OCR Text |
Show "STOPPED TAKING DAILY LAXATIVES After 15 years' dosing now eat KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN" Constipated? Given op hope of finding lasting, gentle relief? Then read this unsolicited letter: "I am a rural letter carrier. For mora than It yeara I used a laxative (vary night. About a rear and a half ago a good friend auggeated that I try KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN. I did ao with the remit that I have not taken pill tine. I eat ALL-BRAN generously every day. I find it a great help." John II. Martin. WcaU minster, Maryland. Wouldn't you like to be able to be regular without ever resorting to harsb laxatives again? You may if your constipation is due to lack of bulk in the diet! Just eat a dish of delicious KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN every day, and drink plenty of water! If not satisfied, end empty carton to Kellogg's of Battle Creek. You'll receive double the money you paid for itl ALL-BRAN is not a purgative. It's a naturally regulating food made from the vital outer layer of wheat. It provides gentle-acting bulk that promotes normal, easy taxation. Get this delicious food at your grocer's. Ask for KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN, the cereal that brings lasting relief to millions. Made by Kellogg'a of Battle Creek and Omaha. WORKS WONDERS FOR MRS. WILLIAMS NASHVILLE. TENN.-A recent letter from Mrs. Johnny Williams of Nashville, Tennessee, to the Faultless Starch Company reveals tut important time-saving ironing secret. Her is what Mrs. Williams Wil-liams wrote: "For the past three years I have been doing my own laundering. laun-dering. Last week I decided to give Faultless Starch a trial. It certainly made my ironing easier and I finished in almost half the time. I shall never top praising Faultless Starch; and I am telling all my friends about It. tt sure worked wonders won-ders for me." Would you like to save half your Ironing time, like Mrs. Williams does? Wo certainly can't promise it, of course, because you surely iron with a different iron and in a different way but, you can't lose anything by trying Faultless Starch. And it may help you save time, just as it has Mrs. Johnny Williams. EAST, BEAUTIFUL IRONING) There is an important reason why Faultless Starch makes ironing iron-ing so easy. You see. Faultless Starch contains ironing-aids, already al-ready mixed in, that keep the iron from sticking. No more fighting a "sticky" iron. No more pushing push-ing or pulling at the end of each stroke. Your iron just slides along, smoothly and beautifully. No wonder won-der Mrs. Williams found she could . save half her ironing time. "4 YOU DESERVE FAULTLESS Why should you go on fighting a "sticky" iron, when Faultless Starch can make your ironing go . so easy? Why tire yourself out ' when Faultless Starch can help ' save your back, your arms, your legs? Why work so hard when Faultless Starch can make it so easy to do beautiful ironing? Just ask your grocer for Faultless Fault-less Starch and use it. Then you'll know why Mrs. Williams says it "works wonders" for her. -Adv. USE 666 COLD PREPARATIONS UQUID. TABLETS, SALVE, NOSE DROPS USE ONLY A) DIRECTED SHOPPING Vw "J" to itart your shop-ping shop-ping toar is ia f f MY youi favorite asy-X asy-X VJ 1V I chaJr.withaaopsa mm " newspaper. Hale a habit of leading the advertisements advertise-ments ia this paper every week. They oaa save you time, energy and money. .aJ mm imai Inc..,,. i.,m 22SL ft O. lea no. tenth Hill CaWerafe Li la ADMBS- CUT. .STATS. DDnanaoa rOe n Infoonotiv I ffuHjAsM I 10 Page qXU5fSC WORID RKEAtCHff : kiil.MMlll,U at II IS i I ' ' . t Nation Can Head Off Postwar Crime Wave Quick Reconversion Can Prevent Era of Lawlessness, FBI Chief Says; Expects Vets to Demand Order. By BAUKIIAGE Newt Analytt and Commentator. WNU Service, 1616 Eye Street NW. Washington, D. C. Will there be a postwar crime wave in the United StatesT That question was put to the man who will have to deal with it if there Is one FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. Hoo-ver. He threw the answer back on me and on a lot of other people In these United States. Here it is: Whether we have a postwar crime wave in the United States depends on how well we as a nation can reconvert re-convert If we do have a period of lawlessness, it will in all probability probabil-ity be led by teen-agers. The returning re-turning veteran has it In his power to make or break such a crime wave. That's not beating around the bush. Let's look at the facts, disturbing dis-turbing though they may be, as the FBI director laid them before me. After the last war. he said, there grew up a lawlessness from which the United States has never been entirely free since. When the gangster gang-ster era of the 20s and 30s was finally final-ly broken up there was some decline de-cline in criminal tendencies. Nevertheless, Never-theless, just before World War II began in Europe crime was still very much with us in fact, the United States had 11 times more cases of murder and manslaughter than England and Wales. With our entry Into the war, crimes increased, the emphasis on type changing from crimes against property to crimes against the personmurder, per-sonmurder, assault, rape and the like. On V-J Day a major crime was being committed every 23 seconds sec-onds in the United States. One person per-son In every 22 in this country had been arrested at some time or other. New Crop of Criminals Teen-Agere Perhaps the most ominous single factor about the picture with which we start the postwar years is that the most frequent criminals in the United States today are boys and girls IT years of age. Director Hoover explained why this has come about These teenagers teen-agers have been maturing in a period pe-riod of great political, economic and social upheaval As they were entering en-tering the critically formative years for them in the beginning teens, fathers fa-thers and big brothers, to whom they might have looked for guid ance, left home to enter the armed services. Mothers frequently had to take jobs which kept them away from home, leaving boys and girls to their own social and recreational devices. Frequently, families pulled up roots and moved to teeming industrial indus-trial centers In other parts of the country where jobs could be had in war plants. Normal living was Impossible Im-possible under such overcrowded conditions. There was a general spirit of wartime abandon which impressionable im-pressionable youth was not long in catching lack of discipline, lack of personal responsibility, became the accepted thing. A "war hero" attitude at-titude developed in many of those too young to "join up." Then teen-age boys and girls found that because of the manpower shortage short-age they could stop school and take jobs where they would make more money than some of their elders did before the war. Coming suddenly onto what seemed sudden wealth, and of their own making, found them unprepared to use it wisely. "We have been developing a generation gen-eration of money-rich -nd character-poor Americans." While we had our attention on the far-flung battlefronts the foundation was being laid tor one of our major postwar problems on the home front. There Is another condition that has been a breeding ground for lawlessness law-lessness during the war, according to Hoover, and which may spread if crime detection and law enforcement enforce-ment do not keep ahead of It. "Gangsterism has been showing signs of revival during the war," he said. "There have been gang wars in places where they used to thrive Hijacking, shakedown rackets, black markets and bootleg have been on the increase." Therefore, the groundwork has been laid for a new era of Dillingers. Then there are the returning veterans. vet-erans. Because of their peculiar training, will they present a new band of criminals efficiently trained BARBS . . . Christmas is coming yes it la tt will be here before your package to your soldier is there unless you mail now. Wrap securely address properly. prop-erly. .' la 1840 this country had less than 13Mi . million men in what is considered con-sidered the productive age group of 49 to 04' It is estimated that in 1970 there win be over 18tt millioa 41.1 In taking life and appropriating property that does not belong to them? Vet $ Desire Orderly Community On this subject. Director Hoover issued an emphatic "No!" Here is bis reasoning: "Of course, soldiers are trained to kill but so are we of the FBI and so are police officers. But no man of the FBI has ever been arrested for a crime of violence. There will be criminals among the returning veterans, vet-erans, it is true criminals who. will operate more efficiently than they would have if they hadn't had army training. But these are the men who probably would have been criminals crim-inals anyway if they had remained civilians. After all. the army is only a cross-section of the American people. peo-ple. Of course, the real criminals never got Into the army their records rec-ords were too bad. "I expect the returning veteran to be a big help to us in combatting crime," Hoover went on "The boys who are returning from the battlefields battle-fields have seen so much of destruc tion, horror, disease, the dangers of dictatorship that they are anxious to see their communities get back to normal, peaceful ways. They are more Interested in their homes and civil affairs. They want law and order or-der over here." The FBI expects the veterans to be a major influence on the criminal crim-inal tendencies of the teen-agers. "If the big brothers and fathers coming back settle down into jobs or go back to school, they can show the younger boys and girls how to be good citizens. The youngsters look up to these men as heroes they can be a strong influence on them." But the responsibility for leading the teen-agers aright does not rest solely on the veterans nor alone on the agencies of law enforcement. "The question of crime among our youth cannot be pawned off on a few juvenile courts, overburdened juvenile juve-nile bureaus, and the local police," Director Hoover declared. "These agencies can help materially, but the big job is getting every parent, business busi-ness man, school teacher, salesman, farme. , mechanic, housewife, and every other forward-looking citizen to knuckle down to the two-fisted realization that this is their job and it is up to them to do something about it" But no matter what is done to try to meet a crime situation that now has a potentiality for great evil In this country, there is one thing which Hoover believes will determine deter-mine in the long run whether it will be law or lawlessness from here on. "Whether or not we have a postwar post-war crime wave will depend in the last analysis on how we as a nation convert to a peacetime basis," Director Di-rector Hoover announced emphatically. emphati-cally. "You can't divorce economics econom-ics from crime. Although it is true that having money does not necessarily neces-sarily prevent a person from committing com-mitting a crime, not having money is a definite cause of it When people peo-ple are out of work, there is a greater great-er chance for them to get into trouble trou-ble than when they are employed." "If the Republicans don't look out, this guy Truman is going to pick up some votes right out from under their noses, he's so darned human," a political wiseacre whispered to me at the Press Club party for Byron Price. We were watching the President mingle with the guests, obviously enjoying himself. Just then a colleague of mine on the weekly press came up. His face was wreathed in smiles. "Guess what." he exclaimed. "I just said to the President 'I'm from Kansas City' and what do you think he said? That's a suburb of a certain cer-tain city, isn't it?' " And my friend, who has been a Republican since he can remember and especially so in the last 12 years, is beginning to think that "this guy Truman" is all right when the party was breaking up the President was heard to observe with a broad Missouri grin that he was having as good a time as he did when he was at the Press Club last That time he was still vice president and his picture was taken playing the piano with movie Itnr Lauren Bacall perched atop It by Baukhage When the German armies left Holland Hol-land each soldier was permitted to carry 75 pounds only Any more was confiscated by tht Hollanders. But they wouldn't have had much chance to loot anyhow because the German civilians left the Netherlands ahead of them and left very little behind that wasn't nailed down. American Farmers to Continue High Goals in Satisfying Demands Peacetime Need for Products Prod-ucts Assures Farmers of Good Market and Price. What will the impact of war's end mean to American agriculture? That question has been raised with increasing frequency ever sin:e Hirohito accepted President Truman's Tru-man's unconditional surrender terms and the Jap hordes have laid down their arms. It has brought in its train other questions: Will a farm slump occur? Will continued vast production smash prices? Will transition to peacetime schedules upset farm economy? Three fairly definite answers have emerged and each is hearteningly reassuring to everyone who lives on or near a farm: 1. Demand for foods, fibers and oils will continue to require a high rate of farm production. The world must eat and American farmers must feed it. 2. Farm prices will not be deflated. The government has already guaranteed guar-anteed the farmer support prices for many of his products for one or two years after the war. 3. The farmer, unlike industry, is not faced with reconversion problems. prob-lems. His job is growing crops and he needs no different set ot tools to accomplish his objectives. All of these factors eliminate the possibility of a sudden crash in farm income. Farm economists are agreed there will be no Immediate cutback in production despite the end ot the war. In the months to come, domestic do-mestic and military needs of the United States plus the relief demands de-mands from liberated areas in Europe Eu-rope and the Pacific will take all the food this nation can produce. With vast areas of Europe and Asia laid waste, American farmers will be called on to produce and keep on producing. It may be years before the ravaged countries can come back anywhere near to nor-maL nor-maL In the meantime American fanners have a big job ahead to help keep whole continents alive and healthy. During this same time the United States itself must be fed. As demobilization of our armed forces proceeds, there will be less need for the various services to have great stocks of food in reserve. That will tend to increase civilian supplies sup-plies as well ss permit better distribution. dis-tribution. No Major Farm Surplus. With industrial reconversion getting get-ting the green light the dislocation cf workers caused by war contract cutbacks may be of much shorter duration than has been anticipated That means more peacetime civilian jobs. One thing the war demonstrated demonstrat-ed was that If the entire nation Is at work, there is no major farm surplus sur-plus problem. The greatest crops in history have been produced during the war. The record year was 1942. Next was 1944 and Indications are that this year will exceed 1943, so that 194S may be the third best Credit for this epic achievement must go to the nation's farmers, but the contribution of the fertilizer industry in-dustry should not be overlooked. Agricultural Ag-ricultural authorities estimate that more than 20 per cent of the crop production in the war years has been due to the use ot fertilizers. The use of plant foods has been of essential es-sential importance to the food production pro-duction program because it has enabled en-abled farmers to produce bffeger crops on existing acres instead of having to plow up millions of acres of additional farm land. The saving In labor, equipment and man hours has been enormous. Farm income during rectnt years has passed the peaks reached during dur-ing and immediately after World 8 ' N I-- - - - - - Increased production of dairy and poultry products has been little short of a miracle. Better breeding, feeding and management has been the answer. Even greater results caa be expected in the next few yeara. Industrial Reconversion Getting in The war contractor who loses his job of working tor the government Is in i much better financial position posi-tion for his immediate reconversion needs than the worker deprived of employment by wholesale contract cancellations. It was early realized by some leaders that provision must be made to enable manufacturers with their working capital tied up in war contracts to obtain use of such capital at the earliest possible moment Consequently the Office ot f i ? ; I 11 1 it I K iiaMilBMSi,JW-3jp8,ni'a' KM The war production of garden crops reached a new high. The demand will continue for some time. New varieties, Improved soU fertilisation and new equipment will aid the farmer in repeating his record production of these crops. War I. Prices are now near or above parity. Even if prices should come down to government-support levels a drop of perhaps 15 per cent below present peaks farm purchasing purchas-ing power will be enormous. The farmer has a higher amount to spend out of his income than other wage earners, for the reason that less of his income is required for rent food and fuel than is the case with city dwellers. Six million farm families comprising approximately 30 million people having a gross income in-come in excess of 20 billion dollars a year will be a factor of tremendous tremen-dous importance to America's peacetime economy. Farmer in Strong Position. Just as significant as agriculture's high income rate in recent years is the fact that the farmer has been laying aside a good portion of his savings in war bonds to spend for essentials in years to come. Clearly the farmer has emerged from the war in a stronger position than he was at its start To maintain that position the farmer should do some straight thinking and planning. Two things are especially important: 1 He should avoid overexpansion through the purchase of additional land in the peace years ahead; 2 He should make immediate plans to repair re-pair the damage to his soil's fertility fertil-ity level which the vast war crop production quotas have caused. The experience ot the last war with its farm land boom and subsequent subse-quent collapse should be a reminder that the American farmer should not go in for more land than he can successfully suc-cessfully handle. Farm land prices have already risen dangerously toward to-ward inflation levels. Farsighted agricultural authorities are urging farmers to "keep their shirts on" and steer clear of the pitfalls of land speculation. Better soil management methods on a well-equipped and economically economical-ly operated farm will prove safer in the long run than vast fields without efficient management The key to successful farming operations op-erations in postwar years will lie in Increasing the per acre yield on existing ex-isting crop land rather than in bringing bring-ing additional acreage under cultivation, cultiva-tion, a recent statement by the Middle Mid-dle West Soil Improvement committee commit-tee pointed out Contract Settlement has been working work-ing long hours to speed up these settlements. Reconversion Director Snyder reports re-ports that about 8). 0,10 contractors and their employees have been trained in special courses and know about settlement procedure. Provision Pro-vision has been i .ide also for the contractors to o!::iin government guaranteed loans to free funds frozen fro-zen by contract cancellations. In addition the treasury department Production of Entire World A. t i f 1 5m 1 'X v- 4V i "In months to come the emphasis will be on reducing the cost of crop production per unit," the statement sets forth. "That means making every ev-ery acre do a better crop producing job. "In every community there are farmers who increased their wartime war-time crop output as high as 50 per cent, without increasing the cultivated cultivat-ed area by one single acre. In every case the larger yield was the result of adopting good soil fertility practices. The experience of these farmers can be profitably followed by their neighbors in their peacetime peace-time operations. Their soil-conserving methods not only prevented waste of fertility, but actually have helped restore it "Such methods include growing legumes to enrich the soil's nitrogen nitro-gen and organic matter supply, the use of adequate quantities of mixed fertilizers containing nitrogen, phosphorus phos-phorus and potash, liming, contour plowing and a limiting, so far as possible, pos-sible, of soil-depleting crops." Soil Fertility Replenishment. The matter of soil fertility replenishment replen-ishment will have an important bearing on the peacetime continuation continua-tion of farm prosperity. If the nation's farms are to be kept productive, pro-ductive, a vast soil-rebuilding job lies immediately ahead. How important this is may be understood un-derstood from a recent report issued by the Soil Conservation service of the department of agriculture which estimated that nearly one billion acres more than 90 per cent of the nation's farmlands need soil conservation con-servation treatment to protect them from erosion and to maintain their fertility. Wartime crop goals used up the soil's resources of nitrogen, phosphorus phos-phorus and potash faster than they could be replaced in spite of the fact that the fertilizer industry broke all previous production records. Farmers Farm-ers have realized that this wartime drain on their soil's fertility level was a necessary contribution to victory. vic-tory. But the fact remains that wealth borrowed from the soil to help hasten peace must be repaid. While every encouragement will be given to soil rebuilding projects by the federal government and by state agricultural agencies, the major ma-jor responsibility for getting the job done will rest on the shoulders ol individual farmers. The effectiveness of the individual farmer's soil rebuilding program can be enhanced by the co-operation of agronomists at state agricultural agricul-tural colleges and experiment stations. sta-tions. Through research and experimentation experi-mentation over a long span of years, these experts have developed information infor-mation concerning fertilizer needs for various crops and soils that it helpful to the farmer who is undertaking under-taking a replenishment program. The cooperation of the fertilize: industry will be an effective aid, j also. The present plant capacity ol j manufacturers is sufficient to meet ' ill peacetime needs of agriculture. I Farmers are more fortunately sit- j uated for accomplishing their soil- j restoring job than at any time in the ! past generation. Dollars invested in war bonds, during the period when : farm cash income has been at a high level and farm debt at a low point, can provide the ready cash to pay for the nitrogen, phosphorus and potash pot-ash needed to build up the fertility level of America's soil. Fast Strides has moved forward the time for obtaining ob-taining tax rebates by big business which will add to the 30 billions ol stored up funds now in the handa of the large corporations for peacetime peace-time expansion and production. But no farsightedness has been apparent in planning for the reconversion recon-version of the millions of wartime workers held to their posts by manpower man-power controls ... at least no legislation legis-lation has shown up on the statute books. U' lin WASHINGTON WNU Weshiagtoa Bureau. 1616 Er St.. N. W. Doctors' Lobby Fights Socialized Medicine WHAT happens, or what does not happen here in Washington ofttlmes gives cause for wonderment if congress, if leaders in the fields of economics, of agriculture, industry, indus-try, labor, social relations, etc., actually know what the people are thinking, what the people of the nation na-tion want or need. It is easy tor persons down here in the nation's capital where events happen so fast and with such farreaching effect to lose the "common touch." ( And the cause for most of the. blindness and the out-of-focus perspective per-spective is self-interest and the self-' ish activities of various pressure groups. At the present time, there is a tremendous lobby functioning against the extension ot the social, security act to include medical care j and hospital insurance and other protective features for low income groups. This lobby is spearheaded by an organization known as the National Physicians committee, with headquarters in Chicago. Every effort is being made by this opposition to defeat the provisions of the new social security amendments, amend-ments, all in the face of the wants, needs and desires of those for whom the benefits are intended. Labor is solidly behind the new social security securi-ty proposals and a survey just completed com-pleted by the department of agriculture agricul-ture indicates that this same concern con-cern is voiced by farmers the country coun-try over. Hospital Insurance , The survey shows that more than four-fifths of the nation's farmers favor more public medical med-ical clinics in rural areas, and more than three-fourths want to subscribe to some flat-rate prepayment pre-payment plan to cover possible hospital bills and the cost of doctors and nurses for themselves them-selves and their families. This is the hospitalization Insurance feature of the new proposals. The answers to the department survey indicate that farmers generally gen-erally are conscious and concerned about the need for better rural medical med-ical and health facilities. They are aware that farm youth, 18 and 19 years old, showed the highest rejection re-jection rate in the selective service for physical, mental and educational education-al defects of any occupational group ... 41 per cent, compared with an average of 25 per cent for other groups. Many factors, the survey shows, contribute to bad rural health . . . the shortage of medical and sanitation sanita-tion facilities and the lack of physicians, physi-cians, dentists and hospital services. serv-ices. Many of these rural folks are in the low income groups which would be reached by the new amendments, since in 1939. approximately approxi-mately 3,000,000 out of the 6,000,000 farms in the country produced less than $600 worth of farm products. The records show that out of the 3,070 counties in the country, in 1940 there were 1,200 counties containing contain-ing a total of more than 15,000.000 people, which had no hospitals at all. And there were only about 1,800 counties with any organized public pub-lic health service, and most of these inadequate. According to the estimates of the surgeon general of the United States, there is need now for some $2,000,000 in hospital construction which would provide for 1,000,000 jobs including doctors, doc-tors, nurses, technicians and assistants as-sistants to keep them going. Medical Care Wanted Animal husbandry, consolidated schools, roads and bridges, soil conservation and crop insurance, agricultural experiment stations, vast agricultural laboratories and many other material objectives are fostered through governmental help for the benefit of the rural areas. Many, many farmers, however, how-ever, believe that assurance of medical and hospital care for themselves them-selves and their families are more important than building roads, constructing con-structing dams or saving "soil, and that no price is too high for a healthy, vigorous and productive people. The statistics show that although the death rate from all causes for the last several decades has been lower among rural people than urban ur-ban folks, deaths from some preventable pre-ventable diseases such as typhoid, diphtheria, malaria and pellagra tend to be more numerous among rural people. Moreover, the death rate has been going down rapidly in the cities, but relatively slowly in the rural areas. The records show that folks in the rural areas are ill oftener and for longer periods than city people. Under the social security law there are now 36,000,000 insured workers against unemployment. There is no insurance for farmers either for unemployment, old age or survivors' Insurance. The new act would extend these latter two provisions pro-visions to Include farmers, professional pro-fessional people, domestics and others not now covered by the law. I mmt mm em i ? me a f i A General Quiz 1 The Questions n 1. On January 1 the earn, how many miles nearer the1 than on July 1? 2. Why will the new giant aitf ers have their tires filled helium? 3. What king wore high heeli increase his height? i 4. What is meant by the riglf angary? t 5. How many colleges . i i iounueu in America oeiort American Revolution? M 1 S 1 A I 1. a "a 6. Specie payment means u mem in wnai: The Answers 1. Three million miles. 2. To reduce the weight so more payload may be earn - Twenty pounds of helium wil the work of 180 pounds of air. 3. Louis XIV. 4. The right of a belligerent tion to seize the property of i trals. j 5. Nine. I 6. Metal coins. A me and "5 S I classifies; departmekB AUTOS. TRUCKS & ACCES RflSHiSSJ?! MISCELLANEOUS WE BUT AND SELL Office Furniture. Files. Typewriter!, f Ins Machines, Safes, Cash Registers Bg SALT LAKE DESK EXCHANGE IS Weal Broadway. Salt Lake Cttj. t a" t r PERSONAL MAIL ORDER PHOTO FINISHI) Developing, printing, enlarging, ear Write lor price list and free mailiix PHOTO SERVICES. Inc. ISO Market St Baa Franeleee 4,1 WANTED TO BUT Ship all ol your raw furs, rabbit I bides and wool to NORTHWEST BIDE AND FUR COMPANY. 463 t Sri Weat. Salt Lak City, where yc. always receive highest market pi Keep Posted on Valii en i; ai ajL ECONOMICAL! ; Clf Stock la file aroof. .SX termite proof, parma- it. Ideal taw noaae S. coope, dairy henaea, eta. '. Available in any quantity. WNU W Foi-Yois To Feel Well U hoar erery day, week, aerer atoppinf, the kidney , lull matter from the blood. II more people were aware of K" fctdneyt moat eonatantly removi pint fluid, exceae aada and other ' matter that cannot atajr in the without injury to health, there be better amderatandint of whole ayatMP ia upset when to funetioa properly. .t Burning , ecanty or too N" (Job tometimee warm) that wbk hi wrong. Yon may ruffer naK arte, headache. paina, getting np at n hM. 2 Why sot try Dooa'a P" JZ be Ming a medicine reeommM country orer. Woaa tM!l tioa of the kidoeya and help J ,4. flunk cut poieonooe waste nw. Get Don; today. Uaa with coat At all drag FT Q - 'fntqn nSSBs fleet 1 A jcomn llil Pli LJ MSPIttkL Im -ty e i i.'kot m.L 4 2 r |