Herald-Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 September 1921 — Page 8
0
PAGE EIGH1
THE HERALD-DEMOCRAT, GREENCASLX. INDIANA
Management Blamed for 507^ and Labor fcr 2577. HAVE IIU.B EQUIPMENT. Advises Or>{aiii/.ed l^tlntr to Dove! ip Policy for Increasing Output and to liaise Standards of Skill. Plant Idleness Is Severely Condemned. ST. LOUIS.—American engineers place 50 per cent of the los:; and waste in industrial process at t! •> door of the management and 2i per cent is due to labor. These figures were made public in the report of the American Engineering council's committee on elimination of waste in industry. The report showed that the margin of unemployment amounted to more than i million men; that billions of dollars were tied up in idle equipment: that high laborturnover was a rough index of one of the commonest wastes, and that waste of time end energy and money through duplications and estimates and bids in building trades ran into mi’iiors annually. r ' ‘h emoloyer aid emnloyes restrict output, it was said. Both canitel and labor are blamed for existing abuses, hut the annual Josses through waste by eonfPcts between Is less than popularly sunnosed. Five Million Idle. Ero r n f£» r to five million workers were idl° dcing January and Fehruarv of this vear. In t!)?l half a billion dollars w'll be lost In wag"s in the building trades. It was said. • - The waste Inoulrv was in charge n rommitfeo of s'xteen heaUea hv J. Parke rhenning of Mew York as ehal-m-'n. and L. W. Wallace of Washington, executive seoretarv c, f the American engineering counci* of the federated American engineer In.g aoc<et»"« as vies chairman. T' was the hec»innlng ot a m^vem'”'* hv the conn * c-'s ors'antrea Ai.e’neers. a>-mit 200,000 in nnmhee < tf> bring about better Industrial coc-M-tlons end more ha»rnonto”s relations heSwoon eanltst a e rl tnhov The committee ontpned the Set. lowing pronosed nrogrem ot gever" mental assistance to elim'na'“ waste: "A national indnsttdel i-»osrrettoe servlee should he estahl'shod to furnish tefe^matlon coverts. -- re"t nrodnctlon and peequmnMer and stocks of commodit’-; a tm-. ttonal ctat|sf|cnl sofy'se to cover om-nlo'-ment roevtrement-* a uoltev regarding nubile health *0 foster and encouraue the uottrtua; nnognem for Industrial ret'nl‘P*ms*oy shoo’d h a encouraged and onnew tunitles for education and ul »*f. tuent of those having uhnstcnl A». fects and tt'ose hendteanned because of Industrial accidents 1 a ratinn wt-te urogram of Indtislrla' Star aa rdlaatlon should he encouraged In contnnctlon with Industrial Interests; the government should rerorniro th“ neeessltv for a reof such federal |a^-q as Interfertng with the stahlliratlon o # industry: a bodv of prineipios should he accented which could he d-■"at-oned for the adiu.stment and settlewieot of labor dtsnutes *' labor Should Increase Ov*nnt. Organised labor should d->ve!on a policy for increasing outmit, it was stated. "The attitude of opnnnltion or indifference to proper standards for production should be changed to a frank and aggressive Insistence on such standards." Declaring that the annual econo mic loss in the country through preventable diseases and death amounted to $3,000,000,000 the report urged a more general use of safety methods already perfected It was asserted that 75 per cunt of the deaths and serious accidents In Industry could be thus prevented. Plant Idleness came hi for Its share of the blame for waste. In the printing industry alone the report said, an Investment of more than $100,000,000 in stocks of paper carried to meet trade requirements could be cut in half through standardization in the brands of paper. The building Indus’rv was said to be about 00 per copt efficient. In the shoe industry the waste is put at about 35 per cent. The average plant In the mata! trades group is from 25 per cent to 30 per cent behind the best plant in output per employe.
ROB FRENCH ROADS.
PARIS.—In 1913 merchandise In value estimated at 17,000,000 francs was stolen from the cars and yards of French railway companies. In 1920 the figure reached 241,000,000 Irancs, or more than fourteen times as much. The increased value of joods, as compared with prewar figures, accounts, of course, for some part of the difference, hut for the greater part there is no other reason than simple increase in the practice of theft. The railroad which has suffered most from thefts is the Paris. Lyons. Mediterranean, on which recently there has been an extraordinary number of cases in which passengers have been robbed Bafore the war average compensation for theft paid by the company was about 5.000.000 francs. Last year it was 95,000.000 francs. The State Railway is by comparison fa'riy honest, as there the iu crease has been only from 4.000,Of* 1 fr>ncs to 45,<100,000 francs.
Handkerchief tunica and all soil. of pointed and scalloped draperia are the motif for chiffon frocks these days, and for dresses trimuio.l with fringe.
»■»»»« M H I M »»«* ) The Mock Turtle
t M I M I II M III “Jared,” began Mrs. Jimplecute, ‘here is a large hunch of recipes clipped from new-spapers during the past year. Some of them seem to be very good recipes, indeed; I wish that you would have your stenographer arrange them alphabetically and typewrite them for me some day when she is not very busy.’* “Sorry, but the mock turtle Is no more.” “Jared! Aren’t you feeling well?” “Certainly. I perhaps neglected to tell you that my late' stenographer wkis called the mock turtle after she had been in my office a short time.” “But why in the world ” “Was it not the mock turtle which shed tears on such slight provocation? My late stenographer shed'tears upon even slighter provocation than that. The first time I saw her, the morning she'answered my ■advertisement, I picked her out of the whole hunch of applicants because of the tears in which her big blue eyes were swimming. 1 could see that it was going to break her heart if she did not get the Job. So I beckoned to her and she began to weep for joy. Then I dictated a trial letter to her and she did it as well as I could reasonably have expected her to, but sho handed It to me weeping for fear it would not be satisfactory.” “The poor child.” “That’s what I thought. As I say, her letter was all right except that she spelled ‘divided’ with an ‘e’. She watched me very closely while I reached for my pencil and made the correction, and when I handed it to her and she saw what it was, the tears rolled down her cheeks.” “But having put up with it so long you might have continued to put up with it.” " "I could have, but the last straw came along today. She had caught a slight cold last night. I should never havo noticed it, but while I was dictating c letter to an old friend telling him a funny story the stenog. stopped taking dictation long enough to use her handherchief; I stopped dictating for a moment, and resumed when she appeared to be ready. Pretty scon she again reached for her handkerchief, and I paused again. I give you my word that I neither looked, acted, nor felt in the least impatient: but pretty soon 1 looked at her and noticed her chin quivering, then the corners of h-sr mouth drew down, then two great tears rolled down her cheeks and splashed onto her notebook. “’Good heavens!’ exclaimed I, ‘are you .crying?’ ‘Yes I am,’ she blubbered. T don’t see what a person has to have a nose for, it la not pretty.’ I can stand a whole lot, but when a girl is so tender-hearted that she has to weep when she wipes her nose I quit.” "Then I won’t get my recipes typewritten?” “I fear not. But it is perhaps just as well. That girl would have cried her eyes out the first time a recipe said to beat an egg. The next stenographer I gst is going to be a man, and I am going to slap him on the wrist the first day, and if he cries I am going to throw him out.”
What Interested Kim. Sir Arthur Pinero, the famous dramatist, who as chairman of the United Arts Corps, is doing a great deal of hard work just now, tells an amusing story of a conversation he once heard while watching one of his own plays in the stall at a west end theater. A lady and her little hoy were sitting near him, and, as the -curtain went down on the second act, the fond mother turned to her son and said: “Well, dear, are you enjoying it?” “OH. yes, mamma,” replied the youngster, gleefully; "do you know, there are sixty-nine men in this theater who have bald spots on the top of their heads! I have counted them five times.” After that the lady enjoyed the rest of the play without asking her young hopeful any more questions.
One on Billy. Billy Sunday stopped a newsboy in Philadelphia the other day and inquired the way to the postoffice. . “Up one block and turn to the right,” said the boy. “You seem a bright little fellow,” said Sunday. “Do you know who I am?’’ “Nope!" •T’m Bill Sunday, and if you come to my meeting tonight I’ll show you the way to heaven.” “Aw, go on!” answered the youngster; “you don’t even know the way to the postoffice.”
Had Thouflht About It.® Kind Lady—Do you ever think of the solemn fact that we all must die?” Tramp—Yes, mum, often. "So do I, and I hope to die the death of a Christian. Have you ever thought of the death you would like to die?” “Yes, mum. I’d like to be drowned in a beer vat.”
imbwji iiiramsE COMING BUCKFOREIGN IRSOE
Disl net Interest Shown in the Big Bird Famed for Table Use and Good Layer. T1 e Light Brahma is tjie oldest pure bred variety of poultry in America. It was introduced into New England frem Asia more than sixty years ago. Mr. I. K. Felch, of South Natick, Mass., has bred Light Brahmas continuously for nearly sixty years. This veteran poultry breeder, writer and judge has been breeding poultry for seventy years, and is past eighty i years of age. He breeds several other J varieties, but insists that the Light , Brahma is the best variety of all and • the most beautiful. Many will*not ! agree with him, but there is a common ] saying, “Once a Light Brahma breeder, • always a Light Brahma breeder.” ! There seems to be evidence that . the Light Brahma is regaining some- • thing of its old-time popularity. At ; the recent Boston show there were 227 Light Brahmas in line and the quality was said to be the best ever seen in America. New England is and has always been the hotbed of Light Brahma interest. • This is the largest of all varieties of poultry. Cocks weigh 12 pounds each, cockerels 10 pounds, hense 9% pounds, pullets 8 pounds. Greater weights are ofteir attained. I once saw a cock weighing 17 pounds. Such extremes of size, however, are not desirable. The above standard weights are more desirable. But Brahmas should be large. A small Brahma is an absurdity. In spite of their great size the Light Brahma is not a “big, awkward fellow with feathers on his feet.” He is not so sprightly as a Leghorn, is rather slow in his movements, but he is not ungraceful, and in the opinion of many who do not breed this variety the Light Brahma is the most aristocratic of all folws. When right in size, color and sllape he is ad imposing show bird. The black and white colors are surely attractive. The neck or hackle leathers of the male are long and jweep back over a portion of the back. These , ihers are laced with black The breast is white on the surface. The back is white, but towards the tail it merges into the beautifully striped feathers of the saddle, which should be long and abundant. The tail proper should be a glossy greenish black. The toe feathering should be abundant and should be black and white. Most Light Brahmas are too light in color, often faded. The color should be intense. The beauty of the color lies in the sharp contrast of the white and black. "Strong” color is desirable in young birds because the tendency is to a loss of color in breeding. Moreover young birds that are just right in color are likely to be too light when two or three years old. The shape of the Brahma is peculiar to this breed. The body is quite long, the breast full, the legs of fair length, tiie back is broad '•nd rather flat in front with a concave sweep to the tail, which is carried moderately high and is broad. The head in mature o—- o n a la very bror-’ above the eyi. The comb is a “pea” comb. It is low. with three nearly parallel ridges of five rounded points each. The color of the eye is bright red. The feathering of legs and toes should be abundant, but not so abundant as in the Cochin. In fact, the Brahma is quite unlike the Cochin in type and in feathering. The Brahma matures slowly and it is not seen at its best until it is a year or more old. The chicks are very hardy, as is the Brahma. Light Brahmas are' u-ied more than any other fowls for capons in the eastern markets. They are also favorites as roasters at six to eight months of age. There is no better table fowl than the Light Brahma. Cocks and hens two or three years old, if properly fattened, are tender and of fine flavor. Because of size, birds of this variety are poor flyers, and usually can be confined by a fence three feet high, hence they are a favorite with many who have only a city lot. They bear confinment well. On account of their size, their low combs and their abundant feathering they do not suffer from cold winter weather, and are good winter layers. The experience of some is that they are almost nonsetters. This is true certainly of some strains.
Liver troubles are often caused by over-feeding and lack of exercise. Give the affected fowls a good physic of some kind and follow with a fiver tonic. Give a limited diet for a few days, and if possible induce the fowls to take a lot of exercise. If they are too far gone to scratch, better kill and burn their bodies. Unless a bird is very valuable there is not much profit doctoring the sick ones, which have to be fed with a spoon.
Growing cockerels should now be separated from the pullets, and the former given an extra allowance of feed. They will need this additional amount more than will the pullets In order that they can be kept growing.
Diplomatic OfTicers Submit Reports That Ars Optimistic.
STOCKS ARE DEPLETED.
Countries Abroad That Had Large Supplies of I’roducts Made in the United States Have About Exhausted Then,.—Will Soon Be in Market for More Goods.
WASHINGTON. — Reports from diplomatic officers abroad are to the effect that resumption of foreign trade on a normal basis is coming soon. Commerce with other nations is relied on to a certain extent tr boom American business. Back of the extraordinary meas* ures adopted by President Harding, Secretary of the Treasury Mellon and Governor Harding of the federal reserve board to loosen up swollen bank reservoirs f r the benefit of the oppressed and debt-ridden farmer, is the certain knowledge that the world demand for American products must soon be resumed. Accurate reports from all parts of the world revealed to officials of the federal reserve board that there has been a gradual depletion of accumulated stocks o' American merchandise abroad. The board takes the view that the establishment of new credit facilities will reopen the channels now closed for American produtes. New Credit Support. The establishment of new credit support for moving American produe s and assurances to the farmer that he can continue producing at a profit is now sought by the administration. President Harding soou will resume his conference* with middle-western, southern and western financiers. Official announcement of still lower bank rate reuuctions in the near future will have a marked effect in further relieving the strain The new cuts are expected before miii-summer. Officials believe they are fully justified by the rising reserve ratio of all of the banks, and by the easier money conditions generally.
PUBLIC BE DAMNED.
Newspaperman Tells How Much Quoted Phrase Originated. Melville E. Stone, the well-known newspaper man, tells in ’’Collier’s’' the story of a famous phrase attributed to Mr. William H. Vanderbilt— "The public be damned." According to Mr. Stone, the phrase was used in exasperation aganst a reporter, not in contempt of public. The persistent reporter got into Mr. Vanderbilt’s private car while he was at dinner and demanded an interview, "Well, sit down at the other end of the car until I have finished mjdinner, and I will talk with you," pleaded the victim. “But," said the reporter, "it is late and I will not reach the office in time. The public —” "The public be damned!” ejaculated the infuriated diner; “you get out of here!” Out of this expostulation, says Mr. Stone, the reporter made his sensational interview, which did the railways incalculable damage.
. Dairy Products Healthy. NEW YORK.—Physicians interested in raising the standards of health and vigor among Americans are now encouraging them to eat more dairy products, and also to eat more liberally of the leafy vegetables, such as cabbage, lettuce, spinach, cauliflower, Swiss chard, Brussels sprouts, turnip tops, dandelions. and beet tops. Lack of the vitamines in human beings interferes greatly with nutrition. Headaches and more serious troubles result. The lack of vitamin ss in the animal diet shows particularly in the skin surfaces, and the same deficiency may cause scurvy among human beings. The vitamines are a real help to the skin of animals and to the complexion of human beings.
HAH STRANGE TOMB.
There is no stranger tomb in Eng land, a correspondent of the New York "Times" says, than that of Sir Richard Burton, the famous traveler, iu the cemetery at Mortlake, "It is of white marble, and is fashioned as an Arab tent decorated with a crucifix. Within is an altar, and Mr. Thomas Wright in his Life of Burton completes the picture thus: "Sir Richard’s sarcophagus lies to one’s left, and on the right has since been placed the coffin of Lady Burton, while over all hang ropes of camel bells, which when struck give out the old metallic sound that Sir Richard heard so often in the desert."
Models Are .Startling. PARIS.—Startling are the new spring models of dresses and costumes for women seen in Paris ^ dressmaking establishments. Envious * of the success achieved by stage costumers in showing dresses made up of two distinct colors leading dressmakers are bringing out dresses one-half of which will be in color, for example red, and the other half of another color, green. Some of the dresses will be divided up in quarters and each quarter will be of a different color. Some striking combinations of colors have been shown and costumors anticipate a big success.
The Country’s Laborers. Thers are to-day 3,000,000 day labor era in this country. One and onefourth million belong to national trade onions, another million to trade unions not yet national In their scope, and the remainder comprise the army of MOTfMized labor.
All the old stock that is not wanted should now be disposed of before they go into molt.
Lighter foods are best these warm days. Heavy food like corn heata Uis blood. .... —” 7”
Big German Revenue. BERLIN.—The imperial revenue tor tire year ending March 31 was approximately 46,000,000,000 marks, this being 5 400,000,000 iu excess of tha estimates and an increase’ of 37,000,000,000 marks as compared with the previous financial year.
CHOOSING AUTOMOBILES’ A prominent automobile manufacturer is authority for the statement printed in Leslie s Weekly that wom?n decide upon the purchase of seventy-five per cert, of the fine motor cars sold iu America. 1 he cheaper cars are usually purchas'd by beginners in automobiijng. and in. such cases the husband’s judginert usually prevails, the w<fe having no experience to go upon. Women are likely to pay more attention to the smooth-riding qualities of the tonneau than men arc, because they more frequently occupy it, and it is a fact that an easy-riding tonneau usually means a well-built car. Women are also less tolerant than enen of mechanical defects which result .n breakdowns. Many men rather enjoy a stop on the road for repairs, in making which they may exhibit their mechanical skill: but to in'st women such a stop Is irksome and rather humiliating.
YOU ALWAYS CAN TELL. People on their wedding Journeys never really conceal the fact They may talk and act as indifferently to each other as they please, but the unfair iliarlty of each with the tea and coffre requirements of the other will betray the secret to the observing, and the topics of the conversation between them will advertise the fact to the most oblivious. That is the conclusion reached by a friend of the Office Window man of the New York Mail. “At the hotel table.” he said, "I caught myself talking to my brice, within enrshot of other people. of things that no veteran husband would discourse to his wife, because she would know them already. For example, I told two or three stories of my childhood days. Every seasoned wife has heard all such stories several times, and none but a Newlywed could repeat them.”
WRONG CENSURE OF WEALTH. Our rich people are, to be sure, new to their wealth says the editor of Collier’s Weekly. Let them play with It for a while, and It will In a few generations slip back through their feeble fingers to Us original levs., or else what is retained will have so lost Its novelty that it can become a habit to its owners and a strength to the nation. Wealth, after a time, will bring with it natural responsibilities. Rare *and costly things will still be caused by it, but the great necessities of the poor and of education and of the development of science will be more intelligently ministered to. Of our Babylonia symptoms, the expenditure for lace and jewels and solid gold plate is the least serious, and may soou develop Into a virtue.
DOES AN EDUCATION PAY? Does it pay an acorn to become an oak. Does it pay to escape being a rich ignoramus? Does It pay to fit oneself for a superior position? Does it pay to get a glimpse of the Joy of living? Does it pay the chrysalis to unfold Into the butterfly? Does it pay to learn to make life a glory instead of a grind? Does it pay to open a little wider tlie door of a narrow life? Does It pay to add power to the lens of th® microscope or telescope? Does it pay, says Orison Swett Mar. den, in Success, to know how to take the dry, dreary drudgery out of life.
STARTLING IMMIGRATION NOTES. “For every boy born in southern Italy two men migrate to the United States,” says a recent writer on immigration to this country. This is a startling fact. The same writer says the immigration from that, country to ours in 1902 was 15,883 or more than the entire increase of Its population. So that the United States Is actually depopulating that aection of Italy. In like manner he shows that we are taking the greater part of the growth of Austrian Poland. 32,429 in 1902, out of about 54,000 increase. We are becoming more and more foreignlzed, as years pass on, and what are we going to do about it?
MOST EXTRAVAGANT MONARCH Within the limits of his ability the Sultan of Morocco is among the most extravagant of monarchs. He has spent In the few years since he took up the reins of government not only th^ whole revenue of his country, but also the saving of his predecessors. Few of the things ho bought gave him any pleasure. Photography amused him for a time. A camera of gold at $10,000 came from London; 10,000 francs worth of photographic paper arrived in one day from Paris.
A CONCERT IDEAL.
A young man should go to cortege to learn citizenship in the broadest sense of the term. And he should not only learn what It is, but should learn to practice it. Failing this, he has practically proved himself a fizzle, however brilliant or sensational hi* achievements may be in football or Greek —Chicago News
sentenced to a term of I for saying of his best g rather kies h^r than the Some people are to bu the fanita of other peop nave ao time to correct aomurvlUe (Mass ) Jour
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1921
i I
i<y. ivZl. b> kcc’lura N«w«y*p Jr S; t. . ' .1 line’s glance triui.i; luntlv . , t the long stretch of deserii <1 Not u soul in sight! For an hour at least she might confidently expe t t() keep all this wonder to herself, t;:,.,,. iuily she visioned the chagrin d t , not to mention her half-dozei „t; , T satellites, when they should litm ,ii S . covered her to have already talo n her morning dip, without their ul)i ; ;ii, us ministrations. It was five o'clock, and half an q , lr before sunrise. Jane waded out towards a not dlstnnt sand liar, h r eyes fixed on the eastern sky, wiouv the gray mist was parting, to reve ti inq. den color treasure of orange uml - i],|. She felt suddenly awed. How bu everything was! How tiny her httml* seemed, buoyed in front of her on the surface of the water. At that moment she half wished for a chance to snub the owner of a certain steadying if presumptuous arm, then slinking off the weakness and determined to gl ry in Ikt new found freedom, she plunged, sqm tiling irrepressibly, into an oncoming wave and swam with an eveu, sure stroke for the bar. Once there, site turned to glance at the hotel, oddly somnolent in the half Sight, then with a superior sniff, intended for Its lazy inmates she stretched luxuriously on the sand and gave herself up to the enjoyment of the spectacle to the eastward. For a full hnlf-hour she watched and mar veled and dreamed. How trivial now seemed yesterday's preplexitii> and Intrigues! Her unaccountably poor showing at the tennis tournaim nt, that cataclysmic error which had caused her partner to view her in stunned surprise—how little such things really mattered. She remembered with a certain sense of shame the flirtations which had marked her stay at this most popular of beach resorts. What poor sport it was, after all. Henceforth she determined to repress the eternal Eve in her ami to save tier smiles for—him. And a delightful speculation gripped her as to who—he might he. A cold tongue of water lapped her i bathing slipper and she Jumped up, I shivering. The tide had risen. Jeal- | ous waves were already trying to edge I her off her perch. She fus-od with I her cap in preparation for the swim j back, pausing for a lust look at the j King of Day, now well over the rim if the world. For a while she stool there, a .harming figure in her modish -e-a ; rail, eyes ngleam with youth's ! >ve J of life, curling tendrils of gold whipj ping her creamy throat. Sud Daly she stiffened and a sharp cry escaped her. j Cradled between two of the larger I overlapping waves she had esp ed j something sinister and white, a gleaming mass that moved and glowed in j the long rays of the morning light. A sort of numbness seized tier us through her mind there flashed all tlie stories she had heard recounted of the white-bellied terror which many of the hotel habitues were reputed to have glimpsed thereabouts, always from the asylum of a dock. Jane viewed despairingly the fastdiminishing strip of sand. Ten minutes at tlie most, and she would have to take her chances with the thing In tlie water. On the verge of fainting. she yet managed to find her voice. At first thin and weak, desperation lent It strength. A favoring breeze aided her, and the cry which roused half a hundred sleepy vacationists from their beds was that of “Tom!" Tom heard with the rest, and not one of the wondering watchers saw anything grotesque in his pajama-clad figure, as it flew to the water's edge. “Get a boat, Tom," Jane screamed, then toppled and fell. But Tom didn't go back. A few minutes and he had in his arms a strangely docile June, who could only whisper faintly, “Tom, darling Tom,” and who clung piteously to him. As he swam back to the beach, now thronged with half-clad people, his precious burden held close, lie was too deliriously happy to wonder why Jane, conceded the best swimmer la the crowd, hud not dared negotiate •he short distance. Time enough for explanations later—for the present life was very sweet, with that soft "Tom, darling Tom” in hi* ears. Through a haze of Joy, he was conscious that one of his vigorous sirokes brushed away something which felt Rise seaweed, but which wus apparently a white satin petticoat, and he wondered from whose clothesline it wus missing.
Movements of the Earth. Tlie continents stand at an average bight of about lii.OOO feet above the ocean bottom and their weights causing a pressure of 15,000 to 20.d ,,, * pounds per square inch on their liases is supposed to lie causing a slow creeping of the land into the s **" against the O.OOO pounds of pressure by the water at the bottom. Tlie rocks of mines are observed to creep under less- pressure. In recent experiments, two hemispheres of rock >vcre fitted together by plane surfaces, and a Yuvlty wus ground in one or a stiH ! ! washer was laid on it and the hemispheres were then forced together by hydraulic pressure continued (or monih.s. at room temperature. II was dc:ii-piist|j|ted that a pressure of s'tiiioi pounds per square inch will close even aiiniij cavities In gmuile, busull. obsidian or liinesione.
JANE’S SHARK By MARY A MURDOCK.
