Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1946 — Page 17
t
UNE 14, 1946
ay
ite
JETS
cather!
sure to
very day
S FILLED
—— —_
No AT 3 -
‘Tnside Indianapolis
IT ISN'T ENOUGH that “Cement Mixer” (Putt Putti) is blaring out of all the radios and juke boxes. Now a robin has been caught in the re-bop fad. Ervin C. Fahrner, of 523 8S. Rybolt ave. says a robin which hangs around his house sings nothing but the “putti putti” song all day. The songbird gives out with an especially knocked out version that sounds just like the Sli Gaillard rendition each morning and evening around 7:30, according to Mr. Fahrner, He had a little trouble convincing his wife he wasn't hearing things, but she too heard the robin doing “C. M.” the other day. She summoned some peighbors, enough to back up the story if anyone is skeptical. Mr. Fahrner may have to take some of the witnesses to convince his fellow workers at Stewart-Warner's, wha blame everything on the heat... . . Mrs, Kenneth L. Turpin, 42 N. Holmes ave, put a rat trap in her garage Wednesday night.
: yesterday morning, he found an oppossum trapped.
The animal was still alive, so they put it in a screened box. Maybe’ the 'Turpins don't know it, .but their accidental catch has put them outside the law. In the first place, it's illegal to catch a possum without a trapper’s license. And in the second place, they
: can't keep it, according to the conservation depart-
ment, unless they get a breeder's license. It would probably be less trouble to turn the 'possum loose.
Want an Easter Kitten? MRS. JESSE FRAZIER, 1941 Tallman ave, who
' wanted to give away some Kittens, phones to say all
, liam P. Alexander, of 1819 Tallman ave.
{ ave. ,
three now have homes. Some dozen people called her, most of thém wanting the one black kitten, The black one, however, went to the first caller, Mrs. WilThe other two were given to Mrs. Oakley J. Pearson, 2053 N. Olney st., and Mrs. John Robert Long, 827 N. Bosart . « One of Mrs. Frazier’s callers was Mrs. Fred Keithley, of Hunter rd. Mrs. Keithley; however, didn't want a cat; she wanted Mrs. Frazier to refer any surplus calls to her, so that she could find homes
' for five kittens which the‘Easter bunny left at her
house Easter morning. Anyone who can give the kittens a good home can get one by calling IR-2104. . . . And still another cat story, Mrs. Ruth Glick, of 802 8S. Lyons ave, wants a black male cat to replace “Eight Ball,” her former pet which disappeared. “Eight Ball,” also a black cat, belonged to her son, Bernard Glick, who was discharged from the navy
' recently. Mrs. Glick can be contacted at BE-5004-W.
And that's our quota of feline items for a couple weeks.
- Wilbur Shaw to Loaf Awhile
SPEEDWAY PRESIDENT WILBUR SHAW is leaving this week-end for Florida to take his first vacation since before the war. He'll do some fishing
When her husband inspected it- &
¢
Lea A x La x . ie Vv
N
The Easter bunny brought these kittens . . .
Fritz Keithley and Spot, Squeak, Blondie, Pug, and Boots. and just loaf around. . ., . Having an appendectomy
didn’t disturb Boyd QCill, manager of the Indiana bureau of United Press. He came out of the Methodist hospital surgery Monday smoking a cigaret. . « . Another appendectomy victim, Paul Squires, of the state conservation department, still is off the job, recovering and getting a chance to tell people about his operation. . . . Station 13 firemen claim only 40 seconds elapses between the alarm and the time trucks clear the station. We timed them Wednesday and it took only 22 seconds. Why so modest, fellows? . . . Gibson Co., Capitol Motors, will fete 42 workers who have been employed at the company between 20 and 34 years fonight at the Athletic clyb. The workers, all members of the 20-year club of the firm, will celebrate their long stay and the golden jubilee of the auto industry, since they got in on the ground floor. The Gibson Co., incidentally, is back in stride now that the pre-war world distribution of auto parts has been resumed. It's interesting to note that
.in addition to a 20-year anniversary, and the golden
jubilee, Speedway also is tied in with the dinner. Carl Fisher, who with Cecil E. Gibson founded the company, once operated Speedway.
Famine Buoys Drys By Frank Ashton
(Second of Two Articles)
WASHINGTON, June 14—When post-war famine struck millions it also struck fresh sparks of hope for the nation’s most ardent drys. These are the rank-and-file drys who believe in making the most of every opportunity. They began to sense a new glory of aridity as far back as Oct. 8, 1942, when the government stopped all production of beverage spirits and ordered distillers’ full-time facilities to be turned to industrial alcohol
+ production for war purposes.
Dry optimism dipped slightly in August, 1944, and in January and July, 1945, when distillers were granted three “holidays” to stock up for commercial purposes, And deep gloom settled on prohibition circles Aug.
' 31, 1945, when the government turned the industry ' back to private affairs.
Distilleries had been expanded some three-fold at
" government expense to speed the output of munitions
and rubber. It looked last August as if the country soon would be deluged with drinking alcohol But no. Food was desperately needed. were food. Liquor consumed grain. Aug. 1, 1945, brought War Order No, 141 announcing grain control to fight famine. Ardent drys took new heart. The order became “permanent” the following Sept. 1. It instructed distillers to operate only six days in September; 7! days in October and November: .10 days in December and January; 7’: days in February; 5 days each in March and April
U.S. Makes Second Slash
MILITANT DRYS applauded. The wets kept mum —human life was at stake. _ Last March 1 the department of agriculture forbade brewers and distillers to use wheat. The demand for food to save millions grew louder, more desperate. The department cut again. In May, June and July distillers were to operate only three days a month. Brewers were limited to 70 per cent of capacity. No wheat was allowed and only low-grade corn.
Science
EN ROUTE TO BIKINI—A miniature multi-col-ored sun will suddenly break out over the waters of the lagoon of Bikini atoll. It will be the explosion of the atomic bomb in Operation Crossroads. The center of that miniature sun will have a temperature that is five times hotter than scientists believe the center of our own sun to be. It will have a temperature of 100,000,000 degrees. From that fiery center a series of destructive waves of various sorts will emanate in all directions. We must know more about these waves if we are to guess what may happen to the 74 warships at anchor in
Grains
the lagoon for the test.
All these waves originate in the 10,000,000th of a second that it takes the Uranium 235 or- plutonium in the bomb to undergo fission. The first atom that splits in two releases a couple of neutrons which split a couple of more atoms. Now there are four neutrons to split other atoms. After this split, there are eight. Soon there are millions of neutrons, then billions. “Soon” is an ineffective word to describe the process since the whole thing takes place in‘ a 10,000,000th of a second,
Source of Energy THE VAST amount of energy released comes from the transmission of part of the mass of the atoms into energy in accordance with the famous Einstein equation of 1905. As was disclosed after the bombing of Hiroshima, the atomic bomb has the violence of 20,000 tons of TNT. Part of that great energy is released at once in the form.of radiations, ranging all the way from rays as
My Day
NEW YORK, Thursday.—I noticed in the papers yesterday morning that the senate was weakening the OPA bill as much as it possibly could. They seem completely to ignore the fact—which would seem to have some weight in a democracy— that public opinion polls favor the continuation of price controls, For instance, 82 per cent of the people in one of the weekly polls favored controls in general; 85 per cent favored rent control. It is roughly estimated that the cost to the coun=try of the removal of controls on the everyday things which go into our ordinary living would be roughly around $16,000,000,000. You have a good example of what removing them does ‘in the case of butter. We no longer subsidize, so OPA allowed a rise in price. Just that one rise will cost you and your family a goodly sum each week—if you are able to buy butter.
Automobile Costs Are Up AND ANY of vou who have been fortunate enough to obtain new automobiles, on which price controls are practically removed, know that the cost. has gone up several hundred dollars. One of the funniest statements I ever heard was made by one of our most respected senators, who re-
“ marked that the sfaff of people in charge of OPA ies \ . . ow.
.
Some bourbon fanciers shuddered on reading that part of the corn in their favorite stock was classified as “unfit for human consumption.” Agriculture explained this meant the grains were broken, dirty and mixed with cobs. Under sterilizing alcohol, the department reported, the “unfit” became “fit,” Enthusiastic drys stepped in to deliver the knockout. The wets began to spar a little and to do some fancy footwork. ? : Distillers went into the market to buy a million tons of grain to donate to U. N. R. R. A. Brewers announced they would cut consumption of supplies 30 per cent, but reduce output about 20 per cent, a trick understood only by brewers. Distillers explained that they used grain only to
obtain starch and since potatoes would yield starch|marks about girls in government
they might supplement their output by processing potatoes. Distillers met the charge they were “wasting” sugar by revealing they don’t use sugar. The industry stressed that in the flve years before 1941 the industry absorbed an average of only .176 per cent. of the nation’s total grain production.
Industry Hits Back at Foes
DRYS HAMMERED at the contention that even| pointed out Miss Marjorie Van if the alcohol crowd weren't depriving people of grain, | Cauwenberg, an Indianapolis native. they were certainly subtracting from the supply of “But, we aren't allowed to do this [concerned with the curfew sugges- |, 34 per cent since last July 1. |So, we go to the restroom when we tion of Rep. Wilson. “My ol here nn
grain for stock feed. Here the industry struck back. distilleries, under government supervision,
Cats as Cats Can|
During the war, installed |
’ : Te Taw Ee ; . . ] a
-—
1e Indianapolis '
SECOND SECTION
. FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1946
” » » TODAY, the Indiana Republican believes several other criticisms should be added to his original ones. For one thing, he includes the G-gals among federal “excess baggage” of 750,000 workers who aren't giving the taxpayers their money's {worth, “He doesn't even know us,” pouted one girl. She was among several interviewed at local federal offices. “Why is he squawking? He won't be likely to turn down the proposed 50 per cent salary increase for congressmen. And, there's that $8000-a-year assistant that's proposed,” another G-gal flashed. ” » » AN OPA price aid, Miss Martha Leonard, raised her eyebrows at Rep. Wilson's contention that many federal workers don't “earn their salt,” in contrast to private enterprise. | “Why the first job I had when I |left business school I read a book |every day,” she recalled.
“I even
took my embroidery to the office, I |got so tired of reading. Here, I ? industry. job
{work,” Her private {was a bookkeeper in a Toledo,” O., {hat store. | » ” » | ANOTHER OPA employee, Miss { Ann O'Connor, wrinkled her nose. { “I always heard Mr. Wilson was |a nice guy. | though, isn't he?” she asked diplo- | matically. Miss O'Connor is private | secretary to James Strickland, In{diana chief of OPA. The small blond said, however, {she couldn't blame him for his re-
| offices who spend considerable time leach day applying their makeup. | “I think his 10 p. m. curfew idea | is silly, though,” she smiled.
| revenue collector. | “Men can smoke at their desks,
feel the need of a smoke.”
NEW WILSON CRITICISM DRAWS FIRE—
Do 'G-Gals' Loat on the Job?
By KENNETH HUFFORD >
He's a school teacher,
» = » THE DOUBLE-STANDARD lifted its head at the office of the internal learned. “And, we need a final dabjoperates a listing machine—hard|sidered now by congress provides for
Furthermore, Miss Van Cauwen-| We have a curfew of our own. 1 ; reclaiming devices which enabled them te return 66% berg defended the expenditure of | think it's a good idea, whether jt |graduated increase ranging from 12 ill-advised.”
Bikini Bound—— Here's What | Will Happen to | A-Bomb Ships
By DR. FRANK THONE
EN ROUTE TO BIKINI, June 14, —As our ship ploughs through the waters of the Pacific toward Pearl Harbor on the first leg of the trip to Bikini atoll for the explosion of atomic bombs against’ships of the navy, I have been letting my ims agination run ahead of the tests at Bikini—years ahead. J-~ What is going to happen to the ships after they are sent to the bottom by the two bomb blasts, one lin" the air above them, one in the | water a little below? ” » » * LIE THERE and rust in the still salt water, until nothing is left but heaps of iron oxide—that might be the first idea to strike one. But that notion reckons with the sea containing nothing but dead salt water. Nothing could be further from fact. ' The sea is a living thing, especially the parts of it that are shallow and warm, as in the lagoon of an atoll All manner of living creatures will swarm aboard the sunken ships, as soon as quiet is restored in the lagoon and the deadly radioactivity has diminished to ‘a life-tolerable level.
" THE HOOSIER schoolmaster’s ears never burned more from the remarks of his pupils than they did today. Goverment gals here answered the latest criticism of the “schoolmaster,” Earl Wilson, who also is congressman from Indiana's 9th district. " It was the 40-year-old former Vallonia school administrator who last year first proposed a 10 p. m. curfew for the G-gals toiling in federal offices. Moreover, he implied that they didn't get enough sleep and came to their offices late and sans makeup. The makeup they applied later—on government time —Rep, Wilson asserted.
OPA Price Aid Martha Leonard . . . “T read a book in private industry, even embroidered. Here, I work.”
Miss Ann O'Connor, private secretary fo Indiana OPA Chief James Strickland . . . “Rep. Wilson is a school teacher, isn’t he?" ; y ” » FIRST, marine bacteria will form films on the steel plates; these films will give foothold to later comers, Soon the decks, upper works, masts, funnels, everything will carry a mixed population of barnacles, sponges, sea anemones, mullosks, and other “rooted” animals. Brilliant fishes will swim in and out of the observation towers and the ack-ack positions. Crabs will sidle across the sloping decks, pctopuses will lurk in the gun-ports, » =» ” BUT THIS will not be forever. - The coral will come, Coral is not the first thing to grow on newly available sites in the warm seas, but it is almost always the last. It will appear among the myriad other animal forms, gradually spreading ‘and growing higher and thicker, until the entire wreck is encrusted. Nothing about the sunken ships “but undergoes a slow sea-change into something rich and strange.” After centuries, nothing will be discoverable about the once proud § | vessels of war but masses of coral. | Oceanographers of that day may wonder a little over their unusual shape.
Another internal revenue G-gal, Mrs. Donna Belle Eustace , . . “My G. I. husband is attending school. We have a curfew of our own.”
Miss. Marjorie Van Cauwenberg . . . “Men can smoke at their desks; we can’t.” She is a clerk in the office of the internal revenue collector.
We the Women
Mama Can Take Heroics Out of
Papa's Actions
By RUTH MILLETT 1S POP a hero at home? A New York psychiatrist claims
to look our best.” work, too, her employer admitted, |8 general 14 per cent raise, or $250, : x =x = If federal workers receive a pro- WhISheveE is the renter. hs Goats y - + | posed increase July 1, then they will n't too much, the G-gals! ONE MARRIED G-gal wasn't), io received increases totaling 23|agree, considering the rapid rise in| the cost of living. Meanwhile, Rep. Wilson's beliefs {were being assailed from. other quarters as “absurd, intolerant and This came- from the
{is a G. 1. attending school here.
LAST JULY, they received =a
per cent of their grain to stock feeders in the form |, «reasonable” amount of time in/is for single girls, though, I don't|to 20 per cent to compensate for alaugust senate chamber—from U. S./the war had a good effect on kids
of protein by-products. This is mixed with ordinary feeds to enrich them. The alcohol industry carefully refrains from quarreling over grain curtailment. Its spokesmen stress that lives come first. : But the industry quietly is spreading its case before the public. And the industry never is reluctant to remark that it provides some 2,000,000 jobs and that 1945 federal, state and local revenues totaled almost $2,000,000,000.
By David Dietz!
short as the shortest gamma rays of radium, through
radiant heat. |
Waves of Air Pressure
ous temperature. Another part of the energy of the bomb is expend- | ed in imparting tremendous velocities to the fission | fragments, the smaller atoms which the dfoms of | the bomb disintegrate. These come flying out with | amazing speed. At the same time great streams of subatomic paricles, the neutrons which created the chain reaction, likewise come out. Finally there are the waves of air pressure that radiate from the center of the explosion. Each type of wave is capable of damage which is| characteristic of itself. The fastest traveling wave is the wave of radiation, from gamma rays to heat rays. These travel | with the speed of light, 186,000 miles per second. The U. S. commission of scientists and medical men who studied the effects of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, found that these rays of radiant heat cause houses, trees-and the clothing on people's backs to burst into flame at distances up to a mile and a half from the point directly under the bomb. Next comes the wave of particles consisting of radioactive atoms and neutrons. It is capable of damage akin to that caused by the gamma rays. The third wave is the shock wave traveling wifi 1 the speed of sound and finally comes the blast wave with winds ranging up to 1000 miles per hour.
By Eleanor Roosevelt
were the greatest Fascists in our country. | That, I gather, is because they do not want us to) have inflation and are willing to see us submit to a| certain amount of control for a limited period of time in order that we may not suffer a depression in the near future. I do not like controls any more than anybody else | does, but I have lived a long time. I remember what | happened to us after the last war.
Prices Go Up Unreasonably IF WE are not in full production before we remove controls, prices will soar because a lot of people have money to spend. When there is more money than there are things to buy, prices go up unreasonably. The things you eat, the clothes’ you wear, the houses in which you live are all necessities. If you can possibly manage to have them, vou will have them. The people who live on fixed incoines, however—the people who earn moderate salaries— they are the first ones who are going to find that they cannot have the things they have had in the past. Then we will have detaands for higher wages, and prices will go up still further as those wages are passed on to th€ consuming public, which includes the wageearners af? well as the rest of us. That is what weakening the OPA bill is going to
mean Yor us. a i hd
ak
| applying makeup. | “Sometimes our noses get shiny on the way to work,”
A-Bomb Jaunt ‘Just a Ride’
| By JACK
{ Times Foreign
she has! Mrs.
ABOARD U. S. S. APPALACHIAN, June 14—A tiny flotilla of three
know,” she shook her neatly coif- return to a 40-hour work week Irom | Senator Sheridan Downey of Cal-|in this country. fured head. The G. I.s wife isjan overtime schedule, ifornia. He is chairman of the sen- | One of the reasons given is “if Donna Belle Eustace, who! The proposed increase being con- ate civil service committee. | Papa went off to war, he was a m—— me—— {hero for the first time in his life.” That is mostly Mama's fault, isn't
bis for Newsmen Mama's attitude is mainly res | sponsible for the way in which the {children regard their dad. keeping the bomb a secret from; In the meantime, the men who 8 = =n {their governments. | will write that story lazy their way| IF MAMA gives them an idea
The answer is easy. across the great saucer of the Pa-|that their father’s job is exciting
KOFOED
Correspondent
: . ei | before . . . the slightest longer X-rays, up to visible light and| oo shounds are berthed aboard her.
is a scattering of foreign reporters—| French, Russian, British, Mexican, A PART of this energy is absorbed at once by the Chinese . . surrounding atmosphere so that the air around the tions of this test concerns all the exploding bomb is immediately heated to a tremend- | world.
ships—the Appalachian, Panamint, and Blue Ridge—are carrying scien-| wo .o or 1c will learn any scien-| cific. tists. officers and newspapermen to Bikini for the atom bomb experiment. tific facts, W All n They'll be busy soon enough. Since the Appalachian has been fitted . . . as no ship ever was fitted | acts, e will see the blast Copyright, 1948, by Thé Indianapolis Times with a tremendous communication system, naturally, we and the deadly cloud that rises from and The Chicago Daily News, Inc. it. We will visit the target ships UA |before A-day—and afterward when ELKHART WILL HOLD paign ribbons and decorations. But, the danger of radioactivity is past.| MODEL PLANE MEET after seeing how his fellow workers| We will have a complete picture { “ ELKHART, Ind. June 14 (U. P.). dressed, he stashed away the gaudi- of what the atom bomb can do to —Maj. Gen. E. R. (Pete) Quesada ness and appeared in mufti. warships, but not how it was done. | nor commander of the 9th tac-
| : ao» n | A large percentage of the Ameri-| on sup mrenchman and the| tical air force in Europe, will be can newspapermen present served Russian, the guest of honor at an Elkhart mod-
Chinese and the Engin some branch of the armed forces lishman can see what we see, and| € airplane meet Sunday. during world war IL |not pass on anything that should| The general said he would pay Since no women are permitted on | be kept hidden. tribute to a former associate—Maj. this expedition, there is a complete! In these days at sea there isn't| C- I Robbins of Elkhart. Maj. Robair of informality. Almost every much discussion of the bomb. Navy bins was killed in a plane crash other man wears a mixture of left- officers hold occasional briefings, At| near Charlotte, N. C., in 1942 while over uniform and civilian clothes, |Bikini we will be thoroughly in-|serving as operations officer of the the 2 8 » structed. Until then there is only|33d pursuit group of the intercepWHEN THE chill winds of the|the routine of life at sea. (tor command. Gen. Quesada, then North Pacific are left behind and| Reporters live in the present, be-| & colonel, was his commanding ofthe heat of the tropics brings its|cause the immediate present is their | ficer. roasting routine, everyone will be|business. Sponsored by the Elkhart Exstripped down to shorts. For a few days, before July 1, and| change club and the Maj. C. L. There might be some question as|for some days thereafter, the Ap-| Robbins Air Scout squadron, the to why foreign newspapermen are|palachian will be a hive of frenzied | model plane meet was expected to permitted to view the atomic ex-|activity, as the story of “Operation| attract 500 youthful builders comperiment, since the United States is. Crossroads” is told the world. | peting for $500 in prizes
THE DOCTOR SAYS: Watch for Cancer Signs
Bleeding May Hint of Growth
By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. BLEEDING after the menopause is not caused by the change of life, as so many women apparently believe. Irregular bleeding after the periods have stopped is not to be expected, and it may mean cancer, as the earliest signs of cancer of the uterus are bleeding and discharge. Cancer may develop in the cervix (neck) or the corpus (body) of the uterus, The former type is more apt to develop in middle life, and the latter in older women, Whenever bleeding or spotting occurs independent of the menstrual cycle, the cause should be Pain, in cancer of the uterus, may| investigated. The severity of the|P® ® sign that the disease has exbleeding in cancer may vary; it tended for some distance beyond its may occur before, during, or be-|Place of origin, tween the menstrual peridds. " As there are several possible [causes for uterine bleuding, al uterus cannot be made without a years old who has bad eyes and woman should not° consider that special examination. While .some of cannot see without her glasses. Ts she has cancer until her physician the growths are characteristic, it|there something she can eat or ‘has made an examination and has may be necessary to take a piece of [drink that will help her? She has found the disease. the tissue for study under the her glasses changed every summer. a n.» microscope before the diagnosis; ANSWER: Ask your physician to CANCER in the uterus, as else-|can be confirmed. If ‘the growth de- [tell you exactly what is wrong with where in the body, is more readily |velops inside the uterus, scrapings your daughter's eyes. It is hot possic cured in the early stages. Women [from the inside are examined under ble to take anything to correct ordi- * who’ report for examination after the microscope. nary defective vision, ; % ‘ * © i
Most of us are Americans. There
. because the implica-
Some of these men are very interesting characters in their own ght. ¥ The Frenchman, for instance, was an outstanding leader of the Maquis during the war, He fought the Nazis underground until V-E day, but he admitted that, had the recent French elections gone other way, some other newspaperman would have been sent to Bikini. ” n » THE RUSSIAN was chosen because he had been a naval officer, and could speak English. He arrived in the United States wearing full uniform, with cam-
*HANNAH « Fd 1
i\
~ ~~
17
Cancer can be detected in the stage before symptoms develop, through pelvic examination of apparently normal women. Women who have regular. check-ups every
the first warning signs derive the greatest benefit from treatment, if they have cancer, If it is not cancer, they are spared the mental anxfety and doubt which always occurs when we think something may be cancer and are not certain,
The other warning sign of cancer is discharge. As infections and irritations also produce a discharge, an examination is always advisable after its appearancee., A cancerous discharge may develop in women who have never had any previous trouble of that sort, or it may occur as a change in the character of a discharge previously present.
appear, are not likely to develop advanced cancer, Treatment of cancer of the uterus consists of removal, when the disease starts in the body of the organ, or of X-ray and radium treatments when it develops in the cervix. All the cancer must be removed or destroyed before cure results, but the outlook for patients with early cancer of the uterus is excellent. It is regrettable that "so many women delay consulting a physician until the disease has pro-
gressed considerably. . ® = 0»
A DIAGNOSIS of cancer of the] QUESTION: I have a daughter 10
McClure Newspapar Syndic ”
and important, if she plays up, in= stead of belittling, his ability as a |“fixer” around the house, if she encourages the kids to look on Dad as a friend and not as somebody who will hear about this or that | disobedience when he gets home— |Dad will be a hero, without benefit {of uniform or medals. But all too often Dad is forced into the position of the one who dishes out discipline. He has the buck passed to him when the children want to do some= thing their mother knows they shouldn't do but hates to deny them. His ideas on bringing up kids are openly scoffed at by Mama, who knows ALL because she has read a couple of books. ” » » IF DAD isn't a hero in his own |home, it is because Mama cops | most of the glory of parenthood and pushes off the disagreeable aspects on Papa, Now that Papa is home, Mama ought to see ‘that he goes right on being a hero. It's a sad commentary on modern family life when Dad has to go off to war to amount to anything in the eyes of his children.
HILL BILLY HOP SET FOR TONIGHT
Boogieville will have a Hill Billy Hop tonight at the First Presby-
six months, or as soon as symptoms | terian gymnasium, Délaware at 16th
sts. Special events of the evening will include a floor show and the election of a Hill Billy Harry and & Hill Billy Harriett. New officers to be inaugurated ine clude Don Johnson, president; Dick Parham, vice president; Pat Conse way, secretary; Carol Glant, treasurer; Basil Zilson and Harold Smith, sergeant-at-arms. The board of ddvisors includes Lloyd Peacock, Philip Peacock ana John Gannon,
ONE HELD, ANOTHER SOUGHT IN THEFT
Police today held one youth and sought “Another as suspects in the theft of two Speedway golf club trophies recovered Wednesday. The trophies were recovered by Justin Marshall, head of the athe letic department at Washington high school from under a shed on the school grounds. - : is They had been missing sines May 30. x ’ aio
