{ title: 'Press-Republican. (Plattsburgh, N.Y.) 1966-current, November 26, 1966, Page 12, Image 12', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074101/1966-11-26/ed-1/seq-12/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074101/1966-11-26/ed-1/seq-12.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074101/1966-11-26/ed-1/seq-12/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074101/1966-11-26/ed-1/seq-12/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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i-;^£sSB3 ft *.$£ *•£•** > SWIMS'>*{ •*' —1 \:•* ^„.i....,,?,,, ii L . I.^.M^. ^-r - tr-r s***Atofc^i^^ •» ^*\. >, * -;/^V' is? ,.*>' .i'l<j'. •y ANN UMMESS :* W ^*?v3«; 5*&*5 ^ toc» tf 9b by amt K a ' ^rttwy dirtrtwf Mtf ttty both $a!4^rWtb«w»ttombe- &&* m? bm dwowtrttod *»**« <* w«B**y *** early cMldbood Thftft tfce older tme said be baa let Meads copy iff Ids paper during exams and be Has given his girt last year's book reviews, but be didn't con- rider tbbt cheating. I was shock* ed and my husband bit the roof. The discussion lasted over an boor with both teens insisting they would be completely friend- less If tbey refused to help their pals. At times their arguments btit % Jaw* fitoy to6t ii fttir m Vm to ';* Urn Df«r '$*£fed Mo* *> rate <wr «Uadtfdi tad help as to think wcB «f oaspelm. Your efeOdrw «• Mdy ****«»jii»fr gifts ar« insured. The \ eBeo Hidea behind Insurance is to protect against loss or damage. they beflev* ta*y art ting their pab when they help The person who is complete- ly honest does not encourage dishonesty in otters. Your teens are being unfair to the students who study and work for grades wben they band over answers to joof-offs who are looking for something for nothing. should have told the truth. Mom says she didn't want to upset the woman because it's \tbe thought that counts/ 1 Do you fed, as we do, that mom was ? ~ % and G. Dear E. and G.: Wben a gift arrives damaged the sender shook! be notified at once. Us- Dear An Landers: Mother received a piece of fine China from a friend who visits us every year. The gift arrived last week broken to smithereens. Mother wrote and thanked her, making no motion of the breakage. My sister and I say mom | intials. How about it? Do you Mom was wrong — but not dishonest • * # Dear Ami Landers: Please ssy something about parents who give their children initials instead of names. I have beard men referred to by their initials, and I have no objection to this, because these men actually do have names. But don't you think it is a dirty trick to name a child B.K. or N.R.? — Committee of One Dear One: I think Initials in* stead of names are O.K., hut then I've got a name. I'd like to hear from people who have only like initials or do you wish you bad a name? * • • Cenfldettlaty to Ben te The Purple: Sorry, but your reason- ing breaks down from the out- set. Good manners, kindness, consideration for others, and personal integrity are not quali- ties confined to the \well bora\ The social register lists hun- dreds of individuals who are \well bom\ according to your definition but tbey have none of these qualities. • • # Liquor can ruin your mind, your body and your life. To learn the booby traps of teen- age drinking, write for Ann Landers' booklet, \Teen - age Drinking/ 1 enclosing with your request 20 cents in coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped envelope. Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them to her in care of this newspaper enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envel- ope. Wf'-i!*^' I, 3*>. .-' . ••-•fvtt iifrthiiiitfEmtDjui i jifirn JIT * Icew^l yv* 0 'jS^^MflM^ ttj\ Sickness hampers play skills By GARRY C MYERS, Ph.D. When, because of Illness, a child in the elementary grades must be absent from school for a long period, he obviously may faQ behind in book teaming. But his greatest loss may be in flay skills and experiences. - If such misfortune comes to your child, you should do your best, working with the school, to help this child catch up on his arrears in reading, spelling, arthmetic and ol'.er subjects. Tatar Hetpt Hardly very strong, he may not be physically fit to cam any or much added study right away. Yet his home study should, if possible, dwell more on what he missed than on the current lessons. As you can see, his lessons to today may not easily be learned unless he has mastered the earlier steps lead- ing up to them. Often this child may profit from the help of a skillful tutor. But finding successful ways to help this child bring up bis ar- rears at books is much easier than to find ways to make up his losses at play with other children. Indeed, few parents or teachers ever give this peaty lem a thought. Frustrated Emotions Just consider the school child too ill for a long period to en- gage in active play. All the oth- er kids have had continuous practice on the playground at play skills and at getting along with the gang. This child has had none. When after long ill- ness he goes back to play ball or engage in other group fun he is not as strong and agile as he used to be. Your child may not do so well at catching, throwing or hitting a ball or at learning the rules of a game new to him but fam- iliar to the gang. His awkward- ness, noticed and commented on , I by the other fads, may make him shy and fearful. T^iese frustrating emotions make it harder for him to improve his play skills. Grin And Bear It If he had not been a very skill- ful player before his illness, or had not been high in sportsman- ship, these lacks tend now to grow more pronounced. In case he feels so discouraged as to leave the gang at play or not i to join them the next day, how j much harder his plight will be-, come. ! This lad would be smart if ! he can make himself try hard,; watch and listen carefully and; do his best to improve his skills.: He should grin and bear it when he is raz2ed. He should make j himself keep on trying no mat- ter how hard the going be-: comes. But if, alas, this lad not be-' ing so stable emotionally as be-; Painful bowsshoM bams te&* pen so frequ^y ttrt tt» e» tar spptkattOBi ribouid be stw^ sed to tfc*e nfeo may art at ready tow Jt Ffysktans who work te in- dustrial pUnte, where boms of even greater importance happen often, report that there is im- mediate relief of the intense pain when the arm or band is immersed in lee cold water. Be* sides the relief of pain, it seem* that swelling and blistering and damage to the skin tissue is re- duced by tide method. This first aid treatment has been recognized tor a number of years and recently was again studied by Doctors E. B. Cun- ningham and Jack L. Harris of Middletown, Ohio. In an indus- trial plant tbey employed the ice and ice water method on severe burns and kept the burned part in ice water from 30 minutes to four hours. With face burns they found that constant applications of cold water compresses were very effective in relieving pain. TTiey suggest that the burned! area of skin should first be cleaned gently with a liquid soap and cold water and then quickly follow it by submersion; in water cooled with ice. Burns of al lnature — chemi- cal, electrical and by fire — can i dqrtag en emergency. The dura- Uonef ice water application and the need for a special cov- ering should, of course, be un- der the direction of one's per- sonal physician. Pali to the ear to kpewn te persist for a long time ^without any signs of infection or in- jury to the ear Itself. Hie un- recognized cause, when finally tracked down, turns out to be the result of the bad bite of the teeth. Technically, this is known as malocclusion of the teeth— a disorder that affects the jaw joint and the muscles that surround it. The nerves that go to the jaw joint are so closely related to the ear that pain radiates from one to the other and may even extend to the neck and should- ers. Dentists and ear doctors are constantly on the lookout for this dysfunction of the jaw joint when patients complain of pain on chewing, clicking in the ear while eating and pain just in front of the ear. Dr. Nathan A. Shaw, of Temple University Dental Col- lege in Philadelphia, recently reported that 20 per cent of the population show some form of disorder of the jaw joint caus- ed by poorly fitting dentures, wfftMHUHLitogwp* i* tut Sf rm mmm imtm WWOQUT »WDGK W« *. l-Bo(b wfcMraNt, — Soa&yMfc*): Hwrtk BMt fMOi WMt 1 <? PMS 1 NT Ptts S <? Pan t What do you bid now? Q. *-Eatt>W«t mibwraMe. m South yau bdd: Tbm biddinf hw proceeded: jNwtk EM Bwmfk Wert 1* PMI 10 F«M 1 9 Past T What do you bid new\! Q. 3 —Both vulnerable, at South you bold: 4AlM<<?AJltm0l + TS The bidding hat proceeded: North 1 0 2 * : * J * Eatt Paat Past Past Pan What do you Sooth 1 V 2 A 3 V t Wert Pais Pait Pan j bid now? | LI 1 Q and as South you hold: 4AKI4 3 <?7 OAJI3 +AKS nrv ^* bidding haa proceeded: SMft waat W** *** i • DM*- «• rm What A> yc^Wd now? *. f ^BotTvuiMrfMt, •• -South yen bold: m bidding baa proceed: Norib Eatt. Sevtli Wert I V Paaa I * PMI 2* Past T What do you Wd now? Q. i^Eaai-Wett vulnerable, aa South you bold: •AMil tfJIM OAOJ»7« Tim Wddtof baa proceeded: Btrili wart Ifcrtk Bart 1 o *** * V Faw What do you bid now? Q. T^Both^vutoerable, as South you hold: *Kt43<?KI2 0AK*3*J< Partner opens with one club. What U your mponse? Q. *_As Soutb you hold: *S4S?KJ1MT*0AK4*I3 Tb* Wdtfing baa proceeded: Eart Sartfc Wert North IV PaM Pass Past What is your^opening lead? fLook for answers Monday] absent teeth, grinding of the teeth, constant chewing on one side and a poor or bad bite. The condition can be cor- rected if the dental disorders are treated and if the bite is balanced. Dental surgeons all over the country have been using; special apliances to adjust the bite and correct the poor position of the jaw. • • • A Swedish snrgeen, Br. Knut Hager, is stressing a special warning to people who take long-distance airplane journeys He has found that many of the seats are too long for peo- ple with short legs. The result is that one of the large veins in the leg is com- pressed causing the blood to slow down and even clot, form- ing a thrombosis in the vein below the knee. Air and auto- mobile travelers are urged to get up and walk around at least every few hours to keep the blood circulation active. fore his illness, perhaps, should run to his home when things don't go well with him; or if be should get uncontrollably an- gry and say ugly things to the other boys, even cry as he leaves them, he is handicapped . The worst that could happen would be for a parent to go out and charge the gang then with unkindness and unfairness. Help for this child requires a lot of parental skill and patience. Often parents can do most to help the child who has not got on well with other children of the neighborhood by studying and guiding this child on their i ^ premises while some of these! ^i other children are gathered there for normal fun. ^. (My bulletins \Your Child! and His Playmates\ and 4, Fear!* in Children\ may be secured o by sending a self - addressed.: — U.S. stamped envelope to me in care of this newspaper.) TUAT'SALL FOR NOU), LADS... U)E [XXT uuAMTTO SET 100 MAN^ HEARTS PUTTERING 1 Y-i <! i«t ** r r jSaC XOKST^ / TWO, I THRge, V fOOfZ... O^jj^ ^jpSE^p^ jf£*3 r&»£ %JQ 1 tyf ^ I o$ y *> a=f^ & a€?C» a # wtmnmw+*w»wm ^^*'i;^ AUSTIN, Tex. dent Johwoa fen tratkxt officials ; sional leaders of b his ranch Friday through present as administration pr pruning knife in ha No major dedal on juat what and fa be cut from this grams to help dai inflation—or on pn against a tax inert la fact, the onl; nouncement in l field was that the ) approved the spi Securii for ceii UNITED NAT fAP) — The U Council voted 14 k censure Israel foj military attack or daman villages, a would consider aj nve measures if tfa tition. Only New Zeala on a resolution wfc lomats hoped woul per on antigoverm m Jordan itself, a< ing Israeli-Arab sions. Ambassador Fra New Zealand told that while his cour condone an act o the resolution cont tive contribution t in the area. It was the fifth ti that the council ha resolution of cem DAILY ACROSS 1. Collision S. Vessel 11. Slow: music 12. Passage* way IS. Frequently 14. Essay 15. Now Thailand 16. Fretter 17. Half an em 18. Specie 19. Music note 20. Hunting doe; 23. Kiln 25.Nimrods 27. Small barracuda 29. Relax 32. Rough lava 33. Conjunc- tion Zi, Con versa* tionai svilable 35. Cower 3S. Man's nickname 40. Linger 41. Tapestry 42. Gladden 43. Highways 44 Ke>-odup 45. Ocean mist DO^^N 1. Shuts 2. Purify a. Species o€pier i. Branch C 5 « • 7 1 % IC 1€ M 23 22 22 •