Speedway Flyer, Volume 33, Number 9, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 February 1964 — Page 4

Page 4

BLOOM FLOWERS , SPENCER and EDWARDS W. I Oth & TIBBS AVE. ME 6-5556 -WE GROW OUR OWN" "Plenty of Free Parking"

In Speedway-Parkview Estates Entrance at Moller Road and Beauport Road 2726 McArthur lane MODEL HOME OPEN DAILY Urge lot, All Utilities - 2 Blocks To Schools 3 Bedrooms, Brick, Hardwood Floors, Tiled Entry Hall, 2 Baths, Living Room, Dining Room, Kitchen with Custom Cabinets and Built-Ins, Paneled Family Room, Fireplace, 2-Car Garage, Concrete Drive, Front Porch. PRICE WOO 2nd MODEL (Price $16,990) AT 5949 BUICK DRIVE Built by CHEMCO BUILDERS We Furnish Owner's Title Policy with Every Sale PHONE SALES ★ AT. 3-3072 ★ JOHN L MdNTIRE

SMITH'S Barber Shop 4 BARBERS "FRIEND LY SERVICE" 1506 MAIN STREET CH. 4-1771

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Children’s Museum “The First North Americans” will be the subject of the Saturday morning program at the Children’s Museum this week,

THE SPEEDWAY FLYER

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Feb. 29. Bob Breunig, senior at Shortridge High School, will speak at the 11 o’clock program in the assembly hall of the museum, 3010 N. Meridian, and will tell how the history of the early Indians can be found in the archeology of the American southwest. Breunig will be assisted by Joe Traugott and Bill Julian, high

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school sophomores who have participated in archeological expeditions in the southwest. They will explain how the ruins are excavated and what can be learned about the everyday life of the Indians from these excavations including pottery, irrigation and agriculture, ‘building construction and religion. Mrs. Grace Golden, museum

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director, announces that all Girl Scout and Campfire Girl badge classes at the museum are filled with the exception of the puppeteer classes, which will meet from 2 to 4 on the Saturday afternoons in March. To register a girl should send her name, address, troop number and $1 to the museum. Indiana Bell Expanding r acuities Indiana Bell is expanding the communications facilities which interconnect telephones through-

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out the Indianapolis metropolitan area. In seven equipment installation projects starting in February, many additional circuits will be provided for the transmission of calls between exchanges in Indianapolis, between the city and suburban communities, and between the suburban areas. Youth Parttdpation In Red Cross Robert R. Freeman, director of Public Relations, Indianapolis Public School System, has been appointed volunteer chairman of the High School Red Cross Advisory Committee, Indianapolis Chapter, announced Paul J. DeVault, chapter chairman. Robert Shultz, principal of Shortridge High School, formerly held the volunteer post. As chairman. Freeman will advise the chapter on youth participation -through the high schools in Marion and Hendricks counties in a variety of Red Cross service projects and thru these projects help develop within the “leaders of the future” a sense of civic responsibility and an understanding of their fellow man.

Freeman was graduated from Indiana University from which he also received a Master of Science degree in secondary school administration. He is presently a candidate for Doctorate degree from that university. Jose Greco At Clowes Jose Greco, maestro of Spanish dance, will bring his own company of dancers, singers and musicians to the stage of Clowes Hall on Friday, March 13 at 8:30 p.m. This beautiful and fiery show is part of Greco's 12th transcontinental tour and is the largest company ever to travel under his banner. A hand-picked troupe of artists, starring prima ballerina Lola De Ronda, will represent all the regions and varied dance modes of Spain. Greco is his own choreographer, director and costume designer, coming out with a new production each year, and presenting one of few self-supporting dance troupes in the entertainment world, as well as one of the most varied and colorful Just two days after Greco's lavish spectacle, piano virtuoso Peter Nero will play a single performance on the Clowes stage, “New Piano in Town,” on March 15 at 8:30 p.m. Nero, who has long been a Hoosier favorite, having made recent hit appearances at The Embers and at Marian College, will give fans their first chance to hear him play in the acousti-cally-excellent hall. His LP records are leading sellers, and his name is synonymous with exciting piano style—both classics and jazz sprinkled with wit and humor. Both the Jose Greco and Peter Nero shows are brought to Clowes Hall by W-B Productions, Dayton, Ohio.

Thurtday, February 27, 1964

Handicapped Vacation If sufficient S&H Green Stamps can be raised, a large group of handicapped of Indiana and adjacent states will charter a DC--6 or DC 7 plane for an eight-day vacation in New York City and surrounding area, it was aiuwunc. ed today by Mrs. Dorothy S. Axsom, 3250 E. Loretta Dr., Indiantpolis, sponsor of handicapped tours. It will take approximately 2,250 completed books, or 2,700,000 S&H Green Stamps to finance die flight, so the entire group along with friends and relatives are making an all-out effort to secure the needed stamps and will most gratefully appreciate all contributions. There will be space for a number of young adults who, in exchange for reduced tour rates, would like to assist the handicapped tourists. Very few of the tour members can completely finance their trip, so cooperation by the public is a great assist in the success of these tours, which are completely non-profit. Mrs. Leonard Huffman, 2330 N. Gross Ave., ME. 1-0736, is the Westside chairman for this drive. She is also the president of the Indiana Adult Rehabilitation League. She will be happy to give people further information and also to receive the stamps from those wishing to donate them. TB: The lively “Corpse* People in the State of Utah had every reason to congratulate themselves. They had achieved an enviable record—the lowest tuberculosis case rate in the entire nation, amounting to only two per 100,009! TB problem? A thing of fee past, it was widely agreed. Just a ghostly memory of the old times when huge sanatoria were still being erected and filled. Thai overnight, tragedy brought a jarring reminder feat those “old times” weren’t com? pletely dead. In Salt Lake County the mother of a large family was found to have a case of far-ad-vanced TB. Prompt examination

of her children showed that four of them, between fee ages of one and four, also had the active disease. Next some relatives were examined; three more active cases were found, all under fee age of five. All eight sufferers were Immediately hospitalized, while fee Utah Tuberculosis Association and the state health department joined in an intensive search for further contacts. For unless every person who had received the active germ could be detected and isolated, there was no telling how far the disease might spread. Fortunately,-no widespread outbreak took place. Utah has kept its leadership in low TB incidence, and is in line for renewed congratulation. What the episode really proves, however, is that communities big and little achieve relative freedom from TB not by ignoring fee menace, but by keeping up their guard against it. With the aid of Christmas Seals, Utah TB Association people are confidently expecting to be ready with all decks cleared if and when the next outbreak comes along. Quack “See a doctor—but be sure he is a doctor.”

One of the best pieces of medical advice anyone can get is, “See a doctor." When you feel side, don't trust yourself to diagnose the trouble. A doctor can do it much better. That is what he has been trained to do. But there is a second piece of advice that should always go with the rule: “But be sure he is a doctor.” Every year, the American public spends millions of dollars on medical quacks—bogus doctors with bogus methods. They use seemingly wonderful, unheard of machines and mysterious, secret formulas. At best, these quack remedies are simply harmless: at worst, they can be extremely dangerous. A quack promises cures, even for incurable diseases. He is generally anti-doctor and anti-med-ical associations. He is also opposed to proven methods of treatment. He probably advertises (something a bona fide doctor would never do), and he often talks freely—brags, in fact—about the cures he has effected. But the worst thing of all about a quack is the time he wastes, time when the patient could/be undergoing valid treatment from a genuine doctor. Times that, in some casses, might mean the difference between life and death. So, if you aren’t feeling well, don't dose yourself. See a doctor —and be sure he is a doctor. Quacks are for ducks.