Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 8, 1952)
A"frN EDITORIALS Furse's Fresh Flashes No Place Like Home? FIGHT OVER KEYNOTERS In Washington they are in a tizzy ov er the question of keynoters at the national conventions. Both parties are composed of various elements and the question of a keynote speaker is only one of three sixty-four dollar questions now facing rival groups within each party. Al though the keynote speaker question ranks first in speculation, there are other impor tant posts to be settled at each convention. Who will be the permanent chairman of the conventions? Who will write the platforms? These are other issues which will be settled in the in-fighting between now and July. The Republican convention opens first. There has been much talk that General Douglas MacArthur would be in vited to deliver the keynote speech to the Republican delegates, but the thought here seems to be, now, that the General will be invited to be a guest speaker, but not the keynote speaker. In the case of the Republicans, the politicians in charge are said to be wait ing to see who the nominee will be before writing the platform, and making other arrangements. Because of a wide differ ence in the views of the two leading G. O. P. candidates, the platform might have to be arranged to suit them and no one can yet say which of the big two is "in", or if a compromise candidate may be the man. The Republicans are expected to name either Minority Leader Joe Martin, of the House, to be permanent chairman of their convention, or, possibly, Senator Eugene I). Millikin. Tradition favors Martin, but there is strong support for Millikin, in many circles. So, too, does tradition favor Speaker Sam Rayburn as the permanent chairman of the Democratic convention. Rayburn is the favorite for that Democra tic convention post until someone comes along to seriously threaten him. And, since there is much dissention in the senior ma jor ranks this year, Rayburn might have strong opposition. Drafting a platform calls for a resolu tions chairman, and each party is also fac ed with that problem neither having solved it as yet, of course. House Majority Leader McCormack, former Senator M3 ers, of Pennsylvania, and several other Democrats have been prominently men tioned. The Republican picturf hasn't crystalized even that much as yet. The G.O.P. platform may have to be tailored to the man, and the man is a hot issue, at this stage. THE DIPLOMA RACKET Apparently there are several .hundred so-called educational institutions in the United States that are operating a diploma racket running into millions of dollars a year. This information was brought to the attention of those attending the National Conference on Higher Education sponsor ed by the National Education Association. Many of these fraudulent schools special ize in the issuance of fake theology de grees at a cost averaging about $250. Dr. John Vale Russell, special consult ant of the committee reporting on the frau dulent educational institutions, pointed out that a number of those receiving these phoney degrees have succeeded in getting into the Chaplain Corps of the Armed Service. While the Federal Government is vir tually helpless to stop this unfortunate practice, the Federal Trade Commission did succeed last year in bringing suits against several "diploma mills" with the resulting success of obtaining "desist" or ders. New York and Virginia have effective laws to deal with the diploma racket. Other states in the nation should follow the lead of these two states to avoid the A pedestrian is a man with a wife, a daughter, two sons and one car. FliDner Fannv, our dainty little con tour twister, became offended at her boy ' friend the other day and mailed his en gagement ring back to him. Large red et.ers on the label attached read: Glass -Handle With Care." Some people give and forgive others get and forget. In business, you charge a thing and pay for it later; in politics, the payments come first and the charges later. A local kid says he can look into his girls eyes and tell what she thinks and it's most discouraging. That bathing suit that grandma wore Looked like a Mother Hubbard, But nowadays the bathing suits Look a lot more like her cupboard. In our day the girls were more shy and demure you had to whistle at them twice. ... man in his determination to no vice president, bu. w3r?iV' .: Some people's onlv idea of exercise is cessful. They r,-'-:-:i i.liir: :-, if he letting bills run. v-ld talk ? 'irum-n. 0 ; Murray, who hau room in the Blacks c:irj Ho 2I where need of federal legislation. There is less ! Senator iK.n"n a:.- ; lived, pick chance of losing educational freedom j JJu1udDce ft'L when the necessary laws are enacted by i -Tn come UP and see you," political subdivisions rather than the cen tral government in a nation. iHOIGHI FOR IOI AN Xo man has power to let another pre scribe liis faith. Faith is not faith zvithout be Vici'inij. Thomas Jefferson w4sf-' tit Legislative SIDELIGHTS . . bv BERNIE CAMP (Legislative Sidelines Is :ie available to ycur local news jap-r as a service of Mv j is.a Farm Bureau Fp ! r 1. 11 Opin ions expressed art ri" nr.-e.-sarilv ..f this new.suapcr Hi . -. 1OI1 ; NVh-a-.Ua Farv' Tiv,-. 1.. Federation THE PLATTSIHOUTH, N HRASKA, SEKI-WE EKLY PAGE FOUR Sect on 3 Thursday, May 8, 1952 mSHINGTON ToH Roads (he An:-tver? mere n?s teen some 1 WASHINGTON, D. C Presi- aent Harry Truman threw ex ecutive gears into confusion at his last April Dress conference. mention editorially in Nebraska n. he, f?ld assembled news- about the possibilities of toll " "' j R. , hci s uui - roads to .solve some of the state's ' 1 he was, u-n" rca-1 p.-cblems. leashing a hot-peep exclusive o. r tt tor the first time, about an ul- S;ate Engineer Harold Aitken timatum to Russia, he was not -a ,d recently hat toll roads were . only eivine newsmen a hparl not the answer in Nebraska. chye lut alo givmgone to his One of the most successful own executive department. Much toll roads in the United States 1 has been written about the poor has been the Pennsylvania members of the press, who felt Turnpike, completed in 1940 at their blood pressure rise to new a cost of $70 million and running j heights when the red hot tiD was Stanley James, Journal Washington Reporter Down Memory Lane cautioned Gillette about it. Other members of Gillette's committee were sore. They are also peeved over the fact that, after the Senate voted unani mously 60-0 on April' 10 to con tinue with the McCarthy in vestigation, a month has now passed and Gillette has nothing. repiied Truman. And he did. His only move has been to A. most bursting into the room cater to McCarthy's close friend, a minute or two later, the Sen- : Senator Welker of Idaho, by atcr frcm Missouri didn't wait 1 postponing further McCarthy for Murray to open the conver- investigations until May 12 when saticn. j Welker returns from the west. 20 Washington Pipeline Few people, even in Kentucky, know how much it pays to have ' Alben Barkley pulling wires for half apologetically explained that the veep was concerned about the transfer of an air force training center from Bocne County. Kentucky, to "I know what you want," he said, ""and I'm not going to do it." He went on to say that he YEARS AGO Harding Memorial Highway will be marked to follow U. S. :4 from Red Oak to Glenwood and through Platts mouth across Nebraska . . . Miss Anna May Sandin was winner of second place as vocalist in ths state music contest . . . A. H. Dnvhurv- va nrspntPfl a nat rnm. '' about a year ago that he was mon,).,', t. u.iiiyViv-i t called in for a pcrso "'"""CI a 3J Ul. JYlllKlil iJliUltll jrn)il1 toll- .5tV. tha nrncint , , i ,. . Ko,,,, j- e . v, 1 "-" - .i "i- mh.oiui.;i. nacs lo iveniucKV. ivieanwnue Danquet . . . L. b. li.vernment ha. 00- ; Jittery Gillette the Senate Armed Services Com- tained permission to pave from the city Sen. Ckiy Gillette of Iowa, jit- mittee is investigating why the limits of Plattsmouth north on Eighth te"V chairman of the Senate Air Force spent the extra money ctvnpf f vQ i-Jflo rono Ar,,rrov ov, Elections subcommittee, has ! to shift an air base from Ken- , , , ,, , ., , ' r- o made out a suopoena for severa ed its baseball season Sunday with a l-- other newspapermen to be gril win over Union. Newman collected four led on news leaks, but apparent hits to back the pitching of Hopkins and j hasn't the nerve to serve Taylor . . . Juniors were hosts to senior? I knew the CIO chieftain wanted the Bluegrass State. The other - him to withdraw, that he wasn't day Truman himself telephoned going to do so. and lelt. Secretary for Air Finletter and mat enctect tnat. uunng the years that followed. Murray was not invited to the White House personally as he was by FDR. He went there only with ether lobor leaders. And it was not until from Harrisburg over the Ap palachian Mountains to Pitts- ; burgh. This toll road appears to have paid its way and has been , very popular because it provided I a bee-line route over the moun tains. Particularly popular with truckers, it has been largely paid for by revenues from trucks. Trucks made up 24 per cent of the turnpike traffic and 64 per cent of the revenue in 1950. This toll road was authorized in 1949 to extend its mileage east to Philadelphia and west to the Pennsylvania-Ohio border. A number of eastern states have undertaken ambitious toll done road programs in recent vears. but because conditions similar to those of the Pennsylvania Turnpike did not exist, many of these roads have not paid out. A toll road between Portland and Kittery, Maine, built in 1947-48 and running for a dis tance of 44 miles, cost $20,690, 000, but in the first two years of its operation did not pay off any of the principal on the bonds floated to pay for it. One of the most recent toll roads constructed in the east is the New Jersey Turnpike, be gun in 1949 and completed a few months ago at a cost of $225 million and running from the Delaware border to New York uttered, but little has been said about the hot flushes which overtook State and Defense de partments, and members of the presidential press staff. As the reader probably knows, Mr. Truman inadvertently mis led the press about the ultima tum. It later turned out, ac cording to presidential assistant press secretaries, that there had been no genuine ultimatum, and that the news Mr. Truman was releasing was not really news. up to the Far East command post, as a reward for his job in Korea. But he and Gruenther were not moved up. They held two key jobs and it might well be that no one else could do an equal job in the same capacity at the moment. At least. Kidgway insisted that Gruenther remain his CS in Europe. Both parties are wondering what they can do about key note speakers. Those in the G. O. P. who wanted General Doug las MacArthur to make the key note speech at the Republican convention are finding that Els enhower supporters will never agree to that. It is not objec tionable to Taft s workers since General Mac has already indi- y cated a preference for the Ohio an. But Eisenhower supporters fear the MacArthur charm might set the tone of the con vention on the wrong pitch, which to them would be on a Taft policy pitch. Most observers think that .(Mr. Trumarrtold his press con- j General Mac will make a speech, ferehce that he had issued an! but that it will be only one of ultimatum to Joe Stalin in 1945 i a number of regular guest telling him to get out of Persia j speeches. For the Democratic by a certain period, and that keynoter, a man like Senator Stalin had removed his troops.) i Bob Kerr might be named. Of wv, i course, it has been a tradition broke up reporters were ready i that thcse actiVely rJnning f0r to ksenUdP' thTumia urn Sy Jhn0m?aSn "0?VS over the world, and some did, XlJlll1?? i l HIS Hilill. CiilillllcitC "Wl, 11 is still in the race by July. Sen ator Hubert Humphrey has been almost ruled out because of Southern objections. He has the active animosity of some in that section. caLed m for a personal, confi- ' made, but now is being made tee as did Eddie Milne of the 10 them at the annual banquet. Stuart Porter, jun- to servp livp-wirp rinrk Moiipn- ior class president, gave the farewell ad- heff of the Des Moines Register dress to which Miss Helen Schulz, senior 1 Tribune, who wrote exactly the ,v,w c 1.. , fame story on Gillette's commit- YEARS AGO George L. Farley has filed for the nomination as a member of the uni cameral legislature . . . Mrs. Gertrude V. Gorton has filed as a candidate for the Re publican nomination for the office that she now holds . . . Another filing was also announced today. Henry C. Backemeyer filed for the board of county commission ers from the third district . John J. Cloidt of Plattsmouth was elected presi dent of the county petroleum industries committee. Other officers are Ralph V. Lane of Avoca, vice chairman; and C. E. Wel-shimer, Plattsmouth, secretary . . . E. wmi na.i cit-iieu presiuent 01 tno j Providence Journal. In fact, the I rear-Dlatform speeches . . . Sen editor's note appearing at the i e secretary Les Biffle has been 1 top of the Providence Journal : "uietiv toostin the elderlv veep and the Kegister-Tribune stated fr nrpsident together with the that the stories were the samp, j r,,-namic, voun? Serrparv of the , However, Gillette has threat- 1 Tnferior. Oscar Chapman, for er.rd Miino with jail unless he vice president. i reveals his source, yet he hasn't : Merrv-Go-Round ' served a subpoena on Mollen- When President Trumm ill signed non, tnougn one is and ready. Reason : Rhode Island . is a loti" way from the voters of Iowa (,r !J Clinton County. Ohio. The tran sfer had already been partially City. No clear picture is avail able yet as to whether this road is going to pay for itself or not. Some authorities have serious reservations that it will be com pletely self-supporting. Massachusetts, which already has several short toll roads, in 1950 turned down a toll road proposal which would have call ed for the expenditure of $60 million and would have crossed the state from Connecticutt to New Hampshire. The Massachu setts Turnpike Authority, after a traffic survey, decided that to be justified financially, this toil road would have to carry a minimum traffic volume of 15, 000 vehicles per mile the year around to pay for it. Nothing less than that figure would en able the authority to finance original costs, meet interest charges and maintenance costs. There appear to be about Uicky to Ohio and back again. The committee doesn't know that the veeo is 'involved . . . Tennessee friends of Senator MeKellar are discussing the pos sibility of hiriner a private rail road car for the Senator's re jection camDaisn. MeKellar is too feeble to travel by automo bile and climb up on platforms so thev nlan a series of R.R. Tropted bi stl executives the o'hpr dav h made a special "oint of sbakin"- hands with r'irPHCP Randall, president of while Mollenhoff writes Tn'and Sel. who had attacked biggest circulating paper bim hitfprlv on the air . .- . "ausmoutn board ot education. Dr. R. P. Westover was named vice president; and v,-ank A. Cloidt was elected secretary . . . Mrs. William Woolcott was installed as resident of the Plattsmouth Club at tha annual banquet. in Iowa. Incidentally, Mollenhoff isn't ducking the subnoena. He's a rciind the capito! every day. ready to accept service. Gillette us. doesn't have th'3 2ufs. v; tow in? to McCarthy Meanwhile, the cm ire "inci of heckling newsmen re garding their news sources in dicates the extent to which Gil- 0 ic nas tecr. under the thnr-h man Dc-mocrnMe bosses in Yc'S"?- nwn. Ohio, wpvp renllv nut to .orpt Kfnuvpr. Thev had bitter memories of his Cleveland rrime '-"-anns vhpn he snbionaed vrimin mrbstprs who hd en iVPd viiipal nrotecTo!i nrd Vnii'rstn'ivn publi- can reform mayor Charles B. "-ndrson nnd Younstnwn no ';c chief Edward J. Allen for "'anin"- un the city . . . Con "rnniin Waltpr Brehm of Ohio. he iz supposed to probe. What ""ubMcan. convicted of taking Vv man s of Senator McCarthy, the The Washington Merry-Go-Round The Plattsmouth Journal Official County and City Paper KSTA BUSHED IX 1SS1 Twice Winner Ak-Sar-Ben Plaques for "OUTSTANDING COMMUNITY SERVICE" 1949 1951 Presented Nebraska Press Association ' GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD" in 1951 (Ranked Second in Citi es Over 1000 Population' Published semi-weekly, Mondays and Thursdays, at 409-413 Main Street. Plaitsmouth. Cass County. Xebr. RONALD R. FURSE Publisher HARRY J. CANE Editor FRANK H. SMITH News Reporter nssocmrion 9 tfT-,w.'.AVA-.v.w.vfiCAimuWmri s art n mm 1 1 NAHONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCiATION Entered at the Post Office at Plattsmouth, Nebraska, as ffconil class mail matter in accordance with the Act of Cons re? s of March 3. 1S79. SUBSCRIPTION RATE: $3.50 per year in Cass and adjoining counties. $4.00 per year elsewhere, in advance, by mail outside the city of Platts mouth. By carrier in Plattsmouth, 20 cents for two weeks. (Copyright 1949, By the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) DRE:W PEARSON SAYS: PRESI DENT TRUMAN AND PHIL MUR RAY HAVE NOT BEEN INTIMATE FRIENDS; SEN. GILLETTE IS JIT TERY OVER IOWA NEWSMAN; VEEP KEEPS AIR BASE FOR BLUE GRASS STATE. Washington. One of the personal paradoxes of the steel dispute which only three or four people know, is that Presi dent Truman and CIO chief Phil Murray for many years were not on too good per sonal teums. The public has the impresion that they were intimate friends and that it was part ly because of this intimacy that the White; House went to bat for the steelworkers. However, though the CIO has thrown powerful political support to Truman, Tru man's and Murray's personal relations for a long time were cool. The coolness dates back to the 1944 Democratic convention in Chicago when Murray was a strong supporter of Henry Wallace for the vice presidency. As such he opposed Truman, and was not in sym pathy with the way Sen. Sam Jackson of Indiana abruptly gaveled the convention to a close in order to stop a bandwagon rush for Wallace. That night Murray received a call from me of the bier democratic bosses, includ ing Ed Flynn of the Bronx and the late Ed Kelly of Chicago. They reported that they had been trying to stop Sen. Harry S. Tru- iviune ana r.iouennctf wro(p about the Gillette committee was that its own staff had rec ommended hearings on five of the charges Senator Bern on referred against MrCartViTr I McCarthy, who didn't like this nuiiLiL.v, dim wiiu is ciose to Gillette, is credited with per suading him, to crack down on the press. This crackdown came as a complete surprise to Senator Hayden of Arizona, chairman of the Rules Committee, and he l'ickbacks alter an expose in 'his column, finally decided n3 to run for re-election . . . .nator Williams of Delaware v-. md'1 such a name for him self as a tax-fraud expeser that -onle outside his state now aD--pal to him for help. When the Tennessee Gas and Transmis sion Company abused farmers in puttins: a cas line across wes tern New York, people of that area appealed to Delaware's Williams, in addition to their cwn New York Senators. but some waited to get a re hashed version which later came from a press secretary. The President's words had been ton ed down astonishingly. No real ultimatum, no "first facts," and not 1945 at all but 1946! Those were the changes or refuta tions. When the President's utter ings were dumped upon . State Department heads, they suffer ed from temporary blindness, for one thing, hoping someone would say it wasn't so. But no one did. Other top government officials in the executive depart ment were thunder-struck. The President of the United States had certainly said something! And unlike the occasion on which Mr. Truman expressed a belief he could take over the press and radio, when his words were blown up a little beyond what even Mr. Truman meant, on this occasion Mr. Truman had put his feet squarely in his mouth. And even the executive department was stunned. There is one suggestion that President Truman himself key note the Democratic convention, but the President hasn't been drawn out on this idea. He would be expected to refuse the suggestion, however. And on top of htat, the President isn't J an effective public speaker any- now compared to some avau- , able in the party, or either party. three basic requirements in con sidering toll roads. First, that such a road must meet certain minimum requirements in aver age traffic volume. Second, that the road provide a more conven ient or more direct route be tween points thus speeding the movement of traffic and reliev ing congestion. And, third, that it solve a problem that cannot otherwise be solved. About the only real advantage General Matthew Ridgeway's appointment to the top NATO post was not the most satisfac tory one possible to Europeans, but it was satisfactory. . The tough fighter (Ridgeway) de served his appointment and is expected to make a good NATO commander, but General Alfred M Grupnther was Drobablv the ! favorite among Europeans for the job naturally. He has been Ike's Chief of Staff for many years knows how to work, not only with Ike, but with the Eu ropean nations themselves. In the apopinting, which sent General Mark Clark to the Far East " as theater commander. General James A. Van Fleet Three Countians Are Shippers To Omaha Market Three Cass countians were listed among shippers to the Omaha market last week. Shippers included Mrs. Louis Goebel, 15 hogs, weighing 22 pounds, that sold at $17; Arnold Stohlman, seven heifers, weigh ing 896 that brought S33.T5; and Siemoneit and Schmidt. 28 steers weighing 961 that sold at $34 and three steers weighing 900 that brought $32. Livestock supply ran heavy Monday at Omaha with some 37,000 cattle, calves, hogs and sheep on sale. Fat cattle sold unevenly weak to 50-75 cents lower, while hogs were steady to 25 cents lower. a a ii -i . ai a. i x :i; ro ion roaas is mau sucii laum- pl - h en SQund and ties make available immediately ! ffiiot fiw -hn hn not. high-standard facilities instead of 20 to 3C years in the future. DYNAMITE TRUCK EXPLODES MERCERSBURG, Pa. When his dynamite-laden truck went out of control and plunged down an embankment, the driver seems to have been the forgotten managed to escape in time to man. He stays ngn wnere ne warn near-by residents before has been, commander of the the flames ignited the dvnamite army on the Korean front. Van Although there was a deafenin VETERAN S' COLUMN By RICHARD C PECK Cass County Veterans' Service Officer Pension Cost of Living Increases Recent legislation has author ized certain minor increases in pension and compensation pay ments to disabled veterans and their dependents. These in creases are automatic and no application is necessary. Some veterans should have already re ceived checks by this time payin" the increases. Disability pay. ments are in creased as fol lows: tor service connected died as a result of a service con nected disability is increased as fellows: Widows with one child $121.00 (instead of $105.00) with $29.00 for each additional child (instead of $25.00); no widow but one child $67.00, two chil dren $94.00, three children $122.00. with $23.00 for each ad ditional child; dependent par ents $50.00 or $35.00 each if Jiv ing separately or alone. Death pension rates for de pendents are raised as follows: Widow with no children $48.00, widow with one child $60.00 with riis;n bilitv. a 5, i crease on ratings ' child; no widow out one child V ...v.--- , , : , t , a 5 irt. $720 added lor eacn aaamonai Iiichari ings from from 10 to 4f)- and 15 on-rat-50 to 100: tn. One of the most prevalent misconceptions about toll roads is that they are better than free roads. Actually, such roads are better only because they have beeii built comparatively recently and incorporate modern erteineering principles. Free ! roads could be built to stand ards just as high, if not high er, if the taxpayer wished to concentrate his taxes on the building of such routes. The motorists is twice-burdened on toll-roads. If his taxes had not been so widely misap propriated and mis-spent over j the years by self-seeking poli- i ticians he could have had his i highway free. The toll highway built to exactly the same stand ards as a free highway costs a great deal more, because inter est has to be paid on the bonds floated to build the toll road, and expensive toll gates and fa cilities for collecting tolls and persons to man these facilities are necessary. A mile of toll road of a given standard costs a great deal more than a mile of free highway built to the same standard be cause of the added costs advo cates of toll roads do not take into consideration. The way to get good highways is not by building toll roads, but by concentrating the spending power of motor vehicle tax mon ey on roads where traffic needs are greatest. Nebraska does not have the metropolitan cities or the travel between such cities which in the eastern states do possibly justify the cost pf some toll roads. At no point in ' Nebraska, possibly with the exception of the im mediate environs of small areas efficient fighter, who has not lost a maior battle since tak ing over the U. N. command. He was expected by many to move roar, no one was reported ir jurcd. A Classified Ad in The Jour nal costs as little as 3c. WEEKLY CROSSWORD PUZZLE Spring Harbinger Here's the Answer -s-'fiOO two children $39.00,-three children o.uu,- v.itn iui rarh additional child. non-service rrinnpctoH rfii.;. mi., nkmio ravmpnts nnnlv to an increase of S3.C0 per month veterans of World War I, World in Lincoln and Omaha, is there on regular cases and an increase ! wir II the Korean War. and ever at anytime sufficient tral cf $3.00 per month for tw ! r dependents. For veterans fic to pay for the cost of toll persons in need of regular n't- inH their dependents of the Civil roads. tcnuauLC anu aiu. War SpaniSn-AIIltflitiiii vvai, Death compensation payments ' ind' the Indian Wars, the in to dependents of a veteran who , crease is a Hat 15. A Classified Ad in The Jour nal costs as little as 35c. HORIZONTAL 1 Depicted songbird 6 It belongs to the family 12 Gets up 14 Baby's toy 15 Brown 16 Mongolian 4 Exists 5 Seines 6 Snare 7 Rabbit S Right (ab.) 9 Indians 10 Sailboats 11 Hearth goddess 13 Salt Swig A o. IL43 icioi-'js "Tswrr 18 Dawn goddess 17 Toward 19 Those in 25 Female sheep power 20 Slant 21 Drunkard a 22 Giant kingof Bashan 23 Mixed type 24 Observed 27 Passport approval 29 Pronoun 30 Area measure 31 Plural suffix 32 Thus 33 Direction 35 Finishes 38 Not (prefix) 39 Exclamation 40 Scold 42 Rods 47 Greek letter 48 Cravat 49 Cognizant '50 Arme'd conflict 51 Total 53 Revoke 55 Reposed 56 Orifices VERTICAL 1 Proportions 2 Color 3 Containers (Pi) 26 Its is made of mud 36 Old age and grass 37 Portions 27 Flower holder 41 Obtains 5 Metal 42 reel 00 11 goes soum 43 Was indebted 44 Note of scale in the 34 Lily Maid of Astolat 45 Go astray 46 0ose 47 Pitcher 52 That thing ' I2 J H 1 I' Kl'" 12 IT"! Ti ; tZZjz 71 vfr i? TS 2 "J P"13 lEZZ 5T rpr n Ui I T5T TT3 a si !z 55 55 I f