Newspaper Page Text
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t) NOTE: The following
written by a twenty
isslan who spent three
ivlet forced labor camps
e CHI ROPRACTOR-and Vm
v NO. 4 of a aeries of articles published to the public interest
to explain and illustrate the practice of Ohiroprafctic.
SK HISTORY Ne. 206. This pa
it had developed fainting spells
tch «r»w in number and severity
,time Sg went on. During one of
spells she struck her head on
’ floor and on trying to rise dls
«red that aU use had gone from
’ legs. Despite costly advice and
ailment the condition gradually
•se. Senation as well as
was lost in the limbs,
she was carried into a
r'a office wly-re analysis
led the nerve pressure that
the cause of her trouble. The
simple adjustment enabled her
owe her toes. In three weeks'
leg movement returned, and a
later she was able to walk
L There has been no r<*ur
i or the fainting spells
ipractie adjustments were
iE HISTORY No. 488.
fitaches had troubled this
Mfffct yews, the attacks occur
betimes two and three time*
t. She had obtained
try relief from the man
its undertaken, and whe:
• * __ly C7 decided to try Chlro
lt was, she explained “ho
pe.” A series of spinal ad
its brought immediate relie
hto 3 months the headache
apparently ceased.
DR. JN 0 . S. ARNOLD \
206 PARK BUILDING
Office Phone Rea^hone
3343 3654
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mM SOTUID UNfilR AUTHOKITV Of THl COCA-COIA ft
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THE GRIFFIh L o c A - L U L A B O T 4 t.NG CO.
m 4 iiM Mi
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, Nov. 16, 1948.
—.............—........ ..... .................. . ............ ..
and escaped last month to Ger
many.)
By ANATOLI KOi’dSARENKO
Written for United Press
occurred twice during the follow
ing six months, and in both tost
■ nee, OMropnMl. WM
brought prompt relief. There have
been no headaches since.
CASE HISTORY No. 421. A baby
girl who had been subject to ep
zema since she was six months old.
Scores of remedies were tried with
out success. Tier mother, who had
begun taking Chiropractic adjust
ments herself, suggested that Chiro
practic might help the child. Analy
st indicated nerve pressure and a
mries of adjustments were given.
The eczema completely cleared up
and has not reappeared at any time
since.
WHAT IS CHIROPRACTIC? The
Chiropractor teaches that the brain
and nervous system are the root of
health. From the brain, nerves
energy Is distributed through the
nervous system to control all parts
of the body. When this nerve energy
la shut off even slightly between
Tnln and body (by bone displace
ment to the spine), one or more
'•cdy functions are Interfered with
and jll health results. By x-ray.
analysis and spinal adjustment the
Chiropractor Is able to relieve ner
ve Interference and restore nor
malcy to the affecetd part. No drug'
No surgery. Nature Is the healer.
Ml :¥ 7
- T have »pent U
last six years of my life to frow wf
labor campa—there in Nazi Ger
many and three in Soviet
I was fourteen when the Ger
mans picked me up to Kiev
sent me to Essltafen to work. After
the war Soviet repatriation officer*
came to the UNRBA camp and
asked us to return. They said they
had wonderful Jobs for us. I de
cided to go because I wanted to
see my parents on my younger
brother. * '.
When we got to Poland we real
ized something was wrong. Rus
sian soldiers got on the train to
guard us with machine guns. The
train went to Kiev all right but
I didn’t get to see my family. All
of us were taken directly to prison
barracks.
The camp was Snlaminka, Just
outside Kiev. Tha sign over the
camp entrance raid "German La
bor Camp,” and we were ordered
, . , „ „ ... ,.
know why. The guards also spoke
German. They were Russian girl
paratroopers from the last war, and
they carried machine pistols.
Then we were put to work to
the mines fourteen hours a day.
The older men wasted away. When
I became so 111 I could not work,
they sent me to the hospital. When
I got well, they sent me to a new
camp. There we dug a new subway
on the outskirts of Kiev.
I wanted to write to my. family
but letters were not permitted.
We were questioned regularly,
and we usually got beatings with
the questioning. They told us we
had to “make up for our mistakes."
Once a week we had to attend
lectures. They told us to the lec
tures that Works's in Western Bu
rope always were beaten and forced
to work against their will. They
said, “While you were in the West,
It was war, but now it is still worse
than before the war.” i
We knew if we stayed we would
work until we were dead, so we al
ways looked Eight of for a chance to plans es
cape. us made our
together. On one evening of
tember 8 , when some of ua were
taken to the wood* to gather tta
ber we made a break. The guards
shot one and the others then sur
rendered—all but me I hid under
the roots of a bi; tree and they
didn’t find me.*
When it was dark I went Into
Kiev to see my family. The apart-
■
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With the White House undergoing extensive repairs, the President
and Ms family will temporarily move to the Blair Hou«S- above.
Located at 1853 Pennsylvania Avenue, across the street from the
While House, the Blair "House has been used for visiting foreign
dignitaries - The White House has been termed a “fire Was” in
its present condition. 7. 7
_
ment house when we Uved
nothing but ruble. I was
to talk to the neighbors so I left
I don’t know whether my parents
and brother are alive or hot.
The next seven days and nights
\ walked toward the Polish border,
\ had nothing to eat until I got to
Vinniza where a woman gave me a
hundred rubles—almost as much
M a worker earns in a month. I
j bought fried chicken which cost
twenty rubles,
Three days later I got to Brest
xitovsk and during the night I
I swam across the Oder, I wanted to
g0 back to the UNRRA camp but
they told me to Germany theydid
n’t have them any more. So I went
out to Munich. ; ;
our camp was different from
mo8 t 0 f the labor camps we heard
about to Russia. Others are much
; larger. In the Ukraine they are
bunt near work projects. Thert
ma y be forty camps with two hunt
dred thousand prisoners on Ohf
work project. These people were
arrested inside the country because
they were “enemies of the regime.?
We were Just a small group of ex-j
patotetos who hjjid accepted
r*r*
Aomkam VS per cent of the
world’s automobiles. |
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SO IE SURE
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Firemen
Save My Goldfish' ~7
BRIDLINGTON. England —UP
It looked like curtains for Sammy
the. fish. The,hot sun
ihr< UiL girl**;bowl at
Khtsrhousc '. set the window
afire. Pretty soon the whole
was blazing. But Sammy
"roiled. Flfemen rescued him
sa ved the house.
He’s as perky as ever now.
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TALLAHASSEE, — A
F/orlda educator asserts that ele
mentary teachers need more time
during the school day to “relax,
drink a coke, smoke a cigarette or
gossip with other teachers."
Dr. J. C. Peel, Dean at Florida
Southern College, says the teacher
to the lower grades “las children
under foot or to her hair from 8:30
A. M. to 3 P. M. five days a week.”
The lack of free time, he says, is
directly responsible for the short
age of instructors in schools all ov
er the country. He thinks some
thing should be done to attract
more tocahers to the elementary
schools.
“It Is Impossible to do goodhigh
school or college work on a base of
ineffective education In the lower
grades,” Dr. Peel declared In an
article written for the Florida
School Director.
fc, > ■
"The greatest disadvantage of
elementary teaching is that the
teacher is allowed no time during a
school day to which she can be a
j way from the children,” he writes,
j ’ This, says Dr. Peel, is the average
day of an elementary tether, out
cldc of conducting her classes:
She must be at school 30 minutes
early so the children won t get Into
( trouble by beating her to the
Fto or three times a day she
have “UP-**” recess,' personally
Euptrvised, to train in proper ^ ha
^
At rec ess, the teacher must take
part to the games or at least refe
ree. At noon she sits at the table
j with the kids to see that they eat
a well-balanced meal, say the
fmi 5SS Rivers I
•; J
- take
DUBLIN - UP) - Irishmen
their fishing seriously,
80 seriously that the Dublin high
court was asked to decide if eighty
Donegal fishermen had the right to
wet their lines In a three-mile tri
butary of the Lough Foyle, the ri
ve* which runs through northern
li eland and Eire.
The Irish Society, founded 355
years ago by King James I to ad
minister crown estates In Ulster,
claimed it owned the fishing rights
under royal charters received in
1613 and 1632. Hundreds of docu
ments, many dating from the 13th
century, were introduced.
For 4» days the court hearing
droned on. Costs were estimated at
Justice Gavan Duffy gave his de
cision recently. The 80 Donegal
fishermen won the right to fish the
liver. Any charters granting the
rights to the Irish Society were con
trary to the Magna Carta, Justice
Duffy held.
SANTA CLARA HOPEFULS
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Santa
Clam has Its most promising fresh-
71 man football aggregation in years.
tog and exhibit good manners. Of
course, she must first inspect hands
and faces for dirt.
After school, the
teacher still can’t leave her
She must be sure they cross
street safely and load Into the
i( , hool bus . ^ comes discussion
c f their work with the
< “Sometimes,” he says, “such a con
ferenoe is actually more trying on
the teacher than the entire work of
(he school day.”
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g£ *u r »'«*'*« ^vMne^Menard* l - * ^“hert’s
g h e’s 2 0, likes steaks, rare, and
is I feet • tochts tall. She didn’t
| sw whether she’d read the boo?.
^ rispondw Ren^Henry >
,
On the eVfe of World War II
automobile registrations totaled IT,
500,000 in the United States.