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Show Who's News This Week By Delos Wheeler Lovelace Consolidated Features. WNU rtelooso. NEW YORK. After 1940 It seemed that Rear Admiral Ross T. Mclntyre had had official instructions instruc-tions to look on only the bright side Thts 3rd Termer dential mi-Will mi-Will Also Take 4th crobes.Inj It c.. c '40, after the i Vote rs Say bo ' , , usual pokes ; and taps and lab tests, he announced that his White House patient wasn't so good. In '41, however, he said the subject was in grand health and he said the same in '42 and '43. But now, following that recent bout with the flu, he is firm in his order that i the President coast for a while. Mclntyre, chief doctor to President Pres-ident Roosevelt for three terms and a cinch for the assignment if voters approve a fourth term, is stocky, broad -faced, full- mouthed, bald and assured, as all good doctors must be. Born J in Oregon, he married and practiced prac-ticed for a while before entering the navy In 1916 as medical corps lieutenant, j.g. Until he took on the top-to-toe care of President Presi-dent Roosevelt he specialized in eye, ear, nose and throat matters mat-ters and was good enough to be elected a Fellow of the American Ameri-can College of Surgeons. He has decorations from Brazil, Sweden and Belgium. When he went to the White House he was a captain, but he was boosted boost-ed over a lot of seniors into the navy's surgeon generalcy and made a rear admiral forthwith. His order I is that the President keep between 184 and 188 pounds, which cuts off second helpings but allows an unlimited un-limited variety of food. He didn't order but approves the President's eight hours of sleep and breakfast in bed between eight and nine. Dinner Din-ner he leaves to Mrs. Roosevelt. v T'INFOLKS seem to have guided the hand of fate which brings Leigh ton Goldie McCarthy now to the post of first Canadian ambassa- w f a if r- or t0 Let s Give All Due u. S. He is Credit to Kinfolks a top-draw- OfAmb. McCarthy er states; m a n and business man, of course; and for that may take some personal credit. But consider his grandfather! A solicitor so-licitor back in Dublin, he came to Canada because a partner left him short of cash and Canada seemed the best place for a fresh start. McCarthy Mc-Carthy wouldn't likely be the new ambassador except for that Irish trouble. Then there is the fact that his family has long held a scat in the Canadian house of commons. Young Lcighton, who was born in Ontario, near blue Lake Huron, Hu-ron, helped his uncle win the scat in 1891 and that, no doubt, inspired him to run for the scat himself in 1898. He held it until 1908. He has been Canadian Minister to Washington since 1941. Early in life he studied law in an uncle's office in Barrie, Ont. Relatives, again! He has represented represent-ed aluminum interests and is chairman chair-man of Canadian Life, the oldest Canadian life insurance company. A humanitarian, he is a trustee of our National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis and visits the President yearly at Warm Springs. They are old friends. Mr. McCarthy is a spare, polished man, six feet tall. Although he is 75 years old now, it is easy to believe be-lieve that he once excelled at rough tough lacrosse. Fishing, golfing and riding are his present interests. 'TpHE Russians can't be reading King Carol's recent clippings. When his expensive press agent was hired the idea was to fill even Mos- O J C TL C0VV'S neW Reds Say There re papers with Still Kings a Cat stories of a Wouldn't Look At sort t0 draw a halo around the head of Rumania's runaway run-away ruler. A lot of pieces landed in a lot of papers, good ones, too. But here is Moscow calling Carol a comic opera fellow and warning that he will never, never get his throne back. Such stubbornness will dismay Carol down in Mexico City's suburban sub-urban Coyoacan where he lives a simple life Intended to con-' vince his worst enemies that he is changed for the better. A Hohenzollern on his father's side, kinsman of British royalty on his mother's, he keeps to a practically peasant routine. lie and Madame Lupescu live in a small house with only one servant, serv-ant, six dogs and in the master's bedroom only seven suits of clothes. Now and then they play bridge with neighbors, no stakes; but usually usual-ly Carol is abed with the birds, which should surprise his old Paris pals, if any still live. His typical day begins about seven i:i the morning. He breakfasts on toffee, toast, fruit, reads his mail and works in the garden, while Madame Lupescu suggests he might better have planted that there, or there. .Then lunch and all the news papers, then a motor ride to delivei Madame Lupescu at the Red Cros vorkshop, then home to receive of icial callers. |