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DARTMOUTH HEAD TO GO TO YALE Dr Ernest Fox Nichols Re sijrns After Seven Years as President. AGA1N WILL OCCUPY CHAIR OF PHYSICS Trustees Will !??- -"taw to Con. sider VI? ' hall Take His Placo in ("??liege. M'on. Not. 21 The retirement of Ernes' roa S i I oil from the preil '0f Dartn ?"?? t'ollego at the 1 0# .v ?liege year was "nwnced I of trustees to " n? ?Hci - . accepted an invl uUoa ? a ? ' : 'V- ?c' ftt Y8le' ,8Bi rttor- ? ;hat in th(l >f to. ! . had gratified [' fUr> '? which ,1C leit ',?.., ? .r'.moulh six and ? half F?*" Rkro T(|i sli,. '?- Nichols has not (tr ,,;,.-, rding to the trustees, who ?aid '"? 9 ?tat? menl that there was ,frtT ? act deliberately and ,ft*r Ml <"? " ' ;' r;'""n *t the needs of jvj f0; . | the policies which it ?hould i jn ,:,.- || resl?rnation Dr. Nicho!? ?id: "Every wise adminis? trator conservis in a college all the ?trtngth v.'? eh his predecessors have v*,ufa- r" thle heritage he ?:Rth. and the college ii the piner. ??0* tn'8 re*8on- mfon there i" oth? r . .a president does well neeatinne in office no longer than the : me required to make his full contribu? tion." The reply of 'he trustees contains cordial tribute to the service? of Presi? dent Nichols, saying in part: "In aeren years he will have made ??hat might well be considered a l'.fe tiae'i contribution to the wellbeing of rurtmouth. By unremitting labor he ?OCOninlishod ? monumental task, irr.ed the right to re ' and chosen field ? I ?.. where large honor* ttill aw? I him Neu il;a\ en, Nor. _'i Dr. El aeet 11 i S'icholi will come to Yale nezl year t? i-.ll ? new chiiir , m the aca domic nt, a? cording to >? ment to-night by the Rot. Anson Phclpi Stokei, leeretary of the university. 1!? will be aaaocinted with Prefeeaoi Henry A Hum-tend, director of the new laboratory; Professor Hertram B. BoltWOod and Profoaaoi ? Zeleny. MRS. HETTY OPEEN, 81, CELEBRATES BY A WALK Chat and Family Dinner Only Other Birthday Festivities. Mr??. Hetty Green? the wealthiest woman in America, celebrated h?r elghty-firat birthday yesterday. If the anniversary had fallen on a weekday it would have fa.uriii her at her office promptly at 10 o'clock, but this year she divided the day between her chil drOaf?Colonel H II H. Creer., i? Weit Ninetieth Street, and Mrs. Matthews Agtor W;lkes, !.. I Avenue. A WOlh In the brllh afternoon air, a ehat With a few friend- ai d a family dinner with ? tor were the only fe?. tivities. Mr?. Green carries her years lightly. Her step is as firm and h?T eve ;.s bright as those of a woman ?if half her age. Sho attribute! her physical and mentnl vigor t<> the fact that she has alwaTI worked hard and eaten health? ful fooil. She has no fadl and is Bot "modern," declaring recently that she had no respect for women who "dabble in such trash" n~ ?n?togo. The daughter of Edward M Ott Robin? son, Hetty Howland RobinaOn wai born in Non Bedford, Mi . on November ?_',. 1884 Her from long lines of hardy and prosperous New England ancestors included habits of cii^e economy. Accordingly, when her father and aunt died in 1866 and left her about $10,000,000, she managed her estate with such care tha^ at present it is almost ten tim?s the oiigmal amount. She was married to Edward II. Green, a wealthy New York merchant, on July 7, 1R67, and they had two children. They lived in London for several years. ! Mr. Green died-in 1P02. Since that ; time Mrs. Green has dressed in black 1 and is rarely noticed as she walks through the streets. How to Save Money Buying Toilet Paper Never buy toilet paper unless you know how many sheets there are in a roll. It doesn't matter how big the rolls look or how many rolls you can get for a quarter. Toilet paper can he loosely wound to make a big looking roll or the paper may be coarse and thick so that you really get little paper. You can't be deceived on quantity if the wrapper guarantees the number of sheets in the roll. Scoftissue Sollet Paper Has 1000 sheets to the roll?10c But we don't want you to make quantity the onU test?quality must come first. ScotTissue is a very soft, absorbent, white paper and will give excellent and economic service?10c a roll. "It's the Counted Sheets that Count" Sani-Tissue Toilet Paper, very soft and clothlike. The balsam treatment makes it healing. 2500 sheets in car? ton of 3 rolls, 25c. At drug, grocen', department and housefurnishing stores. Carrr tv ? r.l Sc>rt f~umt Compta?y SCOTT PAPER CO. 30 Church Street New York Maker* of Absorbent Scot lissa* Towel* ?^^ta-BRvuniii?nniniiii nTiiiiiiniTTi?TTiniiniiiiiitJiitinitiiHiiiuiiiiMiii u;iainiiuf iiiifiii?nri?ii!iiritnii[innni-iriirriiiii^ Perfetto I Fairy sandwiches. Light, delicate ? fan with candy cream filling. Three flavors in one box Chocolate, Lemon, Vanilla -ooi far tfue DiosfmTJ Fmrk et your Dernier'* (OO.C Vr'lL*? fJlSCUlT (pMPANY Bmhtre of Sunshino BucOite NLW YORK Look for the doll in each package of TAKHOMA BISCUIT. Eight pretty costumes in many other varieties. See list in Tak homa Package. 'oroiAi, Whumm IN ? .SI*. TUSKEGEE'S HAM RISE RECALLEI Veterans at Institute Tel of Early Ten-Acre Farm and Rickety Shack. OFT PAWNED WATCH SAVED SCHOOL'S LIFI ?Alien Funds l?an Low Timepiec Disappeared, to Return with Better Days. Bj JOHN J. LEARY. JK. rnekegOO, Ala., Nov. 21. The pre posai mude in several places that monument be erected here to the men ory of Booker T. Washington impress? those who know what Tuskegee is as a afempt to paint th3 lily. Tuskege Institute, with its 3,600 acres, its scor of magnificent buildings, its wol equipped shop?! and school rooms, is i itself n greater monument than an ?or could ?'.rsign, or popular fun pay for, were a design made. And if lesser monuments are desire elsewhere they are to be found now i the form of schools, some small, som large, bu.lt on Tuskegee lines in widel scattered points by those who imbibe? the spirit of Washington as his pupils. What is wanted and what the friend of the school propose to obtain is i memorial in the form of a large me rnorial fund to be use?l as an endow rnonl fund for the institute. It nov ?lightly lOM than $2,n00,000 an? ,000 i?i<>ro is needed to place it 01 a footing that will eliminate the noces sity for the heaftbrc '.ing task of rais ing funds for running expenses tha broke Dr. Washington down. Just hov i this fund will be raised will have to h? determined by friends of the institut? in the North, the Impression prevailing, here that some plan will be announce in New York next week. To such a fund the South will be i large contributor, and in contributif the whites will not be backward. Ir the last week the grip Dr. WBshinglor and his work had upon the white popu lation of the South was manifested At never before. The demonstration a" ;neral was as largely a white man'? egro'e. To one not familiar wit! tioni In the : outh a- rognrdi ' Ingtofl this was as impressive a the institute must be to one who ha?) never before visited it. It is a city in itself? Bnd the thoijughness with winch everything is done at the place is a wonderful obi'ect lesson of what a man with an idea and tenacity of purpose can accomplish. Tuskege? a Surprise. The route to the institute contributes to the impress,on Tuskegee must have upon the visitor. There i? nothing at Cheewnw, the station on the main line ?if the Southern Railway at which vis ?tors disembsrk, to indicate that there is anything of size or importance in the immediate country. For miles as one drives toward the school on a- sees nothing but rather ordinary farm coun try. until at u bend !:i the r"uil wbsl iike a large ? lty on a d range of low hills looms up. "That is Tuskegee," says the driver. "Is it as big as that? How large is it?" "Thirty-five hundred acres," says the driver, "almost six square miles." That is just before one swings into the city of Tuskegee judged from Northern or Western s andards it I? only h village and a sleepy little oil? large at thaf. The trees tell that it il ? rery old village, and th" home of ["?" ho know wealtfl and long estab .ished social standing, an aristocratic "I'l place. Beside the institute further out it is piiftcant, for the buildings arc -, larger and better ko, t. Only s ec and one can well appreciate hat "The Atlanta Constitution" did not overstate when it mid Tuskegee >- the ingest an?l most complete educational plant in the South. As a money raiser Washington stood without a peer. With him gone, where would the $150,000 needed each year to meet running expenses come from, not to mention the large sums raised from time to time for new equipm?nt" This is the question now beset'lng Dr. Washington's assistants. Tuskego cannot stand still. Like Topsy, it has "growed," and is still growing. Th?.> reams of telegrams then pouring In after Dr. Washington's death gave thl answer. In its hour of trouble friend? of Tuskegee were standing by. ( lcanllnes* a Religion, ! or days more messages poured in. In the executive offices there was a world of work, bi't no excitement. In the shops and on the farms th? 1,700 pupils and their 200 instmctors worked as though nothing had happened. Th>> work could not stop. And all were busy when, with a clean-cut young captai:i of cadets, I started on a round ?ri the shops. I have seen shops of various kin?ls. I thought I knew something about such things, but I was not prepared to/t what I saw. First was that seeming enntradietio-. in terms a dustless WOOd working shop. There was a pile of shav ngs where a young man was working a lathe but everywhere else dust and w?-?e was not In sight. Later, when 1 remarked this to Miss Miner, one of the teachers, she smiled arid said ther? was a reason for this that I had not suspected. "Of course, we have to keep every? thing very, very clean that was what Dr. Washington always Insisted " said, "but you know we use that ?h It is the best thing in the world rl<-Hu floors with when it is dampen We try not to wa*te anything here. Cleanliness and prevention of wa are cardinal prim iples in Even the blacksmith shop, som?how other, lacked the grimy .*,.? such places. The clothing of was far deanei plac? ?' the tin shop, of th re 'lev were earn BSa and of the wagon shop, 1 i lothing shop and the shoeshop. where nearly all fold in Tuskegee send their reo work, was small, but in a showci wore shoes that any manufacturer Lynn, Mas?, need not be ashamed ?>r that would look out of pie ? ?? <>: an] Fifth Avenue dealer "Wat.h the Little Thlf" Everywhere workers were courteoi but very intent on their work. "We try te I ttle ?hinir aid C. A. 1 neater drnrl man. "Ev< . ? < s de to scale. TiV' I ? - work is ?lone ' I of pi? ; roi ' sd We aim turn out something more than avc SJ ?? workmen, and 1 think a We also try to teach the boys to 1 caref'il in usirig u Tap of m terial. The close worker is the m? employers want. And, anyway, WS ca not afford to waste anything we BO? ?very penny so much." Later, as I tl rough the ir mense ?lining-hail, where three tin.? a day the 1,70 ? < ? ' ?>U Fel Uranna: . sen rhief co? since the first day Dr. Wash II gan his work. where ami he l ? of the first hoi ' i' wasn't much of a ??' .? we just nursed it. antil il gol crol Thon one of the boyi taught It to lie ???, just lik. ?lo. Ye sir, he wouiil go through ? tortol, pich out all the boneo and ju? mash that stuff up s? the horse won! eat it. After a while it got so that i just like?! that Stuff. To*, we just had to do that we didn't hav anything else to give it. Hut be ha plenty now, thank the Lord. The hoy they sometimes come back I awful lean, hut when mo and Nooke puts the ment and inca! int just fatten out like young shoal look III ? .:n." Hard Working Watch. One detail as *o boa re pro rided in ?he early ?i iked b; " ( ; regory, the only m? i of thirty al ! iski at th ? |te, whin- he look ? after the car of the buildings as S labor Gregory) through shrewd Investment in land when it wa-? to be had at $2 o $3 an acre, is now w? "Mr. Washington he just need t? pawn young Booker*! Gregory. "I don't believe thei was a watch that did as mn I that one. It aras gold, and it wa: i 11 tty. M las B - er when he aaod to say his name i i - ? and out all the time. Th t then and, Loi ' ing fur OS ' YYl.er gl got r? ;? ! low SJ i ' . .. . ...... ?hat watch When things looked '?.;. :i ' come out, but It I ?ck. li those days we had nothing. Booker Joel got a toe hold in her? 'en or t'.fteer acres and we had that lit'le ?had that used to stand near the ehuicl where Hooker is going to be buried tc ?live and sleep and eat in. We ha in'1 knives or forks or anything. Bttl gradually things came, and some '. idj wonld give us a few knives, or forks, then some one would ?:;??'? u? some tin dippers, until ' enough to go around. For just made them out of planks. B rS arid ?onie of |; Ing vo?ae?. are up In 'he library ? "Weil, that flrot ?lass was woi i i V> e i'jst knew nothing worth kaowinfr Ml most'of us had wi? ht.h, an<! we wanted to ?earn, hooker just ?rot hold of us. ami the first week h I busy classifying us. Some aneo ing; there were some who were well enough along to be juniors in CO eg) Then he just overhauled us. He told us all about taking care of o?;r bodies nnd ourselves, nnd he just made us a!l wear collars. These were the ! . paper collars, and you could gel all you needed for a n:ci:e!. I.nts of the boys did not kr.ow how to wear I em. They W0T9) taught. Tue?, are nil bad te wear neckties. We had to keep clean. If Hooker had what ? ? call a bug, It aras ko? .? clean. Nest to a liar he hated a ?lir'y man or wom? an worse than anything eiJe in the world; those were the only two kinds of 'hinirs he 1 . - ami dirty folks. Of course, he hated thieves, but all liars are thieves, so they were in? cluded. Leader's Tutting Bee. "Then it was work. W? could ?11 Anglo-French 5% Bonds In denominations of $100, $500 and $1,000 TLe joint and several obligation of the Government- of r,r?ai Britain and Prance. Due October 15, 1920 Price 98 and Interest, Yielding nearly 5^* Under our Partial Payment Pian SKX) Ronds of this issue rna.. purchased on an initial payment of only f 10 and insUllmentSO? >10 a month. Bend (or ttetail* J. A. CLARK & COMPANY 1 Liberty Street, New York ?Telnp?<??o, ,/ohn Tag mmmmmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmwmm^mmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmt Tiffany & Co. Silverware Substantial in Weigh <)i,e daj Bo?kei -??'?i every on must be on han?i t.ie next Monday fo a cutting boo. We di?l not know wha a cutting bee was and he wouldn't tell Well, we all were there. Every mai had to take his axe and cut and ?u until they was near dead and ther- ? a lot of cleared land and plenty o wood laying about. That cutting be? was a joke or. the I "Then Colonel Ho? on. a wealthy mai who used tu live here, had his nous? burned? Hnd Booker gol tioT'plaee. <\n? then it Just grew. Hooker used to leav? here on foot and visit the conferetu'ei around here on Saturdays when he ?lie not have the money fo hire a mule Sundays he would visit the churches Every other man thoufc'ht he had a cal to preach. And Hooker just v.enl around to them all, told them th? children and grown-ups must be tautrhl how to work and live and made therr give, money. Sometimes he got only a little -the folks had little to give, but he kept or. a-poundini:" In earlier dispatches I described Washington's funeral lerrleee. But I ??one?! more than pass . the choir. Nowhere in this world is there to be heaiil anything like that ch'?ir and the 1,700 pupils sin^tnir the ; plantation melodies or negro spirituelle! as thai are sosaotiasos ?There ia a lilt and a swing to that to be appreciated must be 1 eard. One of these was "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot," known in the North through the Flsk Jubilee Singers. It runs: , w awert chariot, crtnln? for to cait? me t. ?n? ?-*:??? lo? tvr*i chariot, ormlnf fo? to caUTy ma I'll ?oraau.TTt? up. I'm aemetlme? doarn. ? i mini fur le carr; m* my ao'i', fa*l? a hfa?*r.!7 boun<1. ?"( mini for t' carr. m? ? tee letiil ? er\ ?? ?lid I a?a i f..r To arr. ? ' . .? ?I af?r ro?. Htalni low. ?a?cc ? ? i tet to retrj me l.orne. . ' ? ? u - ne NEGROES MOURN LOST DEFENDER Hear City's Leaders.at Me? morial Service, Praise Washington's Genius. WITH TEARS, CHANT HIS FAVORITE HYMN McAneny and Representative of Governor Among Speakers Carnegie Sends Letter. ? '?? m York gal tel lay afternoon at Bethel African Methodist Episcopal I bureh, la Ilar ???> mourn the death of Booker T. To them came leaders in net of the city. -..I-,, ipoke O? 'he life work of the ?reat leader and ?,?;? patient genius. Geor;.. eicA acting Mayor; Henry (lews. Jacob H. Schiff and Thomas W. Churchill all friends of Dr. Washington ?lehvered eulojfies. From the platform about the pulpit , ta the topmost row of the gallery the church was crammed with colored folk. Negroes of the present generation, aus? tere and proud in frock coat and white glove:-; negroes of a former day. with frosty polls and wrinkled faces; portly mammies and tiny pickaninnies packed the building to the doors. For the most part they sat in decor? aos silence? listening, lad-f to the recollections of those who bad known the man who brought his from slavery N "anona" would rumble from the ??nee or'twice an ardent s?iul shouted "Hallelujah!" Vet they loeased fi" thoroughly saddeneil by their loss to give way to much emotional enthu? siasm. Perhaps the ?ncient gospel hymn they sang was their best tribute to their friend who had passed. "Sooner ? In the Morning." it is called a chant with a swinir and heave peculiar to negro music. Hooker T. Washington had loved the ?ont;, and his people ? | K it yesterday as thouirh he listened. Oh I/irt. hOM ry>T v ? ? ? ??h Latd, be - OS !..ti. befi i ? I *?ii M? i; and women rocked to and fro ' ir. time with the beat of the sonorous tune, (?nee or twice mellow negro .??.ce? broke ard handkerchief? were ? I to eye? damp with tears. That - the one emotion.'. !' the Is people bore their dead leader Frank J. WbeotOO, a leading lawyer . nearro colony, was chairman of the meeting. The Rev. K. \V. Arnett. pastor of the church, opened the ser? vice with a brief sketch of hi? rsce's advance on American soil and the part that his thirty-year friend, Booker T. Washington, had played in thia ed rance. Mr. MeAr.eny then told of his twen? ty-year friendship with the principal of Tu?ki gee? "The representatives of the city gov? ernment know what hi? influence has been for the betterment of his race in this town," he said. "We will remem? ber It for long, and cherish his name, b? th as u city and the people of a city." Henry Clews then spoke, and Jacob H Schiff, following him. said that Dr. Washington was at once the Moses. Washington and Lincoln of the black "He died at all great men die," he at i. "on the command of God, for own reasons. But hi? memory will '.ive. and as the centuries roll on Booker Washington will rise higher and hig'r.-r in the memory of his race and of all mankind." At th" conclusion of Mr, Churchill's resi Major A. I.. Reagan, represent ororpor Whitman, who was un . ervice. poke a. 1 i of appreciation. Letters were received from Andrew Perkins, Judge Swann anil otkere, erbe regretted their inability to he prOMOt. The service was the result of the ty of Major A. Hart and William ii. Nieeolls, leaders of the negro com? mittee which planned the memorial. NO STATE PENSIONS FOR FOSTER MOTHERS Only Natural or A ?opted Chil? dren Entitled to Aid. Albany. Nov. H.?Widowed mothere who have assumed the care of orphan children by indenture or agreement and not by formal adoption are not entitled to the compensation provided under the so-called widow?' pension law. Attorney General Woodbury hold? in an opinion made public to-day. The question was raised by Alwin C. Quen tel, Albany County Commisiloner of Charities, to whom the Heniselaer County Child Welfare Hoard recently .? en af a fro| worn ftei . ?'!"??' t;g to rare for a child turned ever te her bv the Albany Asylum, be. sr and later loss her husband through "The statute. I must 'i>.in.t, is some, what lacking In d?finition." Attorney General Woodbury sai?! in his opinion. "In every case, however, It speaks of the mother of a child. Although the applicant voluntarily atsumed the sup? port of this indentured child, neverthe? less she is not its mother, either by nature or under the law. "I must hesitate to extend the ap? plication of th.- widowed raotberc* law to such cases. Although her ,irt in as? suming the care of wm in, yet ! And Beth? I the face of the itat ttO or in the reasons advanced for Its adoption which rottl | our conclu ? ? ? ? entil le the guardian to I ? the statute. It is then B an that com? pensation should not be sold for thi? child." W. & J S LO A NE ITALIAN FURNITURE ANTIQUE RUGS FIFTH AVENUE AND 47TH STREET !!_ The most successful of all the new magazines Don't Be a Social Back Number ? If you are out of step with the whirling progress of our time; if you are removed from its magnetic influences; if, despite your youth, you are becoming an old fogey, or an old maid, or an old bachelor, or an old bore ; if your joie do vivre is dying at the roots then you must read Vanity Fair, and presto I you will be nimble witted and agile-minded again- the joy of the picnic? the life of the grill-room- sunshine in the home. Six months of Vanity Fair will enable you to ignite a dinner party at fifty yards Don't settle down comfortably in the oott??. The world is moving, moving on all eijht cylinders some folks are even moving on twelve and you might j st as w ?1 move along with them. Don't stall yourself on life's hi Jr.?id and be satisfied to take everybody else's dust H::p up and take a little joy ride on the red and yellow ban^.-wagbn?Vanity Fair's band-wagon. Every Issue of Vanity Fair Contains : ESSAYI AVD REVIKWS : By the mort It tellectaally stimulating- esssylett. critics -ih)r? -both domestic ar.d importad. PARIS AND LONDON: Th* ??test dlyert ir.g ne*?, trim hol.i of these European c?pl t ?H ?nu occasionally from othere ?? well. If yon went to bei In tho *ool*I end trttetlo ewim, teer ol? the coupon in th? lower right hond corner of this p*?* - *nd tnmilit We Promise You, Solemnly that Vanity Fair is not Just or? mon ma?T?*in?;or even e new magazine of ??i Id kind?but an ALTOGETHER NKW KIND OF MAGAZINE. It is an titertaining Magazine for Moderns. We are not going to print eny pretty ?irl?' heads HI ?ts covers. Wearegoing to spare vou the agony of sax discus ?ioQ- We shall publish no dreary serial rjl rie?. No dories of travel. No hack articles on preparedness. No gloom. No problem stories. No articles on tariff, or irrigation, or railroad rates, or ?are food,?raay i *tm suusticelsubject Cond? Nast MMb Frank Crowninshield ejh? ttCanttaCopj- Three Dol.ere e Ye_i THE STAGE: r.ntertslainc Brat l hehlndthe - mHviiw?, and rev!? I ? newcstpleys-with portrait? oi t THEOPERA AND MtMKttterfaa ?nit por Ira'.;? !lme i.eweinger'.,ec;-ipJaer?,condu t or ?.and whatever I? r.?w about th? THE ARTSt I!!?iatr?ted ntwiiit eritideene ot tha letsst e-.d most dlecuasVd picture?, architecture, boca?, aculpture ar, : poetry. HUM^R: The most orlartnsl and arrmstng work of our y our. a; an i?nimorou??>Tlter?and artista In a fresh and unooovantional vein. PEOPLE? Striking and aniau?! portrait! of ?? a i ?'*'? -'???? ?ehe help to make N.w York a brilliant and fascinating men j gb-iound SPORTS i An up-to-date, !!l??trat?K* bl seiual panorama of (oil, tennis, football, racing, polo, Hy1ng\ swimming, hockey and a doten other outdoor and Indoor syorts. DANCINGi New dance?, outdoor dance? Il '. r laneee. rhythmic danesa, cosmic ?anees and their outdoor, Indoor, rhythmic and cosmic dsneers. FASHIONS t Prom Part* London and New York ?rail discriminating and wcll-dreased American men and women. DO<_5 AND MOTORS i Photoarrephe et tho best hred dot ?and thobeat mi I It motors with dascrlptlor.a and timely diacuaclon of them. SHIPPING i An Inde? to the best shovel what ?hey sell, and a ?hopping offer that is bound to Interoat alert men and women If you wont your broim kept powdered *nd well-?roomed for *ix month*, jutt te*r off, nil in mnl trieil th* little coupon below Try a Little Dollar Diplomacy! You think nothing?in your poor deluded way ?of paying $2.00 for a theatre ticket, or $1.35 for a new novel, but you can secure. for $1.00 (half the cost of a single theatre ticket, and less than the cost of a single novel) an entire winter of Vanity Pair and with it more entertainment than you can derive from cozens of sex plays or a shelf-full of problem novels. Stop where you are! Tear off that coupon! s as* *&VV / A rJ*A?**7 W _.* ATtW or. m *%y ?fry *%y X&s , / /