PAGE SIX HERALD AND flEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore, Wednesday. January 6, 1960 FRANK JENKINS Editor BIO, JENKINS Managing Editor FLOYD WYNNE City Editor MAURICE MILLER Circulation Mgr Ph. TU 4-4752 Entered as second class matter at the post oil ice at Klamath Falls. Ore., on August 20. 1006, under act of Congress. March 8. 1879 SERVICES: ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Serving Southern Oregon And Northern California Subscription Rates CARRIER I MONTH $ 1.50 6 MONTHS $ 9.00 I YEAR $18.00 MAIL 1 MONTH . t 1.50 6 MONTHS . 8.50 I YEAR . $15.00 Welfare M ovo By FLOYD L. WYNNE I take my hat off to Dallas and Polk County! They arc approaching the wel- fare problem the way it should be tackled. For the first time since WPA days, able-bodied men on the wel fare roll in Polk County began work today on public projects un der the county's new work-relief program. It's a pilot program and the first of its kind in the state. The Oregon Welfare Commission lias authorized the county to drop from the welfare rolls all men who refuse to work or work in an unsatisfactory manner. a more realistic approach to our problems. THE PROGRAM is designed to provide work for willing and able workers on the county rolls. . Workers are paid about $8 per day and work in rotation in re lationship to the number of de pendents. The work program is designed as a substitute for welfare aid and does not interfere with jobs held by regular county employes. IT IS ALSO DESIGNED to make work more attractive than welfare. Polk Counly and welfare offi- cials say there are about 45 men now on the county lists eligible for the program. The number is about one-half that o last year. Officials believe that the program already has caused a number of general welfare recip ients to depart the county. I WOULD RECOMMEND that the program be given careful con sideration by our own Welfare Commission. The counly certainly has a num ber of jobs that can be done by men willing to work, jobs that will not throw any other county em ployes out of work, but jobs that are simply not now being done. If a man is on welfare truly be cause he is unable to find a job, then he will welcome the oppor tunity to earn the money instead of having to take charity. If he's on welfare because it's the easier way, he'll soon change his mind and save the taxpayers some money. It will separate the worker from the loafer, in plain English. I'm for it I Civil lfiiK By FLORENCE JENKINS If this area were to be attacked by manned enemy aircraft, rest dents of the Klamath Basin would have from 30 minules to three hours warning, according to Mal colm H. MacEwan, public informa lion officer for the stale Civil De fense department. He came from Salem this week to spend some time with Joe Searles, county chairman for CI vil Defense, and to meet with a new volunteer women's organiza tion being set up in Klamath Counly. It is a matter of accepted fact that education on Civil Defense matters can be disseminated most successfully by means of school children and women of the com munities. Under the present set-up, the first warning will come over Con elrad simply dial G40 or 1240 on jour radio. Survival, in case of enemy at tack or a major disaster, is a fam ily matter. Civil Defense recom mendations cull for at least a two weeks supply of food on hand at all times. The supply should be checked at least once a month and rotated regularly. Canned foods should include fruit juices, fruits, vegetables, soups, meals, fish. beans, cheese, peanut butter, bev erages, instant coffee, instant tea and instant cocoa. Dry foods would include powdered nonfat dry milk solids, crackers, cookies, cereals salt and sugar. Bottled water should be changed every six weeks or less. In case of contaminated water, Mr. MacEwan called attention to the fact that the water in a hot water storage tank would probably provide a supply of good water us long as it lasts. - Because of our close proximity to California, plans ara underway to make Civil Defense facilities and personnel cooperative between the Tulclake Basin and Klamath Falls areas. The same cooperative plans have been worked out between Portland, Oregon, and Vancou ver, Washington, areas through the county courts of Multnomah and Clark counties, Mr. MacEwan staled. In the stato picture, Klamath County occupies an unusual posi tion because of the large suburan population and interchange of busi ness across the state line. For that reason, the chapter of Instructions for this county, pro posed by the stato Civil Defense organization, is being rewritten for Lp Year Tip By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)-This is Leap Year, and millions of coy and mil itant maidens are searching for a successful way to win a husband Lady, do you really aspire to lead a man to the altar in 1960 To do it you don't need to pour him a voodoo love potion or re sort to strange feminine wiles. All you need to land a guy some guy anyway is to learn four words. These are the words: 'Make him feci important." That is the greatest secret of successful courtship which, as has been wisely pointed out, consists of a man chasing a woman until she catches him. But hundreds of thousands of marriage-hungry girls will miss the mark. No wedding bells will ring for them. And why? Because they will use the wrong technique They will scare the poor fish away. Most will do it by making one of two errors: either they will put themselves too much on a pedes tal or they will become too over bearing and possessive. The too-coy girl is the china- doll type. From birth her mommy and daddy have treated her as something special and precious She grows up believing this her selfall girls do to a considerable extent and instead of becoming a real flesh-and-blood woman she winds up a kind of fragile Dres den figurine. No ordinary man is quite good enough for her. She thinks of her self as a kind of Cinderella. There aren't enough ready- made princes, or romantic young millionaires, to go around. And those that are around aren't look ing for a spoiled, eternally adoles cent girl for a wife. At 40, this kind of dame is still wistfully pounding a typewriter, goes home at night to a cat for company and is bitterly convinced all men are bums. The second type the dominant girl frightens potential husbands away by turning on her feminine power loo soon. She starls bossing her beau right away. She brags she can twist her daddy around her little finger, and makes cute remarks such as, "You men you never grow up. You're such little boys. You all have to be mothered." The Leap Year lass who will wind up middle-aisling it will, on the other hand, be the one who can make her guy feel really Im portant in himself and not just a male acessory to her ego. Anti-semitism is a subject from which most Germans recoil, for of all the excesses of Hitlerism, that left perhaps the greatest .lain. But there has remained a hard core of anti-semitism. German of ficials insist it does not repre sent by any means the majority feelings of West Germans, and is, in fact, probably no worse than in other nations which do not have a history of Nazism. On a visit to West Germany last spring, this correspondent was told of anti-semitic incidents, and of the severity with which Ger man courts deal with such. But, perhaps because of its re cent history, there is a differ ence of opinion in German offici aldom and among Jews them selves as to how these incidents should be treated. A Jewish acquaintance illustrat ed one side of the argument when he told of a Jewish restaurant own er who returned to Germany after several years in Israel and attempted to resume in his old business. It prospered until his religion became known and then a boycott finally bankruplcd him. The case was not one that could bo taken to the courts, and the acquaintance who told the story was grateful that it could not be "It just starls something else. he said. But there are others who be lieve action of the courts should bo even more severe. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's regime has been accused of turn ing its back on rising anti-semitism, but rejects the charge. The regime feels itself caught between two fires. If it outlaws neo-Nazi or nationalist parties, it drives them underground. If it curbs freedom of speech, it is accused of being anti-democralic. Horror City By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign Editor About a half hour out of Mu nich, in rolling farm country which eventually gives way to the Alps, lies the pleasant little Ba varian town of Dachau. Houses of yellow stucco nestle close together In the manner of German villages, and Ihere is no hint of the horror that went on there 20 years ago. Some of the villagers claim that even at the time, they had no knowledge of the fact that thousands upon thou sands of Jews were dying in the gas ovens of Dachau. The gas chambers still stand as a horrible memento to Germans of the sins of Adolf Hitler, whose Nazi swastika emblem once more is appearing on synagogue walls, on Jewish shrines and on the homes of some of the 30.000 Jews remaining in West Germany. Some six million Jews died at the hands of the Hitlerites before the Nazis finally were crushed by the World War II Allies in 1945. and today in West Germany there are laws lo insure that never again can anti-semitism run ram pant as it did under Hitler. Under The llutf By JAMES MARLOW Associated Press News Analyst WASHINGTON (AP) The coun try, says Minnesota's Sen. Hubert Humphrey, is suffering from com placency and has been (ever since 1953 when President Eisenhower took office. Humphrey, who wants to move into Iho White House on the Dem ocratic ticket, says the next presi dent "is going to inherit a series of problems that have been swept under the rug where they have been festering and intensifying. If Humphrey is right that the country has been complacent for almost seven years who is re sponsible: The Eisenhower admin istration or the people? The two Arthur Schlesingers, fa ther and son and both professors of American history, have written that history moves in cycles: that a period of intense feeling and activity or crisis is always fol lowed by one of calm while new forces and frustrations and de mands build up. Under this pres sure, the calm eventually yields to a period of new and progres sive action. After the fierce activity of World War I and President Wilson's struggle for the League of Nations the country seemed deliberately to want peace and quiet. It elected Warren G. Harding and then Cal vin Coolidge. For most of the 1920s there was quiet, and increasing prosperity This could be called a complacent period, too. It came to a shocking end with the crash of 1929 and the depression which called for action. Franklin D. Roosevelt promised action. The nation turned to him ind the rapid remedies of the New Deal. But there was to be no calm, Hitler created crises. The nation kept Roosevelt, in 1936 and again in 1940, as the war fear spread. Then war. The nation still kept Roosevelt in 1944. When he died President Truman carried on SHORT RIBS By Frank O'Neal O), (i Srt OFTEN HEAR A arfi I ' V f . 1 cajw::e vmw'J through the war's end and into the turbulent late l'J40s when there was no real quiet at home or abroad. At home Democrats and Repub licans fought like cats and dogs Abroad the Soviets piled up crises, The people kept Truman in 1948, Then came McCarthyism and Ko rea, both of which began in 1950. By the time Eisenhower ran for oifice in 1952 the country, torn down the middle by McCarthyism und anxious for an end to the kill ing in Korea, was saturated with conflict and crises which extended unbrokenly back to 1929. It would be no wonder if the nation, without consciously realiZ' ing it, wanted then a period of calm in which it could live without tension. It got that pretty much under Eisenhower except for the con tinuing tension with Red China and the Soviet Union and the seg regation struggle in the South. The racial struggle was precipi tated not by the public or the ad ministration but by the Supreme Court. The court, in turn, could be said to be reflecting the pressure of racial unrest and tension, build ing up since the Civil War, and through its decision sought to bring this turmoil to an end, too. But suggesting that compla cencyif that's the name for it was handed down from above by Eisenhower is to overlook a very important factor which gives an insight into the mood of the nation. The record of Congress since 1953 it has been run by Demo crats since 1954 has not been a period of . intensity, innovation, experimentation, or startling changes. It has been pretty much a rock-along period. This might indicate Congress was complacent except for one thing: Congress reflects the mood of the people, who showed they liked the calmness by reelecting Eisenhower in 1956. If the Eisenhower administra tion alone had been complacent but not the people then the people would have been pressuring Con gress for action in a dozen fields which have been glossed over, de layed, or pushed aside. The most important factor in the 1960 elections next November after making allowance for the importance of the personalities and records of the candidates will be the mood of the country. If it feels the need for sharp action and an abandonment of its present mood, the party which promises to fill the new require ments will stand the best chance. At this moment it's questionable that the nation wants to abandon its present mood of rock-along. They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo f" l HAD A STAFF CAH VESTERDAy IT WAS HOW THEY AND A CHAUFFEUR 1 f TOPPIN'OHE ( WON TWE WAR SINGLEHANDEO Ca A.rJvT THE GENERAL USED ANOTHER ABOUT CHURCHILL NEVER MADE 4 MOVE X- TO GET CARSICK, U WHAT SOFT JOBS WITHOUT CONSULTING THEMfZ rN.T SO ANV BIG SHOTS THEV HAD IN THE , - " 1 ?Ir , hn HAD TO BE MET- ARMY AND WHEM " I fICl-AM N1 DID IT-" C3THEy WERE DOING 1 THEIR SALES ARE 1 J TffMEETALLl lT" THE MUSKET BIT 4F HERE. COMESy m -f THE HOLLY- J THEY WERE ALWAYS THE END OF THE WK&V&kyX- WOOD DOLLS THERE WAS V LYING ABOUT WHAT MONTH,THEYU. KZ2!lSL WHO CAME TO yTHlS RICH WIDOW U go SHOOTS THEV I BE MUSTERED O-fc ENTERTAIN ) IN MARSEILLES- V Ecre AT HOME- OFF THE OL' &ttz&i7 THE TROOPS"! WELL-SHE USED I V K .A PAY ROLL- 53TCCB- 11 j v juss-Wjssk:--, The Alinaiiiie By United Press International Today is Wednesday Jan. 6, the 0th day of the year, with 360 more days in 1960. The moon is approaching its first quarter. The morning stars are Mars and Venus. On this day in history: In 1759 Martha Dandridge Cus tis was married to George Wash ington. In 1878, American writer, poet and Lincoln biographer Carl Sand burg was born. In 1912, New Mexico was ad mitted as the 47th state. In 1919, former President Theo dnrc Roosevelt died at his home in Oyster Bay, New York. In 1941, President Franklin D, Roosevelt outlined the four free doms . . .freedom of speech, free dom of worship, freedom from want and freedom from fear. In 1939. searchers found Small World balloonists near the Bar badoes. The balloonists had been at sea for 21 days. A thought for today: Carl Sand burg wrote: "Personal freedom, a wide range of individual expres sion, a complete respect for the human mind and human personal ity Ibis is the ideal of the democratic system." Enjoying the auto salesmen's daily" BULL SESSION. TH4NX ANOATIP OF THE HATLO HAT TO ft. Riley, Kan. (notes United Press International PARIS Interior Ministry of ficial Pierre Mairey, discussing plans for Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's visit to France in March: "We hope to benefit by the U.S. experience in handling Mr. Khrushchev. And we hope to avoid the things the Americans did wrong." WASHINGTON United Steel- workers President David J. Mc Donald, telling Vice President Richard M. Nixon that he drew cheers at a union rally after the sleel settlement by making this proposal: "A new ticket Nixon and McDonald." Lads Nabbed By Police ERIE, Kan. (AP) - Two foot sore youths, weary and cold from a dawn-to-dusk pursuit, were cap tured near here Tuesday after two gunfights with police. A plane spotted them and noti fied more than 20 officers who closed in for the showdown. One of the boys, Carl R. (Jock) Chase, 18, of near Parsons, Kan., was nicked in the right thigh. His flesh wound was treated at the sheriff's office, and he and his companion, Roy J. King, 20, of near Olathe, Kan., were jailed. They are wanted in Kansas City on charges of disarming two po licemen Monday night and flee ing in a stolen car. Chase and King fled 18 hours on foot over four square miles of southeastern Kansas timberland following a pre-dawn gunfight at a roadblock. Red Astronomer Dies At Age 53 MOSCOW ,(AP) Tass today an. nounced the death of one of the Soviet Union's leading astrono mers, Pavel Parenago, 53. A member of the Soviet Acad emy of Sciences, Parenago held the chair of stellar astronomy at Moscow University for 26 years. His obituary described him as one of the top Soviet authorities on variable stars and the author of the theory of light absorption in interstellar space. Hebrew School Hit By Fire NEW YORK, (AP) A small fire broke out Tuesday night in a Brooklyn Hebrew school while 80 children were in classes. No one was hurt, and the fire was brought under control quickly. Fire officials said the fire was suspicious. They investigated a report that three small boys were seen playing in the classroom where the fire started. The fire was in the building housing the Ycshivath Shearith Haplctah, on which a swastika recently was painted. Screen Director Victim Of Cancer HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Screen writer-producer - director Dudley Nichols died of cancer Monday night in Cedars of Lebanon Hospi tal. He was 64. Nichols won the Academy Award in 1935 for his screen play, The Informer. He once was a foreign correspondent for the old New York World. Films on which he worked in cluded "The Three Musketeers," For Whom the Bell Tolls," "Sis ter Kenny," "It Happened Tomor row," "The Long Voyage Home and "The Bells of St. Mary's. His wife Esta survives. PARACHUTES TO SAFETY EGL1N AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (UPI) -t Capt. James E Myers of Grand Chain, 111., para chuted to safety Monday when his F-100 jet caught fire and crashed near Crestview, Fla. Text Book Trial Dated OREGON CITY (AP) - A suit testing constitutionality of a law enacted by the last state Legisla ture that permits the use of state funds to buy parochial school text books, comes to trial here Thursday. Circuit Judge Ralph M. Holman will hear the suit, brought by William Dickman and others. The defendant is Oregon City School District No. 62. Ivan Carlson, whose children attend St. John's Roman Calholic School in Oregon City, which re ceived state text book aid, inter vened on behalf of the school. The suit is brought under the constitutional provision for the separation of church and state. The plaintiffs contend that state funds can not be used to provide free text books for parochial or private school pupils. The year 1962 will be the Chinese "Year of the Tiger." Horn Blowing Proof Sought MILWAUKEE, (AP) t. V, Barnes is trying to find someone' besides himself, who saw a black bear blowing a horn in a parked car New Year's Eve. Barnes ran this ad in the Mil. waukee Journal's classified ner. sonal column Tuesday. 'Will other persons who saw a black bear blowing a horn in a car in a parking lot on E. Capitol Dr. about 2:30 a.m. New Year's Eve please contact L.V. Barnes at Broadway 6-4837." Barnes insisted, "I know a big black hairy bear when I see one and I saw one. There were lots of people. We all saw it. I just want to find some of them so I can prove it. I don't know why my wife won't believe me." Two Missing In Bomber Crash HUGOTON, Kan. (AP)-A Rjt medium bomber crashed in a mushroom of smoke and flams a southwestern Kansas farm Tues day night. The pilot, Lt. Gordon White. 54 parachuted safely. One boriv found in the wreckage five miles northwest of here. The two other crew members were missing. Schilling Air Force Base at Sal- ina, Kan., said the plane, which was based there, was on a train ing flight. White told hospital attendants his aircraft went into a spin while being refueled. FREE ORCHIDS When? , Tomorrow! ij Watch For Tomorrow's Paper BRIDGET O'SULLIVAN Formerly of BELLE'S BEAUTY SALON NOW ASSOCIATED WITH MELBA'S SALON OF BEAUTY 1146 Pine St. TU 4-5230 Professionally Serving You DEE HENNINGER MARGE BRADY DOROTHY BOLING BRIDGET O'SULLIVAN MELBA SCOTT HOW TO WASH 36,500 DISHES . . ; Anolher Tip On How To Make Your Home Happier, Compliments Of Your Favorite CaOre Eleclrical League Dealer, IV f 111 A I I WITHOUT PUTTING YOUR HANDS IN THE SINK, Statistics show that the average homemaker washes 100 dishes and utensils every day. This adds up to 36,500 pieces a year! Recipe for a nightmare, isn't it? Enough to make you stop counting sheep and start counting dishes. But beginning right now, you can wake up smiling in the morning, without a dishwashing worry in the world. All you need is on automatic ELECTRIC DISHWASHER in you kitchen! Modern dishwashers pamper your favorite china (it's safer in a dishwasher than in your hands)... and at the same tim scald it almost entirely bacteria-free. You can't do that by hand-washing! St Your Faverit Appliance Dtaltr . At k About Eaiy Ttrmt