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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 19, 1942)
PAGE FOTTR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORJk. OREGON, MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 1942, IFORDfcTRIBUNI Ea?e Is Hsalhrra Oihn atada lb Mali Tribea." Dallr Ktrpi SatsrSar Pubnahad br MEDFORD PBINT1NO CO. tt-tt Norib rir St. niMllll ROBERT W RUHU EdltST. IHNKT R 01UTP. AM Indapandaat Nawapapar. ltniar.d AM woil CM oialtar at ataS tart. Onion, iioilar Act a Marcs I, H' SUBSCRIPTION MTII Br Mall In Adaaea: DU, and Sun-lar-OBa fur. ... .M " Dallr and Sundar all month!.. . Bull and Sunday n mostna. . . DaM and Bund., - tnraa montna I Dally and Sondar ana month... Ta ty Carnar la Advaaca Madford, Art land. Canlrnl Point. Jnekaon-llla, Oald Hill Riu Rlar. P&aaals. Tslaal and oa motor roulaai CM, and Sunday in raar.... . Datlr and Sunday ana month... .la All tarml caah la adanca. Official Papar al tha Clt. "'f' " Ulliriai i-pt If EMBER OP THE AaMCIATED PRE" Ttia Aaaociatad Pt la a.oloal'alr atltlad la lha uaa lor publloatloa of all "-a dl.patch.n .radltad ta It or othar atlas eraduad to "ila papar. and alaa la tha local nawa publiahnd harola. All rlnta for publication of apnelal i - .tad raaarvad. HEUBER OF UNITED PRESS MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU " or CIRCULATIONS Adartlaln. """""'iV INC WEST-HOLI.I DAY OMPANT. INC Officio In Na. Torh. Chlcaso. Datroll. 2i ri"fl Loa Ansalaa. Saaitla. Portland! at. ola. Allan V.nc...r. PUIUSritVM-0ciTIM Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Parry t..... o,.hmrln unit three Japanese .hips off Tokyo Bay, thus enabling the enemy to learn the approximate where abouti of a portion of the fleet, before the American people. This Is bringing the war close to Its originators. It means some fine day soon planes will roar over Yokohama and Tokyo dropping bombs marked: WITH THE COMPLIMENTS OF MA NILA. . Peoria Bill Gates unearthed the following In the want ad section of this paper causing him to unleash a barrage of guffaws: FOR RENT Nicely furnished duplex. Oil heat, electric kitchen, Maytag, over ituffed Adults. He admits it is a thin Joke, It looks like the little boys and girls would be out of luck when summer comes, for an old tire to use In a swing. The Nazis are still In a high trot before the advancing Rus sian offensives on tha Eastern European front. They are doing this, Just for the hell of It, to keep warm in the bitter cold, and to lead America Into the belief Germany is losing the war. One military expert holds, two months of retreats and de feats has done the Hitler hordes no harm. Neither has It did them any good. MAGNIFICENT MICKEY (Time Mag.) "Master Rooney, Metro's No. 1 asset, now 21 and draft able, Is given enough rope to hang himself. He does three so-called impersonations. His Harry Lauder and George M. Cohan are scarcely distin guishable; his conception of Carmen Miranda is painful. Apparently there is nothing he cannot do, except behave himself." The last turkey gizzard of the fall football season has been eaten by the grid heroes. Friday night the Roosevelt grade school squad, and Saturday night Ore gon state college heroes stowed away the edibles. a Premier U Saw of Burma has been arrested by the British for conspiring with the Jap anese, for the delivery of his country to the Mikado. U. Saw Is also Been Seen. a a a "The recent blackout might be better termed a washout" (Lakevlew Examiner) Next comes the hide-out a a a Last week's news hinted there might be a shortage of copper, hard by an item reporting 9 million dollars had been allo cated for tlie building of a power line from Coulee Dam to an Eastern Washington wide- placc-ln-the-road. Copper wire makes copper jackets for ma chine gun bullets. TIMBERS GET SHIVERED "Frank Price went out 'en dishabille' into the chilly night to consult his thermometer and sec how cold it was, and soon found out without mercurial aid. He had absently-minded closed the door and found him self automatically locked out He previously had turned on the radio, and his better half (or so he says) could not hear his al most tearful pleas for admit tance. Local theory has It that outside is exactly where she wanted him to be. In due course, however, his beseeching tones prevailed, and he went back to bed a colder and a wiser man," (We ton Leaders TTie Von Reichenau Mystery It is difficult to dismiss the reported death of Field Marshal Walter von Reichenau, as just one of those things. In the first place if the Field Marshal died of normal causes why didn't the German High Com mand tell the truth about it? For certainly an apoplectic stroke, in a man of his years and physical condition, would be most unusual. WON Reichenau, prided himself on his physical fit- ness and his athletic ability. In the campaign against France, he swam the Somme, at the head of his troops, to the great amazement and admiration of one U. S. war correspondent who accompanied him. Off duty he would box with his officers, and take keen pleasure in landing a haymaker, thus send ing some strapping chap, many years his junior, into bye-bye land. The German pugilist Walter Neusel was his intimate friend, and kept the Field Marshal in almost constant training. We can speak only as a rank layman, of course, but our belief is strokes of apoplexy are seldom suf fered by men who keep in A-l physical condition, not the arteries, but the heart, usually go back on them. At any rate, a stroke is about the last ailment, that under the known conditions, one would believe could have caused the death of a comparatively young and very fit individual, like Hitler's favorite Field Mar shal. A NOTHER mystery. Of all his stars in the general " staff firmament, the aristocratic Von Reichenau was the most popular with Hitler for unlike most of his fellow officers,' Jie was not only an out-and-out Nazi zealot but he was one of the first of the old school, to go over. to' the Black Shirt revolution. It is not impossible of coarse, nothing in NAZI Germany is, but it is highly' Improbable therefore that the Field Marshal was done in, because of treachery or disloyalty to the all-highest Reichsfuehrer. ' -'- ELIMINATING thli factor, and also death from natural causes, and the mystery deepens. Somehow the explanation from London, that the Field Marshal wai not popular with his subordinates, and one of his owt.staff did him in, doesn't sound convincing. German General! of the bid school, never have been disposed to cultivate popularity with their sub ordinates, or enjoyinuch of a personal following, it is against the Pncsian military tradition. .What then? AXELL we don't know, of course. But our guess is " that had the Xasian winter campaign been a success, instead of tragic failure, Field Marshal von Reichenau rpld be alive and well and very much on the joh aday. Whether th ' .s.d Marshal killed himself, or some one did the y Jot him, there is little doubt that the Russian cfj" Mk and the German retreat, was re sponsible ills tragic end. r Carole Lombard .'V- Personility Is a rather baffling thing. The skipper of this department only met Carole Lombard once, and then in a most casual fashion, yet her suddeTi and tragic death comes as a distinct shock,-Ht if a real and old friend had suddenly been taken. The ctile, we think, was the first impression, rather than the subsequent professional acquaintance, derived Impersonally and solely via the silver screen, the irtyvession made by a very vivid and unusual personality.! a IT was on the Paramount lot in Hollywood and we 1 should guess at least eight or ten years ago. One of the well known directors we believe it was Selz nick had just returned from an extended trip, and he greeted Misa Lombard in the studio-patio. Or rather the young actress greeted him, flying from her nearby dressing room and jumping into his outstretched arms, while she planted a resounding smack on both well-upholstered cheeks, and then under the direction of the press department chief, enthusiastically shook hands .with the assembled group, and departed almost as quickly as she had come. THE press chief, Selznick (if it were he) and anoth er studio official then joined in a chorus of praise for Carole Lombard (who if we recall correctly, had just become engaged to William Powell) using vari ous and sundry affectionate superlatives, the precise identity of which we can't recall. But there was no doubt of their complete sincerity, nor of Miss Lom bard's sincerity and genuineness either, in the arti ficiality, sordidness and hokum of that make-believe Babylon it was all decidedly refreshing. And that refreshing quality that genuineness, through all these years has remained. It was a mere glimpse, but as far as one member of that touring Carty is concerned, a lasting one, for there was some ow no escaping the conviction it was the true one. And this, let us add, was not due to any stage struck susceptibilities prevailing, but solely to the subtle somethinp; that is termed "Dersonalitv". and i Miss Lombard possessed to ana uniorgettable degree, and the precise potency of which, as far as we know has never been explained. 9 B 4) A ND ever since that casual meeting the present " writer has known or thought he did, which as far as this comment goes, amounts to the same thing, such an unusual poignant that here was a very fine and unusual person, witli an exceptionally wholesome, fresh-air quality about her; a grand sort the sort who would stick to her friends, till the cows came home, the whole-souled sort who could never do a SMALL or a MEAN thing. a a a a A ND as we have seen Miss Lombard in the movies " from time to time since then, we have never felt disposed to revise that estimate in the slightest. Just one fleeting glimpse, no real knowledge of the true facts at all, yet that clear and lasting impression has remained. And now Carole Lombard is dead, the victim of another tragic passenger plane crash in "the grave yard for transcontinental planes", because she in sisted upon leading single-handed a war savings cam paign "in the old home town", and regardless of the dangers, giving pause to less gallant souls, insisted upon "FLYING HOME I" . Not a great actress, but certainly a great personal ity has gone and an admirable one 1 Personal Health Service By William sinned Itltera pertaining t perianal health and hyflene. not to dlrnat dlannal or treatment, will be answered bf Or. Brady If a stamped aetf ddreued envelope Is enclosed. Letters should be briar and written In Ink. Owlnf to the laria number of letters receited only a few can he anewered here. No reply can be made to queries not conforming, to Instructions. Addreu Dr. William Brady. J6S El Camlno, Beverly Hills. Calif. THE 8CIENCE Whenever the question of ab sorption thru the skin comes up here, and 01' Doc (Granite) Brady reiterates that no one as yet has proved that anything is or can be absorbed thru unbroken skin (Granite, I said, not Gran ny), a consid erable number and variety of readers go to the trouble of setting the Ol' Hor riffht or Vt. brady back by cltjng more or less noted, eminent or famous "authorities" who, it seems, at one time or another have stated or implied that all sorts of medicines and poisons are absorbed thru the unbroken skin. But, Heck, boys, the theories, beliefs or opinions of doctors of the past or present have no weight In a question of science or fact I still main tain there Is no scientific evi dence that the unbroken skin absorbs anything, and my own skin Is still available for any properly controlled test any physician or physicians of stand ing may care to makeprovided both sides agree to publish the result and accept it as final proof one way or the other. Incidentally, readers who know better will please be advised my flies are already overstuffed with reports of individuals who have themselves unquestionably absorbed dynamite or nitro glycerin. Iodine and various other things thru their hands, and statements of doctors that victims of shoe dye poisoning and the like have absorbed the poison thru the skin. That's what they Imagine I do not exclude euch substances from the test on my skin. I confess I have an ulterior purpose tn repeating from time to time the assertion that noth ing Is or can be absorbed into the body thru unbroken skin (skin not scratched, cut, blis tered or punctured). It is be cause other doctors, who know no more about it than I do, have so often asserted that this and that Is absorbed thru the skin, that tha notion persists in the medical and the popular mind. i Here Is an Instance of that sort of propaganda. An article in what purports to be a medi cal journal tells how the doctor made a diagnosis. Young couple consulted him about their fail ure to have a child. The doctor examined the husband and could find nothing wrong. Then he examined the wife and still could find nothing wrong. As the wife was leaving the con sulting room the doctor sud denly noticed that every few strides there was a curious change In her gait, a sort of shuffle. He called her back and told her he now understood everything. He told her she was a negress! She broke down in sobs, and confessed that there was some negro blood In her family but if the doctor would only keep the secret she could go on being happy with her husband who, of course, never knew anything about that. She had undergone several abortions rather than take the chance of giving birth to a black child, etc, etc. All sheer hokum, of course. In the first place, if the woman had had several abortions the doctor would at least have found reason to doubt the story of sterility. In the next place, there is no such thing as a "throwback" that Is, the birth of a black child to white parents one or both of whom happen to have some negro blood. A child may be slightly darker than the lighter colored parent or slightly less negroid in char acteristics than the purent with negro blood, but never more i Brady. M. D. OF PEUGENICS negroid or darker than that parent. This is eugenics. QUESTIONS A.VD ANSWERS Homogenized Milk Can you tell ma wnat Is put In "homogenised" milk so the cream does not separata or is tha creaa removed t (Mrs. T. P.) Anjiwpr In the prooeas of evapo rating, after the milk has been heated to a little over 300 degrees T. and evaporated In vacuum It is subjected to a pressure of about 3,600 pounds whteh forces It thru fine openings, breaking up the but ter fat droplets and blending the fst with milk so that the cream will not separate. Nothing Is re moved, and the homogenised milk Is nutritious and digestible, some phy slrlsns believe mors readily digesti ble, than before. What, No CsIdumT Kindly give a list of non-calclum fruits and other foods. (Mrs. W. A. M.) Answer I know of no fruits that contain no calcium. Bananas, wa termelon, cantaloupe or muskmelon, peaches, apple, and pears are com paratively low In cs4clum- Bacon, eornmesl, white flour, mushrooms, pineapple, pork, tomato Juice, corn starch, olive otl, margarine and pea nut oil and cottonseed oil srs low ro, calcium, t can't Imagine why any one should even try to restrict cal cium Intake. Send stamped envelope bearing your address, for pamphlet "The Calcium Shortage." Probably most people get Insufficient calcium In the dally diet. (Copyright 1943, John T. Nils Co.) gd. Note: Persons wishing to communicate with- Dr. Brady ahnuld send letter direct to Dr. William Brady, M. D. ta El . Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. Communications The Rise and Fall of Rome To. the Editor: We note this item In the Trib une of January 12th, 1842: "Church worker in New Jersey turns out to be a crook." Any thing can happen in New Jersey, and that is what the churches are for. A place for crooks to hide in. In some places the sin ners have driven the good peo ple out. Now that the F. B. I. have found where to look for the crooks we should have more law and order. The most crooks are to be found where the easy money is and the less chance to get caught. So right now Washington, D. C, is the place and it seems by reading between the lines there are more crooks in the National Capitol than any place on earth. The reason is they are under the Influence of the same drug or dope that caused the Dark Ages and the Decline and Fall of Ancient Rome. ANDY SIMPSON, Box 492, Medford. How to Handle the 8. P. To the Editor: We, the business men of Med ford, have the power to make the Southern Pacific come to Its senses, or there is nothing In de mocracy. All we have to do is to give the S. P. the short haul and route all our freight via some other line for the long haul. They would scon come to their milk. What we want in Medford Is a manufacturers' association, composed of all the manufac turers, no matter what they make. The Great Northern refused to Install a purchasing office in Se attle and the manufacturers' as sociation, through its members, notified the G. N. that they would not get any more freight listings, until the office was es tablished and all purchases for the road In that division made in Seattle. The office was established In less than a week. Let us try it and sec We blame the ICC but we should blame our stupid legis lators who are Intrusted to make our laws, and in many cases have not the slightest experience in business, what we want in our legislature Is business men. "Suc- 1 cessful Business Men." Our buai- ness men should get together and select business men, men of vis ion who can see ahead, and for one I suggest our editor for the office of state senator. Now some one els suggest a man for governor. By ail meant let us have a Medford governor, and If no one else can suggest one I can, and will. W. B. CRAUSE. Medford, Jan. 17. Kelly's Comment From Washington. D. C. Fifth Columnist Know Army Mores Bright Boys Aid Plan of CIO r Br John W. Xtllr-. Washington. D. C, Jan. 19. Fifth columnists are aware of the troop movements in the Pa cific northwest, but only the few ranking officers of the 9th army corps (the 4th army) and some of the strategy experts in the national capital have any Idea of the number and disposi tion of the land troops. One of the first activities following Dec. 7, 1941, when Pearl Harbor had its baptism of fire, was to look to the defense of the Pacific coast, and particularly Washing ton and Oregon, where the Jap anese have always been expect ed to attempt an invasion, either by bomber or landing party. It can be said that today the northwest is ready for the ap pearance of Invaders by sea or sky and the strengthening of this defense is continuing rapid ly. In the northwest has been poured an endless stream of troops. In the Rocky mountain and plains states the trains have rushed with now and then a few cars with iron bars on windows, these cars containing aliens des tined for unnamed concentra tion camps Germans, Italians and Japanese. No one knows where these soldiers have been distributed, at least no civilian. Last summer there were war games in west ern Washington and the public knew where the soldiers were. The movement of last August was Insignificant compared to the hidden activities of the mo ment. Howitzers, machine guns, anti aircraft weapsn, anti-tank guns are scattered at strategic points from Olympia peninsula to points east of the Cascades; all camouflaged so cleverly and concealed so well that neither citizen nor fifth columnist ts aware of their existence. But they are there, ready for busi- SOME fine day labor may in sist, with government backing, that it has equal right with man agement In operating a western sawmill, an aluminum plant, a newspaper, shipbuilding plant or private power company. If industry does not sense this situ ation, it is not familiar with the struggle between labor and In dustrialists In the automobile business. It Is the determination of CIO to dictate in managing the automotive plants and these CIO leaders have the backing of many bright young men on the government payroll (mostly from Harvard or Columbia), who con tend that the "profit motive" is selfish and therefore should be destroyed. The CIO leaders who have been making these demands have taken page advertisements accusing OPM of dilatory tactics in production, especially for not using the auto industry at its full capacity. These ssme CIO leaders were those who intro duced sit-down strikes, slow down strikes, general strikes and secondary boycotts. The man-days lost by these strikes amounted to 17,000,000 days; enough to build battleships and cruisers. They held up needed machinery for the government's Bonneville power dam and through their affiliates tied up the lumber Industry of the northwest. Labor has court decisions establishing the right of a work man to his job and that he can not be fired. There is no oblige tion on his part to remain on the Job, for he can quit at any time. The present campaign has been to insist that the worker, who has no capital invested In a plant, can step in and co-manage it with the Industrialist. The ultimate aim of these CIO lead ers Is state socialism. It should be recorded that one of these leaders studied in Moscow and letters written by him praising the advantage of workers run ning industries have been Insert ed In the Congressional Record. a a a IF CIO gains Its point in this controversy, says a high govern ment official, the plan will spread to the northwest and to industries there; to the steel mills in the east, and to all In dustries eventually. AFL, which is excluded from the mass pro duction industries, such as auto- mobiles, Is giving CIO its moral support, for there are enter prises In which AFL unions would Ilka to have a SO-SO say, such as the aircraft Industry and shipbuilding. Industrialists declare that gen eral adoption of such a policy would mean the death of the American system of Individual enterprise the profit motive for private capital will not be risked if stockholders are to take all the risk and be denied the right to manager the busi ness. Out of this mess now brewing can be expected a thorough shake-up of OFM, the members of which have gained the ill-will ot CIO, and one of those whose ears will be knocked down is Bill Knudsen, himself a rugged Individualist with long training in the General Motors organization. In The a4 r y Day's ' News : III. i !J, '!!' . ! . -U....-..J By Frank Jenkins TTHE Pacific picture today (Sat- urday) is not so bright. The Japs, checked yesterday by the hard-hitting Australians, have poured again around the flank of the British on the Malay peninsula, reaching Malacca, on the strait of the same name about 100 miles from Singapore. The strait of Malacca sepa rates the Malay peninsula from the Dutch island of Sumatra. It is the main shipping route guarded by Singapore. It is. the route by which water-borne re inforcements must reach Singa pore. (Your map will make the situ ation here much plainer than words can.) -4 TTHE Japs claim today that General MacArthur's forces on the Batan peninsula are in "general retreat toward the coast of Manila bay, presumably in hopes of finding shelter on Cor regidor island." (The U. S. war department In Washington fails to confirm this Jap claim, reporting only that an attack by OVERWHELMING Japanese numbers, well support ed by planes and artillery is be ing stubbornly contested by MacArthur's army.) AS an American, capable of "thinking for yourself, you should read the enemy reports but should CONSIDER THEIR SOURCE. Tokyo gives out news not for the purpose of INFORMING but for the purpose of MISLEAD ING. The same holds true for Berlin and Rome. Germany, Italy and Japan are dictator ruled countries, whose press and radio are WHOLLY under the thumb of the ruler and are used primarily for propaganda. . War propaganda has two main purposes: To deceive, confuse and terrify the enemy and to ENCOURAGE the people at home. Tokyo, Berlin and Rome have no scruples about using their press and radio for these pur poses. You must take that fact into consideration in reading or listening to ALL news from axis sources. CROM time to time bits of news given out by the axis prove to be accurate (especially ! when they deal with axis victor I ies.) So you can't afford to dis i regard them entirely. But in 1 reading them ALWAYS CON SIDER THE SOURCE. Never believe them implicitly. Always check them a g a in s t other sources. JF you will take a look at a map of the Batan peninsula, you will see at once the reason for MacArthu's success in hold ing bsck a superior force. His front is narrow. His flanks are protected by water or by pre cipitous mountains. Always, since war began, small forces have chosen such positions for stubborn stands sgalnst superior forces. The pass of Thermopylae, where Leonidas and his 1400 Greeks held back the Persian holds, was a narrow front, pro tected on one side by the sea and on the other by the moun tains. In such positions, the superior attacking forces is compelled to make a costly frontal attack. In open country, it can pour around the ends, enveloping and smoth ering the smaller body of de fenders. TTHE British have had a nar- row front on the Malay peninsula, with water on both flanks, but the Japs have appar ently possessed sufficient naval superiority to enable them to outflank the defending British BY WATER. THE war picture, admittedly 1 dark In the Pacific, is bright er elsewhere at the moment The British today take Hal- faya pass by storm, thus clear ing the road alonj the Mediter ranean for supply of the British advanced armies pushing on westward toward Tripoli. In the past, British supply lines have been compelled to detour over a hazardous desert trail 100 miles to the south. The Russians today are re ported to be showering down parachute troops in the rear of the Germans at Mozhaisk on the Moscow front. Their hope is to trap the Germans defending that advanced point. nTE must learn to size up each " day the WHOLE SITUA TION, balancing the bright spots against the dark ones, be ing not too cast down by tha darker places in the news and not too cocksure as a result of the brighter ones. Only tn that way can we mam tain national efficiency. Nation al efficiency is all-important. Flight o' Time Medford and Jackaun Coanty History fro-r. the tues of ths Mall Ttlbnns K av so years ago. TEN YVARV AGO TODAY Jan.'tarj 19, 1932 (It was Tuesday) George A. Codding to seek another term as district attor ney. Oregon autoists with Califor nia licenses face arrest. Portland teachers have salar ies cut. Crater national forest is hard hit by cut in funds for coming year. Spectators fight to get glimpse of Ruth Judd, murderess, as trial starts at Phoenix, Ariz. Cloudy and unsettled weather. High 49, low 38 degrees. Calvin Coolidge, former presi dent, says "a general lack of judgment" cause of depression. Additional snow adds to deep drifts in Crater Lake park. TWENTY YEARs'aGO TODAT January 19, 1922 (It was Thursday) Entire Pacific coast in grip of winter, with mercury dropping to nine degrees above zero here. Many heating plants and auto radiators are frozen up. Plumb ers busy night and day. Lower temperatures predicted. Witnesses in trial of Fatty Arbuckle, film comedian on trial for manslaughter, have falling memories on witness stand. New French premier insists Germany carry out terms of Versailles treaty. Secretary of commerce says stage all set for another John L. Lewis coal strike. Dog licenses are now due In Jackson county. Legion post to stage a pioneer days celebration soon. Mercury drops to 11.5 degrees last night, with a high of 30 de grees. Warmer with rain or snow predicted. Citizens still shiver in unusual cold, and there are many inconveniences. Ye Poets Corner THE NEW NATIONAL DEBT You Japanese remember please We Americans never forget: Like the eliphant we simply can't, And we always pay a debt. The debt we owe with a capital "O," Made on a Sabbath morn; There'll be no lull 'till it's paid in full, ' All America has sworn. You can bet your yen well be seeing you then Over in Toyko town; We won't brag, but it's in the bag, Your "rising sun" is going down. Our Pearl Harbor dead, the blood that was shed. You'll remember 'till your last breath; We answer the call with our all in all, America will fight to the death. Pauline Crocker. 1.335 REALTY LICENSES Salem, Jan. 19. (JP) The : state real estate department re ! ported today that in 1941 it I Issued 1,335 licenses to brokers, 598 to salesmen, 76 to copart nershlps, and 73 of other types. BOWEL WORMS CAN'T HURT ME! That's what YOU think! Lni tb truth I Nrwirt- It ( nrr for ro -r anybody. r.rrwr- to "ftifJi" rourvi. wni. And thou u jly eritir can m rt diauM invtrt. you, vttJut ytr - Knotrtnp icKat u sr-onp. I'm Jstrn' Vrmifar tndrfr rt roaM worm bfnr theyjf tan mt" tvnd maka trouMfc Jmmt'w la AmrirVa trt known pfopnrtarjr worm in.xhc.ru : Mad or a4 liona (or war etntorr. Whsn jthi TiMfr Mw-t!nt. tVriy nr unt Tomi,-h, louiof wfijtht iip ir.ndwrffr--and tt Jmyit Vrrmifur rM iit! It asr rtt.bK.rn wnrmi, 4Wt rr r-tftlr. Whn ro worm ar thr, it wr.rs mrv a rrA-4 DmW Jvm' Vratal M 4 4ru