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The Coshocton Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • Page 4

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Coshocton, Ohio
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4
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PAGE FOUB THE COSHOCTON TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH 23, 1938. THE COSHOCTON TRIBUNE (AMP T1MEH-AUE) AM IKWSltiWUISM NKWBPAFUt MOOQO Ute pott office at QfcfeMloa. Oblo PooiutMO MCb ereniai and morning rbc irtbuat Company MMiA COMTAM MHoM' Adrertfaftnj! HTKBTEHJN OFFICE EASTKKN OFFICE Avc. 630 Fifth Near York ChMW Genera! Motors Bldg. Detroit Member Audit oi Circulation.

Select uet ot Oblo OaUV Associated Ohio BATE SUBSCKIJTIOKS IB Cttj By Carrier Per Tear Per I .16 By Mall .16 Poui .60 Hint Six 82.50 One Year H.SO A THOUGHT FOR TODAY No man is free who is not master of him- The MacDonald Clan NGLAND'S MacDonald family has habit of keeping quietly and efficiently ui the country's foreground and service, Ishbel, who as hostess for her famous father was best known of the premier's four children, hasn't retired the family just because she married a village handyman and will devote her life to running a rural inn. Her brother, Malcolm, at 36 is dominions secretary and is adding luster to the famous family nsrne by his negotiations for a trade and defense agreement between Great Britain and Ireland. As undersecretary, Malcolm refused to cash his $7500 yearly salary check because his father was head of the government. And now the youngest of the MacDonald clan, Sheila, has launched a modest career in politics by obtaining a job as police probation officer. If she follows thru in the usual family fashion she is liable to end up with quite a voice, in the island's affairs.

Her father started the same Ducks vs. Airplanes is something rather appealing about the JL fUtement by Warren E. Emley of the U- S. Bureau of Standards that one of the things worrying the bureau is the fact that ducks refuse to be intimidated by airplanes and thus create a major problem for aviation. It seems that the ducks, which after all have been traveling thru the air a good bit longer than the man-made planes, show little regard for air traffic regulations and continue serenely on their way--even if they fly right thru a plane's windshield.

The result is bad only for the duck but also for the plane and its pilot. The worst offenders among the ducks are Canadian honkers. These birds weigh around eight pounds and it is an unlucky airplane that meets up with one. They fly along honking all the while and expect everything else to get out of their way. Probably think they're in an automobile or something.

At the Brenner Pass From the Washington Post Hitler's calendar of appointments there has for some time been scheduled an engagement to confer with Mussolini in Rome during the month of May. But that meeting, if it is not canceled altogether, xvill lose much of its anticipated importance as a result of the Fuehrer's triumphal entry into his native Austria. Of the immediate results of the coup d'etat which has incorporated Austria in the German Reich, the effect on the Berlin-Rome axis is most Important Literaljy overnight, Mussolini has become dummy in the game, where heretofore he had been Hitler's active partner. The Fuehrer will now play the cards while II Duce watches anxiously to see how the hand goes. Nor docs there seem any likelihood that Mussolini will soon control the bidding again With the removal of Austria from the ranks of free and independent nations, the one factor which gave the Berlin-Rome axis a balanced alignment has been removed.

Time and again, it was said truly that Italy could never afford to have German, as contrasted with Austrian, troops at the Brenner Pass. Units of the Reichswehr have now reached thi? historic gateway to plains of Italy. And with their arrival, Italy's standing as a great power suffered a sharp and piobably permanent decline. I There has much evidence lately Mussolini's increasing difliculties. Censorship and suppression of fiscal data do not conceal the steady deterioration of Italy's financial and budgetary situation.

Such news as leaks out of Ethiopia shows that this conquest is proving not a relief but an added burden for the Italian people. And in Spain, whole divisions of Blackshirts, shipped to Franrn's havp not vet been able to shatter the republican resistance. The customarily bombastic Duce has been very quiet of late And he certainly has nothing to boast about in the nexvly accomplished union of Germany and Austria. There is no need to emphasize the tremendous increase of German influence in southeastern Europe produced by this step What is perhaps less obvious is the consequent and equal collapse of Italian prestige in this important area. The Berlin-Rome axis may continue to exist on paper.

But henceforth, Budapest and Belgrade, Bucharest, Sofia and even Athens will have their attention concentrated on Berlin Southeast from Vienna to the Aegean, it is the word of Hitler, not that of Mussolini, which promisee to be dominant Bv Olive Roberts Barton WE'D LIKE TO BAT OUT A LITTLE ULTIMATUM, TOO DAD'S IDEAS OF FUN CAN MAKE SON TIMID Horseplay May Turn Natural Fear Into Phobia We dont' know exactly what is going on in a baby's mind. But one thing has been decided on, and that is fear. The bugaboo has come right into this world with him, strange to say. Two bad fears are quite noticeable; one is the fear of falling, the other, dread of construction. So, mother, it will be wise to avoid anything that increases this natural fright.

Later obsessions are sometimes based upon early experiences that parents have never suspected at the time. Babies today are no longer "swaddled," thank goodness. They are dressed in almost nothing at all for many weeks, and even when they don real clothes to take of a long-eared quadruped, went i lace of the idy, shirt and away to write a story that TVA sweater, the dresses are short and TAX FIXERS I cal advantage alone, but al- The capital gams and undistrib- so mental one Perils of the City HEN you go to New York to visit the World's Fair at Flushing, you may come home with a few gold bricks or a deed to the Empire State building, but you won't have your pockets picked if the state legislature at Albany has anything to do with it. Of course, in their zeal the state senators may have made New York a little unsafe for sightseers when they unanimously voted that the act of "jostling" which accompanies the act of picking a pocket should be a misdemeanor carrying a jail sentence up to three years Just what will happen when you stroll down Broadway, bump into a stranger and he cries "jostle," we don't know You can explain that you were fascinated by the animated cigaret ad. Or tell the officer that you your hands in your own pockets.

Maybe they'll be lenient with you. Or, if you want an airtight alibi to bump into whom you please, you can wear boxing gloves. A Debtless City From the Providence (R. Bulletin I AST November, when its last outstanding bond was paid off, the city of Kalamazoo, achieved the distinction of becoming the only community of more than 50,000 people in the United States to be entirely on a pay-as-you-go basis and completely free of bonded indebtedness. It took a number of years of an undeviatmg policy of not borrowing to bring this condition about, for when the policy was established, Kalamazoo, for its size, had a staggering debt, one which was eating up 23 per cent of the city's income eveiy eai The course tljat Kalamazoo followed is open to any solvent community in the land.

It involves no magic; it demands no super-human intelligence. It demands only a will on the part of those running a city to stop borrowing money, or at least to reduce borrowing to a minimum, so that more debt is cleared off each year than is created. Relief clients of a New Jersey town must turn in their license plates befoie they are given food orders. In other words, they must eat without plates. THE WASHINGTON MERRY By Drew Pearson ROUND uted profits taxes are dead ducks as far as the senate finance committee is concerned, but what the committee will do to make up for the lost revenue is another story.

There Is even a strong possibility that the committee will slash upper-bracket surtax rates. Chairman Pat Harrison favors this as a business "confidence" restorer and he has potent backing in the committee. But making up the lo.st revenue is still very much up in the air. Treasury expetts say privately that the house's elimination of the "third-basket" provision (a super- surtax on family or closely held corporations) and substituting an The baby senses strength and security. This is undermined if he is made into a football by daddy, too early in his new life; daddy, who is determined to make a brave lad of his son.

Well, father you may actually be fixing in him a fear that will feed on itself later on. So instead of having a hero you may have a regular rabbit Cowardice, so called, is never any child's fault. It begins somewhere 'way back and defies examination. Personal Experience A maid dropped me when I was a tiny baby. Today, a height not only makes me ill, but the thot of mci eased whiskey tax of 25 cents one dismays me.

a gallon, short-changed the reve- Fear of height has many cous- nue bill by $40,000,000. The ins. The child who fears this may finance committee changes will add to it many ways. He keeps boost this deficit another 30 or 40 on building. million.

The only substantial sources of still untapped revenue are the so- called "ground level" incomes-that is, the great mass of small incomes which now escape taxation thru the $1,000 and $2,500 mamed and unmarried exemptions. Senator Bob La Follette has long advocated cutting these deductions to $800 and $1,500, on the ground that "broadening of the tax base" would stimulate greater interest in government affairs. He has offered his plan for years, but it has always been vetoed. But now, with gaping revenue holes to be plugged because of the relief to be extended to the high brackets, Harrison and his group suddenly have become interested in La Follette's scheme. In fact, they are so interested there is a 50-50 chance that the 51,000 and $2,500 exemptions will be pared down several notches.

NO VETO Despite whispered threats that the president will veto the tax bill If it scuttles the capital gains and profits taxes, the antis are not woined. They are convinced that while Roosevelt may squawk, he will sign any tax measuie laid before him. What they are concerned about is whether they can put their progiam thiu the senate and then persuade the house to reverse itself. Of the two the is far more difficult. Thp battling will be hot and heavy in the senate Then there is something else that I consider important.

We are forever talking about inferiority Why is it that some children have it and others escape 9 Because the "makings" of inferiority are somehow born in a baby. If this were not true, then vhy does the baby cry or hang his head after the first few weeks of life, when somebody mocks him or laughs at his little attempts to do things? Humiliation is one of the first noticeable traits of infancy Maybe the family does not set much store by his crying, or his refusal to repeat a little trick, but there it is, his self consciousness and his hurt, all ready to spring into life. He won't mind being laughed "with," but "at" is different. Maybe it is best not to pay too much attention at all to his cute baby tricks. He is smart, however, and senses the difference between pride and teasing almost every time THC races ARC IMTO BkOOM AMD TKC ARC ftCClMMlMG TO $JMC THC PIOVMBRS ARK.

STARTING TO COtf UP AND CCTTlMC INTO SOMft NOW AMP fOK THC MEXT MONTHS YOU GUVS COIMG TO CRAWL SOMC ROCKS AMD THE SPRtNcr. T. M. Her. V.

8. Pat. off. TOMORROW: Proper comfort. From Newspaper Fil es 10 Years Ago Today MARCH 23, 1928.

Mrs Fannie McCabe, Canal over Lewisville, was suffering from finance committees lecommencla-, seuous i a i of the right tions, but the chances a the a sustained when she fell down committee. In the house, how- stairs at her home, ever, the administration holds the Unnh Maxwell, 68, died at cards--provided the leaders there' the home of his son, Stacy Max- stick with it. I following a lingering illness Banker Accused of Slaying Wife Expert Ocean Flyer and Robert S. Allen WASHINGTON How close Old Guard Democrats and Republicans are working together against the New Dead arid how fierce is their vendetta was illustrated by a secret conversation which took place hi the senate lounge the other day. The lounge is reserved for senators only, and in it they read the papers, take cat-naps, and while away their time during a dull debate.

On this particular occasion Josiah Bailey, anti Roosevelt Democrat from Xorth Carolina, was chatting with Walter E. Edge, staunch Republican and formerly Hoover's ambassador to France. Edge was entitled to sit in the senate lounge because he was once senator from New Jersey, and he effusively congratulated the Democratic senator his anti-New Deal speeches. "You are doing a great joo, senator, a great job," Edge told Bailey. "There is no one in the Republican party doing nearly as effective work as you are in "exposing the evils and dangers of this regime.

You must get your speeches out to the people, they must be broadcast all over the country." "That is already being done, senator," Bailey assured him. "More than a million and a half copies of my speeches have been ordered from the government printing office by 20 organizations -and are being distributed in every section of the land." "Splendid, splendid'" Edge. "That's the way to pro- "Yes, it Is very encouraging," toward the chamber to open the' session of the house, he snapped his cigaret toward a cuspidor, and missed. Instead of passing by, he stopped, stooped, picked up the said Bailey, "but there is a great like to see the mess around a low deal more to be done. The cuspidor.

ance companies ought to cooper-1 The other dav, while striding ate. They should be contacted by the proper persons and mailing lists obtained of their policy holders. There are millions of their SHVUiU LJC w'wjjvwi, me warned that their money and cigaret and deposited it with gen- property are being jeopardized by tie care. the policies of this administra- TVA JACKASS tlon Altho Senator McKellar of "That's an excellent suggestion, Tennessee explained part of the declared Edge. "It TVA jackass story to Senator should be acted on at once a Br.dges of New Hampshire, he is the class of people we want to did not get the full story, reach And I want you to know Senator Bridges has" charged tnst I am with you 100 per cent, that TVA paid for a jack- My time is all my own now.

I a s-, and later sold it for S300. have nothing to do and I am Actually a jackass was bought reaay help oi. any way I April 2. 1934, from one R. E.

Snell ran I am enlisted your cause of Murfreesboio. for $290. n- tr.e duration of the They kept the beast nearly a year, NOTE--The n' breeding animal, March 15, 1935, to HORIZONTAL 1 Zeppelin designer and commander. 10 Fragrant smell. 11 Epoch.

12 Merchandise. 13 Organ of hearing. 14 Fabaceous plant 16 Period. 19 Type measure. 20 Myself.

21 Accompanies. 26 Below. 31 Machine part. 32 Proprietor. 34 On the lee.

35 Beneath, 37 Bronze. 38 To rob. 39 Electrified particle 41 Three. 43 Deed. 48 Gilded bronze.

52 Crucifix. Answer to Previous Fnzzle 18 His ship made transatlantic nights. 22 Measure. 23 Vulgar fellow. 24 Native metal.

25 Aquatic bird. 26 Most excellent 27 To devour. 28 Beer. 29 Beverage. 30 His new ship is fiOed with 33 Northeast.

36 Stream. 38 Courtesy title. 40 Unit. 42 Eggs of fishes. 44 Signal system.

45 To honk. 46 Unoccupied. 47 To cut grass. 49 To cripple. 50 Jar.

51 Legal claim-. 54 Mover's truck. 55 Small cask. 58 Transposed. 60 Pair.

53 To call out. 56 Mohammedan religious teacher. 57 Dunce. 59 Reverence. 60 Heap.

"1 This 's ship Hmdenbjrg burned last year. 62 His native land. VERTICAL 1 Hawthorn. 2 Russian mountains. 3 Blood.

4 Foretoken. 5 Spring festival. 6 To turn over. 7 Age. 8 Matgrass.

9 Drcayed. 15 In. 17 Sheaf. 000 copies of one of Ba'iiey's and speeches, at the ost-of-pro- one at duction price of for $350 printing oT'ce v. ou'd come to more than S50 000 and thetr mail- of Sevien'iiie.

'omc mg. a free nrsr.o Ho'v Sendo: ing, a iree congressional Bridges got his would t're 1 story happened this way: 000. One day, when the animal was i SPEAKER BANKHEAD to be a new.xman came into the office of TVA's di- 1 neatness rector of purchase Charles H. a abo jt the he referring to around the hn arouna tne nouse of ren.esenT?- lives. Sneaker Bankhead that cleanliness next to He has rv.h on -'ways for rPplPcir? low cn a a a cuspidors with tall re- he 'ceptacles.

-eferred the newsman to i- btillo- ithft ttfiT in T7 that the Ml receptacle i easier we 500 I to aim at, and Bankhead doesn't I But the nevsman, thinking only 1 announcer! t'n" Well-d d. mild-appearing James Warren Crabb II, wealthy 21-year-old Delavan, 111., banker, is pictured above as he awaited trial on manslaughter and perjury charges growing out of the slaying of his 19-year-old bride, Betty. Crabb assert- edly has stated that he shot the girl by accident during a struggle for possession of gun. The couple bad been married only five weeks. Trial was scheduled to begin at Pekin, 111., March 26.

DIET USUALLY WILL REDUCE THE OVERWEIGHT CHILD with cancer. He had been ill for many years and bedfast 19 weeks. Donald Duane Howe, one-year- old son of Mr and Mrs. Arthur Howe, former local residents, died at his parents' home in Cambridge. He was the grandson of Mr.

and Mrs. George B. Howe, Cambridge road. 3 20 Years Ago Today 3, MARCH 23, 1918. Blood poisoning caused the death of George F.

McQuiston, 36, at his home on South Lawn av. Clyde Hook, enrolled in the aviation department of the U. army, had arrived safely in! France, according to word received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hook, S.

Tenth st. Mrs. R. A. Moses, mother of Mrs.

Otto Bries. N. Eighth st died at Bristol, Tenn. Fourteen more Coshocton county men were to go to Camp Sherman on April 2, the draft board announced. 4 35 Years Ago Today MARCH 23.

1903. A petition asking that Fourth st be paved with asphalt was presented to council. Mrs. Seth Gardner, formerly of this city, died at the home of her brother in Tennessee. A small ste, mer sank in the Muskmgum river just below the Randies bridge.

It had been taken down the canal from Roscoe and was being moved from the canal intc the river when it was submerged, BT DE. MOftftIB OSHBEIN, Editor. Journal of the American Medical Association, and of Hjceia the Health Magazine After it has been decided from a suitable study that a child is overweight, it will be necessary to work out a suitable died in order to aid in weight reduction. TheVe is no exact single weight for every boy an girl of a certain age or even of a certain age and height. Neither parents nor children should be disturbed about excessive weight until it is more than 15 or 20 percent different from the average for the same age and height.

It must be remembered that children from southern and eastern European nations are usually shorter and stockier and broader than those of other nations. Overweight children tend to become fatigued easily and for that reason do not execrise as much. Because they do not exer- cis and because they sit a good deal, they have bad posture. The lack of exercise, the excess of fat and the occasionally disturbed emotional state makes such children less healthful in general than are others. There are, of course, some instances in which children are abnormal in relationship to weight because of disturbed glandular conditions.

As has already been emphasized, this fact must be determine by a physician. In the majority of cases the use of the restricted diet will take care interest of his partner, J. J. M. Suitt, in their drug store at Roscoe.

Mr. Suitt planned to take up the practice of denistry. Jesse Meredith married Miss Julia Ann Maston. Seasonable offers at reasonable are listed every day In the Classified Section. of the condition satisfactorily.

Following is a diet list recommended particularly for fat childi on from 6 to 12 years of age. The daily diet should Include the following: One quart of skimmed milk, 1 egg, 1 serving of meat, chicken, fish or liver; 3 or 4 large serving of vegetables listed; 3 servings of juicy fruits, one of which should be raw; 1 teaspoonful cod i liver oil. (Because of diet restrictions, this is important and should not be omitted.) The following concentrated foods should be avoided: Jelly, j'am, sugar, candy, peanut butter, nuts, cake, cookies, ice cream, potatoes, corn, dried beans, gravy a starchy foods in general. In addition, highly spiced foods are not desirable. Vegetables permitted: Class 1 --lettuce, spinach, tomatoes, celery, cauliflower, string beans, asparagus, chard, cabbage, sauerkraut.

Class 2--peas, carrots, beets, turnips, parsnips, onions, rutabagas, eggplant, squash. Three vegetables daily may be chosen from Class 1, but not more than two from Class 2. Suggested schedule: Breakfast --Fresh fruit, 1 egg, slice of toast, 1 glass of skimmed milk, 1 teaspoonful of butter (use with toast or egg). Dinner: One serving of meat, fish, chicken or liver; cup of cooked vegetables; 3 or 4 leaves of lettuce or celery stalks; slice of bread; 1 teaspoonful of butter; 1 serving of fresh fruit; one glass of skimmed milk. Mid-afternoon: 1 glass of skimrned milk.

Supper: Soup made with vegetable or milk and vegetable; egg, cottage cheese or small serving of meat, cup of vegetable; 1 serving of fruit; 1 glass of skimmed milk. HOLD EVERYTHING! By Clyde 80 Years Ago Today MARCH 23, 1858. John Price had opened a 'new coal yard at the depot. Cash nr.v-e fc yard four cents per bushel. 1 W.

A. McKee bought out flie "Look, there's Venus just Mr. Schuitz's.

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About The Coshocton Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
94,135
Years Available:
1862-1945