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“y TRAINING 0 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1937_ In Woods Four Days RO F HOME INCOME FROM HARD |{-—civieteader —7/AUTO ACCIDENTS VISITORS IN PUBLIC: WELFARE WORK OK'D| Program at State University Will Be Financed by Three Agencies ‘Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 13—(7)— Approval for a special program of in- service training of home visitors for public welfare work in North Dakota was granted Saturday by the state public welfare board. Conducted at the Universty, lice. As a step toward setting up the program, President John C. West of the university announced appoint- ment of Miss Margaret Reeves of ‘Milwaukee as assistant professor of sociology and director of graduate) classes in social work, An instructor | of sociology and social work field Practice will be added to the faculty at once, he said. A pre-professional social work cur-| Ticulum will be offered in preparation ) for the special training ofiered in one semester of graduate work including five advanced courses. CONTINUE from page one Withdraw to 2nd Line of Defense Nearer Shanghai withdrawal and in their wake left! Lang, Sterling, at 10:07 a. m. Sunday, land mines. Several detachments of| “'s Japanese were blown up when hungry soldiers raced into fields to pick tomatoes and other vegetables, ‘only to touch off the mines. The total military area evacuated by the Chinese during the last month tonight was estimated at 150 square miles. ‘The Japanese news agency. Domei, reported capture of Tatung, the sec- ond largest town in Shensi prov- ince, by a north China expedition- ary force of Japanese troops. An- other column occupied Kwangling, southeast of Tatung. Communist troops were| Teported massitig near Tatung. In Hongkong, P. V. Thomas, head of the American Seventh Day Ad- ventist mission chapel at Waichow, charged Japanese with deliberate bombing of the hospital despite the display of American flags. said Japanese warplanes bombed the hospital for 15 minutes Prominent ‘Thomas First Public Utterance Mori, a the governments, tinent E or alter. “Industrial index figures convince ‘us of our ability to fight through the » even if a third power ‘emergency, enters it.” ARSONISTS SENTENCED iste who at “3-3 4-SPR 9-3-3274 3+ DICIAL DISTRICT. RD Hi OFF, vs. EH. H. ONE AS H. a LANN! 5 4 aiice ANK J. . 8. W. MILLER, JAMES W. RAYMOND, © BURROWS, HARRY “BRON Jl BRON- SON, MARTHA ROGERS, BU Heian COUNRT. SORE OB ATION, and all other persons one the program will be financed by the wel- fare board, the university and the federal government, with the Grand Forks county welfare board providing | facilities for observation and prac- From Tokyo came the first public utterance from Japan’s bankers about the gover#ment’s stringent financial ‘and economic policies as they pertain to the Sino-Japanese war, Hirozo seen finance giant, told ee me id (Asiatic) con- ie Japanese people's heaven-decreed destiny, which neither the world nor we ourselves can chec! &. Paul, Sept. 13—()—Apprehen- sion and sentencing of three arson- jaded guilty to setting fire Dam and Thief River Falls was announced Monday by Frank YVetka, state insurance commissioner. SUMMONS STATE oe Daa DAKOTA, COUN- IGH. IN DISTRICT COURT FOURTH JU- PLAINTIFF, Lost Bruises and scratches testified as i Florence Jackson of Chelsea, Okla., suffered during the four days she was lost in the woods near Berryville, Ark. The child’s hair was matted with burrs and her skin lacerated by briars when she wan- dered to a farm home in the Ozarks of Southern Missouri. shown here in a Berryville hospital. LQUOR TAX. ‘WAY BELOW” ESTIMATES About One-Third Million Dollars Collected Since December, Gray Reports Approximately one-third of a mil- lion dollars has been collected. in North Dakota hard liquor taxes since the state went off the “dry standard” last’ December, Collections for the nine months of legal liquor total $338,186 and a com- pilation of monthly allocations from the office of the State Treasurer John Gray show that $234,314.58 was Poured back into county treasuries the first eight months. The apportionment for August has to the hardships four-year-old She is eocoorecennnnmmnne Births |_ Daughter, First Sgt. and Mrs. Otto | Hanson, Fort Lincoln, at 12:35 p. m. | Saturday, Bismarck hospital, | Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bismarck hospital. Son, Mr. and Mrs. Vorst, Bismarck, at 1: day, Bismarck hospital Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Wor- cester, Medora, at 10:52 a. m. Sunday, St, Alexius hospital. Marriage Licenses Viola McConkey and Lloyd Chap- man Keller, both of Bismarck. Florence Oliva Anderson and Erwin E Ricker, both of Bismarck. Alice Louise Knutdson, Bismarck, and Lloyd Gordon Fuglie, Miles City, Mont. Elizabeth Leach and Willard J. Carter, both of Bismarck. Hannes Vander 1:29 p, m,, Sun- HOTEL REGISTRATIONS Prince Hotel A. T. White, Bozeman, Mont.; C. Warner Howard, Moscow, Idaho; Stanley H, Gilman, Yonkers, N. Y.; Mr, and Mrs. W. B. Kiefner, Helena, Mont.; Mr. and Mrs. John H. Frey, Musford, N. Y.; Bill Goohey and Steve Birch, Great Falls, Mont. Grand Pacific Hotel Mr. and Mrs. R. Doering, Goodrich; ©. M. Bergen, Duluth, Minn.; Mr. end Mrs. J. J. Doyle, Wishek; Mrs. Jess Smith, Hebron; Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Brown, Chicago, Ill.; Georgia and Ivan Murray, Grassy Butte; Fred Bantz, Sr., Harvey; Bertha Lee, Minot; Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Stevenson, Het-| tinger; and Alvin L, Grosz, Artas. James, 3-year-old son of Mr, and Mrs. Elmer Jameson of McIntosh, 8. D., lies seriously injured in a Bis- marck hospital, the result of being kicked in the abdomen by a horse Saturday. It is believed he will re- cover without complications. Clifford Morlan, who has been spending his vacation in Fargo, has returned to Bismarck and accepted a position as barber at Robertson's Beauty studio. Articles of incorporation have been D. Gronna’s office for the Buchanan Lumber Co., at Hunter and the Nes- son Valley Coal Co., at Tioga, both with $25,000 authorized capital stock. Directors of the Buchanan firm will be O. I. Grotte, Winnifred P. Grotte and H. E. Buchanan, all of Hunter. J. C. Mattson, R. L. Simon and Ernest Bylin, all of Tioga, were named as directors of the coal company. Paul O. Netland, executive of the Missouri Valley council, Boy Scouts of America, will be the principal speaker at the annual meeting of the ‘West river district at Hettinger Wed- ND. ‘BEST? AT CARING FOR POOR|: pective shortage of private capital threatened Monday the success of the government's program to rebuild the American merchant marine. the maritime commission, said @ sur- vey now nearing completion indicated of the ship lines to hold up their end of the subsidy program. {iasm for the subsidy program was re- ported in maritime circles. Some pre- dicted the government would have to build the ships itself if a new mer- chant fleet is launched. Has Proved It, Can Be Done by Legislation, Says Langer at F-L Picnic Clarkfield, Minn., Sept. 13 —#)— Goy. William Langer of North Da- kota, and former Gov. Hjalmar Pet- ersen of Minnesota, now a member of the state railroad and warehouse commission were main speakers at & Farmer-Labor picnic near here Sun- day. Langer, introduced by Tax Com- missioner George A. Wallace, talked on the Bank of North Dakota and the state mill and elevator. Declaring he believed North ~Da- kota was the best state in the union for taking care of poor people, Gov. Langer declared his state has proved the fallacy of the statement it cannot be done by legislation, Capital Shortage Is Ship-building Barrier ‘Washington, Sept. 13.—()—A pros- Joseph P. Kennedy, chairman of an “apparent inability” on the part At the same time a lack of enthus- Frost Reported for First Time in N. D. rot yet been made and Treasurer Gray reports that approximately $75,000 remains on deposit in the liquor fund. Despite this showing, Gray said the collections are “way below” pre-state repeal calculations which. some had estimated would run between $40,000 and $50,000 in revenue monthly. Total apportionments to counties for the first eight months of the liquor law's operation show Cass county in the lead with $26,766.39, followed by Ward, $16,909.27; Grand Forks, $13,564.16; Burleigh, $12,728.13, and Morton, $10,001.81. In other counties, Adams received $1,954.96; Barnes, $6,733.59; 566.00; Foster, $2,212.54; Golden Val- $1,187.85; Hettinger, $1,820.98; Kidder, $2,006.60; LaMoure, $3,637.70; Logan, $1,748.33; McHenry, $4,465.14; McIn- tosh, $3,265.50; McKenzie, $2,418.65; McLean, $4,649.00; Mercer, $2,837.99. Mountrail, $3,829.96; Nelson, $3,- 912.19; Oliver, $433. Pembina, $4,- Pierce, $3,302.18; Ramsey, $7,- 790.95; Ransom, $3.115.49; Renville, $1,399.59; Richland, $5,818.26; Rolette, $3,786.48; Sargent, $2,663.89; Sheri- dan, $1,426.07; Sioux, $991.30; Slope, $547.64; Stark, $5,749.78; Steele, $1,- 464.52; Stutsman, $8,683.52; Towner, $1,928.60; Traill, $4,190.33; Walsh, Lams, $6,602.75. Lemke to Open 8-Day Talk Schedule in State *An eight-day speaking schedule beginning next Tuesday was trounced Monday for William Lemke of North Dakota. Water, conservation, the Frazier- Lemke moratorium and refinance bills and other farm legislation will be discussed by Rep. Lemke in the talks which will open Tuesday at Strong’s grove near Milnor at 2 p. m., and at the Lisbon courthouse at & Fm, His schedule will take him Wed- nesday to Spiritwood in the aftefnoon and the Valley City courthouse at 8 > m.; Thursday, Streeter town hall, Friday, McClusky courthouse at 2 p. m., and Mohall 8 p. m. He will speak at Yellow Banks, Tagestad ranch, north of Towne: at 2p. m., and Cando courthouse, 8 0. m., Sept. 18; Lakewood auditorium, near Devils Lake at 2 p. m., Sept. 19; EAmore hall, 2 p. m., and Park River Agricultural college auditorium at 8 p. m., Sept. 20; Langdon courthouse, Frost was reported for the first time this fall at North Dakota points when the temperature sank to 30 ie t., issued from Secretary of State James |®bove zero at Pembina Sunday Other low temperatures were reg- istered Wishek 34; Oakes 35; Ni poleon 39; Lisbon 35; Hankinson 36; Grand Forks 31; Devils Lake 38. No precipitation was reported for the 48 hours ending at 7:30 a. m., Monday. The forecast locally was partly cloudy Monday night, generally fair and cooler Tuesday. Government Begins Washington, Sept. 13.—(4)—The 2 p. m., and Carrington courthouse at 8 p. m,, Sept. 31, McKenzie By MRS. T. T. HUGHES The Ladies’ Aid held a meeting Wednesday afternoon with Credit-Easing Policy| day’ anniversary cloudy toni, fair and coo! not, s0 cool night; Tuesday east and south ley, $985.23; Grant, $1,936.55; Griggs, tee somewhat warmer toni, cooler northw. southeast port over the Great La! 5 Marie 30.34 inches, and over the north Pacific coat I 3 while from Manitobi gona, The Pi ae inches, Frost was reported a fe Sunday morning, but moderat peratures northern and central districts today. e $7,654.33; Wells, $3,887.15, and Wile | SF Norm: nua; Accumulated ex BI ARCK, Beach, clear . Carrington, clea: Crosby, cl: Dickinson, Jamestown, Max, clear . Minot, clear Pp. m.; Finley courthouse at 8 p, m.;| Parshall, cl Devi Grand Forks, clear Hankinson, clear Lisbon, cleat Napoleon, Pembina, Wishek, clear Moorhead, clear Pierre, sclay. Rapid City, peldy. Glendive, re, pel eerie, Dr. E. T. Klein, district Boy Scout commissioner and past master of the Masonic lodge, is prominent in the civic af- fairs of the Washburn com- munity. Weather Report WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly Tuesday generally fe Dakota: Partly cloudy, extre! southeast to- generally fair, cooler ortions. Generally fair except _unset- For North For South Dako! and Tue: Montana: night and Tu 3, cooler east pi | tion tonight; somewhat warmer Tues unset- it; Tues- cloudy, possibly 1 it and east warmer in extreme lay. For Minnesota: Becomin, ostly GENERAL WEATHER CONDITION The barometric pressure is high es region, 8. 8. Kamloo; 0 inches, ssure area extends uthwestward to Ari- 29.78 inches, Phoenix from akota e tem- shout the a low places in eastern Nor! prevail throu; eather is generally fair from the Lal region westward to the PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date ane | Ni Tot: 1, this month to dat fanuary Ist to dat y to di oe 13.65 to date .. 1.45 NORTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pet. clear 7 00 * 36 75 ear. 2 jooen Beit tteret tits , Cl i Lake, clea S222 Pere tetc rite tir 2303-9-3-3-3-3-3 0900: MINNESOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pet. 68 38 00 SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS High- Low- ent 1 4 80 83 86 MONTANA POINTS High- Low- iM it est PB poldy. 4: : | Lew! el Miles City, r Above record for WEATHER AT OTHER POINTS High- Low- Tex: 80, Idaho, KILL 108 IN U. 5. One Victim, High School Lad, Buried on What Would Have Been 17th Birthday (By the Associated Press) At least 108 persons were killed in automobile accidents throughout the nation over the week-end. One of them, a high school senior in New York, was brought home to be buried on what would have been his 17th birthday. The borrowed car he was driving crashed into a safety island. Fatal- ites by states: Arizona 4, Arkansas 2, California 14, Connecticut 1, Florida 1, Georgia 1, Idaho 1, Illinois 6, Indiana 5, Kan- sas 2, Kentucky 1, Maine 1, Massa- chusetts 2, Michigan. 10, Minnesota 2, Missouri 5, New Jersey 2, New York 3, North Carolina 4, Ohio 11, Okla- homa 2, Pennsylvania 12, Rhode Island 1, South Carolina 6, Texas 5, Virginia, 2, Wisconsin 2. FOUR DIE IN IOWA CRASH * Clinton, Iows, Sept. 13 —@— fifth Jack Gaston, Burlington, Iowa; Mrs. Jack Gaston, Burlington; the Gaston's four-year-old child, A woman passenger in the Gaston car not immediately identified, >—_____._____"_» | Additional Markets | —________-4 WINNIPEG CASH GRAIN Winnipeg, Sept. 13.—)—Cash wheat, No. 1 northern 1.27%; No. 2 northern 1.22%; No. 3 northern 1.17%. 50 No. 3 white 50%; No. 3 white INVESTMENT TRUSTS (By the Associated Press) \Over the counter in New York) Corp Tr A A 3.54. Corp Tr A A Modified 3.21. Corp Tr Accum 2.54. Maryland Fund 8.12, 8.89. No Am Tr 8h 2.44. Quart Inc Sh 15.41, 1 Sel Am Sh Inc 13.34, Sel Ino 8h 4.86, GOVERNMENT ND New. York, Sept. 13—(#)—Govern- ment Bonds: Treasury 4%'s 115.21, Treasury 4’s 110.31., CHICAGO STOCKS (By the Associated Presa) Midwest Corp 7%. CURB STOCKS New York, 8 13.—(@)}—Curb: American Gen. 8%. Cities Service 2%. Elec. Bond & Share 13%. Fisk. Rubber . MINNEAPOLIS STOCKS Minneapolis, Sept. 13.—(#)—Stocks 00 ©! North Dakota Resident close: First Bank Stock 12%. Northwest Banco 9%. New Y exchange mand in do! ol Britain 4.95%; Fra 5.26%; Germany free 4! travel 26.70; owae fe ie: Montreal in w York 99.98 Sues Republic Steel Cleveland, Sept. 13—(#)—Frances Falkenstein, Bottineau, N. D., with Iva Jensen; Evanston, Til, Monday had filed suit for $1,640,000 against 12 officers and directors of Republic Steel corporation, charging an “ire regular” stock transaction. A spokesman for Republic Steel said “the sult has no merit.” G. Lee Anderson is promi- nent in civic affairs at Grand Forks, being Grand Forks county coroner and a mem- ber of the city school board. SY Back Into Politics Forty Years Later Conshohocken, Pa., Sept. 13— @)—Forty years ago John A. Harrold was a member of the borough council here. Since then he has been a police- man, a fiddler, a salesman, sportsman and proprietor of a hotel. Today, at the age of 87, Har- rold is a candidate again—for borough council. He said he had decided it was time “to get back * into politics.” C ONTINUE D - from page one: A Hopkins Addresses 10,000 in Wahpeton * *. At Park Dedication or three times as many families living on less than $500 a year now than there were in 1922, And I know of states in which the average annual income per family has been only $200 Or £0, ‘I Get Upset’ “So when I hear that we can’t pass ® law to get factory workers pay up to $16 8 week as a minimum,” he con- tinued, “or that the supreme: court, #ays you can’t do anything much to help farm income, or that John Lewis 4s going too fast and too far, or that the government ought to quit sup- porting people on relief—or that the government ought not to do anything tw help farmers get cheap electricity or that farm co-operatives just simply must be treated as private profit mak- ing business, why then, I get a bit upset.” Monopoly is an old cry in the west, ke said, but the monopolies and price fixing existing today are more brazen, ly |more inclusive and more destructive than ever. REPORTS CRICKETS THICK Foxholm, N. D., Sept. 13—William || Clouse reports mormon crickets thick on his farm one-half mile. west of here. They are devouring what vege- tation the grasshoppers have left. Bismarck (Formerly Paramount) Today & Tues. ON WORLD AFFAIRS Army Officer Discusses Present Day Europe; Plans for Outing Made Observations of present European. conditions both military and econo- mic, made during a recent tour of the continent, were discussed before members of the Bismarck Lions’ club Monday by Capt. John C. L. Adams of Fort Lincoln. Captain Adams re- turned Aug. 5.from an extended tour in several European countries. European standards of living are much below those common in the United States, declared Adams, who said foreign travelers experience con- siderable difficulty in moving from country to country because of the rigid check, civil and military au- thorities maintain over them, 2 Adems declared the military as- pect of Europe today as “tense.” ., There will be no meeting next Mon- day,. Al Anderson, president, an- nounced, since next Sunday afternoon. members will frolic with Boy Scouts of Troop 10 at the annual Scout pic- nic at Birlea Hollow. Scouts will cross bats with a team composed of Lions’ club members in @ kittenball game after which there will be a picnic supper and a Scout camp fire program. All Lions club members were asked to meet at the Grand Pacific hotel at 4 p. m., Sun- day ready to go to the picnic grounds. Members of the troop committee in charge of arrangements for the outing are Bill Koch, Charles Schatz, ¥. C. McCurdy and J. W. Calnan. Bill Koch, who introduced Captain. Adams, and Frank Liebole were pro- - gram chairmen. Only guest was Henry J. Gilbertson, Fargo. Ask Reduction of N. D. Wheat Rates Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 13—(@)— A four-cent reduction on North Da- kota and Montana wheat end flour shipments to Chicago and east of there were asked in petitions to the Interstate Commerce commission filed by T. A, Durant, manager of the Greater Grand Forks Traffic associa- toin, and H. A. Bronson, attorney for ue North Dakota Terminal associa- n, i Seek Extradition of Youth to Wisconsin E. H, Sieg, Green Bay, Wis., parole © Officer, was in Bismarck Monday , seeking extradition papers which would permit him to return Edgar Reigle, youth held here since Aug. 31, to Wisconsin. i Reigle was arrested on # charge of Stealing gas from parked automobiles. Arrested at the same time were Har- ley Babcock and Mrs. Reigle. CAPITOL LAST TIMES TODAY government began Monday a new credit-easing course of action designed to assure continuance of the “easy” ceri ene fiscal acne have credited w! recov- 4 i the Morton county jail are Henry | ery, ee nee iulich, 22, and Russell Cottam, 18, ar-| It provides, (1), f rested on 2 New Salem farm by Sher- 300,000,000, of the See iff E. O. Lidstrom. They face charges | gold hoard—the first release since the of burglary at Brainerd, Minn, gold “sterilization” was be- last December; (2), J. B. Poindexter, governor of Ha- market purchases primey (aera pore wail, was @ passenger on the west-|ernment securities, Pp bound North Coast limited of the ———— Flier Searching for known claiming any estate or in- pareet 15 or len or incumbrance ie proper! ere! - cribed, property in des. DEFENDANTS. THE STATE SE UO RO NAMED DE- pas ou, ani ch of you, are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in the f above entitled action. a copy of which is hereto annexed and herewith served upon you, and which is on file in the office of the Clerk of Court in Bur- leigh County, North Dakota, and to serve & copy of your answer thereto @ upon the subscriber hereof at his of- fice in the City of Bismarck, in the County of Rurleigh and State of North Seeee se de! Willie Olson, Bucyrus, president; C. J. Austad, Hettinger, and L. R. Church, Haynes, turned Saturday from Duluth, Minn., where they spend the past month. The Senior 4-H club held a meet- ing Friday with Miss Elsie USL! 60 | INVITED ‘00 | BRING THE to | KIDDIES A GIRL'S THE PAWN IN THIS MAN’S GAME! Northern Pacific railway Saturday Hopalong Cassidy plans right. on on on om Dakota, within thirty (30) days from she service of this summons anc after t! upon yor service; and in aera oF ant @ plaintift against you, demanded in the complaint. ive of the da e of your will take wiber 11, 1937. papi Charles L. Crum, Attorney for Plaintiff, Bismarck, action is for the purpose of leting title in the plaintiff to Lots 2 end thi ment ‘against phe Flanney to the Ci no p. 3 bot he bot of such ‘ailure to jswer as above _feuulreds judgment by default, for the relief ted at Bismarck, North Dakota, North Dakota. the Above Named Defendants: ‘ @re notified that the above en- and y ol Bismarck Junior Association of Commerce will hold its third annual meeting Tuesday, Sept. 14 at a dinner in the Grand Pacific hotel at 6:30 ere expected to attend. Beginning today, the westbound limited will run in one section, Ober A. Kobs, Bismarck agent for the Northern Pacific railway, announces. The eastbound limited will run in one tection beginning Sept. 15. There is . {nO change in time of either train. Severe damage resulted at the John Hartner home in Mandan Saturday when varnish remover exploded as Mrs. Amelia Hartner and a son, J. G. Gruber, were completing renovation of ee pane. rel etlal and Gruber love ftom lazing inferno with minor burns. Dr. T. H. Lewis, medical director, and Otto Haakenstad, secretary, of the Western Mutual Life Insurance p.m. Over 100 members and guests | « Lost Russians Down Barrow, Meager reports to this out-post Mon- Gay said Basil Zadkoff, Russian pilot, while seeking the six lost transpolar filers. Zadkoff himself, however, was re- ported safe. He has been methodi- cally combing the area in which the party of filers may have been forced down Aug. 13. Alaska, Sept. 18 —(—| ‘The Homemakers club held a pic- ic Sunday at Menoken grounds. There neaday from Fargo, where she visited her daughter, Mrs, Felix Farrar for four days. She made the trip with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. George ton. o_O Today’s Recipe | Browned Deviled Tomate Slices Eight slices tomatoes, % cup flour 5 tablespoons fat, % teaspoon salt, % tablespoons 2 af of Fargo, were business |! company visitors in Bismarck Monday. The Women's Foreign Missionary society of the McCabe . Methodist W. J. Church, 502 Eleventh St. Mrs. D. H. Houser will serve as leader. In mend properly. his damaged finger rebroken and re- set after the season because it failed to; Portsmouth, Va., Beet ee PHILLIES BUY HURLER Sept. 13.—Earl Allen, 23-year-old local righthander, has been sold to the Phillies of the Na- Long Island sound was once a river| tional League. Allen has won 13 and J lost 8 with © tall-end club. plenic were 19 in attend. | switt ance, The Pi ; Mrs, W. L. Watson returned wed- | ‘Sees eneoeete: MOVING PICTURES ACTION THRILLING SENSATIONAL MO’ ¥ Anew way to “relax” e The Woman drive thru “hoops of fire” e Deep Sea Divers in “Free Air” e The Thrill Ride “on the Level” @ How a Photograph is Sent by Telephoto —COURTESY— Capital Chevrolet Co. an un F game in the most thrilling of oll his famous od 4) “Clarence lta -RUSTLERS a