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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1956)
3 I 3 TOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MEDFORDvITBIBUNB "Iveryon In Southern Oregon Read Thm Mali Tribune" tubllihed Daily Except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 27-29 North rir St. Phone 1-6141 ROBERT W RUHLs Editor HXRB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM. Buainess Manager ERIC ALLEN JR. Managing Editor EARL H ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT S porta Editor OUVE ST ARCHER. Society Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper Entered aa second clan matter at Mediord Oregon, under Act of March 3, 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Br Mail In Advance: Per Cody 10c. Daily and Sunday One year SIS 00 Dally and Sunday Six months 8 00 Dally and Sunday Three mm 4.25 bunday Only One year 94.20. Sy Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point, Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Shady cove Rogue River. Talent, and on motor routes: Dally and Sunday On year $18 00 uauy and Sunday one month l0 earner and Dealers 10c per copy All Terma Cash In Advance Official Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU Or CIRCULATION Advertising Renresentatlve: WEST-HOLIDAY COMPANY. INC Offices In New York Chicago, de- trolt. San Francisco. Los Angelea. seatue. rortiana St. Louis Atlanta Vancouver B C NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION O" NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight or Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30, 40 and SO years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Oct. 21, 1946 (Monday) Mayor Clarence A. Meeker elected vice president of the League of Oregon Cities. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot column: Fossils have been unearthed indicating man roamed California 4,000 to 8.000 years ago. These are the first fossils discovered in a long time, outside the halls of con gress or a state legislature. 20 YEARS AGO Oct. 21, 1936 (Wednesday) What is believed to be the first trailer house fire in this dis tric was reported yesterday by Mrs. Irene Waldo, state Town send speaker, Portland. With election only 13 days way, Jackson county candi dates are now touring the rural areas. 30 YEARS AGO Oct. 21. 1928 (Thursday) Ticket agents of eastern rail roads arrive in Medford for an auto trip through the valley. Fred Lockley, special writer on the Oregon Journal, in town in the interest of proposed East ern Oregon Normal school at Pendleton. 40 YEARS AGO Oct. 21, 1916 (Saturday) One hundred and fifty dele gates from the Sunday schools in the valley attend 25th annual convention of Jackson county Sunday schools. An advisory board appointed by governors of Washington, Oregon and Idaho to consider a cooperative plan for marketing fruit products of the states. SO YEARS AGO Oct. 21, 1906 (Sunday) From Meadows precinct comes some of the largest apples yet brought into the county exhibit building. A plain, old fashioned gourd U one of the attractions at the county exhibit building this week. What's the Answer? Can Too Get 4 of the 7 T Copr. 19SS Editorial Research Report 1. If the Presidency and Vice Presidency both become vacant, the Secretary of State becomes President: right or wrong? 2. St. Patrick's Cathedral in N". Y. is smaller or larger than St. Peter's in Rome) or about the same size? 3. The rich Ploesti oil produc ing center is in the Middle East, Russia, east Texas, Rumania, California or Venezuela? 4. Which Presidential wife was nicknamed "Lemonade Lu cy" because she wouldn't serve liquor or wine in the White House. 5. Official head of the Church of England is the Archbishop of Canterbury. Queen, Prince of Wales, Prime Minister, or Arch bishop of York? 6. Founder of Girl Scouts of America was Harriet B. Stowe, Louisa Alcott, Juliette G. Lowe, Mrs Herbert Hoover, or Julia Ward Howe? 7. A bushmaster is a garden er, bird, teacher in Australia, snake or nurseryman? The answers: 1. Wrong: U s the Speaker of the House. 2. Smaller. 3. Rumania. 4. Mrs. Rutherford B. Hayes. 5. The Queen. 6. Juliette G. Lowe 7. Poisonous snake. MAIL TRIBUNE "We Like Ike, " But Well, it is all over but the shouting. At least Re publican "GHQ" thinks so. President Eisenhower has as usual followed the advice of his political chiefs-of-staff. He has come to Oregon, and also as usual enjoyed a personal triumph. He did not fail to give his blessing to Douglas Mc Kay for the US Senate, and Elmo Smith for governor, and now all Messers. McKay and Smith have to do is look wise, shake a few hands and count up their ".coat tail" majorities. That is the GOP theory at least. The President even remembered Leonard Hall's admonition to point out he was not TELLING the people of Oregon HOW to vote he was merely tell ing them how it would please him so much if they voted as he desired in the GOP book of proper pro cedure quite a different kettle of fish, though we can detect none without a microscope. flELL, mebbe so. But we have an idea it won't be as magical or as simple as the "GHQ" wise-boys think. In the considered judgment of this paper, at least, Messers. McKay and Smith are two of the weakest candidates the Republican party has ever put up for important office, in the history of the state. They are both for Ike, of course, and he for them. That MIGHT or might not elect them, but one thing is certain: the more voters of this state look up their records the clearer it will become that their sup port is only lip service and expediency that at heart, both of these men are not Eisenhower Republicans but Herbert Hoover Republicans and the most confirmed and extreme reactionaries at heart, to boot. FOR example: Elmo Smith is in agreement with Former Secretary McKay on most everything. He believes issues, (he never mentions them), don't count only votes. He can see nothing wrong in the Al Sarena case precedent, or exploiting wild life refuges for the benefit of the oil companies. Smith was the only member of the State Senate, in fact, to oppose the League of Nations resolution favoring thaforganization as a step forward in secur ing world peace. He was the only senator to vote against all three bills to condemn racial discrimina tion. He was, like McKay, 100 for the "give-away" of Tidelands oil. He opposed setting up a game con servation commission in out teachers in public schools to sign a loyalty oath; against teacher-training at Portland college, against a minimum salary for teachers; he was against unem ployment insurance and so forth and so on ad infin itum. .We don't mean to say that ex-Governor McKay had he been in office would have agreed with Senator Smith on everything but we do say they are political kinfolk and hold to the same basic political philos ophy. "llfE CAN'T believe that the voters of Oregon a ' majority of them, at least wish to have Oregon represented either in the US Senate or at the State House in Salem by men of this type, even if they have the endorsement of the President of the United States, as leader of their own party. Few of them, we believe, are for states-rights as far as racial discrimination is concerned, but still few er of them are against states rights when it comes to their freedom to make their own decisions as to candi dates they wish to represent them, and those they do NOT. R.W.R. "The Old Army Game We applauded when President Eisenhower said he would not get down in the gutter with Joe McCar thy and trade smear punches. We would applaud again if he would refuse to in dulge in the rough and tumble of what is generally known as "practical politics." But the pressure of the political "pros" in his party has apparently been too much we would not say "Ike" has become "just another politician," but he has adopted the professional politician's technique, which is to claim all possible good lies in one party, and all the evil, in the other. This may not be "wicked nonsense," but it is non sense, and it is hard to believe the President doesn't realize it. TAKE the Eisenhower claim here in the Northwest, for example, that there have been no "give-aways" in the field of public power and conservation during the present administration: We quote "No, there have been no 'give-aways.' We have not dis mantled the great dams of the northwest. We are building still more dams generating more power for all the peo ple." We wonder where? Certainly not at Hells Canyon, where the measure providing for federal power was defeated largely due to the strong pressure brought against it from the White House. We believe the rec ords will also show that only one federal project ad vanced in the present administration has escaped the fatal stigma of "creeping socialism." That was the Upper Colorado River development. HOW did this happen? T) XT iT jlvc1uii wv. j. is uie expense 01 producing pow er would be so exeat that no orivate nnwer cnmnanips or combination of them project (2) not chiefly for ana reclamation, had the united support of nearly half a dozen states, most of them strongly Republican. (3) The Orivate nmvpr lnhhv. instead of snpnrHno- thousands of dollars to defeat this bill, did not spend Sunday, October 21. "HSB Oregon; he voted to single . . J would look at it. Such a power but for irrigation Matter of Fact By Jo and Stewart Alscp SATELLITE DRAMA A year or so from now, our exciting Presidential campaign may have come to seem a com paratively trivial event, com pared to the ferment tha t is now rising ever more openly in the Soviet sat ellites in East ern Europe. The astute George F. Ken nan is now pos itively talking jo&epb aisop oi an exten sive disintegration of Moscow's authority within the Soviet or bit." The fascinating spectacle of the ferment rising behind the Iron Curtain is also causing in tense and rising excitement among the American policy makers. Informed people are really beginning to ask whether this may not be the great turning point for which the world has waited so long. The question is almost cer tainly over optimistic. Yet ample proof is now available Stewart Alssp of the accuracy of George Ken nan's startling evaluation. If not a turning point, the ferment in the satellites is at least a new political process of the very highest significance. The follow ing proofs may be cited: TN POLAND, first of all, the drive for increasing independ ence from Moscow is now going with a rush that is almost fright ening. It began, in effect, in the struggle within the Polish Com munist party after the Poznan riots. Marshal Bulganin himself went to Warsaw to try to strengthen the hand of the loyal ist faction, in which the leading figure is the Polish-Russian army Commander Marshal Rokossov sky, who used to be Stalin's Viceroy in Poland. But despite Bulganin's effort, the party's nationalists headed by Premier Joseph Cyrankiewicz won a re sounding success. Since then, the Polish press has displayed an incredible freedom. Even "Tribuna Ludu," the official newspaper in War saw, has announced within the space of a single week that the American Marshall plan for Europe was really a good thing after all, and that the Stalin-era industrialization of Poland had proved a total failure. Yet these surface signs in the press have only reflected a larger develop ment. ... CURRENTLY, the pro-Musbor vite, Hilary Mine, is being driven from the Polish Presid ium. Wladislaw Gomulka, the nationalist, Titoist - Communist leader sent into outer darkness by Stalin, is now returning to a dominant post in the Polish party. Most astonishing of all, Gomulka is openly advocating the dismissal of the Russian of ficers who now serve in the Pol ish army at all levels from bat talion upwards, and even calling for the withdrawal of the two Russian infantry divisions still stationed on Polish soil. In Hungary, another member of the Soviet Presidium, Mihail Suslov, made an effort to stem DM a cent and gave it their blessing, if not active support. HTHE CRY of socialism, creeping or otherwise, was never raised, although no informed person would deny that if "TV A" was "creeping socialism," this billion-dollar burden placed by the government on the taxpayers certainly was . . . even more so! It is a safe assumption that had this project promised to produce power that could compete successfully in the open market with private power, the same forces that de feated Hells Canyon would have defeated this. FINALLY and obviously this federal "venture niLu Buwiauaiu waa uut at all, but approximately a WE ALSO wish the President would not try to con- "vc uic uiti o uiaL reality a "New Deal" party terested in small business and the "little man" as the leaders of the Democratic party claim it ISN'T. Ihis is so obviously in the two parties and such catch flies for the campaign period only, that to have a man of the unquestioned standing of General Eisenhower adopt it, is depressing VERY. Why the pretense? Most of the "pros" think this sort of make-believe makes votes, but we doubt it. There are exceptions in both parties, of fourse, but by and large the Republican party DOES repre sent the cause of the Big Man and Big Business and any impartial poll would show it, whereas, again, on the whole, the little man, the workers, the small farm ers, form the chief support of the Democrats. There is nothing improper in this on either side, but it does form one of the chief issues between the two major parties. We can see no more reason for President Eisenhower to maintain the GOP is the par ty of the "little man" than for former Governor Stev enson to maintain the Democratic party is the party of General Motors and standard Oil. It is the old, old army game playing both sides of the street. But we doubt if, for either party, such plain hocus pocus makes many votes. R.W.R. the rising' tide of nationalism, similar to Balganin's vain ef fort in Poland. Suslov went to Budapest to secure the continu ance in power of the Soviet stooge, Matyas Rakosi. He got a dusty answer. When Anastas Mikoyan followed Suslov to Budapest Mikoyan was con fronted with the accomplished fact of Rakosi's removal in favor of Erno Gero. And now Imre Nagy, who is the approximate Hungarian counterpart of Go mulka in Poland, has also been brought out of retirement and restored to power. There are hints, too, of the future formation of a Southeast European federation of Com munist states, comprising Hun gary, Rumania, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia, under the general leadership of Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia. Favoring such a project was one of the chief crimes for which Tito was con demned by Stalin. . "VTOR is this all. On this side of the Iron Curtain, and espe cially in the Italian Communist party, the spectacle of the satel lites driving for a partial inde pendence of Moscow has clearly had a downright intoxicating ef fect. Not long ago, the Italian Communist hatchetman, Luigi Longo, led a group of comrades on a pilgrimage to Belgrade. De spite the Soviet Presidium's fa mous circular declaring that the Yugoslav Communists were not true Leninists, Longo made two important speeches in Belgrade. In both he lauded the Yugoslav Communist ideological contribu tions to the skies and more startling still, he never once even mentioned Moscow's ideological authority. Finally, the ferment in the Eastern European satellites is apparently receiving encourage ment from the opposite end of the Soviet orbit, from the Chi nese Comunist leadership. Ed ward Ochab, the Polish Commu nist party secretary, recenUy visited Peiping. According to credible reports, Ochab was re ceived by Mao Tse-tung, and was told, in effect, "more power to your elbows in your effort to be independent." Put all these details together, and they make a coherent and dramatic picture. Not all the im plications of the picture are favorable, to be sure. For exam ple, independent Western Euro pean Communist parties will have far more mass appeal than obvious Moscow stooge-parties. But if the poles press a demand for Russian troop withdrawals, and if the Soviet evacuation of Poland actually takes place, the time to talk of turning points may well come in the end. (C) 1956 New York Herald Tribune Inc. Metz Wounded When Gun Discharges Clifford Metz, 48, of 112 Wash ington st., Medford, accidentally shot himself in the leg while getting out of his car to go deer hunting yesterday in the Hill crest orchards area, according to Sacred Heart hospital. The bullet wound tore some muscles out of the front portion of his thigh, according to hospi tal attendants. His condition is not serious. ill me l ituilli; liuiuiwtbt thousand miles from it uic vriauu viu j. di ty ia ill only more so and as in conflict with the records of transparent "molasses to fine character and high Today and By Walter ON TITOISM Aid to Yugoslavia has been United States policy for about eight years, since 1948 when the great break oc curred between Stalin and Tito. The aid has been given in order to help Tito main- 25 'J pendence, and there is every reason to think as the Presi MM Walter Llspmana dent declared on Monday, that the policy has been successful. To be sure, we are not well informed about what has been going on recenUy during Khrush chev's visit to Belgrade and Tito's return visit to Yalta. But there is much objective evidence which goes to show "that the essential principle of Titoism, which is national independence from the dictation of Moscow, is not only strong in Yugoslavia but is spreading in the satellite orbit, especially in Poland and in Hungary. VlfHAT we are seeing is a grow " ing separation between Com munism as an ideology, a secu lar religion, and a social move ment and the Soviet Union as a great power and an imperial state. In the reign of Stalin the spread of Communism and the increase of the power of the Soviet state were meshed one with the other. Thus the line of the Iron Cur tain, which has brought Russian power into the center of Europe, was an old Russian objective at least as long ago as the middle of the Nineteenth century. When at the end of the war Stalin's army reached that line, he in stalled Communist governments on his side of the line. But there is every reason to suppose that his primary object was to found a Soviet empire, using the Com munist ideology as one of the ways of binding the empire together. In Stalin's time, moreover, the Communist parties in the outer world, in Italy and in France notoriously, were used not so much to advance Com munism in their own countries as to serve the interests of the Soviet Union. . THE historic importance of Tito ism is that it has been a re bellion against Moscow's use of Communism, as an instrument of Russian imperialism. From the end of the World War unta Tito's quarrel with Stalin, the Soviet Union treated Yugoslavia as, in the old days, the empires used to treat their colonies: As countries which were not to be developed for their own advan tage but were to be exploited for the advantage of the im perial power. This anti-colonlallst rebellion has spread beyond Yugoslavia. It is very active in Poland and in Hungary, and it is working, so it would appear, inside the pow erful Italian Communist Party. In principle, the men who have followed Stalin in Russia have accepted Titoism. There are, they have stated publicly in the Soviet-Yugoslav communique aft fn The Day's Market note: Grains turn lower on the Chi cago Board of Trade. Heaviest selling appeared in wheat. Pres sure on wheat prices was based on beneficial rains in the Texas Panhandle. But selling in wheat would have been heavier, traders say, if it had not been for a 30-day forecast that rain will be sub normal in the Southwest. HOW come? It's Old Man Supply and Demand. He's a powerful character in spite of what the politicians say. LIVESTOCK market note: Hog prices are steady and 25 cents LOWER at the East ern corn belt markets ON SOMEWHAT LARGER FARM SHIPMENTS. Supply and demand again. Man can tinker with it, but he can't beat it. THE California Farm Bureau's cotton department is consid ering concentrating on promot ing cotton sales In competition with synthetic fibres. The pro gram was suggested at the de partment meeting in Visalia. Will it work? I don't know. But, over the long pull, it will work BETTER than subsidizing overproduction of cotton and storing the surplus up in ware houses. THIS better-world note: Two Americans and a Ger man were awarded the 1956 No bel prize in medicine jointly today for evolving a simple method of charting the interior of the human heart. The winners are Dr. Andre Cournand, who is 61, Dickinson Richards Jr., who will be 61 on October 30 (both of Colum bia University in New York) and Werner Forssmann of Bad Kreusnach, West Germany. L0 Tomorrow Llppmann er Tito's visit to Moscow last June, different roads to social ism. About the application of this principle, there is, it would seem, still much argument. For there must be very considerable anxiety in Moscow, not only among the Communist Old Guard but perhaps also in the army, at the rapidity with which in Poland the ardent vigorous na tionalism of the Poles is break ing out all over the place. . . WE MAY regard Titoism as the counterpart within the Com munist world the world be tween the Elbe and the Pacific of the national uprisings which in the non-Communist world ex tend from Morocco to Indonesia. Titoism is the anti-colonialism, the anti-imperialism, of the Com munists. Moscow may be able to restrain it, here and there to set it back. But there is every reason to suppose that in Tito ism, with its national autonomy, rather than in Stalinism, which is -a form of Russian imperial ism, lies the future of the world wide Communist movements. This will pose, indeed it is already posing, problems which require a reexamination and a reappraisal of many of the con cepts which have served us dur ing the Stalinist period of the cold war. ... ON THE one hand, as Moscow ceases to be the governing center of all Communist move ments, we shall see the Soviet government acting more and more like a conventional great power, like a conventional inv Derial power, less and less as a militant crusading power, There is already much evidence of this change. This does not mean that there is going to be agreement, much less that the Soviet government will give up its Russian objectives to ex clude us from the Far East, to establish herself in the Middle East, to push back or to liquidate the Atlantic aUiance. What it means is that the Soviet govern ment will be playing the game of rower politics in the conven tional way, being able to count less than it did under Stalm on the local Communist parties. This does not promise inter national harmony. But it will be better than what we faced when Communism and Russian power were one and the same thing. ... AN THE other hand, in the " under-developed countries we must expect the Titoist Commu nist Darties to have a mucn greater popular appeal than the Stalinist parties. Communism as n means of social revolution and reconstruction will less and less be handicapped by the spectre nf Russian imDerialism. We cannot afford to dourn that Titoist Communism will be a most formidable challenger For Stalinist- Communism, inas much as it threatened subservi ence to another empire on the make. and. to SDeak frankly, a white man's emnire at that, car ries within itself to some con siderable degree it own anti dote. fTnrnrriah 195B New York Herald Tribune Inc. News Frank j.nkin. THE story oi tnis ra awaru in medicine and physiology dates back to a 1929 experiment bv Forssmann, then a Berlin urologist who was -curious about the functions of the heart. He sat down one night behind an X-ray screen and mirror and pushed a flexible tubular instru ment known as a catheter from an Incision in a vein in the crook of his arm clear into his heart. His colleagues warned him to stop what they regarded as a suicidal exploit. He did so only after REPEATING the experi ment to show it could be done without fatal results. That was the beginning of what Swedish experts (Dr. Al fred Bernard Nobel, donor of the Nobel prizes, was a Swede) describe as "the indispensame technique to obtain true and nrecise answers to what goes on inside the human heart and circulatory system." UNUSUAL heroism in the cause of research, do you say? The answer is no. Back in 1900 Dr. Walter Reed (after whom Walter Reed hospital in Wash inffton is named) led a group of army doctors in a series of heroic experiments designed io discover the causes of yellow fever, then one of the dread scourges of mankind. Several of the doctors, as well as a number of soldiers, volunteered to De iniected with gerrhl of yellow fever so that they could study the course of the disease. Two of them DIED as a re sult. But their experiments prov ed that yellow fever is spread by the mosquito and showed how the disease might be controlled. BUT, you may insist, that was a LONG TIME AGO. How about Richard Ogg, the Pan American airline pilot who ditched his plane so successfully the other day that ALL ON BOARD WERE SAVED. True, he didn't die. But he and his passengers would have died but POTLUCK (By M-T Staff and Contributors) Estimating the size of a crowd at a political (or other kind) of gathering is an "iffy" proposi tion for a reporter. At best, he is lucky if he can get and estimate not toe far out of line. In Portland the other day, this problem was underlined by the two daily newspapers and their estimates of the crowd which greeted President Eisenhower. The Oregonian set the figure at 100.000; the Journal at 500,000. They both did it, moreover, in great, big, black type across the top of the front pages in edi tions which came out about the same time, too. Stat police officers, we like fo believe, are good driven Including the one who, the other night, became irritated at the "driver behind" him that "refused to dim his lights." The officer finally turned around to look at the offender and found the light was coming from the brilliant fuU moon. One of the young men who put his newspaper together in our printing department was driving to work the other day from his home in the Applegate area. His wife was beside him. She re minded him he hadn't kissed her yet that day. He proceeded to reach over and do so. Just as he did, a deer leaped onto the road in front of the car; the car smashed into it; the grillwork in front was dam aged to the extent of about $50, and the deer was killed. That's a pretty expensive kiss. Notice to the Southern Ore gon college Newt Bureau, which occasionally sends us notes about local students: Jan Gilhousen, second-year student at SOC and a report er on the Sisikyou. the cam ' pus newspaper, is the SON of Al Gilhousen. Camp Baker rd., and NOT his daughter. One of our faithful community correspondents claimed a "prize excuse" for not getting her copy in on time for the Sunday paper last week. As she was getting ready to write out her commun ity's news, she noticed her type writer was pretty dusty, so she got the vacuum cleaner to dust it.. As she went over it with the vacuum hose, the ribbon flipped up and zoomed through the hose and into the dust-bag all except the last half-inch, to which she clung madly as she searched for the shut-off switch. It was a brand-new ribbon, too, and it took her a long time to pull it out of the vacuum, inch by inch, and rewind it. Three ladies were carrying on a lively conversation on West Main st. in Medford the ether day which Is not un usual by itself. But it was not ed that all three are teachers at Central Point, work in the same building, and came all the way to Medford before holding their little huddle. . . A former Mail Tribune news man, new living in tne ay area, was passing through Gold en Gate park the other day when ha nnttprl some sort of came being played on one of the fields in that magnificent pane, as a fnrmor snnrtswriter (among oth er things), he didn't recognize the game, and stopped to watch. Tt turned out to be Gaelic foot ball, with "Kerry" and "Cork" teams playing for tne iaenc Football Association champion ship. 'You never saw such a game, or more particularly, sucn crowd, in your life," he said in a recent letter. 'All the Shantv Irishmen in San Francisco were there, dress ed in their Sunday best . . . Everybody spoke with an ac and the clothes they tmri wr riffht Out Of Dublin. I stood alongside an old red-headed lady who must have been re lated to everybody on the Kerry team. Every time somebody on the Cork team did anything, she swore at the top of her lungs and yelled foul!' "... 1 never am completely understand the game," he con l.irfoH "hut T cheered when the old lady cheered, and got along famously. . A rather long press release from an insurance company arrived the other day. and we found it comforting, somehow. It discussed the problem of dots, or specks, or eurley-cues in front of the eyes. After dis cussing them at some length, it concluded that if they persist one should see a doctor, but that they also could be tempor ary and result from anger, fear, worry, poor physical con dition, nervous tension or high blood pressure. "If they clear up after the election, or when an unwel come relative goes home, you can be pretty sure they were emotional," it concludes. Whewll for his coolness, his skill and his grimly courageous presence of mind in the face of grave emergency. 1