Ii ti t] n T n t} t) n w oi Di to or it l’? -. s-‘uaif-IIIILL g PAGE Two A .- ‘ma: AAA xxx Wonian ’s Realm -:- kxnkxxkxx A AAAAAAAAAAAAAALAA xx i. v vvvvvvvvv v vvvv- v ‘In A ‘AA ms COOK'S t CORNER OUCUMBEB. AND GBAPEFEUIT SALAD (Serves 4)_ keep you scalp and hair in good condition through the summer months. ‘I00 BUSY 10 LIV! A salad of delicate flavor, excel- lent for separate course or meat accompaniment, calls for: 1 cup diced grapefruit segments 1 cup diced cucumber it cup mayonnaise Lettuce Combine grapefruit segments, which should be freed from mem- brane and well drained, with cu- cumber and mayonnaise. Pile in nests of lettuce on individual salad plates. _ (llior Persons Afflicted With Hilrryitis). l-Ie haihvt time to greet the day. He hadn't time to laugh or play. He hadn't time to wait awhile. i F0071‘ %I\H‘OBT Stand on both feet this summer: Don't shift your weight from one m hadnft time to give a mule. foot to the other because one or rie hadn't time to glean the mu‘ °‘ “he” hm- news’ . Your feet need special attention He hum.‘ time to dram m, when the days and the sidewalks muse; ' are hot. If you would walk with a He had“: light, buoyant step and trip the mind. light fantastic when the stars He hadn't time toAbe just kind; shim’ ‘mm g‘ 5°“ ‘*1 "mi t He hadn't time to see a. Joke, dance plaoe’ en me your ee He hadn't time to write his folk‘ t“ “mm” my ‘1°‘°"°d' He hadn't time to eat a meal. I Tired’ aching feet Wm be “any He hadn't time to deeply feel: revived by a soaking in Se“ and He had!” time to take a m“, water. Use about a cup of salt to He huh“ time to w, his best. two gallons of water and soak your H’ had,“ time w help a “us; feet for at lesst half an hour. Then He hadn't time to make a pause; this? ‘hem’ He had“, time to pm a" note’ Vinegar baths are soothing to He had!“ time to cast a vote, feet that are worn out and tired He had,“ time to sing a song‘ and hot. Use one half cup of vine- He hadn't time to right a wrong; s“ w’ a’ gallon of lukewarm m" He hadnt Cme w "m! a gm’ ter. Rnse your feet with clear wa- He hadn't iiine in practice thrift; m ““""“d' He hadn't time to exercise, Drying your Ieet properly i‘ ha“ He hadn't time to scan the skies: the battle‘ Be sure there is no He had,” “me to heed a cry’ dampness left on them when you He had!” time w say goodhye; have finished with the towel. Dry- He hadn't time to study poise, mg “twee” "m" m’ "Pammyi He hadn't time to repress noise; is important‘ He had,“ time to g0 abroad, If you have small callouses on He hadnw time to serve his God; your heels and bottoms of your feet. He hadn't time to lend or give, use a piece °f pumice 5mm ‘m Ho hadn't time to really live: ‘hem an" each Swkmg- I“ “ma He hadn, time to ma: m-s the pumice treatment will tend to .630‘ make the collousrs disappear. He hadn't time-he's in a hearse. Corns and bunmns shmnd b“ __,1.he New York “m” treated by a foot specialist. There are com and bullion plasters- which you may wear w keep then-i Melt 1 Package of a soft. snappy from huffing whfle you walk Ne. cheese in top of double holler. Grad- vel- cm; 00mg ygufspjfl ually add to melted cheese 16 gem “owing! each and evuy marshmallows cut in small pieces. momma an mo“ knportam to Stir constantly. When melted and ideal-foot condom n seem um completely blended, remove from believable that rnnrly girls wear “m” “d add gamma" Juice t“ their hose the second day without taste‘ (nus dressing Wm harden washing. That's a big mistake! Be when kept m refrigerator‘ but ca“ we that yum,‘ we huh even; be reheated in double boiler be- mwnmg fore sewing.) .___________ CELERY ONCE AN HERB time to train his GRAPEFRUIT AND ‘SALMON SALAD (Serves 4-6) ‘This is a good main dish salad for a luncheon or supper meal. l cup grapefruit segments 1 cup flaked salmon l. cup shredded lettuce 2 hard cooked eggs, cut in pieces 5t cup mayonnaise 0X10 8. SUMMER. FRUIT SALAD (Serves 4-6) This novel salad is suited to the dessert course. l cup diced grapefruit segments 1 cup halved strawberries l cup diced peaches (or other fresh fruit in season) Lettuce Arrange 3 lettuce leaves on each salad plate to make three cups. In one leaf plaice a portion of grape- fruit; in second, strawberries; in third, peaches. Serve with: IVIARSHMALLOW CHEESE SALAD DRE SSIN G PROTECT YOUR. IIAIR FROM THE HOT SUN Summer sun may do wonders for your complexion, but the chances are ten to one it will play havoc with your hair if you aren’t care- ful. It's true enough that hair needs a certain amount of sun- shine and plenty oi’ air. But you should know where to ‘draw the line. A daily baking on tile beach lust isn't good for your hair. Ln the first place, too much sun- shine ls apt to dry out your scfllP- 1n this country the chief u“ o; voyage party, serve this salad. U You feel You can't weal’ a hal- , celery is as an appetizer, but 1|; dc- Peel and segment 2 fresh grape- when you're in the sun then make isms, a “we, place on canadmn fruit, removing all membrane. Cut up your mind to oil your scalp.- men“ Celery is a nomwaste ve_ in pieces. Cut a large summer Hot oil shampoos are excellent gegabie and no; an extravagance 681W!) lll qllB-YWTS lengthwise. These for a scalp which has a tendency even at a mgh prioa Every b“, may pieces are the boats. Arrange each toward dryness Massage a zener- be used. Use the inner white stalks ‘"1 ‘1°"“°°'°°"°"d salad Plllle- ill- w, amount o; warm on“, on m“, “w, the large more wane pieces sertlng a cheese cracker in it for your scalp the night before you, as a moked vegetable and the the sail. Fill with a cargo of grape- w: going to have a shampoo. Wrap leaves and root as a flavoring for M" PM“ “d “W” Wm‘ a 5"“ an old clean towel around your soups and sauwfi Even the water fiellch dfessillil- head w you won't soil the pillows in which it is cooked is a valuable and let the oil stay on all night. 1004, Shampoo the next dwy in the usual| ___._________ lIl-‘lllllvr- Tflmmy, ten years old, applied for If you do your bathing in salt l! 10b B5 B- 8106"! boy for the sum- water be sure to rinse it all out of’ mer- The BT00!!! Wanted a serious- your hair after each swim. You minded Yflllthi 6° h! Pl"? Tmllmi’ 9° may rinse it under the fresh wa- 51mm t5"- ter shower while you're showering "wen- mY 5°!’- Wh" "W14 I011 you, body and the bathing‘ sum do gith a million dollars?" he asked. Han. which has mm dyed m, ' h, say! I don't know—I wasn't “touched up" usually reacts unfa- expecfln“ 5° much at the 3mm” vorably to hot sun. If you don't iii‘ Wm are,“ we“ a ha, when Business NIan: "What do you do *‘I"“P d1°°d ‘mm?’ You, head is exp,sed_ with all these pictures you paint?" WP“ “l” mm- "m" all email ... ice fboneandctintos ll only a rmmmble amount of Modernist Artist. I sell them, pe 5 ° ' u m" um frmumt hot DJ treatments sir." pieces. Dredge meat with flour and ma“, shampoos beam hats and Busme” mm “wen, Mme your salt. Heat shortening in frying pan Itreet hats are ,the things you “m” my mm‘ I," 1m“ 1mm“ m; "Li? 0:10“ and green pep‘ have w rmmnber H ya“ want w for a salesman like you for years." 9° ' "e “m P5"- add meat Painful Piles Salves SAILBOAT SALAD (Serves l) For a beach party or for a bon i BEEF STEW WITH DUMPLINGS 1% lbs. beef ‘A cup flour 2 tablespoons shortening ‘A cup onion 2 tablespoons gleep peppers ‘A cup diced carrots 1 cup diced potatoes 1% teaspoo- salt 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Water to cover . Put the meat, onions Peter could stand it no longer, “Buddy O. K.?" he inquired aux- iously. “He's entirely too O. K. I'm wor- ried." “You can't be too O. K.," pro- tested Peter "Nobody cam-What do you mean?" TWELFTII INSTALMINT "Why. here he's written me two whole letters, page after pagg‘ p11 about Wlleile and the boys and such, u- , and never a word about money." She marched straight to the telegraph desk and Peter fol- lowed her guiltlly. He had to know what she was going to do. “But, Buddy, darling, don't you need some money?" she wroie. There was no bad news. I hope," said Peter, es they went up in the elevator. "Nobody bothering him _ or anything like that." "Why, no," said Rowena wonder- 111811. "Nobody ever bothers Buddy. He isn't that sort." "How-nice," laid Peter. Rowena Rides The Rumble By Ethel Hueston lo Quick-Nu Cutting-No Itching bleeding or protruding piles go quickly and don't come back, if you really remove the cause. Bad blood circulation in the lower bowel and hcmorrholdal veins caus- es piles by making the niIccted ‘ parts weak, flabby, almost dead. Salves and suppositories fall be- cause only an internal medicine that stimulates the circulation and drives out the impure blood can act- ually correct the cause of piles, Dr. J. B. Leoilhardt discovered a real internal Pile remedy. Alter pre- scribing it for 1.000 patients with success in over 900 cases, he named it IIEM-RDID. Hughes Drug Co., Ltd, and druggists everywhere sell HEM-ROD) Tablets with guns-an- tee they will end your Pile misery or money back. -—--______ “There is no royal road to lower- taxee. The only way to really low- er taxes is to spend less money)- Albert O. Ritchie. FOR SALE At Lorne Valley Store with Dwell- ing House, Garage and Outbuild- ings, all In first class condition. Near Churches, School, Hall and “Better men than you have work- ed their way through college. llbr Rowenab sake, I myself am send- ing you the fifty bucks. “It is of course quite unnecessary for me to explain that Rowena does not know that you wired for this money nor that I am sending it. Your telegram was handed me by mistake and I opened it under the impression it was for me." And without an instant‘: hesita- tion he endorsed his sentiments with the signature that would one day be worth thousanda-"Peter Blande." Peter was pretty uncomfortable about the whole business. He was not used to any sort of double deal- ing and was not at all sure but at» The boy who took them up to any moment ofllcers of the law-om their rooms did a very unusual Perhaps the telegraph company- thing, although neither Rowena nor would hale him away to Jail to ex- Peter noticed it at the time. In- plate his unwarranted manipula- stead of unlocking the door at once, tion of other people's aflairs by he knocked, and it was opengd {mm Wlfisfflllll- within. They noticed that, of course, At El Paso Rowena had two let- and framed in the open door was lllnifiwaty. totrlllrbe, nil: Wm,’ 0|- ters. She sat right down in the Bobby Lowell. 0|] l l‘ . 0|‘ I‘ E - u m», .m iitiiriiir- .'::::':..:.i:t::..i:;'.::;"-.;i: DjQNIEL i MMARTHU]; stand to deak and back again, and "What are you doing here?" 19s2~'I-22-.-iv-4' watched her mflgol; ‘ i n \ m; y“! y‘! 599i“! ‘"3 Combine ingredients and serve at‘ n AAAAAAA A ‘x 7Y7 vwvvv v “yv tlon for fl‘ Person The picture shows Col. Llndb erghat North Beach air his Greenland-Iceland journey. ,1 - wmrzciqg; -*-“‘-e¢‘ t ‘ :-eeeee‘¢¢w¢¢ -e:-¢‘.~ eeucz‘ * “one: . * c: c §§§O #¢*‘ A Lindberghs En Voyage aln-:- Fash port, New York, after a. test flight In prepara- Tenanz-i lzit?lf4f"l'e Ddtntfnaes .W'ltli \St;yllej . ,, Ir ' nos-ransom: Wit‘. i z : fl‘ ,5 fly. ‘That's why you'll mm», 1-,, -'. twoor three with this pattern q‘. different colors and fabrics. , You'll like the original model pic- I tured. 1t is white tie silk with vivid 1 10d 800613! 1D Pflirt bOW tie and Vi leather belt. Don't you like the new ‘ square shoulders? ' Another scheme is red and white candy stripe pfq-ue. Gut the deep V vest effect at the front of the bod. ice and the front and back skirt panels with the stripes running in opposite direction from the main part of the dress. Make the collar . of plain white pique. ‘ Again, yellow linen is snappy with the collar and the stitched vest n: yellow and white dotted linen. Style No. 812 is designed in sizes 10, 12, I4 and l6 years. . Sine l2 requires 2% yards 39-inch, Policeman: him down?" Motorist: "I didn't! I pulled upl “How did you knock fainted." i "Oh," said the mistress happllyg when the vase she had drooped did not break. “The biggest fools have“ all the luck, Mary." > "Shure they do. maum." was the, response. "If I'd dropped it, it would have broke." . and peppers lllto the kettle, cover with water and lei; simmer for two or three hours or until the meat is tender. l-lalf an hour before serving add the other vegetables: drop in dumplings 15 minutes before serv- ing, cover closely and do not re- move lid until ready to serve. Place a border of dumplings around the platter. If necessary thicken the: stew with a little flour mixed with " enough water to make e. smooth paste. Pile stew in centre of platter and serve at once. Serves six. ___.____i_._ (Elves Liver and Bacon l. lb. calves liver Price of PATTERN 15 cenisin 4 lllow To Avuld f; ore 1Y0!!! In Age Dorothy Dix Um‘ stamps or coin (coin is preferred) Newlyweds Wrap coin carefully. To Foster Compuiion- ship -_.-._—-_.-_.---_.__,_ No.'8l2. Size l; \ w M m“ g° "°"°"“‘“"’ h”. Young; Husband and Wife Should Take Care to Keep Their Interests Mutual, Warns ' Dorothy Dix; Otherwise They Will Find Themselves at Middle Age Without a Thought or Iii-- ‘terest in Common There is no tragedy commoner or more pathetic than that of the middle-aged couple ivho bore each other to death. Husbands and wives who have not a thought nor an. interest in common. Not a mutual taste or pleasure. ‘They spend their evenings at home in a silence so thick you could cuvit with a knife. When they go to the theatre together, between the acts they read the program from cover to cover, although neither cares a hoot what the well-dressed man is wearing this season, or what kind of cigarettes the star smokes. ant they pore over the menu as if it were absorb- ing romance, as dumb as the clams it exploits. You see them on every side. You could weep over the sad fate that has be- fallen them, for their case is hopeless. Human wis- dcm is powerless even to suggest a remedy, for once you have lost your taste for a thing t6 cup flour 1% teaspoons salt ‘A pound bacon Have liver sliced 1.4-inch thick. Dip slices in the flour and salt combined. Meanwhile cook bacon until crisp in a_ frying pan, then ar- range on a platter and keep hot. Saute liver slices in bacon fat for 5 to 10 minutes, turning ifrequentlyi Arrange in centre of platter with bacon. Prepared in the same way, calves liver and bacon may be broil- ed for the same length of time. Serves 6. Testy Oolonel (in crowded train): "I say, porter, we're packed like sardines here. Can you do nothing to relieve us?" ’ the right, and let the odd numbers breathe in while the even numbers , breathe out." Further Outlook Unsettled like to make the acquaintance of a refined gentleman with an eye to romance. you get any answers? Phyllis-Only one-—from father. I . too amazed, too disconcerted, to of- fer either greeting or condolence. "I've been waiting four days," said Bobby. "I nearly died of lone- someness. You were due two clays ago. I had a notion to kill myself." Peter turned to the boy quite severely. "Why didn't they tell us lit the desk?" "I told them not to," dimpled| Bobby tearfuily. "I wanted to sur- prise you. I told them to show you right up." Rowena marched intp the room, took off her hat and gloves and toss- ed them upon the bed. Then she got out her lip-stick and powder and concealed the stains of travel in a most efficient manner. "All right," she said cheerfully, “Come on in, Peter, and don't stand gapinln-Constantine, shake hands with one of the Boston l-owells- All right, Bobby, give us the low- down. Now, Oarier Wellmen--" "It's all his fault," sobbed Bobby, ignoring Constant he's black and white pow.. "You know that tele- gram he sent you, Peter? It was a lie. He didn't mean a word of it." "Will you see him, or shall I horsewhip him?" . “How do you know? You haven't had time to get to New York and quarrel with him this time," obJect- ed Rowena. I had plenty of time in Albu- querque, end I called him up. I adied him what 1 should get for the readies! he said ‘What wedding?’ quergue l " tine to her rumble seat and they continued swiftly east. Bobby no nothing you can do about it. There is no pepplng it up again. Yet here are two people in the very prime of life, healthy, hearty, with many years in a.ll probability before them that they are doomed to spend in each others company. So tired of each other that they quarrel Just to put a Nothing to look forward to but s. long little pep into their conversation. drawn-out martyrdom of dullness. Both would be horrified at the mere suggestion of divorce as a way to The very idea is revolting to all of their moral and ideas. They are leaders in the church and in all of the So far as the letter of the law goes, they have been power, unless they W019i! 00809-1161’ llld i715!’ tOEBY-llfl‘. W168! they 111N165‘ end their sufferings. conventional uplift movements. _. .1 '".;;.'.;."i;.'.'.'..'."" "" "ti And it can be made at such an unbelievably small cost and so eas- And then there came e. day when they were no more baby feet pet- terlng across the floor, no more rollicking, laughing troops of girls and boys coming and. going, and when the house that had been so gay and noisy was still, and the woman's hands that had been so full were empty. For the last boy and the last girl were married and gone off about the business of life for themselves, and the husband and wife were left alone iiogethe , dependent upon each other for comradeship for the first time in twenty-five or thirty years. And they found out that they had nothing to say to each other. They were stranded. They knew nothing of each others souls and minds. They didn't know what each other thought. They had no community of inter- est except the children and the butcher's bill, and when those topics were exhausted they had to ifall back on the evening paper and radio. ' And there were likely to be thirty or forty years more of this ghastly drag- ging around of the corpse of a dead love. ‘rhlrty or forty years more of these endless, dreary evenings. Thirty or forty years more of life gone flat, of utter and complete boredom. Heavens! What a prospect! At a restaur- Who ls to blame when middle-aged married people yawn in each other's faces? The responsibility is generally laid on the woman, and - wives are adlured to read and study and keep up with their husband"? and to ‘ themselves in their husbands‘ affairs, but I tlflnk the hue u» bands are even more responsible for the catastrophe than wives are. For a woman can't chum with a man unless he wants her to, and tllfi 81B" majority of men shut their wives outof the great interests of their lives and regard them merely either as housekeepers or playthings- or a person it is gone and there is But it does not mater whose fault it is. The important thing is that brides and brldegrooms should realize that unless they start on their wed- ding day deliberately to foster companionship by every means in their e. model husband and wife who have done their duty to each other and i themselves in the same things, they are bound to endure a desolate old their children. now when they are looking at each other with lack-luster eyes they are seeing no siren or sheik in the offing. Of course, it was not always thus. When they married they were thrillingly in love with each other, and could never get enough of each Then they chattered like blackblrds, and he was a spell- binder to the wife and she was e. fasclnator to him. Nor were the next other’s society. Porter: "Try numbering of! from twenty-five or thirty years tedious and monotonous. so full of planning and striving, of hoping and despairing and achieving that they passed almost as quickly as a they were years so full election, flash. For in them the man was laying Playllis-Mother, dear, I advertised was on tiptee every minute of the time trying to hold his own, fighting under a different name that I would for every advantage, matching his wits against other men's, and life was The woman was absorbed in bearing children and rearing them. Her days were filled to overflowing with mothering her brood, with baby formulas, with hearing little prayers and wiping little Mother-Phyllis, how awful! Did noses, with getting youngsters of! to school, with baseball and football, and a glorious adventure. bicycles and sport cars and colleges puny dresses and coming-out parties I said, ‘Our wedding. 'l‘hat you wir- ed Peter Blaride about.’ Rowena — Peter — he went on something awful. He said if I thought less about clothes and more about my immortal soul I'd be better ofl‘. He said what did I mean by telling strangers-and low-principled char- acters like Peter, at that-the pri- vate details of our love-aflain. In fact, he said he wasn't going to marry me until New York had a new insane asylum where he could control me by the latest improved methods." " Rowena and Peter screamed with laughter. “Ilowenafl said Peter, "I take it all back. I won't punch him in the nose. He's a great old scout." "What did you say, darling?" in- quired Rowena. "I said," announced Bobby with dignity, "that while perhaps he had never been in Jail as Peter had, and had never toured the country under false pretenses and that sort of thing, Peter could teach him a whole lot about handling women." Rowena rolled back on the bed helpless with laughter. “What did he say to that?" asked Peter. "Nothing. He hung up the re- oeiver on me—and me paying for a telephone call clear from Albu- So Rowena retired with Constan- No breath of scandal has ever touched them and even in which they will be bored and lonely when they are left with only each other for company- They must cultivate mutual tastes and inter- ’ ests. They must know the same people. They must have a thousand egperienees and memories in common or else spend the last years of their lives in a hell of weeriness. _ ,, Most American husbands and wives ignore this. As soon as the honeymoon is over they virtually part. The man absorbs himself in his business and lives in a. world of which the woman knows nothing. The‘ woman isolates herself in her nursery or her clubs and lives a life oi a which her husband knows nothing. And when at last the times comes when they must depend upon each other for society they have nothing to say to each other and are bored to fears. DORUII-IY DIX. ~ On the contrary, the foundation of his fortune. He "but I guess we have a waterfall thai Not to be Oatdime would put it out in ten minutesl" A party of American tourists was being shown over the crater of Ves- uvius, when the guide remarked. "You have nothing like this in your country, I suppose?" “No," said one of the Americans. two tables, pictures, rnamenis and . I'll‘. ‘ BEDBDOM N0. 2 FURNITURE SALE Mahogany bureau, pictures, table Household furniture for sale at ornaments and rug. “The Hill", the residence of Mn. A. LIVING 3'00“ A. Bartlett, 115 Iitsroy Street, on union‘, Mo‘ “u, "flu" d”; Thursday and Ikiday, July 31th "mm", n“, M.‘ uh‘ Mm“; “d nth‘ ornaments, what-not and mm! DINING mo" articles 0f ' l‘ , including ll“. olioe chain, fyling cabinet, 11W‘ Ole old III-MINI! llllfllfllfll I writer, spool bed, attic furniture all large mantel mirror, several vala- use“; umulls. able ploturu including one of King Home open for Inspection ea Edward VII, one entitled “A Bead- ing from Homer," some Art Union Monday 24th from 2 to 4 P. M., and i on Tuesday 26th from 10 to l- plotures and several lots s: chins, silver and glue. Terms Rah. DRAWING ROOM .1. A.. McDQNALD. Aaotlolmli Sofa, ehalrl, Art Union ‘ ’ picture "Springtime." a small Eng- lhh eoreaulan walnut piano snit- able‘ for making into a writing desk, l collection of framed flolbein prints, ornaments and rag. LIBBAI-Y "That out him to the quick," laid Cllllll. two valuable elllrflllll Peter. "Men don't think about-NIH the Dore sellers. Mullen. I clothes in their emotional moments. "Well!!!" lllelllrl. uibleet “David.” And to know that instead of every ‘hm fill. mlllollfl! mllllo ltlllii pulse and every vein and every—er "I!" hvlllfl- Dlfllml- lllfllilull "l0 -....,. ‘e-singing aloud, '1 lm by Robert lhrrll. srauwrhwe. ' going back to Carierr-you were will“?! lllil 500i!- wondering what to weara-Well, I'm nlnnoo“ N“ ! -—-———-—-—i l l “This might be Just the ideal tirm‘ to stop a war, for nobody has any- thing tc fight one withP-Will Rog- and girls and boys with dates and ers and weddings, and so on. longer did all the talking. Peter was showing up as something of a con- versationalist on his own account. “You've made a great mistake, Bobby," he told her over and over, speaking in a slow and impressive voice. "I know men. Garter meant just what he said in that telegram, but he resented your taking up such a sacred subject by long-distance telehone. The telephone is such a sordid, mechanical, diabolical device. Naturally he would not wish to make plans for the tremendous romantic experience of his life by telephone at so much s. minute. He wanted to have you in his arms." Bobby was impressed-even a lit- tle frightened. "But he used to make love to me over the phone in New York," she said defensively" "That was different. I-le was see- ing you every day then and the calls were from house to house. It's not like shouting ‘I love you‘ over three thousand miles of farm and factories. 1 don't blame Carter. rni like that myself." “But I didn't know whet to wear l! ' NOTICE All anessments in mean l" Georgetown ehool District No- if not paid on or before Jul! "1 1H3, will be handed to the clerk 0| the County Court for collection. B! order of Trustees. ' ASHLEY ALLEN: Seoretaff- _f Just like Carter. It would wound me ' *°»"l°1l°"°-' lsillmnleieluannanlaat film-ll 1