I 'I lllihlit iWil'ilrit"lfV'''Jil'Lj,-: r'
ft.-
Si
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PAGE SIX
FRANK JENKINS BILL JENKINS
v. ; Editor , " Managing Editor
Entered as second class matter at the post office ot Klamath Falls, Ore.,
. , on August 20. 1906 under act of Congress. March 8, 1879
'! ': MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .
. The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use lor publication
of all the local news printed In this newspaper aa veil as all AP news.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
1 : HAIL' BT CARRIER
1 month i , , .; 1.35 1 month t 1.35
( months . 8.50 6 months , , , 8 8.10
l year ,. 811.00 ", ! 1 year 816-0-
BILLBOARD
'. BT BILL JENKINS
i With deer season Just . around
(he corner the usual warnings to
. olav It sale and be careful are
t. flying around thicker than pick
pocket at a convention. And look
' lng at a breakdown of Oregon's
' 195. bunting accidents most of the
. 'x's are in the deer column. Sec
' ond in line Is waterfowl season
i end -third Is small game. There
: were 1,4 fatalities, eight of them on
' deer trips, three on duck hunting
Jaunts, two killed while hunting
' small game and one man killed
on a pigeon hunting trip.
These can be further broken down
, to Include some of the causes. On
deer, for instance, three of the fat-
allties occurred when the victim
was In the line of fire and another
was mistaken for a deer. (That's
'. so easy because a deer and a hu-
man look almost exactly alike.)
' One was killed when a bullet ri
.. cocheted off a rock and another
went west when his hunting part
; net's rifle accidentally .discharged.
On ducks one Chan was killed
while Illegally hunting; He pulled
his gun out of the car by the muzzle
' and it went off. One was self In
. flicted and another was killed when
his parner' was knocked down In
the surf by a wave and his shot
gun went off..
The small game fatality came
about when the victim crawled
through a fence,, dragging his
trusty old musket behind him. The
same thing happened to the pigeon
hunter. He crossed a fence,
snagged the trigger and that was
that. : ' - ' ' '
A bear hunter mistook his part
ner for a bear (that's pretty easy,
: too) and promptly put a hole In
him. but didn't kill him.
Injuries were all too common,
there being 14 of them, too. One
ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL
By KEN McLEOD
i At the turn ot the century In
1899, when the physicist J. Joly
figured thnt there was enough data
available to determine the age of
the sea by Its content ot common
. salt, he arrived at the figures of
97,600,000 years by estimating the
number of tons of salt In the wa
ters of the sea and dividing 'this
figure by an estimate of the nunv
- ber of tons of salt brought down to
' the sea each year by the rivers of
uie land., . . ,
In later years, other workers
with more complete' data revised
Joly's figure upward to 112,600.000
years,
8clence, of course, now recog
nizes that this figure is actually
far short of the true age of the
sea lor they now place the age of
the earth at 3,160,000,000 years
and the sea was one ot the first
features to be developed on the
faco of the Earth. This ostimate
of the age of the sea was far from
satisfactory yet It Is an estimate
that confirms the ancient lineage
or the aea. The number of years
llotcd by this computation merely
takes us back to a period of the
world's history which Is called the
"Cretaceous Period.'1
The word "cretaceous" was de
rived from the Latin word "crcta."
meaning chalk, and was first ap
plied to the soft lime rocks which
form the white chalk - cliffs along
, the English channel. The term now
has been extended to Include all
the chalk deposits of the world, for
, the Cretaceous Age was the period
when chalk was laid down upon
the earth In the waters of the sea
an age, when flowering plants
first appeared upon the land and
many armored and horned dino
saurs were the dominant creatures
to live upon the plains and In the
dense Jungles of fern. .
There was obviously something
i wrong with this early scientific as
sumption that the ago of the sea
could be determined from its con
tent of salt as there Is a vast
nap between lis million years and
two billion years of time. We now
know that the sea was present
some two billion years ago. In a
period known as the "Kccwatin."
In the early Keewntin Period,
some lands sank beneath the wa
ters of the sea so that the present
oceans and continents became de
lined. Rivers commenced to flow
to the sen, bring their leads of silt
and dissolved minerals in their wa
ters from the land.
Geologists find thnt the Keewn
tin period was a period ot volcnnlc
activity. Violent eruptions occurred
and lavas spread across the faco
ot the land from reunites fissures
while the volcano belched out
clouds o( ash. Orcat mountains
were formed and destroyed In tills
most stupendous period of the his
tory of the earth.
The land was a very Inhospitable
place for life of any kind and so
we find that It was In the early
. Keewatln Sea that lite found refuge
and had Its first beginning upon
the Earth. It consisted of simple
animals and blue-green algae.
The error the scientists made In
their attempt to date the age of
the sea by Its content of salt was
the assumntion that the flow of wa
r from the land was always con
stant and that theso waters always
had like amounts of soluble min
eral content. This was not the
case however, as the continents
as we now know them were tor
treat periods of time merely low
lands which were often submerged
hv sreat areas of sea.
We now live In a period of
Earth's history when the land Is
hiah and this means that the wa
ters flowing from the land to the
sea have greater mineral content
than when the continents are low.
poor unfortunate was plugged
twice by an unknown hunter, who
didn't know what he was shooting
at. but had a pretty fair sense of
direction apparently. A duck hun
ter was, Injured when " his com
panion's' gun went off while it was
being cleaned.
And, a word to the horse hunt
ers, one deer hunter ended his
hunting days permanently when he
tried to scramble of his mount and
blew himself into Kingdom Come
doing it.
So it would seem that it pays
in h nnrMui after fill. The acci
dent doesn't always happen to the
other tenow. Ana rii oi us c
liable to make the fatal mistake.
This Is the only plea for safety
we'll make, but I hope it. is heeded
by all. Including me.
...... ManJ Ann White COmeS
UUI ,U !.. -
it.. orraln with another pearl
of wisdom from the Journal of
Living. "Live for today. Remem
ber you're only one day old." So
'.. t umirif Vlnnrt editor of the
magazine. Don't allow yourself to
grow old, keep out of the past and
live for today only.
ia arluln nnri If thCV 11 let
me follow It clear up to the hilt
I'll go along. Forget yesterday,
including that bill I ran up, and
go my happy-go-lucky way. Just
,t.it yin handovers no worries.
no plans no frustrations. Yep, we
think we'll start living for today
and the heck with the past.
But it's not a new idea, Leon.
o,h niH hnv. t helonir to an organ
ization ' here on the coast whose
mnitn ! "A tin- for care, a fig
for woe. Let the world slide, let
tne world go." wnicn jusv nooui
Sums it all up anyway.
Except mat it never wonts mat
way.- - . ! ;
The simple assumption that the
scientists adopted as the answer
for their problem disproved Itself
and became an Impossible solution.
Yet, their computation of the age
or the sea from its. salt content
wns one of the first demonstrations
by science which confirmed the
opinion of geologists that the age
of the sea from Us salt content
was one of the first, demonstra
Hons by science which confirmed
the opinion of geologists that the
age of the earth was ancient by
any numnn scale or years.
It Is interstlng to note the opin
ion that life started some two bil
lion years ago in a sea that was
either fresh water or slightly
brackish and that ever since this
time the saline content of the wa
ters have been on the Increase.
Without a doubt this factor has
played an Important part In the
development of many snecles of
aquatic life. The truo fishes start
ed to appear some three hundred
and fifty million years ago In sea
water that must have been fairly
saline, yet as the - mlllenlum i
passed, life in the sea had to adnpt
itself to Increasing salinity or pass
from the picture.
Much aquatic life of the sea to
day can not tolerate fresh water
and much fresh water life cannot
tolerate any degree of salinity. Yet
there aid' species of aquatic life
which are at homo one time or an
other in cither fresh or salty wa
ter. Some species live in the sea
but come to fresh water to snawn
while others reverse the process
live in fresh waters of the land
yet migrate to the sea to spawn.
Telling The Editor
KLAMATH FAT.tAT.vt TVm.n.
ihg's SlorV on the Khnntlna- nr TV.
nest Decker, Is In very bad taste.
How must Ernest Decker's fam-
llV feel td renri a Klnru llUn thteO
They already have enough sorrow
wiinoui rending stun like this. This
story Is like a 25 cent western
life than one. A for ih ,hm,ti..
with no more regard to a human
ii.woma seem mat ir Ernest Deck
er hnd been drinking henvily, he
would hnve linen utivtnnHv n M.
feet and wouldn't be In very good
atmc io move very last.
Whv then rniilrin'l. KnmPnnn t,L.n
him to Jali without killing him. II
uepuiy snrrm Dale Smith felt
that ho had to shoot hlin, why
did lie SllOOL Hn hlDh? Whi, nn, In
the leg I don't think a man who
nns Docn drinking heavily and shot
m the lcK could do any dnmmse
and he would probably be alive
today,
Sinrercly
Lilllan Lobcrce
Navy Strews
'Souvenirs'
CHARLESTON. V v in Tr
anybody picked up any nice shiny,
pujeciue-snnped souvenirs lying
around U. S. Route 60 nenr New
Creek in Mmei-1 Pniimv i, v......
would like to have them back.
An ammunition truck enroute to
Uie naval depot Rt Earlc, N. J.
overturned in thnt m. Am- ia
the Nnvy snys .several1' ot the
o mm. shells which spilled out oi
it are still misslm?.
OKlclBl. hll,. .1...
nave liked them for souvenirs and
picked them up. Explaining that
tile Ahrlla nrn v,,o all,..
gerous, the Nnvv asks that anyone
havniK any turn them in to his
local pollco department
TheyTl Do It Every
For the whole three weeks
ATTUB SUMMER KESOKT.OM
5 R4MILV DRESSED FIT TO KILL-
14-Day Diet To The Queen's Taste
: by TILLIE LEWIS 1 -
Tillie ' Lewis, most' famous woman In food, has.
spent more than ten years In Intensive research In
the field of sweetened low calorie dietetic foods.
FOLKS ARE SO VERY HUMAN
Let's face, one Important fact In dieting - people are human! And
If you have a sweet tooth and a natural hankering for a tangy dressing,
on your snlad, you're Just making it too difficult to ask your
nature to do a sudden about-face. Why not allow for the fact that
you're human - and make your diet tasty, tempting and delicious?
It can be done,, thanks to. the new low-calorie dietetic foods which are
sweet to the taste but far lower in caloric content. Good luck, and let
me know how you're making out
TILLIE LEWIS DIET
BREAKFAST
Grapefruit
Soft Boiled Es
Whole Wheat Toast
Dietetic Jelly
Coffee
with Skim Milk .
and Sweetening Tablet ..
LUNCH ':
Cold Roast Lamb. Sandwich with
Whale Wheat Bread 2 thin slices '. .'....-. 130
Lamb (trimmed) ........... 1 slice 3-!ii4-!ii! Inches .... 100
Lettuce ; 1 large leaf -r 3
Dill Pickle -.. 1 medium r 10
Dietetic Whipped Dressing 2 teaspoons 10
Dietetic Fruit CockUil ',i cup ;..1. 64
(in dietetic cherry gelatin dessert)
Dietetic Chocolate Pudding Ji cup ' 35
(made with skim milk) - - ;
Skim Milk 8 ounces .r 90
- " ,.
DINNER
Beef Stew
Boneless Beef
Carrots
Onion
Potato
Cole Slaw
Cabbage
Caraway Seed
Dietetic 1 Calorie Dressing
Whole Wheat Bread
Dleletie Jelly
Dietetic Chocolate Pudding ..
(made with skim milk)
Skim Milk
....
Season all foods to taste with salt, pepper or other condiments.
': Remember "Tasty" docs Itl
' This is the fourth in a series of dally diet menus incorporating the
new dietetic foods introduced recently. The menus are nutritionally
sound, doctor-approved, and planned to make dieting pleasant. The
ontire family will enjoy these same menus, but may wish to 'eat larger
servings, or add bread and butter or other basic foods.
BRUCE
The case of Martin Durkih. the
resigned secretary of labor, is a
nice example of confusion nd mis
representation.
On the surface, its elements are
simple. Durkin said the White
House had agreed to recommend
19 changes in the Taft - Hartlev
Act, but reneged on the agreement
under business pressure which
followed premature disclosure of
the proposals.
Leading White House spokesmen
deny, however, that there ever was
such an agreement. So who are the
citizens trying to Judge their
government supposed to believe?
It is possible that there Is some
hair-splitting going on. The two
sides to this controversy may
not agree on what constitutes an
agreement. , ...
The confusion does not end
there. Top labor leaders and many
Democrats are portraying Durkin's
resignation as evidence of a wid
ened breach between the adminis
tration and labor. Senator Morse
of Oregon, a semi-Democrat, cited
It as proof the Republican regime
is "amt-inoor."
Nnturallv the opposition wants to
make all the political hay It can.
But In this particular effort it
Is treating the facts rather casual
ly. : .
The truth Is thnt the Durkin ap
pointment did not bring labor and
the Republicans closer together.
All the evidence suggests Durkin
Is an earnest and honorable man.
But he did not persuade labor
to the administration's views, nor
the White House to see it labor's
way. And he effected no compro
mises. In the words of Joseph Loftus,
New York Times' veteran labor
reporter: "His resignation did
not wreck any truce or honeymoon
Because there was none. 1
The record shows that union
leaders have felt free lor months
to criticize the administration.
They did not regard Durkin as
their spokesman at the white
House: he is not even in the
top AFL hierarchy. But they did
view mm as a sort of labor hos
tnge in the administration, and thus
they soft-pedaled their attacks
somewhat.
i All his resignation appears to
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH
Time ----..-.--
Them on
PLAN - 4th Day
Amount
(i small
1
1 thin slice ..
1 tablespoon
as desired - ...
Z . ounces '
as desired .....
Calories
50
65
6
' 0
ft
0
4 'ounces .
2 medium
1 small ...
, 1 small , ...
200
. 40
. 25
. 60
. 20
. 1
. 65
35
90
535
;i cup ,. .. :
' teaspoon (if desired)
1 tablespoon r
1 thin slice
1 tablespoon
H cup .....
8 ounces
Day's Total
BIOSSAT
mean, therefore, is that Durkin's
neutralizing influence is removed
from the cabinet and labor may
now criticize without restraint.
The charge that this proves the
President is "anti-labor" is cer
tainly premature, if nothing more.
The administration record in the
labor field is still to be written.
Mr. Elsenhower promised to
altar the Taft-Hartley Act wher
ever It could be shown to be "union
busting" In character. Nineteen
proposals were drafted, and then
pulled back. But by the President's
own word, he Intends to submit a
series of changes later. Until these
are actually offered, and examined
on their merits, how can one fairly
Judge the administration's attitude
toward labor?
The fact that Durkin quit doesn't
mean that any new set qi proposals
Is bound to be "anti-labor." As
a matter of fact, the 19 changes
mentioned by him fall far short
of satisfying labor's full de
mands on Taft-Hartley. Did that
make Durkin "anti-labor"?
In all of the argument that has
engulfed this question since Durkin
resigned, one. thing seems to have
been forgotten. A secretary of labor.
no less than the government he
serves. Is supposed to function in
the public interest, not as a narrow
lobbyist for organized labor, which
represents only 16 million out of
a 63-million-man working force. '
So, in the end, the ordinary cit
izen must Judge this controversy
by trying to find where the public
Interest lies. And he cannot do
that until he knows what specific
things Mr. Elsenhower proposes
for labor. Then Jie will have a
chance to see how, the President
intends to balance off the legiti
mate demands of labor against the
Interests of other groups and the
broader Interest of the whole pub
lic. IN PLOPS PLANE
SCULTHORPE, England l.fl A
U. 8. Air Force robot plane sur
prised Mrs. Bertha Elwood, 68, at
nearby Stltfkey Saturday by
smashing Into an upper floor bed
room while she was baking tarts In
her ground floor kitchen. She was
showered with tiles but escaped
unhurt.
XM ik eJJ 0 BASKET ) ( THANKEWILL I
P??Th i f? I ( I SEND A CCfV TO
FALLS, OREGON
By Jimmy Hado
I f
the nv tuphe sons 4
HOME DRESSED IN THEIR "WHAT HAVE tfXJ'S,
WHO 5H0W5 CFP GIVE A LOOK.'
James Marlow
WASHINGTON W President
Elsenhower is shopping around tor
two men to fill a coupie ot im
portant Jobs and, If he had to run
an ad for them, this might be
about it:
Wanted: One man, very thick
skinned, to be secretary of labor,
salary $22,500; another, expert on
injured feelings, as Chief Justice
of the United States, salary $25,600.
No clock-watchers need apply,
The new secretary of iBbor will
have a busy year ahead of hlin,
with long hours of work and no
assurance that all his efforts won t.
end in smoke. He's almost sure to
be a target for criticism.
Long hours go with .he Job of
chief Justice. After his day on the
bench, In his office, in conference
with the other Justices, he has to
take his work home with him.
The lale Justice Vinson was an
extraordinarily well-rounded man,'
with experience in Congress, in
the executive branch and as Judge
in the U.S. Court of Appeals be
fore he took over the Supreme
Court's top Job.
But he had an added virtue
which was badly needed when
former President Trumar. picked
him: He was good at soothing in
jured feelings. At the time Vinson
took over, there were dilferences
among some of the other eight
Justices personal as weli.as Juri
dical differences. ,
It was a tribute to his ability
as a doctor of personality that no
more internal explosions were
heard after he moved Into the
court.
The new man will have that old
problem to consider since Vinson
probably dldn t remove the ailments-Just
reduced the inflamma
tion. In other years the Job of secre
tary of labor was a kind of mlla
occupation, particularly during the
war years when Mrs. Frances
Perkins held it.
In that period President Frank
lin D. Roosevelt set up the War
Labor Board, under William H.
Davis. It controlled wages and
labor disputes, and trnis Mrs.
Perkins was left on the sidelines.
In the last years of the Truman
administration, then Secretary of
Labor Maurice Tobln was over
shadowed by John R. Steelman
whom Truman brought into the
White House as his labor adviser.
Tobin made speeches. Steelman
pulled the strings.
Unless Eisenhower also gets a
string-pulling labor adviser, the
new secretary will have his hands
full from the start.
He'll have to work with Con
gress, unions, management and the
White. House in trying to change
the Taft-Hartley Labor Relations
Act. On that subject he can't
please everyone.
It is almost certain the new
secretary won't come from organ
ized labor, as did his predecessor,
Martin P. Durkin, president of the
AFL Plumbers' Union. That would
make him suspect by organized
labor from the start.
Eisenhower said durlne the nres.
identlal campaign and in his Feb
ruary State of the Union message
to Congress, that there was need
tor t-h Law changes.
But anyone who knew Washing.
ton and politics and the inten.se
teeitng over T-H in Congress.
unions and business would have
oeen surprised if any changes bad
been made this year.
T-H was passed in 1947 while
the Republicans controlled Con.
gress. In 1946 Truman won elec
tion on a platform promising to
blast T-H. For the next four years
uie uemocrnts were Iq charge ot
Congress. But they didn't, or
couian i, oiast T-H.
During his eight months as sec
retary, Durkin worked to find
changes which Congress, unions,
business and the White House
would approve. He acted like a
man who thought he was getting
surne place.
. Then he quit, voicing frustration.
The White House, he said, had
broken an agreement reached with
htm to back 19 proposed T-H
cnanges.
Durkin's successor will need s
thicker skin.
The AFL, which seemed fairly
restrained about administration
delay in suggesting T-H changes
while DutVln was on Lie scene,
has now officially exploded at Elsenhower.
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I-
HAL
NEW YORK Ifl If you think
vou are growing old too fast, take
a look at s baby sometime.
Nothing ages so quickly as a
baby growing up. It is positively
alarming the speed with which
they expand and change.
I am now the 8-week-oid adopted
father ot a 3-monthold girl. At
first I called ber "Little Jughead,"
but now Frances makes me call
her "Tracy" short for Margaret
Tracy Ann Kathleen.
inis naoy is not going to grow
up hearing herself referred to as
Little Jughead . - mv wife said
firmly. "And that's final, Muscle
head." ' -
On the other hand. I'm not too
sure how Tracy will reaot when
she Is a little older and learns she
was named after a tugboat. For
years Frances and I have loved to
look out at the busy, merry little
tugboats chugging up and down the
East River. Each- has "Tracy"
painted on its smokestack.
But Just in case "Little Jughead"
I mean Tracy doesn't share our
admiration for the sound of the
name and its sturdy symbol, we
gave her three more names she
can pick from If she chooses.
Ive always thought the fair
thing to do is to insert an "X" in
every child's birth certificate. The
"X" would stand 'for any name
she might want to Insert later, a
name she herself might - decide
upon, ' ' ' - '
It s an odd experience, suddenly
finding yourself a new-born parent
at the threshold of middle age.
Many more mature, wiser parents
say: .. .. . ,
You think she's fun now. Walt
until she can walk and talk. Then
they really begin to be wonderful."
Tne funny thing is, we aren't at
all nxlous for her to grow older.
After she learns to walk, she might
walk out of our lives, leaving them
Firsi Look At
Pole Asks Asylum Friday
NEW YORK UH Dr. Marek Kor-
owicz,. Polish diplomat who got his
first look at America last Monday,
is seeking political asylum here
after a pre-dawn flight from ha
country's ' communist nominated
United Nations delegation.
"Life In Poland was a night
mare," Korowicz said yesterday.
The graying, 60-year-old Koro
wicz left Polish U.N. headquarters
Wednesday. Pretending to be work
ing on a document in the early
morning hours, he eluded armed
guards and slipped out ot nis mm
town hotel to telephone an old
friend from the Polish under
ground.
Safe In the friend's home, Koro
wicz. first alternate of the Polish
delegation to the U.N., wrote iden
tical letters to Mrs. Vijaya Lak
shmi Pandit, president of the U.N.
General Assembly, and Dag Ham
kmarskjold, U.N. secretary general.
The letters said:
"I have the honor of bringing
to your attention that I formally
renounce my. membership In the
Polish! delegation, to; the assem
bly of the United Nations.
- "The members of the delegation,
headed by Messrs. Naszkowski
and Katz-Suchy, do not in any way
represent either the Poln-h nation
or the people. It is thus absolutely
impossible for me to collaborate
with these representatives not ot
my Deioved country but solely of
the Soviet regime in Poland."
Korowicz, author of some 20
books and former professor of in
ternational law at the University
of Krakow, said he is unmarried
and has only distant relatives in
Poland.
Last Thursday Korowicz sat a3
grim-faced as the rest ot his dele
gation listening to a speech by
Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles before the U.N. General
Assembly.
Yesterr.ay, Korowicz said he was
deeply moved by Dulles' speech.
Later, Dulles smiled when asked
for comment by newsmen, then
quoted from his U. N. speech.
our nope Is that the Soviet
Communist leaders, before it is
too late, will recognize that love of
God, love of country and sense
ot numan dignity always survive.
Repressive measures inevitably
lead to resentment and bitterness
and perhaps something more."
Dulles added that American
policy was in - favor of granting
JERRY
THOMAS
Ihii question:
I read about a man who lost a
$100,000 damage suit reiultinj
from an auto accident ha had while
driving in another stata. It it trut
that I could be forced to return to
another state for trial? - If I car.
riad auto liability insurance, would
the company handle the cats for me
our-ol-ttate, without cait to me?
ON ANY QUESTION ASK , . .
Jtwuf. Thomas
' INSURANCE
rii t Main Phono 646$
SEE
THERMOSEAL
AD
ON
TONIGHTS
: SPORTS
PAGE .
Mt.... I
M
BOYLE.
empty. When she learns to talk,
she might look around and say, Tl
don't know why I chose to adopt
you two aa parents. If I hadn't
been rushed, I might have done
better."
We would rather like to keep her
small and helpless and changeless
forever. The only thing we really
like to change about her Is her
diaper.
But each morning when we wake
her up, we see fresh signs of time
upon her. She is springing up like
a dandelion In spring.
She weighed only 11 pounds when
she came to us. We have no scales
yet,' so the other day we asked the
butcher If he would weigh ber for
us, a service he performs for many
young parents In the neighborhood.
We spread a cloth on the scales,
put the baby on it tenderly, and
told the butcher to keep his thumb
off the scales we wanted a fair
weigh.
"That'll be $17.46," he said after
a quick glance at the scales, "shall
I wrap her up?" and then for
some reason this favorite Joke of
his with new parents always falls
a bit flat he, added quickly:
"She weighs 14 pounds1 and 3
ounces best-looking baby we've
weighed all morning."
Now there's an honest butcher!
At least when he's weighing babies.
This morning Tracy woke up
rubbing her lower gum hard. Her
first tooth Is trying to sprout. She
had more hair on her head, too
hair that she really doesn't need
yet at all and ber old man could
use very well.
I went back and told the baby:
'Take it easy, kid. Don't you
know that every day you grow up,
I grow that much down?"
rAnd Tracy Just looked up and
smiled the smile of victory all
young things have over age.
US Monday,
asylum, but that each case must
be considered separately and in
conformity with the law.
.Korowicz is the fourth Polish
national to flee to .the West in the
past six months. Two Polish Jet
fliers and a Polish interpreter in
Korea previously sought and
gained asylum in me unuea
States.
Korowicz made his formal appeal
for asylum In the offices of Radio
Free Europe operated privately by
the National Committee For a Free
Europe, Inc. .
He told how his chance came on
Sept. 1, when he was ' suddenly'
asked to go to New York with the
Polish U.N. delegation. '
He was surprised at the offer,
he said, because he was a nan-
party man, but added: "I told
them i d oe oeugntea to go. -Korowicz
said ne never even told
his closest friends of his idea.
"You never know who s listen
ing," he said,' "you can't trust
anyone."
- What the Polish people, needed,
he said, was "the true news from
abroad" . to combat Communist
propaganda.
He said dissension was rite in
the ' Communist satellite states
since Premier Josef Stalin died,
and that 65 per cent , of the Poles
were opposed to their Communist
rulers.
"I am Very happy to be free in
the free world," he said. "For the
first time in seven yeais I have
been able to say what L truly think.
. I shall again have my free
dom of religion."
Korowicz is a Roman Catholic.
What the Polish diplomat had to
say was transcribed and broadcast
by Radio Free Europe over 25
transmitters operating on six frequencies.
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MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 21, 1958
The Doctor Says
By EDWIN Pi JORDAN, M. D.
. A -splitting . headache often ar
rives at tne most Inconvenient
times. Although a "headache"
serves as one -of the world's best
excuses for getting out of some
engagement, the real thing Is ex
ceedingly unpleasant, i -
Headache is a strange thing.
There are reasons for believing in
most. If not all, there Is Increased
blood flowing through the blood
vessels of the brain during a head
ache and this increases the pres- -sure
on the hard, bony skull. Cer
tainly, most of them feel that way!
Why this happens In some peo
ple and at some times is hard to
figure out. There seem U be sev
eral reasons which- can bring this
about.
Undoubtedly worry or some
other kind of nervous strain brings
on headache In many people. While
a headache can sometimes be
traced to eyestrain, sinus trouble,
or an upset stomach, the nervous
origin of many headaches is the
most Important. ; '.
One man had a quarrel with his
partner about twice a year and a
day later he would Invariably be
prostrated by a severe head
ache. A mother always developed
a bad attack whenever her daugh
ter stayed out In the evening longer
than the mother' thought wise I
This sort of thing goes on all
the time and furnishes good evi
dence ,of the close relation between
worry, anger, or other emotions
and many headaches.
However, many headaches are
considered to be of the migraine
type which are partly hereditary
and partly the result of the stress
and strain of modern life. Even
many of those which are, not clas
sified as migraine come on after
a difficult conference, a , quarrel
or something else which interferes
with the calm life.
The occasional headache is
something that almost everyone
experiences, but the frequently
repeated attack cannot be Ignored.
If It can be traced to some definite
physical cause the underlying dif
ficulty can often be corrected.
Some physicians who have
studied this subject intensively be
lieve many headache victims have
a driving personality, are particu
larly ambitious and keep pushing
themselves long after they should
let down on their activities. These
people find it hard to let others do
some of, the work and keep them
selves always tense and anxious.
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