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The Terre Haute Tribune from Terre Haute, Indiana • Page 5

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Terre Haute, Indiana
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5
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(t I July 1953. The Terre Haute Tribune. Ride With Heat Wave Is Advite Of Mere Male By Hal Boyle. NEW YORK, July If a heat wave is coming your way, get nervous. You should treat it like an oven wave: Ride with fight it.

Housewives know best how to deal with heat waves. They pull dov the shades, peel off most of their clothes, and lie down until better weather comes along. But how' can a mere male out- I wit a heat wave? Well, here are a few tested recipes: 1. Imitate the girls. Strip down until all you have on is the least the law allows in public.

If ten men in every city had the cour- age to wear shorts to work, soon every man in America who knock kneed would follow suit. 2. Clean out your pockets. This will cut the average weight down five pounds. All you really need to carry in summer is your keys, your busfare and your so-4 rial identification card.

Remember. every extra ounce you pack heat up your blood. 3. If you wear a collar, i you get hot under it. 4.

If you work in a high class place where you have to wear a jacket, strap an ice bag under each armpit. This will do wonders for vou, and you can get ice cube refills from the nearest drugstore. be amazed to know how many men of distinc-1 tion wear ice bags under their armpits these days. 5. When you come home, lake off your shoes and shirt and stretch out on the sofa and ask your wife to fan you.

How do you know she do Wives are always surprising husbands way or another. 6 argue with your wife under any circumstances, not even if she hogs the electric fan. Hot tempers make the blood boil. 7. If you are watching televi- sion and a beer commercial flashes on, run to the kitchen to get yourself a can of brew.

Walk. Slowly. 8 If the heat does become unbearable, follow the example of the dog. The dog cools himself by sticking out his tongue and panting, but the process patented. Stick out your own tongue as far as you can.

and pant hard and rapidly 100 times. If you feel a chill coming on. stop after 50 pants. You want to have to fight a summer i cold. If the boss sees you panting, he is pretty certain to let you take the rest of the day off.

Then you can beat the heat at the ball game, HUNGARY NAMES NEW PRESIDIUM BUDAPEST, Hungary, July 4. newly elected Hungar-i ian parliament met for the first time Friday and named a new presidium. Dtvan Dobi again was elected as chairman or president of the Hungarian Republic. The session followed the be lated resignation Thursday night of Premier Matyas Rakosi's giv- ernment. The parliament action and a constitutional amendment awaiting action Saturday probably will modify new government line with the Soviet pattern The parliament named Dobi, a 65 year-old former landless peasant as president of the a post he has held since Vug 1952, It also named Daniel Nagy, a member of Smallhold Party, as vice president along ith Josef Revai.

minister of popular culture and chief Hungarian Communist idealogist. SLIGHT ERROR. MONTREAL. July Claude Goyette screamed and went into hysterics in court Friday when her husband was sentenced to seven days in jail for drunken driving. Three police officers who had to take the woman from the courtroom explained Mrs.

Goyette thought the judge had said SHEEP GROUP MEETS. Glenn Miller Story Attracts Many Helpers "If You Can Keep It" FLOOD-STRICKEN Japanese watch as a bridge is washed away by raging torrent in southern Japan More than dead were counted early in rescue work, and more than 80ti were missing. U.S. servicemen were aiding rescue operation. (International Rad.ophoto) Gasification Tests On Coal Are Completed BIRMINGHAM, July Seven years of successful experiments in underground jjasification of coal to capture its energy without conventional mining methods have ended at Gorgas, Alabama.

M. Smith, pre sident of Alabama Power revealed yesterday that underground fires were put out June 20 by pumping water into outlet holes of the Gorgas mine. He quickly pointed out that much valuable information has been gained in the Gorgas tests, and experiments are being continued in England, Belgium and elsewhere. Once developed to an economical stage, underground gasification will permit tapping the energy in this and rocky veins of coal which be mined profitably by other methods. Alabama Power co-operated with the Federal Bureau of Mines in the project.

The bureau was forced to withdraw its support when Congress declined to approve further appropriations for the experiments. Two goals were attained. First, producer gas, a low- grade fuel which could be used to operate turbines, was obtained by pumping air and steam over the coal. Then, last November, Gorgas scientists announced they had produced a synthetic gas by pumping oxygen over the burning underground veins. This was the first time synthetic gas had been produced in large quantities by this process.

Synthetic gas is a synthetic gas from which chemists can make gasoline, other fuels and synthetic chemicals. About 6,000 tons of coal were burned during the tests, but no estimate of the overall costs was available. Sv ngman Rliee Scornful Of Attack Made Against Him Bv Churchill Rv Forrest Edwards, SEOUL, July President Syngman Rhee as told Sir Winston Churchill, man of his own age, had denounced him in the British Parliament, the South Korean snorted: old man know' the Opium War is That's Syngman Rhee, outspoken, 78-year-old fighter and kook the Republic of Korea (ROK). Syngman Rhee has led his fledgling Republic of Korea to the brink of parting with America after three years of fighting together against a Communist aggressor. He is one of the most stubborn men.

No one, least of all American diplomats, dispute that. He is fiercely and honestly patriotic. Even those who oppose him the most concede that. He has been imprisoned, tortured, he has never wavered in his fight for an independent, unified against the Korean monarchy, then against the Japanese conquerors, and now against the Communists. Koreans educated in American history sometimes refer to him as the George Washington of Korea, a comparison that only future writers of history will be able to evaluate.

To the bulk of the Korean people, however, he is kook boo, Called Many Things. In his 78 years he has been called many other revo- By Bob Thomas. HOLLYWOOD, July 4. Aaron Rosenberg, the man who is producing the film about Glenn life, agrees with Jimmy Durante: wants to get into the The producer, once a great football guard at Southern California, remarks: I got the Miller story, I thought a lot of people of my generation would be interested in it. But I didn't expect the tremendous personal interest that so many people have about Miller and his band.

Everybody has been issuing suggestions, warnings and even threats about what I should do with the I saw some of the mail he has received. One letter was from an Englishman in Salibury, Southern Rhodesia, who said: a member of the Glenn Miller Appreciation ar- dent Miller fan. The G.M.A.S. is of the opinion that the role should be given to a comparatively unknown actor. I doubt if you could get Prince Bernhardt of The Netherlands, but the resemblance is Another came from an enlisted man in the RAF: my wife and myself, who are Miller fans Painnnf 5 ERPICE Mngaunt, publication of Cititi Company today in ponderous, for bidding Westgate Jail is Chough Pyonk Ok, opposition party lead- an(1 uoikcis of the G.M.A.S., er who dared two weeks ago to niake a suggestion for the Miller brand re-1 star who plays the part lease of 27.000 anti-Communists of Superman in the serial of the prisoners of war in defiance of same name.

He bears a striking United Nations attempts to se-, resemblance, cure an armistice. One correspondent urged that Twice in recent weeks Rhee be played as the has warned newsmen that his number in the picture, and many government will not tolerate dozens have insisted that thoir stories unfavorable to his regime own favorite Miller discs be in-1 and will punish those responsible eluded in the score, for such stories. Not all of the letters are polite So far the veiled threats have Some threaten the producer with been ineffectual against foreign dire results if he heed correspondents in Korea. But cer- their suggestions. One lady de tainly, under different circum- manded to see the scrip imme Benjamin Franklin left Independence Hall, a woman asked him, Franklin, what kind of a government have you given He answered gravely, Republic, madam, if you can keep In painting this Independence Day scene in Hometown, U.

S. the artist, E. Franklin Wittmack, has found an echo of warning in a quotation from the poet William Cullen Bryant. The historic scene of Magna Charta, the signal light on old North Church Tower, the embattled of a great new the hard-won victories, and the priceless freedom, which, on Independence Day 1953, are given every Hometown in the done to celebrate, but to protect. stances any foreign correspondent who criticized Rhee would find himself in trouble.

democracy is a democracy of stern paternalism, of the Unde Sam Plays Role of Cupid ToSe rviccmen In Te xas Camp By Harman W. Nichols. WASHINGTON, July 4. Your versatile Uncle Sam plays diately, claiming she was Miller' mother. Her claim proved incorrect.

I spoke to Rosenberg just after a disc jockey had demanded: father who, although fond of his can you make a picture children, always knows best and about Glenn Miller and not in- who expects them to obey him elude his vocalists, Ray Kberle, cupjd as wen as fights a war. without question. Marion Hutton and the Modern- CUpjd business is being Those who would condemn Rhee carried on at Fort Hood, for his brand of democracy, how- The producer's reply that accordjng f0 (he Pentagon. It is ever, must remember many ht things lifelong fight performers for Korean independence, his long added: Miller band was pri- of exile, the torture he marily instrumental. Nearly all Checks of Vigo Veterans Are Returned The Indiana bonus checks of 58 Vigo county ve terans were to the Bonus Division at Indianapolis during the month of June due the fact the veterans had changed addresses and failed to notify the bonus department.

Veterans whose checks were returned and the last known addresses follow: Paul T. Dammann. 1333 Maple avenue; Harold L. Gray, L29 Fourth street; Norman E. Hammond, 1701 Hulman street; Lee E.

Hay, 2211 North Twenty-third street: Edward H. Hughes. R. R. 6.

H. R. Fields, Terre Haute; Hubert E. Johnson. 1435 Grand avenue: Victor L.

Saberton, 1120 Yoorhees street; Betty J. Schobert, R. R. 4. Box 127; Jessie M.

Sherwood. R. R. 2. Paul W.

Abel, 2514 North Fifteenth street; Vernon D. Cromer, 520 Mulberry street. Apt Ivo Hagenbush, 2263 Deming street; Garland G. Hensley, 1018 Harding avenue; Vernon P. Marsh.

323 South Eighteenth street; Arthur D. Nusbaum, 1000 North Water street; William Rankin, 2935 Simpson avenue; LaFaire E. Robb, 1734 North Twenty-fifth street. Kenneth E. Sanders, 1923 Sixth avenue; John D.

Burns, 209 North Twenty-first street; Hugh M. Davis, R. Box 580 Herschel E. Detrick. 501 South Nineteenth street; Frisky A Childers, 915 Poplar street, (No City); Fred I P.

Douglas, 709 North Ninth street; William L. Edwards, 2130 i Liberty avenue. I Charles E. Gibbons. R.

R. 6, Box 601; Joe E. Hardesty, 1820 Woodlawn avenue; Daniel E. Matherly, 2021 South Center street; Fred W. Schulte, R.

R. 6. Box 213; William R. Smith, 18 Home avenue; Herman T. Snapp, 1524 Barbour avenue; Edward A.

Ward, 415 Second avenue; I Thomas P. Devine, Fairbanks Park, Unit 2A. his own fault. We try to him on the straight and Jack R. Martin, 941 Lafayette avenue; Juanita G.

Osborn, 517 Working with' newly-inducted soldiers is old hat with Miss 1 316 Mathis. When she learned new I a kl bo. i a men had been assigned to the Armored Division, the first 362 South Twentieth street; John remember many he may use one or more of those kind thing she did was suggest that Kbi'g, ithee's lifelong fight performers in the film. But he recruits at the Fort Hood the library double its supply of naD vc rnees, u. independence, his long added: Miller band was pri- of exile, the torture he manly instrumental.

Nearly all GIs ask two questions consist- suffered in prison as a young of his great records were without when they visit the stacks, man for his part in a student vocals or at least the vocal The first is, do you write vears demonstration for government re- insignificant. Miller would allow form, his passionate belief that he no stars in the band; its great is right, the Oriental philosophy that might is permissable to translate right into reality. Rhee is not senile. His mind still is quick, active, keen. He has a good grasp of world problems.

American diplomats who have pleaded, cajoled and fought with him on truce problems can success was due to the fact that it worked as a team. Miller told me that her husband said, I could play the trombone as well as Tommy Dorsey, star myself and others in the band. But since I a love The other is, shall I say in a letter to my The army, being sensible, has put women to work in the library. The head librarian at Fort Hood is Mary Mathis. She has writing paper.

of the boys come in and write as many as seven or eight love letters a seven or eight different she said. of them send the same poem to all the girls, hoping they won get together Noilh Fifteenth street D. Crowe. Svcamor R. R.

6. Norman V. Lawrence, 1510 Grand avenue; David A. Persinger, 1121 Tippecanoe street; Michael Soreno, 1523 Ash street; Arthur P. Williams, 536 North Fourteenth street; Walter E.

can play as well as Tommy, gathered as many books onJhe Unionist a radical, a is no, subpett to ary, a dictator who has crushed wherever possible those who opposed him even when their were as patriotically inspired as his own. His brand of democracy is not the brand Americans know. He blandi.shment, not swayed by per suasion. The greatest disappointment of all has been what he considers his abandonment by the Inited Nations at a time when he con- have to make the band great by arrangements and precision At least one letter writer has told the producer that Jimmy subject of making love through the mails as she could corral. Soldiers, it seems, go in for a lot of poetry.

get lots of calls to look and compare notes Not all of the kids need help from the books to write letters. The other night. Miss Mathis was forced to remind a couple of hoys that it was 10 and time to turn out the lights in the library. writing a love of them explained. on Stewart, who plays Miller, must up love poems to wear the familiar rimless glasses.

Mathis said. have a long But the band widow says list, well indexed, and the that her husband never wore! difference if the fellows copy the I'm helping my Miss Mathis suggested that Dennis I). Crowe, Sycamore Housing, Apt. 37B; Gilbert J. Leonard, R.

R. Thomas W. Osborne, 635 North Fourth street Wayne H. Roberts, 1613 Sixth avenue; George E. Sparks, R.

R. John N. Groves, 1633 North First street; Marion Haskett, 923 South Sixth, E. Riggs; Jack R. King, 362 South Nineteenth street; Arthur F.

Lauer, 814 Lincoln; Harold W. believes in freedom of speech and siders military victory glasses during his early days and poems and put their own bylines No an freedom of the press only when sible in renewal of an all out war jajer sported them only on the: on them? You expect he per ca? a 11 it nnt anaintt him nr against the Communists. KirHcfhnH That't hnw it will be rhpm tn rewrite Keats and sublet it is not directed against him or his regime. Held protective Post Offices With Cute Names Hobby Of Educator With An Imagination against the Communists. He has no faith in a post armistice political conference, little faith in the success of a of his beloved land.

He has fought against an armistice on the present battle line since the talks began nearly two years ago. He passionately be A-C EMPLOYES GET PAY BOOST By George Mackie. HARTFORD. July H. Hughes, vice president and dean of Trinity College, thinks it would be nice if the Office Department wrould a prosy, workaday so that Connecticut has 18 Chestnut Hills and the same number of Prospect Hills.

Animals, birds, fishes, points of the compass, colors, numerals, names establish post offices in such Con- i and such adjectives as great, lit- necticut localities as Gadpouch, Lull, Moose Nod, Obtuse, Pigtail Comers, Puddletown and Wallop. Hughes argue that their populations are sufficient to warrant a post office. He just thinks they would make lovely postmarks hobby is Connecticut place names. He has catalogued tie, long or middle are prominent factors in locality names. Washington, Conn pop.

2.200, is the first town in the United States named in honor of Gen. Washington. Connecticut, more than any strte in the country, uses what Henry L. Mencken called portmanteau or telescope words, formed by joining the first 20.000 in the last 10 year-, work-1 syllable of one word with the last syllable of another. Torringford is between Torrington and New The Vigo County Sheep Producers met for discussion and demonstration with the 4-H Lamb Club Friday night at the cattle barn on the Fairgrounds, Topics included a demonstration on fitting lambs for showing, foot trimming, control of internal parasites in lambs and sheep, and discussion on overall showing of the animals.

ing first with former Lt. Gov. Odell Shepard, author and English teacher now at Bard College, and more recently with Morse Allen of English faculty. Hartford; Hadlyme between Haddam and Lyme; Harwinton is a tow made up of portions of Hart- fiable cease River boundary between North Korea and Manchuria. His English, first learned at missionary schools in Korea and later polished by six years of college study in the United States, is excellent.

He has a master of arts degree from Harvard and a doctorate of philosophy from Princeton. At informal press sessions in his garden, he may slowly walk about, searching for an offending weed which he will carefully pull out by its roots. this weed ruins the he is fond of saying, do a few bad people ruin the world for the BEAUTY CONTEST. them to rewrite Keats Shelly, would The army recognizes, though, that a lot of the girl friends are familiar with the old masters, and that they might be a little suspicious. said Miss Mathis, we Employes of the Alhs-( halmers handy Elizabeth Barrett Manufacturing Company at the Sonnets from the vvorks here have received an- and Omar Khay- other productivity improvement for a Third Division Marine from caught pilfering a poem, it's Spencer.

Ind. He is Private bandstand. how it will be in the picture. SEND LOCAL MARINE TO HAWAII STATION The local Marine Recruiting Station received notice from maybe they could use a book on Sharp, R. R.

Donald K. Hofe- the subject of love-letter writing, ditz, Apt. J-B, Voorhees Park; thank you. the George L. Price, 322 South Thir- know our, teenth street; Billy M.

Johnson, could go on General Delivery; Harold F. ibject writing forever keep I Camp Pendleton, that the lieves that there is only one justi- jm frjnged beaches of Hawaii i fire line -on the alu will be the training ground If the boy pay increase of 4 cents an hour. James L. Bevington. son of Mr and Mrs.

Harold J. Bevington of Spencer The 20-year-old leatherneck is a rifleman in the Third Marines, an infantry regiment of the di- CHICAGO, July vision stationed at Camp Pendle- may need special types of ciga- NICOTINE AFFECTS WOMEN STRONGLY effective on the first pay period in July, This increase, for the people covered by bargaining agreements, is the second of three such the Solomon, 507 North Fourteenth street. These veterans are asked to notify Margaret Terhorst, service officer at the Assistance Center, 112 North Seventh street, of ir new address. FAIR TICKETS ARRIVE. Tickets for the State Fair, which begins Sept.

3, have arrived at the Farm Bureau Insurance Office, 118 Harding avenue. About 700 ducats are allowed for local distribution. The tickets sell for 40 cents here, but cost 60 cents if pur- ton, Calif. He will leave for Hawaii in July as one of 4.000 Marines in a Regimental Combat COAL PRODUCTION FOR NATION DOWN WASHINGTON, July The National Coal Association reported today that the country rets because they are more sensitive to nicotine, according to Dr. Morris T.

Friedell, Chicago. Friedell reported in the Journal agreements, on the contract dates of the American Medical Associ- during July and August, and for ation that women undergo a 33 not covered in July, per cent change in blood volume. This increase is estimated increases provided for three-year labor contract signed chased at the fair grounds. The in 1952. local office has no automobile Company officials said the in- admission tickets for sale, crease will be effective at other Allis-Chalmers plants for ployes covered in bargaining compared to 19 per cent for men.

while smoking He performed experiments on 52 men and 48 women, making their bloodstream slightly radio- hoost the $3,000,000. to company pay roll by Freezers Refrigerators SERVEL (ICE MAKERS) Eleven-Eleven Sales, Inc. C-7653 1111 VVab. Ave. C-7653 Obviously, Hughes con- Windsor and Farmington.

I fine his studies to Connecticut's formally organized towns and cities. There are only 169 of them. He collects names of rivers, lakes, swamps and localities used principally by folks in the immediate neighborhood. Among other things his studies Depressions gave names to at least two Connecticult localities. Hardscrabble in Warren and Pinchgut in Danbury.

Devils Hopyard and Kingdom are two of a dozen wild ard rocky places in Connecticut taking their names from the SHERIDAN. July jn the first six months of 1953. Little Coyote Friday This was 18.526.000 tons below- filed her entry in the the half-year production of contest to be 326,000 tons in 1952. produced 222.800,000 tons of coal active to measure the amount of change in the blood vessel system while smoking. Friedell said his findings prob- decided here July 18.

Earlier, Mary Louis Defenders and Eunice White Temple announced their candidatures. For the week ended June 28. the association estimated tonnage at 10.050.000. compared ith 9.865,000 tons the previous week. ably explain why women get a bigger from a cigaret, causing them to smoke less but to become more deeply addicted than men.

OAKLET'S DELICIOUS ICE CREAM ALL FLAVORS AwotKrr Mtur bow bmy trMi tor Hrh.n* or yoer troubto hr fro howd 1nat WONDER SALVE nnd Winter irwtwd Help you or the to Arwir now for WONDER SAI.VK No ttclT pp Swfo for ehiiirww WONDER SA1LVK WONDER MEDICATED or money refunded. wonderful Try them. mi indn in Haute bv Kinf. Miller. Honk, faillii and Bavr Drug Stores, or your hometown Ad vertiaement.

EATING OUT? TRY LITTLE DUTCH MILL AIR CONDITIONED MILES EAST ON ROUTE 40 SPECIALIZING IN -----STEAKS CHOPS CHICKEN AND FRENCH FRIED SHRIMP BAR RIBS AND HICKEN TRY OCR PLATE LUNCH OPEN 6:30 A. M. TO 10 P. M. F.

HAGERMAN, Prop. have made him quite an author- nether regions. There are ity on Indian languages. The corresponding and compensating Quinnipiac River in Connecticut, appellations that belong on the for instance, is the same word as side of the Hughes says, the Kennebec in Maine. It means The Bible had its influence, water He has though, with 11 Goshens and become also a debunker of local number of Sharons and Canaans.

legends. The story that Yelping: Bangall, in Stamford, got its Hill got its name from a pack of name because it is the former foxes disregards the fact the land site of a tin shop, was once owned by a man named Cherry Park, in Avon, may Yelping. never have seen a cherry tree, Among the assortment of odd It is named for an Indian chief1 facts compiled by Hughes: called of his Most place names grow' of fondness for cherry rum. If the Indians could come back Connecticut (Quinmtukut), they probably wouldn't recognize many places they named; but their own fault because they never developed a written language. Each early settler who heard an Indian name wrote it the way it sounded to him the result has been something that borders on Hence nobody knows how it started out.

but the longest place name in Connecticut, applied to a stream in Sherman, now looks like this: katankshunk Brook. i jst I QUART BRICK PINT BRICK 39c 20c SPECIAL PRICE VANILLA BRICK QUARTS 54 BUY ONE GET 2ND QUART FOR ONLY 15c STORE HOURS 7:00 A. M. 8:00 P. M.

Every Day and Sunday In S. cities 60 to 80 per cent of traffic fatalities are pedestrians. cAwr nr THF RR47IIIW SEAMEN who survived a collision between ihe freighter Loide Pan- ima and the oil tanker Gulftrade oft the Jersey coast arrive aboard a Coast Guard culler at a New York pier. One seaman was reported killed and two missing. Rematnder 53 men originally aboard the Brarilian ship remained on the badly crippled vessel at it hmped port under its own power.

OA LEY 1 PLENTY OF (VaUr PARKING SOUTH SEVENTH STREET PHONE $141.

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About The Terre Haute Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
291,606
Years Available:
1948-1977