Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1952)
PAGE SIX' - 1IKRAI.1) AMI NKWS. KI.AM ATM KAI.I.S, OREGON WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, Wi $erattian&$eUt FRANK JENKINS Editor BILL JENKINS Manacmg Editor Entered second elaiu nutter at the post office ot Klamath Falls, Ore., on August 20, J90, under act ot Congress, March t, 1878 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use (or publication ot all the local news printed In this newspaper well as all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION' RATES MAIL BY CARRIER 1 month US 1 month I US months ., . ... 6 SO 6 montlis MO 1 year 11.00 1 year - $16.20 CAUGHT In ROUNDS Conversation between neighbors, without comment: The little girl from next door sometimes come to visit me. the man said, while I'm working about In the yard. Naturally our topics of conversation are somewhat lim ited in the matter of subjects. One day she said to me, "Do you like cats?" "Yes, I do." I answered. "Do you like dogs?" she con tinued. Again I replied in the affirma tive, ana to my reply sne came lorth with: "I dont like dogs because they go to the bathroom on our bushes." Completed conversation but in complete report: Fred Fleet was passing by the office door. Do you remember Fred A. Baker? he asked. To our head scratching, Fred (Fleet) filled in: Fred Baker was here many years ago with the Indian Service. Then he was in the bank with Cap Siemens. About 1950 he was very, active in the Chamber of Com-' merce; served on the board of directors. I What about him now? we asked. ! He's here visiting: was up at i the picnic at the Fort. It would make an Interesting story. Fred was busy, and so are we. Somebody else take It from here. Paris of a telephone conversation: Yes, Bedding Is going along; great guns, tit was Lou Taylor, g a former Lakeshore Drive neigh bor, on the other end. Lou owns I the Lakeshore Inn property and has I other interests here but is now In business in Redding.) The latest thing coming up here. Lou said, la a couple of small dams on the Pit River. PG4E Is pulling them in. They're starting to put in 18 miles of paved road to the sites now. By 'small" I mean they're power dams like Copco wants to put in the Klamath Canyon but the jobs will run mto quite a tew millions. Lou also commented on the large number of Klamath DeODlr he sees in Redding either moved there or wno nave business uiterest that lake them there. He admitted that it's just a little warm there a the present but' it's Just the way they like it. The rest of the conversation had to do with placing a classified ad. and if you're interested in that, just read all the Want-ads and you 11 probably find it. Conversation about our former playmate, Mac Epley: You may have heard that the Long Beach Press - Telegram, where Mac went from the Herald and News about three years ago. has been sold to an outfit from the East. That's correct. We've Just learned from Mac (Junior) Epley that Mac (Sr.! now is full executive editor of the paper under the new owners. He got the word of the sale while he was back at Chicago cov. ering the conventions, and came home to find that he is head man of the big paper's news and edito real departments. So again to him goes the wish. "luck, love and happiness." ' 1 11 " ' ii y i i i ii i in 1 1 mi ib i i a ngsaaegsg They'll Do It Every Time . By J iminy 1 Lulo ! CUP AMD CRULLER r rS-TrTTTV-Tv-- istflt UUT-JUSTAT NOON- lSSomweS Aets ssYil bust! woTt n!hJ.., TIME M4EN THE coouMfl )( OuTA HbJeJ LA IS SS, lfUlll HERD TWUNDSTS' .8TENkJ rLV N-tttu, jessed STTTf Truman Control Diminished Sharply As Stevenson Men Take Over Party Ike Starts Campaign Tonight With First 'Frankly Political' Speech Itv M.MtVIV L. AltltOWNMI III uuoeili, Uhenlirnvn rxn litlve i lliillsllllt. luulrrtliill nf the rlulltn nf UKNVKK l. Uwlullt 1). Elsi-ll. Lci'lrluiv. Aillnir II. VuiiiIimiiiii liilmr. mull Tllull III tllll rlulll til hnwrr loaded hla cnnumluii iiii I Jr., put nut a uliilrinriit sett Urn em u l "'. atublr iiuiltiiltme lor a KiircuJi toiliiv niiiukiiiK lliolliulli iiulnta the itrnerul exnrcli'il i mil bn won olilv If America Deiiincriit.i ami i-allltm on AiiierU'ii to cmcr. Viiiiilrnueiu nitltl: i Ihiowh n i'iiiii'H' Mimrelv down lo follow a mUlillciti'iiiittd t'ntirne, "llru. Klvuliowrr In lil hneerli the inlilillr. irlerlltm hot h the ex "relei'ltin both the extreme le-ll today at llm.-e will ilriimince the Urtiio nulil Mini extreme lelt," aim rmnt. alleiinil.i nl Irllhl ixilitlcul uiiiiinni Vanile nlinig s relriemo lu a 'Hie Itrniililli'in menlilentlal twin. I lo iiiuiiniwliie uuirrcl atnlal minis ; nildillp iiniiiiicl lomur and lelecllon tnre flies from his Denver hriut. unit to claim that lliriia la the uiily i.. ,i. n... ,i -,i i.n quarters to llnle. Idaho, to make way to ai-lilrvn lliein. inallril mlvli e ulvrn lo Kl-irllhow- a inalor nililirMi tonlulil mini the i llir uri,rnt ailitiliilMrulluii. the rr ri'n'iulv bv Kriiuullruii llov. Val State ('ni)itol stem. Aides were tie- uenrinl will ilmrun l riuiiiinu tlil p-i,,.,,,, ,,i N,.i,,,,k u'iioiiih it hi the general llil rr with new lai rs but will coll-1 . , , ' ,. ., .,, franklv millt'ial mre. h slme ho tlnue to oltrr wlirme, like the , 1 cl""'"1, l . ''P1M1 .. became the iwinv'a standard bear- Hiannan ilaniii IMnii. awlallseil "."T . '"!'."' v .' . : er Julv II. i niedii-liie ami liluurr and more cell- r '". .ur", , ""V. "V. hheiihower anaiiuru lo .inner , imlurd Koverni.icnt a- lt unlv ho- V1, " '.,;,, "... first in Hoisr with the Hcnubllcan Union lo Mime of the uieving ""' He al.l Klrnlu.cr oiiuht to (overturn of 10 Weslein Mates, imihlrms that cmilroni Ainrilia ,Km"r ""' rxtienwa. Tltev nlannrd a ramnaiitn dlscua- lodnv. I Klsrnhowrr hiuiM-lf told u groim alon ol matters of snroiiil Interest ! "The general will av that mhiip liroiiiiiipiit itciiuDiii iiii women to the Went uih as rrcln ma. minis on which Antrrlraiia toilov i vrstntlav that his goal la lo lo tion, soli .conservation and water are aatrrd - pinnlovnipiil mid ! sure tiriup and iiiouipss for Ainei power. 'good wages, adequate neeiirltv forla and to iupvpiu llin "rreeplna In advance of the rnmnalgn old aue. better education, better t narulvaia ol anv ainu ot ism. - Hp told the group ol tlOl' lean. Citizens For Ike Leader Said Political Amateur Hoi f dSjoyfa By JACK BELL ' WASHINGTON OP Gov. Adll I E. cjit'tn.04is man Priuuy Siepa ' en A. Mitchell takes over lorm al control of the Democratic Na tional Committee today. The acliou apparently severs Just about the last direct link bv which President Trumnn minlu in fluence the planning of Stevenson's campaiRn-for the presidency. A possible exception to this lies j in the presence anions campaign 'advisers of Secretary of Interior i Oscar Chapman, an old friend of the Illinois novernor's from early j Roosevelt administration davs. Mitchell. 49 - vear - old Chicnco lawyer whose only practical politi cal experience was in he I runs: sot i Stevenson elected novcrnor of Illi nois, laiiea over a well-nccled com nut lee. Frank E. McKinnev. rettrltiR 'chairman, said the Democrats al ready had bought more than l1 million dollars worth of radio and television time for the campamn. McKinney said the party needs nunc niutiey. howcer. btvuus ol TV's hwh costs and the expenses of runninc a campaign train lor Stevenson. Sen. A. S. Mike Monronev of Oklahoma told a reporter the par tv needs not only more monev but more speakers. Monronev hcadb the nationnl sprnkers' bureau. "If I could just net inv hand1 on 50 cood sneakers rieht now I could tRu them up immediately Sparkman Returns Home; Predicts Democratic Win NEW YORK Ifl Every Ameri can boy has a chance to grow ud to be President ol the United Etates. And many a doting- mother would like to help her offspring get the job. "But how?" she asks herself, de spairingly. "How can I rear my boy to be President?" She knows how to train him to be come a doctor or a mechanic. But what every mother ought to know, she doesn't know how . to train him for the White House. And If she sets out unguided she can waste a lot of time and effort. She might, for example, to lo the trouble of getting him born in a log cabin, when this is no longer politically necessary. As a matter of fact, the average voter today is downright suspicious of a candidate who was born in a log cabin. He thinks that is carry ing the whole thing too far. What a wise mother can do. how ever,, is to try as much as possible to make junior an All-America boy hho appeals to all sections of the country. She might arrange to have him born in the rural area of a big farm state such as Illinois, spend his boyhood in California, and be gin his career in New York. He should be educated in the South, say at the University of North Carolina, and then take a law degree from Harvard Univer sity. His vacations should be spent working at different jobs In dif ferent states on a ranch in Wyo ming, in an auto factory in Mich igan, aboard a shrimp boat off Louisiana. Early in life she should teach Junior bow to talk with bis mouth full of pebbles, how to fish, and how to play some musical instru ment. The best one is the tuba. j as everv man secretly would like :to be able to blow a tuba. ) Junior also ought to always have j a aog as a pe., o sho iu love o. animals, and made to marry a girl I who likes cats. A wise mother will see that Jun j ior iioes tairiy wen n sciioui, uui not too well. The voters are un easy about a candidate who is too intelligent, and contemptuous of one who is too dumb. The careful mother will also be aware of "the doctrine of prophet ic remarks." This is the theory that all presidents, even as boys, foresaw the grave problems of the future. As the biggest problem likely to face most Americans in the next generation is where to park their motor car. the thoughtful mother could well have Junior, as a lisp ing lad of five, look at a traffic jam and repeat after her: "Some day I am going to strike a real blow at all this." This will make a wonderful anec dote for his campaign biography. Now all the mother must do be fore launching Junior into poli tics is to have him enlist for three years as an Army private, then fi nance him in a small but success ful business that makes a modest profit and gives its cmploves nine weeks vacation a year and a bonus at Christmas. How can Junior escape the presi dency now? Everybody will love him fisherman, farmer. ' laborers, capitalists, war veterans, cat fan ciers, dog collectors, hobbyists. easterners, westerners, northern ers, southerners. No, there is one thing more. Jun ior will have to learn how to cook. j It's manly today. And no house .wife is likely to vote to send a man to the White House that wouldn't know his way around the kitchen. 0A. . (p. $joJidan Ladies are constantly writing me bout their worries concerning ex cessive amounts of hair on the face, arms or legs. The mental suffer ing at times must be terrific, though obviously the presence of conspicuous hair is a danger nei ther to life nor to health. Why some women have more hair than others is not clearly under stood, but it certainly happens. Ex cessive hairiness is caused by di sease only rarely. In such cases, there is a clue in the fact that hairiness has not always been pres ent. : If the hair starts growing rapid ly, careful physical examination and diagnostic studies should be made. In the vast majority, the hairiness of the face or arms is unexplained, except as some in herited factor from one or the oth er parent may have something to do with it. There are several ways of at tacking this problem. The hair can be shaved. This is satisfactory for a short time, but generally re sults In a gradual thickening of the hair and its even more conspicuous regrowtb later. The hair can be bleached or dyed but the hair continues to grow out so this has to be repeated frequent- The hair may be taken off with hair removers which often consist or some Kina oi wax wnicn lastens to the hairs and pulls them out by the roots. This Is painful, and of course, the hair will grow again. There are also devices for rub bing the hair off which some wom en use with reasonable satisfaction, I am told. Perhaps the safest method of per manent removal of excessive hair is treating the roots of the hair by electric needle. It Is rather ex pensive and takes a fairly long time, but newer methods are claimed to be faster and less pain ful than in the past. Another method of removing the hair has been tried In many paru of the country. This Is the Use of X-rays a dangerous method. A number of cases of severe burns caused by x-rays used for exces sive hair have been reported. One person complained of severe burns on the arms and legs result ing from X-ray treatments taken over a four-year period for remov al of hair but the hair was not even removed. However, some skin specialists maintain that when properly per formed, It Is the best method of all. This may be true, but the meth od has also caused damage and should be used with great caution, if at all. TWIN BEDS BEST KFJI BUYS 7:30 a.m. FREE! One new Firestone Tube with each tire purcheie Expert Spray Glaxe ' Polishing, $10 up. 24 HOUR SERVICE TEXACO SERVICE CURLV'S By REX THOMAS HARTSELLE. Ala. A tenant farmer's son returned home as a Democratic vice presidential nom inee today jubilantly forecasting victory in November and four more years of prosperity for the nation. Sen. John Sparkman came back in triumph to the small North Ala bama community where he was born 52 years ago in a house made of logs. It was the third and next to last day in a scries of "wel come home" celebrations tha? started In HunLsville Monday. Sparkman Journeyed here from nearby Albertville, his wife's home town, where he sought to step aside and focus attention on Mrs. Sparkman and their attractive daughter, Mrs. Tazewell Shepard. But in a brief speech, he told the sun-scorched Albertville crowd that the Democratic party will win the presidential election "if we can go to the people of America and present the facts as they exist." He promised Just such a cam paign, both for himself and for Gov. Adlai Stevenson, the presi dential nominee a campaign free of "double talk." Earlier, he stood on the bed of a truck at neighboring Arab, Ala., and confidently spoke of victory on Nov. 4 and of a South united I once more behind the Democratic , party. And the election of Cov. Slcvrn 1 son. he said, will bring a "con ; tinuation of that good day we have I seen come to all of the country. ' and particularly this part of the I country." In Albertville. the vice presiden tial candidutc wore a cotton boll in the .buttonhole of his dark blue suit as a symbol, he called It, of his own career. It v.'BH. a; mortgaged bale of cot ton, Sparkman recalled, that gave him money to enter collese. study law nnd thus get into politics. Sparkman forecast at a barbecue in Albertville last niijht Hint the South would "show It still stands fast for what the Democratic parly stands for." ' Council Vetoes Night Nonsense FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. if The Fayetteville City Council took strong steps last night to discour age "nocturnal nonsense" in the city. It placed a 15-mlnute parking limit on this university town s most popular lover's lane. The First Lie GEO N. TAYLOR ADAM AND EVE WARNED "On the day you eat of the fruit of the tree, you snail sureiy aie. So God warned our first parunts. Adam and Eve. But Satan tempt ed Eve to eat, saying "You shall not surely die." This was the first lie. By it Satan became the Fath- WfMWrjt I said Jesus John W . .i I 8:44. T,ntpr Arlam also ate and fell. Then God sent death the sign that all of us are born with Ad am's fallen na ture the sign that in Adam all fall the grave swallows all. CHRIST EN T E R S But though tempted US Geo. N. Taylor at every point, Christ never sinned. He fell not. At the end. He took our sins, died for us and then by glorious resurrection, He came from death and the grave. And Just so, He Is to raise His redeemed. Thcv shall never see the Judgement of The Lost. Believe on Him as dy ing for your sins and He makes you one of God's people John i2in A Portland family sends this message mat you may sense God's love and his yearning to give you eternal life. For details as to the Gospel by newspaper, write Geo. N. Taylor, 3101 SW McChesncy Rd.( Portland 1, Ore, (dv) tor "appearances." Monronev said. I He added that he expects more ! volunteers when the summer va cation season Is over, but wants o get started as early as possible. I McKumev ulaiuird to lav belore the Executive Commuter, which will formally elect Mitchell as his successor, a detailed studv of wuere he thinks the puny snould concentrate its efforts In this veal's campaliiu. ! The commuter was expected lo jlKlloi't) a blast by Americans for 'Democratic Action, an independent (pro-New Deal group supporting ; Stevenson, nt piu-lv leaders in ' ColllilYSN. 1 III a direct swipe at Sen. Einesl W. McFurlatld of Ari.ona and Urn. John McCnrmack of Massachusetts lh' ADA said In Its publication: "Reyponsible Iradrrshiu was not , to be found in the selected heads of cither party in either house. I The Democratic lloor leadership ,was chosen' more for Its wilUns- ness lo get along with the crowd than for Its legislative ability or adherence to the Democratic party platform." Both McFarland and McCormack are seeking re-election. ! The ADA said. "The malorlty :of the Republicans in Congress 'continued to follow the same old ; irresponsible leaders who for vears .have been leading the fight of Iso lation and reaction." i "The voters of Wisconsin and Indiana have an opportunity to re move the No. 1 carriers of the dread disease of McCnrlhvtsm Horn the Senate by relating their support to McCarthy and Jenner," the ADA snid, adding: "Kem of Missouri. Brlcker of Ohio. Ecton of Montana. MMone of Nevada. Watklns of Utah. Mar tin of Pennsylvania and Jenner are all up for election and their cotlertlve defeat would be a deatb blow to the forces of Isolation Ti IIP 1 BsJt lose weight ook lovelier Nw Kessamin Plan Mps yov Ridud Easily . . Quickly . . . SwshSIy Don' I Ut ticfit fat kttp yw trtn looking your lobl bttt . . . from wtofioj otlroctivt now doiktl . . . from gtttiig mort fun J ticitofftont tul of lift than you tvtr thought potl)i. Do fry tht Ktttemin Plan for loiiig wtighl without Ottiol fifrtito, without dangtrou rfrufl, without goig on o itarvelion oNif. XESSAMIN Ii tcuintif iotly-proportd concentrate which, token of(ertJ'g to directions, helpi you reduce quickly, ooiity. 1. Halp curb your appclill. Halp fcttp you from boing dtficlont Is vital nutrillonol fartorl. 7hy provid you "ilk h notdtd vitonini, mintrall ond pretoiM to oot loll. Itv llOtlliltr FARRINGTON NAVY YORK Mrs. Oswald Lord, co-chnlrmnn of Cltlr-rns lor blseutuiwer-Nlxun, Is nn amateur in politics. She entered the pollllcul Irnv last Miring because ol a wurtlhie ucqilutmam-e wllh lirn. Dwluht D. Elsenhower and because she likes i being helulul. I Tall, dark-hulrrd and with a niuei tactful manner. Mrs. Lord's grev eves twinkle when she tries lo trace her path from social work In her native Miiuirapolis to the smoke-filled rooms of politics With ; Waller Wllllums. she la directum the work of a rtlirns cumitiiiieo to elect Elsenhower president, j She has devoted inaiiv of her 47 veara to social work, civil de- frnse. recreation, health and va rious national and International committees concerned with acttv Ittcs of women and children. One thing led to another. She met F.lsenhowrr during the war while touring Europe as an ad viser lo the Women's Arniv Curtis. She got Hint lob lltmtiuli civil de fense ond she ot Into civil rirlrnso when the lair Mayor Florelln Lu Ciuartlia suddenlv announced al a luncheon that she wns Ins new asslMant CD director in the New I York area. I Fhe was at the luncheon in her : rapacity as a director of the New York World's Fair. ' She became a director of the fair because she was president of the New York Junior League. Thai lied in with her social work after she moved here from Minneapolis. Mother ol two grown sons, the has found lime to give advice to the Armv (she was national chair man of the WAC's Civilian Advls ory Commission , lo the secretary of defense on housing and to the New York State Institute of Ap plied Arts ami Science . She has held dosIs in an arrov ol organizations both during and since the wur. Thcv Includo the slate and national war funds, the East Side Settlement House, the Women's Council of Greater New ; vork. the New York Delense Rec reation Comnilvsion and ihe chair ninmhio of the U. 8. Commission Jfor the United Nations Internation al Chlldren'a Emergency Fund: To get back lo her friendship Alter their first meeting In Frankfort soon alter VF. Day. they w-orked together to Wit-diiiurluii on Icttlslllllon which iniide lite WAC part ol the Armv, lalher than an auxiliary. And she ran Into Elsenhower uuaiii when he was Irving lo rr, build Western Euroiic's drtrnse and she was ovrrseas lor Ihe UN Children's Commuter. "It was tiiterrsllng to are how he was liked in foreign lands." Mrs. Lord sold. "Over and over uuaiu. I'd hear that he was the onlv tnun the Communists Irared. And at NATO he d walk down the hull talking lo people and voil ,rould Ills! Irll thev felt thev were oil on his tram. It Ittrt eusv net ting people to work together. You know, r-pcclally with dllfrrent, some times conlllctlng national interests." rrs that woiiirn con he a arewl lirlp iii lirlpinii to achieve that unal breiuisr- "l believe Ihrlr hrails nnd minds turn In the directions of lirnre. fnlinena nnd lustlce In the world." The purpose of the conference wus to man plans to woo Ilia women's vole in November. PAINT NOW WHY WAIT? First Clou Material and Workmanship Rooionable Prices Low Monthly Payment! FREE ESTIMATES PHONE 4226 H. L. BROWN Contractor msr FREE: Valuable booklet, prepared by a reputable doctor, lelll in fro nk, simple termi exactly what you ihould do to itort to ling at oneel Conloim luggeited diet you'll find obtolutely wonderful, Aik your druggist for it no obligation, GUARANTEE) Keiiomin Ii made by McKeiton 1 Robbini, one of Amn ca'i oldtit and moil reliable phorwa ceuticol leborotortei. YOU GET RESUITJ O YOU GET YOUR MONEY BACK) (Not for Glandular Obesity.) TU7 fczr nn nrvn REDUCING TABLETS LEE HENDRICKS Your Neighborhood Drugqiit 2212 So. 6th Ph. 4321 TREAT YOUR ftf CAR NOW! LUBRICATION SPECIAL... AUGUST ONLY Change Motor Oil $2.00 (5 Quart Capacity Cart Only) LUBRICATE CHASSIS .... $1.25 SERVICE AIR CLEANER SO Repack Front Wheel Bearings 2.00 REGULAR PRICE E AUGUST E PACKAGE PRICE ONLY $575 W5 ASHLEY CHEVROLET i E Phono 4113 din tk ' CnniinntuciiiniHiiiiiiiHiiiioiiiptumn! I aw . . V? ' i , d$flS&m mmm JIT 43 sflnM .74 r-r Jt V U X . - This new kind of fflo-Coaf y At laat ... a door polish Hint dric auper-briRlit and nuper-liard without a stroke of buffing I It comes from tlio famous Jolinwin'a Wax laboratories ond it's for any kind of floor. .. linoleum, rubber tile, asphalt tilo or finiriliod wood I Remember tho name Johnson's Hard Gloss Glo-Coat for tho brightest ' shino you' vo over soon tho hardest polish you'vo ever walkod on I It doesn't look streaky or smoary or scttffed-up after woaks of wonr ! Get Hard Clous Glo-Coat wherever waxes are sold. Once you use it, you'll ajreo it's the rtal economy buy in floor polishes bocauso the hard bright sliine lasts so long I TV lee "lebert Meatiemery Presents" en NICTV RADIO listoe to "JttmVWe News" 4 Nmm stay e Mutual . ... Ordinary flrmr watta art anft-thny markup when thoMaeufrovar them, Jnbruon't Hard OIoa Gls-Ceat Is upwhard-lt lUyabrlsht and rawoUi aoahoat don't laaveaacuffad-up look I t tigii,rtiii;:'8,it'UBaaMi 1 "Jotiwoni" and "Harrl OIH OI6 Cii" mtt IrfdiMflitl. ANOTHER PRODUCT OF JOHNSON'S WAX RESEARCH ftlane A Well Phona 2-UI