SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1954
PAGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
They'll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy Hatlo
But tue new suit he borrowed
back ? give 4 look
f , winc UK COILED LAJNORV
FRANK JENKINS BILL JENKINS
Editor Managing Editor
Entered is second class matter at the post office at Klamath Falls,
Ore., on August 30, 1906, under act of Congress. Marco 8, 1879
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication
of all local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news.
SUBSCBIPTION KATES
MAIL Bt CARRIER
1 Month 1.35 1 Month 1 1.36
Months 50 Months 10
1 Year $11.00 1 rear 118.20
T?l4,SsVsRAl.s3VviLL PACKAGED
MO SO CAREFULLY ADDRESSED
BILLBOARD
, I v ... A V
S
By BILL JENKINS
About every so often the aver
age man has to climb up on his
personal pedestal and make a few
predictions. Mostly, of course, they
are quite sale In doing so for tbe
prognostications are merely ver
bal and easily forgotten.
When you write 'em down you
nuke a mark In the dust that
might not be forgotten so readily.
But at the risk of being wrong,
a risk, incidentally, that worries
me very little, having been wrong
so often, I'll make at least one
prediction for the coming year.
I think that the next session of
the Oregon legislature will see a
bill presented and in all probabil
ity passed requiring any politician
currently In olllce who flics for
a higher office to resign his pres
ent office prior to such filing.
Otherwise we are going to find
ourselves in a position of having
ambitious men in office who con
tinue to file for office after office,
knowing that they have safe sanc
tuary in their current office
should the voters refuse to elevate
them.
It seems to us that there Is a
dangerous potentiality In this busi
ness of chain filing. Imagine the
feelings of a man who is currently,
shall we say, a state representa
tive, who files for the post of
ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL
by KEN McLEOD
A few days ago I was talking
with one of our prominent citizens
who happens to be a new-comer
to this Klamath Land and fortun
alt to escape from the clutches of
the big city. Naturally we talked
about the field of outdoor recrea
lion, which, to the business man
pells dollars In tourist business. He
has been long enough within the
community to notice that many of
our prominent citizens appear to
be allergio toward the problems of
giving encouragement to the out
door recreational movement. He
asked "What Is the matter with
these fellows that they neglect this
opportunity?" then continued
with: 'We ought to be Retting five
times the tourist business that we
are now doing
To be asked such a question by
a comparative new-comer was
bit startling and while I probably
could have given him the answer,
I didn't he will be around long
enough to find out the answer him
self. Like many another commun
ily we have been given to chasing
the wlll-o'-the-wisps end overlook
ing a great recreational potential.
Some yellow-haired boy on a white
horse to come charging up from
out of the somewhere to save our
aagghig economy or Is It a guy
with long whiskers and striped
pants?
8trange as It may be It has been
the outsiders attracted to our coun- j
try who have seen the undeveloped
opportunity. For a time our Motel 1
system had a coast-wide reputa
tion of being something out of the
"Drapes of Wrath." Fortunately
that picture Is changing but while
the facilities for handling the tour
ist Is Improving, the very things
that attract people to a commun.
Ily lie neglected, being deliberate
ly destroyed or just plainly falling'
Into decay from over-use. i
The argument waxes long over
whether another great depression
is just around the corner and bus
iness Is going to pot, yet, Mr. and
Mrs. America appear to be going
ebout their accustomed way
inurut ui. .i Uaii ..j I
Mrs. America do not appear' to bevcn, ""' nd G"" ch0 to use
greatly exercised over the econom.i" !"'"e " reveo.1 lo the king and
ic picture and in 1953 brought into'i,
rtrmnn urn nnrt fwi tw- .
vel Information division of the Ore
gon State Highway Department
expects that this year will bring
even a larger volumn of tourists to
the State.
The outdoors Is somrthlng we
attempt to sell to the visitor Irom
out-of-state yet how much atten
tion are we paying to the product
we must sell? How far would the
automobile business be today It
year after year It consistently
turned out Its product In shabbier i
and shnhhipi fn-io vni .
lust what we are attempting lo do! ' oy '"'eniviriinse, and this. I
In the hope It will build an essen-1 "lc voy"1 ''"'''' did and tln-v
Hal tourist trade. People don't,."'', rcllUca tlwl the lust'
come to the State Just to see oui ! "d "r ' " Klv' family !
Main Street or our stores, or rest-! Tow' yel ,n Pr0Phrl emphasized :
aurants, or hotels, or motels, orl "?hhe!,sn" 1101 eleave one to an
any of the the other services up ! other.
may offer lor their convenience I
Ihey have the same things a: i
home, perhaps even better lhan I
what we can produce.
Vacation tours, must still be con
sidered primarily as a luxury, no
matter how delightful they may be.
Vacation tours cost money, like
wise, even when spending Is kept
at a minimum. Last year it was
noted, that tourists were becoming
were snoozing In their cars and Jrove ,l be a delusion and n v.ill
.hopping carefully for lodging. ?reak-Just how we do not know.
Competition for tourist trade is be- e old itas and animosities b-
romtng keener each year, as the ,wren tne :ia'.io;, of turcic will
"buyer's market" develops In that c0";ln"e to keep ihtm span,
respect along with tne demand for Th e"orl 10 unite Kurope
ill other goods and services. against Russia wui aiio la l, and
If the Klamath Country does not weapons we are furnishing
nay the attention It should to the
natural environment, the Jewel In' xr-N
its setting, this great recreation Ttti
rea will be Judged by the outsider tfvfr'
PICTURE TOAMING "SBv
gfrMrf II FTM D"' " "" who do loo work
,!ifr.oL, W. S. "BILL HEIMANN
" " Wtm Phono 111 M.Ira, II
United Stales representative or
senator and is defeated by the
voters. Still stinging and bitter
with deleat this fellow returns to
his unexpired state post and takes
out his wrath on the helpless
people of his district.
At. any rate we think such a res-
olutlon will be presented and
passed.
We will also Ro out on the limb
to the extent of saying that oui
duck season will in all probability
be set too late, that we will have
a pleasant fall and a light winter
and that the Jet base will be fully
completed in less than a year.
Smallest fire of the season was
promptly taken care of by the
KFPA men the other day. It cov
ered Just exactly two- square feel.
Some fisherman had stopped by
a stream, sat down on a log and
enjoyed a smoke and then stubbed
his clgaret out on the log itself.
Since the log was pretty rotten
the punk-like wood had caught
and was smoldering when it was
spotted.
So far the record In tilt Basin
Is good as far as fires are con
cerned. We haven't had a serious
one yet.
And we sincerely hope we don't.
with what he sees and so far, what
he can see has not been too en
couraging. First impressions arc
most Important they bring about a
decision to either tarry, or, hurry
on to where he knows there Is
something present to suit his taste.
As a race of people, we Ameri
cans have grown great upon the
reckless abandon with which we
have destroyed our natural re
sources and our fathers did their
best to leave us a legacy of aban
doned waste, we, too, arc following
closely in their footsteps. There
have been a few individuals who
have been fur-scoing who have had
the vision and courage to warn us
of the dangers on the course we
pursue.
The very fact that we still have
something lelt today for the Amer
leans, of the future Is directly due
to those few brilliant leaders
with vision, whose understanding
permitted them to foresee the im
portant social nerds of the future.
Perhaps we should say, "the hu
man needs" since any social struc
ture of value rests upon the
strength of Its Individuals.
Today we are living In a period
wneie we begin to see the end of
the street. Are we going to have
the vision to meet our obligation
or will we drift along and wait
for the fair haired boy on the
while horse?
DICTATORS
Free peoples of the world view,
with apprehension, the rapid
spread of communism and wonder
whether it will succeed In control
ling the world for that Is Its goal.
We need not be lelt In doubt lor
the daya of a single great dictator
are past.
About 3500 years iko. all the then
known world was ruled by the
great Babylonian dictator Nebucn-
adnezzar who had excellent oual-
uiuiign a worsmpper 01 era-
"1 e orm ,wnal world ruling i
'wuuuio wuum s
uccccd his and
Telling the Editor
im-y were io oe Din mice, the 1 are rather complicated in the re
united Kingdom ol llie Medej and j vere cases and sometimes require
Persians, the Oi'ek and the Rom-1 surgery though olton relief can
; be brought oy more simple meas
Of the fourth o:- Roman TCing- j ures. Other than avoidance of sun.
dom, the young prophet David told ! w ind or dust, when these are ie
Nobuchadnezzar. would be divided ' sponsible, 1 do nut know of anv
and made up of stroiiB and weak home remedv or easily nDplie'd
kingdoms and UYu happened, lor I method which Is likely to be cf
Europe Is but the divided empire I fectlve
ol Rome. Further, the prohrls s.iid ; Q I have a skin rash on my
of these kingdoms: "They shnll not i hands caused from strong soaps and
iu anouier. ana till-I
thi-i- h. ..in ,s ..,J
to
. ?'v'r' K'eat lulrrs of the past
tried to reunite Kurope. Ol those
r.m"- mention Napoleon. The
ivaiser ana Hitler, ol whom each
appeared to have some chance to
succeed tor a time, but all failed.
That prophecy in only eight Ver es
In the secon l chapter of Daniel
has been rhallenced by great rulers
In the past but always proved true.
Communism is now trying it but It
prYiTMATTVJe W r ,i5WCWW5 COULD
"-CT ILAW ASKED W NEVER KrJEW VX kW Vpf.-4R-VOJ J7 EXPECTlaiG ' '
nvNMETODOUP ( HE COULD Y . SURE ITS X5URS? J A SREEN
ViJ FOR HIM, A prujt LIKE ' . V SUIT
W jg-
I p
HAL
BEULAH. Wyo. m There Is
a one million dollar monument to
a fish dinner near here.
The monument is Ranch "A,"
one of the Jabulous showplaces ot
the West. Local residents tell this
story of Its origin:
In the early 1830's the late
Moses Annenberg. multi-millionaire
publisher, passing through
this area on a motor tour to Yel
lowstone Park, stopped for dinner
in a restaurant in a nearby town.
He was served trout, and found
them amazingly succulent.
"Where did these come from?"
I he asked. He was told they came
from Sand Creek, which some ex
perts regard as one of the two
best trout streams in the world
I (the other is in Switzerland. . .
or Colorado. , ' .or wherever you
caught your last trout).
Tie next morning Annenberg
drove to the heart of this fisher
man's paradise, took a long look
at the beautiful salmon-colored
cliffs and the clear-f lowing
stream, and said two words to
the owner: "How much:" He
bought it on the spot.
In the next few years Annen
berg Is reported to have spent
approximately a million dollars on
the ranch. The great lodge It
has eight bedrooms and six baths
was built of huge logs, and
filled with line hand-carved West
ern style furniture. He put in a
nine-car garage, a huge barn In
which each horse had its own
automatic drinking fountain.
The draperies in the lodge are
of horsehldc, elaborately beaded.
The giant Navajo rugs can no
longer be duplicated; looms that
size no longer exist.
Ranch "A" (for Annenberg) Is
small as ranches go out here
only 680 acres, slightly more than
a square mile. But it is a fisn
THE DOCTOR SAYS
By EDWIN P. TORDAX, M.D.
An annoying but not usually
dangerous condition is the subject
of today's first inquiry.
Q My eyes frequently fill up
with water though I do not cry,
and cause my vision to be some
what clouded. Somtlmes the tears
drip over the lids and even run
down my face. What can you sug
gest? Mrs. T. E.
A Excessive watering of the
eyes Is extremely common and
may arise Irom cny one of sev
eral different causes. Tearing of
the eyes is made worse by sun.
wind and dust cr any other for
eign body) and Is fairly common
in hay fever and some of the
other allergies. There are said to
be two main types: Excessive se
cretion of tears, and failure of the
tears to drain out through the
normal passageway or blockage
of tly; lacrimal or tearing pass-
,Kes. The methods of treating
these various tvm nr illtlleultv
.,..ri
tcied
those nations ma bp user, to fiht
each other lor "Thr. shall not
cleave."
The prophet told the kuK that,
in the days of these kings, the Ood
of heaven will dash all the king
doms of the world to pieces and
set up his own kingdom which
shall stand lorever.
All except the L.st prediction,
have been accurately tulfilled. so
can we not look for the last predic
tion to come true loo?
K. L. Chitwond
BOBBY CHAMPION
and
Melody Wranglers
ARMORY
Saturday, August 7
DANCING 9 'til 1
Admittion $1.00 person (tax. inc.)
BOYLE
ranch, not a beef ranch. It has
some 40 elk, 200 deer, and flocks
of wild turkey and ruffed grouse
but its main stock is In its
Uowing hatchery housing several
hundred thousand delectable trout.
Is the fishing good? Sen. Bricker
of Ohio once cast a fly from the
front porch of the lodge and
hauled in a 14-pound rainbow
beauty.
Annenberg, who also maintained
fishing lodges in Florida and Penn
sylvania, came here less frequent
ly in his later years and disposed
of the property before his death.
It is now owned by Pete Smith,
6-foot 7 son of a former Wyoming
governor.
Smith estimates it would take
two to three million dollars at to
day' prices to duplicate the lav
ish splendor of Ranch "A."
"Annenberg built it to last for
ever and it should last for
ever," he said. "I've been told
that each of the bronze casement
windows cost J1.600."
Pete and his pretty wife. Oydls,
love the quiet charm of seclusion
of their canyon retreat. They can
sit on the porch at evening and
watch elk come cautiously out to
graze on the 1,000 foot ledges that
ooruer murmuring sand creek.
"One of the nicest things is that
no dust gets into the lodge," said
Oydls, giving a housewife's view.
But tempting as it is as a place
to loaf, Pete, who has been a cat
tleman all his life, has decided
that even a showplace ought to
show a profit.
"There is no reason this hatch
ery can't harvest 150,000 pounds
of 'trout a year," he said, "and
trout brings a dollar a pound."
One single fish dinner led to the
building of Ranch "A." But a lot
more trout now will have to go tc
market to keep It going.
powders I use for dishwashing
and laundry. This Is complicated
by some other allergy present In
side my own house which does not
bother me anywhere else I happen
to be. As there are no oe'.s in
the house I am puzzled to know
what Is the cause.
Mystified.
A This Is a problem for a
medical detective. It may be hard
to locate the cause. In one similar
famous case a number of years
ago the source was traced tu the
ink of the Sunday comics in the
newspapers and trouble did not
appear on other days of the week.
You will have to seek some sim
ilar obscure cause at home.
Q Would you please explain
the difference betveen pulse rt'e
and pulse pressure?- R. M.
A Pulse rate Is a measure
of the frequency of the beating of
tne nean. Each time the heait
contracts It will show in tha pulse
and, therefore, the rapidity of the
heart beat can be measured. Tne
pulse pressure is the difference
between presure of the blood on
the wall of the arterv between the
high point when the heart is con
tracting and the low point when
the heart is relaxing.
Q Please discuss the possible
reaction. It any, to tetanus toxoid.
Six months ago my daugnier. age
6. was given tetanus antitoxin be
cause of a bad cut and she jui-
severe serum sickness. I
was advised to give tetanus tox
oid now. Mrs. P. H.
A You received good advice.
The tetanus antitoxin give only
temporary Immunity and If your
daughter needed it again she
might get another and possibly
even more severe reaction. The
tetanus toxoid creates a much
more permanent resistance or im.
munity and since it Is prepared
in a different way severe leac
tions practically nev?r occur.
Q I have an acute case of
the
Former POW
Faces Trial
For Murder
LEXINGTON, Tenn. (f A for
mer Korean prisoner of war, his
dream of being sheriff shattered,
sat quietly In a cell today await
ing trial on a charge of murder ,
James A. Cogburn, 33, a disap
pointed candidate who started
shooting after the vote went
against him, was trapped by a
massive posse near here yester
day. His brother, 31-year-old Roy.
wounded by two state highway pa
trolmen during the manhunt, was
in fair condition at a hospital in
nearby Jackson, Tenn.
A third man, James Cbadwick.
35, of Knoxville, Tenn., surren
dered meekly. He caught a ride
with Cogburn while hitchhiking
some weeks ago and stayed on
when promised a job as deputy
sheriff.
The manhunt' was ordered after
a wild gunfight in which Lexington
Patrolman Arthur Gurley, 50. was
killed and Police Chief Clovis
Stanfill critically wounded."
The early-morning battle oc
curred in front of the courthouse
where election officials were tal
lying the vote which showed
James Cogburn running a poor
third in the Henderson County
sheriff's race.
Cogburn, after his capture, told
oincers tne violence exploded over
"dishonest politics."
Police officers said James Cog-
ourn naa been acting "peculiar"
ever since he was released from
a Korean prison ramn to find that
his wife, believing him dead, had
remarried.
.She later divorced Cogburn and
remarried her "extra" husband.
American To
Resume Sales
NEW YORK iff A spokesman
for the struck American Airlines
says, starting today, the line will
accept plane reservations "on a
tentative basis, with alternale
transportation belnjr arranged if
the strike Is still on 48 hours before
flight time."
American was grounded last Sat
urday by a strike of the API, Air
line Pilots Assn. The pilots have
demanded a 20-mlnute stopover to
change crews on the line's nonstop
East to West coast flights. Such
runs require more than eight hours
per flight.
The spokesman said the decision
to accept "provisional" reserva
tions was made soon after the
walkout began, but it was not to
become operative until after mid
night last night.
He added that there was no Im
mediate Indication of when or
where negotiations might resume
in the dispute.
SKRMONS
VIENNA. Austria Wi All ser
mons by Roman Catholic priests j
in Czechoslovakia are subject to
severe pre-censorshlp by Czech
security authorities, the Austrian 1
Catholic News Service reported
yesterday. j
conjunctivitis. Is this caused by
overstrain ol the eyes or from an
infection? Mrs. V.
A It Is moie likely from in
fection than from overstrain of the
eyes. Most cases of conjunctivitis
can be cured fairly promptly with
expert advice involving medica
tion, eye washes or the like.
Lee Hendricks
Tew Hth.irwii Dntf eM
ee icujA. ...
IT Far Your Y K Vff1
Shopping Convenience K !( j
2212 SO. TH
BOY SCOUTS WHO LEARN to use a compass are hard to lose. Here (I to r) are Kenneth Moty,
Father Patrick Meskill, Instructor of Sacred Heart Academy and Dick Cottinghem, Boy Scouts
in camp at Crescent Lake.
KF Merchants
Pian Meeting
The August meeting of the Klam
ath Merchants Association will be
held Monday noon with luncheon
at the Willard Hotel, it was an
nounced by Keith Moon, president.
Setting' a date for fall opening
and store hours during the Christ
mas season will be on the order of
business.
Presentation of the annuul Her
ald and News award for the best
Brand Names Klamath Basin
Roundup ad in the annual Roundup
Edition will be made.
All interested merchants are
urged to attend. Moon said.
Germans Offer
Huoe Reward
BONN, Germany itfi The West
German government offered a re
ward of Si 19,000 today for infor
mation that will clear up the
strange disappearance of its for
mer security chief. Dr. Otto John.
Government officials voiced
hopes this huge reward would
lure some East German commu
nist who knows the true details
of the John case to desert to the
West.
John, who headed the Office for
the Protection of the Constitution
the West German FBI Crossed
over to East Berlin July 20.
The East Zone government said
Wednesday it had given the for
mer security chief asylum at his
request.
Police Move On
Southern Town
COLUMBIA, SC. I.fl Slate
police are cracking down on an
Influx into Aiken County. S C.. of
underworld figures lured by easy
pickings among workers at the
huge Savannah River H-bomb
plant. Some came from Phenix
City. Ala., police said.
Phenix City recently was placed
under martial law and National
Guard troops have been lu.licing
the area, noted for gambling and
other illegal diversions.
In Aiken County, officers arrest
ed 16 men and women in one night
of raids on "honky-tonks" and
"Juke box joints." They were ac
cused of prostitution, gambling and
illeeal whisky sales.
Gov. James P. Byrnes has or
dered the State Law Enforcment
Division to "intensify enforcement
as much as necessary to see that
the Violations arc stopped."
PRESCRIPTIONS BY PHONE
4321
JAMES MARLOW
WASHINGTON Ul The French
still stall on approving a single
European Army which would in
clude Frenchmen and Germans
The United States and Britain
have Indicated, It the stall contin
ues, they will consider granting the
. West Germans sovereignty. It's
guarded talk, more like a nudge.
The word sovereignty In Ger
many's case sounds bigger than it
is. It wouldn't mean full Independ
ence. Nor would it mean immedi
ate rearmament. It might mean
that later. r
But giving Germany sovereignty
without French approval could lead
to an, Anglo-American split with
the French.
The United States has looked
upon an unarmed Germany as
soft spot In Western Europe against
possible Russian attack. But- how
could the Germans be permitted
to rearm without letting them be
come a menace again to their
neighbors? The solution seemed to
lie in a single European Army
called EDC, the European Defense
Community.
That single army would be made
up of troops Irom France, Ger
many, Italy. Belgium, Luxem
bourg, the Netherlands. It would
be about a two-million-man force,
all wearing the same uniforms and
unoer a single command. The Ger
man contribution would be perhaps
500.000 men.
Although this would let the Ger
mans rearm to a limited degree,
they still couldn't have a separate,
national army under a revived
German general staff. The EDC
idea seemed all right to the
French, when they first proposed it
several years ago. Later the
French had second thoughts. Some
Frenchmen feared the thought of
a Germany rearmed at all. Some
foresaw Germany as the possible
dominator of EDC.
EDC couldn't come Into existence
without French approval. The
French delayed although all other
participants except Italy gave their
okay. The United States kept press
ing. Nothing happened. Finally
French Premier Mendes-France
said he would put the question to
the French Assembly before It ad
journed this month. Meantime, he
has run into other troubles which
may sidetrack EDC.
There are two important agree
ments in the background, involv
ing the United states. France
Britain, and West Germany. One
was made at Bonn, the West Ger
ANNOUNCEMENT'
Paul M. Noel, D. M.D.
James H. Noel, D. M.D.
Donald P. Noel, B.S., D. M. D.
hove token over the offices of Boyd S.
Sprogue. 1435 Eost Moin Street.
. Jomes H. Noel is now toking op
oointments for dentol work.
Dr. Poul M. Noel ,m his pr0:ll!.,
to denture construction and will toke op
oomtments on or obout September 15th.
Dr. Donold P. Noel now is serving with
the U.S. Air Force.
man capital, the other at Paris.
The Bonn agreement covers the
question of restoring sovereignty
to Germany. The Paris agreement
covers creation of EDC.
In short, the agreements sav:
There can be no sovereignty for
Germany until EDC comes into
part of it and Germany therefore
not free to set up its own army.
The French can protest the Uni
ted States and Britain have bro
ken the two agreements if they
attempt to give Germany sov
ereignty before the French ap
prove JiiDC.
But, by that Teasoning, West
Germany could be kept unarmed
forever if the French never let
EDC come into existence. That's
the dilemma the United States and
Britain face in wanting to keep
Fiance a firm ally and at the
same time patching up the solt
spot of an unarmed Germany.
Right now United States, Brit
ish and French troops occupy
three zones of West Germany,
And representatives of those three,
called high commissioners, keep
some control over the West Ger
man government. For instance,
they can veto sertaln kinds ot leg
islation passed by the German par
liament. As an example: Laws on
cartels. Also, they control West
Germany's relations with other
government?.
If Germany is granted sov
ereignty, the three high commis
sioners take the title of ambassa
dors. They will no longer, it is
believed, veto German legislation.
They would not control West Ger
many's foreign relations, or prob
ably wouldn't, since that would
have to be worked out. And the
occupation troops no longer would
be called by that name. Undoubt
edly they'd stay in Germany, but
as '"guests" for defense pur
poses. And the Allies would be boss if
the time ever came no ona
looks for it in the foreseeable fu
ture to make a final peace
treaty on Germany with the Rus
sians and arrange for the reunifi
cation of West and East Germany.
The Russians still are boss In East
Germany.
LAWNS
Db ru wtnt food livn tr J
ft low prior? You csn'l alwavt nav
both. Wo do qtulitv work and tar
nish everrlhlnff. Vve suortnleo
rood ilond of f roll! Phone 4?6.
LAKtSHORE GARDENS
NURSERY