PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OKKUON Siitunlny, April 8, MM FRANK JENKINS Editor Entered M second class matter at the post office of Klamath Falls, Ore., on August 20, 1906, under act of Congress, March , 1179 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication f ai! the local newt printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news. SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BY CARRIER 1 month I 1.35 1 month I 135 ( months I 8.50 6 months I t.10 ' 1 year $11.00 1 year $16.50 ? -v I By DEB ADDISON SATURDAY QUICKIES: Call lor O. K. Puckettl He's the man who, through direct action Willi bulldozers or indirectly by the threatening use of his name, gets Unsightly and illicit garbage and tin can dumps cleaned up. It's the road from Langell Valley to Ocrber dam that we're calling to his attention, and It's the culprits who have been dumping junk along that road that we're threatening with a call for O. K. Puckettl The Sacramento Bee on March first increased street sale price from a nickel to a dime. Gov. Len Jordan of Idaho told Congress that Idahoians (and East ern Oregonlans) want no part of the Reclamation Bureau's proposed Hell's Canyon dam because it would: (1) Violate the state's water rights: (2) force the state to form a power authority to protect the 300,000 kilowatts to be reserved to Idaho; (3) impair navigation; (4) result In a tax loss: (5) flood min eral resources; (6) add to the fed eral debt. The Baker. Ore., chamber of commerce, on the same subject, said that it might improve naviga tion for the resident (which are rattlesnakes, jackrabbits, coyotes ABC WASHINGTON ' The Truman Administration s attempt to clean up government corruption looks about as pretty as a dove that fell In a tar barrel. Months have passed and still no investigation, although there's been a little excitement and some big talk. When the noise subsides over Thursday's double-firing of New bold Morris and Attorney General McGrath Morris by McGrath and McGrath by President Truman you get to the meat in the coconut with two questions: 1. The heal was on McGrath and his Justice Department but why did it take him so long to get hot? 2. Does Morris now what hit him-? (for that matter, who does, outside McGrath and the Presi dent?) On Feb. 1 McGrath appointed Morris to investigate the govern ment. Morris said he'd start with McGrath's own Justice Depart ment. On Feb. 25 be said he'd send government officials a sharp ques tionnaire about their financial sources. LONG WAIT A couple of weeks later he sent the questionnaire to McGrath and his Justice Department first. Mc Grath had a whole month to decide whether Morris was right or wrong With the questionnaire. So why, knowing all about the questionnaire so long, did it take McGrath so long to get indignant, so indignant that he sacked Morris, especially since only last Feb. 1 he had promised Morris "complete, enthusiastic and unlimited cooper tion." Morris has been a kind of babe in the woods ever since he came here. He's issued a number of statements which got him head lines but could hardly Improve his investigatory technique; he's quar reled with members of Congress who denounced and investigated him; and after two months on the job be had a staff of only 10 law yers, plus some other help and had investigated exactly nobody. - Morris seemed to think he had iW'Wijti.'g'.i.'W.U'uiw.utt- i ui! .4ii - .mi , i ,nn. ,u in The subject of heart attack, which Is usually coronary occlusion or coronary thrombosis, has been often discussed in this column. Although this is an alarming condition which frequently seems to come without warning, and from which far too many persons die quite suddenly, I wish to emphasize the hopeful and encouraging features of coro nary occlusion. At present It appears that there are nine chances out of ten of a person recovering from the first attack of coronary occlusion. In a recent study of 412 patients, after an acute coronary occlusion, two fifths of the patients made a com plete recovery. Another quarter of the 412 made a satisfactory re covery except for occasional pain on exertion. One quarter of the patients who had recovered completely had lived more than 10 years at the time the study was made, and four out of ten had lived more than five years. More than eight out of ten were employed and six out of ten at full-time work. Among the patients In the group whose first attack occurred before they had reached the age of 45, there was only a slightly better outlook than in the older patients. NOTICE County Clerk'i Office will be open eveninqj commenc ing Tuesday, April 8th, 7 to 9 p.m., for Registration of Vetera. Reaistered Electori who will bo unable to ao to Polls to vote on Election Day on ac count of illness, mav make application for Absentee Ballot. . Chas. F. DeLop, BILL JENKINS Managing Editor v;- r. and gophers). . .but that it "would completely destroy recreation," not improve it. . .and that smaller pri vate enterprise dams there Instead would save the taxpayers millions of dollars and put millions on the tax rolls. . .and what's more, that Sen. Wayne Morse was not acting for the people of Oregon when he Introduced the Hell's Canyon bill. I Now we find out that we could have saved those 3-foot seedling Fonderosa pine trees that were so carefully transplanted to the right spots in the yard last fall. Yep, the mice girdled them. The pre ventative measure is to clear away all grass and litter for about a foot from the trees before snow flies. So says Gene Gross of the Experiment Station anyway. . and we'll double check it with the Old Trapper before next fall. ."Gilly" Gilmore, the Lake of the Woods homeowners head man. says that response to a Cabin Raising Bee for Camp Esther Applegate has been terrific. . .wonder how it will be when It comes time for work? Alas the polls Are barred to her Because she forgot To register! an answer to what hit him, al though it's doubtful he has the right one: He said McGrath hire! him in the belief he was a soft touch and would never really in vestigate anyone. . mis hardly jibes with uie ad ministration's attempt to hire, be fore Morris agreed to take the job. men who could hardly be described as anybody's soft-touches, men like the late Robert Patterson, former secretary of war. Montana 's former Senator Burton K. Wheeler, and Federal Judge Thomas F. Murphy, who sent Alger Hiss to jail when Murphy was a government prose cutor. And both McGrath and Morris established some kind of record for men who change their minds about one another. On Feb. 1 Morris told newsmen he was impressed by McGrath's "sincerity ana good faith" in help ing him in the investiffatinn Thurs day he said of his brief Washington career: "If it hasn't accomplished anyuung eise. we rave gotten rid ui nuwtira iwcuraui. TURNABOUT On Feb. 1 McGrath told newsmen Mr. Newbold Morris is a distin guished lawyer with a reputation for courage, firmness and fairness in dealing with nroblems that affect the integrity of public serv ice. I earnestly ask the American people to place their trust in the rectitude of his efforts.." Earlier this week McGrath told a committee of Congress which was quizzing McGrath about his Justice Department and wants to see his income tax returns that he'd never have hired Morris if he had it do over azain Maybe, if McGrath is mad enough, he'll let the cat out of the bag. Or maybe the cat will be pulled out by thnt same com mittee whose Chairman, Rep. Chelf, Kentucky Democrat, said Thursday his group may call both McGrath and Morris for question ing. Meanwnne tne investigation ol government corruption is back where it started months ago, which hi. I .in y.nm.. minv m ' " .' J Therefore, an older person who has an attack need by no means take a pessimistic view. In another recent discussion of heart disease and other physical numems oy a prominent and dis tinguished physician, it was pointed out that fear of heart disease may react unfavorably on the heart it self, and certainly on the other activities of the body. In the course of the article. h mentioned several patients who had had heart attacks, but had been able to surmount the mental effects and had led long and active lives for many years thereafter.. Certainly, every experienced phy sician will endorse the need for an Intelligent attitude by the per son who has had a heart attack by putting fear in the background. It is not easy to develop this at titude, but the passage of time does help. ! TUISPAY See MONDAY'S Paper They'll Do It Every Time 11 " -1 LIKE THIS CAH BOTTLE, CAP, LABEL -If- -SL (PJO-'(fTpT1 AW PACK 8,500 CASES Of fT I VMLN - ShMACB ID! BILGE WATER 50QA POPPER HOOO, L J ftf JlVfOti CORP. fid AUTOMATCALLY ELIMINATING rf . f5SiteS Ml lCmL -ii TO BuTrrmcsuvvTEeN ( "wh J SSvr -yZD'M 2fZLe LGC- NV8. JoTV( B'MTiR ( SnOMM? COURAGE KLAMATH FALLS Don't snllflu'e slory ' Pieced together. for the odor of soap because thisT1ere Is a trailer parked behind letter is not from a soap box orator, the building. The two boys were Neither is it from a "do gooder" ! playing and entered the unlocked who entertains Ideas of banishing ingh ml p?,, t all evil forevermore. It Is from anlmR them In for refund at the gro- average mother of two boys, aged! eery store. They had played with eleven and eight years. I'he typewriter in the trailer, cached Last Monday morning I was feel- ft JJ' .L"",'"' ' ?,s Je: m vr , ".nr. ti,. I'leved to know that my son had boys were in school. Their clothes were all clean so I didn't have to wrestle with the washing. Every thing was in the cupboard to bake the chocolate cake I had promised my older boy, so I did not have to run to the store for eggs at the last minute. Everything was under control and I had no prob lems. I thought! A gentleman knocked at the door and inquired if I had a son by the name of my younger bov. I answered yes and invited him in the house. There had been a theft in the neighborhood, and this gen tleman from the Dolice denartmrnt had learned rnv son and another i boy bad been seen around the build I ing. The theft was no childish wain., a typewriter ana money had been stolen! Mr. Editor, did you ever try to build a cake with news like that? Well, don't try it. It won't work. After school the officer picked up my son ana the other boy. Tne j iuut oi us weni to me Police HST's Budget Slashed Again WASHINGTON ( - A rut of almost one-third in the Slate De partment ouaget Boosted over the i H'-bilhon-aollsir .mark Saturn i the total the House has slashed so far from President Truman's 1953 budget. A $1,016,923,731 bill appropriat ing money to finance the State, Justice and Commerce Depart ments and the Federal Courts for the fiscal year starting next July 1 passed the House 200 to 55 last night after record slashes had been made in State Department funds. The budget-cutting drive that developed during an 11-hour ses sion hit hardest at the controver sial "Voice of America" program. The budget for the "Voice" and irelated foreign information and education programs was cut al most in half by a combination of Republicans and Southern Demo crats. Left in the bill as it went to the Senate was a ban against setting up a diplomatic mission in Vatican City without prior Senate confirma tion of an envoy to head it. The State Department informa tion program, designed to counter act Russian propaganda abroad, was chopped from the 170 million dollars requested by President Tru man to $86,575,000. None of the money requested for construction of new broadcasting stations. In cluding two on ships, was allowed, although the Appropriations Com mittee had recommended 20 V million for this purpose. Regular operational funds for the I information program, which in cludes press and other activities in addition to radio, were trimmed from $133,272,914 to $86,576,000 as Republicans lambasted the pro gram as ineffective and poorly managed. Of the $102,419,628 chopped from the Stale Department budget, 52 million was cut by the Appropria tions Committee in its recom mendations. The balance by the House itself during debates. r A MIRRORS I J M rar ar room I I I" ! rati I II Ml T.. Mln II " IIK""U!' l.'l" I. . Mil1"1 V uill' ' ' v , ' i. 1 v JL. ,tloii. After questioning the two bovs not been guilty of the larger theft, but the bitter truth remained that he and his companion had stolen milk bottles and turned them in for money. All this happend within a block from our home and the trailer house can be seen from our dining room window. Tuesday morning I walked to school with my boys and had a conference with the principal. 1 was amazed and shocked to learn the facts. My sons were not the only "nice" boys that had been in trouble at one tune or another. My peace of mind was not re stored one particle to have my older son return home from school that afternoon and tell me the po lice officer had questioned him that afternoon and he had told all the facts of the thett! Two under teen age boys had bragged to him Sun day afternoon about their clever ness in stealing the money and hiding the typewriter. They had at tempted to give him some of the money. I had learned mm uiese group ap Sla-isame boys were in a prehended a short time ago for stealing. I asked my son why he had not told me about it. and he replied, "Mother, have you ever been so scared you couldn't even talk? Even to your Mother? I knew I had to tell on them when the policeman said the other boys told him my name." We moved to Klamath Falls less than three months ago. We found a nice home and rented it. Now that we are acquainted with the city we find that our house is Just on the borderline between two dis tricts that are classed as "desir able," and "undesirable." My boys are making new friends and need less to say it is difficult for boys of their age to pick and choose. Such wisdom could not be expect ed of them when their own Mother learned that some of the boys she thought the nicest were involved In serious trouble. My first Impulse was to move away and take the boys out of this neighborhood. Reading statis tics was as close as we had ever been to this type of thing, and we had always felt above it. But, Mr. Editor let's lace it. A child Is a creature of impulse without ma ture Judgment to stifle all the wrong In him. And that includes my Johnny, your Johnny and all the Johnnys in the world. And it has been established by people much wiser than we, that there is a little larceny in all of us. Run ning away will do no good. As long as these conditions exist my boys will be exposed. The police officer was kind, un derstanding and concerned. The school principal was the same. But how far can they go It is not their responsibility. Neither will swimming pools and public gyms solve the problem. The problem of delinquency should be placed right where it belongs. Every parent should assume responsibility for the conduct of their children. If all our eight and eleven year olds received constant supervision dur ing daylight hours and were in side their own homes after dark. we would not have to defend them. Mr. Editor, I have been hit hard where It hurts. It is not my in tention to run away or take It sit ting down. These conditions can be bettered and I will welcome any opportunity to work In any capacity toward Improvement. Mrs. H. L. Ferguson What's B&B TV? By Jimmy Hatlo I Hii "" in iii i.n" in, h v: . aiimni t ii'iui. j(M i' pii i n ' fcmiiii i it, iCni initiii iiiiM-n inn ii n. .in .ii. i. J NEW YORK I -dtislrv drilled 45.000 The wells In the United blutcs last year. But the one that iiiaue the greutCM splttsa .n Hiul out ol wall street was a wildcat on a farm near Tioga. N. U , Just a year ago Saturday. It flows a nice 35u bun els ol crude oil dully an InMitnil leant urop in tne a ' j million barrels tlic nation pumps in a day. But in its first year Unit wildcat has turned the eyes of stock traders toward glares ol a ta.lrouii, a match company, an electric utility. Investment firms, and other seem ingly unlikely companies, as well as a large number oi oil companies, some who already have ana lomu who haven't yet struck oil In the area but have paid out 60 million dollars to lease land there I'rtOOF Slock traders here and In Turonto arc interested bccuu.se the success ful wildcat showed after 30 years oi vain and costly search that lucre is oil in the vital Willlslon Basin, lying to the cust ol the Rockies and stretching from South Dakota into Canada. And every corporation that owns land In that basin, or owns stock in compunies Dial do control land, suddenly looks good to Wall Street. Farmers In that one-time dust bowl have been happily and prutlt ably leasing oil rights to their lands. Some farmers who ottered during the dust storms of the mimes to sell their land lor as little as 50 cents an acre, now sell oil leases for as much as $1,500 an acre. As far away a the St. Paul-Min- ncapolls and the Duluth-Supcrtor areas men are talking ot the Important oil rcllulng centers. If Willislon Basin devclons into the oil field some expect and at tains Alberta's 1950 production lev el, Uie Federal Reserve Bank ol Minneapolis suys "about 10 mil lion dollars would be oald annually in royalties" alone, not to mention additional money spent by the oil companies and workers. Yet oilmen caution that, uromls- ing as it seems. Willislon Busln still must be classified as a hope, not yet a fullfilment. The Oil Information Committee of the American Petroleum Insti tute notes: "There is a long, long way to go before the new Held is established as a major producing center." But the well near Tioga showed the way. And in the year since. U wens icaiierea from Montana through North Dakota and Into Manitoba have found oil In the Basin a sedimentary trough, 400 miles long by 300 wide, and as much as 14,000 feet deep in places. THEORIES Geologists call It an old sea or lake bottom and some think its formations are extensions of those that proved so oil productive in Aineria province to the northwest. 1 Of the nation's 609 geological crews. 27 are working in the Basin. and 13 drilling rigs worked through me long winter. Oilmen caution about ton hiuh hopes. Only one out of every nine wells drilled strikes oil irr" prolll- aoie Quantities. Ana on v one out oi n wuacais in new territory hits pay oil. That makes the Tioga discovery well the most remarkable. The year before 16 wildcats In the Da- kotas turned out to be dusters, r dry holes, as was the first one armed in the basin 30 years ago. Uncle Sam hopes along with the drillers that they'll strike oil. He wants 80.000 more wells drill ed In this country bv the end of next year and he wants refinery capacity raised from the present seven million barrels a day to eight million tor aeiense oi course, not to benefit those taking a flier In Wllliston oil stock. That new car brilliant tomes horn BEAUTY Mmum llincH lellow IK at Hint h hd ill ntw ut kwltr retlend k m beMts. tttfi th bmi gi,sj( atthr eomnvo. Otivt is Mae. DICK B. MILLER Co, l'lty the pour historian who must try to find h truth about the era we mo now living In. There 'are mi. re dlailns, letters, memoirs and other documents bring accum ulated tint it ever before. But the sum total probably produces less lit Im malum i o( use to history than we had before the typewriter was invcmi'ii. i For one lining, some ot the mont crucial drvlslmu made by men in high publld ofllce are never spelled out In documents at all. They are often the result of verbal agree ments, and tho only documentary evidence may be a note reading: 'This is lo conlirin our conversa tion of yesterday." Because so much history these days Is being threshed out In ver bal ctmfeifuco among men or high position we are compelled to fall buck on the various versions of- (ered lntri1 by tho Individual con- lurees. But. unhappily, the ac counts seldom agri'ti. Indeed, they ircuuently . uro diametrically op posed. dih-'i:ri.M'i:s Take, for example, the question ot our changing attitude toward Russia right alter World War II. From President Truman s. highly publlclu'd now book we get one version. From former Secrotary of Stato James F. Byrnes, we get an other. From Jounilinu Daniels, sntitlirrn etlllor once clone lo the While lloii.se as an adviser, still another. 1 Where does the truth lie? You can run down a long list of events of j recent memory about which the! sum dllomma exists. There tire half a diuen stories Ui everv nisei Who to believe. Actually, It Isn't Just tho historian who sutlers from the confusion. The bar llrd oltlmen, trying to decide whether tlw policies of his leBders arc wise :or not. hardly knows where to turn. If ho starts with an already conceived opinion, ne na. NEW YORK UK I am a retired fat man. I used to be round and tlrm and fully packed. I used to be able lo crowd a one-way street. When I stepped on the scales. Uiey didn't Just weigh me. They aald "ouch! But I waa a walking porpoise on purpose. I enjoyed being fat. When I laughed I had twice as much tun as a thin man, because there waa so murh more ot me there ready and able to have a good time. All this is part. The suits I bust ed out of yesterday now hang upon me in toltls. Where I used to bulge I now sag and wrinkle. I ain't ex actly the thin man but I'm on my way. 1 Court to Eye Tax Election LAKEVTEW A peclal meeting nf ih. t ake Counlv Court will be held Monday to consider whether to call a special election lor vot ing on a three-year crlal tax levy to pay the county's share of the cost of taxable property reclassi flcatlon. Under a program of the 8tale Tax Commission. Uie county can get all property In the county re assessed for purposes of equallring the taxes by paying half the cost. The cost Is estimated at $90,000. The order calling Uie special elec tion, pointed out Unit it appear the reclassification is necessary, that the state would pay hall the cast, and that the county anouia raise Its share by serial levy hi the rate of $16,000 per year for three years. Kilowatts Chalk Up Record PORTLAND 11 Some 418.M3, 000 kilowatt hour ol.pottti ml all-tlmc record high for 4 single month were generated during March by the Columbia River's Bonneville dam, The previous record according to Frank M. Lewi resident engineer, was 407.544.000 kilowatt hours gen erated during January of this year. When generators tailed at Grand Coulee dam last month Bonneville' output was 600.000 Kilowatts. Iwls said the normal capacity 1 670,000 kilowatts. Batista Sworn As President I HAVANA, Cub 11 Fulgenclo Batista, a iormer president, wno seized the rule of Cuba in a mili tary coup March 10, was sworn in Friday night as president ol Cuba. He succeeds Carlos Prto Socar ras, exiled to Mexico shortly after his government was overthrown. AUSTERITY APPLES WENATCHEE, Wash. (AP) Apple men feel the "supcr-auatcr-Ity" announced by Prime Minister Winston Churchill for Great Britain may mean the loss of Central Washington's best apple export market. HH a BLUE CORAL TREATMENT! i in i ii. .ii.i.niniiiiwi mil in ' i - , majhM Uirally will choose the version that nulls his prejudices. But If he Is simply seeking the uncoloicd truth, he's In a bail way. The answer to this does nut likely lie lit wiring all our conference rooms wllh dictaphones or taking tape recordings of everything thut passes between top officials. There Is Htlll a great deal of point In allowing our government to hum mer out the raw material ot pull ey In private. Meu'a minds operate moro freely beyond III glare ot public nltcntlon. SM'lll'.TM Yet there should be no endorse ment of "secret" government, ot a process by which decisions are tak en liehliHl locked doors anil spiting nn the public completely cold. Once a tentative policy line is agreed on among the top brans, It ought to bo submitted lor study by all In to cited parties. It the subject mai ler does not conocrn aocurlly or the most delicate diplomacy, U ought to have somo mciisuro ol public debiilo bclore adoption. This procedure, of course, docs not solve tho problem ol the his torian and the clllwn who eventu ally would like lo know accurately who said what In the orlglnul high-level discussions. Muybc we should Insist, by law Unit lormal memorandums be dial led to embody all policy decisions so there will be no big gups In the written record. And perlmiw we ought to have a special corps ol sleiiographlo reporters lo set down the lull give-and-take ol the pre ceding conferences. These material need not neces sarily bo published noon after Uie event, unless this could be done without Injury to the country or to honorable public servant. But they would be available when the time arrived to pass full and final Judge ment on the men and policies involved. 1 Why did I give up the happy, aelf-satlshed, carefree life ot a tat man to Join the miserable million ol dieting Americans? ItKAHONti Well, to make a clean breast ol II. there were two reasons. . First. I wa lonely overwhelm ingly lonely. All my friend were on a diet. All my enemies were on a diet. I began to feel I waa the only tat man left In th world. I had nothing to talk about be cause Uiere waa nothing wrong with me. I waa Just stout and hap py but they don't allow that anymore. The second reason I went on a diet la because of my life insur ance company. I Just hated lo go on worrying them. And they were worrying all right. They began put ting ads In Uie magailne and newspaper saying that fat peupi don't live as long aa not-so-fat peo ple, that fat people don't rally so well from lllnea. Have my own theory about that. It Is this. Fat people who behave like tat people ought to behave -that is, those who take lite alow and easy and one stair at a lima live a long while. But fat people who try to act like thin people rile young. It Is that simple. One ot the reasons a whale live so long I that It doesn't play tennl. I went on diet, like ao many, many million of people art do ing. I took off 17 pound. It was very easy, Mllt.Mll.A The quickest, safest and most healthful way lo lose weight Is to quit eating what you like and eat all you want of what you don't like. My formula I this: If there is something on your plate that looks good, throw It away. Then eat what Ii left. Sloughing off those 17 pound has made a big change In my life. It Ik pleasant again to hear the girls whistle at me a I pas by and murmur "there goe tiger man." I look better and feel belter and t know my life Insurance com pany now Is relaxing. But I do miss the comfortable, sollde, sedate feeling that fat give a fellow. And I am Just about lonely- as ever. Because all my friends and enemies want to talk about is diet. . . diet . . . dleU. Mountain Radio Scoring Binge . LAKEVIEW Engineering details for Installation of telephone cable to connect the planned radio In stallations soon to be made on top of Black Cap are being readied by Mel Johnson, engineer for the Wot Coast Telephone Company, It was reported by A. M. Denio, manager of the local company. Local sawmill and logging firms and the Forest Service, and pos sibly others, are preparing to In stall radio facilities on the moun fybcapo cloeeh n l.sirfe-b tain, to be connected to their of flees by phone cable. While here, Johnson Is also at tempting to urvey the Welsltie and Eastsld areas for rural phone service, a project on which th phone company l to offer serv ice proposal by May 1. . Delivery Price of the new TO-30 Ferguson Tractor is just $1844! Compart the quality! Compart Ptrformanca! Compare tha price! YOUR FERGUSON TRACTOR A IMPLEMENT DEALER Mac's Farm Equipment t Death Claims Boy in Canal LAKltVIBIW floy Jiime Nen-I,. am, f-year-oltt sou of Mr, and Mi. Hoy Neaahain, Weslnlde, dniwnni Thursday when ho tell through now Into an Irrigation ditch. ua was on hln way to school. The HtU'liillllg physician renintrtl that the boy apparently hail been stunned by lilltlug Ills head on ih ennurde abutment a he leii through the snow. The boy wut pulled Irom in ditch by Lynn Touillu. When ihr dlsssler car arrived, two men wcu working over the boy In an atlempt to revive him, and Al Oelly, ol the dlnaKler car crow, suit! Ilia enr win culled about 9 a.m. and lime ol the accident has been estimated ni halt an hour or ao earlier, A liienu o the Neiishani boy ran a ipiiu. ter of a mllo to a neighbor 'vim got the boy out of the dlfeh nml started rrsusniliillon. Tho dlsasier oar brought the boy to the l.nkr vlew honpllalr meeting the doctor on the way. The uccKfiil veurii-u al a newly Installed neaagute. Rotarians Eye City Problems Discussion of two cltv measini". which will be voted on III Uie M..v primaries the proposed 2-year I- nuii levy lor repairs and Improve menta to the aewerage system, ami the proposal to eliminate the office of city treasurer ami consuliclaie tht duties In the police Jiidgr'i office waa the program at Kutarv cuio rrinay noon al Uie Wlllnnl hotel. The mectliiu was conducted as panel discussion with Club Hety Uud Chandler acting a moderator K. A. iTaxli Thomas city enul' nrer. and club members Paul I nn. dry and Cal Peyton, led discus- sinn on tne sewerage prob cut. "iiiniM It was brouuhl nut that Dm ni. i. Sanitary Authority ha demanded inui uie cuy make needed repair and Improvements; tlmt with 1300 000 and $00,000 originally invested raise $:ft.0oo for this purpme i good business: that the onlv way to raise the money Is by special levy or bond Issue: and that It I "not a debatable suliiect." City Police Judge Bob Elder ex. plained the measure lor taknm ih city treasurer riullea Into police Judge office aa a move lo save du plication and an lo save money, lie ""iii many ureRon ciilea aa lim ing made thla change. Ilia estlmnia ol saving wn $100 per month. iir.i.inr.nt i r. Past Mavor Tnm Waller nsinu nut that Uie duplication had been neuoeraieiy written Inlo the city charter, and that It wasn't by ac cident, lie suggested that II had been planned lo provide a aysleni of cheek and balance on the handling of public funds, and so any change' should be carefully con sidered. Election of Rotary directors for Uie year atarllug July 1 put Sroti Warren, O. K. Purkett. Lome Pal merlon, Karl Kent, Boh Elllngsun ana uua cnanaier in ouice. ITALY IMI'OItTS I'lANOg MILAN (API Italy, blrthplar of the piano, doesn't produre enotiitii of them to take care of Its own need. Italy Imports about lO.OOti piano per year mostly Irom Germany ana France. DANCE MAUN SAT. April 5 Music by Bunnell's Orchestra Dancing 10 'til 2 County Clerk 5629 South 6th 7th and Klamath Ph. 4103 Phone 8551 Regiter to Vote NOWt