Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 March 1946 — Page 13
RCH 13, 1946 rtisement ...
ema No Jok
orment of eczema i te anyone wretche: relief. If you suffe g of eczema, pimples hes and other irri | es, get Peterson’ ll druggists. If on. Ss not delight you d. - Peterson's Oint nderful for itchin, ween toes.
oosen and expel : and aid nau Te raw, tender, inflamed |
us membranes, M blends beechwood | nes or on > or \arcotics,
OW many: medicines | tell ta of ulsion with ng you must like the at ihe cough, per- | , OF you 4 ¥ back. (Ady 2
A
or blue tafmningly cut ayon sheer Viisses’ sizes
14.95
fain
ore delightretty short black, with to 18.
29.95
{— (which sepjties broad tiny-waisted t shows off 0 to 16.
34.45
ny occasion. lared shoullattering to green, gold,
ETT = , — ha
- -
RICHARD T. JAMES. is wondering whether he's
lieutenant governor of Indiana or the state of utter confusion or both. ., .-Monday night, genial, portly Richard sped to Columbus to fulfill a supposed speaking engagement at a civic function there... , On arrival, he learned he hadn't been included on the program, , . . So,. beet-faced, Dick tiptoed from a stage door entrance and beat a hasty retreat... .
At noon yesterday, Dick attended a luncheon meeting of the state FEPC at the same time he was programmed to speak over a local radio station. . . . The Beer Wholesalers of Indiana, a brew distributing organization formed last summer, has been wandering around homeless for lo these many months. . . . Bob Kyle, its cordial executive secretary (who bears a remarkable likeness to James Whitcomb Riley), has been toting the B. W. of I. office in his pocket, as it were, pending location of a permanent roost. .., Now, says he, the B, W, of I. is first in line for the next vacancy at the Illinois building, headquarters of the Indiana Alcoholic Beverages commission. . . . Two weeks ago the Weimer Typesetting Co. heard rumors the Veterans administration intended to buy the Murphy building which, at that time, they occupied. +. 80 they moved to the Century building. ... A day later, Weimer officials read a report asserting the Veterans administration had changed its mind and was considering purchasing the Century building. . . . But the situation is still in a state of suspended indecision so the Weimer Typesetting Co. is sitting tight,
Seven Non-Paying Passengers DOGS, seven of them, hounded a Greyhound bus bound for Evansville from Indianapolis last weekend, but six of the pooches were strictly victims of circumstances. . . . Betty McCullough of the Indiana Bell Telephone Co., one: of the human passengers, relates that two G. Ls boarded the bus at the terminal station with a huge, old-fashioned suitcase.... Several hours out of Indianapolis the suitcase started to whimper and whine. ... Then it yelped.. .. While passengers chortled and the driver grinned, the G. Is extricated from their suitcase first a female terrier, then, much to their chagrined surprise, six little .pups they swore had been born en route. . .. At the Bankers Trust Co. a certain elevator operator shouts “Indianapolis” when his car hits the ground floor, probably on the theory that anything above that level is out of this world.
Strange City By Howard Vincent O'Brien
LOS ANGELES, March 13.—From Pasadena to Los Angeles is, in miles, about as far as Evanston from Chicago;. and on the new “freeway” you can do it easily in 15 minufes. As ‘to time and distance, the two places are neighbors. Otherwise, they are on different planets. One way to measure a community is by reading its want ads. In an L. A. newspaper, under the heading of “Business Opportunities,”. number one place went to cafes and restaurants, with 23 opportunities. Nine cocktail bars were for sale, and 12 liquor stores —putting alcohol in second place, with 21.’ The third category may surprise you. It was “Auto Courts and Motels,” with 12 listed. : . Los Angeles motorists drive like hallucinated waterbugs. Innocent bystanders are being. killed - off at the rate of five a day; and . cident insurance rates are the world’s highest, by a comfortable margin.
Telephone Book ‘Firsts’
THERE IS some interesting statistical information about what everybody agrees is the fastest-growing city in the world: ¢ It concerns the mania for being listed first in the telephone book. This began when somebody with a name beginning with “A” had the brilliant idea of putting another “A” in front of it. He was topped by somebody else with an “A” name, who put two “A's” in front of it. And now I see by the directory at my elbow that the Argonne Van & Storage Co, leads with 25 A's, trailed by the All-American Van & Storage Co. with seven A's, and the All-American Certified V. & S. Co. with six. It is reported that in the new directory it will re-
Aviation
NEW YORK, March 13 —Owners of the lightest light planes in the air now can enjoy the added safety provided in big planes by two-way radio. A ten-pound, ten-ounce set with an instrument panel slightly larger than a postcard is being produced by Airadio, Inc, of Stamford, Conn. and fit provides plane-to-tower communication, inter-plane communication, radio range flying, inter-phone between passengers and pilot and standard broadcast reception. One of the greatest hazards faced by the light plane pilot without such equipment has been inability
to talk to control towers for instructions. Many ac- 3
cidents and hundreds of near accidents have resultéd because of inability to receive instructions or give position in the air.
Tiny Set Is Complete
EQUIPPED with the new sel, sufficiently light for
installation in the smallest of airplanes, the pilot will have the same feeling of security as the veteran pilot of an airliner. y The set is so small that it can easily be carried by a child. It is complete with receiver, transmitter and power installation and offers a built-in range filter, a tuned RF stage unit, a standard broadcast band of 550-1500 ke¢, in addition to the regular radio band of 195-420 ke. An edge-lighted slide rule dial for better visibility and more accurate tuning is an innovation. Headphone and microphone cables can be located, out of the way, anywhere desired.
Already in Use JAY SULLIVAN, Airadio's vice president and general manager, today said that the set will be manufactured in a number of different models to fit all sizes of personal aircraft. It already has been successfully installed in the light Ercoupe safety plane, in the Sikorsky helicopter
My Day
NEW YORK, Tuesday.—Yesterday I did one of the stupidest things of my more or. less careless existence! I wrote. down that I was to be at 49th st. and Broadway at 6 p. m. but failed to note the name of the place where I was expected, apparently forgetting that there are four corners at 49th and Broadway! ’ When I arrived there, T saw soldiers’ busses lined up along the sidewalk and thought they probably had a bearing on my engagement, but I couldn't decide which of the four corners I was expeted to go to—and so J went back home. “I About an hour later, a reporter called me to say that the party at which I was expected had begun. I started out again and, went back to 49th and Broadway. This time I found the right door and went into a really wonderful party being given for several hundred wounded veterans by the Jewish War Veterans auxiliary. The dinner was good and the entertainment was even better. Bill Robinson danced, and the orchestra was playing its best. They stopped long enough to let me saya few words, and then I came on home.
Wounded Know War's Cost
BUT SOMEHOW 1 can't forget the men and women I saw there. They carry with them the marks of war, They know what war really costs and 1 think they are the people who should talk to us today. . As I was leaving, a yowig reporter {rom the United Press asked me - several questions. Among a . v ‘ 4 x
. i 4 ~
&
Inside Indianapolis = = Wall of Coal
New type wall at the ‘Washington Coal Co., 1705 W.- washington st.
PROOF that all that glitters may not be gold, but coal, is evident in a shiny, 14-ton Kentucky block coal wall surrounding the Washington Coal Co. 1705
.,
~The Indianapolis
SECOND SECTION -
WEDNESDAY, ‘MARCH 13, 1946
imes
By KENNETH HUFFORD
OLD LETTERS and other discarded souvenirs that.find their way into the family trash pile can become embarrassing. Take the word of several prominent Indianapolis families whose trash is littering numerous county highways. : They didn't know it was there, until- they were notified by sleuthing county road supervisors who dis creetly revealed how the owners
were traced. Itinerant haulers
1 8 . ankle : W. Washington st. . .*. Stacked and mortised together; o1y had taken the easy, way—
in 1939, the fence is varnished every spring to give it
a glistening sheen... . So far, nobody has appropriated any part of it for home stove use... . From an authoritative source, we lgarn the Union station servicemen's center, which warmed many a soldier's heart and stomach during the war, will be converted into permanent headquarters of the Travelers Aid society, . . . Union station's vast skylit roof is getting | swabbed and painted, with.train passengers gingerly | dodging the tall network of scaffolding necessary for|
{dumping on the highway.
| For some time, county officials have been trying to stop dumping | along county roads, “an increasingly | serious problem” in the opinion of | County Commissioner Willlam T. Ayres,
~ ” ” “LAST WEEK we caught five vio-
the job. ... Among new enterprises in the station, |lators,” Mr. Ayres said, and paid
a city-within-a-city, is a custom-built jewelry shop. |!
ribute to his amateur trash
... The Indianapolis real estate board’s red, white detectives. .
and’ blue gavel disappeared after a recent banquet| and now the members wonder whether one of their|t brethren is knocking himself out with patriotism. |]
“The biggest problem, however, is he dump and’ run violator who eaves the trash on some other
. . . Broad Ripple park should be a sweethearts’ para-|guy’s property. This unfortunate dise this summer, with the park department’s plans|owner is liable for its removal, since
to rent canoes for paddling in White river. , . . 8kiffs| county ‘equipment can't go on pri- | mit, generate or promote disease.”
and motor launches will also be operated from a boat vate property,” the county commisdock as a municipal concession. ... A visitor from, sioner added. |
New York recently dialed what he thought was Riley 5551, The Times’ number... . A man's voice an-|, swered and the New Yorker inquired, “Is this The
Much of the. dumping is done on | roads in Warren and Lawrence
|
ownships, -Mr. Ayres explained.
Times?” . . . Following a thoughtful pause, the voice one heavily laden road is Ritter
replied: “Oh, no, she's working.” ... So what?
lave, north of 10th st. Another is Arlington ave. between 38th st. and Brendonwood.
At this latter location, county
workmen caught one man “redhanded.” They have obtained the
[license numbers of others dumping. quire 30 A’s—two lines of them—to retain first place.| But origin of a great deal of the Speaking of telephone numbers, I found my inn— trash is learned by rummaging the excellent “Town House” listed next to “The Town through it.
House for Dogs.”
Dude Ranch’ for Dogs
® ” ~ WHAT the county's authority is
regarding removal of the accumu-
AND THIS calls to mind the fact that up in the lated trash doesn’t seem clear.
hills there is a dude ranch for dogs—a retreat for|
“We're going to stop this, even if
high-bred canines who suffer from eczema in the dryiwe have to plant deputy sheriffs lowlands, and whose nerves are frayed by the stress| where the dumping is being done,” of metropolitan life. {Dr. A. M. Hetherington, county These . aristocratic animals are fed on eggs and | health commissioner, declared,
beefsteak, have daily rub-downs, swim in their private | pool and enjoy supervised play.
County Attorney Victor Jose Jr.
| however, said he didn’t think the
CITIZENS' NAMES ON DISCARDED LETTERS CARRY TALES
County Roads Used as Dumps Gentler Role =
authority in a matter of this sort. George Fassnacht, state health board sanitary engineer, also didn’t know of anything in particular Dr, Hetherington could do about it, unless the trash is tending to “trans-
Under state law, this is the only way the county health officer can take action. Possibility of rats breeding on the rubbish was cited, however, as one reason the problem might be deemed to have public health significance,
¥ ; i Meanwhile, County trucks are being used to haul the trash from highways and an effort is being made to prevent further dumping. At the Ritter ave. highway “dump,” a 150-foot-high tree shattered by * lightning hangs precariously over the roadway to present another obstacle to the unsuspecting motorist. “No Dumping—Violators Will Be Prosecuted” is a sign that failed to impress many on N. Arlington ave. Another among many city streets where accumulated trash has become an unsightly neighborhood blight is the 1800 block of Montcalm st. Cify collection wagons, one resident says, strew waste regularly. At some points, gutters are over-
A narrowing country road , , , trash lines the sides of Ritter ave., north of 10th st, while a huge, dead tree extends overhead to threaten motorists.
some day may cover the sign.
PAGE 13. Labor —
Lewis Using
Soe
In Wage Talks
By FRED W. PERKINS WASHINGTON, March 13~1t | ,| John L. Lewis hopes to wreck the | administration's wage ‘and price controls, you'd never suspect it. Not from the performance he's putting on here in the public sessions of the national bi. tuminous coal wage conference. Instead of the rampaging Lewis who once was mistakenly pictured by his plutocratic foes as a dane gerous radical, even a Commus nist, his current role is’ that of a benevolent old gentleman, He is sticking up for the American sys tem of free enterprise, And, with a proper-amount of reserve, he is advising the coal operators how to run their business. :
Forgotten by ash and garbage collectors but not Is he a changed man? Are his 68 by residents is this large box of tin cans lying in |Vears slowing him? Some guesses the gutter in the 1800 block of N. Montcalm. y
have been made to that effect. Bub there is plenty of evidence that the old fire and belligerency are still. back of those eyebrows. Mr. Lewis simply has not yet seen fit to turn on much heat. # & = ? A BETTER guess, probably, is that the leader of the United Mine Workers is using a gentler sort of strategy to get some important cons cessions for the 400,000 bituminous miners, And without the April strike government officials fear. If he can get enough to satisfy his followers that he is still the same old result-producer, and do it without a strike, he will be fols B |lowing the policy of the A. F. of -|L, with which he is newly re-allied, And’ inferentially he will be throwing a ton of brick at the Q, I. O. strikes in automobile and othe er industries. 4 » . " x MR. LEWIS crossed up many forecasters by making his demands ~he called them “proposals”—in extremely general terms, with nothe ing said specifically about dollars and cents. It was the first time in 20 years or more he had used the: less specific method, What he actually wants will not
A vanishing outpost of hope is the forlorn “No Dumping” sign on |pecome known until the conference Arlington ave., near Brendonwood. Bottles, tin cans and other rubbish | goes from the “town-meeting” stage
into huddles behind closed doors.
Si
4
The owner of an aging spaniel told me that her|peajtn officer has a great deal of
pet had benefited greatly by his stay at this retreat. “He came home looking like a different person,” she
exclaimed. had
Concerning native habits, I picked up this from a restaurant manager. Bus boys, he said, are warned
to be polite to waiters. “What about the customers?” I asked.
. “Oh,” he replied, “that doesn’t matter. We've got
more than enough of them.”
!
| |
By MARGUERITE SMITH
» ated Pr u v And here's a note on housing conditions: A man | MRS. W. H. WILLCOX, 2234 N. and wife were evicted from their apartment. He
found a hole for himself, somewhere within a dozen] miles from his office; but the only shelter he could| ways interesting plants that can find for her was a cabin in«dhe mountains, a hundred | live on air. Hers is the variety that | has lately been on the local market under the name of Everglades d4, orchid. Though many orchids are air plants, this “orchid” is more likely a member* of the pineapple family
miles away.
After payifig a month’s rent on this; he found a| better place. He has leased the latter, although it is}
300 miles distant. As Shakespearessaid: “A mad worl my masters.”
Copyright 1946, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc,
By Max B. Cook
The new light two-way radio for light planes as installed on the instrument panel with only four-screw mounting. It literally provides the pilot with a road map of the skyways.
| Delaware §t., has one of those al-
which includes many air plants as well as earth bound types. Its clus{ter of tall spiny leaves resembles {the top of an oversized pineapple |and it has a spike of purplish buds. i a 8.» MRS. WILLCOX has had this same variety before and the only care she gives it is a sprinkling of | water once a week. She keeps it in la perfectly dry vase, without any Isoil, says that when the weather | warms up she can hang it in a tree lin the back yard. There the rain {caught in its rosette of leaves will | provide it with all the moisture | necessary, and the rest of its food | needs it will take from the air. Sold (in tropical plant catalogues) under the name of “air pine,” it is |related also to the Spanish moss [that decorates southern trees. Mrs. | Willcox says that she and her hus{band have seen the air pine in flower in March on Florida trees. =" » . MRS. RAY THORN, 630 Carlisle Place, is interested in winter flow= lers, those hardy plants that not {only survive but blossom in spite of snow. The Christmas rose which provides winter flowers in many a local garden is the outstanding example, But Mrs. Thorn is experimenting
and in the Commonwealth, Fairchild, Johnson Rocket also with its cousin, the Lenten 185. Luseombe, North American and Taylorcraft, rose. Both are hellebores and
among other light planes.
members of the buttercup family.
As a result, today’s private pilot can notify control! While the Christmas rose is towers of his position and receive instructions, can White with sometimes a pinkish talk to other pilots in the air or to his passengers. tinge, Lenten roses come in some He can fly the radio range knowing that he is “on variety of color. ‘The anemonethe beam” and, when traveling across country,.can like flowers may be white, rosy
tune in his favorite radio program, sit back and purple, spotted, or even greenish. ,
enjoy .it.
-
By Eleanor Roosevelt
>» HANNAH ¢
flowing with bottles and cans.
GARDENING: Everglades Orchid Is Kept Here in Dry Vase—
This Plant Gets Its Food Fr
Mrs. Roy Thorn, 630. Carlyle pL ...
MRS. THORN'S plant, set out it out, put peat moss around it for last fall, is a bit late producing its the winter.
greenish buds. Once established it | will probably blossom in February. | But like the Christmas rose it is
temperamental about being dis- also has the winter iris, irls stylosa. | turbed and if you want flowers the It has not been in her garden long first year, Mrs. Thorn recommends enough to see how it will react to purchase of 3-year-old plants, jour She has hers on the north side distinct from the fall-blooming iris,|a “holiday April 10 to enable every
om the Air
ruby. They can be used in such a
garden ,a window box, edge a bed of hybrid teas or a walk. Mrs.
a
and her Lenten roses.
3
autumn chills before it has time to flower, ss ww» BUT THE most interesting ‘to me of all Mrs, Thorn's flowers were her moisture roses. Summer blooming, they are still hilled up as any good rose should be until the weather settles. But the Lilliputian rosebushes, Mrs. Thorn says, grow no-more than a foot high, usually less, produce tiny roses all season long. Mrs. Thorn's miniatures are the rose-pink rosa Rouletti, but these same tiny flowers are also available in the deep red of Oakington
variety of ways they're worth investigating if you like roses. They can be tucked into a rock
Thorn is so enthusiastic about hers she is planning to have more of them,
TECH STUDENTS USE OLD PLAY SCENERY
Student workers at Tech .high schoo] are rebuilding old scenery because of material shortages. in
Then a “health and welfare fund for mine workers” may become & demand for an assessment of five. op 10 cents a ton on coal production.
» » - “ADJUSTMENT of controversy affecting supervisory, clerical and technical employees” may bring the expected bitter fight over include ing foremen in the same union as rank-and-file miners. . “Increase of wages and reduction of daily and weekly working hours™ may become what one mine worker district has called for—the same pay for 35 hours the miners now get for 48 hours a week. Any one of these and a dozen other desires presented in the same general style of phraseology could become the-rock on which the cone ference would break, producing a strike that might choke off ine dustrial production “in many ine dustrial fields. » ” » BUT MR. LEWIS practically purred as he told the coal opere ators, “If our proposition has no merit, we expect nothing; if it has merit we expect”something.” The baffling part of it, in which the mine worker president ape peared to take a kind of selfish pleasure, was that he had not propositioned specifically. That makes more difficult the task of the main operator spokes men, Charles O'Neill and former Senator Edward R. Burke, who will reply publicly today or tomorrow,
preparation for the school's operetta, “M’'lle Modiste,” to be presented, March 21 and 22 at Murat temple. | Robert Green has been appointed student stage manager. Other appointments are Alvin A.. Sutter,
electrician, and Mary Lee Fisher,
personnel. Make-up workers will be Joyce Hooker, Mildred Bruning, Rose Marie Campbell, Barbara Chopsin, Joann Edwards, Betty Jean Dean, Jacqueline Gregg, Louise Hanna,
| Mary Harvey, Jean Hooker, Milton | Hopking, Gloria Moore; Mary Lou|matured in the army only to find
| Osting, Martha Phillips, Jean Sharr | ' of her cold weather plants and she! and Roxann Swain. i pon. thelr Tun ihe. same. tots
HOLIDAY FOR ELECTION TOKYO, March 13 (U. P.).—The entire Japanese nation will observe
|of the house in almost full shade. [which according to several local| qualified voter to take part in the
1 [She used bone meal, “a small hand- |fans, usually manages to get itself |general election, the cabinet an-
{ful” under’ the plant when she setifrosted in one of our sudden|nounced today.
ir ———— -—
THE DOCTOR SAYS: Fever, Headache Symptoms of Smallpox
We, the Women Many G. I's Return to Find Wives Bossy
By RUTH MILLETT AMONG THE classes of men who |came through the war okay but are finding civilian life too tough, one psychiatrist lists “those who
lof the family’ attitude at home.” | He was undoubtedly referring to {the young man who goes back to [live with bis parents. But a lot of married men must be suffering from much the same kind of frustration. We mean the veterans who have come home to find their wives grown bossy in their absence.
» » " IT MUST be equally hard for the ex-colonel and ex-private to come home to a wife so used to running
them: “Do you share the pessimism of the great ma jority of the press as to our foreign relations at | the present time? Do you feel that the United Na-| tions organization is probably on the way to holding its last meeting? Do you feel that Mr. Churchill's] speech makes it impossible for the major powers to| work together?” |
By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. | | CHICKENPOX (varicella), which Pears in different stages at the develop in young infants. minutes the winter |S8me time, while in smallpox the|
[18 most prevalent in : | ” ay be con-| eruption is fairly uniform. Erup-|remain in bed during the early Where have you been?
ol | i |and spring. months, m
A patient with chickenpox should
‘Nearly Everyone Susceptible iz: 5k
run him, too.
In chickenpox the eruption ap-|were 15 yelirs of age, and .it may, Those poor men can't be 20
late getting home from work without the wife's demandings:
The mere fact that a” very fine reporter from a responsible news service was sent to- ask me these questions points to a lack of realization on the part) of a great many people as to the actual seriousness
of another war.
Civilization’s Future at Stake
IT ISN'T just a question of another war in which hundreds of thousands of young people would lose their lives. It is a question of wiping out the civiliza~ |
tion which now exists upon the earth.
If we go on taking it for granted that the ori) ization which we have set up to try to prevent war | is going to be ineffectual, and if we give up hope before we actually make any effort to succeed, then I think it shows a lack of imagination on the part of the leaders of thought in this country which
brands us as being unrealistic in facing the future.
It is, of course, entirely possible to divide. the world into armed camps and look at each other with | suspicion, We can live in constant fear—and end by | destroying each other. ‘But if we take that path, we | * must .do it with our eyes open and count the cost! beforehand. Tomorrow 1 will discuss where this path!
will lead us. . .
| | |
“8 | fused with smallpox, especially | beginning | centrate on the trunk and face in
slight | contrast to smallpox, where the {eruption is more abmthdant on the
} Symptoms are mild fever, palms, soles and extremities
|older persons. The
headache, and vague body pains; {in smallpox the symptoms are usu- Ff |ally severe, and marked backache | is present. Incubation period for chickenpox is 14 to 21 days, and susceptibility is practically universal among those who have not had the disease; one attack confers permanent immunity, with rare exceptions. ” ” ”
less it has become secondarily in-
fected. i ' \
Chickenpox is caused by a specific virus which is present in the eruption of the skin and eruption of the membranes of the respiratory tract.
breaking out
sists of flat red. blotches, which-in{88 it may be considered just an a few hours change to pimples, ordinary cold.
.|which in a few more hours become blisters. the first week of the eruption.
Within two to four days the|is one. of the most easily spread ‘| blisters dry, become crusted and|of the infectious diseases of childheal rapidly, leaving a slight pit/hood and is most contagious ia the on the skin which. disappears un- early stages.
Chickenpox is contagious during.
of the possibility of secondary infection of the blisters he should refrain from scratching to avoid scarring Soothing ointments may be applied to relieve irritation.
the| « ¥
| disease. Of chief public health importance are cases of chickenpox
AS IN OTHER contagious dis- in which the patients are over 15 eases, spread may develop from the years old or those developing durin the respiratory
ERUPTIONS in chickenpox con- | tract before the skin is involved,
ing an epidemic of smallpox, as
they should be visited by someone
| CHICKENPOX is not a serious
in|tion in chickenpox tends to con-|stages of the illness, and because | They are ordered around like
|servants, and usually without even a pleasant “Would you ,. .?” to soften: the command. They are told off in public about such things as their carelessness in the social |graces, their general thoughtless | ness, their paterhal ignorance.
" ” ” - : AND, PERHAPS ‘worst of all, such wives are willing and eager to discuss their men’s progress in “readjustment” with anyone at all - interested. They do it as nonchalantly as they discuss their
skilled in the recognition of small-|“problem” children.
These modern martyrs may not
POX. } Some communities exclude chil-{end up in a psychatrist's waitings
dren from school who have been |room; since American men
exposed to chickenpox.
have built up quite a tolerance for the
This is not wise, as exclusion [bossy female. ~But they scarcely
child has the illness. No attempt is| Nearly three-fourths of all adults | made to treat chickenpox except to
shofild be limited to the time the = happy. have had the disease before the
y keep the patient ecomfortablé.
There i desperation im thelr eyes every they say “Yes, © dear.” ; oi 8
LN } 2 .
$x.
