The Daily Spokesman (Pampa, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 211, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1954 Page: 2 of 16
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»AOE TWO—SECTION ONE
THE BAMBA DAILY SPOKESMAN
Thg Daily SPOKesmnn
Award
WAMTA. tlXll
An Independent Democratic newspaper dedicated to the
principle* of true democracy a* Mated hy Thoma*
Jefferson. who said, “I would rather be expoeed to the
mcoovenlencea attending too much liberty than tho*e
attending too email a degree at U."
rMIDAV MORNING, AUGUST IX IBM
Frank M. Carter, rabHeher
U Manager Marvin Harris, Business Manager
halier J. T. howling, f'lrralallna Nupt.
Mag Manager Kd llavla, Mrrkaalrnl Hu PI
_____ J Preaa la exclualvely entitled to the uae tor publication of all new* ola-
credlted to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and alao the local newa
herein. All rtghta of repubUcatlon of aperlal dlnpatrhea are alao reserved.
dally except Monday. The Dally Spokesman. 113 S. Cuyler. Pampa. Trxaa,
Entered aa second-class matter at the poet office at Pampa. November
Act of March 3. 1897.
Turning Right On Red
Some Pampans have difficulty in reading, or else they do
not believe in signs. This peculiar ailment does not seem
to hit them until they get behind the wheel of their car. As
they are pedestrians they do a pretty good job of
traffic signs. But when they get in their automo-
it is a different story.
Pampans, however, are really law-abiding citizens and
if those individuals who persist in wheeling their car around
a right turn on a red light, without a stop, would only go a
little slower they would find that the sign specifically states
•uch turn should be made after a stop.
Those two last words “After Stop" are written In the
■ of lettering as the entire sign but there is probably
no two words disregarded more in city driving—at least by a
good many individuals.
Undoubtedly some of the violations are not really pre-
meditated. Coming up to a red light for a right turn the
driver sees a clear lane ahead and forgets that the traffic
law says to come to a stop and then turn.
But regardless of whether such actions are premedita-
ted, they are violations of our traffic safety code and they
cduki easily result in accidents. So let’s take it a little easier
on- right turns on the red light and remember that traffic
tews were not made to persecute any individual but for the
safety of all.
Unfit For Highway
TTie number of cars on the highways today that are
fifteen yeafrs old and older number 4,500,000 of the 44,000,000
in operation Nearly a million of these are nineteen years old
or older. Aid another million have been put together from
wrecks in junk yards.
While only 10 per cent of traffic accidents are ascribed
to faulty mechknism, the large number of antiquated, re-
claimed or otheifvise mechanically dubious cars in service
are a constant rqenace.
Fifteen states'^nd the District of Columbia weed out the
unfit cars through compulsory inspection. Failure to pass in-
after inspection,
spection, or to make the necessary repairs
rules them off the rqad.
from traffic as unfit fdr travel.
With nearly a thircK of the states showing the way, it
would seem that the rest would fall in line, if for no other
reason than to assure that all cars on the road are at least
mechanically fit. The larger traffic hazard, the human ele-
must be controlled through education, self-control and
In the meantime, the controllable hazard of me-
fitness can be controlled by law, as fifteen states
have shown. '
The Greatest Lesson
Lyman Bryon of Columbia University has just publish-
ed a volume of talks he gave at Wisconsin University, the
moat refreshing idea in which is the statement, “Perhaps
some day we c§m learn the greatest lesson of charity, which
is that most men are better than they seem to be." It is a
lesson we have been learning for more than five hundred
years, since this continent began to call the men and women
who sought the chance to work out their destiny in freedom
In a new land. It is a lesson basic in democracy, which holds
all men to be bom equal.
Turning Back the Clock
In this era of radio, television and electronics, when the
human voice is transmitted by air waves across the ocean, it
seems an anachronism for the telephone company to be
planning to lay the first telephone cable across the Atlantic,
But there is no secrecy in the air. The cable will preserve
the confidential nature of transatlantic telephone communi-
cation, which in time of war, may be vital to national defense.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE An,w,rU:£,,**rd,>'’,Pu“u
ACROSS
U—Burma
tribesman
17—Correct*
•»—Prapoaltloa
40—Narrow, flat
board
-Bitter eeteh
43—Bitter___
43—Body of water
45—Lounie about
47—Sleeveless
cloak,
41—Minor
*
57—Spanish pi oral
article
St—Puff
M ran **
19—Fruit drink
DOWN
1—A Mato (abfcr.)
4SMIII
■BtiHH
r«j^an
iiwrYZdi.
Mmm JmIH!
1—Cart of "to bo"
• ■—Make-up
4 Ruaalan hemp
5 -High card
mony
o—Prayer*
3—nioesy paint
*repo, 11
mand
eagle
Oar
■lee
nrtloa
Current news sometimes brings
back memories. Herbert Clark Ho-
over had a big eightieth birthday
party. Mr. Hoover is a famous man
and will long lie remembered. How-
ever, he is one who, through un-
fortunate circumstances, m u s t be
apologized for In the same breath
with words of praise. I can remem-
ber when Hoover was president.
One little thing I remember that he
when talking for newsreels looked
swiftly up and down, picking each
word from his notes. The great de
pression came during Hoover’s ad-
ministration and -the jackrabbit
population was almost eaten u p.
I always felt that any one man was
not big enough to cause such a
dreadful depression. His friends
say he didn't cause the depression;
when running for President in 1941.
Thomas E. Dewey said that
Roosevelt caused the depression.
Hoover was an engineer, a great
one, and the food administrator
for World War I. He fed the star-
ving babies of Belgium and also the
starving Armenians.
Warren G. Harding, perhaps the
most tragic of U. S. Presidents,
died in I923. Calvin Coolidge took
P
he did not choose to run. The Rep-
his place. In 1928, Mr Coolidge said
ublicans picked Hoover, and h e
won. He took office on March 4,1929.
Pretty soon came the stock market
crash. Then drouth and depres-
sion...Dust stormg...Cowmen ruined
banks closing by the score..
Farm homes being foreclosed...The
highways lined and bordered, with
men, women and children. Boy, we
had sure enough hard times. Mr.
Hoover set up the Reconstruction
Finance Corooration and appointed
Jesse Jones of Houston to it. But
he didn’t anything about bank
closings,vast army of the un-
employed, the depressed farm
prices.
Folks who starved out or stood
in soup lines had to blame some-
one; they blamed Hoover. A camp
of itinerants on the shore of t h e
Trinity in Dallas named their tertt
lage Hi
There are still hordes of folks whp
and trailer villas
foovervUle.
see breadlines when they hear Mr.
Hoover's name mentioned.
The greatest arguments the
Democrats have is that not a
depositor in a national bank has
lost a cent since Mr. Roosevelt re-
placed Hoover. Unemployment has
not been a problem. It is much
more difficult to foreclose on farm-
ers. The Securities and Exchange
Commission protects the people
from wildcat promotions for invest-
ment dollars.
Perhaps Mr. Hoover was not to
he didn't gallop like
ps
blame, but _
Franklin D. Perhaps he was a vic-
tim of circumstances. Democrats
still run against him. just as Rep-
ublicans still feel they must beat
Franklin D.
Congrats to the 80-year-old Mr.
Hoover,
Politics From
The Cloakroom
By DORIS FLEE SON
WASHINGTON—The results in
Tennessee added to those of t h e
Alabama primaries show that there
is no longer any reason why South-
ern statesmen cannot be leaders of
the nation as well.
That the South has begun to take
the new dispensation in stride is
clearly evidenced in the re-nomina-
tion of Senators John Sparkman
and Estes Kefauver. Both these
Senators on their own motion had
sought national preferment and had
accepted the risks involved in be-
ing national candidates- Sparkman
for Vice President on the Adlai
Stevenson ticket in 1952 and Ke-
fauver for President.
In their races this year, all the
forces of reaction coalesced behind
aggressive young opponents. Again-
st both Sparkman and Kefauver the
charge was used that they were
liberal Democrats and internation-
alists. The effort also was strongly
made to use the segregation issue
against them.
Both Sparkman and Kefauver de-
fended their records successfully
and stood by the Supreme Coprt.
Defauver calmly told his constitu-
ents that anyone who told them
they could successfully defy the
highest court in the land was de-
ceiving them.
The npise of the well-financed
campaign against Kefauver had
frankly frightened him and his
friends. His three-to-one victory
shows that the people of a m 1 d-
South state are not inclined to turn
the clock back but take some pride
in the fact that one of theirs took
national positions on the great
issues of the day.
In supporting Sparkman, the
people of Alabama similarly stood
bf a — |
Senator willing to carry the
banner of the national Democratic
party and to serve on the United
Natioi
atkms.
Because of what they are and
what they stand for. the Kefauver
and Sparkman victories are much
more important than their personal
good fortunes. It has been a draw-
back both to their party and their
country that Southerners seemed to
feel they could not keep stex> with
the Democratic platform ana main-
tain their power at home.
Democratic conventions and
elected Presidents through their
hold on the pivotal states. Yet the
political skill and brains of the
Sou
themers have swayed the
course of Congress and given Pres-
idents Roosevelt and Truman the
legislative majorities which made
their programs possible.
Their own fears have helped to
Icpan them from the national ticket
Rv*p Miami si sais* iiiyT iiausR seal uvas^i
and In some cases from
WHAT'S THE ATTRACTION?
Ct uuu l wwvviuiv
typewriter ribbon—my tenth year
in this Washington column-writing
by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
r/wz/jr
By THOMAS L. STOKES
BATH,
Report From Washington
England
The simple,
basic truths bear repeating when
the occasion arises, especially in
these trying times.
Among them, that people are
much the same everywhere in the
world - desiring peace and secur-
ity for themselves and their fami-
lies and showing friendliness, kind-
ness and offering a helping hand
to the stranger from another land
who comes among them.
All of this — and it is quite
usual and normal •— has been the
personal experience of this report-
er and his wife on a vacation auto-
mobile tour through much of Scot-
ii«
land, Ireland, Wales and England
— a rambling expedition with no
formal plan. It included some of
the traditional sight-seeing, but
more of observing how Ih*,people
live in the small towns/%n the
farms, at their resort centers, and
reveling always in the bekuty of
these tidy islands, well-tended and
fruitful, with every haystack, every
hedgerow exactly in place, just so.
You get the impression among
these people of a yearning for
peace, of war-weariness, with an
undertone of anxiety about the
nervous impulsiveness that they
seem to sense in our Amtyieun
•foreign policy.
That brings up another simple.
basic truth which strikes one here
as it does, too, at home. This is
he way foreign policy still is man-
aged exclusively by so few and
with their decisions now so mo-
mentous in the atomic age. Num-
ber 10 Downing Street seems a
long ways off in the villages
through which we have driven,
though London is not really very
far from anywhere in the United
Kingdom, just as the White House
and the State Department seem a
long ways off in the small towns
of Iowa or Georgia or Oregon.
Yet you have the feeling that the
yearning of the people here for
a season of peace has gotten
through to their leaders and im-
pressed itself upon them. The par-
liamentary system appears more
sensitive and responsive than ours.
That undoubtedly explains the de-
termination with which Anthony
Eden worked to get a peace in
Indochina, as it surely explains Sir
Winston Churchill’s earnest desire
for some rapprpehement with So-
viet Russia that he expressed so
frankly at the press luncheon on
his visit to Washington with Mr.
Eden a few weeks ago. He was
represented as still intent upon a
meeting with Mr. Malenkov as the
House of Commons recessed a few
days ago.
The doughty veteran of war and
diplomacy, who once proclaimed
that he did not become Prime Min-
ister to presidfc-over the liquidation
of the British (Empire,‘found him-
self under hehvy fire and on the
hehvy rtre and on
defensive in the House of Com-
mons -jnst before its recess be-
cause of the withdrawal of British
troops- from Suez. He stalked angri-
ly from the chamber at one point
under the whiplash of Clement
Attlee, Labor Party leader, who
was twitting the Prime Minister
about the different position he took
on Egypt when the Labor Party
was in power. WhTn ib.e Prime
Minister returned eventually to the
House session he defended his
“Quit Suez” policy on the ground
that the H-bomb and nuclear weap-
ons had made previous policies
"utterly obsolete.’’.The atomic age
'is much on his mind, as he re-
vealed so clearly during hi* Wash-
ington visit. For him it is symbo-
ized in the H-bomb.
For the moment, however, the
British people themselves seem to
have pushed that hobgoblin into
the back of their minds. You get
some idea of the strain of the
long years of adversity, the weari-
ness of war and sacrifice, in the
relief with which they are wel-
coming a symbol of the end of the
policy of adversity. That was
abandonment of rationing five
weeks ago. There is relief in that
symbol, even though some house-
wives an? writing angry letters to
the newspapers complaining about
some prices thal have gone up.
This is the holiday season in
Britain and the chief worry is the
weather, which has been cold and
rainy and miserable for a longer
period than in 25 years. It is the
chief topic of discussion every-
where and the London Daily Ex-
press is running a Pollyanna-type
feature every day inviting sugges-
tions a boil t how to enjoy yourself
on a holiday despite the rain. The
weather has reduced business at
tourist centers, though an amaz-
ing multitude of Britishers are
sloshing doggedly through ittto va-
cation spots in their autonitobiles
and on their bicycles and motor-
bikes. So are two American tour-
ists.
The big bank holiday of the year
in the first week of August re-
minded the visitors from the U.S.
of the crack once made by the
late Hendrik Willem Van Loon as
he sat on his Connecticut hill
watching the Sunday afternoon
traffic on the road below. He ob-
served that everybody in Bridge-
port was going to Norwich and
everybody in Norwich was going
to Bridgeport. It did seem that
everybody in Bath was going to
Bristol and everybody in Bristol
was coming here to Bath.
_MIPAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1954
The Crystal Eight Ball
tv Anri now Wv© fl
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
WASHINGTON - I «uess we can
agree that capitalism works out
pretty well for all concerned So
cialism I don’t know much about
But I’m dead certain that when
you try to mix capitalism and ;
cialism you can come up wiin
some fabulous messes.
The trouble seems to be
capitalists are smarter than social-
ists. They always seem to get UK
best of the deal. ,
What brings on these philosophic
mutterings is the fact that i n
about to celebrate -^with a new
And now We’ve got the Senate
Banking Committee, under Sen
Homer E. Capehart <R.. Ind.) j*
vestigating still another phase ot
the government that put taxpayers’
dollars into private building enter-
prises. Sen. Capehart figures that
1
the builders nroflted by half a
lion dollars on ^federal mortga^
business. And somehow it seems
like most of my pieces for the pa-
per have had to do with our fed-
eral government putting the tax
payers’ money into private busi-
ness (that’s combining capitalism
and socialism, in my book' and
getting stung.
We had first the Reconstruction
Finance Cornoration, which sank
good cash into snake farms it he
snakes died), cactus gardens (the
cactus market slumped I and gam-
bling hells (legal in Nevadat. For
a while there the bureaucrats were
investing our money in cocktad
rooms, juke-box factories and mo-
torcars for itinerant preachers.
The capitalists, who got the mon-
ey in all these enterprises, mostly
did all right. The involuntary so-
cialists, meaning the rest of us.
lost heavily.
These RFC investments, you
may remember, reached their cli-
max in a $37,000,000 loss when the
Lustron Corp, — manufacturer of
houses built of enameled steel like
bathtubs — folded in Columbus,
Ohio. This was the firm, you also
may recall, which slipned Sen. Joe
McCarthy, the demon investigator.
$10,000 Ibr writing an essay on the
subject of housing.
The Senator now’s in the throes
of being investigated about this lit-
erary endeavor. It was downright
dull, that booklet by Sen. McCar-
thy, and I’m pretty sure I could
have written it (adv.t better,
cheaper. That case just aboiii
caused the RFC to blow up; it is
no more.
deals. Some of these were perfect
ly honest, even though the capital-
ists always seemed to come out on
top.
One of the latter,' from Rich-
mond, Va., was so ineDt as an
aoartment - house builder that h«
went bankrupt, but he made $1,.
000,000 in profit in the process. An-
000,000 apartment house in Wash-
ington, even though the law said
flatly that government mortgages
could be no bigger than $5,000,00j|
So he sliced his apartment houlr
in half, filled the crack with putty
and got separate mortgages on the
two halves. The senators are only
getting a good start on this housing
inquiry, and they should be making
headlines from now until snow
flies.
In the meantime we’ve got the
little problem of the government,
itself, in business. It is in a long
line of manufacturing enterprises.
It makes ice cream, produce
paint, soins rope, runs laundri#
roasts coffee and operates the big
gest printing nlant in the world.
Nobody’s urging the federate to
shut down the Government Print-
ing Office, but a mighty campaign
is on to get the government out of
all those other enterprises. Every
one of them is in competition with
private business, none pays taxes,
and—so the argument goes — we
taxpayers are the ultimate losers.
iaA|70J Vi O M* v »■ ------ —-—•*
Odds are that Congress will pass a
.....goes home, tak;t%
law before it „— -
the government out of most
these businesses.
I mean these last 10 years have
been interesting, all right, but,
when the subject got around to
mixing capitalism and socialism, I
found them hair-raising. One other
thing: one of the snake men threat-
ened to sue me, but I regret to re-
port he never did. The horrid de-
tails of his federal financing would
have made interesting reading.
(Distributed by United Feature Synd.. In^
LET’S ASK THE BIBLE
Truth f?or today.
Laura’s family has moved away
from her home town and Laura has
had to leave her dearest friend. It
is the greatest anguish to her that
she will not be able to see him for
some time, and possibly never.
Laura is troubled because she finds
herself thinking of him when she
kneels to pray, and she tells her-
self that she must separate her
devotions to God from the love and
aching sadness in her heart.
1 Thessalonians 2:17, 20, 3:7-11,13
But we, being taken away from
you for a short time, in sight, not
in heart, have hastened the more
abundantly to see your face with
great desire. For you are our
glory and jdjr. Therefore we were
comforted, in all our necessity
and tribulation, by your faith.
Because now we live, if you stand
in the Lord. For what thanks can
we return to God for you. in all
the joy wherewith we rejoice for
you before our God. Night and
day more abundantly praying
that we may see your face. Now
God Himself and our Lord Jesus
Christ, direct our way unto you.
hearts without blame, in holiness.
And may the Lord confirm you
with all His saints.
Our dear Lord looks with the
tenderest regard on those who low
and are separated, for in Gethsir
mane He shared all anguish of
every kind; and He has known the
direst separation. We should never
give to any human creature the
adoration due to God alone, and
our prayers should be without dis-
traction, but we pay our Lord
homage also when we entrust all
our longings to His care, and sub-
mit our hopes to His wise and
sweet plan for our happiness. He
would not wish us to set up a.
wall between Him and anyth!#
or anyone in our hearts, but
to sanctify holy love in Him, and
drive out all that is unholy and un-
worthy of Him. The surest way to
ease the hurt of absence is to
place the one loved in His protec-
tion, to ask God to do what is best
for his or her soul. Drawing ever
closer to Him, the bond between
those who are His own is strength-
ened, and the distance lessened.
Folks are about the same the
world over and to get back to a
serious note that the British are
trying to keep fluted in this holiday
season, as are we in the United
States, there is that question in
the old hymn that we sang in
Bath Cathedral:
“When comes the promised time.
That war shall be no more?”
(Distributed by United Feature Synd.. Inc.)
Winchell On Broadway
Alice in Wonderland: Sen. Mar- ‘
garet Chase Smith’s notorious
••TV—.1
Declaration of Conscience,” has
long been the "Mein Kampf” of
the Get-McCarthy-Bund. Yet on
Feb. 6, 1954, while testifying under
oath at a pre-trial hearing in the
U. S. Courthouse at Foley Square,
Madame Maggie in answer to ques-
tions about whom did she mean
in the Declaration when she said
the Senate had “been debased to
the level of a forum of hate and
character assassination" and “had
been made a publicity platform for
irresponsible sensationalism,” re-
plied (page 229i ”1 had in mind
particularly the Tydings Commit-
tee which I believed to be trying
Senator McCarthy instead of the
people they were appointed to try.”
Jabberwocky: And then again on
page 230: “If you are refer-
ring to Sen. McCarthy’s complaint
that the Tydings’ Committee was
trying him instead of the people
they were set up to try. I would
say yes, I did agree with him. I
felt that the Tydings’ Committee
did not follow through on the cases
(against .subversives» that they
should have been working on.”
tory. At the same time he and
Sparkman have increased the avail-
ability of all their South-
ern colleagues.
The Northern liberals have dom- The South then may look forward
again, if the present trend contin-
ues, to a Southerner in the White
House. The last of the planters to
possess the Presidency was Zach-
ary Taylor, who took office on
on March 4, 1849. He was a Whig
President but a slave-owner from
ixKiisiana. After him, the North,
the Midwest and the West took
thereafter Southerners
Actually the holt of Southern
states to President Eisenhower
was a sign that the old tabus no
>r held force. Whatever the
they publicly assigned to
’ ' irs could
they were
’- of the
Presidents might claim South-
ern ancestry but they were n o t
reasons
their v
n page 237 for a specific
of the way in which Ty-
Asked on
example
dings used "the Senate for his own
selfish political gain,” the Madame
from Maine answered: “In Sena-
tor Tydings’ debates in attacking
Senator McCarthy.” Naughty,
naughty, Maggie, they’ll throw you
out of “the Joe-Must-te
oe-Must-Go League.’
California. Here I Am: Billy
Daniels fMr. Old Black Magic),
who is wowing ’em at Mocambo,
is esconced in the fabulous Karl
“Madman” Muntz mansion in the
Hollywood Hills. Billy bought it
several months ago as his perma-
nent home, brought a governess
for his children from Canada. And
I remember him at Dickie Wells’
. . . Arlene Dahl is frantic. Her
two white poodles went on the
lam . . . Director John Ford char-
tered a battered old rust bucket
freighter which will be anchored
off Midway for the location scenes
for "Mr. Roberts.” The stars,
Warner Bros, crew Ford and his
guests will live on it. It’s been
refitted with sleeping accommoda-
tions for 120. (And island gals,
too?) . . . Gloria Grahame. the
Academy Award winner, convinc-
ed Rodgers and Hammerstein she
has a voice, so no double will be
used for “Oklahoma.” All that and
trebles, too?
One World But Who Wants It:
Did you know that 660 foreign em-
ployes of the U.N. (with 800 de-
pendants) are vacationing in their
nome countries, (including those
behind the Iron Curtain) with the
U.S. paying the lions' share of the
On© Year Ago
A of. it.
Lions Club members heard a
sports round-up at their noon meet-
incr Quaker was Warren Hasse.
th
tr
a were coming In to t h e
Production and Marketing
itration office from farm-
over the county. The vote
'cTmttn a°id»
million bucks expenses. These trip-
pers travel on special passports.
T-Men stand by helplessly while
some dishonest employes smuggle
contraband in and out. Those from
Communist countries bring secret
reports back home, return freshly
briefed to carry on the cold war
against us, and like chumps we
pay for it . . . You won’t read it in
any "liberal” paper here, but even
Britain is fed up with the world
boondoggle. The Select Committee
on Estimates disclosed that Eng-
land lavished 16 million pounds as
its share on UNESCO "last year,
without any government depart-
ment being responsible for seeing
it was properly spent. The Com-
mittee is for calling a halt. News-
paper editorials demand all funds
be cut oft.
Confession of a Cautious Cutie:
Dont try to outsmart the guy
you’re with. Did
re
fellow whistle at a glrl’i brains?
you ever see a
br«inx?
For Better Health
By C. A. DEAN, M. D.
M EDITORIAL: Vitamin B-12 is
■the most active of all known vita-
min substances. It is called “the
red vitamin" because It occurs as
dark red needlelike crystals.
One of the uses of vitamin B-12
is to stimulate growth in children.
In one group of subnormal chil-
dren the vitamin was given once
daily by mouth. The treatment re-
sulted in better general behavior,
increased physical vigor, greater
alertness, and increase in appe-
tite. In an eight-week period the
growth response of the children was
equal to that which would nor-
mally take from 100 to 240 days
of treatment without B-12.
There is no indication for using
the substance in apparently healthy
children who are on an adequate
diet. It is not known if the prolong-
ed use of vitamin B-12 produces
any ill-effects on the body. The
drug Is aonarently of no value in
promoting growth in children who
are small but otherwise in good
health.
The primary use of vitamin B-
12 is to treat pernicious anemia,
sprue, and certain other types of
nutritional anemias.
<Q) “I had a cyst In back of my
ear for several years. About a
year ago it became sore and was
lanced. It baa now filled up again
and la sore again. What causes
these cysts and are they serious?"
SUNBED
served b
Street I
evening
“Mother
ily." Chi
pear abc
Jt
The time i
teachers, m<
alter their s
ing to fit the
it" school H
who arc h
’cause its h
k Aw is abo
fim t
(A) Cysts such as described
probably sebaceous cysts or
They are cysts or sacs formod
the oil glands in the skin.
The cause is not aRvays a|
ent, but is usually due to cloi
of the opening from the gland
oil can not escape and. therel
accumulates and forms a cyst,
cysts haveVio importance and
not serious.
Occasionally the cysts become
infected and then they are essen-
tially a boil or an abscess. When
infected, the wen should be treat*®
as a boil and opened and drained.
For a copy ut ur. Deans new 9»p»e«
ImIIH" write* him
grade,
what the ai
about these
Two of the
child should
there are
aren’t able
mothers havi
is to follow
to pay atten
teen minute
to watch:...c
ed when you
qi#it spells
to act like h
may not rea
step for thr
must make
-not only tc
to the otheY
for handlin';
makes the n
add an extr
and see tha
early e
store u
eet the
book "For Better Health”, write him
care of thla newspaper, lending a self- *
addressed stamped envelope, and 11 cents
to cover coat
FRIDAY, Aug. 13—Born today
you are a good judge of hu-
man nature and can usually size
up a person accurately at first
sight. Your perception is very keen
and you can get to the root of a
matter without too much hemming
and hawing. Your discrimination
will serve you well in any execu-
tive position.
Your Birthday
The stars have given you a num-
ber of talents, any one of which
WISHING WELL
Registered U. S. Patent Office
5
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E K
aaSFJswSsKatBsai:
iifc
read the message the letters under the checked figures glvi you
Millar. Diatribu’.ad hr Kiay Faaigraa. Inc.i-i}
might bring you success, Select one
objective and concentrate on It. In
this way you will succeed far be-
s. Mary
arc lion
to Cha
tet. Loui
they v
. family,
good to 1
who i
home and t
Mwy rciK>r
ssvim in the
y°nd your dreams. If you disperse
your talents, fame and fortune ma,
elude you. What you get out of life
all depends upon what you really
want.
FRIDAY, AMOUNT 13
I.F.n Uu> 94-Ana. *31 -Avoid lielns im
ulalve when “ —'
pulalvp when 11 cornea lo romance. Till"
la one day to think twice before popping
the question—or answering.
Vlhoo (At
regular routl
ibilng the
i rouble.
Keep to
Just now. Novelty and
unexpected could only tiring
nangal 14*kept. 331
Jim
I.IHKA (Nept. 34-Del. 33)—Venus will <kj
ner heat to counter tel unwelcome an
rt’1'1’- With poaltlve thinking, you ad
all right despite minor upsets.
SCORPIO
upset
-w usnu (Del. 34-Nev. 33)—Confused
vibrations are present but good Judg-
ment and level-headed aetlona will roun-
erart them.
.. .SAGITTARIUS
things art really
appear rm the
(Nev, 33-Dee.
tot aa
3*1 -
s they
appear on the surface! Thla Is a lime
Tor you lo (nailrol your own destiny
Capricorn id*-. t3-laa. Ml -Con-
’r»*led aspects make th* going
lltlle difficult, but proceed wli
■ nrl tnua'll k.
»"<! y'sJl' be all right.
atlll
Ith caution
AttUAHIUN
have been secre
(or a long time, thui la the day
you can bring It out into the open.
PMCU trek. 39-Mar. Ml -The beneyo-
[•nt *speils of thla month's algn with
tiW autt
<Zan. 3l-r*’i. 19) It
cretly planning sonSetld^
will do considerable
,m'*dhlng out- your path today.
AIRFdt (Mar. Il-Apr. Ml A good d»V
(or romance. Make or receive a (*”■
poaal. You ran find true and latlW*
happiness now.
TAURUS (Aar. 31-May 3D—Love an«
romance ara In today's aapoot Mr
If wed. find outstanding happiness wlin
your mate.
OF.mini (May 31-dune lt)-You "dll
have a clear choice today, *o be sure
'hat you make the right decision
UAkt Ml I Jane M-daly *3> Be aensiMr
W ail Ullage and you will
diffi'uijB
aspects are still aomewhsl
(Distributed by United Faatuie Sod.. Ji*4
The T
Richor
F>ut he n
f*»ved cc
four
for
he posset
tion. If hi
Richard w
a probal
who worl
lion of c
If. Wh
ability
examinati
fully accr
2
- JOE T
W Synoi
107 W. R
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Getty, Bob. The Daily Spokesman (Pampa, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 211, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1954, newspaper, August 13, 1954; Pampa, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1118109/m1/2/?q=dallas+voice: accessed May 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .