Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 November 1946 — Page 13
. 12, 1946
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Inside Indianapolis = By Ed Sola
“OVER THE TOP.” “Yippee, my team made it
today.” “We'ré going to get the red feather bonnet.”
Those are just a few of the things a man hears when he visits a meeting of the Community Fund workers at the Claypool. The mezzanine, where 135 volunteer men and women compute the results of the 27th annual campaigr resembles a bit of a madhouse at first glance... Underneath there's terrific enthusiasm, team The auditors, typists,
them from getting in on the fun. Above the din of adding machines, typewriters, and team captains who made their quotas, Mrs, Walter Wolf, 5276 N. Meridian st, chairman of district 18, told me her team was going to “get over the top.” The team, after last minute valculations were made, had 46 per cent of its quota. Mrs. Wolf has worked with fund campaigns for 15 years. Showing the enthusiasm of a “contest” that was going well, she reported that “One team in the residential district is 102 per cent of ‘fts quota. Our division gets another gold pin.” Too Busy to say much was Duane Shute, 1620 W. 54th st. Mr, Shute, an auditor at Allison division of General Motors, is working on his second fund drive. Albert J, Ogle, 1117 Newman ave, with a staff of four girls, does the auditing for teams 15 and 16 of the residential division. All are employees of the Public Service Co. He has worked in four drives, two as an auditor and two as a solicitor. Gertrude McKenna, 350 N. Jefferson
ave, a member of the auditing team, was relaxing
:
Community Fund high flier. . . . Mrs. Frances H. Joy holds the “team” awards for bringing in the cash. ’
Housing Bust
WASHINGTON, Nov. 12.—About the only things that aren't going up in price are houses. They're up so high already that the only way for them to go is down. This is true all over the country; particularly is ft true in the capital, which had the screwballiest realty boom of all. Now it's going bloole. Right or wrong, the Republicans can take the credit. The New Dealers are on the way out. As one of them advertised: “New Deal Georgetown home for sale; we've had enough, Republican broom was too much for us. No agents and no publicity, please. We want to leave Washington as quickly and quietly as possible.” Georgetown is that ancient section of the city, erammed with red brick houses, in almost everyone of which George Washington slept. If the Georgetown real estate people are to be believed, Washington was the sleepiest fellow of his age. The old houses, equipped with new furnaces and fresh paint, long have been regarded as fashionable.
The younger practitioners of the New Deal moved
almost enmasse to Georgetown. Now they're moving out. Rare is the block without at least one house for sale.
Prospective Customers Disappear
THE REAL ESTATE agents even are trying to high-pressure me again. Haw-haw-haw, That's me laughing last and loudest. Every time a Republican chief threatens a new slug of economy, the reverberations reach me by way of a desperate salesman. One of the latter, trying to get me to look at a house whose price had just been cut $4500, confessed that the prospective customers somehow had disappeared.
Aviation
IN THE EARLY days of air transportation some of us attempted to skétch the ground facilities setup which would be adequate for the volume of air travel of the future. We believed that the minimum requisite was four airports for each metropolis—one north, east, south and west, As soon as volume air travel began to appear, our first estimate was confirmed. All during the interim, especially when the federal aid airport program was announced, we insisted loudly that no big city could do with less than four airports. We crusaded for more airports—not bigger airports. Some of these days you are going to be astounded with the brilliantly conceived plan for solving congestion of air traffic—stacking up, etc.—by learning that more airports must be provided around our great cities. Eventually, you will be informed that an airport must be available at each cardinal point of the compass around big cities. Maybe this brain-crack-ing streak of common sense won't break immediately, but it’s coming soon, because I am meeting more people each day who have discovered this blinding flash of the obvious,
Forgot Common Sense THIS IS the crackdown on the short-range thinking which is largely responsible for the jamming of airports in bad weather with resultant stacking of airplanes up to 9000 and 10,000 feet. Separated by a 1000 feet or more in altitude at “holding” points, the lowest level is cleared to the airport as each higher level is ordered to assume the next vacant altitude below. What got us into this mess was our
My Day
NEW YORK, Monday.—I have been watching with Interest some of the Republican pronouncements that
: failure to
“have come as a result of their victory last Tuesday.
First and foremost camé an announcement from Benator Taft on economy. The federal budget will be cut, he says. And while he was not as optimistic about an income-tax cut as Rep. Harold Knutson, still eautiously he admitted that there might be a cut. One gathers that these economies in federal
government are going to be effected through curtails.
ing the President's war powers and doing away with wartime pgencies. Of course, they are not going to affect tn any way any of these services rendered by government that are of benefit to the people.
Economies, but Where? SENATOR TAFT himself is committed "to more
- and better housing. But, apart from that, very few
things that affect the lives of the people have received his unqualified support. Therefore, it will be interesting to see how these economies are made. Senator Vandenberg has given assurance to the foreign nations, some of whom were a little troubled, that there will be no change in our bi-partisan foreign policy as a result of the change in the congressional party in power. ‘That must have calmed some fears! Im another item I saw that Nelson Rocke-
in the past few years.
for a minute while she “waited for more money to come in.” Mrs, Paul A. McGauley, 2521 Central ave., captain of team 233 of district 23, is cofifident. “I think we'll make it.” We're getting a lot of new Bledges.” she said. This is her sixth year with the rive,
Junior League Plays Big Role WOMEN FROM the Indianapolis Junior League
at luncheon meetings. They serve as ushers, collect luncheon money in colorful sand buckets (luncheons are dutch treat), pass out the red feather awards and pins, and make up the percentages on the Community Fund thermometers as they are reported. 1 met the Junior League members around their luncheon table. Knifing salads were Sally Eaglesfield, 4376 Central ave.; Mary ‘Johnson, 3668 Central ave,; Alice Boozér, Williams ‘Creek, and Evelyn Hitz, Brendonwood. Governor Gates told the workers: ‘You here today are doing a job that must be done. You are doing it because you realize your community responsibility. You are demonstrating that by working together we are capable of meeting and overcoming community problems that concern us all and affect us all. It is an arena of service where men and women of high principle and deep compassion for their fellow men can express their faith in action.” He was introduced as the Kentucky Colonel, Admiral of the Ohio river and Governor. The chief executive laughingly told the meeting about his naval rank which doesn’t mean a thing because Kentucky has jurisdiction over most of the Ohio river. Veteran of Bataan and commanding general of Ft. Harrison, Gen. Clifford Bluemel, told of the need of the USO for the men still in service and in hospitals. The USO is'one of the mem= ber agencies supported by-the fund,
Team 32 Hits Jackpot TEAM 32 of the downtown division hit the jackpot when it reported 104 per cent of the quota. This team has worked together 12 years. It's not a big team but it does bring in big results. Mr. and Mis. Frances H. Joy, 530 Ripple rd, make up team 32. For pledging the Peoples State Bank for 104 per cent, Mr. and Mrs. Joy received the red feather duck and bonnet. Mr. Joy had to leave before he got the chance to sport his bonnet but Mrs. Joy received the awards. “I don't know. whether they want to get rid of me quick or its truly the kindness of their hearts, but I don’t have much trouble at the bank,” Mrs. Joy said. “When the people see me every year about this time they greet me with a check.” She gets a big kick seeing the looks on donors’ faces when she hands them extra feathers for their children. Petting the stuffed duck, Mrs. Joy stuck a big piece of lettuce in“its bill, “You know—I've seen plenty of ducks on the river—I live on the edge of it—but this is the first time I've ever had my hands on a red one.” Mrs, Joy, who has as much vim and drive as anyone I've seen at campaign luncheons, deserves a duck—a live one, for coming in with pledges over her quota and the determination that she “isn't through yet.”
By Frederick C. Othman
y®
~The Indianapolis Times
SECOND SECTION
Army Takes Wraps Off New Super-Super Bomber
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1946
'Ronge, 10,000 miles with“out extra fuel tanks
The army air forces has just revealed construction and performance data on its giant B-36 heavy bomber, which can “carry an atomic bomb to any inhabited region in the world and return home without refueling.”
tanks hold gallons of
Win gas and 1200 gallons of oil
Six pusher-type, 28-cylinder horsepower, equal to power of 200 average passenger automobiles
engines develop 18,
ki BE
At reduced range, carries
#1 36 tons of bombs or more |
than three times B-29's load for same distance
This picto
Labor
Cabin is pres- | surized for fly-} | ing at 40,000foot ceiling
~diagram shows the air monster .
dwarfing a B-29 Superfortress, which plane it will replace as the major striking weapon of the strategic air force. Built by Consolidated Vultee, the B-36 carries a crew of 12, plus a four-man relief crew. :
(Second in a Series)
. » A ® . | HERMAN B
The house-for-sale ads suddenly have begun to! contain phrases like this: Owner leaving city . . price drastically reduced . . . owner will sacrifice . . make an offer . . . still am laughing. So is the eagle on my dollars.
Blow to Real Estate Vendors LOOKS LIKE that bird soon is going to be worth
of Indiana university, has advanced an interesting theory for the con- |
{
Bill of Rights educational benefits cease.
President Wells believes that
as much as he ever was. One fellow I know put up (American higher education is en-| a new three-bredroom house, which might have cost | tering a new era, one which will|
him $18,000 in ordinary times. So long were the delays and so costly were things like bath tubs in
He was aghast. He couldn't afford to live in it. He advertised it for sale (not realizing that the plug had been pulled) for $55,000. That was almost three months ago. Nobody would pay him $55,000., Nobody would pay him $40,000. He's not happy. Neither is a speculative builder, trying to sell a row of new houses for $14950 each in suburban Silver Spring.. They're not bad little houses, either. The rooms are tight and the closets are small, but the design is good. He's sure of that. He built the same type of houses in the same neighborhood before the war and sold same to their current owners, all of whom planted neat signs on their lawns saying, simply: “We bought this house for $8950.” The effect gon inflation in Silver Spring has been considerable. The final blow to the real estate vendors came in the houses-wanted-to-buy column. The advertiser didn't want to buy one. “Why let your house languish on a dying market?” he asked. “If I like it, I might rent it.” In five long years no homeless one has dared talk like that.
By Maj. Al Williams
recognize facts. Clouded with the headline thinking of what science, radar, etc., were supposed to do for us in facilitating ‘andings and takeoffs in instrument weather, basic facts were ignored. Airport sites were sglected by people completely ignorant of aviation's needs. That's count No. 1, Then came the “most gigantic” super-duper airport of unlimited runways—on which only one plane could land at a time. Ignored was the fact that a modern airport, with all that science has to offer, is a one-track railway station of the air. This is count number two.
It Still Spills Over
AN AIRPORT by way of analogy might be likened to a five-gallon bucket into which a half-dozen funnels were led in the hope that it could be forced to contain more than five gallons. In addition to a few other factors, these are the main reasons why air traffic is stacked up over airports today for hours at a time, causing great and justifiable irritation :to passengers. Mark my words, no magic can offset the lack of a sufficient number of airports strategically ringed around a metropolitan center. You can't get six gallons into a five-gallon bucket. The provision of additional airways between cities equipped with single airports, or additional “holding. points” near said airports have not and cannot solve the congestion and stacking up problems of air tratfic. And every time you find yourself in a transport “holding”—stacked up—over an airport, you and your plane are part of the sixth gallon they are trying to put into a five-galion bucket.
By. Eleanor Roosevelt
the program of good will now being carried on would most certainly be continued under Republican administration. Sa A third thing that several Republicans have announced in the press is their determination to see that labor is “brought into line.” They have announced that there will be amendments made to the Wagner act. In fact, it has been said that they have’ bills ready for introduction that would forbid strikes and the closed shop.
Forecasts Democratic Unity FOR US in New York state, it will be very interesting to watch the accomplishments of the Republican party in their second term of office. The record of Senator-Elect Irving M. Ives, particularly where international questions are involved, will be carefully scrutinized. He knows something of labor questions but has still to be tested about foreign affairs, Curiously enough, the Democratic party, which has been so split as a majority party, will’ in all probability be much more unified in the minority. Even. though it is announced that the Republicans are still counting on a coalition with some of the most reactionary southern Democrats, the few progressive Democrats are going to be working together in very much closer harmony Yeart they have been 5 1 RE . - i anes in El
1
| 1951.
{next year over current reg Should a depression strike within
dent Wells said. The reason for this is that there still are millions of veterans quali-
Inot hit an enrollment peak until|realize ~ Already the university 1s{through education and wil the black market that his investment totaled $40,000.| planning for a 10 per cent increase their children to college in the next|/government, under way. Structures | theory. istration. | 10 years.
|
"By VICTOR PETERSON HIGHER EDUCATION in Indiana has become a big business. Gone are the days of small collegiate enrollments. The college with 500 today counted 250 before the war. versity of 18,000 numbered 9000 just six years ago. Collegiate training has gone on a mass production basis and there is every reason to believe it will continue. :
The uni-
WELLS, president ot taken advantage of it due to! WHETHER {the plentiful supply of jobs.
.| tinued increase in enrollment. His| IN EITHER way, registration will .{view is more optimistic than that rise until it levels off on a plateau. in student numbers. Virtually every |
any reasonable bid accepted. I 0f some educators who feel that president Wells attributes this anregistration will drop as the G.I | ticipated growth to:
ONE: Collegiate background has grams which will run from $50,000 8 mass production basis. The vet-
proved advantageous progress.
to worldly
TWO: Following world war I, en-|ghortages and labor difficulties cur- [sity have caused a change
rollments
the opportunities
THREE: By like analysis, chil-|ago still are shells in many in-|{men as well as educators. Hoosier the next few years, college attend-|dren and future children .of cur-|stances. ance figures will skyrocket, Presi-| rent students will be ready for col-
lege in ‘15 to 20 years.
FOUR: Higher education proved, Bill ; ; {during the war, to. military forces or higher edifation who have and foreign nations that it de-
COLLEGIATE TRAINING ON MASS PRODUCTION BASIS— Hoosier Education Is Big Business
velops national and unity. FIVE: Advanced education is be-
coming the common heritage, part
leadership
|
| 1
|
collegiate body. Most of the stu|dents on campus toddy, however, |are distinctly different from pre-war | {collegians.
Strike Truce Debate on Radio Tonight
By FRED W, PERKINS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Nov, 12. — Basil Manly's plan for a year's armistice in industrial warfare will receive its first public discussion in a radio program tonight, Mr. Manly will be questioned hy Harvey Brown, president of the Ine ternational Association of Mas chinists, a big union: formerly in the A. P. of L, but at present unaffiliated. . \ ! Edgar L. Warren, director of the U. 8. conciliation service, will act as mediator, endeavoring to find as many points of agreement as pos~ sible. The discussion will be impromptu. »
Zo
_ THE PROGRAM will be carried
over by the Columbia Broadcasting System from 0:30 to 10 p. m. (Indianapolis time). The subject will be, “Is a Strike Truce Possible?” Mr. Manly's proposal, made public by The Times, has gained much support among federal officials who see ih it a possible means of ending a condition which Mr. Manly described as follows: “The industrial warfare which has been waged throughout the United States since V-J day 1s rapidly wrecking our national economy and threatens an era of chaos and depression that will soon bring disaster to the American people,” Rn .N . IN HIS OPINION, “a period of substantially full and uninterrupted production will feed and clothe the people, relieve the housing shortage
of the American way of life. Stimu-| It is not that veterans like the gnq largely restore normal price {lated by the G. I. bill, similar laws current conditions, it is that they |jeyels”
{will be passed on either a state or federal level. This will offer collegi-
ate training for all American youths to make the most of crowding and | armistice”
who desire it. It will eliminate the last economic barrier to a democratic education. . - - OTHER educators |agree in detail, it is obvious that they anticipate no great recession
Hoosier college and university is {striving to launch building pro-
to $5,000,000. Government restrictions, material
increased. These persons rently are hamstringing expansion {school administration. No longer offered moves. Many schools have perma-|does a college or university have 1 send | nent projects, sanctioned by the|its head high in the realm of
scheduled for completion months
are geared to accept them. i The veteran has been hardened | {unsatisfactory housing. For the! most part he is mentally and| physicaly more mature; he is not as interested in the rah, rah of {college life; he is in school to learn |and learn as fast as he can to {make up for the years lost while in service. " » . THE INCREASE in enrollment has placed collegiate education on
eran has added a note of sobriety.
All of these conditions of necesin
The leaders must be business
It was noted today that No. 1 in Mr. Manly’s “essential terms of an was largely met by President Truman Sunday. Mr, Manly had said: . “Artificial wage and price cone trols must be removed. The huge and complex machinery of American industry cannot be geared up to 1ull speed ahead if it is hampered by the red tape of bureaucratic cone trols.” » >» » THE OTHER terms are: TWO: Production must be une interrupted. If we would live, either as a nation or as individuals, we must produce. We cannot long cone sume more than we can produce, and the cost and price of any come modity are dependent upon the volume of its production. THREE: Management and labor alike must agree that all issues
institutions have recognized this
Meanwhile, student bodies make {fact and several new presidents
“ best of makeshift substitutions. | have a business background. Others »
have surrounded themselves with
THIS . MIGHT have created 8 men who know the world guiside {distinct problem with a normal collegiate walls.
APPEAL FAILS ON HOUSING J0B
Only 15 Plumbers Report; Plan New Parley.
Only 15 plumbers showed up. at
Stout fleld again today to work on the 324 uncompleted veterans’ hous- | ing units. His appeal to plumbers plumbing contractors seemingly unanswered, Mayor Tyndall planned a meeting at city hall with plumber employers either today or tomorrow. The mayor said the issue which is throttling the housing project is whether non-union plumbers can be used. H. L. Freyn, plumbing contractor for the project, said his organization employs union men and that much red tape would be involved in hiring non-union plumbers or subletting his contract. Deplores Crawling Pace “The mayor's idea of putting nonunion plumbers on the job is fine,” said Mr. Freyn, “but I don't know what can be done about it. I hope there is some way we can work it out.” The session with the plumbing contractors was recommended by the mayor's advisory housing committee after many plumbers said they would work on the project if their regular jobs would not be endangered. eit Deploring the “crawling pace” in construction of the units, Mayor Tyndall asserted: “We've got to force a showdown on the plumbing bottleneck without delay. Our veterans must have homes this winter."
TEENAGERS TO HEAR MUSIC RECORDINGS
{
evening of recorded music to be presented at 7:30 p. m. today in Wilking studio, 128 N. Pennsylvania st
Don Shelhorn and Beverly Dady, co-chairmen, have arranged a program of recordings. Adult chairman is Walter Whitworth. Committee members Helen Cowen, Shirley Peacock, Re-
becca Lane, Rex Fordice, Henry Badger, ‘Delores Hayes, Margaret Curtis, George McCreay, David
Fahey and Patty Joy. The activity is sponsored by the park board.
1-YEAR FELLOWSHIP OFFERED GRADUATES
WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 (U, P). —One-year fellowships leading to a master’s degree in public health were offered to qualified college
service today. ‘ i They will cover tuition, travel expenses and an allowance of .$100 a month, They are open to citizens between 22 and 40 who have 8 bachelor's degree. . .
x
Teenagers are invited to another
include!
graduates by the U. 8. public health |
THE DOCTOR SAYS: Carelessness Causes Many Deaths—
Practice Safety in Your Home
By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. (a simple fall may fracture the hip {of such a person, putting them in
HOME ACCIDENTS resulting from carelessness and poor housekeeping rank first among accidental death today. We must practice safety in our homes if the accident toll is to be reduced.
and! Falls account for more than half
the fatal home accidents, and the majority of them occur on stairs. Other danger centers are the yard, kitchen, bedroom, porch, and basement, in that order. 8...» ” STAIRWAYS SHOULD be well lighted and provided with hand rails, and children should be taught use these rails until they are able to navigate with safety. Stairways should never be used as storage places, and playthings should never be left on them. Doors leading to stairways should be locked if there is any danger of their being used by mistake, especially at night. Every home should be provided with a stepladder to be used in procuring objects which are kept beyond reach. A combination stepladder and stool will prevent many kitchen accidents. » . ” SCATTER RUGS should not be placed on slippery floors. This is
especially true if elderly persons|
causes of disability, and,
bed for months. Burns are the second most common cause of injury and death in the home, and careless use of gaso-
Mothers should point the han-
line is largely responsible for them.
dles of pans toward the back of the stove, to prevent children from reaching up and pulling down hot liquids on themselves. » = ~ WASH DAY brings its toll of accidents. Children often stick their hands in wringers or moving ma-
JUDGE HEZZIE PIKE T0 SPEAK AT DINNER
Judge Hezzie Pike of superior court. 2 will be principal speaker at a victory tirkey dinner sponsored by the Wayne Township Republican Women’s club tomorrow at 523 N. Belle Vieu pl Mrs. Dewey Hoss, president, has invited all Republicans and has named the following committees: Hostesses, Mrs, C, D. FPansler, Mrs. Roscoe Barnes, Mrs. Frank West, Mrs. Waldo Parmenter, Mrs. John McReynolds, Mrs, Love Benefilel and Mrs. Cora Flack. Dining room, Mrs. Charles Peevler, Mrs. William Mundy, Mrs. Ruth Fansler, Mrs. Mary Helen Bastin, Mrs. Dorsey Fogleman, Mrs. Otto Nall and Mrs. John Heaton. Kitchen, Mrs, Byron Carter, Mrs. Alyce Evans, Mrs. J. M., Hillman,
Mrs. Lowell Hines and Mrs. Ray-
are members of the household, for mond Barker,
Mrs. Mary Money, Mrs. Roy Corwin,
chinery, or fall into a tub of hot water left standing on the floor. Bonfire burns result in many injuries and deaths at this time of year, because children are permitted to burn leaves unattended by adults. Medicine cabinets are a common source of poisoning, due to carelessness in keeping partiallyused prescriptions and dangerous drugs on hand. It is a good idea to get rid of all medicines which are no longer needed by burying them, not by putting them on rubbish heaps where little children may find them. » ” » PUT THE garden tools away in a safe place now, and have gas stoves with leaky “tubing i One of .the most dangerous articles to have about the house is a frayed electric cord, from which a fire can start readily. Heaters without adequate guards should not be used, and ‘all gasburning appliances should have a vent to thé outside, to prevent carbon monoxide poisoning. Smoking in bed is still the most common cause of home fires.
SILLY NOTIONS
By Palumbo
‘CHA
i ma. HEOTTIRA MATCH
Matches should be kept in metal boxes where they cannot be reached by children. yf The practice of safety in the home will pay rich dividends in {reducing the number of accidental
|injuries and deaths this fall and
| winter, { » ” » | QUESTION: Would-a malignant |growth in the breast cause pain? !T have a lump in the breast, and |I don’t know what it is. ANSWER; It is usually necessary to remove a breast lump and examine it under the microscope in order to determine its nature,
BARDEN TO ADDRESS ACCOUNTANTS GROUP
Horace G. Barden, president of the Indiana State Certified Public
the Butler university accounting society at 6:30 p.m. Thursday* in the Hotel Warren. > A graduate of the University of Wisconsin, Mr, Barden has been as-
Accountants association, will address
which cannot promptly be settled by conference shall be submitted to arbitration. This implies a joint undertaking that awards shall be |retroactive to-the date of submission and shall be final and binding for a period of one year.
must also agree, during the period of the armistice, not to attempt to change their respective status as regards union recognition, closed shop, membership maintenance and other similar issues, FIVE: Management must undertake to establish machinery through which individual grievances may be quickly and equitably adjusted, and labor must assume the obligation of preventing or speedily squelching ‘outlaw strikes’ and all forms of ‘slowdowns’ or other product limitations.”
We, the Wome
Dreikurs Book ‘Must’ Reading On Marriage
By RUTH MILLETT
IF THE BOOK by Rudolf Drei« kurs, “The Challenge of Marriage,” is as chock full of sound, mature advice as are pre-publication excerpts from it, it is the best wed ding gift you could buy a young couple. Even the title will probably be something new to young folks who have grown up in an era when marriage is commonly regarded as the romantic ending of a love story, rather than as the beginning of a challenging lifetime partnership. » » r
CERTAINLY, these are pointers any young married couple might well take to heart: ; ONE. “It makes no difference who is right or wrong. Each one’s willingness to see the other's point of view is a great deal more likely to “lead .to an agreement between the two than is each one's defense of his own.” TWO. “Whenever “any conflict arises, the first decision which both parties make — definitely although unconsciously—is whether to use these incidents as an occasion to fight, for hurting and being hurt, or whether to try sincerely to solve the problem.” THREE. “Confronted with any marital problem . . . the only point at which ‘either partner can start is with himself—What can I do?” » . » THAT ISN'T the picture of marriage young folks get today from best-sellers, soap operas, how-to hold-your-man advertisements, and divorce statistics. In fact, it is so rarely that one comes across a sound, workable philosophy for a happy marriage relationship that it is a privilege
| | Nunan, Kirin province; Manchuria,
sociated with the firm of Ernst & Ernst for the past 16 years. He is a member of the American Institute of Accountants and was recently elected chairman of the Advisory council of the institute.
to say:
able.
| BUBONIC PLAGUE REPORTED |, PEIPING, Nov. 12 (U. P.).—Bu|bonic plague has broken out in
| the newspaper
' ABOUT = NT"
©
Pao
By all means read the Rudolf Dreikurs when it is avail
MONEY ORDER PLAN * The postmaster general's ., washington, D. C. has announced U. S. postal money orders cai now payment on
book by
FOUR: Management and labor .
