PACE EIGHT HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. ORECON wjINUAV, JULY 18, 1949 DOYLE'S COLUMN Five Hundred Transfusions And Louie's Getting Better Br HAL BOYLE NEW YORK, July 1 Little Ixule, the kid who lives on borrowed blood, hu had food year. "I dont get ai tired as I used to." he said, ai he rested on a hospital bed after receiving hu) 600th trans fusion. Louis was given his first trans fusion at we ase of men monthi when doctor discov ered he had Cooley's anemia. Thia la a rare childhood d l -ease whose vic tims are unable to fully replen ish their own blood. There ta no eurt known. They must live on the blood ol Hal Bol others or die. And .usually they die anyway. But in Louies wiry im pound frame there Is a great gusto for living, a stout heart that wont give up. He is In his Hth year now, and there is a good chance he may yet win his long and tedious gamble for lite. "If we can pull him through until he's 20, he may Improve," said Dr. Harvey GoUance. deputy medical superintendent at the Kings county hospital. -There are cases of that kind In the medical records." Louis Is a quick-witted, cheerful. Intelligent boy. Somehow he has; learned the odds are against him. but he discounts the odds. He's sute he 11 make It. And hundreds of New Yorkers who never saw him have helped keep the small, dark-haired kid alive through blood donation to the Brooklyn Red Cross. Talk Of Future He talked about his luture as he lay there waiting for his dad to come and take him home. "When I grow up I'm going to be a radio sports announcer," he con fided shyly. "Everybody at school says I got a good speaking voice and I take part in all the plays." Louie didn't do too well In his English studies this year "They threw adverbial phrases at us, and I can't tell a dependent clause from an independent clause very easy" but that doesn't worry him. He feels, with some Justification, that grammar Isn't everything In sports announcing. He used to have to stay ta the hospital several days, receiving a pint of blood each day. Now he only come each Thursday, gets a pint, and goes home. "I know a tot of the people here now." said Louie, who has become kind of mascot at the hospital. "After all. I been coming here since I was hist a kid." "Yes. and you tell the doctors now bow to give transfusions," smiled Dr. Margaret Rice, a pediatrician. "And some Thursdays you donl come when you should." Louis squirmed and looked busy. He doesnt like to talk about the times he plays hookey from the transfusion needle. The usual reason is he gets too interested In a baseball game and forget to go to the hospital. "I play first base and the out field." said Louis and added modest ly, "Of course, I do a little pitching, too." He has never seen a major league 522 So. 6th mmm I baseball game, and one of his big gest ambitions Is to watch his hero Joe DiMaegio, knock a home run. He prefers the New York Yankees over the Dodgers treason in Brook lyn. "I Jutt like the way the Yankees play." he said. "I like their slyle better. I saw them on television once." The 500 pints of blood borrowed by Louis in his short lifetime Is equivalent to the amount that flows in the veins of 60 adults. Sometime he'd like to be a donor himself. "I'd like to help someone the same way people help me." he said. Robinson On Stand To Hit Robeson Tale WASHINGTON, July 18 i,Pi Jackie Robinson said today that If Singer Paul Robeson "wants to sound silly" In public, "that's his business." The Brooklyn Dodgers' slender second baseman, first' Negro to break Into the major leagues, told the house un-American activities committee that Negro Americans would fight for this countrv "against Russia or any other enemy." He was the last witness called bv the committee to refute a recent statement Kv . , ....... ,hw u c int. I ous athlete himself, that Negroes in ! the United States would not fight In . war against Russia. I The committee's small hearing ! room was packed when Robinson I and his attractive wile arrived, and I a loud -amen" came from some 1 where in the crowd when he finished i reading a long prepared statement. ire nasroau siar said he never has had time to become an expert on anything "except base stealing or something like that." but that he appeared out of a sense of responsi bility. He said there has been "a terrific lot of misunderstanding about communist Influence among Negroes and it s bound to hurt my people's cause unless it's cleared up." Robinson said any Negro -worth his salt" is going to resent "any kind of slurs and discrimination" because of his race. ' This ha got absolutely nothing to do with what communists may or may not be trying to do." he de clared. "Negroes were stirred up long be fore there was and they'll stay stirred up long after ' disappeared unless Jim Crow has disappeared by then as well." Wooden School Building Burns PORTLAND. July lg ip. Part of a wooden grade school, built In 1943. was destroyed by fire last midnight. The loss was estimated at about $18 000. The building was a block-long, one-story portable, built next to the 42-year-old George Washington ele mentary school to accommodate the wartime increase of students. The largest of the five units In the portable structure was destroyed and the wall of the original school Here's You've Been THE Roaclster $2012 3-Pass. Coupe $1912 Tudor Sedan $2033 These Three Models NOW ON DISPLAY at (he Country's Banner HORIZONTAL 1 Depicted Is the Aug of 7 One of its main products IS Deny 14 Evades 15 Ready 16 Growing out 18 Insect egg 19 Company ab.) SO Trembles 22 Tellurium (symbol) 23 Gaelic " 25 Employer 4 African river 5 Passage in the brain 8 U "aspirated 7 Roman statesman 8 Above 9 Field officer (ab) 10 Fish organ 1 1 Revised 12 Compound ether (pi.) 17 Part of "be-1 20 Destructive insects 21 Yields 24 Drained 26 Horse color 27 Asterisk 28 Fishes 29 Afternoon (ab) 30 Credit (ab.) 31 Mixed type 32 Abraham's home (Bib.) 33 Printing term 35 Disorder 38 Created 39 Stain 40 Not (prefix) 41 Fastens 47 Note of scale 48 Fall behind 50 Splendor 51 Reposed 52 Pass 54 Civil officers 56 Storehouses 57 Shore birds VERTICAL 1 Supports i i 1 N li U I ir 11 A Id In I.; -J . 1 1 1 "" "iS-- 3 S5 2 J"" ST" 3 a I I I I jj- s T"E7 f. J tj r"BT 3 51 3 u ST" " 5T" 55- rp- si S ?, 3 5 n 1 I I I I I ''II I 2 Account 1 Sternw srd Autopsy Ordered In Seaman's Death PORTLAND. July It ufv-An au topsy will be made on a merchant seaman found hanged In the stern of the Liberty ship Port mar after the vessel left Long Beach. Calif. The coroner's office reported to day the Investigation Into the death of William Clarence Unrein, lg. Portland, was not complete. He dis appeared when the ship docked at Long Beach. The body was dis- damaged. The cause was not de termined immediately. Hermitage Aentitcky indstet -ABIeud the Car Waiting NEW mll' I UP FOR L 1 COULD.' yVlaHrVV H IV IT y . AflfcR. TMC UTARTT TO j THAI EYfc vi ' 1 Vj Tio Dr'0iu- ' . t J 4 A Genllcmans AATiiskev from Kenlucky , ,, (fl-Oi.it 100. IU7" I HfL LITTLg IC1. I f A fig O PSJuT. T MMM-Hg HAS Ti l iPT" llh K II Nalioaal Dutillen Prod. Corp, N.Y. R6 Proof Oot Craia Neutral Spiriu gox 0 UiBf g 1e N Ev... lCmo 0ruuc WITH I K. OH TM actio gamtK f T 'li"1 IflX' ' I I covtgwi pcaiv v gnwo uriaic J Kir uci-.in UtgAnof ouf Lrr "y Vital ; li C ') WW X II 1 icsvt time otttiad ! av. mmat txteW JL kkv wi t il '. nmOii IHWd II L. rH -fil T M ' ! th 1 1". ll . ' - - outer to-w'. uiOhs rTa MS . witP . gut I curr mi III f I 1 li l'fl I ;l . Kit WAVFME Answer to Previous Puute 33 Showed pleasure 44 Plural (ab.) 45 Race course circuits 46 English school 49 Opening 51 Drink slowly 53 Italian river S3 Long Island tab) 34 Mexican dish 36 Comfort 37 It is larger in area than the United 42 Try 43 Playing cards covered after the ship was at sea. Federal bureau of investigation ! agents will take over the probe if j the coroner's autopsy discloses the j youth, hired as an engineroom wiper, was not a suicide. Greenland was first settled In the ; I 10th fentlirv For! Greenland was first settled In the nw N. (27l6f . T.jfH C Bicycles and sporting Gaoda e2 1 Jo 111 45Qt- 1 ima-coim:doc yezzir) ( fne crazy I on. n ua oscw.)S J vem.im-hum.hut I I 111 KWHAT 1M 60IN TO TKMOOW I CsMjOOT I HEAR NOU AW. WCLLTvNCXD KITf H I I J(T I ; nouso t WITH CSCAIC .. ; "HOU M lHltl' J &IIKBi 1 JUHI OU rui swnt I I fn 5 giu ttKuwUuwM. Av vjtw A ooo f7?) 1 m r- iw. Telephone 8101 New Method Cuts Down On Vaccine Trips IW HOWARD W. HI.KKSI K Associated trea ticlenre Fdilur MONTREAL Canada. July I ill McOill university scientists have given children three kinds of Im munity mixed together In a single hypodermic needle. They are diphtheria, whooping cough and tetanus. This combined shot Is given twice. It replaces six needle pricks and extra trips to the doctor required by ordinary vac cinations. The triple shut multiplied the effectiveness of the diphtheria Im munity by about 16 times. The other two were not weakened. The combination took no more of each kind of vaccine. In fact a Utile leas. These results offer a welcome re lief from a long -hr Id belief that each kind of Immunization must be given separately. The McOill group arc Donald 8. fmhtMm M i rr v t7 T t : . 1 1 lwL ftlfeliP 1 C . 1V' V) IV Mt, 3 liZL ) mimM I I rifi M I 1T ft" 1 v """""' J t ir t . reauy os do . VirCv XJkki tHIajaffn t5- : J"' "7'-',"-" "f V6AM? Tth T TH6VT3 OOtN' fft f OK-lT-t ZaVCH-Y Klf Hr.t WW.LR) ro -tht 6tMrr.YHsyl eI rr toerT W I vrr oo to o6 ano tcrrj UJ fur ZiJ) ITlVi' TMgjeotET OOOQ, gM? j VPi$' JUwTA BAHQ W J TMV DO OP 0sNAMITIi"COMtt IV. Ml X.0TT O ' ?JL'. Fleming. M O., avwlale professor of bacteriology and Louis llreenberg. Ph.D., now at the laboratory of hy giene. Ottawa. Other combinations are typhoid and diphtheria, tetanus, typhoid and paratyphoid, and all four of these at once. As In the Mi GUI experi ment. It sometime happens thai one Immunising subslanre enhances the good effects of another. In the offing are many other kinds of Immunisation. Yellow fever already ta established. My, cholera and common cold vaccines are used to some extent. Yearly some prog ress unreported toward vaccine for Infantile paralysis. The comnmation of several of these In one needle will savej time, probably money and certainly discomfort. Don't miss a good bet shop the Want Ads every dayl It payst m SEWER PIPE HI r n- sm H Peyton 1 I Mt M.f-t SI Ai k laws Ui I Ptyton & Co. 41 laws Ui rMa HERALD AND Tin practice of kneading dnugli wllh, I he feet originated In Egypt i Early Risers . . . : Cliff Yaden's Signal Service 2560 So. 6th i NOW OPEN 6 A. M. - Midnight ; SIGNAL PRODUCTS 1 Keroscno Stove Oil White Gat I Pres-to-Logs f "Wt Give S 1 H Green Stomps" , Phong 3681 Uta.-'."jl -taa,iJIM fJ.Wdll.il NEWS COMICS lion 1.1 l IIMI l , 1 .ll.llilll ! and continued Into modern days In (trot land. i.J,!S'8jUyV3U..A?-lll5.'te'''