The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, January 29, 1936, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
January 29, U)'M
HERALD HUMLIBHINCI COatfANl, ruanah.ra
FRANK JRNMINd , , ... . , ... .. HUH
MALL'dl.H BIM.KT Mamtcln editor
Itshart avarr aflsrnnnn ascent flitnoay I Tha flareafl Publlel
Company at 104-ltj Bouih Fifth Slreat, Klamath Falla. Orana
Botave aa aaenn olaaa matlsr at tlla pnstnfrlee of Rramath Falls, Or.
an aaiuii su, is-ia, unaar at or vonsreaa. uarcs) a,
. MAIL RATCi PAVABI.B IN ADVANCD
Br Mall
' In County eutalila Counts
Th raa Mentha si n ti ll
la """ I, 1 75 in
Oaa i- , lot M
Lssllvared 6j Carrlar In Cll
Thr Montb.
BlM Unnlha
Ona Vaar
-I al
. I M
. Ill
.tit
UUUUUR AUUIT BUI1KAU OF CIRCULATION
Mamaar of Tha Associated Praaa
Tba Aaaoolalad Pfaaa la aaclustvaly anrltlad to the uaa ar rapufelloatMa
of all oewa dtaiMtflhaa orxtliaC to It ar not olharwla ersdltad in tal
papar. and Alan tha leral haws publlalwd thaialn All rlcbta of
rapabllealln of aplal dlaoalrhaa haa are slaa reaarvad
flam N,ntd Natlftnaltv by
M C Mgnsn CO.. Ins.
Ban Pranalaco. Now Torn, Detroit, atmtllo. ChlrltKS Portland. Lot Anfolaa
Ooplaa of tba Nawa and Herald. toaether wlio compute Informallna
about tha Klamatk ralla mnrkrt, may ba ntttalaad for tha aahlna) al
ana of thaaa offlcaa
Help Fight Paralysis
ATTENTION of Klamath people is again called to tha
President's Birthday Ball, to be held at the armory
Thursday night. The proceeds from this event will go
to funds for combatting infantile paralysis. Part of the
money will be kept here, and part of it will go to the
Warm Springs Foundation, for research work that may
result, ultimately. In scientific defeat of what is now one
of the most dreaded, terrible diseases.
Thi is something for every parent to realize. Every
eerson who ia interested in the welfare of some child
should think about it Infantile paralysis accounts for
27.26 per cent of the cripples among children, hvery
year some 10,000 youngsters are struck down.
Every father and mother knows the terrible fear they
feel when it is reported that infantile paralysis hps
broken out in the community. They fear because they
know the dreadful effects of the disease, and because
they know science has not yet won its fight with infan
tile paralysis. What a difference it win mane u, some
uuy, li oecomes ss ey tu jiibuic aamai uuouure
sia as it is aeainst the once-dreaded smallpox.
That is why there should be a great sale of tickets
for the birthday ball. Even persons who do not care to at
tend might well invest the price of a ticket in the fight
that is to be made against infantile paralysis.
WASHINGTON
NEWS UBH1NII TH8 Nk'Ua
Th InaM Atory From
Thai Capital
a
By PAUL MALLON
CupTight 1936. by Paul Mallon
Put It in Board's Hands
TALK to almost anyone who' attended one of the state
I schools, and he will tell you that extra-curricular
activities meant almost as much, if not as much, to him
as did the classroom courses. So essential are these ac
tivities to students that It is pretty safe to assume that,
in one way or another, they are going to be provided,
That being the case, it might be well for every tax
payer and in a general sense, that means every citizen
to consider the possibility that if the extra-curricular
program is not financed through student fees, it is going
to be supported out of funds raised from taxation.
On the ballot Friday will be found a measure which,
if passed, will authorize the state board of higher edu
cation to charge students up to $5 a term to finance
this extra-curricular program. This measure will place
the whole Question of student fees and it has two sides.
to be sure in the hands of a responsible board of cit
izens close to the campus situation. The board can then
determine what is the best method to finance these
highly important activities, and if it finds that student
fees are best, can assess students, all alike, whatever
small sum is needed. A "Yes" vote on the student fee
bill will make it possible to work out the extra-curricular
activity problem in an orderly, responsible way.
Open West Road
AS IS now quite well known throughout southern Ore
gon, it is important that there be a good volume of
travel into Crater Lake national park this winter. The
park service is keeping roads inside the park open, and
it is fair to assume that future policy will depend, to a
considerable extent, on the evidences it has of public use
of the park this winter. That evidence will be chiefly
attendance figures.
Unfortunately, the attendance is not. reaching the
proportions it could attain, due to the fact that the west
side road the Medford entrance route has been closed
now for approximately two weeks.
On that side, the road inside the park is clear. But
outside the park, from Diamond lake junction to the
boundary, it is blocked by snow.' Snow removal on this
road is the job of the state highway department. There
have been frequent reports that the department would
send a rotary plow there immediately, but there have
been breakdowns on the rotary plow and the Rogue val
ley has been cut off from Crater lake.
On the other hand, the south entrance has been kept
open consistently through the winter. The state highway
department has done some fine work, keeping the snow
out of the road to the park boundary, and inside the
boundary the park service has plowed out the drifts.
The result is that there has been a steady stream of
visitors to the park from this side.
It is gratifying, of course, that the Klamath entrance
has thus been kept in shape, and people on this side ap
preciate the service given by the highway department
and the park officials. But it is realized over here that
just that many more could be added to the park's win
ter visitors if the route from the Rogue valley were open,
and due to the fact that this is a test winter, it is im
portant to us on this side that this travel to the nark be
made possible. It is to be hoped the highway depart
ment can open the west route at an early date.
WASHINGTON, Jan. J9.
President Roosevelt's dexterity
a an alchemist waa never bottar
Illustrated than In th selection
of th new federal reaerv board.
The man In the atreet mar not
know It. but (hat board means
more to Ma every da life than
any other official authority In
government. It rnna the finan
ce of the country; which Is to
say. It rus the country. Mr.
Uooaevelt may be the Janitor of
the government house, but the
FRB ia the control valve for tha
heating and cooling systems.
His problem waa to renovate
the board, remove old banking
cobwebs, protect It front aelf
rombuatjbl firearms and get
Gov. Ecclea confirmed past Sen
ator Glass.
With scientific methods In his
Whlto House law. he composed
the contrary political Influences
Into a substance which Is not by
any moans pure gold out at
least Is a board with lew splin
ters In it.
a a a
MIXING
Half the new board was his
own Idea and the other halt was
to get around Senator Glass.
The first thiugs he put into
his mixing glass were the reap
pointments of his financial man
Krklay (Governor Eccles) and a
sound liberal whom he found on
the board (M. S. Sxyraciak). Only
the Insiders knew It but Siytuc-
iak has frequently disagreed
with Ecclea. notably against the
Eccles centralisation of the open
market committee.
N'eit, Mr. Roosevelt put In his
old friend. Joseph Broderlck, su
perintendent of banks in New
Tork. Some years ago, as gov
ernor, he named Broderlck to
the New York Job. Financial
men characterize Broderlck as
a man with bis reet on me
gronnd.
These three, Eccles, Szymciak
and Broderlck, were tha Roose
velt Ideas.
SIDE GLANCES-b" G' cirw
4mMhm,
Ten Years
Ago
In Klamath
A GLOWING vista of opportun-
Hy, of progress and develop
ment, was pictured to citizens of
Klamath today noon by the city's
mayor, Fred II. Goddard, In an ad
dress before the chamber of com
merce forum,
Klamnth Falls and the Klamith
empire are Just now entering upon
an era which will mean rapid ex
pansion and continual prosperity,
the mayor said, but there are
things which murt be accomplish
ed within th city if the people
are to gain full benefits from the
opportunity which Is now knocking
at the door.
Mayor Goddard took up Item
FORMTU4. '
Georgia senators are under
stood to have been behind the
No. 4 man. Ronald Ransom. He
combines the legal with the
banking type of mind, will prob
ably be the composing spirit
needed on every board of di
rectors to get opposing factions
together. After all, it is not
In advisable to have one banker
on a federal reserve board gov
erning bank.
The Ohio Senator Bulkier
(close friend of Senator Glass)
is sponsor tor the No. 5. John
McKee. but RFC Chairman Jes-
Jones is supoaad to have pat
the appointment over. McKee
waa an examiner for Jones, and
la also a solid citizen.
No. (, Ralph Morrison of
Texas, la being credited on the
inside to vice president Garner.
but tha Texai senators were
agreeable. No. 7 Mr. Roosevelt
withheld became h could not
find a suitable farm man.
Thai did Alchemist Roosevelt
draw confirmatory strength from
th senate and provide his own
leadership for the board. The
resnlt la a key formula to Mr.
Roosevelt'! fundamental method
of operations.
Not 1 There Is a story go
ing around that Al Smiths
bad something to do with the
selection of tba federal reserve
board, which came out 38 hours
later. It could not possibly be
true because the correct list of
new boardmen was in the hands
of senators and certain banking
authorities confidentially sev
eral days before they were an
nounced.
Not 2 Too may auapect that
tha appointment of tha seventh
board member fill control the
board, but that may or may not
be. The six may or may not
split equally on political or eco
nomic lines.
a
POWER,
Th overwhelming eagerness In
congress to vote the bonus was
private laugh even for some
of the veterans' lobbyists.
It Is a . popular belief In con
gress that veterans' support is
the best an ambitious public man
can get, but there have been sev
eral notable unpublished exper
iences to prove th contrary.
A certain senator was up tor
re-election In a mldwestern state
last year. He had voted against
the bonus and naturally was
fearful when his campaign open
ed. He thought the Issue might
be raised to the detriment of
others more important.
He was agreeably surprised
when no one mentioned the bonus
until the last week of the cam
paign. Then a man in the front
row got up with the missing
question. The senator replied di
rectly, saying he would vote to
pay only what was due under the
old law at any given date, but
no more.
The senator was amazed when
bis heckler deplored his stand
but congratulated him for his
forthrlghtness. The crowd cheer
ed. It could not have worked
out better for the senator If the
heckler bad been a plant, which
he was NOT.
Note The senator was Van-
mM fp If
ft'
iM!Amiet. inc. i.u.
5MV,
Telling the
Editor
"I want this done very thoroughly. Tho bridge club will be
here today, and you know how they poke their noses into
every corner."
In congress
the bonus.
who voted aguinst
NOTKS
It sounds Improbable but a
New York congressman swrurs it
is true. At any rute the story
bow Is being told In the house
cloakroom ttmt the m'weat boon
doggling sehemo In Conm-otic-iu
Is to plant briar bushes to make
better cover for rabbits and thus
Improve hunting.
Construction already Is wull un
derway on the Infirmary, fho li
brary, and tho tunnel to fnclli
tutu tho present heating system.
Authorities arouud tho senate
who know .Mississippi do not he
Hove that Bilbo can boat Put
Harrison, but are lamenting tho
vague possibility. Harrison is
very popular.
Mr. Roosevelt has boon doing
great deal of work In bed or
at his desk In the mansion, stav
ing away from the office until
late In the morning or after
lunch. The mansion gives bliu
seclusion.
OltTLAND, Ore., Jan. :. UV
A. C. l,lunnn of Portland re
ceived n two-yeir prison sontenco.
mill subsequently was paroled,
for taking tleorgo Fiedler and
Frrdlmmd Weston, convicted
slayers, to Vnncouvor. Wash,, af
ter th pair shot Deputy Sheriff
Ernest Loll t--r Portland Sep
tember -9, 1935.
News of Oregon
OSWEGO. Ore., Jan. 29. (IP)
Oswego received approval of a
PWA loan and grant of 5 140,000
for a sewer system. The low bid
der, the Gilpin Construction com
pany of Portland, offered to do
the Job for $115,067. City offi
cials now are studying the pos
sibility of adding a disposal plant
with the remaining $25,000.
AI.I1ANY. Ore.. Jan. 19. (Jp)--W.
T. Teiitarh, nsslslalit state
county agent, told the l.lnn coun
ty agricultural parley that pro
duction balanced with effective
demand wn a major purpose of
farm conforonees. He said l.lnn
renin! v had mail Considerable
progross In that line. Figures
were presented showing l.lnn
lends tho stnte In the number of
dairy cattle 17,000 and also In
production of oats and ryo grass.
How About I,imiry Tax
To Hi Kdilnr The snloa tax
has more lives than a cat, It's
coming up for another nx next
Friday,
It th sponsors of this mea
sure were ronlly Interested In
th blind, lame and halt they
could easily have trained a bill
that would pass,
A lot of us feel (hey are us
ing tho derelicts as a paek liorso
to rarry over what will oven
tunlly bo a full fledged snloa tax
as a gonvrnl revenue meiiaure.
There la much to ho snlil for
an honest and properly adminis
tered snloa tax, hut the hill to
lie voted on Friday will be de
feated owing to the gonnrnl be
lief (lint It Is tha fo renin nor of
the big brother which it no
doubt la.
Thero are plenty of so called
luxuries that could easily bear
this tux and it would carry pro
vided the votura weru given a
rhnm-o to express themselves In
this way.
Cull it a "luxury tax" and
guarantoo nil old people who
need a pension tlio full 9n pos
sible under the new fodnrnl set
up and the blind and so forth a
reasonable lift; also guarantee
that the full amount received
will ho given these people and
not transferred to other uses.
A lilll framed along these
lines will get some place.
J. H. ZKNOlt.
Hy IIICIITIIA 1IAAHIC
(High Ni'htMil Cm'iisioinloiit)
The Olrla' League of Klnmnlh
Union Mgh school had the oppor
tunity on Tuesday afternoon to
vlow tha flrat try nut of the re
cently. Installed talking niai-lilno
whon a college play entitled "Tho
Freshman's Finish" wna shown.
It was preceded hy several song
selections of old Hpatn.
Loyd II. Kmery, principal,
operated the mac-bin ,
Miss Klla lladko. th physical
education Instructor, announced
that there would he after school
dancing for anyone Interested In
folk dancing, Hho also urged
those Interested In hiking, ski
lug, skating or any oilier sport
to make It known to tier and she
would see about organising a
club.
For th benefit of tha new
freshmen girls, Mrs. Allen How
ard, (loan of girls, announced
that It would lie neenssnry for
everyone in bring a written ex
cuse Immediately on their return
to school after an absence.
riimd to llK'lr beds with colds and
Mr, and Mr. IC. K. Illniid of
llouieduln worn visiting III (Ills
community. Huiiday,
Mt. and Mm. Itoy Wllaim spent
Sunday with Mr, and Mis, John
Kllege of Hummers l.ane,
Homer Clark and 10 1 don Menu
oru Lennox visitor Huturdny
evening.
Adolph's
Observations
ORTI.AND, Ore., Jan. 89. (PI
A meeting will bo held at Hood
River February 8 to dlscusa pro
posed Improvements to th Co
lumbia river nt that point, war
department notices said today.
PORTLAND, Ore.. Jan. 29. (P)
A recent Btatewide survey In
dicated the duck population Is
around 100,000, W. N. Rush said.
Rush, who is regional director
of the biological survey, said re
ports from three-fourths of the
state gave the total in that area
at 72,510.
CORVALLIS, Ore., Jan. 29. (p)
Governor Charles H. Martin
told th Corvallls chamber of
commerce that "we must not al
low Initiative to die." Ho nolut-
ed to undeveloped mineral re
sources, timber, farming and
Bonneville dam as among the
major factors which he said In
dicated the "unlimited possibil
ities" for making Oregon the site
of outstanding development.
TOLEDO; Ore., Jan. 29. (TV
Work continued apace today on
the Toledo-PWA $71,000 high
school building. Clearing and
leveling work was completed
last week.
ASTORIA. Ore., Jan. 29. (V)
Astoria's second-semester Bchool
registration Is 1,604, or 67 less
than a year ago, It was shown
In figures complied by School
Superintendent A. C. Hampton.
More Injured in
Cairo Rioting
CAIRO. Jan. 29 (P) More
than 50 students and five police
were injured today during a
shodt-llred riot at Hhelka college
where police, belabored by rocks,
fired on the students.
Most of tho Injuries were
minor, and none of the students
or police required hospltul treat
ment. That $125,000 senate monitions
quiz Is over for the time being,
and tho nubile feels cheated When
he had that midget on his lap on
his first appearance, Morgan
might have thrown in a little ven
triloquism.
EUGENE, Ore., Jan. 29. (PI
John Bovard, dean of the Uni
versity of Oregon's rhyslcal edu
cation school, said work on tho
men's physical education plant
probably will start next woeit af
ter technical data Is completed.
15c
REX
15c
for Item, the suggestions made by
him In his annual mossage to the
council, and pointed out way they
all should be adopted.
All hope of constructing the
, . . . . i JNOie i ne senator was van-
Rock Creak bridge over Link river! denberg of Michigan, the only re
fills year appeared to have gone publican presidential possibility
niiuwn irom county records mat
there bnt $17,106.17 left in the
road bond fund.
Thla money, It waa said unoffi
cially at the county court house,
haB been "borrowed" to take care
of pressing claims In other funds,
and as a result this Important
road and bridge construction must
be delayed unless some more
epeedy borrowing from other
funds will supply the money
needed.
Tentative plans for tha bridge
call tor an expenditure of ap
proximately $35,000, or twice as
much as there now remains in the
entire fund.
WILLIAM CAGNEV in
"LOST IN THE
STRATOSPHERE"
-t-ALHO
"BACHELOR'S FOLLY"
TONIGHT
COUNTRY STORE
I tfmlstcMn w-sf
II ED IN HER HEART-1 JM
BH wai a tmumdimolt 7
11WM1IVIA.J
"fjTf "woman n$ lmwW zzzzz
wn. 'N RED" M lll'1' '
TOMORROW III MAIDS
SBs'l s&KlSBl & J'3 v"i WMMHMIll WAWJaRIT LIHOSaY
Hew TOra"N Si 4 I sum dohheilt ahit touist
BI Ml && D m mm 11 urure
HtWo '.Ttmw
h.m j COWBOY 3Ptm
RUTH ETTING IS HERE' W&Lii
"Bandits and Ballads" AGAIN! t'" f fJV
also , jmr ft I $J
Edgar KENNEDY tlTlil VLJl,
I "Sock Me to Sleep" HLIIL.
"- Hfflwi
PICTORIAL V, UiU i
- iajIafaHIBIl i.l
AIUHT KDITOItH
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore., (To
the Kditorl- In a recent issue of
the Kvening Herald there ap
peared quit number of com-nu-nta
from other edltnra with ref
iirunio to Mayor Muhoney's sena
torial nsperatlnns..
With all duo respret tor these
gentlemen, I would like to make a
fow n marks.
If a man has th nervo and
ability and cournge of conviction
to stand up for the peoplo's rlxhta
anil trios to expose holding com
panies and utilities, with these
gontlomen ho suddenly became a
wind Jamher and a dangerous
deiuuKoguo, esprclally If ha Is
seeking nit offii-o wherein he
might help puss lawa to curb their
activities.
It's a notable characteristic of
most editors to be arrayed ou the
aldo where the advertising Is com
ing from, with th excoptlun of
aonio small papem In outlying
districts that isn't In on tho
"Jack." then he usually ejprfssos
his honest convictions.
It was Indeed fair of you to
print tho favorable comments,
should any occur, which with our
up-stat editor will bo raro, but
the unfavorable ones are apt to
bo numerous, as their editorials
show. My! but didn't they liun
bosto him, to think that he should
have tho norv to run against a
man, "where more experienced
mm would fear to tread," the way
they wont aftor him wasn't slow.
until we could cry out In the Inn
gunga of the Immortal Casus:
"Now In the name of all the gods
at once, upon what meat doth this
our Mahoney feed that h ha
grown so great?"
.Since these editors have so
laborously shown us what a nasty,
aggressive mayor we have. I re
serve the privilege of expressing
my convictions about them. In
the days of -9 thoro wan one tree
In tho stato of Montana whore tho
vigilantes hanged 15 hl-Jaikers.
I think they were all better men
than Iheso wonderful editors, and
I believo they nro ull in hell.
C. V. McOILLIWKAV.
Four-H News
ALSO-
"Shoemalcer end the
Elves"
Grand Color Cartoon
ANY
SEAT
15c
ANY
TIME
RAINBOW
afif MB
TtaAii
Jf M sTtrVafaTaVWITH
TODAY
He attracted attention
in "Broadway Melody"
NOW HE SCORES!
ROBERT
TAYLOR
ALREADY HIS NAME IS ON
THE LIPS OF ALL WHO
HAVE SEEN HIM
IRENE DUNNE
AS CHARMING AS
BEAUTIFUL AS EVER
f "mickeySmouse
R COLOR CARTOON 3
LATEST NEWS Jfo
PINE TREE
IIKM.I0V 4-11 NIJWH
Iu tho 4 11 club news, it was
staled (hut soma of the news re
purlers must lie usluup, and not
on tho Job, Yos, wu quite unroe
with that, Our reporters have
had a good aloip, and think it Is
tltuo to go lu work.
The cooking clutm are coming
along film at Iluuluy. Some of
our members huvn flulshed thulr
lessons and the rest are oomlug
III fast. The Cooking club No, 2
mat glv a tea fur their mothers
so It was decided at tho lust moot
lug that they will give it nt the
next I'.-T. A, mooitlug. Thora will
be two club aougs under the direc
tion of Mrs. Obeni-huln, iluuluy
murflc teacher. Two demonstra
tions will bu given by iniuv of the
club members. Ten will be served
nfter th program to tha ladles
present.
Tho public la cordially Invited.
I.OUI8N IMILKY,
Henley Bchool.
I1IAYR been observing an
old fellow that pusses by
our bomi! on Ih way down
town oh dny who la sup
posed l he about ' years
old. II" walks sprightly and
seems to have, exiellenl vi
sion, In faut tha old man Is
atlll going good nttd will prob
uhlv hold out for a loug Ulna
yet.'
I've always had a sort of a
hankering lo talk to this old
goiilloiuau, so yoalerday 1 mailn
II a point lo catch up with
lilm and I bid htm the limn
of day. To my surprise h
kuuw mv, rallud ma hy name
and referred lo my newspaper
articles which shuns thai hla
mind Is fuui-llonlng too and
Unit ha has (oud seine.
I asked this old sport to
what ha atti lliultxl hla Cnutlu
ned vitality and good health
and ha replied, "Well, Adolph,
wht I'wna a hoy my dad lis
rum -receiver for a bankrupt
drug ilore and ha acquired
two barrels of cod liver oil, I
guuas U s il.e kind of a start
I got thut has carried ma
through."
M.U.1V COOKING VhVll
Tho "Cp and Doing)" club of
Malln had meeting on Janu
ary 24. Wu had a play given by
Winona l.ogsdon, Franrea Kum
arad, Rnsle duty and tlernldlne
Anaworth. Th namo of It was
"It's Only tha Negro In Me."
Winona Logsdon was Ma Fran
ces Kamarad, Pa, float Suty
and Ocraldlne Anaworth were
the twins. It was a good play.
Vlaaidj McCullum and Char
lotte Muupln will glvo a demon
stration on ginger bread nt our
noxt mooting. W hop they aro
good cooks. MARIS HANKL.
PINE GROVE
PINK OIIOVE, Ore. Mr. and
Mrs. John Itlchorsun and Mr. and
Mrs. Hoy Wilson rolurncd Inst
Thursday from a two months
visit at Plxley, California.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Axel of
Merrill were visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Clrlffeth last Wed
nesday. Mrs. Lola Deck and Mrs. R. S.
Bunnell entertained the Henley
P.-T. A. last Wednosdar at the
home of Mrs. Beck with a bard
tlmo party.
Several members of tho Doug
las Kohler fiimlly hnve been con-
Some People
Say
No system, not oven democ
racy, can guarantee self-govern-luent
lo a people too Indolent,
or too Indifferent to cherish and.
If necessary, to fight for Its
own freedom.- James 1', War
burg, New York banker,
a
Ro long as the English lan
guage maintains Its unity over
lb Kintliah-apeaklng world, no
great hnrtn ran happen lo It.
I)r. A. Lloyd James. l.ondon lin
guist, sat
Keally, I don't pay much at
tention to anything that "chain
gang executive" says. Secre
tary of Interior Harold Irkos. re
ferring lo jov, Kugona Tal
madge, Georgia,
a
We thought we'd won, until
the, supremo court cams along
and unwon us. llassll Hchcnrk,
vice president, Indiana Farm Bu
reau Federation, referring to
AAA.
a a a
If you must com to Holly
wood, be different. Stand out
from the crowd. If you have to
put on stills. Janet Uayntir, ad
vising would-b moria atari,
a a a
It was not Germany which lost
the war; It waa Kuropa. Th
United State. Japan, and Russia
gained, but Rurops lost Its recu
perative power, th vital forrav
Muesollnl.
Ton have to polish trophies hut
not dollars, and I hat to shin
allverware. Kihel Durkhardt Ar
nold, tennis sensation, explaining
why ah turned professional.
Power used to onsrat a ilnnt
radio tube in a Pittsburgh
broadcasting station jould push
two street cars up a sleep grade.
J
LAST
TIMES
TODAY
KAY
ffTOAMOS
SINGItyG!. FIGHTING! LOVING!
BENEATH THE WESTERN SKIES
WINE1 GljUITARS! KISSESI ROMANCE!
SET TO THE TEMPO OF A
FIGHTING PEOPLE
FIGHTING TO UVEI LIV
ING TO LOVEI
IT'S YOURS
.'. Klamath Falls
THE THRILL OF A
D6ZEN YEARS!
at WrafTl
IWgflSBO'
P f M ChorlaskBUltrerd Willi. Howard .
7! 'its I H,rb vwiaw" 0rn" tra,Y
''mM I gtIPX. ACT NEWS