OCR Text |
Show rape 8 News From Veterans Administration Post-Kore- May I. U5 THE JOURNAL veterans, a mer terms in school derway in about two be their hut chance released rean (II training in this point. un- getting months Then be mu.-- t be Mire that the to start Ko- school will accept him for training. time. Next His next step is to file an applifall s school terms begin too late. cation for Korean (II Bill training It doesn't pay to wait until the with the VA, or with the approved last minute before taking action. school in which ho wishes to en- from military service before August J(, should start making plans now if they intend to enroll in Korean (II Hill training before VA emphasized. a deadline, VetOnce a veteran has decided to erans Administration warns. train under the Korean (II Hill, Under the law, these veterans he must i boose the school and actually must begin training be- course he wants, lie must make fore this coming August JO, in oi- certain that the course is lier to continue afterward. proved. Any VA regional office For many of the veterans, sum can furnish him information on 1 roll. fast-approachi- (Il-ap- Since all these steps take time, veterans should act promptly to avoid disappointment. For veterans requesting VA counseling to help them decide on an objective and a training program. prompt action is a must; the counseling process adds still -j SNEAD BEATS HOGAN BY ONE STROKE another step that is necessarily time-consumin- 'Sy g. VA reminded r - BABY ROY MEETS HIS UNCLE DANIEL will .Xvw V 'v, veterans that the August Jo deadline applies to V vet- erans planning to take and training, as well as to those who intend to go to on-the-j- school. date apThis Augusts cut-of- f plies only to veterans who left the service on or before August JO, 05 J. VA said. Veterans separated after that time have two years from the date of their separation in which to begin Korean GI train- mother and daughter, are shown at Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, D. C., where Mrs. Ralph Lindamood (right), 39, gave birth to a son, Daniel, a day after her daughter, Mrs. Roy Tipton, 20, gave birth to Roy Eugene. The infant Roy Eugene is a grandson of Mrs. Lindamood and a nephew of the younger Daniel. UNCLE AND NEPHEW, 1 ing. The law requires a veteran enroll in and begin train- (left) and Ben Hogan shake hands after Snead won the at Augusta, Ga. Snead defeated Hogan by a score Masters golf play-oof 70 to Hogans 71. Snead won the Masters title in 1949 and 1952 and Hogan took it in 1951 and 1953. (International Soundphoto) ff ACROSS 1. 4. Fruit 5. River (Fr.) Written statement 04.0 of 21. Cubic Ream (abbr. meters qualification 25. 5. Salt (chem.) Country (archaic) 26. Tellurium 6. Miscellany 10. Wrath 7. City (India) 12. Apart (sym.) 8. Grade again 29. Chance 13. Immense 32. Papal 14. To buy back 9. Peel seal 16. Support for 11. Negligent 15. Extinct bird 33. Saunters an elbow a building 21. Sloth 22. Toward nb idly 20. Just 0 Warble 34. Foreman 36. Beach 38. Comfort c r 40. Bounder 41. It is (con- tracted ) the sea 24. Glossy silk fabric 27. City m France 28. A ditch-digg- er 30. Type measure 31. Equipment 32. An apron top r 35. Property (L.) 37. 39. 42. 43. Spurious Perform Corridors Biblical mount 44. Little Islands 45. Affixes 46. Vegetables DOWN 1. Whiter 2. Eat away 3. Genus of lilv WANTED! MEN TO TRAIN FOR REAL ESTATE APPRAISERS Age 21 to CO. Must be residents of this county two or more years. Competent appraisers receive $325 to $350 per month. Farm experience valuable. Write: The Journal Pediatrician has Confidence in Polio Vaccine 9. Talk 19. 17. Before 18. Covering of GI Bill. i ) Layton, Utah NEW BUDGET DIRECTOR SWORN IN must ing on or before his deadline, if he wants to go on with it afterward. The mere filing of an application beforehand, with the intention of starting later, is not enough. date rules apply These cut-of- f only to veterans planning training under the Korean (II Bill. They do not pertain to veterans enrolled under the original World War Two SAM SNEAD CROSSWORD that Full confidence in the safety of the trial polio vaccine soon to be given to up to a million children was expressed today by Dr. Henry F. Helmholz. for many years head of the Section on Pediatrics at the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Helmholz, ex-- j president of both the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Pediatric Society, is National Chairman of the Com- mittee on Health of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers. I have Dr. Helmholz said. reviewed the plans for safety testing of the vaccine by the manufacturer, Dr. Salk and the Laboratory of Biologies Control of the U. S. Public Health Service. It seems to. me that they provide for the most careful procedures possible and available to us to insure that no living virus will be in any vaccine in the National Foundations field trial. Its harm-- ! lessness is further attested by the thousands of inoculations, without untoward incidents, given by Dr. Salk with the vaccine produced by the commercial manufacturers. Pointing out that valid questions have been raised by competent professional men about most new vaccines. Dr. Helmholz stated, I Such questions are natural. have asked them myself. But I am now fully satisfied that every precaution has been taken to insure safety of the trial polio vaccine. If this vaccine proves as effective as I believe it will, it should spell the beginning of the end to paralytic polio. This is something that I, as a doctor, have prayed for over the years. j i j (right) is shown as he took the oath of office as Director of the Budget at a White House ceremony. Supreme Court Justice Harold H. Burton is administering the oath, while Mrs. Hughes and Presidential assistant Sherman Adams look on. Hughes succeeds Joseph Dodge, who is returning to Detroit. (International Soundphoto) ROWLAND R. HUGHES j j j FROM GREENLAND'S j ICY MOUNTAINS, TO INDIA'S CORAL STRAND! 1. |