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é HF Hee i Wy te it i i Bh [ f “i ee het ie ri if Hie Hae lhe-laisl duluth Hite ie Hts is ay i i i Hi} 4 # ri a ae He pada y ah ei nae aa ie se ae | it Hr i " ee cee . shi 2 nth i am ap ae it a a luli ae 3 ba | r Be ipuect ih UnintHe i! i if oo ae an fd Et i ult peed i eel ell itl Mn Lia nf a ait il Ea Fillaus i i? sla: AHIR rite nat HTT Rete bl a Ui iH een ie aan ey ue ei ee mi mn ae ie A aan ae it EG it tis Wi fi ie Bit i A ou bilan ? pti if tia if i at Dat } i abit it il vei ii ut Hut i ia it i Hie : in tt fal (ME Mia ie a Hae He aa ; oh cata itd iy Ht ans ih Hat get a et mht init sill ie i Hk i i Piaberat UE aH rE bl Hea be PEOPLES F eee ai pore ews ick from a three- Florida, of ifs af i ane ili] aly! ih | it Lo Ra oat aie An A in ald dilalll ie i ae : Al aia fae! Hy ee ee (i ea a Hee ee: Te ae wuueeat tiie neal i orida aes Your Help ‘Smathers Back At Post After 3 Be ag omg to life,” “Wi ee ing hay today Preliminary reports for 1952 show a 12 per have Id Criminal Problem equires "ara | he cai Helton quickly killed the ja Sfoot rattler, It had jthrough the baling machine Juvenile Delinquency Problems.) It is estimated the police come in. contact with about a million boys ect betp bet fect that society have failed them. It's Bea gl Prevention too the Children's Bureau. not to let the same thin ito the boys and girls of are getting into trouble.” WASHINGTON — jber of children appearing before! cent increase over 1951 in the num- \juvenile courts that report to the |U. $. Children’s Bureau. |their share of our social iit the pone aie b25% ‘The ages ot } | eu oe a of for a pe- thing in- wing vis] Now Ri current dispute is whether the Senate will confirm him as a serve commissioned M: volved, PIRIE|PLALY S| ve) ISiY MIB iO. MES ITA LK) A permanent re- (First of Three Articles on Rising in both parties dur- military aide to former [TAA ABT] Army Medical Board, CiRIONE Ri per cent disabled and that | Cl ile he was entitled to re-| 's nomination or not, since)’, be little possibility that Vaughan would be od ren it he were idea's purmanapt reorva cope MEIR LE BP f AV IE | FR] and, of the Cedars of Lebanon Vaughan will have to be con- he Department of Neuro-surgery in Los Angeles. already retired and dra jajor-General. The main duty, made the correct appraisal, make little difference whether the 4nd girls each year on charges it seems, is the honor of h forty incurred whi twenty-five epileptic patients after the! Harry Truman, If for ra apts oy the period of sleep averages only about four a Present status, since he managed to anta- as the fifty per cent of those patients previously unrelieved by i Ab tH members of Nene treatment is called the “deep sleep” treatment. Hi Entered at Key West, Florida, as Second Class Matter cio teteece un Thus Vaughan is pay. The only thing involved in the Of the twenty-five patients put to sleep in this man- ner, the physicians reported sixteen became free The report was made by Dr. Tracy J. Putnam We suspect General i g i improved fifty per cent. The treatment, consisting of, drugs, was effective, or partially effective, with all pa- tients tested. after taking this treatment, the doctors reported in the! Journal of the American Medical Association. use of a new treatment. The treatment consists of seizures, five improved seventy-five per cent, and four the disability was ceive basic pay. lent results on epileptic patients in a state of unconsciousness riod of days, among other things. Dr. Sanford E. Rothenberg, Hh