Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1946 — Page 15
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Breakfast Woe By Frederick C. Olin = The Indianapolis imes > 2
n 20, 1948
WASHINGTON, Aug, 20.—With a deep bow to my’ issue, the navy department has recently seen fit to! § special’ West coast agent and to Maj. Gen. H. L, provide cups not so equipped. If you have further RL . George, who confirms the correspondence involved Constructive criticism to offer, etc, etc.” | SECOND SECTION TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1946 : PAGE 15
as official, I can report at 1ong last today on the sorry This correspondence -finally reached Capt. Donald | Labor
F..Smith of the navy in Washington. He forwarded | land, Cal. There were no doughnuts. There was | CIO Reports
2 oe L Re OL Cuss M. Page. Torin of Mare 10, it to Gen. George, commander of the army air force BARKERS, CALLIOPE TO ROAR AGAIN AT STATE FAIR— ; nothing to eat except fresh fruit, flak da Doughnut Cornerstone of Democrac C : RE 4 ; cream, eggs, creamed ibs Soe Shen Pr a Quy, he asked. one of i Mi ! d wa G aq m O u I 0 | | ! NC Ba C { Congress Votes i 3 © and coffee. The colonel didn’t like the coffee. He judged by trained coffee-tasters? It has been Sug- { .
; sr ~' transport command. The general wondered in‘ his 1944, when he landed at the naval air station at Oak- reply about the density of the coffee. ° w ‘ Sans Like Que tap in Widely 14 was served. . gested that a consumer of a particularly dense nature | 92 Jo rong «i A am ial report to the commander of the sta- ion fai] to be pleased by a beverage which would | (Second of a Series) By FRED W. PERKINS
" executive officer N, C. Lee said. seem brosial to le.” | “When served with the coffee, he (Col.. Page) . ambresial Mosh Deople. By ROBERT PLOEY WASHINGTON, “Aug 20.-he
¢ p : A Gen. George observed that doughnuts are one of! . looked at it, stirred it, and said, ‘This is not coffee.” 0 legs destructible cornerstones of democracy and| HURRY! Hurry! Hurry! law-making record of the expiring congress is 92 per. cent wrong, ace
The steward's mate replied: ‘This is the only coffee gqqed: “The best -medical advice obtainable here, TO the tune of the barker's chant, | We juss, Col, Page repeated that it was not coffee. poyever, is that only in rare cases does this fondness happy Hooslersasoon will be stroll cording to a compilation of house er he complained that the cup in which his coffee gevelop into a vice, or habit which cannot be ing down the midway at the frst and senate votes being distributed was served had no handle. This is true—for all cups gyspended.” wy ; [today by the C. I. O. among fol= heey inthe mess hall are mug-type and have no He said he and his staff had given special con-| ov fair Since Pearl Harbor, [lowers of its political action coms andles. sideration to the suggestion that mugs with one or ' lof those who attend fairs for | mittee. Capt. James E. Dyer, commander of the naval air moré handles be provided for the benefit ‘of transient the agricultural exhibits and for| . | This lists 12 important issues in
f : A gg o% the West coast, wrote a 510-word letter colonels. those who just go for fun, the 1946 {the senate, all of which were dis ; § ; ep anation and apology next day to Col. Page “But experience has shown that under the stress exposition is going to have every- | {posed of in a manner not satisface : n Dillon, 8. C. The captain said in part: of necessity even field officers will develop the pre- thing. tory to the C. I. O.; and 12 other i
{issues in the house, 10 of which {went against C. I. 0. lobbyists, | An eleventh issue In the house
fd v . . hensible strength required to use a plai flect-| From start to finish, th ter4 Coffee plain mug effect nis € enter fee Making Explained +ively and without letting it fall to the table, ground, |tainment committee has set up the’ OUGHNUTS which you requested do not or lap,” he said. “Older field officers may use two |first peacetime program to insure
i Srna form a part of the breakfast menu. A hands and this is also recommended for beginners.” that, no matter what they came for, | ! | | produced a kind of stand-off, in the : orough investigation has been conducted concerning The general closed the file on Col. Page's break-|all who attend the fair will have al {matter of showing influence of ore A your contention that a beverage served you was not fast with this P. 8.: “On the question of ‘mugs’ dis- good time, |sanized labor on the legislators. A : coffee. It was a standard brand of navy coffee, cussed herein, the reader should be forgiven if ‘he 4 a 85 . 'majority of 255-135 voted to overs : brewed with a density which experience has shown hecomes confused as to whether reference is being THE entertainment part of the ride President Truman's veto of the 2 2h atable to the average navy man. While formerly made to cups, or colonels.” program will take off with a loud {Case bill, missing the required twos equ ’ : Av 8s equipped with handles were a standard navy All clear, Col. Page? Do you still like doughnuts? ‘report the evening of Aug. 31 when thirds by ve vores. . (Donna Mikels is on vacation. Inside Indianapolis will be resumed on her return.) | the Hoosler Radio Roundup fills the, ji “WHAT TO DO about it" is told-w - {coliseum with music and celebrities. § from the C. I, O.-P, A, C. stande For four hours representative tal- f point—by a brawny. workman pice P . t 9 H : ent from every radio station in turized in the publication. He is Tl : Indiana will hold forth. One hour quoted’ as follows: n ers ome . By Eldon Roar k of the time will be broadcast over “ , ” 7 “I've seen the record, It's punk, oi a nationwide hookup ss rotten. COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo, Aug. 20—We have not accepted. A member in the last stages of tuber- Among the big names on the all- For the first time in five years, the whir of ferris wheels, and the wheezing of calliope music on the | “Plenty of other T. I. O. guys feel completed a circle tour of Southwestern Colorado and culosis will be accepted, however, if he has no other | Hoosier show will be Hoagy Car-| merry-go-rounds, mingled with the “Hurry, hurry, hurry” of sideshow barkers, will draw throngs fo the the same Way. : 2 are back at our starting point. And before we push PIACe 10 go. - michatl a immortal | midway at the State fair, starting Aug. 30. Nan: are ve Song to do about . : Those who come because of old age usually stay | Slarcus sen ohnson, com- | : G" it, brother! ony on northw all y stit y y “ oT y - ! no ard, I'd like to tell you about an institution {nil they: die. Sore. ure. bachelors or widowers with. (207 Sage favorites of two genera a I'm going to give a buck te@ that is one of the show places of Colorado Springs— ,t homes or relatives who will take care of them Lions; Herb Shriner, Ft. Wayne boy aw PAC, the Union Printers’ Home. and some are aged men who, because of circum- ii bscame Kiywh 25 radio's Heo- “Tm goiig 0 be swe 1 Tegisiey The home sits on the crest of Nob Hill, overlooking stances, are forced to break up their. homes. [Set Das osopher, and the booming X and get my family and friends to its own. 300 acres, the city, and the plains of Eastern " Singin Sam : Who really is. Harry register. Colorado, 1t looks up to Pike's Peak, Cheyenne Come and Go as They Please {Puke of Rich, | 7 | “And I'm going to vote, me and mountain, and the Rockies. When the first unit of RESIDENTS—unless confined to their rooms by os fie Wg be 17 radio stations on the millions of other guys like me, the home was built in 1892, the hill, donated by the illness or restricted by doctor’s orders—have complete grou Ne yu g (Hove Sving 6 oie to change thal : pe pips board -of trade of Colorado Springs, was BoM en, A= wirepdom:— They -may-go-to-towwn When -they please. + CE . congress. i . ’ y “RACE FAN 2113 z c | Today it is covered with green flowers and trees— A bus drives into the grounds and stops in front of ry N vn NeTIVIn thenle = pepea Th general. compilation. ShaWA......... blue spruce, maple, cottonwood, poplars. Coel breezes the main building. |portunity to follow the lure of the |this: Practically all the house mem~ sing through the leaves and needles, and inviting Directly in front of the home is a city playground | track through five days of Grand pars who Fan be depended upon 4 benches are everywhere. You can't imagine a more where baseball and softball games are played, day and circuit racing. Starting on Labor $ vole labor” are northern Rw a beautiful, restful spot. The millionaires down at the night. Many of the veteran printers are enthusiastic day, headliners of the trotting and West. Democrats, Most of the antis { ’ : z [2% 3 { g C. 1. O. representatives are Ree amous Broadmoor hotel haven't a thing on the resi- fans. pacing world will compete for id . dents of the Union Printers home, + The home has a movie every Tuesday night, and |$95000 in purses ; Publicans ftom the mers and ids : As you drive into the grounds up to the main five- other kinds of shows from time to time. The audito-| The concessions and stands will Wigan Whe SUnserYal Ye sue J : story stone building with its gables, turrets and big rium has an electric organ, and religious services are lhe as plentiful as ever and the emer ehgcras: » | picture windows, you see residents of the home sit- held regularly. |widely known -Johnny Jones carni- THE REPUBLICAN-Democratie
ting under the 4rees or strolling leisurely about. The library has thousands of volumes and the val will provide the midway attracMost of them are aged men, and carry canes. Some reading room gets magazines and newspapers from all tion. : { are in wheel-chairs. A good many of them wear the over the country. A lot of these old gentlemen, you.! The “fattest lady in the world” caps and eyeshades that became a habit with them know, like to read “their” papers. |will be on hand with other unusual during their days in composing rooms. One of the liveliest spots in the home is the ‘big folk to entertain curiosity seekers Here and there you see a younger man—probably recreation room. That's where the chess, checkers, land ferris wheel and merry-go-
division is illustrated by the cases of the majority and minority leaders in the house. Both are from Massachusetts, Rep. John W. Mc- : , = Cormack, the majority leader, gets Levi .P. Moore, publicity chief, Sam Mendenhall, 2429 N. Dearborn st. and Robert Lee Bowers, |; plus signs from the C. I. O. Rep.
wearing dark glasses and hobbling along with diffi- cribbage, and domino champions fight it out, and round, long absent from the fair 23 E i s j = t he stables as officials prepare for what is culty—for the home is a haven for the sick as well where the pool sharks take on all comers. If you |grounds, will replace loading docks stakes Phe dust off: thn ig rue hm = hg tera Tair. pe. Co a on Turd as the aged. And you also see a few women patients, ever visit the home, watch out for these fellows. and warehouses of the war years. | Fairgrounds office. + 8
“ " - t! or residents. They'll take you to the cleaners. | Joie Chitwood, thrill and Speed- wire performers, comedy and novel- HERE IS the breakdown of fea- day, a “free” day for all who can nc uy Hie Sah ties a compl Dowell Patterson, the superintendent, is a- small, Outdoors are shuffleboard. and croquet courts, way race driver, will provide a show ty acts. It will close nightly with ture days |show No ey Nn er oe cated tables and reasoning Xe "middle-aged man from Charleston, S. C. He seems to - There is also a tennis -court, but the residents don't |Sept. 1. His “Hell on Wheels” per, | fireworks. Friday, Aug. 30—Youth activities Mola: hs 3 Covernors and pected to judge results of a Nohave two important qualifications for his job—a sense use it, Tennis is a bit vigorous for anybody qualified formance will be aimed at the The saddle Horse show will offer day, honoring boy and girl scouts, Yen's , | vember elections—as to whether the of humot. and a sympathetic heart. And. after tour- to live at he home. »Some,_ of the doctors use it many who seek death-defying. feats western events for the first time in Co legislators’ day.
| 1 ing the who?e Tavout’ and seeing how: sthoothly* every= occasionatly:- THEE EA three TesiGent Physicians Ena Oncantirs Omen. | Wednesday, Sept. 4—Educational C. I. O. and other labor forces draw
RoE tara ds A fd Witt tev the eoliseym...., _thing was operating, and how _ciean the buildings 17 on the siafr of consultants. en. ¥ ox : iL cali ane Sepa The As ATA ee a ps Sy re 3 I were, I got the impressior? that Mr. Patterson’ must" Shuffleboard is popular right new, but croquet jsn't. THAT" SAME cel and for the lists have swolies,, Iv. 8 secord of activities Say; Fit With-Faets, 8 a Thursday, Se PRIEE 2? ae 3% wi * . : . . , . will one to live with us, and, he'll w S ruthers, “Victory v - t the fair’ ‘will 1 ea i. fy 3 “Everything Is Furnished Patients fo the game" sive Bir. . and hel hs po hb Victory’ Rowe tin" Children's day at, with floats Seum in the evening added, TIapniracturers’ day and the. lasi|and lie ciate gain “i the MRS. PATTERSON, attractive and cultured, is it goes.” ; “|a_ full array of acrobatics, high and all the trappings. Sunday, Sepl. 1—War. Veterans’ day of the fair. . See. hy a be nia to ne matron of the home, Others pass away time with their hobbies—asf, Cas ies erpre erw: 1 as a qe-
feat for the C. I. O. But if the “| party balance is” maintained about as at present, the C. I. O. can claim
They have 380 patients and residents from al] over ‘craftsmanship, and just plain old whittling.
the United States and Canada. Everything is fur- There is orie thing the home doesn't have, and for REPORTER CHECKS ON DEARTH OF CAR PRODUCTION
nished to them—room, board, medical care, enter- which Supt. Patterson is thankful—a newspaper effectiveness—evenn though the fainment, clothes, barber service, Those who come Everybody probably would ‘want to be foreman of the! A | coalition of Republicans and south= because of illness stay until they are cured. or until shop, and there'd be a constant battle over how to
’ ern Democrats remains as potent they are able to resume work. ‘Patients with mental run it i in thie next congress as it was in diseases or contagious diseases in the last Stages are More about the home tomorrow. this one : Screw, Long Mfg. Co..and Sealed
: 3 . oJ] Seripps-Howard Staft Writer ’ ' ' We, The Women ¢ Aviation By Maj. Al Williams DETROIT, Aug. 20.—Tremendous Why You Can't Get a Car Power strikes. Other strikes af-
Detroit cannot find peace fecting it: are the steel and tubes di-| Shrewd Men
By CH ARLES TI Lu CEY mm . G. M. also is hit by the National |
} 3 mv: " ' i . vision of Republic Steel Corp. | DED : 1 HAVE JUST finished reading Fortune Magazine's they didn’t recognize the need for such facilities, or | The mass production wonder city Or this series could be called "Why Autos Aren't Being Pro a Detroit Harvester L D indictment of the aiglines. p they couldn't get the money to build them. lives in an almost constant indus- duced." Scripps-Howard Reporter Charles T. Lucey for the last Co. Eberhard Mig. Co. Cleveland; | egve ecisions
Do you recall that Gen. Arnold asked for 5000 oarit whi aai fact d th to production . er Products Co. | . ’ trial turmoil which is costing bil-| couple weeks has been digging up tacts around the auto p Phelps-Dodge Copper Produc , T oO err Ives
Sure, the airlines are remiss in service to the planes and was given authority to buy 55? 1 . : ens anes as / y uy 097 “3 ; : . New York, and Firestone Stee public. Their present standard comes nowhere near Where did the combat air services get their over- 1100S in money, jamming American center of Detroit. Products, Wyandotte, Mich.
what they were offering in the pre-war period. Sure, night air transport commands? From the airlines, €conomic progress, and damming a This is the first of three articles explaining why the rosy « = = By RUTH.MILLETT the airlines pulled a boner when they lowered their reaucing the transports available for vital domestic Vast flow of needed consumer goods promises of post-war auto production have not been fulfilled. | IN ADDITION to suppliers’ strikes| WEATHER BUREAU men in St,
Y fares voluntarily before they had taken delivery of !ransportation from 350 to about 70 planes. It was to waiting markets. -- _ | Chrysler had 39 strikes in its own | Louis planned a picnic and let the the airline pilots who manned the original army and | The genius that has solved count- | plants, involving 79.641 workers and [wives choose the day. Result: The
BE —— their new and larger transports. ‘ navy transports. And, when the war ended, these less assembly-line problems has, LAST WEEK Hudson managed to set frequently by management- 2904078 hours lost, from V-J day to|picnic was rained out. , Sure, they cannot handle the traffic that's trv- planes had to be completely overhauled while fac-| foundered on human relations. get 12,000 men back at work after labor strife, to build up an edginess Aug 1. Tt claims these strikes were | - Dumb, you say? Dumb, riothings ing to climb aboard. Sure, their ticket agencies are tories were to reconvert service four-engined jobs to Management and labor - leaders a nine-day idleness forced by a throughout the community anaothorized. | just cagy. on! inadequately equipped with telephones. Sure, they airline specifications. hammer away at each other with strike at the Dura Co. Toledo, sup-| Let's look at the Big Three today.| “ry 'y © A young Co. strike In| Suppose the men had picked the need new machinery for expediting the sale, issuance . {an often-bitter rancor. plying window regulators and door} Ford is currently hit by suppliers’ o.oo." ced Chrysler's Los! |day, and the picnic had been and redemption of tickets. Sure, they let passengers Industr Y Is Dynamic . The commonest newspaper head- handles, But Packard and the strikes at National Screw & Mig Angeles plant from April 18 until | rained out. wait for delayed flights without telling them the why THE RECORD of aviation as the dominant arm of line tells of the newest “strike, U.AW, were at loggerhéads over Co, Cleveland; Federal CoeAIINGS | recently for lack of wire spring winch prestige would have sufe - and wherefore of the delay. modern warfare convinced the public that air trans- yy, whether it was strike or lockout Co. Poughkeepsie; Allis Chalmers, | oc .c 204 cost 7000 cars output. | fered, and, what's worse, their wives
Before the war our airlines were offering the portation was nol: ory sale and comtorte. but. 1 THE PRODUCTION figures show that kept 8500 workers idle, plus an- | Milwaukee; Waterbury Syeel Ba A glass strike cost-1600 trucks, a never would have let them forges finest and most pleasing personal service to the pub- was their way of traveling. Hence, they swarmed WhY You haven't been getting new other 2000 workers at the Briges Co Sele Sudine isin yor propeller shaft plant strike cost the incident, The joke would have lic of any transportation system in the world. Now around the airline ticket counters. cars—Chrysler at midyear had body plant, | Bendix “Aviation, Elmira; Sealed son, 41,0kc a springs plant strike | been told for years.
it's all mixed up. Did anybody say anything about shortage of air- made 317.560 vehicles, or 528,035 _rieven hundred trim-shop work- Pr God Mikegon, wt Tong cost 3900 trucks. * mn Served War Need, line telephones? Let's see you get a telephone tor fewer than scheduled. ers at Chrysler struck to celebrate § Lo, Delrol Result, is x x =» ‘ BUT BY. shifting the responsie yervea ar Needs 1 - cut off supplies of bolts and nuts.| HUPSON was down a month in! bility to the women, the husbands
vour home. The delay in getting airplanes IO A 4 | V-J day. That forced layoff of an18 THIS confusion and lack of service a condition to the airlines? Did anyone a Yoo Setiered General Motors to Aug. 10 had | 4,00 6500 assembly line and body clutches, Bendix drives, piston rings (he spring when the Midland Steel [didn't run any risk of becoming of the airlines alone? You know very well it isn't. ease with which you can't get a new automobile? Has fewer than planned Workers, , #3q bearings "x ow» [aike in Cleveland n¥s. the Imdustry, weather ophets witsoul, Homer if It's a reflection of what is generally wrong with the anyone forgotten the waves of strikes which have Studebaker to midyear had made A war veterans’ vacation pay dis- a . | Kaiseér-Frazer, just getting produc- | their own families. entire country. What happened to the airlines when tied up the whole country? Well. those strikes 43.011 vehicles, or 91,489 behind pute hit General Motors at Pontiac BUT THAT'S not all. . Other cur- | tion rolling, lists 17 suppliers’ strikes| Many a‘ smart husband uses the
made 270,000 cars, or a million
the war broke on us? haven't speeded up air transport deliveries either, schedule, fone Jet Guitan's Xaman’s tke pent Supple Jaleo Ri RHODE | 9s of Aug. 1, Some BOING back Jo Same godge When he is sure of Did the military air arms possess an air trans- The airline industry, in all its ramifications, is Packard planned 179,800 cars from bléw.in-off. Lake Ene. oi br pat of . oy 1 eemical April.‘ Forty other K.-F. suppliers’ the right answer, He talks the portation service for carrying vitally needed muni- dynamic. It has been kicked around ever since. it last October through 1946. It has AW pospiigle Tor mulicla leather, strikes had been settled. matter over with his wife, then
i , . ia : SOME DETROIT lants have thermostats, steel castings, steering | ’ ; r , gr 4 i " tions to our far-flung fronts? Did they possess an raised its head, It survived the airmail cancellation. revised its schedule downward 11 ood labor records WE strikes and | wheel tubes. naptt ie ted gi Nobod) has shown more clearly | says: Do whatever you think best. air transport service for supplying their rapidly shift- It rose to its pre-war standard of efficiency in spite of times, and now plans 71,388 cars, or 3 d 5 S But yi " i a ubes, nap ba, SOFTER e i than Studebaker how suppliers’| That makes mamma responsible, ing combat air bases? Certainly they didn't. Either /ernmen : SlowQowns Imre. bu Shere sulating paper, foundry supplies, ! strikes murder production. Of this,| It things don’t turn out right, there : : 3 the government, enyish plants, Jurge and small, be- yes and upholstery leather, more tomorrow, |is no shadow c4st on papa's wisdom
BE er eee | OF jUAgMeENt.
a production loss of 108,412 vehicles. n ” " HUDSON is making 720 cars a
My Day By Eleanor Roosevelt “ts wn wneue win an. THE, DOCTOR SAYS: Fever, Pains, Infantile Paralysis Signals or mot that was the thing to do
620 cars, but exact figures are un- | but I didn't like to interfere,” papa
available can say, in the tone of a dis NEW YORK, Monday.—1 have had three letters My correspondent says: “I gather from the local Management people blame ‘trikes nset O O 10 S ua u en | interested bystander. about previous columns which require an explana- newspaper accounts that the trouble arose when those in suppliers’ plants for the current | ® 8» : tion. Two of them dealt with a column in which 1 IP control of the general election, while under the production lag, plus earlier basic By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. stance, but diarrhea is not so com- | | “IT 18 OFTEN ‘claimed that
: Ww protection of several armed deputies of the sheriff, 'sirikes in steel. coal. rails and IN BULBAR poliomyelitis the| American men let their wives make said that we sometimes let our prejudices prevent us yn, was a candidate in this election, carried the copper. They acknowledge that| INFANTILE paralysis (without | BOP: ae Deck aq Spine are ginal cord is infected near its at-|most family decisions. That may be rom discovering our own artistic talent. I men- ballot boxes to the court house, where it was reported | materials and manpower shortages Paralysis) is difficult to recognize,| ay Cry Outi hment to the brain. with re.|!¥ue but it isn't because papa is
t'oned that it was extremely dificult for a Negro that they were about to switch ballots before the have cut output. for it closely resembles other dis- ison his head is moved. |sulting paralysis of the throat and|en" pecked or indulgent. singer to get onto the operatic stage in this country. count, But the United Auto Workers eases. ¥ hyselans often recommend : thest uiuscles. The first sigh ‘of It is because papa is cagy enough ly 2.29 These remarks were made in connection with the “These young veterans had insisted that the votes union insists that current strikes | The virus enters the body by way| a pn ure as ® means o this may be the retwn Vnough to know that, if you can get some= debut in the opera house in Mexico City of one of our would be counted as cast. It was anticipated that! could not account for the industry ’s| {of nose and throat and causes awing off a sample of spina body else to make a decision, you
the nose of water which the patient , talented Negro women. Ella Belle Davis, who is an effort would be made to exchange ballots in the! faltering pace. Its leadegs say the | generalized infection; in a small fiyid Jor ezammaiion A he lap- has attempted to swallow, due to} ou} have to assume responsinility
a now touring South America. : boxes for those already marked And prepared to be materials shortage is th ¢ factor number of cases, permanent dam- Jaton. i a he 1p | failure of the palate to close off for it, if it happens to be the wrong My correspondents remind me that Maestro Al- substituted for the genuine ballots. and charge management with try-'age to the spinal cord results. u n Rn lie pare ysis # nfec- the nose: | one, a fredo- Salmaggl, during the years of opera production 5 5 po fin dwil ling to put them on the spot. The onset of infantile paralysis oF 1 e Spina ow gS Dr ard an| A change to a nasal quality to In the army It was buck= in the New York Hippodrome from 1933 to 1938, intro- allots round mn Jai 2 nu lis usually sudden, with fever, aching| in th pr ber of cell i [the voice is also a common indie passing. A, home it if called duced three Negro singers: Caterina Jarboro, Minta “AS SOON AS these armed deputies appeared in| IT WOULD take an army of ac- pains, headaches, sore throat, and | increase in the number of cells in| cation of bulbar poliomyelitis. leaving it up to the little woman Cato and Jules Bledsoe, More recently, at the Brook- Athens In possession of the ballot boxes, these vet- countants to determine where lies vomiting lasting a few hours or the fluid. Mild inlqnyie Paralysis, The virus of infantile paralysis or "lating Me ittle. woman; have lyn academy of music, where the maestro has been erans took steps to resist. precise truth here. But whether several, days. may be present even though the her way.’
. spinal fluid is normal. injures the spinal cord, which. in| ‘producing operas for” the past 10 years, Edith Dixon “The News-Sentinel carried a picture of a pile of you put in with labor or manage- | yn 8 Idrn prevents the passage of nerve! Sewell and Paul A. Smith have both appeared. I ballots found in the jail after the officers surrendered, ment, records available for all to PARENTS may notice that the i impulses to the muscles. (CONCRETE BALLOON . think that Dr. Salmaggl deserves our gratitude for that it was alleged *had been prepared for switching sce shaw how costly and damaging child victim dislikes to be held; IN THE exceptional case of In-{ "po io'o "tendency for the cord WILL BE NEW HOME what he has done, but I still think that my column into the boxes. The timely resistance of the veterans have been the work stoppages re- probably because of sore muscles, fantile paralysis, that which goes to iniprve, as many of the nerve
| was not far from being correct! apparently thwarted an attempt to switch ballots. sultitfg from decisions of either! and this may be the only sign On to paralysis,” the onset may be . : | SOUTH PASADENA, Cal. (U P.)s e This . £ y 2s The sheriff and others involved fle the county, Order aoe or union. bosses, or which suggests that the mild ill-| either mild or severe, but after the Joelle Laugh Juste Bre ne —With realty values spiraling, Gor« Ma k Discusses Tennessee Voting was promptly restored. The sheriff and others then both, to slug it out. ness from which he seems to be third or fourth day of the illness | riot be replaced, and’ this fact ac- | don H Clough has found an answer, an THE SECOND thing that has been brought to my resigned from the offices, and the election commis- Eighteen suppliers’ strikes are suffering. is actually infantile the child, instead of improving, ~~ Ci "ie failure of power. to} It's a specially adapted balloon Phone attention is that the recent political incident in Me- sioners certified the election of the G. I. ticket. . . . badgering Ford today. - On June 1,| paralysis. | gets worse. return Vo. certain muscles. in which Clough will live after ry Minn county, Tennessee, was not connected with the “If every citizen in McMinn county, or any ‘other there were 141 strikes in General Children with infantile paralysis, Some patients while apparently .. the concrete “shell has been ape Your ., primary elections. My correspondent explains that place whera boss rule has apparently dominated local Motors suppliers’ plants. On Aug. are restless, fall asleep and awake |convalescing find that they are un-| QUESTION: I. am developing plied. Anchored to foundation, ’ three elections were held in Tennessee on the same politics, voted instead of staying at home on election 1, there were 50. Some critical ones | suddenly, and become -fussy when able to move an arm or a leg be- "0 my neck and back. What the balloon is inflated and then rder! day. Both the Democratic primary and the Republic- day, no aspirant for public office would resort to remain today, Chr der Suppliers’ | | disturbed. The mouth temperature cause of muscle weakness, while in causes them, and what should I do sprayed with “concrete with ma an primary took place that day to nominate candi- unlawful means to stay in power and the occasion plants have been struck 40 times,'iises to a point between 99 and others paralysis develops early in to get rid of them? chin Ls dates for state and national officers, At the same, would never arise for the public to condone violence some of them still going on. 1100 degrees in the average: case. - the. illness: y The interior, destgned to suit the . : time a general election was held for county offices. to restore government to the people.” Strikes end each week, new ones x x Pain and sensitivity in the limbs, ANSWER: Common warts are owner's taste, contains. three bedThe McMinn county incident involved only the con- This letter comes from Tennessee and; I think, begin. It ‘is like mending a hole] VOMITING and headache are back, and chest are. observed in| due to a virus. Your physician can rooms, living room, kitchen And test over county offices in the general election, emphasizes all I meant to'say. ~~ - and. having twd new ones show up. present in practically ‘every in- the infantile-paralysis victim, _ treat them for you. hil . bathroom. 3s 2% : x lege ty pies : ” : . pe : 2 a ate eae Sani Ma = ok alt Le nat ! iu A .
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