Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 13, 1958, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
MONDAY. OCTOBER K, 1958
By jimmy Hatlo
CHURCHILL ON RIVIERA
NICE, France (UPD Sir Win.
s-ton Churchill was back on th
Riviera today, resuming his vaca
tion after a visit to England.
They'll Do It Every Time
HI6H-CUJSS EXECUTIVES!
DIVE FOR P4PEka in a
FRANK JENKINS
Editor
BILL JENKINS
Managing Editor
FLOYD WYNNE
City Editor
MAURICE MILLER
Circulation Mgr
Ph TU 4-4752
Subscription Rates
CARRIER
l MONTH . t 1,50
6 MONTHS $ 9.00
I YEAR $18.00
MAIL "
I MONTH' $ 1.50
S MONTHS $ 8,50
1 YEAR . $15.00
LITTER B4SKfcT
BOBBIN FOR APPL-t-S"
Entered as second class matter at the post office at Klamath Falls.
Ore. on August 20. 1906, under act of Congress. March 8. 1879
SERVICES:
ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS
AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
Serving Southern Oregon And Northern California
f-nrv
PAGE SIX
V 5lT DON'T DO TO GET IN
.iveu.- wB wi ZZ&Z E4RLV TO HEAD YOUR
L?-t??MJN.IJ7t r2K fidPER.'THOSETW)
MTOBEB&DOME MOOTERS J
STUMBLES IN. X tmTsTk ivE'REV
oc s?7d pJSfTo sports SEC-nOM running a pr-
M, P VMLLV4,NEWT-? I FREE PUBLIC -CX
MLLV1, 5 REDlNC) T over TMEV X
I A GUYS SHOULDER IN C 3 80UGMTONE
l I THE SUBvvy. BUT ME 7FI?OMThlE PAPER
P - GOT OPP BEFORE X BOYOMCE AMDTRIED
I mff A THROUGH-- (TO GET THEIR MONEV
P I BACK AFTER THEyWeBE
UTrti Tin (T1 1ssr3Btf
"-0 I PIXED'EM
V VESTERD4V I
3NE GAVE 'EM A wEEK-1-.
OLD RIPER-
JEV VT-T TC-
ivy v M
Henry Sciiioii
By FLOYD L. WYNNE
What is the stature of a man?
Is it his mind, his body, his ca
pacity for joy and sorrow, love
and hate?
Is it the friends who mourn when
his sojourn through this vale has
ended?
Is it the loved ones of his seed
that he leaves behind?
Is it his lands, his money, his
possessions?
Is it the thinss he said, the things
h9 didn't say?
Is it the things be did, or did
not do?
Or is it the imprint of all these
combined that his passing has left
for those who follow?
All of these things measure the
stature of a man?
All of these measuce well the
stature of Henry Sctnon.
Hank spent 48 years of his life
in Klamath County, coming here
at the age of 2li.
Half of those 48 years were spent
in service dedicated to making the
world a better place to live. Half
of those years were spent unsel
fishly, happily in the service of
his community in the State Leg
islalure.
Here, as everywhere, Hank
built a solid reputation as a man
who weighed all things carefully
and well for ils c licet on all the
people, not the few,
He scorned parly lines and Tor
him the only parly was the parly
of the people. In countless ways,
Henry helped mold the Klamath
County of today from the clay of
yesterday.
He was a man who knew the
joy of a job well done. He knew
the satisfaction of accomplishment,
savored the role of pioneer in sev
eral liclds, and rejoiced in the
friendship of his fcllowman.
For him, lile was fruitful and
full.
His passing leaves sorrow and
sadness. He served his community
his fellowmen faithfully and well.
It is given In all men to die.
It is given only to a giltcd few
to leave behind them an indelible
legacy that will continue to shape
the dreams and the destiny ot the
community in which those gifted
few built their lives deed by deed,
day by day.
No greater tribute can be said
than that those who knew Henry
Semon were far richer for thai
experience.
lieu III IV'iijiII.v
Ry FLORENCE JENKINS
Most ol us think we have strong
cr convictions than we actually
have.
The volers of Oregon arc going
lo he asked to express an opinion
on one very vilnl issue at the
November 4 general election. That
issue is presented as an amend
ment to the state constitution, re
pealing the death penally in this
stale.
In April, 1!IS7, the Oregon Legis
lature voted to prefer this question
to the proplo of the state.
The issue is not in dispute lie
tween the two candidates for gov
ernor and seems to have received
very little political attention.
A state committee, seeking the
passage of the amendment, has
been lorined in Portland. The
growing list of sponsors contains
names uf leaders in religious, edu
cational and oilier professional
fields who are willing lo have their
names associated with a move
ment about which (hey leel deeply.
Their tact sheet relates that i in
state of Oregon abolished capital
punishment in Oregon in l!H and
restored it in 1920. Fifly-seu-n exe
cutions lor minder have taken
place in Oregon since l:io.l.
Under the present law, ilu
crimes of lirst degree murder and
treason are punishable by death
in Oregon. If t he repeal amend
ment passes, Ils proponents say
the death penalty may slill be in
voked in casei of murders com
mitted by persons serving life sen
tence and lor treason. First degree
murder would be punished by life
imprisonment.
Repeal of the death penalty
would set the dale ol possible
paiole lor a person convicted ol
minder alter a minimum of lilteen
years. At present, no one seising
a hie sentence lor minder is eli
gible lor paiole until seven years
have been served. The average
actual lime served has been esti
mated at about twelve years under
the present law.
One statement in the fact sheet
stands out:
"Not one murderer released on
parole in Oregon has been recom
mitted for a crime of violence."
How ling
Hy SAUL I'F.TT
NEW MIRK (APi-1 have Ink
en up bowling.
I do not particulaily like howl
ing. but my boss docs. So I haw
ta)en iv bowling,
jjyjrtk t Celt UC-.-A ,.!!
ot that creeping paralysis ol
American independence known as
togetherness. In bowling, the dis
ease is carried to the ultimate
Friends bowl together. Enemies
bowl together. Management and
labor bowl together.
Remember when we were a na
tion of individualists? When a man
took up a sport to get away from
it all and to refuel his soul in the
flories of nature? When he went
olf, like a man, to sit on the bank
of a stream, to fish, to dream, to
find himself, to find a perspective
about the people he was escaping
his wife, his kids, his boss.
Now we all bowl together. And
this is called healthful exercise,
exhilarating and relaxing. We
bowl in a sweaty smoke-filled
room, where there is no natural
light, no natural air, and you have
a grand view of a wall. Relaxing?
11 has all the serenity of a shoot
ing gallery.
It brings out the worst in people.
The women wear toreador
pants. This tends to narrow them
on the top and widen them in the
middle, with a Freudian subcon
scious wish to look like bowling
pins.
The men wear slocks and
frown. I almost never saw a bowl
cr who wasn't frowning. They
lake the game that seriously. The
good ones even after a strike
come back lo the bench frowning
lo let the rest of the team know
they are continually aware of
I heir responsibility to be good.
The bad bowlers frown under the
weight of their enormous guilt
complex; they are Idling their
Icam down, which in some cases
can mean Iheir department or the
whole company they're working
for.
And llius vice president and sec
retary, man and wite, boss and
slave find yet another bond in to
gethernessulcers.
You see the worst physical tor
tures in howling alleys, especially
as the bowler tries to keep from
tottering over the foul line. He
ties himself up in the air like Ni
jinsky in a ballet ot demented an
chovies. And then the poor tool
falls over the foul line, and bells
ring, and red lights flash, and
you'd think the FBI had just
nabbed Khrushchev slipping ba
nana peels on the launching pad
at Cape Canaveral.
You see the worst menial tor
tures in bowling alleys. An 180
howler bowls Oil, and he blames it
on the fact that a woman three
alleys away was whispering, lie
heard her in all that noise. Or he
blames it on light shoes, dust on
the ball, or a speck of towel lint
on Hie floor.
Another man throws his ball im
mediately into the sutler a wood
en ditch from which there is no
return. His ball siarls there, and
it ends there in the gutter and
he has no one to blame hut him
self. But he comes back to the
bench convinced he was robbed.
All of us bowlers are completely
miserable. Bui we do have our togetherness.
taste buds of the master. Mozart
Toscanini and Spike Jones have
been known to treat an overdone
breast of partridge with the scorn
reserved for a squeaky chair be
neath the first violin.
Although carrier class divas
have disappeared from the stage
of the Metropolitan and today's
reigning prima donnas prepare
for a concert by trilling off a few
pounds at the nearest slender
izing salon, good eating without
recourse to calorie counting has
not gone out of fashion in the mu
sic world.
Tenor James Melton, for in
stance, when not fiddling with old
cars, loves to lay in a cargo of
risotto Melton, a sautecd smorgas
bord compounded of parmesan
cheese, chicken broth, long-grain
rice, creamy butter and a pinch
of saffron.
Rise Stevens, certainly one of
the comcliest Carmens in opera
history, goes straight from Bizet's
bullring to a bout with szegediner
gulyas, an Austrian sauerkraut
dish that starts out with two
pounds of beef, veal and pork and
goes up the supermarket scale
from there.
Pianist Eugene List works off
keyboard tensions over a steam
ing platler of barbecued spare
ribs Vcrneda; basso Giorgio Tozzi
hits bottom with a ballast of
spaghetti alia Carbonara. Zino
Fracescalti still finds room under
his chin for the violin afler run
ning through several takes of
ratatouillc Nicoise, a gourmet's
double concerto for eggplant and
zucchini. -
I he Women's Assn. of the
Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra,
which frequently caters to the cul
inary wants of wanderers in the
bralwursl belt, recently hegan col-
lecnng lavorne recipes ol the
world's great musicians, just in
case any of them dropped in un
announced with a famished sym
phony orchestra.
The result is "Encore," an un
usual cookbook published this
monlh hy Random House and il
lustrated with pen drawings by
Antal Dnrati, conductor of the
Minneapolis Symphony.
Food and Music
By HUGH A. MULLIGAN
NEW YORK iAP)-I( music he
the lood ol love, as Shakespeare
supposed, then lood has ever re-
mHiincd the love of musicians.
At least a dozen restaurants in
New York mark the spot where
Enrico Caruso refueled alter a
perlormance Willi a brace of
brook trout paysanne washed
down with a tew goblets ot
dusty Chahlis and a loam-crested
schooner or two of old Duesscl-
doi-l.
I'aderewski, we are 1 old, al
ways included a personal chef in
his entourage to orchestrate a
menu helilting the well-altuned
OlM'silV
Ry PATRICIA McCORMACK
United Press International
NEW YORK (UPD-More and
more Americans arc chomping
happily along the road to obesity.
There is a simple reason, a
psychologist says the cruel
world has denied them the chance
o manipulate love, career or stat
us In other vital things to Iheir ab
solute liking.
And the psychologist who has
documented this explanation adds:
"The persons who overeat des
perately need to have ultimate
conlrol over their environment.
They are the positive kind of hu
man being.
"Eating is the only part of the
environment in which they can be
absolute dictators. They don't need
(be cooperation of other persons
lo gain satisfaction. And they can
turn it on or olf at will."
Psychologist Paul Fine bases
these observations on a continuing
probe into the nation's caling hab
its.
The study, by the Center For
Research In Marketing, a motiva
tional research factory in Peeks
kill. New York, has been in prog
ress for a year. Tile 4IKI subjects
being studied represent a scientitic
cross-section ol the nation.
That is. they are white collar,
blue collar, male, female, old,
middle-aged, adolescent and pint
sized human beings subjected to
the stresses and strains ol-living.
The need to control something
by yourself is staggering, appar
enllv. Based on preliminary find-
ings, Fine believes that the excess
poundage problem, like the na
tional deficit, will grow and grow
When you ask these plump per
sons to go on a diet, it's akin t
ordering an absolute monarch off
the throne. Fine suggested, add
ing:
"They don't want lo be told that
they must surrender their right to
eat what they want, when they
want, and in whatever quantity
suits them.
Going on a diet means, he ex
plained, that these persons must
become passive by putting the in
strument lor their satisfaction in
the hands of someone else a doc
tor, a nutritionist, a nagging wife,
a bossy husband.
"Oh, these people go on diet:
now and then," he said, "but it
only lasts so long. They may lose
weight, but when the need to as
sert can no longer be quieted, they
say 'to heck with you' and start
eating again."
The exception lo this comes
when dieting creates a new situa
tion in which the person is given
a chance to easily achieve success
and gratification.
As an example of the latter
Fine cited adolescent girls who
were unpopular with boys and oth
er schoolmates because of plump
ness.
When the pounds came off, they
tended to stay off if the new figure
made for success in manipulating
the environment.
Pogo
howcanowi.. Y oorr V
AN'AU., TAK SO JL 6p HOW L
' tfCNVA 6AV T05AV 1 FRIPAV NOW M3U
, IS FBIOAV 1 HB A. sT unit; MACe 6 I
f thirteenth foubwhou I eciser
vMiC-l COMB5 I W5 OM I WxAMvVA
CHAMOHMYk V t7WV A90uT. y
l TMI5 MONTH. - '
Leasing Policy
By SAM DAWSON
AP Business News Analyst
NEW YORK AP) Leasing
equipment for a factory or store
instead of buying outright has won
new adherents in the recession
and today is reported more ap
pealing than ever to businessmen
eyeing the recovery under way
It is the latest comer to this
field of business management
joining Ihe better known forms of
leasing cars, trucks or real estate
Tax laws have given leasing one
of ils biggest boosts. But the rale
at which automation and scientific
research have made older machin
ery obsolescent is tempting sti
more companies to look into the
leasing method of financing the
retooling of plants with expensive
but competitive machinery.
Long-term equipment leasing
ifor three years or morel has
grown since 1950 and is now esli
mated to be a 106 million dollai
a year business. The present trend
in business planning leads leas
ing's friends lo predict it will
rcacn me Dillion dollar a year
mark within five years.
Whole plants, or divisions or de
partments are included in the ac
tivity as well as special installa
tions in existing setups.
The tax laws enter in because
high rales on company-owned
equipment cut down the cost of
leasing. Tax depreciation sched
ules also mean that in this fast-
paced age machinery may go oh
solete beiore it can he written off
the books. To buy Ihe new equip
ment to meet competition, the
treasurer must dig up new work
ing capital and this has stayed
pretty tight lor most companies
since the war.
While total net working capita
has climbed lo a record IIS-1 hil
lion dollars in the latest available
report, the ratio of cash, govern
ment securities and receivables to
current debt runs at $1.20 to $1
At the end ol the war the working
capital ratio was $1.55 to $1.
To see what business thinking
was in this Held. I he Foundation
for .Management Research. Chica
go, queried 1,837 companies from
coast to coast. These include 44
lines of manufacturing, wholesale
and retail firms, with total gross
assets ot 400 million dollars. Indi
vidual annual sales of the com
panies range from $250,000 lo a
billion dollars.
The survey specifically exclud
ed cars, trucks and real eslalr
and any equipment leasing for less
than three years.
The foundation reports to the
United States Leasing Corp., San
Francisco, that in 11)50 only 17 of
the 1.837 companies were leasing
some equipment. By last year 8!
were leasing equipment and 71 of
these were leasing equipmeni
worlh $30,000 or more.
The future looks brighter. The
foundation says 833. or 43 per
cent, reported they are consider
mg leasing in lulure. with 481'.
planning to do so within five years
About half plan to lease equip
ment valued at more than S100.
000.
The San Francisco firm inter
prets the survey to mean tha
while now about 2 per cent ot tola!
production equipment is on a long
term lease, within anolher tm
years 10 ptr cent of it w ill he.
The mam reason, it thinks, is
that industry is more eager lo pre
serve liquid working capilal an
more loathe lo raise capital b
diluting present ownership
through the sale of more slock.
Witching the tigmt
w4llets do their d4ily
mooch on the guys who
4CTUlLLy Buy A RIPER---;
TWO OHEdT MiNUi y. yj
4321 WJCCJINijTON 4VE,, .y7
vJERRV WELSH
8i9 E.de Soto,
ST. LJUiS.K'O.
in
'Big Foot' Tale
Termed Not New
MOUNT SHASTA .1. O. McKin
ney, now living in Mount Shasta,
who operated a fishing lodge near
Weitchpec 25 years ago, states that
the belief in a supernatural being
inhahiling the area south of Klam
ath River, and east from Hoopa
is not new. The Indians told of
and described it as
But they never rr.cn-
this 'animal
a wild man.
tioned big feet.
Tom Peters, full blooded Klam
ath River Indian, who was em
ployed as boat-man at the lodge,
declared it was unsafe to venture
away Irom the river's south shore
anywhere between Weitchpec and
Orleans.
Clear Creek, a small tributary
of the Klamath flowing into it
from the south, opposite the fish
ing lodge, was a trout stream
from which a limit of 'half pound
ers' could he taken easily. No In
dian would venture along its
banks, and the whites who did,
were warned that such was dangerous.
The
Welcome Wagon
Hostess
Will Knock on Your Door
with Gifts & Greetings
from Friendly Business,
Neighbors and Your
Civic and Social
Welfare Leaders
On the occasion of:
The Birth of a Baby
Engagement
Announcements
Arrival of Newcomers to
Klamath Falls
No cost or oblinationl
Phone TU 2-0834 r
Science Shrinks Piles
New Way Without Surgery
Stops Itch Relieves Pain
astonishing statements tike "Piles
have ceased to be a problem!"
The secret is a new healinjr suh
stance ( Bio-Dyne ) discovery of
a world-famous research institute.
This substance is now available
in mippnsitory or ointment form
under the name Preparation H.
At yotir druggist. Money back
guarantee.
Rr. U.S. Pat. Off.
New York, N. Y. (Special) For the
first time science has found a new
healinjr substance with the aston
ishing ability to shrink hemor
rhoids, stop itchinp, and relieve
pam without surgery.
In case after case, while gently
relieving pain, actual reduction
(shrinkage) took place.
Most amazing of all results were
so thorough that sufferers mode
Get Your Tickets in! You May Win the Signal Oil
FREE HOUSE TRAILER!
DRAWING
Wed., Oct. 15th 7:30 P.M.
at STONE'S SIGNAL SERVICE
9th and Pine
FREE! 50 Gallons of Gas!
No need to be present to win but if winner is
present, he will receive a Bonus Gift of 50 Gallons of
Gas FREE!
FREE COFFEE and DONUTS!
&Sttsms&
9th & Pine
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT 'TIL 9 P.M.
Ph.TU 4-3188
WHEN ALL AMERICA SHOPS AND SAVES! 10 DAYS ONLY!
SIGNATURE
zig-zag
automatic desk
sewing machine
It's a handsome
desk for every de
cor. Have it in ma
hogany, walnut or
limed oak finish.
It'i a complete
tewing center
with lots of table
room for sewing,
room for supplies.
$5 DOWN
Sews 1400 fancy stitches
without ottachments
Darns, mends, buttonholes
Sewing is easier with a Signature.
Seven jewel cams give automatic
sewing skill. Touch a push button,
and you can reverse to mend, darn
or backtack. Come in and see why
we say, "Even an 8-year-old can
sew on a Signature I"
No monthly
payments
'til Feb.
39
SAVE 20! Wards Deluxe canister cleaner
with DEEP-DOWN cleaning power
Q O Free-wheeling, 3-wheel.d canister glides easily
J SJ over rwgs, bore floors. You get self-storing reel-
$4 Down away cord, powerful LH.P. motor, disposable
dust bags. Complete with 7 attachments.
IBs
MHJIIfl III ! llllHyM I.',
.... i rT-rr-iir ,-T.-irnrn i , , i , ,tl ,