O o PAGE fiA HERALD AND nWs. Klamath Fall s. Ore. O Thtirsrlav, Nov. 12. 1953 COOKIE ADVICE WASHINGTON (L'PD - A,. They'll Do It Every Time ("..minncBJV.IHE TALE ucau-t SHOWED ihur J. Goldberg, chief counsel .1 uiM A R4IR OP TOPPER) 13 UN fkjum ,cr jr 1 IMOW A GUV the United Stcelworkers I'nion, AIlD i-reri-r iivCtr Dd tt CUPF LINKS THE 1 nrv,p AAvE ME- ate at a tninese restaurant Saturday after the Supreme Court rejected his challenge of a Tali. WITH TWOHtaui- BEING THfcJi'fc ItM ytV 1 TWENTY-FIVE YEARS.l&EV, HE KMOWS TWINS t-iE &AIO HE WON , THE SAME KIND IN FRANK JENKINS Editor BILL JENKINS Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE City Editor MAURICE MILLER Circulation Mgr Ph. TU 4-4752 . Subscription Rates WITH THhTfct Entered as second class matter' at the post of I ice at Klamath Falls. Ore., on August 20. 1006. under art ol Congress. March 8. 1879 SERVICES: ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Serving Southern Oregon And Northern California CAJUUER I MONTH $ 1.50 6 MONTHS t 9.00 I YEAR $18.00 MAIL I MONTH $ 1.50 6 MONTHS $ 8.50 I YEAR . 115.00 (5IVfc US STOCK IN ihc APIECB." A SHOOTIN' j Hartley back-lo-work injunction. COMrflNY ANU A IKIf - AQOUHD THE WORLD-I ucrtDvmiDnirrDT lf Inside his lortune fookie wai THE GOLD '"T.iuovC TUP this advice: "Govern yourself ae. WATCH THE coo RPiWft ccucoiwrf? Pay WID" DOCTTV CUALvjUT 1MTJVV cordingly." uc UCVPI3 RPPN WITH r TUfc HfcU MAN Ul- yuui AW OUTFIT LON6 ENOUGH THERE TWENTY- FIVE vEcy WEU- y- , TO DENT HIS StAl wjshiu"-. Some Of The Things TO SEE Ar The Home Mart By FILL JENKINS The other day I was crying the blues, the shivering blues, about a recent hunting trip. Well, yesterday we had a differ ent type entirely. Didn't hardly know how to go about it. It was dry. It wa.; warm. 1 didn't get any holes in my waders. In fact didn't wear waders at all, just light hunting boots, a pair of Levis end a light shirt. We were hunting the grain stub ble south of Williamson Hivcr. The hunt started just right. Right at the end of the lane was a big sign that said "You are welcome tc walk in and hunt." That is the sort of thing that makes one feel good right off the bat. I'll lake the rci-ponsibilily of speaking for the sportsmen in saying thanks to the Henzels (or the privilege. Walked out a little way, John Henderson. Bob Nnrris, the game management agent, and myself, and put out a small set of goose and duck decoys. The sun beat down warmly. A band of sheep, at least several of them belled, wandered around ner vously in the distance, their bells rounding sort of slorybookish. Mt. Pitt loomed up black and clean against the summer sky. An occasional band of swans drifted over, their thin, reedy tries clearly audible long before you could pick out the big birds against the blue sky. Jet planes, lots of them, were cutting didoes all ocr the sky and leaving big white vapor trails behind them. An occasional snatch of goose song drifted in from the lake. It looked like a good day. On the way up (he lake had been as smooth as glass and almost black with birds. Literally. I have never teen that many birds in all the years I have been hunting and traveling along Upper Klamath Lake. They were (here by (he hundreds of thousands. And all the way. It looked good. We lay there in the stubble, halt asleep, waitin for the big flight. Along about 4 o'clock it started with one band swinging in over the licld but way out of range. A quiet spell and then another little (lurry of ducks, mostly pintails. Nothing 1 o w enough to shoot hut lots of fun In watch. And to listen to. There is no sound in liie world as thrilling as the sound of swift wings in the air as a hand of good ducks go shooshing by. By four thirty, twenty five min utes short of quitting time, the birds were lifting off the lake in tremendous rafts and skeining the tky with long strings of birds in search of feed. They came off in big bands, broke off into smaller groups and flew in all directions. They also lilted quite a way oft the lake before (hey leveled out. One band of several hundred swirled over our field for 10 min utes, never going down, never com ing over a gunner, but just, nor vously looking the situation over. Shortly after the (light started Tlcndersoii knocked a speck out o( the sky, a big, fat bird. That wus the kill for the day. Nnrris was not managing the game at close range By quitting lime the air was filled with ducks. By 20 minutes after quilting time the birds were down in the grain and feeding. All in all it was a lovely day We didn't come home loaded down with ducks nnd geese hut we had a swell day in the field. And that Is the ultimate reward of the sportsman, not the daily hag There is a good deal of Alexander rope in all hunters. Cope, you remember, was the fellow who said in his Essay On Man that "Hope springs eternal in the hu man breast: Man never is, but always to be. blest." Which is about as good as de tciiption of a sportsman hunter as I know. He knows (hat tomorrow will he better, that be will be blessed with a lower Might. Anyway, it was tun. All hunting trips are fun. I wish 1 could figure out a way to make a living hunt ing. Or (ly fishing. Incidentally, that speck that Henderson shot was his Iirst. He had killed honkers and rarklprs but never a white fronted one. Now he II find nut what real goose eal ing is. TwIsIimI Word By FLORENCE JENKINS There is an old shaggy dog story about a man from the British Isles who came lo the United Slates on his first visit. He expressed admiration lor the electronic developments, the vast factories and assembly line auto mobile production. He was shown the rolling plains with undulating dielda of grain. Finally, he showed particular in trrest in a big canning plant where ripe fruit was being processed. He laughed heartily when his guide made a funnie about American abundance, in these words: "We eat what we can and what w e can' eat we can." Back in his native England, the returned visitor thought to enliven his account of the unusual things he had seen by repeating the story. His version was this: "They ate what they could and what they couldn't eat they preserved." With a red lace w e observe I hat the same lack of communication can exist right here. We made a Hat .statement In print not too long ago that poison ivy would kill mice in pianos. It came about very simply and resulted in considerable hilar ity in at least two Klamath Falls households. In the conversation of our two friends, undoubtedly it was slated that the piano tuner had used poi son oats which became poison oak without any trouble at all which came out in print poison ivy, be cause to the layman, is there a difference? Oats, oats, oats, oalsl By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON tAP) French President Charles do Gaulle, iron willed at (i8, acts like a man de Icrmined, if he has to. to take over the leadership of the West. lie has already asserted a lot ol it. - This week the Frenchman, so proud he dislikes using reading glasses in public, dictated to his Western partners and the Soviet Union the time and conditions for a summit conference. At an extraordinary news con ference De Gaulle, who heads a second-rate power but persists in thinking of it in terms of gran deur, put on an amazing show ol memory, calmness and strength. British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's attitude toward a summit meeting has been: The sooner the better. President El senhower and Premier Niki- ta Khrushchev have seemed to lavor such a meeting sooner rath er than later. Bui De Gaulle, after taking over a sagging France and giving it more stability than It has had since World War II, decided by himself that haste was unwise. He even put a stiff "if" on any sum mit conference al all. Before there's a summit, he said, he must meet with Khrush chev in March: there must he an improvement in the international climate and the Western partners must be agreed on how to deal with Khrushchev. And. just to be sure, he told senhower and Macmillan his pro-summit get-together with them in December should he fol lowed by another alter he talks wilh Khrushchev in March. This is only part of his state ments at the news conference. They ranged from pensions for French veterans of World War I lo a prediction the Chinese Com munists would ultimately be their Soviet friends' greatest peril. Allogelher the text of his news conference took up a solid news paper page. In the end De Gaulle may have proved extremely wise in insisting upon complete preparations for the summit. Otherwise, he warned, (he summit may turn into disaster. B. J. Cutler, the New York Her aid Tribune's Paris reporter who attended the news conlerencc, said that because De Gaulle does not want to use reading glasses in puhlic. he memorized his 14 minute opening statement lo the 7(H) correspondents invited to hear him and ask questions. He also memorized 45 minutes o( statistic packed answers to questions he had anticipated. It was a fantastic memory feat, as you will have SHORT RIBS I P.iXT MCJ ws I TRV TO HAVg 1U S.1 MWV fVSt'iJ (A 0CVD TIME, MAR. J "TTfitFAa-iT ..i, I TlrfTiy 'w", " I o - ' 1 noticed if you read the text. What De Gaulle said, and the way he said it, had a sweep, a nobility, and an absolute kind of articulatencss which this writer has not seen in the text of a news conference by the head of any government in years. The use of the word exlraordi nary to describe the news conlcr ence was justified by the word picture of it given by Crosby N'oyes, writing from Paris lor the Washington Evening Star. It was held in the great hall of Elysce Palace with its fantastic gingerbread ceiling, crystal chan dehors, and gobelin tapestries, lie said. The 700 invited newsmen settled themselves on gilt Louis XV chairs with pink seats. Most of the diplomatic and lit crary world was there as were members of the President's house hold and the Cabinet. Exactly on time the gold bro cade curtains parted, . De Gaulle strode in, with no stalf and carry ing no papers. He gestured the audience to sit down. Noyes contrasted De Gaulle's idea of a news conference with that of some Western political leaders. There's no question who is in control." he said. "For Do Gaulle it is simply an opportunity to say exactly what he wants to say with the enormous precision of a man who has memorized the answers down to the last detail." C.-ipii'ol Aolcs By MERR1MAX SMITH L'PI While House Reporter WASHINGTON (UPIl Backstairs at the White House: The staff of President Eisen hower is well aware that during Ins forthcoming 20,000-mile trip to Asia and other points, some areas of the world will be ex posed for the Iirst time to one of the truly unusual aspects of democracy, American style, in operation the White House re porters and photographers. These men and women are spe cialists in their work and they do not always endear themselves lo people in strange lands who simply cannot understand why a world leader of presidential sta lure would suffer himself lo be questioned in public by common ers. Eisenhower held an open press conference in Bonn, Germany ast August and the German re porters were highly reluctant lo ask questions, even alter the President slopped in the middle of (he conference and invited the Germans to speak up. Only two or three of Ihem did so, and then quite uneasily. On the forthcoming trip, Eisen hower may be moving so rapidly as to rule out press conferences llnng the way. He'll have more ime in India than in any other place, but there is as yet no in dication of a press conference in New Delhi. The people of Asia India, Pak istan and Afghanistan may find it hard to understand when the Washington reporters who work with press secretary Jim Hagcrly day in and day out question him rather penetratingly. In London last September, the British re porters some of them, al any rate commented in print on the cheek of the American reporters in addressing Hagcrly to his face a.- "Jim." Hagcrly nnd a group of White House staff members are over in the Mediterranean area today making a planning visit at everv slop to be covered by the Presi dent on his trip. In every coun try visited thus far by the Presi dent. Hagcrly always has seen to it that at least one carload of reporters travels within two or three car lengths of the Presi (Kin s limousine, particularly in processions. By Frank O'Neal In this way the reporters In the "pool" car can hear and sec crowd reaction to the President Later they report to their col leagues who must proceed in other vehicles nearer the rear ol the motorcade. The British reporters last sum iiier were utterly astonished by this arrangement. British oflicial dom from the Crown on down has a haughty attitude toward mosi newsmen and will not permit these men to clutter up their pub lie appearances. French officials felt much the same way last summer until they saw the Amer ican system in ' operation. The British and French reporter: luved the idea. Even in the United States, many average American citizens take their daily newspapers I or granted. They want their news Iresh, accurate and up-to-date Rut as spectators, they frequent ly have difficulty in understand ing why a Washington reporter races to a telephone to transmit something the President said or did. The loud American cry for tel ephones and telegraph wires will ring out Irnm Borne to New Delhi next month and invariably, the local residents will wonder why the crazy Americans are in such a hurry. All across America, millions oi citizens will know within minutes by newspaper, radio or television. what the President saw, what he said and what he did. And they'll accept it as a matter of course The news from Afghanistan might he a mite slow in getting out. however. There the long distance telephone to London operates only on Tuesday, Thursday and Satur day, and Eisenhower will be there on a Wednesday. Vols Jliiil Hatf Senior citizens can solve many of their physical and mental prob lems with "old-fashioned" applied psychology, a Veterans Adminis tration doctor believes. Still active in medicine after a career of 45 years as a physici an. Dr. Charles M. Pearce can speak from both professional and personal experience. Now 73, he continues past retirement age, by special appointment, as chief of the outpatient service of the Dal las. Texas, VA Hospital.- Many oldsters, he says, fail to realize that aging has certain in cvilable consequences. 'They try to do too much or too lilllc," he points out. "The trick is lo have a realistic appraisal of your physical condition and plan your life accordingly." Dr. Pearce1 believes that physi cians can help reduce the frustra tions of older persons by teaching them all they can comprehend about their illness or disability. Almost anyone can live wilh himself once he knows the truth and is convinced that life can he worth living with only reasonable adjustments," the VA doctor says In addition to his regular ad ministrative duties, Dr. Pearce personally interviews and pre scribes (or patients at the Dallas VA Hospital. Those with emotion- nl problems, tuberculosis, heart disease, and many other chronic ailments usually can benefit great ly Horn discussion of Ihcir prob lems, he says. However, he admits that one chronic disabilily of the aged arthritis, is most frustrating. In his earlier days as a physi cian, soon alter World War 1, Dr I'earcc was a country doctor in Oklahoma, where he often had to visit patients in a wagon pulled by four mules to get through snow drifts and deep mud. He still goes hack lo Calumet. Oklahoma, to visit among the oldlimers. Mm Alumnae United Press International Today is Thursday, Nov. 12. Ihc Sltith day of the year, with 4!i more days in 1159. The moon is approaching its full phase. The morning star is Venus. The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn. On this date in history: In 18K. Dr. Sun Yat-sen, found- e,- and Iirst president nt the Chinese Repiihlic was born. In lO.'O. Judge Kenesaw Moun tain Itndis was appointed the first so-called "czar" of baseball. In ID27, Joseph Stalin became the undisputed dictator of Rus sia's Communist Tarty with (he expulsion o( one of the party's founders. I.eon Trotsky. In 1941, stiff Russian resistance stopped i the march of Nazi soldiers at the outskirts of iMos- cow. In 1948, an 11-nation tribunal In tapan sentenced former Premier T010 to death by hanging. A thought for today: American maj) of letters Ralph Waldo Emer son said: "Every hero becomes a bore at last."-. Family Of 4 Found Dead; Termed Murder, Suicide PEBBLE BEACH. Calif. AP A little girl thought her neigh bors' pets looked hungry. She and her father investigated and found a family of lour dead. The coroner calls it a triple murder and sui cide. Dead in their beds, wearing night clothes were Bette Lavine Gardner, 33, and her daughters, Randy Lee, 12, and Diane, 8. Each had been hit on the head with a two-pound sledge hammer. At the' foot of Mrs. Gardner's bed was her husband, Charles Richard Gardner, 38, dressed in khakis and with a bullet wound in his right temple. On the Iloor nearby was a .45 caliber service revolver. In a waste basket between the Gard ners' twin beds was a bloody sledge hammer. "I'd call it a triple murder and suicide," Coroner Christopher Hill Jr., said Wednesday alter the bodies were found. "But it's a baffler. No notes. No explana tion." Papers in Gardner's home dis closed he had recently applied for a job as an art teacher in Welling ton, New Zealand. A prospectus he wrote describ ing himself gave no indication of desperation. But a letter (rom Gardner's brother, found in the house, expressed sympathy for severe headaches he had been having. His only debts, Gardner wrole were the payments on his $25,000 frame home near the Monterey Peninsula Country Club in Pebble Beach's beautiful Del Monte For est. Officer Gives Space Views BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) Maj. Gen. John B. Medaris says the United States may be spread ing its space efforts too broadly. "We can do many things mod erately or a few things well," the retiring chief of the Army Ordnance Missile Command said Wednesday. "But first we've got to decide whether we're in a space race with Russia or want to be in one. So Tar, I've seen no evidence of a solid resolution to compete in a race." The decision, he told a news conference, must come from the people, who must foot the bill. He advocated unified control of space and missile . research but said he would not accept the job ot heading such a program. "I'm not that egotistical," he said. NAVY SELLS BELLS. LONDON (UPD The British Navy is selling 400 brass bells, and old sailors who heard them ring out the watches will have the first chance at buying them. The bells range in size from four-pounders used on small ships to the 155-pound one aboard the H.M.S. Peregrine. It's Fun To Wash At Merit's C0IN-0-MATIC Jfc OPEN , IVI IN I C: ai .. .i w..k...' I IU TkPltnly Drytrl! Hot Wottr Endlotily Fret Parking, fool Regular Load . . 20c Double Load . . . 30c Fluff Dry 5c TWO LOCATIONS: 333 E. Main (A-fr-Mt Ifpm MiHt School) 4801 South 6th Ntnf Is Mot'i Bokiry SAVE $S$ AT I WRIT'S C01N 0 MATIC ID IR 1 Gardner, son of a former Orange County treasurer, de scribed himself in the prospectus as an honor graduate of Whiltier College, a World War II bomber pilot, a founder of the Junior Toastmaslers of America and a one-time writer for Vice President Richard M. Nixon. Hill said he found an unpub lished manuscript of Gardner's in the house. Titled "Fighting Quak er," it was a 1952 biography of the vice president, who is also a graduate of Whittier College. Pasted to the manuscript was a letter of appreciation from Nixon. The bodies were discovered he- cause Patricia McCaig, 12, thought the Gardners' dog and cat looked hungry. Then Patricia noticed newspapers and milk containers near their front door. Assuming the Gardners were away, Patricia entered their home and fed the dog and cat. She found dishes in the kitchen sink, washed them and put them away. She found some of Randy Lee's things in the living room and took them into her playmate's bed room. Then she saw the girl's body. Terrified, Patricia screamed for her father. Raymond J. McCaig ran over and found: Randy Lee, dead, cuddling a blue teddy bear.' Diane, dead, a pink teddy bear boside her. In the Gardners' bedroom, he found the parents. McCaig called police. Sheriff's Capt. D.V. Smith, chief of inspectors, found the Monday newspaper in the house. The Tues day paper was at the door. He speculated the slayings occurred Monday night. DIRECT IMPORT FROM OUR OWN "J (?-i&- DIAMOND CUTTING AND POLISHING M-- Ir-jNT IN AMSTERDAM, HOLIANd) 1. mimmm CHOICE fei ffDnr isssss pimm k c$&&Eift s-sMtsMxa MsmSmb 701 MAIN Store Hours 9:30 to 5:30 "fTiuiMi IN OKI THE TEAPEI3- DOWNER AS HE SPOILS A PAL'S 616 MOMENT-- TMiNK AND A TIP OP THE (( fi&$ UATI Ci U AT TO ' a. paidh Mueller. rt FVFL4ND M.OHIO tti Three Nurses Found Safe ALBUQUERQUE. N..M. (AP) - A trio of Albuquerque nurses, lost in an isolated mountain area and faced with freezing temperatures, have been found unharmed. Jean Yelvington, 21, Margaret Burke, 35, and Maxine Stephens, 33, driving into the Jcmez Moun tains north of here Tuesday for a picnic got onto the wrong road and the car engine died because of ignition trouble. "We knew we would get lost if we went outside the car, Miss Yelvington said. So they settled down for the night. By Wednesday morning, the car windows were coated on the inside with ice. They managed to keep warm enough with the clothes they had worn for the out ing. The women walked several miles Wednesday until they reached a logging camp, and two men there went back to repair the car. WHUL CHAIRS ml WALKERS AM tor ftfc tardily coBMcto4 tod wily controlled. BvtroM Jnninft Folding Wbetl Chun ad Wtlktrt inipir corn pi et confide rx ro tb uMf, Two of our fin Srirnt Jon Bini lidt far ibe handicapped. Rentals and Sales Currin's 9th I, Main for drugs Ph. TU 2-3475 itt'.'S MM 4 FIREPLACE ENCLOSURE TRtASUMO fN HNt HOWS VWtfWfl Mounted Model iu, iit -rft 'fiF:!SV-,ar. ilii "FRANKLIN" FIREPLACE HEATER "IT'S HOT" Come in and See It! Aluminum Windows From . . . Aluminum DOORS $0750 M50 FIREPLACE TOOLS Good Selection BEST PRICES! We Give Z?H" Green Stamp! HOME MART 2030 S. 6th TU 2-58SJ 1 8.? - leal q