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The Times Recorder from Zanesville, Ohio • 4

The Times Recorder du lieu suivant : Zanesville, Ohio • 4

Lieu:
Zanesville, Ohio
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itary is old all! I is it's chance small by "Tranquilizer" Tablets? These Days By GEORGE SOKOLSKY In the Lanza Case public officials placed a microphone in a cell and listened into the conversation of a prisoner and his counsel, an act that is clearly unconstitutional and against which all bar associations ought 1 to protest if they are not too timid to raise their voices in defense of the Constitution. When law-enforcement officers violate the law they are as guilty as the worst offender and ought not to be protected. It ought to be made clear who picked Frank Costello's pocket and why. It is not important to defend Lanza or Costello; it is important to preserve constitutional rights. Law enforcement grows increasingly more difficult, as crime becomes more businesslike and 1 complicated, more thoroughly organized and more protected by the law.

For be it known that just as the law-enforcement agencies seek legislation to prevent and put down crime, SO do the forces of organized crime find means to use the law advantageously and there are lawyers and courts to protect them. In such a case as the one now pending against Frank Costello, the situation actually is this: Costello was in the lobby of his own apartment house, engaged in no criminal activity, but like the honest burglar, was returning to his domicile from a public restaurant, whereupon 8 punk walked up to him and sought to kill him but failed in the attempt. Costello was taken to a hospital where it was found that he was suffering from 8 slight scalp wound which was soon mended. He was interrogated by the police but chose silence. Some time during the interrogation, the police came into possession of a slip of paper which to them and other experts indicated that Costello was engaged in gambling.

Because he would not explain to law officers or to a grand jury, he was arrested on the charge of contempt of court. All of this is normal except the piece of paper is his property and upon it the law-enforcement agencies can only act by due process. The punk who tried to kill Costello is either free or dead, but Costello is in jail for being shot at. Interpreting The News By WILLIAM L. RYAN Some of the queens' horses and some of the queen's men are restoring some of Britain's influence in the Middle east after her humpty dumpty act of last fall.

The return of the British to the councils of the Baghdad alliance, following a period of quite ostracism because of the Egyptian fiasco, is evidence that some of the side effects of the crisis are shaking down. This coincides with broadened American participation in the pact's affairs, and enhances a new link being formed between the West and some of the Arab states. Iraq, a member of the Alliance, is now involved in the process of tightening her connections with kindred Jordan and with Saudi Arabia as an anti-Communist bloc within the Arab league. Indeed, Saudi Arabia and have become, along with the United States, the chief guarantors of weak Jordan's identity. As Britain returned to the pact councils at a meeting of the economic committee in Pakistan the United States arrived for her first formal participation, Although not a member of the Alliance, the United States joined the economic committee last year, and recently joined the milcommittee, which makes her just about as active in the pact as any of the formal members.

It has been said that Frank Costello is to a degree, possibly to a startling degree, a creature of newspapermen, particularly those in New York who have attributed to him the wisdom of Solomon and the depravity of Bill Sikes, Well, everything can be attributed to newspapermen as it is to Frank Costello, but it may also be said that where there is smoke, there must be fire. Crime exists in all big cities throughout the world and what is crime in one place is not crime in another, as the determination as to what is a crime is an act of legislation. For instance, in New York City it is a crime to gamble but not to speculate. Those who engage in bet taking are criminals, but those who publish odds and provide tips for the bettors and the bettors themselves are not criminals. Or, to take another instance, it is lawful to ruin a man's business by surrounding it with a shouting, shrieking picket line but it is illegal to ruin his business by defaming his character or ridiculing his product.

If all the laws. on the statute book were vigorously enforced, it is probable that the people would rise up against the tyranny; on the other hand, crime flourishes best when public officials permit the criminals to move within certain margins. It is unquestionably true no city is wide open without official conthat, sent and connivance. It may also be that public opinion is apathetic and regards the law as an instrument of power rather than of social benefit. Frank Costello has become the stereotype of criminal activity, of the present period.

The probability is that public opinion is 10 or even 20 years behind the fact: that whatever Frank Costello has done, apart from income tax evasion and gambling, was committed long ago that the so statute of limitations has long since run. At any rate, the law has come up only with income tax evasion which, while it is wrong not unpopular, and contempt of court which in his particular instance does not move public opinion against him. The two great Western allies have made economic development of the area-Pakistan, Iran, Iraq and Turkey the first order of their new business with the other pact members. They have agreed the plan with an initial $18,000,000, of which Britain will contribute about one third. Iraq, already under development with the money she gets from European oil interests especially British, will thus be further strengthened for her role as a stabilizing influence in the Middle East.

At least that's a part of the general idea. Iraq, Jordan and Saudi Arabia are being very particular not to let their new position create a break with Communist-tolerating Syria and Egypt. Iraq still maintains her military alliance with these countries, and her determination to resist any Israeli expansion. That is the one point where there has been no deviation from policy by the five countries. The new links and new postures, therefore, do not mean an approach to the Middle East Alliance which Britain and the United States envisioned some years ago, pre-Nasser, Any increased cohesiveness and stability even in a limited area is, however, important to the anti-Communist containment program.

SWEETIE PIE By Nadine Seltzer 88 5.20 T.M. Reg. U.S. Pat. Off, 1957 by NEA Service, Ins.

you want my brain to wear out?" Washington Scene The Times Recorder ORVILLE R. LITTICK President and General Manager 1941-1953 Republican Newspaper 34 South Fourth Phone GL 2-4561 CLAY LITTICK, Publisher WILLIAM O. LITTICK, Business Manager VALLE COTTER, City Editor JOE RATHBUN, News Editor Subscription by, carrier, by mail (payable in advance) Ohio, 12 weeks 6 months $4.00, one year $7.50. New mail subscriptions not accepted in territory served newspaperboys. Outside Ohio weeks $1.25 six months $7.50, one vear $15.00, Special Service Men's rate: six months 84.00, one year $7.50 (transferred anywhere, anytime).

NATIONAL, ADVERTISING- John W. Cullen Company, New York, Chicago, Cleveland and Cincinnati. Entered as Second Class Matter July 2, 1890 at the Post Office at Zanesville, Ohio under the Act of March 8, 1879, Front Page Stuff For the half million Americans who are custodians of active peptic ulcers, we have news that will be more important than any revelations they are likely to hear on evident the missiles, leadership the of peccadillos labor of unions. their favorite entertainers Word from Canada, where it has been achieving spectacular results for the past 28 months, (and from Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Italy, where it has been acclaimed even longer) is seeping through to US physicians about a radically new remedy that is healing ulcers in ten to 30 days. This new preparation, called Exul, represents the first new approach to the ulcer mystery in the past 40 years.

It proceeds on the entirely new theory that peptic ulcers are The traditional treatment calls for decreasing secretion caused by dietary deficiency rather than by hyperof acid digestive juices and neutralizing them so that the ulcer may have an opportunity of healing itself, In prescribing Exul, the doctor is his patient a nutritive substance which speeds the healing process without interfering with the gastric secretion. Thus, the typical ulcer pains are not immediately relieved, but they grow less and are usually gone after a few days treatment. Healing is accomplished in the normal acid environment and usually, we are told, in from ten to 20 days! For more information, you'll have to ask your doctor, since we don't want to get into a medical discussion over our head. In fact you'll have to ask him anyway since the only way you can get Exul is through his prescription. With all due respect to the "wonder" drugs, this preparation seems more on the order of a miracle.

To anyone who ever sweated through the tedious uncertainty of has the oldfashioned treatment, this story is going to be hard to believe. But it is presented, rather for the benefit of those who are still hurting. The Office Cat Young Zanesville Wife My husband is so puritanical. He doesn't believe in theaters, dancing, cards, or any of the modern forms of amusement. Why, he even asks me if he may kiss me goodnight.

Best Friend Indeed! But remember, my dear, you took him for better or worse. Young Wife I know, but I can't help thinking how much better it would be if he were worse! Gullibles Travels The longest trip I ever took Was that one down the aisle, When new shoes squeaked at every step And people turned to smile. P. H. S.

She Do you men like girls who neck better than the others? He What others? Notice workman desiring to attend the funeral of a near relative must notify the foreman before ten a.m., on the day of the game." Questions And Answers Q. Can plankton swim? P.G. A. No. The sea's tiniest organic life cannot swim, but simply drifts.

The tiny organisms are equipped with many different kinds of water wings to prevent their sinking. The name plankton is from the Greek word for wandering Q. Can bodily fatigue affect eyesight even if the eyes themselves are not overstrained? B. T. A.

Yes. General fatigue and nervous tension have decided effect on the eyes. There are six muscles which move the eyeball, and nervous strain can cause these muscles to tighten up. pull unevenly, and press the eyeball out of shape. This results in blurred vision and further nervous and muscular strain in an attempt to see as well as usual.

Q. When was SHAEF organized and when disbanded? D. W. A. Dwight Eisenhower's book, "Crusade in Europe," details the organization of SHAEF (Supreme Headquarters, Allied Expeditionary Force) after his return to London in January 1943.

The establishment was officially dissolved by General Eisenhower in July, 1945 SHAEF directed the Allied western offensive against Germany, The military personnel of SHAEF consisted of representatives of Great Britain, France, and the United States, commanded by General Eisenhower, Q. What is rinderpest disease? T. I. A. It is an acute, highly infectious disease of cattle (sometimes of sheep and goats) which occurs in parts of Asia and Africa but which has not yet appeared in the United States.

Caused by a virus, it produces a diphtheric inflammation of the nucous membranes, especially of the intestines, and kills from 90 to 100 per cent of the cattie it infects. There are several relatively new mucosal cattle diseases in this country which seem to have a clinical resemblance to rinderpest. Rainy Day Entertainment Do you ever rack your brains for things the children can do on a rainy day? Our 32-page booklet PUZZLES, TRICKS AND MAGIC will solve your problem: tangrams, match tricks, domino problems, and a maze will keep youngsters busy and interested for hours. For the adults there are catchy mathematic problems, word enigmas simple magic. Here is entertainment for the whole family, available for only twenty-five cents, postpaid.

The Zanesville, C. Times-Recorder Information Bureau, 1200 Eye N. Washington 5, D.C. I enclose twenty-five cents in coin (25 cents) (carefully wrapped in paper) for a copy of the booklet PUZZLES, Street (Please Print) (Mail to Washington, D. By George Dixon I DON'T NEED PILLS TO SLEEP NIGHTS, AS LONG AS YOUR.

ARMED FORCES ARE KEPT StRonG! U.S. UNO REG MANNING SE McNaught Syndicate, Inc. It Happened Last Night By EARL WILSON NEW YORK I feel real ancient today after joining the Teen Age Set and sitting around with Tommy the Tonsil Sands who at 19 has the world on a string. Slugger'd ordered me to write up Tommy. Not that he cares for him "It's those crazy girls!" "All rootie," I said in the Tommy Sands lingo.

Tommy, a Chicago-born, Louisiana and Texas-reared kid who's wealth in three months, wants one more thing a high school diploma like Betty Hutton wanted one in Detroit when she was already a star and got it. I saw "Hep Dee Hootie, Cutie Wootie, You're All Rootie With Me" Tommy at Globe Photos. Dangling a shaving kit on a strap he came in with his road manager, Bill Lee of Hollywood, who's all of 21. He sure seemed happy to have a shave. "They say if you have a beard" the electric razor was humming "you're a man.

I've sure got a beard!" He fingered it proudly. editor wants you in a bathing a photog said. Tommy ran a hand through his fluffy hair. "I never take bathing suit nor guitar pictures. I've been advised by my agents not to." The photog made a call, then reported: "The editor will be to have a light summery outfit." That's the way it's been with Tommy since "Teen-Ag Crush" and "Hep Dee Hootie" were recorded.

Whatever he says, goes. Now it's the Roxy, Ed Sullivan's show, a Hollywood movie, "The Singing Idol," based on the Kraft TV show and running from little girl fans who chased him from the Hotel Taft to a secret apartment. "Tommy's worked since he was 8," Bill Lee said. "Where did you work at I asked Tommy. "The day I made my last payment on my guitar, down in Shrevepot, I was the way to the bus station.

I decided to stop in the radio station and a sk for a job. Soon he had a "Tommy Sands Show" he and his mother moved on to Houston there he quit Lamar High in '55 "in my last two months" to work. "Has he a draft problem?" I asked Bill Lee. He nodded grimly. "Everybody has, But first he wants to get that high school diploma out in Hollywood.

Tommy doesn't care for college. The way Tommy figures it, he'd be wasting the college's The Midnight Earl Wm. O'Dwyer's plane was hit by lightning between Houston and Mexico City (so he phoned showgal Rosemary Ridgwell) Steve Allen trendexed Ed Sullivan, 19.1 to 18.1 (Ed's show dropped a long time backstage exec) Leonard and bride Norma Wallace will take their eight sons along on their vacation. Celeste Holm was tossed over a horse's head in Central Park and landed on her feet John Perona and MGM gave a premiere party for the trailer of "This Could Be Night" at El Morocco with Julie Wilson getting hurrahs from Johnnie Ray Fernando Lamas, Hugh O'Brian, Sonja Henie and other celebs. Jerry Colonna's recovering from throat surgery Liberace picked up everybody's check at a local restaurant one festive night recently $1200 worth.

Street singer Arthur Tracy's life story interests Hollywood Bernard Baruch isn't interfering in the proposed abandonment of his hold Public School 69. "Sentiment's wonderful," he says, "but WASHINGTON After the, "THANK YOU, Mr. President!" had broken up the White House news conference and started a stampede for the door, I found myself elbowing alongside a very learned member of my profession. When we finally got unmobbed sufficiently for articulation he asked how I would feel if I had to address the president as "High Mightiness." "I haven't given the matter too much thought," I confessed. do you ask?" "Well," he said, "This has no bearing on anything that happened today.

It is utterly, completely, inapropos. But, do you know, that we came very close to having to address the president as High Mightiness-" "It must have been the Democrats," I said. "'The Republicans are too moderate for an immoderacy like that." "It was the Federalists. They thought the president should have a high-sounding title. The matter was taken up by a Senate committee and it reported in favor of address the president as High Mightiness! "Does Sherm Adams know about this? I asked cautiously.

"I do not consider the question shermane. This was some time ago, when there was an Adams even more prominent than Sher, if you can credit such a deplorable situation. It was in, the first congress, and John Adams was vice president." "You mean good old John Adams, a plain New Eng. lander, wanted to foist such a fancy title on the country?" "Well, he presided 1 over the senate, which considered it. However, the House of Representatives decreed that the head man should be addressed simply as 'the president of the United States' and that mode of address fortunately passed into precedent.

I said it was hard to think of a president of this democratic nation for an aristocratic appellation. My learned friend that George Washington himself hankering, was in favor of being called "High "I don't believe it of George!" I declared. "Where did you get that "It's in the history books," said the erudite one. "The first Speaker of the House, General Frederick A. C.

lenberg, of Pennsylvania, is quoted as stating that the stadholder of Holland was then called 'High Mightiness," and Washington felt he should have the same title." My instructor went on: "Muhlenberg said he once jested about it to the president, and, for a time, lost Washington's friendship. Among those present was Rep. Henry Wynkoop, of Pennsylvania, who was a large, commanding figure of a man. The president said to Muhlenberg: "Well, general, what do you think of the title "High Mightiness." "'Muhlenberg according to the books replied laughingly: "Why, general, if we were certain that the office would always be held men as large as yourself and, or my friend Wynkoop, it would be appropriate enough. But, if by a president as small as my opposite neighbor would be elected, it would become "Who was the 'opposite I asked.

"I forget. But anyway, everybody laughed except the president. He looked very grave and displeased." By this time we were out on the street, safely beyond certain earshot, and whispered: "You are undoubtedly a well read fellow, and a credit to our craft. But what are you getting at?" "Nothing a at Nothing at hastily protested the great scholar, looking over his shoulder. "I was just rambling.

sometimes it interferes with Comedian Alan Gale goes into a Bklyn cafe in October four weeks at 15G's per Rita Hayworth's willing to have dtr. Yasmin visit the Aga after the school term ends. PEARL'S EARLS This should be emphasized about highway traffic laws: They specify you can go 50 miles an hour they don't say you have to. WISH I'D SAID THAT: "Middle age is when you're willing to get up and give your seat to a lady and can't." TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: It's comic Jack E. Leonard's answer to a heckler: "Why don't you put in your false tech backwards and bite yourself in the throat!" An actor's doctor warned him, "Avoid all forms of excitement.

Don't even look at them on the street." That's earl, brother. The Doctor Says By EDWIN J. JORDAN, M. D. Several inquiries have been received recently for another discussion of migraine headaches and one in particular asks whether there is anything new.

I do not know of anything dramatically "new" in the treatment of migraine headaches, but the understanding of them and the people who have them, has been improved in recent years. The first step is to make sure that the headaches are truly of the "migraine" type and not some other form of recurring headache. One clue is the fact that most of those with migraine headaches develop peculiar feelings or sensations several hours before the headache begins. These peculiar feelings may be of various kinds, such a visions of animals, excessive hunger or acute depression. The individual victim will usually have the same, or nearly the same, premonitory signs before each attack.

The headache is likely to start gradually but gets worse, spreads over greater areas of the head and is usually one-sided. Those who have severe attacks may be incapacitated for a day or more. Innumerable drugs and other treatments have been tried for migraine. Some of them are just before the headache begins. However, as stated in a splendid article on this subject: "Nothing out of the bottle will offer more than passing relief.

Cure must be brought about by the patient himself, guided by his doctor." A migraine victim is usually advised to reduce the workday in 1 length. He or she should be sure to obtain sufficient rest. The 50-year-old should not work as he did when 30 years younger. Another suggestion is to avoid needless worry. Worry is surely a waste of time.

Most people realize this, but often they do not understand how much they can do for themselves out of such a habit. The standards of work and play may need changing. This applies particularly to resentment or anxiety caused by situations over which the migraine victim has no control. Another recommendation is that one should develope fuller tolerance for other people. This is all part of developing a philosophy toward life which will make one's own daily affairs as much in harmony with what goes on outside as is possible.

All this points up the fact that there is no easy cure for migraine. But much can be done to lessen the frequency and the discomfort of migraine attacks. It Or Not -By RIPLEY Believe EQUESTRIAN STATUE OF KING GEORGE 280 FEET LONG AND 323 FEET HIGH WAS CREATED NEAR WEYMOUTH, ENGLAND BY CUTTING AWAY THE TURF TO EXPOSE THE CHALKY SURFACE OF OSMINGTON HILL PLATINUM NUGGET LARGEST IN HISTORY WEIGHED 25 OZ. AND WAS VALUED AT 30.000 IT WAS FOUND IN NIZHNI-TAGILSK, SIBERIA ABU -AL- HASSAN a Baghdad physician CONTINUED TO BE REGARDED AS AGATE FRYING PAN THE GREATEST HEALER OF HIS BOUGHT FOR I0 CENTS AGE ALTHOUGH FOR THE LAST AND STILL IN PERFECT 20 YEARS OF HIS LIFE YEARS CONDITION AFTER CONSTANT 58 HE WAS TOTALLY BLIND OF USE MRS. CIRA SCARPULLA Hoboken, N.J.

IN (983-1003) Owned by World ALL ITEMS SELF EXPLANATORY TOMORROW Mountain Given To Climberl, This Is Hollywood By ERSKINE JOHNSON HOLLYWOOD (NEA) Well, at least "the tramp" was a lady for 12 Broadway performances, With a sign of progress in the movies now for Hollywood's lady who is always the tramp, Jan Sterling. She's graduated, by golly, to "ex-tramp" in a film. A recent New York play, "Small War on Murry Hill," lasted only 12 nights for Jan, who laughs about always being stripper or a bubble in the "a movies. But at least proof, she's saying, that: "Something happens to me somewhere between New York and Hollywood. In New York they cast me as lady.

In Hollywood I always play Even as an now, in UI's "'Slaughter on Tenth extramp Avenue." Jan is wincing a little: "I'm back on the waterfront as a former girl with the same rack of dark-blue skirts and Maybe, she wonders, "it's fate of all blondes in Hollywood unless you're Grace Kelly." But at least Jan certain of one thing: "I'm the only doll in Hollywood who has played both "Born Yesterday" and 'St. Joan." The movies turned the lady into a tramp in her first film, "Johnny Belinda," back in 1948, right after she had played a lady on the Broadway stage. So she went back to Broadway to be a lady again. Ever since then it has been a trampish film career for Jan, whose off screen personality is 18 million miles away from the girl she played on the screen. More than one person, after meeting her, has said: "Really now, you're not the way I thought you would be at But just nice-girl roles are'nt Jan's goal.

"I'd like to play," she says, "a nice girl with Jan and hubby Paul Douglas have teamed up now and then but they will never be a regular Mr. and Mrs. acting team. "We could never work together on a full-time basis," she told me. "There would be a divorce, I'm sure.

We're both too busy." She's laughing right now about a midwestern woman who wrote her saying a man who came to fix her venetian blinds was a dead ringer for Paul. To prove it, the woman enclosed a photo of the guy, which Jan sent to Paul, currently in New York, with a note reading: "One of my fans thinks this big, burly bum looks like you." One of Jan Sterling's escapes from type casting was in Paramount's remake, a couple of years ago, of the Dorothy Lamour George Raft John Barrymore movie, "Spawn of the North. It was the craziest remake you ever heard about because much of the film from the original picture was used again. Including all of the footage of a trained seal. "And the seal," Jan laughs, "stole the picture both times." Every time I hear the "Spawn of the North" title I chuckle about a gag widely circulated in Hollywood the first time the picture was made, Someone asked the late John Barrymore to explain the film's plot, and his answer was: "It's about a couple of salmon who swim down the Columbia River, meet in the Pacific Ocean and spend their honeymoon on ice at Fisherman's Wharf in San The mere 12 performances on Broadway of "Small War on Murray wasn't too much of a surprise for Jan, who blames the play's flop on its Revolutionary War period humor and style of speech.

"It was SO she told me, "that only one or two persons in the audience would laugh at the jokes, I finally figured out just who those persons were. They were either history professors or college students studying the Revolutionary War." Name State James Jones' new novel, "Some Came may sell for something like $10 per copy when the lengthy tome is published in the fall. MGM owns the movie rights. Dorothy Dandridge is dating Curd Jurgens, ex-hubby of Eva Bartok, after playing scenes with him in "Mutiny on the Esperanza" in Paris..

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