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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 31

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Chicago Tribunei
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Chicago, Illinois
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31
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PART TH IlCS WUnEN'S FEATURES WANT ADS Superior 0100 -TnE WORLD'SV GREATEST 3 KEWSPAPER The Taming of Elizabeth 3IOXI3AY, AUGUST 0, 192S. 5k 31 GASOLINE ALLEY AS RACHEL SEES IT Sff I MEVA SeEKj SECM A vl MAVBE ITS ALL PlGKT HOW COMB VOL) ALL. t'Wf 1 DID, RACHEL. weLf THEKJ 'VOL) AfV4 VOU CAM FISH TM6 If COME TO GET THS A FC.ND LET ME WINIFRED BOGGS fYNorMs. i ryx MP.nnwM to a rrrrTAr.P firnK- BfW BOT MO -h COTTAQe, MiSTA KAft TAKE BECAUSe I I A BHEAKiNJ CVEM.

rmt "Inrrd daughter of Tim and FUzabetb. Darcy When HAD TIME TO SEE THE OCCAM. -c; rr UHT SOMECWE l. I jZ- JV brcnptt ''-T ueisnoor. an Smilry.

'1'. away azain. this time from m. school and to nome of ii IV. who is almost a Eighty th l3, Pfc'J.

joun ElUabeth. rympa- ccr fpOTi. Sv-nhen Whith. ocr tie iU soca to llve w-ua her aunt Dunnr tha kfP them-" a' jy PTiorainf in amateur theatrical. Mcphen.

home on leave. asked by hi. atanmnt'w braefU of y-fX. Utinci a P.aywrijht. to one of their performances.

1 Ci suddenly and ElUabeth learn, to aurBn lSU 3U: 'red the mom-, left her by her husband, inheritance as well. AJfa.d to face Stephen lVr Its decides to to to Mark Lennox and ask him to ret her a rt'- Mark nd. ihoueh his business has failed. (Ii-to h'r hl Id nd ailrice and takes a part in Mark's new 03 lie r.ur.t he gets state fright and runs off. leartnt- an understudy tterer hT rrt.

J. -ho happens to bo la London TinUn her cousin Wine. tliiWtu on the street and take, her to Mrs. Wnhe's house. The crw 3nJ Elizabeth accrpts.

But she falls in this Job, too. and PO to an olJ the country. Julian Vesinfton. the psntoT'ht ail the iirrangements with Elizabeth. jjbiB arri" uiiyy.

io taie over the manacemect of xr-f husiatee. gaabeth to ion-. wn. wno faoer atttntion upon her yonnj com- EX GAG ED na Bourskava Sinzs II EATER Ina Bourskaya Sings I I I I I y.fcot tie r-rt oompaniowhip aad w-ents a tr.ysfery about the house. INSTALLMENT XXXI.

LOVK. Stephen Mr. Ve. niton's cordial invitation with very real pleasure. rai charrsinff ci1 Elizabeth had not exasperated lucky child! -i frank, varni I.

tile note. Tie lucky drorpir.ff into a job like that," thought Stephen. "1 v7 fecp she it and is not looking for flics in ointments; the irsieran littL? person. Tor once I do believe the has not exag-fH for Mk. Veinptor is the ideal old lady and oiite the fairy god-.

let the -rf you sive thr- Clizaln ths of the world the piore they iiaw" He thought of Polly. "Well, shall not encourage any nonsense i2at ort, She's pet to May where she and think herself lucky." r. wis r.ot goSnsr to ave the your.p Elizabeth on hi hands running loose ISS MARGARET BALL, of Chi as Climax to Polish Program at Ravinia Sarajevo, Once Pampered, Now Every Day He Asks Five Persons, Picked at Random, a Question. Johnny Hines Does His Stuff As an Inventor cago, has been engaged by George White for Manhattan Mm." a mid-Srjtember book- OI JLV I Inc for th l'nnr Cohans or. rather Ina Bourskaya's appearance in the for the Grand Opera Home: the pre Poverty 1 nam part of Carmen at Ravinia Cohan name of the theater has bee last night was the culmination of a 1 resumed by the Messrs.

Khubert, who The Tribune iU pay for each question accepted for the Inquiring Reporter to ask. Send name and address with your question to The Inquiring Reporter," Cltlciio Tribune. For today's lutstion. Mm. F.

Birkel. McCirefor, Uk, aa awarded S3. I day of music given in the interests now own the building. Miss of the Polish Arts club of Chicago. Ball, besides dancing, is to have a I The afternoon rrogram was a concert, iecdon and pettin? into mischief.

He wondered why he was looking bo I each forward to her apain. "It's a curious thing." he thought, Allfl Ovrrlnnk nth In tn I am positively fond of the little thing when we're apart and often i vitiHUM role and speak lines and. maybe, have 'JUf ODtimiSm RulcS Hold partly of Polish music by the Chicago i a go at singing. Anyway, she joins i Symphony orchestra directed by Eric the growing line of dancing-girls who Grudge Against Italy. Inspire a Laugh.

are gone from Chicago atebers to the DeLiimarter partly of other Polish big shows in Broadway a line in i music by two choral societies, directed i'by B. Rybowiak and A. M. Hess, part which are Miss Mary Eaton. Miss Har r' i 'I 4 5 The Questiort.

What waa your greatest thrill in an airplane flight? Yhere Asked. Municipal aviation field-The Answers. Russell C. Moss-man, municipal air irkef fcer, yet tre moment we meet I feel nothing but annoyance. I want xit; tien tut give a shaking; some day, when she drives me -A far, I shall find doing it! He would have surprised, rossibly pleased, had he known how very -vi Elisabeth was 1- king forward to s-eing him again counting the days, ae tours.

The Min horf and the birds though f-eldom the captive 'When they di.i it -was such a heartbroken little t-ong that Elizabeth Kid est bear it and would go to her own room ajid cry. riet Hoetor, Miss Louise Brown, and Miss Barbara Newberry, four celebri ties of the current song-and-elance "THE WRIGHT IDEA." ProdiKTxl by Kirst National. Iirectl by Charic liinrn. 'resrnlcd at the State-Lake theater. THE CAST: ly of solo performances by the violinists Michael Wilkomirski and George Szplnalskl, and the pianist, Mieczys-law Ziolkowski.

Judging by the looks of the park, it would seem that most of the audience remained for the opera performance in the evening. plane pilot My first solo fight. No one can have the slightest conception of the thrill that comes from taking hold of the controls for the first time. You forget about This is the fourth of a series of articles on a trip through Yugoslavia and the Dalmatian coast. BY LARRY RUE.

lOirrago Tribune Press rVrvtre-l SARAJEVO, Aug. 5 Sarajevo before the war was a prosperous city. Today it is suffering an economic crisis which is telling on the patriotism or Us Inhabitants. Before the war Sarajevo, as a pet child of old Austria, was given all kinds of economic aid. is e-onnected to" the other parts of Bosnia-Hcrxego- shows.

Miss Ina Claire, as she took ship at midnight Friday for the Continent, gave formal confirmation to the recent statement in The that she would return this season to the direction of Mr. Ziegfeld. and appear for him in a piece based on the legends and traditions of Nell Gwynne, who. according to the records, sold oranges in the corridors of Drury-Lane theater before she became the most celebrated actress of her day and the pet I Miss Bourskaya presents a Cannon with more than a common amount of I color and fire, with an accurate sense I of the stage, and with a tang in her I voice that is of great assistance in proje-cting the dramatic 1 Johnny Wright Helen Mr. Filbert Capt.

Sandy M. T. Klall Mr. brooDt Mr. Stein Mr.

Carter Spe-' O. J. Ciu.ie Mr. Hubris Brlly Mrs. OTooIc Mr.

Saunders Johnny limes Lorraine Brrew; Waiter James Fred KeL-iey Henry Harrows Henry liebert Oiblyri Ja.k MiHugb George Irving Gerrard Ifc-tty tau Blanche Craig Maitland scenery; ou become absorbed in the magic flight of your ship through space. hlch is quite as important as the Elmer Bciite, St. Clair hotel, retired music in this opera. In her perform- vina with good roads, constructed at lowa farmer I had aiance the fortune telling scene with of Charles II. Nell Gwynne, ths COst of of dollars, all of as a stage-character, had a measure whlch was paid by the old empire.

It the cards comes to mean as much as the rapturous utterances in the inn scene, and this in itself indicates that her Carmen is a bit out of the usual. of vogue when the current century Dy Mae Tinee. Good Morning! Th.i.s time our little Johnny Hines is Is connected with the coast by a narrow gauge railroad hich also connects thrill, all right. You should have been with me when my own plane with me and my pilot in it landed upside down in a corn field fifty miles south an inventor. Named Mr.

Wright. Among those associated with her was Armand Tokatyan as Don Jose, who was entirely agreeable in the lyric passages, and entirely satisfactory in was new. Miss Henrietta Crosman appeared in a piece called Mistress Nell." and was successful enough in it to be accepted as a pro-forma star, although eart of her success was due to her loud cries that she was being persecuted by tho Theatrical Syndicate. Her manager was lier husband. Maurice Qaniplndl, whose name has of late appeared more than once on the west of St.

Louis, Mo. Darn it, we ran out of gas and had to muk a forced landing. But we i the more dramatic moments. Margery Maxwell did an excellent performance of Micaela, singing her single aria in the mountains In a lovely voice and uiivori ourselves and the machine. 1 MISS AUDREY READ.

I Rayhuff-Richtcr Photo. 1 Mr. and Mrs. C. Percy P.ead of 4319 Blackstone avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Audrey, to Forrest O.

Becker, son of Mrs. K. O. Becker of 4004 Lake Park avenue. Miss Read has been starred as comic lead in eral of the South Shore Follies, the, Soutli Shore Country club's annual members' revue.

What did Wright invent? A blotter-less and luminous ink. Ia that the Wright idea? No. The Wright idea is the one about how to sell the invention. Is it all wright? In the Omega jal But in the meantime, decidedly no and anything BUT! Would it lj a good idea to go and see the picture? Bright ideal 927 Foster avenue. with the expressive certainty of an John Huber, transport pilot artist who knew nerfeellv well what because of his spectacular most' thrilling erpen-iencc was an upside I she wanted to do and intended to do it.

I activities as a Yolstead hatchet-man i (in Manhattan. Another of that "Fmnjr Mr. Vetington't face had darkened. "It can be hell!" her tyet flamed and her face warn young and passionate. "Funny," she tiiought early Saturday morning, "it's as if I was home-Js for Etephen: fc'he laughed at the ridiculous "yet I believe I lie him quite a lot when he h-n't there: And especially when I'm a little fr.rhteced.

For she still continued to bo a l.ttle frightened: still felt run down id depressed and devitalized in spite of the quantities of food and wine Mrs. Vesir.frton made her take. Of course, it was dull, but it could not be really Sit, because Mrs. Vesingtoii was always there, always bright, and in good p.rit5; it must be something in the air, something unusually relaxing. Yet kcwcculd it be that when it suited Mrs.

Vesington so well; every day she r-ftv i i ti, iicrVit sneer! fn.nt. makine I It is true that the first act of the period about the orange-girl was called Sweet Nell of Old Drury and tho late Ada Rehan had the title-role in that. performance, the second in tho complete score, had a good many resemblances to a vocal foot race, but with DOES draw ble: tries hard and The film is a lively number that includes, amusingly, everything from insanity to bootlegging; develops on land and on water, and numbers among those actively interested, such a varie- down spin a Canadian type Curtis training plane back in 1923. I managed to Fet the plane righted, but what a terrifying experience especially to afterwards. such poor stories.

This "Hot Heels" is just one of the next the speed seemed to be pretty i- Ringside," one of the new plays think about those silly conglomerations, with Mr. well worked out of everybody, and the Iterformance continued at a rather as is AntroUi I gated assortment of humans more seemly and considerably more grin: total, out tliev seemea to nar no ikiwit xlTZl V. 1 A I r. wa hare. 1 rarely assembled in one him.

Tyron iist as the sort of Smart Aleck that is such bad medicine to take. The perpetual kind who -pills a wise Li tk. hi- ihe essence, did Mr. Hines is here, there, and eiery- Andy Kluck, 6220 South Major ave- rhythmic pace. crack that's never funny or a prac "here in ingratiating fhion.

ably as-Ih I had it." sighed the young Elizabeth. Once. he had had it by Lennse Lor aine in parUcu- restaurateur i nis cnange iiau. a. iivutrauie men My first airplane ride.

upon Desire Defrere in the part of After the first trip you Escamillo; at least there would seem tt cor.j i in new ima.ip snouia sieai it si to be no other reason to account for eral. It moves right along to the sort of finish you had hoped for. what it's about, first trip was Chicago to De-I can still see know-That from troit. the fact that he was three or four times better In the mountain scene than he had been in the inn. But tical joke, a minute.

I yearned to throttle the hero of Hot Heels" with my o'-vn lily white hands. The story isn't worth space to relate it in, hut it is aete-d by an adept east of players. Its re-deeming features are a good steeplechase and THE END. See you tomorrow: The that big blue lake, the i there was a great asset in the inn It with the main railroad line between Agram and Belgrade. Public works, paid for by the old empire, brought money and employment, not only to the Inhabitants of Sarajevo itself, but to the neighboring territory on which its prosperity is dependent.

Then. too. there was a military garrison here of 5.000 soldiers, who spent their pay in tho city, making additional business for the Inhabitants. Public works have ceased. The natural richness of the country, its" forests and minerals, have not yet reached a point of efficient exploitation.

Money Is tight, credit is scarce, Sarajevo, however, is optimistic. It hopes for closer economic relations with the territories with which it was connected before the war. Moreover, it hopes that considerable of the proected J250.0U0.000 loan will be spent In this territory. Improving the roads and in the construction of a normal gauge railroad. Politically, we hear complaints among the citizens.

Autonomy is asked. Sarajevo today ia ruled from Belgrade. This is not to the liking of the inhabitants. They desire the right of more autonomy. They want the right of their own administration, as the separate states of Germany possess.

They feel themselves considerably more civilized than their ruling Serbian brothers. They consider themselves also better business men. But they have the greatest con.1-dence in the superiority of the Serb toldiers. This gives them a sense of security. We ask against whom.

The answer is "against Italy." It is then we are told and our informants Include hotel keepers, members of the chamber of commerce, industrialists, railroad workers that Der Tag is coming. "War betw een Italy and Yugoslavia, we are told, inevitable. Why? The Tirana pact, giving Italy a grip on Albania, eventually must re-ult in a war, if we can believe our informers. We read the newspapers. Italy is bald headed sandj scene, and it was the dance done by dunes of Indiana, the rivers, the little Ruth Page and her assisting ballet So bright idea to go see Wright Idea." An Adept Cast Does Best It Can with This.

"HOT HEELS." farm houses and barns. company. c.fii--U VL.U lil.lt. lt'IJH- ftn her, threaten her youth, the very i lood in l.cr veins so that at times ftlt like a sucked orang-. The old xtent their silent, unseeing way: at times they seemed hr like figures in a dream, a dream verging into a nightmare.

There "a totnething inhuman about humanity that had outlived all emotion, all all interest. To them life was no more than a piece of were just the cogs of the wheels. They were shadows in a world of diesis. For that was how hfe sometimes -seemed to Elizabeth just a shadowy, --el thing the substance of a dream. But Stephen was coming.

He was enough; she would wake up then. "I think I will fall a little in love with Mr. Vesington." the decided. It things more enjovable. and it's so easy." She had always found it 7 to fall a httle Sn love," and had seldom been long out of that happy '-dllion.

"firiv vp rather a lontr rett since I was thrown on the Of KAN fcTE.VMIIIP MOVEMKNTS. William Williams, 5928 North Camp about professional pugilists, was liked so well by Detroit that it was held four weeks in that city. Miss Edna Hibbard, back from the l.dndon flop of "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," has the title-r jle of Lulu Belle this week in a Cleveland stock-company venture with that sheep-dip. And Miss Hibbard ought to be funny. If nothing else, in the framed so carefully for Miss Ulric.

Miss Mary Boland, -who has since Cradle-Snatchers had ill-luck i.t her search for a play, is to be in something new by Arthur Richman. The piece was for a time named The Hungry Wife and it is now called Heavy Traffic." The Page," tried oiit earlier in the year, is this week to be tried out again, starting tonight, in Jersey, and then is to be submitted to New-York. This ia the piece about newspapers by Ben Hecht and Charles A. MacArthur, who learned what they know as reporters in Chicago. Among the new song-and-dance piaces is one founded on the late Captain Marshall's amusing comedy named A Royal Family." Miss Annie Russell, Charles Richman, Mrs.

Gilbert, and Richard Bennett were among the well-knowns who acted it in 1901 in Chicago. A new title is not as et announced; but there will have to be a new one: the old one would mean bell avenue, apprentice lirplano mechanic My first trip, one over Chicago. The beautiful view I got of the city and surrounding country' was the greatest sight and thrill I Arrited. rran.vlrama Samaria New York Karlsruhe California Cedru- Lan. jini Sailed.

ialiie iarmania rtaureiar.ia VI uenchrn At. Nrw N-w York. New New New Alexandria nhli 'obh Leiih From. Cobh Havre Cherbourg a I ay Chh roni. av Olaeeow Ijverpool Hamburg Bremen New York N-w York York New York To.

New York New York New Yorii Sew York New York Produced by Vniveral. Dire-ted by 'Williain Craft. PresrnU'd at the Riallo theater. THE CAST: Glenn TYyon atry Patay Ruth Miller Fannie Gretel ToUr Mr. Fitch Jamesi Braiibury Sr.

Jockey Tod Sloan Manager Lloyd Whitloek I am feeling very sorry for Glenn r. r.f i like some gins. 1.U1I1, LliULifcil, tv- (e Blight Lave been thinking of measles. It isn't i aon i--y awfully hard. I waa in love with darling Mark Lennox, though he, too busv to notice Und with the Pod before I saw him off the stage ''2 shr.

mo rfnen "hectic na-sions on her fingers and! ever had. And to me another wonder was that I eiperi enced no scare or sickening feeling. thia Trvon this morning. He IS so capa in tn, mpr beinz wasted. It isn't as Aurora Fair Party to Be One of Year's Best, Sally Says BY SALLY JOY BROWN.

When you read Tub Tribune yesterday and saw that we are going to visit tho Central States Fair at Aurora a week from next Thursday that set you busy, didn't it. girls and boys? I'm sure you are all writing letters to win Invitations, because with -it wonderful place like the Central States Fair to visit, this party will be one of the best of the year. Then there will be the ride we'll have out and back in motor busses through some of the most beautiful country around Chicago, and we'll get there just in time for luncheon. After luncheon there'Jl be rides and shows, exhibits of hundreds of the finest prize winning horses, cows and go on nouhk for long." she thought aghast. It's a "-a thing Mr.

YeMngion is "coming. It would be pretty awful if I were to reduced to lir.g in Ioe with Stephen." She giggled at the thouirht. and Mrs. Vesington looked at her smiling. I OUR SECRET AMBITION i I To Ger the.

old --h TflmiL out of a SsZ-fr. 'W if -NHE Mrs w. aa to tell, but somehow toron wanted to know. Sh sort of digs a of she thought. It as if I were a bottle with something secret up.

and had patent corkscrew that draws the fc tiff est cor. I waa thirkine- love." fhe said unwi.urgij. Generally, or in Sirs. Vesir.e'Tf.n lr.ke.1 kccnlv at the flushed cheeks I poultry, a stylo show by the school girls who made their own dresses, a "Mge-vl thir.g coesn guess I've decided to be a little in love her nerhew." thought Llizabeth. "Some aunts might not l.e- it.

T're aimott as ta.l as mothers-in-law." "The guardian? "Good gracioua no! cri-J the girl vehemently. "'Vfcy jij lnugli, my dear?" "Le's to ir.nv. don't you think? Mr. Vinir-on faco darken. It can be hcil.

H.r popular confusion berause of 4 The Royal Family," still on view in New-York. Tis now said that "Ripples," wherein Leon Errol is preparing to appear, is based on the tales about PJp Van Winkle. If so. it will not be the first venture with Rip in song-and-dance or operatic form. I recall from kidhood an operetta by Plan-quette, who composed the piece Americans know as The Chimes of Normandy." Henry E.

Dixey had a named "Si. I. wherein I circus, arm iois i many wonderful things I can't begin i to tell you all. And all this fun will be yours Just by writing a winning letter. Give your full name, street address and age and mail your letter in time to reach me by next Thursday, morning at the latest.

I'll select the hundred best and their names will be in The Tribvnk next Sunday. referred to as the enemy. An article attacks the Nettuno treaty, which will give Italians property and linguistic rights in Dal mat la. The papers declare that Italy is conspiring to, seize the entire coast and is only preparing the way for this through this treaty, as they did the seizure Trieste by colonization of this eret-while Slav city under the Austro-Hun-fcarian regime. "We cannot fight now, as we haven't the money, the equipment, tae necessary railroads," an official In close touch with the government says, "but when we get this loan wo will be In.

a position to give Italy more than the is looking for. The entire country realizes that in the expendl- ture of this money the interests of the nation as a whole the interest of named ard i- wa- oung arfd passionate. Eluabeth gazed her in rrent. An old lady who had long done i.uch thmi to look Uke that, talk like that: ne xpa K-ntimtnt of the old. but this Mrile Pf-Van Te Jd -Rut ,..1 is dead." she blurted out I tnean he ciea our 'o.

have their sweet sentimental memories. affo." Old pe should have their if shocking, ana snc is tone of voi'-c. in is naraii-s e.v...... tiin Well it's always seemea ram oatrag'-d by jt. to fcl.e I Rip was shown aa an old man grow-' ing twenty years younger in his i sleep.

Among the formal operas on the theme is or was the one by I Percy Mackaye and the late Reginald DeKoven staged early in 1920 by the "Because you know nothing about it:" -tated Ever kl I've been fifteen I've been wie -T" Ion- th. rot to be snubbed. "Only, of course, i oo here lt-s '-he That woulin be much fun. Since I been nere self-defens must come first." Chicago Opera. Martin Beck, at one time the over 3 a sort of rest cure." -r- laughed her old sell agam.

'r-o- m-n to make a there will soon be two However, What's Doing Todays cf he-r: Stephen r.ever at me. i rutc nf me. oniy Juhan will roake tin for that. A pity he nant oWai1v tnevre J1 nit-n have or wy knovs best. Let the TRIBUNE Fellow You on Yoor VACATION The Daily Tribune (U days a week) will be mailed to you anywhere in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Micbigaa or Wisconsin for fifty cent a month Notify your car-rier of chang in address or seed order to Th Tribune accompanied by cbeck or money order.

fclizau-th. "and vet clergymen arm "The of all is to have money oneself." "there wis then that money doesn't matter." Her es fOJ just them, a tteel-Uko Quahty In the Meei with a mouse." Hashed through the rF- brain. She kerwlf for the thought, for the many hateful "ouS tt would suddenly --upon -urjy lord of the flourishing Orpheum Circuit, is said to be through with the theater in all its aspects as a business, and to be about to take up residence in Europe. He built four years ago In New-York one of the handsomest theaters in the world, named it for himself, and gave out a statement that he was from then on to be a big factor In the business of producing plays: but he went no farther than Madame Pompadour." a Continental and London success which failed unqualifiedly between the hours of and 110 o'clock the night of its premitre there. Beck in his heydey was known well in Chicago; and there is no question that he played an effective part in developing tho vogue of tho varieties between Chicago and the Vaclflc coast.

r. conventions. American Chemical fwiety inutjte Northwestern uniTerctty Association of Eleetrafisl. international StrTens Chieaco merchandise fair Cuhaeom Fastem manufacturers end importer exhibit Palmer Gifts. Art Wares and Notelue tuvdt- tion Stereos Jewelry and allied rhow Sherman Journeymen Ta'lor' I nion of America.

Southmoar Summer conference on hool music material Ed it onal Mu 1c bureau KKTlNl.s. Chu-aio Ini.p!nv M'ii club Chicsi H-allh C'ftiier liiu. sherroau tity lea cue Morrisuii Wire bound Box Manufacturers a nidation Hainivr Touns People lescue Cuncreas LI NCHhUNs. Chicaxo Hanoi Hairdressers association Sherman Alumni Vainer," there: Th. tme deu tnai wn dust ttin at all: hke that gin t.at reailv tnerc at an.

were not many jnrM. Vesington hersedf. he fcaid: "1 shall never have any money. A time when youth is better even than mo h( "abeth thoucht of the two thousand new ehe ut le dVd horrid thgs Just for money; iSz ggi) ICopyrvit: 198: Ey Wnifred Boff-J Coniinued txniwruwo.

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