ahe Hoover-- No, I do not, but let’s be really more specific regarding the more sencral Allen-- fears. 4ll right, Miss Hoover. Suppose we quote Dr. Link when ho statos "That the more general fears - of insanity, of persecution, of strangors, of infocr- iority, are usually the resutlt of one's failure to conquer tho minor foars by such practice. Sometimos, however, Dr. Link states, "they are due to the fact that a person, for some reason - disappointment in love, the death of a dear rolative, financial reverses, loss of a job -- withdraws tho in- dividual from his accustomed activitios. after ao catastrophe, ospecially, one should not only keep up old activities, but bond his will and onorsiecs toward beginning some now cnd a preferably stronuous pursuit." Dr. Link states that at the bottom of most foars, both mild and severe, will be found ‘an overactice mind and an underactive body. Hence, he advises many people, in their quest for happiness, to cctivate themselves. Foar is nature's warning signal to got busy. Hundreds of thousands of men end women are playing golf today, not because they chose golf as their chief love in sport and games, but because the family doctor advised the business man and school teacher to broak away from the worrisome grind. Gotting out in God's great out-of-dorrs whore they might rut their attontion on a white, elusive gutta-percha ball, bounding over the greensward, will prevent thom from wor- rying about things that they cannot holp and about other things that never happen. These people know full well that tho only way to koop their phys- icel machines functioning so that thoy may earn thoir deily bread for them- selves and their familics is to spend hours outdorrs recreating body and soul. ere Ridin initials edi intact