G3Sm, Orgn, Frfday, October 21, ltf5
THE CAPITAL Jtirsftfl
re & m eeJB'
CitoitaTj Mies ftnfloMUcrlH Hratl
f5!
6
9. O
x,. P r - . ffl m . ? as. ..
o
0 w '7Tv i waya y wwBgmn iodq
Stanzas MAiiAaiN& f4.f wxt Pub'.thw
EdR2 fVlNAM. tAor mrth , " e
Pubfihad vtY aftertax xcqpt jundey pt 28$ North 9
0 Chuith St. fhant 4-4SI I. .
, r law in aumt fa tMit fm mS tu CaJM4 fwaa.
Tfc AaHanatt 4 ui MVI aafclaak w yg to ,MutM t
tu Ma uajB M rrn a t Mraw miip4 aw Mm M
m ana aatiaiaa uwraift
o 8 Among the Educators9
' Editor! Note: Bernard Mainwarint, editor an fnlliht a
O" Of the Capital Jimma!, i representing the Org'i Mala Kauri
of Higher tdueeti" it lt annual meeting of in Aisoenium
of bnrrmof 8tia a' Ma tlnirer.silin.aan' Allied Intjiu
0 lima till lnitng. Mirk. H wrilri lea tkcrt.
MICHIGAN .STATE tNIVtRSITV, r.4 Lansing, Mich.
1 (IMitorial ConnprmdMu ) Moat ppla know about Mithi
, gan Stit,-if only that it fiaitnall tam arf frequently ood
9 though to beat ttriirt "Dama. Last Saturday was the most
racanl tvnt of thin kind. But hardly anyonf who hasn't
seen tha tampus here is prepared for the fabulous, out of this
. world scn that greets him when he ridea four mil east
from th capital city of. Lansing.
from a prewar erhool of some 4000 students, Michigan
' State roistered 17,400 last month and is now almost as large
as tha great institution at Ann- Arbor, which has more than
-.' 19,000. From "Michigan Aggies" the college here evolved o
' Michigan State Collet and th 1 055 legislature changed it to
Michigan State University, over the protests of alumni of the
University of Michigan.
No institution is expanding faster than this one, which is in
(he midst of a UO.OOO.OOO building program. Thousands of
' student! are housed in new dorms, built with borrowed
.'money which will be repaid from rentals, The institution is
a huge hotel operation, serving 27,t)00 meals a day. It could
not hav grown as it has without providing housing.
The housing includes provision for married couples. The
University operates nearly 1300 apartments for them. Many
are still in wartime quarters, but there is a tremendous new
apartment project for married students that I doubt if any
college in America can equal.
Michigan State has the room, being at the edge of greater
Lansing. It can, landscape around its new buildings. It
," even has a beautiful stream through its spacious campus.
I Those attending the education meeting are housed in Kellogg
; center, which is a gift of the Kellogg Foundation. When an
authorized addition is erected this will have cost two million
dollars. It contains 196 beautiful hotel rooms, a lobby, dining
' rooms, a handsome auditorium. Meetings of Michigan groups
! are welcomed here. About 500 gatherings are held here
) annually, usually at least two are here at a time. Prices are
extremely reasonable and service is superb.
' The school has courses in hotel, restaurant and hospital
' management and Kellogg Center provides the students with
practical experience as well as the public with fine service,
; The fact that the University is four miles from the city makes
; campus hotel service more necessary than it would be other-
wise.
The guiding genius of Michigan State's rise to educational
', greatness is its president since 1041. John A. Hannah. II
1
JLapifoi iMir- ijiiuciniuwiii
lrt)tijseiSotli 3CfK n ovinia
00(;mvChainnan'
By JAMES MALLOW
AssorialO Press News Anakut
(9'ASHINCTON opTSc roof fell
in on Leiayird W. Hall when Presj.
By RY TUCKER IdentoKisenlwer sullen a Jieart
WASHINGTON. October ""afc-fnominces. Wth the ctors ac ' ; ""-'V?'
bhe race r the Presi.Vn-: al? r.. began in gubernatoru, r .-J-
tiai nomination in uuiu ma.w nmuv, e,-. . t en n li-
Parlies0 ho .delned into a The governors, of ijourse, sain-i s chairman of Hie Bepublican
loose tan ,at they uphold nome pnn- .huhku ... wj
sharp struggle Deiwen a loose tain mat mey upnoiu iramt , ... --w-- .
EubernaFonal groufc and the so-! ciples,in their invasion of White to lay the foundations for aTlepud,
colled Capitol Hill faction.o It; House ground namely, states' licag nsloi in 1!M.
threatens toWuplicatc the Eisen-I rights against Federal Wgran-l His counterpart Paul M. Butler,
lniwer-Tal't contest within "theldjzement. Atotheir arniu.'J con-lcIMirman of the Democratic Na.
COP in 1952, and the Stevenson- ference? at the nation finest: tjonal Committt., has, the sama
Itefouver battle among the Demo- Uxury resorts, they comkmn ' kind of jotj, for the opposition. It's
crats at their convention. Ikewashrhston's encroachment in a backbreaking job for both men
and Adlai were Uie candidate's the fields of taxation, labor con- any time. But Hall's looked easier
bf tha state house cabal. trials, highways, schools, etc. than Butler'sbcfore the President
Governor Goodwin J. Knightl Moreover, they'argue that they fell. ill Sept. 24.
of California, with Ms question-1 are closer and more responsive The Democrats have no sure
ing -of Vice-President" Nixon's 0 the "peepul." slipt candidate for their party's
and Senator Knowland's "electa-1 i... , an(i p- nominalion in their convention
bility," merely happens to be the fronicallv, F.D.R. was the anti- next summer, even (hough at lha
nosiesf claimant for the Gover- fetjerajg" 'champion when he moment .A d ! a I Stevenson mey
nors. Less demonstratively, pow- . lh while Houselseem to hold an edge.
erful coteries of state excutives , lh Hinv mid-Viclorian ! And before the conven'ion is
ire planning to nominate one of nkinsjn ,t Albany. Now, it is over the scramble among Demo,
their own at San Francisco and hjs expansjon 0f the Federal crats may bust the parly wi(e
Chicago, or at least to name a i vernment aJ continued by;open.
man suitable to them,. Truman and Eisenhower, aainst But Hall, a lifelong politician
Then- ambitions jeopardize the I which thev protest. ' lwn0 at 55 is denial and almosl
prospects of Chief Justice Earl I On the'East Coast, Knight has bald, saw nothing like that in store
Warren, Nixon and Knowland, as hi! counterpart in ex-Governor , for his party. On the contrary,
well as Sherman Adams, Alter- Thomas. E. Dewev. although the in early scpiemDer, ne was in
ney General Hrownen, tiaroia t. ! latter manipulates less effusively
and more effectively than the
Californlan. No candidate him
self. De.wev will control New
York's 90-plus delegation. He is,
however, supposed to favor War
ren or Nixon.
Stassen's self-starting boom
may suffer from the plans ofj
former Governor fcdward J.
Thye. now Senator. Although
the .Minnesota delegates were I
pledged to the ever-hopeful v
Masscn in jho. i nye swunsj
them to Ike on the first ballot,
thus starting the landslide. Thye
may demand a "favorite son i
role, thus killing the disarma
ment advisers admittedly poor
chances.
Warning From Farm Slates
Republican Governors in the
farm states insist on an import
ant voice in writing the agricul
tural plank in the platform, and
in selecting the candidates.
Otherwise, they warn of a corn-
wheat uprising like that which
gave Truman his "surprise vic
tory in 1948.
GOP state executives have no i all was saving the party would win
impressive entries, since Demo-i by tnking'Mke's philosophy, per-
I'm sick," he is quoted as cralic regimes outnumber them'sonality and the record of his ad-
Benson Policies Draw Mixed
Reaction from Farm Voters
By GEORGE GALLUP
(Director. Arpfnrun InililuU ot Public OolnloD)
PRINCETON, N. .)., Oct 20 be put on the same parity as other
Evidence of mounting disat isfac-. growers," "Instead of piling up
They Say Today
Quotes From The N'rwi
By UNITED PRESS
George Wood, general manager
ot Detroit's do-it-yourself and home
improvement show;
"There are still, plenty of jobs
lion wilh Republican farm policies grain, get rid of it, because sur-that are -st done b? experLs.'
comes to light in a special poll of i pluses are holding prices down."
Ihe nation's farmers just completed , "Take away atl controls and let Gisele Thierry, 21-yenr-old Paris
by Ihe American Institute of Pub- the market go according to supply manncouin after finishine sixth in
is. lie Opinion. jaml demand." "Give us Hid per ,iie Mj World He.iuiv rontpst in:saying, "uf seeing boys and girls i especially in the more influential ministration."
vote of 4-to-3. farmers t-cnt parity. "I hey should re-
the country say they are strict planting ana reduce acre-
Stassen and other eminents in
the Eisenhower family. As for
the Democratic coterie, they hurt
the chances of Senators Kelau
ver, Kerr, Johnson and others
of their party on Capitol Hill.
Governors' Successes
In forecasting the outcome of
such a fracas, it must be kept in
mind that the governors enjoy a
long string of successes. In mod
ern times a majority of the Presi
dential and Vice-Presidential
School Cheating
Albany Democrat-Herald
It is good to know that our
educators are giving real study
to the problems inseparable from
preparing boys and girls to be
competent, useful and happy
members of society. One of the
discussions at the school princi
pals' conference at Salem was
the question of what to do about
grading the students' work. One
principal is quoted as having
objected to th;. practice of issu
ing grades to students.
spot Putler and any other profes
sional politician must have envied.
To hear him talk, there werr
no storms ahead on his political
lake. He was confident Eisenhower
would run again. If Eisenhower
did, with his immense popularity,
he seemed a year ahead of time
to have much better than a 50-50 '
chance of winning.
And if Eisenhower won. hs .
might again, as in 1952, pull the
whole party with him and give
the Republicans -control of Con
gress once more. The whole Re
publican party felt the way Hall
did.
Then on Sept. 24 the President
was stricken. Now Hall merely,
and not too confidently, speaks
about the possibility that Eisen
hower may run.
If he had to bet privately. Pd
guess he'd bet Eisenhower won't
run. So Hall, an ex-judge and
seven times a congressman, faces
a tough year, just as tough as
Butler's.
And now Hall, as if accepting
idea Eisenhower wouldn t run at
graduatf of the institution and his wife was born on the! By
4..n 4a .it hMwm.n n.nm ot mir .nonlntf A i nn, ' 1 ,,i nihi dissatisfied with the new farm pro- lure 'arm crops
tune to sit between them at otn opening dinner hi si niiht. , r(,ni,rnce (Illo intn , were iVnical of the comments.
They are modest, dismiss what they have done lightly. The
president remarked that he was host to the president and vice
president of Notre Dame at the game here last Saturday and
out of politeness was forced to restrain himself during the
game,
He added that the athletic department wants to add 25.000
, Heats to the 51,000 seat stadium, which is nearly always sold
, out, but that he can think of better uses for that money than
seats that will be needed at most four times a year. "And
suppose we some time have weak times; we won't need them
at all," he remarked. However, this seems a remote contin
gency. J enn't imagine weakness in anything here.
A Few Odds and Knds
Chicago and Detroit papers are falling all over themselves,
About Princess Margaret's romance, with huge black headlines
stressing all the angles. You'd think thev were across
horder in Canada. And in Chicago, where a mayor once
wanted to "punch King George in the snoot."
United Fund campaigns are on back here, under different
names. Detroit, with Benson Ford as general chairman, is
after $ 1 4,450,000 for 155 agencies, The Lansing area seeks
$Rfi5.000 fur 55 agencies. They don't go nfter peanuts in
Michigan, "needs being in proportion to population.
A humorous note to me at least. Michigan's attorney
general is on traffic probation after several violations in
which the tickets were torn up. One more arrest for a
"moving" charge, like speeding and he'll lose his driving
license. He is a Republican, the secretary of state, who has
nut him on the pnn, a Democrat. They have politics back
here, too.
Lots of residence construction in the north end of Chicago.
One wonders where all the money and all the people are
coming from. Many are moving out of the city. More prosper
ous, they can make the pavments on nice new places in a com
paratively rural setting. A good sign, but it creates a lot of
problems. P. M.
gram Congress wrote into law at were typical of the comments.
President Lisenhower s request.
Sentiment in the Middlewest
farm belt, long considered a GOP
stronghold, today runs almost 3-to-1
in opposition to the administra
tion's farm price policies.
In the same survey, Secretary
of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson
draws a mixed reaction from farm
ers, with 37 per cent disapproving
of the way he is handling his job,
:to per cent approving and the re
maining .13 per cent expressing no
opinion or withholding judgment
The next question asked of farm
ers in today's survey:
"Do you approve or disapprove
of the way Secretary of Agriculture
Ezra Benson is handling his job?"
Here is the trend of the vote
since October, 1953:
BENSON POPULARITY
Vole of Farmers
TO- Sept. Oct.
DAY -J9S5 1153
Approve 30 .1.1 .14
Disapprove 37 30 27
London:
"It was unfair."
Sen. Walter F. George fD-Ga)
grades. Grades are the greatest
detriment to modern education."
He recommended, instead, prog
ress and "growth" reports to par-
on the coming Big Four foreign j e"ts whenever necessary,
ministers' conference in Geneva: Never having taught in junior
"The greatest opportunity of the, high school and not being famil-
centurv to do something for the.'ar wun an me pruuiems
cheating and lying to get good commonwealths. But, as possible
Two years ago. Secretary Benson i Undecided 33 37 39
was given a vote of confidence, And here is the vote today by
from 34 per cent of the nation's geographical regions:
Ap- Dlsap- I'ndr-
of
stability of the world is now at ! teachers at that level, this writer
hand if we have the courage to 1 s not going to try to tell these
grasp it. It's
and courage."
a matter of vision
j farmers, while 27 per cent ex-
" Albert Kinsey, author of the
Kinsey Report, on the uproar,
touched off in the United States by
a maL'.i7.ine article an "Sin In
'Sweden:" j
j "There is no more sin in Sweden)
; than in the United States. There
conscientious and (we hope) for
ward-looking instructors how to
handle this particular problem.
We are, however, upset by the
statement we have just quoted.
We hope it is not true that all
that is needed to turn an honest,
square-shooting youngster into a
liar and a cheat is to give him
a few. low grades in his studies.
If that is true, the outlook for a
trading material, they are talking
of Governors Christian A. Herter
of Massachusetts and William G.
Stratton of Illinois.
Hint Frojn Tennessee Governor
Democratic Governors and ex
Governors Averell Harriman
and Stevenson are ganging
against Capitol Hill's strongest
available Kefauver. And Gover
nor Frank G. Clement of Ten
nessee, a Vice-Presidential possi
bility, has hinted that the crime
investigator may not have the
full support of his o'.vn state's
delegation.
Free-swinging A. B. (Happy)
Chandler, if elected Governor of
Kentucky next month, will be
swinging again. He has many
sore scores to pay off, and.
But trying to win on Kisen-
hower's record may not be eno-.igh.
since the voters will have to make
their own judgment on the Repub
lican candidate, whoever he is.
And who he may be is something
Hall doesn't know now.
prove prove elded jjf. far more ly in the Scan-' enera, hjgh ',eve, of character ; usual, his 'role is 'unpredictable.
dinarian view on sexual morals jn our citizenship looks discour.
and 39 per cent had no opinion. : Enst .ifi
The first question put to farm .Midwest 20
families from Maine to California: j South 32
, "Are you satisfied or dissatis
fied with the way the Republican
administration is handling the pro
blem of farm prices and farm
price supports?"
COP FARM PROGRAM
Vote of Farmers
Sntlsflrrt 30
OlssntUfled 43
Withholding judgment 27 j in his farm chief and in the flex- the boss can't tell if his secretary ; that used
1 he vote ot larmers ny geo- i ible price support program. : isn t working,
graphical recions shown in the! -
22 re
49 31 "'."im-H'm.iu.uMi.nMuu. j j,,, Inherent dishonestv not
34 31 brought out in junior high will
Far West 42 27 31 Dr. Robert W. Benson, super-(come out later as "needed."
President Kisenhower has been:v'-sor f acoustic design at thej We've seen the incidence of
a strong supporter of Secretary A1 mnur nesearcn foundation ot crime of all sorts going up
Benson, who has been a contro-1 'c Illinois institute ot lccnnoiogy,
versial figure almost from the ' sonic findinp.s made in the study
start. On several occasions when of noise in offices:
Benson was under attack by some; "When it's noisy the workers
members of his own partv. the can't talk so much. and "if the
President expressed full confidence typewriter doesn't make any noise.
the last few years. If the crimes
were largely those of mature per
sons, maybe we could lay the
But he mav control a sizable block
of delegates for barter.
To complete the cast of influ
ential Governors in the Presi
dential drama, three relatively
young state excutives Williams
of Michigan, Leader of Pennsyl
vania, Meyner of New Jersey
are always mentioned as remote
increase to the development of Democratic prospects for second
dishonesty in, formative years by I place. And they will help to de-
the competitive grading system cide who gets top booking.
to be universal and I
IVople JVillirr Ucvs ior Ants
The Honey Bee, because of its highly developed Intelli
gence, the complexity of its social life and the subdivision of
community functions, M.mds al the head of the insect world
and has always interested both nncient and modern naturalists.
Many recent books since Maui ice
poet, dramatist and symholkst, wrote
1901 many books have been written on additional discoveries
of scientists about this highly industrious inject, whose rigid
life pattern had been fixed many millions of years before
following table:
Siitln- Dhual- Unde
rfed Isftrd rldrd
Fast 4S M 24
Midwest 20 5 24
South 32 3S 30
Far West . . . 3s 35 27
Of interest is the fact that,
among farmers expressing dissatis-j
faction with the program, there is I
widespread disagreement over!
POOR MAIN'S I'lHI.OSQI'HKH
All Hal Wants to Do Is Grow
A New Front Tooth; But Wli v?
man approved on Ihr mvih
The riviliratinn of the hip srnus to h.ivo hn'n the niodi'l
nnd inspiration of tin- totalitanaiK. lOninuiniMs and social
ists rnmvptinn of Kovi'i'nmvnt fur il has all tlu'ir (ratines
rnRihinrd. Everything is tTjilllated instinctively hv food fed
to nffsprinc. Kven the Queen, mother of them nil, is created
hy diet, so are the Drones who die alter the nuptul (HrM
and thp various castes of the workers, "each awnrdinn
to the need'' of the hive community, not Ihe individual.
Through eons of time, the svstent Ivc.ime heidilary.
There is no individuality in the hco hive. When the hive
hecomrs too populous, with .MVIMIO or more workers, a new
queen is reared, who-p first act is to kill her sisters, also
reared as queens, just as the totalitarian leaders do with
rivals. But every hep labors indiisti uui-ly and sclflessly
for thp roninmnitv.
The Ant, a still smaller insect lh..n thp II. e. also has an
tdva,ncod social civillallon. lives in societies ronsistinc besides
thp smaller males Mud larger females -iill smaller wins
less workers. Some seeiet or aclivc poison (:nuc acid) is
used for offense and defense. Thev fmrn c'loiucs- founded hv
a sinfla fertili.ed female qiioen,ind Jiave clunked most
the alobe. Piet also? regulates the cate, Thev 'not onlv h.u -"vast
thir fid but 'plant mushioom garden. Their life pat
tern is said to havi developed ;U1 million ran ai:o.
.Mils ilo serve as Rtntalitarian model aud sonic spee'es,
lf the l)rlve,r Ants, have a nulu.iiv eato of blind sohbcK
wh devour rverv'. livini! thini! in then path, an ideal Hod
or Na.'i i mv. afot .jiecies piactice sl.ia:y and ottuis are
p.naitcs all Miman laaits. .
Tli only troubje with applying Hie and Ant ,-ocial total
itai;an patterns to humcus is tS.it people ,ne j;ot m-rts .fcid
deeply resent tha1 attempts to iiake them over on inso t line..
NVr are they childri of a otivmon niothir, and food alone
will not make a quena, a dtie or woiker nor a slave
NKW YOHK un
what should be done to correct the you like to kiow
farm problem. tooth?
The dilemma eonfrnntinj; Sec-re-, This is one of my biost am
lary liensun is conipoumleil hy the bilious. It makes no sense off
fact that dissatisfaction comes , hand, I know.
, ! from both those who want to in- mv friends ask me. "Now. hv
Maeterlinck, the llelttian , crease parity prices and from shouk gnmn man ov uan,
his "Life of the Bee" in those who want to remove all con- ((1 , ,, ,ront ,onln? Whm
,rols- . . , would vou do wilh it-'-'
"'liaise prices paid t-i fanners
or cut down prices of the things- 1 know- hat I d do with it. I d
. ' nur a lA.'-irtil Hrimnnrl in thai
has bf en discarded in a great
many schools in the last few
years, llut the heaviest increase
in crime is in the teen-agers,
many of whom have been shield
ed from the demoralizing com
petition so feared by some edu
cators. Perhaps some statistics
dealing with this point would be
of value.
The case against grades seems
to be based on (1) the feeling
of inferiority supposed to be
forced on youngsters who are
j on the lower rungs of the ladder
tin Scholarship t1 thn inrontii-o
turn of all Kmily Post's etiquette , to ic aml cnpat in oni(,r to got
edicts', you'd blurt out: ! an unearned better grade
"Is it really true you grew that; The case fur Rra(inR is ba,d
handsome new front tooth after HrcK- isn't ii nn r.,s.nC;,i'
erations: 1 1 it gives a student
By HAL BOYLE
How would j Just hke atl the others, you'd
new front grab the first possible opportunity
to be introduced to me. Then, in
the very next breath (in viola-
(Released hv MeC!::rc Newspaper
A Smile or Two
Minneapolis Tribune
There's a new Texas story kick
irf around banking circles. It
seems that Clint Murchison, the
multimillionaire oil man, closed a
deal and sent a check to the bank
to pay for it.
The check was returned marked
"insufficient funds." Attached was
a note: "Not yours, Mr. Murchi
son . . .ours."
GET THIS SETTLED
Why doesn't science quit mess
ing around and develop an auto
mobile engine that will operate nn
disposable tissues, graham crack
ers and beer cans instead of gasoline?
With 12.000 Europeans and 325.
000 natives. Leopoldville in th
Belgian Congo has doubled in size
since World War II.
he buys,"
I " center ot H. And when strangers
SoIiMU 2.( I'S, ArO wbere did you et a diamond like
that?" Id reply:
Ny BIN M.XXWI II,
40.' Please It'll me how. Did you
go on a special diet? lid you first
put an old tooth under your pil
low at night. Poes sleeping on
your lace help?"
And believe me. madam I nm
assuming you are a lady, but if
ymi were a man it would make
an accurate idea of his perlorm-
ance in each subject; i2i it sup
plies incentive for harder work
by the student; (3) It lets the
parents know how their children
are doing, as a basis for their
hnnHlino an tins-ificliotoro
no ditieienceL you would get no! fm-mm,-. uiih tu , .,',.....;"
"Never mind the diamond. Vou information from me. ! nr th '.hnr
OCTOHKR Jt, lfl;'9 lean net diamonds bigger than that I would merely assume that i As a substitute for grade
Powerful banking interests had ' wholesale. Let me tell you about patronizing smile which them-that-! mnnv cott.u.f. .u'
UHI-lH ItM'l I) 11I1U MHII 111 tiC WIT ""- uu, ami .ti . I
stock market from complete riis-' And don't think they wouldn't "The only way I know to grow
integration this day 2ti ears ago. be interested- in hearing nhout it a front tooth after 40 is by the,
1 Many people gi through their exercise of iron determination. To
Canned heat had been fatal to whole lives without ever getting a only a (ew of us is given that kind:
an itinerant found dead in the' chance to have a heart-to-heart of illpower, and begging your
hoho 'jungle along the plough at the talk with a man who grew a new pardon, ma am I'm afraid you !
foot M Hellevue treet. looth'afler 40, were short-changed. The best I
Maybe you yourself are one of can do tor you is recommend a
Hal II. PaMon had recalled that' those who haven t had this privi- good dcntit."
iiK.n, i.i ji-rti.-. 4-u -ntirt w. i.v. ..... ir.ii.ui uuiv Mir n au mi rn. ar- Hhf n,l ,ntll
T. Mi K, Patton tt Sons, Salem book Well, supposing I grew this having J his attitude. Hut I d't
deaVrn. had t totalled electric iu- tooth, and you attended, some mind any mure than I mind now
candescent lighting, the lirt used .snappy social soiree, and you saw the opinion of people who jeer at
hy a merchandising firm in town me standing. therev smiling my my tooth-raising dream.
The lights had been installed by happy 10-caiat grin "People lii.e you simply haven't
Walter Holman. nephew ot Thomas And supposing you whispered to thought the problem throtich And
f Holman. who hrt updated an someone, "Who's the djj: over the problem is this: Middle-agt!
electric right plan; here m ifw. there wrp looks like he swallowed people run out of new things
a heaoiiglH
heard in whispered reel; "Vou press others
ine i mutest way i know of for
nnj ill's irnuw w uu jjirw u u ninnw-nnm otrson to solve nis
front Jooth alter 40'" . problem to get himself looked tip"
Your siif.al aplomb wtfidd van- to and I i stoned to is to grow a
ih. eiir eclat woil be shattered new treat tooth. Now isn't that
bak ng in an instant lon'l tell me . hi trv. illy true
te,achers write out reports to the
parents telling them what the
teachers think they need to know
about the standing of their chil
dren in scholarship and the rea
sons, if the te:chers know then;,
for unsatisfactory work These
notes to the parents are "excellent
aids in the education of the t-hil-
f rain Itl hi hnmac i. knrn . 1. -
ttl
As this wonderful vear
r.t1e danle decade approached mean jou haven t heard of him
the dawn el uepreior these prices
pre aileik .i4 Husu k s self sel t
fug sto: in the big market mid
mg m.u vafene. 1 V a pot f .1:
They can be used as auiliarie
to the grades where grades are
given. Probably conferences with
parents would be better in many
i-.ises: the teaiher could wrl! de
cide which parent", are ahle to
prolit by them. Mac work for
AnAtin k..t
a nit suniwisiiiL' . vou tnlk nhoul nnrl ntw mt-i in im. ' - . in pro r.
to
method'
seems to demand myre from tfle
any system pre
baic comperence
Misar. 10 pounds tr S7i
p'fiuler a pMind , coffee. 4fie would st;nd there sneering and 1 he reason ,i if he qh
a pound, green da. one half pound making cptting remarks euch a, sprout the tooth, he cant share
.'U-' Svine pimple will do anvthing to his secret selfish but equally'
o o An ;itiention. Pray, why iftdp t simple. If eer4dv over 4 sud-
F. K, Watson ho had stnrkxl he sprout a tail anl feeome a denlv bt'g.in to eruot wiiA-gi new
i. -Ullh Sonlhirt P.i.'ilu' ji n!il nnji! mn"" tt fiMtlh il uiviMIt a OjIj.-
. (jrapre operator at the t;th y
Succrns of
ot Uie Iracairr. A ro.llly Rood
tr.-ifher r.in ni.ike fithpr svstpm
irk wolf.
t" thf rV or Ant pHtlorn l make total. tatanism
i. if. s . 8 0
. . . . .... . . . a i -a.itmn in tin- r.fflv ri h.nl Iron thov Ihaysshul vnu wmikin t tuv wilMwo had .nka trow-
nisilf a.ilani prnccr tratlif them mu IoikI. who .Trp voir to ins a now front looiti wil
0 4a-1n,,!''r ,l ""o'iJ 111 J.'il alone as.i?1i-j,h ro3.' ii; mora'Sisffnctivt.)
MODERNIZE0
Your nwtli oith
a DURATILE
8 Metal Wolf Tilo,
W?S. Com'lPh. 4-5292
a&( Of fmCfUf!
Hear With Your Glasses
I
i j -
7 I f '
Cone art
.. l-TTi lMS.-.-,l
:1L
"1
X' 1
r 'l
i
I
4
So tan ttrj
tnmjojtablt tit tutor
Now a single unit he!p you see and hear bolter I Tiny
now Maico one onnfe hearing unit clips to your present
glasses or any frames of your choice. Puts the hearing
aid in its proper" place behind the ear for neater, bet
tor hearing. Ideal for the occ'aaianal user . . . like a pair
of reading glasses. F.asy to put onor take off. Wonder-
tut tor summer acmtt.es . . . worn entirely on th head
i-i ustuuni action ana dress.
See and try his newest, hearing ,
id at our otlice . . . positively no
ob!;.uion of any kind!
Ask to See Floyd BonneU
Distributor C onsultant
MAICO SALEM HEARING SERVICE
Acroia From ladrl andBuih, Bank ,
ytfico Hours: 9 A. M. Is 1 P. M. Saturdasra
i MAICO SAIEM HEARING SEBWICF
: 311 l9r Sirretalrm. Ornon
ojPlmr arnd me Free Information nitho.it obllttalion
il1K .
AiyiRKSS ...... a....
:
STATE. . I
n
19 -
Of O J B .
O Q
c
r9
c
9
CD
0 G
s
Icl
IS)