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Journal and Courier from Lafayette, Indiana • 6

Location:
Lafayette, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
6
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6 Journal and Courier THE JOURNAL? UH THE COURIER OUNDED 1S11 PUBLISHED DAILY (EXCEPT BUNDAY) AT JOURNAL AND COURIER BUILDING SIXTH AND ERRY STREETS LAAYETTE INDIANA HENRY MARSHALL Jr Publish! ENTERED AS SECOND CLASS MATTER AT POST OICE LAAYETTE INDIANA MU uboription rate Indian and Iroquola County Illinois: One rear St 00: si months 1200 three month 1100 Delivered by carrier 10c per wk Mall rates In Illinois Michigan Ohl "and Kentucky $100 per year In all other state 4800 Subscribers wishing addresses changed must give eld a well as new address National Advertising Representative: Tenney Woodward and Conklin Inc New York Chicago til Detroit Mich Kansas City Mo Atlanta Oa San rancisco CaliL Los Angele Callt Boston Mass MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS xi Th Associated Press Is entitled to tn use tor publication of all news dispatches credited to ft" In this paper and also the local news published herein MEMBER AUDIT 'BUREAU CIRCULATION Telephones 4011 Typographical Union No 64 states that all printers employed in the La fayette Journal and Courier composing room are union members DANGEROUS SEASON In October November and December there are on the average 30 per cent more auto killings than the average of traffic fatalities fdr the other 9 months of the year Well here it la November and apparently the rec ord for October was about as usual If not worse One of the factors in the seasonal In crease of road accidents is the series of week end football games attended by huge concentrations of urgent and impatient autos in places adjacent to' hysterical stadia En rqute to the football game every auto driver should prayerfully consider how he may by thoughtful driving help to reduce the highway slaughter and perhaps even save his own neck SOLIDARITY A MIRAGE Some of the sillier new dealers have been saying during the political recess that the passage of the Pittman bill in the senate carried assurance of a third term A casual examination of the senate to give DR his own way in modified will show that among the are such democratic senators as Adams Bailey Burke Byrd Byrnes Chandler Connally George Gerry Gillette Harrison Hatch Hayden Johnson of Colorado King Lucas Rad cliffe Smith Tydings and VanNuys all dem ocrats but not one a man or a third termite Of the number at least five were opposed in 1938 by the new deal political machines our were supposed to be obliterated by the Roosevelt "purge" Had seven others been up for a test in 1938 they too would have been marked for elimination or quarantined by the imperial purger These democratic senators can not in any sense be classed jjas third term parasites or even friends of 'one man government and its perpetuation In the senate majority which passed the Pittman bill are 8 republicans So It is re vealed 29 senators voting for the Pitt man bill constitute a bloc large enough to defeat any measure the new deal labels and tries to put over on the assumption that democratic solidarity has been achieved To these senators the president owes the pas sage of the modified neutrality bill They were for the bill of the moment on nonpo litical grounds They were not and are not now interested in third term delusions of grandeur DIES COMMITTEE According to a Gallup poll of voters a majority of Americans want the Dies com mittee on un American activities to continue to uncover intrusive and destructive insec tivora wherever found whether in fat gov ernment jobs or in the ferment of subversive propaganda It will be necessary to provide authority and money to continue the valu able work If congress votes the money and the work is vetoed or hampered by the administration congress will know what to do to stop such The Gallup shows that on the whole the people feel the Dies committee In uncover ing facts that the people of the United States should know about and that it is desirable that the spotlight of truth should be put on un American activities at this time as never before While 53 per cent of the voters favor continuing the work of the committee only 14 per cent are in favor of doing away with the committee The remarks made by the 14 per cent indicated they were expressing the feeling of leftist new dealers whose ears are red as result of the Dies committee disclosures ENGLAND AT SCHOOL England already has gained tremendously from the present war in long range social benefits according to an estimate by rank Gervasi correspondent with the al lies which is published in the current issue Describing the evacuation of more than 675000 children not to mention pregnant wo men and aged sick from the slums of Lon don Into sheltering homes of the middle and upper classes in villa and country Gervasl writes: enthusiasm over the brilliant way in which the evacuation was handled sub sided rapidly when the anticipated Nazi bombs first failed to come Goebbels had scared the British into believing implicitly that London skies would be filled with thou sands of nazi bombers the moment was war declared moneyed ruling classes playing hosts to those hitherto separated from them by rigid walls of birth background and bank accounts had time to reflect when days and weeks passed and the bombers did not come "Startling truths about the state of social disrepair of the nation began to emerge Some children' were found to be verminous acabrous infected with impetigo dirty and LAAYETTE JOURNAL AND COURIER ill mannered Others even had what polite society describes as social diseases "It was a terrible shock to those who live with clean sheets and hot wat(er to discover that the clothing had to be burned and that some children even house brokeif "But if war can 1 be said to be beneficient then England has already gained tremendous ly from the conflict Thinking Englishmen know that the boys who are now only refu gees from death will learn to love the land: again "Hitler and Goebbels jolted Britain out of her political lethargy when they made peace unbearably degrading The British are slow to become exasperated They have a high flash point received a new jolt when they saw what a state wkins was in They probably will remake Britain because they found unbearably THOSE AKE SURVEYS A so called survey made under the spon sorship of the United States office of Educa tion in 1935 has been quoted recently as in dicating that in Indianapolis a survey of 3 000 "employed" young men showed 43 per cent "received no Stated baldly in the terms thus set out the gives In dianapolis a black eye It just so! Investigation has revealed that in the 43 per cent cross section reported as being "em there were Included a large portion who were married women employed in their own homes without pay and a lot of boys and girls who had chores to do in their own homes for which they got no money The survey had to do with the need for adult education and recreation and the ques tions of employment and pay did not figure save in an Incidental way It was one of those "surveys and made in the ef fort to justify government "spending for elec As a result of this error of bureaucratic incompetence at least three writers have put Indianapolis before the country as a city where nearly half the youth population labors without compensation when the con trary is the fact CHAMPIONSHIP BREAD A 15 year old boy Jimmy Bowler won the grand championship in the bread baking con test at the Michigan state Grange conven tion at Traverse City He beat a field of 25 women Homemade bread have to be of grand champion texture to get our vote Let it rise and shine and bulge over the edge of the pan Tear off the crusty lop over spread the butter thick and slather on the brown sugar or what we used to call and if you want to be particular add apple sauce and maybe a handful of pecan meats Such on is mighty fit right after school when a guy needs en couragement: Representative Colmer (D) Mississippi spoke for a lot of democrats when he said of the and measure as he inter preted it: "The Pittman bill is an act to keep us out of war not to elect any man president in We think about time the rench and German high commands permitted the sol diers at the front to subscribe to their home town newspapers so they can find out how the war is getting along Heavy rains have prevented the contem plated German drive on the western front according to news stories the blitzkrieg proves to be just an old stick in the mud History according to an editorial on the war is simply repeating Itself Don't tell us Civilization has been caught in a revolving door! And then there was the fellow who mar ried an expert interior decorator because he thought that meant she was a swell cook Medical magazine predicts 200000000 colds in the Sethis winter Get your sniffling over early and avoid the rush Allied troops are making gasoline bombs out of beer bottles Drink up boys running short of ammunition! No matter what you think about Louisiana politics you must admit not a dull life Paradox: A man builds an ultra modern house and then loads it with antiques Out of the Past 10 YEARS AGO TODAY IN THE JOURNAL AND COURIER Mary Anna Bieber Thomas Spencer Thomas and Mary Staley of Lafayette are included on the October list of Indiana university graduates Boys of Wea Junior high school have formed an organization to be known as and Gold Joseph Daugherty is president South River road paving is sought Local street railway asks permission to cease operating branch to the home 25 YEARS AGO TODAY IN THE MORNING JOURNAL Lafayette grain market Wheat No 2 $104 No 3 $1aI Corn No 2 white 66c No 3 yellow 66c No 3 white 43c mixed 41c Rye No 2 80c No 3 77c Houses at the vicinity of Eighth and Hartford streets were treated to a shower of gravel rocks and water when a high pressure water line let go Russell and Ira Steinbaugh children of Mr and Mrs Ira Steinbaugh were Injured in a coasting accident Christmas Porringer" is the title of a new story of childhood from the pen of Misb Evaleen Stein of this city 50 YEARS AGO TODAY IN THE EVENING COURIER A new Methodist church at Cairo is about completed The church three miles west of Ash Grove will cost about $1700 This is about the most prosperous church in Tippe canoe county Membership is about 200 The Wabash Building and Loan association up to date has built 36 homes The school trustees have closed a con tract for putting a stone fence around the high school and public library The reckless waste of natural gas has caused much apprehension lest the supply may give out Dorothy Dix's Talks GIRL DEMANDS TOO MUCH A young man attributes the declines and falloff in matrimony to women demanding so much more of their husbands than they used to do and it being so much harder for a men to make good as a husband now adays than it was in the past those good old he said "matri mony was a i job that any amateur could tackle and get away with no matter how big a dub he was But now a man has to have taken a college course in husbandry and have a certificate from his previous wife and his union card before a girl will even consider taking that short fatal walk to the altar with him And even then he know when she is going to fire him because he come up to her expectations in time any man who fed his wife and didn't beat her was considered a good husband And If in addition he treated her with common politeness and paid her a few compliments now and then he was regarded as a museum specimen of the genus husbanditis and cast in the teeth of all the married men for miles around "But Is the modern woman satisfied with that sort of a mate possessing only a few primitive virtues auch as bringing home the bacon and paying the rent? I wot not They are only the background upon which she ex pects him to superimpose all the charms and attractions of the glamor boys of the screen "Of course Mrs Up to Date expects her husband to be a good provider And how! Grandma had one new hat a season Grand daughter considers marriage a failure if she have a dozen Grandma had an ev eryday pair of shoes and another pair for Sunday Granddaughter get another pair of slippers in her closet with a shoe horn And it is up to husband to provide these with gowns to match if he wants to qualify in the good husband class husbands in the past were not ex pected to combine the professions of the gigolo and the bread earner When Grandpa got home from a hard day at the office bone tired and with every nerve worn to a frazzle he could look forward to a good dinner and an easy chair by the fire and resting his feet But when weary grandson gets home he finds his dress clothes laid out on the bed his wife all dolled up ready to drag him out to dinner at the Borems or to some night club If he grumbles about going she be wails the dullness of her life and his selfish ness in never being willing to do anything to amuse HER "Also in the past it was no part of a business to keep up a flirtation with his wife after they were married He cut out that chore when he underwrote her board bill and shopping ticket for life He took it for granted that having ordinary human Intelligence she would gather that he still lovedher as long as he punched the home' time clock regularly and worked his fingers to the bones to give her fur coats and 'automobiles and such like "But does the modern wife let her hus band say it with checks instead of orchids? Not at all She wants both She expects her husband not only to be a go getter but a great lover She wants her filet mignon garnished with large slabs of romance and if she get it she decides that her poor old John understand her and buys a ticket for Reno not saying of course that Grandpa was Exhibit A of the model husband or the answer to a prayer Undoubtedly he was tyrannical as men always' are when they can get away with it Probably he philan dered just as much as modern men do Cer tainly he take as much trouble to en tertain and amuse his wife and be com panionable as men do now But if Grandpa come up to expectations she lacked the secret in her heart and turned a contented face to the world She broadcast her grievances and she rush to the divorce court and break up her home maybe it was because the women in the past were not so hard to please in the husband line as the modern girls are that more of them got married It is realizing that his wife is going to expegt him to be a combination of Henry ord and Robert Taylor and red Astaire and Job that gives the common garden variety of man cold feet when he thinks of DOROTHY DIX (Copyright 1939) A Little Too ar Left? President Roosevelt criticized the action Of the Dies committee in making public the names of over 500 government employees said to be on the membership list of the com munist front organization the American League for Peace and Democracy as a "sor did Presumably the president was using in its meaning of ignoble despicable or contemptible Now which is more contemptible to be engaged in disclosing to fellow citi zens the names of those who innocently or wittingly are rendering aid to a foreign auto crat like Stalin and who occupy responsible position in the government which the Stalin movement aims to control or as the chief executive of the United States to be the one who must bear the responsibility for al lowing communists or their sympathizers to hold positions in our government? Which is more ignoble to be trying to oust agents or sympathizers of com munism from government positions or to be trying to for such persons by casting the opprobrious term at those who are seeking that end? In his radio address the other evening President Roosevelt declared he stood just a little to the left of center between the con servatives and radicals In view of his ob jections to the patriotic work of the Dies committee is it not possible that our presi dent is farther to the left of center than he realizes or at least than we have realized? Richmond Palladium BRIE COMMENT Still aviation has done anything but put warfare upon a higher plane Greensboro News already suffered some backsets in this war including the return of Ham ish Tampa Tribune A woman will wear anything if other wo men are wearing it and a man will wear anything Jersey Journal Wisdom may come with age but so often death arrives first Thomaston (Ga) Times Everything about the modern auto is easy to manage except in making the monthly payments Greensboro (Ga) Herald Journal Viscount Samuels sees this as a war of characters Looks much more to us like one of bad actors Dallas News actographs Memorial sculptures in the Campo Santo or Holy ield a cemetery at Geno Italy are finer than in many museums and call many visitors The film industry must pay approximately $30000 a week to have its photoplays cen sored in the various cities and states 7 Jasper National park in the Canadian Rockies has been known to travelers for 150 years During the war between the states George home Mount Vernon was neu tral ground on which no soldier of either side trod Women of northern Africa wear long capes to erase their footprints when walking through the desert sand NEWS BEHIND THE NEWS By PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON Nov Mr thinkers have gravely changed their minds about the mesalliance of Hitler and Stalin They no longer regard it as a makeshift expedient but are ac cepting it with some amazement as an intended permanent arm in arm phalanx' in which com munism and naziism may blend indistinguishably to face the world together They are not laughing it off lightly any more This disturbing new interpreta tion first reached here in inside diplomatic advices from Europe reporting that the unpublished Stalin Hitler pact contained much more than the world realizes The news has been strengthened to the point of conviction by the undertones of oreign Commissar speech The Stalin Hitler pact has been advertised to the world as a po litical document dividing spheres of influence in eastern Europe coupled with some minor barter arrangements Private diplomatic wires suggest now that the eco nomic scope is ten times broader than anyone suspected and en visions the day when both Russia and Germany will be heavily de pendent economically on one an other This is a complete reversal of the main theme of both Stalinism and Hitlerism which was to es tablish their respective nations as self sufficient within themselves It would mean abandonment of economic nationalism by both and their joining as Siamese twin busi ness terrors The pact further is reported to provide exchange of secret mili tary action (this latter was sought by Hitler refused by Stalin) Whether the two cut throat chums will carry out their agree ment may be another thing but indisputable public and private evidence is now available that they are both taking it very seri ously so far Note This does not alter the conclusion that Russia will fail to be of much immediate economic help to Hitler in the war because of deficiencies in all Russian pro duction but is serious solely for what it may mean years hence News of it may be censored in London but Ambassador Joe Kennedy has picked a house out side of town to which he will move the American embassy It is the former home of a wealthy American whose estate is report ed ready to donate it Site is out side the air bomb danger zone The carving now about to be done upon Rumania maybe more serious than indicated The Rus sians are trying to egg Bulgaria on to demand return of the south ern district of Dobruja If they can get Bulgaria to act the reds will then take the eastern pro vince of Bessarabia without fur ther ado But the surprise of this joint action will come if Hitler succeeds in getting Hungary to demand Transylvania at the same time Seizure of these three Rumanian districts would leave King Carol with about one seventh of his present territory just about enough for him to take a long walk around Bucharest A sharp return to discussion of domestic economic and political issues will come immediately after the foreign policy shipping bill is out of the way Mr Roose velt has been holding up dozens of moves waiting for it Both republican and democratic con gressmen are eagerly waiting also Chamber of Commerce is arranging a series of sectional public meetings out in the country to discuss unemployment labor spending Proposed code of the National Association of Broadcasters may sound like it was devised mainly to destroy ather Coughlin but it really grew out of a serious desire of some radio leaders to clean house before the federal government does it for them It would break up ather Coughlin without doubt He could get free time once in a while but certainly not consisently and could not buy regular time as he now does Heavy opposition is boiling with in the radio trade aside from that of Elliott Roosevelt Broad casting stations get good revenue out of ather Coughlin and any way it seems strange to them that in a country where even ritz Kuhn and Earl Browder are allowed to say anything they wish without recriminations a public radio station will not be allowed to sell time to any man to say whatever he wants to say God's Minute shall save them because they trust in God Who art our refuge and our strength we beseech Thee to hear our prayers and to grant that those things for which we ask may be molded by reason and considered in Thy mercy Absolve us we pray Thee from our own offenses that through Thy boun tiful goodness we may be deliv ered from the sins which by our frailty we have committed Stir up we pray Thee our wills that they may bring forth the fruits of good work wise thoughts kind judgments Grant that we may give ourselves up obediently and cheerfully to fulfill Thy com mandments and that our minds and hearts may remain pure Clean and godly Give us strength and power of will that we may be sturdy and solid and not be car ried away by every blast of vain desire or unworthy impulse Grant us to know the truth that we may steadfastly walk in the way that leadeth to eternal life that we may never be destitute of Thy manifold gifts that we may ever be endowed with grace to use them always to Thy honor and glory Amen The Dead Sea has become an Important source of chemicals riday Evening November 3 1939 They'll Do It Every Time Jimmy Hatlo Registered (J Patent Offlo EIE 1HOBE NOU CONSIDERATE (A DOCTOR I Appreciate vmhat ibe WW ajessweis 'X DONE CUBBIG HERE CAN EEL THAT TRYING 10 KXAT should I COi creeping jnio drum up a I VA BE ID BED INI THTHIS R1GHT I 7A code but i just couldn't) a BRSAKIO kzffi RJO tSJSJ UPJHOUR BRIDGE PART Jy IjwKzTwAROiJ A Ray jy I 1 iaoMEONouR friends Uy I 6UCH CONTAGIOUS personalities rr DO IT EVERY Syndiate Inc World righte TtedL ir" '1 I DAY BY DAY By Charles Driscoll NEW YORK Nov Thinking out loud: Two ifth avenue houses are advertising doth and topcoats made of wool from the vicuna aTittle animal that? roams the Andean plateau Prices around $75 a yard and I understand you can get selected vicuna woolens for much more A topcoat ranges from $350 up Are the good old boom days back again? The autumn display of glorious color was at its best along the Hudson about two weeks ago is now beginning to fade to bare ness When the snows come the Palisades will once more shine in amazing beauty Eddie Do herty who is collecting writing material in Europe for Liberty has a son of the same name working in the traffic department at North Beach airport He writes for aviation magazines is mar ried has one son Jimmy Handsome Jennings Randolph Congressman from West Virginia is listed among the dunkers who have helped promote the dough nut in this country But what about toast? resh and crisp dunked in good hot morning cof fee it's a winner with me William Gellatly radio man tells me about his kleshund and a new kind of dog to me Looks like a chow and collie mix ture he says and has kindly dis position I wonder go ing to happen to the well carved elephant on the facade of the Hippodrome when wreckers get to it I hope it will be preserved by someone who cares for old theatrical lore of New York I never realized how decorative are ears of common yellow corn until I saw bunches of them used in a recent decorative scheme In the grand ballroom of the Wal dorf The big central fountain was filled up with grains fruits and grasses that gave the impres sion of the Lemons rye wheat grapes grape fruit were used effectively Cat tails from the marshes too Most effective were bunches of ears of corn held together by their stripped back husks A pumpkin and a few green peppers helped add color This decoration for a barn dance but for a semi formal reception of considerable importance Al' Memory! We boys used to wads into the Old Green Pond to cut brown cat tails for one of the older sisters who had ideas about home decoration Margaret gilded the stubby tails and they were set in a vase on a what not in a corner of the parlor At 56th and Broadway a twelve story sign on a two story building a vertical sign just the width of one huge electric let ter There are six letters spelling the name of a motor car that is sold in the narrow showroom below Smith a quiet suburban ite of 51 makes a good living re pairing billiard tables You see him from time to time at the first class clubs giving the felt on all the tables a thorough going over At international champion ship matches he is generally on the side lines with his kit of tools ready to make repairs if neces sary experts don't damage tables he tells me "Worst people on felt are women I have lots of pool tables in my home on Staten Island I buy old ones fix 'em up and sell I keep the tables all stored away or turned over on their sides so the women get at and tear the Smith has been repairing bil liard tables for 33 years and care to retire He enjoys the work He play pool or billiards but as a young man was a good ball player A billiard table is so strong in every part that almost impos sible to damage anything but the felt covering says Mr Smith The slate top weighs 490 pounds each and will take a lot of punishment Stoddard author is one of th New Yorkers I know who "es his mustache in the manner so essential to all meticu lous gentlemen of a generation ago He is the son of the late John Stoddard who made an immense fortune out of lectures on travel inely bound sets of Lectures used to be the central feature of many a narlor center table The younger Stoddard (now 56) has done a score of books Including Rising Tide of and "The New World of To Daughter Pat in Arizona I wrote asking "Aren't you just crazy about the She replied I like the desert all right but I wish therj were some way of moving it closer to Mother and Well only overnight by planes now in use but I'll apeak to the airlines about rushing some of those stratoliners into service before next eemester begins! RIGHTEOUSNESS IN THE KINGDOM Read Matthew 5:17 6:18 International Sunday School Lesson for November 5 BY ROGERS "Think not that I came to de stroy the law: I came to ful teaching brings an in terpretation of law that means righteousness among men He learned and obeyed the law of Israel 'at twelve he was found in the temple asking and answer ing questions His reverence for God's laws rests upon basic hu man attitudes which are of the heart He faced the legalists who made a pretense of 'observing the letter of the law and skilfully evaded its spirit who by their interpretation would lay a burden upon their followers His new code includes everyday situations he mentions five Old Testament laws murder adultery perjury retaliation and at titude toward his enemies Mur der is not merely a matter of out ward violence It is hatred in the heart and may be committed with a word instead of a sword or gun Adultery Jesus frankly said is committed in the heart The taking of an oath is simply the trustworthy statement of fact Retaliation is folly The spirit of the administration of justice the basis of an eye for an eye a tooth for a tooth no more no less the offended may demand and secure is superceded by the law of the double blow Christian courage takes an insult rather than expresses indignation The law of the wardrobe is that the man who takes your coat may have your cloak also to give more than an opponent' asks The law of the second mile is a practice more than honest and fair it is generous How many labor dis putes this practice would settle in the spirit of brotherhood The law of the giver and the bor rower teaches to outgive all Evil from fellowmen must be met not with evil but the masterful spirit of goodwill toward the evil doer Truly only out of a heart that loves enemies can this practice come Jesus was accused of being a dangerous radical and reformer because he proposed a different explanation and application of the historic ideals and principles of the Hebrew law and prophets Ho gave the old law a new mean ing This is the righteousness based on love on which the social order is built Many denominations have adopt ed social creeds which apply to modern problems these teaching! equal rights and justice as bro thers protection in labor condi tions security equitable distribu tion of the product of industry opportunities the rights of racial groups etc Such is the expres sion of righteousness among men War violates the spirit of righteousness It is murder and destruction and uses the basest human passions Christianity chal lenges sacrificial heroism to re build the brotherhood of man Party Enjoyed by Rossville League ROSSVILLE Nov The Ep worth League of the Methodist church was entertained at a Hal masquerade party in the basement of the home of Mar garet Pritsch Lorin Irick recelv ed the prize for the best dres sed Virginia Rhine for the ug liest and Emmett Cody was giv en the prize for holding his Td ntity the longest Games and contests were enjoyed and re freshments served Horace Hover of Hagerstown appeared in Herman justice court and paid a fine of $755 for driving on the wrong slde of the road when his car sideswiped a Greyhound bus one mile west of Rossville on state road 26 Marion Robbins state trooper made the arrest ENTERTAINS Rossville chapter en tertained the Masons at a Hal party Mrs Arthur Go cbenour received the prize for the best dressed 18 prizes were awarded in games Refreshments were served 7 Guests of Mrs Wid Godby were her sisters Mrs Cecil John son of Kokomo and Mrs Har old Chittick of Geetingsvllle In the afternoon they called on Mrs Jack McQueen and daughter in West Lafayette The Industrial society of the Presbyterian church was enter tained at the home of Mrs Clar? ence Simmons Mrs rank Cheney gave de votion and plans were made for the annual fair Saturday Nov 4 in the town hall The afternoon was spent In sewing on a com fort and refreshments were also served Mrs rank Cheney and Mrs Bertha Snyder assisted The Loyal Daughter class of the Methodist church met with Mrs Russell Livingston Mrs Clyde Pritsch and Mrs Homer Dice were assistant hostesses Mrs Henninger gave devotion and Mrs Herbert Rose gave the topic A spelling contest was en joyed and refreshments served The Mary Martha class of the Methodist church will meet Ht the home of Mrs Elston Patton Tuesday afternoon Nov 7 A GROWING PAINS by Phillips I QI waW 1 Si i i 1 'ijjijii W(Mn2 A Ax Oh! Here conies a viaiior with that bltem gleam in her 3.

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