Philip Morris
No Smoking
Fields
- Type
- NEWS, NEWSPAPER ARTICLE
- CHAR, CHART/GRAPH
- PHOT, PHOTOGRAPH
- CHAR, CHART/GRAPH
- Area
- LEGAL DEPT/CARLSTADT QRSA
- Site
- N28
- Request
- Stmn/R1-004
- Stmn/R1-039
- Stmn/R1-053
- Stmn/R1-133
- Stmn/R1-039
- Named Organization
- American Pharmaceutical Assn
- Amer, American Tobacco
- Federal Aviation Administration
- Federal Communications Commission
- Federal Highway Administration
- Ftc, Federal Trade Commission
- Interstate Commerce Commission
- Lieberman Research
- Natl Center for Health Statistics
- Natl Educational Television
- Ny Medical College
- Ny Times
- Penn Central Railroad
- Today Show
- Un, United Nations
- Usad
- US Bureau of the Census
- Who, World Health Org
- American Cancer Society
- Amer, American Tobacco
- Named Person
- Anderson, J.
- Auerbach, O.
- Banzhaf, J.
- Hammond, E.C.
- Moss, F.E.
- Nader, R.
- Nixon, R.M.
- Saarinen, A.
- Surgeon General
- Auerbach, O.
- Document File
- 1005091663/1005091855/703 Position Papers. Bw 971
- Author (Organization)
- Cancer News
- Master ID
- 1005091669/1855
Related Documents:- 1005091669-1855 'smoking Dogs' -- Case History of An Attack on Advertising That Failed
- 1005091676 the Truth Seems A Little Twisted
- 1005091677 'all Advertising Should Be Truthful'
- 1005091678 the Voice of the Advertiser Cancer Society, Heart Assn., Admen Voice Opinions About Aa 'honesty in Anti- Smoking Ads' Editorial
- 1005091679-1683 Backgrounder 'the Effects of Cigarette Smoking Upon Dogs'
- 1005091684-1685 12 Dogs Develop Lung Cancer in Group of 86 Taught to Smoke
- 1005091686 Smoking and Cancer
- 1005091687
- 1005091688
- 1005091689-1690 Last Gasp for Cigarettes?
- 1005091691
- 1005091692 Smoking Controversy
- 1005091693
- 1005091694 Tony 'iq' Curtis Pays $120 Pot Fine in London
- 1005091695
- 1005091696
- 1005091697-1711 Remarks of Joseph F, Cullman 3rd Chairman of the Executive Committee the Tobacco Institute, Inc,
- 1005091712-1713
- 1005091714 Tobacco Institute Ads Challenge Cancer Society
- 1005091715 the Tobacco Institute Believes the American Public Is Entitled to Complete, Authenticated Information About Cigarette Smoking and Health, the American Cancer Society Does Not Seem to Agree.
- 1005091716
- 1005091716A
- 1005091716B
- 1005091717 the Cigarette - Cancer Dispute
- 1005091718 Study Data on Cancer
- 1005091719 Smoking Beagles Draw Fire
- 1005091720 Question Validity of Smoking Dog Slides
- 1005091721-1722
- 1005091723 Smoking - Cancer Study Action Rejected by Surgeon General
- 1005091724 Correspondence Between the Tobacco Institute and the American Cancer Society 700227 - 700429
- 1005091725
- 1005091726 the Tobacco Institute Believes the American Public Is Entitled to Complete Authenticated Information About Cigarette Smoking and Health, the American Cancer Society Does Not Seem to Agree.
- 1005091727
- 1005091728
- 1005091729
- 1005091730
- 1005091731
- 1005091732-1733
- 1005091734-1735
- 1005091736-1738
- 1005091739-1741 Report Relates Cancer and Smoking. Auerbach - Hammod Smoking Beagles.
- 1005091742-1753
- 1005091754 Cancer Report Disputed Eject Tobacco Men for Row Wth A.M.A.
- 1005091755 Research Plea Smoking Dog Test Repeat Is Urged
- 1005091756 Tobacco Group Challenges Cancer Study
- 1005091760-1794 Effects of Cigarette Smoking Upon Dogs I. Design of Experiment; Mortality; Findings in Lung Parenchyma,
- 1005091795-1818 Effects of Cigarette Smoking Upon Dogs II. Pulmonary Neopl
- 1005091819 Why Stifle Debate on Smoking?
- 1005091820-1821 Tobacco Institute Vs American Cancer Society
- 1005091822
- 1005091823-1824
- 1005091825 Ama Journal Decides to Withhold Reports on Dogs and Smoking
- 1005091826 Tobacco Spokesman Says Dog Tests May Be Greatest 'scientific Hoax'
- 1005091827 Ama Journal Rejects Paper on Acs' Smoking-Dog Study Evidence of Cancer Found Lacking
- 1005091828-1829 Acs Researchers Retreat on Claims for Beagle Study Now Say Only Two Dogs Got Cancer
- 1005091830-1831 An Editorial
- 1005091832 Reports Linking Cigarets and Smoking 'not Rejected'
- 1005091833 Voltairean Principle
- 1005091834 Lung Cancer Makes Strange Bedfellows
- 1005091835-1836 Study on Dogs and Smoking
- 1005091837 What Became of 'landmark' Cancer Study?
- 1005091838 Beagles, Smoking Article to Be Printed
- 1005091839-1845 of Beagles, Smoking, and Cancer Cigarette Smoking Canines Answer the Demand for Laboratory Confirmation of the Statistical Cancer Link by Developing Invasive Lung Tumors
- 1005091846-1847
- 1005091848-1849 Study on Dogs and Smoking
- 1005091850 Cancer Society's Test on Dogs Looks Like A Hoax, Tobacco Industry Says
- 1005091851 Hoax, Institute Suggests Smoking Dog Cancer Test Challenged
- 1005091852 Cancer Society Was Wrong
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Characteristic
- EXTR, EXTRA
- MARG, MARGINALIA
- Date Loaded
- 24 May 1999
- Brand
- Marlboro
- UCSF Legacy ID
- lze91a00
Document Images
I
s
4t51%'%_L1'1 lY,r.rta Jj~i lr1C~/~llnUil(:L 1J'/.U
<v?.Lhc,t:, c± l r ~jcS)
The Senate oave final Conor«es:
~-
sinna';::ai ra a^ 'zc'r'.oa
bill ann:na'ail ci^cr::i!e cn r er-
cra ; ow"f rc: on f t s,~n rs nf.
. Janur:r.(l, 1971. It P:-.s.cinenry' Ir~'n
lavrby'~-Presidenl Niiron on a.,_-! 7
hc r arso sirengthens llie warn-
irg notice required on e/ery'ciga-
. r:ttd pack. The new r-:essage:
"Warning: the Surgeon General has
determined that cigarette smoking
is dangerous to your health:" The
- bi0lcatted for this to take effect six
mon,hs after the Presidentiaflsignl
ing-on October 1.
T-4e coniroversiali question
regarding the Federal Trade Com-
miccinn's rr:_crt~nsihilitia: nmr~nr!-
-fating cigarette advertising was
settled by enjoining the FTC from .
requiring warnings on remaining
ads until!afterJufy11971; with a
- six months' notice of intention
required thereafter. Sen. Frank E.
Nioss of Utah warned cigarette
manufacturers acainst a: massive
-=- alift!of adveKisements frorn broad,
;, cast to prinlmedia: if this,hap-
pened; he noted, the FTC would
-- act as soon as possible to require
:' health warnings in such ad-
vertising: -
The blt's provisions represent
: a substar.tial viatory for the anti-
smoking forces 'in the Congress
and the nation:_ Sen. flioss,, who
-sponsored Ihe measures, said,
"Thanics to thisbill; f.iarlboro Co: n-
try tvitl' fade inio tetevis on~ history
as of next Janr.ary."
As the revulsion against ciga-
retlo smo:-cing mounis na;ionatly,
pressurc ncreascs to ban smot<-
c tg in public pfaces. Pan Ameri-
ran 1^.'ortdiAinvays li~s c slAtblishcd
Inc first air born; "No Srno.cing"
section on its 7d7'.jets, ;and Amcr-
ican nirtines is conecidc:ring ;t!ch,
VUl~U1rK: Ui , , !w. 1L
a move. A petition has been filed
with the Federal Aviation Admin-
istration by John Banzliaf Illito re- -
~quire such sections on all'pfanes;
it was this young lawyer from
Washingtbn, D:C:, who success-
fully petitioned the Federal Com-
rw:nications Commission for the
Fairness Doctrine rulinl; on TV
cigarette commercials. jhe' FAA
is also considering', a petition by
lawyer-crusader Ralph Nader that
smoking, be forbidden entirely on
airplanes; the consumer's rights
advocate cited the danger of tire
as v:e.!I as the health hazards and
annoyance.
Nader also has oetitioned the'
Federat. Hig'A: ay Admini',;tra;ion to
prohibit smoking on interstate
buses contending that smoking
creates a fire hazard, interferes
with the dtiver's abi!ity to safelyy
operate a' bus by reduc ng his
efficiency, and oenerates a,poten-
tiaffy dangerous concentration of
e..rbon monoxide. Another peti-
tion of his~ to the Interst: te Com-
merce Commission for the same
ban is based on the contention
that smoking,on buses lo :ers the
quality of service.
Railroad§ are ali;o coming un-
der fire from anti-smoking forces.
Recent surveys shovi' tf.iat about
80 per centi of commuters prefer
to ride in "No Smoking" cars,
against less thani 60 per cent a
few years ago; and the railroads
have reduced the n+mtber of
smof:in,t cars on cach It:in, ac-
cordinct!y: The Penn Centrall Rail-
roadi ad;uslc~d the prop~,rtion of
its s,nol~,ing cars after diecovering
that riders erou!d c+ :n:i up i:r other
cs-s rather than sit among the
ctouds of! smoke:
tti!<ny top liospifals in the coun-
try no; lonqrir sclll cig~: ettt:s on
their premises, arrd have re-
Fez
slricted'smoking to limited areas.
The ban on sales affected 18
municipaf, hospitals in Neti'r York
City on April 15. The American
Pharmaceuticaf Association; with
the cooperation of the ACS, has
produced al sign read:rrg "'Be-
cause'they are hazardous to your
health, we do not se!I cigarettes"'
-which is often displayod where
the cigarette machines were, and~
in the many pharmacies tha'r have
eeased selling cigarettes. -
Three professional hockey
teams, the M'onireal Canadiens,
the Toronto Maple Leafs, and the
Deiroil Red 1'srings, ha!z banned
smoking by, spectators durina
gaines at their home ri-.ks.
Reporters may no longer smoke
at presidentizfl press conferences
in: the l'Jhite House; Presidcnt
Nixon does nol smoke and ap-
parently' does not like spending
time in a smoke-fified'roo^n:,Tie
Executive Board of the World
Heafthi Oroanization adocted a
resolution ca!iir.g on all vrrla at-
tend its meetincs to refrain from
smoking; this United i.ations
agency stated that "no organiza-
tion devo';ed to the promo:ion of
heaf!h, can be neutral" on the
qucstion of cigarette smoking.
U.S. Agricu;ture Dep2rrnent fig:
ures on 1 °G° cigarette ccnsump-
tion shov; that the use of' ciga-
rettes is fattina at a faster rate than
it had'predicte:i. In December, the
agency caicufaledi tfiat' 19u9's ~
consumption to;:aed' 545.G bi!lion
cigarettes, a drop of, 2 per cent
from a year earlior. I-iov:erer, the
actual figure proved lh tie only
528:9 billi n, a 3 per cent c:cctine.
The deparimcritls esii;r?ters of
19,639, per capi,a cig.arrCe con-
sump'ioribe,ran last, Se?,emb^r
with an' estimated figurc do-rvn 3
per cent from the 12G5, tc.vef of
4',1C-G: In Ducem!icr, iha v:as re-
v;; ;d ib a4 per, cent docfine, but
lha final aver<:ge shor,,s Ihe fig-
urr; actuaffy droi.,pod !i pcr cen:
to 3,t:92 ci~arcllcs p;ar per.cn
over, 16.
.
7
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( rdU:usrat VJ' Lfk,A llC 1 I CD J:.S V Ictu:
I PEHADULT' UrdITEDSTV.TES;1945-19G9
.
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31 -
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I
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..
. 4/5 1950 19:5Ih;4 tgc5. 1969
IATLSBER OF CIGARETTES SrdOt: _D
~
-~ -wyEl3~iodo.4f. . .. ~- 7wace: U.S. Ue~rrmeN M Agrrcvlour~ .
wur.lnEl1 OF C1.^,AR[TTE SMr1KEnS
It7 TNE U!;IT[D SIATES;31;i5'-lSG6.
so
~ 50.7 . - 49~3
.'.
~~
~
a9 5Y
50
..-.. e--=
.
30
1?GS . 15'vu. 1967 1~3t.51LLtONS OF CIGARETTE Sr;.Oi(ERS
Source: U.S. Uatwrel Cenler 1ar Ifeat[h S-,aisttcs
-. The deparimenl analyst said he smokers, but from 19"6 to 19:81he
ezpects par capita use this year, proportion of former sm:)kers
to drop by another 6.5 per cent to among ma!es increased'b}° cnty12
around 3,763 cigzrettes. The cur- per cent' compared to 22 per cent
rent trend' of declining, cigaretle' among fe,nnles:,The proportion of
ose beganx:ithavery slioht1douvnf -young, people who have never
"- MarO Turtlut isvr. ilv.: °I'=1r ic incr,-.aCinn too. In
clear, the ana'yst saidi that the 1966. 48.3' per, cent of mv!e ; aged
` continuing fatl-off is a'tribule5le 17-24 years Itad'nevensmor:ed;;in
10 the intensive anti-smoking cam- 1968 it v:as 50.0 per centt Among
pafgn. femaies in this 2ge group'the per-
Behveen August 1957 and Au- centages of those who never
gust 1968. an estimated 1.4, mil- smoked are 62.2 for 1963 and 63.4
fion people gave up cigarette for 1968.
smeking, according~ to data re-
Eeased by the National Center for
Hca:ih S:r:tistics: This uf ped~ to
2.5 million the number w'1o join-
ed the ranks of, former smokers
since June, 1966; (A former
smoker is d^_fined as one who had
smol:ed at least i03ici7aret!es in
his cntire life.) In 1968, former
smo!cers formed 13.2 per cent of
the U.S. civilianj, non-instilutional
popu!alion 17 years of ago and!
older, an overall incrcase of 15
per cent over 19u6. A st :ady in-
crease in, peoplc giving jpi ciga-
roite smoking chal actcrized I cvcrY
age and sex grnuaing, bo:h in
numbers ofi people and as a pcr,
cerd~ of cach group:
Tjtc stu: y, r:hich was conductotf
for the Centcr by thc U.S: 13inc,:u
of :nc Census in three succttc,;ivo
}rcars; sho'.vs that a lr:rgcr pro, or-
tionof rnerrttian rrorncrr art: former
! -.fi. . ..
_t. - I__
Althuugh producers of vagetables
and fruits pay the Aoricultt.re De-
parlrarntl S10.8, million a:car to
have their crops oraded.fairly, the
"lords of the tobacco industry"
get free inspr'ctionand gra.ding
by the Depariment. This was re-
ported recently by nstiona!I,r syn-
dicaled columnist J~!c~;,An;i_-rson,
who estini~tedi that the taxpayer
paid S2:9 mi!iion in 19G9 so that
the Acricul!ur<., D^; alUncr;tl could
inspect tob::cco for qua: ty:, lcaf
location and color- "cv.:y,ihing
but hc,.v many puffs it 1abes for a
full-flhc!ced cas~, of lunD caU1cer
or ernphysenla...
1^<hy YowSrrlolie11Ic f.ational
Educationaai Tcievision serics t!iat
was broaclcast on, cc!zwraibnal
lelcvision, stetians throun'InuL the
country during March, is ILe sub-
ject of an extensive follotivup sur-
vey in 13~ metropolitan areas to
determine how effective the pro-
grams were in helping people- to,
quit'smokingand hovr many oeo-
plb were helped by the,scrie:. .
The study, which is being son-
ductedl for the ACS by Lieberman
Research Inc,, vrill survey more
than 14;000 people; they, will be
contacted by, volunteers in their,
area bytr3lephoneand asked a5out
their smoking habits and whether
or not thcy saw the series. A se-
lection of those v:ho report hav-
ing,seen all five programs will becontacted again six weeks later
and I`;en again six months atter
that for further information about;
their smoking habits: Some of'the
data, such,as %-.fiich aparoach was
most tielpful in~reinforcing the de-
sire to~quit smoking, %:rill also be
useful in formu!a!ing other pro,
grams to assisU cioarette smokers
wlro wish to ~ stop.
Cities lnctuocaim rne.blu(iy ntoBos!on; Rochester, \Nilm;ngton,
Pittsburgh, Philade!phia, AtlGnta,
Tampa,, Chicago, St. Louis Cin-
cinnati, Cleveland, San Francisco~
and Seattle.
For 'ha first time;, scienlists re-
eently have produced lung cant
cer in experimental animals cr sigr
niticantly large size asa result of
cigarette smoking. A group of
purc-bred beaates were trained
to~ srnoke cigarc!!es throu~h Ira-
cheostornies, or openings in their
throats, through which plastic
luhes v:ere inserted. This permit-
led them to inhale smo{:c into
th^ir Iun_ts immuch the sama way
humans do. This research effec-
fivc-ly answers such rcpoat^d
clcin,s by the tobacco indos lly as
that which t:ppeared in a full=pai?e
advcr!iscmcni froai the Alm,rican
Tobacco Comp::ny in the h'cr:1
York Tinmcs on S^iyteTbcr 4,
sayin. "aftcr ycars of tt;:-
ing; aovody h~a inducc.d lurl)
canc^r in anirna!, with 6garettc
smn!ie."

~~f
y
stc*dy was d3ncv~r,~; ut, E.
Etry;er-tj~mmond, lriac: es;~ nt
for Eptdemiology and'"STatta+rual
Research of the 1.=S=:::n~' Dr.
Oscar Auerbach, Senir-:lhcdical
Investigator, VA Hosfital, East
Orangc. N.J. and Professor of
-Pathology, N.Y. Medical College:
It was begun in 1K~ = f: ' the pur
pose of tinding, out
-aretles are safer than
~ - ;^..nd -,only sccondarity, s^ ~ it
"'fo7x1-term smoking vr.'r- i:'.,nuse .
. lung malignancies in -'^as. The
dogs smo'r.e& for almorx tv;q and
i--- a half years, which is equ\'~al'ent
tn aboUl 18 years of hu ~~as
~° The death rate,, the inves,iga-
= tors found, correspond_.., r:-recily
with the amount' of tar and nico-
tine that the beaates pu'led into
iheir lungs. Only tour of the filter-
'_smoleing and "lioht"smoi:ingdogs
died'during the study, but hatf of:
the 24 "heavy" smo'r.eri.r_~x.pited.
rnere ivcae nvu;;atim 'c.rucw+µ ii+u
eight control dogs that didn't
- = smoke.
~ - Among the most common
-'causes of death were such respi'-
- ratory disorders as emphysema
"" :and pulmonary fibrosis. As for
A- cancer, ten of the he~---_':ii?o i
Hoes cie:'t .-ned m
`111mors, a^d irl ll':O In; i~'T^~°'
..,<-.~.---------------
:1-,Jr~ ^~i-S were
r
O..r'5^n"-'d 1'li r'l:-1 } ;. ! So-cailC&
benign tumors v:ere found in seven
of the light-smoF:ing dogs and in QI
four of the fi!terrsmokers-
4 The P.CS has warned, as a re-
sulrt of this siudy;, that "Filter-tip
ciaarette smokers shoulct not be
lulled into a false feeling of secu-
'rity by lh,; report of the fil:er-tip
smoking poriions of the :.'.uJyc.
They shoufd reafize tt+-a filter-tip
cigarctlcs, it lhcy~ cft.:ctiveltj re-
duce tar and nico'lne ii +l-^ ~>laih-
stream snloP;e, arc at '`:. : only
-less danrr-e,ing to lung tie,.: lham
_ _ rlorl-fllleri Gi^ya:4iies."
The oven,'he;rninc majorily of
health auillorities and nrg;,rlila-
tions llrroualtout' the r.otlti have
concluded~tltat ciggrelte smoking,
is one of the most important pre-
ventable causes of: disease, dis-
ability and death in countries Iilie
Canada," reported th=_~ Hcalth
Committee of Canada's House of
Commons: in; its hvo+year study
of lobacco and cigarette smol'.ing.
Its recommcndations, whicFi it
accepted wou!d put Canada in the
,vanguard on cicEtretle-healih leg-
_islhtion, included an end' to all
aigerette prwmotional activities
within four years after laws are
enacted, beginningn'.'ith advartise-
r..ents on broadca st m_dia+ An-
other recommandatian, is for
maximums to be set on tar, and
nicotine permissible in main+
stream cioarette smoke. While
stating -that' there could be no
"safe" level for these substances,
the Commitieesa;dithatmodcrz.te
leveli;i, acceptuti!e to most smol;-
ers, would redi!ce the daily total
nicotine. The Committee also,
asked that all adt'ertising and alll
cigarette containers carry a healthi
warning, and that the lobacco in-
dustry concentrate on dwctoping
tobacco that would rm.Ne" ciga-
relles safer.
Estimating that the costlof ciga-
rette smoking in Canada in 1966
twas some S38'J' million, the Com-
mittec eor,ctt;ded that "it is cleari
that'the!magnitude of the pro5lem
is such lhal something more than'
health education is des:rable....
Perhaps the most compelling!rea,
son. to introduce practice ble legi,-
lation to control the promci:ion of
cigarette smoking is to t ring con-
sistency and mutual reinforcement
into society's actions to deal with
the problem. For examplc, young
people can hardly be expected to
believe -t!iat gt;vernments reallyy
eonslderi clg.aret?P_smct'f.i.r10 to beo
hazardous if they allow unlimited ,
beans, I pulled on p!astic ciyarePtes1
tried z~nfi-smo:ang lozenmec and gpm;.
I/ettered the pack t:d(h ruobc. hane;
so I'cocr.'dn't get a ciyaret'e out, and
kept rigrrt on smo.king t'see pr.c%s a
day." To provide support for her If:rst
-, reSnlulion to. Cuit she c'rraGgcd 2fl
eppvlrSnient for 9 p.m., Decca;be:
31st with a psych'iatrist t:,ho csss[
kind of !yp^csisOn 1 c;r's Cay
morning slro rcponlca to vrt::. ers c1
the 7cday Sho:v; .'/ tl.ough?7re v.oufd
put rnc in a deep ma;ic <'e^p and l'd
emerce rri(h an abic'i rg abhorren; e of
'
Cigare(fes. A!.js. i; t,t:sn't' titat easy.
N.e jlrst lcrtches you to i,e:1 }'v: sc!l in
what lie calls a'br:oylant re-4,,zatio..'
I'd'cr.l1 i, a mil;htrance in y-o,r
mino"is receptivo 13 tii^ er !vo-
!cc(ir.q <'.nd respec'iitg G"ie f.oJy, in
..hiChlr y0tr Ii :* it ir ...-; (':r
have ruJivo. Yo1 iraoint t tfs On y,a.,:
m;;ah so o'tt,nt.. ( sr r;r i,!y; 1!P,,
urg^ rc, pro'eCt. }ots bao'; t. nt^.
:
perr.;.l::^n;;}. rn~re ir.~pG~f:~nr r ;~m (t:r
Urc7.'r to pOi.On it. t:'G'(. 1,vJC'cn
houa : rid ; 9
ra11c li:,r'!'i wor.1
of -1 l+.,nce." 77r.' t, ^s P: 1;'51 <.rn (0
J tac;:ry il On lin+il l. 7.'rs $. :,rinc'r-
wido.1 of arcliiti~rf [er,')> .
'.L T l Uelicved as p. ;siorra;cl;< ., I d0
1112r.tP.,.r,7usr stop 1'c(/uridH;.r'lc cr.'rth,
tuhich' is a clo:cclsysnu:n: ~-~hyal
so Ihe!f-hcr c^ pjlr:::ing (' ^ c': scd
system thaCs rnc?" 7h+o ul, pic
ered TV p,.rsan, iil; /Crno S;:nrincn sa
muchllraf as A , lc-t ,rca' on;
shc r.p.. , o1ri, T..isr.. r,orf
flie l+is1 fir,te. s;':c hn 7rii_l;o:quit.
dir "evory~tldir¢rt r't,~t. cY~r,~C~'r t:1i11.
rlrrcidcs tn rn;( do^s G:;%crer! nll, trn;f
on s ain; bi,,c1'ca, r, ,ztled lhern:
IJtyeci n,!h vu"r}cl,-.r.Ucl up
pcns and pcrtcil;, !: ue;u d on c.nllce
was cl;!'na1'srno,;tiir~.
