Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 102, Decatur, Adams County, 30 April 1959 — Page 9

THURSDAY, APRIL 30, 1959

Churchill Is Still Uncertain Os Trip By MERRIMAN SMITH UFI White House Reporter WASHINGTON (UPI) — Backstairs at the White House: It still remains somewhat touch-and-go whether Sir Winston Churchill will go through with his plans and fly here next Monday for a three-day visit with President Eisenhower. The former British prime minis ter and World War II associate of the President is 84 years old and traces of winter illnesses continue

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to nag hint Eisenhower is hopeful that Churchill can make the trip and plans ar-? going forward for entertaining him. 7 The President’s personal staff has beer going over lists of Churchill’s friends in this country and, particularly, some of the men with whom he was closely i'mted in the conduct of World Wa; 31. They will be invited to a series of evening affairs at the White House Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday —probably one big dinner and two smaller ones. jir Winston on Thursday wpuld move from the White House to the British erciafty where a big dinner is bki’r/g planned.

If the British visitor has any desire to see another old friend, former President Harry S. Truman, it would seem more likely that a re-union would take place at the embassy rather than at the White House. ■' , A check at the White House earlier this weex produced no evidence that Eisenhower was planning to include Truman among those being invited to the executive mansion. Os necessity, the White House invitations must be relatively lastminute documents because of the ever-present possibility that Sir Winson might cancel or postpone the trip. It therefore is possible that the

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA

former president, scheduled to be here most of next week to celebrate his 75th birthday, might get a White House Invitation. But those familiar wih the still chilly relaions between Eisenhower and Truman doubt if one will be issued. There has been some obviously unfounded speculation that Churchill with his love of the dramatic, might seize upon the opportunity of a Washington visit to bring Eisenhower and Truman together. Possible, yes. Probable, no. In the first place, Churchill knows 'from his own experience just how mortal political enemies can be The.a also is the blunt

truth that an Eisenhower-Truman reconciliation after more than six years would overshadow Churchill’s visit—and the former prime minister would not like that. • A. Our friends know the worst about us and yet love us. Some folks are like fences: they run around a lot without getting anywhere. The man or nation that trusts God to act dependably and righteously wHI find out that the tvorst enemies and most difficult situations cannot thwart God’s plans finally.

Handbag Industry In Losing Battle By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK <UPI)-Some leaders in the handbag industry deserve a salute from us females. They’re trying, bless ’em, to bring onier out of the chaos in our purses. Os course any woman can tell them they’re fighting a losing battle. Purses are like closets. The more room we have, the more we stuff in, and the harder it is to grub through to the bottom. But

f ■ ■ * * * ijwLjii «I a ** *u UMLAI -A Hl ■■■» H, m J 'GAVE ME A BREAK'—Mrs. Louise Gachwend, 54, kisses her husband Walter in their home near San Quentin prison north of San Francisco area after being held hostage on a pier by two escapees who kept a knife at her throat. Looking on is Douglas Harrison, 62, her fishing companion and fellow hostage. "They gave me a break,” said she. "I hope they get a break.” The escapees surrendered after six hours.

designed inventiveness is not at all discouraged by feminine disorder. _ This season, one manufacturer (Koret) is out with a whole group of leather knick-knacks called “n’cessories” (the word is a combination of “necessary” and ‘‘accessories’’). These include a patented billfold to fit the outsize currency a traveler gets overseas; “his” and “her” passport cases; and a flip-top cigaret box for square packages. The case is magnetized, to stick to the intrument panel of a car. Another manufacturer (Bond Street) has a series of matching purse accessories, all so light in weight they add only a few ounces to the overall weight of a purse. (What’s a few ounces, when some of today’s tote bags weigh in at 10 pounds by the time they’re full -of everything from makeup to nagazines and a sandwich for Junch?) The matching sets come in natural colored linen with strawberry embroidery; in flower-p rin te d silks; and in pastel kids. They include cigaret cases, — eyeglass cases, coin purse, perfume container, and a* two-fold, which is a combination billfold, coin purse and card holder with celluloid windows for easy viewing of driver’s license and identification card. The same firm makes purses to go inside other purses—these are called the "continentals.” The larger of the two types, about four by seven inches, includes space for a passport, bills, -cards and coins. Only trouble with these efforts toward organization — we frails have frail characters. Good intentions end up failures within an hour of hectic shopping. Reclaiming Problem Drinker Pays Firm By MARGUERITE DAVIS United Press International CHICAGO (UPI) — A 10-year program to find and reclaim the hidden problem drinker has saved the sponsoring ind u s try four times its cost, Dr. S. Charles Franco said today. Franco, associate medical director of Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, reported results of the program in an address before the Industrial Medical Assn, meeting held in conjunction with the 1959 industrial health conference. The hidden problem drinker is likely to stay home the day after pay day, Franco said, or to be absent other times with no explanation. He suffers off-the-job accidents, muggings or falls, and becomes sullen as he is beset by the vicious circle of financial and personal problems that send him running to the bottle for comfort. His age is likely to be 46 to 50 years. Under Consolidated Edison’s program, the drinker’s foreman warns him once, then puts him on probation and sends him to the medical department. There, if his health has not been permanently impaired, he is persuaded to admit that he is a problem drinker and encouraged to enroll in the clinic’s group therapy.

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Trained leaders direct the group members, seven to 14 men of congenial personalities, to discus.s their individual .problems with one another. The drinker attends about 20 group therapy classes for a year, beginning on a once-a-week schedule and tapering off. . ■ Approximately 20 per cent suffer a relapse during the first couple of months, Franco , said, but 70 per cent ultimately are rehabilitated. Consolidated Edison pays about $15,000 a year to , support the clinic, and figures seven to eight men who otherwise would be retired are saved annually by the program. Formerly, Franco said, about 22 were retired each year because of drinking, j "The problem drinker drink" too much too often,” he saki. “And you can define too much e. too much to handle.” Franco said a 75-year-pld acquaintance drinks a fifth of whifr key a day, without becoming in toxicated or suffering cirrhosis oi the liver. "But he -is rare,” Franco saw!. "I certainly don’t that.” The real strength of a nation is not in physical strength but in spiritual power.

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