aUl'LIU TIMES . IWJlvbset each Vbtaaday bi IteauuMvllle, N. C, Ceaacy Seal ef DCTUN COTJNTY office aad axtattug giant KeBaBsrille, K. C J. ROBERT GltADT, EDITOR OWNER Catered At The Fast Oftlee, KemaMrlUe, .as 'f (Y. k. C' : - TELEPHONE KeoanvrOIe,' Day 3Vf Night tle-f i SUBSCRIPTION SATES: $S.M per year la DupUn, Lenoir. , Janet, Onslow, Pender, Sampse and Wayne eeaaties; S4.M per year eutaide this area la North CaroUna; and I5.H per year elsewhere. . i . Advertising rate furnished en request. A Duplin County Journal, devoted to the religious, snsterutf, . dneattoaal, economic and agricultural development ef Duplin County. " v ) ;.: . mXTToNAL' EDITOtlAl 1 hffiyg Tc": to My Lawyer' Relative to those people who Of the book you let him borrow. borrow books and do not return them, this poem by Norman Jef frey from the Satevepost, EXLIBRIS Only a thief, in my belief, Would fetch what wasnt blsn. 'Whoever absconds with gilt-edge . bonds Belongs by rights In prison. : People who steal, or pick a purse, Are Justly considered crooks; But the honor system goes into reverse "When it comes to borrowing books. A friend who'd quail at robbing the mail And cavil at graft or bribery, Will look at your shelf and help himself To a tome from your slender liber ry. Til give it the best of care,' says he, 'And hurry it back tomorrow,' But that is the last you'll ever see. , . . I It's never the type of ephemeral tripe : --. ' You'd lose of your own volition, .It's part of a set or, eadder yet, A limited first edition. Perhaps it's, the Kelmscott Faerie Queene, ' . Y ?y . An autographed work by Austen, A Gutenberg Bible, spotless clean, Or a novel they banned in Boston. Who steals my purse steals trash ' or worse,' ' As somebody told Othello, But to swipe a tome from a friend's own home -, .".. Is the mark of a caddish fellow, For duller than people who don't read books ' .'. .. , , And viler than those who burn them Are the barefaced, smiling gentle man' crooks Who borrow and don't return them. . . Norman R. Jaffray. SPORTS AFIELD By Ted Keating " . . r pi , J Tir.iJ Crscfure from the enemy, he fired arrow af ter arrow under the horse's neck. The secret of this eye-filling feat was due to two things. A short halter went around the horsota 1- V.W 1 - M L. I ? UtTVK, Wlfl VUUB IM WIUVU WC1C braided into the animal's mane near the withers. This formed a loop which hung down under the horse's neck. It wae a kind, of . . a ... -X sung into wnicn tne rider eiDow rested, half-supporting his body. Then the Indian threw one lex over the horse's back and clung to it with nis heel. These and many more were the things that George Catlin saw and that he set down in words and paint He left us a living picture of the American Indian and the thunderous western scene. There are few Americans who know the story of George Catlin. Yet Catlin did for the American Indians exactly what Audubon did . for our native birds. He painted their pictures on the spot and also left tea written records of the Indian way of life. . He was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, on July 26, 1796". He was a child of the wilderness and until the day he died the wilder- nee kept us hold on him. By the time he was nine he was an expert witn tne single-barreled shotgun. His family wanted him to be a law yer and he did pass his bar exam inations but might as well have spared him sell the effort, accord' log to biographer Moran Tudurv. v From 1819 MH4823 be was sup pose to be prafettcmg lw Ac tually, most of his time was -scent drawing pictures of courtroom cha racters. Finally he gave ud law and enrolled in the Philedphla Acade my oi rine Arts.': One day he visited Rembrandt Peale's Museum and discovered several portraits of Indians that , were pari of the exhi bition.. From ? then on until hie death In 1672 his life was to be de voted to one purpose alone. It was to live among the Indians and to make pictorial record of their way of life before they vanished from the American scene. Everywhere he traveled he found the strange details of a form of life unidue on this earth. He wai revolted by the Indian practice of scalping but this revulsion did n't prevent him from investigating it So far as the Indian was con cerned, he was told,: It was never wanton. A scalp was evidence that you had killed an enemy proof, like a buck's antlers for the hunter, that you had conquered. To be genuine, a scalp had to show the crown of the head.. Thla n invent ed a, 4eceitful warrior, irom tak ing two scalp Irom the same head. The indlan horses, and Coman che horsemanship thrilled Catlin. By gifts of plug tobacco he per suaded one young warrior to dem onstrate.,.. Although armed with bow and arrow, this Comanche was aoie to hang securely on the side of his horse while going at break- neat speed. Completely screened For RE-R00FIIJ6 RE-SIDIIIG METAL WEATHER STRIPPING Home insulation roof coatings for your eld reof. We have expert mechanics to make Installations according to mana-: factarert speeifleatiosw. v We re-roof ever wood ahmglem, Call as for large or small Jobs Brookbank Insulating & Roofing Co; Phones 2608-2081 Clin ton, N. C Are Issued On Rent Agreements Many farmers . may not realize fit but rental arrangements, like farm machinery, can easily become outdated. Such arrangements need to be revised from time to time to keep up with changing trends in agriculture. "-': For example, more and more Tar Heel farmers are turninr to live stock to supplement and stabilize their Income. Landlord tenant ar rangements which were set ud for s row crop system of farming some times aon t wore well in livestock production. This means new rental arrangements are. needed. ; - uuring tne past several) years me aouuera states, la coopera tion with the U. S. Department of Agriculture, have been studying rental arrangements and. possible solutions to tenure problems. Those making the study have found that with better rental arrangement, the soil can be improved and farm income can be increased. The findings are reoorted in twn publications 'Rental Arrange ments for Progressive Farming," issued as Southern Farm Kfanage ment Publication No. S: and 'Do. lermimng tne Kent in Share and Cash Rental Agreements,' Southern Frm Management Publication No. 4 Copies of either publication may m ooiainea tree nv writing . th ruoucauons department N. C. State College, Raleigh. of the Commission, said today. The budget, nearly $2,000,000, Is the largest In the history of the Commission,- and has been made possiDie oy increased sales of hun ting and fishing licenses, from which the Commission gets a malor portion oi iu revenue. Largest single project in the bud get 1 wildlife protection, with over aau m muiion aoiiars set up to employ, equip," and maintain the commissions law enforcement staff. , Other important budeet al locations are for fish and came management, education, englneer- ui ana una acquisition and de velopment; The Commission burin for carrying a credit balance of approximately $40,000 into the fol lowing xiscai year to finance opera tions during the first quarter July, August and September wnen revenues irom license sales rr at a .low eDD. Detailed accounts of n hnrf- getary operations are published in a biennial renort whlr-h mr k. oDiainea irom the Commission on Sets 1952-53 Budget Commission Set 1952-53 Budget The North Carolina State Bud get Bureau has approved the Wild life Resources Commission's bud get for the 1952-1953 fiscal year, Clyde P. Patton, Executive Director 4-H Pledge Song Is Set To Music Thank to a North ffirnlln. . slclan. the nation's more than n million 4-H Club members now "v musical arrangement for their pledge song. t k. i - , v Prepared by Dr. Frederick Stan ley Smith, organist and choirmast er of Christ Church In Raleigh. tht..?J,gment Jt been published and copyrighted by the National Committee on Boys and Club Ine" wth head quarters in Chicago. It Is dedi cated to L. R. Harlll State 4-H Club leader for the N. C. State Col lege Extension Service. ; The National Committee's mon thly magaiine. National 4-H News. published the arrangement in lis July Issue with the follouHno ment " . ' ..,,.. ,.: 'Four-H Clubs of America have been favored with this fine musical arrangement for their pledge song through the talent and generosity ui ur. creuencs; Stanley smith, its author .and the Interest 'of Stat Leader. L. R. Haraill of North Car olina. . .:rJ,r . i 'It should be a good sons, and it u, xor u was Dora oi an lnaoiraUon. une evening at a -h gathering Dr. Smith, an experienced choral di rector, felt the need of such a song uuiuik me nignt xoiiowing, one came to him.' Lest it eacane him before morning he arose and wrote if oown. ;' ... v 'Try it out and you'll find if vnn learn to sing it well you'll grow fond of Its fine melody and swing. It's a good marching song, and of course the words are inspiring in themselves If sung understanding ly.' ....... HORIZONTAL J Deplete v animal , ; 81s able Vehicle 12 Operatic solo 13 Since 14 Wing - ' ' 15 Vegetable 17 Rounded 19 Prince 20 Encounter - 21 Yea (Sp.) ' 22 Musical note 23 Soak up. i 26 Again 28 Ambaiy zs Neither 30 Mountain past 31 Sir of shot 32 Weight deduction S3 Lamprey 85 Measure ol - :- area 86 Medical suffix . 38 Smudge 42ItUa ' sheep 45 Names 47 More succinct 48 Son of Seth (Bib.) 49 Bustle SlUnaspirated 52 Nevada city : 53 Period ' 84 Essential belnf .'. VERTICAL I Boot strings t On of Dumas musketeers , iSMud" 4 Unclothed - -i 5 Feline' animal Symbol for sUver 7 Negative word 8 Solicitude - 9 On the sheltered slie 10 Snake 11 Teeter 16Either''r'v 18 Type measure 24 Smell 25PaUId '. JV,;-. 26 Poker stake 27 Memorandum : I jju luJ Liii 30 Color ' . 82 Sipper, .t 34 Cloths mad ... Of flax .!...;,.:.';);' 37 Acquiesce : 39 English school :, 40 Too. - 41 Of the thing 42 Biblical ' pronoun -' 43 Shield bearing 44 Employs' 46 Sorrowful , . 47 Child 60 Accomplish I 2 3 H I l J6 7 ' It 19 I0 Ii 2 -; iT r-"-ymw: III! 4r pIEI """"" M.r ' r-r-;r"- t - Tiest Your Intcllirjonco ; Score 10 points for each correct answer in the first six questions: 1. The capital of Uruguay is: - v ., 1 Montevideo : Sao Paulo Buenos Aires Andorra An epicure would be interested in: locomotives books food ' poetry ' Gargantua's adventures were .written by: Dickens Balzac Moll ere Rabelais The Edward J. Neil Memorial trophy is awarded to: golfers .swimmers marksmen boxers The circumference of the earth is about: ' ' , 50,000 miles 35,000 miles 29,000 miles 15,000 miles , - - .). Robert Fulton's famous steamboat was the: . Merrtmac . Clermont Monitor Congress -Listed below, at left, are four famous baseball parks and opposite them the cities in which they are located. Match them, scoring , 10 points lor each correct answer. (A) Wrigley Field -Boston (B) Shlbe Park Chicago (C) Fenway Park Plttaburgh (D) Forbes Field Philadelphia . Total your points. A score of 0-20 is poor; 30-60, average: 70-80. iperior; 90-100, very superior.. " ' . - 4 7. 1 (Answers On Theatre Page) J. HAUL WITH A DODGE AMD CUT YOUR. COSTS! T .v::5;:y.:i:-::r:-:-vi ,..: f Cut cesH wfth a Dedga track 1Ueofafl I ' - t fw lob from i-tonto 4-ton, , J i f, Fowor-wlth-eonomy is the Aral principle af 'I f t Dodge angina, thanks to L-haod dasign, . Mgli aJBdaricy. corburetion. wwtv y Law wpkeea Is engineered Into every Dadga ';.'' truck with features such as floating ail tntaka ' t ami amar Dadge advantages. f gyrol Fluid Drlve-avelUble on V-, 1 .. tan, and Route-Van models save waar i 1... uoawuDT "Eco"" t ia one of the tnany tLtnet'wa like about our ' 1 oil t carr, r' . Conva In today far gead deal I :, 9 Save an gas and aiL Every Dodge engine it en- ,r. gmeerea tnrougnout ror top ecmvnny. Operating costs ttay low, thanks to lightweight aluminum- 11 "A "jL ' 1 . .. ... -: uuy- piswna wjui auoma-piatea wp pisum t;a v rings, 4 rings per piston, and other features. ' y .. , ,. . Save en Wtalntenawce. Dodge "Job-Kate frucka keep you on the road and out'of the repaif shop. You get exhaust valve seat inserts, positive prassure Juhricatten system, and otht I i " .vantage that help prevent costly breakdowns. ' " " Save an long Cfai Husky frajnea, sty sixlea and hih-cepacity springs provide extra strength, -f lengthen truck Life by years and years. Cecauev' ui m m Dodge "Job-Rated" truck lasts lorpsr, t, wa(? y're real low on all costs especially, on s w on the go for every week, , f'H' a-tcavy pgyioaas.ii.-y always eep run-.,, c e rvr fc i ny jar mechanical trouble. "li tJluj t:.a hmw Dot"- asJ LIvcs L:.3 r -"" ' .., has real comfort r r i. , , Pasture Problem Don't overgrate pasturer espec ially in ary weatneri This emphatic advice was Issued this week by agronomists and ani mal industry specialists of IT. C. State College as thousands of Tar Heel farmers ' found themselves with a shortage of grazing and a critical livestock feeding problem on their hands. ' Farmers who overgraze at ' this Critical period, say the speclaliat. not only won't get much feed for their animals; they'll also be ruin ing their chances for grazing in 1053. So it's important to make other provisions for feeding live stock during the present emergen cy. How can this be done? For one thing, farmers who have stored hay or silage should start deeding it now. Another practice suggested Is to cut green corn in the field and start feeding that "y - But in either case the farmer will be drawing on this coming winter's feed supply. He should recognize the fact and do something about it, ; Some feed can still be made this summer by seeding Sudan srass or soybeans for hay or silage, or sor- gnum xor suage. xne season is late for planting these annual crops; therefore planting should be done, immediately. ; As for the future, farmers who don't have enough pasture acreaaa should make plans to Increase It. And since pastures produce better In the spring than in the summer, the correct yardstick for judging is not spring production, but sum mer proauction., Ul'eft Rrfi fern Some 20 North Carolltia 4-fI'eri have probably worn out page 81 of this month's 'Seventeen' n "islne trying to recognize themwi-jves or any of their friends, pictured on that particular page is a scone taken m Chicago of the 1C1 4-H C)ub Congress deletes attend ing tne general assevbly. And all of the other 4-H Clab members throughout North Csro lina will be Interested in looking up and reading the ievn-r -e fa-, ture entitled 2.000.C21 tiroes The Story of 4-II.f v iThe article gives aa lntres!i!f nistory oi tne ti club, teJ's e the club really does, and t.ien al lows tne reader to lotik ipfo pwrii states to see what nrc'Ms 4 ,ers are tiiUfg throiighout t e c;Mf;.,ir?. B,t: tr exeKt si eouftty a. i :tthit"'t in, t le- VUM, . live. .. Sj ! .' ( Ji ,f eeiuae, t" e l ... I " I" :Um1 y.r'r 1 re. i 1 ; c " the c"t.- u r i i r i I ff ! 1 tf t Vi'' f I t t t i i 1 r f i. V" 1 1 C; . h n f., iHighxbuiilp 1 . ' ':... - . , The first white men to look upon them called them the Shining Mountains .w- f , V" Vir.- -I And thev still gleam In the sunrise, a high peaked land of endless pro mise; ' The evening still finds them shim mering gold until the purple of nleht" cloaks them in royal dignity. The Shining Mountains, the High Countrv. , ' Where the great waters have their beginning, - V: Where the horizon rests its rim on the ridges and the clouds sleep In the valleys; Where the moon must Keep to tne (passes or snag it chin on one or the peaks. The Indians knew this land as the Backbone of the World, and the Indians were wise, v.,.; -?.;.: Backbone it is. stiffened with gran ite, muscled with metals, veined and arteried with plunging waters. Man, counting time in terms of his own achievements,'"- i Calls this a new land, a newer part of the nation; m t'.- :.-: But the story of any land, varies with the man who tells the tale, And this was an old land when Rome was laying its foundations. We who live with It now were late But those who came before u. knew its deep-grassed valleys and Its .glaclered peaks -While we were still creeping along the shoal waters of Europe, Seeking our way through the nalsts ox superstition. 1 ? . ; Hal Borland trom ' ' America Is Americans - . '.. fe!s fl.i t!;-.7 Drci If you haven't walked through the courthouse square lately, you should. You will be amazed at the change In appearance of the whole place. Taking ; down the ; fence from the County Superintendant's office, removing eld ahrubberr, adds a new vista, and gives a feel ing ,of spaciousness that was not there before. ' The new coat of wiat paint on the old Gavin place brir"s out the lovely Uses of the )"....jig. ,: When the courthouM renting project ef the Garden Club is completed. ti entire area will be Improved; Changes are taking place downtown, too. - Tlis it of.'ice bs bem alntedi'Pap utwian l jnm" ' l-" ' t y sn eOce ta . C L'aU -t,u.w. ,,g, . t Pattemon has movmd her beau- snpp mi j"e r,w s Jer r"w't. a e (.ions 1 1 ; w'' ,t t-e renovation te . .-tiorg c In e . .Gooding .. r-'!dlng. l.urt 1 . own has iwwly i....'r;hed his tack .'v-&er.. in s month, you wont kmm ,t . rise- and it is a real w royeaeni au around, i .j - ; , ' . " i i r r ; A recent check of seven tobacco oekr cc "rol demonstrations in 1 ..-. County showed -"that ?at t i rr cent cf Ue suckers bad t' I 1.-. ...' .'.!.,...,. ' v ) . rv -t-Vsi 4hm life Of at DCWD&ICri1IallI' OPn " J -i iUall VesXlCVJr jwaiva aai m.m - - r-r woman and keeps the jb interesting, challenging and full of v fun was very evident this week en route to Blowing Rock-I had not realized how t Is our State, how changing Its scenery, , how different are. iu people. Surely the contrast.ls nowhere f more sharps than between our coastal plains and that majestic, " overwhelming Appalachian section of our Western, borders.. . And hard as it may be to realize, it was so cool that we-Jiad to wear coats at night and sleep under blankets. The air Is invigorating and the scenery is breathtaking. 1 have always loved the moun tainsand although much of my life hat been spent sway trom them, '1 understand very well the deep longing oT the gypsy Azucena In the last act of H Trovatore as she sings with Manrico the , plaintive duet, Al Nostri MontTV-Home to-our mounUlns,'- r From Conrad Aiken's Prelude to 'VamaM: You went to the iverge, you say. and come back safelyr Some have not been so fortunater-ome have fallen. Children go lightly there, from crag to crag, ' And coign ' to coign, where even the goat Is wary, . , . And make a sport of It They fling down pebbles, . 'Following, with eyes undlzzled, the long curve, ( t The long slow outward curve, into the anyss, As far as eye can foUow; and they themselves Turn back, unworried to the here and now. -it; , Somehow you can see more clearly In that high altitude you become less concerned with the inconsecjuentlal trivialities that fill our Uvea and you find in the high places a peacer a tran aullity. a vision that often escapes us In the lowlands. Perhaps dominated by those ageless places, we realize Our relative iro portancemore poignantly. Grandfather Mountain was there ! long before the time of man and will probably be there long after our civilization has crumbled. ( - " , ' , ; I met enough interesting people to fill ten columnar-most of them from our North CaroUna Press. On the way from Raleigh to Blowing Bock with Jack and Anita and Randolph Riley, we stopped for a picnic lunch beyond Pfafftown. A tiny old woman bent almost double 'with age and hard work and looking older than the hills darted out of the bushes in. a deep purple dress and a white sun bonnet.': She look a hoe front a tumble-down shed and hurried Into a near-by field, like avfrighteaed rabbit. . I wish I might have j talked, with her ehe seemed so much a part of the hiUs.,vli,;.".'K;- X Not far from there as ,we approached-the mountains on ' route 421 four mUes from Lewlsville we got lost for a, while entirely the fault of the badly marked road before the Yadkin . River. - We found several roads with no rout numbers and no signs which would have been very perplexing nd undoubtedly annoying to out of State tourist-! have tried. to mark them on - my map and shjall report them to the Highway Commission. . ' Unfortunately tourists always remember the unpleasant, features ; ; of their trips and they tell many other people. ; Later1 when we were going to Grandfather Mountain on the Yohnaloosee trail midway, between UnvUle and Blowing Rock near' a water faU, , we were aghast to see the place desecrated by people selling, all kinds of junk cheaply .displayed It was a sharp a blow and in as bad taste as a huge blU board would have been. Things like that leave a bad Impression on travelers 4he State ought to protect its natural beauties. ' s 1 u I ' Unless you have been to Mayvlew Manor, you would believe I was exaggerating if I told you how superb the food Is, how mag . nificent the view from the porches, and how courteous the man- , agement. It reminded me so much of mountain lodges in the , Canadian Rockies that I was S little homesick. ' I read that day . that one of the loveliest resort hotels in the world. The, Jasper ' Lodge, in a setting of almost unbeUevable beauty, had burned. Mayvlew Manor is like It in many respects--and it is like Bretton Woods, too. 'Actually the place Is a vacation Paradise . with such food as I have not eaten In years eight course break ' fasts, with deUdous kippers; luncheons with aU the things I enjoy, chopped chicken , Uver, vichychoisse, and. a bewildering variety of entrees and desserts -that would, tempt the , most ; . finicky appetite ranging'' from chlUed melons with mountain, blueberries to elaborate pastries -rr and followed with divine coffee' '. made tor once strong enough td suit even me.' I do not Uke any .coffee as7 sweet as love as the French and Arabs say, but f do Uke it 'black as night sod hot at the devil If ever you want a complete' i change and -a super-deluxe Vacation, do go to Mayvlew Manor 2 - :. know you will Uxeitasmuch u,lA:. v.vrl'l,.;.-?' '" I saw some of my friends from the press whom I had met before and I missed some of those who .were not there. I was pleased : to Ulk with L. S. Thompson who is the publisher oi the WhitevUle 1 1 " News and Reporter his editor. Is that courageous, and grand ' f person, WUlard G. Cole to whom I always refer, as an 14 friend although I have seen htm only twice. It was he who encouraged ;: me to do some writing again and. who told me that he' was certain I would be competent in anything I made up my mind to do. Thai ; is one thing about the , newspaper business the people at the top ' i always seem, so willing to encpurage you, to help you; to give 1 suggestions, criticism, praise and they stldk'with yoi in any fight for freedom of speech. Sam Ragan has been very, kind as' has" Jim Whitfield they will always give you a pat on the back when . they think you have done a good job, with a story. Naturally with such encouragement, you try to do your bestand work ' 'overtime on an assignment, and are never satisfied with a halw-way f. JJ-'' ykh-y.- :-x--nktk :: ;;"'! ';. - ' I had met Lynn Nesbltt several times before! but I had never f met his charming wife, Kathleen. ! She has a delightful sense of ' ' , t humor, and is such good company. When we were on Grandfather ' Mountain, Uncle Joe Hartley, the bid man of the mountain him-' ' self, presented Mrs. Nesbltt with a basket of mountain strawberries. He had picked them for Beatrice Cobb, but In the rush of all the things she had to do at the press convention before leaving to attend the Democratic Convention in Chicago, she -was late ' arriving.- So Uncle Joe with a great flourish gave them to Kathleen - Nesbltt because she was the1 most representative lady in the . entire group.'. I rather think he was right, too. Lynn told me many h V things about the place that I would not have known otherwise -; ha is more versed in the lore of Carolina than anyone I have met. - . - Miss Addle Cooke who owns the Cherokee Scout took me under ' ; her wing and Introduced me to dozens of the people of the Western ' '.'PrM whnm T hail not iu. t-u. i. . . ... --- ,tuu, u ii person wno raaistes -v I opdns and totegrity and whose' deep purposefulness i evident ' - lj .V TTt u uoes, cue. is a veteran newspaperwoman , , and started ler career with Roy Parker of Ahoskia Y-tVr JT ilA2A,5i!WJ-?,,ta hy Dr. and Mrs. G i? ta Proerant of folk-song,; Mrs. Greer accom panied her husband on the dulcimer which U a three etrinsed in. strumeht plucked with 1 gooM o.uill ted 2 gSuEfoSl. Greer said. He la on nf thm ....v.-,.,.. .1 . IT , i - folklngsand I. a naUvi "5 tbSStt CmmS Z . . . ar. w u ?L 11 ! ?M?I,g " ly-PersonaL "Single Gal" his concluding In The West which we 'Saw e .i number was also; sung In the Horn 1 . ...- J ',- it." " .'.'v.4. C, - ! '"'f 111? n fS f. U 1-1 ' .... l-l r mtsn .tlngTv. to condense here. . It's title-Whst We,aSctchoabin should give you an idea. &t&&iRl&-- article, perhaps this week tf find timsJrlfla TSeS2u speaker and hi. deUvery Is niasterlyj'H.m , f ' . ' , - IU wrtte about the performance of Hora'in "ThM W 'ilti-S i't , " . . " urwnawc impact and interest. T WliW you-could have seen 'the rent ertri 'JS!? BUeys face e is lust al-aa. il "a'S. f?rf aoVu know !tWr.W,flIiTO ivi'sup iS-'.v .Ha? !ia.'J .Ii i the rf- t trjeness. We . a TmL TTVJTV y 1 should be a reward' for 'test drrVe' i s , culvers,,., Tired as she must ha i 1 TT --" x Boost ;.) drove me 'USSaA loT riv. ; . ent OCice la Clinton -T, pti at te fepeaav; s..--r-N.,i.v....-.v. H'Vvv'--'ni'';'v- 'tfr ' J'J? ,:,x -r' ' f ;-'-'' wit cry Sadler and Mai'jt-Ml lJ'' Jrt.'fw.;,''. h . ;t n . I" 1 v : y f r