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Show PROVQ . (UTAH) SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3. '1939 SECTION TVO i Hi t 11 &ty XXtaroooa (ExcepUa Ea4or4.jr ao4 fccadsy Hornl&r rstr.hf4 ky tb HnJ J CorporaUo. m Couth IV West &tret Provo, Utah. Entered econd elaaa mMlr M th pcxtofXic Prero, VU.li, ndr tb ct of 11 arc a , 1171. Ciimta, Xteal A. Kithmta. Nation! Advertisinr rcpr-eotUT, rcpr-eotUT, hew Tork, JTrfcoctaco, troit, Soatoa. JLaa Acctlea, Chicago. Membw United Pi . X. E. A. KTTk, Waira Vaataraa, tk Ecrlppa XaarB iiwpapara a4 AtJt far-eat ! Circulation. Subecrlptioa tarKi b7 carrier la TJtai eoanty, M msU ta aaontJi. J for ait moata. U advance; ti.1t tt y-. la ad ranee; by mill La eouaty, ft.; eawiia aty ta rar ia 4rac Ua4' Ta Bral4 via not aaauma financial - rponiUUty far any arrore which ay appear ia tlftrtiimuiU published la it cola mo a. Ia thoie - lattiien ta aapar ia at fault, K will reprint taat aart taa adyrtleant ta wMe ttee typographical mirtaka aeeart. And his mouth was opened immediately, and hU tongue loosed, and he spake, and praised God, Luke 1.64. A miracle is a work exceeding the power of any created agent, consequently being an effect of the divine omnipotence. South. Organizing Silly Societies It's painful to think of what might happen to this country coun-try if Americans ever took themselves seriously.. Inhabit-ahts Inhabit-ahts of the" United States have the almost unique capacity. Df being able to laugh at themselves instead of looking around for someone to get sore at. . The American habit of organizing silly societies may look a little lunatic to some people, but it is one way of avoiding the jitters at a time when hysteria may set in at the drop of an insult. Take the recently incorporated Grouch Club of America, for example. This society wants specifically specifical-ly to provide an "organized outlet for the grouches of all human hu-man beings" and to "survey and analyze exasperating national na-tional grouches and ... to alleviate them." : , Silly? Maybe not half as ridiculous as certain other organizations whose tactics are confined to working themselves them-selves into a mental lather over deplorable conditions and events and then doing nothing at all about them. We'll Have To Speed Up "" TTHHE WEST needs a i i r if it is going to get m on the industrial ! develonment of the next decade. We have the unlimited resources and the power. ' "" . But ;;- " On the issue of power the Tefenessee Valley is alive and awake, andwith its : . : ... i cheap TVA ' 111 I I industries daily. " . . ' . ' ni in a' ;: built in Nashville; other manufacturers are planning on new factories in the area, Our western states of Washington, Idaho, Utah need good manufacturing plants that will pay high wages rbut there can only be so many of them started at a time, in the normal course of development. It is up to our western people, our civic organizations, our congressmen, to let eastern capital KNOW of the advantages we have to offer, so that the developments of the next decade won't all swing toward the south.; s D8K01!T JIBS. EVA GILLESPIE I porter- -Phone 04OJ-3 I The Gleaner Girls are sponsoring sponsor-ing a dancing party to be given Tuesday evening, in the recreation hall. Music will be furnished by Curt Curtis' orchestra and special features are being arranged to make this dance one of the finest p-arues oi members and friends are invited i Ai Mil to attend. Elder J. Robert Gillespie will take in M. I. A- conjoint meeting tonight and will show slides taken while In Germany on his mission. The Gleaner Girls will sing several sev-eral -new M. I. A. song3 and all 0 ive cor to A v - - - f pr?oTircr riV J - x u?$ Tn? fcr rtf industrious-: . - W W I PROTECT iV Jr V THE BKTAMP POWERFUL '"V'j TH SMALL, HOMESTANO f . IMPOSTRIOU3 i Tin ti rt. . rr.Cvlj cuuo to speed up its program power is bringing in new A million-dollar airplane plant is being members of the ward are-urged to .attend, begiaing At 7 .'clock. Mrs. Zepha Smith will be hostess host-ess to the Literary club "Friday afternoon at her home. Mrs. Hilda Conder will be in charge of the afternoon's program and all members mem-bers are invited to attend. All visiting teachers of Relief Society wilLmeet at 1:30 Tuesday afternoon, when the teacher's topic will be given at the meeting meet-ing beginning at 2 o'clock by Class-leader Class-leader Amy Taylor. Robert, Mary and Jean.Gilles pie were in Salt Lake City on tv),,,,, , Business Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Brereton and daughter. Donna Lou were Salt Lake visitors Friday., Cormorants dive more than 100 feet- below the surface of the water wa-ter in their search-for fish. That's Different Ehv Mr. " ' OUT OUR VAY X WANT ALU OF T THOSE LEFTOVERS PUT INTO OUG I . I DJSR I'M OOING V TO MAKE MASH " , COP. 13 MCA SERVICE. INC. WHY T. M. tEC. U. S. PAT. OFF. LAKE VIEW MRS. SADIE SHAW Reporter Phone 018-R-S : Mrs. Anna II. Williamson attended at-tended the shower in honor of Miss Donna Kimber at the home, of her grandmother, Mrs. Josephine Bez-zant Bez-zant at Pleasant Grove Wednesday Wednes-day afternoon. A "family get-to-gether" was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Scott Thursday evening. Cards and Chinese checkers were enjoyed after which a delicious luncheon was served , to Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Scott, Mr. and Mrs. LeMar Scott, Mrs. Vera Peay, Mrs. . Jennie Scott all of Provo, Mr. and Mrs. - Camby Scott and Mr. and -Mrs. Norman Scott of Lake View. . ''.'' The Lake View Primary"-association will hold conference Sum-day Sum-day evening in the ward amuse-; ment hall. A. pageant will be put cn by the children, "Christ Blesses Little Children." A good program is assured and' all ward members are invited to be present at 7:30. Mr, and Mrs. W .A. Reese of Lehi, visited with .Mrs. Margaret Pearce of Beaver, who Is spending the winter with her daughter, Mrs. Thomas Johnson and Mrs; D. J. Reese in Lake View. ' The M. I. A. 'will hold a dancing party Tuesday evening in the amusement hall. : Good music has been arranged for and . all ; are invited to attend. - . - Mrs. Ara M. Dais entertained Friday evening in honor of the Ninth birthday anniversary of her son .Heber Lee Davis. A birthday cake, holding nine candles formed the centerpiece of the table. Children's Chil-dren's games were played , and a delicious dinner was served tc the following young people. Byron Stubbs, Geneil Judd, Helen Judd, Preston Madsen, Slusan Stubbs, Ted Bunnell, Ira Judd, David Jen sen, Marjorie Stubbs and . the honored guest. StaKn? s r -v--'"" j: j MOTHERS GET GRAY s- BY ELSIE C. CARROLL I was thinking of the magnificent mag-nificent work some individuals as well as groups are doing in their effort to rouse the wdrld to the need of facing the disaster that threatens it and the need of taking tak-ing means to save the world its culture. One of these individuals is . Louis Adamic," who recently lectured in our state. Six years ago I heard Mr. Adamic in New York City. At . that time he talked delightfully de-lightfully of his then recent .w visit to his native ' Jugosla-. via. He revealed , himself to . be intensely Interested In humanity at large and in the place of eminence the United Unit-ed States holds In the world. ; He loved his, native land and told tender stories : to illus- t rate the ideals and the - crs. But his-heart had been .J. - eiven. even then, to Ills new 1 -. cf . ' - .country. Tne brUliant work he has done since that time has broadened his understanding of his foster mother and deepened his love for humanity. : I wish every American Am-erican might hear the message Louis Adamic has and is so eagerj to give. . f ' : The subject of his lecture was "Let Us Become Americanizedr All of Us." ' In this lecture, he points out that nearly 50,000,000 citizens of this country are not of Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Saxon, origin, , and , he predicts that in. less, than two generations over half of the country's population popu-lation will trace their origin to emigrants who have entered the United States within the past hundred years ; in other words, they will not be descendants of the- early colonists , j and pre-Revolutionary pre-Revolutionary War stock. . Mr, Adamic asserts that he is of this new stock, but not for it as against the old American stock as it is. lie is for the whole of present - - day America, which, he points out, is not yet a finished product but Is the material ; out of which the future is to bo wrought. He is devoting his time and energy to helping America, made up - of so many, threads, to : understand un-derstand itself in . order that it may weave from those threads something worthy of 1 the American. Ameri-can. This dream he defines as faith in . the human being, with liberty as its ideal. He-is now conducting an unusual survey among "new stock" immigrants to , this country and their descendants. de-scendants. His purpose is to try to determine what i3 their .contribution .con-tribution to American life. The project will require "at least three years, but he has already secured enough' data - to draw some significant , conclusions. conclu-sions. - He : has discovered that many of this : new . element do not feel at home here, spirtiuai-ly spirtiuai-ly and culturally. They ' feel a prejudice against them and suffer suf-fer discrimination in the matters of. social contacts and employ ment; This causes them to band together and form nuclei for undesirable un-desirable influences to work in. Referring ; to the prejudice which is largely responsible for this , alien feeling of many newcomers, new-comers, Mr. Adamic mentioned the refusal of one American city to accept a statue of Columbus because he was a "foreigner." He warned against the use of . such word3 as "foreigner," and "race," and urged more friendliness ; and toleration, r Prejuuice produces" chaos, he pointed out, and is one of the worst evils of our time. It causes this pulling apart of small groups who feel that 4they do not belong, that they are inferior. in-ferior. He feels that tolerance, in Its ordinary sense,' Is not enough to cure the evil. Too often by tolerance we mean nothing more than "inactive . intolerance," ' This - is - simply I Was Tlnirilf'iriri- I I III 11X11 IJ " aawnnamaMa. .!-'- 1 ' . n By VILLIAL1S . a veneer which , is crackiiiff. .. We need something more. We need , to accept one another "Ours s a teeming nation of nations ; an .extension of all Europe, a creature of all ; peoples." He thinks America has . a high .destiny ; if she will . only " become acquainted with herself and see that des- -I tiny. Right now, unfortunately, unfortunate-ly, she Is In grave danger. T!ie greatest document ever , written is the Declaration of Independence. Government of . the people by the people fe,r the people, are . the- greatest words ever written." But we must do something to make those words continue to be significant, S i . .. ; He asserts that many of these people we call i foreigners were Americans long before they came here.t They dreamed of this land of . promise with its welcoming Statue .of Liberty. They sacrificed sacri-ficed and toiled to come to it. He . pleads for. us to "make America, Am-erica, safe for differences; to accept ac-cept one another, not allowing our likes to be determined by race, but trying to realize that diversity makes for progress." MrAcmic points: out that in iiis task of making "all of us Americans," there - is work for every, one of us to do. , If we teach , or , lecture, or write, or work in libraries, we can help to guide, the thinking and reading read-ing of those who come within our influence. If we converse with bmy neighbors, we can avoid the Use J of such words as "race," and foreigner." We can try to en courage sympathy and understanding under-standing wherever we encounter ignorance or prejudice. We can try to keep sane in this" time of turmoil and propaganda, and contribute all of which Y we are capable to these processes which alone can make - the American, dream a reality which may have power to save . the world. - . , aiRS. YOUNG DIES SALT LAKE CITY, Dec. 2 (U.E) Funeral services were conducted conduct-ed here Saturday for Mrs. Harriet Har-riet Hooper Young, -78, daughter-in-law of Brigham Young," second president of the L. D. S. church. Mrs. Young, widow of Col. Wil-lard Wil-lard Young, army engineer and West Point instructor, died in a Salt Lake City hospital yesterday yester-day of a heart ailment. Christmas ) Carols Through the Ages . , ivy v. 'C V DECK THE HALL WITH r HOLLY "Deck the hall with boughs of holly, Tis the season to be jolly, Don we now our gay apparel, Troll the ancient Cliristmas carol . . - In the Yule season, celebrated in 3ritain before the Christian era, a Winter. festival was held. Halls vere decorated with holly, ivy end mistletoe,, and the Yule losrwas lighted. This traditional Welsh' sons reflects the spirit of these celebrations. . . " . O Shopping Days Till Christmas r 1 1 4 v - T7cnty-fivc Ycaro Aco Today From the I'il.-H of tlie Provo Herald, Decf rr.ber 3, 1314 Officers of Provo lodge 14, I. O. O. F. were elected as follows: fol-lows: Jesse II. Harmon, noble Grand; L. T. Walters, vice grand; John W. Guy, secretary; Boyd Strong treasurer; George F. Peay, trustee; M. H. Graham, degree captain. ; . oOO .' - ; Jack Dare, employe on the inter-urban inter-urban construction, was arrested by Deputy C H. Clark on a charge cf obtaining lodging at the Royden House ' and meals at the Cozy Cafe without paying for them. Prof. A. C. Lund and William F. Hanson returned from Salt Lake where they arranged to have "The Sun Dance," famous Indian opera composed by Mr. Hansen, presented in the Salt Lake theater. Prof. N. C. Hanks, the blind orator and dramatic reader, lectured lec-tured in College hall on "The Devil's Funeral." y John Brailsford and Laura Hatfield, Hat-field, both of Springville, were married during the week by Deputy Dep-uty County Clerk J. M. Chipman. The Utah, Sorosis club met at the home of Mrs. Jacob Evans. Mrs. Ida Smoot Dusenberry gave an Instructive discussion on "Greek Mythology." . , Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Aird were touring the east. '... The Nineteenth Century- club met at the home of Mrs. George W. Fitzroy. Professor Fitzroy furnished the music. Science Neivs A slot-machine bottle opener. That's the invention of Ira Fitz-patrick Fitz-patrick of Austin, Tex., who claims the device is a good check on bevsrage sales. Before the top can be removed from a pop bottle, a coin must be placed in a slot, opening the top-remover. a .. Latest aeronautical instrument is a pilot's slide rule. The rule, which has a base with a transparent trans-parent sliding top, teUs the speed, fuel consumption and gas mileage at any given number of propeller revolutions. It figures in altitudes and wind conditions, giving the pilot an exact knowledge know-ledge of the most economical O SERI AL STORY WAR AND Testrrdayt Linda la Infuriated . tvben Grorare retuuf to leave him , experiments, eome to her. George ' ealla train. Linda' father haa had a heart attack, la la a aerloaa condition. Linda plana ta take : the flrat plane home. CHAPTER VII )HE never remembered, after-t ward how she had broken the dreadful news to Marcia and Mrs. King. All she knew was that the blood pounded in her temples, and her knees shook so that' they led her to a chair. Marcia was instantly in-stantly upset, going for cold water, wa-ter, smelling salts, saying distractedly, dis-tractedly, "Oh, Mother! Linda and her lather are" so close so much closer than ordinary parents and daughters! This is terrible!" ; , 'A plane" Linda murmured. I must go at once." - "But there are no regular planes at this hour,", Mrs. King said, knitting her brows. "J( you were a man, and if somehow we could get hold pf a service ship, ,x . . But this way. . . ." ' v I , Marcia . flew to the telephone. "Jimmy will know what to do." It was pathetic, the way she relied re-lied on - him for everything. Through the dim fog of her shock, Linda found herself noticing that. Dreading Jimmy's presence, even the help he might be able to lend. A moment 1 later, Marcia was saying, "Mobile. That's the nearest near-est airport. It's more than 150 miles from here. Jimmy says he doesn't think there's a flight out of there until night.. But even so, Linda, you'd be home in the morn-1 morn-1 ing. Better than the train. . If you caught a train right , now, you couldn't : be there before tomorrow tomor-row night. Y : ' - , "Get hold of ; yourself, child," Mrs. King said kindly. "Perhaps vour father isn't as ill as it seemed at first. You must be brave. I'll 1 help you pack." Sick grief ached inside Linda. "Anything. I I can't think. Everything else was dwarfed before be-fore this horrible tragedy. Her father her father whom she had left in' the best of health, completely com-pletely happy with his latest rare books. She remembered that one had come the morning she went A book he had been saving for months in order to be able to buy. She thought of his wise eyes, his fingers that turned the pages of old manuscripts so lovingly. It wasn't fair that this should have happened to Daddy! Heart attack. at-tack. Why, he'd never even been ill befote. He was only 55. Young. In the prime. . TTER eyes kept blurring as Mar-cia Mar-cia and Mrs. King were tak-- tak-- ing her in hand. She watched tjiem pull open bureau drawers in New, Deal Liberals Protest Anti-Trust Labor Inquiry BY BRUCE CATION Daily Herald Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON,' Dec. 2 The American Federation of Labor i3 not the only important group that has tried to call off Assistant Attorney General Thurman Arnold's Ar-nold's Investigation of anti-trust law violations by the building trades unions. Some of the heaviest heav-iest pressure has come from within with-in the .New Deal itself. A considerable portion of the "liberal wing" in and close to the government is very much opposea to the line Arnold's investigation has taken, and Arnold and his assistants as-sistants have been urged to call a halt. This group's objection is based on the tear that prosecuting labor unions under the anti-trust laws will in the long run tend to destroy de-stroy the legislative safeguards which have been built around labor's rights in the last few years, in effect, they fear, itNvill increase the extent to which individual in-dividual Judges may determine what acts are and are not legal for labor unions hot only in connection con-nection with the anti-trust laws, but in other fields. As a matter of fact, the whole question of whether the. unions may be prosecuted under the antitrust anti-trust laws undoubtedly will have to be passed on, in the end, by the Supreme Court.. The law. admit tealy is ambiguous. LAW GRAN1S EXEMPTION TO LABOR , Section Six of the Clayton Act says that nothing In the antitrust anti-trust laws shall be construed to forbid the existence and operation of labor organizations, or "to forbid for-bid or restrain individual members mem-bers of such organizations from lawfully carrying cut the legitimate legiti-mate objects thereof." The Department of Justice bases Its present building trades investigation on the assertion that the res traint-of -trade operations It complains of do not "carry out the legitimate objects'" of trade unions and that tne members engaging en-gaging in them are not "lawfully" carrying them out in any case. The next clause of Section Six, however, adds r "Nor shall such organizations or the members thereof be held or construed to be illegal combinations combin-ations in restraint of trade unaer the anti-trust laws." CONFLICT OVER INTERPRETATION This, according: to the labor group, means that the anti-trust laws . Just don't apply -to labor unions no matter what they do or how. they do it. The department replies that this final clause doesn't refer to "the acts of the unions or their mem A WOMAN the guest foom; watched them take out her trunk end begin to hang dresses inside it. . - "One hundred and fifty miles. That's a long ride for you, Linda, all worried and upsets . . ." Mrs. King ventured. "I'm too jittery to drive all that way," Marcia said. "I know I'd plow into a truck, the way I feel. But Jimmy said if you decided to take the plane, he'd get away and drive you." r Jimmy. His name penetrated that queer, mental fog that enveloped en-veloped Linda. "What? What did you say, Marcia?" "I said Jimmy would drive you to Mobile.'-' "Won't won't you come, too?" Linda faltered. Mrs. King's lips pursed in thought. "You'd not be back before be-fore one in the morning, Marcia. Tonight there's the Captain's party for you. I I hardy see how you" . , "But Jimmy won't be there, either, Mother.". '"One of you must be present," her mother said gently. '.'We can't disrupt Mrs. Blair's plans. It would be unpardonable," She did not say so, but the conclusion hung in the air that if the illness had occurred in their own family, it would be different. "I can get a bus to Mobile," Linda whispered. "I can even take a taxi, if I must." . "Oh, , no, my dear. I merely meant that there was no need of both the prospective bride and groom being absent from a parly in their, honor! -Maybe it seems filly, to stand on ceremony, but the Captain. "...." -. Linda didn't want Jimmy Cooper Coo-per sitting beside her for, a hundred hun-dred and fifty miles. But she had to get to Daddy. She had to get to him swiftly. Nothing else mattered. mat-tered. From Mobile it would be overnight until she was home, beside be-side Daddy. Seeing him with her own eyes. Talking to the doctor. Assuring herself that ' the half-formed half-formed disquieting- fears in her heart were not true. People had heart attacks and didn't die. "For things like this, thank God for speed . . .''she thought. "Thank God for planes." If only men would use all their power, all their miraculous knowledge, fpr the good things. . . . And that brought her back, in the same endless circle, to Jimmy. He was a pilot. He flew planes every day. But his planes were devoted to war and the teaching; of war. Forbidden For-bidden for an errand of mercy. TTER things were packed, at last. An enlisted man took down the trunk, ready, tq, be strapped to the b-ck cf Harm's car. Yea bers, und that if it grants full immunity the preceding - cI.-.uj is unnecessary, .tiince there H an imblulty, It is proper to 1 itk cf the law and study its lc .' tive hietory. When this section of the Clayton Clay-ton act was before Centres a, the department continues, ita ors denied that it was intcnd':l to supply exemption from all angles of the anti-trust laws. Furthermore, Fur-thermore, it Js pointed out, rui amendment which woukl flatly have stated that nothing in the anti-trust laws should apply ta any labor organization was vote i down. llnce it is nrgued that the intent of Congress was to provide a very limited exemption. iwnoit Pitori:crr:i) AGAINST DISSOLUTION What that exemption wa.i intended in-tended to provide, the department depart-ment spokesmen continue, wits simply protection h gainst outright out-right dissolution of a labor union by court order. The famous Standard Oil case, in which a federal court had ordered or-dered Standard Oil dissolved under un-der the anti-trust laws, was then fresh in the public memory, and Samuel Gompers was fearful that some court might some day order a similar dissolution of a labor union. That, the department holds, was all this section of the Clayton act was supposed to prevent. pre-vent. Obviously, there is a good deal of debatable ground here which won't be cleared up until the Supreme Su-preme Court has ruled. The fate of the department's present campaign, cam-paign, then, as far as it applies to the building trades unions, won't be settled until some test case or other has been taken to the high court for decision. Cranium Crackers PICKING OPERAS If you know your, operas, this little qulb will be a walkaway. All you need to do ia to undeillne the correct operatic title in each group below. Only one title in correct in each group and be, careful. j 1. Barbara de Veal,- Barbarous: Sawmill. Barber of Seville, Barber, Bar-ber, of the Villa. 2. Fencing Master, Fancy Ml-! ter, Frenzied Jester, Dancing Mas-, ter. 3. Bride of the Golden V."( t 1 Bride of Lammermoor, Bridge o!: San Luis Itey, Bright Stardust. 4. Women of the Bard, Domain of the Guard, Yeoman of th Guard, Changing of the Guard 5. Tryting in Liaoldy. Tristan and Isolde, Titan and Goldyj Twisting of Isolde. j Answer on Pa;e Six I BY BETTY WALLACE COPYRIGHT. 1839, NEA SERVICC. INC. can't take that by plane. I'll tend it to the express ofllce myself, after aft-er you've gone," Marcia said. It seemed ages before Jimmy came. At last he was there. Quiet, controlled, his eyes betraying no memory of the blow the had given him last night. Marcia collared him, talked in swift, low r-en-tences. L'nda .pressed a handkerchief handker-chief to her lips, and said shakily. "Goodby, Mrs. King. I I don t know how to, thank you." "Goodby, Linda. I hope you'll find your father ever so much Letter Let-ter than you expect." "Oh, darling, I'm so $orry this had to happen!" Marcia was frankly weeping. "If it's only a false alarm und I hope it for your sake and your dad's como back for the wedding! Linda, I'd even postpone it, if you cotdJ come later." Linda tried to rmile. "Be happy, Marcia." "Jimmy, drive carefully, rwet t." Marcia ftood on tiptoe, hrr face lifted for his khs. Linda turned away. Tho familiarity, the po?:f ;iv e-ness e-ness of that kiss burned into her eyes even though she hadn't teeti it. And the though that tho mut be a monster to be thinking about this, while Daddy was lying ill at home. The last handwaving?, the lat goodbys, were foon over. Jimmy Cooper and Linda Storm were alone in the little car. He ra!.l nothing for a long time. It wan only when Pensacola was Lehir.J thrm, and the white ribbon of tbo rodd ahead, that he told her, "I'm dreadfully rorry." That was all. Curiously, it w-.n enough. A current of t ti eii-;!i seemed to How from him to her. Her lips quivered, but j.he : i steadily, "It was awfully kind cf you to undertake this long rfiive," "You know I whh I toul l C more." And there it was Hain, r...'. ' i and throbbing between them. The tame emotion, the tsmc compelling compel-ling urge, the fame Jsopclctr, feeling feel-ing of love and despair. The girl tct her lips. She i ; 1 not look at hii One hur.dit i and fifty miles. Three hours, least. Three hours or more of being be-ing alone, of having this thir r beating its wings like a caged Liri against their hearts. Throf l.cu: r, of knowing that he was be.side h r his strength and his love and t! c longing that racked him. "It's little enough to have, cut of a life time," she thought qucer-1 qucer-1 Lvut the vus afraid, too. Afr;. ' I because fitting Lci-ic'e him v: i driving the thourht of her f..t'.- r out of her mind. Afraid bcer.i--- in three hours, crjy thing inir.:-.: happen. |