Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1939 — Page 14
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~The Indianapolis Times
Gen. Johnson |
Fair Enough Dogging Their F
(A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) | rs i ¥. HOWARD RALPH BURKHOLDER MARK FERRI a6 ; i de el het : 5 Pi RA . Business Manager By Westbrook Pegler ; J Ae 3 ith | a ays— I= He . afin ng I» 7 i : : Se hods in 25 . cart od Wigs 3 : Owned and published Price in Mafioh Couns Some Mayors Have It Tough; rR il ept Sunday) by ty, 3 cents a copy; deiiv- 4 . : : . fouy Indianapolis Tim s ered Ly cartier, 13 cents Kelly of Chicago Finds Frequent odie of Class Advisers Wie Have ‘Publish: Co., Fee, + ° . . Ld J} 3 ¥ e . . of on in A / ae be f subseribtio: Do’ Much to Restore Confidence. .. ber of United Press in’ Taliana, 8. a year; | JEW YORK, March 1—Ed Kelly, Mayor of Chicago, Lo A os Howard Fro outside of Indiana, 65 just renominated by the Democrats, is visiting FASHINGTON, March 7—“The people have lost ¥.- confidence in you Mr. President” That is
Miami on a double mission—to rest from the care of |” office and to dedicate a plaque to his martyred predecessor, Tony Cermak. Miami is the regular winter resting place of mayors of Chicago, and Mr. Cermak
cenis a mon'h; § what Washington gossip about Jack Garner is sup-
{| posed to have said in the supposedly stormy Cabinet meeting’ just before the President’s Caribbean trip
paper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bu- - reau of Circulation.
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HOWA RD
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air RILEY 5551 Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way |
¥ TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1839 ed
i aha iron) 4 WHY PASS THIS UP? & N the struggle for business recovery the meesing with
tha President and>A. F. of L. and C. L O. leaders today © is truly a momentous event. May it prove the start of a ." sincere effort to relieve an economically sick nation of that incalculable cost which goes along with strikes, jurisdictional and otherwise. t We believe that one vital means toward industrial continuity is being bverlooked in all the consideration now being given to the labor subject. That is mediation, And, accompanying the effort to .end the civil war within labor itself, to correct the Wagner act and the administration thereof, we think this Congress should legislate a mediation system, making it available to all who work and all who hire. It is a necessary capstone to collective bargaining. Wherever it has been invoked it has succeeded. | Sweden has it, and so do several other nations where labor trouble is how almost unknown;-and collective bar- _ gain accepted as a‘matter of routine. But, while foreign - experience is valuable, we don’t have to go abroad to see
the effectiveness. The jewel is right at our feet. L Our own National Mediation Board functions with the railways and the air lines. During the last fiscal year 500 - cases involving new agreements came up. Four hundred were settled without mediation; in 100 the Board served. With the railways alone a million employees were parties, and wage adjustments totaled 135 million dollars. Not one of the 500 cases resulted in stoppage of work. bo ‘The record is as nearly perfect as you ever find in public affairs. : Why fimit the principle to the railroads and the air lines? : :
IT'S THE HARD WAY : S we get beyond the statement stage of the economy resolve enunciated by Senator Pat Harrison this nation will see its lawmakers wrestling with just about the toughest problem that ever falls to the lot of mortal man. For economy is always the “hard way.” Yet if it isn’t done, God help the United States.
~
Nearly everything you spend money for, private or
public, looks like a good idea. Privately, a pew suit, a new hat, a new dress, a new car, a trip, and this and that, through the vast span of human wants.
Or, publicly, a health program, an expanded educational service, more bridges, more roads, more buildings and battleships, grasshopper control, or a Florida ship canal. | Private spending is difficult enough to restrain, but not nearly so-difficult as public. For there are bill collectors and credit associations that check up on you, and sheriffs that evict you, as an individual, and pretty definite time limits on how long you can run “on the cuff.” The only real regulator on how far a government can safely go into debt is the bond buyer. When he gets leary, “and the quotations begin to slide, then comes the signal that the government’s credit is in danger. That hasn’t happened yet, but warnings are coming from very high governmental places. And unless there is a halt in Federal - spending the next and most terrifying phase shows up. The government resorts to some form of repudiation. Printing-press money is the most common “out.” And the tragic fact is that such inflation isn’t actually an out. It is merely a shot in the arm. Tha stories of the mark and the ruble and the franc, the continental and the greenback, the assignat, the Mississippi bubble—they are warnings we should heed today. And in each you find the same element of false hope and self-delusion that is expressed in the Eccles theory that by spending you can win. That theory is the most dangerous factor in our whole fiscal. picture today. The real job now is how to convince Congressmen, each with his pet spending measure, and each feeling the force of tremendous pressure groups, that this is indeed a crisi $— and that to turn the tide toward reduction instead of - increase of debt is actually demanded if the country is to be saved. | \ ; No “project,” however benign, is as important as that. But to do the trick will take a lot of iron, a lot of follow-through, a lot of statesmanship and a lot of political self-denial. .
THE LIBRARY APPEAL |
IT probably will come as a surprise to many that Librarian ‘Luther L. Dickerson has found it necessary to issue a: public appeal for donations to overcome a serious shortage of books at the public library. As Mr. Dickerson explains in his appeal, the reason is a heartening one. We now have more than 131,000 registered borrowers. And so great is the turnover that the volumes are worn out faster than they can be replaced by purchase. Indianapolis, in fact, according to the American Library Association, stands fifth in cities of its class in per capita
around
was away on one of his frequent resting trips when ‘
he was martyred.
Considering what happened to Mr. Cermak, a;
1
superstitious man in the place of Mr. Kelly might prefer to remain on the job, which pays the not contemptible wage of $15,000 a year, with no deductions for tardiness or days absent, and all immune to the Federal income tax and free of a state tax, of which Illinois has none. But the office of Mayor of Chicago
and Jersey City, while they might seem simpler, are
much more exhausting than the same office in New York. Mr. La Guardia stays on the job the year around with the exception of a few hurried political trips looking toward the Presidency and official missions to Washington. :
Mr. Hague, the millionaire Mayor of Jersey City, | who amassed vast wealth by humble frugality on a |
salary of $8000 a year, finds it necessary to rest fre-
quently at Palm Beach or in Europe. And Chicago |;
mayors. avoid mental and physical breakdown only by dragging themselves away from it all for long periods. Perhaps Mr. La Guardia is just killing himself.
8 # #”
HE duality of the Chicago of homes and citizens and the underworld Chicago of gamblers, grafters and racketeers long has imposed a dual office on the mayors. Of course a Mayor could announce that he was Mayor of the official Chicago only and recognize the existence of no other Chicago. But it hasn't been done, and when the underworld moved its winter
capital to Miami back in the days of prohibition and
prosperity the city government followed.
But intention of the plaque to Tony Cermak is not |} Obviously, if it is to acknowledge his |=
quite clear. services to the people of Chicago, then Chicago is the place for it and Miami is presumptuous. The people of Chicago know better than the people of Miami what sort of Mayor Tony Cermak was, and if they have refrained from erecting monuments to him that was no mere negligence, but a positive comment on Tony Cermak by an informed people, 2 8 =»
IE the plaque intended to honor Tony’s unintentional interception of the bullets which were meant for Franklin D. Roosevelt, the President-elect? If so, why drag down a trainload of Chicago office-holders to witness the rite? Why erect a plaque at all? A man doesn’t get a plaque for accidental death, and nobody has been heard to assert that Tony stepped in front of those bullets purposely. He was, in fact, trying to grab Mr. Roosevelt's ear for a few words on behalf of deserving Democrats. If plaques are to be raised to martyrs, Al Capone would be a more deserving subject. Mr. Capone is
one of the living dead and his condition is chargeable
to his immurement and treatment on Alcatraz, the soundproof prison. It wasn’t because he was rude that Capone went to Alcatraz. On Alcatraz he couldn’t talk to reformers, reporters or rival politicians. n Capone suffered more than Tony, and his long incarceration and consequent lunacy obliterated the crimes of many Chicagoans, including, no doubt, some .
| in the present delegation.
Business By John T. Flynn
Lawyer's Approach to Problems Disturbing World Urged by Frank.
EW YORK, March 7.—Jerome Frank, Securities Exchange Commissioner, who is a lawyer and an exceptionally good one, makes a lawyer's suggestion about the approach to the question of war. Mr. Frank says that a lawyer who goes into a court of equity also begins his bill in equity by praying for the relief he wants. Then he builds up his plea from that point. Why not apply this technique to the present imbroglio in Europe? Let us begin by praying for the relief we want. And then let us see how a war
. would advance it.
Let us now suppose that France and England and the United States fight a war with Italy and Germany and probably Russia and Japan. Let us suppose that France and England and the United States win the war, Then in the midst of a condition, produced by that war and victory, the victors and vanquished gather around the table to make a treaty. Let us start from there, says Mr. Frank. What kind of treaty will they make? What will it be about? What relation will it bear to the objectives which we in America have in our minds now? / ; . The spectacle of that conclave is terrifying. What those in America who lean to joint action with France and England have in mind is the protection of democracy—their democracy and ours. And, ins cidentally, they aim at the destruction of dictatorships. Can apyone be certain that the men who gather at table will not be dictators? °* We can surely have no doubt that almost the first effect of the war when it starts will be to suspend the democratic processes ii all countries—even in the democracies. And can we have any doubt as to what will happen to the economic systems of all the nations. involved?
Right Back Where We Started
It is easy to believe that before the war has gone
very far the dictators of both Italy and Germany will .
be overthrown. But overthrown by whom? By other dictators—other Fascist dictators or Communist dictators. : And what of France? Will her democratic government be still intact when the war has done its apnalling work upon her and deepened and intensified and spread economic chaos worse confounded? #Is it not possible a dictator may sit at the peace table representing one of the democracies? Indeed, is it not possible dictators may sit there representing
- England and France? They may not be called dic-
tators and certainly not Fascist dictators. But what they are called does not matter. May not America—naive America—who will have once again ured out her blood and treasure to make the world safe for democracy, find herself sitting at a peace table with angry, vengeful dictators making a dictator's peace of wrath? And ‘even if this dark picture does not materialize, what evidence have we that the fighting of a war will put an end to those dark energies in society which are driving us toward fascism and communism?
A Woman's Viewpoint By Mrs. Walter Ferguson
would take
% = : — . The Haosier Forum I wholly disagree with what you say, but will i defend to Ue death your right to say it.—Voltaire.
CLAIMS BILL OF RIGHTS IS ‘FOR MEN ONLY’ By All-American Those who would fire all mairied women with working husbands have never yet offered an opinion on the proposal that men, too, who have more than a single source of income should be restricted to one, and only
one, job or business. I don’t really expect to hear anything on this point, bécause this is after all a free country—for mien. The Bill of Rights was drawn up For Men Only. “The Pursuit of Happiness” mentioned in the Declaration of Independence did not apply to women. “The Rights of Man” meant just that. In the American Constitution there is just one ray of light as far as American women are concerned—the ameridment that gives us the right to vote. Having attained this right, we must go on to true equality. We are badly in need of laws which will further equalize men and women. Such a “Bill of Rights for Women” would contain provisions - something like the following: Throughout life women, like men, would bear the same title. That is, all women, both married and single, would be known as Mrs. or all women would be known as Miss. There would be no difference in titie as there is now. . Women would have the privileg of retaining their maiden names throughout life. Think of the complications we would avoid if a woman could marry as many times as she chose without changing her name as is legally required now. Professional women have long resented this extremely degrading legal condition. These improvements in the condition of women would go a long way in removing the slave complex under which they labor and which retards them in their march to freedom. I suppose Mr. Pegler would
say that men are inventors, geniuses,
and therefore rightly on top of’the heap, but all I say is look at this miserable world which is about to be blasted bits by the “genius sex.” It would be a lucky thing for this iene planet if” women ver in a big way. 2 = =
PERIL TO LIBERTY SEEN
IN ANOTHER WAR
By Eva Skelton Tomb
The surest/ way, in my opinion,
to lose our Americap form of government is to get embroiled in another European war. We must give up most of our civil liberties in war-
time. In the present state of world
affairs and under the present regime
In Washington, perhaps we will never again be able to retrieve
them without civil bloodshed.
. Is it worth that risk or the risk of losing millions of our sons to
make foreign governments accept
our form of government—against their will? If they want democracy, the peoples of these governments can get it as we got it. If they don’t care enough about it to pay the price our forefathers paid—shall’ we send our sons into battle to force them to take it? I leave the answer to the mothers of American sons. If we go to war to save a minority in one nation,
(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.)
won't we be called upon to save another minority in some other nation? Do these mothers know
that bills are ready which will force us into a virtual dictatorship in case of war if they are passed by Congress? Do these mothers realize that the almost irrevocable steps which are now being taken may take us into war suddenly and against our will? In war-time, mothers drop most of their social activities and work for “our boys.” It would be far better if they would drop most of them now. and work to keep “our boys” out of Europe's unholy mess. “To be forewarned is to be forearmed.” Let Congress know where you stand on this, mothers—and now. ” ® ®
‘EXPENSES CAN VOTE, EXPLAINS OBSTACLE By E. M. Webber :
With city, State and Federal taxes cutting deeply into the wage-earn-ers’ pockets and the gloomy prospect of still more taxes to come— the ¢ry at the moment seems to be, “well, why don’t they cut down on government expenses?” The following lines, spoken: by a prominent statesman a few years lack, probably answer the moo} question much better thar most of
us can, to wit: “The main difficulty about cutting off the expenses of
government is that practically all
the expenses can vote.” That statement, most likely spoken in jest,
contains more truth than poetry and clearly shows the over-taxed
wage-earner what to expect in the matter of government pruning.
8 2 5
WANTS BUND CITIZENSHIP REVOKED FOR SLURS By F. W. B. oo
Nazis, Fascists and Communists in our country who desecrate the
memory of all those who have lived and died to make the U. S. the
great country it is today should forfeit their citizenship. And those
A MEMORY By VELMA M. FRAME
I picked a rose from memory lane. It was fragrant and wet with
dew, Sprinkled with the stardust of a love that was vain— It’s the picture in my heart of you.
DAILY THOUGHT
The wicked in his pride doth Persecule. he poor; let them be taken the devices that they have imagined.—Psalms 10:2.
RIDE is increased by ignorance; "those assume the most who
know the least—Gay.
who are not citizens should be gathered together and shipped back to their native lands and see if their
masters would be glad to welcome them as heroes and give them good jobs and the living they are accorded here. Also the Americans who are loyal could fill their jobs better than they fill them. Freedom of speech doesn’t give them privileges of undermining and destroying our Government. The insult they gave the Father of our country and President Roosevelt should not go unrewarded. Here's to Americanism a million per cent. » » 8 WANTS DAYLIGHT TIME FOR INDIANAPOLIS By G. H. D. Why are the citizens -of Indianapolis deprived of the many benefits of daylight saving time? ‘I understand that it is because the Legislature passed a law that Indianapelis alone of all the cities in the state cannot enjoy daylight saving time. Has the Legislature the right to dis-
criminate against our city. in this manner? - Other cities in the State
can and do have daylight saving
time. Isn't it the right of the people of this city to decide this question? Isn’t it a matter for our City Council instead of the state lawmakers? I have asked more than a hundred persons how they stand on this question. A few said they did not care; the rest—at least 90 per cent —were for it. Not one was against it. I believe the sentiment of the entire city is overwhelmingly in favor of daylight saving time. If this is the case, what group or groups are powerful enough to keep this act on the books? What is their motive? : I have been told that farmers are against it because they would have to get up an hour earlier to get their produce to market. I asked a State Representative from Marion County to poll the rural representatives on this question. He reported that they cared little one way or another. I heard that labor was against it. I asked many laborers, both union and nonunion men. They were all in favor of daylight saving time. They pointed out that many factories opened an hour earlier in order to give their workers more time for recreation in the evening. I have been told that the groups in favor of retaining this ridiculous law are led by the theater owners and the electric utility. Is it possible that these two interests are powerful enough to keep this law on the books in spite of the feeling against it? 2 8 = LAUDS FIRST LADY FOR RESIGNATION By Henry L. Macy
I want to express my admiration for Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt’s courage in resigning from the Daughters of the American Revolution in disapproval of their undemocratic ban on the appearance of Marian Anderson, Negro contralto, in Constitution Hall. Mrs. Roosevelt has thereby shown to the nation that she is a true, unprejudiced woman of highest
character and courage.
LET'S EXPLORE YOUR MIND
By DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM
| with the fleet and the Administration's | parent turn to the right. =
*| lost confidence in Mr. Roosevelt.
{| private enterprise to go i| vinciwg it that it has nothing to fear from Govern-
sudden ap-
It may or may not be true that the Vice President said so blunt a thing. I doubt it. In the first place, it. doesn’t sound like Mr. Garner and, in the second place, it is not true. A majority of people have not RO They continue to idolize him—perhaps too much for his own good. But a somewhat similar statement could be put into different words and it would be absolutely accurate, The Administration is apparently trying to encourage ‘and to do §o by con-
ment hostility. So far, it has done this by. words of the President, Mr. Hopk and Mr. Morgenthau rather than by actions. It would be perfectly correct to say that private enterprise has so far lost confidence in om ses y from his Ad jnissrat on, that it does not e will no eve t. translated into action, | i ®
) TI" you stand off and stop to think—what an incredie
ble situation had developed which required a President of the United States to say that business had nothing to fear from him! The life-blood of the United States is business. That alone makes employ-
| Ment and prosperity. It sounds like a man’ saying to
his own heart that it had nothing to fear from his
{| hands. Something created that astonishing situation,” | Everybody knows that this “something” was the an- ¢ j| nounced policy and actual practice of this Adminis
tration. Now that policy seems about to be reversed but the reversal will have to go into practice before it can click. In the main, this will take time. But there is one kind of action which would take no time at all and would be at least as effective as all other ‘proposed actions put together to convince every one of our mil-
lions of possible private spenders and investors that
they can go ahead freely with their billions of private dollars to create employment.
2 ® 8 M= ROOSEVELT and business started off together in 1933 in almost perfect harmony and co-opera- - tion, It is a well-known fact that this harmony was broken through new policies bitterly hostile to business which were peddled to Mr. Roosevelt by new advisers and associates. They believed that our capitalist and profits system of economy ought to be. taken apart, put together again and thereafter operated by politicians rather than by private initiative. Their
sincerity in this belief amounts almost to a religion, For a time they prevailed with it. Is it possible that in their hearts these zealots have changed their views?
Such an idea is ridiculous. Yet those advisers and associates femain as close and as influential as ever. If there could somehow be an exodus of them, perhaps by their own action, it would do more to promote recovery than any other possible single move.
Fag
It Seems to Me
By Heywood Broun
'Swing Mikado’ Puts Uncle Sam In Top Flight of Stage Producers.
EW YORK, March 7—“The Swing Mikado” seemed grand and gay to me, and one of the reasons why I got excited was because I had the feeling “This ‘is our show.” . I did not sing a note or tap a tap or utter any line, but the Federal Theater does belong to us. By our votes we created it. As taxpayers we have a piece of the play. And: in an even more vital and intimate way we are partners, since here is an expression of national creative impulse. eh The fact that both Gilbert and Sullivan are dead and British does not impair the assertion ‘that.‘“The Swing Mikado” stems from .the roots of American inspiration. : Some of the critics, members of the younger set, * have complained that the interpretation given by the all-Negro cast should be even more bold than it is at present. The notion has been advanced that the music should be swung from beginning to end. That, I think, it is a mistaken notion. It is a jitterbug idea. Sedate persons, like myself, like to sit out a rhumba on occasion.
Of course, if it were possible to bring the composer back and let him hear the lovely singing of the present chorus, either in romantic or rowdy mood, there is the possibility that Sir Arthur would be the first to lead the applause. Indeed, it seems to me extremely likely that he would be much more than half persuaded to the innovation of trucking “The Flowers That Bloom in the Spring, Tra la.” After the tenth encore he might very well observe, “Why didn’t I think of that myself?” : .
Dignity Plus Gaiety But beyond the sphere of dramatic criticism this Federal enterprise deserves comment as an event of social significance. The Broadway stage has been used repeatedly for what seems to me muddle-headed and cruel satire concerning the WPA. . The comic boys have done their bit to make the workers on relief seem both farcical and tragic. ae That notion was stamped, or better stomped, upon at the “Mikado” opening. Even when laughter rocked
the rafters there remained an underlying feeling that there was dignity as well as gaiety in the enterprise, These performers had every reason to be proud of their accomplishments. Nor is there any reason known to‘'me why gn actor should be embarrassed to admit that he is working for the Govetnment. Federal theater projects have a fine record of achieve= ment, and the day may even come when Uncle Sam stands shoulder to shoulder with Lee Shubert or Brock & Pemberton as an eminent producer. QL :
Watching Your Health :
By Dr. Morris Fishhein
os
Aaa
»
HERE are occasions when one feels strongly that ignorance is bliss. My visit to the Houston Flower Show confirmed the opinion in my mind, for my stupidity enhanced the "miraculous effect of the event. . Having as companions on tour several rabid Garden Club members, by the time we had arrived 1 felt ‘as out of place as an onion among hyacinths. Knowing nothing whatever about plant culture, or .soil replacement, or anything else that garden lovers pride themselves on, I merely went along for the
but once—that is about 85 per cent. So, if there is any more likelihood of the second wife being more suspicious than the first it ought to show up in the statistics. EJ » »
THIS is one of the wisest suggestions for safety on the highway that has been made. Hitehhikers ought to be compelled to carry credentials from their local
A more and more interest is being taken in the ® problems of childbirth, particularly since the birth of the Dionne quintuplets, we hear more and more of extraordinary happenings in the field of childbirth. , ‘Most recent reports concern an instance in which one child was born promptly, but several days passed before the birth of the second child. There are many cases in which twins have been born more than 12 ¢ hours apart. . aad
circulation. . Despite sizeable appropriations for new book purchases each year—ranging from $66,000 in the peak year of 1925 to the $43,600 available this year—the library always has ~ deperided upon generous contributions from private sources, Recently, however, along with reduced appropriations, there has. been a falling off in private donations. This has led to
d
a situation where the library lacks about 100,000 volumes | ide, so to speak. Until that very day I had never snouLp au SSSI —— authorities, same as the people who| It is extraordinary, however, for a much greater lit 3 : Ie | known that the Texas Lupine is the famous BI » people who 1.8 that it should ‘have to continue its high standard. boat. And 5s for peat ial a couple of Tovey : HITHHIKE ; Br SoNpLED BYLAW [drive the autos have to carry a li-| interval to elapse between the birth of twins, because i We suspect that it will not require much urging on the | Words teamed together to create: a poetic image in | “=. Your OPINION’. | C05 soa | the modern specialist in obstetrics seldom cares to my flower-dumb brain. : : ; . MORE THAN 100 volumes have | {3k the chance of waiting too long for the birth
of the second child. ‘There is possible danger to the mother, due to conditions associated with childbirth ¢ as particularly possible danger to the second. child resulting from separation of the tissues by which it is attached to the mother ‘before the child is born. Therefore, in most instances nowadays in which * twins are being born, it is customary for the physi-
part of those who can do so to repair this deficiency. Next to enjoying a good book himself, the real book lover finds no greater satisfaction than in sharing that treasure with ~ others, : | : :
\ COME ON, SOUTHPORT!
After we got inside the giant Coliseum, however, and took a whiff, I became brazen about my ig-| norance. In fact, I forgot it altogether and felt several degrees nearer perfect sensory satisfaction. While my wise friends were intent upon the more mundane matters of soil and fertilizer and temperaBE : accepted the miracles as such and let it go av] .
been written trying to answer this question. Let us take language as an example. Your: capacity to speak is inborn, but the language you speak, your tones. ahd inflections and speaking gestures are nearly all due to environment. However, some persons talk more easily
|
Lag Pe re . : {Heaven is bound to smell something like. that of , : mot cian to take definite action the ! BY a curious turn of events, the basketball championship Flower Show, if it comes up to my expeciations. The THE STORVOF ENVAGWEYY | (snd learn langusgs; mote Tesclly| Clan ts take definite acto immediately Alter he frst ge i —mg i cen Fie. concept has always seemed disap- RONMENT OR uperior heredity. Everybo causes which may be delaying the birth .of the hopes of Marion County—most populous county in the | pointing, for surely nothing could be ss beautiful as ENV TOR HIS bo = periof oh any. Everyhay has maining child. "determines ‘wh
"'He. then d Such as to permit
ciable, but how well you develop
. HEREDIN-HEHERL |
i state—rest on the energetic squad of Southport High a wide stretch of greensward, embroidered: with rows | we 8,
| © School, one of the smaller high schools in this ~~ | of blooming flowers. ] | kT JR OPINION —— 3] |these habits is largely due to en-| Then if the second child is not born within be ’ 8 7 In this ar | Anyway, as long as I shall carry with Ri ah A EE Tgely au 1 5 child is not be thin
