PAGE SIX HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1954 FRANK JENKINS BILL JENKINS - Editor Managing Editor Entered as second class matter at Uie post office at Klamath FalU, Ore., on August 20, 1806, under act of Congress, March 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. SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BY CARRIER 1 Month 1.35 1 Mouth $ 1.35 6 Months -.-$6.50 (Months J a. 10 1 Year -1 IU 00 1 Year 16.20 They'll Do It Every Time BILLBOARD By BILL JICNK1NS I I, for one, certainly hope lor full Tuesday was quite a day up at success. It would be a grand thing Diamond Lake. Lots ol activity, to have Diamond Lake back on the lots of spectators and lots of dts-1 list as one of the top trout lakes appointed people. j in the notion again. And it was The disappointed were thoie who, lhat Just a few short year3 ago. had come up In trucks, packing, j would also like to see sports plenty of Ice, all armed with dip manshlp adhered to strictly In lu nets and all the rest of the ead-lvurc use of the lake and the trash gctry and paraphernalia necessary, ash element kept out ol the waters. to Uie taking ol fish In any ir.aiu.er. I When I lclt the lake along in . early aiternoon there were r.-ports : u"B "3 .ms year s ure of two trout having come to the ton hunting rtyuh. ions I find hat surface, one a 17 or 18 Inciter ,d on top of all the other restrictions Hip other supposedly around 24""'" "" inches. I was unable to veriiy these rcpoits, but am certainly willing to take the statement a:s truth. . The shore, however, was heavi ly lined In spots with dead chubs, ranging all the way Irom the tiny little fellows of an Inch or less up to eight and 10 Inch fish. In all probability we will have to wait until the early part of next week to find out what really hap pened in the big operation. There are deep spots in the lake where It may tnke the poison several days to penetra.'e. And the big lunkers, II there are any left In the lake, may not be as susceptible to the lotcnone as arc the roach. We must remember thai this whole thing Is purely experiment al. It is the blg'(c.;t try at fish poisoning ever attempted any where, and when you tackle a body of water as big as Diamond Lake you are liable to run Into a lot of problems that didn't occur to you at an earlier date. From superficial observation we are led to believe that the whole thing will be successful. It may take some little time for the poi soning process to work, and even longer for some of the fish to come to the surface. hunters are bur dened it is illegal to take water iov.l through the use of "cattle, horses, mule3 or live duck or goose decoys." I assume that this means that; you can't use a horse as a blind when you want to sneak up on a ; band of ducks sitting out on the pond. i Shucks, fullers, as far as I'm concerned you needn't have wor- ried about it. All the livestock 1 1 By Jimmy Hatlo The QUONSE.T3 FIGURED THE NURSE FOR THEIR PERFECT DARLING OF A NEW BABY WAS JUSTIN. UNNECESSARY EXPENSE TlESJ.JUSTAS t)ETS THE GATE,,-. THINGS AROUND . ifi&S Tl-IE HOUSE TAKE ON A DIFFERENT "WJ, ( IP "TP in V'-- . 1 , m I HIMTM4TMURSEHAS filL If W1- NOTHIN6 TO CO BUT . ) rsZtf J TELL WEE V 71 SLEEP--V.E DOCfTNEED pfklj I tf-"TTlV IN THE 2 HER AT ALL ,Tfl's j HORNING-' f FIFTH STWAIGMT Y V ll'i 3, rX'M AMOTUIER Yl WE GOTTA GET .Da V, JY"fii j THINK A PIN THAT kllTOSE BACK! iN'. 'fd 'S STICKING l ' 1 HIM? COULD IT ATT Wt ' v;, BsraLic.-.-rwisi ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL by KEN McLEOD disturbed by the hand of man are apt to retaliate to his injury." This passage was written a cen tury nnd a quarter ago a long time back in the, general concept ul man, or, at least so he feels there were no conservation organ Those of us who belong to na-. tag unique upon our No.th Amer- J"1'""5' Zt hZlnl-l tlonal conservation groups and , lean Continent for It was dupli-! ,u" u. .. ., .Vii. ever run Into hunting excursions (sportsmen's clubs inlghr do well cated in practically every legion . , Hin,rhH h ,1,. proves to be so wild and skittish i to pause a moment and take stock of the land. Back in the 1820's ?' m ' " ., , I can t get within a mile of 'em.lof our accomplishments in the (when the first white men began to , ,,, ,,"1:, ., retaliate In fact, I remember once when Cause of Conservation. We might, probe the wilderness with the am X tried to catch a lone, swaybacked ask ourselves a few frank ques- bition to strip it of Its wealth of old mare In a Held with the cheer lul thought in mind thai I could use her stout If somewhat dished back to transport a load of geese and ducks I had filled my strop with. I could have packed the string in my-lf v.i'.h eflort than It took me to ccch that fool mare. And then she walked so slowly that It got dark and I got lost before getting vback to where I thought the car was. - So I hope that the game agents won't let this clause in the law cause them any worry where I'm concerned. I'm strictly a fence row boy. To heck with the livestock. to his injury. A large part of our natural re sources of forest, field and stream are now gone forever. Nature has. Indeed, retaliated to man's in jury. Civilization Is now changing this land to a country of cities and (3) Have we got the subject in I, ,. conMrniM conservation: ltowns' farms' Industrial plants, proper focus? I this was almost a century before ! lumbe,r "s and ,he (4! Are we dealing wllh first! the word "conservation" came to mltams that cater to mans de thtngs first, instead of fiddling ! have the meaning with which we ' 31res ln ; f c.u.pan1?, o( h? land' with Inconsequential? i define it today. McTaggart was !?,, ,, , , ,11 j j , tions: ill Are we making progress with this conservation business? (2) Are we, as conservationists, proceeding along the right lines? precious fur to adorn the ego of , tho ruling classes of the Old World, one John McTaggart, a I civil engineer In the service of the British Government, in 1829, wrote a note ln which he set aown his i CAUGHT IN THE ROUNDS By 1)1,11 ADDISON THE COMIC BOOK business, that Peck's Bad Boy step-brother of the newspaper funnies. Is grow ing up. There's been a Justifiable uproar over the terror books, the horror books and the salacious books as stimulators of Juvenile delinquency. Reformers said, "there ought to be a law." Well, the comic book Industry has taken a lesson from organized baseball and the movies and is taking steps to clean up Its own business. Judge Charles F. Mur phy will resign as a magistrate of the City of New York on October 1 to become czar of the comics book Industry. Twenty three publishers, five en gravers, seven distributors, six printers and one mat maker of the comics book industry are drawing up a code of ethics for comics books and will provide Judge Murphy with a $100,000 bud get to regulate the Industry. 'Die code will be the "stronROKt ever ndopted by a mass media In dustry." It will forbid the use of the words "horror" and "terror" in titles, and will ban all "lurid, gruesome or unsovory lllustra tratlons," The code also will bar the por trayal of crime in any way that would foster imitation or promote distrust of law enforcement agen cies. Suggestive scenes and sala cious Illustrations will likewise be banned. We haven't seen any of Uie real ly lurid books but there's no ques tlon that millions of copies have been circulated, particularly In the cities, and It's good to see the comics book people cleaning up their own nest. How effective the cleanup be comes still remains to be seen, of course. Judge Murphv, former le gal counsel to the late Mayor La Ouardla, will okay or turn thumbs down 'on new books. A seal of ap proval will be printed on all "okayed" books, it will remain lor all ocople connected with the business, and the public, to make the sell-censorship effective by re fusal to handle those which don't come up to standards of the code Not all comics book publishers have Joined the new association Comics Magazine Assn. of Ameri ca, but even non-members are going along with the movement Entertaining Comics Croup, one of these non-members, which pub lished the first U. s. "horror" comics In I960, announced that It will discontinue all horror and crime comics immediately Those that will not be published after October are "Tales from the Crypt," "Haunt of Fear," "Crime Suspense," "Shock Suspense 8tor les" and "Vault of Horror." wil "m Oaines, the publisher, said KIDNEYS MUST REMOVE EXCESS WASTE Njinm birharha, feu of ni f n,rrr, ncUchN ind diliinrt mar b (Jut to alow. Jowi, of .Mnrr function. Ilorlura aar rod kidney function la prr Important to food acaltn. Vt hen aoma ararrda; condltlon.auch aa atrna and atrafn, cauaea thla important function to alow down, manr folkaaufftrnai tint backacha-fcl mUcrabla. Minor Mad. dar irrltationa dua to cold or wrong dlat mar eauatcatllniup nlihl.or franuant paaaaira. Don t nraltct Jour kldntra If th, .ondi. tlona oothar jrou. Try Doali'a Pilla a, mild dU rell It a amailns how many tlmaa Doan'a Jiva hapor rall-f from thaaa dlacomforta Mp the 16 mllra of kidn., tubca and Milan J.iah out ,.,. A,k fr ,. are. m, IM and aa, mooejr. Utt Uoan'a J'Ula todasl :5i Can many amongst us hon- writing in the great Ontario coun- estly claim to .understand even the try of Canada, yet what he left to elementary principles of wildlife i us was as prophetic in Canada management, which alone offers I as it was with every section of the the solution to our conservation great North American Continent: problem? "Trees of various kinds are to A truthful answer to these ques-, be found thickly growing together lions would, I am afraid, be in(or thousands of miles. That thev til? negative. Yet in the present period when we are faced with a coming election with partisan pol itics rising in our veins like sap ol the trees in Spring, I am equal ly certain that few would have the strength of moral courage to answer the questions truthfully. One hundred years ago this Oregon-California country of ours pos sessed vast stands of virgin tim ber, unlimited game end streams te.miing with fish. The wildwood that In January he will publish live adventure books which will be known as a "clean, clean line." to replace the titles he Is drop, ping. Hie discontinued titles will cost Gaines ,250,000 a year, he said. His move was attributed to "much clamor" from the public. Judge Murphy, questioned by reporters attending a press con ference called by the new associa tion, declined to say whether he believes there Is any relation be tween "horror-terror" comics and Juvenile delinquency. He subsequently declared: "In my time on the bench (nine years, with particular attention to lirVe. nile delinquency) In no Instance did I know anyone connected with a law case who attributed a youngster's misdeeds to the fact I head came up our Klamath River that he read comics." ! each year to spawn, giant resident nnyway, urpnan Annie can rest Ra nbow Trout lurkflrf in thA oooi assured that her wayward step-1 watery depths of our lake land, brothers and sisters arc bclrfg itnd countless numbers of Mullet laKen to the woodshed and lint vers to b fnnnri in ih. tt.or... ... 7 V p wlln "! 'ers of our shallow lakes. This vlr- crime, but good. igin wilderness, however, was noth. serve do allay the severity of the climate, Is surely one of the uses for which they are intended; it neither being hot amongst the trees in summer, nor yet so cold in winter, as it is in the cleared country. In the former season, the rays of the sun are chielly with held from the soil by the leaves and branches: and in the latter, the cold which is generated in the atmosphere, is also prevented by them from darting down and of our land possessed great num- j freezing up the pores of the earth: bers of Mountain Sheep, Antelope, Deer, Beaver, Otter, Mink, Ducks. Geese. Grouse. Sage Hen. and per haps in limited number, the mag nificent Goat of the mountain crags. Yes, there were also Wolves. Coyotes, Bears, Hawks. Owls, Weasels and other so-called preda tors In abundance. But the worst predator of all man had not yet gone to work to shape the destiny of the area to his ideal. Great runs uf Salmon and Steel- tills MODEL'S Willi fV.v'y.'tvw Km Money Savers" r SI Fri. & Sat. ONLY! CHILDREN'S Shoes Jv:'0':;'i Broken Siics i . . ry -:. MY'v.w ' r . ?' :V'.';-,,,''''';-':-'-'-; ; ' w t'''i,,l"?','r'.i" Vu oo ill! -f?"'".V.Vr: .i--f-.iV-itr' Values To 7.95 'VTv-v-t:,i..V' Oxfords Siiei 4'j-10 Broken Siiei ', vJt:.-.'? V.- -. aW EB. of a they may, therefore, be said to act both as a shade and a cover ing. When the rains fall they im bibe and retain more cooling moisture than the land would with out them: hence the many springs we find in the woods Perhaps the rivers nnd lakes will become affected differently if once these Immense territories are shorn of their trees; some of thein niey dry up altogether in sum mer. . . The laws of nature when Its forests: vast areas eroded and unfit for cultivation: many of its streams are dried up. or polluted to the extent they no longer can support aquatic life. Industrializa tion is still on the march and con tini'cd destruction follows in Its wake. QUICKIES By Ken Reynolds "Been snooping in tli Herald & News Want Ads again for bar Rains, 1 see!" Social Security Official Clarifies Work Question By EVERETT EATON Manager, Klamath Falls Office Social Security Administration "How much can 1 earn under the new law and still keep my Social Security Check?" This Is a question frequently asked In the Social Security office these days. Until January 1, 1955 the old re tirement test applies and benefici aries who earn over 575. during a calendar month in gross wages will not be entitled to their old age insurance or survivor's insur ance check for that month. Cash bonuses of any type are considered as wages in determinuig the gross earnings for the month in which the bonus is received Beginning January 1, 1955 Uie new retirement test provided by the 1954 amendments to the Social Security Act will become opera tive. The new test Is on an annua! basis and will allow beneficiaries of all categories to earn more and still receive their benefit check regularly. Those who work for wages may earn $1,200 gross dur ing a year and receive a benelit check each month. I- does noi matter whether the 11,200 earned in four or five months or spread evenly over the year; you will still be entitled to 12 benefit checks for the year. "What happens if my earnings in 1955 exceed (1,200" Is usually the next question, ln that case you lose one benefit check for each month. As an example if you work steadily at $125 per month you would earn 81.500 in 1955 and your excess earnings would be JO0. In that case you would be entitled to eight benefit checks for the year. However, if your work Is season al and you don't work in all 12 months of the year it is possible to receive your benefit check lor any month in which you do not earn over $80., even though you have earnings consldeiably in ex cess of 1.200 for the year. As an example many loggers work about fix months during the year and earn about $2,500. Such a bene ficiary would be entitled to his checks for the'other six months of the year, provided he didn't earn over SB0 per month. The retirement test for self-employed beneficiaries in 1955 will be ......, iitw th. umR as in the past pxcent thev will be allowed $1,200 ln net earnings instead of $900. u..... a KPif.errralovcd benelici- ary must add any wages or other earnings to his net business in come in determining wnether his .,rio ped $1,200. A o,t.omninvpd benelicisry is titled to his benefit check for any month in which he does not render substantial services in the conduct of his business, regardless of the amount of his net income for the year. . Thi is the last of a scries ol articles explaining the 1954 amend ments to the Social Security Act. Anyone desiring further informa tion is invited to call at the So cial Security Office which is lo cated in the Klamath Falls Post Office. Leaflets are also available which cover thef various changes. Sam Dawson THE DOCTOR SAYS By KDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. you will have made a close op ipronch to the feeling of your chil We parents often have a hard aren and to their trials, failures time understanding our children : and successes. and I suspect that children do a j Friends of the same age are better Job in understanding us. every bit as important to the 8 Perhaps ' that is the reason so i year old as they are later on. In much more Is written for grown- fact, m many ways, they ate mote ups about how to get along with ; important because mere are tew- their children than for children er of them and one has not learnea abcut how to get along wiih their j at that age that human contacts parents! I with others come and go with uie. One period of youth, namely The rules and regulations of that between nursery age and ad- parents and teachers arc often olescence, has been called the for-1 particularly hard to understand, gotten years of childhood. It is ' Al the age of 6. death and injury easier perhaps for parents to dis- seem entirely unreal and as some- ciplme or run their children at , thing that could not possibly nap. these ages Uian it is later on but the thoughts and emotions from approximately 6 to 12 remain dif ficult lor most adults. The attractive early years, when the words of parents were ac cepted by their youngsters with out question, have passed, but the grnwr.-up approach to life and its problems have certainly yet been reached. pen to oneself. Hence, the warning to be careful crossing the street and similar instructions from grownups seem merely adding to the confining and senseless rules which are always interfering with fun. In short, the youngster between 6 and 12 and in older and not I younger years, too is a real i person with normal reactions so One of the difficulties in dealing i "r their own experiences are concernea. inc ones wno ao not have normal reactions in the eyes of the children are the grownups. The problems ol youth arc every bit as serious to the one involved as those of later years. Every parent and teacher should understand this and operate their relationships with the youths un der their direction accordingly. An excellent pamphlet on this subject, called "Understand Your Child From Six to Twelve," has been published by the nono- profit Public Affairs Committee, with youngsters of these ages is that It is so hard for the parents to think back to these years them selves and remember how they felt and acted at the same age. True, most of us can remember something if we try but the effort is seldom made. Can you remember a party giv en when you were 8 years old to which you were not invited or at which you had a very bad time? Do you recall the feelings of tri umph or tragedy which accom panied, success socially, in the classroom, or on the a t h I e 1 1 c ' 22 East 38th Street, New York 16, field? Jl you can do these things i New York. It costs 20 cents, NEW YORK (Pi Ticket supplle. are showing up unexpectedly today In three sectors of the economy' metals, textiles and money. In each case the shortage is special, regional or temporary. But it has been enough to raise pricu or interest costs. And it Is troubling- certain busi. nessmen. Some are asking Wash. ington to do something about it There was so much copper earlll er this year that producers ex. peeled the 30-cents-apound price to break any day. Now there is so little to be had that copper futures on the Ntw York Commodity Exchange have gone to their highest level in two years. And copper users are urging Washington to release some of the metal earmarked for the nation's strategic materials stockpile so that civilian and military produc tion won't be held up by the shortage. The tight supply came about this way: earlier in the year, when copper seemed too plentiful in re lation to demand, producers cut back on the output of mines and smelters. Stocks were held close to the demand level. Recently, a series of strikes both here and in Chile has shut off much of the world's c oppcr sources. At tne same time, demand for copper continued to rise in Europe, which has been experience, ing a boom rather than a reces sion. Copper ,1s so short abrosd just now that metal for quick it livery commands premium prices. American stockpiling also hss tightened supplies of lead and zinc enough to raise their prices in re cent weeks. Quicksilver has also been on the short side, with prices going to the highest level in years, and traders unable to explain where all of the mercury Is going unless into the U.S. stockpile. In textiles the short supply situa tion is very spotty and is brought about largely by consumer prac tices. But demand for some items Is big enough to lead some mills to raise prices a little. Buying practices have been the cause of the spot tightness. Textile buyers don't want to take any risks these days so they have been placing only small orders and ask ing quick delivery. Tightness in money Is even more puzzling Just now since the Federal Reserve banks have been keeping the supply easy for the nation is a whole. The tightness shows up mainly in New York and Chicago, while banks elsewhere mostly have excess reserves looking for bor rowers. The New York and Chicago banks have been buying up the U.S. Treasury offerings week by week and slowly raising the in terest costs to the government, as the supply of money tightened. Banks elsewhere haven't been sending their Idle money in to take up any of the supply of treasury bills. Money has grown tight in New York and Chicago and Interest rates have firmed there, while out side these cities there's lots of money in the banks, that is, if not in your pocketbook. MISSILES LONDON (Al An official source said Thursday Dr. Standlsh Masterman, 43 - year - old gov ernment expert on guided mis siles, has been transferred to non secret work because of past mem bership ln the Communist Party. You Can Buy All YouVe for the Least You 11 Ever Wanted Ever Pay! fesV "' ' 1" ;..i.-(-V..a. atfaU.aajat: J...1 mm ARBUCKLE'S 5i.v.',-.rs- ' ! nW" -vi. MODEL SHOE 717 Moin v..-v.v .v.".;. . All the Size! 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