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THE INTELLIGENCER g&t?APLISHED ISM. i Published every morning except fc?onduy by 'iii?; Anderson Intelllgon ttr at 140 West Whltn?r Street, An fl er z or., H. C. SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays and Fridays U M. GLENN_Editor and Manager Antercd as second-class matter april 28, 1914, st the post office at Anderson, South Carolina, ender the Act of March 8, 1879. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES telephone.321 6UB8CM?PTIOK KATES DAILY tine Tear .10.00 Biz Months . 1.60 Area Months. 1.26 One Monta .? .48 Ona Week.*.? JO BUI-WEEKLY On? Tear .?.11.60 Sl3 Months.76 The Intelligencer ls delivered hy ?arriera In the city. Look at tho printed label on your moor. The date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Notice date ea .label carefully, and If not correct Stf eoee notify nj at once. Subscribers desiring the address of their psper changed, will please state lo their communication roth the old and new addresses. Wo Incurs prompt de!'rory, eom elatnta of con-dellvciy In the city of Anderson should he made to the Circulation Department before 9 a. m. and a copy will he sent at ono?. All ?hecks and drafts should be arawa to The Anderson Intelligencer. ADYSBTISIHG Batea will be famished OK atylisa No ti advertising O&conUnttad ?x on written order.. ffbo Intelligencer will publish brief and rational letters on aub Ja cte of general interest when they ara ac? companied by the names and ad* ??wee of the aa thors and are not of ?. mSSSwrJr MMHI * AncnymnnH ? eoaoxnunlcatlono will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not be re sumed. In or?>.er to avoid delays on aeconnt Ot personal, absence, lett:re to The .Rtolli?cncer intended tor publication ab^ld not bo addressed to any Indi vidual connected with the paser, but | Oimpty to The Intelligencer. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1915. Constantino ia king but Sophie is bono. l'y:' .Wonder what tho'next' legislature ls| going to do to the mileage law. War Nbie: All is quiet along the | River Styr-not a stir. Tho frost was on the pumpkin all ?What is tho uMatter With Greon Ifol" asks tho Dally Piedmont. The] urmnf ini^ nnw ^Assistant Postmaster General Roper . ov??b??t?y tuuusut for the ??tae being) tat he was holding ofilco in Russia. Tho machine . tbat a scandalous I story travels In is never in need of | rrepair for lt never broaks down. Iturkltt spoko tho minds ot a good itr.ny.oE us{ lt the truth were- but ldwn. ;Tbe next beut thing, In tho way of awe, to tho killing of a Bulgarian .tho killing of a wholo passel of ''"he frost lo on tho pumpkin and the1 liter's ui the shock, while the com! .beginning to And its way into tho! Editbr Bell .5?. the York News ls oneT to ; paragraph about the fair ?rsi thing, he *<?OWB he will iow .that Ito doesn't know anything Sfttbem ut all,' Now let us all hope that the para .. g rapheirs won't bo forced to get off i$Vof .-thatold -'stuff about. Bummer t?pmg^ack for a wallow in the lap .V ; -?- ' Many, editors are boping peace wilt ah prevail* In the rep?bllo south af the Bio Grande as many of them luve been deprived of the privilege of Vending their winter . vacations in Mexico <atV Just''-about .'as' long aa they ^^-stond'ft,. ' ' Now York ls once moro indulging.iu j imaginative- arithmetic, hud ?bragging! tat she has? 6,000,000 population;!f#a view of the nature ot 'a large part ot ??^iopulation, and her inability to take proper , care of it, we should i that New York, would be feeling ^tea^r?oit^;' '? HATED HY THE WOHL? The word? spok--: by JoHepk H. Choate before tho Massachusetts ? branch of the National Security League bring somewhat of a shock "The United States is one of the moa* hated natloti3 in the world." The speaker seemed to think jlut by tho close of the war we should be abso lutely the most generally hated of all initions. Thc average American is likely to scratch his head In perplexity, won dering why, In heaven's name, tho world should baie us. Are wc net peaceful. In policy and deed? Don't we mind our own busi ness? Don't we tullin our Interna tional obligations? Haven't wo been generous with our sympathy toward most of the belligerents, i.nd generous with our money toward all of them? Haven't wc labored to maintain tho sanctity of international law and safeguard the rights of all, whether belligerents or neutrals? We can seo that it's natural for belligerents to bo irritated by our neutrality. It's natural for a nation, In thc heat of thc conflict, to assume that anybody who 1B not with it is ngalnst it. It is natural for both sides to resent criticism, to sec us in the wrong perspective, and to dislike thc very coolness that enables us to steer un oven course. But why should thc neutrals hate us? Perhaps, after all, our greatest of fenses are these: Wo aro prosperous, and therefore a cause of envy. Wo aro conscientious nnd fair, and therefore, un offense to ?"?rery nation which has a bad conscience or ls blinded by passion. And yet, wo can't bollovo that at th-! CIOBO of the war we Bhi.il bo entirely without friends among tho nations. Surely by that timo thc mitions will understand, hvttc". RAILROAD MORTGAGES In reorganizing the bankrupt St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad, tho bonded indebtedness ls to bo greatly decreased nnd tho capital stock Increased, The need of such a chango is seen in Ute fact that in tm reckless years when this line waB used primarily fe* the- flnanclol op? orations, it accumulate? a- bonded debt of, about $43,000 a tulle, with a capitalization of only 910,000 a milo. Tho Toad was undoubtedly, worth mora than 810,000 a milo, but the fact of its financial collapse would In it self be proof enough that there was no property basin justifying the enor mous sum borrowed on it. If a man owns a house and lot with a stated valuation of $10.000, he finds considerable difficulty In mortgaging It for $43.000. Yet in the halcyon dnys ot railroad financiering such a feat seen ? to have been taken nu a matter ot cours?. It .was similar op erations that broke th* back ot tho New Haven. .rile extent to -rhich thc stockhold ers of such railroads have been "bled" -even n.?ids troru the question of their money being wasted in nu wiso investments and unskilled operations -Is seen in tho fact that In twelve years thc ?San Francisco railroad paid moro than $80,000,000 .:' ia bankers' charges connected With bond and neto transactions. . Nu xvondor lt was call ed a ".'jankerfl'/railroad." Today the principio.ia accepted that railroads are built and run for trans portation purposes rather than bank ing purposes. And. in proportion \ 83 that principle is lived up to, the railroads are making money. THE ?OLD FAMILIES" The New York World rise* to pro test against the prevalent lamenta tion over. the "extinction ot the old American* families." The old famines, tho World main tains, have always had a te '(?cncy to dio out. There has never been, a country nor an we in .which tho cele brated familles have not been disap pearing, .n England, whero the aris tocracy ls supposed to bo ?e ancient and durable as any In th? world,; great numbers of once famous families have become Utterly extinct. Those which persist have kept their lines unbroken Only by continual marriages with moro plebeian stock. There is nth ?where an aristocracy that has kept its blue blood "pure" for centuries. In America, as tn ..Shjrxp*,..\ great men haye left few linfei"1.- descendente. In ttevohitiv nory days tho Tories, who were the aristocrats of that .tinto, Wore grieving over the thre*A?fied >x tidotion of their class. . Th?* P.evolu llt?nsiry families now vr^ardod as old wer*'--mostly'' n?W theil. "Nour. t&ery < too, are at the vanishin ? point. Thor? are few cases whore tho &reat Ito tolu < [Ut?ary n?i?os ounrlve through an a?. I broken Ha? of descent. And even ls. tboai) ciaos, ibo strain ot -''blue blood ' iii BO modified by tlie admUture of vulgar red blood that little remains Lut thc name and tradition. Old families are always disappear ing, and new families of vigor and worth are always arising to become "old" in their turn and disappear, giving place to other aristocrats ac cording to thc- shifting hut systematic working of nature. Wo have no fear that there will not alwayB be plenty of "fine obi American" families. They will continue to come and go, some of them lasting longer than others, but all finally giv ing place to line new American fami lies. Whatever may be said of partic ular families, thc parent stock 1B not exhausted, nor is it ever likely to be. A LINE o' DOPE Weather Forecast-Fair Wetlne?day and Thursday; warmer Thursday. -o "The tickets for the Bryan lecture ors geing like a prairie fire," stated Mr. Fred M. Burnett yesterday. "Those who have not already purchased their tickets better do so at once as wc can not guarantee anyone a Beat ex cept those who buy tickets for down stairs. Thc out of town inquiries keep tho wires busy and every mail brings orders for tickets." Mr. John P. Colpoys, ono of the government mon in the city yesterday to investigate the Brogon Mill strike, was formerly a newspaper man. He stated that ho would bo glad to say something in regard to his visit hero but all of this is dono from Washing ton. There are no Icicles coming from '.hat show at tho Palmetto thia week except those on the stage. Manager j PinkBton is well pleased and so are j those who have seen it. This afternoon the management an nounces that ladies will be admitted free. In other words lt will be ."Ladles Day," at the Palmetto this afternoon. Tonight one lady will be admitted with evr ry- paid-admission, j Tho management announces an es pecially good show for both perfor? manees. Jim Balley, who has been In Knox ville for the past several months, has accepted a position with Liggett and Myers Tobacco company, his head quarters being in Anderson. Arr. j Bailey's specialty will bo cigarettes. He is one ot Ave representatives in I South Carolina and his territory will be tlie upper section ot tho state. -o Rev. W. H. Steno of the Orr ville [Baptist church on Monday received ?notice that he had beon unamlously called io tho pastorate at Newberry, to begin work January 1- On Sun day night the Rev. Stone v. an again j elected to serve tho Orrviilo church! for the next or third year. The committee which notified Mr.' Stone of the action of the congrega tion in Newborry,. advised him that in addition to tho salary offered him a nice parsonage would be arranged, Ho has the matter under consideration but lt is not yet known whether he j [will accept or not At the regular monthly meeting ot i thc Anderson County Farmers' union held in the city hall yesterday a res* olution was passed asking Senator | Sherard to call a mass meeting to dis-' cuss the Torrens land system. An other resolution was al BO passed, to j the effect that a committee composed j of J. W. Rothrock, T. H. Burrlss and J. M. Broyles confer with tlie federal authorities in the Investigation of the cotton situation which exists, in this territory. Mr. Sam Milford, proprietor of 'a' grocery store on East Whither wtreot, announces that in a few days ho will move into the vacant store room on South Main street next to Manning and Glenn. The South Sido Grocery atore will in a few days purchase another auto truck. ' The management announces that they Intend delivering goods to tho, retail trade in Belton and all of tli? nearby towns. Only last week; i?bls'grocery company pot ?a ?nauW truck,' which! lt js t*^*4 ** proving very oatisfactory* : " ':^^^^^^?? v'V ,.'o iv >' .''.''. #he monutrent of Sovereign J, B. Love will, be unveiled by,? members nt W. O. W. Camp Bethel, ?Ol, next Sunday afternoon at; S oVlo?lc, ./.Mr. Winston Smith will bo tho orator ot ?the occasion.^ There waa a killing front yesterday morning and lt seems that there is a heavy frost this morning. The doc tors ?tate that now everyone will feel better, the farmers'state thut the cot ton will stop sapping the land, tho merchants say that business will bft better, and the coal man says that be will now be ablo to do a bi? busi ness. This cold weather ls encouraging t:i all, and although it may be x little uncomfortable for a few days, lt is u good thing. It puts more life Into everyone and busineas too. It ls caus ing muny people to put on"'their new winter clothes, both mon and woiner., and they lok mighty good-yes, -tho clothes and those who wear them. OLEAN FALL FARMING Cleanliness on Farm Is Big Fnctor In Insect Control. Clemson College, Nov. 16.-"Clean up tho farm In fall," ls the advice given to ftti-mors by the entomologist of Clemson College, who says that clean farming is not only un aid to tho control of present Insect pests but lo ono of the principal stops In prepara tion against tho boll weevil. No practice on tl.? farm, according to the entomologist, is more lmporl ant than cleanliness, especially In fall. The number of insects in spring de pends, to a great extont. on how well a farmer has cleaned his terraces, edges of fields, creek bottoms, and road sides. These aro some of thc places where insects spend the winter and whore thodo that are active dur lg winter find food and shelter. For example to leavo poke weed an terraces ls to invite the cotton red spider. To leave life everlasting weeds on terraces and nt the edge of fields ls to invite the bud worm beetle and numerous other pests that stay on d farm during winter. The most important stop in fall cleaning In the destruction of corn stubblo during bite fall or winter. In the roots of the stubble ?are the winter homeB of the corn stalk bore?* and tho bjll bug. The corn stalk borer 1B tho insect that causes what are known as "windfalls" of corn. Tho worm or corn ear worm re mains over winter fr?m twj> 5? t~G and one-half inches below the surface j of tho soil in undisturbed, neglected cotton and corn fields. Cleaning tbo farm In fall should be one of the first steps tn preparation against the coming ot the .boll weevil. This insect is tremendously destruc tive on plantations tha{ ?mnintn.In old pastures covered ''with? underbrushv crcek bottoms covered ^vrith weeds and matted grass. rubbl?m--filLqd' ;terraces and fields. >w* v WINTER COW FERD Mixtures of Cottonseed Meal and Ursin Mako Balanced Rations: Clemson College, Nov. IB.'-South Carolina farmers are being urged to use as much, home-grown grain feed as possible.In the ration? they give their,'cows this winter. One reanon for this ls the high price of cottonseed meal. But even if meal jwore low In .price, thia advice would ae'given, say the Clemson dairy experts, because cottonseed meal and hi;lls do not .mako a balanced ration and by substi tuting some grains a ma? an Improve the feeding value of his ration and at tho same time save money. ~ In a circular letter sont to farmers by -Dae agent in dairying at Clemson college tho following ration ls su? gesten for dairy.cowa: Ona part cottonseed meal. One part corn-and-cob meal or rico meal. . v ?' . One part wheat bran. ,.: Oho part ground cat?.may be add<?d to the above ration or substituted for either the corn-and-cob meal or wheu bran. Feed ono pound ot titi J mix ture for evory 3 pounds ???nl!k git 'a by the cow dally. Cowpea hay, continues ine..lotter, ls bringing low prices. It can bo used to great advantage tn the: cow's ra tion. If cows bavo free straw abd racks of corn stover or oat straw and are given 10 pounds of cowpea hay dally, one pound of tho meal and grain mixturo may be fed for '. every four pounds of milk given, .'t?/* ^ "Do not let present O?gn prices of cottonseed meal discourage you in thc dalry business," say tho dalry special ists, "Feed your cows liberally oh home-grown feeds. The man ' who eel's his cowe or -cuts .iheir rations when feed ls high never ha a any high producing cows. The dairy cow ls a mean: c<f converting - 'bbme**rown feeds Into cash, while allt'h'e eklmnillk and manure remain on'-the farm.. These by-products are vrnnaoie * o you in maintaining the soil fertility of your farm." Obeying Orden; - . F. E. Smith. recently t told ?tho story of tbo captain of hussara^wbo gave a dinner to the men of his squadron the night boforo : they jeft for. the front, says Tit-Bit?. "Now,, my lads," ho. ?aid, ' -tfraat this dinner aa yot? >?lln?i? enemy;" And they aet to with a^Will.' After tho dinner he discovered one ot tho men stowing a?^; bottles of champagno Into a bag! ?ft?d highly indignant, he demanded : to know what he incant by such, conduct "l*m only Obeying ordef&alr." said the man. ' "Obeying orderer" rc4tfedithe capi tata. "What do you meas, etr?" !'You told na to treat the. dine or like tho enemy, air. and ; ? when wo meet tim enemy, slr, tho?e wo don't kill wo take prtsonera." . : . " - V " --- v No Bad Habits. "Maud seems to conrioer her all* mony an improvement' over hor..bo? band." "Why shouldn't she? It.,cornea In regularly and doesn't drinki'jjjfc .aweary? -Boston Transcript. Saved From the Ancona ..'., . -. > fr.-M.---i ; s"":' ..}. .-. v'., ;.: .. . ?. .? fir. redie L. Grell. Dr. Cecile L. Greil of tho Ancona survivors, was returning to New Yor?t from special hospital work, to which she woe called at Bari. Italy, by the Russian Red Croas. She ca ll cl from America last August on tho Adriatic. "1 woil'd not go tfjfere merely to hind ap wounds,*' she said. "There is too much misery here at home that needs an abundant supply of working physicians. I .am going for the or ganizing part of the work." ' At ten, Cv. Greil was a- cash girl in a store at Grand and Allen streets. New York City. She married at .six teen, and;. after having three ? chil dren found (herself called upon to support them. .She said once that tt. .took her fourteen years to save the ?2,GOO with which, after roaching the age bf thirty, elie' went through medi cal sd-ool. She later wont to Italy and was attached to tho Children's Hospital In Florence and -the Marino Hospital in. Naples. ... . - - - In Stratford Town. william Dean. Howell*;, the well known .American critic, teUs a E'lakespenrs ?tory. "In Stratford." (he bays, "daring one of the Chakeapear jubilees' an American tourist approached an aged villager In a smock and said: "Who ls this chap Shakespeare, anyway?* . . "He waa a; writer,'-sir?" ? "Oh, 'b?t there are lotB of,writers. .Why; do Jos -make;, such an Infernal fuss ,pver > thia 'one. then ? ; * Wherever I turn .: X' S6e> .. Shakespeare hotels, Shakespearocak'car,. Shakespearechoc olate; Shakespeare shoes..,- What the duce did he write, magazine stories, attacks on 'the government, shady novels?".., /'r:.;y:H^^^m^^ "No, slr! Oi; no, air.^satd tho ajred villager, 'I understand he writ for the Bible, sir. .'.??d^nd?n Tit-Bita. ------ Not Tfp io Jlsr S?nau?rd. "Have" .you any; references;" in quired ,tho>lody Of the her.)se. "Yie, mum,'iota ot ^htni^^s>piJ ' the prospective maid^ "Then< why didn't yon bring of them with you?" : Welt*: .v tnum. to tall tho . truth, they're inst like ta*, oht*togrRphs. Nene o? th?tndont do m$ Justice." Ludlea' Hc?te Journal. 'War. TN the Fall w r* frosty and U air after sundov gets his overcoi And in buying wise-for, in th sures his health gets a far bette would by waitii These men are 1 add another po B-O-E Overeo .heir money, whether they p or more, their n garde?l as only til they are pert what they have Vi I. I9IS .ra A Co, Regeneratic Rank* Paris, Nov. 16.-Tho French gov ernment recently gave facilities to The Associated Press and a party of for eign journalists to inspect some of the remarkable work which is being done fer thc regeneration of the ranks of stricken, crippled, maimed, and ap parently hopeless wounded who are borne back from the fighting line at Champagne. Under t?e escort of French offl cera, the party waa talton to St. Mau rice, a short distance outside Parin, where wounded are brought after the .physical cares of surgery have bash giyen to be nursed into convalescence, diverted from the loss of llmb3,.-andi, gradually educated toto some now' lino which recreates them into useful members of society. St. Maurice' ?SLot vast dimensions, the buildings ; and grounds occupying an area probably greater than Central Park in Now York. The buildings strotcfa- aa' far as tho eye can see; low, two-story stone structures, so that the cripples are not climbing long stairs, and are near tho gardens, everywhere abun dant with flowers and shrubbery, to lend cheer to.the occupants.. "Two hundred moro wounded are coming,'" said an attendant, as the officer led the way Into the first build - ins, ihs receiving ^?ard. '.'Hore they are." ?nid -tho ' officer, pointing to 200 large glass photogra phic plates ranged ana numbered in a case. -. The photographs ol' the 200 wounded had been -sent ahead, the plates show ing with 'precision the exact- wound and its process of (healing,, some of them X-ray plates. "See tilla one," aald th? officer, hold ing up a largo glass plate showing the Bldo-i-roflle of a wounded soldier/ with a gaping bullethole back of the ear, ana around the hole little sutures' or cracks of the skull. ? ' . "14, is hot a fractured, skull-that would be (hopeless," said the officer. "No, 'that man can be made over." But this receiving ward was more ly the first.Stage in a sort ot" ascend: lng neale;'which improved the wound ed man's condition at each stage un til he wan finally landed in the school where he was mada over into a con dition more useful to himself.and so ciety t>.en ho was before., lt waa to this school that cniof interest waa directed. Thin enormous school at St. Mau rice ls~ a hive of/ work shopsof all kinds-shoe-making ' shops* . machins shops, auto recall* shops,. blacksmith shops with biasing forges and clothes making shops and the .workmen were' the wounded aoldiera from the 'firing lino, minus an arm. leg or ~ ?ye on which dkl not"need. that arm, leg or eye. As a whole lt was aa efficient a body of workmua as one would. find in any well-regulated -factory. ' '.Tho men had smiling faces ; those working Jh groups wera -' chatting. and laugh Attention waa also ,gi*en t? / sho flae arts end tho prcesslona, and hero also -were schools for sculpture and ?painting and. architecture, so legless- ear armlos? or ?yelos? tee who had >f.; taste for aestroiotic, could he !??-into some new UneV which did not require the ttn?t the lost member. Ono . pate-faced yoting soldier,. his lett' hand gone1 near' the elbov/, waa delicately model in K a t?pjs;jl of Milo with his remaining -hand.' The moldier architecte, war? making designa, with blue-prints ? of girders, arclrca end col ama s, and '; caleula tin g tho ?trength ot tyalla and roofs. AH ot these men had something mlMing, hut their work waa so chosan as to lat???eb^liHely t?t?lglWe the lost member, and to- make- what remained Ot their members entirely efficient fer e Chills hen mornings are ?ere's a tang in_the . vn-your wise man it. early he's doubly e first place, he in i; in the second, he r selection than he wise, but the wisest 'int-they insist on ats, thus insuring for they know >ay $10, $15, $18, noney is always rc on deposit here un :ectly satisfied with : bought. it Shite with o C&ratiat.?* m of i of Striken this particular work. Near tho sol dier architects were ranged two long lines of soldier typewriters, men who lost a foot or some other member, but whose hands had now been tauglit n skill they bad not known before hi rapid typewriting. In the shoe shop the mon were turning out a good grade of Shoes', selling for 23.francs (about ?4.'10?, also wallets and purses of all kinds, leather wate'j chains and belts. A large glass case exhibited the divorsi* ty of their product. It was tho same, tn the machine shop, the blacksmith ' shop and all the other branches of this hive of industry. "Ohe'soMter with both hands gone," ?aid .tho. officer, "is making 18 francs a day as a carpenter.**. '??.*. Ho explained that special tools had boen made for this handless carpen ter, fitting on lo fae steel hooks ch his arm-stumps. Tho plane, for in* stance,' automatically permitted , thi carpenter to do his work, with pre cision, a bell ringing, if pressure wa* too great to tho right; another bell lt pressure waa ton great on the left ami other bella of forward and rear pressure. So that the handless sol dler carpenter learned his trade au tomatically, bella warning him of each false move until h? v>?_d become ex pert. The St. Maurice institution and school which is thus making soldiers ovvar for a new an'd useful occupation has a capacity ot fiOO men, who have their wounds dressed so far as re mains necessary, are housed and fed, and at the same timo carry on theso extensive shops which turn out useful products of all kinds, and what - is more turn out useful'men skilled in the arts, architecture, mechanical arts and the many branches of manufac ture. - . According to Orders. ;; Timetables are distinctly "subject' to alteration" nowadays, and fro* quently at very short notice. On a certain IriBh -railway a. sub urban train.?ras ;taken off and an-, other altered Suddenly, go the sta tion master told tho -vorter-whoso name was Pat, of conrrso-tb give no tice of tho change to tho passengers ns they passed tho barrier. Shortly afterward he-- heard a terri ble din outaldo his".office. doing* to ascertain the .cause, he found Pat ringing a htigb heil violently and shouting: .. - .. "This ia to, inform ye Ul that on and-, after tomorrow th? 10 o'clock train will start at nolne-thirty. and there will bo no last train."-London Answers, , A western ranchman, who had spent all his lifo with- Corsee and had had llttlo experience with womankind, *|#rvinarrled, saya ?h? punday Maga s?n?.. After ,?he ^remohy tho bride' and groom mounted their horses and started along the mountain tratf.-te?' ward homo, fleing along a hedge tho brWe'a horse stumbled and feil down the sleep embankment; Vit. was mighty hard luck for both the woman and tolo horee.'C' the ranch man said in tolling the story of tho ac?ident; "eAch of 'em broke, a leg,'*' ^.{fjfhet did - you do?" replied ?^Wuer sorrowfully. "J anet 'e-o." -:."-v... . v Fond Mothor-Bobbie', como here. X ]have a?mething awfully nice jO^jt Bobble (ago fclx)--Aw--I ?on'l care. * know what li isv Big brother's homo om college. / F. M.-^-Why, Bobble, ?iow could you, less.'.-.'.,. i Bobble-My - hank don't, rattl? ^rp.--iAwgwan.