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Show JT CANADA ISSUED Handy Door And Launlfr Bn STAMP IN 1890 Girls Win Scholarships Through Skill With Need 4-- H College Course Assured For Dozen Lucky Ladies needle and thread, and perseUSING verance, 12 girls from as many states each won $200 scholarships at Hie Nacloth in.; achievetional ment contest held at Chicago in connection with the 21th club conm-ssNational The scholarships v.erc awarded by the Spool C..tl.ni company of New York. 4-- . 4-- Tin K.i.M-iDra-ioni- Mai Cn, Si1, i l, Dixie Lee Cnrinse Co , Ar iz.; fauum. C'tiriiikri Co.. Nut-tal- vu-r- Sewing Isn't difficult it you have patience, saya Rhua Slavena. who haa made nurneroua ha Is and hues, coat and suit. a winter coat, and She admits, however, that she started sewing by making a tea towel! Ruth Erb thinks It is a crime to let gnud material go to waste, so she lakes clothing anil, using her style sense, creates many fashion seiis(itii;iis. Ruth thinks everyone sin in Id go through the rug bag nr the pile of disc mill'd clothing from time to tune to get male-ria- l for skirts, shorts, jerkin, blouse and other garments. l ocr.i.nona do not bother Kathryn Johnson, for she makes any Oiil'it she wants. Her father's old silk shirts, discarded 20 years ago, proviJed her with a Mouse. She old hats into stylish modes SiH.-ri.i- ..THE door pocket oum. Guess Early on 1948 Rep&tiek tin the club, Mac Cagle progressed from muking dull dresses to slips, dresses, house coats and other Items of apparel. If she likes a dress shown in a newspaper or magazine, site makes one like it for herself. Eleanor Zaharis has won many prizes for her exceptional sewing. She starts first with good material, testa it for wrinkles, chooses a pattern carefully and sets to work, She refuses to rush through the sewing, but takes extra care to assure an attractive and satisfying result. Before she became an expert at sewing, Marie Wcislieit made many mistakes, but you would never guess it now. Along with making her own clothes, Marie does most of the mending and darning for her family of six people. Another wiio started sewing uy 4-- in WASHINGTON i2h WHO It W- Parity Price Formula Facing Fierce Attack FARM organizations who ere now setting their sights for revision of the parity formula governing prices of farm product have before them a reripe of how NOT to make friends and influence people. Setting up this furmuls means ev- erything to the farmers and the rura population In these Imrr.ertia'e postwar years, just ss achieving ( abor peace formula meant every-'n t),ing to management and labor the recent labor management cun-- ' j National elections still era three years away, but Washington politicians and news correspondents particularly the latter already are aelecting men to be watched." The next campaign will be normal In at ieait one respect, namely, that the Democratic candidate meet for all practical purposes already ference. This ing ended ignuminiiHisly in utter has been chosen. Unless the parfailure. ty's hierarchy wishes to confess failure of policy of government it eonfer-encBut (he has espoused with only occasional was governed by greed, and departures, the ticket will be headed and suspicion, bigotry As farces so Itiug as these govern by President Harry S. Truman. now can be of that a matter fact, no Ihouglit and aetion there can he effective performance of democra- dismissed from conjecture; unless fate intervenes, Truman la the cantic processes. didate. Tresident Truman bdd the However, passing of a President ronferenre: "I want to the elimination from the pomake it clear that this la your con- and scene of an incumbent In the ference . . . tills la your opportunity litical vice presidency, plus election of a to prove that you can come to in New York and agreement without Democratic mayor combined to encourage havt City political or governmental pressure. Mayor-elec- t election forecasting. And 38 lyrnona of management William O'Dwyer will not figure perand 36 tyrnuns of labor met and sonally, but because he ran roughwrangled for weeks, sreomplixhed shod over the nominee of Governor nothing, snd crawled out of WashThomas E. Dewey, head of the Reington with their taila between their publican national ticket In 1944, he lega. They couldn't deliver because haa brought national Implications men on Into what otherwise would have they were unreasonable both aides whose attitude was. "the been simply a municipal ballot. public be damned." Who will be Truman's running mate, currently is a popular subg Boardi ject of debate In political circles. And now government steps In Whom the Republicans will place with the Presidential demand fur on their ticket runs a close second. cimgressiixial action, not to outlaw Taking those developments up in Inverse order, attention first comes strikes, but to set up boards, much the same as In the to Governor Dewey. His was the Railway Labor act. which has been presidential chance discounted by successful In averting strikes for 19 the election of O' Dwyer in New years. The boards will let the pub- York City, eves Joslah Goldstein, a lic know the facts on both sides and former Democrat turned Republthen there will be a cooling-ol- f ican a circumstance that didn't period of some 30 days during which help him one bit In an overwhelma strike will be illegal. ingly Democratic community headWhatever be the fate of this legis- ed for the past 12 years by Mayor The Little Flower delation, whetlier it is passed or not, LaGuardia. and we believe It will be. labor fied description by party label, but hasn't a leg to stand on and neither hia replacement on January 1 will has management, in objecting to so- - be regarded as substitution of Democrat for a Republican. No One called government interference. Both labor and management have familiar with New York (late poliproved they cannot keep their own tics needs to be told how poor are houses In order, and government has the chances of a candidate for the responsibility for protecting the governor whe lacks city support Dewey faces the New York elecpublic Interest. When strikes in such national industries as steel torate twa years hence. And he and automobiles, telephones, trans- does it, recent history Indicates, portation or other utilities siTect without city backing. If he fails to large segments of the people, a re- gain another term at Albany, that, sponsible government cannot mere- plua his defeat for the presidency, ly "stand by " Just about ends him as a contender. d e nt inlnl-erane- e, nt undrr-atandin- g Fact-Findin- fact-findin- g hCHOLARKHIP WINNERS . . . First raw, left la right: lllxle Lee Kuttall, Arizona; Gerry Deathly, Oklahoma; Khua Klarrna, Montana; Bennie Cbrlatison,. Wisconsin; Ruth Erb, New Hampshire; Eleanor Zaharis, Oregon. Mecond row, left to right: Mae C'aglr, Georgia; Meta Marie Keller, Illinois; Doris Clopper, Mary- land; Kathryn Johnses, New Verb; Marie Wriahrll, Indiana. (Billie MrCey, Traareaee, net shewn, was also a winner.l and creates other wearing apparel Ca.; Meta Marie Keller, Streatnr, La Sulla Ca, III.; Marin Lorena that will stand the test of any fashWeisheit, Petersburg, Pike Co.. Ind.; ion editur's eye. Doris Clopper, Hagerstown, WashBillie McCoy estimates that she has saved over $300 by making her ington Co., Md.; Rhua Ethel Molt, Stillwater Co., Mont.; own clothing during the last few Ruth B. Erb, Hudson, Hillsborough years. Evening gowns, blouses, Co., N. H.; Kathryn Johnson, Maraskirts, suits, dresses and other needs thon, Cortland Co., N. Y.; Gerry were produced by her sewing skill. Keathly, Norland, Noble Co.. Okla.; To list all her sewing achievements would make a news story in Itself. Eleanor Zaharis, Portland, MultnoIn seven years of project work In mah Co., Ore.; Billie McCoy, Jasper, Marion Ca, Tenn.; and Bminie B. Christison, Elkhora, Walworth Ca, Wis. In case any of the above do not take advantage of the scholarship, some of the following alternates may go to college Instead: Alice Word, Osk Grove, Christian Other nations are learning from Co., Ky.; Lorraine Miller, Faircluba of America, It was the mont, Martin Co., Minn.; Nancy revealed at the 24th annual club New congress held In Chicago. As their Marshalllon, Britlingham, Castle Co., Del.; Carley Jean Vanmembers of the guests the ia nt, Richfield, Lincoln Co., Idaho; United States had 66 boys and girls Lyda Jean Smith, Boat, Etowah Ca, of other nations who had come to Ala.; and Helen Ochsner, Madison, share the event. Madison Co., Neb. Eighteen young Chinese, who Each were sent to the United States by clothing achievement clubs girl had a personal story of how she their government to study started sewing, of her progress and and agricultural methods, are among of her final triumph as a national foreign friends who will taka home winner. a report of their experiences. Dixie Lee NuttaU got her start makThese young Chinese passed Noing dull clothes. After dressing the vember on American farms. As a doll In the best of fashion, Dixie climax of their American visit knew she had overcome muet of the they attended tha congress with delepitfalls of a beginner. She has gates of their "adopted" states. completed a total of 77 articles and Typical of them Is has knitted or crocheted 19 mors. who will describe the congress to Bonnie B. Christison admits she Chinese youth on shortwave broadalways liked to sew, and recently casts soon. He Is learning to drive proved it when she made 10 gowns a tractor and operate other farm for a formal wedding when her sis- machinery on the Owen Perry form, ter was married. Malcolm, Neb. Mrs. Perry is teachDoris Clopper discovered that ing him English and he's looking shortage of piece goods during war- forward to Christmas the Ameritime made remodeling almost a can kind. South Americans Here. necessity. She first selected a blue The serge suit of her fnther's. took it g.od neighbors" who atapart, placed it on a pattern, and tended included 7 Venezuelans. 1 set to work. A fine suit Costa Rican, t Peruvian. 33 Canafor herself resulted. A black coat dians from Ontario and 4 from Quewith a big fur collar, discarded by bec. To get acquainted they visited her mother, was revamped Into a with different delegations. For inStylish garment by Doris. Her magic stance, one Canadian boy hud breaknow turns all sorts of old garments fast one day with Oklahomans, Into attractive ensembles for herlunch with the Oregon delegation self, family and friends. and dinner with Georgians. Sla-ven- s. making a tea towel Is Gerry Keathly. "If you've never sewed, you' don't know what you're missing, ' she declares now. Making dresses, or suits. Is now easy for her, end her favurite pastime Is darning! Meta Marie Keller finds she can now make all her own clothes end still have time for fun and other It le true that the congress has work. It wasn't easy at first, she strike on all rand ur ted a admits, is she looks bark to tha labor for the re-affecting site her made first cotton dress canveraioa time period. And labor attempted to take matters Into Its owa bands, sssuming dictatorial attitudes which have as place la nur democratic way of life. Management wsi equally dictatorial and 4-- H Imperialistic and unwilling te give to bargain, in nn atand take Mario Fere of Venezuela has tempt la reach a common ground been living with his pal, Gilbert k which might be satisfactory le i of Connecticut. He is active majority concerned. in the clubs of Venezuela, simiIt I the guess of your Hometown lar to clubs. that labor, rather than Reporter Rita Lefobvre, 20, of Chandler, the President's recomoppose Quebec, and Nnrmand Laforriere of had better urge for it Berthe ir, Quebec, toured Chicago mendation, lest an congress and marveled at "those buildings passage force through more drastic reforms with their heads In the skies." which might In the end hurt the In their English, unions seriously. The President's the vivacious Miss can help labor recommendations and her companion from a town of 300 population said It snd management both, since the worked surrrssfulty over a waa tha Brit time they had seen plan has long period In the case of the rail15 over buildings stories high. roads and their employees. Neither had visited the United States before their present trip, Matt Be Fair to All which was in the nature of an So reconversion for the agriculaward for their club work in tural Industry, which will Include Canada. such troublesome questions as surMiss Lefobvre, who Is employed In subsidies, a new parity a bank, directed an exhibit of home pluses. formula and other factors, price economics work and forest educamust consider the public interest as tion last August fur the 70 memwell as that of the farmers A combers of her club. Laforriere, mon ground of agreement satisfacwho is taking special scientific to a majority of those intercourse preparatory to entering col- tory ested must be found lege. organized two clubs and As Secretary of Agriculture Clina community center for forest Inton P Anderson pointed out In s struction at Bcrtheir. recent speech before the milk pro- Both they and their chaprrona, Mrs. Gerard La Terreur of Chan- ducers In Philadelphia: "subsidies dler and J. A. Breton of Quebec are still in effect Now I know tlint City, marveled at the vaatnrss of milk producers generally prefer to get all of their prices in the market the Unilrd Slates organization. The Canadian clubs, which are place However, holding the line on cost of living is vital if we arc io more social and educational organizations than farm groups, have a prevent disastrous Inflation which could ruin the future of farmers membership of 500, they said. j and of nty folks alike '' Which brings into locus the point TIIE FOl'R health champions that fair prices to farmers as well s fair wages for labor should or si the 74th annual national Ml congress at Chicago look down on the basis of abundance of pro from the balcony at congress head- duction at prices lliat are fair to and the quarters. Left In right. Eleanor both Ihr prdut-These puces, in the case nf Chapman, 17. Ccntcrburg, Ohio: Louise llale, 17, Randlcti, Okla.; the farmer and lahoivr as well, John Savoy, 17. Cameron. La., and would assure to Doth a fair shale Harris llcinholdl, hlarshall, Minn. of the income With the of stupid inl.iler Under the slogan, "Building for a et bv the la a Stranger America" the Club Slice and bickeru-.cou'ercnre. the gives throe rules for health: Work Dor niai iigeti-eii- t and Play Hard; Sierp 8 to 11 Hours : farm loaders have nnlv to steei an Fa I Meat and Vegetables. nppoK'te course u hen hearings begin on their own problems j Strong COP Competitor, Loom n Visitors from Foreign Lands Come to Learn at 4-- 4-- 4-- two-pie- Congress ... Hes-cor- anti-unio- n French-accente- Assuming, if only for the sake of developing the thought, that this diagnosis by Washington scribes is accurate, upon whom does the mantle fall? The subject becomes difficult st that juncture, but there are two who atand out so far In front of other aspirants as to make them virtually alone In the field. One ia a disciple of the old school, n tn polithe ether an tics the former. Senator Arthur Vandenburg ef Michigan; the latter, former Governor Harold Stas-se- n ef Minnesota. A close third, and a vigorous contender, ii John Bricker ef Ohio. A political catalogue could hardly record three more differing types. Senator Vandenburg la the most poHtieally orthodox ef the three. His experience in public life has been confined wholly te the United States senate, but he haa made the beat of every political break. A forceful orator, he capture headlines, la the country. knewm throughout There ia no bluster te his oratory; It be been pointed at specific objects end he has clicked. With the country facing an era af International dealing ef transcendent importance. he la well versed in world affairs. He was chusen ever several ether lllustrieua party members as a Republican delegate te the United Nations conference at San Francisco, where he acquitted himself well. In the field of labor relations second teday only to international problems he was the sponsor of meetthe recent ings In Washington, which, if they did no more, proved that employers snd employees can sit down at the same table and discuss their differences even if thev cannot eradi ultra-moder- 5-- d dark-haire- - AiuJytl and Cummmlalor. WN'll Service. 1818 Eye filreet K.W., Washington, D. C. d re 4-- 4-- 4-- , I 4-- I BARBS - now. major step laping stone toward amity. It was beled the President's Conference. Both sides, and the rest of the nation, know it was Vandenburg's. Former Governor Stassen stand In a position to become the first veteran of World War II to become President, just as the incumbent President Truman, is the first veteran of World War I to achieve thai high estate. Stassen has youth plu wUc-lhas since saved her subjects experience as the chief adminislrs mlllioMof dollars, Canada produced is Important tor of a state which Lirge postage stamp upon which politically and geographically. Liki j,( depicted a map ef the world with Vandenburg, he also was a delegab ia English territories printed in red to San Francisco, but in an, "Canada appraisal of their roles In inUrna- WH inscribed in the frame design. tional politics, he must give ground xhus Canada became the first to the Michigan senator. However, j country to issue a Christmas stamp, Stassen has captured popular iniag-snthe only stamp ever te bear the,-alti ord Xmas." (nation by his forward-lookintude toward the tantamount subjecij of the day, the atomic bomb. Heia3CfiJWaa)ca)ea335a)eaKS5i has a faculty for- capitalizing on HAT BRUSH 5HOC CLOTH A SMALL' PLEAT AT TOM OP POCKETS "Tf-- , UMBRELLA STOCKCXCB RUBBERS BONE RINGS SEWN TO EDGE FASTEN OVER , HOOKS j Sjevt? - u.cTftta , uhITi. Utundiy ta- - Is ( fuirii-ai.d stiiefa u fabric tra fokrto j ' NOTE: Book I la 15 cents .k.kvuIiJ w tontains 32 paces of useful the rau will be wanting to ma'.e fur you some. Bend order to: A Better 1946 Governor Bricker faces the drawback that hes been to the well'' before. He failed to win the Republican presidential nomination ir 1944 and had to be content with secBut who could win! ond place. against the wave of Dewey senti-- j merit then washing over the nation? That he has made a splendid slate administrator even Democrats adWhat he lacks is recognimit. tion outside his own stale; he hai suffered from the accusation that he ia provincial His declarations on foreign affairs as a vice presia year candidate ago dential weren't marked for their profundity, weren't convincing. Unless all present plans miscarry, Bricker will try for the United States senate. That would give him the national sounding board he needs. Bricker is handsome (an attribute which cannot be overlooked in these vote), hes an day of women' able speaker and a war veteran. The latter will be a factor to b carefully weighed when the 194f ticket Is made up. And this time he'll have the wholehearted support of Senator Robert A. Tift of his home state, something he lacked in a practical sense before. Taft was candidate himself. This time he ay he will not be. .f." f0u do this. The bound slush m u,e jZj a 12 inches dep and the tup is shape Bl hanger. g issuei. taste and foundation, The V ,wth Pt.Xm.MI!r fn:taki H DOOR its ore 32 inches long and I Ir.ches fa. Plan the other pockets id f'.t iruniS which they are to be ur d. fc.i j t:a be 11 U.x p m pockets, make a j MRS. Rl'TH WYFTH SPEiRI Bedford (tills Krw vn) SSXKKEaS!SXBKBatlBatEaJEfBStK Uncharted la the sea Drawer IS enclose U cents for Book On which my bark moat sail; If tempests there shall be Or auaay calms prevail, I know net; but I knew. Whatever wind may blew. From east, north, south, er west. They will be far my beet; Fear dees sot shake my heart. For Then my Pilot art! No. g Nam- eAddress- - know that Then wilt all Thy premises fulfill; Whatever may befall. Twill net be for bay IR; I know that Then wilt guide My barb through wind and tide; That with my voyage past I shall reach pert at last: Fear does aat shake my heart, Far Thoa my Pilot art! Claytenlus. 1 you are ma down bcetao $Ifyoure not getting ail the SU - Vitamins you ssed start Uiiw Seutt'a emulsion to pienytly kelp bring back nurn ass tamfns and build nmtim g Bruit's is rick Is natural AAD Vitamins sad eaergr-buildin- Washington Started New Year's Open House at New York r, natural Ml Buy today I SB drarerwu. ISCOTI'SiEMULSION 0 D ff i f9 for the Future? George Washington, aa first presi- Planning dent of the United States, moved, Buy U. S. Savings Bondi! with the seat of the newly founded Democrat t Vie for government, from Philadelphia to New York in 1789. Vice Prendency New Years Day, 1790, fell on a MRS. DYE MAKES On the Democratic aide, the goal hopefuls will be shooting for is the Friday; Waihington, who had been OVERALLS LAST vice preiidentiai nomination. The; accustomed to hold open house on field Is rather open, but not to the Fridays In Philadelphia, continued PITCHER, OKLAHOMA Mn more obvious personages. There is. to do so in New York. Therefore, it E jjve has had a lot of expert- was not until the steady stream of ence in of course, no vice president today, washing overall for fiv Senator Kenneth McKellar func- callers ion New Year's Day persisted iSoy and husband. She has tions on the job as president pro throughout the late afternoon andltound out how to make them last tern of the senate. Actually, in evening that Washington gave the Here is what she says in a letter to Faultless Starch, spite of public thought to the con- - matter a second thought. d trary, that doesn't make him the Inquiring whether auch procedure I cannot wash without highest officer of the federal waa customary, Washington was in-- 1 government Protocol places the formed, by a native New Yorker, speaker of the house next to the that the Dutch settlers had brought r I President As a matter of record, the custom of making calls on New . President Truman has asked con-- Year's Day to New Amsterdam; gress to enact legislation creating English and French colonists fell into statutory succession to the presi- - the routine and, by 1790, no New dency with the speaker preferred Yorker would dream of letting the ever the president pro tern of the first day pass without calling upon senate should vacancies occur In his lady, his friends, both the presidency and the vice. Washington caught the spirit of presidency. Translated into sports this "cordial and cheerful McKellar ia "in an a pass." jservance cf New Year's Day and in 'her wash. Mrs. Dye says that In any event, McKellar will .be continued the custom throughout his Faultless Starch makes overall! approaching 90 years at age when idminiatration. Presidents Adama wear longer (thats mighty impor-thnext convention roll around and Jefferson followed precedent font, today) and look "ten time and would be out of the running on and. when the capital moved to better (and thats important, toe) that score if far no ether reason. Washington, D. C, the recaption be-i tha aacial A dark horse in the integral part Overalls, work pants, wash shiru attended Meby Brian Senator U increasing predictions ceremonies and lengthening rcceiv-Mahon at Connecticut A first-terPresident Taft shook 8 H ember, he trimmed the popular About Persona in and able Senator John Danaher, lllnd Republican, to win his office. Re n has many of the attributes which' Prea Franklin D. Roosevelt votes for year ego he' 42; he has Proved himself an able Faultless Starch you save a lot d lny en othofUiruL that prosecutor while serving as chief rtCtlvmf rubbing. You see FauitleH at tha criminal division in the deStarch penetrates the fah.-c-partment ef justice when he cleaned dirt cant grind in so easily. An EARLY NEW TEAR'S DAY up such messes as the Harlan mine Faultless Starch dissolves instantColsmbna eras the Christopher of th outlawry: he's a White House intirat white maa la celebrate New ly in water and carries most e mate. a vigorous speaker, y when So it. out dirt with In right the Western hemiman with a substantial accumula- Years Day starch other things, be sure io ffr1 While his ware sphere. ships tion of worldly goods gained tn the pants, children! repairs aa Jsaaary 1. overalls, work a very light starchinf practice of law, and he's chairman 1493, he enjoyed clothes, etc., a dinsamptaeos the of the senate's committee to develop ner with two savage monarrhs on at the same time. You'll notice them! national policy on atomic energy wash when difference you the Island af Haiti. After Ms In gaining the latter distinction, i SO SMOOTH TO WEAR meal, historians say, the discovhe overthrew the senate seniority te ef America had his erer it. like men will The really rule and older members smoke at tobacco. The fabric feels smooth and she who aspired to that Important post not scratchy and rough- The? k 'g Fault-secon- : ' ob-tal- k. e G j aim m wiera f caln,r nmttil m m " sus-wo- ufor" i , e self-mad- i . - by R a u k h a ge wont chafe as much around the neck and the arms. Its a wonde ful relief to wear smooth, site ash' Late in Arriving Although tha United State leads vvork clothes! Try it, thi-la many ways, in tha eyes of Fa day. And be sure to use Faulii ther Time, we are in sixth place. It Starch! Adv. seems he brings the New Year first Australia, Asia, Africa. Europe and most id South America before. he gets around to thia country. Then for three more hours the people of California must be satisfied with IMS before they receive tha fresh of 1949. It will ha 7 a. m. nw HOSE ,n New Yrk on December 31 when LIQUID, TABLETS, SALVE, DMECT9 the New Year is born In Australia. AS ONLY USE CAUTION s , . I these articles. Hue ar details so you can go r .o'-- 1 .With cate them. That was j l ai d lauM ie in 1897 Victoria Regina celebrated tape to match. You will n.d .. wi. 10 chintx and of as the of her ysrda the diamead jubilee reiga 2 ruler of the British Empire. Im- M lnchel j1'!? pressed by the dispUy el loyalty by kr her aubjeeta In aO corners sf the wids. Bind this sU arouiu. i.rs;. Siio, glebe, she annonneed that, aa a Christmas prrwent to all BriUshrra, she would reduce the postal rate to Edging one penny or its local equivalent. STITCHED To commemorate the first anniOWXLOTI ELFCOVES versary af Ibla stupendous gift, WHIST BROOM' acsj By BAUKIIAGE Nan J B Choose chintz M inches Truman Seen as Standard - Bearer of the Democratic Party; Dewey Faces Fight In New York to Stay in GOP Race. Duitm Wuiianu It Kra St.. N. the First Anniversary of the Oueen 8 Present. x. Presidential Candidates i Walter Shead Bv Commemorated It is generally admitted that the United States emerges from the wur sea of an island of capitalism In leftist countries Whether we can withstand the tides that are moving toward state Sueial.sm and the curtailment of private property depends on whether we work tngeilitT or fight among oiiiseltes The heav iest pressure is from within nut without. When Admiral Nimitz was wel oined in Washington, planes in fur mntion spelled out his name in th air "Some stunt in nvike a Z." an remarked tu me Rut kiik pose ihpv had t' spell nut Fisen'mir er! After ihe parade there w.i a will cpxui- - rimorg c ik uH'-i- t sailors and marines, tm j Hie ' K Nine" do rtei.i. iin.eni di.ini mli-ke- r yr I , 1 |