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Today's Roundup
Br MALCOLM EPLEY
j A N unfavorable surface condHion his de
f velopcd again this spring on the Willam
tt highway.
! ; The light surface on this lm-
o r t a n t thoroughfare has
i roken up In apota. On a
oad where engineering and
en oral conditions invite
ipeed, these rough stretches
. ire very hard on equipment
nd tempers.
What Is needed on the Wll
iamette is a thorough sur
facing job. It has never had
; Hie.
! When the road was ODened
: for travel in the late 'thirties, EPLEY
' It was given a light oiled surface. This re
t suited from the heavy public demand for use
of the thoroughfare, and the highway officials
: provided a temporary surfacing program that
would take care of the Immediate need. Then
1 came the war, and the real surfacing job has
' never been done.
' It Is a Job that should have high priority
;now. We are told that the federal government
; has authorized expenditure of $1,080,000 in
I forest funds for work on the Willamette, and
1 it is understood here that this will go at least
' partly Into the reconditioning program so
badly needed there.
The Willamette highway, perfectly located
for a great traffic carrier, has never had the
I chance It deserv es. The western entrance at
j' Goshen is most unfavorable, and a correction
P project has also been held up by the war.
I When It Is given a proper surfacing job, and its
junction with the Pacific highway is satis
1 factorily' arranged, it will begm to come into
I its own. Despite these drawbacks, it is the
i fastest, shortest and best route between Cali
fornia and Willamette valley points.
- "Cog" To Leave
DR. LOWELL T. COGGESHAIX, the man
who conceived the mission that created
. ; the Klamath Falls Marine Barracks, will leave
- '! the coming weekend. He is now on terminal
' leave from the navy, which he served as a
; i captain. He plans to return to the University
"' v of Michigan, where he holds the chair of
S tropical medicine, although it at reported he
has received other flattering offers.
Capt Coggeshall has been more than a mere
'4 military sojourner in Klamath Falls. He has
. - assumed the responsibilities of a citizen of this
$ community. He recognized Klamath Falls as a
- community that could do much for the marines
; at the Barracks, and he contributed much to
the establishment of a mutually beneficial re-
lationshtp between the military post and the
- town. ;
f When the first big Job of the Marine Barrack
. was done, "Cog" conceived the idea of making
this magnificent facility available for educa
tional purposes In the state of Oregon, espe-"
4 ciaiiy ior mi Denexu oi ex-service men. xiere
again his contribution was most significant, and
f Oregon and Klamath Falls are both fortunate
.that this man bas been with us for a while, and"
eity. . .
Dr. and ,Mrs. Coggeshall will be honor
guests at a testimonial dinner to be held Fri
day evening at the Willard hotel, under spon
sorship of the military affairs committee of
the chamber of commerce. This is to be a com
munity affair. Anyone interested is welcome
to attend. ' Reservations should be made now
at the chamber, and there should be a large
crowd out to bid the Coggeshalls fareweU.
Dr. Coggeshall has many constructive sug
gestions to make to Klamath Falls a city in
whose welfare he has become vitally Interested.
We hope he voices them frankly at the Friday
night affair, and we hope there are many there
to hear him.
STATIC
Another psychological drama
is brought to the air tonight
i when ABC presents Dark Ven
' tufe. This week's story features
the supernatural in the form of
a murdered father returning to
help his daughter. Entitled "The
Window," tonight's adventure
combines a murder, a villainous
suitor, a beautiful blonde, blind,
rich girl and a ghost. How a
murdered . father restores his
daughter's eyes makes a thrill
ing episode in this newest of all
radio thrillers.
The Green Hornet will make
his last appearance over KFLW
tonight. Business being business
and all that, and radio being a
screwy business anyway, you
never know what to expect next.
Replacement for the crusading
newsman will be Ed Sullivan,
commentator, coming to you
through the courtesy of Edge
worth pipe tobacco.
One of the few professional
programs on the air today, "The
TUESDAY P. M,
KFLW 1450 kc.
C:00 Salsn Concert
6:1ft Muile of Manhattan
:30 Newi ABC
fl:45Tha Flrlnf Fa bile ABO
6:M Elmer Dtrli ABC
7:00 The Green Hornet ABO
7:1ft "
9:30 Hootler Hop ABC
7:45 Teddy Powell Orrh
:ft0Lum 'N Abner ABO
11:15 Console Cepera
AO Dark Venture ABO
11:45
ftiOOBob Willi nil Texas
Flay Boye ABC
:1S "
,. l:30 Newt
9:45 Air Fereei romlnf Hone
10:00 Cal Tlnaey ABC
10:15 Raymond Awlnr ABO
10:30 Doctor Talk It Over ABC
30:45 Ambaniador Orcb ABC
11:00 Bifo Off
11:15
1 1 :M
11:4
WEDNESDAY A.
i0 Dm Patrol
: Farm rare
liMNiwi, Ilreakfant edition
? Jtin stop and Go Rhow
7:anjamei Abba Obf rvai ABO
1;Zk. MannrnAHC
:10Brfkf.t Clgb ABO
Breakfast flab ARC
:SH Braakfail Club ARC
S:U Broakfail Clab ABO
iXW
M., APRIL 24
News B,fdJNews
malcoi.m m.rt
HlHIini Miwr
WWW SUamata
act h "
jnanth Sl.oe
jwnUl $1.00
Doctor Talks It Over," will be
heard tonight at 10:30. With Mil
ton Cross interviewing leading
doctors, surgeons and medical
authorities, the program has had
a steadily increasing audience.
Appearing on the program are,
and have been, such notables as
Dr. Morris Fishbien, Surgeon
General Thomas Parran of the
U. S. public health service; Dr.
A. C. Furstenberg, dean of the
medical school at the University
of Michigan; Vice Admiral Ross
T. Mclntire, personal physician
to the late Franklin D. Roose
velt and Dr. Allen Gregg of the
Rockefeller foundation.
With spring in the air, Chief
Ambrose of our fire department
issues the annual warning
clean up on fire hazards around
your home. With fire losses and
fire deaths on the increase, a few
minutes spent in your home
cleaning out the basement, or
getting rid of that pile of old
rags in a closet may pay off big.
And don't forget to check your
furnace or other heating divlce.
Half of the world's estimated
coal reserve of seven trillion tons
is in North America.
RADIO PROGRAMS
, APRIL 23
KFJI 1240 kc.
Gabriel HeatterMBB
Aroand Totra
Aaaer. For am of Air MBS
WEDNESDAY A.
KFLW 1450 kc.
0:00 G lam ear Manor ABO
:IS " "
S:.10 Bre'kfatt In Hollywood ABC
9:45
10:00 Kellocri Home Edit, ABO
10:15 Ted Malone ABC
10:30 My True Story ABO
10:45
10:55 Newt A Betty Crocker ABC
11:00 Baukhatte Talking ABC
Jl:15Etnel and Albert ABC
11:30 The Listening; Pott ABC
11:45 Mntio by Tranacrlptlon
Voice of Bp or 1 1
Ked Ryder MBS
Gardenlnr Today
Calendar of Mntlc
Pellcana
Mlsrha Borr Orel..
Glen Hardy, Newt MB I
Jamea Crowley MB!
Dance
American Legion
Concert Mall NlWi
oundnp" '
Mu.Uj Ai Yo Like It
rhel Stewart Orcb. MUM
1S:0t Vewi, Noon
it: in man on tne nireei
12:80 Ladlei Be Sealed ABO
IS:4S
1:00 Jack Berch ABO
1:15 Try 'X Find Me ABC
1:10 Thla Moving World ABC
1:15 Hymna of all Charcaea A0
t:0t What's Data' Lad lei ABO
2:15
2:25 Norman Neibltt ABC
2:30 "14-10 Clab"
11:00 Bride and Groom ABO
3:30 AI praroeABC
3:45 "
4:00 Headline Rdltlen ABO
4:11 MafAolm Kpley
4:0 ft on tat Hong Shop ABO
4:45 Hop HarrigtnABC
8:00 Terry and the Plratil ABC
iVIADIrk Tracy ABC
:30 Jack Armstrong; ABO
' 1:45 Soorli Lineup
The Fiellnt It Mutual MB
Spike Jonet Orcb. MBS
Newi Bonn dap
Wake-Up Tanee
Mornlna Bevellle
Newa MRS
Rile and Sblno MDS
leadline Newe
Todar'e Beit Bora
(aland Mrlodlea
Faehlon Flaabei
rake II r.i.r Time MRS
Vleler U. Llndlahr MBS
Fealnro
WASHINGTON, April 23 The leading
article a few weeks back in the "Art
Digest," a trade bi-weekly, presented "George
Inneas re-evaluated" which is to say, a great
American landscaplst of the middle nineteenth
century has been revalued upward In appre
ciation by his profession. More than that, the
article was a reaction to a show of forty-seven
oils of Inness exhibited in the energetic Spring
field, Massachusetts museum, later to be shown
in Brooklyn and Montclalr. Two weeks after
ward, the same publication re-discovered Al
bert Ryder, whom it halls as "America's great
romantic who found that 'something beyond' '
as he superiorly did. It points out Ryder,
who composed 130 works, never had a one
man show during his lifetime.
All American Art Needi
THIS Is all American art needs, a fair show
ing and a hearing which has been denied
it. There are other numerous incidents of
similar promotional nature which show the
people who can do the job are taking hold, as
this column started demanding some months
ago. But the trend must expand and con
tinue for several years before our art can
get its proper place in the popular mind, which
has been confronted for so many generations
with European and lately our own thought
enslavement, to non-existent beauty sur-real-ism,
non-objectivity and such popular metaphy
sical attacks upon our realistic senses.
An exposure of this delusive metaphysical art
has now been published by the New York
Times artist, S. i. Woolf, in an article asking:
"Is it art or it is double talk?" He likens our
recent art status to that of the nation in the
famous Anderson fairy tale, where two for
eign fakers came in and deluded an entire
nation by getting the people to bring them gold
from which they were to weave gold gar
ments, and they succeeded in getting the em
peror to dress first in non-existent clothing
and all the people to go into rapture over it
for fear they would be considered stupid, but i
finally a little child who saw the sur-realist
parade shouted: "Why, the emperor has no
clothes on." Whereupon the people shook off
their hypnotized state of thought-control and
saw the child was right.
Blames Art Dealers
WOOLF blames the art dealers mostly, and
does not mention the communist psy
chological inspiration for our stupidity, which
I think any philosopher not clothed in imagin
ary gold raiment himself, can realize after
Investigation. (See column published March 23).
If Woolf does not realize the political inspira
tions of this art, the believers in it do.
The problem and the remedy is greater than
Mr. Woolf suspected. It is more than a fault
of the dealers. They will sell what the public
wants and unless the public is hoodwinked by
metaphysical means it will not buy such de
lusions. The problem then. Is to break up such
metaphysical controls over the people and the
way to do it is not only by direct realism,
but by metaphysical means to establish the
normal senses and common sense. We must
not only show our own real art and establish
its proper place to the open mmds of our people,
but break the controls from the totalistically
deluded.
Need For Realism
IDO not think this is needed in art as much
as in politics, because in art people are con
fronted with a visible object and under any
normal circumstances cin, in bulk, and as a
people, protect themselves against such an im
position upon their normal intelligence and
imagination. But in politics, world politics,
there is dire and critical need for realism, and
a necessity for exposure of those who have
established unrealistic politics to dupe the peo
ple. They should always be required to face
the facts in UNO and elsewhere, upon all print
ed pages, through all microphones.
Do not let our people fall for any non
existent beauties of politics or art. Make the
fakers prove their case before the bar of com
mon justice with their controls off in U.N.
or in art museums or better yet, break up
their metaphysical controls. In any way pos
sible, save the people from the delusions of
sur-realism in metaphysical politics.
Physical Ed Man
Hired At Lakeview
LAKEVIEW, April 23 Alvln
Unruh, who at present is work
ing on his master's degree at
Colorado State teachers college
at Greeley, has been hired as
boys' physical education in.
structor and coach at Lakeview
high school to fill the vacancy
caused by the resignation of W.
11. (Wad) wiliaman.
Unruh has had four years
teaching experience in North
Dakota schools and served two
years in the army. According
to advance information, he has
a well-rounded background for
the coaching job here, and will
be an able succesor to Wad Wil
iaman, whose resignation be
comes effective at the close of
the present school year.
SMALLPOX FATALITY
SEATTLE. April 23 (Pi Har-
borview county hospital today
announced tne aeatn, irom
smallpox, of Mrs. Mabel Gagnon.
46. She was admitted to the hos
pital yesterday noon. Mrs. Gag-
non's was the 11th fatality of
me current smallpox epidemic,
M., APRIL 24
KFJI 1240 kc.
Lyle Van, NewiMBfl
Morton Downey, MBB
Morninr Matinee
Ray Block Swing
S'ewa MBS
Krno Bapee
Leo F.rdody Helen
lobn J. Anthony MB I
Fray Braglottl Plaao
Queen for a Day MBI
WEDNESDAY P. M., APRIL 24
Edition
Melodlona Melodlea
Newi, Headline
Fear Dance Taaea
Farm Front
Organ
Johnson Family MBS
Mlacha Borr Orch.
Homo Demonetratloa
Zeke ManneriMBS
Local Newt
It H
Reqneit Hoar f
Dr. Lewie T. Talbot
Tea Dance
F.lia Maxwell MBH
Fulton Lewlt Jr. MBS
Rex Miller MBS
Rrtklne John ion MBS
Klamath Thealrei i
Wettern Ballada
Kuperman MRft
Captain Mldnlle MRS
Advent, of Tom Mia MBI
KFJI Fealare
SIDE GLANCES
23 J
wwi. taw it mn wet, m t. m ma. aaT. an
i T go to all the trouble of having your teacher out for
dinner, and the very next day you spoil nny chnucc you
bad for good grades by ploying hooky I"
BOYLE'S
NOTEBOOK
By HAL BOYLE
ROME. April 23 () The
liner Vulcnna is speeding toward
America today with hundreds
of happy warbrides.
Pretty Julia isn't one of them,
although she wanted to be.
Julia was a real life "Madame
Butterfly" one of the thous
ands of girls who lost their
hearts to foreign soldiers in war
time. But this "Madame Butterfly"
couldn't live on promises for
ever. She could wait only so
long.
Two and a half years ago Julia
first met her American captain
In Caserta. She was only 19
soft, pretty and unworldly. She
had never gone out with men
before.
Nw to Julia
It is an old, old story but it
was all new to Julia. She fell
deeply in love with the young
captain. He was married but she
told friends he had assured her
he would divorce his wife and
marry her.
When the captain was trans
ferred to Rome the Impression
able young girl followed him.
She bore a child that could bear
no family name. She loved it
dearly and for a time was happy
over the prospect of future life
in America with the man whose
love she had forsaken her strict
religious upbringing. Then the
baby sickened and died.
In her sudden loneliness Julia
was cheered only by thoughts of
that life ahead in the new world
with her captain. But six months
ago the captain returned to the
United States, his army service
completed.
"I will be back for you In
six months," he told her. "If I
am not back in six months I
will never come."
Lived for Letters
Throughout the lone Rome
winter Julia lived only for his
iciiers.
Only two letters came. Tn Vinrh
the captain said his wife was
seriously ill and that he feared
to ask her for a divnrco. H.
promised to send a package but
11 never arrived. Alter that
Julia's letters and cablegrams
went unanswered.
She brooded for weeks. Only
Holy Friday Julia was to meet
her sister. Carla. but she hH
no heart for the gaiety of Rome's
pre-Easter crowds.
For hours she sat alone In her
room and stared at two pictures
of her captain. She wrote a brief
noio 10 ner sister, and then rose
and put on her prettiest red
frock.
From a drawer she pulled a
hidden Distnl anH hnM If tn'h
body and pulled the trigger.
wim me Drignt agony of
Leather Faced
GLOVES
OREGON WOOLEN STORE
, LISTEN TO
a
TOP TEN for TONIGHT
1 ) v ;
v
I
Janitor Resigns
At Lakeview High
LAKEVIEW. April 23 Tom
Dohcrty of Plush, who has boen
Janitor at the local high school,
has resinned and will leave this
weekend for Brookings, Ore.,
where he recently purchased a
bulb farm. Mrs. Dohrrty will
continue her teaching duties un
til school is out, after which she
will join her husband at Brook
ings. Charles D. Young, a Lakeview
high school graduate with the
class of '43, and recently dis
charged from the navy, will take
over the Janitorial duties next
week.
Red Bluff Roundup
To Feature Races
Racing fans are promised
four exciting running races with
fast thoroughbreds, each day of
the Red Bluff Roundup, April
27 and 28. according to Racing
Director Fred C. Pugh.
A relay race each day Is an
other feature of the Roundup,
with riders changing their sad
dles to new mounts at the end
of each stretch.
Entry blanks have been se
cured for horses from Califor
nia, Oregon and Nevada and
stall reservations Indicate a full
program.
Car Wreck Caused
By
'Dead' Salmon
LA GRANDE. Ore.. April 23
OF) A salmon salely untied
and presumably dead today
was credited with having
wrecked the auto of James Man
takes. He reported he lost control
of his car and drove off the high
way when a "dead" salmon sud
denly lunged about.
that first bullet flaming within
her she squeezed the trigger a
second time and died.
When Carla came In search
of her she found Julia lying near
two pictures of the one she had
loved most. The farewell note
read in part:
"Carla, excuse me If I do It
in this manner. It is cowardly
I know but I do not wish to
nor am I able to continue. Try
to say as little as passible about
my captain. I do not wish to
harm him. He loves his wife.
"I love him a hundred times
more than at first and I don't
wish to live without him. It was
six months yesterday since he
left, and the waiting period has
aireaay passea. i aon l wish to
wait an my lire.
"Mother and you who have
done so much for me must for
give me this.
ISlIRYDLACt1!
PAINTS
SUPREME QUALITY at your Daalars
or from HENRY BLACK CO.
2a S.W. 1st AVt, PORTLAND, ORE.
prn 17.17-
, if t If II ww s
M vm M If
5:45 Sports Lineup
6:15 Music of Manhattan
6:30 News ABC
7:00 The Green Hornet ABC
7:30 Hootier Hop ABC
8:00 Lum N Abner ABC
8:30 Dark Venture ABC
9:00 Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys
ABC
9:30 Newi
10:45 Raymond Swing ABC
THE HERALD and NEWS
By JOAN O'NEILL
"She Stoia To Conquer,"
this year's student body play,
has bi'on In rehearsal for aonio
time and sevins to be faring
fine. The play
la ar.lt, i.IiiImH
................ m'.".
to bo per- I f Jprt y
formed April K "v.
30 for the stu- I.': f
dont body and JBjrTs.f
May i ior uio p V .
townspeople. r sj
"She Sloops
to Comiuer Is t
a five-act pluy vt
SU ''JUS' HATufjJi
smith. The JoenO'N.U!
first prricntiilion of the piny
was in Loudon in 1773, The
play deals with the period in
which Goldsmith lived during
the reign of Louis XV. which
was greatly Influenced by Mar
quise do Pompadour and Count
ess Dubarry.
This iwrlod which was so
greatly Influenced by pomp and
elegeiice is the butt of Gold
smith's sly wit. He pokes fun
at the extreme hair styles of
both men and women, the pow
dered wig, the hoop skirts, and
nil the trickery and extravaguut
finery of his age.
English Department Assists
The dramatics department
has asked all the Engli.ih teach
ers to Instruct their classes on
that period In history so the
students will be more familiar
with the trend of that time.
The play Is being presented
in the manner of the day with
costume, speech and furniture
all of ihut period. This play
seems to be .one of the most
worthwhile and one of the most
difficult that KUHS has under
taken. There are five scenery
changes, which differs from the
usual procedure of modern
times of playing In one stage
set. The music to be played be
fore the performance and be
tween acts has been selected
from the composers of the lime.
Several townspeople have
helped with this production.
Mrs. Lawrence Clocksln de
signed the costumes and draft
ed patterns; Mrs. Ethel Clayton
assisted in the making of the
costumes and Vern Swansen,
architect, gave suggestions on
the stage set.
Lignite is a dark brown coal
with low carbon and high oxy
gen content.
CARD OF THANKS
We are deeply grateful to our
many friends and Pelican Post
No. 1383, Veterans of Foreign
Wars, for their many kind
nesses, expressions of sympathy
and floral tributes extended us
during our recent bereavement,
the loss of our beloved husband,
son and brother, H. L. (AI)
Rhoads.
Mrs. H. L. Rhoads,
Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Rhoads,
Mr. and Mrs. Doran Rhoads
and children,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Rhoads
and children,
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Rhoads,
Mr. Wesley Rhoads,
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Hurt
and son,
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Eastburn
and son.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to take this means
of thanking the friends and
neighbors on Summers Lane for
their kind, thoughtful and effi
cient assistance offered us dur
ing the fire of the home at 4831
Summers Lane Saturday after
noon. Knute Johnson, (owner).
Mrs. Collins and Children,
Tenants
Hemorrhoids! Hurt
Like Sin! Now I Grin
Thousand rhanirft uroarit to rrln. Vm
a DOfTTOHH' formula for dintr of
FZZfSSi "nl (IrUKKiats by tint". Thorn
ton A Minor Clink. Hurjirimna: QUICK
pnlllfitlvrt relief of pain. Irritation, aort
nons. JOIpfi noftrn ; n6n to ahrink awcll
injr. Vntt (tnrlttr' way, Gt tub Thorn
ton k Minor. Ilactal Ointment or Thorn
ton Minor Hartal Hiipponltorl".
Follow lab. 'Ilr'rtionfi. Tf not della:htrd,
low roat will ba refunded on request.
AI all ffo aBff itarta avarywkart.
A Fence to
Meet Every Need
Made from selected 48 in.
full sise wood slats, evenly
spaced and woven between 5
cables of heavy wire. Colors,
red or green.
It's easily, quickly and per
manently erected. Long last
ing and makes a good ap
pearance. It's inexpensive,
too.
' Available in any quantity.
Suburban Lbr. Co.
4784 So. 6th Phone 7701
saALD NKWS, aiaaaaia ralla, Ore.
Medford Not
Legion Host
PORTLAND, April 23 (A')
The stnte convention of the
American Legion will be held
here July 2U-31 Instead of at
Medford, It was announced to
day. State legion officials reported
lack of housing and inability to
obtain use of either Camp White
barracks or the army air field
facilities for the delegates forced
the change In plans.
It-will be the first full scale
convention since the outbreak
of World War II.
Flashes Of
Life
TURNABOUT
WILKKS-HAUHK, Pa., April
23 ll') A year ago girls at the
Wllkes-Barre YMCA couldn't
find enough ntale partners for
their dancing class.
Today the class was discon
tinued but not because of man
power shortage. Of 72 regis
trants, only five were girls.
e a a
QUIET. PLEASE
SALT LAKE CITY, April 23
(!') Soup slurpers who set to
with gusto muy be somewhat
subdued from now on when they
read the menus In Salt Lake City
restaurants urging silence.
Meaning no offense to the cus
tomer, however, the Salt Lake
Restaurant association explained
thnt It had merely agreed to help
out the city's anti-noise campaign
by printing "quiet" slogans on
the menus.
a a a
MENLO PARK, Calif., April
23 A') Now Clayton Elliott, San
Frunclsco attorney, can be that
fellow you've heard about who's
always telling the traffic cop,
"Look, bub, I own the city hall."
Elliott hits purchused for $35,.
000 the building leased to Menlo
Park for Its city hall.
Home Food Lockcra
To Aid Housewives
PORTLAND. April 23 (Pi
widespread use of home lockers
for frozen foods will help the
nation's 7500 commercial froten
food locker firms, an Industry
spokesman said today.
Here to attend the convention
of Oregon Kronen Food Locker
association member. R. R. Far-
quhar, Omaha, Neb., executive
secretary of the Manufacturers
and Suppliers association, said
home lockers will make house
wives "froten food conscious.'
Paul O. Landry
this question:
"Our firm Is subleasing
space in our office. la
ease one of the subtenant's
visitors is injured while oa
the premises, does our teg
ular Public Liability pol
icy protect us or must we
have a new 'rider' at
tached te our present
policy?"
For Information ea any
insurance problem, consult
THE LANDRY CO.
419 Main St. Ph. 56.2
Serving Klamath
20 Years
The Courthouse Is New
One Block Down The
Street From Our Office.
The Apostolic Faith
228 North
V ,.V.. M,-.s--.;vft5'l
'mm
R. Robert Crawford,
Evangelist
Assisted by Workers and Musicians from Portland.
Tht Morning Star Quartet and The Vesper Trio
will furnish special music and tong.
Personal testimonies of men and women converted
from oil walki of life,
YOU ARE ALWAYS WELCOME
"The Church Without a Collection Plato" '
WSBT. ..U M. !. F... Tea
From Other
Editors
WHAT IS YOUH PIUCEt
(Farm Journal)
If price ceilings are ended,
and the OPA closed up on June
30, It may cost you money. You
may be one of a great many peo
ple who will have to buy ihlnie
or pay rent for awhile at scar
city prices.
That will hurt, of course.
None of us likes to pay out more
money and gel less.
8o, let's ask ourselves a really
touchy question: "la freedom
worth any money?"
Some Moisachusetts farmers
lust 171 years ago this April
thought freedom was worth
more than money. They were
angry about unfair taxes. They
wanted to be free to buy and sell
as they pleased. They refused lo
let government be their master.
They were joined by other farm
ers and patriots. Led by Vir
ginia farmer, they finally won.
The struggle cost lives and
bloodshed and great deal of
money.
Their success made all Ameri
cans free, being free, the gen- .
erst loin that followed became
more prosperous than any people
had ever been. No people have
ever prospered under a master
government.
OPA. like King George lit en
croaches on Individual freedom,
the princliile our fighting ances
tors mane so conspicuously
American. Even If OPA policy
did not prevent production, and
in the lung run cost us more
than It saves lis, government
prlt'e fixlng Is alwilulely wrong
in peacetime. It makes govern
ment the master rattier than the
servant.
Can modern Americana sacri
fice for principle? Are we to auk
OPA to continue to regulate us,
because temporarily a few dol
lars will be saved? Or do we In
1048 have a little of the same
kind of courage to stand for
freedom that we gratefully
thank our Revolutionary fore
bears for having had?
Will our grandchildren point
with pride to our resistance to
encroaching tyranny? Or will
they have to regret that we put
money above principle?
What la your price for free
dom? That your insuranee Is right
is Important. Consult Hana Mar
land. 123 N. Sth St.
Genuine
Russell
tin? 'j
Dim
Shooters"
America's leading
light weight
sporting boot.
Moccasin pack.
No-Mark Soles.
Both narrow and
wide widths.
JleedeA,
MEN'S CLOTH I lH
Corner Sth and Main
Sth Street
Announces a
Special
Evangelistic
Service
Tuesday, April 23
at 8:00 o'clock