Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 November 1946 — Page 15
19, 1046
been now,
ation
BR —,
Inside Indianapolis
A PILOT OF an airplane is in command of his ‘Plane and crew. A captain of a ship is the big boss. But who has charge of a railroad train—the engineer? No. The man who is responsible for the equipment, freight, and crew, rides on the tail end of a train , in the cdboose. He is called the conductor. This infor mation may be disillusioning (it was to me) to many persons who have wanted to be engineers at one time or another in their lives, An 85-car drag freight train was made up for Bellefontaine, O, at the Brightwood railroad yards. The New York Central system's train carried coal, scrap iron, lumber, stone, \ and empties for the steel mills. A drag freight is the slowest thing on a railroad and must make way for practically everything that moves. The drag freight gives right-of-way to manifest trains carrying perishables and passenger trains. Instructions to pull to a siding may come at any moment on ‘the trip to Bellefontaine. James Anderson of Bellefontaine,
conductor of the train, was notified here in the city *
ari hour before “call time,” which in this case was 2:30 p. m. He also received the names of the other crew members. He was to report to caboose 17630. On this trip there would be an extra brakeman, required by Indiana law. where the number of cars in. a train exceeds 70. Before Mr. Anderson and his crew reported to their train, the yardmaster assigned two car inspectors to check €very piece of equipment for defects, and oil all rolling parts. They notify the yardmaster of any defects immediately. If they can't fix them before the train is to pull out, the car is switched to a siding.
Caboose: A Rough-Riding ‘Pullman’
THE CREW OF CABOOSE 17630 reported promptly. Mr. Anderson was joined by Flagman Hubert (Buck) Weaver, 2424 La Salle st., and Brakeman James Wilson, 2304 Stewart ave. The head brakeman rides in the cab of the engine with the engineer and fireman. The men changed into their working clothes. All the equipment on the caboose was checked. Lanterns, fusees, torpedoes, spare parts, oil, and waste materials for the wheels must be carried for any emergency. In case of an accident, Mr. Anderson notifies his superiors, Trainmasters Lee E. Pangburn, 703 N. Denny st., or Frank B. Gill 5226 English ave,, who will decide” what disposition should be made, call out wrecking crews if necessary, and keep traffic from getting snarled up on the lines. They in turn will notify Thomas W. English, 6039 Evanston ave., superintendent of the Indiana division, who has the final word in decisions. The superintendent and the trainmasters know the men on they road personally. They know the duties and responsibilities intimately because in each case they have come up from the bottom. Mr. Pangburn began his career 30 years ago as call boy for N. Y. C. and worked up through all the positions including brakeman, flagman and conductor. Mr. Anderson, in his 18 years of railroading, has not been involved in an accident. The caboose is a rough-riding “Pullman” complete with icebox, bunks, stove, tables, lamps, wash basin, drinking water, and an observation tower—*“cupola.” When the train is in motion the conductor and flagman watch the entire train from this observation post.
Conductor Is the Boss
BEFORE THE LOCOMOTIVE comes out of the roundhouse, the caboose crew again checks the train. The flagman checks what the inspectors have done. The brakeman loosens hand brakes which have been set when the train was made up. The conductor goes to the yard office and picks up 85 bills, one for each
Mi Losi WASHINGTON, Nov, 19.—~John L. Lewis seems to be one of those fellows who can’t read the writing in the soot om the wall Every time he wangles his boys another hoist in wages, the price of coal goes up and these things happen: More householders put in oil burners, more railroads buy Diesel engines, more factories convert their boilers to natural gas, and more scientists concoct more schemes to put coal miners out of work.df evebrows and his members think I'm kidding, let them ponder a few current developments: The Alabama Power Co. has a coal mine at Gorgas, Ala., into which it shortly will pump ‘air and oxygen and then, scientifically, drop in & match. The coal will get hot, exuding gas, which will whoosh out of a pipe in the ground without the assistance of a single member of the United Mine Workers of America. Any comment, John L? At Louisiana, Mo., meantime, the bureau of mines has in operation a $17,500,000 plant (it used to be a war factory) for the production of fuel oil from shale. There are untold billions of tons of this greasy rock underground; if the Missouri plant proves economical, still more of eyebrows’ boys will be looking for other jobs. ~
Everybody's Sore HERE IN Washington tomorrow the house surplus property investigating committee will attempt to discover why the government still hasn't sold its big ‘and little inch pipelines. ‘These are the pipes— one is two feet across and the other 20 inches—
S IF THE weatherman obliges with clear skies next Baturday morning you will be able to see a partial eclipse of the sun. The eclipse will be visible throughout the United States and Canada but its extent will vary with the locality. Dr. J. J. Nassau, director of the Warner & Swasey observatory of Case School of Applied Science, points out that the maximum phase will be seen in northeastern Canada where the eclipse will bé 78 per cent. Orono, Me., gets the best view in America with 64 per cent of the sun hidden behind the moon. Augusta is a close second with 63 per cent. The eclipse will be less as you move westward and southward. It will be 56 per cent in New York, 50 per cent in both Pittsburgh and Cleveland, 46. per cent in Columbus, O., and 44 per cent in Cincinnati. The exact time of the eclipse will also vary slightly with the locality. In Cleveland the eclipse will begin at 10:42 a. m., Eastern Standard Time, reach its maximum at 12:10 p. m, and end at 1.42 p. m. But in New York it will run about 10 minutes later,
Use Watch as Aid
AS YOU face the sun, the shadow of the moon will move across the face of the sun from right to left, Dr. Nassau says. You can visualize the eclipse now with the aid of your watch.
My Day
NEW YORK, Monday.—For several days now, the chief headlines in the papers have been held by John L. Lewis and his threats against the goyernment. Curiously enough, what he says rarely stresses the one point which I think is important-—namely, that the conditions under which the miners today are working may need to be changed. : There was a time, a, long while ago, when I thought Mr. Lewis one of the best labor leaders in the country. I thought he -cared about the men in the mines. I kuow that the reason he has kept his hold over them is because they thought he cared,
Rulers of an Empire THE MINERS still trust Mr. Lewis, and the longdistant past would justify that trust. But a nearer view makes one begin to wonder. For a long time now, it has seemed that John L. Lewis and those immediately around him feel that they rule an empire. The people who make up that empire seem to be there mainly to serve a lust for power which seems practically insatiable. No one could read Mr. Lewis' last letter without being struck by its arrogance, ‘ x A strike in the coal mines will mean the stopping
‘a
Ay
The Indianapolis SECOND SECTION TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1946 PASTOR NEVER FORGOT CHILDHOOD TRAINING—
Realizes Church School Dream
Last of Two Articles
+
By Ed Sovola
imes
Labor
C. 1. O. 'Paper Purge' Had Reds’ Consent
By FRED W. PERKINS Soripps-Howard Staff Writer ATLANTIC CITY, Nov. 19.-On paper the C. I. O, in natfbnal con vention here, is purged of Commu~ nist influence. But many of the 560 delegates doubt that the Moscow followers have been removed from influence. The convention adopted & resolution which said: “We resent and reject efforts of the Communist party or other political parties and their adherents to interfere in the affairs of the C. 1. O. However, President Philip Murray, who fathered the declaration, oute lined no action toward removal of known Communists and fellow trav elers from key positions in some of the C. I. O.'s 40 unions.
By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Times Church Editor THE REV. RAYMOND G. HOEKSTRA has never forgotten the colorful Bible stories he heard nor the religious training he received as a child in a Christian day school in Michigan. As a result, when he became pastor of the Indianapolis Calvary Tabernacle of 45 members, he envisioned a new church with adjoining Christian day school. The broad, two-story building of cinder block covered with Indiana limestone at 902 Fletcher ave. has materialized from that hope of 10
+ + +» Conductor James Anderson gives the engineer the highball sign.
“Let's roll”
car of the train., which show the number of the car, the contents, weight, and destination, primary and, years ago. The church membership ultimate. ‘Each bill will be in order, beginning with has increased to 600 and 60 pupils the first car to the last. About 15 minutes before attend the school. “highball” time, (conductor's signal to the engineer * wn» to pull out) the locomotive chugs out of the round-| pTHE GRASSY plaza has been house. This is the only time the engineer is in charge of his locomotive. The minute he couples on to the Paced With ‘a concreis pavement rest of the train it becomes a part of that train and|1n the cemter of Fletcher ave. makthe conductor is the boss. Standing in front of the ing it a wide and imposing highyard office, Mr. Anderson gets the reports from Mr. way, An incessant stream of city Wilson and Mr. Weaver about the condition of the trafic flows past the combined train. Mr. Anderson glays at the yard office. The others go back to To In the meantime 950 church and sshool: The church of pounds of air has been pumped into every freight the Pentecostal 3elominaion as car in the train from the locomotive. The train|OWpleted in 1940 and the schoo cannot move out of the yard if one car's brakes are “2° added the past Sr 10 fake defective. Everything is in readiness. Mr. Ander- ® Spite ue Wiagrale a TO li son gives the engineer the highball. The locomotive Wi I religions ne begins to move slowly. As'it passes Mr. Anderson Ni ih ; w Jooks at.every car. The caboose finally rolls up and, struction for children that he sent; THE PHYSICAL welfare of the he swings on. Here he checks the two lanterns on Ms boi gi Bsa Whe Ewimads Grildien was kept in mind in the each“side of the caboose which mean that the train “t cpap a ne . | provision of large, airy, well-lighted is complete. If these are-not put up the train would ‘"& O° 1's © Soy a ents diq|TO0mS, space for a wood shop, be incomplete. As the train heads for Bellefontaine, | So many tabernacle paren weal likewise that Emmaus was over- Crafts room and print shop. Hot
t for| : there are a great number of reports to fill ou crowded. Thus the building of the lunches are served daily.
the main office. Through these reports, the railroad | 0 knows exactly where each piece of rolling stock is ay Tabernacle day school became al-| A playground for small children
all times. There are no lost cars, in motion or on| sidings. The flagman and conductor make out reports | su before they take their stations in the cupola. Should, IT INCLUDES grades one through the train for any reason stop during the trip, it is the taught by Mr. and Mrs. duty of the flagman to go a sufficient distance away Dwane Ripley, instructors of PT ih of the premises and the from the caboose to insure its safety and warn fol- ; ge teachers adjoin the school proplowing trains. He carries fusees, torpedoes, a lantern experience. Each day begins with at night, and a red flag during the day. Every man devotions directed by the teachers in caboose 17630 was asked if he wouldn't rather be and closes at 3:15 p. m. For de-| an engineer riding in the cab of a locomotive. Three yotions, the Bible is read; scriptural | 1s conducted in accordance with re-
separate answers can be boiled down to one word— memory texts are given; hymns are| quirements of the state. Financial
n » » MR. MURRAY'S answer to that was: “This is a statement of policy and designed to chart a course for the overall conduct of our international unions and affiliates . . , but as the president of this organization I should Uke it to be definitely understood that I am opposed to any form of repression. Mr. Murray skilfully prevented debate on the anti-Communist resolution. That might have split the C. I. O. He announced that a {rising vote would be called for in thanks to the .committee—three right-wingers and three leftists— which had prepared the dooument. . . . “= KNOWN COMMUNIST sympa< thizers apparently were not” too much displeased by the resolution. They seemed to have feared something more sweeping: A survey by thie Research Institute of America concludes that “Communists don't control the national C. I. O., but left-wing unions |do” carry an impressive minority Abloc of votes on the executive board.
Mrs. Dwane Ripley gathers small groups of the children about her for that “personal touch” in the Calvary Tabernacle day school. o r
em
{is maintained in the rear of the § { 4 {building and a baseball diamond is
across the street. Quarters for the seven
» . . "This survey lists: Seven right-wing C. I. 0. unions: American Newspaper Guild; Textile Workefs union, United Retail, Wholesale and Department Store
erty. The secular part of the curriculum
“NO.” 1 still think it would be more fun to be ah sung and the Lord's prayer is said{support comes from tuition fees, Employees; United Rubber, Cork, engineer. ~ collectively. gifts and endowments. Children Linoleum and Plastic Workers; A special reading course in Bible who wish to enroll but whose par- United Transport Service Em-
ployees; United Steel Workers; Utility Workers union. Three disputed unions: Play- { things, Jewelry and Novelty Work-
. By Frederick C. Othman {these formal features are only pari ne child away from the tabernacle, THE SOUTH SIDE Adventist school, the Rev. Mr. Hoekstra sald: igs, Jeweiky and Noveliy Works Tor Stone and Allied Product
which pumped oil during the war from Texas to| | B a al School at 1233 Latirel st. includes Protestantism is notorious | ers:
: ; {of the spiritual training Tabernacle | school. Philadelphia and New York. They were considered school attempts to give the chil-| Indianapolis Protestant parochi v 71 Tha the inadequacy of its educational! workers ren. Ischools include three Seventh Day the same grades and 21 pupils. system. The average Roman Cath- | | Os righ inn uo
a bargain at $161,000,000; without them we might even | d have lost the war. | : | ron ; iti : ; a ] : BY Es fe | It calls its brand of teaching— Adventist schools in addition to Capitol Avenue Adventist school, glic church in America gives its Now ‘everyby's gore Wt everybody. Mest of “Christ-centered education”—which those conducted” by the Calvary 2160 N: Capitol ave, has 60 pupils children 300 hours of ‘religious in-| Glass, Co le and Silica ng people say they can hau! fuel for furnaces cheaper link od . > Tabe d th ‘ { Synod 5 Workers; National Marine Engi- : a : s religion to every day living. | Tabernacle an e Missouri Synod and 10 grades. struction annually, The Jewish % in tankers. Some government experts think the big . i | . } . i : ’ neers Beneficial association; Paper little inch lines should be used exclusively for oil {No opportunity is lost to point out Lutherans. One Seventh Day Ad-{" In discussing the need for daily synagog gives 300 hours. But the | workers Organizing committee and litte Inch lines s . | God's many gifts to man and his all- | ventist school is located at 2301°N. religious education in Indianapolis average. Protestant church gives its| Three “problem” unions (basically right-wing but occasionally
Two Qffers Made | pervading kindness, Mrs. Ripley Alabama st, and has an enrollment and America, which caused him to children a maximum of 25 teaching : | voting left): Amalgamated Clothing
iv th said. lof 37 pupils and 10 grades. {promote the building of his own, hours each year. TWO CONCERNS have made offers to buy the eA . _ ! : big’ inch pipe for hauling Texas’ natural gas to the : | Woes, Manns nd Shipbulldine East. Big Inch Gas, Inc., which wants jo pay.3 $40,- L Workers. 000,000 for the line, says it can haul 275,000,000 aeta re 0 a war é r pS 6% " = : cubic feet of gas a day and sell it all to electric > pike yiobaily lofewing ustanst power plants in New Jersey, New York, Pennsyl- t ; Workers LY ean vinien: vania, Delaware and Maryland. | Dr. Carlton J. H. Hayes today tous diplomatic mission of the war: |attack Britain. If she were allowed the defeat of the axis, you patient- ited G Cok d Ch mical The power companies now use coal. They're received the Laetare medal for TO neutralize Spain, to change a to enter Spain, the North African (y went about this tremendous OB We cs ur Thine Cl a tired of strikes and rising prices, and according t0 1946 from Notre Dame university | hostile hon-belligerency into a be- |campaign, and the invasion of Nor- and by kindness, by firmness, by Workers: United Shoe Workers. Big Inch Gas, Inc, would be delighted to tell John nevolent neutrality. mandy which brought the war to an . ! Sixteen left-wing unions: Am L. to go jump in a coal mine. ; Fh “You brought to the work all the end in the west, might have had a| Pointing out the advantages iF ten ® _— ’ ns: hor Br That brings us finally to the first atomic power club in New York City. resources of your historical studies; very different ending, or at least a Spain of holding off Germany, you Food Toba os ultaral po plant in the world, about to be erected by the gov-| The announcemient that the a mind skilled in political thinking,| very long delayed ending. {won through, kept the American |, + 10 080, Agricultural " k : Cons S { , ; " ed Workers; Inland Boatmen’s ernment and associated industrialists near Schenec- award was t6 be made to Dr. 8nd an honesty and firmness of| “You were pitted, sir, against the|!00Ps’ landing in Africa free TOM | ion of the Pacific: Federation of tady, N. Y. When you split an atom it gets hot.|p wo intern oiior one pro his- | Character that did not take long to|shrewdest minds of Germany, and Attack on their flank and rear, made = © “po 0 00d oi and Build a boiler around the hot pieces and you get; . a {impress the men with whom you|yet in spite of this, and in spite|POSSible the British success at El rechnicians: o_o rnational Longsteam. That's the principle, and while it is expensive, | !0Tian, author and diplomat, Was |e; gea], of sniping at home by newspapers Alamein, and eventaully the in.| ee hs, and i a reRoNseman? the scientists say it can’t help but get cheaper. |made earlier this year on Laetare| “Germany had reached the Pyre-|and radio columnists who seemed to Y25ion of Normandy, a Maes: and mene When and if the cost of oil and gas and atomic Sunday in mid-Lent. The univer- nees and was ready and anxious to put the destruction of Spain above| When you had accomplished Py
{ ‘ lers; Pur and Leather Workers; steam balances with that of coal-heated steam (and |; {that, like “a modern Cincinnatus, © : | sity bestowed the medal upon him | with the modesty of greatness, you | Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers;
every miners’ strike brings the day closer), we can| ‘ ignore John L. He'll be just another fat man dining! asked to return home to your class| Wood Workers of America; Marine
{stories and the making of posters ents cannot pay the tuition are : with sacred themes add to the re-|sponsored by other church mem- Pwane Rigi” .* | bgious knowledge of the pupils. But bers. Thus a lack of money keeps wane TMpey
i
«Mrs. Dwane Ripley
in ceremonies at the Sogapoiitan |
because of his diplomatic service |
New Spotlight Demonstrated
i i \for the United States in Spain | room and take up where you had|C00ks and Stewards association; in solitary splendor at the Carlton hotel. | ne or | | a etre. 7. ir | Unite d Public Workers of America: The citation by Notre Dame | By Science Service | ‘The light was developed from the is a lesson in patriotism—a radiant |Iransport Workers union; United
| CHICAGO, Nov..19.—With a ray, landing lights of wartime aircraft
four times more powerful than a and has a parasol-shaped filament ! sealed beam automobile headlamp, shield to eliminate stray light and study and emulate in this post-war Metal Workers; United Furniture a new sealed beam spotlight for| prevent a blinding glare. The lamp, world to much given to the Workers; United Office and Procars and boats was demonstrated built by Westinghouse engineers, furtherance of selfish ends and per- fessional Workers. | here today. | has a half-mile range. ‘sonal greed.” = We, the Wome
| » “| Urban Wives
Always Carry Your Medical Record] Press Agents
For Husbands of the sun on June 29. By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. | . An allergic woman who selected | THE TWO products were 50 | WAS recognized by one of the nurses, Sixth D 8 EVERYONE should carry some her breakfast cereal with care be- | similar in taste that the allergy|who gave her adrenalin to relieve By RUTH MILLETT wth on Lec. {means of identification on his per- cause of known susceptibility to} Pent Ri the new cereal Widhouyy the Spoil of poe Drang RISE UP, city wives and defend A SIXTH eclipse will occur on Dec. 8. It will be a son. so that in case of illness or realizing what she was doing. Short-| If it had not been for the nurse, | 1 i i isi or oh certaln grains had her order||y afterward she was ble to|this patient would have died, for YOUrseives. total eclipse on the moon but it will be visible only in accident his relatives can be no-| cheb aa’ a3 Ae y ! 8S unable “io thls pall hy Wb md ‘boy! A woman editor of a farm magthe Pacific ocean. | tified. [switched by a waitress who did no reathe and lost consciousness. {she carried no information about azine has come out with thé fat~
Despite the fact that half of the sun, more or less,| In addition, those who suffer uth Hii Spe change would make any| At the receiving room of the hos- her allergy, on ee petsan, footed statement that a farm wife convul- .
B D id Di ‘reads in part: patriotism, an unselfish patriotism, | Electrical, Radio and Machine y aol tet “Called by the President of the which all Americans might well | Workers; Farm Equipment and | United States from the quiet of Imagine for the moment that your watch is the your academic pursuits, you (Dr. sun. The first bite out of the sun will occur at the |Hayes) were given perhaps the figure “1”, Gradually the dark area will grow until{most delicate and the most momenit extends from 1 o'clock to 9 o'clock, the curved rim|(————————— > Pr —_—" 2 : . . » » of the moon swe¢ping a little below the center of THE DOCTOR SAYS: Identification Important in Case of Accident— Dr. Nassau points out that while this is the first eclipse of 1946 visible in the United States, it is the fifth eclipse of the year. There was a partial eclipse of the sun on Jan. 3, another on May 30, a total eclipse of the moon on June 14, and a partial eclipse
| pital to which she was taken, she
will be obscured at any given locality on Nov. 23 such diseases as diabetes, when the eclipse reaches its maximum, there will be no | sions, allergy, and blood disorders noticeable darkening of the day. It is only when an|should carry with them special de-
eclipse approaches totality that the day begins to grow dim. A word of warning should be given to all citizens who plan to observe the eclipse on Nov. 23. Do not under any circumstances attempt to look at the sun with the unprotected eye. There is grave danger of doing permanent damage to the eyes. Even permanent blindness might result.
By Eleanor Roosevelt
sary to the rebuilding of the economy in our own country and in the world.
What Ts Purpose? ~~]
I CANNOT HELP wondering which of two things Mr. Lewis is trying to achieve. ONE: Is he expecting recognition from the Republican party if they should win in 1948? Has he entered into an understanding with the owners of the mines whereby, if he breaks the contract with the government, he hopes to force the return of the mines to the owners and then to make a better contract with the owners? This would make him a great figure in labor. The Republican party and the industrial leaders might feel that they had some one whom they could safely place in power, because he would be amenable to their interests in the long run, The only other alternative, of course, is that he
‘does not realize haw much resentment. a strike in
an essential industry is going to cause on top of the other strikes which have only just been settled. I would be sympathetic with a gplea for better conditions, but I cannot believing that, at the moment, we have to bordinate ourselves to the paramount interest of getting our economy running full blast. How can the people. of devastated coun-
: ‘of hundreds of industries—industries which are neces- : tries hope'to succeed in this if we con't succeed?
Wi a . ull
2 5 s i » a Ho * ~ g Si
!scriptions of their difficulty, in- | cluding a record of the medicines or | injections they are taking, » ” n DURING a hot spell in which excessively high temperatures resulted {in a large number of cases of heat |prosusation and heat stroke in a northern city, hundreds of victims were taken to hospitals without any identifying papers on their persons. Most of them had left home that morning feeling fairly well, and {since they did not anticipate be- | coming ill, they did not prepare for that eventuality. { As a result, the patients had to be revived before their relatives could be notified.
” » y VICTIMS of diabetes may become unconscious in public from an overdose of insulin or from neglect of their diabetes threugh failure to| take enough insulin or to diet. Diabetics should carry in their pockets a complete description of | their disease and a notation as to] the amount of insulin.they are taking and the time and amount of| their last injection. To this information should be added instructions as to what should | be done for the patient if he is] found in an unconscious state. |
u n " MOST ALLERGIC persons know the foods or other substances which cause their trouble, but sometimes
without their knowledge. i
a distressing food is given to them,
SILLY NOTIONS
By Palumbo ii person a card stating the nature]
1-19
5
“HELLO! POLICE P SOMEONE 15 TRYING TO BREAK INTO MY APARTMENT /*
%
EVERY PATIENT who with convulsions should carry =n
suffers
of his disease, the treatment he is| taking, and general directions as] to what should be done for him should he lose consciousness in public. When a person is having a convulsion, it is advisable to put a piece of wood (a clothes-pin, for example) between his. teeth, to prevent him from biting his tongue. » > ~ THE PATIENT should not be restrained, and when the convulsion is over he should be allowed to rest in a quiet place until he is ready to go on-or until someone calls for him. During the war there was a move to compel every person to carry with him a record of his blood group. This is another wisé precaution, especially for persons suffering with disorders of the blood in which hemorrhage might constitute a serious problem. kr 8» QUESTION: 1 have been pregnant for eight months. During the last two months my skin has become very itchy, Is it natural for this condition to develop?
ANSWER: Itching is common in pregnant women. Many physicians recommend drinking more water,
is worth more money than is a glamorized city housewife. She says economists have done a research job on the farm wife and
[found that she is worth $69,000 to
her husband in her lifetime.
» » . THE LADY editor claims city wives are worth considerably less. But she does add the afterthought that nobody has yet bothered to figure out just how much a city wife is worth to her lord and master. There is where you step in swinging, city wives. There is where the champion of the farm wives left herself wide open. - “ » TO BEGIN with, the eity wife is supposed to be subtle about her help.. She i§ supposed to help her husband without letting anyone realize that she is helping him. She never mentions it when it just happens that the people she finds congenial enough to entertain are the “right people” so far as her husband is. concerned. ” » .- THE SAME thing is true of the house. The city wife, knowing the value of a “good front,” gets pretty clever in using a sewing machine and a paint brush to create a charming setting for herself and her family-—even though she may have little to start with, i The farmer's wife may be her
| bathing more frequently or apply- | ing a solution of | soda to the affected areas. The con{dition will disappear after the birth
) of your child.
“
jicarbonate of
husband's help-meet in the oldfashioned sense of the word, i But the city wife is her huss band’s press agent—a job that is no small potatoes in these fimes. By r E ais
»
