Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 July 1946 — Page 9
Lad
Taken b Crews
1 though radio imnt. een the antenna the radio impulses or under water are ber not announced. » time clocks on a They are set to ries of protective gh their nature is believed they open cal circuits, hands of the clocks een or “safe” sector be set when the bandoned—the cur- / from the antenna When the hands ach the red sector, e intended detonaimpulses can reach But this does not item, eries of radio sigich might be caused , & series constitutde must be transmb to complete its ke it ready for the
y, from a ship out Marshall Holloway, Y., young huclear as one of the origile Los Alamos labhe first atom bomb row a switch which clock. This is the
circuits have been oomb armed. Thirty ir. Holloway pulls pulse leaps through d up by the antenr ship and is transwires to the detos the bomb and the orce ever invented
DENT ENROLLS Schmidt, 5110 Winrolled for the sumne Cincinnati Consic. She will study ny, band and band ere. tEUNION SET 'ndleton, will be the ars family reunion
—————
I _- ot
There's an out-of-the-way spot on *the ‘North side that is ideal’ for neighborhtod® visiting. It's where Carrollton and Guilford aves. meet 28th st. ++ + The three come together after 28th zigs and’ rags east off College ave. Instead of running parallel, Carrollton and Guilford intersect and 28th, normally an east and west street. veers to: almost a north and south run . . . "No wonder we became a little community,” commented Mrs. Jesse -Hodshire, 2832 Carrollton. People have so much trouble: finding the place that we're almost isolated and we get to be very close.” . . , We agree that the spot is off the beaten track and our feet heartily concur. We walked for blocks up and down the North side looking for a neighborhood with signs of life . . . and then we stumbled on to this exceptionally pretty place. A triangular shaped green in the middle of the three-point intersection gives it, a small town look. A cluster of houses on Carrollton and a couple on Guilford and 28th face the green, ds if it were a little court. And on Guilford, ivy covered Sutherland Presbyterian church adds just the right atmosphere to the “little gommunity” that grew out of a jumble of streeis. ] : e
Hers Is the Trouble
THE BUSIEST woman around the neighborhood was Mrs. Max Farquer, of 2818 Carrollton, who was scrubbing down her front porch. It was Mrs. Farquer who told us about the trouble the name “Barbara” causes in the neighborhood. Out of 13 pre-school age children within a block radius three are named Barbara, There's Mrs. Farquer’'s daughter, Sharon
Barbara, 4; Barbara Benham, year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Bepham, 728 E. 28th st. and Barbara Fields, 4-year-old offspring of Mr. and Mrs. William Fields, 2814 Carrollton.
And what's more,
All of them answer when you call “Barbara.” , .. Sharon Barbara O'Brien, Mrs. Barbara Farquer and Barbara Fields are three of the four Barbaras in one block. :
Rich Vacation City
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo, July 22.—We hit this crowded vacation capitol about 3:30 p. m. We thought that would give us time to look around a little and decide where we'd like to stay. We preferred something near Manitou, five miles west of Colorado Springs. leave one town and enter the other. dences of Colorado Springs stop, the motor courts begin There are scores of these courte and camps, presenting practically every style of akchitecture. Down the line we went. “No Vacancy.” read the signs. Most of them are made so that the “No” is detachable. Finally we came to a comforiable-looking court whose sign said “Vacancy.”. Oh, boy! My wife jumped out and ran up to the office. “Are you the manager?” she asked to a tall, darkhaired, bleary-eyed man standing just outside the door. “The manager isn't here.” the man replied. “They gay he won't be back for an hour. I'm looking for him, too.” The poor fellow and his wife had slept in their ear the night before. They were full of cramps. They were there before us, waiting for that vaeancy, so we drove on.
Same Old Story
WE WENT to the end of motor court row without success, and then; starfed back on the other side. But it was the same story. Just as we were about to give up and drive on we were told of a tourist home at_701 N. Tejon, a good residential section of Colorado Springs. We could get a three-room apartment with kitchenette for
Science
THE CALL OF “bomb away" resounded along the decks of the U. S. S. Appalachian. It was then precisely 30 seconds after 9 a. m. July 1 (Bikini time). Along with my fellow correspondents, I had been standing. on the boat deck of the ship for the past hour, listening to Capt. Fitzhugh Lee as he relayed the radio reports of the A-day operation over the ship's loudspeakers I think there is some point to my reporting what I did during that hour and what my reactions were since it throws light on the state of mind with which I viewed the detonation of .the atomic bomb. One of my fellow correspondents reported,’ in effect, that time seemed to stand still with cosmic awe during-that. hour and that the announcements over the loudspeaker were a voice from the sky that seemed to fill all space.
Had Three Big Objectives IT DIDN'T {ill all space as far das I was concerned. It was just the voice of Capt. Lee, with whom I had been breakfasting two hours earlier. In fact, my principal concern at the moment was to effect a compromise of three objectives. One was to get a place at the rail of the boat deck where I would have the best view of the bomb explosion. The second was to find a place where I could hear Capt. Lee clearly for there were spots along the deck where the loudspeaker couldn't be heard distinctly, Finally, T wanted to take advantage of such little shade as there was on the boat deck of the Appalachian. Unless vou have stood for a couple of « hours in the tropical sun, you won't appreciate fully this third desire of mine. ng I had brought on deck with me the dark pgiaroid welder's glasses and the prism binoculars which bad (
My Day
NEW YORK, Sunday.—Among several things in the newspapers during the’ last few days that have interested me greatly, the most thrilling was the story of a new artificial arm developed by Samuel Alderson, research physicist, in the International Business Machines laboratory, at the instigation of Thomas J. Watson, I. B.-M, head. Early in the war, I saw the latest things that the navy had developed at a hospital in San Francisco. It seemed to me that artificial legs were far less of a handicap than arms, . You could learn to walk again even if you had two artificial legs. I have seen people who, after sufficient practice, could get up and down ‘stairs and walk on-a level without using a cane. But an artificial arm—that seemed to be a very great handicap. This hew development will apparently give control of every section of the arm. which is' worked by a tiny electric motor. The newspaper story said that heavy labor would not be possible with this new de-
You can't tell when you Where the resi-
&
.
Inside Indianapolis
from bad guesswork on the part of planners for | jis goals for Earlham in his address the recent International Harvester picnic. They ¢ tl he ar Griobe @bought more cokes than attendance merited and |? Je ceremonies in Lclober. of
2
" Ey
0 AE apie Lk
T Tia » : «0 J. . . 7 By Donna Mikels Mrs. Farquer's givensname is Barbara. “When we call our own Barbaras we're never sure who's going tol answer,” Mrs. Farquer told us... “Half the time I| . - ! answer Mrs. Fields: when she wanfs her daughter.”| SECOND SECTION . . « Mrs, Field's daughter, Barbara,*is a brown-eyed ~~ blond whose long hair has been causing hér trouble. The other day one of the smaller boys in the neigh- | borhood got a handful and wouldn't let loose. When he was pulled away, the hair went. with him. Last week some of the older boys combed her hair straight down over her face, then stood back away from: her. The object, they explained, was to see whether they could tell whether she was coming or going with her hair like that. . . Barbara. Benham also seemed to be jinxed. She had a severe cold ‘which kept ber
from coming out to be photographed with thé ther Barbaras. .
And It Moy Be John
THERE'S another unusual name combination at the house next door to Farquer's. The surnames of Mr. and Mrs. Heaton, who recently moved out of 2822, were Mary and John, The people that moved in after them are also Mary and John, formhlly known as Mr. and Mrs. Roberts. Then a couple moved In upstairs named Mary and John Hluchan A few weeks ago both Mrs. Roberts and Mrs. Hluchan had sisters named Francis visiting them at the same time. . . . One of the favorite couples in the neighborhood was moving away. They were. Mr; and Mrs Jacoby, of 2802 Carrollton. Incidentally, we purposely omitted Mr. Jacobv’'s first name back there because we're undecided about what to call him, “Every-
Earlham hall in Norwich, England, gave assistance to its namesake in Indiana,
body calls him Jake and her Vera,” a neighbor told us. “But if you want to get his goat just call By EMMA RIVERS MILNER him by his right name, Boynton." Well, we did | Times Church Editor it,. but we'd prefer that Mr. Jacoby keep the goat | RICHMOND, July 22.—A new|
to stock that farm in Crawfordsville, where he's president offering a new plan for moving. . . . We cooled off with a coke at Mrs. Hod- | 4 shire’s as she bundled up fishing tackle and camp- will be inauging out equ'pment for an overnight trip. The cokes|Wated this fall at Earlham college. were the first either of us had in months, Mrs.| Dr. Thomas Elsa Jones, the new Hodshire's good fortune in finding them resulted | president, will outlihe his plan and
permanent peace
employees, including Mr. Hodshire, bought. the su -| November. plus. . . . Between planning the fishing trip, Mis.| Fresh from Fisk university where Hodshire was busy worrying about her
24-year-|he was president hie old daughter's lost sorority pin. Daughter Pezgy for peace was hurrying to keep an
appointment about a; ; : job a couple of weeks ago, and Jost her Mu Phj| Which he considers sufficiently dy-
pin on Illinois st., between Washington ahd Ohio sts. It was a bad day altogether for her because she didn’t get the job and lost the pin,*which she'd only
for 20 years,
{has developed .,a plan
namic to grip men and women of all cause
and
to
races them
nationalities and | work together for
had.a couple of weeks. The finder would make the a united world Moved by the! Hodshires very happy if he'd call TA-5801 and ex- |spiritual force he describes, they ' change the pin for a reward. Off the beaten would reach out to each other, pr. Thomas Elsa Jones, Earlham's
track, though this neighborhood is, the pigeons found it. Pigeons and more pigeons are the big worry .of ligion, culture and economy. Mrs. Kate M. Brewster of 2805 Guilford, who lives 8 8 8 right next to the church, She's ‘tried shouting, wires| DR. JONES regards Earlham coland everything and finally in desperation bought a lege, with its more than 500 stuB. B. gun. (We couldn't quite imagine the tiny white- dents, and the midwestern area in!of goodwill, friendship and relief haired woman aiming the gun, but she confided she which it is located as an “intimate | for suffering only planned to “scare them off,” not actually try face to face” laboratory for tae} “Rugged .individualism prevailed to shoot them. Anyway, now that she's got the working out and ultimate dissemi- in pioneer life when man was makgun, she’s even more frustrated in her anti-pigeon nation of such a plan, ling a home in the wilderness,” Dr. war—she's found she can't buy B. B. shots. In his cool and spacious office,|Jones continued. “Collectivism 1s
; Dr. Jones recalled that Quakers|in the mood of the modern age— By Eldon Roark
have always maintained that God | communism, organized labor, and $5. That sounded mighty good. We lit out for
tourist home—and heére we are, very comfortable.
Millionaires’ Church I AM WRITING this on our enclosed sleeping porch. I can’t see Pike's Peak from this window, but I can see the mountains to the south of it. And] directly across the street is Grace Episcopal church. Mrs. Charles Layhor who runs this apartment house says they call it “the millionaires’ church.” She says I must go over and look at the window that cost $10,000. They don’t mind if you come in and look. Mrs, Lavhor is just full of information about that church. Some time ago lightning struck the tower and made the $75,000 organ go haywire. It cost $1000 just to get it tuned up again. There's a lot of wealth in this city. Last night after dinner young Eldon said he believed he'd take a walk. About an hour later he came back enthusiastic about the shuffleboard players in the park about five blocks down the street. “Man, some of those old folks can really They have a lot of lighted alleys.” And he also was 50 cents richer. “I was walking along when a man stopped me
across all barriers of language, re- new president.
in man, to seek the spots of tension in the
dwells in every man. “But the the like: The way to meet the age concept must go further than |of collectivism, and at the same that,” he explained. “The spark time save rugged individualism, is
the of God which glows ih all human |to believe steadfastly in the idea
(beings needs to be ignited into a of God in every man.”
envelopes the world. 5 n ‘n
Dr. Jones approaches his task st
the Holv Spirit, a flame of aware- voice and manner as he talked. ness of poverty, maladjustment, ra- | ".» » cial and industrial tensions and{ HE SUPPLIED a definite answer every kind of sin. or strife, glows, to the question: “But how does the
them passively any more than they | his fellowman?” can endure molasses in their hair.| “This is done,”
about them. “But that is not all, they recog- living.” nize that this spirit which makes| Earlham is represented by stuplay. a person sensitive to sin, brings dents employed in relief and rehahim into co-operative relation with |bilitation work in Germany and his neighbor whom he sees also|Japan. She sends groups for weekas the possessor of the living spark end visits to Friends’ work camps in and asked if I'd mind toting” a watermelon up to his! f God.” {connection with Flanner house, in third-floor apartment. I guess he was all played out, on .N | coal mining areas and other places ‘cause it was a big melon.” Must have weighed 50] DR. JONES explained that Quak- where there is opportunity for social pounds. I told him sure, I'd take it up for him.|ers do not kill and indulge in the service. 8 i Then he offered me 50 cents, and I said, ‘Aw, that's various known forms of strife be-| Among the foreign students now all right, I don’t want any pay.’ But he grabbed cause they are convinced that in | enrolled in the college is Taysir me and made me take it. "I didn't want to, but I so doing they would injure God | Taji Farouki of Jerusalem, nephew didn’t want to fight him.” “Well, if you put up-a good strong protest, T guess it's all right,” I said. "You did right in not striking the man.” { 1 think I'll go out and take a stroll myself in a little while. Might run into some rich old gentleman who can't make it up the steps with his cantaloupe.
By Pavid Dietz
(Last of Avenues of approach to the mile-
a Series) | By LARRY STILLERMAN {in the morning and evening rush Like so many other improve-| hours and parking bans on the ments scheduled for Indianapolis,| southern arc of monument circle
been issued to each correspondent. When ‘the signal of “bomb away” was given, I knew that the bombardier on the B-29, “Dave's Dream,” had dropped the-atomic bomb. This meant that the explosion would take place in a matter of seconds, 1 slipped the dark glasses over my eyes at once—
der “long-range” planning. ; | Alabama and Delaware sts. are also However, . officials here believe’ peing enforced. that although there is need for im-| 2 =
» provement in all phases of traffic,|] CITY OFFICIALS also are com-
an elastic band held them tightly in place—and fhe Stianen is “not as bad as it pleting a survey on the needs for began to count. When I reached “five” there was a cou e.' i 4 : . . mproved street z blinding flash of light. They point to the reduction of d street lighting
traffic fatalities and accidents dur-|- And the need is evident, police ing the past two months . . . and|records commend the police department. |cent of all accident fatalities ocThey point to the numerous SUr-| cur- at night and 45 per cent hapveys being .conducted on various'| pen after sundown.
phases of safety . . . and predict | Some traffic experts believe trafimmediate improvements.
Watches Ball of Fire Grow THE GLASSES had reduced the glare of the tropical sun to a sort of dim blackness, though not so dim that there was not still some suggestion of blueness in the sea and sky. The flash was about like that of a lightning flash at night, the kind of flash that makes you| yl. 0 2 Shia feel certain that the chimney of your house hus] UNDER TH § pele. ey is brings wp parking. meters. been hit. [ynoa es qocine | Advocates are divided into two facThe instant I saw this flash, I yanked off the city-wide traffic safety conference; those. wantin Somats dark glasses since they were of use only as a pro! to map plans for curbing the Prob-| se ou an 08 Ful neue = tection against the initial bright flash. | lem here. I devices yorins faction y pera. ‘Looking to the horizon I saw a white-hot ball] Instead he has ordered the en-| ' ons are luriher of fire on the distant horizon beyond which lay|tire police force to “crack down” on| Bikini atoll, about one-fourth the size of the setting sun, but as|fident that
show,
Mayor | by increasing parking facilities.
this will result in a
1 watched it, it grew in size and rose in the air.| “much greater” reduction in traffic It grew to 10 times the size of the setting sun and fatalities. 1 estimate that it must have been three miles in| tu 4 diameter. | AMONG: 22 cities in the same
The ball of fire, however, collapsed in a matter Population category, Indianapolis | By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. in 1 ‘e108 or war. has ranked 18th in the past eight| LUMPY JAW (actinomycosis’ # of seconds, and in its place rose a great creamy i 4 : la dizense of tattle and swine which white pillar of cloud, the atomic cloud. It climbed | years in traffic deaths « @ 3 ; | slowly into the sky, about 1500 feet a minute, to a! 10 move Indianapolis —teward. i 0 A Ano yun gus A height of five miles. |the top in traffic safety, at least 25] one time it was eved that |per cent of the police department chewing animal-contaminated grass should be assigned to the tirafic|and straw was the source of actin- / | safety division,” Dr. R. N. Harger,| OMyCosis in man, but most human By Eleanor Roosevelt man of the Indianapolis safety| cases develop from fungi which fcouncil traffic enforcement commit- | 1hhe bit ye gums and tonsils of vice, but that ordinary things could be done and a tee, contends. june pa lent. man could handle rl anything weighing up to| Records show the police traffic| Actinomycosis affects the neck, five pounds. |satety division contains only 15 per | lungs, stomach, and intestines of The arm is equipped with cables, hidden inside cent of the force. { humans through aspiration or which act as do human muscles. The different func-| However, a dozen of 88 men re- swallowing of the fungi. The aptions—elbow bend. wrist motion and finger grip—| cently appointed to the department | pearance of the infection in the are ‘controlled by gears which are thrown into posi- dre tabbed for motorcycle duty. face and neck is striking, as lumpy tion by shoulder movements “na | inflammatory masses form, later to 1 think the development of this mechanism will] ALTHOUGH PLANS call for break down and discharge pus condo a great deal for the rehabilitation of many modernization of the city’s decrepit/ taining yellow “suphur-like wounded men. I am, not surprised to find that| traffic signal system, | Jrogustion eramies : le like Representative Edith Nourse Rogers, Sur-| cutbacks - will delay. this projec - coral Jy T. Kirk and, ral Thomas planned for 1947, officials state. THE DISEASE is more difficul to J. Watson have been pushing the research that led Prospects. for uniform flashing | recognize when it stands in the to it. {and stationary “stop” signs also are | lungs, stomach, or intéstines. When Mr. Watson heard about Mr. Alderson’s ex- dim. Lack of funds and equipment! When the small “sulphur” granperiments, which had been begun during the war, he! procurement are offered as excuses. ules are crushed invited him to: continue ‘them at his laboratory in| Meanwhile, the city is experi=|unhder the. microscope, they are Endicott. N. Y., and set aside funds for the project. menting with off-street parking to found to consist of masses of the He must have a great sense of satisfaction in this facilitate movement of traffic| fungus which causes the disease. final, successful achievement. ; : ‘through the downtown area. Fungi which are discharged from . » + '
Lr »
~The Indian
However, it is their custom
world and there live out their ideals
explained the new They feel impelled to do something president,” by prayer, meditation, | Bible study and daily thoughtful
«
MONDAY, JULY 22, 1946
EARLHAM'S NEW PRESIDENT. EXPLAINS QUAKERISM—
World Peace Plan Offered
This old book in the Earlham colle Benjamin Franklin's and Hugh Me
by marriage of the grand muff. Thus the college reaches out iuto the world. » »
{of America’s rose country at the | college 100 years ago.
| hall, Norwich, Englgnd, | where it takes its namg. | Earlham college corfforms 10 the standards of scholarghip fixed by
from the eastern United States.
sturdy buildings, the farm, the orchard, the library of 70,000 vol-
apartments being erected government for former G.L'.. - =» *
take satisfaction in the annual Elizabethan May day, the breadless dinners and frugal meals inaugu-
overseas relief and the packages
SAFETY EXPERTS REITERATE: DRIVE CAREFULLY—
~ Trattic 'Crack-Down’ Is Ordered
(£plit on the need for municipal | meters. » » »
AT PRESENT, plans for either of
| cial delay” at city hall.
| Another safety measure, rerout-
ing of state arteries through down-
| town Indianapolis and public trans-|
| portation terminals in the mile
| square has advanced from the plan-|
ning stage to the discussion status. | Requests for more men and equip-
More than 60 per| ont will be included in Sheriff {training
Albert C. Magenheimer’s budget for 1947. He points out that routine work of presenting subpenaes and eviction notices consumes time
To augment first aid facilities in the county, Kenneth D. East, Red Cross safety director, reveals that future plans call for 30-hour training programs for gasoline station operators in the county.
When I first saw this ball it was) trafic violators. The major is con- THE DOCTOR SAYS: Oral Hygiene Prevents Lumpy Jaw
Fungi in Gums Cause Trouble
rarely to man,
| ~ » » | ACTINOMYCOSIS usually re-| mains limited to the region ‘of
it spreads through the system. The majority of patients are adults who have neglected their oral hygiene. When neck infection occurs, the area feels like wood to the touch and the. skin develops a reddishpurple color. Pain is not a common complaint, and the general health may remain good. As the disease progresses and sinuses form, the stiffness and swelling interferes with swallowing. In older persons the disease may be confused with cancer and in
Students of the summer session |for yesterday pointed out the school's presidency of Fisk, a university for | reasons for pride—the tall forest Negroe$ located in Nashville, Tenn. | trees shading the green campus, the when news of a race riot was star-| Was because there wasn't much of
rated by the students on behalf of |law af
the jaws of infected cows as they) graze in the pasture may spread cessful in the treatment of lumpy the disease to other animals, but |jaw, Penicillin is very helpful, too,
eee —
Earlham hall at Earlham college stands as a reminder of friendship with Britain,
Lge sic oy Kolbe Ocovwrr 4
bomen
ge library includes pages printed in redith’s Philadelphia printing shop.
(sent abroad to the needy. All of this was in the international spirit | broadcast by the new president. | His acceptance of the -appoint-
{of a homecoming. For Dr. Jones is
alma mater. | ” . =n
| HE SERVED with
| sociology at Keio university, Tokyo four years. He assumed
tling the nation.
torate from Columbia.
apolis Times
{
3 4,
AE
. PAGE 9
~—— High Finance
British Hang 'Go Easy’ Sign On Loan Funds
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, July 22 - His ma jesty’s government seems to have Joined me in going easy on the butter, - We're waiting for some clearance sales. What brings this up .is President Truman using 16 pens to put a shaky signature, a few days back, on the $3,750,000,000 loan to Great Britain. Then the treasury department announced it had slipped the British a first installment of $300,000,000 to spend any way they pleased. I kept an eye on the financial pages to see whether the British bad found any good buys, but results were nil. No news, So I got to talking to some {fellows with London accents (they spell check, cheque) and so it is that I can tell you about the chancellor of the exchequer. He is no Champagne Charlie! He's got millions to spend, and billions more where that came from. But if he can't buy stuff at a reasonable price, the hell with it. My sentiments, exactly. » » ~ HIS IDEA is that the British have downed so much macaroni and brussels sprouts they deserve a few other things to eat, such as oranges. Have you bought any oranges lately? Then you've got the answer. I spent a while in London this summer and I had hoped that the loan might somehow result in a new dress for people like Miss Peck, of Herbert Crescent, Knightsbridge, who was my landlady. She had worn the same old brown suit since the beginning of the war. It was so baggy that she long since had stopped looking at herself in the
| mirror.
She is out of luck. The loan will provide her no frock with ribbons on it. My experts got to talking gibberish about trade balances and sterling accounts; it seemed to add up to the fact that the British government intends to buy only the things the country has to have, such as food and as little of that as possible. ~ = » ONE OF the things that painea
Ld t IT IS SITUATED in the heart ment to Earlham is in the nature Me in London was the fact that the
restaurants closed around 7 p. m.
sweeping conflagration by contact! This then is the idealism, the|crossroads of Quakerism. It started a Hoosier, born 58 years ago at| Anybody who got hungry later in with the Holy Spirit of God which belief in spiritual force, with which |ag a boarding school but bécame a Fairmount, an Earlham graduate | the evening, like me, stayed hungry It was in-|and former assistant on the facul-|the rest of the night. This unhappy Earlham. He does it with eagerness! fluenced and aided in the early days|ty. His subsequent experience has Situation is going to continue. “WHEN THE spark in man meets to judge by the quiet excitement in| py the Gurney family af Eariham! led him all around the world and 1 from back again to his Quaker-related|don to buy anything in the way
It was almost impossible in Lon-
fof a tweed suit, or a bottle of | Scotch whisky, or even a London
the Priends'|pipe. These fiercely,” to use his words. “Quak- divine spark in man, of which you|the various associatidns for a lib- mission in Tokyo, Japan, from 1917 shipped abroad to help balance the ers and those who hold their views, speak with such high hope, make era) arts schools About one-third of [to 1924; directed a Y. M. C. A. in budget. My financial friends say don't condemn these errors of man, contact with the all-powerful spirit! the students are Qiarkers and be-| Vladivostok, Siberia, for a year, and | the loan isn't going to change that, but they can't stand to contemplate of God and also a similar spark in|yween 20 and 30 /per cent come was professor of economics and | either.
things were being
| I told 'em about the only things
the!I saw for sale in London without
| coupong were walking sticks and top | hats, mostly gray. They said this
{an international demand for canes,
| He received his B. D. degree from or gray toppers, either. umes, the old observatory and the Hartford Theological seminary; his by the master’s from there, and his doc-|
» tJ » THEY ALSO said they'd like to tell me what they hoped to buy
| Dr. Jones succeeds Dr. William C.|with the first $300,000,000, but that
{ham as president emeritus. | Dennis will engage in the private | practie of law, teach international
Earlham's legal counsel
ABOVE ALL, they seemed to Dennis who is retiring from Earl- | they didn't care. I'd print it. So Dr.|if they wanted a couple thousand
gross of teacups, for instance, the teacup makers would gang up and
the college and .serve as|raise the price.
The trouble with this loan is that
| the British have got to pay interest lon it and if they don’t get their
| money's worth, their taxpayers will
be in a tough spot. They're spending it carefully. They're not going to announce exactly what they buy, and they think it'll be some time before Miss Peck can throw away the old suit, which (according to
| MEANWHILE, RURAL communi- | her) makes her look like & scow.
| {program formulated here last week { 'at Governor Gates’ state-wide safety
traffic safety is still classified un- and ‘along east sides of sections of | the facilities are snagged by “offi- conference,
Plans. call for redrafting state
traffic laws to curb state highway! accidents, Periodic vehicle inspection state agencies, stricter examination of driver license applicants and better trained state examiners, adoption of high school driverprograms, a state-wide {60-miles-per-hour speed limit on |highways are among several meas{ures promised. | But crystalization of traffic safety
|fic bottlenecks can be eliminated needed for patroling county roads. measures takes time . . . time that
{means more hospital patients, more Imoney expended for insurance and more pins on “spot” accident maps. | Knowing this, safety experts reiterate an old plea — “Drive Care{fully . . . It pays.”
The sulfonamides hdve been suc-
especially in the internal and com|plicated forms of the disease. Farmers should refrain from the practice of chewing on grass or
origin, although in occasional cases| straw, because of the rare possibil-
ity of thus acquiring lumpy jaw. But neglected mouths are the real source of most infections. The development of discharging sores. on the face, mouth, or neck should arouse suspicion of lumpy jaw, and a physician should be consulted at once. ” ” " QUESTION: 1 am subject to severe gallbladder attacks. Will you please send me a good diet? My weight is 127 pounds.
ANSWER: Painful gallbladder
» » ” THE INFECTION can be brought
and examined}under control by scraping out the diseased areas. Physicians no longer the distress caused by eating certain
use potash to any great extent, for it cures the infection only in animals.
younger persons with tuberculosis attacks are relieved by a surgical of the lymph glands. (operation in which the gallbladder
|and stones are removed. A diet cannot cure gallbladder colic. The chief purpose of a diet is to relieve
fise they n attacks,
foods. Large meals, b [have a tendency to bring ‘showld be avoided
/
’
| Square are zoned against parking|parking areas along with parking ties hopefully await the “action”|
We, the Women
| Roads Jammed
by |
5
By Exhausted
'Vacationers'
By RUTH MILLETT
SIT ON the last bulging suitcase to make it close, Mama. Shift the other bags around, Papa, to find a place for it somewhere. And watch your language—Junior is all ears. Leave a note for the milkman, pile the family in the car, and head for the highway. It's time for the American family's vacation—the two-week period that tires them out, gives them unlimited opportunity for .argument, and makes home a’ glorious place to come back to for another year. = . n THE WEAK in spirit would give up the vacation trip this year. The car is old, the highways are crowded, and the eating and sleeping places are jam-packed. But the American family is made of stouter stuff. If the Joneses can take it, so can the Smiths. There are good beds, electric fans, and easy chairs at home-the best place in. the world for a family to rest and relax. But staying home, sleeping late and loafing around, is too easy. That's no vacation at all, } » " » NOT WHEN the family can follow. a glaring highway for mile after mile, eat at crowded roadside restaurants, at dusk fall exhausted into beds they were lucky to find, and at 5 a. m. stagger out of bed so as to get an early start before there are too many cars on the road. The routine is the same day after day. It never varies until some{hing goes wrong or the vacation is gver. : . Now there's a real vacation--tailored to the American passion for action. Watch the road map, Mama, Pipe down in the back seat, kids. Papa has to make 500 miies today. Varationtime is here again. Nr
