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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1949)
PACE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON I RIDAY, OCT. 7. 194? rAK JKNJUMt editor B1IX JENKINS ntenaslns gditor These Days V v . i ADDISON raw Associate Prose oouueo nnciuiviy u pos Iwoublloouae at all Use l"cal prtalad Is I Reporting the News By 1)KB ADDISON' STILL carrying on as Nstionsl Newspaper Week: Within Uie Umde, the newspaper olten Is referred to 4i the -ulcer factory"; there s the old sew bout "you dont have to be crasy. ( but U neips. riw 5 I n.rk you mlaht eurmtse that newspaper people yt chronic crabs, or that they're dlssetis- ! fled with tneir joos, or oouu i un.ih thrra nrobablv ara about aa many sourballs and mil- a In the newspaper business jgg - O H III wwt. ' ' ture newspaper folks ara a little i mora vocal than others: and then there'! the matter of working 1 undrr deadline. wAVJ otheri work under deadline too. but probably very few forma of endeavor keep you under one all the time. Wa like to think that there's nothing never than today's paper aa it rolls off the press. There's nothing deader than yesterday's. " With all the hurry and scurry, and cynical re marks thst go with same, there are few news paper people who would be caught working at anything else. THERE'S one sad thing about reporting the news that's cause for heartaches, lost tempers and what have you. If! something we cant change. It's the Inescapable fact that there are few things that go Into the news that don't affect someone adversely. The people so affected would like to have that news kept out of the psper. It cant be done. If a happening were kept out of the paper the word would get around anyway, and by the time It was circulated far and wide by word of mouth there probably would be slight resemblance to the original. Also. If a paper persistently kept happenings out f the news columns It would wind up by being tha ex-newspaper. Someone else would be publish ing the news. At least, that's the wsy It always has been. There's the old story, told and retold, about the man who excused himself from a group to go out to the poorhouse and see his old friend the editor who tried to please everyone. THERE are some matters of private activity, bus iness transactions and the like, which dont be come news until they are completed and go on public record. (The formation of Crater Lake Machinery company was one such which was long In tha making and fairly well known before it was re ported In the news columns of this paper.) " Matters of political nature are something else again. Tha doings of political bodies, from dog catcher to tha supreme court, are matters for public scrutiny by their very nature. They are matters of public concern In which you and I ara the stockholders. TOT amount of space given to some happenings In the news Is sometimes questioned. Why are Some things "played up" and some "played down"? Both labor and management sometimes take news papers to task for the Intensity with which strikes are reported. If a thing wont stand the light of publicity cer tainly H Is the principal's concern. It Is the con cern of the paper to let the public know what foes on. There la one simple mathematical formula which ean be followed. Multiply the Intensity of affect by the number of people affected, and you'll know how to play up a happening. If eoa obscure person without friends or relatives meets violent death few people are affected, but he Is affected to maximum Intensity. If half the popu lation of Klamath county develops hangnails you have tha other extreme. If you apply the formula, you'll play up each atory about the same. By CEORGI URAMADA i contuse the masses, they give her big circuses. but the people ara naive and vulgar and do not appreciate culture. So Instead of orchestras and ballets, they have grown men who play Ilk little school boys with balls and bata and running around playing tag. This they call baseball, but the name Is also a fraud, because the ball la not on a base at all but In the player's hand sometime and sometimes It Is Just flying around. Now they all have finished playing tor Uie sum mer and will soon retire to their private enter prists which shows the corruption of their spirit and their failure to grasp the social significance of their clownish support of Wsll Street. Only a few gsmes remain, but these will be carried out in the degenerative competitive atmosphere Instead of ac cording to Uie principles of the lata Andrei Alex androvttch Zhdanov whose dialectic materialism led him to the conclusion that games are of th people who understand the Inherent evolutionary qualities of Leninism by Stalin. As he objected to music which he could not understand and forbade them as imitations of bourgeois decadence, so he would hsv ridiculed this childish game. I lea", will be played between two pseudo youth groups named -Ysnkees" and "Dodgers". Th Ysnkees come from the Bronx which Is s prole tarian faubourg controlled by the Wall Street poli tician, Edward Plynn. who has close associations with the Truman anti-Roosevelt forces in the demo cratic party which Is not democratic but bi-partisan of Hoover-Dulles characteristics. The Yankee youth group Is a fascist faction prac tising Jim Crow and similar mass wrongs. In fsct. It Is a penetration of working class activities be cause most of the members of the group are not inhabitants of the Bronx at all, nor are they prole tarians. They are, in fact. Kulaks who are hired to capture the Imagination of youth and to lead them away from the Marxlst-Leninlst-Stalinlst dia lectics to enjoy themselves by yelling, shouting, standing up and stretching, eating dogs aa a hot dish and popsides as a cold dish on top of which they pour a brown, sweet water called Coca-Cola. Such a black year on these capitalists who poison their own people. THE other youth group who will compete Is called the Dodgers. This means thst they run away when they should stand still. You will recall that the English fascist. Charles Dickens, portrayed such a character, called the Artful Dodger. The true name for this youth camp Is "Dem Bums", which In the dislect of Brooklyn, where they come from. Is a recognition of the glorious art of the Soviet writer, Maxim Oorkl. who wrote about bums In the Czartst reaction; also Steinbeck, the American renegade. Oorkl discovered bums before the Marshall Plan countries heard of such an ethnological entity. Brooklyn is a vast devastated area which the proletariat have taken away from the degraded bourgoisie who lived there In magnificence wrested from the toll and swest of the working class. In Brooklyn, they are so naive that one a tre grew there, so they immortalised It In a book. The people of Brooklyn speak a dialect which most Americans do not understand: therefor a vast racist movement has developed against Brooklyn. To combat this white supremacy Ku Klux Klanism, the Class-conscious Society for the Prevention of Degrading Remarks about Brooklyn (8PDRB) haa been organized to stamp out antl -dialectic remarks concerning Brooklyn's dialect proletarian thugee organization called "Murder, Inc." This wss a right-wing deviation, organized by Trotzky lsts to confound the revolutionary masses by utiliz ing Bakunlnist terrorism, especially In trade unions. "Murder, Inc. disappeared because these deviations lost their mass base. The capitalist provocateurs have so completely disappeared in Brooklyn that the Hoover-Dunes republicans hsve sought an alli ance with the American labor party. Tomorrow I will describe how these men-children play in their circus to divert the people from their deep depression, the hollow chains that bind them to Trumanism, the mass hunger for Marxism, and their undying fear of the atom bomb which Is no longer a secret. THE DOCTOR SAYS Child Diseases Being Nipped By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. f In the case of measles, there msy Many of the common childhood j 08 me factor which we do n o t diseases which In civilized times know about responsible for some of hsve struck down so many are be lng conquered. Diphtheria, which took so many lives a generation or so ago, la now rare, thanks to pre ' ventive immunizations, better treat ments, and improved public health measures. Scarlet fever appears to be a less serious disease than it was, both with regard to frequency and to the harmful complications. In this esse th good results appear to be caused, parly at least, to immuni sation and better treatment with antitoxin and penicillin. The campaign against diphtheria shows what can be d o n e by or ganized effort in the child health field. The practice of early Im munization of children against diph theria has continued since 1930 and has resulted in the extraordinary record of not a single death from thst disease among the residents in 40 large American cities In 1947. the Improvement. Thr fine record In cutting down the deaths from that disease Is a little bard to explain be cause, until recently at least, there was no very good way of preventing or treating this infection, still bet ter results in preventing deaths and other complications from measles, however, can now be expected. The results today with these im portant diseases of infancy and childhood are most gratifying. It sems definitely possible now that they can be conquered altogether and eliminated in the future as a serious cause of death or dangerous complications. Tbe Doctor Answers QUESTION: What is the cause of a gnawing sensation in the abdomen? ANSWER: It is Impossible to guess at the cause of this condition without knowing more about tbe symptoms. Not only must the symp toms be carefully analysed, but this SIDE GLANCES 4IUmM. I 0-7 com. e mt am KtaMsim w. "We'd to lik to hear this picture ar there any teats In section where they aren't eating popcorn?" Static By DAVE I'NDERHILL "Muchos dtneros" passed through many hands at Justice court yes terday afternoon. Just like at a bull fight in Mexico City. I Just happened to arrive on the scene when four Mexican "much actios" were brought before Judge Mahoney. The lads had absorbed Just a bit too much "vino" the night before and had visited, at the re quest of stat police, at the county Jail. One of the swarthy lour. some. Leopold, did all the talk ing. He seemed rather well edu cated, and wore a school ring on his left hand. Another of the lads. Antonio. I believe, peeled out a great wad of greenbacks. He a-ave fifteen "dtneros" to the Dave Underbill Judge, handed over five more to Pedro, who didn't have enough to pay the fine, and another five also to Carmel. who was just bit shy of the greenstuff, too. Then up stepped Lopes, the go between, who dropped five and-a-half on the Judges desk for one count. But he didn't hsve quite enough tor another charge. So there was much talk, snd finally Antonio dug down into his jeans once more, and peeled an other $10 from his ssdly depleted wad. In the mesntime. Uie other two boys were standing in the back ground muttering to themselves, and I was wishing that I had paid more attention in my Spanish classes. Doubtless, there must have been some classic remarks passed in that brief conference in the corner. Finally the four went out the door smiling, poorer but wiser, snd hesded back to Bonanza, to make up for the day'a losses. Men, do you have a bad habit of i The World Today: TELLING i THE EDITOR trial mm .hi, mm ost nut J I London Daily Mull uyi Queullle'ft Vno uu!ti. I.! j rwagtmUon u due Untvly to Eng- lenr Ih. 4VM , ! h J petti WTlttVB I ' a at) errrl NAM By DaMVITT MACKENZIE I Ar rortlfB Attain Aaalyit I I ! Th tall of th French govern ment under Premier (jueutlle Is not In Itself a matter ol extreme grav ity: It's what must be xiected fre quently In a country which haa such a multiplicity of political parties that maintenance ot a government majority In parliament Is difficult. However, the present crisis re flects (ar more than domestic poli tics. It grew out ot devaluation ol the Iranc and so I a part 0 f the Western Euro pean economic dislocatlonwhlrh also Is so strongly In evi dence In Great Britain. That disloca tion is caus ing Increasingly deep anxiety I n the chancelleries o f the democ- Marfcentia reel, for It renders pear more vulnerable. It scarcely csn b by mere chance that thla economic stress sees sn Intensification of th bitterness In tha quarrel between Moaow and th fiery Balkan slate of Yugosla via. Russia Is cracking down hard er on the rebellious Marshal Tito as Western Europe discloses weak nesses. It is well for us to recoanii that the situation revolving about Yugo slavia is serious. The consensus of observers Is that the French government crisis has its roots in the recent devaluation of the British pound sterling, which forced a like devaluation upon France and other Western Euro- countries The conservative BOYLE'S COLUMN Pensions for Housewives? 'Yes,' and 'No,' They Shout ur civilisation -t h house- ' M life. i f They fret ft bout the prob- could be. a sign of some condition '"J1 ,leWCT ta ")ur to I aide mat nnrket? of the Intestines or stomach which Wtl ao do I. Sometimes I file some news items would require X-rays and pernaps other studies In order to mske a diagnosis. Livestock Show Opens Tonight PORTLAND, Oct. 7 WV-The Pa cific International Livestock Ex position, the Northwest's biggest stock show, will open its annual nine-day run here tonight. A record 343 head of beef cattle were entered. The total entries, not counting horses, reached 2463. I n fact, two shifts were ordered in Judging. Four-H club and FFA exhibitors will have to give up the space tor their 1000 animals to light horse ex hibitors Wednesday. . For a company vegetable dish, couple green snap beans with sliv ers of mushroom or celery cres cents. Or serve the buttered cooked snap beans sprinkled with slivered browned almonds. RADIO PROGRAMS FRIDAY EVE, OCT, J KFLW 1450 kc, PST i NTiiir'i sport esse S:1S Horns Town Ntwi' :25 World News Sammsrv d:StTane Time ABC :ie Elmer DaylsABC :4S " " :.u t'bsmplon stall Call ABO 1:Mrisn Jlsbass ABO 1:15 " 1:3Nsma the ftscard ?:4S Bcdtlma stories" S OSTho Sal Mas ARC Tbis Is Year FHI ABC :M rtbl, KlilB SsFlsllH :IS " t:S " " S:SS " M laioi Rtcbflct Reporter ABC 1S:IS Jso Hssfl. Sports ABC 1S:MBsvorlr Hills Orck. ABC It AS News "asamarjr J1:S Slta Of! lilt ll:tt Kt Jl 124 kc. Gabriel Hrstter MBS uls Sfaow m Aroand Tswa H'eslber Sports Roundup Bill Hrar MHS ('. of C. Comments Ho tbe Story (iees tljco Kid MBS Slrsltht Arrow MBS Mystrrloas TrsvelerMBt Glenn Usrdr MBS Simmy Ksye Hbewrnem Run Morasn Orcb. MBS S-Mla. rinsl MHS I l.ovo a Mvsierjr MRS Fallen Lewis Jr. MRU Ross Morrsn Orcb. MBS Answer Men Meet tbe Press Matnal Nesrereel SATURDAY A. M., OCT. I s iscera la Ui Mora s e - - tsrsna rare Vse Mows. Rkl.t. Editions C S. riles Roandaa- 1M Martin Acronssy ABO ' it Top ol tbe Mornlnt S M Steppers Special ABO. S:ie r.reenslllr Time :tS " as Meet the Band :IS Rrrands ml MerevO I ;:M Asasrlcaa Farmer ABO : a " KM At noma wllk Stasia ABC 10:11 le saCerleie stasia ARC ajurul. Mlrb. vs. Army ABC e Kri.w w l Muslrsl Reveille Muflrsl Reveille t rink Hemlniwsv MBS Rresafsst Geas MB! Newt Best Bays Vet. Hanto Know MBI Mornlnc Matlaaa Treaiory rssblsn rissber tsvorlles ol Vosterdsr Ktddlse Show Newo MRS World Series MB SATURDAY P. M OCT, I KFLW 145 kc, P6T IMS " ISO " 1:15 Neoa tdltien News l:S0Tea and Crampete ABO 1:15 ' t:M " S:S ltl Ranch Beye ABC S:oajenlor Jnnctloa ABC S:SS Concert ol Amer. Jssi ABC 4:ta Beqacsttallr Years 4:15 " " t ie " 4:15 " " IM Special Speaker ABC B:I5 Alvlo Holder's Bsnd 5:50 The Harmonalree ARC 5:15 Cbrlstisa Science rem. KKJI U40 ke. Year Osnce Tones Msrset Livestock Binds lor Beads MBI Spotlit-blare MBS VYC vs. Orefon Rlckya Beqsesl M'iI Tear Mstcb MB! along with the letters, and they come out in the wash instead of in the newspaper. And that la what happened to the list of winners in last week's "Wynne with the Winners." So here are the names, a husband wife combination no less. And for once the lady came out on top with 13 winners, one loser and, 3 ties. The lady is named June D. Stewart, 325 S. Sth. Her husband, John had a similar record of wins, losses and ties. The "Mrs." was 233 points off in guessing the scores, and Mr. Stewart was 248 points off. Still, thst Is a pretty good batting average. Yes, I sometimes hsve trouble forgetting to mall letters. And the girl-friend up In Portland gets rather perturbed at my forgettui- ness, But since the trains and planes have cut down on their dally sched ules, there Just Isn't much a fellow can do about it. So please Mr. Postmaster, can't you fix things up for me? The pony express days are over. These are the days of jet propulsion, streamlined trains, and 100-mlle-an-hour automobiles. "What Happened" to the postal department? j The game of the giants will be aired over LW, starting at 10:45 to- morrow morning. It will be the army mule against th Wolverines of Michigan. Some- 1 wner vooiripoiieni ini ""- : J ralea ara warmly welcomed- KLAMATH PALLS. Ore, (To the Edlton The giant utility compan ies and Fulton Lewis Jr.. have won a major victory at the expense ot the American people. While the gas snd electric firms have defeated their most staunch regulator. Pul ton Lewis haa been successful In his slur campaign and trie con sumer faces the probable loss of one of his most ardent defenders and champions. Tha target of this corporstlon Lewls team was naturally Leland Olds, the president's nominee for a third term on the federal power commission, and a great American. Though opposition to his nomina tion was anticipated. It waa hoped that the congress of the United Statea could not be intimidated by the pressure groups who hste Le land Olds and the liberal philos ophy of government for which he stands. The senste committee action In rejecting Mr. Olds wss Uken after extensive heartnge during which every opportunity was given con srrvsllve Interests to denounce his economic beliefs snd criticise his Journalistic writings In the late 1920s. Mr. Lewis found It profitable to ignore Mr. Olds' present support for the capitalistic system and so concentrated his "mud slinging" campaign on his new deal attitude In government. Both the senators and Mr. Lewis failed to take Into consideration the excellent record of the power com mission, which should have been the main point ot consideration during the hearings. Whereas Fulton Lewis and com pany failed In their attempt to ridi cule David Lfllenthal and John Carson and deny their service to the nation they have succeeded In this esse. This Is not true Ameri canism. But the senators appar ently don't care and Its obvious that Fulton Lewia the Jr, doesn't either. JOHN KERBOW, 1222 Division. lands devaluation, about which Prance wasn't consulted. The news paper adds thst the premier has been gravely embarrassed by the consequent nae In prices. In any event, an Increase I n ' prices, and tear of Inflation, brought , quick demands from French labor j tor Increases In wages to meet a ' higher cost of living. This was re- ! fleeted In the cabinet which became divided over the Issue. ; As previously lndlrated. this Is a bad moment for political or eco-; nomlc crises in Western Europe. , Strength Is needed to maintain the balance and prevent any reckless adventures In the Balkans. My HAL ntlVI.K NEW YOHK. lAI Do American housewives want government hand outs' Well yea and no. Th girls ar as divided on litis question at on any other. A tew days ago I wrote a piece pointing out that legislatures have sadly overlooked the moat Impor tant figure In , our civilisation Mild Wife. about lenia of t h b u s I n aaman, set limits lo th stint of th laboring man, and vote cash on the barrel head to protect Ih farmer , against rainy days. But for "l Boyle the woman with th mop. the lady ol the house, they have voted no 40 hour week, no cash subsidies, no benefit payments, no bo n usee for raising the nation's chief crop children. Well, should coin rest and Presi dent Truman aet up a new cabinet post secretary of the home? Should housewives pet pensions? Keaetiona Scores of ladies across the land dropped their dust cloths, sal down and wrote me how they felt. And their answer aa to whether the government owed them anything boiled down lo this: 1 "Yea, of course " 2 "No. naturally." One mother wrote objecting "to the prevailing sense of values whleh excludes from erom mlc considera tion the work of the home woman " Her Idea was that mothers mold rwi ats. I. and a home never nioiea or la frus. trated. We're too busy. We don't want any special recognition. W reap our rewards as w go along " Yea, ina'anit I I I Who brought th subject up anyway?" Nurses Meet In Portland Next Week Hie combined annua! convention nf the Oregon state Nurses associa tion and Ih Omaiilaatlou for Publl Health Nursing will be held In Port land October 10-13. Headquarters will be In the Multnomah hotel. The slogan for tha convention it "Onward for Oregon " Pre-ronrenllon activity Includes eonferenr of the nine dlslrlrtof. fleers on Hiinilav, October I Itesti lar meetings beiin Monday Speak ers fur these meetings will be Dr. rilsaheth Porter of Cleveland. Ohio, Dr. Jerome L. Toner of (ilympia.nr Wash . and Miss rleannr Morris, uf the Hed Cmaa. Important Issues Many Important Issues will be dis cussed during the three day rotifer cure, and local nurses are urged to attend. Delegatea from Klamath Fallt will be Anna Htnithera. president of district cwht. Oregon Hlale Nutset asaorlatlon. and Margaret Strode, who la running for re-election on Uie board ot directors. When you are preparing liver and bacon, fry the bacon first and drain It on bmn paper or a paper timet or napkin. Then when the liver haa been put In the pan and th aluea have been turned onre. the character of future cltlarns. and I put the bsron on top of the slice one's unbroken victory string Is bound to fall by the wayside after this one Is over. My money goes along with th Wolverines. Starting at nine tonight LW wiU broadcast the second half of the Peltcan-Sprtngfield conference con test. I've got fifty cents riding on the Pels. So come on, fellows, let's rack up those TD's. Road Wreck Kills Bride MONTEREY. Calif, Oct. 7 i-P) A Portland bride ol six days was killed and her husband seriously In jured In a head-on highway collision near here yesterday. Mrs. Clara Pakrnham Collins, 22. died shortly after entering Monterey hospital. The husband. Charles Ke vin Collins, 31, suffered two broken legs and multiple skull fractures. Police said he was "given a chance" lo recover. Prominent The two were prominent In Port land college campuses. Mrs. Collins was student body vice-president at Marylhurst college and was elected "Miss Marylhurst" for 1049. Bh as graduated last year. Collins was student body presi dent at the University of Portland last year. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent J. Collins of Portland. They were married Saturday at Tacoma where the brides parents. Mr. and Mrs. Irvtn Pskenham. live. Th stat highway patrol aald a truck driven by Ralph C. Juarei ol Monterey apparently crossed the center line and crashed Into the Collins car. Juares waa uninjured. The crash was being Investigated. Juares wss not cited. should be paid In some way by th statu for this Important function. Mrs. Sue Persona of Mandan. N D . thought It might be simpler If women Just did more to solve th problems of government and Inter national politics even against male objections they are "getting too big tot their unmentionables." "We have had a lot of experience cleaning up messes before." she added tlrmly, "antl we couldnt make a worse muddle " Illinois Idea An Illinois wife observed: "The housewife should be con sidered by Uie government. Possibly a pension plan or a week's holiday a' me government s expense to no a little traveling. Of course I would suggest a set time for the pensions to start after 25 years of faithful devotion." On the other hand. Mra. Iren Pllarkas of Chicago Heights, III., aald flatly: "We absolutely do not want any handouta from Washington. "We'd be stir lo lose not only our independence to clean house how and when we please, what to cook, when to apank. what to say to the better half, but we'd have to pay some Jerk 6 per cent for telling us off. "Th woman who haa children so It will keep hot as Uie liver fin ishes cooking. .u.i.rinrrtf Mrs. Dickerson Breaks Elbow Mn. Jesn M. Dickerson. Roose velt school teacher, suffered a frac tured right elbow In a fall at her home. 303 Washington, about 6:45 last evening. She was Uken to Klamath Valley hospital for for treatment by Kaler ambulance. Please Mail Details of INDIVIDUAL PLANS Klamath Medical Service Bureau- 405 Pint St. Nam Address Slit f'&M ' ((((0Jj)j ;. 'J v'.-. ;; ., SATURDAY EVE, OCT. I Hoick Aa A Flask MB! a:ISHomo Town Mows" a:t5 World News Ssmmary e iSDsre Colemon Trie ABO d:tSBert Andrews ABC t:5t " " 7:no Bollywood Byline ABC 1M Wynne wltb Winners 1:15 Bedtime Storlee S:STbo Lena Ranger ABC S saciaremoat Orrb. ABC t an Time lor MoileABC 5:15 " t it Heinle a Bit Baa ABO 10:00 News ABC IS IS Irs Blae, Sports ABC IS:sat lerement Hotel Or. ABC lhaa News Mammary 11:05 tln oil &TLW Poolers Jena B. Kennedy MBS (fOis Show Weothor" Mlsrba Bert Orck. Red Ryder Klsmatb Temple Charlie Barnell's Orck I.emberdo l.snd ISA MBS Glena Hordy MB! Dink Trmpleton MB Roes Morton Orrb. MBR Monica Whalen MBS John Wolehan Orrh. MBS Ross Msrfsa Orck. MBI Sua Oil RfJI realere FOR RENT TRUCKS , U-DRIVI ' VANS PICKUPS FLAT RACKS Rate by mil, hour or week OPEN BCNDAn BEACON SERVICE STATION 1241 E. Mala Ph. lit Shtll Oil Products Shell Oil Product! When in Bly Stop at BLY AUTO SERVICE Th iportsman's htadquarttrg in Bly Discount en Ammunition Hunting antl Fiihing Lictnui Sporting Goodi "Tint end Batteries Anti-Frooit Phone 7S1 August Tikkenen, Prep. ..l$ By GLEN B. INMAN The t'nlv. of Kansas Medical School televlaed a couple of op erations and th result mado the medical men happier than a kid with a new toy. They will continue with th work . . . and maybe It won't be too long be fore you ean have a sponsor for your operation. We suppose that If the surgical soap opera be comes a regular television aerlea It will be known aa "The Inside Story." and every night will be opening night. We'll hope the doctors don't atari arguing about who get top billing. It we're having our tonsils deducted we don't want our favorite doe worrying a hoot how his profile looks on the screen. A Grand Rapid! woman wanted to divorce her husband because he haa failed to come home since December, 191. Now, let's not be haaty. madam. You can't be too hasty about those nee ensary repaint and ser vices on your ear. NOW la the time . . , and the place la INMAN MOTOR CO., 424 Booth 4th HI. Drive Into our com pletely equipped modern shop and take advantage of our etpert repair and service Job. You can count on the quality of sendee and low price we offer. Phone mi. Choose CONGOYALL MR WALLS OF LASTING BIAUTY! You'll bleu the day you discovered this exciting, new permanent wall covering I Made of long wearing baked enamel. Its handsome raised tile pattern lends a smart, modern note to any room , . , stay smooth and lustrous for yearsl Easy to clran, easy to Install! Bee the array ot lovely colors and designs. We'll be glad to give you an estimate. S -BW nauwunA r FLOOR COVIRINGS tmw liri Htm mt qaillif tXmmf cevetinie ft KUanftth AMAIIH6 WAIL 60WBIH6 fafig TP COtlGOWftth-tJ yifOtf iAMAJsim iai I fW alTVT!WX Iff KrCHCtt, BATHt, CMlOtCNt fiOOMf. 6itMMt. COiOvriJL K0 WA0... WPS ClUNMA wink, .. mrs fat yAs jutr firrt n wall, rnjiri jh . miantmv "lorn 0ACTf(& AISIlfM ttnrtiumoM' Or naa LOCK Uxmrli. arm ravn. i- inm rrtltm. . corrr &J Tffffr Jf S i COuaarsvme wr,n ntfifci-niM.n?1 ' i we efcsnswneiaaa A esaaaw momroMX cOwouum-Maww an. t 1 i i