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The Daily News from Lebanon, Pennsylvania • 12

Publication:
The Daily Newsi
Location:
Lebanon, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 Lebanon Daily Newi, Lebanon, Jan. 30, 1952 $1 Who (Nothing Wrong Willi Video 'National Politics I licit UOOU OI.OWS WOIl LlirC Dr. Herman N. Bundesen Fac Is Abou Heal th Rofarians Overlook Fine Print, Sign Up For Navy CHARLKSTONYS. C.

(I'D of the Charleston Rotary Club weren't ure whether they were civilians or sailors after 125 of them "volunteered" for the Navy. lower corner cf each card was pledge whereby the signer agreed serve a five-year hitch In the i Navy. At last reports, the Navy wasn't i planning to call up Its "volua-i teers." I BEST MAN BUSY LI NCOLN. Neb. (UP) Lloyd 1 Terry probably is the "best" best jman in Nebraska's capital city.

A 'deputy clerk of Lancaster county (By HAL HOYLE) NEW YORK (AP) The average television owner known what is wronir with video: "Thfv rlnn't hsvA tfnonfh trrrt shou'sf i iiamih'aps fimlfi'sv tin uk reihtko bv modkrx diu'kh Cnkmrl flf Tall jruMjwvi vi i irv Given Rolarians ur. Samuel B. CJroh, local den stressed ine. members of tnej Lebanon Rotary Club at their weekly dinner held last night in the Hotel Weimcr. Using as his subject "In Rctros- Oddly enough, this knowledge is widely shared hy telc-j ovont-ito.

i of what doing. The modem treatment of epl- The level of entertainment must raised," said iL 4 lepsv Ih with drugs a phenn- Many people 40 not rll htblu.njUi maiitoln and plJepsy ran now cntrrIlrf tridinrm. Such treatment run ie- bell Robinson, boss of Columbia's TV network productions. Ai iiicctintr of the cluh. when Flear Adm.

John P. Womhle ierve4 as members signed what appeared to be regular monthly attendance cards. However, in small print lit me STRANGE AS IT SEEMS to Rut how? I.lk many another! top lirana figura In th Industry iiop)t now. today Robinaon will fall on yotirj "Th actora an4 peifornws are if von auta-iat a frah nw niar ciui a ith drugs. It la believed that If all the epileptic, children could receive th necessary treatment at the hand of experienced physicians, very few would be handicapped by epileptic, convulsion.

Knllentlca usually have, a bard time finding a useful place in so progiam Idfa -or ha'II ahower 0f them, and create new ones. ut avc an wwresi-you with money, if H'l trasa jdeppnd too much on start wholing background survey of the na- tw.li.t fm wealth you prefer, "New idfas pour In bere ai- itioat by the he and ARWKSCP Bf'-Wt CALIFORNIA PEPWIMEMT OF FSrt AMD 6MvS 15 B0 FWSM LAUDS, OlSCriARDS AD VINEYM5DS OP iMi netv because of the feelings otneiprui in oiagnosuig me ivpe or nhPra toward them. Thia i trtiejepileiisy, so thai proper tieaimenl von of epileptic children. en be started for thai pai tit ular Needs Inspiration jform. Too often the children arej QlKtinH A Mt A nts ahlelried and mad to feel ashamed V.

Will a reasonable amount of themselves. The enilentic child of alcoholic beverage Ihcteaae The Lebanon Daily NfcWS will piesent one dollar to the lint per-, son who correctly identifies the person In the "Qui Photo." Just fill in the form at the bot- tm this caption with the correct answer and deliver it to the NKWS CPU AMOS SARCELOWA-TSEJKTED ARW flf BeCM55 rlE Witt OWlY 'II "TALL OKiE YEAR LAT- PASSED TUB MJ5 AA? 06W OAMS before o'clock this "and I'm flooded with mind No answers will be aetepled after readers and hypnotists. that time, "One mother of a chess cham- Kntries must delivered Iniplon was sure her son could drive person and no answers will be ac-Urthur Godfrey out of business, repled by mail or telephone. other suggestions range from bal- -i kt. i.

i irus let to bridge. must he given inspiration and ne. taught, that he can advance through life in aplte of his condition. There are still two unfortunate Biifconceptiona about epileptic they have hereditary riieeape and are feeble-minded. Both of these idea are falae.

Kpileptin convulsions may appear In a person at any age. There are about. 750,000 epileptics in the Vnited Mates, over half of them heing tmdef 20 years of age. The causes of this disorder are many, than a fourth of the rases are due to scar tissue of lha brain, resulting from a head in-Jury. Most 'cases are due to an abnormality" of the brain cells themselves, the cause of which i unknown.

Normal Powers of Thought Manv times, thinking ability la reduced in an epileptic person A APOIN6T SAME. 5 LETTBSft SAME OEOSR BETOEE I And Aftek I ERRO TO MAKE A COMMOW EN6USr! rJoTO. 1 but this is not the common rule, on a cnarge or auemptea murder. Most of tbesa people have normal Producer William Perlberg con-power of thought, and may reach firmed that Wanger's pals, inclu-the superior level. Many with ding movie makers Samuel Oold- pilepsy are emotionally stable.

Wyn gruj u8t Disney, have chip- Infttde their fame In other lunia, mien aa raoio, iae mea the The drain on television talent is already enormous. "Our network puts on 70 pro- son. "That's roughly equal to 70 motion picture more than the annual output of a major film studio. We turn out In a week what they do in a year." This tremendous pressure takes it toil in nervous breakdowns: among producers who get to Jiv- lng on diets of aspirin and cof fee, pep capsules and Sleeping pills. Robinson then mentioned a minor problem vexing him at the moment the disappearance of a new curtain bought for the.

Frank Sinatra show. "Oh, we'll probably find it," he said cheerfully. "But it cost $3,500 and now It's lost somewhere." That's television! People so busy they mislay a $3,500 curtain. SIORR OV Looking At Life (Contlnn Trom Tag Tin) she needed happy. She was lonesome, un- She wenat to Services Bureau.

the Community Today she has a private room with her foster parents, Dr. and cum nnjs, who me in men mid fifties and who arrived herci' from Israel three years ago. The Weisses, too, were lone some. JBut they were too far advanced in age to adopt a child. So they took Mrs.

Chudnowsky in to their home, and the three of them are happy and contented. These are not legal adoptions The old people if they are refin ed and have seen better days- are simply placed in homes and are entitled to all the privileges of a mother or father. Usually trfese "adoptions" re- referred to the Community Serv ices from hospitals, old-age insti tutions and other sources. I get so many letters from eld erly people who seem to see no purpose in life any more people who are just waiting for the end, All the scientific aid in the world cannot solve their main prob lem. Wood carving, knitting, and all the other hobbies can never take the place of LOVE any more than sleeping pills can take the place of natural sleep.

Perhaps this new idea may do at least a tiny little bit to alleviate the pain of loneliness for our old folks a pain which hurts much more than any disease. This Funny World beginning of the century until the Present day. He talked about bis impressions of the presidential candidates ()f his youth, and des- criberl political rallies and programs which were held locally in support of various political figures of the day. Dr. Groh Was introduced by Rotarv president, O.

Bressler, who presided at the meeting which was opened with the singing of 'America. followed by the invoca- linn hv th Tnoeneck. er. Robert E. Hower gave the report of the nominating committee, and the president called for a vote of credit for Paul Gingrich, who requested release from bis position as club secretary.

Vernon Bishop gave a report on the father-and-son banquet to be held on February 12, Group singing was led by Mark H. Tice with Francis Nogle providing the piano accompaniment. Guests present at the meeting were Charles Rnhl.fi ng, John Shenk, and the Rev. Chester Rcttew, all of Myprslown; M. L.

Keim, Annville, and Joe Aiman, West Reading. BOOK DRIVE-IN BEAUMONT, Tex. (UP)-Bcau-nmnt is going to have a $6,000 drive-in library in its Central Park. Tatrons may order by tele- nickllD WORD-A-DAY By BACH FANFAR0N an' a-ron)ww A BRAGGART I haven't HAD AM ACCIDENT IN THIRTY By Jimmy Hatlo dolefully, "but there isn't a good one in a carload. And it's the old stoi the best ideas come from the pros, not the amateurs," Kohtnaon, a slender.

Quiet, dark -haired man of few Illusions and many problems, shuddered at 'I memory of some weird idea hants who besiege his door ior "There was it fellow who want- iY? otnPr bugs," he recall- i nan ifliii'im ,,1,,, Ha Ing one man that four people playing bridge Just Isn't a show." The trouble, as Robinson sees tt, la this: "In television tha technical facilities have outstripped the creative skills. The caliber of ci ttive people must be Improved and improved. We must develop belter writer, better directors, better producers. "If we don't, television won't continue to hold tha people as It Toll-Bridge Jumper Survives River Swim HUNTINGTON. W.

Va Today didn't, mean to jump into the water," said a damp steelwork-er who leaped off a bridge into Ithe flooded Ohio River after re fusing to pay a nickel toll early yesterday. Tolice figured James Moon-ey, 33, of North Kenova, 0., had drowned in the swollen waters when he leaped from the 30-foot high bridge between here and! Chesapeake, O. But he. showed up here hours later, drinking coffee in a restaurant. Mooney refused to pay a nickel toll for walking over the bridge hecause he didn't like the way col lector Azel Barney asked for it.

"I jumped from the brace, hop-. to hit the pier," Mooney re- i i laien. nui 1 missed, nenrvr iiic, I was surprised when I hit the water. "I must have gone under about 40 feet and swallowed at least a quart of water." Police were unable to launch a boat to search for. Mooney because of the swift current of the river which was at flood stage of 50 feet.

They gave him -up for lost. But Mooney, who had helped re pair the bridge last summer, came up swimming five blocks away. There he grabhed the steamboat George T. Price, on its way to Cincinnati, and was helped over the rail. He was put ashore 10 miles be low the bridge.

He caught a bus back ,0 H.u,inton Next time I will sure pay that guy a nickel regardless of how he asks for it," he vowed over a cup of hot coffee. Hershey Girl Awarded 4-H Showmanship Trophy A Hershey R.D. 2 girl, Kathryn Ann Coble, member of the Dauphin County 4-H Babv Beef Club, last night received the showmanship trophy at the annual baby beef cluh banquet in the Stevens Memorial Methodist Church, Harrisburg. Prizes for places won in the show ring at the county roundup and at the Southeast District roundup at Lancaster went to John and Jay Coble, Hershey R.D. 2.

The 300 members, parents and friends who attended consumed 276 pounds of baby beef at the an nual affair. Twenty-one of the Dauphin 4 Club members received prizes for their work in baby beef projects. Four of them received trophies. John Coble was toastmaster. Kathryn Coble took part in a skit.

They'll Do It Every MERE'S oiteoy-c5eUER4ay USEFUL-ID HELP STOCK ROOM OF PIANO S-CMY WEB-EXeLLErJT mi 50 dure tli number of seismes in almost all rases, arid often it pre-, vent them entirely. However, i not every drug work In every! case. Only an experienced phvsi- irlan can determine, the loneit, drug, after careful teats. I An Instrument railed the elec- la extremely high blood pressure? Answer: It is not likely that alcoholic beverages in moderation will increase, the blood pressure. However, this Is a matter for your physician to decide after be has carefully studied your rondlt ion.

Friends Chip In To Pay Wanger's Pre-Trial Bills HOLLYWOOD (LP) Producer waiter Wanger is nearly broke, but the big wigs of Hollywood will foot part of th bill for his defense ped In to help pay his ''pre-trial expenses. Wanger, who goes on trial Feb. 26, has been living in a friend's apartment since he was charged with shooting Jennings Lang, agent for his wife, Joan Bennett. "His friends wanted to do this anonymously and quietly. We don't especially want it" known and I'm sorry the story leaked out," Perl berg told The United Press.

"He needed some money, and I was asked by group of his clo.e friends to collect it. I didn't approach anybody, nor solicit anyone. "When the 'incident' occurred, some of his closa friends personally volunteered lo help him. They sent him telegrams saying if there was anything they could do to let them know. So 1 contacted those who had offered to help." Wanger's friends who opened their checkbooks include producers Ooldwyn, Disney, Harry Warner, Jack Warner, Darryl F.

Zanttck. Hal Wallis and Perlberg, and Spv- ros Skouras, president of 20lh Century Fox studio and Joseph Schenck, executive production head at Fox. Wanger was faced with an In voluntary bankruptcy suit in fed eral court a year ago. His "Joan of Are," starring Ingrid Bergman, was a colossal money-loser. He hasn't been in the chips since.

Recently Wanger, who once was top executive at Paramount and MGM. signed an independent pro ducing deal with Monogram studio. After ht wounded Lang in a dimly-lit Beverly Mills parking lot, Miss Bennett explained that her husband had been under a strain because of "financial difficulties," "We all did this because we like Wanger, we believe in him and we wanted to help him," said Perl berg. "Naturally, he'll pay it back. It's just a loan." One Man't Opinion By Al.TF.H KIF.RN AV (Distributed By Internationa! Sertilce) While we wera looking tha othr way th style In inglng rhatiged again and tha newest sensation is a fellow with tear in his tonsils When this Johnny Ray starts singing about "The Little White Cloud That Cried," boxes of Kleenex that haven't been opened yet start to drip.

We had him on our radio the other night and after the second record thera was mildew on the microwave. Pack in fha days when Sinatra started, women wanted to pick him tip and ruddle him and feed him to build up his strength. When this hoy sings you've got to mop up around the place. If yon haven't heard him, he sounds like a Kefauver cousin who has just, been told that Harry Is going to run again. But these are queer time anyway.

.1 hear Carlsen is going to California thl week to decorate Glendale for ataylng afloat for so many days. You know these are strange days when you ee buoys where girl used to watk. Retirement Killer For Eiderly Folks print shop which he opened 22 years ago. "It keeps me young in spirit," says Kokanour who has been a printer since he was 17. Alfred Davies, 76, opened a clock repair shop here two years ago and saya business is fine.

Another court, he has been nest man ai an average of two weddings a week for the past five years. By Elsie Hix mm Hanid picked Pixie O'Scowl up, still kicking and yelling. O'Joy, Pixie O'Prank, and Plxii McGiggle all shouted at once. Pixie McSnooze said: "I just found him all curled up in morning-glory blossom, taking a nap. If he's got time to take a nap, he's got time to play tug-o'-war!" Hanid looked sternly at Pixla O'Scowl and said: "Is that trim about your having time to taks- a napr It took several more pinches before Pixie O'Scowl finally admitted that he had been taking a bit of a nap yhen Pixie McSnooze happened to find him.

"But I was just resting up after all my work. And anyhow I don't like tug-o'-war. So leggo of me, leggo!" Able to Work Harder "It'll do you good to play game," said Knarf. "You'll ba able to work harder alter it." So Pixie O'Scowl, with much grumbling and muttering, finally consented to play tug-o'-war with his companions. They played it in a curious way.

First they knocked down several daisies and buttercups, and wound the stems round and round until they had a sort oi rope. Then, to make the rope even stronger, they twined fresh spider-web around it. At length, when the rope was ready, half the pixies took hold of one end of the rope, and half the pixies took hold of the other end. Then, when Knarf gave the signal, they both started pulling in opposite directions. Pixie O'Scowl pulled so hard that he dragged the other side (and his own side, too) into the pond.

That made him laugh. very Interesting game," he said. "Let's Dlav it 82ain It's much more fun than workl" i And it really wast I sty ili 'D, A' Here! What's thia 'A' in Sex Education?" The Pixies Play Tug-O'-War At First, Pixie O'Scowl Didn't Want to Join In PRIVATE LIFE OF BUCK and well adluated. There are many different kind and degrees of eplleptiu attacks. A typical, severe attack Includes muscle tremors, rigidity, uncon- lousnpss, and loss of control over the bladder and bowels.

At the. other extreme, a aeintie mav appear a Just a passing period of forget fulness, Many episodes rf temper tantrums, falnt- lne. mental- confusion, or black outs may ha alight rases of epilepsy that have, missed diagnosis. These types, as well as brief periods of staring without obvious cause, are usually called petit mal epilepsy. niH.iiHcloiis Action In one atranga type, of epilepsy In adults, the person may carry out ansctlon without being aware JIORK OV Labor (ConMnntd Twm rr Tsn) workers, who were Ihe basis of the greatest union take of all.

On their salaries, the union, known popularly as District 6S, would charge up to 10 percent ad lake it from the boss as a re tirement fund. Trouble is that very, very few retail workers stay in the trade more than a few years. This has left the pro-Soviet outfit some Ifi.OtiO.otMl. As Ihe Communists lost control of nlher unions, their manpower was dumped" more and more into District 6V Finally, Arthur Osmsn and his Hide, David Livingston, the man who helped organize the early pro-Communist "Bring the Boys Back Home" maneuver in the Orient in 1945 so we'd have no armed forces in and around Korea, decided lo break with the Party's people in the union. They began firing some comrades.

The Daily Worker attacked them. They counted noses. The score on the top controlling union board was 17 for the Com mie-line and against. Leading the fight for the party reople is a vigorous Sovieteer known as Esther LeU, the woman ho permitted fugitive Communist Party boss, C.vis (Dynamiter) Hall to hide in her apartment. She's the one.

who led the first American delegation to last May Day's Bed Square celebration in Moscow. Receiving; honors due her, she was placed in a reviewing spot only 300 feet from the man in her life, chap by name of Joseph Stalin One night, two weeks ago, the rarty people and the Osman bloc bad a showdown. Jt is now a fight to the finish And the Party can be expected use tough tactics, brother. They have no ethics. This is the crowd which kicked around a widow know.

Called her vile names threatened to destroy the shop left to her and her two children by a husband not dead a year. Sent 100 men to raid a plant, held by this widow and a girl. And when the widow tried to train a foreman, the Commies called him one night, told him he'd take their orders or, "We'll give your wife and kids the business," The story of Osman's revolt is most dramatically told from the press table here at the Sixth Convention of the CIO's Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union, for this was the first outfit to kick out the Commies. Its officers felt ro one could live with the comrades. The CIO Retail Union suf- tf.iA tnm if tiiqt haar) e9 tttr 4i ma employes or their families.

He is: sm By John Cameron Swoyz New York NKW YORK Thought Peddler: talking a bit with tlmt one and from Log of a Roundabout, this one and a eorrespnnd- cut lately back from soldiering hear the tale of the rookie who went, to service from a life as a concert pianist. He was a city slicker with no rural blood In his veins, and thei term "ma'am," 1 1 replaces "air" when ad-dressing the army's hesklrted of fliers, was as fa in 1 1 1 a to hi in as a mule In double harness. Hospitalised with a mild Illness, he 9WAYZE began chattering with the nurse, forgetting nurse have commis sioned rank. The young ladv promptly reminded him. Utterly conrusef, his mind groped tor the elusive "ma'am," but couldn find It.

So pulling himself to at tention as nearly as a beddnd man can, he stared directly at the good- looking lieutenant and snapped: Yes, slr-KKKKK!" At last re pot he hadn't been court-mar tialed. Hi the mall a not from the humorist, Harry Hershfleld, re calling an item here about Man hattan's system of paining found lings. He counsel 1 should have included Ram tloldwyn's gem on naming youngsters, voiced when one of the movie maker' directors called his son "John." "Whv John'?" frown ad (loldwyn. "Every Tom, Dick and Harry is named 'John'!" Yes? I'll thank him to tell me what's so unique about 'Sam Footing it, across Madison Square and fall to watching a trash picker waking a park-benched Inebriate with bis pick-up stick. I truly believe he thought it a lark, poking Hie chap in the sluts.

There's a restful air about Madison Square that you don't find lu t.li-nol,-far-distant Union Square. Hy contrast there's a helping of Coney Island about Union Square and the bustling streets around it. Ilet. on the roof of Kleins sprawl ing department store, machine guns were once mounted during some isnor troutim, sign on a venerahle red brick front: "Keep mm at the Gramercy Gym. Someone better trim up the building a little or it going to fall In on tha gym that keeps trim clients who pay to lose weight day by day.

And if I try real hard I'll bet I ran toss off another rhyme every bit a good as that on. Manhattan Contradictions: The posle emporium on Madison Avenue named The Fifth Avenu Flower Shop. I would never hava thought of a 12-courae Chines dinner as a pick-me-up but whenever actress Anna May Wong gets the blues she goe right down to Chinatown and has one. Of course, she probably wouldn't think of llvarwurst on rye and a mug of chilled buttermilk. But I would.

Glided neatly on th plated window of a plush Fifty-seventh street beauty salon: "Specialists In th art of Hand Culture." Wonder what would happen if I sauntered in and asked for plain, old-fashioned manicure? I'll never know because, drat it, 1 haven't the nrve to try. (pcAViaiiA By James J. Metcalfe Tt) ONE ALONE You can divide your worldly goods Y'our Iot and sympathy But In no righteous way can yo Divide your loyalty For loyalty is aomething pledged To one and only one Until the promise i fulfilled And every deed is don It, may he loyalty to find With every breath of life Your country, jour employer or Your children and your wife Wherever and however long There must he binding tie Without a reservation or The slightest compromise No matter how Ingenoua or How clever you may he You can not serve two masters with Complete fidelity. --rem "Buck $aid he had fo do He wasn't any crowds at all!" By MAX TRELL THERE was a great argument going on. Knarf and Hanid, the shadow-children with the turned-about names, heard the voices long before they reached the Old Oak where the pixies lived.

One voice was saying, "Oh, come on, O'Scowl, don't be such kn old stick-in-the-muddlel You can play this game as well as anybody! You don't have to pretend you're busy all the timel" "But I am busy all the time!" Knarf and Hanid heard Pixie O'Scowl answering in a grumbling, ill-humored, out-of-sorta voice. "Let go of my hand, Mc-Merry! Let go, I say!" All Shouted at Once Here a dozen or more voices all itarted shouting at the same time: "Don't let him go, don't let O'Scowl go!" Knarf and Hanid raced to the Old Oak to see what was going on. On reaching the Old Oak they saw a strange sight. Two crowds of nixies, about, a dozen on each side, were pulling i and tugging at Pixie O'Scowl. One side had him by the hands and arms and were trying to pull him one way; the.

other side had him by the legs and coat-tails and were trying to pull him the other way. Meanwhile, Pixie O'Scowl, while keeping himself from being pulled in either way, kept yelling at the top of his voice: "Leggo, legeo!" Everyone stopped pulling and tugging when Knarf and Hanid appeared. Indeed, they all let go of Pxie O'Scowl so suddenly that he instantly fell to the ground and rolled Into a thorn-bush. Hanid picked him up and held him between her thumb and forefinger. He was still kicking and yelling.

"Now, now, Pixie O'Scowl dear," said Hanid, "there's no need to be so excited any more. What's the trouble?" A Pinch or Two At first the angry pixie refused to answer, but Hanid gave him a little pinch or two and after screaming: Ouch! Leggo! OUCH!" he finally consented to explain. "They want me to play tug-o'-war!" "Well," said Hanid, "what's wrong with that? Why don't you play tug-o'-war?" "Because I'm too busy working. I haven't got time." "He never has any time," said Pixie McMerry. "Its Juoi an excuse Piiie 8 TIMS SEEMS TO ME TO RETIRE TmE OUN6 FOLKS HE 6ETSA OFTO04yc50TNO NO THE rVAy (SET-UP-AND-ao- ti i LlAe ThEY JUST GET ANOTHER ASDUNP W4IT(N6 TO FX TVS.

FOR TWN'6S On OWC FOR CVArJCEMET' FEED BILLS' LUdTrl IFAPU iwoc ruouu BUSINESS PREVIOUS MECHANICAL EXPEraENCE Time HOT FOR ME -X KNOW THEM mO OF JOBS-TUEY A SUV AHO HIM LAV OFF TWO JOS WANT SOMETHING lib KtAL INTERESTING TO JOS MO RELATIONS OR, SOMETHING HOCRO COPLEy, HE'D IT1L BEFORE Fi 1 A SLVEft? JVTTEK-i SETTTti'A Jb3 CA4 WAIT'TUEY COST KNCW THAT COOL! ALL SET TO: FIRST- FOR "MINX 1 But, slowly, it has recovered. Now! PASADENA, Calif. (P A it actually has all of $7,440.16 of oldsters here are convinced the bank and some $37,000 in as-(that retirement kills more persons sets. Not much but a far cryithan hard work, from the morning after it ousted) Typical of those still on the job the comrades and found no one i I. M.

Kokannur, 86, who runs pay 70 VP OlWlOr? TO TWE FACT THAT HE SHOULD W( FOR A UV1NO frATbO MAT to would help the retail union which i couldn't fven pay its rent and sal aries that day in '48. And now, with 100.000 members, it meets today with the knowledge that it led CIO in purging the Commies and that the comrades IT WAS SOMESOD PLAYNCi RUMMV" finally are falling apart in the very 76-year-old man, Ralph L. Chap-outfit on which the party peopie'man, retired once and didn't like had hoped to build a federation it. Now he has his own cigar stand wbirh could capture millions ofjand is already planning to expand American workers. jthe business..

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