Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 13, 1958, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE 4 A
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
SUNDAY. JULY 13. 1958
FRANK JENKINS
Editor
BILL JENKTN'S
Managing Editor
FLOYD WYNNE
City Editor
Iirivrr Training
By FLOYD L. WYNNE
I note that ttie driver training
program at KUIIS has been abarv
cloned, at least temporarily.
A board member made
the motion to continue the program
at Monday's board meeting but
the motion died for. lack of a
second.
I find myself in complete sym
palhy with those who refused to
second the motion.
One of the ills of our school
system at the moment, not just
here, but elsewhere, appears to be
the fact that the taxpayers are
being hit to provide services for
the few ralher than the many.
Driver training falls in this cat
egory. The state provides a $20
per student fund for those schools
participating in the program, but
that money, in turn, comes from
the taxpayer by one means or an
other.
Certainly there arc merits to
such a program, and those who
advocate it can find many rea
sons why it should he continued
However, if we are to curtail
the continued sharp upward spir
al in costs of education then we
must begin to also curtail some
of the programs themselves.
This curtailment must begin in
the courses or programs that we
can consider slrictly nonessential.
Driver training is one of these.
In turn, if we arc to curtail
some of the marginal operations of
our educational structure, then par
ents must he willing in turn to
pick up their share of the load.
Teaching a youngster to drive
should be somelhing that is done
by parents. I, for one, will be
more than willing, in fact, I will
Insist, that when the time comes,
I will be responsible for teaching
my youngslers lo drive.
The driver training program is
Just another example of a situa
tion where parents have been con
lent to let the schools take care
of what should bo their own re
sponsibility. I don't think lhat the abandon
ment of the driver training pro
gram will work any hardship on
the youngsters who want to drive
a car.
They still must pass the same
examination that adults do In or
der to obtain a license and any
young man or woman who wants
a license earnestly enough will
find it no great (rouble to learn
the necessary rudiments of driving
and driving safety.
It isn't (he lgnoran( driver, nor
even the careless driver lhat
causes the majority of our acci
dents today. It's high speed . . .
and equipment failures.
I find myself in complete sym
pathy with the board members
who declined to lake action on the
driver training program, and con
gratulate them on the first step
toward sale, sane financial admin
istration of our schools.
I'ilcmt'iils Tough
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (API When pro
ducer l.eland Hayward decided to
film Ernest Hemingway's "The
Old Man and The Sea," Homing
way warned him:
"This one will be hard to do.
. "You'll he dealing with the sun
and the moon and the stars and
fish and Cod. You're not used to
dealing with these things. II won't
he easy."
Recalling the warning three
years ago and $5.noo.(iiK) later,
Hayward ohscrvrd wryly:
"The Lord knows he was right.
I never spent so much time on
one project."
The completed picture runs on
ly an hour and a half. There arc
those m the industry who figure
it may he as big a financial lur
krv as Hay.vard's last picture.
"The Spirit of St. Louis," another
$.Vihhi oon M-nluie which tailed to
get ott the ground.
H.ivu.ml, a former newspaper
man ami press agent who matte
his tit si million at -J and went en
to hcctime one of Broadway's
most iatMilous producers, seems
unwnmrd.
"1 am a fellow who usually has
an opinion on anything." he re
marked theeiliilly. "Hut 1 don
know how this will do linannalty.
"If you twisted my aim. I'd say
we'll gel our money eventually.
This one can run loiewr.
"It should h.ue a big world
market. The hook was ti .inflated
into 42 languages. The thrme is
universal that man is not nuile
for defeat, thai he can he 1
flrnvcd . . . hut not defeated. II
sums P Hemingway's whi'Cli
osopny.
The film comploies a M0 m.it
started with ll.iwv.iuis hichh
profitable production of "M r
Robert." ow plans lo leave
(he Hollywood inry;irrl lor a
while. His tentative plans include
Ihree big TV shows and three
Broadway musicals tin 1 u d i n g
"Gypsy." th1 li,r ,ory tiM'
nos Lee, starring Lllici Mir-
lie JHeralb
Entiwd m Monnd clu matter il th pott office at Klamath Palla.
On. . on August 30. Ifloe. under act ot Congreaa. March 1. 1670
RERV1CE8:
ASSOCIATED PRESS DNTTED PRESS
AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS
Serving Southern Oregon And Northern California
man.
Hayward, who runs an airline
among other sideline chores, is
a philosopher as well as a pro
ducer.
He sometimes has the melan
choly feeling lhat the American
people have already lost out in
the world struggle "because we
let ourselves get too soft." Tte al
so believes U. S. ladies have got
ten out of hand.
WnrlM
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D.
Written for NEA Service
Thanks lo many correspondents
who have written me following the
publication of previous columnn on
warts, I now have quite a coiled
tion in my file ot strange cures
and other interesting comments on
this peculiar disorder of the skin
1 do not doubt that there are
more strange notions about the
cure and cause of warts than any
other human disorder.
It is impossible to quote from
all of the letters, but one man
wrote that when he was 10 years
old (he is 82 now) his left hand
was a mass of warts. A school
mate told him to steal a piece of
red flannel and a piece of raw
pork, to fold the pork in the
flannel and bury it in (he ground
under a stone.
The writer said that he did as
directed and, strange lo say, in
three days the warts disappeared
and he has had no more for the
next 72 years.
Another correspondent said
that he had trouble wilh t w o
warts on his face and a lot under
his amis and back. He asked many
peoplo for a cure, but no one
seemed to know. He has asked me
lo suggcsl a remedy. This is more
unusual than the first letler, be
cause it seems nearly everyone
has a pet cure for warls and
arc not bashful about passing it
on.
The fact lhat warls disappear
alter so many different kinds of
treatment even including burial
of an object is particularly as
tonishing, because warts arc al
most cerlainly caused by viruses
which are small living bodies too
tiny lo see under the ordinary mi
croscope.
Why a condition caused by vi
ruses should disappear following so
many kinds of treatments lor none
at all) is truly extraordinary.
The so-called "seed wart" which
occurs on the hands is the most
common type. Children are more
likely to have warts than grown
ups.
Warts can be spread from one
part of the body to another, but
there is no basis for the old su
perstition that handling toads will
cause warls.
Painting wilh cerlain dyes, sev
eral kinds of oinlments, freezing
with carbon dioxide snow and
hurning with diathermy needles
have all been used with success.
One of Ihe treatments consists ot
the use of injections containing a
heavy metal called bismuth. Warts
also disappear in most cases after
X-ray treatment.
But the most astonishing treat
ment is hy the use of suggestion.
How (he mind can have an effect
on a virus disease is a mystery.
It has long been known that warts
which may have been present for
year can disappear suddenly and
completely lollow-ing suggestion.
This has been continued by sci
entific observers, .lust how lo go
about llns kind of treatment is not
settled and some doctors remain
skeptical. But it seems certain
that it does happen.
Warts 'except plantar warls on
the feet) can hardly be considered
serious, hut they are troublesome
and peculiarly interesting in their
behavior.
Pogo
Vs AMJtfT MwlvIM
WITH WfStA. AN0
A antes
cam pRrr
MOSS THAN Tg'
rr Vu MAN Y.
4f.. Asf with -ru. ecvwtf, tv tuoer-eur to cowphth
CC-T vow Acvr.w can OUTGTUPity
LV -?.,",UTPOB'T T'"' -
anb
HoroVr ( liangi1!
By RAMOND ANDERSON
Richmond Times-Dispatch
WARSAW (AP)-You don't need
border guards to tell you when
you've crossed the frontier he
tweon Communist Czechoslovakia
and Communist Poland. You can
sense it from your fellow passen
gers.
For 10 hours from Prague to
llv Polish border our train was
full of subdued, unsmiling
Czechs. Thirty minutes after we
crossed, everything was laughter
and lively conversation.
I had breakfast on the train
wilh an exuberant Pole from Kra
kow just after we crossed the
border. We got acquainted after
he shared with me an important
discovery there was water (or
shaving in Ihe next car.
Our breakfast was two ham
sandwiches, two glasses of coffee
and two large glasses of vodka
The vodka was first. And it had
lo be "do dna" (bottoms up). A
challenge.
It's wilh a sense of duly well
done that I can report the Pole
gave up first. But he stopped just
in time to save me from fiery as
phyxiation. Each glass was still
about a quarter full.
While we ate, we talked politics
an eternal subject in present-
day Poland striking a common
language in a mixture of German
and Russian.
The conversation went like this:
American "How do you hap
pen lo speak such good German
and Russian,?"
Pole "I was a 'guest' in both
countries. First Ihe Russians cap
tured me in M3!) and then the
Germans in 1!)42."
'How long were you in Czecho
slovakia now?"
"Long enough lo make it worth
while."
He grinned and waved his arm
at his suitcases.
American "What do you think
of Czechs?"
Pole "They work heller than
Poles but Ihey don't die as brave
ly."
"How is life in Poland now?"
"It's a lol belter since Gomulka
kicked the Russians out of War
saw. It's still not perfect but it
was terrible while Slalin was
iilivc."
"Have the Polish people heard
of the help the United Stales has
been giving Poland for the last 18
months?"
Yes. But it really isn't much
help. We have to pay it back with
interest. I know America has been
giving money to the world for
years and can't keep it up. But
Poles arc your friends. You should
help us now."
The Pole told wilh relish how
Wladyslaw Gomulka. once nearly
hot as a Titoist, regained lead
ership of the Polish Communist
party in Ihe October 1!)5K revolt.
Gomulka is a relish national
ist." he said. "That's why he is
so popular even though he is a
Communist. All real Poles are na
tinnalisls. They haled the Moscow
Pbles who came in with the Red
irmy's baggage and look over the
country.'
A waitress entered our compart
ment. The Pole ordeied another
round of vodka. The waitress
brought il. Luckily, this time the
glasses were smaller.
"Do dna."
Waitress "W here is Ihe
Krechman going?"
Pole "He is not French. He's
Wt'CI IN V'
Yf HOW Nl
ffV
rru. 0f a
NCI NCrt C9
CUV PUTUK
-r To put is
OC6
efn
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
CARRIER
I MONTH I M
MONTHS t .00
I VEAR 118.00
MAIL
I MONTH 1 SO
MONTHS 7.60
I TEAR 12 00
an American traveling through the
people's democracies."
Waitress (doubtfully) "He left
America to come here?"
Pole "He might even go to
Moscow."
The waitress grimaced, picked
up the breakfast dishes and left.
VH Mail ling
A veteran selling nis home and
GI mortgage should first contact
the Veterans Administration if he
wishes to be released from lia
bility to the government on his
GI loan.
Such a release protects the vet
eran in the event the new purch
aser defaults in payments, VA ex
plained. VA pointed out that a 1956 law
allows veterans to be released from
liability to the government, provid
ed the new purchaser meets credit
requirements and assumes the vet
eran's obligations to the govern
ment on the GI loan.
The new purchaser need not be
a veteran, VA said, and the gov
ernment's guaranty of the loan is
not altected by releasing the vet
eran from his liability.
In most states Ihe only cost of
obtaining the release is a small
fee, usually not more than S5,
tor a credit report on the pro
posed buyer, VA said.
Release of the veteran from li
ability to the government does not
automatically release him from li
ability to the lender.
However, VA will furnish the pro
spective buyer's credit report to the
lender, and otherwise assist any
veleran who wishes to seek his
lender's release.
VA makes no charge for (his
service, although the lender may
require Ihe payment of a nominal
fee for the processing of his re
lease. QllOlK
By United Press International
WASHINGTON Chairman
L. McClellan ID-Ark.) of the Sen
ate Rackets Committee, on the
use of the Filth Amendment:
'Converting the Fifth Amend
ment into a device to make a
mockery of the Senate or the
courts is something that needs to
be clarified. I know of no other
way to find out except to process
these cases and let the highest
court in the land rule."
CLEVELAND Thurgood Mar
shall, chief counsel of the Nation
al Assn. for the Advancement ol
Colored People, on integration in
the South:
State action in the South is
dead sot against us. Our answer
must be that without affirmative
action lo protect our rights by
either the executive or legislative
arm of the federal government,
we must and we shall continue
lo resort to the courts for re
dress."
LONDON - The Hon. Major
Henry Douglas, faiher of jazz
pianist Robin Douglas-Home
on indications the romance is over
between his son and Princess
Margarelha of Sweden:
Quite frankly, I'm fed up wilh
the whole bloody (liing. 1 think the
way this so-Ci.lled romance has
been handled is lunatic."
BEIRUT. Lebanon Rebel
leader Saeb Salam. in rejecting
President Camille Chamoun's of
fer to resign when his term ends
in Septemher and demanding his
removal: - ' -
"The struggle is continuing until
Chamoun goes. We are not pre
pared to leave Chamoun as presi
dent for one day."
AMES, Iowa Mrs. T. S
Mosncss, mother of Navy airman
Thomas R. Mosncss, on reports
that her son, released Thursday
hy Cuban rehcls, had enjoyed his
two weeks as a hostage:
Ho always enjoyed himsell
wherever he was. If there was
any way to get along with them
(the Cuban rebels' Tommy could
find il. I never was worried about
his safety."
DEL RIO. Tex. ('apt. Lloyd
Strot, public information ntticer
at Laughlin Air Force Base, on
the explosion in flight of two I
high altitude weather research jet
planes within 100 miles and
hours of each other:
"I think it is a coincidence
There is no correlation bct0cn
Ihe l'-2s at all."
STOCKHOLM il TP Twice
defeated United Stati presi
dential candidate Adlai Sleensoi
turned to thrive - elected Socialist
Premier Tagc Erlander at a state
banquet and asked:
"What is your secret lor gifting
elected soi many times?"
There was no record of Er
landers' rep.''.
They'll Do It Every
THE LDC4L CWZ CLOUTS
PRIZES FROM THE NEIGHBORHOOD!
BUSINESS FEOPLE"SO ONE
y c
yOU, MISS BENPOLEj
COUPSE AT THE KATZOFF
COH-QMT-J-LAU0S!
.n-
14V i
Faubus Asks
Court Opinion
ST. LOUIS (AP) Arkansas
Gov. Orval E. Fauhus is prepar
ing to ask the U.S. Supreme Court
lo review an injunction which
forced him to remove National
Guardsmen from Central High
School in Little Rock last fall
Attorneys for Faubus asked the
clerk of the Federal Court of Ap
peals here to prepare a record of
the case for that purpose. "We
are doing that," said Robert C.
Tucker, Ihe court clerk.
The injunction, which prohibits
Fauhus from interfering with inte
gration at the school, was granted
last fall by Federal District Judge
Ronald E. Davies. It subsequently
was approved by the Court of Ap
peals, which censured Faubus for
actions which, if permitted to
stand, Ihe Court said, could lead
only to "a complete breakdown of
government.
When the injunction was
granted Faubus withdrew Na
tional Guardsmen who had pre
vented nine Negro children from
enrolling. Rioting followed outside
the school and the federal govern
ment sent troops into Little Rock
to enforce the court order.
The Court of Appeals will con
duct a hearing in St. Louis Aug.
4 on another phase of complex liti
gation stemming from the Little
Rock situation.
That hearing will be on an or
der by Federal District Judge
Harry J. Lemley at Little Rock
suspending integration at the
school for 2'i years.
The three judges designated to
hear the appeal, brought by. the
National Assn. for the Advance
ment of Colored People, have in
dicated they will rule on it before
the fall school term begins. The
suspension order was requested by
the Little Rock school board.
New Pear Grade
Established
SACRAMENTO (AP) Four
canning grades for Bartlett pears
have been established by the
State Department of 'Agriculture
(or (he 11158 marketing season.
Established grades are first,
hail, second, and third.
The department said first and
hail grades are unrestricted as to
use and may be marketed or
delivered for the preparation of
any canned pear product.
Second and third grade Bart
letts afe restricted and may be
useri only tor special canned pear
products such as baby foods,
nectars and juices.
Fees of 85 cents a ton for
administration and inspection and
one dollar a ton for trade stimu
lalion and promotional activities
were recommended, the depart
ment said.
Man Prones Self
In Gutter To Die
NEW YORK (AP) A shabbily
dressed, heavily bearded man.
about 55. stepped slowly off a curb
in downtown Manhattan Saturdav
He slopped In the crosswalk,
looked around and laid down,
stretching out on the asphalt. It
was 2 a.m.
Seconds later, he was struck by
a taxi driven hy Benjamin Gold
stein of Queens and killed.
Two passcrsby told police they
had seen the man lie down in the
roadway before the cab hit him.
Goldstein was not held.
HUGE DISCOUNTS!!!
Btty Aaniu'i Mows M Hmjkxm oot Uto
two Executive Curs
1911 IPUW COCSAIt
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11th to 12th on Klairh Phone TU 2-2581
Evenings Phone TU 2-3793 or TU 2-0281
"For Bttttr Buys in Con & Truck i AUoys Sto Juck!"
Time
And spek'iwfi nc wot wcrmkm
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23, MO. V
UF Exploration In Fed
Of Killing Diseases Cited
The problem of meeting the
needs for research in Ihe fields
of heart, cancer and other forms
of killing diseases has been one
that the local chapter of United
Fund has been exolonng in recent
weeks.
Ralph Hemmcscn. president of
the Klamath County United Fund,
indicated that a special committee
appointed to study this problem is
expected to make its "report to
the United Fund Board of Direct
ors at its regular Monday noon
meeting at the Willard Hotel.
Hemmesch repeated a recent
statement by John A. Greene,
Cleveland, president of the United
Community Funds and Councils of
America, that some 2,200 united
community campaigns last year
raised a 'total of 412 million dol
lars to support local, state and
national health and welfare serv
ices.
Greene expressed the belief that
givers would support the new pro
gram of research on benail ot tne
whole man with generosity and
enthusiasm.
He w e 1 c o m e d the newly an
nounced Medical Research Pro-
Group Wants
Policy Change
SACRAMENTO (AP) The Cal
ifornia Water Commission wants
the federal government to make
a policy change whereby more
than one agency would be allowed
to build multi-purpose dams.
Commission Chairman (.lair
Hill Friday released a letter
written last month to the Federal
Budget Bureau asking lhat the
Corps of Engineers as well as the
Bureau ot Reclamation oe al
lowed to build such dams
The corps is presently restrict
ed to building dams in Lantor-
nia's Central Valley that are
exclusively for flood control.
Federal policy limits construc
tion of multi-purpose dams in the
valley to the Reclamation Bu
reau. Hill recommended in his letter
that the corps be allowed to con
struct multi-purpose dams when
they are intended primarily for
Hood control.
He said in his letler that the
commission believed the practice
of having only one agency build
multi-purpose projects has and
will continue to delay federal
water development in California."
Hill said the Budget Bureau has
indicated it will consider the
request.
CANINE HERO
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (API
King, a 4-year-old floppy-eared
beagle, is a hero and Mayor
u-.r,.M VraiA-ol will award the
dog a medal for saving the lives
of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Burn
and 14 of their 18 children last
Sni- 17 when a fire destroyed
their home. King's barking
awakened me'.ibers of the family
and they were able to get out
safely.
PROFESSIONAL
RODEO
KLAMATH FALLS
July 25-26-27
vw T4 - ml 1
fit
K iAi
i-wb
a IVi
By Jimmy Hatlo I
RATHS-
A
'fa
gram of the National Fund for
Medical Education as "another
strong weapon in the arsenal of
our medical research experts who
are in the front line trenches of
the fight against the crippling and
killing diseases afflicting man
kind.
Hemmesch pointed out that the
National Fund s Medical Research
Program would furnish local Unit
ed Fund and Community Chest
members an opportunity to
raise and allocate funds for med
ical research with confidence that
Ihe money will be used intelligent
ly, and effectively in attacking ba
sic health problems.
Un June 10 of this year, the lo
cal Board of Directors stated that
formation of such a program
this national effort was imperative
in ngnt oi the news that the Amer
ican Cancer Society withdrew from
the local United Fund.
Hemmesch also pointed oift it
was still his belief that the people
oi isiamatn County are vitally in
tcrested in spearheading the dread
cd cancer research program
well as other killing diseases, but
that they wish to accomplish this
end by one federated means of
giving as they have done in the
past through the United Fund.
I m sure that the committee
we've appointed will come up with
a workable answer," Hemmesch
replied when asked about the
course to be taken hy the Klam
am county United Fund.
AMERICAN BAPTIST
CHURCH
Mnsffl Bnnm. AlUmont ir. HI ft
SftOO tooth tb
Sunday Services 11 a.m.
Wake
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LUCAS FURNITURE
195 E. Main
Parking Survey
Report Snagged
An off-street parking survey re
port, scheduled to be heard at
the regular council meeting Mon
day, July 14, Ins been postponed.
Mayor Lawrence Slater reported
that the survey report being con
ducted and written hy D. Jack
u s t m a n. consulting engineer
from Sacramento, has not yet been
received by the council.
The survey was conducted at the
request of a group of merchants
who have instigated plans to form
an off-street parking district. Funds
for Ihe survey are being taken
from parking meter monies that
have been set aside for this pur
pose by the city council.
Slater stated that no definite dais
has now been set for the public
hearing on the report. It will he
necessary, he pointed out. for the
council to have an opportunity to
look the report over before it i$
up for discussion, but that as soon
as it is available, a dale win be
set for the public hearing.
EVER
STOPPED
AT A
FEEDING
STATION?
A feeding station fsn't a rs-"
taurant it's the difference;
between life and death. Feed
ing stations in Korea are opt
erated by the Overseas Aid
Programs of America's great
faiths. They are typical of the
on-tbe-sTot help given to des
titute people all over the.
world through the relief pro
grams of your faith Protes
tant, Catholic or Jewish. It's
a wonderful feeling to know
you have helped people who
want to help themselves. How
can they face hardships on.
empty stomachs? Ycmr help
is needed. Please continue to
support your faith's over-
PROTESTANT v
Sha'- r," Surnnra Annt"
CATHOLIC
Bishops' Clofhlnq Cotlectlofi
JEWISH
UJA Rescue Fund
Pnbliiihedo a miblretmncitb
nneration. vitk Th Advertising
Council avd ih Newspaper Ad
vertising Execittivet Association
up
fcx lariat $7t.St
wet ceraftctc' tPV tljft
M Taliij Co. in I cab a ran rv
i,ecHe lapr n dQ
Phone TU 4-3134
I