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PAGE FOUR YESTERDAY: Lynn Britton has spent a terrible two weeks in Mongolia, trying one day to escape from Temu Darin, who is taking her to marry the fabulous Prince of Shani Lun, and afraid the next day that she is in love with Temu. Now Temu and his party are caught in a revolution, and for days death has been just Ground the corner from them all, Chapter 28 New Life I YNN slept the clock around ‘ and woke, the sunshine play- ing upon her face through a lat- ticed window. A_moment later Peggy came in. When she saw Lynn was awake she sat down be- side her. “At last!” she remarked. “Te- mu’s been guarding you as if you were an incubator baby.” She turned at the appearance of a ser- vant with a basin of water and another with a tray followed by Temu Darin, himself. “What's this about an incubator baby?” he demanded. Lynn stretched deliciously. “I do feel sort of born again,” she murmured dowsily and submitted to the warm, damp towel as the maid sponged her face and hands. “We're going to treat you like a baby for a while,” Temu de- clared. She looked up at him but his eyes were busy with the lighting of a cigarette. She fancied it was a studied preoccupation as if their last meeting had produced more consequences than the simple give and take of therapeutics. “The most exciting news!” cried Peggy. “We're leaving today to meet the caravan in the desert. A company of armed horsemen have come to conduct us. Hard riding, young noblemen who are subjects of the Prince of Shani Lun. They're the most romantic look- yl fellows!” ynn laughed. “I thought you’d never be able to see any romance in Asia again.” “They've brought a remuda of several hundred horses, all milk- white. They’re camped on the plain beyond the hill back of this village.” Lynn sat up animated! cepted her tray. “Whi Are they a special bree “Mongolian stock belonging to the Prince,” Temu answered. “It is the custom of breeders of Shani} Lug to presen: all grey colts to} their ruler. We are not far from the borders of our own country.” She could tell by the tone of his voice that the thought of near- | ness to his own country moved| him, and because it did, she her- self felt stirred. Their eyes met for a moment. “See.” he said, “you do under-| stand.” | She felt disconsolately that he was putting her back on the throne beside the Prince. He took} the tray she had finished and handed it to a serving woman. “Dress and come out as soon as fou can,” he directed Lynn, and ollowed Pegg; out into the court- yard. A maid helped the girl with her clothes, a new Mongolian outfit of cap and boots and trousers, a cloak, a full-sJeeved shirt, and a Birdle of crimson silk. In the courtyard, sedan chairs were waiting for her and Peggy; chairs that reminded her of one that had carried her from the de- sertion of Dick to the over-power- ang pecection of Temu Darin. ittle Tsong was there to bid her goodby. The old lama, his uncle, had come over from the monastery. He stocd before Lynn with tears of gratitude in his eyes, and through Temu’s interpreta- tion, thanked her that her beni- ficent presence during that night of fear and torture had saved his little elder brother from the rage of the fanatical Moslems. Lynn felt humble, and told Temu as much. He smiled. “I did nothing helpful,” she protested. “I feel like an imposter Teceiving this homage.” “Give them your blessing. It would be all right to put your hand on the little fellow’s head.” And suddenly sensing her inten- tion he added hastily, “Don’t kiss the lad.” Chariot Of Gold “NO the old man either?” asked Peggy mischievously. He frowned. “Nor the old man either.” She stared at him. “I think that’s silly.” Lynn agreed. “I know my people,” he an- swered stiffly. “They consider the kiss an extremely intimate and | Private caress reserved for lov- ers. Lynn colored at her own stu- Pidity. Had she would have su iy and ac- | horses! | might also be true “The lama has Peggy the use of his go! h chariot for the journey,” Temu in-| formed her. «Lynn was disappointed. “I had wanted to ride a w! e rest of you.” “We'll be going to “You don’t seem to kn a good horsewoman I am “You don’t realize what hell- for - leather rid men are. Besides you need to take things easy for a while.” She knew there was no use} pleading with him, but she couldn’t resist saying, “A gold- hite horse with} 's these young} “You'll be surprised.” He beck- oned her bearers forward. Peggy's chair was already disappearing through the gate. Temu had ken truly; Lynn was surprised, both at the ease of the conveyance, and at the of travel. As well as gold-studded | wheels, the cart possessed a gold- en roof with gracefully curved eaves. Its springs and upholstery equaled the comfort of an em- peror’s coach. At the end of the tongue to the vehicle was a wood- en crosspiece made to fit in front of the saddles of two horsemen. They started off at a dead run over a boundless, grassy plain stretching north into the violet haze of the desert; the riders and extra animals surrounding them like a flowing wave of white horsefiesh with streaming manes and tails. At short intervals two other horsemen would ride in close and take over the management of the cart, slowing the pace but a trifle. They were magnificent feats of horsemanship. Lynn thrilled to the show but Peggy preferred not to watch. “If I'm going to get my neck broken in an accident,” she said, “I don’t want to see it coming.” Temu rode beside the cart ex- cept when he dropped back each hour or so, as the others did, to change mounts. Once or twice a herd of gazelle cut their trail. Oc- casionally a band of spirited wild horses joined them for a run. An incredible distance for.horse- men had been covered when they stopped to camp late that after- noon. Blue and white Mongol tents went up like fluttering birds. Bula served the supper roast lamb and tea. Chan was follow- ing at a more leisurely pace, it seemed, hard riding being beyond his power. Someone brought in 2 great armful of wild leeks from a nearby spring. Lynn and Temu ate of them because they had ro- bust appetites. Herdsmen had taken the horses out to graze. The other men of the party spent the evening wrestling, telling stories, or singing. The sound of the revelry, coming to the girls in their tent, made Peggy shudder. “What people! I feel as if I were traveling with a party of Apache Indians on the warpath.” Lynn lifted a corner of the tent beside her pallet and looked out rebelliously. Temu had made them go to bed with the camels though there were no camels. She had wanted to watch the fun and hear the songs. “You'll have many other oppor- tunities when you are Princess of Shani Lun,” he had assured her. She could see a light in his tent now. Two other young men were with him, riders who had come in from the north on spent horses. A sentry paced back and forth in the darkness. The inhabited, war- torn valleys had been left far be- hind and already seemed unreal, as if they had never existed. On Wings T= next day’s breathless, head- long filght across the plains was similar to that of the day be- fore, except that it included a wolf hunt. The animal jumped up before them in the morn! F A bowlegged young rider brought in the brush and showed it to their leader. “A young wolf,” observéd Te- mu. “We have probably saved the lives of hundreds of gazelle.” They were now wel! into Mon- gol country; their camp-site that night was on the orakes above a deep, dry wash in which the meh dug a shallow well. In the wall on the opposite side of:the canyon gaped abandoned cave dwellings. “They will be occupied again when wandering nomads return to pasture their flocks for the win- ter,” Temu told Lynn. They were standing on a prom- ontory in front of their tents look- ing out across the plain that merged into hilly, desert country. the horizon in slender, gras streamers of purple and crimson and orange against a lemon-yel- low sky. 2 “This is worth everything I've been through in coming here,” Lynn murmured softly. Temul was staring as if he saw something even beyond the sun- set. She asked him about it. “I see the grassy hills of Shani Lun with their great herds of horses and cattle and their white yurtas dotting the landscape. Be- yond these I see the river and the irrigated districts of orchard garden, and beyond that, the city at the foot of the mountain. It is es eee the os Lay sur- rounds the palace. A pair of pekin ducks are playing in the willow pool. The Princess Mother is walking with her ladies in the garden.” A little smile curved Lynn's lips. “What is the Prince doing?” | she asked. Temu kept his pose and re- frained from looking at her as she had hoped he would do. “He is Lake: of you.” She stepped closer and put a hand in the crook of his arm. This = looked down os his tea. jored eyes very brig! “You see,” he said, “the Prince very much in love with you. To think of an object is to touch it. He always has a sense of your | Presence.” . en he powers that ‘I do not. I have no sense of his presence when I think of him— thank heaven.” wheeled chariot is not my idea of | U.S. AT RIO FAIR RIO ‘DE JANEIRO—Rio’s an- nual sample fair has an Amer- ican pavilion this year for the first time. The American Cham- ber of Commerce for Brazil ar-/| ranged for the pavilion at a ren- ‘Te be continued {tal of about $1,050 for the month and a half which the fair runs in November .and December. The Pavilion occupies about 700 square yards. Subscribe to | Weekly. Sunset clouds had banded ane \ The Citizen, 20c|animal Sa ‘proach | | -: SOCIETY -:-: ‘Local Parent-Teacher Associations To | Be Represented At Congress Meeting. All Parent-Teacher Associa- i in Key West and Monroe {County will have delegations at! | the Florida Congress of P.-T. A.’s, | i which will open a two-day con-} ithe first of several business ses- | | sions scheduled to get under way | at 10:20 a. m. when Miss Katha-; rine Lenroot, of Washington, D./ |C., chief of the children’s bureau, | | United States department of) |labor, and secretary of the 1940) White House conference on “Chil- | dren in a Democracy”, will give | Tallman, administrative assistant, | the keynote address of the meet-| safety project of the N. C. P. T.;/ | Mrs. George Calvert, president of | ings. | A dinner, featuring a Pan Am- erican motif, will take place this; man of the committee on “Educa- | evening in the Columbus Hotel. |tion for Home and Family Life, Mrs. M. L. Russell, ee County Council, P.-T. A presi- dent, left last evening on the 5:00 o’clock bus to take part in| |preliminary meetings being held Clellan, of Jacksonville, state president, will preside. Other outstanding guests at the! convention will be Mrs. William | Kletzer, Portland, Ore., national president; Miss Marian Telford, national safety chairman of the| national congress; Mrs. Gertrude the Oklahoma congress and chair- N.C.P.T.” | ! DIES EARLY TODAY, | Mrs. Ethel C. Hill, 61, died this | morning at 1:00 o’clock, at her |residence, 508 Grinnell street. | | Rites will be held tomorrow aft- | ernoon at 4:30 o'clock at the; ee Street M. E. Church,! Rev. W. R. Howell officiating. | | Body will be placed in the church |0’clock at the clubhouse on Di-/} jat 2:00 o'clock by Pritchard | Funeral Home. | Junior Women Meet Tharsday Members of the Junior Wom- an’s Club are assembling this afternoon in the first of their combination tea and business meetings. The first of two socials to be given this month will be held on Thursday afternoon at 5:00 vision street. Hostesses named by Mrs. Jo- \ORCHANDARANA RITES THURSDAY Mrs. Emma Orchandarana, 77, died this morning at her resi- dence, 1023 Watson street. Funeral rites will be observed | | Thursday afternoon, 4:30 o'clock, at the Pritchard Funeral Home chapel, Rev. A. C. Riviere, of | vention in Miami tomorrow, with | today at which Mrs. Malcolm Mc- | First M-E. Church, officiating. Surviving Mrs. Orchandarana are a daughter, Mrs. George Koch; two sons, Berl of Miami and Sullie of Key West; a sister, Mrs. Amelia Bethel, and six; grandchildren. j are: Merlin Albury, Thomas; Whitmarsh, William Cullingford, | William Pierce, Joe McMahon. |Harry Dongo and C. Sam B.} ‘Curry. IMPRESSIVE ARMISTICE |DAY PROGRAM AT PARK, (Continued from Page One) united stand to do all in our; Power to uphold our highest | standards”. : | Master of ceremonies at the | park ceremony, held on the |bandstand, was Dr. A. M. Mor-| gan: and musical director for the | selections played by the Key} ; West Civic Band, was George: | Mills White. i | Program opened with |“America”, all present participat- | ing. Rev. A. L. Maureau, S. J; | delivered the invocation, follow- | jed by opening remarks by the) Surviving Mrs. Hill are her|seph Lopez, president, are Miss|master of ceremonies. / husband, O. P. Hill, two daugh-|Anita Salgado and Miss Isabel} ters, Mrs. Orion Russell and Miss | Anabelle Hill, a son, Warren,! jher mother, Mrs. Anna Watkins, | itwo sisters, Mrs. Eugene Mears, and Mrs. Bernard Roberts, three brothers, Paul and Ben of Tampa} and Joseph N. of Quantico, Va.,| and one grandchild. Roberts’, Rites Today i Funeral services for Charles A. | Roberts, 81, who died Sunday in a hospital upstate, are being held i this afternoon at 4:00 o'clock ; from Pritchard Funeral Home} chapel. Rev. A. C. Riviere is of- | ficiating at this service. } BRITISH AIR WAR SHOWS INCREASE, { (Continued trom Page One) | peated the story released yester-| follows: Leon first, with 233! day—“additional defeat of the! Italian armies”. i | Dispatches from Rome fail to} borough fourth, with 157; and , mention any news of the three} battles now raging along the Greek-Albanian frontier — men. |troops being captured or slaugh-! tion being made only of creased air action. This was re-! ported yesterday. Silence on! army action is taken to mean ad- | mittance of severe defeat. i The Greeks, on the other hand, | report complete disruptance of the enemy in the middle anil northern sectors of the new war. Completely routed, with hun-! dreds upon hundreds of their ‘MEET THE CHIMP Kelly. TEN KEY WEST GIRLS AT FSCW (Continued from Page One) Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia. Students from Monroe county, which nas 10 young women en- rolled, are as follows: Key West: Mary Bonniwell, Margaret Dexter. Dorothy Dungan, Gwendolyn James, Carmen McBeth, Helen Pierce, Eloise Roberts, Eliza- beth Sawyer. Winifred Shine, Theresa Sullivan. Counties having the largest ‘delegations here and the num-! waiter F. ber attending from them are as students; Dade second, with 164 Duval third, with Polk fifth, with 109. tered in traps sprung by the Greeks, the Italian army has fallen back for many miles in the central sector, now fighting fur- ther into Albania than ever be- fore. Similar defeats for the Italians are reported in the north, while the advance, former- ly reported on the south, has been thoroughly checked by the Greeks. AND LEARN WHY MEN BEHAVE LIKE— By MALCOLM B. JOHNSON, AP Feature Service ORANGE PARK, Fia., Nov. 12.] —Diapered baby chimpanzees | in their new nursery at the Yale} Laboratory of Primate Biology! jhere are taking many of the! same tests a psychologist would | give your child. | Reared in isolation from their own parents, the infant apes are| ;expected to show what traits of; behavior are natural and how} |quickly they pick up essential |T€#ted away from their parents! |will be compared with tests giv-! | en to young chimps brought up| | knowledge for themselves. and | Results of the experiment may | become bases for further study / | by psychologists of human child: behavior and learning. i Little Alf, Jojo, Jenny, Kenjthrough two courses of tests be-| and several others—none much! more than a year old—are cared! ‘for by humans with the idea of making them healthier and in-) {hibiting them less than would Mama Chimp. H | They eat regular baby food— ‘fed with Spoon and bottle by a nurse. They wear diapers. They rects all the work here and in Junior School Many of the experiments car- ried on here could not be under- taken with man to learn why we do the things we do, so the Yale university research experts have gone to the next best source for hints. Lower Level Of Emotion Results of tests of baby apes by their own mothers and with other young apes. Peter, for example, went fore he was allowed to rejoin other apes in the colony. The Scientists found “the impression was very definite that the subject showed a lower level of emotion- ality” than young chimpanzees who had been reared together. Dr. Robert M. Yerkes, who di- Mayor Willard Albury gave j fitting remarks in a short address , | following a band selection, which was followed by other musical selections. Then Mr. Little was | introduced. “God Bless America” was play- ted and sung following Mr. Lit- | tle’s address, then Rev. Ted M. iJones, of the First Baptist | Church, rendered the benediction. |The National Anthem closed the ceremony, shortly before 6:00 o'clock. Representatives of all civic and | fraternal organizations, as well ‘as county and city political | groups, were represented on the ‘platform. The military groups | were represented by Col L. L. Pendleton, U.S.A, Grand Mar- shal of the parade, Captain Jacobs, U.S.N., Col. H. T. Hatfield, U.S. Marines and Comdr. C. H. Hilton. U.S. Coast Guards. HAMS’ SEARCH FOR OUTLAW STATIONS (Continued from Page One) 4. Sign each transmission with your assigned call. 5. Scrutinize domestic traffic offered you by strangers; if you are approached by any agent of a subversive group or an agent of a foreign country, communicate immediately with the FBI or A. pa 163; Hills- There's A Law | Incidentally, League officials point out that any member who \Teports hearing suspicious sig- ‘nals, while he may be perform- ing a patriotic duty, technically lis violating a law punishable by a $10,000 fine. This law makes it an offense ;to report anything heard over the air except broadcasts in- tended for public use or the dis- tress calls of ships at sea. | Many of the “hams” in, the | league are members either of the |Naval Communications Reserve or of the Army Amateur Radio System. IHARRIS CHILDREN HAD BEST FLOAT: (Continued from Page One) | Battery E, National Guards; i fal’ car, Boy Scout color, iguard, Arthur Sawyer Post, No. |28, American Legion, sponsor of |the parade and ceremony. | Legion auxiliary and junior \ girls, with Red Cross emblems, ‘Key West Guard, two companies, jdrummers, Boy Scout troops, Scout float, troop 52. Patrol units, play freely in their individual! New Haven, believes that if there | Junior Red Cross units with cages. They are tested to see when: they can determine colors or per- form such tasks as picking up: and throwing balls or figure out: that a square block will fit bet-! Were more imagination among champanzees they “might be ex- pected to develop a spoken lan- guage”. “As to memory, the chimpanzee is efficiently equipped for it re- |school_children and Convent of Immaculate bus. Columbia Laundry Red Cross display, then followed Sawyer’s jhorse and buggy. another Red ter into a square hole than a.members well and long anything Cross float, Adam’s Dairy, Red round one. Minimum Of Training which vividly impresses it”, he said. Cross float, WPA Recreation de- partment float, White Star They are allowed to learn) Experiments have shown that Cleaners’ car, Fisherman’s Para- about the world for themselves the chimpanzees “depend for in-\dise float, Junior Woman’s Club with a minimum of training. oratory, believes the chimpanzee to cross the gulf between man Club car, in mentality and physique is the!and anthropoid ape, that we may Club car, Stone Church kingdom's closest to mankind. ap-|know ourselves and them in true Club car and the genetic relation and perspective”. ! Dramatic FOUR KEY WESTERS TAKE NUN’S VOWS | ENTER SISTERHOOD OF BENI- DICTINE ORDER AT HOLY NAMES CONVENT The Convent of the Holy Names| at San Antonio, Fla, was the) scene of an impressive ceremony | their first religious vows in the Sisterhood of the Benidictine| Order. / Leo’s Abbey officiated at the solemn service and the Misses Rose Whalton, Ruth Whalton, ; Anna Pitts and Edwina Martinez | were among those taking the vows. The_names, in religion, follow in rotation: Sister Mary Gabriel | of the Sacred Heart, Sister Mary Thecla of the Precious Blood, Sis- the Sorrowful Mother. Immediately ceremony a reception was held and amony those present were: Thomas Gato, Elgin Roberts and | Charles Grawe, all from Key West. DIVORCE ACTIONS Final decrees in divorce suits filed in the circuit court clerk's} office the first of this week, listed the following cases Herman Lopez vs. Hazel Mar- garet Lopez; Henry A. DeGuire| vs. Ruby DelPino DeGuire; Geo. | Holborow vs. Avasola Holborow. | EXPERIMENTING AT ALASKAN AIR BASE (Centinued from Page One) | the perilous peaks and rutted gorges to Fairbanks. The Major, however, a ‘there’s nothing romantic abou! the Polar Bear squadron’s assign- ment this winter. “It’s just hard work”, he says. “And there’s nothing romantic about hard work at 40 degrees below”. The experiments will include assembling all data possible on the effects of cold on motors, car- buretors and wing surfaces (tem- peratures at Ladd field average under zero 116 days out of the year) and also reactions of the men to prolonged assignment at posts in the land of the midnight sun. The “Polar Bear squadron” gets its name from the insignia on the planes, a polar bear standing up- right on an iceberg with an air bomb in its upraised paw. The northern lights provide the back- ground. To Have Eskimo Clothes An interesting phase of the army’s winter activities in Alas- ka is that Brig-Gen. Simon Bo- | jlivar Buckner, in charge of all armed forces in the territory, has set the Eskimos to making Arctic “uniforms” for the entire force. jAfter an investigation of the clothing situation, General Buck- ner concluded that hooded “par- kas” and fur-lined “mukluks” (moccasins) would be the best/| |protection for the men against the extremes of cold prevalent |in the Alaskan interior. These are made only by the garments i from the skins of Arctic Eskimos, fur-bearing animals and the Gen- LiAMs. eral has issued orders that have , |set the Eskimo tailors working The army air corps reports al- so that work is going forward for a second experimental air field in Alaska—Elmendorf field, near Anchorage. With war rag- ing across both oceans, the army | and navy are giving more and more thought to the strategic val- ue of Alaska in the nation’s de- To relieve scrz COLDS 666 Try “Rab-My-Tism"—« Wonéerfal ‘Lintment TIO ODL IDA | BLETS SALVE COUGH DROPS WHAT MAKES AMERICANS LAUGH? (Ameciated Preat Feature Serview’ BOB HOPE: “Americans are the world’s most sentimentel people. “The worm turns’, I have discovered, is the best-liked foun- dation for a laugh The American dearly loves to be told of the meek little guy who boots his op- pressors right in the sitting dowr jon a recent date when four for- | apparatus. Second im dmportance jmer residents of Key West made is the ludicrous joke, Mke the wonderful Marx Brothers laugh- getter—you have the mind of « 13-year-old boy, and TH bet he Pallbearers selected to serve! The Abbott of the nearby St. W&5 glad to get rid of =. See “Who Knows?” on Page 2 seer 2. Franklin D. Roosevelt, 523 in 1936. 3. Gen. George C. Marshall 6. The Duchess =f Kent for- merly Princess Marina. of Greece 7. The first number Grau = |Whalton, Mrs. Antonio Martinez, |the draft lottery 8. No; he will be “electe i the Electoral College 9. In Virginia. 10. 6,175. LEGALS NOTICE Te CREDrITeR< IN THE COUNTY JUDGES Cover IN AND FOR MONROE CouNTs. FLORIDA. IN PROBATE. In re Estate of William E@waré Huston. abe known as William E. Buster also known as Wm. E Hus- ton, also known as W. E Huston, Deces =~ To all creditors an@ all persons having claims or demands acain=t the estate of William Eéwaré Hus- a ton, also known as W: also known as W. E Huston ceased, late of Key West, Bonn County, Florida. You, and each of you are & by notified and required to f claims or demands which » either of you. may have agaip estate of William Eé@ward © also known as William EF # bs Judge of Monroe © in the County Court House in Men- roe County, Flerida, within «icht calendar months from the Gate of the first publication of this metice to-wit, November Sth. A DP. see Said claims or demands shal! b+ i writing and contain the of residence and post office address of the claimant and shall be v2 o by the claimant, his agent or ttorney. Any such claim or demand »ot filed within the time and manner prescribed herein shal! void Dated at Key West, Fiorids 4th day of N As Administratrix of the Estate of William Eé@ward Huston, alee known as William E Huston also known as Wm. E Houston alxo known as W. E Huston. de- yh Ht th { CHANCERY. 4 ALEX BERGER, Plaintiff v= BES- SIE GORBATOW BERGER, De- fendant. TO: BESSIE GORRATOW BERGER, 1480 Washington Avense, Brena. .Y. + hereby required © the bill of complaint & legations therein will be taken as confessed. Let this be published i West Citizen. Duted this yer, 1960 SAWYER, Clerk ‘ourt jo, Deputy Clerk 29: nows-12-18.1968 IN THE CINCLET COURT oF THE ELEVENTH JUpsEat CoRCErr OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA. IN AND FOR MONRSE COUNTS. IN CHANCERY. Case Ne. T2508 IN THE MATTER OF THE AP- FLICATION OF JULIA 8S. WHL- WoMax DEALER octz2- above entitled matter com- ing on to a final hearing upon the petition of Julia S Williams te b made a free dealer and the Special Master's Report and Gpinier as t petitioner's capacity, competency and qualifications te take charge of and manage her own extaic and Property, together with the testi- mony taken before the said Master And it appearing to the Co from said Master's Eeport and Gpinion that the said Julia S W- liams is a married woman age of twenty-one years. is the lawful wife of Hach WH liams and that she pomsesses tbe capacity, competency and quali- fications to take charge of. manage and control her estate # and to become = free dealer ip every rexpect and that the prayer It in. JUDGED prayer of her petition be and the same is hereby granted and the said Julia S Williame be and abe i to manage $th day of November, A D_ 2948 (84) ARTHUR GOMEZ. ircuit Juége novi2-19-26; dec3-10,1948 Richard Arien—Andy : DEVIL‘’S PIPELINE Comedy and Serial PRIZE NIGHT — TONITE SHIDOIDDOD®! ocrccccsccscerecscsesess ee MYSTERY BAIDE —— TRIPLE sestTic Matmes—Saecory Me Cr cheswre 15-2