The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 23, 1935, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper | THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Bstablished 1873) State, City and County Official Newspaper Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D, and entered at the postoffice et Bismarck @s second class mail matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Archie O. Johnson Gecretary and Treasurer Daily by carrier, per year Daily Bismarck) .. Weekly by mail outside of North year ... * Weekly by mail by mail, per year (in Bismarck). eee Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Datly by mai) outside of North Dakota . Weekly by mail in state, per year . Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Kenneth W Simons Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exci ‘use for republication of ail news dispatch: it or not otherwise credited in this new: uitied to credited rT the local news of spontaneous origin oublished. hei rein. All rights of republication of ali other matter herein are also reserved. Inspiration for Today Their throat is an open sepulchre; with their tongues they have used deceit; the poison of asps is under their lips.—Romans 3:13. eee Where the speech is corrupted, the mind is plished. Such a one is that publicized by the Het- tinger County Herald at New England which relates how the family of Tom Lee, a cripple, has been protected by a bit of neighborly interest. Public Opinion Although unwarranted activity Farm Holiday association has put the organi- vation in disrepute in some sections of this and other states, a case crops up now and then in which considerable good has been accom- ir and also by the ehind the Sceties | in Washington By RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, Nov. 23—Mr. Arthur Walsh, the new assistant administrator of Federal Housing Administra- tea, is about as astonishing a fellow as you're likely to 3 meet, i He can make music with his bare hands. Actually plays tunes with them. Cupping palms and fingers together, he achieves a sort of wind instrument from which he can produce melodies with a sound which 4s an approximate compromise between a kazoo and a whistle and not unpleasant, either. At banquets where stuffed shirts were boring every- body stiff with speeches, Mr. Walsh has been known to slip his hands under the table and, quite anonymously, to emit with disturbing audibility such tunes as “Show Me the Way to Go Home” and “How Dry I Am.” New Dealers, accustomed to no end of oddities, agree Ten awe that this is the darndest thing they ever saw or eard. Also, Walsh's new appointment is an improvement over most prevolus top-rank appointments in FHA. He is @ protege of Charles Edison, formerly worked with the Edison laboratories, did some good federal housing work in New Jersey, and more lately has been FHA’s deputy administrator in charge of modernization loans, - see the to OUTLOOK IS BLEAK A recent officia! survey showed 37 federal agencies to have “definite responsibilities In housing.” The New Deal has sparred with the housing problem more or less furiously. Housing is the one big thing Roosevelt's inti- mate friends say he will grapple with in his second administration—if any—and nearly all the outstanding American housing experts are or have heen here on the federal payroll or as consultants. What all those housing people whisper privately to your correspondent almost exactly pardilels a letter just received from a former high official who went away to supervise one of the largest non-profit housing experi- ments now under way anywhere. Let us quote: “I have just been through the process of actually getting some houses started. These are supposed to be minimum houses, not luxury homes or even good houses, but minimum decent houses that will stand up for 20 years and house an average family. “So far, it seems the job can’t be done for much less than $6,000, which means they will have to rent for $60 a month to carry themselves. “According to income figures by Brookings, 71 per cent of the families in this country can’t afford that much for housing. No wonder there is a housing short- age. “Owning or renting comes out the same way—hous- ing costs too much.” one HARD TO RIGURE OUT “I've been over this question of reducing building material costs from one end to the other,” continues this expert, ‘over the labor problem, over the expensive distribution system, everything. It all adds up to the same figure and yet you can’t make an appreciable cut in it Well, It’s an Appropriate Ti ——— By William Brady, M. D. juestions pertaining to health but not disease or diagnosis. Write letters briefly and in ink. Address Dr. rady in care of The Tri e. All queries must be accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Dr. Brady will answer PULLING THE LEG OF THE SCIATICA PATIENT , the lower part of the spinal cord dowr through the back of the had sciatica will readily that is you don’t know what is the matter. ‘Yelaxation of the sacroiliac junction, called it before we regulars got onto . Te may occur trom general diabetes or syphilis; sometimes the pelvis. Treatment depends remedy. the affected better Hodgen’s and the distor- ‘While the patient is having his leg pulled, heat in one form or another, or diathermy, and medication may be combined with the correctional orthopedic treatment. This method of treatment has proved especially successful in cases where the trouble is of gradual onset, the patient “nervous” or perhaps branded “neurasthenic” under “nervous strain,” and subject to backaches and leg, paing when tired or worn out. The fundamental factor in these cases is fatigue and muscular insufficiency. Not a bad plan to keep up your Third Brady Symphony practice, ladies and ed raeaa leading strenuous lives. You escape a lot of ailments by keeping fit. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Depilatory Please advise whether the following razorless shave is harmful: fix 3 ounces of barium sulphide, 3 ounces of quicklime and 3 ounces, or orris root powder or powdered starch. Sift. Apply by meking a paste by adding water to a little of the mixed powder, spread over the face, let ; Stand three to five minutes, then wipe off with smooth piece of wood and wash, (8. M.) Organ prelude: “March de Fete”— jecker. 5 Anthem: “We Plough The Fields”— it 7:30—Guild groups | Additional Churches | >—_—_—————————_—_—_—___+ c I, ting at the church, y Organ offertory: “Melody"—Fry- pen’forum for young men at the Answer—Only ‘objection to such clfemical shave is that the chemicals ST. GEORGE'S CHURCH . Tear pa eee hariaaivine: ton are likely to produce too much irritation of the skin. olo, se — ; Corner Third and Thayer Sermon: “When Love Was dusti-| ii a. im—United — Thanksgiving (Copyright 1935, John F. Dille Co.) Rev. N. E. Elsworth, Rector baecices eaceanowes E fled,” by Walter E. Vater. service at the Presbyterian church, The mortgage on Lee’s home was fore- closed and he was ordered to move. The actual eviction was halted and townsfolk and farmers began an effort to get the matter straightened out. The federal government, refused a loan because the property was over-mortgaged. The application bounced back and forth like a Mexican’ jumping bean on a hot platter. Finally, the government agreed to make a Joan if the buildings were repaired according to specifications and 30 men volunteered to do the work. The county commissioners cut the taxes $75 to make the deal possible. As a result, Lee now is in better shape than he has been for a long time. During the long process Gordon Gardner, mayor of New England, and R. H. Horne, president of the holiday associa- tion in Slope and Hettinger counties, found theinselves working hand in hand. The entire thing was a demonstration of neighborliness and friendly interest, carried on intelligently and quietly. Such things do much to offset the unfav- orable publicity received by groups which were dominated by hot-headed individuals seeking only to win a name for themselves. Where holiday associations have respected public opinion and cooperated with it, rather than try to direct it, they have won more respect than in other areas where it has been made merely an excuse to flout the law. Not a Bad Showing Despite frequent adverse comment on North Da- keta’s public debt, both state and municipal, this state's cbligations, in proportion to it’s resources, are far below the general average for the rest ot the nation, according to a survey by The Annalist, a publication by the New! York Times company. One reason for this, according to the survey, is that North Dakota's debt has not increased much during the last 10 years, whereas some other states made the late twenties the occasion for a real spending spree. ‘The result is that our debt, in proportion to our resources, is only 55 per cent of the national average ‘nd there have been no defaults on state obligations and few of a municipal character. At times the North Dakota burden has seemed heavy to the taxpayer. It may be that he has not re- ceived full returns on the money borrowed in the hope of creating better conditions, But these things do not change the fact that we seem to have managed our public affairs with more foresight and restraint than some other sections. It is a compliment to the intelli- gence of North Dakota’s electorate. Certainly we have fhad as many proposals designed to increase public spend- fng as have most other states. Spirit of the West For a concrete example of the spirit of the west, which presumably encompasses all that is forceful and constructive, the rest of the country might take a look at Helena, Mont. That city has suffered, all told nearly 1,000 earth shocks within the last two months. Some have been mere “quickies” as folks in our neighboring state call them, while others have been full-fledged earthquakes, sufficiently severe to destroy buildings and imprison The experience has been enough to shake the stout- est heart, but Helena has taken it in it’s stride. A few people have moved away but those who remain say they don’t want them back, that they lack the spirit which is anywhere. thing else cannot make a decent business out of housing at the present state in the arts of production—the pres- ent state being about a 1906 period (poorer, by the way,|th | Epito RS “Mortgage tinkering, housing act, hot air, and every- than 3890 construction). “I’ve even looked over all the prefabricated houses and see nothing good yet. It’s always something a lot better (so they say) for a little more moriey, when we need something almost as good for a lot less money. “Each is trying to adapt his material or plant to something new instead of setting out bodily to find a new thing irrespective of what it may turn out to be.” oe. HOPE FOR SUBSIDY Resettlement administration is trying to find the “new thing.” PWA Housing hopes to provide a few homes for lower middle class incomes of $1,500 to $2,000 a year, but to achieve that it must operate with a 45 per cent subsidy and a 3 per cent interest rate for 60 years! About all housing experts here hope for is enough PWA and RA “demonstrations” to inspire widespread public demand for heavy government subsidies for low- cost housing such as we have been granted in most European nations. «Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) With Other show what they say. Reprinted to | We may or may not agree with them, “Huapei,” North of China (New York Herald-Tribune) The Japanese military men in North. China— Doihara, Tada and others—who are forcing upon the responsibie Chinese military authorities of five provinces financial, economic, military and administrative seces- sion from the recognized Nanking government, have been preparing to call it a “voluntary” demonstration in favor of “co-operation” with Japan. These Chinese leaders, however, have had the moral courage—not ordinarily common among them—to strip the Japanese program of make-believe. They have announced in ad- vance that whatever declarations they may sign against Nanking will come as the result of demands and threats from Doihara which the Japanese army, mobilized on the frontiers, is prepared to support by foree of arms. These officials therefore brand the steps which the Japanese army is taking to set up an autonomous North China government under its own direct control as an overt act of aggression in violation of what the nine- power treaty calls “China's administrative integrity.” Their action completely destroys the excuse which Japan was preparing to megaphone to the world; that no viola- tion of China’s sovereignty has been perpetrated or is contemplated. An examination of the name which these military adventurers propose to give the alienated territory con- firms this view. The Huapei Lien-sheng Tzuchih Cheng- chuan falls far short of describing the prospective gov- ernment of five provinces as an independent sovereign state. Phrase by phrase, this title means: North of China (but not North China), United Provinces, Self- directing, Governing Authority. Nanking’s sovereignty is not specifically denounced. There is a catch, however, in the term “Huapei,” which is to be the shortened form of the new nation’s name. According to all pre- cedents in Chinese nomenclature this means “to the north of China,” and not North China, which a Chinese would normally and naturally call Peihua. Here is a Japanese way of advertising to the Chinese people, great and small, learned and unlearned, that however the rest of the new state's title may be translated and interpreted abroad to prove that sovereignty still resides in Nanking, the territory is henceforth to the north of and definitely outside of China. ‘These are, therefore, simply “face-saving” devices for covering an act of territorial theft. Nevertheless, there will be loud outcries in Japan if Washington, or any other national capital, has the bad taste to pronounce these devices inadequate to the discharge of interna- tional treaties. When an actor in an Oriental drama pushes a chair to the footlights, calls it a city wall and proceeds to declaim from it as a city wall, it would be very bad taste for any member of the audience to com- plain aloud that it did not look like a city wall. Any one whd now protests that Huapei does not look like @ strictly honest Chinese limitation upon China's admin- istrative integrity is going to be in just such bad odor with Japan’s delighted audience to this latest army 8:00 a, m.—Holy Communion. 9:30 a. m.—Church school. 10:30 a. m.—Morning prayer and sermon. Text: Psalm 105-1. Ofefrtory anthem: “The Earth Is the Lord's" by Simper. Sermon, hymn and anthem appro- a thankful one. Do as they did on the first Thanksgiving Day. Go to FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH accept Him as our Savior and Friend; we pledges Bim our loyalty in every relationship of life.” ‘We cordially invite you to join in our services and our fellowship. 9:45—Bible school, Departmental instruction, The adult Bible class meets in the auditorium. 11:00—Morning worship: ing Lites Heights and Dept :30—Tuxis society. 30—Evening fellowship uilding a New Person.” 8:30—Young people's half hour. All “Touch- service: Morning worship, 10:30 a. m, Epworth League and Builders Evening worship, 7:30 p. m. A service of vital interest, singing of the old-fashioned hymns led by the 21 Actual being. of the west and high officials of the state and national. governments were invited to be on hand. ‘Then came the quakes and the question of what to do sbout the “golden light” fete. Helena’s answer was quick and to the point. They would go ahead with it as scheduled. They did, just as though the hand of un- fortuitous circumstanee: had left the city unscathed, Their attitude was the same as thet of North Dakote “We believe in Jesus Christ; we} Organ postlude—Simper. Mid-week devotional service Wednesday evening at 7:30 We heartily invite you all our services. BISMARCK GOSPEL TABERNACLE Corner of Rosser and Eleventh on p.m. to attend 11:00—Morning worship. “The Holy Spirit in History.” in the old and_ new te: His manifestation 200 p. service, pWorld Peace in the, Light of Prophecy.” What are the signs of time pointing to, will there be better days coming? Week services: Tuesday night, 8:00—A series studies on the life and the ministry of Christ, by the pastor. Thursday night, 8:00 p. m.—Special Thanksgiving service. Friday night, 8:00 p. m.—Tle C. under the direction of Jack Andre’ You are cordially invited to -the com- ing services. Special music and song each service. study of the Bible and its message 7:30 p. Pianist—Catherine Mason. A special invitation to young peo- ple. 8:30 p. m.—The Senior B.Y.P.U. Sermon by Adjt. Smith of the Sal- vation ee Special music in kee ing with the day, | Th ing eee teal to the Bismarck Elva Nelson. as ervice st gece Nov. 24—Twenty-third Sunday after boo, TT ‘<eeT Trinity: {Rural Church Notices} 2:90 2:30, The Ladies aid meets after the service. Mrs. Helmer Arneson and . Adolph Peterson are the hos- tenses. Driscoll Luther League meets at m.—Sunday school and/8:00 p. m. The Zion aid’s annual sale and Pp. Peyialtsracaiwaye melomes fae eteesas teat aces PiF00 aQ@hurgh worship, [supper will, be held on Nov. 3. Din- Service on Thanksgiving Day wil eae : jermon| ‘wo Hours of Destiny.”|ner from 12-3:00 p. m. beat 9 a.m. Let us mate this day |Mandigo, Su MARIA LUTHERAN CHURCH The Driscoll sale and dinner is set Braddock DRISCOLL PARISH Divine service at Driscoll in the day. for Thanksgiving 4 ‘We bid.everyone a hearty welcome G, Adolph ‘Johns, Pastor of | EN-.5 Ss hurch, Let Turkey and Cranberr: ‘ eid Saturday afternoon, Nov. 23—|English at 11:00. to these services. Sauce come last, not first. 7) 1a Bit Gadi service from sta-|radies ald at the Carl & Neleon home| Divine service at Zion in English | C. T. Brenna, Pastor, 8:00 ’ m.— Evangelistic by © 1925 NEA Service, Inc. BEGIN HERE TODAY NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY shiny demonstrator roadster in- to the shop, turned off the switch, and got out. He was notorious for a steady and was about to get into the car when he saw Mark Hopkins’ neat blue roadster parked against the opposite wall. “ain’t no roads around this part ef the country got red mud in Julius; then he got in the demon- traced a road that ducked under a raflroad bridge, skirted the rear of the steel plant's enormous reservation, running between the i : 3 és sep her to marry him. young people of the city are invited FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH he reece Sullus, the colored man who| factory and a railroad yard, and to this friendly fellowship. Fourth Street and Avenue D o. Calnen: renter aignt cad Wednesday, 7:30—Mid-week prayer Ellis L, Jackson, Minister bets megts SANDY HARKINS |took care of the shop nights, was|then came out on a long slant, service. Sunday, November 24th, 1935: . 7 introduces Bel coming up with a bucket in one|tunning off to Join—yes, Central McCABE METHODIST Briscoran ltetire the state peni- MR. use MS, LEWIS [hand and a length of hose in the|street—at an angle, “| CHURCH 0 a, m.—The church school: ev sett some lother, He grinned when he saw] Hmm, eaid Bobby, maybe it Walfer E. Vater, Pastor | The church school invite you to a Bobby. matches up after all. The Central street bridge is closed for repairs. “9 ” Organ prelude: '“March’'—Gounod, | for life today. ‘Boss eure got her dirty today,’ by Miss Ruth Rowley, organist, '| ‘The Evarts class for adults. he sald. “Told me to wash ‘em|5° if he wanted to go out here, Anthem: “Praise The Lord’—Ran-/ The Quain class for young people. Up good right off.” he'd have to detour, and this back degeger. ‘ The Tuxis ss for young people. 8. 4 ral . road, Pulaski road, it is—would Organ offertory: “Arabesque’—]| Graded classes for ail other ages. apartment bat The roadster was dirty, unde- take him. But why go so far out? Wrangell. 11:00 a. m.—Morning worship. Com- in wife have disappearee. niably, It had gleaming wire}, Solo, selected—Mrs, Iver Acker. munion Sunday. Jean hel indy coaviure e- |wiceis, and ah abundance of | cere Plenty of other cross Sermon: “From Despair to Thanks-| Plan{st—Elizabeth_Raaen. lee he had nothing to do with © 4 ‘streets that'd feed him into Cen- giving,” by Walter, E. Vater. Prayer response—The church choir. eee coe Tee aeecemtee, ‘Sater jbright chromium-steel om hood | trai gtreet a lot sooner, and more Organ postlude: “Gioria"”—Andre, Selection: Thanksgiving Anthem— ee Re eee cenéz jand bumpers; and these were| 4 van Sunday school 12:00 noon. Classes|The church choir. Somes te cee Ber and neke her te | iastered with a pectliar reddish| {rect t0o Why go along Pu- for all ager, The adult classes es-| Sermon: “The Meaning and Incep- on Wee Gea ke to ton laski? pecially invite you, A place for every|tion of Thanksgiving Day.” dust that completely obscured b ramia member of the family. 7:30 p. m.—The evening service: their ordinary brilliance. T last the solution came to League, 6 p.m. All young people of| Trumpet solo: selected—Wilitred CHAPTER XXV “Now where you suppose they him. Hopkins’ destination high school age and abi . i i ot th mused DRAMA heart Pina “Forgetting God.” Boxer WALLACE drove the op Meander scan it, | must have been on Pulaski.street itself, beyond the steel plant. Or- dinarily he would have gone out Central and then turned down choir. Special music and a helpful} Thanksgiving leader—Miss Margie \ « j’em. I seen plenty down south, gospel message. You will enjoy this| Albrecht. “Those brakes heed adjusting, u -|Pulaski; with the bridge closed, eeerite Tuesday at 3 p. m.—The Ladies ald] Red," he. ealiod out te @ Inve tae Des SIRF mene Aran Rare. Nor he had had to take another mm rel- mechanic who came aoaaa wi caused bim to go down strolling over to him. Bite aalisn ono es rey bispoey aoe 2 corre oe a e f Red nodded, chewing gum slowly. to a wall fitting and motioned the ange plant ri 8 point Sey ueen O ueens Til tell \MacFariane,” he said. |Bobby to stand back lest he bel according to Julius, the ore dumps 4. . He looked dourly at the automobile. | splashed, covered the road with this reddish : Trouble is, Mac fan’t here now.| “Uh-huh,” he said, twisting tho| dust. His goal, then, must have HORIZONTAL —- Answer to Previous Puzzle _ 11 Ethiopian Him and the boss went off some-| connection “She do look|been on Pulaski, somewhere be- 1,7 Wife of the PMATXTI ML IRIOML IGIOIRIKIU Sein ya athe nied mt = like fron ore. I don’t know where|tween the steel mill and Central ree of Etat OIE NTT) IN jOrbIL IN} ce au they'll be back.” ie wand dows tack of the Buapire Th th 11 Floating ico. FOBT ROS ERE A ERRE LA Go] 12 To, hasten. MacFarlane was superintendent [Steel plant.” Per yeget bag ier yor cayev 12 Polishing 2 4 Ts fl ‘ KISI 15 Sheltered of the repair shop of the State Auto] “Was he down there?” asked/ing, getting away from the sales Ranching niaga G place. Sales agency, and all orders for re | Bobby. The Negro looked up. |room as soon as he could, Bobby 1a Vertet 3 AINIOIN] 24 23 You and [. pairs to demonstrator cars were} “Z don’t know where he was,”| went to a drive-it-yourself agency, erbal. ISIEISIEIL II] 95 wither. supposed to be routed through him.jhe said. “When he come in, I/hired « car, and set out to ses 17 Once more.” Palen °” ore ot ag Ha thout the ‘Contrel street bridge] "ite reached Pes 5 hearing. “Listen, I got s prospect wants | Sbout Central street bridge! _ He reached Pulaski road, an ill- 8 Boapsn 28 Calmed. a demonstration this ” he| being closed, That’s all I know.” wed street, and si cee 29To help. sald. “Can't I get a special job. it], All of this seemed to add up| followed it, Before long the high wheel. — TETAMESICIANY) 30 Insight. Mac doesn't get back in time?” 2 nothing at all. Bobby stood|red towers of the Empire Steel 20 Carried. FILINIEISIT} Red chewed his gum solemnly,|{°F,®, Moment longer, watching | plant loomed up on his right. His 22 Female sheep. 48 Wise man. prayer. strator and drove out to give his/as he saw that om the opposite RTherefore. — G0Gems. VERTICAL be phcia pyre ager rm peor |" PToaDect” & spin, side of the street there was a ‘o harass. 51 Heaven!: To interro- "ody. 2 Ofperntiee- anrt take the Blame," sald Bobby. gate. 52 Row of a 2 Mole. “You say Mac went off with the Ht conpall ae 3Noblewomen, | munity. | boss? Where'd they go?” 4 5 i “ headdress. _§4 Epilepsy sBaphoat 43 Musical com- Pr gnctay erate nig ierngisadyre 33 Metrical symptom. z position. over there—” he jerked his thu syllables. 55 She broad- 6One who 44 Musical char. at a sedan whose taken,| He drove along with ting, 35 Noise. casted a radio compiles ata- acter. crumped up like an accordion: ‘twice | excitement, past the stee) mill and 37 Consumes. —— tor pre- tistics. 45 Toilet box. “when Hopkins came out and called ’|the railroad yards, between a long 39To accomplish vention of war 7Repairs. . 46Cattle si him, They talked for a minute and foreman | double line of unpainted len 40God of war. 56She completed 8Short letter. 47 To boast. then they went away together.’ the mid-/houses, mean and disreputable in 42 Selections. 1 of 9 God. 49 To sin. “Oh. Well, if you can get this chose appearance. The region was a 45 To recede. — and 10 Doses. brake fixed evening I'll ap anybody’s|slam, and a miserable one; what i oe | ae oe ng rea |Hopkin dow het R = Bobby walked back to the wales bd lage cert pinch a ® room, won wi 8) Pt NET PT NT foretian end the head ofthe eee reel tnd rane "the “right lag S N . could have gone. He remembered Larry: Ve -lots and shacks mt Larry Glenn's admonition. to keep around |made.up.the landscape: of fac- his eye on everything that seemed where tories, or business houses of any era Tt io tt earn oo tt gue rooney am reece, an, : 3 2 nary, bope could un- : , 4 SSS N tereabouts of the plant where the cars, .jended... Was. this. = wild goose dl oh this sfternoa'e dolage bare oa? reten he[,becamsoaea, Bel | ee he [something is had ‘ce ‘atid bee > an hasty supper in @ nearby was} Went of to the left, between two NWN tie assoc, He went back to the uthest-|peured edound bast ins plare . : the agency,’ He went back to the ‘eonthennt-| peared around 0 bend ‘in a piace ee TT NST | shop and found bis demonstrator in an al-/Where the rolling, tenantiess, S Seth rates inter et Stile, tn id y lc Was‘gone, ea es PELE TI , @ tag on the steering wheel bear see—Jou must, be it.” mused a Re ing the words, “The brake drum ds | took Turney road, and Turney was|Bobby. “There's no other possi- "| { 7 Ss worn down, I fixed it OK tor now |a dead-end street, ending right at/bility. 111 just Gnd ont.” ] but she needs. new one. Tell|the steel mill. He spum the wheel and started es jac.” Back of the plant, then? Here] Of along the lonely driveway. = 6 point’ (To Be Continued) Wt was. 4 Bobby’ eee Va * a

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