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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1953)
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, ms. HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE SIX They'll Do It Every Time BILL JENKINS BILL JENKINS FRANK JENKINS Managing Editor Editor tK or j hi. '"". .. .... tnr mibllcatlon o! all the local new, I I primru in ....a crncr'nlPTIliN RATES RV CARKIEB BA,L . . , month 1 35 1 month . 6 months 1 year ... 1 month . 0 months 1 year I 8 10 16 20 t 6 50 $11.00 BILLBOARD t- IT ll a"Wws OLD LAW PRESSES fl W IT'S JUST TEMPDRAW- W ETiw ATAIL03 OR H MIS PAtJTS ABOUT ONCE M WArS ; SWELL ,ELLV- K 2-BSIX0mi I COULD Doll, TWAWKS VERV MUCH" f, ",s is f( WASrJ'r FIGURED OUT ' IF WO TAKE TO HAVE A SMALLER PR06RAM--Jc POg RE i- TAILOR ( NOTICED ONE 1, f ( feo TO R EVERV- ( (tSSS S DO IT X Y 'SSMe-V-f . J TWIM6-NEEOLEAWD t W SSIuaER 1 OVER'" -tSS:- iTJREAO-MAhJfiOVER UCSLiV N-Lrrrl REMEDIES-FREE I -ftMORNlWQd- By BHX JENKINS In case you're Interested In what people are tbe most interested In It's health. That la the flndinif ol a two year atudy by the University or uucaifo. rmrdr;;i out a two year survey On Iha . date wen lun u.e - red on page one. The National Wildlife Federation has gotten off on a new track these days. Along with their little releas es about whistling swans, pralr c chickens, the number ol cougars In Washington and what not they have started bragging about the fall col ors to bo found In America, su perior to anything else In the world, aays NWP. 'Specially In the east. The hardwoods of Maine and New Hampshire, for instance. But then there are the aspens in the rocky mountains, for Instance, that make up In a amall amount for the drab greenery of the Western slates. They also inform us, in case you are Interested, that the vivid color ings are the result of disintegration of the green chlorophyll which ex poses the yellow pigments that have been there all the time. Harold Mansfield of Boeing writes us and directs our attention to a new ad coming out by his people on the subject of guided missiles. Seems that much progress Is being made. Most of it along the line of Interceptors to be used to HAL BOYLE (Editor's Note: In a troubled world of doubt and wrong, all agree there Is one thing eternally right and that's October. The following Iribule to "the Month-Of-The-Year" Is reprinted at the re quest of a number of readers:) By HAL BOVI.E ANYPLACE IN AMERICA Iff If the Lord whispered in your se cret heart that you had but ono month to live and let you pick that month, which would you choose? I'd say October. The birds love it, the beasts love It, and man himself then stands upon the summit of the year. October is all the other seasons wrapped Into a 31-day grab-bag package, tied with a rainbow rib bon. It Is the period when Mother Nature, the great dramatist, brings her traveling road show to a cli max. This Is the month that, like a elder press, squeezes out the best Juices of all the oilier months the promise of spring, the sultry joys of summer, the afterglow of autumn, the premonitory chill of winter. Everything that walks the earth feels an amber thrill, a tremcn , dous bubbling vitality that sings In the pulse. Now Is the glory of the universe manifest, and In tho mighty pa geant of the hills each patch of woods elects its own tree beauty queen. You like the dogwood? We won't quarrel. I'll take the maple, that yellow torrn. The birds looked on disdainfully while foolish man clogged every steaming road with his July vaca tions. They know the right lime to travel. They have hung a "To Let" sign on their nests and cloud the aerene skies with s billion wings THE DOCTOR SAYS By KDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D. Two question on tho tongue tart off todny'H column. Q The first sks for a discussion of geographic tonguo. nnd the sec ond for the en use and treatment f furry, discolored tongue when one's state of health Is otherwise 1 good. A Geographic tongue ts a con dition In which there are deep furrows: in the tonue which give aomethlng of the appearnnco of a contour man. There Is nothing par ticular to be done for this, nnd H is harmless. Black tongue, or hairy tongue, Is a condition of uncertain cause, j and again la considered harmless. It arises occasionally during the : me of penicillin locally and clears i un when stopped. Under other cir cumstances treatment Is aimed at clearing away the offending growth by scraping or brushing, possibly with the use or chemicals, but II often comes back. Q I gel a cramp In the bnck of my leg when I walk a few blocks, la' this a sign of arierlosclerosLi? Mrs. It. A This Rounds typical of a con dition called Intermittent claudi cation, which Is generally a .sign "f arteriosclerosis of the blood vessels of the leg. Q A boy and girl are planning marriage. Her mother and his father are first cousins, noes that make them second or third cous ins? Is there a danger of not having normal children? I. I,. A They are second cousins, if the girl's mother and the boy's father and their families are free of hereditarily transmitted abnor malities or disease, the chances o having normal children are pre aumed to be as good as those of any other marriage. QTwo years ago iny sister had her oviducts closed through an operation, but now she Is pregnant. How can this be? Mrs. P, A Evidently the tubes or ovi ducts, became reopened so that the egg could pass down from the ovarlta to the womb. This hot usual, but doea happen ec- shoot down approaching enemy hnmh,.rs. So lur nothing has been said nbout rcplacUm the San Fran- olsco-Los Altos cominuier w.u. . ,;uidmi missile or even an engine Hint was built bclore U. S. Orr-.nt's ,. , iii,. nh well. I ku' .s us every. touRur- ,,, ,.,. ...... OHme Commission: a companion piece to the fishing report, this one 10 ucm with hunting In Its various stages. The first such report, issued on October 8th, spoke about deer hunt ing, saying ihut It was lair in most regions but the Southwest one, where it was cither good or bad. Lake County reported In with a lifty per cent success figure, many big bucks but Sliver Lake poor. Extreme (Ire hazard. Bucks hanging up in the hlsh ridges. It sounds like b good Idea and wo are glad to see It come along. It all adds up to a better hunting outlook among the sportsmen. Much success to the sheet. Pacific Norlhwest construction was up by some eight per cent In September as compared to a na tional average of only five per cent gain, according to another one of those surveys. But Oregon was lag ging with a fifty per cent drop oyer "he previous year and Washington hanging on by a mere one per cent gain. Maybe we won't be too over crowded alter all. Big public proj eels account for most of the gains. beallng southward. The worm they missed noses deeper into Ihe turf, muttering "Safe at last." It Is as if everyone suddenly had been given magic color glasses. The stars bend nearer. And that big blob of moon ... a child feels It Is so close he could reach up wllh a knife and spread it on his bread like butter. The stag stamps on the hilltop and lifts an amorous bugle to Ihe night. The throb in every wood land heart has an echo In the city. October knows no boundaries. Lis ten ... enn t you hear ana teci us music In your veins, the tremen dous symphony of living? The squirrel, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed becomes an annual ...i.nr mrtivelv denoslllng acorns In a hidden safe deposit box that will be empty by March. The bear Invests his excess proms m planning to live off Ihls stored cap ital unlll he emerges from his hi bernation next spring, cross and bankrupt. The wind at night now has be come a violin, playing a love song for Ihe young, a last tunc of youth for Ihe old. Do you slay awake to hear II? You'd belterl He only . ...... a in while this wandering fiddler In the dark, then takes his ballads and beats II. October wears a crown and makes evcrv man a king. It bears Ihe harvest superiority of the rounded apple over the petaled flower, the advantage million and achievement have over pale prom ises. April is the lledgllng politi cian of the year, saying "hue wun me and we'll go places." October Is Ihe mature statesman holding out the golden reward. October pours the mellowest wine of life, and anyone who Isn't drinking of It deeply right now Is a salesman for sour grapes. cnsionnlly QSome weeks ago I slipped on a wet kitchen Hour, (ailing against me coiner ol n inuie nun suiKing my breast. I received a large bruise over the side of the breast which hits been painful since. I have been told that an Injury of this sort can often cause cancer. Is this true? Mrs. D. A -It is unlikely that an injury of this sort, no matter how painlul, could be the sole cnuse ol the development of cancer In the breast. Nevertheless, the safest thing would be lo have this checked frequently by a physician. Bank Robbers Leave Tools ARAPAIIO, Okln. Ifi-Kiuk rn'i beis who were hoping for ft bl,' haul alter they broke into the Cus ter Null mm I Bank here came tin wilh a del Kit instead. An alert cashier slunved up after d.iik lo take care ol wme un ftul.shcii buMness and surprised tho burglars. They hurriedly escaped, leaving behind an expensive set of dilMs, dynamite ami cap.. ESS 2!' ARTHRITIS RHEUMATISM lisiS NIURIT1S SCIATICA . BURSITIS t ftuui.i'i, i.oipi. rontnin tix medicallv proven nifirrfiirm. nvipniinranv rttiflnrefl lo (rive vou SAr K, f.i.l relief (rem pain, of AHTIUtn'lS. RHKl'MA TISM, lirunti.. i-mtua and O'lnHu. ARTHONl'l. ronlain. I'AHA. mvntlv imported at the arthhti. MIKAl'I.K dm,. AKTllONl'L n,hl num. .wllms ami ililTnrv hv working thru the bloixl itrram (, hrin ft, Ion, laitin, pain relixf.'lt AKTHOM'I. brlp ou ... It I. Sufe. non habit forminc. (let AKTllONl'L Mav! (Wi-PV5 V KOfSfl CJ1 MOOCH RUNMIUG HhTL TRUE TO FORM- ;j2pW (gjllg bhIP ww'lia' . .If- Sam Dawson NEW YORK (Pi Sailing some what gloomy seas of economic forecasting of late, bus.nessmen scan Ihe horizon for ihe lust slain of new hope and think louay they sec some signs. Business sentiment was a little more cheerful this Columbus Day than It was beiore Labor Day. although the majority of business and financial leaders :tlll Minn ihey must sail through a sligh. trough of deflation beiore Industry hits another cresting wave. The signs they see arc both spe cific and general. First of the third quarter earning-, reports lo come from corpora lions are mostly on the cneci ful side, showing thai pioiits air: still topping a year ago, although many predict that the fourth qitiir ler will show a dip. Nevertheless the bright showing of the lirst ha.i of the year means that lor many companies 1053's total earnings are going to be at or near the top. For ono Industry there Is a par ticular sign. Steel scrap pi ice. often foreshadow what thi steel In dustry Is expecting. Titty nave been sliding lor a long nine, iiim cating to many that the slecl in dustry was heading for a slow down. But last week steel scrap prices rose. It was only one Isolated in stance, but it strengthens belict among many steelmen thai orders will be high enough to keep steel mills busy till the end of the year at least. Easier credit, lower intcres. rates and generally nlenliful mon ey supply also arc heartening the businessman if only as a sign that the administration is going to strive lo cushion the impact ol HcflnLinn. Tax cut prospects look ' a llltl-' brighter today, too. as a numbe" of congressmen indicate they'll fight for them. Lover taxes foi individuals mean more customeis with money to spend: lower taxes for business means a cushion to drop in profits. Bruce Biossat Not all the Issues that affect the average citizen closely are head line catchers. For instance, there's the chronic matter of congestion In American courts. Just look nt the federal courts alone, wich are of course only part or the story. The way to measure congestion Is to plot the time It takes from the filing of n case In court until Its final disposition. This period, for civil cases, has lengthened to 12.4 months In 1053, from 12.1 months in 1952. But this is nn average for the whole country, rural and urban. In the crowded cities the performance often Is much worse. In the districts covering Manhat tan and Brooklyn In New York City, for example, the time in volved in disposing n( civil cases has this year reached nn average of 47.3 months and 32.6 months, respectively. U these statistics fail to stir yon, 'Imagine . how you would feel waiting three or four years for the repair of wrongs done you, or how you would like accepting an unfair settlement simply because you could not afford the lime nnd mon ey involved In pressing a case to its long-delayed conclusion. In 195'J, every federal Judge completed 213 civil cases, while -3fi cases per judge were actual- ly filed. By this year, each judge wns finishing an average 2.13 cases, but the filiims had jumped to on average or 2fil. That is the statistic proof that the courts cannot keep up, The Judicial Conference of the U.S. says 31 new federal judges are needed without delay. Henrv Chandler. Director of Administra tion or United Slates Courts, is call ing on Congress to act soon to relieve the janvup. Concress already has considered legislation to remedy the situa tion at least partially, but the fruits o Its 19n3 labors were lost in the haste to adjourn Inst August. Both houses passed bills to create CASTLEBERRY'S DRUG STORE ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL By KEN McLEOD The recognition of the value of the outdoors m the daily lile ol people is not confined to any one race of people but is world wide in its scope. We might turn our attention lo Asia to see what pro gress has been made in the field of preservation ol the wildwoods. Asia, m spite of teeming popula tions has started to make progress in the preservation of some of its natural environment. It is not necessary to enumerate the various parks and preserves that have been established in re cent years in Asiatic countries, however, it could be expected that such people, with sensitive, spiri tual natures would in due lime wish lo preserve .some of their na tural environment lor the inspira tion it would bring in the future. Asia has long been a land of contrasts, of great estates of land ed aristocracy amid abject pover ty of teeming masses of people one step from the door of starva tion. Asia provides us some of the best, examples of man's abuse of the soil as well ns the example that the soil can be used for thou sands of years lor the support of man. We look with some apprehen sion at conditions in certain sec tions of China, and wonder if our increasing population pressure will reduce the land to the deplorable condition we find present there. There is one province of China which is about the size of Oregon, its population is fifty million peo ple. What would Oregon be like with a fifty million population? Such ts the worry of the sincere conservationist who feels trie re sponsibility of having a hand m shaping the destiny of our country. It is heartening then to note tne awakening of Asia to the fact that the people have an interest in the outdoors that is greater than the mere pleasure of some potentate. Nature and the outdoors is for all i people to enjoy not just some ' prlviledged class. In India, we lind, that in spite of the fact that the country is pre occupied with the basic problem of survival, the people there have made a beginning nnd in their new ly acquired freedom have already established several parks and for est reserves. Japan illustrates the possibilities In the Asian countries when their inherent sensitivity finds nn oppor tunity tor expression. Even though Japan is densely populated and lssesses extremely limited terri tory we discover that the people there have established 17 national parks ond three so-called quasi-national parks. In this land of over crowded people, they have recog nized the value of natural environ ment to the extent that their out door preserves constitute more than four per cent of the total land great deal of agitation against these natural preserves because the op ponents claim that too much of the country is being tied up from ex- new Judgeships, but the two mea sures differed somewhat and there was not lime to compromise this disparity. Certainly this legislation de serves a place on the "must" cal endar when Congress reconvenes In January. Justice must be more than simply having a theoretical access to the courts of law to right wrongs nnd remedy grievances. That access must be real, and to be real it must come to any citizen of this country within a reasonable length of time after he has suffered injustice. JCRATER LAKE Milk comes to easy fo EASY TO OPEN no fun no mun M f hom veua CRATf LAKI DIALtB e ploitation our preserves amount j lo less than one-halt oi one per i cent of the land area of the nation. I How many Americans feel that Uiey are superior in culture to the people of Japan? In the April 1953 number of the "Population Bulletin," published by the Population Reference Bureau m Washington, D. C. we find this very signuicant comment by Dr. Robert C. Cook: "In Japan man lives with the land, not oil the land. Even though every square loot of arable land is intensely cultivated, there is no evidence of erosion in the regions I visited. This is in striking con trast to both India and the United Stales, where the marks of man's exploitation are everywhere visible. Perhaps it is because land is so precious a commodity in Japan that it is respected and cared for?" Japan has a National Parks Assn., somewhat similar to our own. About a year ago there arose a peculiar threat to one of Japan's national parks by the continued use of portions of tlie Fuji-Hakone Na tional Park as a maneuvering ground for United Nations military forces. It was American conserva tionists, through the American Na tional Parks Assn., the Wilderness Society and other organizations, who provided forceful opposition to the destruction of the natural beau ty of the park and assistance to those people of Japan who wished to keep intact certain areas of their country which were an inspira tion to their people. Ia a letter by Olaus J. Murie of the Wilderness Society to Tryg ve Lie, secretary general of the United Nations, Murie pointed out: "Military occupation of another country is never pleasant or con structive for the people of that country, however necessary it may be as an aftermath of war. Cer tainly when peace has been achieved, every possible means shouid be used to assist that coun try to nurture its cultural life. Every such worthy impulse, as shown by these Japanese citizens should be encouraged by all mem bers of the United Nations. Therein lies the road of eventual lasting peace." Tulelake B&PW To Have Dinner TULELAKE Tulelake Business and Professional Women will ob serve National BPW week, wilh a 6:30 p.m. Thursday dinner at the Tulelake elementary school fol lowed bv an evening of entertain ment. All working women in the community have been invited to at tend. Dinner will be a planned pot luck. A skit, depicting committee ac complishments during the past year will be presented by Mrs. Jerry Van Buskirk, education and vocations: Mrs. E. L. Coyner, in ternational relations; Virginia Llnd sey. public affairs; Mrs. T. L. Hol land, health and safety; Mrs. Les lie Thaler, legislation; Mrs. F. A. Dobson, civil defense; Mrs. Ches ter stonecypher, hospitality: Dor othy Schupp. aids to small bus iness; Mrs. Bud Fies, proeram co ordinator; Mrs. Lee Sonncnberg, finance; Mrs. Carl Baker, member ship. AKIHITO HOME AGAIN TOKYO W Japan's little Crown Prince Akihito heir to the oldest throne in the world re lumed home Monday to more than a half million of his subjects. you in the container that's open - easy fo close.' EASY TO ClOSE- lale, lur rtstal I sib ,,unni SSS was the first teacher? Gu Unconcerned About Arrow nox Through Him SYRACUSE, N.Y. (.ft That mysterious and much - photo graphed sea gull with an arrow through its body seems less trou bled about its condition than are SPCA officials. After photos of .the gull ap peared in newspapers across the country, bird fanciers began to protest that it should be put out of its misery. But the gull seems to feel dif- j ferently about it. It struts and flies around unhampered and ap pears to enjoy the stares of its fellows. SPCA Director William E. Rapp says it might be a good idea to catch the bird and try to get the arrow out. But the gull wants none of that either. Even amateur photograph ers, who have swarmed to its hme on nearby Danforth Lake, have trouble getting close enough for a shot. Tne arrow appears in pictures to have entered the bird's body at ihe right rear and poked out the left front but no one has been able to explain how it got there. 7 Spittoons Up For Bid VANCOUVER, Wash. tf The Vancouver postmaster issued a call Monday for bids to remove seven spittoons from the postoffice. He said he wanted to get rid of the spittoons, which no longer are needed, and that a formal call for bids is required for disposal of government property.. The bids will be opened Oct. 28. The best buy in toirjn is fa most advanced car in America! Gaf e sensational '53 Studebaker Its out-ahead style insures you top resale value! TL - frn , , , The '53 Studebaker U .v.nrrd Kavnion,, Wwy ,lesip ' Z I ?t won t be outmoded a few months from now! Th.'53 Studebokar It on teonomy .tand-out! l.w jn prir, -U in ga conM.mplilw in npker,,-ih "2 ralne-a nation in .hi, year's Mol'ilga' TW tCMle Tht'53Sludebflkerxeeliinquqlirvwirl,m- L' i , Thi 53 Studeboker i, ..nationally low p,i, c '. baker Man,, coupe, ,nH hard-. ' $U'Ar; m pnre. The 10S.1 Studrhaker cL , tn Mrth one of ,he .owe,, vnXt) Klamath and 8th "CS'M!- 'I I tie w.f, 3f'f rir&p 'rry .---..rt: m- uepF? The recent picture shows what is believed to be the tint sti" s"ndI"9-when w" " built j District Rate Seen Ike Test EAU CLAIRE, Wis. Wl-Observ ei's saw possible test of the Ei senhower administration today as voters selected a successor to the late Republican Rep. Merlin Hull of Black, River Falls. Both Republicans and Democrats are watching the election in the n.-nrl,.,inntnl., ml'nl 11-COUntV dis trict as an indication especially of the government's policies, sini spiv Arthur L. PadruU. 36. Chippewa Falls Republican, nnd Lester Johnson. 52. the Democratic Jackson County district attorney from Black River Falls, both stressed their opinions of the ad ministration during their energetic campaigns. The electorate, however, was apathetic and seemed only dimly aware of the possible national sig nificance of the election. As a result, the election may draw no more than 30.000 persons less than 28 per cent of the dis trict's estimated 150,000 eligible voters. Republicans were confident of victory, on the strengtn oi men past record the district never has elected a Democratic congressman and their intensive campaign on behalf 01 raaruil ana ins planum, of all-out support of the adminis tration. Democrats were cautious, de- plnvinfr nnlv Ihflt. tllPV had H COOd chance to win in the agricultural district because of what incy claim is a "farm revolt over declining prices." They also point to John son's adherence to the principles of Hull, Ihe Republican representa tive whose death last spring cre ated the 9th District vacancy. Hull, who served 11 terms in Congress, won election early in ca :. ... i., t- McCulloch Motors Telling The Editor BONANZA Could it be noMlsl.l that the skeleton found was taaUtl iny great uncle? He was a pionurl of cany aays. wnen muzzle loading rifles nnd quivers were used, ml was interested in discovering ih,l wilds, and he was in this part oil tne country, j am a pioneer of !H I My father was H. s. Oden. Mil uncle went out and never nl heard trom any more. I have h i nephews picture, and the bulltl molds, for tnat kind of rille, H.i name was Tom Oden. Yours truly, Philip Oden Bonanza, Oregon Box 87 Police Investigate Body in Street TULSA, Okla. IiH Police ccived calls reporting a body hi ing in the street. Kusnr.g to ttt scene, they found the- "body" i right a dressmaker's durair.l wearing a shirt and khaki trousei:! Now they're waiting to see r cliiitns it. VIETNAMESE MEET SAIGON.. Indochina IJI ae Communist Vietnamese met btii Mondav to nominate delegates : negotiate with France for Vitl Nam's .. promised independeocJ within tne French Union. his career as a LaFollette Pro gressive. Although he was a it publican in recent years, the Con grcssional Record shows he vote with the GOP only 24 per cent t the time in the last session of Co: grcss. J ' Wii loni-whettbase, 6-passtnger Champion Custom Stdan $203000 , DELIVERED IN KLAMATH FALLS trffA standard equipment. Stale and heat taxes, if any, extrt, H hile sidewall tires and ehnme trheel discs optional at extra ' Price. m7 ..rr .om.wb"' in nearby eommuoilie. Comp.r.blr lew price r. in it on .11 olf.., 1953 Shidebeku. inoludinq th. brilliantly power.. Command. V-fi. and lb. olb.-roomT Stud.lk Land Crnle". Bargains galore in used cars! Big .election priced lo movt out fatl. 530 Main Phont 3333 Phone 41