Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1946 — Page 11

oI $ ” Heidergott 0 to him—" She with her clothes, ation on her face, ere trembling. ‘I'll phone Jocks vant my scalp for ‘at this time of |

hone him™to prove ght. Then will you

she said, ” » himself for a fool e call. Nina's voice 0st immediately,

o disturb you—this is Jock?” Even as ealized how silly. it

just got in ‘from Nina said wearily, en comprehension, now about it?” ” » AT? Sorry, Nina, d. What is wrong

n automobile accie sen drinking. There him. She's dead.” ; toneless, repeating | 5 enlightenment. ina. Is there anye Nn" irive in tomorrow.” , me tonight?” a sedative and get d night, Colin.” ” » from the phone to 1 be all right. He auto accident. I'll see him tomorrow,” gly, “Now will vou yr , little dazed. “Now she said docilely. 3 , a glass of water hite tablets to Ann, em unquestioningly, n,” she said, reache 1d. t the light and sag ier hand. Soon she was no more sleep ight,

Continued) m————————————

3 5

Inside Indianapolis Home

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ae

GIRLS NAMED VIRGINIA seem to be particularly adept at French. Of nine Indianapolis girls

‘who won medals in the national French contest

sponsored by the American Association of French

Teachers, three were named Virginia. They were

virginia Cordill, of Shortridge and Virginia O'Drain and Virginia Kennedy, of Technical. . . . A carelessly tossed-away match threw a crowd thronging Loew's theater into a near pani¢ last week. The theater was crowded and people were lined up waiting when a

- match set off a fire in a rest room. Someone got

excited and yelled “Fire!” and the entire audience rose to rush the exits. Luckily, the assistant manager, Zeva Yovan, was in the audience and with the aid of

“the ushers succeeded in restoring quiet before anyone

was trampled. The fire was out even before all got back in the seats. . . . The P. R. Mallory & Co. plating

department has one ‘employee who doesn’t have to

pay any attention to the absentee posters. He's John Hood, 1732 Lyndhurst dr., who hasn't missed a regular work day in more than 30 years. What's more, he passed up his yearly vacation from July, 1941 snd August, 1945, because he “saw no need for them” when the company was engaged in war work.

Firemen Turn Mecharics

WARREN TOWNSHIP volunteer firemen felt they needed another pumper and they didn't seem to have the $10,000 to $15,000 it takes to purchase one. So, the volunteers decided they’d make their” own. They purchased a truck, a pump and a tank and now some 40 volunteers devote some time each Thursday night to building the pumper. Every once in ‘a while they have to call a mechanic for details but most of the work is done by the volunteers. When this unit is completed, sometime around July 1, the department will have two pumpers, with 1100 gallons of water supply. . . . Something new has been added at Shortridge high school. A “coke” machine has been installed, for use during the last period and after school. It's the first time that “pop” has ever been sold in Shortridge's hallowed halls, and means the kids can loaf over a soft drink in the cafeteria instead of at the corner drugstore. . . . If you're troubled with mice, here's a chance to get a good mouser for free. Mrs. Jess Frazier, 1941 Pallman ave, has three kittens she'll give to anyone who'll provide them with a home. In case there's an un-superstitious person troubled with mice, she'll give them an allblack kitten. Mrs. Frazier can be reached at CH-9039-R. . . . The annual check-up of gas station pumps got under way last week, directed by City Weights

Polish Scout Vow

NEW YORK, June 10.—Amazement and deep concern among Boy and Girl Scout officials follow the revelations of Correspondent Jack Bell from, Germany. that Polish scouts are taking impassioned blood vows to kill Russians. Boy Scout spokesmen here call the situation foreign to every basic concept of the international scouting movement, On the face of it, they assert, such vows to'become “soldiers who fight, who pour blood, who kill,” contradict the essential principle that scouting is nonpolitical and non-military. Mr. Bell's story, exposing vows taken by so-called Polish Boy and Girl Scouts at the Weiden displaced persons camp, noted that some of these “scouts” were adults from 30 to 45. “This is so far from the aims of scouting that it doesn’t 2dd up,” scout officials here said. Mr. Bell's exclusive story is being studied today by John Skinner Wilson, director of the international scout bureau in London. : Mr. Bell's interpretation is receiving the closest attention by the officials. Mr. Bell finds that the scout movement is being used “to bolster the rabid opposition to the present Polish government” and to add to the strength of the forces of Gen. Anders’ Polish forces in Italy.

‘Fight for Poland’

IT IMPLIES, in fact, .9/ post-war kind of Hitler jugend, based on hatred and partisan politics. “Poland,” says the vow taken by the Polish scouts, “has been captured by the hammer and sickle. Dachau and Buchenwald have been replaced by Siberian ice. We take oath that we shall not cease to fight until Poland, our motherland, is free.” The exclusive story, published last Tuesday, has

Science

EN ROUTE TO BIKINI: What can happen in a teh-millionth of a second? Your Uncle Sam is about to spend $100,000,000 to find out. The atomic bomb, which itself costs about $1,000,000- and which joint army-navy Task Force One will detonate in Operation Crossroads over the lagoon

* of Bikini atoll some time in the next few weeks,

releases its energy in about that fraction of time. This is an important point to understand because much of what the bomb can do and much of what it cannot do depends upon this time element. If anyone could state with certainty the possibilities and limitations of the atomic bomb, there would be no reason for Operation Crossroads. But high-rankwig army and navy officers and most top-ranking scientists feel that it is worth emparking on a $100,000,000 venture to get the answers. Ever since President Truman first announced the plans for the atomic bomb test at Bikini there lmave been a variety of opinions expressed. Opposition to

.the tests arose from a number of sources and for a

number of very different reasons. A certain number of public figures both in and out of congress took the stand that the test ought not to be held because of its possible effect on international relations. Their idea was that it looked too much like a threatening gesture.

Postponed by President MUCH OF this opposition reached a peak shortly after March 22, the date on which President Truman ordered a six-week postponement of the: tests. The tests had originally ‘been set for May 15, but the President said that postponement was necessary in order to enable a considerable number of

. congressmen to attend the test.

My Day

HYDE PARK, Sunday.—On Friday afternoon T went with my son, Franklin Jr., to his farm on Long Island. I had a chance before dinner to see all of his livestock and what he is.growing on the place. Then we went to the initial big meeting for the Y. W. C. A. My daughter-in-law, Ethel, is on the board and had asked me to come down and speak. Mrs. Moors, who is head of the foreign division, spoke very movingly of the work which the “Y” has done in many countries throughout the world, and particularly of the remarkable way in which the various foreign staffs had stayed on under war conditions. They moved with the people of the respective countries, enduring the same Hardships, and are still trying to carry on the objectives for which the “Y” was established. One particularly moving story was about a girl stationed in the Philippines, ‘ She had once been a member of the girl reserves and still possessed one of that organization's flags. During a critical period, news came that some of our paratroopers had landed in the jungle.

Ran Risk of Being Shot THE LOYAL Filipinos were afraid the men would be lost in the wilderness and not find the band of guerrillas whom they had come to join. At the same time, there was great hesitation on the part of the older men. vi > "They felt that if they went out to find the Americans they not only ran the risk of being kil'ed by the Japanese but also of being shot by the paratroopers, who might mistake them-for Japanese.

A . .

on vo

| | | {

volunteers build |

Warren Township firemen * pumper, save $10,000.

and Measurfs Inspector Maude Hobson. After all the pumps are checked, Mrs. Hobson will begin on store scales, and by that time it'll be time to check taxi meters again. | “500” Bicycle Race | IT PROBABLY will take the world series to get | the Indianapolis kids’ minds off the 500-mile race. | The gasoline grind was imitated by some boys from School 66, with a 25-lap bicycle race at Watson Road park last week. The winners, after the 25 times around a three-block track, were Jerry Mathews, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Mathews, 129 E. 36th st., and his relief driver, Harold Carpenter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Carpenter, 3812 N. Pennsylvania st. There was a $2 first place prize, in addition to second’ prize and lap money. “ Some seventh and eighth] graders, including Dan Cady, Morton Tavel and | Edward Weary, engineered the project. . . . Now we know the best seat for summer boxing and wrestling | matches at the Sports Arena. It's not even in the| arena. It’s the dental chair in the office of Dr. Harry | Leer, in the Underwriters’ building at 445 N. Pennsyl-| vania. The chair looks out a big window right into the arena. It'd probably be the most comfortable seat, too, for someone who doesn't get cold chills when they get near a dentist's office. We don't be-

lieve, however, that it's for reat. : { > |

By Nat A. Barrows

brought a flood of inquiries, and shocked reactions | trom scout officials in all parts of the United States, as well as Canada and South America, |

Scouts Non-Political |

MRS. PAUL RITTENHOUSE, national director of the Girl Scouts of America, said in New York her | organization is taking prompt steps to combat | militant tendencies by scout groups in displaced | persons camps in the U.S. zone in Germany. ° |

She shared Boy Scout official comment—the scouting movement, the world over, always has been completely non-political. os “The national Girl Scout organization,” Mrs. Rittenhouse said, “is very glad Mr. Bell has revealed | the political ends for which the name of the Polish | Girl Scouts is being used. | “We feel this indicates the great need to provide really sound recreational activities and wise leader- | ship for children who are recoverng from the stress | of war in Europe.” { In the light ot the Jack Bell revelations, a group of Girl Scout leaders, due to sail for Europe this month, are being briefed on the situation exposed among the Polish youth. ~ { They will concentrate especially on ways with! which_te.glivert. {he mindg and energies of in viet. He. eamps. On the scene, they will organize Girl Scout troops | and train adult leaders, with emphasis on the nonpolitical deals of the organization. In this team are: Miss Gertrude Bruns, Madison, | Wis.; Miss Helmi Koto, Mountain Iron, Minn.; Mrs. | Marjorie Dickerman, Atlanta, Ga. and Mrs. W. B.| Matter. Duluth, Minn.

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

- By David Dietz

|

| On March 29, Senator James W. Huffman of Ohio! introduced a resolution into the senate requesting President Truman to abandon the tests. The National Council of the Federation of American Scientists, an organization incl#ding many of the scientists who worked on the atomic bomb project, likewise todk the stand that the testis endangered the success of the United Nations

World Knows U. S. Has Bomb

IT WAS pointed out, however, that whether the tests were held or not, the fact still remained that the United States possessed the atomic bomb and everyone knew that the United States had the bomb. Me nation has already taken important steps looking toward the international control of atomic energy. A plan for the international control of atomic energy has been put forward by the state department | in the so-called Lilienthal repqrt and the senate has already confirmed the President's appointment of Mr. Bernard M. Baruch as the American delegate to the United Nations atomic energy commission. This commission is scheduled to meet for the first time om June ‘14 and Mr. Baruch 18 known to be preparing a statement to be presented to it. As I wrote several weeks ago, this document may prove to be the turning point in the history of the world. My own feeling is that since the nation is making every attempt to settle the international control of atomic energy there can be no reason for feeling that the Bikini tests are unreasonable displays of strength. ? President Truman has expressed the opinion that they are of vital importance to the national defense. Army and navy officials say that they need the data which the tests will disclose and many -stientists feel the same way about it.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

No American flag was available, so this Y. W, C. A. staff member took her gir] reserve flag and went on the search with the old men. They crawled on their bellies through the jungle and finally spotted our paratroopers, Covered by Every Gun WHEN THEY stood up it was to find themselves covered by every gun in the group. At that moment the girl broke out her flag. “Hold on a minute!” shouted one of the paratroopers. “That's a flag of an organization to which my kid sister used to belong!” And in that way, both our men and the loyal Filipinos were saved. | The Y. W. C, A. has much useful work to do in, every community at home where it is established. | Among its most important work, however, is the | opportunity to acquaint people here with the people | of other lands, and to put them in touch with the work 'which their own organization is doing in so many other countries. ! I have just had my attention drawn to a radio| program called “Daily Dilemma,” conducted five days a week—Monday through Friday-—by Jack Barry. Mr, Barry's program is designed to help veterans find places to live. so he ealls upon them to come and tell their stories on the radio. | “In the course of the last eighf weeks. they have, secured 100 apartments for veterans. i little ot veterans these days, and I know that the! housing problem is one of the things which causes |

them the most difficulty and therefore the greatest - oo v

bitterness.

| oldest of the institute buildings, a

chilgeen.|.

| bolic reflector.

|persal systems, the famous FIDO| | (fog, intensive dispersal of),

20% 4 i

ne The Indianapolis ‘Times

SECOND SECTION . MONDAY, JUNE 10,1946 | or : INSTITUTE SEEKS TO RAISE STANDARDS OF LIFE— 7

y: “ . if ? » ® U | q Ir R Lif ‘. ’ | upon -the quality of rural people who repopulate the city.” ; ” ” ” “BOTH PROTESTANTS and Catholics recognize that. the maine tenance of Christian democracy in the United States depends upon what happens to rural life,” he continues. These are some of the reasons why the Congregational-Christian churches established Merom institute in 1936 and employed a director and staff to carry on its work in a dozen counties of Indiana and Illinois. The institute is booked solid for conferences from now until September. . Last summer, 1235 persons were accommodated over a 17-week period many of them using| workers and asked for an election the nine cabins provided on the(to establish bargaining rights. CAMPUS. ® » » ‘ « 8 =x AT THE election, workers voted, RURAL MINISTERS continue|4l t0 21, against union n. their education through Mecrom's Then the union set up a picket study courses including a week of 2 residence “work each quarter and Supers o f a sy instruction by correspondence in Charge, that the majorit the interim. Staff members who y were

strangers. call themselves “modern circuit

riders” conduct Jeadership- training Business dwindled. ders : The Railwa; . schools in counfry churches. And y Express agency re

fus three churches which need to be revital-|o¢ ih Ro hale deliveries foe bricks ized are visited by representatives|hyried from the picket line of the institute. Evan A. Nash, president of Yele The latter spend a week among{jow Transit Co. said he stopped dethe congregation calling in homes| liveries because his drivers—memeach morning, outlining their find-|bers of the union—refused to g0 ings in the afternoons, and holding| through the picket line, worship services at night. Businessmen said they were u n ”

_PAGE 11 Labor Employees Seek | To Stop Union From Picketing

By JIM LUCAS OKLAHOMA CITY, June 10. Employees of an Chianoma ivy garage who have voted two to one against union affiliation in an N, L. R. B.-supervised election are asking the district court here for an injunction against union picket« ing on their employer's business. It is believed to be the first such case. ! Several months ago, Dan Brotherhood of Ta nis feurs, Warehousemen and Helpers (A. F, of L) tried to organize ems ployees of Quick Charge, Inc. They specialize in repairing bate teries, The union subsequently claimed to represent two-thirds of the

. Me rom-— By EMMA RIVERS MILNER «Times Church Editor MEROM, Ind., June 10.—A thumbnail sketch of the rural work of Merom institute reads like a riddle. The institute is not a school al: though it has dedicated its 12 buildings and 27 acres in southwestern Indiana to education. Religion furnishes its goal and drive and yet it is not a church.

Merom goes beyond the usual functions of both church and school

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Fh Be * Rev. Shirley E. Greene

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in its effort to raise the standards of town and country life. It sends forth modern circuit riders; conducts summer conferences, research and survey projects: and maintains a social education and action program for the com-

v A RNa ea The white tower of Merom institute commands a view of Hoosier farms and Illinois prairie. . .

munity. [tower, you will have a panoramicistone church with adjoining edu- | threatened with picketing if they “ xu {view of Hoosier farmlands and the cational building, such as stands| MEROM ALSO makes itself felt continued to do business with the MEROM INSTITUTE'S maple- Tllinois prairie rolling away be- every few blocks in Indianapolis, isin the immediate neighborhood firm.

.

* HANNAH «<

’ . ’ . ‘ . .

controlled fires along the runways to clear the fog over landing strips. The greatest disadvantage of the units, the high fuel cost per landing, is being overcome by a new

partment of conservation. Discharged in December from the navy, Mr. Starrett recently completed a post graduate course at the University of Pittsburgh. Sev-

shaded grounds and the adjacent| neath you. | conspicuously absent in the open| through the community council. $2 2.8 town of Merom lie along a bluff | Along the highways between In-! country. |The council offers a recreational] A C. FLETCHER, president and overlooking the Wabash near the dianapolis and Merom are to be| “Churches .in rural districts are|program for children; has aided owner, last week posted notice the spot where the ferry docks. The|seen evidences of the advancement on the decline in spite of the im-|with the inauguration of hot school plant would be forced to shut down, made in farming over the last provement in farming methods,” |lunches; agitated for a public water + Employees then raised funds to red brick structure with long nar-|quarter - century. You note ma-|the Rev. Mr, - Greene solemnly supply and the organization of a hire D. I. Johnson, Oklahoma City row windows and surmounted by a|chinery designed to lighten the pointed out. And you realize how soil conservation district. attorney to represent them. Mr, white tower, was erected as Union| farmer's task, painted, well-kept very seriously he takes this situa-| In addition to the Rev. Mr, Johnson went to court for an ine Christian college five years before | homesteads and modern schools, [tion when he adds: Greene, the Merom staff includes fupeox. the Civil war. . #0 8 | “What happens to country life the Rev. Ralph Richard Keithahn, e lawyer sald sult was brought If you will climb the winding] BUT THE churches suffer by will determine America’s future.|the Rev. Carl Landes, Mrs. Reah on the theory his clients illegally airs ‘leading to the top of theicomparison. The sizable, brick or!’ Phe quality of city life depends | V. Gettinger and Ores Houpt. nk Jopuven er us — gion 2 a | ! : union. He contended they are enNEW RAINM AKER MYSTERY SHROUD'S BIKINI DRAMA'S STAR— ee 1 nh “hu Yote ant won Xa na . MR. FLETCHER said, he knew Where Is That Atomic Bomb? i big ! e (read of it in the newspapers. He roe By JOSEPH L. MYLER | "You can find persons on this, The more air-minded believe the i NS Smpiovees hired ME. Solin United Press Siaft Correspondent task force flagship who believe the bomb has been or will be trans-|the attorney was not Re Firs Navy Hopes Machine Will! ABOARD U. &. 8. MT. M'KIN-/homb has been somewhere down ported by plane. There are some the company, 8 Puid by ’ (LEY AT BIKINI, June 10.—The in the hold ever since the Mt. |who believe certain components of| Prank M. Boyer, a foreman said Clear ‘Ceiling Zero. |star performer of Operation Cross- McKinley left San Francisco May 8. the bomb will be flown to the he called the meeting at which ; roads, the atomic bomb itself, i§, But there's the U.8.S. Albemarle. Marshalls while the more bulky funds were raised to go to court _ By RON ROSS geiting leis publicity than any Ihe -Albemarle is the flagship. of parts will go by ship. |because he did not want to lose Science Service SIAR Writer other member.of the cast. * 'Rear Admiral W. S. Parsons, deputy | And there are others who believe | his job. A score of employees testiBOSTON, June 10.—A rainmakingl n, oficial of joint task force one task force commander fof technical | it already is at Kwajalein, the island | fied they did not want to join the machine now under construction. cen talk about it. All you have direction. It was the only ship from which the bomb will be flown union, that no dispute existed here may solve the problem of i, 4, to produce a painful lull in Admitted to the one pier at Kwa- [to the target on A-day, the first between them and their employers clearing fog-bound landing fields |; éonversation is to remark idly jaléin when the tide of Operation atomic test scheduled for July 1. ” 8 = and prevent many of the fatal air .q yonder where the bomb is.” | Crossroads ships coming to these | Restricted Area A. 8S. MOORE, union attorney, crashes now caused by “ceiling “That is because something awe-|\SiAnds was at its peak. | Kwajalein is a small island, and Sharges the suit was instigated by zero” visibility at airports. {s6me called “security” is involved. Jt has some Manhattan District in, visitor could miss seeing the big Shagement. The rainmeaker sends out sound The bomb is manufactured and People aboard. It was heavily signs at one end which say “re- bonis Jiexcung is “merely to waves that drive the fog particles) conirolled by the Manhattan Dis- guarded while at Kwajalein. S8o— (stricted.” Nor could he miss seeing dispute exists the public that a together, forming rain drops. The| trict, which runs the country's $2,-| Fall River in Running the marine guards, and an earthen! management at etWeen labor and rain falls, clearing the air fleld. 000,000,000 atomic plant. Another ship in the scuttlebutt|T8mP near the air strip. injunction est Slaw: 454 the This attack on the fog problem | Nobody but Manhattan is author- | tition for bomb ing } { One scuttlebutt school believes strain Tues Poche "0 re. proved effective in tests during the|iseq to say anything about thel ob C0 fof DOMD-CAITYINg NON" the pomp will be trundled up that| men» peech of working war at the navy's landing aids eX- | atomic bomb, and Manhattan just | oS is the heavy cruiser Fall River. | ramp to the belly of a B-29 a few District Jud, periment station at Arcata, Cal.|jsnt talking. Moreover, it has im-| The Fall River is the flagship of hours before bomb-away time on decide the Hoge Jews Morris will Where Sires were we whiny une | pressed everybody else with the Rear Admiral F. G. Fahrion, com- | aay Sut gigs. k 1 abo Wee og, but the new machin {necessity for secrecy. Ime : | Scuttlebutt also knows all about more subtle job. | Yan = id |mander of the naval task 8roupSs |) bombs shape, dimension and We, the Wome Sirens Sicken Personnel (for Operation Crossroads. _'|weight, despite Manhattan's de-|| , .,, A : But not even Manhattan can There once was another cruiser! termination to keep such specifica-| Eli ible’ M Sirens ok only turned the in stop scuttlebutt, and scuttlebutt has the Indianapolis, which once car-|tjong secret. g en to rain but also made personnel a dozen different notions as .to'ried an atomic bomb. That bomb T' i 5 A qr . on the field sick and knocked birds| where the bomb is, how it was or hit a Japanese city. The Indian- a 1h Jecoring sutie Still Plentiful, out of the sky, so the new machine wil] be brought to the Marshall is- apolis subsequently was sunk by a shaped like a tear drop. It weighs will be able to generate sounds of | Jands, how big it is, and what it Japanese submarine with a loss of up to five tons, depending on who Survey Shows such high frequency that they ean | Jooks- like. 880 officers and men. has your ear at the moment. : not be heard by the human or ani-| ea —— ; po pa —————— se — By RUTH MILLETT mal ears. - ‘Care RELAX, girls. All those The rainmaker being built by THE DOCTOR SAYS: House Mice Carry Meningitis predictons 1 fhe’ Met TAT tory Ultrasonic Corp. here is a high - weren't going to be enough men to powered sound generator equipped ' go around in the post-war world with a wide frequency range or \f r b R t S weren't based on fact. experiments to Seitinine how Tue) | us rol | ) O en S e Ol 1 \ a a According to Dr. Hope T. El. sound of what frequency wi 0 dridge of the U. 8. - the best job clearing different types’ By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. the immediate neighborhood where urge patients with choriomeningitis| sus, Se war SE ea a of fog. INFECTED HOUSE mice may be Lhe infected mice lived. to prolong their bed convalescence of men to women in this country The navy's office of research and responsible for a special form of #. 4 until all danger of recurrence is| but there are still plenty of men invention expects to spend $100,000 virus infection of "the coverings of =~ CHORIOMENINGITIS is one of past. {in the marriage market. for the construction and experi-|the brain (choriomeningitis), which several varieties of mild meningitis Infected mice carry the virus| There was an excess of 3,700,000 ments with the rain machine that|is not to be confused with other which tend to disappear without throughout life, and it rarely causes|marriageable men in 1040. War is Scheduled to be tested at_Arcata,jforms of meningitis, as choriomen- special treatment. The chiet com-| meningitis in them. The female|reduced the number by 300,000. where the army, navy and civilian | Ingitis is rarely fatal and complete plaint in this infection is headache, | transinits the virus to her offspring, x 8 8 air ‘groups now test all-weather recovery is the rule. which may be relieved in several so that eventually the entire colony SO MARRIAGEABLE men are landing aids. The navy hopes to| Dr. Gilbert Dalldorf and asso- ways. Sulfa drugs, penicillin, and | becomes infected. still in the surplus commodity class, try out thesinstrument in September |ciates report, in the Journal of the serum are not used in treatment, as| Infection in man is more common and not among the country’s scarce at Arcata before the fog season| American Medical association, that the disease runs a self-limited | than is realized, as many cases products. there ends. : | house mice which they trapped m course. | undoubtedly appear as respiratory| You don’t have to grab a husGain New Data the homes of choriomeningitis pa-| Some virus infections of the brain! infections without meningitis, band the first chance you get, with- ) tients were carriers of this special and spinal cord tend to flare up if| The solution of the problem is the out wondering whether or not An air jet-type, acoustic genera-| i... and that buildings harboring the patient gets out of bed too soon. | extermination of infected mice in|h® 1s & bargain—the way you buy tor, the rainmaker will be about|i,fected mice are a source of the Because of this, some physicians homes and places of employment. hylons,: Sight fest 1 Siamever pm p Poy | disease in man. The virus has been ' ~———— - mre | . an You can still shop around, look n earlier. model jshiated in animals in laboratory By : ; over the market, and take your time built here gave good results in the |... colonies. dE TIONS 1 lave ho en Loa until you have made a real “find.” laboratory, hut lacked the con-| Ehoriomeningitis may begin with An I have had ‘an ingrown Bolen: Nor do you have to give the men trolled frequency range of the new | nfleunza-like symptoms, without for vents. I ‘would like to 2 this such a rush you scare them to machine, |any signs of meningial irritation. A medicine. What Is it? y death, the way many of you did Tests to be made at Areata with the | (ow days later, the patient will ANSWER: Undoubtedly > when servicemen first started comacoustic generator include experi- complain of severe headache, stiff for to thiouroci] No Be ing back from overseas. There is ments with the effects of sound!peck and vomiting. (In some cases, ‘hed on’ certalr for of okt N8 no need for such competitive bidwaves on the structure of airplanes these symptoms are the first to pe the a It id 5 by Ing for their attention, { sonne lanes. serv ) : rN nd on personnel I. platy 108 age. [220 ran under the direction of a physician| THAT CENSUS figure is the best who is experienced in its use and|news for women since the end of used] THE VIRUS causing choriomen- indication. the war. {ingitis is found in the blood and { I ———————————————— Here the girls were scared silly, | spinal fluid of patients duirng acute thinking that if they didn’t grab off (attacks. Guinea pigs also arg sus- STARRETT NAMED a man in a hurry they would be [ceptible to the disease, and if some old maids for life. of the patient's infected blood or | Now they can relax. And maybe i spinal fluid ‘s ‘injected into them, MUSEUM CURATOR even let the men resume the oncetheta | irtallation Joating navy| they will develop the infection. hed accaline prerogative of leading iw. the possibility of A special blood test done on the | Robert D. Starrett has been|the chase. Both men and women sound replacing heat in the fight | Patient six to eight weeks after the | {named curator of the state museum, ought to like that. [infection will show a positive re- | fa against fog. i 5 |it was announced today by Milton | NAVY NEWLYWEDS Even if the sonic system does not{ *°tion which may persist. for years. | | Matter, director of the Indiana de- | rové practical for airports’ OM- e virus is spread from infec ted | BAN RICE SHOWER p . | mice through their nasal secretions, | lals of the office and research and |, ie ang feces. Man contracts the ANNAPOLIS, Md. June 10 (U. P.).~You still may throw the trae ditional old shoes—but not rice—at newly married naval couples.

invention declare new and impor. | disease from infected food and dust, tant information about sounds and possibly through “insect carriers.

their uses will be gained from the my, y,cubation period is about one |

McClure Nawspaper Syndicate

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rainmaker. to two weeks. a, eral years ago he received a Rocke-, The U. 8. naval academy took 2900 TROOPS WILL There is no known case of trans-| | 2 | feller Foundation fellowship ' to|/note of the world famine and fer from one infected human to!|@/ [study museum methods and tech- banned rice thro at weddings ° DOCK IN U. S. TODAY another. BA . | niques. av the campus chapel So, for By UNITED PRESS | .| From.5 to 20 per cent of house [ | During the war he was associated the first time in years the couples "Two ships carrying 2000 troops Mice trapped in certain surveys : ‘with the federal bureau of investi-| married here commencement week are scheduled to dock at New York | Were found to be inefcted with this | gatfon until he joined the navy's|—there were 38 of them-—escaped

amphibious forces in 1944. Until|the usual rice showers. recently he had made his home in| But in some cases Pittsburgh wiftt his wife and ‘tw re pelted the children, aioe na a pod

today. #They are. | vifus. As mice do not have a wide fal 3. R. Brooke. from Le Hayre| range of activity, the usual story Undesignated troops, is that seve uman cases deLe Javre—

ps Blanche P. Siggman, from 315 Undesignated. troops. veloped ia the same house or in

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