PAGE FOUR HE3ALrANn NEWS,' KLAMATH FALLS. ORKfiON TUKSDAY, KKRKUAHY '20, 1051! FRANK JENKINS Editor Entered aa second class matter at the post office of Klamath Falls, Ore., on August 20, 1906, under act of Congress, March 8, 1879 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication of ill the local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news M'BHCRIPTION RATES 6 months $0.50 By mail By Mall By DEB ADDISON PROGRESS NOTE: Since 1939 the population of the U.S. has! grown 18 per cent: industrial pro ductlon has grown 100 per cent; prices have gone up 130 per rent; federal spending has grown 800 per cent. The federal government will be spending $2100 lor every family in the land, compared to $205 per lamlly In 1939. tThis is one good reason for vot ing for Taft OR Eisenhower OR Warren OR Stasscn.) SAY THAT AGAIN SLOW, SEN ATOR: Senator Kefauver said he would NOT crltlcire President Tru man during his campaign for nomi nation but that he WOULD cam paign to "clean out crime and get the budget balanced." SAY THAT AGAIN FAST. SEN ATOR: Senator Saltonstall, the long-faced New Englander, comes mrougn wun a non-codfish type humor. Speaking of the Washing- iiitj-Bu-iuunu, iic shjs us Just the same old thing month after onu it(& min mill. DUI then he adds, reassuringly, that all we nave to lear is fur itself. BEAR HUNTER BAGS BIRDS: Arthur Rickbeil (or Jimmy Ricky; lane your cnoicei who Is one of the famous Buck Island bear hunters, NEW YORK 0PI Civilization Would go to pot except for the bravery of women in small situa tions. The Improvement of a culture Cepends upon things being done better and better, and it is women who generally insist that thev be done better. For this their reward is often blame instead of the praise they deserve. I'aither sex has a monopoly on courage. But they have different kinds. Man is a sucker for applause. He likes to do the big deed at the big moment with the spotlight cen tered on him and a band softly playing, "Onward Christian Sol dier." He wants the hero in him, when it does come out under great stress, to be fully recognized. He yearns for the outspoken apprecia tion of the herd, and he feels hurt and angry if he doesn't get it. But women have the courage to meet the lonely moment, the anony mous valor to cope with the long boredom of such chores as house keeping, and the firm bravery to fight for her small rights in the face of the public frown. A man's heroism is usually shown in the midst of noise and bloody battle and memorialized by phrases Buch as "Don't give ud the ship, boys," "Damn the torpedoes full speed ahead," or "You may lire when ready, Grldley." But a woman has no applause at the big moments of her lifetime. There are no cheers when she makes up her mind to marry a man nobody would bet on in a borse race, or goes through the valley of agony alone to give birth to a little dolt she knows may grow Up and break her valiant heart. It takes couraee to make these great gambles, but women have ttill another kind of courage that .'""-'.NHWWW NEW YORK OB Top executives are leiung stockholders and em ployes these days what's ahead in 1952. There's a flurry of forecasting luaay some rosy, and some cau tious. Annual reports are usually the medium. Business continues to boom for the American Telephone It Tele graph Co. President Cleo F. Craig tells stockholders that the company has plenty of would-be customers waiting. ' "Renewed upswing in demand, pressing requirements of defense, and strict governmental allocation of materials have limited our abil ity to do everything we want to do," Craig says. If material short ages can be licked, 1952 should be another boom year for the phone company. But taxes are whittling down net profits. Charles A. Thomas, President of Monsanto Chemical Co.. has a word of caution for his stockhold ers. "In December and the early part of January, 1952," he says in his report, "we have noted some softening of chemical markets in general." But Thomas thinks "it is too early to predict prospects lor the coming year." A "good year," however Is fore acen by Arthur O. Dietz, president of C. I. T. Financial Corp. He thinks people will want to borrow money for many things. He pre dicts five million cars and trucks will be produced this year, to be sold at Increased prices, and this will keep the dollar demand for car financing high. He expects "1952 will be a satisfactory year In our automotive financing opera tions." Another company tied In with the automobile is also optimistic. Pres ident W. O.'Neil tells General Tire & Rubber Co. stockholders that "the replacement tire field is ex pected to exceed all previous sales records" in 1952. An Industry with little to fear In 1952 Is machine tools. Shipments continue to increase, the National Machine Tool Builders Association reports today. And in January un- HOTELS OSBURN HOLLAND IU0INI, ORE. MEOFORD Thoroughly Modern Itr. and Mrs. J. E. Earley and Joe Earley Proprietor i, . in iu i hi l ... ...... m, .i- in, v .m , m , . - ..- .v v- V.. y A BILL JENKINS Managing Editor year 111. 00 l,.llii.m.iiini.,. (H iv m- vS V U- (comes up now with stuffed birds. He has mounted specimens, side by each, of our largest and small- est owls. The pigmy owl (which pipes that "hco-hoo who who" you sometimes hear of a winter night) was a kamikaze suicide at a plate glass window, with a mouse in his claws. The great horned owl was bagged. The great horned owl, unlike the eagles and most all of the hawks, is not protected. This big boy with the ear tufts, of all the clawed and beaked birds, is the most likelv to come down in the winter to make meals of the game birds and song oiras. REGIMENTATION OF FREE ENTERPRISE: Small boys who used to make their pin money In uie spring and summer supplying live minnows to fishermen face new problems. It's now illegal to fish wun live minnows. Live minnows sometimes get ! loose and multiply to become pests. oiate icnuivoiogists sav minnows have ruined trout fishing in Dia- ! lUOna LAKC.I On the other hand, if Junior can sneak a corner of the family freeze er. maybe that will work better than trying to keep the things alive. We have Just installed a new typewriter ribbon in '0 seconds. iae.es even more character. That Is the courage to fight against the inertia of the slovenly, to see that things be done properly, that she gets value received in Ihe small dealings between people that take up most of our Ives. A man may boldly cry "Don't give up the ship, boys" yet lack the downright guts it takes to tell a waiter. "This veal is under- cooked. Take it back." He is a coward when it comes to what he calls "making a scene." No mat ter what, he feels his rights are in small matters, he has a great big yellow, streak about demanding UIC1I1. A woman may be afraid of a mouse, but she isn't afraid of a louse. A louse is somebody who is trying to take money from you for iiui aoing someuung ne is being paid to do. Civilization is full of them, and more crawl out of the woodwork all the time. A husband will let store rWk badger him. butchers shortweight him, and repair men overcharge him. His motto is "Let well enough alone," and he stands by em barrassed When hU Wife rallnni: In his rescue with the flat challenge, "Look, this won't do at all." Men are the prisoners of the stat us quo. Women bless their honest pride have the strength to say. To hell with what the bystanders think I'm goin to get what I want when I'm right." It takes real courage in our time to face a social sneer, and it Is only women who have this cour age, bometimes they may overdo it a bit. But civilization would crumble without their moral fi ber, and soon when you went to a restaurant they would serve you iooa on a snovei. filled orders were 18 times the current production rate of the In dustry. But the ratio is dropping. It hit Its high last September at 23 times production rate. The rubber industry, Just given the green light by the government to resume its own buying and sell ing of natural rubber a govern ment monopoly for 14 months Is pretty optimstic, too. January saw the biggest month-to-month gain in rubber consump tion in almost two years, the Rub ber Manufacturers Association. Inc., reports. Return to private purchase and sale of raw rubber won't change things in the industry much, executives say. There's plenty of rubber now. Even the discouraged wool Indus try gets a half-holeful Dredictlon. The U.S. Agriculture Department preaicis a stronger demand for wool to be used in civilian goods this year. But it warns that mili tary demand for wool may drop, and so the industry may not be much beter off than last year. L.nue nut gloom, however. Is een by the National Association of Purchasing agents. Industrial or der and production continued to tan wis month at the same rate the agents reported In December and January. The agents say they are ouying ever more conserva tively. Just waiting for that long ever-due pickup in business in gen eral to materialize. Polite Thief Gives Service NEW YORK (IP) A strange clerk greeted a woman customer Mon day night when she entered a drug Etore to buy cigarettes. Unsure of the nrlee. he inmilrerf of the owner, who was tied up at the moment in a back room. The clerk served her and she left. men he pocketed the money and left with an armed companion, add ing the price of a nack of r.icarettes to their J500 robbery. SINUS INFECTIONS DR. E. M. MARSHA laeetlllallf Trciwi EieliilM Htlhod ! K. 7th pbM 1091 Cblrspraetle Pbrilnlan They'll Do It Every Jiry THE POOR TCLEPHONlE OPERATOR r MNSTMNCc, LONo "DIoWNCE CALLER WILL OVE STRICT INSTRUCTIONS ( -ARE UP I y .11 v Za , J I i TREATED HO? UKE A t . ' jS NA frtf JZZ2 D06N0T THAT SHE'S "-J v, ( VERY fvr fTKrvnT W EL.HEKSEL f tTI M I WELL"- vLFIJy? lY)HDERSTAHOAHO : 2 y r iLyf. , IVSSi V AUOTHeR THING- . l,l'!'1MmuiUi !W.uyimw URU-iw l UWUHlHiikiw i.ui!HU. ..unmm .i mum I. mmiuiiu' im .u.iijuuH'- Whlttaker Chambers, in his story running in the Saturday Evening Post, tries to explain the myster ious quality of communism which has given It such driving force throughout the world. He concludes that true Commu nists are people first of all of Im mense conviction. But more im portant still, they have the will and the capacity to act upon their conviction. And in this they are aimosi aione. Chambers here ha hit iinnn one of the nuzzling Daradoxes which grip free men. They have the faith that rightly may be prized above ail otner la tns the concent oi freedom and individual human dig nity. Yet when thev hold these rich prizes in hand they too often act as if they did not value them at all. Men fight fiercely for freedom when they do not have It. They fight, too, when they see it ebbing away, or under Immediate and grave threat. But when the danger to their liberties recedes even slightly, they relax their guard and turn a deaf ear to all pleas for militant ac tion. This puts them at a definite dis advantage in any contest with Com munists, to whom militancy Is a way of life. In the Communist world, there Is no room for relaxa tion. The Cause is an around-the-clock tyrant commanding the be liever's energies every second. remaps it is in the nature of i So far as I know there are no i statistics on bow many people are amiciea wun pinworms, out there are certainly many so a.'fliclod. One correspondent wrUes that rhe 'IKiui.wmi unim-uumi . ji. i mi in n m i j;n -Hi "'" J i q i ',' - -- . . . , . x v. " has been bothered with them ril-ito and-on for eighteen years.- and many who write me ask how to get rid of them. Actually. Pinworms are no- as hard to eliminate as some orher intestinal parasites, but reinfection is particularly common, and there fore careful attention to hytfitnic living conditions and care in as sociation with others fs particu larly imporant to keep them from coming back. Pinworms are more common in children than grown-ups, especla' ly among those in lartje families or In children living in institutions. It Is comparatively rare !n fam ilies in which separate bedrooms are useo. This is because tne worms get on the bed linen pajamas and other clothing and are picked up by others who come in contact with such objects. When children live in in insti tution or dormitory or when sev eral use the same bedroom, tho spreading of the worms from oie person to another is easy. The eggs from ninwuims are usually laid on the skin and mu cous membrane near the outlet of the bowel. This causes severe itch ing. In fact, the itching can be so Skin Grafts Used In Some Stomach Rupture Sutures DEL MONTE, Calif. IPi Patches of skin burled an Inch or more deep In the abdomen make good binding material to close massive ruptures of the stomach wall, a University of Oregon surgeon re ported Tuesday. The skin Is taken from the pa tient's body near the site of the rupture, stitched to the inside of the stomach wall and burled by the external sewing up of the entire break. This method is not new. It has been tried by other experimenters over a long period of years. Dr. Millard S. Rosenblatt of Port land told the Pacific Coast Surgical Association he tried it to determine how it compared with other patch ing material. He first tried It on 34 dogs and since has used it on five patients. It worked well on four of the pa tients and also was successful on the fifth after some complications had been overcome. The most common patching ma terial for this operation is Flscla, the semi-transparent tough tissue which forms a Rack for muscles and Intestines. A mesh of fine Tan tlum wire also Is used sometimes. Dr. Rosenblatt reported the buried skin heals well and turns into fitcia-llke tissue after a few weeks. It Is stronger than most kinds of flscla, he said. Also it works better If the top layer of the People DO TOO read small space ads - you are! Time - ICM WHEN 6HID PARTY IS NOTIFIED S PER INSTRUCTIONS' OUR GAL IN freedom that it camiol be best used in an atmosphere of sell conscious mllltnnry. In any event, men who have their liberty seem bent most upon enjoying it not defending it. Its defense Is a tusk they put off as almost an interference with their freedom. In an Ideal condition. It may be possible for free men thus to In- dulge themselves In the fruits of i uoeriy wiuioui suomuiing 10 inei"'u un numn suprrviMun oi limitations which follow from its I active and constant defense. But a world containing an effective Com-: .'""" .""f ""'.' The defenses the free nations are now throwing up are a response to a threat they sec as serious and relatively close. They must be cred ited with defining and meeting the menace with more speed and fuller energies than they have here tofore applied in critical moments. Nevertheless, they have not yet passeil the real test of these times. They have not yet shown that they understand the Communist threat is always real and great, even when it appears to recede. They have not shown realization of the fact that you cannot com bat 24-hour-a-day militancy with no militancy at all. Whether or not It is the natural inclination of free men to do so. they must act upon their faith constantly and energetically In to day's world. Otherwise they may awake one day to find it gone before thev saw and recognized the peril it was in. bad that It Droduces nervousness sleeplessness, and even convulsions. The exact diganosls must be made by taking swabs from the nine where the wnr. nr lit..!., be and examining the material under the microscope. Infestation with purworini is fre quently confused with infestation of other parasites and the diea nosls must be clarified bv accur ate examination. Once this has been done, proper treatment clu be started. Treatment is rcaso.ia-vly satis factory but should be given lo all involved persons in n family or to all children In a dormitory. About nino out of ten are cured, although the treatment may have to be repeated several times. Once an outbrcat of pu worms Is discovered, treatment sl ould be prompt and thorougn. Ail those who are exposed as well as th-we who have definite signs of worms must be given information on hygenic measurers. Careful and frequent washing of the hands with soap and water is one of the most important meas ures. With the improvement In knowl edge of hygiene and how to take care of one's body and better meth ods of treatment, plnworm infes tations have become less frequent. Once established, however, pin worms rarely or never disappear without treatment, as many peo ple have discovered for themselves. skin Is scraned off. he added. This scraping removes the shiny tough top finish which does not unite well with the stomach wall- Public Land Funds Go To States WASHINGTON Icfl Pacific Northwest states and Alaska will share in cash receipts from public lands within their borders in the year ending June 30, 1951. The states will receive the mon ey In lieu of taxes they might levy If the lands were privately owned. The lands are now under the Bu ureau of Land Management in the Department of Interior. Secretary of Interior Chapman reported Monday Oregon will re ceive one of the largest allotments $3,240,006. The money will go di rectly lo counties In the state. It was received principally from sale of timber on revested Oregon and California railroad grant lands. Alaska will receive $2,876, Idaho $70,007 and Washington $16,659. NOW Wednejdoy DOUBLE GREEN STAMPS CliffYaden's SIGNAL SERVICE 2560 South 6th (Open 24 hrt. Every Day) By Jimmy Hatlo THE MIDDLE GETS THIS- Reds Still Push Korea Peace Stall By RORKRT B. Tl't'K.MAN ' MUNSAN. Korea i.ti Com immlsts "cateiiorlcallv relecled" ; Tuesduv an Allied propositi that Korean truce. The Allies had nronosed four neutral nations nolicc the trace instead of six. This would cut Nor way off the United Nations list and Russia off the Red nomina tions. "We cannot consider" It, said Chinese Col. Pu Shan. Stnff officers also remained deadlocked on the number of ports ol entrv each side should be al lowed during a truce. The Allies row propose six, the Communists five. Another croun of stall oil!- cers devoted their entire session to minor cilferences in phraseology on arrangements for exchanging prisoners oi war. As truce talks adjourned until Wednesday, each side accused the other of stalling. The U.N. Command made Its compromise proposal on neutral upcrvislon Monday In an elfort to get around the newest road block toward ending the bloodshed in Korea It would limit sunervlslns na- lions !0 Sweden. Switzerland, and Communist Poland and Czecho- Slovakia. This would get rid of the Russlnn problem. "The point is not the number of mourners on tnc neutral nations supervisory commission," Col. Pu than said, "But It Is the question that one side cannot give reasons f,e n,eC,tlL'Mt "1C non"n"llons 01 Uie other side What he meant was that the Communists could name anv na tion they wanted to the commis sion, so long as It was not se Do cpr nee tub- J New 1952 Packard For ft Model illustrated ! a full-size, 6-paiaeniter, 4-door edan. Optional equipment, acceaaoriea, Hate and local taxea, il any, additional. Pricea may vary alijhlly in adjoining communitiea due to ahippinj charjfea. All prices subject to -change without notice, 603 Dixie Revolt As Russell By The Aaaorlatrd Tress SinouUlcrliiK Dixie oppouliiiHi to President Tnimnii was being fanned Tuesday by adiulreis uf Gooiula's Beimtor Richard tl. Mi .v sell. Russell's home nlulo nuppnrters may propel him Into I ho ml-Mc of the Democratic presidential luce this week. Russell wouldn't comment mi a request by the Georgia Domn'T'i llu Executive Coiumitee Unit ho become an active caiulldate But his friends said they doubt Unit Russell could refuse. The Georgian headed the Mid Democratic convention rrVielhon against Tnimnii but did not loin the Slato Klghto movement wliliii look 39 electoral votes lio n ilie JAMES TIFFEE, 20, son or Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Tiffcc, 3008 Cortcz, is now train ing in Electrician school with the U.S. Navy at San Diego, lie graduated from KUHS in 1949, and was employed at Weyerhaeuser when he enlisted last July. Ferehec Photos Released Of Atom Furnace UPTON. N. Y. in The U S. Atlmlc Fnergv Commission has re- leased photogiaphs of nil four luces; "i ine once superseerei niomic furnace or reactor at Bronklmven National Laboratory, the nnuou'3 - largest reseprch reactor. i Previously onlv pictures of the w.rt face used for exnerlmenU with neutrons had been published. The other three faces are used for feeding uranium fuel Into the I furnace and for Inserting spc. mens to be made radioactive. lively fighting In Korea, and the U.N. had nothing to anv about It. You Know You Can Buy YOU MAY be surprised to learn that you can buy Packard' famous quality at such a moderate price . . . that you can enjoy Packard's fine-car performance and comfort at medium-car cost and economy 1 ' Every dollar gets you more beauty, more performance, more long-lasting quality I Over the years Packard ASK THE MAN LEE HUFF MOTOR CO. So. 6th St. Seek State President In the election. Jack Hell, Associated I'le.,! polit ical reporter, snld Tuesday the licorula move would likely spu. Boul lici n opponents of the I'rivl tlcii t Into tin effort to swing uthcr atalcN behind RumicII, In Florida the flunnrll nuivvini'ii'. sot n shot In the arm when nine Florldliiiis liistriiclcd to iiunpi.rt him qualified ax caiiilliliiieH lor stale delegates to the Democratic national coiiveiilluu. In Mississippi, the House of Rep resentatives uuved the way for an other possible break with Ihe mi llonul parly. It voted without dis sent lor all political partlr.t lo nnni iiiale anyone they wish ns I ho stale US Sailors Wounded In Ship Action WASHINGTON Ifi Tile Navy reported Tuesday Hint 11 men were wounded aboard the Dr.ilrovrr Jfhelton Feb. 23 bv Communist shore fire. The destroyer. Uirn oil Ihe North vest Const o Koren. received ihree direct hits; two enemy shells burst directly over Ihe Inutail. One of the direct hits tore a hole. Ihree feel by four teet. at the water line, causing one com partment lo be purtly flooded. The sihelton retired lo a bnse In Jnpnn ufler the action which oc curred during Ihe previously re ported repulse of an enemy at tempt to lu ud on a miiiiII Inland Three ol Ihe II wounded were described as seriously hurt. The Navy did not disclose any nuiiies Two other destroyers received minor damngr but reported no rasunltles on the sonic day the i'lielion was hit. , The destroyer Rowan reported' a direct burst on one of Itn own gun mounts. The destroyer Henderson sur vived several near nilssra which caused some damage to the super structure. A Nuvy spokesman to', I a Penta gon news conference thul enemy shore tire has been more active In recent days than for ninny months urevlou.'ly lie also recalled a succession ol 'enemy altempts in the past ten Iduvs to lund troons on small Is- lund, alonit both coasts of Koren. WURLITZER A magnificent I piano. Many I lovely itylti and finiiht to chooii from. LOUIS R. MANN PIANO CO. 120 Ne. 7th $2,83900 DELIVERED IN KLAMATH FALLS ' costs less (o own because "Built like a Packard" means built lo ln.it t So, before you buy any car, look at one more. Spend one hour driving Ihe magnificent new Packard -the car that's engineered to outperform and built to outlast them all 1 By every comparison, it costs less for what you get than any other automobile 1 WHO OWNS ONE Klamath Falls, Gains Backers Support oinunlnllon's choice fur President mid Vice l'lciildciil. Hell said Hoiilherii Democrats feel the Dixie revolt would cullapne It nhnn.it any cundldnla other than Tniiiinn were noiiilnnted. I'iveu to, siiine uf them fear Ten liesseo'a Beiinlnr Kstca Kefnilvrr tmi v split the HiiiiIIiciii vote, Miiny lenders. In the itotilh rcmiiln cool lowurd Kelauver'a candidacy. The Tennessee senator continued his busy rampulKiiliiii, going Inlo Iho President's homo slulo of Mis souri, lu Ht. Louis he sulci without limning nninen Mondny that "Ihe head of a government. , , . has a clear responsibility . , , lo clcnil up any corrupt or dishonest act as quickly nn It springs up." Another DeniocncUo prnsldentlnl hopelul, Heiinlor Hubert H, Kerr of Oklahoma, won iinniilmmin en dorseineiil ol his slnle's Democra tic ('enti'nl Committee. Kerr hits sntd he will be a tiindldiile only if Truuiuii does not run. Itcptilillriitm were busy gelling llielr cnmlldnles squared nway lor the iipproai'liliiu prcsldriiUnl pref erence priuinrlcs. Henntnr Cnrlson of Kansas sulci nntlonnl lenders o (lie Urn. Dwiuht D. l'hsenhowcr movement would t not support a slate of delegntntf' for Ihe general In Minnesota's! Micrrli IB prlmnry, lie would be running agnlnsi former tlov, llnr old E. tilassrn III tjtussen's home state. The Pennsylvania Election Bonid acted on lieu. Dotiglan MncArthur'a request to luke his name off the April 33 prlmnry bnlloi there. Thai would lenve Klsenhower and 81ns sen In the race. Rep. Miller of Nrbrnska sun gcslcd lliiil. If Trillium stumps Ihe country (or Ihe DcinocrnU, Mnc Arthur should folluw him with a rebuttal cnmpiilgn. Beimtor McCarthy of Wisconsin, bnck In WnshliiKlon lio.n an il state speaking tour, no 1(1 he loiuid "unlimited" popularity lor Mac Arthur, "a lot ol good olid sup port" for Kenntor Tufi i f Ohio unci "a considerable nmo.mt of seuli. ment for Elsenhower and Btaasen " McCarthy, who has said he fnvors MucArtlnir, snid he wasn't ready lo announce whom he would support. QuifsLnxn lives funis amazing relief "Had tried method after method to relieve constipation. .until I lott faith," admits New Jersey woman. "Then I stnrtccl to eat Kellogg' ai.l-bran dally and was amazed at the fine resulUt!" Delicious ALL-nasN may bring back your youthful regularity If auflerlna has been due to lack of bulk In diet. It's the only type ready-to eat cereal that supplies oil the bulk you may need. ai.l-ian Is rich In Iron, high In cereal protein, pro vides essential B and D vitamins. Not hahll-formliiK. Kat j cupful, of KrlloKK's ALi.-nsAn dally; clrlnkL plenty of liquids. If not lallsflrd after 10 days, send empty carton to Kellogg's, Battle Creek. Mich., and get Douan vou momey iack! A 4 Ore. i i