Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 October 1946 — Page 14

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Japs Urged Not to Deify MacArthur

He Had 3 Clear Field IT'S OUR BUSINESS 4 o By Donald D. Hoover’ . he 1

D WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ Editor, ; Business Manager, _ A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER Owned and published dally (except Sunday) by : Indianapolis Times Publishing Co. 214 W. Maryland | st Postal Zones. > Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of

Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy: delivered by carrier, 20 cents a week. - Mail rates in Indiana, $6 a year; all other states, , U. 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, 87 cents a month. “ © RI-5851.

DECSOWMEN Give Lioht end the People Will Find Their Own Way

FIGHTING THAT ‘NEXT DEPRESSION’ THE Committee for Economic Development has declared "3 war on the notion that another great American depresgion is inevitable. : That is important good néws because the C. E. D. is one business organization that fights with intelligence, vision and a keen sense of public responsibility. It was founded nearly six years ago to combat another dangerous false notion, then widely held—that mass unemployment was bound to come right after the war and would require government measures to provide jobs. The C. E. D., believing that wise advance planning by business. and industry could maintain high employment,

SLOPPY THINKING 18 SHOWN by a military decision at Tokyo to suppress an editorial in an Eng-lish-language Japanese newspaper because . . , &Ccording to long distance information . . . it told the Japs that Gen. MacArthur was not a god and should be regarded as a symbol of democracy, not a reincarnation of their first emperor. ! The editorial, which _ already had appeared in Japanesé language newspapers, was barred from the Nippon Times, a publication which had a circulation of 1700 when U. 8. troops arrived in Tokyo . . . but now is a source of news for American troops.

Definition of Democracy

THIS INCIDENT COMES CLOSE to home for me because, under Gen. MacArthur's orders to destroy the Japanese propaganda machine and create freedom of the spoken and written word in Japan, I created the machinery for control of the press, radio and motion picture industry there. The basic codes issued to these agencies of public opinion just about one year ago had two primary principles . © . untruth was prohibited and use of the truth for harmful propaganda purposes Was prohibited. There never was intended to be any improperly repressive interference with a free press. At that time, the personnel in charge of controlling these agencies was experienced in the technique of the fields” for which they were responsible. The head of the press and radio section, for example, was a naval officer who had been a tity editor and managing editor in New York and one-time head of the city news bureau there. These men knew what they. were doing . . . and regarded freedom of speech and press as a fundamental of democracy. Under the army and navy policies of bringing men home before the job was done . .. without providing

{rained replacements . . . we quickly lost the most mature and capable men and women., Although the organization I headed now employs some 8000" people: in its over-all intelligence job; few of these at the top have the background to control the media which form public opinion. - ¥ This recent. example of censorship*shows ineptness. ‘Whefi I closed down Domei néws agency or suspended the Nippon Times shortly after the occu=

the action was taken to eliminate government inte terence and control. It did not restrict fair discussio! The suppressed editorial .". . which the Jap public already had read in.its own papers . . . deplored here worship, a characteristic of the Nipponese. Here was a definition it contained that appeals to me . .. and which I know reflects the aspirations of thinking Japanese editors: : “Democracy means freedom. It asserts human rights and does not entail divine rights or the deification of personalities. If the conception that gov-

pation began . .. because it distorted the truth. . 3

‘ernment is something imposed upon the people by an

outstanding god, great man or leader is not rectified, democratic government is likely to be wrecked.”

Advice to People PERHAPS THE OBJECTIONABLE part of the editorial was“advice that the way to express gratitude toward Gen. MacArthur “for the wisdom with ‘which he is managing post-war Japan and for his efforts to democratize the nation,” was ppt to worship him as a god but to “cast away the servile spirit and gain ‘the self-respect that would not bow its head to anybody.” 3 : That's not a defi. Gen. MacArthur wants to ‘develop leaders, not followers. And the editorial carries a message that I do not believe he himself Would have agreed to suppress. “

: worked diligently to stimulate such planning.

war deflation,

job-creating business enterprises.

» ” » » . =

lems of the imm e future:

making collective bargaining work better.

purchasing power.

the past.

“gion later.

GASOLINE FOR A FIRE

8 Meant to be taken too seriously.

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now been in effect for some time.

possible. »

: in 40.

other incomes,

3 POLITICAL MUD

can. and Democratic.

| these last-minute attacks as political mud | ~~ lowest sort, and hope those persons zo) “A

simple 'l do. wil suffice when | ask-who gives

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Events have proved how right it was. And how much of this last year’s economic grief might have bgdh avoided if the government had shared the C. E. D.s faith and refused to heed the mistaken prophets of an immediate post-

> The C. E. D. wants to preserve free enterprise by making it work for the greatest good ofthe American people. It wants to keep employment and production high, and take no chance of letting a small recession become a big depression. It does not want a government-planned economy. But it does want government to plan its own far-reaching activities, to the end that thay most encourage and least impede | ° the establishment and growth of legitimate, competitive,

AND so the C. E. D.’s national leaders—Indiana’s Paul G. Hoffman, Eric Johnston, John D. Biggers and others, figures in industry business—are putting business men and economists to work on research into three great prob-

labor, but by improving labor-management relations and

But this surely is a queer time for the American Fed- |tention of the members of the P.-T. eration of Labor to pledge a fight for a 80-hour week A. of one of our high schools that| =" 0 “\ “Conitel ave. throughout industry. The resolution, adopted without debate at the recent Chicago meeting, points out that the

ing hours and observes that the present 40-hour week has

Technological progress has enabled American workers to earn in 40 hours many more dollars than they used to| Carni | ick duds , val — IC rner earn in 72. Continued progress may sometime in the future go By D : Tu ne enable them to earn in 30 hours more than they now earn A g¥ w

But that time is not now. On the 40-hour week, with | full employment, this country is not producing enough - goods and services to meet its people's wants and needs and assure them a rising standard of living. The argument that @ shorter week would “spread jobs” has no present validity. - Under existing conditions, it would spread only poverty and * hardship, by cutting production, increasing costs, inflating | prices and destroying the buying power of wages and all

ac. The A, F. of L. convention would have contributed t. more to solving the country’s present problems if jt had . resolved to fight the feather-bedding rules and practices of its own unions, to make the 40-hour week fully productive. + Instead, it comes forth with this clarion call for a 30“hour week, which is as ridiculous as calling for gasoline to | put out a fire. By such action, friends of labor are reminded | it the cause of unionism has nothing like as much to fear “reactionary employers” and “labor-hating legisla8 it has from the stupidity of its own leaders.

Nov. 5 ‘election draws nearer, several sneaking |. “campaigns are being whispered about, directed |

‘habits or records of individual candi-|

cency to desist.

ee _l “3 CB UR T—

"| do not, agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say it." — Voltaire.

Hoosier Forum

ne—— ———

"Politics in Juvenile Court

Juvenile Court Committee

qualified for their jobs except’ that

TWO: How to develop a wage-price policy which, in- they have been loyal party work-|flance of our fight against juveni stead of merely taking money from one group and giving ers who are hired for jobs that! delinquency. If our theater man-

it to another, will stimulate roduction of more wealth to [call for trained personnel. ced by high teal d i d| It is ‘time this cour. was taken ment, we feel sure they will agree ., 4 like to examine some of be shared by all groups in higher real wages and increased |." ¢ ‘oiitics. And that is what With our p ition. the Citizens’ Bi-Partisan Juvenile Naturally, the power of suggestion Court Committee is trying to do. | would bé very great in the forth-

|

THREE: How to manage the government's fiscal and | rye Republican party had a chance coming presentation, and certainly | the children need more of the high-|

tax policies, to meet the actual need for federal revenues [in the May primary to nominate a ldren » Se high : i i ili _ |qualified candidate. This group did |er character Pp ctures than € but to avoid undue interference with stability of the na- | est to assure his nomination, | “Dead End Kid” type of movies. tional economy at normal high levels of prosperity. v The C. E.’ D., being realistic and honest, does not promise that absolute stability, with no fluctuations, can pig, was detested by only 600 be achieved by the free, dynamic economy for which it |votes.

stands. It does hold that wise co-operation by business, la-

along with the Democratic cdndi-

stances, the only candidate who

£ We welcome the C. E. D.’s new program as one of the [pledges himself fo “take politics out| The P.-T. A. of School 24 believes | most hopeful developments of recent months. And we agree |of the Juvenile Sous? i dle Demo HR a le A, sil : : : : cratic cand:tate an 1e citizens’ er Vy Sm S with Chairman Hoffman that now is the time for this coun- 0° has indorsed his candidacy. [shown When a picture interesting to decide that it has no inescapable reason for scaring

itself into either a little recession soon or a major depres- | gpiMg AND CHILD MOVIES” |president.

By Mrs. J._8. V., N. Holmes ave. I read with much interest the

land. Friday evening, and quite agree with one particular item in|

with boys and girls.” It has been brought to the at-|

another “Lassie” picture is sched-

opposite. trends definitely is in de-|shown.

“DON’T SEE WONDERFUL LABOR GAIN UNDER C. IL 0.” By “Disgusted,” Indianapolis ? When the Link Belt employee | criticised the union out there he must have hit a sensitive nerve, dging by the answers signed

Breeds Youthful Crime Repeaters"

By Mrs. George Home, Steering Committee, Bi-Partisan

1 wish to take exception to a statement made at the meeting of the ° policy committee of the Marion county Republican precinct committee- Ju : men. . In their indorsement of Judge Rhoads he was praised for “having “good C. I. O. member” and others » ONE: How » reduce the number of sf and oe operated his court with an exceedingly competent staff.” vent the losses they cause, not by taking freedom from | If that be true, why has the court failed to rehabilitate so many of i : | these children? ‘Why do they keep coming back into the court until; Peen a lot of talk about “labor's they commit sont major crime which takes them into long-t sentences? The answer is that the staff is not competent, t

{of the same nature. T

agers will stop and think a mo- gobo iy 5 factory nor owns one I and blooded horses to be tagged with fancy ribbons.

| They came crowding into Kansas City, the folks of

) Does it seem fair to the children date, Mr. Joseph O. Hoffmann. Their, ©, 0" 5" pyyrder picture linked

Republican nominee, Mr. Harold N. |with their picturé?—Mrs. Lloyd T. | stated with apologies while a lot of fellow workers lose their pay. Gain No. 2. Our present union C. I. O. man gets higher pay. With it he cannot buy a good cheap auto like! in" 1783, America suffered from a mother-in-law

Jones, P.-T. A. member.

Had a new candidate to replace| T am sorry to see a picture like : : : . the Republican incumbent been | “Courage of Lassie” teamed with bor, agriculture and government can prevent the wide nominated it would have been &|an undesirable picture at Loew's! Henry Ford used to produce beswings from boom to bust that have been so disastrous in [matter of allowing the best man |this week.—Mrs. D. J. Hendrickson, | cause they aren't being made now| by the treaty of peace—true enough. But the Amerie on account of C. I. O. and if they| can states were still living in a mother-in-law’s home, were the new cars cost twice as! With canny grimness Mother Britain seized the much, A nice gain for “labor” '{there. Our modern worker can't get toilet paper-or lard, his taxes are higher, his son can't find a| ocation from their ships on the high seas. She home to live in, and there are no diapers for his babies or his grandchildren. Now in the wicked old days Link Belt furnished good} indignation | Working conditions, had good emlover this and we would like to be|Ployees, paid them well and made |able to do something about it. It|8ood products.

to win this fall. Under the circum- |39 N, Webster ave.

that pictures of horror, gangster

Fe : for children is being featured. —Mrs. | “THEATERS SHOULDN'T LINK |raurence H. Ridley, 706 Blake st,

I believe that all parents feel article written by Lillian D. Cope-|#® certain amount of

ship and greatly appreciated by par-| |ents if theater managers would cofeature something suitable or else] present the children’s single feature.—Mrs. Carl Strick- {fhe in.

: , ———— {latter benefits. | uled a one 3 our Sonniown hee) The “Lassie” picture and a crime|eat dollar bills, A aters, but it is on ¥ e same billing | 01) re should not be shown to-|for slethes and ride a dollar bill in| 8YeW from a population of 122,658 to 195,853, an in-trade-union movement has always sought to shorten work- 8s # crime picture. The. Questior] | gether. We - would like for your place of a new car. wh 23 10 WHY, al a Wank er 4 | paper to ask them to show some- any wonderful gain for labor under picture o e ssie series, 1U|thing more suitable for children.— the C. I. O. system should be necessary to show anoth- | . * he : X i | Mrs.” Meredith Stader, president, | ‘ Well, the 40-hour week is no more sacred than the week | picture. If a second feature must|genoq) 28 P.-T. A. > . be shown, why should it be a deof 72 hours or more, once general, which labor fought a |moralizing crime picture? good fight to shorten. It is more reasonable. and humane. Except perhaps in a few extremely arduous occupations it does not improperly tax the endurance of workers. Yet we

certainly do not contend that its further reduction is im- picture than one of crime. In our|by The Times, opinion, having two pictures of such that the latter film would not

Editor's Note: The foregoing are As ever watchful and concerned | typical of the letters received crit- | By parents of our young citizens, we icizing the billing of a “Lassie” pic~ i shearer Age iia oy * Wupdee Bim The Mak. ins” Oct. 14, 1046, about the case| line of them already here, and the thousands of § i agement o e theater, questioned | ; i | new ones who came barging in. It was much like ahoanied today | °F Cpl. Hite, I would like to have ging pe | YOU print the recent experience of

‘| my husband who is now an ex-G. IL

| triotism arranged | Mr.. might establish himself bac | to civilian life again. Thinking the| he finally selects—I' use select advisedly—a sponsor

, “+. Mr, Enderby!" » 1 5 is : la 3 J a Si

QPR, 1946 BY WEA SERVICE, INE. T. M REGU & PAY OFF. _

ings flow! the bride away,

Praise Him, all creatures below! ie 4

Here where the West and East begin to merge, but

5

the soft hand of the city. Here where Dixie” and “John Brown's Body” are

Homely Missouri Background Harry Truman is a part of all of it. So in Washingmany people out here, he has no kinship with the

intellectual type that Franklin D. Roosevelt liked as intimates.

| |

ese “labor gains.” In the old days

th man could work where he pleased | ; : 3 am paying ye hon the! uncles and maiden aunts, and their hired hands. They

privilege. Now he must pay. That's

gain. Then he did mot have to

lay .off every time some drunk was! bawled out or fired for incompetent work. Now a wild cat strike is |called until the brother is rein-|

pork chops on the table, diapers] on the line, and the sit down strike, | mass picketing, slow-down and class | picture as a|Propaganda were just dreams in| minds of the boys in the Xrem- | Now we have gained all the] We are going to| wear dollar bills

| “JUDGE IMPOSED HARD CONDITIONS ON EX-G. IL”

Having read the article “Reflec

Three weeks after being dis

charged from the army, Mr. ob- | tained a job in a factory only to be {forced out by a strike that was | called and planned before he was NEW YORK, Oct, 22.—This piece may be someemployed there.. Knowing he had| what prejudiced, since Arthur Godfrey has been a

| obligations to meet in a small town 0 f years, and since, when I { thirty miles southeast of this city friend of mine for a lot of years, a i | he arranges an interview with the kind judge to explain the sttuation.| into Godfrey's unhammy honesty to make me believe

Everybody who VERY labor convention—and almost every other conven- | iin she states that “the power Would be an act of good citizen- | Wanted a car had one, there were| & tion, for that matter—passes some resolutions not |of suggestion carries much weight

I don't see

people, than did Mr. Roosevelt, who wad" the algof

ere has | political philosopher of the country house, with a

feeling for people in the mass, and often, quite cal-

: | culating in his adept handling of them. But Harry ains” under the new system Of Truman does not know exactly how to-stand up for hey aren't C. I. O, as compared to the dreary them. 5 ——— old time when the wage slaves of] Here, there was displayed -the atmosphere that Link Belt were exploited by their | Harry ‘Truman so well knows and likes. It was the | master. As a fellow who neither | beginning of the American Royal Livestock and Horse 3 | show, where they bring. their cattle and their pigs They are disappointed at the way things have turned = out for him in Washington. But they can understand = how that happened. He's one of them. And being & President i$ a hard job, especially when thrown into it the way he was. They feel sorry for him. There & is no meanness or bitterness in any of it—such as= some people had for Franklin D. Roosevelt. ;

the prairies and small towns, with their children and

| wandered about the streets and into the lunchrooms, | holding back, hesitantly and politely, before climbing |

FOR 30 ODD YEARS after the Revolutionary war

complex. ‘Her ties with Great Britain were broken

opportunity to back the hostile Indians on the fron- | tier; clung defiantly to strategic forts on the Canadian border; swiped American sailors without prov-

showed all the symptoms of a domineering mother-in-law, piqued at the marriage of a favored daughter now concerned with new. home interests.

Apron Strings Cut BUT AFTER THE War of 1812, the young folks cut their way out of their mother’s apron strings. They went to housekeeping on their own—out west. Here beckoning, wide-open opportunities greeted them, and they went not only with zest and hope, but by the thousands. | This is how they went; in the decade from 1820 to 1830, nine states of this new west, as of that day —Louisiana, Indiana, Mississippi, Illinois, Alabama, Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee and Ohio increased in population about 1,500,000. In this ‘decade, Indiana

} 1

crease of 59.7 per cent in the 10 years. In this whole westward trek over the Appalachian mountains, the per cent of increase in population in Indiana was exceeded in only two states—Alabama and Illinois, Taking the picture as a whole such a mass imigration has seldom, if ever, been surpassed in the world.

Regular Times. Reader, Indianapolis. As this wave of immigration rolled into Indiana,

-1 it posed many problems to Indiana people—the thin

By Godfrey, He's

get lost in the tortuous mazes of radio, I always bump

The judge seemed so full of pa-| there is something worth saving in sound transference,

the problem so| after all,

k| Arthur knocks off about $200,000 a year, and when

judge would keep his word, MTr.| for his new show, he will make half a million.

kept his promise regularly until si

x This is not so bad for a guy who was making $38.50

months latér this kind judge called| a week in Washington in 1934, for doing the same him back into court to:nform him| thing he does now.

all back payments that were sup-

Dosed to be forgiven, due to being| Raises Howl Over Ringers out of work during the strike, plus WHAT HE DOES now is talk to people from early attorney fées and twice as much as| morn to noon on the : radio—talking in a beat-up the ‘original .amount each week.| baritone, playing a record, kidding a sponsor. When reminded of the ‘past agree- He does it 365 days a year—and has, for }8 years. ment this judge had made he sud-| The price he pays for his big farm and his yadht and

denly lost all memory of the prev-| his airplane is the absence of a day off; the curse”

fous conversation, Now don’t you think this was grand way to encourage this G. after all he faced overseas?

of being hauled from the hay when the wrens arise. a The impudent redhead has been doing a new show 1.| for about 15 weeks—a sponsorless show for CBS. He

Is there any justice in this small} sponsor. =~

town court? - -

DAILY THOUGHT

) But who am.I, and ~what is wy people, that we should be | able to offer so “willingly after: | this sort? for all things come of | Thee, and of Thine own have we given Three —I Chronicles 20:14.

he said, profanely:

to buy me.”

alse God, from whom all _bless~ digliked ‘the guy who-ran it. .

~ Godfrey's sustaining show is called “Talent Scout” (Tuesdays, CBS, 10-10:30 p.m.) It is a good show, ~Thontas Ken. | an adult variation of the amateur ham theme the:

A \

~ Fs : nm - Sore

SAGA OF INDIANA . . . By William A. Marlow | Early Hoosiers Slogged Along in Mugl

the hurly-burly of a three-ring circus pitching ten at a new stop, with practiced circus efficiency left oul

grimmest headache. They touched food, clothing and shelter—basic requisites of life. They affected necessities and profits. They touched land valuesg They hindered or helped both business and pleasure They hampered the even tenor of justice, for judges and lawyers; for the guilty and innocent; for much of. the protection that law brings to civilized men.

what could they do? The newcomers who came roll ing into Indiana in this era had no money to build roads—just a little dirty wad. of cash pinched aside fof the land office, and the little farm that was to sus tain them as “they raised a family. The scattered few who were already in the state were but a step or so ahead of these newer ones.

It was “a condition, not a theory” that confronted these folks. i

roads in Indiana in the state's growing days of thé 1820's. The southern half of the state, where the jo was most needed, was densely forested. The streams were unbridged. Adequate labor and materials fo road-building were impossible. 9

Transportation in Mud its belly—=it has to eat to move. Likewise, early Ine" diana traveled in the mud—of necessity. It had travel to grow.

form, has always loomed large in Indiana. It was § long, tough job to pull the state from mud to macada

way loyally. Indiana fittirigly honors them.

REFLECTIONS . . . By Robert C. Ruark

' most of ‘em ought to stay home and hide.”

isn't being paid. for it. He is waiting for the right

To now he has rejected about seven, including one of the larger cigaret companies. Mr. G. was brutal on that one. ‘They offered‘ him $3000 a week, and

“your stockholders don't have enough in the bank

This company turned him around, some 12 years ago; cancelled a deal without reason overnight. Godfrey's memory is. 10 miles’ longer than an elephant's, He also kicked another tobacco, company because he

POLITICAL ‘REPORT . . . By Thomas L. Stokes Home Folks Sorry for Harry Truman

KANSAS CITY, Oct. 22.—Here you get the feel on the counter stools, not pushing and shoving

and flavor and style of the man who is President of like city people. ¥ Harry Truman has seen- and has been a part 3 \ § ;

4

the United States. all this.

All afternoon, people roamed the streets, rambling

never quite mix. Here where the hard, calloused with no fixed purpose. And, at night, some of them hand of the farm still feels a bit awkward as it clasps went to the grand opening ball, but mostly that was a 1 Kansas City affair, a society event. PB

The Kansas City Star had a formal headline ove

equally familiar, for that issue once met here, too. the account of the parade “Pomp in March” (it was really such. a jolly occdsion). Harry Truman would = understénd that, appreciate the headline on the stock # IT'S A HYBRID SORT of place—and friendly, show opening, “Gay Royal Debut.” :

He would understand all that, as he did the news-

ton he reflects it, gathering about him for advisers paper stories on his primary election eve visit here easy-going men of the Middle West and tHe South, that went down to such intimate details about himbecause he feels comfortable among them. Like so self and his family. He can't get away from it, like it or not. Nor can he get away from the front-page photographs taken then of himself and Jim Pendergast, head of the Pendergast machine, nephew and Harry Truman probably has more heart and sym- successor to the late “Uncle Tom” Pendergast who pathy for the ordinary folks out this way, the working made Harry Truman senator and thus started him to the White House.

No Bitterness in Criticism

THAT'S ALL A PART of the Truman story, too.

Jhese people here understand all that, even though many of them feel, fine as loyalty is, that maybe Harry Truman should have dropped the Pendergast

machine. :

They “understand Harry Truman. They like him.

Out of all this, roads were destined to be Indiana The intelligent men of the state knew all this. Buf

As Grover Cleveland once said of another matters

But even so, it was anybody's tough job to build i

© NAPOLEON ONCE SAID that an army moves @

Transportation, not only in ‘the mud but in eve

Early Indiana folks slogged their stretch of ti

in Big League Now

late Maj. Bowes shoved onto the public for, years. Godfrey is a salty individualist, who puts on an honest weekly show which usually is better than most: carefully rehearsed programs. Arthur deals in un-§ known professionals, not embarrassingly pitiful ama=-g teurs who shock the handles off the shower when they i sing in the bathroom, i

Arthur's people interview a thousand unheralded |

pros each week, in order to find half a dozen per-4 formers who won't. insult the esthetic intelligence of the listeners. R “My gosh,” moans Godfrey, ‘most of 'em are} awful. You wouldn't believe how many people with nothing come for auditions. They all think they'red great. Out of the weekly thousand we don't get 104] we can use. : “One thing we got, though is baritones.” I got a thousand guys can sing better than Como. Nobody: sings tenor anymore—we got & backlog of baritones to carry us through next summer. b “Dames . . : I guess they've quit singing. It's hard« er to rustle up a good woman singer than it is to find a steak. But brother, we get everybody else, “and

On Air 365 Days a Year ARTHUR RAISED a great rumpus when he found some of his associates were sneaking ringers—estabs lished pros with other radio outlets—ihto his program. He fetched up such a howl that the logrolling ce: abruptly.’ : One of these days the old redhead will find some amiable rich outfit to.pay for his once-weekly s snd then he will retire from the morning cha field, to the great dismay ‘of some several millid of listeriers who call the day ruined unless that wart] baritone crawls into thelr ears. Je Godfrey has a lot of sailing, flying and farming | do—and some ‘piano playing, too. Without do Godfrey is one of the worst piano players 1 ever heard® =~ vii “i I is

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