aris Notes 1@» the ha. W P unt Partial identification of the mosses, woods and plants has been mada by Dr. F. K. Butters, professor of botany; Dr. Rosendah! and Robert Humphrey, assistant in the department, who has charge of the specimens. Bits of wood, clogging a pump, brought to light the remains. Wifeâ€""You didn‘t marry a CoOK!:~ He (bitterly)â€"â€""No I found that out & long time ago." Specimens found are in perfect conâ€" dition, preserved under the ground morraine, or earthly residue, of the lce sheet which crept down on the reâ€" xion now the Middle Western States near the end of the Pleistocene era. Minneapolis. â€" Pre â€" glacial â€" plant specimens that grew 50,000 years ago in Minnesota are being examined by University of Minnesota botanists.. The plants, woods and mosses were found at the bottom of a former well near Bronson, Minn. It is the most extensive bed of preâ€"glacial plants ever discovered in the state, accordâ€" ing to Dr. C. 0. Rosendah], head of the botany department. | Preâ€"Glacial Plants Found in Minnesota Well United States, making a lecture tour and writing for the Petit Parisien. No formal presentation could be made, but the news was cabled to him. This prize, the gift of Mr. Ralph Beaver Strassburger, is awarded each year for the best article or series of articles tending to promote cordial Francoâ€" American relations. ‘ autumn. It consists of bright red {rousers with a blue stripe and a black coat. Led by their commandant, tieneral Frere, they have been proâ€" ‘esting against the sky blue uniform ever since it was instituted in 1914. Fhen, it was only after strong proâ€" tests that they were allowed to retain their traditional cockade of red and white plumes, which will, of course, ontinue to be worn. Writer Wins Amity Award The Strassburger Prize for 1932 has been awarded to M. Philippe Soupault for his articles on Francoâ€"American friendship which appeared during 1931 in the Paris papers L‘Europe Nouvelle, Vu, and Bravyo. At the time of the award, M. Soupault was in the Scottish bagpipes, Icelandic flutes and Wesh trumpets will lend color to the International Gorsedd of Breton Bards to be staged in Pontivy, Brit tany, July 29 to 31 inclusive. Bards who write in the Breton languageâ€" Irom Scotland, Wales, Iceland, Engâ€" !and and Canadaâ€"will assemble for their annual poetry contest, and prizes will be awarded to the Breton singers who bost chant the glories of Druidic traditions. ‘Twenty choirs will comâ€" pâ€"lc in a Breton eisteddfod; and exâ€" position of Breton art will be given, while in the streets "On with the dance" will be the slogan, as ancient Breton instruments play folk music. During the Gorsedd, Breton will be the chief language spoken in Pontivy, especially since many foreign deleâ€" zates are unacquainted with French, but do speak a patois which is related to Breton,. Mistletoe, which figures in UDruidic symbolism, will be sold by Breton girls to visitors. Uniforms at Saintâ€"Cyr The cadets of Saintâ€"Cyr, France‘s Military Academy, are to be allowed to resume their old uniform next autumn. It consists of bright red The Comedie Francaise, like the Opera, possesses a valuable and large collection of theatrical objets d‘art, but, unlike the Opera, it has no space to display .is collection adequately, Portraits and busts of bygone actors by famous artists such as Houdon and Le Moyne are set out in the corridors, and can be viewed only by people atâ€" tending a performance. It was the custom at one time for a wellâ€"known artist or sculptor to make a reproducâ€" tion of some famous actor in the troupe of the Comedie Francaise, and In exchange to have a "life" admission to that theatre. There is also a large collection of manuscripts, and these are stored in a narrow corridor, toâ€" gether with display bills, magazines and photographs. reealed at a recent meeting of the stockholders that the gross receipts amounted to nearly 7,000,000 frances ($210,000) for the year 1931, and that the net profits were almost 3,000,000 francs. _ M. Citroen, who uses the tower for advertising his motorcars by electrical designs, pays 300,000 francs a year for this privilege. Other Versailles‘ Oldest Treeâ€"Eiffel Tower Shows Profit Paris.â€"It is said that there is only one tree in the forest of Versailles which was there in the time of Louis XIV, According to a writer in the newspaper L‘Echo de Paris, this is due to the activities of Napoleon when he was First Consul of France. He then needed great quantities of wood io make rafts and convoys for his proâ€" posed invasion of England, All the forests in France were expected to contribute to this vast store and even Versailles was not excepted. The surviving tree is a giant oak. Itakes Money The Kiffel Tower is not only a unique feature of Paris, but it is also a moneyâ€"making proposition. It was Art Gallery in Theatre Bagpiper and Boards of income are admission fees, aurant and the sale of souveâ€" Paris Notes cook!" The Angloâ€"Irish idiom is naturally ‘ormed and logically constructed; every deviation from the standard English tongue has its reasons and its explanation. "Are you selling the horse today?" The speaker of corâ€" rect English has to move the emphasis from one word to another of the last four according to the information he seeks. Four successive positions ef the chief stress give four different On the other hand, the bureau said that four tobacco companies which deâ€" creased their aggregate investment in newspaper space in 1931 showed a 45 per cent. decline in combined net earnings. Of four leading tobacco manufacâ€" turers who increased newspaper space in 1931, three showed an increase in earnings, and one a slight decline from the high net of a year precedâ€" ing, Aggregate expenditures of these four companies in newspaper advertisâ€" ing were increased from $20,000,000 in 1930 to $26,000,000 in 1931, and agâ€" gregate earnings increased from $105,â€" 200,000 to $10,300,000. [ One automobile concern which inâ€" creased its newspaper budget 33 per cent., the bureau announced, showed a 40 per cent. increase in earnings during 1931. A manufacturer of elecâ€" tric refrigerators spent $200,000 last year in newspaper space, and dollar sales for the year were 460 per cent. of sales in 1930. U. S$. Publishers‘ Association Announces Results of Bureau‘s Survey New York.â€"Many companies have maintained and even increased their earnings by constant newspaper adâ€" vertising, the American Newspaper Publishers Association said in anâ€" nouncing the results of a survey by its bureau of adertising. Newspaper Ads Increased Sales Heartsâ€"9, 8 Clubsâ€"4 Diamondsâ€"10, 9, 8, 7 Spadesâ€"none a singleton, it must be in spades. Therefore, the spades must be divided 5â€"4â€"3â€"1. His heart and diamond holdâ€" ing and that of the dummy also indiâ€" cated a possibility that these suits were divided 5â€"4â€"3â€"1.* Z, therefore, who was a very fine player, decided to Auction Bidding No score, rubber game. Z dealt and bid one spade. _ All passed and A opened the six of clubs. Z% won the trick with the nine of clubs and proâ€" ceeded to look the hand over. What would you figure as to probable disâ€" tribution and _ correct play of the hand? % should note that his own hand and Y‘s were divided 5â€"4â€"3â€"1. He also noted that A opened the six of clubs and that B played the deuce. If B had held two clubs, he would have started an echo to show his partner: that he could trump the third round: of clubs, so his play of the deuce indiâ€" cated a singleton. Z, therefore, figâ€" ured that the clubs were divided 5â€"4â€"3â€"1, He held five spades and his dummy three, so that, if A also held Heartsâ€"K, 6, 5 Clubsâ€"none Diamondsâ€"K, Q, 6 Spadesâ€"10 If spades are trumps and Z is in the lead, how can Y Z tricks against any defense? Solution in the next article. Heartsâ€"J, 9, 6 Clubsâ€"Q, 10, 8, 6, Diamondsâ€"Q, J, Spadesâ€"7 Mutre, Contract, Heartsâ€"A, Q, 4 original bi Clubsâ€"A, Q, 7 ner should Diamondsâ€"A, K, 3 The w1 Spadesâ€"J, 8, T 2 tioned the The Professor should have sized up | articles. the hand as follows: "A can have only | theory tha four clubs, for he has led the three lation exis and the deuce is in dummy. ‘There | tion of th fore, A B should only make two club| the hands tricks and two spade tricks,. If the| one of the diamonds are evenly divided, I can go| hands. T game without finessing the queen of | well exem; hearts. If they don‘t break, then 1| the followi will have to finesse the queen of cently in ; Heartsâ€"Q Clubsâ€"K, J, 7, 4 Diamondsâ€"A, 8, 7, 6, 2 Spadesâ€"5, 4, 3 Greek a, â€"~."6 "204, the Professor of Greek at one of our wellâ€"known universities bid one no trump at Auc tion, all passed and A opened the three of clubs, The Professor‘s hand and the dummy‘s hand are as follows: Heartsâ€"10, 6, 5 Clubsâ€"9, 4, 3 Diamondsâ€"Q. 10, 4, 2 Spadesâ€"Q, 10, 9 In the lollowlng hand ot.Gmk at one of a Heartsâ€"A, 8, 4, 2 Clubsâ€"A, 9, 3 Diamondsâ€"4 Spadesâ€"A, K, Q, 10 Problem Heartsâ€"4 Clubsâ€"8, 7, 6 Diamondsâ€"none Spadesâ€"A, J, 7 ARIICLE No. 30 Nor recipes for turning Plum blossoms into plums, The spring is never quite on time, And yet it always comes. â€"Marjorie Barstow Greenbile. She seldom is quite accurate Nor often punctual, * She keeps on hand no pecks and Never criticize anything at a chari bazaar. You can never tell who ma« (From Poetry World) Nature has no mathematics Such as banks and merchants use Sbhe cannot make ber unshod feet Walk a straight line in shoes. _ In reply to the query : "Does it rain here?" the native says, "It bees rainâ€" ing," or "It does be ~aining." He is m king an attempt to reach an exactâ€" titude that is possible in Gaelic; in that language there is a distinct form of the very "to be" to indicate the habitual, the frequentative tense. The Irishman who has the tradition of Gaelic, even though he may never have heard it spoken, feels the want of the frequentative tense in English, ind he attempts to supply it. And so "bees" ard "does be" are used as a distinct tense in the Angloâ€"S .xon idiom.â€"P2â€" draic Column, in "The Road Round Ireland." meanings to the question. The Angloâ€" Irish idiom, which in this matter folâ€" lows the locution of the Gaelic, has ro need of accentuating. Its user would say (a) "Is it you who are selling tre horse?" or (b) "Is it seling the horse you are?" or (c) "Is it the horse you are selling?" or (d) "Is it today you are selling the horse?" "In other words," says a wellâ€"informed writer, "where the English purist depends upon stress to bring out his meaning, the Irish idiom employs construction for the same purpose, and much more effectively," | To measure large and small. play accordingly. At the second trick he l{d the ace of hearts and then a low‘heart, trumping in dummy. . He then led a low club, which B trumped. On this trick, Z played his ace of clubs, so that he could finesse the king jack later. No matter what B now plays, Z must make a small slam. Figure it out. The hand is remarkâ€" able in that, after the first lead, the distribution of all four suits can be so accurately determined. It is also a remarkable illustration of the Law of Symmetry. All of the four suits and all of the four hands have the same distribution, 5â€"4â€"3â€"1. It is the first time that the writer has ever noted such a unique hand. Contract Bidding | Z should bid two spades and Y three! spades. A and B always pass. Z should now bid five spades and, if Y is a sporty bidder, he will bid six spades. It is a tossâ€"up; but, as alâ€" ready pointed out, Z can make six spades against any defense. it C ie Pn SereR," tioned the Law of Symmetry in these articles. _ This law is, in effect, a theory that there is a symmetrical reâ€" lation existing between the distribuâ€" tion of the four suits in any one of the hands and the distribution of any one of the four suits amoug the four hands. This symmetrical relation is well exemplified by the distribution of the following hand, which came up reâ€" cently in actual play: i D) . 300 .. 6 +2 ‘amonds, They were evenly divided so that in this way he could have made game. If the Professor had been playing Contract, he should have made an original bid of two no trump and partâ€" ner should have bid three no trump. mepo x)(E EE niehing 7 B0 P CCCDS T0 FRC TCRUT, TCG the heart, finessed the queen and A won the trick with the king of hearts. It was now impossible for the Proâ€" fessor to go game as he had to lose two club tricks, two spade tricks and one heart trick. He should have set up his spades and then have played for the drop in diamonds. They were evenly divided so that in this way he could have made game. hearts," Unfortunately. he failed to figure out the hand as outlined, and as soonhu he got dummy in the lead, led #ha LS s ud 3 t the hearts." How to play Bridge maont nm ie writer has occasionally menâ€" DW Es of Symmetry in these Heartsâ€"K, 10, 7, 5, 3 Clubsâ€"2 Diamondsâ€"K, 10, a Spadesâ€"J, 9, 8, 2 Heartsâ€"Q, J, 10 Clubsâ€"Q, J Diamondsâ€"3 Spadesâ€"8 win all of the Size 16 requires 4% yards of 39â€" inch .ncterial with 2% yards of ribâ€" bon for sash. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such Style No. 2854 may be had in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Naturally the flowered chiffons, dotâ€" ted chiffons, crepe silks and voiles are lovely for to fashion it. There is a definite slimming quality about this model with its crossâ€"closure bodice and new necklace capelet that is brought dowr. to the waistline. It‘s so versa u ! It will meet forâ€" mal afternoons as graciously as Sunâ€" day night affairs, dinner engagements and those informal dances at the club. Here‘s a charming dress in flatter ing beige lace. BABY‘S OWN TABLETS "At the first signs of peevishness or illâ€" ne.ian:ebot.tryiunoï¬c’i{m- mer, I give baby Baby‘s ‘ablets, and in a short time he is well and smilâ€" ing his thanks", writes Mrs. Alton Dangerous Days & Is Wearing BY ANNEBELLE WORTHINGTON HWlustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fuy nished With Every Pattern elms that em>ower the (otint;'};ide for _ After repeated visits to Shakeâ€" speare‘s town, the traveller begins to _observe more closely than perhaps at first he did, its everyday life and its environment. I have ra.>} ~d through fragrant fields to Clifford Church, and strolled through green lanes to romanâ€" tic Preston, and climbed Borden Hil}, and stood by the Mayâ€"poloe on Welford Common and j»mneyed ‘>n; the botâ€" tleâ€"haunted crest of Edgehill, and restâ€" ed at venera‘ > Com, tonâ€"Wyn: tes and climbed the hills of Welcombe t» L:er into the ° sening .alleys of the Avon and bear the cuckooâ€"1 te echoed and reackoe‘ from rhododendron groves and from the sr *, nysterious In all England there is not a cleanâ€" er, moreé decorous, or more restfu) town than Stratfordâ€"uponâ€"Avon, and even to look upon it is to receive a suggestion of peace and comfort. The red brick dwellings shing among the trees, the flowerâ€"spangled meadows stretch away, in every direction, and the green hills, sprinkled with copse and villa, glimmer through mist, all around the lovely Valo ‘ the Red Horse:â€"\W:l:zome in the north, with its conspicuous monuments; Meon in the south, rugged and bold, Red Hill in the west, and far away eastward, beyond a wide, smiling area of farms and villages, the crests of Edgehill, at Radley and Rising Sun, where once the armies of King Charles the First confronted their Roundhead foe. The face of England can wear many exâ€" pressions, but when propitious, it is a face which to see is to love and noâ€" where is it more propitious than in stately Warwickshire, and around the home of Shakespeare. What New York Stratford Gleanings â€" *32 Hamburg, Germanyâ€"Because of a series of robberies at stations, the Hamburg Elevated Railway has armâ€" ed its employees and allowed them time off for target practice. Teach me, little playmate, Teach me to be gay, For I‘ve felt your laughter Lightly sweep away Doubts and cares of heart and mind, Mists before a golden wind! Is cradled in your eyes And their trustful look can gi Ample faith by which to live. A universe of wisdom (For G.) Iemh me, little playmate, It had been suggested that the burying was simply a device for the preservation of the butter in the abâ€" sence of salt, but it is probable that proloaged burial, for at any rate a few years, "ripened" the butter and improved its flavor. "What is Brown‘s score*" "He can‘t find the holes. He says they must be phychological depresâ€" sions." The custom of burying the butter in peatbogs was widespread, for it has been found in several parts of the Western Highland. and many in Ireland. The keg and its contents, which weighed about 100 pounds, recalled the days when the farming peoples of the Highiands left ‘their villages in spring to migrate to the upland sheilings. Here they and their doâ€" mestic stock remained during the summer, and during that time accuâ€" mulated stores of butter and cheese which were to last throughout the winter. The butter, during its immersion for centuries, had changed into a hard, solid mass, with a somewhat rancid smell and greasy to the touch, like a piece of frencp chalk. It tast. ed, Professor Ritchie assured the audience, like slightly sweetened talâ€" low candles. Aberdeen, Scotland.â€"A remarkable find of bogâ€"butter centuries old from Skye was described by â€" Professor James Ritchie, F.S.A.Scot., of the University of Aberdeen, at a meeting of the Soriety of Antiquaries of Scot. land. . The wooden keg containing the butter was discovered, during the cutting of peats by Mr. Hugh Mackay, at a depth of six feet. The keg was hollowed from a treeâ€"trunk. ‘ patterns as you wani. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrup it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Butter Buried Centuries MDoas e 2o ueney OR Vp in 1746. The cik frame to support the bells, however, had been in the tower more| than‘ three hundred years. â€" From "Gray Days and Gold," by Wilâ€" liam Winter. only one of the many services that he has rendered to the old home of Shakespeare. Standing in the cellar of this house I saw that its walls are four feet thick, _ Also I saw many pieces of old oak which 1 was inform:â€" ed had been taken from the bellâ€"tower of the Shakespeare Church in 1887, when a new frame was installed to sustain a chime of heavy bells, and‘ which would, eventually, be converted into various carvings, to tempt the taste of enthusiasts of Shaespeare. In the poet‘s time the bellâ€"tower was surmounted, not as now by a graceful stone spire, but by m spire of timber, covered with lead. That ~â€" removed, and was replaced by the stone spire, The building that forms the southâ€" east corner of High Street and Bridge Street in Stratford was once occupied by Thomas Quincy . , . who marâ€" ried the poet‘s daughter, Judith, and an inscription appears upon it, stating that Judith lived in it for thirtyâ€"six. years. Richard Savage, that comâ€" petent, patient, diligent student of the church registers and other documentâ€" ary treasures of Warwickshire, furâ€" nished proof of this fact, from investiâ€" gation of th: town records, that being miles and miles around. This is the everyday life of Stratford,â€"fertile farms, garnished meadows, avenues of white and.scâ€"s* hawt:orn, masses of milky snowball, hoeysuckle, and syrinâ€" ga loading the soft air with fragrance, chestnuts dropping blooms of pink and white, and laburnums swinging their golden censers in the breeze. Rail Men Taught to Shoot To a Love, in the Chicago From the point of view of the hat seller, two heads are better than one. A traveling cannery to aid, in conâ€" serving surplus foodstuffs is an originâ€" al idea being promoted in Josephine County (Ore.) Boiler, pressure cookâ€" er, tin cans, sealer and other needed equipment are being assembled on & fourâ€"wheel trailer which will shortly establish a schedule for visits to variâ€" ous communities. It is expected that a majority of the 445 faniilies enrolled in the yearâ€"round garden project w!ll‘ take advantage of this profitable canâ€" nery to preserve their garden pro-‘ duce. Teache~â€""Your trohble is you don‘t address the ball properly." Wouldâ€"Be Golferâ€"*"Well, 1 was poâ€" lite as long as ° could be." The business man who retired to escape salesmen has returned to his office to ay.‘4 houseâ€"toâ€"house canvasâ€" sers, Horseradish is now being brigtened up with the aid of beet juice. It is now a horseradish of another color. Tom (grunting)â€"*"I‘ve had it about six months; bi" we call it a baby." Jerryâ€"*"I pity you, then. I‘ve got it awfully bad. I‘ve been affliicted now for about three years,. The doctor calls it ‘neuria insomnia paxalaxitis‘." Tomâ€""I am. _ Some nights I don‘t sleep three hours." Jerryâ€"Tom, are you â€"yer troubled with sleeplessness?" It may be, as a woman‘s college inâ€" quiry shows, that men get mad twice as often as women, but don‘t the woâ€" man break even by getting twice as mad ? The Wifeâ€""Don‘t you think we ought to get mother a little present to take back with her when she goes? Can you suggest anything?" The Bruteâ€"*"What about a nice big jar of vanishing cream?" port Take It Or Leave It It‘s a consolation to know that those who live by taxes shall perish by taxes. It would serve some of these hoarders right, too, if they forgot where they hid it. Only exceptional men can run enterprises on idealistic lines and make them pay. The averâ€" age person‘s imagination is what enâ€" ables physicians to make a comfort: able living Believe it, please, there are fellows so tight that they regret it when the pores function. Buying her too big a stone has put more than one boy on the rocks. Maybe so many society girls go on the stage because it has become a matter of good form. | Sherlockâ€"*"Well, you have forgotten to put on your trousers." Sherlockâ€""Ah, Watson! 1 see you have put on your summer underwear," Watsonâ€""Marvelous, Holmes! How did you deduce that?" A failure who understands why he lost, and blames the right person, who is himself, bas some elements of greatness, Hostâ€""When I was a young man, 1 always said I‘d never be satisfied unâ€" til I‘d smothered my wife in diaâ€" monds." Guestâ€""Most laudable. But why in diamonds?" And her beautiful figure, ob, my! By her glorious bair I was bitten. She‘s really the charmingest girl, sir, In her arms any man would find bliss, sir. But what struck me most about her Was her hand when I started to kiss her. Badly Smitten I was charmed by the look in her eye, By her nightingale volce I was Banish tce Fly ~«â€"«AEROXON Edna Wallace Hopper may have all that youthful complexion she claims to have, but she should have that voiceâ€"of hers filed or scraped. Loaferâ€""Will you marry me?" Working Girlâ€"*"I‘m afraid not." Loaterâ€""Aw, come on, be a supâ€" A Traveling Cannery ONTARIO ARCHWE TORONTO Children should not be punished for bed.â€"wetting, 1t is caused by weakness of kidneys or bladder. Mothersâ€"will find my home treatâ€" ment helpful for their little ones. Send no money, but write today for Free Trial Treatment _ Adult® with urinary weakness will also find my treatment beneficial. Box 25 Windsor, Ont. For Sale by Leading Druggists The British Museum has now ac» quired this Cornish treasure trove from the heir to the throne, It conâ€" sists of #ix bracelets and two torques â€"twisted gold probably worn as bracelets. _ On the bullion value of the hoard, which was discovered by & laborer, a considerable sum will be paid to the finder, Quietâ€"About the hardest thin the world for a woman to keep. Londonâ€"The discovery of gold bracelets 3,000 years old under a hedgebank in a Cornish village has drawn attention to a littleâ€"known privilege enjoyed by the Prince of Wales, As the Duke of Cornwall he is the only one of the King‘s subâ€" jects in England to have the rights of treasure trove. ~ORRECT THE CAUSE OF CHILD‘S FAILING Prince is Entitled To All Treasure T Nud i COs P PR GV Cp mare I: + equipment and many extras. Thim cruiser with its two cabins and its well equipped galley is an unusually comfort» able boat for weekâ€"ends or ionger cruises for four to six people. 1t is exâ€" ceptionally seaworthy and has cruised al‘ over the Great Lakes, 1t has a algn class and very economica) 60 horsepower, sixâ€"cylinder power plant with complete electric lighting throughout and speed of 12 to 14 miles per hour. it is a 1pG= clal paint job and very attractive in ape pearance. Owner will sacrifice for nalf its original cost. H. Watkins, 73 W. Adelaide St., Toronto. es 100 e weee RICH R DsON pouBus TABIN eruiser, mabout thirty feet, in use allogether only four or five months in two seasons; complete equipment includs Ing carpets, bed and table linen, chinay glassware and silver as well As al) marâ€" Py . e ulsnd CC O fanth arau @e2°0RC+ 2C"70000 any Ume, Month olds, 18c. Pullets, all ages, g:o‘. (t)ur'-nllhod. Model Hatchery, Kite s n uP tb idwaczsren iB ic id se {.‘ PAPER in Ontario which 1 could ease for a term with purchase in view, Send particulars to Box 12, Wilson Pub= lishing Co., Ltd., Toronto. ALESMEN WwaANTED To REPR § SENT _ the "Old Reliable Fonth urseries." . Exclusive territory, libes commissions, New Specialties. â€" Stone Wellington, ‘Toronto 2. WEEKLY NEWSPAPER WawTEp. ww 220 mc AVE $2 PER HUNDRED. LEG= HORNS, 6 cents; Rocks White, ::k: Rl:l. O“oent-; delivered any time, nth alas mCns EOE VANDERHOOF & CO., M _LOOKING FPOR WEEKLY in a ananes C222R 1 Acknowledged as a Protection Cutieura Soap MOTOB BOAT FOR SALE against Shin Trowbles SALESMEN waXTEp. 10e 2o¢