lieralb aitbJteUfS News Behind The News
FRANK JENKINS
Editor
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March 8 1878
Today's Roundup
l By MALCOLM ErLEV
THIS writer It Just home from few days in
Southern California, which seethes with booming
development Housing construction, new industries,
carry tile Immense auto tralflc of
the area, and many otiicr things
combine to give the visitor an
impression of tremendous growth
and what is commonly called
(
If ' '3m Tf fa "progress."
V 'aj s. c., of course,
uiai way iot a quorioi- u a cen
tury or more, changing pace now
. 1 and then but consistently on tne
Aj I boo"1- K Is nt bubble likely to
burst. tnougn, use outer ouooirs,
it may deflate somewhat. iPor
Instance, we drove past a battery
of new houses, normally worth
EPLEY . . about SS500 each, which carried a
sign: "First Choice to Veterans. $8500 Each.)
i A climate that is favorable not only for pleasant
living but for Intensive agricultural production, and
for many other tilings, gives it a momentum that
seems certain to carry forward through a long
cycle, continuing S. C. as one of the most intensively
developed and settled sections of the C. S.
To one who through custom has come to like the
wide open spaces and "getting away from people"
It may not be attractive, but there are obviously
plenty of people who do favor life in the teeming
big cities, or out In the so-called country amid fruit
groves, towering palms and a profusion of always
blooming flowers. S. C. has something, all right, and
it is making the most of it.
Where Is K. F.?
COMING north Sunday on our favorite 395. we
switched off near Carson City for our first view
of Lake Tahoe. After partially circling the lake, we
struck off northward through Truckee and on to a
little town called Sierraville.
. Lacking a map, we weren't quite sure where we
were, in relation to the main arteries, and we asked
a woman at a little hotel where we stopped for sand
wiches. Her answers were vague, and we told her
we wanted to know the best way to get out of there
toward our destination. Klamath Falls. She looked
still more confused, so we mentioned Alturas.
"Them towns must be in Nevayda." she said, pro
nouncing the middle syllable with a long "a." . "I .
never heard of 'em."
But she knew about Susanville. and her iMrectiJ-;..
put us back on the northbound route, which we
traveled, as usual, with remarkable speed and saving
v of time in. both directions.
Siskiyou Discussions
IN neighboring Siskiyou county, an interesting
demonstration of democraUo processes is under
way in connection with consideration of the proposed
charter for county government. ,
' A series of public meetings is planned, at which
11 is hoped to have speakers on both sides of the
charter question as well as a question and answer
period after a debate. The plan was proposed by
the group formed to support the charter, which is
headed by Earl Ager of Tulelake. ,
Siskiyou is a big county, with its communities
scattered and in many instances separated by geo
grapliio barriers. It Is significant that Its people are
thus attempting to get together in their thinking on
ah Important change in county government If the
discussion plan works out as proposed, the charter
election vote on May 27 will be cast by an informed
public . .' v
We think that more compact areas, such as our
own city, might well make a note of what Siskiyou
people are attempting to do, next time important
local government issues are up for decision. '
Theories Vary On Origin
Of Heaven's Many Stars
By J. HUGH PBUETT
Astreoomer, Extension Dlrleiea. Oregon
Hlgaor ESacatlau System
When we stand Under a clear
night sky and view the seemingly
numberless little lights of various
brilliancies which dot this blue dome
above us, do we ever wonder how
they happened to be there and where
they came from originally? The
question becomes all the more over
whelming when we realize that these
apparently tiny flecks of luminosity
are actually huge and intensely-hot
suns, most of them millions of miles
In diameter and trillions or more
miles from us.
Perhaps for most of us it is just
as well that we seek an escape in
the expression, "In the Beginning."
Even the most learned of scientists
have to admit that they cannot
carry their speculations far enough
into the dim past to account for
the origin of matter and force. Dr.
A. E. Fath, the astronomical writer,
' states that discussions of origins
MONDAY EVE.
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MALCOLM KPLKY
Managiug Editor '
4 month! S4S0
year MOO
has been going
properly belong to the realm of
philosophy and religion.
: Those, however, who study most
Intimately the orderly processes of
nature are not content easily to
cease research on any phase of a
subject that seems to be within their
sphere of Investigation. Some would
start with a condition when all space
was uniformly filled with finely
divided matter. "Something" finally
occurred to make this unstable, and
it began to break up and divide into
what has finally resulted In the
present galaxies, or huge systems
of billions of stars each.
The late Sir James Jeans believed
that each Immense mass of gas
somehow finally started to revolve
and because of this to flatten. Spiral
arms extended in opposite directions
until the present spiral shapes of
galaxies were formed. Condensa
tions took place in various parts and
formed stars or clusters of stars.
He comsideijed that the edges of dis
tant galaxies today present the loca
tions of star births. He based his
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Sign Off
By PAUL MALLOV
By JPAt'L MALLON
WASHINGTON; April ao Musings upon reading
Harold Stassen'a interview with Generalissimo
8talln:
"Stalin assures Stassen press abroad distorts Soviet
newt." (My goodness gracious, Stalin assures ut we
are always wrong again. Is there any news in that?
"Calls Herald Tribune outstanding newspaper." tl
hope he never calls me an outstanding journalist
because then I will know I am wrong.)
"Now accredits its correspondent" (Aha I I see the
Trib got Its man into Moscow permanently, and by
permanently I do mean at Stalin's future pleasure.)
"Says he tried ending censorship, but got bad
, results. (When? I never heard of it A man with
so much to conceal must necessarily have censor
ship.) "MOSCOW. April H Stnssen talk with Stalin
subject Russo-Amerlcan press relations (two people
who are experts on the subject?) while Stassen mak
ing fact-finding tour." (I'll bet the only facts he got
In Moscow were those given by Stalin's people for
their own purposes.)
"Stalin says he tried relaxation of censorship
with unsatisfactory results because the American
newspaper made the Soviet government out to be a
toologlcal garden." (In other words. If the American
newspaper will print what Stalin wants and never
make a mistake, he might relax censorship and he
Is to be the sole judge of when a mistake has been
made.)
. a '
Result of "Accident"
HCTALIN replied that the refusal to admit a'per-
manent New York Herald Tribune corres
pondent had been the result of an 'accident in our
policy.'" (Of course they never make mistakes in
Russia. They only make accidents. Me und an
atheistic gott which is me too! But sometimes
not lead him into er. ha, what shall we say
Stalin cannot be so sure his atheistic self-gott does
accidents?) .
"It is an outstanding newspaper." he said. (Gosh,
these Russians are certainly learning how to Ret
publicity in the United States. They take the leading
Republican journal, which incidentally is really
what that newspaper is. and they salve themselves
up to a two column top head and a completely
detailed story on page one.)
"Two days after the interview (no newspaperman
could get one), the Soviet government actually
began to correct the 'accident' and approved the
admission of a permanent correspondent of the
Herald Tribune." (Well. well. well. It had nothing
to do with the "accident' the Tribune made last
week in accepting the full page ad of the communist
party, carrying the patent medicine propaganda so
raw the party was not even allowed to palm It oft
on a congressional committee, and inviting repub
licans to send in their contributions to pay the cost
of the ad.)
And so on . . . and so on . . . how long, how long?
At the risk of making an "accident" myself because
I am only a newspaperman of 28 years experience
watching how these things work from the inside, I
would say the explanation might be found in these
following facts facts, that is:
, Stassen's presidential campaign has not been
gcing well. The rather obvious reason was that
the government and its popular foreign policy
(so popular it has been approved by -both parties)
did not leave Stassen much room to popularize him
self. So he went to Russia. Wlllkie came up to popu
larity that way once. But things were different then.
The Soviet government then was not so obvious to
so many people. It had not yet disclosed its intents
and purposes in actions before the UNO. in London,
in Paris, and yes. even in Moscow conferences.
However. Stassen must have had an experienced
publicity adviser who knew that he was not getting
much play in the American press. He was just one
of a large number of presidential candidates and
what he said was not as Important as what some of
the others were doing. But "fact-finding" in Europe
would give him the play. What he .would say and
do there and after he came back, would be big
news. ,
The trouble with this. game is; we all played it
before. Thinking people would have to forget so
much to believe it again. In fact, they would have
to forget all they know to be true.
Now here in this very case 8talin did what he has
always done before. He never relaxed a bit to Stas
sen, or the American press, or deviated the slightest
bit from his censorship or purposes, ne kept nil he
wanted and got the American press to play up its
own faults. It all worked out his way. We get
nothing. The Trib got its correspondent bark, but I
wonder if it would not have been better for him to
be out. as all he will get is the stuff Stalin's clique
wants him to print
I think both Stalin and Stassen r.eed new press
agents. They art both playing a losing game.
belief on both observation and
mathematical reasoning.
Present day astronomers believe
they see evidences of star formation
in certain nebulae. At the meeting
of the American Astronomical so
ciety at Harvard last December sev
eral papers touched on this matter.
They recognized that half the ma
terial in our Milky Way star system
exists as gas and granules between
the stars. Some refer to this as
"dust"; others, as "grains" or
"smoke." This material gradually
"freezes together" or otherwise coal
esces and forms large clouds of low
density. Dr. Bart Bok of Harvard
calls these formations "globules."
and Dr. Lyman Spitzer Jr. of Yale
refers to them as "protostars."
When they contract sufficiently they
become stars. ' ,
Photographs of certain diffuse
nebulae clearly reveal round dark
specks which are said to be the
globules necessary for star forma
tion. But stars are not expected to
be born from these in a few years;
it is a matter of millions or billions
of years.
The naval reserve is In the process
of being organized. Join now! See
your naval reserve recruiter in the
post office, Klamath Falls.
TUESDAY P. M.
APRIL 22
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SIDE GLANCES
j"H7 " """""" """""""!S
9CW4ss-'
com (w tv at uavKt. ne. T. a. ma in a pat. or. A'2I
"I detest shopping sine Dad got to stingy about the
bills I always run across something I need so bad I'd
positively die without it!" .
STATIC
Br KELLY ROBERTS
Today, dear children, we feature
the pensive countenance of Sam
(Is it alive? Is it a man? Is it a
comic? NO! It's Schleppermanll
Hearn, No. 1 stooge on Kenney
Baker's "Glamour Manor." The
outlines that accompany the pic
ture don't say whether Sam Is sup
posed to be biting his nails or read
ing the latest Racing Form.
' a -
We turned' on the radio la.it night
with the intention of Utenlng to
Pat Novak get hired, fnstead we
latched on to some Columbia sta
tion and grabbed a bit of Sam
Spade. Frankly. It was a little dis
appointing. Sam seemed like a nice
enough guy, he even went out of
the way to tell the story while he
was having a fresh bullet wound In
his shoulder patched, but it failed to
convince us that he was very tough,
he sounded like the kind of a guy
that might even take his hab off
In an elevator. Nope, we like 'em
rough, low-down whispering snarls
that don't take ruittln' from no
body. Heck, even the kiddles can
listen to Spade.
V
Dash Hammett. by the way, now
has four adaptations of his char
acters running consecutively, some
sort of s record we think. On ABC
the "Fat Man," on CBC "Sam
Spade." on NBC 'The Continental
Opj' and "The Thin Man."
.
LSMFTs are now using short
spot tranx. This morning we awak
ened to the lilting tones of a
Calypso singer telling us why we
should shorten our lives with his
particular brand of weeds.
y
Lew Taylor is keeping Joaquin
Garay on for another week at Lake
shore, according to latest Into from
the service bar. The Joint has been
packed every night since the Jovial
Joaquin hit town, and more people
keep crowding in. Someone the
other day said that they thought
Eddie Gordon, the chief crowder-ln,
must have gotten his early training
in a sardine cannerv. An Instant
hit was Joaquin's Al Jolson medley,
complete with typical Jolson man
nerisms. Joaquin Is accompanied to
town with a very pretty blonde
wife we found on going back to the
dressing room. Both took in a lit
tle skiing Sunday at Crater lake.
Saturday night Joaquin was busy
congratulating Lelghton Sleight,
Chet Sessler and Bill Van Busklrk
on their wedding anniversaries.
The navy has a band wagon
called electronics. . Climb on today
and take a ride Into the world's
greatest development in the field of
science. Enlist today and see the
navy way.
Classified Ads Bring Results.
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Hv Completed Yers Grade Years High School
Please Bend Me Free Informslleq at Onre .
Loney Attends
Music Conclave
Andrew Loney Jr., director of
music education in the Kluinuth
Falls Schools, faced a busy week
end when he left here Thursday
night following the spring band
concert and arrived In Ellensbunt.
Wash., early Friday morning to
take part In the Central Washing
ton Competition Festival.
Loney shared guest conductor
honors with Carl Brlcken. director
of the Seattle Symphony orches
tra and W. H. Ilnunnh, supervisor
of music of the Vancouver, Wash.,
schools, when he conducted the 800
volce festival chorus. Hannah con
ducted the festival band and Brlck
en the orchestra. Some 11(00 stu
dents took part In competition, ac
cording to Loney. who also served
as one of the eight adjudicators.
He returned here Sundnv night.
Loney was accompanied north by
Jack O'Connor of the music depart
ment POTATOES
Basin Potato Shipments
In Carloads
1W7 1B46
April 18. 19, 20 .. 43 63
April to Date 290 222
Season to Date 10.525 10.510
CHICAGO, April 21 (AP-USDA)
Potatoes: arrivals 197, on track
226; total; U. S. shipments Friday
1075, , Saturday B04, and Sunday
10; supplies moderate: demand
good for red slocks, rather light
for white varieties: markets slight
ly stronger for western red stocks
snd Red River Valleys and about
steady for Idahos; Idnho Russet
Burbanks 13.60 unwashed: Colored
Red McClures 4.25 wanlied: Minnesota-North
Dakota- Bliss Tri
umphs $3.20 washed, cobblers (85
per cent U. S. No. 1 quality) $2.15
unwashed ; Wisconsin Round
Whites $2.76 unwashed; Wyoming
Bliss Triumphs $4.00 washed; new
stocks: Texas 50 lb. sacks Bliss
Triumphs $2.90-2.95 washed (all U.
S. No. 1 except where noted other
wise. LOS ANGELES. April 21 (AP- I
USDA) Potatoes 19 broken. 42 i
unbroken cars on track; Idaho 2,
California 27 cars arrived. 13 by i
truck. Market about steady; Idaho I
Russets, No. 1-A. $3.25-30. I
SAN. FRANCISCO, April 21 (AP- I
USDA1 Potatoes 2 broken. 8 un- :
broken cars on track; California 8, I
Oregon i, inano 1 arrived, 2 ar
rived by truck. Market steady;
Klamath Russets No. 1-A, $3.65. '
When you finance your car,
demand that it be insured by
ont who specislixes In Uigur
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5:45 pm
monday thru Saturday
KFLW ABC
I
The World
Today
Br DeWITT MacKENZIE
AP Foreign Affairs Analyst
- -i- ,-,-irirn-iriririi nm- nn -inn n n n n n n m i
During long yenra of Jouriinllstlo
tllot-u oiling a reporter naturally
01100111110 m a n y extraordinary
storlif but, I've Just run into one
of the irnsi remarkable of my ex
perience. ,
Thorn Is In New York ,,u sueolnl
duty the distinguished Chinese sol
dier, General Ho Ylng-chln. Hu la
widely rcKurdcd as Generalissimo
(Jlilnng Kai-shek's right liniid. and
at this critical Juncture In world
affairs Is representing ohlim on
the United Nations military staff
committee.
Several weeks ago I heard the
general Imd developed a ulna
which miKht ultimately end I ho
bloody civil strllo torturing his un
happy country. Slnro the United
atulcH hud exhausted Its best ef
forts to halt tills tragedy, any new
Idoas by responsible people were
WOrlh hrtllHltir M,. T ......
I wanted to meet General Ho.
minimi rrtwedeitl
It was over the lunchooii table
Hint th irmirtrul imf,.),l-4 - M..j...
which, so lar as I can recall. Is
"' preccneiH in surit a Muni
tion, in relaying tho Interview in
, Ifc nuwimi uo ciuuiui-
siatid not only that we are dealing
,i . rai iop men. out
that he Is a professional soldier,
accustomed to settling arguments
with bullets. He Was Chlneso min
ister of war from 19.10 to 1945. Ho
also was chief of stuff 0f the army
during the World war, and In that
SliSnJ! "w,ved surrender of
J.OOO.OIK) Japanese troops at the
close of hostilities.
. His project calls for moral re
habitation eventually among the
Chinese communists but first
among tho nationalist government
regime aiicf jts supporters tills
being rnlcuiktM to remove the
ciiuses of the fratricidal strife.
r-rSi , P""1 ounded strange
coming from a fighting man. And
the general admitted that until re,
'"'' e regarded the settlement
fi' t'v'Lltr"e iur,y null
wf?. Vi ,Ihe ov"mm hail to
blast the Chinese communists lino
submission with high' explosive.
How else are such disputes settled?
New Approach
General Ho discovered s now ap
proach to the problem as th result
of nttemlliiu Hu. i,,,.... , ....
waiitjly . lor moral re-armament al
ii.7 i z " weens ago. of
this clmmic ho says:
"Punug Ms pant 30 yours of my
Jlgni against the materialists of
Ouina, uie method I used was force
against force, and organisation
UKiiuut omaiuaatioii. But It did
not occur to ma that I should hit
buck with an Idea aguliul an Idea.
, - . ."v mi; urni con
clusion that I might tight an idea
The general said he believes that,
whatever militni.u r,,.r-tn...
be necessary the only way to cut
the ground from under the feet of
communism In China Is for tho na
tional government to Inaugurate re
forms which will win over the pop
ulation now dominated by the reels.
And along with economic reforms
milal Mmi lb mnr.l . I. . .
- .hviki iuii-v Mint
will give new standards to the
country.
In short, there's no . use trying to
reform'' the communists unless
the change starts first In the gov.
ernment and among Its key sup
porters. bfMeia! Training
Obviously the spreading of these
new Ideas calls for specially trained
people, find the energetic Ho has
lolri hafnM . I , , -
w..u., iciiu itimnuiiu pro
gram which calls for selected groti
u wiMiicna io oo sent to America
at once for training In moral re-
nrmnmj.nt tin .uiri. tt.
s.u ainvn lllSb WiriW
men "must be absolutely unselfish:
they should be men of faith, not
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Rewinding
1IA1IX
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735 Commorciol
Phont 3268
THE RUSH SEASON IS HERE!
4 1 ' ' '
We will be busy and so will you!
O No matter how busy we may be, we will
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WEEK-END AND NIGHT
WORK GLADLY IN ANY
EMERGENCY
"Bring Your International Home For Service"
We Have A Good Stock Of RED-450 Motors
DICK B.v MILLER
INTERNATIONAL TRUCK DIVISION
Phone 7755 Residence 472 , V , 17th and Klamath
ItKRAI.D 4 NStt'S, Klamalu Falls, Ore.
House Adjourns In
Honor of Norman
. - WASHINGTON, April 31 ') The
house adjourned tutliiy out of J'
siiect to the Into Hep. Fled Norman
IR-Wash.i, who tiled Friday.
Rep, Holmes ill-Wash.) addressed
the houso briefly, saying Nnrmiui's
"quiet, steadfast devotion to duty
wus noteworthy." He described Nm -nun's
career nn "an vxemplllloatlou
of Die American dream,"
Speaker Minim iR-Mass ) named
Repa. Angell ili-Oie.), Jackson lU
Wash.) and Holmes to represent
the house at the (Linonil, which will
be held Monday at Raymond, Wnali,
Horses Cause
Two Accidents
Roland Jitmes lllrks, ilD-vriir-'ild
Klitinnlh Iiiillnn, rushed Die nnlrii
season Buiulay mid wound up In
Hillside htispitul with a very bad
rapture of the left leg when lie was
kicked by a horse, file little rodoo
Was under way lain Bunilnv iider
noon three miles north of Modoc
dent,1" lmk " Cl'lloqulll real-
Another accident was reported
Sunday ul 4 p. m.. when Mr. M. O.
Mi'Kudden. 35. 307 Wendllng, fell
from hor horae while riding on the
hill above the Hot Hiirlniis district,
Mrs, Mcfuddeli I ulso In Hillside
ioiltal suffering from n sprained
back. Botli victims were moved to
the hospital by the Klumulh Am
bulance Service. Mrs. McKnilden
I the wife of Dr. MoKadden, Klam
ath Full veterinarian.
necessarily Christian but with a
spiritual philosophy.''
In order to speed up the project,
General Ho tins propmcd to send
to China forthwith tho brilliant
S. 8. U who lung wuji private
secretary to Chiang Kiil-ahok but
now I In Washington to help In
the selection of men who will fight
Ideas with Idens. U himself has
been awoolnted with the moral re
armitment movement for loine time
and la enthusiastic over the Chinese
program. Tho general like to sum
up his plans with a quotation from
Confucius:
"To put the world In order, we
must first put the nation In order:
to put the nn i ion in order, we must
put the family In order: to put the
family In order, we must cultivate
our personal life: and In cultivate
our personal life, wo must first gel
our hearts right."
Clnsslflcd Ad firing Results.
About Boys and Girls
By EAKL WIIITI.OCK
A dlsmnycd father writes to me
about his children. ' Another of
those "What li
the -, y o u n e r
generation - com -Ing
to" letters.
He doesn't like
the way they
sprawl all over
the furniture. Ho
doesn't like the
fact that they
don't rise when
an older person
comes Into the
room. Doesn't like
a lot of things. Earl Whitlock
And what do 1 think about It?
Well, frankly, I think the ktda
are fundamentally pretty sound.
And, further. I think father Is
worrying overmuch. Perlmiw hit
kids don't Introduce their friends
because his altitude ha been su
perior. The matter of rising on the
entry Into a roon) of an older
person Is, In my mind, rather an
artificial gesture al beat, a relic of
the last century which we can do
without. You want youngster to
respect you because you are wor
thy of It, not merely because you
are older.
I think moat of the kid have
been, fairly well trained at home
snd that when they outgrow the
coltish stage of behaviorism they'll
wing back Into the more manner
ly actions of their earlier training.
I think this father most par
ents, In fact worry too much. If
you don't believe our adolescents
turn out all right, size up our
younger married who were ado
lescents such a short time ago.
Next Monday Mr. Whitlock of
the Earl Whitlock Funeral Home
will comment on Salute to Gardeners.
us-.
MONIIAV, April 41, lH. rego Fear
BPW Members
Attend Meet
A liuuo delegation of Klamath
Vails member attended the district)
conference tor Southern Oregon of
tho lltislnes a n d Professional
Women ut Modhird Sunday. Kdna
Helueson of Koscburg, district
('hull-man, presided over the nil
day sensloii, wllh II them of "In
teriiallniial Uliilarnluiidlitg." Parti
cipating In tho urogram was Inn
belle Brlxnnr of Klamath Full,
state education chairman,
Medina were hold In the Hotel
.luckson, with representative of
Rosebuig, Grunt Has, Mcilfiird,
Lakevlow and 21 Klamath Pulls
BPW members taking part.
Concluding tho day' nellvllle
was dinner gt Jacksonville and a
tour of the old landmark of tho
area.
KFLW Program
Chanaos Announced
Two KFLW program chiinge
were announced today.
Right - fifteen p. III., Monday
tlmiiiKh Friday, l die new time
for the "Managing Editor' Heport"
given by Malcolm Kpley, The pro
gram ha been nhlfted from 7:15
p. m.
Kpley's program Include a fea
ture on rciilonul Hlslory. "Five
Minute of History,"
"Stand Bv fur Adventure," ion
sniod by Dick B. Miller, will lie
heard hereafter at 7:45 p. m, un
Tuesday ami TIhiimIiiVs.
Woman Breaks Hip
In Bad Fall
Mis. George iOiii R.I lloyil, (10.
I5JB Knur, tuffvivd a f mot urn of
Uie left hip when alio fell at 6 30
p. m. Sunday 111 front at 015 Lin
coln. She 1 a patient al Hillside
hospital and roiiorlrd resting com
loitably today.
Mrs. Iluycl was picked up by the
Klamath Ambulance Service at the
Lincoln address and moved to Uie
lliuulllul.
The olhrr day when I aaaduan
to the 8. I'. Hlatlun Willi a
shipment of meat fur one ef our
out uf town rualuiuera. uf
which there are many, the Kan
(Krauclaco train Just pull
ing out when a taxi rushed up
and a middle aged ehap Jumped
out and atartrd dawn the plat
form after II In full stride,
Aa he plrkod up momentum
his rust tall literally slurk
trial til out and hi farm would
have done Justice to Jesse
Owen. Kar a while It looked
like lie going to make It.
Hut a he gained la wllhln a
few yard of Hi train and Just
about lit lime hi rooting srr
llon on lite bark platform
reached the letillh of Ihelr en
thusiasm he began to go rubber
legged on them and stumbled
and foil.
He plrkrd himself up slowly
and came moping bark down
Hi platform. As be poised lh
spectator near the station on
the way bark to hi taxi some
guy rrarked, "What's the mai
ler, huddv, did you mle your
train?" "Saw," era the eauatie
reply. "The darned thing made
me mad and I was Just chasing
II out of the station." I started
to tell hint that If ho bad ealrn
some of our cliulro grain fed
steer beef that he would have
had enough lr energy lo
have made II. But decided lb
poor guv felt bad rnuugli with
out rubbing It In. Anyway, he
apparently wa an out of town
stranger and If lie want to go
around missing train thai
none of our bualnen.
It Just gors lo show what
false economy It I not to eat
Die liral. We have always con
tended that the beat I the
cheapest. WhyT Suppose that
you do pay a couple of cent a
pound more for your meat al
The Palace Market? Vou rat
thai pound, you rnloy II. and
II doe you good. Vnll buy an
Inferior pound of meat snd H 1
lough. Vou eat ti of II and
vou ilnn'l enjnv II no vou waste
13. If you ' paid onlv AOc a
pound you have paid 20c a
pound too much. Wouldn't It
be better tn pay 62 cent a
pound In I he, first place and
have something you would be
proud to Nerve and really and
truly enjoy? That' why the
marl peonle ay It pay lo
HHOP PALACE. The Palace
Market. 524 Main. Fancy Meat
and Groceries.
by