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The Daily Reporter from Dover, Ohio • Page 6

Location:
Dover, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
6
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PAGE I THE DAILY REPORTER, DOVER, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH READ REPORTER CLASSIFIED ADS THE DAILY REPORTER tmCARAWAS PUBLISHERS, DOVER, OHIO ALt MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE Entered as second class matter at the Dover, Ohio post office under act of Congress, March 8, 1879 SUBSCRIPTION RATES By 30c per week, $15.60 per mail ou rural routes tn Tuscarawas, Carroll, Coshocton, Guernsey, Holmes and Stark counties: 1 month $1, 3 monthi 32, 6 months $3.50. 1 year $6.50. Post office and rural route boxholders who receive paper same day it is 1 month $1.25. 3 months, $3, 6 months $5. 1 year $9.

In Ohio outside the above listed counties: 1 month $1.25. 3 months $3, 6 months $5, 1 year $9. Outside -Ohio: 1 month $1.75. 3 months $4.50, 6 months $7.50, 1 year $14. No subscription period taken less than one month rate.

Associated Press, Ohio Newspaper Association, Inland Press Association, American Newspaper Publishers Association, Audit Bureau Circulation NATIONAL ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES; SHANNON ASSOCIATES, INC. The Better To Understand SEVERAL YEARS ago Dover's school administrators and teachers, realizing that home Bible study, and even the saying of grace at meals, had become non-existent in many families, elected to place greater emphasis on moral and spiritual thoughts in the classroom. Children in our elementary and high schools thus have had their thoughts directed to serious consideration of the things which keep them alive and enable them to get along with those with whom they are associated in and outside the classrooms. Instead of merely cramming children with factual information on subjects studied teachers have endeavored, without disturbing the normal routine, to stress deeper thinking in respect to the courses and their every-day uses. Accuracy, sympathy, reverence and good manners are some of the attributes which have been linked to lessons.

Prayers, scripture readings, stories based on Bible incidents and good poems, many of them of a religious nature, have become a matter of course in Dover classrooms. Thus the broad aspects of religion have been brought into play as a means of teaching that cheating, cribbing, stealing, swearing, lieing, unsportsmanlike conduct and the like are not conducive to. a good, moral life. This," in a strict sense, is character building. And the program already has dividends.

One of the school administrators, upon visiting a Fourth Grade recently to discuss with pupils the possibility of one pupil who had been ill with polio returning to the classroom, was surprised when a girl said: "We know she's going to be able to come back because we've been praying for hfer That is an example of the, dividends. But administrators and teachers, despite the fine progress they, made, feel that even greater moral 'and spiritual' good can be accomplished. Last night they launched an 8- weeks workshop in which they will study "Moral and Spiritual Values in Education On consecutive Tuesday nights teachers and administrators will consult with Catholic, Jewish and Protestant clergymen, thereby acquiring a basic understanding of their respective faiths and teachings. This knowledge, in turn, will teachers to better understand and be more tolerant of children of the various faiths who are in their classrooms. There will be no intent, whatsoever, to change beliefs.

We commend the school administration, teachers and clergymen taking part in the workshop. Certainly great good can be found in teaching children to think on the better things in life. The teachers, who are taking an evening of their own time each week to further their understanding of moral and spiritual values, are demonstrating once again that their profession doesn't hesitate to give children some of the fundamentals of every-day living which many of us, in this busy world of today, neglect to teach in our homes. Evening Out Coming Up MAKE A DATE with your wife and take her out to dinner on the evening of April 13. That's the Wednesday after Easter and the date of the annual Dover Chamber of Commerce annual meeting.

As has become a custom in Dover, the dinner this year will not only be the annual meeting of the Chamber of Commerce, but will also be the occasion upon which our town will honor one of its deserving civic leaders for years of effort toward making Dover a better place in which to live. Plans are shaping up for a nice evening, with good food, a report on our civic progress, and an inspirational talk by an outside speaker. Tickets will be on sale very soon, so don't forget the date: Wednesday, April 13. News Of Yesteryear 10 YE4M 460 Nelson P. McMiUan was elected president of the Dover Association.

Clarence Rouch was elected vice Atty. Charles Barken, secretary. Rt Rev. Bishop James J. Reidy of Columbus, head rtf Columbus Diocese of Catholic Churches, visited St.

hore. it AGO lijUrftrrt JottM of Superior Ave. left for visit in Phillips Dorothy Quick attended pmettUtiou of at the Hanna Theater in AGO the formal dedication of the Mfft" store io Can ton. 4Vi "ferlcfc with $100.000 capitalization, was A- Mordi of Dover to pur- the Noble Brick Co. at Ava THE PEACEMAKERS ANYBODY WANT TO START A WAR? DREW PEARSON'S WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND GOP Fights Hard To Balance Budget boys in the White House are rolling up him to breakfast with the President.

their sleeves as never before to opened the breakfas "Sam, I thought friend of mine." Rayburn replied tiat he was; but that in the American system of government, loyalty to your party was more important than friendship, and he vas not going to let the Democra unfairly criticized. Country vs. Politics Two years passed, hower prepared, to mosa message to Coi er Rayburn confer-ed with ex- Speaker Joe Martin defeat the Sam Rayburn $20 tax- reduction amendment. Long-distance phones all over the USA were busy last week trying to pressure. certain wavering congressmen.

This week they are working on the senators. Last week, for instance, Assistant President Sherman A da phoned Gov. Robert Kennon of Louisiana, an Eisenhower Democrat, and asked him to do some long-distance lobbying. Governor Kennon, in rn, phoned various governors Whom he knows personally, asking them to pressure their own congressmen to vote against Speaker Rayburn and his $20 tax reduction. Among others, Kennon' called Gov.

Phil Donnelly of Missouri, a Democrat, who did not bolt to Ike, asked him to work on the Missouri delegation. His words fell on barren ground. Governor Donnelly did not exert himself. No votes were changed among the Missouri representatives in Congress. Sam's Trump Cards' Reason" for Wnite House consternation over the $20 tax reduction is because of two trump cards in Sam Rayburn's hand.

Trump No. appoints the conferees to the joint committee of the House and Senate which will finally iron out the tax bill. They will be staunch Rayburn I was £xt' morning Eisenhower by saying, you were a party be When Eisen- end his For- gress, Speak- and both decided Ike didn't need any special authority from Congress to take action in the Forme san crisis. So Martin got the President on the phone. Both he and Rayburn, in, a three-way conversation, ol Eisenhower that special resolution was not necessary; that he already had all necessary authority.

Ike appeared to ajree. After the conversation, Rayburn went back to his own office and told a group Democrats that the presidential message. off; Ike would not send it. However, the President sent it just the same. Anfl after it was senj, Rayburn jam supporters.

With the Senate likely to defeat the $20 reduction, Sam's conferees will stick to the bitter end, and the Senate will probably have to yield. Trump No. tax bill, to which Rayburn has tacked his $20 tax reduction, will expire April 30 unless Ike gets some action. And he wants action badly. He needs to have that bill renewed so badly that he can't very well veto it, even if the $20 tax reduction is in the bill.

For the bill continues wartime excise-p ofi taxes and corporation taxes. if Rayburn's amendment stays on, Ike is hooked. If he vetoes, he may not have a tax bill at all. Also, a veto would put him in an even worse spot politically with several million small taxpayers. That's why Sherman Davis is working the long-msiance phone overtime to try to switch votes in Congress.

Friendship vs. Politics During, the first weeks of Eisenhower's term In 1953, he enjoyed excellent personal relations with Sam Rayburn, at that time demoted in favor of Joe Martin as speaker of the House. But one day, when the Eisenhower budget went to Congress, Ike went out of failure to balance the budget. Whereupon, Rayburn made one of his infrequent speeches. He took off the gloves and blasted Eisenhower for sending that kind of critical message.

And he dared Eisenhower to balance the budget so far has not been done. That afternoon, Rayburn got a call from the White House asking the House in recjord time. He worked just as hare, as if the message had come from a Democratic president. the prestige at stake and ahead of poli- Sam put the nation tics. Three weeks latelr, when the reciprocal trade bill ENGLISH WORDS OFTEN not say, "This is zll the farther I ned it through was at stake, MISUSED: Do can go.

Say, "This can go." OFTEN MIS Foregoing. Accent is as far az I 'RONOUNCED: second syllable, not the first. OFTEN MISSPELLED; Achievement; observe th ieve. Rayburn stepped down from the rostrum and personally urged the bill's passage. His personality, his prestige swung many wavering votes, won a victory for Eisenhower.

Again the nation's prestige in international relations was at stake. But taxes is purely a domestic matter. So "Mr. Sam" is frankly and personally quite peeved at Eisenhower for now accusing his leadership of playing politics. He's not only peeved, but he's in the fight to the bitter end.

Capital News Capsules Good-will President Nixon, whom I have frequently criticized, is doing a terrific job on his good-will tour of the Caribbean. Everywhere Nixon has gone he has handled himself like a veteran diplomat. Mrs. Nixon is also doing a bang-up job, visiting hospitals, orphanages, and schools, (Some Democrats say it wculd be a good idea to keep the Nixons traveling all the time.) Penny wise, pound Deputy Budget Director P.ercival Brundage suddenly has pounced on the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare for selling surplus federal hospitals and schools built in wartime by Uncle Sam to cities and states that need them desperately. Brundage claims the HEW Department charges too little.

He to 'squeeze every dollar he can out of these buildings by selling to the highest which case they would probably be torn down and sold as scrap instead of continuing to serve a vital community service. HEW and the General Services Administration are fighting back hard, but the cost-conscious Budget Bureau seems to be winning. Unsafe all the worry over government secrets and security, it's just been discovered that the government's top- secret filing cabinets are so flimsy they can be broken open within five to ten minutes. Alarmed GSA officials have put out bids for better filing the best one built can withstand a safecracker for only 19 minutes. REPORTED HEALTH TALK Treating Infant's Colic By Herman N.

Kundesen, BABIES escape attacks of colic during the first couple of months of thei Although these disappear about lives, attacks usually he third month, and apparently cause a baby no lasting harm, they are extremely uncomfortable. Usually, parents can help preven attacks and i Jiev when he does siffer from colic. The exact caus known, but there i about it. Possible Causes For instance, li ve colic is due Portraits in brought on at least some the baby's pain 2 of colic is not re some theories any doctors be- to an abdominal by underfeeding. By James J.

Metcalfe KEEP GOING, DON At eighteenyears of age you are tall and growing man. And in your home and college you doing all you can. very happy birthday, Don. good luck to you. sure you will succeed.

everything you do. know the struggles you have had. The records you have made. And we are confident that you. Will reacix the highest grade.

You honor God and country and loving family. we are proud of you because. what you try to be. bless you. son you well deserve.

AJJ compliments and cheers. And may your birthdays multiply many fruitful years. overfeeding or gis in the bowel. Others think it isually occurs in nervous, tense baaies whose mothers probably are nervous and easily upset. It migtt also be caused by some food to which your baby is sensitive.

An attack of coic can usually be recognized by the way the baby acts. He will begin to cry suddenly. He will draw up his arms and legs and then push them out vigorously. The muscles in his abdomen become stiff or -igid. Might Hold Breitfa As the infant cries, he might also hold his breath.

3oth bis face and body will become red, and his hands and feet will become cold ap-i clammy. He will stop crying for a few minutes and then begin again. Much of his suffering can probably be preven by following these simple rules: Don't feed your baby too much yr too often. However, be sure that he gets all the food he needs. Don't get him too excited, especially when he eats.

Keep Calm Be as calm as possible. Avoid all unnecessary noise and keep your home quiet and peaceful. Pick the baby up slowly and gently. Don't startle him, and don't handle him unnecessarily. Keep his room well ventilated, r-n't keep it brightly lighted.

If the baby is bothered by colic, you can relieve the acute pain if you: Give him an enema or a suppository to help him get rid of any gas in his bowel. Help him belch by holding him closely, and nearly erect, over your shoulder, thus making pressure against his abdomen. Pat him gently on his back. Place him on his stomach in his bed. Have him lie on something warm, such as a warm flannel cloth or a hot water bag partially filled with warm, not hot, water.

Be sure whatever you use is not hot enough to burn his skin. If necessary, your doctor might prescribe med'cines like atroplae which relax spasm of the stomach. Don't, however give your youngster any medicines unless ou doctor advises them. Question And Answer E.S.: What can I do to remove molds from my neck? I have one about the size of my thumb. Answer: Moles should bt removed only by a physician, preferably a skin specialist or surgeon.

Certain types moles should be left alone, arid the physician will determine whether or not removal is advisable in your case. DR. CRANE KILGALLEN'S VOICE OF BROADWAY IT Select 2nd Broadway Grapevine Mate Wisely By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE aged 43, is a very attractive widow.

"Dr. Crane, my husband was killed during World War II," she began. "He left enough insurance so my two children and I have lived comfortably ever since. "Both of them have now graduated from college, and are soon to be married. "But my life is very lonely, for when a woman has learned to live with a husband and to depend upon him for companionship ahd affection, it is doubly hard to go back to an empty apartment at night.

"For several years I have worked in a doctor's office, and six months ago I met a widower, aged 47, who is a wonderful man. "He wants me to marry him, and I should like to do so. But my son is very bitter over the idea and thinks I would loyal to his father if I were ever to marry again." Re-Marriage Problems Actually, a second marriage is a compliment to the memory of the departed husband or wife! For it indicates that the surviving mate found marriage so delightful, that he or she aspires to try it again. Poets used to laud the fact that widows or widowers would remain faithful to their dead mates and never contemplate a second marriage. That's foolish sentimentalism! The Bible tells us that God made Eve because God said: "It is not good that man should be alone.

I will make him an help meet for him" (Genesis Since God thus decreed that marriage is good for people, you widows and widowers who marry a second time' are really cary- ing out God's will. Widows, Beware But it is even more necessary that you select wisely wheii you pick your second mate, for formerly married folks have a better technique for getting proposals than do the novices. That is ably indicated by the fact that a widow can usually run circles around an unmarried woman of the same age in winning a husband. And widowers have a better understanding- of feminine psychology so they have little trouble in getting a second wife. Because of these facts, many scheming widowers, as well as widows, may hide their gold digging aims and "hook" a wealthy mate for the latter', property.

Widows whose former husbands have left them a good income, should thus be doubly careful that their second husband loves them instead of their money. Teen-Age Jealousy Mildred's plan for re-marriage, however, is based on mutual ideals and physical attraction. It is a desirable type of marriage. So her son's objection should not be allowed to stand in. its way.

Like many teen-agers, he has the youthful belief that love is a one- and-only type of experience. He thinks it is an affront to his father's memory for his mother to consider marrying again, Many young people have that false notion. But if the- dead mates of our widows and widowers could see ie great loneliness which they experience, I am-sure that a Gallup poll in heaven would produce a lopsided vote in favor of remarriage here on earth. For love is characterized by unselfishness! And re marriage should make a widow or widower happier. Therefore, the departed mates would naturally vote for such remarriage, if their own love had been of the true, unselfish sort.

So send for my "Test for Husbands enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus a dime. Use them to make sure you pick wisely. Bible Verse Withhold not thou thy tender mercies from me, 0 Lord: let thy loving kindness and thy truth continually preserve me. Psalms 40: 11. DOBO Rockefeller's upcoming trip to Europe is so hush-hush most of her friends don't know the real reason why she's going Eartfia Kitt just second death threat White House insiders will bet you that Robert Stevens' resignation as Secretary of the Army will be on President Eisenhower's desk before the end of May.

Linda Christian's refusal to return the jools given her by Bobby Schlesinger actually is a repeat performance, as a now-forgotten New York lawyer- bridge expert once prominent in the tell you Hildegarde has a new reason for singing: an oil well in Texas that will make her even richer Saint Su'bber producer of "House of Flowers," gave Pearl Bailey a three-strand pearl necklace as an extra prezzie for her contribution to the show. The new Pee Wee King record of the song "You Can't Hardly disc jockeys accompanied by a note from RCA Victor asking the boys with the microphones please not to mention the name of George Gobel, who made the phrase famous. Apparently Gobel's lawyers made a fuss about the disc. The police haven't confided this angle of the still unsolved Serge Rubinstein murder to reporters covering the case, but. they want to question several male companions of the slain financier's mother, who lived with him in his Fifth Ave.

mansion. Despite her age, she was accustomed to having younger gentlemen escort her on her visits to restaurants, and detectives believe the chaps might supply vital clues in the cause celebre. Sharman Douglas is quietly making a go of it as a "trainee" press agent in Hollywood. Her last try at a publicity career, when her father was still Ambassador to the Court of St. James's, was a flop because she got more newspaper space, than the people she was hired to ballyhoo.

The Stork Club has seen everything from balloon nights to society square dances, but a new bit arrives the week of March 14 when John Scarne offers $10,000 to any chess or checker champ who can beat him in the Teeko tournament to be held on Mr. Billingsley's premises Jet McDonald's reconciliation with Don Medford (the video director) didn't last long. He moved out New Yorkers visiting Las Vegas report you have to see it to believe it: people standing on line at 6 a.m. to see Louis Prima at the Sahara. Broadway guessing game: One of the girls involved in the Jelke case is threatening to hurl a lawsuit at an ex-attorney for the oleo heir A high-ranking member of the Russian delegation to the UN has been on a long "lost weekend" since the shift in the Kremlin.

Over vodka martinis in one East Side spot he told the bartender he's afraid he'a "washed opp." A big-time bookie soon to be released on parole will be handed a sizeable bundle of cash the moment he exits from the pokey. A YOUR I. Q. -HOW TO on 100 Uons (10 days), with a dally average as 9 or 10 correct answers rates you as a Memory Genius; 7 or 8. Very Superior; 5 or 6, Excellent; 4, Good.

Turn to the Comic lor the correct anewers. 1. In what country is Saigon? 2. Name five of the eight States whose names begin with the letter N. 3.

"The official or umpire appointed by a court to report regarding some legal controversy is known as a 4. Coney Island is located on what island? 5. Where are the Ozark Mountains? .6. Is encephalitis a medical term for seasickness, sleeping sickness, or ringworm? 7. What is "the arena of the bears and 8.

What is the name of the device used on a submarine to enable it to run its diesel engines while submerged? 9. What does the moon most strongly affect on the earth? 10. Which of these haye cloven hooves-rhorse, cow, sheep? reward from "the boys" for talk, ing so much and saying so little A night-club (and disc) singer who so far has avoided scandal is about to be hit with a paternity charge. The girl in the is "a model." Watch for this name to figure importantly on the longhair scene: Beverly Sills. She's the young American soprano rushed into the role of "Tosca" on the "Opera Cameos" telecast when Delia Rigal of the Met became ill.

tall redhead with bathing beauty signed to co-star with Jan Peerce at the Portland, Civic Opera in April and summoned by Ford Foundation executives to audition for a new opera "Omnibus" will present. She's only 24. Mary Kirk Brown, headlined playgirl of the thirties, is In a Florida hospital fighting a sad problem United. States laboratories have perfected a submarine detector described as "uncanny." The (Telephone company is working feverishly on a solution to the problem of how to make illegal wire taps impossible. reading recent yelping about the lack of privacy Bartel, the one-time "Miss America" is being wooed by a cosmetics mogul.

Albert Plaut. Broadway chorus outies, always shopping for bizarre fads, have become fascinated with a gimmick they won't be able to forget overnight. Several have made the long trip to Brooklyn to visit the tattoo parlors usually frequented by sailors, and their chums have caught the mood. The one saving note: most of the tattoos are tiny and other petite works of art, applied in spots where few will ever see them. Comedian Joey a and his wife are trying a reconciliation T.

S. Eliot has been visiting a London clinic for treatment, but intimates say it's not serious A platinum blonde currently making the rounds of the producers' offices calls herself Jean Harlow. Celeste Holm and Denise Darcel were among the stars who had fits at that Chicago benefit because so many "extra demands" were made on them. One movie belle, even more incensed, refused to appear. ETIQUETTE Q.

If It is necessary to remove a bone from the mouth while at the dinner table, should one use a fork, spoon or the napkin? A. None of these items are in good taste. Merely use the thumb and forefinger, and lay the particle on the plate. The Literary Guidepost By W. G.

Rogers CASANOVA. By Herman Kesten, translated from German by James Stern and Robert Pick. Harper. Casanova, most famous of all the men who kissed and told, was the 18th century adventurer remembered for his desperate escape from tht Venetian "Leads," his oc- charlatanry, his ings and his 100 or more mistress, es. The ladies are all here, me sisters Lucrezia and Angelica, Teresa, Christina, Henriette, "M.M." and so on.

Kesten points up Casanova's character, draws morals unobtrusively; much of his book, however, with some abridgment and the change from first to third person, comes straight out of Casanova's "Memoires." AMONG THE DAUGHTERS. By Antrna Enters. Coward MoCann. A 'beautiful American girl has grcwing-up adventures in this novel: she meets women, she meets men, she moves in and out of the world of the arts and in and out again, for this is 500 pages long. It a world Miss Enters knows at first hand, for she has been or it actress, dancer, mime, painter, sculptor and autoblographer.

But novelist she is not, if this first novel is an indication. THERE OUGHT A BE A LAW! By Fagaly and Shorten ESTERWV OF THE PRESS- DIMMWITZ AAADE LIKE A POLAR NOTHING WAS TOO COLD FOR HIS ARCTIC MICE' TODAV- TNTMEPRIVACV OF HIS BAWTH- WHAflS HAPPENED TO OIMMYS RUGGED, POLAR WIDE ALASKA THIS WttgttS NOT HOT WHAT ARC VOU TftVING TO DO TO FREEZE (SET THAT WATER'HEATgR GOING BEFORE I CATCH PNgUMQNIAf.

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About The Daily Reporter Archive

Pages Available:
194,329
Years Available:
1933-1977