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The Journal News from White Plains, New York • Page 4

Publication:
The Journal Newsi
Location:
White Plains, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE ROCKLAND COUNTY JOURNAL-NFVS nyack, n. Saturday, april io. 1954 ready threads a narrow path along the base SPOILS OF VICTORY LOOKING AT LIFE By Eric Brandeis These Days By George Sokoliky to put a wide highway there much of an undertaking with affecting the community. -X- -X- -X- Women's Ages Ftobilahed cxcvrt Sundays Landrocs Publishing Corporation, four-mile difference in mileage is an Driven will look at a map going over and then down; why the road disigners didn't shortest distance between two see other roads on the map 1 tht ta trli tm am In, Ko trl If tu 1 In In wh yw Uh th re of VO' I KM tlx In nW ho, du St Is Ct'i direct, even if they aren't they'll take a chance; where-tiMn roads will miss a few dollars otherwise collect. Just don't forget turnpikes and thruways are out dollar they can get and they leaks; they have debts to to think about, and extensions They're thinking in terms the toll collected for every -X- -X- -X- of the cliff and also is very out seriously and hnltflivi by the HudJuo Avenue, and object to they'll wonder We do say Tlie important item.

follow the points; they'll that look more turnpikes, and the toll they would these after every don't want any pay, maintenance to plan. of drivers and mile. So it's no been given the board in course for this states. No he has already that's mutually will be know very well, the specifications the plan is not it will the course as there will no familiar struggle plan for crossovers MY NEW YORK simple assignment that has county engineer and planning directing them to dope out the connection between the two doubt if Mr. Hall can or if figure out something satisfactory, everyone concerned everlastingly grateful.

We though, that if he meets set by the supervisors and satisfactory to the road authorities be the latter who will set they see fit. In that eventj doubt be a recurrence of the to get modifications of the and so on. I Serious About Art Sjmck. New lor. JURLES J.

HJLRDI, JR. PrestJent 8. MILLER Business M.nr N. ft. BAKER tailor MastMT Audit Burma Clreulstlnas (ABC), Central press and the International News Sepriee.

Xered at Nr PneWflee second clan mttr. Sutwnpuoti ret 35 rr month, 1-3 JO per ex snail; nio par moota, flsOO per year by carrier. More opla OS THX JOC'RNAX NEWS sola In Roufciaad Cuntj dtlly than all the week'j papen cuoUum4 MU weekly. Katiooal A4TerUtni Representatives: DeUaaer. Int.

East 4U Street. New York; ZJ5 NorLO Michigan annua, Qucafo. btrtno valley una or e-ua KXACK 7 MX) HAVERSTRAW -IU0O SATURDAY, APRIL 10, 1954 Naive Thought With all due reject to the good intention of the supervisors in directing the county engineer and planning board to figure out a proper course for connection between the New York State Thruway and the New Jersey Turnpike, we hardly expect the result to be eminently satisfactory to cither of the road authorities. It would have been much more to the point to direct the county engineer to put his services at the disposal of the authorities and to press vigorously at all times for a route which will least damage Rockland County properties. -X- -X- -X- Wa don't know, and It could he.

that County Engineer Nelson W. Hall ha figured out a route, using hi familiarity with the area aa a twain for his reasoning, which will mfft the ie-riflcatlons of tho authorities and cauw the leust m-al property lout. Ilea an ahle engineer ad riMwl builder with lung experience, on the Job and it wouldn't he surprising If he did hate an Idea which could ho worked out Niiceeufcfiilly. It would be wonderful If he could come up with proper answer; Uiat would save the road 011-thorltiiw trouble and at the same time reduce local complaint to a minimum. -X- -X- -X- Local desire thus far has been to the effect that the connecting link should come up in the vicinity of Route 303 for a junction somewhere in the vicinity of the clover-leaf in West Nyack but objection to that has already been voiced.

The road authorities point out that a route going west from the Tappan Zee Bridge to Route 303 and then south would be four miles longer than a course going straight south or southwest from the bridge and angling over the hill to keep within the three percent grade limitation somehow. We're seeing at first hand the way the Thruway builders cut and blast and slash at the high points to fill and level the low spots so we're all ready to accept the fact that anything's possible in the way of construction these days. If engineers say the link can climb over the hill and still meet the grade requirement it's as good as done. The important thing, though, in the eyes of those who live between 9W and River Road, is a connecting link that doesn't chew dec-ply into their properties. The railroad al it's advisable to have the; Motor Vehicles Commissioner Charles F.

Kelly certainly picked up a red-hot poker by the wrong end when he refused 5000 women of Connecticut their drivers' licenses because they refused to give their right ages on their applications. The commissioner Is a married man. He ought to know women by; now. When a woman says "over; 21," that's ths best that can be; expected of her. No man of discernment will ever ask her to say more.

The commissioner should also know by now that eternal youth is every woman's privilege. If tt were not so, why would dress and cosmetic manufacturers spend millions of dollars a year to advertise their products to them? Why would almost every newspaper in America run women's pages with beauty advice, fashion articles, and all the other Kerns that show a woman how not ever to grow any older than "over A number of readers have writ ten me to say that I canfthink much of women, because I am "always knocking them." One reader, who met my wife in Florida, expressed her astonishment that she "is such a nice woman." She had expected to see an ugly, mean, nagging old hag from the way I have written about her. I want to say right here that I both love women in general and my wife in particular. I asked her whether it was true that I write about her as if she were "an old hag," "Not exactly," replied the mate, "but you are a little bit condescending when you write about women." I suppose that attitude of condescension exists in almost every man. Frankly, we don't like it that women are getting closer and closer to ourselves in their activities and achievements.

They have made us run so much harder for success, and we men! are sort of running out of wind. If we don't look out, pretty soonj they will be our superiors and we! will be the weaker sex. The peculiar thing about women is that they are trying and succeeding to combine all their feminine wiles with our male virtues. Take three stories in one day's lAFF A tan. iik rtATtisn syndicats, wotts "He'd have a lot more respect aod fare up papers.

One tells about a little 85-pound woman in Detroit holding back a driverless car rolling down her driveway to keep it from crashing a five-year-old neighbor boy. When it was all over, the woman busted out crying. A man wouldn't have done that. He would have acted more like Filippo Cardellini, of Rome, Italy, who threw a live hand rrent Cecilia Dorazzi. who had spurned nis love.

is in the hospital, he is in jan. Then there is the story about that woman up In Watertown, N.Y., who gave birth to her 20t child in 26 years. I understand that she took it very calmly, while her husband collapsed. Commissioner Kelly should go and see all the women who buy "Do It Yourself kits nowadays! And they don't buy them for their husbands but for themselves. We had a door that wouldn't close.

I tried fixing it but gave up in disgust. I was going to can in a carpenter. "Nothing doing," said my wife, 'TH do It myself." And, by golly, she did. Why should she have to give her right age? FACTOQUI2 ANSWERS Madison Lincoln, Jefferson City, and Jackson, Miss. 2.

Atomic Energy Commission. 3. No it is a small bird. 4. Impossible it weighs one ton.

5. From France, Spain and Mexico. 6. A group of unofficial advisers to President Andrew Jackson. 7.

No it is in Indiana on Lake Michigan. 8. Approximately l35th. 9. Oklahoma.

10. A sacred or private place. PICTURES ON DISPLAY Pictures of Ramapo Central District 1 schools will be part of a special display at the anniversary convocation of the University of the State of New York, according to word received this week tiy Supervising Principal Lester E. Rounds. The pictures of Ramapo buildings have been blown up to 4 by 6 foot proportions and are used as part of the murals in the corridors of the first floor of the State Education Building.

DAY ucsn usnvxa for ya if you'd come down to him." Yesterday's iww 36. Bone (ana'. I 39. Capital of Bashkir re public 41. Hail! 33, Salt (chem.) 42Bywayof county engineer and the planning board of which he is a member confer actively with the two slates 'n any conversations there may be as to the connecting road.

We know, too, that they would press for full protection of local property interests and contest vigorously against a route which would affect adversely the locality through which it passes. Grand View has already gone on record against a course which would practically take away the hillside and other sections will no doubt follow suit. The best that anyone can hope for is a link which will draw the minimum of opposition and yet goes in a fairly straight line. Maybe there'll even be a collision with the guided missile site proposal which is under fire in Orangetown as affecting a proposed I I I I I industrial center location. It would be almost amusing if a connecting link were designed which met with approval as far south as Orangeburg and then interfered seriously with the proposed industrial development.

And don't forget that a main highway does Guatemala and Coffee Jacobo Arbenz. president of Guatemala, the first "People's Republic" to have been established on ie American continents, has had this to say about coffee: "Exports of coffee for the 1952- 53 season amounted to 1,237.894 quintals (one quintal equals 101.3 pounds). The United States took 85.20 percent of this. The higher prices wiil benefit the sea son in particular. Figures for it are not yet available.

"It is absolutely clear that the rue in coffee prices has been due to economic law that operate in dependently of the will of man. A forced cut in consumption, or a decree on prices, could not bring about lower-priced coffee. From the economic or political viewpoint, it is even more Impassible to justify a boycott directed exclusively against Guatemalan coffee. For some years to come there will be a sure market throughout the world for coffee. Guatemala is in sured of a good position In regard to coffee.

Nevertheless, diversification of crops is part of the agrarian reform. This statement Is interesting be cause of the curious use of Marxi an terminology in the second para- raph and the evidence that the continuance of this "People's Re public" and its possible (or even probable) emergence as a Soviet satellite is dependent upon the sup port of its economy by the United States. Free Right The United States, as a government, only purchases coffee for its own use in comparatively small quantities for its armed veterans hospitals, etc. The gov-j ernment of the United States does; not purchase coffee for its citiz-i ens. We have not yet been reduced to barter so prevalent In dealing among the satellite countries and in the trade between Soviet Russia and some nations.

Therefore when 85.20 percent of a country's export of any product is taken by American citizens, they enjoy the free right to use or to re fuse to use this product. I am free: to drink Guatemalan, Colombian, Haitian, or Hawaiian coffee or none at all. In a word, what any American does about his food and drink is personal and individual and if as a free citizen, read a label on a can to make sure that there is no Guatemalan coffee therein, it is strictly my business and the government cannot force me to poison my conscience any more than my alimentary system. Therefore when the Marxian concept of historical materialism is applied to a man drinking coffee by such a pivrase as "due to economic laws that operate independently of the will of man," I smell not coffee but Marxism. Is an economic law a revelation from heav en? Is an economic law a law of nature? Even laws of nature are not altogether independent of the will of man.

as. for instance, hybridization in agriculture, breeding in animals, or the experiments in atomic fission and hydro-nuclear fusion. The will, of man often transcends the so-called laws of nature, thus proving the correctness of Thomas Aquinas over the errors of Karl Marx. Fatalistic Concept Marxism orthodoxly accepts the fatalistic, concept of inevitability tiie general assumption that man; is a product of his environment rather than the result of an act of God by creation. Free will is a Judaic-Christian concept; the rigid enslavement of man to his environment is a Marxist concept.

"Inevitability" has been overcome by man since he learned to make fire. The Communist party In every country goes In for what it calls, agrarian reform. It will be remembered that some Americans spoke of the Chinese Communists as agrarian reformers. Even in the United States, the Communists have developed program of agrarian reform much of which has appeared in the program of the Farmers Union. The concept of agrarian reform is that if the land of a country can be socialized, the country will ultimately become socialized.

In Russia, at the moment of the 1917 Revolution, the nationalization of land was not difficult, except in the Ukraine where it waa necessary to kill and starve the peasants to succeed in introducing agrarian reforms. While it is true that the ownership of land sometimes results in human slavery, the agrarian reform phases of Marxism are aimed not at the improvement of the lot of free farmers, but at government ownership of land and government of its product. In some respects it is a revival of feudalism. COMING EVENTS- Apr. 11 Annual hiker's service.

St. John's-in-the-vllrierness, followed by reception In the Old Barn, service at 3 p. m. ffo.Mi fhmsxm. D)BAfZ WOOD Director a BAnd-ad tAHKATa.

MINN. KEAF? AJOA'A- iiA hospital a PUce wHEee RUN-D6WM CLOCKS WiO OBIS n't go dodging in and out between trees. -X- -X- -X- llowpver. nut has been put on the flat Iron for cracking and we can hope there will he the dealred meat extracted. He know very well, though, that neither Kockland County nor any other county I going to tell the states of New York and New Jeraey that here's where the connecting link will go and nowhere else.

That's being naive. i HEARD and SEEN By Frank Ernest The Wagging Tongue By Mel Heimer ins gave annual concerts at the Rilz. Writing for the current album, Francis Robinson, assistant manager of the Metropolitan Opera, says tiiat tins yearly recital was "a private ceremoniai for the select few her stubbornly loyal circle of clubwomen and the ad-; venturous cognoscenti." Helen Hok-i inson, the ill-fated and wonderful; delineator of the clubwomen, was an ardent Jenkins fan. Her costumes were classics, particularly the one with wings, that! ornamented her rendition (a fit-1 tine word) of her own song, "Like a Rird. I am Ringing, Like a Bird! Like a Bird!" When she sang "Clavelitos," she appeared in Span-1 ish shawl, with jeweled comb and; red rose in her hair, and flung; tiny red flowers from a basket to; the audience.

"On one occasion," says Robinson, "the basket, In moment cf confusion, followed the; little blossoms into the It, too was received with spirit." In 1944. she took the big step' and hired Carnegie Hall. The house! was sold out two weeks before the1 recital and more than 100 floral? offerings arrived. While Mme. Jenkins' heroic young accompanist, Cosme McMoon (Co me- struggled to keep up with her (he had his troubles; once one of her wings collapsed and he had to stop' until repairs were made), she flew! blithely through a series of misinterpretations of the masters.

At the end, she gave Cosme a solid gold medal, presumably for valor. A critic said she gave listen-! ers "more of a kick than the same; amount invesred in tequila, vodka or marijuana." I Jenkins aficionados still remem-l her how she was involved in taxieato cra.sh late in 1013 and; suddenly discovered she could sing! a higher, or rounder. than be-; fore. She sent a box of cigars to the cab driver in gratitude. She died a month after the Car-' negie Hall concert some say of i a broken heart, because the hoots! and hysterical jeers had grown too! loud for her.

Robinson in-; sisls gravely. "Midame Jenkins died fu'l of years and, it is safe to say, with a happy heart." in Review against a "go-for-broke" gamble in Indo-China. On Capitol Kill, Dulles, a man who seldom uses toid Congressmen that Red China's muscling-in in Indo-China already is "ominous." He said, for instance, that Peiping's own gunners are operating tne new radar-controlled anti-aircraft weapons the Reds are u.Jing near Dienbicnphu. Little things sometimes tell a lot. Dune.

Princeton '08, Is a strict grammarian. But he lapsed for an instant when a Congressman asked him if the Red 'Chinese were not commuting the direct aggression which, they have been warned, produce V. S. retaliation against their own mainland. The secretary said wearily; "They're coming awful close to it." The transcript was correct to read "awfully." But the people who heard him said "awful" was what he said, Meanwhile, those horrible mid-century firecrackers, the hydrogen bombs, continued their monstrous boom of possible doom.

Another hell-bomb, third in the present series was triggered off. It might have been tho biggest one of Ike said tiie force and fury of: the H-bomb tests in the Pacific; have proved ono thing, anyway.1 The U.S. doesn't need to make' those obliteration weapon any; bigger, because they're already big! enough to wipe out any military; target, anywhere. Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Lew Strauss, a man who: has seen the H-bomb in knows what it can do, and who' has warned that it could make a junk heap out of New York or any other metropolis, added a heartening footnote. He told Senators the IT.

S. in-! tends to increase its H-bomb su-i penority over the Russians be- cause the joint chiefs of st.iff be-: that, to be the best way to keep the Soviets in their own' iron-curtained back yard. In offect, Strauss remarked to lawmakers who hold the nation's pursestrlngs: "Just give us the funds, boys. We'll do the est." Sen. Joseph R.

McCarthy made news, as usual. Joe had a number of caustic things to siv, In a TV film, about Edward R. Morrow, a celebrated newsman who last month was equally acid in his ap praisal of the Senatoi's rough-and-fContinued on Pag Seven) they are standing still, they rt ally bring In the image. They stand still much more than when they are moving. NEW YORK The long-playing: phonograph record album that, came across my desk was pink and beige and black and looked pcr-l fectiy respectable; It might have contained something by Rise Stev-j ens or Toscanini.

However, there was no mistaking the picture on' the cover. The only coloratura so-, prano who ever dared wear wings when she gave a recital was, ol; course, Florence Foster Jenkins. Madams Jenkins is dead now these ten years but still there ara around town many young old-j timers as Ed Durling puts it, whoj remember her wistfully and nos-, talgically. She was easily as much; a part of New York, in her day, as; Jimmy Walker or Clayton, Jack-j son and Durante. A skillful writ-' ter named Irving Johnson, his soul' long since sold to the advertising fleshpots, once said of her: "In Florence Foster Jenkins' bright lexicon of age, a ripe tomato was' an orchid and the faintest hiss a roar of applause." To this day, no one can aay fori certain whether Mme.

Jenkins was as naively shall we say lousy? as an artist as she seemed, or whether she was pulling everyone's leg. The odds Indicate she was serious about her art. About the! ouly true test one can make is a' comparison with the current singer; named Anna Russell (whose best-selling' album was so aptly titled "Anna Russel Rings? nnother off-! key lark. Miss Russell ia pulling everyone's leg. and her popularity is considerably less than that of1 Mme.

Jenkins. It would seem that the old girl climbed to fame with a kind of sincere wretchedness. Financially Independent, Mme. Jenkins was founder and president: of the Verdi Club, at whose musi-j cales she first spread her famous; wings. It was not.

until she was 63. however that would be about 1931 that she gave hor first full-; length concert at the Ritz-Carlton. The critics fell off their chairs. I One dazed reviewer said her voice was akin to "wild wallowings in descending trills." Another writer said her staccato notes, repeated over and over, reminded him of a cuckoo in his cups. I For years thereafter, Mme Jenk-I The Week By JAMES LEE WASHINGTON, April 10 (INS) The voice of the man from Abilene was heard In the tend thisi week.

President Eisenhower spoke out; in a time of tension when the ugly; word "war" was being whispered in America again because the Red tide of Communist conquest; threatened to drown another free; region I.ulo-Cliina. Ike's man-to-man Kansas accent had a reassuring sound. Ike's familiar image on millions of Tv screens was a calm and friendly tiling to see. He had many things to Including something for the men' in the Kremlin. i If, he said, Russia's rulers start an atomic war "in a fit of madness or through miscalculation," they can pretty well count on winding! up like Mussolini, hanging by his; heels from a lamp-post, or like a trapped rat.

The President said something else which may not be quoted in the history books, but which should' make any citizen of the United States 100 percent jitter-proof. It was "America is the; greatest force that God ha ever; allowed to exist on his As such, it is up to us to lead this world to a peaceful and secure ex-' istence, and I assure you we can do it." A couple of days later. Ike told! his news conference why the Com-! munists must not be allowed vie-; tory in Indo-China, a green and steaming piece of real estate where brave Frenchmen and natives have' been locked in jungle combat with the Rcda almost since the end of World War II. The President said it was like dominoes. When you stand up a line of dommoos and push over the first one.

you don't know how-many will fall. So. he reasoned, if Indo-China fell, the next domino to topple, un-. der the Red hand might be. lor instance, Burma, and so on down the line to Australia.

New the Philippines all of the free world's great bulwarks in Asia. The situation of which Ike spoke made Secretary of State John Foster Dulles just about the busiest man on earth. In advance of this month's conference with Russia and Red China at that lovely city on the shores of a shining lake, Geneva. Dulles labored build a common.1 "united action' ront so strong the; Chinese Communists will decide i But the tongues don't. I know people who cap hours on end who relinquish it tor a couple or seconds to let a question that, the "parnkeet-tongued" spouter-offer couldn't aruuver In a thousand person says "I don't know" off the other person by turning DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS DOWN 20.

Indefi. 1. Talk 1. Fottow rule 8. Measure 2.

Head 22. Inter-of land cowering nwh- 9. Circle 3. A wing ate of light 4. Russian i law) 10.

Midday author 35. Vast 11. Deadly 5. Wild ox region 12. Spanish Celebes card game 6.

Comrade AJnca M. Like 7. Steal 28. Contain. 15.

Exchange, 8 Foe ing no as goods 11. Distant fluid 17. Greek letter 13. Reddish 27. House- 18.

Public 16. Skin tumor holds esteem 19. An animal 29. Abyss 21. Among of the 32.

Fish to more yakltteyak," teacher who told the Lions Club girl who could read 1.SO0 words a proud of his job. But, if he has talk 1.800 words a minute, he around to the famous New York he can get earp'jgs. us must keep them' In solid, otherwise of luck. Grab Bag ture the floor very reluctantly and then brushes occur by chance; for egg -head ask a years. The yakltteyak the conversation The school that he had a minute should be someone who can should follow me sleep shop, where And both of we'll be out The IT 1790 Vnited by Congress.

Matthew Calhra'th between the United took Odessa On Sunday. American statesman World War II, the the Elbe Klver Conserve your and avoid changes. be noted In today's be above average. For Sunday, methods your may have an ITanre Perkins, Clare Booth Luce, and former list today. On Sunday, greetings to Paul Barney MrCosky As sure as Rod of affliction, Charles Haddon WATCH HAPPEN HrrEXEI TODAY States patent system established 1794 Birth date of Commodore Perry, who made first treaty States and Japan.

1M4 Russians from Germans In World War II. Apr. 11: 1794 Edward Everett. and orator, born. 19-15 In United States Ninth Army reached In a 50-mlle surge.

TOl'R FtTCRE resources in the months ahead, A highly strung Individual may child, intellectual power may Apr. 11: If you employ original business should prosper. Today's child exaggerated sense of filial duty. I waj Interested in a talk given before the Lions Club of Nyack recently hy an instructor In one of the high schools In Rockland County on how ths eyes react to this and that. What the lecture led up to was the subject of reading.

I'll skip all the, things about eyes moving here and there arid yon and how ths eye in motion doesn't do anything and how tt pick up from 'here to there while it is functioning normally. And then there are ths readers. Some are slow and soma are quick on ths draw. Those who fall a little behind ths ot litre In the speed in which their eyes catch the words can be brought up to date by corrective studies. I understand that there Is one high school pupil who can attain a speed of 1.800 words a minute and then can come up to a special test and tell what the subject matter of the reading was.

And It would be a very exacting test, too. I'm a reader, myself, but I don't rush over what I am reading. And sometimes I couldn't answer specific questions about the storlca because, perhaps, I have been more Intent on being entertained than In being educated. Therefore, at 1,800 words a minute, I think I probably would flunk the teacher's course In the explanation of what I hnd read. What Is bothering me is whether there arc courses In the schools today that parallel the reading and ths eye setups.

I mean, in particular is there any comparison between the eyes and the tongue. The Nyack Lions Club learned that there are two eyes and unless there is something screwy about the setup, they work In harmony. I guess that works out, too, for google-eyed people. Movies aent to the far reaches of the universe will show people there how other people react to eye tests. I suppose it Is entirely different with the tongue but some defects there can be overcome by corrective speech courses.

Wagging Tongue So, maybe I should go into this thing a little bit, seeing that I have been exposed over several hours to a tongue that is hitched In the middle and waggles both ways. Words flow out over both ends of the mouth. They come out ceaselessly. And, in an exacting test, I doubt whether the person who utters theee words nay, almost shouts them could tell whether the 1,800 or more words that slop over the Hps in a minute or It might be even more, or anybody listening in on the monologue into which nobody can break gracefully, could give any Idea of the conversation. It seems to me that these people whose tongues nan overtime and leave no time for reading should have some sort of instructions on how to control the urge to blab.

Fortunately, there aren't too many of them. But there are some who wake up in the morning and are very happy people. They look out to see what kind of weather is going on outside. They don't give a whoop about what the other members of their families are doing. They Just want to talk and talk and keep it up until they go to bed at night.

Even eating doesn't halt the moving of the tongue. Chewing the fat with a mouthful of food Is one way to keep mandibles going through tho waking hours. Bagree that the eyes ars of outstanding Importance. I never realized before that, when they are moving, they don't have much function. When 23.

Soon 24. Require 25. Covered with sand 27. Little miss 28. Wavy Hcr.) 29.

Mexican laborer 30. Unable to hear 31. U. S. painter 34.

Land-measure 35. Particle 37. Masurium (sym.) 3S. Part of speech (pt) 40. Small mallet 43.

African bow-string hemp (pi. I 44. Wicked 45. Child's name for daddy 46. Chair Himalayas so 36 9 7' a sa.

a AO 41 A3. 1 1 nil HATTY BIRTHDAY former secretnrv InSnr' U. S. ambassador to Italy, playwright congresewoman, are on our birthday Apr. 11.

we send happy hirthdav Douglas, actor; Sam Chapman, and Jim Hearn of baseball fame. ITS BEEN SATO puts His children Into the furnace He will be with them In It. Spurgeon. TOUR LANOIAGE (HAP-en) verb intransitive; to DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Here's how to work It: AXYDLBAAXR is LONGFELLOW One letter simply stands for another. In this example A is used for the three L's, for the two O's.

etc. Single letters, aposs-trophies, the rength and formation of the words are all hints Each day the code letters are different. A Cryptogram Quotation to come to pans: befall; to come ny cnance. Origin: Medieval t-nghsh Happenen Hapnen. LAZQZ NAZ SZZ RJOBR, RJOB GM OYLRVGU'R N.A ATCH YOl'R LANGUAGE flAPrtnvi t- VGZ RAEBZRUZEQZ.

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE DESERT i.KADS, LIKE THE ROUND OCEAN GIRDLED WITH Tli SKY SOUTHEY. lecture, a waterspout often carved grotesquely, pro-j jecting at thj upper part of a building, usually from the roof er. Origin: Old French Gargouille. Irom Latin Gurgulio, gullet, windpipe..

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