I! H R , q ll m " Her distended eyes took in the whole scene with photographic clarity before she realized its enormity. For the first time it occurred to her as she stared at the still, disheveled tigure, that Mrs. Jupiter wns dead. But it wax the spot in her forehead, Just below the hairline, from which a slow ooze of blood trickled and ran "dly down the tempfe into the snow- white hair, that drew Mary's horri, Bed gaze. What had happened seemed quite erear---Mrr. Jupiter had been 'obbed, but she had not given up the neck- lace. With her last breath she had protected it; the toil of blood-red “one: between her fingers testified to her success. The thief had not been gold dress twisted about her knees. a. poor wrinkled old face haunt! but strangely peaceful under the Dal-thing glare of the lights. An old Pair of felt house slippers covered in feet. Her hands. barren now of rings, “ill clutched something which she held duped tightly between the palms, still firmly grasped together On her breast. It was the ruby neck- Then she looked down-and there on the floor lay the crumpled figure of Mrs. Jupiter, the white hair awry where the diamond headdress had been ruthlessly snatched from it, the The silence began to tear at her nerves. Gasping with excitement, the touched out suddenly and jerked open the door. The room was brightly lighted, but empty. She looked about. dumbfounded, almost ready to believe that her senses had tricked her. He hadn't said anything about bringing someone with him, though, and some other person was in there-- the person he had been quarreling with. Suddenly she remembered, and the realization stunned her. Mrs. Jupiter was in that room. Hadn't she (one upstairs to take her shoes oil? It had been Mrs. Jupiter's voice she heard. Then whose hand had fired those shots? Perhaps there hadn't been any. Her Inhelieving mind was milling about despert tely. Perhaps an automobile had baehtired in the drive. But that was nonsense-the noise had been elose. plain. You trouldn't hear noise from the outside clearly in here, in this great heavy-walled house with the thickly shuttered windows. KRAFT CHEESE Could it be Eddie in there? What would he be doing in Mrs. Jupiter's room? Me had no business there un- less the servants had directed him there in error, or had gone in there by mistake. Farmâ€), as if drawn by a magnet, Mary moved slowly forward. Ont- Ilde the closed door of Mrs. Jupiter's sitting room she stopped and called sharply, experimentally, "Eddie?" Then more loudly, "Eddie'." There was no reply. 014) In. Jupiter. I". of the mmt0n- ntro automobile martutaetarer give. " mutant dinner and dance for Mr scent-r)! uni protege. Mary Barium“. ill. I. to marry the socially elite Dirk Illlhcl’. Mary receive. . telephone call "out Mr souvenir. brother. Eddie, Ba','- in. he In tn trouble and must no her. Marr arranges for him to be admhml “curly. When she (on upstalru to met him cube hears screams and then Chou in Mrs. Jupiter's room. b----.--.-.-----.------"- Rich in Ch, phesehoeu. . . . and Edy-building Vila-inn. It in the not: highly eooeestrated to." od highest quality prolcin howl. Foe a balanced diet, in- CH. Kraft them with "or, M I). path": or Aired from IE. but». s lb. loaf. Look for tho I... "Klan†no the only with. ideotiseatioas of the healthful q"---------------------------. Made in Carma Gems of Peril CHAPTER II SYNOPSIS By HAZEL ROSS HAILEY. What she wanted now was to find Bessie, and Bessie proved hard to find. Tracked to earth in the butler's pantry, munching marrons glace and stuffed olives with blithe impartiality, Bessie slipped quickly down off the high stool she was perched on and confronted Mary sullenly. Mary's white face and burning eyes, and the quiet, precise manner of her question, puzzled her. Seenting' re- proof, she took quick affront, after the manner of her kind. "And how would I know who came in?" she retorted, pertly. "I suppose I've had nothing to do but listen for the doorbell, with all this racket go- ing on l"' "Then you didn't let anybody in?" "They let themselves in, if they eame," the maid snapped. "I'd no time to be bouncing in and out of there. I just went and unlocked the side door when you told ine, Miss, and left it open. If they came, they got in all right. It was not Bessie's fault; it was her own, if it was anybody‘s. The side door was standing open as she passed. Nearly half an hour. Any- body might have come in, and gone out. Could it be possible---'. A half- crazed bor, 1nd the sight of all those i-ls-- " he were desperately in need of moner- But he would have waited. She had never failed to get him out of any of his scrapes before. With ageproachrul hit of the eye- hows, he ascended. Mary, watching the matter-of-fact back moving up- ward so serenely, almost decided she must. be mistaken. Murders and such don't happen where I am, that res. pectable back seemed to say. It seemed hours before Spence came down. He seemed. surprised that she was still standing in the same spot where he had left her. "I tell you it's true," Mary insisted. " heard them, and I've seen her. Her rings are gone, and the tiara, and her forehead-oh, you'll see, if you’ll uat go on up!†"Well, well, we'll see," he replied, testily, starting forward with obvious reluctance. "indeed, I was just going up anyhow to answer Mrs. Jupiter'ss bell." "Bell?" "Mrs. Jupiter rang for me, Miss Mary, not two minutes ago. And would she be doing that if she were killed?†Mary eiosed the door an-d locked it spin. His thin nostrils quivered with dis- dain as his upturned gaze picked out the white blur of t girl's frock em circled by the black-clad arms of her escort, half hidden in a turn of the stair. "Welll What are you standing than fort" he barked as if she had been one of the servants. "Find the mater! Quick! And Barelart." He snapped his fingers,. "Go right aero" the street and fetch Dr. Jordan, and uh. him up to the mistress' room as fut as you can." " was impossible not to obey the old man " he crackled out commands "You're excited and overwrought, Miss Mary. And no wonder, with all trat's goin' on hereabouts tonight. A man can't hear his own thoughts,†he added tardy, as an extemporaneous tap-dancing contest broke out behind than in the btrllroom, "let alone know- ing what he'll find when he turns a corner unexpected." "Oh, Spence! Spence! Go up to Mrs. Jupiter's room, quickly. Something's happened. She's hurt. I think she's --detr.d!" At the foot ot the stairs she collided with Spence, who was just coming up. She grabbed him by the shoulders and held on while she tried to get :ontrol of her voice. The old servitor ls, inspecting her Suddenly it came to her that what she had been thinking was simply fantastic. Eddie had had nothing to do with this. More than likely the poor boy had not even come yet. Something had happened to delay him. She looked at her wrist-watch. Twenty minutes had elapsed since his tele- phone call. She ran downstairs in feverish haste. She ran from room to room, stumbling in hes haste, opening doors, calling. There was no sign of dis- turbance in the other rooms. Her own door was open. If Eddie had been there, he had gone. She stood in the hall, looking from one blank door to another, calling softly, "Eddie, Ed- die, it's me, Mary.' Oh, Eddie-boy near, where are you?†The silence seemed unnatural. She broke into helpless gobs. A scrum broke from the girl's 'ips, and without looking when she was going she backed away from the fltrure on the floor and stumbled through the drst door that presented itself, the door into Mrs. Jupiter's bedroom. She closed the door and ieantd against it, shaking, her knees nearly giving under her. She tried to collect her thoughts. Suppose it had been money that Eddie needed-- able to get it away from her, but his talked fury had cost her her life. held her " stern- reproachfully. and overwrought, then Sparrows, which were not known in Australia until imported by settlers. have now become such a pest In parts or South Australia that there I: now a. price on their heads and eggs in at least one district. - It is a law of this universe that the best things shall be seldomest seen in their best form . . . And therefore, while in all things that we see, or do, we are to desire perfection, and strive for it, we are nevertheless not. to the nearer thing, in its narrow accom- plishment, above the nobler thing, in its mighty progress; not to esteem smooth minuteness above shattered majesty.' not to prefer victory to hon- orable defeat; not to lower the level of our aim, that we may more surelv enjoy the complacency of success. She went out on the terrace. Some dark corner-would yield them, she felt sure. As she came out on the walk that led to the lower garden, the sound of voices below her arrested her attention. Two figures a'ere swaying together on the very lip of the lilypool, the woman's white dress brightly silhou- etted against the dark. Suddenly she wanted Dirk terribly. He would know what to do. The tPII- room was deserted as she crossed it and a. bt.bble of voices from the dining room told that supper was being serv- ed. Dirk and Cornelia were not there. “I will! I will, tooy' she was sob hing. "Let go of me, you brute!" He moved off, making exaggerated motions of search, lifting cushions, spanking draperies, and inspecting woodwork through a non-existent magnifying glass. She had not really expected any help from the fool, but his silliness seemed more than she could bear. I It was Cornelia, and the man whose bosom she was pounding with her fists as he held her firmly by the shoulders, was Dirk. "Listen, Ted," she said quickly, "will you do something for me?" He was compliant, but suspicious. "Then go and find your host for me. He may be out in the drive talking 'o the chaufreurs Find him and bring him here, quickly!†Teddy saluted elaborately. “I hear and obey." He turned hits, self around and started off, but sud- denly stopped and clapped a hand to his head. "By the way, who is my host?" Then he snapped his fingers. "Ah, I remember. Now don't go way, sweetheart-PII be right back!†"We thought you’d doped!" be chortled gaily. "Where's Dirk?†ms puzzled gaze searched the dark corner in vain. Anything to get rid of him, Mary thought desperately. The figure of Teddy Doulton lurch- ed into the hallway. Teddy always pretended to be drunker than he was. It was part of his "line." He fancied himself as a comedian. Now he hailed her with shouts of delight. Mary put up the receiver slowly. She wanted to go somewhere and think, but she did not like to leave the telephone. Eddie might call again at any minute, and she wanted to be there. like a drill-sergeant. Mary moved off, but stopped to telephone Eddie. He shared a flat with tW) or three other young men, and because of them she had never visited him. Someone answered, but it was m: Eddie. Eddie had not been there for three or four days. Mr. Neired---"Yetr, but you want to live "he a. millionaire’s wife." Mrs. Newlywetl--"You said when we were married we'd live like two turtle doves." Curls are definitely In. Thll comm-e Is the latest, called the Park Avenue hob which goes well with the leminlne trend of fashion. Curls "Are hp (To be continued.) AIMING HIGH By the way, Peggy's own account of that historic drama-in which she played the leading pert-is given for the first time in "The Autobiography of Peggy Eaton," just published, 1nd an amazing and intensely human story it is. But that is neither here nor there, except to connect up the ap- pointment of her husband, John H. Eaton, as Governor of Florida, after he had retired as a result of the scan- dal, from President Andrew "eksont Cabinet, in which he was Secretary of War. Three days after his arrival in Florida, Governor Eaton granted-as was his righb--his frat divorce, fo a dissatisfied wife. "I am going to give them as as: as they ask for them," Peggy quotes him " saying. "H they cannot Jive together in peace I am not going to keep them umber." We hear much about quick and easy divorce these‘days, but one hun- dred years, ago, divorces were obtain- ed even quicker and easier-at all events in Florida, where the Governor t the Territory had the right to grant them. At that time, the Governor was John H. Eaton, husband of the cele- brated Peggy Eaton. Peggy, you may recall, was the storm centre of one of " most dramatic, political and social scandals Washington has ever nown. "Sna'res," said Kipling, noticing the look of astonishment on his friends face. "I was dozing in my chair yesterday evening and my foot slipped out of my shoe, which for com- fort I had unlaced. Half-waking, I felt with my foot for the shoe and began slipping it in, when my toes touched the leather tongue. Snake! flashed across my sleepy brain. I gave one desperate kick and when the shoe struck that miror I realized that I was in London and not in India." Furthermore, she kept the hair'. This Disraeli discovered when exam- ining his dead wife's treasures. She had never reaped the crop without, as he put it, "garnering the harvest." The new Kipling book of stories and poems, "Limits and Renewals,"-- his first in six years-recalls the days of long ago when he arrived in Lon- don from India in search of fame and fortune and lodged in some small rooms-up two tiitthts of stairs-in Villiers Street, alongside Charing Cross railway station. One morning a friend called, and when he found himself in Kipling's sitting room he was surprised to see a handsome mir- ror which stood over the fireplaee smashed to smithereens. To cut the hair (as Mr. Sykes well says) was a mark of affection; to keep it, surely, an act of adoration. Mentiming Disraeli reminds me that his wife, the famous Mary Anne, has a biography all to herself. And no married man will read "Mary Anne Disraeli," by James Sykes, without agreeing, perhaps only to 1imseif, that she was "the perfect wife." Why, for thirty-three years of their married life Mary Anne cut (and later dyed) Dizzy's hair every two or three weeks --mehulously preserving the curl ever the forehead, a characteristic feature of his portraits and carica- tures. Then there was the story of a young clergyman who was commanded w preach before Queen Victoria at Wind- Bor, and who so Ight cut Disraeli, then Prime Minister, for some pointers. "That," replied Dizzy, "will be a matter of indifferene to Her Ma- iesty." "But?' said the young clergyman, "what can a preacher possibly say in ten minutes?" "If you preach thirty minutes," ad.. vised Dizzy, "Her Majesty will be bored. If you preach fifteen minutes, Her Majesty will be pleased. If you preach ten minute Her Majesty will be delighted." " 'Old man, you have got him a safe. If he ever esc res cable xt my expense to Robert G. Ingersoll, Peoria, Illinois, U.S.A.' " "I told him that the Duke', i dy was first put in a wooden coftin, and this was enclosed in steel; that this had made for it a position in a stone weighing twenty tons, and ovcr that was another huge stone weighing {arty tons. He gave me a slap on the back which sent me flying quite a distance and exclaimed: Speaking of "Making the Most of Yeur Life," Messrs. Morgan and Webb quote Chauncey Depew--a real humorist, if you pietrse---as once "i- ing: "My grandfather died of worry, and my father died of Worry. I was dy- ing of worry when I decided to take up humor-to see the genial and amusing side of life. It was humor that saved my health." "Many Americans come here, but the most remarkable of them was Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll. He was very inquisitive and wanted to know all abou: Wellington's tomb. Depew was a young man until " passed on at she age of 94. One of Mr. Depew's stories came out of a visit he paid to St Paul's Cathedral. He was looking at tie tomb of the great Duke of Wellington, when a guide edged up to him and aid: Reminiscences British Make Bow: and Arrows British factories In still turning out enough bows and arrows to equip u large-sized tribe ot Iadiana. Ono tae. tory alone, mamitaeturitttt 8.000 arroy- each year, reports a growing business. CONFIDENCE Confidence is conqueror of men; vie- torious both over them and in them. The iron will of one stout heart shall make a thousand quail. A feeble dwarf, dauntlesaly resolved, will turn the tide of battle; and rally to a noble: strife the giants that had Ted.--<'up- Canada’s Fur Imports in 1930 Canada. imported raw and dressed tuna and fur goods to the value ot $9,585,433. and exported turn ot Canadian origin, either raw, dressed or manufactured, valued at $15,357,386. Nearly the whole of this sum was the valuo ot raw furs, which had a total export value of $15,202,168, of which the British Isles took over 88.- 525,000 worth and the United States nearly $6,000,000. Fur ot Canadian origin is ot notably high quality and consequently is in demand in the beat markets. We must set up the neglect of prosperity against the care of ad- versity. With prosperity many par- ems unload the responsibilities tor their children onto others. With ad- versity the home takes its more nor- mat place. There is no substitute for intelligent parental care exercitt- sed throughout the day, " meal times. and in zontrollins proper sleeping conditions at night. More important still, there is no Butt. stitute for the parent in the develop. ment of the spiritual. moral and men. tal make-up ot the child. By Ray Lyman Wilbur Personally and speaking broadly, I think that unless we descend to a. level tar beyond anything that we at present have known our children are apt to profit rather than 1uifrer from what is going on. "The gorge is reported to be six to twelve miles wide and trom three quarters of a mile to one mile deep. Its sides are almost bare ot vegeta- tion, as is true also ot the Grand Canyon, so that the horizontal rock layers are exposed. The coloring and the unusual pinnacles and other rock forms sculptured by erosion in the American Grand Canyon are re- ported to be less spectacular la the newly discovered African duplicate. "Just as the waters ot the Colorado River, after emerging from the American Grand Canyon, now are to be used tor power and irrigation by the new government project at Boul- der Dam, so the river that fiom, through the African canyon ultimate- ly will be put to use, the Duke be- lieves. as a source ot power." "Through this colony ttown the river called the Webi Shebeli, the Abyssinian headwaters ot which the Italian Government commissioned Duke to explore. At one place along this river. he reports, the water has cut a deep gorge through almost horizontal rock strata much as the Colorado River has cut the Grand Canyon. A great valley like the Grand Can. yon ot Arlzona. eat nearly a mile deep across plateau lands or south- ern Atryssinfa, but inhabited only by monkeys, and seldom ll ever seen by white people, has been discovered by the Italian explorer. the Duke of Abruzzl. "Well," said the wife, "he's just. as hard to get along with as any other darned fool!†One ot 1taly's colonies, a part ot Somaliland, lies just south of the Thyssinian border. Says D. E. E. Free, in his Week's Science cNew York). The job of being wife to a genius L7 not all lavender, as witness the re- joinder of a notable victim to a gum- ing young thing who gurgled: "It muit be Towel-r61 G be the wife of a genius." "He scared me half out of my life," adds Peggy. "He would give seven divorces a day. I remonstrated with him, telling him that it would ruin the population; and he playfully threatened to divorce me if I did not stop. That first year of his reign was actually frightful to matrimonial circles. It separated an amazing number of couples Several :adies toid me that they hardly knew how to be- have themselves any more. They were afraid to speak to their husbands for fear they would find themselves di- vorced next morning. Children and Adversity For 40 years SALADA has given the Mggegtt quality in tea. Present prices are the Another Grgnd Canyon The 40th Anniversary "SALAM iijijiihl, lowest inf " years. Twists working i 1 most Govern- ment oMces have to make a. daily re- turn ot work done, showing the sort ot work done, and how long each job oc- cupied. This takes from ten to twenty minutes ot each typist's time each day, and there are 8,000. So the opponents ot the return say there is a. loss ot " least 1,333 working hours every day. Cold tea is recommended by the medical superintendent of one big hos- pital as a ttrst-aid treatment tor burn. It any ot the old reasy treatments were given. he said. it was very dill!- cult to clean the wound before any- thing could be done. Women employees who work in the Bank ot Englnnd must now wear only black, navy blue, or very dark grey, with white collars, and must not use llpstlcks or other aids to beauty. Plain white blouses will b permitted in the summer months. Hopgrowlng, to which 20.000 acres ot England were devoted last year, tn. volves an outlay of trom £120 to £150 an acre. Each acre ot hop land and: steady employment tor seventeen workers. A fully furnished Bat, comprising living-room, kitchen, bed-room, and bath-troom, ls provided by the L.C.C. in Lewisham, London, so that schoolgirl- can learn practical housework. Criminals taken into a police station in Gt. Britain can be identified by their tInger-prints in less than half an hour by means of the 400,000 sets of prints tlled at Scotland Yard. 'Wedding-ringa were formerly worn on the fourth anger of the right hand. counting the thumb in . Bttger. Emignnts who crossed the ninth: 150 years ago had to carry their own food supplies. as none was provided tor them. Feathers are sewn closely together to form a. son (abric which is very popular just now In Paris as a trim. ming tor coafs and jackets. Gambling at cards and dice and matrimonial troubles which lead to the payment of alimony are among the principal causes of business bankrupt. cies in America. Gold giggles are sometimes substi- tuted tor wedding-rings ir. the Scandin- avian countries. -iiiiiei/reiisiout, freedom was allowed In Spain the ale of Bibles has gone up by 00.000 0. year. - Th; iiiLimG, speed tor safety on emulators is said to be 180 feet 3 mm ute. Out of every three persons aged twenty-eight in London two ire slur plted with tutiticitU teeth. Daring’the last ten years no fewer than 45000 people have been killed on British made. Big motor-coaches in $350 apiece every year alone. Ot alt marriages In England and Wales thirty-elght are childless They know an oil intended tor general household lubrication should clean and protect on well u ' cate. 3-in-0“ Oil docs those the. things. because it in . tteietttiitt, compound of three high grade pro- tNets-animal, mineral and vexe- table oils. it is distinctly in a ell" 3-in-0ne costs more to make than ordinary oil, but less to use. it you want the best possible service from your sewing machine. vacuum clean- er, lswn mower. washer. electric fan and other household devicel. in- sist on the old reliable 3-iu-One Oil. At good stores everywhere. For your protection. look to: the trade lurk “Mn-One" printed in Red on - when. In every line ot endeavor there " always a. Ietrder--amt countleu tol- lowers. The tield ot household lub. rication is no exception. Unto» tunately the general public doeln’t always appreciate the difference be. tween the real thlng and the “just as good"-turt household experts do. by Itself. "ittetasgitad'l.eil sayshbriutioumrt ISSUE No, i3C..F3-2 England cost tor Insurance on "That alone belong. to you Vim-l you have begtoqreyd."-Vtunumt. “Giving does not impoveriuh " it the service of our Ink". neither doe. withholding enrich t"r"-ir'r Baker Eddy. "Gm. are n gold that adorn an temple: (no. I. Hi. tho tannin this “nonle- the otld."--Burkitt. October is nowhere so much itself an among the Hinksey elms. The trees. whether they stand alone or in socie- ties, are most perfect in autumn. Some. thing in the soil. or climate. preserves their farewell hues as in a protracted sunset. Looking " them at nightfall. it Is hard to believe that they have been amidst ten thousand sunsets and remained the same; for they ponder great matters. and not only in the autumn. but in May, when the silence is startled try the gurgling laughter of the hen cuckoo. When spring cornea into the land. I remember a mulberry. that suspended its white blossom. among black boughs. over a shining lawn " the also ot the city; and the bells that in March or April seemed to be in league with spring. as we heard them from the Ilelds. And how well a conversation would grow and blosso- between Headiuton and Wheatley or Osney and Eatott'.--Protn "Oxford," Painted by John Pulley-love. Described by Edward Thomas. “Ho give: uric. who (he: quick- ir."--. “For the will and not tho gift makes the giver."~boulu. Remember-Edison nu annull- "my. quot in audacity. Ind yet more up "eitr, and always .trdaeitr'.--Da6 Rest la a meaua. not an end. We rest that " may work and work better. The teat ot a holiday in in what it does tor no in the way a! reinvigoration and inspiration tor the work that waits. July and August are to many thousand. vacation months. and September calla them back to work. It ought to be e welcome call to everyone. Nothing worse could happen to us than have no work to do--to have a vacation all the time. We need work to develop our powers. It in by action that we grow. Skill in any department ot life in the result ot practice. Tasks may seem lrksome. but every one in an opportunity. and hears a gift ot God tor as which We can only get by accepting It and doing it. To ahrlnk from the duties which come to ill in our common calling. how- ever dull and wearisom. they may be, in not only lndolence and cow- ardice, it In also robbing our on! liven ot many helpful and uplifting 1ttt1uettCetr. W. should come back to work, therefore. after a holiday, with u. dour and enthusiasm. We should have the Susplntion of gratitude-m rent from he", mks certain], Is something to be thanktul tor. Our "canon. it it bu been spent In t sensible way. has retttled our grain. od fountain: ot vitality. giving no new strength tor the work before u. I seen sunsets like thou whlch mt. Wytlum Wood Ind Marley Wood great purple clouds. And the clonal overhead more solid an: they. How plenum no Cherwell and Eveulode. and thou angry mm waters at Ferry Hittuertl When I no the ruin a white cloud and Shotover Hill . grey cloud. I see- nover before to have seen the sweet. neas ot rain. Gems from Life's Scup-booli l suppose that ivy in: the same graceful ways on all old unwary. yet I have caught myself remetntterfrtg, " it it were unique, that perfect welent Ivy that makes an arcade of green along the all of Godsww nunnery. And in the same Wt)‘. Above all other. I remember the pound wlllowa that lean thig wny 1nd that along the Ox- ford streams-lib, trrehistorio sculp- ture in winter. But in summer . green one and full or volcel. Never In“ GIVING “The more we [in to ottterr, 1h. more we no Ittrrq-d"--uo-0e. There is . beautiful. sloping acre. not thr Item Oxford. which 3 number of greet elm: divide into aisles and one. while at one end a curving how- thern and mule hedge completes them with " Ipse. Towsrds Oxford. the - is almost shut in by remote elms. On one side I hesr the soft sod sibllsnt an at seeking grass before the scythe. The rein end Inn alternat- ln; are like two lovers in dialogue; the rain smiles from the hills when the sun shlnes. sad the sun also while the rein is tellinx. When the rain is not over. and the sun bu interrupted. the night, insole sings. when the Ititchtvort I. starry 'mldst long gross that bathe. the sweeping branches ot thorn and hrler. . . . A potent. warm. And not quite soothing perfume creeps over the grass. and makes the lay blossom something elvish. I turn and look east. Almost " once. all these things are happily composed into one pleasant sense and are but A Irma to s tower and three spires ot Oxford. like cloud. --hut the sky is suddenly cloudless. The Oxford Country What we mum in order to co.- Back to Work AUDACITY --Dr. J. R. llller. that! t an bl!" BI " Th "In nd