New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 2, 1925, Page 6

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Marshall thus had into the presidency, hance to ride New Britain Heral HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY But when | Marshall heard of the plan he | | the i Mr, would have nothing of it; he pre- President recovered, Tasued Daily (Bunday Kxeepted) At Herald Bidg., 67 Church Stiest ferred to remain loyal to a friend. | IPTION RATES | As presiding omser of the enate | b he listened to high-flung phrases N Month, | LS that were intended to be embalmed SUB? $3.00 & Year. 42,00 Three M upon the front pages of the news- Entered at the Post Office at New Britatn as Second Cluss Mall Matter, papers: but many such a speech was shorn of its lustre by a few homely TELEPHO! 5 CALLS obseryvations it awakened from the To De- the Senate he was like Lincoln to Everett upon the ficlds of B Edilorial Roo vice-president many a — mosthenes of tably s room alway advertising medium ulation s and open to advertiser | Gettysburg, when & fow scorc words freighted with meaning dashed Member of the Associnted VPress. oratory Mr atter into oblivion, ted Pross s excl use for re-put not otherwise ¥ and also local 1 heveln | Marshall left Washington, was much sought as an of sound American tinctured with the in his later days, he his official position in doe- Mark His Tt mind Kept pace with the changes of it th newspaper natignal and exponent Member Audit Bureau of Clreulat] The A atlon adver- ilyels of n. Twainian attributes of the soil time, so that when he addressed it his keen observa a gathering of folks” it was that “*Just rare indeed tions were not fit fruit fo® public through In New Times | dissemination Intrance the news- papers From an inconspicuous lawyer in a small town to the governorship OREGON SCHOOL LAW LAID TO REST alled Oregon school and to the vice-presidency was a big but being thrust pon the wings of fame did not rob step suddenly The gy aw, was sought to force all i the ng parochial Mr. Marshall of his early qualities personality, He did bring artificial dignity and circumlocuting y to high office, but radiat- for the which children public not schools, eliminatl and vat fro th state, N private m the state. oo national | o4 g wholesome The S. Supreme court threatenc and not dedision of t in holding t fully disposes of it Once agalnst the ome a regard o S lnind commonplaces of life, his high office exalted. His career in the Senate was not- able for its sanity, integrity of pur- | pose and unflinching loyalty to his chieftain in the White House. Yet it is a peculiar twist of human nature | that ot all the homilies he uttered | | as presiding officer, none will be re- | membersd so long and with such | universal approval as his remark | that what the country needed was | not so many senatorial panaceas | saliln o and cure-all legislation, but & good | have been going far beyond the re- o "o, I for educating children had the Oregon law, specifying the | particular schools in which such education was to be obtained, been | permitted upon the statute hooks. When their children i the dictates of common sense and e law unconstitutional court upheld the liberties of Ameri- cans to send their children to any saw fit. Other states with now be held in chack, It is astonishing that fundamental precept of liberty was threatened in any American state. Compuisor ol laws are univer- this cou but it would | nian predilections will such a quirements CURING THE ILLS OF WATERBURY Instead of clamping two ‘ripper’” bills down upon the Waterbury city | government, the Waterbury Repub- lican 18 of the opinion that a bet- | ter government in Waferbury would | be more to tha point than legislative ! meddling. And to this end the pa- per makes the suggestion that the city adopt the city manager form of government, | The legislative tm- | pinged upon the city is expected to!l improve the police department, The its to determine | oo with the Waterbury depart- prefer the public OF | yopt gamistedly has been that the police force was used as part of the political spoils system. But the Legislature has not cured the sys- | of the times tem, merely employ certain officials therein—in system. te to remaln educate conformity with parents agree to n the precepts of the state, it should the is be no particular business of st an education t meets a required to state how given so 1 c schools exist for citizens to con- Pu possible standard treatment make it \tional laws, and form to t stitutions gainst Americaft overnment in Oregon making it necessary to ! e Oregon 1aw 11 it would step to attain been itself a of The present superintendent of po- | species spolls have bee hort u educational rther rictive lice will have to scek other fields, in such & case it would | 0 o csor heing mamed by the as logical to speelfy | o | The weakness of the Waterbury has not been the in- competence of the chief of police. the Republican points out, but the fact that mitted to run had to bow ust ollegians must attend the jes and not other uni- ted step would universit department and a corre extent of im- y t knowledge the chief was not per- nd state uni- s and state un: he the department; Sy see an inkin : iready s an inkling to the powers that be nd ir were interested in political spoils i partment. Merely a state law to con- will passi trol officials of the department not necessarily change the under- g the opinion of ef- trouble in How are was indicated by passing one Legis- another one to circumvent the first By this time a way to Iy Waterburians. futile such forts usually that after ‘ripper” bill the to pass didh ence a way 8 iiscovered PHILOSOPHLR A MEMORY obably T been devised c MARSHAL NOW the of government in Water- for city man- to be supported by ¢ Naugatuck metr gain any support man- not siature. The city of government is oliticians partyized v for seif-evident rea- With the backing of the Re- Waterbury Hoosier's e sh make consider- politica Suld be able headwa As an antid xist t conditic be a good th LET ATTORNLY GENERAL EARN HIS SALARY Why has the state an attorney : His salary is paid state legal when som: e services to the Hing crops up dema ing his legal services in m the average capacity. me“ gl ture immediately looks abdit fpr way to employ special counsel and individuals a thereby gives favored employed as suc a ch counsel special fees, usually high © Jatest thing of the kind il Nianti wr < in Lign was was to take the prosecution of pro Kk r When Wilson th and isp 1 condemnatior started in Was' am p he 1an a a view f the hands of Iran M with ceedings out E. Healy of having him reling respon- Hea orney general vice- is regarded as an political or- sibilities of office, U monly president at 't govern- | “enemy” to the state ment, even m cabinet | ganiza is given no think it advisable at gaining laurels or be ir circumatances. were inclined to chance under ' the at least until | himself personally or by his own | this will be a much more expensive | best yet | bank robberies are as | The Times of that city declared the | ling the Connecticut. mitted to handle the ou 1o digest the more time you ta: it, . elther assistant, the Legislature intends to There's no way out, Fear mak armamont; armament makes fear. cmploy special counsel. Of course, Revolution: of proceeding A painful and mes wcquiring new bosses, than letting Mr, do the work; and Mr Healy Healy's sal- ary — which comes to him for do- Ing just that Kind of £0 on at the same The tion case was an exam | way The work — will be time, 1o concentrating crgies on runnin agl of its e Waterbury school cnumera le of whal It costs to get things done by special | counsel of permitting attorney general to do the work he is paid Mor, In order tate's $170,000, special Healy tend quires him to do and a instead the to callect the the state $17,000 has to pay counsel 1r M. had heen permitted to the job — as the he would have done had the Legislature re- henpecked isn't so ba ego is throtiled down. od mother is one who hope hter wi not jammed through a bill for special the 1 counsel ? did $170,000 but the cost to collect would have amounted a few 1849: Hoping to find a gold min Hoping to find an excuse nundred dollars for in cidental expenses, ARMED GUARDS HALT BANK ROBBERIE: A dispateh from an Indiana town the other is a vity of the f iere the firc is. ently your partn when the oth ay told of another high- handed daylight ba ried out in the usual manner- Too dummy takes the as! fr ever bid 'k robbery, car- or flve men with guns entering o estimated that Amer people that won't work an laws that won't. gountry bank with drawn revolvers, bundling tellers and clerks into the vaults, grabbing all money in s and decamping in the “waiting au- fhres gencrations tleman, but only two itches to knicker tomobile’ with engine running an confederate at the wheel, Indiana can do one or two things to stop the hank robbery record: Adopt the Michigan system of send- ing them to the penitentiary for life | if they are caught and convicted: Illinois or adopting the system of having armed guards patrol 1 ,y may become vielnity of all banks day and night born with the knack Ten thousand armed guards hae been on duty at every b in the safe, state since March 17. then is still safe, 3 once in a you meet chorefiliusn haen single bank | (¢} 0 1 ows what a bobbin is, robbery in Illinois, e e g The though expensive, scems to be the Since a gl a armed guard system, al-| That might print. husband the thumb her for rece him er devised for states wh ¥ common as | automobile accidents. And is no “if caught and convicted” about | it, either; it prevents the necessity | “"<'*% of catching and convicting | Civilized people are ines to work and c there vent muac then do other we'q ik long see whether a knowledge of chil psychology really works better tha | an apple sy DUMPING SEWAGE INTO 'ICUT the state | Among the cities of which regard the anti-pollution bill | passed by the Legislature with con- is Hartford, | Correet sentence “T don' wor out, fast.” (Protected by this Kids have the ca “for they never driv said he, siderable misgivings Associated Editors, Inc.) 25 Years Ago Today Date other day that ‘it amounts to a certainty that Hartford will be r quired eventually to ccase pouring raw sewage into the river. ¢ ¢ ¢ Hartford is not alone in contaminat- From Yaper of That 1t is virtually | the way It ion an sewer all trom Holy be cleaned open excite all que emen e 1o Middietown will not by ti# a of one to be erecte community even if that is a large It there is any bt other communities o ny years before one. may bémany yea ma hth 1 as well as Hart- we ! howill ) general ivity bie direction, it would be well it J 0 s of tI at the 1 until Jun there season, children's day ford, began to think about it v :"ijr‘ should be glad to hear from Spring- fleld.’ But “many to Driv it shouldn't be a e this morr to discontinue what Had beginning years” outrage. the the water a municipal The been partment nt out iy state - from watchful of its rights such | g een a fow City Clerk pollution would never have permitted to develop. Imaginc such ' Cil at New B raw s : in to the w he state |y opor kind' wor cities as Hartford Springfield tain people take dumping their o a rk and that severa bisects t have made ¢ s whic m that o sea, inflicting a wrong upon questions they know wi s 1sked others en route and maki dedicate S ) T ommitt the strcam, as the Hartford paper idly admits, “an open sewer.” sists of not situ that are 15, Hick gue g on Ma first be hich 1 go harbc 1 provid- rivers ar have found no difficully nder way t or Bassett t Hartford Sewage oty Mhan the problem by not injuring satisfactory disposi the ing plants; inland er, much lar solved its finances in the slightest and has fine sewage disposal 8 is as wort visitors. Hartford Com- Howard W ahout to can with this its cheaper stem of into wag! American C throughout week Hon. | o believed him STORRS PROPHESIES Thinks esidential politi worth Eeventually will Flectric agements Have to Hand Both Cars and Busses itizen was if the park (AP) electr the Cemger did j t exist there would be no What tually w that ith bo however. was ocal trans of the co st more room all busses by L e director of t \rs, motor a nice looks FactsandFancies ROBESE QUILLEN BY vutomobi ccried Moderni s and One man Ning i sm making Mr. | public eye Instead of being PEI°| Hagte saies no time, The quicker |ment. rum-running fratépnity seems -~ About all you ean say for human nature is that it makes a goad alibi. | marry better than or second §8 if nobody calls Central to ask a has| President, Every Kansas woman who couldn’t | look those who ine » the work and enough to Savings 1 Milford | South will be 0 .8 one to the b Stanley Tune Man- ing improve parts Electric ke o8 sy b Ohe ’ . We'd like to urge a lot of guys Who usc the links for exerclse, To exercise thelr humor too When off the links, now wouldn't you? The Fourth Estate! Rastus: “Ah hears yo' wife is | talkin' ‘bout gittin' a divorce.” | Florfan: “Yas, dat's jes' some of | dis newspaper comic talk.," ad ~—Mae Geisen, es tsm and fact, to be sung fo the « tune of Auld Lang Syne). At last comes graduation day, The end of four long years; We bid goodhye to high school lite, Let's shed deceitful tears! The world outside is walting for Our youthful point of view; And yet we'll all be lucky it (We get some work to do. e, to It nearly breaks our hearts to go er And leave our teachers dear; l\\‘c Kknow that's bunk, and so do you We're glad to go from here, (Soma of our teachers were all right But lots of them were not, And when they die we hope they'll g0 To where it's good and hot! nd to to £y We're going out into the world To fight 'gainst greed and sin, ‘let we don't think we'll fight hard | That we will get run in, We scatter now, but may we meet On Heaven's shining shore; So goodbye, dear old high school walls, We'll mark you up no more! 50 of | The Real Worry Money has worried me to rl | Fets: any." Berg “I dldn’t know you had P. C.‘ Stover. “1 haven't The old saying, land a yard wide,” no something like this: “She's aint, and an inch thick!” A Different Variety A liftle girl, six years old, re- marked to her mother that she had a cake, “But where did you get it, dearie? I had no cake in the shouse,” said mother, d n | 't ar | e | ache,” she replicd. .eater Nicholson. I | Collecting Wild Geese " By Dr. Walter E. Traprock 1t is always fascinating to watch a packag the flight of wild geese as they wend their way northward or south- ward as the case may be, The man- | ner of their flight in geometrical formation is very interesting and the length of some of their jour- neys is amazing. As ornithologists know these birds elect the largest and stongest male in the group to 1 commander and the other birds will | follow him until they fall to the | ground in exhaustion. he| 1 once tried an interesting experi- ment based on this follow-the-lead- er instinct. I built a small 'plane, carefully camouflaged to look like a large wildgoose even down to such horn that honked & it d. r- ne er | details as a s machine I rose 1,000 feet above the Connecticut hill honking persua In two hours I was followed by numerous schools of wild geesc which must have totaled over 50.- 000. T led them to a lake in the in- terior of the Province of Quebec which I had previously selected as | fecding ground. Here they 1 landed and there have spent the summers cver in in asing numbers, From time to time I take a few friends to this carefully rctreat where, natur: v, the ing is incomparable 1 have in corner of the world the finest pre geese ely, 18 Iy an ide and n- they sinee be he | favored A, | hid a this far away what is undoubtedly serve tame wild ietence. y- all Views and Reviews “So. you .gave uy Peggy apartment , Mary: the view “Yes, couldn't r the apartment afforded —Gertrude. we Topsy-Turyy “You keep such your house.” “Yes, we try to slecp when does' —Mrs. J. H Ward hours at Miles the baby strange Stone, The Tricky Triolet Counter A Paragon hubby is the finest man! brings home’ dough and bacon. tis not every woman can hubby is the finest man! first our married life began ives me all he’s makin’, is the finest mane— won't awaken! Erma R. Childress. Slight Drawback hair is coal black, d 1 love black 'tis true; often look back her hair so coal 4 and alack 5 That this maid T can't woo. Her hair is coal black— he | S0's the rest of her, too! 1 Julla McCaskey. My He Oh Sy hubby e he le Ar 1 At ic oo black: i The Perils of an Editor Stone: [ Brown we t “How was that?” Stone: “Polson gas. Brown “Poison gas! you're crazy! They don’t use gas at this newspaper's office.” i | an outside T by Stone know: bu from source." Brown: “Oh, for the loveof Mike, | ness or irritation, “Oh. Mother, fhis is a stomach- | hear the ecditor of the Fun Shop had a narrow escape last this came ) Graduation Hymn for High Schools | (A standard form, combining ideal- | | | | about it you Bane, Stone: *Well, some bad poetry, and—" Brown: ow I'm sure you're completely gone! How the devil could anybody get gassed just do- ing that?" Stone: WVell, the metre was brokenrand leaked." ~8, Varcoe, If necessity is the mogher of dn« | | vention, the newspaper must be its father., \ (Copyright, 1925, Reproduction Forbldden) ADHITS SENING BOMBS IN HAL Phila, Man Took This Way {0 Collet. Alleged Debt - Philadelphia, Pa., June 2, (AP)— | An attempt to recover money of which he believed he had been de- frauded led Walter W. Graebner, a postal employe, to wend bombs and 100 threatening letters to Emil L. Podolin, attorpey, Gracb-| ner's counsel, A. L. Wanamaker, de- | clared in court whei his client was | arraigned on charges of sending the | bombs and letters through the mails. Gracbner, who confessed to !r\nd-‘. ing the.bombs and letters, was held | in $10,000 bail by the United States Commissioner Manley. ‘Wanamaker told the commission- er that Graebner “was only trying to collect money justly due him, although I concede he employed the wrong method.” Assistant United States Attorney Robert M. Anderson, prosecuting the case, said that Graebner had not only endanger the lives of the defendant’s intended victims, but also the 100 postal clerks who handled the bombs.” Post office inspectors testified the bombs were powerful enough to wreck the post office building; were ingenious and would have blown a | T. Hawksworth, post office inspector, “She's all wool, Hawksworth sald purchased an auto- | adays goes gbile truck through Podolin on time all | payments, but later, when he found | | 1 the wigration. He is their fiight | | in | imitation of their hoarse cry, In this | and headed north, | in ex-| -CORNS G'wan, | | fuse was wet. | coroner's | Angers. train off a track had they exploded in a mail ¢ . Graebner's story of being defraud- «d by Podolin was denied today by A. who investigated the case. Grachner, the truck would cost more than he expected, dgeided not to make the purchase. But, bound by contract, he decided tg pay for the machine in full m\‘ mortgaged his home to raise the mon The first bomb was sent abont a | month ago, and was found on a porch of the Podolin home, by a neighbor. The second failed to ex- plode, Hawksworth said, because its | Graebner was arrested last week near Winslow Junction ,N. J., where he was waiting for Podolin to throw containing $1,000, from a train window as he had been in- structed in one of the letters. CROWE PREPARING STRONGEST CASE Making Every Eliort for Shep- herd's Gonviction | Arnola” | Guard, Chicage, June 2 (AP)—8hould he obtain a conviction of Willlam D. Shepherd for the murder of Willlam “millionaire orphan,” | iy Crowe wishes his cd that there will be possibility of grounds for Te-y | by a higher court. | herefore the 11n a eir stories will 4 before the court. An impo utor 5, and each be sifted and give testimony ant witness for state, Robert White, still_is however, and though he reported hiding in Pittsburgh, lie could not be found by detectives. With four jurors sworn in, both counsel and the state anticipating a full jury box soon Subpoenas have been prepared for Whliam P, Derrick of Houston, Texas, and Jerome Maillo of In- dianapolis, but Mr. Cpowe explained that the calling of them did not signify that the state was intending to delve during the trial into the death of Mrs. Emma Nelson Me- | Ciintock, William's mother The jury held Shepherd wonsible for hoth ths, N Clintock having been killed by mer- poisoning, according to the chemist's report, weig) ir the missing, was defense a cury o | detectives, | for-all nght | organizations had protested |and grinned, Lift Off-No Pain! Doesn't hurt bit! Drop a le “Freegone” on un aching corn, ntly that corn hurting then shortly you life it right off with one stops Your druggist sells a tiny bottle “Freegone” for a few cents, suf- ficlent 1o remeve every hard corn, soft corn, or -corn betwedn the toes. and the foot ralluses, without sore. ot i (BY CHARLES P, STEWART) NEA Service Writer Washington, June ”2.—Politiclans profess to be wondering whether or not President Coolldge will make w bid for another term in the White House. This wondering is pure make- believe, so far as politiclans with a particle of sense are concerned. The even slightly sensible ones know perfectly well the' president will try to succeed himeelf if he thinks he sees the least chance of getting away with, it, ..o Of course there's the limit precedent. Dut, as we all know, that doesn't fit Calvin Coolidge, Inasmuch as he got into Nis first fraction of a term by way of the vice presidency, b True, Theodore Roosevelt did pro- vide something of a precedent for presidents in Coolidge's position, but at that it wasn’t much of a prece- dent, Roosevelt himself was the only man ever bound by it, and he two-term | by no means hecause he wanted to be . Bestdes, his fractional term was was much longer than Coolidge Even so, he considered that it w sufficiently doubtful if he weren't cntitled to a renomination so that he made a special announcement on | the subject. And directly afterward he wished he hadn't and finally tried to re- verse himself, 5 No, no, President Coolidge can't see any impropriety in two terms and a fraction. Moreover, he as- sumes that his fraction didn't count and that, for all practical purposes, he's on his first term now. Without saying so in so many words—at any rate not publicly— he's permitted this information to leak out through spokesmen”—which is the way presidents transmit to the public in- formation they wish disseminated but prefer not to articulate person- aliy. s i s 's doubtful if a single politician in Washington isn't certain the president woufd have announced ‘it already, if he didn't want another “administrafion | term, as all There are plenty of good reasony why he shouldn't say hea dots want it, If he does. Therds no imaginable reason why he shouldn'i say he doesn't want it, it he doesn't. On the contrary, in the latter event, he coud clear the ground and im- prove his party's prospects by ex- pressing himself. The question, “Can he get an- other term?" is different. It he can get the nomination, he'll take his chances with the voters. ' And if this were 1928 he could get the nomination,. The old line republican leaders |don’t like him but the voters evi- dently do. While that lasts the old liners will have to go on making the best of him. If, however, ho loses his h6ld on the voters, by any chance, the party |leaders will be tickled to déath to throw him overbourd. In other words, they won't let him have the 1928 nomination. Ho won't be like Taft, who, when he lost his grip on the voters, still held it on the party leaders, D fan't as uncommugleative ) 1 If, then, the country etill seems as well disposed toward Coolidge three years hence as tod he'll |bave everything his own way {n the 1928 convention, and assuredly | he'll help himself to a renomination. Maybe he'll be as popular then as he is now. Then again, maybe he won't. Three years is a long time for public sentiment to stay put in a repul ike this. Something ay happen. Oor | perhaps tho people Will tire of so much coneervatism, without any- |thing in particular happening. In that cvent—it he loses enough of nis popularity—Coolldge will be |eliminated automaticaily. | The old line republican leaders |won't try to force him on the |electorate. . The electorate forced ‘)\lm on them instead. But if he lives and keeps his health and |doesn't get a renomination, it won't be because he doesn't want it, The politicians are just: pretend- |ing to wonder about him-and wish- {ing they had a little better reason ‘for doing it. GENERAL O'DUFFY HAVING HOT TIME. Twice Is Center of New York Demonstrations New York, June 2 (AP) Owen O'Duffy, whose policemen the Irish Free State go about armed even as to night sticks, been the center demonstrations in New York police these Incidents use the clubs don't carry. A battage of eggs accompanicd by hissing and crics of “shame,” “tra tor” and “he’s a second Benedict greeted the gencral last night as he was about to review th 165 regiment, ; New York Nationa! vhose members arc 1 eneral in un- has of two turbulent here as many in one of were compelled 10 which Irish polic. of descent, Twenty women, kicking screaming were ejected from mory by 200 military police Police needed clubs warfing symhols, but did not them as all disturbers women. General O'Duffy’s presence Snun- y at Celtic Park stirred up a free- A crowd of admirvr collected ahout lim. A man fell and the as use were crying that he had been Kicked, and | the fight ensued with a club was serves arrived., Colonel J. J. Phelan, commandant of the h had been warned of the demonstration last night. members of the bomb squad were sont to the armory, Irish republican Colonel One policeman helpless until Phelan's invitation to the Though eggs spattered about him, Genera) O'Duffy marched undaunted to the reviewing signd Three years ago he narrowly escaped assassination when fired upon from ambush in Dublin He expressed amusement over last night's incident. “It is most unfor- tunate,” he said, “that people dis- agree over what I believe will even- tually be the full freedom of Ire- land” The general is ‘commissioner the Trish civic guards and came to New York to attend the recent in- ternational police conference. the floor of | Observations On The Weather | Washington, June ' 2.—Forecast for Southern New England. Parl- |1y cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Somewhat warmer Wednesday; gen- [tle to moderate varfable winds. FForecast for Eastern New York: | Partly cloudy tonight and Wednes- day; somewhat warmer Wednesda) lin north and east central portions; |gentle to moderate variable winds. | Conditons: The western disturb- ance now forms a long trough of low |pressure extending from Minnésota southward to New Mexico. It is | moving slowly eastward. It has |caused unsettled weather with local |showers during the last 24 hours | between the Rocky Mountains and the Mississippi river. Showers also | occurred in the eastern portion of the lake region and the northern | portion of New England. The tem- perature vesterday was 00 or above from Connecticut westward to Téwa and from Michigan southward to the Gulf, Conditions favor for this yicinity |fair weather foilowed by increasing cloudiness and not much change in temperature, " Cuticura Baths !Comfort Bay’s Skin re- | Even | general The absolute purity and delicate medication of Cuticura Soap make it ideal for baby’s tender skin, Used daily,with touches of Ointment to little skin troubles, it keeps the skin smooth, clear and healthy. Cuticura Talcum is soothing ‘and oooling, idea! for baby after a bath, Soap Ze. Olatment 3 and We. Talenm e, TEhen. Sample sach free, . . 4T, Masa g‘ Cuticura Shaving Stick 25e. Heart Throbs of ‘Humanity LOSE to the heart interest of muny—reflected.in the call that comes from every walk of life—the Classified Ads are brimful of news that's interesting and Valua- ble—the desires, hopes, plans and endeavors of humanity. 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