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Wichita Falls Times from Wichita Falls, Texas • 6

Location:
Wichita Falls, Texas
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6
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tA WICHITA DAILY TIMES TUESDAY JUNE 13 1039 PAGE 6 1 Want You to Know That WICHITA DAILY-TIMES FuaiMBse TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY OF WICHITA rtUA TXXAB Dili AftemnoB and Sunday WICHITA FALLS RECORD NEWS (Moral OS) Strtntb and BonU ItlTata' BraacS Exriunta rnniaetlni All Edltntlal DapartmauU irt at tba poal ottlaa la WMtta Falla man aa Saanad Claw tut wr Dadar Act af IteicS A IKS Tba Tlaifa PuMlaliias Cbl aequtrad Wa WlaSIta Palls Sawad Wawa Asrll Sad ISM InuiMH AUP11 BOlUAC OF tlMtlliAtiiS MEUbER-ASSOCIATED PrSA Tba Aaoeiaiad hna la saeluaiaaiy aatltlad to tht aaa far rapubltaatloa of all arwa dlapatchaa cradllad ta tt ar set otlurwtaa endlird la UUa pa par aad alaa tba teesl publlahed haraia Mauaaal Hraraaaautlra: Kau Bpaelal Adrrrtwai Aaaaay MT Marta Ifiehlsaa Annua chlaaaa MB Fifth Amur Mew York Uonadancfc BulMlas Saa Fiaaslsaa Rtpuhlla Sank Sulldias Dallas Trxaa 100X Bryant Sulldias Kaaaaa Ciry Oracial klntnra BulMlas Detroit Mich IS Marietta SUaat Elds Atlanta Da SM South Broad PhUadaiphla Pa THE LIBRARY AND ITS NEEDS Seldom in this city's history' have Wichitana been called upon to support a worthier move ment than that of the Kiwanis club in connection with the Kemp public library The club is raising $19000 in cash for an addition to the library building That sum is expected to make available additional amounts to be used for equipment and books The immediate need is the $19000 The library gift of Mr and Mrs A Kemp about 29 years ago has cost Wichita Falls very little for its maintenance The modest tax lev led for its support has purchased more usefulness dollar for dollar than any other public expenditure That is a broad statement but the facts support it The library is an excellent one of its size but it is decidedly below the accepted standard for such institutions because all of its revenues have been used for maintenance with no expenditures for the expansion made necessary by our growth since the original gift was made It is the hope and purpose of the Kiwanians to increase the library's size and facilities to a point more nearly commensurate with this needs The cause should command the support of every Wichitan who can afford to give THE SOCIAL SECURITY CHANGES The changes in the social1 security law approved by the house at Washington Saturday are in keeping with what the experience of the past year has revealed in connection with the measure they are in keeping also with com mon sense and with the recovery program as a whole Administration leaders had hesitated to clear the way for changes in the law fearing attempts to disrupt it and wreck its purpose While the changes favored by the house do not go nearly as for as some interests would like they have the effect of both strengthening the law and making it less burdensome on employers The spirit in which the changes were made should be opplied to some other measure notably the Wagner act That is to say the corrective changes that experience has shown to be necessary should be made without attempting to destroy the measure itself SDBSCHIPTIOM SATBS-BT CABBIES Dally Tunca RaeardNawa Both Pa para Eranlngaad Moralnsand Mora Bra Sunday Sunday Sunday 1 Waak IB -M 1 llOOtfe SSSSSdSBSSSdSSS ill a Months IIS i-Js sts Months did AM IB 1 Ysar a 00 BBS USB BY MAH Payiabta la Aoranea MORNINO AMD BOMBAY OB BVENIMO AMD SUNDAY Par Thrra Bis Oaa tloath Months Months Ysar la Texas and Oklahoma BAB BIB SOS IBM In Halted Stataa IBS BOB BAB IMS la xaas ol snor or nmiasina In Manx or other adrartlaa manta tha publlahcr doaa aot hald hunaalf Uabla for dam asm further than tha amount reeelnd by him tar auah adrartlaink "ABOVEBOARD CIRCULATION7 Tha Wlehlto Dally Tunca and Raeord Maaa arc aiam-ban af tba Audit Bureau el Circulation a national orsan-mattaa which eartlftas tha elreulatum af tha leadlnf aawa- aaaera of the United Stalea HSUULA'it cm CARRIER SERVICB Should you not raeaire your aopy of Tha Tunee by ear-rlar by ottock la tha araains aa weak days and TAB cloak ea Sunday biotlIbi psasa velaphana tha emulation department S1 bafora 1 o'clock la tha srealad ar balora IJO oa Sunday man Ins and a aopy will hr east nut by special masses iter It is our desire to lira ihaAbara prompt and aatlafaetory sanies aad wa will appraelato ynur antlfylns na diirlna the time mentioned Talk BRUCE CATTON IN WASHINGTON By BKUCKCAliON Wichita Daily Times Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON June A slow but significant drift In new deal' thinking in regard to bust-mss loans is in progress these headed up by tha various lending proposals which are now under public discussion and It points in tha direction of vastly increased exercise by Washington of functions which even the new deal hu heretofore considered the private banker1 Job Most obvious of course la Senator loans-for-small-busi-nessmen bill This wouldn't put the government directly into the banking or at lust not all the way in Basically it simply a plan to guarantee private-bank loans up to 90 per cent Next comes A A Berle's pro-poaal for a government agency to lend money to business men or firms which had new construction programs in mind This might either take the form of direct loans or of the purchase of bonds It is commonly referred to under the name of the capital credit system Stepping Toward the Banking Business The Berle plan a step beyond the Mead pbn It may also be significant to notice that a step beyond the Berle pbn the proposal for a capital issues banking system which being advocated by the American Association for Economic Freedom and which will be introduced in congreu before the present session ends Thb lut scheme would simply have the government take over the functions of the ordinary Investment banker The underwriting and distribution of all capital issues would be handled bite government organization setM 1 somewhat along tha linea of we federal reserve system It would put the private Invest-ment banker out of en im which is also in the back of the minds of thou who are talking up the Berle plan All of thb not to say that the Roosevelt administration committed to any such step as this Ralph Burton currently la an investigator for the house committee which probing Into the foibles of WPA large and amalL As such he hu presented to the committee a considerable mau of evidence which has been highly embarrassing to WPA Which somehow makes tt interesting to report that approximately tour months ago not then employed by the congressional went to WPA headquarters here and asked for a Job on WPA's own Investigating staff He got turned down soon after was hired by the committee 8 A Is Rough on Rata The Housing authority probably responsible for the death of more rats than any other outfit in the country When new dwellings an built under USHA programs the bw provides that an equivalent number of slum dwellings be destroyed These the A people have found are invariably rat-infested If left to themselves the rats would simply move into the nevf buildings along with the tenants Wagner Changes Almost Harry Hopkins business advisory council hu put in weeks trying to work out a set of Wagner sot amendments that could get White House approval The job nearing completion It uid to include provisions for increuing the labor board membership to five permitting employers to petition for elections and modifying the rule which prohibits an employer from discussing labor problems with employes Hopkins reported to favor thb personally However Ifi confer with Labor Secretary If kins and Labor Board Chairman Madden before handing the president a final definite set of recommendations Dog Catcher Loses to Stork MIDDLETOWN RL-Th stork quicker than tha dog catcher When Leroy Feck-ham wu called to pick up a stray dog ha acted promptly But even he was late Instead of one canine mother with 11 puppies awaiting him Texas Today Furthermore and However I By JOHN GOULD THE BUSINESS of shipping scrap metal to those countries that make use of it for munitions Is still brisk it seems Some recently published figures show that Junk shipments from American ports are about 19 per cent heavier now than they were a year ago Japan is the principal customer but not the only one There is a ready market for all the disused metal that civilization accumulates from day to day Civilization creates machines and gadgets uses them weirs them out then takes the rusted battered steel for thinp wherewith to destroy what it has wrought Little Oswald's tricycle outgrown and discarded may return to him one day in the form of shrapnel that rends the body it once helped to develop The typewriter on which these lines are written the linotype on which the type is set the press on which the paper is printed may alt some day aw the heck with It! Let's move on to a more cheerful theme skipping over the thought that metal In a bomb may serve ci vilization no less effectively than metal in a typewriter depending on whose bomb and whose typewriter A preacher-friend of mine tells about another preacher who tor one reason and another fell out with the newspapers He wanted to preach a sermon about the press and presently found a suitable one It was Luke 19:2 which tells about the publican Zaecheus who Was short of stature and thus at a disadvantage In the crowd that gathered when Jesus cams that way The verse says thst he could not see Jesus for (because of) the press There are all sorts of possibilities in such a text for anybody who like newspapers Some of the governor's friends might call hia attention to it Not that the governor needs any help Anybody who can make alliteration do things for him as the governor did Sunday morning can go it alone In case you missed it he spoke of "political proselyters polluting the place performing a personality piracy plot for the purpose of plucking personal publicity by the papers printing their prattle" Pretty good or perhaps one should ssy pretty proficient Still there is room for improvement He left out pusillanimous paleozoic pernicious perverse pin-headed pragmatic putrescent and puerile He probably know what all of them mean but that shouldn't deter him at alL TIE weigh t-guessers at the New York World's fair It seems are at outs with the officials and are threatening to move out and leave the fair flat on its back It's hard to think of a fair or a carnival without them but maybe the show would survive In the old days when the circus was a traveling gyp-game weight-guessing was tied up with pocket-picking Tha guesser would run his hands lightly over a male body as if to see how solid he was and would take note of the location of the customer's wallet A algnal to a light-fingered confederate would follow A boyhood' acquaintance of mine who traveled much with carnivals said that there was a formula that made weight-guessing fairly easy The customer's height and the breadth of hia shoulders as I recall were the main factors Most West Texans have known men in tha cattle business who could come amazingly dose to guessing the weight of a steer Henrietta used to have one who would undertake to tell within 10 pounds and bet you any amount you named on the accuracy of his guess There Is one hard-and-fast rule am told about guessing the weight of women The guess must be op the down aide of the actual weight even if the house loses THIS department's guess as to what the king or maybe the queen said when they departed from United States soil "Thank goodness maybe now we can get a decent cup of tea" American tea as much of a trial to British visitors as British coffee is to American tourists In England That is to say each country has a lot to learn about the other's favorite beverage It's when you offer a Briton iced tea however that you really break hia heart Know Your Bible By EVELYN DUNLOP After Abraham's conces-aion to Lot in Genesis 13:14 what was his compensation? "And the Lord said unto Abram after the separation from Lot 'All the land which thou seest will I give It to thee and thy seed forever'" How numerous was his seed In be? A will make them as- the dust of tha earth so If man can PONtMEHYWOl FOR IT -ty efrank Cibn TAR-FAU-LIN Noun Canvas coveigd with tar or impregnated with waterproof composition No dictionary unctions or lists yet Jew speakers pronounce it otherwise This mispronunciation doubtless orig inated in an attempt to give the word a French twist but Web certain that the word is of French origin That is boride the point however for the French would never say in any event Neither should we The second syllable rhymes with law the third syllable rhymes with pin Correct pronunciation: tar-PAW-Ha dents who pax-ticipate in the and Industries" project Enrollments in the various cities for 1938-39: Abilene and I 27 Amarillo and 39 Big Spring and I 22 Borger and 22 Breckenridge and 30 Brownwood and I 22 Cisco and I 20-Dalhart and I 21 Dallas and I 94 Dallas and 22 Edinburg and I 20 Corpus Christ! and IH 19 El Paso and 0 19 Georgetown and I 21 Graham and 19 Goose Creek and I 10 Houston and 1 22 Lameu and I 21 Laredo and I 20 Lubbock and 24 Marshall and 22 Memphis and 17 Midland and 1 20 Mt Pleasant andRL 29 Pampa and I 19 Ranger and 21 San Antonio and I 24 San Antonio and 0 30 Sweetwater and I 23 Taylor (negro) and 22 Texarkana and 28 (By na Associated Fish) In 29 Texas cities this year high school students in diversified vocational groups earned while they learned had Jobs during vacations and upon graduation atepped into full-time with Vocational training In high schools of the United States is not a new development educators having almply redecorated the ap prenticeshlp system of an earlier era The Encyclopedia Brittanlca traces the movement's great atjmulation" in thia country to 1906 when tha National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education was organized Even before that sporadic classes in manual training and kindred arts were occasionally offered principally however to give boys' and those quite something to do at school When the NSPJE began Its crusade it introduced the novel Idea that large groups of American youth never would need classical training Slowly vocational currlculi were broadened until the world war period when inadequacy of the supply of skilled labor together with the Industrial educators' increased influence led congress to pass the "Smith-Hughes act" Feb 23 1917 Federal Aid The legislation accepted as the of high school vocational in the United States provided for the granting of federal financial aid to public schools offering approved vocational agricultural home economics and trade and industrial education courses of leu than college grade to pupils 14 years of age or older Support also wu given to teacher-training institutions preparing vocational teachers to civilian rehabilitation training and to special vocational researches No aid was given to commercial training School men readily accepted the Smith-Hughes idea Within a few years schools in almost every state offered courses in auto mechanics cooking vocational aviculture printing welding electricity art and similar fields But when the depression arrived vocational educators took a new tack They prepared not only to train but to find Joba for tha workers In 1936 congreu passed the George-Deen bill providing for "part-time cooperative vocational training" In a broader field than that provided by the Smith-Hughe act Texas took immediate advantage of the opportunity and that is the system under which thia year's 700 youngsters studied Varied Pragmas This is how the plan works: A high school upper classman finding he cannot go to college wants to learn a trade and obtain foundational at the same time Ha goes to the head of his school's cooperative part-time training program who Is called a The latter allows the youngster to choose an occupation after his interests and abilities are determined In Amarillo Dallas and San Antonio the stu- PREDICTION Anybody the Republiesna choose to nominate says ex-Governor Lsndon of Kansas esn win in 1040 About this time four yesrs ago Mencken of Bsltimore web saying that the Republicans could win in 1936 with Chinaman aa their nominee There have been election years when the Republicans were certain of victory regardless of whom they nominated In 1920 for example they could have won with anybody even with Daugherty even with FalL In 1924 the Democrats seemed to have a chance to win which they bungled but it is doubtful that if Coolidge had not been the Republican's logical and inevitable choice and if the Democrats had named somebody much more formidable than the stodgy John Davis the outcome would have been different There were some aspirants for the Democratic nomination in 1928 who had they been chosen would have received more electoral votes than A1 Smith but a GOP victory waa in the cards from the very start in that year If Landon or any other Republican leader thinks that the party can win in 1940 with any candidate it puts forward Democrats may indulge in the malicioua hope that ucb a belief to guide the opposition The Republican party's prospects are bright and that fact is one for Democrats to face but if the idea that the American people are going to favor change just for the sake of changing dominates the strategy of the Republicans they are in for a jolt They can win if the Democrats give them the opportunity and if they take well-considered advantage of it But it is not going to be any set-up in any event If as now appears likely the Republican party is ruled next year' by men of the Hoover and Vandenberg type it faces a hard hard fight Landon is doing his party no service by saying that it can win with anybody as it could have done in 1920 THE GOVERNOR DOESNT DENY One of the rules of politics is that a man under fire must not try to explain because his enemies won't believe him and his friends don't need any explanations Grover Cleveland facing a quite unpleasant charge discarded that rule for a better one "Tell the was his command to his lieutenants they obeyed and the scandal presently spent its force There are Texans who feel that it was incumbent on Governor O'Daniel in his Sabbath broadcast to make some reply to the speech of Representative Finer quoted in part on this page Monday In that speech the governor's good faith was sorely impugned He was put in the position of a charlatan catering to selfish interests while affecting to serve the pensioners The fact that he ignored the matter failed to either deny or explain the remarks attributed to him by Finer is a damning one One must believe that he would have denied it if he could In his broadcast on the previous Sabbath he had assumed the role of taskmaster and bully cracking the whip over the legislators Last Sunday he indulged in half an hour of whining and pleading He offered no argument for tha pension-revenue amendment other than to say that it would be much nicer if the measure were approved in that form The weak and querulous nature of his speech and his failure to answer Finer should have the effect of giving the opposition to the amendment more votes than ever when the measure conies up again THE ADVANCE IN GASOLINE Higher prices for gasoline distasteful though they may be to autoista in general are something to be viewed cheerfully in a community such as our own where oil is a dominant economic factor Higher gasoline prices mean a healthier state of affairs in the oil industry as a whole their stabilizing effect on the market for crude is something for Wichitana to view with equanimity if not with happiness The statistical position of the oil industry is still very far from satisfactory but it has improved noticeably' in recent weeks The current demand for gasoline is about per cent ahead of that of a year ago and that fact weighs heavily against the factors of crude over-production and excessive runs to refineries If the present excellent demand which is setting new records continues this summer in the face of higher gasoline prices the end of the year will find the industry in better health than for a number of years Such a consideration should prompt oil country autoista to take ajpheerful view of the increased prices By GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS Author of "You "Just Among COOU FRESH MINDS We all know people who come to us like a breath of beauty or like a stimulating breeze on a hot day There is uplift power to them They light you up! I am very fond of Hawthorne but there was a morbid stream of thought that seemed never to leave him He waa a great and gifted writer but I wish he had lived a more cheerful life and had written more that would leave his readers buoyant In spirit I have been reading his Journals and they are filled with morbid suggestion and he was so expert in picking out the faults in people and not so expert in praising Stevenson on the other hand lived in a body that was wasting away He suffered but his writings are full of warmth and beauty He had a cool fresh mind and leaves his readers cool and fresh in their minds after reading him There is a very Intimate relationship between the mind and the body In fact the mind is the body's boss! And if this boas keeps a bad house and bad hours and harbors thoughts that are unkind intolerant and revengeful the very away and mien of the body will reflect the life of that boss An unhealthy state will result with both Science has gone into many fields and produced wonderful revelations but it has gone but a short distance into revealing the human mind Even a dog can scent the fear of a person the moment that he approaches And we all know that are like or dislike a person the moment we come in contact with him or her Why? I believe that the mind gives out invisible waves that influence just the same as the sir is composed of waves that carry the human voice for thousands of miles We think of the latter now as no mystery because science has explained it When will science explain the waves of human thought? There are those who inspire us without uttering word! They have cool fresh minds that give of their substance without asking We think better we live better when people say encouraging things to us and when we reciprocate Tomorrow Mr Adams will talk cm the subject: 1 Contemporary Comment HOW ITALY HELPED FRANCO Ten days ago we referred to the boast of German and Italian officials about the extent and nature of German and Italian direct intervention in the Spanish war during a time when both governments denied formally that they were in any way Involved in Spain We pointed out that while there was little new as to the actual facts of their every one had known for years that non-intervention waa merely a convenient diplomatic it was somewhat unusual for officials to admit so brazenly that their governments had deliberately tried to deceive the world as to what they were doing Now comes more material from Italian sources which shows that the actual extent of Italian intervention waa even greeter than had been expected An official Italian publication Forza Ar-mate is quoted by our correspondent in Italy aa authority for the statement that the Italian navy convoyed 100000 Italian soldiers and brought back 14093 wounded and sick At the same time the Italian government helped in the shipment of 70 guns and 40000 tons of munitions and of 4370 tanks trucks and automobiles The point is that this was done with official Italian connivance at the time that Italy was insisting that only Italian were in Spain and the Italian government was trying to give the Impression that it had no official part In the movement of these volunteers Instead we find that Italy was actively helping General Franco all the time that it was protesting that it waa getting out of Spain Thus another chapter is added to the long story of deceit and misrepresentation which is Justifiable only on the Machiavellian theory that it succeeded hi mlsleeding the Chemberlain government and so served Italy's immediate diplomatic ends aid in Spain was detailed last week Here again it la not so much the fact of intervention as the manner in which this intervention was covered up which concerns the rest of the world Incidentally it will be Interesting to see the reaction on British opinion as It becomes more and more clear that Italian submarines may well have taken part In the attacks on British ncrchanlmen in Spanish waters The British have always been peculiarly susceptible to the use of submarines and long tried to have submarine banned as instruments of warfare Whenever It becomes apparent that submarines have or may boused to the prejudice of British merchant shipping all tha old traditions and Instincts of a nation that is dependent on control of the seas come to tha surface The recital of Italy's prowess In the Spanish war doubtless enhances Italian self-esteem But Its publication is not likely to strengthen British faith or affection the government of New York Herald Tribune dent may work in either "distributive or and In other Texas towns with a part time program there is only one division sometimes sometimes and Industries" includes mechanics radio repairmen printing coffin makers em-balmers saddle makers cooks engravers draftsmen and similar trades "Distributive Occupations' includes retail clerks buyers window decorators stock handlers and other jobs associated with merchandising After a choice is made tha coordinator contacts a suitable employer and the student is put to work under strict regulations Works Fari-TIme The student works half a day on school days and goes to class the other half He works at his Job full-time week-ends holidays and vacations At school he must take subjects selected largely by the coordinator and his staff but he receives regular dam credit for both his job and studies His classroom activities are determined by his employment If he is working a dyer for instance chemistry at school is based on elements of dyes makeup of fabrics and similar projects He also takes business English salesmanship commercial law and public speaking advertising physics and kindred subjects If a girl works in a cafeteria much of her school time is devoted to experiment and research in home economics and food chemistry and related material A boy in a office specializes in advanced mathematics architecture physics and similar appropriate work The program is arranged so that atudents can gain enough combined credit for their work and study to graduate with their acad cmic claasmates although a lade of the customary required entrance subjects makes it imposaible to enter college without considerable make-up work Adjuatmenta Made Aa protection against exploitation of student-labor employers are required to sign agreements to provide desirable working conditions pay specific salaries retain students at the prescribed work advance them with all speed and furnish regular full-time jobs upon graduation if the students have proved satisfactory The coordinator and his assistants make frequent inspections of the establishments were students work If either youngsters or employer prove unsatisfactory the student is removed if attempts to adjust the difficulty are unsuccessful Tha student obtains from vocational training Instruction in desired work for which he receives pay has a Job during his off time at school studies Interesting subject matter and la assured a position and reasonable advancement which he faces the world with a diploma In hand In turn the employer obtains workers who are trained scholastically to handle his particular problems and to stay with him' At least that is what A Woods state superintendent ol education claims and at hia office in Austin he has a huge pile of testimonials from satisfied employers to prove it When the plan wu launched two years ago at San Antonio business men were a bit skeptical Mr Woods admits Now In most cities they are increasingly eager to participate in the plan How About Your Health? i I blocked or perhaps when i hhwks the flown of urine i dngte kidney the other on ing been previously remov cause of diseases In such death occurs in from 10 to 1 This type occurs also in poi when tht ctl both kidneys are stopped Obviously an scute atli this condition is a serious nd demands the most i Potwible medical attention! at once put tt fak! bBcki tamo! Jhtao teeth and taka care tti tongue ta not bitten and I hack so as truct breathing The dock convulsions by tl of suitable remedies and ca increase the flow of fluids body Uirough the bowel by may ibis for him to relieve so the most serious symptoms I bing mme of the fluid fro spinal canal the immediate a re brouht undei trol ii i possible to ease to set by the help rt to keep the bowels open a fluid and waits mi through tha LoweL The methods of treatmer SB? th vtaJJ1 however these an methods of treatmentwhich Snta for himself lamly the presence of anv Wnptoma that have been Kribed constitutes such a sira By DR MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of tha American Medical Association and of Hy gela the Health Magazine When the kidneys fail to set they should in disposing of the waste materials from the body a poisoning occurs which unless controlled will become fatal There are many different theories aa to Just how this poisoning is brought about No one causa accounts for all the varieties and symptoms of the cgidltion However it becomes dear that the aasodated changes in tha blood prwsura the increased amount of fluid in the brain and tha accumulation in the blood of various toxic substances all have some part Because of the variations In the manner In which the condition occur doctors classify three kinds of uremia: one is a sudden form which comm out of a clear skv with a sudden Inn at sight and follow by a jagg of consciousness The second is a more chronic two In which the failure of the 5mnY 11 rdui1' The patient will have headache loss of amr tit a taste of bittsV: staftaJL" Jwj vomiting shortness of breath and perhani JNtantuM muscular twitching 5 In some eases of hind the convulsions or un- deveU)p lud-oanijr Tht bttterncM or tutc of 10 tee lE in gUElnd their retlon in £5 of uremia occurs when tha kidneys art suddenly number the dust then- shall thy seed be How extensive a territory wu to be theirs? A walk through the land in the length and breadth of it for I will give it unto thee" Did Abraham take God at his word? A "And Abraham removed his tent and came and dwelt in the plains and built there an altar unto the lord" Vena 18 Does unselfishness always yield Its reward? A In self-satisfaction which is tha highest compensation Dallas with both and A programs leads Texas cities in enrollment with 66 students figures issued by Mr Woods show Enrollments range from that number to Graham's 16 Taylor the only rity having a negro project hu 22 negro stu- THOUGHT FOR TODAY Hitherto have ye asked Bathing la mf bbbm: ask and ye aha 11 receive that year Jay auy he falL-Jehn 16:34 No one who is not acruslnmed to give grandly can ask nobly and with Lavater jt.

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About Wichita Falls Times Archive

Pages Available:
698,364
Years Available:
1907-1987