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The Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • 4

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The Tribunei
Location:
Coshocton, Ohio
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Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL 29, I960 THE COSHOCTON, OHIO, TRIBUNE "It Was Awful They Behoved Like Indians" GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY EDITORIALS The Coshocton Tribune Oldsters and Youngsters The tax increasingly riages all lethal attacks on the wakens the family structure of amily ThtoMtu says: our nation. The family is based on Tte TttTS the concept of mutual parent men of our nation is a ate of nurtures the child; brother help. Perpetual suspend ed aumaua a be- brother; children care for parents causey of the draft law wtuc w.U ther fake them into the armv at the table this time, we may have the first real test of what can be achieved through a blend of firmness and flexibility. The world will watch this test with more than ordinary interest.

The confrontation will be both fateful and fascinating. no De Gaulle and the Summit By BRUCE BIOSSAT THAT President Charles de Gaulle of France views with some hope the summit conference starting in Paris in less than three weeks is surely significant For DeGaulle is neither the unyielding ramrod he once was pictured, nor the soft negotiator who would give away part of our shirts to get an agreement with the Soviet Union. He is a tough but flexible bargainer, imaginative, forceful, positive-minded in the sense that he searches constantly for solutions. He does not dwell unduly on roadblocks and other negative factors. Recently he has personally tested the mind of Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev.

Having sampled it, and knowing his own mind, he still sees real hope at the summit. Not, he makes clear, that we shall gain final solutions on disarmament or Berlin or anything else. Indeed, he appeared in Washington to suggest that Berlin, the original cause of summit talk, may be shoved into the background and allowed to drift along unsettled. What De Gaulle expects is that, most probably in the disarmament field, there will be at least the beginnings of progress, the creation of a new international atmosphere in which genuine solutions are actually possible, if not immediately attainable. Up to now such solutions have seemed terribly remote.

Obviously, to accomplish even this much the summit negotiators must get beyond the stage of mere diplomatic niceties and onto some sort of solid ground. The raw materials of agreement must be laid on the table, whether or not they are to be quickly assembled into a final product. Not every Western leader agrees with De Gaulle that this prospect is likely at the May 16 meeting. But Vice President Nixon, who himself has had some exposure to Khrushchev's mind, is one who does. And he too has a quality of toughness which does not bend easily to wistful thinking.

Neither the totally rigid nor the pliably soft negotiators have had much success in dealing with Khrushchev. With De Gaulle That's America to Them IN THESE days of cold war and propaganda battle, Americans are familiar with warnings that the so-called "American image" has become hideously distorted abroadand not infrequently through our own doing. The warnings are undoubtedly justified and warrant the concern of all citizens. But as a check to utter pessimism, a little item from the Post Office Department is worth repeating. Announcing the new 25-cent airmail stamp for mail to India, China, Australia and Africa, Assistant Postmaster General George M.

Moore explained that Abraham Lincoln's head appears on it because, in these distant parts of the world, Lincoln stands as the symbol of America to the majority of the people. This was determined in a survey conducted by the department prior to designing the stamp. For our South American neighbors, another survey found the "American image" was the Liberty Bell, so that appears on the 10-cent international airmail stamp. In the European area, most people chose the Statue of Liberty, so that is used on the 15-cent stamp. If things like this are what foreigners think about when they hear the word America, maybe it behooves Americans not to sell their country too too quickly.

The Lesser Evil REPORTS from the census takers indicate they weren't wrong in anticipating trouble over trying to learn the ages of women. Lots of them balk. Some of the head-counters get around it with a trick. They say, "All right, 111 just estimate," and mention a figure about 10 yers too old. That does it.

The correct age comes out hastily. Ah, the complexities of governing. Tight Wires in weir oia age. me income las leaves too Utile over from earnings and hrrf. working persons find it difficult to tA m.m9i f.miiv maintain a fund for normal family relationships.

Therefore, the oldsters demand government aid and the passage of morally degenerative an act as the Forand bill which recalls the campaigns of Dr. Townsend to turn the United States into a nar- cotized state of dependent people. When the government cares for people from the cradle to the grave, the individual loses not only his initiative but his dignity. It would be more provident to make it possible for those who labor to keep a fairer share of their in- come to be thrifty, to save and to provide for their old age. It would sureiy De more morai iur cuiuucu to care for their parents than to leave such care to question-asking bureaucrats who can become very harassing.

However, the current trend toward socialization eliminates the qualities of gentleness, pity, kindliness, hope. "Stand on line and be counted!" There is no freedom in that. The youngs ers have their problems, too. An actuary recently stated the case this way: illustrate: under the laws dealing with rent control, a necessity in wartime, but some thing our lawmakers neglected to abolish when the need for it no longer existed, an executive continues to live in an apartment he has occupied for the last 10 years at a frozen rent ceiling of $65 a month; whereas a young newly-married couple, of more modest means, finds that as new tenants they, must pay $165 for the same apartment in the same building. That is to say, the rent control law allows the landlord to charge his new tenant 'the law of supply and demand' rate, while the old tenant pays me raie uiai applied years aS Further, another and even more disastrous difficulty of young peo- pie was cited uncertainty, post- poned marriages, marriages while still at college, interrupted mar- Looking Back Ten Years Ago Aoril 29, 1950 Coshocton Union carpenters plan- ned to celebrate the 50th anniver- ti kk May 18 at tne American Legion nal Flovd Shafer headed a corn- JLghta JJ.fJ TjgJf iJtshnS STv' 'wLr J.L Hr2L reatlon director- A- I wenty-rive Years Ago APril "35 Coshocton had the lowest pro- prtionate total debt of any muni- cipality in the state, it was report- ed T- c- Ohio State university.

Game Warden E. A Bailey call- r.A tu. i.i.i. t. cu aircuuuu iu ure uiatu uass sea- the to reopen June 16.

Marietta high school accepted an invitation to join the Central Ohio league. Ruth Millet Thin Bundle of Good Shepherd in Beverly Hills. His father-in-law-to-be is also a singer of sorts. The kid bounded into the room and waved a kiss at Miss Sinatra, who was sewing a torn pocket for one of the boys in the act. She has a sweet face topped by hair bleached pale and she smiled back at him and bit the thread in half.

Her mother was in the living room, a petite, attractive person who is dark and friendly, and she was asking the men of the Tommy Sands act what they would like to drink, and did anyone want coffee. She keeps a homing eye on her daughter and it is obvious that she has done all the things a good mother does for a daughter. She agreed to come to Miami Beach for the Sands engagement because young Nancy wanted to be close to him. It was an import- ant booking for Tommy because he is breaking away from the The Voice of Broadway By DOROTHY KILGALLEN nor free them for fJ reer. Any propsective employer is naturally unwilling to put a young prospective employe through a training period for a career with his company when the future of such a man is so uncertain as to whether he will be drafted and rated rom the employer for nrnhahiv not r.

tum tQ the company after service, Similarly young men cannot plan theif immediate Mure-it's too un- certain under these circumstances. The natural law must released from the ghackles of such mogical nd bureaucracy, if our national and imagmation are to fuUy exploited in making further progresg The intention is lmprov the of evry indi to reduce the nower of the rich to become richer and safe guard the poor from becoming poorer. Actually the effect of socialization, nearly 30 years after the Roosevelt program was established, shows that those who possessed inherited or accumulated wealth have grown richer; the general level has gone upward but taxes and the cost of living have risen and individual debt has increased. What remains, when it is all calculated, is a life of diminishing returns for the family in sound currency and rainy day 4avings. This needs study by actuaries-such a study it has never had, so far as I know.

Great attention is being paid to the problems of the oldsters who must not be permitted to suffer but who also cannot become a drag on the community. Too little attention is being paid to the social problems of the youngsters who are the hope of the country. We get excited over their delinquencies but we fail to recognize that society has, in this generation, jealt them bad cards, particularly loading them down with debt, giving them a bad currency, wast- ing their most fruitful and creative years and bringing them into the market place at too advanced an age. This problem we ignore at our peril. From Triune Files Thirty-five Years Ago April 29, 1925 The annual West Lafayette high school commencement Friday was to mark the opening to the public of auditorium in the recently completed building.

erstown, Aug. 4-8. Betty Compson was starring in "New Lives for Old" at the Sixth st- Fiffrv Ypnrc Ann mtV A9 c- i I Six. wrloads materia to be wd the construction of the new railroad 0" Sixth nad ar' rvaW, Fj Mafcll vil, had without inrW inr th Aai nr suite me ueam oi ur. WpnrWsnn sign salesmen of Americail Workg wm meet Jn Coshoc ton the coming week for the annual convention.

Sessions were to be held at the Town and Country club. We, The Women Columbus 12. Oblo 230 Michigan At. HiMntfi i. A Chicago 1.

Dl. 8121 Euclid AT. Cleveland, Ohio SUBSCRIPTION Carrler ill nV .40 Rock 'n Roll singing and trying that, in the morning, he had three mitt' akina arrangements for The Community Chautauqua pro-to sing material that will appeal 0ffers from motion picture studios. gram was to be held in Newcom- closed. The kid has been working at.

odd jobs even as a garbage man since he was 8. Tommy's father remarried. His mother didn't. This gives the Sands something in common with the Sinatras. Mrs.

Sands worked in Foley's store in Houston, Texas, as a saleslady, and Tommy attended Lamar high school for a while. One day his mother gave the kid a $13 guitar and a book of chords. He just had to be loved, and the best way would be to entertain people. He worked as a disc jock- eVi a studio assistant, and he got on WBKB in Chicago and sang1 "The Blue-Tailed Fly." The big break came on January 30, 1957. The Kraft Theater was casting a dramatic show for tele vision.

They wanted someone to act tne part 0f a TQC vcn s-ing. er. Tommy Sands eot the cart. It was oniy a 0ne-niehter and he was not a n. nii singer, but he sang Age Crush" so well His aching ambition was to be an actor, but no one wanted him for anything but rock 'n' roll.

Tommy Sands did it did it well. He has been trying to break away from it ever since. He thinks he will make the transition this year although, as an actor, he talks too fast in a whispery, staccato way- like Cagney when he gets a busy signal. A year ago last Christmas, some friends took him to young Nancy Sinatra's Christmas party. Tommy had fun, but Miss Sinatra was in- i i.

icresieu in someone else, AU- gust, 1959 she saw his act at the Cocoanut Grove, and she hked him and he liked her. They've been "going steady" since November. This autumn they win De married, alter sands does a six-month hitch in the air force. He has met his future father-in-law a few times. They talk politely and distantly to each other.

Just a hello and a few flatted Answer to Previous Puzzte came over from nearby tables to ask for his autograph; they thought he was George Raft Model Joan Fields may be the one to persuade Art Ford to give up his bachelor status. Their LP romance began 'way back in 1953 Dick Clark's popularity with the rock roll fans remains unimpaired. He and his wife tried to sneak into the Viking Theatre in Philadelphia by a rear door, to see his movie "Because They're Young," but they were discovered arid all but caused a riot. Nobody watched the screen once his admirers had caught sight of Dick in the flesh, Julia Meade's abilities as a vocalist will be demonstrated this summer when she takes to the road in "South Pacific," playing the Mary Martin role A large Wall St, organization is dickering to recapture some of the 42nd St. movie theatres for legitimate plays.

Anyone puzzled over why Illinois Jacquet stormed off the podium at the 369th Armory the other night and refused to finish his concert? He had a sharp difference of opinion with the promoters over money, with Illinois contending they didn't give him his full fee. (Doesn't the union take care of collecting in a case like that?) Broadwayites are making bets on when the proposed Zechendorf hotel will open its doors. Their guesses wouldn't cheer Toots Shor, who is waiting impatiently to open his new restaurant in the hotel. No. Didn't know.

Would tape recordings of conversations). Lawrence Wein, who bought the Plaza for a reported $32,000,000, will put up all the money needed to bring the Princess Theatre troupe from London to the United States in the autumn. It will be the famed company's first tour of this country Some of their Broadway friends are trying to determine whether there was any connection between the recent tragic deaths of pianist Nicky De Francis and singer Beverly Kenney. Guy Lombardo presided over what must have been one of the most unusual recording sessions in history in Somerset, Mass. During a dance engagement, he recorded an album of Christmas songs some carols, a choir of 300 children from Father David Burke's St.

Patrick's Parish Church sang. When the pop songs were played, the Lombardo band was supple-" mented by the 1,000 voices of the people attending the dance. Alert observers fear "the hoodlum look" may become popular on Madison av. One of the town's top advertising executives showed up for lunch at Felix Young's Park avenue the other day attired in a light gray suit, Wick shirt and almost black tie. Several patrons JIM BISHOP Tommy Sands Is The kid came off the elevator and Into the suite of rooms like a happy matador dark, bushy-haired, grinning, as hipless as a teenage girl in the black suit and the shirt with the shirred front.

He's 22, and he earns $100,000 a year singing in places like this one the Eden Roc at Miami Beach. He's happy, and intelligent and semi-literate. He reads his own notices. His name is Tommy Sands, a thin bundle of tight wires. In November, he will marry Miss Nancy Sinatra at the Church of the BRIDGE By Oswald Jacoby Always Secure Contract First My teammate Morty Rublnow of New York recently completed some long play records for bridge instruction.

He has records for beginners, average players and advanced players. One of his points for beginners that everyone should learn is to make sure of your contract at all odds. With today's hand Morty points out that South should play the Deuce of spades from dummy at trick one and then win that first spade lead with his ace even though East has played low. Now all South has to do to make nine tricks is to cash his ace and king of diamonds and lead a spade toward dummy. The queen and NORTH 26 AQJ2 QJ1074 4864 WEST EAST A9785 K83 VK J94 V1083 832 4965 Q10 K973 SOUTH (D) A A 10 4 AQ6S AK AJ5 2 North and South vulnerable South West North East 2 NX Pass 3N.T.

Pass Pass Pass Opening lead A 5 jack of spades will constitute a sure entry for the rest of the dia mond suit and with five diamonds, two spades and two aces South will have his nine tricks for the contract. Afterwards, he can fool around with the hearts and clubs and pos sibly gather in a tenth trick but that won't be important. The main thing is that he will have made his game. CARD SENSE The bidding has been: South West North East I Pass 1 Pass You, South, hold: AQ6 5 V32 A98 AK8S4 What do you do? A Bid two spades. Don't afraid to live an immediate sinfle raise with three to ta honor.

TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner continues with a bid of two no-trump. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow THE DOCTOR SAYS Pituitary Gland Regulates Body MISS MIDNIGHT'S NOTEBOOK: Shelly Berman, one of the overworked performers in show business, just cancelled a three-week one-nighter tour on doctor's advice Johnny Mathls may witch booking agencies big news in the trade Sammy Davis Jr. has another battle on his hands. This time his enemies are the managers of a Las Vegas hotel who barred Shirley Rhodes, wife of Sammy's accompanist, from the gambling room James Roosevelt It preparing a magazine article on bis mother a companion piece to the one he wrote about FDR Audrey Hepburn didn't win an Academy Award this year but she'll earn enough to buy a pair of shoes (her favorite extravagance). Audrey's performance in "The TJnforgiven" will be rewarded with about half a million dollars of box office loot Juan Peron, the exiled dictator, is contemplating marriage A large contingent of show business celebrities including Tullulah Bank-head and Lauren Bacall will throw the weight of their popularity behind a drive to get Adlai Stevenson the Democratic nomination this summer.

They're optimistic about winning against the strong Sinatra Lawford segment of Jack Kennedy backers. The Duchess of Kent missed several engagement parties for Princess Margaret and Antony Armstrong ones because she was in Paris visiting Prince Paul of Yugoslavia and his princess Fascinating line on the cover of a May movie magazine: "Did You Know Liz Phones Debbie 4 Times a Day!" (Answer from this corner Question QWhat pseudonym was tati by Isabella Hardenburgh, the American. Negro leader? A Sojourner Truth. She took this same because she thought cf herself as a traveler preaching truth, to all she met. Who teas the first presidential candidate the Republican Party? A Jbha Fremont He waa defeated, In whose honor -is North Carolina' Mount MitcheK mamed? A Dr.

Elkha Mitchell who first measured it Boa many VS. presidents ere buried in Arlington National Cemetery? A Only one William Howard Taft. Wfto were the Sophists? ATeachers who came to ancient Athens to give instructions to language and reasoning. PRUjMjEl piAIPIAIW EAIINII 5A Bp A 5 A Apf I HE ge eDSIQIm jQ ArilAll-F OPAL TJP HAJE AT Aj ELI SLAY 1 A voc A raioi NJEIEImIt 'AHA AM AveggeHT ani.e to adults At the moment, he belongs to neither. The children who see his act cheer wildly when he satirizes Elvis Presley, and the adults shrug when he whispers "I'll Be Seeing You in All the Old Familiar Places." The kid stands in a spot- light, eyes closed, hand reaching out, foot stomping time, in the time-honored pose of his betters, His real name is Thomas Adrian Sands.

His father was a Russian, an arranger and pianist for Ted Lewis. The family lived in Chica- i tu. j. go mm, vy uie nine uic jaurci ue- cided to leave the mother, little Tommy was ready for a nervous breakdown. He had it and was helped by a psychiatrist, but, with all his self-assurance, the kid remains wound as tight as a dollar watch.

He has studied all the religions of the world, and has none. He thinks he has one in his head, but he cannot explain it. Like so many of us, he is reaching with his eyes Sports Roundup ACROSS 1 Ike's favorite sport 5 Football play 9 Beverage 12 Used in fencing 13 Region 14 Pale 61 Versifier's products DOWN 1 Obtains 2 Jewel 3 Unaspirated 4 Repels (with off) 9 Golf term IS Where football covers are processed 7 Appear 17 Same (prefix) 8 Black buck ISUsedinwin sports 19 Struck 21 Let it stand uua 10 Comfort 11 Soon 23 Tennis 18 Regard equipment SJnglng voice 24 Sailors use it 22 Made. 27 Ages 29 His sport was fiddling 32 Blackboard accessory 34 Needier 36 Til 37 Take into custody 38 Italian city 39 Mend 41 Delirium tremens (ab.) 42 Aged 44 Oceans 46 Ministers 49 Sports groups 53 High note in Guido's scale 54 Cat's competitor 56 Baseball's Maglie 67 Feminine appellation 58 Girl's nickname 59 Mineral rock 60 Observed misplay 24 Plateau XEWSPAPEni 1 12 13 14 12" is 24 25 2T IT 33" VTpT 59 Looking at Josie you think, "What a bad, irresponsible And in a way you'd be right. Josie's forgetful; lazy around the house.

Boys smirk unpleasantly when her name is mentioned. She's too casual with other people's money and has a lashing tongue with rwhich she often abuses her mother. But in another way you'd be wrong. Josie's so relentlessly purJ eued by reminders of her past mistakes that she can't help getting Involved in new ones. So You look at her mother and think, "Ah, here is the real And partly, you'd be right.

Mrs. is a merciless nagger. She's absolutely incapable of reproving Josie for late hours with-j out reminding her of the fountain pen she lost last week, the toasten she broke last month, the hole her cigarette burned in a blanket last year. But in another way, you'd be wrong. Mrs.

is so terrified of Bier husbands criticism that she has to nag Josie for exposing her (to it. So Though her eyes keep fluttering to his face in dread of his displeasure with her roast or a chUd's behavior, he offers no reassurance but enjoys her anxious suspense. you'd be wrong. The son of a desert-ttng father, Mr. has to blame his wife for all domestic mischances pecause he was taught that financial support of a wife and children Entitles a man to perfect performance from them So Turning your eyes to Mr.

M's mother, you think, "Here at last is ithe blame for Josie!" And again, you'd be right in your way. By her bitterness as a deserted wife, old Mrs. made male earn-Ung-power too important to her son. She still complains of hei struggles to raise him, making jealous contrasts between what he provides his wife and what his father failed to provide for her. Her favorite remark is, "Lou doesn't know how lucky she is!" But once more you'd be wrong in another way.

THE COSHOCTON TRIBUNE TIMES-AGE) AN IfUtrtNUENT NEWSPAPER STuwcbTlCl P09tffIC O-aoctoi Ohio, under Art of awning and Sumla, morning by The Tribune Company Member Audit Bureau of circulation and Ohio Newspaper AmoeiH, 25 War god 43 Cupolas 26 Rural poem 45 Fight 28 Bowling term 46 Mexican 30 Repose money 47 Wing-shaped 48 Face part 50 Dry 51 Horse's neck hairs 52 Health resorts 55 Coin from the Orient 31 Table scraps 33 What a yachtsman does SSOver- decorated 40 Take for granted By HAROLD T. HYMAN, M.D. If you visit tht "freaks" when the circus comes your way, you'll have a chance to learn something at first hand about the most powerful gland you possess. It's called the pituitary (pit-two-it-airy) and it's no larger than a large raisin. The pituitary is situated just back of the bridge of your nose in its own little compartment at the base of the skull.

This compartment is called the sella turcica cause it looked like a "Turkish saddle" to whomever it was who christened it. Xo authority on Turks or saddles, I'd say it looks more like a miniaturi model of an old-fashioned baby's cradle. If I were to show you a pituitary gland, you'd find it hard to believe that a disturbance of this tiny structure was all that was wrong with the circus giants, dwarfs, fat man, bearded lady and human skeleton. But that's the simple truth and I'll try to explain how this comes about The pituitary acts as a sort of controlling mechanism for almost every important activity of the body. The freaks, for example, illustrate the importance of the pituitary in the regulation of height and weight.

i The dwarf who looks like a little old man is a fellow whose pituitary growth mechanism never got into gear. The giant is a chap whose pitui tary growth either took off in high or forgot to stop when it should have stopped. The fat lady eot more than her share of the mechanism that forms blubber and the human skeleton got none at all. Now that you have some idea of what can happen when the pituitary gets out of whack, consider its miraculous normal efficiency, as it takes over during pregnancy, for example. As soon as the ripe egg is fertilized, it stops the discharge of other ripe eggs and interrupts the normal menstral cycle.

Simultaneously, it promotes the growth of 'he womb to aecomo-dae the new tenant starts construction of the placenta (afterbirth) to Join the blood streams of mother and child, stimulates the mother's breasts in preparation for milk secretion and often causes an increase in the skin oigmentation especially of the face. Later, when the time for delivery occurs, it initiates labor pains that start the newcomer on its voyage through the birth canal and arranges for the mother's blood to clot more rapidlv as a means for preserving her strength. And all the it continues to carry out its many duties that are unrelated to pregnancy. The ctcus freaks represent pituitary errors. The rest of us attest to pituitary efficiency Not a bad score for a living structure no larger than a raisin! 15 16 17 IS 19 I 0 jtl T5 Ti 15 '2F 28ST 30 31 34 35 3j 3Tw "TTm I5t 5T 55 si 617 Vine St.

ViUWUUAU. VU1W 1 fi 630 Firtn At, New Tors 20, trades yqlcniiugn BATE Of B' Per in Coshocton and Adjoining Counties One 1750 Sit Months 400 Tbx. Month. SSS On. Month IM ind ii.hl.

eV On. Tear" tbw 8tat nft Six Month. $10.00 TMonlbi 2'S2 On IM EaTKBPRISB ASSSt..

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