Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1946 — Page 11
S———————
wi | i
Y GET f STARS
st Designs to vaii, Alaska.
, March 25 (U, P.). artment’s division rritories is seeing ' them, on is due to sugwali and Alaska ted to statehood. eing flooded with rearranging “Old ple designs range
ll aspects of more tastic and revolu-
iguing suggestion, a of retaining the s, but rearranging rs in the form of 1gs outspread. 1 appeal to Texas sing the stars to ar. Another would to carry a double ross the top and ong the left side, red and white
1 and housewives conservative conoffer such pracviding seven rows en in each row. would start a new present ones with itional states when
ecommended
been recommended and Alaska, and troduced into conId admit the two union. gress in 1818 proydmission of every 1e union, onc star ) the union of the lditional shall take 7 4 next succeeding
b specify where tne, put, however. In a joined the union, rder provided the lent. bates firmly, how-
mmittee has been
ing the flag and nother territory is | to the union as
Inside Indianapolis
"THE STATUARY on ‘the south side ledge of the
‘ state house is gleaming white and’ sticks out like a
sore thumb against the grey building. We noticed it passing by and called to see if the state had purchased some new ornaments, Building Superinten=
dent Harold Shulke told us, however, that the statues !
have been there all along. They were just so dirty
“that no one noticed them. We -were convinced but
we had a hard time convincing one of our guests who saw them. He insisted he'd walked by the statehouse every day for years and that he was positive the
, statues were new additions. Just shows what a little
soap can do. y The influx of foreign brides has produced a lot of curiosity as to their citizenship status. The answer is that the girls do not become citizens by marriage. With the exception of elimination of red tape on their entry into the country, they must follow the normal naturalization procedure to obtain citizenship.
Sinatra Slips SOME OF his local fans got a kick out of Frank Sinatra's slip of the tongue on his radio show. Singing “Personality,” The Voice tripped and said Juniper instead of Jupiter. He caught it, corrected himself in Crosby fashion, and went on crooning. : . . J. O. Wiseman, who claims to be a “hobo” and who comes out each spring to sell paintings, had his shop set up in front of Charlig’s restaurant the other day. Mr. Wiseman is & buyer and seller of paintings and “everything else legitimate except whiskey.” When he makes a sale the buyer gets a resume of the vendor's colorful past, all the information about his 1926 Ford that has a motor that “sounds like distant thunder” and any other comments that pop into the “hobo’s” mind. The Times sports editor, Eddie Ash, got quite a shock when he was making a purchase in an East side drugstore. A woman came in and informed the clerk she wanted to buy some birth announcements. Her dog, she said, had just presented them with four puppies. The Anderson basketball team were honored guests of Fabien Sevitzky at a concert in Anderson Thursday. The state champs also were invited to be the conductor’s guests again at the symphony concert the 31st. One of the orchestra personnel comments that the team was a lot more anxious to accept the invitation when it learned that the guest soloist would be a 17-year-old attractive girl, Miss Patricia Travers.
"Peculiar Kite ‘Flaps’
ONE OF our agents who has a mania for seeing sign flaws says the sign on the “Beuna Vista apartments” is extremely attractive and well done. The
only thing, sez he; is that it’s misspelled. . , . Should
be Buena Vista, meaning a “good view.” , , . Another sign-seeker comments on the card in a liquor store.
Head-Stander
BOMBAY, March 25 (U. P.)—Every morning before breakfast Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, 57, India’s potential prime minister, stafids oh his head. .. The present tense external and internal. situation in India has not interrupted this head-standing, which is part of the exercise Nehru takes daily between 7 and 8 a. m. The Pandit expects to follow his program of setting-up exercises right through the coming conferences .of the British commission, on its way to India with an offer of independence. The rest of Nehru’s day, when he is at home, follows as rigid a pattern as his exercises. He rises at seven, three hours later than Mahatma Gandhi, whose general political policies he espouses. Breakfast for the graduate of Harrow and Cambridge is at"8 a. m. His menu, which rarely varies, is foreign—fruit, eggs, toast, butter, sometimes honey —and he eats it in western style, with knife and fork. 3 Nehru comes from a long line of Kashmiri Brahmins, a fair-complexioned Hindu set. Unlike southern Indians, Nehru eats meat. In this he also differs from the Mahatma who is strict vegetarian.
Steady Stream of Visitors
AFTER breakfast, Nehru settles down to his work of answering correspondence -which pours in from India and the world, and seeing a constant stream of politicians, students, peasants, - reporters and foreign visitors. Nehru's palatial home at Anand Bhwan was built by his father, who was a rich lawyer-politician. It is a two-story white building with a lovely garden and ample grounds. The servant quarters in the rear are now occupied by congress political workers. Each day Nehru must interrupt his work to show himself, and perhaps say a few words, to the hun-
Aviation
IT'S TRAGIC the way foreigners are trying to take us to the cleaners in this world air commerce business to attempting to slide through our state department and the civil aeronautics board such rate and “rights” rackets as marked the Chicago and the Bermuda international air commerce conferences. They send men who know their business. We send boys from the state department and the civil aeronautics board who are inexperiericed in aviation. The British advocate rate-fixing in international air commerce. Let's look at this rate-fixing for a minute. The British and the French are buying American transports—the finest in the world and the kind they cannot produce -at present, They buy these planes at the same prices charged to American airlines. Therefore, they start even with us, using ‘our, equipment. Now by reason of the higher standards of living in the United States, we pay our pilots $1000-$1200 a month for flying four-engine job on trans-oceanic schedules. :
Edge on Costs
THE FRENCH pay their pilots about $250 a month. The British a little better for their flight captains. This gives the British and the French a terrific edge in cost operations over the American competition. To make a go of our trans-oceanic air commerce, American operators necessarily must, obtain .a passenger for almost every segt available. 2 The French and the British can run on half or one-third loads and still make money, This gives
My Day
LOS ANGELES (Sunday) —Friday we took the afternoon train to San Diego for my lecture there in the evening, and then caught the 11:40 p. m. plane back to Los Angeles. I am constantly surprised that a plane which travels all the way from New York arrives on time, but I was grateful that it did, for we were quite weary when we reached Los ‘Angeles again at 1 in the morning. Saturday in Los Angelés "I attended a luncheon given by the PAC and the Independent Citizens Committee of the Arts, Sciences and Professions. In the evening 1 gave my lecture in the Shrine auditorium, I was rather worried when I heard that it would be in such a big hall, but apparently they had no difficulvy mn filling it. Since this lecture was a feport on the United Nations Organization, I was able to tell more about the actual machinery which had been set up.. I am happy to-find that people seem really interested to know just what this machinery is and how it functions, and particularly how they can help it to function well.
People Aware of Tie THEY ARE eager to know just what are the actual conditions in the other countries of the world, and 1 think it is becoming clear to everyone that there is a close tle between our own. conditions and those which exist elsewhere... Pdrhaps our very young people are helping us to see this tle. Here in Los Angeles, Miss Corine Seeds, principal of the elementary school of the University of California, has helped to start what seems to nie a very interesting plan. ”
. , , _ » - y «
£ ff 1
The state house statues . . . they look like brand new goods.
old residents but
It reads “Believe-It-Or-Not Rum for only 75 cents.” What our agent wants to know is if it's just rum or if the name of it is “Believe-It-Or-Not Rum.” - Our item about kites brought comment on the peculiar kite that some boys have been flying out in Garfield park, This kite is described as having holes in it and some sort of auxiliary trrimmng that “flaps” as it flies. It sounds peculiar but— State police have received an appeal from a Scottish woman who is trying to locate some American relatives. She is Miss Mary E. Mackie of Shawlands, . Glasgow, Scotland, who wrote the police asking for the address of an uncle and aunt whom she identified as Mr. and Mrs, John Maclean, formerly of Hammond, and a sister, Miss Kathleen Alexandra Mackie, of Gary. This sister is supposed to have married McLester Stanhope in Gary. Any information about the people can be sent to Miss Mackie in care of Mrs. T. Lamb, 11 Dector rd, Shawlands, Glasgow, Scotland, Times Reporter Bub Bloem went to the Press club Friday for the first time since returning from service and lost his hat. Later in the afternoon Ben Cole, of the Star, returned it to him, apologizing for picking it up by mistake. Bob accepted the apology and went to put on his coat, only to find it gone. Some other newsman with a similar coat had taken his by mistake,
By John Hlavacek
dreds of peasants who wander up the circular driveway to glimpse their leader” Many of them are pilgrims in their native costumes. Nehru lunches from noon to 1 p. m. Lunch may be either foreign or Indian food. Theén he returns to work, which is interrupted in the late afternoon for tea. ~ Nehru's daughter Indira and her small son Rajiv] live with him. His wife Kamala died in Switzerland | in 1935 and the Pandit has never re-married. Indira, slim and pretty, was educated at Oxford. She is married to a Parsi, Feroze Gandhi. Also at Anand Bhwan are workers of the All India Peoples Congress in which Nehru is vitally interested. Indira says if more peple move in she and her | father will have to pitch a tent on the lawn. Dinner is served at 8 p.m: in the Nehru home and after that the Pandit returns again to his work.
Publicity Surprises Him
1945, Nehru has traveled widely about the country,! ‘awakening his people to the struggle for independence. He also has electioneered for congress candidates. 3
Statuary Cleanup] ~~."
SECOND SECTION
ianapolis Tim
MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1946
\YBE
CHAPTER ONE
“WON'T go,” Mona said. “l think you will,” her. mother replied with the wellbred restraint which irritated her daughter more than any display of temper. “Russel Brithertor is’ one of the few really eligible men in our acquaintance. His parents were dear friends of mine. We practically grew up together. His grandfather on his mother's side was one of the governors of California.” “So what?” Mona asked, yawning. “So you will not insult him by re=fusing to attend the dinner party he is giving tomorrow night. We were planning to spend the weekend at the Carmel cottage anyway. There's absolutely no reason why you shouldn't go.” " ”
» “RUSSELL. bores me. He never talks about anythingsbut horses and guns and dogs. I don't like the redfaced sportsman type and I wouldn't marry him if he were the last man on earth.” 4 “Don't be too sure of that,” Mrs. Shane advised. “He hasn't asked you yet, and as you grow older you'll find that while many men may flatter you with their attentions, few will actually do you the honor to propose. You are only 20 now, but the time may come when vou'll be grateful for a chance to become the wife of a fine country gentleman like Russel Bretherton.” . “I doubt it,” Mona said. “But of course I'll go to his party if you're going to make an issue of it.” # . "
IT WAS part of her charm that she could capitulate so gracefully. As a matter of fact, she had known
she would all the time, Her protest had been registered as a warning
to her mother’s future plans which | Mona suspected embraced far more
than an evening's engagement.
|. Going to the Carmel cottage would please Mona's father. Patrick Shane, who had been born “in the
gold mines wealthy man.
ISTARTING A THRILLING NEW TIMES SERIAL—
IT'S LOVE .
Mona wondered what Russel had said about the man who seemed that night to be the answer to all her dreams. She recognized him
instantly. Tall dark-eyed; magne which drew her like a charm.
become the husband of a woman who considered herself above him. He, Patrick Shane, who had kissed and -left girls all over the world— beautiful girls, too, young, desirable —~to be married to one who gazed at him with actual repugnance, But she had giyen him Mona— that slender bit of green-eyed, black-haired loveliness whose: flashing charm drew every man Who looked at her. Mona loved him {with all her warm young heart. |For Mona he could endure anything and at the cottage even Josephine did not annoy him. She had her .own room there to which she retreated with the dull books she was always reading. » " ” THOSE EVENINGS before the | fire alone or with Mona were the happiest of Patrick's present life. Mona, too, loved the informality and freedom of the cottage. The walks along the ‘windswept beach
with the gray waves thundering and breaking into white-tipped foam; galloping, prancing and retreating in intricate formation—the
tic with a soft spoken gentleness
their parked car he would whisper: “Mike O'Brien is head and shoulders above that dog fancier Russel Bretherton,” her father was arguing. a poor but honest Valley family is to his credit. It isn't every man who can educate himself under such circumstances and become a district attorney at 30." » » "” MONA SMILED. She had seen the “poor but honest” Mike O'Brien many times when he called upon her father. He was good looking and he might be brilliant, But he was not the man for whom she was waiting. He was too serious, almost aggressive. The man hadn’t a drop of romance in his viens.
cerned,” Pat continued while his wife shrugged into her cloak of well-bred silence, “It'd be better if he loved those animals of his less and human beings more. The fellow's a snob.” “Snobbishness is something only one who considers himself” inferior can recognize,” Mrs. Shane re-
spirited “horses of the sea.”
At 35 his deep blue| With the rigid back
On their way to Carme], Mona
{in front of her.
{minded him.
| “It so happens I am not re-| \reminded herself that the walk ferring to. myself,” her husband; | with her father tomorrow should|replied with dignity. “It's his treat-| | Mission” and run away to sea at aN |p, yor compensation for the party ment of Mike I'm objecting to.|DNever go to the city,” he replied. SINCE cbming out of Ahmednagar jail in August,|early age, had returned from the she would have to attend tonight.| when Mike ran for district attor-| “Why should I? With Wong to of South Africa a She was sitting in the rear seat|ney in the Valley, Bretherton went | COOK for me and my horses and of her mother | out of his way to defeat him, which 4088, What more could a man Mr. and® Mrs.|didn't hurt Mike in the long run | Want?” a kK hearty | : eyes, Wavy black hair, and ¥| shane had not exchanged a dozen |pecause he made it later in San | . 8 2
On these trips, Nehru is obliged to stop every few Irish smile would have made him words since leaving the house on Francisco.” miles for impromptu speeches to small groups who!attractive to any woman except the| Broadway. But at least they were row
clamor for him. When traveling by train, he isl ,. who married him to retrieve] not quarreling, Mona thought grate-
greeted by large crowds at every station and usually | makes a speech at each stop, sometimes making the! train three or four hours behind schedule. | At these gatherings Nehru speaks in Hindustani. |
Hg has an amazing gift of being able to bring a large served, aristocratic, had deliberately | have breakfast with us tomorrow.” {captured the devotion of the rol-|
crowd to fever pitch.
her own vanished fortune. = ” "
fully. » » »
“I HAVE always assumed that it |Temind him of that. Russel may {is every voter's privilege to judge | [the qualifications ofa candidate |®dded awkwardly: “After all I do A MOMENT later her father/for himself,” Josephine said in- have neighbors, you know, and if
JOSEPHINE LANDIS, proud, Te- | said: “I've invited Mike O'Brien to differently.
“That's considerate of you,” his
friend objected to. He told
For all his work, Nehru rarely pleads that he is|licking, self-made man but she had! wife replied. “Especially since you himself that it was O'Brien's backtoo busy to give an interview. His slightest doings are never permitted him to forget the know I'll have to cook it myself.” page one news in Indian papers and the amount of social difference between them. It| «can't Mona help you?”
space he gets amazes him.
By Maj. Al Williams
them a chance to provide lounges and whatever luxuries they deem essential to attract trade.
tive agreements” nation to be made by an American President without consulting the senate). Our state department knows nothing about avia-| tion and not one of its representatives at these international rate-fixing conferénces ever has operated a business or won recognition in any American industry.
Matter of Wage-Sharing OBVIOUSLY, the fixing of rates for transportation;
of people and things?by air across the ocean is a! cartel racket of the worst order. Foreign agents do. For whose benefit? not for our benefit. ¥ In any such rate-fixing, the American standard of living collides head on with the standard of living| of France and England. And the foreign standards| range from 50 to 70 per cent lower than our standards, | Of course, it would be just too sweet if we could raise their standards. to ours, but the foreigners lack
Who proposes it?| Certainly
everything necessary to do this, And it is a job which |himself there. He could build a
they themselves would have to do. We've got what they want, so they want equality
| was a chasm not to be bridged and |
“Don’t be ridiculous! = You've
after the first few years Pat had spoiled her until she can't ‘even
ceased trying.
headstrong; passionate reserved but tender.
but proud;
enter his head to leave the woman me at home instead of tearing were approaching the cottage. {he knew now had never loved him.| sound the country driving a navy The San Francisco house was one | ¢r.,ck » : \ |of his earlier attempts to please her. Narrow and tall, with its cold | hyckling at the picture. “She canisatisfaction as he carried the bag- | Was| jearn *{warmed by colorful hangings and|mhere was a“ war to fight you|the threshold.
proud exterior, the inside
| bay region, The books and pictures | had been inherited by Josephine.|
comfortable, but Pat never felt at home there. 8_ =n » THE COTTAGE at Carmel beach was gayly patterned curtains and strong. homely furniture, a man could be
roaring fire in the stone fireplace, put his slippered feet upon a chair
Josephine was the| poi an egg.” | mother of his daughter whom he| “I'VE SPOILED HER?" |adored. Mona combined the con-| grinned. “I wanted her to learn to some people.” 'flicting qualities of both. Generous but She This the foreigners can do, taking our shirts in was the single bond between them. the doing; provided they can get one of these “execu- Yet while Patrick Shane had his
(an agreement With a foreign| ,,ments of rebellion, it did it]
cook long ago. You were the one who said the servants wouldn't stand for it.” “That was when we HAD serve ants,” his wife said bitterly. “I was the one who suggested she help
“It's good for her,” he aSgerted
to keep house any time,
(rugs, by dark, richly carved wood|ygnow?” | and breathtaking views of the entire | ow.
THEY WERE ofl, but after a few
[of her own. She had her own | dreams which .she had never confided to anyone. Dreams of a tall,
music shared with an adoring companion,
in the form of fixed .air rates. If we agree to any and smoke and dream of daredevil] voiced telephone conversations. Exsuch nonsense with England and France, other na-|days when he would have fought| citing breathless moments, then one
tions will demand similar agreement, labor is certainly going te have plenty to say about’ sharing its wages with foreigners.
By Eleanor Roosevelt [C
The names of 3000 “School children in one little Y.
town in Holland were secured and already 2000 have! hecome “adopted friends” of children in the schools of Los Angeles. This project is sponsored by the county board of education. Once a month, the children send a friendly letter and a parcel of warm, used clothing, shoes and food. | If this plan spreads, it will, of course, be a tremendous help to. the clothing drive held under UNRRA sponsorship and the food drive which they. are now’going to undertake,
California at Its Best SPRING is certainly the most delightful time to see the southern California landscape. The hills and, fields are green and .I know of no more beautiful! beaches anywhere than-those along the Pacific. ! When 1 come to California at this time of year, 1 always remember my first visit here, Franklin K.| Lane, then secretary of the interior, was traveling | with us, He loved this state, and early in the morn-| ing he would send us huge bunches of flowers, saying that this was the state of flowers and sunshine and he wished our first impression to be of their beauty and of the sweet odor of the orange blossoms. | On this visit I've been sent a number of the very decorative paradise flowers,. which one does not see as much in the East as out here, , I must say that the vrofusion of little flower. marts along the streets-adds greatly to the charm of the city, On Saturday. I had a chance to walk through Olivera street, the heart of the Mexican community, and many of my old friends there spoke to me, . ,
|
|
> HANNAH ¢
American|a man who insinuated he would | night when the fog swirled about
By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D,
| SUPERFLUOUS hair can be re- | moved by shaving, by rubbing with | abrasives, or by applying chemical or wax removers, but the only permanent method of hair removal {is by electrolysis. Shaving of the hair is recom{mended for the arms, legs,” and {arm-pits, and, contrary to popular | belief, this does not cause the hair fto grow back thicker and coarser. | In a controlled experiment, the | hair on the legs was shaved twice la week for eight months and no {change in its quality was noted.
| Plucking ‘the hair is an old prac-| (tice, but it grows back unless the Permanent method of halr removal, | pugs though the development of | imagined faults. follicle is destroyed as. the result | but it must be. administered by 8a canerous mole is uncommon, frri-
of a complicating infection, The
"THE DOCTOR SAYS: Here's Use for Electrolysis.
Excess Hair Can Be Removed
ground.” | pany my father used to be interHis wife's faintly contemptuous | ested in. Unfortunately I sold the smile was not visible to their Shares of stock he left me, but I
| daughter as she replied. “Of course it's difficult’ for you to understand
he how important such things are to |Chap here tonight. An engineer
Momentarily defeated, Pat said no more. Josephine's darts were |always poisoned. but he had learned to escape them by ducking into tanother spot. This time he con|centrated upon the fact that they | White |and shining, neat as a little boat, {it waited their arrival. Pat's kindly, humorous features beamed with
{gage and boxes of groceries over
MONA HELPED him. The. sun yours” | was setting over the wide expanse] | moments Mona ceased to listen f0/of ocean and the wind was blowing
| wi . The bedrooms were luxurious and| ther. She was absorbed in thoughts into a stiff gale which beat against| voice as it slid over her name, made
ready
the windows, but the fire was [to light. Pat touched
warning and sweep her into an- case in her own room, lining up the f ¢ th t | other world. Romance, soft lights, books she had brought to relieve| Face hat they hii i lone, uid
her boredom.
| “How you getting to your dinner | ¢p h There would be flowers and low- party?” Pat asked glancing toward | ng had happened during, the
Mona,
“Russel is coming for me,” she, isaid with a little gesture of distaste,!
secondary infeetion from
on the skin surface.
| Chemical removers usually con- to develop in tain a sulphur compound which and nose. The ears and brows can|
“The fact that he came from |
“And as far as Bretherton is con-|
“It wasn't his qualifications your me |
a match fo] i forgetting th SS a | the twisted rolls of newspaper, sank ore 3 that Russel was waiting
dark-eyed man, not a boy, who|into a chair and put up his feet.| his own idea. Snugly built, with | would come into her life without | Josephine was unpacking her suit-!
bacteria
. . Leth . ¥ -Labor
By Vida Hurst
“And I'd better start dressing so you won't have to entertain him.” Later it amused her to recall with what indifference she dressed for what proved to be one of the most exciting evenings of her life, Because of war shortages, she wore a short, black frock left over from boarding-school days. » » » «YOU'RE NOT wearing that,” her mothér disapproved. “It's at least three years old.” “1 couldn't buy anything half as good looking today,” Mona answered snapping the belt. In a way this was true. The folds of soft rich silk clung sweetly to her lithe, young figure bringing out each contour with subtle grace. Josephine sighed, “But it looks so drab. You might at least have worn a color.” “rll stick a rose in my hair,” Mona promised. “I saw a lovely yellow one in the yard as we came in. Don't worry about it, mother. Russél won't notice what I wear. He'll be too busy talking about his dogs.”
THIS PREDICTION proved to be true. During the ride from the Carmel cottage to the fertile valley where Russel Bretherton lived, the conversation was practically a monologue delivered by him. Even at his own dinner party Russel was | wearing tweeds, His highly-colored | face was not unpleasant. His nose was straight and high | ridged. His mouth thin-lipped but | wide. His gray eyes, open a bit too {far so that the white beneath the | iris always showed, were clear and | fearless. He looked every inch the country | gentleman he was, but Mona was | not interested in the deer he had ishot on his last hunting expedi- | tion nor the clever retrieving done | by his favorite hunter, . " . HIS conversation bristled with terms and words which offended her, She liked horses herself, but she was not regaled at hearing the | details of their illnesses. | So far as she was concerned the {drive was a complete failure, but | the setting softened her heart. The | gently swelling hills, the moon | peering through veils of drifting | foe, the lights shining from the widely spaced, low, sprawling ranch | houses, | “Do you ever get lonely down | here?” she asked as they turned into his own road. “Never.- If IT had my way, I'd
HE COULD want a woman, Mona | thought, but far be it from her to
have surmised-her criticism for he
{I want other company I can ask {people down from San Francisco as I'm doing tonight. There are several men from the stecl cum-
{ still keep in touch with some of {the executives. And there's a new
{ from the east, IT think. . . .” | Mona was not listening. After{ward she wondered just exactly what ‘Russell had said about the man who seemed that night to be the answer to all her dreams. She recognized him instantly. Tall, dark-eyed, magnétic with a soft | spoken gentleness which drew her {like a charm. His name was Cam- | eron—Jay Cameron. i 2 x = “WHAT DOES the for?” she asked. | “Nothing,” he smiled, “Just Jak. {It's my name just as Mona is
Jay stand
The way he saic¢ it, dropping his
it sound beautiful. Mona regarded him with a sort of wistful wender,
| to introduce her to other friends. Suddenly she realized by the | amused expression in Jay Cameron's
attention to her host. But some-
magic moment of their meeting and Mona knew it.
(To Be Continued)
PAGE
Radicalism in’ Labor Seen af UAW Meeting |
By FRED Ww. PERKINS ; ATLANTIC CITY, March 25, ==
Some of the inroads by radicalism into certain important segments of organized labor are apparent here in the 2000-delegate convention of the C. I. O, United Automobile Workers, Radicalism was obvious: in the two Sunday sessions held to expe dite a crowded schetule, And | was expected to be in the pieture again today when a main event will be a speech by Philip Murray, C. IL O. president. : Mr, Murray is faced - with the problem of steering his words bes tween fervent believers in various degrees of radicalism and cone servatism and also between the face tions in the main convention fight —whether Walter Reuther shall un« seat. Roland J, Thomas as president of the union, The outcome of that contest will be important far beyond this union, It is likely to affect the future of the C. 1. O. It may have repers cussions in other fields of American organized labor, . ” » IN DECIDING this fight all the left-wing groups are active and considerably more vocal than the conservative unionists. But the “conservatives” outnumber the rade icals in the convention. And even if all the left-wingers could ge tos gether they wouldn't have the votes to elect a president. Most of the left-wing idealogies that have appeared in this coun= try in the last half century have their spokesmen in the gathering, Some will be heard on the floor, others will work more quietly in committee rooms and caucuses. Most important amofig these groups are the Communists. They probably outnumber all the other
union. ” » » i AMONG THEM is Nat Ganley, 8 member of the national committee of the Communist party, who sits on the platform as a member of the U, A. W, resolutions commits tee. He is business agent of local 155, an amalgamated unit of tool and die shops in Detroit, which the Communist Daily Worker claims is “headed by Communists.” The same organ asserts that the big Ford local, No: 600, contains much Communist influence. The convention can display also two varieties of communism known as “Trotskyism,” with revolution ary ideas differing from those of the Stalinists. : The Trotsky followers are divided into the Cannonites and the
of thelr American leaders. Each of these factions has a publication the “Militant” for the Cannonites and “Labor Action” for the Schachtmanites. » ” » THESE ORGANS, like the Daily Worker, are pressed free of charge on the delegates as they enter and leave the big convention hall on the Boardwalk. There are also representatives of two schools of Thomasites (named for their leader, Norman Thomas) and the social Democrats. Also there is a small group of what are known as Loves toneites. pot The straight Communists are striving to keep Mr. Reuther from becoming president of the union, This young leader has been pictured by his employer and other foes as a dangerous radical, but by the Communists he is described as an adherent of the Social Democrats, who are milder even than the Thomasites.
We, the Worren Airing Hubby's Faults Is Seen As Poor Policy
By RUTH MILLETT A RECENT Gallup poll on the question, “What are the chief faults husbands have?”, found most of the wives approached ready to hold forth on just what was wrong with the men they married. Plenty seemed to be wrong, so far'as the majority of women were concerned. But four wives out of every hundred declared their men faultless, and another 8 per cent re fused to discuss their husbands’ shortcomings. It's a safe bet those two grouns of women have the happiest homed, Not because their men. are neces
Jn advancing years, there is a tendency for excessive hair growth the eyebrows, ears
|dissolves the hair extending beyond be shaved or clipped, but the nose
{the skin do not should be clipped. Pulling these hairs may result in a serious sec-| ondary infection. | ” ¥ { THE DEVELOPMENT of superair is usually on a glandular | Excessive hair growth in
surface. They
have any permanent effect on hair
growth. | The X-ray is the most dangerfour form of hair remover,
| hair at its source.
may cause ulceration of the skin
and the development of cancer, | u ” 4
[skillful persén. Each individual
as the |rays cause atrophy (shrinking) of |fluous h
{the follicle, and this destroys the A heavy dose Women at the menopause. is related
ELECTROLYSIS is the only safe
| basis.
to the charges which are occurring | in the body, but no effective method | of treating superfluous hair by administering glandular extracts Is known, :
[tation of moles is to be avoided at
| aging changes, as there is a ten-|large areas cannot be treated. This |, 0u1d not be removed separately.
| dency for these to occur, i ¥. 48 | WAX REMOVERS catch the hair | as they harden, and the wax con{taining the halr is separated from
| follows, it is not caused by the remover, but develops as a result of
treatment is expensive and time- |
consuming. |
hydrogen peroxide and ammonia.
Bleaching the hair is a harmless
LOCAL OFFICER HONORED
‘of the 8th army.
| sarily easier to live with or really | better husbands—but because the | wives aren't willing to pick them | to pieces on the slightest provocas tion. ® a IN ONE large and happy family there is a strict rule that no two or more members can discuss the personality of any other member, If such a discussion starts, the father says firmly, “L. N. D, O. C.* which they all know stands for “Let's not discuss our =hildren.” And it would be well if wives would impose the same kind of silence on themselves when it comes to their husband's real of
[ CH » AS A RULE, husbands are
but rarely does he talk about her shortcomings with his friends. Yet it is a common thing for all
Cited for meritorious achleve-|of a woman's friends to know just method of making. it less con- ment on Mindanao, Philippine] what is wrong with her husband. |spicuous, and if large areas are in-| Islands; Lt. John Sclipcea, 749 W. ; he skin much like hair is removed (volved, this treatment is recom-| New York st. was recently awarg dl | with adhesive plaster. If infection mended. Most of the bleaches are|the bronze star medal oak 6a { harmless, as the majority contain cluster at Yokahoma headqua
is a favorite feminine
avowed left-wingers and appear to hold a balance of power in the
Schachtmanites, so-called because
Socialists, the
| < & | ar N appearance of coarse hairs follow-| hair follicle has to be destroyed by |ay times. Hairy moles should be| more loyal than are wives, A man ing plucking may be .*he result of the application of the needle, as|..yoved by surgery, and the hairs| may find his wife hard to liye with,
the faults of martial
