Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 23, 1949, Page 4, Image 4

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    PACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. ORECON
THURSDAY. JUNE 23, Uf
ntXNR JINKINg
Kdtlof
MAlXUUa gPUTT
Managing Cdllor
(rad M Itmcd n asattar UM Boat Klamaie
falta. Or., aa Atuwt SO. laue, uo4er act c4 aoaerM.
Marca ISTS
iMbaia or mi tuocuiu run
TIM Aaionaiad rrf W antltlad aaciuareal. t the ass
far republication of aU ma tcal aaara .elated to UUa eewa
papar. aa artU aa all AP Basra.
Up ere erer blown ever the bloodstained fix of
the corpa it will ba because th bureaucrats have
thwarted th will of th Amnion people In the
dark."
MITCHELL PAIOI.
OT Radclltfe 8t,
June 14, IMS.
These Days
Guest Editorial
EDITOR'S NOTE: Th following comment ill
submitted to The Herald and New by Mitchell
Paige, captain In the Marin Corp In the recent war
and winner of the Congressional Medal of Honor.
Paige, now a resident of Klamath Pall, went Into
th Marin Corp out of high achool at th age of
IT, served as private and non-com until, on Guadal
canal, he was commissioned In the field after th
exploit that won him the Medal of Honor. Reading
about the Tydlngi bill the other night, he aat down
and wrote this article, expressing his personal re
action to th proposals tn that measure.
a a a
FOR the past U rears I har been associated
with th United States marine corps. During
World War II, M per cent of th Marin Corps
officers and 93 per cent of the enlisted marines
aerred In combat. For the four years following
Pearl Harbor, approximately 17 million men and
women served In defense of our country, so that w
may lire In these United States as free men under
the Bill of Rights.
At the present Urn there are two military bills
before the congress: th Tydings bill (SB 1843) and
the Vinson bill (HB J45. These two bills tn effect
may wreck the very constitution they are supposed
to protect.
The Tydings bill, for Instance, concentrates all
command, all authority, and all control of the
present military establishment In the hands of one
non-elected Individual, the secretary of defense. Th
bill would lump Into a single department responsible
to the complete and autocratic control of on man
the non-elected secretary of defense. These are th
three largest existing executive departments of our
government.
It would place In this man's hands the responsi
bility for drawing up nearly two-fifths of the na
tional budget, and would make him the disburser of
corresponding traction of our annual governmental
outlay. It would give him command of a million
and naif men and women In the armed forces.
It would allow him to control another million or
ao civil servants employed by the defense department.
It would permit him to exercise at least partial con
trol of several million armed forces reservists and
national guardsmen.
Through control of mobilisation plans. It would
allow him to wield a tremendous Influence on labor,
commerce. Industry, educational, journalism, broad-
casting and entertainment, since the wartime des
tinies of those elements of our national life would
depend on the degree to which they had pleased
the secretary in time of peace.
r) top things off. It would place at the secretary's
disposal a vast public Information and troop
education machine, by means of which he could
saturate th personnel tinder his control, and th
. public at large, with any brand of philosophy which
might appeal to him.
The a bora powers relate only to peacetime. Th
spectre of their increase in war time is even more
forbidding. We had a taste of such control In th
recent war, but only a taste.
By GEORGK . COKOLSKT
COMMUNISTS belter there is no Ood. They
believe that llf Is a product of materia! title
forces and elements combining by accident, con
ditioned by their environment, producing current and
constant, even If Imperceptible, changes through a
struggle for existence and survival. This concept
they call empirical-materialism, which Is the essence
of their philosophy. There la no Supreme Intel
ligence, no overall wisdom. Life Is an accident, a
result of chance.
In such a system. Ood has no place. He Is a
superstition, a myth, a concept created by man with
the object of giving the dominant minority In any
civilisation control over the masses of the people.
The dominant minority Is always right and estab
lishes the morality of Its era. because In the strug
gle for power It has survived. Therefore, wherever
the communists com Into control, they attack first
all organised forms of religion, all churches, all
religious schools, al! systems of worship. The most
dramatic sttaeks recently hav been against Roman
Catholics. Archbishop Steplnac, Cardinal Mtndssenty
and now Archbishop Be ran.
However, the assumption Is false that communists
only oppose Roman Catholics. They also oppose
Protestants. Jews as a religion. Moslems and any
other peoples who believe tn Ood. In the revelation
of truth by Ood. tn testaments describing Ood's
truth, tn a moral law based upon Ood's revelation,
In any Immutable, eternal, moral and ethical way
of life not subject to the fatalism of environment,
and not constantly changing In a never ending strug
gle for survival, those who believe In Ood's truth
are enemies of Marxism and are to be destroyed.
a a a
Opportunistic Expedient
COMMUNISTS can no more depart from this
concept and remain communists than a Jew can
reject the Torah and remain a Jew, or a Christian
can reject Jesus and remain a Christian. There
fore, when, during th war. Franklin D. Roosevelt
got Stalin to permit religious worship In Soviet
Russia, It was ordered as an opportunistic expedient
to lessen Mr. Roosevelt's difficulties in making Soviet
Russia popular in the United States. And those, in
this country, who accepted the synthetic religious
revival in Soviet Russia, were either ignorant or
fools, for th essence of Marxism It that Ood Is
dead.
And It Is most Important to communists that this
should be accepted, for if there Is a Ood. a revealed
truth, a moral law, then man has a soul which Is
his by grace of Ood. This doctrine was brilliantly
developed by Moses Maimonldes. a Jewish philos
opher, and by Thomas Aquinas, a Christian philos
opher, and found Its way Into the political concepts
of this country through the writings of Thomas
Jefferson, who was Influenced by rather Bellarmlne,
a French Jesuit. The doctrine of the -Inalienable
rights of the Individual which la the essence of the
American civilisation. Is a political manifestation of
the Judeo-Chrlstlan concept of freedom of will in
man aa a grace of Ood. unaffected by mundane
environmental circumstance. Man possesses In
alienable rights not by grant from government but
by the grace of Ood. The Marxists care not permit
this doctrine to be believed, lest It destroy the
omnipresent power of the state.
SIDE GLANCES
eoea ta ai mu stance. KIK aaa V1H1 Of.
"Sinct I got this summer job, everybody kseps reminding
mi of tha dough I owo them yn my parents art
money-mad!"
Night Desk Diary
-
r
r -"',,"v
I
RELATTVB to this matter, th June II Issue of
Comer's magazine carried an excellent article
enutled. "Blueprint For Disaster by Walter Wln
chell. In his article Mr. Wlnchell says: -The poli
tician who Introduces any bill to abolish the VS.
marines win have dropped into the hopper his own
political death warrant. Yet the secretary of de
fense can emasculate the Marine Corps with a sheet
of paper, an administrative order, any time he
pleases. No single man should have this power. If
the republic's battle flairs must be folded, let it be
don in the open, by the will of the people, and
where, at least,. our colors can be paid the final and
lull honors of war.
-Secretary of Defense Johnson Is not only tn
tharge of the nation's safety he now has th
fxrwer of life and death over Its traditions. If the
Marine Corps Is to teas mto history, this nation
and world win be less a great fighting spirit and
magnificent personality. One thing Is certain
Bureaucracy is not going to kill the Marine Corps
by the scratch of a pen, at least not publicly. If
God It No Dead
TKK entire Marxist political, economic and social
system falls, if the Christian system stands. A
morality based upon Ood's revealed word cannot be
accepted by those who must insist that morality Is
a product of a struggle In a changing environment,
A system which demands that the Individual sub
ject himself totally to the authority of a self-constituted
and self-perpetuating state cannot accept
moral law as a basis for personal conduct. Nor can
the "Inalienable rights of the individual man exist
in a world based solely upon das struggle, upon the
conflict of economic groups, upon a materialistic
strife for the ownership of the tools of production
and distribution.
But Ood Is not dead. He lives in the soul of man.
It Is possible to exist under any economic system,
but man reaches out for Ood under every economic
and political way of life. The martyrs for Ood's
cause do not shrivel tn prisons In vain, nor do they
die without knowing Jat life is eternal. Those who
think they can kill Ood. kill only themselves.
THE DOCTOR SAYS
Poison Ivy Easy To Get
By EDWIN P. JORDAN. M.D.
Written for NEA 8ervica
There Is more trouble with poison
tvy during th summer than at
other times of the year only be
cause more people are out-of-doors
in warm weather. The stalk, how
aver. Is dangerous tn winter also
ana n cannot be recognized so easily
when the leaves ere off.
Everyone should learn to recog
nise this plant and it typical three
point leaf. Even those who seem to
avoid difficulty easily should not be
careless as the time msy come when
they themselves fsll victims. Doc
tors often see people who are as
tonished at having poison Ivy be
cause "they never got it before
The poison tvy plant contains jn
oil which is extremely Irritating to
the skin. This oil, even in small
quantities, can cause blistering. It
can be carried by the fingers from
on part of the body to another.
Hence rubbing or scratching of the
Itching akin should be avoided.
If there is any suspicion of having
come In contact with poison Ivy one
should wash the area with soap and
water two or three times, rinsing
carefully after each washing.
There are several lotions and oint
ment which are useful In combating
tvy poisoning, but when a large area
Is Involved, a doctor's advice should
be obtained. For small skin Irrita
tions crystals of potassium perman
ganate can be dissolved In water
and applied to the skin. This has surprising.
By RED III'RD
I Night of June 23. 1M9.I
In answer to several surprising
calls concerning this collection of
this "n that every night from The
II and N newsroom, this will be the
last week for the nightly Journal.
Next week I'll go on dsvs. Mal
colm Epley Jr. he likes to be called
; -Male will
hold down the
dogwatch d u r
lng h I s sum-
mer's absence
, from the Unt
( versity of Ore
gon, wher he Is
t majoring in
' kill malum
I spent sn
enjoyable two
hours tonight In
the Pelican
party room
Red Hard where the
Klamath County Oregon State
Alunnl association played host to
likeable Kip Taylor, new coach for
the Beavers. froVn Mlchigsn State
where he turned out powerhouse
grid teams and will no doubt do the
same for Corvallta.
I was Impressed with Tsylor. If
his "drive" snd enthusiasm at a
speaker's table Is borne out on the
football field. Beaver fans can look
for real hustle from Corvallls pig
skin ners.
I'd say Spec Keene. et el., made a
find choice when they picked Tay
lor. He almost busts at the seams
with sincerity snd enthusiasm and
one can tell he's the type of man
kids will like to play football for.
He's slso quick In the wit depart
ment, too. He opened his talk to
night with -Well. I'm happy to re
port that I'm the only undefeated
Oregon state football coach "
e- er, no doubt pitch plenty of equine
rarrs.
You'll get to see her as she's lined
up for plenty of personal appear
ances July 2 and 3.
The Pioneers kept their baseball
ecord clean tonight and they've yet
to lose a game. They beat Weed to
night. 7 to S, which made callers
hnppy.
But their Joy was short-lived
when they learned that Willows
r nocked over the Oems.
The World Today;
DeWITT MACKENZIE
AP I oralis Affairs Analyst
Mo-sow's communist party organ
Pravda reaches the general conclu
sion that the big four loreign min
isters' conference In Pans has allied
In "easing" th International at
mosphere. We may accept that apurinl
guardedly aa correct, I believe, al
though we reach itt"
the conclusion
by a different I
rout than
Pravda. M ore-
over, Una ease- I
ment would
seem to have
been achieved
more because of
what tlie con
ference proceed
ings Imply tlian
because of what
they specifically
carry out.
T h atmos
phere of tlie conference was that
of a truce making a forced halt
to the great offensive which the
musrovites hav waged sine the
1
Markensr.
President Truman In his state
ment about the eohlerence Tuesday
found that "genuine prmrras' aa
mad toward the ciuu'luMmi of a
treaty with Austria. II pointed out
that during the four yeais since
war's end Austria has been under
a regiuie of occupation, altliouali at
the Ural Moscow conlrirnce In IK43
It was solemnly declared that she
was to be regarded nut as an enemy
country but aa a liberated country,
th first victim of nail aggression.
Certain Soviet claims placed ob
stacles III th way of aeedy conclu
sion of a treaty.
Mr. Truman said the Auntrlan
people "should be commended for
their attitude of patient under
aianriliuf throughout th protracted
negotiations." t had a rioae-up of j helped biand 400 head i( cattle on
that attitude In March of '48 when the Moary opeiirhelii holdings
I visited Atwtrla. which then was j After all, lh boys were Judging for
uttering from the scourge of prl- u queen-net a cowhand. Prom the
ration and was hamstrung by the comments In Hie grandstand. Iliu
occupation. I hulld-up was rerlalnlv comidrr
I had a long talk with Dr. Karl , B.a taste, to say the least, and very
Rentier, president of the provisional j u,,ir i0 Hie other gala. May iha
government. Our conversation dwelt ( qUrrn be chosen without "pull "
largely on world pear, and It Is i JOHN M. CI AIlt
worthy to note that he Is among tien. , Klamath Palis,
those nominated for the l4 Nobel ,
peace prise, which la yet to be nit the -Telling the IdlUar
awarded 1 ssw Dr. Rentier Jut 1 irpMimtnt yeatcrdav appeared a
alter Wliul.il Churchill's famous ; r(,r mrlUrn br Jtrk i.,nmmn ,.
"iron curtain" apeech in Missouri ( dor,(nl , Hrhuherl for MUX
and Rentier voluntarily commented: . rf Thr.ufh an anfaciun.i.
we nave one main sorrow
! TELLING
jTHE EDITOR
I Lalitia artel. Ii ) m ta
UMivr tain aa wrS, aaaal .
I nits UiiHr aa oS SIUS al
soar, aaa Sa la f ,
,.i..rl mams and AUueses al aka
(!. t aNtflkallaaa lIUwlas ISm
raUa aia Maiaali waWaweo.
t OMH.AIST
Kl.AMATII rAI.14, Ore.-I hav
atlrudrd a good many tryout and
rodro prtfoiiiiaiues, but this la th
Ural lime I ever heard sn announcer
l.ulld up a contratant. Th Illy a
lode well, but why add dial aha had
end of lh. ami,. ... . ..,.., " " lPr.phlrsl error, the alsnalare
rnm..:. A .7" Z'.Z.'Z uom ""' D """ wa. dripped, leavlm
communist domination westwards
towards the the English channel.
The counter drives by the weatern
aemorraries tthe Marshsll plsn.
Churchill and Htalin. The unltv of
uie world U our life, the end of
unity would be the end of Aintils
. I hope that there will be agree-
the Atlantic pact aid to Ureer. .,lfi ''... ... , .11,.
Turkey, and so on 1 have been eflec- I u - t ... 1., 11,. ..re.
live. The dangers of another global ! m,m AutrU wm t be frotten
waa rirupped. leaving th lerter un
signed. Ill llrrald and Newa re
greta thla unintentional mlalake.
Phone Sill -kf... I'LAiiHimiH ,
Save time trouble, money - get ouirg
remttta with a Want Adt '
war have receded.
80 the world doe breathe easier
As soon as our International ,
status ts fised we want to be a mem-1
are absolutely for peace "
Well, President Truman aavs "we
have reason to hone that before the
At the same time it know. nr . .... .... . ... ...
.iu .. , L in r 01 uie ln ana laae up iririmiT
certainly should know that this I nMUm ,, .,, n.OIUl ... We
.. ,1111311 vi uie coniuci ot
the Isms. That will continue, per
haps long after your time and mine.
But so far as tlie western world Is
concerned. Uie red drive Is likely for
at least the Immediate future to be
confined largely to fifth column ac
tivities which are aimed at crlp
P'ying non - communist countries
economically and spreading the red
Ism. And meanwhile, as Secretary
of Bute Arheaon told the senate
foreign relations committee. Russia
Intends to hold onto the gains she
has made.
LEGAL NOTICE
ttrvrtt v i iirumv uivr.N ihi ,
M'sUitd lNr llMf m4 NtJl'V lUfi.i.
t lh tlulF (iMilnlsMj. fjualirisHt anJ
strtlnf J..4M itttniilfl.rt) ( Iha mUi
1.4" II II MP iv ni-fas nil pvi '
fnd of th" Tfir th tnlY mr be . "
ll In lh martrvstr
lit u ! IK nfftc ut
.n .... is I w.s.e.. -
ttrftdvln tnflufnt- In rirvj, r..u..i u-ir.s. I n m,,
h wnnu to b frirndlr Ki.rtith i u ..... - n im oil...
i-t Viiwin itt.ji. sP rnm I
llwll.tinf KUrnatlh rUi (Jrvgttfl. wilhi
1 ntoiilh ftern lit l-l'd it. of Ju,
l4tt Ira (!( al !' flrvl pubUf-atiudt
u thU aWllliC
men.) MOr Hf) UHOY HAFTY
.ct HI'IIV HAHIN, Joint Artmirt-
lau -' ft th .( 4 Luna
if tiM - ir and wnrn uii nppr ni, v.-ti, r-
aivnin tikiw i.lar Aiutrta ihoutd pi"-id.
ICurop.
with both thf Kill-nun blv and th
wetfrn nation. thmih ht ht no
lianinr loward wmmunUm. ttnr
svha la htffhty irllglnui. And Tfliflon
don't tniat wtth rommunum.
It Par to Uw I he Want Adit
Static
Be JOT Bir.GS
Tuesday winners: Mrs. John Bor-e-jlll.
1K3 Nlmlts. She received two
theatre tickets on the win with
Wynne Theatre Quia. KPXW.
Jane Mason. 302i Lawrence. In
somnia club winner, received one of
the valuable prizea. Same station
These are guest artists who will
sppear on Telephone Hour this
summer and the dates. Jaarh.
Helfet. June 17: John Charles
Thomas. July 4: Claudlo Arrau. July
11: Polyna Stoska. July H: Lucille
tummtng and Edwin Strife In a
premiere performance, July 2S: Hel.
fetz again on August 1: Gladys
Swartout. August g. ICiio Plnia.
August 15; and Llcla Albanese. Au
gust 33.
Don Lee Mutual listeners wlli
tear the story of the man who waa
being haunted by his own voice
during the Mysterious Traveler story
for Friday at g 30. "Murder Has a
Voice." That's KPJI.
v. 1 '
$ ;' l
h Vs ' T ; N. ;
i V
, V ID MORRIS
V' t " ' -
K i 1 i i
W W.lcomt
You
To Our
New Store
MORRIS
And
BAKER
UADtYCT
(
,J. -:
4707 So. 6th
And
t t BAKER
- i
Dcon Hall's Froien Food Lockers this tarn location. 700 lokr units
or available and or of th newest and belt refrigeration. Our customers
will find this dual (ood service an extra advantage for stopping and shop
ping at our very modern food store.
PI
This Is the debut date of Hon.
But there's a story on the sports j alng Cassidy on Mutual-JI. The
page concerning the meeting and t
isn t necessary to go Into detail here
Male and I got plenty of calls
early In the evening from persons
wondering where the fire wa. Male
checked all the fire departments
and still the calls came tn although
there wert no calls received bv the
firemen.
We found out It wss trssh bum-
the disadvantage of staining the
skin dark brown. Calamine lotion la
also used a great deal.
Some doctors believe that an ex
tract of poison ivy which can be I u.- dumn
s-iven hv lnleetlm t. K.lnrl l cltT dump.
venUon. There Is some difference of
opinion about this, however, and
while It la useful for some. It does
not seem to help others.
Note:. Dr. Jordan is unable to
answer Individual questions from
readers. However, each day he will
answer one of the most frequently
asked questions In his column.
TODAY'S QITESTION
Q. My husband formerly stuttered
irequentiy, now only occasionally.
Can this stuttering be inherited by
my oaoy wmcn is expected shortly?
A. Stuttering Is Drobablv not in.
herited. Children, however, are great
uniuiioTs ana copying s loved par
ent In speech as well as in other
respects for a while would not be
RADIO PIIOGUAMS
THURSDAY EVE, JUNE U
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Hary Klnr Orch. ULBS
I M la parla
llmrar rtla'i Orcfe. DLBS
ftawa ni.Ra
&PJI faatara
Accord in f to picturw. thl R?no
Browne, starlet who will appear at
the July rodeo here, is mi(thtT
fetchln' "... and thoae In the know
tell me ahe can ride a horse too.
Having lived In the land of Bally,
hoo, known aa Hollywood, for t good
many years. I took thla Information
with aome aurprtae. She can, how
k'ds have been besieging radio ex
ctutlves ever since It was announced
that he would be on the air. so here
he Is now snd they can clamor at
him for "Hoppy souvenirs. Cheek
your station for the time which
wasn't announced with this blurb
Listen to Pat Man Brad Runyun
ahen an attractive gal tells him
he killed a crook, Prtday at I p. m.
ABC.
aaa
Red Ryder outsmarts the sheriff
who Is a crook anyway, plus his
crooked associates when he rides
the range again at 7:30 tonight
Thursday, In "Porging the Prontler."
I
Meat Dept.
"The Night has a rhousand Byes
and they are all reading classified
Is your ad there?
Ktn ia tS
sunwr 'tftis''!
' .. ..........
i- jBEEF for LOCKERS i
I Tr Wrapping 3c
You Will Find Our
MEATS
Top in Qualify
Low in Prict
BEEF POT
ROAST
55
Wieners
Asst. Lunch Meats
Bologna
39v
lb.
Fresh Ground
Beef 39c
Fresh Poultry
h
Produce Dept.
Our Produce Is
Always
Fresh Crisp
Ready for the Table
rf
Roasting Ears
;i Carrots
Lemons
(Choice)
lb. 17c
bunch 10c
lb. 25c
Cants
Grapefruit
Strawberries
Large Klpe, local
lb. 9c I
lb. 15c .
n., 25c f
Picnic Items
i :
Everything
for the
Picnic
7 Days a Week
Mayonnaise ,..,
POTATO CHIPS, TOMATO CIIIPR
ONION CHIPS, CIIKRHE CHIPS
Pickles
(Hweet and Dili)
Fresh Hleek
. pi. 36c
bag 25c
I.OWKHT
PKICKN
Van Camp
Pork & Beans
Olives
Cookies
mbo
ft
15c $i
i',-os.-39c
103 (In
Ijirgs Ass't
All Frrah Raked
STOP - SHOP - SAVE SsioL 8
- - - a " iiiym m rivni n
OPEN
7
DAYS
A WEEK
DON'T FORGET!! We
DO CUSTOM MEAT
CUTTING SERVICE FOR
FOOD LOCKERS
HOURS
8 a. m.
to
8 p. m.
K
aasaA