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ncipals Atten ew Yor! meling 1 me of t times ir * outdo: > Tuesd the sm Ml indice ted lac omers. he-woo! 1d have ning al + fight y dinn 3. here hi Garde igh as ice rin ch of t once 38 at pr se in w ire. rom i ),000 or sa “ge it, in id Ch _ 23 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1932 The Bismarck Tribune - Am Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune , Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as Second class mai! matter. GEORGE D. MANN t President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ Daily by mail outside of North Dakota 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in stave, per year $1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in stat three no less a place than the British House of Commons itself. The discovery of the murdered child's body close to a spot where scores of police had been on duty for weeks; the fiasco of the Curtis case; the tragedy of Violet Sharpe—these things constitute a record which ‘no Police department could be proud of. | The Penalty of High Office | Now that Mayor Walker's examin- ation by Judge Seabury has receded into the background a bit, it is pos- 20|sible to see that regardless of any {questions as to the man’s fitness for the office-of mayor the whole busi- ness has re-emphasized one old but often forgotten fact—that a public of- ficial must keep his financial and business affairs above even a hint of te suspicion. +» 1.50) What would be proper for a pri- veer by mail in Canada, pet sty vate citizen to do can be highly un- Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) wise for a public official. He must not only avoid corruption; he must avoid anythting that remotely looks like corruption. It is not enough for him to be upright; he must see to it that no one has the slightest reason for implying that he isn't upright. The mayor of a great city can have no “private life.” That is one of te penalties of holding high office. 1 One thing you can say for Mr. Hoo- ver: He hasn't yet claimed that this is a depression to end depressions. Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON We Don’t Believe It For many months a group of ex- perts, known as the “President's Conference on Home Building and Home Ownership,” has been working on the problem of how to assist every American in that laudable ambition to have a piece of ground and a home of his own. After much thought it has blue- printed a lot of suggestions and has/ devised a formula which, if followed, will guarantee results to anyone. The, difficulty, as is usual in such mat-/ ters, Hes in following the Prescrip- | tion. {| The announced object of the con-|~ ference is to raise the standard of American housing and that is a laud- able aim. The plain fact, however, is} that the work of the conference will probably be so much lost motion, since the standard of housing for each individual is established largely by} what he wants or can afford and the| conference has suggested no work- | able means of adjusting those fac-| sors. Volume nine of the conference re- ports under the title “Household) Management and Kitchens” is in-{ tended, according to advance an-; nouncements, “to bring the efficiency | of modern business into household! management and the scientific tech- | nique of the factory into the equip- ment and operation of the home.” How nice that would be. | Doubtless there are ways in which the management and operation of the average home could be improved The sailor that had a swectheart in every port now has a son that is a truck driver with one at every hot- dog stand. Enacting some of the appropriation bills by congress amounts to the same thing as writing a check to pay an overdraft. A Los Angeles man has instituted | @ search for his mother-in-law. This is the hottest news since the last man bit the last dog. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. An Organist Doing (New York Times) Senator Dickinson of Iowa was as- signed a hard job as “keynoter” at the opening of the Republican con- vention * * * and it must be said that he took it hard. Dutifully he en- tered upon ‘a long laudation of Presi- dent Hoover, with which we have no quarrel, but which was shot through with occasional gleams of unconscious ; humor like the following: \ Perhaps it was with prophetic vision that the American people elected Herbert Hoover four years ago with the greatest popular and electoral college vote any presi- dent ever received. At any rate, he had scarcely taken the oath of his office before economic storm clouds had begun to cast their shadow over the nations orld. This is almost comic when one re- calls the Republican pledges in 1928 to continue prosperity at top notch for four years more, and to proceed cheerfully to the entire abolition of poverty in this country. but, somehow, the kind of a home| where factory technique prevails lacks something of appeal. Speaking! strictly from a masculine standpoint, the factory atmosphere should be re-| tained in a factory. | But we take particular umbrage at the advertising for this great docu-; ment which will make the house-| wives’ task just one sweet song. Thej authors say of it, or have hired some-! one to say for them, the following} choice bit of bunkum: “Means to| correct, the inefficient and wasteful | operation of an American business! that spends billions of dollars yearly | is offered to the public with the pub- lication today of"—etc. Now ain't that somepin’? Hl That “inefficient and wasteful’) crack is what gets our goat. It ap-| pears so much like a gratuitous slap | in the face. ‘We may be wrong, of course, but we'll wager a cookie that the average} American wife and mother knows and | is practicing economies which the | high-priced “experts” who commie’: | this book never heard of. i And we'd like to bet a little some- thing on the side that the average | North Dakota housewife, faced with | a specific problem of household man- | agement, would reach a better and | more practical solution than most of | the folks who contributed to this For instance, we might try out this | one in competition: | “What would you do if little Johnny | had just got stung by a bee, the baby | had the colic, the stove is smoking, | the potatoes aren't peeled and friend husband is due home for dinner in) half an hour?” ‘Your housewife takes problems like that in her stride and meets them every day, but your expert probably would come up with the explanation that bees and babies are a bad com- bination and really should be avoided. A Big Job Bungled ‘The perplexing Lindbergh tragedy seems to have grown more puzzling, rather than less so, as a result of the suicide of Violet Sharpe, maid in the ‘Morrow home; and once again there 4s borne in upon the casual observer Senator Dickinson, coming from the | agricultural West, was obviously cho- sen as temporary chairman at Chi- cago mainly for the purpose of reas- suring the troubled and embattled farmers. At this task he labored / strenuously. Referring to the efforts | of the farm board to raise or stabilize agricultural prices, he was forced to admit an almost complete failure, but added blithely: “It matters little if; the government loses $150,000,000 for the savings it made to the homes of farmers throughout this whole land. t was throwing a regiment into the; front of the battle to lose, but saved | millions.” However, Senator Dickin- son proceeded to draw the political moral of the whole experiment by gravely asserting: “As I said before,! grievous as his suffering may be, no farmer can deny the undeviating friendship of the Republican party.” This is the Q. E. D. which is expected to bring back into line the agricul- tural states now flaming with politi- cal revolt. But Senator Dickinson might try it on his own state of Iowa and see how well it works, The rest of his speech walked deli cately away from most of the really | live questions of the day. It wholly avoided mention of prohibition, * * *, said not a word about reparations and war debts as they press for different | handling today, took the most super- ficial and obscurantist view of the ne- | cessities of our foreign commerce, and at every oratorical crisis resorted to arraigning the Democrats and calling for three cheers for the Republicans and their president. Making every allowance for the in- herent and insurmountable difficul- ties which Senator Dickinson faced in trying to sound an inspiring key- note, the general verdict of the au- dience must be that it was a per- formance in part singularly muffled and at times almost ludicrously shrill and discordant. Py It would be a better idea to wipe out crime than to wipe out crime pic- tures.—Ernest Lubitsch, movie direc- tor. ce We shall take no steps antagonistic toward the Soviet government unless Russian agents meddle with internal affairs in Manchuria. If our efforts here are impaired by outside influ- ences, we shall have to check such in- fluences at once—General Shigeru Hondo, commander of Japanese troops in Manchuria, = - fi * * the feeling that the investigation into ‘We should look to the future and this case has been woefully bungled. . At first this girl’s suicide looked like profit by’mistakes of the past. His- tory shows that we have been through trying times before—Dudley 8. Hum- tacit confession of guilt. But it has|phrey, 80-year-old popcorn king, become more evident, as the days Mich vissigulbenunlilesibcta eet ne rere eee ESET RENE RUNS EFC mt + * * ‘The prosperity of our nation de- the theory that an inno- [ecb Magee Dorper proximate half our population which has its first hope of prosperity in the welfare of agriculture —Con- Doing a Gandhi! { | ANNIVERSARY diabetes. I am 19, 71 inches tall and weigh only 152. pounds. please tell me the number of units of insulin to take to increase my weight? My mother could give it to me as she does to my brother.—(W. C.) Answer—No, son, I do not think it would be wise for you to have the in- sulin, unless under medical direction. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) petits” eae TODAY . a 1S THE a BLOODY ITALIAN FRONT you nee eh that jhe is sick of By William ink. No reply can be made to qui ALCOHOL IS A DEPRESSANT You teach that alcohol is a depres- sant and not a stimulant. I have had quite an argument with some people here about this. They won't accept Dr. Brady as an authority. Will you Please explain it in such a way that I can convince them they are wrong? My husband had pneumonia when he was 12 years old, and he says the only thing that saved him was a teaspoon- ful of brandy every hour or so. These other people also assert that members of their family have been saved by be- ing given brandy. What's more, they say that during the influenza epidem- ic all the doctors prescribed alcohol and that was all they did prescribe (Mrs, W. B. The action of alcohol is not a ques: j ion of opinion but one of fact, so it doesn’t matter much what I say or what your friends say or what your husband says or what Mrs. Sumsey or Mrs. Saireygamp thinks about it. Any |modern medical textbook on Thera- peutics (the action of medicines or [other remedies) will explain how al- cohol acts as a depressant from first to last. We have to concede that these scientific authorities know what they are talking about, and we cannot op: Pose our traditional notions or our an. cient theories to their precise meas- urements. Probably it is useless to attempt to convince people who like a nip of brandy or other alcoholic liquor or beverage every little while that their dope is not good for them and for everybody in every emergency. Capable physicians learned from sad experience that alcohol was very bad medicine for the flu. I believe I am not treading on any good doctor's toes when I say that such treatment for such an illness is no longer sanctioned as good practice. No emergency hospital uses alcohol, as whiskey, brandy or other liquor, as a stimulant. All good authorities with much ex- perience warn against giving liquor to ;@ person suffering with venomous snakebite. Only in old-fashioned novels is the brandy flask used to revive or restore victims of shock, fainting or loss of consciousness from any cause. In none of the great hospitals of the ecuntry is there any considerable quantity of liquor used today. If you |find a hospital with a regular whiskey or brandy requirement the cue is to look for the boozers on the staff or in the employ of the institution. People who loudly declare more liquor is used now than ever before and that all good doctors prescribe it PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. Brady, M. D. eries not conforming to instructions. , for most illnesses’ and that it saves life when nothing else can, merely say what they wish were so. When an honest, competent physi- cian has occasion to prescribe alcohol (which he may in certain cases) that | is nobody's business, and nobody else than a physician can even surmise whether he is using it as a fuel or as @ narcotic. Suffice to say that the effect of al- cohol is depressant, not stimulant, as all recognized authorities agree. If anybody can cite any recognized au- thority on therapeutics who holds that alcohol in any form or quantity is a | stimulant in any way, I'll be happy to note the excepfion here. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS That Fatal Craving | I have such a craving for sugar I can eat a tablespoonful of it at a time jevery day, Is it harmful? What} makes me crave it so? I had a goiter} removed two years ago.—(Mrs, H. 8. E) i Answer—Perhaps thyroid deficiency | £ is a factor in your case—you should iscuss that with your physician. It} nless to satisfy a craving for ugar, candy or other sweets, provided ‘ou do not bring on obesity by over- }induiging. In any case the indul- | gence of a sweet tooth should be bal- | anced by the habit of taking suffi- {cient exercise every day, in work,! |play, games, hiking, swimming or home gymnastics. Pasteurizing Milk Going to country to live. We will have government tested cow. Please | tell me how to pasteurize milk for |child and family. Also how to pas- | teurize cream for butter making.—(P. |M. M) | Answer—Pasteurized food. is food | which has been heated to 145 degrees F, and held at that temperature from 20 to 30 minutes, then allowed to cool again. Such heating is sufficient to kill the germs of tuberculosis, typhoid fever, septic sore throat, undulant fe- | { | | | | a | STICKERS AILNORT Out of the letters above, ee if you can make one three-letter word and one four- leter word which, when spelled back- wards, will make two other words. _ 4 | THIS CURIOUS WORLD THE WETTEST SPOT IN THE UNITEO STATES ts TILLAMOOK COUNTY, orscon, WITH [30 INCHES OF RAINFALL ANNUALLY, =| b, NEWYORK & ALBANY WERE NAMED APTER THE SAME PERSON oy | at YX) BABY STUART,” the cuxe of YORK ano ALBANY/ @Aey START LATER BECAME AMES IL, B0T THE WORLD KNOWS HIM GEST LE On June 18, 1918, Austrian and Italian troops, the latter reinforced by British battalions, engaged in a fierce battle on the Italian front. It centered on the mountain sector and Montello district; and was caused by the concerted Austrian effort to the American microphone + 5; Broad- with backstage unions and blue- Sunday advocates .. . Wouldn't it be funny if Earl Carroll wound up by moving into his old show house next season, putting his name back in the talize Cleopatra; while another drova her to poison! x * * For instance, here’s one that should drive the Broadway column lads back into their lairs (or should this be spelled differently?) Harry Franck, lights and tossing out all the Zieg-|noted globe trotter, says the most fa- feld changes? ‘They'll have you believe that White and Carroll will both be in radio by winter .. . With Carroll advertising, possibly, “through these mortals now go the most beautful programs on the air.” ee # ONE IN A MILLION Almost a million people at Coney Island over a recent week-end! Yet the tenth person I met turned out to be a lad from my sophomore class at East Denver high school ... Small world? ... It’s practically congested! And at Luna Park I sauntered into a thrill-cave designed by Langdon McCormick . . . Incidents like this force time to march backwards . . Only yesterday, it seems, we were all goose-fleshing up in the gallery while better their positions on the Piave, especially west of San Dona. railroad running from that town to- ward Montebelluna was hidden under a litter of dead bodies for a length of several kilometers. The haul of prisoners from Austrian ranks had reached more than 9,000. Many of the prisoners had little pack- ets of money coupons printed in Ital- ian for spending in cities the Austro- Hungarian forces expected to capture. NO HAT, NO GYP! Saint Andrea, which had changed stage , . eae patie SUR iy eel | “The Jungle” is the title of Coney's ver, scarlet fever, if the milk is pol- luted. To pasteurize .at home you must have a suitable thermometer and a double boiler which permits control of the. heat. teurize if the milk is pure? If I had my own cow I'd prefer the milk as the cow furnished it, unless I suspect- ed the cow had tuberculosis or infect- ed udder or the milker or other hand- ler of the milk had some communica- ble disease. Insulin to Increase Weight My brother receives insulin for his \P BEGIN HERE TODAY pretty, LLIPS, wearing, goes: But why pas- New York, June 18—Notes on nothing in particular and everything in general . . . Those wise young night rounders who have been appearing hatless at the swanky resorts are do- ing this to save the hat tips tariff, according to the check room gals... It may be smart to be thrifty... but it's twice as smart to outsmart the gypsters... * * # decides to disappear from the thea- ter and devote himself to glorifying seemed to settle over the girl's heart. She didn’t want to remem- ber the way she had spent the aft- ernoon. Cherry evaded; “Oh, I went out for a while and walked uround. Then I came back to the hotel and read the paper and waited. I spent a lot of time get- ting ready for dinner—” “Ah, dinner! Reminds me I have a date with a certain young wom- an. If I keep her waiting much longer she'll probably swoon at my feet. Get your bonnet, Cherry. I'll just remove the surface grime from this battered old face and be ready Don't be surprised if Flo Ziegfeld] the Langdon McCormick Gadgets worked melodramatic wonders on newest shiver-palace . . jon! x # THE ELEVENTH CASTAWAY A little volume titled “Name Your Ten” reveals my selection of 10 per- sons I. would choose to take to that apocrypal desert island. They were: Charlte Chaplin, for entertainment; Clarence Darrow, for mellow wisdom and philosophy; Mickey Mouse, for diversion; William Beebe, for his knowledge of plant and sea life, plus his company; Hendrik Willem van Loon, as historian and raconteur; Lynn Fontanne, for—well, maybe just to look at; Marlene Dietrich, just to have fens, Ruth Etting, to sing, Jeft behind. “would do the cooking?” * * # Nothing, by the way, can start YEAR BRIDE.2 totale 808.70, She t ds lotala 3.70. e returns to ti in two seconds!” SS ae ees tee As they went through the door a NOW GO ON WITH THE story |!ittle later Phillips remarked cas- CHAPTER X1 'HERRY said “Oh—!” and then her voice dropped in disap- pointment. A bell boy in blue uni- form stood at the door. He held a large pasteboard box bearing in heavy lettering the name, “The Stanley Company.” “Package for you, Mrs. Phillips.” Cherry told him to put the box down and rummaged in her purse for a coin. The door clicked on the youth’s retreating back. There wore her purchases of the afternoon. Cherry considered the package doubtfully. Ninety-three dollars and seventy cents spent for @ few simple garments. Suddenly she wished she had not gone shop- ping. It seemed a huge sum— $93.70. Why, it was almost $100. In the store she had thought only that the dresses were becoming, that she wanted Dan to see how well she looked in them. Now she would have to tell him |- how much they had cost. She wished she had bought something for Dan instead of for herself. Here it was, the first day of her mar- tiage, and she had spent almost the whole time buying two dresses, The dresses should have been taken out and hung away so they would not be wrinkled but, in her dissatisfaction, Cherry carried the | box unopened to the clothes closet and pushed it back in the shadows. | Then she straightened with a sigh and returned to the window to wait for Dan. . She thought she might see him coming down the street but half an hour later when his key turned in the lock the sound startled her. “Oh, Dan—I'm so glad you've come!” She flew into his arms. Dan's arms, so strong, 80 comforting. The touch of his cheek against her tem- Die. Swift, reassuring kisses, She looked up at bim through shining, tear-spangled lashes, | “Why, darling! What's the mat- ter?” be ( Dan He crushed ber close again in a quick embrace, laughing. “Is that the way you show it when you're happy—getting your eyes all red with tears? Someone will be say- ing Dan Phillips beats that beau- titul young wife of his or locks her up without anything to eat.” “Say it in, dear!” “Say what? “I love to hear you call me your wife. it’s because I’m so happy, ewe (PONDER words, softly whispered, Precious, precious moments. They stolé past. swiftly until the orange glow faded above the city skyline and dusk settled in the streets, - “Was it a long day, Cherry? Were you lonesome?” “It doesn't matter now. Every: thing's all right so long as you're bere again.” < “What di4 you do this after Boon?” ually, “By the way, honey, I thought wo'd go to the Wellington tonight but—well, the fact is I intended to get a check cashed and then forgot. Would you mind if we drop in at a little place I know over on Lo- cust street? but the food’s o, k.” Nothing very fancy, a She assured him she did not mind. Out on the street Cherry raised her head proudly. She wished the whole world could see her walk- ing beside this tall young man who loved her and was so good to her. The “little place over on Locust street” proved to be exactly as Dan had described it. It was not fancy in the least. The sign on the win- dow read “Schroeder’s Restaurant.” Charlie Schroeder, the proprietor, came forward to meet them. He greeted Dan cordially and led the way to a table in the rear of the long, narrow room, eee ‘HE restaurant was about haltf- filled. There seemed to be more men than women at the tables. The furniture was all of dark brown wood and there was a dark brown wainscoting half way up the walls. Dan glanced up from the menu card. “See anything you like?” he asked. “Yes, lots of things. T’ll have the roast lamb and broccoll—" Dan gave the orders, then leaned back comfortably. “Now then,” he said, “I guess we'll eat, To tell the truth I'm al- most famished. Only had a eand. wich at noon. That restaurant out at the airport doesn’t go in for any- thing very elaborate.” “Oh, tell me about it, Dan. Did those girl flyers finally get here?” Phillips shook his head in dis gust. -“No, after we. bung around about three bours word came that they’d had engine trouble and Janded in some God-forsaken corn field. Probably be held up for a day or so. Anyhow Groves will be on the job tomorrow and 1 don't have to worry about it.” “What else did you do today?” gave ber 8 sketchy report. Po Moe ‘station. A run out to a sub There it wast A cold hand urban community where @ grocery rens. “Was it along day, Cherry?” he asked. “Were you lonesome?’ store had been held up. A session with Patrick Maloney who aspired to be commissioner of public safety. The air port. Back to the office and away with Reeves, photogra- her, to get pictures for a featuro about traffic conditions under the antequated regulations the News was campaigning to change. “And did you have to write about all those things? I don’t see how you could ever do it—” Phillips grinned. “This wasn't much of a day,” he said. “Wait un- til something really happens! No, I didn’t write much. Most of the stuff I telephoned.” There was something Cherry had forgotten. Now she spoke of it. “Did you see the morning paper? I mean what it said about us?” “Sure. Front page and every- thing. The News and Sentinel,both carried your picture. ‘Society Bud Weds Reporter.’ That shows you where 1 come in, doesn’t it?” He was smiling and Cherry knew that he had intended it as a joke, Still she didn’t Ike to have Dan even suggest that there were dif- ferences in their social position. “You should have seen what that crazy gang at the office did.” Dan went on. “Bells and ribbons and silly little dolls tied to my type writer and desk. It was a sight! There was a lot of kidding of course. By the way, Cherry, you made a big hit last night. Every. body said so. They're all strong for you.” H® paused and the bantering light left bis eyes. “We haven't had much ‘chance to talk,” ent on. “I've—well, I've been thinking about things today. First of all 1 want you to know | think it was bretty swell of you to stand by me when sour father said all he did. mous streets in the world are: ‘Street, New York; the Strand, Lon- ° don; Champs Elysee, den Linden, Jerusalem; Hataamen, Peking; Gin~ za, Tokyo; Rio Branco, Rio de Janei,y ro; Calle Florida, Buenos Aires, and Bubbling Well Road, Shanghal .., Where, oh, where, is Broadwe™? . The scares are produced by the eyes of thou- sands of jungle beasties glaring out of the darkness ... Plus the growls .»» Anything to give an escort an excuse for cuddling his girl compan- different type; Lincoln Stef- talk over a lot of contempo- tary things one should’ be posted on; and Harpo Marx to remind one of the madness “But who,” asks my practical wife, Quicker argument than anybody's list of 10 anythings; from recipes to si- It wasn't an accident that caused several gentlemen to immor- Walt Paris; Unter Berlin; Via Dolorosa, Barbs - | — Worry, says Andy Mellon, is the occupation of men who have nothing to do. Or, we might add, of the men who haven’t Andy’s millions, . ee * An unusually homely explorer, in a recent lecture, said that starvation once stared him in the face in the frozen north. Must have been a har- rowing experience for both of them. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) When you don’t have a date, there's no use to moon. That's real loyalty. Yessir! With Zi) & girl like you, Cherry, I’m not ; afraid to tackle anything!” _ Her eyes answered him. Phillips continued, “I know we'll get ahead all right, but it’s going to mean going slow for a while, 2 You won't mind that, will you, dar- ling? All I'm getting is 50 bucks & week now. Not bad as the pay, is here on the News but of course I'm going to make a lot more, I've always thought I'd write short stories or maybe a play. Maybe I couldn’t—maybe I wouldn't be good enough—but anyhow I’m going to settle down and give it a try. You know there's lots of money in short stories if you can sell to the right magazines, “Til work as I've never worked before! It's true I haven't saved much but, thank God, I've never gone in debt, We'll move from thé Bismark and find a cozy little place, There must be some somewhere that aren’t too expensive, We'll make 8 budget and I'll cut down on lunches—” : Now was the time Cherry should have told him about the charge ao count and the new dresses, She should have said, “Dan, dear, I've made a bad start, but I'll make it up by doing my share and learn- ing to save in the futura 1 do want to help you!, I do want to do my part!” Tnstead she turned her head away, and apeared to be interested in something across the room. When @ looked back all she said was, Tl start looking for an apartment tomorrow.” They had finished dinner and re turned to the hotel. The big box from Stanley's was just.as it bad been in the clothes closet, but Cher ty did not mention it. (To 3e Continued) ¥