Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
Home Making Milady’s
Miss Leslie E. Harris Becomes Bride
Os Maurice A. Gellis Os Washington
A marriage of cordial social interest
and one marked by beauty and dig
nity was that of Miss Leslie Elinor
Harris, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Les
ter Harris, to Maurice A. Gillis, of
Washington, D. C., which took place
yesterday afternoon at the home of
the bride’s parents on East Forty-
Ninth street. The ceremony was per
formed by Dr. George Solomon, of
Mickve Israel Synagogue.
The house was simply but beauti
fully decorated with palms, talisman
roses and other summer flowers.
Mrs. D, J. Slenker, of Miami Beach,
Fla., her sister’s matron of hon
or, and wore cream satin printed with
pink roses in a large design, fash
ioned with drop shoulder effect with
pink roses on each shoulder. Her
flowers were an arm bouquet of
talisman roses, snapdragons and
mixed summer flowers of the same
shade.
The maid of honor, Miss Ruth
Gellis, of New York, sister of the
groom wore a becoming gown of
a 'qua satin, with matching flowers
at the V neckline, which was cut low
in th' back. Her flowers were also
MRS. J. T. WELLS, JR. GIVES
PARTY IN HONOR OE
MISS DAVIS
A lovely party of yestrdeay after
noon was that given by Mrs. J. T.
Wells, Jr„ honoring Miss Sarah Da
vis of Roanoke, Va., who is the at
tractive guest of Miss Carolyn Salter.
The house was attractively ar
ranged with bright summer flowers
and a color scheme of red, white and
blue carried out the Fourth of July
decorations.
There were three tables of players
and the high score prize, a double
deck of cards was won by Miss Ruo
Beebe. The low score prize a novelty
game went to Miss Anne Wheaton
and the galloping goose prize, a for
tune telling game was won by Miss
Katharine Doyle.
The guests included besides the
guest of honor. Miss Salter, Miss Nell
Glover, Miss Anne Douglas, Mi-s Eu
nice Foss, Miss Katherine Doyle, Mbs
Jane Mclntosh, Miss Barbara Butter,
Miss Anne Wheaton, Miss Mary Da
vis, Miss Margaret Blun, Mtes Mary
Bythewood, Miss Louise Osborne, Ms:
Ruo ®rebe and Miss Barbara Gil
christ .
Meetings
Tomorrow
The Savannah Women’s Christian
Temperance Union will meet tomor
row afternoon at 4:30 o’clock at the
Bull Street Baptist church.
♦ * *
The degree team of Martha Wash
ington Council No. 27, Daughters of
America will meet tomorrow evening
at the home of Mrs. Pearl Holliday,
724 East Thirty-Sixth street at B:‘.s
o'clock •
• * ♦
The Isle of Hope Community club
will meet tomorrow evening at the
Community club house at 8:15 o’clock.
After the business session, a social
hour will be enjoyed.
TO ATTEND UNVEILING
The Savannah chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, have re
ceived an invitation from the Geor
gla branch of the Daughters of Amer
ican Colonists to attend the unveiling
ceremonies of the marker on the site
of Fort St. Simons, the Colonial fort
built by Gen. Oglethorpe in 1736. The
unveiling will be held at St. Simons
Island tomorrow afternoon at 4
o'clock.
f— COSMOPOLITAN — i
COMFORT
whan you viait
NEW YORK
You'll like the Great Northern for
it* apariout, newly decorated rooms
—for ite popular priced restaurant
and bar ... vhtrt euiiine end totk
tub art "iuit-io!" Located in the
"FASHIONABLE FIFTIES," you’ll
find easy acceas to Radio City and
New York • smartest shopping and
amusement centers. Yes ... you’ll
like the GREAT NORTHERN!
ROOM AND BATH
For Ono from $2.50
For Two from $3.90
HOTEL
GREAT NORTHERN
Lilt WEST 57th STREET I
"HIW YORK CITYmnJ
For the Dance Floor
50c the Pound
BURNS & HARMON
PHONE 2-2196 _ CHARLTON AND WEST BROAD ST.
. talisman roses, snapdragons and
mixed flowers.
The natural beauty of the bride
was enhanced by her gown of white
satin with a flaring lace tunic open
ing down the front' to show the satin
and caught at the high neeklin? with
a cluster of orange blossoms. The
tunic had long tight sleeves, which
began full at the shoulders and ta
pered terminating in points over the
wrists. The collar of the dress was
upstanding of stiffened lace. Her
tulle veil was held to her head with
a Juliet cap of satin and tulle and
was appliqued with orange blossoms
on the border. Her bouqutt was of
bride's roses and lilies of the val
ley.
Mr. and Mrs. Harris entertained
the wedding party and family with
a dinner immediately following the
ceremony, and later in the evening
Mr. and Mrs. Gellis left on their wed
ding trip, the bride wearing for travel
ing a jacket suit of dark blue wool,
with a blouse of blue and white
striped taffeta. Her hat was an off
the face model of navy and she car
ried matching accessories. Upon their
return from their wedding trip they
will reside in Washington, D. C.
SOCIETY BRIEFS
Mrs. John Chandler has return
ed home after visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Goulding R. Chandler and attending
the Boyd-Chandler wedding in Aug
| usta.
• * *
Mrs. E. P. Lawton has returned
home after visiting her sister, Mrs.
C. M. Strachan in Athens, Ga.
♦ ♦ *
Mrs. Harry Sheppard of Augusta
has returned home after visiting rel
atives here.
• * •
Miss Jean Porter is visiting her
grandparents Mr. and Mrs. E. L.
Porter in Waycros, Ga.
• * *
Mr. and Mrs. Delmas Barber of
Brunswick, Ga. have arrived in the
city to make their home here. Mrs.
Barber was the former Miss Lorena
Dean of Brunswick.
♦ * *
Mr. and Mrs. John Grayson and
Miss Harriet Grayson have returned
home after visiting Mrs. J. R. Sinque
field in Jacksonville, Fla., for a short
time.
• 9 • '
Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Seigler and
daughters, Misses Annie Laurie and
Jean Seigler have returned home
from a visit to Mrs. Manie Seigler at
her home at Lakemont.
Miss Grace Barnes will spend this
week end at Sea Island.
♦ » •
Fenwick Jones and Peter Coy will
leave this afternoon for New York
where they will sail for a trip abroad.
They will visit Germany and other
countries. Peter Coy has been the
guest of his grandmother, Mrs. Peter
Mildrim for some time.
* • •
Mrs. DeLamar Turner, Mr. and Mrs.
George W. Upchurch and son, George,
Jr., will leave Saturday for Los An
geles, Calif. They will visit other
places of interest in California before
returning home.
Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Haskell and Miss
Ruo Beebee have moved to Savannah
Beach for the month of July.
Miss Anne Gorin will leave Friday
for Macon to visit Miss Stevens Des
sau.
♦ ♦ *
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Wheless Mr.
and Mrs. George Mercer, Jr. ’ Kiss
Elizabeth Mercer and George Mercer,
111, will move to Savannah Beach
today. They will occupy the Lippitt
cottage for the month of July.
• ♦ ♦
Mr. and Mrs. Olin F. Fulmer will
leave on Sunday for Seattle, Wash ,
where they will attend the Shrine
convention. From Seattle they will go
: to Alaska before returning home.
Miss Eloise Sharpe of Roanoke, Va.,
will arrive tomorrow to spend some
time with Miss Helen Fulmer.
♦ ♦ ♦
Miss Sarah Schofield left last eve
ning to visit friends in Washington,
D. C„ before returning home she will
take a cruise on the Great Lakes with
friends.
Mrs. Perry Land will leave this
week-end for Del Monte, Cal., where
she will attend the national conven
tion of Alpha Delta PI sorority. Mrs.
Land is president of the Savannah
City club. She will visit in Seattle,
| Waste. and will return home the last
I S’, H ' Sherm »n, superintendent of
| schols of Jesup, Ga., Mrs* Sherman
and daughters, Margaret and Batty
Ann, have returned to their home in
’-Z.i ■
—Courtesy of Atlanta Journal.
MRS. CLAUDE TALMADGE BRAY
of Athens and Savannah, who was
before her marriage on Saturday
evening, Miss Martha Carter Storey
of Athens.
Miss Storey became the bride of
Claude Talmadge Bray of Athens and
Savannah on Saturday evening at
eight-thirty o’clock at the Central
Presbyterian Church in Athens. The
ceremony was performed by the Rev.
S. J. Cartledge, pastor of the church
Tf.e nuptial music was rendered
by Mis Nolee May Dunaway, organ
Ist and Mrs. Lewis Kincaid, soloist.
The bride’s attendants were gown
ed in pastel shades of organdie with
accessories to harmonize and then
flowers were arm bouquets of talis
man roses. Mrs. Charles Newton Byrd,
of Madison was matron of honor.
Miss Ethelyn Cook was maid of honor
and the bridesmaids included four
first cousins of the bride: Misses
Frances Storey, of Athens, and Fran
ces Ellington, of Jefferson, who wore
models of yellow; and Misses Joyce
Storey, of Jefferson, and Evelyn Dan
tel, of Atlanta whose dresses were of
orchid.
Jesup after visiting Mrs. Sherman’s
parents, Mrs. J. LeV. Martin of the
Gilbert Hotel for several days.
* * *
Miss Frankie Moxley of the Ho
tel Gilbert is spending a short time
in Augusta.
• ♦ •
Col. Lee Moore of Statesboro is a
guest of the Hotel Gilbert.
\
Objection Overruled
Employer (to applicant for job):
No. I haven’t enough work to keep
my own men busy.
Applicant: “Aw, take me on, mister,
I won’t work hard.
Snakes can neither wink nor close
their eyes. They do not have eye
lide, but their eyes are protected by
immovable sections of the outer skin
which permit the eyeballs to move
underneath and w'hch are shed when
the snake loses its skin periodically.
LISTEN, FOLKS!
—TO WILLIAM RITT—
WHAT SONG do you hum as you i
go about a task?
Maybe you don’t hum but If you
do and have been humming such
tunes, the last several days, as “All
My Life”, “She Shall Have Music”,
“Touch of Your Lips” or "Robins
and Roses” you are right in musical
style, according to Variety, entertain
ment trade paper which makes a bus-
Ines of finding out about such things.
Variety weekly checks the num
ber of songs and how often each
song is played over the Columbia
and the two NBC networks. From j
the results a list of 25 or so leaders
is culled and announced.
The four songs mentioned above I
are the latest current over the chain '
airways.
THE WEEKLY LIST is proof that
the life of a popular song is almost
as brief as that of the butterfly.
Like butterflies creeping through
the comparatively long existence of
being a caterpillar song writers work
long and hard creating and perfecting
tune and lyric.
Then, again like the butterfly, the
I song emerges from its creative cocoon
' and takes to the air—or, rather, the
SAVANNAH DAILY TIMES. WEDNESDAY, JULY 1, 193«
JUNE BRIDE
Flower girls were little Nancy Coop
er, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. G.
Cooper, of Athens, and little Emma
Carter Daniel, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Carter Daniel, of Athens. The
flower girls were attired in models of
pastel organdie and carried baskets
of ose pedals.
The lovely bride entered with her
father, by whom she was given in mar
riage. Her gown was of white satin.
fashioned on princes empire lines.
Her veil which was caught to her
head by a wreath of orange blossoms
was the one worn by her aunt, Mrs.
Carter Daniel, on the event of her
marriage to Mr. Daniel. The brides
arm bouquet was of calla lillies.
Serving as Mr. Bray’s best man was
his brother, Austin Bray. The grooms
men were Charles N. Byrd, of Matti
son; Frank Albertson, of Dallas, Tex.;
Julian Fleming, of Athens, and Storey-
Ellington, of Jefferson.
Following the ceremony there was
a reception for the wedding party,
out-of-town guests and a few close
friends at the home of the bride on
Boulevard.
YOUNG CHURCH GROUP
TO HOLD BOAT RIDE
The Young People’s department of
the First Baptist Sunday school will
sponsor a moonlight ride around the
bell buoy tomorrow evening at 8:15
o’clock.
Concert music and comedy acts by
the orchestra will b? features of th?
evening. There will oe free lemonade
and other refreshmnts and sand
wichs for sate. Tickets may be se
cured at the boat or from any mem
ber of the department.
The proceeds are for the benefit of
the Sunday school and anyone inter
ested may take the trip.
Terrific
It may be all right for America to
be known as the “melting pot,’ but
we ought to make it considerably
hotter for those who refuse to melt.
i air waves. And, as the butterly is
actually on its way to extinction the
instant the sun firs glints on its
wings, the popular son£ as soon as it
becomes a hit, already feels the com
petition of newer compositions.
Just a few weeks ago you were wild
about ‘’Beautiful Lady in Blue”,
"Red Sails in th; Sunset” and ‘‘Treas
ure Island”. But like the butterfly,
they are already gone from that grim
list of 25.
♦ ♦ ♦
NOTES—Radio will salute journal
ism in a NBC-Blue network program
i this autumn . . . Phile Baker is
I chairman of the radio division of the
i New York Father’s day committee.
I He invites listeners to mail in their
' votes for their favorite artist who Is
j a father . . . Metropolitan Opera air
auditions will return in the autumn
. . . Believe it or not Richard Gordon,
radio’s “Sherlock Holmes”, is called
"Sherlock” by his wife and daugh
ter! .. . That New York dinner at
a tribute to Jack Dempsey is aired
this week.
Those NBC Honeymooners, Grace
and Eddie Elbert, pose for you. Their
trials and tribulations, garnished with
chuckles, may be heard every morn
ing except Sunday.
PLAY WITH
THE BABY IS
COUNSEL
MOTHER ASKS IF SHE
SHOULD TALK TO
HER INFANT
By GARRY C. MYERS 3, PH. D.
Head department of Parent Education
Cleveland Collage, Western
Reserve University
The other day a mother wrote to
ask whether she would dare to talk
to her baby, then five months old.
“Some say I might .excite him too
much if I talked to him."
Much of the foolishness written
and talked to mothers has made them
afraid to be human beings in the
presence of their little children. Many
have not dared to kiss the little tyke
and now some hesitate even to talk
to him!
Kiss your baby, of course, mother
avoiding his lips for the sake of his
health. Talk to him, most certanly,
as soon as he will respond; Just be
moderate. A good time to talk to him
is while he is being dressed or
changed or bathed, or while he is
nude, hating his free exerc ; se Just be
fore bath.
You may have forgotten when your
mother played “Pat-a-cake” with you
or “This Little Pig Went to Mar
ket,” or “Here Sits the Lord Mayor.”
But you may recall when she did so
with baby brother or sister. Happily
do I remebmer when my mother so
amused my baby sister, and I can
think of nothing quits so beautiful to
me as my mother s face and voice
were then.
Turn Back on Silly Things
I wish that young mothers read
ing this would turn their backs upon
some of the silly things that they
have been told or have read, and
would restore to themselves and their
little children many of the whole
some joys they as babies shared wibh
their mothers. It is wise, of course, to
employ discretion and not to over
stimulate the baby, nor to poke a
finger not well cleansed into his
mouth, nor to tickle him. Yet finger
plays have great value when properly
used, both forth' 1 mother and the
little child. Here are a few samples.
Almost any grandmother can supple
ment them indefinitely, and would be
very glad of the opportunity.
This little pig went to market,
This little pig stayed home.
This little pig had roast beef.
This little pig had none.
This little pig cried "Wee, wee,”
all the way home.
From China, w'here the baby’s toes
are played with, comes the next:
This little one eats grass,
This little one eats hay.
This little one eats water,
This little one runs away.
This little one does nothing
But just lies around all day.
With last line the mother play
fully and gently slaps soles of baby's
feet.
With the next, the mother points
to each part of the baby at men
tioned:
Two little eyes to open and close.
Two little ears and one litle nose.
Two little lips and one little ch n.
Two little cheeks with a rose shut in
Two little eblbows, dimpled and
sweet.
Two little shoes and two little feet;
Two little shoulders, stout and
strong,
And two little hands busy all day
long.
•
I Affairs Os Tonight
Franklin Temple No. 2, Pythian
Sisters, will meet ths ev?ning at the
Knights of Pythias hall at 8 o’clock.
Initiation will be held at this time
and visiting sisters will be welcome.
» * »
Amercan Legion auxiliary No. 135
will meet this evening at the Hotel
Savannah at 8:30 o’clock.
♦ * ♦
The Workers’ Council of Wesley
Monumental church school will meet
this evening at 7:45 o’clock at the
church. Dr. Samuel T. Senter will
conduct a short prayer service before
the business session.
AH Os Us
“NIX ON SENTIMENTALITY”
I’M A BIT groggy, but I can still
poke a typewriter , . . I’ve Just re
ceipted for half a dozen uppercuts
and roundhouse swings from an
anonymous correspondent who did
NOT like something I wrote ... In
the midst of his general disapproval,
he took one violent crack at my “sen
timentalizing” over what a little girl
had missed in never having ridden on
a steam train.
And if that’s “sentimentalizing”,
then I agree with my unknown letter
writer . . . "Sentimentality” is get
ting all worked up emotionally over
semething that isnt worth a whoop
in a whirlwind. It’s getting soppy
over a lovely sunset while you are
standing on a puppy-dog's tail. . . .
It’s giving a starving man a kind
word and neglecting to buy him a
meal . . . Something pretty close to
hypocrisy.
But why, says my friend ( I’ll eall
him, for convention’s sake) should
anybody write that a little girl who
hasn’t traveled on the “dirty, slow,
smelly hot (or cold) trains of today”
has been cheated of “a very precious
experience”.
Well, I just happened to feel that
why about it, and still do.
When I was a kid, the railroad was
romance and the railroaders were
heroes. The roundhouse was an ex
citing place. And the wooooh! of the
train in the night was swell to hear
They Got Their Walking Orders
IIIw
nB -Hi
J OB
I
Rubber workers of Gasden, Ala., objected to attempts of union organizers
to run their affairs. A mob of 300 men attacked the union headquarters
where they severely beat John D. House (left), president of the Akron
local of the United Rubber Workers of America, and L. B. Gray, a local
organizer, and ordered them with nine others to leave town immediately.
antra I Press)
PROBE PLANNED
AT REFORMATORY
TENNESSEE GRAND JURY
TO MAKE DETAILED
INVESTIGATION
NASHVILLE, Tenn., July 1 (TP)
A grand jury is expected to make
final reports today on an investiga
tion of alleged flogging and other
cruelties in a Tennessee reform
school.
Six guards of the school already
are under Indictments on charges of
beating the young inmates. A former
dormitory matron, Mrs. Mollie Stone,
testified that the school superintend
ent. G. Newt Choate, often urged the
guards to whip the children.
Mrs. Stone said she never was per
mitted to watch the floggings but
heard one boy lashed 95 times. The
former amtron testified she frequent
ly heard th? young victims screaming
with pain and praying to die to find
rlease from the cruel treatment.
.. And for kids who lived in the
middle west, in little towns or on
farms, the trains were great adven
tures coming from afar, roaring to
ward the unknown . . . The aviator
may have taken the place of the
engineer for the youngsters of today,
but not entirely . . . I’ve feard kids
who’ve traveled eighty miles an hour
in automobiles and ridden in air
planes complain tbak they never get
a train ride and they get more ex
citement out of steam puffing out of
an old switch engine Ihan they do
out of the air mail droning overhead.
So I’ll stand pat, fellow.
My correspondent said he couldn’t
sign his name because he has “a me
nial job” . . . What’s that got to do
with it? Did he think I’d write a
nasty letter to his boss? . . . That’s
a silly ic’ea.
Directs Style Show
V IL
Edna L. Maynard
Edna L. Maynard of Cleveland is i
only 26, but she is stylist for a
huge department store, and writes
a snappy fashion column called,
“What’s Up in the Seesaw of
Fashion.” Miss Maynard is di
recting the daily style shows at
Cleveland’s Great Lakes exposi
tion, a pageant that it is estimated
approximately 8,000 people will
u aee daily.-
Contract
Bridge
CONVERTING PARTNER
Provided partner’s bidding shows
strength, it is as necessary to show
him two suits of five cards each as
it is to afford him an opportunity
to rsbid, by keeping bidding open
with 1-No Trumps, and upon about
the same honor strength in either in
stance. Today’s hand offers an illu
stration of why such procedure is fa
vored by experts. North happened to
be an obstinate sorb of playsr. Two
months ago I knew that he was bit
terly opposed to showing immediately
a two-suiter over partner’s call, un
less at least one quick trick was held.
He favored first bidding 1-No trump
partner’s opening suit call, then
later showing a long suit, if afforded
an opportunity to do so. Gradually
nis ideas have altered. Last week he
offered teas objection than he did
formerly. His experience with today’s
hand has almost converted him. Soon
he will be reconciled to such pro
cedure.
-Bidding went: North, 1-Heart,
third hand; South, 1-Spade, at which
game could not have bsen expected;
West, 2-Diamonds: North, 2-No
Trumps, that could not have been
made; South, 3-Clubs; West, 3-Dia
monds; South, 4-Clubs, leaving part
ner to shift, if he desired; North,
5-Clubs, that West doubled.
When partners have bid different
suits, then compromised upon a third
suit, ordinarily the best defense is to
lead trumps as frequently as possi
ble. West led the Ace of clubs, hop-
♦ A 4
VAJ 9 5
♦ A 10 8
*K J 9 4
«? 5 4 10 9 6 7
f Q 8 3 2 VKIO 64
♦KQ J 7 £ UJ $96
4 3 S. 4 8 5 2
4 A
♦QJ 6 3 2
V 7
♦ 52
4 Q 10 7 6 3
ing partner might lead the suit again.
Then West led his of diamonds, tak
ing out dummy's Ace. The shift to
diamonds plainly enough showed that
Easb held the missing 8 and 5 of
clubs, and declarer played according
ly. He led off dummy's Ace of hearts,
then he ruffed a heart, to lead the
Q of spades. West’s double indicated
the probable location of the K of
spades. West’s K covered the Q of
Rich Photo Studio
26 1-2 EAST BROUGHTON STREET
PHONE 4412
BOARD SANCTIONS
FEDERAL GRANTS
WASHINGTON, July 1 (TP)—The
social security board authorized fed
eral grants totaling $6,200,000 today
for relief to the distressed in 16 states
and th? District of Columbia. The
federal funds have been matched by
state appropriations in New York,
frew Jersey, Maryland, Missouri and
Utah. The grants cover April 1 to
June 20.
Twelve othei states are t/ receive
grants for the coming three months,
July to October. These include Ala
bama, Arkansas, Colorado, lowa,
Massachusstts, Michigan, . Mississippi,
Michigan, Nebraska, New Hampshire,
North Dakota, Wisconsin and the
District of Columbia.
WORLD WAR VETERANS
STEP INTO LEGAL FIGHT
BOSTON, July 1 (TP)—The vet
erans of foreign wars stepped into a
legal fight today over a court order
to make a veteran pay his debts with
his bonus.
The order was issued against Herbert
Mahar of Adams. Mahar is ordered
to pay more than S3OO. He cashed
S2OO in bonus bonds, but he wouldn’t
pay it on the bill. Commander Miller
of the veterans started an inquiry. He
said he means to be dead sure that
the court order isn’t a violation of a
fedei -1 law designed to -irotect vet
erans against seizure of their bonus
funds.
J won the return lead of spades,
spades. Dummy’s ace won. Declarer’s
Dummy ruffed • a third lead ol
spades. Dummy’s J of clubs was
overtaken with declarer’s Q. West
showed out of trumps, as expected.
Dummy’s last trump ruffed a fourth
lead of spades. East’s last spade fell.
Declarer used next to his last trump
to ruff a third lead of hearts. Then
his 10 of clubs picked up East’s last
trump. South led off his fifth spade,
winning his eleventh trick. Previously
he had lost to the Ace of clubs. Now
he had to lose the thirteenth trick
to West’s Q of diamonds, just making
his double contract .North was gra
cious enough not to even mention
that South was lucky to go game.
Increase—ln Title
Steno: I think I deserve an In
crease in salary.
Boss: I can’t afford it, but you can
call yourself a private secretary in
stead of a stenographer.
AoaH NUMSKUVU
j^^ z WF >
DEAR NOAH=VUHAT
WOULD SUE DO WITHOUT
A LAWYER T joe holnem
NMH VI UkE. ,TE NN.
DEAR NOAH=WHEN A
RA&IO STATON IS GIVEN
A WAVE., IS IT SUPPOSED
TO E>H- PERMANENT?
HEMMAN DECXE-ft TICO>r, H.V. /,
DEAR NOAH= IF
WORLD WERE
stationary; WOULD the
SKY-ROCKEY?
O.J»NSt-N MADISON, VJ)«
SEnD IN SOME. >PEA» NOWI- I
WK
WITH AKY OTHER««
BRAHO OF
Woe the ju
LET TOUR OWN TASTE