Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
5 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Ni iF THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by ume Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ..... + $7.20 Baily by mail per year Gin Bis- marck) +2 1.20 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ Daily by mail outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail in state, three UNIS ere ssices buen scesccecsicc ‘Weekly by mail outside of North too tense. The mind gives out years before the body. We find old people all ground us who have been dead for years and don’t know it. They dont think any more—their minds have died, although their bodies live on.” ‘Then the famous physician explain- ed in detail just what he meant. “Think what has happened to us in 35 years,” he said. “Our life, once largely agrarian, was paced to the horse. A man could keep up his busi- ness in longhand. “Now it has speeded up. Tractors and typewriters—a man had to have a typewriter, then a stenographer, then a lot of secretaries. And what happened? In 35 years the percent- age of insanity doubled. Men out- lived their minds. “Perhaps man is slowly adjusting himself to this age, this speed. But Dakota, per year ..........+. 150 lit 4s a slow process. The tension has ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, pel year .. 2.00 | become almost too great. ‘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 oT newspaper and also the local news o: spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Soldier Sleep Firing squads at local cemeteries volleying over soldier graves, wreaths on mounds which mark the resting places of @ nation’s heroes, parades, Programs and speeches today give outward show to the feelings of a na- tion, Tt is Memorial Day, set aside so that those who live may honor those who have gone before them into that “undiscovered country from whose bourne no traveler returns.” The usual custom is for the mem- ‘bers of each family to decorate the graves of their loved ones in tender remembrance and this is a laudable thing. But for the nation as a whole, interest centers on those dead who, at some time in their lives, consecrated themselves to their country in time of peril. Inaugurated primarily to honor Dr. Mayo is not the first medical man to issue this warning. But our usual custom is to stay about a gen- eration behind our medical advisors in matters of this kind and the killing pace of modern life has not yet really begun to worry us. We have wander- ed innocently into the midst of a lot of whirring flywheels, high-speed gadgets and rapidly moving assem- bly lines, and it has hardly occurred to us that all of this is a little more than we can stand. The machine age has compel- led us to live our lives under condition unlike those faced by any other men in history. Hand in hand with our efforts to adjust things so that over-production and unemploy- ment may be abolished there must be a sincere attempt to slow down the tempo of the individual life. As things are now we use ourselves up at a pitiless rate; as Dr. Mayo says, we die long before we realize it. If You Won’t Save Lives, Save, Dollars The high humanitarian purpose of safety campaigns against accidents is to reduce the thousands of deaths and hundreds of thousands of injuries each year. In itself, it should awaken entire communities to action. How- PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. 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 ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. dead veterans of the Civil War, the|¢Ve? there is another side, too often observance has heen extended by time | °Vetooked, that appeals to the pock- to include the veterans of other wars, |¢tbook and has thrift for its founda- Grandsons of Civil War veterans now| 0m. While 29,000 persons will be He beside their ancestors in honored graves, One takes rank with the other. Each served in his own time that this country might be kept free. ‘One by one our links with the past re being severed as death takes its toll of life. Only a handful of Civil War veterans remain in North Da- kota, It is 68 years since that con- flict ended and all who served in it and still live have far exceeded the normal span. Yet we honor them and the mem- bers of those other generations who vlaim the same distinction. In doing 3o we pay tribute, not so much to them as to ourselves, for we are re- minding ourselves of a nation’s glory. ‘We tell ourselves anew of that prec- ious gift of freedom, won by blood and pain and tears on a thousand battle- fields from Lexington to Chateau Thierry. We realize again the spirit which is America and we give it new life by the exercises on this day. ‘This is a day for sober reflection, both on the past history of this coun- try and upon its future. For to us has been thrown the torch of free- dom from the falling hands which never again will be lifted in their country’s defense. Upon us is imposed the responsibility of upholding a glor- ious tradition, The manner in which We discharge it, in peace as in war, will determine whether we are truly worthy of the sacrifices which have been made for us. In the absence of the burdens of ‘war, we carry the burdens of peace. ‘The manner in which we do this is, in itself, a test. From the High Olym- pus reserved for the valiant, our dead look down and watch. / If we would be worthy of them we must carry on where they left off. We must do our share to make this a bet- ter world in which to live, rear chil- dren and bring to some measure of fruition those dreams which our dead held for us. ‘We must keep within our breasts the spark which guarantees to every American-born child a fair chance in life; which preserves the sanctity of our institutions and cherishes the ideals of a great nation. ‘The preamble to the constitution of the American Legion gives as one of its purposes “to combat the autocracy of both the classes and the masses.” This is an aim which should be ‘widely held by more persons than are eligible for membership in this great veterans organization. It is a safe- guard which sound citizenship and true patriotism require of us. Pretty words and high-flown senti- ments are no substitutes for con- structive action. Upon what we do, more than upon what we say, depends proof of our respect for those whose memories we honor. ‘When we bow our heads and say vrivilege. Living Too Fast killed in automobiles this year un- Jess the accident rate is reduced, the loss in dollars that results will be $2,- 000,000,000. In illustration, recently it was neces- sary for casualty companies to in- crease rates for automobile public liability insurance in several states. ‘That was because the companies had suffered very severe underwriting loss- es in those territories. Simultaneous- ly with the announcement of these re- visions, a leaflet was addressed to the more than 100,000 agents in the states where the rates had remained where they were, This was a plain, straight- forward statement of the situation not only for the information of the agents themselves, but for the general Public. In pointing out that the future of rates is squarely up to the public, it said: “If a community is willing to have a high accident ratio, if it is Satisfied to have its juries make ex- cessive awards, if it takes no steps to stamp out the making of fraudulent claims, it must expect to see these conditions reflected in the form of high rates.” Disillusioned The popular conception of the Englishman is that he is a beef- eater. Most of us have pictured Cousin Jack as sitting down regu- larly to a good red roast, even if the “makings” were produced in the United States, Canada or the Argen- tine. And, since the Canadian is com- monly regarded as a transplanted Englishman, the same conception holds true for him, But this idea is mistaken, as may be demonstrated by Canadian statis- tics. The Dominion raises plenty of beef but its favorite meat is pork. In 1932 the 10,506,000 persons north of our border consumed 91.79 pounds of pork per capita as against 56.02 Pounds of beef. All of the pork was raised at home, Proving that swine do relatively as well in a cold climate as in the corn belt of our_United States. Incidentally, biddy does well there, too. Canadians claim the world’s record as consumers of eggs, eating 28.36 dozen per capita in 1932. This is a heavier per capita consumption | germs. than is true of any other nation, so the Dominion government claims. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the Address Dr. William Brady, , in care of this newspaper. SANITATION AND SOIL FERTILIZATION A correspondent asks whether drainage from septic tanks into a garden near by pollutes the soil and makes it unsafe to eat vegetables grown in the garden. ‘The answer is no, with unimportant, exceptions. There is practically no good evi- dence that such contamination of soil is @ source of any known intestinal infection such as typhoid fever, dysentery, cholera. The soil naturally digests and purifies such organic mat- ter, at least the soil close to the sur- face. Carcasses or other animal or veg- etable matter buried or worked into the soil within @ foot or two of the surface quickly undergo decomposi- tion, which is a bacterial process that utilizes oxygen from the air, and dis- ease germs present in the matter So added to the soil are soon destroyed or rendered incapable of producing disease. But if such organic matter be buried several feet deep, especially in clay or sand, it may resist decom- position for many years. The bacteria of the soil must have oxygen and hence they thrive only in the top soil. Intestinal parasites, especially hook- worm, round worm, tape worm, or rather their eggs, do survive in pol- luted soil, and in the instance of hookworm the eggs develop into larvae in the soil, and we know that persons: who go barefoot where the soil is pol- luted with hookworm may contract “dew itch” or “toe itch,” which is the skin irritation caused by penetration by the hookworm larvae, and a little later the parasites entering the body in that way lodge in the duodenum and the host develops the characteris- tic anemia and “no account” languor of hookworm disease. But even these parasitic infesta- tions are quite effectually guarded against by ordinary washing of veg- etables or fruits which are fo be eaten raw, and of course all risk of infection via contamination of such produce by polluted soll is obviated by ordinary cooking. A leaky cesspool or broken drain which discharges into the-soil several feet below the surface may pollute the ground water, but the same dis- charge upon or near the surface is comparatively harmless in that re- spect. Below ‘six feet the soil is usually life. does the soil of a garden. sterile or practically free from germ The soil of graveyards contairis no more bacteria or disease germs than Answer—Antitetanus serum (tetan- us antitoxin) is most efficacious as a prophylactic dose, which should be given the patient as soon as possible after any wound or injury which may involve such infection. Once the dis- ease has developed, the antitoxin is of value only when administered in very large doses, at least 40,000 units, ' into the muscles or other tissues, into the vein and into the cistern or space around the brain and spinal cord. ‘Most lives are saved when the tetanus antitoxin is injected into the cistern thru a trephine opening in the skull. Goltre After careful examination physician said I have exophthalmic goitre and the only cure is operation, but he suggested I get the opinion of another physician, which I did and the second man said medical treatment would probably control the trouble. The first physician says it may do so for a while, but eventually, maybe 20 years from now, I will reach a crisis and have to be operated on . . .I am now 21. . . (L. H. M.) Answer—Time to cross that crisis when you come to it. It Is a Wonderful Machine Kindly tell me why it is that the body maintains a steady temperature around 98.6 degrees F. whether one is living in equatorial heat or in the ex- treme cold of polar regions . . . . (W. G.) Answer—That’s a thing I’ve often wondered about, too. You might get the lowdown about the regulation of the body temperature by consulting Howell's Textbook of Physiology, which you can find in every library. (Copyright 1933, John F. Dille Co.) f Barbs { Co ——— “Not one person in 10,000 under- stands money,” says an eminent econ- 1 Shoe er. « 5 Pertaining to the check. 10 Short-pointed OWN ATCT : BIO olUiC! =) Manchukuo? 15To place in line. ISI BIA ofa omist. Probably it’s because they've eeeeeeineee emma eee eee BRITISH ISLAND HORIZONTAL. ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE about the only disease germs that do exist in soil recently fertilized with manure—the tetanus bacillus is a natural inhabitant of the intestinal tract of horses, cows, sheep and per- haps other domestic and wild animals, piece in a shoe. 49 Secreted. tion in 1 come prensed form, household ST Tatter, — < “pent. 38 Plece for prace 53 Seized. tice (music). 55 Verbal. Very high trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. Memorial Day Wells County Farmer Each recurring Memorial day ought to impress upon Americans anew not, only an appreciation of what they “Soldier Sleep” we must remember | owe the survivors of the fighting men, that it is an obligation as well as a| but a determination to avoid if pos- sible in the future every influence cal- culated to lead us into new conflicts. me He veverans whe risked all for the ig they love, who struggled with ‘The problem that gets the most at-|fate and came forth gloriously tri- tention these days is the problem of | umphant, we pay our respects. adjusting our economic relationships with one another so that all of us who really want to can get and keep @ remunerative job. ‘Tenn. American mind at this time. “Zife today,” said Dr. Mayo, “is | future wars. Memorial day may well be dedicated to thoughts of peace present and fu- ture as well as to thoughts of wars past. It remains for us, as a nation, to make unnecessary the repetition Benind it, temporarily forgotten, is |Of such sacrifices as come to every » nother problem which is perhaps even more acute in its demand for solution. It was touched on the other | time. A day on which every Ameri- day by Charles H. Mayo of Rochester, So the sun rises on another day sacred to memories undimmed by sp ante HPnETI Oe | our warriors alive inn., in ie and dead, should “highly resolve” that ba an Interview at Memphis, <0 "rar as his influlence goes it shail be directed for the prevention of 40Very his 57 Opposi eee: jountain, awe: 41 The th 5S QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS a sevens ie m4 eanert r nodiie. , 43 Upper human Is there a serum that cures lock- Jaw? (M. J.) 1 23 Plerced with Experiments have proved that it is] 204king’s IER MEP IL UIMiB any hole very difficult or impossible to make] ,, jortrenses. Ole} F known disease germs grow or survive formed into # JAIGIOIGMESIEICIT] in soil. The soil temperature is too wolf (variant). ALTIEIDP ISITAIKIE| low, its oxygen, sunlight and nutritive} 74 0rgan of elements are not suitable for disease Hob. o 1 ardier, . Lair of a 2 Drove. Tetanus bacilli (lockjaw germs) are Fn stds VERTICAL al al (a NN Vai iad i id id dil od ih Pra had so little experience with the sub- ject in the past few years. * #% Mining town has erected a Chamber of Commerce with walls made of coal. If it’s anything like some of the coal we got last win- ter, it’s really a-fireproof build- ing ae 8 The Democratic party in Congress has a working majority, but how much better it would be if we had a ls jority working. x * % Department of Interior recently changed the name of Hoover Dam back to Boulder Dam. Now we know who “the forgotten man” really is. * * We didn’t realize how severe the de- Pression in the United States really was until we read that Canadian liquor sales have dropped one-third in the past two years. ** * So far as available records go, there is nothing to show that a girl who grew up to be a stenographer ever ‘won @ spelling bee. (Copyright, 1933, NEA-Service, Inc.) IN ll NEW | YORK By JULIA BLANSHARD New York, May 30.—Diego Rivera, noted Mexican artist who has been paid off because he put Lenin’s pic- ture into his fresco at Rockefeller Center, feels that all his time has not been wasted. Having gone on a diet the day he started working here, he has lost exactly as many pounds as his dainty little Mexican wife, Frieda, weighs—91 pounds. oom — oe ~ thinks he is diet when he gives up| “just get millions of men, women and|Henry Morgenthau, Jr. head of , the third or foarte helping of French] children marching, and they all will) Farm Credit Administration. fried potatoes.” think they are going somewhere.” ee Diego always works in corduroys, Economic considerations alone with a blue or brown shirt open at the - should condemn the proposed bar- Ca ee prs opens a gain with the brewers and distillers u graceful and beaut person, an artist in her own right. to trade off the 18th amendment for They met in Mexico City where she Uquor revenue—Dr. F. Scott Mc- Was a member of an art class of which ‘5 WA Bride, general superintendent of the Diego was the master. I . She is his third wife, Recently his 6 Seca eee ne ree : second wife visite: em here. Now the second wife is on her way to Paris| The bigger the target, the easier to visit Diego's first wife. it is to hit—Ferdinand Pecora, chief * ee counsel for senate committee in in- Travel Notes vestigation of J. P. Morgan & Co. Mary Heaton Vorse, eminent author, * * * is in the thick of things in Germany| No woman in the world is worth ki right this minute. be! has to| oe ans ere) zi Atle 4 ———) see things for herself. Oo years ago judge George W. Ma! . Sha gj] jat peaceful Woodstock, a group of| York. 1539 -DeSotas expadil on} % d} artists lounging about at tea time on * * * ~ lands at Tasnpa d & summer day saw a taxi careening} The average American likes | ri down the road at terrific speed. It! think of himself as an incipient capi- came to a stop for a minute, Mrs,|talist—Sherwood Anderson, novelist. | q Vorse stuck her head out of the win- * * % dow. “England’s gone off the gold] The striking fact about what has standard,” she shouted. “I’m sailing{ been done since March 4 is not the in the morning.” And away went the} Wide grant of authority given to the taxi. ... Mrs, Agnes Morrow Scand- it is the close harmony rett, aunt of Mrs. Charles Lindbergh,| between president and people—; sends a card ated Palm Sunday, rom | sends @ card Sui 0 South Africa where she is on a big Actress Named | veterate traveler, prefers tramp steam- ers, shuns beaten paths and when she n e e€ ui returns brings such @ collection of trophies and unusual huge souvenirs that she “just had to get” that her son, Richard B. Scandrett, Jr., always has to meet her boat with a few hun- dred extra dollars to bail her out of customs. 4 * 8 * A View of Hitler Dorothy Thompson (Mrs. Sinclair Lewis) is hurrying up to their Ver- mont farm to get a little rest. She is the most feted returned-traveler in New York this spring. She comes straight from Germany. At a luncheon at the Junior League Club, where Suzanne LaFollette, Anna O'Hara McCormick, Evelyn Dewey, members of the Foreign Policy Asso- > ciation and other importants pelted her with questions, she only managed to eat one bite of chicken patty and two teaspoonsful of chocolate ice cream between replies, Hitler she describes as the perfect antithesis of hard-driving, forceful, * dynamic Mussolini. Hitler's appeal is feminine, persuasive, sympathetic, emotional. He has real sex appeal. At every meeting she attended, the other leaders shouted to rouse the young and old to action, harangued them. Then Hitler would stand up—quiet, {epee a@ hush would fall on : crowd. He would lean over, spread i out his arms and say, in persuasive, Seavioranttaeathow san: ‘th nelbe: wooing, measured tones, "I need every/ has denied ever having been one of you. Each of you needs each} gione with F. Frazier Jelke other. We must all work together.”! wealthy New York broker suing Then the bands would begin to play| or divorce at Newport, R. I. nd marching, "O° Of SEINE) Miss Owen's name was brought | some poor tish will fall for any “And,” says Dorothy Thompson,| '™t? the Sattorieyets 5 girl's line. e Copyright, 1930, by Faith Baldwin Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Orphaned by the death of her|To the left she caught a glim lan effect of loving thought and a ’ parents, beautiful and vivacious| of water—a lake, she thought, but {knowledge of furniture and of Mary Lou Thurston lives with her|as they came up the approach to|what constituted comfort. aunt and uncle, Clara and Howard|the house she saw that it was| Presently the man-servant re- Sanderson, and takes care of Billy,| really a bend of the Sound, curv-| ap) and motioned to her to their son. When Sanderson and|ing to a white half-moon of a sPpeared : weevils go serene) ee amy) beach, ¥. with his grandmother, Mary Lou i is left on her own. Larry Mitchell, ate pares hee Pao ath er young newspaper reporter and|Fesutituliy proportioned wings, |murmured, and stood aside to let Mary Lou's pal, finds an ad it}tyy almost covered it, and the stone |her enter, not, as she had half ex- which a companion for a sem: itself where it could be seen, and | pected, an entrancing but frighten- valid is sought. Mary Lou leaves|ii.+ of the chimneys had mel-|ing drawing-room, but a sunny to apply for the position. lowed to a lovely soft gray. The | morning room, all low, deep chairs CHAPTER VII. site was high above the Sound,|and chintzes, with a great curved 2 there were wide curving, sloping | window full of growing plants S he steered her through the |Iawns, still velvet green, and many|and, she saw as she eftered, 9 morning throng she found/fine old trees. ere would be|great square aquarium of exotic breath enough to inquire|glowing gardens in Summer, she|fish and two brilliant macaws anxiously: thought, with a catch of her |swinging from their perches. “La H How do I look?” breath, for there were still belated} But she forgot everything as Piveaglds/ thie emcee roses, dahlias and other blooms, |she caught her first glimpse of the ‘A million dollars,” said much as at Oakdale, but on quite | woman who rose from a business: gravely, “and I wouldn't ask for ala different scale. she saw a|like looking desk to greet her. 7 cent less.” big hothouse among the out- Lorrimer was very tall ana He still weighs somewhere near 200, however. His whole hearty gusto in life shows itself at the table. One of eight at a dinner, Diego usually eats as much as the other seven. His idea of dieting never was orthodox, how- ever. Lewis Gannett, book columnist, describes his method by saying, “Diego ting. 10 Slide box in a bureau. ie INIDIBTE TRICK] 11 Pertuining to PTO | IRIOINIE| KMBIAL alr. 12 Fence bar. tl denth? 21'Toolx for ntretching Teather. ION. IE 1D) ISH IS} 1 British tsland oft the west const of Brite ish Columbia, aT 44 Gold. 45 Restaurant enr. 46 Cymn. 47 Indians. 48 Evergreen tree, 40 At thin place. 50 Therefore, 51 Matgrass. Chai 9To change 2 diamond set- we ewes CP eT BN aN cer aE NT | | ON In the taxi, however, he looked her over from head to toe and nodd lip and-remember tl up this Lorrimer bunch. herself. stocks and bonds.” Mary Lou began to be alarmed. This would be her first excursion of Heavy Income into the Clan Taxes. “Don’t worry,” are more than Bethlehem Steel.” He put her on her train with two he had “Put this under your arm,” he minutes to are and handed her a very wild French periodical which bought earlier that morni “You'll do. Keep a stiff upper place, too lovely, she thought, with t your great prapdmonisr. was a lady. - Don’t let ’em put it over on you. I looked There's just a Mrs. Lorrimer and her son, so the invalid must be the lady They are simply all over , D advised, reading her thoughts. ‘Kind hearts buildings. She saw glassed-in porches as they stopped at the house itself. It was a beautiful very slender. She was beautifully gowned. Her white hair was short, cut close to her noble head, lying in flat waves, clinging, soft. Her ordered, “and it will make a swell impression.” He ran along the platform as the train pulled out, shouting advice, commands and encouragement. “Ring me up,” he Fe |, “when you get to town. I’ll be at the of- fice, or leave word. Remember, don’t let ’em put anything over. Remember, you are a ‘ineal de- scendant of Queen Cleopatra!” Mary Lou’s = heart, to be anything but She was still smiling when she|inciferent toward her turned to the pages of the mags: She paid the driver with gloved zine and she kept on smiling for|hands which shook a little, a ite a time, but decided before ed the door and pressec the gown was that superb dahlia shade, neither Purple nor red, TY, plain, bent on Mary Lou were besuiifal on dark brown with amber lights, ‘estmill was reached that per- as firmly as possible. She| Her fe thin to - haps, after all, she had better|was htened and she knew it. | ness. Her mouth, touched with a leave Larry’s gift in the train. |‘Don’t be an idiot!” she told her-|clever lipstick, was a nervous Her sense of humor was still with |self, but telling didn’t help some-| mouth, but sweet. But i ye ee eal Ne Mey jut, r all, she wasn’t 5 of somethi: 80 sure about the unknown in- Fics Ad tense fig ai, valid, The door opened and she found| which is so disturbing to the ob- She reached Westmill and made |herself facing a grave, lean butler. | server because it tells of such hard inquiries at the severe Georgian She stammered something and | won self-control and such restraint brick station. The Lorrimer estate|then discovered she was ho! and repression. was some distance away, and Mary out the advertisement, plucl “I'm Mary Lou Thurston,” said Lou, ing in her purse, discov- |from her purse. Mary Lou, “and I came about the ered to her relief that because of| “If I could see Mrs. Lor-| advertisement,” Larry’s forethought in providing |rimer ... in answer to this?” She was in her heart. tickets — including a return—she} His face did not change,|She ha nm in love at first had quite enough money for the although his eyes flickered briefly | sight. please make her let emergency of a taxi. with some emotion... - | me stay!” she was saying over and Presently was passing thro ment, perhaps or curiosity. He | over. the neat shopping district and gravely bowed her in, took her village and tu: off on gorge- and the advertise- ous country roads where the trees, |ment and offered her a tall, Sie backed carved chair in the proffered card not yet bare, almost met overhead. The driver was, for a wonder, not/square hall in which she fo herself, She sat there, Joduactous, 80 aif Pap hi ae Fai iy a tee oe to enjoy her ride in peace. She|about her at the comfort, 4 ‘Mary fe ener windows down and thelury, the marvelous restrained derstand, aan eee a crisp November air brought a spar-|taste. It was lovely—and yet so| Mary Lou’s heart almost choked kle to her ores and a smile to her |like coming home. t was what | her with disappointment. The place curving red lips. attracted and amazed her. She|was filled then! Well, she might Presently they rattled past E ereat saw evidence all about her it | have known it was too good to be ma posts, up a long tree-bordered | wealth spent on beauty, yet the| true! iveway, curving and very lovely, ‘effect was not oppressive, It.was! (To Be Continued Tomorrow) Se ee I know,” said Mrs, Lorri and her voice was lovely, emer, been holding the advertisement betw the long fingers of one ul hand and now she laid it on the desk and sat down, motion.