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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1949)
PACE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON THURSDAY, OCT. :0, 1949 Jf eralfc anb $eU $ These Days rums juhubi tU. JENKINS laajkaalas laitae at B14 sbau S aaaatke SB iieae A Hoax on Hunters By DEB ADDISON FRIDAY oood moat of the male ruidenu of the basin will Mart lo make the beet of one ot the worst perpetrations that has Bern perpetrated on us in some time . . . and that takes in a lot ot territory, rot better than M aeeka the bird buutlnc frater nity bat been shadow-boxing Um -a pointers, setters, and Just plain k . . . ., ,4 Llin. (mwihI Ik glorious dara outdoors. Untortu nately, the upland bird nun ten and the duck puddle hunters are one. It will take a double barrel shotgun, mate, with the barrel! pointing two direction. a P-IRST off. our late, non-la mented game commission saw (it to choose a forty day duck and fooee season Instead of a fifty day lesson, which waa there ADDISON for the asking. Next off. it aaw fit to hold half of this shorter leaton In escrow until the ice has covered the ponds and the snow has corered the stubble and the birds have left for the riot fields. The split season Is a hoax because nine times out of ten the birds will be gone, come December 33 when the second half opens. There even are local duck hunters who believe in the fallacy that It has to be fit outside for neither man nor beast before the hunting's good. A look at the mallard, sprig and lesser ducks squirming now In every tule pond and swarming to feed in every stubble field will tell you that the time to hunt ducks Is when the ducks are here. The lata season still Is a hoax. We've heard it told that the New Tear's season has to be. to take care of the duck hunters In Western Oregon and on the coast. ITe never heard of the salmon season being set to meet the whims of Malheur county, nor of the antelope season set for Clatsop county. Duck season should be set for the place where the ducks live It's still a hoax. Xft' "V m i . v r u By GEORGE E. gOKOLtiKY Special Kress Correapaadenl rHE warmongers betray their own masses. Tor ' Instance. In America nearly every worker owns an automobile. Does he get the automobile a spe cial privilege because be Is a true follower of monop oly capitalism? Nobody asks him. He has money In his pocket; so he goes and buys an automobile. Maybe he does not hare money; so be still buys an automobile. How can he buy an automobile without money In a capitalistic country? You should ask such a question, because here la America everything Is topsy-turvy. He borrows the money. There Is always somebody in America who wants to lend money. They advertise In newspapers: they shout on the radio. In fart, where the worker goea to Buy the automobile, the salesman gives him a piece of paper to sign and already he borrowed the money. He sits down In the car and drives away like he owns it And the funny thing is that he does own the car. It Is a capitalistic contradiction. Ik IOBODY tells these workers what kmd of car N he should buy. A black one. a red one. a grey one. a yellow one. Some are big. some are small. Kobocty has an eye for uniformity. It Is all con fusion. What does the worker do with his car? Does he go to meetings to become familiar with the great philosophy of dialectical materialism? Does he go to the woods to sit on a stone and read the colossal works of J. Stalin? Such grand activities are not for the uncultured who are betrayers of the working SIDE GLANCES THIS two ring circus Is still something else. As far a anyone has been able to show me. the only reason for nurturing the birds Is to hunt them ... to get outdoors and get the cobwebs out of your brain and the warbles out of your backs. Why then, wasnt it possible to more the upland bird season few days earlier, or a few days later, to allow for that many more days In the open rather than dumping K in on the opening of duck and goose season? It it waa done to give the city hunter a grand binge In the country (and get it done an In one trip) then wen quarrel with that This hunting should be, first, for the people who live where the birds are, and to beck with the tourists. rtS monkey business wss passed on to us by the old state game commission, remember, and those members are dead and gone, as commissioners. So we cant do more than cuss a little, kick the dog. abuse the family and make the best ot it and keep our fingers crossed and hop that the new commission gives the country hunter a break come UM. , Governor McKay rightly cleaned house In the commission on mandate from the state legislature. These new men have a chance to be heroes, and K looks like they just barely might It s the new commission that gave Klamath county a dove season. It's the new commission that gave Klamath and Lake counties a quail season, but (dura their hides) they still made it coincide with the opening on the webfoots. Ducks and geese go together. Pheasants and quail go together. But if the seasons have to be as restricted as they are. let's separate the two pairs and have more time in the field and marsh. No! They use the cars to go to work. So the cars tnd. thousands of them, on streets, on parking lots. In rain, in snow, in the hot sun they have here, waiting for each Individual worker to come out of his private enterprise. What anti-social waste I Can not the cars be used in a social pool, so that all may use fewer cars? Do they need 35 000.000 cars? Do small schoolboys need cars to find love which in Russia we can find anywhere, even without cars? ..iwura ixn caz to ouy meat ana canned soup sua rasnnsua nemng? SUCH Is the waste and anti-social attitudes of these warmongers that each one wants his own ear. I have even seen workers where each member of the family has a car of his own. What kind of government do these Trumsnists produce when they let anybody, for no reason at all. have a car? What is left to reward the stakhanovut who. out of love of the working class, goes Into a factory to show that he can work longer hours and produce a bigger quota than other workers? Why should he be a stakhanovtst if he already has a car and also a radio and also an electric refrigerator and his wife putt on so much cosmetics that it is impossible to ten the difference between a beautiful actress and an ordinary wife? r an this Truman is blind. He only thinks of making more bombs to spread American auto mobiles, radios and lipsticks over the world, corrupt ing the Balkan dwarf. Tito, with machinery, until every man win have so much that he will not un derstand why the class struggle, the eternal clash and smash between opposites, is essential to culture and civilisation. These workers ignore dialectics altogether. I looked intelligent 8o we sat in a saloon and drank beer. I, myself, prefer tea or vodka. Tea I couldnt get in the saloon and if I asked for vodka, M Police-state, controlled by Wall street, where Hoover-Dunes forces dominate Trumanlam, they would fast telephone the FBI and maybe I would nave immigration troubles like Comrade Eisler who brought to the German workers fraternal greetings from the Twelve who are being railroaded by monopoly-capitalism after being framed by Cardinal Spell man, the defender of black darkness. So, I say to the worker: -How Is ft that dialectical materialism is unknown' to you?" He answers: "Come again!" 8o I say: -You dont know dialectical . . He interrupts me: -Oh! You mean like Schnoszle Durante and Eddie Cantor talking naturally?" Such capitalistic contradictions! am teat er asa aeaaaae. attseassM.tm "I'm gUd I cam to a co-ed school, I know wi'n going to loam a lot more J've found several keys tsrtve aa expert at math!" Boyle's Column The Boyles on Feeding And Care of Bachelors Doctor Says Take Care of Tonsillitis By EDWIN p. JORDAN. M n inere are several kinds of in. flammation of the tonsils, or as it is more commonly Known, tonsilli tis. Tonsillitis often results from in jection with a germ called the streptococcus. Indeed tonsillitis, or in the absence of the tonsils a se vere sore throat is typical at the be ginning of scarlet fever which is a streptococcus disease. Tonsillitis may be caused by other germs and perhaps some by Tlruses. Most of those who have not lost their tonsils early in life have experienced one or more attacks of acuta tonsillitis, and they do not have to be told that this is an unpleasant and painful disorder Usually they have fever with it and feel just miserable! If they go to bed promptly, drink plenty of fluids, and perhaps are given one of the sulfa drugs or penicillin, recovery also occurs without much delay. Acute tonsillitis Is never treated by removing the tonsils at the time when the inflammation Is severe. If It is necessary to remove the tonsils at all and this is not al ways the case one must wait until the acute infection has quieted down. II this at not done there Is danger of letting dangerous germs into the blood stream, causing blood poisoning and perhaps death. Although figures on the frequency of acute tonsillitis do not seem to be available, there are many rea sons for believing that there are fewer cases now than in the past Probably this Is partly because ot our better sanitary knowledge which has resulted in fewer dan gerous germs In drinking wster milk, and other sources of injec tion. The Dorter Answers QUESTION: Since great herds of cattle, horses and even elenhanta get their health and strength from eating green grasses or herbage, would it be advisable for human be ings to extract the Juices from such grasses and herbage and drink them? ANSWER: The digestive proces ses of human oeings are different from those of the animals men tioned. Human beings belong to an animal group called carnivore, or meat eatrs. I am afraid tne an swer is "no." Phony $20 Notes In Seattle Area SEATTLE. Oct. 30 WPV-Wlde-spread passing in the Seattle area of counterfeit $20 notes was report ed yesterday by Leo A. Smugsi, supervising secret service agent The report came hard on the ncvis ui an epidemic ot phony (10 bills which were circulated a week ato. The latest counterfeits are dlstln- suisneu oy a Brighter green than genuine bills on the back. The seri al uumoer oi tne bills Is ES1386S13A. Want Ads don't cost they payl Bat Beyle RADIO PIIOGIIAMS THl'RSDAY EVE, OCT. U KFLW 115 ac, PUT "I!1! Saert rata SMS Raaae Tawe New "14 WarlS News Baasaaarr SJSTaae Tina ABC :esiaar DarleABO :4J Sit S-Hla. MTtrr ta CeaaterBf ABC kiaBWraae vita Wlaacrs :tS B.4t!M Btari S:M Orls'al Aauuar Bear ABC in Maaw tka Btarle ABO S:SB in - Bekerl Meatsasaerr ABC B:IS " - S:U Veterans Bcaavt :t Blaaila ABC t:S " la.aa Bk-afKli Beaarltr ABC IStlSJaa H.,l, SaarltABC l:Sa S.iaaaaa Taa Kaaw ABC llm Saaaaurr II : Sl Off ll:IS lists SkFJI 124 kC Gaartct Bcattcr MBS BL Ikaalra Qala Araaai Ttwa Wtatncr- SparU' Rill Hearr MBS Haate Harmaar Sa Tba Slar? Gaaa Lara? Aactlaa aalaas CaMiav MBS riaalaf-Baallaf clak MBS Saarta Par MBS Glcaa Umtij MBS Xl.at. Ipaila Alaaaa MBI Affaira af P. Satai S-aiia. Plaal MBS I Lara a MrtUrr MBS Paltaa l.awla Jr. MBS Ban Manas Orca. MBS ASvaa. af Valeaa Malaal Nawartal FRIDAY A. M, OCT. Zl :iat;ara SI IS Mara S:S S:U Saras Para I Nva. Bkltt, Eattlaa tilSCaartlaa BaaaSaa' 7:S Mania Atraaakr ABO IsfaTaa af lha Maralat B:aa Brikklut fl.k a.. S:IS " S.SB " M.H taa Baa4 S:tSNaaer CralaABC S:St Ptraaaalltr Tltaa iVis"'"' " "'e'ABO l:l Slaa aai Sbaa ie:a Mr Traa Starr IB:IS 1?2J'"' Cr,'ABO Itiiarkaaal la Ik Bar ' tlBRaa Parlr ABC llaMMarkal BraaM . uiw rasisre Blaa aa4 Sblaa MBS Risa aad Skla MBS rrank Haalaffwar MBI Brrakfaal Caas MBS Nw Bt Bar rakla Flask Familiar Pararllri Blkla laalllalaMBS Bhat'a Naw Barrar HarSlar lla Ba af Plar Maralar Malla Olaaa HarBr MBS OaBl BlacarMBS I Palate Balaa Favarllaa Piir La4ls First MBI 8a far aJDapMBI KPJI Pasters FRIDAY P. KFLW liM ac, PST !!'?! 2, 'laa .I'ii U",''" RaaB ABC IZ:3S Parla Slaawalk Bkw 'l-BB M-Praaaaa ABC 1I5II' Daaecllrae I' t? ", ABC IM m -l aaCarlala Call: :xa Briaa aaa Ormm ABC ! !I7ilf T"r w,r Oat ABC S'lB ',!' ABC S.: a:aa Rcaacairallr Faar J:ii I"M""1' ltaara tlis - ! ''"' ' Tak.aABC SJBSkr Bias ABC M, OCT. tl KKJ1 124 Ke, Nam BaaSa Newa- Var Oaaca Taa Market Lirlack Accareias talka BaearS Sr It VTIIh Mail BIBS Nara Sa. Atala! Th Slaras MBI Ricky's Bqasl l.lrln, Wltk OaS Orcan Tra Daaca Fallaa Jr. MRS frank Hrmlnrwar MBI R'hlaS lha Starr MBS Ni MBS B Bar H Ranrh MBS Tarn Mis MBS FRIDAY EVE, OCT. 21 JfJ ;' Pat B:1S Ba Tawa Naara arr tl KrlS Na, nm B:SS Taa TIb. Ami- s is1-""" Dm'i,ABC ucfcaraaiaa Rail Call ABC lifl " " ABC t :SB Mama tka RacarS 7:tS BcBllma KUrlr' ! !JIf r' ABC B:MTkla U Var tRI ABC 11!''' Barrlctl ABC JJFIkl. tlBS.I.aatrK. RlvkflIS Rrr.M.r ABO IBMSJaa Haatl. Baarla ARC HIM. Orcb.ABC IIMNm Bamaaary ll:SS tla Off HIS I1:1S KFLW Ptalara bafcrlal Hrallar MBS Mais Maar- ' AraanS Taara Wclbr Bparu Raaafaa Bill Hrnrr MBS t. af C. CmajiiH Sa Tka Blorr tiais Llaca KIS MRS Slraltbt Arraw MRS Sarrat Mlaalana MRS Olcna Haray MRS Bamrar Kara Bfcawraaar Ba Mvrtaa Orrk. MBS S Mia. final MRS I l.ava A Myatarr MRS Parian l.a MRS Raa Marfan Orrk. MRS Al Wallaea Orrk. MBS n Meal Ika Pra MBI Mataal Nwrl KFJI Flera By HAL BOYLE NSW YORK UPV After a dosen years of marriage. Prances and I have given up collecting bachelors. There simply is no future In It We are going to collect eld but tons or stamps or something like that from now on anything but bachelors. We have disposed of our last one, and dont Intend to ac quire anymore. In our heyday. however, we probably had the best collec tion of bachelors In America, and Prances became an expert in their care and feeding. We dtdnt set out on purpose to build our cot lection. It just grew. Bachelors draw each other hke files. Soon after we set up housekeep ing in Oreenwlch Village our apart ment for some reason or other became a bachelor hive. We had boy bachelors and girl bachelors- gay, eager young people who kept our place bussing. Qwarler After a few years the buss be gan to subside. "It lsnt so noisy around here as it used to be," said Prances. "Our collection of bachelors seems to be a little smaller Well we checked and found the reason. Something had been getting at our boy bachelors. Know what it was? It was our girl bachelors. As soon sa Prances taught a boy bachelor to comb his hair and keep his fingernails clean, one of the girl bachelors would grab him and drag him to the altar. It turned out we had more boy bachelors than girl bachelors and after we married off all the latter we still had a stock of the for mer left Three Types Our collection then shook down Into three main types the eager beaver or let-me-help-you -around the-house bachelor, the slothful bachelor, and the sensitive bache lor. But they all had one thing In common. They were all hungry. One of our handy bachelors built us a bookcase. It collapsed, and I had to bring In a carpenter. Prances used to dam socks for one of our senstttve bachelors while he read poetry. Later he went to Hollywood, wrote a movie ind bought a swimming pool. Now he doesn't have to ask anybody to dam his socks. Big Beef The big plaint Prances had against our bachelors was this "As soon aa I teach one to dry the dishes properly some gal grabs him off. In Just running a tram' big school for. husbands." Well, with the attrition of the years we finally were down to our last bachelor. He wss a kind of modified slothful type. He began as a helpful bachelor, but deteriorated. "We're going to have to get rid of him," said Prances. "He's be ginning to act like you. He won't run to the grocery store, sits in your chair and reads the newspaper and Just grunts when I tsk him a question.' lannf Fx peri But I think the real thing she hsd against him wss that he had got ten so he could whip her at gin rummy. Anywsy. he got married trie other day and now la beating his own wife at gin rummy. After 12 years we had finally disposed of our bachelor collection. "WhatH we collect now. dear?" I asked Prances. "Snslls." she said, "anything bat bachetors,' Static By DAVE UNDERBILL An interesting item In the radio section of last week's Time mag aalne gives fruit to thought According to the story, many eastern grocery stores are being outfitted with radio loudspeakers, Soothing music is played to calm the customer's fevered brow. At ap proximately two and-a-half minute Intervals, howeveh. spot commercials are played, plugging various com modiuea in the grocery line. At its best grocery shopping is a frustrating experience for the present-day housewife. How much more so would it be under this set up. Picture, If you can. the harried housewife, bending over to get a bottle of "Pumpemlckers PlxilUUng Pickets." Just aa she reaches for the plckela, an announcement blares out "Stop, look, reach for Dotangles De licious Dog Bulscutta Your chow nouna will love them." -Heaven praam c us from such a rate m this rugged pioneering coun try in the West in Time, revests the old fireman Another item that Ed Wynne, comic himself, baa now taken to the medium of television to wage battle with Milton Berle. It seems that Wynne almost has a fit of apo plexy whenever the name of Berle is men tioned In his presence. Ed Is going sll out to take the place of Milt in Dave I'nderhill the video world, but according to eastern reviewers, he has long way to go. One critic says, "the only way the old rirenorae has done better than Berle Is to hog the screen for ap proximately forty out of the forty- lire minutes of tne snow." In a reply to a postcard from Mark Mullin. the Olen Hardy news oroaacast originates from station KHJ, Los Angeles. Prom a New York released publi cation entitled "Broadway Beams' come some daffynltlons and quick quips. Says Bob Hawk, a landlord Is a fellow who lives off the flats of the tana. Ed Oardner of Duffy's Tavern says, "A bridge table la one of the very few places where you'll find wife doing her husband's bidding. Minnie Pearl of Orand Ote Opry patters that, "Pearls come from oysters, and sometimes from shut ting up like a dam. Irving Miller of the Bob Hawk show mirthfully says, "The best wsy to make money out of chickens is to start a hat shop." Via Vaughn Monroe: "Television will never replace the newspaper." After all its pretty tough to hide behind TV set at the break fast table.. !S"eWoridToday'i' i By DEWITT MACKENZIE ( AP reretga Attain Asulyal Gollup Poll Maebensle SLANDER SUIT RIVERSIDE, Calif, Oct. M WP) O. D. Sandefur, Medford. filed a 1250,000 slander suit against H. W. Dill in court here yesterday. San defur charged that Dill, his ex-partner In the Rogue. River Lumber company at Medford, spread false Information about him in Medford nd Injured his reputation. Pew visitors to America have at tracted such bus lamed Uileraat lo their expreaalon of yit as aa has Prims Minuter Nehru of India. This is due In- part I Use It to the directness ana clarity with which he attacks the paramount IS' sues of the dsy. and In part to the fact that in him we apparently see the great new leader ol South east Asia's mu ttons. It Is lor this reason that this column re turns to further comment o n his opinions as one of the outstand ing personalities of our time. . For evtample. In an address belore the over seas Preaa Club of America m New York Nehru struck a body blow at the imperialism which Is struggling to retain l la foothold In the Par East The prune minuter declared that "next to hunter na tionalism In Asia still U the pri mary line." He said that ultimately the Orient must "play a very im portant part In world attain" have a bluer share o f the world's wealth and rid Itself ot foreign rule. Startling Nehru then made the startling prediction that "tour or five years" will see the last vestige of alien rule in Asia. That prophesy has a peculiar In terest tor our column since we hsve been InsUting over a long period that the day of empires u rapidly coming to sn end. The time when "mother countries'' ran dom inate peoples of another rare U sll but past "Pour or five years" may seem like a very short lime to finish clearing Imperialism out of Asia. Still, we must listen with respect to the man who, more than any other excepting the late Maria una Oandhl, waa responsible for the winning of Indus freedom. Not Companaanable Another viewpoint of the Asiatic leader waa expressed at a recep tion given by the United Nations Correspondents association at Lake Success. During an informal ques tion period one of the newspaper men asSed Nehru whether he thought MarxUt and capitalist soci eties could lire side by side in definitely. "I dont think so." the prime minuter replied. "It la possible, but ultimately one will Influence the other. The society which delivers the goods the better life will sur vive." Middle Of Read By "better life." Nehru was tak en to refer not only to material things but to spiritual and cultural matters. Of course to net the full significance of thU appraisal you must know Just where Nehru stands Ideologically. As thU column has re ported previously, tne prime min ister U a moderate socialut who believes in following a middle course providing for nationalisation of some Industries but leaving plen ty of others free for development by private Initiative. In short Nehru alms st combin ing what he regards as best In both systems. Two Children Die in Fire BREMERTON, Oct 30 WV-Two sleeping children died last night when fire destroyed their small al ley home In which they slept alone. The victims were Identified by po lice as Raymond and Nancy Kel ly, ages 7 and I. Firemen said they believed the children were over come by smoke In their sleep. The nouse was full oi smoke and the roof of the wooden structure was in flames when firemen re sponded to the alarm of neighbors' and carried the children from their beds. Mother Found The mother, Mrs. D. S. Kelly was located by the navy shore pa trol and a taxicab driver alter radio station KBRO broadcast an appeal for anyone who knew the residents of the burning house to notify them. She arrived at the home after the children were taken to a h.n.i They were pronounced dead shortly ' I I T Ml. Mrs. Kelly said her husband lives In Los Angeles, Air Power Faith Still High, According to Poll By (iMIRtiE UAI.IIT PRINCETON, N, J. Although the average American voter U mil well enough Informed about mili tary strategy to follow In detail the current row In the armed services between the era oil leers and the aviators, he has one Idea fixed llrmly in his mind. To him alrpowrr Is all-Important. He believes Uiat If titer Is another war, the Amerl- f would play a much more im portant part in winning it than either the army or the navy. Whether thU Idea u sound from the mili tary point of view U a matter which only ex perts can deter mine, but there U little doubt about the widespread tiallup admiration the American people feel for Uie air arm ol our delenaea. It u alumn clearly In the reaulla of interviews with thousands of vot ers representing a balanced cross section of all walks ol Ills, who were asked. "It the United Slates ahould get Into another world war, which branch of the armed forces ao you think would play the most impor tant part In winning tne war the army the navy or the air force?" The vote: Air Force -. 7t Army , I Nsvy 7 Qualified t No opinion 7 In the group who gave qualified ansa era are those who named more than one branrh aa bring Impor tant, or who said that all three are important. Military leaders may be startled to note how extremely one-sided the vote Is how much the drams and color of the air force has fired the popular Imagination. Conscious ly or unconsciously, the air force has apparently done a huhly ef fective Job of public relations. The vote does not mean that only 6 per cent think the army u im portant; the question simply brings out the Individual voter's imprea alon. Informed or uninformed, ss to the relative contribution of the three services in a future war. Ac-' tually some military ooservers are saying today that Russian rioaaea. ; Bion of the atom oomo may di minish the Importance of air power and Increase the Importance of armies large enough to encompass the Russian land forces It they try to overrun Europe. faith of Lang mending The popular faith tn air power Is of long standing. As far bark as 1934 Institute tuners were find ing bigger ma)orlt!ea for building s larger air force than for butlding a larger army or navy. -rnu was less than three rears. after Hitler came lo power In Oer-' many. As Hitler's power expanded, American public sentiment for strengthening our air lorie rote steadily, until In September, ibjs the Institute was finding II per rent of the voters in Isvor of building up Uiat part of our military strength, aa cumins red. to w per cent for a bigger army and navy. Yet as late aa Marrn, 1M0, when the army asked congress for nueiey Ui build 1100 new military alrpianea I congress appropriated enough mon- : ey to build only M. ; The great popular appeal of ths l air forra affm'La all aralka nf ti. Persons who have had college train ing leel the same way about the relative position of army, navy and air arm aa those who have had only high school or grsde school training. Here Is the vote by educational leveU: Col- High Grade lege eVh'l rVnl Air Fores .. 7g'a If, 70 Army 7 I Navy 1 Qualified 7 10 I No opinion I ii Thief Loses -r In Holdup SEATTLE. Oct. 20 ISA Crlrns, doesn't pay note: 1 A youth walked Into a Women s gift shop tale yeaterday, bought a box of stationery and a gift card, and proferred a is bill In payment Then he Uild Mrs. I leasts A. Free, man. the proprietress, to "stick 'em up I'm sorry, but I need the money-He took II from the till and 12 from her purse, then fled. Mrs. Freeman still had hu II bill. Net loea: 12. Mac Say Some people hava headaches because their haloes tit toe tight. The LUGGAGE SHOP as Widow Fleeced In Con Gome PORTLAND, Oct. Mm Police reported today i widow claimed she lost savings of M775 to two young women In a confidence game. They said Mrs. Kate Ransom told of cashing bonds to post the money as evidence of "good faith" In order to share a larger amount the girls claimed they found on the street HOTELS OS8URN HOLLAND EUGENE, ORE. MEDFORD Thoroughly Modem Mr. see Mr. I (. garley aaa Ja Ktrley BreBrleters CURTAIN TIME - 8:13 TONIGHT! LAFF DT OFF! A RIOTOUS STAGE COMEDY All Local Talent eeutifu! Cettumet Lavish Revues Sponsored' try Klamath Co. Jr. Chamber of Commerce l.n.fit Children's Christmas KUHS AUDITORIUM ADMISSION! ADULTS: $1.00 Plug To; Children 33c Christian Science Can Meet Your Needs Attend a free lecture entitled "CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: THE RELIGION WHICH TEACHES TRUE SPIRITUALITY" by ELISABETH F. NORWOOD, C.S.B. of Brookline, Mosiochuietti Member of the Board of Lectureship of The "? 'her Church. The First Church of Christ 8clentlst, In Boston. Massschuselts. Sunday Afternoon, October 23 3:15 P. M. in CHURCH EDIFICE 10th end Waihlngton Street! under the auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist Klamath Falls, Ore. ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED