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PAGE SIX
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Yesterday’s Sports
In Brief
By The Assoclated Press
GOLF
PALM BEACH, Fla.—Cary Mid
dlecoff won top money in both the
medal play and pro-amateur com
petition in the Seminole Tourna
ment. His 207 won the 54-hole
medal play among the pros. He
teamed with C. Douglas Dillon for
a 128 in the 36-hole pro-amateur
contest, which tied Jim Ferrier
and his partner, Leray Berdeau.
RACING
MIAM]I, Fla.—~Theory, Calumet
Farm Derby candidate, was beaten
a neck by Black George (S2O) in
Gulfstream Park's Fountain of
Youth handicap. Trarab and Som
ber furnished a $1,624.50 daily
double payoff, second biggest in
Gulfstream history.
SAN BRUNO, Calif. — Doctring
(8.10) won the featured event at
Tanforan by three-guarters of a
length.
HOT SPRINGS, Ark. — Foray
Vina ($3) sped to a one length tri
umph in the Tennessee purse at
Oaklawn Park.
General
PHILADELPHIA—Jim Leonard
signed a new three-year contract
as head football coach of the Vil
lanova Wildcats.
PHILADELPHIA — Ralph
Greenleaf, 13 timeg world pocket
billiards champion, died shortly
after entering a hospital. He was
50. |
LUXURY GOES TO THE DOGS
—BURBANK, Calif—(AP)— Re
ginald Odegaara aecided it was
time to give dogs a break in this
bot in -the - summer - cold » in
the wiriter area. So he began
building what he calls “the dog
house -6 the future.” :
The 80-year-old power compa
ny emyguoye, whose hobby is de~
signing small hemes, makes his
pooch-shelters out of stucco. A flat
roof, -detachable for easy cleaning, ‘
servieey &s sun deck.
The houses are separated into
bedroomn and living room The
latter has a plate glass picture
window- with a window box. The
latest mnedels have miniature car
pets and. beds and one-inch square
flagstones set in. front.
‘ In Memory of
: James Ulus Kidd
Dear ‘Husband and Daddy: On
the 16th day of March, one year
ago todeyv, death angels came to
our home and took you away, We
know God gathers His loved
ones, one by one and day by day.
The angeis carried you home and
placed you on a flowery bed of
ease. But, oh hew we miss your
sweet smiles and tender voice, no
one can-gay. And we hope to meet
you some day,
\ MES.-H. J, KIDD (Wife)
| ang Children,
\ \
e ——————— e e et e et
Funeral Notice
MILLER —Mrs, J. F. Miller of
Statham, Ga.,, died March 14,
1956, Surviving are her hus
band; daughters, Miss Lillie
Miller, Statham, Ga.; Mrs. E. J.
Pentieost, Winder, Ga.; son, Mr.
H. D, Miller, Dawsonville, Ga.
and two grandehildren. Funeral
serviges were held Thursday,
March 16th, at 2:30 o'clock at
the statham Baptist Church.
Rev, Meeks and Rev. C. W.
Thomeas officiated. Interment
Statham city cemetery. Kelley
Funeral Home, Winder, Ga.
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BRITISH JET CAR MAKES TEST RUN—The British auto industry’s first jet-propelled car
makes a test run at Silverstone, England. The car, powered by a pair of twin kerosene-fed jet
4 . ~ turbines, traveled 90 miles an hour during the test,
HOSPITALS COPY IDEA FROM
GRANDMA'SDAY; MOTHERS AND
NEW BABIES NOW "ROOMING IN”
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AT HOME IN THE HOSPITAL: Mrs. Jean Norton
shares her bed with junior when she slides over the
table-top basinet in the ‘“‘rooming in”’ unit at Franklin
Hospital, San Francisco.
By NEA Service
SAN FRANCISCO.—(NEA)—
Maternity care is taking a step
back to grandmother’s day, when
babies ' were wvorn at home and
shared life with mother almost
from birth.
The difference is that the hos
pital is replacing the home with
“rooming-in” units, in which
mother and child share the same
quarters throughout the confine
ment period after the first 24
hours.
This return to oldsfashioned
theory actually represents one of
the newest practices in obstet
rical care and is beginning to
gain acceptance across the nation.
It is typified at Franklin Hospital
in San Francisco, where the fifth
“rooming-in” unit in the U. S.
just opened, and is attracting in
terest of many other West Coast
hospitals.
Far more scientific than home
methods, the new wunit is a
streamlined ward decorated in
pinks and blues and partitioned
off into glass cubicles. A nurse at
her desk in the cente:r of the ward
is able to observe each mother and
child at all times.
In keeping with the “natural
approach,” babies are fed on de
mand rather than according to an
arbitrary schedule; many doctors
now concede there is strong re
lationship between natural feed
ing and an infant’'s emotional de
velopment.
Most of the time, junior is right
next to his mother’s bed in a
transparent, bed-high table bas
inet. The basinet slides on run
ners to facilitate diaper changing
and bathing, operations which are
performed by the mother rather
than in a “dormitory” type nurs
ery.
There is also a sound-proof
“panishment chamber” in which
the baby can test his lungs with
out disturbing anybody.
“Rooming in” is a break for
fathers, too. No longer need he
wait in the corridor for a momen
tary peek at his child through
tl.e plate glass of a nursery win
dow. In the new-style units, he
washes his hands, dons a sterile
gown, and takes his place at the
head of the family during visit
ing hours in the temporary glass
house.
In praise of the new theory,
Dr. Philip A. Reynolds, a noted
Los Angeles obstetrician, report
ed to the California Medical As
sociation:
“Under formrer routines, the
mother of a first-born baby ~ . .
leaves the hospital without ac
quiring any of the skills and ex
periences needed for its care at
home, and without having become
accustomed tc the physical and
emotional reaction of her baby,
In rooming-in she becomes well
acquainted . . ~ with a multitude
of things so easily taken for
granted by nurse and physician,
but which to her are tremendous
mental hazards. The transition
from hospital to home is easy.”
BREATHES DANGER FROM
ATOMIC WORKERS
MINNEAPOLIS — (AP) — A
breath of air so slight you could
hardly detect it even by holding
up a wet finger wafts radioactive
dust particles away from work
ers in atomic-energy laboratories.
The controlled air movement
over the special desks of such
workers must be “marvelously
precise,” -explained James S.
Locke of Minuneapolis-Honeywell
Regulator company. “It must be
strong enough to draw off fumes
and dust, but not strong enough
to draw into the exhause mechan
ism any of the material being test
ed.” An electronic instrument
achieves this balance through su
per-sensitive thermostats that
control dampers in the ventilat
ing system. The thermotats create
and control a breeze that is about
as strong as the upward curling
of smoke from a cigarette in an
ash tray.
' THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
What If Means:
Investigation
ofThe F.T.C.
By CLARKE BEACH
WASHINGTON -— The Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) is re
ceiving little but brickbats as pre
sents for its 35th birthday (Thurs
day, March 16), Congress, looking
sourly at FTC’s record, is prepar
ing to make an elaborate investiga
tion of the agency. The Hoover
Commission on Organization of the
Government last year fourmd it
woefully inadequate.
The third great campaign in
American history to curb the pow
er of large monopolistic business
combinations is gathering steam.
This time the heat of the attack is
falling on FTC, which was created
to prevent unfair busineds prac
tices and to enable small business
to survive among the ever-grow
ing giant industries, ;
Points of Pride
The FTC, replying to its critics,
points with pride to some accom
plishments. But it freely admits
that it has been unable to do the
full job for which it was estab
lished. One big reason, it says,
has been lack of funds—its re
quests have invariably been pared
down both by the Budget Bureau
ook how much more you get when you
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OWNERS — H. A. WESTERVELT and R. T. EBERHARDT, JR.
312 E. Broad St. : Phone 2781 Athens, Ca,
and by Congress. Another ig loop
holes in the anti-trust laws that
it has repeatedly urged Congress to
plug. In a report to Congress last
July FTC cautioned that unless the
steadily increasing power of the
“giant corporations” is restrained,
the eountry will go “down the road
to collectivism.”
The battle for free competition
in business and industry is as old
as the nation. One reason the col
onists wanted independence from
England was to shake off the mo
nopolistic business controls of the
British Isles. Great leaders
throughout United States history
have repeatedly declared that if
business got too big it wounld con
trol the government and the people
would lose their power. Washing
ton, Jackson, Theodore and Frank
lin Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson
all warned against it.
Mergers and combines of rail
roads and industry so alarmed the
nation that # fairly conservative
Congress in 1890 passed the Sher
man Act. It was intended to pun=-
ish the menopolists and to force
them to break up their large com
binations. But big business con
tinued to get bigger. In the elec~
tion campaign of 1912 both parties
evromised to do something about it.
When Wilson was elected he pro
posed measures which resulted in
the establishment in 1915 of the
Federal Trade Commission. The
FTC’s main job was to detect the
rise of the combinations and to
head them off before they became
strong enough to justify court ac-
tion under the Sherman Act,
Spectacular Investigations
The commission has made many
spectacular investigations, Its ex
posure in the 19208 of the “blue
sky cases”—wildcat stock manipu=
lations—resulted in enactment of
the Securities Exchange Act. It
reported on utility corporations, on
the causes of high prices of farm
implements, on sale and distribu~
tion of milk products, on the chain
store industry. These led to the
enactment of several major pieces
of legislation.
Its recent big victory in the
courts came last year in the ce
ment case, involving the basing
point system of pricing cement.
Another major case is now pend
ing in the Supreme Court—a
charge of price discrimination
against the Standard Oil Company
of Indiana.
A task force of the Hoover Com
mission, however, reported that
“the commission’s record has been
disappointing.” It accused the
FTC of cumbersome procedures
and of wasting time away on minor
matters.
To darn a hole in a sheer cur
tain, cover the hole with a piece
of white paper and run back and
forth over it with the sewing ma
chine needle. When the curtain is
laundered, the paper will dissolve
leaving only a neat darn
Approximately 75 per cent of
the ~world’s supply of cranberries
are raised in Massachusetts.
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NEW NECKLINE—HoIy Year
influence is seen in the unusual
neckline of Christian Dior's
onionskin taffeta afternoon
dress, with its enormous cowl
collar of starched white hand
kerchief linen. A black chiffon
tie breaks severity of the collar,
and dress is finished with a full,
gathered skirt and lopg, narrow
gleoves. “The mt&‘w‘mn
in the Paris zpring fashjon show.
THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1959 -
FIREMEN FIRED
WITH ENERGY
EAST MOLINE, m.— (AP) o
Firemen were on their way back
to the station from s false alarm
when they sniffed smoke, They
stopped, got down and douseq a
fire in the “brake section of the
fire truck.
e Acoseishes
THE FRUIT OF HIS CRIME
CHICAGO— (AP) —A gunman
who held up Joe Kocibenski's
market made off with $l6O in cash
and two big red apples.
e
A steaming in the bathroom wij
help take excess electricity out of
a taffeta dress. Ordinarily, taffety
will generate electricity when it
rubs against a silk o# rayon slip.
. s
A loose contact point on breakey
points will cause an automobilg
engine to miss.
R m
7 ) )
ot Byrup of Black.
s ’;% Draught hnn.pw;
" P pleasant flavor thof
e Younflte."l take withe
g out fussing, Pronpt,
- thorough laxative so.
> tion is nntur?l-l;k.
when taken as directed, Sgup of Black-
Draught is pure; made of finest importeq
herbs, Always flvc it for occasional con.
stipation. And for adults, Black-Draught,
in powder or granulated form, costs s
penny or less G:t dtou. Povuln.:l wm: soup
erations, orm you prefer at yous
mors. For children, ask for e
SYRUP OF BLACK-DRAUGHT