Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1946 — Page 19

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Inside Indianapolis

THE FIRST ROBINS, the bus conversations and

the firemen at station 13—we can't seem to put out

a column without getting one of the three in, Babe Lawrie (a fireman, not a robin) crashed back in

+ Inside today after he put the old catching arm back

to work—catching pheasant, no less. The former inflelder with the Indianapolis Indians, along with some other No. 13 firemen, was skeptical when Carl Woolen yelled that there was a pheasant in front of the engine house at 102 Kentucky ave. They ran out and'sure enough, the bird was strutting along Kentucky. It took off down an alley and Firemen Lawrie and Jiggs Seal cornered it there. The others wanted to club it but Fireman Lawrie tried a shoestring catch. He got the pheasant right by the tail assembly and thought he had it cinched—then the bird gave him the bird by flying away, leaving him holding a bunch of tail feathers. Mebbé he's just as well off, since possession of pheasants in closed season is just a wee bit illegal. He gave the feathers to a fellow fireman to varnish and make into fishing

Fireman “Babe” Lawrie (kneeling) shows brother °

firemen how he almost caught a pheasant. . : Left to. right—Kenny Williams, George Seal and Charles Hill. >

Tourist Ills

HOLLYWOOD, March 28.—The most loathsome creature in California is the “tourist.” Every hand is against him. Seeking food and shelter, he slinks through the shadows as furtive as an alley cat. Indicative of his status was the remark of one native who expressed a pious hope that newspapers in the rest of the country would play up the earth-

quake story. Maybe, he said, this would scare people into staying away from California. Getting a meal is a real problem for the tourist. If you belong—as we do—to this miserable species of bacteria, you don't just walk into a restaurant and order dinner. You decide on Monday where you wolud like to dine the following Friday. Then you

+ apply for a reservation. ,

If you are persuasive enough, you may be assigned a time—say seven and one-half minutes past 8. Arriving promptly, you are told there has been a regrettable error. Will you be good enough to wait in the. bar until things have been straightened out. (I have heard of tourists who waited in bars for a whole week-end without being straightened out). Should you venture to complain, you will be given explicit instructions as tor where you can go. When we were novices in ‘the art of forage, we made a frontal attack on the Brown Derby. Looking back on it, this was as ridiculous as walking into the Kremlin and asking to see Stalin.

Smart Cookies Go in Side Door FOR A LONG TIME we stood with the crowd at the front entrance. We might be standing there still if my consort hadn't discovered that nobody but tourists and autograph hunters cluttered up the front entrance. The smart cookies were filtering through the side entrance. After some remarks about what sort of a cookie I was, not knowing any better than to think some

Science

ST. LOUIS, March 28.—“Thirteen pioneer newspaper science writers” is what the official statement of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, called us. We were the 13. awarded the George Westinghouse citations and medals “for distinguished service in science writing for newspapers.” While it's pleasant to receive a gold medal, it's somewhat disconcerting to be called a pioneer. But, I guess it must be so because I recall that it was 31

_ years ago that I wrote my first newspaper article on

science, Perhaps the story will interest you. In 1915, I entered Western Reserve university and obtained the job of college correspondent for The Cleveland Press. My duies were to “cover” football games and other athletic events and to report campus activities at botlf Western Reserve and at the adjoining institution of Case School of Applied Science. It soon occurred to me that the activities of the faculty ought to make as good reading as the exploits of the students and so I determined to write an article about the amazing experiments with sound waves which the late Dr. Dayton C. Miller was then carrying on at the Case physics laboratory.

Dr. Miller Took Chance

AND. 80, holding in my hand the green cap that the Reserve freshmen of that day were required to wear, I climbed the stairs of the physics building on the Case campus and knocked on Dr. Miller's door. Had I been a visiting professor from some great European university, I could not have been received more graciously. I did not then realize how courageous a thing Dr. Miller was doing in entrusting his scientific reputation to the mercies of a college freshman, particularly in view of the fact that back in 1915 most scientists feared newspaper mention.

My Day

SAN FRANCISCO. (Wednesday) —In every city where we have been, the same shortages of hotel rooms and homes seem to exist. I remember very

“well the overcrowded conditions that existed after

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the last war because of the war-time building restrictions; but the war lasted. much longer this time and the conditions are therefore far worse. . People are buying homes because there is nothing to rent. In many cases they are paying far more than the actual value. This means that, when building resumes full-swing and homes are plentiful, the value of their investments will deteriorate. 12 tlw bomes purchased are bought to be lived in over a ‘Yong period of years, this will probably make very little difference, since the savings in rent will. soon make up for the deterioration in value. But if, at some time in the not too distant future, conditions

force people to move and to sell their homes, the

loss in some cases will be considerable.

Protection Requires Regulation

ONE CANNOT help wishing that, in some way, this loss might be obviated—particularly for people in the medium and lower income brackets.” It would

have to be donk by some city, state or federal regu-

lations, but it ‘would certainly affect the future wellbeing of a great many people. T am glad that priorities now are to be given to the building of veterans’ homes. I have felt for some to carry out the

Spring Notes

ON EVERY hand we see signs of spring. Out on 4600 N. Illinois we spied a man mowing the long green grass, Another one was out weeding, and one woman with a bisket on her arm was eyeing some dandelion greens speculatively, Around town windows are getting their spring bath and yesterday morning we had fog and not smog. Spring housecleaning in the city clerk's office produced a bunch of old papers and a dusty jar with one nickel in it. The city hall's flocrs have received a new waxing. And last but not least, it's time for the annual spring vacation for school kids. It opens tomorrow and the kids can have spring fever legitimately until April 8. ...We hear this rumor about a new

initiation trick concocted by a Butler sorority. In-|f

stead of having pledges give the Monument its annual tooth-brush cleaning, the sorority gals ordered the pledges to form a nylon lineyin front of Ayres. They did and in a few minutes enough women had lined -up-in- back of the pledges to reach almost to Illinois st. Then when the doors of the store swung open the pledges threw everyone into confusion by whooping and running toward Meridian instead of going in the store. The bewildered women are re-

ported to have besieged the store and departed very 2

bewildered and very nylonless.

Coroner Gets.a Shiner THE PUCK was flying every which way at the hockey game Tuesday night. Times Sports Editor Eddie Ash, who's seen many a game, ventured a guess that the puck flew into the crowd more times

than in any he'd ever witnessed. Strangely enough,

the only person who actually got hit was a man who's usually on the other end of accidents, Deputy Coroner Leonard Cox. The deputy had a hard time explaining the shiner when he showed up at work at City hospital yesterday... . Bill Evans and Al Kettler, both of the school board, held an unofficial “preliminary test” to the: Times Spelling Bee after Mr. Kettler bragged once too often that he was the “champ.” It ended up with the former Shortridge teacher being “spelled down” on “canceled” (or is it “cancelled?”) which he insisted could be spelled either way. Mr, Evans, who held the book, voted him down though. . . . Policewoman Caroline Junemann calls to say that the handcuffs she found missing on return from a sick leave have been returned. On reading the item in Inside Indianapolis, Clinton Meyers, at the receiving room at the City hospital, phoned and returned them. to. .Policewoman Junemann, He'd found: them on a prisoner and had been waiting for someone to claim them.

By Howard Vincent O'Brien

people went into places through front doors, we transferred our falling arches to the side entrance. After ‘a while we found we had made enough progress to be in the way of waiters and bus boys. Finally we attained a sort of purgatorial corner where we could be stepped upon more efficiently. Intimating that I was more mouse than man, my consort suggested that I speak firmly to the headwaiter. In what seemed to me a rather ill-timed vein of reminiscence, she recalled one of her suitors (a strutting ass in my memory book!) who had been remarkably adept at getting tables in restaurants.

Headwaiter Doesn’t Help

80, THE NEXT TIME the headwaiter stumbled over me, I inquired, with an ingratiating and whimsical smile, on what date we might hope to dine. Without smiling, he replied that it would be hard to say, and why: didn’t we wait in the bar? My dearly beloved wife, relinquishing hope of victuals, then asked me to point out some of the celebrities in the place. When my ball rolled off the alley at this game, she. dipped again into her bucket of recollection, recalling how Edwin—that was the paragron’s name—had always known everybody who was anybody. > At this point a fellow come out of the bar and unhooked the plush cord barring our entrance and politely asked me to hold its end. This I did, only to discover that this was a joke regularly played on tourists. So it went, until the headwaiter himself could stand it no longer. “Listen,” he muttered hoarsely, “I got four parties waiting in the bar. But I'm giving you a table now.” ® With a contemptuous glance at the ‘tourists still hanging around the front entrance, and trying to strut like Edwin, I followed my bride to dinner.

Copyright, 1046, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc. °

By David Dietz

My article appeared in the next day's Cleveland Press. It was my first newspaper article on science. That first meeting marked the beginning of a friend-

ship that lasted until Dr. Miller's death. I became

a frequent visitor at his laboratory and his encouragement had much to do with my decision to devote myself to the popularization of science. In December, 1922, at the suggestion of Dr. Miller, I attended the Boston meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. That meeting was the first one to be reported in a serious and thorough fashion with a genuine effort to interpret its importance to the public.

Interpreting Discoveries PRESENT at it were the late Dr. E. E. Slosson and Watson Davis, representing Science Service; Alva Johnston, representing the New York Times, and myself, representing the Scripps-Howard Newspapers.

Alva Johnston deserted science writing a few years later, first to write profiles for the New Yorker, later to become a staff correspondent of the Saturday Evening Post. But Watson Davis was here today among the 13 who received their medals. Since 1922 I have missed only two meetings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. It has been my rate privilege to number the leaders of the association among my dear friends. Together with them I have labored to interpret the discoveries of science, make clear the implications of technical advances, establish the understanding of science which the modern world must have. I hope the reader won't think me too vain if I sy that I like to think that I have performed some useful service in the past 30 years. On second thought, it feels fine to be called a pioneer.

“By Eleanor Roosevelt

It is certainly ironic to say that veterans have the opportunity for an education, and then to find that there is no room for them in the institutions they wish to attend, It is equally ridiculous to say they can have loans to buy homes and then have no homes for them to buy.

Planning Necessary

OF COURSE, the war came to an end more suddenly than we expected. This unpreparedness, however, is nothing new to us. We are usually averse to government planning. We consider it a menace to our free enterprise system. And yet we Have no respect for an individual who does not foresee the eventualities of non-planning in his own life or business. . The same foresight and planning which make an individual a success probably would be helpful in making the government a success. : Yesterday morning, I walked through Chinatown and visited some of my old friends. Then I went to Gump's and saw some of the work which they are encouraging artists to do In ceramics, woodwork and weaving. Some of the pottery was lovely. One can order pottery table decorations, linen, furniture and materials in the colors of ohe’s choice, and even have an artist make special designs of one’s own choosing. I could not, help thinking what fun with: an idea

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SECOND SECTION |

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THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1946

Jo Hayes (slightly muffled) . . version of radio soap opera.

and Robert Davis . a teen-age

A teen-age parody of cu

in the gymnasium, - All reserved seats were

styled dance routines. -

in the Russian zone of Germany, progress today. which should make

facturers quiver with envy. -

in the showcases: Dolls, porcelain ware, glass eyes

mometers,

chines, accordions, typewriters, wood fiber cloth, shoes,

Mr. Morgan microscopes, clocks, candy, cigars

and tombstones. There was no place to display automobiles and motorcycles. ” = . GERMAN civilians can buy few of these articles yet and the pro-

you an idea of how Thuringia is going back to work. There are 5400 industrial enterprises, large and small, in the state. According to Dr. Rudolf Paul, state president, 91 per cent of them are operating.

Men Can Go To Vassar Now

POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., March 28 (U. P.)—Vassar college swept away 86 years of tradition yesterday and opened its doors to male students. Due to the shortage of educational facilities for returning soldiers, Dr. Henry Noble MacCracken, Vassar president, announced that the college would admit properly qualified men to study in regular classes.

However, there'll be no diplomas granted men students. The college charter empowers it to grant degrees to women only, Dr. MacCracken explained.

show culminates six weeks’ work in which students wrote dialogue, designed clothing, selected make-up and rehearsed self-

Edgar Stahl, vice principal and

test tubes, ther- “ mos bottles, car-

limbs, cowbells, egg beaters, breadslicers, binoculars, violins, candlesticks, sewing ma-

duction of none has reached any staggering quantity. - But they give

COMEDY AND SONG TO MARK TEEN-AGE SHOW AT BROAD RIPPLE

Students Compose Own Play

Making like zombies are Richard DeHority (left) and Walter Delgell, Broad Ripple students who will participate in the cannibal act of the vaudeville. The show, already a sellout, will play through

tomorrow.

«

rrent comedy and drama with

emphasis on singing and dancing has Broad Ripple residents anxiously awaiting “Ripples of ’46,” a-high school vaudeville presentation, tonight and tomorrow at 8:15 p. m.

sold last week. The four-act

chairman of the show, and one of the production’s most ardent boosters, believes the show is a practical way of uncovering individual talents and promoting creative qualities.

there is an industrial exhibition in the National Association of Manu-

The exhibition shows what is being manufactured in Thuringia under the benevolent eye of the Soviet military government. a list of a few of the things we saw

Here is

(One of a Series)

There are no accurate figures available on the current disposition

penters’ tools, of the products. needles, kettle-| A large share goes to Russia as drums, artificial | reparation, or to the Soviet army of

occupation. Another slice is offered for interzonal trade, which has begun to move weakly among the four divisions of Germany. The rest goes to the state government and to civilians. : » - » AMERICAN authorities, somewhat nettled, believe that if the Russians are taking manufactured products out of Germany as reparations it is in violation of the Potsdam agreement. This provides that current exports should be sold first for dollar exchange to pay for imports.’ They maintain that the United States, for example, is going to have a tough time collecting for food it has. already sent to Germany. However, the Russians have not yet clarified their transactions and they obviously consider that what they are doing jibes with their interpretation of Potsdam,

PARADE WILL MARK ARMY DAY, APRIL 6

Army day will be parade day in Indianapolis, when the city will observe its first peacetime Army day celebration in five years with a downtown celebration, As Governor Gates set aside April 6 to honor the army as a part of the national observance, Col. Charles A. Beaucond announced plans for the parade from 2 p. m.

to 4 p. m. in downtown Indianapolis. Adj. Gen Ben H. Watt, of the Indiana State guard, will be grand marshal, while Governor Gates and Mayor Tyndall will review the parade. Eight patriotic and civil groups, as well as several military

_*HANNAH

bands, have already made plans to participate. Other organizations can participate in the parade by calling Col. Beaucond at LI-T936.

By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. WHEN I was in grammar school one of my classmatgs had what he called granulated eyelids, He was bothered from spring until fall with sore -eyes. During the winter the soreness = practically disappeared; only to return in the spring. He probably had what is known as vernal conjunctivitis, or spring catarrh. Spring catarrh is not contagious, It develops most often in children and young adults, and, for some unknown reason, especially in young boys. x If you have spring catarrh, both of your eyes are itchy, light both< ers you, tears flow most of the time,

. |and your eyes exude a sticky secre-

tion. Your trouble seems to be worse in the morning, and it gets better during the day. *. Bw

"THE CAUSE of spring eye catarrh must be a special form of al-

/ lergy, as germs or viruses are not|transient, even though

THE STUDENT cast has planned a satire revealing “young Amerjca’s” attitude of the soap opers,| singing commercials and newscasts | as ong of the four acts. i Originally there were 25 acts submitted. A board of faculty members selected the four. The winning acts| are “Soda Jerk's Fantasy,” “Canni-|

and “On the Air.”

clude Ross Copeland, Shirley Elder,

28 —Communists opposing Walter Reuther for the presidency of the C.1.0. United Automobile Workers ° brought about his election. ]

Red Support of | Thomas Seen as “| Aid to Reuther . By FRED W. PERKINS = ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. March

i %.

Their support of retiring Presi dent R, J. Thomas scared away

This analysis of results -in/ the stormy U. A. W. convention here is based on convincing reports of delegates who swung away from Mr, as. or * a» 3 THUS THE country gets a new major labor leader, Mr, Reuthef,' who is more radical than > Thomas. And Mr. Reuther now

| | in a position to try out on indu:

® in general the ideas that produced

Joan Walrod . . . a featured dancer in the “Ripples of '46” tonight at Broad Ripple high ' school. :

Bert Boaz, Jeanne Wilson, Steve Bellinger, e¢Barbara Ernsting, Lee

the long General Motors strike. The hard-to-explain factor in the result is that Mr. Thomas, a conservative, was supported by the most radical element in the convention, the avowed revolution ary Communists and their fellow - travelers. , NE There were loud boos when Nat Ganley, member of the Come munist party's national commits

Tinsman, Sharon Pfister, Jean Eby, Margaret Farrington, Jack Dellen, Robert Myers, Donna Dean, Joan Pixley, Richard DeHority, William Delzell and David Myers. » » -

FACULTY SPONSORS are Miss | bal Cut-Ups,” “Rockets Cavalcade,” Jhiatatn King, Mrs. Ruth B. Herin, | | Mrs, » a» | Elizabeth Johnson, Owen Beckley, THE CAST of performers will in-|

Eleanor Willlamson, Miss Sterling Shaw and Hubert Mann.

The high school orchestra, di-

Richard Berry, Joan Walrod, Billy rected by Mr. Beckley, will play

Bernstein; Jo Hayes, Robert Davis, during intermissions.

MEANWHILE, in Thuringia at least, the Russians are winding up the work of shipping out what industrial plants they had earmarked for reparations. The military governor of Eisenach, near the American zone border, recently received an order to complete the shipment of such reparations by the end of April. , The implication would seem to be

that plants not moved before then would stay in Germany.

yet been nationalized. Most of them had been “sequestered” by the Soviet military administration.

” - ~ THE PREVAILING idea at the moment, on their disposition, according to the President Paul, is to draft legislation to permit the factory workers themselves to decide whether plants should become stateowned or not. This would take the question out of the hands of the general electorate and my guess is that the trade unions, controlled pretty solidly by the Communist and Social-Demo-crat parties, together would vote consistently for hationalization. There has been no final decision on the matter yet, however. " » » FACTORY operation in Thuringia today is a wonderful improvisation. The B. M. W. plant in Eisenach, which is the only factory in Ger-

Only Vacant Lot —But It's '"Home'

MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, March 28 (U. P.).—As far as the Minneapolis clerk of court is concerned, Harry Goff, Minneapolis, has the No. 1 housing problem.

Mr, Goff applied for a driver's license several weeks ago, and yesterday he returned to the office of the clerk and complained that he had not received it. He was informed that the license had been sent to him but returned by the post office be= cause Mr. Goff had made an error in his address. Mr, Goff was told that the address he had given ‘was a parking lot and that there was no home or any other building on it. “I know it,” said Mr. Goff, “but my car is there and I sleep in it.”

found in the secretions. The rough appearance of the under surface of the lid is caused by inflammation. The congestion of the eyes and the sticky, mucous secretion are troublesome features. Eyes should be kept clean with boric acid solution washes, — - : . Temporary relief from the burning sensation may follow the yse of cold compresses. Dark - glasses should be worn. There are other forms of spring and summer sensitivity. Practically every victim of hay fever has red, itchy, runny eyes at sometime during the season, and the trouble may develop mainly in the eyes. ; Patients sensitive to cosmetics containing orris root’ may have puffy, itchy eyes with red lid margins and light sensitivity when they

None of the factories we saw had

THURINGIA MAKES EVERYTHING FROM CLOCKS TO COWBELLS— Germans Labor as Reds Reap Reward

By EDWARD P. MORGAN Times Foreign Correspondent BERLIN, March 28.—In Weimar, capital of the state of Thuringia,

many making passenger automo-

biles, is run by a ‘board chosen by

the workers. " The Olympia typewriter factory in Erfurt is operated even more directly by the employees,

The Carl Zeiss foundation in Jena, which is famous for lenses, microscopes, etc., is managed by a group of men recommended by the Nazi directors themselves before they skipped out. There is but little

worker representation at the top.

mill during the war.

many. . not VEry much: Yes, they were get-

called for, not much to eat, but enough to live on.

they were getting them and there wasn't much to buy. The important thing was that they were doing something, ? The

with the former leading.

And the Schulenburg & Bessler textile mill in Gera is run. almost single-handed by a man who joined the Nazi party in 1938 and who held an important executive job in the

I THOUGHT I sensed less of a feeling of futility and more of a vigorous spirit among these industrial workers than among any other group of people I have seen in Ger-

Their answers to questions did

ting all hatt their ration cards

No, wages were not much, but

party? Almost invariably Social-Democrat or Communist,

tee, cast his vote for Mr, Thomas, | Reuther boosters in one of the {several parades around the convention hall chanted “Out With {the Commies.” : ” fA THE COMMUNISTS are supposed to. have fought Mr. Reuther | because—they say—he is syms pathetic to a different ideological group, the Socialists. : The Communist groups operated: as a “balance of power.” Their efforts apparently boomeranged-— which is significant in a big union where they have been active since it became a power in American ors ganized labor 11 years ago. - Mr. Reuther, at 38 the youngest head of a major union, already is nationally = known through his leadership in the G. M. strike. Most of the General Motors locals voted for him. ‘ . » » HE IS expected to become better known in the higher councils of the C. I. O. by what his supporters call | “aggressive and progressive leadership.” Just after taking over the gavel from the defeated president Mr. Reuther acted to scotch rumors that he favored joining the U. A. W. with the A. F. of L. He pledged anew his loyalty to the C. I. O. and its president, Philip Murray,

voting. Mr. Reuther also said he would work to banish intense factionalism in the union, » ” » HE ANNOUNCED also he will work toward establishing a guay~ anteed annual wage in the ) industry. He linked with that “development of a marketing nique that will level prod through the year.” That, is essential if steady work assured. The new U. A. W. served notice that the creases recently won from companies “are merely a down payment on the amount necessary to meet the needs of the General Motors workers and the needs of the national economy.” This forecasts further wage efforts, with strikes if necessary.

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Copyright, 1946, by The Indi lis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

ADVANGE IN FITTING CONTACT LENS TOLD

BOSTON, March 28 (U. P).—A new ‘technique of fitting an allplastic contact lens was described

of New York, who said the discovery would make such lenses practical for -everyday use by persons from 10 to 70.

In an address prepared for the 25th annual congress of the New England. Council of Optometrists here, Dr. Feinbloom said the new lens already has been fitted successfully to more than 20,000 persons, including combat pilots, by about 30 optometrists throughout the nation. Unbreakable and more. transparent than glass, the plastic lens is fitted by a rocking or see-saw motion to reduce frietion, Dr. Feinbloom said.

THE DOCTOR SAYS: Allergy Likely Cause of Sore Eyes

Spring Catarrh ‘Attacks Young

for several years. When it disappears it usually leaves no trace. In some patiénts, however, grayish rings remain on the surface of the eyes; or there may be slight thicken ing, discoloration, and irregularity of the under surface of the lids, Although the disease is most common in the spring and summer, slight symptoris may persist throughout the-winter months. Patients with spring catarrh should practice good personal hygiene, even though the disease is not contagious. They should not use a common towel with other members of the family, and they should keep their hands. away from their eyes. "If the condition becomes too

relief

use the offending substance. #

t . = » ' SPRING catarrh tends to ugly it may

Cv peal

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yesterday by Dr. William Feinbloom|'

. |food wastes he never

painful, consult a physician for Allergic eye disorders which re-

main unchanged the \ be] entire year are not to be: confused imaginations

“2 &

We, the W 5 ‘Invisible Guest’ Should Aid U. S. In Saving Food

WE SHOULD all take to heart

the suggestion of former Presi den it Herbert Hoover that every entertain at its table an “ guest.” Explained Mr. Hoover, no orary chairman of the famine ergency committee: “If households ers could visualize that some starys ing guest is sitting at their table: dependent on their action, Wwe wouldn't have to worry about cooperation.” In many homes there is already that “invisible guest.” Those are the homes which con= tain a returned serviceman, ong who saw and remembers the hunger of European children, hanging ¢ the army camps, hoping to fill their empty stomachs with scraps from the army mess. : "

8 8 THAT invisible guest, big-eyed, scrawny kid, sits at the table ih many homes today, prompting the veteran to caution his own - dren to take on their own plates only what they can eat. I is the ey of the invisible guest that makes such a fa impatient with any sign of X food fancies in his own young. . It is the invisible guest ; makes the ex-G.I. concerned abo! before

have noticed.

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& enough votes to give that leader a. / bitter and unexpected defeat.

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