Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 58, Number 59, Decatur, Adams County, 10 March 1960 — Page 12

PAGE FOUR-A

II 111 ~ U Modern Etiquette | By BOBKBY4 LKB j Q Wbm two dd» a*r wa lMn< iMhrtikM uml inert • bn* wt»o 1= • , Mm*<d at th* s u 11

@ Enn a DINETTE id MCLOSEOUWa Mim’ fl* [ HRu 0 .-- wi Mt I B Onceogoin—thanks to our great Lu,.ng capacity. Hit'WBI WMy WB house brings another first to Decatur . Imagine! A ' n ’* II huge 36x72 table with fashionable browntone construcO1 I ; Wlr W D accented with sparkling brass trim, an ash wood grain table top in ■lft’^-: : ly HB ’ tough high pressure plastic that defies heat, stains and scratches. I^ <' U are 8 bi£) chairs with matching browntone frame, plush box seat withi foam ; '. . >F . ■ ' rubber and de luxe welt trim. Your floors will love the self-leveling glides on the table and ■ P er -2> f^e chairs - °° n,t miss ***** one — yoU C AN ' T go wrong., IK |l^^Fe> s */Zf s I 7-PIECE CHROME DINETTE 9-Pc. Chrome Sets—- ■ l& ' , CHOOSE browntone OR chrome Slightly Higher You get all the finest features . . . gleaming brass O JiteXCr?'*’- /MCrlWh ‘ 'Xwra&X’ I OB or chrome trim on tables and chairs, thick box 111 I - seats ond bocks with foam rubber and welt tnm, Terms • Free Delivery -I ; and attractive tu-tone mar-resistant plastic table ■ |M| t top, for the first time at this low price. ~ • Price •Style •Quality ■ -'/' ■ i I ■■ are imp*” o "* wO UA|ttglOOS@ I ''f in the Carton* ■ ■ wßflj J a xM\oi^3*’ x *otbmLo«••>*•* C E? RE STORE ’ fl "* 1 DELIVERS DOWN W* 11 239 N. 2nd St Docotur.

>tr«M to Utk. t** a *** t * w * MMd by Witt* wmwtw «w aar* abv »«lh "® »towt>? , A NW Mw»»W »eU •* »«»wty unlit hrt trwnd rr>«tt*» hrs •«»■ Ir» s of raurw. two tfimd tvdiU Iwf snrl ininwt’H'eo be* •• *bo t**y

y tWeouoo of iUwm M n»y famUr I r*d M MM|M*M>*bt tb >ws an mJhrme! aftalr tn my homo to *hi<-h I laouo* lovHattnb# What' ran I A‘* "* A K-itbrr romli the Wvlialkau t>« iriaphunc or brief nuta. eaptam

TTIE nrCATt'R tMH.Y DWNOCftAT nrCATUW. mptANA

IAo rurrumatabroe ah<l trll y*»*r iatondod guoaU that you Wlfli®* m uaich with lh*m ala Utar dale y Whm raima M a crowded rrttaurant. amt a .trnnyw ww” ti» Ml W» a chair al your table and aah». Do y<a» mmd. what abnuM

the roafamae bet I A The MM MMW* ®» •obfba,| Not M bM. M i y one of my clrt tnmdi m al-. wa*a rnahma unUcUul romorba HereoUy *he »ald. ”1 biwayt did I like that ha! an jmn." implying llj

I*H quite •** uM hat HuW CM I te*ck l*t b*«ter m**u»«»r»* A Yaw’d do bMt to handle thr** | ramark* I* * light win and by■» IdoWM. y«* *“ A l * 4 ** Mkor* i|A* .»tjaf»rtkwi erf ihmsin* th*-' .have up*ct you You U tool much

brfirr. too. tor having krpl your >m|M>surO. Q Ii h ctM&Mtofod proprt to anmmnca aa an*ag*tnMi( If ano <rf the cxiupto i* awatung a final divnrre rtrrtw' A. Navor I South America Trip Triumph For Ike Hr MERRIMAN AMITH IT! White H»u** Reporter WASHINGTON 'UPD — Backat«in al toe White Home J President Eisenhower, one* again tn toe well-ordered ealm of the White Houae. can took back lon bl* South A-irrtcan trip aa a Iperannnl triumph. He wa* hailed by vast cn»wd» and heartily praised In the l-atln American preu There were, however, a great many thing* about toe trip that the President probably doe’ not I know even to thl* very day. These are little aspect* of human extetlencr that for toe mo»t part are kept from him In order not to I add to toe burden* of hi* office. For example. It i* moat unlikely he know* that: A member of the White Houae staff, overworked night after I night during the trip, collapsed flat on hl* face unloading bagI gage from the President's plane in Puerto Rico and had to be hospitalized for much the same, reason, exhaustin complicated Iby a painful Intestinal block that ! certainly wasn't helped by this person missing all semblance of regular meal* and getting only an hour or two of sleep each night. I A high-ranking member rd the 1 President’.* staff went foodless in one of the more distinguished palaces of South America for nearly 24 hours while lavish banquets were served only a few feet from where this person was workI ing. Several of the President’s Secret Service protectors were seized by violent stomach cramps caused by tropical dysentery, yet they remained on the job and enduring the absolutely incredible working hours caused by Eisenhower's whirlwind schedule. Gouging hotel keepers charged isome of his working staff more than their federal per diem, meaning that if they ate decently 'or had any laundry done, the cost came out of their salaries. A non-White House official but still a prominent federal servant made quite a name for himself in several South American hotels for bawling out the help. The White House staff to a man would never voice a word of complaint to the President himself. They would collapse first, and they do. They are intensely loyal to Eisenhower, they willingly sacrifice personal health and comfort to keep his show on the road and most of them, fascinated by their front row seats in history, woiildn’t trade jobs —for— anything. But just now, they’re awfully tired.

State Primary May Draw Many Women By HORTENSE MYERS United Press International INDIANAPOLIS (UPD—The Indiana presidential preference primary may attract a record number of women voters to the polls even though there is no major contest looming in this bracket of . the balloting, according to two I state women division chairmen. Mrs. Jack Gregory, Kokomo, i head of the women’s division for 1 Vice President Richard M. Nixon, and Mrs. Alice Whitecotton, Indianapolis, who holds the same post -for Democratic Sen. John Kennedy, conceded women are showing signs of succumbing to masculine charms Both women hastened to add that they feel their candidate has many more important qualifications for the job of president of the United States than their physical good looks. His Sincerity Appeals “But I’m afraid I am in agreement,” Mrs. Gregory said. “Women seem to be influenced by appearance. But that’s not the important thing. I|know when I first' met Mr. Nixon, my first thought was of his sincerity. Men talk a lot about how experienced the Vice President is for the presidency. “That may not appeal so much to women. My personal feeling is 'that women will vote for him, if they meet him, not because he is charming, but because of his great sincerity.” Mrs. Whitecotton, clerk of the Indiana Supreme and Appellate Courts, said that her own reason : for assuming chairmanship of the 1 women’s division of the Indiana Kennedy organization had nothing to do ' with the ‘Massachusetts’ senator’s charm. “Has Strong Father” ,“I think he’s the man to get the job done. He is a strong son of a strong man. I know a lot of I women will vote for him, though, I just because of his looks. i Kennedy is expected to be the 'only major presidential hopeful entered in Indiana’s Democratic primary May 3 and Nixon is in the same position on the GOP side. . Over 2.500 Daly Democrats are sold and deUveref 1b Decatur each day.

THUMjUiAY MARCH W. >•*’

Money Needed To End Shortage Os Nurses By RORTENRE MV ERA t'akted Pre— totemattotMl INDIANAPOLIS ♦t’Pl' — Th” at Ale* (MlticMUll I could be •cdvc’d with • two ingredient formula — men *nd money Ml** Florence Brown. counselor I tor Ute Indiana Blate Nur*** A*soctaUnn »ald that a-iy expert • who Marta thinking about the i nursing •hortagp soon find* two major probtom* "School* at nursing can’t ati ford to expand because they do not have the finance* back of them ’, »hc said "Moat of them I arc prtvatrlv owned and support'cd. Even If they did expand, they | would not have enough faculty. ' Moot aurora are woman. Women i marry. When they marry thes I become more interested In their own famine* than In a career in I nursing.” Mis* Brown suggested as the ■ answer "more men in the field of nursing, and more tax-support-Jed organteations with school* of 'of nursing.” Both the ISNA official and Mis* ' Martha Abers, chairman of the j committee on career* of the In- ' diana League for Nursing. Inc. , agreed that the need for more nurse* in all areas is still criUcal. , The situation has improved a litTtle but at last count the shortage in the state was more severe > than for the nation as a whole Indiana has a total of 28 schools of nursing including four types—--1 those offering four - year college l programs, those with three-year. the experimental two-year college | program schools and one - year , practical nurses training. Partially Tax-Supported The Indiana University school iof nursing and one at Marion j County General Hospital are partially tax-supported, but funds for I the others come from prßßste j sources. Miss Brown said From , among the figures indicating i shortages in nurses, she put her finger on one as being a bottlc♦ntcir in expanded training—3? *d--1 ditional faculty members needed on schools of nursing, or 17 per cent more. Other shortages include a 33 i per cent increase needed in head nurses and a 29 per cent increase in staff nurses. The last report i 1958» also shows 30 per cent of calls for private duty went unanswered. The estimated need for 400 more public health nurses and the thin distribution of registered nurses in the licensed nursing homes also are part of the picture. (Ninety - seven RNs in 416 licensed nursing homes). Miss Akers said that the basic types of nursing training offered has been varied in Indiana “to try to meet the needs and costs of different individuals and to meet the demand for nurses ” Two-Year Schools Newest change is the addition of two- year schools. “We still think of them as experimental” Miss Akers explained. A five-year research was conducted by Columbia University before about 30 to 35 such schools were established in the nation. “Generally speaking, the twoyear nurses do as well on state board examinations as three and four-year, but their performance is limited and they need more training on the job and closer supervision”, she said. Indiana’s first two-year products emerge this year from the school conducted by Vincennes University. The other two- year college program is at Indiana Central College and it opened last September. Four-year college programs are offered by DePauw, Evansville, Goshen and I. U. Three - year schools are operated by hospitals and include Lutheran, ParkviewMethodist and St. Joseph’s, Fort Wayne; Ball Memorial, Muncie; Holy Cross and Memorial, South Bend; Methodist and St. Mary Mercy, Gary; St. Anthony and Union, Terre Haute; St. Elizabeth, Lafayette; St. Margaret, Hammond; Protestant Deaconess, and St. Mary’s, Evansville; and General, Methodist and St. Vincent’s, Indianapolis. Indiana now has five schools of practical nursing, granting diplomas. They are at Marion, Indianapolis, Muncie, Hammond and Fort Wayne-

/ Je / b ylr’’ j d fl H WEDDING DATE—-Catherine McConnell, 28, will marry ac-tor-seafarer Sterling Hayden,* 42. They met on a blind date when he was in New York to do a television play. J