The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 December 1964 — Page 5

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Circuit Court of Putnam County, Indiana. Notice Is hereby given that MARY ALLEE was on the 8th day of November. 1964, appointed: Admlnlstratix of the Estate of NOBLE H. F. Allee, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same In said court within six (6) months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred.

Dated 8th day

at Greencastle, Indiana, this of November, 1964. Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana. Probate Cause No. 10,450 LYON & BOYD i Attorneys 18-25-2-3t

NEW CONTRACT FOR KNOTTS HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Don Knotts may continue as

the zany deputy on t h elory Peck and Diane Baker in “Andy Griffith Show,” but his the cast “Mirage.” future movies will be made for

Universal under terms of a new

long-term contract.

JOINS CAST HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Walter Matthau joins Greg-

A TALE OUT OF SCHOOL—Barefoot boys and girls from the Hong Lac private school in Saigon run from a burst of tear gas used by police to stop rioting against government.

JOHN F. KENNEDY MEMORIAL GRAVE—Created by architect John C. Warnecke and approved by Jacequeline Kennedy, this is the model of the memorial grave to be constructed at Arlington Cemetery in Washington at a cost of $2 million. The gravesite will be dominated by the eternal flame lighted by the assassinated president's widow.

PUBLIC SERVICE

COMPANY OP INDIANA, INC. C&cSu'c afid/ewtl Ceoytaxy THE HOUSE THAT TAX BUILT i Schoolhouse or firehouse, playground or road, this year $11,650,000 Public Sendee Company of Indiana tax dollars are working alongside yours to help build them. In addition to local taxes, PSC of I’s federal income tax provisions amounted to $22,020,000, making it one of Indiana’s largest tax supporters of government services.

Follows Cold War Pattern By United Press International

The agonies of those who died, or the fortunate ones who were saved and of those who now have been left behind | came forth all too clearly in the accounts of the joint U. S.-Bel-gian rescue mission to the

Congo.

And it becomes the more un-1 fortunate that this mercy mission now should fall into the old cold war pattern. The same U. S. planes which air - lifted the Belgian paratroopers into Stanleyville and Paulis in rebel-held Oriental Province ferried out nearly 1,700 hostages of the Simbas, or lions, as the rebels call themselves. For more than 80, including at least three Americans, rescue came too late. Left behind when the rescue mission was declared concluded were an estimated 900 foreigners still in Simba hands, their position even more precarious now than before. For the propogandists of Moscow and Peking, the operation was tailor-made. They ignored the lives at stake and denounced the mission as a pretext to re-establish Western imperialism in the Congo. Communist regimes make short work of any demonstration against themselves but mob action can also be an instrument of policy. Therefore it was no surprise I when mobs attacked the U. S. Embassy in Moscow, and U. S. legations in Prague and Sofia, j In Cairo, a mob made up mostly of African students, burned the U. S. Embassy li- | brary. In Algeria, President Ahmed Ben Bella promised more arms for the Simbas and even volunteers. But amid the general uproar which went up from black Africa, there were dissenting voices, and the protest themselves were based not so much on communism but upon black African nationalism. A voice of powerful dissent came from Nigeria whose Foreign Minister Jaja Wachuka praised the U. S.-Belgian action and said that in a similar sitation Nigeria also would attempt to protect its citizens.

4 YOUR HEALTH

By LESTER L. COLEMAN, M.D.

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana 5 Wednesday, December 2, 1964

Accidents—An Epidemic Disease

NEW COIN—This is the front and back of India's new coin commemorating Jawaharlal Nehru, late prime minister.

CRIES DOOM—Sen. Kenneth Keating, R-N. Y^ who lost to Robert Kennedy in his bid for re-election, says in his Washington office that the Republican Party could be doomed if "ultra-conserva-tives” still control it in 1968. 3e did not support the Gold-water-Miller ticket.

TOE PERSON who might have discovered the answer to cancer was killed today. The person who might have won the Nobel Prize in literature was killed today. The person who might have been president was killed today. All three were killed by a devastating epidemic disease— the disease of accidents. Accidents are a major public health problem. They take a staggering toll in human life, Dr. Coleman family misery and dollars. The statistics of accidents are astronomical. But to many they may be just meaningless figures. Young Victims There were 101,000 accidental deaths in the United States in 1963. There were 16,000 accidental deaths in children under 15 years of age in 1963. Thirteen million school days were missed because of accidents. More impressive than these lifeless numbers is the painful realization that one happy, healthy five-year-old, spared from polio, measles, chicken pox, mumps, tetanus and a mastoid infection, was killed by a drunken driver. Medicines Ineffective All ths startling new medical advances of antibiotics, cortisone, vaccines and heart surgery are Ineffective against the disease of accidents. Since there is no cure for accidents, ths only answer is prevention. Most potential accidents can be recognired and prevented by using ordinary common sense and anticipatory judgment.

Painstaking precautions must be taken to protect our greatest and most priceless resource —the young. Dr. Virginia Goddard Harris of the Department of Health in Syracuse, N. Y., insists that many accidents, like epidemic diseases, can be predicted. A study of the personality of a child, his behavior patterns and his relationship with family and friends gives valuable information in planning safety measures for accident prevention. Must Recognize Hazards Both parents and children must be educated to recognize the hazards of poisonings, gun injuries, traffic accidents and home accidents. Safety patrols, rigidly enforced speed limits near schools and play centers, and careful supervision of play areas are all vitally important in reducing the possibility of accidents. The disease of accidents is not caused by bacteria, viruses or cancer. The accident disease is usually caused by the germ of caralessness. A Joint Effort Parents, public health officials, educators, traffic engineers and regular safety surveys of homes can, by prevention only, eradicate this menacing disease. The child whose life is saved today need not be a scientist, Nobelist or president. Let’s just give him the chance to grow up into a happy, normal, healthy human being. These columns are designed to relieve your fears about health through a better under* standing of your mind and pody. All the hopeful new advances in medicine reported here are known to doctors everywhere. Your individual medical prob* lems should be handled by your own doctor. He knows you best*

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Seek To Avert Vote Showdown UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. UPI—The 1964 General Assembly was off to a shaky start today under a stopgap arrangement to avert a showdown on Russia’s right to vote. U. S. Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minis-

ter Andrei Gromkyo were meeting for lunch at Soviet delegation headquarters in continuing talks to resolve the potentially crippling dispute. It was expected that they also might touch on other EastWest issues such as disarmament if time permitted. The United States had demanded that the Soviet Union and seven Soviet satellites be deprived of their assembly votes under U. N. charter regulations

for failure to pay assessments for peace-keeping operations in the Congo and the Middle East. Weeks of efforts to arrange a compromise were climaxed by high-level talks carried on by U. N. Secretary General Thant up to the time of the assembly’s opening session Tuesday. Thant emerged from those talks to tell the assembly: “There is an understanding to the effect that issues other than those that can be disposed of without objection will not be raised while the general debate proceeds.” The annual general debate, in which foreign ministers and other delegation leaders make policy statements was scheduled to run almost until Christmas. The arrangement afforded at least another month for U. S.Soviet talks on the financial issue. Under the no-voting agreej ment, the assembly proceeded ' to elect Alex Quaison-Sackey of j Ghana as president of its 19th ! session. Quaison-Sackey, 40, is the youngest assembly president and the first Negro to hold the office. Under the “no objection” arrangement, the assembly then admitted Malawi, formerly British Nyasaland; Zambia, formerly British Northern Rhoi deisa, and the fabled former British Mediterranean island of | Malta to membership, raising I the U. N. roll to 155 countries.

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