Interest A - . . . lly MAO EPU V .IK. Mix men wine In polnto know how, unci a Imusewlle, Inst night tinkled a iiiobloui "liuw We bent tan expand anil protect (lio Khun nth HiiKlna potato Industry?" And lin y came up Willi some answers, The panel dlaousnnd Hit) prob lem on the "llullcl tho Basin" pro Itnim over Kl"l.W. Their comlnit together wiin similar to nnother coining together of peopln Inter filed In potatoes In the em ly 1920's It was then lending farmers mid businessmen of the bunln selected pnliiKiFH in the major cash crop Inr Ihe tuturo development of the Hnnln. The further development of Unit crop was Innt night's meeting pur pose. Hurprlne member of the panel was l.uulu Lyon, Merrill potato grower end o director of the Nil lloniil Totnto Council, under whose auspice Lyon recently attended Price Fire Cent) It fun lu The By HANK JENKINS I have an Interesting and, In its way, a challenging letter from three girls In their late teens. Tliey are out of high school and are not going to ' college. That poses for them a special problem. They put It like this in their letter: "After listening to recent discus ions of teen-age problems, we would like to preaent our problem. We are 18 and 1 years of age and have been out of school (or a year or more. What sort of enter tainment or recreation la there lor us? "We ... art not treated as adults and do not consider our selves adults. Wa Icel we will be old soon enough. It seems that we are in an In-between age where we are considered neither as teen agers, which we are, nor adulta. which we are not . . . We are not permitted to attend the high chool dancea and If we go lo the armory dances unescorted wcare fm.idered as being on lit, down trad. "We would like to have dances and things like that provided for us Just aa well as the hlgU school students, but there Is of course the problem of not enough teen agers of our age to make such a thing feasible . . . "We would appreciate It very much II you would give our prob lem some thought." Ah, my dears, thnt "In-between" agcl I know It seems to you thnt your problem In unique. It Isn't. It conies to everyone. Especially, it comes to everyone of your sex. While vou were In high school, did you happen in your literature courses lo read much of Long lellow? If no. you will recall these lines from his poem Maidenhood: "Standing with reluctant feet, "Where the brook and river meet, "Womanhood and childhood ileetl" "Where the brook and river meet." That is where you are Mnndtng now. You are neither chil dren nor are you women. But where you are standing isn't a TRAGIC spot. It Is a wonderful i,put. All your lives so Inr you have been preparing yourselves to live. Now you are BEGINNING to live. You are standing at tho door of the Ureal Adventure. What we oldsters wouldn't give to be standing where you are standing nowl What I four, my dears, Is that v.m are fulling into- some wrong Alnklng. You any: "Wc would like lo have dunces and things like that PROVIDED for us Just ns well as the high school students." Provided bv whom? By govern ment city, ntato or federal? Or by kindly people who will take all the drudgery off your shouldcfs, leaving you nothing to do but ENJOY YOURSELVES? I wonder If too mnny of us In theso days aren't fnlllug Into the hnblt of ; thinking that everything mast bo 'PROVIDED for us that It Isn't up to us to provide ANY THING for, ourselves. - That is dnngurous thinking. It leads to pinny disappointments. Anyway,' : if I were you, I wouldn't glvo too much thought to Mils business of being In an "In between" age. Since tho world began, millions upon millions upon millions of girls of your age have been In this tame spot. Most of them canle through it very nicely indeed. ; just go' ahead nnd live your lives, Do your duties from dny to day. Help your mothers around the house, It tliorc Isn't anything else to do. If you want to work, get Jobs. Bo Interested in what you are doing. Be Interested In the people mound you, Live up. each day to the responsibilities that fnll upon your shoulders that clay. Bo nnv, Whatever you do, do with a llglit heart. The first thing you know, you'll be so busy with the good times that are coming your . way that you'll never give a thought to he shortcomings of a system that fnlle to "provide" good times for youJ after you are out of school 'jusV' as It did while you were in school. Try it. , i M 1 ...... .-: My'slews Keen . lirower-OPS acuHlonn In WuMhliiic ton, D.C. 1 1 ci returned from tho iiuiiiiiiH cnpllul only this pui.t weekend. Oilier punel members Jncluded: County Agent Charles A, Hender son, who believed potatoes to he mo coiimtnuiiic 111 inn (icvoiopiiieui, of excellent. iigrliullurn In the Kliinuith Basin. 'I ho potuUi wan introduced here for that purpose, lie Mild, not, only for the mile of agricultural products, Iml bcflnuao of tho need of conslderablci luhor, much equipment mid wippllen, nnd development and Improvement of liind. Mm, Lcn Hurles, a Klamath liniinewlfe, who pointed out tliul the consumer Ik the nernon who oiin make or break the Miceen of our potato economy. Nollim the rpmllly of potatoes here lit homo, she Intlniuted thnt potato dim Illy niny be falling down In other mar kcln, loo. LI UJ KLAMATH KAI.I.H, OltKCON, Dypti fa imiii iif"n nrli Tim f ,- rii a r icinni ill- ill mi ' ii'iinniinirTi hihiiiii nnmn ir- iMMirf, i Poor Lo In Sad Plight You Gottum Eagle Feather Anybody got any eagle feathers hidden away? Chief Thunder Bolt Left Hand wants 'em. The chief, a Crow Indian from Montana, la currently In Washington, I). C, attending to some business for his trine, and ha been asked lo gel some of hl bucks together for a tribal danr there In the village of the Ureal White Father. Hut he doesn't have a war bonnet, Ihe flamboyant ceremonial headdress upon whlrh eagle feathers are the principal adorn ment. There doesn't seem fo he much of a supply of eagla feathers In Washington. D. C, either. Ilorsefeathen, perhaps, but no eagle feathers. And . , . well, an Indian at a tribal danre without hia eagle feathered war bonnet la In about as bad a fix as a hula dancer without her you-know-what. No Chief Thunder Dolt Left Hand sent an appeal for eagle feathers lo Ihe Fori Klamath Chamber of Commerce. There Isn't any such organisation, any more than there are eagle feathers in Wanhlniton, D. C. The Korf Klamath Business As aoclatlon referred Ihe appeal to Ihe Herald and Newa. Our own local Indians don't go much for Indian feathers, and Ihe Great White Father has a rule against killing eagles, anyhow, Bui somebody might have a few around. If so, send them to Chief Thunder Bolt Left Hand, KZi Ufh NW, Washington, D. C. ; vi ; t, ... . - - He'd appreciate II. Weather Warms Up - And So Do Tempers Over Highways SAN FRANCISCO tm .tnnniirv (he month that brought Northern California Us severest storm In 6? years, Is ending with warm wea ther and warm tempers over road conditions. The U.S. weather bureau fore cast fair weather the next lvo days. This should help highway crews dig out the snow-clogged passes across the Northern 8icrrn, now Ihe center of a controversy. Twenty.six organizations at the southern end of Lake Tnhoe com plained Monday that "political pressure" had concentrated snow plows on U.S. 10 over Doimcr Sum mit. They chnrged no plows were clearing U.S. SO, to the south, which serves the 1,600 winter resi dents of their area who depend on tourist trnde for a living. Tho Stale Highway Division re plied a rotary plow was enroutc to clear the lnkeshorc roads nnd then would tackle U.S. 60 over Echo Summit. . - or, n .77 - '.-M.; OT aijiiiiijiiiii' 'li iliiiiinfri i in i' i licrinii ii lU'ltm (ftmiawwoiafcintiiwifi w.kJtBf .v vns m wi')(iiMtaii WINTER FUN The three youngsters above don't 'seem to .mind the show. They" are (1 to r): Patsy. Wakefield, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Wakefield, 2540 White St.; Tommy Randolph, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oris Randolph, 2445 White St.; and Ricky Horn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Horn, 2530 White St. As Spud Panel ...... . ... ... ... .... , n . J. II. Degnnn, . Merrill DoUto buyer, who poaed the Industry's biggest problem as the search for it method to meet the decline In potnto connuniplion, and. If pos sible, Incrcnso It. He suggested Ihut potatoes lire not an fattening many outer loons euucniion ulonii these linen, he said, would ntlnniliile coruiumptlon. Me added Unit variety In packaging, display Inn nnd nerving would alio be Im portant fnctora In tipping the nu tlonnl potato eating habit. Hoy Anderson, master of Malln Orange and overacer of the Pomona Orange, who questioned the place of (tovernmenl controls In the farm economy. He propocd a Western Htnle Combine which would eel up a fair price for No. 1 (trade spuds, wit h an agreement with Hock men for use of surplus potatoes aa "took feed, If and when a aurplua la realized. Kber K. Kllpatrlck, Prealdent of TIJKKDAY, JANUARY 29, 1B2 Toons Officials said everything possl ble was being done to open all three mnln routes 40, 50 nnd Calif. 21 to safe travel, but It was too early to say which would be Uie first completely open. Balsiger Breaks Leg li Tumble Elmer Balsiger, owner of Bal siger Motor Company and mem ber of tho Oregon Ghme Commis sion, will be laid up for about two months. He broke his left leg In three places nesr the ankle in a fnll on the ice at his home Sundav. He is at home, off the Merrill highway. FILED SALEM IVi Circuit Judge G. F. Skipwoith. Eugene, filed for re election Tuesday. the Klamath County Farm Bureau who proponed better public rela tions between the Krower and the connunier an perhnpn the best way lo expand our economy. He noted that a thorough underatnndlnii by the public of the fnrmer'a risks iiih chances for loan aa well an gain would Increane Rood lecllng etween the two groups. An for economic controls, Kllpatrlck aald It appeared now that they are a necessity perhaps a necessary evil. Contrbla nuch a thene would be more preferable, he naid, if placed In the handn of locally con stituted authorltlca with nome knowledge of the problems faced. Kifrl Wllnon, prealdent of the Klamath Potato Growers' Axsocla tlon, who In few words summed up the thinking of many a local farmer: plant potatoes on land fit lor potatoes, Increasing the acre age to fit expanding market by better farming methods; and din- Telephone Sill So. 2726 Waiv More Dead Located In Cairo Ruins By FRED Zl'SY CAIRO. Egypt Ml Five more bodies were found in the ruins ol the British Turf Club and Shen- hcards Hotel Tuesday, high police sources said, bringing to at least 67 the total dead in Saturday's rioting and burning by mobs. Fire brigades still played hoses on smouldering ruins of some fires. Flames still were flaring Irom Shepheard's. There were no reports yet that any Americans were casualties, but U.S. Consul General Lamar Mul llner said he was checking iurther to find out whether any - Ameri cans besides those who have al ready reported to him may have been In the famed hotel. Business sources estimated the fire losses at more than 100 mil lion pounds or 288 million dollars. Cairo, still under martial law, was quiet. Leading newspapers meanwhile underlined the view thnt Egypt's new Premier Aly Maher Pasha will keep majority support in Parlia ment only If he follows up the old government's widely popular drive to oust British troops from the Suez and united the Sudan with Egypt. Al Mlsrl, paper of the Wafd Par. ty, snld the Wafd majority which dominates Parliament will decide Its future attitude townrd Mnher Pnshn's militnry government "in the light of Egypt's national de mands." , Weather FORECAST Klamath Falls and vicinity and Northern ('atlfornia: Cloudy with a few showers through tomorrow. Low tonight 28, high to morrow 42. ' High yesterday , 33 Low last night 29 I'reclp Jan. 28 0 I'rcclp since Oct. 1 10.17 Same period Inst year 10.21 Normal for period 6. SO (Additional Weather on Page 10.) Discusses Basin's No. ... . card all government regulations and let farmers control their own Industry, not by "mock regula tions" which are In reality decreet from Washington, D. C. Lyon, with his Washington trip 'till fresh In his mind, explained that both sides were surprised with the good approaches of the other. OPS, he aald, had expected grow ers to head Its direction to brow beat; Instead, the growers brought along facts and honest effort to secure what they considered sin cere adjustments In price ceilings and rollbacks. The powerful Far mers' Union of the Midwest, he nald, was the only supporter of the Of'S regulations as they are today. The Merrill grower said that in OPS figuring a potato In JuRt a potato, ro grade or production cost considerations given. He said, though, that OPS officials admitted they were not doing the best Job In the world. fo) (' f'S 'WL' !. ' IIIMIII 1 I I I I If' mtl fY Hill - I Ml 11 Miiiiiii riii Ml SMM J MEAL STOP Alfred Merwin (center),- en route from Ashland to North Dakota with his parents, breakfasted on a hamburger this morning at the Hilltop Cafe here. On Alfred's right is S. R. -Clough,; fcafa operator.' Serving the youngster is Ruth Wilson, 515 Jeffer son St. -, . . - - - - Private rivers Protest Lack Of Cooperation For Ski-Type Ships A not-loo-serious emergency sit uation last Sunday pointed up lack of cooperation by Airport Manager Red Whitcomb with private flyers using the port, City Councilman Darrell Miller told the Council last night. ' He sugiiested a meeting of the lAirpon Commission, with Whit comb, severnl livers and a couple of C o u n c 1 1 m e n attending to straighten matters out. The difficulty, he snid. is that several local men have planes equipped with skis and Whttcomo, in clearing the runways of snow, has left no smooth spot for them to land and lake off. They have been towing their Flu Empties School Rooms City School nnd County Health authorities are advising students suffering from flu to stay out of clnsses till they are fully recov ered. Arnold L. Gralapp, superinten dent of city schools, said Monday absentees irom Illness in KUHS mounted to 28 per cent of the total enrollment and in elementary clnsses to 15 per cent of those registered. County Henlth Officer Dr. Seth Kcrron snid he advised these pre cnutlonary measure to school of ficials: 1. Persons coming down with flu should stay home in bed until fully recovered. 2. The recuperative period if the person is well before behig stricken usually takes at least four dnys, before the person is well enough to return to classes. Dr. Kcrron snld In most cases dining onset of the Illness, the stu dent will feel fairly well in the morning, go to classes, come down with a temperature, nnd spread the illness to clnssmates. - - Dr. Kerron snid it the precau tlonnry measures are followed, it will prevent further spread of the Illness, Freezing Rain Mucks Up 6th Early morning rnin and freez ing temperatures agnln this morn ing made a "skating rink" out of S. 6th St. for motorists driving to work. Dozens of cms, traveling into town, piled up bumper-to-bumpor, when one enr skidded crosswnys In the street near the Larch St. Intersection about 8 a.m. today, according to City Police. Damage to cars involved ; was minor, police reported, but the traffic jam was heavy. One City Police v car, parked while a traffic officer was clearing up the tangle, wns the - Innocent victim of a skidding vehicle. "They even offered to hire us Lyon aa td. A heavy volley of questions from local consumers hit at retailing problems which had not been con sidered as Important, in face of the topic, when the panel was selected. However, buyers and growers at tempted to show, as best they could, how retailing of the potato was carried on. Poremost among the phoncd-ln questions (In frequency, at least) was the query "Why aren't pota toes In local stores of as good quality as those , shipped else where?" Many on the panel offered sug gestions: locally-sold potatoes may come from small growers who do not grade as keenly as big grow ers because of lack of inspection laws covering them. No. 1 grade potatoes are available in local stores, they said. If the consumer will search them out. fo) planes "out Into the sagebrush" to find snow-covered spots for take offs. . Last Saturday several men went to Lake o' the Woods in a weasel and on the way in threw a track. They radioed here Sunday for a plane to bring them out. At least two flyers were going She Didn't Have A Thing to Wear LOS ANGELES (.TV-When a woman says "I haven't a thing to wear" she's usually stretch ing the truth a bit. But June Bright wasn't kid ding when she told that to police Monday. Miss Bright, 25. a model and wife of Disc Jockey Gene Nor man, showed up at the station in a brief, black satin battling suit and told this story: She was moving to a' new home and wore only the bathing suit white packing in 76-degree weather. She put her entire wardrobe, $4,000 worth, In her car. Then she donned a coat, drove with friends tov a cafe and went into eat. When she came out the wardrobe was gone. Officers were sympathetic but were inclined to agree with a detective who remarked of the shapely blonde: "She doesn't need anything but a bathing suit." United Nations Members Listen As Russia Accuses US Of Training And Aiding Strong By STANLEY JOHNSON PARIS W With almost half the member nations declining to vote, the United Nations Political Com mittee Tuesday condemned the So viet Union as having failed to hon or Its 1945 treaty of friendship with the Chinese government of Gener alissimo Chiang Kai-Shek. Tile vote, 24 to 9. with 25 ab stentions, came shortly after So viet Delegate Jacob A. Malik charged that under the direction of two American generals there is be ing built up in Burma a Chinese Nationalist, "shock force, armed to the teeth, which at any moment can provoke aggression." The U.S. has repeatedly denied similar charges raised by the Chl neso Reds. Before Malik spoke, the U.S. again had rejected such charg es nnd implied it would not aid the Chinese Nationalists in Burma, The resolution was a watered down version of one presented by T. F. Tsiang of Nationalist China and supported by the U.S. to con demn the U.S.S.R. for violating the treaty. ' The "yes" votes came from the Latin American, countries, the U.S. As for local nroceaslnor of the npud crop, Henderson said there Is no such Job we ran do here or the time being. When asked If price ceilings would cause a black market In potatoes, the county agent answered, "It may." Kllpatrlck and Anderson, officers in the two strongest local farm or ganizations, agreed that Farm Bu reau and Orange members could work more closely together. They pointed out that their ideas, In most cases, were similar, Lyon, when asked how much It cost to produce a sack of potatoes 1 100 pounds), quoted figures sup plied him through the county agent s office here: A field yielding 300 sacks cost $2.70 per sack. A 250 sack yield cost 13.11 per sack. A 200 sack per acre yield cost S3. 88 per sack. And a ISO aack per acre in with ski planes Sunday to see to cabins at the resort lake, and decided to bring , the snowbound party out. Paul Dalton's plane broke a ski when landing on the lake and a craft piloted by Elbert Stiles had lo return here to get equipment to make repairs, and go back to the lake. 'The rescue was finally mad" but, Miller said, landing and taking off at the lake was much more simple for the ski-equipped planes than landing and taking off at the Klam ath Falls airport. He suggested that with as much runway and taxi strip as the local airport has, a strip could be left snow-covered for use of the ski equipped planes. (Continued on Page 3.) Tax Man Asked ! To Return Hubby DENVER lifi A Denver woman asked Ralph Nicholas, federal col- lector of internal revenue here, to cieliver her husband Instead of tax refund. ! She wrote to Nicholas that she I noted her husband's name in a newspaper list of those due for re funds. He had deserted her, she claimed, and wanted the collector to notify her when the husband 'eppeared for his check. "Shock Force" In Burma Nationalist China. Iran. Liberia. Thailand and Turkey. British Commonwealth nations, France, Mexico, Belgium, Holland nnd the Scandinavian countries ab stained. India, Indonesia, Burma and Is rael voted with the Soviet Bloc against the resolution. The debate brought out anew the Soviet-Chinese Communist charges that the U.S. was aiding Chinese Nationalists- in Burma. Malik said seven American co lonels and. 27 American majors were attached to the Chinese Na ttonallst troops which took refuge in Burma from Yunnan Province after the fall of the Nationalists. The Soviet delegate did not iden tify the generals or the other of ficers. In Rangoon, the Burma govern ment denied a report that it had launched a campaign against Chi nese Nationalist forces- near the frontier. . . , . In Tuesday's debate, before Ma lik spoke, U.S. Delegate John Sher man Cooper asked the Soviets If their charges ot U.S. Interference 1 Crop ... u B yield cost 5.0. There were many ' fields this year, especially In the Malln rea, Lyon said, where yields were lens than loo sacks per acre because . of this past potato-growing season's long, hot, dry spell and the light soils. Before OPS rollbacks, potatoes had risen to more than $5 per hun dred pounds. Congress, Lyon said, meant the grower to hnve at least an average of parity ithe present $3.85 rollback point), not the type of parity and control set today. Next study of the "Build the Basin" series will pose the toplo "How Can We Attract New Indus try to the Klamath Basin?" A panel of top local Industrial, business and professional experts is being selected for another forum scheduled for next Monday eve ning over KFLW, 8000 Flee; Cold Snap Cuts Crest MARIETTA, O. Ufi Blizzard snow and ice Joined the wide spread flood crest of the muddy Ohio River Tuesday to plague 8,000 to 10,000 refugees in Ohio and West Virginia. . The blizzard-like snow struck at Pomeroy and Mlddleport, O., to the south before midday. Bitter cold temperatures made roads and streets a maze of ice. The crest of the marauding Ohio cut down somewhat by the cold rolled toward Parkersburg, W. Va., Tuesday morning and headed toward a midnight date with Pom eroy and Mlddleport. Two thousand persons are home less there as these two Ohio towns awaited the full blow of the flood crest. Three or four hundred other : persons climbed to higher ground at Parkersburg. Nine are dead from a series of floods spearheaded by the Ohio in : three states. Many other thousands have been affected either with water in base ments or first floors or with blocked roads and streets that kept them irom work. Subfreezing cold made life still more miserable. The punishing crest flowed slow ly through Marietta at 10 a.m. It measured 43.75 feet, shy of the 44.47 feet predicted by U.S. Army Engineers ancL U.S. Weather Bu reau. Far downstream, from Ports mouth, O., west to the Mississippi River, residents along the Ohio had some hope that .the cold weather would soften the blow of the oncom ing flood crest. ' The U.S. Weather Bureau at Cin cinnati revised flood cresM down ward two to three feet from Ports mouth west. , Court Hears Damage Suit Plaintiff's testimony in a $15,000 damage suit, arising from a two car accident April 16, 1950, on U.S. Highway 97 near Williamson Elver bridge, continued Tuesday morn ing in Circuit Court. Mrs. Mildred L. Snow, plaintiff, was passenger in a pickup truck driven by her husband, Fred Snow, which crashed into a railing of . the bridge. Her suit alleaes the crash re- ' suited from driving of George S. Boyd, 1527 Kane, who assertedly swerved his car In front of the pickup. A jury of 11 men and one wom an was picked to hear tho trial yesterday afternoon and the panel was taken to view the wreck scene after hearing testimony of Dr. Jack - Martin of Malin concerning injuries suffered by Mrs. Snow in the accident. Jurors hearing the trial are: Rollo F. England, James Rogers, G. C. Motley, Marvin L. Shepherd, Robert Petrlck, Harold L. Dryden, Paul Winter, Cecil Drew, Paul K. Buck Melvin Nltschelm, Duane Blackman and Estin Klger. TOASTMASTER PORTLAND UP) Oregon's an nual Valentine to itself, Uie Ad mission Day dinner noting the state's admission to the Union, will have Art Kirkham, Portland radio announcer, as toastmaster. Mrs. Onelta Michaels, president of the sponsoring society, reported Tues day on preliminary plans for the Feb. 14 dinner. . in Southeast ' Asia meant the U.S.S.R. was actually planning ag gression in the area herself. He de nied "categorically and specifical ly" Soviet charges of U.S. activity with the Nationalists in Burma. , Tslnng denied that the Chinese troops in North Burma were sup ported from Formosa, present sent of the Chiang government, and said they were operating as independent raiders, "similar to Garibaldi." Malik claimed that the Chinese troops in Burma were being sup plied by parachute drops from U.S. Constellation planes and said they are "girding for aggression under the leadership of American gen erals." He labelled the troops a "shock force, armed to the tooth, which at any moment can provoke aggres sion," - The Soviet delegate was seconded by Poland's Julius Katz-8uchy, who asked Cooper to confirm or deny each of Malik's charges and de manded to know whether the U.S., Britain and France have decided to bomb 'Communist bases In Man churia and open full-scale war against tha Chinese mainland.