Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1946 — Page 17

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Colors

ge. For quality. dresses Brown,

[” time

n’s Center

suckers and 'on Pajamas Sizes 1 to 18

"streetcars received by Indianapolis Railways. . . .

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ILLUSTRATIVE -of the city’s desperate housing

shortage are numerous requests for old, unused

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. Inside Indianapolis Firemen Practice |

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~The Indianapolis ’

" hicles. . .

‘ Applicafits desiring, to convert abandoned trolleys into makeshift homes are spurred by reports that the " Street Railway Co. eventually intends to replace ! {ts streetcars with motor coaches and trackless ve . Recent substitution of busses for street cars on_the Shelby line also brought a volley of ~ queries. concerning disposal of idle streetcars. But railways officials have squelched their hopes by announcing that surplus cars, for the present at least, will be retained for emergency service and whatever Biggest aerial map bf the mile square yet produced is now in the. city hall office of City Plan Director Noble P. HolMeasuring eight by five feet, its scale is 100 feet to the map inch, , . . The shot was taken in 1936 by the state highway commission and “blown up” recently for inclusion in the Chamber of Commerce’s industrial exhibit to be displayed in Union

spare parts they can surrender. , , .

lister.

station.

Chain Letters Réappear

CHAIN LETTERS are in vogue again, only now they're dispensing good luck ‘instead of money and making nobody rich except the postoffice depart The old “inclose a dime” angle is miss Mrs, Mary Helen Bastin, clerk of superior court 4, recently received a letter. entitled “Luck of . It informed her the chain had been around the world four times and would inflict tragedy . She was assured smooth sailing ahead, however, if she made four copies and sent them to friends within 24 hours. . initials of 30 previous warned her not to inclose cash and to destroy her . . . The Pem club, Shortridge high school sub-deb organization, was meeting recently at the home of Joann Harper, 4612 Carrollton ave. when it. heard lilting piano strains wafting across the street. . So members trooped en masse to the home of Mrs. Dorothy Wilson, 461. Carrollton, where they found a piano tuner performing his duties with the . . While delighting the girls with an impromptu concert comprising ‘both classic and jazz, the tfiner told them he always tested his work that way, had been playing for 20 years or . His name is Al Gabel. . . . A waitress at the Apollo restaurant boasts of having served 72 customers in an hour, better than a

ment. , .. Ing. .

London.” , .

on anyone breaking it. . .

sage, containing

own copy.

utmost musical talent. .

more on different pianos. . .

customer a minute.

Sure Sign of Spring

WHEN FIREMEN spring from their chairs to the horseshoe’ pits the sap is definitely rising (no pun . Station 13 fire-fighters have opened their spring fiesta on Maryland st. near Kentucky, where they pitch horseshoes at two square plots of ground etched in the otherwise solid concrete pave- . By midsummer the lads are so skilled they average several ringers per game. . swer to many calls, yes, Indianapolis has a daylight saving ordinance, setting clocks up an hour on the last Sunday in April and keeping them there until the last Sunday in September. . . . Local sportsmen are eyeing the career of Bill Hardy, Shortridge

intended). .

ment,

Socializing Coal

NOTTINGHAM, England, March 7.—In socializing the coal industry in Britain, the labor govern-

ment faces its greatest test.

The transition from private enterprise to state ownership will be difficult and fraught with awkward complexities, from the moment nationalization be-

gins. .

It is bound to continue awkward and difficult for years to come—certainly for five years and more

likely for a decade.

The. problems of nationalization are easy to define but hard to solve, and whoever sits on the nideman state coal board must be wise, practical and

essentially non-political.

The mere technicalities of taking over the 1634 pits must be carried out slowly if the already drastic fall in production is not to be accelerated. 1924, with 2718 pits then operating, Britain's output was 267,000,000 tons; for 1945 it was down to 174,000,000 tons, and the first two months of this year

certainly have not been encouraging.

The output continues to drop despite every plea.

British Miners Bitter

THE ANSWER lies mainly in voluntary absenteeism. The men work just so long, and then they

stay home.

Absenteeism grows in seriousness, and it will certainly continue to grow after nationalization unless the government somehow restores a semblance of

discipline in the mines.

The British miner, more perhaps than any collier in the world, is an independent, supersensitive chap. He is steeped with bitter memories of ruthless exploitation and’ carried the chip of suspicion and frustration on his shoulder wherever he goes.

Science

PERHAPS YOU'LL be amazed to hear that the You may think that I have confused the calendar and think that -today No, I am stating a scientific fact. Dr.-Fred.L. Whipple of the Harvard college conservatory explains it all in his excellent book, “Earth,

Mississippi river flows uphill.

is April 1.

Moon and Planets.”

Due to the fact that the earth bulges at the .equa~ tor, the mouth of the Mississippi river is further from the center of the earth than is the source of the

river.

You will ask then why the river flows at all since water is usually said to flow downhill. explains that the river flows because of the centrifu-

gal force of the earth's rotation.

Earth Has Adjusted Self

IF, HOWEVER, the earth were so rigid that it did not bulge under the centrifugal force, then the result would be that all the oceans would flow to the Thus the ocean bottom would be exposed at the North Pole while the earth’s equatorial zone would be completely in-

equator in response to this force.

undated.

However, ‘the fact that the oceans are on the average no deeper at the equatorial zone than elgewhere on the earth is proof that the earth has ad-

My Day

NEW YORK (Wednesday). —Mr. Churchill's speech in Missouri indicates his belief, as a private individual, that the peace of the world can best be guaranteed by a military alliance between Great

Britain and the United States.

He believes that the people of both our countries want peace, but apparently, he is not so sure that this is the case where the peoples of some of the

other nations are concerned.

I think he pays the English-speaking people a very high compliment, and I hope that we could be trusted to have no’ selfish desires, not to "think of our own interests first, and therefore never to take advantage of our strength at the expense of other

peoples,

However, it seems to me we must face the fact that, were siich an alliance formed, other nations would certainly feel that they, too, must form independent alliances. What is sauce for the goose must

also be sauce for the gander.

Return to Power Politics

SUCH ‘a situation would not differ very greatly from the old balance of power politics that has been going on in Europe for hundreds of years. The only difference would be that now we in the United States would be a part of this world political picture. _ We have not always seen eye to eye with .the foreign policy of our English-speaking cousins, and Jwe certainly have done a good deal of critical talking about the balance of power game as it has gone aN ‘ 2

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.-+» The messenders

. » In an-

In

Dr. Whipple

. Babe Lawrie, at station 13, loosens up his pitching arm for the horseshoe season,

Getting in practice . .

high and Butler university grad, now spring training with Montreal Royals of the International league in Daytona Beach, Fla. . . . Bill gripped a toehold on professional ball by shortstopping a season with Dayton, O., before serving in the South Pacific with the navy. . .. He's the husband of Florence Hardy, daughter of Leo Emmelman, well-known proprietor of the Em-Roe Sporting Goods Co. . . . L.'V. Phillips, commissioner of the I. H, 8. A. A. will witness two state tourney semi-finals Saturday, racing to Muncie in the afternoon and scurrying back to Indianapolis at night. .. . Strangest school class in town undoubtedly is the rabbit-breeding course sponsored at the Purdue-

~ SECOND: SECTION

HOOSIER'S WEDDING HAS AN

FROM THE Isle of Capri to Crawfordsville . . . , That is the dream of a Hoosier

private and his foreign bride whose

wedding had the sante international touch. The" bridegroom is Pfc. Kenneth R. Buser of Crawfordsville and the bride was Miss Slavica Lenici from Dubrovnik in the province of Dalmatia, Yugoslavia, The wedding teok place Jan. 27 in Jes,

| Illy, with both British and Yygo-

slavian subjects as bridal attendants. ’ : The ceremony, a far cry from a typical Hoosier wedding, was car-’ ried out in accordance with tradi-

church. Guests included about 30 relatives of the bride and a crowd of U. 8 and British servicemen.

o os ” TO CONFORM to the Yugo slavian bridal pattern, the bride needed a godfather, Lt. H. Kohn,

of the British navy, filled this need, while another Britisher, S. Sgt. J Davis, was best man. The maid of honor was the sister of the bride, Miss Vjera Lenici. Two days later, after a round of wedding parties, the couple went to Rome to apply for transportation to the United States. One of the authorities they consulted was Warrant Officer Sexson Humphreys, Times staffer on leave and adjutant of Pfc. Buser’'s regiment. Officer Humphreys, whose wife, Frances, is a teacher .in. Pfc. Buser's home town, had previously aided in obtaining permission for the wedding.

Marott center by the Marion County Rabbit Breeders’ association. . It's free and open to anyone inter-| ested in the subject. . . . Recently one student asked |

of 13 bunnies when the mother could accommodate | only seven.

By Nat A. Barrows

Today the British miner works four or five shifts a week and then he goes absent. He asks: Why

should I work more shifts when I can’t buy any- | liberal Why make overtime pay and -have christian point of view.”

thing I want? most of it taken by income taxes? So he stays away from the coalface—and Britain's coal production drops closer and closer to the& danger point.

Discipline Difficult

IN MINE after mine, crawling about the coalfaces I have heard the same tale: “Why work more time when it goes to taxes? Why risk your neck when commodity goods can’t be bought with your extra money?” The miners cannot believe that London and other duced schedules for lack of fuel. They see coal ‘simple minds to assimilate the larger picture.

Altogether discipline is at a shocking point. Pri-

cities are short of coal, or that factories are on re-}

Instrutcor Robert M. Dodd what to do with a litter| CHRISTIAN VIEW

Speaks at 1st Ash Wednes-|

day Service of Federation.

By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Times Church Editor

“College students may receive a education and keep the

Dr. James F. Lowry, president of | Wooster college who addressed the {union Protestant Ash Wednesday service last night, holds this view. |Dr. Lowry spoke in Christ Episco!pal church on the circle at a. meet|ing sponsored by the Indianapolis {Church federation. It was the first {united . Ash Wednesday service {sponsored by the federation.

| In an interview preceding his ad- | rather haye sontething a little less| summer, \dress, he described the experiment | refugeeish.” Dunce’s caps, he ex-| schoolmates decided it might pay. he is working out in Wooster col-| plained, are the newest rage; they, 4 : {lege with a view to proving that a are high-peaked hats that look age market is worth five billion a everywhere they look, and it js_diffjcult. for a pr education. is not incom-|good on any girl with any hairdo. | year.” {patible with the christian point of} Otherwise,

| view

tions of the Yugoslavian Orthodox }

LPR

Mrs. Slavica Lenicl Buser . . . a Yugoslavian bride. Pfc. Kenneth R. Buser , . . a Hoosler bridegroom.

FOLLOWING the visit to Rome Italy, in April of 1944 and was medal and the combat infantrythe Hoosier and his bride honey-|wounded twice in the campaign for man’s badge.

mooned on the Isle of Capri where they visited the famed Blue Grotto. The wedding was the climax to

Hoosier private. The son of Mr.|

THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 1946 INTERNATIONAL TOUCH—

Rome and Bologna. » n ~ IN ADDITION

to the purple|with headquarters in Rome. |an eventful overseas career for the heart and oak leaf cluster he has|section issues all military currency the European-African Middle Eastin Italy and supervises transactions and Mrs. Kenneth B. Buser, Craw- | theater ribbon with two battle stars, between the commission and the fordsville, he arrived at Naples,|the victory medal, the good corrduct | bank of Rome.

He is now serving in the financial section of the allied commission The

Dunce Cap Rep

By PHILIP WECK United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, March 7.—The bobbysox crowd.-is going. high-hat. | That word comes straight from { Eugene Gilbert, 19, a youth who ! has his finger on the bobby-sox pulse, and who's keeping it there as a matter of business. Gilbert is president of the Gil- | bert Teen-age Services, an outfit | that ‘uses - teen-agers to poll the | bobby-sox - crowd on its buying | habits. and tastes. | In this coming year, his pollers have discovered, the bobby-soxers | will discard bandanas for jdunce’s cap.

ps Now It's Dunce Caps |- “Bandanas will still be worn,” | Gilbert said, “but the girls would |

the back-to-dignity

vate owners cannot halt’ absenteeism, because they] “Wooster.” he explained “is a lib-| far as clothing goes, Gilbert said.

no longer control the men under the essential work order freezing colliers into the mines, or diverting conscripted youths there from the armed forces. ° Obviously, the unions are not going to interfere. Manpower shortages are being met at present by conscription. This is rabout as successful as the so-called Bevin boy call-ups in wartime when draftees ‘went into the mines instead of the army. The Bevin boy idea was and still is an utter failure. The boys simply will not pull their weight. Only cautious wisdom by the Atlee government can solve these problems of absenteeism and broken morale. But the road will be long, and it will be hard.

By David Dietz

justed itself to the centrifugal force of its rotation. These are interesting facts which are often lost

is discussed only in relation to its astronomical eflect.

Wobbles Like a Top

AS IS WELL known, the bulge cduses the earth to wobble on its axis like a slowly spinning top. Con-

same spot in the heavens forever but describes a circle in the heavens. It takes 26,000 years to complete this circle. This means that the game star is not always the pole star. At the time that the pyramids of Egypt were built,

the pole star was Alpha Draconis, the brightest star Church in 1946.” He feels that the|

in the constellation of Draco, the dragon.

This wobbling of the earth's .axis' has numerous [church is mapped but that her big!

interesting effects, Dr. Whipple points-out that at

have been possible to:-see the famous constellation in the southern skies, the Southern Cross, from almost anywhere in the region that now comprises the United States. ‘ At the present time, the Southern Cross is only visible for a few weeks of thézyear. from such extremely southern locations in the United States as lower Florida.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

on in Europe. Almost invariably, later to wars and more wars, | The alternative to this old political game was] what Woodrow Wilson dreamed of in the League of Nations after the first world war. Then, as a result of this last war, my husband and many other great | statesmen planned the United Nations organization. Instead of running an. armament race against each other and building up trade cartels and political alliances, the nations of the world should join to-| gether, each contributing a certain amount of niilitary strength to be used only against an aggressor. |

International Law the Goal WE WOULD use the forum of the United Nations to discuss our difficulties and our grievances, using our diplomatic machinery to adjust such things as we could among ourselves, but bringing before the bar of the United Nations as a whole any questions on which individual governments could not agree. Difficult machinery to work out, but it aims at the

nations of the world living under international law, |

using an ‘international court of justice, and resorting to force only ‘to curb an aggressor, I do not wonder that the elder statesmen think this is a revolutionary move in the international situation. There are two possibilities here—the old way and the new way. We have seen that the results of the old way-were war and destruction, and we

earth as a result of the old way. Might it not be! wise to try the new way? §

+

% |RESTAUR G5 [TART sms) a HALF Shei, pny Ne av ATS

#2

it led sooner or

i eral college with a christian center.

certain areas of study are pre-

education. Independent Study “During his third and fourth years in college, the student gives one fifth of his. entire time to independent study in his major field. This is designed to give the student both method ‘and content. He forms judgments and situations for | the judgments. | “For instance, if a man majors in chemistry, in his junior year at | Wooster he will learn to work “at {some definite problem in his field.

sight of because usually the earth's equatorial bulge | ye will receive frequent criticism |

and faculty direction which will en|able him to do his senior problem,

{ which will likely be an essay, and also to pass examinations.” | “There is a rumor,” he sald

sequently, the earth's pole does not point to the exact “that christian colleges are going |

out-of existence. Wooster is ‘determined “o remain‘a christian college.” Last night in the church, Dr. Wooster spoke on the “Role of the

international and social role of the

job is the awakening of her lay-

the time Alpha Draconis was the pole star, it would men, a tremendous task of evan-| gelism. “Church membership comes

too cheap,” he charged.

scribed. This is considered a neces- | sary part of the student's general|regularly for a weekly newsletter.|Council and the Junior Chamber of

| sweat shirts, Gilbert predicted. | Gilbert digs this information up

{In addition he does a lot of market]

MINISTER CITES |Bobby-Soxers Go 'High-Hat;

laces Bandanas

research work for advertising agencies which pay him an annual income running into five figures. He's found out some of the darnedest things. ’ s For instance, he said, youths in Milwaukee are wearing stocking caps and the boys in Highland Park, Ill, sneak out between dances to gargle. The gargling, he said, is to keep the garglers socially acceptable. The stocking caps are just a fad. Bobby-sox styles vary across the country, too, he said.

In New York and Chicago the the | kids wear blue jeans and sweat- | shirts. In Los Angeles it's slacks; in and

Milwaukee, pegged pants sweaters. And ties,

He Makes It Pay

Gilbert started his business last

when he and severa

So far,

club, the Marketing

Commerce.

“It should,” he said. “The teen-

it has paid out. He's [move is trictly from the birds, as| handled contracts for an airline, a

STARS AWAITING ‘0SCAR’ AWARDS

Annual Honors to Be Given At Program Tonight.

By VIRGINIA MacPHERSON United Press Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD, March T7.—The

movie colony, dolled up in its best clothes and with fingers crossed for its favorites, parades to the first post-war academy awards show tonight to learn who gave the top

performances of 1945. The 2'%-hour program at Sid

From Capri to Crawfordsville] feb

phone situation is now under ine vestigation by the national labog

Unicn Probe Is Part of General Fight

‘By FRED. W. PERKINS +

< hd

relations board. It is charged with being company-dominated. : This is the Western Electric Eme ployees association of Kearny, N. J. As a member organization of ft National Federation ‘of Telephone Workers, it actually has been on strike over wages since early Janu-

PR er

ary. » Intensity of the strike feeling is indicated by reports of mass pickets ing. This has prevented entry to the plant of many supervisory eit » . ” le

. DESPITE this record, the three

| members of NLRB still intend to g0

through with the task of examine ing 12,000 pages of testimony for and against the “domination™ | charge. The charge was brough$ more than a year ago by the C. & | O. United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, w 4 The C. I. O. union hoped the NLRB would withdraw recognition from the Western Electric Ema ployees association. The C. I. Os charges the latter union is a type of organization declared fllegal by the Wagner act — a “company union.” ’ : i » " » « FEELING became so bitter among the telephone unions over this charge against their Western Elec tric’ affiliate that they threatened a strike if an examiner's report supe ported the C. I. O, claims, k The report did that—and 1§ caused a comparatively brief ine terruption of telephone services now regarded as a prelude to later strikes. A spokesman for NLRB e today that this body must decides the case on the record as submitted by the examiner. It has no ati thority to take account of strikes and other later actions apparently not in harmony with the “company domination” charge. So the possibility exists that NLRB eventually may find the Western Electric union to be dy a legitimate union. : ” » . THE FIGHT against the NLPB examiner's report is part of a gene eral picture. The telephone and other inde pender.t unions repeatedly have

Grauman's garish Chinese theater was to start at 8 p. m. The 2100 seats there have been sold out for two weeks.

1

stars drove by. Hope to Preside

he's “always

Stewart. The program they supervise would be a movie fan's dream come true. of the Academy of Motion Picture

SMOKE VIOLATORS ARE WARNED AGAIN

The city’s alleged smoke, violators were warned again today in letters from Charles E. Bacon, acting city. combustion engineer, to abate excessive smoke emanating from their

stacks or face court action. Mr. Bacon admonished factory | {and apartment owners, whom he | {described as the “worst offenders,” | declaring that other violators {would be dealt with severely as soon las they are located by his investigators. « “No favorites will be played, “he | exclaimed -in- the campaign begun | {under a strong smoke abatement | ordinance enacted in January. |

offense. tion engineer is being sought by

the city anti-pollution commission, |

nance, stated.

| The Rev. E. Ainger-*Powell, host |

rector, presided last night

| | quartet in social music.

> HANNAH ¢

| |

and : : Ralph Wright directed a double | abatement board isn’t provided tor |

may still see starvation and pestilence stalk the!

| Although the proposed smoke

{in the present city budget, funds

{may be transferred from the build- | ing commissioner's department.

W AVE Is First Coed at Colgate

HAMILTON, N. Y., March 7 (U.

["P.).—Mrs. Helen Craven Mues, 4

former WAVE of Maplewood, N. J., is the first coed to attend classes at Colgate university in the 127-year history of the school. Mrs. Mues, who is studying under the G. I. bill of rights, is attending classes under a recent ruling at Colgate permitting wives of veterans to-enroll at the university.

FLAY CONGRESSMEN

FOR PATMAN VOTE | Other nominees ‘for best actress

Martin L. Larner, state chairman (Were Joan Crawford, Greer Garson, Fines ranging from $5 to $300 may |of the Indiana state council of The | Jennifer Jones and Gene Tierney, be imposed on violators for each American Veterans Committee, to- | and for best actor Gene Kelly, Ray {day denounced five Indiana con-|Milland, Gregory Peck and Cornell Meanwhile, a full-time combus- |gressmen for “their vote against the Wilde: Eve Arden, Angela Lansbury, Ann Mr. Larner described the action |Blyth, Joan Lorring and Anne ReCharles H. Hagedon, president: of as a vote against the veteran and a|Vére wete nominated best supportthe commission created by the ordi- | victory for the “special interests | ing actress, and Michael Chekh

Patman bill."

lobby." He asked veterans

Joreatiication’s stand on the issue.

to wire their

Arts and Sciences and their guests, a few non-member award nominees and newspapermen will see it. Vote Carefully Guarded The last votes were cast Feb, 23 on the award nominations, made Jan. 27. The results were counted by a national accounting agency and locked in a vault for the big {moment tonight. “Anchors Aweigh,” “The Bells of | St. Mary's,’ “The Lost Weekend,” |“Mildred Pierce,” and “Spellbound” | were nominated for the best pic- | ture,

Ingrid Bergman and Bing Crosby, | nominated for the best acting in | “Bells of St. Mary's,” were trying | to repeat their triumphs of last

ar

{John Dall, James Dunn, Rob

noir and Alfred Hitchcock.

THE DOCTOR SAYS: Tumors of Voice Box Are Common

Larynx Cancer Means Surgery

By WILLIAM“ A. O'BRIEN, M.D. CANCER of the larynx (voice

“/box) usually develops in men be-

tween 40 and 70 years old. It might also develop in women, - Growth is often preceded by thickening of the {vocal cords. Cancer rarely (Jevelops in a normal larynx. Contrary to popular belief, benign ‘tumors of the larynx seldom turn linto cancer. This is of interest to |the large rmumber of patients who |have popillomas in the larynx. As |beriign growths are much more common than cancers, patients should not fear throat examination because of the idea that all growths in the larynx are cancerous. : ” ” n «THE EARLIEST lcancer of the larynx is change in {the voice. This is a huskiness or

| hoarseness which starts as soon as the growth develops. Other symptoms are easy fatigue of the voice, inability to clear the throat of phlegm, a feeling of rawness, dryness, or irritation as if + something is stuck in the throat. -

‘a

»

yi ‘ % w Vv y Skt - 3

symptom . of |

os a

The strong, rough, painless voice Jot vocal cord involvement is characteristic of the disease. Patients in the early stages do not feel sick, and therefore often delay seeking médical advice. ; Unfortunately in giving the early signs of cancer in any part of the body it is necessary to list “warning” signs. All of these warning signs can be caused by conditions { which are not cancer. It is only by being examined when these warning signs. appear that cancer can be found in the early stages. ” n o p THERE are many things which cause throat irritation but there are only a few conditions which {cause permanent changeg in the

voice in older patients, °

physician by examining the throat

make the diagnosis.

. .

sv,

1% usually surgical. The growth must be removed if permanent cure is to be obtained. Cure is practically certain in growths which have not extended beyond the confines of the laryngeal box. Use of X-ray and radium is limited to those patients in whom its use is recommended by the attending physician. There have been important advances in the treatment of cancer of the larynx recently, notably in better preparation of the patient for operation. » » ” CANCER of the larynx has a favorable outcome when taken in time. When patients come early, the operation can be more limited in nature.

. Treatment of cancer of the larynx!and readily by other means,

cancer of the larynx.

Following the removal of the with a simple laryngeal mirror is|larynx, the patient breathes through | able to see larynx growths and|an opening in

Temporary bleachers for 1000 were erected outside the theater, and other hundreds were expected to line Hollywood boulevard as the

Funnyman Bob Hope, who says ! a bridesmaid but candy firm, a department store, an | .ver a bride” when it comes to The girls will keep their sloppy-|automobile manufacturer. He made |. .odemy awards, was chosen as Ii is sponsored by the Presbyterian|Joe sweaters, slacks and flat heels.| two surveys for the U. 8. &rmy| ..cier of ceremonies again this church in the U.S. A. In the under-| The boys will favor Little Abner|which were so confidential even he yor He will trade off with Jimmy graduate program of the school, | (army style) shoes, jackets and doesn't know the results. ; i | He's a member of the Advertising Research

But only 900 members

get to

Mitchum and J. Carrol Naish won congressmen in protest and contact |as support actors. local representatives of the Repub- ( lican party and inform them of the Wilder, Clarence Brown, Jean Re-

Directors were Leo McCarey, Billy

Individuals in middle and late ” life with. voice difficulty extending over a period of two or three weeks When real voice changes occur,|should consider the possibility of cancer should be suspected. The

the neck and can often be taught to speak distinctly

claimed discrimination against them by government agencies. They say C. I. O, unions are being favored in most jurisdictional cases. They objected also when they were refused representation in the national war labor board, > » . THEY ALSO demanded and did not get direct representation in last fall's national labor-managemensg conference. This also confined labor membership to the major labore . bodies, « The smaller independent unions were not so recognized. But seats were given to the Untied Mine Workers—then not affiliated with the A, F. of L.—and to a representative of the Railway Brotherhoods, J. A. Beirne, president of the Na« tional Telephone Federation, has stated that relations between the telephone unions and government agencies would be better if the unions had received more recognie tion as legitimate labor bodies. This could have reduced the probability of long and costly strikes.

We, the Wome Mother of Ten Gives Advice on Happy Marriage

By RUTH MILLETT AT A FAMILY LIFE conference in New York a mother of 10 chile dren gave young wives pointers on how to have a happy marriage. Now that sounds like a sensible idea. Most of the advice women get on marital problems is either too scientific or too artificially roe mantic to impress * young Mrs, America. But she should know that any woman who has weathered the mare ital seas long enough to have 10 children must have something worthwhile to say.

» ” . WOMEN respect the opinions and ideas of those who are dealing every way with the same problems they are. They're skeptical about what the “experts” tell them, What are the average woman's

favorite. recipes?—the ones -she . found in a scientific cookbook? Nope.

The pumpkin pie recipe she pere suaded Mrs. So-and-So to give her, and the recipe her mother used for such-and-such. They are her fa« vorites because she knows they work out right. ” » " AND THERE is no regson why women wouldn't be as open-minded about trying recipes for a happy marriage if they came from one who had tested the ideas and found them practical. ie! The reason given for the fact that | there aren't more classes and cone ferences on family life in our cf and small towns is that there is a shortage of trained persons to the discussion groups. ; ‘as » MAYBE we ought to realize. that some of the real are women who are just , ; wives and mothers—the way some women are natural cooks. J

$ 5