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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (April 7, 1948)
J ACE. POUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, l4 i i '( j, l: ; i 1 i il Wtxixib anbJltv$ These Days rRANK JENKlKt tdltoi MAU'UIJi tMi.rt Mansltnf Editor i Today's Roundup By MALCOLM F.PI.EY ONE of the hlRhway Improvement which fclm Blh and Lake county people will urge vigor ously together before the suit highway Interim com. miltce nere next week is m urttMiu "J chaniie In the present Intersection of the Willamette highway and ' US M at Goshen, south of Eu gene. This is a long way from here, over ill Lane county, but 11 is a situation that is of vital Import ance to highway travel in Klam ath and Lake counties. The state highway department lias developed a plan for a most satisfactory intersection at Ooshen, but it has never gotten beyond the planning stage. What EPLET 1 proposed for soutliuouna travel ers Is a turnolf to the right Just south of Judkins point at the edge of Eugene, and then passlii back over US 9 on an overhead crossing. An equally convenient arrangement would handle northbound traffic coming In from the Willamette highway (Oregon 58). So long as the present unsatisfactory intersection condition remains, the Willamette highway will be cheated out of a lot of traffic It ought to have. Manager Charley Stark of the Klamath chamber. In preparing his brief to the highway committee, has commented: "At present, Oregon 58 at Goshen junction appeals to be a minor country road and it takes real pioneer ing spirit to venture on it for the first time. Once a traveler has made the fast easy run to California by highway 58 and US 7 through Klamath Falls, he 1 completely sold on the route, but thousands have not vet tried It because the Junction at Ooshen la so unfavorable to the Klamath route and so favorable to route 99." The But Driver Blushed CONFIRMINO what has been said, I have been told these stories: A friend of mine aays that even though he is bound for Klamath Pa Us and fully intends to turn off US 99 at Ooshen, he finds It so difficult that he ask his wife to pull his left arm when he comes to the Junction. Otherwise he runs on past. Another friend, who came from Eugene by bus Just a day or two ago, observed that the bus driver almost drove by the Ooshen Junction on US 99. As he started on past a student, who lives at Oak rtdge on Oregon 58, went up and called attention to his mistake. The driver blushed, and pulled off on the Willamette highway. Conspiracy THE conditions at both Ooshen and at Weed, the latter the south Intersection of the Klamath route with US 99. are unfavorable for the Klamath route. At the Weed end. no satisfactory state signs have ever been erected. Could it be that- there is a conspiracy of "do nothing" at these Junctions, fostered by people who do not want travel to move off US 99 on the faster, shorter Klamath route? We dont like to think so, but K this continues, well get suspicious. Briefs From The Pocket File ' ' A SOW at the Henry Nicol place at Adel has just hung up a new record for Lake county . . . She produced 33 pigs . . . Several died shortly after birth but a bigger-than-nonnal litter remained even after that . . . This may not have been a severe winter, but I've never seen highway surfaces in such bad shape . , , Broken paving is commonplace every where ... If you're running on a Nevada divorce, maybe you'd better get an Oregon re-tread . . . Floyd Patty, whose death occurred the other day, was a real gentleman and a good friend . . . The current storm has proceeded bullheadedly on Its way in spite of the weather bureau's predictions and the barometer . . . But It's not as unusual as every body aays . . , Bnow in April and May ha occurred here before. SIDE GLANCES By (iKOm.K E. KOKOI.SKT DR. EUUAKU BENES, prisoner-president of en slaved Czechoslovakia, has wrtttcu his memoirs Painetl) published In Prague. Ill this I quote "The Central European Observer" he tells of the effort made 111 1939 to get him to leave Western Europe and to take retUKC In Soviet Russia. The effort continued even after the Stalm-ltltler alliance, even alter the Russians had marched lnu Poland and Eastern Uallcla. He reuount a con versation with a leading Cch communist: My talk with Sverma iCwt'h coiiinuiiu.it i made me reallre what a great difference there was between the attitude of our communists, under the Influence of the Russian communists, towards the further de velopment of the war. and my own attitude towards it. We both ocheved that, although the Soviet Union had signed an agreement with Germany. It would enter the war. The communists, however, ap parently considered that this would not be possible until the war was nearly over, and It was with this very object in view that the Soviet Union had signed the agreement, so as to gain time for Itself. They also seemed to think that it would intervene with a mainly or exclusively revolutionary purpose at the moment when both sides were so exhausted that they would not be strong enough to ward off the , socinl revolution. At this moment, too. they Imagined that In any case they would succeed In Internally revolutionising Germany also." J j General View THIS view was very generally held in 1939 and j 1940. namely, that Soviet Russia would ultimately I stab Germany in ihe back, but not until the western j powers were so weak that they too would crumble. Then Soviet Russia would be the master of Europe. Ulrich von Hassell. former German ambassador to Italy, who was killed by Hitler for conspiring to bring about a revolution in Germany during the war and who nearly succeeded. In his "the Von Hassell diaries." published In this country, confirmed Bene's view. He wrote on August 26. 1939: "It is clear to me that the Russians made the pact with us in the same spirit in which they dragsed out the negotiations with the western powers. That Is to encourage us and to set all nations of Europe against one another." It was during this period that communists through out the world allowed their enmity to the United States. Even in this country the communists used the slogan. "Tile Yanks are not coming." and they picketed the White House and booed President Roosevelt. Benes describes this background: . . . This, too, was how I explained the constantly increasing vindictive action of one section of our communist in London and America against us. They soon afterwards began to stress the theory of Imperialistic warfare and to assert, as regards the Allies and Germany, that it was a case of six of one and half dozen of the other . , '." World Revolution Seen FURTHER he wrote: . This particular trend of the communist party reached it peak towards the end of 1940 and the beginning of 1941; this was six months be fore the Soviet Union came into the war. It is evident that at that time the German attack on the Soviet Union was not yet expected In the com munist ranks. It I also clear that during the first few months of the war the central committee of the Czechoslovak communist party had accepted the erroneous expectations of the Russian communists regarding the Soviet maintenance of neutrality for a maximum length of time, perhaps even until the last stage of the war. The same body was also prompted and directed by the assumption that at the very end of this imperialistic conflict' the world wide revolution would be let loose." As one reads all this. It Is impossible not to won der what documents are filed In the Archives of our state department. For what a roving revolu tionist inside Germany, Von Hassel, and the refugee president of an occupied country. Benes. could know our state department and our president must have known. Yet. when Stalin was ready to enter the war, the American people were deceived both as to the nature of the Stalin-Hitler alliance and It breach. We were lied to and we paid for it in lives and wealth. We are still paring. m i ' I i t 9 I A v7 r "I'll bet you've got plenty in the bank, Mr. Greeley! Don't people wear out lott more ihoe nowadays hunting for house and bargain?" The Gallup Poll Many Europeans Would Like To Leave Homes The World Today Bv HEWITT MACKENZIE AP Kurrlin Affairs Analyst DtWill Moik.nllt The Doctor Says Anemia Fatalities Drop Up to 1926 pernicious anemia wa highly fatal. Th victim of this disease of unknown cause lived on the average only a little over three years after the onset. Today death from pernicious anemia in the properly treated patient is rare. Pernicious anemia wa described in 186& by an English physician named Thomas Addison. His de scription of -the disease In untreated patient still -stands, and this con dition is .' often called Addison' anemia. (The victim of pernicious anemia Uai difficulty in telling when, the (irmptom i first started because they develop o gradually. Usually the first feeling is lack of pep. The ffce becomes pale, the whites of the eye look pearly, the muscle seem to be flabby, the pulse is soft and large but has a (light perk when the person is excited. .; When the disease toe untreated, the paleness becomes worse and worse. A small amount of (welling is likely to develop around the ankles, and the appetite fails. Event ually the aickne&s may become so severe that the patient cannot even rise from bed. A diagnosis is made principally on the results of an examination of the blood and the absence of acid in stomach secretion. When diagnosis is made early and liver treatments started promptly, the results are almost always good. Liver by injection or by mouth is standard treatment today. Liver will prevent the progress of the dis ease and restore the vigor of those afflicted with this kind of anemia. Note: Dr. Jordan is unable to answer individual questions from readers. However, each day he will answer one of the most frequently asked question in hi column. THE DOCTOR ANSWERS QUESTION: What causes outing ana ringing sounds in my r.gm ear ANSWEk: Tile conduinn in the ear itself, it may be imaginary, in ib may come irom some general condition, such as high blood press ure. Whether it can be cured de pends upon what is causing the trouble. Narrows Bridge To Be Rebuilt TACOMA, April 7 tjf) E. F. Gohl, vice president of the Bethlehem Pacific Coast Steel corporation, said today his company will begin actual reconstruction of the Tacoma Nar rows bridge next week. Gohl said his visit was to ar range subcontracts with a Tacoma firm for demolishing present ap proaches, removing 4000 cubic yards of old concrete and adding 9000 yards of new concrete. The coal strike in the East should not have any immediate effect on the bridge rebuilding but may re sult in delays if It continues for any extended period, he said. RADIO I'IMHjIUAMS WEDNESDAY XV RFLVV 1450 kc - wv ;!6 :2& :30 :,', :&4I 1:W 1:30 S:00 l:H0 1:46 M i:MI I& tVXO f:46 10:W 19:15 19:40 HMA 11:00 1 1 :5 ll:f It SO 11:4ft 8 port. Linaup . Horn Town Ncwi World Ntwi ftamraii-j Vox Fop ABC Tht I,on Ranter ABC Mayor of the 1tnABC Abbott A oalello ABC Grontao Mara Show ABC Blni Crej.aj fbaw ABC Star Thaitrc ABO SUrdtiti M Had lit Jm aUtcbman Or ok. ABO Ntwi Rum mar? Tcleqacat t., APRIL 7 KFJ1 UiQ kc. Gabrltt Hvalter MB! Qui Show' f Around Town" Sporla Kound-op Dinner Dane Grcffory Hood MBS Li.co Kid Mbh Wbat'a Nam a of Song MBS Pllcana Sportamanabtp In Corner. Uilly Roar, Horatabon MBS (ilertn Hardy, Nowa MBS Tanoa Yoa Know' Htre a la Veto Land of the Fret MBS Fallon Lowta Jr. MHS Albam of ft no MnaJc" Marine Story Moate Uall MBS Sltfjj Strtnada MBS Nrwa MBS :I5 po S:n lift Vs 9 on 9:1ft HO t:4.. It Oil 19 tft I9:.t0 J9.AS Jf:S 1 1 .00 ll:!0 n 4i A, THURSDAY A. M. Screnado Farm I'ara Ntwi, llreakfaat Edition II rtli Willi ttlandard Implement Show' V.rkt Mannrra AHC tlreakfaal Clab ABO Vltiront f.oper flrrh. Mrmorablo Muaie' lira la ti ,n Holly wood ABf ioln Drake ABC Mualr of Manhattan My Ttwo Story ABO : Mlnlalaro Concert Hop and Shop lomrmakera Hour llaualiaie Talking ABO Mhel and Albert ABU ... KTl.Tr realvre AL, APRIL I . Mualral Reveille On Too Farm Front I. Hemingway, Ntwi MBS Riae and Hhlse MBS Headline New Hril Buya Cecil Brown MBS ' lathton Mathea Memory Muilc Farorllea of Witerda Kale Smith Speak a MRS Victor II. I.indlahr MBS Morning Matinee, Sona of the Plonerle V,tn Hardy. Newa MRS Balph ninihergh Orch. Vault! On Parade Jamea Landrg Sing Happy Gang MBS M N Qaeea for A Day MBS KFJI realm THURSDAY P. KFLW 1450 kc l:U)Newa, Nora fcdltlon U:IA fayleaa Hidewalk Show laopaul Wbiteman Clab ABC I t:tft m I "WO Claudia l;lftKtllK Educalional Jgm IdOMaaten Golf Tonrn. ABC 1:4$ 7.-00 Surprlaa Package ABO S:lft :.. Roddy Twlaa ABC 3:39 Bride and Groom ABC :45 ' , " 3:Hl l.adiea Bo Seated ABO X:0 Salon Concert :4& " 4:W Headline Edition ABO : l s Reqaettfally to a re 4:10 ' 4:S " " :MMeddox Brot. it Roaa .1:16 lerry and Ihe PfratraABC 3:10 Jack Arnatrong ABC ft;4S " M APRIL 1 ivKji ju40 ke. -Name Hanoi Headline Ntwi' t our Dance I unra .Vlarket-I.lvcatuck Afternoon Concert" Johmon Family MBH Klamath Theatre Mallaeo Newa, Local" Heari a Uealro MBS Hollywood ravorlloa MBS Hawaiian Kicky a Keqoeat lea Dance Living With God" Fulton Lewie MHS Frank Hemingway MBS failing Parade MBS Hiiltrn Ballada Adventure Parade MBS Superman MBS Captain Midnight MBS Tom Mis MBS THURSDAY Sporti Lineup Home Town Newa World Newa Summary Hlta and Kncorea ABC :0 :I5 M0 11:00 11:16 ft: to 9 on Chile"! World ABC Kllery ffafen ABC Henry Morgan ARC Men Behind Melody Malcolm F.plei ' The Clock ABC 9:16 9::t9 9:16 10:00 19:16 I0:3 Bo. Sth St. Corral 10:46 11:00 1 1 :H6 M:H 1 1 :.1A akeihore F.nterlaini Vour Navy Recruiter Slarduat Melodlea Newa Summary Telequeat ri,W P at ore EVE., APRIL 8 Gabriel llralter MBS Klamath Tbcatro iult Around Town Hporta Round-up . Iltiuie Quartet Family Ihratre MHS Rrd Ryder MRS Ho II Klam. Sporti Allium Kl. Community Plavert Rillv Rnae. Hnrieihopi MRU filenn llardv, Newa MBS llramaa of Medicine Lela llanre Newa Scope Mlttt f'ullon Lewla Mll Albnn of Fine Muilc Rendeivoai In Par I a ' Mualo Hall MRS Sleep Serenade MHS N Newa MRS KFJI Peator By CiEORGE GAL!. I P Director. American Institute ot Public Opinion PRINCETON. N. J., April 7 If all restrictions affutn.M emiKrutiou were withdrawn overnight, millions of people in the leading countries of Europe France, Holland, Ennland and others would want to pull up stakes and move out of their war wracked homes to find s more peace ful life in another country. Restle.vnfM in those natioiiA whose people generally bear the brunt of military destruction con- uasis sharply with the sealed feeling of Amar icans. In this country only one person In twenty-five expresses a desire to set tle elsewhere. Seven of the twelve interna tional Gallup Polls conducted a simultaneous survey to deter mine lust what the average people throughout the world think about living cond.tions in their countries. Thus, thousands of representative men and women in each country were at the same time giving thought to what they would do if they were able to move out of their homeland. In England, more than four out of ten adults want to start life anew somewhere else. Approximately one out of every three in Italy and the Netherlands, one out of four of the French and Norwegian people be lieve they could find greener fields in another part of the world. Of the European countries re porting the survey, only in Sweden are relatively few people anxious to leave their native land, about one In eight expressing a desire to do so. The question asked in all coun tries was: "If you were free to do so. would you like to to and settle In another country? The comparative answers: . No Move Stay opinion it'es in the British Dominions than here, while Switzerland looks very attractive to the French. Significantly cnoiiRh the "utopliu" mentioned by the four per cent uf Americans who want to leave hortt are scattered around the globe. No country received as much as a, one per cent vote and a total of -W na tions were mentioned. Court Reverses Injury Decision SALEM. April 7 i,P The state su preme court ruled Tuesday that an arm nu'thocK as witnev. the man injured sr.. nun cannot colled dam- ' ncr tn whi-'h thry have taken over ages from a steamship line which is I the mikUI t-uuntrie of raMrrn HusMu's quick public it polony for Ihe Hovtrt-Mi itlMi plant tttsunttw' Monday tu (lcrmaiiy created hope that this might alunul a Hmirinl easement of the dangeioua tension recent ly bet wppii f the soviet and the western al lien In that aone. but this hope has now been largely dissi pated. It Mania n Claim The It uv in lift today blamed the Hnti.sh lor the collision be tween the So viet fighter plane and the passenger ship, with the ltu of 15 lives. The boMirvisla charged that the Hritlh pilot vio lated regulations by flying over the Soviet truffle son. The Urltlsh re torted that the Hussian story was palpably untrue. The Soviet authorities not only had apoliHited but had pronitM'd that hereafter allied pitmen would have unhindered aicos to Merlin. As a result, lliittsh Foreign Secre tary Hevin. while pressing for Im mediate investigation uf the dis aster, fell able to tell the house of commons rewarding the general KaM-West dispute In tiennany: "If there tn goodwill, it la capable of solution." Mr. tlcvm wus miu-.iL to put tn that qualifying "if " The Kuaalaus arc treating the crash aa 'an accident, and while that exact characterization might be questioned, the allies haven't quib bled over the term. It appears from the testimony of eye-witnc.vea for the allies that the pilot of the red fighter plane was trying to harass the transport by diving at it. How ever. It would be absurd to claim that he deliberately sacrificed his own life in order to destroy the Hritlsh plane with 13 Itrttmut and two Americans atard. He Jus wasn't smart enough as a pilot to do the trick of 'buying" which tht witnees say he undertook. (Hind Kt ample If we accept the version of these witnesses, we have here a typical example of Bolshevist tactics for all occasions. The communist philos ophy of life is wrapped up in strong- The Dollar Went To The Doqs -r. Hp( burk (list lip fuulilll't make Mil ntlliiHinrrnirlil Httlluut "biMi( ilic" II, Ills Mill Unci Cliuiiillrr Mull (lip ilnllitr fruiil Annul lln. nit liniitlleH (It. roiilruL Hrll, It Is tlirp yrurs slncr lilt did am-li ilulf. Th. nionrjr tts liivrslrd In K.trlrvrr rluli piiijri-t. statu; Ry JOY nitiliH England Holland Italy Norway France ... Sweden United States 42"; 33 38 38 35 13 . 4 53 ' 56 64 M 73 86 84 5'.i 11 It will be noted that desire to move away Is highest In Britain. One probable reason for this sentiment is brought out In another poll con ducted throughout England by the British Institute of Public Opinion. This poll found that nearly two thirds of the people thinlc It I harder to make end meet in Eng land now than six months ago. The vote is: "Compared with six months ao are you finding It harder, easier or about the same to make both end meet?" Harder 65 Easier - 4 About same - 30 Don't know '. . 1 Two additional Oallup Polls, In Finland and Australia, in 1846 asked the question about moving to an other country. Also, last year the Social Psychology Institute, a French organization, polled Oer mans In the French zone of Ger many on the same issue. The result of these polls follow: No opin Move 8tay ion Germany HB47J 46 47 7 Finland (1846) 28 60 12 Australia (1046J . .. . 6 85 America still beckons as the land of peace and hope to large numbers of people In foreign countries. Of the ones who want to move, over haW of the Norwegians, 44 per cent In Finland, 15 per cent of the French, and one out of every ten In Holland say they would like to come to the U. S. The English see greater opportun- ITcii BURN Crack, rfrv anrf rnumhm And wonderful reliff In smooth, oil? mfdlmtH Rrninol. If Hp nature heal. RESIN QL0INTMENT operated by the United Suirs gov ernment. The opinion, by Justice H.ill S. Lusk. reversed Circuit Judge Lamur Tooze, who heard the case in Marion county. Fred W. Fluk. a seaman on (lie Liberty ship Oeorge Uavid.son. was injured August 3, 1843. The ship, owned by the Shepard Steamship company. Vxs being operated by the government. Fisk won $9000 damages in the lower court against the company, but the high court ruled he could not collect any damages. Euroiie. Politirnl aurcria Is acnirvrii by the u ot force, terrorism and purge. Kven In ordinary debate they don't waste time Willi attempts at pci mi iMon but rrsori lo bullying and oUsiriKlliin. us witness tlirlr operations In Hie Ulllled Nations. In the light "I all this, the Hus sian apology for the Berlin "col lision" wa a striking deviation from their usual behavior. But nuw the Russians, having perhaps saved a grave development by their quick apotogy for the plane crash, apparently are reverting to their old tactics. Boyle's Column Bald-Headed Men Will Still Have The Last Laugh On Us 1EI By HAL BOYI.K NEW YORK. April 7 iVi-Today we sing sdithyramb In praise of that forlorn hero of the ages the bald-headed man. Those who laugh at a bald-headed man only show their own Ig norance. For the bald-headed man la the man of the future. He has been sent bv heaven as a model of what all men will be like someday, when brain power will be honored o v.e r brawn. Meanwhile Ihe bald- headed man. like all pioneers ana light brlngers. is Joked at and ridiculed. "Wnnta know how to ave you halr?" his friends ask. And when he Innocently and hopefully says, "How?" they Jeer: "Oet a cigar box!" There Is no renson any longer for bnld-headed men o submit to these Jibes, because they are coming Into their hour of power. The hairy man has had hi day In history and Is on the way out. Hair Messy Hair Is unkempt, uncouth, un sanitary and unnecessary. It I ac tually nn expensive nuisance from our animal past, a relic a useless a an appendix. There Is really no place for It In the machine age. It may remain the glory of wo manhood, but It Is already out of date on the brow of man, the thinker. HAL BOYLE Science has confirmed this. Anv number of test-tube savants have advanced the theory that bnld headed men are more virile than their fur-headed brothers. The more hormones, the less hair. And baldness Is also aj sign of brains. Dr. R. E. O. Annul toe. a scientist from North Ireland, has Just eompMed a study which showed (hnt edupat -1 men get bald sooner than uneducated men. I don't know of a statement better calculated to empty our colleges But this Is only because of the piesent flattering preference women show for men with hair Inferiority Feeling Whv do women foster the delu sion that a man lopped with cranial shrubbery Is more attractive to them' Because bald-headed men give them a feeling of Inferiority Women have domlnnted men since they led them as shambling half-apes out of the forest. But Ihev are secretly afraid of a bald man. They know that he Is a symbol ot the coming men Intelligent, authoritative, energetic, and aware of his own superiority lo them. Thev know a bald mnn is too smart for them. Socrates. Ihe greatest philosopher of our race, was bald. So was Julius Caesar, warrior and empire builder In our own times Charles Boyer. screen epitome of the successful lover, and Blng Crosby, our finest living Jukebox artist, have been crowned wllh more success than hair. Baldness Is the Insignia of civili zation: hair Is a hangover from sevagery. There is a day on the way when a man will have to shave from his eyebrows to the back of his neck to THE THOUSANDS THAT PREFER ALE . . . PREFER COLUMBIA! If you yearn for tomtth.ng ddtinctly different In malt btv ragei treat yourself to a bottle of Columbia! It's delightful. Distributed In Klamath FalU by J. MARVIN HILTON Dlitrlhutlnf Co. This ftitow Job Ihe wruthrr niiui lias been ilUhlitg out lulrly (Iik-.mi t look like the work of a prnfrv.ioiru.1. Look to il an though Aomr mim tiur hit!! berii nt the cunt ruin. The miii will ihlne tor five mimitcft nnd a gentle Aprlllun rrphyr ruffle the willow. Next off the nnow u fll Init, flue leuo-type griuiulrM rrllevril here and there by a huiie frilled fluke, out of all proportion tn It ncWhbort and wruthrr rnmlitlonv tn Junt a few tnlnutr (he itiu switch will be pulled und howrt In keeping with the mouth on the calendar will wet the pavement, to he followed ahnmt trnmrdlntrlv with kerchief-Hire hunks of uow that plop when thev hit. Thene ant purMird bv allRhtly-Mnnllrr-thrui-muthhiiH hnll.itone.t nnd avnln thr Run will Rive oul with a opldrd smile . , . Hark In the boys and girla In radio and how thry H there . . O'b Walter, now chief cntflnrrr 1,1 KKl.W. live, eata and aleepa radio. Dints hnw much he like ll, but would rather read the uewnpaprr than listen to radio program. He w throiiRh hifth whool when he decided he would like lo go into aviation radio. He not by-paofd Into the broadcast phae and llkr It an well ha will tav. He ha done h'? share of announcing too and after becoming a professional radio man he ha gone into the "ham ' ntnt'on Idea a a hobbv. Interview with scientist from the rhlef research center of the drnartment of agriculture. Bella vllle. Md . will be brnndctut on 'he !("! net at fl 30 p m. thl Wednea drv Tills Is the tdmr where exierl. men have producrd small fnm'lr mre turkev. tx-foot lillea and other lant f lowers - . Charlie MVFarlan'a chet-kerhnard hfrkirround brought him through gold panning, driving an armored truck, door-to-door telling and pro errr, singing to thl at at Inn. He wa singing at a church on night and on the way home picked un a magn.lne containing radio an nnpnrementa He read them nvrr rwid wondered whv he couldn't do OK at that. Called his friend Mark Brenneman (Tom'a brother- and ant In the car reading the announce, rr.ent'a to him. Mark showed him the rn(e and here he l! New mornlnv urogram Is the Ptnndnrd Tmmmrnt show, 710 o' clock with M Farlnn announcing A net newa hrnndenst preredes th' program ao Charlie can almost loiter down the htll In the rool sunrlae hour. Max Frve. salr manager I.W. str-rted out to be a newsnnner re. porter. He graduated from the Imirmllsm dlvls'nn of the Universi ty of Oregon and wa all set to, tke a newsnaper 1ob when he wna offered a more attractive 'to hlmi proposition In rnd'o selling. Aaron !Ve, n not her snlrsnmn, wn op the road with hla product and In the line of bualnesa contacted the stutlon manngrr, We ran gticsa who sold who with floe now on thr mo tion nayrnll, selling air time Hoe, bv the way, la not an Italian, although a recent reference In this column to his hand in something lrd several to that belief. Dick Magulre. JI's fair - hnirrd boy, had hla alghta set on bring a big business adm'nlstrntnr. Among other students at University of Ore son he was hired to handle prn trrnms over KOHE -Ihls was aftrr h nassed the audition OK. Audi tions were pretty rough In those days. Dirk wua nhtllnnrd out on a (lie cfuiipe and luul to keep up a tun ning gttb about everything mid any thing, lie even dctu-rlbcd the brliki of the building He entered ciimpiu progiam hut dldn t think sri lotirdy of rutl'u a career until the (link tlrprcuion vrnri when lie found even purl time iiullo wotk paltl better than matt full time nb-. Through Itob Thoinp miii of tit's iltv Dick bet nine aj clntcd wuh Ntt'lloMH tn Honolulu. Anyone willing tu study tip on Teleuiirst riddles nhcd of niiedule en u pdk 'H cope of the ilddlr ft mil K 1T.W Itecrpt lonlAt Marult Knulr Dewey Heads For Nebraska FN HOUTK WITH DKWKY TO NKUItASK A. April 7 ' , Our. 'Ihoma F Dcwev. ahrugging off hla defeat In the Wlftt-ouMu prhnary, wn flvlug to NebntAkn todttv confi dent 111 pirlilrntinl loofc will shoot up iignin in the primary thrre next Turwiny Hefoie bourdlng a i Imrteif d plant Inking him to Ur.md Inland In Oil ttnl Nrhriikn. for a twoday cam paign for tat klng In the stair i prrfrrrntltil primary, Dewey told rejKtrtrrs "Now wr have won one one prl tnnrv and Itiit onr primary. We are on to Nebraska, where thert are, no favorite urns "On total. veMridsiy wa a pretty good d.ty We gained 00 delrgatr In New York, whlrh U more than four time the number any other randl dMe Bcrfiilird " Dewey rerlrd tiint he had pri vately predicted lc would finish In l tn It' thirn-wiiy WtconMi fit ht with Harold r. Miiuurn and Cirn louKlaa MncArllmr. be socially prrscntable. Tlien the bald mnn will have that last laugh hp's hern waiting to enjoy through history. I sure, am glad my hair Is falling out. Stand-By Curb Policy Eyed WASHINUTON. April 7 President Truman count tl of eco nomlr ndvtnern toduv ald the need for stand -bv rationing and wgr prlre controls l even greater than It was three month ago. Chairman Kdwln O Nnurvr and other counrll mendiers made tht statement In presenting their quar ter lv reixjri to Ntr. Truman. The findings will be reviewed at the regular cabinet meeting Friday. Nourse told reporter the counrll reaffirmed Mr. Truman's conten tion I hnt It Is nerennrv to have leglslntlon ready to rombat Infla tion. He would not go Into, details of the reno-t or nr whether the preM ent will make anv part of It p"b tlr He did niir the roimcll fre's slnnd-b rat'nn'ng and WBcre-rtrt'-e control should be enacted tmmrdl pMv He inld thev should be selec tively annhed a, needed. Noiirte tndlented In advance the renort tnitrhrd on a wider range of hle'-t than osunl. Inelndlng nrnb (! Ip'nacl of rearmament moves under the II. H "si cm Rusaln" policy, TO NPsiK POttTI AN'D AnrU 7 rrtV-.eVi.alor J Ifoward MeOinth of Rhode Mnnd. nntlnnnl democratic com mittee chairman, will sjwak here ton'trhl nffer Ihe Orevnii Jefferson Jackson centennial dinner. His address will be broadcast na tlotmllv on the mutual network The dinner wilt he a linn a plate affair In the Multnomah hotel. PARADISE FOR PAIN rnr TO irari. f..)k. hat? rrt.1 for Dial rHt o'4 SUIA.N H MMMI.NT l.n lh.T ),! rimldti 1 (ml tli HaMiln. kriKr IIU full) nt nniia, Diii.iili, ' I am) imiM'iiiar hn Wlifh tin miMm .in., yau aialn, trt.h fnf ait.x !.t aliliN S UMHCNT Hw !,.. qui..!, I., hnl in warmih J"l. Iirinar ulk tixl htntrd tH", UNIUfuNT t rotir ttiuaitiira tcxla. Get there faster on Mruted Maui(vnex() PORTLAND VA hn. SEATTLE 3'i hn. SAN FRANCISCO .... 3 hn. LOS ANGELES 6Vt hn. rsl NM-vlrc In Chlrsio, New Turk and "all tht F.ssl" Alrporl Tarmlnal yjir toll 317 UNITED T&M&farZwaf B IT is i ll. Hl.l 1 1