Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1947 — Page 22

| ‘The Indianapolis Times

. . » 3 ! .

~ _PAGE.22” Friday, Sept. 19, 1047 Ta ~~ ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE © President Editor Business Manager

HENRY W. MANZ

WE'RE WORRY WARTS HERE SEEMS to be a predilection among men to look with fear upon each succeeding gen-

A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER «E5Pe~

eration of the species. Thus each generation has acquired some label, such as “Lost Generation,”

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“Victorian Generation,” “Jazz Generation.” That is, up till now. But the present state of man's thinking and acting has earned him one all-embracing title. This title applies to young and old, up and down. the strata or society. Pres« ent-day man is “Worried.” All living generations are worried, We are Worry Warts as never before, Perhaps this state of mind comes with the fear of the unknown which the atomic bomb has opened. Our V-J day cheers of victory wege not full-throated, And each day since finds our wore ries affecting more of our thinking and activities.

Dr. Orien W. Fifer

of the Methodist church.

intendent. His qualities of quiet leadership and gentle understand-

major pastorates. Methodist and Southern Methodist churches, had been editor of the Christian Advocate—a position in which his early training as a newspaper reporter and his erudition were assets—was a member of the board of foreign missions and a delegate to many general conferences. At several of these, he was chairman of the committee which assigned bishops to posts throughout the world. During the -y¢ars he lived in Indianapolis, he coptributed much. \

‘ . ’ Ominous F anything more were needed to awaken America and the world to the danger of another war, President Truman

The President radioed orders from his ship at sea to Washington to swear in Secretary of Defense Forrestal immediately, He then explained to reporters for publication that his surprise action was caused by the international situation. Because of conditions abroad, the President as commander-in-chff of the armed forces considered it unsafe to wait even a few days for the scheduled ceremony of putting a single cabinet officer in charge of the military unification, which hecame effective yesterday.

” . - fa NH LL citizens will understand more fully the gravity of the situation if they will read every word of Secretary Marshall's portentous statement to the United Nations general assembly Wednesday. a ; After all these years, Americans know George Marshall well. They know Re doesn’t talk loudly and loosely. On the record he is a master of military appraisal, and as secretary of state he has access to the most complete information on foreign conditions, He summed it up thusly: “In place of peace, liberty and economic security, we find menace, repression and dire want.” Men are wondering “whether a new and more terrible conflict will engulf them,” = He was specific. He nailed “the illegal assistance” furnished by Soviet satellite neighbors to Greek guerrillas. He called this under international law ‘a hostile and aggressive act.” He spoke of Russia's “abuse” of the veto power, of her “frustration of the collective will” which imperils the United Nations. He named Korea and other danger spots. Russia's blocking of international atomic control he described as an “ominous fact.” ’ When President Truman says the foreign situation forces an emergency swearing in of a secretary of defense, and the careful secretary of state on the same day uses the word “ominous” to the representatives of 55 nations, it is serious,

world war tomorrow. We do understand it to mean that Russia, in many places and in many ways, is aggressively creating conditions which can explode into war.

» nv » » » » AMERICA must be prepared. That is why Secretary Marshall is appealing to the United Nations for collective security. That is why President Truman at the same time is looking to our own defenses. Gen. Mark Clark, speaking here this week in connec-

tion with observance of the 160th anniversary of the signthe “insidious” growth of communism in this country.

negotiations, and obviously was convinced the Soviets were not acting in good faith. And Gen. Clark should knew, because he has negotiated treaties with them = PA

Old Story, New Angle HENRY MORGENTHAU, latest New Dealer to tell all

from his private files, has started his by-line series in Collier's magazine, Those. were the days: Russian

wh.

no

able in that it reveals so little that reporters didn't write at the time. For instance, Mr. Morgenthau tells-how, in 1936, Harry i Hopkins “confused nedd with politics.” Just before the November elections, the WPA rolls increased. Then, soon after President Roosevelt was re-elected, 150,000 people were loppd off." Tom Stokes, a New Deal sympathizer himself, exposed just such political-relief shenanigans in The Times when they were going on and for doing so was damned by New Dealers and won a Pulitzer prize. He reports that Henry Wallace's show in the agriculture department was the most inefficient of all, in terms of costing dollars to spend dollars. Even at blowing in taxpayers’ money; Hank was snafu. And whom will that information startie? : There's a keynote in Mr, Morgenthau's disclosure that Mr. Roosevelt once suggested making Tommy Corcoran director of the bydget. And a good nifty, considering Mr, Morgenthau's own record, is his reaction: “It took my breath away . .. I felt sure he (Tommy the Cork) knew very little about finance and could-not be relied upon to keep a tight rein over the spending policies.” Maybe that's going to be the most fascinating angle of Mr. Morgenthau's series—his self-painted portrait as the - Stern Watchdog of the Treasury but with a heart of gold; a sort of glassy-eyed budget-balancing sound money funda‘mentalist who knew all about finance but was always being carried away by his Better Self, or something.

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JNPIANAPOLIS has lost a distinguished churchman, civic leader and kindly friend in the death of Dr. Orien W, Fifer, formerly superintendent of the Indianapolis district

Dr, Fifer, who formerly had been pastor of the Central Avenue Methodist church, died yesterday at the age of 79 in the Methodist hospital, of which he was one time super-

ing brought him many honors from his church, including He was active in unification of the

We do not understand this to mean that Russia wants a

ing of the American constitution, sounded a warning against |

menace, no atom bombs, no V-2 rockets, no runaway prices. |

So far, Henry the Morgue's story seems chiefly remark-|wage and income situation, move $ 2 ' . Ja 'than half of the purchasers of only real estate as a business, but

Ral re mat se

We even concoct things about which to worry when we exhaust the popular supply. We certainly have a right to be greatly concerned about domestic and world events. A healthy concern and participation are what bring about , workable solutions, But we dwell on things over and beyond our capacities to do good, 80 much do we concentrate on the fetishes of our Worry Wart cult that we are becoming a strange nation of Introverts. How often have you walked down your own street lately and had as many as two of your neighbors call out a “Hi-ya-Joe"” greeting? How often have you bothered to stop over at a neighbor's backdoor for nothing more than to talk? We are too busy worrying to live—live, that is, in the full sense of the word. One fellow I know complains that even folks who mow their lawns these days often get so engrossed in their worries that they don't even take advantage of a passerby's ear to enjoy a respite from their mowing. It's a vicious practice when we drive ourseives that way, The worry over atomic energy, or bread, cannot

And Secretary of State Marshall have given the warning, | =

| | . : » 5 ’ : : " . | In Tune W ith the Times * account in full for this malady. It may be that the old vaudeville character had something when he cracked, “It's a case of mind over matter—I don’t mind, and you don't matter.” But whatever

it is, now is the time for all good Worry Warts to shed their fretting ritual and dispense with this

characteristic of our age. THEODORE L. SENDAK. # » “ SUNSET Now blue velvet curtains Bteal across the sky, Closing on the ending day, Foretelling evening's nigh. And. in the far horizon There ‘shines an orange disc, Surrounded by strange figures, A land behind the mist. But now the curtains falling And night is drawing nigh. The amber light is fading, The day has said “Goodbye.” ~ALICE M. SCHEFFLER. . ~ ~ » Colder weather will permit rich men to display their wealth by wearing bits of real butter on their vests. on» THAT EXAMPLE of the mislaid prepositions was not exactly correct. An editor of The Saturday Review of Literature said his son was the only person he knew who could end a sentence with FIVE prepositions, The quotation was:

“Daddy, why did you send the book I didn’t want,

to be read to out of up for.” ~OLIVE ENSLEN TINDER. : » » . - Cash savings from a few mealess days could fill a piggy bank.

Some of That California Sunshine

on FG MpTIes-St: Alpert Salm way

do not agree with a word that you say, but'l will

defend to the death your right to say it."—Voltaire.

Question Recent Times Article

By Charles T. Stewart, Director of Public Relations, National Association of Real Estate Boards.

men. The record of the past few months, which has béen made. {during the abandonment of un|sound government programs, vindi-

long history, ‘and a dismal one, in!

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| SURRENDER, DEAR

H! ‘He's only 8 DOG! We'll start him off right; no house dog, this one. We'll leave him outdoors, loose, the way all dogs should be. Well, these first few nights, maybe, he can stay in. After all, we are strange and he is such a little puppy. He'd howl all.night in that dark garage. As for his food, we'll have absolutely no pampering on that score! He'll just have to eat table scraps and dogfood, and like it. None of this raw hamburger and liver every day business for our pup. Nor will I warm milk and beat up eggs for a DOG. Oh, maybe I could do it for awhile until his appetite becomes adjusted. Look at that ex_pression! Give him another hite of your steak! And another ‘thing, he ought to play with his rubber bone and ball, and quit dragging things out of the closets, We just CAN'T have him gnawing the rugs and furniture like that. (Look how important he is, trotting through the house with that shoe) Ha! He trots sideways, on the bias! Oh, let him have it to play with. It's an old shoe, anyway, , . . . (Puppy, I surrender. You sleep under our beds, refuse your dogfood, drag laundry through the house and tear Up our papers; you scratch your fleas in our best chair and you get by with it,

Why? I don't know, unless it's because such adora- |

tion as you show us could not help but be returned.) ~MAYROSE HYATT. ~ ~ » With seven vice presidents, the United Nations general assemply should be able to keep fighting for peace without a war,

- » . 8o far the biggest postwar surplus seems to be trouble. -

o » » Inflation will be stopped when buyers of new cars quit peddling them at the higher second-hand’ prices.

IN 1895, DR. JOHN N. HURTY had his drugstore on the northwest corner of Pennsylvania and Ohio sys. A little farther to the west and on the same side of the street, in what was then known as Doctor's Row, ‘was the office of Dr. William N. Wishard, The postofice was on the southeast corner :of Pennsylvania =

the P. M. The U. 8S, Marshal, Willia mH. Hawkins, had his office in the same building. The Model clothing store was on the southwest corner of Wash{ington and Pennsylvania sts; the Bates House on the mhorthwest corner of Washington and Illinois sts. All of which is by way of setting the stage for Prof. Paul Alexander Johnstone, a professional mind reader who came all the way from England to

_|enlighfgrt us with his bag of tricks.

Prof, Johnstone said a rumor had reached Europe that Indianapolis. was a town made up mostly of.

.Iskeptics and that he had come to remove the stigma.

Invites Group to Bates House

ACCORDINGLY, "SN “TIBIA “of the

"day before he was scheduled to appear at English’s,

Prof. Johnstone invited a collection of representative citizens to meet him at the Bates House. When they assembled he proposed that they form two groups, one of which was to remain with him. As for the other group, he invited them to go to {a physician of their own picking, get him to write |a prescription, and have it addressed to some druggist. That done, they were to place the sealed prescription in a lock box of the postoffice, and hide the key. After which Prof. Johnstone promised to drive blindfolded through the streets of Indianapolis, find the key, get the sealed letter,. deliver it to the druggist to whom it was addressed and fill the prescription himself, . The foot-loose committee went to Dr. Wishard and had him write a prescription—anything that popped into his head. It was sealed and addressed to Dr, Hurty's drugstore. Postmaster Sahm gave the committee the key to lock box 40, and into this was placed the sealed envelope containing the prescription. The key was then hidden in a back room of the U. S. Marshal's office. : Upon the committee's return to the Bates House, Prof. Johnstone was blindfolded and led to a waiting

IN WASHINGTON . . . By

WASHINGTON, Sept. 10.—Most of today's demands for bringing back your bonny OPA to you make a pretty song, but it's largely nostalgia for the good old days of 50-cent beefsteak, putter and eggs, and it's wishful thinking. There.isn't a chance that a price control law can be brought back, either dead

or alive. . Congress isn't in session, and therefore wouldn't

cates that opposition. Government| pe gple to do anything about it for four months. That control of home production has 2 may be too late.

Your editorial of July 27 reflects a sympathetic understanding of other countries. There is no reason| Would Freeze at Current Levels

some problems that concern the real estate business.

did not have when you wrote the editorial.

You state the private enterprise has been unsuccessful in providing

He low-income housing. - The bureau of the census report, Series H-46 thousand of population than is! amazement just how unpopular high prices are. accused Russia of a take-it-or-leave-it attitude in treaty No. 1, May 16, 1946, shows that the median rent for all occupied urban enjoyed by any other nation (and They may come back to make some red-hot speeches

It convinces us to think that it will work any better

%

that you will have an open mind to certain facts which obviously you here.

The real estate men of whom you

produced for us more dwellings per!

YOU CAN BET your bottom, inflated, 50-cent dollar that the congressional price investigating committees now barnstorming the country aren't going

write operate the industry that has|to find any new solution for the high cost of living.

They may discover to their own but nobody else's

dwellings in the United States is $30.25 per month. This means that N¢ldentally more than we had at demanding lowgr prices. But as President Truman

half of the rental housing in the United States rents for less than that have given America figure, This is low-income housing, and it is good housing. The same census report *hows that 93" per cent-of ‘the Urban. dwellings: Rrswitite the

REO TO AR AEA Sa

“out Tieed -of MNIOY Yepatrs~Records of the fedéral housing Editor's—Note: administration show that 60 per We published cent of the purchasers of privately

comes of less than $2500 per year. Estate Business

|The same agency's figures show that| Trouble.” last year, with a vastly improved

privately built homes sold under every home owner FHA mortgage insurance went to Which occupies a {families with annual incomes of css than $3500. : Your inference seems to be that [somehow government housebullding, {of the Kind-proposed by the Taft. | Ellender-Wagner bill, can produce

[the commodity at costs lower than discussed.

on thoughtful and provocative article built homes under FHA mortgage by E. T. Leech, editor of The Pitts. insurance before the war had in- burgh Press, entitled

Mr. Leech, in a friendly but critical manner, explored some of the. ills he believes

companying letter, Leech by Charles T. Stewart of the keted for the price of used houses

National Association of Real Estate ith the taxpayers making up the

Boards, presents some of the views difference. y of the country’s major real estate !rVINg to “guide” the theory of the;

men on the same problems Mr, Leech [¢ll0W Who says: “The government

the time of Pearl Harbor), They|

the highest!

~~

4 (1s a |. an ®OT Far from wanting to keep things! PAR® A jst exactly as they have been, | these men are now using the newwon opportunity to step up produc- | (tion to surpass all previous records; to produce more homes in modest! price ranges; to put home ownership within reach of additional millions, | They continue to oppose the “solu- | and every family... that calls for government pros |

home. Th - | written Te Mp. duction of new houses'to be mars

best gpiifiy oth Some weeks a; a : this

“The Asking

Real

Is for

affect not

They see no virtue in|

|owes me a house.” | | 1 these theories should ever pre-'

!private building costs. What are the (facts? Mr. Philip Klutznick, while ‘he was federal public housing commissioner, told a congressional subcommittee on housing - that the {average monthly cost to the tax-

{built and owned housing to sub|sidized tenants is $36.31, or $6.06 more per month than the median

| | other types of building, The record | vail, Mr. Leech, then it will be the {shows that as controls have grad- potential users of houses that will (ually beer removed, the rate of new be really headed for trouble. | home building has accelerated until now-—free df control—it is.rolling |at the highest rate in 20 years. It . payers for supplying government. ;. with pointing out that this Become Our Dictator year's figures represent real houses, my R. 0. L., City pi Tg whereas a considerable part of last! Ome thing I would like to know |

A Labor Leader Wil

y , w { NE | (private enterprise rental. ~|Yetks Statistical new houses Were |i; what would happen If’ we had|

temporary structures, madeover barracks, and trailers. : | | Last year so many builders had ®0Y other labor leader in the White blunders which began at Yalta whem the United to give up dfter taking out “uild- House. ing permits that the bureau of labor labor man work for nothing. :

You state that real estate men | “fought for scrapping all rent conItrols.” A look at the record will show |you that the National Association of Real Estate Boards has never ad|vocated an abrupt end of rent control. It has consistently urged a {cushioned process of gradual rent decontrol.

|statistics warned

|John L. Lewis. or Phil Murray or|

They would make the

the public’ that] Can't the laboring men see

DET “7 Twould have to be At present price levels. That might"

has learned by now, prices just can't be talked down. Even if congress were of a mind-to pass a law

ratio of home ownership on earth, restoring OPA, it might not do any good.

7-31 price ceilifign-were- put back of everyThing, they:

stop prices from going any higher, But it wouldn't make them any lower. And it's lower prices that are wanted—not a law freezing: today’s high prices. Experience with wartime "price controls showed that, whenever a fixed, dollars-and-cents ceiling price was put on any article, this maximum price tended to become the minimum" as long as the supply was less than the demand. Goods sold on the black market always went for more than the legal ceiling. «If price ceilings were reimposed—with shortages of ‘everything still pretty acute—the black market

SHANGHAI Sept. 19.—The United States is on the verge of its greatest diplomatic defeat since the end of the war. If it comes about —and many well-informed Americans here in North China fear that it will— it will involve transfer of all Manchuria to the undisputed control of the ese Communists as

lwell as .all other areas north of“the Yellow river.

Etpanded Red Influence IT WILL PUT SOVIET RUSSIA in a dominant position in the Far East and eventually add another 200" million people to the Soviet bloc. It will be a bitter finale to a series of American

States bartered away China's port of Dairen, the South: Manchuria ‘railway and Port Arthur as the price for getting Russia to enter the war against

totals of building permits could no through the unions? If they don't Japan. longer be considered as an accurate see soon they are going to wake The second blunder was the American attempt ‘index of new building: Now, with up with a bang. the restrictions and red tape dis-| We are going to have a dictator tion government here with the Communists—

through the Marshall mission to bring about a coali-

You state that .private Industry carded; building time has been cut/and I bet it will be a big labor something which has not been successfully accom-

“fought to end all =-knowing that this would channel! disa : scarce materials into many struetures less needed than homes.” As programs a matter of fact, there is but slight shortage

between home construction and

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JS ARR 0 S01 0 6 OE a Nb rao ha

-controls in half, and the costly delays are man.

You concede that government

opposition presented by real estate United States:

Not the working man, but! the labor leader. “| They talk about the Commu-|

aimed at solving the nists running the unions but it rtage have been unsound. Ye: seems they are, Fascists. I hate competition for building materials you wonder at the vigorous kind of

oii

plished anywhere in the world and something which the United States itself has been unable to do, even in tiny Korea. ; The third and final blow is the effort—which is now underway in some American -quarters — to convince Generalissimo Kai-shek that he

Chiang must relinquish all territory north of the Yellow river

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OUR TOWN . . . By Anton Schoen

Lifts Skeptics’ Stigma Here

“OI 008Y BT HVE © brought down: ese demar aren't making @fY headwiy bécatse they bump into

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“+ Donald D. Hoover

CIRCULAR COURSE TO CHAOS

1914—Eyeing Eruptions In Europe's Unity 1915—Watchfully Waiting with Wilsonian Word. 1916—Keeping Country Clear of Chaos? 1917—Beginning Business of Being Brave 1918—Fighting Piercely for Family and Fireside 1919—Hurrying Homeward Happy and Hopeful and Then 1920-1938 ; 3 Bickering, Boasting, Belittling, Be-damn-ing, Fighting Our Friends, Forgetting Our Foes, Smugly Saying We're Safely Secure . Until -1 - 1939—Eyeing Eruptions in Europe's Unity 1940—Watchfully Waiting with Wishful Words 1941—Keeping Country Clear of Chaos? 1942-Beginning Business of Being Brave 1943-44 Fighting Fiercely for Family and Fireside. 1945—Hurrying Homeward Happy and Hopeful ¢ and Then 1046-1947 Bickering, Boasting, Belittling, Be-damn-ing, Fighting Our Friends, Forgetting Our Foes, Smugly Saying We're Safely Secure 7?2?2?7-—Circle Continues Its Cuurse to Chaos. ~DUMPY.

- » . TRUE WISDOM We have attained true wisdom When we realize .., . That all wisdom Was not born with us; Nor will it cease With our demise. ~LYDIA ROBINSON. » » » x Italian Communists have decided to help their prostrate country by raising hell instead of food.

hack. In the meantime, a copper wire had been attached to his wrist and to the wrist of one of the members of the committee. Everything was now ready for the ride through the streets of Indianapolis with the blindfolded professor and the manacled' citizen sitting on the driver's seat. The rest of the committee was packed in like sardines in the body of the hack.

a run. Jim Corrigan, the corner cop, thought the proceedings a bit-irregular and did his best to arrest therhack, but the horses were too fast for him. They went at a break-neck speed down Washington st. At the Model corner, they met a carriage with a dreamy driver who wasn't looking where he was going. Quick as a flash, the blindfolded professor threw his horses to the right and missed having a eBllision worthy of the front page. A moment later, the professor “had to yell to some newsboys to get out of the way. At this point, one of the committee members on the back seat begged to be let out,

Leads Way to Marshal's Office FINALLY PROF. JOHNSTONE stopped at the postcffice. ‘With the handcuffed citizen at his side, the British mind reader left the hack and led the

committee. to the U. 8, Marshal's: office; as a matter

of fact, straight to a well-worn rug under Mr. Hawkins’ chairy ! : He lifted a corner of the rug and in the accumulated dust of four years, picked up the key. With this he proceeded to lock box 40, inserted the key, and pulled out the sealed envelope, drive was resumed. ' Entering Dr. Hurty's drugstore, Prof. Johnstone requested the apothecary to open the envelope and read the Latin-lettered prescription’ to him. With the committee at his heels, the professor immediately went to the prescription counter, Before Dr, Hurty was hep to what was going on, Prof. Johnstone laid his hands on all the necessary bottles: He was still blindfolded mind you. He weighed the quantities minutely and carefully deposited them in two distinct piles. After some fumbling “In “the drawers. of the counter Prof. Johnstone finally found a wrapping paper to his liking. Not content, he fumbled some more until he found another paper of a different color. Into these two papers he funneled the two compounded piles, and carefully wrapped them. It turned out that Dr. Wishard had prescribed a dose of old-fashioned Seidlitz powders.

Peter Edson

No Chance of Price Control Law

which would develop would make the old wartime black market look like a bargain counter. Prices on a black market today would really teach the consuming public the meaning of that ugly word, “inflation.” Any idea that a new,. peacetime OPA could roll back prices to what they were in June, 1946, when the old OPA passed out is likewise silly. OPA never did have any luck in rolling back prices in wartime, though it talked a great deal about the theory. Only roll-backs that were put over were done with the help of subsidies, That is, the taxpayers, through the government, paid the producers the difference between the legal ceiling price and the actual higher costs of production.

Consumers' Subsidies Unlikely IT IS HARD TO BELIEVE that the present econ-omy-minded, conservative-dominated congress would appropriate money for a lot of consumers’ subsidies in 1948. The only way congressmen might do it is if they thought it would help them get re-elected next year, First demands for restoration of OPA eontrols seem to be coming from union labor leaders who want “These demands

the generdl contention that any reduction in" prices by law must he accompanied by a similar reduction in wages: It doesn’t take even a kindergarten intellect to know that nobody wants to have his wages reduced, even if it would lower his cost of living. The public is now paying through the nose for the mistakes of 1946, when controls were thrown out the window. That man Chester Bowles, who had to leave town because he was so unpopular, is now entitled to the biggest “I itold you so” that was ever uttered, :

‘WORLD AFFAIRS . . . By William H. Newton Attitude on China Is Defeatist

to the Chinese Communists. There is a possibility that American aid to China will be conditioned on this proposal, It stems from a general attitude of defeatism about China which has gripped American officials here ever since the failure of the Marshall ‘mission. Among those who share this attitude of defeatism is the présent United States. Ambassador to China, Dr. J. Leighton Stuart. A Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer, now en route to the United States after a “fact-finding” mission here, was told by American officials that the national government should withdraw troops from Manchuria and from areas north of the Yellow river. a Neither of these men are sympathetic to the aims or methods of the Chinese Communists. Both are usually considered friendly to the National government. But both .are inclined to view the situation in the northeast as hopeless:

U. S. Aid Holds Ke COMPETENT MILITARY OBSERVERS here agree that carefully supervised American aid to. China, possibly administered by the military advisory group now cooling its heels in Nanking, would enable the generalissimo to. regain control of Manchuria and North . ih oa But they don't believe aid will forthcoming in tine or in sufficient volume .to dd the job. © ‘Their general attitude is one of defeat and despair,

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