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' PAGE FOUR e The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1878) Ne be the Aes: Tribune Company, tered at the postoffice efficiency in every‘ field of endeavor. Conservation of energy, material and human, is the order of the day, und, indeed, is the only road by which we can i hope to maintain the American standard of living. Day by day we learn how to do things better, quick- ‘er, cheaper and more thoroughly. With this prog- ress comes development in the elimination of waste mail matter. jand it is in this field that we must specialize if ; George +:-President and Publishet/ yw. weuld maintain proper profits with large Pro- | Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | duction and a highly competitive market. * Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck).. Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)...... ; Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Eettished D. Mann..... Our Business Abroad ! The trade balances speak favorably of- America’s | ‘business in foreign lands, but*there are a few chap. ! | ters in this romance they do not write. i The story of America’s expansion and enterprise abroad reads like a novel. Wherever you go the | “Made in America” bobs up with ‘astonishing regu- larity. Even many of the pe which make Peal labeled “Made in Germary” or “Made in France” | come from these shores. \ Italy, China and Japan are countries famous for | | the silkworm. You’d think they had silk there to burn, but the fact is that rayon stockings, made in the United States, sell at high prices in those coun- tri z Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches | credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin : published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. 1 Foreign Representativ: G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bi Kresge Bldg. ae Payne, BURNS AND SMITH * NEW YORK Fifth Ave, Bldg. (Official City, State and County ee = =a “Call Me Mother” been touring our country re- | nd Queen Ernestin Sheffield, England, makes stecl that the world | | knows and respects. But steel saws from the United | States are preferred there to the Sheffield product. American standards of industry are following American goods. Thus the packing business in Ar- gentina has been revolutionized by American ma- ery ard the adoption of our methcds. scales are lower, but ‘American | Two queens have cently—Queen Mi Royalists for long | but royalists of radically different types. | “Your Majesty.” | ars these two have been—- ¢ Foreign wage One properly is addressed 2 jquantity production and salesmanship overcome “Call me mother,” the other commands. | much of that disadvantage in competition. Queen Marie is consummately regal. She aaah Thank You, Lord Bishop! We are told that the Lord Bishop of London, why is known academically as Rt. Rev. Arthur Foley Winnington-Ingram, enjoyed a couple of sets of tennis the other day at Oakland, Calif. | We now can understand how Great Britain came through the coal strike and kept the pound at par. in her appearance, in her speech and action, and in her graciousness, You already have guessed, no doubt, that the rest of this Queen Ernestine’s name is Schumann-' Heink. , What a far call it is back to America’s first ac guaintance with Queen Ernestine! We heard cf her as early as 1878, when at 17 y of age she burst J into grand opera gtardom in Germany. We saw| We can understand a Ict of things about England her face to face when she came to America soon | now that used to puzzle us. We now realize ‘how it \is possible for so many old men over there to go about wearing smiles, For the lord bishop is 68. He played two sets of mixed doubles and they didn’t have to call out the Red Cross. He is a dignitary, the very personifica- tion of unbending British formality, but he can play tennis at 68 and enjoy it. As for the alarmists who recently heralded into! our ears the decline of British power, we don’t be- lieve a word of it. The lord bishop ‘has set us right. afterward. We have known and loved her ever since. We haven’t known Queen Marie long, save by the news reports about a lady who, with marvelous tact, swayed affairs over in the Balkans. Only in the last few weeks have we known her in) person. So a comparison between the popularity of these two queens in America scarcely is fair, perhaps. Still—ean a queen who is addressed as “Your Majesty” ever attain the place in the hearts of the j people that this Queen Ernestine, who says, all me mother,” has attained? With all respect to Queen Marie and her un doubted woman.iness, her fine character, her capa- bility in matters of state, our guess is that this other queen who prefers to be addressed not even as! “Madame”—who esicems the title “Mother” highest | of all—is the queen whose memory will live the longest and shine the brightest when she is gone. Editorial Comment | “Lafe” Young (New York Times) In his way “Lafe” Young was a more interesting’ ic cter than many greater and more solemn men. | Born in pioneer Iowa, he was brought up in village! ee newspaper offices. At 15 he was learning to set! Some Thoughts on Hatred type in the shop of The Albia Union, edited by aj These United States of America have 6 per cent thirsty lawyer. Long afterward he recalled the! of the world’s population and 40 per cent of that simplicities of, this then newspaper and forensic same world’s wealth. world: ‘ One need remember nothing else to have an an- swer ready to every query why we are not alto- gether popular with the world at large. Envy is no provincial emotion. It is universal, international, knowing no bounds of color or speech. Envious John Smith of Main street, who chokes |! down his spleen at sight cf his neighbor’s limousine while he himself rides in a fliv, or walks, is no dif- ferent from the envious nations, tax-ridden, cramped In 1865 he hitched his wagon to The Eddyville for expansic:, who see the vast areas of a neightor) Star: across the scx. Some may argue that this is no new story for America; that we have been just as prosperous for years with no clacking, envious tongues waggel against us. “C’est la guerre” again is the answer; the war that made all the world kin and brought into open daylight things rarely thought of before or won- dered about; the war, too, that as it took pros perity from others, made our prosperity the more visible. Tf we are hated, why protest? We can afford to be tolerant of # purely human quality, asking for tolerance in a possible day when cur own larders ry Though born a little Democrat, he had become He Be Rebbe 20 full of fats and grains. of the most Republican of Republicans. In 1890 he| : established The Des Moines Capital. He knew the A United China i itori There i 4 whole business—news, mechanical, editorial, adver- re is a prospect at the present time of a united { tising, circulation, But the joy and main pursuit of China, something that has not obtained since 1912. | (° a 3 Appearances give rise to the conclusion that all his life mae politics, in thls capacity. be was deat i 7 rs 5 to all devil's advocates and all true believers in the central and south China will be united under one | _ 4 - sacred tariff. That could be put up with advantage. government, although for how long no one knows Put it dow d the wid h of ol anh = 1 i ‘Sarr woul atl, ie never forgot ne days when lowa it seems very doubtful at this time that Marshal was Iowa yet. Governor Geer and Senator Allison Si y “Fi i e e C1 prac! 5 pis Chuan Fang will be able to counteract the un and “Dave” Henderson and Jonathan P. Dolliver, be- ; dermining of the loyalty of his troops. The people, fore his conversion, were his gods. He fought Sen stirred by the students, seem very eager to weleome | +0. Gummi ervey os ePonent ens = the Cantonese and thus the st f th ‘or Cummins, and the Iowa Idea for years, vainly Siar ne, the strength of the ogprst- but with undiminished aurage and good humor. tion to the Canton forces will be nullified by sedi- ‘ = tion within the ranks of Marshal Sun, The irony of death made him Dolliver’s successor, _ _ It is a very great pity that China should be thu» | Cummins’ colleague. He served five or six weeks torn so constantly between civil conflicts. For |>¥ #Ppointment in 1910. There was a homely di- years it has only had a government in name. There | Pe¢tness wy ale sneer pleasing to. those. who. weary. ® has been no real administration of affairs, merely a|* little of the perfection of the saints. Mr. Young, 5‘ who had had the honor of nominating. Mr. Roosevelt shell of authority. fo dali With its potentialities China could i ye tise, prosients. veapeinlisea: the Innurgents,- He & a be a. really. couldn’t away with the word “progressive.” He great and powerful nation, taking its proper pla € among them in a splendid ech of nee he called it “an apology for being caught with the « it is, ‘however, unless some ‘great leader arises to |®2"8-" “You've got to come back to your father’s B combine all factions amicably, China will end up in house,” he told the insurgents. “I’m the keeper of; the scrap heap, the prey of improper foreign exploi- the ark of the covenant.” The insurgents and Pro- tation and an object lesson to the rest of the world. | 8Te8sives are, unfortunately, doing business at the old stand. The ark is far from well kept and in his last days “Lafe” accepted, not without reservations, the egregious Brockhart. We have always wished that Mr. Young coull have stayed in the senate. He called the august ones, to their faces, “those boys.” To the unsuc- cessful users of the prosperity prescription in this year’s elections, and to all and sundry, may be com- mended “Lafe's” formula: It would be a good thing if congress should adjourn for two years. Legislation is a menace at times. Let us have a cessation of hostilities. This is the only way.to insure @ new era of Prosperity. | With all his prejudices and defects, this unregen- erate old thad more sense than the whole I used to sleep with him in the office in his bed, where the had a quart of whisky leaning against the front bedpost, in order to take a drink whenever he awoke. He went to Oska- loosa at onc time te defend a man charged with stealing a horse. The man was acquitted, and the lawyer rede the horse home as his fee. I boarded with the editor, as usual, and was not cverfed. The editor was postmaster, and I slept in the back part of the little postoffice. One of my duties was to get up at midnight or afterward when the western stage came in and throw the mail bag on the sidewalk, when the driver shouted, “Mail!” Primitive days, at which one loves to lcok. Be- tween jobs the boy went to school. He also en- joyed the larger liberal education of a journeyman printer, still envied by some sedentary and mer Perous men. He started his own village coer | Se a, War on Waste The drive against waste in industry must be * maintained if the material condition of the people pe the United States is to be improved further, ir. the opinicn of’ Secretary Hoover of the commerce res On bls decision is reflected in the con- Prominent industrialists throughout lon, The matter of waste in industry is one small profit margin engendered price-cutting tendencies of modern competi- a A Return Engagement j ever designed, 0 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WHAT HAS GON GONE BEFORE supiTa MARTIN, teacher at | Pendleton, University, is admired by ERIC WATERS, leader of the student ‘radical faction, and DR. fake, DORN, of the astronomy facult DEAN TIMOTHY BROWN re- ene ng! fond in Eric and her genet inorthodoxy, j MYRA ALDRI Erie's hood ea HOCH eae of Iu itl “KITTY” SHEA, beat: legger, tries to tack mail the AT TH; E NATIONAL THEATRE UNTIL PURMEK Nolice cean’s wife, and Judith, befriend- ing her, asks Eric to help them. Shea’s body is found and Eric is witness. aX creek is arrested as a-material Mrs. Brown iene the in outlandish a dex rot Hoe bi for a and * ag fF own nates a "en Ser scene Wy Neier with “Eve GERHART, town le to coax her to make friends with Eric and keep him out of the mad schemes he is forming, to defy “ While they talki VILL ere talking, WETHEREL, Eric's fi “eat ‘rather rushes in, crying, “ Dorn are beating ‘cach other ‘e's a pulp down the road! road!” NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XLIV Wetherel leaned against the door jamb, panting for breath. “Will,” said Eve, after a moment, “what did you say?” ‘Having a fight,” Wetherel nodded. ame to get you.” ‘And what,” said Eve caustically, id you think I could do with a couple of battling men?” Wetherel looked bewildered. “Why, —I don't know, exactly. Tom Bal- lard and I were cbming down the voad—I was bringing him to call on you, Eve—when we saw the crowd f people. I caught a glimpse of Eric and Dorn, their shirts torn in ribbons, with blood on‘ their faces, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1926 {pounding each other for ull they ; were worth. I was so shocked I stood still for a minute—then came to get you. Perhaps I had a vay notion that you could ‘make, stop, if anyone could.” Tedith looked at Eve, with a flicker nin her eyes. “You're Will—probably the But what hap- “She'll be in in a minute, said. “What are you looking so ‘ be and SINNER pleased ubout, Dad? You look. like the cat that swallowed the eanar; Austin On, ‘New job o’ work,” Mr. Lane knowledged with w gruffness that aia fae cia not hide his pleasure. “Oh, hello, pire le AA Martha. Feelin’ better today, honey ?” th only smiled, and went, on to i “I been nearly dead with a sic the kitehen, closely’ followed by the headache all Lane ad-; excited, glowing girl, beret : why . jee her Junior catapulted himself violently S3atune’ eyes mournful "un oie hac ” ee phor-soaked bandage that encir- ‘What were they fightine about? wearers door, shedding a <huPior temeae bendare that enctr.| id Eve. But the front door open- about a new job? Got a barn to build, ed again and a lean, sailow face un- I guess,” she concluded bitterly. "der. a freshman’s green cap, protrud- “Barn, your, aunt!” Jim Lane sur-| ed into the room. prised them ‘all by chuckling with! ‘“They’ve separated ‘em,” the new- rie of. suspi an awful fool, worst in Pendleton. pened?” He shook his head sadly. “I don’t know, They were trying to pull ‘em ‘a apart when I left,” prices hint- “Denise nthe marvelous took one last prideful most enchanting trou: wabdroks, look the deep, mecha hennaed hair fo e the old gathered up the parapher-| Euts! of her trade--or her art, as she | bring Fay Allen over some time, and «end with d abby little | 1’ 7 asked her for this evening. You R boy! Say, Faith, you said I could . Hogan fol ‘dat breakfast you'd be home this Pruitt’s give me the contract to build with oo mage air. “Eve, this is’ Tom “She stayed two weeks longer than jI've got Frances Warren and Selma ®, ig ten-car garage for him, buck Bull oP Rees Mepealens | way to keep her just as long as Ifher and tell her it’s not convenient C4F% uP for overhaulin’ Anyhow, one grabbed oun ae peer down eva forward so. that’ his teas Ro one heard Faith's softly uttered, few paces, and when he caught his 4 i : it wasn’t bloody, supper, "she heard Cherry's high,| snaried at her. “You ain't the only gqMQRROW: Faith learne the se- coming over, Fran, and ‘bring her| see, and you can like it or lump it, church, with tis face. stilt blecdy,, L almost got jealous the way Madame|I guess you do, all right, all right!” | u 1” the worst yet,” he declared. “A Denise simply slaved over it, as if ‘Squealer!” Cherry yes over her’ Movie actres whose eyes are street brawl! Sigma Psi can’t af- chicken party. Maybe we'll all dress | Shave off your funny old whiskers dark color causes the pupil of the eye “Oh, damn Sigma Psi!” she ex- up in some of my delirious new pa-| and dress up, wont you, honey? I’m to expand, m claimed “Thet isn’t important, wear in the wedding. Fay Allen is Buster Keaton's picture, “The the reputation of the frat after we've w that, eral.” Init a locomative of Civil War si! worked to build it up. 1 think more wholohearted pleasure than he Finite) to Will. “Gosh, what took her departure--and a ¢ Be nice to her, sis—” had shown since the announcement, & a fifteen hundred dollars, signed by | beat with small, clenched herry’s engagement. “Lincoln' | “Come on in, Tom,” said Wetherel, Ralph Cluny, Cherry’s aged fiance. | iste on his broad chest. “Just when we had bargained for,” Cherry ex-| Pruitt coming over to see my traus- Of his wholesale grocery. Concrete Pa plained to Faith, “The original price |scau and try on. their bridesmaid pia [oe Whar ei Peer Pei RI rate snipes alata eepttey gape was a thousand, but Ralph said Tfdresses. You ean just simply phone cary ti Porartadlin’. Clete’ aed the ited thecern dane til: \ geese: liked, and really, darling, you've ot toda , that’s all, Long Lane! Fay might call a twenty tho and dolter to admit that Pve accumulated the | Allen! - garege a barn.” Iéther Dorn, That professor . chap| me! most marvelous. trousseau any girt! “Long” thrust his sleek dark head - During the ersared that followed, gave him a slug that set him back a While Faith, tired from her stren-} almost touched hers. Round spots of “Dear George!” se frau pear ag ese yng uous day of ‘Saturday baking and, color glowed on the tan of high “(To Be Continued) rolling down his sleeves as calm as cleaning, was setting the table for | cheek bones. on our life!” he (Copyright, 1986, NEA" Serve, fees) HES ale thee fete inele ameel bees happy voice at the telephone. chicken on the roost, even if you are “The other guy: was holding dnie's “Absolutely gorgeous. I'm. dying| makin’ a fool o’ yourself, marrying ¢Fét Of beauty. arm, Dorn put on his hat and walk for you to see everything. Selma's’ that old monkey-gland! Fay’s comin,’ ed away like a deacon going to ee Pe Pe bridesmaid dress, and I want you to|{ don’t care! And you're goin’ to be Movie Sideligh and Wis coat quer: bie: sem: Bixcalee®: come and bring’ yours. Faith's is/ decenb to her, see, or Til—I'l tell ts torn and flapping out be- ae ” ready, too—yeah, a perfect dream! | where 1 saw you last night. Get me? Pascoe ae |-nWetherel turned to Eve. “This is Faith’s dress was more important| shoulder as she ran into the dining light in color taken to gazing fe fy than my wedding dress. No, don't| room. “Oh, dad! Your best girl, Sel- at black velvet before stepping onto ove, a ; let Bill come. This is going to be a| ma Pruitt,’ is coming over tonight! ,a set to darken their starry orbs, The’ ,,EV¢ looked at him disguetedly. jamas, Oh, my dear! You'll be sur-| going to show Frances and’ Selma — Wethere! sulked. "Well, I'd like prised!—Oh, naughty! He won't| my ¢rousseau, and all of us are eoing| Months of research and to know why @ new fellow like either! He's too old!—He is sweet,|to put on the dresses we're going to Were spent for a one minute scene in Waters should step in and wreck ien't he? All right, elght oelock, sure 7 ye: coming over tonight, too. Won't ¢ "She waltzed ‘into the dining roort| be, alee?” # plunged from a burning trestle his. pin should be lifted! and flung her arms about Faith, “When do we put the feed bags ee eke river below, with 1800 extras ,, Eve made # gesture of incredulity, an ecstasy of vanity and anticipation, “We'll all dress up, and give Dad and Muggy and Joy and Junior the kick of their lives! Oh, Faith! I'm si proud of my trousseau! De: think we ought to h: a policeman to guard the house nights? Ralph's | afraid someone will try to steal the on, 2” “Long”: drew a ‘chair dressed as Union ‘and Confederate < pay to the table and began to' soldiers on either bank of the riv. & cushion jazz tune with his fork and, The cost covered the reconstruction into place, a back against it end| ¢! ay! We and sauer-| of the locomotive, the salaries of the ! mother eigaret. “You haven't “Ate the kangaroo’s ‘extras, the cost of their uniforms, arf poe they were fighting “Yooked _ uncomfortable. e erection of the bridge. ike ti I don't know,” he said slow- fe “I don't really know.” He looked artealy. y at indy Judit oa fee eee mS appened after sel erate them? Judith asi Tom the prof, walked off and the dishes now cause eld Fae T guess they fl came on Superstitions that long have influ- Sens. to tell you the news.” enced the stage folk have been carried Eve: rang for the maid. “Bting onto the mar. lots. Among those who some. ae and sandwiches,” pe are careful of their luck are Walter said. back to her Merrill, Dolores Costello, Louise Fa- guests, poy wmited. he best rem- zenda and Syd Chaplin, Merrill dis- edy for heroics and hysterics is food,” posed of an antique ring he had pur- she said. “Let's forget Erie ‘and chased in Miami, Fla. because a Dorn and have a good chat smong fortune-teller warned him its posses- oursel ; sion meant luck, Miss Costello Wetherel responded with bis rope] facile flow of ir, Tom Bal refused to pose for a photograph in nen 8 meer. Fon t ay (Mh lor ca sal oe ie ike ereckied em silk kimona originally made for a and hear jass music and see nearly Lane, going | to the as; “ain’t your Ma comin’ to sup-| | Medium close-ups and long hots of harve: ters dinner in Thomas ee an’s new picture took four day: stew and corned beef and reall: it, since that long write-up in | EVERETT TRUE ‘BY CONDO es AND © COULD ENUMERATE ONG THING APTER ANOTHER JUST AS RIDICULOUS! . HERS In THE UNITED STATES, MR. TRUE, WS TacKCS THINGS HAPHAZZARD yet a frequent mouthful member of the Japanese imperial fam- ily because of a certain embroidered design on the back. | is A bit of movie realism: was Poe W, H. Whythe,, warrant officer attempting to portray a death’ scene iin the British h Navy for four years, but she anjoyed the music from an- and at present an operative with a othe: ok j New York detective agency, was en- decided t 0 postpon: | gaged by Herbert Brenon to act the til the following day. iI part of a sleuth, — mise” un- OVER (IN EUROPE AHEY Dowt Do THAT WAY. — A town was built, Gloria Swanson continues to ignore. tated and 3,000 Paris and New York styles. Not only with livestock and ‘does she wear +: ankles, but her hair once more is, long. Miss Swanson lias a personal designer Co! who is working with her. in the de- the Columbian hi velopment of are yee for het pri- Mount Rai: vate wardrobe costum« Studio, workers are glad wh: ter comes. On interior wets under t ‘he pet lights, the temperature often rises hundred biped Dlay ers esi heavy grease pai ra nullerer a a poenty pops, vehicles Men.” Gorge in Fecent pi ts je of neck clippers.” His jerman circus Acrobat imp ‘war cam) France’in thei ‘ shaved aa the e picture is comple ol ees bapa as to be oe by no be played Sh Md ber Dent shea The trio, viol 4 demand s folly: ie} even in the pale moonlight, like a 200 people dancing. Lya de Putti was| College. uch, so the Director stampeders equ! alpped e er skirts down to her Jackson Hole rountey, of se Wyoming for. lorado, ag Park near Banff in Bernardi- sf settings for other no monniales fone ings for Clyde Cook, comedian, shaves wie ip i hed =n tke Picuare Wire” forbids that he be stesely to the best of ee on on. Judith s it the other side of the fire- place, Tost in thought. e maid brought her. tray and ‘peuved coffe Eve feo with, much light banter. But when Judith declined the sandwiches, she made no attempt to force her to eat. The little gilt clock on the mantel ae came in og win, re rm the tray. i you'll call a taxi Aeron, me, going ru run yj room and get my things, te your ve. When ee came down zr. she ye the landing. Her name ry aan spoken in the room below. Flushing a@ little at her own invol- untary move toward eavesdropping, she walked on down. It seemed to her that Eve and Will stopped talk- ing when she entered the living room. Eve's smile was warm and her mgd tight, as Judith stood in the =. door. “Good night, nde dith,” said Eve. “Have a good s! and think over what I've said, in ke wn. Judith and closed cool night air blew through an open window of the car be aches her face, and she lay in a state jive relaxation during twenty minutes of breakneck speed through quiet streets. A grinding het brakes and a vio- oe jolt brought her ru her drowse. “Damn fool,” the chauffeur was ; inder his breath. “Park a a corner like that and not leave a light burning! Wrong side of the street, too.” Judith blinked. They were in Col- lege road, not ten yards from the Stedway steps. In front of them, at the curb, stood a long, low racer. As Judith stared at it, someone rose from the driver's seat and came tu- the taxi. ric!” she gasped. The chauf- feur had been omen | further im- | Saag ogee at the careless parker. Now he gazed at Judith in amaze- ment. Eric handed him a bill and — Judith out of the car. stood on the si Ik gazing up at him. The black eye looked, piece of raw He led her toward the car. “I've waiting for you a long half, “I had to see you tonight.’ Judith was silent. He helped her into the car and sat down beside her. “It was pretty late to — " he said, “but I simply had — looked ae him. ric met her gaze. “Because I coniaet bear it away from you an- other minute. Can't we drive out a little way and at least have privacy for our conversation?” he urged, anxiously. “We'll be back in an hour.” “Yes,” she said. Eric began the conversation. suppose you'll have to be told about the fight. Everybedy in school will know it tomorrow.” “1 already know it.” she told him uf Weth- fight. he said. Judith, and. erel’s- report of the “Damned busybody,” was his com- ment. Judith sh they'd , us alone a minute longer, I'd have laid that sti Judith smiled wickedly. pee +. a black éye toot” Eric the car and faced her. — don't know what he’s got —Judith, are you in love with that moratiaing fool?” it of ec peerersity, had seized Judie, if I am?” vi hat Eric's “You'll never get him. TH tell you that right now,” wr said, stubbornly. Fong how do you know?” she as “I can’t tell you that. But you mark my words. Peter Dorn will never ask you to mary him.” Judith drew back. “That sounds auch with conan Be he her hands closer for a minute, dropped one of them tod‘allpsedon mem sareund ‘ber jt yee guess what I'm going to say, J i “don't choose to guess,” swered, a little stiffly. eee Ei tell you. I ment ta ok ju to marry me—tonight, at Earl- am. I've got a license clerk wait- ing for me there.” (To Be Continued) Jafith benien to have her doubts aboat Eric, and Dr. Dern comes to the! her with an apology. mored by Michigan State cently London’s average. rainf: pl but in Freetown, th capital of 5) ae Lanse, 131 inches Pye rain descend from th