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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1952)
SATURDAY, JUNK 2B, 1958 liKRALD AND NKWS. KLAMATH FALLS, ORKGON PAGE FOUR 5 eralb atv5 S eUr FRANK JENKINS Bdltor Entered at second class matter at th post office of Klamath Palls, Ore, on August 30. 1906, under act of Congress. March t, 1879 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED FBES8 rht Associated Press la entitled exclusively to the use for publication 'of ai! the local newt printeo In. this newspaper as well as all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BY CARRIER 1 month t month 1 year . . s 1.35 t 6.50 111.00 CAUGHT In tWt)EB : Just to keep things siraighi left repeat the conversation that took place at our breakfast table this morning. It went about like this: "Daddy, are you against Eisen hower? They were wondering, al ter what you wrote the other day." Qee whis, no. I'm FOR Eisen hower. He's one of the great leaders of our time. What's more, he's shown beyond any question of a doubt that he has lots of horse sense and has the knack of getting people to enthusiastically rally be hind him. "Then youre against Tan. I am not. I'm FOR Taft. He's one of the few politicians who's had the guts to stand up for what he thought was right all these Bhw& tBioAAoi More and more it becomes a necessity to speak out against thinking in terms of labels, of thrusting men and issues into neat files. Surely this is a great tempta tion in a time when we are besieged by chaos on every hand. Still it Is a lure we must try to resist. There are reallv no simple men, fitting easily into well-marked categories. We are all a great mix ture driven by complex motives, some of which we may not realize ourselves.- Most of the things we do hare a powerful emotional basis though we always manage to find a rational explanation for our be havior. For example. President Truman today finds himself the champion of many causes with he believes deserve the "liberal" label. But Mr. Truman's personal history makes it thoroughly apparent that in many basic respects he is one of the most conservative of men. Any effort to chacterize the President by a lew simple strokes of the pen is doomed to utter failure. He may have simple tastes, live by what he regards as a simple code, and give others an lmpres aion the yery opposite of a com- Jada Kader Found Guilty PORTLAND W Mrs. Jada Ruder, a pretty 23-year-old mother of two girls. Friday was convicted of manslaughter in the slaying of one of them. She was tried on a charge of first degree murder. But a circuit court jury found her guilty only of manslaughter. Judge Frank J. Lonergan set July 2 for sentencing. The maxi mum penalty is $5,000 fine and 15 years' imprisonment. Her at torneys said they had not yet de cided whether they would appeal Mrs. Kader told police last Jan nary that her youngest daughter Bherrie, S, had , been kidnaped. After prolonged questioning, how ever, she changed her story and led police to the child's body which had been dumped in a water-filled sump. She said she found the child's apparently lifeless body in the basement of her home. Fearing that her other daughter. Vickie. 4, had killed her and would be pun ished for it, Mrs. Kader said she hid the body-and made up the kid naping story. But police said Vickie told them another story of the slaying. They aald Mrs. Kader smothered the little girl to death and then drop ped her into the pit because she cried too much. Vickie, who police said witnessed the slaying, was not permitted to testify at the trial although the district attorney's office wanted her to. The Judge said she was too young. Oregonian Dies To Aid Buddies ' WITH THE U.S. 45TH DIVISION, Korea, I Sgt. 1-C Jerome F. Sears and Cpl. Elmer A. Scott died to save the rest of their platoon from annihilation. The two men purposely drew ene my fire to protect the withdrawal of . their friends from a posi tion overrun recently by Chinese Communists. Sears, of Portland, Ore., was a platoon sergeant, and Scott, of Nunlca, Mich., an assistant squad leader in company BBB of the 180th Infantry Regiment. Survivors of their platoon told the story of the two men's hero ism. "Sergeant Sears was about 200 yards In front of the platoon act ing as forward observer," said Cpl,' Charles L. Tavelle of Charles ton, S.e. "While Chinese artillery and mortar ' came In on us, the Reds , walked right through the smoke, firing burp guns, and over ran our positions on a hill." "Sears and Scott ordered us to withdraw." said Sgt. 1-C Oene O. Hayes, Cleveland, Tenn. "But in stead of doing so themselves, they slipped to the side of the hill and opened fire on the Chinese so as to draw their fire while we pulled back."' Both wounded, Sears and Scott continued to fire on the advancing enemy. Tavelle said when the two men were last seen alive they were fighting hand to hand with a group of Chinese soldiers. After Allied artillery blasted the rldgellne, Hayes and Tavelle led a 15-mnn squad back up the slope with fixed bayonets. The squad drove off the Chinese In a brief fircflght. They found the bodies at Scott and Sears. BILL JENKIN8 Managing Editor 1 month i 6 montlu I 8 10 1 year $16.30 - The ROUNDS ADDISON ; 1 years against all kinds of opposi tion. He's a man of great know ledge and ability; he's morally honest and puts the good of Uie country before everything else. "Then who are you going to vole for?" I'm going to vote for whoever the Republicans nominate. The only thing I'm afraid of Is that the few politicians who are working tooth and nail on each side to get Eisenhower or Taft nominated will create such a furor that people will forget the important thing. The important thing is to get a new president and a new bunch In congress so we won't be ashamed any more of the way our country's being run. plex nature. Yet he Is not a simple man to gauge. Nor is Senator Taft, or General Eisenhower, or Bernard M. Baruch or Charles E. Wilson of General Electric. If we try to dispose of these man mentally by tabbing them as if they were to be tucked into a file cabinet with a sort . of elemental precision, we will only be misled. We cannot measure our public figures, or anyone we know, so easily. By the same token, we cannot waae through the great issues that dominate our present day lives, slapping on labels right and left. So prevalent has this practice be come that some men now are out raged when solutions proposed to particular problems do not fit readily into the categories they have established in their minds. There was a time. Just after World War II, when a lot of people had the juvenile audacity to suggest that anyone who did not favor Henry Wallace for secretary of commerce was thereby an ene my of full employment. The Truman administration now likes to suggest that anybody who doesnt favor FEPC cannot possib ly wish -equality of opportunity for people of all races; that any body who wants to keep the es sence of the Taft-Hartley act is automatically anti-labor; that any body who doesn't like the govern ment's health plan Is in favor of sickness. Now it is just possible that sound-thinking men might devise solutions in these major fields which depart in Important ways from the things symbolized by those celebrated -.labels. Similarly, a good many Republi cans want to make the "Truman Acbeson foreign policy" a term of complete contempt, and to treat with scorn, if not as an out-and-out traitor, anyone who suggests this policy was less than a disaster to the nation. Yet important lea tures of that policy were first en acted by the Republican 80th Con gress, to the high credit of that body. - It is time to say that thinking in labels isn't really thinking at all. It's not even a good substitute. AU that we achieve by this capsule technique is to confuse people, to divert them from the underlying realities, to misinform them about the men and issues they must Judge accurately if they are to govern themselves well. Senate Clears Indian Muddle WASHINGTON I The Senate Appropriations Committee has acted to make clear that it has no objection to individual Indians buy ing land on which they will pay taxes It clarified Its positions hi re porting the Interior Department appropriation measure, passed by the Senate this week and now in conference to compromise House Senate differences. The question arose in connec tion with appropriations for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. That section of the bill Includes lan guage providing "that no part of this appropriation or other tribal funds shall be used for the acquisi tion of land or water rights within Nevada. Oregon, Washington or Wyoming either inside or outside the boundaries of existing reserva tions." An aide of Sen. Cordon (R-Ore), member of the Appropriation Committee, said use of the words "or other tribal funds" had been Interpreted as affecting tribal loan programs, such as that of Oregon's Klamaths, under which Individual Indians borrow money to buy prop erty as well as livestock and other assets. To meet this objection the com mittee added to Its report a stipu lation that the provision was not intended to prohibit acquisition by individual Indians of taxable lands "but is only Intended to prohibit that type of acquisition which would result In removal of lands from tax rolls." Brothers Meet In Net Finals SPOKANE Wl Clyde Knox of Portland met his brother, Clint, of Richland, In the men's singles finals of the Inland Empire Tennis tournament here Saturday. Clyde gained the finals Friday by downing Dick Bailey, Spokane, 8-3, 4-8, 6-4. Clint whipped Les Patten, Spokane, 3-6, 6-0, 8-6. Diane Peterson, of Portland, whipped Salty True, Spokane, 6-2, 6-2, Friday to take the Junior wo men's title. They'll Do It Every Fetlock was so fed up me quit his confining office job for a MAfi'S LIFE ON TVIE BOUNDlNS MAti- PAPER WORK! BAPER VvORKJM ( I QUIT .'! tfA SICK AliO TIRED Ls-fL k W. ' 5a OF BEING CHAINED TO THIS (H A V VC' A?) 6R0B8y LITTLE DESKS I'M ) OvV t- I i "i t-f OT V COIM6 TO seJ SOT A 0O6 J-lVl f1VJ. a lit rtfO 7 ON A LUXURy LINER S wS rx Mt. B Ifj Oh. . (p. Mrs. E. R. B. asks a number ol , questions about kidney stones, j most of which I snau try to answer in this column. One of them, how- ever, will be answered at the beginning, namely: "Are kidney stones hereditary?" The answer to this is that they are not, so far 'as we know. Kidney stones are not really "stones" at all, but consist ol groups of crystals which form Into crysims !cn 10110 rouno or irregularly snuin-u uaua. Tk... in .. mutrlA ihl. kidney which opens Into the ureter i v, otc. "" to the bladder. When stones start down this small nassagewav. they scrape 00 the tender sides of the duct, caus ing soasm and bleeding. It Is this which produces the terrific pain and which frequently blocks the flow of urine and causes It to back up behind the stone.. Kidney stones are most common between the ages of 25 and 40. though they may appear at almost any time. Just why stones should be formed at all Is somewhat un certain. Several possible causes have been suggested. Including chronic infection, deficiencies of certain vitamins and slowing of the circulation in tne nancy. The most probable explanation Month-Old Steel Strike Hits U.S. Industrial Production NEW YORK Ofl Industrial out- I kilowatt hours topped the 6. put sagged under the crushing 834.693,000 reported In the like 1951 weight of a steel shortage In the final week before 1952's midpoint. but business held its psce pretty wen. i Steel strike -losses reached these staggering totals; Nearly a billion dollars worth ol steel products, more than a quart er billion dollars in steel wages, close to a million workers already on strike, idle or about to be laid off Scheduled production cutbacks by j makers of automobiles and auto ' parts, washing machines and other civilian articles, mounted daily. In spite of all this, retail sales volume stayed at a relatively high department store sales topped the like 1951 week the fourth straight time. Bank check trans actions In major cities were great er than a year ago. Record gains In savings account deposits were reported. Economic Indicators like electirc power output and crude oil pro duction also compared favorably. Power production of 7.254,058.000 Korean Solons Get Police Aid PUSAN. Korea ' National police Saturday night liberated 80 Korean national assemblymen from their meeting hah where they bad been imprisoned for S 'u hours by a howling mob. The 600 acmonstralors outside the hall demanded the assembly bow to President Syngman Rhee's demands or dissolve Itself. The police under direct com mand of the home minister- formed double ranks to hold back the Jeering crowd and permit the legislators to leave. One member was a woman. Home Minister Lee Bum 8uk, Rhee's toughest supporter in the cabinet, twice urged the pro-Rhee crowd to calm down. Then he ordered his police into action. The crowd of shouting men and women had blocked all exits from the building. Foreign observers and both foreign and Korean newsmen were permitted to enter and leave the hall during the Incident. Assemblymen who tried to leave were thrown back bodily. One's shirt was ripped. Another was kicked. The crowd included representa tives of provisional assemblies and city and town councils who have supported Knee in his leud with the national assembly. They de manded Interviews with their home district assemblymen. In another development, South Korea announced withdrawal of the 16-day ban on Voice of America broadcasts over the government radio network. Dr. Clarence Ryee. director of the government office of public in formation, explained the programs nao been dropped because of a strongly, anti-government . . . broadcast which contained ex aggerations, distortions and slant ing, one-sided presentations. MIRRORS for for any room In Iho homo! Ill . Mln Time 1 ACT 2.Y00 ASSISTANT YWTcfs 14 NC $jQhdcw however, is that there is some kind of disturbance 111 the excretion 01 ceriaui sans wnicn are oroinaru carried m liquid form In the urine. When stones are being , formed, these crystals are preelp'- lutea oui 01 me urine in soua lurin and gradually become larger and larger. There are at least two singes in the treatment of kidney stones. 111c nisi IS mir w . - The first is lo cure lor tile Inline- uiaie l' uun-i .-.j u,iun.a. i- nnl ,nln In InilVM n tntlV IICI'- manently In the ureler as damage .."J- -."..'-I., me location 01 me sionc can re discovered by proper equipment and the use of the X-ray. II . us Dosslble to assist In the passage of the stone by oiling, or even, suraerv mav be necessary. When , tli nnin I spvpre. the natlent niu.il be given relief, and this involve 1 went on. living costs have risen , The Navajos are held In high the use of pain-klllmg drugs, I I per cent. Thcv reached a peak regard oui here, and anlhropolo somctimes In larxe quantities i last January, dipped a bit . and In gists think the while mun well It Is important to know what j Mav surged up again, almost equal might adopt some aspects ol their fcitiri nf Ktnnes are involved in In the January mark. ,-ttltiirc other words. the chemisfry so , that the doctor can tell which foods should be allowed and which forbidden, since this may help to prevent new stones from torming. Chronic Infections must be treated. Vitamins are sometimes added to the diet. week. Freight carlondmgs of grain and grain products, totaling 65.313 cars, were ins nignest ior any cor- responding week, on record. But total carloadlngs, sharply affected bv the steel shutdown, were only 643.860 cars, against 832.942 a year ago. And soft coal output, rising from the previous week to total 7.850.000 tons, was well below the 10.902,000 of the similar 1951 week. Toll Rises En HeatWave By The Associated Press Cool Canadian breezes brought welcome relief to Northeastern states Saturday but the season's longest heat wave showed little signs of breaking In the Southern half of the country. The death toll from the one-two punch of heat and humidity in the eastern half of the country In the last three days mounted to far above 100. New Jersey alone re ported 54 persons had died from effects of the steady siege of 100 lleriree temperatures. The total throughout the torrid zone was 122. But the cool front which moved Into New Jersey. New York and the New England region gave promise of pleasant weather for the weekend. More of the blistering crop threatening weather of the past several days appeared in prospect for the Southern half of the country The hot and sticky weather also still dominated large areas. Chicago, after getting cooled olf Thursday, was In the path of the hot, moist front, with a promise of temperatures in the 90s over the weekend. Temoeratures ranged from the 90s to 107. with record marks lor the date In scores of cities In the south. It was 100 or higher In nearly every section of Alabama. Crop damage Increased. No rain was ex pected in the parched state for at least five days. In Bamberg, S.C., It was 107, marking the fifth consecutive day of readings above luu. The 103.6 at Wilmington, N.C., was an all-time record and the 105 at Columbus, S C., was a record for the date. The hot spell wan the worst In Virginia In eight years. Atlanta sweltered throughout the night with the mercury at 85 after hitting 100 Friday. Asphalt paving buckled in some part of the city. There was no relief In Washing ton D.C., where five persons have died from effects of the wilting heat In the last three days. GUARD CAMP FORT LEWI8 I 8ome 6,400 Washington and Oregon National Guardsmen of the 41l Division completed two weeks of summer training here Friday, the division headquarters announced. They end ed the encampment with a pay day. Are you in trouble? NEED A FRIEND? CALL 5473 By Jimmy Hatlo GUESSED IT-ME'S 3" FWSER.FOUR DECKS BELOW ON THE S.S. DEEPCTTCH WASHINGTON i - In ihe sum- lm,r o( 1950 ,U5t Bter lne bailie (or Korea started, Bernard Buruch ,cim,f l0 Washington mm warned Congress there'd be bad Uittiitlon unless 11 slapped 011 price and wane controls. President Truman wnsn'i im pressed! But Congress was and voied Truman price-wage control power belore the summer was over. The lUO elections were com- , , Trillium rtcln l rtf, nuif-lunpi-v until ' alter the elections. But it takes time to gel muchln- Lrv llko Ihi, III 111.111,1.. I. ivn. - '- "'.,,'. 1,,, " mem s ulr 10 pm a im 01 prices and wuges And by that time living costs nno oegun 10 climb. In the IH months since conlrois The Republicans have dumncd the blame at Truman's door, for k- ... rfin. i tB-,in An,pn In 1950. BU, those controls will end June 30. unless Congress votes to con tinue them. Now the Truman ad num. un-.ii. now ine irumaii u- ministration, a few monlhi before I the 1952 elections, wants them con. S'2S?5 JSC-. -!! I longer. But the House voted Thurs day it was a combination of Re publicans and Southern Democruts lL'hn rilH it a trill nraH,ll,. all controls except wage controls, h voted to keep wage controls. This Isn't the last word, of course, since action bv Congress Isn't final until both houses agree. If the final result Is to end con trols and then prices shoot un. Tru man Isn't likely to overlook during Ihe political campaign Ihe stand the House Republicans took on kill ing price controls. If the final result from both houses permits continuance of price controls, but so badlv cripples them that prices go looping up ward. Truman, who has never been considered a poor politician, will hardlv forget to mention the Republicans. The President seems certain lo veto any final bill that kills price conlrois but keeps waae controls. Most peonle. meaning most voters in the presidential election, work for wages and salaries. A bill that kills price controls but keeps wage controls will provide Truman with a talking point to the most volers particularly organized labor, wnose suonort he has couriea ana wnose ballots he wants for the Democrats In November. Rarinq Flyer Foiled Again HOOD RIVER I Lt. John Hodgkln was prevented bv bnd weather Fridav from attempting to fand his light plane on the top of Mt. Adams near here. Hodgkln. 43. Is the flyer who has landed in lal and In difficulty with Ihe Armv after bringing his plane down In a number of places where planes ordinarily do not land. Once, bv sideslipping, he landed on a vacant lot In a Fresno, Calif., residential district. Later from a Jail cell he told reporters he want ed TO can on a Kiri menu i ii lived across the street. Then In April Of last vear nc landed his Cub on the ton of Mt. Rainier In Northwestern Washing ton He couldn't get the engine started to take off. though, and a reicue crew started up ine moun tain to help him. When they were only an hour away, noagxin goi the plane Into a glide by pushing It down a slope. He landed nt a lower level. That time he was fined S350 and given a six-month sus pended lall sentence. The charge was violation of the regulation which prohibits aircraft landings In Rainier National Park. Frldr-yJ proposed landing on the 12.307-foot peak In Southwestern Washington was arranged bv a sulphur mining concern which owns extensive holdings on the mountain's slopes. Hodgkln's flight, according to sn official of the firm, was to test the feaslbllly of flying miners to these holdings and thus eliminating a long pack trip. He said he didn't know whether Hodgkln would try the landing again. Hl furlough Is over July 8 and Hodgkln wants to visit his home In Selmn. Calif., before re turning to his base. a W' US Has New Immigration Law For First Time WASHINGTON I The nation has a broad new Immigration luw, the first complela redrafting of Immigration and naturalisation statutes since 11111. Congress ap proved It Frldav over the veto of President Truman. It becomes r I (relive In nix months. Immigration officials suld It Is so complicated completely overhauling the Immigration and naturalisation luws It may take litem even longer Hum that to put it lino full operation. It was a sharp rebuff lor me President the flr.it overriding ol veto on inn Inr legislation since IM7 when Conuress nut Die Tall- Hnrllpv Lnw on the itnlutc books over his protests. Truman said Hie new immigra tion luw Is unworthy of the nation's Ideals. He rtmlended H would asp U. 8. leadership for pence. Sen. McCarran iD-Nevl, n co sponsor of the pleasure Willi Hep. Walter iD-l'nl, hailed the velo DtNVKU if - Having trouble I wi.li vouiiiotlii'i'-in l!UV Joe? I iit in, inim tin- Nuviiio o.. ?U i.i T. ti ,,. I you'll hear her coiiilng-aiid you can gel oui ol her way. The Nnviijos started this peculiar custom hundreds ol years ago bc cuuse ol a superstition thai II a son-m-lnw and mother-in-law inert Incc to luce unexpectedly bolh would go blind. They had aiiuther ralher unusual solution lo this old family problem. II a young Indian brave knew a widow Willi 11 n attractive daughter, he would first marry the widow, then the daughter-anil thus avoid having any moiher-ln-law ttouliU at all. All he had to deal with was two wives Simple? Tlie Navajos, long Impoverished on a vasi, arid 10 million-acre teserviilion embracing purls ol four western slftles. are America's lurscst Indian tribe. And Instead of dying out they are liicrrusiiiK Tliey still wenve rugs and enst silver Jewelry tor the tourist trude. But thrv linve a new source of Income today mining uranium lor the uiileliices' mom bombs. They are a prelty well-adjusted people, and some leei uiai ims ii a result 01 ineir uijuiihk.". sanity is very rata anions them. , T-" which- psychiatrists think arises , rhildhoad Insecurity , lr?.l5h. Vndina make Ihe world's best parents." one man said "They i chSn.Pr.eru,r learntr ihr-niKeives and as a result an h i. ..if.rriisnt at the aue , II a child must be punished, he isn't whipped n't whinned. One of his pnrcnis simply throws water on him a .r..i rfiV.rire .. , .mmm the 'V-irmioTv; neonles thev love to take sweat baths followed hv a Plunge into coiu nirr. water Is scar PO Boss Asks Rate Increase WASHINGTON '1 Postmaster General Donaldson asked Ihe Inter state Commerce Commission Fri day to grant another general ad innr in Darcel Dost rates. The petition did not say Just now mum win or uj ., an Increase. It said merely that fourth class mall servlcc-or parcel post Is not paying Its way. desplle a general 25 per cent increase In pnrccl post rales granted by the commission last year. The higher rales became effec tive last Oct. 1. That rate revision hiked the loinl charges for packaged mall by 100 million dollars a your. Kimball Proud Of Aircraft WASHINGTON I - B"1" of the Navy Kimball says the Navy now has about seven planes com ing Into production that are bel ter than Russia's highly publicized MIO Jet fighter. The Senate Appropriations Com mittee made public Thursday this testimony by Kimball at a closed hearing on tne un -mcnt money bill for the next fis cal yenr. Kimball loeniiuru -" ""-. among the new ones as the r-J. coming Into production this fall, the F-9-F, the F-10-F, which has a fixed wing to take off .and land and a swept wing when It gets In the air; the F-3-H; and ' a very fine seaplane," which he dldn t describe beyond saying It Is be ing made In San Diego. BOBCO PAYING INC. Phone 8789 or Joyhowk Petroleum t 6788 DRIVEWAYS PAVED or RESURFACED With Aiphqlr Block Top F.H.A, TERMS FREE ESTIMATES GLADLY Rafter MD Ranch Summer Camp for Boyi and Girli Owned and eparalsd by Dr. and Mrs. M. W. Pools and Robsrr Molllo. Saaioni July 27 August 31. Enrellmtnt limited. Riding Swim mlng Fishing Ovarnlghf Pock Trlpi. Mam bor American Camping Auoclotlsn. Phent 3363, 4613 Summara Lena, in 154 Years overturn as In tin Interest of Hit milieu's wcHiirc. Among other things,, the hill re tains the present ayslem of Immi gration Quotas based on national origins. 11 boosts but slightly Hie number who limy enter tliia coun try annuiillv. Opponent said this wus anil alien and rnclsl. and designed to keep Immigrant out rather than welcome them to the United Hlnles. Tlie Semite lollowlnir the lend of ihe House Hie duv lielore, over rode the President's velo bv a vole ol 67 In 30. A two-llilids maturity was re aulrcd. With 83 senators vollim. supporters nl Hie leglalntlnn lopped bv one Ihe So voles nreiled. A switch of onlv Iwo sennlors would linve iinhelil Ihe veto and killed the bill. In the House the margin wu wider. There Ihe veto was over ridden 378 lo 113. or 17 more voles thnn the required majority. imkid In snow or dry sand Long hi. me the virtues ol chloiophyl v,e px.ullrd over ruiiio and iclr. vision, these Indians hnd a way of removiiiu body odors. They simply rubbed themselves under the arms with hot porous rocks provided by nature's Iree drugstore. Uui although they are sparlnn beyond bellcl. they are more doe-toi-mnulrd than Ihe hypochondriac nintrons who dwell on I'ark Avenue In Nc York. Some authorities esllinnle llml about oiip out ol every ten Nuvajo men Is eillier a mcdlclno man or studying lo be one line reason Is that medicine men gel high leva and their lers air ulwuys puid. The oilier reason Is Hint Nuvujos, while fourless of di'ulh, me gri-nlly nlruid ol Ill ness. Tln-y uir also ulmltl ol (lend people, and will aunmlon their home if a member ol Ihe family dies In II. Cuiicci nil dlubrlcs are rare among Uiem. Tuberculosis Is com molt, however, because ol their resirictrd dirt. Today many puleluce doctors suy brciiklu.il Is the man ini oorlnnl meal of the duy. The Nnvajos anticipated this view Willi an old proverb: "What vou cut belore noon makes you lal." They also prefer tough to lean meal, on the theory It must stay with a man longer because 11 takes lonser lo chew- Butchers haven't been able lo set tills revolutionary Idea in uia white man'a world but they are trvlnu Navajos are so lougn-ooairo mty lormeily caught eagles bare-hand- Navajos are so tougn-ooaieo mey j ed and captured deer by running But If a ralllrsnake crawls Into mcir nome. ruuirr man m nun thcv will gently shoo him out. ex I plaining carefully that he really doesn't live there. They believe In a iivc ami-ici iivc puni.. These Indians are noted lor lhelr domestic harmony and have few married ouuireu. Their home I. a one-room, dirt- I """red dwelllnj I called hognn. made of log covered with dirt. T w Moon ,a she keens It neat The Navajos don 1 go in lor di vorce as a hobby, but a wile is lust as free to gel one as her husband. Her method Is to lake her husband's saddle and other belongings and put them outside the hogan. If a husbnnd wants a divorce, he Just saddles up and rldrs away. You can gather fiom this that lawyers don't do too well among Ihe Navajos. The odd thing la thai with no laws lo conluse them most Navaios marry and live hap pily together ever after In their hon..,Weel-hoan on the .range. Funds Cut For Channel Study WASHINGTON I The ScnilUS Public Works Committee has ad vised Sen. Morse iR Orei that a requested study ol harbor and channel fnclllties at Tillamook Bay, Ore., may run Into financial dif ficulties. Morse asked the committee last week lo direct Army Engineers to make such a study with particular emphasis on Improvement, preser vation and protection oi existing work. The committee approved Morse's reouest but In a letter to Morse Chairman Chaves (D-N.M.l said Its action "may not serve any use ful nurnose at the present time since appropriations for this pur pose have been drastically cur tailed " ' KUmalh'i Ilnac! MIDu In th World's Mm. Convnln! Contain m ! Optm Easily. CloMI Easily. Pours CUanlyl LOOK FOR THE P0LKAD0T anon CRATER LAKE DAIRY PRODUCTS IP Fishing ( Report PORTLAND 111 Anglers will need to pick their streams and lakes lo bo assured of good fishing this week end, the Oregon mat Uume Commission bulletin report ed FrhlnV. Homo areas are excel lent, sumo good and sumo scarcely lull-. Our lake, Cuinpbell In Lnk County, npiinrcnlly lost all Its fish duo to winter kill. Ily dlMi'li'la; NurthViest Trout lulling on Ilia Wllluiiielle Itlvet above Merldlnn Itesi'ivolr site and on Iho Mo Kentie and ti'lnutnries Is Improved over Inst week end. Clear Laka conlimies lair and Linton Lake spotty. Dorcnu Hcsclvoll' la poor, llir C'luckamua, Molalla, and Untidy Itlvers have been alow. Houlhwesl Trout angling is lair un Central coast lakes. Sal mon fishiiiii at Winchester Bay la pool, baluiun angling In tilt Lower liogur U only lalr but Rogue Hlvrr trout angling la good and catchea Irinii Ihe Upiier Itouue are good In excellent aim Improving In middle Million. Unlmoii Halting Is Improv ing in llir Omni Pass area and Is soon lo excellent in tno upK-r i.o.iie 1 1 mil llyore Undue lo .i- Ciuud. Trout angling Is inir iiLlne North Umpqua area. Cenlrnl Cold, rainy ue.ilicr has slowed angling pressui con siderably. Clearing weather Is ex pected lor ihe week end and fish ing prospects are gooa. kl and Paulina Lakes conimue to yield good catches. Good catches nave, been made at Diamond Lake with 3 and 6 pound rainbows reported. My lulling at Odell Lakt has pro duced some nice caichca of rain bow. Llltle Deschutes and Cres cent Creek are only fair due to cold wcnlhcr. Fishing In Klamath County has Unproved In the last week and anglers nave been mas iiiii limit catches at Rocky Point and tngle Itldge. Limits ara also bring taken liom Ihe streams abovt Agency Luke The trails and lakes alung the crest ol the Southern Cascudrn are now open. Norllira.il Hlueback cnU.hr a at Wulluwa Lake are dropping off. Haiubow ci-lrliri have been fair. VSnllowa Itiirr I ns been high and roily, txicliiiu rainbow catches have bren muue on lha Grande Hondo River and Catherine Creek with files and ball. Large rainbow are bolni taken at Unity Reservoir. Good rainbow catches ara being made on the Lowar Powder River and Rock Creek In Baker County. Pint and Eagle Creeks are clear ing and dropping Ollva Lake has been good. Middle Fork ol tha John Day has produced good catch es of rainbow below Bales. Walla Walla and Umatilla Rivera are producing limit on Hies In the evenings. Most of the high lakea are nol yet accessible because of snow. Southeast In Harney County Fish Lake has been fair. Blltu-n River Is clearing and limns ai reported. Trout C'raek has provided excellent antltng using bait. Wil low Creek Is good lor small cut ihronl. In Malheur County Owyhee Reservoir u lalr to good. OwfJhee River is poor. In Laka CdTwiy there has apparently been a total loss of fish life by winter kill In Campbell Lake. Twenty Mile Creek rs good lor 12 to lt Inch rainbow. Mud Creek Is good for small rain bow. Chewaucan River Is lalr lo poor. Anna Reservoir It poor. Anna River is lair. Morse Wants Acheson Out WASHINGTON i Sen. Mora (M -Ore. told the Senate Thurs day Secretary ol State Acheson ought lo be ousted. He said the Bla Department was denying passports to Ameri can oltlrens without giving specific reasons, even to inquiring n--lors. He declared Prof. Linus C. Paul ing of Ihe California Institute of Technology at Pasadena, "one ioi Ihe world's great chemists," had been denied a passport, Linus 'should be given the passport, ht said "unless gooa cause vmn um shown to believe he la subvers ive." Morse also accused the depart ment of "stinbhv pro.-edtire" in the case of Owen Latllmore. Acting on a lip that the. Far Eastern specialist planned to trav el behind the Iron Curtain, the de-, partment alerted customs men to prevent him from leaving tha country. Newspapers have since report a ii,A, ti,. tin fake Tha Justice Department hai announced orand lurv at Seattle will probe the matter. YOU have to have Insurance beero the loit occurs. Let u hock all your coverages. CHILCOTE Insurant: Agency "The Pionesr Aqenc Eit. 1909'1 111 No. 9th Sr. Phone 5529 look Out!