Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 57, Number 267, Decatur, Adams County, 12 November 1959 — Page 12

PAGE FOUR-A

■-»> A J* ft tip I 5 him HE? - /ar r iwfew ffn wb -agfil IUI W.- JmS - ■xul ' : »lik 3 I ~ jfeaßt.x A. HHHMmMfIMH BOOZE IN BAG— James T. Keenan shows in Columbus, Ohio, a novel idea—liquor in plastic bags. The state t ia trying .to decide whpfgr it will marlqet the drink-size packages. On the bags wfora be stickers carrying brand name, proof, age and the rest of the usual information.

Today's Chorine Is New Breed Os Beauty By GAY PAULEY UPI Women * Editor NEW YORK — Today’s chorine is a whole new breed of beauty. A business head had been added. This I gather from tanMg to a gal with * pair of long legs and the short naineof "sikyn,” whose dancing has been a feature of several Broadway and television musicals." Her latest is the NBC-TV special, “Music from Shubert Alley," to be televised Nov. 13. “We chorines hate the word, to begin with,” said the blond, 23-year-old dancer. ."We’d rather be called a performer, an entertainer, or just dancer-actess. “Let’s set another thing straight A chorus girl is not a

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show girl. Show girls are longer stemmed, some 6 feet and up.” Sigyn nudges 5 feet, 6' inches, measures a lithe 35, 23. 35, and keeps her weight under 120 with a high energy, high protein, low fat diet which features a pound of unsalted peandts a week "All the chorines I know are serious about careers,” said Sigyn. "Being in a dance company is just a stepping stone in show business." Sigyn (pronounced see-gun) said that times also had changed, so far as free-spending stage door Johnnies and sugar daddies are concerned. "Most of us have so many projects going, we wouldn’t have time for them if we were interested,” she said. Sigyn designs and makes Christmas cards under the trade name of “Sigyn Original,” has written one children’s book about a small boy whose hat was too big, and has another in the works. She

also designs jewelry and holds the grand prize for some of her \ work from the Pan-American Modern Arts Festival. At the moment, the dancer also is in the midst of converting part of her apartment into a studio, where she will teach ballet and modern dance to children. Hope Man Living Cure For Cancer By DICK ANDERSON United Press International BREMERTON, Wash. (UPt) — Joseph W. Mayerle, given up to die seven months ago, today was looking for work and doctors were hoping that he may be a living cure for cancer. Seven months ago the 37-year-old ex-bartender walked out of Seattlef's Veterans Hospital ater doctors had told him they couldn’t do anything to save his life. An exploratory operation showed his lungs were shotthrough with cancer. He weighed 126 pounds. He had only a few weeks to live, doctors told him. As he cheerfully chopped wood, Mayerle said “I can break a leather belt around my chest right now ” He weighs 158 pounds. Three months after being told he would die, Mayerle walked into his doctor’s office, rosy - cheeked and bubbling health. "When my physician saw me enter his office, he turned white as a ghost," Mayerle recalled. "I had just been home a few days after they told me I’d die, when John Foster Dulles died of cancer,” Mayerle said. "1 read that some doctor said people never died with cancer, but died of starvation because they couldn’t eat. "I decided I wouldn't die of starvation, so I forced myself, and the wife and kids kept at me, to eat, keep my stomach full.” Mayerle said he followed no diet, just ate what he wanted to. "We paid a little more for groceries than we would have ordinarily,” he said, "but then, I guess we figured it was worth it." Mayerle, who said he smokes cigarettes regularly now, and has smoked a pack and a half daily since he was 17, is now hoping to find work to support his wife and three children. His third youngster was born just four weeks ago. Doctors hope Mayerle may be a walking cure for cancer. They were unable to explain his recovery. Examinations at the hospital two months ago showed his lungs completely free of any malignan- ' cy. A pint of Mayerle’s blood will be used with another cancer victim soon to discern whether a cure is possible. Physicians said there are only about 40 known cases where cancer has disappeared after being judged hopeless.

Staggering Details To Prepare For Trip By MERRIMAN SMITH DPI White House Reporter WASHINGTON (UPD — Backstairs at the White House: The United States Secret Service, the Air Force and the White House staff are burning the midnight kilowatts on plans for President Eisenhower’s December trip to Italy, Turkey, India and other points. The details are staggering in number. Here’s a sample: Press Secretary James C. Hagerty and Col. William Draper, the President’s pilot and Air Force aide, must cover the entire route in advance, leaving this week. Among other things, they’ll have to suggest as diplomatically as possible to local authorities that news photographers be discouraged from using—and discarding conventional flashbulbs in airport areas near the President’s jet transport plane. The powerful jet engines suck up any sort of debris along a runway or apron and a dose of undigested flashbulbs can cause engine trouble. The President’s transport also is equipped with the latest radar equipment. This is another reason why the White House would prefer that news photographers not come near the aircraft bearing flashbulbsRadar beams can cause the bulbs to go off in a photographer’s pocket. There have been cases at some military fields where news photographers suffered painful burns from their own bulbs. The White House News photographers don’t use flashbulbs. They switched to the ultra - modern Strobe lights a long time ago.

THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA

Friends Have Cure For Common Colds UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPI)’ — Science flounders when it comes to curing the common cold. But not your friends. At the first sign of the disease, they gather round with details of the treatment which always works for them, hurt if you dofi’t try it. sure that if you do you’ll be up and about in no time. Well, a cold I caught last week. Throbbing head, hacking cough and red nose I still have. Also a medicine chest full of new nostrums. But some friends I fear I lost; after all, the remedy worked for them and to have it fail for me hints of rigging. Leading candidates on the coldcure parade, according to my latest compilation, are: —Saturation with Vitamin C capsules. One girl I know takes as many as 10 pills simultaneously. Twenty, she said, will send her temperature back to normal within hours. —Feed a cold and starve a fever; how you’re to do this, in case both arrive simultaneously, I haven’t Igured. —A hot bath, climb into bed and load the covers on so you perspire freely. Stay there, and as one amateur pr es c,ri bed, "Think sweat.” Piping hot ginger tea, to step up the perspiration. —Lots of liquids. Drink yourself to the saturation point on orange, tomato, grape, prune, grapefruit, pineapple or other juices. —Lots of alcoholic If qui ds. Sometimes combined with lemonade or hot water and sugar to make a toddy, but more often recommended solo, to be drunk

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till you’re blotto. —Hot lemonade. —Mustard plaster on the chest—Mustard bath for the feet. —Keep heat applied to the area of the head with throbs, possible if you’re home, a little difficult to manage at the office. —Antihistamines, inhalers, and aspirin. —Chewing honeycomb for a stopped-up nose. — —Sipping honey for the cough, Honey combined with hot tea. —A dose of castor oil, just on general principles. —And I read somewhere of a woman who slept with a blanket over her head because birds put their heads under their wings and never have colds.

Eileen Farrell Is Finally With Mel By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPl)—The saying goes that a plump person also> is a person who laughs. In the fcase of Eileen Farrell, it’s matter of she who laughs last. The Metropolitan Opera Co. finally has gotten around to hiring this soprano, after she established herself as a top-flight singer on radio, in opera in Chicago and San Francisco, and with concert audiences in the United States, Canada and Europe. The gossip in musical circles long has been that Rudolf Bing, general manager of the “Met,”

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sweeping mines. The two 2,100-h.p. piston engines easily lift the 3,450-pound car over the Connecticut countryside near Stratford. And the ’copter sets it down gently, too. What away to bypass a traffic jam!

wanted no prima donna as hefty as the 39-year-old Miss Farrell, even though she sang like a nightingale. The Met denies this was so. And Miss Farrell figures that the whole thing must have, been a jnatter of timing and |»er own busy concert schedule, not one of pounds. ;U “The subject of weight , did not come up in our talks,” si id Miss Farrell, discussing her new contract with the famous bld opera company. “The Met came to me; I didn't go to theip. But I understand' this is how it all came about.” Miss Farrell was talking to conductor Max Rudolf, who said he recently had lunched with Bing, who remarked, “I’ve got great plans for her (Miss Farrell).” Next thing she knew, John Gutt-

tHURSDAY, NOVEMBER |l2, 1959

man, the Met’s assistant general manager, asked her to come in and talk with Bing. Miss Farrell said she, with her manager, did just that and Bing remarked, “Everypne always is asking me, ‘Whjtaoesn’t Farrell sing with the Met?” “Well; now I’m asking you?” The soprano will* make her debut next season in “Alceste.” last heard at the Met with Kirsten Flagstad. Miss Farrell then talked about her weight problem. • „ “I’m down to 185 pounds,” she said- “I’ve dropped 40 pounds in the last year. Has nothing to do with my new contract ... nothing in it concerning my weight. “Now, I’m on a limit of 1,200 calories a day. Eat anything I want, but keep count of the calories. Feel like a million.”