The Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 38, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 14, 1969 Page: 4 of 12
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PAGE FOUR — So pul pa (Okla ) Herold, Tuesdoy, October 14, 1969
More readers on
breast feeding
By Abigail Van Buren
It IW tt Ckcni TiW» V Nm tvm4. tat-)
DEAR ABBY: Your answer to the lady who wanted ta
breastfeed her about to-be adopted baby saddened me. altho
it did not surprise me You are hardly to be blamed when ti*
majority of the medical men in the country, including
obstetricians and pediatricians would also pooh pooh the
idea
Knowledge of the physiology of lactation and the factor*
which induce it are woefully lacking in the American medical
education of today.
There are "primitive societies” [civilization's arrogant
adjective for peoples living more naturally than we do) who
very often use the services of other women than a baby's
natural mother to breastfeed a baby. In some groups,
grandmothers, long past their reproductive years, will
successfully suckle infants.
The La Lee he league is far more sophisticated in its
knowledge of nursing than the medical profession More
power to your correspondent. I applaud her maternal instinct
and hope she makes the attempt to breastfeed her adopted
child It can be done MRS L. Me: ALBANY. N. Y.
PARACHUTE PACKING is something every
member of the Oklahoma University Skydiving
Club must do for himself. Sapulpan Larry
Schlecht folds his silks. (Staff Photo)
DEAR ABBY: I have had five children, and 1 nursed
only the first one. and that was enough for me!
It wasn't my idea. It was my mother-in-law’s. She
convinced me that it was a “sin” to put my baby on the
bottle, so 1 went along with her theory to keep peace in the
family as we were living with her at the time I finally had to
quit when my 22-month-old "baby" cut a full set of teeth on
me ‘ MOTHER OF FIVE,” EL CENTRO, CAL.
DEAR ABBY: Please tell that mother-to-be who is so
eager to breastfeed her baby that if she's going to all that
trouble because she thinks it will be better for the baby, she
shouldn’t kid herself.
I have had four children I bottle fed the first two and
breastfed the last two All four are equally healthy. It made
no difference in their teeth In fact, the only child who did
NOT have to wear bands on his teeth happened to be a bottle
baby
Also, my two breastfed children did not enjoy any
“closer" relationships with me than the bottle-fed children
What a baby needs more than anything else is LOVE,
and they all got plenty of that
TWO OF EACH: VALDOSTA, GA.
DEAR ABBY: From my own personal experience, I can
say that bottle babies are healthier
1 WTSfA' oq* ii»*L baby and had nothing but trouble.
When'I was nervous and fretful, my baby would become
nervous and fretful. Every little emotional upset would
promptly be transmitted to my baby thru my milk. Also
breastfeeding seemed to drain me of all my energy.
My next three babies went on the bottle immediately,
and they were healthier in every way than my first one. And
I bad a lot more pep. too MRS G., ORANGEBURG, S. C.
DEAR ABBY. I nursed my adopted baby! It took a lot of
patience on my part, but it was weU worth the effort. I’m
glad I didn't take my doctor's word for it when be told me to
“forget it."
I can thank the La Lee he League!
MRS P. B : L. A., CAL.
Everybady has a problem What's yours? For a peraouM
reply write to Abby. Box CS7SS. Los A age lei. Cal. so***, —J
oaclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
FIRE SWEEPS AREA homes, the Philippine News
MANILA (U PI)-Fire broke Service said today. U.S. Air
out In a lumber yard and swept Force personnel from the base
the Chinatown area of Cebu in nearby Mactan helped fight
City 350 miles south of Manila the fire, which caused an
Sunday, killing 11 persons and estimated $1.25 million in
driving 1,000 persons from their damage.
If you're
self-employed
you can still take
another tooth
out of the
tax bite.
Up to 10% of your income per year, or $2,500 whichever
is less, is tax deductible when you take advantage of the
Keogh Retirement Plan. This money and the interest it
earns are not taxable until retirement, and then only as
the income is received.
You have a choice of a number of
excellent Keogh Retirement Plans
at Manufacturers Life. One, for
example, features "Elastic Pre-
mium Deposits". If your earn-
ings vary from year to year you
can stretch or contract your
premium payments accordingly.
Whatever your choice is you will
have one of the more successful
investment teams in the business
working for you and your future.
Uncle Sam won't mind you pull-
ing that tooth from his "tax
tiger"—call the Manufacturers
Life Man; he’ll make it painless.
Edward A. Luke
Representative
TULSA
Twl: LU. 4 2521
MANUFACTURERS LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
• I14A-69
Jump Ambition Fulfilled
A Sapulpa youth with a life-
long fascination with parachute
jumping has realized his ambi-
tion.
Larry Schlecht, 20, former Sa-
pulpa High school football player
and now a junior at the Univer-
sity of Oklahoma, has complet-
ed ground school with the OU affiliate of the U.S. Parachuting
Skydiving Club. Association. Members make
Larry, son of Mr. and Mrs. their jumps on a course from
E. J. Schlecht, 1215 Melinda Norman to Pauls Valley. Each
Road, made his first jump Oct. jumper must pack his own para-
4 from an altitude of 3,500 feet chute.
He has made tour jumps since Mrs. Schlecht says Larry was
then. interested in parachuting even at
The OU Skydiving Club is an the ace of A or 9.
South Korean Destroyer
Sinks Another Red Boat
SEOUL (UP!)— A South Ko-
rea destroyer and dive bombers
sank a heavily armed North
Korean gunboat early today in
a sea battle that killed all 25
crewmen on the Communist
vessel.
CHICAGO (UPI)— A Chicago
policeman has testified that
Thomas Hayden twice appealed
to crowds to save him from
being arrested during the 1968
Democratic National Conven-
tion. Once, the policeman said,
demonstrators succeeded in
preventing Hayden’s arrest.
The policeman, Frank Riggio,
said he and his partner caught
Hayden and Wolf Lowenthal
letting air out of the tires of
their police car. Lowenthal was
named as a cococspirator but
not indicted.
When be and his partner
attempted to arrest the two,
Riggio said, they shouted to
nearby demonstrators, "Help!
Help! Don’t let them get us.
Don’t let the police arrest us."
He said the protesters sur-
rounded them and began
shouting at the policeman,
preventing the arrests.
The policeman again encoun-
tered Hayden and Lowenthal
the following day and made the
arrests at that time, Riggio
said.
Holt*
BARTLETT HOSPITAL
Admissions: Janice Hampton,
Baby Boy Hampton, Marquetta
Brooks, Roxie Hill, Baby Boy
Hill, Joe Ann Cushman, Cyn-
thia Wallace, Nellie Fair, Na-
dine Hair, Elma D. Greer,
Lucinda E. Myers, Edith E. Mil-
ler, Dora F. Mulkey, Donna Sue
Wicker, Wicker Baby Girl, Bob-
ble Lou Ward, Danny Miller,
Elizabeth Richards, Jean A. Tho-
mas, Marie Sams, Charles K.
Posey, Iris G. Dyer.
Dismissals: Lula Miller, El-
vira Wentz, Nanci Wagner, Ren-
esa Chalk, Peter Egan, Rachel
Lenard, Warnemer Ferguson,
Charles Cagle, John Robinson,
Mollie Brumley, Shirley Hollar,
Stella Hart, Joe Ann Cushman,
Bertha Harwood, Roxie Wyrick,
Lena Lorene Plunkett, Baby Boy
Plunkett, Laura Joyce Conner,
Janice F. Hampton, Baby Boy
Hampton, Mildred May Carl,
Jess J. Shook, Mattie B. Fields,
Nancy Sims, Thomas LaFaver,
Betty DeShane, Baby Boy De-
Shane, Lucy Colbert, Roxie Hill,
Hill Baby Boy, Wanda Lou Wahl,
Howard R. Simpson.
It was the second North
Korean ship sunk off South
Korea in a month.
The South Korean counter-
espionage command said' the 75-
ton North Korean boat— the
The arrests sparked a protest
march to the Loop police
headquarters and to the Gen.
John Logan statue in Grant
Park near the Conrad Hilton
Hotel. Hayden and Lowenthal
were released on bond later in
the day.
Late that day, Riggio said, he
again encountered Hayden.
According to the policeman,
Hayden said, “There he is
again. You!
He again placed Hayden
under arrest, Riggio said, and
again the defendant asked for
assistance from the crowd. The
arrest was completed, however,
Riggio testified.
Riggio also testified he heard
another of the defendants in the
conspiracy trial, Abbie Hoff-
man, urge a crowd to abduct
Chicago Police Supt. James
Rochford.
Earlier Monday the prosecu-
tion showed jurors two films of
defendants speaking to crowds
during the convention week.
The defense objected to their
introduction as evidence, saying
they showed only the exercise
of free speech.
largest ever sighted in South
Korean waters— was spotted
cruising off Korea’s west coast
330 miles southwest of Seoul.
The 3,000-ton South Korean
destroyer Chungmu-Ham called
in 'air force F5A jets and
attacked. The Communist ship
was armed with recoilless rifle,
two rocket launchers, two
antiaircraft guns and 15 ma-
chine guns.
Military spokesmen said the
gunboat fled after the Chung-
mu-Ham spotted it and a
running battle developed. The
gunboat sank 60 miles south-
west of Schuksando Island.
On Sept. 20, a South Korean
navy patrol boat sank a 50-ton
North Korean infiltration boat
manned by a crew of 15. There
were no survivors.
Military authorities in Seoul
have predicted recently that
North Korea is in the process
of changing its methods of
trying to infiltrate South Korea
from overland to attempts to
land guerrillas by sea.
Military authorities in Seoul
said while the sea battle was in
progress, a South Korean army
unit ambushed a North Korean
infiltration squad, killing three
of the Communists in the
central part of the Demilita-
rized Zone (DMZ) seperating
North and South Korea.
The South Koreans siezed a
quantity of machine guns,
grenades and ammunition.
Another South Korean army
patrol killed two North Korean
intruders in the central DMZ on
Sunday, the military an-
nounced. A third fled.
Are You Particular?
Well, you should be most particular when you
Select the druggist you want to compound one
of these!
iis 1$ No Tim« To Experiment!
WE CARE...
. . . About votir family's health!
. . . About your drug dollar!
. . . About your convenience!
. . . About your patronage!
BRING YOUR PRESCRIPTION TO
Plymouth Drug Co.
23 S PARK
BA 4-3B83
Policeman Says Hayden
Asked Mobs To Aid Him
Vietnam Fighting Flares
On US Moratorium' Eve
SAIGON (UPI) - Fighting
flared 15 miles from Saigon
today oo the eve of the
Vietnam moratorium in the
United States. South Vietnam
deployed troops against possible
antiwar demonstrations here.
Saigon police sources said
Viet Cong agents hsd slipped
into the capital and distributed
pamphlets in the Central
Market calling for the South
Vietnamese to bold their own
demonstrations against the war
X ednesday.
In respoose, government sol-
diers in full combat gear took
up stations at potential trouble
spots with orders to take
“strong measures’’ against any
demonstrators.
The lilting voice of Hanoi
Hannah, monitored in Saigon,
said the moratorium was giving
President Nixon a “taste of the
same medicine” that drove
former President Lyndon B
Johnson from office.
The fighting 15 miles north-
west of Saigon broke out
Monday and continued today,
with ooe U.S. Army helicopter
shot down. One American
crewman suffered wounds.
Military spokesmen said
South Vietnamese troops re-
ported having killed 13 guerril-
las in the outbreak— one of the
closest to Saigon since the
beginning of the battle lull Sept
17. Four government troops
have died.
Other clashes were reported
north of Saigon and just below
the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)
Monday, with U.S. air power
killing most of the 74 Viet Cong
and North Vietnamese slain.
One American was killed and
four were wounded.
Headquarters said the biggest
outbreak occurred Airing the
night 85 miles north of Saigon
when searchlight-carrying heli-
copters lit the way for Air
Force gunship barrages that
killed 28 guerrillas.
All of the American losses in
these flareups came in a battle
that killed four North Vietna-
mese five miles south of the
Protestant
Barricades
Torn Away
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
(UPI)-British troops today
smashed barricades thrown up
by Protestant militants in a
neighborhood where weekend
violence killed three persons.
They arrested three stone-
throwing residents.
In London, British Defense
Minister Denis Healey told
parliament that bringing peace
to Northern Ireland would take
a long time and said Britain
may have to transfer some of
Us NATO soldiers to the
province to reinforce its 8,000
man peace-keeping force.
One of those British soldiers
accidentally discharged his rifle
in the back of a truck early
today and critically wounded a
Belfast woman.
The bullet hit the truck,
shattered and a fragment
struck Mrs. Cornelia Fulton, 38,
in the chest in Belfast,
Protestant Limestone Road
section.
Special This Week
F70xl5 Armstrong
Fiberglass
—
HEMPHILL'S
Plus Tax
iDUIW I in
213 W. Dewey
224-5470
DMZ in an area being
abandoned by departing U.S.
Marines.
Guerrilla terrorists at the
same time bombed a Mekong
Delta center for Communist
defectors and their families,
killing ooe person and wounding
48, many of them women and
children, allied military spokes-
men said.
U.S. B52 bombers kept up
their raids against Communist
bivouacs along the Cambodian
border in seven overnight raids
but hit no other targets,
apparently in keeping with a
White House-ordered cutback.
Viet Cong and North Vietna-
mese gunners carried out nine
shelling attacks during the
night, spokesmen said. One
civilian was killed and six were
wounded in a barrage into Long
Dinh, 36 miles south of Saigon.
Headquarters reported a heli-
copter crash from Monday,
apparently due to engine
failure, in which three Ameri-
cans and a South Vietnamese
woman died about 48 miles
southeast of Saigon on a
medical evacuation mission.
The clashes north of Saigon
and near the Demilitarized
Zone saw American air power
claim most of the Communist
death toll:
-U.S. helicopter gunships,
fighter-bombers and artillery
strikes were called into a
guerrilla base camp 42 miles
north of the capital, killing 14
Viet Cong soldiers.
— The same combination,
firing oo ground gunners who
had opened up on an American
helicopter, killed 12 more
guerrillas and destroyed a
bunker in Binh Lxxig Province,
also north of Saigon.
— U.S, troops and armored
personnel carriers clashed with
dug-in North Vietnamese troops
five miles south of the DMZ
and reported killing four
against one GI slain and four
wounded.
NOTICE TO
CUSTOMERS
Our shop has been closed
due to illness.
We will be open thru
Friday, October 17th,
9 o.m. to 5 p.m.
tor persons wishing to
pick up items left
tor repair.
224-1381
SECURITY NATIONAL BANK
... the working man's bank,
working tor you!
HOOT MON!
If You're Interested
In Saving Money On
Your Next New Car-
Ask For Security Natl.
Financing.
More of your friends and neighbors specify Security Not'l. outo financing
because of the convenience, and because of the economy Next time you
need money to buy a new cor, why not come see us first?
MOVING AHEAD WITH SECURITY
Member F.D.I C —Deposits Insured To $15,000
l
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Livermore, Edward K. The Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 56, No. 38, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 14, 1969, newspaper, October 14, 1969; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1493643/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.