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Show Cleanup Time Ike In the- Home Stretch . . Writer Rates Eisenhow'er At Peak of His Form Nov 1- - only daily newspaper devoted to the progress' and advancemert. of Central Utah and! its people Tr e ' i;1 . TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1959 J 'Hoi?' s;me Question We'll be hearing now from those who contjend that bur foreign policy for Europe is sterile because we failed to find a formula at' Geneva which the Russians would .' j '..'jif'j'-"- ' I; accept. ;i Few if any of these would argue that we should yield to. the Krem-- i lin and back out of free West Berlin. Yet they still insist that within the framework of the hard necessity of holding Berlin, we can find :;ome winning approach to the Sov et Union, ilf As a wish, this is an admirable V expressionL As a hope, it is pretty ' By HOLMES ALEXANDER 1 - ; fl .i to assail the Western negotiators at Geneva as basically empty and uninspired in their thinking. Their.- complaint in essence is that there is nothing positive or constructive .in standing firm. It is not enough, they say, simply to reassert our determination to keep Berlin freeJ Actually, we have not done just that, We have proposed I t - I ."fif.fi .Stl3S-- . ' ' i ';-"- . ' ' ns - - '. - . i j all-Germ- and -- all-Europe- ex-amp- le, - an settle- an ) ment underpinned with guarantees of mutual security for both West and East just fccase the Rusmean it wh'enthey hint they sians fear a revival of German militar- thin stuff) j! lit would seem to depend on brewing some mysterious diplo-- . " 6- I i IT" tl 4 t j,.'ism, ''pf We have repeatedly shown a substantial flexibility as to details affecting; a unification of both the city of Berlin and 'of Germany. We liave evidenced a continuing will ingness to bargain earnestly over : matic portion whose ingredients not even the best fdreicrn affairs minds of the Western powers, harve yet be,en fible to stumble jupont "The crii ics themselves offer no rela- help. They want something new ' every phase of East-Weand imaginative, butllthey cannot'' tions. But, in the end, the creative suggest what it" ought to be. j'k. heart of negotiations is discovered Yet they feel it is quite proper only when they are truly mutual. The art .of fruitful diplomatic, .id the art of give g Welcome Relief and take. With the Russians, this time at felt widely to be long Geneva and most always before, overdue nbw seems close to reality that art must inevitably wither, with. Sendte approval of repeal of not die. For they ae interested if the 10 per cent Federal tax on only in taking-no- t giving. assenger travel.' successHow do you negotiate Though this ta pres ently apfully, constructiVely, positively, all travel lies to tickets soldi with a stone wall ? If anybody within thd United States,! the most knows the answer he should offer of the to sit in for Secretary of State change will be the nation's hardHerter when the, Geneva talks pressed nilroads. They obviously resume. peed still other relief, but anything wh: ch serves to reduce rail Mi . X - ; II x 1 - ; t '..1 $1 iXJ . ' over-lobbie- - . I pay-as-you-- " V ', - NEA tQtrol orxifa frt ,f Pi;, Tie t ;i! IS naQSPTlcrfir . i a. nopeiufl sign. Tne lu per cent tax was im posed during World War II, at a time when Congress was search ing everywhere for sure sources ot cost's. to finance revenue huge Jl war 1 J Ti TL 10 was never intenaea it like so many isui permanent, things in government,1 once estab- ished it was hard to alter. Now that the Senate has finally acted, the House ought quickly to .!" follow suit. . No Surrender ; . ij -- Off the A 1 Beat - By M andaddress ' and promptly called the owner. right thing and any other course would n have left a boy instead of heart-broke- . WW-:- OLD TOPS IS DEAD If we'd have had a flag on our farm, we would 1: ave flown it at half-ma- st yesterday morning. Why? j Well,' one of So and1 IN WHOSE POCKET? The "experts" tell us that.the aver age of a dollar bill is nine months. Maybe so, nut none ever las ed us Sun-Telegra- There is something crooked about a generation that sings night and day. about love and then fills the divorce courts with contentious husbands and wives who battle each other for the custody of . . their unhappy children. Rev. Edwin T. Dahlberg, president of National Council "of Churches? " , '. . . , I'm done with , race driving as now. I'll never drive another race. of i Niedel, whose stock car jured 26 spectators, including his son, at St. Joseph, Mo. Albert ; in- - eight-year-o- ld is It that cause (racial: segregation) lost, Tnen we are jail lost, and it Would be a good1- thing if the Russians do destroy us with atom and hydrogen power rathor than that we "become a nation ,of criminals and indecent people. Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus. f Comedy is a fragile thing, Tike a young girl. I mean, some of the girls I've known like Alice in Wonderland. r Comedians should be cherished. Groucho Marx. - - ' ' v The new and higher altitudes man achieves will produce new attitudes .. . ". Mental distance will shrink with physical distance and in the process will be created a climate fo.- peace and a culenrich the tural floyering which will ' lives of mankind. t Delat Airlines president C. E. Wool- - that long. llyjl-'- . !:' E. J. A. '! DAVID'S 1IAP Y AGAIN David Johns pn; who lives at 203 5. th W., hadhi Uttlp LtfaPiip career al-Imost terminated j recently, and it had nothing to do kvith his playing abilities. David lost his prize baseball mit on the to practice, and there wasn't a more heart-broke- n boy in ProvoJ But David hkd put his name and ad- cress on his mitt, and thanks to the honesty of and ther David, all is happi ness again and baseball is assured of another potential prospect. D'avid Miller, 14, found th taitt. He law the nam " By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. Written for NEA Service sunglasses and The Fifth Amendment, workejd seven to nine days a week. Or, rather, that is, that's what he got paid for.: This 'strange and, alasr true tale of the driverless truck driver was unraveled under the klieg lights by an unhappy newspaper business manager, William J. Poch of the Pittsburgh ' Real or Imagined unpleasant body odor is a common complaint. QMy husband, who is careful of cleanliness in every way, has suddenly developed a strong, sickening sweet smell on his body. What can be done for a thing of this Isort? Si R. M. " A The suddenness with which this developed is somewhat puz- A full physical examina"zling-tion might reveal the cause. . Has there been any change In" his eatingr habits? For example,, certain foods such as spices and garlic are said to be responsible for the development of a body odor. Probably the most common cause is decomposition of sweat. Often this can be taken care of by appropriate use of deodorants. Q I am told that I must go to the hospital to have an operation for a fistula that has come back after- supposedly bein,g removed. What is this anyway J. M.' AThis question presumably refers to an abnormal passageway near the outlet of the intestinal passage. Its cause is sometimes f said to be tuberculosis. However, this lined : passage may be quite extensive and the entire tissue has to be carefully dissected out or it will come :. , i ' . . . i , - -- d ; $75,-925.0- 5, Barbs By HAL COCHRAN ,; Maybe they Call it Blue Mon- devoted to the ideal of which education for all since the days of the Mayflower, has not taken the lead in the eradication of illiteracy. It is Russia that has taken our ideal and' made it work. Dr. Arthur S. Adams president of American Council of Education, report-lin- g nearly 100 per cent literacy in Hussia. has-bee- " MEMO TO MOTTIERS: . -, .Unless you want summer' "va- cation" to leave you limp,' you had better get busy and work 'outcome . day because of what happened to the. money . you were' paid on the weekend. highly-charge- d' - early enoughu How long has this gone on. If It is of recent origin the possi- T ' kind of routine for your children to replace the routine they are used to during the school year. .' Leave them with no routine at all and home life is going to be Many women are married be-fcompletely disorganized and yoa they are 30, but no woman,; are gong to be a wreck. ii 30 before she's married. Instead of letting tht$n sleep un- til noon, or. each one get up at a If some people spend what they different hour breakfast lead their friends to think they v at a different wantingset a time time, earn, they're in debt. ' for up. getting , If yoli' don't want them to start A fellow leaves a salesroom, with a brand new car and then worrying about what they are go-tit raiat. lai to do &IL day; make out a week-. Speaking about seasonal colds, verybody gets' tired of hearing-peopldo it. ,. - - e . ' oi f . : ' ; . v ly list telling what chores each child is supposed to do each day, to use up some of their excess time; and energy. In adition to taking care of their own rooms, they can pitch, in and do any number of Jobs that you have done through the school year. They "can lend a hand with th yard work, window washing, floor waxing, garage cleaning, etc. And they'll do it without argument if you let them know ahead what you expect them to do and make it clear that the work must be done before they have the neighborhood kids over for a game of baseball, pr take of for the swimr ming pool!. Three months is izx too Iszi , , " Tell Me Why? "Origin of Dictionaries , By A. LEOKUM the Britannlca Junior encyclopedia for school and home. Send your questions, name, age, address to "Tell Me Why I " care of this paper. To' day's winner is: Carol Scherer, IS, Sandusky, Win ..-- Ohio. 15-volu- ' : . What is a, dictionary as we knowit today? It is ,a book that lists the words of a language,' gives their meanings in the same or another language, usually is alphabetical order. Often 'there is also information regarding pr nounciation,, origin of the word, and how it is used. Strangely "enough it took hudreds of years for even the idea The $of such a book .to develop! first time jthe word''dictionary'' was used it appeared in its Latin form, dictionarlus, which means a collection of words. This was about the year 1225, and'it was the title of a manuscript containing words to be learned by Latin ' heart. This pictiOnarius was used ,the teacher's classroom 'onlyin work" In teaching La tin. ' In the 15th ' eentury, English words began to appear in diction-- 1 aries, but they were used only to help in studying Latin. In one of, them, about 12,000 English words appeared, each with its Latin equivalent What is considered to be the first real English dictionary wai printed in 1552. This book still had Latin Title, and jthe study of Latin was part of its purpose, but it also was. useful for those who wanted to learn to read English. What makes it the first" English dictionary is that here at last the English word was .first defined in English, then - came The Latin" translation. ; This dictionary ;was" compiled by a man called Richard Huloet, and - 4 - , . . : f " FUN TIME The Chuckle Box . ( a time for children who are used to the routine of school to live with no routine at all. They will be happier, and so will you, ii you work out some kind of. daily routine for them to follow. Let children do exactly as they -- please, day "after day, and pretty soon nothing pleases them. (All rights reserved, NEA Service, lac.) ' v Joe: What's that you have la L your buttonhole? That's a Bill: chrysanthemum. Joe: Looks like a rose to me. ' Bill: Nope ,it's a chrysanthe'j mum. Joe: What do you mean? Spell 'It. Bill: by golly, it is a '. rosel j K-r-i- -s - ; ,- . WORD PUZZLE HI I I I e I I 1 : s Y he had quite a tense of humor! For example, "here is 'something from this first dictionary "Black (or blewe) spotte "in the face or bodye, made with a stroke, as when a wife hath a blewe. eye, she sayth she hath stombled on hir:good' man his fyste." Gradually more and more books of this type appeared. Many of them contained . only a few thousand words, especially chosen by the author for some special purOne such dictionary for, inpose.' v stance, didn't have the words arranged by their initial letters but by the' spelling of their, final syl! lables. This was to help poets and it was a sort of rhyming dictionary. "? In fact, the compilers of early dictionaries made no attempt To include all words. They were satisfied just to explain' the hard words. JFrom these beginnings came our (modern dictionaries .which Include all the words In the English language, j . . ' " -- Don't Scof f (ids Will Go For Summer Chore Routine " "i ) Ruth Millctt non-unio- n - I didn't .mind, being shot up 'half 'as much as I did having my second class T rating shot off my arm. Donald E. Airman Carder, pro Navy moted day before his plane was at tacked by Reds over Sea of Japan and he was hit by 40 pieces of shrapnel.1 , It is most astonishing that America, ' ' -- ; . j Q--A- fter -- ur with meecau-- e I insist on his getting up. Could he be'T ill? Mrs. W. This Is by no means a simple question. Some people need more sleep than others and It is possible that he does not go to be ups-and-dow- -- , . . bility of some illness or disturbance in metabolic function should be considered. It would be sensible for Sirs.' W.'s husband to consult a physician since it Is as hard on him as it is on the family. Q please .say something about stripping of varicose veins and? whether this is safe. Reader. A Varicose veins are enlarged veins, usually on the legs. The operation . known as stripping involves tying the enlarged velna above and below and cuttlnf them out. The blood is then car-rie-d by deeper and normal velili. In experienced hands the operation carries extremely light rU.k the birth of 'my second child I discovered that my1 hair was thinning . considerably. Is jthere anything which can be done? .Irs. B. A Tob some strange reason ' this is rather common. I do not know of any treatment for thin- occurring In this fash-Io- n, ,ninhair but believe that sometimes "the. hair grows . back after period of months. If severe . enough, the wearing of a Mg might well be justified. O, Is the dropping of poire honey in the eyes for cataracts helpful or' harmful? R. K. B. A Certainly not helpful.. There Is no acceptable medical treatment for cataracts.. This .might be harmful b producing .Irritation or introducing germs. Ti " more' The payoff to Cozza than $100,000 total Poch was, conceded, for labor "peace." As it turned out, the only peace it brought to Cozza, who appeared, prosperous and peacef ull, before the Senate, rackets committee investigating shenanigans around loading Pittsburgh's newspaper '" docks. Now, in the hot seatr the ' only thing that seamed to- bother the man was the big diamond ring on his little finger. It had enough carats to choke a rabbit. And everytime he reached into his coat pocket for hs cigarettes, that fin- ger got hung up' on the ring. Despite his big bulk, this truck ' driver was a sartorial sensation black alligator shoes, black silk socks, black silk suit, black silk tie, black monogram on his breastpocket hanky and black wrist band on black-facewatch. The color real was the bloodshot only in his eyes. pink Since he preferred not to incrim-back. inate himself by talking, Poch," with the assistance of counsel The surgery Involved is sometimes quite complicated, but is Robert F. Kennedy, did it for him. The man had himself hired in , the only means of bringing about 1950. He was to get pay equivalent a complete, cure. to that of the truck .driver putting Q This .question may found tne most in hours each week. In simple, but it interferes with my the 365 days of 1957', for instance, husband's position. He : sleeps all he was paid for 409' "eight-honight without waking, but when shifts. it is time to get up and go . to ' For the nine years, he got work in the morning he is tired and irritable, and becames angry for $24,279.57 plus renting his truck, plus' $21,600 in; kickbacks' from . a truck rental agency according to .Kennedy. The',newspaper furnished him a nice private office from which) said Kennedy, Cozza operated a, man. " 211. ' -- Cause of Sudden Body Odor Discussed By the Doctor On top of that, when Cozza would be confined td the hospital, he hot only kept drawing his salary for not driving a truck, but got overtime for it as well. For nine years, Cozza, a beefy, glum fellow who hides behind dark I - Your Family Doctoi ph. - . T myra They Say . k . (R-Ill.- 1 by-pro- substitute newspaper The for the greatest fringe benefit of all was that he didn't have to work for his $8,800 a year. y truck-drive- ", ' Like Tennyson's brook, they just- simply run on. and on and on, forever. ), on exRep. Noah M.. Mason rates. tax of Korean War tension i Tops hadn't been feeling well or look ing! too good lately and my bad! cbnsid- aered selling hbr to the ahimai nets Tor fish feed. I'm so giad he dMh't ecause she died yesterday morning on 'I: he farm thau she loved and that had been her homd for 24 years.? S O., Pal- - As president of Pittsburg Team-ter- s Local 211, he got himself hired - - trustworthy .ops,! our work ay: driver threatened an efficiency expert who questioned his efficiency: The newspaper fired Cozza. And then, in the role of Teamster president of Local 211, Cozza called a strike. . I . But he's not doing badly in his sole role as Teamster president. ' His 'faithful employees sent him to Europe on a two-weetrip. Cost 'em $3,000, plus $521.79 taxes. Now, the fired truck driver toolj around Pittsburgh in a 1959 Cadillac. A consolation gift from Local dream job ended last month when the driverlfss truck Cozza's Sun-Telegra- ph. THE OFFICE PHILOSOPHER SAYS Reflective thinking is not done beT fore a mirror. i well-wor- t T. H. L. a happy one. i rescue. I suppose7 that t go:;J attached td Tops when sh;. was hooked to the cable To ride her prt the hay To rk and 'I used n up 'and back on the path in of loads to unload the corral umpteen v A little thing to do? Perhaps. But the ing- to our boys, the words came out as "roast ?host." "Oh, no "j spoke up the youngest boy, age four. "I don't want any of that. It's from the "devil's kitchen.' !T.."' E. J. A. : - numbers racket on the side. - as on-the-j- For Pittsburgh Teamster Official ff By ED KOTERBA WASHINGTON The best part about Teamster Theodore Cozza's job was the, fringe benefits. There were so many extras connected with it that he ended up drawing fringe benefits on his fringe bene- ld the Herald Staff horso died. Now some may think that its silly to think so mubh of "an;! old fbrse," but when you live on ,a farm and they are- around you ""all the time! and11They help make your living well its only natural tJ.fnrm'"?i XUrl rf f H r n H c h in Of course, with all the modern ma- chinery nowadays, Tops has lead a less hectic life during these! past five or six years. But before (hen, we depended upon her to pull; the hand plow in" the cUiches iin the spring to (clean them out and with another hprse,1 she! was hitched to all the farn implements to work and piant the ground in the spring and to help with the harvests in the fall. Then thee was always the In!tremendous job of some jcases. it plowing in the! fall. even reauired two tarhis lof horses to PiOW. Even after modern trucks and ma chinery arrived on the farms, if something should mppen like a' flat tire the tractor o if a truck got stuck in the' mud haul&ng sugar beets, everyone vould turn; tb The horso for a quick Sweet Pay-O- - - our mosi) aepenaaoiu friends passed away 116-year-o- Confederate .veteran of the Civil War, and its sole survivor, is apparently winning his battle against- pneumonia in Houston, Tex. Perhaps 'his' indomitable will to live will keep him with us dur the ; forthcoming eentennial ing Var Between 'observance ofJthe ' ,' the States. I ; Inc. Assignment: Washington. fits. Col. Waiter Williams,' HAUNTED: ROAST Recently we? had a roast of goat meat for dinner. In of fering a serv- - :l Seme. e -- go ' .... A-mov- . , st policy-makin- , ; , . r " s quick-witte- dj 'v!v n entrapment or of oversimplification never rise above their origin ,il WASHINGTON, D. C. In anmerit. Mr. Eisenhower is too other 20 months or less it'll be, courteous and' ,ia truth, not easy to look back on President enough to turn a thrust to Elsenhower's stretch run and to his. own advantage, as Mr; Trunote that he moved much more man sometimes did. like a stake horse than (as was But rather than quibble at ques-tioj predicted) .like a lame duck. which are not pre- -, But to wait till Mr. Eisenhower j mised;- the President soundly is apt 'to has come ot the end of his term, grab the answerable part of the or worse, to the end of his life, - 'query.; and reply to it. For Is not necessary. If there is praise he was recently asked to be given, now is the best time. what- he thought- - of the Olympic The President has certainly served" 'Games committee's "expelling" long enough, anT is close enough and refusing to r' "recognize" Nato the finish, to provide some tionalist China. Instead of bother estimates. His political contriba-.ing to correct the questioner, Mr. tion (i. e, "modern'-- ' Republican-ism- ) Eiserhower went to the meat of is pretr hazy, but as the T the query, saying, in'effect,1 that Chief. Executive of the huge Fedthe Olympic committee ought o eral corporation and as the leadrun the games and stay out of er of the American people, Mr. I politics. Eisenhower is today at the peak Mr. Eisenhower's reputation of of his form. being a "weak" President seems Thcfee who work daily with the to mean that he has not used President--hi- s White. House staf- strong language. After all, Mr. fersi express surprise that the ' Truman used" the", initials ot the not at commented has Senate Office Building pretty freepress length lrEisenhower's progress up6n ly "and his tirades against the "do from a willing but uncertain stu. nothing" 80th Congress are on to of the perceptive master dent record. But . Mr. Eisenhower, if his trade that he has now beweak in has been strong . wfienlt comesVto come. It is freely, acknowledged vetoing host d that; the President "had to go to legislation, like the ' school'. on domestic had political natural gas bill; and - in insisting matters from the 'first day that he , upon a budget, became a .candidate and down which he hasachieved in most of . his fiscal y$ars of office.; through the early years of his' tenure. But the. critics who dwell persons near the Pres .iednt say on his past unsureness and not that he showed his mettle as a errors are missing the man of action last' summer in 1 infrequent plot of the Eisenhower story the landing the Marines on Lebanon an-less happily, in sending the difficult, lengthy but successful ni the OSAirborne to Little Rock. In struggle toughest; both instances, jhe showed that he training course that, there is. doubts' should this could and would get as tough as Anybody who ' , watch' the President at his next anybody, The Presiednt's mastery of hit press conference. If. it is a typical Tatter-daperfprmanqe, the Presijob has been gradual and undra-mati- c dent's excellence will rise and fall and this is the reason why l with the quality of the questions. it has r ae r unremarked. Close s say that there was no Given an intelligent query to work a.sso,,' ' u seeks which one str with, honestly Jing "turning point." ile ji discover "his viewpoint on a pubbetter informed than is generally known. The illness and death of lic matter, Mr.- Eisenhower will Mr. Dulles and the "overseas absay something of at least passing sence of Mr. Ilerter have caused value, and occasionally something the President to make foreign afthat .makes.a useful historical on the fairs statements which he' used to , Presidency. commentary he has leave to his Secretary of State. ' For instance, recently A university economist who came spoken a lot more wisely than his a reasons "on the to Washington to head a study of why .opponents not a should attend President inflation told this reporter that hi series of Summit meetings, as sugwas amazed (having read the paand Senator Fulbright gested by pers) to sit down with the Presiothers. Mr. Eisenhower has also dent and hear him discuss a whole reminded 'his conference, quit, range of economic "Constitution that the The of Sherman correctly, departure envisions a President's appealing Adams ("He(s very much missed obto to public opinion, in order around here," says a White House r tain legislation, but does not en- , insider) altered the climate". of a President's harassing vision the' anterooms, but little else. and haranguing 'the' Congress in Adams was a chilly and brusque . JNew Englander Wilton Persons, order to put over a program. his successor, is a warm and leisIntelligent questions draw from Mr. Eisenhower in 1959 the sort urely Southerner. But " the .real of responses which read very well change in the White House has been its rise from a school room the next morning and which will to something like a make sense this time next year. On the other hand,- the queries of executive suite. 4 - t:it? .. '. I A'.'-.-- .'. - x, F It Can yoa change the first word Hide, to the last word "Foot" ' in five "moves? Change one letter in the word with each move. See tomorrow's paper for the answer. Win the Britannlca World Alias or Yearbook of Events. Send your riddles,"jokes, tricks to "Tell Me Why!" Today's winner is: Cliff Lefler, 13, Clncinna' Ohio. i f . i- - . |