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Show 1 t ; 0 The -weather, Prim v - .. . ... .... . . . .. if r . i Bcrald Service V UTAH: Generally fair tonight and - x ' Tuesday, cooler north portion to- ' ; night. 5 , Maximum temp Sunday 82 .Minimum tempw, Sunday 48 It Too do not reeetrs' toot CemU 'i promptly, vcaQ the Herald office - I a 485, before .7 p. zn..wel day, aa3 10 a, nv Sundays, and a copy tt!3 -ba dellirered to yon. -'v FIFTY-THIRD , YEAR. NO:' 62 il UTAH'S ONLY DAIL.T BOUTH OF SALT LAKB PRUVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAHttMOND AY , OCTOBER ;3, 1938; COMPLETE! UNITED PRESS ppTPT? "CTTP. HENTB TELEGRAPH NBWS BERVICBJ CxVlLaUJe AXP.VX Pre iifiiii. - v -----r;;:; ; . v; -a " -J- asm 1L Jlie . , ID ,lbjJMyio)ltilLMuy IblUJIj-oLiJJJ L ULa; .UJi b a U t li b J liU , b a 11 Wmmt r TWW-. : ZZ" ; ' : : -.Z-.. '. t :-: $80, 000 ttre Destroys Canmery At V fc ', " ' - ; ; : " . . j i ; - , : ' . ' mm . . -. :''rffcL ' 'if " : ' :z :T! '7 i4 f .1' 4 4 ' i RHTW uayoruutlines i ' ItlUII I IVIIVU di nnncn cnir ULHW1LU I Ull COSTLY BLAZE P l a n t Employing 125 Destroyed When . Ligthning Hits Lightning was believed today to-day responsible for a 'disastrous 'disas-trous $80,000 fire which swept the Geneva canning plant early Monday morning, destroying the entire plant nnrt ron tents, and one refrig- eratornar loatled with cased canned goods ready to go out. The- boiler room was the only part of the cannery left, intact by the flames. Firemen from Provo and Pleasant Grove also succeed- rH in savin? one refrigerator car. J one luaucu -"i'j - ; - another with cased cannea gwu, principally tomatoes ana caisup, was partially saved. To Be Rebuilt FranlcAs-Jugler, owner and manager, of the plant, in operation since 1923 estimated his loss at near $75,000, including plant, machinery ma-chinery and stock. Denver and Rio Grande jrailroad officials estimated es-timated the loss by damage to carsantTcontents at $6000. The loss was covered by insur- LHC6 The canning plant will be rebuilt re-built at once, Mr. Jugler told the Herald today. Work ofclearing the debris from the site is already under way. First to see tne flames wnue a i w- . - -iit"-1 H.M WeVe electrical'. ittrnTwttirvtvta lightning flashes was passing over the valley, were uari ueorgc p&n Devereaux and their girl companions. They turned in the alarm, calling Mr. Jugler at about . 1:45 a. m. A call was immediately immediate-ly made for the Pleasant Grove lire department, and a few minutes min-utes later the . Provo department was summoned. Prow Firemen Summoned The fire bad gained considerable consider-able headway when the Provo fire-( fire-( Continued on Page Three) MERRY GO-ROUND A Daily Picture of What's GoingOn in NatlonaT Affairs By DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN Japanese Troops Move Upon Cantoa-Fleet Converges Near . Hongkong ; British Expect Trouble There if Europe Crisis Remains Unsettled; Un-settled; Tom Dewey Got Pecora's Advice Before Running For District Attorney; At-torney; Bill Green's Endorsing En-dorsing of Candidates Enrages En-rages Local Labor Bosses. WASHINGTON Largely ob-' ob-' scured by the crisis in Europe has been the fact that 70.000 Japanese troops, loaded on transports, have been enroute to Canton, prepared to capture that vital metropolis " of $outh China. Simultaneously a part of the Japanese fleet has been converging near Hongkong. The significance of this has not been lost upon the British. Hong. konr is their most important out-postin out-postin the Far East. Canton is a great British trading center and virtual capital for Britains sphere of influence in South China. It is axiomatic that the Japanese Japan-ese always make it hot for the white man in China when he is absorbed with troubles in Europe. This may explain the sudden mobilization of the British Mediterranean Medi-terranean fleet at Alexandria, Egypt. While the home fleet has been mobilized north of Scotland, 52 vessels in-the 4 Mediterranean have been called : . toAlexandria, and diplomaticspeculation is that a large parT'oThem will be sent to Singapore, ready f or eventual!-ties eventual!-ties with Japanilir - . ;"' .Thus In case of warMussolini would have theMediterranean almost, al-most, to himself ;;a" fkr as the British fleet V concerned. ' " - . T Note Although 53 ships sounds like a gigantic fleet, it contains t only .three battleships, all very r, old. The British home, fleet is much stronger, though even this i one includes only seveirj&attle rj. (Continued On rtgc Sight) . 2-Year Program Of Improvements Street, Waterworks Improvements Improve-ments Included in the New Projects A two-year program of public improvements for Provo Pro-vo city, all proposed to be financed fin-anced with the aid of WPA, is outlined byT Mayor Mark Anderson. The improvements include additional paving, cUrb and gutter, sewer and drain, waters works extensions, aqueduct construction, con-struction, new sidewalk, recreational recre-ational improvements, airport improvement, im-provement, millrace covering, lake development, municipal power and light plant construction, and library, building. Included are: Forty added i blocks of asphalt paving in the I city and a paved roadway to Utah lake; preparatory work will begin soon, with completion expected in 1939, states the mayor. Street Project Ready-Work Ready-Work will begin at once on reconstruction re-construction and repair of curb, gutter and street between First and Third West on the south side of Center street. Everything will be finished, the mayor states, but laying of asphalt this year. Paving Pav-ing cannot be finished until next May. Other curb and gutter improvement improve-ment ar to be districted to tol- Work in extending in the east sec tion large sewer and drain lines will continue through winter and spring. Continuation of the present waterworks wa-terworks extension - enlargement progTam will be made, supplementing supplement-ing the 25,000 feet of metal pipe, recently added to the city distribution distribu-tion system. Within a few weeks the lower canyon aqueduct will be under construction, with cement pipe to be made at the Fifth North plant. Two to three years is required for completion, states the mayor. Work is ready to begin on 17 blocks of new sidewalk. Other repair re-pair is contemplated. Salvaged school buildings material ma-terial is visioned for use in cemetery, ceme-tery, golf course and North park construction. Club house work is proceeding with funds raised by the golf association. Completion of park and playground play-ground improvements by NYA and Provo cltv will be included in I recreation plans. A trailer-tourist park at the city river bridge prop erty is now under construction. Airport- and sewer improvement improve-ment at the First ward pasture area is planned. The intention is to extend the sewer outfall and also pipe the millrace separately through the pasture. The old millrace channel will be filled and the airport extended. Federal aid in addition to WPA will bje asked. The millrace in the city, Mayor Anderson affirms, should be cov ered for at least seven blocks, but cost of materials makes this a difficult WPA project. - A lake' harbor proposal is also made with CCC aid to be sought. Construction of the municipal light and power plant is expected to begin this fall, and the enUre system is to be completed and operating in a year, or before the power company's present franchise fran-chise expires. A PWA grant of 45 per cent has been asked. Library construction is expect ed to oe xinisned April l. Officers Continue Investigation Ballistics Expert Ed Hedmen of Salt Lake City has not completed his study in the Milan Beardall case Sheriff E. G. Durnell said today. The sheriff and District Attorney Attor-ney Wm. Stanley Dunford will probably go' to Salt .Lake City to see him in a very fewdays. The sheriff said today Hedman "didn't say very much about it" when the two officers saw him Saturday. Hedman has ' not completed his gun ' examination. Beardall, 35, met death at his Springville home September '20. The weapon V which -apparently caused his death . Is, a small automatic auto-matic 1 easily : discharged, officers GREEN HITS LABOR BOARD AS CIO ALLY AFL Chief Says Lewis Backs Communistic Communis-tic Movement CONVENTION HALL, Houston, Texas, Oct. 3 (U.R) President William Green of the American Federation of Labor today charged in open: ing the organization's 58th convention that the National Labor Relations board "has become an ally of the C. I. O." He also charged that John L. Lewis, 'head of the Committee for Industrial Organization, is leading a dual movement which in 1924 he described to a congressional committee com-mittee as "Communistic." Sneakins: before hundreds of delegates, and to a nationwide radio audience, Green aimed blis tering criticism at tne aummu-tration aummu-tration of the Wagner act, and warned that "American labor will not tolerate government control governmental dictation." Ask For Fairness "We want; to be free," he said-"We said-"We ask only that the Wagner act be administered by a fair not a biased group. We serve warning warn-ing that we will go before congress con-gress this winter and demand that changes be made in this law and in the personnel of the board which administers it. "As conditions are today, the N. We won't stand for that." Green roared the federation's defiance of Lewis and his aides and brought cheers from the delegates dele-gates when he said that the federation fed-eration has emerged from the labor la-bor war with a membership of 5,000,000, the largest in its history. his-tory. He described the federation as the greatest bulwark against the invasion of foreign 'isms into the national political and economic life. "We are not only opposed to Fascism, Nazism and Communism,, Commun-ism,, we are opposed to all 'isms except Americanism," he shouted. shout-ed. DEATH CLAIMS MARTHA HEELER Mrs. Martha Alice Fairbanks Keeler, 77, widow of Patriarch Joseph B. Keeler, former Utah stake president, died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Beulah McAllister, Mc-Allister, at Los Angeles, Ca, Sunday noon. Mrs. Keeler had been in poor health all summer and just recently re-cently left Provo to spend the winter on the coast. She was born in Payson, June 29, 1861, a daughter of David and Susan Manderville Fairbanks, pioneers pio-neers of '47. She taught school in Payson, and was the first teacher of John E. McClelland, one of the early Salt Lake tabernacle taber-nacle organists and L. D. S. church composers. . She was a member of the first Payson dramatic dra-matic club and was active in dramatics dra-matics all her life, appearing in Relief society and ward plays as recent as last year. On May 17, 1883, she was married mar-ried to Joseph B. Keeler in the Salt Lake Endowment house. They met while attending the Brigham Young academy, and (Continued, on Page Three) - Of Shooting Case at Springville m say. He was alone just before the shot was fired his wife, who was in the house, said to the officers Investigating.'. ' " Still Held Accidental Mr. BeardaU's brothers ' however, how-ever, Sheriff Durnell said, are . not of the opinion , that the barber shot himself as at; first reported. -"Hedman, the sheriff said, found some powder marks - on clothing worn by Beardall at the time he died. Although Ins .work Is not complete, he told the 'sheriff that apparently the shot had beert fired from 7 to 8 . inches distance from the body. . Sh . .VX Sheriff Durnell said he did mot know" how long- it;would take Ked- take Hed- Jii.JfV '' - ivJ t , ? tv; t A,-7- , J ?:;,;';4 rf, Ly Impatient Sudeten-German Nazis, organized into a "Free Corps' by their exiled leader Konrad Hen-lein, Hen-lein, made Germany's ownership, of various Sudetenland areas au accomplished fact even before the leaders of four nations gathered at Munich, Germany, to draw up a treaty to that effect In the photo boye, the 'heiling" population of Haale, near Asch, on the Czech-German border, is shown greeting a column of armed Nezis who passed through on their way to Eger. : ; (5 : MASONS CONFER DEGREES ON 21 Eighty-five prominent Masons of the state and Wyoming banqueted ban-queted here Saturday night and took .party in conferring Royal Arch degrees on a clas of 21. All granc oodles and York Rite masonry were represented. Mem bers attended from Salt Lake City Ogden, PrtceJ andLogan, with althjUi been taken -upby police of speclar-'delegatton'f lOle iforf "nisi Ward C. Ireland, former Provoan, attending from Kemmerer, Wyo. Eastern Star served the "banquet. J. P. Woods, Salt Lake City, former Provoan and past "high priest, was presented with a life membership. The presentation .was by R. E. Knappj Salt Lake City, past high priest. Mr. Woods and Dr. H. F. Cannon, high priest,-were priest,-were in charge of the conferring of degrees. The degree team was composed of past high priests. Distinguished guests present included: in-cluded: T. J. Nelson, Salt Lake City, grand high priest of Royal Arch; W. J. Goddard, Salt Lake City, grand illustrious master of the counsil; Harold R. WaldorSalt Lake City, grand master of F. and A. M.; Olaf Jefson, Kemmerer, past grand high priest; Grand Secretary John M. Dunlap, Salt Lake City. This. Day . . . BORN To Leland and Blanche Gilner Carter, a son, at the home this morning. To Fred H. and Mary Wilcox Carter, a daughter, Sunday at the home. LICENSED TO MARRY Norman Stanley Bliss, 29, Dividend Divi-dend and Ruth T. Peterson, 25, Payson, married by County Clerk Clarence Grant. Dwight Bartholomew, 25, and Bernice Tcasdale, 18, SpringviHe. Van William Swenson, 21, Fer-ron, Fer-ron, and Beulah Woodward, 22, Lindon. DIED Mrs. Martha Alice Keeler, 77, at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Beulah McAllister, Los" Angeles, Siindnv nnrtn (j) 1 man to complete his exaniinaUon. No one is being held by officers, and the sheriff stated that at pres ent the death was "accidental as far as we are concerned." He is awaiting outcome of Hedman's investigation. in-vestigation. - .The sheriff has fired two other bullets from the same gun reported report-ed as beside Hedman when v he died and recovered the ..one, which passed through the body. There is no doubt about their similarity Jietatesiv Fingerprint survey s of the gun was not possible, the .gun having been handled by several persons -other u: than investigators before deputies arrived, the, sheriff said. .;;.:-?;itiift00Or-.,-y-9 -K -s;v Acted "While the Powers Talked People In the News By UNITED PRESS Arturo Toscaoini, one of the world's greatest musicians, was reported "in bad" again with the Italian government and his where in abouts is not known. Toscanini t is. an anti-Fascist. His passport way to the United States to fulfill ful-fill an engagement to lead a symphony sym-phony orchestra in a series of radio concerts. Movie Comedian Joe E. Brown was out of the hospital today, recovered re-covered from an injury suffered when he lifted the 300-pound wrestler, Man Mountain Dean, for a movie scene. The engagement of Bruno Mussolini, Mus-solini, one of the sons of Premier Benito Mussolini, was announced in Rome today. He will marry Gina Ruberti, 22, daughter of the president of the Italian court of appeal. Charles (Buddy) Rogers, band leader husband of Mary Pickford, received minor injuries when an automobile overturned three times and struck a pole near Delaware, Ohio, this morning. Motorist Injured In Street Crash Joseph V. Ford, 51, Route 3 Box 110 A suffered a broken shoulder bone when the car in which he was riding was struck by one driven by Charles. Reynaud, about 40, 755 North Seventh East, at 7:30 a. m. Monday, Officer Fred Adamson reported. Ford was treated at Clark clinc and then taken home by the officer. He was riding with Forrest For-rest Ferguson, 32, Route 3 Box 163, when the accident occurred. Reynaud entered the intersection at Second East and Sixth North driving west on Sixth North as Ferguson drove south on Second East. The blow to the right side of the Ferguson car threw Ford from it as the car hit a utility pole. Farm Worker Is Stabbed In Fight AMERICAN FORK Victim of a knife fight, James Hammond, 22, farm worker from Tucson, Ariz., was recuperating here today to-day as officers sought his alleged assailant, another farm worker known only aa "Arky." TTnmmnnrf una nit thrAA'Hmoa in the back two Wprked on the Mike Varanakis farm. Ham mond was treated here after the fight and entered in city jail early Saturday morning; officers in the late morning found he had suffered suf-fered a hemorrhage during the intervening in-tervening hours and returned him to the hospital. 'Resort , Burns Down : BRIGHAM"; CITY, Utah,. Oct. 3 flIE-T-The Crystal Springs resort about ,15 nulea north, of : here, J was destroyed by fire, believed caused b v 1 li chtnins'- earl v toda v. 1 Lom was esfimated at-, approximately 1 GOORT REJECTS TANNER CEiilS Rejection of the claim of Caleb Tanner, Provo, for power use of 33.47 second feet of Provo river water is made in a decision by Judge Will C. Hoyt of Nephi received re-ceived by the clerk of district court 'Monday. The-fodguphotdV, W dectsioa of State Engineer T. H. Humph-erys. Humph-erys. Costs are awarded the defendant de-fendant Provo Bench Canal and Irrigation company and complainant complain-ant in intervention Provo River Water Wa-ter Users' association. The case was heard during the summer. Tanner sought to divert river waters near the mouth of Provo canyon, and return at lower point. The application was filed August 27, 1920, at which time, the court affirms, a ruling by Governor Simon Bamberger was effective withdrawing Provo river waters from appropriation. Engineer Humpherys rejected- the application applica-tion January 22, 1934. Utah County Men Win State Fair Contest Honors Utah county entries are in the winning column at the Utah State fair being held this week in Salt Lake City. Dan Ludlow of Spanish Fork took first .in the 4-H club fitting and showmanship contest; Fred H. Cornaby, Benjamin, won an award in the club livestock judging judg-ing contests. Utah county's herd in the dairy cattle division took fourth. A. W. Cherrington of Springville Spring-ville entered a winner in the special production class. His cow produced 3,830 pounds .of butter fat. Oliver Hansen, Spanish Fork, entered another which produced 115,000 pounds of milk. SALT LAKE CITY. Oct. 3 (TIE) Utah's 1938 state fair opened its third day's activities today with thousands of spectators crowding the fair grounds to view exhibits and watch1 judges determine deter-mine blue ribbon , winners in many divisions. In contests concluded last night, prizes were awarded to: Chache county County herd class 'of the dairy cattle division. State Industrial School of Og-den Og-den Grand champion, reserve grand champion and junior champion cham-pion bulls, and , junior champion heifer. , vv ., D, E. Greenwood, Sandy Senior Se-nior and grand champion aged cow In Holsteln dairy cattle division. di-vision. . ; Oliver, Long, iBoise, Idaho-Grand Idaho-Grand champion and junior -champion bull. ;' V : . - i '" 1 Harriette -K J iWisnervMerldiw Idaho--: Senior: and grand chain ptonl-Guernsy ''cow.-jKVSS'--. ' BUlie "Jean Hendrbci rldiaiv Jdaho J unior-' champion Guernsyi Charles H. Hart, BuhlIdaho senior and grand champion; : 'short-' - horrt - beef cattle.-r , ir.s. TT IT TV 11 rsiecJio Duff Cooper, Resigned Lord of the Admiralty, Admiral-ty, Delivers Bitter Onslaught; Laborites, ; Sound Cat-calls As Commons Meet .;. By RICHARD D. McMILLAN 1 :.'-. United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, Oct. 3 U.R)British re-armament willcon-tinue willcon-tinue on an increasing scale, Prime Minister Neville Cham-. berlain announced today, as he defended in the hovse otcarnz mons the price he paid for peace against charges that tie i fcad surrendered to the "bluster and blackmail" of Adolf Hitler. Replying to an extraordinary onslaught by his resigned , first lord of the admiralty, Alfred Duff Oxper. the prime minister turned to face the cat Hitler Makes lis Triumphal Entry Into Sudetenland EGER. German Sudetenland, Oct. 3 (UE Adolf Hitler made his triumphal entry into Sudetenland today and, in a speech to the people peo-ple of Eger, its official capital, pledged that it should "never again be torn from the reich." It was the Nazi fuehrer's second sec-ond such triumph in less than seven months. Only last March he had entered Vienna to claim Austria Aus-tria for his third reich. Cheered by Throng Addressing the people of Eger in the market . place today, his words were frequently drowned by the wildly cheering throng. He apoka4glth fftngUanlt-WM obvious that he was imoved. As he welcomed Sudetenland to the reich, the cheers were interspersed inter-spersed with roars of: "We thank our fuehrer!" Evidently, radio communications communica-tions had been established hastily, for the broadcast of his speech was interrupted several times. Hitler had gone to Hbf , across the border in Bavaria, to start his triumphal entry. Troops, occupying oc-cupying this zone No. 3 of the territory to be taken over by the army under the Munich four power pow-er agreement by which Hitler obtained ob-tained Czechoslovakia's German minority area, preceded him. Awaiting him here also was his own bodyguard, led by Sepp Dietrich, Diet-rich, one of his closest associates since the early days of the Nazi movement They were the first Nazis to participate in the occupation, occu-pation, hithert5 a strictly army affair. Meets Henlein Hitler went first, by motor car from Hof to Asch, home of Konrad Kon-rad Henlein, leader of the Sudeten Su-deten party and new reich commissioner com-missioner of k Sudetenland. There, with Henlein as a member of his party, he reviewed part of the occupation force. A steady drizzle hampered the troops but did. not diminish the enthusiasm of the welcomers. Hitler spoke but briefly. "I greet not only you but with you, the whole Sudeten country, which in a few days will completely com-pletely belong to Germany," he said. Pledge Is Voiced "Tnis greeting is- at the same time to view that this region will never again be torn from the reich. "We must all stand together and never forsake each other. Germany Ger-many is happy over these days. It is not only you who are overjoyed. The whole nation shares your joy. Your happiness is that of 75,000,-000 75,000,-000 people, just as your - sorrow a few days was that of us all. "In this . hour I want . to thank the Almighty for having blessed us in the past and to pray that he may also bless us in the future. "Over this . greater German reich is laid a German shield pro-( pro-( Continued on Page Three) Registration For , Classes Still On -, t . - -- v - ..?.-. ' Registration will continue Monday Mon-day for adult : recreation 7 classes beginning at 7 p. m. In Provo high school gymnasium, ? 'reports s the recreational', department. - J - - Classes m are., conducted Mondays Mon-days and Wednesdays t from ; 7 rto 10 p. rat. The Jartsr.and: crafts class. will register in costume room, and the . gU t-makingclass in room, SO J The Bingingf clasar, meets : in little theater: wom.:-)' ' Thursday evening. the social reation class ' meets .from 7 to 9 :ip. m. All are Invited to attend., ends - calls 01 LADorites. Cooper is. izieerea ? . "Let those who feel shame, hang their heads," he exclaimed, point- -ing a finger at the hecklers who only a few minutes earlier had heard Duff Cooper assert that , he could "still walk, about the world with my head erect" because i he " had -resigned in . protest against Chamberlain's foreign policy.. Duff Cooper, cheered . iy the opposition forces In the house: of .x commons where all had united last 1 The situation in Europe:,;, ---"-Eger Hitler makes triumphant entry into Sudetenland, promising people the territory , "never again will be torn from the reich." -- i' - Berlin Germany to demobilize t more than half ot its 1,500,000 -men under the colors' when ma-heuvers" ma-heuvers" end Oct. 10. - A. -. Rome Italy to demobilize 650,-000 650,-000 of its 1,100,000 men on Oct.. 1. -K - .Prague Czechoslovakia starts ' negotiations with Hungary to sur- render Magyar, minority area. ' . fibadttfta his -European course in common ; . debate; may call general'electioni ; week' in praising Chamberlain; charged that the prime minister - had: - , 1 No right to 8ighv the llUnlch declaration symbolizing'' that' there would never again be war between " Britain and - Germany; without . ; consulting either plomatlc. ad- . -. visers or "our allies." V ' ' 2 Committed Britain ; tode-fending tode-fending new frontiers in- central Europe the future borders of Czechoslovakia for. the first "time in history. : ..f 'i Spoke Wrong Language , ' 3 Spoken to Hitler in : the . Ian- ; guage of "sweet reasonableness" . instead of the language J of - "the (Continued on Page Three) ; Garage Mechanic Hit By Lightnin rr i3 PLEASANT GROVE V- Cyril Walker, 24. garage mechanic at the Lindon Garage was-vrecover-ing at his home, today.; from the effects of a bolt of lightning which struck close to him, Saturday night Walker was working on a car belonging to Albert Hancock, when the lightning struck. ; Both men were knocked .unconscious. Hancock, the first to revive, summoned sum-moned aid. Physicians say Walker will suffer no permanent Injuries, 04 I'll Tell You BY BOB BURNS , v Good teachin'. is the finest thing in the world but it don't; fortify a boy to battles evils unless: he's had a UtUe! temptation along: with hi jr? training. ; 1 ' 5 My old maid -aunt went into a bird store one time and told the 1 " fella she wanted toibuy aparrot I but i jshe : didn't "j want one that sused any? kind of vulgarity. ",Th e birdman - s ays,. Laay I've got jest,j? the i parrot for you he was brought, up in a sr and don't know preacher's what -a' -cuss 'word Is.'.'2vi-;sc ;vThat afternoon, 5 the man hadn't any more than delivered- the bird when -he started lettinV out ; a string.of -oaths and jny. aunt says, ' I didn't know -nV swear worrf, The iinan ? siysvWell, ' he? didn't. laojCrDui- you seewe bad ECr;a engine trouble and three tblov.-cuta on the way.out7f. - Copynght 1S33, -Ecruire 'Jlv - - . , ... Features, Inc. ; - ' ? .: Feature. .Tnr. - Accord' - j, t 4 . 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