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Show -- .,- -- ttl;c'tt,tvt"Ill13 V't PNTtt, ,. ,, ""V"."':".".'"'''''''''''''''''''rr'r,::r 'V'y'v''t1,, . 7771.7r . - -- - Algat - - - - WirStand - - - OM gatte-reltgant- r -- CI ' if having ' ' 13,1959, . ' 4 : - - If . ' ' ' - been divinely inspired..- til riI AI ' . - - . f 4A ---- -- -; , -- - - - , "sh :berry-Di-g, ' , - 0 7LFor - - , 6--he , le . ' t i AS IA , 11 .. ' f . ' 4fLk -- ', .- --- ' i .... r r si4p.. : , . ,:: '01' ''.. , ..,.. 0 ,'';''''''': , ', '.4 , . -- - ,: ri , JO i ' ' or ..7liven !, i 117. ') ,...4 . ' Art Linkletter hit the jackpot when he started his "People Are Funny", show. He never need worry about running out of material. -R- obert W. Lee ROBINSON KHRUSHCHEV'S STARTLING DISCOVERY INSIDE WASHINGTON - Drummond By Roscoe - t g ' t 3 c e I s ,..- 1 t 1 , v , 1 - . - SinceFeadin g - . statements But no matter what Mr. Ashby must be aware of the fact that ' there are many thousands of Americans who love their coun--- try as well as he does, who are just af sincere in their feelings and victions That President Roosevelt was a good and honorable American and that as president he brought to hia-lde- a c as, 1 - a ji - ts Attack On President Rooseve it In-Pa- 1 1 t -file-1 "pre-summi- t" Thursday, Nov. 5, a letter by R. L. zens of the United States. vast prestige of the pre'sidency. and accumulated trust and goodwill, Ashby, wThoughts As We Recall E. Petersen , yearsPearl Harbor," I am still amazed at which leaders and people on both ---American Fork fice 'differently than anybody ex. sides of the Iron Curtain have in pected when he 'undertook a second - INDIA'S term. him, in a major new effort to cut PRIME MINISTER Jawaharlal and that Chou and Nehru enter Into, dl- .. , STRICTLY PERSONAL back the cold war in a way that will By Sydney Harris He is working longer and harder. , rect talks on the sltuation.'-- ' Nehru announced a year ago that he cause not the weaken, strengthen, c 1 Ile pnprgiegmoreL Of freedom. applying action by ' back over his activities since that is a fuller participant In time, it Pandit 'Nehru, seems to contradict This means that, far from letting of policy than iexactingly, is easy to understand why he did not get , whole public personality. That he . his administration . in its final i s believed He s paring many - the rest he likely. , sought and no doubt needs months wane and wither, the Prest- okay such a stern message to Chou En-la- l, himself less than he himself fore- OF the most overused and and when ha treated Jim like a ' so much.)). dent is dedicating it to a mission whom he has always-treat- ed with rela- ,' cast. ' he felt wicked. isused vocabuwords human, in the for eventful a been most shamefully -' ..'- '''' . ti be its best i It, bas year vely unrequieted generosity, emphasizes He is initiating - which he hopes may - v. the confusing and controversial prime achievement. of the ,social sentimentalist- isT ANY GIVEN SOCIAL 'd Cultural of tile many paradoxes of his another lary and )i, carrying In the minister, The ' daily weight of govern- - political history. trip he is about to "conscience." , through an ambi- system can develop any kind of President's the visit to India mental administrative duties for him make, venture in It tolls believt" that conscience it sets out to. This is Nehru's, dilemma, strangely enough, ' mfslakenly They most all. significant-omay prove were never so heavy. On Saturday he 1;111 f ','!:,'' personal diplomacy Will still engross him, it is expected, when why the Bible places idolatory at everybody "has" a conscience; that It couldn't come at a better be 70. He says he feelsttired and stale. i,4 r '6414,' which; in the end, New Eisenhower Delhi President reaches the head of the Ten Command,10, one be can in ' it moment. to, always appealed .t.:7414 Franklin . make will There is no indication that India'sCon7 on Dec. 11 as of his nin&nation tour. Min10 part the For Prime this or mentsfor if a society'worgiiips a '; and that myspast years 'Vayanother; Roosevelt and ,z gress Party leaders want-- their chieftain: Western diplomats are hopeful that this Nehru , and with has, iter conscience sincerity deal false Wilson god, then the consciences of Woodrow in Iri to retire. Nevertheless, many of them 1 :.' visit will clear up Nehru's intentions forbearance, sought to stand as a look like stay-at- , 'olil, '. - fallibly permits us the people will be attuned to this 'have 'complained that his near one-ma- n anent the Communist drive in Southeast friend of Communist China, trusting ,. homes. to tell right from falseness, and they will worship ' rule leaves little room fol'- ; growth and its promises of peaceful nine-nAsia, but their hopes arin't running high. - Mr. Drummond , his In in our own Initiative of younger, aspiring men. Nehru, I Nehru has never been noted for wrong ,! evilm,theincrukinegiallt 4porobi:learitg000fd. and turning the other way when it ' tion December trip to Europe, the making ' actions. anti. War and Indochina , in addition to being prime minister, is also in abetted the 1 lie 7 afia Atria Asia', a clear. Middle Last ..0-he $89 is, East, year things accepted tA . behavior social, is so that today The fact now minister. crushed neighboring Tibet. But ' million in American aid and this year , plain foreign at no small risk,' expending his have many young people grown up Chinese Communist troops after 'In January of this year, a group of his hopes to get up to $100 million, all the, strength, not acting to hoard it. ,, i s that many of - lie-- IS rnaintainine, even increas. earlier intrusion into Indian terri-- ,, nr,,.::."'-le- t k '',,,, the OWn - . without a conscience, or with a. members,: including Nehru's party --owe delinquents7 -W, w-- Ithir;';'01'riC-re-s4s.''- '' his- standing with ' the''' the daughter 'ell' ' irk '',' ' ' , Remorse 1 s a foreign word Indian , border, Kashmir, attacking lack of and other can and with , his authority complacency, foresight people strutting nine and 12 AFTER patrols, killing capturing YEARS of power in India, to them ;fief they have committed ; faults. Now, with the Chinese Reds musCongress, despite the e, the modern world ' Prime Minister five. amendment and despite his party's some Impious crime, for rtnorse . Nehru at 70, finds it cling into Indian territory at various a not do have conscience, and 311t. NEHRU is face to face with a more difficult than ever to remain friendly losing three consecutive and ever- and are if the border, Nehru's critics rep6ntence possible only points along would only give an ugly laugh if it difficult, anxious, and grim de '- larger congressional defeats. to the Communist nations. 'Tired and a permanent set of moral values are 'asking what he intends to do about it. ciston. Will he try to defend Indian were is appealed to. - . stale" as he describes himself,-thwho ' are . , There s many figured ruler the has ben built in during the early ' highquestion Significantly, with military forces in- over 350 million people may now have , that, all things considered, Mr. sovereignty eat pitch the same day India etched MAN IS BORN, not with a eon- years. in to Red the those China tenor of t ' Eisenhower would be spending a nonabandoned his warn of stern note China Communist to a policy "dynamic but a with capacity for , science, hope that Peiping will back down? EMOTIONALLY disturbed young. involvement" In view of the situation - good part of his last 12 months W- ill he affront educated Indian - conscience. His parents, and his ing that it would resist aggression Irby all his and restlessly bags ----Ifacking drew-,Irom e are moral Cannot long confronting4iin2,-Nehrt- s, available "The-not- e . on inion his an(Lrisk losing grip monsters of this early impressions, give him a builthe could eseaperaP Indian who cannot be reformed, f to main "a queer mixture of East and West, a cnncilia- masses the , ', Chinese IPremier Chou En-lby capitulating achis in values of set for to retirement. pinging -' cured, or even reached by the tn.. ' out of place everywhere, at home nothe Communist demands? Will he tions and the acts of others. tory proposal that a buffer zone be set Mr. Eisenhower may be pining ' . ditional appeals to their "sense cast aside the policy of neutrality as where." on clashes the , avoid further, to border, up , tvretire but he is, doing the op. outdated and inadequate and invite , , , 4 Is true that every human soul It of right and wrong!' No amount of posite of marking time. He may be has this capacity; but it is equally West? assistance from-thpreaching can affect, them, for packing his bags, but not to go to true that In some persons the con- Ike is going to Delhi at a critical rather to go to Rabat, 4 ' nothing in their psyches has been 1, Gettysburg; hour in history. A t stake is Mr. science is stunted or thwarted or no jurisdiction. AZKONGI OTHER THINGS, Friday .,the Athens t Istanbul, Delhi, , Kabul, trained to respond to ethical, in. ' 's Nehru leadership of India. At twisted into perverse shapes. The Landrum-Griffi- n Thirteenth is also the day that many Law, part of Teheran, Rome, Paris, Moscow and struction. Khrushchev's also Premier is stake The "conscience" of a boy in small builnesmen throughout the country t whichbecomes effective this - week,' points east. of the Communist bloc- leadership Sparta told him that it was fine to changes that. It provides that any small - FOR TUE NEXT 12 months Mr. ' because Mr. Khrushchey cannot re- get a new lease on business life. It is the " ' ' ' ," businessman who can't get help from the stealthe sin consisted In being day protection against certain labor Red an of main be to , is Eisenhower ally simultaneously doing going ',' It -dt ' of NLRB can take his case to 11.0 - !, a state court abuses become law. 11,,Blizmizz caugh t. The "conscience" list he most wants to do, what he Chinese aggression and of the cause .., - ' a him told Finn that or state labor board. ' Huckleberry of the cold war. He also Formerly, many small businessmen deeply believes he would be remiss was scarcely a human being - - , ' choose. must found they had no place of appeal against ' Negro use If the didn't donamely ' THIS ISN'T ONE of the dramatic, much- , Arizona, California Had -- organizatinnalpicketing . discussed features of the ; Law, boycotts. The National Labor Relations Peale Vincent Norman LIVING t CONFIDENT By I it Is one that can Inert. ly mean the 'Board has declined to handle cases- inc but (From the Deeeret News nes) n difference-betweelife- or death 'to thou.' volving smaller businesses, andthe Su- . 25 Years Ago ' sands of smaller businesses. preme Court has held state courts have , ; Nov. 13, 1931 -- Machine gum' ers , , , , . ; and riflemen of the Arizona Na. , do tional Guard sped toward tn iso-- But ever had any success at all. - "Sure," called me dous force you man TOT LONG ago a Hope. stopped ,. . , . , ---' lated -- was of he Colorado River the to answered, "years ago,- I part - SECCE-TH- E really know how hope?11you , 11 ontheitreet. ttort- - but do- we hear -- enough of what Is LAUNCHING Sputnik,--- :to protect the sovereignty of - 7-7to do and can make hope stork for you, ' quite successfur."-Andhebe"You don't know me, Dr- - Peale," L we have been wringing our hands and Appre-National youth good? right statesuccess his their from minstruction crews tell about achievements. me to on can somele.al past s. go you -', be said, "hut I have been reading to- toc."----about the inadequate education and train- - dation Week When he got on this subject and he -- - Of the Parker dam. As the army ap-,in life.',I Re. "The new , book, Amazing your ..;r.i As attention upon these warmed up to It, he showed evidence ,; proached, the construction crew re-- ! Pig our children have been given. We suits of Positive Thinking." You TRIED OUT on him a line Of marked enthusiasm. M he ' have been told the young :people ' ,' sponsor of this fitting across the Opti- - - ivrite about how wenderful life am TIlEtNthI spoke, ': calatedlinforhnalsat.e ,border:, recommended by Ber- - I broke in with. comments such as. in reared since the depression are too soft, mist International asks that we all take certain , who live those be zight by for had has who a a ' H nard friend, you. was wonderful the way "That , that a good look at the Inherent good in Our - techniques. What yea say' certainly considerable success in they are without causes to impel personal 50ye ara s .li'go do some- . to achievement and are interested future generation of citizens.,- -- . sounds good, - and it-- m avo be lame of - colinseling:-H- e t-""' out once thaAn' eistern pointed : like to I that nowN possi'. there-isnthing Pursuant to this Invitation we have , some people But only in themselves and material things. we should learn from our successes este with see him plenty of gold behind it that he ple contacted almost all the high school prin- - 'bility of he being anything like rather than from our failures Of make ' They have been tabbed as conformists, had purchased the old Knutsford , know-how- . At sources of least I me." that for with little desire for individuality. 7, cipals of the Greater, Salt Lake area and course, we can always learn some. gave him some hoPe, and that in it- - , Hotel on 3rd South and State Street "HOW colne" --means little more ' have mine' to the conclusion that these This ebronie-lamen- t thing from failure, if We keep our "You're self is creative. In fact hope is vi- - . and planned to turn the corner into a ; a ' ,,': a,sked. wits about us and really think. But business site. The same group had ' than that human nature is and always boys and girls do not have to be bad to , . , , .. ' , Human being like the , to learn from , tally , important also purchased land at 4th South , has been thing important be noticed. Their achlevemehts, intellecalways there is ,,i . Once everyone else. Why success is I'M GLAD to say that later and you- - have 'WELL, State Street A determined et, ., "the-go- od old this: convince with and qo ' nothinu compare . tually,, socially spiritually 1 e ) ' p :, don t these things on he got hold of himself and did fort would be made to shift the achieved a satisfactory result, stop . these principals, and us too, that they're days," The following paragraph from a .. !,1),, ,' ' 01,,e,, ' ,! ,', and ask yourself, lslow how did I a better job. city's business district from Main to 'I - , sermon, delivered:112 years ago, illus. ' ' just about the finest group in the history 1 . do this so well? Exactly what steps Bible St. 'Paul a In State the in Street passage '' ' i " of our city schools and we venture the the point; wrong either with did I take to get this good result?" sa.ys, For we are saved by Theater attractions Advertised tn. ' '..... hop.?' NtNrates have been led to think and to you or me or with From failure we learn what not to And how true that is. Hope is such ' eluded George M. Cohan in The findings would be the same- on a state-spea- k j ' both of us if the do' from success we learn what We lot , wide basis: , ' upon this most solemn matter, ent ' - Yankee Prince" at the Salt Lake': good medicine for Dr Peale simple principles nf should do. One .is -aNied rny 'friends, by seeing, as who can help Sumrharizing these reports, the prin. indeed Theater; Sousa and his band at the 4 often are that s people -effeeilve--livint won't work 'with , other positive. k-e- hithschoolItu"-- 7 , SPoilers" at the: by hope . We should all read and seeingIhegreat-, " .. So I if he had --, read that passage, anti let it sink Into t Colonial;The Great Divide' at the ; dents are taking their education - more 1 you. strangement,, between the old and. the " he exclaimed with a , our conr'Alus minds until It cm" , Grand. , seriously than ever before by young which, is growing in our day I , note of pathos in his voice, "please s f uh Senator-Caucuthe. subconsej ous old --cannot deny the complaints-whiprmests 75' Years be can fife - Putting In more study hours; conseme better how Ago - tell any ., , 'becomes a basic and of our part Old make.' ,bsr.m.mommlmr 1884-Chpeople commonly Nov. 13, people -olera ivas spread- - !, for me, in the face of all the troubles . quentlY,averaging better grades. i . thinking. Everybody knows that old .' in in Paris. . people have grown Deaths - in that city f and failures I itave. " g , honors for "While saw. more there's students ' life, there's '' 1 ng Qualitti ' .. 1 asked him what these could be independent, saucy, disobedient and yesterday number 28, 19 of them in ' In the National Merit and the Iowa tests ' il - hop' Why not turn it around? ' , the . w.hatnot:,... so unique they couldn't were that hopitals. , , While there's hope, life! As Lake ' quota for Salt or 4 ..,. The cattlemen's delegation from I , than the expected be overcome. And he told me about ttve's (Charles Kingsley. n 1847.) ' long as hope 1 thinkI , . Utah and Idaho was o ff for the na- , , City schools. lb them for 11.5 minutes or riore of : ; ing, you are alive with the possi-- , tional convention in , OF COURSE the complaint l5 much older 'I me' St Louis, .Both 4, , In Actually advanced negativism. ,' '' impassioned of And alEnrolling is bility growth growth. -' the Union Pacific and the Denver : . than that. Socrates Is supposed 6; have 1. never heard anything like his eager. - in'mathematics and foreign languages than ways the result of hopeful thinking. - and Rio Grande railroads-furnish- ed ,, of failure. Finally, he said in the 5th Century, B.C.: Our youth 1t 10114 school , In . that ac,cePtan ever way hope saves, us.; I reported ' JOne high free passes for the delegates ' now love luxury. ;zThey have bad mane sadly concluded, "Well, that's It. I and( , In 1,400 1,300 their wives. SO AND WE ', . left MUST ve. but -hope anything r' keep lope." 1;411075, -- ---- t ners, contempt for authority, disrespect . in roreign languages.) , nav,en't . , iis - --- -1 00 "That's wonderful," I told himHope, of course, is only 1 mord.- -- - , for old 'people.' Children nowadays are Years Ago :1: 0, , ... words But "That's are can Congratuexcitedly, great! dynamite; they WE Nov. 1859-SALUTE I our SO when their no longer rise 13, youth, especia , 4 tyrants, They company ofr Free- AI . Oprib'...- create-.'and an make destroy They love Spiritualists sailed our high school boys and girls. Ninety-- a na San parents o' others older, than they,enter : are 1 '0ILL'011gEatUlating-tne.- L Or , totaKY -- 41t1 4 -,II - --for San Salvadorrin Cemx--:- , .eod .., room. They contradict their , percent ol them Vil1 '' so-l-ake i he that great word. hope, bal America. There the M- 11 .11,Jtsli;777-41.group had ; chatter above company, inte,rrupt and ' useful citizens. We do not dread the time , mind with refurbish ,I.m it, your congratulating brighten ..., 50,000 acres of arable land - when we shall have to pass our responsi- -'---- fact that you have hope, yotron,the 9.2r, , your soul with it, live with it', build purchased gobble their food and what is worse, they that you'ieat 12 cents per acre, or $UM. One , '' We will on to teachers." bilities their believe , to tremen : "Are thers.sny out there today that your future with it down they youth. that dynamic, vital, tyrannize of the members, John Snelling, of bright, shin, ll have the wisdorn to see the right and the - everything else away and 'you're I'm supposed So it is that we still bear much of by- their first rig, r"Plendd bent , optimistic hope! ' ' aOmev:--taVolantlhedsa40 cooaCtkintb Wa3 said to be ! . ' ji -, It. Is to vital; i , what yx accomplish wrong' - with the present genera. trepien. courage I EL.lape.I . EISENHOWER TAWIGHT Nehru At 70...Man , Is tli- - -- his-eig- In The News -- - 1 r pi . . I ' ' , ; ' 1 - - . , - st . , 01,01r lkoomgolatullmt::Ne"---- i , er II, ..- , - j that-anoth- agiiiiet-Freside- - .. 7. ' r - 4r--4.10 wyti 1 --.- .. 4i-.- , - .. -- - tiPLOtAAC4 , ,1 nt- evidence, - ' mead i F. D- .- Roosevelt piling uptrefutable f (T) of our ,,,,.,.... personally, which is all the more to major agricultural Ototyoasbei! amazing since he lull continues commodities, name , "v..n", ; attackhitmyears after he is dead St ' INAna7e i,i and unable to defend himself. lr: ly tobacco, is one some pretty rough conthe :Now he made , leading Ill of tributors to t h e his in letter and I aM accusations t15tePC, grim rise of cancer 4..;. going to ask him to do a little honest in the nation. How he etnswers a soul dt-ithe people react? By setting 111 few questions.. for tobacco consumpI neW records. . and Does he I. sincerely honestly each year. ,e.s,1 tionNow believe-tha- t comes a crop of cranberries President Roosevelt was : that seems to have been sprayed '. the arch traitor he accused him a't . -- ' with material that once caused can- , .., -.cer,,in some mire, and citizensfrom ' .,1' .,,,.., . ""es. Ile Illi'm thatRSPeSt the four.corners of the nation rise dent of the United States he know- -- up to defend the public health. ingly and deliberately, - as he said, A leading authority has said that , "made possible the means for plac- a person would have to have a our country into World War ing for years , steady diet of cranberries 'Z.1. before there'would be any chance of and deliberately failed to take steps which could have prevented Pearl - --- being affected adversely by the ' Harbor ' s attack? chemical. Also, other animals (dogs, for instance) which were subjected - 3. Dies he think he was jubilant over- - the prospect of thousands of to tests with the chemical showed American boys and men being killed tie' adverse affects. Also, the amount and over the devastation of Propto the mice at the time 1 - . experimentation was more - than -- : l't37? .a to If he doesTI Thallenge-bi- m could probably be found in a whole - - 4,N 0v Of.. , FIELDso-tox,- , '111,111&--s. . ' - 1 - , , ' ill,' Secretary Stinson (not Shnp-- Is very ob- it son) and others, but Mous that he meant it as an attack ......i1,., ,,1 , Mr. Church. In Mq -- , Alow---- -- zit ;N , i6.17Ai V , 7 ...- ,,,,, - - . . - ,.. 4 .,.. -.- r 0'..- - -----,, .. . ,. - f ....,;,. of 1959 'will go down as one of the truly ironic happenings of this decade. yearinow, evidence has been - someinerit-rninds- i thrworkings-- ot aster --I- 4 '(:-A---- - a r ' -- - - o , - - - N : , 'CranberryDisastee So-Call- ed k One Off Ironic Events Of Dectido - , .,....k make his visit and then push back , the burner to simmer problems on to the back . ' ,T.N. until he leaves office-, i I is However, the convincing impression -.. know. to wants ,.. that President Eisenhower --...,..., as much about every country as possible, ss ."'" that he believes (after the warm recep- tion accorded him in Bonn, Paris, andI Lon- don on his recent trip) that his visits are valuable in promoting better relations. - . What little prestige value Franco may - --- ---gain- from the visit from the President ,' will be more than offset by the first-han- d knowledge that Mr. Eisenhower ceive learns In detail; for example, , e.", bases -, . man3r 'United- States-missi--cosostillffile...., In Spain.. The suggestion seems vverthy ''. ...n."- - . of acceptance thatthe President also visit' : , and - o ' the Middle East, Premier visit b'From Nasser. a such President per. , .,,.'h'I-17,haps the President could make a substantial and lasting contribution toward easing tensions in that: area. , the highly-explosiIn several countries where be willI visit, ":000111,01:. -.s-1---' President Eisenhower. can .ease the fears .....' engendered by Soviet pressures. There '''''- "''''Z' .....7. are grievances against the United States that foster these pressures,- disenchant,Ar,.----.- 4' trip,-judgin- ' 3 - ,I Ben-Guri- ' ,"0.- , . - Of-th- ' - ir---- - .1 .'- ' - The . 4 ike 016. - h..0:47-6-0i):000.- , 4 11.4. the United States HISTORY AS WELL as today's current events clearly indicate that it has been and isthe' unremitting purpose of past, presidents and today's Chief 'Executive, President Eisenhower, to work for the - preservation, restoration, and maintenance of world peace., This dedication-t- o leave no stone' unturned that might help ease world ten- - sions and improve international reLitions is behind the President's coming trip to Europe and Asia. In his effort to accomplish as much as possible, the President has now added Spain to his itinerary. iscomNendable. His tied There will be those, of course, who will criticize President Eisenhower's frig with Generalissimo Francisco Francd, contending that the President will add to the political Spanisirdictator's prestige and that his visit will be proof ". position, n that-Spaihas at long last found accept-- , Western family of nations. in the ince g from But the President's all the preparations being made at many , e a trip of levels, does notappear-to-bmerely making a eourtitty call or giving external support to "shaky" but friendly ments with our aid programs that the governmentsTrerthir Is it Intendedto----have furthered by Rtter propa- be merely a triumphal tour to demonstrate ganaizing of their good intentions and good ;;;411;;6e vi's only .Am will . ' governments not included in the summit Itathe President Eisenhower seems , and so on arrangements corn- - determined to learn at first hand the PRESIDENT EISENHOWER 'authoritaplex problems that are being wrestled with in the nine countries he will visit. tively and personally carries the Po- tential of his office in his travels to ease Naturally, this will better prepare him for all these situations: His visit with Franco the part he must take whenris;the four West- Decern--07-anern Power leaders meet 'help-- us more a solid for world foundation conference. ber 19, in their The President could, of course; menly peace. ' ' '2 1. ' , iPtaisat ' s , ,Soklekalita,litakiriday,thrtemluir -. for-t- he 4JtJ1 - - . E851:157 1151'; - V- . - 22A , V V 'V' V IF 1, - - - - --- - irlir , - -- v t t 1 Nal Everyone Has A Coilscience i 01 , 1 , 4 ai-;i- y . 9' 4 -- ik ,,-- -', 4 f- ( t a 3 '''' "to - - - - Wit hill 1 -- -- means -- -- ai , Hope For,Sm. all Businesses ., ., , -- , . ' - 1..-- G - - What Hope Can Do For The Discouraged , On Today's, Youth k -- , -- . , gan (Nov.--,a-15)-al- -- :at . th'' -- i'lati-Sm- : . i ""' - . , , ego-center- . - . 4...'A---40N- ,. , - soytou,? ',, ,, , - ,. -- 4", - ", . young ., , . , - 4 (' advifiCed--mathematics'an- . , ,Nrilt. -- - 2 ' -- parenti,liq i , , k -, - MI ' . -- , -- 0 , c - - -- ' . negatthe -a- sked--thisman 7-- - t become-happy,11- r,S - ... '' -- . . . 'clowamic, v - -- ',-- , , - - . , . .044101004. . , ,,I . , , , -- ., . . . . . 1 .. - , I . . - -- --- - -- ' ow . . . . - |