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Casper Morning Star from Casper, Wyoming • 3

Location:
Casper, Wyoming
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Page:
3
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Monday, Sept. 3, 1956 3 The Casper Tribune-Herald GILBERT'S "WHAT. YOUNG PEOPLE THINK" Legion Marches frusnan Says ei Doahouse Farmers Stay If Ike Elected College Girls Are I op Back-to-School Spenders; Budget's Up and Papa Pays In Convention Parade at L.A. LOS ANGELES HV Thirty thousand men and women who have served the nation in three wars will march today in a mammoth parade marking the official opening of the 38th national convention of the American Legion. In a prtconvention session yes lis jr i -f I ,5 I i lA rA i 1 1 I By EUGENE GILBERT President of the Gilbert Youth Research Co.

How much should you spend on outfitting yourself for school this fall. To get the answer to this question and related ones our interviewers went to 46 colleges in 43 states and sam- i -I terday, 58 red-capped members of He said Estes Kefauver, the vice presidential nominee, "deserves the support of all the farm states of America." Truman said the Democratic party came out of its Chicago convention "united behind two of the ablest candidates ever to go before the American people." In discussing farm prices, Truman referred to U. S. Secretary of Agriculture Ezra Benson and President Eisenhower and said: "Benson and Eisenhower know as well as you and I that the way to keep farm prices up is to have firm support prices. But they keep telling the public that this is all wrong, and bad for the farmer.

They say they have to have low prices in order to reduce surpluses. Incidentally, that's a real joke." Truman flew to Ottumwa from Kansas City Saturday morning and returned there by plane after his talk. if i i. OTTUMWA, Iowa Former President Harry S. Truman declared here that "If Eisenhower is re-elected the farmers will continue In their place in the doghouse." 'Right now, in this election year of course, the Eisenhower admin- istration is making an effort to appear more friendly to the farm- er," Truman continued in a speech to an estimated 2,000 persons attending the first of a three-day farmer-labor sponsored Labor Day observance.

Iowa Democratic leaders and candidates tock part with the former president. Truman sai that, "When an election year comes around, and the Republicans want some farm votes, they raise support prices a little. "You will remember that when Eisenhower vetoed the farm bill (the first one passed by Congress last spring), he said he would raise the rice support levels on the basic commodities. And he did raise them above the low levels he had originally planned for 1956 but not above the levels to which they had sunk in 1955." At one point the former presi- dent departed from the text of his speech to say: "If the Democratic ticket doesn't get support from the farm lists lor nearly 2,000 coeds. In addition to Iboking into buying habits of grammar and school students, survey teams visited such campuses as Vassar, Bryn Mawr, Rad-cliffe, University of California, Con necticut, Chicago, Eugene Gilbert the Legion's National Executive Committee abandoned a conciliatory attitude and recommended that the convention force the 40 and 8 society to either "shape up or ship out." The committeemen at first appeared ready to suggest to delegates that action be deferred on forcing the Legion's honorary affiliate to retract "control-by-a-few" charges.

This deferment would allow the 40 and 8 to make a retraction without duress at their own convention in Indianapolis later this month. But J. Addington Wagner, the i n's national commander, read the committeemen a series of letters from William H. Schlupp of Chicago, chef de chemin de fer of the 40 and 8. The tone of Schlupp's correspondence, in which he accused Wagner of snubbing him at a Battle Creek, function last year, destroyed all plans for letting the 40 and ers retract their charges without Legion pressure.

states this time, the farmers will I i it I I Kil i 1 i 'h" "i if i Iff fer-' kVv ftX- deserve just what they will get. Later he interupted to say: Nebraska, Oregon, Wellesley, Cornell, Duke, Iowa State, Temple, Syracuse, Purdue, Florida State, Alabama, Kansas, Maine, Texas, Carnegie Indiana, Missouri and many others. We were concerned largely with coed buying habits because girls usually spend about twice as much as boys in outfitting themselves at the college level. Champion buyers (and gift recipients) in the back-to-school-set are high school, graduates heading off to their first term of college. This group numbering between 250,000 and 260,000 spends an average of $456.22 each in preparation for college nearly twice as much as their brothers or boy "The farmer was too prosperous before.

He wanted a change. He got it, they got all of his change and it served him right." Truman, who unsuccessfully op posed Adlai E. Stevenson as the Democratic presidential nominee at the party's national convention last month, described Stevenson WRITES NOVEL: Mrs. Grace Meralious, 32, mother of three children, may become a literary sensation of the year with her first novel, "Peyton Mrs. Met-olious, wife of a New Hampshire school teacher, never took a writing lesson in her life (AP Wirephoto).

Airman Is Turned Into Fiery Torch AURORA, Colo. UPi A 20-year-old airman was turned into a flaming torch when his motorbike spilled on an Aurora street and caught fire. Air Force Capt. Carlton T. Marsha, a witness, knocked Airman Thomas M.

Hallacy to the ground as he ran screaming, and attempted to beat out the flames that enveloped the young airman. Another witness. John Carroll, threw water on the writhing man. Hallacy, of Wichita, suffered critical burns and. was flown late Friday from Lowry Air Force Base to Brook General Hospital at San Antonio, Tex.

Marsh suffered second degree burns on both hands, and was treated at the Lowry base hospi as "a real fighter." friends spend. French Troops Place Cordon Around Cashah ALGIERS, Algeria Iffi French troops closed off three sides of the teeming Casbah today in a move to place nationalist rebels under tighter watch. In the past two weeks 16 persons are known to have been killed in the famed old native quarter, perched on the side of an Algiers hill. Tighter security measures included sealing the entrances and exits on three sides of the Casbah, forcing all traffic to go through the entrances at the top of the hill where it can be watched by troops and police. A weekend of violence throughout Algeria left at least two dead end 53 wounded at the hands of nationalists who have waged a guerrilla campaign for independence for the past 22 months.

A bomb lobbed into a crowd of Sunday strollers killed two European youths and wounded 23 other persons in Constantine. A grenade injured 20 others at Batna. Another grenade exploded on a crowded cafe terrace at Descartes in western Algeria, injuring This represents a total market o' around $118,000,000 showing the enormous buying power in the back-to-school group. PACE IS STEPPING UP State Fair Rodeo Ends At Douglas High school and grammar school children spend far less between $50 and $55 in preparing for the Woman Dreams of Suez, Tries to Visit Nixon WHITTrEIt, Calif. OP! An auburn-haired woman tried to see Vice President Nixon yesterday.

She said she had been having dreams about the Suez Canal crisis and wanted to tell him about them. Secret service men said they promised the woman, identified as Mrs. Clark Slavich, 23, of Salinas, that they would relay the information about her dreams to the vice president. Nixon at the time whs at the bedside of his critically ill father, 77-year-cld Frank A. Nixon.

Mrs. Slavich was also reported to have told the Secret Service men she was Russian-born and that she hoped to help relatives in that country by seeing Nixon. fall term. uue 10 population increases in this young group, pre-school shop DOUGLAS, Wyo. Cowboys from Wyoming, Montana and North and South Dakota Saturday pers will effect 41,000,000 young won top honors in Wyoming 44 tn annual State "Fair Rodeo.

people this year up one third from five 3-ears ago. The four-day fair ended here uur survey snows that 40 per cent of the families of male and female freshmen expect to spend Saturday. Joe Madden of Lusk, won the bulldogging crown in the rec nrd ftverae-p tim of :12.5 seconds more money in back-to-school buying this than they did last year. Also, 17 per cent of the parents of high school sophomores, juniors and seniors, and 43 per cent of tal. Wayne Dunafon of Westmoreland, was second.

He posted 13.1 A COLLEGE CO-ED, Jan Sterling of Kansas City, checks her list against possibilities for her fall wardrobe. A junior this year at Colorado College in Colorado Springs, and not quite 20 years old, she is planning to spend $200 to $250 for her going to school outfit less than the average college freshman, She works in the summer as sales girl, at a swimming pool and elsewhere, spends own money on clothes. A passenger on Haliacy's motor 10 including women and children. i bike. Airman William D.

Smarr. seconds lor his two steers. The calf roping event was won er Soldier Harrison Will Join in Republican Campaign 19. of Hickory Grove. S.

C. suffered third degree burns on the left leg. He was reported in good condition at the Lowry hospital. Caspi same number bought hangers and luggage. Approximately one out of the parents of high school freshmen planaed to spend more than last year.

Let's take a look at the big spenders in the back-to-school movement: The girls beginning college. What will they be buying mostly and where will the money come four bought blankets, bedspreads, ATLANTA. Ga. William Dies in Wreck 300 Decendanfs of Indian Chief Mull Family Problem Henry Harrison, former Wyoming show and garment bags, and other room furnishings. congressional representative, said Professors will be glad know he will donate his services to the A Casper army private was killed that at least one out of every four Sioux Falfs Croup Wns Legion Choral Contest LOS ANGELES lJ The singing-Legionnaires of Minnehaha Post 15, Sioux S.

won the girls interviewed made concessions in an auto accident Friday evening near Lebanon, according to by John Dalton of Nemo, 5. in 40.3 seconds. Tuffy Cooper of Monument, N. was second and Leonard Saye of Broadus. and Jim Laycock of Wheatland, tied for third.

Buck Boyce of Havre, won the Brahma bull riding with Bruce Coker of Sutherland. second. Bob Shield. Focatello, Idaho, third and Dick Bryant, Kim, fourth. The bareback riding title went to Jim R.

White of Cheyenne, Wyo. Gene Kramer of Sutherland, Neb. was second, Clyde Frost, Kim, was third, and Chub Askins, fourth. A rair of Sentinel. N.

cow- to promptness by acquiring an Republican National Congressional Committee in the coming campaign. Harrison, who recently resigned as regional administrator of the Housing and Home Finance Agen word received here. alarm clock. LAWTON, Okla. OP About 300 descendants of Quanah Parker, last great chief of the Comanche Indians, and his white mother, Cynthia Ann Parker, gathered here Saturday, hopeful of settling a family problem in a peaceful The youth.

Pvt. Richard E. Far from? FATHER FOOTS BILLS They found that freshman coeds spend an average $386.33 for wearing apparel, $44.28 to decorate and outfit their rooms, and $25.61 for work and play items like cameras, stationery, radios and fountain pens. An financiers should be interest ley, stationed at Fort Leonard Wood with the 582nd engineering detach ed in knowing how these girls who American Legion Convention choral contest yesterday. cy in Atlanta, will be stationed in Chicago and work out of the headquarters of the farm division of average $10.58 per week.

in allow ment, was on a holiday leave when Led by Lee Bright, the chorus the accident happened. ances and job earnings, managed to spend an average $456 each for He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. back-to-school regalia and paraph Charles Green, 818 North McKinley. He left Natrona County High School ernalia.

defeated the defending champions, Alonzo Cudworth Post 23, Milwaukee, who placed third, and the Robert E. Kennington Post 34, Indianapolis, the runner-up. The new champions also won the contest in 1949, 1950 and 1951. hnvs nlaced first and second in the Republican National Committee. He said he felt it was imperative that President Eisenhower have a Republican Congress to assure passage of constructive and progressive legislation proposed by the party.

It's a healthy picture for and an encouraging sign for the saddle bronc event. Alvin Nelson won top money with Jim Tpsrher second. our economy. More than tnat. it The problem involves a proposal to remove the remains of the famed tribal leader from his resting ground at Post Oak Mission Cemetery near Ft.

Sill, to Ft. Parker, Tex. The reunion may not be too peaceful, A determined daughter, Mrs. Neda Birdsong, avows that the body of her father will never be moved from Oklahoma. She said that four of the seven after completing his sophomore year in 1955 and joined the army.

His survivors include his parents; three brothers, Jerry Alvin Farley, Fern Farley and Freddie Green; two sisters. Miss Mary Kay and Miss June Green. His body is scheduled to arrive in Basin on Monday for services and interment. shows that girls of today exhibit at an early age the buying power of the women of tomorrow. Today's coed not only knows how to dress but how to shop for a dress a duty once assigned to her Laramie county, for the first time, won the governor's trophy for the county making the greatest contribution to Wyoming's diversified farm economy.

Sheridan surviving- children and Quanah's only surviving wife Topay, would make a strong bid to keep the body In the Sooner state if it came to a showdown. The reunion is being held at nearby Craterville Park and will last three days. About 100 Texas relatives, mostly descendants of Quanah's mother, are expected. Quanah's mother is buried beside him. Prospects for erecting a monument to Cynthia Ann and her chieftain son also will be discussed.

Quanah Parker was born to Cynthia Ann while she was living with the Comanches. She was captured by a Comanche raiding party near Mexia, now Ft. Parker, when 9 years old. She refused to return to her family but later was recaptured by Gen. Lawrence Sullivan Ross near Crowell, Tex.

She died in 1870 and was buried near Poynor. Tex. Her body was reburied at Post Oak Cemetery in 1910. Quanah w-as one of two sons escaping in, the battle in which Cynthia was captured. He eventually won the rank of chief and finally surrendered his fighters to the white man after waging continuing war.

At Ft. Sill he assumed his mother's name and became a champion of peace. He died in 1911. county was second and Goshen fx- county third. Egypt Advertises For Canal Pilots Forest Service Makes Changes in Personnel WASHINGTON W) The Agriculture Dept.

announced a series of personnel changes in the IT. S. Forest Service. Percy D. Hanson, now regional forester for the Northern Region at Missoula, will transfer to Juneau, Alaska, and Charles L.

Tebbe, regional forester for the Eastern Region since 1952, will take over at Missoula. 'Teaches Business Men At Arthuftlurfay'st NEW YORK (if) The Egyptian government has advertised here for pilots to guide ships through the Suez Canal at wages up to more than $1,400 a month. Egypt took over ownership of Their purchases range from complete fall wardrobes, skis and typewriters to towels, sheets and other essentials. A mid-western coed showed us a typical shopping list. It included every kind of apparel and accessory from lingerie to umbrella and wound up with a new wallet probably on the theory that the old one would be worn out at the end 'of the shopping tour.

This young miss told us she did most of her shopping during the lunch of her summer job, dashing to a department store where the family had a charge account a confession that father was footing a goodly portion of the bill. Others acquired their back-to-school items through gifts, part-time jobs, savings, family charge accounts, installment buying or outright from their parents. YOUNGSTERS HAVE A SAY Another facet of the whole back-to-school movement, and a rather recent phenomenon, is the amount of influence young people girls in particular have on purchases made for them by their parents. Coupled with this is the amount of shopping done independently by young girls. A survey of girls in the lower high school grades shows that 23 per cent buy their own clothes and personal items, 68 per cent shopped with a parent and only 9 per cent have their shopping done for them.

Among girls in the upper high school grades, the statistics are even, more revealing. Here 48 per cent shopped by themselves and 49 per cent were accompanied by a parent. But 90 per cent of those who shopped with a parent said the final choice was with the teenager. The younger group admitted some influence on the part of a parent, but claimed a strong voice in the final decision. A more detailed analysis of pur the canal July 26.

It had been run by the Suez Canal a private business organization dominated by British and French interests. '-V Most of the canal pilots had X. V- i 's i i-- ii- -i -i -i i i i firtsisfslBil NORTH DAKOTA GROWN TREES and SHRUBS FOR Fall Delivery 2 YEAR GUARANTEE Coll Me for Replacements A. B. ALLEN PHONE 3-5072 1040 SOUTH JACKSON ST.

br 5ATISPY 29 Injured in Blast NEW DELHI UP The fifth bomb explosion in nine weeks in teeming Old Delhi injured 29 per sons, Friday night. Police speculated the bombings were the work of outsiders trying to stir up trouble between the Hindu and Moslem religious communities. McPherson, Kansas is the boyhood home of this tall, lanky fellow with wavy gray hair. A young dynamo at fifty-six, he tells of getting his start in his trade when he been British or French. After Egypt nationalized the canal many failed to return from home leaves and vacations.

Egypt was said to need 200 more pilots to keep traffic normal through the canal, and has been advertising abroad in an effort to get them. An advertisement placed by the Suez Canal Administrative Board of the Republic of Egypt in the New York Journal of Commerce said applicants should not exceed 40 years of age. was twenty-three. Apprenticed for 4- MAKING HER OWN selections, Jan likes to have mother's advice. Her father, Paul W.

Sterling, thinks she has excellent taste. Her weakness is shoes, and she will have about 30 pairs at school. Majoring in education, she plans to be a kindergarten teacher. ON YOUR DANCING Sinus Trouble Can Now Be Avoided i 5 I some years then became a 'journeyman. Moving to Casper in 1941, some will recall that he opened his own electrical contracting firm here in 1946.

Today his company is well-known for their work in homes, schools, government projects, and industrial assignments. They do just about anything when it comes to electricity and their small shop carries a nice selection of lighting fixtures, heaters, fans, and the likes. A modest, agreeable guy who has a membership in the Kiwanis Club, of Masonic Lodge and Shrine, he says his wife, Regilia, is also a native of the Sunflower State. They have two children and three grandchildren." His son, Keith, happens to be his shop foreman and 'right arm' in the bustling enterprise. The company bears his family name which, in case you're still stumped, is noted on classified page.

4 $1650 chases made by girls beginning college showed that only one out of seven bought an evening gown and only one out of 12 bought evening slippers. This did not mean college social life was in decline. Four out of five purchased dresses, and the same number equipped themselves with dressy high heels. Two out of three freshmen coeds bought towels, two out of five bought sheets. One out of three bought curtains, and almost the S40 VALUE dfreet- the IF YOU DO NOT RECEIVE YOUR Call Your Carrier or 2-1515 BEFORE Star A.M.

Tribune 7:30 P.M. Sunday .1 1:30 A.M. Sinus trouble is very prevalent in this part of the country. Some of the symptoms of sinus trouble are frontal headaches, pain about the orbits of the eyes, and through the nose. There seems to be a continuous drainage from the nose.

The eyes are affected and water. The lack of the ability of the body to adapt the tissues of the nose and throat and sinuses to the sudden wealher changes seem to be the predisposing cause. This is due to the lack of control of these tissues through the nervous system. This can readily be proven by the fact that you can pamper the condition and ve the symptoms by changing to a drier climate or higher altitude; however, this does not remove the cause and when returning to the former climate the symptoms manifest themselves again. Chiropractic adjustments remove the cause of these incoordinations very readily and in a short time all symptoms will disappear.

This is one of a series of Chiropractic educational advertisements appearing in this paper each Monday through the courtesy of the Mooney Chiropractic Office, 216 West 9th Street, Casper, Wyoming. Adv. -I Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Finds Healing Substance That Does Both You'll regain that old fun and enthusiasm. Become a graceful dancer with this special brush-up course. MEmUE RZUBBM Drop In Or Call for Your Appointment Now! Dial 3-5764 or 3-5765 254 S.

CENTER Relieves Pain Shrinks Hemorrhoids KfiT JUw York, N. Y. (Special) For the first time science has found a new healing substance with the astonishing ability to shrink hemorrhoids and to relieve pain without surgery. In case after case, while gently relieving pain, actual reduction (shrinkage) took place. Most amazing of all results were thorough that sufferers mads astonishing statements like "Pile have ceased to be a problem!" The secret is a new healing substance (Bio-Dyne) discovery of a world-famous research institute.

This substance is now available ia tuppository or ointment form under the name Preparation H. At your druggist. Money back guarantee. Adv. E.tJ.aptot FEDERAL SAVINGS LOAN ASSOCIATION OF CASPER 126 SOUTH WOLCOTT STREET.

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Pages Available:
79,943
Years Available:
1953-1965