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The Bismarck Tribune ' An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Senhora ies Published by The Bismarck Trib- une 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. + 87.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- marek' Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ...... eecssesees 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three JORIS o.ceserssseere Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ............ 1.50 Weekly by mail in Canada, per YORE sesscescoccsccscesescesees ‘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. Comfort—and Warning | ‘Those who place in the Democratic ‘party their hopes for a purification of the state government will find both comfort and warning in the gathering of that party held here ‘Thursday. The comfort comes from realiza- tion of the tremendous interest which is being shown in the Democratic 5.00 tage which may be used to tempt them, These are unpleasant things for the average Democrat to hear. Men- tion of ghosts will bring no joy to Democratic leaders. But they must be laid, definitely and without equivo- cation, before the way can be paved to a successful campaign. If they can do it—and how they can do it—are questions which chal- lenge Democratic leadership. The silence of the party leaders as to the crying scandals of the present state administration may have been dictated by expediency, Who will be nominated by the Republicans re- mains to be determined and until the enemy is known a campaign cannot be launched against him. But unless the Democrats recognize these evils and are prepared to give vigorous battle to them, their imag- ined strength will disappear like snow before the sun. There were hints at the meeting here, too, that some Democrats look with equanimity upon the five-per- cent racket now being worked by the Langer administration. Behind this lies a secret hope that they can du- Plicate the venture, line their pockets with tribute collected in the same fashion if they come to power. If that sort of thing gains wide accept- ance among party leaders the party is doomed to defeat before the cam- paign starts, As the minority party, the Demo- crats’ hope of winning lies in an ap- Peal to patriotic North Dakotans who are willing to forget party tradition in the hope of effecting a clean-up if the need for one still exists when the fall campaign rolls around. party as an instrument for service to the state. The record which Franklin D, Roosevelt has made in the nation enlists the support of many North Dakotans. If they feel that the party can do for North Da- kota what Roosevelt has done for the nation they will flock to it in suffi- cient numbers to make it a majority rather than an insignificant minor- ity organization. In the hope that the group will be truly representa- tive of popular demand, many al- ready have indicated a desire to give it their allegiance. The fact remains, however, that the party and its leadership in North Dakota has yet to demonstrate any such capacity; gave little indication at the meeting here that it can or ‘will do so, If it fails to do what the independent-thinking people of the state expect it to do, they will not hesitate to cast it aside and the op- portunity of a lifetime, politically Speaking, will have been ruined. Comfort comes from the fact that the party, having been nothing to reckon with in the last quarter cen- tury, has no bad administrative rec- ord to live down. The possibility exists for it to offer the voters of the state a really new deal which will eliminate much of the political horse- play and shadow-boxing to which we long have been subject. The warning lies in the obvious Possibility that this chance will be muffed just as other, though less fortuitous ones, have been bungled in the past. Among the newcomers who affili- ated with the party for the first time in the Roosevelt campaign, there is the feeling and tradition of victory. ‘These promise new life, new energy, new hope and new leadership for an organization whieh long has had, as its sole reason for existence, the dis- tribution of federal patronage on those infrequent occasions when the Democrats have controlled the na- tional government. Some of the oldsters, it was made ‘@pparent here, have no desire to go farther than that. Having accom- Plished their limited goal, they are content. There are signs that a cer- tain element in the party is afraid of opportunity; actually fearful lest circumstances force them into a po- sition of responsibility for which they have no stomach. This condition exists, of course, only under the surface. Every party adherent, apparently, is singing the song of victory even though it is dis- tinctly premature. It seems the thing to do and so they are doing it, but the tongues in the cheeks are all too evident. It should not be overlooked,’ either, that the unusually fine attendance et the meeting here was due, at least fin part, to the uncertainty which still exists within the party fold. ‘Many jobs have not yet been appor- toned to the faithful and the cur- rent meeting offered splendid oppor- tunity for many to demonstrate their party loyalty in a way which all could see. Clouding the Democratic chances, also, is a certain unsavory tradition which must be eliminated before many straight-thinking voters will have faith. This is caused by par- Thus it becomes a vital necessity for them to put “practical politics” in the background and take a stand ‘non the surer ground of high princi- ple and sound public policy if they are to have a chance to win. 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. A Golden Opportunity for Graft (Washington Star) In the consideration of the proposal te make a house-to-house inquiry | throughout the country regarding the| Payment of income taxes, which has been laid before the collectors of in- ternal revenue by the Secretary of the Treasury, one point is especially borne in mind. That is the possibil- ity of imposition upon the people by unauthorized persons. It is quite! conceivable that with such a system| of investigation under way grafters would take advantage of the oppor-/| tunity to impersonate agents of the| government to obtain information for SAAS SSSSSS Hees self-addressed envelope is enclosed. 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, Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. HAD YOUR COPPER TODAY? A renegade dentist who makes his! living by panning the aluminum ware| many of us use in our kitchen in- variably signs his name as “Dr. Doe”. That impresses the unwary reader who imagines the trickster is a-medical authority or something. To bolster up the trick dentist's weird imagina- tions against the use of aluminum vessels for cooking and containing food, he cites or quotes a number of “eminent authorities,” the majority of whom are obscure charlatans of one stripe or another, but well the shrewd dentist who makes a noise like a doc- HAVE YOU nefarious purposes, or would even attempt to collect money from the! uninformed and the credulous. Such | games are played constantly, and the| institution of a door-to-door search for delinquents would open a rich field) for crooks and swindlers. | While those who pay income taxes! regularly are well acquainted with the | Procedure by the presentation of re-| turns by the collectors of internal revenue and their filling out and filing with checks in quarterly pay- ments, there are many who under such a system of inquiry as that pro- Posed would be likely to fall for the suggestion that the procedure has | been changed and that the govern- ment is collecting its taxes directly, and would hand over money to the} supposed “solicitor.” Then there are those who do not| now pay income taxes because they are not in possession of sufficient revenue to make them subject to the tax, They would be easy pickings for Pseudo agents, perhaps bearing badges —which are easily obtained—and de- manding settlement under penalty of Prosecution. The game would not be difficult for shrewd operatives, play- ing upon the ignorance and fear of their victims with the suggestion that settlement on the spot would prevent | trouble, The present system works well enough as far as the great majority of people are concerned, those of small incomes who, as a rule, conscien- tiously file their returns and pay to the last penny of the computed tax. | With few exceptions the delinquencies occur not in the lower brackets, which embrace the largest number, but in the higher brackets, where the in- comes are greater and the taxes cor- respondingly heavier. A house-to- house canvass would not reach these delinquents, who make their returns regularly but not altogether truth- fully and who take advantage of self- computed deductions in abatement of/cial ingredients, namely, their taxes. If the purpose of the Secretary's | suggestion is simply to find out how | many people make returns and pay taxes an individual canvass of the ertire country would undoubtedly yield the answer. But it would cost an immense sum of money, probably @ greater sum than could be secured in the course of several years through taxation of the now untaxed. A hun- dred thousand inquisitory agents would at the least computation be required to make such a survey in a year. The pay roll of such a body of door-bell ringers would make a great hole in any volume of additional taxes thus gained, to say nothing of the sums collected by impersonators and chiselers taking advantage of this golden opportunity to reap @ harvest from the innocent public. I send the American people my government's and my own most cor- ‘al greeting, hoping that Cuba may soon achieve an order of reason and Justice—Col. Carlos Mendieta, new President of Cuba. It’s an insult to the orchestra. Won- Law must be stable, and yet it can- not stand still—Dean Roscoe Pound of the Harvard Law School. Eradicate poverty by getting rid of birth control of money. That's the thing that’s being overlooked.—Rev. Charles E. Coughlin of Detroit. tor knows that the simple folk who take his propaganda seriously will never see the humor of that. Medicine is making rapid strides these days and not all the strides are in a circle. I should not be aston- ished if some one were to discover tomorrow that there is a definite quantity of aluminum normally pres- ent in the body and that a healthy Person requires a regular daily ration of aluminum to maintain optimum health, Formerly we thought that copper is rather poisonous and that it is foreign to the healthy body. But in the past few years our view has changed. Now we know that there is a small amount of copper normally present in the body, and that a minute trace of cop- per is essential and desirable in the daily ration. Especially is it desirable where there is any degree of anemia. Hence the incorporation of a whiff of copper in the iron tonic for the blood, _ If a child or adult swallows as much as one grain of copper sulphate dis- Solved in a spoonful or two of water, the medicine acts as a prompt emetic, and for this reason I recommend that a half dozen tablets of copper sul- phate—each containing one grain—be kept in the emergency chest or pocket first aid kit for poisoning emergen- cies, In such an emergency the cop- Per sulphate acts instantly, where ordinary emetics take many minutes or fail to act at all. My own baby once got hold of a bottle of corrosive sublimate tablets in my office, and put at least one in her moth. A dose of copper sulphate brought in- stant ejection. I owe this practical knowledge to a great physician—Dr. Abraham Jacobi, God rest his soul. The same quantity, one grain, is enough copper sulphate to put in the pint of iron tonic. Don’t let anybody scare you about this. Just purchase from the druggist the standard, offi- a_ single grain of copper sulphate (otherwise called “blue vitrol” and “blue stone”) and four ounces of iron and ammon- ium citrate (this is one medicine which is official in the Pharmaco- Poeia, so that no half-baked druggist or drug clerk can tell you he doesn’t understand what you want, unless he is an utter imbecile). Put the iron in a pint bottle, and fill the bottle up with water that has been boiled. When the medicine is all dissolved, drop in the copper sulphate, and shake up the medicine once more. Now you are all set. The dose of three times a day, and you should continue it for two or three months. A good way to take the dose is in a little water, sweetened and flavored with fruit juice. It does not upset digestion or cause constipation. It does not injure the teeth. It does and should blacken the stools. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Unreccgnized Whooping Cough ‘We can't imagine how our five year old daughter got whooping cough for we had taken her no place, and she had not played with any suspicious children for a long while . . . (B. R. T) Answer—Adults or children may have whooping cough in moderate form and the nature of the disease is not recognized. Persons who have had pophylactic vaccination, or those who have received the “vaccine” in the early stage of whooping cough, may have the disease in a form that escapes recognition, yet they may in- fect others. Wrist Strap Hocus-Pocus Please advise the benefits and other- wise of wearing @ wrist strap as ath- letes do. Some authorities claim ». GIS) Answer—Nonsense. If there’s some- thing the matter with the wrist a strap may support and protect it, jugar Excellent remedy for hiccoughs. Eat a little sugar. It has relieved me many times, and others. (M. R. J.) Answer—Thank you. Our readers may put your remedy to the test. In obstinate hiccoughs relief is often ob- tained by rebreathing into an ordinary paper sack such as grocers use, for a few minutes. This gives the effect of inhalations of carbon dioxide and air. Of course the paper bag must be held closely over nose and mouth, (Copyright 1934, John F. Dille Co.) The New Deal Washington | ighbaue Rubber Tire or Coal Tar? ... Fur Flew in Louisiana Quiz... Federal Pay Cut Is Big Issue in Capital . . . Cemetery and Circus Codes, By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, Jan, 27—You may be | | | Grecian HORIZONTAL 1 Who was the professional dancer in the picture? 7Male children. 8 Auditory. 10 Devoured. 13 Indisposed. 14 Mother-of- pearl. 16 Helmet- shaped part. 18 Kinsfolk. 19 Kindled.. 20 Sun god. 22 Myself. : 23 Suffix forming ** Sansky! nouns. 24Postacrint. 48 Ae popular. 25 To total. fae 27 Bhe was also a. oe ae dancing —. . 33 disseee fish. 49To observe. 34 Midday 51 Satlor. 36 Backless chair, 52 Kind. 37 Ingredient of 53Sea eagle. powder. 54 Ax-shaped 88 Snaky fish. stone imple. 40 To dress, ment. 41To sink. 56 To vex. 42 Neuter 58 Pertaining to this medicine for simple hypochromic anemia is @ teaspoonful after food Pronoun. an amide. Answer to Previous Puzzle Dancing to revive the -_-_oo. 11 Dogma. IS} 12 One who ogies iC} 15 Brink. 17 Ozone. 21 Stir. 24 Chum. 26 Female deer. 28 Corpse. 29 Arrays. IC} 30 Dove's cry. IE] 31 The pigfsh. AT IEMEUIRINIS) 32 Deity. [FILIEIOINIGIS] 33 Label. 35 Wool fiber knots. StSho. rae. ‘dane 37To make lace, ing in Ger- 39 Upright shaft. many (pl). 42 Siamese measure. VERTICAL 43 Golt device. 1A jot. 45 Tardy. 2To lay 47 Oil (combin- rubblework. ing form). 3 Like. 48 Silkworm. 4 Company. 50 Sprite. 6 One end raised. 53 Type standards 6 River in Egypt. 7She was born 67 Adjective f— ——. suffix. She attempted 58 Morindin dye, toby ld atk foJD Lo Tela Eb Iie NS fot ke NY! Moje tTP-los FANART S lA ay) PRIN Sort) les | N 12 La WINNS IT 1p LoL ENS "ra el | AW SARNAAAN d Ly NGF 16 | IT NV ELA! Rice NAR NT ch APA SZ a BON AN Ri lelcis lel bly lo [ie drinking a distillate of old rubber tires, but you probably wouldn't if you knew it, That’s one of the problems the Federal Alcohol Control Adminis- tration ponders in connection with its hearings on labeling of whisky. The rubber tires won’t hurt you. ‘The alcohol made out of them is just @8 pure as alcohol from grain. The Question is whether proper consumer protection standards demand that when a rectifier mixes alcohol of that type with whisky the retailed bottle should bear the words “rubber tires.” Gasoline and coal tar also can be made into alcohol. The FACA doesn’t think you'd drink that knowingly, either. ‘You'd prefer aivohol made from grain, molasses, or even pota- toes. Rectifiers just don’t see any sense in such labeling. Rubber tire, gaso- line and coal tar alcohol are much cheaper than grain alcohol and the rectifiers prefer cheap alcohol. So long as the chemist can’t tell what the alcohol was made they ask, what's the difference? LOUISIANA QUIZ NO PICNIC The famous “battle of New Or- Jeans” was no picnic, says Senator Tom Connally of Texas, chairman Reporting the Senate and describing the bit- terness of Louisiana political factionalism at the hearings, Con- nally says: “That resulted in this commit- half the audience would give s PAY CUT IS BIG ISSUE Big news breaks here almost daily. Sometimes it may be important enough to change the course of his- tory. But you can be sure that Washington's local newspapers will devote their top headlines to an issue which interests more citizens here than any other, though it attracts little attention outside. Restoration of the 15 per cent fed- ‘ral salary cut is that issue. Govern- ment work is the city’s one big in- dustry and the federal payroll is all- important locally. Washington didn’t feel the depression until the pay cut came along in the economy act. Hopes of the 75,000 federal em- ployes in Washington—and 515,000 yeu. Gutache supt. English language) by Mrs. Li meeting. Topic to be announced, tinue every evening at throughout the coming week. 7 others outside—have been going up and down for weeks, as the agitation proceeded. President Roosevelt — basing his decision on a cost of living survey, as the law provides—said the eut would be reduced from 15 to 10 per cent next July. But agitation has continued and if the president doesn’t take a definite stand in opposition, Congress is likely to take a more immediate step for re- storation, Organized labor has lobbied for the employes, but the restoration cause has been helped along principally by the agitation for more money for veter-|t° ans, whose compensations also were reduced in the economy act. CIRCUSES AND CEMETERIES Circuses and cemeteries recently hed their NRA code hearings. Capt. Billy Schultz, world cham- Pion lion tamer, urged a licensing system which would prevent promot- ers from taking performers and ani- mals out on the road on a shoestring from, }and leaving them stranded after go- ing broke. circus business was revealed to be &@ bad way. Only three rail- Toad-traveling circuses and 21 motor- jzed_ circuses went on the road last year. Eleven railroad circuses and 21 other outfits were laid up. Fiery battle broke out at the ceme- very code hearing over alleged racket- ecring in memorial park lots sold for speculation. ‘ (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) | ‘ —__—___—__—_ Additional Churches | OO THE BISMARCK BAPTIST CHURCH , — | J. J. Lj | Barbs icra Corner of Highth and Rosser . J. Lippert, Minister 10:00 a. m.—Sunday school. K. F. ‘We have classes for ages. That means that we have for your boy or girl if they a clas: don’t attend any other Sunday school. {1:00—Morning worship. relude. Special music. Object talk to the children (in the ippert. (in the P. m.—Bible instrutcion class. Message: “Utter Despair” German language), 1:30 p. Just now they are also learning to write in the German language. F. Gutsche, instructor. K People’s President. Dio you Pp. m.—Our_ Young Peter Klein, want to spend your Sunday evening Pleasantly, then come to our young People's meeting. :00—Evening service. Special music by male chorus, Message: “Heart Trouble” (in the German language). Our evangelistic meetings will con- 8 o'clock Rev. W. A. Weyhrauch of James- town, N, D., will be with us| start. Ing with Monday evening. He will speak in the English language. Particulars, topics, etc, of these meetings are found elsewhere in this paper. A hearty welcome awaits you. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 723 Fourth Street Sunday service at 11:00 Subject: GOD. Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. ‘Wednesday evening testimonial meeting at 8 o'clock. A reading room maintained in the Hoskins Block, 200% 4th St., is open gelly, from 12 to & p. m.; Sunday, 3 a, m p.m. All are welcome to attend th church services and to make use 0! the reading room. TRINITY LUTHERAN Avenue A at Fourth Opie S, Rindahl, Pastor “There is a cordial ‘welcome at Trinity” Septuagesima Sunday, Jan. 28: Church school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11 o'clock. Sermon: “Our Generous Master.” Choir anthem: “Christian the Morn Breaks O'er Thee.” Solos by Mrs. Narum and Mr. Esko, Evening service, 7:30 o'clock. Sermon: “I Press On.” Music, selected, ZION EV. LUTHERAN CHURCH (Synodical Conference) 419 Fourth Street J. V. Richert, Pastor gesima Sunday, Jan. 28: . m.—Sunday school with alf Miss Verna Brelje, supere 10:45—Morning worship (English), Mrs. F, Peters, organist. 6:45 p. m.—Bible class in charge of the Walther League. 7:30 p. m.—Slide-lecture: “The Life of St. Paul,” AID welcome, | Sally Rand is going to tour the |country in vaudeville, so that you can (see for yourself whether it’s the fam jor the dance that makes her populay, * *k * A fossil chestnut has been dug | up in Tennessee. That must be | the one starting, “Who was that | lady I saw you with last night?” xe Ok Harvey Bailey, notorious kidnapet, ‘has gone on a hunger strike in Leavene |worth. There’s one man who doesn’d insist the world owes him a living, * * * Huey Long’s law library filled © whole freight car when moved td Washington. So you see, there's really no need of keeping all such informae tion in his head. | (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) SYNOPSIS After three years in Europe, lovely Stanley Paige, young society girl, returns te New York. She following her father’s death. Stanley, how- ever, was not so sure of her heart at the time. Perry realizes, after seeing Stanley again, that he is still in ove with her but steels him- self against committing himself until his leve is reciprecated. CHAPTER TWO “Still in your father’s office, Perry?” “That's right. And not very darn| important down there either. But it pleases dad to see me hanging around—” He shrugged. He had wanted terribly to study landscape gardening but his father had re- fused to admit there even was such @ thing. So Perry was an indiffer- ently good lawyer and no longer mentioned ever having wanted to plan gardens. “How’s your mother?” Stanley remembered her as being an ex- ceedingly stout woman with a ma- nia for bridge and marron glacés. “Mother’s fine. She’s given up her bridge club and reduced twenty pounds. Doctor’s orders. I must take you up to see her—she always thought you were nice.” “So did 1,” he added a second later, in a slightly different voice. “You know, Stan, I was rather bad- ly in love with you that winter—it took me months to recover.” lighted tip of her cigarette. “Why| didn’t you marry me and keep me here. I'd have been much hap- Pier—” “You mean—you've been un-| —and terribly important.” She hed suddenly, a bit wi stag line at a coming-out party at the Ritz. Daughter of one of our clients. She’s fat and almost unbe-| lievably stupid—an utter waste of time and money!” Stanley leaned her elbows on the tea table and stared at him frank- ity in the fragile twilight. “You're awfully attractive, Perry,” she told him gravely, “aren’t you in love ‘with anyone?” He grinned at her. “If you mean, anyone else—no.” “I mean—isn’t there someone—” “You mean is there someone who has a claim on me. I’m trying to tell you that there isn’t. I hope you're caer She met his eyes honestly. “I think I am, Perry.” She thought suddenly that it was like him to blush. One of the nicest! things about Perry was his utter lack of conceit. Looking at him across the table, she realized he had plenty of reason to be pleased with himself. But he wasn’t. He was just anxiously eager that you should be pleased with him. And you were. After Perry left Stanley con- tinued to think about him and herself. But she failed to reach any definite conclusions. Sometimes she| felt she had never been quite sure jabout anything. Life had always seemed to treat her in a rather quietly. disinterested, altogether haphazard manner. Sh He had seldom, if ever, thought of Stanley and never with any feel- ing of responsibility. Occasionally had arranged to get back to New York to see her and he was little to greet him, a tall thin young son with ridiculously long legs, shy- and utterly dismayed, “Not in five years, Lorna?” Lorna had shrugged. “Well, you’ might postpone the calamity a year by sending her around the world —but eventually you’ve got to face the unpleasant responsibility of a gtown-up daughter.” But as it happened he had never had to, at least not for long. Stanley had beén taken away from the quiet apartment in the Gramercy Park district and sent to an expensive and correct girls’ school on the Hudson. Vacations she had spent in a New York hotel with Ellen and once a year her father had arranged for her to run over to Paris, or Vienna or Ostend, or wherever he had happened at the moment to be staying. During the next five years, Stan- ley had grown from a thin-legged, grave-eyed child into a rather beau- tifal girl. She had been neither more nor less happy than when she had lived in New York with Ellen. She had always been quite happy and a little lonely and a bit entranced by life and a lot puzzled by it. She still was. She didn’t feel sorry for herself. She never had. But she did feel lonely. It wasn’t exactly an unpleasant loneliness but it was there all the time — some- where at the back of her heart. It was a feeling that more than any- thing else in the world she wanted ito belong somewhere—to someone. ‘To someone besides Ellen who was kind and sturdy and honest but didn’t understand. She had made friends easily and eagerly but never intimately. She had found life an altogether pleasant and de- sirable thing but she had been = bit bewildered by it and sometimes And yet when he had died sud- denly at the end of her first season, which he had come back to New ‘ork to give her, she had felt more than ever and during the past years she had come to realize if he had lived things would been different for her, . it was, her Aunt Julie hag immediately stepped, in and start- ed to arrange her life for her. And now she was in New Tug! back “It sounds silly, doesn’t it? But/ly serious young eyes, and an air|York, sitting in Alita Lawson's BE pelle Zep Fs" F- ate HM: i} Fe FER qe mnhans Wiin E. i oF meantime she's th charming drawing room and juite free to do exactly as she pissed that night she pleased to go dancing with Perry in a dahlia- colored gown. Beyond that she was. still not sure of anything. She felt how that beyond that nothing red very much, or if it did it quite likely take care of it- came for her at eight "clock — bringing her gardenias, lovely, waxen cluster of them, trembled against her shoul. ‘gave Perry a nice sense of possession. He always felt a pleas. little proprietary right in girls flowers — temporary ‘They dined at a club in the Fig. the music, never talking. ed @ bit disappointed when he sug. rather you quite to myself and all that, to be amused and I lo it, Besides, I tolg in.” keep Ca aehapiaill te