i PAGE SIX HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OTtKGON ' ' FRIDAY.' FKnnUARY 20. mr,2 "' Vi FRANK' JENKINS -"''" "-'Editor ' Entered second class matter at the post office of Klamath Falls, Ore., on August 20, 1906, under act ol Congress, March 1, 1879 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The. Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication t! all the, local news printed in this newspaper as well as all AP news SUBSCRIPTION RATES 6 months $6.50 By mail .. By Mall Jhank Sago Sidflnnc's While the man was putting in our new television and tuning out Ihe snow,. I remembered watching the plumber install the first city water tap In my mother's kitchen, to replace the pitcher pump in the eld Iron sink; and the thrill of turning it on and off. I didn't know that I was never to experience like thrill again; that my father's house had started its trek toward an establishment run by push buttons, switches and ro bots. I didn't know that one C.y wc Would hear voices and music come from a machine that talked; or that our magic lantern stills of Niagara Falls would come to life pictures that moved. That the pictures would become gaily colored, and then would talk, no one could have made me be lieve. That sound would ever travel Without wires was unbelievable. The bicycle was the wonder of the age. It got people to places where men made speeches, bands played, actors performed. That the whole family would some day be transported by its own horseless conveyance; that we would Ily the skies and sail under the sea was only the fantastic muse of Jules erne. The man said: ' "It should be have all right. If you have anv trouble, let us know." So here was ti)t contraption that was to bring tnsiani scenes uno our living room; like that first water tap brought water to mother. Bv the time the motion nirture had Its publio advent in storefront Nickelodeons. I had become press agent for drama, opera and vauoevine. a me early movie in dustry had been sure of itself. I Would have been put in Jail for what I wrote about this upstart competitor oi tne legitimate the ater. -' I said that It challenged every lofty American ideal; that it would sap the time, destroy the eyesight, wreck the morals of the nation. That "smelly firetrap Nickelodeons will some day crash over the heads of innocent chiViren. parked there by gadding mother, end leave their little charred bodies in the hideous pyre." Editors believed with me and printed columns of it. Time, as ever, met the crisis. The authorities banished Nickel odeons; science smoothed out the flickers, legitimate theaters added movies to their programs; ornate cinema palaces went up. And now; the UDStart was under niv own I NEW YORK Wl Millions of lovelorn single girls are moping this Lap year day because tney aren i among the harried married. "What does it really take to win husband?" they wonder. The answer to this has stumped soothsayers and psychiatrists. Sci entists have been unable to come up with a test tube solution. Now business is trying to solve . the problem. For the creation of new families is becoming more and more important to industry. If people quit getting married the nation would soon smother with unsold refrigerators, washing ma chines, and lavettes. I have at hand the results of a little business research into the matrimonial field. It is a survey made by Shadow Wave, a Lever Brothers home permanent. This firm polled about 100 guys ana iuo gais on tms question; "What are the five most impor tant weapons in a girl's arsenal needed to get her man and make 1952 a successful Leap Year?" The returns are in and, I must Bay, very distressing. The disturb ing truth is that there are dramatic and fundamental differences rf what qualities a man looks for in a mate. Even where there were areas of agreement, the emphasis differed. Both sexes agreed the girl ought to be well-groomed and attractive in appearance. But the girls themselves stressed neatness, while the bachelors voted heavily for more definite feminine allure. "Pleasing personality" was high on tne men s list; tne women voted for "charm", and Just what that covers remains a mystery. The ability to cook rated near the top with the lads, but the lassies hardly even mentioned the kitchen art, perhaps because of a growing Womanly conviction that cooking is Bomeuung none only in tne back rooms of restaurants. Many men put down "a sense of humor." The girls worded it more often "the ability and willingness to hu mor him." In general the bachelor girls pic tured the prospective bride as a nice clean girl it was amazing how many mentioned cleanliness In love with hearth and home, con versationally gifted and so In formed about her husband's busi- IVERYTHING NO DOWN PAYMENT ONLY $5 A MONTH 715 Main Street BILL JENKINS Managing Editor year $11.00 Jhipp roof. I recline of an evening and dare It to satisfy me; while I relive the cradle days of the talking ma chine, the movie and the radio, which it is. all wrapped Into one. Figuratively speaking the slap stick comedy of the old flickers is there olien the flicker too. In a more sophisticated fashion so is Uie old sawmill melodrama, with betrayed heroine and mustached villain. So much is so corny; and much, so wonderful. The business of having lived through the borning of these won ders admonishes, "keep your shirt on." Recollections that the movie and the radio went through the same growing pains and were res cued by showmanship, gives faith that showmen will rescue TV in the end. It may be that the admission price to our own show in our own nouse win always be tolerance of the accompanying ballyhoo. Yet public opinion forced advertising out of news stories; off of cur tains and back drops In theaters; out of the content of the cinema: even off the backs of elephants at the circus. I once saw Hamlet stab Claudius in front of a backdrop which urged the auillence to "Chew Battle Axe Plug." TV at times reminds me of it. Methinks the day will come when showmen again will put on the show and advertising men will do the advertising artfully un scrambled to make the show the thing. The sponsor will be as well repaid, and more proud. History will repeat: We once let me lawn sprinxier run all night; we drove our first car every min ute we could be in it: we bought every phonograph record because it was new; went to any movie for a place to go; fished all night for a distant radio station. Every new gadget gets its novelty- play gets away with murder. Then we demand perfection and it settles Into its niche in our lives. We harbor both the new and the old when they serve us. Yet some times the new hurts the old; as TV is hurting the movie and radio, while the old newspaper plugs right along. I When mom s water tan went In, scarce 25 million newspapers were read daily across the land. In face of all. never ceasing growth brought the -figure to over 54. millions in 1951. Because basically every news paper is as local as tne town pump and our major wants and activities are local too.- --. . ness affairs she coula even help him figure out his income tax. This ideal bride, seen through the men's eyes, however, could best be portrayed as Rita Hay worth with her vocal chords re moved, standing In a boudoir with a frying pan in her hand. The difference beween the sexes showed up most clearly in the matter of conversation. Most women were dreamily sure men yearn for a wife to "be able to discuss many subjects intelli gently," be "a good conversational ist." or "a lively talker;" The fellows themselves, on the other hand, showed a morbid dread of wifely loquacity, or, as they put it, "nagging". One said flatly: "She should remember that the less she has to say, the less she will have to explain." Only one male traitor listed "in teresting conversationalist" as de sirable. Oddly enough, he was a dentist. Many, many girls In the survey wroie aown - common sense-' as a husband-winning trait. The men were unanimously silent on this subject, either through sheer male gauantry or Because oi tne leenng that, after all, a girl can't have everything. 1 Musical Arts To Go On Air The second of a series of broad- caste sponsored by the Klamath Musical Arts Council will be heard over KFJI Sunday, 5:00 to 5:30 p.m. The program, under the direction of Mrs. Margaret Jolly and Mrs. Anita Campbell, will Include a voc al duet in Italian "Solemne in Quest" Ora, sung by Peter Armen, tenor 8nd Marvin Nerseth, bari tone, and accompanied by Mrs. Elolse Mclntye. A string ensemble will present Mozart's "Elne Klelne Macht Musik" in four movements. The string ensemble is composed of Harry Borel, Helene Hornby, Wllma Beaver, John Drysdale and Madge Chilcote and will be ac companied on the piano by Miss Marie Obenchaln. Three vocal solos by Peter Armen, and the Aria ty Tenagna presented by Hfifthind an I,.. ,....!.. itrvlen ivalUbta at noderaM xlt-a colt. lo 0nIy If K They'll Do It Every Time : VE Ati., TK1Na OUR MEW TAPE RKORDERNOlV HERE'S OUf? COOP PAL NEWTON SHOOKER.A VB?y funny euy.'cwoNi, NEWT SAr SOME- THINS FUNNr"; Rswhr-n i ii i f tmmsm con, l:. iisq nmo itvwutt, Ue. worn ikwfs Kmivuy v -?0HwJjT?, - IB Hauptmann Still Guilty Lawyer Says (Samuel G. Blarkman, the writ er of this dispatch.- covered' the Lindbergh baby kidnaping and the execution of Bruno Richard Ilauptmann for 'The Associated Press. Blarkman, now chief of the New York and New Jersey bureaus of the AP. asked former attorney general David T. ' Wll entz and former governor Harold G. Hoffman, If their views qn the kidnaping had chanted after 20 yean. Wllenti maintains If was a one-man job. Hoffman, ' who once gave Ilauptmann -a' .re prieve, believes more than- one person was Involved.) By SAMl'EL G. BLACKMAX TRENTON. N. J. Was the Lindbergh baby kidnaping solved by the conviction and execution of Bruno Richard Hauptmann? There is no new evidence 20 years after the kidnaping on March 1, 1933 to alter the verdict that Hauptmann alone kid naped the infant Charles A. Lind bergh Jr. and killed him. Time has not changed the opinion of David T. Wilemz, New Jersey's chief prosecutor, who told the jury that "all the evidence leads only to Hauptmann." nor nave tne nassins vears cnangea me views oi lorrner gov ernor Harold G. Hoffman that Hauntmann's execution left manv uuuies unsoivea. Hoffman, who once cave Houn- mann a 30-day reDrieve from death out reiused a second one. sa d Frl- aay: "I believe that the crime was commuted by more than one per- "I believe it would have been difficult to execute that crime without the assistance -of- someone who was inside either, the Lind bergh or the Morrow household. "I believe that tho nnllr-p Hauptmann had been apprehended. uu me lone won- pattern of pros ecution was decided upon, not only failed to make, but made every effort to hinder further investiga tion that might have brought others to the bar of justice." : Hoffman, now rilrprtnr ' nf tho State Division of Employment Se curity, maae tne statement when asked if his views now differ from those he once held. wis intervention In the case as governor, Including a secret visit to Hauptmann in the death house. stirred wide controversy. ne received hundreds of letters, both praise and criticism. To crit ics, he said, he sought only a com plete solution of the case. '"There was some evident nri. tented, seeming to point to the guilt of Hauptmann that I am not in a position to dispute. However. I have indisputable documentary evidence that certain witnesses made substantial changes in the statements they made to the police and to the bronx cranrl itirv nnri the evidence that they gave upon the witness stand at Flemington; evidence designed, two years after iney were lirst interviewed, to prove that Hauptmann was the lone won- murderer." The tragic kidnap story, was one of the nation's most celebrated criminal cases. Suffering from a cold, the blond 19-months old baby, first child of the famous flier and Anne Mor row Lindbergh, was tucked in his crib in the couple's Sourland Moun tain home near Hopewell. A few hours later he was missing. A crudely written note demand ing $50,000 ransom was left on a wlndowsill. A rickety ladder lay outside. Both became telltale evi dence two and one half years lat er. A nationwide hunt got underway for the baby and the kidnapers then believed more than one. Lind bergh made a contact through an intermediary, Dr. John F. Condon, better known from his initials "JFC" as "Jafsie." Dr. Condon delivered the iSO.oon ransom in a Bronx cemetery to a man he addressed as "John." the string ensemble will conclude tne program. P" ob"o o o evTTfm'a o a a a c o trwo a a a a oTo'frrrr oTir rirTinpg 604 Main Next To Rudv'i Men's Store SATURDAY SPECIALS Cream Puffs Hot Cross Buns PIES CAKES PASTERY MMr THIS IS r HET.L HAVE A V hC TOOK TUO U UY Eff-UU... A Se4N 17 WHOLE TAPE FULL I HOURS TO FISURc Vi 7 1 linftiw l MIS MUMC i OKUNIO W I HVIV wrvir 11 l.afwSSPj- 1 COULD TAKE A Vl -We TAPE KEEPS i limvHAVWG J hap WHEN HE LJZ--lBf?E4lIN3-. 21 After 20 Years Lindbergh, nearby, did not see the man out-heard Ills voice. ,., numerous ronsom notes were . passed before the payoff. The. last "Sgt. Charles W. Jones. x)t Mem one informed Lindbergh his l?aby ,phls, Tenn., and I plnvcd an un wss on a boat "Boad Nellie." the usual game oi Canusia recently kidnaper spelled II. ' just beiorc he lelt Fort Bennlng While Lindbergh searched' for hisi lor duty overseas." writes a Oeor son( the child lay dead in a shallow tgia-correapondent.-"I was leading grave live miles from the Lind- j by a wide margin until the last bergh home. The body was found' hand. ' ' May 12, 1933. . . ."On thai last hand he save me not until sept. 19. 1934 was Bruno' Richard Haunlmnnn. 35- year old Bronx carpenter, arrested.' naupimann. a German machine gunner in the First World -War, was caught passing ransom money. Identified through serial numbers. In Hauptman's garage. . pOlli-ei iouna 5M. out) ol tne ransom mon ey. . -. Eight handwriting experts fosti' iicu naupimann wrote an tne ran some notes. ("So convincing Is the proof that Hauptmann might just as well have signed each one,"Ji said one expert. One of the most convincing wit nesses was Arthur J. Koetver. a wood expert, who told an absorb ing tale of his search for the oricln of the wood used in the kidnap lad der. He traced It from a Carolina mill to a Bronx lumberyard. One piece, he said, came from the flooring in the attic of Haupt- irmnii 5 noine. . Col. Lindbergh testified the "Hcv Dok-tor" he heard in the cemetery "was Hauptmann's voice". Dr. Condon said "John Is Bruno Rich ard Hauptmann." Hauptmann denied writing the ransom notes: He denied making the crude ladder ("Certainly not, I am a carpenter," he said with scorn.) - He denied kidnaping the baby. He sajd the ransom money waa left in a shoe box In his possession by the late. Jsldor. Flsch, a busi ness partner who died In Germany. Hauptmann was executed in the State! Prison at Trenton April 3. 1936. . . ... Wllnetz, who as New Jersey at torney general prosecuted Haupt mann and is now an attorney in his home town of Perth. Amboy, con siders the case was closed that night. His position Is that the evidence remains' unshaken; no ransom money has since-appeared: nothing has arisen to point to the guilt of any other person. But Hollman, in his statement. questioned alleged discrepancies in tne testimony oi some witnesses. These, and a hundred more questions, - have never been an swered," Hoffman said. i I may be wrong anyone can be wrong but I still have enough evidence in my possession to make me feel that I was entirely right in my aesire to nave the investiga tion continued before Hauntmann's life was taken. "If Hauptmann had been kept behind prison bars for a reasonable time, there would have been an opportunity to answer .many of the unanswered questions, particularly those Involving an accomplice or accomplices. "The execution of Hauptmann forever closed these valuable ap proaches to what might have been a complete solution of the crime." Smoking In Bed Cause Of Fire Smoking In bed resulted in a small fire In a cabin behind 1143 Pine St. at 11:40 p.m. Thursday, according to firemen. The cabin was occupied by Le Roy McNeil and is owned by Mrs. Nina Currier, firemen reported. A hole was' burned In one wall of the cabin and other minor dam age resulted from smoke and flames. CRASH KILLS EIGHT RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil. liPt Eight persons were reported killed and a injured 'inursaay nlgnt in the crash of a Pan-Air Do Brazil airliner trying to land in a fog at Ubcrlandia. 425 miles northwest of i Rio. BAKERY Cream Slices .' By Jimmy Hatlo The latest gadget GUARANTEED TO MAKE. PULL fMRTIBS PULLEf?' THE HATLO HAT TO Afcwey HAYES 497 M StllTTAM. 5TV PUWTtW, MASS JACOBY on Canasta 'quite a uastlns unt 1 I (Inallv man- aaed to meld out. I thmiuht thnt I hal him beaten by a few points, but the final count showed that we each had a total of 5035 points. As you can imagine, we checked that count- two or Uirce times before we accepted it- as final. "Ls there anv provision In the ofllcial rules for settling a dead lock of this kind? Could I have stopped the game to add u all my points and lhos of Sergeant Jones before' deciding whether or not to go out?'.' - The law makes no provision for settling a tie of this kind. One of the ways of ending a game Is by means of a tie score, In which case neither side wins. Tills maylirrouo of tissues, called the retlru- be frustratln U you are oartlru larly anxious to have a winner for the game, but It's always possible to play another game. Tills reminds me of the Questions Uiat constantly stream Into my mailbox. "Who wlas the gamC" they always ask. "The player with the high score or the player who melds out on the last hand of the game?" rne answer is mat tne nign score always wins. Most Canasta players play for points rather than just to find out which side wins. A player (or side) with more points always wins from a player (or side! wllh fewer points. It doesn't matter which player melds out on tne last nana oi tne game. Similarly. If the difference be tween the two sides Is zero (a tie i. there Is no winner at all. It does not matter who melds out on the last hand: and the laws do not provide any other way of breaking the tie. If the two players are anxious enough to break the tie. they can agree on any procedure that pleases both of them. My correspondent's second ours-' Hon is not so easily answered.- You are always aUowed to stop and think before ploying. .An expert al ways knows the score and can tell you what cards are concealed In closed canastas. But even an ex pert mav have- to ' guess at the value of the cards that an opponent has in his hand. There's no way of counting- Uiose points accurately. No Progress In Bus Talks ' SAN FRANCISCO. fP Negotia tors for Pacific Greyhound Lines and the AFL Motor Coach Em ployes Union meet again Friday with Federal Conciliator Omar Hosklns in an effort to head off a .threatened strike. Hosklns met win them Thursday but reported little progress. - A' strike of 3.500 employes is set for Sunday at 12:01 a.m. in Cali fornia. Nevada, Oregon, Arizona, New. Mexico and parts of Utah aud Texas. The union seeks a 40-hour, five- day week and wage Increases thnt would up long distance drivers pay from $7.26 to J8.50 per 100 miles. The union asks hourly wages for short run drivers be in creased from SI. 63 to $2.04. The company has offered a four per cent wage boost and a two year contract that would tie wage scales to tne cost oi living. For used typewriters and adding machines .... Vo'ght's Pioneer Office Hupply, 639 Main. ATTENTION! thico SALESMEN AND SALESLADIES , wanted for Klamath and Lake Counties. Call 2-0131 between 12 and 5 For appointments. 8 complete cleaning and polishing units in one-Ask for free home demonstra tion.' Phone 2-0131 FRONTS FOR FRIEND Jane Russell (right) told a Los Angeles Supreme Court that she had known Yolnnda Elliott (left) lor 11 years and the designer had a reputation for honesty and integrity. Miss Elliott was accused of steal ing a fur stole by her former roommate, entertainer Anne Sterling. Yolanda claimed she paid Anne $200 for the fur. Hodgkln's disease Is a peculiar and forlunalely, not too common disorder, but one which ls of ex traordinary Interest to a person who acquires It and lo his or her family and I r lends. The disease Is more common In young people thun In older ones mid more frequent in men than hi women. It has been reported from every part of the world. There Is no danger of catching It irom a patient. . The llrst sign ta usually (but not always! enlargement of the lymph glands In the neck. The swollen glands are not palnlul. After a while, perhaps months or years later, glands In other parts of the bodv become enlarged. It does not interfere with general well-being lor a long time, but gradually anemia lends to develop. A small amount of fever may be present and the patient slowly be comes thin. The lymph glands and the spleen which are affected In Hodakln's disease are part of a chain or loendothrllal system. The fact that this system Is attacked has raised Leap Year Has Long And Colorful History For Men Today we come to that extra day of February w hich once in four cars transforms an entire twelve months Into uprlori of nervous anxiety lor the more Id souls of the masculine tribe, Some believe (hat certain of (he female persuasion assume leap vear was insulated solely for tlirm and take full advantage of lhhvchg"ges In It so the year would rare opportunity. Ibe In error by only about three The reversal of woolnir nroccd- ure auring leap year dates back for hundreds of years. In A D. 12B3 a Scottish law declared: "It Is or dalnt that during the rein of hlr malst blisslt Mageste, for eucn yearc knowne as lepe yeaie, each mayaen laaye snail nae liberie lo : bespeke ye man she likes, albeit he refuses to talk hlr to be hi lawful wyfe, he shall be mulct In ye sum of one pound . . . except II PORTLAND tfi The Democra tic can make it appear that he . tic party In Oregon Is having Is betrothlt to another woman, he trouble finding candidates for slate shall then be free." Previous rn - tanglement In "the holy bonds' uiso excusea mm. In case the fine went to "ye Jilted ladye." It seems that one of unattractive mien might have worked up quite a "proposal rack et" and have ended "lepe yearc" with a bulging bank balance. Whatever tne general opinion, lean year Is not a social but an astronomical Institution. Mast of tile ancient peoples had very un satisfactory calendars. The year of the Assyrians and Hebrews con sisted of 13 lunar months, or 354 days, to which a 13th month waa added every two or three years. The Mohammedan countries to this day use a 354-day year with out a correcting leap-month. The Egyptians used 365 days from very ancient times. As accurate as this way,..fler 130 years mid-winter came when the calendar said It was summer. Many ancient scientists knew the true year was about 365 ' days. juuus uaesar in 45 B.C. established the Julian calendar. In this there are three years of 365 davs. then a leap year oi see. But the year ls actually about ii minutes less man 363'-. dnvs By A D. 1582 the year had got out oi giuer" by about two weeks. That yeor Pope Gregory estab- llshed the Gregorian calendar now In use. During 400 years, three of the usual "fourth-years" are not lean years. These are the vears aivismie oy lira out not by 400. inus ioou ana tvvu are lean vears 1700, 1800 and 1900 are not. MB. fN Mitrnii the question of some Ihfevllon be ing at fault. So lar, however, nn germ or virus has ever been proved aa the cause. The patient with llodgkln'a dis ease UMially goes through period of remarkable Improvement. Thu enlarged lymph glands may disap pear almost completely and thi. gcneral condition may Inpiove fn. ii long lime. X-RAY TREATMENT FAVORED Hie favorite form of treatment has been X-rays. Ilils olten causes Improvement lasting for months at a nine. Treatment with drugs has not been particularly successful. Recently there have been several favorable rations on the treatment of patients with Hoclukin's disease with preparations called "nitrogen mustards." These substances seem to be quite helpful for some pa tients who have become resistant lo X-rays. Manv competent Investigators are working hard to solve the prob lems connected with this disease and consequently other develop ments in treatment may be ex pected. Tilts revision makes the ralen- idar only 30 seconds too long. There 'Will not be an error of one entire day until several thousand vears tlm-lhave passed, a fact that need not worry us yet "hen the Oregorlan calendar i ws adopted bv Greece and Ru- I mania In 1934. they mane minor c-u"u' Demos Find Lack Of Men ofllces, a party official said here Thursday night. William H. Way, party chairman for Multnomah County, aald there were no sure candidates for at torney general, secretary of state or state treasurer. Waller Pearson, state treasurer now who will run for the legisla ture this year, told the meeting of county Democrat, that Republi cans are planning to put over a sales tax. He said the Republicans were talking about a sure deficit In the state treasury. The foci Is, Pearson said, there will be at least 10 mil lion dollars In surplus at the end of the present blennluin. He aald aome more Industries In Oregon, plui closure of tax loop holts for corporations and co-op-eroilves would eliminate any need for new taxes. Pearson and Nicholas Oranet, former party official In the county, criticized Monroe Sweetland, Dem ocratic National committeeman, as serting he was trying to foment dlscor.l In the party. ' i Demo Leader To Speak Tonight Mrs. Margaret Cawood of Port-Innd.-vlce chairman of the Oregon Democratic Committee, is to bo guest speaker at a meeting of the Klamath County Demo Central Committee tonight. A no-host dinner Is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at the Wlnema, and the meeting will follow. GALS! HERE'S YOUR CHANCE! i LEAP YEAR DANCE SATURDAY, MARCH I MAUN MUSIC BY BUNNELL'S ORCHESTRA 30I0I1ASI if--? War Losses WAfllllNCITON I Three n. publican i.rnaton aniimini-rrl they wuuiu I'm up n mini rTKiav In lorce Hpcreliuy ol Di'Ipiimt lovmi nml ollin- I'piiKigon olllclula Id Uv, Cnngrrsa esmil IIhiiits on llun-lint-tlr onsiinlllps In Korea. Hrnatur Knowlaml irt.-Ciiiiri i-i.. the Hennle lain 'I Inn May he had been "given a coninlele iiinariMinil by the tjerrelarv of LIpIpm-.p" ui.. he akr lor iIipsb slalbtlcn. Knowlanil mild dilutions) Is pn. Iltlfil Ki "Hits ppi-thiPiit Iniurina. tion" because under Ihe t'Oiwtliu llni) It has Dip rpsiitinnlb lllv ni clcllng on the nlr.e mid inalntenmn t ol the nriiird lorcc.i, I shall innke an Issup nf ihia inalter," Knowlund aiiltl, adding h would light Illinium Hip npiiat.. iirnied pi vices mid nniiroprlntlona committee In gel the data. Senators Cain ilt.Wuhh.) ai,4 Kein (It. -Mo.) promlr.cd'Kiiov.:liind lull support. Knowlund liatl asked 1 Inr "hp. rilinuluti-d iioii lmltle casually Iik lires" since tho Korean U'ni- Mailed ' l.nvelt's reply mild battle cn uallles through Feb. 33 nimibereil 1115.03 anil that Ihe Arutv had not beril milking the nun-buttle nit tnilllpH public In recent months. 'Hip Delenr-e Secretary snld lhe- foriupily included men who.j checked Into sick baya or even asked lor mi aspirin. I.ovett said UU. Armed Forces all over Ihe world sulleied I7.7M battle deaths Irom June W, 11150 ihe starting date ol ihe Korean War through Ihe end of I DM. Thrro were, he nald, "I.U deaths from all other causes." Total deaths wcro listed at sn.ilito.' Know'aiid said Lovrtt'N answer did not supply the Information asked and raised an lasue "that will have to be fought out." Minister Hits Home Outlook The Rev. George Alder, First Christian Church, charged Fali vlew ITA membora yosinrdny with the principal reponlblllly fur the moulding of character in their youngsters.- t . Alder, in a brief talk bnfore the PTA group aald child character was moulded oil the Ihree-prunurd basis of home, school and church . . ; And ol Ihe three, lie placed Ihe major Importance on home life. He said a principal evil of mod arn home life was the opulnr prao tice of both mothers and fulhcia working. "We're placing too much Im portance on matrrlul things . . , Not nearly enough on spiritual, said Alder. He cited the vicious circle of a houres 0 j woman who "had lo work lo buy tlme-kavlng giiinnicks fur her house work so she would have time to work and make money to pay for the gimmicks.' INSTItriTOltS I1IK "sj tnuinyniin, o'aiu '.y inr-o Instructors from Atcarares Air Force School were killed in a plane crash Friday, but their eight stud enUs parachuted to safety. The In structors were flying a Junkers transport of Hpanb.li Civil War vin tage. Olflnals blumed the crash on engine failure. JEFF'S BARBER SHOP 920 Main People DO TOO read small space ads - you are! AUTO INSURANCE 5-10 5 Liability Insurance Current 6 Mo. Rate 1190 AjLowAi I I riNi ftmilt Nenrrmrrlnf Mrmbrhip If leu Ouiiide CUT Preferred Ins. Exch. i. uii.i Aiiii ( i iiAni.tai lllil. Af.nl SDI? Knulh HUlh SI. 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