- READ THE OMAHA GUIDE - _ _ _ _ _ __- — — - — - — — - ~ ^ _ _ — —. -- - — —^ ^ ^ New Stamp Honors Polio Volunteers * Join the March of Dimes • __ .. —.....,._ -1 Ok. Jonas Salk gives ^//JT J2*1£t!£T/ I FIRST POLIO VACCINE ' * c'“'",ucn' ' Postage Thousands of victims STAMP ISSUED STILL NEED HELP... VACCINE &y END OF I 1957, HONORS MILLIONS OF OTHERS 1956. OF DIMES STILL NEED PROTECTION _II___I I YOUR DIMES TRAIN THEM WW—■—w~ ^flTffil n »||iMHWWIWMM>IWWl III I » li Funds raised in March of Dimes provide scholarships for (Barbara Phillips, Winston Salem, N. C., for physical therapy .study, Northwestern University; James Prestage, Alexandria. La., predoctora! xo«lopy at State University of Iowa; and Isabella (Finley, Washington, D. C., medical social work at lloward Uni versity. CONFERENCE WITH GRADUATE Polio patients with respiratory difficulties are promoted frotni Iron lungs, to chest respirators, to rocking beds, to normal breath* I Ing. Mrs. Hilda Allen, chairman of Health and Welfare Commit*f tee of Women’s Auxiliary to the National Medical Association,! visits polio patient, Jean Cook, at Rancho Los Amigos Hospital during Conference of National Organizations. The conference was sponsored by National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis to re* slew programs supported by March of Dimes. The 1957 March of Dimes must ra^e {46,900,000, Jan. 2*31. "PRECIOUS LIFE" Mrs. Gwendolyn Randolph, Gary, Ind., was stricken with! bulbar polio in September. Six months pr< rnant, she has four children ages 8, 7, 4 and 14 months. None of them had Salk vac cine. Funds raised in the March of Dimes pay for care of more! than 2,000 iron lung polio patients. The brealh-of-life is precious! and expensive. Join the March of Dimes. .. URGE DIMES DRIVE SUPPORT 1 ——Mi" - ■ WBMUMBWr: Scovel Richardson. Washington, D.C., chairman, unuea states Board of Parole; Mrs. Osbeth Adams. Chicago, III., vice-president, Jack and Jill of America; Benjamin F. Wilson, Gary, Ind., at torney; and John T. Williams, president Maryland Stale College, at Princess Anne urge support of the Polio Foundation’s fund * raising drive, the 1957 March of Dimes. The March of Dimes ■ponsored polio vaccine is safe and effective but more than half of those under 35 years of age have not received vaccine injec tions. The March of Dimes will furnish funds necessary to aid all polio patients without regard to age. race, creed or color. ‘ JfMRVW Nowifim I. GIVETOTHP d MARCH Of DIMES \ 2TGET VACCINATED' YOURSELF \ PARALYTIC POLIO IS WORSE T --- - . ^—1-1 Rom Marie Waters, Washington, D.C., 1949 March ot Dimes Poster Girl, comforts her two-year-old sister, Brenda, as Dr. Davis of Children’s Hosptial injects Salk polio vaccine. March of Dimes volunteers are trying to finish the job of polio business. Have[ you received your Salk vaccine? HELPED BY YOU Judy, age 4, has severe pa ralysis of both lower extremi ties, as a result of a polio at tack in August 1956. Her broth er did not survive his attack. Larry, a hospital friend, looks .— over Judy’s, shoulder. Your, dimes and dollars given to the) March of Dimes insure the care' and treatment of all polio pa tients. . * TRAINED PROFESSIONAL CARE , nr~ - wm mm wmm mmmgmmz^ Four-year-old Jimmy follows Instructions of Mrs. Josephine Finch, physical therapist. 1957 March of Dimes funds will provide scholarships to train professional workers. A team of nine special- ; ists is required to aid polio patients to return to normal life pur- j suits. The 1957 March of Dimes opened Jan. 2 and will close Jan. 31. 1, (ffi&llldftftdDimes WjmmmL BORN TOO SOON FOUR-year-old MARLENE OLSEN OP BURL INGTON, MASS.... MIT BY POLIO JUST AS THE NATION WAS ©ETTINS ITB FIRST SALK VACCINE,..SVMBOLIZES TME COUNTRY'S POLIO VICTIMS WHO STILL NEED MARCH OP DIMES HELP.' STRICKEN WHEN SME WAS THREE,/MARLENS « RIGHT LIS AND AROUND. DOCTORS lUING CARE "FOR YEARS*1 ■ Dap ain Arnold Olsen, SMV*BOMBER PILOT, 3 AWARDED TME QUfSHED FLYING CROSS -AST MAY POR P SECRET* WORK i IN KOREA I ■ ■ ' "I """ 1 ■mmCmIi OF DIMES MJANUAXY j This Polio Information Sponsored By THE OMAHA GUIDE •% ' A,4*v4bagfe, iWfe,4■■ . „ - rt - -- I Q. This » my W yeor for formal donees and 1 would like+o look my beef. Could you (jive me any ideo$ A. Here ore ofew hints you miqhf find fielpfiil: When you're weorinq o qown Hnot (hows your shoulders ond your skin i$ o bit spotty...usea tinted liquid foundation to coneeel these blemishes. ait evenly from hairline to neckline ond set a liqtrt pat of dustinq powder. I Rub o touch of cold creom "* on your eyebrows to keep them qlossy and in place c l Wear o briqbter darker lipstick than \ vou do durmq the day, because electric liqhti wash out color. Touch _/ perfume behind your core, in the hollow of your neck and In the crooks ot your arms. '/ ' J ' /f fiu Iwve more dotes than dresses, you con chonqe a simple basic qown by mokinq a detachable net overskirt qathered to a three Inch ribbon with streamers that tie in the bock Several of these in different colors will odd qlamour to your wardrobe* / C MSk ftxvd* Good Grtxminq Service It’s Your AMERICA I ‘vZs. OP AMERICAN WOMEN TO VOTE CAME ONLY AFTER YEARS OF AGITATION AND PETITION, INCLUDIN* A DRAMATIC PROTEST ACTION PURINO WORLD WAR I WHEN SUFPRACEfffcS CHAINED THEMSELVES TO THE OATES OF THE WHITE HOUSE. rtZ'i WINNING THE VOTE Hong after the constitution became LAW, ONLY PROPERTY OWNERS COULD VOTE. DANIEL WEBSTER ARGUED THAT "VIOLENCE AND DEVOLUTION' WOULD RESULT IF THOSE WHO HAD NO PROPERTY WERE ALLOWED f;||| TO VOTE. - pr . . :. • - - v'-v wmir K x\\: ‘ Txxvy OVER 103 Million MEN AMP WOMEN ARE ELI61BL tt TO VOTE BECAUSE AMERICANS KCFVSeD TO CVS LP THE FtOHT FOR FRL-E UN-VK*AL. BALLOT. CAST Yout VOTE ON EIECTION PAY. £.„ » FREEDOM MARTYR TSliJAM R LOVBJCVOP ALTDN.n.UN0l*. tA'.e w* lire oeFiNCTM* Hie **ht to speak , AMP TOPU0LI4H Mi* HATREP oe «.AVERY. [. %ur rights befcm hi# martyrs death Si November 51857 Lovejoy said. jk *P THE CiVH. AUTHORITIES RBPUSE H> /J PROTECT ME. I MUST UTOH TO COP: I AND IE I PIC. I HAVE CSTERAAINEP TO » MAKS MV SPANS IN ALTON. I HAMP SHOWN ETERNAL OPPOSITION TO < SL AVWPV— I CAN we AT AAV non POT / CANNOT oms»NT IT." 9__ Phone Your News To HA0800