Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1938 — Page 10
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The Indianapolis Times
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Sp, Riley 5551
Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1938
LABOR LEADERSHIP
ANIEL J. TOBIN of Indianapolis, president of the International Teamsters’ Union, loves a good fight as
much as any man.
But Mr. Tobin, wiser than some other
leaders of labor, sees clearly the folly and danger of continuing the warfare that has divided the American labor
movement.
“We must fuse this great movement into one compact body,” he told the A. F. of L. convention in Houston yesterday, demanding that the door be kept open to peace with
the C. J. O.
“The President of the United States has urged you to
reach a peace.
He warns you that the workers will be hurt
if the strife continues. Can anyone doubt that? The energy a dual organization now wasted in fighting should be spent to benefit the millions still unorganized. “Personal feelings, love of publicity, individual hopes and ambitions—all must be put aside and trampled upon, if necessary, in the interest of the 10,000,000 workers who should be enrolled in a united labor organization.” That sounds like labor leadership—a welcome relief from the belligerent talk indulged in by A. F. of L. Presi-
dent William Green after Mr. We believe that many other labor
ceived the other day.
Roosevelt's message was re-
leaders and that the great rank and file of both A. F. of L.
and C. I. O. agree with Mr. Tobin.
to speak out, as he did.
The need is for them
Eventually, and we hope soon, the forces of John L. Lewis and of William Green must realize the wisdom of
some such course as Mr. Tobin proposes
agreement on
every point that they possibly can settle between them, then mediation through unprejudiced outside persons of
the issues still in dispute.
‘GIVE US THIS DAY...’
HIRTY Franco war planes, the United Press reported, roared over Madrid and bombed the town—with bread.
A gallant gesture!
Picture the scene.
Intrepid rebel
aviators threading their planes through a pattern of death woven in the air by Madrid's crackling antiaircraft guns and gently floating down the blessed manna on hundreds of
snowy little parachutes.
An inspiring sight, indeed.
It recalls the amazing story of a few months gone, from the Orient, in which was told the flight of a squadron of Chinese war birds, all the way across the Yellow Sea wastes to Japan, and there sent down, not bitter death and mutilation, but hundreds of fluttering little hand bills on which was written, “We have no quarrel with the people
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of Japan...
But there is one little difference; doubtless a minor one that only a quibbler would note:
The heathen Chinee did not preface his gentle gesture | and did not follow it up with artillery fire.
with bombs
Before deciding to feed the little children of Madrid. Gen. Franco unfortunately found it necessary to kill and
maim so many of them.
Doubtless there are some hungry men and women | there, lately bereaved of their
young ones. Doubtless there
are among these, some who would find, if they would try to eat, that Gen. Franco's lovely wheaten loaves would stick
in their tightening throats.
They could not swallow, nor
find it in their hearts to thank the gallant flying dons (and
c. Fair Enough By Westbrook Pegler
It Would Seem Communists Have a Duty to Protest the Fascism Probe As Much as They Did the Red Hunt.
EW YORK, Oct. 8.—Now that the Dies Committee has placed our Hitler-true Nazis and naturalized Italian Fascists and the consuls of both nations over the same barrel where lately the Communist conspirators were getting their licks, there comes from the ranks of the Bolos and their “fellowtravelers” no such protests as recently decried the Committee's Red hunt, The Bolos and their “fellow-travelers” called that phase of the investigdtion of un-American activities a Red hunt, and I see no reason to pretend otherwise. Red hunting, like the hunting of Nazi and Fascist
conspirators against the American form of Government, is a legitimate duty of that Government.
4 4 &# T may be remembered that when the Dies Committee was revealing the Communist influence, in the C. I. O, the WPA, the Workers’ Alliance and the League for Peace and Democracy, and tracing the beam of inspiration from Moscow to the American Communist group, ridicule, insult and deliberate misrepresentation were the answers from the far left. Now it is the turn of the Nazi Bund and the Italian conspirators to defend themselves, and it may be noted that, like the Communists, they rely on irrelevances rather than disproof, If the Bolos had resented the investigation of communism on the ground that communism holds an exclusive franchise for un-American activities, having pioneered the field, they would have justified their approval of the current hunt for Nazis and Fascists. But they took the position that any such interference was of itself an un-American activity and thereby assumed a duty to deplore with equal passion the present intrusion into the impudent treacheries of their rivals. The Communists have been advertising their Russian product as a 20th Century Americanism, forget ting that a Nazi or Fascist, might with equal truth— which is to say none at all—describe his ism as Jefferson and Lincoln in streamline version. § #4 #4 HE Communists have taken to themselves the word “worker,” forgetting, again, that the workers of Italy and Germany are now their enemies and that in this country millions of people who work will angrily resent the implication that because they detest all alien conspiracy in their own country they must be loafers and drones. It is too easily forgotten that Mussolini, the originator of fascism, was himself once a radical Socialist, and that fascism, from which Hitler copied Naziism, is but a custom job mounted on the .old standard Marxian chassis. The paint job and shape of the hood vary in Italy and Germany, but Mussolini and his plagiarist playmate are driving the same jaloppy that Joseph Stalin rides in. The method of penetration in this country is the same on both sides. The Communist Party, to remove the appearance of foreign control, organized under American laws as an American group. The Fascists and Nazis, never original, work through anti-American groups of naturalized conspirators under verbal guidance from official emissaries stationed in our midst. As it was in Eger, Czechoslovakia, so it is in Union City, N. J, today.
Business
By John T. Flynn
We'd Better Find Out Quickly Why Loans Aren't Being Made, He Says.
EW YORK, Oct. 8-—This is another of those times of the year when the banks tell us what they have in the vaults and what they are doing with our money. Most of the bank statements I have looked at tell
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES The Roar of the Crowd !—By Talburt
ER AR REE RT AT
=
ay Ss ENG ara 2 1
The Hoosier Forum
I wholly disagree with what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.—Voltaire.
WANTS U. 8. TO WAKE UP TO RED ACTIVITIES By Dr. Harry H. Nagle In order that there be no mistaking the true thoughts in this article let it be known that the writer is “anti” anything that is not 100 per cent “pro” American. At the rate the Communists are using wool to pull over the eyes of the American public, it will be so scarce that the farmers will not worry over getting a good price for their product. Just remember the following when reading about the account of the recent riot in Union City, N. J. when Kuhn was forcefully stopped from addressing the Bund in that city. The American League for Peace and Democracy (formerly the
Fascism) and the International Labor Defense (the American section of the Russian controlled Communist International Red Aid)
the story very swiftly. The banks are doing nothing. Here is what I mean. The great bank of J. P| Morgan & Co. reveals that it has 436 million dollars | in deposits. It shows alsc that it has in cash or in| Government loans (Federal and local) 410 million | dollars.
An even more striking case is that of the City | Bank Farmer's Trust Co. It has on deposit 77 million | dollars from its customers, and of this 74 million is| in cash or is loaned to the Governments. | Someone asked me, in view of such statements, if | the banks had actually ceased to do business. And of | course before many days Mr. Jesse Jones proudly | will be jumping on the banks again for not lending their money. Whose fault is this? Before we try to answer that question, here is an illuminating list of a small number of large banks, giving the amounts on deposit and the amounts in cash and Government loans held
by the banks. Cash and Bonds
despite their “wool pulling” names, were well represented at the riot. They carried the customary banners denoting their peaceful intent, but delivered verbal and stony barrages of varying intensities. Remember, too, that these are the type of organizations that staged s0 many protests (both visible and verbal) when Mayor Hague of Jersey City, N. J. stopped Norman Thomas and others from talking to crowds in his city. In other words, these organizations made vigorous protests about suppression of civil liberties, but would themselves forcibly prevent another group's claiming the same civil rights. It is just a case of the pot calling
American League Against War and |
Hague's |
(Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Make your letter short, so all can have a chance. Letters must be signed, but names will be withheld on request.)
(in our elementary schools. To get
(cold facts let persons read with an lopen mind “Revolution 1776” and |“A New American History,” the latter by W. E. Woodward. Let them ‘read the true facts regarding our methods of preparation for annexling the Sandwich Islands, now the | Territory of Hawaii. | Let them read about the infiltra- | tion of foreigners into Mexico, how the “outlanders” took control of | what was then part of the United States of Mexico. Let them read a | true account of what led up to the {war with Mexico, of the insidious propaganda from the nation's capital during the administration of President Polk. Of the actions, un- | friendly and illegal, toward the nationals of a friendly country and its governmental officers of the Californias by outlaw forces of fron-
| tiersmen, etc, under the command |
lof United States Army officers— Captain Fremont and Major | Kearney-—to satisfy our “manifest | destiny.” If persons would know something of the history, peoples and customs lof the white Californians and of California before the advent of the {Americanos and the unprovoked at(tacks on these people by the wild
years earlier resulted in a war with Mexico, the result of which was that we took the territory we wanted, let them read the books of Stewart Edward White. The course of action during the Administration of President Theodore Roosevelt leading to the secession of the State of Panama from the United States of Colombia is not an historical fact of which we should be particularly proud. In later years “Teddy” boasted of the fact that he “took” Panama.
| =» = |AS OTHERS SEE | INDIANAPOLIS By Mrs. S. Derringer | Among Robert Burns’ more widely
|
{quoted poems is: “Oh wad some power the giftie gie us To see oursels as others see us!” ‘and it is with this thought in mind, jand with recent visits to most of (the other major cities of these | United States as a basis for compar|ison, that I wish to convey some impressions of Indianapolis, in the [forlorn hope that they may stir [some manifestations of civic pride or failing this, bring on what might lelsewhere be considered a major |calamity—an old-fashioned cyclone. The first impression a stranger Ireceives of this city is one of in(credible, amazing filth. Dirt, papers, Junk of all kinds litters the streets: [the downtown buildings, seen dimly (through a fog-like pall of smoke and (soot, are stained dark gray. The postoffice, partly cleaned, is some queer experiment in miscegenation, while the truly exquisite monument, which dominates the civic the
§ 3 BA WEEN a GRE DIRE z i
ARE a 3 % si wt ry ¥
- SATURDAY, OCT. 8, 1938! Gen. Johnson Says—
The Proposal for an Annual Wage And Continuous Work Is Attractive, Yet Has a Pretty Dreary Prospect.
a a
ALISBURY, Md. Oct. 8—The President's message to the A. P. of I. seemed to suggest that labor consider annual salaries and continuous employment as preferable to high hourly rates and part-time jobs, There has recently been a great deal of eager discuse sion of this in industry, . The difficulties are very great. In any manuface turing operation that is “seasonal” peaks and vale leys of actual employment are certain. One suggese tion that is being studied in industry is that employees be classed in three grades—A, B and C. A is the group of workers always kept in slack sea= sons anyway, about 50 per cent of the peak crew. To these is guaranteed a monthly salary, averaging pres= ent earnings. Grade B, about 25 per cent of the remainder, also are hired by the year and paid every month, whether they work or not, but their total annual salary—and hence their monthly payment—is no more than avere age of what they earned on part-time work at hourly rates unless they work more days than average. Grade C, is “floating” labor to be hired and paid by the hour as at present. n ” 2
us method is in practice at one large plant. Y have seen a careful study of exactly how it would work out in a large coal mining company. It doesn’t seem to me to be any solution. Men in Grade A know they are going to he kept and paid- anyway. They gain neither security nor pay. Grade B gains nothing in pay. The only security it gets is to have the employer manage wages. Grade C is offered nothing new.
In organizing and starting WPA in New York City I tried to get skilled building trades—bhricklayers, masons, carpenters, etc.—to accept guaranteed six months employment on a salaried basis which would have paid them more than they had ever earned except in the 1928 construction boom. They have a true if cynical saying about their high rates: “$14 a day and $700 a year.” But they were unwilling to accept a guaranteed salary. They felt that private build= ing contractors would use the much lower hourly WPA rate to chisel down the prevailing rate, without guaranteeing continuous employment.
» o »n
DIDN'T think so because the deals were entirely different. Their wives and families didn’t think s0 either. They struck and I went on the air and ap=pealed to the home-folk. In spite of the strike order hardly a corporal’s squad stopped work. But Wash ington changed its mind and we went back to the prevailing hourly rate. Looking backward, I think Washington and the workers were right. As the construction industry is now organized, it could not guarantee continuous salaries to more than a handful, because construction jobs are never continuous in any one place. In spite of its great attraction this proposal has a pretty dreary prospect. Labor would probably object to any classification and grading of workers. On the other hand, if it had any aspect of full-time pay for half-time work, industry couldn't stand the increased drain on its reserves and consumers couldn't stan® the increased costs.
It Seems to Me By Heywood Broun
The Lifelessness in the Fuehrer's Painting Impressed an Art Critie,
EW YORK, Oct. 8—I was talking with an ar$ critic about painting yesterday, and so, naturally, the name of Adolf Hitler came up. The course of
! world history has been vastly affected by the fact
that the Fuehrer isn't a very good painter. “But don't set him down as just terrible—as a painter, I mean,® sald the critic, casting a disapproving eye at an early Bivun which hung heavy over his head. “I've seen some of Hitler's water colors,” the critic continued, “and some of his charcoal sketches. I believe all his paintings have been done in water color.” : “The same medium he uses for treaties and terrie torial guarantees,” I suggested. “These pictures of Hitler's,” he explained, “are very nice—not good, you understand, but nice. The mood is timid and the treatment conventional. His subject matter consisted of the streets of tiny towns and peaceful landscapes. “The drawing was quite good, although entirely static. Decidedly they seemed to be the work of a person who could do something else more effectively. “As I remember, Hitler the artist never tackled any figures. No one walked in the streets which he painted or played in the shade of the big trees which he depicted so rigidly. I have a vague recollection that there were a few sheep in some of the land-
the kettle black—for the Commun- Whites from east of the Rockies; a/center bears a semblance to ists know all too well that fascism course that, together with the out-|unique experience of finding a Van has been a formiddble dam erected landers provocation in Texas a fewyGogh in a garbage can. against the onrushing flood of their | Although much amusement has forceful control of all Europe! FALL REVERIE been directed toward the Los Anand then the world. They do not | By VELMA M. FRAME geles Chamber of Commerce, the intend being likewise impaded here | oy a M. A beauty of that city backs up all its in America by allowing any group Shedding trees that whisper to stand in their way—despite their | sigh,
and statements San Francisco has its 2 magnificent bridges, its vistas; Seavowance that they will resort to! A world fast growing bare, attle is a splendid peninsula bethe ballot and not force to over-| Yet everything's beautiful to the tween Lake Washington and Puget throw everything we hold dear. eye— Sound, modern, inviting: Salt Lake We want one “ism"—American-| Autumn parades her colors rare, |City is clean to the point of having ism—but we won't have that long! : |continually flowing water in the unless the great American public There's stacks of leaves of gold and gutters; Portland, Ore, is far-famed stops playing Rip Van Winkle and | brown, | the City of Roses; Minneapolis J | " : : removes the wool hoodwink. The birds are poised for flight; !and Chicago have their beautiful Old harvest moon like a dollar lakes and parks and driveways. 2 &£ round [one could go on citing different WHAT CAN BE LEARNED Sheds its beams in the crispy things of which American cities can FROM U. S. HISTORY night. be proud. By CHD
Indianapolis has its clutter, its Replying to the letter of U. P.| DAILY THOUGHT
smoke and soot, its drab houses, its uninteresting setting. One wonders Stewart of Westport in The Hoosier] I will sing unto the Lord, beForum, it seems to me that some of | cause He hath dealt bountifully of the many colleges in Indiana? Do
Italian signors) as they gazed on the glittering wings growing smaller and smaller on their way back to the rebel lines. And after night has come, and the long fingers of the search lights pry among the clouds, there doubtless are some, even in godless “red” Madrid, who kneel down and begin their sorrowful pater nosters . . . and as they say in the ancient phrase, “and give us this day our daily bread,” make with their Maker just a little stipulation—a gentle and understandable remonstrance—“"but not from Gen. Franco.”
SOLACE FOR LULA BELLE "TO Lula Belle Kimel, the Carolina jailer’s 175-pound daughter who loved not wisely hut too well, our heart goes out in her hour of humiliation. To James Godwin, the rogue whose honeyed words | led Lula Belle to free him, we can wish no juster fate than | a brief reunion with the strapping Lula Belle. An ambu- | lance should be kept handy. After that, maybe Lula Belle would find solace in the classic poets. Homer recorded that “love deceives the best of womankind.” Ovid affirmed that “love is a eredulous thing.” And Shakespeare of course noted that “love is blind, and lovers cannot see the pretty follies that themselves commit.” As she thumbs through Tennyson she can hold her head up once more on reading that “Tis better to have loved and lost, Than never to have loved at all.” But to guard against a reawakening of her unfortunate passion, let Lula Belle read further in the same poet’s work; to wit, in “Locksley Hall”: “I am ashamed through all my nature to have lov'd so slight a thing.”
AMERICAN FASCISTS SOCIALIST Norman Thomas, hater of fascism in every form, denounces officials of Hudson County, New Jersey, for permitting a mob to stone “Fuehrer” Fritz Kuhn and break up a Nazi Bund rally at Union City. Says Mr. Thomas: “That mob was doing more to promote fascism in America than Fritz Kuhn ever can. True Americanism
of Governments £1,790,000,000 1,308,000, 000 1,280,000, 000 303,000, 000 15.000, 000 28,000,000 101,000,000
Deposits Sheseran $2,376,000, 000
Bank Chase National National City Guaranty Trust Philadelphia National .... Fulton Trust J. Henry Schroder Brooklyn Trust
It's Easy to Blame the Bankers
Of course it is easy to say the bankers refuse to make loans. But there is nothing a banker likes to do more than make loans. That's the way he makes profits. Maybe nobody wants to borrow. One thing is certain, we had better find out very quickly why loans are not being made. It nobody wants to borrow for business purposes—and that is the real reason—we had better find out why they don't want to borrow. Nothing could bg more stupid than to sit around talking about capital going on strike through mere pique. If they saw the way open to ‘nake monny, | no matter what they think of Mr. Roosevelt. the most case-hardened tory would go out after the profit. The trouble is he does not see that way open. Is it because he is blind? Or is it because the | . way is not open? It is a pretty serious matter and| \S May need to read something of | we have to find the answer. The alternative to that, the history of these United States. answer is more Government loans, more Government! The history we should read is not! taxes, more Government intrusions. Maybe, indeed. | the synthetic, fairythere is no alternative to that.
scapes, competent and contented. The detail escapes me. This was several years ago, but even if I had seen these water colors more recently it would be difficult to carry away any very striking impression.
The Sunday Painter
“The spirit was one of lifelessness and of sure render. And this was heightened by the meager color sense of the man. No sky which he painted was a glowing bowl. Instead, he left a light blue curtain down behind the uncompromising green of his forests. You had no sense of anything beyond the horizon— or, indeed, of any horizon. “I started off to talk about art to the exclusion of other things. But you cannot divorce the personality even of a Sunday painter from the things he does with line and color. “I did not know it then, but now I know why, long ago, I had an uneasy feeling in looking at the nice, quiet, uninspired water colors of Adoif Hitler. I have said that they were peaceful. But it was not a come forting peacefulness. It was a frozen world he cape tured. No leaf stirred, and no child romped. And now I know the secret. Hitler, the little man with the water colors, did not paint peace; he painted death, “Almost a generation ago Hitler moved humbly about Munich carrying under his arm a sheaf of his drawings and his paintings, and sought some master who would accept him as a pupil. They all refused, It is a pity no one took him up.”
Watching Your Health
By Dr. Morris Fishbein IY the United States 106,000 people died in 1937 from accidents. The rate for Canada is 40 per ceng below that of the United States. In England and Wales there is constant agitation over deaths from accidents, yet our death rate ig twice as great as that of England or Wales. One person dies every 14 minutes in the United States as a result of an accident in the home. Last year almost 40,000 people were killed and nearly a million injured as a result of accidents, collisions and other difficulties on the highways. It is said that at least 10,000,000 people every year have accidents sufficiently severe to take them teme porarily from their work. These are some of the simple figures which indie cate the importance of the safety program. They indicate, moreover, the need for an organization like the National Safety Council, which is holding in Chi= cago a vast congress dealing with the necessity for prevention of accidents and for the kind of education of the public that will lower the costs of carelessness, Safety is a habit, as carelessness is a habit. The four types of accidents that cause most deaths are those from automobiles, drowning, falls and burns, Most of the accidents associated with automobiles, drownings, falls and burns are preventable accidents— preventable by a little carefulness and proper ine struction. In a recent study of accident rates in the state of Kansas, it was discovered that accidents are fifth in the causes of death, preceded only by heart disease, cancer, brain hemorrhage, and chronic inflammation of the kidneys. We have given careful concern to these leading causes of death. The National Safety Council, concerned with the fifth of the leading causes of death, deserves the supe port that; all of ys must give if its work is to be successful: :
what becomes of all the graduates with me.—Psalms 13:6. they go elsewhere, or why is it that —— some of their multiple energy is not HE truly generous is the truly expended in making Indianapolis wise, and he who loves not a more desirable place in which to! tale stuff taught others, lives unblest.—Home. live? Where is civic pride?
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM NOT UNLESS you are very dull
By Mrs. Walter Ferguson | O ¥ su S ities’ i i | D Be eh Si oe 0 Rhee an ee, a \ 2 or have never learned to read. — 4 a - re oo os i Hop ing pie Rie TN | Many high school and college gradur Daughters” indicates a trend toward simplicity |uates have never learned to read
We can only hope so. ; (well, because they still look at each The madcap antics, the wisecracking ccnversations 2 | separate word. This is partly
of the sophisticated comedies, which have Leld public Does iT HELP caused by too much reading aloud attention for some time, bore us a bit. We are now RSTAND ‘while learning to read. You should ripe for homespun sentiment. | try to take in several words as one And how we can use it! The world exists today (combined picture. You can greatly in a dither of bewilderment and fear. New symptoms increase your speed of reading, with continually emerge to prove our mass mental insanity. | a positive gain in understanding, if We have, for example, the jitterbug dances and those | you will first sweep your eyes over strange jungle sounds, those unrhythmical, in- Zach DEF agraph as rapidly as possiharmonious tone bedlams we call swing music. Wie Rkin 8 sever) Woris or Sven There is something immeasurably sad in watching TD Tes : in jeac glanee, en the methods man invents to hide his hurts and fears Bn ou have full HRS & oye and to escape the deepest convictions of his own soul. y in 2
” $ : meaning. You will be surprised at All our jitterbugging, I think, is an eifort to get p vi away from Conscitace. your improvement within two or
three weeks. » And so we cry: “Come on! Let's not think about all these ugly things. Let's forget that heavy, heavy I HAVE HEARD persons who hanes over our heads. Let's ignore the fact that 3 pride themselves oi being hardboiled advocates of this idea. Their
family unity is disappearing, that sanctity of the argument is that since the parting
must win by proving that it does not have to act with marriage vow is almost forgotten and that the love in which we trusted is failing us.” of “friends” is always painful, saying “Goodby” only emphasizes it.
Nazi brutality.” Fternally right! Herr Kuhn and his impudent fellow | From that point we force back our tears and . : Y h thev hold 10.000 ralli ) All | think up smart cracks. We hide our tremblings in fanatics, though they 10 , rales unmo ested, wi | the quiverings of queer new dances, but cur hearts I do not agree. In saying “Goodnot convert the United States to Hitlerism. The greater | ache and ache. by” there are always renewed exdanger is from Americans who think they are fighting | ch comes a picture like “Four Daughters"— pressions of friendship, assurances that each will keep the other in mind and be eager to learn of their
‘ simple, dignified, sincere—and our response is infascism when they behave like Fascists—who employ | stantaneous. We smule. sniffie and rejoice because we further fortunes and misfortunes which give comfort to each during
against the silly “American Nazis” the typical German | recognize ourselves here as we desire to be—fine, their absence from each other,
A Woman's Viewpoint
#
Would ITADD TO > = HUMAN HAPPINESS,
““ZRIENDS
HAVE TO PART, ol DISPENSE WITH
HABIT OF SAYING GOOD-BYE? YES ORNO 1 YES. The world takes a man atthe egotist, experiments show that about his own estimate. You nearly everyone has far more abilmay say this it not true of the ity than he thinks he has. The egotist but it is. The egotist boasts world measures you not by your hidbecause he has an inferiority com-!den abilities but chiefly by your plex and is trying to o ll the | honest intelligent confidence in } world vn himself. But, from [yourself and your abilities.
1
MANY PEOPLE L - RENN: Pnecuies
Pl
or
a OPI
: : lean, d Nazi weapons of violence and sufipression. decent Ince en and ‘Wworien leading fine, clean,
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——_—_— oo SR TEENS a a ei EEN
