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The Palm Beach Post from West Palm Beach, Florida • Page 4
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The Palm Beach Post from West Palm Beach, Florida • Page 4

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West Palm Beach, Florida
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4
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Perhaps The Summit Meeting Will Settle All This The Palm Beach Post Weather Map For Todatj S28 Datura Street, West Palm Beach, Fla. A JOHN H. PERRY NEWSPAPER Tax Assessment Methods Rapped ByLakeLytal MtVUC Of WIATHIR ftUMAU FOIICAST TO 7:30 fM 1ST 7 -SI E. A. Kettel, Treas.

John H. Perry, Pres. Member of the Associated Preu Geo. W. Archer, Publisher, Gen.

Mgr. Ed F. Stumpf, Editor FntArarf mn nf th mnmnA at the nnst office In West Palm Beach, Florida, January 18. 1916, under the act of. March 3, 1879.

and reentered jepruary iu. ivm. Valuation of urban and suburban The Associated Presi li exclusively entitled to the use for republication real estate in Palm Beach County of ail news. for purposes of taxation was critt Member Audit Bureau ot Circulation cized by County Comtrlissioner Lake Lytal Thursday. SIJBSCB1PTION RATES CARBIEB fmt.

Timpi Post iind Time and Tlmee The commissioner said that to Si and Snndajr Sunday Sunday Dally Only him the formula upon which Coun- ty Tax Assessor James M. Owens, bases such valuations was "in conceivable. The commissioner spoke in reply to Owens statement Wednesday that he used the rather than the 1 year 13380 i3.40 i ioou 6 Montha 16 90 11 70 11.70 7.80 3 Month 8.45 8.85 5.85 3.90 1 Week 65 .45 .45 .30 Single Cepv .05 Sua Post-Times ,15 MATX HATES Payable In Advance joit. Times Post and Tlmee and Timee and Sunday Sunday Sonday Dally Only lVear $33 80 $23.40 23 40 S15.60 8 Montha 16 90 11.70 11.70 7.80 -3 Montha 8.65 6.15 6.15 4.50 1 Month 3.20 2.20 3.20 1.75 SUNDAY UNIT One Year $7.80 Six Montha $3.90 Circulation Dept. 3-7530.

Other Depta. 3-7541 Advertising rates on application. The management reserves the right to reject any objectionable advertisement offered. value of a piece of land when making assessments on the county tax roll. MigtitiMtmptraiurt 'jC! I 'aCTV m4 Cloud FO CAST I SmBcW WIATHIR FOTOCAST Both declarations came as after math of a request from West Palm Beach Board of Realtdrs that In order to broaden the tax base in the county there should be a complete reassessment and reevaluation of National Advertising Representatlvea, John H.

Perry Associate Suite 502, 19 West 44th Street, New York 36, N.Y. properties, particularly in, the suburban areas. Opinions expressed by writers of syndicated articles published In The Post and The Times are their own and do not necessarily represent opinion entertained by The Post and The Commissioner Lytal said county commissioners had learned a valuablebut costly lesson on land values, through condemnation proceedings for rights of way. The COPft.mSfDW.l.A.WAGNER DfSTRItUTCO lYUNITfOPRCSS fnnntv tnent nnnrnvi motel K1 fWl 000 for such nroDertv durine' the i FOR PERIOD ENDING 7:30 P.M. EST JULY 15 Warm weather will continue over the center of the FRIDAY MORNING, JULY IS, I9S5 Two Local Judges Due Back Shortly nation and over the Western mountains today and warmer weather will be spreading up over the 1954-55 fiscal year, "If you'll make a check of the prices we paid for much of the land it will show that in most instances it was 200 to 300 percent greater Eastern States again.

There will be scattered showers and thunderstorms In the afternoon over the Gulf and Atlantic Coast states, except for New England. There will be shower and thunderstorms also over the Southern Plains States and in the Western mountains. The high pressure area over the Dakotas will keep the weather fair or partly cloudy over the North Central States. (See the inset chart for the temperature lines, and the areas of cloudiness.) The maximum temperatures this afternoon will include: Phoenix 104; Ft. Worth 99; Boston 97; Denver 95; Memnhis 92; New York 92; Los Angeles 90; Kansas City 90; Philadelphia 90; Miami 87; Cleveland 87; Milwaukee 84; Seattle 74; San Francisco 68.

Palm Beach County will have a full complement of judges again shortly as Circuit Court Judge Joseph B. White is due to return to the bench Monday after a two-week sound the July term docket on Monday, July 25. There has not been a criminal court trial since his departure nearly a month ago. In his absence, Judge Otis Far-rington. Ft.

Lauderdale, conduct than it is listed on the tax assess- ment roll by Assessor Owens," the commissioner said. vacation, and Criminal Court Judge "Furthermore, the court-set ed one plea day, while Judge Murphree has conducted two such E. G. Newell is due back July 25. Judge John A.

H. Murphree of prices can't be argued because in courts. In the main, all cases han-ieach instance it was established by DEATHS AND FUNERALS Gainesville, who was assigned to sit here in the absence of Judge died on these Tuesdays have con. competent and expert appraisers, he explained. Former Martin Sheriff Dies White, will depart for his home He particularly pointed to large 8th Judicial Circuit, at the close of business today.

The President And Geneva Next Monday, July 18th, the Big Four Geneva Conference on world affairs will be opened with the top men in the four major powers sitting down together around a table, ostensibly to find a way to end the long cold war, and bring peace to a world tired of both hot and cold wars. That such a much-desired goal will be achieved at Geneva only the most optimistic of people believe. That there may be some progress made toward that goal is a possibility, but hardly a probability, in our own humble estimation. The modicum of success attained toward the desired goal at Geneva rests entirely on the true attitude of the Russian delegation, whether Premier Marshal Nickolai Bulganin will come to Geneva to really seek peace, or whether he will have his Kremlin orders to use the conference to embarrass the Western leaders with demands which he knows never will be met. It will depend on whether or not the Soviets will seek to use Geneva as a wlth Holy Trinity Church pastor, the Rev.

James Stirling, officiating. Burial will follow at Hillcrest. sisted of hearing pleas of persons who have been in jail and determining whether they wanted immediate trial by Judge, or whether they wanted to await jury trial at a later date. housing projects in the suburban areas, which, on the whole, are In the meantime, Circuit Judge MRS. DELLA LIVINGSTON.

Mrs. Livingston, 70, of 530 Avenida Her-mosa, died at a local hospital Thursday afternoon following an extended illness. She had lived here for the past 29 heavily populated with children Vincent C. Giblin of Dade County will continue to assist on the Circuit Court bench here every and upon which assessments are so low the residents are paying STUART Charles Edward (Ri-ley) Christensen, 78, who before retiring in 1944 served as sheriff of Martin County for nearly 12 years, died Wednesday night at a nursing no county or school tax whatever. CENTURY'S END The 19th century ended with Dec.

31. 1900. All the vear 1900 was in Thursday and Friday through- years and was a member of the Central Church of Christ, Survivors include (our sons, Ran The school budget eats up ap- Aug. 26. Criminal Court Judge Newell home after an 11-year illness.

eluded in the 19th century, and the proximately 50 percent of every 20th century began with Jan. 1.1 tax dollar collected in Palm RUDOLPH WILLIAM ELLER. Funeral services for Mr. Eller, 62, Lake Worth resident and retired Chicago executive, who died Tuesday in a local hospital, will be held at 4 p.m. Saturday at E.

Earl Smith and Son Chapel with former First Christian Church pastor, the Rev. Hollis Hart, officiating. Burial will follow at Hillcrest. will be tackling a heavy load of He was a native of Hartland, I Beach County, he said. trial cases upon his return to '1901 and was a building contractor in North Milwaukee before moving dolph Livingston and Willard Livingston, West Palm Beach, and J.

H. Livingston, Belle Glade, and Dewey Livingston, Eustis; two daughters, Mrs. H. H. Thomas, Portmouth, and Miss Evelyn Livingston, Germany.

Also 10 grand FAIR ENOUGH By Westbrook Pegler to Florida in 1907. He established the Rio Fish Co. with Frank and Charles Glass and operated the children. Milton Kaufman presiding one night Mizell Simon Faville will an at a meeting of the World-Tele ROBERT BULL. Funeral services business until 1912.

for Mr. Bull, 82, Lake Worth! Hf 'f la'e George W. retired machinist formerly of De- Pai in founding Stuarts fust troit, who died Tuesday, will be hardware store, Stuart Mercantile hiH 5 nm tnrfav at p. F.arl which now houses the Stuart nounce arrangements. gram unit.

How did that stranger As soon as Winston Burdett finished his "confession," which came too late to do any good and seems verv skimpy anyway, the Newspaper Guild rushed into print with from an obscure publication land in the chair of a meeting of Ameri GEORGE PARSONS WINSTON. Smith and Son Chapel with Dr. T. lFed tillers for advertising in the Chicago American where a strike was on. That was humor.

They would drink sheep-dip if it was free. The next week the Nutmeg had a page ad for National. Broun couldn't resist a few dollars. I phoned the World-Telegram and they ran a story with a spread showing the ad in the Nutmeg. Under a trick in the constitution Funeral services and burial for In 1924 he became an oil dis misleading statements about its Emerson Wortham, Lake Worth tributor and worked in that field First Baptist Church pastor offici own present puri until he was elected Martin County can newspaper people? I heard that Heywood Broun imposed him on us.

Anyway, there he was, whacking the gavel and running our show. When I last heard of him he was press agent for Nathan ating. Burial will follow at Hillcrest. ty. But the Guild Mr.

Winston, 49, a printer at the Palm Beach Post-Times for the past two weeks who died suddenly of a heart attack Thursday noon at a Lake Worth trailer park, will be Pallbearers include Joseph nerm in mm. tie was re-eiectea Fearnley. Elmer served years, re- vV Herman Huber and Thomas C. Witt in a Communist waterfront held in Groveland. Douglass.

tiring near the end of his third term because of ill health. He was a member of Acacia TtHpe F. nnri AM anrt Shiflrt He had moved with his wife, Mrs. of today is the beneficiary of all the cruel, treacherous, dirty work of its Communist officials and rank and file in the Have whan lnval you had to stay in the Guild for life or get out of the business. A bunch of floaters in this catch-all union could drive out of his calling strike.

He took the Fifth Amendment after Burdett named him. Earline D. Winston, to Lake Worth There was a group of strangers new sounding board for world Communist propaganda. And, within this doubtful setup for the conference, President Eisenhower will find himself knowing full well what he intends to do insofar as the United States is concerned, and he no doubt will try to anticipate what the Russians want. But he will be handicapped by not being cognizant of Moscow's real intentions regarding its so-called desire for world peace.

There has been much talk lately of internal economic troubles in Soviet Russia, but so far this has been only conjecture with nothing concrete on which to base such a belief, for even though some Soviet leaders have criticized Russian agriculture and industrial "recessions," the fact is that no one outside of Russia is aware of whether this is "window dressing" or the factual truth. It may be, too, that Moscow, failing to split the Western allies by threats and intimidation, have turned on a new facet of propaganda, and are using hpneyed words and action to prevent the rearming of West Germany, or a hydrogen-bomb war in which even the Communists must know that no one could win, and survive. These are the unanswered questions that will be faced by President Eisenhower when he sits down with the Russians, along with Britain and France, at the conference table at Geneva next Monday. It will be a momentous sitting, and it could turn out to be the turnintr point in the world's from Pompano Beach recently. He MRS.

AMANDA STEVENS. Funeral IOOF. the best reporter in the country. about midway down the meeting was a past secretary of Typograph- services tor Mrs. Stevens, tz, ot Survivors include his wife.

th The clause said you could be ex room known to none of us Ameri ical Union in Orlando; a member of 2813 Broadway, who died at her formPr pearl Williams of Rio, pelled for withdrawing your desig Americans went cans. They were the real Reds with the Eagles Lodge, Moose Lodge and home Thursday after a brief illness. whom he-married in 1911. and two nation of this Red layout as your through hell every day on the job. American Legion.

He was a veteran of World War II. bargaining agent. We were green wui De neia at i p.m. saturaay Mrs. Ada B.

Christiansen, the Northwood Funeral Home withanrj Mrs. Catherine Glass, both of Its worst features, now represented as virtues, are the work of the horns in the hands of dedicated a charter for a "labor press unit." One of the papers represented by this bunch was nothing but an occasional mimeographed throwaway. But it could certify as many "Mem Survivors besides his wife include tne itev. Allan k. watson, pastor ot smart.

conspirators. A sportwriter, a big, the Northwood Baptist Church, offi- Funeral services will be held at Reds, whom it now disowns. In the 'thirties under Roosevelt, Irishman on the W-T, got sore at his parents. Mr. and Mrs.

Earl T. Winston, Clermont; two sisters Miss Rachel Winston and Mrs. Jean bers of its staff as the Reds want the Guild and resigned. The paper with a packed Labor Relations Board and Communists spotted all had an open shop so the Guild westbrook, Clermont: a brother. Richard Winston, Pittsfield, Mass over that vicious bureaucracy, a Communist had special privilege in Hating.

Burial will follow in Hillcrest Cemetery. She had lived here eight years. She was a member of Northwood Baptist Church, and the Women's Benefit Assn. Review 1, Washington, D. C.

Surviving are a daughter. Mrs. ed. All they had to do was pay their little head tax. They were experts at heckling.

One night a nasty little brat of a copy boy sat in a front seat yelling "company 3 p.m. Sunday at the Johns Funeral Chapel with the Rev. H. H. Jones officiating.

Graveside services will be conducted by members of the Masons at Fern Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the Johns Chapel from 4 to 9 p.m. Saturday. couldn't make Roy Howard fire him. A year later, Marshall Field opened up his little sheet, PM, to expiate the sin of inherited wealth.

McRae Funeral Home has charge of local arrangements. any shop with a Guild contract. A Red had special privilege because they were all nagging, snarling. This Irisher went over to PM but union, company union throughout a reasoned speach opposing affilia agitating all the time. His work he bad to dig up a $500 fine before he could go to work.

Only a counle Edna Mae Kling, Jacksonville, and a brother, Edgar Garrin of North MRS. IDA Bl'RSE HART. Services for Mrs. Hart, 75. of 422 58th who died Wednesday, will be held gf A inri in Vi XTntthnrAfl search for real peace, or it could be the setting for was secondary.

If he was fired for neglect or incompetence he of years ago. Harriet Van Home, Carolina eventual war Detween tne two dominant; ideologies 01 uv. ing in the world today. ihe Funeral Home. Burial will follow fined $500 for proposing after 76 Din.t days an end to a terrible strike LEON N.

SNOW. Services for Mr. Snow, 69, of 702 S. W. 4th Delray Beach, who died at a local hospital Thursday after a long cauea oy a comm.ueewmcn naaMRS MINNIE SCHLOTTERBECK wmigieu auuiui licujuu.

lius was nip tion with the CIO. The Guild was organized as a "professional" society, not a union. Then Broun took it into the AF of and he soon opened the member-CIO because the CIO was crawling with Reds. Broun wanted power and he soon opened the membership to sweepers, copy boys, girl clerks in many departments, scrubwomen everybody. They were drifters but they could vote.

This faker, who never could cover a story because he was so lazy and could go straight to the board and claim he had been canned for "union activity." They did little else but agitate and conspire, so the board would order the paper to reinstate the man, with back pay. There were some good writers and reporters among them, but the guild was the refuge and protection of the lazy slob with little ability. We Americans on the World-Tel new, reformed Guild. illness, will be held at 2 p.m. Sat President's Nephew Engaged To Wed FLORALA, July 14 (JP) The engagement of Miss Sally Ann Booth to Milton Stover Eisenhower, nephew of President Eisenhower, has been announced by her parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph Thomas Booth, Jr. Milton Eisenhower is the son of Toward the end, Roy Howard asked me what the people would think if he renewed Broun's contract. I said it would be a kick in urday in the Scobee Chapel, Del-ray Beach, with the Rev. Arthur Rich, pastor of the Delray Beach First Baptist Church, officiating.

Burial will follow in Delray Beach Cemetery. Mr. Snow, a retired farmer, had lived in the Delray Beach area Graveside services for Mrs. Schlotterbeck, 74. of 218 Bethesda who died Thursday in a local hospital, will be held at Woodlawn Cemetery with the Order of Ame-ranth in charge.

She was a member of the Order of the Amaranth, also Bethesda Recreational Club. Survivors include one daughter, Mrs. Grace Stamp, and a granddaughter, Mrs. William McNeill. the teeth.

They had given Roy egram kept saying that these ro dents were Reds. But how could Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, presi loyalty and taken Broun's abuse for years. The least he could do was throw the frowsy tramp out and let him go to the post.

Roy did. indifferent to truth, was lording it over his betters as a "leader" of the "little people." since 1900. He started a rag called the "Nut Broun is a saintly myth to young Survivors include his wife. Mrs. Johnie Will Snow.

Delray Beach: meg and soon dealt himself a newspaper people, but he dedicated land one great grandchild, all of we prove it? Like the Ku Klux, they were oath-bound. Ironically, they damned the Klan for its secre-crecy. You develop a sense in dealing with Reds. You can spot them and some of those I spotted then have been named by Burdett In his sworn testimony. I spotted that dent of Pennsylvania State University.

Miss Booth, who at present is in Germany, was graduated from the University of Alabama, and had been teaching at Eglin Air Force Base, during the past year. Milton Eisenhower recently com his life to mendacity, cruelty and west Palm Beach. threedaughters, Mrs. C. J.

Clapp, dirty deuce. Broun and his chiseling friends, who never paid for anything they could mooch, declar Mrs. Schlotterbeck came here sham. (Copyright, 1955, King Features Inc.) ed a boycott against National Dis from Jamaica, L. in 1947.

Ferguson Funeral Home home of arrangements. has ueiray Beach, Mrs. William W. Woldt, Miami, and Miss Clarolin Louise Snow, Delray Beach; three sons, Harvey E. Snow, Delray Beach, Lloyd N.

Snow, Daytona Beach, and Clyde E. Snow, Detroit; two brothers, William H. Snow and pleted two years' service as a lieutenant in the Infantry of the U.S. Army, stationed in this coun THE MERRY GO ROUND By Drew Pearson try and in Berlin. He is now employed by an airline in New York.

and then saunter down the aisle'. Sunday Blue Laws We don't pretend to understand it, but the State Attorney General's office has assured us that Florida's Sunday blue laws are nothing to worry about. So we aren't going to worry about them as such. The blue laws, as adopted by the 1955 Legislature, are simply a rewrite of Sunday closing laws which have been on Florida's statute books since 1879. They were included in a general bill drawn up by the statutory revision section of the Attorney General's office, which brought a large number of statutory laws up to date.

In general, the amended laws, now more or less in effect, provide that anybody who keeps a store open or does any mechanical or manual labor for profit on Sunday is liable to a fine of $50. Exceptions are made in cases of emergency or necessity when a shopkeeper may operate in sort of speakeasy fashion behind closed doors. Certain other exceptions and exemptions in the old laws apparently were eliminated. Actually, we gather from an opinion by Asst. Atty.

Gen. Charles Tom Henderson, these laws may be interpreted to mean that the State frowns on such Sunday activities as robbing banks or selling marijuana to minors. But it can't specifically ban such pursuits because the State Supreme Court has held that specific exemptions are discriminatory and therefore unconstitutional. Without explaining at least so we can understand why they are retained at all, Henderson told the Florida State Retailers Assn. that the 1879 blue laws "are like a lot of other laws of the horse and buggy days which are still on the statute books." He added that insofar as he knew, no concerted effort had been made to enforce them.

We're not going to start or be drawn into an argument as to whether or not Florida should have Sunday blue laws stringent or otherwise. But we will state categorically that if Florida must have' Sunday blue laws, thev should be enforced. And vice versa. Anything in be Earnst Snow; two sisters, Mrs. Oscar Robinson and Mrs.

George Fulce, all of Daytona Beach. Also seven grandchildren. any other search for permanent peace. As far as American public opinion is concerned, Eisenhower MRS. NETTIE P.

HINDLE. Funeral services for Mrs. Hindle, 49, who came here from Cocoa about a month ago and who died in a local hospital Monday, will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Miiell-Simon-Faville Chapel with the Rev. Harry Waller, pastor of the First Methodist Church, officiating.

stogie at Jaunty angle, to announce his usual alibi: "I am awaiting Ed. Note Drew Pearson has flown to Geneva to cover the Big Four meeting and today writes his first column on that Important forthcoming event.) WRONG HAIRCUT STAMFORD, Conn. (UP) Twelve-year-old Jimmy Williams was suspended from Hart School instructions from my And it watched the repeated con- GREW UP vercatinne hpfwoon that nlH Vtattlar Casablanca, city of parks and I "for several days' after showing insiae laci is inai for nParP. Aristirfa RrianH anri nalaces. was onlv a tfnv fishlnff vil-iun with a Mnhawk hafrrnt Prinrl.

President Eisenhower at first didn't German delegates in an effort to ARTHUR BELL FESLER. Funeral lage on a pestilential swamp in pal Thomas F. Reardon said Jim-services for Mr. Fesler, 225 30th north Africa less than 50 years! my "was causing excitement and who died Tuesday afternoon; a bo. Todav.

its nonnlntinn sH- imnairlns rlasswnrk" He aaid tha want the Big Four talks to be held in Geneva and argued against this city when the Russians first pro- will be held at 2 p.m. today in; mated at more than a half-million boy had become the target of the the Mizell-Simon-Faville Chapel persons. lachool'a "Davev Crncketts." posed it. at Geneva will play from strength. No Easy Roads When it comes to any quick and easy roads to peace, however, Ike might well study the Geneva experience of the Secretary of War who promoted him from lieutenant colonel to lieutenant general and helped assign him as Commander in Chief in Europe the same Henry L.

Stimson. At Geneva during his efforts to head off World War II, Stimson knew that an era was dying. It was dying before men's eyes, right at the conference table the peace that he and other men had hoped to patch up a partnership between those two age-old arch-enemies, France and Germany. As these conversations failed, also watched the huge mustachios of Aristide Briand droop lower and lower, as the League of Nations more and more sank to the point where it had only the noncontro- Ike is a bit superstitious, and to him Geneva DR. JORDAN SAYS THINK IT THROUGH By Edward F.

Hutton was too closely Identified with he Indo China conference which lis Secretary of State ballyhooed i A 1 At By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D. I this dropsy). There Is also a spe-Written for NEA Service cial kind of protein in the urine "MY five-year-old son has re- known as albumin so that examina- versial task of preventing opium smuggling. Eisenhower Is Stronger But there is one big difference bring in 1918.

He knew it was dying, I as the world cently had some swelling around tion of the urine is particularly im-his eyes, especially in the morn-jportant in making a diagnosis. Dut ne refused to give up. There's a bloodhound In Washing- between Geneva's failures of the 1920-30's and the position President best hope," but His room at the Villa Besingeiing," writes Mrs. M. "The doctor which turned out rt.A --j i ion senator junn u.

wiinams. mere is no pain In nephrosis but He watching and protecting the Eisenhower is in today. looh-ea aown on an old garden has examined him and aairi that 7: h. i. sheltered by high trees in which The League of Nations in those days was operating without the he has nephrosis sometimes quite uncomfortable.

Doaks family. He's a tax hound busily engaged in digging out and to be one of this country's most crushing diplomatic defeats. To other diplomats, Geneva is a city roosted flocks of birds at night And sometimes when he could not exposing info so that we can sleep and work dragged, Stimson tween makes hypocrites and technical criminals out of practically all of us. Like the constitutional provision for Senate reapportionment, the blue laws apparently are to be obeyed only if convenient or "practicable." Such paradoxes have stood at his window looking out and I wish you I One cannot tell how the individu-would tell us aI patient with nephrosis is going something of this to come out' disease." By and large the outlook is not Childhood bad, though the victim of rosls is a peculiar nephrosis is more susceptible td ln-condition usually fections than a child who is well, attacking I 1- Over half of the patients with upon the trees and the moon and the shadows they cast upon the garden, and remembered the days of World War I when he was an set good look. You.

see, Mary and Joe, if we don't know the facts how are we going to defend that which no place an orderly society, Unites states. It was limping on one crutch, with the other crutch, the most powerful nation in the new world, aloof, suspicious, and isolated. Even when Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931 in the forerunner of a general conquest of China and eventual world war, American isolationists shrank in horror when Secretary of State Henry L. Stim-son instructed the American consul general in Geneva. Prentiss Gil which has watched some of the world's greatest tragedies and the world's greatest hopes.

It watched the birth of Woodrow Wilson's dream of a bright new and peaceful world. And it watched Emperor Haile Selassie walk down from the League of Nations' rostrum, after his plea for helpless Ethiopia, a heavy-hearted, beaten man. It heard the silence that followed him, more -0 artillery captain in France Out among the poplars he saw dren under four nephrosis recover and remain in Steel Goes Up years old but. good health we should? So drop a line again that line of men from the fields, the factories, going forward, The treatment of nephrosis is 1 1 and the line of men, wounded men a post card exhausted men, going back. A pan highly technical and must be adjusted to the individual patient.

During the active phase of the dis appearing in older ones. It is primarily a disturbance in the kidney function. No one is entirely certain wheth to Senator John J. Williams, Unit orama of war lay before him on bert, to attend the League Council merely as an observer. eloquent than his plea eloquent of the League's inability to chal those nights; a panorama also of order, however, the child must be ed States Senate, Washington, D.C.

Herbert Hoover was in the White er it is a disease in its own right guarded against infections, salt in i and thank him the years he had spent trying to lenge the swaggering might of prevent more war. Mussolini. or part of something else. Its cause; the diet is usually kept to a min- Recently, according to the report is still unknown. It is almost and rest in bed is frequent- of Kermit McFarland, writer, the House then, and so loud were isolationist shrieks from inside the Republican Party, that Hoover finally Those were long and sleepless Dollar Diplomacy- nights at the Villa Besinge.

"How It watched the ambassador of overruled his own Secretary of tainiy not nereaitary. it occurs ily advised. senator wormed out of the Internal more frequently in boys than girls. I In addition to these measures it Revenue Service the first tabulation It may develop in any climate and is often, but not always, desirable as to how much the federal gov-attacks all races. give certain medicines which in-jernment has outstanding in tax de- Adolf Hitler bluster out of the disarmament sessions when Franklin State and withdrew Gilbert as an heavy," Stimson told a friend, "a simple dove, bearing an olive branch, can weigh upon a man's Roosevelt was making one last at observer.

Charles G. Dawes, former vice president, then ambassa In all probability nephrosis is a I crease the output of urine, and thus linquencies. In other words, how dor to France and a good Chicago Higher prices are now general throughout the steel industry and the bill for this basic material will rise more than a billion dollars a year as a result. That means, of course, that everything made from steel will cost more to produce and the ultimate consume" will have to pay the boost. In some cases, it may be, producers who fashion steel into automobiles or washing machines or other goods will be able to "absorb" the increased cost of the metal.

That 'is, they will not raise prices on the articles they make. But in reality it is impossible to absorb this added charge. It must be passed on to the public in some form or other. To illustrate this point it is only necessary to cite the reasons given by United States Steel for its decision. The corporation is paying more for labor, more for the materials used in making steel, more for goods and services it must buy to carry on its business, more to replace worn-out equipment.

But Americans may as well face the fact that the mounting spiral is reaching heights that can only be viewed with misgivings. kind of degenerative disease of the carry off some of the excessive much is due Uncle Sam in back kidney. Since inflammation of that fluid. Itaxes. It looks like 1,600,000,000 tempt to block rearming of Nazi Germany.

And it watched Japanese Ambassador Yoshizawa insult the council by keeping it waiting a full hour during the Manchurian crisis organ is absent it is not the same The use of ACTH or cortisone, bucks. The money is owed by peo- as nephritis or Bright disease, providing the treatment is care- pi" and corporations. Isolationist, acted as an aloof, playboy observer in Paris instead. It almost broke Stimson'B heart, and later he went to Geneva himself to fight the battle against Japan, the aggressor. Eisenhower still has his problems wrist.

So Dwight D. Eisenhower, who took orders from Secretary of War Stimson during the war that Stimson was not able to prevent, will now look down from his villa at night and see the ghosts of Stimson, Aristide Briand, Woodrow Wilson, walking among the poplar trees, sitting among the shadows cast upon the garden, wondering, hoping, praying that he may suc Most doctors believe there are sev- fully supervised, also appears to be Did you pay your taxes, Mary eral varieties of nephrosis in some useful in some patients. and Joe? Sure, you did! Did they? of which the cause can be discov- It is encouraging to note that the Not yet. ered and some not. National Nephrosis Foundation (140 1 Our government takes from the Bible Verse The most typical sign of child-: 58th New York 19, N.Y.) is pocketbooks of the workers between sixty-five and seventy billions per hood nephrosis, regardless of a group which is aiding needed re- cause, consist of gradually 'increas- search and otherwise furthering in- year not perhaps.

If Senator inside the Republican Party, also with his own administration advisers, as will be described in a subsequent column. But, by and large, the American people are overwhelmingly behind him in this on Jesus saith am the way, the truths, and the life: no man cometh unto, the Father but by Me. ing fluid in the tissues (swelling! creased attention to this important Williams, our bloodhound, can col ceed where they failed. Copyright, 1955, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) around the eyes referred to by disorder and rather common dis-ilect, it will be a nice dividend for Mrs. M.

it probably evidence of lease of I those who pay..

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1916-2018