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The Hillsdale Daily News from Hillsdale, Michigan • Page 4

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Hillsdale, Michigan
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4
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4 THE HILLSDALE DAILY NEWS Saturday, September 14, 1963 The Record Shop Duke Finds Best lest Is In Home By DICK KLEINER NEW YORK frequently musicians will complain that record they thought sounded great i in the studio just sound so hot when they played the finished product at home. And they gen-1 orally blame the manufacturer for goofing Duke Ellington thinks the fault probably lies with the innate dif-1 ferences between the sound sys-! tem in the studio and that in the home. why he always listens to his tapes on his home system before he authorizes their release as records. Ellington says he will frequently approve a take in the studio, then take it home and play it and find it sounds quite different. He has even gone so far as to rearrange numbers because of what i heard at home.

true test of a recording, after Duke says, how it i sounds in your Ellington offer any explanations as to why records sound different in the studio and the home. not concerned with why this difference exists, merely with the fact that it does exist and shouid be reckoned with. The great pianist composer- conduclor has long been a perfectionist about sound both in-person sound and on-record sound. He explain what he wants or how he goes about detecting it, other than his simple statement: just listen, But his listening is educated listening. he says, had as much recording experience as anyone in the business.

I began making records in the and when I started they only used one microphone. Today, we have eight or FISHING FOR FUN- And To Wash Your Soul The Doctor's Mailbag Purpose Of Bland Diet Is To Soothe Problem Stomach WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D. I had a barium ray taken and it showed pyloro- spasm. Since there is no ulcer, why do I have to continue on a bland diet? this condition is usually recognized in childhood, you have probably had it in some degree all your life.

The muscular control of the outlet of your stomach is abnormally strong. As a result, your stomach is slow to empty. After a heavy meal this condition may be associated with heartburn, bringing up of sour stomach contents into your mouth, or even vomiting. If you take frequent small feedings, these symptoms will bother you less. Your doctor wants you to take a bland diet because such a diet leaves the stomach more readily than does a diet that contains much spice and roughage.

Antispasmodic drugs sometimes help. If the condition is severe, an operation to cut some of the excess muscle at the outlet of the stomach must be performed. I eat fresh toma- my teeth hurt at the gumiine. It. then takes several days of going without before this sensitiveness disappears.

Is there anything besides not eating tomatoes I can do about it? we grow older the gums begin to recede below the' enamel crown. This exposes the sensitive dentin. Dentists have used many preparations to desensitize the dentin. One of the best is a mixture that contains sodium fluoride, kaolin and glycerin, but no desensitizer will prevent continued erosion by such foods as tomatoes, citrus fruits and sugar. For this reason your dentist should search for factors that Waldron "No political aspirant can qualify for election unless he demonstrates he is a Mr.

Hoover writes. President Warren G. Harding as a lake fisherman. The compan- ion at left is not identified, fishing in a tentative Mr. I am told Harding undertook Hoover notes.

Ellington was the first jazz artist to concern himself with where the mikes should be placed when he recorded. Others just sat down and blew, but Ellington worried about balance before most musicians had ever heard the word. In his home, just as finicky about bis private sound system. He has a beauty, designed to fit his apartment by Harman-Kardon and built into a Swedish-styled ebony cabinet. At one end of the room, the speakers are placed on either side of piano.

At the other end, the turntable and controls are convenient to his couch and work table. Generally, Duke listens at night with the lights out. hear better in the he says. PICKS: Little Peggy March may repeat with on RCA. Others: in the (Dennis Regor, Contempo); Sunday, That i (Nat Cole, Capitol); Wonders, Sad (Ken Dowd, (Ron Williams, Mercury); a Little (Les Brown! Liberty); and (The Four Preps, Capitol).

Around the world on rerent has of the Bull with a Madrid Plaza de Toros hand; I Weston plays From the New African Nations, Featuring the apitol has two albums of of French songs, one ieatur- ing Daniellt Darrieux the other a young Mar, Francois Deguclt is a Catholic Mass sung In Congolese, plus Congo songs; Capitol has Kyu Sakamoto with and Other Japanese Classically, there are two new. albums of collections worth noting, Complete Orchestra Works of played by Andre Cluy tens and the Paris Conservatoire Orchestra and RCA i has Evening of Elizabethan played by The Julian Bream Consort. By HERBERT HOOVER PART SIX For years I have recommended will need to buy a new rod and I with your right hand, and with reel. your left hand dragging a dead Also, when attired in this mid- fish in the behind the stream apparatus, you will find i boat. remedy'for aU i fly is not ri8ht one- To But if you are lucky enough to al, spiritual, and physical ills.

I brace yourself with the iron- gex one of these sea monsters on Perhaps I should show a balanced pointed staff and at the same your line, you spend the next hour mind by a frank statement of the Itime chanSe must cranking the reel with a special cruel hardships when fishing. The rod under spinal motion called pumping, amount of hardship varies with and the fly one hand i About the time you get him along- the kind of fish you are after. and your teeth- That fly 1S als01 side- a shark bites him in tw0 i pieces and keeps the larger half. I Or the boatman misses him with There are two handicaps which apply to all expeditions for fish. The first is the depletion of your savings.

You must buy more tackle; and you must bring one coat with large checks. Passers-by will then you are a real sport. You can wear your old pants. You must also buy a canvas jacket with seventeen pockets to carry the gadgets and bottles for emergencies. The second hardship relates to frustration.

You have been dreaming for the previous six months about that big one. But your appointment with destiny will connect you with the smaller sizes. usually the wrong one. salmon. The realty aristocratic To fish in streams and lakes, 1 Spots are in Eastern Canada.

That you go away from your own com- variety has two griefs. You must fortable food supply and bed. special clothes, but Having engaged this new habita- y0U must engage an Indian and tion in advancei you arrive to find j-jis canoe. He charges you separ- the cook has usually just resigned ately for these two parts of or gives you a boiled egg which ment. And of course you pay a the gaff.

If you are also a stream fisherman, you already have restrained language at hand. I have withheld mention of mosquitoes and black flies, since they are applicable to all kinds of fishing. Their distribution in the Western Hemisphere is one of the wonders of nature. If you have a fish on the line, then the fly bites. Slapping at the fly on your face is one of the methods for unhooking the fish.

As part of your seagoing equipment you must take several varieties of liniment and sunburn dope. There is also stream fishing for You will need periodical libations of the liniment on your muscles When you do not get anything on a dry fly, you descend to a wet one. As that fails, you begin to think about the need of fish for dinner, and to show the other guests at the auto camp. Then you try hardware of different sorts. Failing with these, you take on the cans of salmon eggs or worms that you have hidden in your secret pockets.

This long been classified top secret- Incidentally, when it really rains, your sport is playing solitaire on your bedroom bureau. all night long. Sunburn is a seri ous business. Each of ycur friends has a sure preventive dope. Do not be sun is used to all of them.

The only real protec- I tion is a mask or a skin- diving suit. In case you go home during the early stages of burn, the first kid you meet will I tell you that you have need for a face. Copyright, 1963. by Herbert Hoover, from the book published by Random House. Inc.

Next Saturday: A Bone to Pick About Bonefishing. Prattville Pioneer Mrs. Richard Tebeau of Alvordton had the misfortune of falling i should have been scrambled with raje for board and lodging, which a ladder and breaking mustard. Your coffee is part of the hire of the total staff three bcnes in her right wrist. She that used in days gone by.

There durjng the long winter, is always a loose spring in the The provincial bed. If the food is good, you eat about 500 dollars for was taken to a Toledo hospital by ambulance. Miss Carol Sue Oxender started 1)0 much- I the seasons use of a half-mile of Toledo University In order to prevent your getting one 0j the rivers. In the end you Freshman week and college start i a big one, some states require may get a big one, but the aver- next you to back any fish over age expenst is about one thousand Emma Shumaker of 14 inches. dollars per fish- You can get one ler is spending the week with her There are signs every half-mile i of equal weight, although a little son and family, Mr.

and Mrs. Del warning you of 30 days jail. I less flavor, at a California market Shumaker and Sharon. Also about this time, £ou look up for less than five dollars, at the bank and see a sign on a tree: PRIVATE FISHING. Your comment becomes worse than that for which your mother washed your mouth with soap.

Pittsford Mrs. Erwin Snow and children, I Beth and Charles attended the first reunion of the Crocker family in Cincinnati, 0. David Burlew, who broke his leg recently playing football in the yard, is able to attend classes at school. Rev. Hoates.

minister of the Church in Kalkaska, Mrs. Hoates and daughter, called on friends in Pittsford. Rev. Hcates was a former minister of the Congregational Church here. Mike Warren will leave day for Big Rapids, where he will enter his second year at Ferris State College.

If you are fishing for trout, you can do it either from the bank or mid-stream or at prohibitive expense from a boat. In casting a fly from the bank, you alternate half- hours climbing trees trying to get your fly and leader back. Most times you get them, even with the beguilement of words. Your ambition being to get a six-or ten-foot sailfish or swordfish or an oversized tuna or dolphin, you go to the neighborhood of the Gulf St ream, the Humboldt Stream, or Japanese Stream. If you buy your own tackle and its spare parts with which to wear such monsters into subjection, you will need to negotiate a long time loan of magnitude.

You may think your physical improvement will on bills later. But not so. You will need special treatments when you get home. Also, you must hire a good-size motorboat with a crew of at least two. Their gaze at you is always clouded with pity.

And if they fur- If you are fishing mid-stream, you must have those special waterproof pants which reach from inside hcb-nailed shoes to your armpits. You must carry an iron- nish the tackle, the charter money pointed staff to prevent your be- would hire an oil tanker. Also, ing washed downstream. When these boats have a habit of sud- that happens, the waterproof denly descending to the floor of pants fill with water and you sink. If you have the good sense to hold onto the staff, you possibly save your life.

But you the sea, then rising up to the sky in a fashion that takes your breakfast overboard. You spend the whole day hanging onto the boat Mr. and Mrs. Loren Fackler and son, Roger, of Toledo were recent caller on Mr. and Mrs.

Oakley Rogers and Mrs. Cynthia I Rogers at Little Long Lake. Cyn- thia w'ent home with her grand- I daughter and family for a brief stay. Recent callers on the A. O.

Barkers were Mr. and Mrs. Carol Barker and family of Iowa City, Iowa, Mrs. Elsie Carpenter and family and Leo Barker and family of Bowling Green and Mrs. Wilma Kidd and family of Temperance, Mich.

They were entertained at a I picnic supper. Mr. and Mrs. John Haas and Jonel were guests of Mr. brother and family, Mr.

and Mrs. James Haas and family in Liberty Center. Caller last week in the home of Herbert Osmun Mrs. Martha Rockwood of Ann Arbor. Mr.

and Clarence Herman were guests of their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Riggleman arid sons in Toledo. Mr. and Mrs.

Richard Tebeau and five sons entertained his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E'rnest Tebeau of Toledo at their Bird Lake cot- tag. Rev. and Mrs.

Alden Barrows entertained Wednesday evening at a farewell party in honor of Carol and Lear Fellows and Deanna Lockwood who will leave soon for college. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Fisk and family of Marion, and Rev. and Mrs.

Lowell Young of Flat Rock, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ford Fisk and son. Larrv Young who had spent the summer in the Fisk home, returned home with his parents. Mr.

and Mrs. William Forrest of Maumee, Ohio and Mrs. Harry Tibets of Adrian were guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Emens and family.

Mrs. Tibets remained for a few days visit. Mrs. lone Monahan is visiting Miss Ruth Monahan in Ann Arbor for a few weeks. Dalton Jones of Toronto.

is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hasty and other relatives for two weeks. Mr. and Mrs.

Norman Brooks i of Convoy, Ohio, were guests of Mr. and Kenneth Hyslop. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Betz and family of Lansing, and Mr.

I and Mrs. Eugene Goff and family of Jackson, visited their mother, Mrs. Vem Kunkle. Pfc. Billie Hills of Fort Knox, visited his parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Clair Hills. Mr. and Mrs. Hal'lie Wright and Mrs.

Irene Hamilton and girls attended the Wright-Bash reunion at Fort Meggs, Ohio. Miss Rebecca Burnham and friend of Findlay, Ohio, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Zimmerman and family. Guests of Mrs.

Leona Huffman were, and Mrs. Harold Wolf of Tecumseh and Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs.

Ralph Wenig of Wolf of Berrien Springs. Houghton Lake were callers of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Seeley and family. P-N-2 Robert and Mrs.

Gump and son of New Orleans, are spending a 20-day furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hadley and family. Mrs. Alva Quimby of Boston, and Mr.

and Mrs. William Crance called on Mrs. Ida Fisk. Mr. and Mrs.

Lester Taylor and family of Toledo were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hasty. Mrs. Mary Towne attended a birthday' celebration Saturday in honor of Mrs.

Rachel Morrison of Fayette, who was 90 years old. Mrs. John Ruckman and son Paul attended the Morr reunion at the Plattston Grange hall, near Delta, Ohio. Mrs. Paul Ruckman.

daughter Emily attended the wedding of Barbara Jo Shelley and Donald Leon Lutz at Toledo. O. Emily was bridesmaid. The girls both work at Riverside Hospital, Toledo. Mr.

and Mrs. William Robison accompanied their sen and family. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Robison and children of Adrian on a two weeks trip to Foleyet and Aubrey, Falls, Canada.

Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Horton of Waynesville, were guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Bertie McFate and attended the school reunion. Mr. Horton was guest speaker at the evening service Sunday at the Church of Christ. Mr.

and Mrs. Ivan Harmon helped their daughter and her family, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Sharill and children move from Mountpelier to near Pulaski, Ohio. Carolyn Coman, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Arnold Coman has gone to Geneva, N. Y. where she will teach the 4th grade this year. Robert Coman went to Miami, Fla.

to visit his brother-in-law and sister. and Mrs. Walter Wagner. He will return to Houghton, N. Y.

to attend Mr. and Mrs. Robert Farnham and family entertained Mr. and Mrs. Richard McCloe and children of Brooklyn.

Church's Corners Mr. and Mrs. Eber Cunningham have returned from a trip through northern Michigan, Wis-j consin. and to Des Moines, Icwa, where they visited their uncle and aunt, Dr. and Mrs.

Ned Douglass, Mr. and Mrs. Park Gregory and I family of Belleville were guests of their parents Mr. and Mrs. Ger- aid Bradley, Sr.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Crisp. Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Paulsen and children were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hertler for a picnic dinner in Ann Arbcr. Jim Townsend has arrived home from California. Mr.

and Mrs. L. J. Townsend spent a month in California. They were guests of their i and daughter, Mr.

and Mrs. Jim 1 Crowley and children. Mrs. Orrin Pibbles and Mrs. Berkley Ball have returned from a vacation in northern Michigan.

JACOBY ON BRIDGE By OSWALD JACOBY I have had many requests to write more on opening no-trump 1 bids and the Jacoby transfer. My opening no-trump range is from 15 to 17 high card points. This is in full accord with modem expert practice, but if you want to use 16 to 18 you will be at only a very slight disadvantage against players ho use 15 to 17. You can also apply the principles in these articles, provided you simply cut down all responder's requirements one point to allow for the difference. cause the erosion, in addition to the dietary factor.

Prevention of further erosion combined with desensitization should help you. What is a hemangio- hlastoma of the cerebellum? What is the cause, the toms and the chance of a cure? A You do not say that you are the one who has this disease and I sincerely hope that you are not. This is a blood vessel tumor of the lower portion of the brain. It runs in families, but no cause is known. It may cause dizziness, difficulty in walking, and headache depending on how big it is and how fast it is growing.

It is not a cancer and can be cured by removal. County Schools Announce Menus County school participating In the hot lunch programs announce menus for the of Sept. 16. Meals to be served are: Waldron Area Schools beef sandwich, buttered com, cheese squares, apple crisp, milk. dog on a bon, potato chips, buttered peas and carrots, apricots, milk.

and bologna sandwiches, buttered green milk. Thursday Chicken and gtavy on mashed potatoes, roll and butter, cab- baqe salad, fruit, milk and cheese, sliced tomatoes, tuna sa'ad sandwiches, fruit gelatin, milk. North Schools Joe on bun, cabbage sa'ad, apple crisp, milk Tuesday Oven-fried potatoes, hot doq, green bread end butter, fruit, milk. Wednesday Beef-vegetable bread and jelly, carrot pineapple up-side-down cake, milk. Thursday peanut butter sandwich, celery fruit, milk.

ad, cheese sandwich, buttered peas, fruit, milk. Reading Community Schools casserole, buttered peas, peanut butter milk. Tuesday Macaroni aalad, buttered corn, pickles, applesauce, cookie, milk. Wednesday Hot beef sandwich, squash or lima beans, vanilla pudding, milk. cheese deviled egg, choco- -Mecaroni and cabbage pineapple up- Deeds Glenn W.

and Hazel R. Cooper to George M. Jr. and Cora E. Spross, Allen Township.

George M. Jr. and Core E. Spross to Thomas and Carolynne B. Spross Alien Township.

George M. Jr. and Cora E. Spross to Terrance E. and Patricia W.

Nessif, Allen Township. Carol M. to Frank A. and Ardena M. Peterson, parcel, Wheatland Lyle R.

and Ruth Baker, Gienwood and lela Baker and Harold and Ida Baker to J. Moroun, parcel, Fayette Township. Floyd John and Mary B. to Neil A. and Ruth P.

lot, Hillsdale. Cleon G. and M. Bailey to Lyle F. and Louisa Ruth Lee, parcel, Jefferson Township.

Marion O. and Barbara Greene to Francis and Virginia R. Hilsl- dale. Richard S. and Marilyn S.

Banovic to Robert J. and Rose M. Kennedy lot, Hillsdale County Industrial Development Commission to Ernest A. Balser, parcel, Hillsdale. Wilson G.

and Marjorie E. Kittle to Arthur and Lorena J. parcel, North Ethel E. to Herman and Eleanor J. Kuster parcel, Camden Tdwnship.

Edward T. and Lucille Lienhart to Arthur and Juanita Peterson, lot, Somerset Township. Fred and Lila Kennedy to Fred L. and Hazel Robinson, parcel, Cambria Township. The Presbytery of Southern Michigan, United Presbyterian Church in the USA to Bethany Chapel, Assembly of God, lot Reading.

Clarence B. and June L. Adams, to Lamar E. and Alice R. Parker, parcel, Allen Township.

John and Anna Lonq to Everett E. and Barbara J. Sparks, Fayette Township. A. O.

and Lola Ballard to Lake LeAnn Development Township. Kathryn G. Gray to Alton and Margaret Herkimer, parcel, Cambria Township. Lawrence W. and Janet M.

Wilson to John E. and Nettie A. King, parcel, Cambria Blair and Freda Thompson to Cleo and Patsy Swan, parcel, Hillsdale Township. Lake LeAnn Development Co. to Lyman E.

Abbott lot, Somerset Township. Marion M. White to Robert W. and Bernice Oswald, parcel, Hillsdale. NORTH 9 K65 Q8 7 4 3 WEST EASf 4AQJ64 1097 VQ82 VJ10 73 105 A 9 6 7 10 3 SOUTH (D) K85 A94 KJ2 A962 East and West vulnerable Rooth West North East 1 N.T.

Pass Pass Pass Opening While I really object to 16 to 18 no-trumps, I can assure you if you start playing 15 to 18, 14 to 16 or 11 to 14, or anything along those lines you will be hurting yourself substantially. The first thing to learn about no-trump bidding is that there is no point in trying to get into a minor suit contract a balanced hand. Thus we use both! two diamond and twro club re-; sponses as artificial forcing bids and reserve jumps to three diamonds and three clubs if we ly want out of no-trump and intol a minor suit. Playing at one no-trump South wins the opening spade lead and starts after diamonds. The defense takes four spades and the ace of diamonds and South makes two no-trump.

Of course, if West opens a club he will beat the no-trump two tricks, but double dummy leads aren't made very often. If North responds two diamonds that contract would be a cinch except that West would back in with two spades and have no trouble making three odd. bidding has been: Wesi North East South 1 N.T. Pass You, South, hold: 2 VK6 5 4Q8743 5 4 What do you do? You have no interest in and there is no reason to assume that one no-trump isn't as food as any other contract. late milk.

Friday- salad, tuna side-down cake, milk. litchfioJd Community School noodle or vegetable soup, ground meat sandwich, fruit, cookie, milk. Tuesday Vegetable beef stew, tage cheese, fruit gelatin, bread, butter, white-chocolate milk. Wednesday Spaghetti with meet sauce, tossed salad and dressing, white- rye bread, butter, applesauce, ice cream, milk. dog, bun, baked beans, cole siaw, sliced peaches, chocolate milk.

Friday Macaroni, cheese, buttered peas, tuna salad sandwich with lettuce, fresh apple, milk. Pittsford Rural School Marzetti, meat and cheese sandwiches, green beans, plums, milk. meat and egg WiChes, mixed vegetables, peaches, celery and carrot sticks, milk. and gravy, meet and lettuce sandwiches, spinach, fruit, milk. dogs, potato chips, corn, tossed salad, cheese strips, milk.

Friday-Baked beans, meat and tune sandwiches, beefs, fruit, milk. JonesvilH Community Schools Monday Hof dog, escalloped wax beans, peanut buffer cookie, peaches, milk. potatoes, creamed chicken, baking powder biscuit, butter, fruit raspberry gelatin with fruit, milk. stew fresh fruit salad, rolls, buffer, cookie, milk. buttered bread vegetable salad, pineapple, milk.

soup, grilled cheese sandwich, relishes, pumpkin pie, chocolate milk. Camden-Frontier School potatoes, gravy, cottage cheese, lettuce sandwiches, fruit, milk. casserole, cabbage jalad, rolls, buffer, fruit, milk. potatoes, butter, sliced cold meat, tossed salad, bread and buffer, filled giaham crackers, milk pickles, green beans, sliced tomatoes, fruit, crackers, milk. fish salad, succotash, toasted cheese sandwiches, fruit, milk.

Moscow Mr. and Mrs. George Durga have returned from a vacation at McCormick Lake, Atlanta. Mr. and Mrs.

William Petrie have moved to Manchester, where he has employment. Miss Venice May Oney of Levelock, Alaska, was a guest for a week at the home of Dorothy Ramsin and Ruth Warren..

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About The Hillsdale Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
28,367
Years Available:
1961-1976