE KISSING km nesseen*** m** 1os 3ems. mb. Ja i ien pceet was s sh to th am ne ent pgns a h emaeigs heam a aSk ist* where he had smahed a check for ne -m I relatin his exapeina to the polle ia Deter Hurls aid that what surpised him was th way the thief tecos So pIbetI his p0rposs. bed "He embaced me and trie to kies h m eabeuth cheh in the tre Itals ii: be heq** said te doctor. I feed my We sear bme to a'l the -e apol ust -s . mreent sa apparentey ab dsappeare I discovere the Io ire my wafLqt." Ier ties datmed for Professor Tmb. but iw does net w ish to divule them anti the ty hae prove suecoerit She is She a strosavocate or the parnot-in. tualty datu sdime.an, d delares th targs red sad reon pilum bird a is *i ndls.e.abI to ha. 4 a HNgs oiM Lady her. A Alpine. Teass-Wood Ipadel ea held egaed ia & bulggag match with a aeo- Menest was the beher buer aad egusemed th ola lead bear to deth. oes ?assaig N. 3,-Thepionce were sa in, able to teae th fngerprints of Aer at Smith arrease tsr burglary. becess - ho sed actd whec made aIs Bng as as emmh as gInes. X X.· F Y > r Y . Y - 4u 4i ' in having an pet Aqpsrbno/ t T r n ba srsggeiatltaottioa stn of lits isi.y"d for eu. natlll o maturity f tbsutt a N · vbpmsat o tb th faculties bears aa umls atasIlaE "" point of vt w 'pus it As Theodore Rdmsr hub M. in apropos at his rnsist fist ,It to Les- 0. loa. "We ma omly de. thing lpal- ft Smutty caus. The io Ura any yld Impoltost thing ouch. sad be; it -nhush at tess~ and hs.t Pon with Its beuty~ anO Iti mafmsiS' N "W man dsatya bat saeshfar N the irst tbme" wa the thIu I ba pswdsatly in mini as I rsadsild f, ward la preipest to oram 134* dh~. of the Gasd Campos of wLS Y .-b salse wlwrits Nusto " In the s ts~k jbrr 't w 1 pet a to b m ,enof lef -ore but of any thinml n.s rb*t iuoti, 'O mand aI i et Ith sea of wk4 'to was aiy isMase is ass AU the way l I bat sJ i i bumi P I gul - 1boi what se" fu swarsaau. ht ethus tiusima' le U -eesds 4 hsthy rYw? k thr my qua whesr the `s - h LiS owabuat eas bohra mm r b mfeaqss hr W Y News Tesima WiHk Pink U lIt had Mii"inul ng 8 19 km I that had Dely qlshmel the mWs m I str and lladt L3sstaSnbSS 5' a is. oadue frem thek AatwmaS I I I hour foats bionI Mut sng I the Yllowtalse rit,., a emw nodi d 1Ira pss .mm towming wliAs. ws Whsk -bap and fr@ i i o te VSmmEh G ot tit pus ujem. oe atbaf fa1l maLn thesiaeswr de im di' 1 t s' with brooding =In t Is e The foius-gom M...we aimaessl -aad bebo bag the mm o-ne eat I tIinto lb. f yss vuafday, km with xrm ani ied in noilses of nowl I1a PO O R.l"o* 1mw,, Manuand . a tarn and pik. Thi gree nmw level I d qmryl the SAM* of *taping bas Usm shops at teals woun the 4 I ~Y IhQ9 r~~ 1 1 , OWN Ultls pi nq beads wbI* I a brobl thw ia~ of as law. d We hulted b a lgui s lat I a to galsyeswma.l u. twrn I d a waeir, akost a terulut .Io-4 o d hula and a mm.sr the uwr ' 4 l sad Lire.u bd 31 ,th a ad I "i nd ui pwnm -.1 wilethe ela k of wse. .I a The wa inkm'ps~a .l i in the glindsia of1t. f 9ai ubla I it I .l uM It bmels oa to I I t ren in msd pse - mh an . "m mkl pees boats mlh a.h~~l r h o"o asan nw i fhesw. than. b okm 11s ed us a ! . w do pe uawd of the- i t In Ms hummydl _ M . a y Iwtins .i kma aer b ffe am awed0. 40 ros S.tIba ad w aStms4.aof the ier asin a buo ar water pp ct Ips i Umg hr lh bumsd s3 r- spa rag tom baseros a itc skibitntg gubeaof of ma m oat pinr vs .mra. aU tea MA-Y.lt l m*T ads.. O sinoas.My of theb imto M an w abs uM estosudy web fad o at hamtorisnp"is dibtyou don' And than astying away trem the lhrlbun s b.naaN of that! If you a. The'-n teim. Gosda Alp a -r U time, inh't youi Iklsa t d a_ hf t orat w rager o is moadi! And thnV as sash thing as a, e dying of. "It. "hu .to hon . at UoWahm Thug" us "Zee King M Wo WM a 0341em." To hua a rd trimed urinpl r idmoaor e ya buamm. to m belarg Mari you .34 sa 1~w. wog by a 4sft1gtti ,Dis. You bs* iiiy4sIIng way e r. of the l34twW40vuisi 5 Is.w wai. a burie wdlti/l parts fero mouth tatti em to milling ie stronl agat la, mr - hasuhl a "the e sat ml the awut f the sra"-IL En.. ldds. ask hay inn ahut 5km~ as 5s .n strqam ml the dw or. awn hut ma e thq a amon 4w fla It was ledto be udvb, 7 -hrsaah too -w t. 1Z .alr atlsr wo Ma ter P'ML We aoorni il bosn s t bits which amorcth ibma a#o 3 tam of *hou ameminS to sm sd s, wmOri Sow of eer +:w I a nlok basksew wm -tS. the v. - 0.. aoLLknr mmto- nt o it awed tlis pot in~aomr,4LWIi -ww% which kvdr9wl -- to -r M wa. OWN" M f 'awas tb w to aths1 -b" 49 SdbW hast.r N put 1Mrimbo" Its aser. at t so of lbsm inatst-allMl IH. --- t I lr. stat AM~ twa. of s Karam hul atin thE ab - --1I ml ~ -k I IaoMC o the ' gusgi(Y I, "mii" rcar at die Is tlrn P. batwoin for t inuhr o- we ml i " ma 0a &n bat "t /1i Stin the - la nwa too o.Yo:tw) = . itPE ow rw ,Ia 3..ib 4aý n tibm uat1 t we " lopMist- hit to,"I f r at a- ds K VAbrol mo doI W .ep ml at is twal fosse rnow~"te - r by their is. loch mow rrr R f bi dis bolol ir t . SI Ru m.- -tI r It was &m, AA le aR a Sill ein r* we whoa eir is alte ruiw- rn it . bat 1Mbisu atC a bmwu, ·m. .in, ~ I it a Il ta dish ft ll e Bet trveaml, m il t .toeams Mrml. I wl /Mr.ve a5 Moid` bu I iL He blo rrcl w ~o to is r.. rsa t tt Ia char s pm 5mM by waes she moft he blt. It In ,o to p as w"-b.o at t t t..hi.m a mt whom that ou tO is -WlM We a,. m Cornlm..! What a womjoittU a it se ow muah ttdlocooutom~b W aprnilsat mea or wYoma o o- nowltes it hae 1111e4 a semar out afth w oqmot cal34 ies him an.t hcami M heihi word whomeer I=: Swhither It be to a child will