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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1956)
WEDNESDAY. MARCH 21, 1956 PAGE SIX HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON OPERATIONS WASHINGTON (. An estimated 80 senators and representatives arranged to fly to Guamanamo Bay. Cuba today to witness oper ations aboard the U. S. Navy su. percarrier Forrestal and the guld. ed missile cruiser Boston. They'll Do It Every Time By jimmy Hatlo t Itaralu ait 5 Jfofas . , SUBSCRIPTION RATES Entered u second elsaa nutter l the post office at KJsmato Falls, CARRIER Ore., on Auust 30. t0e, under act of Congress, March . 181 , MONTH t I. SO SERVICES: MONTHS . ' YEAR 118 00 ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS 1 " AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS hLfJL 1 MONTH $ 1.60 . ... MONTHS 1 Serrinf Southern Oregon And Northern California i year lu.oo ucu-Lipu-.-Eveny once in ' A WHILE IM OL4D I KvE(? rzrrr IT nr: TUF CiCTU fi&lDE FRANK JENKth'S Editor ' BILL JENKINS Kanaf lrur . Editor L fs "'.mww ;, .sy7 YGOAUeAD.VADOYAA f gf5 HE HELPED ".Vl ASK ME ALL THE (1 I TI?IED TO- ' Vl WE SPILLED &PJT4 60 V HisToavQussnossR but its I BICARB ALL TO TWE CUB U- OM PA6S S2-THEN ) BSVOUD 1 uf4 OVER My J MECTlNS-" 1 WE'LL DO TrIE AmE- J. !3-tNs4PR ji . . tl . . 7 SPELLING AKD I Sir ' ' 'Hi'' " "1 iOC- iJi m Is 1 Delaware I Snow plows nd trucks, and steam AnHiiit hnith the streers By KEN McLEOD ! clt,d go m e places. Mostly The word "Delaware- when used )t w, dont m,ui muscle memones ol Fremont and tne Delaware he u.ed as guides, however, the story of the retreat of the Delaware before tne iron tier of the white man Is one of the sorry tales of the New World. A group ol Americans driven Irom their homes wandering about this sreat land driven here and there lor 150 years finding no land the) could call their own. The Delaware were memoers oi Die Alitonlon family occupying the Middle Atlantic front where the valley and river of that name now located ana iney ji and shovels. Before they started, however, people going to work simply walked down the middle of the streets. It gave you an eerie feeling to see the avenues deserted except for an occasional bus or truck. Imagine walking down the middle of 5th Ave. at t o'clock in the morning and living! Together, the wind and snow fashioned shapes of incredible beauiy. Great billowing curtains of white came swirling down from the sky a.e now . " - " Sometimes, it looked u, he Hudson and Manhattan, ml e column, of thick smoke pour Wltam Penn's day the capital olf "op )wy Hie uciawai-. - head chief, was near what Is now Germantown; In other woras, renn started a rival capital almost at the same place The great chief at lhat time was Tamencnd. or Tammany a name immortalized bv politics. The In dians hld Tnmenend in such great esteem that the whites often spoke of him as Saint Tammany, and as such he became the Ideal of In dian virtue. Even as early aa the French and Indian War It became fashionable to form tocletlei with rituals and slogan drawn from Indian culture, so In 1TB a so ciety came to notice under the name "Sons of King Tammany.' About 1786 a Tammany Society was set up bv veterans of the Revolution, lor much the same purpose as the present American Legion. This society was destined to survive as a political organ ization In New York. City, and the name for Its building, Tammany Hull, will be recognized by any one who reads this as a popular svmbol for a political organisation Ions dominant In New York Slate and even in the nation. The ritual of the society contains such terms as "chief, sachem, wigwam, wampum," etc. Originally there wore 13 state organizations, with such tribe names as Otter. Eagle and Tiger. The latter was as signed to the organization in Dela ware but later became the sjm bol for the surviving organization In New York, hence the familiar cartoons of the Tammany Titter. While much of the glory and vir tue associated with the old chief. Tammany, originated within the minds ol white men, the historical data available suggest an Indian of the hlnhpM. rank and worthv ol a prominent place tn American h:'5fnry. i The Delaware called themselves the Leuhpe, which seems to have mennt about the same thing when a distinguished citizen rises lo speak, using the term "we the people." Most of the names we use for Indian tribes were given them by others, among themselves something like "we the people" not only sufficed but asserted the superiority of the group. Similarly oi our local scene (he Klamath and Modoc Indians called them selves "Miiklaks." The Delaware term Lennpe, however, became fa mous in literature because ol a document In picture writing, culled Ihe Walam Olum. This may or may not be a genuine Indian document, but Us contents are In the style of Indian legends and some o! the incidents relerred to are found in the recorded myths ol the Aignnkin. Furthermoie. the reader of Cooper's novels will re cull many rclcrenc.es to Ihe Dela ware by the famous Natty Bumpo. who stoutly extolled their virtues In contrast to the Iniquity of the Mtnr.o. cr Iroquois. The Delaware seem to have rec nutuzed n duel lender .Immortal ized In Tnmmanv. The several di visions ol this tribe hsd chiefs ano pools, like pale ghosts slowly down Park Ave. New Yorkers are usually worse than Englishmen about not talking to strangers. But on the bus. everybody was an old friend of everybody else. The blizzard was an experience shared, a common bond. Electoral College By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON Url For 159 years ever since 1797 Congress has talked about amending the Constitution to change the Elec toral College system of choosing a president ana vice president. The Senate, debating it again, is wading In muddy water. Demo crats and Republicans are divided among themselves. Neither friends nor foes of the amendment being considered can positively predict its ultimate effect if it became law. Because delegates to the Con' stitutional Convention I n 1787 didn't trust the wisdom of the av erage voter in choosing a presi dent and vice president, they put this method Into the Constitution: Each state would choose distin guished citizens equal In number to a state's total number oi sen ators and representatives in Con ' gross to select a president and vice president. These citizens were called electors. The framera of the Constitution didn't foresee the rise of the big political parties which use Ihe electoral system mis way: .acn party in each state picks a slate of eleotors. wnen a party s can didate wins the popular vote In a state, all that party's electors vote lor its candidate although, under the Constitution, they could vole for whom they pleased. A state's electoral votes all go to the candidate winning a plural ity of Ihe popular vote. For ex ample: in a slate with 45 electornl votes candidate Smith gets 500,000 popular votes and candidate Jones gets 499.000. By that 1.000 - vote margin candidate Smith gets .ill 15 electoral votes while the 499.000 people who voted for Jones count for nothing. Tills has long been criticized as a weak spot In the electoral sys tem. Why not a constitutional amendment to let president and vice president be chosen directly by popular vole? It Is not being? seriously consid ered now. It seems to have little chance. The Constitution can't be amended unless in addition to two thirds of the Senate and House 36 of the 48 slates approve. The three-part mam proposal for amending the Constitution now being considered In the Senate would retain the electoral system but work this way. with some of the arguments being offered against it: No. 1. No candidate would auto matically get all of a state's elec toral vo.e.-. Each candidate would get a portion of a state's electoral otes in proportion lo his popular , down by radioactive Isotopes. I tera lightly, but in selected cases J These byproducts of an atomic Where other methods have failed pile, widely useful as tracers, are : to bring results, it has sometimes being turned lose in paint to see been successful. what may come of it in the way ' ft Is there any real proof to the ol new and better spruce-up jobs, j claim which I have heard that olive The industry also counts on the 1 oil In a cream or lanolin will grow psychological impact of a widely ; hair on the face? Mrs. J. G. enlarged choice of colors on the ! A I looked this up and found army of determined do-it-yourself-: that some investigators who had ers. You have all the way up to , studied this question found thai 1.000 choices not to mention , there is no proof that face cream: what a home-owner may acciden-! promote the growth of hair. tally stumble on in spite of him-i Q Please give some lntormation self. about Morton's toe. Is this a dis- The National Paint, Varnish k ease ol the nerves, bone, o: Lacquer Assn. estimates almost 50 muscles of the feet? Mrs. M. per cent of homeowners now are ; A The condition known as Mor- brave enough to tackle outdoor - ton's toe was first recognized Ir painting. Gel them inside and out , 1876 as characterized by sudden at I of sight ol the neighborhood cm- tacks of sharp pain usuallv con t les and 71 per cent will wield a lined to a single toe. The fourth brush or roller on interior paint toe is the one most commonly in Jobs. volved. It has been shown that the The Retail Paint and Wallpaper pain Is associated with the local Distributors of America says, with thickening of one ol the nerves. the deepest disapproval, that some j The symptoms can sometimes be 30 million American homes , relieved by a suitable arch sup haven't had a new coat of paint port; surgical removal ol enlarged in 10 years. It also turns a critic's i segment of the nerve is in most eye on all the several million 1 cases the preferred treatment. homes built since World War II : Q -Would you please discuss mir and asserts perhaps to no one's I ror eyes, a condition in which a surprise that in its view 70 per cent could stand a new coat right now. person sees everything backwards Mrs. B. W. A I presume that this question refers lo what is more commonly known as mirror writing or read ing. In this rather unusual condi tion everything Is s e e n or ex pressed as though seen through a mirror. It is considered possible that this occurs because of the way visual Images are transmitted to or ruceivcd by the brain. A thoroughly Though! Control By CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Staff Correspondent The Kremlin evidently has deci ded to put its Communist "thought control" system to a historic test. Russians are being asked to be lieve lhat Josef Stdlin. elevated to, satisfying explanation, however, is Red sainthood on his 70th birth-1 yet to be found, day In 1949. actually was a geu-j q No matter how much sleep I erai no-sooa. get the surlace under my eyes Thai ought not to be dllficult. always seems to be baggy and ii cenaimy was no secret even looking as though I had dark cir from the people themselves. I cles. I am in my middle teens and They knew all about Ihe secret wonder If there is something I police. Thev knew about the slave can do. Reader, labor camps in which millions oil A The most likely explanation people were worked and starved i for this Is that it is a family mai to death. They knew about the ter. Do your parents or other close police spies in their own social relatives have similar baggy ap clrcles. even in their own tarn-: pearance underneath their eyes? If Hies. they do. perhaps the only mcasim' The real test which the handlul , which miclit be taken would be of of Russia's leaders have decided i a cosmetic nature. to risk is their attempt to put j . over the' idea that they, like the j n-..,, Viiflitf people, were victims of Slaliri'a; -IM" BV JAMtS DAOU.M HOLLYWOOU i Tonight Is Oscar night in movletown and for the flrsl time this traditionally gay lunatic dictatorship. It Is Impossible not to believe that people will ask about Premier Nikolai A. Bulganin, Communist party leader Niklta S. Krushchev and the rest: And where were you all tne time? nr-fht will be tinged with a little sadness.1 Never before in the 26-year o All Ihe men In the presidium I Ihe Academy Awards has a dead cm'nsclors, as did most Ihe Alco.v kin. The people lived in small vil-'vote laces ol rectiuiBulnr bark-covered. Argument against: Big stales houses instead of the usual dome-, whose popular vote might be shaped wigwams oi the other Al--pretty evenlv divided and thus (tonkins. They were hunters bin have their electoral vote divided taised com and other vegetables. , would lose ihe importance sml In keeping with their greatness I value of their big population, they cherished a systematic ph.il- Smaller states, particularly those osophy and mythology, according where one party dominates, would lo whlrn there was one great pow-'galn and might contiol an elec cr over Ihe universe, but subject ; Hon. to it were (cur gods Ihe four di- No. J. Instead of' doing It the lecfons front which came the lour proportional way, a state legists winds and other ereal powers. A t lure could decide to lei the voters series ol spirits end powers, in choose electors the wav they pick descending order, mpde up the members ci Conn re-s-' two elet -rank and file of the supernatural! tors would be chosen for the whole host, strange to say. there are no state (as senators aret and the good books upon their culture, nn ' rest would be elected by congres-ei'moloRi-t having given us a fulllslonpl districts of Ihe Central Committee ol the Communist party, Ihe rulers of Russia, were close collaborators of Stalin. It was they who elevated him to sainthood, they who helped to send Communists and non-Com munists alike to (he slave labor man been one of the favorites to win a top Oscar. Then too It is expected to be the last Hollywood appearance of Grace Kelly, movie o.ucen soon to become a real princes: Many in Hollywood feel lhat it the late James Dean dcesn't win camps, they who made Russia I the top acling award, the Acad Itself a gigantic slave camp. I emy should give him a special 8talin's life In power is nowlOscur. Ihe brilliant vouiip: actor being divided Into Iwo parts. First, I was nominated lor "East ol Eden." the period between 1917 and 1931 i Dean was killed last September when he collaborated with Lenin. in a car crash, but he still get.; succeeded Lenin and consolidated i niore Ian mall liian any other his own power. Secondly. Ihe no-1 star on the Warner lot. riod from 1934 until his dealh in I He could well win. He's the 1953. when he ruled as absolute choice ol many. Including Frank dictator. : Sinatra, who was nominated him "Man With the Golden But Bulganln, Khrushchev and Ihe rest were Communists long be fore 1934. They were co-directors of the Red lerror. They, too, shared responsibility for the fam-J see an c:car go tc someone who ine of 193:1-1933 In which untold can get some good out of It. That millions died a famine caused by I makes Ernest (Marly) Borgnlne self for Arm But Hollywood is a practical town. Most of the voters want lo ruthless (arm collectivization. the favorite. After 1934, Bulgamn. Klnush-i Others in the top acling circle chev and the rest cooperated with .are James Cagney and Spcncn Stalin in the purge .trials of the Tracy. 3oth are previous winner mid-193'is. when he wiped out the; and both Rave penormaners, CaR "old Bolsheviks" who had bcenincv in "Love Me or Leave Me' his closest colleagues. and Tracy In "Bad Day at Black It was relatively easy for Stalin 1 Rock." that are Oscar caliber to concoct the evidence on which I Among the girls, it's a oown- these men were judicially mur- lothe-'nal-Run race belween tne dcred. Also, the victims them- Italian Anna Maenanl and Brook selves were dedicated Coilliiiu- Ivn's Susan Hayward. Magr.ani. nlsls. ThotKh conlcssions were I one of the worlds great actresses extorted from them by torture. I scored In "Rose Tattoo." It was manv ol them seemed to cooper j ate in their own denunciation, j Thej . '.oo. were Ihouuht-controllrd. It is rot toitip to be so easy for these men to convince Rus- sia's ?Pn million people or even its i 7 million members ol the Com j munist party, to swallow Ihe idea that llirv were guiltlr: hor lirst American picture and the part was tailor-made lor her by playwright Tennessee Williams. Miss Hayward, in Ihe charmed circle for the fourth time, is up for the Lillian Roth slory "1 1) cry Tomorrow." Her portrayal of a lush was .superb. Others in Ihe top actress race treatise upon Ihe subject. .v York Slorm By RELMAN MORIN (For Hal Bovlei NEW YORK c-T Mother Natuie has waved a manic wand over New York, and turned the big citv Into a villace. As von saw in tht papers, we have been getting snow here, a littitastic amount for this corner of the country some of the old timers sitting around In Man hattan equivalents of the general More and the pot-bellied Iron stove -- are comparing this storm with the real wing-ding blizzards of the ln Congress past. It has choked the streets, buried i VolllllH paiked automobiles, and most' v riAwurw un.Hlenul Ol all. marie the traffic NEW YORK ? The painl in ""t',,h,,"i'!1 ,",V ' '" m,::rv P" . '.!! be its big It dehchis children, opens the,.,,,,, ,., lrs vn,mp ... .w-i.usr so many peo- ; peeled to ne r" wiui in sen cant eel down- Argument against: Rural areas have loo much Influence now now both in state legislatures and the way congressional districts are set in proporlion to their num bers. Tins would give them even moie influence in picking a presi dent No 3 II no party got 50 per rent ol the electoral vote th House and Senate Jointly would pick the President and vice presi dent. Arrunirnt acamst: This not onlv would delay the choice of presi dent bu' could turn the presidencv Into a football In a game of politi cal deals to gel a majority vote Nevertheless. It is nuite plain1 are Katharine Hepburn i "Sum that the men In the Kremlin are mertime" i. .Icnmfei Jni.cs i '-Lovc- convinced that thev can get away 'Is a Manv-Spletldored Thine" with it. Henry Shapiro, chief U P. and Eleanor Park'r ("Interrupt correspondent ln Moscow, returned ed MclndV't there last fall alter a stay In the For ':esl pirlllre. "Marty" anil United States. Shupiro has spent "Mr. Roberts" are the favorites, most ot the last 'J3 years in : but lou-th competition can be ex Russia One ol the lirst thinas he noctcd trom "Picnic." "The Ros( noted w.-s a new air ol confidence I Tattoo" and "Love is a Many anions the top leaders. Undoubl- ' Splendotcd 'hn.c " edly. they nlteadv had decided to- The nr.'inn will be able lo see debunk Stalin and lid decide! and henr the his show- over NBC the Russian people would buy the T--' and radio from 10 30 to 12:15 new pa: iv line. j EST l.lvrr Spolw OuoH's By EDWIN P JORDAN. M. D. " Bv UNITED PRESS it is amazing how persistent, LIBER TYYILLE, III. Adla: somr oio terms are such as that , Stevenson on Sen. Estes Kefauv refetrrd to in todav's first Innuirv i ft Please sav something about liver spots on the neck and lace . What can I do about them? Mrs. C. B A There Is no medically recog- l nized condition known as "liver mliht feel' i spots " What is probably present 1 !rr areas ol pigment m Ihe skin! MINNEAPOLIS Sen er's stunning Democratic victory in Minnesota: "I congratulate Senator Kefauv er. The unprecedented Demoera tic vote tn Minnesota overcomes any personal disappointment I E-te: tonin, makes strangers feel like talking to eai-h other, and j.ies everybody a chance to tell vou "how I got to the office." Or vice versa K has been magic, pure white titanic. You think of New York as tht epitome of Ihe machine age, in lact. as great roaring machine Itself. But when the stoim en gulfed il, the city was as helpless as any cross-mads community. bv 10 per rent to a new record ol 11.67 84MQ0 There a a chance retail prices of pauu may rise due to recent boosts In Ihe cost of hnseecj and soybean oils, aome pigments, freight, labor and the hike an nounced today In the price ol cans. Much of the sales talk now In the paint industry Is built around marvels such as poik dot paint, lelled paint, or colois in roiiapsi b tube Other marvels art being humrd known as chloasma The cause of ' Ketauvrr on his up't victory mis condition is pooilv understood! "I am confident that the laite oui n noes onen seem to run nifvnie .ivt indicates ren!' In 'he '(amines A Rieat manv tiealmcn:s Midwest asainst i President i Eis have been tried but with indifferent; enhower's farm presram " success. . ft -I want to inquite about a LONDON Prime Minister An- inemal patient and what the valu- miKht be lor him of an operation called tiansorbital lobotomy Mrs Z. A Tins operation involves going into a portion ot the brain with a sharp mstiiyieut It is ued occa sionally lo ctiamie the menial pro cesses and is sometimes lollowrd Ov hn;h!v desnao'.e lesiilts. It is not a procedure on which on en- t'-ony Eden when aked the cost of the Buiganin-Krushchev visit: "Much less than the millionth part of a hydrogen bomb." LONDON Deputy Soviet Prem ler GeoiKl M Maleukov on hi- visit to - Sliakesjvare's birthplace at S: i allot d-ou-A on : "Shake-oraie nas cixcn me much pleasuie " KiW'JS-. t VAX I Mm i SiA Ksiar rtf.i-.v j" - i - Shedding a tear FOR DE4r? OL DAD AS HE GULPS TOW4RD ANOTHER ULCER THANXINOA VPOf TD'BETS WD&LL" ESS! So smooth it leaves you breathless mirnoff tct ancaiest name VODKA 80 proof Made from 100 grain neutrilipinu. See. Pierre Smirnoff fit loe.. Hartford, Coon. Spud Acreage Increase Seen A one per cent increase in po-, A five per cent decrease is fore- tato acreage over 1955 .s lorecast cast for the nine eastern states for the II western states accord- and for the nine central states, ing to U.S. Department of Agricul- plantings In the 13 early states lure's March planting intention re- me reported nine per cent less port. than the 255.900 acres for 1955. A Increased acreage is forecast for five per cent reduction is forecast Washington. Idaho and Colorado. I tor tne seven imermeamit; simcs. The planting Intention repor the slates listed shows mcr Instead ol the suggested reduc 1 wmMmMnn The greatest increase is listed for Washington where the 4S.000 acre anticipated planting is 10 per cent greater than 1955 acreage. Annual AAUW Confab Set The 31st annual convention of the Oregon Division. American Assoc iation of University Women, will be held Thursday. Friday and Sat urday. April 19-21. at Corvallis, according to Mrs. Fred Ehlers, president of the Klamalh Falls brunch. The convention has been called by Mrs. Willard R. Duncan, state president from Klamath Falls, and will coincide with the 35th anni versary ot the Corvallis branch. Theme of the meeting, which will he chairmanned by Mrs. Joseph Eilison of Corvallis, Is "Challeng ing Today's College Woman." Keynote speaker at the conven tion will be Mrs. Lucy Somerville president of the AAUW from Wash ington. D.C. Mrs. Howortn is an authority on administrative law and has held such varied appoint ive and elcciive posts as general counsel ot the War Claims Com mission, representative In the Mis sissippi Legislature and U.S. com missioner in Mississippi. Convqnllon delegates will regis ter Thursday morning at the Me morial Union Building on the Ore gon State College campus, head quarters for the meeting. Special quests at the Friday dinner meet ing at the Benton Hotel will be senior woihen from OSC. During the business sessions, del egates will consider committee re potts and offer recommendations for action. Adjournment is slated for early Saturday altemoon. A 1.06S.300 acre late crop plant ing forecast for the nation com-, pares to 1,096.200 acres planted in 1955 and is only 2.8 per cent small-j er. In commenting on the report, 1 County Agent Walt Jendrzejewski stated that a favoraole growing season In the West could easily result in a burdensome western late crop in 1956. The agent pointed out that USDA'S) planting guide for 1956 suggested an li per cent cut In national acreage. Reductions sug gested for specilic stales included; 25 per cent for Washington, 16 per cent for Idaho and 15 per cent for California. An eight per cent cut was suggested for Oregon. A 17 per cent cut was suggested for Maine. LOSE UGLY FAT TODAY Amazing Yew7 Safe Discovery Males easy WITH HUNGER TABLETS Newest of formulas recently brought to light bjr medics cience is HUNGER TABLETS a preparation lo taka iat off hip and waistline and will not affect the heart. For many who have tried "reducing treatments" and who have lost faith in them because of eiagfrerated clawna and ineffectual results. HUNGER TABLETS bring new hope. Simply take 2 tablets before each meal and see if your clothes don't fit and look more attractive, especially around fat spots such as hips, waist, abdomen, etc No strict diet is required. 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The 'Jcrp' Station W agon is just as useful around home. Comlort.iMc scats lor 6 passengers or space for up to 1 10 f uliic frrt of cargo make this rugged 4-wheel drive per formrr ideal for family use. Great for hunting and fishing too, because it carries you and all your gear right to your favorite field or stream. fWHEELDRIVEJ'pi STATION WAGON WILLYS makers ol the world's most useful vehicles Let us demonstrate the 'Jefp Station Wagon today! ' PARKER MOTOR CO. 606 So. 6th Sr. Klamoth Falls, Ore.