Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1945 — Page 11
may have a new rug in his office one of these days. And it'll be the skin from a 450-pound Jeepend. Until a few days ago the leopard was one of the
show, was putting the animals through their reguJar act the other day at the eircus headquarters near Peru, one of. the tigers became unruly, ‘He dashed across the cage, clawed at one of the leopards and killed him. Then he headed for Trainer Jacobs. Mr. Jacebs had his chair, his whip and his gun with him, but none of them seemed to do much good. He used up all his ammunition and then began wondering how he was going to get out of the cage. Suddenly, however, the tiger turned toward King, one of the big lions in the cage. With one swing of his paw, King knocked the. tiger 20 feet across the cage, And the tiger hasn't wanted to fight since then... . Dick is resident agent for the circus and that's how he gets in on the rug deal. He took thé leopard skin to Fred Fate and Marion King, taxidermists at 4604 E. Michigan st. The rug is in the tanning process right now and probably won't be done until about five or six months. During that time, however, Dick is going a to have to do some fast talking to get the rug for his office instead of for that of Terrell Jacobs.
. King Shoots a Moose THE FATE & KING taxidermist partnership probably started in some Indianapolis fire station. For both Mr. Fate and Mr. King are firemen. Mr. Fate retired a few years ago and now devotes full time to stuffing and mounting animals or fish or tanning animal hides. But Mr, King spends every other day at fire station 13. . . , There's quite a collection of wild animals at the work shop of the two firemen. They have lion skins and heads sent here from servicemen stationed in India. One soldier sent a vampire bat from Trinidad. And then there are all kinds of # monkeys, fish and other animals. Mr, King himself went on a little hunting trip last month and came back with a moose—the first one he ever shot. E. R. McDaniels and William Jett went along and had prefty good luck, too, Mr. Jett shot a deer and Mr. McDaniels, a moose. They say they almost got a bear, but he got away. The hunting trip was way up in Canada, about 1035" miles from here. The three hunters were up in the wilderness country about 11
-
good pheasant business soon.
. Already hunters are Daytime sending pheasants in from South Dakota to be » stuffed. And the pheasant season opens here in just : Shop 10 days. :
G. I. Impatience
LE HAVRE, France, Oct. 30.—The average American soldier awaiting redeployment home from points in France has become about the poorest ambassador
of good relations that we have ever had abroad. And the longer he stays here, the bitterer he becomes.
“4 1 “We've had it. You can have : it.” That touch of G. I. cynicism, NC K S staring’ down from a huge sign ; over the improvised docks along 4 i" Le Havre's shattered waterfront, fwaist §
expresses a state of disillusion-
ment among our boys that cannot Poplins 8 ©. ical, practical Confused by abrupt changes in
his redeployment schedules, un= able to attdin a perspective about . the rumors and gossip surrounding home-bound shipping space, the G. I. is utterly at a loose end. From this side of the Atlantie the problem of high policy is reduced to basic factors. The G. I. has no concern for anything but getting home.
waist of Spun n Poplin. Tai- 3 smart in Navy, ovelty buttons lar coat style.
Th
keeping with Hear No Explanations HE IS unaware of the delicate balance between a ineness. a potential flooding of the labor market back home by over rapid redeployment and he is entirely beyond RESS SHOP, understanding the possible impact of leaving Europe JOWNST AIRS without adequate American occupation troops.
Mich of the bitterness and honest complaint sweeping the American staging areas in Le Havre and Marseille right now could be dispelled in a matter of days by a clearcut explanation of what the army faces in redeployment. But nobody tells these homesick men why small cargo ships cannot quickly be converted into troop ships—or even converted at all, Nobody makes it clear that the return of the Queen Elizabeth and the Aquitania to the British is not a deep plot engineered by Whitehall,
Science
THE SO-CALLED “weaker sex” has not only long ' proved hardier than men but in the last 20 years | has increased its superiority in this regard. | Statisticians of the Metropolitan Life Insurance ' Co, report that for many decades the death rate for ‘women has been lower than that ‘for men, But in addition, while the death rates for both men and women have been declining in the post two decades, that for women has shown a sharper decline. Analyzing the company’s ine dustrial policyholders; the $tatis~ ¥% . ticlans find that while the, death rates for white males dropped 26 per cent between 1923 and 1943, that for white females declined 43 per cent, “The greater Improvement among females reflects essentially the more favorable trend in this sex for most of the important causes of death,” they state.
Ulcers Get Men
ON THE other hand, death from peptic ulcers— that is ulcers of the stomach or duodenum-—were largely concentrated among men. For every woman among the policyholders who died of an ulcer of the stomach, there was an average of T'%2 deaths among men. The ratio for ulcers of the duodenum, the first division of the small intestine, was almost as large—six to one. ' As most readers know ,the chief causes of death in America today are those diseases growing out of
NEW YORK, Tuesday —Yesterday afternoon I went with some members of the citizens’ housing committee to visit an old-law tenement: A house with no hot water and no heat, a house which many families call home--here in ‘the biggest city of the U.8 A In one place, an old man and woman occupy two Tooms, with stove on the left of a nar-
-k
days. . . . Fireman King expects to have some pretty
Indianapolis
Fred Fate (left) and Marion King cod Stutting is their business.
Admiral Was Their Guest wi
MR. AND MRS. ROBERT SCOTT JR. 34 W, 52d st., had a very honored guest last week-end. He was none other than Adm. William (Bul) Halsey. Adm. Halsey spent the night with the Scotts and had breakfast with them before leaving Indianapolis by plane Sunday morning. This was the first time he had visited here, although he and the Scott family have been friends for many years. Mr. Scott's brother, the late Rear Adm. Norman Scott, and Adm. Halsey had been friends for about 30 years. Adm. Scott was killed in action in the Pacific in 1942, , . . Mrs. Norman Scott, who is now in Colorado, and Mrs. Halsey also are very good friends. . . , A hungry, weary male blond cocker spaniel was found wandering around the downtown section Sunday. He evidently’ belongs to a soldier, for he has a G. 1's dog tag with serial number fastened to his collar. On the tag also is engraved: Return to J. J. Rupprecht. But the Rupprechts listed in the Indianapolis ‘telephone directory already have been contacted and do not own the dog. Dr. C. B. Meckel has the dog now. You can reach him at IR. 4118. ... One of the town's male window shoppers caught this slip-up by an Ayres’ window decorator. In one of the store's Meridian st. windows a woodworker is making a shelf, Among his tools are a pipe wrench and an electrician’s pliers.
By Nat A. Barrows
Nobody explains that there are Americans wanting to get home from the Pacific and that our largest and fastest ships must be put on the Pacific run. They hear wild rumors and they believe them for lack of any satisfactory explanations. It is obvious that the war department should send over able officers to follow redeployment moves from one point to another, through staging areas and aboard troop ships, and then quickly return to brief the waiting troops on the real story.
Hear Much Idle Gossip
SO MUCH idle gossip sweeps the staging areas and so much red tape is immediately apparent to every homeward-bound soldier, that only an inspired, thoroughly capable job of briefing can alleviate bit terness and rockbottom morale. I have found, in talking with redeployment groups in the “cigaret” staging camps around Le Havre and at Calais, near Marseille, which the soldiers call Buchenwald Jr., that a few minutes of explaining the widespread shipping problem can ease much of their
discontent. Much of the trouble is psychological. No longer are there the zest and excitement of combat. No
longer is there any objective except getting home. The result is a breakdown in discipline and effi-
ciency. Officers infect their men with their outspoken griping. Buck-passing never was more apparent.
The hard, cold facts of shipment, however, present a different story from what the uninformed soldier in a staging area knows. Col. Thomas F. Weed of San Antonio, port commanding officer, explains that his schedule is on fime and that only the lack of more ships prevents him from sending out more men. He does not know why more ships are not available—and neither does anybody else over here.
Copyright, 1 1945, by The Indianapolis Times and ¢ Chicago Daily News, Inc.
By David Dietz
high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries,
namely, heart disease, kidney disease and cerebral|
hemorrhage. Heart disease heads the list of causes of death in ‘ America. The statisticians report ‘that death from diseases of the heart is higher among men today than it was 20 years. ago but that the rate for women has declined 17 per cent. As a result the excess male over female mortality from this cause has increased in 20 years from 12 per cent to 40 per cent.
Men Worry More
THE LAST 20 years have been, in general, years of great medical achievement and the rates for most diseases have been downward for both men and women. This has been true of such disease as tuberculbsis, pneumonia, influenza, appendicitis and syphillis.. It also has been true of homicides and accidents. But in almost every case the decline has been more rapid for women than men. Just why this is so, it is difficult to say. The situa-
tion is particularly complicated by the fact that the past 20 years have been the ones in which women have made the largest forays Into those segments of the world—business and industry—which were
previously regarded as men’s spheres,
It will be interesting to see how the records of 1944 and 1045, when they are available, compare with the record to date for those were years of par-
ticularly high industrial activity for women.
Proponents of psychosomatic medicine are inclined to associhte the incidence of both peptic ulcer and This would seem to indicaté that men do more worrying
high blood pressure with nervous tension. than women and pay a higher price for it.
decently in this city of ours,
should not let it lie idle.
Ae we were coming home, I could not help wons« dering whether some of the conditions even in ware torn countries were much worse than those we have
By Eleanor Roosevelt
Most: of this money will be spent in New York City, but it must be voted by the state. The money is on hand and we
SECOND SECTION
"
* WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1945.
ASHINGTON, Oct. 31 (U. P)~Here is President Truman's execu tive order which in his speech last night he asked the public to read in their newspapers today: EXECUTIVE ORDER 9651 : Amending Executive Order 9599, providing for assistance to expanding production and continued stabilization of the national economy during the transition from war to peace, and for the orderly modification of wartime controls over prices, wages, materials and facilities, » » = BY VIRTUE of the authority vested in' me by the constitution and the statutes of the United States and particularly the Stabilization Act of 1942 as amended and for the purpose of carrying out the guiding policies of Executive Order 9599 of Aug. 18, 1945, and amplifying the provisions of part IV thereof, Executive Order 9599 is hereby amended by adding at the end thereof the following Part VI: n » » 1. THE stabilization administrator, designated pursuant to Executive Oder 9620 of Sept. 20, 1945, shall approve, undef Section 2 of Part IV of this order, a wage or salary increase falling into any of the following three classes In any case in which such increase has been found by the National War Labor Board or
ment or inequity which would interfere with the effective transition to a peacetime economy: A. Increases where the percentage increase in average straight time hourly earnings inthe appropriate unit since January, 1941, has not equalled the percentage increase in the cost of living betwen January, 1941, and September, 1945. B. Increases necessary ta correct inequities in wage rates or salaries among plants in the same industry or locality, with due regard to normal competitive relationships. C. Increases necessary to insure full production in an industry, designated by the stabilization administrator, which is essential to reconversion and in which existing wage rates or sal aries are inadequate to the recruitment of needed manpower.
o ” » THE stabilization administrator shall continue to approve wage or salary ‘increases approved by the national war labor board or other designated agency in cases in which’ such increases satisfy standard in effect prior to Aug. 18, 1945. The stabilization administrator may define additional classes of wage or salary increases which the national war labor board or other designated agency is authorized to approve as necessary to correct a maladjustment or inequity under Section 2 or Part IV of this order. Nothing in the foregoing shall be construed to require the national war labor board or other designated agency to approve any
other designated agency to be necessary to correct a maladjust-
wage increase unless, in its judg-
TEXT OF NEW EXECUTIVE ORDER ISSUED LAST NIGHT—
What Truman Asks You to Read
Truman's Plan WASHINGTON, Oct. 31 (
President Truman's statement on wages and prices:
MANY WORKERS have suffered a cut’of 25 per cent.or more in their wartime pay largely through loss of overtime. If wage levels are
allowed to drop, industry, agriculture
because it can lead to deflation. " s »
to give business a fair profit. u ” 8
tively in “good faith” to settle their ognize labor's right to a “decent” reasonable in its demands and not “ egg.”
on the facts of the particular case, to correct a maladjustment or inequity which would interfere with the effective transition to a peacetime economy.
IN MAKING findings under this section the national war labor board or other designated agency shall be subject to directives issued by the stabilization administrator under the authority confirmed by Executive Orders 9250 and 9328 or other applica ble executive orders, 2. Nothing in this order shall be construed to prevent an em=ployer from putting a wage or salary increase into effect and thereafter applying for approval of such increase, under the standards of this order, so that it
ment, the increase is necessary,
may be used as the basis for seek=
” THE GOVERNMENT is not telling industry to raise wages by any specific amount. But it belieyes business as a whole can raise them “substantially” without having to increase selling prices.
» " " " WAGE RAISES can be granted without prior government approval
but business cannot raise prices without first getting government okay. The government will sanction such increases when they are necessary
o THE COUNTRY expects labor and management to bargain collec~
*
at a Glance U. P.).—Here is the gist of
and the general public will suffer.
” »
» » problems. Management must recliving standard, Labor must be kill the goose that lays the golden
ing an increase in price ceilings, or, in the case of products or services being furnished under contract with a federal procurement agency, for increasing the costs to the United States. » o » 3. NOTWITHSTANDING the fact that a wage or salary increase has not been approved in accordance with this order, the price administrator shall, after the expiration of a reasonable test period, which save in exceptional cases shall be six months after the wage or salary increase has been made, take such increase into account in determining whether an increase in price ceilings is then required under the established standards governing increases in price ceiling. HARRY 8. TRUMAN.
By ERNIE PYLE BROWN COUNTY, Ind. —T'll bet nobody has ever won a dollar the way I did last night. If I could find enough takers it would be a good way to make a living. We were having dinner at the Nashville House. About six of us were eating in a private back room. There were Johnny Wallace and John Horton, the bird hoys I ‘wrote about the other day, and Helen Andrews, who makes arty things of leather, and Susie Lindsay, who manages the Nashville House, We were Susie's guests. # = » IT WAS terribly hot. The party being very infomal, John Wallace was wearing a loose sport shirt, unbuttoned, just hanging loose around him, showing his chest. John is very tall, and thinks he’s very thin, and was sort of apologetic about the skeleton-like appearance of his chest. So, to keep up the conversation, I remarked that his chest was Atlas-like compared to mine, » » » “I'LL. BET you,” said John. “I'll bet you a dollar we can count more ribs on me than on you.” “Taken,” I said, and started taking off my shirt. Susie was appointed the official rib-counter. I knew all the time how it would turn out —it really was an unfair bet, Susie didn’t even bother to count. She just took one look at me, sort of snickered, and handed me the dollar. I'm going to buy a box of Vitamin B-1 pills with it.
ITALY WILL HOLD ELECTIONS SOON
ROME, Oct, 31 (U, P.)~Local administrative elections will be held before the end of this year and national elections, before next April 30, the cabinet announced last night after a 5%-~hour meeting. The announcement generally was regarded as a rightist victory. The
United States also was understood to have exerted pressure for elections as soon as possible. Leftist quarters had urged postponement of elections until later in 1046,
* HANNAH «
| situation,
demand.
THERE ARE some fascinating village names in Brown county, such as Gnaw Bone, Stone Head and Pike's Peak. There are various legends about how each one got its name, but f like the Pike's Peak one best. It seems that a long time ago a fellow from these parts got the western fever. So he sold his patch of ground and all his furniture, stocked up his wagon with several months’ supplies, and started West. » » ¥ ON THE side of his wagon he painted (as so many later-day pioneers painted on their autos) the words: “Pike’s Peak or Bust.” Well, roads weren't so good in those days. It took the fellow a week to get from here to the Ohio river. By that time he was so homesick he couldn’t go on, so he turned around and came back.
» » » HERE HE was home again, with no house, no land, nothing but a wagon full of supplies. So he sat up a tent for a home, and started peddling his supplies to the people around. It got so people would say, if you need something, “Why don’t you go down and get it from that Pike's Peak feller?” And that’s how the place got its name, It's just a tiny settlement. And the funny thing is, it's down in a valley, and there isn't a respectable hill within half a mile, » » » PROBABLY the No. 1 sage In Brown county is a man named Marcus Dickey. And I didn’t get to see him, for he was down in bed with a bad cold. He was secretary to
This is the last of a series of articles on Brown county, written by the late Ernie Pyle in 1940 and reprinted by popular
BEAUTIFUL BROWN COUNTY AS ERNIE PYLE SAW IT—No. 8
Pike's Peak, Bear Wallow and Goodby
Dickey has lived here at least a quarter of a century. His home is on a high ridge called “Bear Wal~ low.” Across from the house is a wooden observation platform, where people can stand for a superb view of the hils in all directions.
» » AND S80 many tourists have knocked on Dickey's door to ask about Bear Wallow that he has put up a sign in the front yard saying: “Bears Not Wallowing Today.”
without having to cook it myself, I do not get any meals in my cabin, but eat down at the Nashville House. Usually I eat with Susie Lindsay, the manager, and Helen Andrews, who stays there.
» » 8 HELEN RUNS a little shop in a rustic buildings across the street, She sells such things as wooden sculptures, pottery, hand - woven rugs and various souvenir trinkets. And above all, her own leather work. She is a young .widow, making her own way. She fashions beautiful purses and book-covers and whatnot out of leather. I was especially interested in this leather work because That Girl al80 has got to be a whiz with leather, you know. The main difference is that Helen sells hers, while That Girls gives everything away. Which is certainly no way to make a living for me, and I intend to speak harshly to her about it the next time I see her, » ” » TODAY 1 must leave Brown coun= ty, and I feel sad about it. You don't suppose the old Hoosier is going to revert to his homeland, do
Since food to me is bad enough}
But it has been so peaceful here. and people have been so good. Why, I know half the people in town by their first names. Nobody yet has called me by my last name, and I like that. - » » THE OTHER day I took my car into Paul Percifield’s garage to have the rear bumper tightened. When I went to get it there wasn't any charge. “Why, Paul,” I said, make a living that way.” “No,” he said, “and you can’t make friends charging them for two minutes’ work Uethenjng up a bolt efther.” #8» THAT'S THE way Brown county is. That's one reason I Mke it. I want to come back sometime when the slopes turn into the bitter beauty of dying summer. Come back and hunt squirrels with the boys, and listen to the quartet at night, and go far out into the back dirt rods where the cabins still lean,
“you can't
» » ” THERE 18 an. accumulation of generations of dignity about these rolling hills and their peoples that gives me a nostalgia and a feeling of deep respect. The artists and the local people of. the hills have found a common bond. But there are mahy people who come, and take a look, and go away without understanding. The other night I heard a remark by an outsider who has lived here so long she is almost and insider. She was referring to those who mean well, but still look down. Her’s was a. beautiful tribute. She said; “Nobody need try teaching culture to the Brown county people, They've already got culture.”
James Whitcomb Riley.
By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. STEADY weight loss extending over a period of years may result from undereating. Such a condition, which is of nervous origin, is more common in women. The original cause of poor appe. tite probably occurred so far in the past that it is usually forgotten. Questioning may reveal there was a conflict in the patient's life over a honie or school or re sentmerit of authority or frus« tration over so~ {celal of school failure. In older women and sometimes In men, grief over the loss of a loved one may be the starting! point.
O'Brien
FT. WAYNE C. OF C. PICKS NEW OFFICERS
FT. WAYNE, Oct. 31 (U. P.).~ Walter W. Walb, vice president and general manager of the American
‘| Steel Dredge Co. last night was
re-elected president of the Ft Wayne Chamber of Commerce. Other officers named include Harold J. Mammoser, treasurer of the Tokheim Oil Tank & Pump Co, first vice president; A. C. Wermuth,
Pt. Wayne National bank,
| president of Wermuth, Inc. secs ond vice president, and Thomas ‘A. McKiernan, vice president of the
you?
THE DOCTOR SAYS: NERVES MAY AFFECT APPETITE
Grief Can Cause Weight Loss
to their associates, give vague reasons why thy cannot eat, and exhibit apparent unconcern over their condition, ” ” » JOHN M. BERKMAN, M. D,, In the Annals of Internal Medicine for May, 1945, who has studied a number of these patients, points out cer tain Hifferences between nervous loss of appetite and vomiting in the effect upon the body. Loss of meals soon after eating makes a person ill in a fairly short time; loss of food several hours after eating may | not affect weight as a certain {amount of food is absorbed at once; {fallure to eat sufficient food for a {long time results in progressive | weight loss without signs of anemia | or vitamin deficiences. In spite of | extreme emaciation, patients with | nervous loss of appetite get around’ {fairly well and may do their own | (work.
| Extreme weight reduction results| Older persons lose their appePersonality of patients who eat | from diets of around 1000 calories tite from loss of interest in life, less and less until they become extending over years, as this is less|loss of job or the death of a loved emaciated resembles a spoiledithan one-third the normal need. one. child. These ‘people are tiresome |Pirst step in treatment is to rule serious consequerites.
|MMICKLE FUNERAL
Industrialists in Austria Arrested
LONDON, Oct. 31 a P.).—~The German news agency Dana reported last night that American military
‘I police had arrested two major Aus-
trian industrialists -~ Hans Mal zacher, directop © of the Hermann Goering Works in Linz, and Fritz , director of the Steyr Works. » arrests were said to have been made by police from headquarters of Gen. Mark W, Clark, commander of U, 8. jpesupadon Joton n Austria,
*
THE END
out organic disease by a complete physical examination. Food Is increased at the rate of 300 calories a day until 3500 calories are consumed daily
Id ” " BULKY foods and those rich in protein and vitamin are advised.
Food should be divided into four or five meals each day with breakfast or the fourth or fifth meal the most difficult for the patient to | eat, | In the average case, Nnproverient is noted in two weeks by a change of color, strength and mental attitude. Forced feedings or artificial stimulation of the appetite by inJections of insulin are not advised. Forcing the patient to swallow food | against her will does not change her | attitude toward food, as she must eed herself. | needed in stubborn cases.
Unchecked grief may lead to
RITES NEAR ENGLISH
olis resident 19 years, died today at his home on Victoria dr. Mr. McMickle, who was 88, was born in English, Ind., where he hgd a blacksmith shop 556 years. " Survivors are his wife, Sally McMickle, a son, Martin E. McMickle; a sister, Molly Tillery of Knoxville,
, Elma Morgan,
Psychiatric help is|
Fountain McMickle, an Indianap-.
Woman's Ideas |
On Immigiciion
By FRED W. PERKINS NEW YORK, Oct, 31.— One woman sat in the last conven= tion of the International Association of Machinists five years ago in Cleveland. There ars six among the thousand dele~ gates In the convention here. "One is Mrs.
pe
ING
who runs a thread grinder in an airplane plant at Burbank, Cal, She spoke against a resolution calling for sloppage of immigration into the United States for the next 10 years and for return of war refugees to their homes. The convention voted down the proposal. When Mrs. Morgan sat down the international president, Harvey W. Brown, said: “You have just listened for the first time to a lady addressing a convention of the International Association of Machinists,” » » ¥ ALL THE six women are trim, attractive and well dressed. Mrs. Morgan has two children, is a law student and, she said, “a darned goed cook.” Another delegate, Mrs. Mary E. Morgan, operates & horizontal boring bar in a St. Louis plant. “I'm a machinist, not a production worker,” she said with pride. Asked if women would stay in this traditionally men’s trade she replied, “We will if we get a chance.” The other four are Eleanor Scholl, Cleveland; Mary Helen Kraus, 8t. Louis; Mabel Maixner, Indianapolis, 3 and Mildred Davishak, Bie, Pa . i AT THE Peak of wartime production close to 100,000 women mostly in aircraft production, be~ longed to this union of 700,000 members.
One significant convention ae tion was to knock out of its national legislative program a demand that congress set up a per» manent Fair Employment Prae~ tice commission, This was done quickly, on recommendation of the resolutions committee, and without debate, although there was some muttering among dele gates. A FEPC is high on the list of laws desired by other ticularly in the CO. LO. chinists have had cor
like a dozen other A. F. L. unions. At present Negroes in most plants where they have contracts are ore ganized into auxiliary unions,
We, the Women—— Women Expect
Courtesy, Now War Is Ended
By RUTH MILLETT IN ANSWER to the complaint of a group of weary overseas WACs, returned from Manila on a 17-year-old ship, that it was a “vermin infested hell-hole,” a disgusted soldier also aboard the transport declared: “Combat troops have played nursemaids to WACs aboard this ship. We even had to carry their bags aboard.” Well, maybe that was a good introduction to civilian life, having to lend their mascuine strength to helping the fem inine soldiers aboard. MS " n FOR their women back home are going to expect that much pampering—if that is what they feel treating women as women really is, hs In wartime the women in uniform were expected to look after themselves, to shoulder their own load. And so were the women at home,
But this is peacetime. And it does seem as though the girls who
went into uniform and endured the hardships of the Pacific = should be treated as women i
again, even to having their bags carried aboard ship. Even combat troops are going | back into a world where women | expect extra courtesies simply bes cause they are women.
“on SO IF the WAGs and other uniformed women can get men A
used to that idea before they ever a get home, it will be that much easier on' the women who are waiting for them. Plenty of women who have mowed lawns, put on storm wins dows, shoved heavy furniture around—and maybe even driven trucks or worked in shipyards A are going to expect to be treated = like ladies again once their men are home. And the men might Just as well get used to saying, “Here, let me do that.”
mamas ———ot FOSSIL RESIN USED
"
Tenn, and two brothers, Jerry Longest or Indianapolis and Matt Longest of Paoll, Ind. Services will be held at 1 p.
8 58 FV) Suetey. |
{resin available; it is & fossil
Friday in the Passwell Chistian Bt aud which still | church near English. Burial will certain 4
WASHING TON--Congo copal now about the only natural
.|from trees which grew in
