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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1949)
ACE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 194 Ceralban&Jleto These Days ' Bt riavwj.r nUUI UfKIKt teniae tlX JSXKIK1 Ilwfu4 nitr lIH.'mUM U1U Mm - l as Br asau S sanative t eaau It M Bp wil ea siso ... aa ee f r cim WW mt UM pmi eefiae aj aUameta ffaiis. Oesv. eva aueTual ao IM ansae act a eiirea Saras ( ISPS ADDISON The Welfare State By DEB ADDISON FOIXOWINO the dmerUUoa on voluntary wel fare agencies (er.bbed from Herbert HtotKi it might be well to take s look at the welfare Mat. That k a lout at. the aelfare atal through the eye of ah Aeaop-Uke author taga4n cribbed i A tmod arm this la. Zl oarrtr th explanatory note: Tbe fol lowing description of toe Welfar Euu at written by an anonymous author and la getting wide tti tntwUoa on Capitol HiU. Here we go: a TWO Eea decxied to marry and aeuie down. The cere mony performed, they selected a big. Inactive dug and took up their seMde, Life wai tweet and roay. Food. shelter and beat were pronded from a central control source. Freedom from want and fear be came a reality. With a houaing unit In every wrinkle, the fleu had Utile to do other than eat, Jeep and multiply. The doc seldom scratched. He never plunged Into streams, or in any other manner upset the tran quility of his "dtixens." Selfish, material right were subordinated to the comfort and welfare of the fleas, who enjoyed this abundant sheltered life. They multiplied amasnglyf There came a time when the old dog grew weary and debilitated. Could be the fleas were too voracious In their appetite. Unable longer to sup port his hungry and nonproductive duzenry. the old dog wandered Into the wilderness and passed away. Consternation, nay panic reigned among the fleas. They raced from tip of tail to cold shining nose, shouting. The economic system ha let us down! . Many of the panic-stricken horde, disillusioned and without sustenance, and totally Incapacitated to seek a new livelihood, died on the spot. Others, deeply embittered, trndged out to face a cold, un sympathetic world, dying as they tried to thumb a ride to the next dag. With a reasonable tmotmt of initiative, a will to do a fair day's work, a bit of discipline, plus self-reliance, the fleas would be living today. And, so would, the dog- a a a ITS hard to decide whether to feel flattered or hurt, that nobody called us on copying the Hoover speaeh here yesterday and the day before, when credit Intentionally has held to the end. Cse of the four-bit words should have given it away. If not the astute reasoning . . . Too bad they cant give the only living ex-president a shot from the fountain of youth, so he'd live another 75 years. By. then he should be completely mellowed, under standing and understood. Seems during his time a president he was unapproachsble, un-understanding and misunderstood. a a a WHEN Mike Houser was Safeway district man ager here, the Houser home was practically next door to the Dr. D. J. Rees home on Lakeshore Drive,. Only Denny Rees lived (existed) with the Jsps at Cabana tuan, P. I, then. Now they both live at Oswego in Portland. They've never met . . . We've all threatened at one time or another to put In concrete and paint It green. No grass to mow or water, no weeds to pull, no moles to trap! Someone's finally done it! Drive down Portland street and see for yourself . . . Speaking of Aesop; do the kids still read Aesop's and Grimm's fairy tales or do the comic books and radio take uo afl their time? ... A good many hot football fans missed the treat of the year by not being at Modoc Field Wednesday night when four grade school teams ran the gamut from a kick-off return for touch down to razzle-dazzle line smashes. Many a future Pelican star got hi first feel of Modoc turf to this classic . . . Conspicuous was the smile on the countenance of he-man. cab-Impresario George Clark a the loud speaker blared. "Clark picked up six yards off right tackle,' or "He was stopped by Clark" , . . in spite of Roosevelt getting beat. By ba'UROC K. SOKOLaKi THZ Impractical proposal of universal disarma ment Is constantly being propelled in the United Natl oris by Soviet Kussia. It Is a one-sided proposi tion, for whereas the United States would abide by any agreement and hold Itself open to Inspection. Soviet Russia re; ecu inspection. From a certain standpoint. Soviet Russia Is right because It has been traditional to accept the good faith of a sovereign state, but It has not been experienced that the good faith of Soviet Russia can be ac cepted. She has with regularity broken her treaty pledges, by a conscious and obvious misconstruction of terms. Usually Rusuan proposals with regard to di armament are aimed toward the elimination of the American stockpile of atom bombs. The Baruch plan on this score required Inspection and Inter national control, which the Russians rejected. At no time have the Russians been willing to provide adequate data on their military establishment, al though ours Is so much public property that the navy and the air force are fighting the next war In the newspapers. As an example of Russia's dilatory tactics, as far back as November I'M. Mr. Noel-Baker on behalf of Oreat Britain proposed that all members of the United Nations should report their troops and bases abroad and their troop In the regular armies, etc Molotov had asked for limited data; Noel-Baker proposed that all the data be made available. This Molotov rejected. He refused figures as to the home forces and rejected that verifications on the spot be made. a a SIR HARTLEY SHAWCROSS. in that discussion, raised this question: . . . Why M. Molotov had argued that the In clusion of home forces would distract attention from forces abroad; was it because Russia's home army was so large that the figures would shock the world? ..." He might have asked whether the military and political police who are as much a military establishment as Hitler's S3, would be Included. In the 1947 meeting of the general assembly. Heetor McNeil made Ails very Interesting point: . . . There can be no systematic disarmament without a real basis In collective security. But as long a there Is mystery and exclusion, then there Is the probability of mistrust." In IMS. it was proposed: 1 AH states must belong to the disarmament system. Hi Disarmament could take effect only In an atmosphere of confidence. (3) Such confidence would require the creation of the United Nations forces envisaged in the charter, the effective control of atomic energy, and peace treaties with Germany and Japan. (4) Anns must be limited to those in dispensable to security. () There must be safe guards capable of detecting violations, and yet caus ing the minimum Interference In the nation's lives. 6 Enforcement action against violators must be provided for. As before, the two Soviet representatives voted against this resolution. a a a a HOWEVER, at the same session. Soviet Russia proposed that all countries reduce their arma ments by one-third. But all resolutions to get at the facts were opposed by the Russians, so that the question might rightly be asked: one-third of what? The phrase, one-third, was thrown out without the slightest statistical evidence or connota tion. This has been the Russian method, exasperat ing and confusing all other countries. In July. 1M9, Mr. Manullsky of the Ukraine denounced a French disarmament plan. Summarized he said: No state conscious of It national dignity could allow foreigners to investigate It military archive. Those who were pressing for complete in formation on conventional armament Insisted on withholding all Information about the atom bomb. Mr. Nash (U-S-A.) said that Soviet opposition to any plan aimed at restoring International confidence was based on their desire to conceal the extent of their rearmament. France took up the fight for a worldwide census of non-atomic weapons and armed forces. Soviet Russia opposed that but her representatives con tinue to make speeches about disarmament and peace. And her agent In this country do the same. a a a s, THE point Is that every effort toward gathering accurate data concerning conventional arms or the size of armies, toward disarmament, toward control and inspection has steadily been opposed by Soviet Russia. Yet that country all the time calls the United State a warmonger. SIDE GLANCES I , ''ill aa t mk. eat t lasnwai "If it gat you down worrying about the prlca of this coat, just think how many billion Unci Sam owes and nobody seem to mind!" Boyle's Column ! The World Today! i bt nrniTT Mackenzie AP rareiga A Hairs Analyst I Mark mate A Happy Birthday to Our Big, Wonderful Pinup Girl hi f -a Jj Doctor Soys Problem of Kidney Stones By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. Written for NEA Service The passing of a kidney stone can be entirely painless but quite often the psln is terrific. A kidney stone may have existed for many years without producing any pain or other symptoms. Most of them grow slow ly and do not cause trouble until they begin to move down the uri nary passageways. These things which we call stones are not really stones at all but groups of crystals which form Into round or irregularly shaped balls. They start In an Irregularly shaped space Inside the kidney which opens Into the ureter or passsgeway which leads down to the bladder. When stones start down this small pas sageway, they scrape on the tender ides of the duct, causing spasm and bleeding. It is this which pro duces the terrific pain and which frequently blocks the flow of urine and causes it to back up behind the stone. Believing the Pain There are at least two stages in the treatment of kidney stones. The first is to care for the immediate pain and other symptoms. It is not safe to leave a stone permanently in the ureter, as damage can be done to the kidney itself. The location of the stone can be discovered by proper equipment and the use of the X-ray. It 1 possible to assist in the passage of the stone by oiling or other meas ures. When the pain is severe, it is necessary to relieve the patient and this involves the use of pain- killing drugs, sometimes In large quantities. It Is Important to know what kind o; stones are involved so that the doctor can tell which foods should be allowed and which forbidden in order to try to prevent new ones from forming. Chronic infections should be treated. Vitamins are sometimes added to the diet. The Doctor Answers QUESTION: Please tell me why I always have cold feet and hands, summer and winter? ANSWER: I don't know. Some people merely seem to be this way without any adequate explanation. LONE WOLF PORTLAND, Oct. 28 UP) A middle-aged robber entered the Stan dard Outfitting company yesterday afternoon and robbed the lone clerk of about 1100. The clerk. Sheldon 8. Loeb, said the man. armed with a Luger, disappeared Into shopping crowds. RADIO PROGRAMS By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK OS" Happy birthday today to America's most glamorous girl! She's 63 years old. but isn't look ing forward to her old age pension. She still carries a torch for every man In the land, and she la true to each one that ha stayed true to her. A chubby lass who always wears the same old fashioned dress, she has wel comed more people to New York thsn Oro ver Whalen. She never lifted her skirts lor a cheesecake pho to, but she hss posed for more snapshots than Oreta Oarbo ever hoped to avoid. Hal Boyle This nstlonal sweetheart the number one U. S. pinup girl is Miss Liberty, the sta tue that stands gazing seaward from Bedloe's Island, a 19-acre wel come mat outside the Golden Door. Party Every year she has a birthday . arty and. of course, she also will this troubled and uneasy year. May or OUwyer and the French' am bassador will be there to make speeches, and a lot of other people. It would be a pleasant change if Mis Liberty made a speech her self for a change. She's a strong silent woman. She's had quite a time of It some career our girl. She has greeted more than 60.000.000 immigrants to our shores, and ought to know how these newcomers felt, entering the land of opportunity. Perhaps she had an even harder time getting set up here than the average immigrant. Conceived The idea of the Statue of Liberty was conceived by a French histori an In 1876 on the 100th anniversary o American independence. She was modeled by Frederic Augste Bar tholdl, a young Alsatlon sculptor. She was a million-dollar baby. It (took the French people four years I to raise (700.000 by popular eub scription to build her. But It was nine years before the American peo ple got around to taking her as a I gift and raised 1300,000 for a pedestal I to put on her feet. The campaign i was put over the top by Josepb : Pulitzer's New York World. The first rivet was put in place on July 12. 1886. and President Cleveland formally welcomed Miss Liberty to citizenship on October 28 of that year. b brine She immediately took the country by storm and over the years has become a great national shrine. Some 500,000 tourists visit her an nually. During the war years Liberty's lamp, which throws its beam twen ty miles across the waters, was darkened. But when the boys came back home her torch glowed as a beacon again for them by day and oy nig nt, She stands 151 feet, has a right ,arm 12 feet thick. She never went in for a boyish figure she is 35 feet .thick at the waistline, and weighs ,450.000 pounds. Thirty people can stand In her head. oddity I An odd fact: In all these years no , one has committed suicide bv Jump ing from this Inner perch. This ! might be because no one ever want ed tc desecrate Miss Liberty. Or It could be because nobody but a mid get could crawl through the win dusts in her crown. FRIDAY EVE, KFLW 145 kc, PbT : reeepe Spars rase S:ISHeana Tewn la'cwe' m Werl Newe flimurr S: Tana Tim ARC S:H llmt Davie ABC :ts " SSChaaiplan Bail Call ABO 1.-SS riaaa riarSaaat ABC ?:! - 1-M Name the kcrari Rcallaia Rtarlci I Tha ! Maa ARC MThi. I, raar 1 HI ABC t atOula aa Harriet ABC Bill " :SSARC Dance Baaif ABC la:a Kicafltie aaaarler nc a:is Jea Hatal, saorta ABC M USmilr Hill, Orck. ABC 1 1 :ae New, Sataasarr UM Slia Off 1 1:1 IMS OCT. 28 Kt Jl 124 ke Gabriel Heatlar SfBS Oais Saea" m Arean Teat Hcatber Mparts BaaaSaa Bill Henrr MBS Riaar Kara Sa Ibe ftlerr Geee Ciua Kit MBS. Iralibl Arrew MBS RLHS va. Create raar f.lena UarSr MBS KtUI as. Create PM I Lava a Meetcrr MBS Pallea l.ewie Jr. MBS Be4 reatber Review MB! AITSallaca Orck. MB Meet tbe Frree Mataal Mewercel SATURDAY A. lCera la lae Mara S:SS " :IS Perva Pare 1:aa Newe, Bkftl. Eiltlea 1:1 harlle'e Beandae' 1:SS Merlla AcrenakeARC T:tf of Ibe Meralnr" S:as Sbeaacre Special ABO S:ll " -S: Pereenelllr Time t-aa Meet the Bene B:IS Erraaae af Mere S:sa Aaeerlrea Termer ABC leeaAl Heme silk Me He ABC ..is - 014, New, Berrewe ABC l:S 1 las I lei Raarh Reye ABO ( ampae Mnale ABC I Tee. va. SMI; ABr SILW Ceatara M, OCT. 2 Maslral Bevellle Meilcel Berellle reek Bemincwar MBg Breakfaet Gang MBS Nea, Beat Bare avarilee af TeaierSer Mernias Matinee Hevea ef Rnt MB Feehlea pleBbee Kiaalee Skew HI He Sea Skew Newe MHS 4-H lab Newberrr Cel. Cbelr MBI Selea Feverltev Pell Saeehe ! r,i i aa PereSa MBS Alrferea Bear MBS aril realare SATURDAY P. KFLW 145 kc. PSI it - IS:IS l!:l " -Jt:IS " 1 :e - - l ie I ts t aa Tea aa Oaaaeele ABC Z:ISKeea SSItlea Newe 2:SSTea aa4 Crampete ABC S.aejealer Jaartlea ABC S:secenc. Amerlcea Jaag ABC 4:aa keaaeetlaUr t'eare 4:IS " -4:M " 4:IS " Sa Beaaember A.4C S:ISAIvle HelSer'l Ban S M Tbe Herneaelree ARC : Cbriltiaa Scleace ttm. M OCT. Z KFJI 124 ke. Name Renae Newe Headllae Tear Danre Tanee Market Llveeteck Maa aa tbe Perm MR RenSe far Rend MBS ONC va. WSC MBS Print Mrmlnfwap MB Blckri Beejeeal . SATURDAY EVE, OCT. t S.a S:IS s::s S:SS S:tS I IS : 1:M IIS aa S:sa tee S:IS IK la.aa lt:IS IS:Se Tedar'l Spert Pete" Heme Tewa New, Han Newe Sammarr Rip tVhmiker Trie ABC Ben AaSrews ABC Hellrwee Brllna ABC Wvnne wllb Hlnaere Bedtime Blerlea Tka Lena Ranser ABO Beperaiea AHC taaebeek Cre. Haa ABC i Tba Navr Bear ABC New! ARC Ira Blse, Sperte ABC Tear Slater. PrleaS ABC 1 1 e ,.i In ramer- 11 :W sit I Off attLW resins OaUk Aa A Plae MB Jnba B. KeaaeSp MB Mais Shaw Wrilber Lrnn Marrap Orra. Br Rrder Kleauia Tempi DerllfM Serine Bill MRS Lembarde Laai I SA MRS Newe MRS Velre af Armp Reee Merfea Trees. MBI Menlca trt helea MRS Jehn Walebaa Oreb. MBS Baal Merpaa Orca. MBS Slia Oil BPJI Peileto Static By DAVE VNniRIIII.L What a rugged life these news men lead! Two of our newsroom's finest. Red Hurd. I ports ed . and Wally Myers, desk man. took to the hills aiound Algoma last night in search of the SP derailment. In the process of stumbling over till and dale, and various sized boulders. Wally lost a four-cuspid bridge from his lower Jaw, and Red gashed his thumb. Then the fun began. With nothing more than a folder of matches the two began a search for the missing molars After a lengthy look. Red spot ted what he thought were a pair of eyes ' gleaming In the I light of a feebly ' burning match. "You're a gone , goose. Wally." : uvi RmI Tt looks like a A v f gopher has got 1V i . . a your teeth." Dave I'ndevhlll But the day was saved, for the gleaming article turned out to be the missing molars. Oh yes. Despite all the confusion, they also located the train. e e e The town win probably be largely vacated tonight with rabid football fans traveling to Orant Pas to witness the crucial Pelican-Cavemen contest. For those of you, and me. not able to make the trip, JI will air the play-by-play account starting at 8:30. Previous network commitments prevent them from picking up the game at it inception. a e a Saturday will again see the two local network station carrying two major contest. JI will broadcast the Oregon State Washington State donney brook at 1:45 in the p m. A safe bet here would be on the Cougars' nose. ABC and Harry Wlsmer will come your way from the southlands with an account of the Texas-Southern Methodist melee. And here, with no fear of contra- 4V7vJ Russian soldiers at Helmstedt, In the Soviet occupied ami of Ger many, refused lo let a truckload of Hible proceed to Berlin. That's propaganda malarial," e. plained the red olllcvr In charge. And of course he was quit right about the "propaganda' angle. The Bible in the greatest piece of pro motion ever developed. That U precisely shy the com- munista. w ii o are battling re ligion aa the dope of t h messes, are anslous to pre vent distribution of the worlds moat widely read volume. Hitler Ian na slsm maintained the same attitude. So the Russian officer of Helm stedt was cor rectly folio UU orders, and presumably his own cuiurienc as w ell. if he Is a loyal communist. Still I have a notion he wss wasting his energy. I don't believe you can Jtlll religion that way any more than old King Canute could make the tide recede at his command. Mrong As a matter of fact, leligion is doing all right for Itself. There are many signs of moral and spiri tual revival In various parts of our ar-shorkeil world. This column called attention the other day to the indications thst a religious re vival may be boiling up In England. There is a widespread feeling In Britain that the country won t over come Its economic troubles or re gain Its old status as a world power until there has been a splrttusl awakening. There also hss been t postwar resurgence of religion In Holland and other continental countriea. Then recently tht column re ported a conversation which I had in New York with Madame Chiang Kai-shek, aife of China's nation alist generalissimo. We were dis cussing China's rehabilitation and she said: "Thst can be achieved only through moral and spiritual growth." "You believe that moral and spiritual change will come to China?'' I asked, and she replied: "Yes. It Is coming." At Home But we don't hsve to go to Europe or Asia lo find this ferment work Uut. We see it right her In the western hemisphere. One of my AP colleagues, John L. Springer, sought an explanation of why half a doeen religious books had climbed to the top of the non-flctlon best selling lists In the United States. William R. Barbour, president of the Flem ing H. Revell company, book pub lisher since 1870. asked expert In the field to answer the query. Tbe consensus was that this call for religious books Indicated a large scale 'return to religion" In the United States. "People are taking religious think ing and the whole concept of re ligion a little more seriously these days." aald C. D. Jones of the Abingdon-Cokesbury Press. Milk Men Warned To Watch Labels PORTLAND. Oct 28 lv Milk distributors In the Portland area were warned today to make their milk and cream as rich as the labels on the bottle. Thomas L. Ohlsen. stale milk marketing administrator, said sam ples had shown some milk and cream to contain less butterfat than the label aald. In a letter to all drVtributors. he warned that such violations would bring prosecution. Cleor and Cloudy New Wage-Ho Puzzlers Bp JtMr-fi MAttl.OW WASHINOTON. Oct. 38 i You r an employer. There s a new minimum wase-hour law. You want to know right now precisely what each Item In It means and how It affects you. your busmeaa. your em ploye. At this moment no one can give an amaer saying whst the law means In every possible case. Gen erally, this mu.h la true: ( hsngrs Most employes, employers and business eovtred by Uie old law, which wa paaaed In l.l. are cov ered by the new law. Hut the new law has removed some people from coverage and has made some other chances aa well. The outstanding change: Every empkiye covered by the taw now must be paid a minimum of 78 rent an hour. Under the old law the minimum waa 40 rents. But there were other rhsnges. some of them stated In such clear language by congress that no one ur Law Poses ' for Some Firms ran misunderstand them. For . ample: A publle telephone exchange, and Its operator, sr exempt from the minimum wa and overtime pro visions uf the law If thai eschang aervlrea leas than 7M station. A number of other businesses end their employes are alo aiempted, clearly, under tlve new law. Hut the law's effect on other buel neaae and their employe Is far less clear. It's so unclear. In fart, that II probably will Uke years be. tore court dec talon say precisely a hat the effect la in different rase That liy because of lark of clarity In the law the wags-hour ailmliilstiallon eipert. who Inter, prel the law and lay down the rules, can't at this tune give opinion cov ering every pmstbl case. Ho, If you have any doubt as le how this new law affect you. your business or your workers, do one of lo things: I. Ask the wage-hour administra tion for a ruling In your case. 2 Ask your lawyer. Gallup Poll Voters' Opinions of 81st J Congress Decidedly Mixed By (.roKI.R liAI I IT PRINCETON. N J.-Voter opln Ions on Uie 81st congress sre de cidedly mixed. How you regard the achievements and shortcomings of the session Just ended depends largely on whether yoji are re publican or democrat. .n a national survey voters mere asked tc tell whether they think the Slst congress is belter or worse than lu prede- fer: Hilar. tha A much maligned 80'h. Moat persons replied either that they didn't know or that they could see little difference between the two. About a third made a definite choice, most of them favoring the 81st. Here Is the national vote: 'I'rern the Impeeaalerta yo have Unas far, baaed on things ye have hesvrd er read, hew da yoo think the preaenl Slst eangrras la Wash ington com par re eiiiii the one Juat before it that is, the aethr" 81st eamgreas belter Slat rengreas worse Both about the same Neither very good . . Don't know Republican Net Happy The chief difference between re publican and democratic attitudes la shown in the following table Re publican who expressed a definite choice took a generally sour atti tude toward the Slst while demo crats were much more favorable f .lc sentiment has been found In In- 'lute surveys lor outrigiu repeal. esrepl among labor union mem berv Despite failure to repeal the act, union members felt a Utile more friendly toaaid the Slst than jliisard the 80th. as the following table allows: t'MON Mr.MIIP.K. Slsl belter U I Slat Wore A boat name 13 Neither good S Don't know JI (iallup !1 II 17 7 S7 Slat better .. Slst worse - .. About same Neither good Don't know Demi. 4'i 7 21 . S 3 Kepa. li'I, It SI 5 U CLASSROOM TEACHERS PORTLAND. Oct. JS 4i The Oregon Education association's de partment of classroom teachers will open a conference here tonight with an address from their nstlon si leader. Philip Wardner, Garden City. N. Y. diction, we place our greenbacks, as thin as they may be, on Dosk Walker and his crew. a e e Ran Into a one-armed bandit on the outskirts of town last night, that refused to pay off ii. free gamea, that is until I wa hungry, and It was time to eat. However, I backed the thing up to the wall, It one arm and all, put the hex on it, and the next thing you know I waa out of nickel. Anyhow, the steak was good, and that was the reason for my being there, to eat. You're 'HONir-5 TAUC0FYeT our-f alia J s. 6s V . ,eT TUB WHISTLES a. OF TUB " . .1.. ..TMErV.ftM ,cr. .aUT iMPfeKWI.; rij.35 a I at- 'l. CCG- lJXVM laJ T -a YOU Imperial 1$ mad. by Hiram VValk.r. Blended whiskey. 86 p 70 grain neutral spina. Hiram Walker tc Sons Inc., Peoria, Illi IMPERIAlj IIPT" '2.10 Action Paralleled Opinion The 80th congress. In power from 1M to IMS, was controlled by the republican party and the outstand ing feature of the session was the Taft-Hartley act. The Slst congress which will be In power through !M. started out as a virtually "do nothing" congress, but ei.ded up passing a good many Important pieces of legislation. When lu actions sre Judged In terms of public opinion, six msjor measure adopted were closely in In with majority public sentiment as revealed early In the year by Institute surveys. These surveys had reported ma jority voter support for Incrrsslng minimum wsges, federal aid to housing, the Atlsntlc psct and the arm aid program for Europe, con tinuation of tht Marshall plan ap propriation and the Recipro cal Trade Agreements act. loion Attitude The 81st congress failed to follow administration demands for repeal of the Taft-Hartley act. Little pub- Lake Still Pondering Locust Fi Fight f -AKEVIKW Whether lo take action next spring toward control of the locusts which Invaded Lake county from Nevada last year will ataln be discussed at a meeting with Warner Valley and other ranchers st the new stockyards at Plush on Thursday. November ). County Agent Elgin Cornell has arranged for the meeting, and h exisscis a federal entnmoloelst from F.lso. Ney. to be present. The ento innlogLst will be either Rill Mabre or Erra Punk, who have studied this band nf strange locusts which began Its march toward Oregon 10 year rgo In the Nevada desert. The problem at present I lo se cure some finance from the ranch. e-arta t -r-ati-as rrA a nPfaPPain nf Kaitl( saw lor ut m 8 b-wlii. The brdu tn mtpprd Unt Hummer during thit in v.. ton by tht entomolnciiu. Con trol nrk mhllc the locut horde l movtnr lx not pmuible, and the only mean of control li to bait the MFC bcrta after the young loruata have hr.trhl and before thry return thftr march. 1tse peta, known lo entomolo (iiu as "range locos U," were not known brfnre their appearance In Nevada ten year ago. So far the have brthcred grain and graaacropa very little, existing almost entirely on MgrbruAh, rabbltbrush and bioadleafrd bruuse. Knpny Health It ... ('tMTifurt Jirl HiMplUHtV St th Buckhorn Mineral Springs Sanitarium o MlB-ml aa mm SUki for thumum. Arthritis Kcarlils. NrvousnBa, Hllh and Lot HlfHMl l'rsiur in 4 stasia tferkoa D i os lot Viper Bsik tse Aithmi. Ke-ivma, Colds, a ISM and HrnnrhlllS. a u...torm Mtasml prtmga nllrtmv, Bt. 1, ArtUaU, aw. - Dr. Iinsu WMtor, IMrMtol ChlrofrratTlU PhysltElM 3 -) """"-OV, C(lipi; ; f ""for ftpc $ wmm St' II