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Show r THE. WEEKLY. NEWS. EXPRESS. u NOT IN THE BOX SCOREt . Incidental expenses. Ilia partner In the . Insurance business, who was supposed .to take care of his renewals, fell til while Bitsy was AWay and let a number ef pojlclcs lapse . , . Bobby Riggs and Wayne Sabin, the yonng California doubles combination being touted for next year's Bavis enp competition, have been parted by lack del Valle, their "angel. The break came during the Ryo matches and Del Valle explained It by saying ho believed Sabins Influence on Riggs was not beneficial. It probably will be patched np before Aim national m. championships, N NU ftenrlt '. Tr are In the the Giants ', Although midst ef one oi the most magnificent pennant drives of retent years gossiperi still operste on them. The lowdown U that Hank Leiber latest . and Harry GUmbert will be traded to the Cards for Jim Collins next winter, ' The whispered reason for this is that Terry and Leiber do " not ' Another keyhole along. WHILE boating litI ttasqiN! item "get is that several Giants offiMapping par vrr the Boston BartondeV at cials consider Mel Ott to be "an . Yankee Stadium, Joe Jouls wa overrated player" and will peddle 1937 if Terry far ahort ef'.hia top Chicago King-fis- h him to another club-iagree. even Ye4, though performance. It took one minute and two seconds Top Warner and Gil tioble wilt of the third round before be could be personally matching thciy footconvince a trembly-leggeeye- - ball coaching wits vetercarrcd for. the first lime an that be had enough,' this falling Boston college t not of be should meets ohort, perfection Temple In This Is . held against Joe.- He. did the Job October. V J. assigned to him and probably the .Warner's forty-aee- whole Vassar Daisy Chain teim ond year as a coach TZBiS- - ty, rould not have done It any better. while Dobie has I "jV "Whether he Is, by apy chance, the been on duty for A mere 35 seasons . gamp gifted. athlete he was.bcfore Eddie Borden, tile the Schmcllng writer and sports Is something j will i manager, fight that need not be shortly publish' gone Into here. new boxlpg mags he .entered 'Princeton the ring no r e cine tagged Bang down and adInsiders breaking' art blithely than for any Frosh football supother New York ap- mitting that the ta best since the class of the ply pearance .up to date. '36. add that They.' thlp manna will Even before, he got his first glimpse of be very. much welcomed by Coach Crisler' since practically ail of that dreadful Shark Frits. the present regulars will.be blotted who, by ey man, out by graduations text June,! .' . ' ' was the . the way ft IE IL 1HI Y. GRANTS European tennis B ITS tour cost him $250, exclusive of 4 ? f; te?.--.-- ' ; t BRISBANE THIS WEEK O' ,oAo. . An association called "The t . . - d, thirtf-three-yea.r-o- Id - - . - . . . . . 'T mis-tak- e' Cer-Vainl- y' J . of rpund-heeled.rl- . rounds and.LOi later, he was ' . . grinning. ' . , That, of course, may have been because .he was. getting . his 'first . glimpse of Leon Kcttchct, the human beanpole who. soma day may . he stood up tp be bowled over ln'the same alley . and under the same benevolent auspices as- last night. ft also might have been because youngster, whose best ballyhooers about , had bebn doing masterpieces ' .his "shellshocked reactions, was at last Coming te realise that in- -' stead of going' into battle he was facing a pink tea, . . - . ,vk Anyhow it'hnrdly matters. ing his right up high, as . , . ; Keephe- - did Pot against' the fairly yoling and' fairly agile Schmeling, Louis started slowly, .perhaps. a punch Into those whiskers he has neve.r yet had .time to grow might have', caused him some inconvenience and slpwed; ' him. up evert more. But, even though , the halfbold Sharkeywhich Indicatrr)ad.e ed that Joe still has- a bit to learn before being better than even mpm gents ey against such as Eltore, Tastor and .John Henry '. Lewis, nothipg rhuch- happenedi; ' Sharkey went through the first found As if surprised that the bad hep's was so Jong delayed. So, lie pawed ' his bemused way Into the '' Second .round, scarcely landing a blow. He went down from': right ' to the Jaw, got up and went down again shortly thereafter ' from . right,. left and a feeling of futility, la the third round he again was . howled ever twice, .ence sprawling ever' the lower strand ef ropes. i , 'After this He got up. He was not as badly beaten as was Louis in . , the Schmcl.ing fight and it is pr6b-able that he expected to go .on. But' Beferee Donovan .had- already Counted fen. So that was that The battle of "Uhat .Docs It Prove?" . - was over and, even tbougl the radio . and movie concessionaires .may squawk to. the high heavens,'. there will be no rema-tch.Sharkey now can go hack to Boston and impa- . pent customers Who Have been , screaming ran get some service . leaden-footed- - some-motion- two-legge- d - i . . . Ohio Stale Fears Grid Date Willi New York ID. - - With N. Y. U',. this fall. Buckeye athletes, In New York for the World Labor .' meet, reported that folks around Columbia feel the Violets are going to be so tough that there is practically no betting money in . . Ya.e 'men. refuse to 6igh.t-''talk about gridiron prospects but there is a. persistent rumor that Ducky .Fond' Will surprise the nation with a powerful' team, this fall Especially it rmp of the scholastically doubtful sophs regait) , Don't expect good standing . Lou Little to.be oversetive at Co-- .' lumbia this tall .. Reports from his Leomjnster; Mass.,- home town are thsrt his injured hip still pains him . . mightily. . George Varoit, the poie .vaultcr, will stay away front sports untit after Christmas,- lie feels that hi baa been spending toe much time n suck play and ie anxious te catch up In his studies, at Oregpn, wherj be Is sophomore this fall . , Sign ef autumn .. ... . Six Youngsters tossing the seasons ' first Mahhattpn ' sidewalk ' football e East Eighty-fourt, . - - bigb-Aeartn- - h . street. . . Although-Jes- . . . iweetser, president s .the Metropolitan Golf association, is playing as good golf as ahy eff New York amateur this summer, his' temperament still gets' b his went competition. way In 6pie of his mafiy yeafs .of' campaigning he still enlists in the club- -' throwing ranks when the breaks go sour,'' , For a lad whos had taste of. Holly wood, Buell Tatrick Abbott, the .Californian who recently won the national public links tifor A movie tle, has pntid career. "All X. want," he says, speaking of tha.t fabled city where salaries' always are quoted lii .the higher Gs, "Is a contract fop $350. or $400 a week for four or five years. .Then Ill qua.. . This has been singularly unfortunate summer for Bill Cook, capV again. . tain and future coach of the Rang, ' ier.. Ills mother died two nunths Slbirghed Sailor ago, Just after the popular hockey ' veteran had moved his. family east .! Have No Regrets (O' the neW house he bought near llainitton, .Out. Ills two children While explaining how he held the had to have tlieir tonsils 01ft and, Brown Bomber tq a mere count of Although that's ordinarily simple tea kayo three ycar.s arter this stal- operatiod these days, bis younger wart Camera .yon. the-- , championdaughter .had a relapse' and, had to ship ft'omhlm by mcaps of a slash return to the illhospital. Then, Mrs. and had to. undering! . lone uppercut, the sloughed Cook became .sailor need .have Pa ft grew, .though go an operation. . . V Jughandle He got. a very handsome 130,928 Johnny Morrison, former ' Dodger for his sca-nmoments oi light ex- and rirate. is noW pitching for not In'. Bropk- ercise. So he departs with the pleas- too good ant .feeling that in a town where lyu and getting $3.50 per game.. ' , 6,600,000 people take dfly (haneps be a quid Although. he appears-'tof being bowled over, by antos', fellow, Wally Berger merely' because they cannot afford of the Bees likes practical jokes ovcarfare, at least 6,000,000 ..people en better than base hits!. His pot are envying his 'pretty opportunity prank is to put rrh in the pullman and his bright reward.' . berths of his teammates . ., Hand bets, in Mon books take Not in the Box Score: ' , treal . ; . Watch North' Carolina Dartmouth football fans are wor State's football team this fall Hunk ried about Mutt Ray, who recently Anderson, the old Notre Dame, will underwent a back operation. The be working with 26 letter men, most . crack center is far from right and of them Juniors.. . chances are he will Eee little action Experts whisper that the best this fall. The two star guards, Lat buys on the Ihilly barta McCray, severely Injured In gain counter wit be Tit, her Claude skiing accident, and Joe Hanrahan, Iasseau and Catcher Bill Atwood. who was stopped by die June ex- The Cult and Giants already have ams, also may be unavailable. been fingering the $50,000 price tags. - - Nml i g " - t aemi-proTca- d 'five-Ce- nt mid-wint- t er title,-chie- f - - orig-inaUy- .- ! . Fishermen of Helgoland; row of boarding houses and. hotels, to resorters .t,he first sniff ELGOLAND .Is falling offering of salt breeze before It re'aches nadown", may be sung tives n back the sadly to- the tune of town runs Kartoffal'allee, or Potato London Bridge" if there Lane, bisecting the Island through, Is truth In reports that Germany is garden patches of potatoes and. cabfortifying this pinhead stronghold bage, through pasture spots where In the North Sea. Firing great gun graze a few sheep and. goats,' past menaces the island more than any the red and white cone of the lightsecenemy, for at every big shot to the little eafe ort the north-- , house, tions of its vertical sandstone sides ern. where tlie "Fog Cow" point plunk Into the surrounding sea. bellows warning every two minutes Like a triangular block of rasp- when the mists swirl- low. platberry ice en a vast The lower town, lacking horses ter, Helgoland is melting away into and vehicles ' of any sort,, ia not. the'.North seav The Island is liter: without Us own method of rapid ally crumbling away around its pop- transit down hamelyv sliding pilots, banisters. Men oi ulation of have Helgoland flsherfoik, or to scorn the elevator known been Here the IlelgolahdcrS try to between the clifTtop and hold together their Island, their operating " the kjvel of the two- -, floiirishlrig summer resort business, mount the Iron town; story they and their traditions on a small bare hand of the start: way along railing, rock upon which would fit the Fed- the cliff's face ' and nonchalantly eral Triangle buildings along Penn- skid doWn to. the foot of the- precsylvania avenyo In Washington ipice. Here in the shelter of the without too much margin.. cliff, houses and shops duster about morsel Is the re- a knot of This concrete motest of the Frisian islands, which streets. ' . water has gouged out from the Sun la." is the money, crop' t northern coastline, of Europe, and. Helgoland. This is, raised chiefly At Within .historic times, scrubbed the expense.- of &um,mer visitors-baskindown until reduced in size, or in n of: on the frail some cases washed away altogether. barrfcn beach of Dune or Sand Broad submarine rocky ledges in Island, Apparently melting into the the shoal area around Helgoland North sea a mile southeast, of .the are submerged souvenirs of its for- main rock. Here lias been located mer extent,' estimated to be five tiny graveyard for nameless bpdics. timbs its present size, which' is .washed up by .the- waves. Ama square mile. abbut seaquake In 172(1, the. by putated 'The Island lost ground to thq extent DUnb was Joined, to it 'previously' of about 250 square yards a. year tall White the base home by rocky until 1892. Then the wave-worCliff of fine 'quality chalk, now visiwestern side was ringed around ' reef at low- - tide. Chalk ble as with a girdle of granite brought which' export, occasionally attracted from the Danish island of Born's .as a hundred ships as many holm. Evert thus protected, tt, 1$ harbor at one. time, grew doomed within eight 'Centuries, say so that it killqd the chalk that the pessimists. More generous geol- la great id,' the golden egg; 'the White Cliff ogists give it about forty .to' go, but caved In during A. storm and tum" go they all agree It will. bled Into the sca : After ages 'of erosion, what reIt Tcople Are Frisians mains of Helgoland? A ' Inhabited by Frisians,- a rugged Shaped wedge of red sand'strtne Romans were, proud the' race whom streaked with layers of chalk, swept to remained allies, Helgoland call, winds .and incessantly by chill salt of independent great Europes Its sea.. the North. gnawed by are notable far their kingdoms for. centuries; resisting in- -, vasions even of Christianity;. In fact, smallness, except 'the height; the sides, rise sheer and dripping from iti lasting consedration to ojd Norse the water to a flat top of 200 feet .gods, especially Forsetl god of jusabove sea level Its Importance lies tice, . may mean .that its name from lleiligpland, t of In 'its .position; as Cermanys-."EyLand. however call Holy .Natives, .of the Empire", it watches over the their Island det Lunn, The pimply of. fn6uths the Wese'r,' equidistant Jade. Elbe; and Eider rivers, com- Land. Although German isf the offimanding the Harbors of Hamburg, cial language, they spc.ak a dialect Bremen, and Cuxhavtn from a Van- of Frisia'n,. which resembles ancient tage point 8 miles from the. nearDuring' the Lliddle Ages U was est poini of mainland.' theoretically controlled' from the Shattered by the World Wa ' duchy f 'Schleswig, the duke even Yet Helgoland, with history prac- pawning it to a Hamburg merchant, tically ih its- hands, had been re but actually .It was the Irrepressiported by astute observers as re- ble stronghold of those medieluctant to make history and more val maritime racketeers pirates, concerned abo.ut making living. brigands, and beachcombers' The Its experience clurlrtg the- World Danes . once 'got possession by w'af proved that history .is easy to to hang all .the men, There, fs nothing like bfelng strong make but hard to survive. Its scant threatening whom they had kidnaped while nut a'nd prepared for (rouble. You no pasture land was confiscated to Ashing,' so that the Women over-- , '.tice how differently . Germany , apbuild forts.' Its rocky cliffs, pf which threw- the of France and small, Schleswig garrison pears; in V1 ey th.are. was already precious little, and proclaimed Danish allegiance. other nation surrounding her-- tocrumbled, oft and plunged seaward, Thereafter, wherf improved water day,. as compared- with the yeara during artillery fire. The entire pop- - transportation gave, it greater con? after the war. Hear. Lord Lothian' ulation was forced into frtu'r .years venicnce It has been In on' that subject: of exile to rrtake room for the mili- demand and in use asconstantly a stepping Germany .crw has both, equality tary in .J91. When the living rem stone for larger countries. . . and strength. Reparations . h?v'e 'mints returned in' 1918, .their peace valuable smuggling headwas It a V' of the Treaty of Veir Part gone. was shattered by' three years of the blockades of the The dqmilitariza- -' quarters has during bailies gone.. blasting down fortifications in actlon of the Rhineland has gone, and cordance with the Versailles trbaty Napoleonic wars. Then England 'and the further trimming, dotyn of sent seven , ships to capture it, in. .the .sooner . that recovery of. her. September,-1807like "plucking an natural right to Is acthe Islahd's slim sides.. In In desperation.. Helgoland- petitioned 'apple hanging over a neighbor cepted .without further .discussion, flrially relinquished ' the better. Germany is rearmed. 'It' the League of. Nation for neutral- wall"; Denmark 1 to claims . seven after years. only remains for the British governity. Scheduled for. a. perpetual bout Helgoland was- traded in 1890 to ment to abandon once and for all the With', the. sea, it 'finds any oth'ct Germany for Zanzibar, 3,000 times fatal system whertby.she first has country a fight just one (oo'many.as large, and the exchange was a conference with her friends and . Green, Red and White pompared to an entire suit of then presents the results as a kind Within Its diminishing boundaries, ..tloUies swapped for a trouser butof ultimatum to Germany the sys-- , It has three pkrts: the massive rock, ton. But the trouser button demontem represented by the recent table of Ob'erland with Its cornered strated that it ceuld serve a purpose questionnaire and to substitute for tuft of town, the shoreline shelf of vital importance when it became it free and equal and frank discusprojecting below Uke caps visor pne of the worlds strorgest fortsion around a table. The old sysWith a secoYid edition bf town called resses during the World war. Not tem is not equality, either for Ger' Untcrland, and the wisp of sandy far away, on a misty morning in many or for ourselves. , tow A mile to the casl A Dune in August, 1914. occurred the first thin green- belt of- pasiurage across serious naval clash of the war, What telephone girl In America the Islands top ' completes the .when, British Victory littered the has the softest, most beautiful, most color triad which Inspired the flag:' glassy smooth sea with WTeckage. easily understood voice? That ques"Green the land,' red the 'rock, Helgolanders acquired the habit tion, was asked in England and a white. the sand:.'. . of considering themselves fishermen Miss Cain won the competition arThese colors' make tHe .flag of at the start of the Fifteenth century, ranged by the British postoffice, Helgoland. when a strange migration of herwhich owns British telephones and .Like a toy village on the comer ring brought them great harvests telegraph. The finest voice having .of a table, at Obcrland's southeast of fish for 290 years. An equally been selected, a robot was manufacpointy huddle blocklike, houses, strange emigration of their source tured to imitate that voice by phonoaquare and solid against the recur- of income left them catching only a graphic process. Now. when you rent want to know the time In London, gales. The flat skyline few lobsters. Since the island's popularity as a you dial Tim and the soft voice is broken by nothing more than the pretentious little summer resort began in 1828 with of Miss Cain, perfectly reproduced, German postofllee of glazed brick only a hundred resorters, the tells you: "At the third stroke it and the spire added during Queen will be four twenty-seveand fifderive their year's income Victorias reign to the Church of from renting themselves out as teen seconds' St Nicholas, already centuries old. pilots and their homes as boarding K Xing Srndlcata, Ibol Around the cliH's edge stands a houses for the season of two weeks. Wy K'nilnAM 0orr.pht(! Prrri1 C. WNJJ Brle. WaHhlnicton, 1 1. - streets.-Throug- - . . - bluo-groc- . rt . - J,50(l-mai- nly . boarding-hdusc-keep-er- they-wer- down-town- b' - - sea-bitte- . n half-moo- . ' - one-fifth-o- f. n' l f . tomf'or.t. at .Cockfight 'is probably the only ever .'achieved the dls Cbctfigh-ting- - spurt 'that ' ' . ' ti.ncflon 'of having a halr espbclaK . ly designed for It spectator's. Th! ' ; chalr. notes I!.', Huot,. Seattle, ' ' Wash, .'In Colliers Weekly, which was, used, in Europe about. 200' '.years ago, delighted the heart of, ' . the ' cockfighting1 fan because, . al though h.e had to sit astraddle, it .. , provided a thin support and arm '... rest, . Sherman Wret Long Letter d Despite his arduous-militarties 'during' the Civil war, Gen. William' Tecumseh Sherman regularly' took time, even during his famous march to the sea, to letters to his brother, Sen, John Sherman. From 1S62 to 1SG? General Sherman wrote about 1,000 letters to Brother John, who kept them In two large volumes In hi ; safe In Mansfield,' Ohio, write-length- Hrct ' Locomotives Compared Britains first railway builders made .repeated experiments to es- tablish the relative cost of horse as against locomotives, and only after an elaborate series of trial did they reluctantly Come to tha conclusion that the locomotive waa'-; cheaper than the horse. ' Gallic and Pita I moH . Strange as' It may seem Ohio Sta-tfears (hat ewly football date . '.H Anglo-Germa- n Chief Justices, Plural In the United States, In .forming' the plurals of complex titles! 'the principal word '.In the title. Is given the plural, form, That principal word Is 'always a noun; says. Literary, Digest,, sometimes occupying the first positlon-vapostmaster, general, .postmaster? general and, sometimes the second as deputy the. Judge,( deputy Judges. Justl.ce, chleif Is- an adjective and , would, . therefore?, not b.e . plu: ralized.' It 'Is '.quite' analogous to prlbefpal. vclty the plural ', being principal cities.! '"Hence, .'.under .either category, as the principal, 'word' in accord ''with' grammat-JcaYules; It is .Justice that take the . plural forte hief Justices,'.. s Fellowship," A name which shows' that'- men forget, warsas they do seasickness, gave a dinner in London hr honor of fornia,' . . the Duke and' 6 u c h e s s of . : Franked, Envelopes, Brunswick, who From the earliest days of the are Germans, as ' President of .the Republic . the, was the British been authorized has States United royal family . to frahk mall Through, by congj-ess. re. Among other, the tltfie of. Buchanan the law writhis actual at signature quired the speakers Lord ten In. his own hand." , From Lindinner, talked coln's time; the power .eras shared Lothian about war, the with his. secretary, and then Grant importance of doing something to iised. the executive' sfamps, with satisfy.Germany, now that Germany the autograph frank, but seldom is' 'strong enough trt fight back, ' ' From Hayes on, they have used the printed' penalty" envelope., and more, the envelop Lord Lothian has discovered, that markedrecently simply The White. House,'' ' . one dissatisto it is deal with thing fied populations w'nrtn they are un.Odd Names for London Inn armed, and a very, different thing In the olden days, street numbers to deal with the same dissatisfied were not used In London and other whew ate fully populations they English .cities. This, is the reason armed, .. that the old ones, Thi British made that discovery have Inns, especially names, such as distinguishing for themselves long ago, before the rtnk and Lily, the Beetle and Lord Lothian was born, In the Wedge,-th'Swan, the Sun and process of building. up ' their great Seven the Bluebell, the .Cantons, empire, if the Boers, Hindus, Zu: Golden the Calf,, Jolly Brewer, the some as his and others had beep Cocks and th Cobweb,.. Fighting thoroughly.' armed as .thoroughly dissatisfied,' the British, .. 'MaayVu.it Motes Fountain smaller.-- : empire would According to tradition,, the spring Americans who want lb know that gushes from a rocky hill at what Europeans,- including the- Engfoot of Mount Kebo is the same the lish, are thinking and planning, will fount' that kerved the rrophet be interested in .the following stateMoses before he climbed the mounLothian ment by Lord concerning tain to view the Promised Land. Germany. It. has been suggested Therh he died. Nebo is a miles that England, .and France should east end the of north bit giving back pacify Germany some' of the colonial properties taken from Germany at the end of the war. Lord Lothian'.!? one of the. numerous Englishmen Who da not believe' in '"giving, things .back!".. .Said-- he; "Personally, I. do not believe that the problerh can be solved along the .lines' of the restoration to Germany of the old German colonies.' That would not solve Germanys, difficult ties! and things have changed since .1914;, The question must be. conlines. All sidered, on much-widethe colonial nations must be willing to make their, contribution to a transfer of territory. The new wprld must be willing at well as once .'more to reopen, its doors .to trade and migration. The statement of the hpble ford' that "the new world as well 'as the be willing, etc., has no .pleasant Sound in American ears. The word lm,ust," especially, .is one' that a wise Englishman could hardly apply to the United States after 1776. Lord 'Lothian probably meant that ' the United State "ought," not that If "MUST, once more reopen its dooTs to trade and '' ' migration. ' The United States,' It 1? to be hoped, will decide for itself about reopening its. doors to trade and This country need, immigration. more of .Ihfe immigration that made ft what it 4s it is NOT 'a. redskin country, its' people .came from Eu rope,, and It needs many millions . more,- of the ?ame kind. It also needs, and the majority' of its peO. pie intend- to keep, American. Jobs, American wages and American money for the people who live and work-i, the. United States. . 30,000 for Trouble .'. - o, - What Docs It Prove Bout Gives Sailor .4 . itear the Noble lord ' .He Sees a New Germany A Must for. the U. 5. A, 'Strength Alone Protects PMt,-W- . - Swoc.-'''- - . Classification of Knmquat Tb English botanical classifies-- , tlon of the kumquat Is Fortunella It was named In 'honor japonicof Robert Fortune, collector for the Royal Horticultural society of London,, who first Introduced It Into England- from the province of Chusan and Mlngpo, 1S56. In It ls. growrt In EngChina, land In greenhouses. Four years after the kumquat was introduced Into England, according to a writer In the Los Angeles Times, It was brought to America, In 1SC&. Nursery men In Florida, found the demand' growing fojr the plant so, In ' T800they started . Iqiportlng It from China. A. few years .la ter. thd kumquat found Its way. to Cali' .' 0 IL A MIDI r fcfc J LAYTON-UTA- H i L A. WM JJL LL -- : , . . , . GET ON& MABEL'S ROOM, !!--HU- . RRY' r to;Hcl-goland- the-ol- $lice-of-.pi- e old-MUS- - dcve-loped- Anglo-Saxor- ). . - - - ; Here comes 'com - . Is thi$ ' en embarrassing - panyl And! , - : . self-defen- 1922.-an- - . . i..; '' . - ' - . . . ... Situation 7. , . V..' , .It i tlie olJ' old Atorya slioxtage of lamp LiilLsi ancl a scramble to juggle. tbc remaining few from 'one socket! ' . . to another, . , ... It s mighty iriconvcnient and entirely ; - . . unnecessaryl'. tct . ' . . . . . . ' . . . . . .Does this happen in vour Tiome?" . a HU those empty sockets todayl Mazda lamp bulbs are cheaper now than ever and they cost less than ever to use, with - Extra Electricity, at Half-Price- 7 !. - V See Your Mazda Lamp Dealer or Utah Power 80-mi- wind-catchin- g Hclgo-lande- fv Light Co. rs FtFCTfWary n L is ths BIGGEST BARGAIN m the Homs . . '. |