OCR Text |
Show , . , - . , ' , , . Essa, Pkg IrCitglint 1 In . . ' -- Sok Loki City, Utok.Saturday, October 10, 1959 ' -- . We Stand for the Constitution of the United States ; ,, as ,having been 'divinely inspired. . ..i . ,., - ', ' ' : .. , - - , -- , - r.,...,,,---- --- Magazine came aerom cr k;ng count o Salt Lake City. The editors sent a copy of the article to the DesNews. A P.t9Ttirr4A lass than haeretif of the original article, aP'. pears .:belaw ). . - , ' (EDITOR'S NOTE: , While searching through 109 years of their magazine in search of re- - 'printable articles for an anthology, the editors of Ilarper'S. , - The Tories Win in Britain -- -ME ' , - - ' . - ' , . , g' 0.00Lil .,, ' e 160 . ' . , . ' - - ' - , - ' --,- ,-, , ' - - . --" . ... , , ers wlAnalsoareJareathing---a--siglat'dfiddareliTicr-i-, CONVINCING win of the . , , ,, to be not able will now ,.... relief that Labor , economic re-- attempt some of the sweeping 'has, undoubtedly, brought a sigh of ' was promising 'it , reforms World and Free the in changes lief to the governments . ' ', during the . c capitals. !' ' . had promised to abolish certain and , Labor that , knows of these governments , - . lower other taxes while at the same time - the Each i '' Labor Party has long advocated millBritish Elt to By benefits social every ' incteasine ' ' - tary disengagement in Central Europe., ,, :,'' ' ' '' , citizen. Prime Minister Macmillan referred (Harper's 'ESaGAEut,11' ;, Had Labor come into power, It would have ' ',''',44.'f'; Laborites as "slick operatoYs" for ''.' ,, . the first things that , ' .. ,,, '' ' , . ' '' ' ' been In the paradoxicar position of being ?4, to , ,,(,,,, ;laking .mseemingly al ingossible ' t,g.,1',""$' cornpro, ;;"i.,.P!''.14. i ese and also ordered Young ', disengagement for military AMONG . ,t. ,,.i ises.f ' , t.: after his pioneers had ,, t, ,;,,-, mitted to NATO. Even at best a Labor ''',,.;:;,f' r).,'-'- deto ' come into the valley was to , HAD LABOR WON and been required government would have weakened the make good on "more social benefits and fense posture of NATO's forces. ,The prot survey a site for the future city. ' tio ,, 4- ,Central to had in have would , juggle done on was This lower it disengagement taxes," agenerous scale, ; posals, for , ,,,... after structure.. Plan financial Gaitskell The streets are 130 feet 'wide, russn Europe, named the the nation's' delicate '': ----f ----, the Labor Party s would have had an immediate :1,y, true to the points of the compa' This in turn i Hugh Gaitskell.leader-o' ,'''''. i, . ' one ' . ,, Ind Prime Minister had it won, has never-- - effect on the pound sterling'rhough the righi ''Voil at and cross. ;o. another WI ',,, I ,I, ' --: United e IIr' , to to the States, depends been attractive its , A stability , i stable, angles. is , I pound '. ' ' ', ,J'',.'' considerable degree upon the 4.riew of the , French, and West German governments. Each square contains 10 acres, , t held by ' so that when of an 'evening you stability of .Britain's economy ,, 0- 1;', ir',I' :NO DOUBT the United States State Debankers abroad. Had the Labor Party and block." you will "around the walk ,';: '' . ' partment is also giving a special sigh :,' Its platform,won, these bankers might a , ; t.if 4.: ) tramp exactly half a mile. of relief because a Labor Government confidence lose' to cause some had have . . nine A blocks of was. square ' could have been much more venturesome , in the British economy. ,.. Made to constitute a "ward," of , ' n trying to expand trade with the Soviet A flight from the pound would have ; which the now has each 24, city ' Union, as well as with Red China. This - followed. And , a sustainedflight from - -; presided --.. IC -- -- ------- - ward 1 beingefstrengtheningwould havnecessitated would have pound' the , hChurch This, ward bishöpof-the2 ,: diplomatic relations with Peiping whicfeet upon Britain's ability to maintain the . classification Is one that even yet citi-- l'n turn would have supported Communist area-:-- Without-thi- s , English sterling enters largely into the social con.- china's' entry into the United Nations. zens would not have been able to continue --- - With a Labor Government's policies run- - -stitution of the city, which is thus n The Tabernacle to say"We've never had It so good." View Of The Great Organ And Pulpit-ia- sort of federation of United of the bishops' States, , THOUGH 12 MILLION British- - voters are ling counter to those wardst.each inclined to be clannish. of the is they would have been bound to do, , no doubt bitterly disappointed in that reversing the ordinary - Style of has been, In round numbers, two and the chilling bareness 10- each divided is relieved vault t,mericans could have expected to hear a whitewashed elecof tenths millions of dollars, nine ,huge their Labor Party did not win the -. acresquare into eight household, designation. good deal of unbridled criticism of Washfrom this distance it seems clear which is accounted for as cash. It by langings of evergreen and flow. lot the Mormons tion, this On yet lots, giving every man an acre and the Of. from both International and domestic more ington's policies. Such criticism has been that three ers made of is was that years here held their first supposed worship; a quarter, and half the people coris indeed. which vicof fect Conservative good the frequent while Labor has been in opposivery dollars million viewpoints time and another Party built the small building now known ner lots. The result has followed tion. it. tory of 14 million voters is by far best as the Endowment House; here, complete EVERY SUNDAY THE sacrament - and dividedthese that have been, Britishof millions for concerned. are No doubt there everyone . It is doubtiut whether there is later on, the combined voluntary is administered, t h e table subdivided, to- suit individual wants . Church in of the United States another pub-- loaded with the baskets of bread members the of the labor and notions,- until many pfthe lie building so massive and genu- - and tankards of water occupying a- Tabernacle : and ..houses stand. right In the heart of erected the first .... ef ble. -; were - - ONE laid the here foundations corn MOST perceptive dais at the foot of the pulpits- -. E the block; ,behind those frontirm onand Laborites'llete neck and necii.is wherein - ments President the prommade (it Temple, Truman Conservative landslide and are anoroached by Precisely at two o'clock the Harry Today, with the THE FIRST TABERNACLE was street, shall Christ Jesus appear ised) manIn his 1948 campaign was aimed at tak- - ;victory, it is once again apparent how of built organ sends forth its melocontributions great of bor'which are by alleys, many , wrong the polls can be, even in a tight, bodily to the faithful as soon as it clered by a double row of thrifty ual labor for the most part, and dious summons,-- and the noise of ing the hide off public opinion polls. is completed. busy voicesthe hum - of the verwas early completed, It had a gen- homogeneous, nation like Britain. ,,, Lombardy poplars Itegularity and "Sleeping polls,' he called them is to be a tall, This so of Deseret in to Temple are "Most the causes wrong the go of What to polls the resemblance eral he people convenience are sacrificed said, present 'table honey-bee- s "But," Perhaps , d of hushed. building whjte of the often? The smallness of great size., their home hive--isample may not being fooled. They know sleeping was and structure, by lhis, but picturesqueness is Cot- from Little is is announced effect brought equiva(by some hymn grapite, ' one sampling be the bad for reason; Gallup are to been have system, they polls gained . Interiorly it Is said , - tonwood to the .average Congressman can- - Canyonfamous as the exceedingly plain, but to have held: brother in a business coat whom ntthe mind. An' overdose could be SALT LAKE CITY, then, is beauti- locality of the Emma Minewhere vassing seven persons in his district . a very fine organ. Only a few years You Will meet in trade tomorrow, The outcome of that attitude will not detached ac- - enormous in from is emotional it assess paradise to comparison split responses Failure pe rhaps) , and sung by the choir, have soon be forgotten. Voters of Britain however, before the con- with the buffalo plains or the stony fragments that have fallen - from elapsed, for though the tune may be one curately may be another reason. The of the kesent larger edi- struction reason to remember it today. ' of the old familiar ones, the audi- - , cliffs. It is almost as ivhite and gulehes- in which the great major- candidates the the of up assessing fice was begun. Mr. Truman, it will be recalled, was 1 ano th ence does not join in the 'singing. . en fly of Rocky Mountain towns must to the day of crystalline as...marble, and unexThe form of the Tabernacle is ' unanimously written off' by the pollsters is needs set. discounted the for an celled be as be music of the Tabernacle material to imposing not And, finally, : elliptical, and its roof an elliptical hasThe In 1948. The Roper Poll decided in July suburbs-- , except toward the The a of structure.... Independence-many great reputation in tha West, dome, arching everywhere from the that the outcome. was a foregone conand it would hardly be fair to de- Until the Very recent extension Americans who will give the pollster a uplands northward, rolcy grade on to eaves and the elusion and stopped further polling supported ridqe, off into farms quite imperceptibly, - of the Denver- and Rio Grande ng answer as a . way of telling him cry it because it doesnot come up - - that question. The others flatly declared upon a series of heavy stone piers , to a New Yorkyerformance. It is own his all mind business. the this streets to out invto the canyon, sRailway continuingstraight the shortest span between which is on election eve, "Dewey is in." d to seek ways Into country roads between dense.-America to conspicuously--goothe for the ma- was stone Somehow, ought city by brought 172 feet. As their height is only Truman won decisively. o minimize the effect these institutions now the railway terial and the locality. bullock sunflowers t but of Jungles teams, glorious The 1952 polling was di fferent only , about 20 feet, and the height of the The a handsome instru- exert on politics. The effect can be great ' organ,. hurlin degree. Gallup'S last release before the . arched roof much less than a' , ,.. 7:, or small. It is generally agreed the the ,,,, as large as the great ''''''''''l ,,T election declared that ,Eisenhower and C'' dred feet, the Tabernacle from ment, nearly '' lost brought-to In Music Hall, is Dewey Boston the complacency they organ homedown Stevenson werp "coming the without gives you the impression not so him the election. Conversely, the close- however, discounted, readily stretch in a tight race" and that he -could an more enormous building of than - and is in Britain - may have ness 4 much with polls skill, to ' played 7 not predict the winner. I half buried. stirred the Conservatives to action and to of the people. constant the 't!' delight Eisenhower won in one of the biggest , . he 44I0 From the general 4, 41;41,3,.. ;!.10, . 9.17'6',",, victory "'" " 7 t.,i;,,i;:1:7:-,;F4X111. 9vaS e,:4,4:'' landslides in Presidential history; . !1; ,4,-,"' Yl 4 '',i,,' to almost Is it ,,. 1''''''44 ME SINGING comes a Impossible '' ' '"'''''' 01,4' " - But hope--or e llibility-somehow WHEN A POLITICIAN-sa- ys as Cover. ,,., tarn the smallest glimpse of it ...:), long prayer by some layman eternal And so in Britain these tf'18,44ta-,nor Rockefeller did not, long ago,. ,04...,4,:c.,Atni of the trees or of priest,-- and a hymn, ' during the because either - springs past weeks the polls have been having that he will wait until closer to conven- , ' 7 !ilk ' Ill ' - -:45;r4., the great wall behind which it. is singing of which eight bishops another heyday. They first saw the Con- ' tion retime and then "see how the ;tpolls r k"" and in order to get any notion break the slices of bread into mop. , 'hid, 40f4,4. i1 10V-befo. A. ,,f, deciding whether to become '. , servatives ahead by 770. But gradually, of sels. Then, while the bread is being Its size, you must climb to some ' I' 'Vt' . .'Saccording to the polls, the lead narrowed - a candidate, something is badly out ofT--' -''''I'''' eminence like the northern bench- -- passed through the audience to the ' 4,4 ;iiit. 7, until on election eve the Conservatives, foals. ,..' 44.10.1MTII .v. t old communicants -- - everybody, where you can look down upon its A: .tr.,,,.';:;k.4,4'-'-';,- ' , tv '' ''' e ' ' and young, partakingPresident form. , huge fungus-lik''' ''' 4144 ' ' .' :kr: 1 ,...4,.,,e7' ': ,' ,.'' - , Elevate it 60 feet, or set it on Taylor, or some other dignitary - ':11,. ,, i -1,, ,u,' 7 MONDAY- WErea ds the Bible ..lett, l fitting-Uta,- h hill,ree'd be;lo- prove 11s-a ',., a 7, :4. 11- ,,.1-a-ailk It, , Revelation, ' and of the 50 states in the Union. 42 cele- - convictions: He, was 'a devout man and in its severely simnle out- - usually from s'.,fivi-1,-i,,,;.--..scenery makes extemnore remarks upon it . brate it as a legal holiday. In some states, :T. ,lines, it would be as grand in its gave God the credit for leading him to N orth 1oole Toward mg - - , it goes by the name of ,..ometime! the Hon.. Georg! 9.1 at Athens. iscovery Day' Cannon, the most eminent of the Day" and is even called "Fra Columbus discovered America and did tracks run from the quarries into walls of gold 'edged with green and SERVICE IN THE Tabernacle is Mormon leaders , occupies the pul ternal Day" and in two states down South, not know it He did not know Until many the Temple yard. with innumerable dots touched held on Sundays at two o'clock It is "Farmer's Day?' pit. , ' years later that he bad bhuldered-wiselmaroon. , - ' in as the Saints The afternoon. Whatever it is called, this observance It is 3 o'clock before the bread r contrived was and THE TEMPLE on the great day of discovery. It happens is a memorial to the man whom history And in these suburbs yotk.may sketched qut by Brigham Young - qemble not only from the city, but and water have- -been partaken of o ten to great men an d lesser men ark e ' all the country round, and find some of the quaintest, most. The credits with the discovery of America. by all, and fully 4 by the time the The targef they seek the. target style is one unknown to ar- ' homes. One such, for ex- vehicles of all sorts are left Nevertheless, Columbus made a mis- idyllic many preacher has ceased, the bishop I schools but but chitectural their ' by missing strike., think, aim, ' takea magnificent mistake. . He was they standing in the neighborhood . The pronounces the benediction, an d ample, stands down in the third reach 'a greater goal. i more' nearly resembles the Gothic they not looking for a new continent but for a centre of the church fills rapidly the conRregation is dismissed. wird. The house is hardly bigger ' than INEVITABLY THIS SIDE of the globe any other. The structure I s sea route to the East Indies. That is why As the people scatter about the is en while men predomi- a and with women, than room, cs c f base its would have been discovered, explored , . Cy- opean strength, be caned the natives he found on this of seats. rows a nate the narrow ered side t in great dusty yard, picking their queer through far below th e surface i s 16 feet in and settled had Columbus never sailed. continent "Indians"--misnomer that has seats There are cowled second for The the, blocks of stone way 13,000 among persons doorway. try ' But he was first to go into action with thickness, decreasing to nine feet' and gallery, - awaiting their place in the Tem- in the persisted down to is hardly half as large as the lower amphitheater n 4gthe One thickness las Fut puoc ett.toss a at sea i surface. uess and to Columbus held- out valiantly against and many more crowd in at some pie, one sees how largely foreign- one, leaving a slanting room be- sail on through the thick f og o f d iscour- ' course of the basement stones other men's misconceptions and false a d an and tween, erl they are, the predominant hedge picturesque sullen and storms stands in the shape of a series of o f the great conferences of mutiny, agement teachings. When he was convinced that the nationalities being British an d closes Whole. broad enclose A around fence the gallery until he opened a New World for man- solid reversed arches . world was round, not all the at the front, where the choir sits in Scandinavian. Their peasantry, too, kind a land of opportunity and freedom. persecution This would be striking enough w' Ab ove th nse near y two 'wings, that could be heaped upon him sufficed eh While we celebrate today, let us re- alone for its shape: but every two facing each other, the is unmistakably stamped upon fee ,1 n t ickness to the re to dissuade him from his effort to sail seven their faces, plough they have ex side and the women men one solve to keep it so. -i weeks the whole adobe and stucco ant height of 80 feet, which is : l'a.osi.t- 7' l their foreign cbaracteris- changed !between is The rootileviashed ,space wh ci is from affair Mb ' nearlv- to where the roof begins.,-- - filled for-."Bétter-itics tush--crimson ay rusticity of the American three long 81 eams treetfoundation,--uptiriThere is no hollowness, or "fill- - - toned by ' tYPe ' of which each in desks, like a fresh IN HIS 'SONG OF THE OPEN ROAD," pulpit the ing. 0, or brick an obvious aim in our highway markings, but most of worknothing the Among 20 or can sit at so prominent once, ',' speakers Walt Whitman wrote; ''There around that its creep granevines chiseled granite through and but so much confusion exists in many may be the Mormon .apostles are Orson each ranK overlooking the heads of envies. and the nonlars and maples thin7s that may prove well in the lecture the 'outer walls, minds that it is necessary to determine only ir Pratt, the most distinguished one . the beneath in that photOgrinh-theroom, vet not prove at all under the spa- boughs but In the partitions,- the ceilings which combinations of colors have the . ' scholar and writer in, the sect, ' The ' shadow upon its spotless sides highest was designed for cious clouds and along the landscape and and the stairways and Joseph F. Smith, a nephew of or "apparent daylight greatest brightness counsetwo his and ' ! But 'to set it off the better, the flowing currents." President Taylor told me Brig - lors,?the second one for the twelve .. the original Prophet and founder reflectance," when put to use on the high- This could be true of many of our high- ' his owner windowsmall paints ham of Mormonism. Young's intention was that the ?. ways ' sashes bdght yellow, his casings building should last a thousand apostles and the lowest or way markings, designed for the motorist 's ' ' SALT LAKE CITY is one of the bishops, but I believe the , order is THE TASK of the highway markings ex- the reddest of red, and his sills and . years. safety and convenience. Are some of ' not very rigidly observed ",',... ' points in the 'United States that is to ascertain to what extent Ahese shutters and door panels vivid pert - quite satisfactory The acoustic properties of the all tourists think should not be ENORMOUS THIS TEMPLE is not does it match or differ from the back- and impressive on the ,drawing board or whole the If affair had green. just house are almost perfect A for- - missed. It is one of the certain 'intended as a place of worship, In the paint shofcactually working out as 7 ground against 'which it is seen. Contrast . been handed out of a Dutch toy mer deficiency of light his been stopping points in .the. programme ' but as a sacred edifice within which is the key to visibility . The red sign, for well under the More varied situations of shop , it couldnotbemore fantastic overcome by the use-of the '' electricity; Of ceremOnies various consecra- example, considered so the open highway? , and childishly pretty . conspicuous, may etc tion, The Utah State Highway Department, martiage ' scarcely be noficed against a red ...brick One think that -.: 2 ,. t, formed that are now celebrated in rl wall or bank of red clay. A black post may : ,. with an aim to adding to the effectiveness 'air, wiihm'a;.e-iev'a7 dry and '''''',-house,Endowment 'the For :'h.:14-;;this AfT,7,' of roadway marldngs (a large number 1 th ,;: .,Ie go unnoticed against dark evergreens and feet-wi1:1, breezes 4,600 Ittotei,),,,,, , Varpose the whole building is cut ,ill'ilt have pioved quite Inadequate). awhite one stands out clearly ,.,,..'1.4 sweeping , down from a rance 4)t Z.';;;;6-',...,0 '14' upr 1'; into little like rooms. cloister -is has started the good work with the in- dark when alagainst foliage may, mountains where the snow protrud4I!''S ' iltil',., 414', N;j'' . houses ,for public worship Altect.';,,.t,"?..N4;,;o.!:,,;',": '', t,Z,. ' 45 The in g from a snowbank, be sp nearly invis- stallatidn of several 12x8-febe to interstate' b across d or a '' vas seen, 411 ' iZ 1,',11' ,....,...... : ,,' ible as to prove a dangerous hazard. ' signs. in Box Elder, Washington and and purifying 'lake, and with , sor are the Tabernacle, and a handearth-a- t Tooele counties. High brightness In band tatz .use(rsome granite building, dry I ,',.,, ' than ecclesiastical in best thing or the worst and no conclusion appearance, - 7'; 4Ab41,7-7as a 'ready antiseptic, this locality la ,,,, ' .f.,. CIIIEF FAULT with found Utah's rugn", ,....A which , t the is 'valid until it has ,been proved by ample "'N'At..74...h.t: occupies 4.,,,..17., mrraZ -be as to on as any 'ought healthy ,...1t,?,.way markings has been'their blade- 11,....(er-,, 4,, ,,q, -. Temple Square, In the interior this ' visual f?bservation. The real problem it earth.face of the the .0'4;',4, quacies in'size. With the construction of ,',, r Holt. c"3 ., fh., not with those combinations that do not building is arranged with galleries, , ','''' ill3!.42 And today'a AT superhighways THE VERY FIRST, onesquare tiers of pulpits, anCorgans just :c work at all, but with those that work 3,,,II I ' 5 the Speed with whit.), they are traversed, just of the city was set apart as the like the Tabernacle, but in a .' well enough to satisfy our indolent 1' i. markings must be large and con- Block," for holy use. This .finey style, and it is used ''Temple vation us and leave to believe that nothing , sDicilously displayed. 'They must- be de- )c'"Tillii be not only the waillti ended to ,:owdo.,1 Quorum Meetings, evening could be devised. LI: t too - the traff16 tray- - - -,better signed to accommodate-heavbut and winter spiritual services geographical .,....i 1 1r itcli,1 eling at high speeds. Ktah's new highway , IT IS GOOD that State Highway centre 6t the city (for in spite of , LL What has ,beenthe cost of - signs ...,,iiiii.:-,-, , 0 4, do this and thereby cornnly with the t 4,,. 1, vik Department Is not satisfied with sizes their present claims the founders Temple, which during 30 years : v c.j 1 -i 7.; standards Buthe Federal colors prescribed by and of roadway markings that , certainly had no idea that so great been rearing before the eyes of the 1.4.,,,,,, i ''. . . reau of Public Roads. -st a town as this would ever arise merely suffice. It wants the best and has ' is asubject of natural dltownspeople, .,,,.., ' Ato,..iff , , Another field In which the State High: taken steps to set ,up the bestboth as to all 1 and streetsthe are here), curiosity.... mem in a le .T.;::. t:--. Nn..me mI K.4..iit, way Department might well do some re-size of the signs and visibility through :,c,f; named from this point outFirst . have the word of President I , -- search Is In color markings.-- Visibility is proper location and color contrasts. on, Weal The Toward West, East Side Of Salt Lake City and so cost South, First Looking oddly , Taylor, however, that the - , Conserve- - c- - y- - tive-Part- . - campaigning. - . . , , ,, - .,. ,, - , -- -- - , , . . , 1 - - . , , .. , . , -- i . '''''''''4--.-,-'i.-'.':,''t'''i,- . ' - . , r1. '' i . ' 1: f14. , . - 'e ,:, -- 1,.. . t 4,,, . ,, - --- . 0-- . , , . -' - 1 - 74,4'. :'-- - f 4, .4 - .. - i,-- Wtt t: .e. , , - , o , ,, i' 4 . , L - - , , , , - '1-- , vIix. -- ,-- I '', -t -- - ,,,,,...--4...,- .., - '.., ,, - ; 1, , ' , ,, . - , --- -- ' . . - , - . . - by-:--- g hatlit-damagin- . - -- , . . '- , ,- , , , The-pione- ers - 10-ac-- re tissue-pape- r, - , . . -- - Pas The Sleeping . - OF-TH- , - . , - - , - miny-turrete- -T s o -- fatal---4e- fula - hidll . -- -- . - ,, .,, , - 4 tio--- , - - - of-t- ,v, ,,, ..:::::!:'77.-;- - '. ' 7 ;4,trm---,...,... '". - i ,....,, -gu- ," 7 level-of-t- ''''4.-'112:- ,, 4- .,, .;, -- - - 4 Sb.. ,. 4;'41..,!, . .: I ) 4. - - ' - . . I, -- - - - - ,. .., -- - - ,- . :7 1 1:444.-'411r- .'.,,, :..-- ..'' : . , - ' . . AA, - ,,,,,: CALL--"Columb- 77 4 ', ' .17 ,,,,-.. '..coluH:0':.:MOgiiifi4InIM;toke': t lk t- ' ji,'?,',-':- -'- . Cr .' , . 5c..:;711 ''.4.,..,,,!...r.::::;:77. .:,.. ''. - 7 i...'.:; ttl.--- t.,..r...!.;';,,---;.:- d -- . .:,' -- ,- -, i';'- -- .7,...; he- . - -. at"-han- .,..:- - - 7:'' :, - - and,--terfectl- y 7prit:t- i -- '- Parthenon - - , --- -- - - - , - , , , - fm is-n- ot . good-size- d Phmrlace 1 , , . - ' 11 . isib ilitv -- 1 ' 4 bigns- -- Ot-Hicthw- - r a -- - , -- --- ' st - -- . thio-ailr",r;;- ' -- . . . .. . ' ' , - 2 - signal-design- , - s, 2 - -- of ' . ' 1;;; - gloir-trotte- .c-- 7.-:- , . ;. - ,- - - r. - , ' - . - s - ,., I;4-,l'f',';'- :'Ve: 4. '', 4 '........, , :: ' , ' ----- A . :,,, et more-tivie- r . one-corner- -of , - I ; ; - oc!.14,-"--,- - --, . , .- rr c, t. the-Vta- h --- -- vets f - ; ;,-,."'--- "' ,,,' Pt .:;::..''-liil...--:--- .11'. r 0 -- 4,...,,.7-- , - , - ,,47:4-,,z..- q 7 y . '4,77-i,,- ft. ' - 1.., ,). n , - 4-;,'LZ- , ultra-moder- ' , .,.! 'ireA ,Z.7,-i- 4X n ,,,,,,,,,,,-A,--- 'Iry - - - , mi gm I.0 - - , , r 2! . ' ;;,-,f- r ... Iswim , -- ..e. - - ,., |