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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1951)
PAGB FOUR HERALD VAND NKWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORKOON SATURDAY, OCTOTtttn 11, m t if I FRANK JENKINS Editor Entered second class matter at the post office of Klamath Falls, Ore, on A usual 30, 1000, under act of congress, March t, 179 MEMBERS OF THIS ASSOCIATED MESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication of all the local news printed In this newspaper as well a all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall months $6.50 By Mall year $11.00 BILL-BOARD By BILL Yesterday was football day In Klamath Falls. That tense air ot hushed expectancy prevailed most ol the day as little knots of snorts fans talked over the chances. And you couldn't (ret much enthusiasm generated over Klamath's chances in the big traces. Then came klckoff time and the picture started to change right tl.ere. With our boys in the lead right from the start the crowd's enthusiasm picked up, the rooting sections went wild nd the Pelt on won the one game thct means more to them than all the others put together, ine ooys on the team will always remember V mi.j squad that whipped Medford. On top of that It was a good game to watch, a clean game cn both sides and played hard enough to make it a good game. Despite the cold. Congratulations team! Mcdlordltes came over in force lor me iimv "u put um pretty good cheering section of their own down at the end cl ?e,rrw,vDd,oPePle.h,eir1 US Mere and more ginning to discuss f nm iIm tan. In flraimn Au'.rouid it sn to be 'ihi ,nt -nhl. solution ore can , sensioie soiuuon ore find. That, of course, will be leu . . I . ,M .lulfta ,.,nS iT;1'.. But Harold Bulfington, new p-"h -,;m , m, T can't figure It i"""" "re """" "'"" right to use the privilege that we for a new type of deer contest P f. kmds of clubs 4re l- 1 in America still have, that had never occurred o me. out. UcoeJ. I The point is that we now have : We will soon not be sble to at Why not. says Buff, a contest o ,n " , " , met;u our 't oa or Persons , tain these material things you u who. opts his deer in the j The story goes on to state met w:F,jt,. . i.. n- .i w . ,. ' ? 7!Z """mSlS a pretty least time each season and with the fewest shots? Maybe a pretty good idea. Your first thought is that you would jam the woods with hunters bright and early of opening day. But aren't they jammed already? It would serve to keep a fellow from shooting one deer and then sootting a blg - ger one later shooting it and tos sing away the first one. And in rnnlunctlon with a on deer law COnjuncllon lin a ow- urar w it might cut down on the unneces-1 sary doe kill. It's an idea at any rate. Les Offield. US Bank official, can give you all the dope on television following his vacation trip which he ended recently. He saw the last three games of the Giants-Dodgers game on the rig and is highly enthusiastic. All the comforts of home, he says, and CAUGHT In The ROUNDS By DEB ADDISON Here are three thoughts that are worth passing on, worth thinking about twice: Any human labor is dignified If it is honest. No matter how good you do a thing today, you can do it better tomorrow. . No matter how well you do something, there Is always some body else who can do it better. These thoughts were gleaned, of all times and places land that's not meant disparagingly) listening to a high school English teacher talk about her experiences in Wales. If the experience stimulates such thinking, it would be well for more teachers to sojourn with the Welshmen. The teacher was Miss Ellse Perry, who spent 14 months In Wales through a state department teacher exchange deal. Miss Perry's an English teacher, es stated before, and she estimates that 35 per cent of the words in the English language have a dif ferent meaning here and "over there." As a result, we misunder stand our British cousins and they misunderstand us. She gave an interesting talk on the conditionc and problems of 'Ssohqs. I'oII Opinions- rKlIMUKITIN. N -T CVinnln tZ J unions? mixed attitude toward this contro versial Issue. In principle, police unions are not favored. If there is definite assurance, however, that no such union could go on strike, the popular attitude softens considerably. With this as surance, the weight nf niiim.ni .r".j at. fc'-"u fla Is in approval of unions for police- i m"- , , That is what public opinion inter- viewers found in the course of ! questioning representative adul's in communities of all sizes through-1 outUie country. , me issue has stirred sharp con-; ........ oj w, new jura uiiy wnere ; a drive is on to unionize the police force. Many other municipalities re. watching closely the outcome of this fight. To test public sentiment through out the nation on the principle of a union for policemen, the American Institute of Public Opinion put two questions to the voting public. The first: "Would you favor or oppose al lowing policemen to Join a labor union?" Here Is the national vole: Yea No :. 32'; 53 IVo opinion ..15 100 Some voters who oppose the prin ciple of police unions may have had In mind the famous Boston police strike of 1919, which helped catapult Calvin Coolidge Into the White House. As governor of Mass achusetts he achieved national fame by breaking the strike and sternly ordering the men back to BILL JENKINS Mmiln( Editor JENKINS I eight men with cameras making sure you don't miss a thine- that 'foes on. ine iv arriais, ne ss, make Southern California look like a forested area. In the East and Midwest the big rigs don't stand up much over four or five tect oft the roof, but in California they stuck up anywhere from ten to a hundred feet in order to grab the clearest reception. My predlc- lion: In three years Klamath Falls will have TV. Our much discussed hot rod moposttton in Klamath Falls seems to have fallen through. Nick , carter, who star.ed the Idea in the first plaee. Is sUll hopeful lug 5Q rc ttia uiucia. .,-... v. " I and Grants Pass both have clubs i and tracks as does Astoria. Per hups in time we can get some- i thing of that nature here. The i Footpriniers started some action I on It a few months ago but I have anDarentlv drooDed the Idea. I , Too late In the year to do much , out mm IIWUI tt , there'll always be another spring 0LCC S'? " Sioi miciunes, puncuww WIiU anlmaU nor noDle and m- have im our luwmj m uic vwiumwi - -Tple other gaming devices. According J" Tuim ln toe do not S w " 1". our only way to express our- .n"0 !' 9r "to,"1' ttlnk kind.'- of them'efves .llhougK flv's. 1b',0"r v.le ' ..Plf,"! I Si2 . " , umlc" .. According to uie aisp.icu - .c. Kn . ,nlv ' ""j ,:. -Tfh If that means ; anvthlng to vou I wish you'd ex-1 IJJVmZ Tnrt h- boxes will J entertaent i be legal forms of entertainment Bambllng device0 Thert I would riftStrriS i likTbox U ?g.r7bling I."" i ,hir. mtrr was one. In the first place It's a gamble whether you'll get the number you punched and in the second place It's still a ramble to whether it will be tit to listen to or not. There is also the element ot "icic 1J . . . gambling ng as to uneuier juti ij.u hear the music or not. or wheth er you can hear anything else. It will be amusing to wait and see what happens, however. I doubt if most people give a par ticular hoot one way or the other on the .situation. But It would be fnice to have the state take a firm stand on the measure and really do something Instead of hemming and hawing. mutual understanding between countries land she's recommended for any club speaking assignment) but what sticks with us is this: Teaching is a dignified profes sion if it's honestly done. No matter how good a teacher does the job today, she (or be) should do it a little better to morrow. No matter how well a teacher teaches, there's always another somewhere who Is doing It better. Incidentally, we learn, KTJHS nabbed Miss Perry on the fly, so to speak. She merely stopped -in while traveling through to say how dedo, and was hired. It was good "nab." Tom Wells, student "body prexy ana reJican nalioack. predicted Fridav noon Out gims iijj heal wJrtS?rf n , would Bill Borcher, the new University w.cguii uasactuaii coacn, IS lam- ous as a former Oregon player and for mii-sin. tv. iitiiJ - - " n maiaiuiCMJ Pirates to the state tournament six times (once to knock out the Pelicans In the finals) but he's best known here as the son-in-law of the H. E. Haugers. $alkm t. since that time, however, a good .iiiaiiy cities nave allowed tntr iw. lice forces to be unionized. Many of these unions are In the Ameri can federation of state, count; and municipal employes. The con stitution of this A.F.L. organization contains a "no strike" clause. NO-STRIKE PLEDGE to determine how the public would feel about police unions which adhere to a "no strike" pol- 'cy. this second question was asked in the survey: "Do you think policemen should or should not be allowed to Join r. labor union to represent them pro- vlded they would not be allowed w go out on sinxe? Here is the vote: Should Should Not Ne opinion Ml .3$ .14 100-. Generally speaking the smaller the community the less sentiment there is for allowing policemen's unions. In towns of under 10,009 popula tion the survey found only 44 out of every 100 adults favoring such unions with a no-strike pledge, as compared with 60 out of every 100 cities of 10.000 to 100,000 population, and 64 out of every 100 In cities of over 100,000 population. SINUS INFECTIONS DR. E. M. MARSHA Iklr.ptaetle rtrilcLa Saccastfolly TrtaLg kseltilra tfttb.i N.. Ilk PH.aa M They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo lL ... 'V'w!nm Z. Z00RS.TREMBLEOliM ' wxy wt you let US HELP ( TWtkzs VOTMS TO IT.' is? UOULDMT TWrJK OF ( 5TRAIQHTCM UP ft AW HAXDS, Hi WXLONT TMN OF ' ' "1 LETTlN'3 THE GUESTS V. K0 KHOWAT LEAST LET Jl IT ITS JUST A BREEZE. V (Tl CO AHY FC6T-fRTY TT US CSTHt DSriS-..-' I IU, VMiP wOJcW IT I A$k HEH-HEH-MErTT ASK R3f M f WOOL Ol 1WC KrtS AND (MS JP KEKK'OWS W'fcksJ'S'W AW? "JASrl THE GLASSES rj J Jsdlinq ihsi fcdiioh THE DOG DISAPPEARED KLAMATH FALLS i This Is n .. nln ...H nlri.r th.n x-ni r i j ti,... V,l """7" U oi dog, ! people who are Ithis may take some doing, V5 u" Xt d S" !?UtS',ei?1 '"S wf?S a"M ail otner iotas continually , .hniA-Vrtiiiei .L t. r,." i not kindly dtspowd " animals. We ! feel ra,n" 'ngly that there may . . immediate neighborhood who lacks a kindly , Uceling toward people or dogs. F If there la such a person roam-; Inn nnr hltrhurttv It m-nulfl K. nf iitti immrigna i- hi.n .wm h. ! rn.i thi Th ohiiHi.n im.. an.t I sobs or the Wife's weeping would i mean nothing to him. But there " aciiue pcupitr m una coininuiui-j nt.n -.ill ......J ani I. i. -" J -' them that we address our nlea. i x K tn it th.t vn.ir nnr ha. tmnl. protection around your home and I Br'v,"fe 0 .v?le you "n wln that he Is not permitted to stray ! tt nere n0"e far more help too far away. Besides the llklihood : ,ul "eating the kind of world nt ...nrin ri.th k ...tnt,ii. you desire for your generation and there is the added danger that in- u" generations to come. So be In-1 even reolaclng to some extent the dog murderer will chance by terestea and influence your friends I European terms such as St. Mar For instance our boy found our I n1 nlghbors to register too. Why i tin's summer, the little summer of dog seven miles from home wl'h i ahouM e sit and criticise that I St. Luke, go-eummer. and the sum- a bullet through his head. Right between the eyes. He had been gone five days, and was found wholly by accident. Not far from where h's body lay was another dog of the same breed with n wire around his throat, apparently strangled. - can you p'cture any youngster that would do a thing like this? i Neither can we. These ghastly ma-1 chlnalioiu. in our opinion, point tn an adult. Whether you agree , or not. if you have a dog. take I care. i It 'may save your children and j you who love good dogs many 1 cwim TAojJdiv ABC'ti ' WASHINGTON, ItTtit tall of the British lion has been given another agonizing twist in the Mid- die East, this time by the Egyptians. lm mreaienea yesierasy to drive the British out of the Suei , canal area and the Sudan. It was i sharp timing. iney aciea wnne tne prestige oi ,. nVltUh w hlttlnir a new low1 ., 8 v""n "nanswereo ? taSrks . St o1!lue5,l0'', are: (,) wm Egypt go the Middle East as a result oi .hron ,,. ,, , , the oil disnute in Iran. Only last week the British suf fered one of their worst bumllia- "Mn? iJSL Uf1pe BJSST bluZSre-dTbouTnand! Iran. This month the British voters will decide between Prime Minis ter Attlee's labor government and Winston Churchill's conservatives. Undoubtedly the Iranian fiasco will hurt laborlte hones of remain ing in office. This Egyptian move will hurt them further. When he was prime mln'ster during the war, Churchill said lie 'b.d not become his majesty's first minister to preside over the liquids tion oi tne empire. ATTLEE BLAME It's possible but questionable that If Churchill had remained in office Britain's power and prestige would have fared better. The voters re placed him with Attlee In 1945. At any rate, Attlee must stand the blame. The British have been In Egypt, In One way or another, since they shipped Napoleon In 1901. They got e share of the Suez canal In 1875. They formed protectorate over the country In 1914 when Egypt ceased to be part of the Turkish empire. This protectorate ended In 1922 when the Egyptian kingdom was established. Still, the British have kept a hand irl Egypt. In particular, two treaties with the British have been a festering sore with the Egyp tians. One gives the British Joint rule with them over the Sudan. The other, a mutual defense treaty supposed to run until 1958, allows the British to keep troops and Planes In the canal area to guard It. CONTROL The Egyllana want the Sudan solely under Egyptian control. And they argue they can do by thn selves all the guarding the canal needs. So desire to get rid of the HOTELS OSBURN HOLLAND IUGINI, OKI. MIOFORD Thoroughly Modern Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Earley and Joe Earley Proprietors tears and hopeless grief. ... , J. E. Oldham 1 '' "lal sweet a!niosliere of SlZi Harlaa drive ""V ue I lingered all October through." I'NREGISTERED I That aeltiihilul season of Indian KLAMATH FALLS More than a 1 summer ha already been acaller third of Oregon voters still unreg- i Ins lu beneficence of hulness and istcred. Appalling! warmth and light over many sec- With our country in the condition election will determlnr'the kind of i government we will have. It Is the j mosl Important election In hlstorj' most I Sl0 . ,,,.. . ,, ... .now lniportant.lt ia that yo" register so you will have the think so essential if we allow the freedom and rights our forefathers fouhi for h. rf..,,, -H ..rhi even taking the time to make it possible to express our desires wnen election time comes. The out COme U Ul the DCODle's hands. Let's make It at least four out of five ellgibles on the rolls before i M,y Primaries. j All eligible youths 31 and over ..u to mu counit me , vou ar trolncp In h... i Ine kind of America vou want. War i - . " - . . . mJ ... , settles nothing but in using vourlca. The first reference seems to iiu:ii is going on II we are not interested enough to register. - We are neglecting our privilege and right. We need the best men ' In the country for leaden. The ! only way we will get them is by exercLsIng our very sacred privi lege and voting the best in. let s gel congressmen who will "sten to the people and think right instead of remaining in the cogs ' tne machine now overrunning ... . KP tne faith of our fathers by doing first things first. Register "o then vote, Mrs. William Mtlhase British, and talk of breaking the treaties is not new. But yesterday Egypt's Prime Minister Mustafa Nahas Pasha, leader of the Nationalist party, ln- in entering parliament bills to cancel out the treaties. He said Egypt isn't going to wait, any longer. At . ,, th. ..,. through with this threat, and try it unve ine nritisn out oy force, if necessary? Will the British let tne Egyptians get away wlrt it? ling the Iranians but in the end trotted out mildly when told to go. REFUSAL Nevertheless, In London the Brit lsh foreign office said Britain would refuse to recognize any Egyptian cancellation of the treaties with Britain. Still the United States and the other members of the Atlantic pact nations which last month brought Turkey and Greece Into their al liancehave a stake In what hap pens to the Suez canal. It's tied in with any defense the Atlantic alliance hopes to build In the middle East against Russia. With Britain, a member of the al liance. In control of the canal, a short-cut route to India and the Pacific through the Mediterranean would be kept open. What would Egvnt do about Veen lng that canal safe for the Allies, If the hd full confro'? ETTitlrns have professed frlendshin with the West In preference to tie-up with Rutsle. At the least this Middle East area of the world as a result of 'he Iranian eofsode, which m-v force Iran into economic links with Russia, and thla lateit Egyntian move Is a matter of increasing concern for the Allies. FDR LIBRARY BOLD NEW YORK, Iffl A small pri vate library of the late Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt has been sold to the Rosenbach Co., New York and Philadelphia, by his bod Elliott, it was announced yester day. Purchase of the library, housed in FDR'S cottage retreat at Hyde Park, was announced by John Fleming, vice-president and New York manager of .Rosen bach Co. A.n, B PAINT STORE 1229 I. Mil Tiuqh (pAiudi Heortm Above on ' ' ,e country, its ciiariiiing I.HII tH U 1I1SJIV UIIV hope and make one's heart beat moi atrungly In the Joy ol living. inaian summer seems to oe a condition rather than a definite pe riod of lime. This exhilarating and dreamy weather Is usually as signed to October, yet It la often clejirly In exlstenre In September or as late as Norember. The traditional characteristics of Indian summer Include Uie follow ing: A mud temperature which Im parts an enthusiasm for outdoor existence: a hase lying along the horlioii which envelops dtstant d'.y lime objects with a fantastic ve.l of sofiness: cloudless skle day and nltzht bin with Ktar lititrh ltu mi. merous and distinct than in Ideal telescopic weather. RLtiriv nf -arlv rtK-nrtU Inn t-l. that the term originated in Amer- . be In MaJ. Denny's Journal In 1704 when he wrote, "Pleasant weather. Indian summer Is here." Soon after that It attained widespread usage, nicr oi an suinus. One writer said of this season, "Indian summer Is so delightful that- one would suppose he had been transplanted to some celestial clime." Said another. "Tills singu lar occurrence seems to be to sum mer what the vivid recollection of past Joys is to reality.'' Da Quincy in 1830 wrote. "Indlsn summer crept stealthily ... a aw ect mimicry of summer, a spiritual or fairy echo of a mighty music that had departed." It has been suggested that In dian summer was the fall hunting season of the American natives. The weather was fine and the game abundant. The haziness favored a close approach to the game. Others I think It referred to the Indian bar- vest since the fine weather found Indians busy with their crops of maize. Suggested also Is the custom of the Indians during this dry, warm period to burn the grass from the open ranges Intended for pasturing the following year, or to burn the underbrush to drive out the game. As a result, there was a great deal of amoklness in the still atmos phere. LEGEND Some attemnt to connect Indian summer with the legend of Sawon dassee, ruler of the 8ou'h wind. When he sighed In autumn, balmy Southern air was said to bring warmth and delight over the land the enchanting aeason of Indian summer. , Be that as It may. It appArs to be as Emerson wrote, a season o' serenity when even "the cattle that He on the ground seem tn have great and tranquil thoughts.'' Slots. Boards Deadline Set PORTLAND, W The Oregon state liquor commission yesterday set January 1 as a deadline for taverns to get rid of plnball and digger machines, punchboards, slot machines and "other gaming devices." The action followed an opinion from Atty Gen. George Neuner that they were illegal forms of entertainment. It appeared that only such things as radio, television and phono graph would be acceptable forms of amusement under the law. The ban applies to taverns and not to clubs and restaurants with class C licenses. Last month City Commissioner J E. Bennett told the liquor com mission he was voting against tavern license applications In Port land If amusement devices were on the premises because, he sa.j, they were forbidden by law. ORF.OONIAN HONORED COLLEGE STATION, Tex., 11 Edgar W. Smith, Portland, Is the new president of the association ol governing boards of state universi ties and allied Institutions. Smith, who Is head of the Oregon board of higher education, was elected here Friday. Your Headquarter (or SUPER KEM TONE end KEM GLO Aik far aur Shsrwls Williams Style Calee Scan (bawAon IluntWfl NEW YORK, in-Money Is all over the news today. Kvrrydne'a talking about It lntere.il rates, mortgages, loans, Investments, taxes, dollar siioi'lagc. the price of gold. Hatikers, government offi cials, biiilues.-nirn tell vou every thing about It except how to get It. Some savings bank olllclals want to rahe iha dividends tliry pay to depositors. Other bankera pre dict II I going to coat more to bor row money from them bv Christ mas lime. Loans to bu.ilneaa no up another IH0 minion In a week, ana intercut rates mav go up, too. Congress gets net to draw more money from taxpayers both Indi vidual and corporal. And New York banka rrport they are doing more business but making teas money, because ot higher taxes. iuuh lusttr. You are assured there'll be plen ty of mortage money available. In spile of the proposed federal tax on lenders, II you want to go in ihk-k ior a new nouse. The Brltli h say thev lost more gold and dollars last hummer than In any other three months since uie war. once their election la over they'll decide what to do about paying Uncle Sam tha $131 million due nun In December. The finan cial crisis will have to wait for tni political one. Sngo SldeglniicfN' ..Vi 111 '"' "J "r-.Ul1'' rV. weakness. They are twitted plenty about the trunk - iui oi irinxeu tnsl they carry to mill and to meetln'. A survey shows that most men also need a handbag, knapsack, or something. I Much haa been written about the .contents of a small boy's pockets I but no inventory has belore been taken of Uie truck that the grown , up boy totes around Willi him when i he has room for it. In summer a man It strlnDetl of several convenient pockets They Sometimes a discussion followed i o into mothballs with his vest and experiment and pttcksu' con I overcoat. He's glad to ort them ' tmu c,m ol" 0, ' 'able. These 1 buck in Uie tall. Of course there hss to be at least one year-round pocset one lor his wallet. Any time he hasn't auace for thai hi. .wife will gladly nnd room in her 'crowded catchall, i fc'OHEY I I set out quietly to gel nosey , about men'a pockets, me result ;Ot the poll is Illuminating. The method was to casually ask various men for something you'd not ax pect they could produce at a noon- oay luncn lame. Such as a screw driver, for example. You'd be sur prised how many men can produce one. Mostly they are screw driver blades In knives. Some sort of pocket knife seems to be man's favorite companion: to many of them the only tool thev own. All had watches, more than half had pens. Watches, knives, pens, even screw drivers proved more on the common side, Bo I got tough; started to ask for fool things lor a man to be carrying. I found three men with needles and thread. One had both black and white thrrad. ready to sew on a button or mend a rip you know where. One could deliver a bottle of cleaning fluid to wipe off grease spots. Two had safety pins: many could produce common pins from the underside of their coat laixiv Several had aspirin. Alka Selt zer or soda mints, none had a flask. Be It to the everlasting credit ol the male sex that none had a mirror. But a bachelor produced lipstick, and not on la ahlrtfront: ssld It waa for the convenience ol a certain widow. One guy had a whisk broom, another a hairbrush. I was about to give up on one Item when It showed up In the last place you'd expect. A preacher had American Soldier Capitalist Compared to Foreign Fighter Br ED CREACH WASHINGTON. W) "Seventy five lousy dollars a month I" Heard that complaint recently from any young American who haa Just received greetings from his draft board? Well, If It's any consolation, the $7-a-month U.S. recruit la a rich man compared with the draltee in any other country of the Worth Atlantic treaty organization. His British comrade-in-arms starts soldiering at $16.80 a month. The ' Oreek conscript does next best $10.08. CORRECT And so it goes on down the line to the Turkish draftee, who's mus tered In at honest, this is not a .ypographlcal error 11 cents e month. These figures supplied by U.S. military authorities, were made public by house appropriations subcommittee In connection with the $7,482,627,190 (B) foreign aid bill. The spread between the pay of the American fighting man and his overseas counterpart will be even greater If congress approves the 10 percent across-the-board In crease which the defense depart ment has asked. The figures lor the overseas NATO countries show that France pays Its draftees $1.2$ a month, Iran shells out 31 cents month and Portugal bestows 61 cents i month. ' It won't surprise enlisted men ARMAGEDDON A Free Lecture at the New Seventh-day Adventist Church Motion Picture "Open Doori to the Orient" DOUBLE SESSION SUNDAY NITE FIRST SESSION SECOND SESSION Motion Picture 5:45 p.m. Motion Picture 7:30 p.m. Sermon 6:30 p.m. Sermon 8:15 p.m. Mirror I An American biialneimnian Bays i that Imluniry hare will have to In vest auuilmr i::iri bllllnn by IIMU to inalntnlii existing alaiidardi of living. Hil l: MAI1KI.T Th). price of gold fluctuates wide ; Iv in I lie l'arla "Iree market," now I that Ilia lulernatlnnal monetary 1 fund has glvlu up trying tu regu- lato the amount that can go Into the premium market. I And American ollliials aeem to disagree as how to alabllliv the I value of your dollar some want a treeie on prices and wagea to keep the value of the dollar steady, but Ki'onomlo Stabiliser Johnston aavs that would only atlfle production. Mail bankers city or country ay their loans are at an allllme peak and show signs of going lush er. Country bankers are Interested just now In finaniiiu Ilia move ment of crops In market. City bankers their loans to business now at a record $M billion-expect Uie defeiKe program and the In dustrial expanslun of plants and equipment to send the total even higher belore the end of the year, 11iey freely predict that the 3'-j percent rale they charge for loans to business with the highest credit percent soon and might touch 9 percent by the end of the year. In Ml. bv contrast, the rate waa I1, percent. I corkscrew. Nobody had pllera or a monkey wrench. I didn't ask j lor an anvil. Una Irllow had a pocset mm tit, a few had bolts. Picture hangers and wood screws, sowing them handy around the house. Half of them had snapshots ol their wile, children or dog: more Hun half had pocket lighters, one a can ol lluliler fuel. I.esa than one out of ten had plies, tobacco pouches and various pipe amekers' gadgets tilings showed up Tooth brushes, safety ratnrs, combs, com plasters, chewing gum cough drops, csndy bars, sacchar ine tablets, breath pellets, laxative, shofe laces, pipe cleanera, latte measures, scissors, lull clippers, blackhead extractors, pocket com pass, magnifying glaaaes, stapler, pocket dictionary, candid camera, olgaret holdera, Inhalers, golf lees, golf balls, styptic pencils. Joke book road maps, crossword pussies, fish ermen's calendars, sinkers. Read er's Digest, quarter myalery books. Pocket barometer, compass, ele vation gauge. St. Christopher's med als. Masonic pocket pieces, old coins, (but not a single sliver dol lar), foreign paper money, frayed and cherished letters, newspaper clippings, addreaa books and tele phone numbers reluctantly), ex pense account books, slock niarkat stamp folders, spectacle caaea. spare eyeglasses and one emer gency set of upper teeth. DINOLK The record shows that more men than, don't, habitually carry a walch. pen,, pencil, knife, wallet, note book, three or more letters, clippings, memos, lodge csrds and licenses, bunch of keys, handker chief, gloves, clgarels. clgara or pipe, lighter or matches, often a newspaper. Add to this almost alandard equipment from one to a dosen ml.ncellsnenus articles peculiar to the Individual or his hobby and It makes a sizeable bundle of some changes from one suit to another and lugs around with him. Bache lors and widowers carry the moat. There now. Mrs. America, don't let the master kid you again about your portable dressing table. of any army to learn that the pay goen uo as fast as a man rises through the ofllcer ranks. France, for Instance, pays a ma jor $203 a month, compared with i the $384.15 that an American ma I Jor gets. Belgium, which has la-month draftees, pays Ha majors iim to $279.20. i IM.'ENTKRH And Turkey with Its 11-cent con. scrlnls, pays majors up to $197 a monlh. In other words, while an Ameri can ma lor Is paid about five times as much as a draftee, a French ma lor gets 36 4lmes as muoh as a French draftee and a Turkish ma lor 1790 times as much as a Turkish drafte. There's one thing for sure about the Turkish system: It gives a msn nlenty of Incentive to buck for officer training. Hot Rod Club Curbs Noise ASTORIA im Thlnn. ... - Ul, quieter here, now that the Hot nod club has gone Into operation. Police reported less noise and traffle .nillrrMlln h,. .l-i.. " v -..,.. . ...... n ..j c:,inT; UI1V- era since the club was formed witn some no members. The club has decided to set up Bit nhNtnel entir.a tn l.t th. .1.1.. lng of Its members and hopes lat er to establish a speed courso. died Souk I'oor Mnu'0 Plngia i YANKEE STADIUM. N.Y., Wi llie hltless old hero and ilia hurt young hero hntl adjoining open lockera 111 the Yankee dressUig loom. It was after the serond game nf the World Serlvn-lhe 10th World trtiirs lor Uie elderly man ol al moat 31 and the in at Win Id Series lor the young man of in, The buy was Mickey Manila and h 'd sprung his right knro tunnlim Im a fly ball that the spry old man nrst to liliu-Jno DiMngglo -had caught In a siillie Uie Yankees had won Irom the New Yoik Giants 3-tn-l. Mickey was ihiinkv and Winnie and briive and worried, ami ho had Die Irrsli look any lalhrr would like his sou lo wear, i'tiero wns a crowd mound hint, and there was iiobodv around Jim. "No, it doesn't hurl," suld Mic key, looklnu duwu al Ills liruvllv bandaged leg. "I illttiit Hip or step on anything. Mv leg luM went out and I went tlnwii I dun'l know yet whether I'm through an far as the rest ol the aciira goes or not," INIIAI'I'V He looked unhaiitiv as lie dressed slowly. Other Yankee plucis wriu Into tile shower room and came fUack. Illein wits a slack of (in I mall on Ilia table In the t enter of ine room uui iioihhIV loosed at li liters were alro two boxes of gilt chocolates, opened but uneaten. The old man next In Mn krv dirt not ahowor al once He rested He sat there Hi his while undershirt , wllh the black sleeves an timler. shirt that had "DlMag 6" scrawled In Ink on iia lorn back. Ills pain were open, hln shoes were oil. ami lila fret breathed through his sock-, An attendant brtnntlil hiiti a brer" and he dnink It deeply. Then lie had another, and look It slowlv. the sweat nl the afternoon sun nnii beading his face. Homebody akr, lilin what he thmmlii when Mnuiin had aprawled on the turf auriileii. IV in the tillh inning as Joe him self went an In make the catch "I didn't know what hannenr l at Ural." he said, and then glanced diled,n"Uiy tow"rd "'' and "What can you say when some body la hint?' DIMagglo. a baseball Immortal caught in tlm mortality nf all men who compete beyond their prime made no mention of his own trmi blea. Ha is the first man aim e Babe Huth l0 play in 10 World Series. In nine prevloua aeries he scored 24 limes, knocked 7 homers, and butted in 18 other runs. In the first two games of this series the Yankee Clipper has played 111. usual flawless game In Uie oullleld. But his bnt has Iom Its magic. In seven limes al Die Plate he has failed even lo reach first bote. He knocked four long flies, two feeble grounders and fanned once. Sipping his second beer, he msy hare .thought of Una and of Uie 1930 series, when he hit safely in all four games, or ot the tlma In 1941 when he hit in 54 consecutive gamea. In front of him Uie photographera lined up the three Yankee heroes ol the day pitcher Ed Lopat, Joe Collins, who homered, and Oil Mr Dougald, who pounded In Uie first run. DIMagglo looked without rancor at Uie barks of the men wiio ao often had turned their cameras on him. llien he turned lo young Mickey and said cheerfully: "You got to make a home run or get hurt to get your picture In the papera. " Someone asked him what he blamed his hard luck on in Uie current aeries. "I haven't had any hard lurk. ' said Joe. "I Just haven't been hit ling. Today they were pitching ine out balls. Every lime I swung I was out." MAY UK When someone renisrkrd politely that a lot of people were still look ing for him to pole a ball or two Into (he bleachers, he said non commltlaly: "Yeah-h-h. Well, maybe things will get a little belter." DIMagglo Is a workman, a pro. fesalonal, a champion. He plavs each ball game each dev. If he has reached the end of one of the brightest trails ever blazed In base ball, he will do so without excuses or apology for the fact that he no kinger can do well what he used to do superbly. Today or loinorrow Joe may be a series hero again, as he waa so many times before. But he'll never be more of a champion than ha was Friday, silting alone In the Yankee dressing room watching without envy as younger players got the recognition he has enjoyed for 16 peerless yeara. MERCY RECORD TOKYO. Wl A huge C-154 Olove master plane yesterday flew ItlO wounded and six U.S. eighth army troops from Korea lo Japan- new record for a simile fiieht Th previous high was 127 patients. ' 0 c?c I II be back a$ loon ai i I let a ring from Rickyt!" if 4A Q .....