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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1952)
PAGE STX HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OR EC! ON TUESDAY, JULY 20, 1052 FRANK JENKINS Editor Entered rand clan matter at the post office ot Klamath Falls, Ore., on August 30, IMS, under act ol Congress, March t, 1I7 ' MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press ts entitled exclusively to the use (or publication of all th local news printed in this newspaper as well as all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BV CARRIER 1 month . I 1.35 1 month S 1.35 6 months 6 50 6 months .10 1 year S11.00 1 year 116.20 BILL-BOARD By BILL The legionnaires will be leaving us tomorrow after a five day stay in our city. From all appearances they have had a good time. As to the success of the convention vie couldn't bay. Not being a member of that or ganisation I have not sat in on their councils nor taken an active interest in the inner circle politics which must, Invariably, occupy a great deal of the tune of any group or convention. But from a quick look-around on the streets I would say the conven tion had been a howling success and good time by all concerned. There have been only two re curring complaints about our city as a convention spot the weather and the accommodations for so large a group. The weather might have seemed a trifle warmish to some. I'll say nothing about it. I save my wrath over the 'weather for the winter season. Sort of nurse It and keep it warm all summer in anticipation of doing a good deal of cussing when the snow and ice hit. But it should certainly not be overly warm to the people from Portland where it has been much hotter and stuffier than it has here. . As to the accommodations I'll have to admit we're a trifle on the short side. Klamath Falls was not designed as a convention town. When the founding fathers laid out our village they saw no such thing. And having built up pretty much on a here-and-now basis we have omitted seeing to it that there were enough rooms for all. It's even hard for people who work here to find suitable housing. Perhaps If we are to continue CAUGHT In By DEB Observations on the party nomin ating conventions, from a distance from a distance In time, space and connections: ' Neither one was cut and dried beforehand. (This assumes that Ke lauver and the rest had a chance when they got to Chicago.) Rank and file primary voters showed their dissatisfaction with the status quo by drafting Ike and Kefauver where they had the4- chance in open voting. This was sufficient to carry the nomination of Ike over the old guard. It didn't do Kefauver any good, after Truman turned thumbs aown on him. When labor bosses pulled the cork -on Alben Barkley it left the way clear for a "last minute draft" of Aiilal Stevenson by the party bosses. : Ike Is a sort of rough and rugged leader farm boy to gen eral whose first ambition was to . become a major league shortstop. Stevenson is a sort of silk stocking liberal third generation politician on the Roosevelt style. Ike, on the radio, sounds like Clark Cable. Stevenson, over the air, sounds like an American ver sion of Ronald Colman. Ike was drafted to fight for the nomination. Stevenson was drafted to accept the nomination. Now the champions are chosen, and we get down to the serious matter of choosing a president. From here on all politics are local. Radio repair shops report a brisk business in replacing radio lubes this week. Wonder if ear doctors are patching up many ear drums? Oh. . fi. An Interesting problem is raised by Mrs. E.. who writes that her 7. year-old boy has been troubled with noseDieeas lor tne past six years. She says they usually start with out any apparent cause, and gen erally at night. This kind of thing is naturally most distressing to the parents, but It is not too unusual. Many growing children have nosebleeds, wnnoui any odvious reason, irom tune to time. In general. DerhaDS. sDontan. eous nosebleeds of this sort tend to come more frequently in delicate children than in those who are I'ODUSl. However, it is often a question as 10 wneroer tms is serious enougn to require treatment, since most youngsters seem to outgrow these recurrent nosebleeds in a few montns or years, even without any active treatment. . It Is probably best, however, for every youngster who has frequent noseDieeas to oe examined to see If a correctable cause can be dis covered. . Some of these nosebleeds come from small ulcers In the nose, borne youngsters pick or scratch the Inside of the nose or place objects In It, unknown to the par ents, and this of course may lead fa chronic difficulty Inside ths or gan. There la a family form of nose bleed which is sometimes found in several generations. Ths condition is caused by enlarged blood vessels In the nose which frequently rup ture and result In nosebleeds at all too Xrequent intervals. Several blood diseases can cause , I 1 EXPERT Gun Repairing and Bluing SCOPES MOUNTED THE GUN STORE BILL JENKINS Managing Editor JENKINS boosting for more and more large' scale conventions it would be well if we turned some thought to in creasing our facilities. The long discussed but never acted on idea of a large hotel on Ewauna Lake seems a better and better idea as you listen to the visitors complain about their crowded Quarters. With as much through business as Klamath Falls does during a year it wouidn t be a Dad risk at any time. At least something to taut about. The American Legion is a good organisation with two purposes m life. To fight communism and to convince every individual member that you. personally, had it tougher than anyone el" during the war. There are still enough veteran of world war one left to fold that their war was much tougher than world war two. And the Korean boys will be alontr soon to put 'n their bid that "their " war was the rugsedest of all. But so far the world war one lads have the edge. Not that it was a tougher war. It might or might not have been. But the legionnaires from that period have the experience, the background In. business and tne knowledge acquired over the years to out argue most of the younger men. And it is a regrettable but true fact that the youngsters from the Inte great fracas don't have the pep. the energy or the staying powers of the old timers. Having gotten that off my chest I shall now go out and take mv lumps from said old timers who insist they are still only "middle aged." The ROUNDS ADDISON , The Order of the Antelope trek to Hart Mountain must have tamed down this year. The only story that we've heard worth re peating is about two local medicos who attended the gathering. The pair slipped, away from the throng and bedded down at a dis tant point Saturday night in order to get a good night's sleep before the trip' home. They were awakened at-dawn with the sensation of a misplaced earthquake. Full consciousness re vealed the disturbance as the paw ing and bellowing of a range bull. One "Anteloper'' took the sippcr right off his sleeping bag but the other just came out of the sack like a ground squirrel out of his burrow and was first to the car. The bull went back to his cows, and the boys came back to town. For the benefit of the city street department (or whoever it Is that's supposed to keep the lights burn ing) both the original light over Fremont bridge and the new one that's been put up recently are out, and have been for some time. For the benefit of roadside na turalists, we've seen the first covey of young quail scuttle across the road at Moore Park. The little ones have passed the bumble bee stage and have started to feather out. For the benefit of hometown Le gionnaires, cheer up, the next con vention will be somewhere else. Then you can go and be visiting firemen. goAdan nosebleeds. If the blood does not clot properly, bleeding is particu larly likely to show up In various openings of the body, including the nose. In fact, a nosebleed may be me hi at sign oi some oieeuing dis ease. A nosebleed can develoD merelv by going to high altitudes. Other possible causes include violent ex ertion, acute Infections, and occa sionally tuberculosis or chemical poisoning. High blood pressure may be as sociated with extensive nosebleeds, although not in children. In such patients bleeding may last a long time and be extremely difficult to stop. It is a Question in some cases. however, as to whether the nose- nieea is not nature s way of re lieving some of the pressure In the blood vessels. Most nosebloods can be and are rapidly checked. Methods common. jy usea inciuae pressure on the upper up, tne application of cold to the back of the neck, and the insertion of a little cotton into the nostril itself. Rest In a position balfwav be tween sitting and lying. accomnan- led by muscular relaxation, stops most nosebleeds rather rapidly. In severe cases it may be necessary to cauterize or pack the region around the blood vessels in the nose from which the blood is es caping. The occasional nosebleed 1s ex tremely common and usually un important, but severe or repeated' nosebleeds should be investigated, probably both by a nose specialist as wen as by general examination. FRONT END ALIGNMENT $4.95 DUGAN & MEST 312 J.. th They'll Do Ic Every rJ'EVB? notice at the OUTS WHO SIGNED UP FDR THE SWUUWG FVTkJTC VlMUT Trt TAk'tr nco . TUP FLAIL R.dMF.... war yimmg "-r-s A THE ONES WMO WE WKON THE BALL FIELD AMJUNV 7Ht TO. TO HAVE Adlai E. Roger Editor's Note: This. Is another scries on the life of Adlai L. Stevenson, Democratic nominee for president, covers the war years, the birth of the I'.N. and the Alger Hiss case. SPRINGFIELD. 111. (Pi When he returned to Washington In 1841, Adlai Stevenson already had uo quired a vision of America's place in the shrinking, strne-riaaen world. His knowledge of International relations grew in succeeding years. until eventually ne assisted in tne birth of the United Nations and participated In its first and second general assemblys. Bv the middle 1940s. Stevenson was working on foreign policy prooiems wiw tne laie oen. nrmut Vandenberg, John Foster Dulles and Sen. Torn Connelly, all far better known then to the public. His original Interest in the sub- lect nrobablv sprang from boy hood travels with his family In Europe and his experiences in 1928 a tour oi uie near tnak uu Russia. - In the IMO's he became a mem ber, and finally president, of the Chicago Council on Foreign Rela tions. . The council welcomed Xorelgn rllnlnmats debated their DrO- nouncements and weighed possible effects on the United states ot iar away events. Its discussions and Stevenson's voice were out of harmony with ih nredomin&nt sentiments of a. city whose mayor once threatened to OUSt Mllg ueorge OI aiisinuu in the snoot" and which became a stronghold of the America First movement. Stevenson's wtlllncness to swim ! against the tide gave a glimpse of a characteristic that reappeared in the Alger Hiss case and in some unpopular acts as governor ui Illi nois. Perhaps his most important war time assignment was as chief of a foreign economic administration mission to Italy. Its purpose was to plan for re lief and rehabilitation of the lib erated areas. In Italy, Stevenson met the man who eight years afterwards was to be his rival for the presidency Gen. Dwlght D. Eisenhower. The brief encounter occurred in the corridor of a Naples office building. Elsenhower asked how things were going and Stevenson said as well as could be expected. That's all there was to the exchange. In 1945. Stevenson moved over a few notches Into the domain of diplomacy proper. The State Department, mindful of his growing experience, called on Stevenson to help promote pub lie understanding of the forthcom ing uniiea nations coruerence at San Francisco. When the conference started, press relations of the United States delegation sagged and Stevenson was given the job of sprucing them up. He performed creditably. He served as deputy to former Secretary of State Slettlnius, who headed the U.S. delegation, at the U.N. Preparatory Commission meeting in London in the fall, of 1945. 1 He filled Stettlnlus's shoes when the latter took sick. He was "senior adviser" to the U.S. delegation at the first gen eral assembly of the U.N. In New York the following January. That fall, and in the 1947 meet ing of the General assembly, he served as an alternate delegate. In his various capacities con nected with the creation and early functions of the U.N., Stevenson was brought in touch with Alger Hiss. He first mat His, In 1933 when both were employed by the AAA. Their contact at this time was "frequent but not close or daily," in the words of the controversial deposition Stevenson made for use at the first trial of Hiss . on per jury charges. After 1933, Stevenson said he saw lar . - i ' 1 :-i ,. i xV.. j . - office rcWiciwe 75 OUST Pty CMOM SUPPOSED H-ANQ Time. TTTTTjTWli Mr I Ml I Etc Stevenson By F. Lone no more of Hiss for nearly 13 years. The two renewed their acquain tance early in 1945 when both were employed by the Slate Department. In the next two years, Stevenson and Hiss followed official paths that verged and crossed several times. They met at Intra-departniental conferences of the Stale Depart ment In Washington and discussed press relations at the San Fran cisco conlcrcnce. Hiss was secre tary general of the conference. This sort of contact continued Intermittently Into the latter part of 1947. when they hnd their final encounter In New York. At that time, Stevenson was a U.N. alternate delegate and Hls.i was connected with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Eighteen months passed. Steven son now was governor of Illinois. Hiss stood accused in a federal court In New York of lying to con ceal theft of secret U.S. documents. Pursuant to a court order, Stev enson was approached on June 2. 1919, by a U.S. -commissioner In Springfield, III., to answer some questions under oath. me main questions concerned the length of Stevenson's acquaintance with Hiss, the history aiid clrcum. stances of their association and wneiner irom what Stevenson had heard about Hiss from otlier per sons up until then he considered good or bad the accused's reputa tion for loyalty, Integrity and truth luluess, i , Stevenson answered the ques tions. He said Hiss had a good reputation, among their acquaint ances In common, on each of the specific points raised. The first Hiss trial ended In a hung jury. Hiss was tried a second time, and convicted. Early this, year, Stevenson was asked- about the deposition by a re porter in a television Interview. He related how it came about and added this: "I'm a lawyer. I think that one of the most fundamental responsi bilities, not only of every citizen but particularly of lawyers, la to give testimony in a court of law, to give it honestly and willingly, and It will be a very unhappy day for Anglo-Saxon justice when a man, even a man in public life, is too timid to state what he knows and what he has heard about a defendant in a orlmlnal trial for fear that the defendant might later b convicted." Then the Interviewer asked: "Now that so many of the facts JULY CLEARANCE SALE reus A smart- collection of year round dresses. Group includes gabardines, crepes, master sheers. Misses sizes. Values to 16.95. Summer cottons and sheers. Ex quisite dainty styles in bright, colorful dresses. Misses and half sixes. A selection you'll love to choose from. Values to 12.95. Better summer dresses in top quality sheers, crepes, linens. Beautiful selection of colors. Misses and half sizes. Values to 19.95. . Choice selections of our better summer drcssc. Group in cludes dressy linens, crepes, master sheers. Misses and half sizes. Values to 23.95. Fashion Salon By Jinuny Hallo j UT couple Pork Prices To Increase WASHINGTON Wr-Hams, chops and other lean pork cuts popular during summer months are going Irom one to eight cents a pound. The Office of Price Stabilisation iOPS) announced Monday that cell ing prices on lean cuts those ac counting for about 40 to 45 per cent ol pork sales are being in creased through October, Then they may be reduced. These are the aulhoiir.rd In creases, effective immediately: Pork shoulders, one cent a pound: hams, bellies. Bostnn butts and neckboucs, three cents; pork chops, loins and sparcrlbs, eight cents. Slaughterers and wholesalers may arid SI. 20 per hundred pounds on sales of pork product to res. inurants, hotels and others selling men Is. Ceilings on cuts usually used In making sausago were not boosted. OPS said increases were neces sary because the Agriculture De partment raised the parity price for hogs above loo per cenl from July through October. And a new economic controls law provides that processors must be given higher ceilings to make uo for higher prices paid to farmers. Chinese Lad Wins Victory PORTLAND Ml A IS-yenr-old Chinese youth, lighting for U. S. citlcenshlp, will be admitted to the United States at least temnorar llv under an order signed Tuesday by Federal Judge Gus J. Solomon. The boy, Louie Kyle Fale. now Is in Hong Kong.. His attorney said the U. S. consul there has refused him a passport., Judge Solomon directed Secre tary of State Acheson to admit the boy so he can be present for the trial of his suit for U. 8. clllten- shlo. The suit, filed bv Falc's rela tives, claims he Is entitled to citi zenship on ground that his father, a Portland cook, is a U. 8. citizen. have come out in the Hiss case, what Is your judgment or feeling about the verdict of the court." "I am a lawyer." Stevenson re plied. "I believe explicitly that a Jury of ones peers must find the right answer or else we can have no faith in our Judicial system." Second Floor vJ i'AJU I )TiL- ' "J tieJA III. W f V mi I I J-f . I I I I V '-.1 " I . 1 I Tl 1 I I 5 died NKW YOKK tV) A liusbaiitl'n lob used to be to bring home the uncou. i , In more and more houarhoUis looey, however, the liuaband nut only brings home the bucon be coons it, too. a nun piece la ui the kill hen. Tlio aiili'l revolution in domestic duties begun abuul a uum-lrr ul a reniury nuo in Hint uci'tuil ol culinary history known as "the era of Iho outdoor mill Father tot Hie Idea he was a real heroic liguie as he Mood, eyes streaming from I tin smoke, turn ing over a low ol hot dogs or steaks buuung to death over a fire In a atone barbecue uven in Uie bnckvard. ' "M-lii m-m-m, simply delicious." murmured Mama later, munching a aaiiuwii'h thai lusted of garlic and old rust. ' This feminine flattery went to father'! heed. "If I can do this well outdonrn." he told hlnisrlt. "whet couldn't da in a reel kitchen?" So he moved indoors, bought hlinselt a cookbook, and beuan ev prriiiientinu like a small bov with a new cltemisii v set. Kverv weekend he figured out a new dish to try on his friends, and Irom the Hie ol the parly he became the wife "t the perly the guy in the sky blue apron. Mama gullautly shuddered her way through his trial - and error '(furls, ami tuld guotts fondly In his presence: "Mv busband ts getting to be a womterlul cook, but he does leave the kitchen In such a mess." This praise touched father's cop science. "Whv should I have all the fun of conking, uiid leave my wile all the dlrlv work?" he snld. "I guess I'd better tvlv up the gllcheu, too." That is what I oblect to about the whole theory of male cookery. The husbnnri has been artfully WASHINGTON l.fl The sele-o tlon of Gen. Eisenhower and Gov. Sievenson as presidential candl dates will go down as one of Hie mast extraordinary events hi American political history lor more reasons than one. Both were reluctant candidates. Great support had been built up lor both before either mun actually said lie would accept nomination. Elsenhower didn't say so until last January although the cam paign among Its supporters to get him nominated had begun long be fore that. Sievenson never publicly said ha would accept until Friday before the third and final balloting began. Stevenson nrver said one word In behalf of himself through all ihe months when Sena. Keluuver, Kerr and Russell and Avrrell Hap rlman were making speeches and looking for votes. Elsenhower did not campaign at all until Ihe last month before live Republican convention although his chief rival Sen. Tail, traveled through at least 33 stales and prob ably let an American record for pre-conventlon speeches and Inter views. Both men are newcomers lo politics. Eisenhower even more than Stevenson. The general had Actual 'PROOF-OF-VALUE' demonstrations show you why the Cycla-matic Frigidalr is bast, ' regardless of price. Com in I Sat CYCLA-MATIC FRIGIDAIRE f fie finest of 15 million Frigldairttl Cascade 124 No. 4th dfjoyjb convinced Ills wife h doing lilin a lavur to lei him Into the kitchen, Hut what Is tne real truth? lie has been freed of her most on erous ilioics lluouuli the cen turies cooking dinner, then doing the dishes, I am an old fashioned man, and it Is the other way In my lioine. The other evening I went lino the kllchen, My wile, Frances, mined around and w me and Jumped. What's Uie mailer?" I asked. "You alarlled me," she aulil. "It's been yrius auiue I saw you In the kltc-lim." But ulirn we go out to have dinner Willi I Mends, the host nieeli me et Ihc door and feeys: "Don't go Into the living room with iho ulils. AU they'll talk about is baseball and politics, biey hero In Urn kitchen, and help tie baste the million. I'm trying a new rrvliio very exciting. You wrap It III burlap and mm dock leaves and cook It over a alow lire." Later, after Hie meal is over, he hands me a dlshlowcl and . "vou know how wives are they like a clean kitchen," and alter we are through he says: "Now. ahall we loin the ladles?" When we go In we find the ladles have taken the television set apart end a ro Hying to put in a new lube, and one wile is saying, "darn II, I forgot to put a No. 3 slut serr.wdiivcr in my purse. I can't work without It." It all makes me pine for (ha days before knighthood was In Hour. II won't be long mil 11 a young men. proposing marriage, will win his fair one's heart with this tender clincher: "And another thing, honey, you'll nrver ret better. I ran make an anitfl land rake Just like Daddy used to bake." never been In politics before. Stevenson had taken no part In politico until 11)47 when he agreed, alter weeks ol hesitation and soul searching, to be a Democratic candidate for governor of Illinois. So now, as he begins his cam paign for the presidency. Steven son will have had behind him only four years' experience In politics. But perhaps more extraordinary than all this Is the fact that the country as a whole knew practi cally nothing at all about the think ing of either man on domeatlo allalrs until shortly before Uie con ventions. Everyone knew F.lsenhower's views on international life. He w-aa a linn supporter of Ihe Truman administration's policy ol standing united with Europe and helping re arm It. But. except for some scattered tatementa he mule while he was president of Columbia Univeralty statements which revealed very Utile of his knowledge of domestic alfalrs the general public knew almost nothing of Elsenhower's thinking an affaire at home. Tills didn't seem lo bother the people who voted in the stale pri maries where they picked him, as In New Hampshire, over Sen. Taft the 'gr tat new VERN OWENS' 1 Ifiillif 571; mwmwm mam Home Furnishings COMPANY iTo Receive, Lunch Honey WASHINGTON 11 Paollln Northwest slates and Alaska will receive nearly two million dnllain of Ihe SM.IVj.OOO apporllonml by Hie Agriculture) Department Mon day for uprratlon o( Iho school lunch pniKiaiii during the IIID3-53 school year, The department said allocations will Im-ludn 1745,111(1 lor Washing Inn, s,'CD,7D lor Oregon, l:tS.3'il lor Idaho. SJ1J.741 for Montana, and III. 4114 lor Alanka. The luuds ere apportioned on Hie basis ol Ihe number of children of school age and Iho per capita Income. Under Ihe law setting un Ihe pro gram, local sources will put up Si. 50 for each dollar of federal lunds If Ihe state's tier capita in coma exceeds or equals Ihe na tional average. The man-hum re quirement Is decreased for stales with a per capita Income below the national average. VOTK KLAMATH FALLS To everyone that hasn't registered Iq vote, please do so now. Don l sit back confnlrnlly. Ilka you did before. Come on you Re publicans and vole, lei's put this allow on Ihe road. Register now. Mr. and Mra. D. II. Nabakowskl Douglas Off For Asian Journey 8AN FRANCISCO tfl Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas la en route lo Southeast Ana and the Far Kaat, ' Douglas boarded a Pan Ameri can clipper here Monday. He said he will be gone about two months. Douglas said he planned to visit the Malay Peninsula, where there has been guerrilla fighting, and stops In Burma. India, Slam, Hong Kong. Formosa, Korea and Japan. who had spent years making hn viawe known. II wasn't until he came bark to this country last June that Klsen hower began to express opinions on domestic problems. And then ha disclosed he didn't know much about Ihem. This didn't deter the delegates lo the Republican convention. They, loo, like Ihe people In the primaries, preferred him to Talt. Except for some vague know ledge about Stevenson that he had been a good governor In1 Illinois and had some experience in the foreign field while working for the Btate Department Hie general publio didn't know much about him. Gradually word teemed In get around that he waa a sort nf middle-of-the-roader. But It's doubtful that more than a handful, of delegates at the Democretia convention bad any kind of detailed knowledge of where Stevenson stood on a host of domestio Issues. In short, this was the year when Ihe conventions turned their barks on the professional politicians Ilka Talt and Kefauver, whose views they knew well, lo pick newcom ers more an faith than knowledge. Ph. 8365 hi i( f iih '' '". !'-!"""' ; FnlUIUHillE I tV M.e.l IR-fO nly $00075 A