Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 July 1951 — Page 19
Skirts
Tt Happened Last N
; . boys.
iy rw =
By Earl Wilkon
NEW YORK, July 5--Hal Block, the “What's My Line?” TV whiz, says the U. S. maneuvers with the Communists now could be called “Truce or Consequences.” aoe TOMMY MANVILLE at times has had the powder room of his home wired for sound. He got a recording of one of his beautiful blonde guests saying to another girl, “I thing we can take this guy for ahout $1000.” . Then he played the record back to them and threw them out. oo DJ ow . CBS' Flo Warner, formerly of Des Moines, Hkes to tell how she sublet an apartment from Elsa Maxwell ard could hardly wait to see the elegant furnishings. a Looking in the linen closet for bathrcom supplies, she pulled out as the firdt elegant item a towel on which was woven: ; “Towa Hotel, Keokulk, Iowa.” TV COMIC Danny Webb tells of a WAC telling another WAC that she was out with a civilian who said he'd buy a War Bond for every kiss, “How many kisses did you give him?” she was asked. : “I don’t remember,” she said, “but in 10 years he'll be an awful rich man!”
ONCE when Jimmy Walker and Frank
Waterman were opposing mayoralty candidates, speaking to a garment industry group, Waterman sald, “I'm so economical-minded, I press my own pants.” : Jimmy said when he got up: “I want everyone to know I don't press my own pants. I refuse to alienate the tailors’ vote.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL John Jacob Astor now has an apartment in a major hotel-—away from the family apt. on 5th Ave.-—and has confided to a few friends that there will be a divorce. Doris Duke's ex-husband Porfirio Rubirosa, whom she was expected to remarv when he visited her in Honolulu, is back in town, bound for Paris alone —and he's still gingle.
GOOD RUMOR MAN: The new Queen of
Americana By Robert CC. Ruark
NEW YORK, July 5. “We have finally run full
cycle on the psychiatric approach to parenthood: It says here the baby knows more about his care and feeding than his ma does, and the old lady had better watch her step or else, x A Dr. Benjamin Spock, writing for the American Medical Association’s Journal, warns us directly that too rigid a diet and toilet schedule can do all sorts of things to the tot's emotional development. He says that, after the first vear, mother better start adjusting her maternal approach to Junior's personality, and that, over all baby is a better judge than either mamma or m>dico of how much he needs to eat. This is news to me. I've spent the last 30 years or so under the impression that mothers were created for the purpose of keeping an eye on Buster boy until he got big enough to smoke cornsilks and pull pigtails. I REMEMBER I had some definite ideas about diet at three, which that heartless, cruel monster, Mama, rudely trampled down, making me there-
_by a hopeless neurotic. I used to think that vou
could swallow and receive ntitriment {rom naiis. sewing scissors; screws, nuts, bolts, coins, cigaret butts and lip#ricks. I was espedially fond of chewing lipsticks, because they/were colored so nicely and went down =o easy. But that fiend in skirts wouldn't pamper me. She was in there holding out for milk and spinach. : ; ; We went to the mat again, later, when I was an elderly statesman of 6. I had found, af‘er ‘some tedious research, the perfect diei for little
This was simple fare consisting of ice crecm three fimis a day. on Monduyd Seiesda ys Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdavs. ‘On Sundays it was to be served six times a day. as payment for my sacrifice in attending Sunday: School. ¥or a variant there were other staples, such as pie. cake, cookies, candy, unripe peaches, pears and apples.
THAT BENIGHTED relic of the Dark Ages, Mother, kept on practicing her medieval tortures on me. Everv time I turned up with the hellvache due to scientific miscalculations in the laboratory, she got out a bottle of castor oil as big as a fire extinguisher. She poured out a neat half-tumbler,
Outside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola
Continued From Page One
go Tar, following so smoothly the soft contour of the hillside. You walk between the rows of crosses and see interspersed the six-pointed star of an American of the Jewish faith. Thev're side by side, in death as in battle, comrades all.
out for a long scenes.
”n ou n I WONDERED how many men of the 9489 who were at everlasting peace on the hill reached the height after death. Did any of the men have a A chance to see the view from the hill where they were now sleeping into eternity? Was s my presence among them an intrusion? Surely among the 9489 in Saint-Laurent there were men
cemetery is when the
member of the
office of 28th Division Col. Albert G. Branyan; Marion F.
Division
ight
» “She handled China like she was Russia”
#
who wanted to be doctors, lawvers, men who. wanted nothing else but to get back to a girl, a wife, mother and father, to g0 back to the old job, live in the old neighborhood, out in a familiar bed and look
The sun was heavens when I began to walk among the graves. musn'® let it get too low before starting out for Bayeux.
shadows and the light is gone, I thought.
INSTANTLY I felt ashamed. It was as if a voice spoke in my ear and said, “You, you a
COMPLETE SER Cet new financial nig a Sort ne snot. ae whre ems Br. tal service for Gls. Present at epaving were (left to right} Lt. jane rhe. 3 rayenterday en Clark and Ivan G. Esarey, : of Iaianipals post office, and Maj. Gen. Daniel B. Strickler, 28th
Now It's ‘Truce Or Consequences | 2, Egypt is rumored #xpecting. . . . Sid Slate teamed |
up with Ben Blue to Play the Capri, and for TV shots, , . . Artist Paul Meltsner has done a
The Indianapol
5
i Pes "
fw
> ~ THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1951
is Tim
es.
wy
satirical painting of the Met Opera opening showing all the celebrities nude! : od ob ALL OVER: The Fred Allens are vacationing at Cape Cod. Larry Storch will pinch-hit for Jackie Gleason when he takes a month off TV, ... Ann Crowley’s the purty siren in ‘“‘Seventeen.”
E24 » ~ B'WAY BULLETINS: Gary” Cooper's signing a huge TV contract. . . . Since the merger with Paramount, there's been much shaking up at ABC. . .. Two restaurants, show business landmarks on 6th Ave. folded. ... Loew's engineers are adapting many theaters for TV,
” = F . WHO'S NEWS: Yul Brynner escorted an unidentified blonde to the Champagne Room. . . . Joe Adonis wound up with a
“baldie’’ (close haircut) in prison. . . . Ed Luckenbach and Carolyn Phillips have dated
three nights in a row . . . Lee Segall, owner of Dallas radio station KIXIL, arrives July 16 : to investigate the TV sale of his other property, “Dr. IQ.” . .. George Shearing's Birdland opening stretched into the street. . . . Today's Daily Double: Comic Orson Bean and dancer Nancy Crompton.
Ann Crowley
* 4 4 o> oe oe
FARL'S PEARLS: Claims Nanette Fabray, there are a lot of odd fellows who don’t belong | to any lodge. {
WISH I'D SAID THAT: “Communist Malik givinge a $50-a-plate dinner seemed to belong
‘Behind the Irony Curtain.’ '.- Mark Reéeberts, George Schindler explained firing his maid:
That's Earl, brother.
Modern Doctors Can Take Tip From Mama
and sat there until I tossed it off. No chaser, either, ® It was along about this time that 1 began to bust out with complexes. I began to associate cause with effect. For instance, I learned that, if I didn't eat the spinach and the peas and tne chicken and-the potatoes, I didn't get to eat the ice cream, either. I learned that, if I consumed a mess of green plums, I was dead sure to have a slug of castor oil as a demi-tasse. Oh, 1 was a psychic wreck. 1 can tell you. I sensed automatically that, if I brought the billy-goat into parlor when the preacher came to call, a certain little boy was a einch to have his pants peeled and a long, lean, lithe lady's hair comb applied to his hare bottom. This wus a frightful indignity to practice on a mature dietitian - and - tree - climber, but that horrid woman was heartless, I still have fine-tooth marks on my caboose.
. WW
BY THE TIME I was 10, I was a seething cauldron of complexes. a mass of tangled emotions. a phenomenon of frustration. If I told a lie I knew it meant two afternoons’in bed. while the other kids played baseball. Shy, tortured as I was, I said “Sir” and Ma'am” to my elders. .I learned that kicking schoolteachers was taboo; playing hookey was frowned on; that little boys who made bad grades often were not allowed to go hunting on Saturdays. At last my diet was so completely hedged by discipline ‘and wicked regimentation that I had excellent teeth, :stood close to 6 feet tall, weighed 150 pounds and could liek any kid in the class. 1 forgot to mention that I enjoyed fighting, because of Ma's cruelty. She caught me runsing away
from a kid smaller than I was once -and laid a |
lath on my seat until T went back and whipped’ him in a sheer, panicky effort to avoid a worse licking from Mr. Demon. You ean see how Mother's callous, sadistic influence has wrecked my life. I have never been in jail for anything serious and have never consulted a psychiatrist. { I eat everything except eggplant, hold my liquor reasonably well, pay most of my bills and have heen married 10 years to the same woman. I'm a psychic scarecrow, and I blame it all on | Mama.
Did They Find Peace Al Normandy Beach?
a short time and flee. What about us, the dead, who have no choice but to remain?” It was then that I decided to stay longer because I was the only- living person among the graves? In the administrative office was an American, He was stationed near the entrance where there were parking facilities, He had work to do. I walked some more, pausing every few steps. I tried to think of myself as a representative of all who had sons here. Even that was futile in a way. What could I think at a particular grave? Could I recall happy memories? Could I think of familiar scenes or shed intimate living will spend tedrs over a grave?
= u ¥
stretch fime at familiar
high in the
I knew I
no place to be disappear
u »
COULD 1 say that a picture he sent from London is on the | radio in the living room. that his room is the same as he left it? That on his birthday his mother cries? Could I tell him the girl | he was engaged to is now married and lives three blocks away and has two children? No. And the thoughts race through your mind. You can't | do any good here. In front of a | grave you can only pray. In | front of a grave you can only | say that you'll try to do what- | ever you can so there won't be another war, more dead, new
cemeteries, wooden crosses, marble crosses, Gardens of the Missing. You can also say you're sorry. You can say you're sorry 9489 times,
Law Finds Man Who Feared Slain Wife's Kin
| PORTSMOUTH, O., July 5 (UP) om Scioto County Sheriff Burl Jus{tice said he would file murder charges today against Paul Burke, 139, who shot and killed his es{tranged wife during a domestic "quarrel in the hills 15 miles east {of here.
Sheriff Justice said he found. | Burke cowering on a hillside near "> {his home for fear his wife's rel(atives would kill him. 3 f
Burke confessed to officers that
after he went to his mother-in-
| tion,
a
$0
{ something to do with it.
law's home to seek a reconcilia-
Your Years After Forty—
Attractiveness An A
CHAPTER FIVE By SYLVIE HAMILTON
Fashion Consultant, Foundatiof T9* Forty-Plus Living
IF YOU were to ask 10 passersby what “old ladies’
runners’
are, vou might get 10 different answers from
“errand boy” to “wheelchair on skis.” A short time ago however, the shapeless, unbecoming shoes that greying women put their feet into were known as “old ladies’ runners.”
Today that shoe is disappearing from stores and from the minds of women, who no longer think that a shoe must be uninteresting in order to be comfortable. The designers themselves now know that people of every age should put their best.foot forward. Even an orthopedic shoe can be flattering, So many customers are near or past the age of forty, that even the most conservative are recognizing that attractiveness is no longer a monopoly of youth and there is no reason why any of us should wear our age on our sléeve. It is not accidental that many women past forty have heen selected in recent years among “The Best Dressed Women in America.” The Duchess of Windsor has maintained her stylish stature for more than a decade, and certainly would not think of relinquishing it.
stores
she just:.doesn’t Jet it hide her, ~ ~ ~ A WOMAN who is attractive in her youth ean go right on being attractive all her life. The trick to make the most of each stage that life has to offer, and not try to remain attractive in the same way all your life. That is why Joan Crawford, bert and Bette to shine, while many of their once famous contemporaries have dropped into oblivion. The poise, dignity and phistication that come with maturity are often more attractive than the shallower charms of vouth. The next time you are at the theater. notice how much attention is—being given to the
such stars as Claudette ColDavis continue
S0-
By EDWARD KN MOWERN wu Edward
Scripps-Howard Staff Writer ®
NEW YORK, July 5 The juvenile narcotics nearings here and in Washington have
aroused the nation to a grave threat to the younger generation. Public officials who poohpoohed the idea that considerable addiction existed among minors now know they must make a greater effort to police the traffic. On the other hand, some of the testimony from child vietims might incline parents to believe that a great percentage of juveniles may be using marijuana or worse.
What are the true dimensions of the problem? Competent officials offer
these generalizations: n » » TEEN-AGE addiction to narcotics is largely confined to the major cities. There's little of it in small towns and country areas. New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Detroit, Chicago, St. Louis and New OrJeans have sizable problems; it hasn't hit the West Coast so much yet, except 1.os Angeles. Addiction among minors is on the invrease. It's happening in Turkey, one of the most modern ‘Middle Eastern countries. Japan for the first time is having a juvenile dope problem. And the British are complaining that hot jazz, the drape shape and dope go together over there, The general letdown in morals which ~haracterizes war and postwar periods seems to have
World War I we had a similar flareup. Family conditions have
a lot, to do with juvenile addiction. More .children from broken homes, or grindingly
poor families take to the vice than from from stable environments, Statistically, evi-
we have
The Shopping Front—
After’
~—8hedoesn't- try -to- hide-her-gge—
No Easy Answer—
What's The
country
NOTE: This is the fifth of six articles directed to men and women past forty.
beautifully groomed older women who come down the aisles, All eves turn with admiration and appreciation to the well turned out woman of fifty or more, and even a gay young thing in the most revealing topless gown will'rate second billing Whv? The answer is simple. The beauty of youth is taken for granted, but it Is a special jov to see an older capitalize - upon the It is gratifying to see older men and women genninely interested in heing an asset hoth to themselves and to their surroundings. For looking attractive has a dou:
person years,
ble influence: it influences both you and those around you, NY) ” = NOW, THEN, just how do these older neonie £0 about making themselves look =o beautiful and distinguished? Ts it bv being conservative in their choice of cut and color? Indeed not! Color and good
design are their greatest allies. As Mrs. Julius BReekman., a handsome woman of 56, said to me recently: “When 1 was very voung I used to feel that IT had to conform and to be as much like evervone else as possible It seemgd extremely impbortant to do and look as much like mv friends as IT could 3ut. with the vears we are liberated from that kind of
thinking. Youn get braver and more independent. You learn to dress in the wav that best
suits vour own needs and does
the most to enhance vour own particular perszonalitv.” As 1 looked at this proud,
x a £ » J. Mowery, "a. staff writer for the New York World Telegram and Sun, a SecrippsHoward newspaper, was writing stories about juvenile addiction to dope long before it became a concern of the daily press at large. The American Legion of New York County has just presented him with a citation, in recognition of: “Outstanding service to the people of New York and of the entire United States in exposing and publicizing . . . the horrifying encroachments of the drug evil among school children and teen-agers . . . thereby performing in the highest degree a true publie service to the community; state and nation.”
%
dence of increasing juvenile addiction in the fact that at the federal narcotics hospital in Lexington, Ky., the average age has dropped 10 years— from 36 to 26 —in the last two years. Boy addicts outnumber. girl addicts 10 to one and the disproportion is increasing. Servicemen returning overseas areas where the milder forms of narcotics are taken as freely as cigarets in this country have been remarkably clean of dope addiction
from
contrary to occasional reports linking military. service to dope taking. Up to now, there's little evidence of. dope parties among high school students except in New York. 5 ou a WHERE DOES the dope
come from? The same officials reply that as far as they can tell about half of it is smuggled into this and the rest is obtained bv robbing drugstores. Robberies of prescription departments .re now averaging well over 100 a month, The principal form of smug gled dope is heroin, an opium derivative. The factories which
life. serene woman I was reminded of a phrase from my history books of many years ago. A wise old Greek. when asked how he could summon up the courage to defy Ceasar, said, “It is my age that makes me brave!’ ia Don't think about vour age when you set out to buy clothes, Do as” Hattie Carnegie does when she designs a dress or a suit, She doesn’t doesn't think about what age she is creating it for, but rather for what figure, what coloring and what occasion, ® » n THE OLDER woman's acces sories should be eve - catchers and look important She has the dignity to lend them authen
Scope Of
put opium into a marketable form are locatedein Italy, Turkey and Communist China. Red
China's opium is marketed through British Hong Kong. ! The United Nations Economic and Social Council is considering calling an international conference to work out an agreement to limit
opium production in Turkey, Yugoslavia, India and Iran to scientific. and medical needs. But even if this is done, in the present international situation it will have no effect on Chinese production. Are American laws narcotics stiff enough? Federal officials say no; they would like Congress to pass pending legislation to invoke life imprisonment for selling narcotics to minors, They would also like to have a law requiring convicted dope peddlers to serve a minimum of two vears for their first offense, five for the second and 10 for third, . The average sentence now is well below two years. Federal officials also have called for tighter state laws and for city and state hospitals for narcotics addicts, ..
against
LJ nu on NEW YORK- The mother of a teen-ager phoned this writer and whispered “My boy is in his bedroom banging his head against the wall. He wants us to Kill him,
Please, what can we do . , .?
Her voice caught in a sob then she continued “He was a good boy" and we've tried to help him. Kven got nim some heroin to taper off. But we wai'ed three hours at the hospital and an intern only ‘gave us some pills and sent us home. Then he went
into spasms.”
The mother was witnessing the most painful sight human eves can endure a child nar-
cotice addict suddenly deprived of his drugs.
But symptoms of child-addic-
Dignity. and_serenity should’ mark the years in the twilight of
Attractiveness is truly an ally of old age.
ticity, Gloves, scarf, shoes and purse are the obvious and necessary accessories, but jewelry. and perfume
be by-passed as ex-
a sash, flowers
should not
clusively for the younger person. No one .appreciates a _dash of moonglow in her per-
fume. than the mature woman. Under the heading of accessories we must now include eveglasses which are designed to compliment our costumes. No longer afe glasses synonymous with “"gradma’s specs.”
They are as varied and as colorful as butterflies and are worn with a dash instead of an apology for failing eyesight. One of New York's leading optometrists told me that he
had several male customers who
tion ‘aren't ATWAVEEa “aliens. expert
Sometimes they defy
PAGE 10
y Of Age
don't need glasses to improve their vision, but who wear them to improve their looks. They select the most flattering frames and have them made up with plain glass lenses. There's the matter of hosiery. How long has it been since you saw a box of grey ‘service weight” hose when you asked the - salesgirl for stockings? There was a time not so long ago, that the clerk automaticallv reached for the heavy service weights of good “neutral” colors when a mature “customer approached the counter. Now, you'd be hard put to get this type of unflattering hose.
We are also fast getting away from the idea that im order to he youthful a dress must look teenagish. Many stores now have special departments devoted to youthful looking styles cut to be most flattering to the mature figure. They feature fashion plus fit and help to eliminate
the bother and expense of difficult alterations. = The real tip-off to what is
happening in tlie fashion field was demonstrated recently at a luncheon at the Women's Club of Ridgewood, N. J. A group of four distinguished speakers were addressing the club, prominent novelists, columnists and newspaper writers. The oldest woman and the youngest on the group were amused to
identical suits for the occasion, But it is doubtful that any but the most observant of the audience were aware of it. The were of different color (the older woman was wearing the brighter of the two) and were worn with completely different accessories, Both looked extremely smart and flattered their wearers. Age had certainly not been a factor in their selection but color, line and suitability had. It isn't how old vou are, but what looks good on you that counts!
suits
Next: How people “retire” to live more useful and happier lives than ever hefore.
«Convright. 1981 United Peaturs Syndicate, Ine.
Ee -
Dope Proble
diagnosis’ A youngster may be-
come furtive, nary pursuits and companions
forsake his ordi-
keep odd hours. When questioned, he'll evade, lie In such cases, if the boy is taking heroin by needle, he
will refuse to roil up his sleeves and wash his hands before an ‘other member of the family. He'll guard his heroin rig capsules, hypo needle, rubber arm band tourniquet), medi cine or dropper and bent, burnt spoon as if it were a set of burglar’'s tools. = on ” ONCE “hooked,” a child dope addict is lost to family, friends. teacher, church. His inhibitions shattered,. he takes to delinquency and crime and other ®™orms of vice. When far gone, he becomes dangerous. One New York adolescent told probation officers she would kill her father or mother “if they stood between me and a shot.” Studies have shown that the usual path to addiction is tak-
eve
ing a dare Kids sniff heroin or puff on a reefer because they fay others in their age group will consider them sissies if they hold back Then it's only a step to appreciating dope for the kick it gives to taking a shot of “horse” (heroin) before
going to a dance
As in other forms of vice, the tragic consequences don't come immediately Not all juvenile dope "addicts dies of poisoning Not all =steai or Kill to get the money for their drug This just happens occasionally.
Meanwhile the dope addict has a feeling of restless pleasure = n n Eventually, he or she is likely to stand before a judge some day and confess that he is powerless to help himself. What happens then? The court has two cholces—jail or
a hospital. Jall is no help at
Uplift Bras Rob Men of Sense of Foundation
HIS business of buying a bra
Once it was simple even for the most timid male
blushingly to sidle up femaledom and stutter:
“Uh, size 34, I think, please.
to a
counter in dreamlined
Pink.”
Then he would slink away.
Not any more. It's getting so any self-respectin’ man just ain't a-goin’ to do it. We sort of swallowed our pride over these million-dollar hold-ups (no clues in sight) and kept right on a-buyin’ when uplift talk started. Some of it even sounded a bit like army lingo in cadence: “Lift —~ mold -— correct hold.” Now: when the talk swings around to the lift that never
lets you down, lets make no bones about it. We worried a good deal if it was going to come to a downpush, an insweep or an out: sweep. That was foolish.
Instead, added to our buying
* woes came the A cup, the B
»
cup,“the C cup, the D cup, the T cup and the shaving mug. Somehow that last one doesn't ring. However, man is a slave of environment. And no matter how deep or adjustable the
plunge, we got over that and put the cup down on the saucer, That's all
man will rebel,
here and now
I guess we can
ask for wize, lft, up and plunge. But there'll be a divided opinion on the latest
twist separation,
That's the word separation and it comes right. from a handout tpssed our way by the manufacturer of these things that fit “right up against the breast bone.”
Seems us men have had some mighty long-suffering women: folk around that ‘have been uncomfortable in their bras but didn't know it was because they were forcing themselves into a bras with measurements different from their own natural proportions,” :
"buy the dern things yourselves.
So now gals fall inte three other classifications on this separation deal narrow, medium or wide. That was determined by careful study. By whom? Who, that's whom. Why, about 60 per cent of all American women, and that's a lot of women, need wide separation in a bras; 25 per cent are mediums without materializations, and 15 cent are just plain narrow. That percentage comes right to 100 and doesn't give one of
our
per
ectoplasmic |
|
you gals the chance for that |
delicious feeling of being a bit different. This has been a delicate suhject, one to treat with restraint. It can't help causing cleavage. Ladies, from here on, you're just going to have to go
| 1 } {
RAR
Dd Es » quate’ pr and treating addicts: n ~ » The reak remedy for juvenile addiction is to stop the sale of narcotics to adults or children, The dope traffic is one of the most lucrative sources of revenue for crime svndicates in this country, But the federal government employs fewer than 200 narcotics agents and most states and cities either ignore the traffic or pay it so little attention that they might as well ignore it. Day by day revelations of the pay-offs belween the underworld and police departments perhaps explain this inattention. The best thing that could happen would be for the foreign nations that produce or refine the dope to suppress it at the source. On May 1 Commissioner
Federal Narcoties Harry. J. Anslinger virtually begged Italy, Turkey, Greece, North China and Manchuria to destroy their stocks of illicit drugs and reduce opium production to strictly medicinal levels. How much effect this will have on the Reds in China and Manchuria is questionable. The Chinese Reds are reported to
have 500 tons of raw opium ready to dump on the world market. Heroin, the opium de-
rivative, is reported to be pouring from Tientsin laboratories to Japan, where thousands. of American troops are exposed to the danger. But in of Italy, Turkey and Greece—recipients of America's largesse — it ought not to be difficult tq obtain co-operation in the humane goal of reducing the world traffic in dope. The old League of Nations struggled for vears with the dope problem, sometimes with considerable success.
the case
| T Facts About Polio
In Times Series
Worried about Polio? You'll have a better understanding of the disease after You read the columns on Polio by Dr. Edwin P. Jordan, Times health columnist. Toe day's column is on Page 21, Dr. Jordan answers many questions, including these: How can I safeguard my child
against Polio? , . . Where will it strike? . . . What are the danger signs? . . . How
is it spread? . . . How is Polio treated to avold permanent injury to muscles? { You owe it to, yourself to read Dr. Jordan's columns about Polio. They're anothep’
exclusive feature of The Times . , . on the Wo '
find that They had selected
m?
- Fo RT Resa $5 nn ah ps sions’ for keepin
:
