Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 31, 1955, Page 6, Image 6

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    MONDAY, OCTOBER 81, 195.t
HfcHALU AINU NhWS, KLAMATH ALLS, OKUtON
FRANK JENKINS BILL JENKINS
Editor Managing Editor
Entered as second class matter at the post office at Klamath Falls,
Ore., on August 20, 1906, under act of Congress, March I, 1879
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated tm Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication
of all local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
MAIL CARRIER
1 Month f 1.50 1 Month 1 1.(0
Months f 1.50 6 Months f 9.00
1 rear $12.00 1 Year 111.00
wilt Jfeai Trie ftesd
In yesterday's column I ctarted
to sketch the application of scien
tific thought through industrial re
search to a common problem to
tthow that there is very little mag
ic In the methods used by scien
tists in their search for the re
producible experiment. The prob
lem was the "knock" in the auto
mobile motor that was treated to
n systematic process of investiga
tion by trial and error. The basic
fundamentals, the field of therm
odynamics and the laws used, their
mathematics! compulations were
items that had been discovered a
hundred years or more before
there was any such thing as an
automobile.
Time .uid again we have heard
stories of wonderful gas engines
that would produce tremendous
power ou lesser amounts ot fuel
but the story then went on ihat
the oil trust had a conspiracy
against any. such type of engine
since it would mean mat tney
would have 'less sale for gasoline
if such an engine came upon the
masket. In tnrs conspiracy, ine on
trust had bought up the patent and
suppressed it. However, when the
accusers were pressed for the
patent number of this wonderful
invention they became silent since
there wss no such patent. The
mad scramble for new forms of
motive power, more powerful en
nines, Uiat accompanied our el
forts during World War II clearly
indicates the false accusations that
had been directed at industry for
purely political reasons and since
the average American will trust
the politician before an Industrial
list the average American believed
that such a conspiracy was a tact.
The phenomenal rise in the au
tomotive Industry and Its tiemen
tlous demand ior oil has created
many worries over the problem
of conservation of the fuel supply.
One does not have to dream up
uny fancy ideas over what ulter
chaos would rein In our Industrial
economy should our supply of oil
suddenly cease it's too fearful
thought for even the politicians
to play with so they content them
selves with playing with lesser
power problems such as the power
of electricity.
It is impossible to answer the
original broad question of conser
vation of gasoline, for instance,
until we limit the problem In some
way. From the automobile Indus
try's point of view we might as
sume that the answer would He
in an engine of Improved efllclen
oy. such a wonderful engine the
eosslp said was suppressed by the
oil trust. Improved efficiency,
however could be attained by
raising the pressure in the cyllnd-
, or, ior Instance. But if we had
tried to do that in the early 1920's,
we would have found that engine
knock traceable to the fuel, set
a low upper limit on the Improve
ment in efficiency we could ex
pect by this method. So the auto
motive engineers had to stop rais
ing the pressure in their engine
designs until they could learn what
HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK UTi Death gets
to be less of a stranger as you-'
grow older.
As he harvests more and more
of your friends and enemies, your
sloatlng sense of survival becomes
smaller. You are suddenly aware
that more than 60 per cent ot the
people you've met In your lifetime
are no longer with you.
I have the uncomfortable feeling
some days that I have at least
reached the 40 per cent figure,
though I do my heart's best to cre
ate frcs-h loyalties as I move along.
8omc days this Is hard to do. Old
loyalties have a way of creeping
back Into your mind.
There are some memories a
man can't afford. It is too peri
lous a self-indulgence. Some re
membrances will crack Ule av
erage middle-aged person's mind
unless he turns his thoughts away.
But the past always churns in
every Brain, and I think at times
of "Shorn" Schults.
How that little man docs come
Back, and I don't know whyl
buc in ivia i was a green copy
1 duties was to
carry late Saturday nlsht conv
from Tho Ajsoeinied press oftire
in the Kansas city Star building to
the AP oflice In the Journal-Foal.
Shorb. to whom I deliveied the
copy, was one of my boyhood he
. roes. He was a telegrapher. He
was Bbotit 6 feet tall and 6 feet
arotuin the middle.
Schults left nothing to chance. He
was a bachelor. He made money
playing the grain market on the
side. His girl friend sold msgasins
subscriptions, .o he got his read
ing mailer free.
Food was an obsession with him.
Ho always brought his own lunch
find dinner. His endless sandwich
e and pieces of fruit were sep
ralely wrapped, and he un
wrapped ach small tidbit as If he
were unveiling the Ta) Muhnl. Af.
wir cntn iiirai ne loo a big swig
from a bottlo of mineral oil he had
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4 P.M. and J ta P.M.
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caused fuel knock and how to con.
trol it. riitis the broad scientific
question of fuel conservation vfc
narrowed to a question that could
be studied, and perhaps answered.
That is the way this Industrial
research began. Thomas Mldglcy
tackled the problem of finding
what to do to a gasoline to keep
it from losing power as the pres
sure went up. Instead of gaining
power as predicted by the physi
cists. Midgley showed that two
things happen in an engine: first,
the flame burns regularly and
pressure rises regularly, and then
the pressuie shoots up suddenly
as the remaining fuel goes olf
with a sudden detonation that
wastes power against the cylinder
walls. Later he proved mat ad
dlllons to gasoline controlled this
second detonating stage, and that
tetra ethyl lead was a most ef
fective additive.
Like most enterprises of the
kind, tms one was a team enort
and Midgley headed a team at
General Motors Research that in
cluded such men who. have since
attained to eminence Thomas
Boyd, Hochwalt. Henne, Lovell,
among them.
After the discovery that tetra
ethyl lead was a solution to their
problem the answer was not com
pletely solved fur the next step
was to produce tetra etnyi ieaa.
This, too fell into an old science,
but an entirely new technology.
It is not remarkable that the first
manufacture of this compound on
a factory soale showed that spe.
clal care was necessary In hand'
llnr it. Safety and efficiency re
quired the development of new
and special manufacturing tech
niques that motor builders and on
refiners knew - nothing about In
1932. But tnclneers of the Du Pont
company were accustomed to han
dle dangerous materials and un
dertook this chemical production.
Chemical manufacturers put ev
ery now process from the labora
tory through pilot-plant tests be-
iore tney go into mil scale pro
duction, and this pilot-plant stage
la part of the tetra ethyl lead
story. Now the pilot plant Is a
miniature production unit that is
set up to turn out small quantities
of product and to operate a pro
cess under dote control. At the
same time, it Is a larger-scale
laboratory operation that reveals
nny flaws In laboratory reasoning
and conclusions. It is the invention
of the chemloal industry to help
transfer laboratory findings as
safely as possible over that ha?
ardouS slep Kettering calls It
"the smi't-losing gap ' between
laboratory and production plant.
Thus, though the automobile In
dustry had discovered the way to
greater power theve. were still
many steps to be overcome be
fore the discovery could be ac
tually placed In operation and
there was no alchemist present
to wave a magic wand to bring
this desirable invention Into im
mediate public use.
handy. He felt his program kept
him healthy as well as fat.
To fetch him the rolled-up news
copy I had to cross a viaduct. Of
ten on a cold Missouri night I'd
stand there and watch the steam
floating up and listen to the long
"whoo-whoo-whoo" of engines set
ting out for old St. Louis or neigh
ing in pause on the long road to
Los Angeles,
The night held a magic glamor.
Big black cart drove by and I
could hear the sound of feminine
laughter floating back. I dreamed
that sometime one of the big black
cars would halt and an older wo
man with blonde hair and ruinous
oyes would call in a throaty voice,
"won't you come in?"
Progress caught up with Shorb.
The Morse wire was replaced by
an automatic printer machine that
forced him to punch first 40 words
a minute, then 60 words.
His two flying pudgy fingers
couldn't quite keep up with the
tape. He took a Job between mid
night and morning when news was
re so mat he could fight out the
problem of sdjustlng to a new sys.
Icm. He never really quite made
u.
He atlll brought his food In neat
parcels. He drank more deeply of
the mineral oil. He never com
plained. But one day the little gal
lant fat msn stood up. then fell
over dead. Something in his heart
or head had burst.
Still at times I think of Shorb
no the long gone time when
I fetched the news copy to hlni
across the viaduct where the
trains cried "whoo-whoo-whoo."
Supposing 1 did walk that way
again and this time one of the big
black slinky cars really did stop
and a girl with a throaty voice
called, "where are vou going
can I give vou a lift?"
What would I do? I know. I'd
sty:
"No. thnnk you, ma'am. I'm Just
out lor a bll of fresh sir.
oy NOV. 7IS. Cltlltl I t
They'll Do It Every
A FEW CX?OPS
OF RAN, WD THE
OFFICE FORCE COMES
ItfLjTEORSTAVS I
OUT4LTOETWER-
JT WHEN" THEy
ARE IN, NEITHER
, BLIZZ4RD NOR
HURRICANE STOPS
THE DAILY COFFEE
BRSAK'"AHD
IN THEIR PIN-
FEATHERS yET-vfi
'"..1 II I "Sr CTTT V t . JWy I If ia7ji7i 'IP-A
SAM DAWSON
NEW YORK l.fl Electric pow-
er output Is headui? for its blight
est Christmas. Utility profits glow
warmly loo even though prevent
ed by governmental rate regula
tions from making the spectacular
gains showing up today in some
other Industries.
New standards of living of the
American public are pulling sales
of electricity 18 per cent above the
year ago figures and flashing the
warning light to the utilities to get
set ior anoiner spun oi expansion
of power production capacity.
Right now they are spending
more for distribution lines than for
new generator Installations. Tney
are trying to keep up with the
building ooom In nomes, effices,
factories and suburban shopping
centers.
America's steadily rising stand
ard of living has helped the util
ities keep profits on a fairly steady
uphill climb in postwar years.
This year the consumer's de
mand for electricity hos gone along
at a steadily Increasing pace. Bui
industry Is booming, too, and using
more power. One of the expanding
Industries Is aluminum, which uses
a great deal of power. Another
big user is the atomic Installation.
Hie Atomic Energy Commission
tnis year is calling for 47 billion
kilowatt hours of electricity. Next
year it may use 66 billion.
ui tne 27 utility companies so
far reporting their net profit after
taxes for the first nine months
of this year, six out of seyen are
THE DOCTOR SAYS
ny KiiwiN P. jonnN. m.d.
Mrs. Y.i asks lor a discussion
ot rupture and whether this and
hernia mean the same thing. Also,
she wants to know whether or not
there are any ways of treating this
besides surgery.
Mrs. Y., Is correct: Hernia and
rupture do mean the same thing.
A hernia results from a weaken
ing of the structures which are
supposed to hold the organs in
place, the most common location
for such rupture being through
some part of the abdominal wall.
In men particularly, this occurs
most frequently In the groin.
It Is generally believed that the
Jury Debates On
Murder Charge
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UP) A
Jury was expected to start delib
erating today whether Dr. A.
Arnold Axllrod seduced a pretty
dental patient and strangled her
when she threatened to expose him
the father of her unborn
baby.
Defense attorneys in the sensa
tional murder trial planned to
ask for a directed verdict of ac
quittal when court opened. But Dis
trict Judge Lester Anderson nas
already turned down a similar plea.
If Anderson made the same de-
civlon. tne opposing lawyers were
scheduled to go into Oielr final
arguments immediately. Judge
Anderson's final instructions to the
jury were to follow.
Fire Flares In
Bay Area Cafe
SAN FRANCISCO (UPl Dam-
see was estimated today at &30.0OO
from a three-alarm fire that broke
out In a grease flue of the Cava
Her Restaurant In downtown San
Francisco.
The lire started at 7:15 a.m.
yesterday. Two ltreinen were hurt
as 32 pieces of equipment and 110
men battled flames and dense
smoke lor nearly two hours.
The fire worked up tlirouch
walls and doors of the bulletins,
burning Into a Christopher for
Mayor headquarters and a beaut;
school.
to wr.n
LOS ANGELES iyr Film pro
ducer Dore Schary's daughter. Jill
ID. and Navy Lt. Jon Zumitcr. as.
plan to marry, probably Jan. 8.
They obtained a marriage li
cense Saturday. The wedding must
uwult Zlmmer's return from a
cruise aboard a seaplane tender.
They met on a Jillnd date four
months ago.
TAP ACROBATIC .
NOVELTY HAWAIIAN
BALLET
ALL AGES EVENING HOURS $6.00 PER MONTH
SANDRA RAE PEMBERTON
615 UPHAM Phonv2-0384
Mtmbtr NADAA
National Alloc. Dance AtMntfd Artist Int.
Time -
-JFsTQgM? WMfflKf ALL I KXOW, MB. BISDOMg.TI
16? 11 STORM? THIS 1 IS EVERVBOty tflZH',
rlSIT6TORM ifTi PH0MEONDS4rDTM ) JCTfl CI
i I rrs just 4 rlrv.l i COUIDNT etrr in on . ramH
making more money than in the
same perioa last year, combined
their profits come to 1209,689,407
a gain of 10.1 per cent over the
1190,390.4 15 the same companies
made in the first three quarters
of 1954.
The lour among the 27 that had
lower net Income this year wee
off only slightly.
Next year the utilities expect to
spend 1(. billion dollars for new
capacity. In 1957 they'll spend
neai ly 2''2 billion, based on orders
placed tms year.
The cost of new feeder lines to
distribute power to the expanding
economy will come to about IV
billion dollars this year. There is
little sign of a drop In this cost
lor some time, as long as the con
struction boom continues and
Americans don't go back to the
simple Ule.
Early this year when the makers
of heavy electrical equipment went
on a price slashing spree, and the
utilities were able to order some
bargains. But this summer the
price of copper and other metals
began to climb, and by September
the nrices of heavy electrical
equipment began to rise also. It's
going to cost the utilities more to
keep up with the demands of their
customers. But the power com
panies are counting on Americans
using more and more electrictv in
the home and the factory. This will
pull up the total of utility sales.
u nd the regulated rates will let
profits rise slowly too.
weakness leading to hernia Is In
born, at least to some extent,
though it may not become obvious
unless some strain has been put
on the weakened tissues by heavy
lifltlng or some similar activity.
For a person not engaged in hea
vy manual labor a rupture may not
cause any trouble though there Is
always the risk that It will some
day come out farther and get
strangled or develop into some oth
er complication.
Nevertheless, treatment is usu
ally desirable and unless there are
good reasons to the contrary, stir
gery is best. A truss or support
may help but does not cure. Most
operations for hernia can be done
without special risk at almost any
age, but one has to decide whether
the occupation and other consider
ations Justify the period of invalid
ism and the expense.
Some years ago the injection
treatment was suggested for her
nia. The purpose of the injections
is to irritate the Inside of the her
nial sac so that a firm scar will
form at the point where the her
nia is bulging and force back the
contents of the sac where it be
longs. This method requires several
treatments and carries some risk.
Also, the scar tissue formed is
not always strong enough to bring
permanent relief. Although Ule in
jection treatment still has some
supporters, it Is probably not used
as much as it used to be and is
not as desirable as surgery In
most cases,
When one speaks of double her
nia, it means that the wall has
given way on both sides so that
there Is a rupture In two places.
Operation is the same (though It
takes twice as long! and surgeons
often repair both at the same time.
One should realise that an op
eration Is not always successful
nnd occasionally a rupture breaks
through again. If lt does, which
does happen often today. It will
have to be operated on agaHn In
order to produce a firm wall.
for Simple Headacht
Colds' Aches
Pains And
Fevetishness -Muscular
. Bin i r
200 Tablets 79C (Pi
inn T,hllt iOf I - caia.' M,
12 Tablets lOt
By Jimmy Hatlo
Bruce Biossat
With the Geneva Foreign Mln
Isters' conference under way at
last, the test Is truly at hand for
tne soviet union.
After a long series of discredited
"peace" overtures, the Russians in
1955, under new management, fin
ally put some substance into their
"new look."
They agreed to the long-delayed
Austrian peace treaty. They lifted
the Iron Curtain part way. They
stopped shouting epithets at Ameri
ca and turned on the smiles.
At the summertime conference
at the summit in Geneva, they ex
hibited a conciliatory spirit which
seemed to promise real gains to
ward peace. They appeared to
have concluded that nuclear
fare was unthinkable, and that
reasonable negotiation with the
West was the only alternative.
But, as has been said again and
again since that meeting, what the
Russians offered there was only, a
promise. That it carried more
weight than earlier pledges was
due to the fact of their token ges
tures of sincerity, like the Austrian
tir.aty.
Nevertheless, the rcnl work of
negotiation was put off. It begins
now, with hard-headed discussion
of Issues like disarmament, Euro
pean security and G -an unity.
If no progress is made on any
of these vital fronts, then we shall
be forced to conclude that the
Russians, for all their meaty 1955
gestures, are still determined upon
their objectives of world conquest.
We shall have to dismiss the "new
look" as merely the most convinc
ing of their frauds upon free peo
ples yearning Intensely for genu
ine peace.
No question of it, the Russians
have gained considerably this year
by their new tactics, a few months
of really warm smiles have done
more to lull Western fears than all
ISS fir.8.??" PUmped U' Slnce,feated Colorado 20-12 Saturday to
World War II.
But all the advantage does not
lie with them, Just the same. They
were able this year to overcome
to some degree their reputation
for fraud only by delivering some
real goods on tne line.
Should they now after all this
build-up once more show that
their promises are hollow, they
might find it impossible ever
ogaln to hove responsible men in
the West lake them seriously.
In a sense the West too Is on
test, in that it must be steadily
alert to signs of real Russian in-
Kiinuii acme uuiaiiuiiuug issues,
But fundamentally, this is pay-off
time for the Kremlin. The Russians
must deliver something solid, or
their elaborate 1955 campaign will
collapse, leaving an Indelible Im
print of distrust on Western minds.
Police Probe
Temple Dynamiting
HOIAYWOOD (UP) Police
sought an antl-Semltlc dynamiter
today following the third attack
upon Temple Israel of Hollywood
and an adjoining Jewish religious
school.
The temple was Jolted yesterday
by an explosion resulting In dam
age estimated at (300. No one was
Injured but the family of a care
taker was reported to be "sevcr
ly shaken."
The blast occurred near the door
of a subterranean passageway
leading to classrooms and gar
ages. Part of a dynamite stick
and a fuse was found near the
door. Police said the major force
of the. blast was dissipated on
solid concrete walls.
The temple was rocked last Dec-
ember by a powder bomb and a
! minor ftre was set there some
months later, police said.
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21" Sparton Table 299.95 209.95 90.00
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Boy's Body
Found After
Year's Hunt
POWERS LAKE, N D. tUP
The discovery of a four-year-old
boy's body one year after he had
wandered from his ranch home
raised strong suspicions today that
he nad been murdered.
An examination of young La
Vera Enget's body was scheduled
and authorities planned to drain
oil the slough where the discovery
was made yesterday.
Sheriff Martin S. Ryan said it
was ' inconceivable" that LaVern's
body had been overlooked In a
shoulder - to shoulder search by
thousand of men last October.
Ryan also couldn't figure out
how the little boy could have got
so far out into the pond, located
about a mile from his parents'
ranch home.
He said "I still haven't given
up the possibility of foul play"
and indicated someone may have
placed LaVern's body in the slough
after bad weather halted the search
last year.
"If the pathologist's report re
veals anything, I want to check on
some hunters who were in the
area," the sheriff said.
LaVein wandered into the fields
on Oct. 17, 1954, to meet his fath
er and disappeared into the North
Dakota dusk.
Thousands of men camped a
round Power Lake to aid in the
biggest hunt in North Dakota's
history. They joined hands and
walked in mil2-long human chains
across the rugged country. Air
planes helicopters and blood
hounds were called in to help.
In all, the search covered 100
square miles. But no trace of La
Vern was found.
Then, last week, Willison. N.D..
newsman Dan Halligan organized
a "final" search to "ease the last
doubts" in the minds of the par
ents.
About 75 men gathered in Pow
ers Lake and pushed into the mud
dy sloughs. They burned away the
tall, tough grass and began drain
ing away the water. LaVern's bad
ly decomposed body was found
lying in about a foot of water.
Pefifions
Ask Ouster
Of Fawrot
ST. LOUIS. ! Petitions seek-
lng the removal of Don Faurot.
creator of the spllt-T formation
ond football coach at the Univer
sity of Missouri since 1935, are
circulated in the State, the Post-
Liispaicn says.
Hie petitions, not bearing the
names of their originators, report
edly originated with the school's
alumni in Kansas City and St.
Joseph in Western Missouri and
have spread to St. Louis, the news
paper said.
Faurot Is dean of the Big Seven
end n seven-same losing streak,
the longest of any Missouri team
under Faurot.
At Kansas City alumni associa
tion officials said they knew of no
anti-Faurot petitions.
A fullback on Faurot's first Mis
souri team, Clair (Butch) Houston,
Was quoted by The Post-Dispatch
as saying he had been asked to
seek signatures favoring Faurot's
removal. - .
Houston, now an elementary
school principal here, was quoted
:s savino- -i threw it ih netu
u0n) away because In my opinion
i Don nas done too mucn tor tne
Missouri athletic program to re
ceive such treatment.
At Estes Park, Colo., where his
team was touring after-the Color
ado game, Fauroi said,-"I have no
comment of any kind to make
about them."
Under Faurot. also the athletic
director, Missouri has won three
conference titles, played In fivo
post season bowl games, while
winning 97 games, losing 71 and
tying seven.
Hearing Set On
O&C Timber Deal
PORTLAND 1.4' The Depart
ment of Interior has scheduled a
hearing here Jan. 20 on a' proposal
by Clatsop County officials to open
OkC timberlands to cutting by
private logging operators.
The region, which includes 94.570
acres of timber land In southeast
Clatsop County and portions ot
Columbia, Tillamook and Washing
ton counties, was excluded from
ihe timber marketing arrange
ments which were set up by the
government in 1B47 At that fme
it was determined that mills In the
area were not dependent upon OkC
lands for logs.
TV
, (oxITsomtelTY
x xLfund" agencies
fllS. ARB NICE TO UAVS,'
KjiZfcj BUT CAN WE ft
(ME WE CAN'T FFORDjgV
JTO G-ET ALOM6- fWfi
NO, WE CAN'T afford to be without tho varioui "Unittd
Fund" campaign agenciei. Thoy follow the old adage that in
ounce of prevention it worth a pound of euro, and they, thr.
fore, offer youth programs, health services, and family and
.child cara aid to treat problems before they develop and
spread.
Cracow Citizens Still
Observe Traditional Days
In Face Of Red Rulers
By TOM REEDY
CRACOW, Poland W It's noon
in Cracow and from the tower
of the Cathedral of St. Mary a
trumpet blares a weird series of
notes.
The trumpeter repeats the per
formance from each of the' four
apertures.
For 700 years this hus been go
ing on, commemorating the heroic
trumpeter who warned the pon'i
lace that the Tartars were ap
proaching. That's the atmosphere hi which
Cracow still lives, despite occupa
tion by the Nazis, war and now
domination by a Communist gov
ernment. The Reds call the "City
of a Thousand Churches" a reac
tionary town. They grumble about
"reactionary bars" where oldfash
ioned Poles sit around and speak
French in an odd kind of resist
ance. Cracow is Poland's shrine city
and tlie Communists wisely make
no effort to change it. Here In the
Wawel castle are burled all the
Polish kings except the first two,
Mleszko and Boleslaw, who are en
tombed in Posen. Hans Frank, the
Nazi butcher of Poland, lived in
the castle to show his power.
But Frank pleaded guilty at
Nurnberg and said his crimes
would stain Germany for a thou
sand years. He was converted to
Ninth Victim Of
Crash Passes
NORTH HOLLYWOOD. Colli. W
nine persons now nave lost their
lives in the Ll'fisln fiei-.f pi'li n
wealthy Joe Thome's plane into
uii upanmeni. nouse uct. 17.
Thome, who was flying alone.
and Iwn nthprc wnra 1illa
seven nel'snnM pritirnllu hnmnri n,
the time of the accident. Six of the
injured nave died. The most re-
cut viutiui was a-year-oia fatty
Mnrchlr.ii. whn riled Rntni-Hav uB.
father, mother and brother died
earner of burns.
Still in critical condition from
burns is Michael Preston, 41.
Wanta Pay
Short of
COMMERCIAL
FINANCE CORP.
107 No. 9th
IT MAS BEEtf 50
IN DEMAND THAT '
A SEED HAS SEEN
Don't Take It fop Granted !
DEVELOPED WHICH &tt&Z74:
SPROUTS ONLV FOlG-LEAP
VOUKELF A POTFUL OF
OONFSCTtONttflV MANU
FACTURERS spent 25.9
WOCE MONEY IN NEWS
MPEftS U5rVCA.
Catholicism and the Poles of today
will tell you it was Wawel that did
it.
Above the altar In the golden
chapel of the castle is the silver
casket cop' -''lng the bones of 8t.
Stanislaus, murdered on the altar
by a Polish king.
In the catacombs, a place of
honor Is given the tomb of Thad
dcus Kescluske, aid to Washington
in the American Revolution and
leader of the Polish fight for Inde
pendence against the Russians and
the Germans in 1794.
Directly in front of the altar Is
the resting place of Cardinal Sapie
ha who won lasting fame among
the Poles for his conduct during
the Nazi occupation. The cardinal
Invited Frank to dinner and served
him the miserable black bread and
porridge ration the- Nazis were
giving the suppressed Polish pou
latlon. Frank was enraged but
helpless. He had to eat it.
The city miraculously escaped
damage In World War n. The
Poles credit tneir top Communist,
Boleslaw Bierut, for this. They say
he Interceded with Stalin, asking
that the Red army avoid storming
the shrine city. Marshal Konstan
tin Rokossovsky flanked the city
from the west and trapped the Ger
man garrison which surrendered
without a fight. Rokossovsky, born
a Pole, Is now the nation's defense
minister., ,
A Three Days'
Cough Is Your
Danger Signal
Creamulsion relieves promptly becttu
it goes into the bronchial system to help
loosen and expel germ laden phlegm
and aid nature to soothe and heal raw,
tender, inflamed bronchial membranes.
For children get milder, faster Creo
mulsion for Children in the pink ad
blue package. Adv.
CREOMUCSION
lelum Coujlil, Cht Colds, Acatt IrMcbMit
the Doctor?
Money?
S EE
Phone 7711
LVcfr
4 V
THE MAKBRS OF BAKIM6-
products spent 4nm,ooo
MEWS&P&i$ LAST YEAR
117 MORS THAN IN 1QSS.
Vlj.U .
-TWf IMF AJFUKPAPpOf
J&G&ANTEDf