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$tanton l{ill ilIake Hoo-Hoo Hum
No man ever tackled a tougher assignment of similar charaiter than did Roy Stanton, Sr., of Los Angeles, iir succeeding Ray Saberson as Snark of the ljniverse of Hoo-Hoo. Saberson, orator, organizer, human dynamo in elderly guise, was hotter than a burning stump the whole two years he served the order, and to say that he left it in better shape than he found it would be like saying that the noonday sun is brighter than a tallow candle. He did a whale of a job of it, and left some mighty big tracks behind.
But this fellow Stanton steps into that trying situation, head up, smiling, and not a bit bedazzled because of the lustre of his predecessor. When they elected him Snark in September he lit out at top speed and hit the ground running. And in just a few weeks time he is serving notice that the record of EIoo-Hoo for the coming year.is going to be something worth pointing to and perhaps bragging about. Stanton is a thoroughly saturated Hoo-Hoo. He has lived all his life in Los Angeles, and Los Angeles in particular and California in general has been not only Hoo-Hoo conscious but likewise Hoo-