Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 01, 1948, Page 4, Image 4

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    THURSDAY, JAN. 1, I94S
PACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
leraifc aniUleUrS Advertising Roundup
, t"!. (. f- DKLHKIl T ADDISON
rKANK JUNKINI
Editor
fnterad M scond claaa matter at the postofflos of Klamath
alia. On., aa Auauet . lea, under aot of conirew,
March B 1870
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
Those words have headed this column in the
New Year edition ol this paper for many years now.
The simple greeting Is meant to
express, for this newspaper and
for Uils writer, a feeling of good
will for our thousands of readers
and friends, and of appreciation
for their kindness, Indulgence and
support.
Perhaps I rationalize, but I often
get to thinking that one could not
find anywhere a belter place In
which to work In the kind of a Job
I have than right here.
That Is partially because of the
grand country which surrounds us,
where something new, and big. Is
Iteav harmpninff. Hale Scar
b rough and I were driving home from Merrill the
other day, and we got to talking about these things.
Hale halls from the South, and I asked him If. after
taste of the West and of the Klamath country, he
would consider going back to Alabama to carve out
his career. To his negative answer he added a remark
about like this: "What I would do back there, and
what the people around me would do. would be Just
the same thing people had been doing for generations."
There's still the thrill of new things and of pioneer
ing out here. There are things like new land, new
Ideas for using the land, and new opportunities for
work and business, that keep life full of Interest and
suspense. That's great country for newspaper work.
People
BUT perhaps even more important to my personal
satisfaction about the job I have and the place
I work are the people that live In this country. I've
been here for 16 years now, and I know a great many
of them, from Lakeview and Adel and Plush, from
Alturas and Canby and Bieber, from Gilchrist and
Fort Klamath and Chiloquin, from Merrill. Maun
and Tulelake, from Dorris and Keno. from Bly and
Bonanza, from Henley and Olene and Poe valley, and
here close at home.
The country Is filled with good people, with whom
our paper and the folks who work here have enjoyed
most pleasant relationship over the years.
We have found them a friendly people, aggressive but
not quarrelsome, generally successful but not egotisti
cal, frank and liking frankness. It is to these folks,
in the home town and its environs. In the country and
in the towns of the surrounding region, that this
department extends that sincere greeting: HAPPY
NEW YEAR!
a
Cruise
FOR a few days in this early January, the writer
will go on a cruise on a US navy destroyer, through
arrangements made by the public information office
of the thirteenth naval district. For that reason, our
pieces may appear on a hit and miss basis here for
the next week or so.
It happens that I have never been out to sea before,
except on a close-to-shore fishing jaunt once off
Netarts bay. My well-wishers, among those fine
folks to whom I paid tribute above, have done a great
deal of talking to me about seasickness. Their custom
ary method of sympathetic treatment is to tell me
11 about the symptoms and effects of this malady,
to horrible detail, and to finish it off with: "Now,
Just don't think about it at all. and you won't get it"
Don't think about it I The only way I can keep
from thinking about it now is to lose consciousness,
and some of my "pals" tell me that is entirely within
the realm of possibility.
Well, ni be back before long, and will report in
full about the bit ol navy activity I observe, about
the Pacific, about the "can" that will carry me there,
and about seasickness. I'll be seeing you.
Boyle's Column
Americans Are
In The Dumps Over 1948
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK IVP Adam was con
vinced he was bom in the most
troubled period ot the world's his
tory. Every man since then has had the
same idea, and each generation is
dolefully certain it has been afflict
ed with the greatest woes since the
sun first shone upon the waters and
outlined land.
The present world era of normal
confusion offers no exception. We
are sure we are misfortune's dar
ling of the ages, and that no race
was ever more flattered by disaster,
actual or potential.
Many people met the advent of
1948 more with melancholy ques
tionings than confident hope, as if
they were resigned already to the
fact that the newborn year would
sandbag them with grief from its
very cradle.
THURSDAY EVE., JAN.
KFLW 1450 kc. I KFJ1
SparU Lin top
Bomt Towo Ntwi
:1S
:23
vvorio r9W Summarr
MIU of 104. ADC
6: H0
6:45
7:00
Ellcrr Queen ABC
1:M
i ne tiocat abc
11:00
memorable Mailt
11:15
ft:3e
(0
;.V
:0fl
9:15
8::10
Malcolm Eplejr
Candid Microphone ABC
It Happened la lftIT ABC
9:15
IU:00
10:15
10:50
11:00
SUrdnat Moladlea
Frtddr Martin Orck. ABC
rsmwt snmmtrr
Teloqneat
11:15
11:30
11:45
Al Wallari Orch. MBS
Nowa MBS
FRIDAY A. M., JAN.
:H A. U. leraaaSa
:30 "
:srara rara
7:00 Nawa. Breaafait gditlaa
1:15 Rocara Rouadup
7:30 James Abba ABC
7:13 Zeka Manners ARC
S:0 Breaklau Clab ABO
S:l "
S:0 "
" -
:00 TVtlooms Traveler! ABC
:lt "
:30 Barsi Is nll;wao ABO
: "
l:oe Galas Drsse ABC
10:15 Moiio af Manhallan
ion Mr Trsa lien abo
10:15 "
10:55 Mlaletare Ceaeerl .
11:00 Step and Shop '
Jl:l Richard Lelberl
11:30 rbe Llalenine Peat ARO
(lies rtbel and Albert ABO
alIXT? realare
By
MALCOLM IPl.fT
Managing Editor
up with a gain In
ness and being reaoy lor a sound
operation in 1948.
The year started with "Junior,"
the little tabloid sans advertising.
January through February, ad
vertising was on a Son- basis. Ad
ditional newsprint, lack of which
had caused this curtailment, was
acquired In the spring. Advertising
momentum was not recaptured
until June, but by then volume
had caught up with 1946.
m
EPLET
Still Down
Well, there is little prospect that
any government or social order,
here or elsewhere, will invent a
bump -free path from womb to
tomb. But it is odd that in America,
now in the flower of its plenty,
there should be such a widespread
philosophy of half-despondency and
-fear. I doubt if since time began
there have ever before been so many
people so well off and so gloomy
about it, so vocally despairing of
the future.
Halt the faces you meet nowadays
in this land of spreading wealth
are twice as long as they are wide,
and faith in ourselves seems to be
on the ebb. We are like a giant
living in dread that some unknown
midget will sneak in by night and
rob the sources of our strength.
Perhaps this is the real explana
tion of the invisible dread that
hangs upon people's spirits they
IIADIO PROGRAMS
1
1240 ke.
KFLW 1450 kc.
!S:OONowe. Neon Edition
17:15 Parleaa Sidewalk Show
15:30 Paul Khltemsa Club ABC
15:45
1:011 Clsadls
1:10 "
1:1.1 Merrill Time
l:30Treaaarr Band Show ARC
1:13 Sammy Kara Serenade
7:00 What a Dels' Ladlea ABC
7:15 "
7:33 SpoUlfht an Holly'wd. ABC
7:30 Bride and Drooea ABC
7:13 "
1:00 Ladlea Be Sealed ABO
1:30 Bales Canrert
Gabriel Realtor KB I
(tail Show
Around Town
Football Round-Hp
Dinner Dance
f amllj- Theatre XBi
Bed Kyder HBI
Peru of Call
Klam. Sperla Albom
Organ Mood"
Billy Boie. Horteahoei MBg
Glenn Hardy. Niwi HBI
Hello From Franco"
Let'a Oance"
S'fwi Scope MBS
Newi Commentary MBS
V. S. Marino Corpi
RcTerlea"
Benny Strenr's Orrh. MB I
S:I5
3:.".e
4:0
Headline Edition
4:03
Walta Mree On
4:13
4:30
4:13
Reqaealiutlr
5:00
5:15
5:30
5:40
Terrr and the
nar HlhiSHU
X
5:00
0:15
0:75
0:30
S:5
0:35
7:00
Bporla Lineup
Homo Tawn Newa
World Newa Summary
The Sheriff ABC
Hoalcal ReveUlo
l-'arm Front
r. Bennniwar. NiwigBI
Rlae and obtno MBS
Headline Nowa
Betl Bare
a'clock Newt MBS
Oashien flaebea
lamlllar ravorllea
I.ee Erdndr Cenrerl'
Kate bmltb Speake MRS
Victor II. Llndlahr MBS
tlornlne. Matinee"
Sena af Ihe Flenrere
Glenn Hard Newa MSB
rielawett Show MBS
Mnalo
Hawaiian
-
l a Pelnlet al 11:00
Craklne Johnaon MS
Queen For A Da? Mill
M M
EMI fealare
Champtea Roll
Gillette FlghtaABC
7:15
7:30
5:00
S:30
0:45
S:-',3
0:00
t:15
The Pat Man
Thla la Tour I
Break Ihe Bank
0:30
Famous Jary
0:15
10:00
10:15
10:30
11:00
11:05
11:15
11:30
11:15
Stardual Melodies
Freddy Martin Orch. ABO
Newa Bummary
Telequeal
DKUIKIIT ADDISON
THE most Important developments In Herald and
News advertising in 1947 were maneuvering out
from behind the eight ball as f last January, winding
the years bus!- tt'wmii
M.
Advertising set new records for ADDISON
The Herald and News the last halt of the year, and
final figures for the whole year will show an Increase
over 1946 of about 12"c.
The Increase was accomplished by having paper
available, by having an adequate staff to handle the
volume, and because business generally was good
in Klamath Falls.
The Herald and News display advertising staff now
includes Justin McDonald, talso national advertising
manager). Gene Inge Is, Jim Morrison and Hubert Tot
ton. Totton Joined the crew In the middle of the year.
Classified is handled by Leah Dent. Bee Wells and
Edith Pieruccini.
Advertisers generally provided increasingly better
selections and quality of merchandise at prices which
kept creeping up through the year. It looks like more
of the same Increases in 1948.
Circulation Up With Costs
ADVERTISING volume in 194" was satisfactory
but wage increases and skyrocketing newsprint
costs took a big bite out of profits. Again, 1948 looks
better from this standpoint, as an eight cent per
column Inch increase in advertising rates has been
announced for February first.
From the advertiser's standpoint, cost per inch will
be up but the number of subscribers also is up enough
that he still will be getting as much for his money.
As a matter of fact, the cost per subscriber In 1948
will be just about even with 1943. and will be far less
than it ever was prior to that. Few services sell for
less than they did prewar!
Average net paid circulation, as given by the Audit ',
Bureau of Circulations report, for the year 1946 was ,
12.100. The audit for 1947 won't be made for another I
month or two. but present paid subscribers number I
more than 13.000. It might be of interest that news- I
paper circulations nationally have more than doubled I
since 1920.
Increases in newspaper circulations and volume of
auieruAuig ccuuub tor ute conunumg paper snoriage.
a a
All Business Is Local
IN national advertising the big newspaper achieve
ment for the year is the fairly general acceptance
of the premise that "all business is local." In short,
"merchandise" doesen't become "business" until it
moves off a local retailer's shelf. It follows that
advertising is most productive if applied locally ton
home town newspaper pages) to local consumers.
a a a a
Special Herald And Newt Editions
THE Herald and News is better than half proud of
the three special editions it produced these past six
months the "Rodeo Pictorial," "School Days" and i
"Yule Tidings."
The news department is Justly proud that its part
was entirely original production. Not a line of "filler"
went into the sections. The mechanical crews are
proud of technically excellent printing. And the ad
department is happy In knowing 'that not one ad
vertiser was high pressured Into running a "compli
mentary" ad.
The ad department has enjoyed a year of unprece
dented cooperation from all members of the team.
News room, photo, art (Jim Floyd), engraving, proof
room, composing room, press crew, circulation depart
mentall have been eager to try something new and
better. This good spirit is herewith gratefully acknowledged!
have the worry-worries because they
don't know the real enemy.
The cave dweller built a fire In
his doorway to keep out sabre
tooth tigers. The modern cliff dwell
er doesn't know what is prowling
outside waiting for him, but he has
a vague certainty that something
out there In the nameless night Is
closing In on him something be
side the milkman.
Is it another depression: a third
world war; or Just a higher income
tax; does the New York carpenter,
whe Just got a pay hike raising him
to $2.75 an hour for a seven-hour
day. take no joy in his task because
he fears somewhere an atom bomb
is even now being built to level
the product of his hammer?
Two Big Hopes
Whatever the hidden cause of
the national blues facing us as 1948
begins, the average American has at
least two things to console him:
(1) He will probably live twice
as long as his great, great grand
father did.
12) He is more likely to die from
the lifelong effects of overeating
than he is to be killed by an auto
mobile or a war.
The plain truth is that now, even
FRIDAY P. M., JAN. 2
KFJ1 1240 kc.
Same Tanea
Headline Newa'
Vour Dance Tonee
Market a Llvealork
Afternoon Concert
l.et'e Read Matarln
fnhneon Famlli MBB
Matinee
Newa
Hrarta Deflra MRS
Uearta Deeire MBS
Martin Black MRS
Red Hook 31 MRS
Rlrkjr's Reqaeat
Tea Dance r
Orraa M.ilc '
Llrlno With Oed
t alien Lewi Jr. MBB
Prank Remlnrwnf MBS
Voice of Army
Adventure Parade MBB
Hop llarrlran MBB
taper Man MRS
Captain Midnight MBS
ram Mis MBB
ARC
Vsara
Plratea ABC
FRIDAY EVE., JAN. X
Mlacha Borr Orcheatra
Klamath Theatre iaia
Aroand Town
Sporta Roundup
Dinner Dance
Rob Eberly Slnea
Voice of Hporta
Ciace Kid MBS
Scarlet IfUten MRS
Evenlnr C oncerl
the npooner
Hilly Rait, llererabere MRfl
Glenn Hardy Nawa MBB
l.et'e Dance
Harry Horllck
Henry J. laylor MRB
Fulton Lewis Jr. MHB
Henry Klnf Orcheatra MBB
Reyerlea
Benny fitrone'o Orch. MBS
Call ABO
ARC
HI ARC
ABC
TrlalaABC
John fl iHahea Orch. MBB
Newa MBB
SIDE GLANCES
h If
cowt. tste iv taw wavier, lac.
"It was the funniett New Year' party aver you should
havt n the look on your boss's face when you pushed
him into that fountain!"
These Days
By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKY
THE SONGS OF OUR CHILDREN !
To cement friendship, It Is not
necessary to teed lies either to this
or the next generation. Lies have ,
a way of declaring themselves at the
most unfortunate moments, tor
truth will out sooner or later. I once
received a letter from a publisher
of falsehood who Justified himself
on uie gruunoa uiat ne su ii mat
time cementmg friendship and that
he has since withdrawn his publica
tionwhich circulated widely In the
armed forces during the war be
cause the cement did not hold. I
wondered whether the falsehoods
did not hold.
The bulletin of the "Friends of
the Public Schools" publishes, with
ample protest, a hymn used In many
p jbllc schools to cement friendship.
But the hymn mot the bulletin)
teaches lies to our children. The
author of the English text Is given I and that It Is the responsibility of
In the bulletin as Louis Untermeyer, f parents to protect and even to lor
the anthologist, which came to me ) bid their children to partake of such
as a surprise, for I had not known nonsense as "Long live mighty Rus-
inai tnis craiuman in ute iieto oi
poetry was aiso so aoie a linguist as
to turn Its doggerel Into English
Here then la the hymn for you to
judge whether you believe that It
la anllAhla Irtr vnlir hilriran U'harhftr
it does not teach them falsehoods
ot (act and implication: j
1. I
"Republic forever, the land of the I
free.
Joined hi love and in labor for all
men to see;
Long live mighty Russia, the
union supreme.
As the hope of the people, their
- work and their dream.
CHORUS:
"Long may she live, our mother
land. Long may her flag be over us:
Flag of the Soviets, our trust and
our pride,
Ride through the storm victorious.
Lead us to visions glorious
Flag of a people in friendship
allied.
I.
"Through terror and dsrlcness the
sun shines today.
For Lenin and Stalin have lighted
the way:
We crushed the invader, we hurled
back the foe.
And our armies In triumph will
sing as they go:
CHORUS:
3.
"In battle our armies have made
themselves strong
Against ev'ry oppression, injustice
and wrong.
In battle we, too, shall establish
the might
Of a new generation, the children
of light."
No lw of this land has trans
ferred to the schools, to municipal
if the world does spin in its usual
ordered chaos, we never had It so
easy before and the chances were
never brighter for a longer-happier
existence.
Perhaps all we need for 1948 Is
fewer resolutions and more resolu
tion. In Edgar Lee Masters' "Spoon
River Anthology," Luclnda Mat
lock, a pioneer mother, gives this
advice from her grave to her easily
disheartened descendants:
"Degenerate sons and daughters,
"Life Is too strong for you
"It takes life to love life."
Ask Lynn Roycroft
fcouf Standard Insurant
GOLDEN YEARS' HAN
He will give
you full details
on the insur
ance plsn lhal
enables you to
retire with
life income.
Staixdauii
IlXSUIIAsVCE
Company
Lynn Roycroft
412 Main SL
Klamath Falls. Ore,
T. h ate. t. a ear orr
! a.- slate nr even frtler.il authorities.
the trusteeship u( the child It par
ents exist and tire li'Kutly competent.
The school pertorms a function tor
which every parent pays In taxes.
I In the broadest sense, there Is no
I such thing as free education. It Is
either paid fur out of pocket directly
or through tuxes. Scluxil employes,
from the sufiertnteudcuts down to
caretakers of the buildings, are paid
servants of the tnxpuyer and are
responsible to the parents of the
children In their charge. They may
not teach a child anything to which
the child s legal trustee, whether his
parents or guardians, objects. While
compulsory education prevents tne
parent from withholding from the
chili', the advantages of a minimum
education, the moral responsibility
of the parent imposes upon him the
obligation to see to It that the school
does not corrupt the child,
I maintain that any American
'child who Is required by his teacher I
j to sing this hymn is being corrupted '
sia, me union supreme as tne nope
. oi ute people, meir worx and tnelr
I dream." That Is a lie. Russia li a
of the individual to the state. Our
children should be told the truth.
!
Big Party
Called Off
HOLLYWOOD. Jan. I iPi Mil
lionaire Sportsman Bob Topping
Isn't going to celebrate his birthday i
tnn,,nM, O In tfr.1 1 .n I Attn I
peTnVdm get imTon; ,day
EMvT a',d MV" Ae,r
" luriicr.
TonDlnjr fo lowpd un the invit-
tions with teleeram.. KAVine he
. a c- r
found it Impossible to be in Cnll-
fornla January 9, and con.ieriurntly
plans for the evening had been
called.
"Without ni y knowledge a n d j
through error. Lana Turner's name
was mentioned in some of the lnvl- I
tatlons." Topping's wire stated. I
Movie studio sources Indicated
that the original Invitations were .
dispatched by John Meyer, public j
relations counsel who figured promt
nently In the Howard Hughes air
plane contract Investigation by the lower Income groups Is vitally neces
Unlted States senate. , nary during 1948 and the years
It was to have been quite a party. ; ahead,
with a large consignment of orchids . Slating that "many American
at 13 a copy llown from Honolulu , families have found themselves
and the Chaucy Gny orchestra hop- i priced out of the automobile mar
plng from the El Morocco In New tet." Crosley said In a year-end
York for the all-nlght affair at
Hollywood's Mocambo.
(it ASH
ATLANTA. Jan. 1 in; Twenty
one passengers were shaken up but
none was Injured seriously when an
Eastern Air Lines plane collapsed
Its landing gear during a sudden
squall at the Atlantic airport today.
The plane was thrust Into the air
while rolling down a runway. The
freakish gust then dropped the
twin-engined airliner against the
pavement with such force that the
wheels collapsed.
SHORT VISIT
Monty B. Jones spent a brief visit
In Klamath Falls over the holidays
with his pnrenls. Mr. and Mrs. M.
B. Jones of 731 Rose, and other
relatives and friends. Jones Is a
teacher at LaConner, Wash.
ABC's
are now heard on
KFLW
DIAL
1450
6:30 "Hiti of 1947"
7:00 "Ellcry Queen"
7:30 "Th. Clock"
:30 "Candid Mike"
9:00 "It Happened in
1947'
10:30 "Freddy Martin"
KFLW - ABC
Fruit Growers
Protest Hike
WENATCHKE. Jan. 1 Ml Speedy
relief from the new freight rate In
crease, described as "the straw that
breaks the back of our fruit in
dustry." was being aouglit by lend
ers of Ute apple Industry today.
At a conference of growers repre
sentatives yesterday, Frank W. Tay
lor, secretary of the northwest
horticultural council, said he would
leave fur Washington today to see
what relief can be obtained.
William J. Mulllken Jr., was named
by another group of growers to
seek relief In the nation's capital.
The Increase Junts the rate on
apples to the east and soutltea.it from
11.63 a hundred pound to approxi
mately 11.96. Taylor said the boost
brings the rale to almost a dollar a
box and means fremiti coat ol ill
million dollars to North Central
Washington alone.
Six Arabs
Killed Today
JERUSALEM. Jan. 1 Police
said six Arabs and two Jews were
killed today In a Jewish reprisal i
raid on the Arab village of Hulntl ;
Esh Sklekh. raising to 600 the '
deaths In communul strife since the
United Nations decided 34 days Olio'
to partition Palestine.
The Jews. Using marhlneittuis niul
grenades, also struck at another i
Arab village. Huvassa. At least 30
persons were wounded.
The attacks, believed instigated
uy Hugnnn. tile jewisn uiitlerarutiiiu
defense force, were reported as re-
venue for the killing of 41 Jews at
.,. - i.h Ji..,.
Haifa after the Jews had thrown a !
bomb into a group of Arabs lined:"" si ice lueMiay. .s
up before the plant's employment : ''"); y O Dwyer after he had
office.
(The exiled mufti of Jerusalem. . .. ,lllt SK ot digKlng out Irom im
' Haj Amm el Husscinl. told leiwrters j (rr i,u,t Friday's record ai -ln.h
j In Cairo he was "satisfied with , snowfall.
I Arab resistance " to the UN decision, j With almost 40 per cent of the
He had Just conferred with Hie cuy 6719 miles of atreeta already
j pernuer of Egypt.) opened, Ihe mayor predicted yester-
I Sporadic shooting occurred in the j day that by Ute tomorrow every
streets of Haifa during the morning
and some 30 Jews and Arabs were
reported wounded slightly.
Arabs In Jerusalem attacked Jew
ish buses three times, but no casual
ty was reported.
Tariff Cut
In Effect
WASHINGTON, Jan. 1 M1
Tariff reductions on hundreds
I prodUcts went Into effect today
the United suites and eiglit oilier
countries In arcordnnce with
general International agreement
reached at Geneva.
Urltaln,
Scotch whiskey from
sugar and tobitcco from Cuba and
wuio Irom France were Included in
the Import duty cut made by the
United States In return for conce-
slons on American exports.
Other countries putting into el-
feet now the pact made at the
International trade conference In
October are Australia. Canada and
i " " rtand. - Luxem-
T .hrZeTrpact was an -
Mr.-sH th w.i inn. I Aiuuirititton
; nounced the National amocimuoii
I . .1 . .L.l,. n T -a--.
OI AtCOnOMC ICVCrBC i.i.iw.ui
said one result would be a 30-ceiU
' in tV t-Atnll nrlc nf fifth, nf
Imiwried whiskey. The association
Mild the saving would be passed on
to consumers quickly.
Need For Cheap
Car Stressed
Powell Crasley Jr.. president of
Crosley Motors. Inc.. said that meet
ing the tranvnortatlon need of the
statement that "there l more than
ever today a definite place In our
economy for smaller, economical
cars, priced at less than $1000.''
HY-LO OIL BURNING
SALAMANDERS
THK
Modern Heater
for
BUILDING CONSTRUCTION
MANUFACTURING PLANTS
OUTDOOR CONSTRUCTION
GRAIN WAREHOUSES
POTATO CELLARS
JOB OFFICES
FOUNDRIES GARAGES SHOPS
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Loggers & Contractors
732 South Sixth
TOONERVILLE FOLKS
Final Item ovcrtimc
Truck Ban
Moderated
NEW YOltK. Jan. I ol'i New
York City's ban on noii-csriilll
trucking Imposed by Mayor William
'Dwyer to speed snow removal
"'" " '
j u"1 ",r '
yuio'iiobllcs will
further notice.
asalnst private
continue until
Modlfkutlon of the order, In tf-
coiifcrrrd with his emergency snow
! committee directum the still-stun-
thurotiKhfare In all of New York a
five buruuuli would be cleared for
traffic,
Conitnrrci.it ti umporutloh. with
Uip cxcepUun ol nmtirrrtl tm.t
ruuiCA. was ticurly buck to iiurmul
and commuitrs were rxiHTlriulnu
unly orcunluiml delays In travfltiirf
to mid (rum work.
Single Bid In On
Generators At Darn
I COUl.KK DAM. Wash.. Jan. 1 iV
. A bid of $3 i"U.aoo for comtructiun
i of three ls&.UOO-hor.'iepower turbmej
in drive new nettersliirs st Ornnd
, CoU , r-tivrd from Ihe New
Innrt News Bhlnbuildiiw and lirydork
company ol Newport News. Vs., the
I bureitu of ret-laiimllou suld totlHy.
,, .,. nlv h,.i ror.,i.n.
Twenty tlniro as powerlul as the
, inr..,i ritllroiul locomotive, each
j tllri)lnP weigh about 1.100.000
pound.
j The Woodward Ooveniur cutiipuny
( ot Kix-kfnrd. III., submitted the only
j bid ir.M.lM. for dellrate guveriung
. equipment to control the sieed of
I the turbines.
.
i DAV.H. Okl... .... 1
nicitc than 20 movies of piuyliiif hrro
..... ......
m
' Mllll llCIUIlin IU CaT.111 uuin, iviy
Kviins, lu.i leudlng lady, made U of
(Iclftl ypsterdny In a wedding cere
mony at the flying L ranrh nmnrd
by W. L. Likens, Oklahoma cuttle
man, near here.
RADIO
SERVICE
ALL MAKES
and MODELS
Radio Tubes
Port. Batteries
Y.
I IS
i 1
1
mm
MACHINERY CO.
ro thb papy-S.ittbh
WA
! Jews Reach
Cyprus Camp
KAM ACWHTA. Cyprus. Jan. 1 ill
More than 11.000 uncertified
Jewish Immigrants were dlaembark
liut quietly heie today under walrh
of hundreds of llilllsh troops and
police fioin two t-ouvrrtrd cargo
ships.
The ships were uroiiifhl to port
under escort ol llrltlsh warshlpi
hentlrd by lo cruisers after being
Intercepted In the Mediterranean.
(The Jews hail siilled from the
Illiu-k sea for Palestine. The llrltuh
foirlBii office said masters of the
ships oKteed voluntarily to allow
boarding parties aboaid and to slier
their courses fiom Haifa to Cyprus,
where approximately 17.000 other
Jcwa uerc 111 camps after being In
tercepted In previous eltorts to
reach I'alestlno without visas.)
Hundreds of llrltlsh commandos,
garrison troops and civil policemen
lined up at the docks and the opera
tion uas so peaceful as to be anil
climactic. All Jeva were off the Pan des
cent by mill afternoon.
Those on the Pan York were tll
Int quietly across gangplanks onto
the quay.
Willamette River
Locks Need Repair
WK8T LINN. Jan. t ! Wil
hiiucitc river Iinkn licie will rrqulre
Ijo.ooo to :ii.io in repairs Uiu
rnr. Col. O. K Wlh rewrled here
niter an inflection lour by army
engineer.
Tlie dlatrltl (nguicer IU the i
pitlrs would In no way change In
curlier rertiniiiirniliitimi (or nrw
lock ami Hint he hopes Prealdenl
Truman will Include sJ.000,000 t.h
Ute work III retiiet to congreas
r .i j si l
i romanacr r-amca
To German Court
WASHINGTON. Jitn. 1 tl'i Rob
I ert f. Mngtilre. Portland attorney,
j was iinmetl late yesterday by Presi-
dent Truman as one of nine Judges
to serve on military tribunals el
up in Clrrniiiny by the war depart
, menl to try act uoed war criminal..
How To Relieve
Bronchitis
Creomiilalon rellrves promptly be
cause It goes right to the seat of the
rouble to help loosen and eipel
term laden phlegm, and aid nature
0 sootho nnd heal raw, tender, ln
lamed bronchial mucous mem
iranes. Tell your dnutglst to sell you
1 bottle of Creoinulslon with the un
IcraUindlng you must like, the way It
lulckly nlluys the cough or you are
o have your money back,
CREOMULSION
or Coutht, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
Phone 6222
j
K