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Show X 1 f Speaking of Foot h olds 7 I". I' prqVo, mm tdltC Udaal la v.'' . ' .', X'Behold, GbwlU not cast away a perfect man : neither will h& help the evudoers JobS:ZO. ik::, "A-- trifle. Michael Angela, Bonds Build for the Future ' IE Whatever this- commilnity looks like 10 &years hence, war bonds will have helped to design the pattern. Whatever "destiny awaits you and your home in the 1950', 'war bonds will have taken a. hand 'K Tltese are; the inescapable facts behind "the Fifth War Loan. . - Every dollar df your warliriconie you are jputting away in bonds is la dollar which has rendezvous with your welfare and the wel fare of this area. The best hinesa trans action of Vour life is the war bond pu you make from the volunteer wheflfne calls - iupon'yeu either at your place jaf vtskk or in pypur home. Vou can never Ipse a penny of nyour lnvesttnepti- The longer you hold the "! bond the greater its value. More than 60,-.000,000 60,-.000,000 Americans owif one or more of these .bonds. , r.r bur present urgent "reason for at least doubling your war bond purchase over your fourth war loan purchases is to help our in im&iori forces to knock off Hitler and Tojo as qdickly Is possible. When peace comes 1 Blf -interest reasons come to the front a new home a newauto an education for the youngsters. From a strictly selfish standpoint, you Can't afford 4 not to buy extra war bonds! Two Separate Jobs Ship owners are asking Congress for per mission to go into the air transport Held They argue that British competitors are go- ' mg to supplement their surface services " with air schedules, and that Americans will , be left at a great disadvantage unless they X jure permitted to do likewise. A 'It is easy to imagine thatxthe ship Owners wouldibenef it from such a dual setup. But to the layman it seems improbable that joint ihip-plane operation is the only solution, the best solution, jor evetv a desirable solution to -r-the really puzzling problem that laces our "postwar merchant marine. Without belittling the great importance Nf maintaining. our hard-won position of primary importance -on ,the high seas; it is vital also that we play a major-part in the coming air , age. And our share' in . world ayiation surely cannot beiprotected best by burning its development over, in any, oon-siderabJe oon-siderabJe part, to a competing industry. rTraofeoceanic air lines are in direct competition com-petition with surface shipping. Before the y&r the competition was limited to luxury passengers and midget packages. -After the war, aviation experts hope, tHe planes , will bo able to go after passengers well below be-low the luxury class; and to carry packages of greater bulk and weight. Advancement in transoceanic aviation can be achieved economically, and made com- " jetitively self-supporting, only if postwar ! Aviation is an the hands of. experts whose 'fortunes and reputations are staked upon their achievements in that one field. ; Neither railroads nor steamship lines should he given any major part in the development-of aviation. Plams will compete-Urectly compete-Urectly with-both, and American history gas shown that such competition is the se-JTSret se-JTSret of greatest success, " Finnish Relations ' Most Americans must have felt at least ' some regret when the popular minister of a popular little count-ry, Hjalmar Procope, was - handed his walking papers by the State De-. De-. partment. But the step cannot have sur prised as alert a diplomat as Mr. -Procope, had full access to the jnvasion news in lencan papers. We are committed iow to the march to ;Berlin. As fast as new openings can be de veloped, we must be in position to advance on Germany fromvery direction. We cannot can-not permit ourselves to be stymied by relations rela-tions with any riatio$,. however much , we pity her. that is fighting side-by-side viti the Nazis against our allies, f Presuniablythe .request that Mr. Procope '''gp Jionae may "be iakqx by his principals as warning that from now on, unless she .gets. OJlt Of the war, she is liable to find herself WtCconsIterable experience in the wire in me. pain qj, an American juggernaut. , wno Mi Mil ffi Down Drains I The Christian Science Monitor, which is DO calamity howler, complains that in and around , .Boston milk is be me poured down . drains, becaise of government regulations, Awhile eager-consumers are short on milkj' " Ceant and ice creaml The Monitor says that the government .order, limiting, milk, dealers from selling 'more than a prescribed percentage of "the June1943," Mies, leaves them with a surplus sur-plus now that green pasturage has increased productipn. ' ' They carft legally, sell the surplus. They Vcould gi nt away, but that would irfvolve Snbearable outlays fbr pasteirization, noting not-ing and distribution. So they - have to throw.it away. 7 The creation of planned economies, on ;paper looks easy. Theii administration can be pretty difficult.. . . Tha: Washington m Br : Draw Col. .. A Mil a m all daty) epry-Go-Rpurid Uf Dafiy Hcture of What'i Coins On In National Affairs (Lt. dcJ: Robert S. Allen now on active Berv- ice with the Array.) CHICAGO Something- has middeniy dawned on anti-Rooaevelt Southern Democrats. It was be- glnnlngr to dawn on them, before the Republican! left Capitol Hlir for Chicago, And judging' from anti-Roosevelt Deraocrata here, ft has now hit them with the conclusive 'smack ot a wet blanket. What they hive suddenly realised is that their electoral colleee Idea Is llkelv to do to the south what aU the senate filibusters over the poll tax nev er could do namely, take away 13 percent; of tne South' political power, unless the- vote is given to the rtegro. What most people don't realij and ahtl-Roosevelt ahtl-Roosevelt leaders are awakenlns: to it is that, in the electoral college, the south is able to vote its negro population even though the negroes themselves them-selves don't vote; In other -words. the ' twelve southern states MWTSSTi peiwflt of tn ration's vote In the electoral c5hrc. Cut. eiiAe- Ucgrccn on't k'ote, those same states have only 12 percent of the popular pop-ular vote ot, the nation- Thus; in the last election, the twelve southern states cast 135 votes in the electoral college, -which was .25.2 percent of the total. But, in the oopular vote, they cast - only 5,642.000 out of 49.T66.000, which was only 12 percent per-cent of the total. So by changing the age-old practice of the electoral college foUowing the popular vote. South ern anti-Rooaevelt 'leaders are certain to start a move to abolish, the electoral college, with '.the privileged voting position it gives the South. SOUTH' GAIN FROM CliU WAR Prior to the Civil War, te constitution recog nized the fact tnat negroes aid not vote in tne south by giving the southefn states a smaller firoportional vote in the electoral college. Since he Civil War, however, the south has got 100 per cent credit for its Negro population in the electoral elec-toral college, even thoughJLhey-don vtate. Thls added polttTcal strength which the south has enjoyed ever since the Civil War would evaporate evapor-ate if the electoral college were , abolished. And pollticos of both parties agree that -its abolition Is just as sure as tomorrow If j electors refuse to obey the mandate of the people. Note How the south benefits from the electoral elec-toral college is illustrated by the following:. In South Carolina, only 100(000 people vote, or one person out of 18. But it Has 8 votes in the electoral college. Texas with a popular vote of 1,041,000 In 1940, had 23 votes in the college. Meanwhile, California, Cali-fornia, voting three times as many people or 3.26900Vhad lest electoral votes than Texas, or 22. And New York, with six . times the popular vote of Texas, or 6.302,000 had only twice as many electoral votes, or 4T, DEWEY STRATAGEM Dewey's- friends - aren't shouting It from the house tops, but he had a neat 'stratagem up his sleeve when he ran fr governor of New York, and he may use It again, during his coming campaign for president. It. air hinged around smart shrewd publicity expert - Edward L. Bernays. who has handled public relations for some of the, biggest firms In New York. The Bernays agency made a thorough study and canvass of New York state, preparing a" card-index file of every Republican leader who controlled more than a teasooonful of votes What Bernays did was to take old Republican lists and check them over, bringing them up to date, analyz ing the Importance Of each leader. Each card contained not only first names, but nicknames, pet hobbies; political and financial histories, his-tories, and every other fact which- a candidate need ed to know. Thus, Dewey was able to tell, from a glance at a card, precisely whom he was talking to when he stumped the sjtate. He was able to ask political leaders about their families, their business etc.. In typical Jim Farley manner. Bernays also did an intensive research job on the political writings of about 500 key non-poytical non-poytical civic leaders around the state, and dug up. from what they had said, passages parallel to Dewey's talks. Then letters were sent these leaders lead-ers showing how Dewey's and their minds were running in the same direction. The Bernays survey is reputed to have cost Dewey's friends $50,000. but it was worth it. Note Word of -the Bernays survey for Dewey leaked when Bernay approached -the Democrats re cently to suggest that he do a similar job for them. Best U. S. memories for names, dates, ana nlaces are rated as follows: Jim Farlev. Mrs. Hen ry Wallace. Edwin riolt retired cotton manufacturer manufact-urer of Burlington. N. C. and Nat Howard, editor of the Cleveland News, former U. S. press censor. COXVEXriON CHAFF . Outstanding press conference at Chicago was that . of Connecticut's glamorous Congresswoman Clare Luce. She had all the answers. Asked a newsman: "What about the Democratic charge of swapping ajiorse in mid-stream for a Shetland pony?". . . Ifd swap a horse for an elephant any time, shot hack Mrs.. Luce. "Especially in place of a donkey". ... After talking about women in politics, Mrs. Luce went on to another subject. Piped up a newsmani Let s get back to the wo men. Replied Clare: "The men always do." Most fascinating hat at Chicago: That of Mrs. Bertha Baur. national commit teewoman from Illlnois.'Itfeatured, six white elephants in. feathers. Commented a lady reporter: "Doesn't she know that white elephants are a token .o absolute use-lessness?. use-lessness?. . . . Paulina Longwortb. daughter of Alice Roosevelt Longwortlr and the late Speaker? covered the convention, for the New York Times. . . Mayor Ed Kelly,. staunch F.ooseveltian. In-' vaded GOY stamping-ground Just once. He drop ped h at the' Stevens Hotel to v arrange for some huge Wown-up, photographs of FDR to be used July 19. ,. .(Dewey headquarters had it's own telephone switchboard. Apparently the Dewey boys, with, considerable experience in the wire - -tapping. business, decided not to take chances, Mrs. Warren Austin, ...gracious wife of .tne Senator from Vermont, came to enjoy the conven-UoaV conven-UoaV found herself answering the phone and mak- ing beds. . . . . Just before Chicago, 26 negro or ganizations met in New York, aecraea wiey wouia not -support Dewey-for the. following h reasons: Failure to support closure during, the senate anti-poll anti-poll tax debater failure to support the Federal soldiers' ballot his returning; of Andrews to Mississippi Mis-sissippi to. face what Negroes feared wcmld be an unfair trial. -.' . '. To eet quick service iri Chicago hotels, GOP delegates had. to use an Irish brogue ' nnri tallr lilt nomwrati ' . ' (Copyright. 1944 by United Feature Sjmdicate, InjC.l.V We should not think that we have been passively pas-sively attacked but that we .have actively pulled the enemy toward us. Tokyo radio, : after Japan bombing.. , , We must again make- It unqualifiedly attract live ror every man and woman to work, to think, to invent and to create. Eugene E. Wilson, chairman chair-man Aeronautical C. of C. of America. Whoopee! -' vxiio nepy)to a clt.,wher ' hA'Wij-K.'-y holding aNrevivai, and asked' thft-'v ' way & th post of fice, and-the ier prompuy answered: e'block and turn -the . . By PETER EDSON Daily Herald Washington Correspondent , The almost' unbelievable utterly fantastic increase in numbers num-bers of ships, "and th. increased sizefc- strength and efficiency, of crseo -MEET MR. DEWEY -NO. Z- Dewey's Rich Vxrice Aided Career From School Days to Nomination -A-t?..r-"L3i ,f !v n fX J' 7 t - A "" -- -1 - M T-nTililMiiiLli landing craft and auxiliary, in the U. S. Navy has jtist been revealed reveal-ed to a group pf Washington correspondents cor-respondents visiting a few f the eastern Navy and ship yards -at the invitation of Secretary James V. Forrestal. How much of this new striking strik-ing force will be in action in this war is. an open question. But the mere fact piat the Navy now sees fit to lift the lid on what its research;. . and baildirig1 programs have been is evidence that some of the news ships are even now In action against theeseroy. And In total impact, effect of these disclosures is to reveal to the J world that any aggressor nation may wen, mtnk twice before starting any World War III. Begin with- battleships: News of the six Iowa-class 43,000 tenners ten-ners has already' been announced, announc-ed, Uipwingvjheiy, to be tii most formida'ble sPjps afloat.. Their 880-foot 880-foot length should be compared to pie 750-foot length-of the four South Dakota class ships now in service. On the tremendous gun decks of the Iowa class ships1 are more than 125 anti-aircraft guns, topped by 20 five-inch guns and nine- 16-inch guns in triple turrets. tur-rets. For observation, these ships carry three catapult-launch planes and every known device for fire control and Communication. Communica-tion. Their crews more than 2500 officers and men; their cost morevthan SlOOiOOO.OOO for the hull alone, exclusive of equipment. equip-ment. Cruiser Now a "Battleship" v More dramatic, perhaps, than these big battlewagons ia, a new class of cruiser;., the first of which have been named for the U. S. territories Alaska, Guam, and Hawaii. They are 27.000-ton. ships 750 feet in length, mount nine 12-inch sains as. mam armament. capable of abouC 35 knots faster than most speedboats. These super-cruisers toavie been designed to knock the .spots off any pocket battleship of the Tirpitz class built by Germany: The first was built by "the New York Shipbuilding .Yards, Camden, Cam-den, N. J; Aircraft carrier developments are no less ensatkmr-l?nder con struction at the New York Yard D you know w; fNope." . fTm BiUv Sunday. come to. my meeujng the way to Heaven." Aw. go on!" exclaimed -raV youngster, "you didn't evenv know y- The Dewey family, photographed on the steps of their farm home at Pawling, N. Y. By 8. BURTON HEATH NEA Staff Correspondent By twisting a few details, Horatio Ho-ratio Alger could have based one of his better rags-to-riches books on the rise of Tom Dewey from printer s devil to Republican candidate for the Presidency. There weren't really any rags. Tom's father came from ope of the earliest colonial families (the first American Thomas arrived in Dorchester, Mass., in 163) and himself was publisher of the weekly - Owosso, Mich., 'Times, postmaster and, an active GOP worker able and wiUing to pra-vide. pra-vide. all necessities and moderate moder-ate cpmforts for his family. Npr "did the family have to look- back toward Plymouth Rock and .the Pilgrim Fathers to. Jus not for academic honors. for his singing. Singing Paid Expenses According to one version he was considered shy and retiring by his college . classmates. ons, whether or not this was true, he seems to have taken little active part ''in extra-curricular activities activi-ties other than music. In the fall of 1923. using his scholarship, he came to NeW York to study for a musical career. At the same time he matriculated in the Columbia University School of Law. He helped to pay expenses by singing in the choir of the Church of St. Matthew 'and St. Timothy, and In a synagogue. Meanwhile ' he was courting Frances Holt, -born In Sherman, Tex., but then from Sapulpa, It was, Dewey set up his own office and went into, private practice. In 1928 he had married his mu sic school sweetheart, who mean while had been doing concert and revue singing. They have two Thomas E., Jr., Martin Dewey. Their on a 300-acre farm in Pawling, N. Y. youngs t Un oi rights, "You seem Xortght little jfeK low," said Sunday jovially .as he v v- as " I nt .v - V 1 total i snow you'. v. Democracy can never' fail long as people have sotnetht ahead to look forward to, . . . . j- r : even ,ir it ts merely tne anticipa tion - ef a' sane, national -aamlnls ratfQnt. ' "."- . , -0O0 - . Nope, we never were and do not v- tnink we ever wlu be sold, on Xli un-American idea Qf governmental 1 control of 'business. -. " . But, just suppose that "eachi per-! son who wanted to start th busl- -niess (any business) for himself had to pass a state examination .At i ine same . as uoctors, aeotists, -. lawyers, opticians and pharmacists, pharma-cists, do) before he or she could . receive' a license to . start. Don't you think H would eliminate a ' very considerable industrial t- loss ''. in America ? . "' And, say, could you past a . state examination right now-ron. the technical, and commercial end - tf your own occupation or line of work 7 . - Hwnesty Is My Motto' ; Pistol Pete was in the middle of on of those historic western poker games that continued for days or, until all of the shirts were gone. ' Pete arose from his chair, nulled A Out his gun, and grimly ' an nounced to the players; "ThlaA game is crooKea. joe .tnere ain't. playing the hand I dealt him." : - oOo Only those who are enthusiastic attain any measure of material success. . A A . i4 the first of a. "new type 45,000- fbst'.' recent political speech my iwcii. ueuiliMUa jcwey, Qkla.. a ifeilow student at the school of music with,; a pleasing this Toms grandfather, was a delegate to the convention at Jackson, Michigan, which founded the Republican party. A fifth cousin; was that crusty old Ver-monter. Ver-monter. Admiral George Dewey, hero jf Manila Bay; another relative rela-tive (degree vgue) perhaps because be-cause he was a Democrat) was Nelson Dewey,v first governor of Wisconsin. . Won Scholarship So Tom Pewey did not literally start from rags any more than, actually, Jie has achieved riches,. He- started from small city middle mid-dle class comfort and has arrived at metropolitan middle class com? fort plus a little. ' a good mezzo- personality and soprano voice. Dewey was graduated from lajy school in 1925, having completed a three-year course in two years In spite of diversions. He spent tne summer touring Europe in a jalopy and on a bicycle, and re turned that fall to begin his pre admission clerkship with a good but not prominent law firm. Ad-; nutted to tne bar in 1826, he was affiliated successively with ' two firms uhtil 1931. n All or Nothing In connection with a case which bi iirm was defending, young . As . a - schoolboy v Tom became press ton on Gfeorge Z . Medalie, 'devil' ta-Tiia father's printship. QIe of York's .best-knowh ton-carrier largest ship in naval history intended: to carry the Navy's new twin-engined planes, (larger and of longer 'range than aj"V other carrier-Jaorne aircraft ffow in service. There is a new 2200-ton super-destroyer' super-destroyer' that is almost a dream ship, better than many World War I cruisers in firepower and- speed. What destroyers were In the last war, what the old four-stackers traded to the British for Atlantic At-lantic island bases are in this war is how surpassed by the most modern destroyer escort vessels. These lowly DEs now carry three-inch guns, torpedo tubes and anti-aircraft grins as well as depth charges. They are built now at 1300 tons, as compared com-pared to the 1200-ton destroyer of the last war. All Grow Up a Notch , All up and down the shipyards this tendencv of. addine arms- and John I ment, armor, firepower and range nome IS i. nnlurnrthv V.verv rlAxa of HE IS THE KIND OF MAN who would keep a second-hand iawnroower for lending purposes Fert and Pertinent "Ftsh go :on vacations too.. science ijote A, aild, they always seem, to ptctt the same time wo do. "No man can dohore than'liis Tomorrow : Dewey as racket-buster Q's and A's which is to, say that he was thej icrwiiest meniDer.or tne start, privileged priv-ileged to do all the dirty work that nobody else would do or had time to do. In such spare time y - a . i. : : it. x ; j jicw iiiouuiiicui uuuiuiiiijiK tne truni-ij . also horn and tromlxne is nnnminppfl 4i wnf fiwia Wkar. ,r.n n;u I 0 modern ' fv vitw wim., miicic Kin mc iicisii-1 .without air jiwrs iintj ajwuier nuujse.io niove into 'Stanton. There Is a clear prospect that the home front armies, (management and labor) will mobilize and march against each other as soon as the war Of liberation is won Donald R. Richberg, former NRA chief. nation can survive and"nroar power. CAA Administrator Charles t as he could find, he - could learn the printer's trade. : Apparently he was allergic to- printer s ink, because he did not even begiji ; to f ollowin the foot steps of . Horace Greeley.- Irt- steaa ne got. nimseir a lob, one sumner, on a farm. In spare time he clerked in a local drug-Store drug-Store ;and distributed newspapers; He was not, bV testimony of one of his. teachers, particularly popu-J mr among his playmates. A ma jor trouble was that he knew all th,e answers, not just in' hia own mind but in fact. Even , more im portant,, he was Impatient with those who did not know ; thtfs answers an-swers or could not think Of .them. In high school he played t football, tootled the, bass horn and, perhaps to give the- senior class? prophet something with which to work, participated acj- trveiy in public speaking. At tfcjJJjiyra1iy f-Mlchiytn he-TnaJoiidirtAPolftk: science (more material the seer) but the scholarship that he won was lawyers who then was United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York. Mr. Me-daiie Me-daiie jnyited Dewey to Join his staff. Dewey bargained ' all or inothing; he would acct only .the post of chief assistant in that very important office. A. A " A Those who' TthowV George Me-dalie Me-dalie as a hard?neaded, -unimpressionable veteran'' .a lnd-pendeht. lnd-pendeht. as Dewey, fe- thKt he musl i have Seen-, farther than others could then, because he accepted ac-cepted Dewey's tei?na and made him chief lassistaht. x, They nave remained v the closest of friends eveif since. ' .f .. ' A In the nex$ two yeart, Dewey convicted, ,' among v others, ' the racketeer "artichoke kihg" , Cos- taldo; Depty; vSty- Clerk Mccormick,: Mc-cormick,: a powerful. Tammany district Jeader; Irving Wexler better if 4esa favorhly known a "Waxey, GF0Wk When Medalie test 1933, Democratic and Republican' Ijudges of the U. S. District court unanimously chose Dewey to suc ceed him until President -RooseJ ven TOoia get arouna u name a Q Does the town of Le Havre, which is in the Allied beachhead zone in Normandy, .have a meaning mean-ing in French ? A "Le havre" is -French for port or harbor which is exactly what the town is. Q Is Cherbourg, the great Normandy Nor-mandy port which our troops are seeking to seize, a very ancient riln r ? z . A It occupies a Roman site and its name is a corruption of the Latin Caesaris Bur gum. in the 11th cfehtury under the name of CarusbaA it 'was a favorite resort of the Norman, kings of England. ' ' - A' Q What is noteworthy about the appointment of Prince Dona Famphtu as mayor of Rome.? A-For the first time lin its thousands of years of history ( an American. Brigv-Gen. i Ed ht Hume, acting for the Allies, named the prince to the job. Tv, , ' Q Have any countries, recog nised General de Gaulle s French Committee of National Liberation as the provisional government of the French republic 7 A Yes: the, governments-in- exile M Belgium, Luxembourg and- Czechoslovakia. ' , hnoblenran recently wounded In Normandy ?i A He is chief of the British Commandos. . v . teristic of the class that used to be above it. Advances in landing craftBhow this in marked degree. The new LSM, or Landing Ship. Medium seen at the Federal Yards ati Kearny is no longer an auxiliary vessel, but a 200-foot ocean-going ship, capable of carrying light and medium tanks ano gun mounts armed with - 20-mm, anti-aircraft guns to tight its way right up to the beach. Bagger than these and for later waves of an invasion are tne new AKA ships Attack Cargo Auxil varies that ' can bring in Lheavy tanks and a complete lit tle expenditionary force of their own. And for transport" of troops by tlia. thousand there are the new AP ships. Auxiliary' Personnel vessels like the General Mv C. Meigs -ween at Kearneys luxury transport wiui an w-r v -u im u- ped operating room. andV rnew chanical cow to provide TresIL mux to onnK ana xor ice creamii for the' troops sailing to war inj fatyle. From every angle, it looks like a whale of a new Navy. . but, , most men .can do mora than they think is their best. AiThe United SUtes has, 12 dtar tinct dialects . . . "according to -a recent , survey. . and--a vocabulary of S724 slang words and expressions.. "He who hesitates, "ancient proverb ... . : . . - might just as well look for another an-other parking place. com- For Your Scrapbook from mine. . "ITS ALL tS JHE GAME" I can't expect Luck to be i ing my way, In all of the games that I happen hap-pen to play. So If. now and then, I must forfeit for-feit a trick, V Though badly I need' It. I Wlgaui t U3 KICK For that Is just part of th game! And whoever played la a game that was fun. That called for small effort, that it might be wont weapon has assumed the charac r My victory can never, no never. ne sweet. Unless I have snatched it away' from defeat! The fight's the best part ef the game! . NEW TRANSPORT FATIONS Second quarter transport ra-tioni ra-tioni now being used j by truckers, truck-ers, taxicabs. .and, ojther cbmmer- cial operators, become invalid for consumer purchases on June 30, E. H: Azbill. OPA mUeage rationing ration-ing . reorentative announced to day. .A -, "The coupons will be replaced by those bearing the third quart er designation.'; Mr. Azbin said, "which will become vallcf July 1 through September 30. ' Bj May. i944i synthetic fiibber tires were being . produced at a rate of 1,00,000 a month. Games Needed By The Teen Kdnteen j Paul Shurtleff and his father. Guy L. Shurtleff, 83 North Fourth west,--, have loaned and installed two pool tables complete with appropriate ap-propriate equipment to the jnocal Teen Kanteen. Miss Jessie Seho-field, Seho-field, director of the recreation department, says that the tables are already in use in the most popular room in the Kanteen, the game room. Any games' for this room would be welcome. Games such as monopoly, mon-opoly, parcheesi, .checkers, And chess are specially needed and tne .donation of any. games m una category would afford many pleaf- ant hours to the (youth of Frovo. And who Is it wants to be always al-ways fn luck, Relying on Fortune Instead' of on ptucK And who is it wants to go smiling smil-ing thru life. Unable to say he has weathered the .strife Unable to prove he was game? : f Ahd though I tnay win, or. be last in the, race. May I never 'cringe at the . troubles I face! And when I have finished, may honest men write: " "In winning ot losing, he fought a gold ftght, -; Trqm the start to the end of the game!" "5 y --Charles S. Kinnlson.' ) ' opo ' - A i Stumping the Sticks ' . "Yes said the! candidate! Tm golnr among the farmers today.. . , to a cattle show or a Jackass show - or something of that sort. Not tllat r .1 H. fju.' MAMli. M'Xi.l.nul.:' but I want to shor the peoplH that I'm one of theni." .:.--Jt:' I Passenger tlr prodnctlon dur ing ivf win propabiy total between be-tween 18 and 24 million atm far short of the 30j000,00d previously estimated as neceisanu .-M. 1 ? j ii ii.i . ii a i. mm CfiUnealRcicIts AttMHM; tes' m -hifVMii'' tlito alRletiM Mr;ii and tmTSx tt & i to UmiMto Dm wir srtwllna? mtgwt H mm tkwint a (ooiiwirtaMtd tw tMxir. II m junto r pmtvH vtUh and poor, ebiW (. : Wbm wttlk the ailMriw rf tki&armkmU - to find wmr ottors ktn trM for wmt to doal with Uila Mat. Oia.fuhUol . .TodaA thaaks to aa impbrtaat eWtie 7 I tamwf.u waisiiisLU eras Unm ?:: fifona UbMa mlnJ It the labon wrw f ur. u. Mm m soa, AaMrtM 1 dinar OiMwhllata tm m .lili... - . 'PW inakw H Mr to 4m Hth Fia Wans. Th iwa. Mnatlaal t.W fata aat fa aaaeial M w.JtM. th h normal aon aaic yatjr .ant A-r-. i li MV voar ArmmUA tarn V.W. a-rf to,Mtto.ona,U'aW,V. ' LaMfa Mlll uemtcrau At the end or, 1933 .' ;" 'V ' " A V A" r V a; : A hi A- |