Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1950 — Page 13

Vi

She Never Touched Snuff

£ i the new “girl” helping Walter Dolmetch, tobac1 ;

lower lip of Shosmeewaraki., . - . As near as anyone can make out from the writing on ancient pieces of brown and white buck‘skins, Shosmeewaraki was born near the village of Hartford, Conn., many, many moons ago. You just figure out how many moons have passed since Apr. 12, 1830 and you'll see what I mean.

1 that today because Shosmeewaraki also is stout as an oak. Solid. Oh, there are a few .. wrinkles here and there, but nothing a few strokes

of an ax and paint won't cure.

other Indian maidens of the time. She went to work for a celebrated tobacco firm. The work wasn’t hard, the hours weren't long, only 24, but * where else could a girl take home 10 tobacco leaves every Saturday? The years rolled by swiftly. Before the paint on her face began to chip, the sales manager sent Shosmeewaraki on the road. Everywhere the princess went, tobacco sales zoomed. And they : 5 continued to zoom for nigh on—suh, nigh on and asamp: cee Jr imi £8 Bein nigh on. oR SA ESA PAA A A A AT . : Things changed in the tobacco business. People began to quit rolling their own. Women learned to puff on corn silk and soon tobacco auctioneers were working overtime to pay consistently more for better tobaccos. Poor Shosmeewaraki was out in the cold. She had served well and long, but now the Long Trail beckoned. Still clutching the three tobacco leaves > cs she received as severance pay and the rose she plucked from the personnel manager's lapel, Shosmeewaraki hit the road. - ——For-awhile she stayed with friends in Danbury, Conn. Her days were happy again. All she had to do was adorn the front lawn, milk 1000 head of cows, do the plow'sg and planting and harvesting, and pack the boss’ pipe with burley every evening. A better offer in Guilford, Cann., was snapped

sii

. For Mercenaries

CEE ge 5

or

“othe Golden -

THERE ARE many conflicting stories about

—eonist.- Some peddlers of. Indian lore will try to make you believe Shosmeewaraki (In English it ° means Round-Firm-Always Milder) chewed snuff. That's not true. Snuff has never touched the

A

Tobacco team - . . Tobacconist Walter Dol metch gets a helper. He's happy, at least,

at by Shosmeewarakl. From miles around, Con- or ination.” necticutt Yankees came to see the Indian princess, \

who. stood through bitter. cold. ] . rh Sr i An ie

One day a fancy Dan from San Francisco made| o¢.1ivi f t a big play to get Shosmeewaraki to go-with him St hiving ho i Gate. “Fahicy Dan > wis “scorned. an ow Re oo G Rha kaa ds

he kidnaped Shosmeewaraki. CAll trace of her was

lost. There wasn't a nicotine stain to work on.

Then, just as mysteriously as she disappeared,|tomobiles and trucks. a coming and going. He first said Shosm Sewaranl sae back. The years had left Upon the Bureau of Labor Sta- % eir mark. Only her figure didn't change. She|tisti e f a 1.5 per Wis still the plump girl she had always been. Sts apmounceitint of 8 pe ere were wrinkles, a few fractures and her cloak needed. pressing, but she didn’t complain. SUEing the 30 4ays ended July 25, She had a job at L. Btrauss & Co. Life was be-

ginning all over again at 120.

Feeney paid his respects. He didn’t buy anythin

+. +» just in the department to say hello and use!

the phone.

A Physical by Tree Surgeon

SOME FINE DAY a tree surgeon is going to'Mr. Reuther said. “It means that| E\gin, Joliet & Eastern Railway which moves materia

visit Shosmeewaraki and give her a complete/the already inadequate living 36,000 workers in their Chicago-Gary area plants, x White House prestige Srthe samhysical. ’ tandards of millions of American ww : | paign. Those who see him y 3 sion], . oe Sheltered Je she : Pods now, ilies. not protected by con Tay W Is Iran Nex{?— (ay he hasn't changed; that he hosmeewaraki is good for another 120 years. Mr. ° ther EPI RANEY as fe a 2 1still_believes UMT Dolmeteh thinks he Is, too, tracts such as the GM Cash ; stil ves is—our—best

I used to know a girl like Shosmeewaraki . . quiet, reserved, never disagreeable and possessin, a wooden head. Nice,

“Konka hootchy wah chickyboom.” (This, a0 an hourly wage of $1.72 be-

means: ‘Put your pipe away, Buster.)

By Robert C. Ruark povees wil receive the increase. By DAN KIDNEY Grace Left to Avert a Political Crisis

-Mr. Dolmetch-is-easy to-work for-—Atready the controls be established immedi-| tobacco princess has made many friends. Mayor ately to halt “inflationary price!

i opr a ge NR STE Tr

"WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1050 ” FIG BD

Indianapolis

- | Workers sooth Chicago Steel Workers Idled by Rail Strike Two Key Men ent Get Five-Cent | 5d Holding Back Pay Increases | UMT Action

Boost Is Based - Truman's Tactics | Confuse Friends "Rise of 1.5 Pct. |

Of Measure ~. DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 23 (UP) By JIM G. LUCAS —General Motors granted the Seripps-Howard Staff Writer (CTO United Auto Workers a 5 ~~ WASHINGTON, Aug. 23--Twc cent cost-of-living wage increase men in high positions--both of today, but UAW President Walter

whom say they're for it—ar¢ P. Reuther said the boost would making it tough for the Defense be “paid in the wooden nickels

Department to get universal military training legislation from this session of Congress. .-naccountably, -hoth President: n and Chairman Car Vinson (D, Ga.) of the House Armed Services Committee are

| AXaRRinZ thelr feet, Both profess HAEARBINE. Sheik Tost, Bot. hy aren't pushing it now. _ Mr. Truman has met himself

The hourly hike w

ay; = >

as the larg-

«0

i: granted a ARR since the historic UAW-GM

“KE. Wilson said that “no pric increases are .contemplated at “ {this time” for the company’s au-

he wouldn't ask for universal military training this session. Then he let Defense Secretary Louis Johnson send up a bill and a letter “most strongly urging immediate consideration and enactment.” But the next day Mr. FTruman—again-going-en—record ——— in favor--sald he saw no reason to do it now. Confused by Tactics : The President's off-again-on-a strike of the again tactics have dismayed those

th leadin, . g the fight. They had taken lid off 27,000 of |i; for granted he would lend

cent spurt in the cost of “living

Mr. Reuther demanded in a telegram to President Truman and ! congressional leaders that price!

£ grabs.” ‘Disturbing News’ : “This rise in the cost of living, iwhich brings about this wage ncrease is deeply disturbing news,” |

[lant after boing laid off b inside the plant. Carnegie

Workers leave Carnegie-lllinois' South Chicago

{long-range insurance. But the

Hope ; for ; | rem {President hesitates to tackle what

g The average GM worker will] 'he regards as a controversial

[are being undermined by prot 1° Asserts Laid to Jacobs

» . ® issue. 1 : | Mr, Johnson has done his best i ar er the) 3 : dli Lies in U. S. Aid ito minimize the President's incontract was signed. i Wilson Hits Han ing J | IM h f {consistency. In his testimony beAbout 335,000 hourly-paid em-| Of Congress Record | Premier Warns Country Has On y ont $0 (fore the Senate Armed Services

Committee yesterday the secre[tary quoted frequently from Mr. {Truman’s past UMT speeches. He

Another 76,000 salaried workers,

Times Staff Writer ——————————————————

NEW YORK, Aug. 23—There seems to be an | awful lot of comment these days on the moral 2 aspects of the United States’ possible hiring of : some paid foreign troops to help us fight the passel of capable professionals, pay ’em peanuts, and save the wear-and-tear on our own fuzz-faced * innocents. But some sort of weird moral argument is involved. Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge, for instance, is quoted to the effect that we should not hire, outright, mercenaries to fight our battles. He observes that there is a powerful spiritual fiber to the cause being upheld by the United Nations and the U. 8. in opposing Communist aggression that transcends e the mere rounding up of military hired hands.

Short Answers and Knees - I WILL GUARANTEE that if you take a head

Fash- and quiz him on his powerful spiritual fiber and his concept of the United Nations you will get both a short answer and possibly a knee in the groin. Smart This is the thing that you can never shove through the skulls of people who form committees and learn about the world from junkets and who to 20 . hive out in ideals at the drop of a gavel. : : _ There -are-no-high ideals in a war on the part of the people who fight them. The only high ideals are owned by the people who stay home and tell other people how to fight them, and what they are fighting them for. Soldiers fight because you sign 3 them up and transport them someplace which is generally unpleasant, and threaten them with the Articles of War unless they behave themselves. Smart soldiers live long enough to kill other soldiers. Dumb soldiers die fast. Inexperienced soldiers don’t last long. And all the time, they aammm—_ | hate it, and are scared, and baffled, and fatigue4 happy. They get drunk when they can: "They steals 8 They fight among themselves. Their morale is finally based on their own competence, i You could hire for about six bits each, plus

oh OR every Aiistican Hghtiig oh Xoiea today

bitten pros, just exactly like the hardbitten Amer- x [pages in the appendix of the] TEHRAN, Aug. 23—Iran is eager for American dollar ald and jaan, We must not muke the ican pros who survived Africa to Hve through/ 40,000 Hoosiers Congressional Record yesterday .s ajiah wills,” some day ihe government may get around to. sub-!mistakes we made after the first —Siefty-to-goon to Ttily to Wind up In Normandie. {to present one newspapers views itting specific proposals on how they intend to spend -it. {world -war,” and strongly recYou could hire them at a great relief to the fax-| 10 Get GM Boost regarding certain national col-| [ommended UMT. : payer and the American family, which dislikes to General Motors’ 5-cent wage Umnists. cod Meanwhile in this devoutly Mphammedan country, there is an Vinson Jealous see its adolescents being butchered in Korea, in rease will go into the pockets] The cost for such fine print ingrained tendency to pass the buck to Heaven's will. | Mr. Vinson is another matter against puppet troops, for somebody else's ideology. of 37,000 Indiana workers. , |publication was $82 per page, Premier Ali Razmara, who heads Iran’s new and comparatively myo ‘Georgian is jealous of his They would kill well, at cut-rate prices. What do In addition, 3000 salaried work- according to the public printer. | : : :

: Imost | sep———— meno ani chow, a wonderfully competent bunch of profes- The boost wil cost GM a Rep. Andrew Jacobs, Indianapolis — os, : : {warned “We must not forget our - sional soldiers from Europe to Japan today hard-{® million for a three-month Democrat, took more than 12 By CLYDE FARNSWORTH, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer | s 8!

you want a soldier to do for you-—love the adversary into submission with kind words‘/and lofty

thoughts?

1 . ; " ore Xa the evoRGimits a 2 ra heap heuer to clude 12,000 in Allison and Chev- objected to such publication on body else's, if this be possible at a saving in. ex- colet divisions here; 17,000 in pense. It is callous, but everybody else but noble P¢!co-Remy divisions in Ander- Sr Withdk "old us has been doing it for centuries, and war ison; 3000 inthe Delco radio dil "Late :

finally fairly callous in that it boils down to ‘bayonet in the belly, NYHA ANAL AA es A

It seems silly to me to employ amateurs at high|in Muncie, and 2000 in the Bed-| Rayburn (D. Tex.), who said that! i inted out that almost any will have to be done before any Andrews (R. N. Y.) headed the

Prizes to die for Mealy they never made when you| ford Foundry. division, Bedford. auch 2, Jrecedent of peeks, amount of money within reason cash is laid out.” Armed . Ee can hire pros at If money to kill 5 I | ? . . r . . ’ A killed less, - This does not apply to pinche py |would be uncalled for restraint. Premier in Clash With Parliament [Committee, headed by Sen. Mil tag at a church supper, but that thing in Korea! Id C I as es In addressing the Hou ne a] It is probable that Premier Razmara, a brisk, westernized type, 'ard Tydings \D: Md) i has right now is no church supper. : 7 ; jms pg AIL I deal Knows in his own mind about what he wants to do, but in an in. jSranbed the ball and star own 8 Si . lo : Orresk 5 fic. | Use Me—Don't Kid Me . : ‘to the taxpayers in his 9th district terview with this correspondent he faried to get specific Howse Pls Dela ) sehanhainaR ei wa < ond that whenever sucha sum. Possibly a reason is the difficulty Premier Razmara has been __JCOUSe °7OB8 2/0048 —F'WENT to the last fracas for the duration and| di {could be saved it should be done, having with Parliament. | “MF. Vinson has sald won't will undoubtedly get mixed up in this ‘vile, and , 4 1 oo ht Ww my objection with Late in June he formed. his government and announced that be taken up until more important somehow I feel I speak for.g lot of contemporaries MM list Hurt Ry y rted adding he would have two goals-decen- ——— : m— —- matters are out-of the way. He's when I say use me, -but dom;t kid me. This is sup-|. Ho otorcyc Ist nu {reluctance,” he Ag. to ns tralization of government and parison with previous cabinets, it announced that his committee posedly the United Nations’ war, not the United ws nh Smashup | that he meant no Dy ae po a economic reconstruction. is composed of a string of fire- won't even begin hearings until States’. If this be 50, let's rassle up a mess of mer ~ > .% colleague, Mr. Jacobs, but only “aw,. pyriament has spent more crackers, though the unknown |the Senate passes a bill. And Mr.

cenaries from all over the world and put them to

work as paid cops. : ; You don't draft cops. You don't ¥eed them crawful of fine words. You hand ’em a gun an

tell them to go out and shoot criminals. That is Wheh his car hit a truck. | One step in that direction Was the Razmara program by decree. | for public opinion in Iran. That is, [Sire of Congress to go home, parwhat a police force is for, and they tell we are| ‘Police said Mr. Hoff struck the taken when a rule was adopted| At the moment at least, Premicr the literate minority of city dwel- ticularly “strong in an election a global police force. This being true, Id like to truck, driven by Earl F. Trent, requiring members to get permis-| Razmara has the full support of (lers who are neither big wheels Year: But Sen. William Knowland see more of the globe mixed up in it, and a slight|29, Connersville, at Kentucky and|sjon of the whole House for alll \ h .~ cessation of sermons on the moral ‘aspects of our/West Sts. - - a Sg at

holy war. > ~ a

ws

more per quarter. 2 pom ee will earn $25 more per qu | WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 Third of four articles. Truman's past UNT shoe He

‘anguish during the days of Ba-

{energetic government, sald re- —-— remem in pprapogatives as unofficial secreers in Indiana will receive $25 As 2 membep of ihe House cently that Iran had only three which would ‘teep Iran from fall-tary of defens.. He like~ t. see: per month increases. Appropriations SAE oe P| months of grace left to avert u ing to Russia, would be a bargain himself as “Mr. Military,” He preThe 37,000 Hoosler workers in- Earl Wilson, Bedford Repu can. solitical and economic crisis next! for the United States /ters to originate defense legisigIwinter, | Lately, he's been pointing to tion and somehow never seems to’ One of the conditions of avert- Korea as a frightening example. work up a head of steam for the ing an upheaval—beside Allah's But at the same time 1 was in- other fellow's ideas. Objection... CL LAVOT, Of OUTSET WAS a generous formed onthe American side that! Phe hg drive for-UMT-eame vision in Kokomo; 3000 in Chey-| Later he withdrew his objection ;eugion of American funds. the Iranians had failed to sub- during the Republican 80th Con-trolet-and Delco Battery divisions atthe request of Speaker 8am. — guits cogently, the Premier mit a single specific project. This gress, when the late Rep. Wi Gi

{the grounds that it was wasting, ithe taxpayers’ money.

Ezra H. Hoff, 53, of 4743 wanted to establish a precedent than a month studying the idea, will of Allah is still a restraint on| Vinson runs his 36-man commit. - | Brookville Rd., was in fair con-/for more thrift in publication ofl ond there are SR Er if the their decisions. tee with an iron hand. What he

!dition in General Hospital today the record. ; i J f says goes. a: y i statemate continues it may bel The Razmara program has|58Y : with injuries received last night Must Present Estimate necessary for the Shah to enact deeply appealed to what passes| There's a third factor—the de-

(R. Cal.) dealt effectively with

| 8 d (tr 1-| rw . Iran’s young and (they say) ideal- in the bazaar no ealthy land that yesterday.

{appendix insertions running over istic monarch, Mohammed Reza lords.

VR a

HEPES a Do ES

+ SN REA WASHINGTON, Aug. 23—The late President

Roosevelt always hated what he called “iffy” ¥ questions at his press conference. (If such-and-2 such happened, would he do so-and-so?) and I

_don’t much like. iffy storfes in the newspapers, except when I stumble across one with nerveshattering possibilities. ___You know those Republicans? They claim there is such a wave of sentiment in their behalf

gress. You also know the Democrats? They pooh-pooh this; not a chance, say they. If the Republicans win, all the Democratic — «chairmen of all the congressional committees must

dias. with take seats in the: back of the room and speak only when spoken to. And chairman of the Ex$3.50 ecutive Expenditures Committee, in charge of

3 investigating every last thing President Truman's with knot administration does will be: - we-Ug $ 98 ) The Hon. Joe McCarthy, Senator from Wiscon3 ° sin, one-man scourge of the State Department, and perhaps Mr. Truman's bitterest foe on Capi-

$].69 i tol Hill: “The mere thought of it makes a Demo- : crat go, uplp, loosen his collar and cry piteously e——— . for water. . 98 Cd Can Be No Alternative : GRANTING a Republican victory, there is no

alternative. The Senate appoints its committee bootees. chairmen solely on their political faith and their seniority. And the bachelor Senator from Apple- ~ ton, Wis., with the biting tongue, the gay cravats, and an undying hate for our current staff of nt boys or _ diplomats, is No. 1 Republican on the committee. $].98 He won't be up for election until 1953 and what he could do in one year to those who have "accused him of most of the horrid things in the book, I hate to contemplate. I'm taking no sides

maple or

$5.95

Iq McCarthy a

=aanithat month after mex they'll get ‘control of Con

Fedorck C. Oh

ot ARTE

as between Republicans and Democrats : { “We: between Sen. McCarthy and the Secretary Een tion in Methodist Hospital. ~ Walter Winchell, Westbrook Peg- young Tranians who shun communism but who have a bellyful

but I must point out that he’s caused a good deal |S, Pine St., was in St. Vincent's|

of administration’ suffering as it is.

There's no need to go into his campaign Was injured yesterday i colli- | Md 2 : gn yesterday in a COili-|with the others during his two! . y esp i iatartant was serving his second term toagainst alleged. pinkos and sex offenders in high sion with a car driven by Alfred| years here. 8 leaving the central government

places, because this is fresh in everybody's mind, Umphrey, 29, of 23 N. Kenwood and anyhow Sen. Joa probutly will come up with |Ave., at 22d St. and College Ave. orrow. He's a great fellow a E———

a-new-development to

y i E i SFY « - “he d--home rule; ? for speeches. But I must point out that he, and | ___ Today's polio tofals in Indiana Governor - generals are- to be center an lich ~~ terday In Washington, D. C. _ : he ‘alone, was responsible for the big deep-freeze Coal..Reserves. Mapped. “aired Jam. ‘1. compared with ‘the abolished and recalled and auton: = Meanwhile; he Has dropped the’ Thy party Will prepare a state = imbroglio of a few months back. Even as a| BLOOMINGTON, Aug. 23 (UP) same date last—year: omous local power accorded toititle “general” in front of his of candidates to oppose those Republican on a Democratic committee he was — Coal reserves totaling! ; No. of [provincial councils. (name and prefers to be called nominated .by .he Progressive responsible. | 365,596,000 tons were mapped Oases Deaths Counties) This is a partial swing away “Mister.” |Party for the ITU's 1952 election, The Senators in charge were Investigating five| and appraise d in a geologle in-1220 125 °° 8 - BO regime. A young Janian Slielal, TOMORROW: Iran Bitterly, Mr. Tucker lives at 2352 Broadper centers, you may remember, and : - 11949 532 51 66 from the late Reza Shah Pahlev § Anti-Red. | way.

fume mogul their free freezers.

Soup Boils Over

BANG, went the gavel of the startled chair

| ' ' | Top Favorites With Subscri man. Meeting adjourned. But the sume our: Me @sure Marked Rush aa World War op ysiiies " Su scribers

over and a couple of days later the whole deep

freeze story became public property. And John Maragon, the fixer, got in a jam on perjury

charges.

It may be a little beside the point, but I've had a number of queries about whatever happened | A ’ to Mr. Maragon, who lives down the street from | PAfrage. government's contribution would Road, He was 53. me in McLean, Va. 1 must report that after his! conviction, he appealed and was released on bond ; } é > . I see him frequently mowing his grass, and sven} LOIOTIOW, The Senite passed ittribution to the total allowance Graceland Ave. before moving to drew wide response from Fabien servative to some listeners. Fewer strolling around the halls of Congress. He never

[A motorcyclist, Joe Leeds, 17,/two pages. They also must pre- Shah Pahlevi. They like it principally because There » NO . recess for Tu ‘lof 437 Leeds Ave. was injured in|sent a printer's estimate of cost. Foraign observers here are high Iran's. entrenched politicians do. $0008 Korea. hg said a - Ee a collision with a car driven by] Mr. Jacobs told the House that! on the Razmara cabinet. By £om- not. there shoul no Yecess fo : . lus, : .

| Herbert Marvin- Ramsey, -32,/the public. printer had estimated man x ye tat

‘member, and going into| vestigation of Clay, Greene an executive (meaning secret) session Whenever the Sullivan counties, Indiana Un

in Lake County, 1 each in Greene, ee. IN laa TR. RS Re : roa proceedings seemed to be squashing important toes | versity’s state department of & Sri Thoma E- ! A oriantloes.; versity's state ts of Marion, St. Joseph and Wayne | S ke bo y : So-it was Sen. McCarthy who blurted out one conservation geology division re- Counties, First ¢ ana us morning the names of a couple of administration | ported today. stalwarts who had received from a Chicago: per-| ————————

R. 6, at English Ave. and/the cost in this ca eT ENS h ty SETTERS

ans footrest om Re, ood ‘ condi-

Sa A SR eS

of the columns of Drew Pearson, Rasmara has yet to win--by deeds—the support of the educated

=

ERE te Ca TON

e , ¢ ; ’ : To Heads ITU Party ‘of old line politics and politicians. ! og

With the exception of Mr. Win, Premier Razmara would accord autonomy to the 84 provinces Charles D. Tucker, Indianapolis Hospital in good condition. He chell, Mr, Jacobs has had feuds oe fran in such matters as health, social affairs and education, | Times composing room employee,

se at 51025. The Fed Up on Old Line Pol

"He was reported in g

Gerald H. Doyle, 34, of 607% |jer and Fulton Lewis, Jr.

! ; wa |day as president of International ; LL at Tehran in tharge of finance, told me that Premier RAZINATS |p, 0 ondent Party in the Interforeign affairs, concessions, na- was. trying to strike a balance tional hica: Union. d A —— rR State Polio Data: tional security and general policy. between dictatorship - from the National Typographicat Union. de

was re-elected unanimously yes-

NeW. cases reported today. Two ~—— 5 a

ase this year re-!

ported 5 Waywe County — Services Friday Unveils Program Survey

Beethoven, Tchaikovsky, Brahms

House Gets Gl Benefit

{ |

| | Veteran Dies Here | By HENRY BUTLER

WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 (UP) this would come out of the serv. 5i | The Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra this coming season will . |—A Seriate-approved family al-|iceman’s pay, depending on his 1nomas O. Dickerson, charter play programs local concert-goers have said they want to hear. \lowance for the GIs of the Ko- rank. The rest—$45 to $75 would Member of the First Friends Howard Harrington, orchestra manager, today revealed results |rean War went to the House to- come from the government. _ | church 2nd disabled ofapan ofior the first musical-preference survey ever conducted for the (day for rush action and ceftain Under the House version the a yey early today in/1nqianapolis orchestia. .

Cold Spring Done by Dr. Dennison Nash, statistical researcher from WashHouse leaders set the Depen- be bigger, ranging from $45 to A native of ‘Indianapolis, Mr. ington University, St. Louis, {dents Allowance Bill for a vote $85. The enlisted man’s own con- Dickerson made his home at 3536 Mo., the local survey last season

Sevitzky's .programs for the approaching season will seem con-

last night by voice vote, without check would be a flat $40 for’ men East Jordan, Mich, several years Sevitzky's Symphony subscribers. novelties more well known elas-

290 | | The Quiz Master

looked fitter. Almost any day now he'll learn opposition and with less than alin the bottom three grades. Forizgo, Presenting Dr. Nash's findings, sics and a higher percentage of how much time, if any, he must spend in jail half hour's, debate. (those of higher rank,.no contri-| ‘He was a member of Wayne Mr. Harrington today said Dr. light classics will be included, Mr, J : ‘l Chairman Carl Vinson (D. Ga.) | bution would be required. [Post, American Legion, 4 nd|Sevitzky has been guided in his Harrington said. of the House Armed Services| Thus the’ total assured family North Park Masonic Lodge. choice of music for the 1950-51) Previously announcsd, the sea

?2?2? Test Your Skill PP? in slightly different form— run from $85 to $125. The House Flanner & Buchanan mortuary hapstive questionnaire. open Oct. 14 and 15 with an all-

Committee predicted the measure| check under the House bill would| Rites. at 2:30 p. m. Friday in season by the results of the ex-/son's 11 pairs of concerts will

would sail through the House. committee said, however, that en-/will. be followed by burial in| ; . orchestral program of Wagner House and Senate versions then|listed men of the higher grades Crown Hill ; : Probably First ; prog Ener;

b ; Why does the Constitution provide that revenue 98 : i bills shall originate in _the House of Representa- = tives? ’ !

: This provision is an adaptation of the English receiving at that time its present name in honor men monthly incomes of from — & vealed. aa ¢ Fat lime Us present name in honor \men x of limited to-wives, \ —————————= According tothe Nash survey, —g;isieis dna dates for the other —— 5 babyy FS jprasiiee The prinsiple involved is Sant tue Lume of William HI King of England. Ta $85 to $155. From $40 to $80 of|dependent parents. ! : | Beethoven is local first choice pairs of ELS are as follows: rae) body directly responsible to the people. Ah 3 rama : a. ‘Mobile Bus Drivers |among great composers. From pianche Thebom, mezzo-soprano, Ee EL ! ay What is meant by the “king's evil"?, | WASHINGTON, Aug, 23 (UP)—The following table‘shows the Beethoven on, the order ia: Tchal- (oot, 28.29; = Guiomar Novaes,

average American? : . . About 200 cans of food and other products per and Year. Fifty years ago, the average was only about EE 26 cans per person. $6.95 es. + %

Who wrote the Tales of Mother Goose?

! How man cans a year are opened by the $3.95 ; 0 y ca y pe y

Mother Goose” have earned him the title of the inventor of French fairy tales. .

Charles Perrault, a French poet. His “Tales of

For whom was Williamsburg, Va: named?

Settled as Middle Plantation about 1633, ‘Williamsburg became the capital of Virginia in 1699,|syre families of enlisted service-|

“King’s evil” is an old name for scrofula. It monthly payments that could- be expected by the families of en- End 69-Day Walkout kovsky, Brahms, Bach, Mozart,|njanigt, Nov. 18-19; Cecilia Hans

is so called because it was believed that the only listed men under the bill passed by the Senate yesterday: BILE __|Wagner, Debussy, Chopin, Sibe-| en violinist, Nov. 26-27; Ruggiero cure was to be touched by the king's hand. T° Allotment Amount to Dependents ~ Over Pay left sor oEs a Aug UE iitus and Haydn. : Ricci, violinist, Dec. 9-10; Winiee (Base Pay from Pay 1 Depend. 2 Depend. 2 Depend. Serviceman ended today as AFL bus drivers, The survey reveals a connec-|ereq Heidt, contralto, and Mario Who owns the Isle of Pines? E2198 7 80 147.50 147.50 155.00 = 118 returned to work for higher tion between age level and musi- Berini, tenor, in concert version After the Spanish-American War it was ceded 169 80 147.50 - 147.50 155.00 89 wages. Ly ical ~Preference, with youngeriof “Carmen,” Dec. 22-23; Claudio to the United States and many American settled 8 139 . 80 127.50 127.50 1300 - - 79 ! National City Lines increased Pople generally lking “‘disson- ‘Arrau, piamst, Jan. 7-8; Jascha on the island and established fruit plantations = 117 60 12730 = 127.50 135.00 ou BT the pay of the drivers after the ant” modern music, older people Heifetz, violinist, Jan. 27-28; Bartduring the time it was considered an American! 95. 7 40 "85.00 107.50 11500 55 city commission approved a fare preferring “clas sic-romantic” lett and Robertson, duo-pianists, .. possession. In 1907 the U. 8. Supreme Court de-| 82 ; 40 85.00 . 107.50 11500 °° 42 _ [boost raising the price of three music. . : Feb. 4-5. and Boris Christof”. cided it belonged to Cuba. wh 80 40 85.00 107.50 115.00 40 ° jtakens from 20 to 25 cents. . ._ As a result of the survey, Dr.|bass, Feb. 24-25.

| 1 Brahms, Creston and Rimskycan be expected to make fair al-| Surviving are his wife, Dolly, Mr. Harrington added that thei. © ow 0 "000 Nar 3 and 4,

will go to a conference commit- | : tee. lotments to their families volun-jand his mother, Mrs, Nancy J, survey is probably the first of ts} oq) “ip another all-orchestral, - The Senate version would as-|tarily. : (Dickerson, and a sister, Mrs, Leo Kind ever tried on symphony au- |.) ro yest program yet to be reIn both bills, dependents would Malon, and a, nephew, all of In-|diences. a . and dianapolis:- me

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