Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 May 1940 — Page 12

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PAGE 12 | ii THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES TUESDAY, MAY 21 1840 The Indianapolis Times Fair Enough [ Not Going to Be Just Antler Joy. Ride! Gen. Johnson

(A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) gh y wy a ROY W. HOWARD RALPH BURKHOLDER MARK FERREE By Westbrook Pegler Sas LEE To RS 7 a Sa S

President Editor Business Manager Own | oui Price in Marton Couns Wilson May Have Been Wrong in| gis ; So VE \ a Dude League Speeches, but Some Were b ; g Mr. Ickes Sets the Tempo for a

Suily (except Sunday) by ty, 8 cents & Sopy. delivi . ts . . . " ¥ 2 4 \ 3 ¥ » e Indisnapolis Times £= ered by carrier, 12 cen Prophetic in View of Later Events -— ; 3d Term Campaign With a Speech

PUBS Co, 214 WwW, a week. Y . 4 aryland St. ] Mail subscription rates |. ASHINGTON, May 21. Woodrow Wilson, in the hat's Just About 100%, Wrong

Member ot United Press, ih HE ou course of his speaking campaign of September, : N ASHINGTON, May 21. Secretary Tokes, the or.

Scripps - Howard News- B= outside of Indiana, 65 \ paper Alliance. NEA BE ; cents a ‘month. 1919, on behalf of the Teague of Nations, seasoned his i . N iginal triple termite, made a speech belore the Service, and Audit Bu- remarks with some paragraphs which today are of bio ’ : a8 i Amalgamated Garment Workers,

reau of Circulation. mn Sob SS RILEY 5551 | more interest than they were then. : . oN ; Tt first assumed that garment workers are “the une - The wisdom or folly of his proposals can only be 4 OR der-privilaged,” then it pamted a picture of Mr, Roose Give 1ayht ana the People 17ill Find Their Own Way debated, never determined, but they were rejected by . velt as the original and greatest champion of that the ‘people to whom he carried his case, who then, ! ” wn class, He has only begun to take away from the haves TUESDAY, MAY 21, 1940 having made their decision, got plastered on kitchen P ; He saved the country from revolution by this method, gin and went lurching into the era of wonderful non- : To prevent revolution is No, 1 item of national de

y sense, with a hey nonny-nonny. : FIREM AN ON THE JOB On Sept. 5, 1019, Mr. Wilson in ® Speech at St. fense, Self-preservation is the mightiest law, Theres Louis, said: tore, Mr. Roosevelt must be re-elected, or such fol NTIL he was called home in a hurry to replace Gen. “What oi the Crom, So, Wiioh vey got Bite Vyas of 403 ay Seguiny hia yep, io at oh X ¥ i Belgium? Every piece of machinery that could be : a8 1 BLY Ol aa URILY, Gamelin in the high command of the Allied forces, Gen. Ta away was taken away. If it was t00 big to take After a few punches at the economic royalists, it gloated that they are flocking to the Roosevelt stand

q ey was i I f the French forces in the | away, experts directed the way in which it should be / Masie Weygand was in charge of the injured xD Shit it Could mever be Wsed gain. and this, ’ ~~ = ard under the stress of threatening war, The musia Near East. because there were textile industries and iron in- E VE \ ah Y. WLR i Hot, ive of hi Tos pat wa A tor wn Bw Qusie: ) " ey \ v - | dustries in Belgium which the Germans hated the ; BR A 8 ' plus a plea for unity, but that inconsistency There in Syria, whenever visiting reporters sought Boi: Tor ha Th war, 00 To Hotmmon, ee 4 a ! DE eo. a

to get a few words out of him, he would never say anything | a commercial and industrial war. Tt was not a po- : "“." ® litical war. Cdl 7, ’ ” 4 N the third movement of this symphony, Mr, Roose

except: p ® w = : $y tll velt appears the great leader, reformer and savior

“Je suis pompier”—*“1 am a fireman.” “ oy vii, oe, it Vo pid Shing wi and be 1 2 7 i 8 of our economic and industrial system=which is.ow Heaven help the world if he is not a good one! For must he Wa I — Sn TE py Po . ) \ our first reliance for defense. In the fourth, he is the today in Flanders and northeastern France this little fire- | We must have a great standing army. We must see ; He op Sa, a wi Boi Spun de a . . . a Yr & o it that every man in America is traincd to arms.” \ . 4 hich the whole democratic world relies for champion» fighter who learned his trade as Foch's “shadow” in the | vu cannot be unfriendly to everybody without being re), ship and who foresaw the necessity for complete res World War has history's biggest fire on his hands. ready that everybody shall be unfriendly to you. And a , armament and in a single recent speech united the : what does that mean? Reduction of taxes? No. Not : 4 aA! ! / | country Tor it, : ee only the continuation of the present taxes, but the 4 | , x : 5 , On thiy skillfully prepared foundation came the

WE NEED TWO r ARTIES Here of the present thxes. ie By) 38 ; pay-off, . And it means something very much more serious . : / ; Washington was trotted out as the original triple R. ROOSEVELT'S effort to form what would have the | than that” he continued. “We can stand that so / termite in these circumstances, because he once satd Aa : ; that in a crisis we should conscript services of tha

ee . far as the expense is concerned, but, what is much appearance of a coalition government is as clever & | rhore serious, we have got to have the sort of organ- leader universally approved as our best, Therefore,

Ns "ay y " Bo ds its ization which is the only kind of organization that [ Mr, Roosevelt=—and incidentally Mr, Ickes—must now I olitical maneuver as any he has even initiated can handle arms of that sort. | be drafted because “democracy universally des

If, as is reported to be his design, he prevails upon “We may say what we please of the German mands it.” tilt Wai . . an ; 3 8 . | Government that has been destroyed, but it was Col. Frank Knox and three or four other influential Repub- | 59 Tt Er a IL wis licans to take Cabinet posts at this time—in the teeth of | an armed nation. You cannot handle an armed na- strengthened our economic system for defense, i enti tions—it wi tion by vote. You cannot handle an armed mation : He hag almost ruined it with debt and taxes, HW the national cony entions and elections it will be a meat | o°0 “0 democratic, because ‘democracies do not Ro E hasn't contributed to unity. His political “ii job of interring Republican opposition without benefit of | to war that way. You have got to have a concen- : ~~, ; A Wy politic clergy. or even a wake trated, militaristic organization of government to ge : trade has been disunity and class hatred, ey, ; . Ce run & nation of that sort. You have got to think of Sn ; His diplomacy hasn't prevented the awful results We are in an emergency, arising from the turn of the Wt fedgon pot i ee ghieh Wo Sheeten jo of aggression abroad. It has invited it hy raising false aki. , . . ’ i a little while, but as the man meant constantly an a ho of who! DONS sg “il war in Europe and from our lamentable unpreparedness | query day to be the commander-in-chief of the Army E a Er mica, WH a which the impact of European events has brought dramat- i Yexay ht ein jo any part ot i readiness, should have stalled for time to PIOpAT®, } . " . aN or here t hreat ar is & menace to his This 15 the reverse of a record on which y 1T sev . X } ” / ! y n which to choose ign Sid a RI, Roose elt 1s appealing to Col. KnoX, | own people. And you canmot do that under free ge- | m leader on Washington's formula, National defense et al, on the basis of patriotism, asking them to place | bate. You have the alternative, armed isolation or can't and won't be made a football of politics, But

* . . . . . peaceful partnership.” what are we to call this kind of stuff? country above party. Their natural inclination is to accept * ® w | h H 0 0 rr F 0 ru m » to call this kind of stuff”

the summons. S to whether the alternative would have worked, | 2 . . . there is no testimony, but onl inion, but some y ; . : . But a cool appraisal of the situation should raise Some | o¢ the prophetic phrases which the. war a ore | { wholly disagree with what you say, but will | Bu siness doubts in their minds as to whether they serve either party | cried at an indifferent people have now been upheld. | defend to the death your right to say it.—V oltaire, | i rw . Said a abink mn And, after 20 years, the next Democratic Presior country by abandoning bipartisan government in times gent in a war speech to Congress speaks from the | By John T. Flynn

like these. neck and not from the heart when he says: “There [SEES WANT INVITING (Times readers are invited |tempted in the early New Deal days.

are some who say that democracy cannot cope with | TROJAN HORSE TACTICS fo express their views in Ln 3 a little late in sug- New Deal Defense Clamor Logical 8 unity,

% Ww > ow W the new techniques of government developed in re- Im | By George Maxwell .. % » | these columns, religious com vw» In View of Its Failures at Home

. 1 . [cent years by a few countries which deny the freeFirst, let them ask themselves whether such a coali- | doms which we maintain are essential to our demo- | In her Friday piece, Mrs. Roose- | woversies exideds: Winks SEES BOTH GOOD AND velt said that a considerable part) v BAD IN NEW DEAL EW YORK, May 21 —Here are a few tacts which

tion-government-in-appearance be a coalition government | cratic way of life. That I reject.” ; 4 rejecti ; siti SOV . [of our people regarded as imma-| | 5 | In rejecting that proposition, Mr. Roosevelt, for terial the System of government your letiers short, so all can By 1. W. Pruett, Bloomington a lot of people have a tremendous interest in

in fact? On that point the record of this Administration | shee disputes his old chief. should give them pause. Would this Administration, which - under which they lived. They were have a chance. Latters must The New Deal is both condemned keeping a lot of other people from thinking about, Srou’e #: DEES. oy i concerned largely, she said, with and applauded. Tt deserves both., Unemployed—10,000000 people, has tried so energetically to purge dissident opinion within | the kind of government that would Tt has prevented or at least post~| Bugness Index—Jan. 1, 107; May 11, 94,

» » . . . i to a Yes > Sl lot : give them a chance for the material| withheld on request. yoned the rise of a Hitler or Stalin its own party, be more tolerantly inclined toward conflict- Inside India na polis things of life. And she left no doubt | ye) I the WPA and other velit! Public Debt—May, 1939, $40,155,000,000; May, 1940,

ing views of coalitionists drawn from another party? that she referred to the one-third pest A. Harness of the Fifth Oon- agencies. For this it should be $42,730,000, of our people who, the President gressional District, applauded. Government Deficit This Year to Date

Would Col. Knox, for instance, have a free hand to Airplanes And a Building Boom: said, are fll-clothed, ill-fed and ill- * Mr, Harness gave as his reason| Tt should be condemned for the $3292 000,000 tie Secretary avy ’ , re- y rs |ROUSEd, for refusing to si he petition cont ; ation oh Ni rr function ns Secretary of the wg Ns 1 pe And Racing Cars Plus Redo. If one-third of our people are! pat RS Se % Rg i AYR. "no | New Securities—1930, $4,483,000,000; 1940, $371,000, wry y . YY, “wr HN / A] » 4 b 7 y 4 4 " oe a tary Swinson id, or Secietary Disa hes! ; ~ e oy OT | JNDIANAPOLIS certainly is air-minded these days. tum. Afth column or rogers, | %0 Of bringing bills to the floor. Yet Opiates are needed in times of ex- | Col. W illiam Donovan or Fiorello La Guardia be in fact | | pat Washington report that a major aircraft | then democracy might as well begin a wR i pe ome di; Their continued |... ac that bank loans are hardly more than they more of a Secretary of War than Mr. Woodring has been? | firm had selected this town for a $10,000000 plant [practicing its swan song. t the “soak the rich” T [use Is dangerous. . . . were in 1933 at the bottom of the depression and that ¥, # k ’ y | ’ v > y y ¥ : ‘ has everyone talking. The firm, incidentally, is one | oul the “soak the rio ownsend| On the other hand those loudest ..u security issues are actually loss than they were Or would they be just window dressing? of the nation’s largest and just recently brought out | aT PP, a, ; —. on tie in To ore, (ew | in 1932 close fo the bottom > yo i ! SW <li h ‘FEARS CANADA AS SEAT | truly amazing presumption upon the Deal shout their condemnations | . ‘ Ire ; Another question, one that has been asked loud and a a lined job that the Army thinks is [OF BRITISH GOVERNMENT lack of intelligence of Fifth Disirict trom the appatent safely of the) wil To wee in power and Jud promised to long, is mewly pertinent in connection with this coalition A plant of the size proposed, we're told, would ly Cuan. Anderson ue on woe, Soro, Xam 45-billion dollar shell hole for steri- | and had to 100k At Tn dismal statistics. what would talk. That is: Will the President run for a third term ? | hire at least 3500 persons—mostly highly-skilled work- esi- MOL, After all, a politician, But ft lized credit. | you think? You would think it an excellent thing to ers. It also would add to the demand for new homes | 10 APPEAIS to me that the Presi a n. Sub 1] Bankers contend they cannot 10an | get people to quit looking at them and fretting about If he sincerely wants a political truce, he can get it, com- | on the fast-growing West Side dent is maneuvering very nicely. seems to me that many more of axcept on the soundest of security. | ghe P y b - i. . y : Ys I : Why is he getting so excited all at your constituents were interasted in , °. | them and remembering them, getting Years of depression have caused pletely and unqualifiedly, by answering that one in the Real estate men have been anticipating this. As | Gols sould ft be that the fighting the Hatoh “clean politics” bill than | ! | And now comes Mr, Hitler and wipes this all out tiv y far back as three years ago some of them predicted |; "ooiine pretty close to England, were interested in the Townsend .° U0 gravitate into the hands of of the minds of people. And a vast panic is worked negative. that the West Side would see the greatest future | that their seat of government is “soak the rich” pension proposal, the ultra conssrvative, Unreason~ | up by (1) those who think we ought to go into Burope ableness on the part of FDIC and | 15 save the British Empire; (2) the various foreign

vaxy 3 a ay ES " residential development. Already they've subdivided ; To go all the way in coalitionism, the Pr esident would plots around the airport and north to Speedway OS A Sw, SN vy » 9 other bank examiners is given 4% groups and their leaders who think the United States have to renounce the third term, devote himself solely to | City, where a building boom already is in full | United States would be obligated to THINKS LANDON LATE the reason. ought to go to Burope to save Holland or Poland or his duties as head of a nonpartisan government for the | SWiNg. protect the shores of Canada? IN SUGGESTING UNITY Reason or excuse can only be other countries from Germany; who think not in J i dois : Fi of b = in Un * x w You know Mr. Roosevelt has the go «ooo smith determined by investigation. The | terms of American interests but in terms of their rest of his time in office, refuse to be a partisan in the The South American Group in the 500-mile [name of being very shrewd and to | y + antecedents of these dictators of | foreign allegiances and sentiments; (3) the politicians | Alfred Landon criticizes Presi- credit should be examined. re | who want to get the minds of Americans off our own

coming campaign, and call upon the people to elect the race here is pretty unhappy these days. It my way of thinking has always been | : £ p g p p 1 seems that the two radio chains down there are (very evasive in his remarks. If the dent Roosevelt for spending money | they largely bankrupt bankers domestic problems which they do not know what to

best man to the Presidency and the best men to Congress, | putty tough rivals, One of the chains, co-operating |King and Queen of England were(Un Projects insu Flin 0 use Dsl Nia have made do about. regardless of party. with La Critica, an Argentine newspaper, backed the brought to Canada that would bring | OU! nse, 71 18 har ! wish | b cautious? , ., , eg party : financial campaign to bring Raul en and a new |the war right to our front door and | between weapons for defense and No enterprise with a reasonable @uotes Wendell Willkie But there would be no quid pro quo to Republicans | Maseratti here for the race. They sent representa- |then the excuse would be that the offense. Airplanes, guns and ships chance of success should be dented | y \ D war was forced upon us. That would | ¢an be used for either, | its fling. Interest rates commen» 1 do not want to do any plugging for any candi : POR us, 3G | v pve A N* | date for the Presidency, and certainly not for Wendell

wv ow bids lav aside litics if. ins intends tives with the Argentine ace to cover the big event, | whom he n ay aside politics if, insterd, he intend The radio chain hoped to get exclusive South [De a very easy way to force the Does he remember that because of Surate with risk might be the wiki. But it must be said that he puts the question

to take the Democratic nomination, and run on the issue of | American broadcasting rights. Its rival, however, |Uhited States into their conflict. |a few thousands boys going into answer, The “Go” that has made | very well when he says: “It is useless to talk about national unity, expecting his coalitionists to remain loyally beat them to the gun. Working through a major I am mostly certainly for a OCC camps, an awful rumpus was America invincible on the field of | loans to the Allies now, since they have money and Ys J U. S. network, this outfit paid cash on the line, strong defense but the President's raised: we were preparing for war, battle and in the economic field | sash credits here enough to buy more goods than we (sudden outburst has got me won-| What a howl there would have should no longer be sterilized | on possibly manufacture and sell to them for &

mum. signed a contract for exclusive rights | . ik ii dy . ; by : Py a dering. been if Landon's 1940 ideas were at-| through lack . Before they accept political sterilization, Col. Knox | When Riganti's backers came up with their | 8 of credit number of months, proposition they learned they were too late. They're ®E ® » “Tt is also unimportant to raise the naval appro=

and the others probably will want to know the answers. | pretty mad about it and threaten to take some drastic | CRITICIZES REP. HARNESS priation or the army appropriation for our own country, since the orders already placed are far in

action. y » . 222 fully s B® ™ FUR RIOR (511 SAW New Books at the Library excess of our own productive capacity to fill,

Then there is an even more important consideration— | Maj. Gen. Robert H. Tyndall is back from the PF C'nwde Braddick : “What we must have in this country above everys Texas war games, where he was the only National | Fasy targets in the coming cam- thing else is prompt domestic recovery.”

whether our country, in the long run as well as the short, Guard officer given command of a regular Army Paign should be the three Indiana | But suppose you do not know how to produce would be better served by coalition, even though it be a | division. | Congressmen — one Democrat and | THOMPSON RICH and his never going to have much money; | domestic recovery? Then what do you do? You lition in fact He took over the First Division (one of our |two Republicans — who refused to . bride, shortly after the World so they wisely ceased to watch the | work up excitement, You clamor for billions to build coalition . best) for four days, drove 250 miles a day doing |SIEn the Dempsey petition to bring War, found themselves in Holly- horizon for a ship which might | ships which cannot be built because the shipyards are : {the second Hatch Bill, a “clean wood where the young husband was never come, and decided to put into | erowded, You yell for planes which you cannot pro-

If we have come upon had davs now. with inad ate | his own reconnaisance. Among other things, one of J . | . uf i ahd , Su his combat mechanized columns was “bombed” by | Politics” measure, onto the floor for having a try at scenario writing. [practice a little formula which they | duce because the productive capacity of the plants national defenses and industry apparently unable to supply 12 planes and his division, in ‘urn, captured part a vote, And especially vulnerable, Typical experiences convinced the had devised, whereby they could get| is occupied turning out planes for Burope—and our

the weapons of war in the quantities and at the speed | of a mechanized cavalry division. in this respect, should be Rep. For- couple that they probably were the most out of life on what they selves. You holler for arms although the arms plants But the highlight was the time when he went had, are working day and night. What else is there to do?

needed—then where should the blame be laid? Certainly | scooting over the rough, dusty roads at 60 miles an Si 4 Gl B G Ib " h “More Than Mere Living” (Whitnot with bipartisanship. The minority in Congress has | hour, preceded and followed by troops, to avoid cap- | @10€ ances—Dby Galbrait Uesey House) is an exciting little

) . ad ‘ : ture by the “enemy.” ; 1 book. It stimulates the reade : been nonpartisan, indeed almost coalitionist, in voting the bY We “entmy nen pry Mus Wie Neder Watching Your Health

defense appropriations the Administration has asked. If 3 own private little variation of the formula, which, says Mr, Rich, is By Jane Stafford

| 3 ’ . . » : the Republicans are to be blamed for anything it is that A Woman S Viewpoint )= ~ : nothing more or less than easing off

they have not functioned effectively as an opposition party . on many of things that really don't , o 0 . WY 8s thes arly summer days ma) NV By Mrs. Walter Ferguson matter, and bearing down on a MY of us these early su y y y

They have voted the money, but they haven't followed yi Wo, A) umes vaguely old EH fii. Wiaimus or hut », S y h > “« y “ v ay e, e 8, “ - ¢ through to make sure that the money was spent as it E are determined that suitable accommoda- Dt i ot oh bo 3 wan every afternoon, Even if we cannot take time for should have been. And they have been too weak in num- VTS bri o Heusonibis a rg to | blaze new trails.” such enjcyable outdoor activities, we should not miss bers and leadership to check the headlong Administration | pleasing words Mayor La Guardia fssues a general 4 This story of how one family| the benefits of A ie. policies which have been at least in part responsible for mviiation oe Yama Jemetung Mt We Wales Bin '\ Pe i» | " Tv a spa a petite and makes one feel better, Tt improves diges . - vi & s y swell of you, Mayor, but we’ e { ] a : , 1 . th of 0 than their income warrant tion and circulation and promotes assimilation the flabby condition of the country’s industries. to call your attention to another little item which 4 still keep a level Sh gid ins food. It relieves mental fatigue and has been credited We have had too much one-party government, and i do ST - Te. tipping gi : cn ; steady work-a-day heart beat a lit-| With curing insomnia in some cases. Medical authorih restrained ‘domi by . _ ge T) > h some money to » tle faster—a oar, a boat, a big Per. | ties have found that heart disease and high blood too much unrestrained dominance by one faction within | spend is intimidated by the attitude he finds in the sian pussy-could we, just possibly, Pressure are less common Wn those who make it a that one party. Instead of absorbing all opposition into | Metropolis. — do it ‘iso? POSEIDON: | habit ta, get some exercise regularly every day and \ . ke . His life in the wide open spaces has left him ha ; 5 4 ——————— ho at the same time avold excess weight than | the New Deal, the country’s crying need is just the opposite | wholly unprepared to cope with the haughty in- . ee Wie a take any exercise i, —a minority strong enough and intelligent enough to keep Jud: vie ae save = yy iy to Futon y CAN-ODE It because of your working hours or some other 3 vil ” ie. > 8 ng in the Big y. om \ / are . : By JOHN BROWN circumstance you cannot! play golf or tennis or ride the majority always on its mettle, In short—a return to | the moment he leaves home until he returns with | | y % 24 . ¥ High on a peak of silver shells horseback every day, you might try to get a regular real bipartisan government. empty purse and outraged feelings, he is embarrassed, ot : > Bathed in the light of a summer's| !Wo-mile daily walk. Making the daily walk a short harassed and often downright mad. BY... by moon, hike into the country with a dog or a group of friends Wo a Pe Ws HY very time he turns ) w Wy — Queen of a mountain of shimmer. | #dds to the fun, but you can get the same health TOPATOES FOR US rod. vocgn So 9 : Ii his hide is CERT ! ing wells, benefits from Whe erie if the walk merely Wikes you enou e cold, re- od _ to and from work, You may not think of walking as UR favorite horticulturist is George H. Chisholm super- proving stares of those whose palms he does not Or) Hh ae is mein Weny net Tadies too exercise, especially if your walking has been limited ym grease with quite enough silver. NY : - : Al Though I doubt if you equal in| '0 a few blocks with an occasional saunter past shop

intendent of the late Samuel Untermyer's estate near er 8 Such a Joumiey we feel a A RN beauty at all windows. In nt case, your first brisk, arm-swinging Me wr y r - : Bi 8 / n our “American Way” is insulted - § LURES i oma esoa walk of a full mile or more will convince you that 3 Yonker S N.Y. Last year Mr. Chisholm achieved fame by by the tipping system, which is so at odds with x Bi WR hath Sa hat Ped YOUr| hia is exercise as well as a means of getting places, = inoculating honeydew melons with rare liquors, producing evening we profes to love. - A glaring in- we Jf XR , A An important feature of exercising for health, o : ; o o i" _ | congruity in any democracy, it es all our fine - 5 oo, Re whether you walk, do setting-up exercises before the fruits delicately flavored with cognac, port wine and bene sentiments about the dignity of labor, . ks BY, RT et EN DAILY THOUGHT open a, or engage in some sport, is regularity, dictine, ' tng eerainy ie ellow iio tips has less cause : SN a a Vn Nevertheless for thy great mer. | SPasmodic, irregular physical exercise is of no benefit : oulited J o feel aggrieved than the worker who is forced to : pul a ba THO, ) thou uth and is likely to leave you tired and sore, Important, Now he has outdone that by gr afting tomato vines on stoop to such methods to get a decent living. There “ + : Siext Jae them Sa, 0% vey also, when you start your regular exercise program ~ potato roots. The vines bear extraordinary fine “poma- | is something shameful in compelling any man, hy oS a ga for thou art a gracious and mer~ | i8 10 begin with a small amount and gradudily in- . toes.” And the roots grow “topgtoes,” which taste just like | or ultra-naughty attitude. necessary to Sion os Hf Gul == NEN 931, op mbersd. up aug wow " potatoes but are starchless and maye be eaten freely by Hie customer ito RIVE Wide than he can afford "That exercise certainly has put you in Fip-t hape, Mr. Smith THE GREATEST ATTRIBUTE | take is suited to your strength and physical condition, hl . or a service for w expects to pay the I iy 235 Put you in ip~top $ IT OMITH== lof Heaven is mercy —Beaumont and | Your physician is the best person to advise you .. those inclined to —ahem—embonpoint. | management, - bet you could sail right through an insurance examination!" Fletcher, | about this:

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® ww» FLL, it’s all a ton of tripe. Mr. Roosevelt hasn't

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be signed, but names will be

One might go on with this melancholy catalog,

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