Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1945 — Page 9
UND LLIN
t Results or Rat |
experiment: refer, Ha yde Bsseidd only knbwn . effective he relatively the organism rmis, h cases had ly in medical’ n three addi= cluded that tive chemo= ch decidedly | the disease.” avy medics sue reported ent's angina, ease of the m 10 days to, d the use of |
by Lt. Cmdr, 1d Lt. Cmdr.) treatment of’ L the tablet] to normal in| y cleared up’ ne within 9¢|
/ BILLED 15, Women I] meet at @ hall. A Vale] ram will fole] ng. 4
coming up in the Siegfried line. 8 Tanking officer says it could be formidable if properly
! théfh are frankly skeptical.
i fenses.
| hour, this is entirely out of the question.
ww
Difficult Terrain
(Ernie Pyle’s first. column of his new series from the Pacific fighting front will appear tomorrow.)
WITH THE 82D AIRBORNE DIVISION, Belgium, Feb, 2 (Delayed). —Back around 1st army headquarters we get continuous refforts of powerful resistance At Corps, a high
manned, - “but—?” - At Division, they say that if the outer defenses are powerfully manned, Jerry is keeping the secret well. At Regiment, they tell us, “we've found nothing to worry us—yet.” And a doughboy frankly asks, “how the hell can them Krauts disappear so fast: through this deep snow?” Out here, a brassie shot from the first giant concrete pillboxes of the Jouter - Siegfried defenses. the boys who've been down among Five patrols went into ¢ the huge, silent defenses last night and saw but seven Germans during hours of prowling, Only once were + they fired on, that time by three foes they surprised, and who sort of fired over their shoulders as they ' made tracks eastward, The Americans found snow-filled trenches and a few abandoned concrete pillboxes, which bears out
. the constant reports of prisoners, who have said that i “the ‘| nants of units mauled by the American troops during ! the return trip by request that Jerry took after his!
west phase of the line will be defended by rem-
December jaunt westward.
‘We're Going Through’
THIS DOESN'T “meant that the Yanks expect a picnic, “It “would-be totture if we run into nothing more
|. that burp guns in this weather,” said a high ranking
ficér. “We're going to know pretty thoroughly | what is ‘there when we hit, and we're going through . ho matter what it is. It is possible that“Von Rund.stedt expended so much effort and equipment in-his big push, that he hasn't had the vehicles to haul | mines, guns and ammunition into the Siegfried deIf they're there, it'll take us a little longer; . that's all.”
Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum
THE SPINK ARMS has a new house rule pro- . youngsters who have hold of their parents’ hands
: hibiting residents from parading their pet dogs on | leash through the lobby. All dogs en route to University park for exercising must be carried through { the lobby. We didn’t inquire too closely into the { reasons for the rule, but we did near that it’s being taken as quite an insult by some residents of the hotel. Others. make a joke out of it. For instance, take Dr.'E. R. Bebout, the chiropractor. Doc has a fox terrier named Duffy. Instead of just picking Duffy up and carrying him ~through the lobby, Doc has fixed up a nice little basket which he has labeled “Duffy's Airline,” and he carries | i Duffy in the basket. On a K-9: priority, no doubt. . From the | Shortridge” Echo, we learn of a new “racket” re- | portedly being worked in chemistry class. It might be an old one, but we never heard of it before. The Echo reports that Mary Alice Lindgren was seen | carrying a tempting looking cake into the classroom of Robert Black. Inquiry revealed Mr. Black had . | assigned her to compound some baking powder, and, then try it out on a.cake “to see if it worked.” If evidently worked-—and how—as the Echo suggests that the chemistry faculty should assign some “industrious student to attempt the baking powder test at least once a week.”
The Ravenswood Terror
FRED SCHEURER, proprietor of the former Roy Goodpasture grocery. in Ravenswood; would have | made a perfect movie villain for kid films. Fred's | scowl seldom fails to send cold chills up and down the spines of youngsters who don’t know him well. After they -get on to the fact he’s really an old softie, they can see a twinkle in his eyes, even when ‘he’s scowling the hardest. Those in the know say t his scowl is most effective when he’s cutting meat, | with a cleaver in his hand. At such .times, even ’
5
America Flies
THE EUROPEAN WAR undoubtedly will end before more than half the uncanny schemes which are now hatching in laboratories are tested in field operation. But right now we are smack up against & revision of fighter-plane tactics by reason of the unbelievably high speeds accomplished by jet-propelled fighters. As fighter plane speed have been boosted nearer 400 miles an hour, the tactic of hit-and-run has become more common. Nevei~ theless, there is still a mighty premium on maneuverability— the foot-work and boxing ability to win a position where one’s guns can ‘be brought to bear on the enemy fighter while the enemy's guns are trained in another direc- - tion, , (Fighter plane guns are all “fixed.” Where the plane points, so point: the guns.) - Fighter tactics, as we know them today, are 'all based on the performance of propeller-driven planes where the speed- difference between ome fighter and another amounts to little more than a few miles an hour, There are a few fighters today actually good for an honest 400 miles an hour, while the jet-propelled fighters now used by the Nazis all do more than 500 miles an hour. Authoritative estimates run between B50 and 62¢ miles an hour.
Means Fast Turning Fonts:
FIGHTER PLANE maneuverability means attempting to turn fast fighters sharply at wide open speeds. With the jet fighter of 500 or more miles an Hence it appears that the new type of maneuverability for Jet fighters will be based upon the startling capacity of the jet fighter to change its pace from normal
My Day
KEW YORK, Sunday~You may have.noticed in
| $he papers that Henry Kaiser is heading up the:
greatest drive for used clothing we have had in this eountry. I want to remind everyone that this does not mean that we should give less where we usually have given at home. If we have given wisely in the past, what we give is still needed, We should be sure, however, that what is given here is really going to fill needs that are vital. Everything else that we can ‘spare should go to this drive for countries where without question the need is greater than anything we know over here, distribution in foreign ‘countries will, of course, be made through UNRRA, which assures us of transportation and the best possible supervision. ‘In connection with this question of clothing, 1 Juve. received, through a friend, a revealing letter . : I think gives an Sse into could possibly
But just now the weather is, the biggest factor of the offénsive. For two days-melting snow has turned the 1st army sector into. what turf writers call a quagmire, We spent most of the day in deep ruts and traffic jams, For weeks heavy trucks and tanks roamed these roads, packing the snow ‘until ice formed sometimes two feet thick; bulldozers piled snow six to eight feet high on either side, and now all that mass is melting,
Army Must Move
OVER SUCH ROADS a mighty army must move giant trucks and huge guns, thousands upon thou-
"By Jack Bell
sands of them. At present, it is doubly difficult because no -main highways. run east-west through| the sector and the mountain dirt roads have been used, They were frozen deep and have stood up. |
With thawing weather, which will come soon, even |’ if this present warmth: is just a lapse, these roads).
4
won't stand the strain of war. Is Herr Hitler counting on the “weather again?| You don't have to be around a battlefront long to realize that communications are more important than guns, For guns are useless if the roads can't get them moved. Armies can't eat; wounded can't be evacuated; ammunition can't go forward if a road is blocked. Will the Siegiried line, which was built an impregnable defense. through which even the mightiest armies of the world were not supposed to be able to pass, be defended by a tew hundred burp- guns, basic artillery, nondescript troops—and heavy spring,
" rains on territory almost devoid of roads? It is pos-
sible, in view of the vital needs in the East where| Uncle Joe's hated and feared Bolsheviks are. rolling across the frozén plains, an avenging tide. The Siegfried line—it is actually two lines. in this! sector—can make the going slow. As a matter of fact, American troops couldn't move through this area
“as fast as ‘the Russians have moved in the north, 3
there were no opposition, - This terrain is unbeliev- | ably difficult, .I thought I had seen the worid's| worst roads in Burma, during the monsoons. I took it all back.today.
1Copyright, is, by The Indianapolis Times and e Chicago Daily News, Inc.
back away involuntarily. Just the other day, a little girl arrived at the store with a note from her mother. Fred read aloud: “Dear Fred: Give her a loaf of bread, a half pound of butter, pull her hair and lock her in the ice box.” Fred ad libbed all but the. bread and butter, but the little gir didn’t know. that. She shrieked and ran outside. ‘ Try as he would Fred couldn't get her to come back. Another” time, he told a little boy he was going to lock him in the ice box. The boy grabbed a large butcher knife and chased Fred all over the store, eyidently believing a good offense was the best defense. From all this, you might get the impression that Fred is unpopular with the youngsters. But he really isn't. In a recent issue of the Ravenswood Clatter, publiched by a group of school boys, there appeared an ad for Fred's grocéry. Fred let the boys write the ad themselves. * It wotnd up with: “Fred promises not to scare the kids too much.”
Cigaret-Blackmarket.
. A NORTH SIDE housewife thinks something oughit to be done about blackmarketing in cigarets. While driving out N. Meridian st. the other day, she saw .a soldier thumbing his way, and gave him a lift. He told her he was hitchhiking his way home from Camp Atterbury. Then he mentioned rather casually that he had three cartons of cigarets in his luggage—"one for my dad, one for me and an extra one.” “Would you sell me one package out of that extra carton?” the motorist timidly asked. “No, I'll sell you the entire carton for $2.” “Why, “Rat's blackmarketing,” protested the motorist. “I know it,” replied the soldier, “but that’s the way I pay for my trip home.” “Well, this is as far as I'm going,” the motorist told him, and out he got. . Another reader was aboard a train to Cleveland the other day and saw the dining car porter sell a diner three packages of Old Golds. “How about a caon?” "asked our reader. “Can't do it, boss,” the porter replied, “but I can let you have ‘half a carton, Only 30 cents a pack, t00.”
The 1
ianapolis Times -
SECOND SECTION
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1945
HOW QUICK COMEBACKS ARE MADE POSSIBLE FOR WAR. FATIGUED AIRMEN—
Curing SE Fliers in Record Time
By ROSELLEN CALLAHAN NEA Staff Writer
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Feb, 5.—0On his 48th
mission over Germany,
Capt. James B. Hatch, fighter pilot (that isn’t his namie but it will do for this story), saw his best friend go down in flames as three Focke-Wulfs closed in on him for the Kill. He managed to get on the tail of one Nazi, spit a stream of tracers into the cockpit and send it careening crazily earthward. , 2 8 ” BACK at his base the doctor saw his nerves were ‘about shot —“flak= -happy, " -the--boys call it. As in"most cases of operational fatigue, it wasn't his own close call that unnerved him, It was seeing others suffer, and blaming himself for not having acted quickly enough to save their lives, on 8 8 NEXT DAY he was on a bomber bound for a 21-day leave before reporting at the redistribution center in Atlantic City. The quick comeback of Jim Hatch, once he received the at-
. tention of the army air force's
unbelievably successful mobile convalescence program, typifies one of the. greatest and most revolutionary advances in the treatment of wounds and operational fatigue. For Jim, like thousands of others, was back on his feet and fit for duty within six to eight weeks, ® 8 = “IN THE last war,” recalled Col. Wilford F. Hall, surgeon, personnel distribution command, man might have stayed in combat, eventually cracked up, and probably would havé become- a chronic hospital case.” There are thousands of these chronic cases left over from the last war. Men who after months of hos-
pitalization and inactivity lost all
‘initiative and confidence in themselves, refused to accept a job because they feared they wouldn't: make good, and. continue to wander from one veter~
ans’ hospital to another, burdens
to taxpayers. 2 8 = BUT THESE veterans of the last war have taught doctors of this war two things: ONE: That taking a man out of combat when he begins to show signs of strain will lengthen his service tenfold. TWO: That keeping him active all during his hospitalization will make him mend thrice as quickly.
“that °
gram,
Airmen recuperate from the strain of battle at Atlantic City where
they have been jpined by their wives.
Air force medical men have
learned that mental and physicaly activity are necessary for quick
recovery.
When the first casualties of this war were returned for treatment, they were more or less left to their own devices. ® a 8 “BUT ‘WE discovered that rest was as likely to kill a man as cure him,” Col. Hall said. “They had too much time to mull over their gruesome battle experiences, to worry about their uncertain future, and steep themselves in self-pity.” One doctor, alarmed at the increased languidness of patients as their bodies mended, decided to institute a mental and physical occupational program, o s s THOSE GIVEN a daily stint of shop work and exercises—though they were no more strenuous than finger exercises taken in bed— showed a vast: improvement. As a result of this mobile pro8 to 90 per cent of wounded and operational fatigue cases resume duty within six to eight weeks, and 75 per cent of these return to fiying, : rE TY i - PUBLIC and private hospitals, recognize the tremendous success of this theory of ‘prescribing as much activity as early as possible are taking stefe b apply it to civilian ‘pdtiengs. ’ They realize, too, that healing a man who has lost a hand or leg
_—and therefore lost his livelihood
—goes further than sending him out of the hospital with his bodily injury mended. “They know it 1s also their duty to relieve his mental anguish about his uncertain. future by helping him to learn a new trade Vepouen “a vocational program ilar to ‘that of the army air
°r force.
IT IS THIS personal interest in the patient that has been as responsible for record recoveries as the mobile program. The air force's interest in Jim Hatch, the individual, rather than Capt. James B. Hatch, ASN 10456784, has paid off in a minimum of thedical discharges. When Jim Hatch arrived with his wife at the redistribution station in Atlantic City, he was assigned to a luxurious room facing the ocean in the swank Ritz hotel, which in pre-war days would have set him back $10 a day. It costs him 50c and $1.50 extra for his wife. " ” 2 ENLISTED MEN stay at the equally ultra Ambassador hotel and are furnished food and room
free, though wives pay $150 for
lodging. The air force, anxious for him to live as normal a life as possible, encourages him to have his wife and children with him. High chairs at luncheon in the “hotels” vast dining rooms are the order, rather than the exception, of the day. . au a
ONCE he’s settled, his papers
are put in order, back pay adjusted and clothes and equipment refurbished. Then he’s assigned to a doctor who sits down with him and irons out all his problems. He's encouraged to unburden himself of everything that's-been preying on his mind—things that once told often spell the end of weeks of unbroken nightmares. » = ” IN DAILY TALKS ‘#ith’ the same doctor his profile takes
“tion, what has happened in other war theaters, reminders of safe- I" ty-firsts in flying and discipline
bowling, billiards, beach parties,
“structor, passing on—his—valuable
shape—mental makeup, physical condition and aptitudes. Except for two hqurs of physical reconditioning and three hours of vocational classes and lectures—on the state of the na-
required at home—their time is their own; and the air force sees that they have the time of their lives. » » 8
THERE'S horseback riding,
a dance every night and shows with topflight movie, stage and supper club entertainers providing the entertainment. Chow is super. For 60 cents they dine as well as at the Colony or 21, on breast of guinea hen with all the -fixin's or thick steaks. Their pastry chef is a wizard, and there's a never-ending supply of oranges, butter, milk and ice cream + to match their © neverending hunger for these scarce front-line items. For those with a passion for raiding the ice box before retir- | ing, the cook keeps a huge re- | frigerator full of midnight snacks. | 8 ” =” BY THE second week, Jim Hatch has learned to take peace and quiet in his stride. The familiar is not quite so unfamiliar and frightening as it. was on his arrival. He's beginning to adjust himself to civilian ways and discussion. He's starting to think of what he'd like to do next: He's certain. now he won't be lost in the shuffle. He's ready to sit down and think about the immediate future and his next job. ” ” n
ASSIGNED to an officer—also a returned airman who has been in combat and knows the score— he is first made to realize that combat flying is out for at least six months. Then they get down to the |! business of what he would most like to do and where he will be of most value. He may choose to be an in-
combat experience to new pilots ready for overseas and the “share the flak” program. 8 8 8 OR HE may be given a post in an airport tower directing land-
lows through translators.
ings and takeoffs.
Never is he assigned to a desk |
job or administrative work for which he has no aptitude and which would make him discontented and result in a maladjustment for the rest of his life. With the future of Pilot James B. Hatch secure, Patient Jim Hatch is ready to complete his convalescence .at one of the 11 army air force hospitals nearer his home,
By Maj. Al Williams
cruising of 300 to 600 miles an hour in a matter of seconds. For the Sake of convenience, let us assume these jet. fighters make 600 miles an hour, That's 10 miles a minute, Four hundred miles an hour is about six and two-thirds miles per minute, or about 584 feet per second. Therefore, the jet fighter is three and one-third miles per minute, or about 300 feet per second, faster than the fastest propeller-driven fighter. In terms of practical accuracy, it ‘is geherally accepted that a small fighter, broadside or in plain view, is discernible under average visibility conditions at little more than five mile§~30 seconds flight time in a jet fighter. This great advantage in speed enables the jet fighter pilot to formulate his attack plans at greater distances beyond gun ranges, tactios “are, therefore, necessarily Rit and. run.
Strategy of Surprise
BY REASON- of the jet fighter’s lightning-fast acceleration, his strategy is surprise attack from any quarter at phenomenal speed, Eight hundred eighty feet per second is a big-asset for a pilot who has already made his plan and is working it out, forcing his enemy to involve a counter-plan and put it into execution in little more time than it takes to say, “Jack Robinson.” Nowhere|. is the surprise advantage of the offense greater than in the air, The head-on atfack of a 600-mile-an-hour jet fighter against a 400<mile-an-hour propeller plane in-
HOPKINS ADVOCATES STRICT, UNIVERSAL MILITARY TRAINING—
A Perpetual Army of Occupation?
WASHINGTON, Feb.5 (U. P.). —Only a “perpetual army of occupation’’ - would be able to keep Germany and Japan from rearming eventually, Harry L. Hopkins, personal adviser and close friend of President Roosevelt, writes in an article in the current Ameriéan magazine. He advocates a post-war program of strict universal military
Staining
There was quick speculation in
"| Washington on the extent to ‘|. which the article may or may
not. represent views that Mr, Roosevelt will take into. the Big Three conference. ; » » 8 A PUBLICITY release from American magazine accompany= ing advance copies of the article said that Hopkins “in proposing a never-ceasing occupation of enemy lands, has gone farther than any cabinet member or: administration official.”
‘This interpretation, however, did not appear to some to be borne out by Hopkins’ own words. After a lerigthy discussion of the need for military training for every . 18-year-old boy after the war in order to assure peace, Hopkins wrote: “I have no doubt that powerful forces in Germany and Japan are preparing “even now for their next- attempt to conquer us. We
will try to keep them impotent,
but only a perpetual army of occupation would be able to prevent them from rearming even-
tually.” 8.0 'n
HE DID NOT elaborate the reference to the permanent army of occupation. , ‘It seemed to some that. this inten was to suggest that such
occupation is unlikely and that this makes it all the more necessary. for us to be prepared aga t future wars.
volves fantastic figures, Such a situation is equivalent to that of either fighter approaching a stationery target a thousand miles an hour, or about 1460 feet per second. And with gun ranges of about 3000 feet, this relative speed (1000 miles per hour) leaves about two seconds from the start of firing to collision—or one second for firing and another to maneuver the plane to avoid collision, This is not only a smart man’s war, but a wide awake man’s war,
By Pleonor Roosevelt
assisted me in writing you a letter from Mother ‘Hubbard's cupboard—do you remember it? “Well! Today he helps me again to write a similar letter at thé end of ‘the fifth full year of war, and ‘the #ixth “6f its progression. “Tt is no ‘official: secret that the weather has been these last four months. Rain has been perpetual. “I asked one of your American soldiers who was at our home the 9th of November: ' ‘What dé you think of England?’ to which he replied: ‘Oh,. England is
Up Front With Mauldin
very much like my ‘own Michigan; excepting 'the weather, The weather is the absolute limit.’ ' “He, of course, spoke in these terms with.no anxeties of mind regarding the effects. {t has upon & home, because he,’as with’ our own servicemen, was better clothed than 'the- civilian, better warmed and without doubt “(and rightly so) better fed. He said, however, he had seen only two shell 'ggs in seven months. “Yet to a mother of any family, the weather is in these days an insidious enemy, in that it has to be eaten with all the inferiorities that war brings. “One. fights it with dull-edged tools, like food SEAS Wl uk fous ut Sits ong aes clothés which, , although the our
Urging adoption of a program for “exactly the right kind” of universal military service for the nation’s youth after the. war, Hopkins wrote in the article that “we must accept a new'and tough concept -in world affairs —that the earth is.not civilized enough to make world-wide" disarmament practical for peaceloving nations.”
EJ s ” “WHEN this war ends, we must immediately prepare to defend ourselves, particularly to make sure that our enemies realize that if they dare to strike again they'll lose again. . “This nation should join other nations to promote and secure peace . . . and I believe we can have peace. But I believe that we must have a powerful military force that will discourage . . predatory ambitions.” Hopkins said he believed congress, after “one of the greatest debates In American legislative history,” should pass a law providing for one year of compulsory military training for every 18-year-old. boy—‘“tough, technical instruction under miltary discipline.” ” » ”
THERE should be no escape loopholes for certain youths or exceptions because some are necessary workers, Hopkins said. “Unless a boy is mentally or physically incapacitated . for any sort of training and cannot be rehabilitated, he should serve his year along with his friends. I
believe the 4-Fs should be ih-'
cluded, for the American people will not like a compulsory serve ice that exempts 20 per cent of the boys and permits them to get a job or go to college. “Nor will they like a plan-that
_bars boys who are eager to accept
all the benefits and responsibilities of training, but are disqualified because of punctured eardrums or flat fect.” Hopkins said he was not discussing “a plan that calls upon 18-year-olds- to ‘give a year of service to their country’.” a 8 w
: “THAT is a separate idea for boys and girls and would iitlude
A War Message To U.S. Public:
WASHINGTON, Feb. 5 (U. P) —A message to the public from the office of war information: The government: neéds and asks its citizens in this 165th week of the war to:
ONE: Fill a war job to make heavy duty tires, which are worn out at the rate of one every 15 seconds on the battle front. Thir-ty-five plants urgently need 3200 men to help meet a 30 per cent increase in tire needs this year,
TWO: Employ special nurses only when you are critically ill. Call on your visiting nurse association, nurses registry or your local health department for advice and home care. .
THREE: Stick to your car pool; avoid useless driving. In the recent German offensive 500,000 gallons of American gas were captured or destroyed — enough to fuel 20,000 “A” cars for more than | three months.
FOUR: Take good care of your electrical and mechanical appliances, Stepped-up war production makes repairs. dificult to get, |
Battle Shapes For Control of Labor Parley |
(Continued From Page One)
fabs with Soviet spokesmen and report that they are regular felSidney Hillman, C. I. O. delegate, who can talk to Russians in their own language, had not arrived when this happened. The A, F, of L. attitude toward the Russians, as shown in last week's Interna - tional Federation of Trades Unions’ meeting, is that their labor unions are merely part of the So- Mr. Perkins viet government, therefore, are not free in the American sense. The C. I. O. attitude, as so far outlined, ‘is that if the Russians do not question the American setup there should be no American disposition to inquire into the Soviet organiatéons. : 2 ” 2
THIS HAS repercussions on such American affairs as the senate fight over the nomination of Henry A. Wallace for secretary of commerce, The British interpretation, according to a story in the London Times, is that President Roosevelt decided on Mr. Wallace as the man to carry: out his promise of
60 million jobs, through methods
repugnant to such conservatives as Jesse Jones. : The C. I. O. is all for the Wallace methods. The Soviets have state control of employment—not liked by "American right wingers. 2 = n
THE C. I. 0. and the Soviets can agree on the Wallace question, but it is questionable how far they can agree on some of the other issues. Some of the C. IL O. Adisgaton have been sympathetic to Communist. methods, but others are opposed—Mr, Carey among them. C. I: O. men brought to London an_ elaborate booklet giving the background of their unions and delegates, and criticizing the A. P. of L. and John L. Lewis for “isolationist” stands. os = »
IT SAID that the ©. I. O. has “departed from narrow nationalism of the A. F. of L., has learned something of “international cooperation” and seeks to learn more. Mr. Thomas, president of the United Automobile Workers, is. scheduled to become chairman of the C. L O,. delegation, which may put Mr. Hillman in the background. Absence of Philip Murray, C. 1. O. president, was explained: on the ground that he has important wage matters to settle with American steel companies and the war labor poard.
FIVE: Keep say g Jour wastePog Rdg Ee cosine
We, The Women Count Words To Keep Your
Spouse Happy
By RUTH MILLETT
A DELAWARE judge claims there would be more ‘happy marriages if husbands and wives limited conversations to 100
words a day. It looks as though -
the judge 1s speaking from a man’s point of view —and a strong, silent - man at that. For mar. riage would lose most of A its appeal to TN women if they had to stop talking to their mates when they had used up a scant 100 words. It takes a good 1000 words to get a husband‘in an expansive enough mood to be told in an off-hand manner, “I bought - a new fur coat today.” a "8 8 FEW MEN could limit themselves to 100 words a day at home, either. How would they get hy when they came home after winning a golf game, or after telling the boss off, or stopping for a before - dinner drink that lengthened into three
So cutting conversation down to 100 words a day each for hus-
But something actually could be done to keep the conversation in a home from so often leading
- to the divorce court. In the first
year of marriage a couple is sure to make - many conversational
ca Kyi
-
a=
