" OREGOV KTATIWIAN: TrnrKSnAT, F3IRFART 14. 1918 ;J5? HEN RULING ': j " i . i i 4.' Gratitude Is Expressed That -i 'IT ' f a t - s UEsraiiiariie i.nirifpn Are Affected By W. C. COWGILL, The fluttering of chicken wing3 " could he heard all over the city yes terday, when the growers and me"- cnanis learned, of the newest law 'laid down by the government In tha ' matter of handling liens and pullets. Telegraphic advices received by Pood Administrator W. B. Ayer In Portland from Washington, are In the way of a modification of the first orders sent out, in that a hen that does not earn her board ran be soil between now and April 30. The rul ing In full follows: "Yesterday's alteration of the or : iglnal order: gives the farmer an J : Tgower the privilege of killing and marketing hens and pullets which are not laying" eggs." It is provided - only that, they must, before killing j. any considerable quantity of theso . fowls, consult the requirements of the market to be supplied and rov- i crn ; the supply , according to exist- Ing demand. It will be, permissible 10 market the fowle supplied by the growers to Buch places as the public ,marKtis or Portland, it Is said. - "As the matter now stands: th , licensed dealers. In 'poultry. Includ ing ail wno do a gross annual bust Bess of $10,000 or more, must turn -to" the raucns rooster and his imma ,ture brother, the cockerel, for tha .supply of fresh "chicken" they ban . "I am very glad to know that thi3 chicken, business has been put on a oetter oasis and It Is. a good thing. 'Any old hen that will not earn her board, and .keep, like a dairy cow, snouia De sold to the butchers," said ,vv. jratts.- , , . . The. whole thine fa In line with nil the other, conservation orders, and win no oouot result Jn .cheaper cold storage eggs this season. branches of th rnuntrv'a war artlvl- ties. The flaa - will contain about thirty stars.' - ' - ,- The dedicatory address will be de livered by Rev. Father E. V..O'Jlara of Portland,' and all persons, regard less of religious belief, are cordially invited to W present-? Father Buck, pastor of St. Joseph's, has set the hour at l:3o. p. m.. so that the cere monies- will not interfere with the union celebration iofi Lincoln's and Washington's birthdays at the arm ory, which is set for 2:30. Father 0Hara is noted as one of the very able and interesting pulp't and platform speakers of the1" state and the local pastor is delighted to be able to procure his services for this event, believing that the people of Salem and. vicinity will be pleased to bear him. There will be special patriotic music. j FARM OR FIGHT SAYS LECTURER California Professor Adopts Canada Slogan in Address ' to Farmers WALLACE WRITES FROM FRANCE liable School Papib ' Observe Labor flay SCOTTS MILfS, Of.. Ueh. 13 (Special to The Statesman.) Arbor day, v was observed . Friday . by oy A.ue pupils which was enjoyed by .those present.. Cookies and punch was served After the program.. Miss Pauline Semolke . of Salem spent the week-end visiting relatives at Noble. . ; . Quite a crowd from Scotts Mills and Noble attended the drama given at Crooked Finger by the young peo ple of that , place. . , v t , X I- . If nlirfni At . ' , ' - uiiuoun vi 1 uruana was a week-end visitor at the Brougher home. . . ' ' r, 4)1 .ycyfjy ,1111 UC9 Vanr V Cllvartnn Vn..J.. 1 f - ness. . '; 1 Dr." and Mrs. G. C. Bellinger and children and, Mr. and Mrs. Paul V. T II1UKU b LM V Uvl linger home Sunday.'' ' Bm . To "Mr. and Mrs.. E. Coulson, at their home. Sundar. Feb ruary 10. 1918 ' a. rfanhfa Miss Katherine Gnnnell of Salem epent the week-end visiting her mot Her at Crooked Finger. Mrs. Lewis Russell of Marlon Is Tisumg ber parents, Mr:" and M J. A. Taylor. " wurer crougner was in Sllverton Miss Bessie Atkins went to Port land Friday, where ehe will visit her sister a few days. " J. Snow of Salem visited at the Frasure home over Sunday. u. wrpfl cuzrcn iriu Dedicate Servict Flag Next Sunday afternoon at St. Jo seph's church will be dedicated a beautiful service flag in honor of the young, men . of the Salem Catholic parish who are serving In the several SAN BERNARDINO, Cal., Feb. 13. "Farm or Fight," one of Canada's slogans, was urged upon the farmers of California today Tsy Dean Thomas r . nuni 01 ine university 01 v. fornia's college of agriculture, in an Only Way to Bring Peace Is . To Whip Germany - Into i ' .' It, He Says Followinet are extracts from two letters written to hid-liome Tolks by Lieutenant Paul H. Wallace of Sa lem, who is with Company L (th Dallas, company). 162d .infantry. AmericanY expedftionary force, in France: . FRANCE. Jan. fi. 1918. We are nicely quartered, the captain, one lieutenant and myself are located in a French home, where the man speaks no English. However, he 13 a wonder at conversation in French. He will come in and make a long speech to the captain and the captaia will reply, with quite a lenghty ad dress in English and both seem sat isfied.1 although neither has under stood a word. ' The air is full of rumors as usual, but we pay 'no attention to them, depending on our news on the Paris edition of the New York Herald, which gives quite a good review of the day's doings. Jan. 3, 191 8 We have been here long enough to get started Into the routine, our work being more or less like it was In the states. . I think. however, with reports of those clear address to,;, ranchers, assembled to days on the "border," how I would hear the country's" call for increased farm, production. Dean Hunt told his audience how : the farmers of Canada had 'responded to calls cf war without Introducing? an appre ciable amount of foreign labor, and this despite the heavy drains on the man power of Canada, by three years of war. like to camp again for a week in that lovely southern ' California cli mate, where we used; to go to bed with the tent walls rolled up and li? and look at the clear, starry sky. and oh, how soundly we would sleep! I have an idea that something of the same is on the way for us here: they say the winter Is over In March, and A patriotic rally was arranged here today as 1 walked down town I today, business and professional men of the city; laying aside their affairs and uniting, with the farmers in wel coming Dean Hunt. The latter, who has recently returned from Canada, declared that the United States must prepare to do all that its neighbor has none.) (Canada, he sals, lias maintained one-fourth of her men in the 'army and in war work, has in creased her acreage 40 per cent and her production 4 6. per cent.' and also has maintained nn Immense army on her own soil and doubled her food products. .This, said Dean Hunt, has been done y sacrifices, and the Unit ed? States mnst prepare to do the same. : . i. . . A portion of the lecture was de voted to an explanation of the steps by which j Canada has managed to thought I could sense quite a trace of spring in the air just ; a little softening - such as we get at home. aboufthe! time" the first "pussy wil lows' begin, to bloom. I went to chure today. ' I had noticed a little chapel where English services were held (according to a sign over the door), where I listened to an elo quent address in French. It was then that my years of training came into play and I put on my church face and sank into a comatose state until the final i)-ayer. The preacher was a realy fluent speaker and said some very complimentary thmss of the United States aV least I played it was complimentary, r There were only a jhandful of, people; present about a dozen soldiers, Y.. M. C. A. men of our crowd, a few French depository, from which we will take as much as we can; second, as a en rioelty. on which we will look with interest; third, as "an opportunity for service. ' ,' Our minister says that he is glad God did not say, "Be thou euccesa ful unto tleath," but said "Be thou faithful nnto death." In the eyes of beaven, faithfulness is success. Our zninisted says that sin is a delirium, and that the man who is rowing wild oats actually does not realize what he Is doing. Our minister says there are a great many people who criticise th church for vha"r they jhink it is, not tor what It really.is; they have only a long-distance acquaintance with the church, end do not know what it really is, nor what It is doing. . Our minister says that if you mul tiply the height of your love for God by the breadth of your sympathy for man you rill find the area of your soul. Our minister says some people loave all the religious duties to lather and mother, but they wouldn't leave some other things to them, lie says. If mother prays for you. and father pays for you, why don't yo-i lot them eat for you?" Religion by proxy will never take anyone through the gates of beaven. Our minister says there are 450. 000 -words in the dictionary, so Jie thinks there are, plenty of them to express all our thoughts without us ing profanity. Our minister says that the root of all evil is selfishness, and the cure is love.. r Mary Starck RUSSIA LONGS FOR MONARCH Correspondent Asserts Coun try Is SickBut Will Re cover Soon AWSTKRDAM. Feb 13. The Ber un lageblatt's correspondent Leon Aaeil. tQleeraDhiner from th DARING AVIATOR HOLDS INFANTRY FROM ASSAULT Stirring Story of "Guardian Angel" at Cambrai Comes to Light ' ' BRITISH PLANES DIVES Bombs Dropped Among Ad vancing Germans and ' Scores vAre Slain SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE, Jan. 2.r. -(CorresKndence of the Asso ciated Press.) A stirring story of how one dainy British aviator, like a guardian angel, held up for a whole day repeated enemy attacks upon a weak and crumbling British' line at Cambrai in th height of the desper ate struggle there by using four air planes one after another as they were torn and crippled by enemy fire nas just come to light. It shows that some of the most daring and dangerous airplane work of the past year has been In the new field of ; attacking enemy infantry from the air. , ; The Germans were trying toN-e-eover a portion of the lost Hinden burg line, pushing with a great weight1 of men and eruns at a point where it was very difficult for the British to bring up reserves. The British battalion opposing rne attack had rone to earth in little 'isolated groups among the shell holes, grimly determined to hang on to the end. The German masses -had already moved' across No Man's Land into ine nattered eartnworss that once The Boys in the ARMY Austrian war press headquarters last formed the British firing line. Other whHrX Bia8 conrernInK Russia's masses were movinr up in support. v its s-iic? war; Will enjoy ' News from Home I $1.25 Pays 3 months sabsdHption (by mail) SUBSCEIBE FOR YOUE BOY We pay all postage ; if STATESMAN PUB. CO. . ' 215 South Commercial Street " ' ' . Phone 583 ; :. I . -- increase production with lessened Te- youn)? pp and fIve woraen abpve serves of labor,. - The worklne day has been lengthened he said: men have been shifted from non-essential middle . age; four of these were 1 In deep mourning; The first mail ramp- yesterday and made quite a comm &?UlZtVZZ-g tlon. but It proved to be onlv ? sack from the cities, soldiers .furloughed from camps, and women from homes have all aided in production, with the result that it has Increased whil st the same time Canada has sent f overseas an : Army "proportionate by population to one of five million men from the United States. - The meeting here- todamy was one of ' the 'l first s of a series at which Dean" Hnnt will speak, and which will enable him to : carry , word of what lie observed in Canada to al of packages. What the 3r s aU wanted was letters. There Is a ru mor current a carload of mail came In today, and the men can hardly waiL For -my own - part. I got a copy of The Statesman, and felt like being at home again. The old fa miliar , ads were like . imeeting so many people whom one passes every day In the "old town." It sounded quite naturel to learn that : Mrs. William Burghardt hsd decorated the Commercial club rooms: that NEW TODAY TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY JCOR SALE-YEARLY OHIOSEEU potatoes, 2c pound. Onions, lic pound, tn smalt or large quantities. -Bring your own sacks... Farmers' Products Co., 160 South High street, phone 10. j , r,. . M-wm ' j Mrs. Fish had read some choice bits oi vaurornia, 4.. land that Mlu fiM withrMmhA had served the nnnrh. whirh T have 1,VJ lVIJ!l.., tno doubt was loranberty. T nm ieet- Contentmeht "Is the 'cnrse of the! ting better and better acauafnted medlocreAif ;i ;-;f fh with the men of Company L. The The man who -wantsnothinff gets more I know them, the better X like exactly whaf.e. wants nothing, . them. They are a Tine, manly hunch w nen ne ceased to covet tno Im- j or Oregon boys, and when I get home possible and unattainable, he stands j I! fancy I will quite enjoy driving on me? onn it ox, senility and 'decay, over to Dallas to spend an evening. His end will be mental and . moral I The talk of peace draes on until I paralysis.? 1 ,t -j-,-- ' I tire of reading. It seems as if It Ttoe only preventive of retrorres- i might develoo Into i a rrand talk sion jb-progression. I rest. For my part I can see onlv ii is sai a or . Jierscbel, the great two ways to peace firr to whin astronomer, that -when he was .a Oermany until sh cknowledfrt iuiuu no area to cry ror the moon. I Jierseir Deaten: mvnnA. a rarman auu ius Diograpper adds that "wben revolution. -However, neither of ne oecame a man he eot it- with itnese events seems to me to h nvoiv i.u uu ana stars tarown in." . A.nd n ine immediate future. mat was Decause-.be never ceased to cry for the moon. . When you are satisfied with vnnr place the world will be perfectly sat- little use - for the lsnea 10 jieave jou In that place. When ; man became -dissatisfied witn Ws tent he built a house OUR MINISTER RAYS. " Our minister says God has very religion of the four corners the religion of pom posity and pride but He has a ereaf deal of nA for uih niiH. . When he grew tired of the ox team closet" rm th iLion , 1.1 1 he constructed a railroad. I obedience to Til. iw When the mails were too slow fori Our minUto eava . . .3 1. communication he invented the tel- believe that opportunity come, once 1 1 tr- sunn dhj. ai 1 Tiiar - 1 r i. foMnt Placed on the map knocks at our door eery morning, Is the discovery of. some Rninmlm titw. tM.t. i.". "6 . 1 . . . - uiuk, uv uciietch iiiai we WniIa rtd : Ult 'ltoOSfU,1? By to oat aQd opportunity! Wmian .Pavenport In Forbes Maga- Our minister says there are three - ui xuuniuK Bi.iiie: rirst. as a ' . . 1 - A 1 Long before Trotsky's declara tion of peace, the Russian demob ilization had begun. On .the Zk- and already the nearest shell holes were- heaving and boiling over with the rests ws heads and., shoulders Of men about to renew-4 he advance. ;r;HTLrJU.e; IO?i Jhe barrage of the British guns was n : ,V,T ?eavy.-nut ar close quarters only In who made the last effort to brpak fanirv T.tt.w 4 V a w , I iUV'lUTT 11 VHI (UQ II l"e "uroanian rront but was shell holes, hart drown went nrf '. , ....... ' ' ' x ' ' ! ' " : ' "' ' " repulsed there and crossed the Aus man frontier, near Radautz. Sytin who' is a grizzled veteran. saia .10 me:, ,'Jiussia is very sick. lise a , near which has had a hard whack 00 the head she has lost much blood,. But she is only stunned and will soon recover. RuSsia soon will have another monarch ial govern menL Believe m that is what Rus sia is longing for. i rtAs for enineand Trotzky. I like them personally. It is very interest ing to talk with' thera about big worm pro oiema in-iront of a cozy straggling. It looked as If the scanty Kritisb line would be overwhelmed by sheer, weight of numbers. " British Plan IMves. The - fire from fhe - Germans In creased until the air was aliv with their bullets. It was the concentrat ed fire which ? always : precedes the rush to ' close 'qirarters. The bitted gray figures' were already, Wginning to appear above the shell holes, their loose flapping uniforms and hideous gas masks giving them the annear- anee of demons, when suddenly into fire; but yon cannot do anvthinir V.'" K m?J 01 &lu inere w4th them in the practical affairs of u"Fif tv feet fm thl Las dSf iVi' B;aheVikl tenFedte:ndfTk"da,ed SonTth" "ft has done is the abolition of secret a 1 v C? anB. ui me BiiarK, n came skimming back like a swallow charg- on a new machine, encouraging the British infantry by his example, and scattering death and confusion among their foes. He was flying his fourth machine when darkness settled down, .putr ting an end to the conflict, with the Hermans securelv eheeVL WOMEN PROVE MORE ORIGINAL Excuses to Avoid Doing Jury Duly Easily Framed, Says Commissioner it is by Ao mere chance the Ukraine was. the first territory' to make peace. The Ukraine is most strongly anti-Bolsheviki and the movement will" r. soon assume still more tangible shape BRITAIN'S FOOD SUPPLY KEPT UP Million Additional Acres Are Put Under Plow; Wheat " Acreage Big ONDON, Feb. IS. Andrew T?nnar Law, chancellor of the exchequer and I government ! leader in the house of commons, replying to criticisms of tbe government with respect to its nome policy. --said that in 1917 the ing a swarm of flies, its machine guns enfilading the advaiXins: foe and drivf-g him back to his burrows. A storm of German bullets swent through (Mie pl&neo. and a. btack flame-centered burst of enemy shrap nel smothered the airplane in vapor. The watching infantry saw splinters fall from its quiverintr frame and the silvery fabric of the underwings was torn in several places by shell splinters. But the daring pilot fin ished his course and vanished Into the smoke clouds, leaving the panic sincxen enemy clinging to his sheel holes too shaken and thinned to press the attack further. Little by little, however, the Ger man supports came up, advancing by short rushes over the open, reinforc ing their comrades by twos and threes in spite of British fire. Scores and scores of their dead littered No Man's Land, but eraduallv the strength of the attacking line was made good, and the shell . hoiea again began to heave and"' boil, as TnJi01 8eICdADrDlent(! put mon ros fon the lower cover- 'and UWO-LcTli IS'-'THIS; YptHOUSE? Only the passers-by! will kiow if you have a placard your houie, but Thousands will see if you uie a on '-3 : If Ji:HE Oregon Statesman 215 5. Commercial Phone 23 into, the army' 820,645 additional men and Dlacetf in mn1nT rnpnr at home 731,000 men and 804,000 wo men Referring to the food ttroduction. ne tsaia that th cereals oronuced In . " . r rngiana in 1317 amounted to 850, 000 tons.-and In addition, the mim try had produced an extra 3.000,000 ions or potatoes. England." said the chancellor, was the only, country iJn thexwar where tdere bad not been a diminution In tooa productidn: A million addition al, acres , were Ageing .put under the v -niuTi;u m bogiana ana IOW 400 land. The total stocks of wheat in Great, Britain at the end of Decern- oer, is j 7. exceeded those at the end or ..December. 1916, by 1,000,000- quarters. , In ldi 7 there 'was built in Great Britain. 1.163,474 tons -j of shipping " iu.wuo tons were obtained from anroad -The chancelldr exolained laid hold of the rims to assist them over the top. Bombs Hit Infantry. ; Then suddenly they were over and away, little spurts of humanity belch ed out or tne crater field, coalescing into a seething blue-erav. rtiKhintr mass, hopelessly out weiehine tb handful of British defender Hn before lhe mas could . gain full mo mentum, a familiar snoring hum sounded above the din of battle, and out of the low-lying haze swept cov ering airpiane, a new machine but threw with the same' pilot as be- tnrt TTIa KaiiiK. . r000TmorT 1"" SS .000 more in Scotland and Ire-1 who manoH th fiiC . r "J "ft laRlilCUM, and hl3 machine guns swept th.em out of sight in the shell holes. A half-hour passed.., and aeaJn ih enemy attempte to: attack, this time hesitatingly and with diminishing spirit. Again the airplane and the first rattle of his guns sent iue uerroans into cover untn ,. . . . wiiue unuu . Gown In Ahat the premier's estimate of ship drive him away, but another Briton " a" .p i macmne irom the protecting patrol cause the government had arranged I came down on the Cermsn'. n to nave a large quantity of tonnage and sent him catwheeflnr behind his Pullt In America, but when America I own lines. Th .r. mi... n... fhTRiiMwthe V2r."he Pre?. machines in the offing, btft the the British would have preferred, to watchful British fighters made the take the . tonnage herself. But the enemy airmen .by of Sr their tondage .was there. titude and the daring n.lu l,?L i . j.uBjr hub w laoDi runner infstfm... aw said that, in soite of the dlmu- Many times he swept down on the wrva anu. in spue oi me i uermans mat day. tnimnHn. SAN FRANCISCO, CaHf, Feb. 12. Women- show greater originality than men In the matter of. framing excuses to avoid dolnsr lurr dutv ac cording to Jury Commissioner Th6m as S. Mulvey, who has been' listen ing to thousands of reasons offered by men and women why they should be excused. . . ' . ' s . . -: A number of women', have done what . mere man, who . perhaps has had , more experience with courts, has not dared to do. They have sought to avoid Jury duty by the slmi, pie process of ignoring the sum mons. Included among these are a number of women who are officials of various federation and civic or ganizations. - These will get a sec ond summons and if they fail to re spond, their names will-be put in a jury box and they will be subject to call for. service. ' One woman wrote to Mulvey that she thought she ought to be excused as her "sixteenth child Is ill and the eighteenth is. less than six months old.'' Another sai"i shVd 'Must love to serve" but her husband "wouldn't ever consent." - . Another-fair! voter summoned re plied on perfumed- stationary through her secretary, that she Just couiun t possibly spare .the time. Commissioner Mulvey says she was one of the club women, who wrote him several Weeks ago demanding mat a per cent of the -1918 i Jury panei u comppsea or women. pea-dints," continued M. Clemenceau. "to suppose that they would haggle over the six or seven week k work; that we demand." : a The number of men wanted Is' un-. aerstood to be 200,000 and their work is generally thought to be pre paring defenses against the expected great German offensive ' in the spring. .. . t. . : -. ' . SOLDIERS ETJJOY POPULAR MM - -. Gminunity Recreation Ser vice. Recognized Pactor in. - U California : fact that , Great Britain had 1,509,000 gross tons for them In I fire. rpnHarin . "2 . " which fUoM, t, w ta . m ;?tr "t" " ne,r p- ' w viuvcu buu ciLiuiia iiiiiin-iiii l r m. - - m. T, oauMd ?0st of the raUli- often rocking madly in the air rusts ties at the aviation earn m ihnni I fmm . ' ,,: r?"1 Fort Worth. performing wileX Now that Holland has , abolished se7che5 to, hi we Bve-o clock tea, a social rupture times his aimlnr w. ' IZWZl with Great Britain might be exnected l dimimit v. T " - - - a wuib. ii il vurn wi m dm ma . a m ui a up k w i ii r n rMm - --www m vs PEASANTS ARE FULL OF FAITH French Trust Their President 5 in all Things, Chamber Is Told t : - hep.. 13. George Cle menceau tne premier, told a little story to the chamber the other da v to i.iiwimie nis own confidence in the peasants of France. lie had Just told the .house that., as the com mander In chief had argent need of Rome inousanas or men ttf do certain work Just behind the first lines, he would have to call out men of the nasse or iso and 1881, that is men of 46 and 47 who had Wn mi....:i from military service to work on the .-uu. jjiey would lie .needed for January and February; when their wor at nome was of Jjss impor tance. : ... . . . '!'Bght op ,n the midst of peas ants." he said. "I know- their devo tion, courage and 1 vll t Paants in my native iS?.6 ?uhaT iad ur sins Killed, a fifth made nri.rna . h .tlU at thm ,ront- e of them came to me. with and said. ' " weir?10 " oIng to end !?" ? And h9? I "aid that I was wouia, ne, said: .'Then I sure It will glre everything. EOS ANGELES. Feb. 5 War Camp Community Recreation Service-has become a recognized factor , in the lives of many commissioned w A .il.li.,. j . ....... cmieieu men. on auty in this part of the state, according to their own expressions of appreciation. A recent manifestation nf hl type of work, has been the popular ity accorded the "Durout Mr Merideth Woodward's own hame for ner ifonywood home, which she throws ODen to tAe soldiers earn Sunday. Mrs. Woodward ias organ ized a grou p of you it g matrons and mams wno-assist ner each week In entertaining! all the men Ja khaki or blue who come seeklnif recrea tion. Music Is Provided bv vnlnn- teers; the simplest of refreshments are at hand for those who want themf and absence of formality and presence of cordial cheerfulness are the chief elements that draw KM res of men to her home weeklv v ; The plan has become so popular that the soldiers have rechristened the "Dugout.? They call U the "Young Soldiers' Home." On a recent Sunday, representa tives of nine allies .were in the vari ous groups that spent a portion of the day at the "Dugout." Members of the British, TValian. French, Bel gian and Japanese consulates called, a Polish recruiting agent dropped in. commissioned officers of the Russian ! and Serbian armies, and an Ameri canized ' Chinese, also on . furlough callers while scores of Americans In cluding types from New England, the southland the far west were mingled with the allied soldiers. . - The community service has also done much work here in equipping the Y. M.rC. A. cnarters atNjearby forts and cantonments with amTme menU and musical devices, books and other needed materials that could not have been supplied other wise without much delay. . A JIOTAL KRIU)IC A well-known provincial paper In England makes itself responsible for the following story: ' ' The tramcar waa hoDeleslw over crowded, . and several nonnla whn had achieved thv upper deck,' were transposing all regulations by . standing, 'Here, you," shouted the conduct or with emphasis, "you con't stand on top." - Well" sad , aim ikmii. . .m.i. . - . Dill,. Ing blandly as he neered dnwn th i steps, "we are standing whether we 19 11 aw ... A ....' . ' . The girl answered nothlnr. hat promptly pressed the button. Thn m m Mm - . a m - vasr juuiDeu i or warn onrt ha iiterii. Jst involuntarily took a seat on the xioor. "There." said th vt snnonx in complete good humor, quoting the 'irr m a ramoua nhr "n think Christian Science Monitor. Yon Should 7crry - Let ths would J,e an Insult to iucJi 1 Chified Adl Tint tcT Yc