v:rs PAGE SIX HERALD ANT) NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1052 They'll Do It Every yinie- - Dy Jimmy Hatlo tiAtn IV FRANK JENKINS Editor BILL JENKINS Managing Editor Entered as second class matter at the post office of Klamath Falls, Ore., on August 20, 1906, under act of Congress, March 8, 1879 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use lor publication of ojl the local new printed in this newspaper as well as all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ,.,.,, ( r.io.i.hs$6.N' My Mi'il year HI. 00 i, K Ma!' ssKajsasansoasEssaniBaaasBcsBaDosraaaa dossssijg) cx-pAWNusTerJ. w the cu,y mS f the food -Ur-T SlfJCE XXI FIRST ) P$,STr wJvW WWH. totb.i.)ojoff: &?Jw&Yj , ,i XKS J 1 WBfStiSS' T BRIN6S IN HERE. J7i FOOD t' v J V V ' h iron :. 'Jf By DEB ADDISON When you got your income tax forms out Uie other day and fretted and fumed and fussed when you came to the part "Contributions" and scratched your head and added up, didn't the amount seem pretty small and insignificant after all? Honestly, now, didn't it? When you looked at Uie amounts that Uncle and the state gouged out of you, didn't the amounts that you voluntarily gave, to the few things that stand on their own fect with out government aid. seem pretty small? The Red Cross drive is going on now. ON HONESTY: "After all. a great number of bureau employes who have been dismissed lor aisnonesty were on the civil service rolls. A civil serv. ice designation will not make a dis honest collector honest." Sen. John Williams of Delaware, whose investigations started the chain re action of the national tax scandal, commenting on Pres. Truman's plan of clean-up. We were startled, to put it mildly, on thumbing through the bound file of the Klamath Republican for the year 1899, to come across an ad for the Winema hotel. A quick second look showed that It. was the new Winema hotel of Merrill. Ore. How many remember that hostelry? For the benefit of the present Earl of Winema, Earl Russell, fur ther reading showed that rooms were $1.00 to $3.00 per day, and free sample rooms were always available. And. just to keep things even, let's add that there also is a Wil lard Hotel in Washington, D. C. We have two wetlish reports from down Redding way. One is that Shasta Dam is full to the mm.' Is; that with up to 70 i inches of rain having fallen in some spots there, they're looking for the country to wash away when the snow starts melting in the mountains. The other is that the people down there just take it for granted that they'll get the Klamath water: that they seem mildly surprised but slightly interested that we ain't willin'. How about that, Shasta Sam? ON SUCCESS IN ADVERTISING: "In came a client with his bowels in an uproar because a competitor had been allowed to make some exaggerated claims in a recent pub lication. Such things, of course, are worth keeping an eye on, and making proper protests about. But m the long run I always trunk wit lie Hoppe had the right idea. When somebody asked his manager how it was that Willie always won his matches, the answer was: 'Willie is always playing billiards, while his competitors are always playing Willie'" James weoo Young in The Diary of an Ad Man." Build The Basin Series Spreads To Other Areas In State As Good Idea NEW YORK tf The U.S. post man is one of America's best but least recognized educators. He Is a walking library on bun- Ions, a traveling professor for the great university of the common man toe postal service. This silent teacher delivers the world's knowledge In the worn leather bag slung from his shoul der. It is the 20th Century version of Pandora's box, bringing endless tidings to mankind of old dismay and fresh hope a draft notice here, a dividend check there. ,1" Be Is a messenger of death and birth, keeper of tremendous se crets in small envelopes, the mate go-between for lovers, a salesman who works for the price of a stamp for distant firms. Over the years the postman stirs more hearts than anyone. People wait tensely or eagerly for the sound of his footsteps on the walk, his whistle at the front JACOBY on Canasta "We are forming a Canasta Club, with about 12 to 15 mem bers meeting once a week. What do you suggest as a method of playing progressive Canasta?" Your first problem is to settle which pairs play together as part ners at any particular session, ff the same people come each week, you can prepare a list of partner ships to make sure they change each time. This is more fun than having people play with the same partners each time. If the players sometimes show up and sometimes stay away, which is the usual case, you can't follow a prepared list. The simplest meth od Is to shuffle a single deck of cards and deal out one card to each player. The two highest cards form one partnership; the next two form another partnership; and so on, down the list. Let's suppose you end up with three tables of Canasta. It doesn't matter how tables are arranged. because with only six pairs you can work it so that each pair plays against each of the other five pairs. Olve each pair a number, from one to six. At the first table, pair six plays against pair one, then against pair two, then against pair three, and so on. At the other two tables, the arrangement for the five rounds is: Round 1: 2 vs S 3 vs 4 Round 2: ' 3 vs 1 4 vs 5 Round 3: 4 vs 2 S vs j Round 4: 5 vs 3 1 vs 2 Round S: 1 vs 4 2 vs 3 A round should last about thirty minutes, so that the whole session takes somewhat more than two and a half hours. Everybody plays as many hands as they have time for in the thirty minutes. The director (or hostess) should call time after twenty-eight min utes, allowing everybody Just one more play after which the hand is ended even though nobody has melded out. Everybody keeps a running score for each round, and a prize is awarded to the high pair at the end of the session. Buy nice, but inexpensive prizes and everybody win oe nappy. . r porch signals of the arrival of his daily cargo of magic and disen chantment. His reward for wadin? thrnuoh snowdrifts to reach the family mail uux hi rest a cup ot not coffee: "i u " "s a disappointed wail, a uuib an you orougnt? -Bad weather and bad nope Am. bush him, and he learns to bear wnn ootri. He COme in knmv hie nalnhW. hood better than the cop on the beat, and he is harder to fool. He doesn't have to read the post- i"" " no is naving a won derful lime. He doesn't have to orjen th ftt. ters to tell who is hein ,i, ,,,) iw iiun-payment 01 bills, what member of the family has gone away for his hraith h-m,. -ri ey '""s nome tor more mon- By the number and nature of his mail deliver!,, hA irnnn.. .i 1nn.lt, .kZ ,L l. ' ". " 'S " nappy, wnich eiri is B-h, hS n? wWl ner bea" and When little Johnny comes gal loping out to grab a letter frnn, . correspondence course in muscle wuuuiiib, c unaerstanos the situa tion at once. ' '.7, euesS il won,t be long now until you'll be able to handle that bully down the street," he says. The weather, the dogs, and the people he meets turn him general ly into a tolerant philosopher In time he becomes a connoisseur of mankind's woes, the confident and consoler of people who have no one else to talk to an.1 wait by troubles ' him their But he learns to keep his own cares to himself. How often can you tell somebody your feet hurt? Who worries if your shoulder is chafed and sore from lugging bundles nr rhrMn... cards? ' The one thing the postman can not understand is why people al ways blame him about the lelter they expect and never comes. "It must have gotten Inst " thou complain, looking at him accusing ly as if he had chucked it down a sewer. And it is a wonder that postmen don't throw more mall down a sewer and en homo onri soak their falling arches in hot water, dui tney tlon't, useless as they feel many of the letters are. nuer mi years or more of leaning into the wind with his heavy bag three decades of treating frost bite and dog bite the bent-over post man fails to appear on his ap- pUiMlCU JUU1IUS. What is his usual epitaph? One housewife says to a neighbor: "A new postman brought the mail today a young fellow. I guess Mr. Jones must have retired." "Yes," says the neighbor. "I hate to see him go. He's brought us so many letters over the years ever since I moved here as a little girl. But he was getting awfully old and slow." Build the Basin." the Herald and News-KPLW public service forum conceived in an inter-offlce (,'abfest some ten weeks ago, has attracted interest in several other Oregon cities. News and radio men of six state communities have studied 'Build the Basin" and are now in process of or considering the Introduction of similar programs In their own municipalities. The six are Bend. Oregon Federal Pay To $704 Million WASHINGTON Ml The fed. eral government has poured $704.- 581.166 into Oregon for various programs since 1934. the Joint Committee on Reduction of Non essential . Federal Expenditures reports, t . The total, which runs through June 30. 1951, includes all direct cooperative programs, plus ex penditures for relief and other aid. It does not include military outlays. The report showed a sharp in crease in the flow of federal funds since 1947. Depression period aid, topped by $44,819,010 spent bv the Works Progress Administration, totaled $262,958.069 an average of slightly less than 33 million dollars a year for the period between 1934 and 1941. In 1947. government payments to Oregon fell off to slightly less than 26 million dollars, only to soar to a peak of $67,040,478 for the 12 months ended June 30. 1949. They amounted to $53,994,428 in the year enaea last June. The biggest single Item listed by the committee was $106.291351 for re-adjustment benefits and vo cational rehabilitation of veterans. Costs -of this program, administer ed by the Veterans Administration. have dropped steadily from a peak oi S33.u47.924 reacnea in 1949. the program's second year. Its cost ran only slightly above 16 i mil lion last year. Second most costly government program in Oregon is agricultural conservation. Under this heading, which also Includes the agricultural adjustment program of 1937-1947, tne government paid out $66,952, 125. The overall total also includes $39.35.466 paid out in old-age as sistance and $43,745,549 for war housing under the Federal Public Housing Authority. Eugene. McMinnvlle. Rosenburg, Mcdiord and Coos Bay. The program, dedicated to the ievelopment and Improvement of the Klamath country, is a non commercial pubho service from which the Herald and News and KFLW derive no revenue, since the program has attracted such widespread interest, several firms have indicated a desire to sponsor the forum but the program Is to be kept on a non-commercial basLs. Program topics are now sched uled for several weeks in advance. In the next several weeks there are to be forums on how to best utilize Klamath's water resources, what to do about the growing prob lem 01 frequent chant v and wel fare fund drives and the roles of Christianity. Oregon Tech and women in the Basin's future. The topic on women is to have an all woman panel. Each forum topic is the respon sibility of a single member of the Herald and News editorial staff. The staff member assigned to en gineer a forum for a particular date confers with fellow news and radio workers In deciding the top ic and then sets up the panel. How people feel about the mat ter to be discussed, whether they are for or against any nroDOsals pertaining to the subject have no bearing on their selection for the panel. The Herald and News does not strive to channel public thought to favor or disfavor any proposal: the sole aim Is to bring problems to public attention and present a nearly as possible all angles of the problems. "Build the Basin" was originally scheduled for a one-hour program but public demand caused the first program to be extended to an hour and a half and all nrograms thus far have been extended the extra half hour. EARLY MORNING BLAZE ROUTS RESIDENTS Crowd ijatliors to watch firemen battle a iicncrnt-alnrm fire which destroyed or dniiinKcd three npurlmcnt buildings at Montreal, Canada. The residents fled the burning buildings In their nightclothcs into a snowstorm. At least one person was killed with eight others reported missing: (Ten per sons were hospitalized. Hcd Cross disaster workers set up emergency shelter! for the burned-out victims. Hp wyi t ill '- T'- g S,muH I I -t- By JEAN OWKNS Crater high, we're out to win! Truman Simmers Over Appeal To Soloes On Tax Office Reorganization; Says ( Policitians Only Interested In Office WASHINGTON 1 Prr.iltlrnt Klamath fans are looking forward! Truman suggested Friday that sen- to a bis giime on Pellcun court tonight, when the Pels and Crater nigh basketball teams meet to vie lor the district championship. Good luck to our fellows we houe they will be making the trip to state this year. Saturday night's game will be played on the Crater mgn tcnooi court K club vs. faculty basketball game was held today during our swui pinKi 111 .reiicun L-ouri. During the half-time a pep rally and skit was given for tonight's game. tiaroara Koagers. pep Pepper, was in charge of the skit. Members of the K club who par ticipated In the game are: Chuck Bennett. Roger Bliss. Ronnie Brv- ant. Jim Davidson John Miun Bud Mullen. Shannon Oldham. BUI Pickett. Flovd Pierce Chirk omn. UH.tHI. Officials were Dick Lundsten and Ronnie Owings. K club member har! a hitv Aav today, for they are also sponsor. Ing the after-game dance tonight. The dance will be held In the gins gym with the music provided alors opposing his nhul to reor. gnnlie the srandal-hlt Internal Rev enue BurPiiu "lire more Interested In their nnlitlcnl uatrnuago than In good public rrrvlcc." The President, in a letter to Vice President Burk-ley. made the strongest rl of a series of ap peals to Congress to approve his reorganization propositi. The Senate Kxpenlllures Com mltlee voted 7 to 5 this wck against the plan, which would end the political appointment of col lectors of Internal revenue and oili er top officials and place nil tnx collecting officials except the Reve nue Commission under Civil Serv ice. "Unfortunately, those who find It to their advantage to preserve the present system, or to plav polltlm with the Integrity of the public hervlre, have raised specious argu ments against the plan that obwure the real Issue." Mr. Triimiui wrote. "Disapproval of Uie iilnn winilrl be a blow to our efforts to assure provnl of the plan would W defra' lor Civil Hcrvii e reform nnil u victory lor proponents o a pulitii nl pnlrnniige ay.nem. We must ,,i let tlirse things happen, "Millions o( Aint-iicau taxpayers will be watching the Krimto r. lion on the ifnignnlnitlnn plnu They have been henrm . 1.,. .... I about corruption In government ...in mry are concerned about what Lb''!"f ""!"' ,u '"''Klncn the conduct In government "Phantom" Scares Truckers On Route 40 In West Ohio VANDAI.IA, O. (Pi-The "Pliant om of Route 40" Is ronrlng down the National Highway these nights maybe along a stretch you've traveled on. Listen to Roy Fltr.water, 30, a Thl.SIt lilKlln,, . I.'. . efficiency and prevent Improper ; Interested In seeing whelher !! . . Olsap- j Kirs are morn liiirrrstrcl ,,,. public servi." Under present practices the I'rrs. Idem appoints i,e (li iBX i-ollectm. 6U"Jcct 10 Sf""le The House, which lis. no voice in tie confirmation,. , ,,,,,,, rJ Mr. Truman s plan. II was spitting snow, and freez ing ram, and very dark one night three weeks ago. I dimmed my lights when a car approached. "When the car got about 300 feet -School Board Member Out Al- L.- v., w Klamath Girl In Campus Queen Race PACIFIC UNIVERSITY. Forest Grove Dolores M. Kidder, of 424 N. 11th St., has been chosen as one of four finalists in Pacific uni versity Intercollegiate Knight's queen competition. Each year, the local chapter selects finalists from i'ne three sororities and the Inde pendent group to compete for the honor of reigning over the IK Queen's ball. Miss Kidder, a sophomore busi ness administration major, is affili ated with Phi Lambda Omlcron, local social soroity, and is presi dent of Boxerettes. local service Honorary for "underclass women- The Intercollegiate Knights or ganization is a national service honorary for men. Sailor Held For Murder JACKSONVILLE. Fla. I bert D. Turney, Jacksonville Naval Air Station sailor from Portland, Ore., was arrested on a murder charge in the death of his wife, mother of three children by a form er marriage. Sheriff's Deputy Ernest R. Hart ley said Mrs. Clarlne Turney, 31. was found alive in bed after her husband left home Thursday morn ing, dui aiea snorny alter a neigh bor gave her a glass of water. The deputy said Mrs. Tumev was badly bruised and that finger nail marks were on her throat. He said bloody clothing and bed linen littered the room. Hartley said, "in my onlnlon. he killed her; no doubt about that." The deputy said Mrs. Turney's three children, ages 7, 9 and 12. were staying with her parents In Columbus, O. He said Turney and his wife were married in January, 1951. Hartley said Turney admitted he and his wife had a fight Wednes day but said he thought she ws not seriously hurt when he went on duty at the air station the next morning. by a Vix piece band. Admission I Gni!ite- ?;:. rucker: will oe the usual 35 cents stag and 50 cents a couple. Let's all turn out for this and support our K club, besides having a good ito main activities are on the agenaa lor the first of next week The music department headed by Andrew Loney Jr.. wrfl Dresnnt a music department Droeram lor the student body Monday, while Tues day the regular meeting of the girls league olub Is scheduled. Thej theme for this meetlmr will be a preview on the annual girls' league! LOS ANOELES 'H J. Paul El. nun. uas Aiigrirs nonra oi trunca tion member, was convicted of mis conduct In office Thursday. Pen alty Is removal from office. Elliott had been charged with j votinir scnoni mix contracts to an operator, the Landler Management Co., tor whom he was legal coun- ! sel. He was the fourth board member ; to be convicted on grand iurv ac cusation or Indictment. Mrs. Gertrude H. Rounsavelle re signed after being accused of an Interest In Insurance written for Uie Landler Interests. Roy J, Becker waa convicted aft er trial on an accusntton of hold ing a similar lntcrc.it. Olln E. Darby, only one of the four accused of a felony, was con victed on one count of voting a contract to a tenant of one of his properties. He was fined $1,000 placed on probation and then re signed from the board. from me. Its Ughia went out civ tlrely. Then a little light llickrd on Inside, and I saw this thing. It waa horrible looking. Il 'acarrd me. I Jammed down on mv throttle and got out of there fast.' Five tales of the ghostly traveler have rrached the State Highway Patrol here.' Some truckers aald the "Phantom's" car glows. Oc casionally, the "Phantom" gets out and reveals a Hallowe'en tnusk. Boyle Joins Panel Group BUILD Bflfflt OS IBS PEYTON PUMICE BUILDING BLOCKS VttMINrHOOa MUMSUUTINa MAimm usr to itnio com YOU LISS FLUORIDATION KLAMATH FALLS It aDnears now that Klamath Falls may order nuonaation oi tne city water sup ply whether the people want it or not. I believe the project is not un animously favored, and I would suggest that It be placed upon the ballot for a vote of the people. B.C.T. WWW No Vets Bid On Farm Land Tract E. L. Stephens, Project Manager, Klamath Project, Bureau of Recla mation, says there were no vet eran bidders for 375 acres of pub lic land known as Lot No. 2 In the Lower Klamath Lake area. Sealed bids will be accepted from the general public at the of fice of the Bureau of Reclamation, Klamath Falls. Oregon, until 2 p. m., March 17, 1952. Detailed information concerning the lensing of this land mav be secured at the Bureau of Reclama- marigolds. tlon office, Klamath Falls Airport, I scabiosa and coreopsis. Flower Plan Gains Ground EAST LIVERPOOL, O. Ml A minister's Idea to beautify the city oy giving cnnaren packets of flow, er seeds Easter morning has land' ed In fertile ground and offers of neip are oiossoming all over town. The Rev. Frederick T. .Gillette suggested it and John Ridder, sec' retary of the Chamber of Com merce, raised $50 to buy the see.ds In bulk. A big greenhouse firm will get tne seeas in Duik, a paper con tainer firm will furnish the enve lopes and the East Liverpool Dahlia Society will weigh and package the seeds, enclosing In structions for the youthful Luther Burbanks. 1 Each child will be given a mix ture of flower seeds zinnias, hollyhocks, cosmos, immim sees mp Before you replace or lerape a Urnlnhed mirror uk lit about ReSllverlnff It . . Our complete equipment, sxperlenced aklll, fine ma terial! will make the mirror look like new. And, the coat la moderate. , formal to be held April 6. Rev. Echlin Plans Visit CHILOQUIN Rev. C. Ellery Echlin left today to spend a week In Tualatin, where he will conduct evangelistic services In the Meth odist Church. He will be the guest of Rev. Leonard Buck fnrmpr innoquln and Fort Klamath minis' ler. wno now lives in Tuninttn On Sunday the Chlloouln rv. Ices will be conducted bv lavmen with Don 8lmnson in the milnlt nrf Les Hoback and Leonard Swanson assisting. A quartet, Mrs. John Manner Ing, soprano. Mrs. Athel Roser. alto, Don 8lmpson, Tenor and Les nonacK, oass. win sing. Family nignt. generally held on the sec. ond Sunday evening of the mnnth has been postponed until the fol lowing eunaay. New Building Plans Okayed WASHINGTON UFi The govern ment Friday approved the erection of 105 new office buildings, banks, stores and commercial structures in seven cities it said were suffer ing "slack" construction activity. This action, by the National Pro duction Authority, released proj ects valued at t53,678,435 In the Metropolitan areas of New York, Washington, Boston, Los Angeles, Snn Francisco, Seattle and Portland, Ore, Materials will be granted for de livery after July 1, but demolition, site clearance, excavation and other preparatory work may begin at once to relieve 'Joblessness In the building trades. "This action Implements the pol icy we announced several weeks ago that as soon as possible we would take steps to help alleviate tne situation in areas hard-hit by lack of defense expansion construc tion." NPA Administrator Henry H. Fowler said. Fowler said ordinary construc tion In the cities affected has slackened because of the- limita tions on building "made neces sary by the impact of military de mand on scarce materials." The approvals Include 17 projects In Los Angeles totaling til. 108.740: nine In San Francisco, 12,954,428; seven in Seattle 3,85S,S72; and eight In Portland, $777,168. Piggy Banks OK, Cleared By Mint WASHINGTON tm Owners or the nation's piggy banks have been unjustly accused of causing a penny shortage, a member of Congress reports. Testimony give last year to the House Appropriations Committee Indicated that "the chief offenders" In withholding coins were the children of America, who had cached thousands of pennies. So several members of the com mittee visited the Philadelphia Mint to get some facts. tne superintendent of the Mint, according to Rep. Canfield (R.-N. J., , said 30 per cent of the pennies Dcing rniurneu oy rcnem rte serve banks as worn out "are good coins very good, In fact." That being true, Canfield said, the chief offenders In the nennv shortage "are probably the banks tnemseives not the piggy type. Canfield reported his flndlnor re- cently to the committee and they were Included In hearings made public Thursday. "E" Bonds Hit Record Peak NEW YORK im Public hnlrl. Ings of scries "E" savings bonds arc at an all-time high of $34,800, 000,000 says Secretary of the treas ury Snyder. In a speech Thursday, Snyder "E" bond sales In January and February this year were six per cent above the same months in 1051. He added that the amount of bonds cashed during the period was nine per cent lower than last year, u.n."1! hny,r- vll'n president and general lminni.Tr nf i).. ." and a skeleton suit, with bones out- Oregon Power CoiiipHnv will h lined In luminous paint. 'he seventh inrmbi-r nf iipki mii Three truckers almost caught the 'J"y night s "Build the UliMn" in macabre motorist a wrrk ago. But dlo panel. he roomed away, scraping his car 1 Topic? for dlsrusslon will i. n, against one of the trucks. ! Klamath area's w c re,T-.! Maybe he's mentally III. said Itmcl use. icsuiiicc patrol officer or mavbe he's Just ! Thr- urnirrnm I. i i . . got a weird aense of humor. I Kl'l w' i" a in be "'.V1 oy(r wesrU"" " 'nt nu-mbVr, ;r"i Mum uie ii.Mciuiig audience. In general, bccniiso the uiii-mioii uf water resources mid use is aueh j" "ig Him iinpurtuiil one. the ills cusMon will have to be limited to wairr sources, supply, present use. history of the various agencies in- j (created In the rrsourcc. Future nlnns tor Huh i lunijon un A man who often . """ pumie and prlvntn agencies said "I'd give my right arm" lolwl" " laken up In a later forum, see his ailing daughter cured lost In addition to nnyle. who Is (he arm In a car crash and she comlnir from Merinsrrf mi.., ...ni -..-, MIJV.V-l lUMfllj. lirillFM. The odd case, with the names withheld, was described by Dr. J. M. H. Smellle of Liverpool In Fri day's Issue of the British Medical Journal. Dr. Smellle said the girl was In Western Ohio. Girl Healed By Miracle members are coming from a dis- mni'c 10 participate. Charfe-i Strlck lln. Oregon Hlato Engineer, la to come from Salem; A. N, Murrav, U8HH regional planning engineer, Ironi Sacramento: Tom Horn. Tule. nine wiKinio Iteiuue miinnuer. a skin disease assoclatd with crippled by arthritis and disfigured ; from 'lulelake; Moyd OKI. ranch r. irum i.aiiKru vailev. iwo Klamath Falls members arc Frank Jenkins, publisher of (he Herald and News, and E. L. Stephens, project manager of the Kliiiniilh Reclamation Project. Bud Chandler, KFLW manager, will be moderator. ( Her devoted father tried all kinds of treatment but she did not re spond. One day he set olf on a motor trip with (he girl and his wile. The car was wrecked and the father's rignt arm was torn off. Before his wound had healed, the daughter's skin trouble and artli-, rltls had vanished. Dr. Smellle offered two possible explanations the cure might have ' been due to psychological factors ; or to cortisone liberated from the ' gin s adrenal glands by the shock of the accident. In time of shock the adrenal glands, situated near the kldnevn, pour out cortisone. This substance has come to the fore In recent years In the treatment of arthritis. WURLITZER A magnificent piano. Many lovely stylet end flniihti to chooit from. LOUIS R. MANN PIANO CO. 120 No. 7fh i JNEW MOTORS tii JAYHAWK Joys . . . . THERE'S HONE BETTER "91" Octon. Ethyl 31c BGS5Q We have been able to secure these brand new, complete Motors and Short blocks, either or 105 H.P. J . k... ... planaln, I.. It new malt t t ihtrt kite, DO IT NOW-whllt tkty art .till ytlltbltl USE OUR EASY BUDGET TERMS and take your time to pay! ASHLEY CHEVROLET JAYHAWK GAS fgH-331 410 So. 6th Phono 4113 IP. EYT0N&C 3B MaHKIT ar. 213S South th mmnnmuniniiiui