WtLKKK JF.NK1NS MALCOLM KPI.V
idllor eianasuis Editor
K tared Mcond ctaae tnattar at the poaiotllco of Ktamatb
Ua. Of., oa Ausuet ao. 1906. unom act of consreae,
March s. 187
moeithe ft SO
year M.00
I i1
r
eUUWJRUTlON RATUR
Cirri jnenlh l 00 By mail .
y mail month i.oo By mtil .
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
By MALCOLM EPLEY
NEW YORK, N. Y. (.Travel Correspondence)
Without a struggle, Portland today won
the 1947 national grand Jodge convention of the
Elks. The action was taken at the 1946 session
here, which we are attend-
F,J"JU' ing. Frank J. Lonergan of
" I Portland, past grand exalted
' . ' cmnt, nirin0 it thp Irish firi
d,iA wit thnt tvnifv iilatform
fl ' ' dt3t1i appearances of the Portland
KJ A circuit judge.
From the way delegates
from all over the country are
talking here, Portland will at
tract a huge visitation for the
Flks convention next sum-
EPLEY raer. A lot of the folks have
never seen the west and are itching for travel.
Elks obviously are going to make a major
contribution to the 1947 tourist crop in Oregon.
There are about 3000 registered for the 1946
convention. With their wives and other visit
ors, there must be about 5000 here.
THE Elks convention opened with a huge
somi-public ceremony in the grand ball
room of the Waldorf-Astoria hotel. This mag
nificent room scats maybe 3000 and fortunately
ii air-conditioned and has grand accoustics.
Among the speakers was William O'Dwyer,
New York's mayor, who told the Elks that New
York is not populated with 7,000.000 smart
alecks. (We don't know why he felt it neces
aary to make such assurances.) The newspaper
photographers got pictures of O'Dwyer receiv
ing a lei from the Hawaii Elks delegation. Try
as he may a he-man like O'Dwyer can't help
but look sheepish with that thing on his neck.
Big, warm Jim Farley, one-time postmaster
general, onetime Roosevelt campaign manager,
and onetime third-term opponent, was an audi
ence favorite on the program. Farley made it
an occasion to declare his opposition to "isms"
that he said may threaten the American way of
life. As a matter of fact, that seems to be a ma:
ior theme for speechmakers around here.
J .
AFTER the meeting, we walked back the six
blocks from the Waldorf-Astoria to the
Commodore, where we are staying. It was hot.
Our party decided on ice cream sodas.
The opportunities for something stronger
were available everywhere. We had to comb
Lexington avenue pretty carefully to find a
drugstore with an operating soda fountain.
However, don't get the idea that nobody
drinks anything but hard likker around here
(although there are a tremendous number of
bars and cocktail lounges.) There are little
itands here and there, especially in the Broad
way district, that do a huge business in genume
and synthetic fruit drink.
We sat down the other night at the Cross
roads sidewalk cafe, at 42nd and Broadway.
Our young son was with us and ordered milk.
The waiter expressed astonishment.
"That's an act," said the head waiter. "He
isn't that blase. A lot of people order milk
here."
News Behind The News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, July 14 Molotov advised
Mr. Byrnes privately just before our state
secretary set out for Paris, that Russia was
ready to talk peace with Austria. The Russian
did not lay why, but the Byrnes people assumed
the reds had seized about all they expected to
get out of Austria and were prepared to with
draw their troops sometime in the future. Thus
Austria was added to the agenda of the Paris
conference of the big four foreign ministers at
the last moment, rather surprisingly and inex
plicably. Lo and behold, as soon as the Big Four got
near agreements in Paris, the Russians started
picking up about 4000 persons in Austria, giv
ing them 33 pounds of luggage and shipping
them off to our zone of Germany to support, or
to the French who are borrowing from us to
support themselves, saying these people were
Germans or something. This was nazi techni
que. They wrested people from their homes
and business in one nation and shipped them
willy nilly in the remaking of the globe. This
was the stuff we had been fighting the war
against. Of such character are our dealings
with the Russians.
Hungarian Purge
OR do you want another example? The Hun
garian peace treaty was already on the
agenda for Paris for settlement. This was one
nation which had held the greatest semblance
of a democratic election and had chosen over
whelmingly a people's peasant party govern
ment opposed to the tiny communist minority.
But we have been officially advised since the
Paris Big Four meeting that the communists
have demanded, and taken steps by their oc
cupying troops, to suppress the Catholic youth
movement. Unofficially, underground reports
which are entirely trustworthy in tone if not in
detailed fact, are revealing that several hun
dred priests and clergymen have been put into
prison and that a cardinal has been the leader
of a movement to keep Hungary free by consent
of both Protestants and Catholics.
The Russians well know they must suppress
the Catholic church and its plea for individual
freedom of conscience if they are to roll Hun
gary permanently under the foot of the small
communist group there, and are acting accord
ingly. Or do you want another clearly provable,
obvious example? The Russian press and offi
cialdom has been daily foolishly charging that
our atom bomb test was a warlike move against
them. No reasonable person could support such
a claim. The tests had been scheduled for six
months. Just between you and me, they were
inspired by the navy department to prove their
ships should be maintained in the face of threats
to cut their appropriations and fold them into
the war department, but they may not even
have proved this. The test was badly bungled
from the standpoint of naval publicity which
was its chief aim.
a a
Poor Coverage
IN an atom bomb test, nearly everyone knows
the effect on human life may not even ap
. pear for 14 days. Yet newsmen were put into
airplanes over the target area at the time of
explosion and naturally recorded the truth,
namely that they saw little or no damage. Later
some ships sank, but not the Nevada in the
center of the target and one good reporter
wrote the bomb had been exploded too high in
the air for maximum effect (several seconds too
soon were his exact words), while another lead
ing journalist said to make the matter com'
pletely un-understandable that it was ex
ploded too low (my info suggests it was 300
400 yards sideways off the Nevada but is not
accurate on the height).
Incidentally, Mr. Truman was not accurately
quoted when some news authorities reported
him as saying we had only two atom bombs
sometime ago. My understanding is we have
a good many and may be making a stock pile
of them which Russia can consider a warlike
act if she chooses but every American knows
is a measure of defense, particularly a defense
against another Pearl Harbor.
We have no world ambitions, except for
justice and freedom of the individual. Anyone
knows that when you compromise on this prin
ciple, you compromise with injustice and en
slavement of the individual, to a totalitarian
stateism and its purposes of world revolution
against every existing thing, which has not been
officially limited or defined by Russia in any
respect. If you deal honorably with a person
who believes honor is a weakness, you weaken
yourself, and you strengthen him. In this case
you give a character of world honor and mili
tary support for steps which are against our
war purposes of individual freedom and uni
versal justice, for the common man.
SIDE GLANCES
m KYI s&A
7-1?
com. t4 tv tare uavKt. mc t. u in u. a nt off.
1 (li, I'm nnlv o out with Ctcorjjo, so I'll just mulch
I sonic of llicse oh! stockings I can save my new one for
n tUilc wilh .some stranger!"
I I
STATIC
r '" 1 1
The World
Today
By DeWITT MacKENZIE
AP Foraign Affairs Analyst
-J
Secretary of State Byrnes is
home from the Big Four for
eign ministers' adjourned meet
ing which laid the groundwork
for the world peace conference
of 21 nations opening in Paris
July 22 and, to quote his re
strained summary, "made some
progress on the road back to
peace."
Mr. Byrnes is scheduled to
give us a report of the foreign
mining ts' parley by radio to
night but one would expect that
his account would be calculated
to make us grateful for part of
a loaf, rather than to set bells
tinging over a tremendous suc
cess by the Big Four negotiat
ors. It's indeed a matter of
much satisfaction that the con
ference didn't break up in fail
ure, split as it was by the great
divergence of views between
Moscow and other allies.
There could have been a
knockdown fight easily enough.
That there wasn't is explained
in part by Mr. Byrnes' remark
in Paris that the U. S. accepted
some compromises on European
treaty proposals to avoid a
"clash that nobody wants." One
hastens to add that this isn't
meant to detract from conces
sions made by the other pow
ers. ..
The foreign ministers reached
a large measure of agreement
on the proposed treaties for
Italy, Bulgaria, Hungary and
Finland. As this column pre
viously has remarked, it strikes
me as unlikely that any treaty
could alter the status of the
four smaller countries, since
they already are under Russian
domination. The position of
Italy, however, is still on the
knees of the gods.
International Experiment
One of the outstanding fea
tures of the vital Italian treaty
is the agreement to internation
alize the strategic Adriatic port
of Trieste. Byrnes said this
could serve as an experiment in
international cooperation.
"The nations of the world "
he declared, "have entered into
what is a great experiment that
should determine whether it is
possible for the United Nations,
in a situation of this kind, to
reach a solution."
We now come, however, to a
grim failure on the most impor
tant subject of the entire world
peace settlement. That is the
administration of the Germany
which started two world wars
within a generation. Here the
differences between Russia and
the western allies are so great
that if accord is possible it still
is far below the horizon. The
tendency certainly is towards a
parting of the ways and a divi
sion of the reich.
Need Each Other
The Potsdam agreement,
which Marshal Stalin helped
frame, stated that while Ger
many was being occupied it
should be treated as an eco
nomic unit. The reason was that
eastern Germany (occupied by
nussiaj long nas Deen the big
producer of the country's food,
while the west (occupied by the
other allies) has been the ercat
industrial area. Before the
reich's downfall these areas ex
changed products and so com
plemented each other.
Under the occupation, how
ever. Russia has sealed off her
RADIO PROGRAMS
MONDAY EVE
KFLW 14.50 kc.
Maalo af Manhattan
Hama Town Newe"
Werld Newt Summary
Faravar Topi ABC
nporlo hy II. winner ABC
Southland Singing
Attr-n Roth Orrb.
Dade Martin Orch. ABC
Caraan Bobiion
I.am N' Abner ABO
Newe and Comment
Tha Fat Man ABC
:t
0:15
0:15
e:sa
0:55
7:oe
l:l
7:
1:15
:16
ia
1:15
:IJ
fl:3a
:!5
1:11
:ja
la:M
I Daal In Crime ABC
Newaa
Novatlntr .
Mlalc by Adlam ABO
Cal Tinner ABU
10:U timer Davla ABC
la ta Revere Blaea ABC
II : !( Off
lhst
ll:t
. JULY 15
KFJI 1240 kc.
Gahrlel Heatter MBS
Around Town"
Spotlight Banda MBS
Bulldog Drummond MBS
Clico Kid MBS
Michael Shayae MBS
Robl. Hllllard Center!
Erneit Armitrong, piano
filenn Hardy. Newa MBS
Rrx Miller MBS
Let'e Dance
Urnrr J. Taylor MBS
MurIc Aa Yoo Like It
Lawrenre IVelk Orch. MI1S
Kddie Ifeywond Orch. MBS
Newe Roundup MHS
ts
l.-eo
7:15
7:5
l:0O
S:M
la
:M
lIS
TUESDAY A. M., JULY 16
Dews Patral
Farm Fare
Newe
Slap and Oa show
Jemee Abba Onerrvee ABC
Fake Mannara ARC
Breakfaal Club AUG
Olamear Manor ABC
BUai. la Uellrwood ABO
Uakc-Lp Tunra
Morning Reveille
F. Hemingway, Newa MBS
Riae and Hhlna MBS
Headline Newe
Reat Buya
lavorllea af Tealerday
l-'aiihlon Fleibae
Newa
Victor II. I.lndlahr
Bobby Norrla Slrlnga
The Coke Club MBS .
Morning Matinee-
TUESDAY A.
KFLW 1450 kc.
:4ft Bkfat. in Hollywood ARC
10:00 Home Edition Newa ABC
10:15 Worda Jt Mnafc
; Mf Trna Slery ABC
!0:3S Betty Cracker ABC
11:00 Stop and Shop
11:10 Richard Lelbert, Organ
11:16 Ethel and Albert ABO
II:.0 l.iatenlng Poet ARC
11:45 Vlneent Lepea Orch.
M.. JULY 18
KFJI 1240 ke.
Klamath Tbeatrea
Newa-
Newe far VFemen MRS
o.ueen for a Day MBS
i
Lea Erdody Salan
Zeke Mannere MBS
Organ Mooda
iohnny Long Orch.
The happy looking gentleman
with the gun and small boy in
tow is Jack Bcrch, heard in his
own show over KFLW every
week day. Jack's home is near
Kisco. New York, and he really
does a lot of hunting.
for desert glass, but without
much luck. Otdn't have time to
go arrow head hunting, but fig
ure on doing that next year. Hurt
mountain was a show, all the
time, and Cyril Cook, of Chilo
quin, didn't detract from the
program any when he knocked
the ud on a mux can ot bar
becued beans and promptly
blew forty pounds of well couKvd
beuns all over the camp and
spectators. If you don't believe
me come on down and take a
look at my jacket.. Everyone
had a good time, and Uie con
census of opinion is strongly
along the lino of "I'll be back
next year, and we'll go out and
get dusty and dirty again."
It's a small world, and the
postal authorities seem to oe aoie
to get around it pretty well. A
card came into tne station this
morning addressed in a firm
manly hand and saying simply
"Radio Station KSLW, Clamotn
Falls, Oregon. It was written
by a chap in Corvallis, or should
I say Korvalis?
State Senator
Passes At 79
NEWHEHG, July 15 (.V)
State Senator William Erven
Burke, 711, a republican member
of the Yamhill rntinly senate
delegation since 10111, died at his
homo In the Glbbs district yes
terday. Death was attributed to a
heart attack.
Burke, sponsor of the Burke
fortified wine bill passed by the
1U4.1 leglsltttura to restrict sale
of fortified wine to stuto liquor
stores, did not campaign for a re
nomination In the 104S pri
maries. He was an unsuccessful citmll
ditto for state treasurer in ll'llt)
and withdrew from the 11134
gubernatorial primaries before
the election.
Hn was born on a farm In
Clark county, Wash., October I),
1866, and was educated in Port
land schools mid Willamollo uni
versity. Ho had operuted exten
sive pear and filbert orchards in
Yamhill county since 1015. Two
children. William E. Burke Jr.
and Alda Burke Jordan, both
Portland, survive.
Vessel Runs Aground
On Alaskan Beach
JUNEAU. Alaska. June 15 (Pi
The freighter Northern Voyager
of the Alaska Transportation Co.
ran aground on a sandy Ix-nch a
half mile below Juneau early
this morning.
The vessel may be refloated
at high tide.
The Northern Vovauer naued
up Juneau on its northern trip
last week because of the long
shore strike and discharged Its
cargo at Skagway.
It was proceeding to Juneau
when it went aground.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to extend our heart
felt thanks and appreciation (or
the acts of kindness, the mes
sages of sympathy and thu many
beautiful floral offerings dur
ing our recent bereavement.
William Morandn and family
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne It. Hall
Mr. and Mrs. George Phillips
HKRAI.D a NEWS, Klamath Fella, Pro. MONIIAT, July II, IH Fa 9
Railroads File Plea
To Abandon Tracks
WASHINGTON, July 15 11')
lu Mkkoil Hit Into!-
stale commerce commission to-
tluv for the right to utmmioii
aU.'llO miles of track from llliikts
Junction to Holiiiiclle, Ore.
The request was inittlo by the
Oregon-Washington Hullroud and
s
kin feel
fiery?
ho Itthlnf of ilatpla lath,
dry dtieme, local InllaNon,
'Try iht widely uiej Koalnol war
lo Waned relief. For to yean thu
Wilfully medicaied oininitnl hat
bMn givinft comfort to many
hopeleia ikin luArrtri.
For cltansing idndar akin, roila
Reiinol Soap it moil agrttablt.
reswolis;
Navigation company, which owm
tha ruad and by Uio Union PJ
clflc which Irusea It,
1 ? 7 7
I
I
I
I
AT
SERVICE
YOUR
JOHN H.
HOUSTON
RgraaaiNTiNo rum
EQUITABLE LIFE
Anuranca Society
LNael terh
III N. Ilk rheae mi
LOOKS ARE DKCEIVING
Know what tnl,k for. Look lor the nam
Ml. Joavph. ind luallty, onxI and neon,
omy id aspirin, (iet rt. Joarph Aeplrm.
world eUxsTjetecllor. lUc. lUUUIdcte.lJe.
Clayton Steam Generators
Now Available
0-150 pounds steam pressure
(in 5 minutes)
O FULLY AUTOMATIC
O OIL OR GAS FIRED
INEXPENSIVE
O To install
O To operate
See the "CLAYTON"
on display at the
COMMERCIAL MAINTENANCE CO.
Commercial Arts Building
233 So. 11th Phon 7164
Gib Fleet and Cy Cook are to
be congratulated on the wonder
ful job they did with the bar
becue, and Lakcvlcw is to be
congratulated on the way they
go in there and mit on a rjarlv
jtor three mindrcd and fifty men
ana Keep u rolling-
Back from Hart . mountain
and ready for the grind of work
again, but in a much better
frame of mind than I was when
I started. In three days we got
a touch of a little bit of every
thing, including beans. It was
hot and clear on Friday, hot and
dusty on Saturday and cold and
much dustier on Sunday. With
out a doubt that trip down
through Spanish lake and on
east was the dirtiest trip ever
taken by man. We left Hart
mountain in the back of a pick
up and drove thirty miles try
ing to find the antelope herd.
We got back with a grand total
of five antelope, at ranges of
everything from 1000 yards to
100 feet. Also one big black
tail buck, spotted by Chuck
Cecil, who turned out to have
the best eye for game of anyone
on the trip. Stopped, as every
one always does, along the road
through Plush and took a look
zone. As a result both America
and England have to spend vast
sums to provide food for their
areas. To alleviate this absurd
situation Byrnes has offered to
merge the American zone with
any other economically. Russia
isn't willing to enter such a
merger under present condi
tions, but Britain and France
may join.
The official communist news
paper, Pravda, of Moscow, yes
terday said that the Soviet un
ion favored economic unifica
tion of Germany but that it
could be achieved only by a
central government, with gen
uine "democratization" of Ger
many as a forerunner. Well,
when Moscow talks of demo
cratization" it means only one
thing, communization. I there
fore is easy to see that as mat
ters stand the idea of getting
economic unity in Germany is
quite as Utopian as would be
that of securing political unity.
, If anyone knows how to make
a coyote howl will they please
get in touch wilh Lloyd Ogle
and let him in on the secret. He
tried every way he knew to get
a pup, on a leash, to howl for the
broadcast, but without luck.
Seattle Longshoremen
Quit Work In Protest
SEATTLE, July 13 (P Seat
tie's CIO-Longshorcmen went to
their union hall this morning
instead of to the docks to stage
a protest meeting over an al
leged delay in payment of re
troactive wage awards.
Officials of the International
Longshoremen's and Warehouse
men's union said the meeting
was well attended.
"You don't find a CIO-Long-shorcman
on the- piers this
morning," they said. They did
not indicate how long the meet
ing would continue.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to extend our heart
felt thanks and appreciation for
acts of kindness, messages of
sympathy and the many beauti
ful flowers during our recent
bereavement, the loss of our
wife, mother and sister.
Warren Ware
Shirley Ware
Dclores Ware
Bruno Kautto
Harriet Ware I
and other brothers and sisters.
TUESDAY P,
l!:0D Kewa
11:15 Man an Iba Street
J;:JS L'1" Ba uSeate ABO
iIikj Jack Berrh ABC
1:10 -
1:15 The Welti I.lvra On
1:30 llellywanil a) Vine ABC
1:13 Hymna ABC
:MWhal a Doln'tallea ABO
:?!( Newa ABC
2:30 Jimmy Wakely Trie
S:IS Mauler Slnrere
S:00 Bride and (ireem ABC
S:3aciab Matinee ABC
t.lS
4:00 Frank Jenklna
4:15 Requeetrully Yaura
4:30 Requeitfully Yaura
4:IA Hep Harrlfan ABC
:00 Terry and Plralea ABO
S:I3 Tenneeeee Jed ABC
5:3(1 Dick Tracy ABC
6:16 Sparla Lineup
nrLVV realms
M., JULY IB
Meledleua Melodlea
Newa
Veur Dance Tanea
Farm Frent
Llrlnt with God
I amine
Jebnaen Family MBS
Hand Concert
Local Newa t
Once Orer l.lfhtly 'newel
John J. Anthony MBS
Rlcky'a Reqneet
Raven af Reel
oeA
Adven. at Sea Round MBS
Albert Warner MBS
Rex Miller MHS
Klamath ThratreaO
Fill Frellca MRS
Swineherd A Tha Prlnceea
Superman MBS
t'aplaln Mldnlla MBS
Tom Ml Mils
KFJI lealara
aW
BMefal
Wood
Phont
7150
Venetian Blinds
Patterson Furniture
230 Main
Off to a Good Start . . . with Milk
An adequate Breakfast and a pep-filled day go hand In
hand. To keep your family in top-notch condition during
busy vacation days serve a hearty breakfast. Breakfast
should provide at least a quarter 25 of the day's
health and energy requirements. Let milk play the most
important role use it in hot breads and 'on cereals
and have plenty for drinking purposes. Insist on
Glatei Jlahe
MIIILIK
NO PREMIUMS NO SPECIAL Inducsmtnti. Just tha finest, saftst bottU of
milk to bo had.
Ar your food itore or telephone 5101 for home dolivery of oil Crater Lake
Dairy Product
KLAMATH FALLS CREAMERY
DON'T MISS
KFLW's
"TOP TEN
for TONIGHT"
5:4S-Don Nasi, Sporti
6:00-Music of Manhattan
6:15-Hometown News
6:30-ForOvor Tops, ABC
6:SS-Wismer Sports, ABC
7:30-Symphony of Melody
7:4S-Carson Robinson
8:00-Lum 'n Abner, ABC
8:30-Tha Fat Man, ABC
9:00-1 Deal in Crime, ABC
9:30-World News
The Herald and Newa
abo KlJLlV 0
LU
10
Q
Z
I
o
ui
LU
STARTING WEDNESDAY AT WARDS
Read Sale Advertisement Tuesday Nite
a
m
73
Z
o
m
u
m
O
in