Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 19, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    HERALD AND NKWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, inf2
PAGE SIX
FRANK JENKINS
alitor
BILL JENKINS
ManaRlng Editor
Cntercd s second class mattor at Hie post office of Klamath Fills, Ore.,
on August 20, 1906, under act ol Congress, March S. 1878
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS
Die AMSoclated Presj Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication
I si! the local news printed in tlus newspaper as well as all AP news.
By Mail
SUBSCRIPTION RATf.S
6 months $0.50 By M; il
year Ml. 00
1
By BILL JENKINS
The Ouinness people are making
It hard on the American public.
In several of the national niaga
lines they are running full pane
ads. Which is all well and good.
But the subject of the ads runs
along the lines that Ouinness is
the thing to take along with a
steak dinner. And In three colors
and black are pictures of team
ing, succulent, mouth - watering
steaks. Everything you can imag
ineChateaubriand, tournedos. ten
derloin, rump, sirloin, Porterhouse
and filet mignon.
While being extremely fond of
Guinness I find that the advertise
ment tends to make me want a
steak much more than a glass of
nut brown ale.
And of course one doesn't just
lightly say that one will have a
steak any more. There are certain
preparations the trip to the bank
to be financed, the furtive trip to
the "certain little place" where
you can supposedly buy the best
of aged and tender steak, the call
ing in of friends to witness this
acrifice to human greed . . .
The condemned reader imagined
a hearty meal.
Offices are fascinating places.
So much going on all the time
to see and do.
There really Isn't anything more
intriguing than visiting a half doz
en establishments and watching
various executives, officials, clerks,
stenos end supply room boys take
down information either over the
phone or while talking to someone.
Some people are meticulous and
write down notes as you were
taught to in high school. Headings,
subheadings and sub - paragraphs.
All the information is there.
Others scrawl a reminder word
here or there and let it go at that.
Still others cover page after
page of note paper with scrawled
messages. How they ever decipher
them later is a mvsterv.
And then there is the super type
that just remembers everything
and never forgets. Most people
fondly believe themselves to fall
into this latest category but in
reality fall far short of their goal.
Perhaps the addition of a mem
ory course in our public schools
would be an improvement and a
step in the right direction.
For the past couple of days the
snow on the streets has had ex
actly the right consistency for slid
ing. Small boys, usually followed
by a madly racing dog. appear
suddenly over the crest of a small
hill, take a running leap at the
downhill slope and slide to the bot
tom with shouts of glee. Despite
a lot of other things that's one
sport that hasn't changed since the
days of Tom Sawyer. All it takes
is a bit of surplus energy and a
stout pair of shoes.
Game commission liberation
tankers are on the roads already
hauling millions of yearling trout
to various streams and lakes so
the Ike Waltons will have better
fishing come spring. The fish come
from hatcheries at Roaring River.
Oak Springs. McKenzie, Cedar
Creek and Butte Falls.
49.903 lake trout are being plant
ed in Odell lake. (I wonder why
the odd number? Why not 50.000
even?) Davis lake, well known to
most local anglers, is to get a
batch of 7100 yearling Atlantic
salmon. This Is the first such
plant to be made in the state of
Oregon.
There will be loud cries from a
lot of sportsmen that the program
isn't large enough, that distribution
is unfair and uneoual, that the
plantincs are made at the wrong
time, with the wrong type of fish,
etc. But in the lone haul It will
pav out. and the money derived
from taxes and license fees and
what not will be pretty well spent.
They'll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy Hallo
Horatio x.otjsior swore hep me
r.nVWl -i mas RFROITE HE WAS 40
AHC rWKE IT W THE REST OF H6 LIFE-
oi nvlTV timb to
PLAY LATER. tVE
TOLD M30 XtL
MAKE Aiy STACK
OfTD-nTp I'M 40-
TELL-HE MAOE THAT FIRST MILLION!
WD D MILLION MORE. BUT PIP HE
RETIRE? DUM BE SILLCMJ
LIKE miS-nOISKlNa ALL I
amis u rwn - r
1 NEVER GO MWMERE"- J
K WE NEVER HMVE AM J
PCR-lX- to MIS 11 I
AIAJESTYS 60VERrJAIEMT 1 iTTv I
ME RE-UHPREWP?ED TO I If I ifaJ
SUBDIVIDE AND PEVELOP J f. t g IJ 5 hi"
ALL OP AFRK.PRDVIDlNcj 1 I zZVX?
XX),AT XXIR CXPeNSE, ySy
REMOVE THE PYRAMIDS &
KP THE
It BSSife
1 ...ws
Lobby Control
Issue Slows
WASHINGTON I Indications
Wednesday were that Congress will
do twilling this year to rewrite
key provisions of tho congressional
Lobby Control Act which a special
three-Judge Federal Court deulared
unconstitutional.
Lawmakers who predicted a do
nothing course pointed out the rul
ing utnde public Tuesday is not
final, They hiiUI II may be con
siderable llmo before the .Supreme
Court passes oil the decision.
The three-judge court said the
criminal penalties section and
other vital parts ol the 11)46 Lobby
ing Act were unconstitutional. Its
ruling was in an action Instituted
by the National Association of Man
ufacturers. Tlie court ruled the act did not
adequately dellne grounds for crim
inal prosecution. 11 also struck at
the criminal clause prohibiting con
victed persons from attempting to
influence legislation or appearing
before congressional committees
tor three years.
This penalty, the court said, de
prives convicted persona of their
to petition Congress tinder the First
Amendment.
NEW YORK Ifi She stood. I
a small lady among many taller
men, and in her heart she laughed
because she knew she was taller
than they were.
She was taller than they were
because she had more land. And
in her heart she felt that land
was power, because she trusted
acres more than people. .
Sophistication and recognition
were pretty much new to 64-year-old
Susan Haughian when she
came here on a visit to Manhattan
Island from Montana.
But they weren't as new as she
made out. Well, like any other
stranger in town she kind of hung
back about telling her story. You
know how folks from out of town
are they can't help from be
lieving that the resident rascals
are plain waiting to ambush them
and their dreams.
Well. I am a local yokel and I
sure did waylay this country girl
on her first sustained visit to the
big city. She was fun to squire
around, and this was her story:
She was one of 16 children
bom in Ireland, and naturally she
Br DEB ADDISON
You've all heard about Paul Bun
Jrn's Winter of the Big Blue Snow.
You've heard old timers tell about
happenings In the winter of '16-'17.
Some of you will remember well
the tough winter In the middle
'30s. All remember the hard win
ters two and three years ago.
All of these winters brought more
severe weather than this one. There
was one spring, 10-15 years ago,
when it snowed every day for the
first 20 days of May.
But that's not all the story.
This winter always will be re
membered as the Long Bitter Win
ter of the Early Fifties.
As far as the "long" goes, no
one can remember anything like it.
From the time the snow came in
1st j November there just hasn't
been any let up. It never has been
too tough, but it's just been steady
winter, day in, day out. Period.
Now, with spring here yes even
the almanac says that tomorrow Is
the first day of spring, and the
sun does stay up longer whether
you can see it or not the weather
still is winter.
As far as the "bitter" goes, that's
something else again.
There's the bitter realization this
winter by some people that we've
been had. We're thinking of the
bloody stalemate in Korea; of the
bubbling over of crime and corrup
tion in the government in Washing
ton and in its tenacles throughout
the land: of the cancerous growth
of government agencies and its re
sultant sapping of our strength
through taxes.
But following every long, bitter
winter there must be a spring.
There are a couple of signs on the
horizon.
One Is, that despite every action
of the government to the contrary,
the Federal Reserve Board's vic
tory over the Treasury Department
(no longer forced to buy up
all government paper to keep it at
par) has resulted in an influence
toward the reversal of inflation.
The other is that General Eisen
hower, a man of honor and cour
age who has the respect of most ail
Americans, has said that, if chosen
he will run for president.
old, worn-out water pipe." Then,
they not only pull out the old one,
but pull in a brand new shiny vein
to take its place.
And though the passing motorists
suffer some from the incisions in
the pavement until they're healed,
they're not nearly as painful as the
incisions in the human leg.
settled ovor here In a small cozv
place like Montana. It reminded
her of home It was so much
bigger. You have to know the
people from the cold country to
understand her land hunger.
She and her man Dan. his name
was started with 40 acres where
that was an apology and a pos
sibility. The family did a lot of pioneer
ing way out west where the wind
blows free and the animals graze
when they can. Susan is pretty
proud of Dan for providing her
with the first house in her life
time that had hot and cold run
ning water and the local defini
tion of central heullng.
There also were five sons Bnd
five daughters he gave her. Of
course it is hard to pick among
children in Montana or your town.
But I don't think Susan will ever
forget her sixth child, now known
also as Susnn and no more her
favorite than some of the others
today.
Dan knew of course he couldn't
get a doctor they are a long
way off in Montana, and the
country isn't shrinking. Susan
spread a rug on the cold floor
when the pains came upon her
and had a normal birth and a
fine daughter all alone. Her othor
children waited ill another room.
She cut the cord of binh and
blew warm breath upon the cold
frame of her newborn babe.
The neighbor woman that Dan
brought said with tho exultation
o till women:
"I knew you would do It. I knew
you would."
Dun went Into another room he
was a strong man and went.
I In 1031 Dan gave up his long
I struggle against the weather and;
I the land and died. He left Susan ;
i a widow with ten children and
I about S20.000 in debts.
"Nobody sent me a single bill."
i she recalls. "And. of course, they !
I didn't really have to."
How about today? Well, the bank
' er is ready to talk to Susan any
i time, bnck there in any town near
I Miles City, she's got the ball
I money ready for her herders when
i they come Into town after six
.months or so in the hills.
Oh. maybe there's 1.600 cattle
or so now. and say 2.300 ewes
! and 1.400 lambs. But how about
I that spreading patch of Montana
j she controls?
I "Well, of course now they are
looking for oil that way out
i there." said Susan cautiously.
"You know, I Just have no respect
' for people who fib. I don't respect
i them at all. I suppose maybe we
: own or lease about 80,000 to 100.
jOOO arrea or more. And some
! beyond that."
I P.i use.
"But it was Dan first and then
i the children who are responsible
for" sa'd Susnn earnestly, the
little old lady In broken spectacles,
i Somebody broke them by bumping
Into her since she came here.
She said that, city ways aside,
i she had been well-treated on Man-
hattnn Island which Is considerable
j; smaller than 100.000 acres, which
is more than 150 square miles.
"Of course, the land here is
mora valuable." she said politely.
Groups Study
Pelton Dam
PORTLAND Wl Experts re
presenting the State Fish Commis
sion and the Portland General
Klrctric Company will compile
facts relating to the effect the
proposrd, Pelton Dam would have
on fish runs in the Deschutes and
Metollus Rivers, i
Officials of the two groups met
Tuesday In an cllort to Iron out
their differences on the proposrd
power project.
The commission said the dam
would reduce or eliminate salmon
runs In the Lower Columbia River.
1'UE. which has been licensed by
the Federal Power Commission to
build the dam. denied this. PGK
officials said related hatchery con
struction, for which they have
ollered to pay sIOO.000 annually,
would Increase salmon runs.
The Fish Commission said It
would cost $205,000 annually to
maintain adequate hatchery faci
lities. The slate Jlydro-Flectrlc Com
mission, which favors the dam,
directed PCiK to reach a setile
ment with the Fish Commission
wlihin 30 days if a state permit
for the dam Is to be granted.
prrrrmiTJTii m rirnnrmrnfimrnmrmiTo
(f H t a ii Hiiiinllltlllllllllllllllllllll O.H.M.8.IXIU3
OATIIl ltl l) TONK1IIT
We're gathered tonight In our well
reiiiemorrcd home
Our limits and our spirits are
guy.
There's fragrant anlfla of lite cof
fee and the pie
And we know there's chicken on
the way.
Our hearts turn back to the little
country town
We romped through in tlnys now
long past,
We havo seen those times when
Tetz Named
OEAPrexy
PORTLAND Ml Henry TVlr.
ot Independence Tursduy was
elected president of the Orrgon
Education Association.
Other ofllrers namrd at thr
rducutors' convention here Includr
Vera I'arrott, Hood Itlver, vice
president: trustees Mrs. Antnnla
Crater, Nrwberg: Keith tloldham
inrr, Dilution: Harold lluliinan,
Hums: Kdwuid Elliott. Uiimttllu,
and Gilbert Shearer. West Llmi
Ai'iiiiiiiciu.i for and against a
sliitesiippnrled four-year college
lor Portland were aired un a pnni'l
program. George Kvcy. Portland,
pointed out that more than one
third of tlie stale's population was
concentrated in the city and Us
suburbs. Mrs, William KlrUrr said
she thought adult rducutlon should
be stressed.
Opposing the prugrum were Dr.
Waller Glersbach, president of
Pacific University and Dr. Richard
Steiner. Unltarluii pastor. Glers
bach said another stair achool
would Increase tile trend to "slate
Ism." Hlclnrr sulci there already
are loo many mediocre colleges.
the things were looking down
But we've intiila Kliiinalli miiiia
proud ul h"t.
Ulng nur words, my lady, Ilia weep
ing lime In o'er:
So i.lmi utir song lor tlie dear
old Klaiiialh home,
For the old time liiriidslilp funned
of yore.
We meet no nioie hy (lie brldgn
across the slrralu
The wild birds, (ho lulls and the
shore:
The Lakrsltle Inn serum a sort of
ha.y dream,
Where II stood by the old brick
store.
When the Utile old church stood a
guardian on' the hill
A polntlng our pathway to the
right
Way thai hand we found led the
Pilgrims (inward still,
When we bid our Klamath homo
goodnight.
(Thin verse was written over
35 years ai. I'. I llnrlh 1VI
Irlt. uhn runtrlhlllrd II to the
I'ueta Corner, y he dnetu't
know who wrote It, hut it serins
la fit the tune of My Old Ken
tucky Home. I il note.)
I'ltllCNDS
My llrrtlia Lund
I Dedicated to Itutli)
'Hie treiiMires we hold so llglillv,
The Jewels of friendship fair,
l ove s fires burn so In liihilv
As ihe gems reflect lights rare
In troubled times we are showered
With sparks from Ihe lire's glow
And our hriirts are gladdened Im-
nieasuretihlv
Because of the friends we know.
More Jap Tax
Offices Bombed
Bookies Cleared
In Vancouver
VANCOUVKIl, B. C. i.fl All
3ft lierMI11 Bl'l'llveil nf Pnll.nl,l.
n,l?YhJT hn0rrrt "o. i' " M.000.000...yer Ink.
S ject aX. hV7,.. ihi oZ,t few ,u,'m'' rckrl "' Vancouver were
direct action In Japan the past few oum, Uuwccnl wa,iY ,,,
three Japanese tax olflres-lnl -,'"e M "r" nnl "ian
Yokosuka. Yokohama and Kawa-l'hree ol them publishers or dls
sakl were hit by home-made
tire bombs.
The latest attack occurreil M
Yokosuka, Japanese port for Amer
ican warships, but alert tax work
U Million ol racing Information
were acqulltcd bv an assl.e court
jury.
E. Massle White, aliened to have
been the "kingpin" of what the
ers smothered the flames before ICrown called a mgiintlc i-onsplr.
serious damage occurred. aev operating here between D4l
1 1 and 1051, told reporters lie didnl
liana Norland Hre Insuranre. Ulan to attempt to restore hn
Thone 1-1515. tracing wire servlre from Ihe U. ft.
lodklng around with no air of
real conviction at the nearest sky
scraper and added" absent mind
edly: "'you know, I once saw a cow
wrap her legs around her calf to
keep it from freezing. I believe
in nature. Take our sheep. I feel
it we take care ot our sheep they
will take care of us."
Medical science has done some
wonderful things, to put spring back
in a man's heart and spring in his
legs. We're thinking particularly of
the surgeon's deftness In the new
operation to remove varicose veins.
With a few minor incisions along
the limb, from thigh to toes, the
old, worn-out vein is removed, and
the patient is ready to dance again.
It works about the same as a rob
in pulling a worm from the soil
we re told.
Wonderful as these surgeons are.
they could take a lesson from Glenn
Bowen's Oregon Water Corporation
crews.
These boys make an Incision in
the pavement at either end of an
charles of the ritz
I iau.
With ust a few drops and one sweep of your
fingers . . . your skin is covered with a satiny glow of delicale
- color (hiding all the little defects, too). Comes in seven
flattering "natural" complexion shades . , , you'll love if
becouse It's even more effective and certainly
more convenient than any make-up lotion you've
ever used. $3 the bottle (plus lax)
' Cosmetics Street Floor
I
Same size bottles,.
K IK EVERY OUNCE OF
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vv f:n or enn'sons use more tomatoes. ..California
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S j This richer tomato "body" absorbs and
pK holds more sugar and spice, sparkling
make-up I rft ' fK vincSar' finc scasonihS- That's wh?
. I JJCtltllSOtlS ' 7 oVrv Dcnnison's tastes better... and has more
lotion I -'- .n.is... kV. MjfZZx . . ......... r,....
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