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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1949)
MONDAY, AUG. 8, 194 PACI SIX HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON rax a jehuki tdltor ALCOUI SPUY Manaslas editor alaat snails al lat ami offlca al atlamata Auauat ao. isos. uoaar act w vwaiw Katarad as raiia. Ota. Marc 117. Today's Roundup By MALCOLM IPLEV rO many vacationist make a race out of their holiday travel They aft up a schedule that caiU lor night atopi several hundred miles apart, and they not only try to meet that gruelling program but to beat It. When It ail over, they may be able to bra to their friends about I mileage records and vast distances raveled, but they've muted many pleasant. Interesting and Inform- Iing thing en rout, usually, they art ao Ured when they get home they havent even got the I strength to boast about the vast CrLCT Many Inquiries 't Vr 35 (J distances covered, and their wort; ' . ; ..... f- . WMk iw ma until tii I get rested up from vacation. This writer has become a sort of lone-man travel information Bu- ireau In recent years because of 2 descriptive pieces appearing her and elsewhere In The M and N about various routes and roads, about routes are received at the office, and often on 8unday, as was the case yester day, I get calls from local people or through tourists who think I know about the best way to go some where, rm no authority, but I do my best. I mention It because so many people want to know the quickest way from here to there. I have Hone a rood deal of writing here about the route to Southern California via Alturas, Reno and over US 595, and tt Is true I have emphasized the direct ness and the possibility for fast travel over this route. If you want to get to Southern California quick, it is good for that. But perhaps I have overlooked making It plain that this route, like the US M and coast route Into the Southland, possesses many Interesting stopping places and aide trips. Virginia City, Tahoe, Yosemlte. Death Valley, the Sierra ghost towns, are some of them. The leisurely traveler can have a lot of fun along TJS39S and off on both sides of It, and he can come home rested and with memories that are more valuable than speed records. a a a a OKI little Incident in my experience is indicative of what I am talking about. A number of years ago. I spent most of a beautiful Sunday morning in the old graveyard on the hill above Sierra City, early-day mining town deep in the mid California mountains. It was most interesting two or three hours. On the moss-covered gravestones I read stories of mining disasters, of an early-day smallpox epidemic, of the death of a young Irish doctor who settled and died in this remote California mining town in the 'eighties and .whose four broth er back In Ireland had a tombstone erected In his memory with the Inscription. "We Are Still rive. Cars rolled by the cemetery at high speed on a nearby major highway, their occupant racing for some distant point In search of "something Interest ing." I had found it lots of It there in the restful shade of the pines and oaks in that ancient cemetery. See what I mean? These Days By GEORGE E. SOKOLSKT THX fiscal year 1Mb. which ended on June to, resulted in a deficit of ll.sll.OOC.000 for the federal government. Mr. Truman spent that much more than the federal government received. There 1 no war. The president sav that there la no depression. Yet we spent nearly 11.000.000.000 more than ws received and any cltlaen who honestly pays his taxes knows that the government receives too much by taking too large a share of his earnings. A government can always spend as much as It It minded to, but It can only get money out of the productivity of Its people. Nineteen forty nine shows an expenditure of 16. M,000.000 over IMS, which ought not to be because as this country get farther away from the last war, expenditure ought to decrease. But that It not the way it la going. If every year that we move away from World War II, expenditures In crease, It will not be long before all the earnings of all our people will have to go to the government. If It la not desired that such a mlllenlum be reached, then a halt must be railed sometime and somewhere. Mr. Truman Is halting nothing. He wants to spend even more. a a Earning Down ACTUALLY, with taxes higher than they ought to be. receipts for lwa were less than IMS by $3,965,000,000. That Is because earnings are lower. In a word, the government get less In revenue be cause the people gel less for their work. It Is Inter esting to note that withholding taxes, which affects most persons. Including all workers, decreased by $1.5(15.000.000. Secretary Snyder pointed to an In crease of tSM.000.000 in tax refunds, but that only meant that the system of collection Is confused and expensive and troublesome. A simple system would reduce the number of refunded taxes. Why collect taxes that will have to be refunded? Of course, one reason for the deficit Is an ex penditure of S4.W1.000.000 for EC A. which we ob viously cannot afford. If we have a deficit of $6, 000.000.000 and we give away $4,000,000,000, we are startllngly like the drunkard who stands drinks for the crowd but falls to pay his family's grocery bill. If we lack the money, why are we giving it away? ECA ha already proved to be a failure, as even Winston Churchill and Bernard Baruch have testi fied, but that does not mean that we shall stop spending. In fact, when a cut was proposed. Paul Hoffman threatened to resign, which would have made no difference one way or the other, as Paul Hoffman well knows. Also, the commodity credit corporation upped Its expenditure $1,788 000.000 for which there could be no necessity whatsoever, and the veterans got an additional $409 000.000, which the entire population. Including the veterans, could not afford to pay as the figure show. You never can afford to spend what you havent got. a a a a What Government Does SO, what does the government do? It does the same thing that you or I would do If we spent more than we got. I nearly said, "earned." but actually none of this is the earnings of the gov ernment: it is what the government takes from the earnings of the people. So the government Increased Its debt. For H year, from 1931 to 1944. the gov ernment went on piling up its debt from $16,801.45. 143 In 1931 to $269,433,099,173 by the end of 1946. That top figure for 1946 was reduced In 1948 to 8353393346J13 and everybody said that the turn had come, but in 1949. we Increased the debt by $478,000,000. And there Is no reason to assume that we shall do better in 1950. The Hoover commission showed the administration how to save $4,000,000,000 on running expense, but congress Is doing little about that and the re organisations planned by the president Indicate no saving. The Hoover commission labored to produce a comprehensive plan. .but both the president and congress are giving lip service but make no savings. For Instance, the department of welfare I going off on health and educational expenditures, which will mean spending more money. In fact. If Oscar Ewtng had hi way, there would be no limit to spending. And w now plan to arm our allies to the tune of billion. Are w drunk or are we prudent? SIDE GLANCES lata av ma trainee, an. t. n ata. a. a pat. ore. I'll bet po other baby in the neighborhood let than one year old it far enough advanced to do that!" BOYLE'S COLUMN Scrawled Note Penciled On Billboard Opens Old Case Of Missing KF Man YREKA. Aug. A penciled warn ing on a billboard at the Klamath nver village of Somes Bar recalls the 11-year-old disappearance of a onetime Klamath Falls resident. The warning read "To whom tt concern, will be in town before August 11 to avenge the death of Dick Sharp. Come to town and watch the fire works." Below It was the signature Pete 8 ha ley. Although Deputy Sheriff Charles BUrritt removed the sign, its con tents have the people of the Some Bar -Orleans area guessing. The disappearance of Dick Sharp, a thin, middle-aged Englishman, had been almost forgotten. Sharp dropped from light early in the fall of 1938. Foul play was suspected at the time. While prospecting along the riv er late the next spring, Melvin Cross saw a car in the water. It turned out to be Sharp Chevrolet pickup truck. The serial number of the engine removed by Sheriff A. A. Rots checked with Sharp reg istration. The truck had dropped off the tate highway at Windy point Into the Klamath down a 900-foot cliff. Windy point Is two mile south of Somes Bar. Sharp's body has never been re covered or a clue offered to his death. The Englishman, a native of that country, was a carpenter by trade and came to the rugged Klamath river country from Klamath Falls, purchasing property from Tom Mc Hale at Red Cap creek near Or lean In 1934. The warning may have been the work of a prankster, but It proved someone in the Somes Bar area had not forgotten Sharp's disappearance. Love Slayer Gets 70 Year Sentence CEDAR RAPIDS. la, Aug. 8 (Pi Dr. Robert C. Rutledge Jr.. of St. Louis today was sentenced to 70 years In prison for the love triangle slaying of Byron C. Hattman. District Judge J.' E. Helserman told the young pediatrician that he had committed a serious and vicious offense. "The sentence." he ssld. "must be severe for a long time." The Judge stipulated that the sentence be served at the Fort Mad ison state penitentiary "at hard la bor." The court said that because of Hotel At Yachats Burns YACHATS. Aug. t The three story frame Y achats hotel burned out early yesterday while firemen worked to save the coastal town's post office and a garage. Hotel Owner James Gross report ed none of the 30 guests were harm ed, although they fled into the rain In their nightclothes. Gross estimated the daciage st $35,000 and said he doubted the ho tel, built In 1935 and acquired by mm ust year, would be rebuilt. Vacatloneers and sports fisher. men Joined volunteer firemen from here and Waldport In manning the nose lines. Assistant Fire Chief B. F. Orubos said hi own crew wss hampered by being forced to use leaky hose on a new pumper that arrived a week ago. New hose had not been delivered. The fire burst through the roof, apparently after starting In the up per floor at about 4 a m. Two hours later the top floors and roof were burned away and the walls had col lapsed. Canadians estimate their country nas 1.Z1KUW square mile oi lor ested area. the statute and honor time for good behavior Rutledge period of lm prlsonment would be approximately 30 years "st worst," IIADIO I'llOUIlAMS MONDAY EVE, KFLW 145 kc :MTtlay-i Bprl Pat ileMaat Twa Newt- :SanrltJ NrtT linmiry 44) Kit Sew I lit Calls ABC I - : " " U " - I HThi La. R-.tit.tr ABC " 1:11 Nirni til Krart) 1:4ft Halt Smith Calls ABC I N Tbt Bailraad Hoar ARC l it Kill Smltb Call. ABC f&Hfnrr J. Tartar ABC Jlft ,l HArtbar Oaatb ABC iSKala Smith C alia ABC ' ' t;lft Prev'w Chat-LtiTlfhABC It 0 SlrhflrU Hartar ABC JtJlft Inaamala Cla" ItttFI Ktttrha lUlrt Ore.. ll:MBr i Tamaca Niwi ji:0.-. tig otr 11:11 II (I .: Al GLST I KFJ1 1249 kc Ciabrlol H fader MBI HI. Theatre Qaia Araand Tawa Wealhtr Da art R ) C baa. Shaw MRU Vatra mt tfaarti Laa Bark and Malta Analveraary Night" Lat Gtarrt fa It MBI Tbt fa lat MBI Jab oar Dtiman MBf Glcna Bartlr MBS ftamrnr Kaye Trtaarr Walter T rah a a MBS Harwlat Jehaaaa raaiil Affair af Peter Salts. Melwerfc MataaJ Newareal II a xa ' It at la tl It t It M TUESDAY A. M- AUGUST Car In tbt Mara Para- para" (harlla t Baandaa Marlia AcrenaaT ABO Te. af the M amine Braakfaal ClabABC Matt (he Bt.net" Nanry t'ralf ARC rvraanallty Time Mat, la HeMywaai ABO tea aaS Shea Mt Traa Mary ABO Blty Crack ar ABC C!ab Time ARC T4 Malaria An" Galea ftrabe ABC KPLW Ftalart Maairal RetlMe Oa Iht lartt treat Frank Hemlnrwa MRS Rreakfatt Oaag MBS fcewt Beit Bate (aril Brewa MBS Veer Marrlart rath Ian Plaabet larerltae al VeattraH Kalt Umlth fler-eke MBS Rata Bmtlb Rlmi MBS Boat af Plaaeera Marnlnr Matinee flleaa Hardy MRS Ravine ! Ratfy'a Laaaheea al raTs MBB Lat let PI rat PLBS Qatea far pap MBS RPI rutin TUESDAY P. M. KFLVV lttft kc II Nawa, Neea R4lliaa IZ:lMaek-al ReaatlaB' IT U Pifltti Sidewalk Shaw II 43LI.Ua I Thit ABC l:t " 1:11 ft't Daacetiiat I :Jt Madera Baaaaacta ABC 1:4ft t:aaararta Parker ABC f :M Bride and Green ABC 1 MMedr Mallaee 1:1ft " l it "AdS-A-ttat" 1:4ft JltS 4:M Reqaeatfaltp Tear 4:l Reqaealfallr Ttart 4M " m 4:4ft " " It Tan O'Sbanltr Oelf ABO 4 1 Sky atlas ABC :4ft " AUGUST I KFJ1 124S kc Naaie Baa da N'tai Tear Daae Taaet Market-Llveetaek Areardtag TaTh Br4 Jaaaaas Pa ail I y Newt A (alert the Karat MBS Blrkyi Reqaetl Tbt Tem a tan a MRU Art A Dottle Tedd MBS Tea Danre Living With Gat Organ Waller Trehea MBS Prank Hemingway MBS Peetlng Parada MBS Newt MBS B B B Ranch MBS TUESDAY EVE, aTaday'a parte Part til Heme Ti he wa rt II Werld New Hammarp 4 :M L. S. Kay Bead 4 " " I Matt By 8trt ABO (tuft " ?.Arantraty ARC I WPIrata Treatara Pay tt: pwentld Cchaea R:lft Malrlm Kaley K MTewa Matting f Air ABO ft M - " :l . t;X4W4f Btrmaa Oreh. !: Rlrk field BeprtrABO lt:lft Inaemnla ('lab I4:4 Beverly Hllla Ofrh. ABO D M Berg'a Teaaca Ntt aiga uri RPLW Ptat AUGUST I C.ahrfel Healler MBS RU ThtaUa )ali Araand Twa" Waiber Haarla Raandaa" hea. Shaw MBt (.regary Had MRS Naebltt Hl-Ha ran hfcav lhn Slttl MRU Olann Hardy MRS Evening Cnneerl Alang Natara't Trail Dennlt Day Walter Trabaa MBS Harwlat Jabaaaa F ata My Offlelal Dttacllva Nelwarh Malaal Ntwtratl Ufa Off RfI Ptttirt Hollywood Wriiers Are On The Move, For Better Job By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK, oft in the old days a Hollywood script writer had very little to live for. He supported a house or two. a wife or three, some children, a few serv ants and a five-star ulcer. This brought htm little happiness for. after all. he was only a writer. And In the hierarchy of Hollywood writer was Just a HSOO-a-werU : object of charity. His forlorn paper dream the script was hacked by the producer, m I s conceived by the director, am bushed by the actors, and left writhing on the floor by the film cutter. The only thing left on his orig inal product in many cases was a comma here and there. And you can't hear a comma on the screen. Today all this It changed. It It now possible for movie writers to get ahead in the world without marrying the daughter of the man who owns the studio. There la a happy ending for them now, too. They ran work their way up to become directors, producers and yes even film cutters. Some of them now write, produce, direct and cut the film. They run the show from idea to screen. This is all to the good In the opinion of Sidney Buchman. who spent a decade as a writer before he became a producer. "In tome studios 75 per cent of the producers are writers or former writers, he said. "And about hall are carrying out both functions." Buchman. 47, Is an expressive o 1 ;1 i. A ' . . K Hal Boyle featured man who looks and ges tures more like Exlo Pinxa or John Barrymor than a man who got his callouses studying a typewriter. "If a man has the skill to write s fine script." he said, "he certainly should have the Judgment to carry it out to know whether a set Is right or a costume Is right. "When a writer trying to Imple ment his work In film first comes down from the Ivory tower, he falters a bit, then Uses to It like a duck takes to water. Geod rndcrmtandlng ' "After all. who hat a better un derstanding of the script than the man who wrltet lt Why thoulsn t he be able to pick and direct the cast and see that they carry out his own conceptions? And as for cut ting the film, what Is that but another rewriting technique?" Buchman himself wrote such script as "The 8ln of the Croas." Theodora Ooet Wild." "Mr. Bmlth Ooet to Washington" and "Here Comes Mr. Jordan." He became a producer In 1937 and It best known for hit music dramas. Including "A Song to Remember." based on the life of Chopin. His latest la "Jolson Sings Again," a Columbia production. "t like the music drama form and I want to do more, he said. "The phase of our cultural life that people are least acquainted with is great music, and they don't know the importance of this type of genius. The great composers con tribute st much to the world as any man." Buchman plant to mike films presenting more classical and oper atic music, climaxed finally by a picture on Beethoven's life. , "That one," he said, "would have to be right. The others could be only practice pieces for It." Cm Adorning today't column Is Gor don MacKAe. who aktppcrt tonlghl't Railroad Hour on ADC. A ttory carried In the Saturday edition of The Herald and News, but previously aired on KP'LW, started "a battle of sweet peas." The yarn, picked up by Malcolm Epley Jr., told about a local family . . who raised the I J 1 ax " ; flowers to the " i.2 C. t t.iwrtna helohf k . a of alx leeL four lllchra. i -Mere mia- 1 - rtmt air and Mrs. Mal- t rolm Teare of I8JJ Melrose, who charged In to the LW studio alter hearing the newscast, and proudly claimed Uiat their aweet Red llurd peas reached the height of g-7. Added note: they left a bouquet of the multi-colored flowers with Newscaster Word Wynn. This sounds like a challenge. Perry Carle, who brought thia in formation to your culuniiiist. avers that Tulrlakcra w. til scull al Klam ath Falls' "midgcu." 11ml Ueorge Valentine, atar auper sleuth uf Mutual, haudlea a atraiuie cae tonight i p. m when ht takes over the problem of au eX'Convict who comra home to Hud hia wile dead. The released man sciuea "loul play." How could It be any loulerf I aa a 1 THE GALLUP POLL Fear Of Eventual War Still Felt In America THE DOCTOR SAYS Doctors Differ On Change By EDWIV T. JORDAN, M. D, Written for NEA Service Medical opinion it divided at to whether or not there It a rapid de crease In the functioning of the sex gland in men and if ao at what age It occur. Some authorities claim that while the activity of the male sex glands does slow up with sdvsnclng year, it 1 too gradual to be a true change of life. Other believe that at least in some men a decrease In functioning No Secrecy For Barkley Now ST. LOUIS, Aug. ( (V-With nothing like the secrecy attempted two weeks ago. Vice President Barkley turned up at a ball game yesterday with a very lovely and charming St. Louis widow. Those are the adjectives he used with reference to Mrs. Carleton 8. Hadley, while she stared straight ahead at they tat together in owner Fred Salgh't box at Sports man's park at the game between the Cardinals and Giants. "Romance?" he was asked, and he answered: "There have been rumort like that about me for the past year but that't as far aa It's gotten." The last time the vice president detoured hit Washlngton-b o u n d plane to St. Loul for a Sunday luncheon with Mrs. Hadley it was supposed to be "sort of secret," ac cording to reports. Yesterday they kept their dste In iront oi some 23,000 persons. Poachers Along Columbia Watched PORTLAND, Aug. I (IP) The Oregon fish commission tightened Its legal weapons against poachers on the Columbia river Friday. It re-deflned the term "dnftnet" In order to keep fishermen from anchoring such net in the Colum bia or plugging entrance to tribu taries with them. The new defini tion calls a driftnet a glllnet that drift with the tide or current at all time. The commission tald Columbia river commercial fishermen had Indicated they would agree to a weekly closure In the fall salmon season In order to allow more fish to resch spawning areas. I It' Mighty! of these glands may come fairly rapidly and produce symptoms which Justifies speaking of a male change of life. They believe that men go through this period some what later than women do usually between 45 and M. Symptoma May Develop Many men do not have any symp tom at all which can be attributed to decreased functioning of the teg gland. Some, however, describe a distinct feeling of tension with a sort of inward feeling of trembling, which It made worse by excitement or fatigue. Some men around M may be restless and complain of sleeping poorly. Numbness snd tlnglbig of the hsndt or feet mty be present It It clslmed thst the memory become poorer and the ability to concentrate Impaired. A mild feeling of depres sion also teem to be common. Dizziness, palpitation of the heart, cold hands and cold feet, slight shortness of bresth and sudden flushing of the face, neck and upper part of the chest are also mentioned. Easy fatiguabllity may be present. Waning of the sexual power, real or Imaginary, frequently causes men of this age to consult their physi cians. Any of these symptoms may be the result of gradual rather than audden change. Any of them also could come at other ages snd from other causes. Also It must be re membered that many men do not develop any of these symptoms at all. Authorities have studied the ef fect of injection of the male hor more testosterone propionate In men complaining of tuch symptoms tt those mentioned. The value of this Is still doubtful. Note: Dr. Jordan I unable to answer Indlvloual questions from the readers. However, earn day he will answer one of the question in hi column. The Doctor Answers Question: I have been drinking a quart of milk a day and since doing so have developed rheumatism in both knees and shoulder. Could milk have caused this trouble? Answer' This is almost certainly a coincidence. There 1 no reason to believe that the drinking of milk will cause any form of rheumatism. Baaerull managers will tell you ; emphatically when they send Ui a pinch-hitler, they re aoout eO per I 'cent sure hell hit. I'lhals wrul I the emergency clouter Is lort, j XtutUAl need have no worry auout j Waller lronau, lAaanuigiuu Bureau 'Chief for the Chicago tribune, wiw j will take over the nuke lur ui!uu ivwia r. ionium uirougn rriuay, August 1. Time la p. m. It s been a dull week in the news department as tar as spot news goes. Head atory on page 10 Baturuaya Herald and News) . . . but we re waiting ' land auxioualyi lor Ult lid to blow olfl You'll want to hear "The Plo. Ooes Double wnh uie Count nl I Monte Cristo turning actor to I catch a murderer. Inats KM!. p. m. Tuesday. Marriage, like Income lax, hits UKIO Bill Heres the "I do's" lined up for the Bride snd Uroom show this week. Tuesday througn Pridsy will Join In wedlock a tiftj,m Hand a marine sergeant, a novelist "u a isw student, a lyric soprano and a general contractor, and a school teacher and a dairy hus bandry student. Kr-LW It the station, 2 30 p. m the tune. Here's the highlight in the world of sports for the radio audience una week. KfXW will carry a preview of the Lesnevlch-Charles tills fight tonight (Monday V 46 p. m. Tnt managers of both battlers will be at the mike in addition to other dignitaries of caullfiawer row. The battle la Wednesday night. Pun of the week: Dick Kleiner, scoreboard tportawrlter, quipped about Lha F.fltta floH. .ll ..- wiu m ! a championship battle, more or Br (iKOKHK tIAlll T Director. American Inatltute ef Public Opinion PRINCETON. N. J . Aug. -While there Is little frar today of all Im mediate war, a widespread fatalistic belief prrstata among the American people that a third world war Is coming eventually Uiat aimed con flirt la more or leas Inevitable. This gloomy outlook Is revealed In a public opinion survey completed Just before the fourth anniver sary, August t. f of tha dropping of the atom bomb on Hiro shima which quickly brought the second world w ar to a close. The survey asked a cruas section of voters to express their opinion on the following Ques tion: Oalliip "lie you believe there will be an other vVorld War within the nest 14 sr 30 years ar do JOB believe there la a good chance Is avoid one?" The vote' War likely . Ml War ran be avoided 41 No opinion . The same question, worded In ex actly the same way. was put to the people in the U. 8. tone oi (Jermaiiy in a poll conducted by the Opinion Surveys Branch of U. 8. Military government early this year. The Oerman people voted as fol io s: War likely 57". War can be avoided .. - 31 No opinion . 1) The results of tills 1W survey In Germany allowed a alight decrease In the number uf persons who thought war was likely as compared with a similar poll taken In Oer many In 1041. View Meld lleaplte I N Of course no man can foresee what Is going to happen Jl years hence, and the average American voter haa no first hand facta on the International situation on which to base a Judgment. Hut It la interesting and may be aignilicant that the widespread public assump tion of another war Is found tods. In spite of the creation of the United Nations to foster peace and In spite of our national dralre for permanrnl pence. One hopeful note in today's sur vey Is that tilt besl-rduraled voter ar tli least prsaliulallo about the proapecta of lasting peace. In fact, a majority of college-educated per sona with opinions on the subject think kar ran be avoided. Here 1 the vote by degree of edu ce lion: War I'sa Us No I .a r 0i. College . 4ti . 4U'v a t High School . 411 41 tlisils School , t4 36 10 Veterans of the first two world war are inclined to exiect another war. forty-one per cent think It can be avuldrtl, while &J per cent think war In at to 30 yeara la likely, and t per rent have no opinion. Ne Immediate t'sntllrl For the Immediate future com paratively few voters see another Ne Immediate ConHlrt When polled In May by the In stitute, only IS per cent of voteia thought the United Mutes would find Itself in war within the nest year, while 74 per cent said no war was likely In that period, and II per cent had no opinion. t'Ol.lt PORTLAND. Aug. g Bummer? Not at all: It waa freesing today at Bend. The mercury there dropped to 33 degrees early Una morning. Baker and Klamath Kails recorded lows ol 43. A cool air masa moving In from the ocean accounted for the lower temperatures, and increased humid ity through the stale It was a welcome respite to fire-alert fur-esters. South America Quake Worst Since 1939 NEW YORK. Aug. t i The Ecusdor earthquakes. In which the drath loll la over 400. Is South America a worst tragedy of tills kind since 1IIJ9. In that year, 30 ooo were killed In earthquakes In Chile. Only oilier recent quakes on the southern continent were last April when 44 were killed In South Cen tral Chile, and In November. 147, when 0 were killed In Central Peru ! Other major earthquake rales i trophrs of the last two decades: IM-3Ji killed in Pukui. Japan; more than I (so killed at Lthwa. fll i kang province. China. I l.i-rsingan. Turkey, J3.0O0 killed. It"t Qoetta. India, eoono killed I I14 India, more than eooo killed. 1B33-Honshu Island, Japan. IMS i dead. 1013-Karuu. China. 70 000 killed. I The greatest toll of lives taken ; bv earthquakes this century was In 1930. at Kanau. China, when 10 000 were killed. In the big Ban Franrtam earth quakes of IWsJ. there were 453 fatal I Hies. But property damage ran to tlMOUOOOD the heaviest loll la J earthquake property damage or I record. It'a Mighty! Its Mlthlyl i Attention' Like the oak from acorn, the trackless trnllev Iranrf I... that, at the end of 1W. 4 Amer- iu auopicu iracxiese trolleys In their own transit .v.. tern. ' r lilj v the path of true love . . . never run smooth. Or doe it? It' the question Id life that make it fascinating and it' the answer that make My True Btory dsrinf snd dramstlcl RSYiMJE A Cempltt Btory Every Day Monday-Friday 10:3 A. M. DIAL 14.K KFLW suiiics oaectiTiao coupsst Record Fans i mm.. 0 II -Ui j vU GO KING COLE and Ilia TRIO RECORDS of the King Cole Trio ond" Woody Herman available at the Armory Dance Tuesday Get Your Favorite Rtcordi Hart them by "Woody" and "King Cola" at Derby's Record Bar in the ARMORY - at th DANCE