Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Kokomo Tribune from Kokomo, Indiana • Page 2

Location:
Kokomo, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 KOKOMO (Ind.) TRIBUNE Monday, July 5, 1954 tures in small babies and what causes them. These are inborn weakness of the muscles and other tissues which allow some of the contents of the abdomen to protrude through the weakened spot. The question which she asks on the surgical treatment of such rupture and the age in which it should be performed is not readily answered. It depends, on the location, size and some other-factors which have to be evaluated by the The Doctor Says: Kindness To Emotional Child Vital By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.

D. Written for NEA Service fae Perhaps small children are more a te advice, susceptible to developing nervious habits than human beings at any other age. When they do the situation is often likely to be made worse by the fussing of the parents over the habit and at the children Here are some examples. "My son is two years old and loves to be outside. When I put him there by himself he cries and shouts bul stops the minute I go out.

Will il hurt him to leave him in the yard and let him cry it out?" Another mother writes that she has a little girl who has had spells of holding her breath since she was a year old. It always happens when she falls or gets bumped. She has these spells on the average of once every two weeks. A final letter on this subject comes from the mother of a year-old girl. Until the age of three, the mother writes, the girl was easy to deal with; but now she finds the child is terribly frustrated, sucks her thumb and has a problem with food.

The girl is also aggressive sassy, her mother says. Probably all mothers and fathers will recognize from these typical letters experiences and worries they have had with their own chil dren. With the possible exception of the little girl who holds her breath and should be examined for some phys ical cause the probabilities are that these are all cases of nervousness in children of a perfectly normal type. Generally speaking the parents are wise if they think of jealousy of another child or lack of playmates as a couse for this kind of behavior. They can also study their own attitudes toward their children and make sure that the youngsters are confident of the parent's affection, consistency of discipline, and love, and a general lack of quarreling around the home, particularly between the parents.

If the parents can provide a happy, affectionate environment and not pay too much attention to these, emotional qualities of their young children and deal with them firmly but kindly there is a good chance that they will be outgrown. A tough question is asked by Mrs. G. who says, "When a baby falls from a chair should a doctor be called even though there are no obvious signs of injury?" I suppose all children fall and bump themselves and that 999 times out of a thousand no harm is done. Occasionally one hears of something serious resulting from what seems a minor fall and thej only thing I can say, therefore, is that one just use one's best judg- ment.

Another mother asks about rup- Opposed To Knowland's Stand WASHINGTON GB Sen. Fulbright (D-Ark) and Hep. Short (R- Mo) said Sunday they don't agree with Sen. Knowland (R-Calif) that the United States should quit the United Nations if it admits Red China to membership. Sen.

Hickenlooper (R-Iowa) said he would "seriously consider" the idea. The three gave their views on TV-radio shows in answer to questions about Knowland's statement last week that if Communist China is seated in the U.N. he would resign as Republican Senate leader and devote his efforts to getting this country out of the organization. Fulbright and Hickenlooper, members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, appeared on NBC's "American Forum of the Air." Short, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, was interviewed on NBC's "Youth Wants to Know." Short said that to admit Red China to the U.N. would be "appeasement" and would further weaken the U.S.

position and that of all the free world. And while he is "fed up" by Russia's veto of vital issues, Short said, "I want us to continue, certainly for the time, as a member of the United Nations to support it." Fulbright said the U.N., "as inadequate as it is, is the only alternative we have, now, for the long-term future, to the old policy of war at nearly every occasion there is a disagreement." Hickenlooper said the United States should use its veto to keep Red China out of the U.N. because 'there is a tremendous international morale problem involved if Red is permitted to shoot itself" into the organization. Fulbright and Hickenlooper took somewhat different views toward British Prime Minister Churchill's recent plea for a try at "peaceful coexistence" with the Russians. It is possible, Fulbright said, adding: "The only alternative is war." He said "we have co-existed this same world with them ever since there has been a Communist group." TRY A TRIBUNE WANT AD! Deaths CHOSEN South Korean Foreign 'Minister Pyun Yung Tae returned to Seoul from the Geneva Conference to find he had been approved as prime minister.

He replaces Paik Too Chin, and expects to retain his foreign ministry job. Meet For First Time In Year LOUISVILLE, Ky. dfi Looking for all the world like a little boy lost, a shy Japanese youngster popped into his mother's arms Saturday night for the first time in a year. Mrs. Yuki Spilman murmured a few words in Japanese; her son, 4, answered in Japanese, and Naoki Spilman became a little boy found.

The youngster, whose American father was killed in Korea, had come to live with his mother and foster father, T. Sgt. John W. Spilman, at Ft. Knox.

His arrival at Seattle July 1 ended a yearlong wrangle with immigration authorities. Spilman married Naoki's mother in Japan after her first husband was lulled in action in Korea. When he returned to the United States last July, Mrs. Spilman came with him. Limited immigration quotas forced Naoki to stay behind with his grandparents in Kobi, Japan.

But the American Red Cross entered the case in Naoki's behalf, and when the immigration quota was increased, Naoki came to America. An Army friend of Spilman's accompanied the boy to Seattle and the sergeant met them there. "I don't speak much Japanese," Spilman said, "and Naoki doesn't speak English, so he busied him- ielf with comic books most of the time on the train. Then when we reached Chicago, he started asking for "Mama," a clerk-typist here, was wearing Oriental dress when Naoki at the railroad I BOTTLED GAS SERVICE Nahml gu eonverledjo L.P. Senrica on LP.

Gat Approved LP. Gas Water up Approved LP. Gas $99.50 BOTTLED GAS EQUIPMENT "INSTALLED FKEE REGARDLESS OF WHERE YOU PURCHASED YOUR GAS READY-FLAME TENBROOK SALES, Inc. S24 N. Buckeye, Phone Z5489 she met station.

His big eyes brightening as he saw his mother, Naoki took her hand and peered shyly at the trains and at the people. Stolidly, like a man who has seen too much too fast. Then he hitched up his belt and HOWARD 210 Watt King St. Buy With Care! You need than a lumber list, to build that new. home or tun luccettfully and lovingly See The Howard County Lumber Company Free Estimates Easy Payments COUNTY LUMBER CO.

Jutt Off South Washington St. Phona 4115 toyed with his. squirmed. Like a hat, and little boy. he INTERESTING FACTS Special auto taxes including registration fees, tolls and excise taxes on cars, parts, gasoline and oil now produce more than 5Vt billion dollars a year says the Automobile Manufacturers Assn.

The residents of Greenland are attempting to grow trees in some sheltered locations on the island. Minks are cousins of the weasel. Church officials believe that Ship Meeting House in Hingham, built in 1861, is the oldest building in the United which has been used continuously for public worship. About 53 per cent of daily newspaper circulation of the world is Kingdom and Japan. In the most powerful atom smashers, atomic particles travel CLIFFORD OTTO TONEY GALVESTON (Tribune Area Otto Toney, 67, died at 3 a.

in his home miles southwest of Walton. He had been in poor health since suffering a stroke in January, 1950. Mr. Toney was born March 14, 1887, in Cass County, a son of William Henry and Emma (Luellen) Toney, and was married on Sept. 1910 to Miss Edith Munson.

Mr. Toney was a farmer and had resided in Cass and Miami counties all his life. He was a member of the Mt. Zion Christian Church. Surviving are the widow; one son, Max, two grandchildren, Maxann and Doug las Toney, both of Linton, two sisters, Mrs.

Elma Macy, Gal veston R. R. 1, and Miss Mary Toney, Lincoln. Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p. Tuesday, in the Thomas Funeral Home, Galveston, by the Rev.

Carlyle Me- Farland, Frankfort, assisted by Rev. Howard Smith. Burial will be in Galveston cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home any time after 12 p. m.

Monday. WYLIE COLLINS Wylie Collins, 76, Kokomo mail carrier for 31 years, died in Indianapolis at 3:15 a. m. Sunday. He had been a resident of Indianapolis for about 12 years.

Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Carrie Jane Haute; three sons, John and Robert of California; Spencer, Terre Haute; and a daughter, Mrs. Janet Wiedman, Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held Monday at 4 p. m.

at the Planner and Buchanan mortuary in Indianapolis. HANOr, Indochina' Union and Vietminh officers held their first meeting Sunday at Trung Gia, Indochina's Panmun- jom cease fire in the nearly eight- year-old Indochinese War. Trung Gia is in the center of a neutral zone about 4tt miles in diameter carved out of Vietminh- held territory 25 miles north of Hanoi. The chief rebel representative said he considered the meeting a "step forward" toward peace, while the French spokesman was Breakin Nets Thieves Truck, $400 in Tools A breakin at the J. Leach Company early Sunday netted hieves a half-ton truck and tools valued at more than $400.

Officials of the company told detectives that more merchandise may be missing pending an inventory. The intruders gained access to the building by breaking out a window in an overhead door. Apparently they loaded the tools on he back of the small truck and drove from the scene of the mrglary. Tavern Scuffle Is Mundt Plans To Introduce New farm Bill By EDWIN B. HAAKINSON IB-Lawmakers opposed to the Eisenhower program of flexible farm price supports outlined a Senate strategy Sunday they hope may reverse the setback they suffered in the House ast week.

Sen. Mundt (R-SD), a member of the Senate Agriculture Commit- tee, said he plans to substitute the and one-package House farm bill for one now pending in the Senate committee. "Then we could knock out the flexible to 90 per cent sec- ion, redefine some other points and send it on to the Senate," Ylundt said. "I think a bipartisan arm bloc there is strong enough put across 90 per cent for the lasic crops." Mundt is a member of a group that favors continuation of the jresent system of rigid supports at 90 per cent of parity. He said if his move is successful it would send the general farm bill back the House for two possible actions: 1.

A second House test on rigid versus flexible supports in an effort to overturn last week's 228170 vote in favor of a flexible system ranging between and 90 per cent of parity. 2. A Senate House compromise that would raise the lower limit of flexible supports to "somewhere aetween 82V4 and 90 per cent." This would be getting still further away from the administration request for a range of between 75 and 90 per cent. "Farm state senators know that the minimum support level will act as a floor under most farm prices in a time of surplus," Mundt said. 'If we could raise that above 82Vi States per cent would nel P-" Mundt's proposal would amount a rebellion within the Senate Agriculture Committee against the chairman, Sen.

Aiken (R-Vt), a strong supporter of the Eisen- lower flexible program. Aiken's plan is to continue work- a separate Senate bill, start- people. FOODLIIER a. m. OP- ID- let a Senate-House conference committee iron out differences between the two bills.

Warm, Pleasant On Fourth By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Warm and pleasant weather blossomed throughout the nation on its Day. Except for a sporadic shower rainbelt extending eastward from Illinois to the Middle Atlantic States, the nation basked in sunshine. Warm air sped northward through the Great Plains and Great Lakes regions, boosting mercury readings. Continuing hot weather blanketed the Southeast. Temperatures were normal for most sections west of the Mississippi River.

The West recorded Saturday's highest temperatures with Blythe, posting a 110 degree mark. DO YOU KNOW you can own a brand new '54 Chevrolet 2-door with collision, dis ability and life insurance for only $48 per month. SEE JIM WHITE CHEVROLET, Union and Sycamore, for the best deal in town. French, Vietminh Officers Meet in Indo Peace Talks Fatal To Hoosier NEW YORK (B-A man with an ndiana address died early Sunday as a result of a scuffle in a Greenwich village tavern. Follow- ng an investigation, police termed he death accidental.

The dead man was identified as Edward Francis Kerlin, A etter found in his car led authori- ies to believe his home was at Sullivan, Ind. Police said Kerlin Met William Whalen, 37, a merchant seaman, midtown Manhattan where the seaman stopped to admire Kerlin's car made in England. The two men then drove to the Old Colony restaurant in the Village where Kerlin and a patron, Colin Tuttle, 4, of Manhattan, got into a scuffle. Police said the car was regis- ered in Kerlin's name with the Hotel Belmont Plaza, Manhattan, as his address. Detectives said the man wasn't known at the hotel.

Another address found by detec- ives was 302 Hicks Brooklyn. Kerlin apparently had been hojd- ng a broken bottle during the fight and fell on it, suffering wounds of the throat and chin. He died in a il about an hour later. careful to emphasize that any final decision on a truce is up to the Geneva conference. The meeting was postponed from last Monday because of uneasiness on the put of France's Vietnamese allies over what concessions might be made to the Communist- led Vietminh.

It came after the French disclosed they were pulling out of the southern sector of the Red River Delta to strengthen defenses farther move which was denounced by Viet Nam political leaders. French Union forces under heavy rebel attack withdrew Saturday from Phu Ly, miles south of Hanoi. The conferees held a public session Sunday morning, then reconvened later in closed session at French insistence to work out an agendy. The Vietminh had been ready to call it a day after the open meeting. "Discussions on the spot always have a greater chance of being concrete and realistic," Gen.

Van Tien Dung, head of the Vietminh delegation, said. "We can say that the present meeting marks a step forward on the way toward the settlement of the Indochinese War by negotiation Col. Paul Lennuyeux, head of the French delegation, made it plain the French consider the main conference is the one at Geneva. "It is not up to us to decide the issue of the war here," he said. "It is only our business to study concrete remedies for certain painful problems of the war and how, if Geneva should so decide, an end can be made of ihe fighting locally." Eleven Die (Continued from Poge One) skirts of Evansville and hit a tree.

Mrs. Arelene Johnson, 32, of Chicago, was injured fatally Friday night in a headon crash on U.S. 231 two miles south of Hebron. Her husband, George, 32, suffered a broken back. Charles M.

Smith, 21, of State Line, a student airman at Chanute Field, 111., was killed Friday when his motorcycle and a car hit headon on U.S. 24 three miles east of Kentland. James Brewer, 33, of Gary, was killed near Olive Hill, Saturday night when his motorcycle struck a truck and then plunged over an embankment. Police said an involuntary man slaughter charge would be placed against the driver of the truck, Ralph Arlow lowen, of Dechard, Tenn. SHOP SAVE JESSE'S East Mqrklond and Bypass OPEN TODAY Monday, July 5th TIL 9:00 RM.

COLONIAL PLAN PERSONAL LOANS $25.00 To $500.00 TAKE UP TO 24 MONTHS No. 1 Service! 0 Service! COLONIAL FINANCE CO. 109Vi W. Sycamore Phone The Funds Entrusted To Our Care This Statement of the Condition of the Union Bank Trust Company, as of the close of business Wednesday, June 30, 1954, shows how the funds entrusted to us have been invested to maintain the proper protection for depositors. At the same time we keep ample cash reserve to finance the legitimate needs of the Businesses, Industries and Citizens of our Community.

DIRECTORS R. H. Blacklidge General Manager, Kokomo Tribune Pres. North Central Indiana Broadcasting Station WIOU. C.

M. Chew President Chew's Retail Grocery Chain R. S. Conrad Director Continental Steel Corp. W.

H. Deitemeyer President Treasurer Wm. H. Turner Co. Jesse A.

Dietzen President Dietzen's Bakeries, Inc. A. T. Ehrhardt Ehrhardt Drug Co. John P.

Fredrick President Dirllyte Co. of America, Inc. Director Continental Steel Corp. C. N.

Hodgin Citrus Fruit Grower B. D. Mitchell President H. L. Moulder President of The Armstrong-Landon Co.

G. L. Rathel Retired E. B. Seaward fc Vice-President Guy Wilson Farmer and Member Board of Trustees, Purdue University.

Mark Zimmerer Vice-Pres. 4 Gen. Mgr. Kingston Products Corp. Statement of Condition At Close of Business, Wednesday, June 30, 1954 RESOURCES Cash and Due from Banks.

5,928,567.75 U. S. Government Securities. 10,500,913.72 Other Bonds and Securities. 1,759,767.81 Federal Reserve Bank Stock.

Loans and Discounts Mortgage Loans Overdrafts Banking Premises (Main Office and Markland Ave. Branch) Furniture and Fixtures (Main Office and Markland Ave. Branch) Accrued Interest and Other Resources Trust Securities $18,189,249.28 30,000.00 4,030,964.03 1,969,893.34 319.52 211,521.81 49,275.83 155,958.55 $24,637,182.36 1,381,514.81 $26,018,697.17 LIABILITIES CAPITAL FUNDS: Capital $500,000.00 Surplus 500,000.00 Undivided Profits 287,198.81 Deposits Dividend Payable July 1, 1954 Accrued Interest, Taxes, Reserves, etc Unearned Discount 1,287,198.81 23,039,576.94 15,000.00 183,522.48 111,834.13 Trust Investments $24,637,182.36 1,381,514.81 $26,018,697.17 OFFICERS B. D. Mitchell, Pretident I.

8. Seaward, 1. K. Billingi, Vice-Pretidenf Roy E. Harper, Secretary-Trull Officer Clyde R.

Hill, Cathier I Secretary W. Wagner, Auditor Au'l Cathier Claude E. Love, Mgr. Branch Bonk ft Asi't Coihitr Dalloi Andrewi, Atiittant Cathier A. J.

Barlhelemy. Attittanl Cathier P. R. Giveni, Cothier J. A.

Aniilont Cathier Forett Zehring, Auittant Cath'ier John F. McCann, Mgr. Insurance Dept. Floyd McElwee, Mgr. Farm Service Dept.

UNION BANK TRUST COMPANY KOKOMO, INDIANA MAIN OFFICE MAIN AT MULBERRY BRANCH BANK MARKLAND AT BELL Member Federal Reserve System and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Kokomo Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
579,711
Years Available:
1868-1999