Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 44, Number 60, Decatur, Adams County, 12 March 1946 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

. DECATUR DM.Y DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday By THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. Incorporated Entered at the Dacatnr, Ind.. Poet Office as Second Class Matter J. H Heller Preeldent A. R. Holthous*, Boc'y. A Etta. Mgr. Dick D. Heller .. Vice-Proaident •übeeHptfon Rate* By mall, tn Adame and adjoin tna coantlea: Ono year, 16; six montha, M-M; three months, 11.71 By mail, beyond Adame and adjoinlng counties Ono year. |7; six moaths, >3.75; three months. MBy mall to servicemen, any place ia the world: Ono year. 13.50. elx montha, 11.71; three montha 11Single copies, 4 cent* By carrier, 10 coate per weeh. G/VE.' Servicemen oversees. especial- !> those In huopitala are keenly interested in world event#, from sports to elections. Your |2t> contribution to the Red Croon fund campaign I# enough to buy and deliver a radio overs* a# where it will help raise the spirits of many a homesick soldier and sailor. —o—- — Houses' Houses! We need house*. —o How ar. you coming with plans for spring hour -cleaning? —o If a third war cornea, why not start it with the Atomic bomb and get it finished in a week No on In power tooay would ever repeat President Hat ding’s naive remark. is a very simple thing after all.'' —o The outlook for new cars i* brightening When they come, th y will at least provide some sort of sleeping space, and so may releivc the housing shortage. —o Signs will be erected at the "Pffk-up and Unload" spaces along Second street, inviting you to drive your car there when you want t<> run into the store to pickup your packages —o—o Many peoplu lately seam to think that we shall soon be on speaking terms with the planets —especially the beautiful planet Venus, who* name, fame and proximity all tetid to make it more attractive than the others for our earthbound citizens. Hut really. It is quite a distance from »he earth to Venus, a matter of some 2<,0W».0u« miles—so far that even a radar signal traveling with the speed of light would doubt-

Hope for Two Blood Disorders

By Herman N. Bundvsvn, M. 0. HOME yearn ago. treatment for two serious disorder- with radioactive phoaporoti!- w tried. There two disorder’, are Itikemia and polycythemia. In the first of thea- two condition* there is a great incaaaee tn the number ot white cell* in the blood, in the second condition it is the red cells that arc ovorplantiful. Doctor Shields Warren of Boa> ton. Massachusetts, has studied Ml pattenta who were treated in this way. starting iti January. HH«. Had ioactive phosphorus is not easy to obtain but since the end of the war it is hoped that a more plentiful supply will be available. Vein Injection The preparation, dissolved in a mixed salt and glucose solution, was given by injection. Into a vein. He fe>,ia that It to better to give it by Injection lluut by mouth. elnce more ot it is absorbed in this way. Dr. Warren also used It In a number of patients with lU»dgkin's disease, a condition afecting the lymph glands In th® body, causing th<m to enlarge. He rlwse those cases for trectmeut which had responded to X-ray for a while but which later on were not Improved by further X-ray treatments Taking the patbnU treated by Doctor Warren as a whole, it would appear that about one-third of them were benefited No harm ■as done by the administration of the radioactive phosphorus In the does* employed. It was found

less land with such a thud that a recording angel couldn't count the pieces. This country escaped a disastrous post-war deflation, and that ia so much to the good. But we have lost about three months' production in strike waves, and there is still considerable idleness caused by lack of materials and other factors. However, theie are uow at work about 50,000,000 employees, the biggest and most effective working force on earth. There is little real fear of Inflation. The most common complaint is delay in filling accumulated orders for goods and materials. That dlffi culty will diminish with the advance of spring All in all. It looks Ilk- an extremely good year. The situation might have been worse, but should have been better. O .Q Attention is now focused on Spain, that unhappy country where conditions resemble those of Nasi Germany. Despite official denial. Franco's Falangists continue in power, in large land ownership, in business, as leaders in the reactionary group. The Falange salute may be required of any pedestrian. The army is undermined with ranking Get man officers. In-t-llcctuals are throttled with the stigma of "red.” The masses ate illiterate. Outside fashionable areas in Madrid and Barcelona people live ill caves: children with sores beg for bread, thousands of political prisoners lie in stenchfilled dungeon* or slave In mines Except for his own gang, everyone would like to see Franco go. —o Young Candidates:* Two young men hav- their eyes on the presidency. Ex-governor Harold Stassen of Minnesota is genetally supposed to aspire to the 191* Republican nomination. Now one of the columnists sugg> sts Gov. Ellis Arnall of Georgia as a Democratic possibility. Both Stassen and Arnall are 39; if either should be nominated, he would be a candidate at fl. This is pretty young tor presidential candidates, most of whom run when in their 50's, and none of whom are eligible, according to the Constitution, until they are 35. Dewey was 43 wheu he ran. but even he does not hofl t flrecord for youth. That is held, and likely to remain so. by William Jennings Bryan» who was first nominated at 36. ouly one year above the minimum age.

that th* doses used did not damage the formation of normal red bltstd ceils. Thus it was noted that in tlte cases of leukemia, while the white o il* decreased in number, the red rolls increased. In polyrythmia, in which the red cells are increased altove normal, the radioactive phosphorus caused a drop in the red <:-II count. Blood cells are formed In the bone marrow. If there is normal bone marrow present, even heavy dosages of the radioactive phosphorus will do no permanent harm. In one Instance, a patient developed what is known as radiation sickness. which is a condition sometimes occurring following Xray treatments but this cleared up when treatment was discontinued. One patient also complained of sickness to the atomach following treatment and the treatment was discontinued. The patients did not develop fever. Pra< ttcaj/y all of the radioactive phosporus given Is excreted by the kidneys. Hence, it is not retained in the body. In vkw of the fact that this type of treatment doe* no harm and appears to give benelils in such serious conditions as leukemia and polycythemia, it would appear in many Instances to be worth trying in these diseases particularly when a more liberal supply is available. (Distributed by King Fesrtures Hy nd tea tel

"MADAM BUTTERFLY* K MT'W - J 5 *''

♦— ♦ Modern Ettiquette By ROBERTA LEE | Q In there such a thing a* an 1 “unfailing lest of good breeding "? 1 A Yes. there are several such I tests. An infallible test Is what I one laughs al. a well-bred person is 1 quick to discriminate between 1 what is a fit subject for Jest, and 1 what i* not. A well-bred person is ' never amused at another's misfor- < tune or discomfort. ' Q Is it correct to nay, "The man I Is light-complected”? A No. Say. "The man is lightconiplexioncd." The adjective* "complected" means interwoven. Q When one is staying at a hotel for several weeks, should hu j tip by the week or each time he is nerved? A It is preferable to tip by the week. 0 _ — — I Household Scrapbook By ROBERTA LRE • • The Fruit Closet One good idea tor use in the fruit ■ closet is to divide it into com-1 partmeiits with a label over each | little section. This saves the trou-1 ble of labeling each individual jar . The partition* can lie made of heavy cardboard and easily arranged. Rusty Knives Rust on knives can sometimes | bo removed if “In blade is run through an onion and allowed to . remain for about three hours. Then ' polish it. Squash bquacth will lie much easier to pe<-l if it is first placet] in the oven until thoroughly warm. o Twenty Years Ago Today * March 12 Raym«n« Harting is elected president of the Decatur ■ Chatauqua J. H. Carmody arrives home from a business trip to Chicago for the sugar company. Roy Mumma plans the remodelling of his rcaideiice at Tenth and Adams. In a straw vote tak* n by I<*o newsiiapers. the result was nine to one In favor of modifying or repealing the Volstead prohibition act. Members of the I’licebe Bible claws of tin- Zion Reformed church give a cafeteria aupper. -j. Legion Ex-Service Officer Is Dead Rockville, Ind.. .March 13 (UP) —.Mr*. Ethel L. Tierney. Gaston. Ind., service officer of the Indiana department of th- American Legion from 1924 to 1933, died here yesterday in the Indlaiia state tuberculosis sanitarium. Mrs. Gaston, who was secretary to former Son. Sherman Minton, handled veterans' claims for soldiers in World* War I. She also worked with the War Department. —• o —- —• ■■■«■ ■— —— Flqsh Explosion Os Stove Causes Fire Firemen were called to the Oren Brunner residence on South Line street about 6:30 o'clock thia morning to extinguish a b)ax • caused by a flash explosion of a kerosene stove. M**n<beia of the family estimated that the damage would amount to approximately MM. In addition to . damage done to the rear part of . the building, moat of the family . laundry was burned in the blase. 0 — — Men are great only aa they are kind.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

Title Is Awarded To Decatur Jeweler Announcement is made today by the American gem society that Carl C. i’umphrey. local jeweler, has been awarded the title of registered jeweler. American gem society. A jeweler's use of the title indicates that he has passed the examinations established by the international Society, and indicates a specified knowledge of grades, qualities and varieties of diamond* and other genie Mr. Pumphrey has spent months in s|H*cial study and research in precioua metals, jewelry and silverware, and especially in gemology -the science of diamonds and other gems Special courses in gemology, recently prepared by the society, make it possible for the modern jeweler to follow the precedent of the banker, the insurance man, the optometrist and others in embracing adult education an a necessary part of his preparation to best serve the public. The American gem society Is an international I professional organization and has |ax it purpose the development of a scientific knowledge of gem stone# by the general public. The I society registers only such Jeweli< rs as have the required practical I experience and a proccd record of ■ integrity in their business practices. In keeping with the trend of the times th- American gem society hopea to bring back to the jewelery trade woinething of the dignity and Integrity of the old trade guilds. Mr. I’umphrey has lieen In the * jewelry and gift store business in this city for more than 30 years. 0

Huge Black Market Ring Uncovered Corporation And Individuals Cited .. | New York. Mar. 12-(Vl*)— A huge filuck market ring which faked meat ami augur ration coupons from cut-up telephone hooka wa« uncovered here today as a frderul grand jury indicted seven corporation* and 215 individuals on charges of conspiracy to vio* tide OPA regulations. The indictments chargod that the defendants overdrew U»uir accounts, in the period between March 15, IMS, and V-J day, August 16, by 75.iH)0.000 red ration (meat) coupon*. and sugar coupons worth 6.00<f,000 pounds of sugar. United Htaiea attorney John F. X. McGohey Haiti it was the largest black market "ring" ever uncovered in the New York district, and that he believed it was Ute largest In the United States. The widespread ring had a “tight hold” on sale of ration checks to wholesale distributors in the New York area, he said. Three defendants, who Were ’ named in each of the seven Indictments returned by the grand jury, were dene r I bed by McGohey , as the ringleaders. They were William Rupoll, of New York, Ralph Russo and Joseph lucoleno. lioth of Brooklyn. fucolano was uald to have a i rimlual record. McGohey said Rupoll had been paroled front ! federal prison where he was serving a sentence tor high jacking. McGohey said Gut ring short- ’ changed banks holding ration check accounts by cutting up ’ tinted paper and qven telephone Itdoks and enclosing the pieces of 1 paper in envelopes, which lhen * were marketed on the outside ’ with false numbers of ration 1 stamps, and filed with the banka, t The deceptions were not discovered for some time. The ring also established a » huge market in forged ration checks. McGohey said. He seid

ths forged stamps issued by the ring bed hmn f’>u*d aa far weal as Ohio. Illinoix and and that the ting operated tvusively In New Jersey. Pennsylvania. Connecticut and all of New York slate, as well as in the motropolitan area. The iMwaibility i hat Imome tax and alcohol lax violations also may have been committed is being Investigated, McGohey said. ■wm . i / mi ■ "W Robbery Attempt At Petroleum Is Foiled One Man Wounded, Another Captured Bluffton. Ind.. March 12 llT’»— A man was trapped and wounded by gnat ire today ,*a police foiled what they said wa« an attempt io break into a hardware store at petroleum. Three state police det<-clivi*. watching the Roy Burues Hard-1 ware store on a tip that two men would try to .break in. shot Hoy Maris. 36, Fort Wayne, and arrested hi# partner. Rnbert Intrim. 30, .Muncie. Marta was In the Wells county hospital and Antrim in the county jail Both were arrested on chargua of breaking and entering. The detectives were Kenneth Wine*. Truman Blerle and William Spannutli of ahe Pendleton state police post. They were assisted by Sheriff Ed Gr.id’-n ami Deputy Sheriff William Hixson of Walls county. The officers Mid that Martz and Anti Im. Imjili former inmates of the Indiana state reformatory, were equipped with burglar tools. The police Mid they tired at the men when they refused to obey a command to halt.

SENATOR CONNALLY (Coatlntud itom Pags Ons) plena and radio piled denunciation upon the head of Winston Churchill and the Anßlo-Anw-ri-can military alliance he proposed as a check to Russian expansion. ' The Soviet Union is firmly determined to secure all Its frontiers, and in trying to achieve this most legitimate and necessary aim It will not yield to any threats or any subterfuges, nor to any art of the most modern .. . weapons,'' Izvestia said. / The article added that Russia “will tread its own road without turning aside, without eiicroa*-h-Ing on other people's interests, and without conceding those which arc its own.” There was no direct mention of the atom bomb by name, hut twice Izvestia referred to use of the "most modern weaiHius." It drew attention to Churchill's suggestion that the Anglo American powers prepare the most modern weapons, then said that Russia would not he swayed by such devices. Izvestia condemned as "dangerously Incorrect” th*- theory that th** Russians res|H*ct only force. "Nothing could ever Irritate the Russian people more than an attempt to Intimidate It,” the article continued. . - O — O l The People’s Voice t Thia column for tha im o 6 onr ' readers wbo wish to maha tug- ' geatlona for the general good I or discuss questions of inters osL Fisas* sign your nams to I show autbsoUcity. It will not I b« used if yon prefer that it I not b«.

Agrees With Missionary Editor: It would appear that Decalurites arc considerably aroused and angered over the fact that Mrs. Paul Mayer thinks the Japanese are lovely p-ople and not the little brown ape men that we had been led to believe. I do not know Mrs. Mayer nor have 1 heard her speak; how-ver 1 seem to agree with her in some respects, it is a well known fad that the Japanese are the most polite people in the world. They are also highly literate, perhaps even snore so than Americans. In 1925. a mor- or less normal year, the Untied States printed half ax many books ax Japan and less than on*- third the number printed In Germany. Little Denmark prints the greatest nurnln r of books In proportion to the number of Inhabitants. In addition, they (the Japanese! are highly artistic. Many entm the annual poetry contests which we consider sissy. Consider also the simply decorated. Immaculately clean houses. Itesida them, ours look Hke cluttered hog pens. The Japaneses have also made Important scientific coutrtbutlons -one of the most Important In my opinion, being the discovery In IMS of the causatory organism al dyseulary by Ebiga. There areytilso some things I do not admire—th'-ir treatment of women for example. I am not a Jap lover nor do I hate them -they are jnat as human as we .are. We like to think that we were

treacherously attacked by a band of savage ape men and that om boys died gloriously to »»'•“ " ur fair land Such Is not the case. | We also like to Mam- our leaders, diplomats, and military men for Itelng caught off guard again It Is our fault. We selected themand they are human, not omniscient godx. What started the war? What did It accomplish? I do not pret< nd to know, hut I have an Idea that would Im* worth while to try out in preventing the next war Let’s be Christians The last Christian died on the cross over two thousand years ago We have |. arned little from Him. if by learning we mean using what we know In everyday life. We an -a-itish. mean. In tful. Imastful avaricious, lazy, spiteful, dilatory, and It is the Individuals among us who mak up the nation as a whole If we aren't genuinely sincere ax Individual*, our nation isn't amt you can't expect foreigners to like or trust us. There was a reason forth- wai and it I is burfml deep in <mr own Individ- ■ ual minds and heart*. As for missionaries, I have little respecl for them except lor th* medical missionary who do- x more good than a thousand preachers. I do not unth r-taml th** missionary motive How can we presume to bring peopl*- to our way of thinking? We certainly aren't in the right. Since: ly. Mrs. Ray Daltnvr 130 N sth St. Sktppy Skippy was a mongrel dug with a brown and white coat, he was about 11 Inches tall who bad a habit of taking a walk for about an hour in the forenoon and aftern<sm. apparently for exercise. He was alamt eight years old ami Hi pet of th- children of the north end. He Iwloiiged to a l»oy who served with the I S. 3rd Marines for three years during the war. seeing plenty of action through the invasion of th, Marshall Islands and the invasion and •■onquest of Guam ami Iwo Jima. He never wrote home without inquiring about his *iog and wondering if he would ever see the dog again. When lie did come home the dog was w. II and very happy to see him.

T\JOB FOR J ENN Faith Ba/da)iii k OtSTRIHITCO SV UNO rBATWUI SVSrSCATV -

CHAPTER THIRTY STEVE COULD forgst, too. th* sense of strain under which he continuously labored . . . impatience, Irritation, which he must not betray, neither to his patients, who certainly didn't deserve It, nor to hia father’s watchful, anxious eyes. Heck, he said “to himself, I'm as warped as my hand. He could argue himself out of it . . . rationalize it, tell himself how lucky he was. Oh, sure. All the words, sll the answers to the questions, he knew them all. But it didn’t make a darned bit of difference. He did bus work, and well, with every ounce of skill and knowledge he possessed, and he was learning more every day. He forced himself to a genuine interest in each r to anxiety, and rejoicing, depending on the case and its outcome. And he consoled himself with the knowledge that he was prolonging bis father's life. But the heart has to be in the healing, Bert's heart was always in his healing. Steve's was not So, the day In Portland was an interlude, a respite, beginning with their early start in Mary's fast, smooth-running car, which she drove. She permitted him to spell her at the wheel, because she understood it was a matter of pride when he offered. Early morning was lovely along the coast, the sea with the memory ot sunrise still in it. the wet brown rocks, the creaming surf. The little towns were charming, in the sunlight. . . they were picture towns, white steeples pointing to heaven, white houses, green shuttcra picket fences . . . cows grazing, a horss kicking up his polished heels and running free In a meadow .... a startled squirrel .. . the flame-flash of an oriole's wings, a song sparrow ringing from the top of a maple. Yet. after they'd reached Fosters, after luncheon, and the discussion and the sightseeing, Steve was through, he was bored, he’d had enough. He let Mary talk to Foster about the hospital. After all, it was Hathaway money. You must expect that they demand a very largo hand In It, all of them. But now and then he made practical, professional suggestions. He did sot, privately, consider Faster the man for the job. Faster had made his reputation in the building of beautiful country homes—it was he who had remodeled toe Elton place for the Hathaways. He was an expert on restoration, and he restored with a loving and respectful hand. Also he built new houses, very modern, functional and fine. He had some business buildings to hia credit—a bank, an office building, as well. But the nearest he had ever com* to planning a hospital was when remaking a fabulous country house into a sanatorium, ah expensive haven for the very tired, th* very neurotic, all of whom were also very rich. • » Anyway. Jie thing was in its earliest stages, Hathaway had giv-

You can imagine his reaction when some person In th- north mid shot and killed his friend and pet. It may not fare so well If that boy should come In contact with the person who lx responsible for the <b ath of hia bast friend A person who Is so small ns to shoot and kill a harmless pet would have no more regret for* taking the life of a humau being Hull b<- did that dog. The pal of the north end kids is gon- but his friendliness shall he remembered by those children for some time to come. "The Ownei" 4> — *•-- March 15 Tax Quiz (By F. Shirley Wilcox, Collector of Internal Revenue) i Editor's note: This is the Twelfth of a series of 15 l»rh<f articles. in question and answer form. I explaining how to fill out your fed-1 eral Incom** tax return.) Q Are members of the armed; forces exempt from tax? A. Theyl ar** not themoelvee exempt, imt most of their military puy is exempt. AH pay of enlisted men I and women is exempt; the first! 11. Son of officers' pay is exempt In iMitli cases, any outside income ' U taxable Q. Suppose a serviceman does owe some tux but is overseas.' Win n must he fil - his return and pay his tax? A. He must file his I return within i>'-. months after the; month in which he returns. He may, however, apply for a |*oet-poiiemi-nt of the payments. q. What arrangements can be made for pont;M>ning the payments? A. Usually, the law allows payment. without Interest, in 12 quarterly Installments over a threeyear period. Application for such installment paymciitM must be made before the first installment date t<> Hi** collector to whom the lax is due. q. When is the first Installmeiit dal*: under this plan? A. For men ami women discharged prior to Dec. I. 1945, the first installment date ie May 15. 1946; for those discharged during succeeding months the date* are • December. June 15. I<M6; January. July 15. 1946: February, August 15. 1946; March, . Sept. 15. 1916: April. October 15, 1916: May. November 15. 1946; June. December 15. 1946; July.

tn the green light cautiously: talk with Foster, have some plans drawn up, see what it will coat initially, had been his instructions. What it would cost, in the end, was another matter, as was the proposed endowment This thing would be kicked around plenty before anything came of it In ths meantime Steve wasn’t going to put in his two cents’ worth of discouragement. When Hathaway was he told himself, watching Mary put her pointed, tinted finger on a rough drawing, watching her dark eyes, bright with excitement then was the time to tear up a lot of plans and start from scratch. His unrest finally communicated itself to her and she made the necessary graceful social gestures which would release them from the hospitality of Footer and his rather attractive but definitely smsonized wife. Driving off, Mary suggested that Mr. Footer had designed the woman he married, and had had her built to specifications. So they left, and later than they had expected, and stopped for dinner. also later than Mary had planned, at a pleasant old-fash-ioned inn set well back from a village street. The bar was quiet and pleasant, and the liquor good. Mary, Steve observed, drank three cocktails. They had, apparently, no effect upon her; but Steve, limiting himself to one, thought It would be wise if he drove the rest of the way. Not that the thought pleased him. He had learned that, despite his faithful exercising of his hand and the various therapies suggested for it. his arm acMd after a long day. and his stiff fingers, which could be cajoled into doing their share st the wheel, became stiffer still. They had a wonderful dinner, and hearty. Steamed elams and chowder, pilot biscuits and lobster, broiled to perfection, the corai beautiful and enticing against the paler, succulent flesh. A green salad, black coffee. Xt was very good, and Steve enjoyed it, industriously picking at the wonderful meat while Mary, not at all ostentatiously, eracked the claws for him. “The Foster lunch,” she said critically, “was a little cm the chichi side, don’t you think? Mrs. Foster makes with the crystal and napery and charm, but so little nourishment! The omelet melted in my mouth and that's all it did. The salad had been breathed upon by garlic, but there was so little to breathe upon. The iced tea,” she added, “was good, and they evidently have a mint bed. And I like raspberries and cream, but not whipped to such a now-you-see-It-and-now-you-don’t consistency. Nourishment,” eald Mary, “is what X craved . . . and what, the Lord helping me, I gits." Steve grinned. A refreshing girl, Miss Hathaway. He liked women who didn’t diet, and said so. She looked at him, smiling. “I don’t have to," she said happily, “If I had to, 1 would. I'm a

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very vain w oman. W yxlM that I had been jdtM! ■ H | ' thought she was asked, ’’Are yu shook h-r blwic bul H -At th* altar brother” A■ Site told him sbwt ft'-■ Steve listened. He remartwtaj tie awkwardly, that Pit abiv a ht'!« Then -As far as that goe*. wen MB at one time or another * - ■ about the nurse at M u. kJ that he wished to ronMa |y in his companM®. butmflß creet confidence er.je.ideeaß sen'** ar,other, anti perhaps Stem her flow of Marv said nidifltrtnty W| abiv !'H never marry" ®*“B at him coolly. “I *1 she said. ’nor obUgalwM Strtctions. Once I thought was willing to knot string* wound my over what is known* *»*■ —oh, figuratively, of ■ mid “as 1 had no turning my hvk interests. Milling. M~»| half a dose; kid*. like children really. « -J barraM me-sll of JJ look like Pat But not any He suggested gently got over it; S'* ■ over the rim of her ««*•! her eyes laughed. * ment. "Don’t * J said. “I am over al And glad of it f« ,1 mediocre young ' *1 beautiful J faces which or.eej•«" bar. Just • rif**] each of which ’ tl m*i other, if >’ ou g* l the whole ‘"“‘"‘““iJ u*’] domwuc,ty ww awl»H caped by an eye.*"-ataUSO-andlmr* He said, * ••You'd make someor J Wife.’’ , i.nre’” "You. for Ins an« -ffii back Ler *'*3 so too—-in *** good house, a t utt ona cook and th* " ‘“j i iM* H the right become a very' tioner. You P«* erf ly, as if » he ?TH. **l4 "’“L 3 Steve flw* l * 1 ”' m th* * rm plodding ***« t0 She d i n d.®' M Steve looked * and in that and d * dDt , Uk *.med- Toy£ fi her Hka •mmeonr * He said qui* at« ** job. He was betw ever be, but- , foo i«* She said. «na , tor your Mff> 1