Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 13, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAOSKTX
llERAI.n AN'D NKWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OKKC.ON
WEDNESDAY, AHfil'ST U HIM
They'll Do Ir Every Time
J3yjimmy liatlo
rXM TOOR PHOTCX56ER &XS RATTY
TKrlMS TO GET A LITTLE AMlVWTIOSl
NTO US ROUTINE PICTURE -ASSiSN.MEWTS-
OFFICE IT SEEMS &ZRY3QVy VWMTS
INTO THE ACT-
FRANK JENKINS
Editor
BILL JENKINS
Managing Editor
Entered at second class matter at th. post offlct ot Klamath Falls, Ore.,
on August 30, 1906, under act of Cong re; , March I, 167S
MKMBERS OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use (or publication
oi all tlx local news printed in this newspaper aa well as all AP neas.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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CAMT YVB PUT A VTVLS ) V . CeW wo,
VPE i 1WE PICTURE ? Qk , flVrSi IMOol VM I
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I MtAl A GAVEL CW SOWC- ) fiSSji ktPi2J aV"V7? 'J
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died (Boyk
NEW YORK Jf One of the
perils ol American office life Uie.se j
summer days is uie returnee 1
vacationist. i
He insiMs that you hear about;
his vacation but he closes his big
ears like a car door when you;
want to tell him about your vaca-!
tlcn.
How can you deal with him?
You can't get away. He will eveu
trail you Into the men's room to
relate the strange things that hap
pened to him.
You would think no one else had
taken a vacation before In the his
tory of the human race.
The onlv sure way to halt him Is
to try to borrow money from him,
or else top him by interrupting.
oh. by the way, Joe, while you
were gone I saw a flying saucer.
What the average office needs
from June until Labor Day is a
"vacation hour" each morning.
For the lirst 60 minutes oi eacn
workday the office staff could as-j 7. The funny fellow everything
aenible and listen en masse to the comical happens to him. "I threw
returning pilgrims tell the sad and,niy moiher-in-law to the bears in
wonderful story of what beiell j Yellowstone Park." he says, "and
them. (ruess what they arrested me.
Anvbody who even mentioned ; How did I know vou aren't allowed
the word vacation the rest of theto fed the animals?"
dav would be automatically fired, j g. The don't-let-'em-get-away-the
office vacationists lall into ; with-anything guy "they trv to
pretty standard types. Here are a jrob you every step of the way." he
lew vou may recognize: I moans, and neglects to mention
1. The postcard fiend he writes mme tp he pocketed that the
you a postcard as he leaves his t0Urist before him had left for the
home, and stops off at every other watress ,t a hotdoa stand in Ten
lilling station along the way to nrssee.
mail more. Two weeks after he is 9 The boss "aren't thev cute?"
back at work you are still getting ne siys. pulling out some snap
postcards about what a swell time siiots of his children wearing
he Is having. I striped bathing suits. And how can
1. The calamity kid bee-ailing ' ,en hjm th i00t like b,by
and covered with poison ivy, he saber-toothed tigers?
returns on crutches. "Just stopped Well, there they are the office
bv on my way to the hospital,'- he Marco Polos. The odd thing is how
mumbles through his bandages. ;duli tes .
The doe says I got to spend a j just Kot tcl from a vacation
month in bed. WiU.ypu handle ni myself, and had a really unusual
work while I'm gone. experience. 1 was just.. .when...
S. The sultry stenographer she .(EDITOR'S NOTE: Enough of
looks the color of a hand-rubbed , this. Bovle la a No. T vacationist
walnut bookcase from days of himself.)
(Oh. . (p.
The most regular type of allergy
Is fall hav fever. Millions of suf
ferers from this annoying con
dition can tell within a day or two
when their trouble will begin.
The reason for this is that the
pollens to which thev are sensitive
usually members of the ragweed
family mature and enter the air
at about the same time each year,
depending upon the locality.
The running or stuffed-up nose.
Itching and watering eyes, and the
sneezing fits of the hay fever vic
tim make for a miserable time.
Snmn nMnl ir hi Krinilslv af.
fected that thev cannot sleep.
They lose weight, become Irritable
and exhausted and feel of little
use to themselves or to anyone
else during the four or five weeks
of "the season.'
Many victims of hay fever have
obtained great relief by taking In
jections or "shots-' of pollen be
lore the season starts. The pur
pose of these Injections- Is to re
duce the sensitiveness to the
pollen.
Some people cannot take large
enough doses to do much good.
Others, for reasons which are not
Honeymooner Shows Press
Private Atlantic Estate
By F. T. MACFEELY
SAPELO ISLAND, Ca. Ufi R. J.
Reynolds, a man who inherited a
tobacco fortune but kept it lrom
spoiling his Hie, is having a big
tune uisplaying to his attractive
auburn-haired bride their home
here in the Colden Isles.
Ii you got the idea from stories
of their wedding here last Friday
that the place is a gossamer pal
ace ot gold splashed with dia
monds, forget it.
lne place is nig ana it is tine.
But there is nothing superficial.
It's solid and substantial.
Reynolds, whose many pursuits,
Include building boats and skipper
ing them, running a shipping line,
Hying, pnoiograpny, forego, caule
raising, farming and road building
to mention a few took hours
away from his honeymoon yester
day to show an Associated Press
newsman and photographer around
the Island plantation.
No newsmen were present at last
week's wedoing ol tne 46-year-oid
Reynolds and the former Mrs.
Murlal Greenough, 33 the third
marriage for each.
But the newly weds pointed out
tne spot uncier tne old-age oaks
In front of the 23-room main plan
tation house where they repeated
their vows before the Rev. Cordon
C. King. Methodist minister from
Darien, Ca.
The green waters of a nearby
garden pool glistened and in the
background many of the 72 Negro
families who live on the island
sang softly.
Contrary to popular belief, Rey
nolds doesn't own all of this South
east Georgia coastal Island.
Several Negro families, whose
ancestors were slaves here, still
hold 10-acre tracts deeded them
after the War Between the States
bv Thomas Epalding, then owner
of the inland, which Is 12 miles
long and three miles wide.
While the Island can be reached
only by plane or boat, Reynolds
has several cars, trucks and leeps.
He drove one of the Jeeps on the
tour he conducted over the five
miles of asphalted and many more
miles of sand roads on the Island.
With an enthusiasm bound to
sweep you along, he spent the en
tire day showing and describing
(he diversified interests of the plan
tation: a summer boy's camp:
beach sunning, and there are
wedding bells in her eyes. But the
new ooy inena ane met at tnc
shore quits calling her up alter
three days, and for the rest of the
.Miinmer she snaps at you If you
even say "hello."
4. The camera nut he has to be
.forcibly restrained from pulling
down the office wuidow blinds and
Irving to snow everybody the in
teresting new movies he made of
Niagara Falls-
5. The statistician this boy not
onlv has the fiKUres of how much
he paid for gas and oil at every
stop he also wants to tell vou the
air pressure in each tire the day
he drove up Pike's Peak.
6. The everlovmg homebody
"vacations are more fun at home."
he bealns And for the next three
Ihours he bores you with the details
of now much money he saved and
what a grand time he had re
painting his little grey nest in the
suburb:
JjoAdan
yet entirely understood, fail to re
spond very well. Many, however,
obtain some relief from injections
and a few get over their symptoms
entirely.
Once the season has started,
these preventive injections are not
of much help. Many who can get
away try to seek areas where
there is lesa pollen, but others
have to stav where they are and
grin and bear it.
Air conditioned public buildings
often bring some relief. Some
people who can afford it feel bet
ter if they stav In a room with an
!alr filter in the window.
i Several druirs Known as anti-
(histamines and going under various
trade names bring considerable re-
net to many hay fever sufferers.
These drugs act for only a short
time, but they do help many hay
fever victims when their symptoms
are intolerable.
They are not lacking entirely In
undesirable effects, however, and
therefore should not be taken
without some medical supervision
Furthermore, some people seem to
be - helped more bv one kind of
preparation and some by another.
large cattle-raising project (1,500
head of Angus and Brahmans);
planting, seeding, cutting and ship
ping pine and other timber, ex
periments in surfacing roads, dik
ing the marsh land for farming
and the historical facels of the
island.
Mrs. Reynolds, who had made a
trio around the Island a day ear
lier. Joined her husband in show
ing the main house and their hon
eymoon cottage. The latter is a
comfortable two-story house built
ortrnally for the plantation man
ager.
Within g few months the couple
will start on a world cruise aboard
their yacht Aries being built in
England.
bring back the
Or
in
i
i
ft8? A
CAMERA DEPARTMENT
'CURRIN'S
Tha Friendly
ind Main
9th
Television Opens Up New I Fich tnrlf
Theory Of Political Job- 'J,, , I,
Seeking Technique In USMOUi NearS
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD if) How do our
political conventions look to for
eigners?
Through what Is usually referred
,to aa the miracle ol television,
some 60 million Americans this
year got to see what goes on at
presidential nominating conven
tions. It was an eye-opener to
many citizens, but even more so
to those not familiar with our po
litical tradition.
One of these Is Richard Burton,
brilliant young t36 British actor
who was imported to play opposite
Olivia De Havillajid in "My Cous
in Racnel." Like most everybody
else in a TV area, he was glued
to his set durinu tile Chicago con
fabs. So I asked him for his im
pressions of these peculiarly Amer
ican rituals.
"Well, it wns quite an eye-opener
to me," he began. "I guess I ex
pected some very solemn men in
dark suits to sit around and dis
cuss important Issues on a very
lofty plane. Instead, I saw a nulla-
baloo with people running around '"L- , 7., .nA h.. n u..h, i ""uon "m
wiwiv it V.n .m.Mn how- cho0' ec " " .'"l!m Sam Whitney ot Rosebura has
,,. .- . ---
The oratory, I thought, was old-
fashioned. Most of the speakers
shouted at the audience and pound
ed their fists. It was refreshing
when a young lawyer got up in
the Republican convention and
merely conversed with the audi
ence. Suddenly everybody started
listening to his speech. I think tele
vision wtu make tnat kind of de
livery necessary In future political
contests.
"I would think there would be a
change in the demonstrations lor
the candidates. Nearly all of them
were obviously staged. Only once
in a great while would there be a
really spontaneous reaction from
the crowd."
Burton remarked that there was
nothing in the English political
scene that matched the hoopla of
the national conventions.
"The two" major parties have
their meetings," he said. "But they
are rather quiet affairs. Of course,
our Parliament was pretty lively
when the Irish were in it. They
were always making demonstra
tions and threatening to hang the
King and so forth. Things have
Hospital Lack
Causes Hazard
PORTLAND Ifi Lack of hos
pital space for psychotic war vet
erans is creating a growing hazard
for the public, the Veterans of
Foreign Wars rehabilitation direc
tor believes.
He Is Col. George E. IJames, who
arrived here Tuesday for a two-day
iaspectlon of veterans' facilities in
the area.
IJames said that "many World
War II veterans are Just now show
ing up with mental disorders
brought about by mijitary service''
and there aren't hospital facilities
to take care of them.
"More and more we hear about
crimes committed by mentally ill
veterans who should have been in
hospitals," he said.
He said too there was a short
age of beds for chronic cases re
quiring long hospitalization.
IJames commended the Veterans
Administration outpatient clinic
here as "the finest In the nation."
higMights
rOlfft 1410ft DAY OUTING
personal movies
A single roll of 1mm. Cine
Kodoi Film mokai 30 lo 40
mevit letntt , . . Isr oi lirllt
oi J2 V0, prsetiiing end
Fedarol Ton Included. If
you've never mode meviei,
ilep In and Itl ut thaw you
hew eoiy rhay really art.
- "for J;
rugs
Drugstore
Ph. 2-347S
i
quieted down since the Irish got
their independence and lelt Parlia
ment. " .
The actor added that television
has not made much Impact on
British politics.
"Not enough people have sets,"
he explained. "Whenever Churcii'
ill want In talk, hi- h.i to .k
Attlee. who Is allowed equal tunc
on the air. That is, unless Church- Stocking of Inkes in the Mt. Hood,
ill Is going to talk on some non-con- Willamclir and Dcschuir.i National
troverstal matter such as the his-1 Forests has already been corn
tory of Marlborough, which he I pleted, and now plantings are be
basn't as yet. mg made in the Umpqua and
"I auppose the Laborltes would Rogue River forests Irom the Korl
just as soon Keep tnc conserva
tives oft the air, because the con
servatives are such better talkers.
Churchill is superb, of course, and
Eden is very good. The other side
has no one to compare. 1 might
add that I'm a socialist myself.''
Burton was born In the coal mm -
ing region of South Wales. He was
one of 11 children, and his lather
and 5U brothers worked In the
mines. All except two brothers
have gone on to other walks of
drama every summer since iuju at'
I. vr - piioiru me un piammK ciait wi
ytaitsucia, vi. ,our yenr, ind u,hery agents
Trained by his father. Burton tell; Qeino Koskl and John Dimlck
into acting easily. He quickly rose ! transporting them Irom the hatch
to fame and scored in London and I ry the air strip.
litW,!3f. i7,.!& f.n-'i A two-man survey crrw outfitted
for Burning. An outspoken follow. w, fc ,nw, is checking on
he has been hailed as the British i sh popUi,llons In many ol the
Marion Brando. mountain lakes to determine trout
"That's not true," he protested, survival, fish growth and numbers.
"You can understand what I'm and tishlng success resulting from
saying.' I the aerial stocking program.
: . . is the time to buy the fine furn
iture you've always wanted ... at
BIG August Sale savings.
Our four floors offer an amazing
selection of superbly crafted
modern and period furniture . . :
at drastic reductions.
So . . . come in, look around. Our
sale price tags tell the story.
"Four Floon of Fine Furniture ond Floor Coverinqi"
Wamatk unmtime Ca.
221 Main
Compietion
The Oregon State Game Commis
sion Is nearing the end of Us sum
mer's program of stocking 3,180.
000 rainbow and brook trout In 400
remote Cascade mountain lakes
Klamath air strip.
Waldo Lake, located In Lane
County Just a few miles north ol
Odrli Lake Is receiving the large.-t
allocation of fish om 600,000
rainbow
nd 300.000 eastern brook
the 5,500 acre body of
trout In
1 water,
The liny flncerllnc trout are be.
i ing flown to tho high lakes, most
Sol which are accessible only bv
I trail, in a Piper Super Cub fitted
out with special belly tanks and an
., . .L. l ...
f
A NEW $40,000 building on
Trucking buiinait.
Truman Pal Defeated In
Arkansas Primary Vote
LITTl.K ROCK, Ark. trt-Qov.
Klii McMalli. a political pa ol
President Truman, was defeated
lor a thud term nomination yes
terday by a one-time college class
mule, Judge Francis Cherry.
It Has apparent early as returns
(ruin the iiinull Democratic url
iiiiny poured In that Mt Mulh had
sunned the ftr.il setback In his
rapid six-year political rise. Mc
M.til) conceded his defeat and
promised to aupport Cherry's ad
ministration. Unofficial reports from 3.040 of
the state's 3.3ti boxes today gave
Cherry 100.543 votes to 110,616 for
Mc.Math.
Cherry, a 43-year-old Chancery
Court judge from Jonrsboro, Is
newcomer to state politics with
new political weapon the radio
talkathon on which he answered
questions from all comers and dls.
cussed isaues for as long aa 34
hours at a time.
He frankly rredits his u.e of
the talkathon with being the "dil -
lercnce'' that lilted him Irom com.
paratue obscurity to a clo.--e sec
ond place in the July s preieren
1 13 primary and victory In yev
lerdays runoll.
Democratio nomination such as
Cherry obtained yesterday al
ways has meant election In th,a
Southern slate.
In the bitter runolf campaign
which preceded yesterday'a elec
tion, the aofl-spoken, prematurely
gray Cherry had the open aupport
of Sen. John L. McClellan, who
obviously shared the common be
lief that McMalh hoped to run
aguin.. him two years from now.
Cherry was also supported by
thrre former gubernatorial con-
lenders, Including Rep. Boyd Tack-
etl. who were eliminated In the
preferential primary.
Besides Truman's approval ex
pressed on a visit to Arkansas
Phone S3S3 or 5339
Spring Street it to be tht horn
early In July McMnllt was en
dorsed by both the AI'L and CIO
political alllllatos.
Cherry, a nallvp of Ft. Worth,
Tex., and a former tetldent of
Oklahoma, la serving a aecond
term as Juilue ol a Northeast Ark
ansas rhaiicery District. He left
tha bench temporarily to serve
iwo years in the Navy In World
War II.
The state's only rniiurenslonal
rat yesterday saw rcnoininnllnn
of Hep. Ilrooks Hays of Little Hoi k,
a member of the house aluce 104.1,
over Anils Oulhrulge, Lllllt Rock
lawyer.
Con Builds
Own TV Set
..,.,.'.....
1 Wf.1 HMISFIKI.D Conn. - A
'""""" ""f "s pirrrea in
wniis that do hln prison make, and
olfmala are proud of him.
Jo. otherwi.se unidentified
has built a lelevinlon set. mainly
from salvaged pan. and scrap me
tal from the machine shop at
Connecticut Wlnto I'rt.vm. Home
parts he bought from hla frus
trating prison pay of 14 to a month.
I'riMin officials ar. pleased with
how Jo, has rehabllliated himself
by working on his window on the
world.
From a "Kansas tough luy"
three years ago, h. has become a
model prisoner.
Joe will be up for a parole short
ly. His plana for th. outside?
"I'm getting Into television." he
mvi, "There's a great futuri in
it."
CP
?m oak
-r -m- OLD
Hermmge
SI
BRAND II sf
I UBONWHI3KtV
ti PROOF THf OlD HERMITAGE COMPANY, FRANKFORT, KV.
of the Hitchcock and Mother
Industrial
Firm Sale
Told Here
Phil IIIK'hcock announced today
that he and Mr. Illtrhrm'k hail
purchased Merle Weit'a Interest in
the WeM-llitclunck CoriHirulion.
The, Hltchcoi'ka arc completely
rroiganiiiiig the business. Thn
heavy mmiiinery bumursa la being
dropped ami two new lirma han
been organtied; one will bo a
OMO truck aalea and service com
pany and the other will bo pump
company handling Fairbanks
Mors, and I'nmona pumps, nprlnk
ler Irrigation ami allied linen.
Hlrve Mnsher, manager of West
llltchrock's truck department, la a
partner of III. Illlchcork'a In Ih.
track company. Art Reed, Weat
llliehcock pump department man
ager, is likewise a partner In tin
new pump company.
Construction naa already begun
on new quartern for the truck lirm.
A Hn.oun building la being errected
at 31 Spring Htreet. Hie pump
firm la also tn move lo new quar
tern. The location la lo b. an
nounced later.
In announcing the renrganliallon
the llltchcock'a said "w. ar. con
lldenl w. will b. able to aerve"
our customers "belter by eoncen
tratlng our elforta on the lines
are retaining."
The heavy machinery business
Includes the Allin Chalmera line of
logging am) Industrial equipment.
Ilils portion o, th. husinena in lo
be taken over bv Tractor Bales
and Service, of Medlord.
Negotiation aro in progress for
the founding hero ol a new A 11 1 si
Chalmers farm equipment firm.
9
BRAM)
Mio V)60 S
7 4SQf. . Z Pint y-