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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1949)
FACI FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON MONDAY, OCT. 24, 199 141 lor MIX JENKINS Managua aVatar usacmiraoN mtu nonu 11 aa By mall noma II IS an null Month a (0 r wo o Base! m nail eiaaa BjltM at Ha poal fall. On. M Aufuil so. laoa. under Mare U7S. fUa at Ulamata act at eoasrvaa. wimui or tm astociAito run fke AaeooLsLed Free a anuud Helueivl to tt tar raaubUcotloa X HI IM local hwi prlausa la last m I WU at U AT Bjasr. 7Aese Days By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY OUR courts hart (or some time been under a timn of criticism. Men hart been appointed to tha luprema court of the United States who do not command the respect of the legal profes sion or of tha people. It has been rumored that Candida tee for elective Judicial office buy their nominations either by direct transactions or by con tributions to party funds. Lawyers have been ap pointed to receiverships and other "references' whose vary appointments five the impression of Impro priety, If not of corruption. And lawyers have been seen to be hare In court as though they were on a street earner soap box exhibiting themselves with out regard to propriety or their positions as officers of tha court. Tha lawyers who represented the 11 convicted communists hare been held in contempt by Judge Harold Medina and have been sentenced to prison terms. Their behavior ta court has outraged every sense of fitness, of order, of the preservation of the dignity of tha court. Judge Medina's patience waa obviously taxed and at one time he collapsed under the stress of their bad conduct. It does not matter whether they are or are not communists, or whether they represent communists. What does Batter is that they failed to realize that apart from their proper function of protecting their clients, they also must protect the dignity of our courts and of our Judicial process. A lawyer should be a gentleman even while defending a criminal. THBSB men win probably serve their prison terms and come out to sin some more. But that Is not too Important. What Is very serious Is that a trial such as this could have happened; that the Judge should have been forced to accept humiliation, Insult, personal abuse to avoid a mistrial, or to prevent soma higher court from accepting some, thing that tha Judge might have said as the basis for a reversal of tha decision of the Jury. The pro cedure In the court ought to be revised to protect the Judge and the process of law from the trreipon slbtlity and Impropriety of lawyers who fail to recognise their full duty. Certainly the bar assort atlons owe It to the good name and the Integrity of their profession to undertake a thorough study of this problem. In this particular ra.se. the lawyers undoubtedly were more than advocates; they acted as though they were themselves part of the very apparatus of which their clients were the servants. But other lswyers have acted badly In our courts, for no reason other than to convince their clients that they were taking risks on their behalf. Our courts ought never to be noisy, clamorous, irreverent tnstt tutlons. We need to be sure of that In these con fusing times. IT would be preferable that Judges should not be thrown Into the hell-tire of party politics. Our campaigns have grown Increasingly distressing. Can dldatea, even tor the highest places, no longer de vote themselves to Issues, nor do they pursue gen tlemanly amenities. They hurl Implications and falsehoods at each other. For Instance, In the New York state campaign for United States senator, a motif has been injected which must disgust Americans who love our Inst! tutlons, particularly the right of the people choose their own government at a secret election at which each person may vote as an Individual. owing at the moment allegiance to no man on earth or to no party but only to Ood and his own con' science. Into this campaign have been Injected religious differences and the point has been made that John Foster Dulles Is a religious bigot. Whoever says that is liar. But that Is not what I am dis cussing; - It la rather that such things could be that no sense of decency comes to the rescue of those who are maligned because they would serve the United States. We have lost something In these years snd if It Is old fogy to expect dignity, then It were better that we revert to dignity and pro priety ana manliness, u our politicians, as our lawyers, need to be buffoons to get on. our country needs protection from Its own children, and the children .need to be .re-educated. BoyU'i Column Pretty Girl 'Guinea Pig' Collects Fat then Reduces K -a mm By HAL BOYLE TOW YORK, WV-Gaining weight with many women is a matter of self-indulgence and losing it Is matter of self-torture. But with Fay Susklnd putting on pounds and then taking them off is a matter of business. She la paid to do it. Miss Susklnd. a pretty, dark-eyed girl with a Una background and a splendid fore ground, has one of the oddest jobs in an odd civilization. She la- a human guinea pig for the. mechanical massage indus try. "It Is my Job to test the re ducing equip ment," she said as we sat in an assi Doyie of the u,rWv .uucinum saions wnere she acts uso as gymn supervisor. "Three or four times a vear T put on as much weight as I can. and then take It off with massage rollers. "We have machines for everr place you want to reduce calves, hips, arms, back, waist or thieha. I test each machine bv taking weight off myself." She keeps an elaborate chart dur. tng the whole process showing the changes In her hown measurements she builds her weight ud. then takes it off. We went Into the gymn. which was full of strange Instruments and resembled a medieval torture chamber. There were two fat lady customers present. One was bent over a machine that kept thumping bar in the stomach mildly with a (cries of wooden rollers. The second fat lady was harness ed in a gadget that kept rolling sev eral tightly clamped elastic wire springs up and down her thighs. uoes it tlckle7"I asked. "No, no, indeed." she said. "It feels rather good." I took her word for It Both plump ladles looked with a algh of envy at shapely Miss Sus klnd, whose weight Is now in the downward cycle. She explained that the most she had ever got her weight up to was 126 pounds, but that now she was down to 108 and still losing. . . T can put on as much as Uelve pounds in four weeks by eating can dy and starchy things like spa ghetti, noodles and mashed po tatoes." she said. "When I'm gain ing I always go to bed with a full stomach and get lots of sleep." This system is harder on her hus band than it is on her. "He really doesnt like me to gain he wants me to stay slim." she smiled. But he knows It's my Job." "And he doesn't suffer from it. He's underweight himself. He gets everything fattening to eat and has beer at every meal and still he doesnt part on an ounce-. - One aspect of Fays Job might make it attractive to many women. She finds It necessary to maintain two complete wardrobes one for the upsurge, one for the downbeat. "Tha advantage of mechanical massage, she said, "is that it en ables women to remove fat from any part of the body they desire. It gives -them control over their physical contours. The trouble with having to test different reducing machines, how ever. Is that sometimes Fay may be required to slim her calves to Betty Orabla size while leaving her hips in a Venus de Milo proportion. "But that is only temporary, she said. "As soon as I have completed the test, they let me get back Into shape all over. All the patrons of slenderizing ss. Ions today aren't merely anxious to melt away blubber. "In case it interests you," she said, "we can build up the bust, too. Many women now are interested in that," Captain Should Have Had Red Face INOLEWOOD. Calif, Oct. 24 UP) Police Capt. Robert Collins returned home from work, tried to flick on his television set but It didn't work. The tnsides of the set were miss ing. He called police headquarters and immediately lieutenants, ser geants and Just plain cops began an all-night citywute search lor a TV burglar. Not a clue was found. Thz captain himself called off the search yesterday. Embarrassed, he told fellow officers that he had sent the set's chasis out to the repair shop. And then forgot about it. Hawaii's Long Stevedore's Strike Ends HONOLULU. Oct. 24 Mt-Hawail s striking CIO stevedores will go back to work tomorrow snd Wednesday in live ot the Islands' six ports. They started the territory's most crip pling labor tieup May 1. An agreement covering all ports except in Manukoma was signed yesterday afternoon 176th dav ol the sinke whose known losses start at 1100.000,000 (Ml. The memoran dum was signed by officials of all out one of Hawaii's seven steve doring firms and the Intematinni longshoremen and Warehouse men s union. The agiaaunt i-wmi, sues which had blocked return -to work since October C wnen tne wu u,wu stevedores were granted an immediate pay boost of 14 cents an hour with seven cents n March 1. They str ek to raise their $1.40 hourly wage by 32 cents. The memorandum provides the agreea wage increases extension of contract to June IS 1951, snd no Discrimination against the strikers. Dorena Dam Dedicated COTTAGE GROVE, Oct. 24 M, Dorena dam was officially dedicat ed Sunday in a public ceremony that attracted a crowd of more than 500 people. Governor McKay threw the main switch that formally set Into operation the 114.000.000 flood control structure. Scheduled for completion in July of 1850. crews worked Sundays and holidays to iiziisn sneaa ox time. Rep. Harris spoke briefly, pledg ing his full support until all the units in the Willamette valley proj ect are completed. Dorena was the third and largest of three dams con structed In the valley. Fem Ridge on the Long Tom nver near Eugene, and Cotta urove on tne coast fork of the Wil lamette near here were finished pit or to the war. CABINS BURN ROSEBURO. Oct. 24 (Pi Three cabins of the Oak Grove auto court at comstock were destroyed bv fire Friday, State Police Sgt. Lyle H. nan-en reported. RADIO PIIOGUAMS EFLW 14M kc. MIHn'l Saert Psre S:1S Heme Tear Nearo 31 Werie News Semassrr :SS Tan Time ABC Ilaur Davis ABO MONDAY EVE, OCT, 24 lei fill ,11-mla. Mrstsrr tTka Lane Manaer ABO :IS . t:M Nana tha Barer 2:tS Beatlme Stories' Mr. Treelienl ABO S:MBIrtav Starr ItHoarr t- TarlerABO t aa Artkar rtaata ABC S:IS BarsU-Trlb. reran! ARC :aa.sle Suit Calls ABC S:4S " " S:SS Ju no Blehflali BaparUr ABO !:! erali-Trl. r.ram ABO S:SII Baacbe Orrh. ABC IIMMn Saaiaaarr 11SSI Oil 11:11 llltS KFJ1 124 ke. Gabriel Heatter MBS ax Ibeatre Quit' Araani Twa Weather Sperls Reaadan Bill Hear MRS Voice al Saerts Ra Iba Slarjr Gih MBS Anniversary Night Let Oaarta Da It MBS Iba Salat MBS Jabanr Desman MBS Clean Hardy MRS Rammr Kara nhesrreem toalo Dachla Shew MBS S-Mln. final MRS 1 Lav a Myeterr MRS raltaa Lewie Jr. MRS Treassry Variety MRS "'' la Vet;' Marler br tsperte Malaal Kewarsei TUESDAY A, M, OCT. 25 SrSt IS Far rare l aoNewe. Bif.t. Mitten :IS C'harlla'a Boana'ap" l Marti Airanikr ABO t:UTn at tb Marnlnr MBreeafaet Clak ABU S:IS " a a Meat U Read :IS Nancy Cral ARO S:S Fersenellty Time f :4b Bafet, la Bell.waai ABO !: " - 'IS Sls ant Sbna l:JMr Tr.a Slory ABO la ssBeltr Cracker ABO It.-aS " luisriak Tina ABO 1 1 :SS Haaae Party ABC 11JS Market a. ear I- KrLW realara Rlea Shine MR. Rlee ad Rhine MRS Frank Hemlnswar MRS Rraakfaal Gn MBS Mews Reel Bya raeklea Fleebei Faverltae at Yesterday Uarea at Beet MRS Rata Smith Sneaks MRS Harvey Hardlns Sans af Flaneere Marnlnr Matinee Glenn Hardy MR nnspel Alnrer MRS Roving Rererder Maelcal Maslnga rally Speaks Ladles First DLBS Qoeea far a Day MBS KFJI Faalars TUESDAY F. M, OCT. M ItaeNewa, Naea Cdltlaa 12:1S Maeica! Beaodap IZ:M Paylees Sidewalk Shaw lt:4S Malady rremenada ABC 1:M - " l:lfi It'a Daacatlme I Standard Scb.al Bdeet. 1:44 Z:MCnert Master S:M Brlda and Cream ABC S:M Hema with Klrkweda ABC S:IS Vera Varna ABC S:M Ledlee Ba Seated ABO ' SIS 4 a Renaeetfsllr Tsars 4:15 ReqaeaUallyIeare !ts I MThe Oreea Hernet ABO Sat Jack Araastrens ABC Mama Bands Newe Tear Dane Tanes Market-Llastrk Awarding TaTha Bcrd Say It With Made News' Haedewa Farty Birbya Baqaeal" Meinc Wllh Dad Salan Paverlles Oaeld Bass MBS Fsltaa Lewis Jr. MBS Frank Hemlnrwsy MRS Behind tha Stary MBS alary Time Iraltht Arrow MRS Capt. Mldnlfht MBS TUESDAY EVE, OCT. U M Today's Sparta rasa :ISHeme Tawn News :2S Warld News Saaiasarr : Tana Tlma ABC IS Elmer Darts ABO :tS :US-Mln. Mystery 1:M CaaaMrspy ABO 7:IS " VI Wynne with Wlaaers rtSBrdltm Starles S:M Tlma tar Defeaea ABO 151 rlw "tins at Air ABO :IS " " i s Ci"4 ' J,l,a ABC I0:W airbtleld leprtr ABC 10:15 Herald-Trlb. Feram ABO 10:SS Beverly Hltla Orrh. ARC 1S:4S Eddla Oliver Oreh. ABO 1 1 :M News Sammarr II assiin otl 11:11 11:11 U:M BrXW Fsalara r.shrlel Haatter MBS BL Ibaatra tjali Araand Teas' Weather Sparta Reaadep Rill Henry MBS Wba's Wba he the Stary Gees' Nesbill Hl-H Faa Skew Ceant af Mania Crlete MBS Mystery Is My Bakky MBS Ulsnn Hardy MBS Alenr Nslare'e Trail Official Dettrtlv MBS S-Mln. Final MBS I Love a Mystery MRS Fatten Lawla Jr. MBS Bass Marfan Oreh. A a tea. ( Bab Bath . Adven. Orararr Meed WRS Mr'trrlsaa Traveler MBS Sun Oil n m BFJI Fealart SIDE GLANCES pf A . . mfc; rH y.- V ll 'PS 10 -n eoea. iph sr u sunct ac t. is ais. a Mn,orr. "It's kind of lata for us to elope we. couldn't make it back home for dinner!" Static By DAVE I'NDKKHII.L Heres an amazing bit of Informa tion about the "Amazing Mr. Ma lone" that I didn't know till just the other day.'- ' Handsome, blond-hatred, fortvish. Oent) Raymond, popular star of stage, screen and radio, portrays the amazing Irishman on ABC's popular mystery program. This exciting detective thriller ap pears on LW by transcription at : pjn, Wednesday. A fourteen year-old Wichi ta. Kansas high school, s o p h c- more, Nancy Jett, broke the Jackpot on Kate smiths pro- ABC's LW tomorrow night at 8:30 include: Dr. Louis N. Ridrnour. Dean of the Graduate school and professor of physics. University ot Illinois; Lt. William Bradlord Huie, 11SNR iretlredi, lecturer and au thor of a series of articles on "Air Atomic Power, and Rep. Henry N. Jackson tD. Wash), member of the house appropriations committee on atomic energy. George V. Denny. Jr.. originator of the program will act as moderator. gram last Mon- P , i. v day night In do- I ' V -v lng so Nancy I : won 125,000 In (: -W- J" I prizes. J When Nancy ' Identified Kates jf ' mystery friend L-. v . A in the q u I s as Dave Underbill General Dwight Elsenhower, the shows jackpot was broken for the first time In eight weeks. Clues given to help the lucky (?) high school girl win all that loot were: "Why didnt you become and admiral? "What does the "d stand for? "How long were you in the Phllllpines? The sound of a roar ing lion, which represents the mas cot of Columbia university, of which General Eisenhower Is presi dent Another answer to the question. What to do with all the prizes that person wins on a qulzz pro gram?, was printed In Time maga zine radio section this week. An eastern woman who won 'Just oodles of prizes on one of the east coast give-aways, played lt smart and decided to get rid of all the loot. She held an auction, and re alized about M000 on the sales. That should Just about take care of all the taxes, and Incidental costs of winning about $19,000 worth of goods. As they say. you never get some thing for nothing. House Solons See 'Red' In Women's Group WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 or) The house un-American activities committee has described the Con gress of American Women tCAWi as an "anil-American and pro-Soviet' snare lor gullible women. This, retorted the organization, is outrageously Lnlalr." A committee report was made public over the week-end. A CAW reply followed last night from New York. Hoax The committee said CAW Is "just another communist hoax specifical ly designed U ensnalre Realistical ly minded but politically gullible women." the chief purpose ol which "Is to act as part ot a world-wide pressure mechanism among women in support of Soviet foreign and do mestic policy." The CAW described Itself as "an organization of women whose open ly avowed goal since Its inception has been the furtherance ol world peace, and the betterment of the conditions of life for themselves and their children." Subversive The congress was cited In IMS by the attorney general as a sub versive organization. It traces its origin to a meeting ot the Women's International Demo cratic federation In Peru In 194S, the committee reported. In New York. Dr. Gene Weltflsh. executive vice president, called the report "nonsense, fantastic." She said she Is now honorary president after having served three years aa president. She Is an anthropologist who lectures at Columbia university. j The World Today! Markensie By DrWITT MAl'KKNZIK AP foreign Affairs Analyst I haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaearf Publlo pronouncements by the ktti( and other Immediate mem bers of the British royal family or dinarily are non-controversial and are sanctioned In advance by the prime minister a office, since the monarchy Is constitutional. for this reason England sat up and took nuUce when 22-yrar-old Princess Elisabeth, hrlreas to Ilia throne, made a publlo address In which she gave the coun try a o o d trouncing fo r lax morals. Bhe was speaking at a mothers union meeting and h er re ma r k a were aimed primarily at divorce, which has In creased heavily since the out break of the late war. 'Havoc' When we see around us the havoc which has been wrought, above all among the children, by the breakup of homes, aald the princess, "we ran have no doubt that divorce and separation are re sponsible for some of the darkest evils In our society today. I do not think you can perform any finer service than to help maintain the Christian doctrine that the relation ship of the husband and wile is a permanent one, not to be lightly broken because ot dllllculilea or quarrels." This speech by the nelce of King Edward VII, who abandoned the throne to marry an American di vorcee, was the ahariest delivered had the surprising effect of bring ing a rebuke from the Marriage Law Reform committee which broke the traditional attitude toward royal utterances by challenging her state ment that divorces lead to many of Bri tains social evils. Tempest So a good sized tempest has been brewed In the British teapot. One of the highly Interesting aspects of this devlopment. as I see It, rests In the fact that Mrs. Geoffrey yuh- et, wife of the archbishop of Canter bury, presided over the meeting at which the princess spoke. There fore It strikes me that Elizabeth must have had not only the approval of Prime Minister Attlees office but that of the head of the Church of England. If that la so. what la the signifi cance? Well, there are those in In formed places who believe that Eng land Is ready for a moral and re ligious revival. They feel that the country won't overcome Its eco nomic troubles or regain Its old status until there has been a tight ening up of morality. Conscience In order to understand tills new point one must know that the coun try Is possessed of a very strong national conscience. It's the sort of thing which swept Edward off his throne when he insisted on marry ing Mrs. Simpson. I myself have encountered strik ing examples ot moral and spiritual convictions In various parts of the British Isles. In many places you find an austerity which sustains such beliefs as the one that the epic withdrawal of the British forces from the sands ot Dunkerque at the outset of the great war waa the re sult of a miracle. FUNNY BUSINESS : m v m -V5wT?F-- b. i7Ti Mia tievTri t iU,,, ;"r! in nr v 'Jy ' r tuiVvstf "Sort giving us the run-around, aren't they?" Accident Rate Down Despite Screwballs I be ahead of yuu. And nmt nf Ulcu I arte bought by slow dnvris. l"t a. For a few pennies per word you can advertise to thousands through a Want-Ad I Phone 8111. State Seeks Basin Road Rock Bid SALEM The state highway com mission will open bids November 7 S at Its Portland office on 14 proj ects costing an estimated million and a half dollars. Among the projects Is one tor pro duction of 18,030 cubic yards of crushed rock on the Whiskey creek East Forest boundary section of the Klamath Falls-La It evlew highway. Another project is for construe- I tion of 6000 feet of metal guard rail on the Soda gulch-Keene creek sec tion of the Oreensprings hlghwsy In Jackson county. Town Meeting, a quiz show of another type It tries to give the answers to questions. Instead of vice versa will return to Town Hall In New York City for Its first "home broadcast since departure last June on a global tour of 12 world capi tals. Americas Town Meeting will take as IU tonic. "What should the free world do about the atomic bomb? Atomic experts to be heard over I rOU CAN COMPLETE I HIGH SCHOOL Now A t Home Low Payments All Books famished No Classes DIPLOMA AWARDED If Too Are 16 or Over Write for Free Booklet AMERICAN SCHOOL Dept. KLA-10-24, 1440 Broadway, Oakland 12, Calif. Name.. Street Address . City Age. Slate Br nil I. j. NKiN. JFE In America Is much safer In today's era of airplanes and speeding cars than It was 40 yean ago when the country waa emerging front the horse and buggy days. Figures show that during the nil ID! period deaths from accidents were occuring at the aae-adjuilrd rate of (1 per 100.000 while In the 1SM8-4S period the Incidence had dropped to only 43 per lOO.OUu. Mm despite the drop aoout 100,000 deuUis a year are caused by ac ctdrma. The fact that the rate hai drupped Is sometimes difficult to be lieve, but when you watch auiue of todays acrew balls drive you can readily see why ao many pay with their lives tor 'accidriiu.' If you had a dollar for every lime some body in a tearing hurry passed yuu on the brow of a hill or on a blind curve you could probably buy a near car. But If the guy doing the pass ing keeps it up he won't even nerd his present car for long. That was one tiling about the horse and butty. Vou seldom killed all the occupants of a wagon In a head-on smash. Anyway, the accident rate la donn over four decades sgo and you cau lay most of the reasons u the ad vance of safety In industry. Can kill more and more but ahop and factory workers have safer machines every year. BROM San Francisco comes this cheering news: The macaroni, spaghetti and egg noodle bus I tie-; in trill country la running 140 per cent of the average for the same period in the five yeara befure the war. If you happen to own stock In one of those business you can sit bars; and take it easy. If you own enough of It, CTILL on the subject of cars, here's another flanra- mnln, ..-hi-'- registration In Oregon totaled (US. 874 last month to set an all-time high. There are 44.444 more pas. senger cars. 73M more pickups. 374.1 more trucks end 32J more motor cycles than there were In IMS Buses were the only ones on the list to show a drop. They lopped 144 off the last year s total. It often seems that when you hit a curvv atretch most of the extra cars munt ntK'K hunters aie a funny lot nnrti to unorisiami. itistll up until the araMiii orn Ihry toin plain bitterly It a cloud mats tin sky or the wind blows a irlfn mid and krrpa tlirm indoors un a Sunday when lliey coulit be out loafing on the lawn Then rnrtut the manic date and they rhinit their chant to a blashphrinous. aim. erlng blast at the sods of weather who send tlirm nothing but varm, balmy days without a trace of wind. When the season rntls, o( course, then they II curse and rave and isnl at the first snow that blankeu cue ground and the ftrat wind that drifts it up amuud the houses and over the streets. Hilly, Isn't II? All I. personally. ak la a Hire hail wind and some low cluuU to mots the ducks a bit. Thai s not un. rra.oimb!e la ft? Just a little ttini, from now until the ninth of neu mouth and from tsrx-enibrr 2J ta January 4 After that It ran cleir up and be warm and balmy again until nest October. rIMIIt O.M.V OTTAWA. (VI. 34 i.l'i-Tlie Ci nadian fisheries department hsi banned the killing of seals in Arctic waters except a fond for Eskimos. Want Ads don't coat tnry payl ran VI C IHIU'II Ot .4 lO Jjerrtlb anb3lflt.js ULamaTu colls ORteort Ml Take Advantage of Klamath's Largest Selection of NEW Hundreds of pat tern . . . florals, solids, diagonals, geometries, stripes, and polka dots. nV D mm 2 far,p BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING a ewe ITlMin !( Phone 4774