Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 20, 1952)
I .'AGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH fkUS, OREGON SATURDAY, DECEMBER 20, 10fl2 They II Do It Every Time Uy jimmy Hallo LI pf or .P R,No.- NAME. TWErV BULLlSTErJ.CIJIH Rvt uJe-q-i rim , Naiae i Adataaa eSiT,fWe VOU GUESSED TALENT, BR NOS THE ait'it nwe."-.w - HIS NECK IU GOJEfML FOR TOE CLUB- EatpioyM Pleat tvr la Ik above mloimallcn baloi tellrllallon tloeli l tty tUrlre U nli wi connunllr tiealih and wallara piota. Il nndy ehilrirn I rUHg. a UNITFO ClfT at chrkJ la In bri blow USO and Kivicas le FRANK JENKINS Editor BILL JENKINS tluuillll Editor AS OiJUQMAH. T Uiur vj I I TWAlJk TUP RDAIn nhnLi. 1 N I .also . ' 'ir-vST S ,T?.'l'r2' Vurs ryntrM teeond clut matter tt the pott olllce ot Klamath Falls. Ora, ji . as August SO, IBM, under tot of Congress, March 8, 1879 lt' ": MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . i Tht Associated Frew la entitled exclusively to the ua for publication ! if all the local nawa printed In this newspaper at well aa all AP news. : IT-SWELL 12 PAYMENTS OT THE AMOUNT CHECKED (X) BELOW MONTHLY OF YOU PEOPLE TC CU4iRS-vtl?s.PiyUD aifn uo COAte-f LL CAW IM VOUR STUFF"- 17 00 IS00 ISM 14 00 ) II SO 00 II SO II pi mi w if iw m pi pr ' pl II W " SIM """ 7 to M ' Jo 10 l 3 IN AHO A1Kfc YOURSELF TO r-v"r w mc -JHENCCGOOO iTTv-t NKjHT.' SUBSCRIPTION RATES v - '. -,- I t,.l. m, vlv M Mml lallMI I! mI ul KMt itoi. U.-l m Oil.W 97, m ia ll 44WWMI IvHi iitvU ! mv t M M im1ii Im t fmM klt t n rMfi-iM a imiIW f v Hm im it At.i4 hh-i m '-i l -t'it-v-- 4"t j . . MAIL BI CARRIER in t month : ( months I year -- I 155 I 6.50 111.00 1 month .. I months I year I l.M t 8.10 116.30 Ol 1 tubtnib as Mlewi Total Xirouni Colli Harewl'lii" tjilonr Du BILLBOARD 5 Hv BILL JtMilNS Just-as you can tell those who jve garages and those who dant i Uu&-snouT weather, so can you almost surelv tell who lives in fie country and who lives in town- lust by looking at their cars. 7 The town people can usually get ground fairly well on snow grips oi some kind, but the country people almost always come clank ing into town on chains. That's life in 'trie high country. . Always fun about this time ol year to read the Xmas cards from your irlenda In different spots. Al ways reminds one of how fast time (ravels and how wide-flung a place the old world is.- This morning's mail brought In a nlpasant season's ereettngs from r ...... uac th pv.v 7r H i-.ir. He tends his best to all his- friends In th Basin. He's now giving his talehta to KSLM up in Salem. CAUGHT IN By DEB ADDISON When you think of foreign re : latlons you generally think u terms of friendly or unfriendly ceoole. and when you think or tne friendlv ones it's generally in terms of American financial aid or American brains showing the .fuddy-duddy Old world how to ao things right, r Four-H Club leaders, who were ' honored for their year's work at a banquet recently, heard a grass roots foreign relations report which Was a little different. It definitely was "grass roots", because H was made by David Patterson, an Oregon 4-H member, who spent last summer in Finland at a 4-H exchange student. This 4-H exchange program puts American boys and girls on farms In other lands and the foreign youngsters on American farms. The following is approximately what David Patterson reported: Small dairy equipment is much more modern than small dairies here in the U. 8. That statement, however, does not apply in all cases to the large dairies of Fin land compared to U. 8.. but some of the equipment in large dairies Is superior to our large dairies. They have different types of timber, it is smaller. In planning forests, they have a plan for each section and a plan tor eacn aina 01 tree. The present Umber crop was planned 60 years ago and they're now planning ahead for .M years. They conserve their : forests much better than we do. They cut according to worked out iong time plan. There is little waste. They have been controlled by forestry laws for years. They plant 2 trees for each one taken out. In Lapland they plant 3 for each one taken out due to loss of so many young trees in their cli SAM DAWSON i ;" - ' I j' NEW YORK A drop in the cost ol living a restoration ol -the buying power of the dollar would be a welcome Christmss present lor everyone. ; Or would It? - - Call K "mating a dollar worth 100 cents again," and it sounds ..fine. Call tt "deflation," and a lot -,oi- people get worried. The dollar actually has 100 cents 'now. as It always did, but inflation has chiselled away much of its Buying power. When you talk of a "52-cent dol- lar," you mean that before the I ..war o2 cents would buy as much in goods and services as one dollar will now. The pre-war dollar bought more finished goods. It also bought more raw materials. And it bought more labor. Mnnv nennlp houtvt, haH fw er dollars then to spend on goods ! lhan tVwtv ri tnHau lhan they do today. It is the others those with only as many dollars a week to spend now aa they had before the war for whom the postwar rise In the cost of living Is particularly rough. Millions, tor example, are trying ' to live on pensions or savings earned when the dollar bought more, and being spent now when inflation hat taken half ot its buy ing power. To deflate the economy, get back to prewar prices, and make the dollar at hefty In purchasing power as It once was, however, might mean that people would have to take in fewer dollars for the commodities they grow or mine, and get less for transporting them to factories. Workers In factories and mills might have to take pay cuts. And those who supply factories with tools, materials and services would have to slash their prices and incomes. - Stores would havt to pay less Watllu.t Ballta fat Rttpt. ealla Oak kaek ant Pant. Fall Maul Plata Pfaaal taalllr Ittlit Miatini aart. Tanal ! hr warld'a Itadlni le villral ntlnctri. Ytt Warlltitr PUnat ari nal Jail t ft Saltan bal aetiall handradi ar tallara aaStr atany elinas aat naif lr aa wtu ballt. Thai it aoeamallilitS Uiraaih lha aaa"eallaa at atattrn rriclanl ftetarr aat marbcltnr mtlh a4t, sttllitt a atw aundart la tha Blana laSattrr. Krai ana at Iktat la! . apiaal pUnaa H raa with. Aaalr rant far a raaaanaala Uma taw-art parehaaa. Tha lavatp aalanlal spinas SSS1 tallraraf wlia Sanaa. i Louis H Mann Piano Co. IM Ms Ilk NiBiind Orfti iinaifflVMawS Looks like he ll hve a hot old time ol it with the legislature this year. And to will a lot of the men we i elected. There are some very I knotty bills to be talked over. Many people around town threatening to go up and sit in on some ol the sessions, just to see how they go. I've always wondered why more people didn't take advantage ot i their opportunity to visit their legislative bodies In session. It's I the best working example of, democracy I can tmnk of oifhand. More voters should make it a point to drop up to Salem and watch and listen to the sessions for a few days each time they con vene. It puts you closer "to the way your state is being handled and gives you an insignt into a com- iplex business, that of making enforcing the laws by which I live. ana we THE ROUNDS mate. Most of the mills are very modern, equal to this country. One mill engineer said he would not consider using American equip ment as it is too slow. Most of the equipment for the mills is Ger man and English manutactured and ihen rebuilt in Sweden and Finland so aa in adant u their timber TOeuary colder cr SSSZj methods iiient. They think our mhoos are not well planned and wasteful. The small forests mere do not have much equipment A maior Dart ot the forestry is on ! small holdings. They do have -"me national timber. The rehabilitation methods and care for underprivileged and handi capped are superior to ours. They take better car of them in their modern schools. They have more study from books than from labo ratories. The laboratories art not quite so good as ours. The stu dents are one class ahead of ours. It is harder tor them to adjust to different subjects than our stu dents. They have more specialised education. Schools are very modern and well kept. They have 8-year school requirement but most want 12 years. They had much courage and stamina in rebuilding their country after both World Wars and are paying their own war debt without help from the outside as most other European countries. They are much more heavily taxed than we are. the tax is about SO per cent of their income. They accept pay ing taxes as on of their duties, but don't like it. The 4-H program is modeled after our American Program and they are very proud ot their 4-H. In their country it1, is years old. - It is a very runt program and very at; for rent, light, fixtures and clerks than they do now. Everyone would enjoy paying less for the things he hss to buy. pew would relish getting less lor the goods or labor he has for sale. A Virginia farmer says of Infla- tion: "I like having more money. I know It runs right through my lingers when I go to the store. But I like the feel of more of tt in my hands." And a Bloomingum, mail writes: "Our dollar is worth 100 cents, alwavs has been and always will be. "After all, a dollar is simply s token of a day s work, and the more days work there are, the bet ter for everybody and the country in general. "Also, never since you were born did a day's work buy as many of the needs of life as it will to- a. ' And of the high cost of living, be notes: "Many folks have a car. and there Is nothing wrong tbout it. "They also attend many movies, lake trips all around, and at the end of the month find themselves a little hard up. which they blame on 'the high cost of food' or some other thing."' None ol this is Intended as a defense of Inflation which does no one any good, just gives them the nice feeling of having more mon ey, ill of which runs right through their fingers. But deflation can be a mixed blessing. Particularly if It gets out of hand. Falling prices are great tor the family budget but only If earn ings and incomes don't fall too. Many people may find that pretty hard to achieve. Now Playing at tht Y Club MEDFORD Chuck Miller Trio mew 1tf-r (THK Ike to Depend on Business Brains for Economic Operation of Defense By MARVIN . ARROWSM1TH partments.- Yesterday Elsenhower NEW YORK lwPrefid-mlijani,0Uced 5Clectloo ol:. Elsenhower . Is count Inn on the , .. civilian team of industrialist-, and armed services in his admlmstra. tlon to save the taxpayers money without jeopardising national de fense. Eisenhower reportedly placed much enmhasLs on a need for what one aide called "sound American business sense in his now-com- plcted search for a defense high command to direct the spending of billions of dollars. His first step, taken late - last 'o f J- f wllson the veteran president ol weiieral Motors, as secretary ot ' the civilian team, Eisenhower wanted not only a n J" Production but one v . ; " value out of every dollar, , He and Wilson looked for exper- ienced businessmen to head the Army. Navy and Air Force De-' At 1-A i'Vaa7 a. . ,:"-. V: JAM to MAKLUW- -v iira- SI .. i rfrW.-pa tUi&K.bVH. WASHINGTON Owen Lat- timore has been running a tongue- battle with some senators for two years. Now he's in the worst Jam of his life. A federal grand jury has indicted him on seven charges of lying under oath. At 52 Lattimore is a vigorous, stocky, balding - man with eye glasses. And he's art emotional man. judging from the heat with which he hae always responded to senators' sttempts to link htm with communism. BMtriM twin a nr!falfit nn nr t-... . 7, "VT. . . t.M Donart'tnent on.i.lt'.nl h' is a lecturer at . Jonns Hopkins university, MV.'"tyi'm.. f.rn. . commit. Many times, facing a committee in the Capitol, he has sounded like a professor denouncing a mob of disorderly freshmen. This didn't endear him to the senators. iiitimnr' had iiivi hpcan in ! March. 1950. when Sen. McCarthy '. 1 1 j v. . i i .... v. : called him a bad security risk McCarthy created a national sen sation for himself and Lattimore when he ssid the Far Fsr-rn spe cialist was the top Soviet espi. onage agent in this country. Short ly sfterwards he called Lattimore the chief architect of our Asian policy. Needless to say. Lattimore de nounced the Wisconsin senator. But a subcommittee of the Sen ate Foreign Relations Committee, headed by the then Sen. Tydlngs. Maryland Democrat, began hear ings on the whole range of charges made by Republican McCarthy. When the nea rings enaea tne Democratic senator., on the com-j mlttee gave Lattimore a clean bill I iiisiiiiiiissiiriisissnrirrriTrrnuisMiirii (posdA fiiiiinniiHiiMimlilllililHllllllllliliiin EXCHANGE, PLEASE ' Awnrmona' "Twas the day after Christmas, And Into the store came grlm-visaged customers Bv the score They came all loaded with packages Tightly held In range . . . And why did they bring them? Oh, Just to exchange. Some came with a dress. Too long or too short. Others brought back boxes Of dainty confection. Others the powder that won't DANCE Community Hall South Sixth Saturday 9:00 1:00 Standard t Music lv Les Gardner and hit WESTERN SWING IAN0 kFLW Iroadcait Saturday, 5:00 p.m. Adm, $1.00 (Tax Inc.) I ,f "T" f evens w. tary of the Army. He Is a textile executive and also Is chairman ot the Federal Reserve Bank of New York: He served as a colonel lu the Quartermaster Oeneral't Office i uru'8 World War II , ' Robert Beroerd Anderson, 4J. of vernon. rex., as secretary ot the Navy.. A Democrat, he la manager I of a half.milllon acre ranch, one ,of the largest in Texas. He also is chairman ot uie Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Harold E.- Talbott, 4, ot New York, as secretary of the Air Ff'itie. He is a member of the Chrysler Corp. Finance Committee, a former chairman of the boar a of the ' North American Aviation Company and a former president tof the Davton Wright Comoanv. -During the second world war he served as director of aircraft pro of health. That might have been the end of Lettlmore's- troubles, except that another commltiee be- gan an Investigation of- V. 8. pol icies in the Far East, v-here ihe Communists had taken over China and we were In a war hi Korea. This committee the . Senate sub committee oisantRrnal security', led by a Democrat, Sen. McCarran of "Nevada selrv" In' - bam in Lee. Mass., In February, 1651. some files of tht Institute of Pacific Re- i Unions-. i The IFR, an rat iyit, an international re- ' rcn Organisation, was founded in 126 with the a .-owed Durt? e of promoting- greater knowledge ' o' " Pacific tret. Latlimort. -n :iPD d-., IPR .trustee, was editor of Pacific Affairs, en IPR magasine, from 11.34 to 1941. Witnesses told the McCarran Committee IPR had been lntiltra- d by Commrnlsk . to ihe oi i- miftMt vii Ini'Mittl Imo it - nart mittee waa investigatloa it at part of its Inquiry Into Communist in fluences on our Fsr Eastern pol icy. . Several- -witnesses one of them was Louis Budera told t ie cu.ii mlttee Lattimore had supported pro-Communist views. Testifying under osth. Lattimore swore he was not a Communist, not a Com munist sympathiser and not a So viet agent. In add t on. i'.r aaid Budeni had perjured himself. In the end the committee de cided It wss Lattimore who had perjured himself. It urged the Jur tice Department to ask a grand Jury to Indict him for perjurv. Thi the firand Jury rtJd yesterday, seven counta. on Qohmh Match their complexion. There was Jewelry and purses, Gay nighties and such, And one pour c'd lady Had brought back a crutch. Imagine the looks In the Jam and the squeeze. When a small voice piped out: Change mi vitamins, p!'- .. With stocks so depicted And nerves In a Jangle, ' It was hard for the sales girls To keep out of a wrangle. The moral of this: Keep your gift snd Con't crab It. Re kind to humanity . . . Don't get the exchange habit. SOLVE ... Your Last Minur Shopping with a . . . filT lclBTlHCa' from JUUeiL & duction lor tht War Production Board. Eisenhower also mimed Rotter M Kyes. 46. of Bloomfleld Hills, Mich., deputy secretary ol drleiisr. Ltke Wilson, under whom he will serve. Kyes Is a General Motors executive general manager ol the corporation's motor truck and coach division. All of the defense high command appointees are RepubllcaiLs except Anderson. All are resigning their private jods. Aides said Eisenhower Is delight ed about the business backgrounds ot all of the men and that he lerls thcir experience should assure aav-1 SUl,emrm trom s,n. carbton R tns w.Uiout endangering national . Kun, ce,rlv lndic.tlnr. lnal Pr, n"!!f,' .u. ildent-elect Elsenhower had no ob- ZTZ!.Z...Ja , ,. JT.-l '",'""" pledged repeatedly to work for a cut In federal spending. He report edly feels there la room for savings In the military field, where he has spent most of his life. - In completing select ion of top civilians In the defense aet-up, Elsenhower also let it be known he wants to name another woman to a post In the new administration. Mrs. Mary B. Lord of New York conferred with the general yester day and said afterward that he had authorised her to nay he had offered her a Job. She said she was considering the offer and would decide in a few days. Mrs. Lord was co-chairman ol the National Citizens lor Eisen- ' hower Committee. Shasta Carries One Millionth Klamath Falls welcomed the ar rival Friday of the one millionth , Shasta Daylight passenger at the s p. deoo. on the arrival m the, S P. depot on the arrival of the northbound Shasta. The honor was given to Alice Smith, II, from Oakland, Calif., who was accompanied by her mother. Alice was enrouit to Seat tle lo visit her grandparents over the Christmas holidays. bhe was greeted at the depot by O. W. Morgan, district pas senger agent for the 8 P., who in turn Introduced her and her mother to Mayor Bob Thompson. The May- or presented her with a mnlature crate full of Klamath's fsmous net- ted gem potatoes and Oeorge P. Davis, newly elected president of the Klamath County Chamber ol Commerce, presented corsages lo both Alice and her mother. Miss Smith nd her mother were guests of the southern Pacific for meats ana courtesies enroute to Portland, and from all reports Alice was having the time of her life on the million dollar streamliner which has been averaging 800 pas sengers daily In both direction! s-nce its Inaugural trip In July ot mt. Indians Invited To Inauguration WASHINGTON I Indians from 17 ststes including Washington and Oregon have been invited here to take part In the inaugural parade for President-elect Elsenhower. Joseph C. McOarrachy, chair man of the Inaugural committee, said Thursday many of the Indians will wear complete tribal dress, and some will ride horses In the parade. Rig It lb Budrel Bundles washed and dried at Men's Hand Laundry for Just 9c DANCE New Years' Eve Bonanza Hiqh School Gym ANNUAL ' Fireman's Ball Btntfil Bonanza Volunttar Fira Dtpt. Music By Les Gardner and hit Western Swinq Band SI. 00 Per Nrson a (111 MONTHLY Q OVAHTKHIY Q ar n, Wlow. . SUBSCRIBERS SIGNATURE f itniH aia lor diinsHaiM lot your aid COMMUNITY CHEST subscriptions art btinq tcctpttd from thoit Klamath poopli who havt not betrt contacted this year. Tht loctl campaign committee, optrtting with limiltd num. btr of volunteer worktrt this year, has not bttn tblt to eovtr many treat ti ytt, and coma qutntly hts txtandtd tht campaign. To facililttt mttttrs, tht commlHtt is tikinq Ihoit whs would contribute to do so by cutting out tht tbevt blank, filling It In and mailing to P.O. Box 839, tithtr with pledge, check or cash. Si miliar trrtngtmtnts may bt mtdt by phoning 6096. , i T Republicans Reveal Party Harmony; Taft Assured of Senate Leadership By JOHN (HADWKK WASHINGTON tnfUn T.ft r unia waa ail out elected at the new Senates Republican floor leader today in a fresh burst of party harmony. Backstage maneuvering for the post apparently came to an end yesterday with the announcement yy lait mat he waa a candidate for tile lob and ihiuh. h.d , sui nnces from Sen Bridges tR-NHi and Sen. Knowland (R. Calif) that they were not aeeking it. Tatt t announcement waa pre- I jection to the Ohio aenalor be- coming tht OOP floor leader In the Senate session starling Jan. 1. Carlson was one of Elsenhower's close advisers during the presi dential campaign, and what he had to aay was regarded by atnatora as signifying a deitre by th President-elect to avoid any breach with Tafl. Earlier aome aenatort had mia- ? livings, not only because of Tail's ight against Elsenhower for the GOP presidential nomination but also because of his recent blast against the President elects choice of Martin p. Durkln to bt secretary of labor. Taft called the selection of Dur kln lor the Cabinet post an "In credible appointment,' laying the Chicago union official was a Dem ocrat who had fought Elsenhower's election and advocated repeal of the Tall-Hartley labor act. In addition, Taft reportedly had been irked that hla Cabinet rec ommendations had not been given greater consideration, and that a number of close associates of Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, long his party rival, had been picked by Elsenhower for top spots In the new administration Republican aenalors fel Republican felt, how - THE ELKS .ANNUAL KIDDIES Hj i i n 1 1 ,3 tl je ' 3 ' jS i CHRISTMAS PARTY ARMORY -2:00 P.M. SUNDAY SANTA CLAUS ilrTrl'!pHaSVVVa'.t'.VarVVW from a 1st PMSBYTftlAN CHOftCH ORGAN SOLOS by Tha Rtv. Dwyana Prottt. "Andantt Raliqiota" by Thomt; "Christmas Niqht", "Arioso" by Hondtl. VOCAL SOLOS by Pttt Armtn. "Tha Livinq God" bv O'Hara; "0 Littla Town of Btthlthtm" by Radnor, READINGS by Tha Rtv. glaVfaaalaAkiBBBBaltll t HTWMOCK tver, that Carlson had taken pains lo flash the signal that Elsenhower wanted to avoid a quarrel with Taft and would not oppoat. his selection as lloor leader. Carlson Dirt with Elsenhower In New York last Tueaday and told reportera afterwards that ht pre sumed Taft would let the leader ship post If he wanted It and that he would be for him. Up to that time Taft had said only that he was "available" for floor leader, retraining from an nouncing that ht waa a candidate. Both Brldgra and Knowland were In the picture Brldgat aa ihe senior Republican who look the post last year to h'ad off a threatened clash between Taft and Elsenhower aupportera for the OOP presidential nomination, and Knowland as an avowed candidate If Bridges didn't want the Job. Shortly after Tafl announced he hail assurances from Bridget and Knowland that tney were not tees - ln tha nost Knowland aald at hla home hi Oakland, Calif., that he had withdrawn from tha race "In the Interest, of a united Repub lican party. Bridies haa said all along he did not want to continue tt floor leader, that he preferred lo be chairman of the Senate Appropria. lions Committee and temporary president ol th senate. Hit posi tion was that he would keep Ihe floor leaderanip only u necessary yWeUKWeMrWarVj "McGraqor" ) Sport Shirts! His Fovontt DON'S - - j ?6th and Main Ph. 6520"; 1 ,-.v-v.v-ltV.''lrV,-are.v.- WILL BE THERE! LISTEN TONIGHT at 9:00 over KFLW PROGRAM iiirmwwwwwirmwAWSaMyi David lornett. ossd MMHM PATE I I lo avoid t party fight A conference of all Republican senators will be held here Jan. I lo choose t Door leader and lo fill other pols. Ben. Watkins iR-utahi prrdlctrd after Tail's announcement that tin Oliloan would be elected floor lender unaiumoualy. Ben, Mundl (It-Hl)i said he felt there was "an honest desire" by both Tull ami Elsenhower to work together, "They bitlh reulle." he told a reixirter, "that It thry du. Ihe ad nunlsti nllnn will he mii-cohiIuI end that fighting would hurl both tha party and the countiy." As lloor lender, Taf! will holrJl cgialaon between the White Scitla prln (leatheopiovi nthatiOAil House and the Hrnale on teglsla. tlvt matters. Some nf their friends hav tut 1 gesterj uiai this will provide the beat means of avoiding any nubile clashen between Elsenhower and Tafl. becau it will iv them t chance to work out dlsagreementt In private. 1.- t 6 r 'o 1 ' V n a ..,nnwT a - t: 1 la aap- MaOrawad Iraad knot tkMrHllta face H tpaclal sautlsM . , , a kaurp t a, avery aiaal. 1 1 NO SATS era eaWat 1 I ym I i I ,iami rot YOU IXCIUIIVIIP y , I! ...... t-s. s I ".' (ftrmtrly Wtsr-Hirtrittelt Cerporalienl J SM lai la Sum m. , tlmm