A6B TOUR
FRANK JENKINS . BOX JENKINS
Editor . ' Managing Editor
nlred as second elm nutter at the put offlcei of Klamath Falls, On.,
on August M, 190s under act of Congress, March I, 1179
MEMBER Of THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press ia entitled ezdualvely to the use for publication
cai news pruiiea in mis newspaper as weu u all AP news.
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Br BILL JENKINS
Belnr of a. weird turn of mind
we like to collect the more
gauche items from the news. .Like
the chap the other day who wanted
to commit the final crime of
suicide and tried to hang himself
off a bridge. He slipped the noose
around his neck, tied the other
end of the rope to a bridge girder
and jumped. Many feet later he
hit with a sickening thud but
not the end of the rope. The water
In the reservoir beneath. He was
subsequently fished out, cold, wet
and alive.
Who said snythlng about giving
a man enough rope and letting
him hang himself?
And then 'today along comes a
little abort story from Conegllano,
a hamlet In Italy. They held fu
neral services for Oiacondi Nardl
and buried her with full rites. A
month later someone stumbled
across her body, still in the
morgue. .
, Bo they held a second' funeral
. Who said a casket wasn't a big
liemy
' You can't kill a fisherman. .Was
tawing to a naraened ene.yester.
day whose main Interest in the con
versation was to find out If -the
channel up around the source of
Link River was open. So he could
go out and sit in the snow and fish,
And if he does I think, by gosh,
I'll go out and kibitz.
If that's legal and doesn't re
quire a license,
ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL
By KEN McLEOD
. In our list column giving Joa
quin Miller's account of crossing
the plains in lsM we stopped at
the point where the Miller family
reached the Willamette and were
most delighted with the climate of
the - graat valley.- Joaquin con
tinues: ' 1
,. "In this happy frame of mind
papa soon after cut a stick, and,
taking a small pack on his back,
set out up the vast and fertile val
ley to find a location a "claim."
He left us under the care of a
nobel old missionary, E. E. Far
xish, and also a Methodist preacher
by the name of West. It seemed
that every one -of the older immi
grants were either missionaries or
preachers. And they were all good,
Ood-fearing men, who did all they
could to encourage and' care for
the stranger.
.., "Wo three boys nine, eleven
and thirteen years of age soon
found work in clearing off brush
. and making rails for a neighbor
close at hand. Mother would go out
. to work with us, sitting on a stump
and knitting and talking cheerily
to tie when not herself at work. We
exned a cow this way, and mother
Vsught two ethers, . giving a note
tearing enormous interest.' The
Cows cost $100 each. Bo when papa
tot back after a long quest far
ud the valley we had three more
cows, three frisky little calves, and
lota of butter to sell. Two little Jew
peddlers,, brothers, who; had , In
some way got down from Russia by
the way of what now Is Alaska,
cam by' (vary week and got the
putter and gave In exchange gro
ceries and dry goods. The mer
chants in those days demanded
more than .double the purchase
price of everything; but aa they
paid 1,00 a - pound lor . butter,
which waa twloe what It really
waa worth,- the thing waa about
van. These Jew boya carried
everything on their backs at first.
' Then, they got . a horse, then a
' wagon; then they opened store
' away up at the fork of the river,
Where papa had found a 'claim',
they had a big store In the biggest
city; then a bank in San Fran
cisco. And open-hsnded papa won
dered to the end of his daya why
he, too, could not have been such
a 'merchant.' ' .'
"It was a muddy, miry road
away up to the Willamette Forks,
with neighbors forty miles distant
from one another in places, and
no bridges, and few ferries across
the swift deep river; but we-got
there at last, and the sparse neigh
bors, as waa the custom, came to
the 'raising', and to ,a few days
wo had a home and a house, auch
aa it was let us call' It a palace.
' For never was nobelman of high
degree with all his house so happy
, in his castle as waa proud, brave,
dear papa.
"The law had been meanly
cnangea wnue we were en route.
cutting down the donation from 640
acres to one half, so that the ranch
was not what it should have been
in area and real value; but no one
complained, and all went to work
and worked from sun to sun, happy
healthy, and gaining strength every
day. The land, unfortunately, was
not well chosen. We should have
located In the middle of the valley,
where every foot was fertile and til
lable,; but we had been used to
woods and did not like the open.
We wanted the wood for houses,
fences, and the fireplace. In . the
rear a great mountain, topped with
wonderful fir trees, gloried in the
morning sun; the swift, river glis
tened under the great big cedars
and balm trees away out yonder
In the boundless dooryard, where
the cattle fed and fattened, and all
was wen. .
. "Papa at first took up the moun
tainside to cut down trees, cut off
logs and roll them down for rails.
These rolling,' tumbling,' headlogs
6n the steep hillsides made great
sport for our little dog. But he
got caught under one and was
killed. Then Jimmy got caught un
der one. And, .although he got up
and laughted at our terror and dis
may, papa gave up the mountain
and we made rails after that from
ash, maple, balm, alder, and so
on, to fence our first field worth
less .wood compared to the beauti
ful fir, but we boys were too bold
and venturesome to be left alone
to wrestle, with the tumbling rail
cuts, for papa again was going to
teach school miles away.
"He plowed and put in flax, corn,
and a garden, even before we had
a fence., as the lence around the
house was finished, we put In an
orchard, papa going far distsnt
and bringing the trees home on
bis back. When we got the trees
in the ground, a corral for the
cattle, and when the corn and flax
and all sorts of things began to
grow and glory In their existence
mother looked on and said: "I tell
you, boys, things are Just a-hum-mini!"
.
Thus ends the little essay of the
covered wagon that followed the
setting sun on the long trail from
Liberty, Indiana, to Eugene, Ore
gon. It was on this long trait that
ine DOT uincinnaius xitmer aimer.
or "Nat" as his mother called him
and to whom fame came under the
name of Joaquin, received his pre
school mental training. And while
Joaquin speaks of the crossing of
the plains as taking place In the
period of "seven months and flvo
dava." actually the Miller . family
was eleven years moving westward
such was the history of many , of
our pioneer families always on the
move ever westward. For ' a
greater part of the time they
were living in a cover.
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
They'll Do It Every Tjme
By Jimmy Hatlo
What's wsmwell spr EJffil?
FWOUOSRAPH PLUS RECORD LkSRARy
AHO A WOWOERPUU DIMMER WAITIMQ
So WHERE IS HE ? DOWN AT
THE DUTCHMAN'S HAVING A SWELL
TIME PLAYING THE JUKE BOX AMD
MUNCHM6 OR SHIMGLE SANDWICHES !!
HAL BOYLE Bruce Biossat
THE DOCTOR SAYS
: B EDWIN r. JORDAN, M. B,
Uncertainty aa to whether a tra
gedy could have been prevented
by different - behavior certainly
causes a great deal of mental suf.
faring. As an example of this one
mother wrote that she and her hus
band suffered the heartbreak 'of
losing a bsby girl two daya after
Dirtn.
The cause of the child's death
Waa said to be heart disease, ana
the mother wanted to know whether
the father's drinking could have
had anything to do witn it.
To this can be aatd that while
there are other undesirable el
fecta from excessive drinking. It
Is not thought a cause of heart
disesse, and the mother can at
least be relieved on that acore.
Another question which comes
from Mrs. A. has to do with the
effect of 'clgaret smoke on a two-year-old
child. The lady evidently
doea net approve of her neighbor,
she aays the neighbor smokes one
or two packs of cigarets a day,
and her apartment Just reeks of
this foul clgaret amoke. Her child,
since the day aha waa born, has
been inhaling all this amoke. The
child (according to Mrs. A. 1 looks
pale and eats like a bird. The
mother, she says, spends W per
per cent of her time smoking and
watching television.
First, it seems to me that much
as she may disapprove, It Is not
Mrs. A.'s business. As to the health
hasardj. It can only be said that
la the light of preaent knowledge,
it ia questionable that the. ehUd
would .be damaged by breathing
second -hand tobacco amoke.
' Another correspondent write
that her three-year-old daughte.
haa such a good appetite and seems .
to be gaining so much weight that
she wants to know U she should be
put on a diet; She also asks whether
soda pop and ice cream are fat
tening, To the last it can be said that
both are fattening, and scarcely
constitute a good diet for a three-year-old
child, except occasionally.
As to whether the child should be
put on a diet or not, that depends
on whether the girl la overweight
for her age and height. If she la,
the pedistrlcian can readily tell
the mother how aha should be fed.
Finally, Mrs. O. asks my opinion
about a six-month-old baby who
cries himself to sleep every night,
crying for a half hour at a time.
It is not considered desirable to
let a amall baby cry too long since
there Is some lnorease in danger
of rupture, and generally apeaklng,
a email child who cries too much
is uncomfortable in some way. on
the other hand, oven small babies
like attention and try to get away
with things. If they find they can
get picked up by crying, they may
develop this habit.
MISSING
TOKYO Ml Thirty-seven men
were reported missing Frldsy aft
er 70 mile an. hour blisssrd winds
wrecked 143 small craft off the
northern Japanese Island of Hok
kaido, Kyodo News Agency said.
NEW YORK (PI Sometimes I
ieei sorry tor the younger gene
ration. '
They have so many things to
entertain' them they often don't
know how to enjoy themselves. It
is so frlghtenlngly easy for them
to get lost today in a wilderness
or pleasures mat can harm them
as much as help them.
To grow up in any. period of
the earth's Past has always been n
stern and lonely task. Many peo
ple who manage to grow up physi
cally never do so emotionally.
And mentally they merely grad
ually merge from first childhood
Into second childhood. All , they
have learned - from living they
could write on a postcard.
A Child . should walk Urn umplri
in wonder, Maybe I am- getting to
us a miaaie-agea luaay-duddy, but
it seems to me that our comnleir
civuuauon roaay does as much to
blunt a child's natural sense
of wonder as it does to perpetuate
Many children' today learned
from television the proper way to
hold a gat before they learn the
alphabet. Isn't It too fast a stop to
go directly from "Mother Goose"
to "Dragnet"? Shouldn't there be
something in between?
Many a person at 40 can still
remember the tremendous thrill
of finding an orange in his stock
ing on Christmas Morning. A
whole orange for himself -And
what a terrible problem it
brought: Would the delicious ec
stasy of eating It balance the sad-'
ness of knowing it was all gone?
Naturally a child today could
hardly be expected to show awe
over the gift of an orange. Oranges
are commonplace. They are taken
for granted. But what would awe
many of today's pro-teenage so
phisticates, so used to miracles
they don't know what a miracle
Is? If Santa Claus left them a
slice of moon cheese, wouldn't
they take that for granted, too?
Children used to entertain them
selves. Many modern mothers
now complain to their husbands
at nightfall: "I'm all worn out
trying to think up things to keep
the children entertained." But why
should any healthy child ever have
to be entertained by Its parents,
except perhaps on rainy days or
periods of Illness?
Simple Joys are better for young
minds than complex pleasures
and for older minds, too, for that
matter. In the present Jukebox
age how many of our children
still know the delight of simple
things? How many lose the path
in a mechanical Jungle? Isn't it
more fun for a kid to throw a
rock at a tincan on a fence,: than
to mow down dear old grandma
with a toy atom ray gun? . . . I.
But the thing I pity the young
sters most for now is their
dwindling interest in reading. A
book Is the opening portal to the
vast hall, of the human spirit; li
braries are the shrines of the
mind. No canned music, no flick
ering pictures! on a movie or vMr,
screen can truly stir the 'pagina
tion of a child as well ts a bojlt.
Somerset Maugham, who turned
80 this week, once wrote:
"Intelligent people, alter the
age of 30, read nothing at all."
It Isn't quite that bad. But it
certainly Is true that most people
do most of their reading when
young, and gain .the ideas they
spend' 'the rest of their lives ex
ploring.-.
Many a high school boy can now
discuss the atmosphere on Mars
or the problems of tailoring a
space suit. But has he walked the
streets of old London with David
Copperfleld, or floated down the
Mississippi with Huckleberry
Finn? Probably not, unless his
teacher led him on a conducted
tour.
There is no doubt children to
day are smarter in many ways,
know more facts about more
things, than any previous kid crop,
but they are an old-young genera
tion. I think they mature too fast,
dull the edge of wonder too soon,
and miss the Joy of being young
in a simpler time. -
Aren't you glad you were bom
when you were?
JAMES MARLOW
Type w f its n A4tfitf MmMmi
(Hand o lleetrie Osoretoo)
Uaderwee.
SmrHi-CrM
DICK MOORE'S
Tulalasjt Druf Cr.
WASHINGTON W-Secretary of
Estate John Foster Dulles long ago
paid a high professional compli
ment to Vyacheslav M. Molotov,
the Russian foreign minister. .
Molotov, he said, was quite a
diplomat, one of the best.
And Molotov, whose name means
hammer, lsnt letting him down,
now that the' two men are meeting
to Berlin with two other foreign
ministers, Britain's Anthony Eden
and France's Oeorges oiaauu.
As soon aa the conference gong
sounded Monday Molotov began
throwing left Jabs. His footwork
Was pretty good. He was a faster
counterpuncher. And today, near
the end of the first rouna, lie
wasn't even sweating.
The Big Three had tried for six
months to pin Molotov down to
what the diplomats call an agenda:
1, 2. 3- list of things to talk
about when and If they got togeth
er. .
If he agreed, the Big Three
would have him pinned in a cor
ner: once the meeting began, he'd
have to stick strictly to the agenda.
The rules would be laid down.
Molotov wouldn't buy the agenda
idea. What he Said was: if we're
going into the ring, we'll make the
rules when we get there. Since the
Big Three wanted to see him, they
agreed: no agenda before , they
stsrted.
what Dulles, particularly, had
said he wanted to talk about was
unification of Germany and an
Austrian peace treaty. It was no
secret he didn't want the Russian
to succeed in softening up the
French any more pn the single
European army idea. The un ted
States Is relying oh that army in
the defense of Europe.
wnen they climbed into the ring
Monday the four ministers had an
understanding- 31dault, Eden, Mol
tov and Dulles would all talk the
fl day, in that order. :
dldault and Eden were polite.
But Molotov wasn't at all. He at
tacked the United States tor Its
defense plans, aaid West Germany
couldn't be trusted to rearm, as
the United States urges, and talked
about the need to cut down on
armaments.
Then ho laid down an agenda of
his own and asked the Big Three to
accept it. They should, he said,
discuss In this order:
"Measures tor reducing tensions
in international relations" and a
meeting of the four of them with
Red China in the spring; the Ger
man question; and a peace treaty
for Austria.
To get things going, the Western
Allies accepted. But Dulles called
off the speech he had ready for
that day. That night he rewrote
his speech. ,
The next day he peppered the
Russian. That didn't bother Molo
tov much. The Big Four began
considering the items on the agen
da, starting from the beginning.
Right off Molotov made a big
pitch to bring Red China into a
future conference, meanwhile mat
ing eyes at the French with a hint
maybe If they played ball with
Russia. Russia could manage to
end their war in Indochina.
Dulles blistered him again, and
tne Red Chinese In the bargain.
Finally Molotov was willing to stop
talking about China for a while
at least.
- It the Big Three sighed with re.
lief at that and thought "now
we can get down to cases and talk
about Germany, No. 3 , on the
agenda" they were caught flat-
footed. ,
Molotov punched again. He sug
gested a world conference on dis
armament. The Big Three went
back to their dressing room to
figure out the answer to that one.
,,. ; ROUGH
PHOENIX, Aria, () It was a
rough day for Byron Arnold when
he paid a brief visit to downtown
Phoenix.'
He received a ticket for over
parking in a 34-mlnute meter tone.
But later somebody picked the
lock on his car and went off with
an expensive pair of shoes. Police
weren't around when the theft oc
curred.
Is itll'l
LOUIS
LarftH SIMk ImS
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Slut. SMMI
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It MAHM PIANO CO.
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'.'III! 1l
For more than two decades the
St, Lawrence Seaway nroieci has
been a topic of bitter controversy
in and out of Congress. Through
this span the arguments shifted,
but they always added up to the
same result: No action. - '
Now the project has won Senate
approval but It still must buck
heavy snd perhaps fatal opposition
in the House. Some observers are
predicting It will- never get past
the House Rules Committee.
Unlike many perennial issues,
the seaway project was fought pro
and con along clearly discernible
lines. From the start, the salt-water
ports, the railroads, the utilities
and the coal Interests ' battled it.
They feared it would hurt them
and said so plainly.
On the other side, the fresh-water
lake ports Of the Great Lakes
and' the whole,- expansive : mid
western region argued honestly that
it meant greater, economic develop
ment for . them.
After World War H, they added
another .argument: the depletion
of American iron ore reserves com.
pelled 'resort to -outside .sources.
with newly discovered stocks- in
the Quebec-Labrador area among
the most convenient and desir
able. Lying fairly close to the St.
Lawrence system, these ores could
be brought more cheaply to estab
lished inland mills over a tuuy ae
veloped waterway. '
- Opponents scoffed at this . con
tention, labeling it just a smoke
screen for the old argument. And
they had sufficient strength to keep
the project bottled up in congress
year after year.
The economics of transportation
are not simple. The railroads
fought the Panama Canal, too, be.
cause they thought it would ruin
their transcontinental business. It
did not. No one can really be sure
what effect the St. Lawrence sea
way, opening the interior oi Ameri
ca tn lnrarer ncean-BOina" vessels,
would have on the railroads and
on ports like Baltimore, rnuaaei-
phla and New ors.
But evidently a good many sena
tors whose own areas are not dl
rectlv affected bv the seaway Issue
have become convinced that the na
tional interest Justifies .upsetting
traditional transportation patterns
in America.
Undoubtedly they may have been
influenced strongly, too, by the out-.
side pressure from Canada. The
Canadians, weary of waiting for
the United States to make up its
mind, announced in 1951 their m
tention to proceed alone with the
project. Canada's parliament au
thorized construction.
Canada under this plan would of
course have chief control of seaway
facilities. Inasmuch as these steps
appeared to be more than mere
bluff, American lawmakers began
to realize that ship traffic Impor
tant to America might before too
long be moving through , a water
way over which this country had no
governing voice.
Whether these same considera
tions might prevail in the more ex
plosive House is uncertain. But at
the very least, the project deserves
to come to the floor for a vote.
The St. Lawrence Seaway has
been held in the suspended state
too long. We owe it to ourselves
and our friends up north to de
cide one way or another.
SLIPPED OUT
MT. STORM, W. Va. ( Opera
tion. ., ttia v.ihn nn Mine were
curtailed sharply yesterday when
two ponies usea TO pull mini vara
escaped from their drivers.
Waal Viro-inlft. atatA TWlice re
ported about a dosen miners were
kept away from tneir joos uracil oi
the day before they captured the
animals on a mountain side. -
dive Joor Portrait
III
ItJ The heartfelt way
greet yei? Valentine
. the lasting nmeaabraneB for uua
day. Pleasant sittings arranged
I at roar coaTeniefloa.M
Phono 7S43
Miller-Williams- ,
L STUDIO -J
- 511 Main
FRIDAY, JANUABV on ...,!
Lin Vuan
Story of Eed
Life, New
Tells
Arm
freedo
Editor's Note t- AP Correspon
dent Spencer Moosa talked to
many of the freed Chinese POWs
who streamed ashore on Formosa
this week after release from Allied
captivity in Korea. Then he picked
Ling Yuan at random and asked
him to tell his story from the be
ginning, i '
By SPENCER MOOSA
. T A I P E H, Formosa 11 Ling
Yuan is 19 but he looks like a
schoolboy of 15 despite the corro
sion of bitter memories.
Ling Yuan Is one of the 1,209
Chinese who fought under the Red
banner in Korea but, once cap
tured, vowed never to return to
Communist rule. This week they
all came to Formosa,
This lad from faraway Szechwan
province in western China can
spread a smile across his slender,
handsome face in spite of all be
has seen of wsr and brutality.
I asked him his name.
"Ling Yuan," he said. i'That's
my real name and I have no fear
of reprisals against my family for
giving it. I'll also give you their
exact address 20 Nan Chu Men,
Chungking.
"I am not callous," he went on.
"It's only that my family are past
reprisals."
His father had been ' a cloth
vendor by day and a tailor at
home by night. Then late in 1949
the Communists came to Chung-
FRANK TRIPP
A sixty years conquest for peo
ples' time began when folks start
ed gadding. Americans had been a
race of stay-at-homes. The family
fireside was a brief nightly forum.
Ten o'clock was late to go to bed.
A touring melodrama, a church
supper or a lecture by a man who
had been' up Pike's Peak made a
lively week for the average house
hold. Evenings were spent with
stereoscope pictures of Niagara
Falls, the magic lantern, charades
and homework. Most evenings
found everybody under the kero
sene hanging lamp reading.
Successively the bicycle, automo
bile, movies, radio and television
.have changed the scene. Up to 1890
the newspaper was the only means
of mass communication; the horse
the only means of individual trans
portation. Came the bicycle and for the
first time in history the common
man could take himself places. He
went,, and the release of his pent
up wanderlust was what made the
Nineties gay. The nation went on a
cycling bender, '
I remember losing customers
who were too absorbed with cycl
ing to have time to read when I
was a newspaperboy. It is of rec
ord that in 1896 a single New York
news agency suffered a volume
loss of a million dollars; fabulous
in those days. Tailors, shoemakers,
theaters, cafes faced bankruptcy.
Cigar sales fell off 700 millions a.
year, a barber wrote to Harper's
Weekly, . , there is nothing to
my business any longer; the bi
cycle has ruined it."
The newspaper weathered the
bike 5pree, grew and prospered.
At the turn of the century the
horseless carriage and "flickers"
in Nickelodeons joined the con
quest; feebly at first, but soon to
outdo the bicycle as time consum
ers. The movies entered the adver
tising Held. The public rebelled;
forced ads of consequence off the
cinema screen. The motion picture
settled Into its niche; the" newspa
per greW, prospered. ,
Up to then diversions had only
competed for peoples' time. None
had supplied any service given by
the newspaper.
So comes radio. It kept people
home, where the newspaper goes.
It would never go into the news
business; it was just show busi
ness. Its advertising would meet
the fate that befell the movies.
Listeners Would throw it out.
The same thoughts pestered the
radio pioneers; until they did go
into the news field. And scared the
living daylights out of half of the
newspaper world, still the newspa
per grew, .prospered.
While the battle raged newspa
pers rose to their all-time-high In
circulation, advertising and qual
ity. Perfected radio settled Into its
nichel
Television is a composite of the
movie and the radio. It too will
settle into its useful niche, and with
newspaper and radio form a trium:
virate of public service known to
no peoples save Americans.
The newspaper has grown four
fold in the three score years of
conquest. It needs only tend to
Its own knitting; stay as local as
the town pump. .
SAM DAWSON
NEW YORK Wl The Presi
dent spelled out Thursday in his
economic report more of his plans
to shore up business should the
present slide show signs of turn
ing into an avalanche.
You'll be hearing the adequacy
of .the plans debated in the weeks
to come. - f , .
They are aimed primarily at
stimulating business, because jobs
stem: from business. .
-For - the present that is con
sidered enough, because many in
dustrial executives are so sure
that' business now has the vitality
and' the ability to roll with the
punches.
Already industry has been given
easier' .credit and money con
ditions, and some tax -relief. Con-
Talking In Sleep
Breaks Marriage
LOg ANGELES ffiA woman's
habit of talking in her sleep an
noyed her husband, Cleone E. Pat-ton,-
especially since she talked
about the man next door, Patton
told a judge yesterday.
1 He said his wife Ruby denied
any wrongdoing. But he said he
saw her enter the neighbor's house
and looked through a window to
see that the neighbor was only part
clothed.
Patton was awarded a divorce
and custody of the couple's two
children,
VILLARD
HOTEL
"Host of the West and
Still the Best"
PAUL BUNYAN
COFFEE SHOP
Popular for Luncheon
and Dinners
' PONDEROSA
LOUNGE
Fovorire Meeting
Place for Cocktails
NADINE
at the Spinet
PINE GROVE
Every Sat. Nite
Dining ond Dancing
Mode Enjoyable with
Music by
"The Hucksters"
gress is considering more tax con
cessions, aimed frankly at mak
ing it attractive for industry to
spend for new plants and equip
ment, and to take business risks.
If these tax reforms should fail
to create the jobs and the good
times which the administration
thinks they will, and the reces
sion gets rolling in earnest, two
measures could be taken to in
crease purchasing power, and thus
tackle the problem from the other
angle. .
One would be further cuts in
individual income taxes and In ex
cise taxes. This would give people
more left-over, income they could
spend.
The other that the President has
already set forth in the State of
the Union message is a public
works program in readiness to of
fer jobs and give industry outlets
for its production.
The first line of defense is the
stimulation of business initiative
and incentive. The majority of
businessmen will likely applaud
this wholeheartedly. The sug
gested tax reforms would remove
some of the millstones which busi
ness contends hang around its
neck..
king.
Ling Yuan ma ..... .
20 Nan Chu M.n "B.
They found his lattorJ
stock nt ninth .. "M,"ll
to avow ... "e, 'l
" -CUUn pprJ
his mother and his
to a "people's court." i'J
court.'"" van
Ling Yuan was a 'mJ
of 14 at the time. hM
old-fashioned and tosUUdl
marriages. He and hi, ,J
were In the country .1
parents when u,e
nrtto!Ylanchangeanl
fled Szechwan nrnuin..
Communists caiiph.
draft and at 15 he J
In Manchuria, next door J
Late in 1950. when hJ
abruptly entered the Kori
Ling Yuan crossed the vj
into North Korea as .J
carrier for the, 188th Dlvlsi
icti Aiiny.
China's armies ,.
ward the 38th Parallel. 4
ueiure nis jBtn birthday,
chance to desert.
HiS Outfit tun. n.. m
the Central Front th. m.J
a friend found themselvel
from their company,
He said they smash
weapons and Kent walk!
until they reached the nil
oi ine u.o. 2ft Divlsloi
they surrendered.
: . F.rom the front, Ling ?
shuttled southward to the i
port of Pusan. Late In
transferred to the smi
prison island of Koje.
Inside the barbed vi
pounds, he found the t
netween Nationalists am
nl8ts still raged.
He did not talk about Ibd
when the two factions fel
control and blood ran in
pounds.
But he said he was onl
internal guards appointee
anti-Red prisoners themsd
In April 1951!. the Alii
their screening to see who)
to go back to Red China I
of an armistice. They asi
Yuan If he wanted to 1
"The very thought ml
blood curdle," he said,
could do was say over
again, 'Even If you kill d
not return to Communist!
And so he was moved frl
to Oheju Island with oil
Communist prisoners. I
On Sept. 18. he arrives
south camp in tne neuia
for the "come home", in
provided by the armlstlcl
But his compound was one
which refused to listen
persuasion teams.
He said 20 to 30 per
the Indian guards wen
munlst and tried' to talk
oners Into going home..-;
.'"They-told us," he ssi
regardless of whether
questioned or not we would
back to Communist China.'
After the period for eipl
ended in December, Lie
said the Indians screened
pound but not a single
changed his mind.
On the tank landing shij
ing him to Formosa, he Hi
the ship's public address
Jan. 23 that all prisoners
verted to civilian status ta
of the TJ.N. Command.
"Then," he added, 'we!
at Keelung (Formosan pa
stepped on tne sou oi iree
DANCE
Modern' ond old lime a
Every Sot. Nite 9 p.m. to
Music by Four CloiH
1 K.C. HALL Public w
A BETTER BUY
NOW
"45 QT.
225
Better buy Plm"" l
...By any stmulf"
you couldn't buy
a better Bourboul
SI
ricM
z
BOURBON
at its
ALL-TIME'
BEST!
Planter
Club
STRAIGHT
BOURBON w"
10. HOOT CONTINENTAL WSTUWO COtPOMTION '