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TI ISN'T THAT A pEreFECTLY TERRIFIC §SCHEME TO MEET Him —? 1 CANT WAIT TO TRY «2 our” a By Paul Robinson NO./’— BUT MOM DID.2— SHE USED IT ON you.” ‘Saturday, April 12, 1952 THE KEY WEST CITIZEN Page $ “He told me about... about ...”] toward the parking space in the FREX= was standing now. She |Sh¢ stopped, rubbing long sensi- on: rink rseaia tive fingers across her brow, wi unm =. ing” oad Mad wamerie. look: | preasing them there a8 though Ys people around the sil figure that| ‘ree her brain to act. ad been hauled from the pool. “Yes? He told you ° what? Johnny imagin Grandpoppa? swayed slightly. He had the sud-| “Yes... he told me about the den thought that perhaps she was | Stamps. going to faint. He started that| Johnny's forehead was deeply way. The car, with a roar, started |-lined in a frown of concentration. tting toward | “Stamps? What kind of stamps, Irene?’ “Stamps with . .. pictures. He showed me paar. +. . this morn- ing ...” She held to Johnny driveway. The roadster was there. The car was out of sight by the time Johnny and the nurse led the woman up the front steps of the house. At the top of the stairs, Karen said, “I'll take care of her. A couple of Luminal pills will quiet her nerves. She's on the verge of going to pieces.” “Yes,” said Johnny. He added juickly, “But those things are Ganseconn aren't they? An over- Saxon’s arm, gave a sudden ex-| Two won’ hausted si, “T'm trying to... ouenien’ she said, and it was as though she were out of breath. Tae h king said feelingly, “I know.” He urged: “You say hnny acco! i ad tt ty hk Gt lito, fee Tight careful where you Ka he showed you the colored stamps} in my you' was it about them?’ H® eyes lidded, opened again. I. They no longer saw him. They seemed milky gray. Johnny heard quick movement near him, turned. E Today’s {Truman Plan To Put Postmasters Causes Dispute Business Under Civil Service Mirror , ow oat ce || SCLENCE ada is showing States r trick. It’s cutting taxes Sacks! NEW we ote Cc is be In country, Congress ling asked to raise taxes, and the| By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE budget for next year anticipates | Associated Press Science Editor a deficit of 10 billion dollars or so.| NEW YORK (® — Aureomycin In Canada, income taxes are | and citrus fruit vitamins are being _ |coming down, as well as. excise | tried on human cancer. taxés—for a saving of from $100} They show some promising side te $400 on cars, for example—and | effects, especially when the can- still Canada expects at least a nine |cers are treated with X-rays. million dollar Treasury surplus; These reports were made to the next year. opening session today of the Amer- If you want to buy a Canadian ican Association for Cancer Re- dollar you have to add two uen-| search, More than 200 reports will nies or more to your American|be made in a 3-day session. dollar. Eighteen months ago the} Aureomycin was given to 31 per- Canadian dollar was worth 19 cents |sons with far-advanced cancer. It Jess than the American—it’s gained | was combined with X-rays, surgery 12 cents in that time. and nitrogen mustard, a poison American money is pouring into | war gas given in small shots. Canada for investment in indus-| The aureomycin shrank five tries tapping its rich resources. | caners enough so that the patients | plain that it’s like pulling teeth to| peared to make cancers more sm | get a risk dollar out of the Amer-|sitive to destruction by X-rays, In this country, companies com-|could be operated upon. It > ee under Civil Av of Georgia promptly announced his jean investor. and the same for nitrogen mus- opposition and added: Some of this urge to put Ameri- tard. ean capital into Canadian ventures | This report was by Jeanette C. a “flight from the American dol-|Roland Barbario of the George lar’—the desire to put one’s mon-| Washington University School of ey in a land that operates on a | Medicine, Washington, D. C. balanced budget, can cut taxes and| The vitamin treatment consists veloping natural resources. ing him Vitamin P so that he Specifically, the rush of Yankee | won't get scurvy. dollars to Canada is a flight from} In rats this treatment makes a chance on making capital gains | It was tried on nine persons at in most instances. York City, and the results were But a larger part of the Ameri- | said to be encouraging. Hodgkin's can investments there are prob- | Disease, one of the most incurable ably based on the realization that forms of cancer, became more / sources which the United States| This work was reported, for the and other nations will need in the janimals, by Drs. Boris Sokoloff Unfortunately, sharpies have also | ¢rn Bio-Research Laboratory, Flor- been playing this field and in some | ida Southern College, Lakeland, instances selling all but worthless | Fls., and for the patients by Dr. Americans have eight billion dol-| (many pretty speculative) may be | Bateman, Calvin T. Klopp and J, a Strong support for the reorgant- encourages industrial growth by|of two steps, first depriving a zation came from three younger offering tax benefits to those de- | person of Vitamin C, and then giv- Piety re oy: greta Minnesota Humphrey of They previously had introduced high tax rates on income, to take |cancers more sensitive to X-rays. pe pte beige get that ia : “ in New . Well a8 postmasters, marshals and which are taxed at a lower rate | the Pack Medical Group in New | -stoms officials under Civil Serv- Chairman MecClellen (D.-Ark.) of the Senate Committee on Gov- Canada is emerging as an indus-| sensitive to the rays. So did one frie Meier which will trial power, that it has vast re-jother type of cancer. aa ee or eo ga “I think it's a mistake to let . . | Poliey-making officials be selected years to come. and Walter H. Eddy of the South by the Civ Saetiee Comiiilecion without Senate eonfirmation,” The President, in his message stock to gullible American. Tehodore R. Miller, New York. to Congress covering the plans, said it is too great a burden on the President and the Congress lars invested in Canada. They con- NEWS NOTES site pass on all these appointments i trol about 2,500 plants there, doing ja third of all Canada’s manufac-| | turing. We take about 60 per cent | used in every state of the United | of all the goods and materials Can- | States. ada exports, and she gets 65 per cent of all her foreign imports It is believed that more boys ifrom us. Last year this brought | than girls are born among all 2% billion dollars to American | groups of human beings. business, according to a report by | inte | the Research Institute of America| For a long time, each 10 years | | Canada is really cashing in on | has seen about two million more Coal mined in Pennsylvania is *®4_ Confirmations, adding: “Relations between the Presi jdent and Congress ought not to ibe complicated by the need fer coming to agreement on the selec: tion of a host of field officials ,im positions where policy is net made,” The U. S. steel industry used 9 her resources now. Rich oil strikes, | dairy cattle in the United States. | page Rast million tons of coal} jam expanding aluminum output, | ——————_$___———_—— | large deposits of copper, lead, zinc | northern neighbor for part of its} \and platinum are bringing high | needs in cobalt, titanium, magnesi- | prices. Canadas has 80 per cent of /um, cadmium, tin, tungstes, cal- the free world’s nickel and 70 per|cium and gypsum. Your Grocer SELLS that Goog j cent of its asbestos. She is first | im uranium. Iron ore is being de- | weloped in Labrador | America gets much of its news- Korea jumped the demand for fall these. And Canada, with its ff | mancial house in order, is sttract- ing investment dollars from around print from Canada. It looks to its | the world. STAR * BRAND wna cusan COFFEE ——TRY A POUND TODAT—<«