Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 January 1952 — Page 18

‘President

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y Sli fig - oe iid : = . 4 , ” Gl 5 P : i - Bo i : = oh x ; : . : T : 4 Ji ; > : i Sh oy : i Ji = ; SU : FRIDAY. Ey ge a wa EAR BOS... By Dan Kidney. Perennial Performance: = Bv Ralburt TUd Lt pa ores: fe pr— «The Indianapolis Times + “loo” Perennial Performance By Talbot | Hoosier Forum | | | Big 1 TH be F SN an. “3 i") do_not agree with a word that you say, be b | To start : ] A SURIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER y = ; ; - ° THOSE 4 2 » % but | will defend to the death your right § Right! ROY W. HOWARD: WALTKR LECKRONE HENRY W MAN Worry Hoosiers NEW vep to say it Volare. © tJ | Right! itor usiness Manager : Tavecarrerstenasfisrssittensesestuanineiteniniss senses is T

4, 1952

"a PA » ~ y * PAGE 18 Friday, Jan. Pre " . ‘Owned and published dally by Indianapolis Itmes Pubilshind Co, 314 W Maryland St. Postal Zope 8 Member of United Press Scripps-Howvard Newspaper Alliance. NEA Serv. ice apd Audit Bureau of Circulation

Harvey Offers Opinion © _-~ After District Survey

" WASHINGTON, Jan. §—Tenth. District Hooslers the. New Year gravely. concerned about taxes and the Korean War, Rep. Ralph

hegan

ESOLUTIONS,

‘Two Cents Worth’ b,

MR. EDITOR: —- Ph . 1t has been some time since I last aired my. .

views through this column and I feel that it ig

again time, to ‘lend my two-cents wotth to the

citizenry of Indianapolis, Since a new year has begun, I should like to put in a few requests from the new year:

ONE—1I sincerely hope 1852 brings Wilbur, ' Young a copy of the second inaugural address of Thomas Jefferson and a copy, of the Ate lantic Monthly which includes the article enw * “titled. “Subversive of What?" I think Mr. Young's jaded opinion of Hoosier mentality would improve slightly...

TWO—I hope the new year brings a sense. of* duty to Gov, Schricker, duty not only to the Democratic Party, but to the voters of Indiana, so he will run for the Senate. Too many of us are fed up with the asinine antics of our two

Price ‘in Marion County 8 cents a copy for dally -and 10¢ for - Sunday: celiveied “oy carrié’ dally and Sunday 3% a week, daily only 25¢c. Sunday only 10c Mall rates In indians daily and Sundar $1000 a vear daily 3500 a vear Sunday * only, $500; all .other states. U8 orikeexsions Canada and Mexico. -dally. 4110 a marth. Sunday. 100 a .c0DY «

4 ‘Telephone PL aza 8551 Give Tight and the Peoples Wii Fina 1hetr Own Woy

Harvey, New Castle Republican; reported upon returning here, Mr. Harvey, who-has been mentioned as &- aw Possible senatorial candidate when and if = .8en: William E. Jenner - seeks the ,GOP nomination for governor this vear, visited each i county in the district which he has represented since 1947, “1 called at each courthouse in the 10th District and took. on all comers, about like

Hope It Isn't Permanent : VW HEN W. Stuart Symington takes on a government job the people who get first attention from him are the.

taxpayers. That's the reason Mr. Symington has been a trouble«*

a the strong-man WwWres- : . the "da wer : \ hlundering ‘bottlenecks "and hope for y shooter in the-Truman administration. That's ‘the reason ; tler at the old-time when Hod Bh can again be proud of her Senhe has been confirmed six times by the Senate—without Rep. Ralph Harvey SOUL Mr. Har: es. question and by unanimous votes. That's the reason it's ...’people disturbed’ "rn tie whole, 1 THREE—I hope the 11th District will elect A : I V , ; resent her in Congress. We too bad he ig leaving the government. found our people seriously fon: eyed Font what Er re since : i ' i o 1 s h ning to. them, he two things upper- > be ) C - Since Mr. Symington doesn’t waste time getting a job done. is. Bapperng bo. thers, Te ted ut Tier. ions 21 noth of Tous Ludlow, ince Wi e doesn't waste time trying to convert or coddle {orean War. They think their tax inoney is certainly ‘gave his all for his people. n urying Rez eT Party will wien . -uptionists in the government. He fires ‘em. ' being wasted, in many Instances, and that the FOUR—I hope the Democratic Party 100 Make Mi corruption: ts In g sy a F eo Cor Korean War and Truman foreign policy aren't wake up to the-fact that the Democratic Party 5 ~ When he took over the Reconstruction. Finance Corp, pp auino cence is a party of, for and by all the people . . . a 53g." after it had been riddled by influence peddlers and favor- Zo party of Catholic, Protestant, Jaw. SA ji qs” ! nt , : ‘hite, black, re A— iene givers, Mr. Symington said he wanted the office to bristle People Resentful i hy party OF ites we cannot 00 NewsBe with integrity.” A few employees inclined to take this THEY ARE disturbed-and resentful’ That long exist as an adjunct of any race or creed. 15 Make Mi lightly were convinced by getting dismissed. : : "is why I feel that of all the Central Midwestern FIVE—I hope the Democratic leaders Who 230 Curt Mas = 5 IN ly states. Indiana eould he fpost safely predicted have led us so successfully to disaster and de- — 113 Sing Sin MR. §YSINGTON not only demonstrates a belief in 1 Leif FePilion 1b, 2 it meiod Kor EE 3 eam Iv lev i 46 : ; | Rely and support a new clean group whic Ve : giving the taxpayers service, He believes in getting it at dn I see anything in the offing that is likely to Ang ed untaifted leadership and can win 30 Club "1! the lowest possible cost. He is one government official. ‘change the voters’ minds a I Si yTe cre In 1057, 45 Edward While Hoosiers are: horrified at the “tax . 200 Musiclan

who thinks a dollar ought to buy a dollar's worth of goods

SIX—I hope Indianapolis can somehow, in

thieves exposed in the Internal Revenue Depart- ‘the 15 : or services. ment. they are not making a partisan issue of some way, i a Gg alg 30 Bandstan . “ 3 $ "” 3 3 apne 1 < Vv - an A : . That led toute of the term "Syminglonisn” In far-off 1x oy on ny Ie nan DE ane so everything foul, :45 : : y apolis Anker and. § am ' 8 r § : ’ J — Singapore by those whose price-gouging Mr. Symington the Democratic National Committee, Mr. Harvey ; including the weather, Yul Sol be iin i 00 Paul We fought—the rubber and tin producers whose “high-as-pos- reported. od ’ door-step of the administration or 15 lat? : They view that with a certain amount of 3 : ; i Se poor Harry. :30 Robt. Q's sible prices he refused to accept. state pride, which is quite nonpartisan. ! : That is all I ask of the new year. ou, yea. 3 «45 “ of “isms” nd Washington. Most ' < $68,000 fast-buc safe am a hard-headed Democrat who is independen —— iD Cando { There es i tou idn’ ne ) i a mes ne itis DEFENSE son By Peter Edson enough to think for myself and to say what I 99, {alot of them would be mcre useful if they didn't exist. But the Nation vy DE ttaman Frank M. McHale n : -think to all who will listen and courageous 15 Sutter U : . 5 y Nation t M. 1 ini # government could use a lot more of “Symingtonism.” Let's ,,4 now bankrupt Frank Cohen Empire Tractor enough to forego the sanctuary of anonymity. 3 Buia y

hope the vacation Mr. Symington plans won't last too long.

Co. Philadelphia, brought more amused smiles than anger, the 10th District Congressman re-

Germany Holds the Master Key

which covers the vituperation of others in this column. ft

00 NewsGil

1 \ ported. ; ; T |- y i 2 : : t f 1 952 —Ronald F. Faucett, 834 Wright St. 1 We Sanita Capt. Carlsen—Hero Tose who aid peter 011 a 0 ings | Q EUFOP@ S FrOSPeCHs Tor vo uush Ay Gossip? pm, NE uies the word herd cautiously in these cynical times. nt JT SIh0 iotrments supe on Povobe shat the. obd-vears ave 3 paving mand time sping oon poston. I EIIOR an you and ng But Yio other 18710 Je Sdequate io desttibe Cap. Rust good years, the even years pad. Certainly Euro. » The fore BE of the western Fu- a Puno Times a ont individual a lis

‘Carlsen, who gallantly refuses to leave his ship—a ship battered by gales and lying almost flat on her side in the ferocious troughs of the North Atlantic. This is an epic of high adventure, of towering courage, that belongs, in the story books on a boy's shelf. It is a

“It is a healthy sign, too, that Capt. Carlsen’s valor

Election Spotlight

“I BELIEVE that President Truman, in_his practical political wisdom, made Mr. McKinney the national chairman because he realizes that the next election will be. decided in Indiana,

. Illinois, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin.

greatly in garnering these votes into the Democratic fold. I would say that his chances are the worst in Mr. McKinney's own state, however. “Only the acceptance of the senatorial nomi-

pean crops were better in 1951 than the year before. And more progress was made toward European -economic recovery, defense against communism and stability. The outlook for 1952 is not, however, generally held to be bad by European experts. Key

the opinion that many of the outstanding German proplems may be settled within the next six months. 2

ropean countries have been meeting in Paris over the holidays to try to iron out their difftrences of opinion. If they succeed by Jan. 15 or 20, there is hope that agreement on the’ European army can be ratified by the NATO council in Lisbon in February.

But the fact that the Schuman plan for integration of western European coal and steel

. production was ratified by the French parlia-

ment, 377 to 233, is taken as an {ndication that

thinks of you. You have fallen into the same steps as the Star-News “dig up or make up” any gossip against a Democrat. It is startling how fine a country we have and how prosperous it is with Democrats at the helm.

; - to the whole situation is Germany. And on - ; ! 4 . 7 : ~ : “These five: midland states account for 97 Lo } 2 : This will by no means put the European Stalin doesn’t even have to pay for propa= harkening back to the days when valor was never COTNY, iectoral votes. The President figured that et fhe URINER NIN oY.INe Weswern army in being. The -plan must first be ratified © ganda in this country. The newspapers, such as . when brave men battled the seas and did not desert their naming a man from that area ‘would help sone of east Germany, American offiials are of by parliaments of the six governments. The Times, give him all the free space he needs.

I have written many ‘letters that your paper refused to publish, Is it because you don’t agree with my views? ! Your paper, like the other two in this town,

AU

has captured the imagination of people everywhere. Behind ; : bl Firs x wat t 2 hir Ie P id t lined PAtlon hy Democratic Gov. Henry F. Schricker Hl ue Te aa . Ts Fo the European army plan will also be ratified never gives us facts. Just “organized gossip.” . banking counters, in machine shops and in streamline would give the Democrats a chance in Indiana. gfnoio” backed by Gen. Dwight Efsenhower. by France. The Schuman plan goes hefore the But this fine country stands in spite of all LOOK A kitchens, men and women have put aside their prosaic tasks And I understand the governor, who will be 69 pie ic" naw helieved so near solution that it can West German Bundestag Jan. 9. Present ex- your paper prints against it . .. because the @'Oven Tim for a moment to lift a cheer for Capt. Carlsen and to exult . When his term of office expires, doesn't want t0 0" 4iae4 by the North Atlantic Treaty Organ- pectations are that it will be ratified by from individuals here in America are the ones who: oven "0? in the glor f hi deed : come to Washington for the next six years. ization Council meeting in Lisbon, Portugal, be- 40 to 100 Yotes, This will indicate how Ger- count. ; , eet aele glory of his deed. “Of course even his foes in the Democratic ginning Feb. 2. : -* many may vote on the European army plan. —FEvelyn Walton, 2049 N. Meridian St. Piri. The British have been particularly touched by Capt: Party ould ice i Ropingte him v5 Sengton, Second task is completion and ratification ENGLA Sarat ais s vi). : th as they know he is the only Demo 7 of the new “contractural relationship” between sounds w! Carlsen’s lone vigil, for they are traditionally people of ~ .) , big gersonal popular vote. Even then, Western Germeny and the United States: Brit: ND... By Ludwell Denny a the sea and they can recognize perhaps better than most unless the*tfde turns. I do not think he can win. ain and France. For all practical purposes this . a + of the intrepid nature of vigil. vi >. O “But there are Democratic governors wno amounts to the conclusion of a peace treaty C I | i Y by U 5 even heat pid natur that vigil. Over here, of course, =, BC* (TC "0 fiiinots, Ohio and Michigan ‘wit the Federal Republic of Germany. | urcni races oug —~ N @ Oven nd we can bask in Capt. Carlsen's reflected gallantry because, who have considerable popular appeal. The WASHINGTON. 3 t ation 1 mt ‘> Joes 99 i i ica battle for ballots will be great in those states, IN, Jan. 4—Winston Churchill politically cannot afford to compromise Wi tomatieatl " y ein where Sen. Joseph Mec- w ave a har me here. President Truman the Prime nister on sever sputes whic while bak although he was born in Norway, he is an American from paste Toralials wil be gre ize 3 Target Date AL 4 mcr ra oy ha ” dloputes” Which

Woodbridge, N. J., and he is making Americans look good. But in a sense, Capt. Carlsen belongs to the world today. He is a symbol of the magnificent heights to which

Carthy has been made the issue. =i “8p far as Indiana and Ohio are concerned, Republicans seem to be all-out for the nomina-

TERMS of this peace contract are now being negotiated in Paris by representatives of the four countries in what is known as the “umbrella agreement.” If the drafts are com-

is deep in domestic problems, and Congress is suspicious of British policy. . There is an off chance that the unpredictable

are already election issues. * Mr. Churchill is no more free:than the President. His Tory Party polled only a minority in the recent election. He is trying to

Mi

Sen. Robert A. Taft. And the way Prime Minister now or later may revolutionize an individual can rise in a time of crisis. The whole human BO eT es jabor leaders are ~ Fleted early in 1952, Anal approval hii sil four British-American relations by proposing some- wipe out unfair charges of being a warmonger » 331 EX ate. 5& well as Capt. Carl ; : I rapping him, they must be afraid he can beat governments is hoped for by June. at is the thing approaching economic and military union. and Yankee lackey, which lost him a popular a —— race, as Capt. Carlsen’s employers, can take great Mr Truman or anyone else that the Democratic target date, at any rate. : But short of some such daring move, the = majority. He feels his political insecurity 80 comfort and pride in having him aboard. ‘convention nominates.” Obstacles to these two major achieve- . Churchill visit is unlikely to solve many of ‘the much that he bowed to the Bevanites on the = : juents are Noy Lopaidered. ” much ih the par outstanding problems of friction. left and the blimp imperialists on the right WF ure of routine details tha ere is e dou His main purpose in-coming here is said by pandering to anti-American reaction against ' Makin It E . 5 S . ° ‘about their satisfactory solution. In fact, some be to revive DE a im Ho U. "s. sod bases in Britain, though he g h asy or pies Views on the News American officials are now so optimistic over which existed between himself and the White heartily approves of those bases. :30 Early BI ETTERS writt : th cat : the outcome that they regard the much larger House when President Roosevelt was the oc- Withdrawal of British recognition of Red :45 “ ; en 1n is country to Americans in BEST wav for a Justice Department house- Federation of western Europe—intended to fol- cupant. He will fail. By temperament and China and a joint British-American policy in TT :00 Word! prisoner-of-war camps in Communist Korea are not cleaning to be taken seriously would be for low the new contractual relationship with habit, President Truman is not cast for that" the Far East is the key to closer co-ordination ‘5 vin censored by U. 8. authorities. But all ‘incomin ii the Attorney General to fire J. Howard McGrath. Germany—as being in existence and in progress role, and is opposed to it. .of their policies in Europe and the Middle : | ¥ ee . g -mail 18 right now. : Fast. If Mr. Churchill had a bigger parlia-- P 30 Feels § carefully scrutinized by Red censors before its ‘delivery to THAT new fletennion amp "The remarkable thing about this is that Less Fitted? mentary majority, he probably would defy 5 News in. Alabama cou e e Germany and France line up in closer agree- y : : ublic opposition to a break with Red China. : WS the addressees. Lo ne with former “Friends” of .the ment than any of the other western European Ing ig oe td American of For he se Peiping affronts to Britain, and i ho ~ Communist spies in the United States could not want a Justice and Internal‘Revenue powers. German government officials led by PY era re ee Me I he wants American support in the Mideast o Su Back fo better arrangement than that. All they need to do td Dery its secured A re oh proer military policy than he used to be. They think yo apt. lien. Maype he Te ons — insure safe delivery of military information to Moscow or administrator DiSalle that disturbed by any alternative plans that they LE he Sin warts Pethody is De Britain’s China policy soon. : : le pl Peiping is to address a letter to an American soldier in one 1952 prices canbe held to a support the Federation. Italy is for it. Britain (he past. ug Bgng at he ls aang in i fiton of the prison camps, keyed so it would be diverted by the 2 oF ye rise—if they $senis " be supporting the idea, though not “The Prime Minister's second purpose is said A Front Man 4 is Ore on . oining At. : to be to soften the hard-boiled attitude of Con- -HE PROBABLY will fare better here on —i00 NewsL Commun 1 censors. ; Se SEN. KEFAUVER hasn't First step toward the political Federation gress. A great orator, he probably will succeed - some economic matters than expected. .He will 90 fowl ossibilities of such abuses could be reduced to a mini- mcjally announced his can- of western Furope is to secure agreement _ temporarily. . : get more American steel; he may get a better 1 45 Let's mum simply by setting up a U. S. censorship office in San _didacy for the Democratic 03 hi Bugean sry, oe PODER Here de nor . Bu he is a victim of his own unique reputa- ‘deal on British tin and rubber. He may pre- 130 Give ar : : a residential nomination.. But - 18 ion. Congress, which did not read his cautiously pare the way for. more dollars in the second i ———————— Francisco or Tokyo through which all prisoner-of-war mail Fre OFT oo he Sugar Bowl Sen. Kefauver them. It imvoives {he Sager issues of how this qualified campaign speeches carefully enough, is ~ half of thé year, in addition to the $300 million :00 Theater would be channeled. Why isn’t this done? ; game in his coonskin cap. ...to be? European army is to be ui ed. bitterly disappointed that he is as strong as the unofficially promised for the first half under 1 us. ils. ‘ ww oLD BOLSHEVIK MAXIM LITVINOV wil Will Ibe haliuanen eoumbies in the Federa: retired Labor government for the welfare state, mutual security aid. : :30 Stars 0 IT MIGHT be a 20d ies to hava a CORE : ; fe ed mt riTple Ronpri-ike 3 bridge tion agree 0.80 o war or not to go to war on trade with Russia, and recognition of ‘Red China. . The ‘paradox is that he is the indispensable 45 ) ! {o gressiona 4 a majority vote? _ : The worst barrier to a Churchill-Truman front man, but in actual negotiations Foreign "100 News inquiry into all existing arrangements for safeguarding expert. Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxem- settlement of disagreements is domestic poli: Secretary Eden, Chancellor of the Exchequer “5 Fam A information. There mav be other holes in the system just A NEW YORK psychologist says New Year burg, with somewhat higher living standards tics. Both men are pretty much prisoners. Butler and the British military chiefs can bar- 1 :30 City Ho ; : J sd . resolutions are “immature.” He must mean and higher pay for their armed services, are Here, it is an election- year and the ad- gain here more easily and profitably than their : Y as big as this one. g : : “premature.” : D. K. now holding back on full surrender of their ministration is on the defensive, The President great but aging leader. a Some of the regulations seem designed-to suppress : 9 Grand | : : : » . - ! information the public ought to have and which would be of ~~ §|DE GLANCES By Galbraith TIT-FOR-TAT ... . By Frederick C. Othman 30 Senor no benefit to a foreign enemy. po sia uy -’

Y

I Sen. Kefauver and the Coonskin Cap

WASHINGTON, Jan. 4—The presidential race at "this moment is what we politicians call fluid. You might even say it is all wet. So there I" wag in my galoshes detouring around . the Eisenhower-for-President Head:

quarters at the Shoreham Ho‘tel on my way to the Willard Hotel for a press conference on the mezzanine with Harold Stassen, the Republican hopeful.

Pretty Is as Pretty Does

(CONGRESS will be asked by President Truman to okay a general overhaul of the scandal-ridden Internal Revenue Bureau. + Mainly, the. new plan streamlines the organization of the bureau, puts all of the employees, except. the top man, under Civil Service and provides for.what Mr. Truman calls a “thorough” inspection system. ? ~ It-is a plan which looks pretty in the charts and sounds 4 good in the descriptions. It. is the sort of thing recommended by the Hoover Commission three years ago and a year before that by Con-

_ gress’ Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation.

-~ T While. he recounfed his o 8 problems, Sen. Estes Kefauver. . (D. Tenn.) was In the Capitol, where he had another coonskin cap in a glass case, telling still other reporters that he'd decide in about a month whether he'd try to .wrest the Democratic ‘nomination from President Truman. That is, if ‘Mr. T. chose to run. ; The fur cap, continued Sen, Kefauver, he intended to present to Sen. ¥erbert O'Conor (D. Md.) as a forfeit because the Maryland football” team beat Tennessee. It was not the payoff on. a bet—Goodness. Both gentlémen are members

university president. For good measure he’s going to enter his name in Ohio, too. Tit-for-tat. ”

” a GOV. STASSEN went on to say that he will make four important speeches soon and that they'll all be radioed and televised, He =aid he hoped a lot of his appearances would hit the television screens, . “This television time on the. network in the evening costs about $50,000 an hour,” suggested one of my cohorts. “I was’ just wondering whether you had that much money.” - Mr. Stassen said he didn't; not yet, but contributions were - coming in at a lively clip. Fur - thermore, he said he believed it was the bounden duty of the TV proprietors to make their machinery available free to the candidates. . . A grim-faged television man took furious notes, I talked to him later and. he said he was reporting to his boss exactly . what Mr. Stassen sald. said ‘he feared for the boss’ ‘health. High blood" pressure, 80 I got out of.there. Fol-

of the Senate Crime Committee, which frowns on gambling. So eventually I squeezed into Gov. Stassen’s room, where the

television cameras were focused on his large brow, his green-spotted cravat and his cinnamon-colored suit, He was telling about how he intended to enter his name ‘in the primaries in both his home states where he'd been challenged by another aspirant named Bob Taft. - One of these is Minnesota, - where Mr. Stassen used to be governor. The other is Pennsylvania, where he's now a

le] |e ad LE

— —

EAD PR

» o o I COULD see the klieg lights burning in his sanctum down the hall, even 'as I ran into a large, red-white-and-blue sign {n chalk, which said, “Kefauver for President Headquarters.” So I got waylaid there in a large parlor containing a young man with a southern aecent, a . pretty lady with a ditto, some more Kefauver signs, and a ratty-looking coonskin cap. : This I tried on for size; the lady laughed; the senatorial hat was on the smallish, side. ~ Made me look vaguely like Lou °°

= ‘ - vr “ #4 . 8 IF THE plan's actual operation lives up to the blueprints, it is the kind of modernization which might have - prevented the skulduggery which has been exposed in the bureau—had it beén put into effect when the need for it first was spelled out. ) a, But, like any pretty plan, its success will depend on the : people delegated to carry it out. - The term Civil Service

- *

‘indicates competence and freedom from insidious politics. "Ne

-

LIFE'S TRUE VALUES !

EACH year that I grow older... I feel more . . contented still . . . for I view the stage of living . « » with an ever growing thrill . . . for more precious are the seconds . . of this year than " were the last . . . for I know I'm growing older . ++ and the night is falling fast . .. little things, + that went unnoticed . .. mean so very much to - me . , . like the rain that falls so gently . . . on = the leaves of bush and tree . .. people too be- -

+ But these virtues do not always follow. li , . _Postmasters are under Civil Service, but politics by

on

{no means hag been elimi : ; . Costello. So the campaign come more wondrous . . . for I see only their low these dispatches for. 4 B Mi h- 2 th Shaneed from these 4 ep ariments, Ea : oa ? i: manager, talking carefully, _ good . . . passing by the evil moments .., . for latest news trian ine t . Much of the scandal i the Internal Revenue Bureai Jl ns i SER Cope. 1963 by WEA Suen, ma, 581d, yes, sir, it was tough run- I really know L should . . . so it is while years uation, Next stop: The Eis i stemmed from the selection of political hacks for important will vay shone and ask the dentist to cancel ointment? DINE 8 local calmphisn when he are turning , . . I mellower with age . . . hower Headquarters, which JF ~iposts. : ne? an x : i you phone and ask the dentist to canc 1 2p men didn’t actually have a candi- realizing life's true values .« , are the real stars. .. still have no candidate. Nor Eee ae : in «I've got a couple of cavities and | know find 'eml" ~~ date,. only a hat, i : on its stage, ~—By Ben Burroughs. even a coonskin hat, > i 4 v 5 pi 7 ot Gi 2 3 : ¥ eh zh. = : - A : 2 Tie . 0 He A oo on & em ; a @ on Bs 2 il iat i Rc rl : oe iw > ne, aay 5 > z i; " : a, 2 : orn . » i J i 2 Segre % tre ¢ aa + wile & 4