TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1952 . PAGE SIX HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OrWOON FRANK JENKINS Blltor Enured as second data matter at the post office of Klamath Falis, Ore., on August 30, 1906, under act of Congress, March 8, 1879 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press la entitled exclusively to the use for publication of eil the local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ( montlis $6.50 By Mrll By Mall By DEB ADDISON Maybe this has happened to you. It happens, whenever you get a bunch of guy together without any thing particular afoot to keep them scratching, that the talk travels far and free and, particularly this time of year. It winds up on taxes. It happened the other evening, and there were a couple of cattle men sitting there. The talk Rot around to "capital gains". Sitting in one of these sessions, with two or three streams of talk going in one ear at once, it doesn't all come out clear like reading a book. It does come out clear thouch that "capital gains-' is some kind of a different ground rule that's a fine thing for a cattleman when he comes to figure his taxes. If you don't have any cow brutes and if you're not a tax expert it doesn't mean much except to leave you with that dull feeling and the tnougni mat were am t any cap ltal gains" terms used by the'guy wnrHnir fnr . mvchi-ck. There is a capital loss Involved, You know month for the Come other term, "depletion." That's used by people who pump oil out of the ground and run mines and such. They use mat wnen tney inj ure their taxes. It works good. ' But that . doesn't mean much, either, to the guy who works for a paycheck. The only thing depletion that uncle has taken a a year n wouia run uie Bureau- jusyoe so. x suppose inni means ;,'... .1 iTin Th 7i m ' irom a ucrinsn larm. of two of your paychecks crats for just two weeks. mat you aon i nave time 10 un- L"" '' -'X"" "r was cieareo nionusy nigm 01 Income tax. So when thev look at Uncle Har- tangle the paper clips that some- 'u read i J our '' isusplclon he might be Ihe Innocent rv s 85 billion budget they know one hangs together. Three out of . nl second choice is, and (3 what carrier of the cattle disease after . r.'V...,, ZZ.. ... x i. . h. i vou cons der the most important!!. ei,..i i.h,.,, ..... ABC's i WASHINGTON Ml Even tome Of the professional politicians, who seldom put on a poor mouth be forehand, speak cautiously about the outcome of the New Hampshire primary Tuesday. And the politically-wise Wash ington r.ewsmen, who invaded New Hampshire in battalion formation, are reluctant to stick their necks out with any flat prophecies. Their stories are on tne illy siae. The nrofessionals. oolitical and Journalistic, indicate the . result may be close, although that result in the long run may not be con- how the people of New Hampshire fee) rlsrht now. There are a lot more state pri maries between Tuesday and next July when the Republicans and ' Demoncrats finally pick their can- ' dldates at the big Chicago conven tions. Much can happen between Dow and then. True, the New Hampshire result may have some psychological ef- 1 tect on what happens in Ihe other primaries and. eventually, on what happens in Chicago although even this idea can be twisted more ways ' than one. Over the weekend Sen. Taft was credited with edging up on Oen. Eisenhower who had been ex pected to make a big showing In New Hampshire where his backers were strongly organized. It has been said a bad setback Tuesday may force the general, if he really wants the parly nomi nation to come home from Europe, make a real campaign, and tell the voters in person where he stands on the issues. It could also be said that a sweeping victory for Eisenhower Tuesday might in Ihe long run cost him the Chicago nomination in this way A bie win Tuesday might lull him into a feeling he can get the nomination without lifting a fin ger, a situation which would cer tainly stir the Taft men into even more strenuous effort and maybe the nomination. At this point you can play eiiess- NEW YORK Ifl Things a man learns from reading his mail: it is even more important for ; older workers than young work' crs to avoid a sloppy look. ... In the boss's eye carelessness In per sonal grooming is a "time-to-retire-him" signal ... A survey by the Northwestern National Life Insur ance Co., of 3,000 male policyhold ers showed only 24 per cent wanted to quit altogether at 65. Some 39 per cent wanted to keep their pres ent jobs, and 37 per cent wanted to i j juuiiipiiiMijiJU.'s.miaawuiiai iifin.i jni.ii-1 n in jslow down a bit but keep doing something useful. . . Boxing has been under intermit tent publio attack ever since the jtlays when the Romans pummeled each other to. death in the arena, t . . But It Is still big business. . . . Eome 2 J 5,000 men engaged in prize Slights in 1951, of whom 24,365 were (irofesslonals. . . . There were four deaths, but only one was in a pro fessional bout ... Boxing gloves were first used in modern times in a bout in Paris In 1818. ... An Englishman won. , , This is not o strange, however . . . His op ponent was English, too. ' Racing Is known as "The Sport of Kings," but do you know what king actually ran a lootrace with a horse? ... It was Thomas Jcf erson's old foe, George the Third of England. ... He became a little balmy upstairs after losing America. , , . You know, of course, jivhy some saints are pictured with sauare Instead of round halos? . . . tfhe square halo Indicates the saint was still alive when the portrait fc'as made. . . . .' ! Few if anv presidential candi dates today have or need the lung power of George Whltefleld, fam ous Hth. century Methodist mis sionary. ... He could speak loudly enough to be heard bv 20,000 people. 1 , . Actor Pavid Oarrlck once eaid tvhlleflcld's oratorical power was no. great he could reduce an audi- tnce to tears merely bv the wav I BILL JENKINS Managing Editor .. year 11.00 means is that when he's depleted, someone else takes over and there aren't any more paychecks. The word "discount" enters into It somewhere, too. But the only discount that a man working tor a paycheck can figure on is that when the checks end and social security sets it. the 50-cent dollar will surely be discounted to a two bit dollar and he'll have been dis counted again. Somebody said that the Lord must love the working man because He made more of him than any other kind. The tax people in Washington must love the working man. too. because they get more money from the cuts out of his paycheck than from anywhere else. Whether they say Soak The Rich or not, that ain t the way It works, Th joint rnmmiti of Congress on Taxation Just figured It out thstiauora (O pica up a pin. lour umt lit thev confiscated aU the money that everyone makes over $10,000 cuts out of paychecks. That's lv place it ban come from - an't borrow all of it. . i bigger I the only they can' How about a little depletion in file ranks of the Bureaucrats and a little capitol gains in the way of new faces at the capitol? ini? games all day with the prob lems resultig from Ihe New Hamp shire primary not only on the Re publican side but also amonv Dem ocrats, since there's a contest be tween President Truman and Sen. Kefvauer, too. In the excitement of Tuesday's rote not much attention seems to have been paid to the question of what may happen Inside the Re publican party as a result of the una v..i d v.i nave waRed Rgamst 0ne another in New Hampshire. At this moment it seems sure and the New Hampshire vote has nothing to do with this that there v.l II be a bad split among the Dem ocrats because of the Southerners' hostility to the Trumaniies. It's possible a few more cam paigns like the one in New Hamp shire may put a bad split among the Republicans, too. For example, Harold Stassen, one of the Repub lican candidates Tuesday, sharply criticised Tall. For 12 years, he said, Taft had been invariably wrong on foreign policy, and added: "A senatorial blindspnt on foreign policy is un fortunate but a presidential blind spot on foreign policy would be tragic." After such a statement it's hard to see how Stassen, if Taft wins the Chicago nomination, could cam' paign for the senator. The same I (roes for some of Eisenhower's New Hampshire supporters who have torn into Taft's foreign views. Taft had some thinsrs to say about Eisenhower, but he seemed to speak with less finality than, for instance, Stassen. And this is only the beginning of the struggle among the Republicans for the nomination. Taft said Sunday the Republicans will need real organization to win in November. If the party Is split by bitterness. Its organization ef forts will certainly suffer. The less solid the Republicans, the better tor the Democrats. ihe pronounced "Mesopotamia".'. . . Any politician now can get the same result By saying "taxes ... . Half the blindness among New York children of pre-school age is caused by a disease unheard of a decade ago. . . . Called retrolental noropiasla, it affects only prema ture infants of low weight. . . , Cross-eyed and near-slirhted chil- dren usually rank among the best students, tne American Ontometric Association says. ... It also has found color-blindness is five times as common among boys as girls. . . . But It is the girls who grow up ana nuy tnose Christmas neckties. Naturally you've been wonder ing for years how fast a golf ball spins , . . The answer Is 3,000 to 6,000 revolutions a minute If you hit it well ... A hlgh-lofted ball with a good back-spin may reach 8,000. A poll of 170,000 defense plant workers showed that 75 per cent used private cars to get to work. . . . In Detroit the figure is 88 per cent. . , , Well, anything to keep from getting Into an argument with a bus driver. Mosquitoes will soon be out again . . . You may be depressed to know that instead of about 400 vari eties known 50 years ago science now figures there are between 1,700 and 2,500 kinds. . . , Here's a new way to fight them carry a warm billiard ball around in your hand. . Tests have shown that some are dumb enough to sting heated billiard balls. Of course, that could be lust an other argument for staying out of pool nans during the summer months. DIVIDENDS INCREASE WASHINGTON, P) Dividend payments in January approximated $505,700,000 or 2 per cent more than the 494 million dollars paid out In January a year ago. the Comn Department reported Mondav, January a year ago, the Commerce They'll Do It Every !3f vj 5ulo4 seem theW mms -dut siiy l a tosmAif mmm6m. I vJ 5Ulo4 seem the yi UTTLE RED-HJUDCO rJUffSE Is, MAKE A DATE W7W HER FOR VMEti I GET OOTMHPJ THERE WAS THE OCTTWN-I EXPECTED A BS.MT CWMC-IN COMES THI5 KNOCtOOT-BUT tWITLL I TELL KXJ ABWT THE NISHT WRSE- By BILL JENKINS Somewhere I once read, probab- ly in a magailne. that you can I is more vaiuaoie man uie worm .of the pin. ; bowl, shell or whatever you keep I he clips In you get a cluster of I 'em. all hopelessly entangled. But (anyway, I suppose you can't af ford to do It. In fact it you take a closer look at things, as the experts would like you to, you'll find you can't afford to do 'anything. Your time Is too; ST r-Tl y &Zrl KXUM9iA fcr-i W ' d j , T-l vaiuaoie. " ? laooraiory. You cant even afford lo sit and : important magazine published in Authorities feared that the 37-think-unless you have a hookup , U United btes. The humor year-old Bruentjen might have with a national publisher who pays i niags aren t funny enough, the ! brought the dread cattle virus on you for it on the condition that at j news commentaries are loo biased h clothes from a farm In Oer the end of thinking you turn outnd the home magazines jive In many where he worked and where a few thousand 111 chosen words for him to put in his magazine. If you follow the advice of one expert and spend your w aking hours striving for higher ,and better things you'll run across another expert who will tell you to relax and make more because of your newly-restored vigor. (FDR read that once and started the theory of spending yourself rich since followed by HST) Maybe we've carried this study of man hours too far. Perhaps we've lost sight of something along I tne line mat is more valuable Man sav -ki are aoing nnvui uaum sentenced lo live years lor OB a precise and regulated way of liv- a little equipment. Maybe the gov- talnlng money under false pretense. mg. And mavbe rieht now would be a good time to take a look and see i government. Sort of a pair of armed if we're missing out. After all, I camps squared off and waiting lor even if you do utilize all your vast the other to make a mistake, potential of money-making man Please, God, let's see if maybe hours of labor per week the gov- we can avoid a mistake next No ernment w ill take the profit out vember. I'd hate to have to put of it in taxes. So why not sit back ! in another four years of not know and figure out if you're going the ' Intr -what was going on on Capital right direction or not? It might i Some harsh realities about Ko rea now have to be faced. The American and United Nations posi tion with respect to the Commu nist enemy is not an enviable one, either in the field or around the table at Panmunjom. Truce negotiations in Korea have been under way for eight months. In that span the most Important single field factor is that we have apparently lost control or the air. A great step-up in Communist anti aircraft power, plus a large in crease in its Jet fighter force, has given the enemy an edge over our limited air strength. This -has great meaning when applied to the prospect of any fu ture resumption of full-scale war. We are no longer able to shoot up Red supply lines and harry troop concentrations almost at will. More over, the of t-dlscussed plan of bombing Red Manchuria bases is now almost an academic matter. It is extremely doubtful we could pull It off successfully. Therefore any way that we might be called upon to fight in the im mediate months ahead would or necessity have to be more limited in purpose than that which we have fought so far. It would be silly to say: "Let's go in there nd finish them off.". We are not equipped to do it. In other words, in an early re sumption of real combat we should have to . hope mainly to achieve the same kind of stalemate which now prevails during the course of the truce talks. But since our power to hurt Red supply lines has diminished. We might find it harder than ever to keep a stalemate. Tne outlook in the field consequently cannot help but Increase the pressure upon our negotiators at Panmunjom to come up with some sort of agreement that will avert the necessity of re- snmlnfr hnw rnmhnt. But here, too, our hopes are' not bright. Since we no longer can exert battlefield pressure upon Red negotiators. We are forced to await their pleasure before concluding a truce assuming always that the Communists really want one. De spite this uncomfortable fact, we still have not lost our courage at the council table. We 'have stub bornly held out against Red de mands for the right to build air fields in North Korea: we demand really effective inspection behind the truce lines, and we are against repatriation of Red prisoners who do not wish to return to Communist territory. Yet even if we should win our way on the airfield and Inspection issues, the chance is great that the victory would be empty. The Communists are masters at administrative sabotage. It Is pret ty certain they would keep any UN SINUS INFECTIONS DR. E. M. MARSHA MecMlfallr Trull CiellllT. Mtlkat ti: 'Ik FkMt IIM Cllrraell Pkrtlela. .........tT,i.!,.i t.- ..Mf i Time Off rtkl A UA-ATION?.MOK f 0AI. Yf7iu,, ' . . I u ?b p fn I uii0k nw I . - " . if . iiivt ujrri j"e VSPTEOCW.- ",S!fA RhJNO J cRL(jERw. Xibsttws.a ,rr v .- I VI ysiJ... M DlETiTMN WENT 1 f V 11 V w&yAf , f -i be fun to see what a slightly slowed down tempo would do for Ihe country. Publicatlon-s Research Bureau has a little blurb in the mail that m?,in' t?f?.n Sm ont , ?'' 1 'hJ,t.,,,nh"s,L to ' nswer : read 1 e "aga- sines the Elks club subscribes to The choice depends on whether I'm hungry iGourmel), adventur ous (Truei. lazy (Sateveposti or cvnlcal (Time). There la no choice. All depends on how you feel at the i realm that Is almost as far out of reach of the average man as a HollywooU movie theme. I wish time would pass in a hurry. I'd like to be living twenty five years from now and able to read in the newspapers and con gressional record what the big brass will have lo say about all tir.i lies, cover-ups, evasions and what have you that have been put out about our Dart in the Korean I mess. It seems strange to me that we can dig In and do the Job they eroisem aocsn i trust ine people i nv more man tne people trust tne Hill. inspectors effectively snarled in red tape, and build such airfields as they chose. As for the prisoner question, there seems to be no ground for compromise at all. We must either give way or face the likelihood that UN prisoners of war will spend years In enemy camps. The blunt fact is that the initiative in Korea is not ours. Our choices seem to be resump tion of full war under less favor able circumstances than before, endless dragging on of the truce talks while our armies mark time and eat up equipment and money, or an uneasy truce which leaves the way open to renewed Com munist attack when the moment suits the Red high command in Moscow. We scoff at the Trench failure to liquidate the Red guerrillas in Indochina, and the British stand off against the Reds in Malay. Yet we are now in almost their identical position. We are engaged in an enervating, strength-sapping enterprise which seems to have no end and appears to bear ultimate promise only for our enemy. German Bride Goes Home To Die STRAUBING, Germany m A German war bride who came home to Germany last January to spend her remaining days died of cancer Sunday, friends said Tuesday. Maria Legault had expressed a wish to spend her last days with her family on German soil. She flew here with her husband, Bgt. Albert L. Legault of Elma, Wash., from McChord Air Force Base. Air Force authorities snipped red tape and granted the sergeant 60 days leave to accompany his strick en wife. Legault met his wife while sta tioned inTJermany in 1946. They married two years later and went to the United States. RENOI'S SON DIES PARIS Wt Pierre Renoir. 6, French actor and son of the noted landscape artist Pierre Auguste Re noir, died Tuesday, KIDNEYS' MUST REMOVE EXCESS WASTE NefKtnrbaekaeht.lottof ppndnerKT neanacnet mna iEinia mar m qui io iiow down f kidney function. Doctor air good kidney function rery Important to good health. When aome everyday condition, audi aa atreaa and etraJn, causae thia ini portent function to alow down. manrfolkaautrernar ting backache feel mltcrahle. Minor blad oe ier Irritatiena due to cold or wrong diet may cause gettln g up n Ighta or frequent pasfia gee. Don t neglect your kidneys If theie condi tlona bother you. Try Doan'a Pllln-a mild diuretic Uaed atieeeeafully by mllllona for over 60 years, Tt'a amazing how many time Doan'a give happy relief from thexe dlseom forte-help thellmtleeof kldneytnbea andflU ten flush out waete. Get Doan'a TUU today. t By Jimmy Hatlo Immigrant Not Disease Cause OTTAWA l.fl Big, blond Willi Bruentjen, an immigrant German farmhand, flies back to Vancouver, B. C. Tuesdav nlchL with 1.V1 In . fdgc that he didn't bring- Canada's , current outbreak of foot and mouth But the mystery of the acourse which struck in Saskatchewan and brought turmoil to Canada's live stock and meat Industries still was unsolved. Bruentjen got new boots, sweater and pants to replace those used 'n tne isooratory tests, besides the j $50 paid him for time spent at the It broke out before his departure. Escaped Convict Captured Again SALEM Wl A trusty who j walked away from the state prison ; rarm a weex ago was caught won- ' day In Pendleton, Warden Virgil O'Malley said the convict, Walter Cullen, S3, was picked un bv tlmtliu Cnuniv sheriff's denutles. Cullen was sent to prison In 1948, ON REFRIGERATORS AT FYOCK'S! Model NCS8 G.E. Deluxe (5)95 Thii ii real vlu in refrigeration! Model NCS8 shown above it rated the beit in refrigeration by an unbiased laboratory's latest report. BUY FYOCGC Kf llcnvMiN We sometimes hear the rxpros' alon, "As sure as sunrlao and new day," and seem to Irel that uotlilnu Is much more certain. However, with the r ec e n t ad vances In airplane speeds, the case of the hypothetical around-the- world fiver who could enlov noon of a alnirle day for 34 hours, norms about capnule of arcoiniillshmnt as tar s speed Is concerned. The fuel sunplv for a non-ston flight might still be a bit vexing. Let us assume thut our nvlutor leaves 1-ondou at noon on March IS and flies duo west at 090 mllen per hour,, thus offsetting the ap parent westward motion of old Sol and keening this luminous body constantly In the noon position. By the sun, his lime Is not nlmiuilng: bv his watch, 11 is. When the latter reads 1 p.m., he sets It back an hour .lust as we (.0 on west-bound trains when en tering another time tone so that sun and tlmepleco may anreo ap proximately. After 24' hours our aviator Is OVERHAUL YOUR CAR MOTOR NOW.. PAY LATER! OUR SPECIAL complete overhaul WE WILL: lB...n ''"V . r..i.i v.W ci "''" scksr oerforrnea f-hevroim P""Ji ASHLEY CHEVROLET 410 So. 6th MODEL NCS8 - 8.2 Cubic Feet Spacemaker Compare if you can! NOW -Easiest Terms in Town! Call FYOQK'S Today: (pjuudi Abo VP again over London. During alt Ilia Journey It lias been noon to him. No dnv ended: no new one has Marled. Tie wonden what (lav It Is. If still March 16, why ran he not continue forever this globc-rlmltiK Journey and thus heat out "lime In Its Might." Perhaps all of us shoutl take to the air and avoid future birthday celebrations. Is this the secret of perpetual youth? Had our aviator understood world lime, he would, despite continuous noon, pick up March Id at the International dale line hull way around the world from London, Karh new (lav begins at this line. II runs from the north to Ihe south pale, with a few convenient Jutin, passing a little east of New Zea land. Westward moving ships add 34 hours la their calendars when croiMni; It. Just belore the line is reached. Ihe lime may be II a.m., Mmi'li in. Ton jnlmites later II will be 11:10 a.m., March It. Ships HOlim east subtract day. Complications could result. Those assembling for Sunday religious Plit.a Dliiflye' H'"u Quarts II P, o $7750 U tU aW at. for a Full 8.2 cu. ft. G.E. SPACEMAKER REFRIGERATOR STANDARD. 30 MORE FOOD STORAGE THAN OLDER MODELS Ph. 2-2518 or 2-2519 services might find most of It tak ing place on Monday, Those pronie sil a a,iimiliious shipboard Clirl mas. dinner starting exactly at IV p.m., December 3n, might lore out entirely; or get two If traveling the other (lUcotlun. Solar eclipses sometime end the day belore they begin due til the ahsdow's crossing Ihe date Una from west lo east, Our afternoon pupera often relate events which have already taken place In Japan the following day. lllatih day lasts 48 hours. March lR begins at midnight n the dale line, and an hour later each lit degrees westward. Alter 34 hours It Is lust starling a fool east of this line. Another 34 hours must pats before this position (era March 16. Yes, It's "tailor made" fit you when ynu Insure wlllt Hans Nor land, 627 Tine HI. 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