HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON SATURDAY. MARCH 22, U)A3 They'll Do It Every Time "- By Jimmy llatlo 2tS,lrJPeEC)Tr)CRE'S NO PUCE LIKE HOME 'AS THE FELU SEZ-fHOrVEVER, THE FELU WHO 54IC7 IT MT CHEDCMR ) FRCM Trt HOSPITAL." FRANK JENKINS Editor BILL JENKINS Managing Editor Entered ai second class matter at the post office of Klamath Falls, Ore., on August 20, 1906, under act of Congress, March I, 1879 MEMBER8 OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication of til the local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news. ow' j",: oil IFirSONLy KKsT HE NEEDS i "nr CAN'T Hfc SUBSCRIPTION RATES S months 16.50 By Mall ... By Mall year ill.OO PAOBTOUR T3&V WH ST4RTEO ID MVS .Ev&Ef?El h- wiiexxiuwe.. J J'Cui i 7 nrr?5r--. WATCH THAT THE WORK- Y "but if oU r'r-d ,TfI yfJz t'AWiH Pvm the wmmm 1 ViA L . II .-. . .. ...,..1 . -v, ....... ,..J.-.aa..JwJaAa...to.aati - By BILL JENKINS Sometimes It can be hard to live up to what we like to refer to as our Ideals. I'm suffering from that right now. Like Voltaire who once said he didn't agree -with the chap but would defend with his life his (the chappies') right to say It. I defend the right of the writers to write and the publishers to publish the books they do today. All part of a free press. But I can't agree with their choice. I refer to the recent trend away from good wholesome whodunits that has sprung up among our budding authors. used to be iin the good old days) you could go down to Uie magazine stand and iind halt a dozen fresh and gory murder mys teries. Now you look over Uie same shelves and find that the brain teasers are mostly reprints of old books and all the new ma terial runs to the love story type, "lyivo Ammir the Havstacks. One Night Stand, city 01 wve. nucn Hike to Romance, She Wanted IfWP Ptl " These may be all well and good and no doubt will sell well. Other wise they wouldu't be on the nheives. . . . But I find it hard not to shed a nostalgic tear for the good old tiays when men were men and left their women to co off and face sudden dealh via the gun, knife. drowning, torture, cagea apes ana what not that the blood and gore boys had been feeding us for so many years. What happened to the Thin Man? Where has Jimmy Valentine gone? 'Are there to be no more Raffles In our literary boundaries? Even the red-blooded and virile writers of the present day have slowed down. Mickey Spillane has given his Mike Hammer a rest for some months now (not that the guy didn't need it) and there has not been a real honest-to-goodness chilling shocker for a Ions time. If you don't like the romance stories you can always turn, of course, to the historical novel but these are so heavily dusted with fiction as to make them almost unbearable. Or they are direct steals from the master pieces of a bygone age. You know you've read it before but keep on going to see what new angle the author will work out to ease his way through he treacherous rapids of the pla giarism laws. The same kind of pap turned out for those thin-minded people who haven't the energy or the intelli gence to choose their own reading but belong to book clubs and sub scribe to the Readers Digest and allow their minds to be packed with the opinions, prejudices and beliefs of another. (They don't even know if the editor is a man of intelligence, character and knowledge or not. All they care about is reading something they can quote at a cocktail party with out having to study to get It.) Anyway, let's bring back the whodunit. In this world of strife and pain there must be some re lease. And it's not to be found in the arms of a literary roue or along the paths of a distorted and twisted historical monstrosity. If you'll bring back our mystery stories and restore the vitality and gristle they used to have, you'll succeed also In bringing American literature back up to a level where it belongs. We've let ourselves be" led Into every pitfall that man can devise to date, but, please, let's not let our nation down by bastardizing the written word. There is a high er aim in writing than the mere fact of a few cents a word paid by the publisher. The so-called "better books" that Various clubs review and that you quote with pride are mostly a lot of high-minded hogwash with little or no meaning. The serious and studious works turned out by hon est authors go unheeded because the heroine, if any, turns out to be flat chested. But in the good old mystery story you have a solid foundation from which to launch greater ef forts. Let's bring back the whodunit! Notice a story In the paper yes terday that the legislators are talk $cumA ABC's WASHINGTON Wl The pro fessional politicians must be badly confused. Life was comparatively simple until the primary election in New Hampshire and Minnesota. Go around and meet the people, shake hands with them, and get on the TV screens in their living rooms so you can get your Ideas across to them. They seemed like three obvious and wonderful ways of getting votes. And maybe they are. But the results in New Hampshire and Minnesota don't prove it. At the same time they don't disprove it. The uncertainty of all this must be a hardship on any politician who'd like an easy formula. General Eisenhower, whose TV appearances have been few and far between, who stayed in Europe where he didn't meet the local lieople, and who never shook a local hand trounced Sen. Taft in New Hampshire and far-outdistanced him in Minnesota where the voters had to write in the names of both men. Yet Taft has probably made more TV appearances In the past few years, and particularly In the pnst year, than any office-seeker in the country. He spoke and shook hands all over New Hampshire. He stayed out of Minnesota. The Taft people shrugged off Elsenhower's New Hampshire suc cess, where the state political ma chine was backing him, and they expressed satisfaction nt Tr.'t's ing about holding a meeting to dis cuss weather control. What la weather control? New one on me. If man can control the weather who is the dirty so and so that controlled all the snow for us this winter? I've always regarded weather as one of the great cosmic mysteries controlled by gods higher and mightier than mere man. And now the legislature wants to take It over. How ridiculous can man get? I'm not gonna mention spring again, honest, but if I did it might be to mourn another loss. The stub tailed gopher. Over the years as aerlculture grew and grew the poor little old gopher (there went a lot of friend ships with farmers) tossed in the towel and went over the Oreat Di vide. There was never a sDort that had more appeal to the average man than picking a good meadow on a warm and snrinelike dav and shooting gophers. You hunkered down in a field of sweet-smelling clover, took a good resyt with your trusty shootln' Iron, scanned fne area with a Dair of classes until you found your squirrel and then aiunea wnanging way at him. Nice clean sport, helpful to everyone out me gopher. Lot more fun than sitting around a smoky tavern and shooting pool. But there aren't gophers left to shoot. It;s a sad old world, 'alnt it? Someone walked in this office re cently and left a handful of those G-E wild west show cutouts lying around. Yesten '.ay your editor took the bull by the horns (no mean feat if you've never tried it) and attempted to prove that he had at least the ability if not the brains of a ten-year-old child. Five hours later thirty two of the sixty-five odd pieces were assem bled. Horses, mules, cowboys, a stagecoach (with wheels that turn and a four horse team) an Indian tepee, a cowgirl and a scene de picting a hunter running down a brace of buffalo. It's true what they say. Any child can assemble this. Any child, that is, who has a college degree, a masters from MIT and a father who is a civil engineer. But it serves to pass the time. And proved to the customers that all editors eventually come to cut ting out paper dolls. T feel a little better about not getting things done. Last fall, a few days before the hunting season opened I took a shotgun down to Carl Schubert to have some work done on it. Rib was busted loose, a suspicious rat tle somewhere down in the works, etc. Told Carl I didn't need it until the season opened but had to have it by then. The next thing I knew it was this week and I was talking to Carl one day. Suddenly remembered the shotgun and my demand to nave it out not later than last October. Started to apologize to Carl and what did I find out? He hasn't finished the gun yet, either. So I guess Carl knows me bet ter than I know myself. Of course, had I sons down there two days later the gun would have been finished. Carl's too good a gunsmith to let that slip up on him. But it must prove something or other. Like maybe that people are prone to forget things? Hank Semon Is packing around a fascinating little clipping from a Portland paper. An ad offering a sea-going boat for hire for a year or longer. After reading it yesterday we de cided to take the owner uo on his offer and shove off for a few months at sea. Only two arguments over the thing. Hank wants to go to Alaska. I want to go the the South Seas. If we can reach a settlement on that score there will be only one small hurdle to surmount. Anybody got any money lying around they don't need? Tlteuifoju) showing in Minnesota although El senhower ran far ahead of him. The Elsenhower people, of course, piayeo up ineir victory in i both states for all it was worth I and, considering the attention giv en the victory, it seems to be worth plenty. The only other place where It seemed the people could express their feelings about the two men was In New Jersey in a direct preference primary but now Taft has withdrawn there and says he won't campaign. This will cloud up the vote there. But if any politician Is drawing a lesson from the Taft-Elsenhower results, Senator Estes Kefauver rises to haunt them because Ke fauver in a write in vote In Minne sota and a direct preference in New Hampshire ran far ahead of President Truman. President Truman did Just what. Elsenhower did: He stayed away from New Hampshire and Minne sota and never shook a hand in either place. , Kefauver trooped all over New Hampshire, sticking out his hand whenever he could to strangers. saying "I'm Estes Kefauver, Ma'am. I'm running for President and I'd like your support." While the state Rpniihliran mo. chine backed the victorious Eisen hower in New Hampshire, the slate Democratic machine backed the President against Kefauver NEW YORK tf Space is no longer a matter of distance. To conquer the gap between us and the moon is now a matter of money, relatively no more expen sive for the American nation todav than it was for a shopgirl a genera tion ago to gamble her year's sav ings on a voyage to Bermuda. They say they can reach the moon and they will. ihe age of the "rocketeers" has changed all our standards. Nobody any longer really knows what space and time are, except by the old measures of how far the heart you want to be with is from you Biid how long it takes to reach here. But space and time are words the scientists use to measure the universe. And they are shrinking that universe like a drying apple. They are conquering the old barriers of time and space, but whether they are getting closer to the heart's desire of the world remains to be seen. Can I tell you of two personal adventures in time and space to point my meaning? When I was a boy, the biggest voyage I remember in space was a wintry 45-mile trio with my uncle. It was in a weather-cracked ism glassed, model T Ford steering across the vaguely-charted, muddy landscape between Kansas City and Lexington, Mo., my father's birth place. Our destination was known,- but our route was a gamble. Our vehicle, sturdiest their known, was still a doubt. But it held up. The tires didn't, but they could be blown up again. We didn't think anytlunz on lour wheels in inose days could go that far across those mud tracks in mat temperature. It wasn't until I saw Korea that I knew God gave men colder days. But I still remember the warm sense of victory when the beaten little car wheeled home. T remembered those 45 miles or conquered Missouri mud again the other day when I sat In a New York restaurant and heard a 39-year-old man tell seriously how he had made plans to ro to the moon. KICKIN' AROUND l jQjy i) V J Uiow CROSS "I'M TRYING TO GIVE TILL IT HURTS, BUT I'M FEELING BETTER ALL THE TIME" who drowned Truman in votes. This completely contradictory situation can only add to the dis may of the professional politicians in search of simple solutions to the vote-getting problem. Add to all this the fact that In the past few years Kefauver un like the seldom TV'd nut still victorious Elsenhower has pro bably been seen on as many living room TV screens, if not more, than Truman. For Kefauver was on TV dally when his Senate committee was investigating crime. It's quite possible that the voters In New Hampshire and Minnesota simply did what came naturally voted lor the man they liked without being Impressed by local speeches, handshakes or TV ap pearances, .So? QaihounA Oil MIRRORS for any room tbo Bomei S5T E. Mln His name was Wernher Von Braun, the German inventor of the deadly V-2 rocket that almost forced Britain to capitulate in the last World War. Von Braun is a tall, blond, blur eyed scientist who now is enlisted on the side of American arms and says he warns to be an American citizen. There is no doubt he is a genius. He has already proved It. His genius Is now devoted to a very simple proposition. He spends his time selling it with the same simple ardor of a young salesman peddling a new vacuum cleaner. He has figured out a wav he can shoot up a rocket some 1,075 miles or so beyond the reach of gravity. He has figured that If he can shoot up twelve of them he can build a doughnut - shaped watchtower holding 36 men who con spy down as they circle the earth every two hours and use Uieir platform through radar to control the world. "An enemy Just couldn't hide any more." he said. "We could call down fire on him wherever he was. If we don't build this space station, the Russians will sooner or later." Von Braun says he can safely get men uo and back from this whirling space station, even rocket them on to an exploratory trip to the moon and return them whole. "It would take only four billion dollars and ten vears to do." he said. "That is only a fraction of the Amelrcan military buduet. Listening to him I had no feeling of doubt that his project could be done. But I had no sense ot victory over space. I only felt depressed. If Von Braun is voted the money he wonts and bold men carry out his nlans successfully, they will have , negated the obstacle of the sky. But when. 30 vears ago. I made a 45-mile trln into the unknown to visit my father's birthplace there was someone we had come far and risked much discomfort to see. waiting at Journey s end. Who s wojting up yonder? Israel Is now exporting marble from quarries unused for almost 2,000 years. The copper blues of ancient' Per sian clay tiles were obtained- by using glazes that were free from lead and aluminum. The world's first peat-burning gas turbine engine has been built and is now operating in uiyaeoanx, Scotland. British scientists have success fully completed a series of tests In which TV was used to help deep-sea divers. Britain now produces about 40 per cent of all the food she con sumes. People DO TOO read small space ads - you are! ' Red Planes Blasted By Sabre Jets SEOUL. KOREA. I. 11 S In! planes outnumbered 3k to 75 hit mrce Communist MIGS In a swirl. lug air battle over Northwest Korea late Friday, cllmnxlnir our of their most successful weeks of ine air war, the U. S. Fifth Air Force reported Saturday. Alter a 30-mlnule butt!, hlch over sinanju American F-86 Snbre jets pilots claimed one Communist MIG-15 probably destroyed and two others damaged. During the week ended Friday U. N. pilots destroyed nine Russian built lighters, probably destroyed three and damaged 36. the Fifth Air Force said. Only four Dlunes of the Fifth Air Force were lost one Inolr combat, two to Red ground fire and one for an unknown reason. . overcast skies Saturday kent most Allied warplanes on the ground and limited the ground I tenting to a few desultory Red probes. "There were about 19 lavrm nf clouds over North Korea, and a mile snow," an Air Force spokes man said. F-84 Thunderlct fighter-bombers made a few close suonort strikes aRainst Red front lino positions on the East Coast. They destroyed bunkers and trenches and three Red-occupied buildings. F-51 Mus tangs of the South Korean Air Force attacked Red rail lines. There were some patrol contacts on the Central Front Frldoy. Hase and overcast limited fighting on the eastern and western flanks of the155-mlle battlcllne. Two Red groups of undetermined strength probed U. N. positions northwest of Chorwon. but the attacks were brief and small. Carrier-based planes and Allied warships hammered both Korean Coasts Friday. Sailor Wins $2000 Suit SEATTLE lifl William Olynvk will get approximately 30 a day for the time he spent chained to ihe rail of the steamshio Clvdc L. Scavey on a trip from Java to Houston, Tex. A Superior Court lury which de liberated less than four hours Friday evening awarded the for mer boatswain J2.000 Instead of the 100,000 he asked. The New Westminster. B.C.. sea men was chained to the rail of the Isthmian Steamship Co. vessel aft er he returned from a trip ashore at Batavla, July 17, 1948. He was kept there until the ship reached nuusion of days later. At Houston he was acaultted of assaulting the captain but convict ed of assaulting Ihe second mate. closing testimony Friday fea tured a deposition from the mail who had been master of the vessel when the chaining took place. He was Sidney Erick Williams, who said he had been afraid Olynyk might "stir up" mutiny. The sole nuroose was for the safety of the ship and crew, "Capt. Williams said In the deposition read to the Jury. The steamship com pany was - defendant In the suit. Printers To Top Pay Spot SALEM (IV) Employees of the printing and publishing industry were the highest paid grouo at $86.47 a week, or 12.39 an hour. Next were logging and mill work ers with a weekly wage of $83.09. Weekly carnine.i for other in. duRtries: Plywood and machinery workers, $81; food products, $03.64; furniture, $5.80; paper products, $78.57; metals $76J6; machinery, $81.23: communications and utili ties, $71.67. The average weekly wage was up $1.57 from January and was $5.77 more than In February, 1951. The average hourly wage was up 11 cents from one year ago to $1.99. Dr. E. M. Causey Pastor BEATING THE MARRIAGE DEADLINE Four American soldiers and their Japanese bridc.i sny "I do" at the U.S. Consulate in Tokyo. More than (500 servicemen paid $'2.:)0 each at six American Consulates in Japan dtirini; the last three days before the deadline to quali fy their wives for entry into the United Slates. Left to riijht: Itii hard Netherctit performs ceremony for Donald L). Kuhn of Itcllf lower, Calif., Raymond II. lirothcrlon of Cos An geles, Joseph Kozloski ,f Oliphanl, l'a., and Iiobert H". Vai ner of Monterey, Va., and their brides. ionaress On Army Engineers African Air Base WASHINGTON i,Vi Conurawtoll nl charges of fraud, waste and in efficiency In building inultl-milllon-dollar airbuses in North Africa brought ft drastic slmkcui) Satur day of Army Engineers who bundled the Job. ' . Secretary of the Army Pace started the action lute Frlduv. Ho also notified private contrac tors working on the huge overalls project that he will suspend or ter minate their cost-plus-ftxed-fee con tracts unless they take prompt remedial action. Chairman Lyndon B. Johnson (D.-Tcx.) of the Senate prepared- Sugar Beet Growers On Losing Side ONTARIO Ore. t.B Sugar beet growers of the Nyssa-Nampa Dis trict took- a hHi million doi.ur beating with Uie announcement Friday that unharvested 1951 beets were not lit to be processed. Some 2,0u0 acres were left un harvested because of weather. About half the acreago is In Mal heur County. The loin I loss Is put at 40,000 Iodh with a gross Income value -ol $500,090. Jed Lewis, manager of the Nyssa-Nampa District lor Amalga mated Suur Company, made the report of rapid deterioration. Lewis said Uie plant had been on a stand-by basis for weeks hop ing that growers would be able to gei Into the Held and speed the beets In for processing while they still could be salvaged. But It's too lute now. he mi id. there Is some question of wheth er the farmers will have to dig them anyway lo prepare their Melds for the 105J crop. Lewis hrU he thought mat probably tills would not be necessary. 'ihere will bo a partial recovery for the growers through federal abai'iliimnrnt payments. Cilen L. Hutchinson, chairman of the Ma - heur County Production and Mar keting Administration. ald the payments would average $15 to $20 an acre. The growers have an Investment of around $70 to $80 an acre In the beets they couldn't get harvested. This pay ment money comes from a process ing lax on sugar refineries. Cause of the harvesting failure was unusually wet weather In Oc tober and November followed bv an early freeze. Crime Group Lingers On OLYMPIA Ifl The on-SKaln-nff- agaln hearings of the Leeislatlve Crime Investigating Commlt'cc were off again Saturday. Committee Chairman Albert D. Rosellinl said the committee wux authorized a new State Supreme Court order to go ahead with crime hearings In Aberdeen Mon- any as planned, but he does not think It will. He said ho thought the hearings should be put off until after the high court can rule on the scope of the committee's authority. The hearings Into crime and cor ruption In Grays Harbor were blocked last week when an Aber deen police officer obtained a rul ing from Thurston County Super ior Judge Charles T. Wright that the committee had no authority tu delve Into vice conditions nl the locnl city and county level of gov ernment. Judge Wright was to have en tered a formal order lo that effect Friday, but Rosellinl obtained a State Supreme Court order pro hibiting him from doing so. The high court will hear argu ments next Frldav as to whether Judge Wright shall be permanent ly enjoined from entering orders Guests Welcomed at FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH North Eiqhrh end Washinqfon , SUNDAY, MARCH 23 9:45 a.m., Come to Sunday School 1 1 :00 a.m., Worship Sermon, "JESUS WILL COME AGAIN" 6:15 p.m., Training Union, Showing Reliqion$ Film 7:30 p.m., Worship, "CHRISTIAN FIRST PRINCIPLES" Lowers um ncs Mibrnmmittre. which has been iuvcMlKattllK the Alrlcall pl'uiivl for months, announced the Penta gon orders alter rcrolvtng a let ter nun Pare outlining llirni. "Tills should help Ihe Army, the Air Force and especially Hie tax payers." Johnson said. "It titket steps that should have been taken a long lime ago." "This Is ti warning In this grcup of builders and till other govern ment cnnlnii'lnrs in this nation," the senator Mild. "We don't Intend to tolerate Incompetence on 'con tracts if It Involves a suck ol col fee or a million dollars." Johnson said h's watchdog mm mlttre will continue Its Inves'.iita tlon and public healing uu the bases. Pace promised that the Armv will take energetic action "to re cover all -money" shown by con gressional hearings "lo have been improperly spent." Ihe ru.sh order on Ihe top- 7 . ... . ...LT . . fr . fclhlMlk'igtKM-tf A V '4" hiV It e mM : . ' . ypvte y s. BORDER BLOCKADE Trucks line tip for almost two miles along U.S. Route 20 at Canncatit, O., as the drivers halted in protest against Pennsylvania's 45,000-potintl truck weight limit law. The blockade began at midnight and scenes like this were re-enacted at many points along the Pennsylvania border. Apprentice 'Plans To Be Talked SALEM, Training of appren tices for The Dalles Dam and Blue Sox Open Drills T AWlTVTiru Tlin ninn Knv r.nn. tral Oregon League baseball cham pions, open practice for the lob'i season intioors lue.soay. Mnnnnn- Html, Mnmor Is nslrltlo all candidates to report to the i,HKevicw jiign Bcnuoi gym r.ou p. m. blocking the committee's hearings Into locnl crime. Over Waste ! srcrrl sir bairn wan drcltlrd upon shortly after North Korean Com muiii.sls Invaded South Korea in June, IIIM. The Army engineers were put In cliai'Kc of Ihe project and Ihry asknl five lui uf c-outriu ting fli mi to form a combine, Alias Construe tors, to rush completion ol live bases. Speed was the prlmo con sideration. Original cost estimates of 'JfiO or 300 million dollars now have soared to 455 millions as sitrs have been switched 'everal time' The secretary said he hud di rected 1,1. (len. Lewis A. Pic k, cllli f ol Army Knglneers, lo relieve tho two riiKHieer ofllcrrs now In clmnin in Africa, Col. Clrorge Derby and Lt. Col. Leonard llusemau. He said ling Gen llorvell I". Walsh will "command n nrw en gineer division in the Mediterran ean area, and the Moroccan air bases will come under Ills super vision." -fl fliidge projects will be discussed at The Dalles Monday bv llie Stale Apprenticeship Council. Council officials reported Friday there are 2,290 apprentices In the slnte. Most of thorn l.uu lire In Portland. There nro 1110 in Ktigene and 110 in Halcm. )7h ' I'D Llk'E 10 SEE SOMETHING IN A Wtl Wfr KWt ' tstf? ' . IV J J IIU