Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 13, 1953, Page 3, Image 3

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    TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1953 '
ke Gets Birthday Sendoff
for Fence-Building Trip
HERALD & NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
By JACK BKLL
..-.puiunTON IJPt Pl-PKtripnl. V.l.
1VAf,w v "
ctiliower gets birthday greetings
I in Hieer him on a week's
fpnce-building trip westward.
The f resiueiil, wjiu wuu i, ai.mnr
ai until tomorrow. Dlanned to
L-e Washington with Mrs. Eisen-
t nri staff mp rubers earlv in
Blower -
I,. afternoon for a 128-mile drive
f:lc. ." ..!.,, p. tnr Iiri(l.B.nlt
irthday dinner in a. circus tent
Explanations'
Start Asked
PANMUNJOM Wl The Korean
r.na'riation commission today
Lskod the U. N. Command. anU
jh. Communists to start 'lliursday
Iheir attempts to persuade war
nrisoners to return home.
1 The commission request came
diortlv after the UNO announced
it would complete by midnight to
nltht permanent center lor the
Lds io use in interviewing 22,
300 North Korean and Chinese
POWs.
There was no iirfmcdiate answei
pithcr Horn the Reds or the Allied
fThe Allied announcement opehetl
jthe way for the long delayed ana
jpotentiauy eii
The Reds had steadiaatly re
fused to meet with the I'OWs untu
Jj- .unanaHnn nriffinsillV WPI'f
srine """ " I -
tfcheduled to begin Sepi. 26 but
iboth sides rejecieu cai:uiiib oitfe
lis Inadequate.
Wounded Worker
'Gets Half Year
M Rocky Butte
I An amorous "gandy dancer,'
f . -.--.I.,., ..llt In tminv if
nolest a fellow section hand's wife
as sentenced to six montns In
ocky Butte Jail, Multnomah Coun-
, late Monday by District judge
, E. VanVactor.
The Hack worker is Wesley
lampbell, 40, who was shot in the
jej by his intended victim.
Mrs. Lilllian .Juiinsou, wuo lives
i A. section, house on a railroad
iiding three miles south of Cres
cent Lake, told Sheriff Murray
Rriitnn that campDen tnea io
force his way Into the home Sun-
av meht.
According to her story, Campbell
ihouted. "I'm going to get you,
ioney," and began trying to force
ben the door. She said she then
not him with a .22 caliber rifle.
J "I got him, he didn't get me,"
Ihe told the sheriff.
A Mrs. Johnson's husband was
iwy from home at the time of
r
CourtlRecorcl:
MUNICIPAL COtJRTV '
lonnie Scmonis, drunk, SIS or T1.
"fed Bito, drunk. $15 er IV dayi.
Juan Valennuela. drunk. 15 or 7Vt
Norman uarnei, oruntt, ib vr
civde Hammond, violation basic ruli.
h5 bail forfeited.
Clyde Hammond, improper muffler,
b bail forfeited.
Leroy McNeil. drunk-, sis or 7',i aayi.
Wanda Wood, violation baalc rule, 5
kit (orfeitfd.
i vanaa wooa, uniawiui use 01 warn
mt dpvirri. $5 bail forfeited.
Ufa in HrRR, arutiK, sio or tv ay.
Elvin Gallcgly, drunk, $13 or 7i
ivi
Charles Walters, drunk, tit or 7
y Ofield. drunk. $15 or 7V davi.
Stanley Jones, vaerancy. Dieaded not
tuilty, hearing 4 p.m.
jus uriaBK, arunK in auto. is nan
ivfeiird.
William Vance, drunk, $18 ball for
iied.
Richard Johnson, drunk, S25 or 12','t
:rriil r.nil.lB.. a4.iai.Lr 1 hall Jap.
Johnnie Prfers, drunk, $20 or 10 dayi
Elizabeth Harris, failure to drive on
IcM side of street. $5 bail forfeited.
Cleo Freemon, drunk, $15 ball ior-
Almer Mill, drunk, $20 or 10 days.
Kenneth Harris, drunk, SIS ball ior-
Georie Dyer, disorderly conduct, 25
'ohn Henderson, drunk, 918 bail for-
"t Smith, drunk, $15 bail forfeited.
Charlie O'Keefe, drunk,, $15 or 71c
WUlie Taylor, drunk. $15 Oatl forfeit-
Bnn Cowan, drunk, $15 or T!i
Jijl Milton, drunk. $15 or I'M days.
.... "Fn' nrunK- or 7',j days
J"us Avalos, drunk, $15 ball forfeit-
!l1'?h.Lee'..runk' 515 bail forfeited.
MMhew Milton, drunk, 15 or 1
to Mendrlckson, drunk, $15 or 7V4
Walter Branlger, drunk, $15 bail for-
P.?1i,t7Me,,L"- drunk- 15 w days.
('1 Zupshaw, drunk, $15 bail fbr-
'aaVCnT drunk- t b'-l forfeited.
;jc Osburn, drunk, $15 bail for-
?lIda,Sh,,M- d-unk, $15 or 7'.i dava
MasiintlU. drunk $18 or 7 u
Li 'K"rn.al, passlna on ria-ht. 410
tS2 ffln. drunk. M days.
days. ' ouoraw conduct, $40 or
Nene Parker, drunk, tis h.n
h n Tofthagen, drunk. $15 bail ior.
;'inued. .., fi. unit, caBB
Bolden, drunjjlis ball forfelttd.
lei0,"'11" EGYPTIAN SWEATS
lit ;'..?5ip.' ,-Km Tabet
I. Hvi :;'-K'ln rarouk's clos-
kaaav tn i' Ple!lclea innocent
Id ik.. ' nign treason
rIvi 0f power whll,! he w
L,.-V P'ss adviser. The Indict
f reiuested the revolutionary
, "ie aeaui sentence.
there tonight.
The Prnuiilonl i..
--- cviuviuiy una
snaken off an attack of flu which
epi mm in the White House Sun
day. .After a White House birthday
dinner tomorrow night, Eisenhow
er leaves by train on a trip that
will carry him into Ohio, Missouri,
Kansas, Louisiana and Texas. He
returns to Washington next Tues
day, The seven days of that trip will
be devoted largely to the pressing
political problems of drought, low
farm prices, public power and
patronage. On the first three, the
Democrats have made vigorous
attacks on his administration's pol
icies. Some Republicans are
grumbling about patronage.
Tonight's two-ring appearance
and his week's mingling with the
people in the central states will
be watched keenly by politicians
to determine if the Eisenhower
popularity Is such as to lessen out
spoken discontent with some of his
administration's actions?
Eisenhower's visit to Hershcy is
part of a hoopla fund-raising rally,
with 800 birthday cakes, including
a mammoth one of wood with a
cake insert for the President to
carve. Some 6,500 of the party
faithful were expected to kick in
$100 each.
There is vigorous battling be
tween Republican party factions in
the Keystone State, and Elsenhow
er Is expected to sidestep any ac
tion that might be interpreted as
choosing between Sen. Duff (R
Pa), Gov. John S. Pine and Sen.
Edward Martin (R-Pa).
He heads west Wednesday for
Defiance, Ohio, where he will lay
a cornerstone at Defiance College.
He Will hp In a Sfntp uihar. San
Bricker (R-Ohio) has said Repub
ncans are complaining that jobs
aren't fnrlhrnminiT ,rof frnm thm
national administration.
In Kansas City, Mo., he will
breakfast FHrinv with nnvarnA..
from some of the 13 drought-hit
states.
The President will hnv. . rhan..
to talk about farm prices partic
ularly those brought by cattle at
the American Hereford A sen
meeting in Kansas City.
His remarks in New Orleans at
the Louisiana Purchase Exposition
might well touch on domestic is
sues, while foreign affaire mri
power policies may be discussed
when he joins with Mexico's Presi
dent Arinlfn Rlliy. nnrlinoc in narii.
eating the Falcon Dam, about 80
nines irom ijareao, lex.
PAGE THREE
iil .Mi: zml 4
Ln.iin. UKMUrt .WiWteV'-ifVi IT urn n I
A NEW LINE for Hitchcock end Mother, GMC dealers here, was announced by firm officials
recently when they added the Nash dealership. Shown here, left to right, are Chuck Johnson,
Steve Mosher and Phil Hitchcock looking over a catalog of the, Pinnin Farina models currently
on the market. Kenneth Klahn, for the past two years operator of the Klahn Nash Co., an
nounced that he is retiring from the new car business. A resident of Klamath Falls for the past
33 years, Klahn will take over as office manager for Moty & Van Dyke as of Dec. I. He will
dispose of his garage equipment, he said.
Boy Scout Saves
Self From Woods
TUCSON, Ariz. (?) A .Tucson
Boy Scout who flunked a simple
tracking test today told how he
passed the biggest test of all
saving his own life.
Lost in the dangerous Santa Cat
alina Mountains near here since
Sunday, 11 - year - old Augustine
Acuna fell back on the lore he
OFFICE SPACE
Facing Main Street
Drews' Manstore
Very desirable location.
City Center.
had learned in his scout manual.
He walked out of the mountains
by himself yesterday alternoon
while 100 searchers were looking
for him.
He had gone Into the mountains
with his patrol to take a fairly
easy tracking test. But he failed
while coming down the trail alone.
"I checked the location of the sun
with my watch as I had been
taught to do," he snid. "then I
knew my directions were right."
He traveled almost 15 miles, all
of it on the beam.
Laraeat Stock lead
Inr make planoa lr
thla pari at thr
weit. Sent a aplnc
plane. Rental par
?haae plan.
Hammond Organ Chord Organ
LOUIS H MANN PIANO CO.
120 N. 7th
CHAIR'S
Memorial Chapel
FUNERAL SERVICES
FOR ALL INCOMES
NON-DENOMINATIONAL
SERVING ALL RELIGIONS
. Phono 34S6
Klamath Falls
Not Slipping New England's 'Leading
In Transition To Economic Maturity'
By CHARLES MERCER
BOSTON 11 New England, eld
est of the nation's regional econ
omic children, confronts tae visitor
today with a strange mixture of
myth and fact.
The biggest myth, readily ac
cepted in most sections of the
country, is that New England is
slipping economically.
Tlie fact is that employment Is
at an all-time high, witu 3.500,000
New Erglandcrs at work on non
farm Jobs a record surpassing
the World War II peak b nearly
100,000.
It also is a fact that New England
has economic problems stemming
from a variety of causes.
But the widely circulated idea
that it is not facing up to these
problems and trying to solve them
is total myth. How New England
is doing this should be of vital in
terest to younger regional brothers
and sisters.
For most thoughtful New Eng
landers agree on this: "The pron
lems we face today the rest of
the country will face in time."
A widely accepted theory, ad
vanced by George Ellis, economist
for the Federal Reserve Bank 'n
Boston, is that New England leads
the nation in transition lu "econ
omic maturity." That means -change
in the employment struc
lure: first, from agriculture to
manufacturing. Then, as manufac
turing becomes more complicated,
workers demand more services in
such fields as transportation, edu
cation and communications. There
follows, naturally, an Increase in
the number of service e nployes.
Employment figures chow this
is happening in New England. In
other words, If you subscribe to
the theory, you will a,;ree that
New England is in a later stage
of development than other regions
a stage which the South and
West will reach in time. Thus,
while New England still is grow
ing, it is in a less dramatic phase
Friendly
Helpfulness
To Every
Creed and Punt
Ward's Klamath
Funeral Home
Marguerite M. Ward
and Sons
925 Hiqh Phone 3334
YOUR
TELEPHONE'S
NUMBER ONE
ENEMY
How rising costs put a
real burden on good service
Surprisingly, it isn't fire or storm or earth
quake . . . your telephone's biggest problem
today is the rising costs of the things we
buy to provide telephone service coupled
with low telephone rates which have in
creased much less than the cost of the
things we buy to run the system. New
techniques and improved equipment have
helped greatly to cut operating costs. But
the pressure of high prices is unrelenting.
And, since a financially healthy telephone
system is so important to good telephone
service for you, we believe you'd like to be
brought up-to-date on your telephone's big
gest problem.
. It costs much more to add telephones I w lks ' '
ri today , , LMie ' ' .
investment J WSimmmm iiiaa
per telephone ' , Investment iSteASJj
It; added in 6 J per telephone plKStlSl;0Mf Sl
prewar years .1 added in hias W'SSiMtsmMd
1. Buying and building the facilities needed to put new telephones to work
than double what it did in the prewar period.
now costs more
ff'akeiUp
o More Comfort
i tt?j.t ...
"inout Nagging Backache
i? f,N '""'tton. Doctorc sy rood
n;LCtlon ' very important to food
.5 """" ev"rdiy condition, uch
Stan J i "ln, euni thlt Important
t b,,i. i '"'""'ny'olknulternac-
t.m""" do " cold or wiom diet miy
m n, uj niuhu or frequent o.n.Ir..
'Wl.; 1 J2.a' ldnejr If then condl
,."" rou.Try Donn'i Flll.-n mild dl.
i lupp.""?. nK how mnr 11me" Doan
Ml,, . " -"" uni DiKnmiflru
'..' 'idnay tubea and dltara
ttl t'-Aikfor wv.laraa. aatnonir
""nw.eea.-arilaiaaafi.
J, If"" "7 Oor profit has dropped sharply on i
Our operating expenses and taxes C r J telephones added postwar
have ShOt Op .1 'i I L I To I, In 1952, profit on each
.1 j I nq L X 0.JY I dollar invested in the I
J IUO t.f n9.0D of . average telephone i
per telephone I I inn 9a4ch'dp f ' "in? post-
. .,1 ,nl952 I , I invested in iw3r years j
JCO I the average .
I r- - telephone o r
per telephone I ' jfC added in 6 t..JY ,
, in 1940 lllllllljlll J t : - JJrS P" years II
aaanaaaaaaeaeaaaaaaaaaaaaaanaS) MMllli II I ., filfL;:. mamU-ZWk-szr..
2. Up sharply are our costs of keeping the system
running. Operating taxes, for example, have almost
doubled from $10 per telephone in 1940 to nearly
$20 in 1952. Average wage rates of telephone people
are more than double -what they were in 1940. In
fact, nearly everything we must buy to keep your tele
phone on the job-costs about twice what it did prewar.
3. With our costs up so much mpre than our prices,
the profit on the investment in facilities for each
new telephone has been reduced to less than half
what it used to be. And it takes profits to attract
investors' savings into the business to pay for new
facilities needed to meet the continuing telephone
demands of the growing Pacific West.
Your telephone is high
in value, low in cost
Despite rising costs, our con
struction program in the post
war years has been larger than
ever before building to meet
the needs of the thousands of
new people here in the Pacific
West and, at the same time,
adding equipment to improve
your service. Today, your tele
phone is more useful to you
than ever. You can call more
people. ..and more people can
call you. Yet it still carries your
messages for just pennies acall.
YOUR TELEPHONE IS ONE OF
TODAY'S BEST BARGAINS
Pacific Telephone
titi libirill) to par MM Fori k CiMarn; Cktst
than some of Uncle Sam's younger
regional children Ihe Dei p South
for example a gorgeoui- girl,
who recently has blossomed like
the magnolia in outsrouing her
adolescent farm economy
So comparisons of regional econ
omic growth are rather ,lke com
paring the rate of physic:.; growth
in children. It all depends on how
old they are.
On the basis of federal statis
tics New England is & mighty
sturdy young man: ,
Measuring only 2.2 ptrcent ol
the nation's land area, it contains
6.1 percent of the population. These
people last year held 1.6 percent
Latest available figures show their
per capita income In 1961 was
S1.715 compared to a national av
erage of $1,584. Their per capita
savings in 1950 totaled $1,826 com
pared to a national average of Sl,
288. Tills year's econom'r: trend
indicates that those basx figures
should be as good or better today.
Since 1939, New England has in
creased tlie number of its man
ufacturing plants 50 per cent, creat
ing 400.000 new Johs in the pro
cess. Investments In equipment
machinery and new construction
ate better than generally assumed
Workeis have a higher take-home
pav and standard ot living than
those In other regions of the coun
try, says Massachusetts Demo
cratic Sen. John P. Kennedy.
Why, then, the mvth that New
England is slipping?
Probably tlie biggest contribut
ing factor to the myth is the de
cline of the New Eneland textiles
Industry. In itself that decline is
no myth. It's a fact perhaps the
uesi-nnown economic tact about
New England.
But another fact, less Known, is
the extraordinary growth of other
forms of manufacture. Dartcular-
ly the electronics industry. While
textile employment has declined
about 55.000 since 1939, other in
dustry has created 40CPOC new
Jobs.
A lot of people have heard that
New England industry still depends
on antiquated customs and meth
ods. Once thai was true and ex
amples might still be pointed out
here and there. But tour New Eng
land today and you'll fl:.d a new
generation that has awakened to
opportunities and new methods
There Is one other curious factor
in the myth that New Ersland is
slipping: the public anitude ot
many New Englanders thtmselves.
Many Texas millionaire like to
show how rich they are. Many New
England millionaires shun a dis
play of wealth as a puritan shuns
sin.
COUP DENIED
KUWAIT, Persian Gulf m Of
ficial sources denied Monday re
ports that Kuwait's army and po
lice chief, Sheik Abdullah Muba
rak, has staged a coup to unseat
the ruler of the oil-rich little Brit
ish protectorate, Sheik Abdullah Al
Subah. '
Enjoy health, reit, comfort nd hoipitality
amidt pleaont urroundinQi. Oomph-elif
Fumi.hed Sleeping and Housekeeping
Cabins, with all modern facilities.
HOT MINERAL and MUD BAfttf
For Rhtumatiim, ArthrHli, Neurlti,
Sciatica, NtrveuintM
CARBON DIOXIDE VAPOR BATHS
An txetllont for Icxema, Slnui, SMn Ira
tloni, f iflh and Law Bload Prtttur
"Your Health li Our Builntu"
For Reiervatlont and infermatlan AddrMt
Buckhorn Mlntral Spr.ru, Rr. 1, Aihland.
Or9on or Phona Long Dbtanta. ,
Dr. Herman Waxier, Director
Chiropractic Phvtlclon
RED HOT
REMODELING
SPECIALS
FOUR DAYS ONLY
Req. 49e
Flannelette 42c
Flannel Req. 1.98
Ladies Gowns 1.44
Req. 49e
Rayon Briefs 37c
Special Purchase ': , . . ' " '
Ladies Scarfs 66c
Boys Medium and Larqe Req. 59e Cotton Combor
T-Shirfs 2 for 88c
Boy'i Lustre Twill Req. 7.49
Bomber Jacket SiM, ,4., : 5.99
Men's all wool Req. 1.29
Boot Socks
Sizes 14-16
99c
1.88
Men's Req. 2.29
Flannel Shirts
New "Marquinette"
Panels -Reg. 1.79 1.33
Checked Denim Req. 1.90
Overalls, Size l-6x 1.19
Req. 1.00 Cotton
Bras 69c
Values to 19.95
Subteen Coats 12.88
Ladies Assorted
Cotton Blouses 1.09
Reqular Bulk 14c
Motor Oil
12 Month guarantee Req. 9.95
Battery
15 Month quarantee Req, 14.95
6.00-16 Tires
Req. 2.49 4-Pieca
Canister Sets
11c
6.95 Exch.
11.95exch.
99c
28.88
2.99
J.C. Hiqqins Bolt Action Req. 32.95
Shotgun J2.16 om, 20 Gall9.
Canvas Covered
Gun Case. Reg. 3.49
Red Water Proof
Hunting Hat. Reg. 2.49 1.99
Req. 15.95 ...
Wheelbarrows
10.88
cfwrfifrw pmtortf ffB Rf i 133 So. 8th
,,i.VU Ph.n.SlU