The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 April 1966 — Page 5

An Individual Project Working Up A Schedule

By BOBERTA BOESCH “Do you have a basic scheduto that will lit the life of a woihlBf mother?” a reader aaka. “If you do, please send me a copy, because I could ce tainiy use it” Many people could use it—if sued a thing existed. But the truth is that a schedule that fits one woman is not suitable for the next, any more than a Sim • dress could fit every woman who works. De-It-Yearself Project The schedule that is right for you is a "Trail and Error” and “Do It Yourself’ project that you work out for the shape of your Ms by trying it on for aim many times. One working mother, for instance, who runs a suburban art shop, followed a “Trial and Error” plan till she worked out her own daily routine. “I get up every morning at 7:80,” she told me, “and between then and the time I open my drop at 10:00, I get my husbend and children off for the day and do whatever housework I can. ‘TVom 10:00 on, I handle the Shop alone until my husband comes in at 5:45 to help me dose it at 6:00. Then we go home together to prepare dinner and spend time with the

Choree “After dinner, I spend more time with the children or work on odds and ends around the bourn until my son and daughter go to bed at 10:00 p. m. “While the children are up, 1 usually try to organize the house ao tilings win run smoothly in the morning. For example, I set the table for breakfmt and get the coffee ready to “I also pack lunches and make sure that everyone has clothes, bodes, homework and

other necessities ready for the next day. And I always try to tidy up the living room just before I go to bed, so it won’t look like the night before when I get up in the morning. "Once the children are in bed.

Plan Schedule For Home And dob That Isn’t Too Confining I relax until 11:00. Then I get my ‘second wind’ and start working on a project for the shop until I retire myself sometime after midnight” As we said, one woman’s schedule is seldom right for the next — and not everyone can come up with a “second wind” at 11:00 at night But you can find a schedule that will fit your life for both your job and your home U you: (1) Work it out by “Trial and Error” until it suits you. Breathing Space (2) Allow enough flexibility for a little breathing space. (3) Don’t get sick with frustration if things don’t go according to plan. (4) Remember every now and then that schedules are made to be broken as much as they are made to be kept.

British Princess Setters Injury LONDON UK — Princess Asms, 15-year-oM daughter of Queen EMmbeth, was thrown from her hone while riding to hounds and broke her noee, a Buckingham Palace spokesman said Wednesday. The spokesman said the princess took a tumble at a fence while following the Oxford University dreg hounds on Tuesday. The pack does not taunt animals hut follows a trail left or "dragged” by someone earlier. Like her mother, the princess is a keen horsewoman and has won several prises at public horse shows. The princess had no strapping or piaster on her nose when she left London Airport early Wednesday with her mother by plane to spend three days at the royal country estate at Sandringham in eastern A palace spokesman said Anne would go to a nursing home for treatment after she returns from Sandringham. The princess is due to go back to Benenden girls boarding school in southern England next week for the start of the summer term.

To Hold Momovok PARIS UPI — Three West German infantry and armored bridgades will hold maneuvers this summer in central France, French military sources said today. The brigades, each numbering about 8,500 men, will begin the maneuvers July 28 and complete them Sept. 29. The exercises are being held under the terms of a 1963 Franco-German military cooperation treaty.

Impove the appearance of cracked china by boiling the china in milk for 45 minutes.

Take the creak out of a creaking door. Rub the hinges with a lead pencil.

Damage Suit Filed By Dobich Trustees

INDIANAPOLIS UPI — The trustee for the bankrupt Dobich Securities Corp. filed a 8533,000 damage suit Wednesday in Federal Court against Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner Smith, Inc., which charged violation of federal regulations on securities sales. Donald W. Buttrey’s suit against the stockbroker firm was filed in connection with the bankruptcy of the Dobich firm four days after Michael Dobich, young head of the company, was killed in a helicopter crash hut July 10. His death and the

Chinese Reds To Explode A-Device WASHINGTON UPI— Communist China is expected to explode another nuclear device— her third in less than 18 months —“within a few weeks,” U.S. officials said today. America is advising a number of Asian and European allies of the anticipated blast in an attempt to take some of the edge off the propaganda effect of another success in Pewing's drive to become a major nuclear power. U. S. officials said information received during the past week indicated that prepara tions are virtually complete for the explosion. They emphasized, however, that weather conditions at the Sinkiang Province testing ground in northwest China could delay the test for two or three weeks. The United States predicted the first two Chines atomic tests—on Oct. 16, 1964,' and May 14, 1965—with considerable accuracy. The 1965 test apparently was delayed two or three weeks by weather conditions.

resultant bankruptcy disclosed that hundreds of peraons failed to receive shares of stock in Midwestern United Life Insurance Co. for which they had paid nearly 83 million to Dobich and his agents. Buttrey sought to recover 8515,000 which he said represented 8460,000 in speculative losses in the Dobich account with Merrill Lynch and 855,000 in commission paid during the same period to Merrill Lynch. He also sought 818,000 on an allegation that Merrill Lynch failed to adhere to federal Reserve Board regulations which require any customer to pay for securities within seven days after purchase. Six counts implied that Merrill Lynch aided and abetted Dobich in his stock transactions, one charging that the firm was guilty of illegal “churning,” a practice whereby brokers create artificially high numbers of transactions in order to generate commissions.

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