PAGE SIX HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1051 FRANK JENKINS Mltor entered as second class matter it the post o"lce of Klamath Falls, Ore., , on August JO, 1806, under act ol Congress, March , MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS The Associated Presa la entitled exclusively to the use for publication of all the local news printed in Uila newspaper aa well as all AP news SUBSCRIPTION RATES 6 months (6.50 By mall "By Mall By BILL JENKINS Every ao often you pick up a Pacific Coaat paper and read thai one of our major cities is having an air raid drill to see how well and how fast the local gentry can get themselves into a place of safety. On the whole the tests aren't much good and prove very little except that equipment refuses to work, wardens are misinformed the clocks are off and fifty percent of the people are deaf. I suppose the time will come wnen we u nave wen vuuugu vi ganiied CD unit here thai we'll have to put up with drills again. When thai time comes a lot of things will be revealed. The most pertinent of which being that the average adult would rather get , his head blown off than appear in what he considers a ridiculous sit uation. And your average citizen tas if there could be such a thing) - considers crouching against a wall with his arms shielding his face to be a ridiculous situation. The minute he gets in the position he starts sneakng a few peaks over the elbow to see if everyone Is in the correct posture. And all he sees are myriads of guilty eyes focusd on him to see If be is .obeying the ordinance. m Sure, it would be swell if every one would be a good boy and do "ts he la told. But It won't do any good to try. Even during the ac tual attack Mr, Average Jerk will snap his head up to make sure his posture isn't too ridiculous. Probably just in time to pick up a piece, of shrapnel between the eyes or get a good radiation burn or whatever it is you gel from A and H bombs. Then you can sit around with the remaining relatives and dis cuss the sad fate of Uncle Elmer and curse the horrors of war. And By DEB ADDISON Would anybody like to have a college choir sing for them? We refer to the Humboldt State College choir. Here's a chance to see if they sing as well as they play football. (Humboldt handed Oregon Tech one of its three foot-' ball defeats last fall, and it s even up. one and one, in basketball you'll remember.) There's an opportunity to get the Humboldt choir because a Grants Pass engagement, in its spring tour, has been cancelled. The- dale is March 6, a Thursday. : It's a 37-volce choir. To get them here would require making ar rangements for the concert, of course, and providing housing for the students 16 boys and 21 girls. That's all. " Anyone interested in sponsoring fame, call yours truly. If your're hazy about Humboldt, it's one of the California junior col leges. It's located at Areata, on Humboldt Bay, near Eureka not at Arcadia, near the race track. ' Don't let this mention dim your sights on the appearance of Andy Loney's world champion trumpet player. Rafael Mendez, the Babe Ruth of trumpet players, will appear in concert with the KUHS band and a cappella choir on April 4, a Fri day. Mendez also will work with stu dent musicians the next day. In addition to being the world's fore most trumpet soloist, he's a movie and television star. Yes,, tickets are on sale at the Chamber of' Commerce and Der by's: $2.00 reserved, 1.50 general, and $1.00 students. Spring Opening Style Show Mar. 14. a Friday. Admission 50 cents, benefit youth activities. A second look at the panel mem bers of the last Build the Basin forum, on the city-rurban annexa tion question, shows quite a mix ture of interests. Take a look at- the location of their home3 and their places of business or where they work. Two of them live inside the city limits and work outside. Two of them live outside and work Inside Two of them live In and work in. One lives out and works out no let's say two, and that makes It even all around. (Mrs. Wilbur Shannon, the housewife, lives out side the city. If it's correct that a woman's work Is in the home, then the works outside, too.) Here's one concrete answer on the question: Would a larger cor porate city population attract more business here? Occasionally we get the word from our eastern advertising rep resentatives that the Herald and News is not on the Such-and-Such advertising schedule - because they are not going into markets with --- - - " ......-. l.l Open again... Hamilton's Cafe and TRUCK STOP 6 Miles North en Highwoy 97 Tr Melva's back to serve you with an A Grade restaurant. Open 24 Hours a Day DILL JENKINS Managing Editor year $11.00 off in a-dark and lonely room somewhere in the city an air raid warden will blow his brains out in despair because he feels that he has failed in his Job of teaching the people how to survive. He'll go on to his reward never real ising, Just because he was a con scientious soul from the start, that a man died not through lack of training but through inate stupid ity. The poor cluck. Oh well, when the time comes I don't suppose the crack of doom would alert the great mass of the people anyway, so why worry about It? If our city-proposed system goes through to put advertising on the parking meters in town I wonder if a firm could be organized to sponsor signs for the last meter in each block? A sign that would say: Keep in your own lane, you jerk! It wouldn't do any harm and might do a little something to ease the traffic situation. Although it is getting much better. More and more drivers are beginning to move over to the correct lane when approaching a corner so that you can go straight through if you're in a hurry. Fishing season must be just around the corner. The sporting goods houses are taking 'out the displays of skis' and hockey sticks and shotguns and putting in win dows filled with fishing roads, nets, creels, flies, lines, waders, camp stoves and all the other paraphernalia that goes with the art of fishing. Now all the ang lers have to do is wait for the snow to go off the roads enough and the mud to dry up enough that thev can get back Into the creeks and rivers where the big ones arc. I less than 25,000 corporate city pop ulation. That's not often the deciding fac tor, but it does happen. You could assume that it would have a bear ing on other business transactions at times too. Our secret operative No. 7 re ported that after the panel went off the air, both proponents of the Stay Out of the City theme said: Oh yes, the time will come, and it won't be long, when we should join the city but we're not quite ready yet. Doing without advertising is like winking at a pretty girl in the dark. You know what you're doing, but nobody else does. Timber Access Roads Sought WASHINGTON Wl More tim ber access roBds are needed in the Pacific Northwest, an Oregon lum ber expert tola a Senate subcom mittee Thursday. W. D. Hagenstein. forest engi neer for Pacific Northwest Forest Industries, said Congress should authorize 30 million dollars a year for five years for such roads in national forests. He told a Senate public works subcommittee that prime timber is going to waste because loggers can't reach It. He added that the average annual timber cut in West ern Washington and Oregon na tional forests was only 56 per cent of the allowable harvest under sound forestry principles during the last 10 years. "The public forests are not con tributing their share to the forest products needs of the citizens of the United States," he said. Hagenstein, who is from Port and. said that the lumber industry would build many of the needed roads, if the government would sell timber in larger blocks. He commented that the federal aid highway bill now being con sidered would authorize 32 million dollars a year for forest highways and 28 trillions annually for forest development roads or trails, much of the money to be used for main tenance purposes. MORE WOMEN VOTERS WESTPORT, Conn. Wl Deter mining how many women vote In any given election usually means a painstaking examination of the check-off list, but it's as easy as pie here and has been for 30 years. Westport's lone polling place has six voting machines. Three are for "men only" and three for "women only." Which machines record the greater numoer OI TO ICS 7 ine women's, bv about 10 ner cent. says Registrar Joseph McOlll. Theyll Do It Every uMmJ .2rr,wT WAS coursi'r K06IOL4HC CALLED HER FOUR TIMES a cwy M W ATS VVHV Cur W W . l"- rT Vis NEW YORK Lfl Some years ago I started the pleasant custom of kissing all the girls in the office on my oirtnciay. I don't know where I got the Idea, but It's a wonderful Ymse for a fine pastlrtie. My boss has never cared for the practice, however. particulars since the year he came out and caugnt me closing in on a winded secretary who had run five times around the water cooler trying to get away. This week I was 41. and there were no thrilling chases around the water cooler. The girls were good sports enough to realize I am not up to that sort of thing anvmore. They came up to my desk one after the other, said "happy birth day," and gamelv submitted to their annual punishment. One of the rewards of being 41. I noticed, was that four out of five pecked me on the cheek. Sample dialogue: Parley First girl "Oh. eo ahead nrt kiss him. It's no worse than if he was your own grandfather." Second girl "Well. I'm new around here. If I got to kiss old iosiis to hold this job I'm under paid." I looked out the window, and it was snowing Just as it was the day of my birth. When I remarked on this to a friend, he said: "That isn't snow coming down it's your second childhood." Brrrrrrrr! What an unhealthy thought. How does It really feel to be 41? When I was 21. full of the timeless snobbery of the young. I was cer tain that people over 40 didn't really have any feelings left at all. Tbey were merelv sad charac ters, plodding wistfully through the fog of lost dreams. The day I was 40 I still felt pretty much the same way. Life hadn't looked so depressing since I lost my first true love In kinder garten. Gradually, however, and some what to my surprise. I found that being 40 wasn't altogether a crime against nature. And I learned there were even some compensations for Communist negotiators at Pan munjom naturally would like Unit ed Nations spokesmen to commit our side to a postwar poltical conference, with Formosa and the issue of Chinese Red entry into the UN on the agenda. Thus far our representatives have not accepted any such terms, and there is no sign that they will, pro vided they can recognize them at all times. For the Communists have a talent for phrases containing con cealed jokers. Actually, a satisfactory armistice could be had without settlement of the question whether to call a later conference and UN negotiators ought to Insist on leaving this Item out, rather than haggling over it indefinitely or making risky con cessions. - The idea of a conference is per fectly all right, so long as Its pro spectve agenda is not frozen in favor of the Communists. Beat Way The best way to assure that is to let the eventual diplomatc con ferees themselves determine the program, Instead of putting that responsibilty in the hands of mili tary men at Panmunjom. But however the agenda is fixed, we must make certain that it re flects our own major concerns in Korea and the Far East. We have a right to insist on international guarantees of any Korean settle ment, so we don't have to contem plate renewal of the conflict at some future date. And any discussion of Korea can hardly ignore the issue of achieving a unified naton from the Yalu River to Pusan. Apparently U. S. officials In Washington are now adhering firm ly to these points. They go further. They would Insist that a future coir ference be widened to Include not Just the present Korean belligerents but all nations with a stake In Far "JJt'y'lfi1 Ag' "liP:WIH,') HI-1" 'iU I I liiiHIH twill 0$mM...- .-Radiator .ffe Repairing if h-T'4- S0,'''ton guortntt.J ) 'So n repairing, cleaning, IP ' ''li. ORVAL SMITH Our Radiator Specialist Anderson Auto Service 632 Time -..., y. By jimmy Hatlo T CALLED ly? say xxi tovcD fTCM.,w M CALUNSrw YOU OUT ALL VKCCHCY TO 1 ?yy?T W BUT srtrVr? BED"! m the phoJB , FORANHCU- TUMIX AHOA TIP joa-WC HATLO HAT &JO C.MS T. NEW )ORK, ,vS-,'t- the" disaster. At 41 you wake up in the morn ing with no worse a taste in your mouth than at 17. You Just have 'to hack a little harder to clear you throat At 41 you find yourself leading a slightly better life. Ii would be nice lo credit this to the slow growth ol character, but the truth is probably that you Just have wearied of the old treadmill of your small vices and dull dissipations. At 41 you just begin to enjoy tills new sense of virtue, because you realize that being virtuous is much more relaxing than being sin tul. Succumbing to temptation after 40 Isn't play it's hard work, and hard work is for the young. At 41 you feel normal. You don't envy young people. You feel sorry for them, knowing all the prob lems they must meet, before they achieve the balanced wisdom of middle age. Prime But at 41, of course, you don't feel middle-aged. You begin to think of middle-aged people as those over 65. You? Why. you're just coming Into your prime. At 41 you still feel young of heart but you do have to learn to face the fact of what you see in the mirror. Everv once in a while as vou shave you get a weird sense of mystery. "Is that my face?" you think. "Why it looks like my dad's face did when I was a boy." And you wonder whether vou are shaving yourself or your father. ai 41 your senses are more alive than at 30. You feel the small pleasures of life more clearly the awakening from sleep, the aound of a bird, the intoxication of a sun set, the storm and sunshine of a child's face. At 41 you see the world In softer focus. And you still have a big am bition left you want to be 42. Yes, at 41, you say, "it must ne epulslve to be 21. I wouldn't be that young again for $1,000,000." And at 41 you might as wen keep right on telling yourself that. There isn't anything you can do aoout it. Eastern peace. That might Include Japan, India, Burma, Indonesia, Siam and Indo china. Painful Point More Importantly, American dip loma's would demand that a broad dened conference deal with such painful and long-standing questions as the guerrilla warfare sparked by Communists in Indo-China, Ma laya and the Phllllppnes. There is no earthly reason why it should be proper to discuss For mosa, an island the Chinese think we menace, and not talk about Indochina, a land we are convinced they threaten. Future political discussions could well include one more UN demand: That any decisions arrived at In regard to general Far Eastern Is sues be not linked directly to a Korean settlement. In other words, the maintenance of peace In Korea should not be made to hinge on what we do about Formosa or what the Reds do about Indocbna. As an issue, Korea Is a thing apart, and It cannot be made the subject of diplomatic trading. If we can stick to all these guns, we shall not likely be In danger of losing any further ground to the Communists In Asia at least not around the council table. The big question' Is, of course, whether the Reds for their part will find it possible to stomach so decent and fair a general settle ment. The proofs are still lacking. MAILBOX PAINT WASHINGTON, D.C. Iffl Ever wonder why you rarely see a "Wet Paint' sign on a U.8. mail box? Complications like sticky fingers and smudged clothes are avoided by replacing the mail box with a newly painted one when a paint job is needed. 7a 9n "coring. See ui tiritr Walnut MARRIED AHD IWCWTHC REST AWi Keep xxjr MACKINW ON J?A Yrrr Is Indian Jurisdiction Switch OK? By HALE SCARBROl'GH A transfer of jurisdiction of the Klamath Indians from the federal government to the State of Oregon may be In the making, but there is one school of thought on the res ervatlon aganst It that the propo sal Is piecemeal and not the com plete break from the restrictions of governmental paternalism the In dans should be entitled. Last week a conference was held at Salem with Indian Service off! clals, state officials, and men from Uie Klamath reservation in attend' ance. The upshot was that - an tight-man committee was named to study the . request of the Tribal Council for transfer of jurisdiction The Tribal Council voted last De cember to Instruct its official reo- resent stives to take Initial steps in negotiating a plan to transfer the responsibility now held by tne rea era! government over reservation and Indian matters to the state. Few Vetc The vote was as for, t against: a very small percentage of approx imately 440 adults on the reserva tion entitled to vote. But, under the rules of the Tribal Council, ap parently It is binding. Any plan of transfer of jurlsdlc approval of the Tribal Council again and also of the Congress. Presumably It would also have to have the approval of the Oregon Legislature. About three or four years ago a bill was Introduced in Congress to liquidate the reservation, dissolve the wardship in which the Klam aths have been held for 87 years and give the Indians their full free dom. It was opposed by the Tribal council ana nas never come up for vote In Congress. Then last year a wimarawai diii was Introduced in Congress, to al low Indleldual members of the Tribe, to voluntarily withdraw from the tribe and allowing them to take out a major percentage of their share of the tribal worth. That bill was referred to the Bu reau of Indian Affairs for report, and still rests there. Third Facet The proposal for a transfer of Jurisdiction from the federal gov ernment to the state Is a third facet of the whole continuing en deavor for a softening of regula tions applying to the Indians. The theory of the Indians attend ing the Salem conference last week was that the Indians should be come free citizens, but should keep their treaty hunting and fishing rights and keep the reservation In tact, operating its business as a co operative. That nrnnosat nrobablv will draw strong opposition from members of Strong opposition ironi iiimiw " the tribe who want to get out en - tlrelv. There Is talk now of mending a reservation-wide secret ballot vote on the subject, claiming that the J-8 vote of the Tribal Council might not have been rep resentative. Burning Truck Blocks Road MTrnponn ll The pacific Highway was blocked northwest of here for two hours Thursday while an overturned gasoline tank trues and trailer burned empty with searing heat. State police fired JO- JO bullets Into the tanks tp speed their drain ing and lessen the hazard of ex plosion. The truck driver, Raymond Allen Gabriel, of 311 N. E. D Street, Grants Pass, was not hurt when his rig skidded on the Icy east slope of Biaekwell Hill, 10 miles from here, and overturned, As It slid 60 feet on Its side, sparks touched off escaping gaso line. SALE!! 78's 45's MM DepiHjb Mwic Co. 120 No. 7th Stfi SidrftlancFN' when we first went there you could smoke In your room; Willi the door closed and a window open. There waa one dreary golden oak cubicle off the lobby marked "Smoking Room." Otherwise you smoked outdoors, and If you could not get out It was Just too bad for a smoker. Nobody broke the rule because the place was policed by a self- appointed gealapo thai caught you oeiore a inaicn was ugiueu. TO carry matches wan reason to be suspected and tailed by nice old laaiea wnost waking mission in life was to keep Lady Nicotine out of the pure air of this sani tarium. Anyway they called tt pure. It was pure to the extent that the old gala were as pure of limb and mng as oi neart. on the heart acore l had no question. -The only chance fresh air had to enter the public rooms waa when a wheel chair got caught In the doorway, and the door was held open that frightful 45 aecomls. Which signalled a scurry for wraps and mufflers, to a chorus of "oh mys" and "oh mercys" from the radiator fleet. Like as not next dav you'd hear that old Mrs. Cornbloom was con fined lo her room from being In a draft. And Uncle Geniie's bron chial asthma had flared up again. SMOKE HNKAK' So to anrak outside for a smoke you had to be constantly conscious of the draft age which there abouts was 80. A fine time was when the gtstapo waa occupied by the arrival at the desk of a new comer: who, If blonde, risked be ing rated a "hussy from New York" until they opined that she might be the new hair dresser: with whom they would have no truck at all. having no hair to do not of their own. Anyway, while the desk was the center of attraction, you slithered through Uie door. Then, though well off the porch, you heard Miss Ter ryberry trying to talk to Mrs. An struther who was very deaf. She was pointing at you and aaylng: "That's thai Tripp man. He smokes." "Who'd you say was his folks?" asks the deaf one. cKuqh jWnvctiH There is a mystery In the eve ning skies of early spring, a mys tery not only In the realm of poetry but even In the domain of science. We refer to the dim pyramid of the zodiacal light which extends upward from the Western horizon as soon as all twilight has gone. In our latltudea the zodiacal light (accent second syllable f is best aeen In the Western eve ning -iky during tha early spring, and In the East before dawn In the early autumn. It lies along the r.odlac. the sky band In which the sun, moon, and planets move. The observation of this myster ious light requires Ideal conditions. Inside a city with the overpower ing artlflcal Illumination, It can never be seen. All but the faintest o! moonlight will completely ob lltere'e It. Hasv or dustv air will blot It out. A clear, moonless sky far away from a city Is a pre requisite. If one postpones observations un til late in the evening, the zodiacal light will be aet. The best time Is Jusl as the last of the Western Firm to Try Reopening PORTLAND 1 Willamette Plywood, Inc., of Eugene hopes to reorganise and get back into opera tion, ending Its closure In bank ruptcy. E. J. Mitchell, company presi dent, filed a petition In federal court Wednesday asking that Ihe firm's bankruptcy proceedings be withdrawn and a reorganization allowed. The plant shut down In December. V "c p .......... its assets Including plant and sup- plies are listed at $941,000 and dents including taxes ai sjiu.uuu. Some $125,000 will be needed to put the plant In sound operating condition, the petition estimates, If the court approves reorganization, BLIND-TRAVELER RATE NEW YORK IP A total of 12.116 rail and bus coupon books were issued in 1961 providing for rate concessions to blinded travelers, the American Foundation for the Blind reported. The coupon books. Issued by the foundation to legally blind persons, permits the blind per son to take a sighted guide along on a trip at no extra col. Oulde dogs may also travel with their masters at no charge. SINUS INFECTIONS DR. E. M. MARSHA siMtMfallr TrtaWI (seissita Muss ti Nt. iik . rat im fklrarselle Pbrtlelsa 1 LOT! 40c 49c Ph. 4519 I said HE 8MOKESI"- and oould be heard aa far away as Phelps. But my, how tilings have changed. The grand old doctor who founded the place a century ago wouldn't know It; though by sophis ticated standards It'a still nun nery. The kind of one a sincere recuperator nerds, You amoke where you like, Save In the dining room, and of course In chapel: for there's a beautiful chapel and a full-time chaplain, who says a liberal noqseolarlan grace ai meal time. You can't buy a drink for lova or money: yet eyebrows don't rise anymore when you ask for a pitch er of Ice without any water In It, There's a clgarel machine In the lobby, and a television which spends abundant time urging the nine old ladlea to grow strong On "Whoalt'a pure, dry, wholesome Old Horse shoe Beer," At least two eights are drawn there every night, pic torlally and nary a nale yet. Succeeding Ihe ' superannuate chaplains of tho past is a younger one: as devout, but more In the order of the day. He ainga In the village barbershop quartette, PRAYER MfcETINU The Wednesday night prayer meetings are no more; folded with out benefit of a survey which I once made of the piety of the growing cosmopolitan populace of this once atralght-laced Institution. That Wednesday night eight peo ple played bridge, I knew, for mod est slakes; eight played rummy for even less; a acore sal about gos siping or watched the TV. Only seven went to chaprl. Where was the gealapo? Well, that's changed loo, but hasn't grown to smoking yet. A couple of them eavesdropped oi 'he' gos slpcrs: two were taking 'n the beer ads: and one I lean ', was mad at the preacher. Tom going for the parson against such world ly competition. Yet witn ail tne cnange inai lime hit hrnuoht. th rVflrr.AA mid wholesome purpose that the f nt - er bulll Into his monument 100 years ago are stilt there. Tn liitulrn rnnrlmmninta Ihrl til Supreme Healer hovers over the good folks and wonderful doctors who carry on at Clifton, (pAwrfi Above- twilight has faded. Then. If con ditions are right, a fairly broad band of faint luminosity will be aeen resting on the Western Port ion and extending upward and somewhat southward. It narrows aa It heightens, and finally fades out considerably short of the htah South. A few years age some of us viewed Ihe sodlacal light on sev eral successive evenings from the sheltering valley of a golf course south oi town, thus avoiding anv artificial glare along the western horizon. Ihe last observation was especially fascinating as the thin crescent moon was engulfed In the base of thin pyramid of nebulosity. Higher In the band, Saturn glowed; and near lis upper visible lip. the tiny atars of the Pleiades twinkled charmingly. Three nights later, the Increasing moonlight entirely ob lllorated the faint luminosity. The real causa of Ihe zodiacal light Is still a mystery. Several explanations have been offered. One assumes that It Is solely a phenomenon of our higher atmos phere: another, that there Is a ring around Ihe earth something like Salurh'a adornment. Hoffmelster considers there are two flat rings of finely divided particles out In i-pace in the plane of the earth's orbit: one, well Insdle this orbll; Ihe othor. outside and In the re gion of the asteroids. These re flect sunlight. It haa been calcu lated that this ghost-like light could be produced by particles l-ss Inch lit diameter and five miles apart. It seems unusual that no obser vations of Ihe zodiacal light were recorded until the middle of the nth century. The next ten days will be Ideal for the aludy of this faint luminosity wherever Ihe akv la clear. The new moon will not appear until about February 26. ly MARJORIf OVGARD ill Ceium Srroim' magnificent tragic opera, "Elektro," will be broadcast from the ttoge of the Metropolitan Opera tomorrow starting of 1 1 :00 o.m. Dramotlc soprano Astriot Varnoy will sing the title role, and Frltr Reiner will conduct. One of the great clewnt af all time, Jimmy Durante, tha fceleved "Schasstela" will he heard this Sunday In the Walter Wlneh.ll time perleei, 4:00 and 1:10 p.m. Wlnchell It taking complete rett from ell activities ter awhile, en the advice of hit physician. Jimmy Durante will offer the brand ef humor end sang far which he Ii fameut in the enterlelnment world. The program It tpentered by Warner-Hudnut, lac. whe have presented Walter Wlnchcll't AIC hraadcattt each Sunday tlnce January, 150. Another movie ttor will be hoard on ABC when Jimmy Stewart will be the guest on "Betty Crocker't Mogoilne of the olr" next Monday of 1 1:00. Jimmy who wot to long a bachelor, will tell obout hit home life, ond will give tome Interesting Information obout hit recent movie, "Bend of the River" which many Klamath people hove just seen. Tenlght't "Onie and Harriet" program revolves around Washington's klrthdey. A loiion In hlttary plaguet Oitit through out the day, when Harriet, David end Ricky ebterve the tint president's anniversary. Be lure te hter thli amusing program tonight gt i00. Listeners will notice a Saturdoy ofiernoen program change to morrow. "Requestlully Yourc" will be heard from 4:00 to 5:00, the some time es en weekdoyt, The Red Crow progrom, "Errondt ef Mercy" will move to 5:45 p.m., ond ABC'i "Navy Hour" will be heard ot 5:00. mm in. ii mi- a i.ipiui m wj'i iH I.i sf i. i'liiVi.iM mi li.iiili ii llMal ONK PARTY MAt.IN I reM Mil. T, W. O Hrlen's article "Politics." 1 waa amaseil Ihat anyone enjoying Ihe freedom ' and privileges of Ihla great nation emu Id have Ihe temer Ity to advocate this country have one political parly. Mrs. O'Brien begins Iter article, and I quote: "Soinetmra I wonder what la really accomplished by Ihe differ ent political parties. Now, If there i was -only one parly, but several nominees regardless nf party affili ation, let the best man win." Then she ends her article with the question: "What la the difference between the two parties anyway, perhaps question of tariff, which could b Ironed out In Congress." No, Mrs. O Hrlen. Having two po litical parlies does not mrun to me a question of tariff. It ineana a representative form of government, which we the American people en Joy. Not a one-party totalitarian government like Russia haa. It means to me the power of free rotlng to keep this a government! of the people, for the people, by the people. And, Ood willing, we will keep It that way, Mrs. I.oma Welkins Breath Studied . By Government WASHINGTON tA'i "Breath said the label on packages received here from Seattle by United Air Lines. Unlted's cargo agents became curious and Investigated. Sure enough, the packages contained Just that "rral human exhala tions." F.ach metal container held sam ples of the breath ol Naval work ers who had been subjected to ra dioactive material. Ihe airline said It found the gov ernment inuken routine checks of the brealh of auch personnel. i ' ilHSHOP DIM LI8IION Portugal Dm lAgostlno de Jesus r. Bouaa. Rom :ainonc umnoiJ vi w wuu, m .Thursday. He waa 76. COLUMBIA RECORDS that is! All the latest hits, pop, vestern CRY f lease, Mr. Sun le My Life's Companion Always Late Give Me Mere, Mere, More MUSIC CO. 120 N. 7th Ph. 451? Tealtht'S' CavaUede er Saertt eveat will featvre Robert Vlllemaln, the fiery, flfhtlsf frenchman who hat graved ea Aasarlce leaietlon, la hit flnr return te Madlton Square Garden tlnce he toppled Jake Le Metre there In December, 14. He will taca the punching power at Denny Naralce, Tampa, 'lerleVi settling Purple Heart ea-Marlne, In a 10-isund light heavyweight bout. Tonight at 7)00. IIH' Cerum will give the ketween-roune' semmeatarv at utuel. For th- first time tlnce 1932, Rkhord