?ACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
THURSDAY, APRIL 8, in
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MALCULM EPLXY
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Today's Roundup
FOR many year. major potentiality listed for
land development In the Klamath basin area has
been waste land around Upper Klamath lake.
Thousands of acres there vera
noted tn the land use reports at
the periodical economic confer
ences held here under extension
service sponsorship. It has long
been felt that some dy an Im
portant development program
would bring those thousands of
acres Into permanent production
as a factor In the basin economy.
That program Is now veil un
der way. and was highlighted yes
terday by announcement of the
sale of the Copra ranch, 7700
acres, to Tulana Farms. Only
EPLET about 1100 acres of the Copra
ranch was being farmed when the sale was made.
The new owners will launch an Immediate reclama
tion project to bring the remaining area Into live
stock, grain and general farming operation. The
new owners have a reputation for constructive de
velopment of land that has helped make history In
the Lower Klamath lake area.
In the past two or three years, several other large
operators with successful records In other parts of
the basin have moved Into the Upper lake area,
acquiring large bodies of land there and starting
constructive farm development upon them. After
many years In which Tule lake and Lower Klamath
monopolized attention, the Upper lake area has
moved Into the spotlight.
Thus the pattern of land development In the
Klamath region expands, both to the north and the
south.
It is things like this that have scotched for all
time any once-held suspicion that the Klamath basin
might hit an economic decline when lumbering sta
bilized at a lower level
Briefs From The Pocket File
A FRIEND of ours has just lost bis wallet ...
He Is vastly disturbed, as all men can well
understand . . . The average wallet contains a lot
of valuable papers besides greenbacks social secur
ity card, military discharge evidence, driver s license,
credit cards, lodge cards, etc, and In some of them
are kept a few Important telephone numbers . . .
The exact consideration tn the Tulana Farms-Co pco
ranch deal was $261,175. I am told . . . KUKS band
has been Invited to participate In a music festival
at the time of the Portland rose festival . . . Whether
it can go will depend on whether the financing can
be arranged, at least partially, through sale of festival
tickets In this area . . . Klamath chamber of com
merce Is on record favoring the holding of the next
homestead drawing at Tule lake, which Is also favored
by this department . . . One of the finest things
that has been accomplished In our area is a general
feeling of good will and lack of jealousy among the
communities of the regional family . , , Those who
may be Inclined to try to Inject something less whole
some Into Intercommunity relationships should be
quickly smacked down . . . That Improved bus serv
ice between Klamath Falls and Reno and over the
Inland route started today, marking another mile
atone to local transportation history . . . What we
aay In the pocket file department may not shake
the world, but we have a lot of fun getting It
together.
permitting representative government (what la so
often loosely called democracy) has decreased.
Into the new universal stale must be Included:
Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia. Finland l partly 1,
Oermany (partly), Hungary, Poland, Kumonla, the
Soviet Union, the Baltic republics (Latvia, Esthonta,
Lithuania), Yugoslavia. To these European coun
tries must be added, as Included In the Eurasian uni
versal sute: Afghanistan. North China. Including
Manchuria, Korea, north of the 38th parallel, Mongolia.
The Eurasian universal state possesses no linguistic,
racial, religious, historical or economic homogeneity
and must therefore be held together by force. There
can be no other way. Nor Is It possible to suppose
that any process of assimilation ran be devised
which can in any practical period of time achieve
homogeneity. .The Soviets therefore have adopted a
policy of local autonomy so that all utbrg may re
main an uzbeg so long as he Is obedient to his over
lords. In a non-assimilable universal state of this
type, representative government is Impractical and
dangerous. The police sute exists because there j
can be no alternative to It.
Conflict Appears
As long as the Eurasian universal sute was
confined within the boundaries of pre-war
Soviet Russia, the ruling power dealt with peoples
who had traditionally been accustomed to being
mastered and ruled; who had no tradition of per
sonal freedom and no philosophy of equality before
the law Once the Eurasian universal state crossed
the Bug river Into Poland. It came Into conflict
with western civilization as exemplified by an in
herent assumption of personal liberty and resist
ance to the power of a ruling class. This conflict
becomes Intensified as the Oder river Is crossed
Into Czechoslovakia and Germany and must meet
defeat beyond the Elbe.
One of several political reasons for the ease with
which the Eurasian universal state conquered the
countries west of the Bug without much military
effort was the Inability of Europeans to organize
representative government on a simple two - party
basis. They hoped to arrange governmental responsi
bility with a multitude of political parties and by
the use of proportional representation. This method,
while appealing to the liberal mind, actually produces
paralysis and gives power to minorities, often alien j
and unasslmilable. n i
For Instance, the Czech government, which the I
Eurasian universal sute so recently absorbed. In-
eluded the following parties: communist, Czech i
socialist, people's party, social democrat, Slovas
democrat, and two, the minister of foreign affairs
and the minister of national defense belonging to no
party. In a word. It was not responsible party gov
ernment but a coalition of non-cooperative, antagon
istic elements.
Outside the government were two additional parties,
Slovak labor and Slovak freedom party. Of 300
deputies elected to the constituent national assembly,
only 93 were of the dominant party, the Czecho
slovak communists, but they controlled the govern
ment. This minority In time affiliated their country
to the Eurasian universal sute. which means a sub
mission of their people In many respects a Western
European people to Asiatic concepts of the rela
tion of subject to ruler, of man to the sute. How
long Prague can suffer the humiliations of Urga.
It Is difficult to say. But that Is what has happened
to It
SIDE GLANCES
LJ 1
eem. im tv au anmct. at T
T& B t, WT. Qf?.
"You'd think th teacher would get awfully tired of giving
him a bad mark tn conduct every month!"
j Tolling
The Editor
I'tUn print) fct-r anl
' ncr than loa wr4. mmtt
wrliitD UgiM mo ON. SIDE of ib j
ftrrrl NAME AND ADDKKftS mt
CnlMbIUrt Itlliwi
v. rti.lt wlramt4
S
These Days
By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKT
LOOK at a 1938 map of Europe and compare It
with a 1948 map. A process of assembling sutes
Into a universal sute has been continuous during
that ten-year period; also, the number of countries
The Doctor Says
Exercise Aid To Health
Self Destruction
WESTERNERS do not readily understand the
process of self-destruction which has moved
formerly free European countries Into affiliation
with the Eurasian universal state. Certainly, none
of the 13 European countries listed In this article any
longer permit any form, however primitive, of repre
senutlve government, nor Is personal liberty of any
kind tolerated. These European countries have been
restored to the empire of Genghis Khan, whose heirs
attempted In much the same territory but not so
westward In Europe to hold so many unassimllable
peoples together.
Finally, there Is that to learn from what Is hap
pening In Europe' namely, that homogeneous nations
have a better chance of resisting absorption and
spiritual annihilation than states which are composed
of minority groups, particularly unasslmilable ele
ments who resist indigenous social customs and
whose spiritual affiliations may be elsewhere. France,
for Instance, Is more capable of resisting an external
foe than Czechoslovakia, Sweden or Yugoslavia.
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D.
Healthy people ought to use their
muscles If they want to treat their
bodies In the way intended by na
ture. The circulation la better, the
digestion and bowel elimination
work better and probably all of the
other various functions of the
human tissues and organs behave
better If some physical exercise is
taken.
Although many people who con
fine their exercise to a minimum
seem to feel pretty well for a long
time, they generally do not have that
feeling of glowing health that comes
to a person who keeps fit by suitable
physical exertion. Eventually, lack
of physical exercise catches up with
them by disturbing digestion or
other functions In ways which they
do not expect.
The exercise which a person takes 1
ought to be carefully adjusted to
one's ability to uke It. Most people
have to build up gradually from a
sedentary or quiet life to one in
which they can take more rugged
exercise without exhausting them
selves. GETTING ADJUSTED
For physical exercise to produce
Its greatest good and pleasure, It
must be adjusted to Individual
capabilities and to the age and sex.
No two persons react exactly alike
to exercise. Some have to be par
ticularly careful about doing too
much because of some physical de
fect, such as a weak heart
Also some kinds of physical exer
cise which are perfectly all right
for men may bring about harmful
effects in women. More important
still is the age. Many young men.
for example, at 20 or 25 can run a
mile without harm. If they tried to
do this at 40 the result probably
would be disastrous.
It Ukes quite a long time for the
muscle tone and other functions of
the body to be built up. This makes
It necessary for exercises to be start
ed gradually and Increased slowly
uniu proper aajustment Is made.
e
NOTE: Dr. Jordan Is unable to
answer Individual questions from
readers. However, each day he will
anvwer one of the most frequently
asked questions In his column.
THE DOCTOR ANSWERS
QUESTION: What causes kidneys
to turn alkaline?
ANSWER: Kidneys do not turn
alkaline, but the urine can become
alkaline rather than acid as It
usually Is. This is frequently a re
sult of diet and not a sign of disease.
To Buy. Sell or Trade, it pays to
read Herald and News Classified Ads
it pays to Advertise!
IIADIO PKOGIIAMS
THURSDAY EVE, APRIL g
KFLW 1450 kc
S:MS-eru Lineup
;13 Horn Town Newt
S.-tr, oris Newe limmirr
6:30 Uiloaa'l LocorcoABC
t.li
;:w0 S:ilrr Qaeen ABC
7:r.v Henrr Korean Show ABC
S:0 Men Behind Melesro
S:lft Malcolm Lpler
S .SO Tha Clock ABC
IS
S:5.
. Chill'a World ABC
Leaesbere Eatertelne
:I5 Vonr Siarr Kerrmler
1:ih Slardaal Melodlei
10:15 "
1(1:30 So. Ilk St. Corral
)0:I3 "
11:00 Newt Snmmarr
JI:o-,TeleBoel
1I:1S '
1 1 :SS
1IKS
tUrJl 1240 kc
Gabriel Healler MBI
Klamalk Iheatra Hail
Around Town
Snorla Boandap
HiHte Quartet
famile jhealroMBS
Bed Kydor MBS
Boa la
mam. Spans Albaaa
Bill? Boaa, Horoeehoet MBS
Glenn Hardy, Newa MBS
Drama of Medicine
Let'e Dance
Newa Scope MBS
Fallon Lewie Jr. MRU
Album of fineMualc
ondefToue In Parla
Muile Hall MBS
Sleep Serenade MBS
Kewi MBS
FRIDAY P. M., APRIL
FRIDAY A. M, APRIL
SllSCarn In tha Morn
10 "
:(5 Farm fare
l.'OONene. Ilreakfait Edition
?:IA Bob Wllla ahoK
1:X0 Standard Implement Shaw
mannereAlti:
ll.uo Breabfaot Club ABO
:!
IJ
t on The Three Sane
t:IS Iranb I'.rkrr Shaw
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10.00 Galea Driha lan
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le t" "f T"" "r' B0
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jl:lTho l.lilenlnc I'oil ADO
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UiiSklkol and Albert ABC
KFLW raalura
Maelral Rereille
On Tha farm front
e'. Ilcmlnfwar. SretMIll
Rlie and Hhlne MBS
Bute
Cecil Brown MBS
l aablan I laehee
Familiar f avorltee
Cddr Howard Orch.
Kale Smith Hpeaka MBS
Victor H. I.lndlahr MBS
Mornlna Matinee
Sane of the Floneere
Glenn Hardr, Nawa MBS
Hhat'i New
Sat II nith Mullo MBI
l a Polnleo at 11:00
Orean Recital
queen f ar ADr MRS
m Pealara
KFLW 1450 kc
It.oONewa, Noon Edition
I!:1S Parieei sidewalk hfaew
jT-e fj.nl Hi1itm.afl Club ABC
I.OO Claudia
1:10 "
1:15 Merrill Time
I :S0 Goll Tournament ABC
S:00 Surprlaa Packafa ABC
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S:S0 Brlda and Graaa ABC
J:IJ
I iHlladlee Be Sealed ABO
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1:13 "
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4:00 Headline Edition ABC
:IA Reqaeatlallr Youre
1:10
:IS
B:00 "
:STrrr and tba PirataiABC
JO Skr Kins ARC
KFJ1 1Z40 kc
Name Tunee
Headline Newt
four Dance ianei"
Market A l.lteatuc-k
Afternoon Concert
Let'e Read Magarinea
Johnaon famil MRS
i attnee
Sena
Hearla Dealre MBS
Martin Black MBS
Temple Time
Rlckj'e Requeat
lea Dance
Organ Mualc
Llrlnt Wllh Cod
r ullon Lewie Jr. MBS
f'rank Hemingway MBS
Paealng Parade MRS
World Light Opera'
Adeenture Parade MBS
taper Man MBS
Captain Midnight MRS
Tom Mis MBS
the writer.
theae rale
SIBIRBAN ISSI E
KLAMATH FALLS. Ore . iTo the
Editor! I am wondering if there Is
any project of any kind, children's
play ground, teen-agers, picnic
grounds or anything good that
there isn't one or two Jealous, sel
fish people In the neighborhood
fighting acalnst It. And at the same
time at their own meetings they
try to make everyone feel they are
all In all for children's playground
and knock some one who will go
ahead and try to build something
to keep these youngsters off the
streets.
It seems thst about two of the
Suburban league heads don't want
us to build our recreation hall In
the Wlard park because they want
to build a suburban hall where they
have from four to nine at their
meetings. Our hall will be for a
children's recreation place, not for
suburban league meetings.
I guess we are getting along with
donations, and lnbor and material
too well to suit their eye.
The recreation hall In the park
will be the most centrally located
spot In the suburban area. The sub
urban league hall Is located out of
the way. without ctty water and no
Irrigation water. I am wondering
just what the Pomona grange would
think if they know about this.
It is no wonder people Join one
night and they never come again.
Several vears ago I Joined thL,
Shasta View grange and Suburban
League with two othrs and they
never went again. And I can name
several that the same thing has
hsopened to.
I do know we are going ahead
with our donations. Two fellows
are not eolng to stop us. Eleven
months of hard work, night and dav
has been one of the most enjoyable
things of my life, and I wnnt to
make a success out of It. And wltn
people's help we will.
If these fellows would Just pick
out some of the good things we are
trying to do. Instead of picking the
worst things they can think of. I
think there would be a better feel
ing. These men haven't done one
bit of anything on this park, but
they can sure holler. You always
find one or two to down the other
fellow. They want everyone to come
to them and ask them If they can
put up a board.
Don't try and stor- us from build
ing our recreation hall. You go
ahead and build your hall up In
the sticks, and we will build ours,
STATIC
By JOY BIGGS
The World
Today
By nrWITT MACKEN.IK
AF Forelm Affairs Anal at
Boyle's Column
One Young Comedian Has
Solved The Laugh Problem
Hi T , "W
0Wtlt Mocknti
C o
Hello Anybody, Here's Morgan!
Alan Abner. newcomer to kp.it
hitched his wagon to radio from
the beginning. He studied Journal
ism In high school and took dra
matics with that aim In view. In
college he continued to keep his
eye on the ball and although the
army called him he was able to
keep a nodding acquaintance wllh
his ambition. He emreed several
company programs and helped ar
range them.
Abner had a taste of the commer
cial phase of t radio as manager of
that department for KPAS Ban
ning. Calif., but he was more In
terested In the production end of
It and that Is what he Is doing now.
Here's Chubby Cheeks Morgan I
Beaming at us today. He ll play host
to funnyman. Phil Silvers tonight
on nis own ABC show.
Radio operator examinations will
be held In rlty council chambers
Klamath Falls on May 8. 1948.
At 8:30 a. m. exams will be held
in radio telegraph, code and writ
ten tests: radio telephone, all clas
ses except restricted radio tele
phone.
At 11 a. m. amateur class A and
B tests will be held. ADollcatli
forms will be furnished by the fed
eral communications commission,
40 Central building. Portland S
Ore.. UDon renuest and will also be
available at the examination.
Bill Wentworth as a hlKh school
student made top salary as a radio
baseball announcer $100 Der week
He got the yen for radio when he
lived next door to a radio sports
caster In Oklahoma. He was a high
school student and got passes from
his friends to the games where he
carried soft drinks to the announc
er's booth and observed everything
The new Rusao-Finnish, mutual
aid treaty has been described by
leading Finnish politicians as ce
menting the little llultlc republic
tighter Into the eastern bloc but
f. ,n,,,t, ,H a i v a
country s i o v- I '
erelgnty. J
On the facenf
It that would
seem to be so.
Certainly there
Is no qurstlnn
Flulnml being
more firmly
bound to Rus
sia. However,
because of that
very fact It
strikes me the
wish Is fnther in
the thought about preservation of
freedom Just as It may have been
In the cases of the fiercely Inde
pendent states of Itulititrla, Roinitn
la. Yugoslavia. Hunttiiry, Polnnd
and Crrchoslovakla. lxMk at them
now, sweating under the Soviet
yoke!
Anvway, let's examine this latest
Russian move more rarefully and
not rush to conclusions. These are
dnys when wishful thinking ran be
mighty dangerous.
Fltltllng Nation
In the first place, why should
Moscow drop cave-man tactics In
dealing with Finland? Well, for one
thing the Finns I'kely would pre
fer to go down flithtlng rather than
accept servitude by treaty and the
bolshevtsis can't rfford tn stir up
a conflict of that sort at this criti
cal luneture.
The communist rape of Cretho
slr.vakln Is still a horrifying sulnect
n? anxious discussion nlwiul the flre-
stt'cs of Western Fnmie. and ihe
reds wnnt to Irt ihe matter die
dewn. The Scandinavian countries
of Sweden and Norway, lvlng rime
tn F'nland. are on edge. So Is Pen
msrk.
Then. loo. the Muscovites are
anxious In put their best side for
ard for the benefit of Ihe Italian
pnmmUTsts In the fnrthcomlnff ns
lltnl e'ectlnn. Conl-ol of Ilaly Is
n strnteeie nrlre rlthnut nrlre for
Puss'a in he drive to eommunlre
Western Europe and thus clom!n,te
the entire continent. In lesser de
gree this s!n Is true of France.
Finnish Mirror
So Moscow Is using Ftnlnnd as a
mirror to reflect the sun of Soviet
beneficence and thereby blind free
nations to what Is going on. Actu
ally the nature of the Ruaso-Kln-nMi
treaty doesn't alter one lota
the fart that Moscow ran take over
Ihe little country any time It wants
to.
HAI. Ill) V I F.
NEW YORK. April 8 1,11 BUI
Caeanr Is a young coiiietllau who
discovered that nonsense sounds
make sound flimnrlnl sense
One of the first true rmuctlliiiis
of the machine age, Hid has par
Inyed h I s tal- ii i . SHSLJi 1 1
eitla from a 117 I j I
ra wrcra juu SB el
theatre door
man tn star
billing In thr
musical show
"Make Mine
Manhattan "
He can do
"double talk" In
any Iniiguage
and Initiate any
of the noises nutl
machines that
cr mplltate modern life from s sub.
wav turnstile In a hand grenade.
"HlKht now I'm wmkinu up a skit
In which I piny the life of a whlte
wnlled tire," he snld.
First Break
In his present lirondwny Job
his first break In big lime here
ho Is so busy he meets hlmsrlf com
lug on and off the stage.
"I'm In nine scenes, have 11
changes In costume, piny 33 char
acters and hove to do 15 vocal annul
effects. " he said Ihe olher day at
t.lndv's. a plure where ieoplc go to
eal breitkfit.'t for hlllrh.
Carsnr Is a tail, good looking guv
from Yonkers who urd In drenin uf
becoming a grrnt musician.
During the war he served In Ihe
const gunrd His burlesque of air
plane niovlrs In the const guard
show "Stars and Hnnrs" won him a
Hollywood contract.
Sid liked the film colony nionry.
hut couldn't aland Ihe Inortivily be.
tween film aastgumen'.a.
"What a life." he snld. "They
were pnylng me more 111 a werk
than I had been getting In a year
with the const gunrd. But what did
I do? Plnv a gnme of tennis, then
Jump in Ihe xol Plnv a round of
golf, then Jump In the vmi Take
a ride In my rsr -and bark In'n
the pool again. It mas driving me
nuts "
Ho avoids "blue comedy," Uio off.
color gugs popular In anme nlghl
clubs, lie nnil Max Melmian, hla
writing collaborator, spend from
three to four months writing and
developing a single skit.
He drnpi'i'd one number, conlraii.
lt itl the lliltlsh and Husaiaui, bo
cniise people begun td look for po
llllrnl linplli III Ions.
"Humor la renlly like music It
hns no botiudnrlra," he snld "but
when people are under tension, yuu
ran t kid Ihi'iii. Insiruil of laughing
nt r biiilt'siiiir they alarl nuking, 'is
he k fascist, nr Is lie n communist?'
Then It Isn't funny. And Unit s bod
- heriuiM people should always be
able In Inllllh nt theiiiselves."
w
U d,
Grand Coulee
Bids Awarded
mostly by donations, by our good Jj eould bo,lt he Procedure of
FRIDAY EVE., APRIL 9
d:04 Sporla IJneon
:IJ Home Town Nawa
S:JS World Newe Summary
no Tha IherilfABC
:tft " "
:V1 Champion Roll Call ABO
:60 CJIUello IlghleABC
list "
:00 Tba fa! Man ABC
t This la t our FBI ARC
S:S " "
:.VS " h
00 Break the Bank ABO
:IS '
:30 Lakeabora Entertains
S:SAmer. l.eglon Program
10:00 Stardual Melodlea
I0:ls "
I0::0 Florentine Cardan! ABC
10:1., " "
11:00 Newe Summary
1 1 :0." Telaqueet
ll:IS ' "
li t v
RPt.W foelare
Dinner Uance
Klamaln Theatre Quia
Around Town '
Sporla Roundup
Dinner Dance
Tunee Tou Know
Voice of Spnrta
f lace Kid MRS
Wade Crawford
Keening Concert
lohn Wolohan Orrh. MRS
Blllr Roae. Horeeahoea MRS
rilenn Ifardr, Newa MBS
Wreetllng
,. a
Henry J. Taylor MBS
l alton l.ewla Jr. MRS
Album af Pine Muelc
Voice nf the Army
Mtialo Hall MBS
Sleep Serenade MBS
Newa MBS
neighbors. We have a lot of them
Get a shovel on your shoulders,
help fill up the ruts Instead of dig
ging them deeper. Then we may
hnve a better place to live In.
The Suburban League and the
Shasta View grange give the park
board the rlht to go ahead. This
Is what thev said, "In accordance
with resolutions adopted by the
grange and the Suburban league.
the park board Is hereby author
ized to purchase, maintain, develop
and supervise public parks In the
south suburban area."
No matter what vou do to us. the
good old U. 8. flag will fly over
Wlard Memorial park this summer
Harry Wlard.
Skulls Identified
A War Troohies
SEATTLE, April 8 (IPt The three
and a half year disappearance of
two Seattle morticians remained a
mvstery today.
Two human skulls found near
Bothcll were Identified last night as
those of Japanese soldiers killed on
Guadalcanal.
Before the "war trophies" were
identified by a Seattle man, King
and Snohomish county officers had
been checking Into the possibility
that they might be the skulls of the
two missing men.
The morticians, Earl J. Cassedy
and John F, Hennessy, have been
missing since they drove away from
a Thanksgiving eve party In 1044.
Little Ads get Big Results. Use
The Herald and News Want-Ads I
AS PURE AS MONEY CAM BUV
broadcasting a game.
in announcer re II 11 diirlno a
broadcast one nleht and turned the
work over to Bill who dirt all rlgh'
at It to the extent of landing a )oh
at rort worth. Tex., as baseball
announcer later.
Bill Is now with KFJI.
Starting this morning and fol
lowing through during the week.
Charlie MrFirlnn will have the
7:15 a. m. Bob Wills show with his
inimitable pntter and the 7:30
Standard Implement program fol
lowing will be emceed by versatile
Paul Alexander.
Chnmnlon hoe-callers from the
815 a. m. contest of the stale FFA
convention being held at OVS will
be guests on the 12:15 Payless Drug,
store show Friday.
An examnle of hog-calllne will be
given on the broadcast. Which re
minds us of one time Dnn Llskey
rave demonstration of cattle call
ing The cattle came humnlng over
the horizon In all directions In bel
lowing souads and platoons.
We can lust see the hogs strain
ing In their pens for m"es around
tP'lng to answer the call.
The 12:15 program Is emceed bv
Don Nenl and Is a 15-mlnute mull
on-lhe-street show "tnlk'ncr over
news Items of interest ri'h our
friends nd neighbors in Klamath
basin." The show Is broadcast Tues
dav through Friday wllh valuable
awards nresentcd on the Friday
mmrter-hotir.
CHAT-N-NIBBLE
1.155 Esplanade
Fried Chicken 75c
No Neck No lUcki
Call In Your Order 9151
COULEE DAM. Wash.. April 8 (X
TTt? burrnu of rrr Inmatlon tixU
nwanlrd a $2,789 .'.'IM romlmrtltm
contract nt Urn ml Coulee 1sm to
Prirr Klcwlt 8m of Ornnhn,
Neb. and the MorrUon-Knutlscn
company of Bentttr.
Tht firm submitted thr low bid
Jointly for a new control -boy build
liijr, a KWitrhvard and romoanion
Of one thiriK we may be dead struct ure at the huite dam.
The enAt control-bay bullduiff. the
bureau iniid, would houA equipment
for operutlnK the east powerhouAC
rhe iHiwerhnme belnir prepared
to hold the Unit x ion ooo-kilowatt
generator. m.ichtleM tn the world
to be Imtnlled on the east ide of
the dam.
The new east nwltchboard wilt be
YlAible tn the thousand of tourism
vtxltltut the dam. ofrirlnl.i wild.
The contract alv cover romple
tlon of a parttlnir area, bultdinir a
tunnel for control cable, enmtrur-
tlon of tower for power cnblr.".. and
wvernl othr project.
certain- there la no poMlblllty hat
ever of Kujwla ever allowing de
velopment of a situation which
wculd denrtve her of control of Fln
tond. That isn't mrrelv a matter of
a political l.m. It's military.
Thus we shall be wu not to nMve
the .Soviet "altruism'' toward Km
lend a higher ratine than It de
serve. Homesteaders
Start Work
Farm work Is belnf started on the
newly opened homestesd land In
Coppork Bay althoutth none of the
new homesteaders have moved onto
the land to date.
A. D.. Harvey. In chanre of the
USHFl homestead office, alter a trip
to Coppock Buy last week, reported
one man burnlnu stubble on his land
and another plowlnr. Several were
working together combining Ihelr
efforts and equipment and others
going at It alone.
Lester W. McDonald, number 31
on the drawing was plowing. As a
cloud of dust swirled up around him
he wondered audibly what kind of
land he was getting onto.
This snow storm somewhat de
layed preparation of the ground this
week.
A welcome home" psrty Is be
ing planned for the newcomers to
the Coppock Bay area by the year
old Tulelake homesteaders. The
time and place for the party will
be announced later.
Thrtf Fealhtrs
Riservt
"Ktrat Among Fine
Whiskies Since
1HH'.'." Treasured
whiskies hlt'tidrd
with Ihe Anna! grain
neutral apirita. Kav.
orwl .enjoyed every
where.
$O60
J 4 Of.
7)1
J.TI
V. J'jrMl"- -'
mm
OBIT
LONDON, April 8 im A dog
rated an obituary notice In the
personal column of the sedate
Times today:
"Colin and Zea Henderson re
gretfully Inform her many friends
that their cocker spaniel Ooldle
died on April I In her 14th year."
Ooldle was well known In the
fashionable west end, where she
accompanied the Hendersons on
their evenings out.
Bloodhound Used
In Prisoner Chase
REKDHPOHT. Ore.. April 8 (.TP.
Sheriff s officers put a blood hound
on the trail of an escaped prisoner
here yesterday to effect his
cspture.
Deputy Sheriff Carlson Florence
reported the prisoner. F.lmer
Frances Burnett, 50. broke away
Irom him earlier yesterday. Bur
nett. wanted on a Kelso, Wash
warrant charging forgery, was ar
rested earlier this week at the site
of the CCC cuinp at Wauhlnk lake
Burnett was arrested a second
time by state police and was to be
taken to Kuitene today for return
to Washington.
Portland Traction
Trade Falls Off
SAN FRANCISCO. April 8 lVl
Portland Transit company and Iti
subsidiary. Portland Traction com
pany, today reported consolidated
net Income of $353,108, enual to 93
cents per share of common stocK
for IB47. Oross revenues were 8.-
163.601.
No comparison with 1946 Is avail
able because the present corporate
structure was not established until
August 30. 1046.
The report said passenger traffic
was lower than In 1048 but higher
than In prewar years.
Freight traffic exceeded any pre
vlous year by a considerable mar
gin.
"FLAVOR-AGED"
and FLAVOR-PERFECT
r 'y lJ cornea In futl4iinrt bottle I'Ib
Fruit nereis time to ripen
fully. Anil Clicquot Cluli
Conger Ale also uses "lime"
tn xln ila mnlclilcsa flavor.
Fine Jamaica Ringer Is
faultlessly hlrmird with
other choice, lugriHllriils,
then ageel fur months.
Flavor-agril. Its giMMlnesa
cornea In fiillw-inirt hollies.
CLICQUOT ( Llin nOTTI.INO CO,
of Klamath Falls.
80S Spring SU rh. not
li 1 ad
ft
Thrt Folhfi V.J.IL
bottled in Kentucky..
mired throughout
merica. Today'a beat
llourbon "buy."
Serve it to your
gut-ala. 00 proof.
$410
41
Jamos E. Pepper
bottled in bond
under Government
supervision. Full-
bodied prewar
Straight Ken
tucky Uourbon.
100 proof.
35
1 QT.
GO
a t i - u
V4 7
Old Charter- '
Fine Kentucky
Straight llourbon,
6 year old. 88
proof. Every drop
prewar whiskey.
An idealchoicefor
the moatdiscrimt-
nating.
C35
48 QT.
Pebbloford, 100 Proof
bottled In bond un
der U. 8. Govern
ment supervision.
Prewar Kentucky
Straight Hour.
bon. "Knjoyed
in fine American
hom'm."
J 48
or.
r&-Jl
I, tSsp: jjgr I
thiii rttiHut "milium!, mt., raw roil,
.I. IHIIE MslHtll ItltlVI HINDU
WHISHT, It ert.l, 41 (lata si.lrll tflrih. 'i
1KIEI riAIHIII V.J.I. lOUIIOK Whllltr. "
HIM. N imI. 11 lialM laaikas UMitar.
4f iils ti.ai