Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 September 1949 — Page 12
a oT ~The Indianapolis Times
5 A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER
“>
ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE President Edftor
HENRY W. MANZ Business Manager
PAGE 12
Tuesday, Sept. 13, 1949
ge
ui, 3 jaispapets fing Euston;
Cr ps 2 ward Newspaper Alilance N and Audiv Serer of Glreulations
Give LACM and the Peoples Will Ping Ther Own Way
The State Department's Integrity
mmc FRI Phise_ of advancement in home-building has not yet provided the complete answer to hundreds of low-income | families who for one reason or another have to rent living
18 a ‘matter of the utmost gravity when a man of the
standing of Sen. Millard Tydings charges that certain official statements by the Secretary of State are “exaggerated out of all proportion and in most cases are totally
untrue,”
«
His references were to Secretary Acheson's charges that fully equipped Chinese Nationalist forces have been going over to the Communists. The Maryland. Democrat also disputed Mr. Acheson's claim that the Nationalists had lost no battles for lack of arms and ammunition.
On the contrary, Sen. Tydings said, the Nationalists
have had little or no equipment, and some of their armies have had “very little in the way of ammunition.” Where they have had proper equipment, he added, “they have fought with a great deal of courage and a great many
sacrifices.” : Since the Senator's
statements are the opposite of those
SPENDING ...By E. T. Leech
U. S. Paying Off
Nation Seen Facing Hard Decision on Foreign Aid
| WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 -Paying anyone
The payer in such cases puts himself into the hands orf what lawyers call the payee. To a considerable degree we have done this in the use of U, 8. dollars as the chief weapon against communism, It is a fact which this country eventually must face, Any proposal either to reduce or end the immense burden carried by the American taxpayers now brings the actual or implied threat that to do so may. lead to communism, It is time to decide whether this threat is genuiné; and, if so, whether we can afford to yield to it, America has spent 23 billion dollars for foreign aid since the war. Russia has spent nothing. Instead, she has looted billions from other nations.
Contrast With Russia 2
AMERICA'S billions have been spent to help other nations get back on their feet. Russia has seized billions to keep them from doing that, and to feather her own nest. We have tried to pick nations up, while Russia tried to knock them down. There is much evidence that the world
Under Threat?
not to do something bad is the worst possible ,
TAAAAAN
ark
stigan sity
You're Bein Page
d!
~
Hoosier Forum "1 do not agree with a word that you say, but | will defend to the death your right to say B.*
‘Denied Right to Speak’ By H. M. Thomas, 104 N. Chester St, In an oft-repeated quotation these words appear: “I‘don't agree with what yeu say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it."
Price po “. ' way to promote security or good conduct, Cona oy ia a virtus, ‘which: I. bs is fal en rered 8 carrier duly pit % fos Blackmail never buys safety. Even a child soon not being Ry because, mindful of the hy 19.60; SL Ouher Mates oe gor ean uncal will discover he can get bigger rewards or assure slogan, little help is given labor to publicise its Uazion dais 1118+ month hy vm thelr continuance merely by threatening to do a right of free speech. > Telephone RI ley 5851 thing he Is being paid not to do. 1 refer to the Taft-Hartley Law which denies
the right to use the words (freely or limited) “closed shop” in any contractual manner of expression, : I'm for the right of free speech to express yourself but so many people are denied tha right. p v & ¢
‘All Spawned in Regimentation’ By A. J. Schneider, 504 W, Drive, Woodruff Place Either “An Ex-Socialist” is ashamed of the glorious heritage of American birth, or he is still a Socialist too cowardly, to sign his name to his views. A study of socialism in theory and in practice refutes most of what he says. When he tries to pin the label “benevolent fascism” on the British socialistic experiments, he displays his ignorance. Basically, there is no difference between fascism, communism and Nasiism on the one hand, or socialism on the other, except the method of reaching the goal. All, to become operative and effective, are totalitarian and spawned in regimentation. Socialism is a device to arrive at the totalitarian regimentation by the so-called legal approach, while the others are born In revolution and
baptized with violence...
understands this. No country has gone . — p a. : z found in the State Department's white paper, he has chal- | Communist through free choice. In every A <O, fag! : t The British experiments are none of these, ; f that d t : Instance where this has happened it has been I" Woy tid ij {il ! i | [1 The greedy Laborites are deluding themselves lenged the integrity of that document. - a job of force done by the Red army or.by local , 11 { | | | | + tl with the dream that they are taking away from If Sen. Tydings is correct, the decision to abandon | traitors directed by Moscow. H ———— TL ALRURT the rich to give to the less fortunate. But the
China to the Communists has been based upon misinformation and statements which have been “exaggerated to an
almost unbelievable extent.”
Exaggerated by whom, and
for what purpose? Presumably, by someone in the State Department, with the purpose of discrediting Chiang Kai-
shek and serving the Chinese Communists,
Sen. Tyding's charges are far too serious to be dis-
Yet, in the face of this record, we constantly hear the argument that America must continue Its vast foreign subsidies, and even raise them, or this or that country will go Communist, The threat may be bluntly put, as it often is here at home. Or it may be more tactfully phrased along lines that the U., 8. must do this or that. in order not to endanger the position | of the democracies. Either way, It means the
pens
THE GLOSSARY about to be revealed fis designed for the use readers too young (or too illiterate) to get the gist ¢f Booth Tarkington's
of letters which after 46
OUR TOWN . . . By Anton Scherrer or Tarkington Letters Explained
governing a vast network of interurban trains, in the course of which he made enough money to buy and live-in a French chateau, All that
facts belie that premise. The Laborites have neither the stomach nor the courage to apply socialism as the book calls for it. Their own adherents would rebel. Likewise, the left wing elements in this country are trying to put over socialism piecemeal, and they are in a measure successful up to this time. But even those unwilling to think for themselves are beginning to see that the
path is not as rosy as pictured. And “I prediet”
as they should be,
i hs a I hs v . * > . . ’ " a AN -. . Ng, v ¥ : - oy . a ees Wi a Maly Wo i a. ~~ i. a eX ei = ‘ z my SS wii An ea i grids as iy wi .. a v v J d Lie . ty 5 : z ty i i : : : ; ‘ - 2 . z ‘ J j " ’ ; 3 ie e x Fa a | . { % a
i hing. . - s of what w c ighty empire is | that we are now experiencing the peak of hw f ual State Department rebuttal. Secre- | "ame thi | tic references to people and places men- remains o was once a mighty emp o g pe missed after the us al 5 ate » or's inf b Differen ou : | ye. pi A Uncle,” the collection the building (and train shed) at the northwest | socialistic experimentation in this country. The tary Acheson should be faced with the Senator's informants, iferent Decision corner of Illinois and Market. Sts. next moves will be back to the Constitution
and the truth determined before it is too late to do some-
‘thing about the Chinese situation.
If the State Department has been guilty of deliberate misrepresentation, there should be some new faces in that
department. ’
City's Progress in Homes
GRANTING that our aims were worthy and that our billions have done considerable good; we are fast approaching a dificult decision. Can we keep up these payments indefinitely? Can we afford to increase the burden? If we do either or both of these things, will we finally destroy ourselves in the trying? : Can-a minority of the American people — those who produce nearly all the wealth and pay
| years of hiding came
to light last week. ! Page 13, Paris: “Perhaps ou have read somewhere of the wickedness of the Latin Quarter?” “Home students took ‘me to their terrible dance-—-the Bal Boulier, It might have been Mr. and Mrs, Denny leading © the
Page 35, Florence: “Papa John and Nana” (Mr. Tarkington's parents) “are not so pleased with Florence as they were with Venice. When they come home, you may expect thém to spend most of their time on our own Grand Canal . .. They already view Mr. Davis in quite a new light.” :
First to Profit
THE POINT of this was, of course that
Although the whole scheme of socialism, communism, fascism and Naziism centers around a dictator, and the loud advocates, are peddling their wares solely in the hope that when they succeed, somehow they will be jostled into the seats of the mighty, which never happens. They’ are only fooling themselves. Also ‘the basic plan, as has heen proven many times, that these dictatorships subscribe to no ethi
nearly all the taxes finance the world? Can , . F. A. W. (Billy) Davis, president of the-In- | or morals what in their drive t iavi h at the Ejremen's Ball in Tom ) ) a atever In the ve to gain their THE first real progress toward relieving the seven-year | they underwrite the cost of defending about grand ary . Jremene. more proper.” dianapolis Waterworks (and canal system) | tyrannical ends. ¥ |
housing shortage in Indianapolis is indicated convinc- |
ingly in the “Parade of Homes" exposition here this week. The opening of 300 dwelling units for inspection by hard-pressed house hunters is a demonstration of what private industry and individual initiative can do in the way
of solving the home shortage. :
The fact that 3406 new dwelling units have been started here in the last eight months is noteworthy progress over conditions a year ago. It is solving the problems of hundreds of homeless families in the position to purchase
homes, :
space.
© ¥ » Ee THIS problem points up arguments over the issue of whether Indianapolis should establish a federally subsidized public housing authority to promote ‘construction of homes
for lower-income groups.
This issue should not be decided on any basis of political expediency to curry favor of voting bloes. A public housing authority should be considered only-on-the basis of ac-
three-fifths of its surface and one-third of its people? : ’ We owe more than 250 billion dollars. We are spending vast sums for our own ‘military system, for an enormous government and for a constantly growing program of social benefits, Immense new spending proposals are. being {| pushed. And our government already is running | In the red. Like other-nations, this country also faces a crisis. How long and to what extent can we keep up this spending without ruining ourselves? What will happen If we sink ourselves while trying to save everybody else?
Pressure of Threats “SWE MUST meet this issue frankly and not
must not blindly, and recklessiy fix our ign ajd policy to meet the hint or the threat t we have to give certain help. or certain nations will go Communist, If, after four years of tremendous effort and expenses, that Is actually the case, then our program has falled and we had better realize it.
save loss of liberty, (lower standards, ‘suffering and chaos? Other nations are smart enough to know this, Must we then buy them off to keep them from rushing to such a fate? If so, then
under.-the pressure of threats-—real or implied. |
| What can any country hope for from Russia, -
The two “proper” persons referred to were Mr. and Mrs. Caleb 8. Denny, parents of George L. who took over the running of Indianapolis when Mayor Tyndall died. (Except for one Andy Jacobs, George might be sitting in Congress today.) : When Mr. Tarkington's letters were written (1903-04), George's father had served Indianapolis twice as mayor, once in 1885-89, and again in 1803-95. He was a distinguished, austere gentleman underneath whose vest beat a sympathetic heart, especially for the poor and under-privileged. Indeed, on one occasion, fit bled. That was back in the days when the streetcar drivers whipped their mules” so unmercifully that it moved Mayor Denny (senior) to strip his vest and bare his heart. The result
was that it hastened the electrification of our.
transit system by -at least a quarter of a century. And ever since that day Indianapolis ‘mules have been reduced to the status of hauling garbage :
Flower Named for Her A8 FOR Mrs, Caleb 8, Denny, she had a chrysanthemum named for her, every petal of which was in its proper place, Prior fo that ~ time, the corolla of that messy flower was as contumactous and intractable as the hair on the heads of N. Pennsylvania 8t. kids. Page 35, Florence: “I refrain from mention-
would be the first to profit by the Tarkington's visit abroad. Page 62, Rome: “The palaces of the Emperors had steam heating. The plumbing ran through the walls and was excellent; in one place we saw sections of fine piping, beautifully joined. There was a name stamped on it which I thought must be Aneshaensel & Strong but it proved to be ‘Domitian,’ the Emporer who had it made.” J : The firm of Aneshaensel & Strong, operating on the ground floor of the Dennison Hotel, was the first in Indianapolis to treat the art of
. ‘plumbing euphemistically and with a style the
like of which hasn't been seen since. Indeed, they invented a nomenclature that made it possible to discuss plumbing in polite society. In their language a soil pipe was a ‘conductor of “efffuvium,” a philological ‘trick that enabled
© them fo capture the trade of the sacerdotat caste of Indianapolis society. Today, there is
nothing to compare with their elegant deportment uniess it be the feeble imitations now practiced by Indianapolis undertakers. Page 71, Naples: “I was mot surprised a little later when a grizzled, barelegged old fisherman approached me to buy a horse. It isn’t quite the sort of horse you see on Meridian St. and, in faet, doesn't look terribly like ‘Haute,’ ‘Booth,’ ‘John,’ Donald,’ or ‘J. F." . . . because it's a Sea Horse.”
Quite irrespective of the criticism of the private enterprise or capitalistic system by “ExSocialist,” it is the only known system which provides an incentive for man to work and do, And so long as that happens, the wheels of progress will turn, Take away man's incentives, and the wheels slow up — unless there is a bayonet in one’s back. The so-called security which the betrayers are always talking about, for the purpose of throwing dust in one’s eyes, Is the very destroyer of incentive—and once we attain the acme of security, the ones who cried loudest for it will be first to wish they did not have it. So long as human beings are what they are, the private enterprise system will be best, offering as it does a wide range of Incentives to attract the greedy, the miserly, the Jecell and kind, and the Indifferent ones in
What Others Say
BAH, ‘there's no real boxi kids--they don't know how to ay punch, how to stalk a man and wait for just one good opening. They get out there and slug for a few rounds with powder-puff punches and one of them goes down. —Former world’s heavyweight champion James J. Jeffries. * eo &
| our vast aid program has failed. and more | ’ : P Flo Io We ay nts, . ra ————————rgiimemarmecereto BMA coe Aer) A» _ing the price of the fabulous Christmas gifts . . : IF THE world is to move forward, m tual led proven by facts - a merely aps A An dita, v would. “METER tor Had @haght -for—his- nephews + Literary... Whimsey. eins smn AG TAGIOUSEY, MAY MON must rely DIT LL i sr i" . 5 An impartial commission, composed of members ex- | Ny Dp “lest you should go and brag to the McGowan THIS one's a cinch except, maybe, for the | the ministers, but must accept some responsibil. verienced in finding these facts; might provide the answers : | girls.” } crytic initials. “J. F.” stands for Julius F. Pratt, | ity in the church themselves.—Vij . I g ght p Used to Disadvantage The girls who appear to have awed the father of Ruth Pratt Bobbs. He was a N. Penn- | Alben Barkley: ke Provident Is mor
on the controversial question of whether Indianapolis needs
THERE is no evidence that it has failed.
| i | 1 Jameson kids were the daughters of Mr. and |
sylvania St. neightbor, apparently acceptable
* > o
istration. — Sen. William F. Knowland (R.
a low-cost publie housing program. t-But there is much evidence that many people | Mrs. Hugh McGowan whe lived in the big to the Tarkington-Jameson circle. Moreover — CONGRESS s = ) _ have come to like our doltars, and will not make .| French (Loire Valley) chateau at 1305. N. unless my memory fails me--J. F. was an execu- people best oui ut Intormation from the Heat a full effort to stand on their own feet so long | Delaware St., the present scat of the Knights of tive officer of the Indianapolis Gas Co. It's | spoon-fed and given white vy x ” thas being It's Qa Two-Way Street as we continue to remit them. Also there is | Columbus. The house was originally built by food for thought that the public utility mag- | * papers by the admin-
So FAR-~out of the American, British, Canadian talks—
| evidence that our horror 6f communism is being used to our disadvantage the dole
by a technique which
Hervey Bates Jr, and designed by Willlam LeBaron Jenney, the Chicago architect generally
nates of 50 years ago should have provided Booth Tarkington with most of the literary ma-
referring to the white Cal),
paper on China. ®* ¢ »
1 8. ives v 0 | lmplies ‘raise or we will go [| credited with having thought up the basic terial for his whimsey. Shows how times have | I CAN sum . ] L representative have agreed to take two steps to | Communist.” i principle which made the American skyscraper . changed. Lump all our utility men together | clothes for HR UD Mus sid hs America's ease Britain's financial strain, Sometime soon we have got to reply, “0. K. | possible today and all they're good for is a gag of sorts. | bustier than last season's ns . mer and One is to simplify our customs rules to promote heav- Go Communist and see what it gets vou.” When Mr. McGowan came to Indianapolis hy way Shucks' I surely thought I'd have the space | Whole silthouet
fer American purchases of British goods.
It 1s to our advantage, as well as Britain's, to knock down all artificial - barriers which prevent us from buying in large quantities
that happens it will be possible to get down to a realistic and sensible decision on the foreign ald problem.
1
of Kansas City to run our streetcar system which at that time, was suffering another fit of melancholia. He ended up visioning and
to supply the necessary footnotes for Mr. Tarkington's. mention of Albert Goepper and the Chapman boys. Till Thursday then.
——— r———
has been pushed up and broadened in the shou]der, “ner by scarf drapes or those winged eolars, —Fred Mayer, in Paris buying models f chain of American retail stores. ¢ "3
TT ——————————— g
STEEL REPORT ...By Marquis Childs SIDE GLANCES
Dealing With Ghost
WASHINGTON, Sept. 13 Just as with an insurance policy.
those British goods that are priced competitively for sale ~ in our markets. It would help, along this line, if the British
By Galbraith | NAZI BUREAUCRACY ... By Ludwell Denny
f FRANKFORT, Sept. 13—The many is a double danger to- dem | minority of officials are ex-Nazis.
at the same time simplified their own trade restrictions, which in many ways are more onerous than ours.
». "» « » 8 . 7 | AS a second moye, our government has promised to
try to promote American investments in Britain and other
bureaucracy which rules Ger-
you Have to read the fine print in the report.of the President's | ocracy. An increasingly large
Steel Fact-Finding Board, The fine print, in this intance, is in
a lengthy footnote dealing with a ghost.
a sterling areas. Here again, uriless the plan is to send tax- _ It is a ghost that haunts American policy-makers and thdse atthe biredueracy as a whole retains the traditional German rer dollar h invest foll f } ) nm | who would influence that policy. In a footnote. Chairman Carroll ] ude that it is master instead of servant of the publie, payer dollars where investor dollars fear to tread, more will | g Daugherty deals with the theories of the late Lord Keynes who | According to the state personnel office in Hesse more than 27
urged deficit spending by government for public works as a cure for depression. Credited with greatly Influencing the course of the New Deal, the Keynesian theory is championed still by many CIO New Dealers. The root of the argument presented-to the board for the ClO Steelworkers Union was that only by a wage in-
per cent of state employees are situation is worse,
Official figures show that the number of ex Nazi ) - officials the bizonal economic administration almost doubled Detwerr pokes SE — | uary and May, when it was 58 per cent, }
depend upon what Britain and other sterling-area govern- | former Nazis. In Bavaria the |
ments do to encourage investment. American investor dollars will volunteer for duty on any front and in any clime where there is hope and good prospect of profit.
But no amount of official urging from Washington will | crease could the “recession” be prevented from becoming a de- dep nené State governments the propoggion 1s highest in the key 1 HOR 20 persuade Americans to risk their capital in any industry | pression. With steel leading the way, this would be an increase as finance, justice, schools. 14 opie that is under the threat of nationalization, as in Britain, | ‘Proushout industry. Using Ex-Nazis 11 Poem or in colonial areas facing civil war and revolution, -Even | Argument Rejected VARIOUS excuses are offered: Most of these officials Vers 22 Lterahi where such threats do not exist, dollars will continue to be | THE BOARD rejected that argument. This is certain to | only nominally Nazis, who had to go along with Hitler to keep Mw . timid when, because of tight monetary exchange rules, a pes aT wide : on the status of ardent Keynesians within ihn. Thats is A SNarage or axputienced ivi! Survants and 15 He star i : Ce : ; ‘uman Fair Dea | ’ , rate out these tarnt I” —~— profit cannot be realized in dollars—if there is a profit. While rejecting any wage Increase, the hoatd members leave ones. Finally the public demands their employment. Shey 17 Parsons : r | ——— A - . the delicate - task of interpreting Keynes entirely. to Mr | It is much easier for an ex-Nasi than for an ) Anoin 3 . . Daugherty, Far from bheing- scornful of the brilliant British with denazification to get a government job, Hn or — 19 And iw Vacancy for Trained Jurist seonomist, he refers to him as “The Master.” boycott against the alleged “collaborators” with the Allies, - 30 Half-en USTICE RUTLEDGE was one of the few who had Deen’ geciares that Tord Keynes never apmroved the vos a a wae | ata of ThE Daren Niger 1s the FURdamARIAllY anii-Demceratie +} promoted to the Supreme Court after experience on a |-Increase to offset the threat of a depression. | “mentation ofthe citizen as a subject of the authortanan re 26 Ares m lower court. His death arouses the hope that President | . The sivor Me Daugherty writes, “appears to li¢ in carry- | - still is the dominating spirit, : 27 Opera ( ) | Ing too dogmatically and rigidly the view of Keynes that wage T \ Norweg Truman will select a qualified jurist to take his place. The | rates in general are not only an element of ‘firms’ ebst but also | he ia gy Gmtiat acts fe fhougy the State were God and Cab. President's appointments to the high court,thus far have | an element in the demand for firms’ products. Many American | | by “duty” he is member of a caste, On the average his honesty 2 Suna been men who had distifigiiishéd themselves in politics | re: tah hank i and mide S1.VNEV Tate shangys woh | an 's. bie wiiciency, Wbin ihe laity of Authoritarian 20 Bxchan rather than in the field of law. In the argument before the Fact-Finding Board. the union | 1 : 8 premiur verace——g— an Fran X i” insisted that more Jdoliars would have to gol in wages into | Don tet Essentis There so lay of sruims S$ a5 oe Joris eligible for | the pockets of workers if they were to be able to keep on, buying 1 ; y Want Criticism - 32 Boats " ourts He 0 pric : “, 0 promaotio ne : der cul ourts, for -instance, the products of America’s vast industrial machine. Too late! | was hoping we'd get. home from the show before nl INDEED ti18 Yeey sincerity of his superiority complex makes 36 Palm Xi are such outstanding judges as Magruder of Massachusetts, | Darker E ic Pi 2 1 .- father: ton ep m almost immune to the democratic process. To him pubic 37 Passage ed Hand of N v York + | Darker tconomic | cture EN your father fixed the baby's eleven o'clock bottle! criticism Is not a healthy expression of a democratic right, but betweer Learn an ol New ork, Biggs of Delaware, Parker of ON THE other side, the companies stoutly maintained that | ~~ -— go Ee — subversive, . 41 Flower North Carolina (we opposed him once and regret.our mis- | a boost in wages would mean a corresponding boost in prices. | incfease the wages of their workers. Social insurance and pen- “The public is not competent to pass judgment. If encouraged 44 Guides ? le y hi : And with higher prices, the average citizen would be able to buy sions, In° the board's interpretation, contribute to the stability to do so, it merely will vent its orance and spite. ; e), Hutcheson of Texas, Allen of Ohio, McAllister of : pite. The result 46 Dress Mich De fc ia. Philli x ; fewer goods. Therefore the economic picture would grow darker. | of the economy at a high level of employment. YS will be loss of face for officials, which means the end of the state. 47 Expung igan, nman o alifornia, Phillips of. Colorado, Brat- | Chairman Daugherty concludes; : Lord Keynes' last visit to Washington before hiz déath was. +: “Say what you will about the Nazis, they insisted on respect 49 Before ton of New Mexico. There are several other qualified judges Flas longterm need is for steady economic expangion. Be- | in Navember of vy He believed with deep conviction that a | ‘for Officials and sol tr 5 : 50 Is displ 3 5 Lg : A iid __ | cause the effects of a wage-rate change Under present conditions | loan of leas than $5000,000,000 would fail to restore England n one state during the past 15 months there have been 250 * : on the U. 8. Circuit’ Courts, U. 8: District Courts and on | ure unpredictable, it seems best not to tamper now with the | to financial solvency. | court cases brought against citizens Yor “insulting an official” $1 Footiike the state courts. EE | general level of wage rates.” ; |] When a figure of $3.750,000.000 was agreed to he returned | In almost every case the official won. Fines ranged up to $100, 2 . Appointment of a judge of experience and recognized | There ix a slight sop to the Keynesians in the board's! to England with a crushing sense of failure and a deep pessimism, | and jail terms up to three months, Under the archaic and vicious VERTN . d y Le | emphasis that its decision on wages applies only “under present '- His gloomy prophecies smude privately at that time seen to | laws for “protection” of the bureaucracy, officials can intimidate 1 Revolve fan Somes Wold be needed morale booster to the judi- conditions I the companies’ cost of manufacturing steel de- | have been correct. It was too little, if not also too late. But = all except the hardiest citizens by the mere threat of suit. / 2 Arabian = .clary, and wou p restore waning confidence. of the pub- | clnes, then the companies will be faced with the necessity of a | nevertheless, as this latest instance shows, the Keynesian theory J. 8. Military Government tried in many ways to this ‘3 Afirma lic and the bar in the nation's ng trib P en ve en : . | is a powerful force in contemporary life, The brilliant, witty | traditional master-servant relationship to a oitl-- votes Be. rad : hig a unal. , TM®y will either have to lower the prices of their product or | ghdBt of an extraordinary prophet looks down @h our time. zen. But the evil is deep, and change is slow; a BR Filth o
4 —n \ : - ; , ‘A " \ . " Lier ; Fie » & wp - t do 5 : 3 Ee Z x z lL . opr % 3 i \ + f . Ra N ‘ . ¥ & . 3 . + 4 Wk - » aby aT E 3 ; ! 8 Ses, 3 ot v dhs . a 3 J 4 . a 2 - A 1 ; : . \ 2 > - ; 3 ru
