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LYNN

BOGUE

HUNTO

HOW IT FEELS TO BE A NEGRO by Walter White

IS A LITTLE CHILD BRINGING BACK MAX BAER? by Jack Dempsey

MORE THINGS I FORGOT TO TELL by Former Governor Hoffman

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World copyright, 1938, NEA

Just by being

can't put me in jail for imagining things, can they?

I wonder how those five little strangers are going to

fit into the Dionne family after four years of compara-

tive exile. I wonder how they're going to get along with

their brothers and sisters, and with their parents.

They haven't had any family life. Through necessity,

they were removed from their overcrowded home in the

first days of their lives. They have been kept away from

that home and all that a home means-for over four

years.

The quins were, to all intents and purposes, the same

as orphans. They had no need of their parents, evidently.

If they had little woes, little heartaches, little fears,

there was no mother or father close by to pick them up

and kiss them-and cover them with germs. If they were

naughty, there was no father near to scold them, no

mother to spank them. Are they better off? Or have

they missed a lot?

And now they're going home!

Strange, isn't it, to have a family so divided against

itself? To have a part of it ordinary and obscure and

not at all rich, and the other part rich and famous and

adored? To have seven children raised in the old-

fashioned way, and five who come to it with their own

suite of attendants and their own peculiar background

of scientific training?

Will the seven leaven the five-or the five the seven?

Suppose the five fight with some of their brothers and

sisters as children sometimes do. What will happen?

Will papa or mama settle the disputes? Or will the mat-

ter be taken under advisement by the guardians of the

quintuplets?

Can the Dionnes ever be one happy family? Or will

the quintuplets always be a unit, a five-cornered bloc, a

separate and unique part of the family?

Do Mr. and Mrs. Dionne love the quins just as much

as they love the other children? Or more? Will they

treat all the children the same?

I doubt it. Can you see Cécile, Marie, Annette, Yvonne,

or Emilie helping with the dishes, minding the babies

pitching in to get dinner ready before papa comes home

or running errands?

JULY 9, 1938

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the jaw a crack that was heard clear out on the veranda,

and for the first time in his life Moss went down. The

READING TIME 24 MINUTES 56 SECONDS-

Stingarse

Jack

A vivid tale from "somewhere east of

Suez"-of a mild and sleepy Samson

and the grim terror behind his smile

BY ALBERT RICHARD WETJEN

ILLUSTRATED BY KARL GODWIN

JULY 9, 1938

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WHITE

HOW IT FEELS

TO BE A Negro

BY WALTER WHITE

on reveal

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READING TIME 5 MINUTES 17 SECONDS

E sat on a stool in his corner shaking his head. I

was working over him. For three rounds Joe Louis'

fists had been drumming a tattoo on his face.

knew Max Baer punched hard enough to knock out Louis

if he could connect. So when he grinned at me and asked,

"How am I doing? I told him frankly and brutally:

"You're doing lousy. Why don't you fight? You're

in there letting him take the play away from you, and

you're not doing anything about it. For the love of Mike,

hit him! Go out there and sock! Sock and keep on sock-

ing till something drops!"

The bell interrupted. Baer went out-and he went

OUT!

I say went out, because that's just what he did. The

guy had no incentive, and even in later fights his lacka-

daisical clowning lost him fights against physical in-

feriors. But lately, since Max has become a proud

daddy

I am making no alibi for him when I say that he fought

Jim Braddock and Joe Louis with bad hands. Nor when I

say that he was in poor condition for these fights. And

in terrible condition for many fights.

After he floored Tommy Farr three times in their

recent fifteen-round battle, he accomplished a feat that

Joe Louis did not equal. It brought Baer another oppor-

tunity to win the heavyweight title, for he is to meet

the winner of the Louis-Schmeling fight.

So two questions have arisen: 1. What are Baer's

chances of regaining the heavyweight title? 2. Will the

fact that his attractive wife, Mary Ellen Sullivan, re-

JULY 9, 1938

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Crackpot

Swiftly now a headlong tale

of love, lunacy, and laughter

reaches its smashing finale

BY JAMES EDWARD GRANT

LIBERTY,