Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 22, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
HKRAL1) AND NEWS. KLAMATH KAl.LS. OREGON
TUESDAY, JANUAI1V 'M, 1 Of.2
FRANK JENKINS
. Editor
Entered second clans matter at the post office of Klamath Palls, Ore,
on August 20, 1906, under act of congress, March 8, 187S
MEMBERS OF Tills ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press la entitled exclusive! to the use for publication
of all the local' news printed in this newspaper as well m all AP news.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mall 6 months $6.50 By Mall year 111.00
rj'jrvdm
By DKB ADDISON
This Is an apology to the read
ers of this page lor allowing a
phony to slip In the other day. It
was a "Tolling the Editor" letter.
The name and address turned out
to be lictttious.
Suffice It to sav that it was
critical of the milk situation. If
you read it, remember that the
writer didn't have the honesty to
sign a true name and address.
Ironically, appearing on. the
same page was the picture, of the
new officers of the Klamath Coun
ty Dairymen's Assoclntion. This
association stands on its own feet,
and these gentlemen are thorough
ly capable of answering any criti
cism directed at them. ,
We apologize to them, not for
printing criticism of a phase of
their busluess, but for being the
vehicle of an undercover jab.
' It was only yesterday that we
were rending, In our trade maga
zine. Editor & Publisher, the re
port of a speech on the pitfalls
of letters to the d'.tor.
The talk was titled, "Dear Sir,
You Cur."
QcmisiA
ABC's
WASHINGTON LB The national
budget was unveiled to Congress
Monday and the sight was impres
sive. It totaled 85 million 444 mil
lion dollars.
The buaget Is President Tru
man's formal request to Congress
to vote the money needed ta run
the government another 12 months
the tlscal year starting July I.
The President hands Congress the
budget at this time every year. It
contains his lengthy explanation
whv the money is needed, plus
hundreds of Daces of itemised ta
bles showing where the money will
go.-
The budget fills a volume as big
as the Manhattan telephone direc
tary. And, as always, government
people began working on it as long
ago as last summer. The Presi
dent himself started working on it
In September.
CONSIDERATION '.'
Since practically everyone owns
a piece of the budget, through the
taxes he pays, great consideration
has to be given the public in the
way Information about thejbudget
Is released. A '
The public would get a disorgan
ized account If the newspapers,
news agencies and radio chains
were unable to see the budget until
that moment when It was for
mally presented to congress.
Still, the President can't turn
the budget over to newsmen before
he hands It to Congress. So what
was done this year Is what is dene
every year.
On Friday copies of the budget
were given newsmen with strict
instructions that no details could
' be released until the formal pre
sentation to Congress.
This gave them a whole weekend
the President himself had a spe
cial conference with newsmen
Saturday to answer their questions
to examine the budget carefully
There are still vast unexplored
regions of the earth, on continents
like Africa and South America. But
we usually think of our own coun
try as pretty well tracked from
coast to coast.
Yet we are much closer to the
primitive wilderness than most of
us realize. Only occasionally does
this lact sink home.
We get some glimmering of it
when planes crash Just minutes
away trom cities like Phoenix and
Bufialo and cannot be found for
clays.
'xliey vanish in Impenetrable for
esv or barren desert or, in the case
of one heavily loaded craft, a
sjant moment or two from the
shore of Lake Michigan.
The thought is almost Incredible.
It takes a mere hour to fly iroin
Pittsburgh to Buffalo, but if your
plane goes down somewhere be
tween the two It's almost as bad
as landing in the tangled jungle
o, the Amazon.
Let a plane crash In Arizona and
the searchers find themselves look
ing for fragments of shattered
metal amid an endless expanse of
gray-green sagebrush and grease
wood. .
Take a look at your highway or
railroad map and you can single
out trackless wilds In many parts
of the country.
There's one stretch In Nevada
where, following a main highway
route, It's 80 miles between filling
stations and 116 miles between
towns.
The road climbs a ' mountain
, range, descends to a broad valley
floor, climbs another range and
then dips down again; then goes on
for hundreds of miles.
Most of the valleys have a lone
ly, empty look,' with few marks
of civilization.
The spacious West Is the easiest
Try This New 1-Day
The Economical Family Size
'BUDGET BUNDLE'
1 A BIG POUNDS QO
V Wo$hed and Dried! 07C
MEN'S HAND
11th and Klamath
BILL JENKINS
Managing editor
1
Mis kteurjd&
The point was, and this paper
thoroughly agrees, that a home
town paper should be the sound
ing board for any and all legiti
mate, honest expressions of opin
ion. The pitfalls are found In the or
ganized publicity drives and the
anonymous pot shooters. The anon
ymous letters and the stereotyped
form letters are easy to dispose
of. That round "file 13" always Is
at hand.
There are others, like this let
ter in question, which have all the
earmarks of genuineness. There is
a city Directory of names and ad
dresses, but none for the county
and Basin. They sometimes fool us.
Letters to the editor always are
welcome. Take your pen in hand
and start out. "Dear Sir, You
Cur." then' be brief and to the
point.
When you're through, read it
over. If you don't feel like sign
ing your true name and address,
please file it In the wastebasket
yourself and save us the trouble.
You'll also save the three cent
stamp which would send you a
letter to a boy In Korea.
Tileuifow
and write stories about it.
As early as Saturday morning
the big news agencies began mov
ing these stories to newspapers
everywhere, with the understand
ing none could be released until
Monday morning:
In this way, when the newspa
pers come out on the street with
stories about the budget, and radio
commentators begin talking about
it, they are able to present a fairly
complete picture.
As early as last August the heads
of the various government divis
ions, agencies, bureaus and depart
ments bad to make their plans for
the year starting next July, to
gether with the costs, including
payrolls.
They turned these in to the Bu
reau of the Budget whose experts
then sat down with them and went
ever the plans and figures to re
duce the costs. The President had
a sav abou Ml this.
EXPLANATION
When the President and the Bud
get Bureau were satisfied they had
the costs , as low as passible, the
President wrote bis explanation to
bo with the figures. All this wes
then printed by the government
printing office.
Once Congress gets the budget,
it begins hearings, calling in the
various government officials who
put the budget together, to Question
them in the hope of cutting the
expenses further.
This questioning is done through
the House and Senate Approoria
lions Committees. The questions
and answers fill manv more fat
volumes. All this questioning takes
months.
When the committees are satis
fied they have cut the budget as
much as possible, they turn the
whole thing over to both - Houses
to vote the money, which may not
be beiore next Summer.
.place to break contact with civili
I zation; hardly a state does not
I have sizable areas little touched
by man.
But as you move east across the
map you can encounter lots of
blank spots: the sand dune coun
try of Nebraska, the treeless roll
ing plains of the Dakotas, the
rough-hewn lands of northwestern
Pennsylvania, the whole rugged
backbone of the Appalachian moun
tain chain winding southweslward
from New England down to north
ern Alabama, the forbidding waste
of swampland and lush growth in
tlft Florida Everglades.
Let your mind dwell upon these
unvlsited places long enough and
you'll begin to think of America's
teeming cities as tiny islands In
an ccean vacant of humanity. Of
course it's not really that bad, for
America's industrious farmers
have put the marks of man upon
hundreds of thousands of tillable
acres.
Yet this must still seem a pretty
primitive land to a man who at
10 o'clock is Impatiently pacing in
a warm, crowded airport waiting
room and at 10:45 is trying to plow
his way through woods and deep
snow in search of any faint trail
leading him to a remote outpost
telephone and a contact with civil
ization. Smith Pays Top
Heifer Price
MIAMI, Okla. Un A world's
record price for a heifer. $35,100,
was paid at the annual Sunbeam
Farms Aberdeen-Angus brccded
cattle auction at Miami Monday.
The record price was paid by
Breeder Ralph L. Smith, a Kansas
City lumberman.
Laundry Service!
LAUNDRY
Phone 2-2531
They'll Do It Every
Shimber is. om. so
ABOUT WHAT FUEL. AtV BRL GO
INTO MIS HB4PM081ES ItfHARDS
II 7 "v- TV f
I THOUGHT V V -4 7
h VOUSflPXW Vf HjU lAlow tM l..t... A S
hwJ eJESDEC? S4S- VERY BARTIQJLAR I 17 I
YnH ww aonfr xxi H asoot what gas J cSf hU
tZA STOP THERE? mo OIL I PUT 4
irftr-r, r- K X'UL. VWIT TILL H - V TUTTI PrsCihA A
Sago SideglaiitM's-
Did you ever get a good old -
fashioned stomach ache trom eat-
Sua green piums? No self-inlllclod
spusm of childhocl can approach i stopped lor years to come outside
wniu a green plum can do to ajthe lcr.ce and one asked the other:
kid's tummy. Mr. Odell had a i "It's a grand spot, I agree: the
plum tree that hung over his spot whence comes the hope of
fence. The boys of our neighbor- our nation: but why doesn't some
hood ran true to form and raided) one cut down that battered thins
it. The years have proved that ' right there in he foreground?"
others than kids raid plum trees. . "Younsser, thai was a great
The politicians for instance. No tree in its day." says pop, who
sooner aoes a plum pass out of I voted In 189S. "That tree once
the blossom stage, and bcg.n to grew plums for Roosevelt and
snow its round ereen bodv hi the Vails that's the poor old Repub-
ena or a siem. than the vard ls.'lican tree."
I an irampea down by hopeiuls i "Koosevelt and Taft plums trom
I hang jig around to catch it' when the same tree?" questions the be
lli alls. juddered youngster.
But for the age-old humbug that ! "'No, U:e 'ou knfw:. "'
lpar.y inemoers nave someunnsi to ! "ef,e..leuav Kooscvea and Big Bill
j say about who will get the r.peiieu ! ls pops anwct.
.ruii, tae waole trme ot UisiLtrs
would climo Uie tree tomorrow,
oreak oil v its limbs and beat it i
oac home with some
iouvenir o. the occasion.
ih.? JT"Jf UheW0ULd b; :e that inspired ' this rcverVc. I
iSrn?. yv?.l.8 . e ;8Be 1 6lC,en remember '.Uict alter the kids had
plum: yaimeu it olf Ue tree be- nimosL ..iL-h i, ,-, wise m icu
.ore the warm aim sircnguien.it)!, fjm , : " . r nv n
FHO. , . ,' ' "boys, bive the old tree a
nea plate it in a fruit jar hvfcm,nce. Its still a good tree,
his kitchen window, keep iv ircslny iWnafs lcit of it, and no tree ever
ivaterea and waic.i us skm tur;i'erew sweeter plums. Don't climb
from olive green to its pnrpi.s-i i and break off more branches,
snate of maturity . I. m:gnt cnaage Let tlle Irult gel rip2. Don't quar
color, but still oe a pnony -1,11113 ! rcl wiiii 'tech other about us
by convention time: just a plum, ! pums: ra-e most Ueservuvi of you
si:in deep; on the insioe a puipy i win geyule biggest and the bent
mass oi unripened opportunity, x prom7s. Let 'cm get ripe, kids,
picked Joo soon by the wrong men. I cnd the old tree will flourish
But, by goily. hed have-ltr and agaln wlth plums for . 0 you.
he d -run-lets say lor Present. 1 n vuu dolVt- ril-.heve to cut it
All but one of the gang, wao tad , cown-and start another tree."
gathered 'neath the tree-at bios-, Ci in
som time wouid ba dbappoimed.
but each woula have something to
show that hed been there. &ome -
thing that to his dying day he'd
never let the country .orget that
he was mcnioned lor the ncrnma-!
lion in 1352.
Snould t.ie time ever come that , tres. its solid, juicy ripened plums
his pals let the p.um get ripe, and 0f late Summer proved worth wait
one of them got elected, the fact ; mg for: and we were spared the
that he once was mentioned might I green plum bellyaches that bad bc
put him in line for the Cabinet, ;. set us. Somehow we seemed to get
or something. 1 along better with each other. Even
When they got their coveted sou-1 the neighbors begen to like us.
venirs of the premature raid, the j If you get anything out of this
winners of second to fifth places . homely allegory swell; and you
in the contest didn't notice what I might even go along with the guess
theyd done to the tree: thai thcyd that the man most likely to save
bent and broken many of its most the Republican tree never got sick
beautiful and prolific limbs, and ' off Its green plum',,
left it an awkward object in the 1 He s been too busy fighting for
national plum orchard. ithe whole orchard in a uniform.
APPRECIATION
To: The Honorable U. E. Reeder.
County Judge, and the Hon
orable Jerry Rajnus and Ed
Oowen, County Commission
ers, and the many Rood citi
zens and supporters of the
undersigned.
I desire to publicly express my
deep felt appreciation and grati
tude for tho confidence reposed in
me by my appointment as the
Sheriff of Klamath County. Oreij.
by the County Court of Klamath
County, and the wonderful support
given me, In support of my ap
pointment by the good citizens of
Klamath County.
In accepting this office, I do so
with the full appreciation of the
difficult ta.k ahead of me in fill
ing the position left vacant by the
late J. E. Francy, my superior in
office, and with the full realiza
tion that his able administration of
such office leaves me no choice
but to carry on in the some ef-
From G(ni Up Yr Ckimflty,
StntttUntl New Scit toi tarfctn fit
Rfitf tut up it 25 ( yut Win
tcf'l Sunplj tf Cial, Oil. it Wiotf.
(Jit liiuitf far all. M"to IH
fuili.
if Rimtfff cltltlnf ritpliltt frtnt
hit ptt it rtiimnty lt
it Mt bealinf Muipmtnt lait
lirw
Site! Cair la till
USE RED DEVIL
At Lending Hardwore, Grocery
and Department Storei,
Tiqic
careful
1 They cither
never heard, or
didn't sense.
what people said
: ttboui the
tree; as passers-by
., . .... ,
it s.nce then." remur.s the kid.
. . . " v-yv- w "
It." says the old-ilmcr and they
drive on.
I remember Mr. Odcll's plum
1 As lne years passed we all were
; g!ail tnat we heeded the old man,
:even to the pomi or shooing away
. u,e Drds, We realized how Ions It
; wouid take another tree to bear
plums. ;
: 0nel i0ined to orotect the
I ficient. courteous manner, with the
one purpose in mind of servlnrt
the public and Klamath County lo
the utmost of my ability. This, I
most humbly pledge; and solicit
the support of each citizen of this
County in my efforts to serve you
as faithfully and efficiently as my
esteemed predecessor, the late J.E
Franey.
1 Faithfully yours,
J. M. Brltlon,
Sheriff
ETHIOPIA HAS SCRAP
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, W
Ethiopia could provide thousends
cf tons of scrap iron for American
blest furnaces. Transportation Is
one of the difficulties In getting It
oui 01 me country, rues of rusting
scrap litter mr.ny places In Addis
Ababa and other areas In the
country debris from Ihe 1941
fighting between the Italians and
British.
Mm
'ffiSJQS
9.
thi ran ndiy au iini
904 Klamath Ave. Phone A076
By Jimmy Ilatlo
wtoSSqS Sas to wis om
TUB l J
rJ?rl ND HOT
r our rue Or
Ovi.
Thamanoa tip o
IhS HAJI.OH!
TO
nrir'Timiti-- -T'-' "" "
The most common operation per
formed in the United States is
removal of the tonsils. But even
though tills Is done olteu. it should
not be performed without good
reason, slnco it Is not entirely
without rl.ik, though the rlsk Is
very slight..
There are some recognized rea
sons for NOT taking out the ton
sils. Among these are the pres
ence of acute Inflammation, tuber
culosis of the luu7s, several blood
disorders or diabetes.
The reasons for taking out ton
sils are not always so cleur-cut.
F requent attacks 01 acute tonsillitis
is one. Dilficulty in .swallowing,
breathing or talking caused by en
larged tonsils is another. Caiarrh
or oilier Infections of the middle
car also Is usually reason enough
to remove them.
Most specialists in the field do
not believe that there is any
method nearly as satlsiaciory as
removal of the tonsils. Burning the
tonsils by electrolysis docs not re
move all of the diseased tissue,
they feel, and may actually seul
over pockets of pus which can
only drain Into the blood system
and do more harm thaot was done
before.
All of this Implies that the de
cision 011 whether to remove the
tonsils or not niut be made ul.er
study and r.nelysis of the Indi
vidual problem, and all the cir
cumstances it involves.
JACOBY
on
Canasta
We had quic a few arguments
recoil. ly uuouv Ctuasta," reports a
liiicagu concsponueni, "bui ihcy
w.e a.l laniy mild compareu 10
the one we jUst had about a play
1 mace, ihki lusi one was realty
U IUIU.
I - .as dealt five Jacks. My
, partner maoe ihe firs, meld lor
our siue auer a couple ot plays,
j so at my turn I put oown three o.
I me live jacks and kept the oilier
: two jacks In my hand Innocent-
! I1KC
I "oure enough, the player at my
: lcfi irozc ihe discuro pile. Aflcr
. a few more plays, -ihe player at
: my iigiii ulscarded a Jack. Tills
i was Just what I had been waiting
' .or, so I picked up the discard
pile with the two packs iwhicn
were sun in my nanu, 01 course.!.
"The opponents said that my
stratagem was simply cheating,
and that they woulun t play wlm
me any more If I wem on like
that. I argued about it until we
were all blue In the face, but It
didn't do any good.
"i am fond of my friends, so I
let them have their way. Never
theless I feel sure that my play
was pencclly fair and proper. I II
abide by your decision If you say
1 was wrong, wnat is your ver
dict?" ,
Tliis sort of thing happens sur
prisingly often. My correspondent
was of course absolutely fair in
playing the way he did. His op
ponents had 110 right to say that
ills tricky play was cheating.
This, of course, Is known to
every good player of almost any
card game. It Is quite proper and
ethical to make a deceptive play,
provided that you rely only on the
play itself and that you don't help
matters along wlh a false com
ment. For example, you can meld three
Jacks and keep two In your hand;
but. you should not say "I wish I
had more of these" or anything
else that would give the fal.e im
pression that you had melded all
of your Jacks.
Nevertheless, Canasta Is just a
game, and friends arc more lm-
LIFE INSURANCE
OPPORTUNITY
With Good Earning
Potiibilitiet as
DISTRICT MANAGER
Applicant mutt have
background of substan
tial sales production or
sales supervision.
Man selected ' will be
given Home Office Train
ing., Call or Write
Gordon D, Orput,
General Agent
NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
Phone BE-1196
214 Corbcrt Bldg., Portland
" '. tnmi
t..i 1.. . , ..... . .. .... ....... .
Itv SAM, I'KTT
(lor Hill lloylpl
NliW YQKK W'l How's your
schwa? r
Oh, come on now. You've gut n
sciivvu. 1 1 uiiuiii has a bvhwi,. So
has I'.'iM'tiliower. Likcwlnv Churc
hui, Vojl llcri'ii,.Scii. Tall, Shirley
Temple, Fl unk C'UKtcllo, Every
body hus 11 tichtvn bvcuio a stiiwa
knows no bairleis ul tux, politics,
tin: ur Heiiaraphy.
Ucloiti you lutlio In contusion
to I lit- nporu pnitis. let It bo ex
plained quickly what a schwa Is,
In h (Iim-.uks.oii of pioiiuiu'liitloii,
the Technology Kevlcw of the
iV.ussiicini.scm jii.Hlltuio of Technol
ogy syi:
"Much of the variability In pro
nunciation of 11 given word arises
110111 11 Hirnuff tendency of timc
EiujIInIi towel sounds to lo.se their
Individuality, and to be replaced
by u Hernial sound which pho
neticians cull the "schwa."'
You iiulm uiidoistiiiul, thoiiiih,
thin the selnvn In not the phonutlc
spelling of the sound miide. It aim-
my is a name given uy uie ex
perts to Iho Niiind. It couM Just ii
e...Hiiv iiuvc ureu caned senmo or
shuook.
So what Is 11 schwa?
A schwu, suys tlic TechnnliiK.v
Rcnier, Is the sound "produced
by expulsion of breath with the
vocul uruuns hi 11 iienorully relaxed
position" 11 nd "decidedly roseni-
ules a grunt ur gionn.
"The schwu occurs frrnuently In
English.) For example, the vowel-i
of 'above' can lo pronounced In
no other way. If Ihc reader will say
this word aloud, he cult satisfy
himself that both the "A" and the
'O' are pronounced with tho equiv
alent of 11 urunt."
Readers who try this simple test
and do not como up with a munt
Budget Earmarks Billion
For lipping Naval Power
" a i.inin.i 1 11a fravft nn details of the nil
I . w Aan.nu ir . - ".
noiiar isavy snipoiiiioiin u.n
before Congress Tuesday, as part
of President Truman s request lor
11 30 per cent Increase in defense
.spending here and abroad. -
The mil would auinorue con-
structlon of this country's
The bill would authorize con-
IiiUL irui tFwi-icti nt.u.i,,,, ..iu
as second Klaul alrcrufl carrier, df
nearly W.000 tons and capable of
berthing craft bearuig an atomic
bomb.
It also provides for si other new
coinuiu tcsscis, iiiuuci iur.nuuii ui
1 10 additional warcrafl now in serv
1 ice and the construction of 010
landing and service cralt.
! Chairman Vinson iD.-Oa.l of the
J House Armed Services Committee
introduced the M.150.000.000 mcas
I ure Monday beiore Congress heard
1 President Truman's budget mes-
-sc. I PORTLAND ili A drop In en-
! The President's I8S.444.OO0.00.') rollincnt of 13.4 per cent nl slate
bud;iet for the 1053 flscul year colleges wna reported Monday by
starting July 1 included til. 183.-' the suite board ol higher education.
ouo.OOu for this country's military I iliui Is a normal drop lor the
services and 10 'j billion for lor- wlmer Mrm, officials said. They
eign military and civilian spend- listed the total enrollment at II.
.nj. it, . 033 Oregon Htale 4.(143. Oregon
ihei 'election year Congress 4.085. Oregon College ol Education
opened the pic.icnl session by talk-; 430. outhcin Oregon 501, Eastern
1 mg oconoiuy, mid key represents- Oregon 432, Vonport 008, Dental
tlvcs said Monday they would scru- School 306 and M relic 11 1 School 65.
1 tliilsc the President's dc.cnse re-' College course changes. Inrlud
quests closely. ilng three at Oregon Htale, were
I Vinson said 'the new ship build- approved by the board. The Culver
1 In? progrum was necessary to lty of Oregon protested saving the
"keep our Navy In tcp with new chaniics enrroiichrd on major llelds
! developments" and to rcpluco out- until now reserved for tho Unlver-
worn or obsolete ships.
Everest Aim
Of Two Treks
ZURICH, Switzerland W The
Swiss Institute for Alpine Research
is planning a Mt. Everest expe
dition In 1052 hoping not 10 trend
on the toes of a British expedi
tion which Is due to climb the
'seme mountain ot the same time.
I The government ol Nepal recent
ly gave Swiss formal permis
sion to launch the first postwar
eliort to climb the world's highest
1 peak. At the same time, the SvIsj-
learneq innt a uriiwri expedition
wan also preparing 10 renew me
attack on tinconquercd Everest
next year. Botli expeditions arc
hnll.,nH Ia V.a ,,nnlt,- It... .. ..,...
by the southern route from Nepal
In the early fall of next year.
The Institute Is lining up Hlm-aluya-trnlned
sclontlllo and moun
taineering experts 10 Join the Swiss
gruup. ine expcuuion, complete
wilh the most un-to-datc caulp
ment Is expected to leavo Switzer
land early in April,
porlant than games. If your
friends arc foolish enough to pre
fer a sissy's way of playing Ca
nasta, you may nave to let them
have their way.
12 Men Chosen
Geo. N, Taylor
After that night of prayer, Jesus
chose the Twelve to be H's disciples
among them Judas who was to
betray Him. Yes, Christ who knew
what was In man, chose Judas.
Three years pass and we think
of Christ's deeds of mercy, His
gracious words
and His raislna
X 'h- 1 of the dead. Then
B. 'i'ly I at the end. came
iiV; I the night of His
Jr. 4 v"m betrayal. You see
'iAi 1 M the lemnle nnlice
march In wit It
lanterns, torches
and weapons to
arrest Him. You
see Judas step up
to Christ's side
and give Him the
t r a 1 1 0 r' s kiss.
Geo. N,. Taylor N"xt, Wit sec an
not) 01 uoa lb
was that for nn Instant Christ let
Iobc the glory that wns His from all
elmlty, Temple police and mob
nil went bnckward and fell to tho
ground. John 18:0. Flesh and bloc.l
could not stand before the glory
of God. Then Christ gave Him
self up to go to the Cross to die
for your sins John 18:0.
A White Pine Drive family uses
this space lo tell whnt price Christ
paid fnr your soul, What Is your
3p
ft
wwmmt 1 mi. i.iiii ,". ."' '.I ,1'iij
. , yi .,,U .j.n,,.
ruin 011 1'licstly uilvlsed tu lonluiit
MIT , not inc. I trini 11 nmua, iu
times without n hIiiiiIo giunt or
Uioiin. It una the uuy next to mo
who Riimiicd.
Aiiywuj, Uie Kevlew uy. tho
sehwii Is repliiclim more mid more
vowels In both tiood mid bud Eng
lish. As a "random" example, the
iihiasc. "Miis.'iacliu.selts Instltilto of
TcehnoloKy," win cited.
"When Ihcjie words me ))loiiouii
ed Willi illiniiHt formality, the He
view auvs, "the schwu occurs In
three additional places: Tho '1'" of
'MHssiieliiisett.s.' tho second T nl
'Institute,' and tho second 'O' In
'Tc'linoliw.'"
Tlum, If we use n question, mark
for the schwa Miiilid, Ihe rolloqulul
pniiuincUillciii of Ihln phrase la
"Miis,.l'hUM?etl.s ?f TrclmolJey."
Oct i? Well, now that you tin
rieislnnd the schwu. don't worry
about It. for the Hevlew unlnls out,
"Such free use of th n-'hw.i tloes
not eiuluiKier Inlelllglblllly, as the
wonts Ulenlllles them fully 11 ml Ihe
context niiikns nicniilnus lienr. In
lact, cusv speech with llhernl Use
of Ihe scliwu sound him iii ceplnnro
today us the .stniidiird for radio
1 and the stnuc. '
I A tribe of biishmen who live on
jlhe Irlimcs of li e Kiihilinrl Desert
in Allien has Hs own version of
the schwu. Actually, It's more of a
jclocl: Ihan a schwn.
"The luimuuiie of these people.
suvs the Review, is iirn-nuni n
consisting niiilnly of clicks made
Willi the tongue umilnit the rnnf
of Ihe moiilh. . . . Although the
Kwtllsh sneiiklmt ieron einnloys
clicks onlv In odtlresslnu horses or
other animals, It l striking l" note
Ihe predominance In current Amer
ican speech of a ulnillnrlv rudlmen
tarv sound -jinn schwa."
Feel belter now?
, ; STiirl .uhmnrln. but said
r; r - u-iii. mil
It
u'niilrl he
submarine attack capabilities." He
uL"o declined to estlinute the cost.
A second nuclear underwater
crult was authorized alter con
- , t , b , building
vy-, lnlUM vewcl ot this
type.
'i-t. 1.111 ii.niilil iill.nrly -nn.
jruc,lon of wloii,er submarine, the
; rad,r pieM ,mtU,rwllt(.r cr.,,
designed to provide an air screen
! (or . t.rrirr striking force.
Fewer Attend
State Schools
slly.
Couple Held
jFor Murder
OREGON CITY IP Mrs. Bonnie
Lee Kuhnhaurcn, 3(1, and timer
Dorscy Williams, 23, both of Port
land, were arraigned here Monday
on flr.a degree murder charge.
They are accused of Iho lulnl
healing of Jalmar Tarkla, 118,
Portland.
Tarkm died In a Portland hos-
Cltal Snturduy, He was found badly
eaten In a roadside ditch In south
east Portlond Thursday,
KKAMSTIC ACT
SINGAPORE im Sorcar, the
Indian mnglclitn. Invited 20 per
sons to the singe lo sec his most
prized act. From a close range,
they all swore that Sorcar cut o f
Ihe tongue- of a hypnotized nssls
tnnt and replaced It minutes later
without any apparent 111 cfect on
the subject. The act was so con
vincing thnl three of the witnesses,
nil women, fnlnted
Make Your Yard the
Most Beautiful
for Miles Around!
Growt up to
60 ft. high
Early Blooming
TULIP TREE
Special-by-Mail!
(3 for $2)
$1
00.
Nnthlitff ynu en 11 Id plan I Hill ffVr
vou m much nntlifnrllon an on of
thrnp tail, nnlif llcvihty InvHv Tulip
Tifr. And II will Innrrnnr lb
vnIii of yintr i.rnpprly htindrrrU ot
aoMari In JhhI a tew yfr, Itlonmt
early and long with Am maafiea
of (1-peUI lullp flower. I.mvm aro
n fltnn rli-h green. Wonderful jihadc.
Will maVo yortr yard a dhow nlare
for yfari lo romf. (trow fa, Verv
hardy. r nrrtd a ulron Irff It lo
ft fel fnr iirit!trnl Irntinnlanflti.
Limited ftunpiyt Send II for I, 11
for II, noUalri, CO. II, 'a we'rome.
HatlftfaHion jruaranlnrri or your
mnnev bark. I XTTIA (ilFT, color
ful Red Twlf Dogwood Tree!
KRirRR NimrTKRIRH, IEPT,
Hlocmlniton, lllinola
Trappers Go "
For Muskrats
The flint muiikriil hurvnst nit
Tille Luke and Lower Klumalli
Niitloliul Wlldllln Itl'limes In three
veins Is how under way according
to the United HtiUi'S Fish niul Willi
lit n Hnrvlce,
A quota nf S.nno nils from Tills
Lake unci 3,000 from Lower Klnm.
mil nuu.li areas hus been net,
Theso quotas do not Include mimic -ruts
to Ue taken from the Kilciil
tin nl m ens on both retimes whrni
coinplute rrniiiviil of all iminkmu
Ih desiiabln to prevent (Inmiige 10
dikes, water control alructuien and
dlli'h bunks.
I'll Ion 1 liiippcrs Imvo been Is
sued shiiiciriippiug iiernilts 10
Hup Iho iiiilskiuts. Under thesn
permits Ihe prlln will be divided
un a M-6II bnsl.s between the lliiii.
pers mid the Fish and Wlldliio
Service. Proceeds from (he sale nf
tho lloverniiienl sliuro nf the pel 11
go to Ihe II inc. HI of lleclnmntlou.
Miiskmls In n ninrsh are. .r..
one of the mursh iiiuiiiiuenient
lools, iiccnidliig to Hetugo Mini.
Kir Tliomiis C. II111 11. Where
dense stmids nf riiltulls or bullrunli
exist, Ihe miiskruls, If not reduced
In numbers IhrouKli trnpplnu, will
In feeding on the rools of thesa
plants, open up Hie lilies lo pro
vide nesting and leedlnu areun fur
waterfowl. When this lhlnnlnn pro
cess nn moi'iih cover prnRrni.ses in
Iho desired point, 11 reduction l.i
ihe number of mm.kruta reduces
the VCKeliillnu roiilrol mid a de
sired density of cover can lio
inululaiiircl.
All (lira are hklnurd and drirV
In relUKe biillillnus mulutiilucd fun
this purpose. All 11 uppers are ex
peclecl to Imp out their quotas
within Ihe next 30 days.
Precious
Patients
Treated
ROMF. IP A fust-bulldlng
book hospital" In Rome Is at
trading "precious patients" from
all over the world.
The hospital is The Institute of
Book Pathology. The pnllrnls are
ancient and rare books and parch
menls which have suffered srcl
dents or are threatened by de
strucllva book bacteria.
Mostly the damage to previous!
stores of old bonks and record
In Italy during the war has brr
irsponslolr lor tho growth of lha
ni.-itltiitr. nllli'luls mi Id. Many nf
I the ancient documents saved from
the Abbey of Monte Caaslno were
restored mere.
The iiistiiuie, founded In U3I,
now boasts Ihe most modern equip
ment. It can duplicate the parch
ment, the Ink and printing and
drying processes of centuries ago.
11 has photoelectric equipment
to delect "Internal diseases" In
books the destructive bugs which
In lime could reduce a treasured
volume to shreds. There la also
a "gas chamber" lo destroy
these book vermin.
Yugo Terrorists
Get Death
BF.I.ORADH, Yugoslavia t
The official Yugoslav news agencw
said Monday night ihree turn were'
nenteuced lo death and 30 others to
long prison terms. They were con
victed of being members ol a ter
ror band which killed several gov
ernment olflclals and robbed col
Icrllvo farms.
The agency said all were Yugo
slav cltleiu 01 Albanian descent.
The charge said threo of their
murder victims were members nf
the Yugoslav Security Police
cUDBAp.
British Heavy
With Pennies
NEW YORK. 11 There was a
fcarclty of pennies In the United
Stales III 1U31 despite a double
shut in operations by the Bureau
of the Mint to meet demand, rhis
caused rationing of pennies, as
well as nickels and quarters, bv
Ihe Federal Reserve Bank of New
York.
In contrast, Great Britain's Roy
al Mint was trying to get rid of
sonio of their oversize pennies by
buying up and retiring one mil
lion dollars worth. There are about
two billion British pennies out
standing At.FAIJr'A mFcK ZOOMS
PORTLAND 11 A gain of $3
a ton In Uie price of Alfalfa the
past week, Increased Iho price 10
an all-time hlrih of $50 a ton In
Portland Monday.
chains!
Repaired or made to order
for car, truck, or equipment.
SOUTHWIND
GAS HEATERS
REPAIRED!
Soe the new Southwind . .
with frcih air and dash con
trol! . Alto Defroiten For
All Can and Trucks!
Bill Davis
ASSOCIATED SERVICE
2101 So. 6th Ph. 3413
answer? ,.,4. . I
Addrana