Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, June 14, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    n ! 4 I T 4 FOR SUPPER
Capital A Journal The Cipher
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
!' GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor and Publisher
;, ROBERT LETTS JONES, Assistant Publisher
Published every afternoon except Sunday ot 444 Che-
meketa St., Salem Phones: Business, Newsroom, Want
Ads, 2-2406; Society Editor, 2-2409.
Full Leased Wire Service of the Associated Press and
' The United Press. The Associated Press is exclusively
entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches
.' credited to it or otherwise credited in this paper and also
news published therein.
', SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Br Carrier: Weekly, Sc; Monthly. $1.00; One Tear, llJ.eo. By
' Mall In Oregon: Monthly. 75c; 6 Mo.. $4.00; One Year, H.00.
V. S. Outside Oregon: Monthly, $1.00; 6 Mm., $6.00; Year, fit
4 Salem, Orejron, Tuesday, June 14, 1949
Eisenhower Speaks Our
Last year when there wan much speculation on who
would be the major party nominee for president, the
name of Dwitfht 1). Eisenhower was offered frequently
' by his supporters. His name was put forward rather casual
ly among the republicans. Among the democrats, how
ever, he received some ardent backing.
All the while, his position on national and international
subjects was pretty much a mystery. It was a strange
situation where a man was sought to a varying degree
by both parties without the people knowing his views.
And then he made his position clear: He did riot want
his name considered as a candidate for the presidency
in 1948. But his political views were still not known.
At the time and since then, there has been much specu
lation on what political opinions Eisenhower holds. Could
he be considered a new dealer or middle-of-the-roader or
what?
- One of the first bits of light came the other day when
he addressed the graduating class at Columbia university.
He made his position known on paternalistic government:
He was opposed to it. Nothing should interfere with man's
right to self-government. It was a stirring pledge of faith
in the individual as a free man. He belabored demagogues
'of right and left who would turn back the clock of his
tory to the days of regimented humanity.
This expression of views on Eisenhower's part left little
to the imagination. He was definite and clear in his posi
tion. Because of the significance of these remarks in let
ting the people know where he stands, the Capital Journal
is reproducing that commencement day address in two
parts. The first is on this page today.
' And one page one of this issue is another indication of
how Ike stands on national affairs. He opposes federal
school aid grants to all of the states, a proposal already
-.approved by the senate and now pending in the house
labor subcommittee. As he sees it, help should go only
;to those states that can't raise enough taxes to support
a high level of education. And then he would stipulate
that such help would be only "under formulas that would
permit no abuse, no direct interference of the federal
authority in education processes and no opportunity to
expand the flow of federal money into areas where need
could not be clearly demonstrated."
New dealers will find little eomfort In Eisenhower's
remarks. His two public pronouncements indicate he could
not be considered in the new dealers' camp. It would ap
pear that his views were more of the traditional liberal,
as so ably outlined in another century by Thomas Jeffer
son. Free man, defined by Eisenhower in lofty terms, is
beset by schemes which would supposedly improve his
condition. But those schemes actually would weaken his
own self-reliance and build the power of the state.
Blue Monday for Stocks
It was "Blm Monday" for the New York stock market,
when it cracked to a 4Vt year low. Leading issues dropped
from a few cents to more than $2 a share, some around
$4 and one to $7.50. It has been a bear market for weeks
and it has not yet stabilized. The investing public has
not been buying for months and the billion dollar loss of
paper profits seems to have been mostly by the speculators.
No explanation is offered for the slump", although the
drop in steel production, the demand for a fourth round
of wage increases in the largest industries, the decline
in tax payments, price reductions and production cuts and
John L. Lewis' shutdown of coal mining had their cumu
lative effect. Also important was the fact that the resist
ance level at which a declining market has been stopped
three times since the end of the war was broken through.
, Undoubtedly other factors had their depressing influ
ence, among them the European situation and the cold
war stalemate, and to failure of congress to act on either
the financing of the Marshall plan or the Atlantic pact;
the failure of the administration to even attempt bal
ancing the budgpt and resort to deficit expenditures in
stead of effecting economies; the return of the president
to New Deal ideologies of costly subsidies; insistence
on $4 billion more taxes when the collections of the past
year show a shrinkage of $.1 billion for the last year prov
ing that taxes have reached the point of diminishing re
turns. Back of it all lies the national debt of $2.V2 billions
and the unbalanced budget, for which record new expen
ditures are advocated to stimulate the recession.
Salem Leads Northwest in Bank Gains
The gloomy outlook in Wall street doesn't affect Salem.
The Federal Reserve bank statement shows a gain of
14 per rent for Salem Imnk credits in May compared with
the same month last year, and bank credits are consid
ered one of the best yardsticks of business activity. For
the first five months of the current year, Salem's bank
debit gains amounted to 7 per cent.
The showing placed Oregon's capital city at the top of
the list among major cities in the Pacific Northwest and
compared with an average gain of 1 per cent for May
and a fraction of 1 per cent for the five months period
in the Twelth Federal Reserve district.
Salem's bank debit total for May was $."i8.6"8,0H0 com
pared with $51,426,000 in May, 1948. For the five months
the capital city had hank debits of $298,250,000 as against
$277,771,000 last year.
Portland had bank debits of $515,262,000 in Msv and
$2,610,091,000 for the five months, a drop of 6 per eent
in each instance.
Eugene's bank debits were $48,363,000 and $223,710,000,
decline of 4 per cent for the month and 11 per cent for
the five months, according to the report.
Bellingham had a 14 per cent increase in bank debits
for May but showed a drop of 2 per cent for the five
months. Walla Walla was even with Salem with a 7 per
rent gain for the five months but was behind the Oregon
city with an increase of 11 per cent for May, tht report
aid.
BY DON UPJOHN
Indications are, from the rush for marriage licenses at our
local Cupid's counter, that some sort of a record may be hung
up for June this year unless the urge flattens as the month ad
vances. Yea. it
the time torrwn
brides and roses
and well has
the month been
named. But it
looks like a bit
o f discrimina
tion by leaving
out the grooms
in this designa
tion. After all,
in most cases,
he's the guy
who pays the marriage license
fee and it seems should be treat
ed as something else beside an
Incident. He deserves some sort
of a break.
Albany Mrs. Saloney M.
Hinkle, 82, was feeding kittens
on the back porch of her home
Sunday on the airport road, R.
F. D. No. 1, when she stumbled
over the black mother cat, fell
backwards and broke her hip.
She was taken to the Albany
General hospital where Monday
her condition was reported as
fair.
Oaa Vpiaaa,
Nature in the Rough
Lebanon, June 13 (Special) A
lady pigeon is fighting a losing
battle high in the rafters of the
Lebanon Auction house on east evident
Pat Emmons, formerly Salem
attorney but now practising law
at Albany, engaged in quite a
baseball game the other day
while relaxing from his legal
duties. When Pat went to bat he
was faced by his 16-year old
son as pitcher. When Pat hit the
ball it was fielded by his 10
year old son who heaved it to
Pat's 12-year old son at first
base and Pat was out. 'This was
by gibes from his 8-
Sherman street. The old build
ing, used as a livery stable in
early days, is being dismantled,
and Madame Pigeon is in a high
state of excitement over the ac-
year old son who was sitting on
a nearby fence giving the old
man the raspberry.
Ore Pearson
The case of State of Oregon key Manchur
John Pinson was on the ian city of Dai-
tivity which threatens her nest docket in circuit court for trial ren was divided
and eggs. During the past week today. The defendant was to be between R u s -she
made vicious swoons on tried for certain antics he al- sia and China.
workmen removing shingles legedly cut ud as a convict in Developed by t he Japanese, tankers.
from the roof. Rafters must the state penitentiary. The case Dairen stands at the tip-end of "The company therefore sug
come down within the' next few didn't get trial. For some reason the Lao-Tung peninsula, also at gests," continued Truitt, "that
days, wrecking crews state, and or another counsel for defense the treminus of the south Man- the commission reconsider its
eviction of the belligerant couldn't get in touch with his churian railroad, is one of the action ... by which it declined
PEARSON UPSETS ARMY APPOINTMENT
It didn't attract the big headlines that the battle over Mon
Wallgren did, but last week President Truman quietly bowed
regarding another of his major proposed appointments Cur
tis Calder to be secretary of the army.
Though last April he announced that Calder was due for
appointment 60 days later, Mr. Truman quietly appointed
Cordon Gray to be secretary of the army instead.
The president's reversal, according to White House observ
ers, was due to a series of columns by Drew Pearson, reveal
ing the corporate and utility connections of the proposed sec
retary of the army.
WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND
Chinese Communists Row
With Russian Communists
By DREW PEARSON
Washington Biggest news from the Orient has only been
reported so far in the diplomatic cables. It is that the communist
government of Russia and the new communist government of
China are already at each other's throats.
Mao Tse-Tung, conquering leader of the Chinese commiAiists,
has become bit- ' '
the maritime commission, four
tankers now building would not
be registered under the Stars
and stripes.
"The Standard Oil company,"
wrote Truitt. "will have (four)
tankers which it desire to place
under American flag and reg
istry, to be manned with citizen
personnel, provided it is permit
ted to transfer to Panamanian
flag and registry ... the equi
valent carrying capacity of used
m BY BECK
Recollections
terly anti - Rus
sian. Here is the
inside story of
what happened:
Under the
Big Four peace
agreement, the
n
"V I USED TO OREAD THE DAV
' "li our street would ee paved
- ( BECAUSE OF THE NOISY TRAFFIC ir . '-
Fi IT BRINGS.. BUT NOW I CANT frEVl-1-'.
i-'V4-J WAiT TIU. ITS OPEN FOR f'-M.'-'-"fir-
USE AMD THOSE KIDS A '"-Tm',- -T !v
- V TAKE THEIR ROLLER V, " Vj' . v
SKATES SOMEPLACE JK- $ 'fSihil
'JK yi' ji y IciosEo
nester is certain.
client.
EISENHOWER IN SIGNIFICANT TALK
Ike Hits at Demagogues
Of the Paternalistic State
(Editor's Note: The recent commencement day address
given by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower at Columbia was
significant. The Capital Journal feels his message is
so important that this newspaper is reproducing it in
full. It makes clear his political feelings. This is the first
of two parts.)
By DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
"When Columbia's first graduating class was awarded its de
grees, the pace and tempo of the human world had changed
little from the days of the Caesars and Pharaohs.
"Life then, as viewed from
our observation post 200 years themselves as capitalists.
later, had in it more of leisure spokesmen for labor, social re
and less of strain; more of medi- formers or politicians, eliblv
tation and less of hysteria; more promise us prosperity for our
best seaports in North China. to approve the application to
But when the Nationalist Chi- transfer to foreign flag and reg
rese moved out of their part of istry the vessels named above,
Dairen, the Russians promptly and desires to point out that
moved in. And now that the com- . . . (otherwise) this will result
munists control all north and in the loss of the newer tankers
central China, Gen. Mao Tse- to the American merchant mar
Tung sent word to Russia that ine and the national defense pro
he wanted to take over the Chi- gram."
nese half of Dairen. The vice-president's son-in-
Whereupcin the Russians said law used to be general counsel
no. They said it emphatically of the maritime commission,
and they have refused to budge later was a full-fledged commis-
since. sioner. Nevertheless, his former
As a result, Mao Tse-Tung colleagues did not relish Max's
and Chinese communist lead- squeeze play regarding oil
ers are boiling mad. They have tankers.
come to believe that under the (Coprrimi lew
much vaunted Russian-communist
system, China may not even
have as much land as she did
under the old-fashioned capitalists.
MacKENZIE'S COLUMN
Ignorance Is Dangerous
oy uevriii Macivcriic
' UPl PoreliD Alt.lr Anamt)
Educational developments sometimes get lost in the shuffle
of world events but we shouldn't overlook the importance of the
positive stand taken by 20 of America's outstanding educator!
regarding the r"i
mese obviously nigniy con
troversial views were contained
in a report prepared by an edu
cational commission appointee
by the National Education asso
ciation and the American Asso
ciation of School administration.
The purpose of the commis
sion was to study teaching
changes which might be advis
able in view of political ten
sions. When President Truman wa
questioned about this report at
his Washington news conference
he said he figured the educators
know their field the best. How
ever, he did think that young
Communists should be barred mlnds sh?uld not e taught b'
from the teaching profession.
teaching about
communism in
our schools.
These educa
tors who in
clude General
Dwight Eisen
hower, presi
dent of Colum
bia university,
and Dr. James
B. Conant, pres
i d e n t of Har
vard, have given in effect this
verdict:
The principles of communism
should be taught but not advo
cated in American schools.
1
OcH'ill Markeatla
of faltn and
confidence and
less of doubt
and fear. But
underneath the
surface, in the
gen eration of
C o 1 u m b I as
founders, there
was spreading
the spiritual
fire of a new
social and poli
tical philosophy
support of their personal but
carefully concealed ambitions.
"False teachers, who magnify
acknowledged errors in the
BARKLEY'S SON-IN-LAW
Washington's sanctimon i o u s
newsmen say it shouldn't be
written about, merely buzzed
about at Washington dinner ta
bles. However, one of the po-
practice of democracy, attempt jitical misfortunes of Washing-
1 to destroy our faith in man s
right to self-government. As we
seek to conserve what is good
ton is the manner in which the
vice-president's son-in-law. Max
Truitt, is cashing in on Alben
and sound even while we boldly Barkley's fine name
explore and test new ways, we
are belabored by the dema
gogues of right and left, both
k. tinh ""wiii wuuiq turn oacK ine
clock of histnrv In tha riavi nt own
. m , . ' J- ii
based upon tne concept oi eqimi- regimented humanity,
ity of right among men. regard- "In such a maelstrom of facts
less of the accident of birth. and crises and false counsel, the
"For centuries that fire had guidepo'sts to individual duty
glowed so leebly as trequenuy and action become obscured
Truitt is an able, likable law
partner of Ex-attorney General
Homer Cummings. Both get
plenty ot law practice on their
However, since his father-in-
law became vice-president of
the United States, Trultt's law
business has expanded so the
clients almost jostle each other
to disappear almost completely
from view; but it persisted mif-
"Infallible counsel for each' of eUin in!,i.de tne door
powers
through history
the fate of
becoming a cap
tive of the peo
ple they cap
tured. But the Am
ericans are be
ing captured on
a cultural and
household level
rather than on
a military level,
by German music, beer and ser-
JJTJ
ma
us is to be found within our
In addition, young Truitt is
ficiently to provide much of the valid hopes and aspirations and not t0 "elective. On his list are
inspiration for the great trans- ideals as human beings, so me-tnree cniei Dictators ot tne
Atlantic migration of the seven- clearly understood by our colo
teenth and eighteenth centuries, nial forebears.
Many diverse reasons hardened "The simple faith, the un
Trujillo of the Dominican Re
public and indirectly, through
- - . , w i-uiim intra uv iiumutrr
men and women of Europe to an shakeable conviction they held tne largest Argentine Shipping o( Americang ,rtalioned here for
cruel, to get a favored job," she
said. "And they haven't in any
vants rather than by the theories way lost their desire to doml-
of Clausewitz. nate.
That was the impression "They show it in small ways,
gained by correspondents flown For example, we just bought a
here by American overseas Air- young dog, and I have been try-
lines on a tour oi tne war zones, ing to train it.
It
people who advocate the over
throw of the government of the
United States.
The point is, of course, that I
teacher can import informatiot
objectively about communism,
or any other ism, without advo
cating it. Objectivity, there
fore, is the key to the problem,
as this column has been insist
ing. There has been widespread
anxiety in this country about a
discussion of communism in our
schools, and my observation is
"I don't like the fact he can nBl 11 na,s . ?een .ue
. ... fear that presentation of the
understand his German nurse subject mi(!ht be accompanied
better than he can me." by advocacy.
The ideological complexion ol
An intelligent wife said one our country a dozen years hence
of the most depressing things to may well depend on the manner
her was the struggle for power in which the current educational
that went on among German ser- program is handled. We cer-
vants in her household. tainly can't solve our problem
"They'll do anvthin to pnrh by hiding under a barrel. We
other, no matter how petty or must et out and face the issue
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
Americans Find No Fun
As Prisoners of Conquered
By HAL BOYLE
Berlin, June 14 (A) Americans in Germany have in some ways
become the prisoners of the conquered.
They are suffering, to a degree at least, the fate of all occupa
tion
No teacher who isn't thor
oughly familiar with the sub
ject should be permitted to try
to explain it.
Our greatest danger lies in
ignorance.
The educational commission
condemned the careless and un-
les on a tour of the war zones, ing to train it. If I either praise ' . noun
was confirmed by a number it or discipline it. I know that '"'J "se of ch word as Red
company, Peron of Argentina.
In fairness to the vice-president,
it should be noted that
he is frequently on the opposite
side of the fence from his son-in-law.
When Truitt was retained by
ocean Journey that was then in man s individual rights and
scarcely less than terrifying. his equality before the law and
Foremost was a fervent hope God, is the most priceless jewel
that they would find in the New ir, all the vast spiritual and ma
World escape from ancient terial heritage those men and
tyrannies imbedded in the Old women bequeathed to us.
World's structure. "We rnnnnt affnrH In lrw
"This purpose expanded and their sharp sense of basic values tne Tidell,nds oil lobby,, Bark
flourished at amazing speed in expressed by Patrick Henry
the American wilderness, where In one imperishable sentence,
only individual courage, self-
confidence and faith could spell "Millions of us, todav. seem
survival. to fpar that individual freedom
It begot in our fathers a dc- is i(,ading u, toward social
termination to reject utterly ,.haos. lnBt inriivi(illa oppor.
any political theory that gave tunily na, forpvPr ajSBppCared;
one man, or a group of men, an thllt no p(,r,on can have rightful
Inherent right to dominate olh- ti,le to prop(.riv. that we have
ers a determination eloquently roarhed lhe point wn.rc the
expressed and reaffirmed in our dividual is far t00 fmM lo cope
most treasured historical docu- wilh hi, circumstances: that his
mcnis.
the last three years.
and "communist" to attack peo
ple whose views differ from
those of the accusers.
To these expressions your col
munist would add the term
brought a softening of the atti- "I have lived in Germany be- h. "i " ,, " "L" Z
'Fascist," of course, was the
as soon as I turn my back my
cook will go to the icebox and
get a bone for the dog. And
The hardening of the political that's the lesson she wants it to
lines between east and west has learn.
tude between the individual fore and since the war. In all
American and the individual that time. I have never met a
ley fought on the senate floor German. Even combat men who German I felt like throwing my ment
to kill the Tidcland oil bill. Also, across mis una tour arms around and saying, 'You
when Truitt registered as the years ago have dropped the word sweet old thing, you.' They
paid agent of Dictator Franco "kraut" from their vocabulary, aren't loveable and they haven't
ine auierence mat nas tanen cnangea. And that gives me a
place on tne social level can per- hopeless feeling.
and lobbied for his full recog
nition, Barkley was known pri
vately to oppose iruch recogni
tion.
designation of Mussolini's move-
in Italy, and subsequently
came to be used for similar
movements, like nazism. Be
cause this ideology was essen
tially opposed to communism,
the communists started to use
the word "fascist" as a term of
opprobrium to be apnlieri In
ing and you become a stranger anyone who was against boU
haps best be shown by two par- It isn-t much fun to be a con-
ura i auenueu mrt inree yean nuernr wh.n Ih. o,,n o.i... tir.
afmi i.
A - ll i in,.
Meanwhile, Truitt gets in on f. . . i m land ,nat doesn' want you. shevism.
some of the most inner circle
parties in Washington thanks
to the fact that his wife is of-
lifolong physical" security against ,icial hostess for the vice-presi
dent.
every risk is all that matters.
"In the simple living of that "More than this, we hear that
day the application of this re- such security must be attained
solve to social and political by surrendcriag to centralized
problems, while difficult, did control the management of our
rtnt invnli-a anh pnmnlfiviliAl SOCirtV
and confusions that our fore- "In short, to these fearful Vandenberg, on whom the pres.
fathers were led to deny the men, the free human individual """V1 mu," depend for his bi
were some frauleins pres
ent, two Russian officers but no
German men. Some newly-ar
rived American wives gave the
frauleins the silent treatment all
the most exclusive ever thrown
by the Trumans. Not even Sen
ators Tom Connally and Arthur
validity ot their principles.
"Rut, since the days of Colum
bia's founders, a mighty up
surge In the gathering of knowl
edge and the development of
machines has many times over
complicated human relations.
"Technologically, we who
are gathered here and our pre
decessors of Columbia's first
commencement are separated by
the chasm between the ox-cart
and the jet engine, between the
grist mill and the cyclotron, be
tween a man wresting his own
living out of a wilderness farm
and the citizen whose livelihood
depends on the successful func
tioning of an entire and complex
national economy.
"The Impact on us of every
international fact and crisis is
is a social anachronism. P'"1 Ionian poucy, were m-
"On every count the fearful v''d-
men are wrong.
"More than ever before, In
our country, this is the age of
the Individual. Endowed with
the accumulated knowledge of
centuries, armed with all the
The White House dinner for f"n'"' T.h ?"mn hes
Winston Churchill was one of """" " ug
uviiiiiiii mug, uui inuai UL tne
tunes the band played were
American.
This week the correspondent
group went to another party. The
band played only two American
tunes. The Americans sang and
danced to German songs. No
Russians attended the party, but
there was a fraulein or two
there and several German men.
The American wives danced
instruments of modern science,
he is still assured personal free
dom and wide avenues of ex-
Living isn't so lush for Amer
icans in Germany today as it
was three years ago. But they
But L a w y e r-Lobbyist Max
Truitt was.
Latest of Max's operations has
been to demand that the mnri-
Oil of New Jersey to transfer With ,he Gr.m,n men
six modern oil tankers to the
Panamanian flag.
The maritime commission had
pression so that ne may win for "'" , " '" ' " " can still live more cheaply her.
himse f. his family and his 0l1- Standard then hired the , ,, .. . r
country greater material com- versatile Max. The commission'!
fort, ease and happiness: greater ""'"sol was based on the fact
spiritual satisfaction and con- ,nat 0,1 ' setting scarce in this
tent ment. country and. in time of war.
"When even the rudiments of ,h' nation's entire economy will
knowledge were possessed hv nepeno on naving enough tanK
rrs 10 uring in toreign oil. it
the tankers are under a foreign
flag, however, the United States
loses control.
Floor Furnaces
only a privileged few. when
man's appalling ignorance han
dicapped his participation in
snvernmpnt thfr u-b orn,,nH
Immediate. We are seldom tree , believe that an all-powerful
from anxiety as each day'a ...i. hid in ruin .a-h ...hi.t .
evenis crowd instantly upon our iif, from th, cradle to the grave. Panamanian flag
attention. Th.l iminl t,.. Hi,..v,.J l .nrt Iriu-.r
than they can at home in terms
of parties and servants.
"What do things cost now at
home is the housing situation
any better? they ask.
One way in which the Ameri
can victor is being captured
here Is by his conscience.
"Wives who come over look
at the misery around them and
it troubles them deeply," one
man aaiH "Th.u mtmr rfnina
But since operation under the thin,. , hjD Ge'rman children.
and before long they are more
means
wages. Max
Wiax.nHii Barm oil. No
fire-tesding, no shore! ing of
, Irs cJmm Mo M-crim
or dirt,
If lt kWmmmHt ra.n
Hoti Powerful hU op
to 4 or S rooms wiu
"warm-floor" comfort.
Mm Hm w.
can install
without "tearing op" tout
hftuse,
WM. tmmf ! Sli.i mnd
MaJ.li to suit yonr partic
ular needs: Seoosiortho
Ha-M tnetaltatioii for toot
homo,
W.'n mUh Ifclt offer to
inrinro yon to buy in our
alow ann instead of in
oor Fall rush. See ns nnw
st mono ret thm
beau
1
.
xl
active in charity work than they
their own homo
"Pralir IPAIini nttnw nr- -U .. a ..-!. Ti.iltl want U - C , I I
" ""- "... p- mi , ii jrni i, UUI nJUUtlC ..... -.n, ,u 1UI 7II1UIIIU rVCT W'CrO
tend to a moral purpose that ex- existence. Oil. towns "
animation proves false Tht None remains today. He proposed that Standard Many American families are
vote-seeker rarely hesitates to "The free individual has been Oil register under the Panaman- disturbed bv the problems of
IT. i .li" " ? A" S"'utM ni" own master; th. ian flag six modern tankers rearing children here. One hus-
humankmd Ruthless Individ. ..ate as his servant. ouiU ,lnce m2: ,nd threatened band whose child is just learn-
uala, whether they classify (Concluded tomorrow.) that If thii was not accepted by tni to talk aaid:
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