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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1949)
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 21,1 949 PACE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON Editor mix JINKINS aUnaSlna gaiuie M asanas l SM on ernes or Klaotslk (W M AtUUJI 10. ISOS UOM ! OS omiiii-m, mm im tine . , , Saw Charlie Hovey, former K F, lumber men, get oft the south-bound plane at Sugene . , , The United eUUon In Bugene feature a ba relief In wood of Paul Bunyan ducking a tllght at DC-J a Tht Inscription, alM wood carving, mention "United Airlines." OUd to see that street signs at tht K P. airport no an correct with thrt wordi: "United Air lines saiaiae or ma eeociar raies T - rz.uZjr?Jz r-K'u.t-r These Days SUBSCRIPTION SATESl jnonlB n ". noma IIJS aitM ese jrosr aiouo lp n The Air Again 6 ADDISON Bv DEB ADD1SOM BUSINESS In Eugene celled lor s quick trip up and back, ao what could you do after a free eicuralon In a United Malnllner Just a week ago but haul ott and BUY a ticket. SeaU wera avail able; and we were airborne at . in m m Rundav ai Der ached- 0 ' : 1 The pilot chose to awing over 1 Pra M lak on U1U run. 9V O had the unique experience of seeing Crater lake from the air t dmk. Crater lake la always kCi J Crater lake, but thla certainly wa V v 1 different. Everything looked blue v 1 in thla dusk view, iwuigns uaa OTl ' ! painted the vivid red and brown a V clltis with blue from the lake. J 1 From there on the acene waa kVJ dominated by a eonUnuing. chang ing aunaet; a ribbon showing the length of the coast between hort- son and low-hanging clouds. (Inside the plane the scene waa dominated by a Terr tasty dinner, served by s very attractive stewardess.) LOITERINQ at the Eugene airport while bag were being unloaded, your eye Ut with a atari on the legend. Eugene. Br. 390. We Hew DOWN to Eugene, not UP. Howard Boyd, who waa an active Scoutmaster when he served aa wire chief lor Pacific Tel Tel here, waa waiting to bop the plane lor s Portland meeting . . . thus ending a two weeks vacation for him. A quote from Boyd: Tre lived In most every town ta Oregon and m still take Klamath Falla aa the best town In the state." Howard la wire chief in Eugene. Said he did some business with blue bscks and ateelhead thla season. Wl learned from the gal airport limousine driver that the Eugene airport Is nine miles from downtown, and also that the -home of the state university" la enjoying s smog, crested by the new pulp mill st Springfield. Payroll envelopes culture! Klamath and Eugene often are opposite. A Klamath Falls group worked long snd hard and memorialised congress to get the canal fenced to keep youngsters out of It. A Eugene group worked long and hard and raised funds themselves to reflood the mlllrace to get young people Into it. Eugene waa uu awful A ceremony waa held over the gushing waters st the week-end. . THE return flight entailed an hour and ten min utes In the sir craning the neck to identify such landmarks aa Mt. Jefferson. Three Sisters (over low-flying clouds in the valleys); then the Rabbit Kan up the west ridge of the Rogue gorge, Mt. Thlelsen, Diamond lake. Crater lake; and finally Wood River valley. Klamath lake and home. A closer scrutiny, this trip, of the usually lush meadows of the Wood River valley, now showing quits a Uule brown, disclosed cattle graslng all right. Tney must have been grssing, but from this sigh, birds-eye view they looked more like lice on the barn floor. The swing In to land showed that widening work on the Diversion canal had progressed almost to the airport. PET HATE: People who call you at horns snd then hsng up Just ss you come panting In from outside, upstairs or somewhere distant . . . Used to be that all the boys figured the best looking girls In town were telephone operators. Since dials sup planted the "hello girls" the beauties have taken to the air. Did you ever aee a homely airline stew ardess? ... Sir Stafford Cripps said anyone who followed the black market (of currency, we presume) was not surprised at what they did to the British pound. He dldnt mention Paul Matthews by name but the KF. accountant had predicted this long By GEORGE K. SOKOLsKY WHAT all the conferring and trading and deal ing amounts to is that the United 8 la tea, fearing a war with Soviet Russia, find It necessary to contract for allies. This policy has been con tlnuoua since the summer of 1M1 when Harry Hopkins Hew first to England and then to Russia to tlx StaUn In the war against Hitler. Shortly before, Stalin and Hitler had been allies. The deal with StaUn. subsequently strengthened by Uie agreements at Teheran and Yalta, costs this country til, 000.000.000 In s cash outlay to Stalin; our elimination from the East of Asia; and the prolongation of the war In Europe Indefinitely. In directly, because of a policy of appeasement, we encouraged the Infiltration of Stalin's agents into our government, and from these vermin we have not yet been able to tree ourselves. It the direct and indirect costs. If the money and the Intangible costs of thla enterprise are ever assessed, we shall probably discover that it would have been cheaper to have gone without that alliance. Costly Ally THE British have cost us about SM.000.000.000 In direct outlays since 119. It is impossible to assess the Indirect outlays What it comes to Is that this country, by one means or another, la under writing the continued existence of Great Britain as a power. The British desire that we shall continue this process, until the British schleve an -equilibrium- in world trade. That -equilibrium" they are not likely to attain for three reasons: 1. A large part of the world, in which British trade used to be important, has been closed through Russian imperialism. Even should Orest Britain be able to make s barter arrangement with Soviet Russia, it would last only until the Russian empire could Increase production Barter la a difficult method of exchange and proves disadvantageous to the country that must export In order to get food stuffs snd rew materials. 1. orest Britain can only rely upon the sacrifices of the United 8 tares as long as there is no un employment and no depression In thla country. The first signs of tr"""1" diiloratlon here and public clamor will Insist upon protective apparatus to keep out of our country goods priced cheaply by any government aa a political measure. Sooner or later. American labor will revert to Ita policy of a pro tective tariff and exchange rate, from which It had been lad sway by one world Internationalism. Thla trend Is beginning to show now. however slightly. Similarly, the wheat deal at the recent Washington conference will be chewed over by the American fanner. It will probably wreck the entire trans action. 1. Unless the United States underwrites British deficits, the welfare atate program was to price British goods beyond competition Is the open mar ket. Thus, the British fsce permanent dependence upon the United 8 la lea. if they are to continue to price their goods at competitive levels In a word. Great Britain has been making herself an economic satellite of the United States. Whst devaluation will do to to be seen. Britain's Danger YHI danger in thla condition la greater for the British than for the United 8tates. In the first place, no country can long be an economic satellite without becoming a political satellite. The United States win sooner or later come to regard British costs of government as the business of the American people because so much of it is paid by the American taxpayer. When It Is recognised that this huge cost Is designed to assure the United Sutes an ally In tune of war, this country may demsnd of Its government a realistic and tactual assessment of the fighting value of the ally and the cost of maintaining the it may prove not worth too much In a war with Russia, although its value was greater In World War I and during the first year of World War n than subsequently. In a word, how much do we need to pay for an ally? Economy Fight Enters Another Round; Strikes, Devaluation Cloud Outcome Bv 8AM DAWSON lrw YORK. Sept. Jl OPy-The bell sounds today for the fourth round. Labor and management in key Industries square off for the battle over security. And It is timed at a moment of great Inde cision ss to which wsy our economy is headed. The fourth round battle might easily decide. It comes hist when our British cousins have aimed a blow at com modity markets, which msy or may in time mean a further decline in the cost of living. Management is set tot use that as a new weapon In fighting labor cost hikes. The fight comes to a climax Just when businessmen across the na tion are wondering If the pickup or ders last month means an upturn in trade this fall, or Just the neces sity to replace depleted inventories, but still on a hand-to-mouth basis. Businessmen feel the boat couldnt be rocked at a worse time than now. Fall Outlook Many caun observers think that the wsy the public mind works this fall will determine whether business goes up, or takes another gentle slide down the deflation trail. If people think times are going to be good, they may buy a little more. If they think prices aie still due to come down, they may put off buy ing a little longer. The balance Is that ahaky at the moment. So what do we have? We have more lndedatan : Will the coal stop page spread ft the steel industry, the auto industry? Will manage- SIDE GLANCES wetMet variants li A r It a " i it i r. n i 1 Mackenste Th Cyrenalra One of Uie ticklish problems with whk'h the United Nations will have to deal in the Immediate future la whether to continue the limited self-rule which has been tentatively established by Uie British in the former Italian Mediterranean colony of Cyre nalra. This new gov ernment waa In augurated Sep tember It by Britain as mil itary occupation authority ap parently pursu ing a courts somewhat sim ilar to that of the western powers In the matter ot the aerman gov ernment at Bonn. regime la headed by Emir Bayld Mohammed Irdrla el Bemuat, the prUiccly personage who long has been both religioua and temporal leader of his people. There la a disposition In some UN quarters to criticise Britain for making such a positive move in advance of assembly consideration. The decision about Cyrenalra and the other Italian colonies, by the way, a the only legislative action which the assembly thus tar haa been authorised to make. Power to decide this Important Issue waa conferred by the 1 1 a II a n peace treaty. Of course, despite any argument over the timing of the event. It long has been expected that Cyrenalra (Mussolini a prise colonial develop ment' would be turned over to the, Srnuiwl. who are a Moslem sect of Arabs. Britain promised them dur ing the war that thev never asaln give Uie order- and he was amasrd , would be relumed to Italian rule, at the lack of shoving. Britain's chief Interest In Cyre- -Here one Individual doesnt Ira- I nmira anH it u harH hv amHra from Osaka, thinks one American pose upon another." he said gravely, j u that thla ex-colony Is an Im- f.xl v 1 so im vr ma awce mc v s4 a mt are. "We'll be leeinjr you mort often for a while. Jot th family it starving on my wife's diet!" BOYLE'S COLUMN Osaka Sam Tours America, Says Falsies Not For Japs By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK iPv Sam. a cigar- smoking, sakt-drtnklng big wheel i The World Today j By Dr.WlTT M.t'Kr-.N7.1K AP Foreign Affairs Analyst i a a ipless sll- jfA T4, ment give In on the pension Issue? Will production halt in these key Industries and spread unemploy ment through their allied and d e- pendent Industries? Already thousands of workers are being laid off on coal-hauling railroads because ot the pension deadlock Idling the coal miners. Bteel Sbewdowa The steel industry says It will have to slow down next week, to ssve dwindling eoalplles. Mean time, steel executives debate the pension Issue with the steel unions. The strike deadline in steel Is next Sunday morning. Steel executives have been un usually convincing this tune In say-1 lng they won't back down on the issue of paying all the freight on Uie product has only a limited future in Japan. The product Is falsies. -It Japanese girl wear European d r e a s ." ss il Sam. -maybe falsies all right. -But If she wear kimono no!" It seems Uie Japanese feml nine ideal bumpless houette. -8 nickname he picked up here la Isamu oa heki. 47. man axing director Hal Boyle of Uie Kinki Nippon railway, the largest Independently owned rail road In Uie Orient. The railroad owns a chain of ho tels, department stores snd thea ters, and Sahekl Is vlslUm America to drum up some tourist business for the lend of cherry blossoms. -Business bad now. better next spring." he aald. "Haw's stock mar ket doing?" We had a long Ulk with Sam and the interpreter he leaned on when his own thoughts exceeded his English Oeonte Alexander, Tokyo traffic manager for Uie Northwest Airlines. The Jspanese Silk association asked him to find out why Ameri can women prefer nylon stockings, and Sam aald: -I feel that silk stockings are more flattering to women's legs than nylon." Thoroughly broad-minded as well aa keen-eyed, he gestured with his hsnds as If outlining a barrel, and remarked: -American women beautiful very shapely. AU have originality In dressing." Sam made a trip on the subway, but it failed to give him any new Ideas on how to sardine more passengers onto his own railway. It already carries from 1 .000.000 to 2.000.000 commuters dally. He does plan, however, to put on some cute girl hostesses. They'll peddle tea. A big league baseball game gave his biggest thrill of Uie tour to Sam. who has the yen to buy a team for himself sometime. He was dis appointed at Uie small crowd only about 40.000. -In Japan big game draw 100.000," he said. -The thing that Impressed him most was that Uie crowd got up voluntarily at the sound of the naUonal anthem -Nobody had to It must be pointed out here that I pnrtant military base, dominating Sam dldnt see the subway In the I the main shipping route through rush hours. the Mediterranean. The harbor of What did America have that Tobruk of evil war memories and would be helpful to Japan? "There lot of very big things here that wouldn't fit small country like Japan." Sam mused. But he thought I strait of there was room for automrttc vend- I canal. lng machines including pinballers. Back In IB4J. when Montgomery And he felt Japan could adopt a I had lust driven Marshal Rommel the big Island of Crete to the north. form a saddle rtgrt across the Mediterranean life-line from the Gibraltar lo the Sues higher respect for women, a thing that struck him about Uie United States. "In Japan woman walks behind," he said. And what Japanese custom did he think America might follow to Its advantage? 8am thought and thought. ""'ell. Japanese men very patient under bad luck." he aald. and his face became bland and Innocent -Japanese women very, very faithful to their menfolks." out of Cyrenalra. I spent some Ume In thai area and later waa given the opportunity ot meeting Uie grand Senusal In Cairo. I was guided to him by two of his trusted lieutenants and had a long talk with him about his hopea. He certainly expected that Cyrenalra would be returned to his people and, while he expressed no personal am bitions, I had no doubt that he be lieved he would be their head. The SI -year-old prince la all that the moat romantic could wish an Arab shlek to be. IIAUIO PUOGHA31S WEDNESDAY EVE 8EPT. 1 9 Tlr'i tr1 Pit :IHmb Ta WW U fV4.rH N tammtrr M Om Trial ABC u :4 " U " " l:NTk LM ABO til " 1:4ft BwtfUn tort" :M Hbm ! 111 Caaalfjr M Boris KarUffABC I MTki CrBBltrABC It - I llAaulif Mr. kUUac ARC t: " 1:M Straff! Bprtr ABO :! Iinai Clab .:M " U lIAnnut. Hat! Or a. ABC llrM Nw. aaiaiarr 11 at Ufa Off 111ft 11:4 KF J1 1244) ke (.arlal HtatUr MR! 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Naata BbbOsT Viwr Tar Daara Taat Markt-I.Iat4M'aa Accardiag I tka Rcrt Jaaaaaa Ftaillr Nwt Aralart Taa Starai MBS irkv'a Bqata ftrila ( rarkrt MBS Th t44 MRU Mvla wllk G4 OrfBa David B4 MRS Orfaa ralUB f.awll Jr. MR rranh Bmlnf;war MRfl Bhlnl lh tlarr MBS Nw DLRS Iralfbt Arraw MRS tBBt. MlatBllBlMRS THURSDAY EVE, SEPT. tX tT17i laart fr a:i nai Twa nwa :ttwrlS Nwa mar IT Cart ABC 4 " - 41 Th Baraialra ABC 4 n " 1 CillllNM ABC - -l.Mr.art Rlar 1 u Re4Mn lrl aorlg al Aatiir Bar ABC I M - " 5 ltKaaia Ik Mta ABC M - - itBb-trt Malrairr ARC It " ? lraaa Rrt MFIrrt Haa4r4 Taara ABC :tt - " ItMIkifMI Rr1rABO 1 It lataaiala Claa 14:t - l 4t RaMll Ratal Orck. ABC 11:a Kwi RBaiatBrr 1t t lifa Off IMS 11 4t kf-LW faaUra Oaarl! Hattr MBS BL Taaatra ' AraanS Taara Waiar Hprta Ranta Rill Hrnry MRS l.an Rbb l.lta a Ta mtj ft" Vwrkj Aacttaa ffBliff TaailSr MRS rialBf-Haallnt ClaS MRS Ml Vtal MR GIbb BarS MRS Jha Walahaa Or a. MBS rr4 Mlaalana MBS ft-at I a. Final MRU ralla l,wl Jr. MBS jhna Fimllr Atr.a. af ralraa TSar la ' raiSr pib ( Malaal rVwarl- Mil falara n am. a. - . M i 11 Ira Dave I'nderhUI pension plan. They want Uie work er to kick Into Uie fund too. Coal stockpiles, on a nation-wide basis, are large. But some large users, like steel mills, csn't store enough of It to keep going very long without new supplies. Others, like Uie utilities, are said to be well stocked and able. to ride out a coal strike for many weeks. 1 Feed Ultimatum The auto workers union hss told Uie Ford Motor company to grant a 1100-a-month pension by Septem ber 39, or else. The union has singled out Ford this year for Its fourth round showdown. Rail brotherhoods have been hav ing trouble with the roads over the dlesel locomotives. A presidential emergency board has Just turned down firemen's demand for an ex tra man on dlesels. It also has said no to a plea for a second engineer on dlesels. Management, trying to assess the effect of British pound devaluation on world trade and prices, thinks It hss a new argument against fur ther benefits to labor this year a two-edged argument. First, It's going to be harder to aell American goods abroad and meet foreign com petition h re, hence costs of pro duction should not go up. Second some Important commodities are likely to drop In price, adding to deflation In this country, and bring ing on a further decline In Uie cost of living. That, says management, means workers don't need Uie bene fits. To which the unions appear ready to answer In the Immortal word of the Amerl an commander In Uie Battle of The Bulge: Nuts. Static By DAVE I'NDERIIILL I was beginning to wonder If any one besides myselt ever read this column. But last night I received two phone calls from members of Uie fair sex. asking for me and In quiring If I was Uie one who wrote Static." Reaching for my trusty Ai. and dialing Uie number of my attorney on another phone, I hesita tingly answered in Uie afflrma tive. But really It la nice to know that someone has Ume enougn to resd this stuff. My first caller wss Mrs. Kirk Patrick, 312 Ml Kin ley street. And the Intor- nation she gave me was quite In teresting. If you will remember last night's "8tatlc." I went to great length In describing a new program now car ried by JI. The program. "So Ooes the Story" la, or I should say, was produced by John Neblett. For Mrs. Klrkpatrlck Informed me that John Neblett was killed about two years sgo in a plane crash, either In Illinois or Indiana. That certainly was news to me. It seems that Uie program was transcribed quite a while back, and that no aponsod had been found for It till Just recently. I am really grateful to Mrs. Klrk patrlck for giving me that Informa tion. For I kind of kicked last night's story around, more In a Jocular mood, than for any other reason. So thanks again for calling. Incidentally, If any of you good people have any bits of news like that, don't hesitate to give me a buzz. I may be algnlng my death warrant In saying that, but I might aa well die happy. A .It Is said, "When the cat s away, the mice will play. Oops I Didn't mean to call you a cat Mrs. McFarlan, your husband Charlie (that Insomnia club man) Just wanted me to let you know that Nellie and Judy were very well be haved children while you were in Uie hospital. Charlie will probably hop all over me for writing this, but here goes The night Mrs Mac. went Into Uie hospital to be operated on, Charlie came steaming Into Uie news room and aald to me, "Will you do me a big favor? Slick by that phone of yours, and if the hospital should call come Into Uie studio snd let me know. My wife Is undergoing an emergency operation, and I'm wor ried to death.' Well. I waited for Uie phone to THE GALLUP POLL Votes Favor Taft-Hartley Injunctions As Strike Bars Uallup PRINCETON, N. J., Sept. al The Injunction provision of the Taft Hartley art la approved by an over whelming majority of all votera, In cluding labor union members, quea. tloned In a survey conducted by the American Institute of Publlo Opin ion. Approximately three out ot every four labor union members and about viKiu oi every iu a votera In the J survey Indicated approval of the principle lo al low Uie govern ment to Issue an Injunction to prevent a strike In Indus trlea considered vital to the country's m e Hare while settlements are attempted. Although greater approval cornea from republicans, democrats also are substantially In favor ot the law. Just before Missouri Pacific trains chugged to a hall recently. Presi dent Truman aald that the govern ment had exhausted nearly all of Its authority In the dispute. The auike, called by A0O0 engineers and other key oteratlng employes of the nation's ninth largest rail ays tern, raises again the question of Uie place of Uie Injunction In labor disputes The present Taft Hartley law lives the government the right to use injunctions to halt auikea In certain instances The administra tions proposed labor law would not continue this right. Teat Query In testing attitudes toward the In junction principle, the Institute put this question to a carefully distri buted croaa-sectlon of Uie voting population: -If there Is a strike In a public service Industry like gaa and elec trie light companies, telephone eom paalea, ee railroads de yom think the government In Washington shauld er should not be allowed t base aa InJuneUoa that la. a ro art order lo prevent the etrike tar a period while II ran be dia- bhowld ahewld awl Ne opinion Crippling strikes ' II I that threaten the nations economy are anathema to the public. They believe such strikes should be stopped whatever the legislative mechanism may be. Today s survey shows approval of government use of the Injunction as a means to achieve the end mull. Manual workers and members ot labor unions are somewhat less ka cllned lo favor Uie Injunction prtn clple than are other occupation groups as shown In Uie following table: heals! Ne Kheuld Net Opinio Union members . 74 11 1 Professional and business Mil White collar 11 runners It 10 11 Manual workers 15 11 II High! Te lrlke Although strikes of any kind are seldom popular with Uie publlo, previous uislltute surveys have shown Uiat Uie publlo believes In unions and a majority approves ot Uie basic principle of labors right to atrlke. tine thing the publle dose net ap prove, however, Is the Idea of gov eminent unemployment benefits be ing paid Is men whe ge ea elrlka. nils Issue waa put to voters la Uie Institutes survey as follows: lio yoa think government aneas ployanent beneflta ahoald er aheuld net be paid Is nen whe ge ea strike?" Nhauld 11 hhould not . SS Ne opinion II Manual workers and members of labor union are considerably more In favur of government unemployment benefits than are other occupation groups. Farmers are moat oppoaed as ahown In the following table: Hhould Ne hhould Net Opinio Union members . Jl i SOW lit Professional and business . 1J 7g ( While collar JO 71 Farmers .. 10 (0 10 Manual workers 30 M II Jobleos Iteneflla In general, there la considerably more sentiment among democrats to pay government unemployment beneflta lo alrlkers Uian among re publicans. Independente tend to aide with Uie democrats on this Issue ss Uie following vote by parties shows: Hhowld Ne hoald Not Opinion Republicans . . 11 71 t Democrats .... . 34 S3 II Independents 31 07 It o An earlier InsUlute survey showed Uiat another part of the present labor law also Is approved by a sub stanUal majority of union members questioned, as well as all votera. That la Uie Idea of a "cooling -off" period lo prevent atiikea In vital Industries. Eight out of 10 unloo members ill per rent) questioned by Institute Interviewers said they are In favor of the principle of the cool lug -off period, compared with 17 per cent ot all voters. Specter Of The Broken Showed Private Rainbows By J. HUGH PRl'ETT i on the fog Just touched Uie rim of Early on August 11. HMO. ten ' m personal rainbow." mountain climbers from Uie Obsid-1 Personal Rainbows eana, an out-door organisation well- Aa slated In this column July II. ring, and at the aame Ume listened j known In Uie Pacific sutes, set out . when rainbow-forming conditions to Charlie s broadcast. Fortunately j from their summer camp at Spirit ; exist, each person sees only h I s w. wiK-iik uii roiius inr t imiiuw,, bmivo ui. rvnivr OI me the doctor had no occasion to call and Mrs. McFarlan came through the ordeaL The point of Una whole Uilng la. that while he waa experiencing all that mental anguish. Charlie man aged to put on one of the best shows that I have heard In a long Ume. That Insomnia club man la quite Uie guy. Incidentally Charlie would like to thank all those kind people who sent cards and flowers while his wife wss In Uie hospital. There has been quite a bit of Ulk about the FCC a Intention to ban all give-away shows. It la true Uiat some of them are rather obnoxious, although I waa never one to look a gift horse In the mouth. However. Uie best comment Uiat I have so fsr aeen on Uie situation appeared In Uie letters to Uie editor section of last week's Time mag ailne. Bald one disgruntled Time reader. "They ulk about banning give-away programs. At least you have to answer a question before they give you a prise. But nowa days In Washington, D. C. they give you a deep freeze first, and ask you the questions afterwards." Wonder what the sub-committee would say to Uiat. nearby, snowy-uipped old Mt. Bt. circle, of which Uie colored arc la Helena, They planned to return be- ; Uie circumference, la exactly oppo lore Uie end of me day and report site Uie observer from trie sun to the larger number who had not aa Is his shadow. A straight line attempted the climb. 1 would run through Uie sun. the ob- The ascent waa successful, and and Uie bows center. Thai late in Uie afternoon wnen hallway i u"noon on St. Helens, ten vie back from Uie rounded summit, Uie i ,bl Specters of Uie Bracken were party unexpectedly came upon Uie P"m,d on Uie gleaming, white fog. rare lexcepUng from airplanes I i put nln w,r unseen by any one ana striking phenomenon lorn, "" " P"y. known as The Specter of the Brock en. Miss Adeline A. Adams of the University of Oregon library aUff, greatly enthused over the beautiful spectacle, described It aa follows: "We were on the sunlit Dog's Head, a very sleep, rockv nromi. Tlila phenomenon Is Dot quite a Uue rainbow, but la mors like col ored coronas sometimes aeen o a thin clouds encircling trie moon. Dif fraction plays a more prominent part Uian refraction. The name comes from The Brock- nence between two mountain g I a- '" mountain In German Saxony, elers. The Ice below us lo the east' 'rom nlch the observer's rainbow waa covered with a dense sheet of j nclrcl,d shadow Is said first t fog. the glistening, smooth top of haV" brrn described In 11M. Many which was probably 60 yards lower I legends center around thla moun than we were. The sun. still well j um ln Prussian foldklore. long ago above the western horizon, was l( waa thought that evil splrlu and casting distinct shadows of all mem-1 witches held "high carnival" on IU bera of our party on the top of the I lo"y eummlt on Welpurgia night, fog layer. But the amaxlng part ot 8ome within eight of Uie mounuln It, something I had never aeen be- "" retain a alight superaUUon re fore, was that each person saw his larding the old-time stones. own shadow surounded by a com- Bludgeoning Kills Alaska Mother PALMER. Alaska, Sept. 31 oft Bludgeoning with a blunt Instru ment caused the death of Mrs. Mar garet Toloff, 41. mother of nine ' children, a coroners jury haa ruled, i The woman's body wss found In a ditch alongside a secluded lane three miles south of here Monday.! plete circle of a rainbow. He could aee Uie rainbow only around his own shadow and not around those of the others. I swung my arm in a half circle as high aa I could and the shadows of the tips ol my lingers Don't miss a good net - snop the want Ads every day! It paysl Dr. R. Theodore Lindley OPTOMETRIST gulls (10, Med.-Denial Bldg. Phone 4i' 1 FREE GIFT TO HEARING AID USERS rf Mtvlmaai avarlnf tIS ffielar TKrr TOI BATTKRIftS. Tat a' lra baa ra alpfal ta Iaaaaa4 af haarlaf a 14 ara. If yaa aa alt ana" all! aaarnll la aam at aa lhr bsrS af brlar ra. yaa will rcla SkKK aaa A BalUr Tir. Jam N. Tafl A Aaaaalala 111 W. 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