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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 23, 1948)
r PACE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON TUESDAY, MARCH 23, THANK JXtiKUi Cdttor MA1AXILM KIM.BV Managing Editor tnurtd at avcond daw matter at tfta poatofftca nt Klamath rail. Or., oo Aufiut So lwus under act of Marcti t in MKMBEB OF THK ABHOCt ATEO PRESS TtM Aaaociatad PrM U entitled exclusively to the u for rvpubllration of all the local newt printed la UiU news paper, at wall at all AP newa. UUSCRIPTION BATKSi nonih H 00 By mail month tl 00 By mall month M .year MOO Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY IT WM.nl long ago that we wrote here at considerable lengfii about Harold D. Mortenson and his In dustrial achievements in Klamath. That u on the occasion of the sale ol the old Pelican Bay properties to large op erators at Dubuque, la. Now, Mr, Mortenson's career here comes again to public attention, through the news of his death in San Francisco. We will not go back over what was said before, but we will men tion a recent matter that tells something of the character and publlc-splrltedness of Harold Mort enson That was the manufacture and distribution of more than 60.000 EPLET small wooden gift-boxes for service men In World War IL These boxes were offered to the public without charge, and undoubtedly had much to do with a tremendous shipment of gifts to service men from this area through the war period. The boxes were complete with string and Instructions. This wm Mr. Mortenson's own Idea, and he offered it voluntarily at Just the right time. The gift-box project came several years after Mr. Mortenson had more or less retired from active civic affairs here, but It showed his keen interest in worthy community projects. Prior to that, he had been president of the chamber of commerce, president of the Rotary club, active In Red Cross and bond drives In World War II, and chairman of one of the com munity's most successful pageants. He did things In a big way. Unfinished Job THERE is a fine new highway across the Lower Klamath lake area now, but there axe things to Be done on both ends of it. Our attention has been called to a hazardous situa tion that exists at the Intersection of this highway with US 87 near Cal-Ore. Her a high bank and a right angle Intersection combine to make entry to the fed eral route dangerous. Some further Improvement work should be done there. On the other end. the new highway comes up to the State Line road, which is not Improved from that point on to Hatfield on the Klamath-Tulelake high way. This connecting link needs to be brought up to standard. The road Is squarely on the state line, half In Cali fornia and half In Oregon. We have made Inquiry as to its status, and our county court says that it has a gentlemen's agreement with Siskiyou county covering the situation. This agreement Is that Klamath county will take care of improvements on the state line from the bridge near Hatfield on east, and Siskiyou will handle them from the bridge west, which is the section of road In question. Definite understandings need to be reached with respect to this road, if they do not already exist. Its unimproved status nullifies part 'of the public benefit gained from the fine new highway that con nects the Tulelake area with OS 97 and with com munities In Middle and Western Siskiyou county. Briefi From The Pocket File YDDNOSTERS home from college this week are enjoying their Christmas vacation . . . The sherlf fs race may be somewhat of a public Joke but it's not looked upon that way by the candidates ... A number of them are really plugging for votes ... An ac quaintance tells us that Tulelake police are enforcing the no-turn-around-in-the-middle-of-the-block there ... He got a warning but no fine Sunday . . . The elty ordinance on sidewalk snow clearance requires propertyholders to do their shoveling within 24 hours of a storm . . . Good citizens don't wait that long Some were out today with the snowstorm still on . . . Oregon Voter says it sympathizes with Lake county in the Lake-Deschutes representative difficulty, but If the gallantry rule is broken, James Short of Redmond will be a good legislator , , , Sam Van Vector, run ning for circuit Judge In Wasco county, Is a nephew of Dayton Van Vactor, running for district attorney in Klamath county . . , Carl Engdahl of Pendleton may make a pitch for president of the state senate , , He's a high class legislator . . . Snow this morning forced State Secretary Earl Newbry to cancel a visit to the OVS ... He put chains on his car and took off over the Oreensprlngs ... It is too bad that letter about dirt on Klamath's streets, quoted on tills page yesterday, appeared In the Medford paper . . . People over mere are inclined to exaggerate such things about KP and this will add to a certain unpleasant smug ness over there that Uie Medford editor had sought to eliminate . . . The lecture on cleanliness was okeh here, however. These Days By GEORGE E. SOKOI.SKY ALL the time I read about how our children are being corrupted by the movies, radio, the comic strip and now television. As one writer, Gertrude Samuels, puts it: "Do children need this exposure to violence, red-blooded adventure and the argot of crim inals m part of their natural process of 'growing up'f" Each generation, when it becomes adult, forgets Its own childhood, except In a kind of nostalgic per fection. The other day, I was discussing our doings of 40 years ago with an Irish friend and we both concluded that stealing sweet mickles (sweet potato to the ignorant from a pushcart peddler, baking them In a fire made of old wooden boxes and barrels, purloined from wherever they could be purloined and fixed on the street where all could gather about It, was not juvenile delinquency. It was fun. In those days, we read Prank Merrlwell and Dead Eye Dick and although Henty and Barbour were tolerated. Horatio Alger was regarded u Inadequately literate. However, we survived them all and many of us came out of the cauldron, misty sentimentalists who love all of mankind, no matter what kind. Miserable Stuff I WATCH my little girl listen of an afternoon to all this miserable stuff called soap opera which I would not be caught listening to but nobody can catch you overhearing It, If it's on anyhow. So. I wonder if the child is being corrupted by all the miseries of family life, and woe is me! i discover that somehow, out of the reachings of childhood, she Is discovering that some things are good and some things are bad, and that if you pursue the bad courses, you get into trouble In the end even If, in between, you might get a mink coat. That is more than I get from movies for adults, most of which are designed to show that the wages of sin are a pent house, a diamond bracelet and an emotion termed love, by which is meant not the sobriety of family life but sex passion, simple If not pure. Then I discovered that my young fellow jets a vast amount of scientific information occasionally from "Jack Armstrong, the Ail-American Boy," from "Exploring the Unknown." and "Eye-Witness" and "The Nature of Things'" on television. Then I found the best Bible (forbidden In schools by the supreme court teaching they get from "Light of the World." and "The Greatest Story Ever Told." The supreme court has not yet made an atheist of the radio. Now, as to comic strips, there are two that I like Tery much for children, "Prince Valiant," which I am sure is both historically valuable and Inspirational, and "Dick's Adventures," which gives a child a back ground of his country. I find that children tire of both the murders and what a small boy described to me u "smack-smack." meaning that the characters osculate profusely. What they like Is a story a con tinuous, moving story. SIDE GLANCES ece m at mt tinni c t m tic w pay oft 3-23 'No, he isn't quite old enough for kindergarten, but they're excavating for a new house on the lot next door!" statu: By LOIS STEWART Same Taste WE adults, who used to watch the early serials In the movies, had about the same taste in movies as our children nowadays have in serials. We liked, for instance. "The Perils of Pauline" and similar serials and went every week, and had a week in between to speculate on how they would come out. In fact, the speculation was part of the game and It wu worth saving pennies to make the nickle. The assumption that all these forms of child enter tainment are Ipso facto bad is both untrue and unfair. A well-bred child, one whose parents are not too busy to talk things over, will after trial and error, discover what is stupid, what Is boring and what, to the child. Is a waste of time. Of course, the child whose parents are always too busy to give even a moment for discussion, lacks the chance to weave a story of its own imagination. In fact, it seems to me that our quarrel Is not with what the child reads or sees or hears; It Is that the current generation of parents seems to have too little time and patience to be a part of the child's life. uyy,, L l in, r mm If Sv;rA K.tV JENKINS j Telling i The Editor'; ! Lattara vrtnUS here mist set b i leaser Ihaa IM wordt. matt be i wrlll.a lailblr as ONE SIDE at lha ! a Mper, and matt be aicned by tht ! c.rr.cl NAME AND AODBESS af ! ! tha wrllcr. Caatrlballani fallawlat S thase rata- ara w.rmlv aralcemfd. , ON TEMPERANCE KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. (To the Editor) This Is from the discourses of Mrs. Bessie Cowie. "A man gravely assured me that, lf we Insisted on saloon windows be ing cleared, that liquor people might demand that church windows come under the same law. "Well, I am quite willing to lead a crusade against churches when the same results follow u from taverns "When women will spend whole days neglecting their homes and children, when men will pawn the very clothes off their backs to leave their money in churches, when extra police have to be engaged to deal with church frequenters. "When Jail accommodations are taxed to bursting point with church worshippers, and taxpayers have to spend the revenue from ordinary sources to undo the results of Sunday services in churches and missions "Then indeed, will we start an other crusade." A prize essay by a Georgia school girl had this telling statement- Take one regular, natural born fool, add two or three drinks of Picking up where Deikman Jen kins and La Ktllmeyer left off we will continue to present those left of the news staffers' husbands and long suffering wives. Today we In troduce Kay Jenkins who tends the fireside and bakes hoe cake for Husband Bill, whose dally stint starts out at some awful hour In the morning, armed with scissors and pencil to feed the hungry maw of tne unotype machines. Kay and Bill met at Pomona and were married at San Diego Just a tew days Belore a steamboat whistle blew and took Bill off to some para dise in the Pacific where he ran through the jungle chasing you- know-what-kind of Japs, i Bill, look ing over our shoulder, said he wished to appear a little more modest than we are putting it, and Just to say he "won the war'' and let it go at that.) Kay is busy with three-year-old Pamela, (four next July, and Sharl. a full grown, mouth-full-of-teeth Dane. a a a It is our usual custom to call KPJI and talk radio news over with our good friends down there when It is my turn to write Static. I'm telling readers of this column of this gentle if unexciting fact so that some of the liquor and mix the two in a high- JLuJbI.u" wh p"r FJI, to Tht powered motor car. After the fool Is thoroughly soaked, place his foot on the gas and release the brakes. "Remove the fool from the wreck age, place In a black, satin-lined box ana garnish with flowers. Prom the United Presbyterian rui a man in alcohol and he'll be preserved. Into a live man put alcO' hoi and he'll die." "The drunkard and glutton shall come to poverty; and drowsiness snail clothe a man in rags." Pro verbs: 23-21. MRS. ELLEN ROGERS, 2829 Kane. Little Ads get Big Results. u th. neraia ana News Want-Ads I IIADIO I'KOGIKAiMS TUESDAY EVE., MARCH 23 HFLW-1450 ks. KFJI-1240 kc. :1ft Hemi Town News :M Werld Ktmw Sammarr Beaton flrmphenr ABC :J5 " -?:M -1:18 n 1:30 KUHg Mmlo Dept. ?; :M Men Behind Mclady 1:15 Malcolm Epfrr -I!!! TWI1 Me,liV. Alr ABC :1ft l l F.r,B41' We Hall !: Xardnsl Melodies 10:1ft M lliMNiwi Sammarr JliOS Taltqutst 1 1 :1ft 1H45 Gabriel H taller MRS Hait SfaaW Areand Town SperU Reand-ep Western Jamboree Civil Libel-lie Sept. MBS Qatidom Peru ef Call' Official Detecllva MBS Billjr Rose, Horseshoes MBS Glen Hardr, News MBS Lei's Dance American Lerlen News Scope MBS Fulton Lewis Jr. MBS Albara ef Fine Music V S. Navy Band Musle Hall MUS Sleep Serenade MBS News MBS WEDNESDAY P. M, MARCH 24 rJ45 , KFJI-1240 kc 12:1 Paries Sidewalk Shew JJlJJ'S"1 Wa,'nj0 ClabABC l:M Claadla WEDNESDAY A. M., MARCH 24 :m i A M. Serenade :iarrm rare 1:90 News, Breakfast rdllian 1:1ft Charlie's Round op 9:30 James Ahbo ABU 1:4ft Zeke Manners ABH S:00 Breakfast Club ABO :1ft " :3a S:4ft " wtThe Three Sans B:lft Prank Parker Shew J J Bm (ala ,n J,t;J'J " ABO le:0t Galen Drake ABO 10:18 Dial ran 10:30 Mr True llerr ABO 0:.V( Mlnlalura Tonrart 11:00 Stop and Shop 11:14 TH l.liienlnff Poal ABO 11:10 Haiti Llvas On IliW Ethel and Albert ABO XFLW reelire I RPJ! rsalira Musical RaralHc Frank Httnlngwar MBS Rise and ffbine Mils Headline News" loday'a Best Itujs' Csrll Brown MBS Kaihlon Plashes Familiar Favorites Charlie Splvak Oreh Kate Smith Speaks MBS Victor H. klndlahr MBS Mornlitf Matinee Sons of the Pioneers Ulen Hardy. News MBS What's New Home Demonstration Harry llorllrk Can. l a Pelntes at 11:00 Nat Brandwrnnc Oreh. tuetn Per A Day MBS Merrill Time 1:30 Land ef the Lost ABC 1: Treasury Band Know ABC ;flSnrprlse Pack ara ABC t:tS Baddy Twlis ARC :JBrlda and Groom ABC loo La diet Be Seated ABC S:30 Day mt Silence 1:15 Richard Lelhert S:!M ' 4:00 Headline Kdltlon ABC 4:15 Rrquestfully Yonrs 4:30 4:1 " 8:00 " :IS Terry and the Pirates ABC 8:30 Sky Klnf ABC 8:48 " .Name Tanes' Headline News Vour Danes Tunes Market and Livestock Afternoon Concert Let's Read Marailnos Johnson Family MBS Matinee News Hearts Desire MRS Hearla Desire MBS Martin Block MBS H'ladlmlr Sellnaky Sin. R'rky'a Request Tea Dance Orran Musle Mvlnr With God rellen Lewis Jr. MRS Prank llemlnfway MRS Passlnr Parade MBS Story Time Adventure Parada MBS flu per Man MHO Captain M Id n l;bt MRS Tom Mis MBS WEDNESDAY EVE, :(-' Home lwn"!vfw 0:M World News Summary ":3d Voa Pop ARC :4S " fl:.10 ?:o Lone Ranter ARC 1:30 Mayor of lha Town ABC S:00 Abbott and Coslelle AnC J;jJGroebo Mar Show ABC :M JiJJ Bnf Crosby Show ABC :30 Star Theatre ABC 8 H 10:00 Slardost Melodies 10.18 " I0:0 Joe Reich man Orch. ABO I fl : 1 .1 " 11:00 Newt Summary 11:08 Teleriuest 11:18 11:18 KPLTV Pestura MARCH 24 Gabriel II a iter MBS Qun Show Around Town Mparts Round-up limner Dance lluusa Quarlet World Service t lt o Kid MBS What's Name ef Sang MRS Pellrana Sportsmanship In Censor. Billy Rose, Horseshoes MRS Glenn Hardy, Newa MBS All Star Dance Here's Te Vets Land Of The Pree MBS Fulton Lewis Jr. MRS Album ef line Music American Cancer Society Muslo Hal) MBS Sleep Serenade MRS News MRS KfJI Ftslara H&N's own KFLW, that it is our habtt and has nothing to do with the letters which reached the edi tor's desk in support of the recent Snapp-Hostak fracas broadcast by JI. In other words, when we give you the news about JI, we do it because we want to do it and we aren't coerced by anybody! So there! KFJI's third Qulzdom Class will be heard tonight at 7:30 with sen iors from Henley, Bonanza and Malin participating at the mike over which Dick Mai?ulre will be ths guiding hand. These seniors will compete for the weekly prizes and six seniors with the highest scores, regardless of schools, will cornDete for the grand prizes including a nice, lat, luscious $100 war bond. we know one father, who Is sort of a brain in his own right, who squirmed through last week's Quiz dom when his son was before tne mike. a a o JI continues with Port of Call. ltaly, at 8 p. m.: Official Detec tive, 8:30; Billy Rose, 8:55; Glen Hardy. 9. Then there's Fulton Lewis Jr., who does a re-broadcast later for all the busy little housewives VT LOCATION! McAfee Clinic 2903 South 6lh I Dr. Waraa HcAI... I fa. "l Ph. i;i I Oiltapalbla ran. a who follow Lewis like he was read ing from ihe Blblel There's an Interesting program on JI lit 7 tonliiht when the boys with a southern drawl talk buck with a vengeance. This is a program ex tolling civil liberties and Is quite controversial as you know. Preceding programs dealt with President Tru man's civil liberties policy which had the Southern boys Just a-bollln', honey. Southern governors and sen ators have chosen their own com mittee who will you-all It through for a half hour. a a Favorite listening on KFLW's Tuesday program Is Town Hall's "America's Town Meeting of the Air," beamed out from 8:30 to 9:30. Tonight the subject Is a timely one. of course, and is "Should the President's Civil Rights Program Be Adopted?" Speakers for the af firmative are Oregon's Senator Wayne Morse, member of the senate labor and public welfare committee, and Roger Baldwin, director of American Civil Liberties Union. New York. The negative is to ba handled by Senator John J. Sparkmun, dem ocrat of Alabama, member of the senate banking and currency com mittee, and Donald R. Rlchberg. at torney, former chairman of NRA board and co-author of the railway labor act. Moderator it George V. Denny Jr. we haven t had the privilege of visiting with any of the four but Senator Morse, and If he can con fuse them like he can confuse nic. he has It in the bag. Without a doubt, he Is the slickest cookie with verbs, adjectives and participles that we've ever had the benefit of rub bing elbows with. f olks say you can now end a sentence with a preposition.) We can always get a lift out of the KUHS musicians. If you re one that enjoys It too. you can tune In from 7:30 to 8 on LW to hear a broadcast tonight by the music de partment. Seems we're going backwards, but maybe you'll be on your own toes and tune In on the Boston Sym phony orchestra program at 6:30 on KFLW. With Charles Muench on the podium, Boston 8ymphony will feature a work originally written for its Oolden Jubilee celebration In 1930. Charlie McFarlan. another of the boys who rolls out early, report a wonderful response to his appeal for records for patients at the Oregon Tuberculosis sanitarium at The Dalles. Charlie has crated and shipped 319 records, all of them In pretty good shape, and as Monday was the last day, he was busy com piling a list of donors which will oe sent on to the hospital. Charlie takes this means of thanking everyone right from the heart. Here one Charlie wants you to know. The Henley eighth graders won the room count for having the most mothers present at a recent PTA meeting and were given 11.50. They divided the money, sending half to the Crippled Children's hos pital, and the other half went to buy a record which they gave to Charlie to send to the hospital. Mister Mc Farlan of KFLW also wishes to thank the Brownies and Camp Fire Olrls. The World Today llr SKiltll) AKNK AT Foreign Affairs Anal) it Russian actloiiF In Berlin the past few riaya mnkr It look aa though another hi.M may shortly go glim mer lug: the hoie of rebuilding tier, muny Into a healthy, peace-loving nation. Sliuo the end of the war Berlin has been the place where the four occupying powers the Americans, the British, French and Russians- have worked together In a council. Knoll power controls a portion of the city, although Berlin Itself Ilea In the eastrrr section of Germany which Russia occupies. But now the communist papers In Berlin are suggesting that the west erners get out. And fcauniliiy the Russian dele gate, Marshal V. D. Sokolovsky, walked oul of a council meeting. The R'Ultins claim the three western powers have broken all their pledges to run Orrmauy us a unit. But that Is cxui'tl) what the western powers h.ivc thought uf the Rus sians nil through 11)4(1 and 11)47. The liumedliiie notion which lingered SokoUnsky was the fact Unit the British, Frenih and Americans met In Lon.lon last week to talk about commerce In then three western sec tions of Oeiiuany. Wouldn't Agee Ever since the war ended, the four-power meetings In Berlin have had trouble because the Russian delegate either delayed or refused to agree to plans which the other tltree approved The most annoying difference has been over the ust of goods which the Germans themselves produced. A definite plun wi laid down for them at Potsdam, where the Americans, British ami Russians met In mid summer Urn to plot Germany's future. They nitreed that any surplus goods tcrnd out by the Germans should be put Into a pool. Those pooled g(K:ds were to be sold abroad to pay for things the Germans would have to Import. The westerner waited for some move from the Russians to chip In. German food was grown In the Russian set tor But as the months The Gallup Poll French, Italians Hold Out On Communism i 5 Hi ! 5 By (IKOIMiK OAI.M'I Director, Amerlraii liulllule of I'ulillo Opinion PltlNl'KTON, N. J March J:l -With the entire world anxiously, watching the progress of column. nism Ihe uttltudes of voters In two key European countries today as sume great significance. Kvldence furnished by public opinion polls Just completed In France and Italy Indicates that In those two na tions the autl c o m in u n III forces still hold the supimrt of a majority of vot ers. The polls were conducted by tho French Institute of Public Opin ion and Ihe Ital ian Institute of Public Opinion, DOXA. two of the eleven foreign alllllates uf the American Institute of Public Opin ion. In Italy, where Ihe threat of com munist domination is serious and Immediate. Ihe latest poll of iolitl cal sentiment Indicates that the communtst party and Its affiliates probably would not become the majority party If the election were held today. Moreover, If the older voters, who are overwhelmingly op posed to communism, ran be Indured Jarqura Durlna and does not ask which way ht Is going to vote, For Uial reason the results In no sense commute a pre. diction of the election but Indlcata current sentiment. The Chrlallan-dcmocrat party Is headed by Alclde dn (lasperl, tht present premier, and Is tho leading anll-coinmtiulst puny, The answers: ii j! n i il h ii ? . Zi Wi t J"a 14 17", X7 17 H K M 3i II 39 20 19 i: II 31 15 II 14 It National . Men Women Kmployer . Worker . Farmers In France: "Do ynu approve or disapprove af Robert Neliumall as president of lha council ?" The national answers: Tfr r.b. J-n Approved ... 4U' 31'V 4tl', t Disapprove !5 J l( No opinion 35 40 28 "If the Nrhumsn government were to be overthrown whom would ynu like lo see as new president uf III council?" (ieneral de (iaulle IT1 l.eoll Ilium II Maurice Thoret 7 F.douard llrrrlnl (ieorgea Blilault to go to the polls In large numbers on April 18. the possibility that the communist party can obtain a ma Jorlty Is remote. In France, General Charles de Gaulle receives the largest single number of votes to succeed Robert Schuman as president of the coun cil, should the present government be overthrown. In this popularity test the romblned strength of two communist party officials. Maurice Thores and Jacques Duclos. amounts lo alcmt two-third, of General de Gaulle's. Total votes received by personalities of the rentrlst parties outweigh the support given either passed no goods ever showed up. The , tj, riauii. nr the i ,-.,. ,,,.,. Russians n.sne no reports on what I te,,rih.. in k.v. ...... their se-lor was doing. No of fleers nf ,(rmil! OI)po,mon , ,hf ,rr.d from the western powers were er mltted to take a look-see at the Russian sector Shell Out Millions And while this was happening. British rnd American taxpayers were asked to shell out hundreds of millions to feed the Germans In their ana. At any t.me the British and Amer icans cool 1 hate claimed the Rus sians were falling to meet their Potsdam pledges Instead they trudged faithfully to the council meetings In Berlin and continued to run their sectors as best 'hey cculd Finally, early In 1947. the British and Am-r. rans merged their sectors in all business deals to try to cut down the rol to the folks at home. of communism comes from another poll The vast majority of Italian and French people, according to this survey, approve the Msrshall plan, m-htch ts, of course, directly contrary to the Internnt'onnl communist propaganda line. In both countries the approval vole was roughly five lo one. Strong evldenre exists In a nrevlous survey that the people In France and Italy do not believe Russian charges that the United States la motivated by lmerlallstle designs. Quite to the contrary, slsable majorities are Inclined to label Russia Itself an aggressor na tion and to believe the United Btatrs would fight only In self defense. Indication that the French people Russians, but no Russian knocked. Last week the Americans, French and Brltlsn met In London to talk Just about Wrstern Oermanv. Amer ican goods will shortly begin to move into Western Europe, and Western Germany has to be fitted Into the pirtur because It can con tribute stel to the general rebuild ing of Europe Another Stroll Thereupon Sokolovsky read an angry rnecch t.i the council In Ber lin and waUed out. Yesterday the Russians, being chairmen this month of the rnur.rll committees In Berlin, called off committee meetings. Does It mean they are through with cooperat Ion with the allies over Oermany'r future? Will they con tinue to boventt council meetings next monih, when the Americans become chaltmrn of all Hie com mittees? That Pe.-hn council Is the only bridge between the East and the West over which men of good will can travel to crei,te a Oermany that can be left to grow up alongside other trustworthy nations. They left the gate open for the re convinced their destiny Is closely uri io mr tiimra rvnirs rarner man to Russia Is given In a poll showing that seven out of ten voters feel we will do more than any other nation to nromole economic recovery In France. ' Mnveover. there Is firm conviction on the part of French voters that an economic union of Western Euro pesn countries must be organized .is a bulwark against the strength nf the eastern bloc of nations Russia has built. Two out of three voters approve surh a union commsed of France. England, the Benelux coun tries and Western Germany. The questions and answers on which these observations are based follow: In Italy: "In Italy's Interest which partv or groop should become slroiiier?" It must be emnhaslrstd that this question asks only what party the respondent thinks should be stronger Paul Iteynaud Paul Itamadler (iuv Mullet . ... Others No Opinion I 34 Which nation. In your opinion. will aid France moat In Iter re covery?" It. K. . 70'', lluaala 7 tireat Britain t None 8 France alone 8 Other 1 No opinion 8 I08-, "Do you favor or oppaae an ero nomle union of the Weatern Euro pean rounlrlea l France. F.ngland. Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg. Italy and Western (iermanyi?" Favor SI Oppose 14 No opinion 18 108', On Ihe Marshall plant "Have yon heard or read aboul tha .Marshall plan?" Ha. a St.. a tl.sra N.I lUlv ... 78", JV. Franra 81 8 "Do you favor or oppoes tna plan?" (Asked of Ihoa who hs4 heard or read aboul IL) Italy France l...r 0,a..a 81 if", 80 II Na fl.ia. JI". J7 PARK VIEW CONVALESCENT HOME irnrmarlr nf A.hlandi aa W..I Mala Slr.al, M.St.rS Or.t.a. rh.a. fall It'll. a. a.rvl.a. K.iui.r.S harsa la Charga The average whale. In a period of two years, travels a distance equal to that arr.und the world. DRINKS OFT SALEM. March 23 (IP) Hotels, restaurants or clubs which do not have liquor licenses cannot permit drinks to be mixed on their prem ises, Attorney General George Neu ncr ruled today. Classified Ads bring Real Resultsl Ralph's Mobil Service Motor Tuning Brake Service Lubrication rlre Ralph Before Buying TIRES AND BATTERIES 11th aV Klamath Phone tKZ LET US DO YOUR PAINTING and DECORATING ESTIMATES GLADLY Phone 20339 after S p. m. "The best job at the moit reasonable price CALL US FIRST HADLEY and WISE Painting Contractors 218 Martin Street W THEY FOUGHT... THEY ) ! DIED.. .THEY LIVE AGAIN ( ...IMA STORY AS BIG '( AS AMERICA t mm owim u an im mm aa. muiw.r - wtm iond THURSDAY PELICAN refill HJ2D 15 Wesley Sharpies REALTOR Presents As a Public Service America's c 8:30 TONITE! Question: "Should the President's Civil Rights Program be' Adopted?" KFLW -ABC Lhnisiilt S3 Pen Sets Desk Pens Pens for Easter for Men for Women for Students Famous PARKER "51" In Demi siie or Regular. The ever popular SHEAFFER Lifetime Pens Pons by WATERMAN or EVERSHARP . . . Ball Point Pens , , , SHEAFFER'S Flnoline Ball Point $1 50 EVERSHARP "Slim Jim" Ball Point "11.S1.95 KIMBERLY Eversharp Pockette Complete Stock Wide Price Range Factory Authorized Pen Repair The MlliO SHOP 7J7 Main I