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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1958)
PAGE 6 A HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON FRIDAY. JUNE 13. 1951 FRANK JENKINS Editor BILL JENKINS Manigihg Editor FLOYD WYNNE City Editor Fliitf Day By KLOYD L. WYNNE Saturday is Klag Day ... the day to pay special honor to "Old Glory." On this day, it is well to recall the words of President Woodrow Wilson at the Flag Day celebration June 14. 1914 at Washington, D.C. He said, "This flag for the fu ture is meant to stand for the just use of undisputed national pow er. No nation is ever going to doubt our power to assert its rights, and we should lay it to heart that no nation shall ever henceforth doubt our purpose to put it to the highest uses to which a great emblem of justice and gov ernment can be put. "It is henceforth to stand for self-possession, for dignity, for the assertion of the right of one na tion to serve the other nations of the world an emblem that will not condescend to be used for purposes of aggression and self' aggrandizement; that is too great to be debased by selfishness; that has vindicated its right to be hon ored by all nations of the world and eared by none who do right eousness." No words could have summed up more the meaning and the intent which every American wants for his flag. Let's all give Flag Day true imeaning by displaying the Ameri can flag in front of our homes. our places of business as well as all public offices. Let's all take special effort this day to add new glory to "Old Glory" on this, her 81st birthday. Trouble By HAL BOYLF. NEW YORK (AP)-It has come to my attention lately that some men are having trouble with wom enana don i Know why. In my lifetime, taking the flow as it goes, it has appeared to me that there arc only two ways to deal with women, girls and wid ows: Go outdoors and point out the stars to them. Stay indoors and tell them about the stars. Women have a strange sense of truth. They can be sharp as a tack In a business operation, but they are ctc(nally vulnerable to flattery. They will even consciously pay for it to bolster their ego. An honest man can look at hinv self in the mirror and know that he isn't desirable. It is the rare. rare woman who can do this. No woman, though her face could startle a nervous rooster into lay ing an egg, is without a convic tion of personal beauty. A man hesitates to he hand some. A woman demands to be pretty, and In a way she can, by being desirable and thinking of herself as desirable, cnlorce this concept of at least partial loveli ness. ) The ugliest woman has a pas sion to he admired and desired, not for her character but for her physical charm. The whole art of dealing with women is one of perpetual adora tion . . . emphasized by depart ure. Put your best girl on a pedes tal, then walk away from her. The rest of her life site will grate fully pursue with both of her clay leel. Never turn back. Confirivnci' By SAM DAWSON 7. NEW YORK lAPi-t'onfidencc is rising today that Ihc basic soundness of the economy is win ning the fight against the forces of recession. Upturns in some industries this month and the official figures on May showing gains in many sec tors of the economy are helping to dispel the gloom. At the same time, more sooth sayers arc stretching out their lime tables when guessing the date of a general upturn. What they see just ahead is a long stalemate. With employment and personal incomes gaining in May over April, with W million Americans having jobs and total wages and salaries increasing for the tirsl lime since the slump began, with retail sales rising from their March lows, some are asking now: "Where is the recession? How can anyone say there Is one?" The same ollicial figures give the answer. Total employment went up in May. Hut employment in manufacturing plains ronlinued to slide, olf 67,000 Irnm April. To tal wages and salaries rose by tiki million dollars at an annual rate. But in the manufacturing sector of the economy the long downturn continued, off Kin million dollars at nn annual rate. That is where the recession l. Manufacturing, especially ihe making of durable goods lor con sumer! and capital goods lor in Entered u Meond cla maiur at the pou office at Kluntiri Ptllt, Or., on Aucust 30. IK, under ut of Coofreu. March I. Kit !HVICE8t A6300ATTD PRES8 U KITED PRES6 AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS Set-Tin j Southern Oregon And Northern California duslry, is where the recession has concentrated. II you don't work in a factory affected by ,the slump, if you don't live in a community where fac tory payrolls are the major item in the area's economic life, then you may well say, "We see no recession." But the over-all picture is a bit brighter today. The May and June ligures are allaying the fears of many. The -usual summer slump in industry may dampen some of this new enthusiasm. The forecasters lake this into account in abandoning the first of the year view that the upturn could start in July. Now most of them are saying it can't come be fore the end of the year and may be not until 1959 is well along. That's because they feel that while continued consumer buying of soft goods and of services is cushioning and to a major extent offsetting the fall in industry, no real upturn can be expected until manufacturing of durables and' or dering of new plants and equip ment by business is on Ihe up grade again and whittling of in ventorics comes to a full stop. Some of the specific gains as apart from the over-all statistics which are heartening business men are: Steel output has risen from Its low perhaps only because a price rise is feared. Employment in steel mills seems to have ended its long slide. Metal prices have stilfcned aft er long months of softness even if the new strength comes not from any increase in demand but from the move of the government to help by the proposed resump tion of buying of metal for the defense stockpile. Retail sales over-all have im proved since March. In particular, chain and mail order companies report a sharp rise in sales in May with volume running 5 per cent above last year. Resorts and transportation com panies report reservations ahead of last year. New defense orders have led some plants to recall laid off workcrR. ly By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON AP Release of nine Americans, taken prison er when their Army helicopter landed in red-run East Germany, is being delayed because ol this country's weird relationship with Ihe Communist world. It goes like this: , The United States and other Western nations do not recognize Ihe Communist government of East Germany. This country, al lied with West Germany, wants German reunification under free elections. The Western Allies argue that in accordance with the Amcrican-British-Frcnch Russian postwar agreement on Germany, all their dealings with East Germany must be done with Ihe Soviet Union. When the nine Americans and Iheir helicopter strayed into East Germany June 7 and landed there, this country, instead of ap pealing to the East Germans for Iheir release, appealed to the Russians. On June 9 the Russian Embassy in East Berlin refused to step into Ihc case, saying Ihc problem was under Ihe jurisdiction of the East German government. This was one more needle to force Ameri can recognition of the German Communists. The next day, June 10. at his news conference Secretary of Stale Dulles said the United Stales would deal wilh the East German Reds, if necessary. In ob tain the nine men's release. Poqo I!" OU4T T r neee wi is hom to ma IV T v I I IHrPIAPPMT I Zi Jtft WBAV I 1 ' McW ABOUT IT. J " TH THIRTEENTH.' y E M:nvm6 an' w ji Dulles said: "When it comes to getting Americans out of a coun try, we don't stand on ceremony. you deal with the kidnapers." But he added: Dealing with the East Germans in this case still wouldn't mean this country rec ognized the East German govern ment. On June 11 the East German Communists promised a quick re lease for the nine Americans if the United States acted in a "nor mal and reasonable" manner al though they didn't explain what those two words meant. They'd negotiate, they said. Yesterday Lincoln White, State Department spokesman. was asked if this country had started negotiations for the nine Americans. He said no. Why not? The Russian refusal to step in was in a statement. It wasn't a formal note. So, although Dulles had said this country wouldn't wait on cer emony, White said this country was waiting for a formal Russian refusal before turning directly to the Last Germans. Asked how long this country in tended to wait for the formal note of Russian refusal before appeal ing to the East Germans, White said he didn't know but "we don't intend to wait forever." The Russians made it official iFriday in a letter delivered to the U.S. Embassy in Bonn. They said return of the Americans "not within the competence of the Soviet forces" and referred U.S. authorities to the East German government. , The Slate Department might de cide to try again at a higher Rus sian level. Otherwise the problem becomes one of technique how to deal with a regime whose ex istence as a government is not officially acknowledged. A Bonn embassy spokesman said he didn't know what the next step would be. Dealing with the East Germans, whom it doesn't recognize, will put this country in the same posi lion in which it found itself when dealing with the Red . Chinese whose government it doesn't rec ognize, either. Ever since Chiang Kai-shek in 1949 was thrown oft the China mainland by the Red Chinese and fled to Formosa, this country, now allied with . him, has refused to recognize the Chinese Communist government on the mainland. Nevertheless Americans fought the so-called Chinese volunteers in Korea and worked out a Ko rean armistice made possible only because the United States and Red China abide by it. And, still not recognizing the Red Chinese, this government has been negotiating with them since 1955 for the release of Americans Lhey hold as prisoners. (e'ooii World By GEORGE CASTILLO In Roseburg News-Review The crash of Ihe Navy jet air plane piloted by Cmdr. G. W. Stac heli Friday set off a search which would have been heartening to any ono who has lost his faith in his fellow humans. Despite an almost continuous rain, a gluey mud clinging to every step, dense underbrush and almost any other element to make a man miserable, search volunteers came in droves. At one time, probably as many as 100 men were combing the rugged hills south of Curtin for a man they didn't know, a man who might even be dead. No one had insisted lhey come. No pressure was brought to force them to look lor this impersonal pilot. Rut just the possibility that he might be alive and injured or lost was enough. VOU 'JSf Tu...,(HiLL MISS MA'WStUe . 1 CN AfOUT Tf0At$H WU SUBSCRIPTION RATES CARRIER I MONTH I MONTHS . I YEAR MAIL I MONTH MONTHS .. I YEAR I 1 to I 00 moo S 1.(0 T.tO 111.00 Police officers from both Lane and Douglas counties worked quick ly and efficiently far into the night, even though no one would have be grudged their ceasing operations until morning. And they weren't getting overtime pay for their ef forts. It was a heartwarming example of man's interest in the welfare of his fellow man in distress. Nor was it merely an isolated in cident enhanced by the novelty of a jet airplane crashing in Douglas County. The effort has been repeat ed many times. Samples crop up every day. A young child gets lost in the woods. While his distraught parents fret, scores of quiet, busi nesslike men appear quickly to find him. A man goes on a fishing trip and loses his way. He may be all alone for hours, but he can rest assured that it won't be long until police and volunteers will be scouring the countryside lor him. A family's house burns to the ground, leaving it nothing. Again, it won't be long before the desolated family is warmly - clothed, shel tered and fed. And often, his neigh bors even rebuild his house. These are but a few of the won derful commentaries evidencing man's eternal brotherhood to man. It may crop up in strange, places and in the face of reports of brutal ity, wars and dire threats of the certain destruction of mankind. But such incidents as the search for Cmdr. Staeheli indicate that all is not lost. Diabetes By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D. I become quite alarmed each year by certain similar letters from correspondents. They either ask me for a diet for diabetes or stale that the writer 'or some rela tive) knows he has the disease and wonders if he should have medi cal attention for it. Diabetes, which is a disease 'char acterized principally by an increase above normal of sugar in the blood and in elimination of sugar in the urine, is not a condition to be taken lightly. 5 Probably the most frequent symptoms are thirst and excessive urination, but other symptoms may be present. Indeed, someone may have diabetes with all symptoms absent or unnoticed. It is certainly not safe for a vic tim of diabetes to go for any length of time without medical supervi sion. Furthermore, adding and sub tracting to the diet without medi cal control is hazardous. Advice rendered from a distance would also be extremely dangerous since everyone wilh diabetes or any other serious disease for that matter needs individual and not mail-order treatment. Untreated diabetes can lead to serious complications. Persons with diabetes are more liable than oth ers to hardening of the arteries and its complications. In the feet and legs. lor example, the combina tion of diabetes and hardening of the arteries may lead lo infection and sometimes to death of a tis sue. Persons with diabetes arc like wise more susceptible to coronary thrombosis or angina pectoris, both involving the heart, than those who do not have this disease. Serious eye complications are not uncommon in patients with undiag nosed or unsatisfactorily treated diabetes. Neglect of this disease can lead, in severe cases, to pro gressive loss of weight and even tually even to death. Even today there are far too many people who are careless about their diets or insulin and consequently develop serious com plications which might have been avoided. Diabetes should be identified as early as possible and exact treat ment wilh diel, and if necessary, insulin, must be outlined. Those af flicted with this disease cannot be careless about following instruc tions if they wish to avoid painful or serious complications and pos sibly even an untimely death. It should be emphasized again that individual management is es sential. No two persons with dia betes are exactly alike in their re quirements. QihpOm By I'nllrd Press International DALLAS. Tex. Doris Lynn Dowling. lS ycar-old Dallas girl, whose refusal lo wed airman Don Kceton is feared lo have led Ihe missing flyer to try to commit suicide by crashing his plane: "I wish I could say 'Come back. Don. and I'll marry you." Rut I can't. But I do hope that he is all right and I'll go wherever t-c is to talk to him if It will help. I love Don. but I don't know whether I love him enough to marry him. Marriage is lacred to me." TheyU Do It Every Howcum Dept. whem interviewed ON TV, PROF.EGGNOOeiN TOLD OF HIS HOBBIES THUS "QUOTE-" JTl RE4D DETECTIVE JE7 r PGOFESSOR-..WH4- BOOKS- I FIND B f r wiurvi Y DO YOU DOFOR I THEM VERV Tr?c?P PEL4XATIOM? DO REUlXlMa ni c7 aiw 1 ENTLy TR4NSUJT1N& J State Department Studies New Letter From Khrushchev Regarding Summit Meeting WASHINGTON (AP) State Department officials studied a lengthy new message from Pre mier Khrushchev to President Ei senhower today for possible de velopments in Soviet policy to ward a summit conference. An 18-page letter plus 20 pages of annex, all in Russian, was de livered to Deputy Under Secre tary of State Robert Murphy late yesterday by Soviet Embassy counselor hergei H. Striganov. The move was puzzling to State Department authorities because East-West talks about summit is sues have been under way in Mos cow for several weeks. The talks are being conducted by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromy- ko with U. b. Ambassador Llewel lyn Thompson and the envoys of Britain and France. It was understood the letter re flected Khrushchev's impatience with the slow progress being made in the talks. In the past Khrushchev has pressed hard for an early sum mit meeting with little or no ad vance preparation. He agreed with reluctance to put the whole matter into normal diplomatic channels. This history led to speculation here that he perhaps wanted to take up the issue directly with the President again, as he had manv times in earlier months, to speed up preparation or to give a new shot m the arm to Russia s peace propaganda. It was noted here that Soviet Knight Vetoes Truce Offered By Knowland SACRAMENTO. Calif. (AP) - Gov. Goodwin Knight, rejecting an indirect truce offer by Sen. Wil liam F. Knowland, says he is going it alone in California's No vember election campaign. Knowland, who displaced Knight as the Republican candidate for governor, made his gesture at a news conference in Washington yesterday. He said it's important tor Republicans to close ranks, and that he intends to give "wholehearted and loyal support" to the entire Republican ticket. Knight, citing their difference on the controversial right-to-work issue, replied "I propose to con duct my own separate campaign" for the U. S. Senate. He said nothing about supporting Know- land. Both Knowland and Knight. along with other Republican nom inees, trailed their Democratic op ponents in the total vote in the June 3 primary. Atty. Gen. Ed mund G. Brown. Democratic can didate for governor, topped Know land's two-party total by more than 600.000. In an obvious reference to Know land's advocacy of anti-union shop legislation. Knight said: "The difference that exists and has existed between us is on an issue that substantially represents his campaign platform. 1 cannot .igree with the senator on thai issue." The first Winter Olympics were held in Chamonix, France, in 1M4. RBAUV' GOOD lJ Pa Time 6 UT'SL4TS COMIC '-HE GIVES OUT WITH THE STRlCTLy HIGH-FOREHE4D STUFF- I propagandists have been carrying on tor several days a campaign cnarging tne united stales with riplihprntalv Ipvinff In ctsll nft a conference at the summit. The So viet news agency lass picked up from lhl Fact Curman aoonpt, ADN a report of an alleged se cret instruction trom Secretary of State Dulles to U. S. diplomats abroad telling them to work MEN'S SHOP ALL GIFTS BEAUTIFULLY WRAPPED! WHITE T-SHIRTS Mawx Mwramaweor 1.00 1.50 Nylon reinforced in fine quality combed cotton. Fit better, look bette., wear longer. All sizes. By Jimmy Hatlo TICKLEOLD BURLEVCUE I COLLECT FIRST EDITIONS--I'M AH 4VID RE4DEJ? OF SCHOPEiH4UER AUO HOMER Im PRES ENTLy TB4MSUJTIKI& KE4TS INTO ESPERANTO- against a summit conference. The State Department ' branded the document a forgery and a complete fabrication. Klamath Basin Roundup Assoc. Requesting bids for ground concessions. Bids sub mitted to Hank Ring, 2104V2 So. 6th St., not later than June 22. Concession fee 50 on acceptance of contract and 50 on July 24. The association reserves the right to reject any bid. ROUNDUP - July 25, 26, 27 . Klamath Falls the best place W snmis j 1.99 to 4.00 i The first and last word in satisfaction and style h for Dad . . patterns, stripes, and solids . . . color-fast Drip-Dri cottons that are easy to laun- der, stay cool, fresh and neat. Famous labels, k Sizes small, medium, large, X-larqe. it S . ' T , A NEW ANGELES TAPERS 4.95 Just received . . . popular tan color with tapered legs with back flap pockets . . . fash ion right . . . comfortably liqht. FADED DENIMS 4.95 Blue, tan, green . , for beach, backyard, relaxing. SWIM 2.95 to 4.00 Water perfect, swim-able styles in solids, patterns. Perfect fit waists in cotton and lastex. Youth Guilty In Slaying Of Mother NEW YORK (API A 17-year-old boy pleaded guilty yesterday to second degree murder in the shooting of his mother. By entering the plea, , John E. Jessup of Brooklyn, escaped the possibility of the electric chair. No date was set for the sentenc ing: 20 years to life in prison. Jessup argued with his mother, Gladys, 38, over his using the tel ephone to call a girl friend last Sept. 27. Later he shot his mother in the back of the head as she passed along a hallway outside the bedroom where he and a chum were examining his collection of hunting rifles. DANMOORE HOTEL 1217 S.W. Morrison St. Portland, Oregon All Transient Guests. All those who come return. Rotes not too high, not low. Free Garage, TV's and Radio's. Reputation for cleanliness. Reservations by L.D. Fone refunded on request upon arrival. to shop . . . after all' ft Give Dad These Famous Brands For Father's Day! VAN HEUSEN MUNSINGWEAR PENDLETON SWANK JEWELRY CHAMPION SLACKS SAMSONITE LUGGAGE HANES APPAREL SKYWAY LUGGAGE . ' SHORT SLEEVES . perfect or pam&sr TRUNKS mi I Sit