Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Tirst and last come to ther to- Bloomfield tonight te play the high school ajumnl of that place. Two weeks ago the locals defeated this team, 27.7, in the Boys' club gym, but the up-staters are confident that they can turn the tables tonight, Thelr floor 1s sald to be twin brother to a molecule, 80 perhaps they will, Bristd] and Merlden meet ton{ght ulght when\mr!meum and Cornell lin a State Boys' Club league game, a) meet at Hanover, N, H.,, in an east- ern intercolleglate baskotball league It Meriden loses, the New Britain Renerves are assured of the cham- contest, the Green's fourth clreuit | plonship. game of the season without leaving the home floor, Dartmouth has de. teated Yale, Columbla and Pennsyl. |ha Cornell has bowed to |Connecticut under its belt, has chal- vanla, whi Penn twice and to Princeton opce. The Hanoverlans have not been In The New Haven Boys' club which tho champlonship of southern lenged the local Reserves, —— action In the league since Jan, 20. G Arragements for the bantamwelght "llEfilATE P"Lfl champlonshlp bout between Eddie (Capnonball) Martin of Brooklyn and Charley (Phil) Rosenberg of New York have been completed, the date to be February 20 and Madison Bquare Glarden the scene. Rosen- LEAGUE FORMING verg Tas shown that e ean muks | VISt S(6PS 1 ThiS Direction the class welght of 118 poynds, Yale, Princeton and Pennsylvania bave agreed to enter thelr leading athletes in the track meet in Madi- son Bquare Garden, February 24, arranged by Secretary Frederick W. Taken at New York New York, Feb. 14.—~First steps in the formation of an intercolleglate Rublen of the Amateur Athletic polo assoclation were taken today unfon to help swell the fund of when Alvin Devereux, president of $160,000 which the sporting world the Princenton polo assoclation, sent will furnish toward the bullding of out a call to nine universities asking the eathedral of 8t. John the Divine in New York, Nurmi, Ritola, Ray, Plant and Frigerlo are to appear at the games. In addition to Mr. Kearns, it may now be sald Mr. Dempsey has Es- telle to support. thelr representatives to atend a meeting in New York with the ob- Jjective the formation of a college or- ganization and the promotion of in- tercollegiate pola, The Sécond Corps area, which has staged the inter- collegiate polo chnmplomhlngnr the past two vears, having announced that the title play will not be con- ducted under the auspices of the We suppose Mlss Taylor agreed to larmy in the future, the colleges take the champion for better or|(hemselves are planning to form an worse and yet he could hardly be[association and, with the support of any worse than he was the night he |the United States Polo assoclation, fought Bill Brennan. continue the event which has proved so populat during its two seasons of If Mr. Dempsey is to hecome a[oompetition. successful Romeo he wiil have to do Before making plans for the or- | more clinching than he usually does | ganization of the intercollegiate or- in the ring. ganization, Mr. Devereux confered with Louis E. Stoddard, chairman of Mr. Dempsey says this, his second [the TUnited States Polo assoclation marriage, will be his last.—In other 'should conduct the intercollegiate words, it is a wind-up bout, tournament, and that he belicved that the executive committee of the Mr. Dempsey says he really does [national association to promote, con- love to hang around the house—es- |duct and, perhaps, partially under- pecially when the house aggregates |write the expense of the tournament. $§600,000, Miss Taylor had to get a djvorce to get Dempsey—Gibbons and Wills are still wondering what they'll have [ Princeton, Penn to do to get him. The colleges which have been ask- ed to attend the meeting, the date if which has been tentatively set for Feb. 20, are Harvard, Norwich, ylvania Military College, The University of Pennsyl- vania, Virginia Military JInstitute, For the first time in his life Mr. [West Point, Yale and Cornell. All of Dempsey appeared for an important | these universities have supported engagement without his red sweater [polo teams in the past, and all have and butter-rubbed whiskers, ‘You probably noticed that taken part in the intercollegiate championship event, Yale winning in PO [the tournament of 1928, and Prince- was not the best man.—Indeed, he |ton carrying off the title last year. was not the best man at a previous affair in which Mr. Dempsey parti- cipated. Joe Wood, in the hevday of his career, was a great pitcher. As a member of the Boston Red'Sox in 1612, Wood won 34 games and lost but five, a record in the majors that still stands. Wood was mlso considerable of a strikeout artist, his “smoke” ball be- ing especially tough to hit. In a game played on June 5, 1911, against 1he White Sox, Wood was at his best. Sent in as a relief pitcher, “Smoky Joe” struck out three pinch-hitters |at least 15,000 “blind DETROIT SAID TO BE VERY VERY WET 16,000 Blind Tigers Axe Report- ¢d in Auto City Detroit, Mich., Feb. 14 in succession in the ninth inning. hootlegging joints within the city of Detrolt, according to an estimate This unusual feat permited Boston | made last night by Superintendent of to win, 5 to 4. The Sox players who | Pol fell hefore the offerings of the sve(:‘]y Wood were, Pat Dougherty, batting for Roy Corhan; Freddie Payne, bat- ting for Billy Suliivan, and Jimmy Block, batting for Frank Olmstead. thletic University of Pennsylvania a teams will engage in their buu?rst day of the indoor season today, with the varsity and juntor varsity Las- e Willlam P. Rutledge. here were 1,500 galoons in the city when prohibition went into ef- fect, and today therc are easily ten times that many places in Detroit selling liquor,” the superintendent i sald. “If a policeman goes info an apartment building containing thir- six apartments he may find five or six bootlegging places, but it would be finpossible for him to stand | Swar e Ketball teams meeting Swarthmor on the sidewalk and estimate how quintets and the freshmen cngaging many there were inside. It is just York Collegiate, The boxers and | Rary K e Himate the number of New Haven, swimmers meet Yale at New the wrestlers grapple With Co!umblfia, the fencers oppose the Arm'y and 23 track men are entered in New York A. C. meet. * consists of 1,042 Mad Hatter, winner of the Latonia champlonship and other classlc horse places in the city, but there are casily 15,000,” he said. The rank and file of H\e]!\ul‘c‘# . s constituted Jan. 1, e ruiaritay rolmen and 81 detectives, exclusive of the women's aivision. It this entire force, work- ing twenty-four hours a day, were 111 one i f races at the age of three, s stil assigned solely to the enforcement o of the soundest "“”’”i’ 'f,‘r'; ,:,?;’:s the prohibition law there would be, cver saw, He was vurcll.u« Payne |on the hasis of Superintendent Rut- Iy for a stalllon by Harry Yne || dge's estimate, 7.41 blind plgs for Whitney from the Ranoccas stable. 1t was Mad Hatter and his kind that every policeman. Superintendent Rutledge explained Lt ""‘("""My,:n.:: ::,.":v‘;:“;::\l that the recent order pui:\!ln;i n;o?‘l\.x‘i He won few races a N to “tipover” raids, in which c passing to the ]‘mncor?\n ‘est:?hih‘!};- entered lind pigs without a war- ment he won nearly every promin-j oo o 4% 509 axes on the furnish- ent event oftered in the east and | earned a reputation for ruggedness second to none. The inter-circuit chamrvmnnh\p‘ polo tournament, an event which will be added to the schedule this season, will have its start next week when play begins in the southwest- | ern circuit at Tort Sam Houston, Texas., Each of tho eight circuits into which the United States Polo association has been divided wiil hold its own eliminations and the winmers will be elibigle for the na- tional title play in September at [Jury. Philadelphia. Hundreds of northern. duffers waiting for apring 8o they can get out on the links have been sighmg | in jealousy over the feats on south- ern courses, such as Miss Glenna Collett doing a 77 at Belleair and Gene Sarazen and Leo Diegel Dbe- coming 8o skilled that they handi- cap themselves sometimes in play- {ng each other, One plays with one army only and the otlrer makes his shots while standing on one leg. Wisconsin has entered its varsity crew for the Poughkeepsie regatta on June 22, but Massachusetts Inati- tute of Technology, which conquered Cornell last season, has declined an invitation to take part. Seven crews in & record-equalling array, are ex- pected to atart in the four-mile var- sity claasic. Besides the Badgers, Cornel), Syracuee, Columbia, Penn- sylva Naval Academy and eith Washington or California will com- pete. The Boys' Club ings of the place and conflscated the liquor, was issued largely because the method had proved a failure. Landis and Banton to Confer on Scandal New York, Feb. 14.—Baseball | Hi7 Commissloner K. M. Landis will 1 gjiayse District |c. confer here Monday with Attorney Joab H. Banton 0'3._”‘(‘ advisability of placing the O'Co nell-8and attempted bribery evl dence in the hands of the grand Mr. Landis {8 on his way from Fiorida and is rcported to have cut short his vacation in the south to finally settle the Inatter which upset baseball at the start of | the 1924 world serics. Williamstown, Masa, Feb. 14, wWilliams College lost its fi ling match of the season last night at the hands of Stevens Institute, 13 to 10, BOUTS IN PROVIDENCE Providence, R. I, Feb, 14.—Andy Martin of Boston beat Midget Mike Moran of Pittsburgh in ten rounds. Davy Abad of Panama defeated Wee Willie Woods of Scotland on a Xo\lli in the seventh round. HAINES TO ROCHESTER New York, ¥Feb., 14.—Th York American league baseball club yesterday announced the release of Outfielder Henry (Hinkey) Ia national league On the Alleys CASINO BOWLING ALLEYS KENSINGTON z.l'ATllNAL LEAGUE Sups r 30— 248 vy 238 | Tutko | Thompeon | vonnarat ne . Peterson [ 9 | Perking 9 D, Poterson . [l slofel 96 191455 . Hart & Cooley, . Sinto ST Mlgata 50 Bagan 91 | Kallerman in Ravlock 8 1Y AND WOE IN Construction Co, 81 iment, yi ROGERS’ BOWLING ALT SPECTAL MATCH UNIVERSAL LEAGUE PETTR LT O ;f\!oe broke the news. Murphy |vest was followed students will att INDUSTRIAL LPAGU North & Judd | pointed Bulgarian min o | United States, was a member of the ¢ | ehamber of deputies supporting the 1 [ government and was also " |the newspaper Siovo. e had heen 2| conducting a campaign agair 1438 I shevism. HELLO 6072 <y NEW HOAK OLE HO5%5- X N WHATY ™ DER OF (ALUNG ME UP1'- & LONG-DISTANCE. (ALL LIKE. | [SELL ME A GOLD BARICK 19 (0479 B LOT OF MONEY! FOR ®5° TR g""“T nes | to the Rochester club, of the Inter- | Lagerlof 84 200 Reed . - 276 Willlams e 322 Chant 285 Andersen m A8-1440 Murphy P 286 Karner [} Zueeht 107 Nelson 105 Freeman 100~ 03 418 408147 & ¥, Corbin Sehaefer ”n " - 168 Crowley 1 10 6= 209 ornayt ......e. 84 100 101 255 100 103 92 205 9117 * e 305 101e= 101 430 498 4751453 Corbln Serew, Staubley ., Sehoyd 20 Corr 5 Riner 8 98 104 310 478 443 4T4—1393 uck 87 103 280 97 102 12 109 ‘e 85 106w 509 M 16— 32 804 5361647 Jelin Doe . LIQUOR CLEANOPS Spoil “Wet Goods” Business of N. Y. Delicatessen Shops New York, b, 14, — lzzy Eln- |steln and Moe Smith, indefatigable leuths of the yprohibition depart- sterday carted 500 cases of Scoteh whiskey away from two a-la- mode delicateszen stores in Madison avenue, James Murphy, chauffeur of a truck alleged to have begn unload- ing cases of whiskcy at one of the delicatessen stores, was arrested. The gilded neck of a bottle, pro- truding from a beribboned basket of fruit in the arms of a young lady was the clue for the agents, Tzzy And Moe, whose successful disguises have included thos of grave-diggers, fazz musicians, negro man-about-town, and even that of prohibition agent, donned bibbed white aprons, put pencils over their left ears, and posed themselves in front of the Vanderbilt Fruit and Grocery company. “All right to bring this stuff in?" |aueried Murphy as he backed his |truck to the curb. “Sure,” said Yzzy, “Thought I'd be careful,” explain- ed Murphy. “Heard there was some } | prohibition agents around.” “There were”, spoke up Moe, “but |they's gone.” As Murphy was carrying the sec- e into the shop, lzzy and ar- y investigation which, according to the prohibition 1 (agents, disclosed rear rooms of |both delicatessens piled high with |spiritious bottled good | \Students at Yale Act As Escorts for Girls New Haven, Ieh, 14—A Water- | bury woman who is to give a dance |at her home next Tuesday evening discove: today that she would | have 50 extra gitls on her hands and % no male escorts for them. She communicatcd with the ath- letic assoclation at Yale and made 1 arrangement whereby fifty invi- tations will he sent here and fifty nd the party. YS BYRON MSs, |London Culh Opens Up Exhibition Of Proof Sheets and Editions London, Feh. 14.—Vollowing the example set in the United States, |the I'irst Idition Club has opened an unique exhibition of Byron man- useripts, proof sheets and first edi- tions, from private sourc seve eral of the books shown are the only nes in existence. Many of the book i arc accompanied by the Mss. and 2 proof copi 3 ASSASSINS ESCAPE ~ dis- patch says rned In the Nicola Mileft yc antl that they escaped after shooting him down in the street, Prof. Mileff, who was recently ap- fer to the st Lol Is be ing an increa cstimates, exchequer, increa | program, is sald to be the prospect of another disarmament strengthen is stated, has the support of several of his collcagues. The question of American part cipation in the conference Is regard- ed as of paramount importance, participation belng generally consid- indispensible, The political rongly emphasize this point, end refer to recent state- American scnate as Coolidge s to the Unite |assume the post of sccretal {he will be able to discus; President Coolidge with considerable knowledge of the Bri- soems col of Among other | housenold had {woman known a rick, I was to Fillipino se rope of perfect pearls, 213 in number valued at $300, Ul‘n«‘\ry during | Palmer returned and was hurt ir the ensuing struggle. offcred me the I proposed L It was my intentic editor of | -ls50.000 them to-London and sell th ENGLAND HOPES FOR CONFERENCE Therelore Postpones Action on Warship Gonstruction Feb, 14—Hope by the Britlsh government that a new dls- armament conference will be called before long, and preferably by the oved to be | causing the cabinet to delay fts de cislon regarding fresh warshlp con- The position outlined In previous dispatehes, with the treasury resist- of nearly 10,000,000 pounds in the naval estimates sald to demanded by the ad- miralty, has not yet been cleared has beon discussed at length by the cabinet, Political gossips from time to time have glven currency to stories that a compromise had been reached re- but these not been borne out andl it now s stated that a cabinet com- examine the whole question of imperial defense before final decision s taken. Winston Churehill, the chancellor who is credited the admiralty's de- building anking on r of the naval appropriation bill passed by the Senate and signed 2 early this week contains a request for the con- another arms limitation conference.) Muil expresses belief Ambassador Kel- States to of state the posi- PALMER ROBBERY - TOLD BY CROOK 1Convict Gives Out Defals of $300,000 Gem Plot Los Angeles, Feb, 14,—The dircet | testimony of Herbert Wilson, (orm"r‘ minister, coafossy1 mail robber and | | convicted murderer, ‘Kn\m'nmmn's behalt | former associates in mail truck ralds, | stod unshaken under eross-examna- | tion in federal court here Defense attorneys failed ta pur |ture the story he had told inveiving | the defendants in mail truck plunder ings here and in Cincinnati, Ohio ‘smaller jobs™ and collected, traced alleged crim operations of the | he eatd hie hal and the “inner conferences” of the | members prior to mail truck raids |in which about $300,000 was taken. facts he told were detatls about the thett in 1919 of & ropa of pearls v | with other gems ¢ Miss Charlotte King P'almer of New | York after she and member of hev been bound and gag- in which Wilson's testimony implicated Jack Elerick as lie brains of the plot, the mail rails. “Bertsche sald we Blerick in the gai “and for a recomn; |about 1919 in New York city Elerick made the acquaintance of a divorced s Miss Palmer, Ele 1 red where nt Bertsel ho They a R WINNER OF 10 MILLION typhold fever when the verdict in Bis favor was rendered, but his vic- tory, It was said, heartened him to | {such an extent that he recove f and now he §s back to sesk fnrther | | penalties from those whom he | charges with conspiring to ruin the i credit ot corpor: his firm. A |lett and Edmund H. Sears, as mem bers ot Willett, Scars & Co. The defendants are the Chase National |M1¢ bank, the Chase Securities corpora- | tion and Eugene V. R, Thayer. his view | Wickersham Crawford, professor of | [ Romanic languages and lite at the University of Pennsylvania, in full of gloom. So am T. a speech prepared for delivery tods told the 200 candidates for diplor and degrees at the mid-year convo- = s cation of the yniversity that this the jazz age in more respects than - one Original Copy of a Beethoven Wed- {deal of our recent fiction, our r verse, our reccent thnking and our recent musie,” he said. “I have no objection to but it must have well expressed ideas behind it before it can be tak en serfously. The new world syin- | phony shows the poss rtain that estimates, which framed before March 31, will provide for some shipbuilding and in consequence will show an in- {but how few have taken advant , [of them! Most of the jazz music, | <2 e literature and jazz think- | of th¢ like ja |Ing, is the product of ilie 1 ntrained |mind. that docs not ‘work in {direction, that does not know how |to think and cannot support the cf- Ifort of trying to think. And it is|Until an emplc precisely this training, whatever its | Hacrtel insearching for Beethover |later application may De, that a | Piano concertos written in the {university course is best fitted to | 'er's hand found the song fastened give." to onc of them by a clip. varsity football team, was among the graduates. | Mvaleth, M - ———— epolis defeated Eveleth 2 to 1, here ‘ The Woolworth building in New|last night in the woest York, which towers 792 feet, is the | the United States amateur hockey offered In the | against three | sterday. | from $10,000 to ued at $300,000, 4 valuables from came hefore should incinde Wilson tostifind ndation told that and got a 14-karat 4i robbery. Miss aris for m for 110 take N but 1 learned that while In the custoly| cago physielan who had custody of | 11 some of our property for a while, | the pearls wero stolen. 1 reduced | my offer to $40,000 which was re. | tused, | | ——— SUITNOW SUING AGAIN Records “Tnvited Hormors” George F. Willett Names Another Philadelphia, V'eb, 14.~The body Group of Defendants in of Dr. Willlam H. Barclay, retired physiclan, was found yesterday $i5,000,000 Action morning huddled over an open New York, Feb. 13.—George Y. stove in the kitchenette of his ex- | Willett, a Boston manufacturer, pe who was at the point of death last | Ridge avenue. Over his head & December when a jury gave him a shoulders was a blanket, p {verdict for $10,634,100 against a to insurc a specdy death from the |group of New York and Boston |fymes |bankers after a trial of 184 days,| o 4 pillow in a bedroom was a said to be the longest In the rec- rambling lctter written to the agent ords of United Etates courts, filed |\ho took care of Dr, Ba complaint in a similar suit | 5ronertios in the neighborhiood. The [supreme court yesterday, the | (tor wasa diary of the last few amount ot damages asked 18 815« |4 acida from one phrase, “I have /000,000 as in the Boston action but |other defendants are named. able to vindicate slvely furnished apartment been badly victimized and am Mr. Willett, | w stricken with time, Barclay, of 138 South Oceay Atlantic City, might not be Iwith the details of mu properties, Dr. Tarclay directions in Lis Jetter zing ava mi about ns controlied by was to b interen as going on in 1 as he wrote his 14 It is now past midn The action is brought by Me. Wil wh 76 hearing u pecard that invites the o » horrors. 1 can't sicop or eat und 1 \Jazz Age in Many Ways, 177500 G0 o oo, Professor Declares form to keep me fom going out o Dr. J, p,|my mind.” another place hie wrote: e morning is dark, d Philadelphia, Ieb, 14. tures | under great calum mind now my i ils to act.” FIND MANUSCRIPT his Is the trouble with a ding Song Recently Recovered Leipsie, Feb, 14 z in the ball room. on of the £ ilitie of y |0ttended hy Becthoven's ney Carl. Al t ¢ of Dreitkopf Alton L. Papworth, guard on the I MINNEAPOLIS VICTOR *st building in the world. leagu | hig talthy and Healthy, Man 1 there | ay's four | myself at this it told nothing of the cause whieh led one in good health and with ample means to end his life, So that a sister, Miss Elizabeth ) venue, ubled 1one, These dircetiors o1 by doseripiioss of physcian's sage, wrote in onc plac. “I Jave been The original manuseript of & Beethoven wedding | song was recently found attached to another manuseript in the posses- | irm - of Rreitkopf & I, Beothoven's musical pub- 1819, asio del Rie, principal of the boarding school ace of the song had been lost ., Feb, 14.—Minne- ’ tattend the Holy " group of | will sail from DOLLARS V. BEETLES Appearance of Bug in Timbering of Towers of Lincoln Cathedral Being Fought, Lincoln, Eng, Feb, 14,~The ape pearance of the death-watch beetle In the thmbering of one of the tows crs of Lincoln Cathedral is causing |the dean much trouble, but he is cqually disappointed with what he calls the stinginess of English peo- ple in sending funds to assist in com= butting the work of the beetle, and in the restoration of the cathedral. The generosity of Americans, the dean y8&, 1s in great contrast,’ Ameriecan money, he points out, h nabled nearly halt the work to he done, and by the end of the year he capects 1o have enough American dollars to pay the reparation ef the central t 1d two transepts, Socres of English tourists visit the cuthedral but few of them go to him with a ten pound note, as the Amers |dcans do, and say “here is a trifle for your fund,"” according to the dean. Dead Bandit Blamed for Murder of New Haven Man New Haven, Feb, 14—~Barney uzan, Who on the night of Deceme ber IS last, was shot and killed by s | bandit fn his store at 173 Washing- ton avenue, was slain by Michael Riceitelll, gunman, according to Core oner Ell Mix, who handed down & finding in the case yesterday, Rice citelli was shot and killed in the Stratford railroad yards while ate’ tempting to escape after he had robbed a jewelry store in this eity, he coroner describes the shooting of Muzan in his finding and tells of the identification of Riccitelll by Louis Brownstein, clerk in the Mu- zan store at the time of the shoote ing. HONOR PIONEERS Minnesota Prepares to Depict Do- ings of Norwegians, Hamline, Minn,, ¥el, 14, — When Norwegians from all parts of the world come here for the Norse- American Tentennial, they will see the story of the little sloop “Rese taurantionen™ depicted in pageant, She was a vessel of 45 tons, manned Norsemen who left their nd 100 years ago this year to seck fortune in America, ie centennial is planned to coma memorate the cvents of this first migration and 1o culogize the Nors wegian pioneers in America. Officials in charge are negotiating to make Norwa participation in the affair of an official nature, which would mean that Crown Prince Olat would represent his country at the exposition. WILL GO TO ROME Philadelphia, 1., 14.—Cardinal Dougherty and the Rev. Joseph A. Whitaker, chancellor of the Catho- lic archdic of Philadelphia, will v Year pilgrimage to Rome, it was announced today. They 'w York.on April 18 aboard the IFrance. Snapshots Of A Bellboy at Work. By GLUYAS WILLIAMS LEADS WAY DOWN CORRIDOR. WONDERING HOW/ N orA TIP THIS MAN'S GOOD FOR 5 WINDX EARS PEELED TOR OF TINKUNG & UMP CARD GAR., AND WITH A SIGH S LOBKS MAN 5 | ADIUSTING SHADE ND ABKS | UNEASILY HOW ON THE OTHER HAND HE SEEMS ULLY MAN COUNTED FIS TO TREAT HIMSELF WELLTO PRETTY COLD FOR THIS TIME OF CHANGE WHEN HE SOPPEDTD CLATHES, AND AS &t BLY ACICAR, - BAD SI6N, THAT GO THS ONE CCST SONETHING LIGHTS, AND SNAPS MOSTOP [ FISE HE CAN FIND TD REMIRKS PLEASANILY 15 VEAR, SNAPS ON ALL THE THEM OFF AGAM I STRAISHTENING ON ON BUREAU N JINGLLS THE GUARTER DOWN DRRIDOR, REFLECING IT ISNT RIGHT TO HAVT TD WORK SO HARD ERS REALIZE BILMES Sam’s Gonna Buy Brooklyn Bridge Tomorrow GREAT 2OTT! -\ /1 KNOW 1T- 9RY!- | HADN'T BEEN (N TOWN 5 UTES BEFORE. A GUY TRED TO / WePN TO WHAT ! - YOu DONT 5AY YOO | POVGHT ONE Sasiibing A 7 ol | | / (1 5H0ULD 5A NOTTh-TrE: ) ) BT B0 /1 5HOULD 5B NOT— CANT FOOL ME— | SHOWED /| MREW L BT HM GIE ME 2 HIM 1T KENEW MY STUFE 7 Yoo WOULDN'T S FOR ®I0 __ ,,,__.__,] (_&_,_(/LETHM 5L\ \\ s