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Altoona Tribune from Altoona, Pennsylvania • Page 6

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Altoona Tribunei
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Altoona, Pennsylvania
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6
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6 Friday, October 29, 1937 The Altoona Tribune ALTOONA TRIBUNE National Whirligig Everybody Pull Together laraAmmnv The News Behind the News By THE TIMES TRIBUNE CO. This Morning's COMMENT By HJLVRT W. 8HOEWAJURB 1118 Twelfth Street, Altoona, Pa. Mall SubacrlpUon Bate Henry W. Shoemaker, President Theo.

Arter, Jr Vice President and Editor Robert W. Boyer, Managing Editor Carrier Subscription Rat One Week .13 Six Months (In WOO On Tear (In $6.00 By RAY TUCKER for any pictures he produced, On Month (In Advance), .60 EXPERIENCE President Roo Six Month (In Advance), $178 sevelt's gradual abandonment of his original theories on prices is One Tear (In I TWO HUNDRED TEARS HAVE PASSED SINCE "WALKING PURCHASE" ONE Of FOCR GREATEST OUTRAGES best illustrated in the disaoMar- ance or consumers' representatives from Washington. The only AGAINST PENNSTLVANTA INDIAN'S. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Entered at Altoona Pojtoffice aa Second Claaa Man Matter Member of The Associated Pres The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the us for republication of all new dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights or republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

Sole National Advertising- Representative: rred Kimball, Ino-New York. one lert is John Carson of the Coal Commission, and his pro-consumer views have been completely disregarded by his own It seems a pity to commemorate agency and the Interstate Com in any way the memory of the nefarious "Walking Purchase" of 1737 whereby the trustful Indians should be submitted to his father or bandied by himself, Messra. Eccles, Kennedy and Hopkins often dash to the White House with matters which only, the President or the cabinet can settle satisfactorily. But now they must Jimmy their way in. i PROPOSITION Through Ambassador Extraordinary Norman Davis the Washington administration may spring on the Brussels conference a proposal as 'sensational as Charlas Evans Hughe' 1922 declaration that th way to disarm was to scrap warships.

The President and Secretary Hull long ago reached the private conclusion that gangster nations cannot be coaxed or wheedled Into a world peace movemont. Japan and Italy havo torn up post-war treaties against aggression to which they were signatories. Germany has violated the Versailles Treaty right and left. The basic merce Commission. In the campaign the President provoked bitter attacks by insisting the nation could achieve full eoonomic recovery only through a were, defrauded out of a great portion of the eastern part of i IPC-n Republican Opportunity system of high wage and low It was said that if William Penn had been alive no such enormity TRIANGLE Friendly enemies of the President on and off Capitol Hill have hatched a quiet conspiracy to kill off the new legislative reforms he has proposed for the special and regular session of congress.

The ring-leaders are supposed to include Vice President Garner, R. F. C. Chairman Jesse H. Jones and Senate Finance Chairman Pat Harrison.

An extremely close friend of Mr. Garner and Mr. Jones tipped off the plot on the night of the special election in Arkansas that saw an anti-New Dealer elected to the senate In place of the late "Joe" Robinson. In a gloating mood and voice he phoned columnists, pollticos and radio commentators to advertise the enormous extent of the Roosevelt reverse. He furnished details that only an interested, observer of the contest would have known.

Washington suspects he would not have inspired anti-administration articles unless it was pleasing to his conservative Democratic buddies. The underlying idea was to convince congressional rebels that they could defy F. D. R. with impunity.

Recently Messrs. Garner and Jones conferred at the former's home in Uvalde. The eeneral be. would have been perpetrated. But the facts are otherwise.

Re cently in a pile of musty records and papers research workers at Harrisburg dug out the original iaing or 16S5 ap prices. In his recent "fireside chat" the same idea dominated, though it wasn't advertised. Ho proclaimed that America's richest market consists of well-paid home buyers of cheap goods. Last spring he inaugurated a deflation policy by terminating P. v.

A. projects lest durable goods reach too high a peak. The demands of labor and farmers have forced F. D. R.

to reverse his field. Increases In railroad workers' pay necessitated the I- C. C. approval of higher rail rates, which will be passed on to consumers. New processing taxes to finance the 500,000,000 cost of the proposed farm program will proved by "Onas" htmself.

The cause, In the Roosevelt-Hull opln- Ion lg not a barbarous desire to taunt and flont world ooln- Indians had no way to gauge' the speed of an English thoroughbred horse and a tremendous slice off the Indians' land was thus ac quired. It is said that when Tommy and nion as they have. It is a need for land, for food, for expansion, for self-respect. So i Washington may propose that the "have" nations adopt a permanent policy which will give the "have not" countries Japan, Italy, Germany access to markets and raw materials they don't pos Jack. William Penn's sons, suggested another "riding purchase" net again Boost the price of food.

The that their rntivarnHnn mk-JVTOftt TirTVi i 14-1 ail iw'b at a council held at Pennsburv in explanation lies in the fact that augured no good for F. D. R. Mr. workers and farmers are organ- uarner headed last session's re- ia, consumers are not.

The vou, and the same legislative May, 1733, the Indians shook their heads, saying "No more gee meaning that horses were "out." neglect prooiems win bob up again. Mr. politico can afford to them and they do. xiarnson, still sore over Whit. NEW YORK DAY BY DAY By O.

O. Mclntyre House backing of Senator Barkley But the wily Quaker lads went into a huddle and said "How would mo leaaersnip battle, holds the whip hand over the President on taxation and appropriations a walk flll the bill?" The Indians returned home and ironis. Ana he's a Garner-Jones INSPIRED The reasons for Vit-torlo Mussolini's midnight departure from Hollywood were economic as well as emotional. The movie magnates' rough treatment of II Duce' son will hardly Improve relations between Rome and Washington. man.

questioned the older members of their tribes and two years later in FORMER PRESIDENT HERBERT HOOVER, speaking in Boston, said the Republican party "must produce principles and programs besides being against and joyriding on mistakes." That is exactly what this newspaper has expressed editorially on a number of occasions. Unless the Republican party has something better to offer than criticism it does not deserve to be successful. Even with its fine record in the past there must be a cleansing of the Republican party, a recession from some of the old doctrines, a re-vamping of its programs if it is to become a more effective opposition to the New Deal. Some time ago this newspaper said it was time for the "Republican party to take off its high hat and don a blue shirt" We still stick to that statement Mr. Hoover urges a national convention of Republicans in which the rank and file of the party might express its views and coordinate its thought There must be affirmative leadership.

Instead there is sidestepping. Out of searching debate of a national convention can the Republicans fit themselves to meet the New Deal. Up to now the party has failed. Democracies demand clean-cut issues. The New Deal has been leading America into devious ways of regimentation.

To halt that march is the task of the Republicans and members of the Democratic party who do not wish regimentation. The Republican party is not dead for 17,000,000 voters in the last election signed a vehement protest against the death verdict announced by Mr. Farley. There is still much vitality. But there is no coordinated leadership.

In the 17,000,000 voters who cast their ballots in the last presidential election we can find the bone and sinew of Republicanism. No party ever dies unless it dies at the top for want of a vigorous fighting energy inspired by vigorous, fighting leaders, not critics alone. It is time the rank and file of the Republican party has an opportunity to express itself. It is time there is stimulation and inspiration by responsible, forceful leaders. The party must recruit its best brains young and old.

If, as Walter Lippman says, the New Deal is the logical development of Old Guard Republicanism then something should be done about it Before the party can espouse liberal principles demanded by changing times it must denounce parts of its old doctrine. did much to publicize the place in his roaming stories of the gas-lit days. Two of Dock's jovial patrons were Herb Swope's irrepressible, ink-stained journalistic twins, Joseph Jefferson O'Neill and Donald Henderson Clarke. When they went on the loose Swope always found them at Doo Perry's. JIM3ITE The President's Demo Philadelphia held a second meet tion of Son James Roosev.W ing with Tommy and agreed to chairmanship of the economic American screen stars did feel a human resentment aeainst th the "Walking Purchase." The caoinet nas provoked intense dis Italians, boast that bombing de Musiacuon among the heads of me eighteen independent agencies ses their own right.

It will be a redistribution of opportunity rather than colonies. It will be proposed only if circumstances seem i auspicious, butj it will have thl democratic virtue: It will thro the dictator nation on the defenilve. RESTRAINT Maritime Chairman Joseph P. Kennedy's public denunciation of the Algic strikers has brought him into the bad graces of that excellent hater C. I.

O. Chieftain John Lewis. Kennedy's blunt outburst was particularly painful to the labor leader because it came on the eve of his peace parley with William Green's A. F. of L.

spokesmen, whose strongest card Is that the Lewis unions are communistic, irresponsible and uncontrollable. The outbreak robbed the C. I. O. representatives of bargaining power, and damaged their prestige i.i the publlo mind.

Mr. Lewis holds grudges against six Rooseveltians now Madame Perkins, Attorney General Cum-mings. Secretary Wallace, N. L. R.

B. Madden, Coal Commission Chairman Hosford and me youngster now controls. CJ- -i i NEW TORK, Oct. 28. Thoughts while strolling: Harpo Marx affects me like the village simpleton.

At whom I never laughed. Molly Picon, the Ghetto's stage darling with the French aperitif last name. For prematurely snow-white hair none of the boule-vardiers top th old '39r Harry Silvey. My father's black porter, Hannibal, laughed precisely like Joe Penner. What the music world needs is another Victor Herbert, rest his soul.

Louis Sobol has also become one of the fiends for dark-hued collars and shirts. Leslie Howard in glasses and you have our elevator boy. Rhyme: To play an old hag in a garret, Til take Sheila Barrett. The fulfillment of George M. Cohans line, "He's a grand little Burgess Meredith.

For oecona-aay tnoughts convince fenseless towns appealed to him as a "sport." Socially, they gave him the cold and hoity-toity shoulder on the lot and in the night clubs. But behind their bitterness and their employer' lay the realization that young Mussolini would some of the eighteen key figure Now and then a poet at some tiny dot in the outland, 1 able to winnow a living sending in stun at long range to the New York marts. There is, for Instance, that their new role makes them look ridiculous. It didn't soothe walk was turned into a marathon Of trained runners and in addition the Indians were double-crossed as the runners followed a route at a right angle to the direction agreed on, which took them far up Lenape-Wihittuck, or Delaware river, to Laxawaxen and doubled the area that otherwise would have been acquired. The Indians were soon made aware of the shameful deception and exiled Lappowingo and Tish-Cohan, the two chiefs who agreed to the their dispositions when friends joshed them with the remark: "Oh, I see that you're now a member of Jimmie Roosevelt's baby cabinet." In the past such men as Maritime Chairman Kennedy, Federal Reserve Chairman utilize Hollywood's production and distribution secrets to build up his father's motion picture plant just outside the Eternal City.

So they ran the prospective competitor out of town. The majority of producers and distributors and financiers bear no love for the Italian dictator, who made the blunder of fraternizing with th anti-Jewish Hitler at the very moment his son was Miss Billy B. Booper. of Neode-sha, a hop skip from my birthplace, Plattsburg. who attains this recognition writing sonnet and such and about her neighbors, her Main street and sundry observations in a prairie town.

She has appeared often In Good Housekeeping, Saturday Evening Post, the New York Times and nearly all the poetry magazines. Proving it can be done. Eccles and Reliefer Harry Hop- sometning neat in wax under glass: George Rector's mustache. "walk, Michael Quigley, the Waldensiani ot-ot-ofgun walker Edwin Mr. Kennedy.

How long he will Balmer, Major Bowes and Eddv Kins nave been accustomed to barge into the big man's office with only a few minutes' warning. Now they must deal with "Jimmie." The new system also presents a serious problem. Despite his ability, some of F. D. aides doubt whether "Jimmie" can de pioneer who met the deposed Duchln.

restrain himself before cutting loose against the administration chiefs afterwards living in bark cabins at the culmination of Nlt- I have a letter from a reefer he once befriended Is the Capital's No. 1 mystery. wimivaung nil new friends. A concerted advertising campaign to discredit Vittorio had been started In movie trade papers, and it would have destroyed the market To Jack Benny: Don't let them pretty you up that way in your next movie. You're all right as tany mountain described them as Copyright MVClure Newspaper Syndicate cide whether a certain questioa.1 "two of the most dejected individuals on earth.

They could not hqld up their heads for shame, and hid in the woods until I de BATTLE OF LABOR KEN MURRAY SAYS: Durned If I Didn't Do lt livered my messages to their wom Is. Theodore Dreiser moping along. A millionaire of the depression: Henry Luce, the publisher. Crack description of a certain Broad wayite: Always wrong at the top of his voice. Most hilarious scene of the season: The legionnaires carrying Noel Coward in silk hat and all on their shoulders for a block and his: 'That was not very funny." Then Graham McNamee's jac as his mouth.

And he thought (INSTALLMENT II) by BOB BURNS "Well I'll just take the frog and cut him up for bait" but the snake held on and wouldn't let him go. So Gus said he took a xouv all heard of Southern en, and took myself off." The other two blot on the white man's dealings with the Pennsylvania Indians were the Paxtang Boys' massacre of the Conestoga Indians on Mill Creek and in the Lancaster county jail and the wholesale slaughter of mariajuana emoker, a jazz band musician who gives ome interesting if depressing high lights on the habit. He has known but two women cabaret entertainers, who smoke the weed. He say users refer to such smoking as "tea." The vendors are called "pads." The most potent part of the reefer Is the last drag, and that is why users hold the butt with a pin or tweezers to get this wallop. The smoke, to get the right effect, must be held In the lungs as long as possible.

The writer states that under the influence one is "high." And that th sensation may be best described as floaty. He admits that in a few monthi he has lost weight and feels good only when smoking. Unconsciously he sounds a warning and preaches a sermon with: "Like all the reefer smokers I know, I started just as an experiment' to see what the stuff wa like." Eddie Rickenbacker entered th pint of corn licker out of his hospitality, but I don't believe that there's any place in the world where the hospitality equals that of the Ozark subway: "There goes an ace in the hole!" pocket and poured a drink of it down the snake's throat and the HOLLYWOOD, 28. I am beginning to wonder whether those things John L. Lewis and William Green said about each other came under the Pure Feud Aot or was it just stag? Anyway, the boys are now getting together to transact a little mtual business and they've got a good precedent for It.

Didn't the F. D. and DuPonts pull off a wedding right at the height of their tong war? Yes, indeedy, the AFL and CIO are now down to a common sense basis and William Green's nose-pincers are mingling with John j-'. mountains. I'll Indian at the Moravian church never ferget one snake turned loose of the frog.

So Gus went down and sat on a log and cut the frog up and just at Gnadenhutten, in Washington time I was stop' started to fish. After awhile he county. LP pin' at a house and the lady was pointin' out It is erroneous to suppose that One of the mid-town oases for newspaper and magazine writers is Jack Bleecks pronounced Blake's Writers and Artists Club in midtown. It specializes in dark heavy brews, thick steaks and chops with giant spuds. And is its liveliest between two and four a.

only Ulster Scots were concerned in these foul misdeeds. In these evil doings there were a sprink different people and a in "that's John, my husband's brother; and the feller talkin' with him Is my sis ling of Germans, Huguenots and miiuui me diversions is a target practice at which rubber eyebrows. There's a peace I have always liked Channing While the names of the Paxtang Boy are pretty BOB BURNS tableau jfor you! Of course, politics makes atranere well known, Washington county relt a tap on his leg. And he looked down and there was that same snake with another frog in his mouth. That reminds me of Gus' story about the hunlin' dog he had.

He said he didn't have to tell this dog about what he was goin' after. If he took a rifle along, the dog only went after deer and bears; if he took a shotgun, the dog went after birds and rabbits; but he said thl day he'd fool the dog and he left the house with a flshin pole over his shoulder. After he got quite a ways from the house he noticed the dog wasn't with him. So he went back and found the dog in the backyard scratchln' ter' husband; and that one over bedfellow and sometimes the bed x-ouock story of the ailor who, asked what he had done with his wages, answered: "Part of It went for liquor, part of It for women and the rest I just frittered awav turns out to be the bunk. On the REPRESENTATIVES OF THE AMERICAN Federation of Labor and the Committee for Industrial Organization met in Washington with their fingers crossed for the avowed purpose of getting together.

With their fingers still crossed they adjourned late Wednesday with the possibility that the peace con-. ference cannot be revived. After two days of jockeying for position the two groups are farther apart than ever before and labor, itself, will be the sufferer. The CIO demanded what amounted to practical control of the proposed combined labor groups. Among other things it wanted to be an autonomous part of the federation with a constitution of its own and sole jurisdiction over the workers it enumerated.

That was a pretty big order. The American Federation of Labor would not have it that way, as was to be expected. Alternate proposals were flatly rejected. They were devoid of any common ground that could be made the basis for further compromise. Peace offerings went begging.

A new crisis has been reached that may be even more damaging in its effect than anything that has gone before. The early offers and counter proposals were noth-ing more than an ask-price. It had been expected that on the basis of these offers eventual satisfactory programs for mutual success would ensue. But the results were different Labor is the loser. Personal feelings and fundamental differences in philosophy have divided the two factions.

How the questions of personalities can be gotten around may be one of the biggest stumbling blocks to future nego-tations. One way would be for both John L. Lewis and William Green to retire as heads of their respective groups and a new leadership set up. If labor wants peace within its ranks, if it wants to proceed in the best interests of the laboring man, then sacrifices must be made by those in authority to bring it about And if peace is wanted badly enough the leaders should be compelled to make the necessary sacrifices and adjustments. historians have drawn a veil of secrecy over their county's "roll other hand, you never heard of of dishonor." But the Pennsyl Damon trying to put poison in Pythia's oup.

So I hope this labor vania Indians are not yet "out of merger is on the level. But until ucuon gadgets are fired from toy pistols, the revival of a Gay 90 innovation by Stanley Walker, one of the leading spirits of the place. Lucius Beebe also makes it a port of call sometime during the evening, top hat and all. Bleeck is the modern journalistic version of Doc Prry' a drug store in the old World building whose room behind the prescription case offered sundry positions for bucking the reportorial rip tides. The Doc's customers were mostly drinkers of whiskey the woods" a far a the white the boys get the details straighten man' barbarous instinct for in ed out, AFL plus CIO still eauals justice is concerned.

Governor John S. Fisher real (Copyright 1937, McNaught Syndi-5 cate, Inc.) up worms. foolishly." (Copyright 1937, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) ATTEND EXECUTIVE SESSION Two Altoona priests, Rev. John J. McAllister and Rev.

William Griffin, were in attendance at the executive board meeting of St. Franci Seminary Alumni association held in Loretto on Wednesday. Rev. I. P.

Denny, new head of the board, presided. ized the peril from waterpower there is my brother's wife; and she's talkin' to the wife of my oldest son." But she left out one woman that was sittin' back in the corner by herself. And I pointed to her and I said "who's that woman? Is she any kin to you?" And she leaned over to me and whispered: "No, sir, I'll tell ye about her. She stopped In here 30 year ago to git a drink of water and she's bin with us ever since and I wanta tell ye I'm be-glnnin' to get tired of it." But I wants tell you that I git awful homesick for those people back in the mountains of Arkansas. And when this excitement blows over, I'm goin' back there and jist sjit around on the front porch with them and whittle and chew tobacco and lissen.

development facing the red men But here I am gabbin' about the Ozark mountains and I plumb fergot I started out to tell you how I got in this swell dressin' room between Carole Lombard on the "grant" in Warren county, HURT WHEN CYCLE HITS WALL Crashing into a stone wall after he had werved his motorcycle to the only Indian reservation in Pennsylvania and offered them nunougn ne could be persuaded to build up an old fashioned if in proper mood- Frank avoid an automobile, Walter Po- 5.000 acres of land contiguous to th Big Spring in the Blue Hole topa, 21, of 2019 Twelfth avenue. LIFE'S LIKE THAT ByFredNehcr country of Fayette county. This was slightly injured and was treated at Altoona hospital dispen writer wa the governor's emis and Bing Crosby. I got so far off the subject I'll have to go back to it a step at a time. In the first place I wouldnt be here if it wasn't for my bazooka.

I wouldn't have invented the bazooka if I hadn't been sort of a musician and that takes me way back to the time I wa six years old and I started takin' mandolin lessons. sary for lacerations of the fing ers on the right hand. The acci sary to the red men In 1927. The offer was declined. dent occurred Wednesdnv nfter.

I wanta go back there in the noon on Eighteenth street at Twelfth avenue. winter time and sit there in front of the fireplace and hear Gus Rook tell about the tim. he brother was two year older 1 courthouse yard, accompanied by than me and he had already tart- the Queen City band. About 1 went to the circus in Van Buren. "Tell the White Father at Har-msburg." Chief Windsor H.

Pierce replied, -we will remain by our dead until all are engulfed by the white man's water." During the past year smart alecks, trying to make a smoke Gus live about 33 miles straight SILAS H. CASSIDY over the Hogback mountain and ea piayin' a guitar. We both took lesson from Frank McClain who is the leader of Frank Mc- he only seen this one circus. He Uvea that circus over and uams van Buren Queen City Silvj.rtone Cornet band. Ill never screen away from forest destruction a th cause of floods, have over again and gits just as mucn thrill out of it a on of them New York men about town that fregit the thrill I got the first time my brother and I played a piece planned to swallow up the Pennsylvania Indian reservation in a togetner, me on the mandolin and ees every first nighter.

And don't thinH these people him on the guitar. haven't got a sense of humor. We played that piece all day "flood control" dam. In this new danger the Indians are trusting in the present White Father at and at night we'd go around and serenade the people on their front A LTOONANS WILL SADLY miss the cheerful per- sonality of Silas H. Cassidy who died as a result ef injuries sustained in an automobile accident He was a kindly soul, energetic, well-read, influential.

He served faithfully for 39 years as an employe of the railroad shops here, retiring only a comparatively short time ago to enjoy the leisure of later years. He was young in spirit though the years were making their mark on him. A good citizen, a faithful worker for the great transportation company, he had endeared himself to all people. But aside from his interest in the community and his work he had two hobbies that brought him much pleasure checkers and flowers. In his leisure years he had expected to enjoy these hobbies much more than ever before.

Harrisburg. Governor George porch. We had a little lantern which mama, gave us and we put Earle. that no injutic is done them. our music on the front porch with the lantern between hi part and my part and we'd kneel down so we could read the music and play 500 people were there.

I remember every time the band gave a eoncert all the people had to tie their coon dogs up. Once In awhile some coon dog would stray In anyway. And when the band started to play, the coon dog would start to howl and putt near break up the concert Later on I took up th trombone and I wa th proudest boy in the world when I could Join those concert. Frank McClain gave me a olo part to play and I practiced on that hour and hours. Every time I hear somebody practicln' on a trombone I think what poor mama had to put up with.

My brother got a trombone too. We were both flghthv fer a position In the first trombone section and between the two of u. her life must of have been terrible. About this time, papa built an addition to the house and built a great big room and at on end he build a tile fireplace that he had ordered from Sear A Roebuck. That big room wa the meetin place of all the boys our age who could ply any kind of an instrument (To be continued) It seems the gate broke down Ill never fergit Missux Rooks.

Gus calls her "my ole woman." One night we was sittin' there amokin' our pipe and Missus Rooks told about the time that Gus hed the fight with th Black bear. She said "it was the pur-tiest fight I ever saw. Gus and the bear just rolled all over the mountain side, clawin' at each other and tryin to git at each other' throats." She stopped and gave a side glance at Gus with a twinkle in her eye and then added: "Honest between Heaven and Hell. St. Peter appeared at th broken part tne instruments.

Our eyes'd be glued to the music. He'd be go- fthe rate and railed out to the In 'clunk clink clink, clunk clink clink" and Id be goin' "tlddle-iddle-iddle-dee-dee." I still remember the name of that piece. It was "Over the Wares devil. "Hey. Satan, it your turn to fix it this time." Sorry." replied the bos of the land beyond th Styx.

'My men are too busy to go about fixing His untimely passing is deeply regretted. Rapidly approaches the time th "-nhhAlin will get you if you don't watch out" ly, was xne nrst light I ever I believe the high spot of those seen where didn't care which i days was when my Uncle Collins one won." i Need ham that's mv mmw. The sone writer who ivnnM in a mere gate." "Well then," scowled St. Peter. -Ill have to sue you for breaking our agreement" "Oh, yeah," yeah'd th derU "where ar you going ta get a lawyer?" brother taught us to sing in harmony a song called "She Lives Gus used to tell an old one "bout the time he went flshin' and forgot his bait He said he was go-in' alon Warloop Crick and he Rain was only about a month previous.

He could have written a better one about October had he been living in these parts the past ten davs. on the Same Street With Me And we sang it one Sunday evening from the band stand of the I This Aunt Emma' Mf-KUI( Pancake Flaw aw a big snake with a frog in.

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