The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 February 1966 — Page 2
S TIm Daily Bannar, Oraaneaatla, Indiana Monday, Fobruary 7, 1966
Viet Nam War Ideas Exchanged In Hawaii
HONOLULU UPI — President Johnson and leaders of South Viet Nam today began an exchange of ideas designed to make the Allied war effort in Southeast Asia more effective. High - ranking officials of both countries steered away from any suggestion that the Honolulu conference would lead to escalation of the war, but they conceded that a more effective military effort was needed before extensive nonmilitary development programs can be fruitfuL
The first business of the principals was set for 10 a. m. HST 3 p. m. EST today at Camp H. M. Smith, a U. S. Marine installation overlooking Pearl Harbor. Conferences will continue off and on into this evening. Gen. Nguygen Van Thieu, the South Korean chief of state, and Prime Minister Nguyen Cao Ky arrived here last Sunday from Saigon with Henry Cabot Lodge, U. S. Ambassador to South Viet Nam and a delegation of Vietnamese officials.
MYOURHEALIL ' ■ '■■■' Wf UBSTEB I* COLEMAN, MJD. These Are Your Questions
COES the new measles vaccine have any value in the prevention of Genian measles? Measles and German measles ‘are totally different conditions and are completely unrelated. Kven though both conditions are known to be caused by a virus and are associated with a rash ninmUMMBSflM of the skin, they are dissimilar. German mea- - sles is a far less severe condition if JBilKil th * T> 18 ordinary measles. It is only of great 8BL dlmH im P ortance WKmmieKM occurs during nr. Oskann toe first three months ef pregnennj Ike success la finding toe virus tost causes regular measles seems to indicate that a vaccine for German measles will soon be forthcoming. Measles ean be a very eerious disease, and can be followed ky severe compBcationa that may determine toe health ef a person during his entire life. No cMM should he deprived of Ids Mrttright, toe eoaqplete vaccination and t— against regular msasles. Vaccinate your children now before they are exposed to this dunsst from other ctaDdm.
• • •
to ft «fk to taka smtar pm« to loss weight? Diuretics, or water pilla are need by phyMdans to encourage rapid ehminatiaa of excees fluid from the body. TBdfmit is an- accumulation of fluid, due to a wide number of nsnsrs Hormone imbalance, changes in metabolism, Uver and kidney diseases, and even excess fluid intake make water
retention.
Diuretics, or water pills, are very safe and very effective, but, ef course, cannot substitute for tiie real way to lose weight
by reducing the intake of calories. If water retention is caused by any general physical condition, the basic reason must be found and treated. Loss of weight by loss of water can, at best, be only temporary. A rigid diet is much more rewarding and leads to more pennanent loss of weight. • • • What is meant by the side effects of drugs and how can they be avoided? When patients are given any new drug they must be prepared for the possibility of some unusual reaction to them. Almost everyone at sometime may react poorly to even the simplest medicine. A pain-killer, a laxative, a cough medicine may, on occasion, upeet the stomach, cause nausea or skin rashes. There are ways by which a physician can sometimes test a person for allergies or sensitivities to a new drug. Reactions to penicillin and vaccines can sometimes be prevented by first testing with a tiny amount. When a person is given a new drug it is wise to ask what yog can expect by taking it If, after taking a single dose, there is any unusual reaction, one that is not expected, stop taWfig the drug until you confirm its use with the doctor. • e e SPEAKING OF TOUR HEALTH—Whea did yea last have aa X-ray ef toe chest? If it's longer than two years, do it soon. Ifs an excellent tavest-
Dr. Oritmam weloomee fetters from naient and, while he cannot undertake to enetoer each one, he will use question* in his eohtmn whenever possible and wihen they are ef general Merest. Address your letters to Dr. Coleman in care of this news-
paper.
<0 IMS, King rmtaTM Syndicate, Ia&)
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Soviets Silent About Luno-9 MOSCOW UPI — Soviet authorities were silent today about the end of their Luna-9 moon mission only 48 hours after the space observatory began sending back to earth his-tory-making photographs of the lunar surface. Scientists at the Jodrell Bank Radio Observatory in Britain reported weakening signals from Luna-9 which they interpreted to mean its batteries were running down, despite previous longer life-span for the lunar station. The official Soviet news agency Tass announced Sunday that Luna-9’s lunar research program had “successfully concluded,” but did not explain why the program had ended as soon as it did. Western experts here speculated that there might not be enough power in the solar cells for further transmission. A loss in power could explain reports from Jodrell scientists Sunday of a rapid change in the frequency of Luna-9’s signals and reception of two poor quality pictures and a part of a third after Tass had announced the end of the mission. The British scientists speculated that the Russians simply made one extra-program test of Luna-9’s batteries that they knew were dying. During its 48 hours of active life on the moon, Luna-9 sent back to earth a series of detailed pictures of the lunar surface, revealing a rough, craggy landscape. Jodrell Bank says it has received 10 photographs from th'e moon, but the Russians have only released three pictures.
League of Women Voter* Will Meet Development of Human Resources is the topic for discussion at League of Women Voters units. Visitors are welcome to attend these meetings scheduled: Tues. morning 9-11, Mary Frances Strain, 513 Anderson St Tues. evening 8-10, Lois Loring, 426 Anderson St. Wed. evening 8-10, Barbara Meehan, 106 Taylor Place. The City School Board will meet tonight in the Superintendent’s Office at Jr. High. The public is most welcome tq attend. anniversaries Weddings Rev. and Mirs. Wm. Pat Buckner, 41 years February 7th.
In Memory In memory of Pamela Jean Brattain, who passed away Feb. 7, 1961. God called our loved ones Yet we lose not wholly what He has given, They live on earth in thought and deed As surely as in heaven. No one hears the door that opens, When they pass beyond our call Soft as loosened leaves of roses, One by one our loved ones fall. From our chain these links have fallen. In our land their stars have set. But enshrined on memory’s tablet Their true worth we’ll ne’er forget. Grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clark Herbert.
WOMEN OFTEN HAVE IUDDER IRRITATION After 31, common Kidney or Bladder Irritations affect twice aa many women aa men and may make you tense and nervous from too frequent, burning or itching urination both day and night. Secondarily, you may lose sleep and suffer from Headaches, Backaches and feel old, tired, depressed. In such irritation. CY8TEX usually brings fsst, relaxing comfort by curbing irritating germs in strong, acid urine and by analgesic pain relief. Get CXSTBX st druggists. Feel better last.
Dr. L J. Goldberg Registered Podiatrist WiU bo in hit office for Trowtmont of Foot Ailments
IWtAILYIANMi
AND
Hit AID CONSOLIDATED "It Waves For AH" 14-W S. Jockson St. Crooncostie, Ind. Business Phono Ol 3-51S1 Elizabeth Raridon Estate, Publisher S. R. Raridon, Senior Editor Noneo HHI, Con. Mgr. James B. Zeis, M—aging Editor William D. Hooper, Adv. Mgr. Entered in tho Post Off!so at Grooncosfio. Indiana, as Second Class Mail matter under Act of March I, 1070. Subscription Prices Homo Delivery 40c per amok Moiled in Putnam Co. $ g.00 per year Outside of Putnam Co. $10.00 per year Ootsido of lodkmo $14.00 per year Bible Thought For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places. Ephesians 6:2. All the powers of evil are set against Christians and their witness. We are in gravest peril. But we can put on the whole armor of God. That will mean certain victory. Personal And Local News SCO will meet Tuesday evening with Mrs. W. E. McBride. Mr. and Mirs. Elmer Wells Jr. are on a vacation in Miami, Florida. Veronica Club will meet Wednesday at 2 p. m. with Mrs. Robert McCullough. The Alpha Chi Omega Alumnae Club will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. with Mirs. Rex Boyd. Active Chapter of Tri-Kappa will meet with Mrs. Loyd Hurst Tuesday, February 8th at 8:00 p. m. The Four Leaf Clover Club will meet Tuesday at 1:30 with Mirs. John Torr. Mrs. James Torr will give the program. Club Sixteen will meet Wednesday Feb. 9th at 7:30 p. m. with Mirs. Betty Rector. There will be a Valentine food auc-
tion.
An NFO meeting will be held Thursday at 7:30 p. m. February 10th at Greencastls Tractor Sales. The National Director will speak. Everyone welcome. The Reddy Kilowatt Club Valentine dinner scheduled for Saturday night, Feb. 12th, has been postponed until a later
date.
Chapter CB, P. E. O. will hold its D I L dinner at the home of Mir. and Mirs. Thomas Slaughter, Wednesday, Feb. 9th at 6:30 o’clock. The Maple Heights Craft Club will meet Wednesday at 1:30 p. m. with Mrs. Marie Crawley. Please bring scissors and two colors of felt. The Clinton-Madison Friendly Club will meet Thursday, Feb. 10, at 1:30 P.M. at the home of Olma Clodfelter. Program will be by Maude O’Haver. The Happier Homes Demonstration Club will meet Tuesday Feb. 8, 1966 at the home of Mrs. Herbert Flint, 27 Sunset Drive at 7:30 p. m. The Jefferson Township Home Demonstration Club will meet February 10 at the home of Mirs. Ronald Dorsett. Members please note change of place. Alton Browning, 28, was turned over to Sheriff Kenneth Knauer and Deputy Paul Mason in Indianapolis Sunday afternoon on a Putnam Circuit Court warrant charging non-support of minor children. The Reelsville P. T. O. will meet in the school cafeteria at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday. The program will be under the direction of Mrs. Eckardt and will feature the members of her speech class. All parents are urged to attend. Peace Lutheran Church held a congregational dinner Sunday with approximately 50 attending. The Junior Choir, directed by Mrs. Robert Andersen, entertained with Folk Songs. Several members then traveled to their sister congregation St. Paul Lutheran at Brazil to witness the installation of their new pastor. Rev. J. H. Klausmeier.
Wed., Feb. 9th After S:30 A. M. at tho COMMERCIAL HOTEL Ffione OL 3-5617 for Appointments
When you specify "cleaned,” you can be assured this is what will take place at Old Reliable White Cleaners.
DR. F. M. BURNS CHIROPRACTOR Mon. thru Fri. 9-12 1-5 Mon. r Tues., Thurs. Evenings 7-9 CLOSED SATURDAYS Phone OL 3-M14 South Jaduen A Sunset Drive
April Crusade (Continued from Page 1) Phillip Elliott, Industrial; Mrs. Frank McKenna, DePauw University and Mrs. R. H. Lambert, Clubs and Organizations. There will be a get acquainted meeting for these volunteer workers Tuesday evening at 7 o’clock at the DePauw Union Building.
Castro Assails Red China For “Economic Aggression”
HAVANA UPI—A charge of "economic aggression” leveled by Premier Fidel Castro against Communist China today brought Havana-Peking relations to a dangerous diplomatic 16w. Castro used terms he usually reserves for the United States to denounce Communist China for reportedly reneging on a big sugar-for-rice trade pact. The text of a lengthy Castro statement On the controversial deal was printed in Havana newspapers Sunday. On Satur-
day, the government-controlled Cuban press carried a Chinese assertion that Castro was lying about the trade agreement. Castro charged that Peking “committed a criminal act of economic aggression against Cuba in a year of difficulties caused by climatic conditions, extraordinarily low prices in world markets for our principal export product and in the face of a rigorous imperialist blockade that Interferes with trade with a great part of the world.”
The polemics first came to the surface last month when Castro charged that Red China arbitrarily cut back Cuba’s rice supply and defaulted on a rice-for-sugar barter deal. He announced the rice ration in Cuba had to be cut. The Red Chinese statement published Saturday said Castro prematurely made public the results of preliminary trade negotiations. The Peking government said the Cuban Premier acted “suddenly, unilaterally
and in a manner inconsistent with the facts.” In his reply Sunday, Castro charged that Communist China “could not have chosen a more inopportune time to strike unfeelingly at our country.” He said the dispute has seriously affected relations between Cuba and Red China and added that Chinese statements on the matter signed by an officer of the Ministry of Foreign Commerce would have had to be approved by top officials.
Rites Wednesday Mr*. Bessie App, age 90 years, Route 4, Martinsville, died Sunday afternoon at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Martha VanWinkle, following an illness of one and one-half
years.
Mrs. App was born At Stockwell, the daughter of Lewis Osborn and Lydia Abbott Osborn. She was married to E. N. App, who preceded her in death in Feb., 1953. She was a member of the Waverly Methodist Church. Survivors are two sons, Kenneth App, Route 3, Greencastle, and John Louis App, Route 3, Franklin; four daughters, Mrs. Margha VanWinkle, Route 4, Martinsville, Mrs. Phyllis Kerkhof, Route 4, Martinsville, Mrs. Jean Cook of Columbus and Mrs. Zoe Campbell of California. There are eighteen grandchildren and thirty-seven greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be held Wednesday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock from the Carlisle and Son Funeral Chapel at Mooresville, with burial at Mooresville. Friends may call at the funeral chapel at any time.
Mrs. Manson Dies Mrs. Mary Manson, 72, Terre Haute, died early Monday morning at St. Anthony’s Hospital. She resided at 117 S. 26th St., Terre Haute. She was a member of DAR, Colonial Dames, Humane Society and the Methodist Church of Terre Haute. Survivors are: her husband, Earl W. Manson; one son, John Manson, Greencastle; her mother, Margaret Link, Terre Haute and one brother, Monroe Link, Terre Haute, and two grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 11:00 a.m. at the Callahan Funeral Home in Terre Haute with burial in Roselawn Cemetery. Calling hours at the funeral home after noon Tuesday.
—Group Invests Continued from Page 1) ness School publication of Shallenberger’s "SIA” activity. Shallenberger said Friday evening that he had been approached by a civic organization in Greencastle to conduct the stock market investment program here.
ELKS CLUB Past Exalted Rulers’ Night Tuesday, Feb. 8
STAG
Swiss Steak
$1.25
Serving at 6:30 p.m. Elks members only
SAVED BY BELL—Telephone worker John Conley, 31, races from a burning apartment building in Boston with 6-month-old Scott Sypek in his arms and administers mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. He and fellow phone employe Eugene Lacey, 34, rescued four children from the fire by use of the ladder on their company truck. They went into action when the mother screamed that the baby was still in its crib.
County Hospital Dismissed Saturday: Mrs. Doyle Webster and son, Stilesville Shirley Cooksey, Gosport Irene White, Quincy Leon Tippin, Bainbridge Lucille Cox, Greencastle Sandra King, Greencastle Earl Cooksey, Greencastle Chester Query, Greencastle Arthur Parrish, Greencastle Reggie O’Hair, Greencastle Nancy Thompson, Greencastle Rex Hathaway, Greencastle Dismissed Sunday: Russell Hancock, Gosport Connie Taylor, Poland Clay Webb, Roachdale Virginia Deer, Greencastle Gene Spencer, Greencastle Darret Durham, Greencastle Maude Long, Greencastle Robert Call, Greencastle Emory Starr, Greencastle
U.S. Steps Up Air Bombings SAIGON UPI — U.S. planes bombed historic Dien Bien Phu in stepped-up air action over Communist North Viet Nam while American ground troops began tightening a noose around Viet Cong units trapped in coastal jungles 310 miles northeast of Saigon, a U.S. military spokesman disclosed today. The spokesman announced that Air Force F-105 Thunderchief fighter-bombers and F4C jets Sunday inflicted heavy damage on the Dien Bien Phu military complex about 175 miles west of Hanoi. The U.S. planes destroyed 60 per cent of the military building complex, damaged the airstrip, destroyed four other buildings and hit a storage and staging
area.
Dien Bien Phu, near the Laotian border, was the site of the bloody last stand of French troops defeated by the Communist Viet Minh to end the Indochina war in 1954. About 500 U.S. Marines and troops of the Army’s 1st Air Cavalry Division Sunday linked
up around a Viet Cong stronghold near Bong Son, completing a giant noose around mountains believed hiding large num. bers of Viet Cong.
The U.S. spokesman said any Viet Cong still in the hills wer* now trapped between the Marines, Cavalry and the South China Sea.
WASHINGTON MARCH OF EVENTS
SUCCESS IN INDUSTRY, I CAREERS IN PINANCl GOVERNMENT CAN DIFFER | SEEN BEST BACKGROUND By HENRY CATHCART Central Press Washington Writer
government, with its vast operations, is the one place where efficient executives are most needed. It may, therefore, come as a surprise to the average man t® be told that a man who has demonstrated great success as a businessman may be a horrible failure as a government executive. Yet, this is the finding of a serious study of businessmen who have served in the executive, sub-Cabinet level in
Washington.
The study found that businessmen who join the government do not perform as well aa those with some previous government experience. Oddly, too much education, as well as too little, can handicap the business executive
in government.
Businessmen with Ph.D. degrees and those
with no college education both rated low on performance in government. Those with a background in manufacturing got toe poorest performance ratings. Those with careers in
banking and finance scored highest. The study was made by one of the nation's
most famous foundations, the Carnegie Corp. Its findings have
been published in hook form.
It should be pointed out, however, that the findings are net necessarily a criticism of the businessmen, although this would appear to be the case. The fact is that the heads of businesses usually have the ability to reason a matter through, make % decision on the facts, and see that it is carried out. This is not always the case in government. Second and third level government decision-makers do not have this kind of freedom, and these are the positions usually assigned to men witll business experience. - What it indicates, really, is that good generals don't always
make good majors.
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• THIS IS GOVERNMENT WITH A HEART—The new postmaster general, Lawrence F. O’Brien, obviously has the romanti® streak of a true son of Erin. He went far out of his way to mend what appeared to be a romance endangered by the failure of thi Post Office Department to deliver a package on time. A young swain sent a package to his light of love, carefully timing it to arrive on her birthday. But it didn’t. He felt badly and was worried, too, because he plans to propose marriage at Christmastime. He wrote O’Brien about his troubles and the importance of assuring the young lady that the failure of her birthday present to arrive on time was not due Cupid to his negligence. _ Ilti - O’Brien dropped all those difficult decisions llun * about ZIP-code, mail rate increases, and opera- Snog tions streamlining to write the girl a personal letter taking the blame for the delay. Obviously, O’Brien’s letter has healed the breach and probably improved the boy’s chances. But it also served another purpose—the public relations of the Post Office Department.
Washington
Less freedom
of action t
l I Lost
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