By the original decree of divorce entered in this case in 1965, the wife was awarded the general custody of the husband’s natural son whom she had adopted during the marriage. The husband, having no home at the time suitable for the rearing of the boy, was granted liberal weekend and holiday custodial privileges. In making that provision, the court “necessarily adjudicated the fact that the father was not only a fit person to share in the custody of his child, but also that the child’s own welfare would be served by permitting the father to have contacts with it.” Olson v. Olson, Mo.App.,
No useful purpose can be served by making a permanent record of the sometimes invidious and always embarrassing details of the controversy. The determination of all factual issues in cases of this kind “has been vested by the law in the discretion of the trial court,” Ramos v. Ramos, Mo.App.,
No point of law is presented that has not previously been settled in this State by an endlessly repetitive line of decisions on all aspects of the subject. Even these are not preserved for review by such abstract assignments as, for instance, that “a young child should be in the care of his mother, all things being equal, and the fact that the mother is an adoptive parent
*271
is of no significance,” or that “the recent reformation of (the husband’s) personal conduct and actions makes the trial court’s order an unwarranted experiment.” The issues were purely factual, and the trial court resolved them in line with the “inflexible and unyielding principle * * * that the welfare of the child is paramount and supreme.” J- G- W- v. JL- S-, Mo.App.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Where the welfare of a growing boy is at stake, the rule becomes even more pointedly applicable when considered in the light of the assertion made in Luethans v. Luethans, Mo.App.,
