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THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER, MONDAY, JUNE 28, 192G. 5 'jH iLOVE and MARRIED LIFE! Ijij. the mated author t IH .MOTHISIt T,OVK Hl "Mow did you know I was going to H will her Mary." I asked Charles as he I H he came 10 my room after telephoning i H "I have heard you tell your mother! H ' n thousand times that If you ever liad I j ii little baby girl you would name lt H Mary after her." Charles .said noth-j H lap more, but his face lighted up. as he H camo toward my bed and looked down H nt my baby, fast asleep in the crook of H my . arm. Truly she was something H very, very wonderful, Her little ronc- H leaf eyelids wore almost transparent H and with a little imagination 1 could H almost sec her golden brown eyes bc- f hind them. Her tiny mouth kept curl- Hr' ' ln iP into those little movements H ! that only a mother describes as smiles. H ller miniature hand kept reaching out H as if to find me. H "Isn't she beautiful?" I asked. H "Don't you think she is the most beau- H -j, tlful baby you over saw, Charles?" H Knee nccomcs Solemn H Charles smiled indulgently and then H his face became rather solemn as he H .said: "Yes. she is the most beautiful H baby I ever saw. dear, because she is H yours." Just then tho setting sun H peeped under the half drawn shade; IH and glinted across my baby's head, HH turning the ground a soft brown fuzz EH to glinting copper. "She has hair Just like yours, hasn't 'HKH she?" said Charles. !)SH I laughed. think she-will have jfjEH hair like mine when she has any. &HH Just at present it seems like a soft. '-H '"' silken halo of gold, does It not?" 1 fflH , said, mixing my metaphors. vHI ' Charles stood quietly watching us. KflHl my baby and mo. "I did not know," $&H lic observed, "that you were the Ma- ftpsM donna type. Katherine. Whenever I tBN have thought of you before I have al- IKH ways (bought of you as an out-door KaH ?iil a girl who played tennis, who EHf .valked miles and swam like n mer- RjH .nil Id and here J find you with that KH wonderful brooding look that every WkK a painter tries to get Into his picture of HIpV ' :hc 'Mother of Christ. Do nil mothers BH t have It. Katherine, In the first few HH weeks of motherhood?" HHHI T am sure 1 don't know. Charles. HH 1 don't think 1 ever saw a mother with ttftHI a baby as young as mine, and I am nl- '''inH ' most sure that I do not quite undcr- tfflH xland what you mean. Bring me the hHHH hand glass. I want to see if I do look rH 30 differently." ilH "Ah, you've loU It now," 5ald HH Charles, as ho handed me the mirror. rflKk "You look like Cousin Katherine again I 3H with your mischievous smile. You j ilH were thinking of me .and what I said t JH for the moment." tH "No dear." I said. "I was thinking' ;H of myself. Don't you know that when! jEH a man compliments a woman it always' iHH bring? her thoughts back to herself. iHHH and she either agrees with him or1 i thinks he is prevaricating and- she ! likes him if .she concludes he Is speak I ing the truth " I Surely yon don" think 1 was prc- ivarlcating. Katherine." I Musi llne Uecn Beautiful 'Nvo, Charles, J do not, for 1 know 'no one in the world; no mother since I Eve ever felt the great Joy and the great responsibility more moro than I do today. If that rave my face a dif ferent look, then J must have been beautiful. I don't know hor a wom an looks when she has this proud and blissful experience of motherhood, but !l do know that all thoughts stamp themselves on the human face. Some times the stamp 1? brushed away by other thoughts am1 sometimes it re mains Indelibly, as'l hope this thought of tho glory of motherhood will stay Upon mine' "And you are going to call her Mary?" asked Charles fingering a blti of paper somewhat nervously. "Why, of course 1 am." I answered I never had a thought of calling her anything e!i!e." j "John spoke over the 'phone of add-i ing his mother's name to It." "I do not like two names for a girl, for she will want o add her maiden name to her married one when 3he wedF. you know. Besides his mother's name is the very last that 1 would give my baby." I said decisively. "Do you dislike his mother so much?" asked Charles In surprise. ".N'o, but 1 dislike the name more than any other in the World." 'YVhy I think Elizabeth Is a nice name." said Charles Innocently. . j "There are some names that We as sociate with peoplo." was my explan ation. "I do not associate Elizabeth with John's mother." . "Oh!" was Charles' exclamation, and I knew that he had Just realized) that Elizabeth was the first name ofi Miss Moreland. I Blood Hushes to Knee I T felt the hot blood rush over myl face. I didn't want Charles to think i I was Jealous. I really wasn't Jealous i but T did not 'ntend in fact, it' sickened me to think of my darling baby withlhe utterly selfish kind of woman 1 knew Elizameth Moreland to be. "Well." said Charles, changing the subject, "do you know John is com ing for you Just as soon as he can get here".' I gather you heard what I said from my end of the wire." "Yes. 1 heard what ou said, Charles." "Then you should be perfectly hap py very soon, with husband and child with you." "I will not be any happier than 1 am now. In fact. I am not sure that John's coming will jot break In to my bliss." Tomorrow The Otiija Board I. ' j Dorothy Dix Talks Ii 13y DOROTHY JJIX, the World's Jlisrliost Paid Woman Writer ! . TEAMWORK I (Copyright, 1920, by the Wheeler Syn- ' dlcate. Inc.) ' Did you ever consider the value of , team work In the family'.' j '. Of course we all know that no onoi J.v-.,man uio matter how, marvelous a I pfaycr'he is. can win a football game by his own efforts alone. It takes the whole team, playing as a unit, pooling their united skill and strength, ait a , with no thought but for the common success to put the ball over the goal.' 1'reclsely the same thing is, true of families. The reason that so many households aro bankrupt in purse and peace and happiness, Is not because tho individual members of it, lack merit, but because they have not learned to do team work. So they1 "fail. ; Not long ago a Hebrew friend ot ", ,mine who has mado a great fortune.1 said to me: i "The reason wc Jews succeed so' often is because our families stick to gether and work together. When you see a father and mother and a house ;fuU of children all striving for the same object you may be very sure, they will attain it 1'erhaps at first they don't make much money individ ually, but the aggregate earnings of the whole family amounts to a re-! spectable sum, and using it as a whole' It givea them a working capital that enables them to branch out into a 4 bigger business, that eventually , j- makes them all rleh, whereas no one member .of tho family could alone; have ever saved up enough money to have started out in business for him self. ! "1 owe my succc-ss entirely to fam I ily team work of this kind. My two brothers and myself had each onlyi a few hundred dollars, but we pooled' our capital and started a little cloak! and suit factory. One brother stayed) In the work room, and saw there was; no loafing among the work people, i and that the work was properly done.'i Tho other brother did the buying and kept the books. I went on the road nnd sold the goods. In every depart ment you seo wo had someone who was vitally interested in getting the very best results tor the least money. h Also wo had absolute honesty in cv- H cry department, and such service as aH you give yourself you cannot hire any-) rH one else to give you: so of" course wc,' jHH made u success. We couldn't misu It QH working together thai way, but if each tH one of us had cone off by himself, as I- you gentile families do, wo would all still bo poor men." A family doing team work that is a commonplace secret of success, isn't it? Yet it is one that almost invar iably wins out. You rarely see a united family that isn't a prosperous ,7 family. It Is the house divided against v " itself that falls. You can even narrow down this as sertion to tho individual family and say that when a poor young couplo get married and start out In life to gether, whether they will become well (LH off and happy, or be poor and miser- iH able dependents, nine times out of EH ten, on their ability to do team work,1 BH and especially on the wife's ability to' IHj do team work. No man who isn't a H financial genius, can make any hcad- IH way against a wife who Is wasteful IH) nnd extravagant and bitten by the H mania to live beyond their means. Nor I H can any man succeed who has a pecv- H lsh, fretful, selfish wife who thinks; H of nothing but hor own pleasure, and' H -who stands in her husband's way by! H refusing to go to live in some place H where fortune calls him, or who kills H his ambitions and paralyzes his en- H crgy by always opposing every new H scheme, and throwing a wet blanket H oyer every fresh enterprise. H .' But when the wife keeps up her H end of the game by providing her hus- H band with a comfortable cheery home; H whore he Is fitted and corautted and- H) braced up for tho next day's fray;1 when the wife Is willing to economize! Kj and sacrifice .10 that tho money may HlL 4 so back Into tho business instead of R" into fine clothes and automobiles: H when she Is Just as interested in her H husband' affairs as ho is, and as keen1 H for success, why that couple can't fall H they are doing too good team work. B And it take team work to make n H happy home as well as a prosperous I one. This will be startling news to a I lot of men who seem to think that! making a happy homo is exclusively a feminine occupation, like having bablos; . i'eoplo are always telling' women that they should try turning a smiling face upon their husbands and be en tertaining and bright and chatty and wear pretty gowns and so on. 1 As a matter ot fact, no woman' alone and unaided can make a happy home any more than she could move! a glacier. She might grin like a Chcslrc cat and monologue along un til her tongue wore out and be as! beautiful as a hourl and look like a fashion plate and she wouldn't ralso! the domestic temperature of the home one degree, or diffuse one ray of real sunshine or Joy If the husband was! silting up glum and grouchy, or If he! was stamping around the house find ing fault with everything. It takes two people laughing to gether to register mirth It takes two people to carry on an agreeable con versation. It takes two people giving the best that Is in them of kindne&s and tenderness and consideration, and geniality to make a happy home. No woman living can pull off tho stunt alone and no man need expect to marry such a miracle porformer. One of the reasons that women lose Interest in domestic life, and get slack about their cooking and the way thev keep their houses. Is because so few husbanda do team work. Thev never notice what the wife does." They never praise her management. They gobble down a dinner she has spent hours In cooking without so much' as saying that the .sauce was worthy of a chef, or the salad such a work of art It should have been eaten on one's knees. No wonder the woman gels discouraged. If the husband would only do team .work and show some interest in his home; if he would discuss the beat way of meeting the H. c. of i. with her instead of growling over the bills; if ho would display some real Interest in rugs and thrill over wall paper Instead of saying, "Oh. get what you want I don't know or care," it would put new pep Into his wife and he would reap rich results in better dinners and a better managed house, for women dole on talking things over aud a husband whom she could make a real companion of would fill any wife's cup with' bliss. The place where team work In fam. Hies Is most needed, however, and where the lack of it is moat disast rous, is In roaring children. It takes both father and mother, Rtandlng shoulder to shouldor to do that prop erly and alas, in how fow house holds do you find this desirable con dition of affairs! Sometime there is practically no father, only a man who pays' Ihi bills. Father is too much engrossed ARMS AND THE MAN Since Cleopatra's Day the Arm Has Been. More Subtle Factor in Feminine Cha'rm Than the Face ; "She has arms that would lure a Caesar to her heart.'' ( So said the French artist Rau. gereau of Miss Clara Moores, the younn Et-ifje beauty who is play ing the leading role in Col. Henry Savage's Cape Cod' comedy suc cess, "Shavings." In this summer of short sleeves, when the arms are exposed as much as the face, women are in terested in lovely arms. Misc Moores ic probably the greatest j living authority on the care of the arms and has written three articles on arms, telling how 3he. keeps hers so attractive. THE FIRST ARTICLE BY CLARA MOORES APPEARS TODAY J By CLARA MOORES. NEW YORK Most American wom en give too much attention to their faces nnd too little to the rest of their bodies. They pull and pat and j powder every pore of their faces tin- i til sometimes 1 wonder there are any I features left. Too much facial mas sage, with overdoses of cold creams and skin foods, is more liarmful than none at all. With the present craze for cosmetics, you see the average woman's face through a veil of cold cream, face enamel, rouge and pow der. Short Sleeves Imperative From Cleopatra's day to our own the arm has been a more subtle fan tor In feminine favor than the face has ever been. Where Is the man who has not yielded to the pressure of a woman's arms about his neck? The arms are Indispensable to charm and this year when short sleeves are Imperative tho wise woman will take half the time she usually devotes to 1 beautifying the face and spend it in improving her arms. ' Cleansing Procoss j If nature has blessed you with 1 arms that are neither too thin nor too plump, be grateful and let iheni alone. The only treatment a per fect arm needs is a cleansing pro cess. The best in this case is the simplest. A good cleansing cream should be applied at night from shoulder to finger lips, nibbed in well and the arm washed in hot water and pure soap. Then all traces of soap should be washed off and finished with a cold arm plunge. In the morning no cold cream need be used simply water. After the bath the arms can be lightly powdered with talcum or refined fuller's earth. uo Seven Persons Lose Lives in a Fire ELL WOOD CITY, Pa., June 21. Seven persons lost th.eir lives in a fire which destroyed the Krau3 block 1 here today. Property damage is esti mated at $35,000. The origin of the fire is unknown The dead are a mother, Mrs. James Carlin, and her children ranging in j age from 11 years to five weeks. Mrs. J. C. Connors, the only other resident of the building, succeeded by leaping from a window, in escaping. 00 About 77.QOO.000 yards of jute bag ging for cotton are needed annually in the United States. with business to gel acquainted with his children, or to try to guide them, or to decide anything about their fates. He leaves that to their mother, and no matter how fine a woman she Is, she Is incapable of filling the bill and being both mother and father to them. Cnlldren need a man's exper ience of the world, a man's outlook, a man's firmness, a man's protection In tho development of their characters, and in starting them In life, otherwise God wouldn't have bothered to .make fathers and if they miss thlj they atart handicapped, as Is proven by the fact that so many widows' children go wrong and amount to nothing. 1 Sometimes a man tries to do his duty by hla children and Is balked by a weak, allly mother who cannot bear to see her darlings disciplined Father tries to curb a boy's extrava gance, mother scrimps the house keeping allowance to glvo hltn money. Father tries to protect a foolish gin from a bad man. Mother secretly con nives at their meetings because tho girl woeps. Father tries to leach the childron obedience, and respect for authority and somo sonso of duty. Mother pities them when they are de nied anything and conniveH at thoir disobedience and sides with them against their father, whom she un consciously teaches them is a tyrant and a brute. What Is the result tho hoodlums, tho -wayward sons and daughters, th lazy, undisciplined, uncontrolled youth of the day who bring their par entn' heads in sorrow to the grave. Whenever a father and mother dis agree as to the wisdom of somo par ticular courao with their children, they should do no in private. They should present a united front to" the youngsters. There should bo no ap peal from Caesar to another. It Is only by this kind of leant work that family discipline can bo enforced, and children successfully reared. "The arms are Indisoecable to charm." ; j j FOR LITTLE FOLKS . '! PHILIP FROG'S TALE Phil Frog grinned when he spoke of Marty Mink's bad lu'ck. to Tinga ling and the twins. He really seemed to enjoy telling It. There are people like that, you know, who love to tell round how the frost has killed all the fruit, and how (he cost of pepper is going up (who cares) and how the Ila3t Spiffins baby swallowed its best breastpin, and it costing a dollar, I I "Yes." he nodded, ''Marty has had bad luck, and It was I who dis- ! covered it!" (oo the breast-pin;' 1 mean, nol the Ibaby! I But of course you can't blame 1 Phil Frog much. It must be an un I easy , feeling, never knowing when you're going 'o be somebody's break fast, and as long as Marty was around, Phil never could make an engagement for the day after tomor row. But now it was dlffernet. Phil was even thinking of taking his family! Ion a summer vacation, which showed 1 how far ahead he expected to be on- j Joying good health. 1 "Yes," lie nodded, "Marty has had : bad luck, and it was I who discovered It! I was down at the bottom of the stream huntmg wigglers for my lunch, when Marty came diving down sud denly from the bank. I ducked under 1 the mud but Marty hain't oven seen J me. He was after bigger game. Somebody had spread a net. and the not was full of fish, and Mini's what Marty was after. Bui alas! (Phil Frog said "alas" but his voice sounded exactly as though he meant "hurray.") That net was Just like trouble, it was easier to get into than it was to pel out of. Marty turned this way and thai, but there he was caught! The neighbors took in the family and tacked u? the 'To Let" sign on his house. And that's all. 1 But it wasn't! More tomorrow. lStster Mary's Kitchen If one is entertaining a few guests at afternoon tea, along about 5 o'cloct; j the hostess who has no maid Is apt ito let her mind winder to the dinner 1 she must have ready at 6 for her fam ily. . To prevent this mind-straying plan, the dinner that may be put on tno ta ble with the least preparation. A cup ol hot soup, cold meat or chops, cream ed potatoes or polalo chips, head let tuce salad nnd a pie baked in the morning mean little expenditure of time. It Is always haru to get dinner after spoiling one's appetite for it by enting sandwiches or cakes, but the family must have food and they seem to wnni it at the usu."l time, so choose the viands with t . e attention to time of preparation. Menu for Tomorrow. Breakfast Uncooked cereal with top milk, buttered tosa, marmalade, coffee. Luncheon Molded nsparaguu cream, hot rolls, boiled rico with strawberry snuce, tea. Dinner Broiled sirloin steak. Fronoh fried potatoes, siring benns, cu cumber salad, green apple pie, choose, coffee. My Own Recipes, There is nevor any pie quite so good I as tho first green apple one of tho sea-1 son. Early Astrakun apples mnko tne j best pie. They cook quickly and arc Just Juicy enough. Mix flour nnd sugar! thoroughly and dip eac piece of apple in the mixture. The pie will not be so likely to boil over. A thin slice of cheese served with each piece consti tutes the famous "great American des sert." Molded Asparagus Cream. 2 cups asparagus tips. 1 slice onion. 1 clove. 1 slice carrot, sprig parsley. J, cup wnldr. Salt and paprika( 1 teaspoon lemon uice. . i cup whipping cream. Cook asparagus, onion, clove and parsley in the water until the water :has evaporated. Remove onion nnJ ipnrsley nnd press the asparagus ! through a sieve. There should be about ?4 cup of asparngus puree. Add salt, ! paprika and lemon Juice and set aside to become chilled. When chilled, fold in tho whipped cream. Turn into a mold lined with paper. Pack in equal mensures of rook salt and ice nnd lot stand until frozen. Strnvborry Sauce. I tnblespoons butler 2-3 cup confectioners sugar. 1 cup strawberrlos. Work butter with n fork until it Is creamy. Add sugnr slowly, heating all M10 Lime. Wash, hull and drnln berries. Add to snuce one at A time, beating between each one until the sauce is smooth and perfectly blended. As the jsnuce is very rich, the pudding Itself should bo simple. ! Emerson said leave Jtir ;' to slaves. But there ain't no such nnimnls. 1 iTT j LITTLE. BENNY'S j NoteRooM By LEE PAPE ii mn 11 in m 1 m 1 ii 1 1 1 11 rrr0 THE PARK AVE. NEWS Spoarts. The Invisibles wunted a little pratice last Thersday aftlrnoon and It was too late to go out to the park so a delegation was elected to go and seo Flatfoot the cop and ask him If it would be all rite to have a game of ball In the street pervldlng nobody broak cny windows, but Flatfoot looked so mad about sumthlng that the delegation wawked rite past him without even stopping. Among tlmne In the delegation was Bunny Potts, short stop. Skinny Martin, pitcher. Puds Slmkins, catcher, and Ed Wer hlck, ferst baste. Slsslety Mr. Charles (Puds) Slm klnses big sister la practicing singing for grand opra, wlch you can heer her very day for about a block, sownd Ing as If she thawt suinbody w.i.s choaking her, being very Imbarrisslii to Mr. Charles (Puds. Slmklns. but everybody knows Its not his fawlt. Pome by Skinny Martin Once Was Enuff I swatted a fly with a fly swatt And It fell in a heep on the floor. Wl'.h serprize on Its little feelures. It had never bin swatted before. Intrlstlng Fa cits About TntrlsMns Peeple. Reddy Mcrfy took his ferst dancing lessin last Satidday aftlmoon, and on the way home he swapped his danclng shoes for a 3rd balsmanf glove. All kinds of dogs took out for exer cize. Rates depending on thr siz and how mutch they pull. See Puds Sim kin and I.erov Shooter. (Advertize ment. ) 00 CITIZENSHIP FORUM . THINGS WOMEN WANT TO KNOW 1 FjicIi tv is given with. Its cor I rect answer, one question asked I the students at the Chicago School j of Political Education for Women. 52. How many kinds of prl 1 mary elections are there, and 1 wlwre arc they held? ! There are three kinds of primary elections: official, which la held under 1 the state law; unofficial, held under i party auspices, to elect delegates to nominating conventions and a presi dential preference primary, which Is held to allow voter3 of a state to Indicate their preference of possible presidential candidates. Primaries aro hold throughout the 1 state, in cities, towns, and In the cbun I 00 1 Editor of N. Y. Sun Dies of Heart Disease I NEW YORK. .June 2T Josiah j Kingsley Olil. for years editor of the 1 I New York Herald nnd, since its mer ; 'ger with the New York Sun. editor of. the Evening Telegram, died here today from heart disease, following n nor vous breakdown. For thirty years Mr. Ohl had been engaged in Journalistic work, begin ning ns reporter on the Atlanta Con stitution in 1SS7 He became interna tionally known as a political writer and expert on Far Eastern questions. During the war he did yeoman service for the allied cause and it is said that his energies during this period were partially responsible for his break down. He was born at Brownsville, Pa., July 31, 1S63. j. Ull America's potato crop last year was 358,000,000 bushels. 54,000,000 below the 1918 crop. HEALTH BY UNCLE SAM, M. D. IH -iealth Questions Will Be An- H swered if Sent to Information H Bureau, U. S. Public Health Serv . jH Ice, Washington, D. C. H e -- FULL-TIME HEALTH OFFICIALS. During the war and since, with the IH home-coining of thousands of soldiers, IH there has been an awakening In va- H rious cities, towns, and communities H regarding the protection of the pub H lic health. The men who were in mill tary service had various opportunities H for seeing the effectiveness ot sanlta- H lion and sanitary methods. H The civilian population in the areas immediately adjacent to the various military encampments witnessed dem B onstratlons by the United States pub IH lic health service in the control and IH eradication of communicable diseases "R and insanitary conditions. The public is beginning to realize that a city, (own. or county cm be j H freed of insanitary conditions and pre H v en table diseases If the proper super- IH vision of such mailers is maintained H by. the health authorities. H Proper sewage disposal, clean water, IH safe milk, control 0.' communicable IH diseases, eradication of flics and mos- H quitoes, are all possible ir the town or IH community has a competent health or- H ganlzatlon. IH A health officer v.-ho properly pro- JH lecis and safeguards the health of hi H I town, city, or county must devole his H whole time to his work. Full-tim lH I health officers nre necessary for effi IH dent public health work. IH I But the health officer alone cannot IH 'do nil the work; he must have a labo IH ratory, public health nurses, sanitarv H Inhpec'ors. and necessary clerical help. IH The f .itire working force of any health H (leparluK.it, city, town, or county H j should give their full time to the work. H It sounds expensive, but it is Uie H best sort of investment for any com jl inutility, for well-directed public health IH work pays big'dividends. H If you are Interested send for a H stimulating pamphlet entitled, ' 1 Your Community Fit?" .Sent free of IH charge by addressing the Information IH editor. U. .S, public health service, rl Washington, D. C. Q. Please tell me of n sure and t fectivc way to remove hair from th jH face. I have used some hair remover? JH and they make the hair grow worse, f want something to kill the roots of the jH A. The only way to remove hair 1 from the face permanently Is by de- f stroying the root from which, the halr grows. This is best done by the elec- I trolytic method, by means of the clec- I trie needle. This treatment is rather 1 paniful and it requires to be done b IH an experienced operator. Ordinary remedies do no more than remove the vM : surface growth of the hair. Q. Is gonorrhea curable after a num- H bcr H A. Chronic gonorrhea is curable, but J treatment must be persisted in. possl- H bly for one or even Iwo years. A com petent specialist should be consulted, pr treatment be secured at one of the J free clinics In your state. jH Q. Please send me a booklet on jH 'the spine and inward nervousness, fl from which I suffer, 'H A. The bureau has no publications iH dealing with the spine, or with what 'H you call "inward nervousness." If you are not well, by all means have a reputable physician given you a thor- fl ough examination to find out what Is IH wrong. If your plumbing got out of IH order you would certainly call In a IH plumber to fix it. Your body Is a very delicate mechanism and you cannot af ford to tamper with It. By all means jH call In a doctor and let him find out IH what is wrong. jH 00 IH The first United States bank was cs jtabllshed in 1791. Make iced tea S in the morning H Pour from tho leaves when fresh, placeintherefriger- IH atortocool. Serve t in tall, thin glasses UH with ice, sugar and a slice of lemon. LlPTON'S I jgero tea DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Let Us. Hope It Doesn't Rain Again Very Soon. By Allman H For (SooDMeaa sake Wo 1 co VLVtCr I WHAV WASTHe ( no i uiavuV ( F Vol)0CehV sickJ T WAS pAKUrt' VeA. IT WASRAiwiM CHALEV,GfcTBU6W AHO COME PoWW jf- MATTER WTH YtfU J, I VOH V SEE- YM V VeSTETRDAV ' AkiD I WOWY WAMWA CLEArt UP TU$ OFFICE, VeSTERPAV. IB VGSTERDAV, WEJ3E . SICK- 1 CoiADMY C0M6. ) , (SET MV NEW CAP- y i 'L 2 I