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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 6, 1952)
PAGE FOUR irERALT) AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON sATtmnAV. srcPTF.MnF.it n, iusa FRANK JENKINS Editor Entered a Mcond class matter st on August 30. 1906, under act ol congnesa, Marco a, 1179 MEMBERS OF TtIK ASSOCIATED PRESS Trie Aaeoeiatcd Pre.si la entitled of all Im local newi printed In this MAIL 1 month months 1 year . CAUGHT In Shortly after the political con ventions, when the old masters pulled the Stevenson rabbit out of th hat, somebody took a picture of Adlai Stevenson and drew a powdered wig on it. The result was an amoving likeness of George Washington. More recently a picture turned up with a beard and a little scraggly halr drawn on Stevenson. The re sult was the Great Emancipator. Honest Abe Lincoln himself. Just now one of the syndicated columnists reports that a likeness, which has been bothering him ever aince the Chicago convention, has dawned on him. He says that Ste venson reminds him exactly of Mewbold Morris, the brave lad who waa supposed to throw the crooks out of the Justice Department, but who lasted quick. All th time Ike looks and acts dial NEW YORK Wl Jesse James was born In the wrong century. He wasted his criminal talents holding up banks, ambushing trains on horseback, and died young himself, a victim of the crude instrument by which he lived a pistol. Today Jesse James would have to sharpen his technique consider ably to survive in a crime field that has become a big business truck cargo thefts. Looting the heavily-laden behe moths of the highways is now a highly lucrative industry for well organised gangs who operate with the timed precision of a profession al football team making a touch down play. The rewards are high. Single trucks have yielded $100,000 in furs. ttO.000 in liquor, $40,000 In cigarette, or as in one case (30,000 worth of brassieres. Truck hijacking has become so widespread that losses rose from $32,000,000 In 1945 to $65,000,000 in 1951, and some Insurance experts fear the toll this year may reach 75,000,000. Here is the kind of cargo these criminal specialists go for. as measured by losses last year: Clothing, food, textiles, tobacco, furs, liquor, metals, television sets, money, and furniture. "All It requres to steal a 20-ton truck is nerve." said Jack Seide, 42, head of Babaco Alarm Sys tems, a pioneer hi truck cargo protection. "Contrary to the public's idea," be said, "most truck hijackings don't occur on lonely stretches of the open road at gunpoint. "Ninety-nine percent are pulled 0A. . p. The easy explanation for some thing which occurs in the human body Is not necessarily the right one. Q X am a young woman of 33 and have suffered for years on and off because of too much acid to my urine. I can't go away much because of it, and don't want to apend the rest of my life sitting around at home. Have you any suggestions? - Mrs. F. A The urine is normally more eften slightly acid than it is basic er alkaline. It seems quite certain that the explanation of this corres pondent's difficulty is something else than Just an acid reaction of the urine. A physician's job is to search for and then correct what Is reallv responsible for the symptoms which are evidently distressing, ' but are described so vaguely in this inquiry, Q A dear relative has mutlple myeloma. Would you please discuss this? . Mrs. W. K. A This is a particular kind of tumorous disease which locates in the bones. Several treatments, in cluding the use of X-ravs over the areas of bone involvement, and use of ACTH, appear to bring at least some temporary relief. Q Will you please write about asparagus? I have often heard It argued that it was not good for one because of the odor, Mrs. S. A There Is frequently an odor to the urine after a person has eaten asparagus, but this has no Business Prospects Good For Remainder of 1952 NEW YORK Wl Rising In. dustrial output and retail volume stirred optimism this week over business prospects for the months ahead. Production picked up speedily Iter tne Labor Day nonciay. Steel plants scheduled capacity work for the first time in three months, with tonnage of 2,017.000 the highest since before the strike. Crude oil output averaging 6,210,. 400 barrels daily hit a high point aince April. Electric power distribution of T.S46.253.000 kilowatt hours was 1 per cent ahead of a year ago. Evidences of the high level oi trade included: Money In circulation was close to a record high at ss.wi.uuu.uuu. Loans to support business opera' tlons climbed to their highest since April, being reported by the Fed eral Reserve at 120,919,000.000. Retail stores' volume was esti mated by Dun & Bradstreet at unchanged to 4 per cent above the ame period a year ago, while the Federal Reserve put department BILL JENKINS Managing Editor the post office of Klamath Pa 11a, Or., exclusively to the una for publication newspaper as well aa all Ar new. Sl'BSCRIFTION RATES , BT CARRIER l.S.S 1 month f l.SS a t.fiO 6 months $ a. 10 . $11.00 1 year 116.20 The ROUNDS just like Ike. Right after Stevenson's nomina tion he made it clear that he was hit own man: that he wasnt tarred with the New-Falr Deal brush and would clean out the mess in Washington: that the Taft- Hartley law was fine with certain revisions; that Harry Truman could say all he wanted to defend who, he d done but that he, Adlai, was running his campaign. Since then he has been briefed in a Truman cabinet meeting: hasn't had anything to say about the mess in Washington nor his own mess in Illinois; and now has reversed himself and taken the Standard Truman line about throw ing out the nasty Taft-Hartley law. All the time Ike keeps saying, let's clean up the mess in Washing ton. dioyk off in a metropolitan area. They are usually the Its trom unauena ed vehicles. "Gunplay is very rare, because it is unnecessary." Some gangs set up their Jobs with inside help trom truciung firm employes, whom Seide feels aren't carefully checked for past criminal records. Some gangs loot unguarded trucks on the spot, others arive them away ana empty tne con. tents at their leisure, then abandon the vehicles. Seide became interested in the problem as a young traveling sales man for a jewelry and watch sup plies firm shortly alter graduating from high school. Thieves repeatedly broke into his car and stole his samples. "It wasn't the value of the samples themselves that both ered me," he said, "as the time I lost from selling until the samples could be replaced." With the help of a friend he made a crude burglar alarm that would sound the horn if anyone tried to tamper with this car. It worked. He lost no more samples. Other salesmen heard of his alarm, and asked him to make one for their cars. Seide decided to make vehicle protection his career, and de veloped his invention. It took him five lean years of hunger to interest trucking com panies and insurance writers in it. Today ne leases ms alarm sys tems to firms operating more than 8,000 trucks, has 200 agencies from coast-to-coast, boasts that no truck protected by one of bis alarms has ever been hijacked. pAdan effect one wav or another on the health. Q I have for years been a fre quent and heavy pipe smoker, but lately have not obtained the en- joyment I formerly did. I wonder is this means I have definite blood vessel disease? K.L.D. A Failure to enjoy smoking as much as one did formerly is not necessarily a sign of blood vessel disease. If you do not enjov it any more, wny not give It up? Q Recently I suffered an at- tacr or bursitis in mv arm and snoulder. Now I am told I hava calcium deposits. Would vou nlease tell me what these are? Mrs. O.W.T A Sometimes, following lnflam. mation of a bursa, which is a little pocket generally near one of the joints, calcium salts will be de. posited. Just why this should oo cur is not entirely clear, but In some fashion it appear to be one oi nature s reactions to the irri tation. Occasionally, the calcium deposits have to be removed bv surgery, if less radical measures prove ineffective. fci is the use of benzedrine harm ful to the body if taken m the form of 'j tablet daily? Mrs. M.B. A This is a falrlv small dose. and it is doubtful that it would produce harm. There have, how ever, been a few cases of ap parent habit-formation resulting from the long-clntlnued use of ben zedrine orobablv In considerably larger aoses, nowever. store sales at 4 per cent higher. Helping to maintain this activ ity was an upturn in non-farm employment reported by the Census Bureau. Other government reports show ed a 24 per cent rise in the past fiscal year In payrolls of govern ment civilian workers, lifting the total to $9.541, 000,000. Acting Defense Mobllizer John R. Steelman said industries were returning to pre-steel strike levels faster than expected. Trade optimism emanated from the Tanners' Council of America, whose executive vice president, Irving R. Olass, told shoe and leather goods manufacturers and buyers that "the broad outlines of long range normalcy in volume have begun to appear." "We can look forward to good business." he said, reporting what he called "a rosrjonsiv market for better merchandise." Despite all these expressions, the general picture for industry and business contained spots that could brew trouble. They H Do It Every VtMYZIT? CURlKkj " REMEAWS4L ,7hE ACTORS ARE MERVOOS AtiO THE PRODUCER IS COOL LIKE A COOLO'WBER J7 Uti i n,M "Til ' cives.' what brisJss I 1 1 1 1 if too slow wek J lYUlLE DURIM6 THE EUOWI 10 RWiiOH I f f I CONlMA BE SUOKTT Oc AT EASE BUT LOOK TL mis "toupee . aVV'JrVrrr Srl Voice Tells Western Europe That Ike, Adlai Policy Same By JOHN M. HIGIITOWER WASHINGTON IP The Voice of America is telling Western Europe that despite hot words on the nome front Republican and Dem ocratic presidential contenders ac. tually give evidence of agreeing on the main points of American foreign policy. The State Department radio beamed this message abroad this week after the sharpest foreign pwicy argument of the campaign had developed over the issue of America s attitude toward libera tion for Russian controlled satel lite peoples. The Voice broadcast its own te cum oi tne debate In what It said was an effort to "set the rec ord straight. " A weekly summary of Voice pro grams released at the Slate De partment disclosed the line the In ternational radio is taking. The summary recalls that at the American Legion Convention in New York last week GOP candi date Dwight Eisenhower raised the liberation question and quoted him as saying among other things that "we can never rest, and we must so lniorm tne Kremlin . . . until the enslaved nations of the world have the fullest freedom." This and related remarks set off an immediate reaction abroad. The Russian newspaper Pravda was quoted in the Slate Depart ment report as saying Eisenhow er's desire was to conquer Eastern Europe and Asia for "the Ameri can empire." newspapers in western Europe were, reported expressing con cern over what Elsenhower's words might mean in terms of American action. Actually, the Voice told Western curope, Eisennower said nothing in his speech about using Ameri can armed power to liberate the Soviet satellites. Furthermore, it said. Republican ideas were subseouentlv srielled out by an Eisenhower foreign policy adviser, John Foster Dulles, in a speech at Buffalo, N, Y., when Dulles spoke of "peaceful revolu tion in captive countries." Eisenhower ana Dulles, the broadcast continued, have not asked voters to believe that their policy means war for the purpose McGranery Drops Plans For Special Crook Study WASHINGTON lPt The Justice Department has dropped the plan to nave special leoerai grand juries in all parts of the country sit once a year to survey local crime con ditions. Atty. Gen. James P. McGranery says It smacked of ' showmanship' and that he believes regular grand Juries that sit month-ln and month- out can handle tilings just as well, He has disbanded the 13-man "racket unit" which his predeces sor, J. Howard McOrath, set up in the Justice Department last Jan uary to evalute reports from the special Juries and keep the pro gram in motion, McGranery made it clear today he does not think much of the special grand Jury idea, originated by McGrath and strongly recom mended by the Kefauver Crime Investigating Committee. Asserting that his faith lies with the regular juries to maintain fed eral law enforcement on a contin uing basis, McGranery told news men: 'Showmanship ought not to be any part of the administration of justice, such administration cans for dignity and certainty." As to the "racket unit," the at torney general said: "I don't subscribe to the name racket unit.' Labels won't do the trick. We have lots of units in the Criminal Division, functioning ef fectively, and not known by Houy- wood names." In response to an Inquiry, the attorney general said bis position was the same aa that of Federal District Judge Ben Moore of South ern West Virginia, one oi several Judges who refused to respond to Mcurath'a call for special juries in each of the 94 judicial districts. In tne same vein. Mcuranery said today: The function of the grand jury is a heritage that we received as free men. It is the most powerful Instrument under the Constitution and laws of our republic. An effectively functioning grand jury needs no special name or call ing. It can be summoned into ex istence most readily when a need is shown for it and the usual reg ular terms of court In the various districts of the United States are quite capable of taking care of any situation having to do wun violation oi our leoerai laws. ' McGranery recalled that he had specifically instructed all of the U, S. district attorneys, assembled here alter ne was sworn in last May, to keep fighting organized crime and Interstate racketeering on a continuing basis. U was McGrath's Idea that the Time ) LINES.' ttXK VOICES AKC. CVp' ---V ( SHAKIrJo! VWKE ALL V J . - I I - Kl V rife M II! J ' l.-y "e r m i f vi . ii i i - f n of liberation. "In saying that the American conscience can never be at peace while so many captive peoples live in slavery," the Voice con tinued. "1 Eisenhower) Is exnress- tng the profound feeling Americans nave not only now. But nave had throughout their history." The broadcast then quoted Dem ocratic candidate Adlai Stevenson m support of its contention of fun damental agreement between the candidates on basic principles for eign policy. It said Stevenson in a recent speech at Grand Rapids. Mich., bad commended Elsenhower s for eign policy views and had said speciucauy on tne iiDeration issue: "We (meaning the United Stutesi will continue to work for the day when all people will be free to choose their own government and walk again erect and unafraid. ' The broadcast also reminded European listeners that President Truman, speaking at Parkersburg, W. Va., had declared that In va rious "positive ways' the United States is demonstrating that It "has not forgotten the people whom the boviets enslave. The summary made no reference to another part of the President's Parkersburg speech in which he said there is no way to do more than is now being done for the satellite peoples witnout using force." Maybe the Republicans dont realize this," the President said. "but the people who are on the spot m fcurope xnow very wen mat talk oi liberation under pres ent circumstances Is war talk. That is wny tnese riepuoucan statements have caused so much concern among our friends In Europe." Truman s sharp criticisms oi tne Republican comments about liber ation drew a reply from Dulles Wednesday In New York, Dulles said it was "absurd to suggest" that Gen. Eisenhower would set off "wholesale insurrections by un armed slaves' to end Russian domination of the satellites. There are countless peaceful ways," Dulles said, "by which the task of the Russian despots can be made so unbearably difficult that they will renounce their rule. That was shown In Yugoslavia." special Juries sit in January of each year. They were supposed to examine law enforcement officials and known underworld characters, return Indictments where federal violations could be established, and to provide the Justice Depart ment with data on local crime conditions. Sen, Estes Kefauver (D-Tenn), whose Senate committee favored this approach as a follow-up on Its work, recently reiterated his faith in the special grand Jury plan. He said there had been 66 spe cial grand Jury sessions in the wake of the committee sessions apparently including those assem bled in response to the McGrath call and that some 250 racketeer ing indictments resulted. 41 Injured In Bus Crash BORDENTOWN, N. J. Wl A night express bus running from New York to Washington collided with the rear of a truck Saturday on uie New Jersey turnpiKe, in juring all 41 aboard as well as two on the truck. State police said the bus left the I road alter tne collision, rolled 2own a ten-foot embankment and Into a field. The front of the bus was rammed back to the third row of seats. Twenty-two of the Injured were hospitalized and at least one was listed as "very critical." USDA Okays Nut Program PORTLAND Wl The Agricul ture Department Friday approved a program for marketing the Pa cific Northwest's 22.920,00 - pound filbert crop. The program approved earlier by the Oregon-Washington Filbert Control Board, calls for sale of 66 per cent of the crop on the domes tic market. The remainder Is to be sold shelled or In export trade. Briefs opposing the proposals will be accepted by the Agricul ture Department until Sent. is. By Jimmy liulo ! NATO To Have A torn Weapons SHAPE ifi Gen. J. Lawton Collins. U.S. Army chief ol stall, said Saturday North Atluntir Treaty firrces in Europe eventually will be aupportcd by atomic weup ons. The general told a news con ference Hint discussions are muter way lor Integrating weapons, in eluding artillery and guided mis siles, into the Eurojiean forces. He added, however, that such weapons "were not Immediately available." Collins said such weauon "ran add materially to the ability ol western Europe to defend itself. He warned, however, that "it would be a mistaken IiLmi in he. licve that tile number of divisions immediately reciuired in Europe could be reduced'' by use ol new weapons. Collins said the weapons would, of course, lessen the size of future defensive forces but that for the present turope will need to live up to its schedule of military ex panslon. in order to be more ef. fectlve in defense against possible attack. The general explained that atom ic weapons can be brought most effectively into place against an attacking force, for this force, ob liged to mass Its forces for a lunge, presents a concentrated targei. Collins refused to say how soon atomic weapons would be coming off U.S. assembly lines but con ceded it will be in "less than 10 years v He added that "we don't believe tne Kussians nave any atomic ar tillery but we cannot be certain." and said that all Dlantung la based on the assumption that they might ukvb 11. Senate Group Studies Storm WASHINGTON 141 A Senate watcnaog group Is Investigating the heavy alrcralt damage this week at Carswcll Air Force Base Texas to see If losses were due to Inadequate storm warnings, equlp- nieiii. or manpower. Waller .Unkli.c -rf.lniDlrn,l... assistant to Sen. Lyndon B. John son tD-Texi. chairman of the Sen ate preparedness subcommittee, annonneeri vcti,rrfau that tt. probe was under way. Air Force uiiioiuis aiso are conauciing a tnor ough investigation. Four of the three million dollar R3H hnmhera al Iho hnu. ur tipped over and about 25 per cent , 1 1 i , , . i o' ijiuiics at tne giant iieio were damaged when a sudden, vio lent wind storm struck Monday. Fort Rock Man Hurt Avon Derrick wan seriouslv In jured Wednesday afternoon 8cpt. 3 while stacking hay on his ranch near Fort Rock. A cable broke on the hay lift and caused the load to fall on Der rick. The full extent of his In juries are unknown at present but it Is believed he haa a broken arm and possibly a broken shoulder. He was token to the St. Charles hospital in Bend by the Owl Am bulance service which picked him up. Ernie Stclgleder and Wen del Monlcal were with Derrick at the time of the accident and brought him to Fort Rock where they met the ambulance. Power Lack Not Over PORTLAND lifl A water man agement group was told Friday that the present power shortage In the Pacific Northwest probably will last at least until Oct. 1 and might continue through March of next year. Col E. Ellison head of the Port land WeaLhnr Bureau, told the Co lumbia Basin Interagency Commit tee group that sufficiently heavy rainfall to raise river levels is not In prospect for the next several months. Low river levels reduce the amount of nower which can be gen erated in the region's huge hydro electric dams. A Bonneville Power spokesman said if the heavy rains did arrive lnterriiptlblc power cut off re cently might be restored bv Oct. 1. If the rain did not arrive the power cut probably could not be restored to Pacific Northwest industry until next April, he said. PtopU DO TOO read small space ads - you are! ' mm m mm mmmmwmt II yuur house needs a new roof or heating plum, or If, according In Hie distaff aide, It must have mi electric lilsliwuslier. can you wall In save up the cash to pay lui those lliliign or are you going to borrow the money. Tins problem was brought up re cently In this depuiiiiirnt by a dis cusslon of new inorigage Ideas lo make It mora ixiluless for home owners lo enjoy properly improve ments while they pay twlih Inlet call. Due of I lie proposition Is nil mi-dliumiil-ailvaiice mnriKiittr anaiige ineiil, whereby alter you have puiil olf part al your mortgage you can boriuw It back attain. In such a case, if you borrow an additional $1,000 lor IU years, you'd pay $10111 more each month on your morlkage payments or $1.37 J HO lu all, at the rate ol & per ecnl. Another Idea Is to have an "open end" mortgage, which means that alter you have paid ol( pail of your Gangoti Religious Shrine Has Military Significance OANCiOTKI. Indo-Tibetan border ft Ajird Hindii.s by (ho thoumiiul.t MlUKKlc Up ttin liltih lllnuiliiviirt rucl i Mtinmrr to dip be lore ihry die it ihift, the holioM bnthint; pliu-n nlmtK the holy Oiuikim. llrre the IcKi'ndury Ktnn BhiiKi rntht mcdiiAt-rd fur 1,000 yenra, fin ally m.spirinti the oin to .tend down the CliinRe from icy kUcIpi. llrre the Inilh(u) believe the uodit live today. CmuKutrl meun.i "source of (hr OnnRes." For 6,000 yearn or more Hindus havo worshipped the mu red river IKe-mivmR sourer of fertility of the entire North Indian pin in from the Illmnluyaa to the Bay of HtniRul. Now this shrine has nunxd stnitcRic aiRnUicancr Indian old ctnls are confident Chinese troops ucro.ss the nearby NelanR Moun tain will think twice before start I iw frontier mischief to cloe lo Hinduism's sanctuary. Pilgrims from All parts of India must trek nearly 100 mmmliiltioi miles lo reach I3.000.foot hlith OniiROtrl. Most get some sort of Illness before the arduous Journey ends, and every year travelers hear stories of those who have died by the wayside. Formerly, pi Ik rims came here lo die tn the lup of the sods. The Hindu scriptures atiKKesl there Is no surer way to heaven. Many went far mil on the Ice Automotive Market To Be Crammed For 7953 By DAVID J. WILKIK AP Automotive Editor DETROIT IjTI The aulo Indus try will have many cars to sell between now and ihe year end; some of them will be 1053 models but several hundred thousand will be Ihe current types. Sales managers for producers of the more popular makes laMst thev will sell ell the cars they make this year. Many of the re liulcrs who have to do the actual selling are not so positive. Borne fear an over-pro-durtion of 1952 models; others, with inventories nt low levels, sny they can use many more cars. But All current signs are that field slocks will be larger at the year end than they are now. New car retailers always worry at this season of the year. They visualize a stock of current model cars on hand and next year a mod els being shipped from the factory. But they've been through this be fore. In some cases I hey have put on bargain aales; In others they have sprend their unsold stock of new models over a number of used car lots. Including their own. Generally they have come through without actual loss, al though the new car buyer usually has insisted upon a high trade-in allowance before accepting a car about to be superseded by a new model. In the situation Immediately nhead current models mny present good bargains even If the trnde-lns allowances are not better than av erage. There will be assurance of By MARY KGAN Gel on your mark, Ret set, got Yes. this seems to be the one-lwo- thrce process of Retting back to schuo for 116 Sacred Heart Arnu- cmy hiuh school students. After busy days ol registration, lining up courses, and gcttlnK books, everyone is ready to settle down now to what all hope will be a very successful school year. nut is mat mixea up process m Rctllne back to school the students noticed several Important changes. nrst and loremost. tne aaunion of six new classrooms to the school and the enlargement of both the grade and high school libraries. Also in tne line oi aamtions, ana this time we mean the faculty, are Sister M. Macaria, the sophomore teacher, and Mr. Souzn, who will be the coach as well as sociology and biology teacher. Students wish lo extend a hearty welcome to both of them and hope they will enjoy their stay at SUA. Otlit-r than this, the faculty la similar to last year. Including Sr. M. Llllosn, Superior; Sr. M. Clarlla; Sr. M. Clarissa: Sr. M, Ethclwlna: Sr. M. Rosuia, and In the music depart ment will be Sr. Emelda Joseph and Sr. Cecilia Francis, sr. Clurlcna will be replacing Miss Mary Lou O'Connor as physical education teacher. Yes, it's lust me, back agnln to bring you the Academy news tor this limz to M acnnoi year. I'll be looking iorward to seeing you twice a week until next June. Okay? HOTELS OSBURN HOLLAND EUGENE, ORE MEDFORD Thoroughly Modern Mr, and Mr.. J. E, Earlej and Jos Barley Proprietor! E-y DAVID Q. BARHUTrUK, A Heel Itlote mortgage, you can borrow more iiul Instead of Increasing your monthly payments, you oan Just extend the III ol the mortgage to cover Hie added debt Willi InlrieKi. This naturally costs more In the end, but you aren't aupimsril to leel 11. Under this plan, according to one ol our readers, you can be "perpetually 111 hock." One reason these schemes have been originated Is the tieinenilous credit backlog that la being built up among home owuern. The chain pinna ol Ihe "open eiul" immune claim Unit $3 hlllion Is now spent annually on home inoilernltulloii and this eould be doiiblrd with more liberal cretin. They claim that Ihe nine million fattilllnn who own iiiortnaged homes have equ. ties lii those homes totaling tin billion. Another rra-ion Is that It hurts the lamlly budget o much to lake on short-term llunticliig. audi as usual carrying charges on Install. and threw thruvtelves down aomr liluclal ehnMii." recalled Hwa.nl Tapoban, OiuiKolri'n, most noiril mahnttna, who hai lived In cave here for 30 years. "For them It was a tiluiioua end. In keepiiiK with our myiholouv- Uul now we have a modern-minded uov eminent. The police have been Is sued instructions to prevent Mil cides of this sort, and Ihe practice lb dying oul." Each pllitiitn attend prayer reieimmlcit nl Ihe lamed GuiiKolrl Trmple when conch shell horns blare out their suinmoiiH dally latter Miiisei. lite lilfih spot "f every pilKrlin's day comes with the UniiKcs bath, followed uy trans. Icr ol a small portion ol (.j aline water from the river lo a Hpccinl receptacle in the Ilameshwarum Temple. The pilgrims are nrarly all old women and men who have come on Iheir holy vliit with funds do nated by fellow village! a or nuved up for a lifetime. Normally, even Ihe cheapest travel would be beyond Ihe means of the devout pcu.iaul tn a land with average annual Income below GO rupees -j $12.00). After netting to the foothills of the Himalayas an itnK)rtanl item for Hotjth Indian pilgrims Ihe Highlands Journey It self runs rouslily 3A0 rupees (.i3.50, reasonably quick delivery and Uie buyer will e.scnpe the higher prices many industry annlyita aay will mark the new models. Not to be overlooked, of course. Is the lacl that (or trtullnu pur poses a year hence. Die IM'J model purchased new In December will be a year older tlmn the IBS'! model you bouiml lii.il January or February on a 1053 car don't be niloiushcd II the dealer nllera you .i.uuu it-.. man you pniu lor It And, drtpitc the fart that upward of 1 'v million pas.senger autonio biles will be scrapped this year a very larRe part o( the Industry's business will involve trade-Ins. In many Instances the trade-ins go Irom the new car retallrr s sales room direct to the lunkplle. An Increasing number of the new models that aoon will begin coming from the assembly lines will be of the "hard ton " tvne Drought out initially in 1IH0 this model has led the way In elimina ting many other body styles. It has been estimated that of the approximately four billion new pas senger cars lo be built tills year about half a million will be of the hard top design. In all price clas ses. This would compare with about -180.000 built last year when overall output totaled more than 9,300,000 passenger cars. Man Drowns In Columbia ASTORIA I One man was dcowned and another missing in marine mishaps reported Friday at the mouth ol the Columbia liiv or. George H: Wheeler, about 56, keeper of the Tillamook lighthouse, fell Irom a boat to his death while fishing. He collapsed Just belore companions hauled him aboard, They found a gash on his head apparently suffered in the fall. Haymond Lendten, a tug bout operator, Is missing. His oinilly bout was found anchored outside the harbor. He had been lowing logs. Radio Men Call Strike PORTLAND im A strike by radio announcers, actors and sing ers against six Portland radio sta tions has been authorized. The announcers Bald they are asking a $5 Increase which would bring their weekly wages to lull. No strike deadline was set, and the radio men, members of the AFL American Federation of Ra dio Artists, are continuing negotia tions with a federal mediator tak ing part. Stations aflected are KOW, KOIN, KPOJ. KEX, KWJJ and KXL. DANCE RED BARN - DORRIS SATURDAY EVERY BUCKEY BATES and hit BRUSHY MOUNTAIN BOYS A Four Star Recording Arriit All Western Swinq Band? Daneinq 10-2 Standard Time Adminion 1.00 Inc. Tax IdlleT inrnt loans, nr nveri the true yfr monthly-payment FHA I iiHHleling loan. Much FHA "Title I" loans have to bn paid back at Ihe rat ol Ml U0 per mouth on $1,000. al Uiouuh UiU Is supposed In bn a low rato-of interesl, some mill fiUtiia It nut In bn aeluully 0.0 per cmi. How this hi till rale In reality Comes about In elled 111 a letter Horn K.N. of Philadelphia, wlm Writes: "When you ore trllUuj lolka about FHA and thien yeara to pay, vmi should have lold litem (hat whrn you are initkili the lut Installment you are payliiK u with Interest on Ihe oi in uiiil amount or about li per rriu on the otlgiiml amount. .Ike monl other folntn on the pub. lie, this was a l.lihil" JI.H. ol New Koehrlle. NY. writes: "Have We all gone 'deficit finance craxy? Unco the itoal of re.ipeflnl)l men was to pay ca ,li and owe no one. Now we havo coin, pletely lost Hart of Uie old-fnnh-lotted vlitues. To be hi hock in fashionable and, apparently, lh deeper hi drut Ihe better. "All ainiind us c ace buka building huge cathedrals In which the iniallmml plan la worshipped. Hot rowers pay laney Intercut rates tn keep thco haiikn flourishing, and the aveiuyr person Is encouragrd lo puy a Intger and Iniger aharr of his dollui on sotnnhmg for which he nets no physical rolinn -namely htteirst. "You would do better to show your renders how much more they m in lit gain by saving and paying caih for their inipioveuirnix. in the long run, thry will save consid erable sums and be able to slim n even more improvementa than they could by being In drbl lo Ihe banks Well, of course, this la true. Hut when you nred a new rixif and can t atfoid to pny fur It, what ait you going tn do? In some famihrs the need for a washing inarhint may Ad-rm Jul as urgent. bo we borrow money, because a can't boiiow a tool or a KashhiK machine. Uul the thing we borrow thr money for U actually what wi Ate hollowing And we bornm from a baiikei. of one kind or an other, because Dial's his busm-rav-Irmllng money. Furthermore, he la not working for h)n hralth, any more than any of u are, About the only way you can look al borrowing lor a homp Improve ment la on this basis: Are you go. lug to get more satisfaction oul of saving your money and getting In ter e-u on It, or would you rathrr enjoy In Ihe meantime what that money will buy? Vets Mailbag The Vclermu Adiiilnt-iliallon hi advLied all vrtriniui to have pliolo slntlc or cerlllled copies made of their original discluiige or separa tion piielB lor u-x la applying for veteran bcncflti. Veterans with service line Juut n, WMl-tlie slim ol the Korean conflict should have the.se copies inmle Immediately, ihe VA said, II thry plan to attend achool under the Korean O. I. Bill this fall. The VA pointed out that post Korean veteran can avoid delsy in receiving education and tram lug If they have their lepuralinn papers copied before the oViginsli are lent in to Uie armed services lor inusleiiiiK-out payment. Muslerlng.ont pay is handled bv the Individual services and not by the VA. although VA Held ofllccs arc assisting veterans In Uie prep aration ol imiMci Ing oul pay ap plication. For mo-,1 VA-adiniulMered ben 1118, photostatic or certllled copies of discharge or separation papers are acceptable, wiUi Ihs exception of VA-giiarnnieed loans. Veterans applying lor Crr un eaten al eligibility lor G. I. loans must present then original dis charge or separation papers which will be endorsed bv Uie VA and returned after Ui loans ar pro cessed. Tile VA also has asked veterans to make sure that In submitting photostatic or certllled copies of dlschttige or --.epaiatlon papers Ihey submit copies of both sides ol Ihe document and not Just the front, f Veiertins who have been re leased lo the reserves since June 27, 1050, should submit their report of separation or certificate of serv ice, since Ihey do not gel dis charge papers. Kennon Sees Ike Victory BATON ROUGE. La. IB-Oov. Robert Kennon. in an apparent move Uiward open supjiorl of Dwight Elsenhower, suld today the OOP presidential nominee will car ry Louisiana In November, "Mv political weiilhervane nolnls lo Elsenhower," declaied the gov ernor of this traditionally Demo cratic stronghold. Kennon, a critic of President Truman lind Gov. Adlai Stevenson, Democratic presidential nominee, said he would make his position clear In a statement later. Louisiana hasn't gono Republi can In a presidential election line lb in when Riiihcrlord llayei won a disputed contest. Kennon in recent weeks haa shown strong Indications that h lavois Eisenhower and the Repub lican pliillmni. llo disagreed bitterly with Ste venson's slum! on the controversial off-shore oil bciirlnu tldcliinds. Ste venson said recently he favors fed eral ownership of the tldelanda, a position in contrast to Kennon s. "Call Men's Hand Laundry when things look black!" Ilth and Klam ath, Phone Wr:il. NIGHT I