Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 April 1937 — Page 17

y

Vagabond

FROM INDIANA

ERNIE PYLE

EW: YORK, April 8.—A fellow with big ears hears the funniest things. '1 was eating a baked apple at a little lunch-counter in West 47th. The proprietor stood by the cash register next to the window. He was talking to a fellow eating at the end seat, apparently a friend. The proprietor said: “See all those people stopping to look at the window. Theyre looking at that pic-

ture of Al Jolson. If Thad anybody else up there they wouldn¥ stop and look.”

And the other fellow said, and

1 still don’t know what he meant: “That's what I was trying to tell you. You can’t tell what's going to happen in this country.” Maybe New Yorkers wouldn’t notice any difference, but I've never seen such mobs of people as are an Broadway in the 40s these days. Late in the afternoon it is next Mr. Pyle to impossible to move. It’s just as tight a jam as when you try to get out of a ball park at the end of a World Series game. You're cru.hed on all sides, and you mcve only as the mass as a whole moves. Nobody seems to mind. ” 8 = This should have happened in New York, but it really happened in Washington not long ago, on a streetcar. I just remembered if. Two girls were talking. One of them had beck) to a fortune-teller, and was telling the other one about it., She said.

““And she told me I wouldn't have any deaths with-

in the next year. At least no bad deaths.” ! i n ” un if

Coffee Is Problem

O any of my readers happen to know what lone

does with a three-pound glass jar of ground coffee? The other evening the postman dumped a big square pasteboard box into my apartment. It was marked ‘Platonite, Fragile,” so naturally I thought somebody was sending me a nugget of platinum. But it, turned out to be three pounds of coffee. Here's how it happened: Seems that my recent boner, while eating on an air liner, of mistaking bouillon for coffee, and putting cream and sugar in it, sort of hurt the feelings of the J.-F. G. coffee people of Knoxville, Tenn. ;-They couldn’t imagine anybody being so dumb -as not to know soup from coffee. So they set forth upon a “Campaign to Educate Pyle,” the first step of which was to send him three pounds of coffee in a beautiful glass jar, the size of a gallon jug.

#2 #8

Letter Came With It

HE accompanying letter said: ‘Test it any way vou like; drop sugar, salt or your week's salary in it, and you'll still recognize it as the best part of the meal.” Being a frail traveling man, and not quite up to lugging a big glass jar of coffee under.my arm all the way from here to Denver, I have decided to keep one teaspoonful and give the rest to the poor.

Mrs.Roosevelt's Day

By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT

ASHINGTON, Wednesday. — Mrs. Grenville Emmet, wife of our Minister to the Netherlands, who has come over here just for a few weeks, and our old friends, Helen and Lucius Wilmerding and Mr. and Mrs. John Regis, all came down for the last formal dinner of the year. Just before they arrived, my husband telephoned that the doctors had decided that James and Betsy's little girl, Sara, must be operated on for appendicitis. : She awoke in the morning feeling miserable and complaining of a tummy ache, and while one hates

to have an operation, still it is probably as well to

have her appendix out at an early age if it is. going to bother her at all.

happened to her. I was late in going over to the Women's University Club for tea, and felt very guilty when I sa how many people were crowded downstairs waiting to come up and greet the receiving committee and myself. After dinner Admiral Byrd and I had to go dol to the diplomatic reception room, and he and |I spoke at ‘the beginning of the “No Foreign War”

program which Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick closed.

from New York. After the radio speech was ov F the movie men concentrated on us. I have never talked successfully or naturally for the newsreels, so for some time I have insisted that I should be seen and not heard. They made such a point however, of my welcoming Admiral Byrd into

this phase of peace work, that I finally spoke one |

little sentence. I only pray that I shall not regret this lapse from my usual procedure. It would not matter so much, only I think it hurts any cause to have someone take part in it hnd do it extremely badly. I got back to the East Room Just in time to see one dance and to hear one song by the members of the Pine Mountain Settlement School of Harlan County, Kentucky. Then I saw one group of tricks by Dr. Sydney Ross, a magician. When these young Kentuckians were. introduced

‘to the President he was very interestéd to find that

one of the boys was named Turner. Years ago, when he was riding through Harlan County with his uncle, Mr. Warren Delano, they spent the night with a family named Turner who were kind to them. At 10:30 this morning I went out with my brother to look over his new railway and was much interested in this type of bus which runs on tracks and can leave them when necessary.

New Books

PUBLIC LIBRARY PRE$ENTS—

SCAR WILDE once said that it took George Moore seven years to discover grammar and longer to discover the paragraph and that he had shouted his findings from the housetops as he went along. Whether the “shouting” was correct, Joseph Hone in his LIFE OF GEORGE MOORE (Macmillan) does not say, but he does tell of Moore's progress from a badly educated boyhood, through years as a dilletante in the arts in Paris, and his return to England, where he startled London with a realistic novel in the Zola manner. Although Mr. Hone tells at great length and

tho oughly documents his statements about Moore's

litefary achievements, the man ‘himself is the|interesting part of this long biography. Thoroughly Irish in temperment, his favorite sport was having a controversy with someone over a big or little matter. e made friends among the great and the near great; he also associated with cab drivers and porters. He knew and wrote about actors and serving maids; he also knew and wrote about the beautiful Irish lakes and dells, peopled with fairy-like beings. Charming and wholly exasperating, this is the George Mobre who helped shape the trend of English literature. # » 2 HIS dramatic story of an opera singer, OF LENA GEYER, by Marcia Davenport (Scribner), is written from the several points of view of in ds who knew her intimately throughout her turent life. It is a compellingly interesting| study oe a dymamic, vibrant, colorful, human woman, whose high conception of her art permitted no compromise with life. ile the heroine is a purely imaginary | character, it is difficult to separate fact from fiction in this novel, as people famous in the musical] world mole through its pages to add greatly to the illusion of |reality. Nor can one doubt the authenti ity of thel background, as the author is the daughter of Alma Gluck, the well-known singer, the step-dau ter of Efrem Zimbalist, the equally renowned violinist, and

She is apparently fairly com- |

fortable though she doesn’t quite understand what | over. bit Cecily on the back and

| readily offered me her hand. in-

a well-documented, sym- + Mozart. :

The Indianapolis Times

Second Section

THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1937

>

Entered as Second- Class Matter Indianapolis,

at Postoffice,

LET'S PAY. A VISIT TO THE QUINS

Nore Loronix Opens Boo rs ; for An ‘At Home’ With Famed Charges

Miss Yvonne Leroux, writer of the two stories of. wich this is the first, has been more constantly with the Dionne quintuplets than anyone else. She was their first nurse, and, except for brief periods, she has lived with them. ever since. Her picture of the collective and individual traits of the. children is the next best thing to an intimate visit to the nursery.

. By YVONNE LEROUX (Written for NEA Service and The Indianapolis Times)

HE Dionnz quintuplets were exactly 34 months cld on Easter Sunday. Nearing their third birth-

day their development is such that Easter this year began to impress itself on them as a religions feast day as well as a springtime holiday. : They have now mastered ) the Sign of the | Cross so as to : perform it uni;/formly, and the days are gone i when their tiny : strayed

chin to ears in ! the hand-to i forehead move- { ment, and any1 where from col-_ larbone to shoulder-blades in the lateral movement. Prayers

are still short, of course, and consist mostly of an old French religious lullaby ¢Petit Jesus, bonjour!” But there is far less tendency today to kneel and then quickly relapse into a squat, which was the rule earlier. Cecile and Emilie usually appear to be the most pious at their devotions. The others still occasionally allow their attention to wander from the picture of Jesus

Yvonne Leroux

before them.

n E- ”n N every other way, too, their development is becoming morg marked: They know their own

names, and know each other apart. If one of the nurses looks at Emilie and says, “You are Annette!” she will promptly respond “No, I'm Emilie!” ‘Though they are never physically punished, the children all understand quite well what it is to be “bad,” that is. quarrel. act silly at table, refuse to lie quietly during rest periods, or otherwise disturb the others, They know the penalty. which

‘is to be placed alone in the cor-

rection room, & small room plainly and safely furnished, until they are ready to abide by the rules once again. One day Emilie looked at me, then at Cecile who wouldn't play with her. Then Emilie stooped

dicating that she was ready to go to the correction room for her penance. There is no “bad girl” of the quintet,- and trips to the correction room are about evenly divided. - From this you can see that there is nothing “sissy” about the way the little girls are being reared. They play just as freely and often just as strenuously and roughly as any other children. Many are

The Dionne quintuplets grow more disin appearance each day. strangers can now begin to tell them apart. Here is Annette with the smile that has led many to consider her the: prettiest of the

tinctive

quins.

the small quarrels and fights into which we nurses have had to step to bring peace to the nursery.

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HEIR energy makes all the more necessary the precautions taken against injury, such as having shatter-proof glass in the windows, rounded edges to blocks, doors held back in place with hooks, cork or linoleumcovered floors, and high-sided cots. In spite of all precautions, they take their little tumbles and bruises just like all children, but they take them laughingly and seldom cry at all when hurt. I have seen every one of them at one time or another . fall, scratch, or hurt herself, and then look at us and smile. Yvonne smiles when having iodine put on ‘little hurts. The nurses all try to govern by love rather than by fear, and what makes this easy is the love of praise which shows itself in all the children. They are all sensitive to criticism, and eager to please. When they make snow-men or paint pictures, they want their “sisters to admire the work. dicious praise here and there helps wonderfully in the discipline. n ” ” OW that Dr. Dafoe is recovered and. able again to mingle with the children, one of the prettiest pictures in the nursery will be seen again. That is the greeting of the children to “le docteur,” whom they love dearly. When he enters the nursery with a jovial “Hello, bums!” they crawl all over him, go through his pockets, take out his letters, pipe, and tobacco pouch, and hide them. One day Marie got his handkerchief and made him blow his nose. They comb his hair, untie his shoelaces, tickle his neck, crowd up with their story-books. They know his car, and shriek ig delight when they see it com-

he parents and the wider chil-

A little ju-

Quietest and most Even

: that she might well

her sisters.

Emilie is a mischief-maker, constantly playing Here is the elfin face that

little harmless jokes. is somewhat heart-shaped instead

tendency that is characteristic of the features of

her four sisters.

| dren, Cecile here shows you the retiring and reflective mood that has led some to suggest

appears most devout at daily prayers with

reserved of the chil-

become a nun. She

older.

Photos, Still the smallest of the children, Marie likes dancing and music, and seems to have acting ability, for she can put on an “injured innocence” ex- _ pression at will.

of the squarish

Definite: resemblance to her mother is becoming more and more apparent in Yvonne. She takes a motherly. attitude toward her four sisters, and seems less quarrelsome than some of the other children, seeming somehow

Copyright NEA Service. Inc.)

‘Fhe looks like a little doll in her

natural expression as you can see.

dren come across to the. nursery quite often, and are greeted with similar cries of joy. Emilie usurally goes straight to her father, finds him a chair, and sits on his knee, eager to show him a book. They always insist that their mother tell them stories, sing songs, and rock their dolls. Then they parade their dancing, all the new words they have recently learned, and their toys, which they bring out especially when their brothers and sisters are present. They love to give presents to their brothers and sisters. ” ” 2

oO hear all these accounts of boisterous times in ‘the nurser y, you! might think the little girls fell somewhat short of “lady-

MEASURE PROPOSED IN MINNESOTA WOULD BASE WAGES ON PROFITS

By E. R. R. ECENTLY a conservative Senator in Minnesota proposed a

state law basing wages on profits as a matter | of workers’ plan, {special significance in this period of industrial unrest, tomatic of the fact that all three levels of government, Federal, state and local, have now projected themselves into the labor picture.

right. The important in| itself, achieves

for it 1s symp-

In Indiana, Thomas Hutson, labor

commissioner, has been functioning officially since April 1 under a law | passed by the last Legislature and has been credited with successful mediation in two labor and encouraging mediation in two cthers.

difficulties

The law allows him to seek to

avert or settle ‘strikes upon the request of labor or capital or both.

Minnesota's proposed new law, credited by its author as originating with the president of the Hormel Packing Co. (a gentleman who also urged recently that the full tax for unemployment benefits be borne by Minnesota employers), not only would base wages on profits as a mandatory tpractice. It also recognizes the right of labor to organization and collective bargaining, and to collect “fair wages” in! the covirts if necessary... It is revolutionary in its field.

No other states have even con- |.

sidered such| broad legislation, but several states—and cities, too—do have their own labor relations laws, providing machinery to avert strikes, or to settle them (if they occur) in their early stages.

i” ” s

ARYLAND, Massachusetts, New York ‘and North Dakota enacted in 1935 anti-injunction bills limiting the power of the courts to restrain actions in labor disputes: Ohio now is censidering similar legislation. New York this year may establish a three-man labor relations commission under its State Department of Labor, whose function would be to mediate in labor disputes and also

to anticipate and if possible prevent strikes by Promoiing collective bar-

tion of Labor is backing a bill designed to set up a state body similar in format to the National Labor Relations Board—and with much the same powers to protect employees in their right to bargain _collectively, and to prevent unfair trade practices. New Jersey is considering a bill which recognizes, in effect, the fact that labor itself ofttimes is divided into warring factions. It would set up a commission, one of the express duties of which would be to :determine what labor group should be recognized as the proper bargaining agency of employees in any specific case. : Bills are being discussed in some others of the 42 legislatures which meet in regular session this year.

” ” ” UT such activity is by no means confined to states. Cities also are in the picture, directly and indirectly. Two of the more important moves toword municipal participation in labor troubles have been made by Toledo and Philadelphia, where the efforts are in the direction of averting strikes.

Cincinnati also is considering a labor relations board. It has been two years since Toledo’s Industrial Peace Board first was set up. In its short life span it has handled some 80 disputes and its director asserts that it was successful in bringing about mutually acceptable agreements in more than 70 of these cases. The board strives solely for conciliation; co-operation with it does not impair the right to strike, It has a full-time director paid by the city of Toledo, five labor members appointed by the Toledo Central Labor Union, five employers named by the Chamber

of Commerce and eight members .

from the general public. Philadelphia’s Conciliation and Arbitration Board (organized along virtually the same lines) is about one year old and is credited with averting or settling strikes affecting over 100,000 workers. It has 15 members, seven from labor and seven from employer groups, and a local judge as impartial chairman. Members are appointed by the Mayor.

Crop Insurance Bill Is Wise Democracy—Clapper

'‘ASHING'LT'ON, April 8. — As Senator Pope (D. Ida.) said the other day, you can insure yourself against almost anything—death, fire, sickness, accident, bad debts, burglars and boiler explosions. You can get insurance against baldness, triplets, double chins, or loss of your girlish figure if you have one. Paderewski’s fingers are insured. Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers can, and

probably do insure their feet. Lloyd's]

of London - will even insure you against almost anything that President Roosevelt might do, as it insured many firms against devaluatien of the dollar. But the biggest single means of livelihood in this country, farming, caniot be insured. The farmer must gamble. He must take his chances on the weather, and with chineh

out.

ja fold which ie ond the capacity of ors oe able. ‘The facts will

By RAYMOND CLAPPER Times Special Writer

To deal with this situation, the Senate is now considering Senator Pope's Crop Insurance Bill. It is the Administration measure proposed during the Presidential campaign. While they call it, crop insurance, it actually is a plan for setting up a Government corporation which will collect surplus crops in good years, calling them insurance premiums, out of which the farmer will be paid in bad years. The proposal before the Senate is limited to wheat. Nobody knows how it will come It is frankly an experiment. This is democracy at its best, endeavoring to find new wayss of reducing the hazards of existence for a large section of the population,

like” conduct. That would be a mistake. If you could see them sitting decorously with the nurses at the dinner table, or carefully putting away their toys or hanging up their clothes, you would realize that this phase of their training is not being neglected. The mental alertness and curiosity of the children is well shown by their keenness in getting outside the nursery proper every time they can, and launching on impromptu tours of the rest of the house. They seem to get a great “kick” out of finding an open door and running into the office to examine the radio, climb on the couch, and test all the unaccustomed furniture.

We soon made it a point to take the children on a tour of ‘the house whenever possible, not only to give them a change of scene, but to eliminate as far as possible the desire to ‘run away” without permission. To watch the development of the little girls has been a joy, and as their third birthday nears, they are more than ever distinctly individual little ladies.

NEXT—Strangers can’t tell the little Dionne girls apart, but to Nurse Leroux, who has been with them from the first, they are distinct not only in appearance but in personal traits, which she carefully describes. (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service. Inc.)

Flynn Holds Decline in U. S. ~ Bond Prices Significant

By JOHN T. FLYNN Times Special Writer

EW YORK, April 8—The United States bond price situation becomes significant. I believed at first that the decline had been precipitated by a lot of selling for income tax purposes in March by large income taxpayers who had put current funds into Federal securities. But the movement has gone somewhat beyond that. As a matter of fact, the decline was version to cash by large income taxpayers. But of course a correction in bond prices had been due for some time, chiefly in the longterm issues which were overpriced. And so when the selling of midMarch came, this set off the decline with some added energy which took bonds down further and quicker than the normal adjustment would have done and involved some issues which need not have been affected at all. But there is another force which has long been overdue. Banks—or at least many banks—have been holding too much of their funds in Government issues. This is not sound banking, regardless of the inherent value of the bonds themselves. In a measure this has been the fault of the Government which has used the banks too freely for financing purposes. It has also been the fault of some banks which have made no attempt to correct their unbalanced portfolios. However, recently banks have wisely sought to distribute their governments among private investors. And at the first sign of the decline many banks hastened this process, adding to the general depressive force.

» # ”

F course this selling of governments by the banks did not begin in March. It got under way several months ago and was already using up a considerable portion of the market's demand when the March selling started. In the last three months the leading New York banks have sold around $90,000,000 of bonds. Banks throughout the country have probably unloaded $300,000,000 in the last few months

—maybe more; it is a guess since

bank statements are not yet avail-

indeed precipitated by con-.

be: better ‘known

soon, as bank statements are being published now. The suggestion has been made that the decline in bonds has been stimulated by the court proposals and the sit-in strikes. I seriously doubt this. The court proposals and the sit-in strikes might, conceivably, make some timid investors afraid of industrial issues, which might be affected by strikes or perhaps adverse court decisions from a remodeled court touching property rights. But there is no reason why this of itself should affect Federal issues. It might well account for a break in stocks, but not governments. : One other force might have effected the result a little—the fear of inflation which sweeps over us in little waves at intervals. Another reason offered is the action of the Reserve Board in raising reserve requirements of the Reserve member banks. This, it is charged, is an attempt to drive up interest rates which would of course tend to cut the price of Government lowyield bonds. But here again the charge is, I think, ill-founded.

HEARD IN CONGRESS Senator McKellar (D. Tenn.)—Dp until today, the Senator will concede, the minimum wage law passed by the Congress several years ago was unconstitutional, was it not? Senator Wheeler (D. Mont.)— What is the question? Senator McKellar — The minimum wage law having been declared by the Supreme Court to be unconstitutional, it was unconstitutional until today, was it net? Senator Wheeler—Certainly. Senator McKellar—Today the Supreme Court reverses itself and declares the same law to be constitutional. Senator Wheeler—That is correct. Senator McKellar—Who amended the Constibgion?

Rep. Charles L. ‘Giffora (RX. Mass.) —I want to tell you how sometimes the Republicans do sympathize with the Democrats. The other day a Democrat was having trouble getting into his shoes, and a Republican very sympathetically looked at him and. said, “Feet swelled too?”

2 UT that wasn't all.

PAGE 17

Ind.

ur Town

By ANTON SCHERRER

WHAT with Bertita Harding and Maxwell Anderson and a lot of lesser lights spilling everything they know about Franz Joseph and Elizabeth of Austria, why shouldn’t I, too, contribute my nickel’s worth ? The nearest I ever came to knowing anything first-hand about Elizabeth’s past—I never did get around to Franz Joseph's—was back in the winter of 1929-30. That was the winter the . Countess Zanardi-Landi honored Switzerland with a visit, and it was just part of my bad luck to arrive in St. Moritz a few days after her departure. Such things happen to the best of us reporters. For that reason, my tale lacks the punch of a. story based on source material. On the other . hand, I arrived just in time to hear the story handed down by 1 the lounge-lizards of Hanselmann’s | S tea room who were quite sure, and Mr, Scherrer didn’t mind telling me, that they got it straight from Which, of course, was almost Anyway, the story

the Countess herself. as good as meeting the Countess. was still hot when I got there. To get to the point: The Countess had just written her memoirs, in the course of which she had taken infinite pains to account for herself. To be sure, nobody had seen the book, much less read it, but that didn’t make any difference, because when I got there, it was generally taken for granted that she was the daughter of the unfortunate Elizabeth, Empress of Austria, ” on ”

Accounted for Father, Too

The lounge-lizards of St. Moritz also had accounted for the Countess’ father. Step closer! He was Ludwig II, Mad King of Bavaria, protector and patron of Richard Wagner, whom he once addressed as “the only source of joy

- I have ever known.”

The story interested me enough at the time, I

remember, that I took time off to inquire into Ludwig’s past. It turned out that he was very fond of Cousin Elizabeth, a.friendship maintained to the last. It also turned out that once upon a time he entered into an engagement with Elizabeth’s sister, the Duchess Sophie Charlotte, and that the engagement was abruptly broken without any regrets on the part of the young lady. a s Fd

Courtship Curious

HE courtship was very curious, I remember. Ludwig, for instance, always picked the hour of mide night, when Sophie was in bed, for sending his love letters, and was extremely indignant if she excused herself as being too sleepy to reply to them. One day when nobody expected it—least of all, sleepy Sophie— he said he wouldn't marry anybody. Just like that, and I believe he kept his word. But to return to the Countess Zanardi-Landi. The best remains to be told, because according to the lounge-lizards of St. Moritz, the Countess is none other than the mother of Elissa Landi, the dandy lit-

tle movie actress. Which is what a good reporter would have said i in the first nthe first place, |

A Woman's View By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON

HATEVER we may do about the Supreme Court and the sit-down strikes, we have already benefited from both. They have made Americans cone scious of their citizenship, and that is something worth crowing about. For a good many years politics as a subject for social conversation has been taboo in most circles, ‘Today every dinner party is likely to end in wordy tilts which add spice to what might otherwise prove boring occasions. Clubwomen bent upon reform and uplift, who have always skirted delly around controversial issues, now debate with gusto. Even the mild-mannered housewife has rolled up her sleeves, and takes issue with everybody in sight. For suddenly we have found out that strikes do concern all of us. The august Supreme Court is no longer sacrosanct and the cook in her kitchen gives her opinion about it as freely as the mistress in her parlor. And does it really matter that neither is prepared to render a correct opinion? What matters is that both are alert to the momentous age they belong to. At last something has awakened them to the knowledge that they are a part of the Government. Although many men and women whose ignorance on these questions is alarming can be heard uttering pontifical pronouncements, we should not be too much upset, for talk can originate ideas just as ideas originate talk. When the robed justices in their retreat at Washeington can work up as much excitement in a group as Jean Harlow or Jack Benny, the augufy is splendid. The minute labor trouble runs neck and neck with babies, bridge and operations as feminine topics, we need not fear for the fate of democracy. All these disturbances are growing-pains and sure signs of coming national maturity.

Your Health By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN

Editor American Medical Assn. Journal

FE; years amebic dysentery was believed a strictly:

tropical disease not likely to affect anyone in the United States. Since the great outbreak of amebie dysentery at Chicago during the Century of Progress Exposition, examinations have been made of many people in various parts of the country. We know now that the disease has spread widely and that, in many places, from 5 to 20 per cent of .the population are regularly infected by the organism that causes this condition. Amebic dysentery develops when an organism

called the ameba, larger than the usual bacteria, ine

vades the body. This organism is scientifically known as the entameba histolytica. When it gets into the bowels it gives off certain portions which may be passed out of the body with excretions, or which may, invade the walls of the bowel and there multiply. So far as is known, this organism affects human beings almost exclusively and only occasionally infects animals. When the Saughior cysts or the organisms invade the bowel, ulcers form. Then begin the symptoms, in= cluding frequent scanty evacuations of the bowels, which often contain mucus and blood. Associated with ‘is dysentery there will be severe abdominal pain and .epression. Sometimes the pain is so severe and other symp toms so difficult to analyyze that diagnosis of infected appendix or peri tis may be made, and an operation perfermed. This condition may be confused witlh other conditions, such as chronic ulcerative colitis, which arises from invasion of the intestines by germs of another character. Amebic dysentery usually comes on suddenly, but may begin with a mild attack which gradually be< comes worse. The bowel irritation may be so severe that theie way be from six to eight or as many as 30 to 40 actions of the bowel in 24 hours. As a result, the patient rapidly gets exhausted, complains of aching in the back and weakness in the legs. There may be little or no fever but, in severe cases with secondary complications, there may be high fever, As a result of the excessive bowel action, patients have tenderness in the abdomen, their skin appears sallow

1

Sad jaundiond, suid they soos Weight Fipadiv

casa