Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 February 1945 — Page 15

ir for me, going to be like learning to live in a new city. r .

The methods of war, the attitude toward it, the homesickness, the distances, the climate—everything ‘ois different from what we have known in the European war. Here in the beginning, .I .can’t seem to get my mind around it, or get my fingers on it. I suspect it "will take months to get adjusted and get the “feel” of this war,

Distance is the main thing. I don’t mean distance from America s0 much, for our war in Europe is a long way from home, too. 1 mean distances after yau get right on the battlefield. For the whole Western Pacific is our battlefield now, and whereas distances in- Europe are hundreds of miles at most, out here they are thousands. And there's nothing in between but water. You can be on an island battlefield, and the next thing behind you is a thousand miles away. One soldier told me the worst sinking feeling he ever had was when they had landed on an island and were fighting, and on the morning of D-3 he looked out to sea and it was completely empty. Our entire convoy had unloaded and left for more, and boy, did it leave you with a lonesome and deserted feeling.

A Slow-Motion Picture

AS ONE ADMIRAL said, directing this war is like watching a slow-mofion picture. You plan something for months, and then finally the great day comes when you launch your plans, and then it is days or - weeks before the attack happens, because it takes that long to get there. As an example of how they feel,

2

you a slick sheet of paper as you go through here, wire-fenced courtyard, and they were wrestling and{ * entitled “Airline Distances in Pacific.” And at the laughing and talking just as humanly as anybody. | bottom of it is printed “Our Enemy, Geography.” And vet they gave me a creepy feeling, and I felt Logistics out- here is more than a word; it's a in need of a mental bath after looking at them.® nightmare, I've not yet got to the front, or anywhere near \e Here's another example of their attitude toward “it; te find out how the average soldier or sailor or| " distances in the Pacific— marine feels about the thing he's fighting. But I'll] A J At Anzio in Italy just a vear ago, the third division ‘bet he doesn't feel the same way our men in Europe | nd ; x sel up a rest camp for its exhausted infantrymen. feel. k,

a man in the lobby wearing a straw hat. And there wasn't a white-coated keeper with the man, either, . , . Walter Mendell of thé Hoosier Hatters, 26 Kentucky ave, picked up his mail the other day and noticed one from the war manpower commission. “What“ on earth done, now, to get in trouble with the government?’ he wondered. He opened the envelope and found it was from cur former governor, Paul V. McNutt, now federal security administrator, in Washington. Paul wrote: “Since coming to Washington, I have tried almost every hat cleaner and blocker in town, without satisfaction. Despite the bother at: both ends, I wonder if you will be willing. to take care of my hats for me?” You just can't turn down a Hoosier in distress, says Walt. George T. Whelden, the realtor, tells us that the item about the State C. of C. getting billed by: Block's for a corset really is getting around. He forwarded a clipping, sent him by his son, Lt. T. Whelden Jr, a troop carrier pilot based in China. The clipping was from a service paper -printed over there.,

y If Not, Why Not? .

"WILL H. SMITH, the internal revenue collector, t Is accustomed to having newspapermen call him and | ask a lot of questions. But he got even Wednesday,

the day the Boy Scouts took over the duties of public officials for an hour. Ed Heinke, city editor of The | Times, received a call during that hour. “This is the

EE ERNE RENNER ERE

Pair

etc.” - AY the last, the caller identified himself” as E Dave Shornstein, a Sea Scout pinch=hitting for Will 4 : “

THREE STRANDS are woven together to provide the fabric of complete recovery in the army's reconditioning program for the sick and wounded, a program | that’ W working so well that it is returning men and

/ officers to active duty at the rate of 12,000 a week. These three are physical reconditioning, edueational reconditioning and occupational therapy. As a result, a man often finds himself a better soldier and a better individual at the end-of “his con= valescence. Col. Augustus Thorndike, director of the reconditioning division of the office of the surgeon general, points out that in every case all three phases are adjusted to the needs of the individual. * Every man is carefully studied as to the background and aptitudes and the program is adjusted to these as well as to the nature of the man’s illness or wound and his constitutional strength, The physical reconditioning begins while the patient 1s still in bed and is carefully graded to the “immediate state of his health. It is designed to prevent the sort of muscular. deterioration that so often accompanied enforced idleness in the past. Thus Ils the case of a soldier in bed with a broken leg it is designed to prevent the deterioration

My Day

NEW YORK, Thursday.—Tuesday afternoon I took the train to. Baltimore, where I spoke to 400 cadet nurses on some of the phases of overseas work. They were a wonderfully attractive group of girls,

many of those ‘who were graduating were headed for overseas service, They have a number of foreign students there toe, being trained as nurses. I talked to a nice girl from Puerto Rico who intends to use her knowledge to improve the health of the people on her home island. She belongs to a family ‘of 12 and has several brothers in the service, so she wanted to do her share, There was a girl from Trinidad, I one from Brazil, and one. from [ Guatemald. I imagine most of iy em will 80 back and teach in some home hospital in the future. . + One amusing little incident was a telegram which ‘came to me from the medical students saying they hid wanted to attend the meeting, but that the nurses had ruled théhi out. This was one occasion on which , the ladies had something which they svidently wanted to keep All to , thesiinglves. :

98 w

us Tax

imulated ozens of s—Dblack,

-r

i I

Hoosier Vagabond

Ernie Pyle is with the navy in the Far Pacific. HONOLULU. (Delayed). —Cavering this Pacific war

the navy gives

have I.

George

' World of Science

and.

3 preity wide flels, at ed i.

“vo. y 3 ,. a» This is an article written on his way.

front line, within constant enemy artillery range. But in the Pacific, from the Western islands to Pearl Harbor to reét

camps-—the equivalent of bringing -an- Anzio -beach-

head fighter all the way back®o Kansas City for his two-weeks rest,

It's 3500 miles from Pearl Harbor to the Marianas,

all over water, yet hundreds of people travel it daily

by aft as casually as vou'd go to work in the morning.

And there is another enemy out here that.we did

not know so well in Europe—and that +is monotony.

Oh sure, war everywhere is montonous in its dread- | But ‘out here evenwthe niceness of life gets

fulness. monotonous. The days are, warm and on our established sland]

bases the food is good and the mail®service is fast and there's little danger from the enemy and the days go by in their endless sameness and they drive They sometimes call it going “pineapple

you nuts, crazy.’

What Makes Mental Cases

8

OUR HIGH RATE of returning mental cases 1

discussed frankly in the island and service newspapers. A man doesn't have to be under fire in the front lines finally to have more than he can take without breaking. He can, when isolated and homesick, have more than he.can take of nothing but warmth and sunshine and good food and safety—when there's nothing else to go with it, and no prospect of anything else. And another adjustment I'll have to make is the attitude toward the enemy. In Europe we felt our enemies, horrible and deadly as they were, were still people. But out here I've already gathered the feeling that the Japanese are looked upon as something unhuman

and squirmy—like some people feel about cockroaches |

or mice. I've seen oné group” of Japanese prisoners in a

Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum

ALL THIS TALK about spring being on its way Smith. “Don't forget to file that income tax return | seems to have gone ‘to the head of at least one man. right away if you want to avoid .the last minute | N. J. O'Connell,” Central Hardware salesman, was rush,” was the scout’s parting advice. It’s good advice, down at Union station Wedhesday night and saw also, for all of you reaaqers. . One of our agents |

who has offices, in the Hume-Mansur building sends us a clipping from a San Antonio, Tex., their zoo. It related that the city had just received a receipts for January. Indianapolis zoological society annual meeting next Tuesday

will noon at the I. A. founder members. of directors andy committee, whic able sites,

Not Mr.

FOLKS AT THE Indianapolis Symphony orchestra | office were cpening the mail the other day and ran across a letter from Cpl. Richard Steams out at Ft.| Harrison. (That name might be Stearns, but it| looked like Steamir)) He ‘wrote: “Gentlemen: I.ane inclosing money for two tickets to the’ concert by | Artur Rubinstein and the orchestra. They are to} be kept for me in the box office.” There was a post‘script: “P. 8. The ‘they’ refers to the tickets, not to Mr. Rubinstein and the orchestra.” Rubinstein will be here for concerts tomorrow and Sunday. . . .| Mrs. Katherine Frazer, telephor 1e switchboard operator at’ ihe school board office, missed a mighty | important broadcast the cther 8ay. One of her friends | turned on her radio and was just in time to hear| the announcer say: “That was Sgt. Bruce Frazer | speaking.” Bruce is her son, over in France. Mrs. | Frazer is attempting to get a transcription - of the | program from the radio chain broadcasting it. , , Cpl. Franklyne P. Kellogg, of Camp Atterbury, is! looking for photos and information on the Indian-| apolis traction terminal as it was when it was used!

the ‘report of a Junior C. of C.

Rubinstein!

internal ‘revenue collector,” said the voice, “ “and by mterarban cars. He plans to build a model trolley | I'd like to ask vou some questions.” Heinke; a little layout for his club at Cleveland—after the war. - He | puzzled, said for him to “fire away.” Then came a also. would like some photos of the ~ars, Can anyone series of questions: “Have vou filed your tax return help him? . . Correction department: When we | - yet? Why not? —=Did-you-file-for your wife last year? - referred the other day to the Central American Tele-| Why not? Do you owe any delinquent. taxes? Etc, phene Co. as a predecessor of Indiana Bell,

it was a slip of the typewriter We should have said Central |

Union.

By David Dietz

of his muscles while the broken bone is knitting. The program of bed calisthenics is not started until the medical officer in charge of the patient agrees | that he is ready for it. Then it is begun very gradually. * The patient may only exercise for 30 seconds | the first day. In no case does the patient exercise | more than 15 minutes at a time. In addition to .these general calisthenics de- | signed to keep up the muscular tone of the whole | body, special remedial exercises are often used .0! enable the man to recover the complete use of an Injured; muscre: -

|

Exercises Vary |

THESE REMEDIAL exercises take many forms. | Thus, for example, a soldier regaining the use of the | muscle of his hand may be given a screw driver and a | bunch of screws to drive into a board. The exeieise] strengthens the hand and helps him regain the use| of ‘his muscles, Col. Thorndike .stresses the fact that the man | is given great freedom in picking his sports program. | He can choose tennis or basehall or any other sport | that the location of the hospital and the weather | at the moment will permit. If fishing is what he! wants and fishing is possible, he goes fishing. The educational and occupational phases of reconditioning are started as early as the physical re-| conditioning. These will be described next, |

" But I did see. two or three young men on the out- | skirts of the group as I made my way out, so some |

It was hearly 1 o'clock béfore I reached New York. |

at the meeting and luncheon given annually for the] United Jewish Appeal. It is very remarkable what-the Jewish community | is trying to do for the unfortunates all over the world, and I came away with a scnse of grajitude and inspiration ‘ I got home just in time to have a few guests for| early supper, and then dropped in to see some other friends staying nearby who are leaving, shortly for England. Today I have a number of apbolntments and will attend a luncheon. given by the Tuition Plan to consider the future of education. This is tertainly a broad subject and one in which I ‘am deeply ‘interested, but I have begun to. think that education can bargly be considered by itself alone. That is to say, one can ‘hardly consider institutions and curricula as being the suin total of education. When you ‘draw together all the different factors

affecting the education of a child you have to cover

By Ernie Pyle

The rest camp was Jess than five miles’ from the |

they bring ‘men clear back |

; TI : ¥

os

3

le Indianapolis

| > SECOND SECTION

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16,-1945

ARTIST SHOWS MEMORIAL PLAZA ( OF FUTURE—

PLE

.

Legion Additions Hinge On Legislafure

paper about |

kin to show cigaret smokers how

[ crowd. gathered below his

L foolish they look,

did other odd jobs to keep his crusade alive, girlish hearts must have relented at the: last minute. 20 years.

He saw the crowd bunched on the | street below and started slowly down the stairs. he stopped and took aut the paper napkin. He waved his arms.

Legion, will hold a dance tomorrow night at the hall, 135 N. Delaware. st. charge are William "Renn, W. E. | Johnson, Preston Judson and Cecil | Watkins,

“The Alene Vey club, 1839 past | matrons, 0. E. 8, will meet at 6:30 |p. m. tomorrow in the home of Mrs. sible : Yogle, 2663 -Watap road.

%

go Niacoriton BF

a_i 4 X 38 Se

This bird's eye view of the War Memorial” plaza, the only one of its kind in the world, is the way it. will appear when three new National American Legion headquarters buildings are erected on the north end at St. Clair and Meridian, sts. and St. Clair. and Pennsyl-

vania sts.

Memorial buildings are removed eventually.

Indianapolis will become the na-|before National Legion Commander

The agenda will include election On the War Memorial plaza.

That reminds us that the | Patriotic organization in’ the world |Y., outlined the tremendous growth | have its first /if the legislature passes the bill to|of the organization. Cc ‘|appropriate $2,500,000 for three new It will be the first meeting t§ be attended by all the National American Legion buildings {Indiana will benefit immeasurably | {and will increase as the membership| Loy continued location of the head-|1S €Xpanded with returning veterans)

The commander pointed out that |

The bill was sent to the floor of] {quarters in Indianapolis.

has been making a survey of avail-|/the house yesterday by the ways A Rg {and means committee whith recommended Hs passage a A few W_minutes

"WHAT A TRAGEDY'—

Messiah Smokes Napkin to Show Cigaret Futility

NEW YORK, Feb. 18 (U. P.).—

A troubled Messiall came ta town’ today—puffing on a paper nap-

“silly” they look. He said his name was Paul Kern, his age 69, and that smok-

Kern stood halfway up a stairway ‘leading to an elevated railway platform. It was noon yesterday in midtqwn New York. A

“balcony.

o » HE TOOK : a paper napkin from the pocket “of “his patchéd tan overcoat. He flourished it. He rolled it tight, imitating a man rolling - his’ own cigaret; He. stuck it in his mouth with a ‘sweeping ‘gesture. He puffed. He exhaled with exaggerated heaving of the chest and grinned. * He tapped his head with his fin ger and grinned. The crowd grinned, | thought they understood. 2 8 =» IN A quiet corner q fthe elevated platform, Kern said he was no comedian, His heart heavy. “I do that to show people how how silly they

=p

are,” he said. “This country smoked $15,000,000,000 worth of l.lobacco last year, What a tragedy!

“I've gone into beauty. parlors where women were having their faces pasted and painted and fought, cigarets,” he said. “They've threatened to arrest me time and time again.” ” ” » A TRAIN rolled in. Kern hurried through swinging doors to the platform. In a moment he was back. “I missed it,” he said. He took the paper napkin from

| his pocket.

“Now watch a schoolboy imitating hi$ elders.” Again he performed the mock. manufacture of a cigaret, feigned

‘striking a match on the seat of | his pants and puffed.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

“A crime, and

down.

he concluded,

» ” HE SAID he shoveled snow or

He tended bar for

But a “force” seized

‘him, he said,"and made him hang Yesterday, morning Mrs, Dorothy Ballanca caine up his apron and bar towel for to_see me, and then I.spent from about 11 to 3 o'clock] good.

The old man forgot the “train. Halfway down The next show began, MOOSE LEGION DANCE SET

Moose post No, 334, American

Members of the committee in

PAST MATRONS TO MEET

was |

|

ing “bears three marks: Spiritual |. degeneracy, spiritual decay and | insanity.”

too. They .|

| in

course of world evenis.”

He said Indiana and its advan-

world through Legion activities.

od

WASHINGTON, Feb. 16 (U, P.). —The National Geographic Society, just to keep things in focus historically, came up' today with a reminder that Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin didn’t originate the idea of dramatic international conferences in out-of-the-way places. Neither did a couple of fellows named Hitler ‘and Mussolini. The Crimea conference was one of “a long list of dramatic meetings which have changed the

; NNT SHORTLY after the assassination of Julius Caesar, things were a mess. Three characters “Yamed Mark Anthony, Lepidus and Octavian met on a small river island near what is now Bologna, Italy, to divide up conquered sections..of the world. Octavian, who later became the Emperor Augustus and gave us the name of the year’s hottest month, got Sicily, Sardinia end Africa. Anthony tcck most “of

This view also shows the south end of the plaza as it will appear if and when the two churches on the site next to War Present plans, however, do not include removal of the churches.

.

“Financially, the Legion is destined and predicted that after the war check for $1680, representing half the zoo gate tional headquarters for; the largest Edward H. Scheiberling, Albany, N./to become a major factor in the more than 5,000,000 veterans will be

{state's economy. Its operating budg- |

{et here last year reached $2,700,000;

of world ‘war II.

Commander Scheiberling said the tages will be advertised all over the|Legion is signing up new members now at the rate of 125,000 4 month

Gaul. And Lepidus settled for a bit of. Gaul and all of Spain They drafted a death list of potential enemies, too, and this resulted in a reign of terror in

Rome as horrible as the Nazi blood purges. » ” ”

THEN. THERE were Henry IV of Germany ‘and Pope Gregory VII in 1077. Henry had defied

the pope, who thereupon declared him deposed.

. -é Rebellious nobles forced Henry"

to seek forgiveness; and-he made his way through winter snow and ice - to the :vope’s mountain stronghold at Canossa. The pope kept him waiting outside the castle gates for three days before accepting his apology. ” » = ; FIVE HUNDRED years later, Kings Francis I of France and Henry VIL of England arranged a meeting in: northern France: Two thousand workers built a gold-be-decked palace for the occasion,

{ members.

a

| “In addition the Legion Auxiliary’s | membership is expected to rise from |

its present 600,000 to more than

2,000,000.

| The new buildings would house offices of ‘all veterans’ organizations their allied groups and the Indiana {chapter of the American Red Cross.

BIG 3 DIDN'T START 'HIDEOUT' PARLEYS—

Old As History

“New, Too

The idea was an alliance, and for three weeks ‘the ‘two sought to outdo each other in exchanging gifts and displaying gorgeous trappings of gold, silver, silk and jewels, They even renewed a treaty for . the future marriage of their children—but it all came to naught. And other ‘alliances formed, : »

NAPOLEON, who knew his dra- |

matics, built a giant raft to be floated on the Niemen river Tilsit in East Prussia, Tor a peace conference at which he and Czar

,. hear |

were |

| |

Alexander I of Russia tried. tp |

divide Europe between them. The - Geographic Society feels, however, that the -20th’ century's

Big Three discussions top them |

all. “Because of the geographic sope of ‘the problems,” it said, the Crimea conference affects the

lives and destinies of more peo-"|

ple than any other gathering in

the history of man”

CHICAGO, Feb. 18 (U. P).— He's making an impressive contribution to American music. Fhat's..what..John..C. Kendel said about Frank Sinaira, the swoon .crooner. And he wasn't kidding. Kendel ought to know because he is national president of the Music Educators’ National Conference. He ds in Chicax9 attending the meeting of the conference's executive commit-

Frank Sinatra

it this way: It's possible to bridge the gap

. between Frankie Sinatra and the

“ting an

Moonlight Sonata. The bobby-soxers who for “The Voice,” he said, are get« elementary introduction to music. Later they to Bach and Beethoven, n . , THAT'S why he figures Sinatra and the other crooners may be doing more to bring music to the millions than anything since the invention of the juke box.

“Bobby-soxers are not tracted to Sinatra Ly his curly hair,” Kendel said. “Fundamentally it. 1s his ‘rhythm and melody that appeals to them. “He 1s ifportant in the music world because of the terrific enthusiasm for music ne has ine stilled in the youtn of the swuntry.

"

” » “IF MUSIC teachers are wise they will capitalize jon. this. en‘thusiasm and subtly "turn thig in terest to music of more Tang

@

worth.”

3

vy

squeal |

HE ISN'T KIDDING, EITHER—

|

tee. Kendel, director of music in Denver public schools, is strictly | a non-swooner, but he looks at |

may turn |

fy at-

¢

Sinatra...Bach ...Beethoven

Kendel’s theory is that -the

{ same rhythm and melody Sinatra

has been putting over can be found in the classics, “It is up to music educators to peint out these similarities to

their students,” he said. » » KENDEL advanced these ideas

- 8

to the council representing 40,000 he had Started the rourids-of the]

These same edthie

music educators. ucators influence

dents said.

- musical | ideas of more than 30.000,000 stu- "| in the public schools, he |

Hunting Cigarets Made Him Dizzy

BUFFALO, Feb. 16 (U. P.)—’ Thomas Farrell, 56, Buffalo, was placed on probation for 30 days on a drunkenness charge today.

roAnd-it-was-the--eigaret--shortage

that kept him out of jail. Farrell told Judge Michael E.

Zimmerman he had been on the |

wagon ‘for five years, However, because of the cigaret shortage,

taverns trying to buy smokes,

“You know,” he told the judge, |

“you've got: to buy a couple of drinks before you can even approach the bartender on the subject of smokes. Supplies were low last Friday, he related, and he lost track of the number of taverns he visited trying to buy cigarets, Judge Zimmerman, who likes to smoke, suspended a 30-day sentence with a warning that Farrell must stop his cigaret buying system, even if he had to give up both habits, :

LENT SPEAKER CITES

EXAMPLE IN LIVING

The Rt. Rev, Richard Ainslie] Kirchhoffer, bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Indianapolis, today

stated that modern men are called]. upon to walk no harder road than Jesus walked. Bishop Kirchhoffer

spoke at the noon Lenten services today at Christ Episcopal church on

the Circle.

“Dying being a part of the whole “Iplan of life, the faith and trust with

which our Lord faced all of life

is not beyond the realm of human

possibility,” the bishop explained.

\ “He walked the same way that we ‘must walk, though we have ] Him as a companion, and flings to us the. challenge to follow.” _ : continue at P7A'| Christ church throughout Lent i from 12:08 to nn 45 Monday through Friday.

The services will

” Labor— ‘Workers Ask Hand in Fore World Peace

By FRED W. PERKINS ‘Scripps-Howard Staff Writer

LONDON, Feb. 16.—Against the war's grim background the peace demands of representatives of “a large segment of‘ the working people of the world are’ taking form here in the world trade union conference, | Here are delegates from the still -occu-. pied as well as the liberated countries of Europe, with cold hate in their hearts for Hitler and his Nazis, Here are delegates from Grea ‘Britain, which stood. up: against repeated bomb blows, still cone tinuing - in ~ southern England, They come from Latin America where Fascist rulé in Argentina is feared; from the United States which is contributing a vast flow of men and munitions to its allies,

In the great hall of London ” county, so vast that speakers are only dimly seen when the fog seeps in the windows and doors, international aspirations are voiced by: spokesmen for labor groups. :

- Britain. On. 3.5

They recognize that the first tas 3 Is speedy victory, but they also. outline an economic program intended to give the working people a. stronger voice in the future conduct of the world.

= 2 EJ

REID ROBINSON, president of

‘the mine, mill and smelter works

ers, one of the C. I. O. delegates, read a committee report sume marizing some of the demands. It said: “Full mobilization of workers is. inseparable from defense of their economic needs and calls for wage levels consistent with adequate living standards, equal pay for equal work without discrimination for any cause, better. housing, social insurance, proper rationing of food and strict “enforcement of collective bargaining agreements and government orders for the protection of workers.”

For the liberated countries the report calls for establishment of the freedoms of speech, press, assembly, religion, ” political as sociation, the right to organize labor unions and the formation of governments having the support of the people. 5

a2 s

THE REPORT was adopted in four languages but not until core rections were made on the floor to eliminate sections which migh#s indicate that the Russian delegation was advising Dictator Stalin to join the war against Japan. Another amendment, proposed by an aggressive delegate from India, would have recorded the tonference as supporting his country’s fight for independence from

supporter. Before

the week-end,’ the

" gathering expects to get: around

its most delicate problem—what to do about the American Federation of Labor. The leaders wang full representation from the United States, but they now seem

.» disposed to ‘set up an organization

which includes the C. I. O. and Russian unions and leaves it to the A. F. of L. to decide whether it will continue 0 refuse to ase sociate with either.

- We the Women Silent Partner Is Envy of

All Husbands

By RUTH MILLETT

MARRIED MEN who read in a recent dispatch that not even the fall of Manila could break Mrs, Douglas MacArthur's policy of public silence, which the general had imposed three years ago on theifarrival in Australia, must have a new feeling of respect for MacArthur the man For it is no uncommon thing for a man to power in field, command the respect of other men, and still be a hene pecked husband in. the presence of his wife. n

» ”

AND IT is certainly true thas many a man's dignity and ime pressiveness suffers. when his wife starts talking about his husiness, Of course, most men's wives

‘aren't asked for newspaper come

£

ment on their husband's business affairs, : : ’ But that doesn't mean they don't make public statements. A remark dropped at a bridge table or divulged in a gossipy tele

phone conversation has a remarks , 4

able way of getting around town. -and sometimes making trouble for a husband. i

THERE 18 probably: many . husband who wishes he could m=

#

his wife—so far as his. affairs are

roncern

oallshe got one.