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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1919-5-1, Page 2G, D. McTAGGART D. McTAGGAR'$ IVIcIaggart. -Bross, BAIS i A GENERAL BANKING I3if1ST- NE$S TRANSACTED, NOTES DISCOUNTED, DRAFTS ISSU3vD- TNTEREST ALLOW E'1) O•N DE-, POsITs,w„ SALE NOT13S PUB,- OFIASED, _ _ EANCE • — NOTARY PUBL1'c, CGNVEY- ANCER, FINANCIAL REAL ESTATE AND FIRE INSUR- ANCE AGENT. REPRESENT- ING .14.FIRE INS17RANCE. COMPANIES. DIVISION COURT OFFICE', CLINTON. W. 1ERYDONE, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC, ETC. Office— Sloan Block--CLIN'rON DR.GUNN Office cases at his residence, tor, High and Kirk streets. DR. J. C. GANDIER Office Hours: -1.30 to 3.30 p.m., 7.30 to 9,00 p.m. Sundays 12.30 to 1.30 p.m: Other hours by appointment only, Officeand Residence—Victoria St. CHARLES B. HALE, Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commissioner, Etc. REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE Issuer of Marriage Licenses HURON STREET, — CLINTON. GARFIELD McMICHAEL, , Licensed Auctioneerer for the County of Huron. Sales con- ducted in any part of the county. Charges moderate and satisfac- ••ticn guaranteed. Address: Sea- . forth, R. Rs No. 2. Phone 18 on 236, Seaforth Central. . ' GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can be made for Sales Date at The News -Record, Clinton, ,or • by calling Phone 13 on 157. - Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed. B. R. HIGGINS Box 127, Clinton - Phone'100, • Agent or The Huron & Erie Mortgage Cor. poration and Tile• Canada Trust Company, Comm'er H. 0. of J., Conveyancer, Fire and Tornado Insurance, ••NotarY Public Also a numbeer of good farms for sale. :At Brucefi.eaoeld on Wednesda Y h I week. GRA of Eti" �_'� Lr Markets of the World Rreallstuuni. '1.'orotito Ap, 29,••�-•Manitoba Wheat —No. 1 Northern, $2,24%; No, 2 Northern, $2,21%; No. 3 Northern, $2.17%; No, 4 wheat, $2.111%a, in store l' ort ` 'illfatn. Manitoba og.ts—No. 2 0,W 75%el No. 3 C.W. 73%c'; No, 1 feed,, 70v,(se No. 2 Seed, G7 7 e, to store Fort Wil- lia?n, Manitoba barley No, 3 C,W., $106%e; No, 4 C,W, $1;01%c; rojee 4cd 94%c; feed, 94e; in store Fort William. Ameriear corn—No 3 yellow, $1,85;' Na, 4 yellow, 81.82, nominal, tragic Toronto, prompt shipment,' Ontario oats—No. 2 white, 70 to 76e; No. 3 white, 71 to 73c, according to freights outside. Qntario wheat -No. 1 Winter, •per car lot, 80;14 to $2,20; No, 2 do, $3,11 '.9910. No. 3 do, $2,07 to $2,15 f.o.b,. 4151/1 TABLE'—. . -,Train will arrive at 'and depart, front Clinton Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODEBICI3 DIV, Goingeast, depart . .6.18 a.m. t 14 44 2.52 p,ni, Going West, ar. 11..10, dp. 11.10 a.m. 0 ar. 6.08, dp. 6:4'5 p.m. a „ • 11.1'8 p.m, LONDON, HURON & BRUCE DIy. Going South, ar. 8,30, dp. 8.30 a.m. n a a 9.15 p.m, Going North, depart 6.40 p•mt 11.07, 11.11 a.tn, The J([cgillop Mutual Fire Insurance Company p Head once, Seaforth, Ont. DIRECTORY : President, Ja:mes Connolly, Godcrich; Vice., James ,Evans; Beechwood; Sec. -Treasurer, Thos. 11. }lays, Sea. forth. Directors: George McCartney, Sea. forth; D. F. bicGregt•r, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, Walton; Wm.. Rini, .Sea. forth; 'D4, McEwen, Clinton; Robert Ferries, Harlock; John Bennewetr, Brodhagen; Jas, Connolly, Goderich. . Agents: Alex Leitch; Clinton; 3, W, pilo, Godcrich; Ed. }Iinchley, Seaforth; 'W, Chesney, Egniondville; 13. G. Jar. math,'Brodhagen. Any money to be paid ;a may he paid to Moorish Clothing Co,, Clinton, or at Cutt's Grocery, Goderieh. Parties desiril,g ,to effect insurance or transact other business will be promptly attended to on application to any of the above officers addressed to their respective post offica. Losses irspected 'Ly the director who lives :,corest tho scene. Clinton Nest: ,- Record CLINTON, ONTARIO: Terms of subscription—$1.60 per year, in advance to Canadian addresses; $2.00 to the U.S. or other foreign countries. No paper discontinued until all arrears are paid unless at the option of the publisher. The ditto to which every subscription is paid 15 denoted on the label. Ativertisieg rates --Transient adver tisenients, 10 bents per nonpareil line for first insertion and 5 cents pe: line for each subsequent inser- tion. Small advertisements not to exceed one inch, well as "Lost," "Strayed," or "Stolen," etc., insert- ed once Tei 35 cents, and each subsea quoin insertioh10 mite, Communications intended for publico Coe must, as a guarantee of good faith, bo accompanied by the name of "the writer. G I. HALL, M. I:, CLAIM, Propriota , Fait,* THUMB LORE, The More Bain Yee Have the Longer 1N:11 13e Your TiWmb, T'olir tiluntli is a sort' interesting snbiect to all auodical students of nerve troubles, There are pointe which could be i;ivea by the hundred to prove the importances 07 this member; but the most extraordinary is that which is termed 111 medical work as the "thumb oe11tre" 07 the brain, It is a well-known fact .amongst nerve speelalists that by an etcaxnine tion of the thumb: they can toll if the .patient to affected, or likely to bo ef- fected, 13y Tenerife or not, fts Elle thumb will indicate this a leg time before there is any trace of the disease In any outer part of the system, If there is any trace, or ouch aflegtiou is indicated, an operation is at once per- fprined on the thumb centro Of. the brain, and if the operatloli is success' Shipping points, according to freights. fel—which le proved by an examine- Qntario wheat—No. 1 Spring, $2.09 tion of the thumb—then' the Patient is. to $2:17; No. 2 do, $2.Q6 to $214; No, saved. 3 do, $2,02 to $2.10 f.o.b. shipping Another very interesting point is points, according'to freights. - the old theory of midwives—which.is Peas—No. 2, $2,00, nominal, ae- easily seen to contain a great deal of truth. They held that if an infant was inclined to keep the thumb inside the fingers for some days atter birth, it foreshadowedsome great pliyeical deg licgoy If, seven days after birth, the thumb was still....Govered, then there was good reason to'suspect that the child was mentellyt delicate. When visiting the asylums of the country, you cannot fail to notice that all congenital idiots have very poor, weals thumbs; in fact, some are 'so weak as not to be properly developed, even in shape. These facts are remarkable, taken in conjunction with Sir Charles Bell's discovery that in the Band of the ehim- panzee—wlticli is the nearest ap- Preach to the human—the thumb. though well formed in every way, if measured, does not roach the base of the first finger. The deduction is, therefore, that the higher and better - proportioned the thumb, the more the intellectual faculties rule, or vice ver- sa. Wo' find in the war history of the Children of Israel instances of their cutting off the thumbs of their ene- mies. It is a well-known fact that in inany briental nations, if the prisoner, when brought before his captors, covers his thumb with his fingers, he Butter --Fresh dairy, choice, 50 to, is, i11 dumb and eloquent fashion, giv- 520; creamery, solids, 63 to 64c. nee up his will and independence, and begging for mercy. Gipsies, in their judgment of character, make the thumb the foundation for all their re- marks. May 1 the Earliest Date Germans Can Reach Versailles A despatch from Paris says:—The German Government has officially ad- vised the allied and associated Gov- ernments that the German plenipo- tentiaries would not leave Berlin be- fore April 28, and that they would reach Versailles May 1, at the earliest. Seven newspapermen will accom- pany the plenipotentiaries, the des- patch added. cording to frei'ht3 outside. Barley—Malting, 97c to $1.02, nohtiflal,. Buckwheat—No. 2, $1.10, nominal. Rye—No. 2, $'L60, nominal. Manitoba flour—Government stan- dard, $10.75 to $11, Toronto. • Ontario flour --Government stand- ard', $9.65 to $9.76 in bags• Toronto and Montreal, prompt shipment in jute bugs. Millfeed—Car lots, delivered Mon- treal freights, bags included; Bran, $42 to $45 per ton; shorts, $40 to $45 per ton, good•feed flour, $2.65 to 82.75 per bag. Flay—No. 1, $26 to $28 per ton; mixed, $20 to $24 per ton, track To- ronto, Straw—Car lots, $10 to $11 per tom Country Produce -Wholesale. gutted•—Dairo tubs d rolls, 33 to 400; prints, to 421. Creamery, fresh made prints, 63 to 64e. Eggs—New laid, 42 to 43c. Dressed poultry—Chickens, 30 to 340; roosters, 250; fowl, 30 to 33c; ducklings, 32e; turkeys, 45e; squabs, doz.,,, $6,00. ' Live poultry—Roosters, 22c; fowl, 28 to 33e; ducklings; lb., 35c; turkeys, 35c; chickens, 27e. Wholesalers are selling to the re- tail trade at the following 'prices: Cheese—New, large, 28 to 28%c; twins, 28% .to 29c; triplets, 29 to 29%c; Stilton, 29% to 30c; old, large, 29% to 300; twin, 30 to'30?yc. prints, 65 to Glc. Margarine -301 to 35e. Eggs—New laid, 47 lo 48c; new laid in cartons, 49 to 50c, Dressed poultry—Chickens, 40 to 42c; roosters, ,28 to Sem; fowl, 37 to 38c; turkeys, 45sto 50e; ducklings, lb., 35 to 38c; squabs, doz., $7.00; geese, 28 to 30c. Potatoes—Ontarios, f.o.b. track To- ronto, car lots, $L40; on track out- side, $1.25 to $L30. Beans—Canadian, hand-pick., bus., $4.25 to 34.50; primes, 33 to 38.25; imported hand picked, Burnia or In- dian, 33.50; Limas, 13e. Honey—Extracted clover: 5-111. tin, 25 to 26e lb.• 10-1b. tins, 24% to 26e; 60-1b. tins, 24 o 25c. Buckwheat, 60 -lb. tins, 19 to 20c. Comb: ' 1G -oz., 34.50 to 35 doz.; 10 -oz., 33.50 to 34 doz. Maple products—Syrup, per imper- ial gallon, $2.45 to.$2.50; per 5 im- perial gallons, 32.35 to $2.40; sugar, 18. ..7c. Provisions --Wholesale. Smoked meats—Hams, Medium, 37 to 39c; do, heavy, 33 to 34c; cooked, 52 to 54o; rolls, 32 to 33c; breakfast bacon, 43 to 47c; backs, plain, 46 to 47c; boneless, 52 to 55c. Cured meats -Long clear bacon, 29 to 30c; clear bellies, 28 to 29c. Lard—Pure tierces, 30%. to 31e; tubs, 31 to 31%c.;; -pails, 31,4 to 31%; prints, 32 to 32%c. Compound tierces, 2535 to 25%c; tubs, 2514.. to 261%; pails, 26 to 2635c; prints, 27% to 27eic. Montreal, April 29.—Quotations:— Oats,, .extra No. 1 feed, 841/4c. Flour, Man. Spring, new standard grade, $11 to 311.10. Rolled oats, bag 90 lbs., $3.75 to $9. Bran, 344 to 345.50. Shorts, 345 to $45:50. Hay, no. 2, per ton, car lots, 329. Cheese—Finest ea3terns, 24 to 25c. Butter --Choice creamery, 63 to 64c. Eggs -Fresh, 48 tp 49c. Potatoes --Per bag, car lots, 31.90 to $2.25. Dressed hogs—Abat- toir killed, 830,50 to 331. Lard—Pure, wood pails, 20 lbs. net, 31%c.. Live Stock • Markets. Toronto, April 29.—Good 'heavy steers, $14.25 to $15.50; choice but- cher steers, 313.50 to $14; butchers' cattle, choice, $13.25 to 314; do, good, 312.50 to $12.75; do, medium 37.1.50 to $12; do, common, 39.75 to $10:25;.,.Geeet toss of life among• rlie natives bulls, choices $11.25 to 312; do, mad- of the Belgian Congo as a result of sum, $9.25 to $10; do, cotr.•,"„n, 37.50 an influenza epidemic is reported ill to $8,25; stockeee, 3s:5 to $11,50; nu feeders, e'll.te to $13.50; canners and despatches received Bore, Some esti- cutters, 35.50 to 37; milkers, good to mates place the number of deaths at choice, $90 to $150; do, coin, and med.,600000. , $65 to $75;. springers, $90 to 3150; The Real Heroes. light ewes, $13 to 315; yearlings, $12 to $14; choice lamhs, 318 to 319; spring lambs, 312 to 315; calves, good to choice, 315 to $16; hogs, fed and watered, 322.26; do, weighed off cars, 322,50; do, f.o.b., $21.50. Pleasant Contrast. -.1 CANADA STEAMSHIPS START ATLANTIC SERVICE MAY 24 A deslia.tch from Montreal says:— Canada Steamship Lines, Limited, announce to -day that arrangements have been completed for the inaug- uration of their new Atlantic service and that freight steamer "Bilbster," 3,500 -'tons, will sail from Montreal on May 24 for French ports. After„this first sailing it is intend- ed that a regular ten-day service shall be established. . WONDERFUL WORK OF ROYAL AMR FORCE A despatch from London says:— The Air Ministry has published an astonishing record of the work of the air force during the, war. It states that before the wait the air forces consisted of 272 machines, 197 officers and 1,647 men, while in Oc- tober, 1918, there were 22,171 ma- chines, 27,906 officers and 263,842 men. From July, 1916, to the armistice the air force on the western front brought down 7,054 enemy aircraft, dropped 6,043 tons of bombs and fired over ken and k half million rounds at ground targets, 500.000 CONGO NATIVES HAVE DIED FROM INFLUENZA A despni'rh,. from Brussels says".— "Mike. " "Phwat?” "I was just thud:lee After we get out of the trenclees an' back home again how ,nice an' peaceful that old boiler factory will sound to us," ecaiseessecrm Hear TO Hear Ye! Hear Ye! This is a summons in which every man, woman and child in this commu- nity should be interested. It Is a Call for Cooperation—an appeal to our community Spirit—a plea for us "to get together," Each week we will -show in cartoon and tell in Story the needs of our community --what is hold- ing it back—the things we must over- come to progress and how this can be accotnplllslted by cooperation. We will "ISnocic the Knocker" and "Boost the Booster." We may hlt some of you pretty hard—the truth aI- ways hurts—but it's our most powerful ally for advancement. If you are in- terested in the progress and faturo of our home town you can help by. read• Ing these editorials each week—and co-operating with us in malting this a bigger—better-•-happier—more pros- perous community. INGENUITY OF AN EXPLORER. A Four Thousand Mile Tramp Through the Wilds of Africa. In order to obtain au accurate des- cription of the rout,.taken through an ,In this extraordinary manner Doc - unbroken country;, ,3 ore is required for Dunker tievelledden toot four those - =amount of bard' incessant la- sand miles through a wild country, a bor, of which few of us have any con- large part of which, of course, had caption. never before been•visited by a white For example, William Jrmker, a Rus- mac, and the information thus de - sten rived was of great service to geogra- fiveby birth and an explorer, spentg 6- g, five years in endeavoring to trace the phers. course of tate River Welle, which lies between the headwaters of the Nile 3343,836,801, COST OF 'and the Congo, in Africa, with a view LAST YEAR OF WAR to determining the position of the watershed between the two rivers. A despatch from Ottawa 'says:—A When he was actually on the march, blue book tabled in Parliament gives Doctor Dunker wore a coat designed details of expenditures under the by himself, having numerous ' War' Appropriations Act during the large fiscal year 1918, the last full twelve pockets especially arranged for the months' period of the war. Total handy use of his watch, compass, ane- expenditure for the year was 3343,- relit, 343;roil, thermometer and notebooks. 836,801. The expenditure in Canada From one of the buttons of his coat by the Militia Dep: i5beet was $201, - there hung three pencils—one, red, 288,628, while overseas expenditures for marking Itis route; another, blue, amounted to 3115)381,243. Naval de - for noting the•.rtvers and streams; fence east 39,666,229 during the twelve months' period, while the In - the third, black, for. recording the time winded Soldier•& Commission requir- of starting and .halting, together with ed 311,393,654. The remainder of the all the more notable incidents of the total was spent by the various other day's March.Government departments. In a little notebook, ruled for the - t purpose, the exact time of starting was put clown, and, thereafter, at the end Great l:ionora to be Paid of every five minutes, the direction in, The Body of Editlt Cuvell which he Was proceeding was deter- A despatch from London says:— rained 1 3' a glance at the compass and The body of Edith Cavell, the English carefully noted, while occasionally the nurse 18110 was executed by the Ger- readings of the aneroid and the thee. .mans in 1915 at Brussels, will be urometer were taken, brought to England from Belgium on A brook•crosses the path: With the May 15 and' taken to Westminster blue pencil It is instantly desleseated, Abbey, where cermonies will be held. as well as the direction of its current The body will be brought to Dover and its *treated breadth" and depth, on a warship and will be transported Every change in the character of the on a gun carriage with military country is entered, as from wooded escort to Victoria Station and thence to grass lauds, or from desert to Per- to Westminster Abbey. Internment tile soil. Tho prominent objects met Um will be eiatNorwich, the home town of on e way, with their apparout height the Geniis...— and distance, are all indicated. So, also, are the names of the tribes and One of the mysteries that has ma - sled bellniakers for years was flow the great bell in the bell tower at Peking was ever hung. It was cast in 1415 and weighs fifty=three and a half tons. It measures fifteen feet in height, is nine inches thiels and has a circumference of thirty-four feet at the rim. To hang lit nowadays would require the most up-to-date supper, was to copy all the notes made mechenionl apparatus, and how it kindness, which never failed. Their during the day into a large book—ono Was hung hundreds of years ago is only reward in many cases being the page, gehernlly, though sometimes a mystery `which has never been intense worshipful love of the men," two, being ese3 to reorcl ti Q•ay's solved. —mt-itch. 1f the night were clear, the traveller's work would end with an ob- servation for determining the posi- tion of the camp. This done, he felt that he had earned his right to rest. "The real heroes of this war," said any local information that may have a recently returned officer, "are the been obtained. nursing sisters. Nothing too much cats be said about their courage. their untiring patience, .and their ability. What the Wren had to endure in the front line trenches was child's play to the worts of the nurses after en en- gagement, when the badly sbe.ttered men were brought in and left to their The time and duration of every halt is carefully kept, as it is necessary to know the actual distance gone, Doc- tor Junker's average rate was a little more than three miles an hour. Ween the night camp was reached, the first duty of the explorer, after IS THE EARTH ROUND? When This Question Came Up in an • English Law Court, It will scarcely be believed that the question of the shape of the earth could ever have disturbed the peace- ful atmosphere of the Law Courts, says a London newspaper. Yet in 1879 the question, indirectly, indeed, did come before three learned ud os j g , and the case excited a good deal of interest and amusement. The cir- cumstances were as follows: The Plaintiff, one Hampden, enter- tained the opinion that the world was not round, and Jested an advertise- ment in a paper called "Scientific Opinion,"'- challenging philosophers, divines, and scientific professors to prove the contrary from Scripture, reason, or fact. He deposited 4600 in a bank, to be forfeited to anyone who could prove to the satisfaction of any intelligent referee that there was such a thing as a convex railwny, canal, or lake, The challenge was taken up by no less a person than the late Professor Alfred Russell Wallace, who proved to the satisfaction of the referee the curvature to and fro of the Bedford Level Canal between Witney Bridge and Welsh's Dam (six miles) to the extent of five feet more or less, and the a500 was paid over to him. But he did not keep it The plain- tiff apparently began to see that he was making a fool of himself, and brought an action, and recovered bacl: his deposit, o11 the ground that the whole affair was a wager;: and there- for illegal: IN is 0 DISEASES :Like h1 ro7ula, ZeaKal i and 7,Welle,' Shu Troubles, ,As wolf 88 14 general Suring nidi-- eine far catarrh, rheulnatisnt, dys, pcpsiai Hood's Sarsaparilla 111 of geed value to anon, w0ln00, children. It does its thorough work in these well-defined dise4503 by cleansing the blood, on tho•ptlre, healthy condi- tion of wllielt depend the vigor and tone.of the }thole s.yeteni, )food's Sarsaparilla is equally suc- cessful in the treatment of troubles that are not so well defined—cases. of a low or run -dawn condition, or general debility, loss of appetite and that tired feeling, or eases an which we see now very plainly aftereffects of the worry and anxiety caused by the world war and the debility fol- lowing the grip, influenza and fevers, In all snob' .iiln'lents it has adeom- plished a wonderful amount of good. It creates a' good appetite, and pro- motes assimilation of food. Hood's fills help as a stomach toning, digestive cathartic. BIG LUMBER DEAL I. RISA COLUMBIA Operation of New B. C. Company To Be Conducted 4n World - Wide Scale. A despatch from Victoria, B••0•, says: ---What is undoubtedly the most gigantic lumber enterprise ever con- ceived, and a scheme that is fraught with tremendous possibilities in the development of. the British Columbia lumber industry, is about to •03 ' launched. by a syndicate headed by , Percy Furber, president of the Mexi- can 011 Field Co. of New Yorlc, and John Arbuthnot, financier, well known in this city. This syndicate will be known as the Furber Lumber Com- pany, and the operations of the syndi- cate will be conducted on a colossal and world-wide scale. Orders have already been placed with the syndicate by British inter- ests to deliver 30,000,000 feet of lumber, which, in the event of a sat- isfactory agreement being reached on purchase price with the sawmills and lumber manufacturers, will be sue - plied by British Columbia mills. THE BATTLE OF JUTLAND. A Comparison of the British and Ger- man Fleets in Sea Fight, There has been much comment 'ori the sbsence of detcfils as to the strength of the German 'Fleet at the Battle of Jutland in Lord • Jellicoe's book. • We are able to give an Interest- ing comparison of the two fleets. Though the strength oC the Germans may be subject to slight modification hereafter it will not be such as to in- fluence the figures at all seiionsl The-force.of the two fleets was . follows:— British German Battle cruisers 9 5 Dreadnought hattlesbips 28 17 Armored cruisers S 0 Light cruisers 17 11 Destroyers 78 77 or 84 The Germans had seven destroyer flotillas present, and normally each flotilla consists of 12 boats, one of which is kept on reserve. For a "selected moment" it is possible that the whole 12 boats in each division were talcefl to sea• The 17 German Dreadnought• battle- ships included no vessel armed with the 15 -inch gun, against six with that gun in the British fleet, The.German pre -Dreadnoughts- were officially shown to have speeds of 18 br 1S% knots, and, according to German statements, could not steam much over 17 knots against the 20 knots of. which the British battleships were capable as a fleet. The Germans were therefore infer- ior in mmnerical strength et capital ships, and greatly interior in weight of broadsides. Sieving is strong and virtuous, Broad -sowing, cheerful, plenteous, Quickening underneath the mold • Grains beyond he price of gold. So deep and large her bounties are, That one broad, long midsummer day Shall to the planet overpay The ravage of a year of War. There isn't a member' of the family need suffer from indigestion, sick headaches, biliousness, fermented stomach, etc, ,Sf he 01 she will take Chamberlain's Stoinaehand Liver Tablets. They cleanse the stomach and bowels and stimulate the liver. to ben thy activity and tone up the whole system. Take one at night and you're RIGHT in the morning. All 21, or !email frays. Chamberlain Madicina Company, Toronto. 18 .. a GEE; MS WIFE TFIN 1 KS I'M -AT THE OPERA•AN' I HAVE, TO TELL HER' WiIAT I'bAvr 4dHEil! 14IT HOME If T11E SI IS JUST L tour LETTIee OUT- veel OOr1'T `f0U GRA6 SOME GiNNS COMIN' 04)7 Me' HAVE MIM TELL YOU AlbouT THE SHOW. I HOPE, I-418 Ne THE THEATRE feFPOP3I EVfi2Y ONE 1"j GONE ie-seezeej ceee el . eifieeE DON'T ASK---` (1001e.-1 ANY (AUCSTIONe. " CONE MIlTie ,,.._J tS A MEQ .r- NOW •THAT NIONEsfL FOR YOU ' 1 WAFV'f YOU ATO eeePt.AtN THE. OPERA `OU SAW TOT -41(11 -AT TO f'lE.- „ NO SPEAI<A EEN41-151eli 4 „?H