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ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Except Sunday by the Prese Publishin: mpany, N 45 Park Row, Now York, ne Company: Nos. 68 to RALPH PULITZER, President, 62 Park Row, J. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Row, JOBEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row. 2 Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Clase Matter, () @ebseription Rates to The Evening) For Hnsiand and the Continent and ‘ ‘World for the United States All Countries In the International ada. Postal Union sareaseeees 8.50) One Year seeeeeeeee © 0} One Month sheet eeeeneee 86 VOLUME 66. AV evessNUNeNHVINO) 100UL OMINOUS SYMPTOMS. F THE attention of the country were not #0 deeply engrossed by international problems it would be considering with more serious- ness the alarming eymptoms that have developed in its industrial m., Not in years has labor chown itself so restless and #0 inordinate in its demands. Not in years have employers found themselves 0 eset with claims which they sec no way to satisfy save by granting what they know the state of their business does not warrant. Day by, day strikes multiply. In order to avoid them manufacturers agree to, higher wage scales with no certainty that they can continue to aain- tain them. Nor is it manufacturing alone that euffers. Freight handlers,! longshoremen, tugboat engineers—workera upon whom depends the movement of millions of dollars’ worth of merchandise each day— threaten to leave harbors clogged with idle shipping and terminals| choked with loaded freight cars. The Port of New York, which ought ‘to be handling the greatest volume of commerce in its history, is fnatead aghast at the tie-up of its traffic. Is it right? Is it just? For three years business bore, the burden of hard times. Em- ployers paid wages and kept going on the smallest margin of profit. Now the moment prosperity is discerned in the distance businese is set upon and commanded to disgorge what it hasn’t had time to accu- mulate. Where is the bonsted shrewdness and common senee of the Ameri- tan workingman? Can’t he see that most of the heavy advance drafts he is presenting he will have to make good himself later? ————— ed Carranza begins to understand us, If he can’t apprecia' us the loss is his. ———— RECKLESS ADULTS, TOO. E ARE glad to note the police are making an extra effort to persuade children that it is dangerous to steal rides. During last month the police reports show that 710 chil- The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, May 5, 1916 % a Not Even a Nibble ret, 1018, boy he Wreas Pai dlitng 6 ce Rew York brening By J. H. Cas si((The S tories Of Stories Plots of Immortal Fiction Masterpieces By Albert Payson Terhune Coprright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Os, (The New Yor Evening World), KING BEMBA’S POINT; by J. Landers. HE Flint Importing Company iad built its African factory and storehouse on a spit of sand—known as “King Bemba’s Point— that ran out into the ocean. ‘ Hither ivory and ostrich plumes and skins were brought by natives from the interior. Here old Jackson, the company’s local super- intendent, bartered for such treasures with glass beads, bolts of calico and “trade muskets.” A ship touched at King Bemba’s Point once a month to carry away the accumulated merchandise and to bring mail and provisions. Jackson, the superintendent, was a morose, crotchety old fellow. His life had been ruined years earlier by a woman. He had married as a young sea captain, and had adored bis beautiful wife, Lucy. Returning from a voyage ho had found her gone. She had eloped with one Bransome, a rich man’s son, whom Jackson barely knew by sight. All his efforts te track down the fugitives had failed. Crushed and heartbroken he bed buried himself in this godforsaken corner of Africa. Sorrow and the beastly climate and {11 health and a4. vancing years had combined to work ravages in his face, until at last his beet friend would scarce have recognised the withered superintendent as the spruce sea captain of other days, One morning the monthly steamship dropped anchor off the Point ana |landed @ passenger. The newcomer introduced himself as travelling man. ager for the Flint company, and said he had come to take general charge of the factory for a time. His name, he added, was Bransome, Jackson looked at him long and steadily, then eatd: “I knew a Bransome once. He waa a scoundrel.” ' From the first the superintendent avoided the new manager's eoctety, | keeping almost wholly to himself and drinking heavily, Once or twice he |came out of his seclusion to hold secret talks with the captain of his boat crew, a native named Sooka, Sooka had a deathless hatred for Bransome, because the latter on the day of his arrival at the Point had had him severely flogged for a trifling offense, A few months later an eastbound steamship from England touched at | King Bemba’s Point. A heavy sea was running. Bransome, as manager, | Was obliged to row out and consult with the eteamer’s captain, He did not relish the task in such weather, but Jackson assured him there was no danger. i The company’s boat, steered by Sooka and with Bransome tn the stern, set forth for the vessel. When tt began the return journey to the factory it carried another passenger, a woman. Bransome's wife had come from Eng- land to join her husband. Sooka guided the boat cleverly through the gale unt!! it was near shore for the expéft native crew to reach land by swimming. Then he turned the craft sideways Just as a mighty wave broke above it. * "The scoundrel will never reach shore alive!” shrieked Jackson in crasy nnn g, Slee from the pier head. { What the Sea He was right. Tho natives, one by one, came to land, The New Manage?: WP nnnnnnnnnnnn ts | tas | Gave Up. panting and exhausted, but safe. But Bransome was not ws with them. At Sooka’s orders they had not raised a hand to help him or his wife when the boat capsized. Next morning the tide washed the mannger’s dead body ashore. Clasped |in his arms was the body of his wife. Jackson, who had bent gloatingly over his lifeless foe, glanced once at the face of the woman, then fell head. tees ' | long upon the sand beside her, moaning: | Gren were warned by policemen that if they persisted in the gport of “Lucy! Lucy!" ee i ” A ‘i i j i ‘catehing on” to moving vehicles something unpleasant or worse | Mistakingly, “seven” sacraments we name; ‘ would happen to them. “Penance” and “Matrimony” are the same,—DUKE, | ‘Twenty-three children were killed in the streets of the city during | ; ‘April—cighteen by automobiles, three by wagons and two by trolleys. O ‘ Accidents of this class always increase in the months of spring and | dy ust a W ife =-(Her Diary) | summer. Playgrounds are all too few. Reckless youngsters must he} Edited by Janet Trevor | taught to practice “safety first” in the streets. H i é % . } But their elders need teaching, too. ‘The police should not forget The Jarr Famil y Ellabelle Mae Doolittle §) (cms yDert eee: tie Se tere tree Won 7 - . bs | . ,We were spendin, % { that. Any number of adult New Yorkers quite old enough to know By R L. McCardell By Bide Dudt ULY 12—Ned and I have had ajiittie girl talaa a Sat aetinreilaite F better may be.seen daily in crowded thoroughfares taking chances in Vesey es LUChs y cy J long talk to-day, 1 love him as|p vurmaa de ener some eae SE | ways that call for sharp reprimand, | Copyright, 1916, by ‘The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), Covsright, 1016, by ‘The Prew Publishing Co, (The New York krening World), . pa i ne tevensaas ay mare Ragin 1 broke my Bromiso eae "4 i LLIB % =) wi 5 * " a 6 aaaaits 4 atte | DU hin understand him ra’ e a red o' to tl 4 The habit of crossing the street anywhere but on the crosswalk ILLIE JARR came bursting| when it's likely to rain or be chilly LLADELLE MAE DOOLITTLE, introduce Mayor Cyrus Perkins Walk. |" and was lost for two dase ae. | ‘ . re into the Jarr apartments at]and give them thelr death of cold, I the poetess with a heart and) ¢@r and ask him to speak five minutes | better, served a good licking—which I didn't 4 for example, is one that has gaThed a dangerous hold upon pedestrians noon and cried, “They are|cannot agree to!” soul, Was announcer at an en- porgnaies pease. a | ‘The doctor told me that it was not | get, Kuess one thing that's the in this city. It is a foolish risk and leaves the man who takes it no, setting up a May party at school and) fearing this decree of fate, the/tertainment given by the Live and] piauded when she appeared on ep. /necessary to sit up with him, but I Hiehtaaterae is that I've always ‘one but himself to blame if something hits him ake ede Laced Wy) ay park, rey ! - in| ttle «irl began bitterly to ery. Let Live Section of the Women’s Het-|Fostrum, She bowed to the rigit and tee bel Fe Trae eltep a pay ‘Acts, inutead of being punichee D “And a little girl in our class what's! «1 wouldn't ery for an old May |terment League of Delhi Wednesday | left, smiling sweetly, and then sald Sat curled up in one of Mrs. for them.” Let the police do some warning in this direction. Bot lovely golden hair is to be arty," said the Nate boy. “Would I, [Might at Hugus Hall. The affair was |Sh@ would make each announcement | uncomfortable armchairs, watching| I have never known Ned to talk ao Queen!" cried the little Jarr girl, fol- i : * /originally intended us a Shakespear- | !n original rhyme. began as fol-/my husband. ‘This morning about 6!frankly about himself. Like most ee Ibwine hacierotier [s ; ian celebration, but it was found that | lows: o'clock his eyes opened and ne spoke | Men, he isn't in the habit of analyzing ' BR ¥ F . ' be “And you behave yourself,” said |80 few people in Delhi had ever hear, Maror Cyrus Perkins Walker ‘in a voice that was perfectly ra-|his deeds or his disposition, He's Judging by the reverse action observab!e at Verdun. nd Johnny Rangle !s to be the)... sarr, turning to her young hope- {Of the Bard of Avon that It wal y rat Cae a tional, although a little weak, and not introspective, q Germany may yet see a big victory there. King, Huh! I wouldn't be King and| “rs. Jarr, tu pees . feared the show wouldn't pay. There- ea to his patter. ollie, dearest!” he said gen’ " I said, as he paused rather J have to walk with @ girl!” cried the|{U! “But I'm glad you do not cater |fore, it was announced as a “High The M : el but he! “Haven't you slept at all? You 1 ik; Sloomily, “will you make me a prom- i boy. to teacher's favorites.” Jinks Social," and one hundred and] ,,7he Mayor, was surprised, but Be | sq white and tired.” tise now? Will you promise to “It's te be on Saturday.” said the} Just then the telephone belt rang. |tWenty-seven persons paid 60 cents|Stephed to the platform and spoke | «eq! 1 exclaimed, hurrying to the|frain from doing anything which in- y REFORMERS BE FO L | ate on Gaturday,” sat he; P each to get in the hall. NORE ANG BEY, a bed and kneeling beside it. “You are; Volves your safety when I ask you j NEED OLS? Uttle girl, “and I want my new white] It was little Emma's teacher, who | "After the audience was seated, Mrs. |,,,f knew Shakespeare well,” he said. frcling better, aren't you? Your head | Mot to take the risk? Tehant bean 4 . Si ; ; 2 B : oF ‘dress and my pink. sash, and the ked Mrs. Jarr if she would come to| Elisha Q. Pertle, promptress of the at be conducted a ean 5 is so much cooler; I think the fever] interfering wife. I know that a man GAIN stories of joy rides that take Sing Sing convicts far be-| teacher is going to have ice cream and| the park as one of the chaperones for | Section, decided to slip a wee bit of | Dallas Vt Ne was afterward elected must be nearly all gone, Oh, it doesn’t) mustn't coddie himself or act Ike a i} ; ; ; eee Shakespeare stuff into the show, any- |‘ the City Council and he gave the | matter about me! As soon asl know| Mis Nancy. I shan't ask you to stop } yond the prison walls call for official investigation. In at|c#ke and lemonade the children's’ May party. "Fur I/way, and she told Miss Doolittle to|city money for a public drinking | you are all right I can rest.” drinking or smoking or motoring. ‘ ‘ » cane tt abpoare to be tte, tek | “Say, maw, couldn't I take my air. suppose you know,” added the teach- | qs ej fountain, he story that he was)” «yfolli he began again, stroking} Shan't make you wear your rubbers least one case, it appears to be admitted by the prison author-| LAGE GeRseaal ABGASTin ethic @AtOvAE the taiaohoue wa’ lerer nul called Souse Shakespeare is wrong. | my face weakly with the hand I had every time there's a cloud in the sky. ‘ “" . a =e ean . gun alons? b up e id children; so sweet of you to call .»!"|Never was there a more re- 4 “y, rt jut I have suffered ities, a convict actually serving a term for a reckless automobile drive, 1 | dectited that weet littl H io pressed against it. ou saved my red so, this time. Te ie A : +} park and squirrels, and I want to/decided that your s fe ets) When Mr. Jarr came home Mrs. | spected""— ‘a life the other day. The outgoing tide| If I saved your life it belongs to me in the course of which he killed a child, dragged the body two blocks | shoot ‘em! said the boy. to be May: Queen? Jarr was singing bilthely” over ane |, “Pardon me, Mr, Mayor,” sald Mrs. had caught me, and I never could ) more than ever, Promise you won't : * Ae | wy baie é fh ea al nM ‘ , | Pertle, arising in the front row, “but have made the shore alone, And—|put it in danger again.” and then tried to escape, has nevertheless enjoyed the privilege of} 350) sous Bot shgot Soe. alse little I didn't know that,” sald Mrs, fea Se lee at & oun ane you have evidently got the wrong and I went out there when you asked| I thought that Ned would give me tae G secasional spins along the roads of Ossining! |2bcePr You'll Bet arrested,” said the) Jarr, “but I was arranging for lor to | Ak hile a selection of pink meanes | Shakespeare. ‘The Shakespeare we/me to stay, because I couldn't take|the promise at once. But there was running a motor car on occa al sy along the roads of Ossining! —|iittie girl. “And Tt am going to take! go, You may be sure I will be pieased tere goed! littie po bell ed Lidl would hear of was an Englishman.” |another woman's dare! I made you|another silence, so long that I rained e The crass impropriety and scandal of this sort of thing is what, ome peanuts to feed the squirrels!” | to go with you and help watch the out. ac a ae Ha ;dtnonstad at Ge Sa I'll shoot them as fast as they causes sensible people to become disgusted with the vagaries of so- come up! Bing!" cried Master Willle | Jarr, and squinting one eye, he aimed e, sane treatment of at an imaginary squirrel with sup- posedly deadly results. Whereat the} little girl commenced to cry and be- | gan slapping her brother for killing | the squirrels, “Behave yourself, Emma!" cried | was my friend,” said the Mayor. | suffer for a fool stunt, and then you|™my head to look at him. He was But William Shakespeare has been|saved me from the consequences, |frowning and the eyes he turned to me dead several hundred years.” Mollie, I'm not worth it! were sombre, “So has Mayor Walker—politically,” | “Oh, my dear,” I breathed, sipping| “I can't promise, Mollie,” he eaid, sald Benge Beecher, an anti-Walker|his weak hand back beneath the|scarcely above a whisper. “I should Democrat, in the rear of the hall, covers and putting my face close to|break my word, ne I did to my mother ae Mayor ‘Walker ordered Constable|his on the pillow, “don't you know] years ago. T tell you, I can't account Brown to eject Beecher. A fight fol-|that nothing in the world ts worth|for myself when I'm angry. It seems Po Ss Mut | M t lowed in Which Brown was knocked | anything to me now except you? Is 1f I were in the centre of a hot p ua otor . down four times, but he subdued his! could not Hye by seer you All the | wi bai area n uy be fought.” man by tickling him severely. other people are shadows to me"—— was why you struck my By Alma Woodward. When the melee was over Misa Doo- |. “And to me, Mollle,” he interrupted, |dog that day in the park,” I sala, Ia Comright, 1916, by The Pross Publishing Co, (The Now York Evening World). little stepped to the edge of the|his voice growing stronger with his|/sudden enlightenment, table. —————_+4-—____ Being all fashioned of the selfsame dust, Let us be merciful as well as just.—LONGFELLOW. calléd prison reform. Is it impos prisons except through reformers whose mania seems to be to let con- to make progress in the victs out of jail in order to see if they'll come back? a, Se The Colonel is not seeking the nomination, but his “num- d . Ja % er 8a ei % ? A ‘ost nd pke as follows earnestness, “there aren't any women “Yes,” he answered shamedly, { DRE eran Tres nen Mra, Jarr, "I never saw such & 16M1-| geene: Curb ie front of Pop's house, [it doesn't matter, Look, 1 bought a] C*tTum and BPS except you. And yet Thad todo what| TI. sald nothing. ‘There seemed per 1s in 1 |per, and 1 know whom you get it! aris jPemnanta, bear Giants’ badge and a miniature bas Uinterancic tie ‘that fool girl told me, even when you|nothing more to say, It was he who 8 nnn === from, too! Wille wouldn't shoot tha jal and-ashatbuind and every oa it \ be t to do, it. Molle, I have broke the pauge, res . ; lanuierala, ain Hob ROIne. (6 him | ta sm |for him! Set up ving for use mper, That Randall girl] “T promise, he sala, soberly, “that Hits From Sha rp Wits aban lt Je oegie BL nie". stone tn front Little Miss ficketts s two | tuunted me, and 1 can't stand a sneer|T wit do everything In my powernne ‘ {ROBO SEE RIP RUD BONE) BAO} OU! A (gasping)—Oh, Milton, don't enters. | boa songs. One of them, written by Miss | from anybody, If she'd been a man/ fight this abominable temper of mine | Be careful where you place your] Perhaps the reason there are ag| People’s eyes, and if I did they TT think ponte overdone itt ated HON ore oar atating imiys | I'd have knocked her down, As tt was,|—if you confidence, and then watch the place,]many poor efforts to write poetry! w ildn't let him take it into the - yh r evomplisned ) Mia “|1 took another way of getting even;| "IT promise, f= DAibany Journ ix that many persons mistake ere’ Why, It looks like an adver- Kanick Was Hit with a Bri cre Chi vei made up my mind, all in a flash, that) gravely Jump! park!” T'd do what she hinted I couldn't, Of course I will help him—surely i. int) rout for inspiration.Toledo law against the | Bla igo Man (with Interest)—Doeg|aied a furore, Miss Ricketts retired ody in New York decorate carg|amid storms of applause and went tisement for something, There ought to b © hen I don't want to go to the old ‘an't overdo it for ; % t . > At |" "“Once, when I was a child, 1 prom-|we together shall be strong e muffler cut-out on rhetorical flivve eo 8 e a Roe dahon se as taatily as you do, Mr, Mitt? out in the street and beat up Moses ised my mother I wouldn't walk alone|to win, 6 enough Philadelphia Inquire All 4 May party aid the boy, these Middle West people. They're} Ma (butting in)—I'm glad you Mke| Betts, a son of a negro preacher. Taxge forest near the hotel where (To Be Continued, = via ROM bands Tantei Md trust thelr hus. | “I don't care 1f Willlc wants to ga] gtrong for outdoor sports and they [it You see, we are great enthusiasts, | Miss Doolittle’s third and last an- |!n & lOTk bs inued,) but we wouldn't a : "eal Are you? nouncement concerned a great fa- ks, tama 4 0 the May part ot." said the | ike , , J 6: When opportunity knocks, every | vise ‘em to brax about it among ‘her| tho May party or not,” eald the|tiko to ace @ fellow enthusiastic for 1S 7M! eageriy)—-You bet. Yottow|rerite im the section—Mrae Bkecter S$ $s, = } Xnock’s a boost.—Hoston Transcript. |husbinds’ male friends Uttle girl; “L want to go and the|hin home team, I've had experience every line ot iene wien Te ou totam | verite, in the section—Mrs, Skeeter Facts Not Worth Knowing, 5 * 8 @ teacher wants me to go! ith these guys before, All this|Who are the ng to-day? | heralded by the poetess: A Boston man claims to have found ‘ aly 0 ar if to-day y ten pearls in an order of raw oysters.| When you sit down and figure jt}. “! amet In favor of such things," | streamer effect 1s Just a little play to} Yop (with im jh bra 0) Mig Shegten O'Brien By Arthur Baer. } It would have pen Much More re- Jour, the fixures will show that_arher, Mal Mra, Jarr. “How can the teach- | the gallery. ish the diamond with then? | Po Bn th a Caner Ut, Be 200 Fret Seas Oe, Fibe Ne Teck Beales Wat), markabe if he had found ten ovsters {people have done ax much for you ag| #4 look after ao many children in] Ma (with awe)—He's a good cus- |e. M optically)—I understand ae : Terr million automadiie Free will be sold tn 4246, which should be good i 2 om one ad er soup, f the m, and a great|t ark where all those automobiles |tomer of yours, inn't he, Milton? they weren't playing such good ball| Mrs. O'Brien choso as her subject |news to the tack manufacturers, } n sides.—Macon News, — [and runaway horses aro? Besides,| Pop (brisklyy—Worth about. twen- this year, “Mere Man,” and the way she chided y will be busy looking after theig|t¥-flve. hundred a year, net, to me] Pop (airily)--Oh, they've had a lit- | the males was a caution. | Letters From the Peopl they will be busy looking after their Tanavs how good he is, Say, wouldnt; tle slump. But theyll Hek the stufe | _ "Man," said Mrs, O'Brie Close observation by the Department of Agriculture shows that the | -} cop e | favori os 6 ; 4 y af if a4 ‘a’ bought all these pennants for noth- fg out of this piker team, 1 gotta | ondary consideration in ‘ toadstool is absolutely neutral until somebody eats it, Thanks From 1 Queena of, wehlle.n shildren 4 nd ing, you know, J'm going to make a | hunch, Man inventy the rocking cha . “ ‘ Thuraday, prettier children are passed over," rit’ with this Chicago cousin to-day | | udionly « 6. ladon with | instance, but who s| ? Womant {To the Kxlitor of ‘Thi 4 o Yea “They wanted me to be con, but |PY, being an over-ineubated baseball | Ger vines al is supped. ® got me all the way,” The average life of a dress suit is 987 hires, { For the very fine Lin‘our Ine (on padi dadeded Ploy, wanted Queen, but yi, when, ax a matter of fact, Tdon't | ghto!" said Mrs, Pertie, with eon } ee rich appeared in The Byenina On what day did the twenty-second}! wanted my little friend, who DRO Mine tena butiker, eal. Man: (oallinglesiey poll! molt ant , | Mforid, I am writing to utter a word|°! Pobruary, 1900, tall? A.G.R, | beautiful golden hair, to be Queen," |jearned all the slang phrases and} C. M, Gumping to fits teet)—Leon! or Walker and Constable Brown, Every quartette would be a success if only the other three singers had } of thanks in the name of the New A li Quotation. [suid the child, Who Was an unselfish rything, 1 guess we'd better start] What're you doing in N York? | and left the hail. The Hon.! voices, RI A eI ae : ‘ . els dine for his hotel now Man erry maicar of P, Doolittle, father of the {and especially in behalf of tho ninety | 71M Moret The Beemng Word MYoutre Juat Uke your father-at. | q 242 (is they sturt off)—Maybe th # the idea of the rebel , left also, but he assured the — See in this city who have norcod | ioase tell’ us the author of in ou're j : sad iy ar ither—al- | don't have sebull in Chica atts i he was merely going out to get In ratio to their size, a humming bird can fly 947,542,807,000 times } of . We fool thut|the exact wording of, tho quotation | 84 G0Ins things for other peoplel™ | Milton, (blinkly)—Why, who're they | a drink. th . D over thirty-six years. We feel that the exa r ing of, the quotation nUOH anion Pop Uersely)-—Oh, say? Mis» Doolittle finished the enter- further than a rhinoceros. @ditorials such as this will exert a | Whose general 1 is Would | S#id) Mrs. daatr they have ft, solng to play to - atro: 26 on the nody of | tha me one Vv i mull metanathin warisis even thouh We never hear anything ~Our home team—Chicagos, of | tainment by singing. a song she wrote } saseng, inausnce B thie large be ay of | th hy mae ne ie ue Hi © git i a e 4 nth mor ve aeea it about teame like that here in we in waltz Hime. It wae ‘A Jitney Bus Nobody: haa ever figured a possible method tor a woman to cat dt ) who your valua Us?" can go, can’ ed little | Feast vet this fellow's a shark, I’ tomer stripe himeit of batecs &efand Gus." She ended with @ clear i woup meets, a arene etirely PENDS bast Hurne wrole | Ther eaio Pe ae hie can disintegrate an etvor and a The Sama termi | hich note that lasted nearly « minute | (ArOUgh @ vetl. . R turns wrote 18 oxue Gama talecemaiiiivaa = together again and set the whole town taiking —_— wwe shall always merit askind word ling | eretaly a nald Mre. Jar [Ps midiyi— What team is the| Ma (eweollyi—There guca your! ahs tadies applauded “w from you. PATRICK J. M'NALIi, on, wad some power the giftle gle us |The thing of sending children to the yow York tram playing tocday? twenty-five hundred net, "dt looke Panes lage BNpleuses WIL’ grant Teate by effictoncy experte show concluatvely that round trotey BBL X. Letter Carriers’ Association. ‘Lo see oursel’s Os itbers see us!” Paik Jo tin, While suuunce drgesce Pop (oerencly)—Ob, 1 don't knew, sick, docou's it, darling? del Were pleased, = etiam, WA CCIO Gre much superior fo octagon shaped once,