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Herald and Review from Decatur, Illinois • Page 6

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Herald and Reviewi
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Decatur, Illinois
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6
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Tuesday, November 22, 1949. DECATUR HERALD INTERPRETATION SOMEBODY'S APT TO GET HURT Midwestern America Second Thoughts Editorials. -By David V. Felts Report on ft. Dodge, "Everybody" Should Live There a While Sometimes we come down to the office In the morning feeling like an oration by Daniel Webster or Henry Clay and after a hard day at the chore go "home feeling like off-the-cuff remarks off the record.

More and more the Vice President of the United States is beginning to look and act again like a husband. the more splendidly endowed American universities with almost 72 millions of But the University of Chicago collects tuition and fees from its students and approximately 13 per cent of the university's income at present comes from various governmental sources, mostly in support of research. With various sources of income, notes Chancellor Hutchins, the University of Chicago is not dependent upon a financial angel, upon the students, their parents, nor upon the Legislature. That independence has enabled the University of 'Chicago to experiment, to innovate and to challenge inherited educational practises. There was a time when the University of Chicago depended upon one donor.

Chancellor Hutchins admits, "but when it was, the donor, John D. Rockefeller, was a singularly enlightened man." Nobody will argue that estimate today. But before the founding of the University of Chicago, and for years afterward, John D. Rockefeller, senior, was bitterly denounced as a ruthless businessman who employed some of the least desirable of capitalistic practises. But Rockefeller gave millions of dollars to the new university at Chicago virtually without restriction, and the university has been fortunate in having able administrators worthy of the confidence of the founder.

By DOROTHY THOMPSON Fort Dodge, Iowa THE LECTURE business is a unique American phenomenon, mocked at by some foreigners including those eager to exploit it, its trials and tribulations furnishing amusing copy even for American lecturers and entertainers. At the end of every season I swear to do no more of it, remembering colds caught on trains; the six-nour nights in a Pullman; the perpetual packing and unpacking; and the difficulty of keeping up with the news and writing comment en-route. But each fall I change my mind, remembering all the friends I have met and made via this same business, and that I would know little about the United States except for town of 30,000, is the shopping center for a wide radius, and its stores and the quality of goods in them, show that these shoppers want the best Its banks are so full that though they pay only 1 per cent on savings they don't seek them. The original site, heavily wooded, in a rolling landscape with' many ravines, and the Des Moines river running through it, has been developed into a town with six lovely natural parks. In these are many stone "cabins," with -large rooms, small kitchens, and open fireplaces available free to any family or group for week end or after-work picnics.

Fort Dodge inhabitants send their children to a million dollar junior high school, and to a magnificent senior high school where any youth can complete junior college at no cost. ANNOUNCEMENTS of further bequests to Harvard, which now has an endowment of $182,824,335 according to the World Almanac, are read with a measure of irritation by alumni of colleges which would really be set up in business with a mere million, or half that amount They can imagine a stenographer in the office of the Harvard treasurer opening the mail and announcing: "Here's another million dollars. What, shall I do with Under such circumstances the treasurer might "Oh, set it over in a corner for the moment; maybe we'll find a place for it later." A couple of weeks ago headlines reported "Harvard Receives Gift of 38,626.506." Gifts of less than a million to Harvard are not news, except in the community in which the donor lives, or has lived. That eight million dollar "gift," really was not new; it was just another installment paid out of earnings of an endowment trust established 40 years ago. When Gordon McKay, Pittsfield, shoe machinery designer, died in 1903 he established an endowment trust, leaving life incomes from the estate to various indi-viduals.

Income from the estate beyond the sums necessary to pay the annuities was accumulated by the trustees for Harvard university. When these savings amounted to one million dollars in 1909, the Gordon McKay Endowment was created and as various individual beneficiaries died, additional amounts were added. Thus far the McKay endowment had paid more than $15,000,000 to Harvard. It should be mentioned, in passing, that in addition to the McKay payment, which had been anticipated. Harvard received between July 1 and September 30, gifts amounting to $1.342,298 miscellaneous.

it. Once this season is over I will have visited every state in the Union. To these visits I owe much of my confidence in and love for my country. The more I see of Americans the more I prefer them to all other peoples, and the greater my faith in this democracy. Even after the United States and Soviet Russia are really and truly palsy-walsy for keeps, the cold war probably will' continue as medical science fights the common cold.

I think America is best in its Ex-Child Takes Adult to Task Christmas Presents More Expensive medium and smaller cities and towns, despite the satires of Main Street and Zenith. If I had not been invited to speak here I never would have visited Fort Dodge, Iowa. The The White House did not make, available a transcript of the dialog between President Truman and the Shah of Iran but the exchange seems to have run like this "I think you're a fine fellow," and "I think you're cute, too." Reverend J. J. Davies, pastor of by stringing popcorn or whittling out a gingerbread man, but it must be remembered that grandmaw By BILL VAUGHAN (In Kansas City Star) AS AN EX-CHILD we feel called Way over 50 per cent of all Fort Dodge families own their own homes.

The worst of these are four or five-room cottages in the neighborhood of the various industries. These are wooden houses with essential conveniences, yards and neat lawns. The finest are the mansions built in the immediate postwar boom of the first World war in "Snell Park." The new better houses are of the ranch type, with one large living room, ultra-modern kitchen, smaller bedrooms, and no waste space. The industries gypsum, agricultural machinery, veterinary serums, packing plants count their workers in hundreds, not thousands, and these earn between $2,500 and $3,000 per year. There are no unemployed except those whose unemployment is self-induced.

An 18-year-old boy can earn $100 a month plus board and room on the surrounding farms. I wish a dozen workers from Moscow and Leningrad could live a year in Fort Dodge! upon at this time to come to the herself didn't need a 14-K gold gadget to hold her purse on the table defense of boys and girls every 4V, of the cocktail lounge, nor an atom- where who were the targets the the First Methodist church, toured me around town. (It was about the building of this church, an imposing edifice, that Hartzell Spence, whose pastor-father built it, wrote "One Foot in Mr Davies, a native of Wales, repeatedly expressed the wish that the folks back there could live awhile in Fort 1 "They'd think Wave of Sex Crimes The Federal Bureau of Investigation offers statistics to prove what most American newspaper readers already realize, and with alarm, that a wave of sex offenses which reached a record high in 1947 continues at a dangerous leveL During the last week or so there has been a series of brutal sex crimes, most of them involving small children. There is no way of knowing how many children were molested but were not killed or kidnaped. F.

B. figures show that during the first ix months of this year 3,725 rapes were committed in urban areas and 1,881 in rural areas. The federal agency blames the courts and parole boards for much of the rise in sex crimes. "Known" sex criminals, or persons known to be capable of a sex crime, are allowed to go free. Persons convicted of sex crimes are released on low bonds, and with little parole supervision.

Many of those persons are in need of medical or psychiatric, rather than police, supervision. F. B. I. Director J.

Edgar Hoover says there is a good chance that the sex crime wave will continue until criminal laws are strengthened. He has long advocated laws that would require sex offenders, even in so-called minor cases, to undergo medical and psychiatric treatment. If such treatment should not prove effective, then he thinks offenders should be isolated permanently. The public has a duty, not only to press for more effective legislation, but to help law enforcers by reporting instances of sexual abnormality so that something can be done before, rather than after, a child's life has been taken or a child's life has been broken. In the cases of sex crimes against children, the F.

B. I. suggests that the parents of the victims may be to blame. That's a harsh indictment, but is not a part of the "blame the parents for everything" habit. Parents sometimes are to blame- because they do not report instances of sexual perversion, or molestation where a child has not been physically injured.

The F. B. I. notes that "shame, fear, ignorance, family taboos and family pride" restrain parents in making reports to law enforcement agencies of abnormal behavior, or of unsuccessful efforts to commit a sex crime. All too often when a shocking crime has been committed the heartbroken parents can suggest names to law enforcers.

Then it is too late, pitiably too late. Older women who are subjected to indecent exposures, or to improper advances are reluctant to report to the police because they do not want to be called to give testimony, or to have their names mentioned in connection with the unsavory experiences which thev want most of all to forget. other day of a sneaking attack by the United Press. Why the United Press just can't go on fighting the izer full of the stuff that whispers someone lovely has just 'passed. And grandpaw, who delighted the children by carving a willow whistle or a peach seed basket did not need a combination jigger, baro- Associated Press and leave the little folk alone is more than a side lines observer can readily grasp tney a gone to heaven, he re Ine mam charge leveled against 4- -j j- and Geiger counter.

marked. CASPAR Milquetoast is nationally known as the hero, of sorts, of H. T. Webster's cartoon, "The Timid Soul." The New Yorker relates that once upon a time Columnist F. P.

Adams, good friend of Webster, once spelled Milquetoast's first name "Casper." Thereupon Webster wrote to his friend Adams: "Mr. Milquetoast has spoken to me about your spelling of his name. He says his family has always spelled it with an but that they are notoriously bad spellers, and you are probably right" the nation's kiddiedom is avarice. And, indeed, they might. Situated in the midst of the world's richest If life was simpler for children then, it was even more austere for agricultural land.

Fort Dodge, a the point being made that children, who once swooned with delight over a little old beat-up rag doll, now reject with contumely anything less elegant than a $375 doll house or $150 worth of electric train equipment. the grown-ups. A pair of roller skates was a big Christmas for little Johnny, and Dad was lucky if he got a necktie. Now the old gentleman must get a $200 jumble of exposure meters, anti-backlash fishing reels, barbecue aprons labeled "What's plaid shirts, girly calendars and little birds for the dashboard of his car. In the dear dead days for which It has long been held in the best MATS Circles Modern World By DORIS FLEESON Washington AMERICA'S lifeline to her new wCi-ld responsibilities is the Mili journalistic circles that a controversial story should be covered by a reporter with no allegiance to Disappearance Of Red Ink By RAYMOND MOLEY WHEN JIM Farley was in his early years as postmaster general, he signed his multitudinous correspondence with green ink.

He also attached his signature to thousands of postmaster commissions in the same bright hue. A few years after 1S33, I noted in the office of an Textbook Tragedy Children going to school in Czechoslovakia now have new textbooks. For a year the new books have been in preparation. It took considerable time, because there were many changes that had to be made. The old textbooks, you see, did not follow the Communist party line.

But now all that has been fixed. No longer will Czech children have to learn the stories about people that used to be called national heroes, Masaryk and Benes; that has been straightened out by saying those two men "went to the United States to set up a Czech state with the help of the capitalists'' and that Masaryk formed the Czech legion in the first World war, "misleading the people into thinking they were fighting for freedom whereas they actually fought the Russian worker." The Czech children from now on will have new heroes, specially created for the new line. They will have Gottwald instead of Masaryk and Benes; they will have Stalin and Lenin. And the little children, growing up, will know nothing else. And that is the tragedy of the new Czech textbooks.

Here are not people who have all the facts available to them, who can then choose to decide for themselves what is right and what is wrong. Here are children who will, know nothing but the story as it is told to them. Under such circumstances, you cannot even blame them for being wrong, for they will know nothing else, they can know nothing else. They cannot even know that they are wrong, nor believe it if they are told. either side in the dispute.

And yet this piece was obviously written by the United Press sighs, Susie felt a erown-UD. The least thp could do to make un for this ethiral il ha been a big year if Santa pop- tary Air Transport service, which operates a great chain of air bases breach would be to assign some'Ped for a hair ribbon and Mother burgeoning bud to reDort on ereed- felt set up over a new apron. In iness among parents This, of those days it wasn't the gift, fortu around the globe. MATS is father, mother, and sub way fare for the hosts of military and government people who, with Ohio postmaster that the green ink was fading out. The postmaster later told me that it disappeared nately, it was the thought But today Mother calls her lawyer if the tree is not laden with black nylon drawers, a can of lizard tongues in brandy, a diamond-encrusted ciga-ret lighter, a Doberman pinscher puppy, Javanese temple chimes for the front door and airplane tickets to Bermuda.

course, it is not likely to do, as i'. is a well known fact that the great press associations of this country are almost 100 per cent staffea, even up to the top policy-making positions, by adults. So, since the children are not likely to get a hearing, they are extremely fortunate to have us around as their chan-mion. their wives and children, make up the thickening stream of U. S.

influence abroad. Among them it is a household word like American Express company, signifying the vital link with "Stateside," the land of milk and honey from which all altogether and that new and freshly signed commissions had been sent out generally. The ink Farley uses is still green, but it is now of a more durable quality. blessings flow. While Farley was innocent of any But MATS is a great deal more Let us, then, state the argument Now we are not opposed to ex-as clearly as we can.

Briefly it isjPensive presents, and would just as this: Children demand costly tovsisoon have a television set without intent to deceive, the device of Those Sunday supplement pictures of "Hollywood Off-Guard" seem to be off-the-shoulder, too. vanishing ink has in history been used by less scrupulous souls. I we are granting this premise, butisenument as a Palr 01 sox wlla- OF THIS Oh Yes AND THAT: My, my, what a busy, busy week end. First, on Friday night, to the pack meeting to hand to the 45th President his wolf badge and to join in appreciation of a pantomine skit staged by one of the Cub dens. Then, after a brief wrestle with the chore on a Saturday morning, chug-gety-chug to the Homecoming football game and to suffer only moderately during the proceedings on the gridiron.

Our seats were not high enough to spell out the band's achievements. After the game, home directly and in good season. The clouded sky was spectacular as the Little Woman drove the ancient chariot right into the heart of sunset, as Zane Grey may have written. Later we learned that while Papa Mama ate sandwiches in the stadium parking lot, the Heiress to the Felts Millions, a guest in an official box, had enjoyed buffet luncheon at the President's house and had shaken the hand of the less. To the new generation: The Best, and Cheers! On Sunday the rest of the stormwindows were affixed and when the last had been clipped in place, we backed down the ladder and exclaimed: "Let 'er snow." And with the morning came snow.

Perhaps we should be more careful with our weather commentary. That newspaper headline "Veep Takes St. Louis Woman as Second Lady of the Land" surely did not refer to the St. Louis woman of "The St. Louis Blues." Let it be known that the phrase in "Mule Train" is Clippety-clop, and not Hippety-hop, as in this space.

Already "Mule Train" is being burlesqued all over the dial, and small wonder. We suspect that many of those whip-cracks are simulated by a cap pistol. Was the Associated Press kidding when it reported from London that the English film "The Forsyte Saga" will be re-titled, for American release, "That Forsyte The moon, described here the other day as Harvest Moon, we are informed, was the Hunter's Moon. How should a fisherman know the difference? reserving the right to modify it later on) because they live in a than an accommodation to the new Romans, the Americans who are going everywhere and taking their customs with them. As a strictly transport service it has been able to rush in where the combat air force would not be allowed to There seems to be a group in the Budget bureau which is intent upon John, youngest of the sons of the late F.

D. is the shy Roosevelt, the one who stays out of politics and out of the divorce courts. a more elaborate plan for getting rid of red ink. They are no doubt Our point is that the kids shouldn't take the rap for an attitude that they have inherited from the senior citizens. Anyway, we have a suspicion there still are children who can get a lot of fun out of darn little.

At least there had better be. vigorously supported by members civilization in which the grown-ups are increasingly setting up a howl for more, and more expensive, toys of their own. It may be true that grandmaw made the kiddie of her day happy A London woman who went sleepwalking in a fourth floor hotel bedroom fell from a window but was saved when her husband grabbed her nightgown and held her suspended above the street for 15 minutes. The nightie probably was not the wispy kind advertised in the slick magazines. tread.

In such respects it is a flying State department whose offi of the Council of Economic Ad visers, since Dr. Nourse has left the field to the left wineers. cers must be diplomats as well as competent airmen and whose crews are students in a kind of war Since the Government now faces Worry Clinic large deficits and increasing na college of the air. tional debt for an indeterminate Dharan, Saudi Arabia, is an outstanding example of how MATS time, and since genuine retrenchment might lose some of the as Rod Spared Too Often When is an emergency not an emergency? When recognition of the situation would compel President Truman to invoke the Taft-Hartley law. sorted groups who are now being -Professor Pain Teaches Lessons operates to keep U.

S. air power alive in crucial areas. Because of its strategic location as a world crossroads of the air era, few airports boast more traffic than the compact base fashioned amid the oil-rich sand, sun and stars of King Ibn Saud's domain. 25 Years Ago in The Herald Uncertainty and anxiety over the Thanksgiving dinner was lessened when wholesale poultry men announced that, for the present, 27 cents a pound will be the price for turkey hens weighing more than 12 pounds and that 20 cents is the pound-price for toms of more than 11 pounds. By DR.

GEORGE W. CRANE CASE V-244: Bobby aged 2, is an energetic youngster. His mother was standing on the corner, waiting for a bus, when Bobby suddenly ran into the boulevard. She raced after him and brought him back. He appeared gleeful, apparently enjoying the tommotion he had caused.

It wasn't two minutes, however, till he had again eluded her and rushed into the street She ran incorporated in the Fair Deal holding company, and since that would be a great embarrassment on the political side, the only recourse is to change government bookkeeping. Th idea is that when expenditures are made for something that becomes a physical possession of the Government or even when money is loaned for a productive purpose "assets" are created which should appear in the budget as a balance against the cost of such items. A slight gesture toward orthodox accounting Would be made by setting up reserves against possible losses. But these funds could be kept to a minimum by bookkeepers who would have a rosy vision of the future. Mr.

Billopp chology which too many sentimental parents are practising with their children nowadays. During the last generation, some sob sisters sold too many parents on the belief that corporal punishment was a mark of barbarism and that no child ever needd a spanking. Don't believe such nonsense! When children are too young to understand the word "asphyxiation" regarding the gas jets on the kitchen stove, or to appreciate the likelihood of death by speeding automobiles, you better dust off the old hickory switch or peach tree limb. Pain has always been one of nature's best teachers. It is understood in every language and by all ages.

Nobody is too young to learn from this teacher. It also works on animals, as well as human beings. The second and third floors of the Standard Life building, part of the space formerly occupied by the Linn Scruggs store, will be remodeled into offices. The Illinois Power Light Corp. has already taken part of the ground floor space.

The rest is expected to be let soon. Denied Martyrdom Admiral Forrest Sherman, chief of naval operations, says the case of Captain John Crommelin is "closed." That means there will be no court-martial of the navy officer who made the original charge that navy morale was going to pieces as a result of Pentagon discrimination, and who made public confidential navy documents in the controversy over the B-36 bomber. As a result of Captain Crommelin's charges and disclosures, congressional com-mittess investigated the controversy and Admiral Louis Denfeld, navy chief of operations, was ousted by Defense Secretary Louis Johnson with the approval of President Truman. Eventually the Crommelin actions drew disciplinary action by the navy. He was retained in the service at his old rank, but received a letter of reprimand.

Thereupon Captain Crommelin demanded that the reprimand be withdrawn, or that he be court-martialled. He was permitted a reply in the letter of reprimand and his "demands" were made in the reply. Thus Admiral Sherman can close the case by declining to take notice of the demands. Captain Crommelin will protest he is being deprived of his rights, even though his demand for a court-martial may be motivated by a desire to re-open the unfortunate inter-service controversy. But Captain Crommelin had prejudiced his case, on two occasions.

First, he announced that he proposed to jeopardize his career by making the original charges; that is, he asked to be made a martyr. Second, he played unfairly by making public, for his own purposes, confidential navy information. He did the navy a disservice, no matter what his original intention may have been. The navy is willing to let him pay, but not on the grand scale of martyrdom. after him just in time to get out of the way of an oncoming car.

Before the bus arrived, she haa to repeat this process once more. My two sons, then aged 9 and. 10. were with me, for we were waiting for the same bus. "What did you think about that? Head Coach Leo Johnson and Line Coach Eugene Sutherd send their Millikin football team against the Knox college team today in the J.M.U.

homecoming game that will decide the Little 19 conference championship. The United States built it as a war necessity in the winter of 1945-46 so that her warplanes would not have to circle Egypt, Iraq or Pakistan in order to reach Japan. The Japanese surrender obviated that use; it did not move the base from-its interesting nearness to the Caspian sea and Russia's vital centers. King Ibn Saud is a nationalistic and independent old party. But his Arabs lack the skill to run airports and fortunately there was the non-combat MATS with a Colonel O'Keefe commanding at Dharan whose warm Irish personality suited the king fine.

The vital lease has been renewed. Colonel O'Keefe is now a general and everybody is happy, especially the Pentagon students of map making. You can go almost anywhere by MATS provided you are sufficiently durable and flexible to jump from rags to riches in your travel pattern. One day you may catch General MacArthur's private plane, the Bataan, which he lends to very important persons. This is known as traveling plush and it is very plush; the reclining chairs which are sometimes bolted into the old bucket-seat planes for VIP's are plush too, and are called MacAr-thur seats.

I inquired, for they had watched the youngster's antics. "She should have spanked him the first time," one of my boys said positively. MARION, Ohio Mrs. Warren G. Harding died early yesterday.

I wonder how woman ever expects her child to stay on the sidewalk when she becomes a par This deceptive technique is not new. A number of spending advocates just about converted the late President Roosevelt before the war. In his budget messages in the late 30's there was a broad gesture toward counting government works as "assets." No doubt, had the facile mind of the President been undisturbed by the coming of war, we would have had this system in full flower in budgets long before this. But the idea remained, as in the case of many other tricks, to be a choice heritage of the Fair Deal. The making of the federal budget is an enormous undertaking.

It cannot be changed overnight, despite the success ol left-wutg advisers in winning presidential blessings. a bookkeeping asset If this view prevails, we shall see red ink disappear. But in the process, government figures will lose all meaning. Animal trainers know that the best rule to follow is always to reward the good and penalize the bad acts! Our psychological experiments with white rats have also shown that they learn a complicated maze much more quickly when they receive a painful electric shock on entering the blind alleys, and a bit of cheese when they thread the correct pathways. Corporal punishment can easily be overdone by indolent parents who prefer to lean upon the rod INDOOR PLANTS Indoor plants provide bloom throughout the winter.

They make the house look nice and cheerful. And they, are not a great deal of trouble. That is except when you look at them and discover they are wasting away and seem to have fallen victim to some fatal disease. Except when closer investigation reveals that nobody has watered them for days. Except that they can be brought back to life only by being soaked with water.

Except that the only practical way to give them a good soaking is in the bathtub or in a large water-tight receptacle such as the one the turkey is roasted in. Except that you can't very well soak the plants without displacing some of the earth in the pots, and nobody wants silt in the bathtub or a turkey basted with loam. No, indoor plants are not a great deal of trouble. That is, except when they need sun and are placed in front of a window. Except when, every time anybody goes to the window there is an even chance of knocking the plant off its stand.

Except that though the plant may not be knocked off its stand its branches will get tangled in the Venetian blinds. Aside from this indoor plants are no trouble except when they are being put out of doors on a mild day to get fresh air and are forgotten until everybody has gone to bed. Except when somebody has to get up out of bed and' risk pneumonia by going outside in pajamas, dressing gown and bedroom slippers to rescue the plants. No, indoor plants are no trouble at all, except to persons who object to tending them 24 hours a day and feel they have as much right to live their lives as the plants do. CHRISTOPHER BILLOPP ty to this dangerous "game" which the child plays? As soon as she released his band, he invariably made straight for the street.

Luckily, she caught him each time. But someday she will not be present to stop him, so we'll have another traffic death on the Chicago boulevards. This mother's behavior is stupid. She is actually educating her toddler to run out into the streets by her sin of omission. She omitted a sharp switching or a painful snap of her finger which would have made the child associate pain with running into the street and thus have helped build up the habit of avoiding that action henceforth.

I Young men are urged to "Join the navy and see the world." Young women can achieve the same objective by marrying a member of Congress who can wangle a junket assignment. instead of evolving clever psychological strategy for gaining the same ends. The Riches of a Jalopy St Louis Post-Dispatch. When Eric Johnston says Belgrade audiences weren't impressed by the beatings of the Okies in "Grapes of Wrath," but by the fact that at the end of the story they drove away in their own jalopies, it's believable. Sad, as a commentary on how little free- dom.it takes to be impressive in Yugoslavia, but believable.

It's a little harder to believe, though, when Mr. Johnston goes on to say that In Warsaw Russians weren't impressed by a movie clubbing of packinghouse strikers in Chicago, but by the disclosure that the strikers wore stout leather shoes. Everybody who doesn't have to guess in advance-- what the downtrodden peoples of Europe will be impressed by in a motion picture should be glad of it. The old tear-jerkers don't seem to stand up beside the tear-jerkers of real life any more. What if the heroine and her father are being driven off their farm in the cold of a winter night because the villain has foreclosed the mortgage? There are people alive today who will think them lucky because they each have a warm coat against the cold.

But always employ "horse sens e. In emergencies, you haven't time to debate with a The attempt to draw an analogy Who is the Second Lady of the Land: Mrs. Barkley, Margaret Truman, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt or has Alice Long-worth relinquished her claims yet? young Bobby, and expound on the error of his ways regarding rush to orthodox business practises is a fraudulent political trick. For the ing into the street investment of government money MATS schedules were reduced by the Airlift and by budget economies.

In any case the diversity of the accommodations will recommend them to members of Congress, except on the much-traveled routes to Japan and Germany. Nor is the Defense department overeager to advertise the defense aspects of the MATS operation. Mention Dharan's nearness to Russia to General O'Keefe or Hong Kong to General White, who commands the Pacific division. Their eyes get bland and shallow and a rather mulish "Who, me?" expression takes over. They are, they say, running MATS bases.

He may be too' young to profit Instead, she has let him develop much by your oratory, anyway. in a public property which yields no return in money creates a lia the idea that it is great fun to run I But he can feel a switch and quick-into the street. He thinks of it as ally learn a safe habit through the bility, not an asset The idea that such a public work makes a richer of "Professor wise instruction Pain." Endowed Independence With considerable pride Dr. Robert M. Hutchins, looking back over the 20 years he has served the University of Chicago as president and chancellor, comments upon the independence enjoyed by an endowed school.

The Midway institution ranks fifth among game, where mamma chases sonny. She didn't even reprimand him verbally! and happier country and thus should be balanced against its cost is completely phony. It might be argued, if that premise is true, that Send to this newspaper for my "Tests for Good Parents," enclosing a three-cent stamped envelope, plus a dime. We need a little more "horse an expenditure for veterans creates sense" in the Drana or cnua psy-.

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