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y J U. S. NAVY HAS FIRST HOSPITAL SHIP BUILT SOLELY FOR USE WITH BATTLE FLEETS| The Relief, From Its Keel Up. Is Con- structed as a Hospi- tal Ship—lt is| Equipped With] Every Modern In- vention and Has a! Bed Capacity of 500 Patients —Other Ships of the Kind Were Conve rted Merchantmen.. HE first ship in the world built | ¢, TS ship in the world built | coyyaNpER R. ¢. HOLCOW from the keel up solely for| . hospital purp s will soon | become a part of the Atlantic ! fleet of the United States Navy. Th about 10,000 tons disp latest innovation in naval archit twin serew burning ture has been miven the appropriate | turbine propelled. In accordance with st the provisions of the tieneva cony ndIme o Reliet | pzinte¢ white. with a Equipped with every modern devige | stripe from stem to stern for the safet comfort and care of | Stripe sick and wounded. with a bed ca- pacity for 300 patients. the Relief in- | the o of thes: conventions stes in design wnd equipment | she would have & red bawd instead appointimencs and advantages of the green. Painted on the side of of a nodorn hespita This assires | her hua'l and on the side of her stack the Navy unel in the fleet, how ix a large red cross There are like- ever far ports it may be. wise on her upper works red crosses that in cnse Kness or injury | showine upward for Weatitieation by they can exp the same facilitivs: hydroplane or airpianc. so that her sis and (reatment that o veutral and humane rission cannot residents any of the , he mistaken. and. to establish her \merican cities in - municipal | identi night. 1he red cross and hospitals other markings are provided with a In additi to heing prepared to ' means of illumination which should earc for the sick and injured of the show up as unmistakably and as clear- THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. BY STERLING HEILIG. PARIS, February 17. 1921 space of the ship, where there may bel the least amount of pitch. There is; forward and after group. with ele- { or service for each greup. Thel OR the first time in history a por- | nd d sk i the cugnevling nas ulge.‘ trait gallery of cotempoary Amer- so that there is sccéxs by stmetcher | i A : between the hospital departments cansin Znal».mg a sensation im | without geing out inte the open: ihus | Europe. For the first time in arta 1 such special rooms as the X-ray Toom, | European painter, emigrating to America “'ilmld'inz raom. I!.\'dm-llnr«“s_mbw { With his own technique ard tendencies, ldressing roomns. etc. are asailabie | oo 5 = [ from all parts of the ship. The typ- [7€1Ur08 te glorify the American atmos {ical ward consists of standees of 'PheTe and his awn astqnishing progvess Iberths which may be banked in two [in it. His success is equaled only by his tiers or as singie berths. Al berih® lgrat'tude. The object of Ossip Perel- iare detachable. so thal u patient may | f 00 ' At {be handied it necessary without tak-|M&'S €I¥nosition is to open the eyes of ing him from the berth. and are ac- ope and 1o “heom the Tnited States ble if necessary from both sides. |nation.”” | take the liberty to quote his | These berthe are much wider than the | ezue wor 4 ords: usual ship berths, Thae ready adjusi- | ¥4 $ubility Gy i et ibe | FITSL who he is. He is a natural- { eaxe of handling the sici. Tub ized American citizen. In 1916 4 Rus- of all patients are in ihe direciion ofisian of the Don (don:ain of thel | shear (shear is the slant of a decid (oo 2 b Jin the fore and aft direction) ard th+ | /¢3*acks). Yoty years of age. wio very necesszry requirement of havohad begun life as wn englueer and fing all heads }fi-y\\.\xri s taken @l lumateur in general of arts und |Santage otipithe arcangamentiQfENe i clences he \emigratedl to. the Gaftel i {#lales as a painter CLgip Pereima. vorn 41 Chubelsk in \ {1876, suidied at Odessa and St veter ! upward. s eore has o AvBdesin 3 peipnd Ihs upaand. o teron: sinine |78 and gracuaicd Gom iu bhaperic | in the patient As all heads | fisher Scheol of Sciences. Later. fdirected forvar only neces faith six medsls for various pro-| jto place the 1 n stch nositio: |icicuoon ne entered s Intperial {that they wiil be aver the fore andj “e0te e i P! [aft aisles and a little forward of the | Avademy of Beaux-Aris and thel athwart ship aisles 1 then put # | of the celebrated Russian 1‘;_«Wv‘r”fin il the feprand Of cuch [painter. Prof. Repin, 4 student of - = i Lioes iata b 4 jhistorical painting. Graduating with < MEVWIHOSEETAL ng dircetly into 0ne’s eves, bithe title of historical painter and | be TN inera) i3 2 Do Able {07 | ftussian academician. he might have {utility light which may sed b e il s Lihe patient for reading. T light | ‘nd in fact he did) continued bril brilliant bulb sign along (lwl' ay also be used for portable pur-| intly iiong these lines. Witness his Hite oax Boves as to examine a throat OF Ar | composition bouzht by the Russian nx one Reliol from I»(mv' Tange res ||\\| '1-[;( \‘:nlrdx n K“h state, “ipoch of the Tartar Invasion much larger platform is provided | lizhts are placed near the ward exists i FEM e 3 i han ore eocauniers Bt the gangway | well i the bed level. where th umber of pitures winning distine of an ordinary ship. thi wrm be- may i the floor only and not be @ §.on for him in the saions of the i et At sl ped Y © factor. i societe Natiopule in Paris and. par- | steeteheps. i the Wards are escellently ven- | icalarly. the “Smile of Victory.” i of the ship thers is an es oth for natural and artiticia’ | ought in full war time by (he krens grod apparatus for Liing tion. The air supplied { overnment from the exposition of fient from & boat in a spiint streteher. | wards is first heated by thermo tank | fouen in 1918, and foday hanging in This apiia Us is o d o e land then forced into ward snaces. Aco [ he muscum of the ar wr s of the qus nt Jdifeboat | ccssory to each of the wards are suel o P cated well aft wier ireoms as toilets. baths and wah i 3 Be the maximum lea ina sea war. froons linon rooms= pantries and quici ¢ igiEntile gleViclaryly datcs iirom I BWiy one Ste Mie fponme. The decks of the shin or~] 1816, the year Perelma emigrated to diately o the he 4l division of fwide wad spacions and arc Provided {ihe United Statss to become an Amer- the sliip. Here the wards are e fawith fitings 10 care for 160 or mors Sy At the gangway entrance on lswimming cots can, a portrait painter, and to re- sides of the s=hip are lo d =mull op-1 On the main deck near the ganz- | visit Paris five years luter. bringing erating or dressing rooms. lway is the out-patient nr-n:«]!l“';'“,l with him this netable gallery ol The hospital wards and utilities are «Th a group of rooms which. while x e Jocated in the comfortuble midship!igcated convenicnt and accessible tolAmerican citizens. y ) {all wards by elevator. are likewise | His talent as portraitist was fore- |r‘0n\orl",n.4\'h|flf‘3';: i thut patientsfgeen by the celebrated Russian ari sent from other ships for special ex- | = . e = Selination. or co-operative diawmosis | CTitic, Viadimir Stassoff. when Ve or treatment. and who will not remain | relma was in full flood of his his- on board as patients, may be cared |torical production. Stassoff urged him for without invading the hospital pre- | to go to Paris. to paint Elie Metch- DENTAL OFFICE ON THE RELIEF. and men of the iiso itted as a b denst wn toal equisitions for carry in her pitai. with fenta InSiruments ranges. cois, am- buiance and various uincr suppli £o that in the event some catds trophe at a coast city. iike the Balti- | more fire. th Iveston tidal wave | or the San Francisco earthquake. she | could render valuable aid by sending | carefully trained men ashore and quickly establishing a field hospital = % % % This is the second hospital ship of th- name Relief in the American Navy. Her predecessor, bearing the same panie. served ax a hospital ship with the Ar American war ippine. insurrec B xer upris- fng in Chin AT the time of the| eruise of the hatile feet wrourd the | world she was pluced in commission ' with the Navy. and arcommaried the far Phil ppin s > Navy shine—the | fort 1 ships ¢ dnr- . shin Fow- 1 fror mer- ehant shig purposes A< lor wo e the mencra bDourd of the Navs erded that | A hospita’ sh'n he the ! building prozrem the Nave, 1t wag not unt'l 1978 that Coneress ap- propriated the money to hnild on on ac- The keel was laid in 1917, by and the work. begun again completed. shin 453 feet in suspended fn 1918 " The SLEEPING QUARTERS ON HOSPITAL SHIP (Official Navy Fhoto.) PENSARY. {room, two small aperating rooms and nikoff. the great biologist, a dominat- cincts. Each of the larger s battleships. its own medica ing figure. partment with splendid equipment Tiror Toepint cousliyh advised )l the but the medical officer often des'res|trial—Perelma’s ““living expressions” the assistance of counsulting special- | of the human face having made him ists. and in this out-patient group are the X-ray and X-ray study rooms, the is. the Repin's favorite pupil while he still at_the Russian Beaux-Aris. was eyve. ear, throat and nose roor The Metchnikoff portrait hungs in laboratory and dental department. All { (he Library of the Pasteur Institute i rooms available for co-operalive |in Paris: they would never let it go. iagnosis not only fo the wards of i1t brought Perelma orders from high- the hospitaiship. but also 10 the wards | placed Russians, particulariy in Moe or sick bays of the ships of the fleet cow: but, while it was the Metchnikoft U % porirait which undouhtedly decided the bent of his career as American The after part of the ship is de- | ¢ lzen, ‘hvv E0g fact. (-nn;“m';gedl to Rtoatn isease, | €Xhibit historical works with distinc- signed to care for contagigus disease. | fi ;N 1ne walons of the Societe Na- As the ship rides to wind or breeze | (ionale. this division would be to the leawurd. There are four small wards for these cases. each with its own toilet and provided with adequate means for disinfection and prevention of spread of contagion. There are many special rooms on the boat. A splendidly planned oper- ating room two decks in height, with excellent natural and artificial light- The sensation created by this gai- lery of American men in Paris is be- yond all precedent of one-man exhi- bitions. It is a political event, a so- ciety event, an art event and an event of popular curiosity. President and Mme. Millerand, cabi- net members, senators. deputies and members of the diplomatic corps paid honor to its three days' vernissage. In- ing and ventilation and with such ac- { gOUOF 10 8 three daye ver " thel il ced, £ cards for their Cessory rooms as etherizing room. |american counterparts on the wall. serub-up room, sterlising room and |“So the three marshals, Foch. Joffre dressing reom and lobby. hese | nd’ Petain. with officers in quantity, rooms are on the upper deck adjacent it o |and with them their wives and a kaleido- to the sick officers’ quarters. cers® scopic throng of fashionable women. the acute sarvice wards are loculed of | They have been making the picture halls the second deck, consisting of such ! ¢ ho" Majeon des Arts, in the Fau- special depgriments as the endo=copic | poyrg St. Honore, across the street from the Krench White House, a sort of new all-Paris extension. acyte treatment room. and the hvdro- therapeutic and thermotherapeutic de- * k %k ¥ What for? Here is the strong part of it. Why. to admire, study. analyze the faces and the breathing spirit, not (for jonce) of a bunch of preuty American | | women, but to stand there, 1 tell you. {and collate. compare and dream over i (ves, it is the right word) the portraits' fof a hundred representative American i He partment. On the main deck well aft | are located such rooms as the em- | | men. The American man—at last. is worth looking al. Few of the sub-' [Jects are young, either. They are | Americans in many w3lks, of whom you feel in looking at them that they totai up, in some way, the American spirit— | there are nearly & hundred of them. Of them Murope has heard much, or less, and is that much the more ‘curious, interested—anxious. The majority stand for the great unknown American residue of possibilities, and 150 are scarce u whit less subjects of fnterest. speculation, confidence, hepe, worriment, the breathing witnesses, Hike, of optimist and pessimist. Wilson, Harding. Franklin Roose- velt, Daniels, Franklin Lane. Frank B. Noyes. Henry Ford. Vicior Hugo Duras und a score of other personages | known to Europe ars before us. i *Here arc ex-tov. Cox. Senator Phe- Jan of (California. several members of {thie cabinet. House 4nd Senate; 8 num- | {ber of diplomats. jurists and univer- ! aity men, Gen. P and officers of the United States y. the late S. H. Kouffmann of Washington and oth- f newspaper men, like Pleming New- bold, | Philander Johuson, Rudolph Kuuffmann and Newbold Noyes. | What imprint of what American di- rectives do they carry—these strong, amiable. courteous fuces? What sur. Drises, from the Haming up of the | Crusader spirit in 1917 (o what un- | known influences of tomorrow? Ku- rope thinks to hgve, here, samples of certain of — |expression. What does kurope see? balming room, .sterilizing room and | “To be an linglish gentleman is re- lincineration roon preparation of { garded as the seme of culture yud re finement.” says Ossip Perelma, “but T food there ix a in galley and special diet kitchen. | maintain that American gentle- € main galley prepares food for man Las more essentisl gentility and well. The special dict Kitehon wanhood.” fitted wilh electric ranges and Nothing of the kind was ever dong aus other applisnces for preparing | before. Never was a galiery of Ame the special diet for the sick From fican men (or of cotemporary men of this room tie food is rout-d any countrs) woved bodily. like this, varipus ward pan’ries and to e ucioss frontiers for the appreciation side Ly means of cufeteria. | of another peop And at such a me- By this method for those - ment of inte interest in the Amers sic the bed i assured The | jcau peopie from whom they spring | cafe ia nicthod the most wffici nd whom they vopresent, in a cen- | method of quickly Serving o lurge | lain seee number of people with hot food, iy | s the patient | 3 rd ca 0 { Jalene i Srert unnot 891 Or one portrait. 1 heard the tol- | lowing 10 interesting feature on board () s Th l)’.»lirr is & mechanical cow which = ret of the man | 10se eyes! iro- ia Videw milk for the sich Fon yomys |i% it those gentle eyes. so fine and eversbody has heen familiar with | Pensive, looking from a noble face. partially dried or cvaporated milk,|{Of will power? Yes, I know-—one ! known as condensed milk or evap- .y . el e o orated cream, which Is heavily sweet. | *ould S8y @ strong will corrected by ened by the addition of cune sugar, |F3Te goudness of heart. 1 come back The milk made with the mechunical [to those tender eyes that laok you cow is a reconstructed milk, and the | straight in the face. Acceunt fer Brosedspisisimplioneistiaking opaid FRi SN R SgHl ny lahoneatasi nary milk apart and putting it gether again. these parts when The face is noble; it is 4 man with & arated Dhaving vers good keeping | will of his own. to an extraordinary e ! ldegree, and vet—"' | g Gy i a companion interrupted; I When it is desired to reconstuctiy MUCh (Of AU Juat s portraitiss - S mip M 1T Leennique the milk. unsalted butier and milk | “pirdon. appreciation-—— ‘nowder are brought together in a, “The willful face be softened by | definite provoriion of water, miswq ! Fich shadows melting into the desp wnd then put througi an emilsifying background- process producinz a palutable miik of | “No. no. T s 4 siroug man with & any degree of cream ricanc s desired. | tender heart As something over four-fifths of milk: I have been talking with that ds- consisis of Water. some idea moy he| tinguished persenality. Col. Victor obtained of the bulk eliminated by Hugo Duras, He was tha first Ameri- handling the produce in this way. As!cun to bs wounded in the war, was| an evidence of the practicability of |4t the siege of ge. where he had this process. when the city of Nitro.| been American vice comsul: was or- | W. Va. grew up overnighi, with a |dered to Petrograd in the same ca- population of 25.000 inhabitants, no | pacity. and was almest ita first for- milk supply was in sight. Bu( by|eign exile to be sent out of Russia by means of the mechanical cow recen- structed milk was produeed sa that|b the families were supplied with re- | n conatructed milk, eream and 3 butte milk. called ‘“nitrolac.” this name being applied to aveid misbranding. A the bolshevists—in % sledge drawn reindeer, on Christmgs o 1917, th of the arctic circle. "Few portraits,” says Duras, “kave ®eon sble to 20 thoroughly group the true spirit of America as Mr. Perslma One Hundred Portraits of American Men—What France Thinks of the Ex~ hibit, the First of Its Kind. THE LATE $. H. KAUFFMANN, ONE OF THE PERELMA PORTRAITS ARIS EXHIBI has done in these collected types. He has made a shecial study. in fact, of the various types of American man- hood, and declares that there are no such wonderful features to be found anywhere else in the world.” Perelma went to America at the mature age of forty, with the equip- ment of literature and philosophy of professed historical painter and Ru sian academician. He had a newcom er's fresh eves to see and (as it turned out) the born portraitist’s gift of interpretation. “He is an en- thusiastic admi of the sterling quali of the American man™ savs Duras. “He endeavors. with extrao dinary suceess. 1o interpret the demo- cratic spirit of America. and 1o catch in our men. their native strength of character. And what has Percima gained in America? He has become world-known as a portraitist. Also. to have done this PERELMA PORT wass of picturces, each in itself a siudy. he musgt have xained from America the swift Am u de islon-—a sai ahility to execute. For a man who has sacriticed cvery- thing to the one end of renderi a strong personality. Perelma’s put is eatraordinary proached the speed | the varied and int ely portraits of tiis American meu's gal- lery. Without doubt. lie is a muster of churacterization Teghnically. mos show 4 rich handling of dark tonali- ties. a striking variely in the runge of blacks. “I &m a painter followin; the types of Rembrandt and Repin, he savs, with the loyalty of a friend a OEK W of Ossip Pex;elma.‘ With | Studio in Washington, Attracts l | | | Attention of Art Lovers of French Cap- i ital—To Boom the United States. | s ' OF FRANK B. NOYES. of the canvasses | C. FEBRUXEY %, IRI—PART % -3- PORTRAITS OF AMERICANS EXHIBITED IN PARIS CREATE AN ART SENSATIOR: = j |public. Here the great shadows,ars ;oblun'i by light cadmium and mag- |der lake mingled with a virtgesity Wwhich charms even the careless. And if yow want me to show of more knowledge, the veivety look of 1t melts into warm. dark backgromnds. which Perelma did not inwent, be- cause Rembrandt did it before him'® Aad all Pari - ] r""‘"" aris moved before the por- Women of America. de you be- " grudge that, just for omce, your men should be the cynasure—the deg-bear or the bear-dag? | | * The Old Names. | | GOOD deal of the pre-Christian or Pagan belief of the ancesters of the great majority of Americans is preserved. or, at least, suggested, in the names of @ur days. Most Ameri- cans arc of Anglo-Saxen, Gaelic and Teutonic descent. with a plentiful infusion of the blood of the Nerth- men who overran Britain &t ene period. and of ihe bloed of the Nor man-French who conquered England in the eleventh century. The very word “day” carries the imagination back (o the foresis, seas and savage tribes of the barbaric morth. “Day” has mo relation to the Latin “dies.” bug descends from the Anglo-Saxon warq “daeg.” or simply “dag.” Amer- icauy became familiar with “der tag’ of the Garmans, and “tag” is met VEFy muck of a change from the older worll. “dag.” Ous northern ancestors called one day in homor of the sum. which to them was a powerful und fickle delty. The next day they mamed after “mone,” second only in impor- tance te tPe sun, snd “mon: has been Chanzesd during the pus: ing :' the ceaturies to *moon.” But, in- stead of say:ng. as our far-back for. Iu:ars" did, Monodag,” or ‘“Mom&n- daeg.” we 'cail the day Monday. Tuesday was called by the Scandi- navian races i3 honor of Tis, or Tvs, who was th g0 i of Their gads o mar "or °F O0¢ Wednesday wus “Woden's dag.” or |2 time set apart in honer ‘oden. A zod generally admitted to be & furious and almest invincible war- 'rll|ner,}_ r;l‘l:o" f‘;e;‘mtnn called one of rtified line ¥ el enting €8 the Woten or the Thursday was named for Thor. ti 50d of thunder. and “Thor. ~Frurs: day” and “thunder” are related. Thor was a terrible zod, with the loudest of voices. It was he whe de the heavens and the earth resound when in his wrath. The Romans also had a god of this kKind. whom they called Jove. a mighty man. who held his court on the heights of Olympus. Friday is a memorial o Friga. metimes called Fries, who was u andinavian goddess of ent Strength of mind and purpose. There is said to have heen very littls of what we call femininity in her char- acter. Saturday was the dar of Seatern whom the Romans called Suturnus Whether the Latins borrowed Sa:- tern from the people of the morth or whether the north barbarisns ber- rowed Saturn from the people of the south. is anvbody's guess. j. Sabbath is 4 Hebrew word for [ srest The Jews applied it to the duy of rest and Christians adopted the word. Not Much of a Witness. = \\VHEN the conductor cgme sdong | for his fare the passemger pre- > . duced a ten-dollar bill, and, ufter as well u8 pupil. to the master - < | Well a8 pupil, to the mas {Jo0King 4t it for a moment. the co The portrait of Duras 8 cohsidered | ductor said: ON. of the most Rembrandtesque. That of | “Why de yor Prof. W. A. Wilbur. doven of George 'y .o ‘v o0 FOU effer me such & Mg Washington University. although it f ou know I can't change it." is but a bust. is pronounced greatesi| “But I haven't a cent with me ex- pE u]ml::fi‘-'ul depth and BOUIY cept this BiL® said the man. portraits in bright «olors' “Then you must leave the car.” (partly by the contrast) atira Well, e s Apardyibiitnecontuastiias of course. I will leave. if you lin K. Lane, former Seereia suy s0. but you will ger me into Interior, represented seated. in a tro You sce. I am a wil ! The other is thae - sl 3 president of t case im court. and | got to be the Associated Press. in whi - 5 about ten sminutes o: (he Sudge Wi surrounded by Vi colors. fine me. . cally interestin ¢ view- Can't help thet” replied the com- point of modern American tendencics ducior. “People win ride on the €u in art. must pay for it Mr. Noyes is scated on a chair The man staried for the door 4 his orchard. which is aglow with ra-'said diant sunli 1e colors of low-. I don't blame veu. old boy the charming cli- to think of it maybe 1 won't go v {court at ali. 1don’t think I will make much of a witness if 1 6id go. ¥ou see, I was standing by my gete onc morning. when two men met just there. One called the other a lwr. and he was calied a thief in return Then they began fighting. 1 can't tell which ome of them struck first, t|my old woman came running te th !door and ealled out that we were oni jof flour, butter. potatoes and coffee, and that there wasn't enough coal in the cellar te last another day. All this | confused me, sir, and if I should &0 to court T might swear against both {plaintiff and defendant, and get my- |self into trouble that war. I will {leave vour car. but not to go to esurt {The old woman needs talking te and iT will stay home and do it.” | | Her Diamond Ring. A[® AND MRS PERKINS had st 1 silent for naif am hour. when he looked up gqrom his paper amd 1 eaid ! My dear. you are very silent te- jnight. Has the cook quit her job er do vou feel sick?” i “No. neither,” replied Mrs. Perki: It is that 1 have something terrible | to teil you. and 1 den't exactly know | how to begin. It is horrible—terri- {ble—and 1 expect. after you hear it you will not speak to me agsin feo two weeks.” i “Yan fill me with alarm!” said Mr. Perk “but %o on and lel’s hear ithe worst of it.” “Well, you know that T had a birth- day two weeks ago. As a gift. veu {louzht me u 3606 ring. It was beau ] ul. and 1 thought I would alway: treasure it. but something has hap pened. T went shopping today gmd lost —lost ™ “You los 't you? ‘Yes. Mr. Perkins. und I have don the stone out of the ri di nothing but weep for the last fou honrs.’ “Well, my dear one. weep mo mere Yes, you hud a birthday and T gave vou a gift. but it wasn't 3 $608 dia mon ring. Knowing what a carghes womun vou are and knowing yor would lose the diamond in less tha:, 1a month. 1 paid §25 for a glass dis.- { mond. You have lost it. but we have {maved $375. Insteud of crying, let us | rejoice and feel good. Yes, dear. we | huve saved $375, and WmOrTow Righ! iwe wiil go out to seme first-clegs rextaurant and get such a dinmer as we haven't had since the war broke out.” The Champion Milker. 1 OTON HORTON. the “milk king." | 7% said at dinner in New York: “The milk trade has many enemies. L gl A e D {but s worst enemies admit that [ Benama. thonsl Be is wa itk s purer tham it used te be ftaoiis A odasPyline | Aaaiteration is & thing of the past. e e i 0 dairyman of old SI Heskin's MRS A R R low -1 fiern would land in jail tedsy. & said to his hired man one | *'Pete’ he said. ‘g0 round ameng | the cows und give each cow 3 esb- 4 t mind yoy give the biggest calibage to the cow that gives the af | veu know or- | marn ng sonally. in conve sution, parallel of the go in the garden and * =ity of nature groatues (lute H. Kauffmann. “Who that S hid obeyed orders. ¥ What is he?' The actor. Day " Bure, Mike® said Pete, with field, is painted in “The Return ot| wink. ‘I gave the cows a Peter Grim,” seated. with that gaze |apiece. and I hung the u,.;.a: by blue eyes which has fascinated the | bage on the pump handle. 2