Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1946 — Page 11
JULY 19; 1948 e
PLY OF ICE JER NEEDS
nore cubes to frigerators are eye, a fresh Eis ready for ration IS Best!
ICE AND FUEL CO.
Inside: Indianapolis -
MAYWOOD RD. looms up like an oasis after a ride out grimy Kentucky ave. After-blacks of driving through dingy business and factory districts, we accidentally turned off onto Maywood rd, and felt like Alice in Wonderland, rubbing our eyes and gazing at-a small town-like surburban street. Bordered on either side by neat houses separated by sprawling, closely cropped lawns, Maywood rd. is quite a contrast to the fertilizer plant and industrial junk lots a few blocks back. The first people we met were Mrs Harry Winings, 2818 Maywood, and Mrs. C. R. Lentz, 2861 Maywood, who stopped for a chat in front of Mrs. Wining's home as they returned from the neighborhood grocery. It-was Mrs. Winings who told us that the 2800 “block, Maywood rd., is actually neither 2800 or Maywood rg. It seems that some of the residents ‘just went to the dime store” and bought 2800 block addresses, after the influx of Allison war workers made the suburb more crowded. “Before that we didn't have any numbers out here, because we all knew one another,” Mrs. Winings explained. “Lands, I still don't have a number, but judging from the other numbers I must be about 2818. As for the name ‘Maywood rd.’ half of the people call it that and half call it ‘old road 67. But our gas bills come addressed to Kentucky ave." Mrs. Winings pointed. out. It was too confusing for us, so we chose to label the block 2800 Maywood rd. as the easiest way out. , . . The women had just come from Paul Burgen's grocery, at the northeast end of the block. The Maywoodians call it a “grocery” but it's more like a general store. The cases are stocked with novelties, make-up, anklets, hunting caps and garden implements as well as groceries,
Made Cookie Cutters
WE SPENT most of our day chatting with C. R, Lentz, in his woodworking shop at the rear of his farm-like home. His “shop,” so large .that people have tried to rent it to live in during the housing shortage, is the place where Mr. Lentz, a retired craftsman, turns out wood novelties “just to be doing something>.. He had a bigger shop once and made all the cutter forms that bakeries use to make cookies and animal crackers.~-Mr. Lentz got too smart and designed a steel cutter, to~xeplace brass ones that broke too easily. “The steel ofies-Jast forever, so I Just figured myself out of work,” Mr» Rentz told us, adding that he made so many of the forms-he was ready to retire anyway. Before he made" cracker
forms, Mr. Lentz had dabbled in almost all kinds of ™
crafts. “I learned so many trades I'm ashamed to talk about them,” he said, “people will think I'm 100 years old." Now Mr, Lentz is making wooden pitcherlike soap powder containers, which he turns out, paints and decorates. He had 3000 in production and hopes in get enough done to sell them at a concession at the Indiana State fair. .
Almost a Little Toun THE SOUTHWEST end of Maywood rd, runs into Tibbs st., is almost a little town. There's 8 tavern and barber, beauty, and blacksmith shops. The blacksmith shop is run by Oscar C. Johnson, a
where it
Sunflower Scenes
YATES CENTER, Kas, July 19.—Before we push on across the Sunflower state, we'd like to give you a few notes on our trip from Forsyth, Mo. to this point, 264 miles. We found the southwest corner of Missouri a grand section for motoring. The Ozarks are beautiful and restful, the roads are in good shape, and ethyl gas is only 17145 cents a gallon, 1 asked at a filling station why gas was so cheap in Missouri. “The state tax is only said. “We got the lowest tax in the nation.” You see some funny sights on the road. Yesterday afternoon we saw a family, traveling in:a truck, who had stopped for the night. They carry a big double iron bed which they had put up under the trees. Just like home. Springfield, Mo, is quite a highway hub. Main, paved highways enter the city from all directions, and they are lined with attractive motor courts, It was morning when we passed through, however, so we stopped only to buy a few groceries and to get our radio fixed. At Nevada, Mo., we made another stop—to fill up with cheap Missouri gas before crossing the line into Kansas, and to get ice for our thermos jug and for our portable refrigerator. The biggest bargain you can buy in touring on a hot day is a 10cent piece of ice. After we fill our containers, we chip up a lot and fill our drinking cups and eat ice as we ride. Very cooling.
A Choice in Cabins WE DROVE into Yates Center at 6:15 p. m, which may be a little late in the day to start looking for a cahin, but we didn’t have any: trouble getting one at the Kraft cabin camp.
Science
A-DAY, that is, July 1, the. day the dropping of the atomic ‘bomb over the artay of target ships in the lagoon of Bikini atoll, found our
two cents,” the attendant
decided upon for
ship, the Applachain, steaming to the northeast of Bikini Island. Adm. Blandy had announced at 10 a. m. on the
previous day that July 1 would be A-day and immediately the complicated procedure of setting the scientific instruments in working order and abandoning the target ships began. We were anchored in the lagoon at the time about a mile from the white sands of Bikini island. During the morning we made a thorough tour of the target arrdy in one of our small boats and in the afternoon we went over to Bikini island for a swim and a visit to the Bikini officers club. As each target ship was abandoned, the navy signal flag for “Y,” a red and yellow diagonally stripped flag known in navy parlance as the “Yoke flag,” was hoisted on the ship. As we returned to our ship from the Bikini officers club, there was much conversation about what the club would look like the next day. The club I hasten to add, was a simple structure with concrete floor, open wood sides equipped with screens, and a canvas roof. List Checked Carefully A GOOD many of the correspondents supposed that it would be a shambles after the bomb explosion. I mention this fact and ask the reader to bear it in mind because I think it was one of the factors that gontributed to confusion in interpreting the bomb test. As we boarded the Appalachian, our security officers carefully checked the list of correspondents. They wanted to be sure that no careless newspaperman or radio announcer had _been left at the club,
My Day
NEW YORK, Thursday—I was somewhat saddened this morning when I saw in the paper that Gen. Draja Mikhailovitch of Yugoslavia had been executed. The man next to me in the subway pointed it out to a friend and said, “That’s the Russian way of handling things. He wasn't a traitor to his country. He fought the Germans at the start, but he didn’t agree to the kind of government the Yugoslavs now have, and that's what happened to the opposition.” I think he pretty much voiced a feeling which troubles many people. ‘We who live in countries where we are free to oppose the existing form of government, so long as we do not advocate violence, fear this means of handling political opposition. In the United States, in Great Britain, in France and in many other countries, you can speak your mind about the public men in. power. You ean advocate changes in your government without fear that the party in power will hale: you into court and then ghoot. you at dawn. ;
You wait and you use your persuasive powers,
and sometimes you win the next election and some- -
times you lose, in which case you go on waiting,
Until people throughout the world learn that changes
- ean be brought about peaceably" thiougn persussiug
Ts CL
“
The Indianapolis
By Dons Mikels
[imes
_ SECOND 8 ECTION FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1946
HOOSIER VOLUNTEERED HIS LIFE FOR MEDICAL PROGRESS—
~ Yellow Fever Hero Is Bu
By JACK THOMPSON
of Huntington today. Residents there were to pay tribute “to one of their most famous citizens, a man who sacrificed his
health in the conquest of yellow
/| lever at the turn of the century.
of fomites in yell The Not of the June 2! bevond Jount that transmitted: by th definitely classifiec ” un
with volunteers demolished the
A HUSH of silence hangs over [valiant ‘men the otherwise thrivi it) 21 other : TS Commun | deep rooted belief
, 1900 to Feb,
? PAGE = ? I Atomic Force Second A-Bomb | ried To Test Ships’ rar et ‘Under’ Armor
|
those of By 8. BURTON HEATH
ABOARD U.8.S. APPALACHIAN, in the danger pm, poute to Bikini, July 19.—The w fever, | blast of the second atom bomb in Sonisien from | {he Bikini experiment will be di1901 proved | yooted against the most vulnerable: Lu fever was part of warships. e mosquito, later aApsue the water line a battle1 as Aedes acgypll | %agon is almost invulnerable. a Super-tough steel, 12 to 14 inches
i Jona Bye a ved, UPON sompl tion of ie come | thick, protects that part of the ship. soni rmpdhi Sage iin) mission's -reports, Dr. Willlam C.| It was against such armor that |had returdied to his cherished home Goryss, chief saniiation officer at ard ay jo pA ne (town, but 1t was h's last trip. Havana, swung into action. In allo. niate but still it failed to | Sw | relentless anti-mosquito campaign | perietrate to the vitals’ of most of | THE 69-YEAR-OLD hero died he and his assistants wiped OUl|y,q ghypg : Sunday in Clearwater, Fla. where completely the breeding spots of “8.8 a C. R. Lentz in his Maywood wood shop . * * he had lived since his failing phy-| the dangerous insect. BUT THE second bomb will be The hat keeps sawdust out of his hair, the pipe icq) condition recently took a turn| John R. Kissinger (right) and John J. Moran read citations given | The fruits of the; commission’s| exploded under water, about 18 or 20
keeps it out of his teeth and the hobby keeps him (0, the worse. | them in 1940 by Washington and Jefferson college eulogizing their
*out of trouble.” He was to be buried at Mt. Hope| courage in offering their lives to the yellow fever experiments. In 1900 ‘there we smith ahd wagon maker 46 years. He drove by his {cemetery this afternoon after serv-| yellow fever. Th present shop one Sunday 31 vears ago and liked it so| ices conducted at 3 p. m. by the | % disease began in F Rev. D, R. Hutchinson in the First that year only 37
. The Johnson’'s| 2830, | Presbyterian church.
As the final chapter in the life| of this brave Hoosier closes the| story of the sweat and suffering of! those who fought to conquer the
well he moved in on Monday. neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Livingston, have lived in Maywood only a few years but they] think it's as near as they can match Camby, Ind, their former home. The Livingstons feel exception-|
ported in Cuba.
and while
labors quickly were made evident. feet deep. re 1400 cases
was reported in 1902 " ” FIVE YEARS after working in
Its tremendous force of | will be directed at the thin plate e attack on the|on the bottoms of the ships, ‘ebruary 1901 and| The armor plate extends only a cases were re-| little way below the waterline—8'a Not a single case | feet on the Nevada and the Penn- | sylvania, for instance. » Below it is a big expanse, somehis discharge times as much as 18 feet deep and South. Bend about 550 feet long, that is covered
ally lucky now because they're not bothered by mid- | July heat. They just returned from a vacation in PAVRBSS of Jello fever Jn Cuba . Mr. Kissinger suffered a relapse as plate not more than an inch New Orleans and the heat there made the Indiana gl ot oe SPani-Aerioa war Ho was stricken while walking to | . . sn temperature seem puny by comparison. .. . While we presents se. his sister's home with his wife.| EXPERTS believe the -Arkansas,
Tn
IN ‘JUNE 1900, shortly after the! Then ensued a 12
health and susten
were visiting Mrs, Walter Gist, at the corner of Maywood rd. and Moreland ave., we turned the tables on
barked enthusiastically on their trip | to the. infested Uopieal country. | One man was Pvt, Kissinger and = | the other Pvt. John J. Moran. THEY WERE anosy positive that| Pvt." Kissinger addressed Maj disease was transmitted by mos-| Reed, “Sir, we heard today that quitoes—a theory. to which little you wanted men for infection with credence was given ny scientists in!yellow fever. I am ready to volunthose. days. | teer and Moran wishes to do likeAfter several controlled, experi- | wise.” ments in which members" of the| Maj. Reed looked surprised and
friend. . nothing compared to the thousands |
of soldiers stationed here.” Dr. Reed ‘saluted and accepted their offer. : One month later, after both had | been bitten several times, Mr. Kissinger finally showed a reaction.
no longer
By Eldon Roark
M. P. Clasen, the tall, friendly man who runs the camp, said he could give us a double with bath and gas hot plate in his group of old cabins for $3, or
at Lafayette” | Imter
The courageous y an’'s eyes urageous young man's eyes eranddaughter un
interest of science. There they lived until three years ago when they felt that they maintain a house and moved to the new tory in the Indiana Soldier's home |
the Kissingers moved to] Florida where they stayed-with a|
-year struggle foriand Nagato, the carrier Saratoga and ance several lesser craft may be sunk in
| ] close of the Spanish-American war,| Mrs. Tom Poole, the neighborhood cut-up. Mrs, 2 tervivie’ vellow. fever pestilence] His fine physique never returned | Bikini lagoon when the second bomb Poole had dressed up in some out-of-fashion clothes, Was sweeping through Cubs. caine] and it was thought for a time that explodes. veer ti ” ’ i rig y "a v B ’ - cutting up” with her grandchildren and visiting ing scores of soldiers’ lives daily | Na he was going to lose both legs. The Arkansas, expected to be the reiatives. She decided to slip through the backyard Army officials, appalled at the He recovered sufficiently, how- nearest battlewagon to the second and surprise_her neighbor Mrs. Gist, with her “get- drastic toll. sent ah alert and. ener every to be able tq limp about with pomb, has three bottoms, one below up.” Just as she sailed into the side yard, all togged gelic medical COI'DS Re pr | out’ the ald of a cane or crutches the other, all of steel an inch or less out in ankle length black satin, a biack veil and a Walter Reed. to Pp th oh 4 and lived on the $100-a-month | thick. lot. of jewelry, she saw Mrs. Gist had a visitor and . ! g the Pp ague. pension given him and his wife by The lowest bottom contains fuel , oo, a - Dr. Reed previously had made al ; beat a hasty and embarrassed. retreat I guess she name for Rimsel in develop] I the government The second is empty. Each is travwas goifig to come-up tothe door~apd play a trick on antitoxin for di Tri i i a) : . ji fa. 8 ersed by water-tight compartments me,” laughed Mrs. Gist, “but she su had the joke nad ie with ervsi 3 Maj. Walter Reed . . . His was Dr. William Crawford Gorgas IN 1927 THE American Associa-| gq that if one is flooded it will not turned on her.” We guess she did, too, because the Trwrenid fe : ySiptas ia . as chief sanitary engineer of tion of Medical Progress presented gndanger the water-tight integrity and typhoid fever. the planning and supervising 4 : . last we saw of Mrs. Poole she was holding™ap her He and his collea & know : Havana, Cuba, he put into prac- the Kissingers with a home in|of the others. The Arkahsas has 21 trailing skirt and hurrying home, still not sus eof | the vellow Eo gues, noun 2s mind in the victorious fight y tice the findings of the yellow Huntington as fitting recognition! such compartments. what kind of impression she'd made on Mrs. Gist's: : ever CUMIISSIONn eM-| ping yellow fever. "’Y fever commission. of Mr. Kissinger's sacrifice in the) " u 4
THE SARATOGA is less heavily armored above board against shells could | and shallow torpedoes, but her com= partments are superior to that of the battleships, so she may prove sturdier against the underwater | bomb than the apparently stronger battleships. When, the bomb explodes — the test is set for July 25—it will apply,
ly erected dormi-
til Mr. Kissinger's
he could give us a double in his new group for $4.|commission permitted themselves to| reminded them that over 50 per and skin turned yellow and for. | very suddenly, a piledriver pressure W looked, and decided on the new one. It was be bitten by mosquitoes which had cent of those infected died. He eight days he suffered and sweltered . a against the thin-shelled undeiw. er much roomier and had six windows. fed upon the blood of yellow fever told them that they had little '" the living hell of a screened-in| A pROMINENT citizen in Hunt-! sections of the Arkansas, Nagato, Windows Ave Tough vietims, ang the death of one of chance of surviving and that ‘a isolation tent ington, Mr. Kissinger was an hon- | Saratoga, the cruiser Pensacola and 4 ! their mumber, they realized that' $250 bonus, which they would re- nn = orary life member of the Kiwanis other smaller ships. MR. CLASEN said he had certainly been through they would need human subjects ceive was a cheap price for life UNDER THE constant care of and Rotary clubs, a deacon emeritus g #8 a terrific headache in trying to get his new cabins 10 carry on their tests. | a x =» Dr. Reed. he eventually recovered of the Presbyteriap church and a IF THAT pressure is great enough, completed. AS THE do 3 > 1 PVT. KISSINGER responded. and a vear later returned to civil- Mason fxperts expect : a crumple not “I shopped everywhere for materials,” he said of the Es Sure: ng members The one condition upon which we jan life and his Indiana home Survivors besides his wife, Mrs only the outer shell below the armor ; t ssion sat smoking on volunteer is that we receive no Mr. Moran, who apparently was lda Jarvis Kissinge! are two but also the inner bulkheads and “Even bought some stuff in Texas. Had to make their screened porch on the eve compensation whatsoever. We wish partially immune, suffered a mod- brothers, William of Lincolnville bottoms, permitting water to pour window frames myself.” of the call for volunteers two sol- to do this iN interest of science erate attack of fever and recovered and Sherman of Liberty Mills and into the protective compartments 1 fried to raise a window. It didn't move. 1 diers walked up and saluted. and humanity, Two lives are quickly. 40 nieces and nephews and through the equally thin: botpushed harder, and still it didn't move. Then I took — ete I ht™ Sel eye i ___ tom of the “afmored Box’ into the both hands, arched my back, and came up with all [shell containing - the machinery. Ire LAX JUDICIAL ACTIONS MUST BE CURBED— maguines, and ving and worong quarters.
The window grudgingly gave about six inches I tried the others. All of them were stuck. Mr. | Clasen wasn't so hot as a window-frame carpenter Big Eldon (formerly little Eldon) took over, and after a good workout he had all of the windows up anywhere from one-fourth to one-half of the way. |
And since there were six of them, we got enough (Sixth of & Series)
Police insist that a single traffic half-time basis and half-time pay
ine he 58 was going down and the temperature) oo , ppy STILLERMAN |Court with a full-time judge could|of $150 a month, he stated. | plied, Inconsistent judiciary enforce- | Minimize the inconsistent jurisdic- | y 4 » - lone judge who lis Later, I walked over to the filling station which | | tion of cases appear: “er f ee Ng NOW - WHEN CASES are continued, Mr. Clasen runs in connection with the camp. Tent is as Constarst as the Inout la courts Peas 3% in me 3 bes
{new deputies assigned to court are !that should stick {unfamiliar with preliminary pro-! ceedings and cause unnecessary de-| lay,” he reported.
ing traffic toll in Indianapolis, safe~
“Nnthi ” : ty experts assert. . 2 =» Nothing but cokes,” he said. ! : . y Nothing but cokes! Why back home you almost! Only when stronger links in the] JUDGE NIBLACK agrees with
a Process of capturing and convicting | the police in the establishment of
“Got any cold drinks?” I asked.
dies for the mo
have Ba apene . wee ahead to get a, ators are forged can the se- a single traffic court. The jdidiciaty committee of the It isn't like this all the time,” he said. *I just Verity of traffic accidents be re-| . He also insists that a “no fixing” Indianapolis bas SSstciatiol : sib driver's licenses. happened to get these today.” duced, these traffic men say. attitude and placement of a traf- ° Rg ly 0g NE) Lh s sage He : Until this renovation occurs fic court jn more qualified sur- Evidence of the split policies of | examinations -and throughout the police, prosecutor roundings will induce a stronger en- the courts was shown in Judge sity of pathologic and municipal court operation,| forcement of this link of the chain Howard's accusation that witnesses cal examinations, are the weakest link in any case Examinations
treatments to curb mounting auto-| But his plans for court remodelmobile and pedestrian mishaps will ing do not -stop-at material altera-
By David Dietz He stated that witnesses are re- driver's licenses s
Courts Can Help Reduce Accidents
primary for prosecutor, bitterly re-| “You've heard accusations of |
of Commerce, an organization
a commerce body.” He insisted that the only reme-
called for more strict physical
We, the Wome Even a Trailer
Can Be Made
Into a Home
tti to its knitting - By RUTH MILLETT IT IS hard to discourage youth unting traffic toll|and love and the need of a young
tens to the Cham- |
must begin with the issuance of family to be united under a roof
jof its own. A few months ago, like so many other educational institutions, a certain Midwestern university dragged in a lot of olive-drab trailers, set them up on a muddy riverbank, and offered them as homes to vet-
added the necesal and psychologi-
for automobile hould be as tough
. 5 BYE BY luctant to testify and charged that as ose for obtaining 3 lot's eran students with children. They We were one of the last. ships to leave the lagoon rémain temporary. | tions. I ou 3 is - those for ‘obidining a pliotsi®a av. 4 i 2 = » | “Pr . : court proceeding delays encourage license,” Mr. Blue asserted were a dreary, epressing and as I have alreadv said, the morning of A-day . . . : osecution is the weakest link : : } k : {orn te HP Obe oa to 4h BOILEast of THE POLICE traffic division is in any large urban center,” he those involved in accidents to “settle 2.8 | jammed together to make a cro Ss 8 ’ p > —_— URC us Sleaming In pen-sea ! ' HE DENIED that consolidation of
often accused of being the weakest charged ‘outside of court
Bikini island. link in any traffic campaign. » » ’ | o ” ”
courts would pro
little city of their own. ”
» "
vide stricter. traf- |
This was the moment for which we had been a Py Pop ww) re co lvsrt : DGE HOW thought, how- OLDER, folks wondered how a waiting, Except for three days in Honolulu, our ship Joe TR nea an TERMING PRESENT-DAY pros- pit HOW 1EnS COUPLE oR fic penalties, saying that the present couple with a baby or two could had been steaming across the Pacific day and night yo oionc with less than 50 PO Ry holdover from the ,.cessary in Indianapolis process “appears to meet needs” | possibly live under such conditions. since June 12 in order that we might be where we throughout the city's 54 square horse and buggy era, the judge He agreed that misdemeanor “Two heads are better than one “Imagine a wife's being couped were on A-day. For the position of every ship on A- miles. - Including. all departments urged a “streamlining” of the prose- cases should not clutter up court anyway,” Mr. Blue remarked. Lup all day with a small child in day had been carefully thought out and set down In there are a few more than 600 men fcutor’s branch to enable deft prepa- dockets, but insisted. that two courts, The prosecutor contended that one of those ugly things, trying to the “A-day bill of operations.” in the entire police force. ration and presentation of cases were necessary to handle all the this “philosophy” also held true in}€o0k and wash,” these elder onSome Work on Deck | Whenever accidents flare in a the bench. traffic cases now being reported his direction of deputies in the lookers said. “And imagine & man’s section of the city, he reluctantly] ull time assignment of a deputy “Shifting the blame while mini- municipal courts today. | Hying to study at night,K in a ABOARD the Appalachain, we had our own “bill oot ® Foo GF motorcycle | Prosecutor ta the courts is the first mizing responsibilities does not, “The shift,” Mr. Blue said, “en-|crowded traller shared with a wife of operations,” carefully thought out and set up after| ..ews to curb the mishaps in that|SteP.”- he said. solve the traffic problem.” Prosecu- ables seven experts to operate|and a couple of kids." numerous conferences between the correspondents section. But this leaves a gaping Judge Niblack ~ denounced the tor Sherwood Blue said in answer- rather than one. It prompts alert-| That was several months ago. The and the public relations staff. [hole in another part. honey of switching teams of two ing charges against his branch of ness in the deputy’s functions. Crater town = Da with young Breakfast had been served an hour earlier than eputy prosecutors bi-monthly as enforcement. < “Besides,” he continued, “we couples an eir- kids now. An LIKE A plumber with numerous retarding the expeditious disposi- a 8. don't have enough money for full|the once-dreary little community is
usual and the wardroom, cleared of dishes by 7 a. m,, was transformed into a newspaper editorial room. 1 brought my typewriter into the wardroom and | nad, enough “hands” to plug the set it up at a spot where the light was good, thus| a yond" apbrovele, Tor “new, the spot where I intended | * in So A eh g spol explosion. Some | equipment and authorization for THE DOCTOR SAYS: A Short Nop Improves Appetite of the correspondents elected to work on deck and | 100 additional men for the poliey| tables were set up for their convenience. |department in 1947 have been tn Having “anchored” my typewriter, I went up on | Only answers to his plea for ne the boat deck to pick a good spot from which to watch {creasing department efficiency. the bomb drop. I took With me the dark polaroid | His department also points to ol welder's glasses and the prism binoculars which had varying policy of municipal court been issued to each of us on the Appalachain. judges in convicting traffic viola-| "Capt. Fitzhugh Lee, chief public’ relations officer tors and the lax operations of the
of joint army-navy task force one was already at the| Prosecutor's office in the preparation of traffic cases as other weak
Jacobs | tion of cases. { At present, deputies operate on
breakthroughs, Inspector MR. BLUE, who defeated Judge time employmen Niblack in the 1940 Republican CORI: Gopgues
—— ’ -
INVESTIGATIONS of men the
THE INCIDEN appetite some slight, unfo Hunger pains ¢ stomach is full
By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. DD. | and! APPETITE is desire based on the
taste, or
women in armed forces *re- 108s of
appearance, odor, vealed that many of their food dis-
of food. Hunger is a painful sensa- likes were
memory
directly related to then
Sleep Good Stomach Medicine ©.
Professional fasters|
two | buzzing with Jutery = life. oe THE YOUNG Ey have turned | the trailers into homes. And their | young husbands have helped them, setting up swings and sandboxes for the kids and fixing up the inside the trailers ‘to make them
t of one or
The couples have fun together, T which atiseos the ani so do .the kids. Instead of may ‘have been| complaining, they say: “You'd be rtunate love affair.|surprised how comfortable we are.” lisappear when 4he What the older folks who said,
“Imagine having to live like that,”
microphone, relaying to us over ihe ship's loudspeaker Noes in he. Mdiciazy process of tion caused by contraction of the childhood training inflate their stomachs with. rubber|forget is that a young family system, tire Jeparie o ihe. A-day ODEFRLION he ney curbing decidents. : muscles of an empty stomach Poor appetite may" dead to mal- balloons in order to get rid of| doesn't need a lot to be happy. came in over the radio. communications system: ES Hunger pains in & Nervous person TUMTILION, —The- catise-of-apoar_ap-| hunger pains | These “youngsters” and their DURING . recent police traffic/who has lost his appetite may petite may be fear, worry, excessive, To gain weight, one should eat youngsters, need ‘only to be todrives, the ratio of discharged and | mimic stomach trouble, fatigue, smoking, or a negative at- concentrated foods of high -caloric|gether in a place of their own, with By Eleanor Roosevelt dismissed cases has climbed in pro-| Appetite is stimulated by pleas- titude toward life. values, while those who are over-|8 chance to work toward the time | portion - to the number of arrests|ant surroundings, good table serv- Introspective persons often be- weight should consume fopds of| When they can have the kind of land convictions. ice, agreeable companions, and re- come 80 concerned -about their low caloric value, such as vegetables home they want.
and discussion. so that revolutions on the one hand and the use of force by the party in power on the other are unnecessary, there is no security for any opposition. We will have great difficulty bringing about a meeting of minas between peoples who have such
A thin person who has stomachs that they are afraid to If distress follows the eating | #
laxation. lost his appetite may regain it by|eat. taking a rest before meals. A 15-/0f & certain food, they believe that] to 20-minute nap is the best “stom-|the food caused the distress, alach medicine” for the underweight. though the opposite may have keen
Police records for the first six months of the year show that while more than 34,000 arrests have been made for moving and parking traffic violations only 9853 cases have
different ideas of what political freedom means. I|resulted in fines and costs. 2 hn true. | addition of fat, can represent. my government and, if I disagree with| In the same period, 1200 cases FOOD THAT appeals to one per- : LW condiments helps any stand they wish me to take, I can resign, but have been dismissed or discharged, son may not attract another, due WORRY will also destroy appe-| more appetizing. no one will put me in prison or punish me in any |2751 fines and costs have been sus- to the differences of the. two in| tite. Both fear and ve | e
pended, 544 operator’s licenses have|race, training, or experience. ny Be direct effect
way. That is the only way, it seems to me, that one
Young children can be fed properly seasoned foods without harm-
and fruits which are filling. RANE ANI a 4 SYCAMORE DISEASE FOOD WHICH satisfies the nutritional needs of the body may not be satisfactory to the appetite. The
DUE TO EARLY FROST
Frank W. Wallace, chief entomol= ogist of the state conservation de= partment, today quieted Hoosier fears that their beloved sycamore was becoming extinct. Mr. Wallace assured Indiana that
sugar, spices, and to miake food
can have political freedom. been lifted and 3079 cases have been|foods seem to be liked by all races,| muscles of the stomach and the|ing their digestive" organs. This|the early frost damage would soon If one lives in fear of reprisal by the party in continued. but as a general rule the foods we| [secretion of the digestive juices. |practice- will help them to form a disappear and the . power, then there are bound to be undercover efforts #8 learned to enjoy as children are| Excessive smoking usually - de-| taste for all kinds of food. ould again be to overthrow the government by force, since, human THE JUDGES explain that the|the ones we like best. | presses the-appetite, and many ex-| : a 4 a = the hot weather. beings are so made that they cannot help disagreeing | high percentage of discharged cases| Adults exert a powerful infin-|smokers. report a gain in weight QUESTION: Is there any drug] The conservation official said his : with each other, now on one subject and now on|can be attributed to the copviction|ence in helping - their children to after discontinuing the practice.| which will get rid of the accumue department had received many another, Until the democratic nations of the world|on only one count of several | form food habits. Such a gain is more apt to occur lation of mucus in asthma? telephone calls and letters from
to among the
ex- in those who have a tendency be .oyerweight than it is Minaerweight,
Thoughtful .parents do not hibit food dislikes in front of thei chikiren, for by so doing they might ; ‘make _ it difficult for the children A negative . attitude foward to make” adjustments later, when'is the usual’ cause of a woman's
charges leveled against violators. While both Judge John Niblack and Judge Joseph Howard have
really live by the will of the majority, one cannot say that one has a democratic form of government. The wil] of the majority also must be ascertained ‘without holding any threat over peoples heads. +injected stricter penalties for traf‘1 think that, year by year, our votes- hg | fic violators, the measure of case more representative of what people really think, with punishment rests on the individual|the foods they like are not avail- losing her desire for food while in wained when no strings pulled by shyvouyd : treatment and poiley by Judges. : able. her teens or early twenties. loosen up and
ri hh : > : J \ 2 : ’ a Ni Sy Loam i Sis 2 Jit = . : ” 0 os ; : ay
| muectis in the br life of
ANSWER: Yes, ‘start with an accumulation of thick
the bronchioles obstructing breathing, these
people who said they heard that the sycamore tree was becoming A extinct. : Mr, Wallace said the branche | killing disease, gnomia veneta, due to early frosts had in} the young leaves of the trees.
Attacks of asthma
otichi and ‘a spasm (small bronchi) Relief ‘is obthick © plugs are expeciorn
An
