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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1956)
PAGE SIX HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON SUNDAY,' OCTOBER 21, 1958 tEIjc Mtvnih mxh Refits rtUUIK. JENKINS Mor BILL JENK2NB Mmm Editor tUX WATJOHOPI City Editor - ntarM M aeoond clu matur at to eon offka at Klamath ralla. Or., on Aiartart 30, WM, under, act of Ooofrau, March I, ltt invicca: ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Serrinj Southern Oregon And Northern California SUBSCRIPTION RATES CARRIER 1 MONTH S I.M ( MONTHS $ . t YEAH 111 W uta, 1 MONTH t 1 10 MONTHS I l.M 1 YEAR I1J.0O Iletreat By KEN McLEOD ' When the Christian world with drew from science in the second Christian century men turned their back on the cosmology of Greece and accepted the dogma of a flat earth and all that went with it and the Pentateuch became the j policyholders will ree'eiv udsiu niiii i mi uonately larger sums. u nrait'e.nCrfeire(.1fnm0. CvrU The first dividend in 25 years iffl CrU Shnosmnv in Ale" USGLI " Policyholders wiU 5 iJ.m. S Lrnln toll Pa'd ' the total 1957 USGLI andria and became a warning to . ,... ,, all who would cultivate profane Mr. Higley also announced a $25,000,000 increase In the regular annual 1957 dividend for some 5.000.000 policyholders of National Service Ule Insurance tfiaLl) which originated in World War II lie said this dividend will amount to t210.O00.000, compared with (185,000,000 for 1956, and that proper knowledge. Henceforth there was to be no freedom for human thought. Everyone must think as the ecclesiastical authority ordered him. A.D 414. In Athens itself philosophy awaited its doom. Jus tinian at lcnoth prohibited its teaching, and caused all jts schools j000'000- disbursement of S26.000.000 for both term and permanent plan policies. The term policyholders, numbering about 20.000 will receive approximately 11,000.000. and the permanent plan poncynoiaers, numbering approximately 330.000 will receive the remaining (25,- to be closed. While this stifling of scientific thought was taking place in the Eastern provinces of the Roman JET them w 5 in the West. A isriusn menu, wno--- - -- v j ,, has assumed the name Pelagius, passed through Western 32,000 of its new models this week; Ford set a production goal of 29, 000. The 1957 model race was on. Never had the auto industry of fered so much in the way of style, color, gadgetry and horsepower. The effort was expected to pay off in stepped up sales. People crowding into dealers' showrooms for a look at the low-slung jobs with the upswept tail fins found prices anywhere from (70 to (300 higher than at new model time last year. But, auto sales chiefs said, the brash newness of the 1957 cars should easily overcome consumer price resistance. Biggest problem confronting the auto makers was availability of steel. Business was humming, too, vision of the tax laws. But almost no one expects tax cuts at the federal level no matter which party wins' the election next month. And with the demands on state and local governments for more funds to meet increased needs, the outlook is all for still higher taxes there. A lot of other things are head ed for the stratosphere, too. The total of public and private debts expected to reach 700 billion dollars by the end of the year. mew high. National income this year is expected to be a record 340 billion dollars. And tangible wealth, public and private, is set at a staggering lht trillion dollars. The. reason the chance of a fed Mr. Hiclev said the last divi dend paid to USGLI term policy holders was disbursed in 1932. Up until recently the mortality and I elections, managed to stage a half- disability experience among these J hearted rally at week's end after such varied lines as railroad;eral ta cul is su'm is the Ireight traffic, textiles and retail trade. The slock market, still awaiting the outcome of the November E u r o o e and Northern Alrica, teaching that death was not intro duced into the world by the sin of Adam. From certain premises Pelagius drew some Important theological conclusions. At Rome, Pelagius was re ceived with favor; at Carthage, at the instigation of St. Augustine. I ...... l.nn.,nnal anffl IhtlS nrnffiinJ Hated a tremendous controversy; 20,000 USGLI term policyholders tried and acquitted of heresy, then ore paying at present. He said fnnHemned bv Innocent I.. Bishopleach term policyholder is being of Rome, While this Innocent died notified by letter. ment of a dividend. However, the continuing good trend of recent years has made it possible to pay a dividend on this plan for the first time in 25 years, he ex plained. Any such future dividend will depend on a continuation of a favorable mortality rate, he add ed. Mr. Higley said the dividend will amount to an average of 20 per cent of the premiums these and his successor! Zosimus an nulled the judgment and declared the opinions of Pelagius to be orth odox. The enemies of Pelagius were not to be defeated and through the influence of Count Valerius, procured from ine em peror an edict denouncing Pela gius as a heretic; he and his ac complices were condemned to exile and the forfeiture of their goods. To affirm that death was in the world before the fall of Adam, was a state crime. The prin ciples on which the decision was founded were based on theological considerations alone though t h e question was purely philosophical. In deciding whether death had been in the world betorc the all of Adam, or whether it was the penalty inflicted on the world for his sin, the course taken was to ascertain whether the view of Pel agius were accordant or discord. ant with the theological doctrines of M. Augustine. In the history of science this case became important as out of the Pelagian controversy, the book of Genesis was made the basis of Christianity. Astronomy, geol ogy, geography, anthropology, chronology, and indeed all the various departments of human knowledge, therefore, had to con form to it. The doctrines of St. Augustine had the effect of plac ing theology in antagonism with several days of decline. Trading was very mucn on the light side, indicating lack of participation by ine puonc. Democratic congressional leaders who control tax legislation are on record as against tax cuts until a treasury surplus of respectable size is sighted. And so are the Republican Administration lead, ers. While federal tax receipts are swelling, federal expenditures are too. Few predict more than a Credit remained tight this week: cam citrnlnc in the anu uicic was every uiaiuauon ui coming year. aheaci a, you couW Tee. The Bak .P1. ?! of Canada raised th in!! r!insm awa' wllnoul waning tur a h erZ rnil h?n,nlrf."il!treasury surplus argue that lower The regular annual NSLI (World War II) dividend of (210,- 000,000 for 1957 represents a 13 per cent increase over the 1956 dividend of (185,000,000 and there- lore will result in an average 13 per cent increase in dividend pay ments to both term and perman ent plan policyholders, Mr. Hig ley said. Some NSLI policyholders, he said, will receive an increase of more than 13 per cent in their 1957 dividend checks, while others will receive less than 13 per cent. The higher age groups will get the bulk ot the over-13 per cent in crease, while the lower age groups will get most of the under-13 per cent increase. Mr. Higley stressed that both the NSLI and USGLI dividends arc regular annual dividends, not special dividends. He said pay ments will be made during 1957 on or about the anniversary date of each policy, beginning In Jan uary and ending in December 1957. QUESTION OF THE WEEK: Q. If a veteran's GI insurance premiums are waived because he is totally disabled, what will hap pen lo the insurance proceeds if he dies? Will they be reduced by an amount of money represent ed by the waived premiums? A. The insurance proceeds will not be decreased by reason banks. The move stirred immedi ate speculation about the. Dossi. bility of similar action by the Fed eral Reserve banks her at home. Last time the Bank of Canada! raised its discount rate (in August 1956) the U. S. Federal Reserve banks hiked their rates the very next week. The rate currently charged by the Federal Reserve banks is 3 per cent. The Bank of Canada which had been charg ing 3Vt per cent, moved up to 3M. wnile tight credit was expected to exert a continued breaking in- uuence on marginal expansion projects, inventory speculation and home construction, retailers said the effect on consumer goods purchases would be slight. Merchants from 35 states at tending a National Retail Dry Goods Assn. conference at Atlan- Ga., overwhelminelv oredicted a record Christmas season. v Frightpud By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Foreign News Analyst There can be little doubt about it now Moscow is scared. The naked Soviet interference the internal affairs of the Polish Communist Central Committee naa to be dictated by a considera tion as strong as fear. The reasons for Soviet intrusion on the Polish meeting had to be of the utmost importance to the Kremlin for it to risk exoosine it self before the world in an act of colonialism. Moscow would be extremely em uarrasseo now II it nan to use 'force to roininnse rikrinlitm in Pa. i: , . . . r .. r - Ul-Mtnn ann HIinDnrV ho un ctnl ncicnce out 01 wnicn grew a in, waiver 01 premiums, ine veier-iitc Communist countries which century uatue mat prooaoiy snea an s utnencianes win receive me are rushing headlong toward some more blood than all the armies of .full amount ol insurance proceeds. I form of political independence But conquest. No other theological de- . jie Russians may yet have to ap- batc produced such a dramatic' Release of a veteran from GI, ply force. If they do, Khrushchev's Human eieiiis in wnicn, loan naoiiiiy io ine government , aavs as the boss of Communism the iirst major break was made by i does not automatically restore his 'are numbered. Copernicus about the year 1307, ! GI home loon entitlement, the Vet-! The Russians fostered public though Dante knew that the earth erans Administration said today. 'discussion and even debate in the was round by J30O. Such a release, provided in an satellite countries. This was a The Mat earth of Genesis had a omnibus GI borne loan law signed safety valve, a means of letting ong slow period of crumbling (or;0y the President recently, does nol'olf public steam and avoiding ex the prevailing belief in Christen-1 change the fact that VA continues plosions from the rising discontent dom was that the scriptures con-,to & illbie x LV rv VA m these countries. The relaxa- ainod the sum of all knowledge. expajlwj ,,10n, got ot con(rol. iinn fn iTi if h ""?.""?"( The VA mtares GI home loan Anti-Russianism. always strong ,.v.. ,, VJ paaouig iiianic p . ilm-nf i r.iH mv In folano and Hunearv. enmhinpri som' here it a bo leni-r kiaie to a ,ln resentment of Stalinism and lender on the mt;aa't guaranty brou8ht about a split in the ranks and the tart ts ocrawaje elj. " satellite Communist parties Eibte lor resEora!io at eetitlrawnt . " national Communists Veteran ! nan oil !.. lnQe wno icei tney need mos- GI loan prmi mar h-t aaoth- cows Protection and discipline to er GI loan rf their orooerlv: I. Was ukfn by a icnernmental interest was taken in astronomical question it was at once settled by a reference to Mitb authorities as the writings of Augustine or Lactantius. not by a study of the phenomena ol the heavens. So great was the prefer ence given to sacred over profane Iparnine thnt rhritinmtv hnri hnn in existence 1500 years, and had agency lor puoi;c os; not produced a single astronomer. M destroyed by The indifference ol Christendom hazard: .Moscow still has the means to apply force lo stem the tide. The rates would stimulate business ac tivity enough to let the govern ment take in a greater total in its levy on incomes. But the Tax Foundation, a non profit organization which every now and then shakes its head sad ly over the steady climb of taxes. observes today: "The only real hope for substantial tax reduction lies in insisting that government spend less." The foundation puts the latest annual tax bite thus: Uncle Sam takes 72 billion dollars, the states 15 billion, and the local govern ments 13 billion. This is double the total of 10 years ago and near ly 10 times the take of 20 years ago. While the population has been growing strikingly over the 20 years, tax rates have gone up even faster. In 1936 Uncle Sam took $30 per capita, the state tax col lector $21 and the local revenue man $32. In 1946 the federal col lector took $286 per capita, the state $45 and the local govern ment $39. In 1956 Washington gets (439 per person, the state (90 and the local collector (79. Just in the last year the total per capita figure jumped (61. Even making allowance for the drop in the purchasing power of the dollar in the last 20 years, the rise from (83 per head in 1936 to $608 today may be as breath taking as the foundation con-contends. They'll Do It Every Time By Junmy Hado Arson's four some brooks HO DEUjy TWEy domT LIKE THE COURSE WHEN ITS CROWDED- r-rrr arOefvEAU! GET SOME 6LOW-K GET US OPP. &LD7rr be -r vou'Re o!fTj YV1 I MELD UP ' jCTT ' 0 fSj .- putts v eMm ,. .fUZ' gS return nvmi.-!.. ii anna mmn v.. -,,1.- J - - ' . 1 EMERGENCY TALKS I Sltt, OM, Boy.' novv THEy ST4CK UP TVJE PLAYERS BEHIND THEM TM4NK ahoa tip OF TH6 IUTLO HT r. to lkjmn BD5K6FEULBC, (ROCKSPRiMSCUie. 1WCXMN6E Colleges Tell Service Tests Selective Service college qualifi. cation tests will be given at Ore gon colleges and universities on November 16, Colonel Francis W. Mason, deputy state director of Selective Service announced today. Applications for this test may be obtained from any Selective Serv ice Local Board. The applications must be mailed to the Science Research Associates,. Chicago, Il linois and must be postmarked not Jater than October 30, 1956. Colonel Mason emphasized that a student must be enrolled in a college or university to be eligible for this test and can take the test only once. A score of 70 quali fies the registrant for considera tion for deferment as an under. graduate student and a score of 80 qualifies him for consideration for deferment as a graduate stu dent. He must, in either case, be satisfactorily pursuing a full time course of study. Dnnanfa Parm Woman Receives Leader Told I'liciiiiioiiin By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D. Mrs. O. has asked for a dis cussion of the diflerent kinds of pneumonia, particularly that kind known as bronchopneumonia. It is impossible to do this brief ly, so 1 shall confine these re marks to bronchopneumonia. The two other most common varieties of pneumonia are lobar pneu monia and virus pneumonia. Bronchopneumonia is not as clear-cut a disease as lobar pneu monia. Bronchopneumonia can oe caused ,by any one of several germs. Irritating gases or other substances breathed in may also produce an inflamed condition of the bronchi and surrounding lung tissue. The dividing line between bronchitis an infection of the breathing tubes) and bronchopneu monia (involvement ot me inns tissue proper) is not sharp, and simple bronchitis can easily lead to pneumonia. The smaller breathing passages a naiural K"m"n. ,w"t efonomi leading to the lungs are called .S? ritonchi. As they pass down to- toward scientilic mallets contin- 3. as other- te dupovcd of for , . .cl ,ihiin in ihlTn ward the lung tissue itself, they lied to the end of the ISth century, compelling reasons such a health, countries a more naked form 'of'divide nd become smaller and Even then there was no Kirn-! military service, employment forc, evon ine ul of Soviet troons ! smaller. Germs can attack the tific inducement. The inciting mo- transfer, or arious other reasons mBV be needed lining of these tubes and cause lives were altogether of a differ- without fault ol the eteran. Th, r..iin0 ..., in Moscow ihijinllammation. When the smaller AT&ta8 In T," ,,!n ""."CS, t" G1 T dilemma and if caS; bronchi become infected, the lung Lr.h ..n .hi7 Is r",ored- 'he be resolved without serious dam-il""ue surrounding them is also earth vanished in the face of ex- Veterans Administration must be age to the Krriiilin's cause then '. likclv to be involved, and in such ploratlons by three sailors lolum- relieved Irom liability on the old Miuiebodv is .ping to have to pav. leases bronchopneumonia is said to 5!!-Mh.Vni.ii .T R"""",1, V '"'Pied. This is That somebody likely is Nikitji be present. ""'"- " :" : -" generally none oy paving oil me ; Khrushchev, first secretary and lougn. witn or wunotii ine onng- old loan in lull. boss of the Soviet Communist oar- ing up of sputum, is usually pres- l nder the new law. a veteran ty. ient in bronchopneumonia. A little may be released Irom liability to The growing ferment in the sa- fever, but not as high as lobar the government under certain con- tellite nations and the growing pneumonia, is the rule. Pain in the ditions il he sells his properly and confusion among the world Com- chest, on the other hand, which is allows the purchaser to assume the I inunist rank and die are bound usually present in the early stages to start a quarrel in the Kremlin, 0f lobar pneumonia, is otten lacit show cracks In its cracks that no longer could be suppressed by inquisition or meth ods so successful in the t-ase of Pelagius. The philosophical crit icism continues to broaden as sci- rj"fj.i:! '":Vn,h"!"'" " u .. i.in:nH ..Ht, .1 ntiiimn iiiiuvi simiuiiiK. mini? $uvti and well-meaning men have at tempted to reconcile the state ments of Genesis with the discov eries of science, but it has been in vain. Divergences have in creased so much that they have he- lull. Tlwv The purchaser must obligate where there likely is deep resent-:lni in bronchopneumonia ment of the way Khrushchev 'and: Bronchopneumonia, when left himself by contract to purchase theims cohorts threw their weight unturated. does not end with a property and assume the veteran's !,rouna- 'rouoie in eastern r.u- sudden disappearance of symp- liability-. tope can oe ine excuse lor a movent,, ,nd drop tn temperature as 2 The loan must he current gainst Khrushchev k Co. 1 lobar pneumonia does. It may 3. The purchaser must satisfv ln lni" respect, one man who ,- 0P , long time without good credit risk lannul w mrw out ot ine p-1 definite change. The treatment lur i Georgi Mnlenkov. whom!of bronchopneumonia was once ivnrusnrnev pusneo irom lop po'-extremely difficult. tions in party and government. Now penicillin and its relatives and the sulfa drugs have brought much help. Since several kinds of germs may cause bronchopneu monia, the drugs given may not come an absolute opposition. One A ne " ol the antagonists must eventually I succumb for the world cannot hope .t thai f liia Imnnrlanl work, which. IHISillK since the second century, has beeni By WALTER RHEEDE Jr. '.. TL pul forth as the criterion of acien-1 NEW YORK Business HIKP . tific truth can hold llself in a po-iaclivily srt a record pace this, "V SAM DAWSON .,i; . voii,.H uittinni i-hnllnnini week despite nuterials thnrtamo NEW tOHK it The lotal tax of human criticism. rising prices and tight credit. I1"1" lr 'he United Slates for one i always bring about the hoped for Interest focused on Detroit. 7ff U at the 100 billion dollar , results. After months ol slow production leve-l lor the first time in history, Bronchopneumonia is still a dan Vpl! jrlflil Ilfltf I" lh auto factories, things were! That will he $fiO for every man. j gerous disease. The damage done The first dividend in 2.i years beginning to hum again. Virtually woman and child in the notion. to the lung tissue cannot always will be paid in 1957 to policyhold-'all the auto makers were rollingi Twenty years ago the take aver- be repaired, and even in those who era Ol S-veaf term U.S. tiOVem-put mrir ini hhmvis, ana lor n uut ni mi per (wsuii. imum, a.iiiipinifiiiiflj i:iisi tor ment Life Insurance 'VSGLH, some the outpouring of rakish! lotal collections hate risen which originated in World War I, I long sedans and hnnllops began more than II billion dollars in the Harvey V. Higley, administrator! to assume the proportions' of a past-year, of Veterans Attain, announced to-illond. I Some congressional inquiries day. I Chevrolet planned lo turn out are getting unfer way for a re- many weeks. The maintenance of good general health and the avoid ance of unnecessary exposure to Infection are the only steps which can be taken to avoid the disease. BONANZA The new chairman of the Bonanza Farm Bureau Center is Lester Jones, who con ducted the meeting October 17, 8 p.m. in the school cafeteria. A general discussion was held on the resolutions which will be voted on at the state convention to be held later this month at Pendle ton. Farmers decide whether they are for or against farm measures to be voted on in Washington. D.C. A delegate from each county will be at the Pendleton meeting to vote, with suggestions from their centers. The Farm Bureau as two lobbyists in Washington. The Langell Valley center met at the community hall the evening of October 16. with the following new officers: Wes Dearborn, chair man; Charles Partridge, vice chairman; and Peggy Albert, secretary-treasurer. They discussed and voted on the same resolutions. DORRIS Mrs. C, A. Branham of Dorris received word Friday of the death of her husband's father, F. A. Branham, 84, in Medford. Surviving are one son. C. A. Branham of Klamath Falls; two daughters, Elsie Baker of Eagle Point and Lola Davis of Rose- burg; . five grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren. Funeral will be Tuesday, Octo ber 23, at 10:30 a.m. at the Pearl Funeral Home, Medfordi QUEEN LEAVES THE HAGUE, Netherlands W- Queen Juliana left Saturday for 'short vacation in Sicily. Her husband, Prince Bernhard, "is on a 10-day visit to the United Stater Custom Cutting of your BEEF PORK Lei as cut it tbt w ynn -want! BIG Y MARKET LONDON 10 Soviet Commu nist Party chief Khrushchev and the top level delegation he led to Warsaw Friday for emergency talks with Polish Communist lead ers have returned to the Krem lin, Moscow Radio reported Saturday. LOOKS DECEIVE JAILER TIAJUANA, Mexico (UP) A jailer learned Ihe other day that appearances are often deceiving. Newspaper Editor Salvadore Gon zals was jailed Thursday on a charge of interfering with judicial procedure. The jailer left the cell door open because he thought tha newsman had come to interview a prisoner. Gonzales calmly walked out of the jail and went to a fed eral court where he obtained a writ prohibiting his imprisonment. WJ. Re-elect- SHERIFF Jame Murray "RED" BRITTON DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE EXPERIENCED CAPABLE VETERAN WORLD WAR II I'd. Ad 1. M. Blitlan MiliiiiM I Oicrm oistfESi? 32 yftltfP & 3S "huge r I I f 72 ' TABLE 1 i : ' ' i wf"" 1 '''C'' ''' J --Y-,f',,,, ''' - ;' 1 None bigger, none o Ji---sTT-: y. xHc - "v -yv?' ' y vSsJt righ for ,the growing V Jt-' -STaB T ". 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