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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1947)
PACE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON MONDAY, JULY 21, 1947 FRANK JXNKINS editor MALCOLM FPLXY Manaslns Cdttor Entered as wconil class matter ll uie postofflca ol Klamath sail, ura.. aa auiuii . .... , March . 1878 8 .i. ten EPLEY SUBSCRIPTION RATES: urrlM month 81.00 By mill monlh. MM gj mail Z-ZZjmonth jl.00 By mall M OO MEMBER Or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS T(i Auocuud Press u enUUed climvel to the il for rVpubnciiUon of all th. loesi oewe printed In thU neve neper, aa wU si sll AP nw Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY I LOOKED at big forest service map on the wall of my office this morning, and must now report. that the state of Oregon passed the night of Friday, July 18, without the disturbance in mmm? 1U political control which I had feared. ' For on that night, Acting Gov ernor Marshall Comett who Is acting governor only when he Is In Oregon camped mighty close to, but on the north side, of the California-Oregon line. Neither the senator, nor any of the rest of us camped with him high In the Warner mountains In southern Lake county, were sure at the time whether our camp was it. Oregon or California. There was no mark on the trail to indicate uie locauon of the line, we had no map that Rave us the exact Information, and we thought for a time that House Speaker John HaU, next In line In gubernatorial suc cess, may have passed the night as governor without knowing It. . But my wall map Indicates Cornett was In Oregon, so that disposes of one campflre argument at any rate. . Wandering Safork THAT camp high in the Warner mountains was a atop on a wandering safari that took this writer as far east as the famous Blue Sky hotel on Hart mountain, where the Order of the Antelope met last week-end. But en route that Journey covered a lot of country that was new to me. though I thought I had r pretty good working acquaintance of our region. It's mighty big. ( Our party took off Thursday afternoon from Kla math Falls. Its local members at the start Included Senator Cornett, State Representative Henry Semon, Charles Mack, Orth Sisemore, Cliff Hogue, this writer, and Hal Ogle, the manager of the Klamath Forest Protective association, who served as out guide as well rs pleasant companion on the early stages of the journey. At the outset, our ranks were swelled by the addi tion of r group of McMlnnvUle men, headed by the Marsh twins, Frank and State Senator Eugene, and by State Penitentiary Warden George Alexander and Deputy Secretary of State Harry Schenck of Salem. That made 17, all bound for Hart mountain. Our trip that afternoon took us to Chlloquln, through the Klamath reservation to King's cabin. In Weyerhaeuser's Yamsay tract holdings, and on to Long creek, where we spent the first night This Jour ney afforded me opportunity to view some of the fine timber that remains In the Klamath region, both on the reservation and beyond In the Yamsay tract. I was Impressed with the excellent reproduction I saw on areas that had been cut over, and by the big stands of virgin timber remaining there both on the reservation and In the private holdings. This was in pleasant contrast to some of the clear-cut areas we viewed on the trip. Friday' morning, early, we rolled on through the big woods, stopped briefly tor lunch at. Thompson reservoir, and moved out into the open country to Silver Lake. There we stopped to look at the monu ment erected In memory of the 43 Silver Lake people who died In the terrible Christmas Eve fire of 1904. Among the victims was the grandmother of Cliff Hogue. - Now on pavement, we rolled on over the Fremont highway to Summer lake. After a refreshing stop at Summer lake lodge, the caravan sped on to Lakeview. We found that town literally teeming with visiting; Antelope and top-flight Elks, all on hand for the ' start next day to Hart mountain. He Knew the Trail BY that time, the wanderlust had us In its grip; and we decided to move on that night after par ticipating in the Elks' doings at Lakeview. Our towns man, Mr. Hogue, came up with a suggestion that we try a trip through the Warners of southern Lake county. We were skeptical about a late start on strange roads, but Mr. Hogue Indicated that he had been "over" the route, and we set out with con fidence. (We left our Salem and McMlnnville com panions at Lakeview, but picked up Fred Flock, for mer Klamathite, and Floyd Leancharger, both of . Eugene.) A couple of hours later, high in the mountains on a meandering trail in the dark, we again took up with Mr. Hogue that matter of his having been "over" the route: He had been over it, all right, In an air plane. "I studied It out from the air," said Mr. Hogue, who promptly was dubbed Sacajawea. But luck was with our guide, we didn't actually get lost, and we did find a pleasant place to camp, though daylight disclosed there was a better one a short distance away. It was cold up there, something around 8000 feet. Mr. Semon, who placed his dentures In a cup of water as denture-wearers are wont to do. had to dig them out of ice the next morning. Hart Mountain SATURDAY morning found us still under Sacaja wea's direction, moving north and east, and sure enough we came out of Uie mountains on the Fort Bldwell-Adel highway, about 15 miles south of Adel. In Warner valley we picked up Henry Nlcol, and moved over now familiar roads to Plush and Hurt mountain Itself. The Journey on Uie mountain to Blue Sky hotel was delayed by two flat tires ou Mr. Semon 's pick-up (the air was slightly blue there In Uie desert for a while) but there was one spare, and belleve-lt-or-not, a wheel from Mr. Leancharger's Chrysler tit , the pick-up well enough to get the Semon vehicle ou to the Blue Sky hotel. There the Klamath potato tanner was able to buy a tire. That afternoon and night were spent renewing ac quaintances and around the campflre at the annual Antelope meeting. Next morning with a new guide, Harry UUey of Lakeview, we took off toward home, but wandered again off the beaten trail to spend some pleasant hours in a green oasis on Honey creek, where we did better at eating watermelon than at fishing. Evening found us homeward bound, and without Incident we rolled over the Klamath-Lakevlew high way to KlamaUl Falls, closing , a roundabout but highlr interesting and lnstrucUve Journey to Hart mountain. SIDE GLANCES News Behind The News By PAIL MALLON WASHINGTON, July 21 The unreal visionaries have run away with art. Their non-objecUve abstractions were accorded a minor place as a novel experiment until; this year. In the fashion-setting spring shows at Pittsburg, Corcoran and Whitney, they achieved equal hanging space with genuine art, and since then they have come to dominate Uie whole art scene and are excluding genuineness, as at the Los. Angeles and Chicago museum shows, (caus ing local rebellion by artists.) The leading editors of magazines at Uie top of Uie profession (Art News for example, are flailing the dtcuonaries for epithets to describe the state depart ment because It rejects their torch. (Assistant State Secretary Benton ' has genuine art hanging in his of fice. Is not opposed to all abstractionism, but only to aberratlbrusm. and merely considers it not to be the best in current American art.) The coup d'art was contrived In a clever way. The devotees of unreal visions on canvas succeeded In labeling anything else as "conservative." Their own work they called "liberaT or "radical." As there is some InstincUve rebellion1 in the human soul against being considered "conservaUve" and as everyone wishes to be thought "liberal." the abstractionists worked the museums Into giving them equal repre sentation with, genuine art They said this was "democratic." Actually, equal representaUon was merely a debasement of democra cy. You would not think of giving insanity equal representaUon with sanity in order to present a bal anced mental attitude. No producer would think of riving bad products equal representation with good products. This is not democracy. It is" simply the elevaUon of ' the Inferior. LifU L toe. M. M.ttCL WC. T. Ktlt AT. Of. 7-21 "Dad, don't you think you'd better increase ruv allowance? If a holdup man ever caught me with this, he'd be to mad he might shoot me!" Tolling The Editor t.ttur priittcri tirrt aiu4 nut b nirt IhNU Uiu werdt in Itiiilh. muil tot wrliwn It i lb l y m ONI; HiliK ( Hit pipti nljr titd tnuil b ttnta' t'stnlrlbuiuni tollvwlni (htM Gets Full Commission r -fs m's; STATIC By VAN I1EMERT B' It's Not Art UT non-obiectlvlst abstracUonism, or aber- raUonism, is not only inferior, is Is not even art. It merely used the art medium. Its devotees use paint, brush and canvas, the utensils of art, but the result is something psychic. You could do the same thing with a few sticks. You could arrange them in any way suitable to your Imagination and call this arrangement "Nude Descending a Stair case." But It would not be art This technique Is not new in the world, but only new in art For generations, men have imagined see ing a man in the moon from blemishes on the lunar surface. Abstractionist art imagines blemishes on canvas to be a "crum of the cosmos." or whatever the author says he sees in It. This factor has nothing to do with the genuine value of the product, whether the paint was applied with superior skill, whether the color arrangement Is new, fresh or vivid, the composition of the work, or any true value of genuine art It Is something apart from the product Itself, something of a psychic character. In valuing all art forms, people attempt to reach for the viewpoint of the author. Reading a book, you will cast yourself sympathetically into the atutude of the author to understand his characters and his plot In looking at a painting you will ask yourself, perhaps subconsciously: "I wonder what the' artist meant by that," and seek to see his product as he saw it This is the common way to understand It. But this also makes you liable to be duped easily. You might be led to accept as excellent a canvas on which Uie artist hurriedly smeared paint for half an hour and consider it In the same realm as a genuine art product on which a master In the pro fession employed skill of a genius for years. Degrading THERE are but a few geniuses. A child, a lunatic , or an unskilled grandma can become superior In imagining their hieroglyphics mean something great Art has thus simply degraded Itself into Inferior mass production. This production sells more paint, brushes and canvases and Indeed far more paintings than the geniuses could produce. Indeed It sells more art mag azines. Yet their product Is interesting only in the psychic field as examples of the various types of inferior minds which produce it. It is not art simply because It uses the Implements of artists. Art needs some Intellectual leadership. vfV, 1 " ' V'J- " ' I ir "'--"'"" ; it -jk inm mi K MHO PROGRAMS MONDAY EVE., JULY 21 KFLW 1450 kc. :00 Sporti Lineup E:15 Horn Town Newt . 6:25 World Newt Summary S:30 KJmmalh Theatre Guide 6:4S Klamath Ratea Bureau ' 6:80 " " " :5 ' ?:0U The Lona Banrer ABC 7:110 Treaaury Agent ABC S:00 turn N' Abner ABC 8:IS Malcolm Epley S:0 The Clock ABO S:4S . :00 Ore. Talk It Orer ABO ' 9:18 Veteran's Report t::i0 El Ranooo Uolel Show ABC :t5 " " 10:00 Stardust Melodies 10:15 " " 10:80 D'Varsa Oreh. ABO 11:00 Nlfhlcap Newioeit' 11:05 8lfu OK 11:15 11:30 11:45 KFJI 1240 kc. Oabrlel Header MBS - ... quia Shoir Around Town Baseball Scores Ulnner Dance Strange Sport Stories Mutual Music Show MBS Cisco Kid MBS Adven. Blcbard Davis MBS Guest Stsr Dave Bose Orcb. Glenn Hardy. Newi' MBS -Jobnaon Family. MBS Let's Dance Henry J. TarlorJHBS Fulton Lewie Jr. MBS . Vena MBS Muslo As Voo Like It AM Star Preview MBS Smile Time MBS Newa MBS TUESDAY A. M., JULY ZZ H, serenade 6:15 A, i:so 6:45 Farm Fare 1:00 Newa 1:15 Rogera Roundup ' ?:X0 Graham Flelcher AnC 1:45 Zeka Mannera ABC S:oo Breakfast Club ABO S:IS " . S:D0 " S:45 " " S;00 Welcome. Travelers ABO (:I5 " :.10 Bkfst, la Hollywood ABO :4S " 10:00 Galea Drake ABO 10:15 Data Willi Melody 10:0 Mv True Story ABO 10:50 Miniature Coneert 11:00 Reflections 11:15 Come and Get It II. SO Listening Post ABO 11 145 Ethel mat Aibars ABO -ISiOt News Musical Reveille P. Bemingwey, News MBS Rise and Shine MBS Headline Newa Best Buys' favorites of Yesterday Fashion Flashea Allen Prescott Art Bsker Notebook MBS Kale Smith Speaks MBS Victor H. Llndlahr.MBS Horning Matinee Bono of the Pioneers Ulen Hardy, News MBS London String Quartet ' Martin Block MBS Music Glen Gray, Caaaloma Queen for Day MBS ' " Name Tunes TUESDAY P. KFLW 1450 kc. 12:15 Gem Session I2:.10paul vtblteman Club ABC 12:45 " " 1:00 Music of Manhattan 1:115 Mi-rrlll Time l:K0Toby Reed's Scrapb'k ABC 1:45 Fearless Foursome ABC 2:00 Wbat'a Doln' Ladles ABO 2:15 " " " " 2r35 Spotlight on HollywoodABC 2:30 Bride and Groom ABO 3.00 Ladles Be Seated ABC 3:15 3:30 Dial Fun 3:1.1 Memorable Muslo :50 4:00 BeijuestfuUy Fours :30 " " 4:45 Tennessee led ARC ' 5:00 Terry and Pirates ABO 5:1.1 sky King ABC 5:30 Jack Armstrong ABO :4S Frank Hemingway ABO KFLW Feature M, JULY 22 KFJI 1240 ke. News Your Pence Tunes Farm Front Faith in Our Time MBS Johnson Family MBS Matinee News Heart's Desire MBS ' Ricky's Request Kay It With Music MBS Tea Dance Voice of the Army Organ Music Living With God Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS Frank Hemingway MBS Flit Frollck MBS Afternoon Concert Hop Harrigan MBS Melody Theatre MBS Adventure Parade MBS Tom Mix MBS KFJI Feature TUESDAY EVE., JULY 6:00 Sports Lineup 6:15 Home Town Newe 6:25 World News Summary 6:30 Kl.m, Theatre Guide 6:40 " " 6:4.1 Conservation Program 1:00 Proudly We Hall 1:15 Salvation Army Pgm. 1:30 Bobby Doyle Show ABO 1:45 Men Behind Melodv 8:00 Lum and Abner ABO 8:15 Malcolm Epley 8:30 Dark Venture ABO 8:00 Boxing 8:15 " - " 8:30 0:45 " 10:110 Stardust Melodies 10:15 " " 10:30 Eddie Howard Orch. ABC 11:0(1 Nightcap Newscast 1 1 :or, Sign Off 11:30 11:18 22 Gabriel Heatler Quia Shew Around Town Baseball Scores Western Melodies Warden's Crime Cases MBS Official Detective MBS Bed Ryder MBS . Count of Monte Crlslo MBS The Falcon MBS Glen Hardy. News MBS Johnson Family MBS Amer. Legion Basehell Wlsard and the Odds MBS Fulton Lewis Jr. MB8 News MBS Muslo As Ton Like It Ernie Heckscher Orch. AIBS Reversing the usual procedure. Dr. I Watson is shown lecturing Mr. Sher- luca. nuimus v. who may or may not be the equal of numbers I to IV. Of course Nigel Bruce portrays Dr. Watson, and leaning over his shoul der is, Tom Conway. Is that a pipe in Watson's right hand? e It has come to my attention that there will be a broadcast of inter est to local listeners on KFLW from 9:15 to 9:30 p. m. Monday. It will feature talks by presidents of the University of Oregon and the Univenlty of Washington, and will emlnate from the deck of the bat Ueship Iowa. What two such promi nent men are doing playing sailor is anybody's guess but it is certain their comments will have to do with Uie status of education on Uie west coast. - e In Saturdays column I stated Bill Lance was going to find a man hanging in a closet in his adven ture that night. Well, out of sheer curiosity. I tuned in on the program to see if this really was the case. Unfortunately, Bill was already on his way to India when I tuned In" and I had to listen to the whole thing misery enough you might say, and truthfully, yet It was even worse, since I never heard any thing about the man in the closet My curiosity is up over this unfor tunate Incident. Would one of you please fill me in on the first few minutes? Here Is a program that appears on my weekly blurb sheet for the first time. It comes on at 1:30 p. m. on Monday, Wednesday and Friday next week. It may a regular pro gram, or It may not, the blurb Is rather indefinite on that point. It features the piano pounding of Ed die Duchln, and will include the guest warbling of Vera Holly, who was born in Buffalo. Make some thing out of that If you can. On the Rates Bureau program to night, Margaret Santos will inter view Mr. Russel Homer, co-owner and operator of the miniature choo choo on South 6th street. This should prove entertaining to those who are interested In choo-choos, big and small. The program is heard at 8:45 p. m. over KFLW. 'Vigilantes' Back On Job TACOMA. July 31 (Tv-The four Tacoma "Vigilante" police officers, discharged April 2 by Police Com missioner Robert Temme for what he said were "unauthorised" raids on alleged gambling estaollshments. were reinstated today to their former positions. Rufua T. Davis, president of the civil service com mittee, announced. They will receive full pay for the period of their separation from the service. The four, T. Q. Strand. Anthony Zatkovicb. Eugene Reardon and Hardwlck Smith, took part in hear ings before the commission Uiat lasted for three months and covered 1242 pages of testimony. TIIK JI'KT AND I'NJUBT KLAMATH PALLS, Ore. (To tho Editor) "The rain fnileth on the Jut and unjust" wo might append, "mill citlitmltles fall ou the good and Uie bad." A trained atnrlltig who hud been tn vm lu to talk wua caught In a trap with other btrtta who wero culpable. Ho told Ue trapper he was not one of the bud birds and should not sudor with them. Tho tnipiwr told him he was caught In bad compuuy and had to take punishment with the bad birds. NaUons have to be considered M a unit. If a man dot's wrong and It Is proven, he has to lake his pun ishment. If he has committed, ho must die. The only hotie he hits Is the priest niuy give him a pass into paradise or purgatory, understand I am not crltlcitiug the priest It la the beat he can do. If a nation commits wroug, It may have to suffer. There may be good ones In the lutul, but they must suffer with the bad. Take Oei'inuny for Instance. There are many good people among them. Oodly and true, but like the trained, Innocent starling they will have to suiter, maybe starve, v America Is trying hard to help Uirm. call we? Are we prosperous and strong enough to ameliorate their suffering? Oeneral Marshall ,'4 i Hn. LA V wmJ JLitCS ii I t'ol. Florence A. Hlanehard I above I, superintendent of army nurara, at Waaliliiiton became lite first fully eoninilaalunrd woman in the regular army. Formerly army uune held only relative rank. Hlic has been an army nurse fur 30 year. AP wlrcphoto tho I actually pleaded and begged him to. Since he had hud her only a mut ter of hours I asked him If he wasn't supposed to advertise over air, by hullo and keep her three days be fore disponing of her and he said no, he didn't have to do it thins, he could dispose of her. regardless. If that statement la true 11 la about time It was changed. What ever It be. a mongrel or purebred, the dog should be given a rhnute tn find Tie World Today Br DoWlTT MicKENZIl AP foreign Affairs Analyst '------------ V -ii ir,njm. Krnest lievln, Britain's over dar ing foreign secretary, took his rep. utalloii as a prophet In hla hands, at the week-end and told a coal minor".' picnic in Northern Knglniul Uiat there Is no danger of another war In tills generation so far aa ho oan see. And why should tills statesman, wiiom voice carries around in. world, raise the harrowing aulijecl of conflict on the supposedly cheer ful occasion of a picnic? Well, be. cause It's a question which never Ii far from tho minds of all thinking people, as you and I well know from Uie conversations wo dally eii. counter, So Mr. lievln made his prediction to calm fears, but he was. quirk to add this liiiKHlnnt qimu. flcaUon: Wrong Act fatal "lint lu every act you uerlnrm. you mum keep in mind the children of Uilrty or forty year from now, Not a day pansei, not a moment piuue In the Job In which I am now entailed without my being fully conscious that a wrung decision. wrung Jutlguiriit or petulant answer limy now rondrmii a generation." Whe counsel that, fur nobody fan afford liiialnkrs In these dangerous days. However, that doesn't mean Dial we are to refuse to luce fuels. House Okays Navy School WASHINGTON. July 21 IJi The house rules committee todny cienren lor nouse debate a bill authorizing the nnvy to purchase the Del Monte hotel at Monterey, Calif., for a naval postgraduate school. The bill would authorize the ex penditure of s2.500.000 to purchase Uie hotel and adjoining school and equip the school to accommodate 500 naval line officers. The rules committee approved procedure calling for one hour gen eral debate In the house. No date was set for the debate. The bill, by Rep. Jack Z. Anderson iR-Callf.i, was held up three times In the committee but brought up again at Anderson's request. forcefully t. 'it the emergencies crop up. It would hate been lutereatlng U Mr. lievln had amplified hi lore- limit l,tL'1 t, -k II'- l, Uiiiwln. ul ,..,.. ,.i,i.m. a... . ...... i.,,. iitti apply mirwlvr .energetically lu and President , hud five wiii.e.en tn mv .trie f laying pinna to meet emergencies. Truman are humane and smart men ' n1(, cunversiiuon three tern-nge l"" l" ,ul l,,n,l ,IU" uiwrauou and are leaving no stone unturned ! children, and each said how can he to help Europe. Are we going to be j do that, he Isn't supixurd to be a able to bring about unity and peace , branch of the law. uphold the from Uie chaos? I am afraid we ! rioht nf miter rhaL r i4ua nt have a severe task. I explain as I didn't see myself how c"1' """ ,"' I""" "f say It Why? Well In the first place he could do II. , mialit have developed aeveral "iri " Satan has connived with the trailers ! It's no wonder we have a Juvenile Wr ",B" ''"ve r " ''1 hrn In Russia and is puiung obstacles problem, and no respect for law and """ Mswwor nation acquire auf. tn the way. Can we overcome them? ! order. Our children learn from such strength lo wage a major Time will tell- I am Inclined to! unfairness and lots of others per- , """"H dares to carry out It. believe a Just Ood will be with the ! formed by men who are supposed f '" I"" 0'.,,y "l western powers and help them win to enforce and encourage honesty, , "I"'"""- " strike me that for good. . t fair play and do unto others as you 11 m'"' "ol generation for , . ! would like tn be done but who are "Utl1 " nyiwlhellral 81111811011 to be Any Intelligent person can see that wou'" "e none, out no are i the United Slates and Urllaln as well f uiiscruptilous that they do more "" A..rnmat . mh.r ...i.rr rwm.r. ...n. J'arm by far than good, do you i. o. no Aggremaor ax other western powers are nations i ' ...... ' , , mill, we do know that ii mil that want to make happiness and , my re,pec or ever see y pliy.lt.lly capable o'f prosperity. I decry the saying It lsi"J d" f 7,"Und '1,11.1 riit "iti? ! " major war of conque.t 1. alone a selfish Interest, that It will ! " ,LuyTxX to il is lhl' "'"'"I tl-"d the U. 8. A. pay 11. in the long run In a financial JZl ,, , ... . , . .. nolo to n.t?, tlint ieC wJi inft prntou- the only proposlUon. 1 Uilnk ho:,, , of u-momh-old western power, are imbued Willi : , ,., , , Christian principals 1 and tci on that , coul1 iix she too A man who Is well balanced ; Kn, , ood d,w u lllo ntMn j aio to me. i wain .10 ee everyone wuldn.t UnA 0M v)wrt ,,, hnppy. then I would be happy." 1 1 Tn(, p.),, olll ,, ,no mmrmww m iwhriii.' lauisan ijisi was. neoole nllL nt ton ammnl really think Uie U. 8.. BrltaUi and .i,.i... u ... -h , neUons of western Europe are ruled 1 believe If they had received our by that principal. I puppy we would now have her. We seem to be getting better re-1 We have been resident of Klam sults In Japan. Oen. McArthtir la . atn pnlla for seven years and I doing well. We can only hope It can love It here, we know a lot of peo- oc anne as wen in uerinany. ; Uc. some renlly swell people, but I lie present danger of war of course lira 111 Uie continued expan sion of asitreasua communism. Th world revolution tor the spread of that Ism Is suing, full till, and It will keep going with Increasing Intensity until It strike, an niaiiri. I which ll can t move. Kvery new country which la absorbed In tho red campaign adds strength to Rus sia's powerful communistic emplro and all tills la gained without a major sliootlns-aar. 80 far aa Moscow la concerned. in the long run It may tnke blood, j if the moneyest-grabblng place I ! 1 CBn ,voia '' uv 'HUng aloof snd sweat and travesty, are we each -have ever lived In. There are men Returns Jack Almetcr has re turned to his desk In the Oregon state employment office after a week's vacaUon. Visit Mrs. Ellen Woolliigton and two children are visiting Mrs. Well ington's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Almetcr of 330 Delta. They will be here for several days before return ing to their home in Mllwaukle, Ore. Vacation Margaret Bradshaw Is on a two weeks' vacation from the Oregon employment offices. On Business Ottls E. Thompson, supervisor for the 0.egon state un employment compensation commis sion, is in Klamath Falls for sev eral days on business. He is a for mer resident of this city. BABY DIIOWNS PORTLAND, July 21 W Mary Lou Roberts, age one year, drowned in the Columbia slough Saturday when she fell from a gangway lead ing to the parents' houseboat and was not discovered until five min utes later. Make your spring cleaning pay off. Sell those still useful but no longer needed articles through The Herald and News Want Ads. PILES SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO PAIN NO. HOSPITALIZATION No Loss of Time Permanent Results) DR. E. M. MARSHA ChlroprftetJe Pbr-lelin 190 Ne. lib Esqo.rf Thfr Rlrtf Phnn ?flrtrl John Wolohio Orch. MBS tViwc MBS fr?(i SVE AUTO GLASS Glass for all makes and models cut and Installed. - TRUCK AND PICK-UP SEAT CUSHIONS REBUILT EXPERT TRIM WORK ' BALSIGER MOTOR COMPANY Main Esplanade Phone 1121 ready to do our part? DR. M. P. TABER. 4060 Shasta way TKOt III.K AT POUND KLAMATH FALLS. Ore. 1T0 the Ed.tori I don't know If you will print this or not. but nutybe If you do It will protect some one else's animal. On July the first we lust our three-month Irish setter pup. fe male, she had followed her mother up on Hogback hunting and couldn't find her way home, after we dis covered she was gone we started searching for her. We looked all day from Mallory's store, Uwan lake behind the Mt. Shasta and all this suburban area and had talked to hundreds of people about her. All these little stores and house have our address and telephone number. Next day I called city pound and she hadn't been turned In there and was informed that they would turn It over to the radio station to broad cast. Still no dog. ' Next day on July 3, I put an ad In the paper and about f p. m. a call from a lady saying she had turned the dog over to the county poundmasler on Intc evening July 2. I was overjoyed as I was sure we could get our dog. So I called him at once saying I'd be after the pup- He said no I couldn't get her as ne had disposed of her that a. m., so he couldn't have ':cnt her over 10 or 15 hours. I asked him what he did to her. he said I gave ber away and I asked to whom, that I would go sec the people and try to redeem her. He said he forgot who ne naa given ner to and flatly re fused to disclose the whereabouts, Poramount'l Q6tt46 ll "DEAR RUTH" I I "I could writs a rhapsody on this rhapsody-in-blu manl Ho't err7 when It comei to picking muiic , . . end itari. Mill him? I lure wou W mill him il I didn't liitonl" . ' EVERY AFTERNOON 12:30-1:00 P. M. ' , KFLW -ABC American Broarfcatting Company here who would sell their very souls for a sliver dollar. Just a word to Uie pitrty or par ties who received our puppy, after the ad was placed In the city paper asking you to contact me about the pup and you did not respond In any way. It places you In tho same class as our good friend the CDC. Perhaps you didn't ee tho sd. If you do see this won't you please return her to us, she can't mean to you what she does to us. . lit the past lew months ,we have had 0110 male Irish setter pup (we gave to our son) nine months old, poisoned, and practically at Christ mas. Two and a half months ago our golden cocker was poisoned and she had eight three-week old pup pies. Now tills one gone. Bellevo me. Mr. Editor, I as well as my family are about roady to lose trust In humanity. This Is only about three dogs, two dead through the wickedness of someone and we can't hope to get them and one la alive but through the unfairness of pcoplo we don't have her. This may seem a small matter to some of you, but to dog and chil dren lovers It won't, In a world so full of sorrow and suffering brought on by the selfishness of man. The children of this generation hear enough to worry them to death as It Is and when we parents who do try to make our children's lives a llttlo hnppy and contented In these times and others tear It down through meanness, greed and self ishness It's really discouraging. MRS. C. C. MANN. being 111 a position to wash lu hands of any act performed by one or moro of lis satellite. Ashland Starts, Summer Sessions ASHLAND, July 31 The second summer session at Southern Oregon college, Ashland, opened today with registration continuing to July 31. Classes will begin Tuesday. Courses offered for tits five weeks' period which will close August 33. Include art. music, psychology, English. cl once, social science, economics, geography nnd history. Irene Hollenbeck of Salem comes as Instructor in science. She re cently attended the Institute of Ma rino Biology at Coos Bay and has her master's degree from Oregon State college. A United States submarine can crash dive In a matter of seconds, yet so smoothly that sleeping crew members are not awakened and there are no pressure effects from submerging. CloKslflcd Ads tln Results. IRMtHS ROMANCE ) V? AND THRILLS FOR o C, ARM-CHAIR jj Y TRAVELER!? 2- ? -fog -V Enjoy all the excitement and ro mance ef travel while looted near your radiol Meet actual travelers ' who tell you where they're going and why, on the great new show "Welcome Travelers"! . T Mfliatji iUTrtUujs. 9:00-9:30 A, M. KFLW -ABC American BroadcnstinK Company 'own Don't Let 'Em Tell You That You're Old By EARL Willi I.O( K No mutter what the calendar has to say about It. Don't let a too solicitous family convince you you're ready to be put on tho shelf. . Thoro uie too many, -oplo who nssoclutu g r cy hulr Willi senili ty. Extensive sur veys, during the l; war showed that oldsters are moro stable than young workers, that they clinnge Jobs less often, have fewer accidents. They do as well In mental testa and on tests that show reasoning, critical Judg ment and the ability tn learn. One nf tho great transcontinental air lines wisely has mora Uian 100 pilots who u 10 ovor 49 years of ago, Tho troublo with many folks as tho years atld up,' Is that thoy grow old unevonly. They loso In their variety of Interests long be fore they are physically low. And rango and depth of Interest are ,a pretty sure mark of youth, Keep alert mentally, kocp In terested in things tho now things. Look ahead to 1000, not back over your shoulder to the dead past. There's your elixir of youth I "Wo Invito you to visit "Memory Onrdcn." Earl Whltlock Noxt Mondny Mr. Whltlock of tho Eui'l Whltlock Funeral home will comment on "Those Big Words."