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READ THIS FIRST: ., Over the poverty and discontent in \the little yellow house broods a mother’s love, which transmutes the dingy home to a palace of love and | beauty. Emmy, the only daughter, | s disappointed with her surround- ings, envious of her wealthy rela- tivea, eager to try her wings. She goes to work at her first job. And there a new man, Wells Harbison, enters her life, very different from quiet, hard-working Robb, who loves her, but who represents to her only a moneyless, boring future. She de- | cides to get away from dingy Flow- ®r street and live her own life in a little apartment of her own, where | ‘she can entertain as she likes. So| ‘that Emmy will not leave, Mrs. Mil- burn decides to give up the little | yellow house, and they can go to live at Grandmother Pentland’s big ‘mansion, where things will be tiner. | Mrs. Milburn did not tell the chil- | dren that in order to get the chance she had promised to do about allf the housework, the servants at ‘he | big house having left. Emmy takes \dictation from Wells, and when the Dletters are finished he tells her he 'will walk down to the corner with er. 'NOW GO ON WITH “Look here,” Harbison & they reached the street; mioet two o'clock. But v your lunch, haven't you? Emmy shook her head in its new hat of straw and satin. “No,” she #aid; “I bought this hat this noon, and I didn’t have time for a bite.” Was he going to ask her to have lunch with him? Was he? . . . Could this be the beginning of | things? Of friendship with this tall. | jmportant, and wholly fascinating| man, who had rarely been out of her | thoughts for days? “My car's up here in a garage on| Thirteenth street,” he said. “If you| haven't anything to do this after- noon we could go and get it, couldn’t we, and find some place to lunch out in the country? That is, if| you'd like to. This certainly is day to spend in town, is it?" “No!" sald Emmy, as if she were ‘out of breath. She felt all at onc: ‘an it she were a glass goblet, and that all the sunshine of the rare | day was pouring itself into her. Happiness that was two-thirds ex- citement made her mute as sl walked along side Harbison to the garage where he kept his car. It| was a huge black roadster, bristling with glass shields for dust and wind, | and shining with nickel trimmings. | It was seldom that Emmy rode in| automobiles, and just to be in this| cne was itselt an adventure, Her! gay deep eyes shone as they had shown before when she Wells Harbison rolled out of the| | she couldn't help | and Rob for my old hat. 1 don’t mind wear- ing it, really.” Harbison made a movement impatience. “Suppose T do buy hat for you? I owe it to you, and what difference does it make, : ny- way? Money's not such an import- ant thing, and I'd be buying my: a lot of pleasure along with the hat. Please, let me get it for you.” All of Emmy's pride—the pride of the Par nd the Pentlands — rose up within her. It showed itself for an instant in the flash of her eves and the proud lift of her little chin. “I'm sorry, but I wouldn't think of taking a hat from you,” she said coldly. The car b into Cheste stone at th flower vendor, } dirty above the aind jonquils t hands to pa by. Harbison drew up beside him. “You'll let me spend fifty cents on you, won't you?” he asked Emmy od naturedly, and when she nod- ded he hought a little nosegay for the lapel of her coat. “I'd rather have these anyway,” fibbed Emmy, who would have loved to have the hat. She leaned hack agains* ‘) ufted leather cushions and w*®%:0 the crowd walking along the sidewalks. She noticed that some of the women she passed looked at her enviously. . Ah, this was something like it! of that ked up and turned str On the curb- corner stood an Ttalian face swarthy and freshness of violets it he held out in his To be rolling smoothly along in this | who | wonderful ear with A man thought no more of buying a hat that cost as much as she earned In a week than he though of paying a half dollar for a little bunch of spring flowers. As th at car sped along the shore of the lake through Fdgewa- ter Park she thought of the dozens of times when she and Robb had humped over this same road in the gasping, snorting strugzle-huggy. And when Harbison swung the ondster hetween the gate posts of a fushionable inn ealled the House of the Seven G late that afternoon thinking of the an1 “hot dogs housht along the road sometimes, and of the lunchbox fill- ed with Mrs. Mi'burn’s hard-hoiled s and bread and butter that they had shared, sifting on the grass of some grove or meadow last fall She thought, too, of the khaki- colored shirt that Robb had worn on those jaunts of theirs, and of the times when the struggle-buzgy had hroken down comple nd they had had to wa‘t for some Good Sa- maritan automohile to como along and tow them to the nearest garage. And then she looked at Harbison in his well-made gray clothe his heantiful and expensive cz andwict Seven Gables throat. It was a disturbing thought —that this man for whom she work- ed had been in ;ove with her ever since she had been working for him. This man, with his paper mills ard his easy manner that only a | background of wealth can give, with | his forcign car and his platinum and-gold cigarette case! . . . The thought flashed into Emmy’s mind {that the wife of a man like Wells Harbison could meet a man like Jim Baldwin on more than an equal footing. She cold hold her head up anywhere in the world. She could have almast anything that her heart desired or her pride dictated! But, after all, he had said only: “I think I must be in love with you.” He hadn't been quite sure of himself, and there was something baffling in his silence now. They were half way home when he put out his gloved hand and {drew Emmy’s hand under it on the rim of the stecring wheel. “We'll talk about this again,” he said. “Not tonight. There are some things I've got to think ecut, Emmy” And | Emmy wondered what he could der his after a minute or two. It made her uncomfortable to have it in his, somehow, At half-past eight they turned into Prospect street, and Emmy felt a plow of sfaction as they slia to a stop before Grandmother Pent land’s red brick house. “What if I'd have to drive into Flower street with him!" she said to herself with a shudder, thinking of the night when Jim Baldwin had house. “Do house?" you live here? In Astonishment sounded this the dwelling place of his two-dollars-a-week who could not afford an Augustine hat. “It's my grandmother’s Emmy said simply, as she stepped | out of the car. “We live with her. | nks for this afternoon—it's been twenty- house,” | Harbison held her | mean. She drew her hand from un- | taken her home to the little yellow ' in | Harbison's voice as he looked up at ' stenographer | BB o A 1 o Rl e PG ST 5 i & WOHEN WIN SPLRS IN COMUNITY LIFE {Hold Positions of Responsibility in Many Fields Long before the-transition from the period when the female of the species was less prominent than the male, to the modern age Wwith its great strides towards and beyond the point of equality of the sexes, New Britain women were in posi- tions of importance and responsibil- ity in the business and industrial life |of the community. In recent years, a8 the city has increased in size and expanded in importance, there has been a corresponding advance cred- |ited to the women along the road | to success, and it is now an accepted fact that they will continue to fill places in which executive ability, | business acumen and the ability to 1 do men's work must be demonstrat- |ed. | Many of the exccutives of New | Britain's industries depend in great measure upon women, who, though | they are classed as secretaries, actu- ally are of great importance to the smooth and ecfficient conduct of the offices in which they work. Some have long periods of faithful service behind them, including years in min- or postions which they used as step ping stones to their present places. Skilled in every detail of their call- ing. they work with machine like precision and are always at their best | when the demand upon their re- sourcefulness and general ability is heaviest. Women Important Cog In numerous business places in New Britain, where every day is a busy one, witnessing transactions in- | volving large amounts of money, women are the axis around which the wheels revolve. Through pain | staking application to their duties, they have mastered the knack of | conducting all phases ot various bus- inessess until they have attained the maximum degree of efficency and have become invaluable to their em- ployers. In the majority of instances, they are undoubtedly appreciated and their abilities given full recogni * that she | at door. |tion. Probably some employers are ond she thought he | oie LY O e of depend- was going to say something more o oo p (5 orced to place on the her. Then suddenly he let her go |eote M Bm TROC 0 b L ecord- and started his car. | o th |ing to observers, conditions of one Good night,” he said again, and | sor¢ or another eventually arise to fucyeianal | prove their importance, And that was Low things began | The municipal government has its between them. share of women in places of import- .« e e | ance. Every office has its clerks and Emmy stood on the front porch stenographers, while the city clerk's and watched his car go smoothly office and tax collector's department down the strezt between the lamp |have female deputies. The probation posts. It turned the corner. Not|department has a woman in charge until then did she lea the front|of apn important phase of the work, porch and go around to the side ang all along the line women are | contributing their services to the Grandmother Pentland had asked task of maintaining the business of EX-BROADWAY SHOWGTRL TEACHES PARISHIONERS Member of “Sister Team” Conducts Draniatic and Dancing Classes —Husband Minister. Chicago, Nov. 24 UP—Dorothy Deuel, a member of one of the "sis- ter teams” featured in numerous’ Broadway music shows, is now spending much of her time teaching her husband's parishoners in subur- ban Berwyn how to dance. Classes in tap-dancing for boys, | acrobatic dancing for children and | classes in musical comedy technique for girls and women of St. Michael | and All Angel's Episcopal church are the chore the former Porothy Deuel has given herself to help her husband, the Rev. Henry Scott Ru- bel, rebuild the parish budget. Miss Deuel and'Mr. Rubel met at the Little Church Around the Cor- ner in New York where both werc members of the Episcopal Actors’ Guild. They were married a year agd and came to Berwyn six months later. Mrs. Rubel believed she could make her musical comedy training pay dividends to the church and im- mediately set about it. The Rev. Mr. Rubel, who pro- duced two music shows himself while a student at the University of Wisconein, is lending aid to Mrs Rubel in the theatrical program for aiding the church. “Christians,” he said today, “have more right to dance than anyone. Heretofore they have been too piou Daneing, which has biblical authori- zation, i8 a natural expression of a human being to rythm in gesture.” CHINESE EDUCATOR WILL SPEAK HERE Dr. William Lung to Address Men of First ong. Church William Hung of Peking and Harvard universities will speak at the First Church Men's assoclation | supper meeting on Tuesday evening | at 6:30 o'clock, his topic being “The Chinese Government Today.” Mr, Hung combines in his owh | experience the best values of China’ cultural heritage with those of the | Christian and scientific elements of | western civilization. Born in an of- ficial Chinese family, his father hav- | ing held many magistracies In China including the treasureship of the province of Shantung, Mr. Hung grew up with full famillarity with intellectual and artistie inspirations of China's best. After the usual | education in the Chinese classics, he £ circle of Americans. The Methodist Mission board made use of him in the central office in New York for several years. At the same time he became noted as a popular speaker in Chautauqua circuits. In 1922 he joined the staft of Yenching university, a union Chris- tian university in Peking. Three of the leading American missionary so- cietles—the American board, the Methodist Mission board, and the Presbyterian Mission board—and one British society, the London Mis- sionary Society of England, united to establish a first class university for north China under Christian auspices. For one year Mr. Hung was active in helping to secure funds in America for this university. Re- turning to China in 1923 as profes- sor of church history §n the theoln- “Hold on,” sald Munson. to come here with you and sign it." “I know that," replied the man, “but I want to know what I'm sign- ing and I'm going to have my lawyer look the thing over." Munson advised the *cautious hall, but the prospective husband never came back. “Perhaps,” mused Munson, “he | was too cautious to get married after {he thought it over.” GUARD IMPROVES Gen. Hammond Issues Reports ou National Units Washington, Nov. 24. (UP)—Gen- eral improvement in the efficiency of the various National Guard units throughout the country was noted by gical school, he won the confidence | Major General Creed C. Hammond, of his colleagues and the student ' chief of the Militia Bureau of the body so fully that, although a young | War Department, in his annual re- man without extensive cxperience, | port made public tonight. he was clected in the following year | This improvement, according as dean of the college of arts and | the report, was especialy sciences and in this position gave'|in personnel, organization, train- three years of service in raising the | ing and supply services and was standards of scholarship in the stu- | made possible “despite restrictions dent body and guiding the devclop- | imposed by limitation of funds ment of the university. Mr. Hung |available for the support of this was one of the growing number of | cOmponent.” Chinese on the staff who, with their | Growth of the National Guard American, British and European | Personnel since the World War colleagues, were eager to establish | Was reflected in a table incorpor- a Christfan” university in which |ated in the report which showed Chinese leadership should be funda- | that on Junc 30, 1919, there were mental. During the years of Mr. | 37:210 guardsmen cnrolled, which Hung's deanship, the university was | [/8ure Was progressively increased reorganized in scveral particulars so | I each of the succeeding years un- that eventually it was albe to regis- |t} O June 30, 1929, there were ter under the ministry of oducation | !51:221 officers and men listed. The of China, the first Christian college | 'TOETAM of 1929 and 1930, - accord- 1B bee el b ing to the report, provides for - s in the aggregate strength In 1927 Mr. Hung resigned from 000 and 190,000, respectively. the deanship in order to devote him- Qe e e A selt particularly to the development of the department of history and of the university library, his work | being notable in each of these fields. | In 1928, upon the tablis! Harvard-Yenching instituts devated | "014UP 1o which the culprits. were to the development of Christian cul | ture in China and to the interpreta- tion of Chinese culture in America, Mr. Hung was invited ‘to Harvard ' university as one of the visiting lec- turers of the institute. In the sum- mer of 1929 he expects to rcturn to China to continue his work in the department of histor to marked EELS STOP WHEELS ov. 24 (24)—The “That will do you no good. The girl has man” to bring his lawyer to the city | in- | town ! of Montrevel, near the Swiss border, | has just been the scene of a general | became acquainted with modern education in the Anglo-Chinese col- lege of Foochow. A gifted student Mr. Hung is an cffective interpre- ter of Chinese culture and a popular speaker before Amcrican audiences. He i3 himself typical of the new China in which the Christian dyna- mic is at work moulding the valu of China's heritage and those of | modern western civilization toward The Best Milk eels. It happened during the recent floods which laid waste much of the countryside. The eels were swime- ming lazily down river when the torrent caught them and threw them in hundreds into the turbine of the electricity generating station on the outskirts of the town. They clogged the vanes of the turbines. The turbines slowed down, all lights went out, tramways stopped and nearly all activity ceased. En- gineers worked for days to free the turbines from minced eel. DRIVERS BEWARE Morgantown, W. Va., Nov. 24 (P —County Judge I Grant Lazzelle recommended to the state legislature that it be made a penal offense for an automobile driver to give a wrong | signal. Not 10 per cent of drivers know the signals set by law, says the judge. $40 FOR BERT | Cherbourg, France, Nov. 24 (P— Bert Acosta, the flier, has $40 wait- ing for him here. 2 A misunder- standing resulting when he landed at an airfield without a permit last summer caused him to deposit 1,000 francs as a good faith guarantee. Since then the courts have settled the matter, leaving the flier $40 credit. APPLES Redick’s Baldwin Hill Orchard BALDWIN MACKINTOSH Entrance from Barbour Road. Enter Barbour Road from Stanley Model Home, or from MOORLAND FARM Golden Guernsey Milk Sold in the City Absolutely Safe Raw Milk, Containing All the Vitamines Costs More Worth More C. R. Weidman, Supt. Tel. 3940 the creation of a distinctive Chinese | culture in the modern world. Mr. Hung has chosen as his sub- ject “The Chinese Government To- day”—what it is and what it is try- ing to do. CAUTIOUS MAN Wanted Lawyer to Look Over Mar- riage License San Francisco, Nov. 24 (UP)— Grant Muns who has won the name “Cupid” because he hands out wed- PLUMBING a~o HEATING witn HOT WATER, STEAM, or WARM AIR . OIL BURNERS Established 1902 . eool twilight of the garage into lhr‘i hot sunshine agiin. “Where shall we g0?” he asked. from the first, he received special ding permits as head of San Fran- attention from Dr. John Gody, the €isco’s marriage license bureau, be- president of this college, and learned ' lieves he has found a candidate for at the House of the that did not look like a tavern at all but like somebodv's Invurious all the Milguns to use the &ide government. door. It saved the Aubusson carpet Increase In Busine The Thanksgiving Field “Which way—east or west?™ “Anywhere!" Emmy laughed reeklessly. She was filled with the spirit of adventure that afternoon, and would have set off for the Farthest Isles if he had asked her| | 0. “That's the proper holiday spirit.” sald Harbison, laughing back at her with a gaiety that matched her own. As he swung his car into Chester street & sudden gust of wind tore| Emmy's new little turban from her head and tossed it into the middle ©of the road. An automobile, flash- ing st them, raa over it. Another cume just behind it and did the same thing. “Oh, my brand new hat!" wailed Emmy. With a touch of her father’s .extravagance, she had paid twelve dollars for that hat! Harbison stopped his car and ran to pick it up. He brought it back to | her—a muddy, battered pancake of | a hat. “I'm afraid youll never be able to wear it again,”” he said with a &rin. “You ought to teach your hats not to play in the street.” it “1 haven't had it long enongh to| teach it anything,” Emmy said in | despair. “T just bought it this noon 1 paid twelve dollars for it, and now just see it! It looks like a mud pud- | dle. Well, we'll just have to zo back for my old hat, won't we? I left it at the office.” Harbison got into the roadster. “T want to show you a hat,” he =aid shortly. In Thirteenth street was a little French hat shop that nmy had passed time and time ain, It was one of those expensive little shops that display one hat in the show window as a jeweler might displa one perfect diamond “Lo Mode chez Augustine written upon the window in br gold letters, and Emmy had ¥ dered dozens of times what French word chez meant when she passed the place. Harhison drove La Mode chez stopped before the door shirred-silk curtain. In the was a gray-blue hat; a hs just the color of Emmy's vyes It was trimmed with two tiny Mercury wings of the same soft biu “I never look t elothes, id Harbisor his motor, “but 1 pa dow this morning on my and noticed that hat it's the color of vour eyes, I supposs It's your hat. Let's go in and look at it shall we?” Emmy refusaéd to hudgs “I can’t afford u I she said tirmly. and head with its uncove gold hair. “But you price of it." “1 don't have of it,” Emmy can see the shop ca or, never could afford a hat that cam out of a shop with F ch words written all over it lik: 3 Harbison roar with laughter Then he sobered. “Look here, 1 veal 1y owe you a new hat, Miss Milburn 1 spoiled the other one, turnin corner so fast back there. It my fault that it blew off tead.” Emmy remained stubborn. “It's the wind that did it. and you know i, Mr. Harbison,” she suid. “Pl let's go back to tig Parks Building | his car straight to Augustine and sith its ind hat nop of red- don’t even know the to insw g the your country hous CHAPT The dining room was low-ceilinged, and a wood crackied in the grate near the littl: table where they sat. On shelves along the wall there were pewter jugs and Indian Tree china platters, and the windows were hung printed linen curtains and powder-blue and lavender. Out- side bright banners of sunset flamed along the sky abo ke Erie, “I'm having a good time—Ek won- der it you know it,” Harbison said, as they sat waiting for the chicken and waffles that he had ordered. Emmy had not known it. She had been afraid he was bored all the aft- crnoon as she chatted to him about thousand things: music that she loved and moving pictures and Lucillo Ingham and the beauty of the drive along the cliffs above the lake. He had barely answered her, But now room that in the warm shadowy they had all to them- arms on ving thin that he had bec s to say for a long time “It means a gre Lie here with you t 4, and then D first name for “Emmy.t Emmy looked quickly away at de his afterno called the al to me to n" he by her first time, from Him. She could feel herself growing 1 she felt as if she were 4 to foot so that tremble he- tails of th sunset was reflected in Lottles on 1) it rrots in th Yoo linen serateh on the nest to th “I suppose you know 1 romendously,” Tar Was ayine 1k P voice 10w 1 to conme from ‘L think T must | “uon to the prointne rode a long her cor 1 nrotile ytter looking than His eyes wore 1 he had a way of n m Emmy never had somehow—a way that alwa lier think of Uncle Bill Pi “He's in love with me™ thinking, and the thonght made bread) come thick and her fast in her with | of old rose| 1k to YLe | | it in the front hall, so she said. She was having her regular Sat- Jay night bridge game with her {three old cronies. Emmy conld “ear the sound of voices and high erack- | #d laughter as she passed the closed door of the little card room on her s all alone in the sewing room, deep in a murder story. “Where's Mother?” asked Emmy. “Robb came for her and they went for a drive, They went down to Flower strest, T think.” the b answered, without raising his ey from his book. Where's Father?” Ask me something easy,” said Dan, making a mocking and disre- spectful noiss in his throat. “Play- ing cards down in the ‘hole in the wall' T suppose. That's where he usually hangs out.” As Emmy walked into her bed- room a familiar sound came floating up through the opened windows that looked out upon the carriage | sweep—"Clacke ck—grrmp!” Tt was the struggle-buzgy toiling up the driveway. It stopped on a long. thin wheeze, and a kind of rusty soh. A moment later Mrs. Milburn ard Robb came softly up the back stairs from the kitchen Emmy heard them go into the ing room. They spoke to Dan and then Mrs. Milburn came down the hall. She tapped upon Emmy's locked door. “Tohb’s here, dear,’ wants to see you.' T don't want to see him,” | thought Emmy, her mind still filled with the image of Wells Harbison— and the way he had looked through the darkness as he she said. “He his voic at he sta that had been made France “All ferently (TO BE CONTIN for him in rizht,” she called, indif- vou ED) RRITAIN TO REVISE CENSUS Lor Nov. 24. (P—Rritish Cen <us officials are already marshalling for the taking of rtinin’s nest census in 1931 their forees Although comparatively small as yet, the number of women in New | Britaln conducting their own places of business hase been on the increase during the past several year there are indications of a more de- cided trend towards this condition 'of late. In the real estate field, wo- { men are active, and in the operation {of stores they also have come into prominence. The last few years wit- | nessed the admission of local wo- ¢ men to the practice of law, and with- s|in the next year or two, others of the gentler sex will be admitted. In the field of politics, which was the last to accept women, a new in- fluence has been felt, and New Brit- ain, like other plas has experi- enced it. No community in Connecti- cut had a better organization of wo- men in the recent campaign than |those into which the wives, daugh- ters and sisters of New Britain men formed themsclves, according to leaders who toured the state and | kept their ears to the ground for ev- {v‘ry development. New Britain wo- men are holding elective and ap- | pointive offices in the government, | and from the standpoint of political and business expediency, they are highly rated. AWAIT REPATRIATION Constantinople, Nov. 24. (P— A million and a half ruined Christian | refugees from Anatolia in Greece {and 390,000 Moslem refugees from irccce in Anatolia are anxiously awaiting Premicr Venizelos' prom- |ised trip to Angora. Both groups are victims of the exchange in pop- ulation made between Greece and i Turkey, |a | ted off in the great shining car | | BIG TOURIST Si ON ! PBudapest, Nov. 24. P—Hungary had a record tourist scason thit year. Most of the visitors were | Americans. Many hundreds of Hun- garian Americans returned the visit of the Kossuth delegation to the United St and also re- newed thefr acquaintance with their country of origin. es, VALUABLE FRANCHISE FOR Kleen-Heet Oil Burners For NEW BRITAIN is available to the proper dealer. Write or Phone Hartford 3-2228 Dubin & Co. Inc. 32 ALLYN STREET, HARTFORD Connecticut Distributors | KLEEN HEET | OIL BURNERS and | much from intimate association with A Dr. Gody's family. While in this' college he became & Christian and | upon graduation was given oppor- tunity for study in America. He graduated as A. B. from Ohio | ; Wesleyan college at Delaware, Ohio. | where he won the distinction of | . membership in the Phi Beta Kappa | soclety. For theological training he | went to Union Theological seminary and combined with his theological course special studies in history at Columbia university, where he re- ceived the M. A. degree. Mr. Hung's ability and personality won him the friendship of a wide 666 is a Prescription for { Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, Bilious Fever and Malaria. 1t #s the most speady remedy known. WHEN IN }{ARTFOR. DINE WITH US. Don’t forget to take home Feast ... Will be prepared more ea: Will taste much better the “world’s most cautious man."” ‘The man in question apepared at the clerk’s window and asked for a license. 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NEW BRITAIN STOVE REPAIR CO. 66 Lafayette St. Tel. 772 OH THATS FINE 7 BETTY DEAR, M BRINGING THE YOUNGSTERS ALONG - ) HAVENT ANY ONE TO TAKE CARE OF TAEM - THEYLLNOT MAKE Yol A BIT OF TROUBLE DEARIE-- OVER - -~OR NO OF IT-~ = - YES, THE SAWED WILD AND STANEY Q1918 Lum w. STANLEY MARGARE T, BRING THE LITTLE DEARS TROUBLE AT ALL- 50 GLAD YOU THOUGHT %———- TIME SHE BROUGAT THOSE BRATS OVER,)) THEY UPSET THE =" FISK GLOBE, PUT /)~ e caT IN THE || FLOUR BIN, AND MAN THEYLL 0 THROUGH I THIS HOUSE LIKE A SPRING ToRNADO! = ——— | LAST A LEG OFF MY SPARE BED— T 7 — CLUB DAY= IT Looxs As THOLGH THE HUTCHINS' HOME 1S IN For A ACTIVE AFTERNOON cenrea. emess }1-24-28