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+ U iClone Mate 33 l # fay; ~. d B: IRVING, President and Treasurer - . Glens Falls Post Company, Glens Falls, N.Y. _ ___| ___ ___ ___ ME R OF THE A8SOCIA TE D P RE s 8 . épeace plan. Nothing could be better than that. If any of . the achievement of the United Nations. It was a unanimous! H. SINGLETON, Vice President _______ CLAUDE FOX, Editor __ Published every evening except Sunday at 100 Gien Street by \The Associated Press isentitled exclusively to the use for republica Tion of all the local news printed in this newspaper, as well as all AP news dispatches, e e TELEPHONES: | __ . ALL PEPARTMENTS . |___ ___ GLENS FALLS 23131 __\ SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By boys, and within the states of New York and Vermont; $11 per year; §6 for six months; $3:25 for three months; $150 per month. Other mail territory within the Tmited States, $15 per year; $7.50 for 6 months; $4 for 3 months; $1.50 per month. By carrier, 420 per week, $2150 per year payable in advance. Second Class postage paid at Glens Falls, N.Y.! Complete information supplied at Busines _ ADVERTISING RATES: Office. The Glens Falls Times assumes no financial responsibility for typographical errors in advertisements but. will re-print that part of an advertisement in which the typographical error occurred. Advertisers! gig ugleasé notifiy the management immediately of any error which may OUR LADY OF THE LAKE, DIANE STRUBLE All day Saturday and into the evening hours we listened with excited interest to discussions by interested sports followers of the progress a twenty-five year old girl was making in her struggle against the cold waters of Lake George, against bodily fatigue, against all the elements that had previously unfted to prevent the hardiest swim- mer from swimming from the foot of Lake George to the head. of the lake. When at last the word came that Diane Struble had reached shore, we al} joined in rejoic- ing in her victory. She alone among all others on earth has accomplished this feat. She had the stamina, the skill, the perseverance, the pluck, to swim on and on, thirty- five hours and a half, or thereabouts, in wind and sunshine and in the darkness of night, existing in an element that most of us venture into but for a few moments at a time, . until at length she won her goal, amid the cheers of thous- ands gathered to see her win, and happy that she did. All this took courage, it took tenacity, it took strength, |- it took endurance, and most of all an inflexible will power,. Strong men had failed at it. Other women tried it and gave up. Diane bore off the palm. She is the Gertrude Ederle of Lake George, with this distinction. Gertrude Ederle was not the first to swim the Channel. She was the first woman toi do it. Diane Struble is the first of all mankind to swim the length of Lake George - a longer distance than from the coast of France to the chalk cliffs of Dover. Lake George is long. Lake George is cold. Lake George can be rough,. Let us hail this young woman who vanquished every obstacle the famous old lake could offer. A HAPPY ENDING The Middle East crisis ended about as satisfactorily as anything of the kind possibly could. In the popular phrase, - *'mo one got hurt.\ Russia was unable to obtain passage of # resolution that would have denounced the United States iand Great Britain. As far as the United Nations Assembly * following the lead of President Eisenhower was concerned, ; the resolution that ended the difficulty was the work of the FArabs themselves. Instead of anyone dictating to them, they * dictated to the others. - They were the authors of their own : them violate it, by continuing the venomous radio broad- ; casts that have been inflaming assassination and rebellion ; in divers countries, and otherwise scheming to seize control. of one another, the Arabs themselves will be called upon to redress the wrong. That is far better than having out- siders sent in to keep the peace. Another advantage of the settlement was that it was : decision of the Assembly, and all members voted except} one absentee. This is perhaps about as close as we have ever come to having a matter of first importance to the peace of the world decided by a Parliament of the World. It is a source of some comfort to find such action taken after open debate, with full opportunity for all to be heard, and I. P. BROWN, Secretary all in territories not served by carrier {suffered compromise. The President's mutual security program originally 1 __ GLENS FALLS TIMES, GLENS FALL Little Rock-— ~ RIPPLES! Naught §yn l\ € iene wr The New Yorkaerqu Tribune Says: A CONGRESS OF PERFORMANCE The Eighty-fifth Congress which wearily adjourned in Sunday's early hours, was one of major accomplishment. It was a Democratic Congress, but there was less of fche customary party-line bickering. President Eisenhower got substantpuy most of what he asked for. There was generally a-wholehearted legislative recog- nition of the President's program on merit and of the imperative chal- lenges of & space-age world in crisis, 'The exgcutive branch supplied vigorous direction, and Congressional leadership by Lyndon Johnson and Sam Rayburn was on the whole extremely effective. It is, however, regrettable that the Eisenhower foreign-aid requests called for $3,950,000,000, which was reducéd more than $400 million by the Senate .and close to a billion in the House version. Vesterday morning the difference was split at $3,298,092,500. But it was a signal Administration triumph that Pentagon reorgani- zation was accomplished on pretty much Mr. Eisenhower's terms, There was generous appropriation for defense. Also the reciprocal trade act, with all its incalculable global benefits, won an unprecedented four- year extension. And in recognition of Soviet scientific advances, Cpn- gress authorized a $900 million program of Federal aid to education. The education program was about 90% of what the President asked, with the exception of scholarship aid. « What else? After ever so many years of obstruction, Alaskan state- hood went through in a whoosh. (But not Hawaii) The new farm bill pointed away from the old subsidy ideas; Secretary Benson is at last being heeded. After a quarter-century of three-cent letter mail, an extra penny was added. And in the first session last year, Congress paSseg & civil rights law which despite its deficiencies was the first such legislation in this century. TRADE WINDS GUARANTEED INFLATION Despite the White House and Congressional blast about the re- cent steel wage-price boost, Con- gress legislated last week a built-in inflationary wage-price increase for each three years until 1969, That's important to businessmen. To win the political favor of 12,000,000 retired workers now draw- ing Social Security checks, Con- gress legislated increased monthly payments. To accomplish that, the new law increases the social secur- ity payroll tax of 75,000,000 workers and the contribution by employers. These taxes are increased next] year, and every three years there- after until 1969. > A tax is a tax to a worker fo matter for what purposé it is paid. The added tax means a cut in-take- home pay. Union leaders will fight for a pay boost to offset the added tax cost to workers, And, said an employer, they will win. Make mo. It was disappointing that no action was taken on labor reform. Certainly the McCiclian committee supplied a mountain of proof for the need of clean-up. But when the Kennedy-Ives bill came to a belated test in the House, the votes weren't there, Some lawmakers said the bill wasn't nearly strong enough; others didn't choose to hurry against} the Hoffas. Still, the country's mood is very much for reform. The next; Congress, come January, has its work cut out already. l Strength for the Day 3 By EARL L. DOUGLASS, D.D. Reg. U.S. Patent Off. NO REASON IN DISBELIEF fect being that man calls God.\ without the big nations dominating the proceedings and dictating the decision. ' Secretary Dulles properly reminds us that this by no; means disposes of all the problems of the Middle East. But| it does mark a tremendous advance since the days when: the destinies of millions all over the globe were in the hands of a few men in the chancelleries of Europe. Those who have been complaining that the United Nations has proved| ineffectual and had better pull down its New York skyscrap-| er and disband, will have to revise their arguments We religious teachings. He has come down to us with the bad name of atheism attached to him and the stain of atheism on his quiet brilliant reputation. \ All of which teaches that, as a matter of actual fact, there are few atheists: in the world. In fact, atheism is so logically indefensible that no one' can hold to it without doing violence to every process of reason. Of course. the order of things suggests a creator. Of course, the continu- ation of the creation along established lines suggests a Sustainer of the Universe. To think of anything else is, in fact, not to think at all. It is when men adjourn their reason or determine to do violence to it C150 18, IN mistake about it. But every employer usually off- sets pay boosts by a price increase. And since the employer also is to make a larger social security con- tribution unde; the new law, it's doubly certain he will prices to offset the added operating costs. To put it bluntly, as steel prices moved. up every year to offset the|- 'three-year built - in pay boost, so will prices of almost all products move up every three years to offset the added social security costs. It's \Since then everything about us shows a progression of power, where|EUaranteed wage-price inflation. 'To is the difficulty that there is, at the summit of all things, & Being in|businessmen it meabs that holding whom an infinity of power unites with the infinity of the willl When|inventories may be smart because this straple idea presents itself to our mind, we have the idea of a per-|Prices do point upward. But that isn't all to this new! This statement would sult even the most orthodox, yet, strangely guaranteed Inflation trend. If social | enough, it was written by a man, Thomas Paine, who has always been security keeps boosting the protec- looked upon as an atheist. Paine was hated in his day for his destructive/tion against destitution of old age, it kills all incentive to provide pro- tection for themselves. That means) the new social security law encour- ages spending. Lots of spending means wide-open buying which will add fuel to the fire of price infla- ltion. # w L Whade Cte that 41au0 | 15 that British bank discount rate wasn't TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1958 ________ |[ The Roving Reporter | the news, world arnd national, 'by a group 0 {Mary and me, \Wait'll you have a {how our concern over Mégan is sil- |1y, and with it the implication that 'lit is all right for m baby to cry 'baby can roll off a bed without {know, that makes a second baby 'were a second baby, to know once share the company of a moonbeam incregse| | the - that they can be atheists. The mind left to itself believes in God. [cut ten days ago because of increas- 'ed confidence in the pound sterling, must remember that less than a month ago before this: meeting of the Assembly was called while Khrushchev was announcing daily that the Middle East was a powder keg: that might explode at any time, and that it was necessary, to prevent another world war, for the heads of the govern-} ments of a few big powers to meet and compose matters. [ Khrushchev did not have it his way. The Assembly met without him. Mr. Gromyko attended, but contributed little except a speech that added nothing to the ensuing deliberations. ' the little fellows who conferred and accomplished the result. Can if be that for all the rockets and missiles and nuclear; armanments, Jove is no longer the wielder of the thunder-i bolts? { coal 2222 E TURKEY'S NEW STATUS : Turkey is a vital part of our Middle Eastern line of «lefense. Lving right across the Russian path of advance I to the Black Sea and the Mediterranean, it also flanks any ' Soviet movement toward the Persian Gulf, Turkey is there- fore highly esteemed by the Western powers. { It was not always so. For centuries the Turks were a formidable and advancing power, like the Russians today.' After Turkish strength faded, their rule over the remainder: of the empire was corrupt and tyrannical, varied by oc- casiong! massacres of the Christian population. Few would have thought, as late as 1908, that the Turks would ever be deemed reputable allies. to In 1908 the old sultanate was overthrown. Though the new officials had all} the defects of the old, they were also weaker. 'Then after World War I Mustapha Kemal, head of | the army, came to power and modernized the nation. I 'While there have been occasional backslidings in the, humane conduct of the government, there is no comparison between today's rulers and their predecessors. The Turkish government today is efficient and moderately democratic. That is why no reproach attaches, as it long did, to an alliance] with the Turks. ithe - multiple defendants [fo equalize the right for plaintiffs. Mofients of» Meditation , Bless the name and fame of Sussn B. Anthony, dear God of 311i freedoms, and keep her memory clear and dear for all the generpA‘aons| because of her determination and success in granting .ema:nc1pa,txon to, womanhood. On this anniversary day, commemorating the time that the} voting for women is not yet universal, that there are stlll nations that discourage the sharing of citizen rights and responsibilities for the mothers and sisters of men, governments that still deny the franchise cans to keep our nation free and great by the fullest utilization of ail: our human resources. . i W ashington Notebook } By PETER EDRON NEA Washington (tyne-pendent 1 WASHINGTON (NEA) - Whenjother measures on which there was Congress tries to Jam through a opposition, to be passed by of legislation in the final days of a unanimous consent without debate. session - as it has done this year - f * 0 * * » it runs & lob of grave risks. ' But up rose Senator Jenner with Here's a typical case, which escape &n amendment. It had nothing to general notice: do with the right of challenging Retiring Sen. William E. Jenner Jurors. . _ cy (R-Ind> introduced a shoft and The Jenner amendment would simple-looking bill which -- if it have changed the 1931 law on gov- had gone unchallefiged - might eAment condemnation proceedings, have tied the government in knots! It would have authorized the on seqtiring property for military Courts to vacate any government installa dons or public works, taking of property if the compensa- - Jenrar's little bill was offered on HOn offered the owner was found the Senate floor as an amendment (0 be fraudulent or not in good \to another bill guthorizing U. S. dis- © triet courts to. allow multiple plain-|_ Jenner's “smug in if.” of. his tiffs in civil cases the right to, ad-famfififgfiz wes bt rat f lied to use ditfonal peremptory challenges of} MCU! SNow!d not be permi 2 » 4 |condeningtion. procéedings to obtain !a confiscatory or even a bargain: j k ' acquisition. . lenges of jurymen is now 51911133}: He called this great power‘r \tyranny \ i Under présent condefunation This bill originated and was pass» D'ACtiCEs. appraisers set a fair value\ ed first in the House of Represen-i°\ plppefig’l required A” gm gmé tatives. It was put on the Senate CVUDENL This sum is then deposited, calendar for consideration with (Continued or Page 17,. Col. 1) | jurors . The right to make additional chal- cases. Only purpose of the bill was I but rather as a government move to help boost economic conditions there. on account of business and industrial activity is declining. to ‘ # ha U Expect total en‘iployment. figures for August to be less favorable than} / Washington hints. - Unemployment [Nineteenth Amendment became the law of the land in 1920, granting may be reduced some, but it will suffrage to women, stir in us the sense of history in our lively applic@-/still run well ahead of last year. 'tion of democracy among 'our people. Remind us daily, dear Father, that And while those employed may num- ber slightly more than July, the| August changeover of auto models will hold it to & less than seasonal Instead of a \summit\ conference. it was to women. Make each of us worthy of our opportunities and oblig@-|gsin. But there will be a marked || tions to help stimulate peoples and nations to a yearning to earn free-ifurn for the better in September. idom and equality for all their citizens. Inspire me and other Ameri-'Employers are - alréady workers laid off in May and Jufie They are doing so hesitantly, but doing 50. That means added spend-| Ing power to workers in the 25 to/ 35 age bracket. They were hit hard- est by unemployment, bracket is known to be liberal spend- ers. It's good‘neqs for retailers. x* % % At long last the National Hotel As-! sociation has recognized motels. Actually set aside a \Motel Day! at! the Hotel Exposition (Nov. 3-7) at! the New York Coliseum. Date given! is November 4. Said a motel man: (@R \It may be an oversight, but Novem-[' ber 4 is Election Day. and this is} an important Congressional election I year, and we've got to retuiain home'} to vote.\ \ U # U - The New York Stock Exchange} official report of short positions in! the market as of mid-August reveals. | a substantial decline. Some statis-Q ticlans say this might be construed as bearish. Here's how: it means a, great deal of the recent share buy»; ing was to cover short positions, and |I not for new investment account. But} 'those who want to be bullish say the | dip in short positions means profes-} sional traders now admit prices will continue moving to higher levels. (Released by Radar waves of a >type which (ran-l. + not be used fo track down planes! smog. by m Los Arigeles scientist. Tecalling.| ( That age! Consolidated News Features, Inc)! j have 'been found useful in tracking] G to the column and should not be policy of this newspaper, ___ . By RAY, TUCKER . \ WASHINGTON, Aug. 26 -- The prospective 'failure of the United Nations in effecting. any long-range settlement or stabilization in the (Middle East confronts the United States and its \Western Allies with two. novel and difficult alternatives, in the opinion of diplomats labor- ing. in quiet conferences at. New York and Washington. Mc Lemore | The next parent who says to 'second 'baby, and then you'll won- der why you fussed and fretted over Megan so much;\ is going to get a slap on the jaw. I im sick and tired of hearing 'we should let her boil her own, milk, fill her own bottles, make her own bed and -do her own. shop- ping. That, I have been given to under- stand 'by owners of two or- more babies, is what happens with Nos. 2, 3, 4 and the rest. You wear your» self out with No. 1, which is foolish, and then all but abandon the babies that follow. If I hear one more time that a 'Baby is as tough as a rock, that seems to regard Colonel Gamal Ab- del. Nasser as .a personal jenemy, President Eisenhower must try to come to terms with the Egyptian dictator, Every Middle East expert here and abroad concedes that he 'and his crusade for Arab national- ism and politicq-economic inde- pendence, not Nikita Khrushchev and \internitional. communism,\ are the sole cause forthe current crisis. Khrushchey, of course, capitalizes on the turmoil. Although the United States led in condemning the Anglo-French-Is- [raeli invasion of the Suez, Dulles admittedly set out to isolate and discredit Nasser by organizing the co-called Baghdad Pact, He hoped to insert a Westen federation be- tween Cairo and Moscow, That flanking movement has been a com- plete failure, Nasser's Neel of Funds Nasser needs funds to rebuild his. poverty-stricken country-dams, it- rigation works, Homes, schools, sani- taton systems. His 25,000,000 people are no better off than when King Farouk was ousted six years ago. Their misery has driven him into Napoleonic international ventures in order to retain his hold on them. The appeal to their emotionalism is an' enforced reaction, 'The United States now pours & billion dollars a year to. shore up shaky regimes against the will of the masses and the street mobs. A small percentage of this subsidy spent to rehabilitate Egypt might turn Nasseit's energies into con- structive instead of destructive channels. Hé cannot sit permanently on & volcano without seeing it erupt into another world war, It is significant.that a recent news poll showed 75 per cent of those questioned in favor of closer rela- tions between Washington and Cairo. Israel Is Asut to Dictator Nasser's greatest amet in this anti-West campaign is the exist- ence of Israel, which was created by the United Nations under Anglo- [American pressure. 'There is no sense in refusing to face this central fact. , * The plight of $00,000 Arab refu- gees living in desert squalor on seven cents a day, as well as failure to compensate those with property within Israel, keeps hot the fires of hatred. Anti-Israelism is as popular and ory and cry, that a baby just thinks it needs a lot of changing, that a baby won't freeze, that a baby won't smother, and that a harm, I believe I am going to run slightly amok. If second babies are treated in the manner most parents say they are, it is a wonder to me that Amer- | ica's population is as large as it is. Just what is it, I would like to so self-sufficient, so mighty-mus- cled, so poised, so able to stand neglect? Second babies look like first babies to me. | I would also like for all those who tell us to. treat Megan, who is barely a month old, as if she and for all that not only is she our first baby, but to us she is the first baby ever born anywhere to anybody. She is a complete, brand-new miracle, and if we want to devote all of our time to a mirgcle, then why should anyone else care? It makes me laugh when I am told 'that I stay up too much at night with Megan, that I am going to wear myself out. I, who user to spend night after night at Toots 'Shor's and Dave Chasen's and other spots, not caring when the sun rose, now can't stay awake to in diapers? I, who have walked thousands of miles at Santa Anita and Belmont and Churchill Downs seeking a tip, can't go up and down the stairs a few hundred times a day for Megan? I, who have worn out my feet sight-seeing the glories of Greece and Rome, can't walk a few hun» dred more miles to look at some= thing much more wonderful than those ancient civilizations ever built, carved or painted? | R Maybe our second. baby, as so many say second babies are, will be made of granite, whalebone and stainless steel, but Megan isn't. She is as soft as the shady side of a kitten's wrist, and helpless as a (Continued on Page 15, Col. 4) the Arabs as \prosperity\ is to the claim and obtain credit for it, But these problems are not insol- uble. Once Nasser has heen pacified and persuaded to megolate them, READ IT EVERY DAY: A discussion: papermen of Waihingtor and New York, news feature, Opinions expressed are those and stirring a political issue among} American political party which can * -_ jthe refugees can be resettled i;: spacious Arab lands through a. Anvestment far less than the amout © we are shelling out today witho settling anything. - The United Nations or the Unite . States and Britain could then a _ sure Israel's ferritorial 'and political B: they should also gualéargteebagtay ‘ : i Arab sts Overruling Seciétary Dulles, who agiggmffign‘mfggn\ if Jop dass absorbed by the United Arab i public.. independence. Alternative Program Should this program fail, the [Secretary Dulles' anti-Nasser alte native must be pursued even. mo aggressively. .It would involve tl formation of a new anti-Khrushchev alliance to the Baghdad Pact. This policy h: (Continued .on Page 15, Col, 3 of events. and. personalitie: *. of fearless and informed new! Whirligig is published as of the writers. contribputin interpreted ms reflecting the editork <> integri® © a AJ anti-Nasse ) 'The Doctor Says: By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D. Written for NEA Service With Each Individual Suppose one has pain in There are many things he ~ Treatment of Stomach Ulcer Vari tI stomach region or some other p. culiar Stomach sensations for , week or two and goes to the doctc The story that you may tell mi. raise the suspicion of ulcer of tl stomach, but the doctor needs make sure ~hefore starting trea ment. er do, One is to give & special te meal, withdraw the stomach co. tents through a rubber tube aft | a little while and examine t. | material for acid and other thin; This is of enormous help, and & though & person dreads the tu the first time, it is not painful. great many patients learn to do themselves without difficulty. 1. ¥ Another thing that is usually do' - Important in any study of It is also possible to look 'This s .c is to examine a sample of intestin waste for blood since the doct needs to \know whether the ulcer . bleeding. > t . ¢ rectly into the stomach by mea of an ingenius flexible tube fitt with mirrors, a gastroscope and is useful for ga (Continued on Page 8, Col. 5) all FOR ADDITIONAL Fashion Shop ADVERTISING SEE PAGE 6 u BACK-TO-SCHOOL CREDIT and FAMILY N APARPIPPPIIIPPI Wohfin’i — 100% Orion CARDIGANS s29 Girls\ . 100% Orlon CARDIGANS 7197 TONIGHT 7-9 P.M. 10% Discount on Any Purchase Over 50¢c. 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An ule pocket usually can be seen by tt method so that its location a: size are accurately known. P01 s Soucy en ¢ % $ GLENS FALLS, N.Y. Rfa Fry | FOR YOUR FAMILY AND HOME 60 10 CRANIY . . . SAVE TIME . . . STEPS . . . MONEY u ts was a appeals : filgu'g Draft - '/ ning Board lent of t ~ssociation 0 president \\fasonic Clul Currently, | qd term as £14 jpb hg ta f“ (I mental 0 Ja) hint of th rvice to w voted mos There will the mile ntative th in; A good ; { Glens F ne city, @ nd achie leard to o we village randall & Jim campal ot the r randall r 'ense was ) jell said d a the mas then th chool ws