PAGE TWO lErjJailis Jtetari*' -** m jnn, n. c. L; *. MOOM imuSm company ' ■ ~ ■-» At 311 Hast ■Cwmry Street ■ MAOONAL JUBRWRTISJNG REPRESENTATIVE , raOMAS F. CLARK CO., INC. * sas-sm twist. Mew yo*M. n. y. “ SUBSCRIPTION RATES BE I lltitifi II at cents per week; BS.SB per year in <*woe; *5 |y •W TOWNS NOT SERVED BY t!ASIM£R AND ON RURAL VL -ROUTES INO—E NORTH OAROUNA: 88(88 to* " year; 88.80 tar ate moollis; » ter three aiontiis OUT^Oi'-STACY: 88A0 per year In advance; 95 tor six months. 93 * for three months Entered as second-class matter in the Post Office in Dunn, * K. C., under the laws of Congress, Act of March 3, 1879. Every afternoon, Monday through Friday v- '' « Capitalism In Action \ collaboration with the Brookings Institution, the { New York Exchange is making the first national census of stockholders. The Institution wm publish a comprehensive * report of ?Tre findings, probably within a year. ® - In discussing the project, the president of the Ex- t said, “This survey will provide the answer to the a question of who owns American industry. 1 ’"The sum erf the people who have declared their faith irl’our free enterprise system will he spread across the rec- ’ owh We will then "have the measure of American capitalism t in action.” 4 , One of the most significant and important aspeots of ‘ tifls American capitalism of ours is that almost every- t one-can share in it—«nd he a capitalist in his or her own t nght. All that is needed is to ouy a share of stock in an « rerican corporation. No one knows how many people 1 own stocks, is why the survey is being made. . 4s a rule, estimates place the number at about 15,000,090. , Whatever the exact figure, it obviously does not include 3 arpy people of large means. The great majority are men 1 and Women gtf average income levels, and some of them , are-in the lower brackets. All have one thing in common i belief that American enterprise is strong and sound, i and is worthy of being entrusted with a part of their ' Savings. These are the people who, with their families. „ represent a powerful bulwark against socialism, com- j munism, and the other philosophies of destruction and '\ oppression. , The survey will fill a real need. Tt will be a factual ’ record of the only kind of “public ownership” of bus- , ihess which fits the traditions and aspirations of a free i and independent people. - 4 E. V. Gainey ] The Daily accord wishes to take this belated oppor tunity to pay tribute to E. V. Gainey, a pioneer Ornm cit izen whose untimely death came as a great blow to his family'and to his many friends and acquaintances. ligT. Gainey had resided in Dunn for nearly a half eentty and was a good, substantial citizen of the town. " v He was a quiet, easy-going, good-natured individual who tended strictly to his own business but at the same time took a vital interest in those things he believed to be foOtie best interests of his town and commanTty. « In,any public undertaking, E. V. Gainey could always be jcoimted upon to do his part and to assume his share of }he responsibility. He was a man who served his fam ily*-his. town and his fellow man well- • 2'He leaves behind him a great host of friends and acquaintances who mourn his passing and pay tribtfte to jPjffßaa for the life he lived. Fqjrmer Enemy Sqilor In U. S. Airforce BHBHAMTO*. N. Y IW—During. WaaUL-War 11, Carl Spoorman was a tnember of the German Navy. , :,he wears a D. S. Air Force I Bppotoman, a native of Trier. 3«nh«nx came te She United Frederick OTHMAN Washington—For these ma*y yeaas I have contemplated (Re pleasure es being snowbound an ms hr Id, acres in Fairfax County. Vj, with no work to -do, or even a (piece far the papers to write. I HWW-hqje my wish to reverse. Stuck in town without a tooth- Whlie 3 was in the golden and gSandiasa reootum «f the House WajSfcand Means Committee listen ing to bureaucrats defending thega t ' solves from an assortment of charges involving reluctant tan- 1 pfafe, 8 t began to ms. It kept ah wessnig. It stfil is snowing. ' rn*-wlk>le city went haywire. Ice §>■s■ stock in the third nils and st- 'gfi*; of the trolleys. Skidding I automobiles on the local hills hafi- I ed others. The police had so many rtofiffa of auto wrecks they wee* e *to lUi Ma«S P 'n C 2 ahmrf wit there (the phones aha were ehphtly on the blink) and g|l ■ ■ tn - ■ States tn 1838 with his family but went book in 1808 to complete his schooling while his parents remain ed here. When war broke nut, he was drafted. Alter the war ended, he worked for the British military govern ment until 1988. when he rrtumed to the United States. Now T7, he decided to join the Air Force because he thinks he ‘(can go places.” oat a nightgown? So die went shopping far a hotel roam. She bad no baggage; nothing, but wet feet. Net that She was embarrassed. A Jot of d(her people were on the ■Eventually she found a room near ‘DuPont Circle, where I've got to hoof. No taxis. Mo rubbers, eith er. Seme fun. I kind of think it Is fun, at that. 11l mush out later .tor some toothpaste and, since I have a finicky wHe, a couple of pairs of pajamas, too. ’ The main thing that pleases me about our blizzard Is its vindica tion oil Old Tanner Othman’s re cent predictions df a long, hard winter. fVm may Temenfber Ihft. I’d hasdlr written it before the weather turned summery and the ladies began ;—retail without their nylons. I also received shine snide correspondence, saying •tat I knew so mare wheat weadtor fore casting than Tsai Caahte «Ud afboot tax cdßecttng. I mean that, as the author Os my own Old Farmert Almanac, I am boattag a button. The official . forecaster* see no letup at fills writing. Looks like the biggest SB*- zard in these parts In years. When finaßy I do get boo* I shall give Tommy, our horse, a i er in our family. Weeks . ago he grew himself the finest fur r coat evertowwrmman or boret "■y ■ §* According to Holm 'Gunther, welting in Hook” Magazine, Oen ewl Eisenhower wrote ‘(Crusade to Ear opr" an seven weeks. John Gun ther is totpreesed by the perform ance. Yet, What puzzles me about this is that John Gunther says: “. . . Two friends helped him, ho- ever, in editorial revision—Jo seph Barnes, then the foreign edi tor of the New York Hefald Tri bune. and Ken McCormick, repre senting Doubleday and Company, Ike’s publishers.” Now, a writer knows that nine tenths of any craftsmanly job is etlitor*al revision. That means re ducing the copy to English; cut ting out the useless pages, phrases, episodes and words; bringing the language through the crucible of thought. According to John Gun ther, this task General Eisenhower entrusted to Joe Barnes and Ken McCormick. Wendell Willkfc entrusted his “|>ne Would” to the editorial tal ehts of Joe Barnes. After that, lost interest in Will tie. I first met Joe Barnes in con nection with the Institute of Pacific Relations where he worked with Frederick Vanderbilt Field, E. C. " Cferier. and 'Owen Lattimore, At that time. Barnes and Field were very close friends. For many years, t however. I have only hearsay ; knowledge of Barnes’s career. General Alexander Barmine, who bid -been * Russian charge dtrf- ‘ faires at Athens and who has , served tn Soviet Intelligence work ' Hit is now an American citizen. ' bjsufytog under oath (before the llcCarran tomraittee, described a j conversation which he had, while ! Still in' -the Soviet service, with ; General Benin, a Soviet totoUi- \ gbnee officer. The following cnl r ! lfcuy is given to the committee J records; * . Rerzin was the head of Soviet mili- 1 tgr inteihgence? ‘ “Mr. Barmine. That Is right. ( “Senator Eastland. Re spoke of Mr. Lattimore and Mr. Barnes as t*o agents of Soviet mflttmy 4n-*| telligence? “Mr. Barmine. He spoke of them j “our j&Bn’. N Dr. Karl Wittogel, a former Gomrauntst, testified under oath; d “Senator Ferguson. Who was building ft fa Communist - organ i- 1 totion) up at Harvard? "Dr. Wittfogel. I think Barnes : was a leading man. . . . "Mr. Morris. . . . Did you have ! a controversy or conversation with Joseph Barnes during the Hltler- Stalin pact? ‘Dr. Wittfogel. . . Just (by aoci- ] dent. Oven Lattimore was in town. We had a conversation, the three of us. It was one of those attempts. I thought. Here, you might -pdll Barnes out Os what be has been in. He has been in it, but maybe he has seen the light:' I polled in vain. "I tried to disentangle him, to uproot him as Tar as I could, t told him many things about my own experience. . . . (Wittfogel describes Ms knowl- edge as a German Communist. You ban read it all in the published owlumes of the McCarren commit tee.) “. . . What interested me was that his reaction was to take bp ■me defense of Mr. etaltn‘s policy And the Comintern without going Into toe facts. If he bad an open Wind, he should have said, 'Let’s really weigh the facts.’ . . . "I B«rw here a sum who was fanatical. He stuck by his allßgi tmee to the' Comintern which he defended in an abstruse manner. Be didn’t care about the facts. . ... That was the end of my contact With Barnes ’ Whittaker Chambers testified before the samp committee in there Words: “. . . Peters (the principal Hue sign espionage agent in this caun tiV> told me that (Frederick Van ferbiit) Field was a member of an underground unit of the American i*W, vlAdi was Meeting, if I remember correctly, la a house belonging to Mr. Ffeid's mother somewhere in Central Park west. New York. Xn that unit were Frederick VHHtatoUt Field and Jo seph Barnes. Deters was consider- Mly disturbed about the unit be- Cause some difficulty had arisen between the two men about Bieir Wives. . . . (Mas. field had divsredd Ipm and marriad Barnes'.)” -’Robert Morris, committee ooun -I*l. summed a* the situation as j a y t « -we I*or -3* too nradh Mr. Barnes, Mr. Oulrmn. Mr. Ohamben is SjwaatTvt |*w wf some CbasnooiiO unit «nd Conamunito (oggagdzriUon, and yet I think ft 4s necoasary, Mr. Chair man, because Mr. Barnes continues to .togr tt.” ilwlto to awa* the print that 1 ;munlst party. This testimony li r i I Mi ' A j. I m mk Jk • I “You’pe riglit! Our ancestors gfcould’ve had enough sense to invest in real p*t&te "here!” | a VRSWiraT Amerry-oo* round g*' 12 ly MUItJI (ED. NOTE—This is another 1 Os Drew Pearson's ; penetraiting i columns on the subject upper- ] most to the nation's mind—graft i in the collection of income tax es.) , 1 WASHINGTON. Almost every 1 administration when it first takes ’ office uses a new broom when it comes to tax evasion. It cleans up ’ at the expense •of the administra- ! tion which preceded it. Then it leans on the broom. Part of this broom-cleaning, course. 4s because the graft it would have to clean out later is , its own graft; and toe dean-up would Hurt people in high places. Thus. Just as Roosevelt came Into office, an important start was made toward a tax-fraud clean-up. Ac tually, It was started by Republi can progressive Senators Blaine of Wisconsin and Broekhart of lawa two months before Roosevelt was inauguaated, but continued by HDR ' with the prosecution of Andred Mellon, the man entrusted with collecting taxes under Hoover and Coolidge: and of Charles E. Mitch ■eß, president vt the Wsttonsfl City Bank. A total of $6,387,13? was dad collected front Benedum Trees, "the Pittsburgh oil millionaire, and public attention was called to the legal tax-dodging schemes of James Forrester and various J. P. "Morgan partners. Today. Washington has the fam ed Mellon Art Gallery because the former Secretary of toe Treasury realised he would have to win pub lic support with a magnificent gesture if be were te escape crimi nal prosecution (for tax evasion. MOROENTHAU'S TAX SYSTEM Following this tax dean-up. the Roosevelt administration settled down to a long period of reasonably honest tax-cobeoting. There were some tax oases fixed in Roosevelt’s day—to be discussed in a later col umn. But eager-beaver Henry Mor genthau made such a squawk about them that even TOR was reluctant to arouse 'Henry’s -ire. Furthermore, Morgenthau built eg) toe most efficient tax-collecting system this country 'had ever seen. His counsel of Internal Revenue Was Robert Jackson, who did such an outstanding job that he was Jeter 'elevated to the Supreme Court; while toe chief of his in telligence unit was an Jncorngrllble eld tyrant named Elmer Xrey. In Jackson's old place, Truman appointed weak-sister Charles Oli phant, recently a pathetic witness before the King Committee; and Ip trey's place be appointed W. H. Woolf, honest but not vigilant. As ‘CMMnifuuoner of Internal Revenue, Truman appointed a medtotUty named Geosge Scboene man, who previously had been mix ed up In a matter which could not corns I taxes ate tmc bear the light of day; while as deputy commissioner he appointed Dan Bolich, who, when he took the oath of office, received so many flowers that the swearing-in cere mony looked like a gangster’s fu neral. Obviously a lot of people were overjoyed that Bolich shotild be collecting taxes, and some df them later turned out to be gang sters. All these appointments were made after Bob Hannegan. friend of the big-city bosses, took over the Democratic National Commit tee and the political fortunes of Marry Truman. SACROSANCT ntAMBR COSTELLO : When Hannegan was promoted from Commissioner *of Internal Revenue to national Chairman, he appointed as Ms successor .Joseph Nunan, who had been collector in New York. Nunan, in tum. retired Hugh McQufflen, forthright chief of the New York Intelligence Unit, replacing him with Dan Bolich. In this key spot Bolich had the power df tax life or death over hig-ehet gamblers, big business, or aifeane else in New ( Later, Nunan (stepped out to practice law, leaving behind him his friend Dan Bolich, who became Deputy Commissioner in Washing ton—the No. 2 spot for collecting the tones of toe entire notion. Among Hunan's clients. Inciden ry. were toe nightaokib owners New York, which Includes the king of toe gamblers, Frankie Ces telto. At about this time. also. Harry AnsUngw. narcotics commissioner. Was watching Costello .far possible connection with the dope rackets, but. because Os Ms hmttod Staff, he hod toe help of 12 toternol revenue agents. This was a nat ural cooperation, since Both -nar cotics and revenue ree wider the '^Bm" l *uddeidy fiolich demanded that the X 2 revenue men be token off the Costello assignment. Ans- Ifnger protested, but 4t did no flood. < I had been following Costello for Rome time, and reported Bolich!* &ck of interest in Costello to Yarn Clark, then Attorney General, riho promised to see that the agents Eiare lc«tbf -nn fiffttolln However, the Justice Deparhnerit has not even soov«8 to' deport Costello Tor perjury In connection with his naturalization; mean while, Bdbch (laved a pari hi delaying prosecution of one at the biggest gambling cases—the Guar anty Fimaree Company of Cafffor fUa. R SHOT MORALE ■ ' Naturally, «H fids varies for dto couragement among toe many tax Continued On Page Threw Wiilinr York -«» WMCMR BROADWAY LIGHTS The Tiret-Nigtrters: Katharine Cornell retained to a reprise of Somerset Maogtiam's “The Con stant Wife,’” which was embraced in the tong-age. This time the star attracted honey-dripped wordage but two atstemen politely dissent- 0 ed. Waiter (Herald Tribune) Kerr’s r citation: “Good fun.” Elmer s Rice's CTth play, "The Grand Toor," commuted between Hem and Haw. The general reaction was ( dominated by lukewarm wjnds- , lien. The Mirror’s reviewer called tt “an amiable Tittle -play.” “Lo t and Behold” was greeted with .yes , and no notices, the hhiks outnum- f bertng toe kisses. Reviewer Wil- t Isa Hawkins’ estimate: "It is de lightful:" The Sinai entry was < “Point el Nb Return,” starring < Henry Fonda. Enthusiastic oracles \ confirmed the tryout town inspec tors. balling It as a high-voltage ] addition to The White Light Way. . Richard Watte, Jr. rejoiced: “A . hstniant, resourceful and enor mously enjoyable dramatic enter- . talnmcnt." In the Wings; Laurence Olivier ood John Gielgud are fierce rivals for the title of England’s Greatest Actor. - Gielgud alleges Olivier is too bombastic and loud. At the premiere of Olivier's “Caesar and Cleopatra” (in London) some one informed Gielgud that if the two “Cleopatras” (starring Olivier and his wife) clicked—the .plays would be exported to Broadway. ‘•Why?" caustically inquired Giel gud. “Can’t they hear him from here?" The Cinemagiclans: “The Strange Door” bos Charles Laughton’s deft .playing 'putting same bite in a toothless tale. “Adventures of Captain Fabian” is the familiar dare-devil drama starring Errol Flynn, which is as quick as we can gti 4a toe point. "Longhorn” Is another cowboy-cattie-eaotos cllche. “The Racket” goes a Jem last rounds In jkt stale Cops vs. Robbers war. “IB Never Forget Ron” presents Tyrone Tow er and Ana Blythe in a conven tional romancinema. Tt inspires a sigh here and a throb (here. entertaining safari featuring your old friends from toe menageria. “Ariaasia Manhunt” to Aridity for the duHto ftotenv. The Airistocrats; “Crime Syndi cated” requires a scripting trans fusion. The .felony fables ore echoes of Hollywood’s camera-worm Who dunit themes, and they are the Siberlas In entertainment. •‘Suspense’’ has come up with some expert thrillers but its la teat was more pish-tush than heebie-jeebie. “The Magic ■ Cottage”- (which comes over Dumont’s channel) has the type of fairy-tale imagination that makes small-fry re happy as a visit from Santa. Fred Allen finally hit the Jackpot on his “Sonod Off” show. The remora tricks were a high spot, too. Anne Jeffreys’ beauty registered big on Toni Whiteman's program. The good thing about Robert Q. Lewis’ panel show, “The Name’s the Same,” 4s Mr. Leads. The gim mick is mdrtly a so-so switch on the familiars. Alan Dean, the nqw. British ringing import, Is the No. 1 record-Re'll er in England. “Leave It to the Girls” (just jilted by its sponsor) loaves toe Antenna Circuit neri enaoto. —— A medium that has niore weeds than orchids cannot afford to lose a posy-rating show. Btage Door: Katharine Cornell’s low bow to a great star. She saw to It that Grace Georg* got toe No. 1 dressing room at the NationaL “The King amri t,” now *7 weeks old. to toO* Htock. It paid the noww.fi «a dtonrpasfit.— Dor- Otlty Mto, after gen pears in Hoßpuenri. to (to the topeut burgs sistotog B qgiuil of lanrs.” Vari ety?! Horitari man reported it betitoTtoTnto ,- r fie°Cteterted : In a tap pMfiafiNH* treatment it could be htyffime fidH, though, of course, fib • ttofi vay freau that.” —The ampailß warn good on PrincetoOb Triangle dhew, "Never Say Horto.* The tones were given a'special nod.——Londoners found N. Coward's newest play, “Rela tive Vataee,” a worthy starrer (or Gladys Cooper bat net up to toe standards es his last straight play, "BUtoe Spirit.” The “Faithfully Years” landlord scolded vs far re- The Press-Box: IpsnicaUy, the Giants and the Tanks bat their greatest inspirational player on the same day when DlMagglo retired as a chaaqrion and Stanley .was Change; The current Washington scandal lnvrivea toe Treasury excel buying mink coats. A year ago the scandal had many in the State Department, wearing them. A 1 (CeßtißaST om . > J .v.:; -■ -. v' . - .-l. . • —— IfiipyfftiviiHßfttiiL 1 ii The Worry Okie By DR. GEORG* W. CRANE Judy had received many *s- t sons In unselftShness, bat they v didn’t involve Carol and Sandra. So dhe acted like the Stile boy i Who didn’t wash his ears because ' his mother tOM Trim dimply to wash his face! Children learn t morality by specific instances, < and they are net prone to gen eralise. CASE C-321: When Judy, our i only daughter was 8, I had taken 1 Danny and David to the barber shop for haircuts. ___ i Judy and her two Gary cousins, Carol and KaWRa, -wanted to go along, As we sat watching toe boys in * the barber chairs, Judy suddenly 1 Jumped up and walked out. Soon she returned with an ice cream bar on a stick. She sat down between Carol -and Sandra with no apparent twinges of conscience and ate her ice cream bar. Maybe she felt that I riiould buy something for her cousins, for Judy was using her own money which she had earned. But Carol and Sandra had been very generous with their money during the previous week and bod bought Judy several delicacies. Within 10 minutes Judy hopped up and left the barber shop « sec ond time. She returned with a second Ice cream bar, and sot down to enjoy -it alone. LINCOLN’S TECHNIQUE “When you see a wrong, HIT it,” was Abraham Lincoln’s motto. That isn’t a bad rule in deriing with children, so I called Judy over and explained that she was being very selfish. I reminded her of toe fact that her cousins toad shared their money and candy with her on several previous occasions during the past week. “drdwn people wouldn’t think of buying themselves candy or ice cream unless they treated their guests to the some,” I concluded. 1 failed to employ the “sand wich” method of inserting the crit icism between two compliments, so Judy leobad somewhat belligerent. She didn’t say a word, though, but walked out of the shop and bought « opufkle df candy bars. §m tt By America's Foremost Personal Attain Counselor MAN AND MOTHER-IN-LAW AHBNT SPEAKING, BECAUSE BE NEGLECTED YD INFORM HER ABOUT ’GRANDCHILD’S BIRTH DEAR MARY HAWORMt: My problem concerns our son-to-bow, Ned, 31, and our daughter, Y«t, *• They have been married two years. Last Spring my lliitovirfl (BUI) and I were invftod to torir Rome for a gome Os bridge During toe , play a dispute arouse toStmuH) Bofi ; and his mother, with tod sfiSpteg her. ‘ Wbim f i II S2S I *, rtSf iT* *** t ed%J*»Jij?sbalr toe*-* «dnufl) £ d my to-JT te myp!'. i Med ■ii'ufi—l to totok Wm tot. i To overt toJWfiy w*. i quidkty. wMh tod polling, *tot ; out, and mover carte book dm* again.” Next day toe came te me and apologised; and uMamgh I toOt i his actions were inexcusable, I for r gave—because of Peg. After that we were most uncom fortable in thetr home and visited ■ only on special invitation, although t they came here for Sunday din > nets and dßen during the week, t - thought we had achieved a har i monious relatiimshlp—until a few i days bed. whan Fug utttered the - hospital to have her first dhfld. I t had told Ned to be sure and call t me when she oreat, re I wanted . te to fhere—reffh nr rear her. He s didn’t call me; I got the' news > from (stands, who’d heard (ram t toha. f TENSIONS RUINS ' * SLEEP. APPETITE i When I rushed to the hospital, r almost ergsy with anxiety, and a asked Ned why he hadn’t let me 1 know, he shrugged insolently and - said he didn’t think It necessary, r nor did he have timet I said “You t hod time to coll strangers—.” He r, walked away and left me sitting 1 alone for hours; then returned to . report that a Caesarean operation a g«rformed^le^^aby choir diligent insistence (hat we live aoeording to nteral and social laws. We are always born selfish! It requires training to make us «un selfiSh and generous! This moral training must .be repeated hundreds of times, albeit in varying situations. One lesson in sharing is not enough, for children are llteralists. ff ‘You told me to share with "* Carol and Sandra, but not With David and Danny,” Judy might later reply. So parents must teach children to share with many different peo ple on many different occasions. One tesson will not make a skilful pianist out of your daughter, nor win one moral lesson make her un selfish. We must hammer away for 18 years, and even then our children have only a thin veneer of civfliza- to tion. The more lessons we give them, however, the thicker will be the veneer! They are not lifcety to be veil taught, so we must instruct (hem. If you hove several dhfldrwi, they will thus hear your instruction more often. So don’t limit your family to one oKlia. Tor you are more likely to slight his moral training as a con- _ sequence. v (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, endos tea a long. 3c stomped, addressed envelope and a dime to caver typing and printing costs when yon send for one of his psychol ogies! charts.) What is your advice? I love any daughter and want only- her hap piness. E. B. THEY’RE INVOLVED IN A HATING MATCH 0 DEAR E. B.: You and Ned (are involved in a hating contest, In wfotata you feel powerless to get the beat es film. This Is the meaning rent tope. Your ‘conoem lor Peg* situation, as his more or tew helpless wife, hlqrikt you from facing, much less repressing, the deadly fury of your totike df Wed a latent attitude mm fiamOy re-activated by the hospital igtirth. Brewing his pay- © rthtyrtfitlr •tetiMinwitoit, you feel tounfatetod. tydßh mnrtteosly and iltaiWtei,tartly. 4n toe- Matter of wwrtntiA tote Ms hostile ireQwes. Oawtequeatty, your orirted wbo rttittan art tom sntartrs terri fic hidden tore*. an your tetter (tore condensed) yon mg tt* trouble started Hast Spring, The evening of the bridge game.. That’s true, but you (still haven’t grasped the gist of the problem—which has to do With © Ned's deeply entrenched bod rela tionship with his mother, tthen you interjected yourself into fiieir ; bridge (fiift, resuming on nil-know ing matriarch air In champlptiing ' her, Ned involuntarily (and lnrtant- Jy> transferred much tet tils filial hate to you. DAUGHTER SUFFERS IN I SHE CROSSFIRE . Bat df course toe wouldn't have i reacted that way, if he wwen’t i already compulsively disposed to C (flout mothers tar female' auttori- ' ty) per ae. For your own composure. rjsyscsrasn® moods aren’t really personal in • suits to you—even when diwpted at you. Rather they are charterer , Istic symptoms of severe dtftur i bonce in his personality, that ex ! lated before you knew him. fiow s ever. I'm not saying you are per -3 feet. On the contrary, you are i smug, bossy, self righteous—and f) 1 self . pitying when croeeed,-ffour • Jtefltotive reveals. b Peg Is on'a spot, caught la the • crossfire of antogonlsm; and her . present MUIlj suggests that lor ) hold on life has been weakened by morbid tensions. As a Being ( rervice to tor, you wafi drop pour . hostile, injured-mother atanae in t mind to a real -utoentandlog of i his afhng behavior. In this en ) deavor you may want a Ufi of ( I S revcltetete (ST 1 " B 1 !? rebels . * a ” HMWrilfi