Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 07, 1948, Page 4, Image 4

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    I
PACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
SATURDAY, FTR. 7, 1948
FRANK JKNKINB
Editor
HAl,COi.M EPI.EY
Managing Editor
tn tared aacond claaa mat tar at Uia potofTlca of Klamath
Auguat m ivuo, unaar aci 01 congrcu.
Marcll 1871
rail. Or.,
By caniar
By mall M
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
..month a too By mail
.jnoatb tl.00 By mail
months 94 90
ymr M 00
EPLEY
MKMHKR OF THK AMOCIATKD I' HI. SI
Tha Aaaociated Pren la entitled xeluilvely to lha
for rapubllration of all tha local ntwa printed In thti nana
paper, aa wall at all AP nawa.
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
ON occasion, one of our brother from the Medford
Mall-Tribune comes over to Klamath Falls, and
the result Is often a fine, friendly editorial about this
community. The only trouoie is
that the folks over there don't
Visit n more often.
A few days ago E. C. Ferguson,
the managing editor of the Mail
Tribune, spent a. few hours in
Kl on business. It seems that
when Ferg got back home, he was
visited by a group of boys from
KUHS, and the two experiences in
spired the following comment,
which appeared as an M-T edi
torial: "A group of Klamath Falls high
school boys with a mission paid
vioHfnrri a visit Saturday. Their
Idea, as explained to this writer, was that the people
of the two towns should get acquainted to the end
that better understanding and more friendly relations
may be brought about in sports and otherwise.
The young visitors, outstanding athletes In the
Klamath school, pointed out that practically all of
the name calling and bitterness which has character
ized football and other contests between Klamath and
Medford, has summed not from the players them
selves, on either team, but from townspeople.
The Klamath boys undoubtedly have something
there. In fact, they probably have more than they
realize.
Medfordites have for years displayed a self-satisfaction
Irritating no end to their neighbors. We just
take It for granted that our teams should win. that
our business is greater, our political and other leaders
more Important, and that Medford is naturally the
king pin of Southern Oregon.
The smug assumption Is based almost entirely on
lack of knowledge regarding the attributes of our
sister city.
Actually, Klamath Falls Is larger in point of popu
lation than Medford. It has a tremendous payroll,
mainly from the lumber industry. Farming, however,
Is assuming more and more importance in the region's
economic picture and this agricultural potentiality will
stand much development for there are vast reaches of
fine land as yet untouched.
Klamath Falls' business district is much more
cityfied in appearance than is Medford 's. Many of
the stores there would do credit to a city of twice
the size. Pavement and sidewalks in the downtown
area are clean and well kept compared with ours.
The main intersections all hare stop and go traffic
control lights and traffic is orderly and well directed.
As for dining places, a point particularly noticed
by visitors, Klamath Falls has soma which are out
standing in food, service and taste in furnishings and
decoration.
It would do a lot of us good to visit more often on the
other side of the mountains. The people both there
and In Lakeview, not tar east, are genuinely friendly.
They exhibit that warm hospitality which is more
usually found in "young" and growing towns than in
older mossbacked communities.
It seems to us the young advocates of peace and co
operation are smarter than a lot of us oldsters. It
must be acknowledged that if ths people of Southern
- Oregon would really pull together they could do a
great deal more for this end of the state. Such unity
would give a leverage which might be powerful In
securing state and national recognition. E.CJP."
"TH spirit thus exemplified by Mr. Ferguson and
I the Medford paper is well worth emulation on the
part of townspeople here and there. We' expect
friendly rivalry; I've told Ferg that anything he or I
wrote would never stop that, and probably shouldn't.
But there need not and should not be bitterness or
malice in our relationships with respect to those fields
In which the communities are natural rivals, and
there should be wholehearted and friendly cooperation
In the much wider fields In which the two towns
can pull together.
I suggested two or three years ago that on the oc
casion of the Medford-Klamath football games, big
social events be arranged In the host town, by such
organisations as the Elks, Lions, Rotary, Klwanls, etc.
which have local organisations In both communities.
That would gel everybody together on a neighborly
basis, right at the time when feeling Is most likely
to get a little out of hand.
I still think It's a good Idea, but nobody ever took
up the suggestion. The Klwanls clubs of Bend and
Klamath used to do it on Armistice Day, and our
relationships with Bend have always been most friend
ly, even when our teams were fighting It out In rugged
fashion on the football field.
These Days
r
By GEOKtiE K. SOKOl.SKY
IT is generally assumed in tills country that the
longer our sons and daughters are kept at school,
the more they know. Apparently, the president's
commission on higher education wants nearly every
body to go to some kind of a college and wants l,
875,000,000 and more to make It possible. Nothing
Is said about building a practical race of competent
men and women to whom experience will mean a
surer guide thau mere repetition of the memorized
contents of other men's thinking.
Two conflicting tendencies appear in our present
day colleges. The larger colleges grow tougher each
year, but they also function increasingly on the factory
system with very little, in fact, almost no relation
ship between professor and student, no sharpening
of the mind on the anvil of classroom discussion.
Just as, at another period, the rah-rah boy was some
thing of a nuisance, today the stodgy, almost stuffy
Junior, full of quotations, drilled in authorities, his
mind adjusted to electric-eye examination papers,
reminds one of tha- Chinese students of old. pre
paring to become Mandarins by making themselves
dull.
Standards Lowered
THE opposite tendency appears in many smaller
colleges that filled themselves to the rafters by
the windfall ot the OI bill of rights. These colleges
have lowered their standards to meet the capabilities
of mass learning with the result that many of those
who come out of them lack even an educated mans
facility in his own native language. So many grad
uates of such colleges lack even a rudimentary knowl
edge of the culture of their race or the history of
their own country. So many are specialists of the left
eyebrow; that is, they know some detail of book
learning with a degree of thoroughness what they
call a major but they cannot fit that into anything
like the whole of human experience nor have they
been trained in thought process. In logic, to be able to
apply knowledge to thought.
The result is that so many of them cannot get the
kind of jobs college men and women expect nor can
they do the work the nation is accustomed to expect
from its college graduates. Professor Seymour E.
Harris makes the point in an interesting article In
the "Harvard Alumni Bulletin":
. . The colleges of the country are not now able
to take good care of 2,000.000, and certainly not 3,-
uuu.uoo students. At the present time they offer a de
teriorated product. The assembly-line method of turn
ing out AJ.'i and Ph-D's cannot bring good results.
The colleges and universities now find themselves in
an unsound financial condition as a result of rising
prices, costs, and axes, and declining yields on In
vestments . . ."
SIDE GLANCES
(ft)
1
2-7
com iin at wt acavtcg. ate t. m arc v a mt of
The World
Today
By HEWITT MACKENZIE
AP Forcljn Affairs Analyst
Elm's general election ha de
prived Eumon d Valera's flniuia
fall party of the parliamentary ma
jority under which, as prime minis
ter, he has guided the new republic
slurs liua through Id of Its incut
trying loriiiauvo i,,
DeW.II Muckenile
"Now that we've got all the mumps, measles, new hats
and relatives disposed of, how about one hand of bridge?"
Boyle's Column
Poor Man's Philosopher Is
Worried About Feet On Desk
Can We Afford It?
CAN this country afford a deteriorated product?
Can we afford to waste the facilities of our
colleges and universities upon men and women who
lack the mental equipment for thought and leadership
and who are not likely to provide a greater capacity
for work In learned and professional fields after a
tenure at college than they would have been able to
do had they gone into their chosen fields earlier In
Ufe? Is the college merely a place to mark time?
Does the student benefit by attendance even If the
years so spent add nothing to his Intellectual stature
or his competence?
What seems to be the outcome of all this is a
proletariat of the white collar, a proletariat that has
trained itself for a satisfied and secured low Income,
sufficient to maintain the white collar, but Insufficient
for a stimulating life of leadership. It is interesting
to note how many of the students today aspire for
the low incomes of civil service positions where they
perform clerical tasks for which girls out of com
mercial high schools ought to be adequate. Does
one have to spend four years at college for that?
This question requires an overall study. For in
stance, some of the colleges mark stiffly, maintaining
the highest standards; others use a fairly low class
average. A grade of B In one college mleht h
A in another. The boy who picks an easy marking
collece mitrht awim- h-M,h i.i. , .
- o h'uvuBi, mm nunors ana give
the .impression of great achievement. That false
picture is very expensive to him and to his country.
HAL BOYLE
RADIO PROGRA31S
SATURDAY
KFLW 1450 kc
Llaeup
EVE., FEB. 7
KFJI 1240 kc
M Sparta
8:18 Hemetawa Ncwi
45 fverld Niwi SaBamary
S:SO Jumpln' Jacka
:4S Veteran'e Report
7:00 This II Your FBI ABC
1:39 Bob Willi 4j Playboy!
S:(r rbe Logo Banger ABC
8:30 KL'IIS TI. Grant! Paei
8:00 " "
t:lS -
8:38 CUrcmoBt Hold Orch. ABO
:IS "
:M S tardea Meiediee
M:1S " "
10:S0 freddy SfartlD Or. ABO
10:S
11:00 Newe Summary
11:0.1 Tolequeal
11:15
11:10 "
ll:S "
Sporte Boundup
Dinner Danea
UniiSbow
Keep I'uJNth Kid! MBS
Klamath Temple"
Bevlewlnr Stand HBS
John Wolahan Orob. HBS
Shoot the vYarke
Glen Hardy New! HBS
Veterana Voice MBS
Fella Glna DBS
Newe Scop MBS
Jimmy Blaia Orch. MBS
Johnny Green Orch.
Welti Tempo!
latin-American Tempoi
umi wiiiiami urcb. Sinn
Valcea at Strlnci MBS
SUNDAY A,
00 riao Arte Quartet ABO
S:15 "
8:30 Bkrat. Ed. Newi
:5 Church in the Wild wood-
S:l "
:15 Blblo Affjdltorlnm ml Air
S:19 Calrarr Echoea
:45 Gneit Star
10:00 Memorial, O. Wrlfhl ABC
10:15 Editor at Home AHC
loi.io National Veipera ABC
10:46
11:00 Methodilt Cbnrcb
11:15
11:10 "
11:S " -
M., FEB. g
Organ Moada
Eddy Howard Orrb.
Sunday Momma Concert
PUfrlm Boar MBS
Latheraa Boar SIBS
Glen Hardya New! MBS
Commander Scolt MBS
Bob Lberly Slnfa
Jeaie Crawford Becital
(Bland Melodlea
r!ihloo riaaboa
Sill Cnnnln(h!m MBS
Canary rat Shaw MBS
SUNDAY P.
I?:00 Laailo ABC
iV.lt Sam FettinrHI ABC
lz:30 Sunday Serenade ABC
1:46 "
1:00 Sound Off ABC
l:W Met Opera Aodllloni ABC
2:00 Treasury A(en! ABC
S:S0 Coanlerapy ABO
S:00 California Caravan ABC
S:S0 Greateit Story Ano
4:00 Child ! World AHC
4:30 Mr. Freildent ABO
4:15 "
5:00 Snn, Evening Hoar ABO
5:10
AI., FEB. 8
Newi
Theatre Matinee
World Mghl Opere
Ray Sinatra Orch.
Uobm of Myitery MBS
Trne Detective MBS
The Bhadaw MBS
quire Ai A llaab MBS
Tboae Webeteri MBS
Nick Carter MBS
Sherlock Holmoa MBS
Ual! Show
Newe
Mediation Board MBS
San. Afternoon Concert
SUNDAY EVE., FEB. 8
N:00 Walter Wlnrhrll AHC
S:I5 Hometown Nawa
:S3 World New! Summary
:S0 Theatro Guild an Air ABC
:45 " '
1:00
1:M Memorable Muiic
1:JS "
1:45 Refleetlom
S:00 Drew Fearaon ABO
8:15 Man. Morn. Headline! ABO
:30 The Green Hornet ABO
S:45
8:00 Newa AHC
J:05 Holel Steven! Oreh. ABC
8:S0 Bolel Claremont Orcb. ABC
8:45 -18:00
Ceiar'a Orcb. ABO
10:88 Freddy Martin Or. ABO
, 11:08 Nawa Summery
I J i Brldre ta Dreamland ABO
11:15 rierrnllno Gardens ABC
J.HW Feature
Meat Mo At Parky'! MBS
lint Backua Show MBS
Behind Front File MBS
N'ewa MBS
Leave It To Olrla MBS
Twenty Queelloni MBS
Jerten! Journal MBS
Shiela Graham MBS
Glen Hardy Nawa MBS
Twin Vlewa of New! MBS
Let'i Dance
Jamea l.andry Slnue
Old Faahlaned Bovlval
News and Orjraa Moedi
in on
KFJf Fooler
MONDAY A.
KFLW 1450 kc.
81S S AM Serenade
8:45 Farm Fare
1:00 Newe Bklit. Edllian
1:18 Korera Baundup
1:38 Jamea Abba ABC
7:4. Zeke Mannera ABC
8:08 Tbo Bkfil. Club ABO
tM "
8:15
8:08 The Three Sum
8:15 Symphony of Melody
8:38 Bkfit. la Bellywee ABO
8:45 "
10:00 Galen Drake ABO
10:15 Muilo of Manhattan
10:30 My True Story ABC
10:45 " -10:55
Miniature Coneert
11.00 Stop Shop
11:15 Llitenlnf Poet ABC
11:10 Men Behind Melody
11:45 Ethel and Albert ABO
M., FEB. 9
KFJI 1240 ke.
Mr elcal Reveille
rarm Front
F Hemiorway. New! MBS
Rile and shine MBS
Newi. Headline
Today'! neat Bore
Newe MBS
raihlon r'laibea
Favorite! at Veiterday
Charlie Spivak Orch.
Kale Smith Speak! Mils
Victor H. f.indlahr MBS
Mornlns Matinee
Bone of Pioneeri
Glen Hardy Newa MBS
Flctuwect Show MRS
Home Demonstration
lluaic
La Falntai at 11:00
Eraklne Jobnion MRU
Queen for a Day MBS
MONDAY P.
I?:00 Newa Noon Edition
15:15 Ceunlr Agent Speak!
Jjaj Paul VThlleman Club ABC
1:08 Claudia
1:15 Merrill Time
1-JJ Tr,l,,,""',B,,a' h"
1l Wbat'a Oola'Ladlei ABO
:15 Twin Tald Talea ARC
1:30 Bride and Groom ABO
S:08 Ladiei Be fleeted ABC
S:80 Salon Concert
8:15
8:30
4:08 Headline Fditlon ABC
4:15 Bequeatfully Youri
4:38 "
4:15 '
5:00 "
I."" " "'" Flritai ABO
J;jJ SkyKIng ARC
M., FEB.
Name Muile
Newi
Vour Dance Tuoei
Mkt. A Livestock
Afternoon Concert
fohmon Family MBS
Matinee
Newi
Heart! Oeilre MBS
Martin Block MBS
Hawaiian
Rlckyi Requeit
Tea Dance
Organ Muele
Living With God
Fulton Lewie Jr. MB 8
Frank Hemingway MBS
Failing Parade MBS
l.atln.Amerlran Muir
Adventure Parade MHS
Super Man MBS
Captain Midnight MBS
Tom Mix MBS
MONDAY EVE., FEB,
o:oo Sparta l.lneup
8:15 Home Town Newi
:J5 World Newa Summary
:30 Want la Lead a Band ABC
8:50
l:oo The Lono Banger ABO
1:10 Bob Willi A Plavboya
J.jw Point Subllme ABC
s i Tw'.l,vt r'"".! Anc
8:55
8:00 Thli i Advrnluro ABC
8:18 " "
8:30 Vour Navv Recruiter
8:45 Natl. Heart Week ABC
I0:0u starduit Malodiea
10:15
10:30 Off the Record ABC
10:15 "
11:00 Newa Summary
1:05 Tolequeil
11:18
11:88 -11:45
"
KFLW Fealara
Gabriel Meatier MBS
Quia Show
Aroond Town
Hporle Review
Dinner Dance
Myilerioui Ireveler MRS
Clico Kid MRS
Let George Do It MRS
Charlie ( ban MRS
Billy Roie, Horirihoei MBS
Glenn Hirdy, MBS
All star llama
Sona O' (.uni
Henry J. Tiylor .MRS
luiton Lewie Jr. MRS
Album af Fine Muile
Oueil Star
Brother Arlinjrton MRS
Quaker Cily Serenade MBS
Nawi
, KFJf Fealara
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK. Feb. 7 Random
cuff notes by the poor man's philosopher:
No man is sure of his Job If he
can't put his feet on the boss's desk
without feeling self-coiisclous.
When a man tells you he doesn't
want to set the world on fire, you
can t oe sure
whether he's
really modest or
lust afraid of
being arrested
for aison.
The reason
comics in the
good old days
were better than
today's buffoons
is a Joke al
ways sounds
better the first
time.
Private philanthropy declined In
America last year. A victim of the
high cost of giving?
Nothing in life tastes the same
twice except bad restaurant coffee.
A pessimist Is a fellow who starts
whipping a mule before he says
"Giddap!"
A man who gives before he
thinks gives more than he thinks
a part of his heart.
One swallow doesn't make a sum
mer, but it has started off many a
long evening.
People used to say, "What you
don't know won't hurt you." Now
their biggest worries are over things
that may never happen.
Why fret anyway? Nobody ever
got out ot this world alive.
But It Helps
Alimony rarely makes a woman
happy but It sure can make her
carefree.
There are several explanations of
why men and women go into bars.
A jukebox is never the first reason.
Something a bartender can never
understand: Why is It a customer
with a mouth full of words and a
wailet full 'of money always runs
out of money first?
Ten good critics can't lower a
man's opinion of hlmielf as fast as
one bad hangover.
The home will always be the bul
wark of civilization because man has
to have one place where he can
repent at leisure.
The best you can expect from a
rubber check Is a nice long stretch.
To live dangerously isn't merely
advisable nowadays It's inescap
able. Mirrors have disillusioned more
wives than husbands have.
The only man who stands four
square before the world Is a traffic
cop.
You can't grow young. You must
grow old. But to do it gracefully you
do have to grow.
Lonely Life
A man who lilts himself up in
the world solely by hit own boot
straps Is lonely on the way down,
too. .
Caste systems are like revolving
doors if you start behind a man
there is no earthly way for you to
come out ahead.
If toads ruled mankind men
without warn would be unemployed.
wnat better epitaph could any
one have than this: "Here lies one
who each year saved a crumb and a
kind word of welcome for the second
robin of spring."
Remorse never killed anybody on
Saturday night.
An earthworm who wants to wear
sunglasses is no more ridiculous
than man. who clings to the neck
ties. Nothing exceeds like excess.
Lovs Is Just one darn thing after
another. Marriage: one thing led to
another.
STATIC
By EDNA KILLMEYEK
years, but the
political seers ot
Dublin Bay he
o a n 1 f he
wishes still
carry on as
chief minister
with the sup
port of the Inbur
and Independ
ent pintles.
Now your cor
respondent h it s
no desire to
poke h I s head
unnecessarily Into the hornet's nest
of Irish politics. However, a discus
sion of Do Vult'ia, the man, Is uu
other thing, for he la one of the
notable personalities of our day ami
1 have known him well these mitny
years.
As a mutter of fact It's almost
exactly ;u years since he anil I nil
but lost our lives (though playing
different roles) in Southern Ire
land's "bloody Kn.iter Week rebel
lion" of 1916. There wns a bitter
fight In Dublin when the tnll. gaunt
college professor was shooting at the
HrltlHii tiooM from a window of Bo- 1 1
land's mill In the heart of the city. 1 J
while your reporter was In the i
hands of the military suspected til
being a rebel became ot an liutil-
Gallup Poll
Even Vomen Vote Down
Slacks For Street Garb
l'UINCK.'ON. N. J . I'rb. 1
Women who Hunt on wearing lack
while shopping or eUrwhrre III pub
lic should be aware thai a ctmi.ldrr
able number of oilier women with
opinions on the aiibjrct Hun thumbs
down on the fud.
What la probably more liiivlHiit
to nlylc-conselous wiiinrii. however.
Is the (art that more men illaiippriivn
of slack -clad
women In public
I him approve.
Both liieu and
women, p r o b
ably feeling that
a woman's limine
is her castle, say
(hat slacks are
an appropriate
(iirmeiit around
the home.
The whole sub
ject of slacks for
w o in e ii w a s
brouulit to public alU'iuuni In recent
weeks by the (umr over the case
uf a school girl In a New York tnun
who in.MMcd tin ruling ihrin to
classes itKOtllst tile objrctinlia of
scIhmiI authorities.
Liut.'l kittf''fc'
uu more weightier suiijrcla, liiMiitiit
liileivleweia look a moment out to
uNk ihls one:
"Do )nu approve or illeAptirma
af ttuiiirii of any age wearing;
lathi Ill pilhllr, that Ii, fur t.
ample, Willie alltipiiltli?"
line In luivv liieu and women vninl:
VUfl Vteiu
Aipiu .H . .Ill ,
DiMtppioxe :iv 4U
Imminent XJ 1
No opinion 'J I
guallllril i t
People giving tpiallllrd unurii
generally plniod the mailer on an
liiillvlilunl plane with niuh amuni
aa:
"All rlulil, If Wiry heroine iha
Iweaier." "II lliry III.' "only ,,r
I yntiiiiii'i' unmrii." "II the wearer )
: nut to ful" aini "it depend on Until
' the tHcaalnii mid Ihe lady "
AKe has a Inl to do with our a
alliliulo toward fi inliune Blink The
younger a peunn Ii the uinir hi
rlllird hr or nlln la to be nprii
lllliulrtl oil the allbjri-t.
Yotlimcr Uiilllrtt vnlr nppiotut t
llatk-.. Out their, our &U )rat4 n,'
use alloiisl)' iiiiie t Jit III I iki uUr.
many mm mull r &0 think alarka am
While asking repi enrol ntlve voler j not audi a bad Idea, while nmi
throughout the country oursl Inns over Unit nife una a illgnlllrd vui
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm I of iluaiiptotnl. Whether tha opiu.
I er-ar-i pa fa 0 . i ituia m mm iuiiy mum wriuni unit
The IUUtor
8 llteri prlnlrrl heie mint not !
8 more llian 8K wtirtli In length, mutl
vertent violation of rigid martial 1 1 the i.nner mux and m i ngn.d J
law, I I t'milrlliiittoni Inllowlug tlie rule '
Iteprleved , -1 1" !. -I'lTTi ......... '
D Vitlera was rtuuleiiuird to
, MIMM.S
i IXlltRIS. Call . ri'o the Kdltm
What I would like to knnw is: Whv
tlo we have to keep seiulliig millions
! o dnlhira over lo KnKlnml to help
women la iiueitluilable. Kaaliliin rn-
liert are geueinlly auirrtl tho
women do not m mainly lo plcuie
mm, but MUh nit eyo lo what oiliri
women will think of their rluihn
A might well be expected, apuiia
fana aro lint as viKtuutnly upptifted
to friiiale trnuirr-tt earing at olhrr
mrii and Women.
1'llbllc Brlltllneill oil hlth arlniol
glrla In alnrk lliitriul of fitxk
folliiua the name general palletu
except etell mute Wninru voire Uu.
approval and fewer ate lilillf Invnl
The t ae In Caiuilrn. N. Y ,
settled nheil the lial Sm IiimiI Uoanl
voled to rrailllill the illltleiit -ttral
111)! lm'kv
death and reprieved
Well, that's the way D Valcra
got his start toward the prune min
istership, for he was ono of Ihe chief
founders of the republic. Not all his
foreign relations have been hanov. 'fted Us hungry when we never ex
for both America and Britain were leit to get a dime of it back? W
angry over his refusal to grant them , all know Kngliitid Is a rich country I
naval buses on the coast of Kiro and should be made lo take rate of
during the war. and Washington ac- !' own people,
clued Eire of affording a base tor The trouble with Kngland I
axis spies by refusing to expel Oer- I think i Is their iiuniey la all In Ihi '
man and Japanese diplomats. , hands of a tew -ihe kliigs. Inrd
So far as home affairs go. lie di.kes and blue bloods, as they call
Valera has wrought a vast rhaiige themselves, and they will not part '
ill thn rntirirnf nr. nf ti H .A , , t.....
n.mnrlnl I . l. I , a. I w -,,V. I1I4I1HVI "1,, H I"1IHI IM MTU lllCir llllll-
"... v . .... ,w M iv v.- was once widespread. m- Thev should ln tavrd ami "'i ii.niia Aini-iiine inon
'.i'k T'kEtld'e fble""d raising for the KngUsh i made ok t'l;! Vr,. .".V-' f Cdmssssi, Mine. no, I
, . .i bH,'P!; "'lu "f r ! markrl WM cl"''f Ihdustry. and , pie. I think what Kngland needs Is ! 0 !"'"" ? ' u"""' ' P"-
Merrill
By EDNA KILI.MKYKR
A mid-morning program Sunday
will be
Additional bulliling on ihe Vnl
Ity Service station line will Iraitnu
a tovered tinshrark
O. J llarrii lui taken Tom Co;,
ami Don Harris aa pnrtnrra In hit
UUMnraa. tlie Harris Mnihlne ilioii
Zrl;r.V.7 "."., agriculture was neglected so that t get rid of all Uiom "hliiher ups"
. ; ? ,i . L,7 v n ! i1'"' including wheat for bread.'..,.! put In . man like our ,r. k
dlL.?r Roosevelt. He would a.m
?rnrr?n ino . ' V"" yst,m "",d "MrA i sl-alghlen -hmgs out and see that
irom 10 to 10.15 a. m. , deal of hostility among the cattle j the poor man has a right to live
. men i. He called for a heavy hicreuse j and enjoy lite as well as Ihe rich.
One of radio's top-nolchers. Thea- In grain and sugar beet produc- In this country the poor man can
tre Oulld. will feature a dramatic i tlon. with siwcial emphasis on wheat go camping also hunting and fWi
gem this Sunday "Romeo and , for bread, and the government made lug. and get just aa much pleasure
Juliet" adapted to radio. In the title ! cultivation attractive by offering a out ot It as tne rich man I think It
toics win oo uoromy nicuuirc sua i HuaiHiucrn ano proinable price for
Maurice Evans. Dorothy McOulre is both wheat ami beets.
Area Jumped
The total area under tillage was
Jumped from 1.4:'5.021 acres in mm
to 2.474J14 acres In ltMS ithe latest
i ngure avuilablei. Wheat was mum.
inis ranio iavorue is neara on -'una acres in l:tl to mz.- I try It was In
nou na srLw i t:j p. m. im- i " in ima. nugar beet In- when he
oay. Lron i miss u, it snouia o reauy I "' iran oou acres to Bt.saa.
fine this week. I Eire started to null her own wheat
and to make her own sugar.
Daniel Oregory Mason's "Lincoln! Result: Eire today Is more nroa.
Symphony" and Stravlsky's "Fire P"ous than ever before In history.
Bird Suite" will comprise the pro- ! A" oitlclals will tell you that there
gram for the ABC broatlcast of the ; ' " hunger these days.
currently being seen In the picture.
" O e n 1 1 e man's Agreement." and
Evans is starring on Broadway in :
George Bernard Shaw's "Man and
Superman.'
ate under Hie lame name.
Pl Hammond hua returned liome
firm Sacramento. heie he ha
been attending Christian flrutlir:s
nehool. I'at has completed his wotk
Ihere.
'Ihe Veterana of r'orelfili Wan
will hold initiation at their nri
Wrdnrsdny mrriinn
Hnti ltarrv Ixm llnfhfr vtiv.
Ilk It l,,., ". - -.......
should lie that wav in every coiintrv. r"'"1 c"', ' nrepaia
The reason I say England should ' , "7, "'mn,, " """" "
have a man like Mr. Roosevelt to , "V """c" Htnte
tcke charge of Its coiintrv Is. I think i ,mw ,'"-n l"hnK t'"
he was one of the greatest men that Mrm" "" ""ring the wlnte
ever lived. son and the ex-til s are taking
Look what he did for one ,,,.. " ai t. immolate another
"heck" of a shaoe i
walked Into the White I
House on his cane. I couldn't we !
any chance for this country to ever I
come back to normal again, but our i
Detroit Symphony orchestra over i
LW at 6 p. m. Sunday. Dr. Karl 1
Krueger will conduct.
Stuffed 8hlrts are not strictly a ,
modern Institution. The Greatest
Story Ever Told this Sunday will
dear, old crippled president had not
men In the White House three
, nioiuhs until everybody had plenty
I 10 eat aim most ot us had work.
rapacity gathering this Haturdny
night. The public la cordially In-
I vlted to renew arquainiaiu es at the
lotal Victory lounge which Ii ostnrd
and operated l:y ihe local VrW Lost
River post No. 40M.
I won't mtii'loii iininra. as we all
know who they are. They do not
Tulelake
Home for a short vacation be
tween semesters are Bill lliiynes,
Clatus and Bob nirtwistlc. Bob
Powell, all from Davis. Here nisn i
tell the tale of a pompous and ego- j be with the boys from the ag college
tlstlcal man of Biblical days. It is ' Is Oeorge Yost Jr.. freshmen ii,.
taken from Matthew 7:12, "There-j University of Oregon,
for, all things whatsoever ye would j Ivan Rose and Floyd A. Boyd are
that men should do to you. do ye , In San Francisco this week on a
even so to them, for this Is the law ; business trip.
of the prophets." : Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Osborne and
.1 Mr. and Mrs. Phil Park, owners and
We have a request to pass on to operators of the new Park nunrl
BLAST INJURY
ROSEBURO, Ore., Feb. 7 P Ray
Slmms, manager of a local electrical
firm, was rushed In an ambulance
to a Portland hospital last night,
following first aid treatment for a
fractured skull, received In the ex
plosion of an oil furnace while mak
ing repairs. A fellow workman, M.
L. Orr, received second degree burns
on hand and face.
Neal Stewart, Realtor. Phone 9259.
you today. A heart-rending cry has
come up our way from the Elks
lodge. You see. tills Is the problem,
on Teleouest. Chuck Cecil's late eve
ning show, folks wanting requests
call 811S to get the Job done. Some
times though they get 8181, the Elks
lodge.
There the obliging fellow who
answers the requester's ring, hears.
"Would you please play 'I'm a
Lonely Little Petunia' for Pudgy
from Qua?" He answers that hell
do his very best and hangs up. with
out the unsuspecting requester ever
knowing he hasn't the right number.
Then the boys down at 8181 spend
the next few minutes whistling the
requested tune. Only trouble Is that
their repertoire Is running low
they need more music I
There's also an unfortunate wom
an whose number Is 7161 or some
such, and Is always getting calls for
Telequest. Making It worse Is that
she has to get up In the wee small
hours and the Interruptions come
smack-dead In the middle of her
sleep. We sympathize, our number
was Just one off from the cab com
pany's for a while.
If too much culture Is Jusl more
than you can take In one gulp, you
can Intersperse your Bunday sym
phony and drama listening with
House of Mystery. KFJI, 1 p, m.:
True Detective, JI, at 1:30 p. m.;
Quick as s Flash, JI, at 2:30; Those
Websters, JI, at 3 p. m., and Sher
lock Holmes at 4 o'clock on JI.
will vacation for the next two weeks
at Palm Springs, Coronado nnd
other points south. They leave Sun
day. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Rngland will
move about February 15 Into Ihelr
newly completed home on First
street In Ihe new addition. The
home of frame construction has
three bedrooms. Mr. and Mrs. Rag
land and family have been living for
the past year and a half In the
apartments at the Tulelake Cold
Storage plant In which Ragland has
an Interest.
Dr. Isaac Spomer, Wilmington,
obstetrician and child cure special
ist, who will open offices here about
February 16. Is here to siiervlsc
remodeling of the office rooms In
the M and W Cleaners' new build
lug which he will occupy. Dr. and
Mrs. Spomer have purchased the
John Burke home.
A recruit In the navy may be as
signed to a battleship, aircraft car
rier, cruiser, destroyer or shorn sta
tion. Navy men are assigned accord
ing to the navy's needs.
Turn those no-Iongcr-used ar
ticles Into cash nowl Herald and
News Want Ads are Inexpensive and
bring quick results.
1
'"l-a''l
Wxssss.
"l.;.,.,.ni.hcdin
I advance.
ciMGER
IjlWlMGClNUR
411 Main
prions tm
PI
M- J
New Spring
Line of
Famous
TAYLOR
Made-to-Measure
CLOTHES,,:;,
Hundreds of samples.
Sine 1911.
MANSTORE
714 Mala
iNunn-Buih Shol-aaaa-
7a
When Mr. Hoover was president I care a whoop about our tommy or
during the nanlrs. I suppose he did
the best he could. But Ihe load was
tot heavy tor hlni and he couldn't
handle It. In speaking or England
again, that was some stunt they
pulled off, setting aside taoo.OOO a
year with no taxes for Princess
Elizabeth and husband. If she
metis mon-y. why not give her a
reasonable amount and let It go at
that, then luke the bulance of that
money to buy food for the hungry.
England has some laws that we di
not like and think should bi
cnangea. nut after all Is said and
our people. All they want la our
money. They have no reaiect for
our Sabbath or our hullduys. The
krep their places of buMucu ocii
Sundays, holidays and every day in
tin year, regardless, lly doing an
they gel the volume of business an I
can sell their goods cheaper, bo .f
course we flmk there lo do oui
trading.
There Is only one state In the
union that I know of who has put
slop to that kind of business and
that Is the state of Arkansas. Thev
keep no places of business open
done, England Is our friend and we "" Sundays. You cun t even chop
arc their friends and should we ever WWK nl Sunday and sell It.
ge; In war again I'm sure England ' Russia would have been liilkinn
wculd be right here to help us out. j Du'rh today had we not gone over
That Is. all except the blue bliKxIs ,,!l helped llirm out. 1 remember
they do not help anybody out In ; lwv oM Hitler hail Russia barked
nr. uu me other hand, ahould
England get Into a war, we know
our boys would be right by its side
to help them out our blue bloods
and all. I mean by that, the rich
mans sons as well as the poor.
I think we should build a monu.
ment at dear old Franklin Roose
velt s gravo that will equal that of
Oeorge Washington's grave. They.
uniia. were two ot the greatest
men who ever lived, and did more
good for our country than any otlmr
two men.
I spoke of the wealth of England
being In the hands of a few and
am afraid It will be the same In
this country If Ihe "higher ups'
don't make some changes In our
lows. There Is a group of people
coming to our country to get our
money and they aro getting It. too.
Dorothy McGuire
and
Maurice Evans
in
"Romeo & Juliet"
THE
THEATRE GUILD
ON THE AIR
NHW .OA t U EVERY
T. N. SUNDAY
AT
DIAL KFLW
zzrzz
1450
dr.wn to the last ditch and thev
were howling like covotes for us in
come. We did go ami got there Ju.t
In time to save their hides. We
thought we were doing something
won' ful, out after all. It nugM
hsvr . .en Just as well had we stayed
out of It and let them take their
medicine. It may have saved on
other trip over Iheio, for Russia has
shown she doesn't appreciate any
thing we did for her
J. fl Combs,
Hox 12, Donis, Calif. "
DON'T MISS
I
i
KFLW'S
"Sin
SUNDAY .
' in
TOMORROW!
2:30 "Counttrtpy"
3:30 "Gruateif Story"
4:30 "Mr, Prosidont"
5:00 "Dorroir Symphony"
6:30"Thea.rj Guild"
7:45 "Rorloctioni"
8:00 "Draw Pearson"
11:05 "Bridgt to Droomland"
KFLW ABC