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: leg was amputated. Blood poisoning set in. Death DAA Aver . PAGE FOUR “The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) | Published by th Bismarck, N. D., and Bismarck, as second cl George D. Mann..........President Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Dy carrier, per year........ 7. Daily by mail, per year, (in 7.20 | Daily by mail, per yea: | (in state outside Bismarck). . 5.00 | Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. +++ 6.00 ‘ulation Member of The Associated Press | ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the | ase for republication of all news dispatches credited | to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and alsu the local news of spontaneous origin published here- | in. All rights of republication of all other matter | herein are also reserved. | EEF Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. ! PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | NEWYORK -. - Fifth Ave. Bldg. | Member Audit Bureau of Ci (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | a eee | Oscar S. Straus { It comes to few men to achieve so many things | in so splendid a fashion as was true of Oscar S. | Straus, lawyer, merchant, diplomatist, statesman | and philanthropist, who died recently at the age! of 75. He was, without question, one of the most | distinguished Americans of his time. His public life | included three terms as ambassador to Turkey, a! post he filled with particular brilliancy, and a term { as Secretary of Commerce and Labor, His commercial activities included partnership in two gr department stores in the city of New York after he had for many successful law practice. He was born in Germany | ame to this country when four old, chilldhood having been spent in Georgia. He | studied at Columbia University, where he took | several degrees. | Mr. Straus was a Jew, but his early training was such that he became identified with the Christian | ‘aith also and during his whole life he was an en- | thusiastic exponent of broadmindedness in religion | and his wide and generous philanthropies were sol designed as to include both the Jew and the Ch@s- | tian. It was in the realm of public service, however, | that Mr. Straus achieved a deserved and lasting | eminence for unsglfish patriotic thought and ac-| tivity. In addition to representing the United States in Turkey he was once candidate for governor of New York, was twice a member of the Permanent | Tribunal at The Hagu Other smaller distinctions colored Mr. public Ji and he had the unique experience of serving in offices of high rank under five succes- sive Presidents, two of whom were Democrats stand- ing at the extreme opposite poles of that party, and three Republicans, also of decidedly different stand- ings. Mr. Straus had the wholehearted admiration and respect of the whole world, both in appreciation of his sterling character, his varied achievements and his comprehensive philanthropies. With his passing the world has lost a good, true American, whose sympathies and interest! embraced evety construc- tive effort for good. ars conducted a most | years The British Crisis Great Britain is experiencing a calamity cf the first order, the first general strike in her history. Five million British workers are out of their jobs— 2,525,000! as members of the unions officially on strike and approximately an equal number as em- pleyes in industries which have been forced to close as a result of the strike order. The issue i: thus fairly joined between that section of the com- munity represented by the trade unions and that other section for which Premier Stanley Baldwin and his government claim a mandate to act. Civil liberties and rights have been revoked and the “tight little isle” is under strict military rule, with every re- source of communication and transportation under government control to keep the essentials in cper. ation. Inasmuc' this is the first oc organized labor has thus flatly direct action on such a scale there is seme doubt as | to the immediate efficiency of the goveryment’s preparations to carry on the essential services of | feeding and transporting the people and heating | and lighting their homes. Although the government has made these prepar- | ations, backed by thousands upon thousands of | velunteers, to continue what are known as the vitai services, the distribution of food, bread and milk for the children, and although the big corporations have ; arranged to provide sleeping and eating quar- ters for their employes, so that the ne ity of re- turning home by day or night is obviated, there is a tremendous tie-up in all the, big cities and there has been an immediate cessation of many forms of labor dependent upon the greater industries com- prised in the Trades Union Congress. | This widespread demonstration by some five mil-| licn- workers will, unless speedily terminated, cause untold suffering, with the loss of millions of dol- lars. Frem a viewpoint three thousand miles dis- tant one can hardly take too constricted a view of the situation, and, on the whole, it is a monumental | tragedy. Let us hope some solution to the catas- trophe will soon be found. ion on which } vd the issue of Bobby Leach and Death Bobby Leach went cver Niagara Falls in a barrel and came out of that tremendous battering whirl- pool‘alive. Bobby Leach, one.July day 15 years ago, crashed through space with the thunder of raging waters beating him into insensibility. But Bobby is dead today. He slipped on an or-; ange peel not long ago. He broke his leg. The j the famous “Lignite Limited,” to strike the Fort | | where the largest lignite mine in the country is op- |scuth and the Little Missouri north of them, pass had the last laugh on Bobby Leach. + Which is only the tale that insurance companies nd their veracious figures tell again and again. “Occupations of tisk,” even plain “dare-devil pur- ~ suits” kill so few persons compared with the can step, the kitchen stepladder and 1 making the general election a pleas’ that waits for an orange peel, but only twirls ye thumbs as a man, desperation in his eyes, feels the barrel in which he crouches lifted by giant hands and flung into rock-strewn spac In the mental world the little crisis stuns, Most | of us can meet the big tragedy, the big experience, | with poise, But lives are wrecked on decisions and | aut nerves born of the pseudo-crisis. i Study in Pride | A convicted wife-beater was sentenced to the whip: | ping pest in a Baltimore jail and received five lashes | across his back. A crowd of about 150 spectators watched the primitive punishment. “T don’t mind taking my medic the man eo his jailers as they locked his hands around the t, “but I don’t think you ought to make | whipping pos a circus of it A man who b tempt for physical punishment but fee and self-respect injured by being public! i would make a suitable subject for psychological ; study. A pride which governs our public and not | our private life not only lacks sincerity but is value- less and a mask which fails to hide true character. Se ae ci cl Editorial Comment |} Into a New Country | (St. Paul Dispatch) | St. Paul men who are to compose the m i ship of St. Paul Association Trade Tour, leaving the | city May 16, are going to sce a new country, out of | the beaten path of transcontinental main lines, rich | in history and still sustaining much of the methods | , Perhaps they will | s his wife, who then shows con: / his pride | insulted ember- | and manners of an elder da not be called upon to “rough it,” but there should be many a thrill for them as they pass through this almest unknown country—-the hinterland of North | Dakota. They strike into North Dakota from the main line | of the St, Paul road at almost the center of prob- | ably the greatest colony of German-Russian farmers | in the United States. They will see a land that for its soil offered little chi for succe: et which | y more prosperous than many richer sectidns of the industry and almost primitive meth- ods of living of the queerly clad, bearded men in garments not much changed from what the peasant of Russia wore. From Bismarck they will go north on the route of Berthold Indian reservation, following the Missouri on the east bank, touching at Sanish, where the new bridge is to be built, and ending at Wilton, crated. t day they will cross to the west bank and from Killdeer, the end of the branch, an oasis of woods well watered by streams, with the Knife river | eastward through a rich and as yet an undeveloped country. Not content with traversing one Indian reserva- tion, they will go south along the Missouri to the Standing Rock reservation, through historic Fort| Rice, to Cannonball (80 named from the peculiar round boulders that fill the river) to Heil in Grant} county, that once was “Hell” to compete with the town of Paradise, a few miles south, to Mott, “the spot the gods forgot,” so ran the legend when rain failed for nearly eight years, and out to New Eng- land, close to the famous “buttes” that rise like pine cone towers in Slope county. A great country, ful! of resources and of a strong people, where the In- dian and the cowboy are yet to be found, and where, despite unimagined hardships and pioneer conditions, the spirit of an undaunted and courageous people flames in a conquering fight. Why They Don’t Vote (The Jamestown Sun) Quite frequently someone calls attention to the danger to representative government caused by the fact that eve year an increasing number of Americans are staying away from the polls. Pres- ident Coolidge himself pointed out this peril in his recent address to the Daughters of the American Revolution. It is often remarked, too, that the cit- izen who doesn’t vote in nine cases out of ten is a conservatively inclined citizen, whether he he Re- publican or Democrat. It might be suggested, therefore,-that there is another reason for this lack of interest in voting than mere laziness on the part of the average citi- zen. In each succeeding election nowadays the per- centage of those voting to the whole number eligi- ble seems to grow less. One reason for this which is not often dwelt upon is that, when it comes to voting the average citizenjis getting too much cf a good thing, and nothing patls on most Americans more than this. In the “good cld days” we went to the polls once every two years to vote, and that was about | all there was to it. But now we have’ two or three | elections nearly every year, and, worst of all, a “dog | and cat” squabble preceding each one. Instead of | the biennial election to express the will of the peo- ple, this present year starts off with senatorial and state primaries, local primaries and all sorts of pri- maries lasting from carly spring until the first of October. And in a good many communities the: will be campaigns on bond es and various oth referendum ideas. No wonder then that by the time the regular election rolls around 4 lot of people will be too weary with it all to go and vote. For ther is nothing quite so disgusting as a primary which tends to be disgusting. Then next year there will say nothing of more referendums, and these will last until itsis time for the presidential primaries to | open up again. | This is all quite different from the old days’ when the people voted in November on the candidates se- lected in convention and left the seleetion of the United States senators to the state legislatures. Of | course, once in a while there was sume anguish over | the result of a state convention, but no convention unrest ever lasted as long as the mildest primary does nowada: i For a long time the cry has been “let the People | rule,” taking the authority away from delegated | meetings and giving it to voters direct. But the Hetaswedl * ne, a out to vote might in- people are getting tired of ruling. Perhaps the best way to whet their appetites would be, not to pass a law compelling them to vote, but to abolish a lot of useless pri campaigns, so novelty again. ' | 1. | | JUDY DECI ST raged my T felt my face grow let me go home, Mr. Officer. n just about all in. Tomorrow I will come back if wish and tej] you all about the jinx that has béen following me ever since I came to this fair city of yours. ‘Now I want to go hom If you let me go, I am sure Mr. Hatha- way will come over and tell you all about it in the morni My dear young lad have to tell me anytl Personally I would like to have you prefer some charges against a man or men un- known who came near killing you, but that is up to you. an’t keep you from going to your home, young jady, if 1 wantedsto. But I really would like some information whereby I could jug those men.” “Did they steal anything you?” “Yes, they, or rather he, for I think there was but one man, took from me_my "purse.” : “How much moncy was th Ta ‘A little over twent, which I owe to Mrs. Ri room rent. The purse ever, is probably worth at Jerry. “Officer, I gave the purse to Miss Dean this morning and it cost two hundred and fifty dollars. It was the finest one I could buy. 1 red as 1 you don't from five doMars for my if, how- I looked But it did shrink—the little Whif- fet's purple bombazine suit did. It shrank and shrank until the Whif- fet looked like a fried sausage that had burst out here and there in spots through its tight jacket. His hands and feet and head and cary }ouked miles too big for his clothes, but he was so happy because the beautifu purple color hadn't faded, that he never bothered a bit about the shrinking. So off they started again to find his shadow. “I lost it when I was crossing the stile,” said the Whiffet. “It could get over, I guess, as it was preit; steep.” So to the stile they went, to loo for the lost shadow. And there sat Grumpy Grinny, ground squirrel, right on the s “Hello!” said the Twin’. ever are you doing, Grumpy ? “Counting my chickens before they said Grumpy grumpily. “What does that mean?” asked the Whiffet. “Has it anything to do with shadows?” “And what is a ground-squirrel do- ing with chickens anyway?” said Nancy. “Pll tell you,” said Grumpy. “It 8 nothing to do with shadows and it has nothing to do with chickens. I'm just being bad. Pop said he'd give me a nickel so I told Jimmy Duck I'd buy his kite. Pop said J was counting my chickens before they were hatched and that it was wrong. So I got mad and came out here and ; now Rm counting all the chickens I ‘be city and state elections in some of the states, to eek le Bd want. I'm up to three hundred and They left Grumpy counting on_ his fingers, “Three hyndred and thirty, three hundred and thirty-one, three ‘hundred and thirty-two,” and so on But there was no sign of a shadow anywhere! So along they went until they came the old plow. And there on the big pointy thing at’ the front, sat Spokes the\Spider. , . ‘And Spokes the Spider was puffing ‘and puffing and puffing, his sides going out and in like a blaeksmith’s bellows. “Goodness alive, Spokes!” erigd Nick. “What are:you doing?” “Crossing my . bridges before I come to them,” said Spokes, going on with his puffing, and' keeping his eyes tight shut. hi “Have you lost your senses?” said Nancy. “How can you cross bridges when you're only sitting on a plow?” “I'm being bad,” said the ‘spider. “I was frightened because the rooster nearly ste me and Pop said I was ridges before ‘I came ‘to re bi them. So here 1 am crosving bridges. faire, it to| TOMORROW: Jerry Propos {her in compensation for the insults she received in my father’s restau- ant when a purse of hers was taken | containing two hund nd fifty | “It is a long story, officer, and I j haven't time to tell it to you dow,” continued Jerry. “Besides I think | Miss Dean should be taken home,and | put to bed. I will return in the niorn- ing and answer any question a may put to me, for Tam just anxious to have that man found and punished as you are.” The officer looked both curious and! somewhat disgusted. “Don't worry,” I Jerry, “be- cause I haven't time to tell you all | that led up to this attack, but Iwill tell it all to you in the morning. It may have some bearing on the “The sooner we get the story, } Hathaway, the easier it will be find the thief.” “AIL right,” me out to his “Judy,” he said the moment we were on our way to Mamie’s: “I want you to’marry me tomorrow morning. It is not safe to leave you out in the cold another moment without some- one to take care of you.” “Don't be in such a hurry,” I said id Jerry as he rushed ‘oadster, happily, for I was beginning to li impetuous, lover. very much. know we are almost (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) It's I’m crossing them in m; less trouble. I've cros: un- dred and twenty-nine bridges. I'm j half way over the three hundred and thirtieth. Im pretty tired, L tell ‘a lost shadow around asked the little ine.” ith my ey id you sc here anywhere?” | Whiffet. “I shut” o to your mext | “You're cra said Nick I.must think you're playing | Wants-A-Cyrner.” “Three hundred and thirty-one. | (Copyrigh WW New York, M of Broalway’ human weakness ment on vanity bright light belt— No. ful. with stage oti monished the clder After a few preliminary with Broadway the older sister be-| It's|ents were voted into.» pther one, ‘o Be Continued.) 26, NEA Service, Inc.) and 1—Two sisters. Daughters of moderately well- off parents in an upéptate town, Both One several >———_——_- —_—- —______ years older and much wiser than the | News From the j the parents ad-j | ambitions, IN NEW YORK OO i I ter. gins to win success in the films. not so easy for the younger one. such. She ment starts. coming n the carly quentif she is drunk, the other. many sisterly quarrels and tears in manded by said the spider. two dramas ch a chapter in » Each a preach- restraint... Each typical of the ironic under- current to ‘the outward gai aiety of the Both beauti- ‘irmishes She gets a few odd jobs in choruses and She drifts into fast company. HEALTH SERVICE POSTURE AND | : HEALTH | BY DR. HUGH S. CUMMING Surgeon Gene United States Public Health Service | Posture may be defined | as the position of the several parts of the dody in relation to each other and refers to the bearing or carriage of ® person in sitting standing and walking. : } ; Posture contributes substantially ‘to the general appearance and is dependent on the state of the health, the type of the physique or build, the tone of the muscles and state of the mind. the muscles is to easily and quickly contract and relax. That the state of the mind has an important bearing on posture may be observed in the dejected appearance of a per- son who is depressed as contrasted with the buoyant appearance of onc | who is clated. 4 ; The emotions particularly influ- ence posture, as witness the slinking posture of fear and the erect posture of courage or defiance. Double Reaction ysital ind mental is posture, it is not unreasonable to, suppose that his posture will react on his physical and mental state. 3 This is widely recognized, as w ness such expressions as “brace u and “head high,” which are admoni- tions to come out of @ depressed or fearful state. The ercct military pos- ture is intended to instill confidence and banish fear. There have been many styles or fashions in the posture of women and these have not always been con- ducive to health. Wrong styles in posture have undoubtedly caused many misplaced positions and dis- ordered functions of the organs of the body. 4 : Woman's posture is often influ. enced by her dress, A very marked example of the pernicious influence of dress on posture, and, incidentally, frequented by theatrical folk... .with another man. It was a sort of tip to the world that the old affair was In the carly hours of the morning in came the “super-slick” young man....the apothéosis of all vay is supposed to repre- quite drunk.... any kel” from Bingville, alked to the table and began to tart something” in loud and angry Could this be the “funny always jibed at the re- es? He said just one word too many.... The girl picked up a bottle: and hit him over the head... They carried him out, for all the world like the ludicrous fig- ures in the film comies —-GILB SWAN. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, In ec.) ( _ State University | , zs Twenty-one State University stud- ‘e member- ship in the Dakota Playmakers, Un ersity dramatic organization, accord- 1g to an annouricement released by Director BE. De Sehenverger. inito ithe apart. morning. Fre-| Those who were elected are: Jessic She is repri-| DePuy, Gratton; Madricnne Florence, There arc(Humbeldt, Minn.; Alice Krick, Ber- thold; Margaret Thomas, Woodstock, the hours just before the dawn. One morning the youngster is in ape. mother say?” res the older sister. particularly. bad “What would pl The other leaves the room. im- Ten minutes later she is Writhing on the Ml.; Gladys Edin, East Grand Fork: Henry Haussamen, Grafton; Charles Buchanan, Carrington; Robert Bennet, Newark, N. J.; Edwatd Thompson, St. floor. She has drunk # fatal dose of | Thomas; Winnifred Davies, Dorothy poison. < Gehrke, Marion Van Osdel, Jack ale: Blain, Allan Olson, Cecil Joyce, No. 2—He is a “clown” in one of| Robert Young, Roy La “Meter, and the very “broad.” sent the are theme Consta! Just “gravy cule. He becomes enamored of a famous Her figure has won ‘her many a prize and no little fame in beauty. the show world. All ‘thick as_ mush,” as “his girl.” affair: One night she appeared in a place EVERETT TRUE [tL HAVE SAID "NO* | SIMPCE WORD AND SASY To INDERSTAND, ts (T NoT = PARDON, SIR, CET M itHe “N' 13 FOR S "Now! AND, THe "O" Is FoR MOOT" Sette BY CONDO “NOW CISTEN to NG, MIR. SALESMAN, THAT \S A SHORT, BUT, MR, TRU, CET ME.EAPCAIN | Trt o-.s GSXxPLAIN, girlie” shows. of humor is known to be particularly He is presumed to repre- slick wisecracking type.| | Love, respectability—all such things for jibes. of man and woman? for his brand of ridi- Broadway knew THS ‘WORD "NO" I> COMPQSED ‘OF TWO LEITERS His brand they were She was accepted Their names were al- ways paired, they were’ always to- gether at the night clubs and publte William Randall, all of Grand Forks. ¢>————________, STATE BRIEFS | BUY GROUND FOR SCHOOL Hettinger—An entire block of city property, located north of St. Mary school, “has been purchased by the school. Gardens will be planted, trees set out and the grounds improved. GIRL SHOT BY BROTHER Kulm—Brace Templain, 16, was fatally injured Friday when she was accidentally shot by her brother. The ‘boy was attempting to extract a load fram the gun when it was accidentally illschaxmye: The girl died an hour later. DESERTS BABY Richardton—A 17-year-old girl was arrested here by State’s Attorney Cain on @ charge of deserting her young baby. The infant was found in the home of Ed. Ballagher here last Satuy- day aftrenoon, when he returned from .| work, The girl was taken to Dickin- son to' stand:trial. It if her second | offense on a similar-charge! The baby i8 being cared for by county officials, FESSENDEN PIONEER DIES Fesgenden—J. K. Swan, 80, died at his home there last Monday morning following a several months’ illne: He had been a resident of Fessenden since 1893, “For many years Mr. Swan had been a pilot on the Mississippi river, working from New Orleans to St. Paul. In 1874 he came to Grand Forks and engaged in steamboating on the Red River. He was a member of the city council Grand Forks for several years and at one time was mayor of the city, He is survived ‘by one daughter, Mrs, H. H. Parsons, ‘of Fessenden. Funeral services were conducted by the Masonic lodge last Wednesday. TO MOVE COUNTY SEAT yDunn Center—Petitions. signed by 1,842 voters, ‘e presented to the county commissione: mecting at Manning last week asking for the removal of the county seat from Manning to a more convenient place. The signatures represent 77 per cent of the voters at the last election. The signatures were checked and verified by the commissioners and a resolution was passed that the peti- | ton ‘be granted. The two cities of ‘the county having the highest number of votes at the primary election June 30 will appear as can tes for county scat in thé official county bal- ——————______¢ THOUGHT | For wrath killeth the foolish PR TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1926 on health, is the average woman’s shoe. Fortunately for men there only been ono style of posture—the erect—which is the correct one. In correct tips the various or- gans of the body ate kept in their wroper places .and are given tho’ proper space, neither too much nor too little, Correct posture insures proper blood supply, enabling all parts of the body to properly per- form their functions. Shoulders Back The principal requisites of correct posture are that the shoulders shall be well back, the chin shall be held in and the museles of the abdomen contracted; the chest should be held other part of the body shoWld high but not so high that it makes breathing difficult. In order to attain the full benefits of correct posture, training, should begin in infancy. The child should receive proper nourishment to pro- mote proper growth and develop- ment. It should wear clothing that does not constrict or deform. Tt should lie on a firm mattress with no pillow or a very small one in order to prevent any possible de- formity of the spine that may re- sult from the sagging of the body when lying on soft mattresses and pillows. Any defects of the limbs or eyes or be corrected as early as possible. As tho child begins to walk proper-fit- ting shoes and stockings are impor- tant in order not to deform’ the feet. When the child begins to go to school or before, the vision and the healing should be tested and, if found below normal, defects should be corrected, as such defects often cause faulty carriage of the head and may also produce many other more serious conditions. The school seats should be proper height and shape so as to comfortably fit the child and not de- form his posture. Posture training should be given ‘to the child in the schools. Bismarck High School Typists Win in Contest Mandan and Bismarck were the only entries in the first Slope dis- trict typewriting contest for high school commercial students held at the Mandan high school Saturday aft- ernogn under the direction of Miss Serefie Winness, commercial instruc- tor in the Mandan high school. The t was won by Bismarck with ge net rate of 36 words per 0 Mandan’s 34. 1 other schools of the dis- trict had made entries for the con- test but because of the heavy rains they did not send their representa- tives. Each school was represented by a team of five ,contestants and ei wrote for 15 minutes. The in- di al scores were: * $ Bismarck Contestant Gross Errors Net Edna Dean Best .... 986 17 G4 her Noggle - 16 «16° 38 Myrtle Miller ...... 887° 33 39 Geraldine Gish .... 853 38° 33 Louise Gish - 855 59 18 Total: 4297 162 Average per. Mand: Contestant Gross Errors Net Margar’t Hoffman .. 776 20-38 Audrey Melton ...7+ 737 17-38 Bertha Kjol ........ 735 26 32 Evelyn Edwards 32 Einar Edwards Totals .. Average per minute . i Temperatures and | Road Conditions | ae 'o-- (Mercury readings at 7 a. m.) Bismarck—Clear, 46; r rough, St. Cloud—Clear, 52; roads good. Mankato—Clear, 62; ronds good, Duluth--Clear, 63; ‘roads good. pftibbine—Partiy cloudy, 50; roads in h Grand’ Forks—Cloudy, 52; roads good. Jamestown—Cloudy, 50; roads good, Minot-—Cleur, 42; roads soft, Fargo-Clear, 44; roads good. Mandan—Clear, Winona—Clear, 65; Rochester—Clenr, roads fair. roads fair, 61; roads rough. . NEEDED IT THEN COALMAN: When f got around with that load of coal for Mr. Jones, his house was on fire, COAL MERCHANT: That's unfor-. tunate. I suppose ho told you to bring it back? COALMAN: No, he said, if it was anything like the last load I'd better chuck it on—Bradford Pioneer. WHAT ONE SENTENCE DID New York.—-When James A. Gar- field decided to go to college he fav- ored Yale, but also wrote to the pres- idents “of Brown and Williams col- leges. Yale's president made a for- mal reply and the president of Brown did the same. But the president. of Williams took an extra second to add this line, “We shall be glad to do what we can for you.” As a result of that line, William’ College received the honor of graduating a president of the United States and having as its own president, Harry A, son of President Garfield.” Ournelds Flapper Fanny Says: | and envy slayeth the silly one—Job 5:2. see He gubsalte, himself k be teen ere! tte ttn be in a fit of passion,’ = Sometimes the girl who: } erent meta the man eke the . of. ‘bt on