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The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page 42
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The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page 42

Location:
Akron, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
42
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

the mayor sent out an appeal to1 Experience keeps a dear chool, but fools will learn in no other. RUPTURE 42 Alxon Journal Tuesday, October SI, 19NJ She Lihcs BoysLots Of 9 Em! riaakVss If silsiin Buy aa. aarSarft. aaoaupatlan. 1 SKIN inniTATIOII No Police For Loan CHICAGO (I'SJ Chicago, like New York, has no police to spare for lend-lease.

Police Commissioner John Pren-dergast of Chicago says he has enough trouble trying to round up hoodlums without going to the New York. Chicago, Detroit and Cleveland for the loan of aom northern detective to help out during the Winter season in Florida. Following tho uit of New York CSty. Commissioner Prenuergast said: need all the men we have." The commissioner added: "Beside, I don't car how many hoodlum from thi area go to Florida. They make millionaire) of down there anyhow." Mransjuialwsi Tb Mat) eretee a vast Haaieissasnl well known far preetoetn Heasoniai resalla.

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.7 assistance of Miami Beach, Fla. isafen ssagir. uM nleaii a aahel BKAB TBK WANT AM ITUT BAT Miami Beach police officials and 1 84-6 S. Moin I' TknlT Holt Tries Return As Republican CHARLESTON. W.

Vs. Rush D. Holt. who rod to Wash-iriflnn on the crest of the New Deal tidal wave in 19S4. la tryir.jt in peddle back in an unfamiliar Republican craft.

Holfa Republican arkvr are supremely confident ha will msk it: IVrnocrat party wheelhorsea are worried, to say the leaat. The comehacW efforta of former I. S. Sen. Holt to asmeat Fair IVwl Rep.

Cleveland M. Bailey la the nearest thing Weat Virginia ran offer In the ay of a political contest of national aiffnifiranre. The principals in thia neat political drama are well cast as direct opposite. rioddin. pipe-limokinir Bailey, 81, is a straight party man who rarely has been out of line with the administrauon during hia two trms on Capitol Hill.

He has the 100 per cent endorsement of labor. THE Bl'STUNG Holt hat been expounding conservative theorie ST 1 1 CZ I sS mfa BRAND-NEW WINTER HATS hats north 6.98 hats worth 12.98 Young people give some older folks the jitters. It isn't bo with Mrs. Mary Bean Roots-town. She likes to have youths around and in large groups.

Here, she sits at the dinner table with her foster family, left to right around the table, Bruce, 15; Richard, 11; Eddie, 10; Bob, 17; Robert, 21; Butch, 15; Carl, Edward, 9, and Leonard, 11. 1 any hitting to be done, I'm the one who will do the hitting. There aren't many scraps. They know that their privileges will be taken away, and sometime I have to spsnk them." THE PRESENT family is a happy, husky bunch of boys. They all call Mrs.

Bean "Mom." Earh All th Newest and Chic Styles in a Rainbow Array of Pastels Jewel Tones and New Dark Colors Fur Felti Port Finish Felts Qualify Wool Felti Sutded Vtlours Champion Foster Mother Still Rearing Families Mr. Roan Has Taken In 5ft llomelfM Children, Say That She Prefers Boys By HELEN WATERIIOISE AKRON DISTRICTS Champion foster mother is still going strong at 75 years of age, with nine lively boys as her present charges. In the past 42 years, Mrs. Mary Bean has taken 58 homeless I has his own job on the farm, and they aid her with the washing, ironing, cleaning and canning. Thev tend the chirkena and havei rabbits of their own.

much- mended bike or two sits in the front yard. The phone was shrilling on the dav of the interview with Mrs. Bean. The boys were youngsters In all Into her comfortable farm home a mile east of of government that were shared bv Republicans long before he finally renounced the Democrat faith and joined up with them. An Ironic twist to the bitter contest In West Virginia' third congressional district la that to win.

Holt must offset the opposition of a segment of votera whose help largely responsible for ending him to a Democratic Ren-ale aeat back In the New Deal da vs. 1 Thu is the important United Mine Workera vote, considered vital In most statewide elections. The third district mine vote is centered in Fayette County, most populous of the district. Back in 1934, Fayette miners turned out to give Holt solid backing. He took the oath at 30.

In a matter of months, Holt took a road sharply to the right of the New Deal route. When Holt came up for reelection in 1940, he went down to defeat In the primary. He has been doing the same thing as a Democrat with disheartening regularity ever since when he sought major office trfe nomination for governor in 1944 and for senate in 1948. HOLT managed to keep in the fringe of the political limelight by getting himself reelected to the state legislature. One year be held the unique distinction of being the nominee of both Democrat and Republican for house of delegates from Lewis County.

It looked like Holt's goose was rooked a a Democrat. Victory-hungry Republicans would welcorrle any candidate who looked like he could win an election. So Holt shucked the Democratic toga he had worn for two decades and came forth in new political raiment He won the Republican nomination handily In a field of four contestants. Already there's Republican talk of grooming him for governor in 1952 if ha can win Cleve Bailey's congressional seat. I took his baby girl when she was nine weeks old.

The baby girl, Mary Lou, lived here until she, too, married. Now she lives in a cottage next door with her husband and baby. After her success with her own adopted baby, Mrs. Bean decided to take other homeless young' caning to asK it they could stay at school to watch a ball game. "They have strict hour.

The younger ones all go to bed at 9 and the older one a little later," he explain. "Sometimes I have as many as 14 kids for supper. The boys often bring in their friends to eat. Nineteen loaves of bread were piled on the table as Mrs. Bean talked.

They were simply her "weekend supply." "The boys frequently talk to me about their memories of living in crowded rooms and of being hungry and cold. They don't forget their backgrounds," said Mrs. Bean. "They are grateful for having a home like this." Is she ever going to retire from the child raising business? Not if she can help it, she says. "I'll always have a child here, I know," she explains simply.

sters. Summit County Children's home has placed babies and older youngsters at her home with results through the years. "A few were wayward boys who would have been sent to reform school. I pleaded to take them and lo try to straighten them out," Mrs. Bean said.

"Now they are ht ir'-ilf Mi- iisA ii-T-f' ft lit ifriaMaaani.sw st iiasjrsjslmVi if-saiiWirtira 1 -n mwmX aaniL jesiasaT Roots town. 4 She has watched them grow from babyhood to young man and womanhood, has attended their weddings and presided over the birth of numerous foster grandchildren. She even has several foster great-grandchildren. MRS. BEAN'S present family ranges from 8 to 21 years of age.

All but the 21-year-old, an ex-Navy man, attended Rootatown school and the Rootstown Congregational Church. All but the oldest are wards of the Children's Home. Robert, who's 21, also was a ward until he became of age. THE GRAY-HAIRED, motherly-looking widow admits she likes to bring up boys better than girls. Only seven of her foster children have been girls.

'Boy are easier. I don't worry much about them," she explains. She legally adopted only one of the 58 children. He Is now a grown man with children and a grandchild of his own. "I read in the Beacon Journal some 40 years ago of a baby that' needed a home," she relates.

"My husband and I went right over and got Karl, 20 month old, and adopted him. You didn't have to go through a lot of red tape in adopting babies in those days." IV LATER YEARS Karl's wife died after the birth of their baby. fine young men, married, and with good jobs. There are boys of mine in all section of the country. "Discipline? Well, when i first get a youngster I alt him down BEST FURNITURE, 363 S.

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(Ui!) Five grade school pupils have been appointed to have charge of the 250th anniversary celebration of the Congregational Church. The celebration will be held In the year 2,000, 60 years hence. mm IBB MBBEI i Consult Our Interior At No Wtf4 WS Ef Charge wheezing uthma attarke Tiw tell of blaned relief after uini it. PROMfTIN eoit but considering thia is not expensive, amounts to only a few pennies per dose. Caution use only as directed.) riOMtTIN I sold with strict money-back fuarant by Anderson's I)ruf Store 61 W.

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Allow 1 Week, for Delivery. Offer Esplre December 1950. Void if Used, prohibited or otherwise restricted by seat or municipal laws..

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Pages Available:
3,080,813
Years Available:
1872-2024