SATURDAY, JAN. 54, 1949
PACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON
FRANK jr.NKINi
Idllor
'Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
THIS may make people unhappy, but we mutt report
that there Is nothing in the weather record here
that show the present run of beautiful, balmy weather
la "extremely unusual" ior uie
Klamath country. Clear days we
the rule, rather than the excep
tion, in thU country in mid-winter.
So far thU month, there have
'been 12 clear days. If this con
tinue to month's end, it will set
a record for clear days. However,
since 1808 there have been 11 Janu
arys with 11 or more clear days,
and last January there were 15
clear days.
Since 1908. there have been three
.iminni with higher maximum
-mr-u.ro 1 11r than llVP OCCUITed
here this month. The maximum EPLEY
so far in January. 1. Warmer temperatures
were reported in Januarys of 1920. 1928 and 1934.
For those who insist that what is happening now is
extraordinary, there is a report from Crater lake
that a new record has been set there for clear weather.
But it will have to continue for several days to set a
record in Klamath Falls.
' People have a way of remembering bad weather
rather than good. We forget that in past years,
there has been lota of pleasant, sunny weather here
in the winter.
Willamette Job
LATEST word from the bureau of public roads on
the Willamette highway surfacing program is that
nothing can be expected until forest highway money,
which finances this work, is appropriated through con
gress. On two previous occasions, the bureau has called
for bids on the Willamette work, and in both cases,
it rejected them as too high. Presumably, it had the
money when it called for bids, and presumably it
apent it elsewhere or something happened so it isn't
presently available.
For the fiscal years 1946, 1947 and 1948. a total of
$75,000,000 was "authorized" for forest highway ex
penditures in the U.S. Authorization is not appropria
tion, however, and to date, only ,9.800,000 has been
actually appropriated.
It is expected that substantial additional forest
highway funds will soon be given the congressional
green light. Work to that end is now underway. When
that happens, certainly the Willamette highway Jobs
should get an Immediate call In this section of the
country. The situation on that road. In view of the
traffic it carries and its general importance, demands
an early surfacing program.
Briefs From The Pocket File
a MOST Interesting development on the local scene
A is the move to bring Class D professional
baseball to this city . . . The substantiality of the
men who have undertaken leadership of this move
ment gives bright promise of success . . . They deserve
the encouragement and support of the community
baseball lovers ... A few more "mentioned possibilities''
for the state representative posts open in this county,
and it will be unanimous . . . Sheriff Lloyd Low,
who is going to run again for Klamath sheriff, was
one of the few republicans who withstood the demo
cratic landslide of the depression years ... He holds
some kind of a record in Oregon as a local vote-getter
. . . Old-timers like to talk about the Klamath politician
who went about the country on horseback, a bottle of
whiskey in one saddle bag, a Bible in the other . . .
That man, we are told, always knew which saddle bag
to open when he approached a farmhouse . . . Two
additional houses for employes are being constructed
at Klamath Agency, even as the controversy goes on
about the liquidation issue ... An automobile acci
dent always gets bigger news play than an Industrial
accident ... A lot of people work as well as drive
' cars, and if accident news is going to perform a
public service In making people safety-conscious, it
needs to drive the lesson home to Industrial workers
as well as auto drivers.
Spud Growers See
Greenhouse Tests
CORVALLIS, Jan. 24 OT About
SO seed potato growers, mostly from
Multnomah county and the Klam
ath area, visited the OSC green
house test plantings of foundation
: stock of certified White Rose seed
SATURDAY EVE., JAN.
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MALCOLM KI'LHY
Uansslns sailor
E ri. 11
potatoes this week. This is the
first year that greenhouse space
bas been available to conduct tests
for virus diseases on this early vari
ety of potatoes grown extensively
in Oregon to supply seed stock to
California.
Dr. John Milbrath, plant path
ologist; H. E. Finneil and E. C.
RADIO PROGRAMS
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News Summary
Telequssi
By GEOKCiE E. SOKOl.SKY
DR. NATHAN SCHACHNER has written, for the
current Issue of the American Jewish Year Book,
a learned and interesting article entitled, "Church,
State and Education," which shows what the Jew
has been and Is concerning religion In the ' schools
of the various parts of the United States. While
his summary of the history of tills subject Is of value,
what he misses altogether is that atheism may be
taught our children, but not the word of God, not
the Bible, not the Psalms, not the Prophets, not the
Apostles. Karl Marx is legal in the schools, but
not Isaiah or St. Mark. They suffer from Biblical
affiliation.
For many, this Is a very serious question. They say
that religion has no place in the schools. But has
antl-rellglon a place? The real difficulty Is that the
Catholics object to the St, James version of the Bible;
the Protestants object to the Douai version: and the
Jews object to both. But does anyone object to a
materialistic, biologic Interpretation of man's place in
society; does anyone complain that his child is being
bombarded with an amoral position that man la a
product of his environment and that morals are a
matter of superstition and social pressures?
In a word, all the talk of church and state has
nothing to do with the fundamental question, which
is, what is being done to offset and counteract their
corruption by teachers who are atheists and who
propagandize an atheistic conception of morals in
the public schools?
.
Children Of God Quarrel
DR. SCHACHNER S article does not deal with this
at all Unfortunately, most of those who discuss
this question are too concerned with money for bus
rides and too little with the need for Ood.
The real danger is not that the public schools
will become sectarian but that fastidious parents
will not send their children to public school. An
increasingly large number do send their children to
private and parochial schools. The Independent t pri
vate) schools are not only for the rich and fashion
able but tor children whose parents object to a ma
terialistic, amoral education. They want their children
to learn not only about the amoeba but also about
the beatitudes. It Is a question of moral standards.
Unfortunately, while the attack is being made on
religion every kind of religion with increasing force,
the children of God are divided into quarreling, bick
ering sects who hate each other, denounce each other,
discriminate against each other. They have forgotten
that Christ taught:
". . . This Is my commandment: that ye love one
another, as I have loved you. Greater love hath no
man than this, that a man lay down his life for his
friends ..." x
And also, he said:
"Y have heard that it hath been said, thou shalt
love thy neighbor, and hate thine enemy.' But I say
unto, "Love your enemies, bless them that curse you.
do good to them that hate you. and pray for them
which despitefully use you, and persecute you . . ."
i
Problems For Philosophers
BUT few of those, Christians some of them call ,
themselves, pay heed to this counsel. They fret
and fume over school lunches and who shall get j
them out of the taxpayer's money, but they do not j
vturry auuuk uie puiauii uutt ia uttiiy uciug jjuurcu
into the minds of their own children, poisons that
have already produced an immeasurable debasement
of man in Europe and projects here a society that
knows no better guide than the rule of reason and
necessity, the passion of self-satisfaction and in
dulgence. Isiah cried out: '
"Woe to the multitude of many people.
Which make a noise like the noise of the seas;
And to the rushing of nations.
That make a rushing like the rushing of mighty
waters!"
This is not a problem for lawyers and doctors of
philosophy. It is the obligation of every parent to
protect his own child, to guard It, to nurture Its spirit
as well as its body, to make it as strong morally as
physically. That obligation can be passed on to no one
surely not to the state. To the state, the child, as
the person, is a statistical entity to be counted: to
the parent, the child is the fulfillment of man's destiny
as a moral being.
Johnson, seed certification exten
sion specialists, reported that many
of the samples tested proved to be
free of disease and will make excel
lent foundation stock from which
commercial certified seed is grown.
The tests revealed some lots, how
ever, with too much disease to qual
ify. M., JAN. 26
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MONDAY P. M., JAN. 26
.Name ftluslc
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MONDAY EVE., JAN. 2
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J
COX 1M
"The new look is all right, but take a tip from grandpa-
what the boys like is that same old smile!"
Picking The Winnah
By FRANK TRIPP
This week ye chronicler will be
making a speech to newspapermen.
There's nothing unusual or exciting
about that except the political sig
nificance of It: in spite of the fact
that I new made a political speech
In my life.
The speech is going to be about
television of which I know noth
ing. Thus will be able to talk con
vincingly about It. Maybe the po
litical significance is all In my own
mind: maybe not.
The affair Li going to be In Al
bany. where Tom Dewey works.
Telling
The Editor,
Letters printed here must not be I
more than son words tn length, mutt
be written leiiblr on ONE SIDE of I
the paper only end must be signed I
Contributions following these rules I
ere warmly welcomed.
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. 1T0 the
Editor) Shakespeare said "Neither
a borrower nor a lender be." Now
that the new year Is beginning. It Is
a good time In which to return bor
rowed articles. This applies to little
things, such as a cup of sugar, at
well as the big things. Let us look
among our books and see If a library
book is misplaced among them.
For every article returned the bor
rower will receive the grateful
thanks of the lender and faith In
the integrity of humanity will be j
continued.
oiucerciy yours.
Mrs. Bert C. Thomas.
Parrish Death
Learned Here
Word of the death of a former
Klamath resident. Henry L. Parrish
of Rlpon, Calif., was received here
this week. Mr. Parrish. who lived
for many years In Uie Merrill fnrm
lng area, died January 14 at Rlpon.
He was 85 years of age. Final rites
were held with cremation at Santa
Rosa. The remains were placed by
the side of Mr. Parrlsh's mother and
his brother, Charles, who was a
well-known accountant In Klamath
Falls years ago.
Mr. Parrish is survived by his
wife, Nellie. A son, Leo Parrish,
died in France during the first
World war of typhoid fever. Mr.
Parrish was a close friend of W. B.
Barnes of 324 S. 5th. and the two
had kept in touch with each other
throughout the years.
Kay Francis Said
Better Today
COLUMBUS. O., Jan. 24 IIP)
Actress Kay Francis continued to
day to gain on an "upper respira
tory Infection" which forced her
from the stage of the Hartmtm
theatre to an oxygen tent in White
Cross hospital.
The 43-year-old star of stage and
screen collapsed yesterday from
what detectives said was ah overdose
of sleeping pills and under circum
stances which led police to detain
her stage manager for five hours
while they Investigated.
PAT O'BRIEN
ARLENE FRANCIS
in
"IS THAT SO"
Th
Theatre Guild
on the Air
6:30 P. M.s
AT
SUNDAY
DIAL KFLW 1450
31 .
IT t HICt. IK T Ct MT Vt.
You've heard of Tom. He's going
n make a speech, too: which prob
ably will not be a political speech
either, but he can't say he never
made one.
The political angle comes In a
silly way. To my slightly super
stitious and admittedly feeble mind
It could have a bearing on the na
tional republican ticket this fall.
What few dollars I've won on
horse races has always been on
hunches and peculiar reasons for
picking what turned out to be a
winner, through no fault of mine
and certainly through no knowledge
of horses.
I'm taking a long time getting
atound to my hunch, but you see If
I get my pay I, have to stretch
these yarns out to reasonable
length. The length is usually the
only reasonable thing about 'em.
Well, here's the dope: and If you
place money on it and lose, don't
blame me or ask for a refund be
cause I'll be losing along with you.
For the last 1 years there's been
a peculiar happenstance between
newspapermen's conventions, the
men who speak at them and the re
publican candidates the succeeding
fall.
...
There was the time that Frank
Knox and I talked to newspaper
men In New York and Frank turned
up candidate for vice president.
There was the time that John
Brlcker and I talked to newspaper
men In Columbus and John turned
up candidate for vice president.
There was the time In April,
1940 when I Introduced Wendell
Willkle at the national newspaper
meeting at the Waldorf and you
know what happened to him that
summer in Philadelphia.
There was the time In 1944 that
Tom Dewey and I talked to the
same meeting again at the Waldorf
and Tom got nominated that time.
So seeing as how Tom and I are
going to talk to the newspaper
bunch this week In Albany I'm sap
enough to believe that maybe the
thing can happen again, and again
and again.
...
If you're the betting sort, chances
are you've put your money on
crazier hunches than these odd
coincidences. Because, you see, on
none of the four occasions did any
of the four men make a political
speech, nor did I. None of the four
affairs was political, but all were
newspaper meetings and all took
place In national election years.
I know what you're thinking
and it's a nasty thought. It's that
none of the four birds got elected
and that If you were Tom Dewey
you wouldn't get on a rostrum with
me for love or money.
Probably there's something to
that, but by the time Tom reads
this it'll be too late for him to back
out. So the only thing he can do
will be to plan some sort of anti
dote. Maybe he can get on a speaking
program with Jim Farley. Jim can
get everybody elected except him
self. Anyway, though none of the guyi
I've Jlnxed got elected, still none of
'em ever was out of work.
A
A
U
G
H
w.th Fred Allen
SUNDAY 3i30 P.M.
NBC
Brought to you by
your friendly Ford Dealer
BALSIGER MOTOR
COMPANY
Boyle's Column
The Legendary
Who Souqht
By HAL UOYI.K
NHW YOHK, Jan. 24 iT In a
hotel room off limes Square, a small
nun) wearing dark glasses sal talk
ing of a dead man of mystery, one
of the fabulous adventurers of mud
em times.
"He was the first white man time
Marco Pulu to enjuy the confidence
of China's rulers," said Eitii Albert
Selle, an old China hand who M
slowly recover
ing from a siege
of blindness
oauitd by a
Jupanese bullet
In shanghai.
The man ha
spoke of was
William Henry
Donald the
famous "Donald
af China" an
Australian who
(or four decades
was a power m
II VI, IIOYI.E
tho uncompleted UmK ol building a
republican government In Uie vast
land where live more than a (Kill of
the world s people
He ns a biii. suiingr, quietly
blunt man who came to China as a
new.spaiierman ami conceived early
his lifelong passion to see the
sprawling country become a modern
democratic suite.
"Donald got his first newspaper
Job In Hong Kong because he was a
teetotaler." said Selle. "That was
what the editor ol the paper that
hired him was looking for. He never
took a drop ol liquor In his life, and
ha had two favorite sayings he
travels iastesl who travels alone,
and lie travels fustcst who travels
dry."
Kdllor's Job
The young reporter traveled far
far enough to become a legendary
figure in the land of the lotus. He
began as an editor to a viceroy In
the corrupt Manchu regime,
switched to Uie revolutionary ban
ner of Dr. Sun Yat-ssn, the Ideal
istic "father of modern China."
directed artillery fire Hint battered
In the gates of Nanking, and be
came advisor of Chiang Knl-shrk
and Madame Chiang.
The JapancM hutrd him and
called him "the evil spirit ol China.''
Selle believes that except for Don
ald. Japan could have sabotaged the
Chinese revolution in 1911 and
.seised the country III 1915. He sees
Donald as the unifying furce that
enabled China to enter the First
World War and to hold off the
Japanese In the secund one.
"Donald aloise Is responsible for
the world-wide sympathy that came
to China and the Chiangs In the
fight against Japan," Jie said.
"His success and history alone
will show the full extent of his
Influence was due to the tact he
was the one man in China all (ac
tions could count on (or complete
honesty," Sella continued.
"He also refused to learn a word
of the Chinese language or even to
eat Chinese food. Ho didn't like the
fond and he decided early that If he
never learned the language the
Chinese around hnn In eunlerenres
could talk among themselves better
and without embarrassment.
"His sole diplomatic principle was
to give advice but never argue."
Broke With t'hlang
In I94U Donald (ell out with the
Chiangs Selle says It was because
of disgust over oftlcial corruption In
Kuomiutang high circles and the
reiusal of Chiang 'at that time to
deliver speeches Donald had written
attacking Hitler.
The next year the Chiangs ap
pealed to him to return. Impatient
at Uie delay In getting an air pri
ority at Honolulu. Donald sailed on
a freighter, which put In at Manila
after Pearl Harbor.
Donald was Interned with the (all
of the Philippines, and although the
Japanese police came to Uie camp
searching for him he would have
been a major prize Uie com
mandant managed to shelter him.
Released at war's end, the Aus
tralian was taken to a Honolulu
hospital where he was found to be
dying of lung cancer. For twemy
flve years he had refused huge sums
to write his memoirs. But lying on
lil;i hospital bed he decided to tell
his story, and dictated It to a steno
grapher brought by Selle. who has
made It Into a book to be published
next month.
Knowing Donald s wish to die in
his adopted land although Uie sick
man refused to appeal to the
Chiangs, Belle sent word to them.
They arranged a special flight and
Donald was flown to Shanghai,
where he died In November, 1940.
"What did Donald look like?" I
asked Selle curiously.
"I never saw him." he answered
quietly.
At the time of his Honolulu Inter
views with this little-known man
DON'T MISS
KFLW's V
8
i SUNDAY
'yl -TOMORROW!
3:30 "Greoteir Story"
4:30 "Mr. President"
5:00 "Detroit Symphony"
6:30 "Thtotra Guild"
7:45 "Rtfltetlom"
8:00 "Drew Pearson"
11:05 "Bridge to Dreamland"
KFLW -ABC
White Man
To Free China
who looms so large III Ilia secrel
history o china Selle himself was
tulally blind.
STATIC
IU LOIS HTEW'AKT
There's plenty of good listening
between now and Monday morning
with KKl.W tuner-luuera gelling
their week-end news over iho air
along with everything else.
Saturday night's program starts
out Willi "This Is Your Fill." de
layed from Friday p. in., and slated
at 7 o'clock. Hons Dolan folluwa at
7::iU; The Lone Hunger, : Chal
lenge u( Yukon, 8:30; Oaugliuslers,
9: Cluremout Hotel oik, 9:30; Htar
diisl Melodies, ID; Amuassadur hole!
oik, IU:ao: news summary at II
o'clock followed within (lie minutes
by Telcquest.
Sunday evening: Waller Wluehell
at t followed In this older: Home
Town News, World News Summary,
Theatre Oulld o( the Air, Memor
able Music. Hrdcctinns, Drew Pear
son. Monday Morning Headlines.
The tlrceii Hornet. We Care. Hotel
Stevens oik. Hotel CUremont ork,
Cesar's ork. Freddy Martin and the
11 p. in. News, ending up with
Bridge to Dreamland.
Incidentally, on Horace Heidi's
N1IC program 8uuday evenings, the
singer we mentioned earlier In the
week Is Harold Parr.
.
Now on tour 111 Canada, the De
troit Symphony orchestra will stop
In Syracuse, N. Y., on lis way home
to prrseut Its 'JMh AUG broadcast ol
the Sunday Evening Hour from
Lincoln auditorium 111 Central high
scIiihiI. The broadcast Is heard over
KFLW from S to 8 p. m
Dr. Karl Krurgcr, conductor, has
chosen an all-lleelhovrn list lor the
concert broadcast. He will open the
program with the Bonn Master's
"Leonnre Overture No. 3." one o(
several Beethoven wrote (or his
opera. "Fldello." The oilier number
will be the amlllar "Symphony No.
7 "
New Orleans and Quebec City,
Quebec, will be represented on the
Sunday KFLW broadcast of the
"Mrtioxihtan Opera Auditions o(
the Air." to be heard (rum 1:30 to
2 p. m. From the southern city will
come Miirgucrlie Piazza. 25. a lyric
soprano, while Canada will o((er
Feruand Martel, 38. baritone. Wll
(red I'elletler. Metropolitan opera
conductor, again will preside over
the orchestra.
Miss Piazza will sing the poignant
"Un Bel Dt" from Puccini's "Ma
dame Butterfly" and "llomance"
(rom Romberg's "Desert Hnng."
Muriel has chosen the (amlllar
"Vision Fugitive" (rom Massenet's
"Hcrodladc" and Timer's "Y A Les
Fleurs."
For their dual duel, the two
artists have chosen the duel between
Ncdda and Silvio In "Kl Pagllacci."
at the end o( the second act. Tilled
"K Allor Perch," It Is the scene
where Silvio entreats Nrddit to leave
her husband and go with him.
Pat O'llrien and Arlene Francis
will be starred In "Is Zat So." the
boisterous comedy ol pugilism that
delighted theatre audiences bark In
Die JO's. In the "Theatre Clu'.ld on
the Air" broadcast of Sunday. '30
p. m.. over KFLW.
Few comedies have provoked more
hilarity than James Oleason and
Klrhard Taber's "Is Zat So." a
tough, rowdy account ol a Uilrd
rule fighter and his manager who
become enmeshed 111 the lush tangle
of Park avenue society. Their en
tree Is arranged by the seml-alco-hollc
son of a wealthy family whose
chief ambition Is to re-shape the
very regular features of a brothrr-in-law
who not only weighs better
than 300 pounds but Is also extreme
ly fast on his feet. That ambition
requires the help of the fighter and
his manager and they are readily
Induced to accept Jobs In the house
hold as domestics. Once that hap
pens, a bewildering variety of com
plications follow, all of Uiem highly
amusing.
O'Brien will be heard as "Hap
Hurley," manager of a fighter whose
prowess keeps both of them under
nourished and virtually homeless.
Miss Francis will be heard In Uie
role of "Marie," a social secretary to
the wealthy Blackburn family, Into
the bosom of which the fighter and
his tough manager move with a
noticeable lack of grace.
...
A handyman really proves himself
handy when he provides David
Harding and the Counterspies with
the evidence they seek to ensnare
7"o the People of the
Klamath Basin...
1ltathl fa making 1947
Hie molt lucceU-fful iije
iiluicufce qeab in my 27
The World
Today
Itv DKWHT MACKRN.IK
AP Forelm Affairs Analyst
Wliisluu Churchill, lirlUln's turn,
ous wartime prima minister and
leader of her great ciiliservatlte
narty, yesterday lluew Ills power-
(ill suuiKirt behind Socialist Foreign
Secretary Kevin's nomsnl or
consolidation ol Western Kuropmu
nations to bla.k communist expau-
lon westward, thereby Increasing
hope ( averting another world con
lllcl, or at least postponing It.
This project, as I see II, would
Ipso facto complement perlectly the
Marshall plan
(or t c o n o in I o
rehabilitation of
Western Kuiope,
To U-.S Ihe lan
guage o( the lii-
ilceudciit Paris
newspaper Mat
in, the coun
tries of this
area would "be
united political
ly, economically
nml militarily "
It Is ol com so
natural for
Da Will Maiatmtt
Churchill lo back up Bcvlna pro
Ject. lor the lormer long has edvu
catrd a United States ol lUirope,
dream of generations of iicare
mluded alaiosmril. The conserva
tive leader spoke bluntly, and 1
dealing wlUi the dangers ol an
other war declared that Uie "ia
tlon had deteriorated, especially In
the last six month..
"I will only venture now lo sa)'."
he continued, "that there seems to
be a very real danger in going on
drilling too long. ... It Is Idle lo
reason or argue with communists. Ii
Is, however, possible lo deal with
thrin on a realistic basis . . ."
lir a Careful
Socialist Prime Minister Atllrr.
who followed Churchill 111 debate In
Ihe house of commons, dealt with
the proposal of a union ol Western
Kuroprun nulliuu rather conserva
tively. He counseled a careful ap
proach to the Idea, asserting thai il
should bo dune under the larger
unity o( the United Nations. Ha
said he dldnt believe war was Im
minent, but added that "there Is no
good shutting our eica to the possi
bility." llevlu's prno,-.al Uius (ar has had
warm support (rom both France
and Italy, and has been receivrd
lavorably though cautiously by
leaders In Belgium, The Netherlands
and Luxembourg -- the so-called
Benelux customs combine. Govern
ment sources 111 Switzerland, which
Is traditionally neutral, aren't en
thusiastic about Joining what is
described as a "bloc." Sweden, Nor
way and Denmark will register their
views later, but the Scandinavian
countries long have made It clear
that they donl wish to anlagoiiirs
Itussia.
In analyzing the slgnlllcaiiie of
the British move we must kerp In
mind these points, which this
column lias emphasized repeatedly.
If Hussla ln t held on the line XV,
which she now has reached Ihrtiumi T
Central Europe, war Is Inevitable,
and the only way she can be held
Is by a physical barrier, since she
isn't susceptible to moral influence,
lll.rf .M) l lsM.r
.ne Marshall plan would (tie
Western Kuroe the strength to de
fend Itsell. and so would provide a
material barrier. The union of
Western European countries cer
tainly would strengthen the Mar
shall plan greatly and might 111 II
sel( be able before long lo provide
defense against further communist
aggression.
And II Uie bolshevlsis can be held
where Ulry now suoml, It may be
possible, as Churchill points oui,
to reach a practical settlement. How
long might that last? Weil, Chui
chlll says:
"In my cxperlruce Uiey tths
communists) will keep their bargain
as long as It Is In Uirlr Interests
lo do so, whlrh might In Uils great
matter be a long time, once tilings
were settled."
It Is possible (or enlisted men In
the United States navy to be ap
pointed lo commissioned rank If th
requirements by the secretary of
navy are met.
a couple of speculators In stolrn
securities. AnoUier odious racket Is
brought to an end on Uie "Case of
the Wayward Bonds." Highlight of
the program will be an address by
William P. Collla, acting general .
manager of the National Better Bus- Jk,
Iness bureau. Counterspy, Sunday-eve.
11:4ft
1 1 :4ft
RFLW Feature
RFLW Fetr.ro