m n k i i I The Sofy Flavor makes them so delicious! Your first bite of Golden Mix griddle oakes will convince you of their goodness! The perfect blend of soy with high-grade, unbleached wheat flour gives them a > rich, nut-like flavor, a melting tenderness that packs a lot of appetite appeal. BTlie whole family will love Golden Mix griddle cakes and waffles . . for breakfast, lunch or dinner. They'll thrive, too, on the protein richness of Golden Mix. Try some tonight! I \CCEAHSWtrH U6HTN/N& SPEED / j | •By actual teat, Old Dutch cleans 69 more sinks per can than any other leading cleanser! Because grease is one of the worst prob lems of cleaning, Old Dutch is made with a fast grease dissolver that emulsifies grease. Then Seismotite erases the loosened dirt —easily — quickly — without scratching. You protect precious equipment and clean with lightning speed when you use Old Dutch! Discharged Soldiers Lose Social Security Rights, Official Says Men leaving the armed services after 18 months in uniform have lost the social security survivors’ insur ance protection for their children for which they were taxed in civil life, Ewan Clague, director of em ployment security of the Social Security Board, told a discussion group last night at the YWCA. Mr. Clague pointed out that while servicemen still in uniform have the protection of the pension system for their children, the fact that the possibility of war was not provided for in the drafting of the Social Security Act leaves an inequity when the fighting man returns to civil life. "There are several hundred thou sand men in uniform whose insur ance is affected by this failure of the drafters of the act to make an exception in the case of war,” Mr. Clague said, “and the drafting of fathers will multiply this number. War Victims Covered. "It is not the family of the man killed in war that suffers most. His family gets a pension. It is the family of the man who dies shortly after his discharge from the Army. His dependents should have at least the minimum life insurance for which he was taxed before the war in the name of social security.” Benefits are paid to widows with orphans after the death of an em ploye covered by the act, he said, onlv when the employe has been paying the tax for half of the three year period before his death. Thus a man who has been discharged from the Army after 18 months of service, he explained, is not covered by the insurance provisions. Even if he should go back to work and the tax on his pay be resumed, he would not regain this insurance pro vision for his family until after 18 months of steady employment. Situation Brought to Fore. Senator Vandenberg. Republican, of Michigan recently called this situation to the attention of the Social Security Board, the speaker - Anglo-American Unity Viewed by Halifax as Basic to World Peace By the Associated Prew. NEW YORK. Nov. 11.—Unless the United States and Great Britain Join hands in close postwar co-opera tion, says Viscount Halifax, British Ambassador to the United States, the two countries will "fall again, as we failed in 1918.” Lord Halifax, speaking at the an nual meeting of the Academy of Political Science last night, em phasized that future relations be tween Great Britain and the United States must be more concrete and effective than mere friendship. “Whatever the nations which I want peace may together decide to; do after the war in order to secure it,” he said, “an indispensable pert of any such larger plan must be the discovery of a firm basis for Anglo-American co-operation.” At the same meeting Brig. Gen. Frank O'D. Hunter said that Amer ica’s Flying Fortresses "have opened a battle front 20,000 feet above the heads of the German people through the roof—the only route at present open into the heart of Germany.” “The Fortresses that daily cross the Channel are building a bridge for the invasion of Europe,” Gen. Hunter, commander of the 1st AAF, said. “There is no place left in Central Europe for the enemy to hide. "Our precision bombing will be expanded, for we have proved two facts to our satisfaction and the enemy’s regret. First, that bombing operations against selected targets from 20,000 to 25,000 feet in the face of antiaircraft and fighter de fenses is perfectly feasible, and, sec ond. that properly selected and fused bombs will destroy any known industrial structure.” Earlier W. Randolph Burgess, vice chairman of the National City Bank of New York, in a paper read by George B. Roberts, also a vice presi dent of the bank, expressed belief that the "common sense behavior” of the American people had pre vented inflation. Rites for Col. Lawhon To Be Held Tomorrow Funeral services for Col. Zim E. Lawhon, 52, who was on duty with the general staff here before being appointed commanding officer of Camp Reynolds, Pa., last spring, will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Fort Myer Chapel. Burial will be in Arlington Cemeterf. Col. Lawhon. who died last Sun day at Camp Reynolds, was a na tive of Texas. He was appointed a second lieutenant in 1917 and served in France during the World War with the field artillery. He was senior military instructor at Prince ton University before serving with the general staff here. Col. Lawhon was to have been nominated shortly as a brigadier general. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Gertrude Lawhon, and a son. Mai. Zim E. Lawhon, Jr., Fort Sill, Okla. Oyster Supper Planned The Shaler Church, Cabin John. Md., will sponsor an oyster and ham supper from 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday at the Junior Order Hall in Cabin John. Mrs. William Hannon is in charge of the affair. said, by writing to Chairman Alt meyer of the board regarding the widow of one of his constituents, a covered employe who died a few months after his discharge from the Army. Mr. Altmeyer had to reply that nothing could be done for the widow under the law as it now stands, he added. Every employe covered by the Social Security Act is taxed 1 per cent of his pay and his employer must pay an additional 1 per cent for old age and survivors insurance. A childless widow is not paid unless she is 65. The benefits for orphans in the case of a $125-a-month em ploye who has been paying the tax for three years are: $35.42 a month to a widow or guardian for one child, $49.58 for two children, $§6.66 for three children. In the case of an employe who has been taxed for three years on a $250-a-month average pay the benefits are: $51.50 to a widow for one child, $72.10 for two children, $82.40 for three children. The pay ments continue until the children are 18 years of age. The pension for soldiers who die * Try adding bits of bacon to waffle batter before baking! Delicious and satisfying I kwKtee BUFF'S! CASH FOR YOUR PIANO If you are considering selling your Spinet Piano we will pay you up to $300.00 cash, depending upon its condition. Call our store for an ap praiser to call on you. We also purchase grand pianos. Arthur Jordan Piano Go. 1015 7th St. NA. 3223 V===i ■ ) "1 TheTVofessionGl Eye Care air Chas-SchwartzcSon Is Well Worth. The Difference In Price • OPTICAL 01V. 708 74* ST. ■ - ■ - - - Easy there, now... not too much Moire a littlo Oakito do l Soaks clothes dean-does family wash Cleans babies’ diapers too. j j j _ In the service, whether In training or in combat, is paid to widows even though they do not have children. Pension payments to widows are $50 a month. Fifteen dollars a month is paid for the first child and $13 each for additional children, until the total (including the widow’s) is $100 a month. Mr. Clague said that the interest of veterans’ organizations in this sit uation seemed to be the one chance of forcing congressional attention on the Wagner - Murray - Dingell bill, which includes a provision correct ing the discharged soldier's lapse of survivors’ insurance. The bill, he said, was drafted by the American Federation of Labor. It Includes many of the board's recommenda tions, he added. RATION NOTICE:! 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