Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 November 1947 — Page 18

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matically to mind when we think of Gen. Bradley. As top combat commander in the European invasion,

“doughboy’s general,” he enjoved in highest degree the

: ‘ iv Arogram -in Greece would also be gone. The little clique of the rich confidence and respect of his men. His new post gives him and the powerful in Athens would have won their battle to prevent the slightest moderation of their power and privilege. incidentally, is greater than that enjoyed by any American of wealth $riviiege of paying virtually no taxes. Mr. Griswold has his deficiencies. He lacks boldness and imagination. But his great virtue is that he is a person who believes in trying to get As Governor of Nebraska he was known as a good

a tremendous responsibilty. We know he will carry it ably and well, : Mr. Truman has namé& Car' R. Gray, Jr. of St. Paul to succeed Gen. Bradley as head of the Veterans’ Administralion. Mr. Gray, vice president of the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad, was the World War Il major general in charge of rail transportation in the European theater, and he handled that big job with distinction.

w ” . » > ~ HE job he is about to take on is one of the biggest and most important in this country. Last year the #eterans’ Aministration spent nearly $7! billion—a sum. larger than the whole federal government's expenditures in 1938. It employs more than 200,000 persons. The disbursement of billions a year in pensions, educational and other benefits, the management of a vast insurance business and the direction of a huge system of hospitals and medical services are only afew. of its many activities. In Mr. Gray, we understand, the President hopes he has found a successful business executive, willing and financially able to make supervision of the Veterans’ Administration a long-time career. We share that hope. The living veterans of America's wars now number more than 17 million. The American people want them to have every ad‘vantage and benefit to which their service entitles them. If or “thats to be assured, the government agency responsible for “fedling with them must be managed intelligently and with fearless honesty. iy We regret to hear that Maj. Gen. Paul R. Hawley, who has been medical director of the Veterans’ Administration under Gen. Bradley, is thinking about resigning and returning to private practice. Dr. Hawley, who was a recent visitor here in his home state of Indiana, has fought bravely to keep politics out of such matters as the location of veterans’ hospitals and the - selection of their staffs. The country owes him much gratitude for that and will look to his successor, if he is to have one, to continue his good fight.

a

Speaking of Gallantry

: AMONG other things, the Senate's. Ferguson committee '

rumors must have their origin with those who want to see Mr. Griswold he proved removed or with those who hope for failure of the American program. himself a truly great military leader. Long known as the oficial soutces deny any intention of forcing his resignation.

If Mr. Griswold should go, the hope of any real reconstruction More Greek than the Geeks.

since it includes the

the job done. administrator.

Moving slowly and surely, Mr. Griswold has tried to correct some of the more obvious inequities in the Greek economy. after considerable difficulty, in bringing about a broadening of the base of the government, which had been pathetically weak and incompetent. When I was in Athens two months ago, it. was clear that members of the little clique who felt their power was threatened would do everything

they could to get Mr. Griswold removed,

Side Glances—By Galbraith

This privilege, corruption in a Near East government and the folly of trying to think| of Greek democracy in terms of Western democracy. Mr, MacVeagh's slogan is: “Don't for heaven's sake disturb the status quo.” The ambassador was one of President Roosevelt's friends out of the C--vfused Powers a Grave Mistake same Groton-Harvard background. Like the late President, he considered | : (himself a liberal. His rich and ultra-conservative family regarded him Now, apparently, Mr. MacVeagh is trying to |atone for his former liberalism by embracing the traditional past in

{as a dangerous radical.

Greece. . He succeeded, |

UNFORTUNATELY THEY HAVE had an ally American Ambagsador, Lincoln MacVeagh. Mr. MacVeagh's code as a minutes came on the

gentleman and a scholar would never permit him to stoop to intriguing | Griswold’s office to say, “I just wanted to stop and pay a courtesy call with these people, but:{yechas been _in Greece so long that he is almost. before leaving.”

; | He is close to the royal family, and his friends #re all among the | 3 American Mission's Army Group and supposedly in sruling clique in Athens. He talks about the inevitability of intrigue and om hder of the 8 P

Gen. Chamberlin

fcharge of the military

of sorts in the 'on the plan for revising the Greek National Guard.

The ‘other ten day Gen. Chamberlin left, when he went to Mr:

never did call on Maj. ' Gen. Ww. G. Livesay,

program. It would be hard, even if you deliberately

{tried, to give a more damaging picture of confused authcrity to the | politically conscious Greeks who are watching this experiment.

THE ORIGINAL MISTAKE, of course, was in leaving Mr. MacVeagh las ambassador at the same time that Mr. Griswold was sent in to head up a mission with a large anfSunt of aid to distribute. Mr. MacVeagh

should have been honorably retired. Granting his great merits as a

| 4A man with less patience than Mr. Griswold would have resented scholar of Greek and (the kind of cold-shouldering that Mr. MacVeagh has seemed to try| deliberately to show toward the head of the aid mission. An extraordi- in Athens was badly organized and poorly staffed. :

nary example of this treatment has come to me from Athens.

General N._:tly Saw MacVeagh

A COUPLE OF MONTHS AGO, the U. S. Army sent Maj. Gen.|

Greek history, it seemed to me that our Embassy

Here is a significant case history for Congress, which is now faced with deciding how the European recovery program is to be administered. This kind of division’ must be avoided. The reaction of most members of Congress who visited Europe last

Stephen J. Chamberlin to Greece to doa little, independent policy- summer is to take authority away from the State Departmefit and put

'making—as though two rvial policy-makers were not already enough.

0 |

at Mr. MacVeagh's home. for exactly 40 minutes,

| winter's relief, responsible leaders

political group—the Communists.

\

European messes, we continue to

and compassion. '

ee gene

| abused the United Statés government, vilified our leading men and lied outrageously regarding our motives for offering them. our help. A generation ago, such unbridled attacks would have brought a note of protest from the abused government and a threat of violent | reprisal in case the attacks were repeated. Today, we take it without | protest as being the frothings of a singularly untruthful and abusive |

‘Despite our longing for our traditional aloofness from these noisy

selected for us by providence. We remain charitable in face of abuse, because we have been chosen to demonstrate the qualities of mercy

Destiny Clearly Revealed

OUR DESTINY WAS never more clearly revealed than in the 1k he the U: speeches of President Truman and Secretary of State Marshall, the first before our Congress and the other before a Chicago audience. In | each case, the people's representative correctly interpreted the wishes of the public, so far as European relief was concerned. We Want to help our. friends in Europe no matter waht they say about us. + This national devotion to the cause of charity ‘cannot be written | off either as enlightened self-interest or a coldly calculated ‘risk. It ‘has been described dn those terms by many Americans in high Those are the traditional terms of diplomacy and power |

lit in some new government corporation or agency, That does not solve Gen. Chamberlin arrived in Greece with Mr. MacVeagh. He stayed [the role of the various ambassadors. A little study of what has happened He flew to Turkey with Mr. MacVeagh. in Greece should convince anyone that the best way not to administer Altogether, in the two weeks he-spent in Athens, he saw Mr. Griswold a program inh a foreign country is to put two Americans in power with

authority vaguely divided between them.

Uncle Sam—Abused Samaritan

SOME WEIRD EFFECTS have been produced on the stage of | international relations this week. The good neighbor has been held | | up to contempt and ridicule by those he is helping. \

In France and Italy, which. are to receive the largest share of this |

We seem to ‘be

of “large political organizations of two wars.

Why didn't we keep move forward along the path ment its war effort

t has gouged huge Now that

tory from their neighbors. in loans and charged 200 per cent interest.

By Hal O'Flaherty

They coldly calculated the risk involved

the only people on earth sufficiently matured

morally and physically to want to be charitable regardless of later returns. We have made no real territorial a We have helped both our friends and our enemies to regain their strength after the exhaustion of war,

Labeled Fools“by- Cynics

T | 3 i . FOR DOING THESE things, we have been called fools by the I cynics and the militarists both at home and abroad. They ask us why we do not claim as our right by conquest all the bases we used during | the war. Why we do not force hungry peoples to feed themselves?

a hundred thousand prisoners of war and work

them at slave wages? * These are things, we are told by the cynics, that others would do in similar circumstances. Russia, for instance, did not fail to imple-

by political action in the post-war world. It

acquired huge new tracts of land. It works prisoners of war as slaves.

reparations from its defeated enemies. Why

States ever learn? e special Congress has been called and aid to westérn Europe has been assured, we can answer, with due humility, that we havé been ordained to demonstrate the truth of our inherited beliefs. | We do not intend to meddle in Europe's affairs indefinitely. no other nation’s property, and so far as we are able we will restore to the rightful owners the property stolen from them during the war. This is sometihng unique ‘in the relations between peoples, The strongest military power on earth does not believe in militarism.

We want

~The _ Indianapolis Times|™ _ YG Lh En . { coup iA = In tune _ | Hoosier Forum | wedd _° + PAGE 18 Monday, Nov. 24, 1947 . er ee Semin : mr ; rn Ln LANNE Eel. § AFC ou e 4 0 W. HOWARD WALTER ‘LECKRONE HENRY W, MANZ With thie Times ; : 3 arr . “I do not agree with a word that you say, but I T ‘B a Editor © — Business Manager AA Y : * : iA ary | ‘will defend to the death your right to say it." 0 € A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER a READING FOR PLEASURE : ; Ta : Gf Ka : : : Maxin - «am - . EA F( ) h EA : ¢ . 3 - . : 3 ph / - wv oo B m imnapolis Times Publishing Co. 314 W Marylan PLEASURE is a large word, embracing may mtn ‘Shocked by Watts Deeds’ eco Indianapolis. Times Ng Ye meanings. There are pledsures of eating, of EE By The 16th Street, Mth Street, 16th Place Come Mae Mann ®. Postar Zone 9 drinking, of conversation with friends, of climbing. munity Ampre t Club, by Moe tame the bri Member of United Press, Scripps-Howard News: ..,,1ains of seeing néw stars, each nonorable Cleanon.. R a Mrs, Alma Summerfield paper Alliance, NEA Service, and Audit Bureau of , delightful in its’ place and season; but of lenn : 5 15th P) a. ceremony Sa Ctreulations all the occupations’ invented for the diversion ! is Setwbers ys ine pe Breet, b Race, an Paul's Episco] Price In Marton County, 5 eents a copy; deliv. of civilized man there is none to be compared Jah fee 3 ras y pe Veen! a William Burr ered by carrier, 25c a week “| with reading. J is ‘mot only Bufficient In itself ; ero c ns coh adrnapoll, oa hon parent - The bride i Mall rates In Indiana, §5 a year; all other states, | hut is the servant of all other delights, and an ? c 8 we Bont Poni Bhan oo and Mrs. Ch U 8. possessions, Canada and Mexico, $1.10 & | acceptable substitute therefor when they must are -as a — 0 poo N * man, 6206 N.' ‘month, Telephone RI ley 6551 | either be ehjoyed at second hand-or abandoned Hagie case o Alls as are Teaper b bridegroom's Give LAght and the People Will Fina Thew Own wey | altogether. ’ ” 3 Mich. - Our dwelling place may be an Iowa crossroads In organizing our club, we felt that trying to Mrs. Willia . . | where’ a glant cornstalk is the nearest thing to make a better community in which to rear our sister of the Aust Indianapolis S% | a mountain within two hiindred miles, but in our children was one way of helping them to beconie matron of Ba . "a. | books we can climb Everest or explore the plateau useful, happy, law-abiding men and women. We gold taffeta, e a ‘Frightened City ? 6f Thibet, watch Hannibal with his elephants or feel that every boy and girl, regardless of race Thie bridesn : a ’ / Napoleon with his cannon as they tempt the or creed, should have the advantages of decent feta, were Mi JE don’t like it much when a national magazine deg passes of the Alps. Our everyday journeyings housing, uncrowded schools in their immediate Uadelphia: ' b the bounds of our own quiet neighborhood, and recreational facilities. Parents Ph : fa i i “fi ity.’ may never pass the 5 0 own e ' Minn scribes Indianapolis as a “fi ightened city, a8 one did count et at will we can roam the Highlanas need equal opportunity to make a decent’ living dale, wo. . - ntry, yet l 8 fridge, Winn st week, after a tragic outburst of violent crime. | with Montrose or watch the galleys of Caesar as for their families. We know that some children, Katherine Fi Unfortunately and this we like least of all . . /every- | they struggle for a landing on the unknown coasts even rite, ese Sqvantuges, ig Become Diohiers The best 1 % fx vo BY of Britain. because ey are mentally ill and n special, Flin jing that magazine said about us was true, and’ we who 0 privelege of reading whatever we may trained care so that they will not become menaces Boutsl. Pini ve in Indianapolis know it was true, | happen to choose, for any reason that we may to society. Ow Mich. | care to assign, or without assigning any reason + We want to offer our co-operation as an x | We are happy that May or Denny was able to reply to | at all, is certainly not the least of our liberties; . organization, in any way that it can be used, in New Fark: 1 hat publication, within a period of hours, that the criminals | snd it 1s, 1 think, the very absence of any SPECIAL any program decided upon by the aroused citizenry Beard, Flint. ho had brought on the immediate reigh of terror here | compulsion that renders it the greatest of our SESSION p “| of Indianapolis to reduce .the crime wave now The bride 1 ; . pleasures. gripping our city, and t develop an effective veil whic ad all been found, had been arrested, nd had confessed. ~FRANCIS H. INSLEY. —_— / Es a wd vel bl i dH Gb » ¢ ¢ @ taffeta, it ha JV HAT happens from here on remains to be geen. In the MARTHA CLARE . and a rosepo ' ’ : . AVRAETAA AWRAVIRE 1 sp — ‘ ’ : : past it hasn't been a foregone conclusion around here The older children daily make thelr merry Don't Like PSC Ruling Her vei ot at a criminal who was arrested and who confessed a crime trek to school, By Lester C. Nagley' Sr. Nashville A Naty 8 a he penalties the law prescribes for such But Martha Clare they cannot take. + The recent decision of the Public Service Comould then suffer the pen Ue d 1 I tora Ro atl She thinks it veri sruel, mission of Indiana, denying the petition of the Valley Niles vimes. There is Howard Pollard, or na ance, wih 8 , "Why cant I go along with Paul, I have Scenic Bus Line for a rehearing of its case stinks po Aha asn’'t even been tried for a killing he confessed back in my books, you see. to high heaven. The Scenic Bus Line sought to pL i \pril, 1946, or paid the nominal fine imposed upon him the “I just can't understand at all, why get an extended franchise that would enable it to will be at I ’ ’ . t bil Wh re. d Barbara's leaving me.” load and unload passengers in downtown Bloom- Flint. ear before that for stealing an automobile. en we. do Her ciiubby arms ‘are. loaded down with ington, thus helping students of Indiana University og atch a dangerous criminal here it nearly always turns out papers, books, and such, ° —— Endre and other passengers get to Indianapolis or go ? Riri hat he has slipped through the fingers of our system of Adult assistance brings a frown, I dare es Sh — | frofn Indianapolis to Bloomington, and the brid : i a i ’ not even touch But, the PSC says “No.” God knows that there p 8 4 “ h ' » mouth Colle; ustice a good many times before, and gone unpunished for Her “mem'ry work’ or Raggedy Anne (She OUR TOWN “ 0 By Anton Scherrer is a need for better service in Bloomington, for the of Michigan. ¢ | good many lesser crimes, thinks the doll may go ‘ y * . lie | student body at I. U. has grown so large that al- Beta Theta I . : 7 3 al To school) According to her plan, the ; most 14,000 students now are enrolled. Those sturecord, is there a reasonable expectation , m ost 14, Nor, on’ the rec rd bs aia dnd arrested y IL Ex sky's the limit. So oO ern Oo e Ul in f 1€S = dents need improved and added service to get to Clubs hat a murderer will ever be foun and arrested at all. ol With broken crayons and a ball she's apt SIXTY YEARS AGO when I was a kid, the South lecture tour at the time when, somewlere around- / School, and the Scenic Bus Line wanted to help ‘ept for/the cases where the killer stood by the body with to go outside. Side had the fanciest house in Indianapolis; what's Janesville, Wis, he ran across a house known as | them. GOP he weapon in his hand waiting for the police to come, there | I shouldn't be surprised at all if she more, the only one of its Rind around here. It was Goodrich's Folly. Its walls were made of small stones, Ray Allen, owner of the Scenic Bus Line, wanted £ap lod in {itis t would try to hide a house bullt in the shape of an octagon with a lime and sand which, when mixed with a quantity A to help out in that ‘situation, but the PSC says, . 1aven't been many homicides solved in this town over a And stow away upon the bus that stops cupola on top and belonged to the Hildebrand family of water, received . " “No” and again set up a monopolistic program tor P amily . the name of “gravel wall.” Then 1 yeriod of .years. beside our gate. Which, if I remember correctly, was the penultimate and there, like a message sent from heaven, Mr. A the Greyhouse Line which runs out of Bloomingx ® RE Oh, what commotion! What a fuss her part of Hildebrand & Fugate, Fowler, conceived the idea of an octagon house, ton over Road 37. There would not have been a : . : Sawa “SV.d presence would create! who did a right nice business M . i " : duplication of service by the Scenic Bus Line, as On F O there are 2 dozen o! more murderers walking the | *They summon Teacher Nennert then to selling hardware in the whole- to Maybe): Gus $TpHen 8s Just ws 11eD 11, beceuse that line runs over Road 45 out of Bloomington to St streets of this city today. . . unsuspected. The man | ease w little mind. sale district of §. Meridian St. bottom and work up. The spherical form, he rea- ad 135 into Indianapolis. Fy Highlights who killed a WAC corporal in. a downtown hotel, for in- I ow 1 aud be iy When he The outage house was si soned, is the most beautiful architectural shape if for The Son of fe BSC ay eventually deprive Shegule n 3 i urse on duty in a city : ye Sled oa . no other reason than the economic fact that jt in- = us Brown County folks of bus service,” for the . tance. And the man who killed RN e v J Our little Martha Clare would learn, but east side of the street between closes the most space in the least compass, the Scenic Bus Line needs those long hauls out of When he aospital. The list is a long one. Too long. gay she'd be at last Sputh and Merrill, where the corollary of which is, of course, that the octagon is = Bloomington in order to stay in business. publican Chu Why? With invitation to return when four Mooney - Mueller - Ward people the next most beautiful inasmuch as it represents Mr. Allen is forced to go into. court to get a poi Fo hs : ‘ : more years have passed. . now do business. It dominated the nearest practical approximation to the spherical reasonable decision in this case, and I hope that 3 ti oF at There are some good men in our police department, and ~MARCELLA HIBNER, the landscape like a lighthouse not only beeaiste of form so far as building is concerned. the judge on the bench will slap down the moguls a Ce i od police work done | ¢ & & its singular shape, but because of the topographical : : : : upon occasion there has been some good p k done | ALL HUSBANDS KNOW fact that, back In those days, the ground in that part "*~-vy Efficiencies Noted on $e PSC and see that justice is given Mr. Evangelical there. There are some able men in our county justice de- | of Madison’ Ave. Was anywhere from § to 10 feet : dent. His artment. and in our various courts A decade's long: a score’of years is longer still: above the level of the street. WHEN IT CAME time to write his book, Mr. > 0-0 Africa.” p ’ : a ae An age compute of greater length than either Fowler emphasized the gain in sunlight obtained by : li : Mrs, Fern They are hindered d frustrated by system thev one I haven't the least idea when the house gas built ooo Winter Day ight Time? the busin ey are hindered and Irustira y a sw : th an eight-sided house when compared wit one re- at the busine An con was the time it took to build a hill: or whether Mr, Hildebrand had anything to do wi By Mrs. H. H. Browne, Indianapolis officers ‘will cannot combat. And men long centuries ago saw moon and sun: dictating its design. It is quite possbile, however, duced to four walls. Indeed, he made the point that Here's Si Open 18F 16 the Gover: ing will no The painful truth is that our bad record of law en- And ancient books, were told, record old Adam's | that the house was built as early as 1854, the year the corners of square rooms are dark and useless for I op e rnor, : he YR ne forcement and it is a bad record is the direct result sm ~ | following Amelia Bloomer's appearance in Indian- fyrnjture. Moreover, he discovered that the distance It is a known fact that the farmers do not ‘os . Jt : All these are short, compared to this (when all is apolis. And If thatbe a warped hypothesis, maybe a {raveled by a “weakly woman” in bringing up wood A 8Ppreciate the daylight saving time during the The Indis of an obsolete system of police and judicial operation. The Ri And done) ‘ ho book written by Orson Fowler in 1849 had something from the cellar to the parlor in a square house is Summer season. Therefore since the original idea Club will m We are trying to control the crime of a 1947 metropoli- 0 Jy wie ays Shel be Toads In, to do with it. nearly double that of an octagon house. In short, hy o help ed hay no J for “brunch’ i i -and-b r methods o od : - : : : Orson Fowler's “A Home for All or the Gravel Wall | , : : ness meetir tan community with the horse-and-buggy me a ELMER Mr. “~wler a Genius in His Way and Octagonal Mode of Building,” published almost | done about changing the season for the daylight social room. country town. : MR. FOWLER, the first white child to be born In a century ago, anticipated all the slick arguments A 5aving time. Those of us who work, say from Mrs, Char They can be changed . . . and made effective. Now Elmer was a fine big eat, the little village of Cohocton, N. Y., was a genius in advanced by contempwary architects—to such a de- | 8:30 until 5:00 each evening and do not own Artist will | T ’ h le of Indi li His fur was black an@ yellow. his way. For one thing, he made a fortune prat- gree, indeed, that it makes the moderns sound sort private cars, and who have to walk from two to play of pict hat'’s up to the peopie of Indianapolis. The rats and mice soon all were caught ticing phfenology. After which he wrote and pub- of “silly. three blocks from car and bus lines to our homes, time of thei Until they are corrected we face the prospect, agaih By this gorgeous'streamlined fellow. lished a series of baoks on rather intimate subjects, .—-As for Amelia Bloomer (the other suspect in the in sparsely selon Belshierwods, whieh it, plensy Maxime has : i i fri ity? indi > / : ark from 4:45 on—and when inha ts of and again, of being a “frightened city,” and of finding that The neighbors all loved Elmer. In hee Sons of Mi Sh De Rous: © Jer ox Suse), ue a) have Pleissd He ides op a Sctegen “hugdom’ are wide awake and on the prowl bership secr the rest of the nation looks upon us as a community that ' Hold ments = +. by the score, they were uttered. “A man,” said Mr. Fowler in his winter of 1853 to advocate the wearing of pants on | Would be very grateful if we could have daylight Mrs. Hom can't... or won't... adequately protect the lives of its own OE ‘6 gy i in Bway monumental treatise on matrimony, “should make his the part of Indianapolis women. At any rate, she | Saving time in the winter. : . St., will ents citizens. : . selection intellectually and love afterward. Let court- was pretty thicR with Orson Fowler and even more “This would cause us to arise in the dark of bian Chapte iki But . . . Elmer was deceivin’ re ing be done in the daytime—in your everyday clothes.” go with his brother, Lorenzo, who also dabbled in a morning, but it is so much safer on a dark p. m. lunch This you shall plainly see When he wis 40 years old, Mr. Fowler stopped phrenalogy. In her autobiography, for instance, Miss street, walking to”the car line with the ‘darknegs will Ral One morn I found my Elmer shepherding the lovesick. Apparently, he had Bloomer tells of attending a vegetarian supper on lifting instead of getting deeper. : in 3 Bradley and Gray Had kittéhs . . , numbering three! plumbed the depths with nothing more to reveal. which occasion Horace Greeley, Lucy Stone, Charles “Please, Sons ger this for the working people speaker ‘or : : —ANNA E. YOUNG. That's when he turned to.architecture. He was on a Dana and the two Fowler brothers were present. = —especially the ladies” sie gs HAT President Truman would select Gen. Omar Brad |— en SF — — es eee me = r— : Initiati ley to succeed Gen. Eisenhower as Army chief of staff k H - ® . : The Alph ; rity, wi wa, of course, expected. And he coud nat have choven + (IF@ EK Clique Hopes U.S. Bounces Griswo By Marquis Childs sort, better man. . : ‘Mrs. Paul : WASHINGTON, Nov. 24~Rumors persist that Dwight Griswold will : Thirfy minutes of that total were when Mr. Griswold was asked to ‘“ " “i - yp PH H oy will be Character” and “integrity” are words that come auto- be removed as head of the American Aid Mission to Greece. These Envoy Close to Royal Family come to the embassy to enlighten Gen. Chamberlin and Mr. MacVeagh St

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a : | hearings this week have proved that, while an act of Smee, | It persists in its charitable futestions, erie a tirade of invective x . Nf . : |: e— | politics. They describe quite accurately the motives of the old feudal | from the neediest among its former enemies. In its with Congress ay Ereate an officer, it takes something Tore o Your grandfather and | lived in a barn for a while after we were | lords and the kings and despotic governments which them | other nations, it clings to the principles passed along Mii new world ¢ create a gentleman, = pire married—but |. guess you wouldn't have much room in a garage!” | They were charitable when they were about to grab some teszi- | over the barriers of : :

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