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Show f THE SPANISH FORK PRESS, SPANISH FORK, UTAH r WtWMWMMntWWmtWWWWITTWffimTfWW ewwwww I ffli V See. off The value of the 1020 sugar crop estimated at $20,000,000. tike IPads In Utah la Approximately $27,000,000 bus been Jn vested In the properties. It took 2500 office and factory employes, 10,000 farmers and 03,000 acres of hind to of beets produce the 1,230,0(8) ton npcessary to make the 102,500 tons of refined sugar, of the fifty-thregirls who. have been paroled recently from the state Industrial school at Ogeen, twiiity four have been uiiiri'led, .ml the attorney general has been asked to decide as to whether or not these girls still are under the Jurisdiction of the school as they were before they were iiiii fried. The finished product of Utah eenrent plants will reach $3,500,0(8); flour mills $2, (88). 188); knitting factories and woolen mills, $l,5i8),SHi; packing $.581,1881; plants, $!),(88),(M8t ; salt, bakeries, $3 5(8), (881; leather gixxts, brick and other tiullding blocks und tiling, 7,(88), 000. One hundred and ten gallons of raisin mash, three stills, a quantity of white mule," ami brew la various stages of preparation, together wltii the men responsible for the manufacture of the liquor, constitute the as the harvest of the sheriffs of;--:result of a raid at Vernal. A charge of $10 a plate will he made for the iFlilier of stew, cocoa and bread which will he scried at the Weber dub January 24, according to plans being worked out as the Ogden contribution to the fund for the starving children of Europe. Potatoes were grown on 17,(88) acres In Utah In 1020, with a yield of 101 bushels per acre, a total product Ion of 3,208,000 bushels and a value December 1 of $2,038,(88), or 80 cents per bushel, as 'compared with $1.37 per bushel In 1010. Leaving a note that he had chosen In preference to remaining nllve since the death of "Ills pal, Tom, who died on January 15, 1010, Janies McGulgaii committed suicide Saturday night at Salt laike by inhaling gas. The total valuation of taxable 8 property In Utah In 1910 was nnd that of 1920 Is $717,308,-821- , a gikla of $24,841,443. Livestock valuations in 1910 were $42.G17.932 and In 1920 they are $34,213,380, n loss of $8,404,552. Twenty-fiv- e gravel wagons and oilier road work equipment have arrived on the ground nt Delta for use In connection with the new state highway from Delta to Holden, a distance of thirty miles. The Utah-IdaliSugar company's plant at Spanish Fork 1ms completed most successful run lu Its history. Since the opening of the plant on October 5 there has been an average of 8(8) tons of beets sliced daily. The estimated total value of crops grown In Utah for the year 1921), excluding sugar beets and Including apples, as compiled by the bureau of crop estimates,' of which M. M. Justin la the statistician, is $34,072,000. Beet sugar manufactured In the eighteen factories in Utah In 1920 aggregated 153,218) tons, with an average extraction of 11.40 and an averbased on the age sugar content, weight of the beets, of 15.41. Of 1340 cases handled In the last two years by the juvenile eourt ut were sent to the Ogden only forty-nin- e State Industrial school, according to the report of Judge Sullivan submitted to the governor. In the accredited herd list just Issued by the department of agricult.Y the ture, Utuh ranks twenty-seconstates with thirty-si- x accredited herds nnd 377 once tested free herds of cattle. George Washington Baker, Sr., builder of the first dwelling house in Uuche vullcy, and Agnes Richards Baker, celebrated their sixteenth wedding anniversary at Mernlon, January PLAN TO PERMIT BORROWING OF MONEY IN ANTICIPATION OF TAX REVENUES. By EDISON MARSHALL ( IIMMMMM ! SYNOPSIS. that he Warned by hi pliyali-tabaa not more than six montlia to live, I'm Fulling alia denpondently on a pork bench, wondering where he aliuuld apend Ihoae ala month. Memorlex of Ida grandfather and u deep love for all thing of the . wild help him In reaching a In a large aouthern Otegon city he ineeta people who hail known and loved hla grandfather, g fainona fronlleraman. He make Ida home with (Ulna Lennox, a typical weaternrr. The only oilier member of the houaehold are Lennox'a act, 'Bill,'' and daughTheir abode la ter, 'Snowbird. In the Umpqua divide, and there to live out the ahort Fulling plana pan of life which he haa been told la hie. From the drat Falling' health howa a marked improvement, and In the companionship of Ixinnox and Ida aon and daughter he flta Into the woods life a If he had been born to It. By quick thinking and a remarkable dlxplay of "nerve" he saves Lennoxs life and hla own when they are attacked by a mad coyote. Lennox declares he Is a reincarnation of hla grandfather. Dun Falling I. whose fame as a woodsman la a household word Dnn learna that an organised bund of outlaws, of which Bert Cranston Is the leader. Is making trouble In the vicinity. Landry Hildreth, a former member Of the gang, has been Induced to turn atate's evidence. deel-Ion- CHAPTER III Continued. ITe looked up, nnd the whole weird picture wu thrown upon the retina of his eyes. The coyote wax still racing straight toward Dnn, a pray demon In his mndness was more terrible than any charging benr or elk. Foy there Is an element of horror about the Insane, whether beasts or men, that cannot be denied. Both men felt tt, with a chill that seemed to penetrate clear to their hearts. The eyes flamed, the white fangs of Grnycoat caught the sunlight. And Dnn stood erect In his path, his rifle half raised to his shoulder; nnd even In that first frenzied Instnnt In which Lennox looked at him, he saw there was a strange Impasslveness, a singular Imperturbability on his face. Lennox shouted. man! Shoot, What are you waiting for?" But Dan didn't shoot. 'Ills band whipped to hla face, and he snatched d off his glasses. The eyes that were revealed were narrow and deeply Intent And by now, the trended coyote was not flfty feet distant. All that had occurred since the animal charged had possibly taken five seconds. Sometimes five seconds Is just a breath; but as Lennox waited for Dan to shoot It seemed like a period wholly without limit. lie wondered If the younger man had fallen Into that strange paralysis that a Imbues. great terror sometimes Shoot P he screamed again. But It Is doubtful If Dan even heard his shout At that Instant hla gun slid Into place, hla head lowered, his eyes seemed to burn along the glittering barrel. Ills finger pressed hack against the trigger, and the roar of the report rocked through the summer air. The gun was of large caliber; and no living creature could stand ngnlnst the furious, shocking power of the great bullet. The leud went straight home, full through the neck and slanting down through the breast, and the coyote recoiled ns If an Irresistible hand had smitten him. It Is doubtful If there was even a muscular quiver after Grnycoat struck the ground, not twenty feet from where Dan stood. And the rifle report echoed hack to And only silence. Lennox got up olT the ground and moved over toward the dead coyote. Jle looked a long time at the gruy body. And then he stepied hack to where Dan waited on the trail. "I take It all hack," he said simply. You tnke what hack?" What I thought about you that the Fulling Hue tiad gone to the dogs. I'll never rnll you a tenderfoot agnln. I saw the But 4ell me one thing. way you looked down the bnrrel. I could see how firm you held the rifle the wuy yon kept your head. Ami that Is all Ilk? your grandfather. Bill why. when you had a repenting rifle, did yoi wait so long to shoot?" I Jsst had one cartridge In my gnu. I didn't think of It until the coyote charge J. Lennox's answer was the last thing In the world to he expected. He opened his straight mouth and uttered great, boyish yell of Joy, His eyes seemed to light. The eyes of the two men met, and Lennox shook him by the shoulder.. Youre nof Dan Falling's grandson youre Dnn Falling himself!" he No one but him would have shculed. to wait till the game had of hint no one Imt on top almost waT him would have kept his head In n tlme BUe this. You're' Dan Falling himself,- I tell you, come limit to earth. Grandson nothing! Youre n throwback, and now you've got those his eyes looking glasses off. I can see on em Dan of Step out yours. right And give em need again. Tou'll never that Idea of dying In four Month- that thlck-lense- self-contr- - Op 1920, by Llttls, Brown A Co. with a steel cable, but aa ordinary line or leader breaks like a cobweb. When his majesty the steelhend takes the lly nnd decides to run, It can be learned after a time that the one thing that may he done Is to let out all the line mid with prayer and humid ness try to keep up with him. Dan no longer wore his glasses Kvery day his eyes had strengthened. BOOK TWO He could see more clearly now, with big unaided eyes, than he had ever The Debt. seen before with the help of the lens. And (lie moonlight came down through CHAPTER I. n rift In the trees nnd showed that hla face hnd changed, too. It was no September was at Its Inst days on longer so white. The eyes were more the Umpqua divide that far wilder- Intent. The lips were stralghter. ness of endless, tree-claridges where "It's been two months, Silas LenIlls last Dan Falling had gone for nox told him, "liulf the four that you days. Kverywhere the forest people gave yourself after you arrived here. were preparing for the winter that And you're twice as good now as when would full so quickly when these goldyou came. en September days were done. The Dan nodded. Twice I Ten times Under Plane of the forest those ns good I I was a wreck when I came. smaller peoples that live In the dust nnd have hen nil ful, trojtcal forests In Today I climbed halfway up Bnldy within n half mile of Snowbird's cabthe ferns found themselves digging in without stopping to rest. holes am) filling them with stores of Lennox looked thoughtful. . More food. Of course they hnd no Idea on earth why they were doing tt, except than once, of late, Dnn Imd climbed up that n quiver at the end of their tails toward Snowbird's cabin. It wag true told them to do so; hut the result was that his guest and his daughter hnd entirely the same. They would have become the best of companions In the two months; but on second thought, a shelter for the winter. But the most notlcenhle change of Lennox was not In the least afraid of all. In these days of summer, was a complications. The love of the moundistinct tone of sadness that sound- tain women does not go out to physWhoever gets her," ed throughout the forest. Of course ical inferiors. he hml said, will have to tame her," the wilderness note Is nlway& some-whsad; but now, as the leaves fell amt his words still held good. The mountain women rarely mistook a ma and the grosses died, It seemed particularly pronounced. All the forest ternnl tenderness for an appealing voices added to It the wall of the man for love. It wasnt that Dan was geese, the sad fluttering of fallen weak except from the ravages of his leaves, and even the whisper of the disease; but he was still a long way north wind. Of course oil the tones from Snowbird's Ideal. Although Dan and voices of the wilderness sound Imd cournge and that same rigid that was an old quality In his clearest at night for that Is the time breed, he was still a long way from that the forest really comes to life nnd Dnn Falling, sitting In front of a physically strong man. It wna still Lennoxs house, watching the late an even break whether he would ever wholly recover from his malady. September moon rise over Bald mounBut ' Dan was not thinking about tain, could hear them very plainly. It was true that In the two months this now. All his perceptions had he had spent In the mountains he had sharpened down to the finest focal learned to be very receptive to the point, and he was trying to catch tile' spirit of the endless forest that stretched In front of the house. His pipe had gone out, and for a long time Lennox hndnt spoken. He seemed to lx straining too, with Ineffective senses, trying to recognize and name the faint sounds that came so tingling and tremulous out of the darkness. As always, they heard the stir and rustle of the gnnwlng people; the chipmunks In the shrubbery, the gophers who, like blind misers, hnd ventured forth from tlielr dark burrows; and perhaps men the scaly glide of those right now ; I'm going to make you live. Well light that dlscuse to a llnlslr ami win!" And that Is the way that Dan Falling emne Into Ids heritage In the land of Ids own people, ami In which, u new spirit was horn In him to tight and win and live.. d nt self-contr- ol poison most-dreade- d lairs Tha Lead Went Straight Home. voices vf the wilderness. Lennox had not been mistaken in thluklng him a natural woodsman. He had Imagination nnd Insight and sympathy; hut most of all he had n heritage of wood-lorfrom his frontiersmen ancestors. Two mouths before he had been a resident of cities. Now the wilderness had clulmed him, body am) soul. These hml been rare days. At first he hml to limit Ids expeditious to a few miles each day, and even then lie would come In ut night staggering from weariness, lie climbed hills that seemed to tear his diseased lungs to shreds. Lennox wouldn't have been p afraid. In o crisis, to trust Ids now. He hml the nnturul cold nerve of a nmrksman, and one twilight he brought the laxly of u lynx tumbling through the brunches of a pine ut a distance of two hundred yards, lie got so he could shatter a grouse out of the Mir In the half of a second or so In which Its bronze wings glinted In the shrubbery; ami when a limn may do this a fair number of times out of ten he Is on the straight roml toward greatness. Then there came a day when Dnn caught his first stcclhcud In the North Fork. There Is no more beautiful thing In the wilderness world than a stcclhcud trout In action. He simply sietns to dance on the surface of the wilier, leaping ngiitn and again, am speed down racing at an unheard-o- f the ripples, lie weighs only from ilnee to fifteen pounds. Rut now nnd without souls again amateur have tried to pull him In with main -'rcictb. amt are still somewhat duci to the revolt. It might bu done e marks-manshl- peop'e that had the rock piles. Dnn felt that at last the wilderness He had Itself was speaking to him. waited a long time to bear its voice. His thought went back to the wise men of the ancient world, waiting to hear the riddle of the universe from the lips of the Sphinx, and how he himself more In his unconscious self, rather than conscious hnd sought the eternnl riddle of the wilderness. He had asked questions never In the form of words but only Inerrable yearnings of his soul and at last It hml responded. The strange rising nnd foiling song was Its own voice, the articulation of ttie very heart and soul of the wilderness. Its the wolf pack," Lennox told him softly. "The wolves have just Joined together for the fall rutting." "Then this means the end of the summer?" Dnn naked. "In a way, hut yet we don't count the summer ended until the rains hrenk. Heavens. I wish they would start I I've never seen the hills so t dry, and I'm afraid thnt either Cranston or some of tils friends will decide It's time to make a little inm ev fighting forest fires. Don. I'm -- us. plrlotts of thnt gang. I believe thoi've got a regular arson ring, maybe with unscrupulous stockmen behind them, and perhaps just o of their own. I suppose you know about Imndy Hildreth how lie's pi cm. Ised to turn states evidence thm m ill send about a dozen of these vipers to the penitentiary?" "Snowbird told me something i.nul It." In I.i-r- penny-winnin- ITU UK CUN TI.NL g hi' ) Folly Came Home to Him. When Charles V abdicated Ills throne uml retired to the imuin.svr of Nt. Juste, he amused lilmsell' l !mng to learn watchmaking. Afti-- i h mo time he remarked one day: "Win an u to egregious fool must I have have squandered so much Mood ami treasure In an absurd attempt to make men think alike, when I cannot even make a few watches keep time ) BOYD PARK JEWELERS yL BOYD PARK BLDG K50 MAIN HUE? e swota Copyright. Tima bow for a girl to hav her engage-mon- k ring tha sweetast treasure of ovary girl Our ronabl prices aaaa tha way. Would Ba Boon to Counties Who Find It Impossible to Raise Funds. Battalion Monument Commie-io- n Report Diacuaeed. line Idll was passed and five new measure', were Introduced III the house of representatives mi January IS The In the hour ami 11 hulf session. hill passed was that enaldlng counties to borrow money In anticipation of tax revenues, ut mi Interest rate not to exceed 8 per cent. It was passed ar the request of the Salt Lake county commissioners. Imt It was said similar counties In the state find themselves In a like predicament ami that they have found It Impossible to borrow money u t 7 per cent, the limit set by the statute now In effect. The Utah senate spent part of the iificriiooa of January 18 discussing the report of the Mormon battalion monument commission In committee of the whole. It also heard a touching uppcol from "Little Miss Hoover" In behalf of the starving children of Kiirope. One hill was Introduced. of the three hills Introduced III the Utah senate on January 17. two add to i lie functions, powers and duties of exiting slate commissions, while the third is the Dern measure, providing a separate ami "headless ballot for elect ion of candidates for Judgeships or for the office of state superintendent of public Instruction. Mrs. Kllzuhcth Hayward, senator from Salt Luke, Introduced a bill providing that the industrial commission shall also he a minimum wage commission, having for lls object the protection of the health, morals and welfare of women and minors employed in Industry in Utah. Senator Harrison E. Jenkins, another Salt I.aker, brought In a measure creating a state real estate department of the securities commission, and providing that all renl estate tirokers and salesmen shall take out licenses, under strict regulation, before they may operate In Utah. The regular business of the senate on January 17, besides the Introduction of hills, was comparatively brief, but was featured by the speedy disposal of the house concurrent resolution providing for an Investigation of the slaughter of bison on Antelope Island. Six bills and one memorial were Introduced in the house oil January 17. House concurrent resolution No. 1, memorializing congress to pass the Fordney emergency tariff ldll as amended by the senate, was read in the house and concurrence in the amendment voted unanimously. Iverson, Boxelder, Representative offered a memorial relative to prohibiting ownership of land In Utah hy orientals and It was referred to the committee on Judiciary. The memorial resolution contains the recently adopted hy the American Legion post in Halt Lake and Is to be followed. It is understood, by a bill prohibiting such alien ownership of lund. Members of the Utuh legislature on January 14 paid their biennial visit to the Utah Agricultural college to make a survey of the needs of the Institution and Inspect buildings and grounds, as well ns observe the work being done by the school. The visitors comprised five senators and fifteen representatives, appointed by the two bodies. The report of the Mormon Battalion commission has been filed with the senate and house In compliance with the law creating the commission, thnt it shall report Its proceedings during the first week of The comeach biennial legislature. mission now has on hand a total of $72,337.02 toward the goal of $100,(88) before the $100,000 apIt must propriated hy the legislature Is available for the erection of the monument. Senate bill No. fl. Introduced by Senator J. W. Peters, would amend the compiled laws, of Utah, 1017, so ns to provide for a redlstrletlng of the county school districts every ten members of the Only twenty-sihouse were tu attendance nt Friday's session, two more than the required quorum. Sixteen were In Logan on a trip of Inspection of the Utuh Agricultural college, and five were excused because of Illness or business. Belief to the agricultural portion of the states population, nnd particularly to the livestock Interests, Is the uvotved aim of a hill Introduced In the state senate on Jaumiry 13 by Senator George II. Dern. Senator John V. Peters of the First district, Including Boxelder nnd Tooele counties, was mimed llepuhllcun floor leader by a vote of the Republican aenators In caucus on January 13. Senutor Peters also Is the only senator who la chairman of two standing committees, those on education nnd public x 400 400 BATHS MOST KODERK HOTEL JO 70 I2S 100 75 Im IES1 OF CH1UC0 wna ll.Sfr, Tr Brian $250 Ish-- Ow Iran $104 wna $200, Taa M--ta $2. SO; Taa pana $1S0 lam $4 00 lam Wh lak-- Ow ana $100; Taa Oa pana $4.0k Ta $5.00 lam IO WA Wsb V Ink Ow ma M ropalar FrictJ Cull Shop aa J Diain ana ana am lean Headquarters far Utah, Mala, Wyssuni, Nmda pesfls e n $092,-400,87- self-dumpi- o le d -- year. NEWHOUSE HOTEL 18. j Vllate Bergener, 3 years of age, amt Clyde Bergener, 2 years of age, children of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bergener, met death In a fire that destroyed the Bergener home at Park City. With a total valuation In excess of $34,0(8),(XX), the livestock Industry of Utah Is now rated ns the second largest In the stute, mining leading the list. The state mental hospital at Provo received twenty-thre- e patients during December of last year thirteen. The hospital now has 002 patients. Utahs thirty-sicanning factories produced 1,414,104 cases of vegetables and fruits valued at approximately $0,000,(88) last yenr. The state industrial commission has decided to buy $7300 of the $15,(88) Issue of public library bonds of the city of Sprlngvllle, The fourth annual convention of the Utah Irrigation and Drainage congress was held in Suit Iaike, January 17 und 18. The people of Greenrlver ore organizing u commercial club, the primary object being to aid In Inducing the federal government to take un active part in the Green river Irrigating project, hy which more thnn 150,-00acres of land are to bo reclaimed. The Salt postoffice will be closed to the public between midnight affairs. and 0 oclock In the morning until Junketing trips throughout Idaho further notice, upon orders from Wash-- j will be few and far between, and out- Ington. The order stated that this side the state they will be extremely tep Is being taken as a precautionary limited under the provisions of a bill measure during the prevailing crime being prepared by the state affalra , jevs over the country. committee of the house. x 0 Bull 'xmxm Bill Francis 6 Luke Scientific Oiec: l Honest Deptj General Minever Bans Bid IIRoomsContmental lany 1 Lake City, urns iX5rij, I orr .salt WALKER'S BEAUTY PARLOR. Switch transformation worth $12 for $.50. Switches worth $7.50 for $5, by mail. Cut ample from center of head. 020 South Main. CLEANERS A DYERS. Service. Quality. Clothes Insured. Work guaranteed. W pay Price return pontage. list on request. O Dyer. 114 E. Broadway. Myers Cleaner Dry Cleaning by Parcel Peat. Send your auita, dreeaea, eoata, etc. to ua for Manter Cleaning and Dyeing." Salt's Lake leading cleaner. W pay return charges. Regal Cleaning A E. 2nd So. Dyeing Co., 150-le- e MONUMENTS. Writs for catalog. Standard Marble Granite Co., 117 W. Broadway. TYPEWRITERS. Distributors Corona portable and Royal. Ail other make sold, repaired and Utah Typewriter Exchange Co. exchanged. FLOWEKS FOR ALL OCCASIONS. Morris Floral Co., 52 E. 2nd S., Salt Lake City. BAY IT WITH FLOWERS. Out of town orders solicited. Miller Floral Co-- . 52 E. 2nd South. ' ART EMBROIDERY CO. Out Machinery embroidering on ladies apparel. town business solicited. 201 Brooks Arcade. RUBBER STAMPS STENCILS. 8eala and ear tags also made. Send for samples, prices, etc. Salt Lake Stamp Co., 65 W. Broadway. 8ALT LAKE BUSINESS COLLEGE. after school : enroU anytime. 30t percent; $1 a pkg. Everybody buys. nULilliJsampc frM Dodga Bros., Salt Lak. Bava lodging ; work 1 rCWTS CREAM BOUGHT. Beat prices. Western Creamery Co., 244 W. Fourth South. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. e. Daynes-BeebEverything known In music. Salt Lake City. HATS Write for prices. Return charges prepaid. Smythe Hat Factory, 110 E t 8. POULTRY BOUGHT. For best results ship poultry, eggs and gams to Fulton MkL Correct weight. Prompt return. Writ for price. 9LDSMOB1LE DISTRIBUTORS. Cars A tracks. Used car bargain. A. E. Tourasan, 447 8. Main. rubberhospFtal! We eure injured rubber articles. Boots, Shoe. Hot Water bottles. Tire, Tubes, ate. Satisfaction guaranteed. Return charges prepaid. Western Rubber Sales Co., 1(4 E. Broadway, 8a!t Lake. ELASTIC STOCKING MFRS. Manufacturers abdominal. Maternity supporters. Truss fitters. S. H. Bowmar Co., Brooks Arcade. WELDING. AUTO RADIATORS A Machinery built and repaired. Beat and cheapest. Potter Welding A Repairing Co., 651 South State. lTd787 3USINES3COLlEGE School of Efficiency. All commercial branch. Catalog fra. 0 N. Main St. Salt Uka City. KID FITTING COKSET PARLORS. Specialists in designing, making, fitting corsets. Hemstitching, onbroiderlsK. braiding, accordion and aid pleating. Buttons made. 40 H. Bdwy. MARINELLO BEAUTY PARLOR. Hair goods Mall order and Marinello preparation. solicited. Clift Bldg., Salt Laka City. Utah. VULCANIZING A RETREADING. Quality and service. Standard lire Works, 161 So. State. Inventors Models Mad. Key, lock and gun repairing. Knudson Novelty Co., 655 So. Stata. Us "Inland Fertiliser." Farmers getting big return. Write Inland Fertiliser Co." McIntyre Bid. Truss so. Abdominal Supporters, hospital and sick e Co. 165 S. Main. room supplies. The Jones-Oa- k BBS YOUR LOCAL PUBLISHER For loon leaf binders, special blanks, records of all kind. He givr Quality Service ATTEND UTAH BUSINESS COLLEGE For Practical Business Education. Tpe A MACHINERY Western Machinery Co., Judge Bldg. MOLER BARBER COLLEGE. Qualify aa barber In few weeks 42 S. West Tempi Street. THE EMBROIDERY BUOP, 534 Clift Bldg. Hemstitching, pleating, machint and band embroidering, buttons made, expert bead work. To Inouro Prompt Servico. Mr. Poster. Why are you trying to phone my office at this time In the morning? Theres nobody there. Ills Wife I know whot Im doing. Ill want to tell you when dinner will be rendy this evening, and If I commence now Ill get the connection Just In time. A Mistaken Reading. for a short, dark woman with a fierce eye who is waiting to give you a check. Pat i on No, she ulnt. Shes waiting to get one from me. That's my wife. I? ul tlmore America n. Fortune Teller Isiok Had No Appetite. soldier going over on a trnnspor turned away as his more fortunat fellows responded to the moss bugle Thnt muy be dinner call for yoi dudes, he sighed, but It's only 1! o'clock for mo." A |