Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1952 — Page 23

11, 1952

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Inside Indiana By Ed Sovola i... po MS

HOW DOES a little tyke fe te y el about school In the heginning class of Mrs. Anna Navi . 8chool 12 x 733 8. West St., five of the 30 I hadn't attended kindergarten. They were the fresh ones who were questioned. Mercy, mercy, how times have changed. kids love school. Twenty-seven years Eel Ha tle boy, who remembers his first brush with formal education, would have kicked the shins of a man who asked if he liked school. Bobby Curry, Tommy Maxwell, Ronnie Warrenburg, Peggy Rhude and Linda Staple didn’t give, and you can’t expect them to give, brilliant answers. But they convinced vou that going to school was pretty wonderful. Why? As : THREE of the children didn’t know what day of the week it was or how many days of school remained before Saturday. Furthermore they didn’t care. : Tommy Maxwell was asked if he would rather be outside playing. He shook his head. He wants to go to school next summer. Tommy may change his mind by the time June rolls around. The important thing is that he likes going to school now. I sat in class for an hour and a half watching Mrs. Navin work. And work it is to keep the attention of 30 supercharged first graders. The children drew pictures, played with educational toys and games, listened to music and followed the leader who expressed emotions in a more lively fashion in time with the music. A ALL THE ACTIVITIES had an undertone of competition. Johnny wanted to do better than Billy. Mrs. Navin formed letters on the blackboard by drawing circles and sticks. The class saw how the word “doll” was written . .. a ball with a stick attached , . , another ball and two sticks. . Youngsters vied with one another to see who could build the word doll on the board. The word dog was built . . . a ball with a stick at-

tached . . . a ball ., . another ball with a tail that hangs. J Fun? you bet. Beats having the alphabet

drummed into your head over and over. Beats having iron discipline shoved down your little throat the first day and the first week. Beats having your knuckles rapped, ear pulled.

It Happened Last Night

By Earl Wilson

NEW YORK, Sept. 11—Our son Slugger will be going back to school soon (sooner than he wants t0)—so we took him to see the Thousand Islands. a Your job'll be to count the islands,” we told im, “COUNT them?” Arithmetic’'s not his best subject (come to think of it, I don't know what his best subject is) 80 he bridled. “That's right. We want to make sure there are 1000, and not just 998,” we said. ’ While we were traveling, we went to Niagara Falls, too. You see, I'd promised the Beautiful Wife when she was just a Beautiful Fiancee that I'd take her to Niagara Falls on our honeymoon. I was 16 Years late. We now had a 9-year-old we had to take along on our honeymoon. Still, I'm a man of my word, and we made it. - We started out from near Syracuse where Slug'd been at camp. As we were heading into Alexandria Bay, N.Y,

Slugger

on a Thousand Islands sightséeing boat. “How many islands are there in the Thousand Islands?” I asked (a darned silly question) when we finally got aboard the hoat and nosed into the St. Lawrence. “Eighteen hundred and twenty-six,” the 16-year-old lecturer on the boat said. “Remember that. You may be asked it on a .quiz program,” the B. W. said« : Bo BUT LATER"I got to wondering. For Grant Mitchell, owner of the Hotel Monticello there, and an authority on the Thousand Islands, sald there were 1885 in the Thousand Islands. Mr. Mitchell laughed. “Nobody knows how many there are,” he admitted. “It depends some on the tide. But there are more than 1800.” One island was pointed out to us as belonging to Arthur Godfrey, having been given to him in appreciation of his popularizing the “Thousand Island Song.” “What's on Godfrey's Island” I asked. Harry Hershfield, the famous story teller, was there, along with Paul Whiteman, raising money for the Edward J. Noble Hospital. When I asked what was on Godfrey's island, Mr. Hershfield answered. “Mosquitoes,” he said. . “The island has been pointed out to 300,00!

"Amerieana

By Robert C. Ruark

NEW YORK, Sept. 11—We have been following the trenchant quotes of airy Adlai Stevenson and have reached the conclusion that he is bucking for the job of summer replacement for Arthur Godfrey. He is a great kidder, this Stevenson, a great josher, and a mighty swift jabber. He ripostes pretty, sallies well, and seems well equipped for ‘his chores. But it suddenly occurs to me we are not hiring end men for the job of President, and there are enough bad gags running lobse on the radio and TV already. We have had one involuntary comedian in the White House for the last seven! years or so; I do not know that we need an intentional funny man for the next four. Constant humor is trying on the nerves. Makes one think the humorist taking his tasks seriously.

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is not

* IT IS RATHER easy to see what Adlai is doing, with his wit and persifiage, though I doubt it has occurred to many, He is attempting fo perform a deadly serious job of diverting public attention from the Truman administration monkey which clings to the Stevenson back. Adlai can’t run on the Truman administration record. He cannot refer with any pride to the long list of blunders, sins, crimes, thefts and stupidities which have been steadily performed by the men around Harry. Adlai must pretend the mess in Washington isn’t actually there, since he has dismissed it by referring to it. He cannot duck the pagt by promising for.the future, because there is not much left to promise that hasn't already been gpestowed by the last 20 years of Democratic rule. There just aren't any more things to give away. «> @ SO ADLAI actually has been doing the smartest thidg by way of compromise. He is a man of undeniable charm, wit and keen intelligence. He has been turning on the whimsy, the umor, and adding to his original stature as a character, the unwilling candidate for distinction. And he is beginning to succeed in turning attention from the stench of his inheritance, in

diverting the public attention from the cold fact:

that he is basically responsible to the same old school of bosses in the Democratic Party, and

' in covering up old scars with his song-and-dance

act, ad IT ‘A FAST patter can boomerang, and this is one year the folks seem to be in a serious mood about their national boss. What seems at first charming and captivating and subtle can degenerate into near silliness if the receptive mood is not present in the audience.

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it will take it any time,

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Mow 2imes Wo Lhange—— They Like School Now

This method of making the first formative steps. appealing and interesting and fun is the way. Teachers such as Anna Navin and the educators responsible deserve a pat. I join Bobby, Tommy, Ronnie, Peggy .and Linda in saying, “I like school.”

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SIGHTS AND SOUNDS: Ray Katzenberger, the tire man, is disappointed with.the lack of some real razzamatazz in politics . . . thinks the opposition should have tried to “do something” with the “Ike” balloon on the Circle . . . too high for a lighted cigaret, Ray. . .. Two comments at 49th and Meridian Sts. as Gen. Eisenhower whizzed past after his speech in the Fieldhouse . +. “Well, let's go back to Noblesville,” and “I think that’s Ike's double.” . .. OOS

MRS. THOMAS L. BIGGS; 920 Broadway, called to have a ‘correction made about her Chevrolet, which Gen. Eisenhower rode in during the parade Tuesday morning. . . . Disturbed the way reporters referred to her '48 Chevy convertible . . . “old convertible” , . . “old yellow convertible” . . . Mrs. Biggs, who bought the car from North Side Chevrolet two weeks ago, says “It isn't old and it isn’t yellow.” . . . Husband Tom is in the Air Force in Okinawa . . . knows about the car by now . . . Mrs. Biggs was thrilled that her car was used to haul the General . .. not so thrilled at the descriptive reports . , . (I saw the convertible, Tom, it's a honey . . . disregard all the other clippings.) SN

ATTORNEY Leo Gardner had a chance Puesday to meet his ol’ card-playing friend from the Phillipines—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, . . . That was back in 1938 when Ike was Lt. Col. Eisenhower, executive officer to Gen. Douglas MacArthur,and Leo was legal adviser to Paul V. McNutt, high commissioner of the islands. . . . “Well, Leo, I forgot you were in Indianapolis,” said the General when they met. . . . Memory like an elephant. An isolatéeonist at the luncheon for Ike Tuesday asked a companion what “J’aime Ike’ meant on a huge huotton. . . . “That's French for ‘I Like Ike,’ ” answered the student of foreign affairs. ... “Foreigners oughta stay outta our elections,” growled the All-American. Au revoir, Ike.

Family Honeymoon— Only 168 Years Late

tourists but not to Godfrey because he has never been here, he added.

But this is not to detract from the heauty of those well-kept isles. You should see them some time.

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THE GAGS were intended to enliven the sightseeing program. :

“There’s the island of Rockport,” the lecturer said. “It has a population of 303 in the summer and three in the winter—the caretaker, the caretaker’s daughter and the man who takes care of the caretaker’s daughter while the caretaker’s busy taking care.”

“I wonder what happened.to the gag about the man who sent his wife to the Thousand Islands and told her to stay a month on each one? To me, the most interesting islands were “Estelita” and “Fairland,” owned by Richard Friederich of San Antonio. : For he didn’t forget Texas even in the beauty of the Thousand Islands. Nope.

On the cool green lawn around his beautiful

home, he has a map of Texas outlined in light

bulbs. He has the Lone Sfar flag outlined similarly. And at night as you cruise about in that lovely river, the map and the flag light up, reminding you all of Texas. . > > @ “HOW DID the Thousand Island dressing get its name?” I asked. “George C. Boldt, who owned the Waldorf, and also the famous old castle here, had Oscar of the Waldorf as his personal chef at one time. He created Thousand Island dressing,” Grant Mitchell said. It was a delightful experience and leaves me little to: tell about Niagara Falls. Except that we put on raincoats there and made the “Maid o' the Mist” boat trip as all do. Somebody said that people who try to go over the falls in a barrel are people who've just paid their hotel bills there. We disagree. It was reasonable and we'd like to go again. And we will, too, on our second honeymoon. BU THE PRETTIEST entrant in the Mrs. America contest (well, I thought so anyway) was from Indiana, Mrs. George Davis of South Bend. And she was honest. Coming out of Lindy's the night before the Mrs. America finals, she confessed: . “Their cake is better by far than the one I baked to get into the contest.”

Adlai Uses Humor To Hide Old Scars

Adlai can sweet-talk his way out of a victory if once the folks decide he is just talking fast to cover a lack of future plan and a smelly record of his predecessors. Then they don’t laugh with him anymore. Ike Eisenhower, by keeping a straight face and making a few loud, unlaughing truths, has a beautiful comparative position at the moment. Ike doesn’t have to be profound. All he has to be is serious.

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THE BUSINESS of humor is a dangerous thing. I imagine most folks don’t want a funny banker or a comedian for a doctor. I personally do not want a Milton Berle with brains running my country for me. I used to watch Franklin D. turn on the charm and the elfin wit when he wanted not to offer a straight answer to an obvious question, and Mr. Truman's barnyard japes have been slightly unsettling to the stomach. I want a deadly serious guy in that White

‘House for the next four .years to haul us out

of the national and international tragic confusion that 20 years of humor, both suave and hamhanded; have landed us into. If I want laughs there's Bob Hope and Bing Crosby, or a look at my bank account after taxes.

Dishing the Dirt By Marguerite Smith

Q—What should the spacing be between plants for .a hedge of Rose of Sharon? Rather than have planfs reach any great height can

they be cut back so that they bush out? What is

the best time to do this and the method? James Nielsen, 80 N. Ewing. A-—Under average conditions Rose of Sharon grows quickly to considerable size, both out and

up. If you want a thick hedge plant them about

three feet apart. Just the other day I saw a hedge of them with plants only two feet apart. But with such close planting you'll need to give some at-

. Read Marguerite Smith's Garden Column in The Sunday Times

tention to fertilizing and pruning to keep plants

healthy. The'individual plants will be healthier if

you give them more room, say six feet. Then to get a thicker hedge, if you have a wide enough strip, plant two rows, alternating-plants in the rows. It's one of the’ most amiable of shrubs, so you ean prune it practically any way you want, For appearance sake, do avoid a sheared top. If you want. a lower hedge why not plant a lower growing subject? Shrub roses or (for still lower hedges) floribundas make nice hedges. Best time for pruning Rose of Sharon is early spring, but

A ’

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The Indianapolis Times

- ~ THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1952

PAGE 23

REVIVAL IN GERMANY . .. No. 3—

By CHARLES R. and ROSETTE HARGROVE

Old Bunker Is Home To Hundreds

COLOGNE, West Ger-

many, Sept. 11—Frau van der Ruhr was preparing the family evening meal in her home in one of the new workmen's housing projects in a suburb of Cologne when we called on her. Proudly she showed . her kitchen-living room with small coal stove, the sink with its col rooms and toilet—no bathroom. She chatted happily, wondering if she would wake up to find herself back in the dark, damp basement where she, her husband Kurt and her 18-year-old son had lived for seven years and where her 4-year-old Chrl was born. ; “I feel as though I am in Heaven,” she said, “Look, all is so new, so clean.” The van der Ruhrs are but one of the thousands of families who were bombed out of their homes back in 1943. By 1944, 70 per cent of this city's homes had been destroyed. Like countless others, they had given up all hope of ever having a real home again for many years. But the miracle had happened. For this — to them, a palatial home—they pay just under $2 a week. ” ” n AT THE OTHER END of the city we visited an air-raid shelter where 90 families, including 230 children (whose ages range from 6 days to 16 years) are living under éonditions which have to be seen to be believed. “Home” for them is a 9-by-6-foot “cabin.” Here entire families eat and sleep without ever seeing the light of day. Triple-tiered bunks line two walls, with just enough space for a table and four chairs. The city provides bedding and blankets. Nobody is allowed to bring in any furniture except a radio, and there was one in every room we saw. For this “hole in the ground”

water tap, the two bed--

THE OLD—Ruins like this make new German housing imperative.

they pay 31.45 a week, which includes lighting and heating, cooking and laundry facilities of a kind.

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THERE ARE FAMILIES who have been living in this bunker as long as four years, “Most of them were evacuated by force from dangerous buildings,” explained Supervisor Hermann Koenig. “Last winter a house caved in killing eight people who were living in the basement.” In the two kitchens, each with seven water taps, the women cook their meals in shifts on two medium-sized coal-burning stoves. There is one small laundry. Sanitation is primitive. Although these shelters are electrically ventilated, the air is fetid. Yet the children look pretty strong ‘and healthy. When it is fine they play on the bombed site above. When - it rains they raise a rumpus in the dim corridors. Most mothers

SPEED UP TRAFFIC—

Maine-Chicago Highway Planned

CLEVELAND, Sept. 11

By late 1956, completion

of the Ohio Turnpike and

some other projected ones

will enable you to drive all the way from Portland, Me, to a point just outside Chicago on high speed superhighways. At present, motorists coming into Ohio near Petersburg from the Pennsylvania Turnpike are harassed by the fact that Ohio has few roads there competent to absorb the terrific turnpike traffic. After years of battle between pro-turnpikers and anti-turn-pikers, the Ohjo Turnpike now has official OK, has the money and a complete go-ahead. The $290 million estimated cost of the 240-mile highway was oversubscribed by $36 million.

” ” 5 _ PUTTING pleasure back into “pleasure” driving, highway engineers have designed a series of interlocking superhighways starting in Portland and running 45 miles to the New Hampshire border. From there a 17mile parkway takes you to the Massachusetts line. ‘Massachusetts, according to expert estimates, should complete its 90-mile link to. Connecticut’s 120-mile parkway system by late 1956. Twenty-five miles of smooth driving over a New York superhighway brings you to New Jersey's 60-

Present ==X= Projected

WIS. MICH.

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240-mile pike ready by late 1954

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165-mile link by early 1956

OHIO

_ cannot afford the §1 a week it

costs to send them to a nursery.

Sister Dora, a state nurse,

| ' checks all the children up to'14

once a week, A doctor comes once a month to see the mothers. “Outside of mumps, measles and whooping cough, we have surprisingly few infectious cases,” Sister Dora said. » ” = “JIT IS THE FAMILY known for its cleanliness afd good citizenship that is given priority for new quarters,” said Frau Irma Schmidt, head of the city’s. social welfare organization, known as the “office to take care of homeless and destitute families.” There are 1700 people living in these @ir-raid shelters around Cologne, with another 1100 living in converted dance halls, movie houses and barracks, plus several hundred more living in basements and cellars of wrecked houses. Often they have to be evacuated by force, yet some of them pay as much as $5 a month to the property owners. Victims of eviction for nonpayment of rent through unemployment have to be housed somewhere, too.

BY THE END of the war two million homes were destroyed in Germany, presenting an acute problem for a country with a population of over 47 million, plus nine million refu-

gees. In 1950, 250,000 new dwellings were erécted—the jsame number France had taken six years to build. Last year the figure was 300,000 and it may be exceeded by the end of 1952. This does -not include some 158.000 homes ‘‘patched up.” These dwellings are modest —one, two or three rooms— with sanitation but no modern conveniences. Rents, however, are very moderate.

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THE NEW—Postwar housing in West Germany includes units

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like these in Luebeck. Present construction is designed for immedi-

ate needs.

terprise, with the ‘help of the banks. They include refugee cooperative societies, municipalities, industrial enterprises, and even religious bodies. 2 Nothing is wasted. Old foundations are used and there is no attempt to modernize the layout of the streets, Many of the new apartments are five and six stories high, without elevators, and builders have economized on the thickness of the walls. The idea is that once the acute shortage—estimated at 3.75 million units—is licked, these buildings can be used as storage space or other public uses. The immediate goal is to remove human beings from ruins which threaten to bury them alive. cop

NEXT: New. blood—refugees and youths.

-

ME. Ad

urnpike from Maine to Fla., by 1960

HOW THE TURNPIKES GROW-—Newsmap shows how present and projected network of superhighways will let you drive from Maine to Chicago without traffic lights or stop signs by 1956.

mile link with Pennsylvania. The original 160-mile Harris-burg-to - Pittsburgh link has been expanded to stretch completely across 350 miles of Pennsylvania, and will hook up with the Ohio pike at Petersburg. The Indiana superhighway will run from the Ohio border

FIGHT AGAINST CRIME . . . No. 2—

By JOHN A. GOLDSMITH United Press Staff Correspondent

WASHINGTON, Sept. 11 —It was all Greek to everybody else, but it spelled illegal bookmaking to the FBL - The little notebook contained scribblings in what seemed to be classical Greek—the script favored by mathematicians and college fraternities, Boston police seized the notebook in a raid on a gambling suspect. Puzzled, they sent it to the FBI, The FBI sent the notebook to its laboratory, Experts in codes and ciphers made sense out of the scholarly scrawls. Sample translation:

“One buck on ‘Picador’ in the third race at Laurel.” That was just what the Boston police wanted to know about their suspect who had bragged to friends that he was booking horses and planned to keep right on because the cops couldn't make heads or tails of his books.

” n ” CRYPTANALYSTS — And several dozen varieties of other specialists—are ready to help police officers at the FBI laboratory. As in the Boston case last year, FBI technicians will testify in local courts—at FBI expense-—to help local prosecutors. In the last year which ended with June, the FBI Crime Lab—

some 150 miles to Hammond City, where the Tri-State highway. takes you into Chicago. Ohio will stop its pike short of the line at Bryan, O., until plans in the neighboring state jell. n n o FROM CHICAGO the brunt of the traffic flows not due

FBI's Lab Helps Police

biggest in the world—made about 110,000 investigations. Nearly 17.000 of those examinations were for local law enforcement agencies. About 40,000 handwriting analyses are done in the lab each year. All kinds of chemical tests—ballistics and fiber examinations are a part of_the

regular routine — and about 2000 examinations are made annually with a spectograph,

a complex analyzer that determines composition of a solid by identifying the light rays it gives off when burned. The FBI's lab tests don’t always prove man guilty. A Clovig, N. M., men was accused of forging a note for a loan. An FBI handwriting analysis

West, but toward St. Louis. Already planners have their sights on a future superhighway connecting the nation's second city withthe Mississippt River metropolis. And from there the distance to Oklahoma’'s new 80-mile TulsaOklahoma - City turnpike begins to look short when com-

UNDERGROUND--OId bunkers made into "cabins" are a temporary refuge. :

pared with the route from Portland to Chicago. FOE Whether skirting or cutting through the rugged Ozarks will prove financially feasible remains to be seen.

While the east-west turnpike system has been getting most of the attention, a northsouth interstate superhighway has been in the making on the Atlantic seaboard. A turnpike already runs from Portland, Me., to a peint not far from Wilmington, Del, where it ties in with a fourlane divided highway to Baltimore. A new bridge carries interstate traffic around the city and ties it in with BaltimoreWashington parkway, a sixlane highway. ! # 8 »

ALL THE remaining states on the route to Key West, with the exception of South Carolina, have passed legislation designed to ultimately provide a north-south version of the eastwest turnpike. According to Ernest Green, president of the Ohio Turnpike and Highway Association, you'll be driving on continuous turnpike from Maine through Florida by 1960, As for an east-west extension from the Mississippi, experts say it is doubtful that turnpikes across the mountains and: plains would pay off. But ever the experts can be wrong.

In Every Town

showed that the suspect had

not forged the controversial signature which was, in fact, genuine.

The efforts of the FBI technicians—in the lab and in court —are available to the nation’s smallest police departments. The FBI requires only that requests be made by bona-fide law ofifcers in criminal cases, " ” n TO SPREAD .the word about scientific crime detection and other modern police methods, the FBI conducts two courses annually at its National (police) Academy. Each session gives post-graduate” police training to as many. as 100 police officers from all over the nation.

In its 17 years, about 2500 law enforcement officers have taken the 12-week academy

course, Currently, the bureau estimates that about one-quar-ter of those graduates are the executive heads or the administrative chiefs of their own departments. FBI officials say frankly that, in the co-operative fight against the underworld, the academy in giving information to local officials also makes friends for the bureau whose co-operation is invaluable when the FBI needs help in their home towns, -

NEXT: Two little-known laws help trap today’s hoodlums.

It Would Be Silly in Egypt, But Here's U. S. Politics

San Francisco, Cal, U.S.A, Sept. 11, 1952.

Mr. Fuad Amini, Care Semiramis Hotel, Cairo, Egypt. Dear Fuad: American, newspapers ha've been printing a lot about Egyptian politics—such as Gen. Naguib’s crackdown on the WAFD party leaders and other expashas, dawn raids, jailings and the forming of a new govern: ment. By way of contrast and in return for your trying to help me understand Egypt, I'm going to .tell you a little about this political season in the U. 8.

The presidential campaigning.

this year is basically the same

as always—a non-violent <con-

test to influence the minds or

fr ¥

To My Friend Fuad: An open letter: whose duties as a Scripps-Howard correspondent kept him in the Middle East and Orient durding the postwar years, now is back home and for the mo-

Clyde Farnsworth,

ment accompanying Presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson through the western United States. In the following article, Mr. Farnsworth explains to an old "Egyptian friend in Cairo what American political campaigning is like.

emotions of voters, But American science keeps devising new means to that end.

The other day at Springfield, Ill, Gov. Adlai Stevenson carefully avoided a kissable baby and boarded one of three chartered DC-6 Skyliners for an airborne tour of 8000 miles through ,the western Umted States. ! He was accompanied by about 125 assistants, publicity special-

ists, secretaries, typists and mimeograph operators, a bodyguard, a manager, correspondents for newspapers, magazines, radio and TV and different kinds of photographers. The Democratic Party will pick up only its share of the charter charges. The remainder will be divided among employers of the other participants.

SINCE THEN, the Governor has been seen or heard in the . : vr

$n 5

flesh by perhaps a quarter-mil-lion people. He has shaken thousands of hands--including those of farmers in Minnesota, ranchers in Wyoming, cowhands in Idaho and labor leaders in Portland. Millions of others have heard and seen him on his major speaking dates. A half million words have gone out from the covering correspondents. Hundreds of pictures, Miles of movies. Management of the tour is

an exacting job. For example,

the hat sizes of Gov. Stevenson and his son, Borden, had to be passed on to Lewiston, Ida. so they could be correctly fitted with western-style gray Stetgons upon landing there. nn = ”

OTHER arrangements do not always work out so well. For

instance, no one had d uted any Stevenson buttons at the Kasson, Minn, plowing matches. Adlai found an awful lot of people wearing Eisens hower buttons. 3 Part of the trip was by train —what ‘is called whistle-stop campaign, with 10-minute rears platform * speaking stops at many places en route. Now, Fuad, imagine Gen. Naguib standing for election on the rear plat. fornt of the Cairo-Adexandria train and stopping at the ways stations to ask the Nile delta fellahin for their votes, yo would have the idea. : Sincerely, = ABU FARNSWORTH. P. 8. Thanks again for offer. ing to let me wear your fez during last J anuary’s riots.

it you could

BUSES Swed