Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 October 1950 — Page 25
D. 349
J MRS. NANNET teaches hard-of-hearing or ‘deaf children of pre-school age. Except for those « wires hanging from the children’s ears, they _ might have. been playing in any Indianapolis kindergarten. At first, before the two-hour class ended, other differences were noticeable. ; nly you know that speéch is directly connected with the ability to hear. Without special training and tremendous effort, a deaf person can’t speak. -A mature person who suddenly loses his auditory sense wil eventually . experience difficulty with speech unless he gives
"special attention to it. .
~~as changeable as , , . let's see now ,
>
The problem becomes acute with children who are born deaf or have their hearing impaired before learning to speak. - * * o
JUST as Mrs. Nannet said, they don’t know any better, They simply live in a world of silence and make the most of it. Any sound. even a mother’s voice, frightens a child who hears sound for the first time. Only one of eight children in the class could express himself to any extent. He was almost six years old and had worn a hearing aid for three Years. Most of the others had a vocabulary limited to a few words. PBB
WHEN IT came to shrieking from excitement, Mrs. Nannet's pupils could hold their own against any normal child. Sometimes a shriek would make Your eardrums pop. Suddenly it would go down .in volume without a change in the child’s facial expression or physical action. Mrs. Nannet said the reason was that a child can’t determine how much noise he’s making. vs “
Mothers usually discover a defect in the hearing mechanism. When a youngster seems ‘dull and doesn’t respond to a parent's voice in any way, that’s the time to whisk him away to a doctor. The aim in the class is to develop the child's other senses, such as eyesight and sense of touch. This is the first step to lip-reading and a satisfactory means of communication between the deafened child and his playmates and parents, Mrs. Nannet has the aid of Barbara Burch_fleld, practice teacher from Butler University. She needs it, too, The teaching technique consists of
It Happened Last Night
By Earl Wilson
NEW YORK, Oct. 26—Romantically, Miss ussie (Lace Pants) Moran seems to be almost . . oh, oh, NOW I've got it! , .. a pair of lace pants. It was a struggle figuring out that comparison, but now that I have, I'd like to say it wasn't worth it. : Gussie’s been intertwined in all the columns with Pat DiCicco, of Hollywood, one-time hus-
an interview. cause if there's any- ‘| thing everybody's tired of hearing about, it’s Gussie's lace drawers,
“How about t DiCicco?” I as “Well, I I still go with him,” guessed Gussie. “Then what about 8yd Chaplin?” “Well, I guess that’s a slight romance.” “It'll be a joke on you if DiCicco reads about Chaplin,” I said. “No, it's a joke on you. DiCicco can't read,”
Gussie Moran
, sald Gussie.
" were all bumpkins in the head-
-. emerging from chimneys.
\seem to be tailored to the average
Gussie came to our interview without any pants—better write that sentence over, without any LACE pants. She had some plain pants (on) under her tennis dress and some gold sequin pants she put on later. ; “I shouldn’t knock lace pants . . . they made me what I am today,” Gussie said. “But I'm fed up with ’em, too.” Now she’s married to them, because in turning tennis pro, she's going to be peddling lace pants like movie cowboys sell cowboy outfits. “I heard women didn't wear pants,” I suggested timidly. oF “Oh, look, now, you always have to wear pants,” Gussie said. Gr ' “Tight pants,” she explained. “Not the kind that hang and droop.” gi oti? :
Bonnet Bother By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, Oct. 26—I was buying a hat the
other day for the dogs to eat, and it suddenly _
‘occurred that very-few men can wear one well, As if they were wearing it on purpose, I mean. Most people. especially important people, seem to have been smitten on the head by a swatch of vagrant felt, = 2 Ths * 0d HARRY TRUMAN wouldn't appoint John L. Lewis to be a dogcatcher, he says, but they wear hats exactly alike. Too small, tipped over the eyes, and too high in back. Very countrified. President Roosgvelt, Bill O'Dwyer and Bernard Baruch all shared the same-I started to say hatitude, but I will kill myself first—which 1s with the brim shoved up in front, off the face, while the hat itself seems startled to be on a head. All these men were meticulous dressers. FDR even went, so far as to affect a cape, but they
plece department. silk hats, of course, in which all human beings look the same. Like sweeps
The Hombury, I suspect, is the hardest of all hats to wear nanattily, unless it be the derby. Anthony Eden and the Duke of Windsor look fairly comfortable in Homburgs and bowlers, but these high society crests do not American skull. Along the same lines Winston Churchill could never be mistaken for a Texan when he puts on his broaa-brimmed beaver,
: Se b> I SUSPECT the two greatest hat-men we ever produced were the late Jimmy Walker and O. O. McIntyre. Both men wore the same kind of Jaunty lids, swooped up on one side and turned down on the other. Both looked naked without hats, as the average man would feel chilly without pants, ry : For several years now I have been trying to
. wits" —Eileen Barton.
soundless world . . . Mrs. Vashti Nannet instructs pre-school children to read lips.
getting the attention of each child for as long as possible and talking to him, trying to imitate lip movements or sound. » ds de KEEPING THE attention of a healthy three-
year-onid for more than five minutes without chas-
ing him all over the Board of Trade Building is a feat. They're not interested in lip-reading. They're interested in smashing a toy automobile or pounding pegs into a board or overturning a puzzle, h Every opportunity for instruction is taken by the teachers when they have the attention of a little one.
parts. One, the individual attention. Second, group participation in a party. This includes washing hands, sitting at a table and eating “goodies.” Third, Mrs. Nannet reads to the entire group, shows pictures and asks questions, She may point to a picture of an airplane and
then ask one of the pupils to get one from the toy
shelves and show the rest of the. class, During that one session Mrs, Nannet noticed several firsts. A little girl saw a drawing with a ribbon in her hair. She repeated “ribbon” and proudly pointed to her own. Two boys went after a red rubber ball and one yelled “nice ball.” The other just said “ball.” : * & * IT'S A slow, hard grind. For some the world of music, pleasant soft sounds such as you hear at the break of day in summer or the whisper of a loved one, will forever be denied them. Others will hear everything but it will be as if they were in an echo chamber. But all need not be denied the means of communication, to understand and be understood. Isn’t it the truth, no matter how rough a deal a person thinks he has received, he can always look around and find someone with a tougher one,
Gussie Plays Double
In Game of Romance
“HOW CAN YOU AFFORD to turn pro?” I said. “Don’t amateurs really get paid more than pros?” “Oh, now, I never made any dough!” she said. “On one trip, Pat Todd saved every nickel of her prize money—and made dinner dates—and came back with $1500. “Me, I had to borrow cab fare! . “Now I'm becoming a corporation. I get $150 a week salary. Anything else I make goes into my corporation. : “But,” she said, “if a first 10 tennis player was a first 10 anything else, he'd be paid! That's why I quit being an amateur.” “So you didn't wind up with anything out of tennis?” Just with my pants,” said Gussie.
= » - GOOD RUMOR MAN: Denise Darcel, walking down B'way at midnight clinging to bridegroom Peter Crosby, lamented, “Already people are trying to break us up—but they can’t!” Since the wedding both've been pestered with anonymous phone calls . . . Bride Diana Barrymore’s 15 pounds lighter since going on the wagon . «+ « Liberty’s upcoming article's titled, “Will the Vatican Move to America?” .,. Phil Regan accompanied Veep Barkley on the last part of his tour , . . Oi! heir Dick Cowell and Lina Romay have resumed . . . Petrillo’s N. Y. cafe musicians demand a 30 per cent pay hike. Cindy Heller told Comedian Joey Adams she couldn't marry a comic because he'd insist that she swear to “love, honor and
applaud.”
» - ” TODAY'S BEST DEFINITION: “Broadway-—a street of bright lights with a lot of dim
» » » WISH I'D SAID THAT: A gentleman,” Says Hank Sylvern, “helps his wife pack when she’s going home to mother.”
BL - " TV TATTLE: Martin & Lewis may be unable to do their NBC show for two months—Mal Wallis summoned them to do a film job ... Peter Lind Hayes and Mary Healy leave CBS for a once-weekly NBC show following Groucho Marx (called the “Pete and Mary Show”) . . . Honey-chile Wilder's a new threat to TV comediennes. : Harvey Stone just finished a book in which the hero is a publisher . . . That's Earl, brother.
Few Men Look Good In Any Kind of Hat
A recent stab at a Homburg brought the house down, and that very night the dogs aie it as a gesture of contempt. I have the kind of face that is too fat for a snap brim, too bony for a Homburg, too big for a‘narrow brim and too small for a wide one. I seem to look as silly in a sombrero as Clifton Webb in a Sherlock Holmes deer-stalker. We had three hundred and fifty thousand officers. in the Navy and all looked at home in the 10-potind braid job except you know who. I merely appeared to be impersonating an officer, which is not too inaccurate an estimate, at that, ! >
Cindy Heller
I HATE HATS, and the hats know it, and hate me right back, just as horses automatically despise me. Hats lose me. At one time or an-
other I have been deserted by a hat in every
major city in every major country in the world. One minute I have a hat; the next minute it has blown overboard or simply run away. who have never known the gastronomic delight of a succulent fur-felt generally indulge their {illogical cravings on something of mine,
priced about $20.
I have read much of the men who wear battered old lids that they prize above their families’ affection. I would not know of this _ tender emotion. No hat I ever bought was in my possession
a full year. Nor have I ever understood the Brit-
ish slang term “old hat.” To me all hats are new until something gets them. Having tried all shapes, colors and sizes, ‘to ‘small success, I have a fresh plan for fall. I am buying an old-fashioned poke bonnet. . ¢ @
THIS BONNET will be of the calico variety, such as milkmaids wear, It will tie under the chin, and will cover the ears that stick batwise from under the lid of a normal hat. It will launder easily, and will be impregnated with dog repellent starch. . Call me eccentric if you will, but my hair is too thin to stand the buffets of winter winds, and this seems to be the only answer. A bopnet will look no sillier on a man than the average $200
special number on ‘a lady, and in final what I always say about a bonnet is that it is such 2 fine thing to keep a bee in, another crime
} ToBe Reporte = By Dan Kidney
The morning class is divided into three main |
‘{tions, was the principal speaker,
{county in the Midwest,” it n° police Lt. Hague
His Times '
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1950 ——
PAGE 25 |About People—
its Perle Mesta
Finally Views
{
Satire on Her
3
Will Tour State's’ 11 Congressional
Districts by Nov. 7
The dean of Indiana politics writers, Dan Kidney, arrived in
Attends Hush-Hush . Broadway Matinee of | ‘Call Me Madam’
| Mrs. Perle Mesta finally saw |“Call Me Madam” in a hush-hush {matinee visit to the New York musical satire on her riches-toe diplomacy career : as American minister to Lux-
!
Indianapolis today to report on} the state's political activities. Washington correspondent for The
Indianapolis Times since 1934, Mr: Kidney will “devote much of his time be-
tween now and embourg. the election, Mrs. Mesta Nov. 7, to visit- later said she ing Indiana's 11 “enjoyed” t h e Congres - show, Mrs, sional districts. {Harry 8. Tru- } The first of man and daughhis articles will ter, Margaret, appear in, next who accompaSunday's Times: nied Mrs. Mesta, During his liked best the
Mrs. Mesta
| Mr. Kidney early reporting {days on The Indianapolis Times| from 1927 to 1934, Mr. Kidney) became Indiana's best-known pol-| itics writer. { And in Washington, he has continued to be Indiana's most widely-read newspaperman. Indiana's Senatorial race between Sen. Homer E. Capehart|_
jokes about the administration and Margaret's singing career, but Mrs, Mesta's Ipreference was for star Ethel Merman's singing of “The Hoste ess With the Mostes’ On the Ball.”
Hogtie Misfires Chicago police were ridin’ herd on an old Texas cowhand today |after an indignant housewife ace cused him of trying to hogtie her because she smoked on a bus. Joseph Fisher, 50, was toting a {loaded pistol, handcuffs, brass {knuckles and a special deputy sheriff's badge when Mrs, Frances Walters, 42, pointed him out to officers as the man who attempted to arrest her Oct. 16. Fisher, allergic to cigaret smoke, used to ride the range in Texas,
» +
Petty Officer Ist Class R. T. Schoonover goes over the educational aspects of Navy recruiting with pretty schoolmarms Frances Matkin (center), teacher at School 69 and Miss Betty Shake, Frankfort High School, He is in charge of a Naval recruiting educational exhibit in Claypool Hotel.
Relative viewpoints of the two parties were disclosed instrategy handsome Irish movie star, said
and Alex Campbell is causing a lot of speculation in wasningon [11rk Closes MA bi | S A) i I } as the campaign swings into its| «© @ e a S eav a) © Bosses Must Deliver Bul arian Border eeded to Rout P Foes “Washington is wondering) g about how much Frank M. Mec-| Hale will be hurt as one of the Dispute Over 250,000 Windup of Campaign Next Week political bosses if his hand-picked Moslems Forces Action By NOBLE REED candidate for the Senate — Mr. State Democratic leaders today began shaping their campaign Capehart, “Mr. Kidney said. (CDN)-—The Turkish-Bulgarian hope of victory in the Nov. 7 election. “Right mow Frank is a big border lies about a mile west of The State Republican leadership has been pushing for a heavy L. A. S-A Nokay wheel with Democratic National here. It was slammed shut a few Vote. but it is not relying on a big turnout to win the Senatorial race.| In Los Angeles, Dan O'Herlihy, : days ago by a thoroughly irritat-| dent Truman isn't unmindful of] his prowess either. That the Pres-¢d Turkey. GOP leaders for the windup of{Jack Mapkin of 1stezon to de: oxy it embarident dearly loves political bosses] The curtain for another act in the campaign next week. {reat Fep. Le GL rasses him be0 ‘ The National Committeeman cause “in Ireland . 4 flew ou to uy hig ig Missourl ging up in this historically-| Frank M. McHale, Democratic| candidates would win in the Sec- frst | 55-miom Lendergasi. famous Turkish border town. National Committeeman for In-ionq, Ninth or Tenth Districts, rst, personality. But. bosses must deliver to : — diana, predicted a DemocraticiThege are held by Republican second and sex a feat hurts. If Mr. McHale doesnt quarter of a million Bulgarian yote in the state goes to 1,600,000 ov | He prefers his send Campbell to Washington it Turks across the ‘border. A sud- yy Re Wiisen Shy Rep Soph Jiagey. women to be will be a horse on him. |den mid-winter increase of that| «If the turnout slips to 1,550,000 4re' not conceding a single Con- both pretty and was national chairman of thegive rise to a potentially-danger- Indiana votes in the 1948 elec pio time» instead of “just GOP when it used to win elec-lous situation. > tion totaled 1,656,000. He said the GOP was making Wig8ling across In other words. the main hopes gaing in the First District (Lake the screen and
peak, according to Mr. Kidney. | - Strategy Conference Held by Leaders for Hale will be hurt as one of the Campbell — fails to defeat Sen. EDIRNE, Turkey, Oct. 26 strategy toward an extra heavy turnout at the polls as their main Chairman Bill Boyle and Presi-| conferences of Democratic and, Hollywood is so was amply demonstrated when he|tpe East-West drama may be Predicts Victory 1f— sald he didn’t think Democratic t we rate stay in the game. And each de-/Bulgaria threatens to thrust a yictory in Indiana if the total pen Charles Halleck, Rep. Karl POO third.” “The venerable Will Hays, Who size in Turkey's population could or Jower we're licked,” he sald. | oressional district in Indiana at talented, he said, Since Aug. 1, well over 15,000
Miss Lupino at the Republican National Com-{Moslem Turks have been forced of.the Democrats to elect Alex County), a long-time Democratic |00zing sex.” As examples of the
mittee dinner in Washington across the border by the Bul- Campbell to the U. 8. Senate ap-|gi1onghold, and also in the Demo-|ideal combination he offered Ida whew. guy po ielson Woosh garians. The refugees have been parently rested on the prospect cratic Eight District (South- Lupino, Olivia DeHavilland, Anne rom Rep. Hug Jr. [forced to sell all their possessions that Indiana voters will turn out| y.ctern Indiana). | Baxter, Judy Garland and Lana Delegates Not Pleased and have been permitted to bring this year in the same numbers as| ' yy Holder said his surveys| Turner, “He told the assembly that the nothing with them, not even cash in the Presidential election two gh,wed victories in the other dis- |p | l k il way to win the campaign this Proceeds from the sales. \years ago. |triets now held by Democrats, in-| attletale Cocktai year is to ‘take the facts to the| Reject Deadline | {cluding Marion County. | folks.’ Just how they are carry-| ” ' can | pitti — !scientist, says martini cocktails ing out the Hays mandate in In. Turkey got its first warning as on Hofer Repu Bat south Bend Car Workers will cause faces to flush faster ’ t early in Chairman, said surveys compile | b e diana should be interesting to re-/to Bulgaria's inten Y Nv his organization disclosed a ; {than 'manhattans will. He's port.” |August. The Bulgarians served °Y Nis Org Cast Strike Vote proved it with his Geiger counter “When I returned to Washing-|notice that they intended to issue sare Waren of Victory for Sen. and radio-active carbon in drinks, ton, after covering the two a passports and “exit visas to thej31omer Capehiart regardless of the x SOUTH BEND, Ont, 26 oP) The scientist said women may . | “" . § otiators ior e 1 Sonventions in the state earlier Turkish gngin who had hows) However, Mr. Holder sald the sues OE 5 were sup S008 . Be Selecting Finks or this So some of ' those dis-1a esire to emigra % the Turkier Republican organization has been | i.4 today by a 92 per cent SO 1% ob sure neither clashes Sun £ g with: the McHale selon ay rou d ak ® to! campaigning vigorously all over i... vote in contract talks with ? o'heh a h R cHa) Jays Shatin » pr vn 1 gr i the{ Re State Jor a heavy vole and gt udebaker Corp. : Three-Way Split to win. They made the cynicalnext three months. The excuse|™e “ill continue to insist on every" Ptgy, “Jot; president, re0 8 oy nade the cynicalinext three mouths. @ EXCUSE yi ter exercising his franchise at fused to reveal the number of yA 22-year-old Chicago bellboy remar hat this might be a cam- given for this surprise move was yp, 41g” rw ated. Nearly 20.000 P24 §100 to spend today as repaign, where the two national/that Turkey had been attempting pyrther, the GOP optimism has W© er ed Dro ward for returning a billfold he comm tteemen would be pleased toto provoke the Turkish minority peen raised to the point where Were eligible, Ver. found containing $5700. The hoe see the other's candidate take the against the Bulgarian govern-|y cu party leaders are predicting Sized that the ballot did not mean te) manager and house detective [senatorial nubdie, bowed th /ment. flatly that Republican candidates| strike would be calied. came in for a $50 cut each. i ecikup show ati Late last month, the Turkish wi; sweep “about all” the Con-| : : Wililam Lampert, Detroit engi« |Mr. McHale is carrying the ban-|reply was released. Turkey did orecsional districts in Indiana. |KILLED IN TRAIN WRECK neering company representative, {ner, however, and was promi- not refuse the repatriation of the tot I | QUANAH, Tex.. Oct. 26 (UP’— Passed out the folding cabbage to, nently among those present when 250000, but did request that the| Predict Jutrease |A Dallas-bound passenger train Bellboy Henry Nofal and others Vice President Alben Barkley three-month time limit be much The last Congressional selection 0, through an open switch after his wallet was returned to Spoke here in Indianapolis. lextended. Failing that, it said, the in 1948 gave the Democrats seven| == = 00 hin a boxcar on a him almost as soon as he re-
Holder Sees Safe Margin A. J. Garratt, British atomic
{ a from InTurkish government would have of the 11 Congressmen siding. killing one crewman and Ported its loss. Artless no alternative but to refer the diana, leaving the GOP only the S\CIng. 8 Unilateral Acti [matter to international institu- Second, Sixth, Ninth and Tent arera crion SANTA MONICA, Cal, { [S. CON Y READINGS se | But the refugees kept coming | Democratic leaders today were PLANS CO Ivy director hi the S2n—one of the few unmarried anne Laprelle, 29, divorced Some of them were not even predicting an increase in their Jack L. Hatfield, civilian American women in Ko= her art student husband y ings for a comedy at 2 p. m. Sun-iregentative of American womane Turkish officials got fed up and least eight. _ 4 proweht a male friend home [closed the frontier. What happens, Mr. McHale forecast a Demo- day-in the Standard Life Insur- h,54 in Korea” and tries to cone . Wi m to watch her take | Co! ight, 1950, for The Indianapolis Times Sixth District, where he expects ington Bivd. Blue-eyed Margaret O’Bid, Red i teres Rk m te rests Ee wre Tr re Cross attache at a Swedish field * Campbell Gets McGrath Boost at Richmond Rally; «cover gin." She says the Joves : : to serve people and feels “in a people who know little of it.” . ; ’ I . | U.S. Attorney General Lauds Democrat | Declares Workers Won't Vote as Unions High Road, Low Road . . * : i i uni ns First Senate Aspirant for Communist Trial Work | Dictate but as ‘America eae Moller Books Stull; 42; his union Widowers’ Club of America, says RICHMOND, Oct. 26—U. 8. senatorial candidate Alex Campbell PERU, Oct. 26—A warm welcome from rk gS {battled today to take Richmond—and the rest of Wayne County— workers in key industries here was interpreted today Db) through his stomach, but through his nose, tonight. 5 } elected in a “close” election. ; | y-He got a rousing assist last night from his former boss, At- Sen. ‘Capehart made this prediction after a handshaking tour, 5 "os means for a woman to {to help the Hoosier Democratic, = > = —— Later, at a strategy meeting of ist oatn of the Taft-Hartley law. “This is what I call the age of {cause at‘ a letter written to Indiana 57 GOP political workers, he ridi- That's for. sure.” smells,” she commented. “Nows= |spectators in the Morton Center automobile man. The letter wg his Democratic foe, Alex Camp-|4. "Lotion at the Square-D gto, auditorium and heard the Attor- contributions and support for Mr. pei, would get the entire labor. electrical manufacturers, al- Brownson Denounces “conscientiousness and devotion hart, on the grounds that the| «Campbell will be lucky to get joiteq to the Taft-Hartley law |), § Spending Program lic Democratic program threatens “a he labo tes,” Sen. Cape- : a » + J, J to duty seldom found in public prog half the labor votes Pe- necause of the “red tape An A COMIION SETSE PrOgrany to Yee
n injuring three other persons. tions. | Districts. - ! : Att A young American nurse in PuOct. 26 (UP)—Mrs. Mari- | {Turks they were Gypsies. Finatly, membership from seven to at Civic Theater, will conduct read- rea—regards herself as “the repe yesterday because he f |now is anyone's guess. -ratic victory in the GOP-held ance building, 28th St. and Wash-quct herself accordingly. a bath. . . hospital, is pretty enough to be | : W * * ® 4 Tour position to do a great job of sell Capehart Sees Labor Vote Gain in Miami County nk the American, way of Ife to Mrs. Neller Books Stull, 62, Chi"By LEON W. RUSSELL, Times Staff Writer Cs By IRVING LEIBOWITZ, Times Staff Writer the way to a man’s heart is not before moving on to New Castle for a torchlight parade and rally can. Sen. Homer E. Capehart as an indication he would be reSteak and apple pie are oute {torney General J. Howard McGrath, who came from Washington through six large factories in Miami County yesterday. eaten a husband, Mrs. Stull said. | Mr. Campbell gat before 300 auto dealers by a Terre Haule cyjed organized labor's claim that “oo Capehart received a cor- adays men go for heavy perfume.” ney General credit him with Campbell's opponent, Sen. Cape- vote, ~ though many workers here observice.” type of socialized government.” hart declared. “I have been in io. union dispute broke out at
“Alex Campbell may be said to| Mr. Campbell's answer was the dozens of factories and have, Square-D plant yesterday place the present “spend, borrow be responsible for one of the story of how he, as U. 8. District shaken hands with hundreds of yy. C10 Political Action Com-land tax policies” was urged by greatest achievements in the his-| Attorney for Northern Indiana, workers. They aren't going 10 ittee leaders sought to distrib- Charles Brownson, Republican tory of American jurisprudence— conducted successful anti-trust yote the way some labor boss or- io anti-Capehart pamphlets in|C s son, lepubiiean the conviction of the leaders of suits to break up auto financing gers them. They are Americans ine factory. candidate for Congress, In the Communist Party,” Mr. Mc-|practices which the government first.» | Larry Cover, secretary of the speech’ before the Real Estate Grath declared in a ringing, Down [charged were monoplistic. Attending the political strategy jndependent United Electrical Board today. Bast Yankee tone. “The big auto companies were meeting and wearing ‘a large ypion, agreed to distribute the! «The Republican Party believes It was Mr. Campbell, he said, | driving small dealers out of husi- Capehart campaign button Was jiferature until he discovered the in government policies just the
-| Who masterminded the entire New ness by requiring them to do their/ Elden Herrell, president of the pamphlet called his union “Com- ia to this program. Our
financing through firms owned by d60-memmber Ynited, Fleetiical It Isiunist-controlied.” ‘ me | the manufacturers,’ 'he said. “We dependent Union here. e told ‘1 Was Mad’ OH a thn, [broke up this practice.” {pewsmen: | “I was damn mad,” he said as ‘yv . must take in as much as astic Democratic rally in Nobles-| “We saved the automobile deal-| “Sen. Capehart wil-get at least ne burned them. “The CIO tricked vou pay out. That rule applies ville. Seat of Hamilton County;lers of America,” he added. “That 50 per cent of the labor vote in me /into passing them out. Nowy, seration of government. whose GOP leaders proudly pro-|is preserving free enterprise.” (this town. : to hell with them.” "My opponent and his fellow ‘claim it “the strongest Republican | Sen. Capehart, who has been. rhe Senator's labor speech cli- shenders are trying to fool the put on organized labor's “purge” maxed a 230-mile handshaking people into believing that a spe list jor yotine for He Yai Hart trip that carried him througheia) set of rules apply to governs i i i ley law, sald many of the WOrk-ipyuiton County, where he stopped ment.” : Injured in Accident jers he spoke with favored the in Rochester to talk with poli-| Mr. Brownson said there is too Police Lt. Ryliam 8 Hague current labor law. {tical workers and had a question much non-essential pending. ba : lle's Forest Was slightly injured early today: rp, {ho Hausske-Harlen furni-'and answer program with the Ki- cause of the politics as us e Sinner 1 lean Cxpansivaly when the Boles, Tar Be was 4riv/ are plant, machine operator wanis Club, Sen Casdiart in Washington. : i re, | “|James Hooten said: | In two days, Sen, Capehart has sri ter mip they. gathered. nthe ‘open air, hicle at 10th and West $18. |" “Lqile UN Hortley law is okay|falled fo deliver two speeches ARRESTED FOR DESERTION under autumn-tinted trees, to! Willie B, Smith; 35, of 135 W. with me. We can get what we which were released by state] Arrest of Richard J. Clar {hear Mr. Campbell and Jack H.|14th St., was driver of the other want.” {GOP headquarters -and given South Haven, Mich., a 20-year-ol d Mankin, Lebaron lawyer and|car, ‘was arrested for being} Ralph Wilson, cabinet maior | Bomineat space in metropolitan railroad section hand, on charges ; tic candidate for Sixth drunk, reckless driving and oper- for the Lee Furniture Co., de-i papers. One speech concerned his/of Army desertion was Sungunced District Congressman. ating a car with inadequateiclared: farm voting record and the other today by the Federal Bureau of Mr. Campbell pointed Bis talk brakes. 20 “I believe in theqnon-Commun- “perpetual inflation. vestigation office hers.
ED ye i id (ovis Vv 4 3
York trial of the Red brass. program can be described in two
words—common sense,” he said.
sisténtly runs 2 to 1 Republican at election time. Three hundred party faithful turned out for a mid-day basket
