Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily Times-Gazette, 30 Sep 1948, p. 9

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a ------ , -- -----. TE SA A 4 Za SATEEN ga SHEN T . ' * 1] * L 3 . Ks ] i! s ' T 4 ] Sr i 8." gi + hi + . :- 3 2 3 :! : LB 8: i i . + . " - Cl - NM " 8 . , " ° a sas a a ------ ( -- ee i £ BL le ett dl dad LS + TO DRA AR, . "Dapplemore," his 3,00-acre Pawl- 'Thomas in London, Ont. # +"~he was leader of the college glee " "School in New York with ambi- . concert stage. Okla, who was well started on a . wife. He plunged into law as a President Truman, drinks very lit- © Lawrence THURSDAY, SE PTEMBER 30, 1948 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE JAGE NIN! Thomas E. Dewey Quits Music, Law For Public Life By CLYDE BLACKBURN Canadian Press Staff Writer Washington -- (CP) -- Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York, Re- publican candidate for the second time in November's presidential election, might have made a mil- tion dollars in law. 2 Instead he chose public service which paid little but brought him fame as a politician. He was New York's racket-busting district at- torney and has served two terms as governor of New York. : Dewey, suave and ' polished, 1s 'nearly five feet, eight inches tall but looks shorter. He dresses im- maculately but quietly. His mous- .tache now is known wherever pic- tures are printed. He is dark with arresting brown eyes, an engaging smile and wide spaced teeth which he does not like to have photo- graphed. He wanted the Republican nomi- nation in 1040 but retired in the face of the Wendell Willkie land- slide, and worked in Willkie's futile «fight against Franklin D. Roose- velt. In 1044 there were plenty of old-guard candidates available at the Chicago cénvention but Dewey won and went on to defeat by still- unbeatable Roosevelt. Now he is again the Republican candidate, as a result of careful planning and organization on his part and his own personal deter- mination to reach the White House. Fortune In Farm His personal fortune probably is almost entirely wrapped up in his $30,000 farm near Pawling, New York, which he bought 11 years ago with a down payment of $3,000. In spite of the fact that Dewey has been in the big-salary class ($35,000) only since he became gov- ernor and in spite of the terrific demands such n office-holder must face in addition to high in- come taxes, he is proud of the fact that he paid off all the mortgage. ing farm, now is his. His predeces- sors as governor were millionaires. Dewey was born March 24, 1002, in Owosso, Mich: His father was a small-town newspaper publisher. His mother was Ann Thomas of English and Canadian descent. He. recalls with interest and plea- sure the summers he spent as a small boy with his Aunt Eleanor At the University of Michigan, where Dewey got his arts degree club. He went to, Columbia Law tions divided between law and the In White's "Scandals" He studied both, taking singing lessons at the Percy Rector Stev- ens music studio. There he met Frances: Eileen Hutt of Sapulpa, musical career with engagements in a number of stage successes, in- cluding George White's "Scandals." He was admitted to the bar in 1026 and two years later he and Frances were married. They have two sons, Thomas, 15, and John, 12. With family responsibilities, Dewey decided to restrict his sing- ing to home duets with his pretty career, but his private practice soon ended when he entered public legal service in New York City. Dewey, like his chief opponent, tle, goes to church with fair regu- larity, and leads a happy family life. . "He is more reserved than Tru- man, nothing of a back-slapper or wise-cracker, but he is eloquent and precise in his public utterances. Urges Investment In Caribbean Area Port of Spain, Trinidad--(CP)-- W. Cramer, secretary general of the Caribbean Com- mission, believes the West Indies can attract "thousands and per- haps some day, hundreds of thous- ands of people from outside." ressing concern over the luke- warm attitude of both local and foreign capital in the development of the hotel tourist business in the Caribbean, Mr. Cramer said he saw no reason why $60,000,000 could not be attracted to the area. A New York ptoposal advocated formation of the Caribbean De- velopment Tourist Association in 1946 and a meeting was held later in the year with delegates from Haiti, San Domingo and Dominica Scores A First Representative Margaret Chase Smith, 50, victorious in the Maine senatorial election, is the first Re- publican woman to have been elect- | ed to the U.S. Senate. ~Central Press Canadian Psycho-Surgery A Valuable Aid Doctors Assert By LUIS TEIVES . Lisbon--(Reuters)--The value of psycho.surgery for curing mental disorders which have hitherto de- fied all forms of treatment was| confirmed by eminent surgeons at-| tending the first international con- | ference of psycho-surgery. recently | in Lisbon. These surgeons reported that of | some 10,000 patients who have un- | dergone the operation known as pre-frontal leucotomy, or its modi. | fication known as lobotomy, about | one-third have been cured. Another one-third showed con- | siderable improvement but were not | able to earn their own living. In the | remaining third there was little or | no improvement. | Mortality resulting from the oper- | ation was estimated at about three | _ per cent. | Best results were obtained ir? the | case of patiegts with great emo- | tional tensior® particularly those | suffering from schozophrenia (split | personality), melancholy or obses. | sions. ! Some 140 doctors and professors from 14 countries attended the con- ference. ! Professor Egas Moniz, 73, first performed the pre-frontal leucoto- my operation in 1935, It consisted of cutting nerve fibres in the pre-fron- | tal region of the brain to change the pattern of thought and emotion of patients suffering from certain mental disorders, thus relieving them -of their symptoms. Later, Dr. Walter Freeman, Wash- ny for a quicker, . nicer, blacker : shine! | ZEBRA LIQUID »»r PASTE STOVE POLISH as well as various territories. ™ \[% Fitness Wins. N ington Professor Moniz's tectinique by cut- ting more fibrés He claimed his method, which he called lobotomy, gave better results. About 2,500 operations by both methods have been performed in 3 : Britain--more than any other coun- try. Discussion of cases led to the con- clusion that a pre-operational study of the personality of the patient is a fundamental requirement. Inte- grity of personality prior to the op- psycho.surgeon, modified eration appears to be the most 4m. | dicine. portant factor in the success or iailure of psycho-surgery. At the end of the conference, the Brazilian delegation proposed that Dr. Egas Moniz be put forward as a candidate for a Nobel prize for me- Dr. Walter Freeman on Moniz and signed by all the Nobel prize committee. the United States delegation sug- | slaughter charge, William Hudson, gested a resoiuiion proposing Di. attending the conference, be sent to Gateshead, England -- (CP) Committed for trial on a man- -- | Egham, Surrey, England -- (CP -- Eighty German women attend ing a church conference wept whe sald to have struck hic! presented with bars of soap. On brother-in-law after an argument |said she had more baths in nir' over whether "twelfth" should be |days in Britain than she had i spelled with an "f" or a "v", Germany since 1941, behalf of members . SPECIAL! -- LOBLAWS ' "QUAKER CORN FLAKES SELL AM. 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