Evening Star Newspaper, August 16, 1933, Page 10

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A—10 x»» DISPUTE HOLDS P S169.500.5 AD Virginia Must Settle Land Title in Shenandoah Na- tional Park. Department, it was ding expendi- nds, The Interior Jearned today. i ture of $1,692.5 approved for the prcposed She National Park. until the authorities can settle the disput land titles. Although there has been a suggestion that the new park erea, which has not vet been turned over to the Federal Government, be thrown open to public travel by the Virginia State Conserva- as learned today | ls are s program at s bacn put for- ward t bo opened to the public, starting next Sunday The view of the Interior Department authorities i: present of park roads aying out into I ¢ motor- they look y con- with two uds of serious Plan of Arbitration, As the authorities here understand it a board of five Virginia judges, from the counties h the park lands lie, forms an bitration commission. before w nd owners not with awasés made for their will to arbitrate. T t take title to the Park until the the park turned a uni Hence, under the public s program. allocated to the Shen- andoah area. are being held up. the Office of National s and Reservatior Roads of the De- propesed Shenan- proce: from Swift Run doah Nati e mext 1 expen desirou: mum fficials he ma r the cinia author 1 of Fark to the exam:ine all re that Uncle Pigeon Accepts Hospitality. () —C. H. Reiff re- r pigeon perched itsel cbile, rode home with him fcod and then started off accepted i A t it would be necessary | the ' Men in 30s Suffer Greatest Slump in | Morale as Jobs Go 68 Per Cent of Uném- | ployed More Bitter Than Workers, Study Shows. By the Associgted Press. NEW YORK, August 16 —The morale of men in their 30s has been hard- | est hit among the unemployed, a survey | made public today indicated. | The study was conducted by the En- | gineeriff Foundation and Personnel Research Foundation. Among the un- employed the 31 to 40 age limits in- cluded the men most powerfully affected in_their outlook on liie. “The greatest effect of ment,” the report states, morale. Seventy-five per cent of the unemployed men had poorer morale than the average employed man. Sixty- eight per cent were more bitfer and antagonistic toward employers than is the average employed man. The net effect on religious beliefs and attitudes was _found to be negligible. “Thirty-four per cent of the unem- ployed in this canvass felt the United States needed a strong dictator, and 19 per cent of a comparable group of the employed felt the same way. Twenty- three per cent of the unemployed hought a revolution might be a very od thing for this country. SiX per nt of the employed agreed. There was relatively little support for Com- munism.” MILK TRADE CODE SUIT DISMISSED IN CHICAGO| U. S. Judge Ends Case When Told of Similar Contest in Capi- tal Court. By the Associated Press. CHICAGO. August 16.—Federal Judge Walter C. Lindley vesterday dismissed the injunction suit recently filed by the Independent Milk Dealers’ Association seeking to restrain United States At- torney Dwight H. Green from enforc- ing the milk trade code. | The dealers charged the 10 cent flat rate for a quart of m was_discrim- | inatory in that they were forced to charge the same rate. although they| competed with milk dealers who made house-to-house _deliveries, while their product was called for by consumers. e dismissal order was entered after the court was informed that a similar | uit has been filed in Washington | against the Secretary of Agriculture. WINSLOW liITES FIXED ntario. August 16 (P).— | r for Allan Winslow, | uthor and World War avi- 1 be held in Chicago tomorrow here yesterday from injuries ed when he fell from a third- hotel window last Saturday. islow had come here on_ business American Airways. With him died was his mother, Mrs. H. ow_of Detroit. w Columbia Permanent Building Association PAYS 5% compounded semi-annually Under U. S. Gov't Supervision Organized Jan. 1, 1903 Loans Made on Owners Occupied Homes NO COMMISSION 733 12th St. N.W. Melvin C. Hazen, Pres. Wm. P. Richards, Vice Pres. Floyd E. Davis, Treasurer Fred A. Smith, Secretary C. Clinton James, Attorney Member Building Association uncil of the District of Colum | has been located. | probably THE “EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16 SLEEPING DISEASE 1S NEW EPIDEMIC 37 Cases and 7 Deaths in St. Louis Call Public Health Expert to Scene. BY THOMAS R. HENRY. A new kind of epidemic sleeping dis- ease may have broken out in the United States With a report of 37 cates and 7 deaths in St. Louis, Dr. James P. Leake of the Public Health Service has gone to the Missouri city to report on the nature of the malady, which ap- parently differs in its syndrome from the well known encephalitis lethargica, of which there was a serious epidemic in 1919, This new type does not appear to be contagious, but to be spread by some general source of contamination. Re- covery, according to the early reports, seems to be much more rapid and complete, but otherwise there is a general similarity ~with known type. Encephalitis lethargica, a disease of the nervous system which is particu- larly prone to follow some other con- tagious disease such as influenza or smallpox and which also sometimes follows vaccination, is still a mysteri- ous malady, according to Public Health Service doctors. Its most manifestation is in the drowsine: the victims. It has a high death Although there has been a constant search for the responsible organism, both in the Public Health Service lab oratories_here and in medical labora- tories all over the country, it It is believed to be one of the mysterious filterable viri— a metamorphized form of some familiar micro-organism. After Effects Serious. ‘The disease is feared especially be- cause of its after effects. It may leave the patient permanently affected men- tally or bring about a radical person- ality change with a marked decrease in control over the emotions. The victim often is subject to violent out- bursts of anger, or of laughing or crying. Apparently it has been in the world a long time, although it first was rec- ognized as a disease entity in 1917 by | ciated the Dbetter | tient could usually be aroused, but when notable | ate. | never the Austrian psychiatrist, Constantine von Economo. When Von Economo was in Washington a few years ago he explained experiments then in prog- ress which indicated it was an in- fection of a hypothetical “sleep center” located in the wall of the third ven- tricle of the brain. This center be- comes over-stimulated, with the result that it exercises its somnolent effect on the rest of the brain over an ex- tended period instead of just a few hours. ~This excess of somnolence, Public Health Service doctors say, is respogsible for the misnomer, “sleep- ing dkness,” which belongs properly to the disease spread in Africa by the tetse fly. There is no relation be- tween the two maladies. Following the 1919 outbreak, the Pub- lic Health Service made a survey of the incidence of the disease and its history. They found an epidemic of something very similar had been reported in Ger- many carly in the eighteenth century. It had been called “schlafkrankheit, and was described as “a catarrhal fever with somnolence and wild, turbulent phantasies at night.” There were also earlier outbreaks in the United States, especially following the great influenza epidemic of 1890. Previous Epidemic Cases. Cases in a previous epidemic are de- scribed as follows: “These cases usually ran a sluggish course, the first symptom of which usually began acutely with headache and malaise, followed by a state of somnolence frequently asso- h a lively delirium. The pa- BUS LINES TO DIXIE'S DOOR! Bus terminal right in hotel ...so con- venient for you and your family . . . York . movies. .near oll shops, theatres, See everything, and save | HOSPITALITY PLUS ECONOMY | Real Southern hospitality and cook- ing: Breakfast 25¢, Lunch 30, Din- ner 85¢ and $1.28. 600 COOL OUTSIDE ROOMS| Every room in modern 24-story DIXIE has radio and bath, delightfully fur- nished. Take advantage of Special Low Summer Rates: Single Rooms, Daily from $2.50 to $4.00; dou- ble from $3.50 to $5.00. Send for free, illustrated Hotel DIXIE folder with map of N. Y. 42nd-43rd STREETS West of BROADWAY, N. Y. W e R % K R H # and DIXIE is right in Heart of New | left alone immediately fell back into the somnolent state.” This varied from sim- ple sleep in some cases to a profound stupor in others. The duration varied from a short period up to a month or more. In the prolonged cases a state of mental weakness was present during convalescence. Occasionally there was a slight stiffness of the neck and sensi- tiveness to pressure of the eyeballs. De- lirium was present as a rule, but its presence was absolutely independent of the depth of the sleep or the degree of the fever. There also was, in some cases, paralysis of the legs and arms.” Although there may be scattered cases, an outbreak of the disease is never anticipated unless there has been a previous outbreak of influenza. This, however, has not been the case in St. Louis this year. There is some evidence, it was ex- plained at the Public Heaith Service, that there may be a great number of mild cases which never are reported or even recognized. In this respect it is like the other epidemic disease of the nervous system, infantile paralysis, with which it often is associated. Thus, it is pointed out, persons who have recovered from some fever after- ward show the peculiar eye squint which is a characteristic aftermath of ence- phalitis, although they have had no epi- sode of especial sleepiness. The Public Health Service is reserving judgment on the present outbreak until the return of Dr. Leake. Nervous sys- Shly SURPRISE YOUR HUSBAND AND CHILDREN WITH GOOD OLD-FASHIONED PLATES OF » BREYE ICE CREAM Special attention givento home and church orders for Breyers Ice Cream. IT TAKES L T0 BE A NEWSREEL ©® ABOVE—HUGO JOHNSON makes a ticklish news shot from a New York skyscraper! As a camera- man for Paramount News, Johnson knows what it is to work under high nervous tension. Whether he is stationed inside the police lines at a five-alarm fire, or hanging on the wing of an airplane, his in- structions are: get that picture!l ©® RIGHT—ARMAND LOPEZ, Paramount News “sound” man, and Hugo Johnson, pausing for their Camels while taking a picture in which you see and hear the life of the city—sixty-one stories below the Chrysler Building gargoyle! tem affiictions, it is pointed out, some. times take variant forms some of which appear, in preliminary reports, to be new diseases. . — Gorillas Win Steaks. CHICAGO (#).—Superior Judge Peter H. Schwaba not only gave Mrs. Ger- trude A. Lintz an injunction restrain- ing a barrel manufacturer from taking her 10 World Fair gorillas in satisfac- tion for an allegedly unpaid bill, but he directed fair officials to allow funds for feeding the animals steaks and | cream. Feel Tired, Lack Energy? You need a good tonic to stimulate your ap- peti‘e and increase your vitality. - For more than a quarter of a century Nutraven has helped thousands of rundown people to regain a strong, healthy body. A tonic of recognized value in building up the system. Pleasant to take. Contains only purest in- gredients. Don't trifle with your health. Get a generous bottle of Nutraven for §1 today at Peoples Drug Stores. NUTRAVEN, a Nutritive Tonic FINAL REDUCTIONS Onlly(9 |_ws 20 our puxy days Then All Merchandise Goes to Full (HIGHER) Pall Prices $25 2-Pts. Suits Xtra Pants—$3 $30 2-Pts. Xtra Pants— $1675 Suits $ 1975 All $22.50 Silk-Trimmed Tropical Worsted Suits Half-Price . $11.25 bB. J. KAUFMAN, Inc. 1005 Pa. Ave. 1744 Pa Ave. 14th & Eye Copyright. 1933, B J. Re; IT IS MORE FUN TO KNOW Since it’s the tobacco that counts, Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. Learn to know Camels’ rich mildness, their better flavor... the added pleasure they give. Its the COOL way! Serves more cities, ofters more frequent service, costs less VEN sweltering days seem pleasant, as a fresh breeze sweeps through the wide windows of your Greyhound bus. You are out of the smoke and cinder zone, on the open highway—enjoying the pleasure of private car travel without its fatigue and cost. Millions have found Greyhound the common sense way to travel. Better dollar value. More frequent de- partures, more cities and vacation places served, more to see along the way . . . many more dollars to save. Choice Summer Playgrounds, Low Fares $14.00 NORFOLK " $4.80 Lovely Virginia Beach RICHMOND $3.00 Capitol of the Confederacy RS'NVIL'E, N.C. $13.25 at Smoky Mt. Resorts CHARLESTON, S. C. $14.40 America's Most Historic City BRUNSWICK. GA. $20.00 Sea Island Beaches, Resorts MIAMI $30.00 Florida Beaches, Deep Sea Fisling ASHEVILLE, N. C. $12.50 Great_Smoky Mt. Nat'l Park ENDLESS CAV. Jct. Va. $3.90 Most Beautiful Limestone Caverns NAT. BRIDGE, VA. $5.55 Miracle in Stone-World Wonder DENVER $30.85 Rocky Mountains—Pikes Peak HUGO JOHNSON says: ‘‘A news cameraman doesn’t keep office hours! I have to be where the news is—when it breaks. It’s a tremendous strain on the nervous system. Nowonder I am a heavy smoker! I find that with Camels I can smoke all I want, yet keep my nerves ‘healthy.” A MATCHLESS BLEND L * * $8.50 Historic New England $12.40 Fishing, Boating LS $11.75 3 a Falls and Canada MONTREAL $15.50 Canadian Cities and Resorts ATLANTIC CITY $4.50 Gay Beach Resorts MINNEAPOLIS $21.00 Cool 10,000 Lakes Region DETROIT $10.50 St. Clair River Resorts LOS ANGELES $30.75 San Francisco, Long Beach Free World’s Fair and Vacation Booklets ¢ the Greyhound office bglow for pictorial folder and map of Chicago 1d's Far — also interesting booklets on expense-paid tours to choice vacation areas. Air Line Tickets on Sale at All Greyhound Depots NEW GREYHOUND TERMINAL 1403 New York Ave,, N. W. Phone: MEtropolitan 1512 . GREYHOUND If you are a steady smoker, Camels are made for you! @ WHILE FIRE GONGS CLANG and the excited crowd They are so mild that they will never tire your taste swings in closer to see the fire, it’s natural to smoke a lot. ...or fray your nerves. Get a pack and prove it for 1t's when you are excited and under a strain that you will yourself. It 4s more fun to Know! appreciate especially the mildness of Camels. Camel’s costlier tobaccos do not tire your taste or harrass your nerves. W f [ NEVER TIRE.YOU VER GET ON YOUR NERVES R TASTE ATLE 4.

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