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Show THE LEW SUN. LEHI, UTAH mmBTmrmimmmmmmimmmmmmammmmmtmm.. News Review of Current Events the World Over President Roosevelt's Vacation Trip Ends NRA Modification and Drouth Relief Taken Up Von Papen's Hard Task in Austria. By EDWARD W. PICKARD $ by WUr Nwappr Union, -. ," ' -1t'- President Rooevelt PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT ended bis rather long vacation trip, returning re-turning to bis home In Hyde Park. Kew York. During the remainder of the summer ana until un-til congress meets he will spend some time there and In Warm Springs, Georgia, but most of the time he will be In Washington, busy with the nation's affairs In his temporary tem-porary office which has been established estab-lished In the Blue room of the White House. The executive offices are being be-ing remodeled and enlarged. One of the first matters to claim the President's Pres-ident's attention Is the modification of NRA. The secret cabinet committee com-mittee he appointed to Inquire into the legality and advisability of continuing con-tinuing and extending the price fixing fix-ing features of NRA has decided this price flitng should be restricted restrict-ed and gradually abandoned, and there Is little doubt that this advice ad-vice will be followed. Whether or not the fixing of prices Is legal. It Has brought sharp nd continuous criticism from Senator Corah and many others which has not been relished by the New Dealers. On his way from the west coast the President not only saw some of the great public works projects of the Northwest, but also passed through" regions that have suffered severely from the drouth. So he Is backing op the government agencies agen-cies In their work of hurrying vast sums of government money to the arid regions to ease the human suffering suf-fering and also to lessen the chances of another such catastrophe. catastro-phe. The Public Works administration, administra-tion, which had an original appropriation appro-priation of $3,300,000,000, revealed It had spent about $400,000,000 on projects to aid Impoverished western west-ern families. Emergency Relief administration officials announced they had allotted allot-ted huge sums to teed men and women. They also have spent thousands thou-sands to care for starving cattle. Public Works Administrator Harold Har-old L. Ickes, who was on an Inspection Inspec-tion tour In the drouth area, or dered his forces to expedite all construction con-struction projects affecting the dry regions. XJATIONALIZATION of silver. authorized by the Inst congress, con-gress, was ordered Into effect by the President. This will have tittle Immediate effect on the average citizen, though the move Is somewhat some-what Inflationary, and started prices on the op-grade, Big debtors and owners of silver mines will benefit. but as the value of the dollar goes down, the holders of securities and loans suffer loss. The President's order directs the surrender to the government of all silver bullion and bars within 00 days, the price to be paid being 00.01 cents an ounce. fUlver coins and Bllverware are not Included Under the silver purchase act the treasury Is authorized to value the silver It obtains at $1.29 an ounce and to Issue silver certificates on that basis. The government pro poses to hold enough silver to make op 25 per cent of the metal backing of the national currency. No one knows how much s'lver bullion there Is la the United States, and it may be necessary to make considerable con-siderable purchases la China and India. OECHETARY OF" STATE HULL and Secretary of Agriculture Wallace joined In a statement concerning con-cerning their efforts to revive America's Amer-ica's world trade, explaining that the reciprocal trade agreements to be negotiated with foreign countries coun-tries will be beneficial and not harmful to American agriculture and manufacturing. The statement pointed out. In answer an-swer to criticism from farm organisations, organi-sations, that farm Interests would not be sacrificed to aid other groups. It also said no sacrifice of any major or basic agricultural or man ufacturing Industry was planned, although Secretary Wallace told re porters that some harm might be done to a tiny fraction of the pro ducers for the greater good of all. ference by a small body of citizens known to be Communist agitators who are being supported in their agitations agi-tations by the sympathetic attitude of Gov. Floyd B. Olson." At the end of the statement was a sentence Interpreted as a request for replacement of the federal mediators, medi-ators, Father Francis J. Haas and E. IL Dunnlgan. The conciliators were authors of a peace plan which the nnlon accepted ac-cepted with alacrity because It granted a maximum of the demands de-mands made before the walkout it was turned down by the employers, employ-ers, but mediation proceeded until the principal point of difference now concerns the rehiring of all the strikers. The Haas Dunnlgan plan makes that blanket provision. The employers do not wish to be forced to take back men who Lave Communistic sympathies. .i.H Parana von Papen u thousand men and women comprising the Minneapolis protective committee telegraphed an appeal to President Roosevelt to protect the constitutional rights now superseded by martial law In their city. Copies of the appeal were sent also to Secretary Perkins Per-kins and Lloyd Garrison, chairman f the National Labor Relations board "We are satisfied." they wired. "that an agreement between em ployers and employees could be reached were It not for the Inter-1 keepers. TN GREEN BAY, WIS., the Tresi- dent delivered what was consid ered his principal political address of the year. He told his hearers that the New Deal was going ahead on Its nonpartisan road and that those who support It "do so because It Is a square dea and because It Is essential to the preservation of security and happiness of a free so ciety." The President's reference to Wis consin political alignments was this significant remark: Tour two senators, both old friends of mine, and many others have worked with me In maintaining maintain-ing excellent co-operation be tween the executive and legislative branches of the government," Senator Robert M, LaFollette, Re publican Independent and sponsor of the new state political party, Is up for re-election. F. Ryan Duffy. Democrat, Is the other senator from Wisconsin, elected In 1032. FItANZ VON PAPEN, vice chancellor chan-cellor of Germany, who was appointed ap-pointed minister to Austria during dur-ing tha excitement that followed the assassination of Chancellor Doll-fuss, Doll-fuss, has been accepted ac-cepted by the Austrian Aus-trian cabinet after considerable delay. Ills avowed task is to restore amicable am-icable relations between be-tween the two governments, gov-ernments, but this wlU not be easy. Chancellor Schuseh-nigg Schuseh-nigg Is as determined deter-mined to root out Nazism In Austria as was his prede cessor, and at the same time the Uerman Nazis are keeping up their press and radio attacks on the Aus trian government. In camps around Munich are about 40.000 Austrian Nail fugitives for whom Von Pa pen Is expected to obtain amnesty so they may return to their coun try; but as they have been hoping to march Into Austria under arms to overthrow the government, It Isn't likely Schuschnlgg will care to let thetn return. The cabinet In Vienna Is taking vigorous action to curb the Nazis, and it Is reported thut the execu uve committee of that party had been ordered dissolved, the members being told to take leaves of absence and to cease activities. Chancellor Hitler Is dally solidi fying his power In Germany. The latest step Is to require all Prot estant pastors and church officials to take an oath of fealty to Hitler Just as did the Nazi storm troops ana menihers or the regular army, New rules were Imposed by the na tional synod that make Reichs- blshop Mueller the supreme law maker and authority for the church. Between eight and ten thousand political prisoners In concentration camps were given their liberty by an amnesty decree annonncprf hv Hitler In memory of President Von Ulnucnburg. UEAliTt approval was alven bv the world Baptist coneress. tn session In Berlin, to a proposal that a plebiscite be held In 40 countries 10 aeterruine wneiher the people warn io cght another war. The sug gestion was made by Rev. Harold Camr of Oakland, Calif, who said the Kellogg pact should be made the basis of such a vote, all nations which adhered to It taking part A RABS of Algeria, like the Arabs 4 of Palestine, de not love their Jewish neighbors, so they started anti-Semitic riots In Constantlne and surrounding towns. In the course of which a great many persons were killed or wounded. Nearly all the casualties were among Jews. The French military authorities quickly got control or mo situation. Con stantlne Is In a wheat growing area and the Arab farmers had a poor crop this year. The rioting gave them a chance to wtp out manv debts to Jewish backers and ahop- M yum wfnvm v f F. Shannon SHIPPING and business interests lomt have urged the establish ment of "free ports" or foreign traAa mip at many American sea. ib ml river norts. and this Is now under consideration by the government, having been authorized by the last congress. Trade and hlnr.Inir exDerts are preparing In formation on how to apply for grants. Rom of the cities that have asked how to set up the trade zones, are New York, Newark, N. J.; Providence, Provi-dence, It. L; Pittsburgh, Philadelphia; Philadel-phia; Ran Dleeo. Calif.; Miami, Fla and Hoboken, N. J. Private corporations located on the Great Lakes also are Interested. A barrier would surround the area sot off for the trade zone. Into this area, which must be equipped with adequate shipping and ware housing facilities, foreign and domestic do-mestic merchandise could be brought, without being subject to customs laws, and stored, broken op, repacked, assembled, distributed, distribut-ed, sorted, mixed with other for eign and domestic goods, and then exnorted. Or. If desired, the mer chandise could be placed In American Amer-ican domestic commerce upon payment pay-ment of customs duties. FROM now on Communists ara not going to have so pleasant a time in the United States, and the spreading of their destructive doc trine will not be so easy. Cbngrea-slonal Cbngrea-slonal investigations investiga-tions Into this matter mat-ter may not have amounted to a great deal, but several of the country's great organizations have undertaken to arouse the people to the danger that threatens their government gov-ernment and their national institutions. The Order of Elks took cognizance of the Com munist threat in its convention in Kansas City, and Michael F. Shan non, Its newly elected grand exalt ed ruler, la now making an airplane tour of the country for the purpose of urging every lodge of the order to carry on the "Pro-America pro gram In Its community. He will travel 10,000 miles to give what he calls "marching orders" to the 1,400 Elk lodges. Of the Communists in America, Mr. Shannon says: A vast and formidable organiza tion has been set up. The United States is now divided Into twenty districts, each with its own committee, commit-tee, Ench district is divided into two sections and subsections, with section committees set up In accordance ac-cordance with the residential loca tions of the Communfst members. "Youth organizations, formed to teach not only disrespect, but hate, for American institutions, have appeared ap-peared everywhere. Organizations under patriotic names, but designed to destroy confidence In our govern ment, are meeting nightly. Bureaus of propaganda are working secretly." The Crusaders, that organization of young business men that was so influential In bringing about repeal of prohibition, has been reorganized and, under the leadership of Fred G. Clark, commander In chief, has entered the fight against the Com munists and other groups that seek to overthrow American institutions. Among its national advisers are Aldrlch Blake, Oklahoma City ; Francis H. . Brownell, New York ; John W. Davis, New York: Prof. E. W, Kemmcrer, Princeton, N. J.; Martin W. Littleton, New York; Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., New York; Charles F. Thwlng. Cleveland; James P. Warburg, New York, and Sewell L. Avery and Albert D. Las-ker, Las-ker, Chicago. The Paul Reveres, a national organization, or-ganization, was established espe cially to cleanse educational and religious Institutions of subversive Influences; and the American Vigilante Vig-ilante Intelligence federation Is also actively combating Communism. The . Department of Americanization Americaniza-tion of the American Legton is working In the same cause. A congressional subcommittee, of which Representative Charles Kra mer Is chairman, has been investi gating Communist activities In southern California, and also has heard a lot of testimony about the so-called Silver Shirts, an organization organiza-tion with alleged Nazi affiliations and a large membership. An Intelligence Intel-ligence service witness who Joined the Silver Shirts, said members were armed and that he was offered of-fered money for stolen government machine guns, rifles and ammunition. ammuni-tion. He said the declared objective objec-tive of the organization was to take charge of the United States government, govern-ment, by force If necessary. WHETHER or not Japan obtains naval parity with Great Britain Brit-ain and the United States, it proposes pro-poses to have a powerful navy. Admiral Ad-miral Mineo Osuml, minister of the navy, submitted to the cabinet the largest budget in the country's his tory. It calls for appropriation of about $214,416,000 for the coming year. New Items alone total about $yo,0O0,00O. In the last budget the diet allowed the navy little more than half of what Is now asked by Admiral OsumL France has denied Japan her support sup-port of any steps toward abrogation abroga-tion of the Washington navy treat of 19-1 by announcing her intention to adhere to Its provisions pending "some change in the European situation." w 0 0 Ef Anna 3ieCImi WNtl Srvle CHAPTER IX Continued 12 He did not care to gaze at It too long. "What a place! She must never, never come here again." Turning too quickly, he slipped, but Instantly regained his balance by a violent lurch backward. In the same moment he felt the heavy Impact Im-pact of something against his shoulder a glancing blow and wheeled around to find his hands violently and Instinctively clutching clutch-ing at the square green base that he knew very well Indeed ; the base to which was attached the old tree. At the other end of the tree was Raider's dark and angry face, watchful, watch-ful, keen and sly. Wilton had a cinema flash of events converging to and diverging from this encoun ter. Moving across this screen were figures both familiar and strange-Berenice strange-Berenice In her patient beauty i Haskell roaming the old academy like some were-wolf; the immobile waxen children. That glancing blow on his shoulder was It an accident? ac-cident? He would soon know and along the avenues of his mind ap proached another figure himself, tragically snared. "See here, Balder," he tried to speak with friendly Indifference. "Be a little imH careful when you're throwing rubbish Into the whirl. You might hurt somebody "What are you In the way for?" The words conveyed more than their obvious meaning, and were accompanied by a sound, half laugh, half snarl Over Balder's broad, blank countenance something passed like a cloud, obliterating even bis purpose; but Wilton instinctively felt that he was In greater danger than he had ever been In his life. Lifel it might be measured only In moments now. Then a terrible fear. Had this man been sent to kill them both had he already killed Berenice? He tried to think calmly and to decipher the black shadows on that huge face. Balder said: "Let go that end. I'll give It another throw." "You let go your end. I am near est the stream." For answer, Bulder's hand gripped the tree trunk tighter. Wilton noticed no-ticed the bits of tinsel still wound about one dry stump of a limb. "It's time that Christmas tree is thrown away," he said, realizing In the same Instant that such com ments could not but make the situation situa-tion worse. "It's my business, not yours. Tnrn around now." "What for?" Wilton asked, trying to speak carelessly. "Do as you're told," Balder roared. Wilton's thoughts raced on. To make a sudden dart for liberty was Impossible. The fellow could over take him with three swings of his great legs; only strategy availed now. Balder seated himself on a fallen limb, and, In this position, so steep was the cliff, he 6eemed nlmost hanging above Wilton's head. The latter thought best to drop the mm I, Wl 111 I I i f 7 Hid l&'Z.Mj.iMl" At the Other End of the Tree Was Balder's Dark and Angry Face. so base; and he let It down irentlv as not to Jerk the trunk out of Bal aers hand. "Pleasant spot," Wilton remarked, wougn it must have looked differ ent the day the Bracebridge chil- uren were drowned." a grunting voice came from ahove. "This ain't an easy place leave!" v "I mean to leave It." "You do do your "Certainly. I must get back rore unrt." "Suppose you never went bark "What do yon mean?" "Suppose- yon stayed here?" "I have no Intention of stayli here." He gpoke firmly, but his i oer terror revealed to him at What connection lay between to te la ist his own Imminent danger and a long-ago long-ago tragedy. The withered tree was the link again to be an Instrument In-strument of death. "Throw In your tree when you choose. I am going home." Balder's laughter echoed even above the roar of the fall "I weigh two hundred and ten pounds. I am six feet three In my socks. My muscle Is iron. And you you are Just a schoolroom plant You don't deserve to live, you don't I" "And maybe I don't deserve to die any more than " he paused, then hurled his boomerang "the Bracebridge children. Am I to have the same execution?" He knew he had signed his own death warrant, but at least he could bring for one instant Into stark daylight the suspected crime whose shadow lay along the corridors of Lostland academy and haunted Its decaying rooms. The great face above him grew quite livid for an Instant, but no rebound of denial came from his Hps. "How much is he going to give you for this Job?' The boldness of the question dis turbed even Balder's poise. His snarl came slowly, uncertainly. "He don't make no bargains. He ain't open and square like that He hints walks all around his design, never comes out bold and free with it But he pays high for little jobs moving trunks or books five hundred hun-dred for moving his books after" "After you struck one of the Bracebridge children with this weapon and cost the lives of the others," Wilton finished deliberately. deliberate-ly. He knew he had taken away forever his chance for life, but In this last grim hour it was a satisfaction satis-faction to wring out the truth ; and It comforted him to add to the indictment in-dictment "Your master, Haskell, never wanted to go with those four young people to protect them, but to steal up behind them as you did. He urged them not to tie them selves together In this Alpine game they were so fond of playing he urged them not for their safety; he knew their aversion to him, and knew they'd do exactly the opposite of what he told them." Balder regarded him with round, ugly eyes In which a tiny gleam of admiration flickered. "You're a psycho what? Mebbe there's Some-thin' Some-thin' In It. Mebbe It's gospel truth." "And maybe It's gospel truth that when Jerry found you In the veg etable garden you had beaten him there by about twenty minutes, I calculate. And maybe it's gospel truth when he said, 'All four drowned,' you knew right away It was children not sheep! You didn't ask one question!" "You d d spy, you ! I knew you've been spyin' on ns ever since the first afternoon when you walked in the evergreen walk with your cloak flyin like a great bat" "You. talk as if the establishment down there wouldn't set anybody spying." The psychologist in him was uppermost now. obliterating even his sense of danger in the effort ef-fort to track down the curious states of mind of Gordon Haskell and his confederate. "And when I find an old Christmas tree In Its stand carefully preserved behind a locked door, I knew that fear Is back of Its being there. You were afraid to tnirn it! Somebody might be looking on. and you were afraid they would see In your race that this tree Is 'a horrible tree a tree of death. Oh, a murderer Is always al-ways seeing trifles as huge signposts. sign-posts. The universe Is one great eye, and the eye la on him. You bring It down with its flag on because be-cause you don't dare not to notice It when Jerry Is with you. If you're careless toward that tree ir yon leave it up here, its very look will tell some passer-by there's something some-thing wrong with it." Balder grunted. "You know a lot yon do!" "Yes I know that undiscovered murderers can poison the very air about them. The infection of smallpox small-pox would be light In comparison People weren't afraid of those figures. fig-ures. They were afraid of what they stood for horror and a strange, hidden killing, and a wrecking of all the Joy and Innocence Inno-cence of life." "Ya-ah ! You've talked too much ' You'll never talk again!" He rose slowly; then, with a spring like a Jungle beast, he leaped for his prey. Wilton had already calculated that he had but one chance for life to face his foe, when he sprang to dodge him with the hundredth chance of himself hurling Dalder into the whlrlpcHl. As the huge creature Jumped, Wilton dodged Balder had over-calculated the width of the ledge and landed on ts extreme Ice-covered edges. He slipped, and for a fraction of time performed a strange, wild pirouette his long arms like the hnge wing of a sawmill in motion. Then, with shriek that echoed and re-echoed between the black walls of the gorge, he plunged Into the whirl "Is great body was swung around , s; tup"110" and around like a cork for a moment, mo-ment, then disappeared. Shouts at the , same moment reverberated above the roar of the falL " Wilton t Wilton r Wilton had suddenly sunk down on the rock, feeling faint, not really sure that Balder had been gulped down the black, Icy throat of the whirl He turned his bead and saw Arthur and Jerry hurrying up. "Thank God, we're not too late." "Too late 1" he pointed to the whirl "He's gone there's no getting get-ting him out of there now!" "You don't want him out, do you?" "He sprang at me he meant to throw me in." "That's plain enough. We saw It all I We came up like mad nearly fell in ourselves once." "How on earth did you track me up here?" 'You dropped this," he held out the note. "I missed you by five minutes. This bit of paper was iu a; w am V III n 'Tat- 7 1 1 -i- j He Plunged Into the Whirl. lying near the gate. Looked to me like Berenice's handwriting and I couldn't help but read It I went In and hsked Jerry If you had gone to the whirl, because it seemed strange to me! Berenice is sick in bed with a cold." "The whirl I' I says," broke In Jerry. "No man in his senses would go up that ravine In dead winter It's known to be dangerous.'" danger-ous.'" "'A man in love might,' I told Jerry, but as it happens Miss Bracebridge Brace-bridge couldn't keep this appointment, appoint-ment, if it's a genuine one." "I knowed it wasn't when 1 read the bit of paper. It had a queer, fishy look to me. I says to your friend, 'Miss Berenice never wrote this note.'" "Who did, then?" Wilton broke In. "I asked that same question," said Arthur. "Jerry wanted to know if I had seen Balder anywhere, and then we both agreed that, whoever wrote the note, only Balder could keep an appointment at the whirl Haskell has never been up the ravine ra-vine since the Bracebridge children were drowned there. We decided at once to come to the mouth of the gorge end look for footprints. We both felt that if Balder had decoyed de-coyed you up there with a fake note, it was for nothing short of murder. We found the prints at once Balder's huge footsteps, and the smaller ones we knew were yours. Then we hurried like mad." Wilton grasped their hands. "God bless you I I made him know I knew that he had killed the Bracebridge Brace-bridge children!" His two companions gasped. - "There's his weapon! He never denied the charge. There's his weapon !" He pointed to the tree. Jerry and Arthur gazed in horror at it "I always knew somethin was wrong," Jerry muttered. "He 6truck me first with the base against the shoulder; but I slipped on the Ice and the blow glanced off. You can picture him when all the foliage was on these trees, darting out against those innocents in-nocents with all his great strength to shove them overl Well he has paid. The man back of Balder hasn't paid." Jerry took a step toward Arthur. His kindly face was stern and solemn, sol-emn, "la his name Gordon Haskell?" Has-kell?" "Who else unless Balder lied? He told me." "Come straight back to the farm," Jerry commanded, cutting him short "We've got to talk. And we can't talk against this falL No use iookin' there," he added as Wilton Wil-ton glanced fearfully down at the whirl "They never come op under twelve or eighteen hours he can swing around and around until mornin'. rm the sheriff of this lonesome county, and the coroner! of this neglected township, and IH i take down ,our uo' are, . n , h too fast." Smmk : P4 It was twin!, t the farm. i-ZZT' in8 coffee, and over! Wilton told rh! lVil he conversation with the whirl. "N0h. there the slightest , ",uu 10 justlcer ' the question. w Pl answered at tT.h of a shadow. Fir8t tC ably-Just what aSS ' Great Caesar l4& suddenly. "Arthur do berwhatltoldvoLfe and the sums of ZZ.m and Doctor BrawbridT-Balder?- 6i "Why, veS- "Suppose it was not all-Haskell was tta Zl" retarv. had . desk in the library, wher had to be kept for th, 5 "What's this what's thiab-, diary?" Jerry asked. Wilton related what Berenice requested him to do, aod l reading her father's Journal "i the thief was never found, uuueu. Jerry was looking froo mv the other in astonishment come risin' up In my memon! things I'd clean forgot: I u about them robberies at the tfc& I remember now an Incident e before the accident murder e call it." ' ' "And what was the lucides;? Arthur asked. "I was down with a load of pies to the academy, little & man was in the kitchen, and I member sayin' to him, 'Caught & thief yet?' ne answered up lip bright and smart, 'I caught tan!- handed this mornin'. We'll hut fun with him now. We're goin' keep him on the rack a bit, tefe we tell !' Then be laughed and k off. I says to the servant, Ti i true Norman's caught the thief? She laughed and said she gtiesesi Norman was strlngin' me. Hisfcj; was passin' the kitchen entm and I says to him 'Xorman says it caught the thief red-handed." I member lie gave me an awful Hut 'He's a little liar, he says, tote queer and white. The girl ft looked after him and laughed hates 'era. He'd like to kill 'eai-t' four of 'em." A profound silence followed tU reminiscence then Wilton spit "Do you think he did this crime because he was afraid, s' his finish when Norman found bia-if bia-if he did find him with hU has on the money till? Even), child might have been verj m. mistaken as to the meaning of incident. Doctor Bracebridge pi ably sent Haskell as his secrets.? many times to unlock the mo drawer in the desk. We curt certainly that Haskell was the at. and had four children killed tip tect himself." . "No more than we can pwf Arthur interposed, "that Brf committed the murder at flee gation of Iiaskell-and not to own terrible satisfaction. 'Ought we to tell the what we suspect?" ft .. "We can't have him arresttl didn't push the Bracebjaj dren into the wblrl-na" absolutely no proor, -of Balder, that he , g mental in the tragedy-"' tor, its capitalist, so to speal "It mav be a strange-Wilton strange-Wilton remarked, "but I tinct aversion to WJ" ing that her brothers and were killed-the added W ness of realizing that W er was her father, wnj trusted guardian! , give her up. let & weapon strong enough to relinquish her, we have f reacts on our on have to accuse mm PJ There was no "Jtf -It's like liking at j f of the tail of one's eye-J remarked Arthur one nas v- condil 1,U j Deposit l KeroinX th 0 issuranc k dan?; I Far iinded e t 1 fhould 41 sosltors in pare oiitparai Is reprtin enot Ban t to aU Pa fcrancs coi h Buttl eorporat al that it Scribe K i ps tie B gitiOD fi: tt of '' al our person ai jjsnee. So jt of all t I are we11 ' . ,ae sigDin Ssotbeml (-.ent ban' jfed for by ed a it. r IK" j-ou half see nim. rf through the w'rF1 l",""e . . on with a Dianh torr ually changed toii "Wilton, Jerry. j, -there's a man-loo" -coming up the thC lamrro bz ccnsr T"f Virt. ri1iJtffle The virtues "J feeling. An eieiu with the happiness an elemental sorrow i ery are Innate In f the numb Sictly half thank. 1 rer cent c f s to the f ess of $5; pred nnd the tol Jpnta was ibid o' ti it tndlvidu jat lnstltn J ith res sea todica 3 comm'J i$!t many ! -sfuld be a greral yei , !a wer ana and ! 4 la the aon made arrowers M me, ! im now -y poin iiany of t a?es hit! saw in t aeat and item ha 4 thing i towns i it to to i the bs 4 what vs, an asssequei 3"se so: l .e at tkt the tn earl; i-'j he iebank tsry ml . It Is I f -r, th ! 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