Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 November 1945 — Page 19
“attracted ‘quite a bit of attention with his
-group hospitalization which has
"Or he may take part in an indus-
state : cohservation department magazine, contains some illustrations by one of Indiana’s young up-and-coming artists. He is 20-year-old Malcolm (Mao)
probably got artist in Bloomfield. She gave him some while he was in high school. , , , Since to work for the conservation
fllustrations accompanying stories on pheasants and nt hunting. He now draws sketches for all stories in the “Outdoor Indiana” magazine and also does some work for other divisions in the conservation : t.
Pre-Paid Medicine
(First of Two Articles)
pay ‘nominal sums-a month to care for tor or surgical bills, Their insurancs is different from Blue Cross
possible doc-
sn enrollment of ‘more than 17,.Doetor bill insurance follows this general pattern: 1. A person may enroli if he is employed or if a member of his: family is employed. . 2. He may enroll in a state- ° wide or local_medical society plan,
ial program at his place of em- : Or, if his yer does not provide such small group which may
—obtain-a-“whelessle policy™ gr *ifmited group peliey” ‘from an insurance company. If the individual is nof
’
Thus some form of doctor bill able simost to every one. , ‘Avoid ‘Socialized Medicine THE GROWTH of prepaid medical programs is fllustrated in a recent report of the social security board which studied 114 industrial plans, 25 plans in ivate group clinics, 31 consumer-sponsored plans, medical society plans, 12 11 Canadian plans.
insurance 18 avatle
HIGH-PRESSURE, high-temperature steam was one of the reasons for the amazing record of the American navy in world war II. The story was told
governmental plans, and
‘Maloolm (Mac) Heaton . . . his skelches are : attracting :
Overseas Benefits Only
request of the addressee, The navy ages do not need a request if address and can be sent as Sepe
It
7, is getting wp at Sheffield Inn until the play is over and
patrons. She is one of the girls who asks for your selection on the juke box and them plays it for you. That's how she gets acquainted with the various voices. The two girls went back home with a thorough knowledge of the juvenile delinquency problem.
By Frank Aston
Physicians tend to favor medical society programs. These seek to avoid “socialized medicine,” which, according to doctors, leads to bureaucracy and “professional "
Most doctors argue that they should set up thelr own programs and operate them themselves, sometimes with financial aid from private insurance companies. ; Doctors claim a successful prepaid organisation improves the health of its members, reduces the bur-
«, den of doctor bills and makes sure that the doctors
"get paid. } . You Might Get Sick . PRIVATE programs allow doctors to charge
in proportion to a patient's Income, if the income is above about $2500 a year. . These programs appeal to most individuals by providing that bills will not mean prolonged debt. A recent study of 100,000 prepaid cases showed that 8 per cent of them were appendectomies, 14 per cent deliveries, and 3.per cent fractures. Professional statistics show that an individual has
“one chance in 1000 of geétting appendicitis today, but |
Ain 100 of getting it within the next year, In other words, *If you feel well today, you'll probably be okay tomorrow, but the chances are you'll be sick in the next 12 months.” . To this thought may be added: “The might be a whopper.” - y 5 That accounts largely for the expansion of prepaid medical cost groups. The movement started in the 1020s and took a sudden boom when the Michigan State Medical society organised the Michigan Medical service in 1940, ou
NEXT—The Michigan Plan.
prior io ening, a Fk SEE = = . : Turbine Speeds Increased
THE DECISION to raise steam pressures to 600 and the temperature to 850 degrees, he said,
Peart Harbor st 8 time when war was threat-
introduction of these pressures and temperatures was accompanied by a complete re-engineering. job of every vy was building.” :
§ 8
2
(Fourth of a Series)
Scrippa-Howard YANGTZE RIVER VALLEY, China, Nov. 29.— Joe Champe was in China a week when he found himself
river. With him were a group of Fukienese - sailors, several tons of navy equipment and an interpreter named Eddie. “Trouble was,” said Joe Champs, “Eddie couldn’s speak the Fukienese dialect.”
ished the firm conviction that when going down a mountainside they should put the vehicle out of gear to save gas. As a result, Lt, Champe, several
(Ff i i ; i g f
ith great good nature the Chi.
approach anywhere near the Jap ships, of course.
» . . THE JAPS were anchored in the south of a coastal river one afternoon in the summer of 1943. Far upstream, a’ few coolies were
The Jap ships were armed, well guarded and steel hulled,
float downstream on the current, » » " THE NEXT afternoon the coolies seemed busier than usual, Back and forth the sampans went, They seemed to be working the ver in pairs—one on one side and on the other side, the Japs had been able to see what was going on, they'd have the foolish coolies dropping
2
on a sampan in the Yangtze.
Here, a navy man
seizes the opportunity for 40 winks while rid-
ing through bandit country,
one on each side of the river, But they weren't close enough
because promptly at dusk their beautiful steel-hulled ship exploded and+sank, w » »
THE PIECES of driftwood, loosed upstream, were tied together with a hundred-foot line. From each dangled another sixfoot line, and from the end of this hung a three-and-a-half-pound can of TNT. ’ The driftwood floated down-
the Jap's anchor chain, the floating sticks gently nestled their burden against the side of the Jap ship and BOOM! “Charley,” sald Joe Champe fo his companion watching the glow from the burning ship fade away, “maybe you better go upriver and see if we can’t do this more often.” w » J
- “I'HE CHINESE are a determined
small bits of driftwood overboard,
By JOHN Times Foreign
: raguan strong man, Guatemala, which tossed out
1 DI'ge neering. * § Ubico a year ago, “It marked the end of the ship and engine build- is running into er,” he explains. “From then on a shipyard became some rocky gove an assembly plant and the way was paved for the ernmental going.
assembly plants which were so characteristic of this war, especially in the production of merchant ship-
ping.” SE
Adm. Bowen points out that with the war with ted a complete break with the past. The Japan on the horizon, the decision to go to these new
methods was not an easy gne to make,
“A great responsibility was placed upon those who decision,” Adm. Bowen said.
were forced to make this
£
i
Even happy, stable Costa Rica Mr. Thale having itself a mild case of pre-election jitters,
Hundreds in Jail
Tough Gen, Tiburcio Carias Andino,
to buy a one-way ticket.
Correspondent GUATEMALA CITY, Guatemala, Nov, 20.—In Central American
to see it. Later they were very busy,|
TT “THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1945 _ {F APPY VALLEY (Story of the Yanks Who Trained China's Guerrillas)
Floating Sticks Tk
ro ug
2»
Left to rights Sgt. W. A, Tawaler, Lt. Roger Simpson, the skipper, and Sgt, Eugene Lemmon, :
Lancaster, Pa, who commanded a coast-watcher station at Haimen, “We wanted to build a headquarters on Mantien island, and these Chinese insisted we build it the way. they have been building their huts for centuries. “Unless you build hut like we say,’ they told us, ‘hut no last more than hundred year.’ “Anyhow, we put a Jot more straw on the roof and used less cement, and avery night the goats ate the roof, We had a little , , . uh , , , bathroom made of straw out behind the hut. and.ohe night
thing.” “= 0»
THE COAST WATCHERS sometimes had a better time of it than Lt. Champe’s Yangtze Raiders, - The subs were active, and tracked Jap ships were common,
Dayton, O., used to row out to the wrecks and raid them for eatsup and soda pop. ;
people,” said Lt, Roger Simpson,
Central American Politics Get
A. THALE
political prisoners in Honduras day at between 1500 and 2000. Soine of them, once safely beyond | the border, tell vivid tales of fellow prisoners tortured. A favorite method, reportedly, is the “elec tric chair,” in which prisoners are seated to be questioned while shocks are applied. ~Some tell of seeing prisoners whose legs were hideously deformed by having heavy weights piled on them, Also described is the “limeburner,” where prisoners are forced to live on platforms in cells whose floors have been covered with four inches of quicklime, Their slightest
put in cells where they comfortably, or are incarcerated in
neither lie down nor stand up)
“One night Brown almost got run
could get. A majority, however, probably remember, that the last U. 8. intervention, in 1927, was | spearheaded by U. 8. marines, and would welcome no more than moral
press, T don’t believe he has any fewer worries. J gery, this has been 1f we look back over Miss Perkins’ whole | changed. ‘will find that she accomplished a great § Jip fractures of that record, T hope many women follow falls the fact that, before condemning one tripping on a the Tact tn ; Lor falling a ‘the yumping the
THE DOCTOR SAYS: Casts Seldom Are Used
Today
131 EL] hel en: Rh
two cows ate the whole damn |g
Gunners Mate R. L. Brown of Linete ships” says Lt, Simpson.
ng Rough
at Sank a Ship]
a ns Er vg LL g ;
1]
down by a Jap freighter. The guys were watching from shore, and they
catsup and soda pop in his. lap,”
Equdlity For Women WASHINGTON, Nov. 29 (U.P.
T 4
£fis hi 8 E
3 wr 2
£5 { s §
1832} Hi | fil)
| i
:
sald Ls. Simpson. : “He did get quite a bit of soda pop, © ve w » . WITH Bosn's Mate J. A, Filkins of Sartoga Springs, N. Y.; Bosn's Mate 3-cl. J. J. Clark of New York, and Machinist's Mate 3-cl, Walter
was enlarged to the extent of {wo
and The Chicago Daily News, Ine.
SE RANSACKED, RARE COINS TAKEN A discharged soldier's “dog tag,” toy pistols, rare coins valued at $500 and a pen flashlight were among loot fliched from 1548 Barth ave, last night, Boyd Casey, the occupant, said
the thieves also ransacked his home and took four $1 bills, The “dog
jtag” belonged to John Casey. The|.
looters, who police believe were juveniles, entered by an unlocked door
Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Tunes] '
We, the WomenMothers Need Educationon | are of Child |’
I Ba #t ts 3 g
: 2 : i
&
n § E 8 § 8 £3
if 4 Ii
gs
i Bi 5 !
i
RE i : Hi H
E 3 8
i
: : i E §
He d
expedient method of giving chile dren good training when they are young is to turn them over to pers sons particularly trained for the
BEATRIX FAIRFAX . = DIES IN WASHINGTON |
WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 (U. PJ
1
|
i Era Lane
