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Standard-Speaker from Hazleton, Pennsylvania • 8

Publication:
Standard-Speakeri
Location:
Hazleton, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ruth Millelt STANDARD NO SINGING, TEAKETTLE! SENTINEL You Are Chief Architect Of 'Good Neighbor1 Policy bUHWlM IIU Ki north Wromlm lutwtna Itwphon OLaditont l-MM PutuunM tt Moral, tlrn uli MolldM Don't gossip with one neighbor iht tfeM mII lt Month (1 I rl a. Otrtttucl (gtirK uMrnptlont Wall I OWNEM AND PCBUBHKRa rrn Hr rRA.N L8ER VANAOiNO CU1TOH Jtl Hiu twond cluw car 1 Morula tn.M MonlhJ MM 44 Orntrtl AdvartMlni Oillunn-utUiHi In. II Cut 4tn SUM Mr York T. LSII 8t ChlrifO 111. Mnrri nnl mint Philadelphia Pa Utmwi Audit Burn ef ctrrulatlara UfmMt AMorlittd P'W Tr Ajuaclkted rM I tntttled to Irt uM for rrpurmmTldn of all th tortl rrn pnmpd In Mil nfvtpBpar.

ll II AP nrir dttrwtrhea THURSDAY, JULY 28, I960 When you move Into a new neighborhood or a new town: Don't low-rate neighbors yo.u left behind or your new neighbors will surmise that you, yourself, may be pretty hard to get along with. Pitch in and try to get your yard looking as trim as those of your neighbors. If your yard is an eyesore on the block you can't expect neighbors not to raise their eyebrows. Make up your mind that you are going to live in peace with your neighbors. You won't, for long, if you start complaining about children, dogs, or noise.

You can't live on an average-size lot and have the privacy of a walled in estate. Bo sure to return the calls of those who call on you whether you are especially congenial or not. Returning a call is simple courtesy. You can then let the acquaintanceship remain just that, if you want to. Dr.

Ilyman gays: PAGE 8 TNcvcr ak for tomorrow: it Is you wait, never doubting, you enough that divine Love is an ever-present help; nd if will have all you need every moment. Mary Itaker Eddy Beware of Products Sold As Cures for Arthritis Talking of Growth Revised government estimates set record highs of 182 billion for nation production and $400 billion for national income of 195ft. They also forecast a gain in total production of 9 per cent over 1958. With the political debate centered on the economic growth at 5 per cent as the figure that is needed to keep the national economy healthy and strong, this 9 per cent growth in the national production indicates that the growth factor is greater than has been known. True, the gross national product, or dollar value of all goods and services prodiicVd, is not a true gauge of economic growth.

But a 9 per cent rise leaves a lot of leeway for the needed adjustments. U. S. Air Travel More passengers, mail, express and freight were carried by United States air lines last year than at any time since air service began, but profits remained static because increases in expenses exceeded increased revenues. Average passenger fare increased three-fourths of a cent per mile, while other public transportation prices rose 61 per cent in the last decade.

Air travel has established itself through service and restraint in prices. Anti-Red Federation Premier Moise Tshombe, who took Katanga Province out of the new Congo lie-public, has called for a federatioi of anti-communist states, charging the government of Premier Patrice Lumumba is communist. The provincial legislature seceded from the republic, detained the Negro commander of the Congo army, then expelled him from the province, to show its contempt for the central government. Tshom-be's Katanga Province has most of the Congo's mineral riches. Its loss would be a serious blow to the ecoiiomy of the new re-.

public. The Right To Know interpreting The News Ik Claims More People. Respect U. S. Than Soviet A Public Affairs Pamphlet that deals with "The Arthritis Hoax" provides these warnings for the 11,000,000 rheumatics who collectively spend more than a year for worthless and expensive "misrepresented drugs, devices and treatments." Beware of any drug or device which claims more than "temporary relief for the minor symptoms of arthritis." Be aware that even in many products advertising "temporary relief" that this relief is usually provided by aspirin or an aspirin-like ingredient that can be purchased as such at a fraction of the cost of the glamorized product.

Check any product, before you buy it, with your family doctor, your county medical society or the local chapter of the Arthritis and Rheumatism Foundation. Remember.ihat just because a remedy has not been driven off the market by legal action does not mean its claims are justified. Many promoters hold off the government for "years in long court battles while they" reap profits on a worthless product. Avoid advertised "arthritis cures." Remember a real cure for arthritis has not yet been found. By a happy coincidence, this pamphlet reached me in the same mail that brought an enlightening report dealing with a comparison between the proper Free Towing And Ambulances Mounting highway accidents have brought a new county service in Cook County, Illinois.

Sheriff Frank Sain is instituting free towing: and ambulance service in highway accidents in the unincorporated areas of the county, on advise of the State's Attorney that it would be legal for the sheriff's office to provide such service. The sheriff hopes the new towing and ambulance 'service will eliminate a lot of annoyance and expense for the public in accident cases. Trucks will tow the cars to the nearest of the sheriff's three district police offices. From there, the owner will have to make his own arrangements. Complete ambulance service, with first aid in emergencies, will be expanded through numerous suburban fire departments.

The' plan should fill a real need, one that exists throughout the land. Youngest First Lady Should Senator Kennedy be elected President, his wife, Jacqueline, will not be the youngest First Lady in American h'istory. She will be 31 on July 31. Frances Folsoni was 21 when she married President Grover Cleveland June 2, 1886. President John Tyler's wife, Julia, was only 24 when her husband became chief executive in 1841.

Also, Mrs. Tyler was a Catholic, so that Mrs. Kennedy would not be the first Catholic First Lady, either. Underground Ulasts In the two years starting the first of this month, the United States plans eleven small nuclear underground explosfons and possibly as many as twenty-one subsurface blasts of conventional explosions to improve methods for. detecting underground explosions.

The aim is to detect sneak underground nuclear tests and to develop such peaceful uses as the possibility of digging canals, diverting rivers for irrigation and opening up new natural resources. They' mark a resumption of nuclear tests, suspended in 1958, since negotiations to limit tests were sabotaged by Soviet objections. Profitable Convention Los Angeles' investment of $500,000 to bring the Democratic convention to that city paid off. ft counted a return of more than $7 million spent by delegates and others on hotel accomodations, amusements and miscellany. Chicago, which is more used to national political conventions, hopes to do as well or better out of its investment in the Republican show this week.

Whon everything seems topsy-turvy to you, maybe all you really need is a new slant. By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Press News Analyst President "Eisenhower was expressing a belief rather than making a serious, proposal when he suggested a world, plebiscite in which people might choose between communism and free society, i He was making the claim' that more people respect the United Slates than the Soviet 'Union. He's probably right.

There's no way of finding out. The Communists are in sufficiently firm control of enough people to make the thought of a free plebiscite fantastic. The question is, would he be safe in issuing the challenge 10, 20, or 50 years from now? Backing away from old concepts of war, although using military power for blackmail where-ever that is practicable, the Communists have boldly attacked the free" world at the point of its greatest pride and strength, its economic system. Though not renouncing the Soviet tradition of aggressive expansionism, the Reds have thus been forced by a military stand-, off to revert to the oldest line of marxism. In such a situation, the greatest counlerforce available to the free world is only just.

beginning to stir in awareness. Free'tviter- prise itself, the real target of the-Communists, has been standing back behind governmental ma- So They Say Acting Career Cured Her Case of Jitters about another. If you do, you will be in the middle of a neighborhood squabble. If there is a gossip in the neighborhood, try to stay clear of her. Return any favors done by neighbors'.

It takes very little effort to cut a basket of flowers for a friendly neighbor, or to take over a plate of home-baked cookies, or'to offer to market for a neighbor who is ill. If you get in any car pools, be sure to do your part. Be on time so that the other mothers can rely on you; The car pooler who is always begging off when it is her turn to drive, or who is late picking up the children, can throw a whole car pool into a dither. Always have a friendly greeting for neighbors ypu know only by sight. It's not hard to fit into a new neighborhood if you know how to be a good neighbor.

ties of plain aspirin (acctylsall-cylic acid) and combinations of aspirin with buffering agents. In this report from the School of Pharmacy of the University of Buffalo (Drs. Gerhard Levy and Barbara Hayes), product-to-product differences in the speed of action and the amount of stomach irritation are attributed to the rate at which the tablet dissolves in the stomach rather than to the form in which it existed when swallowed. In practical terms, this means that if you swallow a whole tablet of aspirin or any aspirinlike product (buffered or otherwise), at a time when your stomach is empty and without fluid, the delicate lining of your stomach may be irritated. (producing nausea and perhaps vomiting), and solution of the tablet will be delayed as a result of which you wili not derive the rapid relief of pain you hoped to experience.

Stated positively, if you desire minimum irritation and maximum effectiveness, you must powder or chew the. ordinary, inexpensive 5-grain tablet and wash it down with at least a glass or a cup of fluid after you have eaten the aspirin. When Drs. Levy and Hayes administered the vari6us forms of pspirin in this way, they observed "no product-to-product differences" between inexpensive and glamorized preparations. Broadway's "The Solid Gold Cadillac" might help her end her public trembling.

Betsy tried out, but when the producer told her the job was hers, she said: "Thank you, I don't want it. I was just auditioning for the experience." And she walked off the stage back ot her advertising agency, still a victim of jitters. The producer and three agents called her and asked her to reconsider. "I didn't know anything about the theater," Betsy remembers, "but I knew when I had a good business deal on my hands. I told the producers I would take the salary." They did, and Miss Jones-Moreland took to the stage.

She was so busy concentrating on the shaking knees during her first performance, she says, that when a wire overhead broke and a curtain' fell at her feet. She lost not a word of her lines. When the show went on the road, she wheedled another concession from her bosses. She was free to leave the company when it reached Los Angeles. That was several years Her last two screen performances have given the no longer jittery Miss Jones-Moreland star billing.

Barbs Prices what they arc, it no cinch for people to laugh at their own expense. A Nebraska man was caught by police when he was heading for home in a stolen car. The Mrs. can expect him in about three months. Some men have a suit for every day in the week which is okay if they cp it pressed.

Mavbe-some women are cm-ployed in banks because they're naturally good tellers. r- A Thought And they stood up in their place and read fro.n the book of the law of the Lord tJveir God for a fourth of the day: for another fourth of it they made confession and worshipped the Lord their God. Nehemiah 9 3. mu-t not forget to keep worship at l.te heart of L'e Henry T. Hadkin.

MANNERS MARE FRIENDS Children and should not be aUowd to us the rhone for 2a or Vi minutes at a tirr, in fairness ta the adlu is bvtj fair.Jics. Each period in history brings its call for supreme human effort. At times in the past it took the form -of war. Today it takes the form of social evolution or revolution. The United.

States will not, cannot stand aloof. President Eisenhower. This is the first time I have felt really free (Cuba) represents more democracy and more Christianity than all the churches in the United States put together. North Carolina Negro leader Robert Williams, back from visit to Cuba. That's what he thinks.

-White House press setjetary James Ilag-erty, to Nikita Khrushchev's assertion that the Monroe Doctrine was dead. Lawman at Home in Pulpit Or When on Patrol Duty Comparsion of Party Conventions More than 80 different istatutes, executive orders and regulations that federal officials, to withhold or restrict the disclosure of information to the public or press overlap so badly, that no one really knows just what authority they actually have to withhold anything from anybody or to disclose anything to anybody. That finding of a Senate subcommittee on Constitutional rights upheld the clamor of the press against secrecy in government. Senator Thomas C. Hen-nings Missouri Democrat, who filed the report as chairman, urged passage of comprehensive "right-to-know" legislation to bring order out of this chaps.

Such a law might serve also a model to the states. Eleven have no laws on inspection of public records Maine, Maryland, Mississippi, New Jersey, Ohio, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas, Vermont, Washington and Wyoming. The other 39 sfates vary in their laws or court interpretations. An overall legislative approach would go a long way to create greater confidence in our democratic process. Congo Birth I Pangs Prompt United Nations action has probably saved the new Congo Republic from utter collapse less than a month after it received its independence from Premier Patrice Lu- mumba, 36-year-old ex-mail clerk whose regime was discredited by mutinies of his troops, will almost certainly have to call new elections.

It was Lumumba who threatened to call on the Soviet Union to intervene if United Nations' forces did not replace Belgian troops, who were protecting white settrers threatened by the mutineers. Though his opponents call -Lumumba a communist, he is regarded rather as an opportunist, whose threat of Soviet intervention was more to save his own regime than the independence of his country. Premier Khrushchev's scheme to use the Congo mutiny to establish a communist beachhead in deepest Africa was thwarted by the prompt United Nations dispatch of African troops to the Congo. The United States simply supplied air lifts that brought these troops quickly to their posts. The fact that African countries sent their battalions to restore order showed their mistrust of th Soviet, their desire to keep communism away from the Dark Continent, and their faith in the United Nations to settle their troubles as they emerge from colonialism into full sovereignty.

Questions And Answers What is th distinction between an heir apparent an an heir presumptive to th British throne? A Th btir apparent is one who has legal right of succession if he outlives th king or queen who holds the throne. An heir presumptive is on who could ucced to the throne only if there is no bir apparent. Where did th accident occur inspired the famous- I ballad Wreck of the Old 97" A Danville. on Sept. 27, 1SM3.

LITTLE LIZ SAYS Alimony is what a woman charges for cam dropping. neuver and military deterrence. A hint of what free enterprise, might accomplish has come from the Congo, where a contract promising development monqy whether it is ever implemented or not completely changed the tune of a premier who had been flirting with the Soviet Union. A hint of what the Soviet economic drive might accomplish has spread through the free world oil industry. One company has been driven out of Ethiopia by Soviet dumping, others may follow, and all face serious price-cutting trouble in India.

As the Communist economy progresses toward maturity, these and similar methods will produce threats in other fields. By them, the Communists seek to establish economic and then political dependence. Their economic capacity is under central control, a weapon which can be directed at will against free world weak points, and especially against the independence of fledgling countries. Until-free economies are mobilized so they also can bring to bear their full strength, Communist expansion which began after World War II will continue, If they are, then another president, in the year 2,000, may be justified in iterating the Eisenhower head, studying the Bible and preparing next Sunday's sermon with a stack of "wanted" posters nearby. Coker is not an ordained minister.

Ordination is not required in the Church of Christ. However, he has been "a student of the Bible for 35 years and studied for sometime under the guidance of a minister in West Texas. He often calls on his experience as a law officer to drive home a point from the pulpit and uses his minister's sympathy in aiding minor lawbreakers. Coker likes to quote from Romans 13 as justification for his dual role: "For he is a minister of God to Thee for good. But if thou do that which is evil be afraid, for He bcareth not the swor.d in.

vain; for he is a minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil." By Galbraith isn't ery chummy! I don't rrtt any more!" By ARTHUR EDSON CHICAGO (P This Republican convention has trudged on long enough now to compare it with the Democratic show two weeks ago, and it lines up like this: 1 The Democrats were a little duller than expected, for that grand fight to stop Sen. John F. Kennedy petered out without anyone laying a glove on him. The Republicans, who never expected any fuss, have been a little zippier than anticipated. What you have preferred probably depends on which party you like.

But both have struggled hard to keep things moving. Maybe a little too hard. So in Los Angeles Democrats kept hammering away about how these are the times that demand political greatness, whereupon would get a chance to se a Hollywood star. And the Republicans, about to Listening to Nixon talk, talk, talk it's, obvious he can do little but repeat himself. Worse, as he himself once said, when he becomes tired, he has trouble winding up an answer, and like anyone else in such conditions' has a tendency' to ramble.

During one interview Nixon said cheerfully: "We wouldn't feel at home without a mike in front of us." The intimate touches that the modern approach brings may add something to the story. Would you like to know what Nixon had to say when he met with Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York? Nixon beamed broadly and said: "Well. I see we both have on those light suits today." Republicans are agreed on almost everything in Chicago, including the proper sartorial equipment.

Inferior Goods "If this had licen properly in HOLLYWOOD (JP) Betsy Jones-Moreland switched from advertising to acting to cure a case of jitters. "A complete panic seized me whenever I had to talk before any group," she says, "even if it was only a handful of fellow workers." An actress friend in New York persuaded her that a stage role like the one then available in 50 Years Ago News was received here today from Philadelphia to the effect that Dr. Edward G. Heyer and Dr. Richard Roderick, both of this city, passed the recent state examinations with excellent marks.

They graduated in June from the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Heyer has not yet decided where he will locate. Dr. Roderick is one of the assistants at the State Hospital.

Thomas Ward, of South Wyoming street, a former Hazle township school teacher, has entered the employ of the Jeanes-ville Iron Works in a clerical capacity. James Mooney, a former dancing master in this city, has entered the employ of the same firm as a machinist. John Kidd, of Weatherly, last night for $500 bought from the old Driving Park Association its race track back of the town. He will raise mushrooms, on it. About 10.000 feet of overhead cable has been received by the Bell Telephone Co.

here for the improvement of its surface. The wires that are tobe put underground have not yet been shipped. An auto belonging to som recta nd parties was stalled on the Church street hill this morn ing due to the bursting of a tire. The incident drew a large crowd to the scene. The kissing bug.

which was a pest throughout the noMhea stern of the state several years a so. has made its reappearance. Th bug get its name from the preference it has for the lips of its victims. It is said that young ladies are more liable to be bitten than men. The bug is said to be very discriminating and has an ey for beauty.

It is about the same-size as a mosquito, but to what species of lowr life it has not yet been exactly figured out. Attorneys John Sharpies and L. -O. Emmrnch. of this city, and Dr.

F. M. Brundage. of Con-ynsham. wrnt to Sugarloaf township today to vtw the site of a prrpod new bridge to be built across th Panther Creek.

Th bridge ill be made bf steel and concrete. W1LLCOX, Ariz. (AP) Six days a week Sid Coker buckles on his .38 caliber revolver and patrols the streets of this small southeastern Arizona community as a deputy sheriff. On Sunday, he hangs up his gunbelt and steps into the pulpit at the Church of Christ. Coker, 59, has been serving the Lord and the law for three years.

He says there is no conflict between "the cross and the badge." "You see," Coker adds, "a deputy is in a 'good position to help people, being on call to wherever trouble may' be." Many a night Coker has been summoned to minister to the sick and the troubled. He makes such pastoral calls in his cowboy boots and with his pistol jutting from the holster at his side. A common sight in the small sheriff's office is Coker, his western hat pushed back on his Side Glances "Two sacks of popcorn bIitv ycu lov East Germans Campaign Against present the soon-to-retire President of the United States, had a lady whose voice was high and whose neckline was low, sing: "After You've Gone." It's the President who has been the real show stopper so far. Who could have foreseen that Dwight D. Eisenhower would be given such a wild and warm welcome to Chicago? Naturally the key figure all week has been the heir-apparent.

Vice President Richard M. Nixon. Nixon has promised he wili be the hardest working candidate in history, and his start here indicates he will live up to it. He shakes hands constantly, talks to delegates constantly, gives interviews constantly. From a reporter's viewpoint, this accessibility is wonderful.

From his own viewpoint, it may not be so good. There's a limit to what any man has to say that is fresh. may be weeks before washboards are on sale again. So far the Communist countries have not been able to produce goods to meet demand. Thi situation is due for a change as the Communists devote more effort to making con-sun, er goods, but it hasn't changed much tt.

Plenty of girl are glad to put out half a w-ek' ra for a iNaJ but Eiily colored ravon umbrella. They may draw the line, though, if it lets in the ram. This i what the exhibitors are trving to pn across, with the irtca of sham.rx people into doing ttw-ir work with more care It's an hill f.tht. Ttv ma.n job in a Communist rv plant i to th norm" 1- put out a present! number cf prr da are low. awl if th staff ovtT th r.orm it tt a bor.bv This for irspcUr.

t-o most eas they pr-f r. to kt poor quaii'y mork t. ral.Vr thaa fL-k hSA.z.g tp prodjcU-ja. By CARL HARTM AN BERLIN An umbrella full of holes, a washboard that tears clothes, a photo fla-h that only Cashes once in a while these are some of the items on display at an aunusual exhibit in Communist East Berlin. It' called "Miss Quahty er-us Mr.

Junk" and it's put on by one of the big retail chain. Th- flea is to improve the -quality of goods ot'erd to tn public. How much filed it will have is problematical. It is housd in a mall shop on the once th Communist' architectural jvhow piece but now som-what otitmod-d Lot of porl look into th shop windows, but not many go ini. Th problem of quality has Ion bffd Communist kadcrs.

In th capitalist West, quality is Vrpt tip by co tr. pe tit ion If a shop of f-r a washboard full of plm-Irrv th bujer MmtUre In a Coinmursis! ettn.T tatc re to go. It spected." says a typewritten notice about the umbrella, "it would never have been offered for sale." A lot of the official notices pinned near the samp'es of "junk" are in the same vein. When ou wrap floor wax in paper, on points out. the paper.

Eel unpleasantly greasy and the wax dries out. "Wh label thi. 'new' pin-ach" is th question about some rather nasty looking chopped up stuff in a bottle. Anyone can se that it's old. One show case full of porcelain war carries th sign- "This i what rjct using taluah! raw materials and costly labor to turn out trash." It contains some real horrors a lamp in th shape cf a squirrel, another that looks l.k a oTJpckf r.

a eh-af dor group I foxes with a sto.cn jro. Products thos ar of 'the riarkct luroi period n.h b.ifcy art." the nyt. fc,.

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About Standard-Speaker Archive

Pages Available:
1,357,385
Years Available:
1889-2024