Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 05, 1946, Page 4, Image 4

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    HANK JKNK1NS MALCOLM JPLIV
C4ibr Uanasinl Editor
Cntarad Mi-uad cleea man at the poeiotlic ot Klameta)
" " Oi on Auruit . I BOB udmi cl ol conr.
Uercb . U7
- UBSCBlPTION lAIUa
sr- arrssa as s sag risra us
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
KLAMATH realtors have done a public serv
ice in calling attention to the need for ca.
tion in loading more tixcs on real property at
time when real property in
come is severely restricted by
federal rent control.
While many of us will not
go along with the suggestion
of a blackout of all special
levies until rent control is
lifted and the tax base broad
ened," this department feels
definitely that there is need
for greater public realization
of the plight of real property
in the current situation, and
a need for a brake on free
spending tendencies that mean
a greater burden on this source of public in
come. That was the reason we favored a severe
scaling-down of the proposal for recreation ex
penditures at the November balloting, as ex
plained in this column the other day. The
original plan for asking $293,000 in addition to
an increase in the recreation maintenance levy
was going too strong. After more considera
tion, it was decided to ask for $175,000 for a
swimming pool only, and it was felt that the
evidence of public demand for a municipal
swimming pool at least justified putting a pool
measure on the ballot in November.
After many years of determined budgeting
for that purpose, the city of Klamath Falls is
The World
Today
By DeWITT MacKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
There is before the world con
ference of churches now meeting
in Cambridge, England, a proj
ect favored by Protestant lead
ers o eight nations for joint
action on global problems by
Protestants and Roman Catho
lics. Under this plan collaboration
would be sought with the Ro
man Catholic church in putting
a Christian viewpoint on peace
questions before the statesmen
of the world. Joint action would
be based upon "some kind of
satisfactory understanding at
the highest level, presumably be
tween the world council of
churches and the Vatican."
John Foster Dulles of New York,
cnairman of the Federal Council
of Churches' commission on a
just and durable peace, yester
day urged the conference to dis
cuss the "extremely urgent mat
ter" of tension between the
Soviet Union and the west.
This move for joint action
would provide a powerful theme
for a sermon if anyone wanted
to preach one, which I don't
However, it docs impel me to
reier to the shocking moral and
spiritual collapse from which
many parts of war-torn Europe
are now suffering as they
struggle to regain their feet.
This may, or may not, fall within
the scope of the proposal now
before the Cambridge cbnfer
ence, but many continental states
certainly need guidance which
they can not find in the pagan
code that Hitler bequeathed not
only to his own country but to
other unhappy nations upon
which he imposed his evil will.
One of the notable develop
ments I encountered on my re
cent tour of Europe was joint
action by the Catholics and
Protestants in various parts of
Germany to meet this situation.
In both the British and the
American zones of occupation I
found that followers of the two
faiths had combined politically,
not under the designation of
Protestants and Catholics but as
a Christian party.
Hitler the "Messiah"
This slough of despond was, of
course, in large degree the work
of Hitler himself. Right from
the beginning of his assumption
of power in 1933 he set out to
destroy Christianity in the reich
and substitute a pagan religion
in which he himself played the
part of a Messiah. His campaign
was thoroughly organized and
provided not only for the crip
pling of the churches but for the
taking over of children and
yoi-'hs for training in the in
ifjn ;ous nazi doctrines.
' 1 y the time of the fateful
111 lic-h conference of '38, when
I 1 icnt much lime in Germany,
tin fuehrer had made tremen
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at last virtually out of debt. As a result, it
will be unnecessary next year to budget for the
bond sinking fund, which means a substantial
reduction in that particular burden on real
property.
If it were not for that prospect, we would
probably not be justified in considering any
new levies for such purposes as recreation.
And even if we do decide to impose such
levies, they certainly should be held low
enough that real property taxpayers may enjoy
substantial relief from the elimination of debt
service requirements. Real property puid the
bill on these bonded debts. Even in the de
pression, when there was a great temptation to
cut the budgeted items for debt service, the
city's budget-makers held firmly to the line
and imposed full annual requirements for debt
retirement.
It is due to
citv is now on
thev have gained.
on a moderate
of the slack and
relief to those
Sales Tax
ing" the tax base
made no mention
over-all study
property, income
EPLEY
taxes that afford
dous progress in changing the na
ture of his people, especially
the young and more susceptible.
While it was obvious that he was
waging this drive against Chris
tianity, it wasn't clear why he
was doing it, unless to satisfy his
mountainous egotism.
His purpose did become ap
parent a year later when he
launched his barbaric war to en
slave Europe maybe the world.
In order to get his people to fol
low him in savagery which had
no parallel in modern annals he
had to deprive as many as he
could of their Christianity and
substitute paganism, because no
Christian eould brook what he
contemplated doing.
When I. was in England not
long ago " I saw official nazi
confirmation that- Hitler did try
to destroy Christianity. This was
a copy of a document taken from
the secret archives in Berlin
after the capitulation. It as
serted in effect that Christianity
was a bulwark of democracy
and that "the cross of the swas
tika seeks to destroy the cross
of Christ."
STATIC
By BILL JENKINS
More comment on the-whis-kerino
is still pouring in, and
here's the latest gleanings from
this writer's basket:
It's long and tough and wiry;
It's something to be feared.
Of course I am referring
To my husband's awful beard.
It's kind of blond and yet it
ain't;
It's sort of in between
A Collie and a shepherd pup.
I can't describe the fiend.
i
When he looks into the mirror
And he thinks I'm not in sight.
He'll massage and sort of pet it
And laugh with all his might.
What he can see in that darn
thing
I cannot understand.
But he'll stand around and tell
me
That it's the finest in the land.
He tells me that I'm jealous
'Cause a beard I cannot sprout,
But that's a lot of hot air;
I do all right without.
That bunch of hair a-sticking
From my cheeks and chin and
throat,
I'd rather have a face that's
bare
Than one that's like a goat.
So, darling, go ahead and brag
On that beard of yours so fine.
But when it comes to faces
I think I'll still take mine.
CORINNE FIELDS.
201 Sheldon Street
Visits Here The Rev. Father
E. Lemire was in Klamath Falls
last week when he visited his
brother, John B. Lemire. Father
Lemire is in Medford now. visit
ing another brother, George, in
business there.
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that hard-headed policy that the
the threshold of debt freedom.
The real property taxpayers who paid the bill
have earned relief. Let's avoid rushing into
new commitments that will offset everything
If we do finance new projects, let's go ahead
basis that will take up only part
Jeave a substantial measure of
who have earned it.
UNDOUBTEDLY, what the realtors had in
mind when they talked about "broaden
was the sales tax, though they
of specific methods.
On that subject, we will await with Interest
the reoort of the state committee making an
of tax problems. . Will that com
mittee come forth with a plan for broadening
the tax base, dividing the burden among real
and consumer levies, that will
attract the support of enlightened public opin
ion?
Oregon's neighbors on three sides have sales
relief to real property. Orc-
eonians Dav those taxes when they visit and do
business in those states. Although they have
had these taxes for years, we hear of no con
certed efforts to repeal them.
BOYLE'S
NOTEBOOK
By JAMES DEVLIN
ESSEN, Aug. 5 tPl Housing
is second only to food as a prob
lem to miners and their familes
living four to eight in a room
in the Rhur. Europe's greatest
coal producing area.
li, Essen, miners' homes clus-
i tcred around pits near the Krupp
i Steel Works suffered an average
I of four bomb hits each.
The British operated north
German control commission is
trying to improve the conditions
of miners charged with the task
of producing coal for Europe,
but is handicapped by a lack of
materials and labor.
F;gures produced by the Berg-werke-Essen
group of four mines
snow that of the 4454 homes ac
cupied by its workmen 62.5 per
cent were totally destroyed, 27.3
per cent heavily damaged, 4.4
per cent suffered medium and
5.8 slight damage. "
None Undamaged
"These figures don't account
! for any houses that weren't dam-
aged," a correspondent sug
'. gested to Gerhard Rauschen-
bach, mine manager. He smiled.
'There weren't any," he said.
Most heavily hit were houses
near the Salzer-Amalie mine,
one of the Bergwerke-Essen
group. Of its 1608 homes, 81
per cent were destroyed totally.
One of Rauschenbach's charts,
kept from the early days of the
war for the Germans' own in
formation, showed that one
group of 2500 houses was hit
10,000 times, or an average of
four each, up to the end of 1944
when the figures reached the
end of the sheet.
Bombed Out Again
A number of miners' families,
bombed out of one house,
doubled up with somebody else,
only to be bombed out again,
losing part of their furniture and
belongings each time.
Now an Essen miner living
with his family in one room of
a basement is considered "aver
age." In the early days of the bomb
ings, strenuous efforts were
made to repair the damage, but
such work slackened as the raids
increased in number and in
tensity. In like manner. Rauschen
bach's charts indicated that pro
duction halted only briefly after
the first raids. The line of slump
and restoration of output re
storation of output resembled a
sembled a narrow "V." But as
the raids continued, the upswing
line leaned further to the right
and didn't climb back to its for
mer height.
WOMEN!
TOKYO. Aug. 5 (Pi Japanese
women legislators, in their first
whirl at law-making, introduced
a bill for "peace memorial en
terprises" to commemorate Ja
pan's surrender and promptly
were scolded for "unbusinesslike
and careless" parliamentary
methods.
Rep. Saburo Shiikuma de-
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I co-wr r4 rr nr wrr. inc r ito. u m. pit. yr I
"I eldest bruise Dorothy, anil piny nn atrocious Runic,
but 1 must join the club that would be better tliun the
horrid feeling of being left out of things I"
Model Planes
Give Exhibit
SEATTLE. Aug. 5 lPI More
than 100 contestants from three
states competed in the Washing
ton state gas model airplane
championships at Bow lake air
pqrt yesterday in a six-hour con
test featured by brisk, gusty
winds that sent scores of models
into spins and crashes
r,.ii i i . ,k j...
went to Richard Nocol. 16: of
Portland, who was junior di
vision high point winner, and D.
Blanchfield. Tacoma, senior high
point winner.
Classification winners includ
ed: Tim Kingston, Portland, sec
ond, class "C" junior; Marvin
Stevens, Olympia, second, class
"A" senior; R. P. Baumgardner,
Portland, third, class "A" sen
ior, K. E. Burr, Sunnysidc, third,
class "B" senior; and Blanch
field, Owen Brown of Portland
and Stan R. Engle of Tacoma,
finished one, two. three, respec
tively, in class "C" senior.
The next contest will be a
free-flight meet at Rainier Prair
ie, 15 miles southeast of Olym
pia, August 18, i ,
Woman Avoids
Train Death
Mrs. George Belcourt, 1144
Homedale, escaped death by a
fraction early this morning
when she was pulled from be
neath a moving Southern Paci
fic passenger train at the depot.
She had boarded the train to
find a seat for her mother-in-law,
Mrs. Francis C. Mann of
Los Angeles, who was leaving
and was late in getting off. As
Mrs. Belcourt stepped from the
coach, the train lurched forward
and she was swung to the
ground beenath the coach.
As the train moved she was
rolled beneath the car but by
standers pulled her out just be
fore the wheels or a low hanging
box reached her body.
Mrs. Belcourt was rushed to
Hillside hospital by ambulance
where her injuries were said to
include cuts and bruises on her
back and legs, not critical and
X-rays showed no broken bones.
Evangelist' To Speak
At Church Of God
Winston I. Nunes, evangelist,
and Mrs. Nunes, will hold spe
cial services at the Assembly of
God church at 8th and Oak to
morrow evening at 6:30 p. m.
Nunes, who has appeared here
before, was chaplain of Devil's
Island during World War II.
Mrs. Nunes, who is an accom
plished pianist, will present sev
eral of her own compositions
as a special feature of the meet
ing. The Nunes will be here Tues
day night only.
The first man to fly over the
rugged Andes, which rise to (
22,000 feet, was E. J. Faucett.
He flew from Lima to Iquitos,
Peru, 25 years ago.
clared that Japan needed food
and reconstruction far more than
monuments. And besides, he
said, the women failed to con
sult party leaders beforehand.
1 FOR SALE 1
$ $ DOLLARS $ $
'
to give' you peace of mind
and i
family.
and security lor your
I
AT
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SERVICE
JOHN H.
HOUSTON I
RKPIteSKNTINO TUB
EQUITABLE LIFE I
AttlllMMi!! tnriofu
LNw fork m
Ml N. Ilh - fbona 3111
Telling'
The Editor
Ltllara printed fctrt mvil nt ht
anara thktt 4t wards In length mil
b wrltlan lflbly am ON: MOIL mt
lh papvr nljr, and mutt igntd.
TanlribulUat OlUwInc ttt rulva
r warmly wtlt-iu
HORSEPLAY OK
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (To
the Editor): I'm sure you have
all heard the old saying "All
I work and no play makes Jack
fAull.?OSr...?y " .k.no
that Mr. Dolin, who wrote re
cently on the whiskerlnos. is
the hardest working of all.
Yes, I agree, it is horseplay,
but who objects to a little
horseplay after five years of
hard work and fighting? And
I'm afraid Mr. Dolin is trodding
on quite a few toes by his state
ment that the bearded gangster
hoodlums are draft dodgers and
wouldn't fight for their coun
try. My husband (who is sport
ing a nice, bushy crop) is a vet
eran of five battles, and my
brother, who spent three years
in a Jap prison camp are just
two among many.
Everyone expects a few sore
headed cranks who never take
part in any civic affairs, so we
will excuse Mr. Dolin as being
one of those few. We do hope
he won't be manhandled or
molested too badly and that he
won't find it necessary to crack
too many sculls open.
I think the best thing for Mr.
Dolin to do is to sec if Webster
can supply him with a sense of
humor or else well, we would
hate to see him leave our fair
city, but since he does know of
places where they don't do
these violent things, maybe he
would feel more secure when
on the streets.
ELAINE PRIDDY.
Suburbanites
Pick Officers
The election of the executive
officers of the Suburban league
was held Friday evening in
Shasta school.
Representatives elected from
the districts in the suburban
area are Mrs. Floyd Hoover,
Shasta way, L. E. Judd, Home
dale, and Mrs. Frank Steel,
Allamont.
Chairman of the league is
now Ned Smith, with Alva
Lewis serving as vice chairman.
L. W. Barlcen, secretary, and
Mrs. Floyd Hoover, treasurer.
These officers and the represen
tatives form the board of di
rectors. Petitions for the proposed fire
protection district are now be
ing distributed, and it is re
ported that almost all property
holders contacted are in favor
of the plan.
Dr. Kenneth S. Garvin
CHIROPODIST FOOT SPECIALIST
Fool Surfer? - and Orlbopedlea
McATEE CLINIC
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23 Perish
In Weekend
Accidents
By tht Associated Preit
Dentil and destruction rode
hnml in huiitl on Pacific north
wnt highways over the week
end Willi 16 truffle deaths
seven in a two-ear collision near
Coltim, Wash. hearing a major
portion of the two-sliile tollof
SALEM, Aug, S (V) Oil gout
highway death rule Is fiilllii,
Secretory of State Hubert S.
Km r-ll Jr., aiilit today in com
piling figure for the first hult
ot ItHU, i
Ten fatalities occurred for,
each hundred million miles,
dm -n on Oregon roads, com-,
pared with 12 per hundred mil
lion miles Inst year, a decrease
of 14 per cent, he said.
23 violent and fatal accidents
occurring Saturday and Sunday.
Sixteen of tile deaths occurred
in Washington.
li,- ,. mvii ,,, suiiim, m,-
ern Washington instantly killed
six of the nine occupants of the
two cars. I lie seventh died In
llrymit mid Wiesiuiin clinic In
Colfax. Sole survivors tire two
nttclihikers who are expected to
recover from serious Injuries.
In Oregon near Redmond,
three young wives were killed
as Hie car in which they were
riding with their husbands side
swiped umitlier. Two of the
men escaped with minor injuries
while a third received a frac
tured hip.
The dead were Margaret Craw
ford, 18; Jeannette Jones, 20
and Anna Mac llruvilm. Id, all
of Redmond. Mrs. Cruwfnrd
and Mrs. Jones were mothers.
At Rosrhurg. Frederick Harris
Callison, 21 and Eugene Daniels,
28. were killed when tlielr cur
collided with another yesterday.
In Portland Nerle A. Caldwell.
32, died when his niortorcyele
collided with an automobile and
In Medford, Mason II. Mcnrs, 41).
fell to Ins death from an apple
tree.
Two persons were found pinned
beneath, the wreckage of a
wrecked panel oil truck which
turned over in a ditch nenr Con
lee dam yesterday morning. One
of the bodies was Identified as
that of Waller llenke, 31 of Wll
bur, Wash., but the other, thnt
of a boy of 14 or 15, hud not
been identified early today.
A second double tragedy oc
curred near Senttle where ef
forts to aid a sister who stepped
Into a hole while wading in the
Duwamisli river cost the lives of
August Mills Jr.. 14 and his sis
ter, I -ois. 15, Sunday. The sis
ter. Marjorie. 17, was rescued
by two men who heard ner cries.
The boy's body was .ecovered.
Search fur the girl's body is
continuing today.
Uninvited Guest
Empties Larders
CASCADE SUMMIT. Aug. 5
While many of the summer
home people here have been
entertaining friends, the How
ard Halls entertained an un
welcome as well as uninvited
guest Thursday night. Friday
they discovered the meat they
bought Thursday and which
they had placed in the lake In
a covered pull, had been de
voured by a bear. Mr. Bruin
by-passed some of the summer
homes and called the same
night on the Ray Bcngards,
also devouring their meat sup
ply. From now on until they hi
bernate in the fall the bears
will be numerous, being at
tracted by the ripening huckle
berries and Inter In the fall by
the Avhitefish in Trapper
rreek.
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTIf'K TO C Kt lHTOK
In the mattrr of Ihc enUlt ot Cldt
T. Phillip., no lira la hero by ftvuri that
the under.g ned ta the duly appointed,
qualiried and acting administrator ot the
above cntltlrd estate and all prnons
having claims a gal nit the juime are here
by required to present the Mine with
voucher attached duly verified In the
manner reqtilrrd by law to me at 203
llne Tree Building. Klamath FalU, Ore
gon, within ix months ot the date of the
first pubJI-nllon ot thl notice.
EDWIN E. UHI8COM,
Administrator of the Ctat of
Clyde E. JMillUptj.
AU. 5-12-10 20, 8. 3 No. 433.
His Date With Death
Jesus set His face like flint
to go to Jerusalem, for there I
He had a dalo with denth. The
night they came to arrest Him, j
lie must have flashed forth His ;
eternal glory, for they all went
backward and fell to the 1
ground. Mere man cannot
stand before that heavenly
splendor. So they all went
backward and fell to the
ground.
Then our Lord, Jesus, yielded
Himself up to be crucified. He
gave His back to the smithers
and His cheek to them that
pulled out the hair. He hid not
His face from the shame and
the spittle. Bible. The third
day, Ho arose from tho grave
and ascendod buck to glory to
give believers His eternal joy
and cheer. Even to you who
' have lived your days in sin,
! taking your orders from Satan
i mid earning Cod's jusl wrath.
' All this as to your lost state,
the Bible dares tell you, Epli.
2:1-3. Bible. .
Take your stand that Christ
died for your sins and cleared
you. God then puts your name
In his Book of Life and his
Spirit Into your heart. So you
me born again, born of God,
born from above. Now prove
the new life follow the Bible
look to Christ for strength
when the going Is hard Cast
ing all your care upon Him for
Ho cure th for you.
n3ZrtW
This space paid for by Port
hind family. S. W. McChesney
lid., Portland 1, Oregon,
.ai u sum, ki.i-ii. '. "
On Tho Beat
t.Nfc ff-
ii un over to cuis Hi liie,will ivipilie the moving ,,f
v' l- J sillier, imumm.
still thinks the navy is swell.
i Cull Hit. who Is one of the Incul
recruiters, came to Klumiith
Falls in December after bring
on submarine duty. An under
wuter mini at heart, he lias been
with the submarine service for
IS yeura, most of which has
been M'iit in Asiatic waters.
During the war t'liilller served
aboard the USS Tuiiu. USS Had.
dock, USS Seawolf unci the USS
Hoiu'iidnr. Although horn In
Minnesota, Mr. and Mrs. Cull
her claim Tacoma as their
home. Calllier Is on Marvelled
Wright's Federal building beat.
Suicide Note
Left In Hotel
City police are holding a dras-tic-sounding
suicide note, found
with a suitcase of clothing left
recently at a Iiinil hotel, and
wondering what tins become of
the man who apparently wrote
the letter.
The owner of the bagguge
checked Into the hotel August
I, paid for the room and Iff i the
bug, saying (hut he would be
back. He has not relumed.
The note, written in pencil on
an unlined piece of notebook pa-:
per. rends: I
"I'leasc notify my mother. . .
I am sorry but I am ending my
life. This win fur I wus a dis
grace to litem all. I'lt-nsa nolfit
my wife also my 2 children."
fy' A The Sign
' X Of The
RED ROOSTER
Klamath's Finest
614 Klamath Ave.
Open 5:30 a. m. to 10 p. m.
Phono las fat Patlf Httertallona
For the
Convenience of Our
Customers
w
Store Hours
Will Be
9 a. m.
to
4
6 p. m.
-vrDINE-
rsi - j
ft
...TO SERVICE
BIG TRUCKS!
"pHE latest heavy-duty truck service equip
ment, in our spacious new TRUCK
DIVISION plant (8900 sq. ft. door space)
offers the big truck operator real factory
service and repair facilities. The Dick B.
Miller Co. International TRUCK DIVISION
provides a facility built for truck service
exclusively, Let us demonstrate!
INTERNATIONAL TRUCK DIVISION
llth and Klamath Phons 7755
M"s''Atj.J:.!'L'L.r'" '"
Chiloquin
Road Work
Goes Ahead
Work mi the Clilloiiiln.
Miiulliu Jiini'tliiu roud Is going
Ulllllg MlVllldlllg til M'lll'ilul
mill grading work l rxpeetcil
be completed mmirtinie lir'wr,-,,
the middle of November and tho
Inst of Uccemher.
Grading crews have flnUli.,1
the loud one mile noith i,i,,
lio.irlrr of a mile mm III of Ilia
north leg of the (.'lillnipiln him,,
wnv, moving n tolul of tivVr
2(10.0(10 yards of dirt
Aiiolln-r crew li working
the Kotitli end of the .Spiing
creek lull n-i-tloo, whrrr llu-y
lire putting In the decpeat i-nt ,,f
III.- entire mud. Tim cut. whiih
luo.niiii i-iiiui- ynrui in dirt, will
be 105 lert deep ut the inil,llr,
uuMi- win h in ut-iiiu none nit
inn nvriTrnKMiig on llii mirth
leg of till t'lilliiiiuln routl mnl
I the forins have heeu put m plrl
nir inn jiin. ll ik "I'M point i,
im new riiim. wiut'ii ruts nut
the Sun nioiiiitiiiK trip, will ir
the nvererinsiiig neiir t'hi'nnili
The new cutoff Is i-xpcrti-,!
cut off mm hour's tinir from (lis
din romi in l M'liil
(trading will he flnlslu-d tin:
I)
winter and surfm-liur. rtintr,i,-i
will be let next suiiiiner. t'lin.i
nun of 11147 Is the expeclrd
opening ilnte fur full travel on
the new road.
fUturn Home Mr. urn I Mis.
L It. Strlngfrllow returned s.i',1
unlay from l."S AtigHe whrre
thev were railed by the drain
of Mrs. Stringfi-llow'm. brutlirr
for
Metal
o
Wood
Phone
7150
Venetian Blinds
Patterson Furniture'
230 Main
'am
MULES and MEN
By EARL, WHITLOCK
An old mtilr - kinnt-r ouie
lold me that the trouble with
mules thut are T
callrd "menu"
Is thut they're '
half full of stub
bornneits and
half full of
good pulling,
but they always
want to let the
million! n 1
come out first.
And Hint's a
churucterlallc (
good mnny of us poajteu, l m
afraid. We let the lubbornnei
out and conceal the effective
ness. Actually there Is so iiiiivh
of rapacity, of luli'itl. of good
will In all of us that If we lit
It out there would be very little
chame or need for any display
of pessimism or Ingratitude or
meunnrsx or littleness or gloom.
Hut we lay burk our eurs at
the slightest provocation. Wr
say, "I won't do to lind no." or
"Hut I'm not upHed to do
thai. Thnt isn't my work." We
kick viciously if there's a
rough sKit in the harness. Anil
the energy we use up In hulk
ing and snorting and fretting,
would go a long way toward
getting done wliatevs'r Job luip
iens to be fining us.
"Visit Memory Gurden."
Next Mondnv Mr. Whlllock
of the Karl Whltlock Kiimriil
Home will comment on "Jusl
Housewife."
H
Ws J