HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1052 PAGE SIX fRANK JENKINS . Editor Entered at second class matter it the post, office of Klamath Falls. Ore, on August 30. 1906, under act of congress, Marcn 8. 1879 MEMBERS OF THt ASSOCIATED TRESS The Associated Press is entitled exclusive' to the usr for publication f all the local news printed in this newspaper a wall u all AP news. SIBSCKIPTIO.V RATES By Mail -i.... months $6.60 By Mail year 111.00 IIIJQIIjlfllll A T mm By DEB ADDISON In tile panel discussion on po tatoes Monday night there was one question that was answered on the installment plan which is impor tant enough to be put together in one piece. The question was: Why do po tato growers object to OPS roll backs when ceiling prices are aoove expectations at digging time. The answer: OPS ceilings are not above expectations at digging time. The potato grower is an eternal optimist, a gambler, else he would not be In the business. A potato grower usually hangs on through several years of breaking even and losing money In the expectation of getting a good year to make up his losses and lay some away lor the future. More important though, the ob jection is that the ruling was dis criminatory. It actually raised the prices in some eastern sections, where Inferior potatoes naturally sold for less than good western russets; and It gave Idaho a price advantage over other, western sec tions on the socialistic theory that the Idaho crop was poor. In other words, high grade Klam ath and Central Oregon spuds, which are subject to higher grow ing costs but which bring higher prices because of higher quality, were knocked down to the normal of poor potatoes. The action, in that light, is so cialistic. To the extent that It de stroys the private incentive to grow and market better potatoes, it follows the communistic line. Sage Sidelancer "Save a thing lor seven years and it will be In style again." or something like (hat, is an expres sion we often hear. Its Inventor must have been super optimist Long before his day Shakespeare had proclaimed, "Fashion wears out more apparel than does man." Bill must have meant women; men aren't so lussy. Pawing through the attic in search of something mislaid, I tried to find a woman's item that couldn't be pegged. I couldn't find a one; not a thing that was really back in style. But I did find plenty that made me thin that the .unknown opti mist might have been misquoted. Maybe he said "will be useful again." I found Dlenty of such. Which caused me to' observe the price we pay to be In style and the foolish ness of saving cast-offs so long that they remind us of it. If you have no place to save things you're tort of in luck. Fanny and I nave at last come to admit, after 47 years of house keeping, that we would have been as well off, maybe better, if we'd never had an attic or a cellar. Every time we about conclude to get out of our big . Victorian edifice, into an apartment or a ranch house, we wonder what to do with all of the truck In the big attic and" the bigger cellar. We can pretty well decide what to do with the massive furniture that we could not move Into a smaller place but, we don't know what to do with the thousand nick nacks we have kept stored in dis use these many years. Then we ask each other "why did we keep them" and conclude that It was only because we had a place to store them. Otherwise we would have traded 'em in. sold 'em to a second-hand dealer or given them to someone who at the time would have prlr-ed them, used them and worn them out. We think that we have been self ish in this respect: then recall that every time a decision has to be made we thought that our children some day would have a home of their own and we'd give the Junk to them. Well, we've seen two daughters and a granddaughter equip homes oi their own and not a blamed thing went to them from the vast ttore that clutters our lives and Mail Flown Into Add, Road Closed LAKEVIEW Recent storms have resulted in daily airmail service for Adel, little community in Warner Valley east of Lake- view. With roads blocked by drifts, the star route carrier from Ft. Bid well, Calif., could not negotiate the road into Warner from the South. So Walt Lowe, who operates the airplane service at Ft. Bidwell, has been making daily hops to Adel with his siti plane. Lakeview Airport was plowed out Monday of this week for the first time In about 10 days. On Sunday afternoon, tractors owned by Lake view Logging Company opened the road Into the airport, and Monday a White Pine Lumber Company grader and a Lakeview logging cat opened the airport runways. BE SURE f BE SAFE 'X RENT IT Rant A Irtnd Ntw Ctrtitt Ptrteblt Two Month St.75 Lett Month's Rtnttt It Atplltt To Purchtit Prict, VOIGHT'S floater Offict Supply (2 Mtin Phone 7411 BILL JENKINS Managing Editor BIMI)ll AM. No wonder growers and others alike rebel at the action. We think the members of the panel were over-restrained In their remarks. Other remarks brought out, time and again, the big need In the potato industry. That's the need for better methods of handling and marketing what happens from the time potatoes leave the growers' hands until they reach the con sumer. Growers here have made tre mendous Improvements, beyond the big Increase in acreage, in the past SO to 30 years. They grow fine potatoes and get exceptional yields. Marketing methods are still pretty close to the 1920 pattern. The discussion brought out that the biggest ohunk oi the reull price now is fixed. The rollback is on the growers' price only. The cost of handling shipping, deliv ering, packaging Is high, and re mains high. A large part of the waste that makes the housewife mad when she peels her spuds comes from abuse in handling. The Klamath Potato Growers Association gained some valuable experience in its marketing and advertising program a year ago. It amounted to an experiment only, but you have to start somewhere. One last remark: We'll stand on the guess that potatoes account tor less than five percent of the av erage family's food bill. If you say you can't afford po tatoes, you're saying you can t af ford to eat. I ! keeps us in the big house where Th 1040-long lorm "n: what kind of work he would or w e now rattle around, since the.used by any of the unde.000 r uUn.t do He would ttpKit , kids leit. j people wnose ; oeoucuo e i -,l,uTimower,. but John D. Rocke- That's when big houses become "nta b le contr but.ons cr , ( lfc -dldn.t h h money l0 a nuisance ? Tim? was when the ;mrtI talta , w ere uusuall large, hlm mow gr,ss He felt first-born or the first married Heres eP.!f1"'on'tible exDen. !lhat was . beneath a Jack of all would take the homestead and for S,1' ? ? o n, f ?ent I lrRdes- .-' generations the old place continued '?"indo"' S m nvone uslfie Form whcn " came ,0 Pa'ntln our well DoDulated and livelv with ' income. Still, anyone using r orm ; nouse Pete would make only one &KpSvtJu i U""yJ.en'?(, ahd'?"Ct IconceSslon-he would let you name o!lr. .tin i, on freonent ocea. uon f ,10 Per cm. be',re the rest your colors.. Alter that the grown Ours stUl is, on frequent occa- i his income is taxable. - una had to stav out of his way. But slons. and we're not lonesome, yet wh. vnl. mn From 1040-A to i ?v naa .ry..i r, ?" i our kids don't live there any more and the unused space has to be kept up, heated and cleaned for three of us, Fanny, Anna and me, just the same as when every room and every seat at the table was occupied. We talk with people who are in the same fix and give them un wanted advice: "Why don't you I sell and get into a smaller place?" I men tney say "wny don't you?" cent, lnsteaa. use tne iw long and we shut up. form. There you'll have to figure It's largely because of those cuss- ''our wn 'ax and Itemize every ed things that we've saved so!exPense 'ou wish t0 oeluct. But. manv vears until fhev .have h. I -nm o nttrt ni c Thfnr... th., i are still full of service but are I I"' vi lunula urn , doing nobody any good. Nobody ! wants mem now: not even our own kids who csn remember some sentimental . or romantic thing about them. They Just don't fit in today. They're uproariously out of style. Many of them have dis proved ihat old seven-year hokum i as much as half a dozen times So it looks like we'll end up running a storehouse for our sym bols. Symbols of the old notion that we shouldn't throw anything away. In another 50 years they may class as antiques, but no mat ter how much they may bring as such they'll never repay our pos terity for the storage that they ewe to us. Just the same, when the old place Is lighted up and filled with flowers and Fanny's touches, all who gather within its walls re mark, "What a cheerful, homey house; I Just love It." There's something about an old house that you can't build into a new one. " Ouess we'll keep It. OF EFFORT TO V $955 f Y ( l Classic I I Aurveor II I tlSTMICHT WHISKIES Jl (JTheyjDo It Every Time . By. Jimmy Hado ' ROOM OF PWIO RODR.. rfM WE) WfiE &yKO HS (SETS A T OF ICtxy (JOT HO S-CVty WEtX-EXCELLeMT r ) p-t uoFP TVVO HORSESlI If" WE WAY I OCT-UP-ASO-dO- REAL INTERESTING -Yf : UKE TELEVISOR CK J. JLZ gtf JftVvcSf t previous ubowkal eoMtTJwa-j . rnfrikiLrTTl S I EXPERIENCE NECCSSAR- ' fJ I lSMim Ift apply ZoM . : hMi M1 vuuiMSM r- gfyr W knocked to T:lslni JUNIOR TO THE FACT feSflX "f1J(G I fiWBWIIIMfc 't VI ! B.lW'ytfWyfv'j:;'itllt'.''-u''-1 "J p.WWffWWHil J I. Ill Ol I i H! If ! ona in a series explaining now i 10 mane out your uittime x ic turn for 1951.1 . - ,j , ftlf,,hi. r,T,,i i,,e ...mil Remember him old Jim, old Joe I haie no trouble cncosing uic ioiiiijold charievj Doesn't he make vou ior your 1951 income tax return, i T1Sre "XSS? 'vi-l,0 mrkimi?' i A gcjieration a?o evervV Amerl Form 1040-A. Stncuy tor umier- " .".......m,.. hnrf a handv m-n J5.000 income people who hao all ! "n.w0m do the odd lobs ha hr mSe; '",X Aer" oZf "omlVf man 2? the' ho! hem. o figuring. "' never found time to get around to. lions. Mail to uie collector. He kud, old figures the i tax for ou merchants vanished? They don't f r - nJn ? ,m win rinn't ,i. W be around any more. And "ufesorg VoU-Xtt "ave left a void in our way ot No figuring. Find your lax in the; ' handyman hi our neighbor-"""wf-; y wne.. i was a boy was "old ca"ed to,?""TLi t,. .he Pete." And he was typical. He had Form 104U tlo 8-0y- "...l er! "'tense P" 'n ""'"'V same as form HH0 out Is called anything that broke, he would the long-form when is end of , he re(used , using the tax table you . '"reJ:ouI I be' bossed while he worked lit had own tax. A Person with So .000 or m more income has no choice -He he would.t worlt ste,dy for must use this long-form, ligunng . 8nVDOtv. hisux. , Pete had unalterable Ideas about When you mall From 1040-A to 1 the collector he figures your tax according to a table in which al-), lowance alrcsoy has been made for that 10 per cent or so of de- uu.i,u,c s.vk-""-"' Form 1040-A. you dor.t have to ' itemize a sine e exoenye. 1 But aont use torm juiu-a . ( if you're one of those umler-So.000 people whose deductible expenses were actually more than 10 per in this way. you can claim tne lull amount of vour deductions. . . . The untfer-jj.ooo people wno can not use Form 1040-A but use tne low snorworru aio luranjiraar eel a deduction of about 10 per cent for expenses. It's allowed for in the table tney use on the Back of form lOtO. If their expenses run to more than 10 per cent of income, they. too. should use tne IU4U tong-iorin and claim their deductions In full even though it means the extra trouble of figuring their own tax and itemizing deductions. Anyone with $5,000 or more in come, usins the 1040 long-form. takes a deduction of 10 per cent up to a limit of tl.000 without itemizing, tie suDtracis mat de- weTo7 hTCVc 6 " ' m JoW onMtl,re I 1040 long form take that 10 per i cent, up to a limit of $1,000 without itemizing. But if they file sena- rately, each is limited to a deduc- tion of no more than $500.) Remember this: No matter what i form you use. attach to it all the , ACHIEVE THE WORLPJ RRfT AIRPIANE FU6HT (Wn'ght Brothers Dec.7t 1903) WIT'"' A MATCHUSt ItlNO OF $tAIOHI WHISKIM It PlOOf CONTININTAl DISTIllINO COfOTION .f Hit ABIIPMIA, PA. NEW YORK .fl ! casualties of ihe age of speciallia- Hon Is old-.ashionrd handy man. r,,"u , ' Jl " .ii. lih children, loved vto WHt with them gnd SOmetlmts t (nem nand!e tne brush for a ,., nm h would unen 0-0Ver the area again him- t-ir msl 10 wipe out your cnuuisa t lde anyone could really do It " " ",i T. ' ha wcii oa lit. Dot. i.rf o innrH life he shared L.jth nobody , His strength w as his j ,ove 0( tidynp. other people's h0,es. his weakness was a quit 1)assion for strong drink. It was , J.iwi,ys a mistake to pay him any ;money before he completed a Job. !I you ojdi he mi,ht disappear in ,u. of a nnlntlnir too leav ing your house nan-orown p.nq nan Falling Lumber Crushes Driver MYRTLE CREEK. Ore.. A Uflri nt liimlvr that failed to ,rln sche.Jule crushed, a truck driver to death here. Police Chief Orvllle Cornctt said the driver, Earl V. Stratlord. 36. backed his truck under the pile of Jncked-up lumber at the Emrle nnd Worth Lumber Company yard Mon day. His son, David, 6, was riding with him. E.0rrtJ ,.f: hi, ,on )n ,he trucv . t , investigate. When he "wtdoanK c,,v. onTamas Valley Route. Roseburg. receipts called Form W-2 given you by your employer or employers for all the tax withheld from you during the year. Form W-2 also shows how much pay you got from each employer. " in I - TMI MATCHLESS WHIKV! une oi ine.wnite lor a couple ot weeks. But he always came back, looking pale, and rocky, and finished what he i had started. He had a sixth sense about know - liw when he u-ssaneprieri a lnn as tne nouse was in good repair, Pet never showed u Rut let something go wrong and the next alaecl last Monday was work for mornlna there was old Pete knock- thj tecn-agern with rcuonnble re ing at the doot. numeration. I don't have to go (nr Mlffll u.n..lH rnnt him hrealrf.vl and hem up the coitee and say. "My, I'm glad you came. Pete, the I gias broKe another window yester day." "That third step In the back ttalrs )s getting rotten," said Pete. "I guess I'll put In a new one.'.' That, was another thing about him. He was never Just satisfied with fixing what you wanted. He always found something about your house he wanted to fix himself. One day our new radio went oiooey. r'tte naa never tried to fix a radio, but he thought hi' hands could heal any broken mechanical thing. At the end of a long, sweaty day, however, the radio still re fused to function. Old Pete finally gave up at dusk. He drank his final cud of coffee in morose silence, snd wouldn't answer us children at all when we asked, "Why don't the radio talk any more. Pete? Can't you fix It.?" When he went out the door, he left our house forever, and J never afterward saw him In tht neighbor hood. The blow to his pride wan too great. In his way Pete was a perfectionist, a handyman whose like wt seldom see these days. Muious new HUDSON HOME! has a new lower-priced running mate... the spectacular HUDSON WASP Here are 1952's only new models . . , A fabulous 1952 Hudson Hornet . . . with new Hudson-Aire Hardtop Styling at standard sedan and coupe prices. There's a new, lower-priced running mate to this fabulous car the spec tacular Hudson Wasp, with thrillinr action ia its powerful 11-127 engine! And there's a new Commodore Eight for '52 . . . with Hudson-Aire Hnrdloi Styling with utmost luxury. All new Hudson are available with Hydra Matic Drive. The brilliant Commodore Six and the thrifty Pacemaker complete Hudaon's line-up of great values. Better see them right away I Opitawi at .ir. in Sl.nd.rrf trim and olh .rwclflratlon and acCMorlM aubjMt to cbang. without a.tit. Hi fobutouf Hurfiftn Herntf JUCKELAND TRUCK 11th and Klamath Sts. pifyj1. mwl yiaiMi i.mw wfiiii;ii,.),ii.iaii J ami i fc.li.-. iM,,ll?ait,.AriiMl.i- -i' imih Jit :imm I lull m ml PRIVATK OPINION ' KLAMATH FAl.1.8 Aa briefly as po.-nlblo, I should like to ulutc my views reRardliiK present day 'vmlll, ItMulll U-lltl II 1m 111V conviction that the Kehools or au ciilled educators, are Jifl aa re Hponslble aa the home: and equiil ly responsible are the political ancmion, unci by those 1 menu any olflclnl hold Inn office either by election or Appointment. From the crndla to the grave, the question now Ik "Wluil la Uiere in It (or me? I low much cull I get for nothing" No one, seeming ly, wuntn to cum Iholr money, 'Of course vu unniv ivu.'i'ii IUI linn If, st nac-e at whirh e ara ine fust pace at which we are living. This la I ho atomic age. I think that the home, piiur to a child altendliiK .school, la ro sponallile for laying the fotiiidutlon. Tills should cover such iitliiUutea a.t love, honesty, unci obeillvnco. But, after a child begins in iiiIiikIc with other children this fouiHliilloii takes on another aspect. Partic ularly, on the pluy-groiiiHl, the bull ies rule the roo.u. whether that be on a school ground during achuol hours, or a city supervised plny iirouucl. You can f.iul this kind irom the prliniirv Kiiidci Ihrotiuli collexe. For Instance, lew. bull games j say a tot. By Hint I mean that i the hravirr, or the Conner nil ,n-; dividual Is. the better tlimirr he has of breaking the other fellow Into submission. Kiwlronmrnl hs a lot to do with formulating character, Hrvii hnblla, and resulting application. Therefore. from Uic . nrUniuy grades up. how much time does the teacher devote to supervisory plav to teach the right and wrong? 1 can a.ssure you, very little. -So,v- ! a-dnyn. If It be a "she" It Is the colfiure or clunret: and with male leacncrs u is noi inucn uinnrcm. Another thins that was cmiilin- . " ClBOOraie Oil lllia. HI mj- llc.g.l. borhood. there are nnd w ere boy wno nave lo earn ineir apriuiui'j money. We nil know Hint work hi this territory la seasonal and the boys had to take It when offered. What kind of co-opcratlon did they get from the schools or powers that be on this score? Certainly, the boys mlsred school at times. But seemingly, their class work did not suffer much. If it did. It was not bronchi to light. Or uors that ruling of extra money the teachers get on school attendance attendance. have a bearing- on thin. My alil- i ih.ta..A.j;:.,!',...!S!?irrtf.d ' ?.irU.cl.D.'J? '2 W' v h., v f.ut in tuff new, itjtuiii. nuin m why not give the boys credit lor ' gram would help clear Ihe air of earning while learning. I several questions that the realdenta They go to school because the of thla locality have been discuss parents Insist on it and take a 1 mg. chance on getting their spending , Again may we urged and encour money, where. If. and when they ace you to continue this oomitiu. can. And that leads to thievery. nit v aerv're that all of us may ging and cheating. And thla In turn leads to robbery, debauchery ana tne courts. r- I could cite case histories right here In this neighborhood. I ask you why, and where wasn't it nipped In the bud? When one does report a minor case you are con sidered either at interfering with S522 tht luxurlovi Cemmoder light mt4 Sift ' 1' 1952 youthful pranks, or you don't have enough political pull to Justify any action one way or another. My auinmatlnn In this: Parents, guard your children at nil tlniea, from the cradle to the Kiave, at plav or at work, In the flesh an In death. Your prayers are always In order. Tenchern: Just because you hold a oolleuc degree, does not make you eduentoia. You have a lot to klenrn while you are enrnlng. Don't leei mill you aro tinner nam in your chosen vocation. By diligent appli cation, In I ho long run you will be reniuneiati'il whether bv a high er career, or a lowly student. Tal -, -,.lli,, ..., .,..H( An c" ap illcttlloii. and sincerity do Law officials and political ap pointees: By the graro of Clod you lire In your jioiltlona. Don't think that the country can go on forever ns It Is now going. Home wns In Die snine ntrulta. Homnlhlng, even tually will give. Then, no matter how much you have accumulated now, all, we all, will go like alraws In the winds, Be It low or high, rich or poor, happy or meek: it will make no difference then. Think about It. MRS. D. K. LAW IM (llt( l .MKNT KLAMATH KAl.LS-We have Hi. tened with a gre.it deal of lnlcre.',t to the iccent foriuu dlsotisiilons oil Juvenile problema. We believe lhal n greni deal uf Inleieat linn been nnd will be gencrntnd by aurh pnuel dlicusalnna on a problem that haa become extremely critical. Mnv U' Mluueat that It ahoiilrt ; be very Interesting to secure the lonlnionn of the various law (orcetuent aBCiiclea In this vicinity bv partirlputlon f the nfflclala therruf on any future panel dlv cuaslon. Iteapectfully youra, F.L.K. KI'l'N INTI RI ST KLAMATH FALLS There has h--,, ur-,.1 ,i..i m favorable I comment this past week of your Build the Basin" program. I have nevrr known ol a radio program that has creuled audi Interest in a community. Your listening audi ence evidently la tremendous Judg ing from the number of people win have spoken of this program. Several cllliens ol Klamath Fnllj and vicinity are keenly uncreated In our nrtsent dy law enforce nient nroblem. and I know It would be benellrlal to our community If ,ih law enforcement odlcers of tht rllv. counlv and stale would be help "Build the Basin" In making a better place to live. Yeura very truly, R.R.L. MIOIITV KINK BOY' NEW PINK CHEKK It setins I when tht big transport dlaap like lately when I pick up ourlpeared. it should have had enough Herald and News and read "Tell-lK,s (nr three hours' flight Mil HUDSON HOtNIT 'aw-Daw U4n It , Oaly a.w tar of Hit yowl Iludann-Aire Hardtop Sly Una at ttamlard cdan and coupe prictt ' Four great Hudton ttrltt, wllh prices btglnnlng ntar tht lowttt-ctil fttld Hit iptetacular Hudtwn Wait SALES & SERVICE, INC. Klamath Falls, Ore. ' ing tha Editor" column Inert is always an argument over rtlltUu. But 1 have aometiyng (llfe.rent to wrll about . . , Last night wlnlt looking out our dining room window at the terrible bllsaard w were having, coming down our road on foot was our Herald and News paper boy, l.im Mi'Claln. Our ronda are pllad hlih with annw drill and at times are Impassable for cars , , , We llva two block, from the highway and Farrla Store, where Ie plcka Ui the Herald and News lo deliver. It doenn't matter what kind of weather we have, our Herald and Newn la delivered on time when the papera aren't delayed by the ntorin, If It la storming, Let brings It lo our door and reiuaea to coma In and get warm by Ihe fire. Ills words art always "I've got lo get these papers delivered. Antl loo, whenever we open our door he la always there smiling and It's always "HI there, here's your paper." And off ha got Into the cUinn, never complaining about tin weather being ao bud . , . Believe me, If anyone deserves praise thin Bih Grade boy doe. He's a mighty fine boy and If any prlsen were given I'd bet my lai dollar that Lee would win firm prltel Now let's atop tilt argument over religion and let's hear mart about our paper boys. How sboul It? Sincerely. Mra, Mary Newman Plane Hunt Carried On rianea from Hamilton Air Font Bae. C'nllf.. are atlll seeking tht C-4? that vanished with elgbt men nfter making a routine radio check to.ooo (vet over Klamath Falli I Dec. 2. ' An Ah.ioclated Press dispatch to- lv a. Id Hamilton planes wtrt nll searching south of here but tiiat ro ground partita were out. The CM?, flying from Spokant to Travla Field, in tht San Fran cisco aroa, carried orew of thret and five hitchhiking Mrvlctmen. At 4:17 p.m.. Dec, 36, the plane radioed the airport here that it waa flying southward on courie above an overcaat. That waa tht laal tlmt tht plane was heard Irom One of the Urgent air aearrh nnd rescue teams In Northw est hi lory wan baed here for 13 days tollowimr tha olane'a dlaapptaranra triZ i oZ Plant waa found Numerous clqea were checked but The nenrch crew was comprised of air rescue experta from Me. Chord Pltld. Tacoma. aided bv tht Klamath Air Search and Reaeut Unit. Earlier thla month, wives of Cant. John O'Dell and Capt. Ver '"on Moo. pilot and co-pllot of tht C-47. offered a 11,000 reward for information leading lo or actum discovery of the plant. Hie offer explru Feb. 16. Tht plane bears I Ihe number 6143. rWtttAlrt Map ItyMM THI IPICTACUIAI HUDSON WASP Hit thrifty Ftitmoktr