New York Amsterdam News — 1963-00-00976
1963
1 pages
✓ Indexed
M • N. y. AMSTERDAM NEWS, Sat, Not. 9,
You Can Cut Colds
Down To A Minimum
$500,000 Goal
Set To Cheer
Wounded People
Career Clinic In E. Harlem \
The East Fsrlem Career In- sector of our city, both the high
formation Clinic will be the topic «*ool graduates and the graduat-
.. ....... ______________ ____ in« 8enlor»-
According to the New 'York i
City Department of Health, chan- I
son are loaded with cold germs,
therefore, should be kept sepa
ces are that New Yorkers will i
catch one or more colds each i
rate from the rest of the fam
ily's until thoroughly washed
per year; and although there is '
no absolute protection against
with soap and hot water.
The Department believes that
colds, there are several things 1
you can do to reduce chances
the key to cold prevention is to
avoid sources of infection:
of catching colds during the
chilly months ahead.
-The Department of Health
points out that colds are caused
by tiny germs called viruses
in the nose and throat. These
germs are spread by a person
who has a cold through cough
ing, sneezing or Just talking. You
may catch a cold by getting too
close to the person, especially if
he fails to cover coughs or snee
zes and sprays the air around
you with gernw. You breathe in
these germs and soon may suffer
from a nasty cold.
Stay away from people with
colds.
Avoid crowds wherever pos
sible, especially during the
months ahead when colds are
common.
Get plenty of rest and avoid
becoming overtired.
Dress according to the weather
- so that you are warm enough
outdoors but don’t get overheat
ed in home or office. And wear
rubbers, boots or galoshes in
stormy, wet and snowy weather.
Avoid ChUIs
From Someone Else
You may also catch a cold
from someone in your family
if precautions are not taken to
limit the spread of infection. For
example, a member of the fam
ily with a cold should use dis
posable tissue to cover coughs
and sneezes. These should be
flushed down a toilet or burned
in an incinerator. Remember
that soiled handkerchiefs belong-
- ing to cold sufferers scatter
countless germs around a room
when pulled from a pocket.
Eating utensils of the sick per-
Avoid getting chilled. It leads
, to lowered resistance and handi-
, caps the body’s fight against
, cold germs.
If, despite all precautions you
. do come down with ' a cold the
. New York City Department of
i Health advises that you get plen-
> ty of rest - and the best rest
I is bed rest. Eat simple nour-
• jishing foods. Drink plenty of li-
. quids (not alcoholic).
The Department further advis-
i es you to stay at home and
call a doctor if you feel feverish.
- He can make you feel more com-
HE APPEARS
IN OUR
NOV. 23 rd
EDITION
Decide wisely on your
next printing job!
Whether it's Letterpress
or Offset, you'll
be wise to see —
Make it a regular habit and
read the Amsterdam News every
week. Out every Thursday.
fortable and help prevent com
plications.
It points out that a present
there is no known vaccine to
prevent colds or medicine to
cufe them. Certain medications
prescribed by your physician
may make you .Teel better; hut
recovery results only after the
body and its germ-fighting mech
anisms have overcome the cold.'
Special attention to —
CHURCHES • SOCIAL GROUPS
• FRATERNAL ORGANIZATIONS^
\ LE 4-4340
► IRA ROSENBERG, INC
NEW YORK
CATHOLIC AWARDS — Per
cy H. Williams (left), assistant
director of contract compliance
on the President’s Committee
on Equal Opportunity, and Dr.
James T. Carey (second from
right), of the University of Cal
York. In between them are
ifornia, hold the 1963 James
Father John. LaFapge, C I C
J. Hoey Awards for Interracial
chaplain emeritus, and A, Phil
Justice given by the Catholic
ip Randolph, civil rights leader.
Interracial Council of New
(Gilbert Photo)
Tenants Want Welfare To Help Burials
Victor C. Gaspar, genera! sec- Church, visited Washington. are burie
retary of the New Harlem Ten- Gaspar said the delegation ap- the fami
ants League, thinks the Welfare pealed to Sen. Jacob Javits and
Department should get a larger Representatives Jacob Gilbert when t
share »f public funds so that it and William Fitts Ryan and they fUDds ar
ean underwrite the burial of wel- assertedlv agreed the agency added in
should bury clients whose fam- the city 1
fare clients.
Welfare Commissioner James dies are unable to do so. tions.
R. Dumpson doesn’t think so. On July 27, Sen. Javits wrote “But tl
.Consequently, Gaspar pictures to Gaspar, he related, briefly Gaspar s
the commissioner as an “in- advising him to tell Commission- sonal exi
humane man without the spirit er Dumpson to communicate with most of (
of charity.”
Washington on any need for ad- in Pottei
; Gaspar’s attempt to obtain fed- ditional funds. A copy of the cent bur
eral appropriation for the city’s letter was sent to the commis- He ins
welfare agency began last May sioner.
hasn’t gc
when he and'a delegation of the In his reply, Dumpson told but feels
league, including Bishop Syd St. the Republican Senator that de- lators a
James of the Coptic Orthodox (ceased welfare clients generallyreement
/
WHITES
ANSWER
jARtV StbSOM PRICK- COMPtfTE EARLY SEASON SlUCflO*
Julius A. Thomas, industrial aor’s Advisory Council on Youth
relations consultant to the Na- and Work, is the former In-
ttonal Urban League, and Robert ?Kustr'a' Rala‘T
„ .
, the National Urban League. Mr.
Easley, well-known upstate labor Easley of 01ean N Y is pre.
.. ,
leader, were among six persons sident cf the Cattaraugus-Al-
appoicted by Gov. Nelson Rocke- legaay Counties Labor Council,
feller to the Apprenticeship Conn Both were appointed for terms
«£ll cf the State Department of ending Oct. 31, 1966. Members
of the Council recieve $60-a-day
Labor.
WHITE PLAINS — Joseph E. for attending meetings of the
who also serves on the Gover- grruo.
ON TO CITY HALL — John
Miller. Karl Alexander, Lee
Gee, Lester Denenberg, John
Lewis ahd Gloria Boat»’r‘~M
'1 to r> hoW «)gns la front of
the congress of Racial Equal
ity’s Harlem office before join
ing with hundreds of others in
march on City Hall to protest
alleged bias in the construction
industry. Lewis is an official
of the Student Nonviolent Co- I
ordkiating Committee. He was
arrested recently in Selma, Ala.
«i r» ^-. (Duramett Photo).
What should Soft Whiskey be?
According to the dictionary definition of soft.
Soft Whiskey should be a whiskey having a soothing
or quietly agreeable taste; lacking harshness or coarseness; affecting
the senses in a gentle or pleasant manner,
ltis.
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Untitled Document file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AMThomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com