The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 December 1964 — Page 4
1
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Tuesday, December 1,1964
Abe Lincoln's Dream Most Famous Case
Duk* University. She has pub-1 Only one thing seems certain —. f
Wished them in a book called j you cannot decide that on a spe- YktCC HUHtCTS RCO^ft ShOfttlflG
cific day and hour you are go- ■ **
Hidden Channels of The Mind.”
The ability of people to step forward in time has been tested under scientific laboratory con-
ing to pack your. mental luggage and proceed through the
Are Found Dead In J. P's Records
; ditions. All the cautious experts i
| barrier of time into the world
of the future. If it ever hap-
By United Press Internationol | that of President Lincoln and About 10 per cent of adult the story he told at a White
Americans probably at some time in their lives have gone on a brief journey into the future. They have dreamed something was going to happen and
it did.
The most famous case was
| will say at the moment is that
the results justify continued ; P ens i° y° u at it will hapand accelerated experiments. | pen spontaneously.
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House party celebrating the surrender of Gen. Robert E. Lee. Lincoln was moody amid the gaiety and finally explained his feelings by telling about a dream. He said he had heard muffled sobs and imagined in his sleep that he had left his bed and gone to the lower floor
of the White House.
I “I kept on until I arrived in the East Room,” he said . . . “Before me was a catafalque on which rested a corpse in funeral vestments. Around it were stationed soldiers and there was a throng of people, some gazing | mournfully upon the corpse, i whose face was covered, and
some weeping pitifully,
i ‘‘Who is dead in the White House?” I demanded of one of
the soldiers.
‘‘The President,” was his answer. “He was killed by an
; assassin.”
All of us probably know or j ; have heard of somebody who | had a similar experience. It j does not have to be a dream. ; j It has happened to women I ; washing the dishes in daylight, j
to fishermen beside a quiet _ . , . . , . . . . .
. : Commercial gas customers, who conduct businesses ranging from
1 stream, to motorists fighting jjjjgjj commercial laundries to large restaurants, increased 37.1%
dstaiali
1953-63
SOMCCt AMOKAM GAS ASSOCIATION
1953—63
NASHVILLE UPI — Two Portland men and the 13-year-old son of one of them were found dead early today in a camping unit mounted on a pick-up truck in Hoosier National Forest where they had gone for a weekend of deer hunting. The dead were mentiried as Donald Whiteneck. 39. R. R. 2, Portland, his son. Denny. 13. and Ronnie Hummer, about 28, Portland.
Wooden clothespins, split in half, make useful pan-scrapers which won’t scratch aluminum or enamelware.
INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The
Indiana State Board of Accounts certified to a Shelby County ^grand jury a report showing an $11,065 shortage in the records of a justice of the peace who also worked as a field investigator for the State
Department of Revenue. The report covered the rec-
ords of Paul D. Murray of Shelbyville for a period from Jan. 1, 1963. to Nov. 10. 1964. It showed the amount needed to balance totaled $13,568 but that amount was partly offset by a $2,480 in a bank account and
1 $22 In a petty cash account. B B. McDonald, chief examiner for the board, said the report also showed Murray failed t<’ report quarterly to the county auditor as provided by law. Deputy Revenue Commission-
1 e»- Robert Hale said Murray was employed by the department but "resigned within the last 30 days.” McDonald said the money in the bank represented fees due Murray totaling 2.084.
M-yUOUReiTH
By LESTER L. COLEMAN, M.D.
Hopeful News In Medicine
This Is The Agency For You
through t a n g 1 ed from 1953 to 1963, while the number of U.S. businesses increased
14.8%. In 1963 the 2.6 million commercial customers used 11.4 bil-
lion therms of gas, more than double the 1953 sales.
; their way
| traffic.
Thousands of these case his- ! I tories have been collected by j Dr. Louisa Rhine, wife of J. B. I J Rhine who pioneered research , into extra-sensory perception at j
YOU'RE TELLING ME!
CKECf
KE SCRAPER Rugged plastic scraper* Removes ice and mew. Tire, Automotive Dept.
HEALTH CAPSULES by Michael A. Petti, M.D.
—By WILLIAM RITT— Central Press Writer
t
IVMAT ARE THE PRO£PECT£ -THAT A GOOP VACCINEAGAINST COLP£ WILL £6. PEVEIOPEP SOON ?
i with"this" AD I
POOR. AT LEA4T 15 P1FFERENT AGENT* PROPUCE UPPER RESPIRATORS INPECTIONS. VACCINATION AGAINST ONE GIVE* NO PROTECTION AGAINST THE OTHER 74TOMORROV; ARTHRITI*. Haahh Capsulas ghr*s MpM infomurtioa. ,!> iinot iat*nd*d fob* o( adiagnotfic nalwa.
DIXIE'S cotton crop for 1964 will reach 15,444,000 bales — 117,000 more than last year’s bumper harvest, the Department of Agriculture forecasts. Now, that’s what we call a real-for-sure cotton pickin’ bonanza! « i t For happy southern plantation oicners all that white stuff should mean plenty of the long green. ! ! ! Another bumper crop is forecast for grapefruit, some 1.7 million tons. Now, there's something wo can really got our tooth Intel ! ! ! In ancient Rome, according to an historian, marble portrait busts of patricians were fitted with removable atone wigs so
the statues could always be in the latest style. Sort of nonpermanent hairdos? ! » t A Dallas, Tex., group have organized themselves into what they call the "Haunted House Club.’ J Should scare up quite a membership. ! ! ! Meat-scented nylon "bones" for pot dogs are being offered by a British firm. As a Christmas gift for Fide—or just as any early April Fool joke? ! ! ! An Oundle, England, fish market operator has twice won back a brace of pheasants he donated to a raffle. We suggest he’d better take another look at those birds—they could be homing pigeons.
If you like to do business with people who are interested in saving your insurance dollars. If you want to keep informed on the latest developments in protection , . . If you want someone to go to bat for you when you have a claim , . . Then this is the agency for you!
AN 11-YEAR-OLD boy was playing with a cartridge, which exploded and shot a fragment of metal into his eye. The damage to the delicate eye structure was so severe and and the piece of metal so evasive, that sight, and even the eye itself, seemed doomed. The usual technique of using a magnet failed to extract the metal. Finally, a new procedure, originated by D r. Nathaniel R. Bronson in Coleman the research laboratories o f Manhattan Eye. Ear & Throat Hospital in New York City, was tried, almost in desperation. Untried In Humans The new method, hitherto untried in humans, first located the extra position of the fragment with an actual radar device. Ultrasonic vibrations, far beyond the range of hearing, caused echoes to bounce off the metal target. Then a tiny pair of tweezers, guided to the metal only by the sound vibrations, closed their jaws on the fragment and, with a gentle tug, extracted it from the eye. An eye was saved and some degree of sight was preserved by the coordinated efforts of technicians, engineers and surgeons, who courageously em-
plea: "I loaded.”
didn't know It wa*
Now it is almost utterly Impossible to hide from the candid camera. Even the stomach is being bugged. A tiny camera invented In Japan by Dr. Komei Nakayama and Dr. Sadaska Taska can bo easily swallowed and lowered into the stomach. Takes Color Photos Pictures of every nook and cranny of the stomach are produced with great clarity and in color by this amazing little instrument 'with its powerful but safe flashlight attachment. Ulcers, polyps and inflammations can be more readily and positively diagnosed. The photographs add valuable information to that which is accumulated by the other standard techniques of examination. “Through the alimentary canal with rod and camera” is no longer a fantasy—it is • scientific reality.
* • •
An artificial valve has been created to replace a defective one in diseased hearts. It is referred to as the “butterfly wing” heart valve. Delicate But Strong The slightest pressure opens the two “wings” when blood is pumped out of the heart into the blood vessels. Despite its delicacy it can withstand strong
back-pressure.
This is another advance in
Sant !•» *>: "Pi-*
by Dr. Bronson. One Question Unanswered The heroic saving of an eye and preservation of sight earned the gratitude and admiration of everyone. But this brilliant medical achievement leaves unanswered one important question. Why was not an 11-year-old child never taught the danger of hammering on a cartridge? There’s always the apologetic
tive heart valves. Many hearts will beat with better health because of these inventive crea-
tions.
These columns are design'd to relieve your fears about health through a better under* standing of your mind and body. All the hopeful tieto advances in medicine reported here are known to doctors everywhere. Your individual medical problems should be handled by your own doctor. He knows you best.
(© 1964, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)
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Fewer is a symptom, not a dtsewse. X warns that something is wrong in the body. Infection is usual cause, but other things can bring on fever.
Fever bums protein, carbohydrates and fat at fast rate. Body loses fluids tSi’i from perspiring. V fever is prolonged, a physician should be consulted.
YOU'LL NEVER KNOW
Whether or Not You Have The Best Car Deal UNLESS YOU CHECK WITH KING MORRISON FOSTER CO. "Your Ford Dealer Since 1910" 119 N. INDIANA ST. PHONE OL 8-4171
DODGE CORONET the savingest, sellingest full-size Dodge in histoiy If you look at low-price cars and miss this four-door sedan Coronet 440 with V8 power, it can cost* you 306 dollars. That’s how much lower priced it is than a comparable model Chevy Impala. (And compared to a Ford Galaxie 500, this Coronet is 314 dollars less!) And Coronet is no compromise. It’s a hot car-with optional power to 426 cubic inches. It’s a full-size car-in room, looks and ride. But, thank The Dodge Boys, it's lower priced-from the two-door sedan model right on up to the sports jobs. In fact, between convertible models (Coronet 500 vs. Galaxie 500 XL), the price savings is 604 dollars in favor of Dodge! Any wonder, the
Coronet is the sellingest full-size Dodge in history? Come see for yourself.
•All price differences based on manufacturer’s suggested retail prices for comparable Dodge, Chevy and Ford models, exclusive of Q
white walls, destination charges, state and local taxes, if any.
PUTNAM MOTOR SALES
18 NORTH JACKSON STREET.
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
