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Journal Gazette from Mattoon, Illinois • Page 4

Publication:
Journal Gazettei
Location:
Mattoon, Illinois
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Page:
4
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TiGx rors TBI DAILY lOCSMAIQAZXm MSO COaSSBMCUXMAM, JUTTOOX, WEDXtSDAT. 1IA1CH SI 1961 IDSON IN WASHINGTON Potomac Fever Tfct Volet Of The Greater Mattooa Art Editorial Opinion 0 The Daily Journal-Gazette AND COMMERCIAL STAR 4 in V'ii ii THE DOCTOR SAYS That Overpowering Desire To Sleep Isn't Serious By HAROLD THOMAS HTMAN, IU. Tale of tho Suits' Fits Basic U. S.Jap Trade Dilemma i Consolidated 1919 WASHINGTON, D. Republicans are con earned.

They say If the recession lasts much longer, they may be forced to take action and vote to blame It on the Democrats. Congressional mail indicates that the overwhelming majority of people are crazy over Ken nedy and At to be tied over his program. The astronaut recruiting program is going big since word got around that if a man stays in orbit six months, hes exempt from the Peace Corps. Prl)nt and Publish ar Vie Prdat QtKaraJ MiMitt Secretary and Advertising Director Wit BAUCL. ED CU1O0NC3 WH.

ft. HASOX JR. havinf a conversation. felt my eyes' clouding and have a hard time controlling myself. I try to wash my face In ke cold water to waken myself.

But It's no use. It's so embarrassing I had It hnnm lunat-tnf Editor dtj Editor a B. JtcOUNAXJ T. J. MeCULLOUGH AL The New Frontier's farm deal permitting farmers to write their By rcro edson J-O Hash mrt Correspondent TOKYO The first 35 ready, made mens woof suits were exported from here to the United States three years ago.

The raw wool came from Australia. But It was processed and made Into suits In Japan. Last year 40,000 Japanese-made suits went to America over a thousandfold increase since 1958. Forty thousand suits is still nothing compared to the 30 mil- own program, is a logical extension of the election in Cook county where Democrats did their own counting. Everything changes in Africa.

It used. to be the white man' burden. Now Soapy Williams is the black man's burden. One Democratic Congressman says hell cast two helpful Votes on the school Issue, one for federal aid to Catholic schools and one for first aid to Jack Kennedy. Fletcher Knebd Every once in a while a patient describes a disturbance with such accuracy that you might suspect, It you didnt know otherwise, that what you were being told was ksson that previously had been studied and rehearsed.

Let me give you an example' In 1880 a French physician named Gellneau described a condition that he named "narcolepsy" In the following manner: "The patient, who has as many as 300 attacks to a single day related how he felt a profound heaviness, a sort of eloud circling his head and a heavy weight on his forehead and at the back of his eyes. His thoughts were muddled, then blotted out. His eyelids half-closed and finally they closed; be slept; and all this very rapidly; the sleep lasting hardly a few seconds. If standing, he tottered, staggered uua mens ana ooys suim manufactured and sold In theUnited last week when my husband took the children and, me for a ride. kept falling asleep and waking and missed half the scenery by being asleep, "If I get the sleepy feeling at home, I Just doze off for' 30 minutes and I feel refreshed.

But I dont like to sleep during the day because it spoils my sleep at night. Now that my children are older, I'd like to help out by taking a Job But I'm afraid that if I started work I'd get a sleepy attack and lose the job." While lots of us get normally sleepy, especially as we grow old States last year. But the Japanese exports) were POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER Menu Ordeal Upsets Aggrieved Housewife ant Secretary of Commerce Rowland runs tan hurrying to Japan at the end of March for' a two months' talk. It Is also why there is an eight-man Japanese mission going to San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago. Philadelphia, Washington and New York on March 90.

It will be headed by Talso IshizakL president of Japan's Federation of Economic Organizations. Among the problems these two trade missions will have to work out on both sides of the Paclflo will be Japan's new dependence on Saudi Arabia for future oil supplies, extension of Japan Airlines service from San Francisco to New York and Europe. Japan's trade relations with Communist China and the limits on Japan's textile exports to the U. S. The Japanese hold the threat of Increasing their tade with Communist China over the United States.

The Japanese big businessmen don't want to trade with the Red; They think the volume may be limited to about $30 million annually. But the US. cant ask Japan not to trade with Red Chin if American importers, American labor organizations and the American Congress are going to limit Japanese exports. The limitations on Japanese cotton textile exports to the United States offer an illustration of all problems. Negotiations on this have already begun In Washington.

Realising that if they tried to saturate the American market with low-cost goods they might er, narcolepsy Is a real, but mild luce a drunk. He heard people ac W1L B. HAg. Editor of editorial Par Another First Today's edition of the Daily Journal-Gazette marks another first in its content and makeup. The spring opening tabloid section which appears as section three of the newspaper was made possible through the imagination and ingenuity of the Journal-Gazette advertising, composing room and press room staffs and the progressive Mattoon merchants represented in the tabloid section.

The Journal-Gazette did publish a tabloid section some jears ago. However, it was printed on a Gazette Printing Co. press and not the large rotary press that prints your daily newspaper. Tabloid sections are gaining popularity in the daily newspaper field across the country. Readers report they are pleased with the ease of handling and readability.

They are also convenient to keep in the family magazine rack as a reference readers can check time and again before making shopping trips. We hope you, the reader, will enjoy browsing through this spring opening section. The sure way of getting an article at fair price and the expert sen-ice that should go along with a purchase is to deal with the reliable merchants whose advertisements appear in the Journal-Gazette. The County Board And Civil Defense cuse him of drinking and laugh at dlMrder-11 i nothing like epilepsy By JOT STILLEY (An Aggrieved Housewife) mm Dut ne could not reply. He souna.

slumped down, If he were In the The accompanying complaint street, to get out of the way of of nocturnal insomnia, as reported horses and carriages." by our letter writer, was also pres- "The trouble I am bothered enc to most of the cases reported with," writes my correspondent, a In the medical literature. lt nousewl'e two Om correspondent appends a 8 for footnote to the effect that she's tier likes them. Homademade corn muffins were in the oven. A welcoming smile was on my face. This would be a dinner to be remembered.

It was. Just when a cheery step should enougn to throw a scare Into the Amalgamated 1 Clothing Workers Uaicu of America. At its Miami Beach convention last month, the ACW declared a boycott not just against ready-made suits from Japan hut against allowing their members to cut any Japanese-woven cloth after May 1. i This incident has assumed the proportions of a major diplomatic break between the two countries. President Kennedy has condemned the ACW action.

Union has rejected the protest. All this makes front page news in Japan. Japanese clothing manufacturers had been considering setting a quota of 130.000 or maybe only 60.000 suits a year for export to the VJS. But they didnt act fast enough to head off an American boycott. Thir tale the suits, which everyone can understand, exemplifies the fundamental problem in American-Japanese relations.

If what has happened to Japanese- ana at Deen ashamed to speak of her have been heard, on the thresh old, an ominous telephone bell tTTk, day' P'1111. to her very busy doctor, 1 Instead. LT. 'a a mistake, because hell was heard to ISt iVUf 1 JUSt hw P'y of the new to give in to it This sleepiness hits pep-up pills that may provide a Jatchi.u, d0Wn readln' taPoltttfcm to the problem and IV enable our lady to get and hold also had It happen when was that Job she's been considering. "So sorry I didn't have a chance to call you before," my husband apologized.

"I've just been so busy at the office I didn't have time. I'm going to go out now and grab a sandwich. Ill be home later." Maybe ESP isnt such a good idea after all. If he knew what I was thinking he wouldn't come home at all. Al Capp's Column Citizens of such vulnerable cities as Chicago, De made wool cloth happens to other destroy this market, the Japanese troit and New York are apathetic about the effort of Japanese exports, things could get have voluntarily restricted their serious.

exports by quotas. Review of a Book Jacket Thoughts For Hal Beyle NEW YORK iff) If there's anything to this extrasensory per- ception business, I wish I could figure out how to tune In on my husband's wave length. Not that I want to check up on his thoughts about that little blonde. It's Just that It would be such a big help in menu planning. I know why they call the dinner table the "groaning board." No matter what food I fix, the man of the house groans when it appears.

Seems it Just wasn't what he had In mind. As sure as I've bent over a hot stove all day preparing a delicate repast of hummingbirds' tongues under glass for dinner, he informs me in disgusted tones that he had a hummingbird tongue sandwich for lunch. If I was out with the girls for lunch and hope to sneak by with Just a cold tuna fish platter for the evening meal, that's the day he -reports he was so busy at the office he didnt have time to eat, and he is In a real steak-and-potatoes frame of stomach. The next night In an effort to make amends, I prepared a stuffed turkey with all the trimmings. But it's my goose that's cooked! It seems he took in an expense-account luncheon at the ritziest) place in town and he is more stuffed than the turkey.

And, of course, there's always that day when I clean the refrigerator and decide that in the interests of economy somebody besides me ought to eat the leftovers. So I throw everything into a WEDNESDAY This is evidence of the righteous Judgment of God, that you may be made worthy of the kingdom of God, for which you are suffering. Thess. 1:5. The brightest crowns that are worn in heaven have been tried and smelted and polished and glorified through the furnace of tribulation.

H. Chapin. In 1957 the Japanese limited their cotton textile shipments to 50 per cent of all United States textile imports. In the three years since then, the Japanese have held their exports at more or less static volume levels. But while the Japanese exporters were trying to be reasonable in this places like Hong Kong and India began to step up their exports to America, undercutting Japan.

The result has been that last year Japan supplied only 35 per cent of the American textile imports. Other exporters thus got rich at Japan's expense. This Japan wants to change. This, and other related problems, are tough to work out But the important principle involved is that trade means life or death in future American-Japanese The fundamental international political problem above all this is that the United States needs Japan as its strongest ally in the Far East, just as Japan needs the US. as a strong ally to maintain Japanese security.

If this alliance is broken for any reason ait all, Japan will of necessity turn more and more to Red China and Soviet Russia, or else become another neutral. The' fundamental economic fact above all this is that today Japan is the United States' largest customer for agricultural foods and fibers and second only to Canada in purchases of all-other American exports. In the other direction, the VS. is the largest purchaser of Japanese exports. The trade amounts to a billion dollars a year each way.

That is why there Is an American trade mission tinier Assist- By AL CAPP I Intended to review a whole book for you today, but I'm going to review the book-Jacket instead. I always keep my books in their paper Jackets, and I've noticed that a lot of other people do. Their gaiety and color make fine decorations in the book case or on the coffee table. The book I'm not going to review is "Meeting At A Far Meridian" by Mitchell Wilson, published by Doubleday. The theme of the book Is "the hope that science will achieve what diplomacy has failed to do bring together the people of the world." But what's the theme of the book cover? The front of the cover is a painting of a towering snowcapped mountain.

On the back Is a photograph of the author, a pleasant looking young man, stepping a commercial airline, I will be glad to discuss rates with them. Ill be fair. My charges, like any other advertising media, will be based on the average number of visitors to my house each day with a reasonable increase for weekends when the traffic is thicker. If Doubleday (an alert publishing house if ever there was one it seems to be going into all sorts of sidelines, including promotion for commercial airlines) wants to hire me for outdoor advertising too, I will carry then- book on subways and busses, for a small extra charge, with the back cover out and plainly visible. I will also promise them not to read the book, because that gets the cover all out of focus and makes it hard to read the ad.

When I buy a newspaper for a nickel or a magazine for two bits, I know these Dubliahem those who advocate a strong civil defense program. So it isn't surprising that the Coles County Board of Supervisors displayed little concern over the demand of the county civil defense director for $3,700 to establish a county warning network, and hit resignation if the funds are not forthcoming. As has been stated before in this column, a few well-meaning Mattoon citizens have spent lot of their time and the city's money in an effort to establish a system of civil defense. To date, on the plus side of the ledger, we have a capable auxiliary police department which has done a fine job of expediting trsffic on -Friday nights and on football Saturdays in the fall And the city has acquired, st a fraction of its worth, a mobile hospital which can be set up in a matter of hours in the event of a disaster. However, Mattoon's warning system has, on the occasions when approaching tornadoes threatened the city, been something less than successful On other occasions imperfections in the warning system have created fear bordering on panic when citizens, awakened by the wailing of the sirens, were unable to learn that missiles or tornadoes weren't hesded in this direction.

It is reasonable to assume that in time local CD officials will iron out the hugs, and that eventually Mattoon's warning system will be worth the time and money it has cost But in view of the frustration on this side of the county, we can't criticize the county board for failure to jump at the chance to spend $3,700. How could they explain such an expenditure to an apathetic public? Glancing Back lAsfa phi out or a plane. On the plane Is a in ie VvAbmrJuTOrJ sign- advertising a commercial couldn't possibly give me all that airline. Below the photograph Is Merry-Go -Round PttBW PEARSON pot, hoping to convince the family that hash is the fanciest of dishes. As the wives have already guessed, my husband picks that night to report at the last moment he's bringing home a friend.

Always eager to please, I recently prepared a menu with all my star boarder's favorite foods. The table was charmingly set. The children were sternly cautioned not to complain about the breaded veal cutlets, which they both dislike as much as their fa- reading matter without getting advertisers to pay. But when I go for three to five dollars for a book, I know I've paid all the expenses, including a cut for the publisher and the author. But if this is a new trend if buying a book now means that all three of us, publisher, author, and purchaser, are going into the advertising business together the profit ought to be cut three ways.

another line of type saying that this photograph was published courtesy of that airline, giving its name again, in full. Well, I'm not going to review that book because I haven't the time. I must return it to the bookstore, get my money back and make them a counterpropositlon. If they want to use my book case or coffee table to advertise Fifty Years Ago Today (1911) Fred Grant has resigned as vice president and director of the Okaw Building and Loan association. Mr.

Grant has been an official of the association for seven years. The grounds surrounding the big reservoir in Paradise township are to be beautified as rapidly as possible, action along this line being authorized by the waterworks board at a meeting held on Tuesday morning. Shortly after 9 o'clock Tuesday night the fire department was called to 813 North Tenth street to extinguish a blaze which was consuming a small outbuilding. There was little damage. Twenty-Five Years Ago (1936) (Sunday) to rug EDITOR pastoral letter telling the people It was a "sin" to vote for the popular Democratic Party.

"The three bishops tried to act as political leaders," Marcona said. "The bishops tried to destroy the loyalty of the people to their political party and failed. We faced this Issue squarely. We sincerely hope you will share with ue the benefits of this Democratic achievement." The bishops were not foreigners, he said. Archbishop Davis was born in Philadelphia arid Bishop MoManus in Brooklyn.

"These men were all educated In the Roman Catholic Institutions of higher learning In the. United States. They are blood brothers of your Roman Catholic bishops, the same who are warning you, in effect, that unless they get concessions for their church school sys swipe at Kennedy's brains and beauty, Father Oinder concentrated on the Issues rather than the President personally. Kennedy's Defender However, Commonweal, the Catholic newspaper not edited or dominated by the clergy, defended Kennedy and ctflded the hierarchy. "The Roman Catholic hierarchy," it wrote, "has now added a religious problem to the administration's aid to education headache The administration's program is, under present circumstances, as good as one can hope for.

It is realistic, carefully wrought out and establishes valuable and significant precedents. "Above all, its measures to improve our educational system are manifestly and urgently needed. Even so the school bill will have to face a punishing liberal-conservative southern secular -religious cross fire. We hope that its wounds will not prove fatal." Bitterness in Puerto Rico The other type of criticism which Kennedy had In mind when he appealed for "reason" was given by Sen. Hlpolito Marcano, Puerto Rican senator-at-large, in testimony before the VS.

Senate education subcommittee. Sen. Marcano compared the current Catholic attempt to influence legislation with the attempt of the bishops to interfere in Puerto Rican politics last fall to defeat Gov. Luis Munoz-Marin. "It started with a little 'bill to establish religious education for public school children through the released-tlme plan," testified Sen.

Marcano. The bill was an at- Readers are invited, yes, urged to write letters to the editor. They must be on subjects of general concern in the community. Letters will not be published critlcixinr business firms or individuals in private life, or if the subject is a personal matter. Please keep letters brief, avoiding repetition, and sign them with full name and address.

Unsigned letters will not be published. Signatures will be withheld at the request of the writer. Mussolini, Salazaar, Franco, and Japanese Fascism each gained and retained power with the eager support of financial giants. Mr. Pearson would have the lion (foreign investors) and the lamb (local democracy) He down peacefully together.

A man of his stature should know that this can happen only when the lamb Is inside the lion. The need of the hour In South America, Africa, and world-wide Is a change to local ownership of industry, for whoever owns the wealth rules the commonwealth. Political independence Is always a farce without economic independence. Terms of such a transition would have to be negotiated. They might include, 1 Purchase of such, property by the native government on easy terms and at a much reduced price; 2 Assumption of a large portion of the cost by the U.

S. government; and 3 Sale by the present owners at a much reduced figure (most having alreadyrecov-. ered their Investment many fold). Such a proposal forms' the only workable basis for world-wide cooperation and peace, is the cost too high? Let's look at the Do you think there are any reliable signs which Indicate whether, a summer will Be hot or mild? John J. Ryan, 1908 Shelby "I suppose there are signs that are fairly reliable, however, I don't know of any.

I rely on the day-to-day weather forecasts which Drew Pearson says: CATHOLIC CLERICAL PRESS ATTACKS FIRST CATHOLIC PRESIDENT; LAY CATHOLIC PRESS DEFENDS HIM; PUERTO RICAN SENATOR ADVISES US. SENATORS ON RELIGIOUS SCHOOL CONTROVERSY. WASHrNOTON-Behlnd President Kennedy's plea 'for reason In the discussion of federal aid for Catholic schools was a series of editorials In the Catholic press critical of his stand plus a move by the clergy to mobilize Catholic laymen all over the country to bombard their congressmen against the Kennedy aid-to-education bill. Significantly only one leading Catholic paper, the Commonweal, has vigorously come to the defense of the first Catholic President in history. Commonweal Is edited by lay Catholics, it was the first Catholic publication, and for some time the only one, to criticize the late Sen.

Joe McCarthy. In contrast, America, the Jesuit weekly, in an article by father Charles M. Whelan. charges that Kennedy's statement regarding the unconstitutionality of aid to Catholic schools was "erroneous. Inopportune and unnecessary." "We could and did expect a alienee respectful of the problem," said Father Whelan.

"As President of the States, he should avoid unnecessary pronouncements on delicate constitutional issues." Then the Jesuit weekly took this crack at the only Catholic in the Kennedy cabinet, brother Bobby: "Neither Mr. Kennedy nor his attorney general enjoy the reputation of great constitutional lawyers." The Transcript of Hartford, was also caustic. "It is no part of the President's business to rule them (aid to parochial schools) out peremptorily," said the Transcript. "The President gave ample evidence here of unbecoming haste in Judgment and a dismaying lack of fairness." The Transcript then asked all readers to start a letter-writing Shoplifting Costly Shoplifting takes a toll of many millions yearly from retail trade, though few shoplifters go long un-caught. But shoplifters never had it so good as they have since self-service marketing has.

spread to almost every kind of merchandise. A common trick of the male sneak-thief is to slip an article up his sleeve, later casually putting his hand in his pot ket and letting the item slide down. The leminine snitcher does this with her purse in the bottom of the basket carrier. This type never searches her purse for money at the checker's counter. A regular customer, a scholarly looking type, always carried a book under his arm when he came to market One day he left his book on the counter.

It was skillfully hollowed out. Inside were four sticks of butter. Fake musicians have been known to come in with empty violin cases which sre far from empty when they leave. A "physician" was even caught with groceries in his "medicine case." Though losses suffered by metropolitan stores because of activities of shoplifters are tremendous, counter measures employed usually result in jail sentences or stiff fines for the purloiners. But it is a never-ending struggle in which merchants cannot relax for a day.

Odds and Ends A newspaper story about the James Newby chil-dren of Rursl Route 2, Charleston, having six living grandmothers, a rarity, has uncovered an even greater grandparent oddity. Lori A. Bullock, nine-month-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry M.

Bullock, Charleston, claims 10 living grandmothers, plus 6 living grsndfath-ers. Her grandparents range through the double grests on both sides of the family Bat Masterson, buffslo hunter, Indian scout and card dealer, ended his career as boxing reporter for the New York Morning Telegraph. He died at his desk Oct. 25, 1921. On his typewriter was found this paragraph: "There are many in this old world of ours who hold that things break pbout even for all of us.

I have observed for exampVihat we all get bout the same amotfnt of ice. The rich get it in the summertime and the poor get it in the winter." President Kennedy's doctor has pronounced that high-backed, much-used rocking chair in his offic. annA mL tem by loans or grants there will nubile schools are made pretty much on a hit be no aid to the and miss basis. It would be almost either here or In Puerto Rico. Editor, Journal -Gazette: Drew Pearson's nine-point program for Improving relations with Latin America is Interesting.

Some points are excellent while others indicate a right trend. But number 5, which would "require U. S. companies doing business In Latin America to promote social reform," Is naive. "Bear in mind," continued the senator from Puerto Rico, "that it was the Roman Catholic people of Puerto Rico in great numbers who Joined with non-Catholic Puerto Rlcans to bring about this great victory.

l(WVtaf wmi i. Impossible to predict the weather correctly every day because there Is too much room for error." Mrs. Richard Sampson, 513 De-Witt "I have heard older people say that when we have a severe winter we will have a severe summer also. I don't know how tactical attack on the public in reliable that is but I have heard it Any other scheme, however sug- Those same comnanles have sel vneir criticisms oi our public manv times." dom promoted reforms In their can only postpone the own country. Huge corporations' day ot inevitable world-wide schools, but who would substitute ior tnem, schools super- tempt to circumvent the oonstitu- vised, "lightly controlled and wholly revolution aimed at confiscation of all foreign-owned property.

So we find ourselves engulfed In World tlonal mandate of the people of owned by ecclesiastical authorities Miss Edith Loew, 1404 Lafayette "I have heard about several different signs but I wouldn't depend on any of them. In the past some of them seemed to be fairly accurate but now they have been proven wrong. None of them have any scientific basis." Mrs. Cecil Scott, 3109 Shelby "No, I dont think there are any are organized for profit, so rarely fight for higher taxes or less prof-Its for themselves. It Is too much to expect, therefore, that these same companies will ever effectively sponsor a set-up In colonial territories giving, to the laboring masses the full fruits of their labor.

Any gesture in that direction must be understood as a conces- signs that can accurately tell us Puerto Rico. In spite of ecclesl-astlcal power we defeated the bill "Next the bishops went out and organized a political party the Christian Action Party, tp be used as a political weapon of the church to launch a frontal attack, not only to the public schools of Puerto Rico, but also to capture the government of PuertoRico. The pulpit was turned Into a political forum, the people were coerced' and' threatened with excommunication tf tey did not although financed with public funds. "They say there should be public taxation to support sectarian public schools in the control of which the people have no representation and over which the gov-, eminent has no supervision or. in which there is exclusive control by those who are tax-exempt.

"In the first case there is taxation without representation and in' the second case it is representation without This is some of the educational-. what type summer we are going elon to avoid greater demands. to have. I think weather reports 'Mr. Pearson, himself, says that concerning the future arent very War in, ostensibly fighting communism, but actually fighting to protect the foreign investments of a.few billionaires.

If we lose the, war whole world goes com-munlst If we win the war? Well, as. Pearson and History say "The; big companies- (the leaders on our side) secretly want a Everf; now in peacetime, attention diverted elsewhere by skillful the public is sitting duck for Fascism. Under the conditions of this project war, democracy would be Which of the three alternative 1 is the best bargain at the price? i ORVXLLS Q. ALLEN', WindaOTj TTHnni, icine. Dr.

Janet Travell savs she i. rnnviri1 carnPaln to their congressmen I wait until summer arrives and then make the best of the weather we have." Landman Shain, 613 wabaslw' "I dont think any signs are re- mu i 7. 7 Our Sunday Visitor, published in a good high-backed chains a fine way for anyone, in Huntington. buYdttrttwU ed nationally, featured an article' "In Venezuela the big oil companies secretly would like to tee Dictator Jlmlnej returned to That is to be expected. Hitler, year we should have ft Act summer.

Even this is not dependable It probably got started some time when it happened to come true by coincidence by one of its editors. Father Rich roue ue pouacai advice of the hierarchy. Fear and spiritual punishment was pumped into their secular debate which President liable. 1 have heard one that presiaeni or peasant, to relax Kemarkable Remark: Tm such an egotistical person that if someone is better than I am I want to know it first." Sugar Ray Robinson, tx-iiuddJeweight boxing champion. ard Oinder, dissecting the Ken- nedy position against) aid to Oath- minds, but the.

tmUuJi rimi. Kennedy want avoid, but seems to he quite popular, A se-which appears to be getting more vere summer always follows a se-tehonient. Ten winter, It holds true this olio acaools. Aside from cawtio eon. Uarctno cited tho hixhona' 4.

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About Journal Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1905-2024