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The New York Times from New York, New York • Page 35

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New York, New York
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35
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GAY SpciaiXiftthe National Capital Takes Peace--5ome- Current Events rJTH th feimfnc or tfeearal. Uca, Washtnstoa put weelf an a peace baala quit retard. Ihi of International nrt. peace parleys, with the result with a closed White House efflclal irKimiB ot what old AMi Pt 8tt functions, the capital la bavin the cayeat fgur of a decada. jm elnee th Tart Administration, wV mrybody danced, rrom th Prl.

jdt and ta 6peak.tr at th House to a sjMshipman from Annapolis and 4t from West Point, horn for a brief ltlAtT, nea the city teen so cy. One Itpltnat haa spoken of dinner partlea' icapast." The succession of dtbstaot leu, am all dances, and cotUllooa, jdreamed of two montha ajo, la. now satttss. Tat. despite an evidence ex-tprscance In the matter of dress, there hi still eeneeraaUTenees In food, which one of.

the leaaona the war taught ua. AltheuKh dinner partlea of forty and 4 Wr covtra art ao usual aa to pas, al- ejeat unnoticed, and each new candidate ft? aortal heaora baa had her time-hon ertd tea aa a debi. dinners and tea era marked hy a lew elaborate display af flower, food, and favora than, beforo the war. 'V --V yew Waahlnatonlana of today are na tires of the Dlatrtct of Columbia. Soel-ety la constantly recruited from every tint at the compass merge Into the layetlea of thla Victory Xftbu.

taatte who Inherit their claim to polite attention through five and alx e-enera-tieu af Dlatrtct amDiea and debutantaa who never saw the dome of the Capitol or portico of the White House vntn tare jnontha aro are Uvtdln honora amicably, not only- with each other, hut with vtattln UBnttarlea of International u-iocb ana wiyj the Vic President, wb. In the absence the Chief Executive, tnay be retarded aa the Chief Per. oaa. There are no political Unea in enterlAaijtax XTr.n k. Vice President and hU wife are called oy tn great Body pf thq capital's Vaaity Pair.

Th Ladles off th Senate." an or. ranlsatton of Senators' wives, continues it war work activities tn. i.AmA dera with Mrs. Philander C- Knox of x-ennrtytvania and Mrs. AUee Pomerea of Ohio as the active alda of the Vice Prealdeafs wife, but there (s no doubt that the work Is aeeondary In Waahln.

ton nowadaj Play the order of the day. scores of women aro still devoting- themselvas to canteen work, to claaawa In reconstruction, and tn nrk amona; the wounded Who are oomlnr Into waarunaTton uteraUy by the carloads, theao ladles In' uniform, either 'of th motor corps on the refreshment tff ar rhanHmr their clothes three times ana nndln me to participate 4n th revived diversions of peace time. Not only has. the femlnlno uniform, except in rare Jnatancea, given place to th tailored suit and. demMoflet.

with fashionable tnodlete working- over um nu order for. evening- frocka. but Jewels that were placed In safe da poalt vaulu are emerging, into the day. WHY WOMEN SEEK SIX SPECIAL LAWS Leaders of Joint Legislative Conference Explain Conditions Which They Think Kequire iNew 5tate Legislation TWD KEYS YORK TDJE3. GmmAV.

light, as aa th subdued, yrgxllght "wjpemwa CUner table. The Russian Ball days ago marked the return of the tiara, the diamond dog collar, and the rooea of trl. v. ntlrely out of place in wartime, Many wn s-ueaia- adopted the JCa-koachnlk, orlglnaUy Istroduood la Wash. Ington Mm.

Oeorge Bakhmyteff when, her huabanxj was the Ambassador tate ar. Kakoachnlka tram a. eornet af biVm. fram. aem plctur of th 14 Hgtm to nwiv-tavQ naMs or aiampnd and pearls.

"WhO effort haa ka Cabinet Day again on th social caJea. oar. in ract that Mra. MarahaU and Mr. Champ.

CUi hav aaoeuaoad at homes for Wdneadav ft.ra.. haa gon a tonar wa loWmi Uahing th eustea of official hotaa'J rwmvmg visitora without formal tavtbv Uon. A secant occasion faUyr repraseata wv er waanington en 4 peaea footing was th rWoapUe of Mrs. PhUaador Knox and Hiram W. ahaoa Joint hosteases at th Kx horn a Strt.

Ka twda issuad- fer th recaption, but ta compaay oauld hardly av ba' mora rraentatlYa af ffl. elal. Waahlagtost. Thaaa who earn ta-, r2dd th Chlaf JaaUc of thi.Ualted iilataa. aeveral Asaoclat Juatkw.

prao. tteally the entire Senatorial circle, dtp. kentta, an offloera at the army and -r-v. -A dosea ar mr daughters of prom, aont famlliea. having had tauatiea 9f omitting school or coliega If the war eoatlnaad.auddaly daeld4 to com out thla Winter with all th ald-ttm nutter ot flowers, and a truly grewn-up gowag for arery oor.

aloiw Th lur of th most Joyous play season of a generation could got be HOW INDIAN CHIEF HELPED UNCLE SAM Awarkaa Indian wha has ink." ably don more than any other cf 1 hla rao ta bring th war to s---aful cencluaW iwtsiraad rcntly New York. remain ahort Mm Ve. for going back to his 'horn on ths Yakama, Bservatioa in Ha la Chief Btroagheart. son of Chief Hu. ning Running Elk waa' scout far General O.

IX Howard tKJ war aina aid Colonel Rooaetalt In th Bpanlah. American war: and fctringhaart, when a child. Vaa "carried, about on th back at Ue xformr Praaldeat. His. graaf.

father 'was hWf Bunding Rek. wno took part ta QueUr taat and wha died at eg of log year. Between' July and lit. Chief Strongheart vtalted ilt military posts camps la this "country and Utrat4 the woldiera with his talk. 21 told them of th life of the Indiana froni er41 th and had pictured for th battle the Indiana fought He trUd to onltat an ay Unea during th war.

but was rejected each im b. aua of 'a wound that ho received In His Iegv He had been th. 1.. bandof Indian scouts la th serrloe ot th UnH4 SUtoa in Mexico in 110. and tn at aaeouater wlUi gwgg of te I4ag.

cana was shot in the leg. Befar tk wound had ba lunirii v. j.m to kming two of the and taking aevea prtaoner. Clnoe It waa ixntoaanu rv hU country on th Fj-va pe. atreagnean raU4 that he oould.

vnhlea do KU alt. He. therefore, toured th 1M fer recnuu for th army. After an address ta frowt af tbe Mw T.rk PubU Library ec aft moon. C3 men emuted.

la ether pan thu Ule, and New Jeraer and Maaaa-chuaetU about toa aner Jm4 the eol. ora. UUr traveled trm Mfrm Terh to th Weatern apeaklng 1a an the large cities for th Liberty Loan and Waa- Savtag gtamp drive. la aQ-hVa travel he waa clothed in hla native dreo aad war his feathered head-dross. On hla return ta Tor.

Caitf 8trongbaurt said that there were l.og Amsrioaa Indiana la Ue war, that moat of them need a It cited an tnataac -whar five ladlaaa a-abled th Amiioa to capture OXOOf prtsocMra. Be ala said that ta Indian war th ertrtnatora of wiirm that th rrench, realising what good avantaga had aa aa la th tndlaa wars. aAooted It JWhenawar tk went ta fight ta Aha wood. atghan xpiatn, uy palatad thtr bodies brawa ar gra and sketch figures of Mrds rr them, ag that thay blaad4 aaauy th cnery. v' -s in nyTOW that the women of New York ll 8Ute have ual nollUoal rlrht JLl with men.

why do they ask for apeclai laws for tho benefit of wemcgT Why has the Women's Joint Lrriia. tlva Oenference. oomptialng the six larg er women a organisation In the Stale, aernaxen to put through lhla session af the Legislature at Albany a program of alx bnia, all, fox the benefit of la InduatryT Why do they ask for. an elTK-hour day for women onlyT Why to they ak that women conductor ele-ntor operators, and office workers (vfth few exceptions) be not required ws alter 10 o'clock at night? Thea are queUon. which the Wo- wi Joint Legislative Conference and Iti repttKntattve New' York aad Al but ara being asked, pot 'only by legt.

Utora. by many persons not in touch with the of women in ihduatry. Ant vera to them have Juaf been lamed is the farm of atatementa by members of (he osBfenwee. which Includes the Womea'a Trade Union League, W. C.

the New Tork 8tate Suffrage Party, the CoatBmere' League of the city and State, and the New York League of Women Workers. Is the first place," according to Visa Jfary B. Dreter, Chairman of tba Wa aaea'a Joint Legislative Conference, "eqaal franchise haa'nat cmtni mhi imuntrtal conditions, either In the hours werg the 'amount in the nay en. yelope. Sine the women are laad.

aottely organised. Industrially they have ot sb able to obtain the better eondt enjoyed by the men. who have oh. them through the power of their aaor unions. "Political eaualltr does not aottrial equality unless Industry is regu.

ttted entlrclv bv lertxUtlnn i- lrtal organlsaUon la lacking leglala- urv reanaaiea must be applied. Th worklngmen have achieved jthe tlit-hour day to a great- extent, and the fact that' women are unorganised ad cagnot through industrial organk utloa demand the same working day a men baa resulted in their uodarbid-dlagtha men and being forced. Into unfair aoaaptuUon with men workers. The at-aour bill, therefore, alms to. remove thla unfair competition, and.

instead of (orclng women out of work and Wiig their chances 'for equal oppor-" tualty with th men. will prevent the JjerJng of standards which, th men have achieved and aid th woman to Jn oaual pay for equal work. working glrla themsalvea want They have' worked under tho a4itlon of no protection and made. PrVertion. and they have Indorsed "legislation heartily, work is wore for women than wr meg because women are 'the moth- (or the potential mothers) of th If aha works at night she does not but to prepare the Uat for bar family, get th chll-ea eft school and dear up the aouse, do the wai)l.

8dia for the family. The few Jiours' JJP that ahe able to snatch through aolsa and dUturbarrc of the day a to recoup her aad her rkae weU es her health ortt has a moral hazard for Jw women, as waa brought out fully astavestlgauon mad by a member of oooferanc. Miss Helen MoCormlck, at District Attorney of Kings 22- Ml McCormiek lavastlgatod conditions among the womoa trana-JJlao, workera and draw up at tho mnjr wom conduct ore th wJh iotecUon of women traps. Jatlon workers. amn In trans.

2 outcom of the tohouif thert froaT! woro ork anywhere 'g hne.rman, Proaident of M.000 working woman, saidi Jng women want these Igwg. I for th organlaed oaen throughout th state who ar Vbortr. day com only tha ntAn airtiw wAM aw w. rwaswvff 4. fOt HIVMWV4TV i biLl Jn araatar Industrial affl women want is competition between the sexes.

What labor has been suffering from is too much competition; women against men and children against wom(). Such competition lowers stand arda and injures all alike. The labor-lag people of this country, aa well aa of this State, are atandlng together for equal opportunity for. men and women, and for pay to be. 'based not on sex, but on the needs of llfe.for tho worker One of these bills which the women are sponsoring.

Is for th benefit of both men and women. This A the health insuraacO' bill. introduced by Senator Davenport, 'to' give the sick worker a weekly sum npt to exceed 8 Pr Per thla the Worker: says half, and hm mnlovr half, the state paying th running x- panaea, la a maternity banefU and a death benefit. Th cost to tha highest paid worker would. net mora man cents a weak, The minimum waere bill would create a commission of three, with mandatory powers to Inquire into th wage of those trade tn which women receive leas than' a living wage.

The office workers wu waa drawn up by the Bookkeepers. Stenographers and 'Accountants' 'Union. Its main purpose Is to bring these work-era under th protection of th health law of the State, which now affect only work. are la factories or mercantile establishments. It also prohibits night work for women office worker, except in professional office, such as' lawyers, doc tors, newspaper offices, jfcc Th eleva.

tor bill prohibits girls under 2) from working in this Industry, limit, th hours to nine per. day, prohlbita night work, and gives them one rest in aev'cn. it provide tor a. aegt in the elevator. i FOOD AND PREJUDICE.

Tha Relation Betwoan the' Two Tends to Inereaao Cost' of Living'. To a far rr eater extent than-wa ad mit, possibly ax aware of. man is governed oj aim prejudices. iney oosn him more than "know, tor a preju-dice la an expensive proposition, In other respect Is this weakness so' apparent aa in tho matter of Bur-Ins th Telra of tho Pood Administra tion many people were persuaded or beguiled into eating things they had never oaten beforo and thourht ther didn't uke. PU try anything one was regarded, a a liberal-minded concession to the unfamiliar.

Yet our llklnrs are aim oat universally a matter of habit es- tabiiahod by repetition, pew of us have taken kindly to cavlara. avocado neira or evn on first When th use of whal meat was urge upon, the 'pubjlo, peopl: laughed and Quoted, TU.balt4 his hook with ttirrs' tails. And sat on a rock and fished for whales. Whale meal 1 inircheafcla in but where la the steward or chtf brave enough to place It on a hotel mepuf Aa a matter Of fact, there la nothlso la tti slightest degree objectionable to ae. nose, or palate ia whale steak, gg those unprejudiced may quickly learn, It re.

embtag comed beef In appearanoa, talUa Uka fresh baef possibly a little lsas ao, gad brolM aad served with a aauoe, either drawn potter or a lemon, eauoe, is tasty enough for second ifclp. ing. pnoe 'w hay evercomd our 'dread of the untried. That this meat will evantually reeognlsed aa a food ad. Junct 1 indicated by two large cannor.

les doing a good business on the Pacific Coast and Ihe conceealons granted to the syndicate etipplying them. The flesh of the ah a ok la aaJdf to r. embl that of the sturgeon the fish, that "goee to the Caesar1 a dish," but its cannibalistic reputation, firmly fixed In the popular mlrfd, ta against it. Man's dread of the gastronomlaally un tried la only squalled by his curiosity, which, after, all, gets the better of hlg fear a Truly, he was a brav man who first wQwd a raw eytUr. lYeJudlc ptayslarc part In our food purchases.

Take the case of But. tarva. Oleomargarine-, Experts In the former have been know to fall In ability to diaUngulsh th two. yet wuou py fvr cenv more ror butter, than for the aubaUtuu. The Between 35th and 36th St.

384 Fifth Avenue NEW YORK. Telephone 2044 Greeley Salfe of iigjli (Siracle Mbit fcteoirdiiniaiiy 5-'conffnulngor, Ihe balance oJanaa'tg: Tf L.i v-i i. included aw; pmeral advertisement but not given special mention. These garments all reDresent our hinh upto-aate in style, and offer a wonderful opportunity for those desirini the best at moderate prices. vV i sow.

waa. i sable itooe ujoo i KRoinTtif i. 1 a V-n- r. arC cxasPcratin? beyend JL hot'outMr. Wcrdcn: "Why didn't vou keen Xfr Tmesdale Vrc? Ycu "lcnew" would be bick in ten.

minutes." Harry Sirhms gulped hard, and replied uHy, "I did try to keep him here, Mr. 3 I wea 4 4 Wcrden, but he. Wouldn't stav." 'Vhat? Wouldn't Uy even ten minutes? Why, yon cculd have kept him 'that long without his realizing it. Why didn't you talk to him about the weather, about peace, about 'the price 'of anyihintr; i This wasn't the first casing doyvn I had heard Simms Wet. had been with th firm for eight yean and' had reached the'.

a may be lure I ti-. aucr.iinj lectures. I v.er.t aft as cartrly as a I fnn ak, i pea- xr.e icea i -r-4 a Ulker what I. had all rr.v in the firn by I.as afraid to stard l-v and talk to I Irarr.cd how ld taU to a nurnber cf pcple'at the tarr.c lime. I learned hjw to rr.alc people listen to -every word I said.

I earned how. to thinji forcibly and I learned to lhtcn v.v:'-others, tilkecj. I learned how-to' sav -what I I learned wherV to be hunsorpui with telling- effect, and how tnawifi i jiwi-iyjpui ir.e wror time. 7 I point where he was as. much a fixture than these viul fur-.

around the offiee a. aual cxarnplet cf w. vwAAob 1 I a -aesaa a JHe.twas. a. slow-goine, steady olurAr.

earning a week. He managed to keep busy, in the Department Icecping records of salesmen's No one around tne? oltice seemed to nouce him. rrifBawr amw i wjnainon, i lound that there was-a knack in making reports to my superiors. found tbere was a right and wrong way to mike complaint- to answer complaints, to givelesmate. He was quiet that the only Uings that iXS wouU imt hin, talking were such momen- wiU antagonl2nh Ld ilt nil aairsiai si au i a.

a a a av ino ocginnjng ot tne war oanics lor a loan. cf course or. the end of the -Even when there were also lessons nn VTr, u.r.L fiiUJC oaoy wa Dorn, mrry said only, three' aavice cn hcj to.flr.d 1 a 'w I prejudice against gooda from storage helps bolster the cost of living. War it not for storage facilities buttarand eggs today would iuaurlea forth ver rich only. Th publlo was reently reliably Informed that- storage esia had proved fresher than fresh egga.

The rabbit VAIlM flivnlah 1mA mm If our rtnnl HW. rtiA mm .9 aj ss aeagga aaa iiionv vi me race. I mrm thins: thai M1? P-J-eal: atatw fliM in 1 f----s -oa VI um OIL 11 'A rfri ITraa TasaMi 1 WMINE WRAP EKMINECOAT. 1 K0UN5KT W)UP. i una "1 UltVW VMV 1 MINK I MINK COAT.

i uinv rmuiM I DIED MINK WRAP I CARACUt COAT-SaUe HauM I CARACUL 1 CARACU. WUP-Hoisaa Seel 1 CARACUL WRAP-, Hudaea SmI trbmae. a 1 1 CARACUL 15,000 too 1.I5I' 1.4SI 1.S54 Si, Ml S5 (2S $7300 2.000 U50 600 X500 1250 1000 1.750 1.650 1JK0 i 150 700 750 'l 950 975 a SWAUIJUL WRAr.l. ai 1 ALASKA SEAL C0AT-BWe Xfavk CalUr Ltd 1 ALASKA SEAL COAT-Skaak CM 1 MOLE WRAP-kaak tvMmSTL 1 MOLE COAT-Fra ti 1 MOLE CCUT-5kank iHaaamwJ. I MOLE COAT-Sdirl 45.

MOLE COAT-Eiawaa IrisasWg I MOLE ijj 1 MOLE WRAP-HmcW Seal 4 1 CARACUL WRAP-Skaak truaaaee 7j 1 CARACUL1 WRAP-Skujak 1 CARACUL SHORT DOLMAN Beaver trisa. 4tt I CARACUL SHORT DOLMAN $1,609 150 I. 730 600 630 650 605 700 37 1 too too 323 1 CARACUL 331 M75 aCEPTIONAL VALUES iN SILVliR NATURAL "BLUB XND CROSS FOXES RUSSIAN AND HUDSON BAY vr Hudson Seal Goits and NOW. issi- I HUDSON SEAL WRAP. (Dyed" Mink panel front collar, cuffs yoke) 1 HUDSON SEAL DOLMAN.

06 1 (Pn4 Mink I ItltsaaAas mm -f I nuuaun otAL DOLMAN Bearer iS9 1 HUDSON SEAL SS0 (DH Miak Catlar a C-JI.) 1 HUDSON SEAL 08 AWOer waiter awl'lleraar) 800 650 SOD i I HUDSON SEAL DOLMAN ItM (AoatraCaa Oaaasaja CoSr 1 HUDSON SEAL CAPE. SM (Bearer triauee!) 1 HUDSON SEAL COAT-Skank friinsa. 5 1 KC0ATMI kv 55 1 wuuiun 5AL SSI 1 HUDSON SEAL SHORT 45a (ieawar STWarasa) 300 700 600 660 750 575 A Urge asaoitment of less fcxreniive Hurlsnn 51 J't'1 io rariou. popular $60 up. v.

-V LadieV Cloth Coa6V fur lined and ftaT'triim jito Coato for Womenin varioua furi at remarkablei 1 RoWa full txzoin irVeat variety at-extreme reductidns, 1 'f Room and Library at 7 ffwm.lhU aalo aant wh apprtnral, O. D. or returriaVU far 3 384 Fifth Avenue NEW YORK 3Sthand3Gth Sts -1 Telephone I 2044 Grcclsy now-he bawled me out? 7i fneident marked' the turntnr Point cf mv.iiY hnade up my rnind that I was "going to 1 live down the niek'namr of that ad faiteVed' itself upon mV to-V. point where I Hardly spoke to my wife, I was jun afraid. I had almouVorgotten how.

to use Perha'n that way.because every time I opened my' they onlyfearr.ed the crindrlrt mouth I 'put my foot in it." I was alwj'v 'r being a connncin talker. flniihcd. I and thenhive to minutes nrLt1, trying to explain them. IWM- and tc Jw Ute aWand then have to. wn'" lJ a -we a V4 4 wordt VIt a bov." It watn't long before we nicknamed him "Silent.

Yet "Silent SimmV.V is now our Sales Manager, regarded as "one of the mmt brilliant men. in our organization, getting an annual salary that runs close to five figures; and is slited the How all this happened jn ao ahort a' time makes one of the most remarkable stories of success I have ever keirA let Harry tell the story as he told it to me when' Tasked hjra joint-blank what sort of mtgic he used in transforming himself. "Wdl' said Harry, "You remember when Mr: Trueidale came in that day and I i 7 rouia not noia nrm lor ten minutes until material for ulkmg and-tpeaklng. actuaj. rules on.

how to ulk to frier.dsto scryanL and even to children the whole tHr.g was! to ilmplc that a single evening I learned the prin- ciples that turned me into a very dynamo cl ambition. I believed that I had Aft lavt: Jound the road to Mastery of Speech. 1 began to apply the principles at ence, 1 to'get things doce. I beran to ntit a 1. ImI aiuu 1 into my letter, into my memoranda, into my talks "wi-jr customers, and with prcple'in' the ofHcc.

wiUi the CLIc: I nearly floored him with some ideas that' had been in my mind for yeui44 but whkh I had always been afraid to mention. It wain long before I was taken c'J my desk and put at te city salesman's deil. tnow how I mad- r-w? ml' most like a dream TTr, --w-ei a it ti am ii; it the Chief govback? And when.the Chief llra5 U.tcr wa' Ro. job cn th? fPY 5 eSaSa, waaa aJ av i .0) came back and found Truesdale Pon; a jT ntorx we fta.c; u. t.

wuuu rucsaaie gone, when I began to break records t'. how-he bawled me out? Thai "wrcsL.e.i. the Lhici wired me to crenr hirV -u46ia jujj ii ir.e salts manatr whenMorgan was put jn charge of the Seattle office, great charge carnc ever me large! v-s my having learned how to-talk, I imagine there are thousands of others the boat in which' found more to explain the first one. I try to explain an: idea to the Chief and WOUld ret SO flustered fhaV mah myself at. all.

In my soaal hfe I became almost a never went out because I vss among people. I was 'the best listener you ever saw-a pa tne worst "Well, when' the Chief railed that day it was the 'straw tho Kri camel a back. It most humili-V contained exactly the amf he hid given in his I.ient for it' and found it to be exactly as he stated After studying the eight simple lessens I began to, realize ahat part cf Simms success was due to real; ability "to-talk." For my own success the Course has as great as I can never thank' Simms enough for'teliing me 'about Dr in- Swiaess Talking -and Public Speaking. SETiO NO MONEY ticuiiui- atinp fjoenenff I I had been with the firm 8 veanH-wa TiiC Ir-dcM was the ntficy' -FM rf'- Creech- Dr. ntoVie tV.t "'v.

getting $40, a 'week -and 'footba l. I went home night detennined to learn how to ulk convinc- iMtstvsuiigi, emu lorcioiy, so that I could interest, people, not only for io minutes! but bv the hour. the silent stuff for me. had no more tmtence jru have an opportunity ar in rr Asr hnma "v-j4 no, 1.1 cr.c tour, leira tt" itcrtt of ir.kirf ir.d tan i-e cf effective opceh under J1 cor.d.ib- Jh.t lhtyre willing ia.srid:yoi tkc Courie cj tree examination. i Don't aeni ur mc-ey.

rH te 1 wa sax a aw a T- iic realize hatit was that was hold in m. the. grind' of detail when I nnauy reuzca wny i.was called 'Silent I. began, to investigate nl! that had been written on the suhirrt VaTeV' iV yrJ fe r-taeJ ai uicd the Cbune, in f-U rarrr.et cu uke no rak and you re rcrvi xo mix EXUUNATIO XLTCN i riT i I did not want.to be9omc a public speaker av ak a a asar aav BBBBaaask sbbbbbk w(iu x.wanica was me ability to talk as a business I boupht inccnrmrionf- books on.Tubhc speaking, but they all i Jl 1 iaugnv anq were so 11D V. ZU Krw Ycrk thit I cave ud almost in -t .1 1 cuiiupucu my ccarcn, nowever, and was 5rtk.M itcrie cl i a 1 rewaraea a lew weeks later by hearing i.M.fu about the work of.

Frederick. Houk Law of New York who was kJi conducting a course, in business talkin- and public speaking. i 1..

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