PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON MONDAY. AUGUST 22, 195s FRANK JENKINS BILL JENKINS Edllor Managing Editor Entered as second class matter at the post oilice ai Klamath Palls, Ore, 00 August 30, 1900, under act of Congresi, Marco I, 1879 MEMBER UP THw ASSOCIATED PRESS Tht Associated Press is entitled exclusively to Uie use lor publlcatloo all local news printed In thla newspaper as well as all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION KATES I Month MAIL t 1.50 CARRIER 1 Month 1.5 I Months t 1.00 1 Vear IU.W Months $ 7.50 1 Year U8.00 The "Walton" soli plan pro , posed by the Izaak Walton League of America can be expressed in ' one sentence: "The Congress (should direct the secretary of agriculture to lesse for cash and place In a conservation reserve sufficient cul ; ttvated acreage to bring pi'oduc !. tfon into line with current dc mand." Is getting a lot of dis cussion in the Midwestern agrlcul tural states. In yesterday's column we covered the point of how land . might be classified under .such a program, George L. Hockenyos ' the chairman of the league's Land Use Committee sketches some of the committee's thinkir-j about procedure and rental. "A cash rental figure." states . Hockenyos, "assuming parity pric .' es, would be estimated. I might say uiat If you look at the cash ' rental and land values acro.ss the nation, cash rentals run pretty ' close to live to live and one-half : per cent of the selling price of a piece of land. A piece of land that is worth (300 an acre Is pretty likely to rent for between 115 and 18 an acre. Having established that generality .makes It a little easier to get an estimate of what the whole program would cost. The land would be classified ac- cording to the USDA system and the proper percentage factor used to calculate the rental offer. "If this proved attractive to the landowner he could contract to prepare and seed the land proper ly the first year and supply such maintenance operations as were specified for such land. The cost of seed in any needed amounts would be paid for by the Depart ment of Agriculture, but the cost of planting would be borne by Uie landowner. Rental payment would be made annually and only If Uie landowner had lived up to his contract, "The program would be strictly voluntary. Farmers have dlffcrcni attitudes toward all government programs. We have many farm ers let's call them the old con servatives who don't want the government to have any more to do with their aflnlrs than absolute ly necessary. There .are others who are perfectly willing and even anxious that the government anould step In and roiiulato their affairs pretty thoroughly. "Well, this program Is strictly voluntary. Every tRrmcr can take It or leave it. II enough of them take advantage of It the others won't have to do so. Wo re-Introduce a system of checks and bill ances. If prlcoii go up there will be fewer of these lease contracts renewed and more land plowed up. If prices go down there will be more contracts made and more land will go Into this program. Any landowner Could place any part or all of his farm into the program. "It seems to me that practically every farm program Is based on the supposition that the thing to do Is to work with each farmer but to keep him on the farm. Actually the fanners have been leaving the farms from economic necessity of desire. Under this program a farmer could put his whole farm In reserve and leave the farm If he wished. Also, farm ers are now beginning to get old benefits, snd we have a lot of old farmers. There are a lot of small farms that will not support a family of boys, so the boys took off for something else and the old folks stayed home, They are going to get old age benefits be ginning at the age 65. They have lived on the farms all their lives, and they don't want to move to the city. So they can take their old age benefits, their cash rental from this program and keep a couple of cows, pigs and chickens and still live on the farm and take it easy. Conversely, they could Ignore the program entirely. "The program could be run con currently with any other system of price supports such as the pres ent flexible price supports. I have found Uiat a good many farmers are a little scared of anybody's pulling these price supports out from under them. So we have provided in our program that when this program is put into effect, and is first offered to the farmer lor a period of three years price supports will be lowered to some extent. Some farmers will wait to see what their neighbors are go ing to do; the second year price supports will be dropped more and more of them will come into the plan, and after three years you should not need any other price support. "A perlnent question by farm ers la 'Just how much would these rental payments be per acre?' and equally pertinent to the public is Just how much would this pro gram cost? Our committee does not have the resources to make an exhaustive survey of this prob lem. I would say It would take several men quite a little time to make an exhaustive study of It. But from a study of census sta tistics we believe that the c'ass of land that should go into this pro gram could be rented for from $2,50 to $25 per acre. If you talked to a farmer in the Midwest about a $2.50 an acre cash rental he would throw up his hands In hor ror and rightly so. But it is not so long ago you could have bought lund In the dust bowl for $2.50 an acre. We figure a national aver age of $7.50 per acre as the cash rentnl. We further estimated that the cost of preparing the land and having it seeded that cost, of course, would be for the first year only divided over the whole five-year period would probably bring the average rental price of this land, the cost to the public, to about $10 per acre per year. "The secretary of agriculture has estimated that our excess pro duction represents the output of about 40 million acre. Actually In this wonderful United States, nf ours, with one billion 905 mil lion acres of land surface we cul tivate only from 340 to 260 million acres a year. The secretary esti mates Uiat we are cultivating about 40 million acres too much. I assume he means of average fertility. But If we are going to take out land that is less produc tive and more erodlble it would take probably about 70 million acres." TheyH Do It Every Time . By Jimmy Hatlo AVJH VOU'RB ALWAYS CR4BBM7' DOHT YtXI EVER GET TIREO OF WE4RIMO tjg yourself yeLP? yt4u AND r-XJR OLD LADY Am IS J'JSTASBIO A PAM 'me SWTTlNcTTONS ARE W IVB SEEM KM LET TOO TTMlWS 154 STILL AT IT! THIS B4TTLS 60 tV fttlUCR TUAH ONE LET THE A STARTED L4ST WlGlfT-WE OTWE? H4VE THE LAST WORD UZARO TM $)K MOUSES AWAY- ft AKD rrU counts ALL WSUE CALLS UM UPrr the ofwcs WHERE HE CAUT ANSWER MB? RACK! I DOUT BE SURPRISED IF SMS FOLLOWS WW RI6HTOU THE TR4IN KiMOWO AMD A0 LEAVE MY MOTHER OUT OF THIS.' OF ALL THE GOOD-FOB. J ,OTHlrteL04FERS,f YOU T4KE THE , C4KE- ;i,mtj tur.r.'.r.u LlSTENNS TO THE TWO LOVEBIRDS BlU. 4MD COO TILL "WE-8.05 COMES ALOhte"" Brucker Asks Strong Force PHILADELPHIA W Secrctaiy of the Army Brucker called Mon day for continued "firm and sus tained combat readiness" despite the hope for peace. In an address to the annual meet. Ing of the American Bar Assn., he sain the summit meeting at Geneva last month "has Riven us some reason to hope for the grad ual lessening oi world tensions ) and the eventual establishment of a stable order based on justice." But he added that "it would be tragic to take counsel of mere hopes, and upon such a slender premise allow our military might to deteriorate." Loyd Wright. ABA president told the group that individual liberty and initiative have b?cn en dangered because too many Amer icans have bartered away the right of self-government for financial fa vors granted by the federal gov ernment. He said that Americans "have drifted dnwn the path of paternal ism, looking more and more to security, wherever or however it may be found and abandoning the good old American traits of thrift, dignity in work. Independence and price of accomplishment, and the joy of succeeding by overcoming all obstacles." Members of the National Press Photographers Assn. will attempt 1o show Monday afternoon that picture taking under modern con ditions does not upset the decorum of the courtroom. U.S. Atty. Oen. Biownell has called for the experiment. An ABA rule, known as Canon 35, forbids the taking of photographs in the courtroom during the progress of Judicial proceedings. The canon has been adopted by 14 states. NEW ARTILLERY SEOUL M South Korea's first antiaircraft artillery brigade was activated by President Syngman Rhee today at the Osan u. 5. air base, 35 miles south of here. It is American trained. HAL BOYLE By ED CBEAGII 1 lor HAL BOYLI-: WASHINGTON IPi Ever hear a President of the United Slates call a pig? Uwight D. Elsenhower does it Mils way: "Sooooey," he calls. In a hall croon, hall-chuckle. "Sooooey! Ho, Pilil Pig! Pis!" And up to Die President conies or doesn't coine, as suits its mood one of the various porkers grow ing lat and marketable on the Eisenhower place up Gettysburg way. Some of us had the odd experi ence of seeing Ike turn hog-caller the other clay, shortly before he left for Denver, and ihe general verdict was that he has the true, down - to - mud approach. Maybe he'll never win any hog -calling contests, but he usually gets his rip. Then, of course, the conversation turned to whether the President will run again in '56. and nobody egieed with anybody about any thing. He certainly did look at home and happy there by the pig-pen. It would have chilled the Repub lican party to the marrow to see the nlfcetionate way he slapped a skittish heifer on the rump. That was the gesture of a man who'd rather be a farmer than President ?.nv day. But then people remembered Ei senhower at Geneva, talking tur key to the Russians. Sure, he'd rather retire to the farm but what if ho felt he had a better chance than anyone else of staving off World War m? Would any private prcleicnce keep him from doing It? . And so the conversation went 'round and came out nowhere. One of the correspondents, whose name had better be omitted, came up with a thought: Suppose Eisenhower refuses to run again. Then why not make him chief U.S. delegate to the United Na Hons, where his personal prestige and the carry-over power of his office would make him the most formidable spokesman this coun try could possibly have? That way. he'd have six months or so out of the year to spend on the farm.. Certain objections were raised to this suggestion. Among them: "What are you, a Democrat? Ike's going to run again don't kid yourself.'' And: "Suppose a Demo, crat won the next election. Can you see him giving a top job to a Republican even to Eisenhower?" And so,' as we were saying, the conversation got nowhere. Except Uiere was agreement that it's a mlgh'.y nice farm. It's Just short of 500 acres. The house, which has been com pletely rebuilt, is painted white and so Is the barn. There's a Penn sylvania Dutch, or maybe a New England, tidiness about the place. And a good deal of simplicity. Somebody asked how Elsenhow er, who. got by most of his life on r.ot-too-high Army pay. can afford such lodgings. The house, land and buildings are worth well over $200. 000 by the most conservative esti mates of neighboring realtors. Well, Elsenhower's book, "Cru sade In Europe." sold more than 800.000 copies and enrned him up wards of S600.000. Even after the capital gains tax and other dela tions, that left a nest-egg. Then, loo, the President, long accus tomed to an Army salary, is reli- ablv reported to be saving a part of his slOO.000 a year salary. In .spit" of this. In spite of the many gifts presented to him for the farm. Elsenhower complains with evident feeling about the high cost of country living these days, What farmer doesn't? WATERMELON 2p a pound at Buy-Low Market, 1338 Oregon Ave. IT'S POOLE'S for TOYS The Year 'Round TOT STORE! FRANK TRIPP Almost every time a fellow rates a complimentary dinner, his friends give him a traveling bag. A going au-av nrp.tent for a bird who often would rather stay right where he is and keep bis Job. The only good reason thai I can see i me cnance n diners to soring all the bromides about "holding the bag." It s a help to a dratted toast master. There's a stoci speech, with or without pathos, that al nv ends. "Elmer, vour friends hope you will use this slight ex pression of their aifection oiten but always oring iv uav.. Thn the emcee reaches behind his chair and clumsily brings forth ihe satchel which has been there all evening; right where the re cipient has had a good look at it and already wlthed they'd given him the dough. The wit who's been presiding tips over two glasses and a can dlestick but finally gets the lug gage Into the hands of the disap pointed guest oi honor. Elmer opens it, hoping to find a fifth inside: but :t's empty and lined like a gypsy tent. Hardly aole to talk, he gulps his appreciation and sheds a few tears. The congregation thinks it's emotion but the poor guy is cry ing real giiei. He's thinking ol what he wished ne got. I had an atlic full of traveling bags that were given me for mak ing speeches. The baas were as good as the speeches, which isn't saying much. Meantime I nad three watches go on the bum and every time I hoped the honorarium would be a watch, but it never was. Finally I got wise. When they invited me to speak and mentioned that they didn't have much to spend tor a fee, I told them how much it would be. When they learned that I was fed up on traveling bags they'd write back that because of sick ness In the chairman's family the affair had been called off. If you can stand on your feet and keep your tongue wagging for 20 minutes or belter you can m.ii a sneech a week, provided you stay amateur, charge no fee and settle for a traveling bag now ana then. When I bought my last watch I was templed to emulate a car mnnist friend of mine, who also had an attic full of traveling gear. One day ne went off on a quiet solo toot. Passing a jeweler's win dow, watches caught his fancy. He bought one and had it engrav ed- "Presented to tne oiggesv asp on earth, by himself, for no good reason whatever. A retiring fire chief in a little berg near my town was given a hie send off. They presented him a silver lire axe with a mahogany handle. It was such an important occa sion that the committee let the chief in on it so the ceremony could be letter perfect. The man who was to make the presentation and the chief got long speeches written for them and met every night lor a week to rehearse. They had the whole thing down pat. Then came tne oig nigni. lne town hall was packed. The chair man called the chief to the ros trum. He had the axe behind his back and the chief stood belore him. The knees of both wobbled, then got weak. There was a long p,u Ttie chairman couldn't get speech started. Finally he said; "Well, Joe, here's the axe." "Damned if It ain't," staaunern Joe and the ceremony ended. What You Cost Him Ceo. N. Taylor The common people flocked to hear Christ. At that, the Higher. Ups, ever Jealous for poner brought Christ to trial. They charged Him with claiming tmt He was the Son of Cod, Let a man make that claim in those days and he must die. Christ had so claimed and He must die. At the trial that fol lowed. He waa sworn In. There He declared that He was not only the Son of Ood but also that He would be sitting at the right hand of Cod, and also coming back to earth on the clouds of heaven. So It was that Christ died by His own confession. Being the Son of God, receive Him as dying for your every last sin and Ood gives you eternal life. Then for you, Judgment for the lost Is out and also the pains of eternal hell. This Message sponsored by a Portland Lumberman se Wife. Adv. Ceo. N. Tajlor GRAND OPENING -OF- Telling The Editor THANKS We wish to thank the more than 700 persona who signed the peti tions circulated by the Klamath Archers and the Klamath Sports mens Association, opposing the closure of the O.T.I, to Swan Lake road. You are probably already aware that we were defeated by the two to one decision of the three man county court, who supported thr. arguments of n land owners, who proposed this closure. We wish to thank the Oregon State Game Commission and our local Game Commissioner for their support in this matter. We also wish to thank Commis sioner Rajnus for his sympathetic understanding of our public prob-lem. We are interested in hearing any opinions trom the puoilc concern- ing this decision, either directly to us or printed in the "Herald and News." t Dorothy R. Brauner, Sec. I Klamath Sporlsmens Ass'n. r" P. O. Box 101 . Klamath Falls, Oregon. FLORENCE'S FLOWER and FIBRE SHOP 935 Division St. Phone 7628 Tuesday? August 23rd Open 2 p.m. 'til 9 p.m. Authorized instructor to teach the makinq of Wood Fibre ond Velour Paper Flowers. Carrying a complete supply of all materials needed. Here is an opportunity to learn this ancient Oriental art and make extra spending money for yourself. 4 DOOR PRIZES 2 in Afternoon 2 In Evening Also 50 CORSAGES GIVEN FREE IN AFTERNOON '50 CORSAGES GIVEN FREE IN EVENING JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON lift-Every once In a while the American educa tional system gets rapped on the head for falling to give tho youth of the country a sufficient ground ing in democracy. The latest rap comes from the special committee of government officials and retired ofliceis which atudlrd the problem of American prisoners of war captured by the lommumsis. in Korea. This committee blamed the armed forces for not preparing uieir men wnue in service lor what tney faced later when taken pits, oner: Uie Indoctrination nnd nroiw. ganda tactics of Ihe Communists. But the committee said: The prisoners of war (who were taken In by the Communist. naa lost Uietr battle belore Ihey entered Ihe service. Good citizens loyai Americans Uie respon- Mumiy ior uieir miildliiir lies with their home, the school, the church, uie community. ' The committee aiicgi'sted onv. ernment agrnciei Ret together with civilian educational institutions, churches and other pmnotir or ganizations to prove bettor under Handing of American Ideals. The committee frankly said the Communists "made lool" of some American rows and "tools ol others with their indoctrination tricks and propaganda when thev help up communism s til0 8nv,'. tion of Uie world and Kail Marx a mankind's benelaclor. "Many of the POW's." the com mittee went on, "knew too lntle bout the United States and n Ideals and traditions. So Ihe Chi. nese Indoctrinators had the ad vantage." Some of them, asked to tell what they knew about American politics and history. Found out their Chi nese captors knew more: some didn't know what Uie Communist program was all about; some had never heard of Marx. To set up a system of educating young Americans in democracy on the broadest possible scale not only in college but In grammar and high schools may call for a major overhauling in American education. How can a young man be taught not with cliches and slogans but with solid historical reasons to prefer democracy to fascism or communism and be able to defend It? Most students, somewhere be tween grammar school and college, get some Instruction In political science. But that's machinery: how a government operates. The Amer icans teach one kind of political science, the Russians another, Uul political philosophy the story ol man's struggle Uirough Ihe ages to shake off absolute rule by a king or group and stumble toward democratic rule can give 1 a youth a solid base for his prefer ence for democracy by giving i nun a oasis ior comparison and an understanding of political opposltos. 11 seems safe to say a very tiny percentage of youtlu who go to schools m this country get a grounding In political philosophy. O0iXXtXC0iXOCC NEED SACK-TO-SCHOOL CASH? fiem hintjf rirttn to toiiti. fc'dt ceil wontf . . mt)nty In.Mttd lit thin tlturt Hjfwt help 000 n muni MONirt SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! BIG BEAUTIFUL 9 Cu. Ft. SPECIAL mm IDAIRI FREEZER-REFRIGERATOR SPECIAL K- m '1 res Eosy Terms Quality features jf that means years n of service! 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