Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 December 1944 — Page 7

SATURDAY, DEC. a, 1044

-

THE IN DIANA

a few days. i y

w

WITH THE ‘AMERICAN 1ST ARMY.—A little

Z, | Belgian train chugged slowly up the track toward a

birthday has: ‘crossing where the old gateman stood stolidly smoking , and there 18 »his pipe. Half an hour earlier a buzz-bomb had

e just now in , and his trage-

roared in and onto an empty truck, seattering truck, buildings and trailer with great dexterity. Everybody was jittery. The train stopped on the crossing, cars piled up on both sides, and overhead the noise of another buzzbomb chased everybody to earth, It landed not far away with a deafening boom. In the comparative quiet that followed everybody had one thought, Down the line a tall truck driver « ,. swung out.of his seat, stood up on the engine cover and all that part of Belgium echoed with his Tennes-

f the new cone les next week n the next few present-day ue of nations that body, ‘25

ashington who

moment. see darkey accent as he put it into words: “Open dat who sdt under - gate, man, and let's get outta here.” )’ as assistant ' (} Still, when a fellow gets out of one plage, the next

idly what the may be just as bad, for the war moves swiftly on the n. wings of rocket bombs and planes, on ‘rolling tanks ther battle are d Republicans.

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and civilians and soldiers alike ‘dive for cover, then best practical get up to look arcund and see if anybody has been t Roosevelt in "hurt. ot only an ine . | sed tentatively Wg « Pretty Deep Foxhole

burbing revival r threatens to . WE ALMOST LOST a cBlonel today; he slid over his #8 stone bank that was perfect protection from the bomb. But that stone wall was a river bank, 50 feet straight down into swift- -running water. The colonel yelled for help; his fingers were ‘slipping off the wet stories, Two Belgian Red, Crass workers gnd an elderly citizen reached’ for him, More help followed and soon he was safe. That same buzzer clipped a deep gash in the hand of Sgt. Vincent McCallister, Geyse, Mont., who has been fighting them for weeks. “Our outfit has shot down hundreds of buzzers, . #0 if this is the worst I get, I'm happy,” he said. For days the great battle area had been one mass of eonfused rumors. A soldier on guard told, in all seripusness, how the ‘Germans were dropping medium

| Senators

e and Poland y are anxious 1ational organ ghosts rattling f the American

the four whor ctively months ) lwo Democrats, ; d 0 Republicans,

together more e two agencies he conduct of 3 broad powers ate, which has and hence the

out of foreign »* BERNARD MULCAHY, the gas company’s re-

search engineer, has found a project to keep his own and the neighbors’ children occupied during the Christmas school vacation. He has them building

# backyard ice skating rink at his home, 3825 ahs rms ington blvd, First, they lala © 20 a § to. about 20 by 30 feet, and made retaining walls of snow. Then they tried putting a little water in it, letting it freeze, then smashing the ice and applying more ~ water, Trouble ‘developed right off. They used too much water and, instead of freezing, it merely thawed the ground and was soaked up by the soil. Now they're trying something new— filling the site with well-packed snow, whichs they're soaking

Roosevelt speals 1 view of what g to our allies ar in advance it, lacking any light be a good with a frank 1 an assurance ” ate intends to te actively for

itulation of the 3 bestowed and UNNRA, covorld monetary he like—which t adhere to the ter, though the gnize that the hieved literally

nc with water. The youngsters keep busy on the job all day, conferring frequently by phone with Mr. Mulcahy at the office. We'll let you know how it

comes out. . . . Mrs. George L. Kern, 4209 Kingsley dr., has a suggestion on what to do with those canceled food stamps. “Why- not,” she asks, “use them to decorate New Year's greeting cards? At least, it would make us feel we-didn't entirely lose the stamps we housewives had been saving for a rainy day.” It's a little late to he sending out New Year's greetings, Mrs. Kern. But why not save them and put. them on April Fool's day greetings? That would be much

more appropriate.

Why Not Share It?

THE BIG ATTRACTION at the Adolph Seidensticker home during the holidays was the postmaster’s Christmas tree arrangement—a family heirloom. It could be described as a miniature park on a wooden platform, with fountains flowing, people walking and varidus other scenes in action. The Christmas tree goes through a hole in the center of the platform and fits into an electrically operated ‘music box. The latter plays Christmas airs while slowly * revolving the tree. Altogether, it's a most remarkable

to uphold the ‘9 ’ would have an us of the place nericifh scheme

elt might wele

tly mindful - of .not forgotten ver backwards, , 'uture relations

lh

ho

World of Science

Dec. 30.—When ned services for training is ene ne job of pro who will serve 11 fall to selece

world of science during 1944. Scientists, ‘mobilized ’ under the Office of Scientific Research and Develop~ ment and the National Research Council, worked

upon those things most needed by the army and navy.

draft system is As a result the year now draw-

; concern, with ing to d& close was a year of imd of experience § mense success in the extension of the nation, It known facts and devices to the after the, first accomplishment of important

eclared and a were gradually ice delivers the as little notice

military ends. It was not a year of new and spectacular discov eries. : If we turn to fields as widely divergent as medicine and metal-

the draft, but 3 lurgy we find that the war had arked. the whole he -same effect upon’ both. In | as cropped up the 8

r J each field the best brains and y chief resources were concentrated upon meeting war problems, » Metallurglsts regard the successful application of the so-called “National Emergency steels” or “N. E. steels” to tasks that f6rmerly called for steels of high alloy content as their chief accomplishment during

1044. New Alloys Developed :

SOON AFTER OUR entry into World War II it pecame evident that shortages of alloying elements were our chief bottleneck in the fifla of steel. Metallurgists found that steels containing high percentages _ of one or two alloying elements could be replaced by ones containing lower percentages of additional ele«

, ments.

i My Day |

WASHINGTON, Friday —Every now and then ‘someone does a very kind thing and one would like . to thank him at once. Today I am constrained to thank a young man for a letter which he wrote on Christmas eve, But I must do it through this column, because he simply signs his letter “An Ex-Navy Pilot,” giving the name of the ship on which our during the last”yeat in the far-off

se familiar with name largely tog en close to the 1g administered board members an outstanding

nit their mane "#8 neadquarters in n to the boards t is ‘this bring= mselves to solve system and it pponents of the

itherto between" JB reat apathy relance and armed conceded to be

ions proved exe ht time to arm, may not provide La citizen-army , being attacked, volunteer basis’ a volunteer tax service for each is no more de-

nts wi [te because of lack

J Pacific, : ki The young man writes: “I have bs just returned from duty in the ay there should Pacific on the carrier X. Thought ona} deferments _ you would like to know -your son, e and the army John, is in good health and doing tions. 4 a wonderful job out there, ht physical de- “We covered some 80,000 water ouls emiers enters the 1 miles since leaving San Diego, so ie ee Jou see we got around, out’ there. You have a i) Mundesta sou and 1 4uOW Jug ie very pioug of hi.» with the . No mother could fail to appreciate the kindness determine - | which prompted such a note and to want to thank’

the writer. The boys who are pilots on the carriers

~The Receiving End

bins (Ernie Pyle is en route to the Pacific and his first dispatch on the war against Sagan will appear in

and heavy trucks. Bombs travel faster than jeeps:

‘for the side with the greater striking power.

Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum

WAR SET the tempo and called the tunes in the.

up by a new process.

By Jach Bell

tanks from planes with motdrs running and crews aboard.

The writer has heard that Jerry is in Brussels in Paris, in Antwerp, Fantastic yarns about new secret weapons are commonplace; paratroopers are under évery bush; tank columns are just around the corner.

Strategy Is Like Football

THE WAR is a great deal like football in its strategy. The Jerries hit the weakest spots in these lines. There was the initial scramble for the goal line, In football there is a play called the mousetrdp. The guard or tackler charges across the line, determined to knock somebody down, Nobody blocks him; nobody is around him; nobody is around to be knocked down. He is just out there by himself. But the hole he was supposed to make closes quickly; the men he was supposed to take out are standing up and mighty useful. Men running wild that way can get themselves into trouble and do the team no good. Something like that could be happening up here just now. The Germans have the ball and want to go places with it. They may fumble or they may be knocked back into the end zone among der Fuehrer’'s diehard rooters, American units, some small and others formidable, are holding strategic spots. Strength is moving up to match that throw against us and, we fervently hope and believe, will be enough to grab the ball and sweep over the German armies of the western front. It is confusing around here, yes, to those who do not know the big picture and are making no pretense of knowing it, including your correspondent. steadily the strength is shifting here and there for reasons best known to those who must win. Once more the war will resolve itself into victory The first “thrusts are relatively minor, When the full power is turned on, it will rival anything ever known and the allied nations certainly seem the more powerful, on the grouad, in the air and in artillery.

Copyright, 1944, by The Indianancis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc,

gadget. It's been in the family 80 years or so. Personally. we don't see why Postmaster Seidensticker doesn’t give the public a chance to see it by setting it up in a downtown store window for a week or so before Christmas next year. How about it? . . . Luke Schneider ‘postcards that he’s down: in Phoenix, Ariz, and feeling a lot better. . . . And from Tampa, Fla, Oscar Wuensch, the fisherman, reports: “The weather and fishing are fine, This is a fine place to spend the winter.” No doubt, Oscar. No doubt... Add awful feelings: To sit down and hear the bus driver sing out: “Hey, mister, aren't you going to pay your fare?” —and- to realize he’s talking to you.

Zip, Zip Hooray

ONE OF OUR agents was in a local department store Tuesday-sthe day after Christmas—when @ young man came in, approached a clerk and demanded help in- getting out of the leather Jacket he was wearing. He wanted out of it * ‘right now.” The irate customer explained he had received the jacket as a Christmas present. When he tried it on Christmas morning, the zipper stuck. As a result, he was imprisoned in the jacket all day Monday, all that night, and until nearly noon Tuesday when the store opened. The clerk and several volunteer hefpers tried to work the zipper, but finally gave up and sent the young man to the alteration department. There, 4 tailor repaired the zipper. And the young man departed wearing the now zippable coat. . . . A car card advertisement (for Weather Seal) seen on a streetcar advises prospective patrons: No monthly payments until Nov. 1. Gosh; that's the most generous terms we've heard of in some time. . . . The Christmas week-end was the busiest week-end experienced by the U. 8. O. Canteen at Union Station since the war started. From Friday through Monday, 7900 servicemen and women visited the Canteen. There were such crowds that they started keeping the lunch counter open all-night. The Junior C. of C. has been manning the counter from 7 to 11 p. m., husbands of the swing shift volunteers, from 11 p. m. to 3 a. m., and the War Dads, 3 a. m, to 7:30 a. m. The all night service will continue, officials say, as long as the rush of visitors continues, }

By David Dietz

The chief advances in medicine during 1944 as I pointed.out earlier in the week, concerned penicillin, DDT, atabrine,” and blood plasma. The greatest, extension in the use of Penicillin concerned its employment for the treatment of gonorrhea and syphilis, DDT first proved its value in stopping the typhus epidemic in Naples. It is now cutting down the incidence of malaria in the Pacific theater of war. Apparently it is so good an insect-killer that many authorities are worried about its post-war uses for it will kill “good insects—bumblebees for example— as well as such bad ones as lice and mosquitoes.

Jet Plane Developed

HIGH AMONG the achievements of 1944 must be listed the development of a successful jet-propelled airplane for the army air forces and the perfection of many new rocket weapons. Little was made public about these new rockets except for an announcement of the navy that one rocket can be fired from either an airplane or a landing barge has the explosive power of the entire broadside from the five-inch guns of. a destroyer, Chemists made many contributions to the war effort in 1044. One was_a method of speeding up the production of synthetic rubber so that the capacity of present plants for the making of GR-8 rubber was increased about 50 per cent. The process of mixing the rubber with carbon | black for the production of tires was also speeded

The year now ending also saw the B-29 or Superfortress, a triumph of engineering skill, go into action in the Pacific theater of war.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

@ nature. “iss Thompson and I took the Taianigin train back to Washington. This morning I had the pleasure of wavicg a talk with Gen, Frank T. Hines, and I am hoping that he will take up with the war department the changing of the pin which is now worn by discharged veterans, If this is done, I hope wide publicity will be given to the new insigne, and that we will accustom ourselves -to the realization that the young men we see

wearing these pins have served their country and]

can serve no longer in a military way. These men are important, however, to every community in which they live and should he made to feel their importance. Many of them are fighting some kind of a physical handicap, éven though we may not be able to detect it, and they deserve our consideration, our respect and our admiration. - From noon on, today, I have a rather full schedule of appointments, with people coming in to talk on different subjects. In addition I have on my desk

headaches are

gineer company, including Capt. Louis W. Gwin of Sparta and Chester,

But |

POLIS TIMES

NONE KNOWS HOW MANY HEADACHES ARE AHEAD —

A PIPELINE CON- , ‘STRUCTION CAMP, Northeast Burma, Dec. 30. —China is just 80 miles east of this most forward construction camp on the Calcutta-China pipeline, the longest in the world. But nobody knows how many ahead—through jungles, across rivers and over mountains under a’blazing sun.

Most ¢f the men of this en petroleum distribution

Yanks Building. Calcutta: China. Pipeline

Ill, are former oil field and

pipeline workers.

A few have worked on the “Big

Inch” line. They agree it was a

mere “warm-up” for this strategic gasoline carrier that snakes its

way toward the border for an undisclosed point in China,

"4 a BUT THEY have come a long ,

"way since their first assignment

in the theater, installing the gasoline distribution system at 20th bomber command headquarters for the first Superfortress raid on Japan. They have leap-frogged up India and across Burma, laying one section of the line, then hopping ahead of two or three other companies, which in turn passed them,

_ After completing the B-29 installations—beating the deadline by two weeks—the company joined four others in constructing 125 miles of line across the plains of India and into the Himalaya foothills. s » o

THE SUN and poor communications were their biggest headaches in this job, where speed had the first priority. The thermometer sky-rocketed to 120 degrees in the shade With the railways jammed and roads undependable, river boats were used to carry much of the pipe from Calcutta. The pipe, in 20-foot lengths

“weighing 190 or 210 pounds, was

carried in by men of the company and coolies in sections

This is the type of country our soldiers and engineers have to conquer along with Japan in Burma. Here four Yanks go about the task of patroling the jungle for enemy snipers.

where there were no passable roads.

u " »

THEIR RECORD in India was 80 miles of pipe jointed, buried, cleaned and tested in three weeks. , Their fareweil job in this country was fighting a fire that started in. a faulty valve and threatened a native village, Lt. Jack D. Boggs of Houston, Tex. and 15 enlisted men worked all night and until 2 p. m. the next day fighting the fir? and repairing the damaged valve. The company started in Burma with the monsoon. Cutting their way through the jungle, carfying pipe on their shoulders and some-

times wading walst-deep through water, they still averaged three to four miles a day. 2 8 AT THE END of the monsoon they put down 22 miles in a week. Every mile in the line meant 264 connections. One cold, rainy morning a ragged barefoot soldier with a deep head’ wound walked into the company's jungle camp and

talked in sign language with three °

men, The bewildered G. Is-—-Cpl Samuel L. Miranda of Milwaukee, Wis.; M. Sgt. John B. Sandlin of Armillo, Tex., and Pfc. Vernon A. Barnes of. Beaumont, Tex., finally

gathered that the visitor was a Chinese soldier who had been shot and left for dead by the Japs. ” s » THEY BROUGHT him to Capt. Gwin, who had him driven to the nearest hospital. . Cpl. Andrew J. Steffens, New York, and Sgt. Harace M. Glass, Austin, Tex. were driving him down the trail when they were

stopped by a group of Chinese |

soldiers, who shouted and pointed tommy guns at their truck. The Chinese took the man, bound him and marched off— with their Japanese prisoner of war.

BRUNETS POPULAR—

Pin-up Girls Push Landscapes Off The '45 Calendar

By JOAN YOUNGER United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Dec. 30.—The pinup girl has pushed the landscape into second place on the calendar. ’ "The landscape—even that old perennial featuring a lake, a

wood and an Indian maiden clad in blue moonshine—has given way. It yields to an overwhelming demand this year for what

HOAX WINS: "WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP'—

WAC Tricks Liars’ Club

BURLINGTON, Wis, Dec. 30 (U. P.) ~Judges of the Burlington Liars’ club admitted today that they had been hoodwinked by a girl. But they said they would award her the title of world champion liar regardless. The winner was WAC Capt. Hope Harrin, who signed her name as “Capt. Hope Harrin.” She convinced the judges she was a G. I. wolf who had a recipe for air mailing dehydrated blonds to the boys overseas. The lie was chosen the biggest whopper of. 1944. It marked the

the calendar men call “the smiling, wholesome, typical American girl—and fully clothed.” They denied that sex had anything to do with her victory. It was, they reported, a matter of economics. They said that would take too long to explain. - . LJ ” SEX, however, was dismissed alrily by a spokesman at Brown & Bigelow, makers of the majority of America's 80,000,000 calgrilars for 1945. ° He remarked that nudes—or next-to-nudes— were a “distinct minority.” “Brunets are more popular than blonds,” the ‘spokesman said. “Pretty faces are as much in demand as full figure shots. “Of course, we do have one lovely girl with fiothing on her but a sort of soft light, But mostly it's just an ordinary American girl with her clothes on.” » ” o MOST CALENDARS, it was learned, hang in the parlor or kitchen, Quite a few are in bathrooms. Men in heavy industry—mechanics, garage men and factory workers—prefer girl pictures, Women buy the landscapes, or the third choice: A dog, a boy, or a story-telling picture—a group known in the trade as human in’ terest pictures.

Hoosiers In New Caledonia Mark Indiana State Day

"Hoosiers in New Caledonia gathered in a Red Cross Service club recently to observe an Indi-

aia State day party. They are *

(front-row, left to right) T. Sth

*>HANNAH¢

, 4th Gr. Charles E. Jolliffe, Kokomo; Pvt, Clarence :

gan City; T.

Martin, Muncie; Pvt. Verrion Akers, Memphis; Sgt. James Ummel, Ft, Wayne; 8. Sgt. Arthur ‘Schultz, Richmond, and Pvt. Rob~

ert Montgomery, . Indianapolis.

Middle (left to right) J. Haier, Laduy aor Ere

the past wi

first time a woman has won the championship, “We've been hoaxed,” O, C. Hulett, president of the Liars’ club, admitted, “but we'll stick by our decision and award the title to her anyway.” ® 8 8 CAPT. HARRIN—a former Conway, Ark, school teacher now assigned to the quartermaster corps of the European theater of operations—won the judges’ nod on a recipe for producing a dehydrated blond to add a feminine touch to G. I. iron rations. ‘This. is the lie she told: “I wrote my girl, a petite blond, to go to a plant that processes fresh vegetables for overseas shipment, and get herself deéhydrated. She did. “Immediately her mother put her in an envelope and sent her to me, air mail. “When the letter arrived, I

took her out, poured water over !

her, and half an hour later, she was as good as ever—and here with me!” ” ” ” CAPT, HARRIN dethroned. T. Sgt. Baron 8. Fonnesbeck, who told the prize whopper of 1043. Mr, Hulett, president of the Liars’ club since it was founded in 1929 as a New Year's home-town Joke, said that Fonnesbeck,” now in New Guinea, has written to his wife in Utah asking her to return the gold-plated medal, symbolic of the championship, so that it may be bestowed upon the new champion,

LEADING EUROPE AGE

DOWNS 34TH NAZI

PARIS, Dec. 30 (U.P. .—Lt. Col. Meyer, Forest Hills, L. I, rman planes in e became the leading fighter ace in the European theater with a total of 34 enemy aircraft to his credit, 8th air force

Johir C. shot down fqur

headquarters announced.

ar. Eugene Troekin. Anderson; T. 5th Gr. Herchel Sloven, Wash= ington; Pfc. Richard J. Flener, Terre Haute; T. 5th Gr. CW. Morrison, Greensburg; T. 5th Gr. Francis Hill, Columbus; Pfc. Walter E. White, Plymouth; T. 4th

Gr. Clement H. Ritter, gE a ond E. Cox, Griffin; T. Sth | 1 Miles, = mi h ’ ' sah a ham | Gr. William Mabin, Crawfordsville, |

_ United States has discoveredy a

FOR THE JAPS— B-29's Clear Air,

Then OWI Radios Its Propaganda

By JOSEPH LAITIN United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Dec, 30—~The

slick new technique for shooting’ its propaganda broadcasts home to the Japanese people. It delivers its verbal salvos when B-29 Superfortresses are over the enemy homeland, silencing Japanese radio transmitters and preventing jamming from breaking up the American programs. Just such a technique may have been used last night in the first of a series of special broadcasts to Japan from two powerful new transmitters at Honolulu and Saipan, urging the Japanese people to revolution. o » » DURING the program, Undersecretary of State Joseph C. Grew, for 10 years U. 8. ambassador to Japan, joined with Fleet Adm. Chester W. Nimitz in warning the Japanese people that they face destruction unless they overthrow thir present war-lord government, The office of war information was responsible for the hint that B-29's may have flown over the Japanese homeland to clear the air for the broadcast. It said the B-29 raids afforded a unique opportunity for reaching the Japanese people with U. 8. propaganda. It sald enemy radio stations, which always attempt to drown out such broadcasts, leave the air promptly when the Supere forts approach. ° . ” ”

WHILE thére was no reliable’ report that the big superbombers fctually were sent over in cone junction with last night’s broadcast the Tokyo radio, which has often announced raids in advance of U. 8B. official releases, was on the air with the assertion that flights of B-29's were over Japan yesterday.

Marion; T. 4th Gr. Joe Stacy, Moores Hill; 8, Sgt. S861 Eshowsky, Indianapolis; _ Smith, Ft. Wayne; M. Sgt. W. E. en, Rensselaer; Pvt, Willie L. Thomas; Seymour; Pvt. Cleni L East, Bast Gary; T. 5th Gr. Ernest Groman, Gary; Pvt. Ray-

Labor—

WLB chairman, more than 200 C. I. O. local , Unions in a resolution pledged “thelr ‘fullest moral, financial and physical support to the strike of the Montgomery Ward workers. War plant employees” be." longing to other C. LO. .union8’ have joined the Ward picket lines, Although their have urged that no one leave job to picket, there is a dis~ tinct danger that such sympathy action might interrupt war work if the government did not ens force its order.”

W LB Chairman Admits Power Of U.S. Labor

(Continued From Page One) “Presidents of

leaders

his war

Mr, Davis also recalled, in ade

vices that were plaved before . President ‘Roosevelt, that “a delegation of officials from the Dee troit and Wayne county Industrial Union Council, ©. I. O,, reported to us that they feared unauthorized strikes might break out in war plants if the government did not act quickly to enforce its Ward orders,

“THEY emphasized quite forcefully and impressively the disintegrating effect upon their authority as labor leaders and their ability to keep the members of their unions uninterruptedly at work in accordance with the nostrike pledge voluntarily entered

"into and loyally supported by the

overwhelming majority of American labor.

“They also predicted that fail. ure to obtain compliance would have an adverse effect on the . referendum which the United Automobile Workers, C. I. 0, is taking next month on reaffirmation of the no-strike pledge.”

Mr. Davis itemized other rea sons for the Ward seizures, but the “strike epidemic” fear stood out as the compelling one, SE J ’ 8x HE EXPLAINED the case of James C. Petrillo, head of the American Federation of Musicians, A. F. of L. who also has defled the war labor ‘board and against whom no action has been - taken, as in a different category. because “there were no such ‘contagious’ possibilities.” The C. 1. O. chairnian did not attempt to explain why the 200 C. L O. leaders in Detroit, after pledging “moral, financial and physical support” to the Ward strikers; then informed the war labor board of “ihe disintegrating effect upon their authority as labor leaders.” Repercussions are expected in congress, but not of the fury that broke out in last spring's Montgomery Ward seizure—a matter not yet cleaned up.

Pvt. Melvin L.-

We, the Woranees Give Soldier Time to Swing

Into Routine

By RUTH MILLETT

ASKED WHAT wives and parents could do to keep a returning serviceman's homecoming from being a disillusioning experience, a navy officer home on leave after months in the Pacific said: “Just realize that whether he has seen much action or not he'll probably come home nervous and restless and will find it hard to settle down, “No matter how much addicted he once was to quiet evenings at home, he'll probably want to be going somewhere or doing something most of the time. “Expect that, and don't let yourself make the mistake of thinking that because he can't settle down right away to a calm, quiet routine he no longer enjoys being with just you or no longer cares about his home. os on »

“IF HE WANTS to talk let him talk, but don’t dig around among his experiences with a lot of questions. Remember, too, that he has thought and dreamed of home for so long that he has built it up in his mind as a perfect place. “He has forgotten the small annoyancdes,” the demands of living, even the occasional clashes of _ personalities within a. family. ‘’t may make him irritable and

hg

cross when he begins to find that’

life at home has the complica= tions and the responsibilities of life anywhere—but don't worry about. his irritation. He'll come out of it. ” » “ABOVE ALL, don't rush in with too much possessive affec~ tion.