Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, April 23, 1952, Page 7, Image 7

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    PAGE EIGHT '
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALL" OREGON
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2.1. 10.12
FRANK JENKINS
amor
Enttred at second clan matter at the post office of Klamath Falls,' Ore,
on August 20, 1006, under act of Congress, March 8. 1879
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS
The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for publication
of ei! the local news printed In
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BILL -
By BILL
As tills Is written I can look far
out over the Pacific from my van
tage point lilfth on a bluff over
looking that bit of water. Because
this Is vacation time.
Your writer has fallen prey to
that strange longing that affects aU
Oregonians periodically. The desire
to visit our rugged and beautiful
coast.
And for good reason. Never a dull
moment. Just hero a knock on the
door of the cabin and an uniden
tified voice mforms me uiai
freighter is beating its way up the
coast from the south ana do I
want to take a look? I do.
For in the sight of that lonely
little ship plowing along lies a
breath of adventure and romance
and the iaint scent of far off
places. To an oflice-bound landlub
ber lika me, anyway.
This longing of Oregonians for
beaches is apparently instilled at
birth. I doubt that there is a na
tive of our evergreen state that
doesn't feel the tug at one time or
another. And answer the summons.
There are warmer beaches to the
south where one can swim and loaf
In the sun. There are luxurious re
sort beaches along the gulf that
offer every known form of relaxa
tion. There are pleasure spas dot
ting all our southern coast lines
that certainly offer much more in
the way of comfort than does this
rugged, cold, windy, Drusn-riaaen
coast of ours.
But they lack the one essential
thing that appeals to the rugged
people of Oregon: the equally rug
ged scenery. Your softly nestling
southern beaches can t oner the
towering headlands that preen
themselves above the thunder of the
surf. They tall short in the depart
ment of variable weather. Here, in
the past week. I've sat through
sunshiny days that were almost hot,
wind storms that blew windows
shut and upset chairs, rainstorms
that start with a veil of vapor and
end with a steady downpour that
roars on the windows and splashes
merrily on the concrete walks. And
through it all is the ocean. The one
thing outside an open fire that
man can watch for untold hours
without growing weary or bored
The Oregon coast Is a good place
ktor a man to rest his soul. There s
enough going on around him that
he can't fall Into a complete tor
por, thusly his nerves are kept
Hiss' Lawyer
Asks Retrial
NEW YORK. Ul Alger Hiss
attorney says he has still more
evidence to support his contention
that testimony by Whittaker Cham
pers against Hiss was "false
Chambers' "fraudulent plot now
stands exposed" adds the lawyer,
Chester T. Lane. -
Lane filed In federal court Mon
day a new 10 point affidavit
supporting a previous motion lor
a new trial lor hiss.
The motion, which will be heard
June 2, originally was based on
new -evidence ' that the typewriter
introduced in Hiss' two previous
trials was a "lake machine," rigged
to make it appear it was used
to copy government data.
Chambers had testified that Hiss'
wife, Prlscilla, used the typewriter
to copy State Department secrets.
cnamoers said he then was a Com
munist spy courier.
Hiss, a former State Department
official, was convicted of perjury
at his second trial and sentenced
to five years imprisonment and a
line for falsely denying passing
secrets to Chambers. The first trial
ended with the jury deadlocked.
In the new affidavit. Lane savs
he now has experts who will testify
that the documents offered by
Chambers as evidence in the trial
were not typed by one person but
by two, and probably more. Lane
added that the experts will testify
that Mrs. Hiss did not type any
of them.
Lane said penciled corrections on
the documents were not made by
either of the Hisses. He also
claimed that the documents are
not all the same age and could
not have been kept for 10 years in
one envelope, as Chambers testi
fied. TERRIFIC
AT
525 Main
M II
iwm
BILL JENKINS
Managing Editor
this newspaper as well as all AP news,
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
BY CARRIER
1 month
t months
1 year
$ 1 35
... $ S 10
$16.30
BOARD
JENKINS
toned up while being rested.
But enough of praise.
You notice a lot of other things.
The fishing season opened yester
day and there has been talk of lit
tle else. For days? the residents of
the tiny coast towns have been anx
iously peering at barometers, test
ing the win J and hauling out the
farmer's almanac to see what the
weather wou!d be.
In the taverns tne talk was of
where thev would be running, of
gear and tackle and weather. Not
once in five days of listening did
I hear any discussion of the nation
al situation, tne strikes, tne steel
crisis or the president's highly con
troversial press conference where
he Intimated the freedom of the
American people may come to an
end.
Down here thev talk as neigh
bors. The towns are a neurogenous
and liquid factor, one flowing into
the next like a stream of water
trickling across rough asphalt. Ev
eryone seems to know everyone
else. It s not at all unusual to visit
four or five tonus cn an average
shopping tour and still not drive
more than eight or ten miles. Half
the distance you travel in a met
ropolitan city, to get the same
things.
It s a nice friendly atmosohere
that makes even the casual visitor
feel at home.
Down here everything but the
people steams up. You leave your
car out overnight and the windows
are all steamy the next mornine.
The shop windows are constantly
steamy. It's a phenomenon I don't
understand but a fact. Someday
I'll find out.
You also get a chance to areue
that favorite subject of all sun wor
shippers: What's the best way to
acquire a tan? There are three
definite schools not counting the
various cults. One (and the best ac
cording to me) is the bake and
burn theory. Step out in the sun
and broil all day, and then follow
this the next day and the next un
til your skin gets tough enough to
take It. No oil. no relief. The sec
ond most popular theory is to an
nolnt yourself with various oils.
greases, etc., and sort of French
fry yourself. And the third, known
as the Milquetoast method, calls
for darting cut for ten minutes at
a time carefully exposing a differ
ent area of skin each time and
waiting until you are tanned before
burning. It's a lot of fun arguing,
and the first school usually wins.
Why? Because if you can start the
argument in the sun and the oppo
sition is serious he'll stay there and
argue with you until his own skin
turns that attractive shade of red
usually found on electric plush
rockers and the faces of diners at
the Waldorf when they drop a fork.
There are florist shops that ad
vertise "oceans of flowers." There
are little crab stalls around every
turn of the road, all advertising
the best, freshest, biggest and tas
tiest crabs in the world. And they
are all correct. You have to wait
until you get over here and tangle
with a crab only a few hours out
of the water to realise the differ
ence between them and the tired
specimens we are served away
from the coast.
There are shops in every lown
that cater to the summer trade
with a line of sun caps with visors.
faded blue denim trousers and
jackets, flamboyant sport shirts,
dark glasses, beach shoes, jack
knives, fishing gear, aspirin, gin in
square bottles and sunburn lotion.
And they all stay open on Sunday.
So do the grocery stores. (Univer
sal complaint among the grocers:
Tve got lots of beer but no shells
cases because people never re
turn bottles." You get a cent
apiece for 'em, sc I take 'em
back.)
That ship is directly offshore now
the sun has come out from behind
the clouds and I m gonna go out
and play on the sand. In closing
let me say that I tried to be seri
ous. I tried to look out over the
mighty ocean and think a few cos
mic thoughts that would fit with
the pounding of the timeless surf
and the keening of the wind. The
only things I could think about
were to wonder whit ever hap
pened to Howard Hughes' flvlng
lumberyard and why don't they
publish Captnln Billy's Whizbang
anymore? So I might as well bo
out and play. Maybe some of the
fishermen on the beach will know.
SHOE SALE
NIIIGllESS
Phone 3466
They'll Do It Every Time
fx PROMISED r WOULDN'T BREWING f&?ZYfj5& IP, U
r PRottisco r wouldn't breathe
H41S TO A UUNG SOUL-BUT I
tell oj euS"CXJess rvwo
UWCW WITH TOCWyj BIFFIN ,
RlFFlsl . 80FFJ AHQ SOMAfUZ
OrFPTEO IE 10 eS AtORE THAN
HERS ID HANDLE THE BUxKJ AXOJNT J
I MUSHED IN MS PUSS. LctFS
W
BOtWES OFFERED MS rflORE THAU
THAT JUST LAST rVEEJv
CAUGHT In
Times and customs change but
certain things are fundamental.
They remain the same generation
after generation.
We're all creatures of nature, in !
spite of our artificial life in cities,
with mechanical gadgets. Mavbc
we're uot aware of it, and therein
lie our frustrations.
There was a time when all were
familiar with the almanac and
when every person knew whether
to plant potatoes m the light or the
dark of the moon. Now. you can't
tell me. (And I'd have to be told.)
To meet this need for a stream
lined schedule of nature's cycles
we have the Solunar Tables, a
copyrighted interpretation of the
daily influence of the moon and
the sun by one John Alden Knight.
It's a modern version of the old
"Moon Up Moon Down ' rule, of
times when all living things are
most active.
The Solunar Tables tell you the
hours when, under the influence :
of the heavenly bodies, fish and
game are most active. Knium's
publication of the tables is in its
eighteenth year. It's most used by
ihe outdoor fraternity, but if you
limit it to activities with rod and
gun you're missing e bet.
Suppose, for Instance, vou're a
salesman and vou have a big deal
to nut over. Take a look at the
table and you find that on April
24 the malor Solunar period starts
at 12:05. Take the man to lunch.
You'll have an hour and a half or
two hours to clinch the deal, while
your man Is most keenly alive.
ff
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
(For HAL BOYLE)
NEW YORK. I Vittorio Man-
unta, aged 10, Is a Cinderella boy.
Seven years ago Italian authori
aties found him crying in a Roman
gutter, clutching the hand of his
dead mother, shot in a street riot.
Today. Vittorio. an undersized
little Sicilian, Is a movie star, the
adopted son of a British Noble
woman and heralded on the
strength of a Btngle film as one
of the best child actors since Jackie
Coogan in "The Kid."
Americans, so far. haven't had
much chance to see Vittorio in
acton, for the Italian - made
film Paul Galileo's "Never Take
No for an Answer" Is Just
beginning to make the rounds of
the smaller independent film
houses in the larger cities. But
the lad's acting created a sensa
tion on the Continent and In
London.
ADOPTION
Vittorio's father was killed In
World War n. After his moher's
death, the dark - eyed, tousled
haired little boy was placed in a
government orphanage. After that.
he was adopted by the countess
of Berkeley, who has a home in
Assist.
Lady Berkeley, widow of the
earl who died in 1942, is a hand
some, white - haired woman in
middle life who was bom Mollie
Lowell of Boston.
Her American children (by a
previous marriage) have grown up
anu nave cnuaren oi meir own.
After the war she adopted three
little under-orivileeed war waifs.
Vittorio's unexpected emergence as
a theatrical star has considerably
El TTW NKTHATSO? 8X0S TO-WK-e ( SBCe OM RAPER I
I i IT VMW W 7A 1 I -r- I
mm 1 9- H . X I -
FINANCE AUTOMOTIVE
REPAIRS and SERVICE
Example:
SPEND $300
Interest for 1 year .... $ 18
TOTAL $318
If you paid Nothing Down your pay
ments would be only $)50
COME IN - MAKE ARRANGEMENTS - HAVE WORK DONE
-DRIVE OUT! ALL WORK GUARANTEED!
I m MM
C4N
i hao
Or
! HE
I GET
The ROUNDS
Or suppose, madnm, that you're
due to give a book review for your
club. A quick check on the Solunar
Tables will tell you that on April
28 a period of maior Solunar in
fluence starts at 3:30 p.m. If you
can wangle the alfnir for that af
ternoon your wit wll be most scin
tillating startuig at 3:30 and. Just
o Important, tor the next couple
of hours your gals will be most on
the qui vlve.
Or suppose further, young man,
that you've found the light of your
life but your courting has not vet
produced the desired "yes." Need
I point out that tonight at 11:45
is the start of a major Solunar
period.
All God's creatures lose' a great
deal of their natural caution dur
ing these Solunar periods. Need
more be said?
(If you've reached the age where
a good night's sleep Is your mat
ter of paramount importance, don t
blame a restive midnight hour on
the onions or that last olive vou
ate. It's probably Just the Solunar
stimulus at its peak.)
SAY THAT AGAIN SLOW depart
ment: "The program now totals JS
hours a day of classes In French.
eight hours in English. At the start
there were a couple of Russian
courses, but these have been
dropped. Nobody knows exactly
why
Culled from Monday s paoer.
some copies of which were dated
Saturday. Could be a Solunar pe
riod that went berserk.
changed her life, too.
She talked about It during a
recent visit to New York with
Vittorio. Time, affection, good food
and a happy home have almost
entirely healed the wounds of the
tragedies in the boy's earlier days,
but the scars still show a little
in the dependence of Vittorio on
his foster mother.
"He is absolutely mad about
cowboys and Indians," she said.
"He likes baseball, but his heart
belongs to Indians."
With his two adopted brothers,
life was quiet and pleasant In
Assist when a party of film people
called on the countess for help
in making arrangements for film
ing tne Interior of famed St. Fran-
els' Church. They told her of
trouble casting a boy to play the
lead role. When Vittorio wandered
Into the room, they decided In two
minutes they had found the boy.
DREAM
The next few months were like
a dream. Much of the film was
made in the Vatican. Once Vittorio
used the Pope's robing room for
his dressing room.
In their couple of weeks in the
United Stales, Vittorio has been
introduced to baseball, hot dogs,
the wild west, his foster mother's
amused and amazed family and
ice cream sodas.
Vittorio, who had been holding
up the interviewer with a toy six-
shooter, lowered his gun.
"Sodas." he said, making a
dreadful face. "They are better In
naiy.. imagine putting mineral
water together with Ice cream I
Put up your hands again."
'He needs a hair cut." said Lady
Berkeley.
14 min an Ar.iinrrh'xa lj j. minify ca irH ici xnu-'nc g I
I J c.4iy Mitt AT HJNCH'-nC. T WXMIbt MUMLCfl Nl
n Wf.S AReuiHQ VtrrH tUS, j I LOT BeTTBf? TR4N HS CUES )
VY (tutsnsex Or the WvLJns ims-twi u.wMa-y
flJI2gsaca rrrrrr r -r J
ii Mr?- C -ni. a-tss v J fx ran wj umb
y in.. ,iu.-l4 mi wrie 1 11 His i 4twst MmiMtr I
. . . i rtecwO jt ujjiyw Piia -tv-. 1 1
J-il COHY Kjy... IW BFFlM-eOFFlM A 1 1 SELL CVERDSINS I
Only i2 of 1 Per Month
J
Example:
SPEND.
Interest for
TOTAL
Pay $50 Down
would be only
per month
By Jimmy llatlo
2 IilSTCrJlMS "10 "THE
OFFICE BLOVHARO
SrllU. FOR HIMSELF
c i
TVMNX AM Al4
UNONVWXIS HAT TIP
TO "AHOUVMOOS"
Summer is Just around the cor
ner, and a few far-sighted people
are already beginning to ask ques
tions about hay fever. For example.
F.H.M. writes "once having started
taking shots for desensitising in hav
fever. Is it necessarv to keep It
up all year, or can the patient eel
relief bv building up his Immunity
for a few months immediately pre
ceding the pollen season?
'I have obtained remarkable re
lief from shots taken approximately
once a week from April 1st to
August 15th. It Is better to keep up
these Injections all the year around.
or is It satisfactory to build up each
season?"
This Is a difficult question to an
ence of opinion about it. Somo doc.
tors believe that at least some pa
tients cio better It thev receive in
jections all the year around the
so-called "perennial" treatment.
Other patients seem to do well
thev take the Inlec'.lons for several
months prior to the August 16th
beginning of the fall ragweed-hay
fever season. "
The decision as to which method
to follow should rest with the doct
tor giving the treatments, but In a
case such as that given the fact
seasonal treatment, suggests that
that method Is all right for him.
In any event, either method Is
much belter than waiting until the
last minute to start tnlectlom.
Sufferers from hay fever do not
all act the same amount of relief
from this treatment. However, the
results obtained today are better
for some people than they were
several years ago. Some people
who receive treatment get almost
complete relief; a larger number
are greatly improved, that is, In
stead of being completely miser
able for three or four weeks they
may be really uncomfortable for
only a few days.
Some people seem to get little,
If any. relief from this treatment
and these must be considered as
failures. But the number of people
who are In this group seems to be
constantly shrinking.
With this in mini people wno
have fall hay fever and plan to
try the injection treatment should
start soon. The Improved pollen ex
tracts and increased knowledge of
what doses to give has greatly Im
proved the chances for complete
recovery or at least enougn im
provement to make injections worth
while.
PACIFIC TAXES
WASHINGTON Wl Well over 5
billion dollars In taxes were col
lected in 1951 from the three Pa
cific Coast states, the Internal Rev
enue Bureau announced Monday.
I 1 stmt iat mtmna t mut
I nor seen auMinic ir iwiwj
$200
6 months $ 6
$206
and your payment
SZ00
JfaW per month
The Doctor
Says---
Slf FAMiiifi TOftH Af 0 Slvi
(JiUffJi
IlcnvtMiM Above-
Wlit'll vp roiinUIri' thill Miiilluhl
Is no Iaint llmt ilurkiiPM In needed
fur IU visibility to llio tumldol oyv,
It hardly nocnin poiislblo Hint a
single brlii In mar could bo Hit'
source of the tlltiiiilimilon of a
consider a bio urea ol a large Amer
ican city. Yet this l exactly wliul
occurred on one occasion lur a
star now lu our eastern evening
ky. ArcltiruH brilliantly lighted Hie
Immense Century of Progress ex-
Kosltlon on the opening owning,
lay XI, 1P33.
Forty years earllpr another urxnt
world's fair, the Columbian exposi
tion, also had been held In CIiIciikp.
At the fair in 1B:I, one of the
interesting cxhlulLi was part of the
huge 40-Inch trli'.Miilic soon to lit
set up at Vorkfn observatory. i
wncn lilt- exo.-4llon of 1U33 was
being planned, Dr. K. II. Frost nl
Yorkes noted that another "40"
was much In evidence. The light
from the star Arcturun, alashing
through apace at IHtUlK) miles per
second, required 40 years to reach
This meunt thul udliitlon
which loft Aicliirs during the first
exposition would arrive during this
second auniiiir evrnt. wny not
give an astronomical slant In the
occasion even let the 40-luch tele
scope participate?
Dr. Frost a well-prepared plan
was accepted bv the exposition
munagers. On the opening evenliu;
an Impressive ceremony was held I
In the open air court l the llnll
of Science, where crowds were as- f
sembled. Alter music by the
Chicago Symphony orchestra. Dr.
The "write In fever" that has
marked the natlnn'a 1953 primaries
ought to be well studied by party
leaders In all slates. It la the vot
ers' commentary on the absurd con
fusion and inequity of our primary
laws.
As they are now framed, theso
statutes do not generally provide
a fair test of strength between the
leading presidential candidates.
The heavy write-ins In states like
Minnesota and Nebraska are a dem
onstration of popular Irritation
with this Intolerable situation. The
voters want a chance to vole on
all candidates. It is evident that ex
cept where they are expressly for
bidden by law, they will take mat
ters into their own hands and put
down Uie name of llio man they
want.
The candidates' personal Inclina
tions are partly responsible for the
scarcity of good primary testa.
They naturally refrain from enter
lnK the states where they feel their
showing might be poor, and leap
into areaa that look promising.
But they are encouraged in their
reluctance by Uie oddities of the
various stale laws. A man may
believe that a particular test will
be unfair, or inconclusive, or un
productive of real gains In conven
tion delegates.
COUNSKL
A candidate actually needs legal
counsel to make these decisions.
Faced with the Incredible complica
tions. In any instance he is more,
likely to stay out than go in.
There la no question at all that
some primary laws have been draf
ted by state leaders who were try
ing to stack the cards for or
against a particular man In a par
ticular year. They seem deliberate
ly designed to block a lair test.
Some atates require a candidates
written consent for his entry, somo
do not. Some allow write-ins. some
do not. Here and there a popularity
contest result is binding, but more
often It Is merely advisory, leaving
the delegates free to Ignore the
voters' recommendations if they
choose.
Senator Taft stayed out of popu
lous Pennsylvania's test on the
ground It would be Inconclusive.
The "written consent" required
barred General Elsenhower from
the big Wisconsin show. The same
-Oris
(pAusdt
I'YuM made a rilling address, ex
plaining Iho unusual foul liinnrill
alelv to be attempted, tie ceased
speaking, buspense reigned,
A alRiutl la flashed to Yorkes
observatory HO mllea away, A wldo
arcu of "old light" from Aroturua
Hlrlkea the huge Iclencopto lens and
is fiinneled down llio tube and at
the lower end Is losused to a
brilliant KH on a photooloctrlo cell
There tho concentrated light la
40,000 times more luminous thau
the alar appeara to the naked eye.
This generates a feeblo electrical
current which, greatly amplified In
other cli-ciilln. siieeda to the eager
throng In Chicago. Switches auto
matically operate and motors begin
to hum. Now the great doors am
opening aa If by unaeen hands,
Suddenly thousands of Incandescent
lights Hash Into full brilliance
siuiiight has opened Uie great ex
position. To be more sure of success
should clouds Interfere at Yorkes
lame telescopes "stood bv" at
Harvard and the Universities of
Illinois und Pittsburgh. At only one
of the four cooperating stations
was uie sxy overcast.
Arctmus, still noted because of
this event, can be seen tonight
wherever tho sky la clear. Dy
8 p in. It In very liliili almont clue
east and Is the only bright star
In that section of the kv. It In
ilri liledlv orange In color. You will
surely want to lorm the acquaint
ance oi ims nimous nartnnger of
spring.
feature kept the general out of Ne
braska. NATIONAL
President Truman and others
have suggested a national direct
primary as the best way out of
tins wild Hodge podge. Hut the tem
per of Congress in this election
year Is against ihat solution.
In the absence of that, let us at
lcii.nl have alate laws which by
their uniform liberality encourage
the entry of all candidates. Let ua
have ulntple statutes, so framed
Hint the voting result they produce
will be clear not as now lost fre
quently m a fog of complexity.
Tixlnv we either gel no test or
a HMlily misleading outcome in
our mast populous slates. The In
evitable sequel Is a disproportionate
tress on voting In smaller atates.
so special and the voting aample no
slender Uial they do not merit be-
Watch for the Opening
' t',e
ROUNDUP ,
mife tavern
(fill 50m
y yJfSsSCc' Johnny
and
Van
-
personal as...
FREE
cnecKs Wong exclusively to you.
They add your own individuality to ev
ery financial transaction. Open your First
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sonal checking account today and enjoy
the prestige and convenience of PER
SONALIZED CHECKS. Your name
and address is printed FREE.
Once you use personal checks from
The First National you'll never want any
other kind. They are' friendlier, more
neighborly... and give a quick, accurate
check and double-check on all expenses.
Klamath Falls Branch,
FIRST NATIONAL DANK
OP PORTLAND
The hank Ihat Hayt OPEN 10 TO S SIX DAY! A WEEK for your convenience
"LET'S BUILD OREGON TOGETHER" iaMiiiitmwci.Hiill
B-36s Carry (
Jet Fighters
FOIll' WOHTll, Tex. Wl Tim
Fort Worth Blur-ielcgrain aiilil
TticMluy U-30 bombers now ran
carry let lighter planes Inside
their A-bomb bellies, launch them
In the air and recapture tliein In
flight,
"Officials In the rentagon ad
mitted the hllherlu top secret
project to the Uir Telegram by
telephone" Uie account said.
The newspaper aald the hlalorv
making pro led was tested last
Friday, same dav the YU M, all
let bomber, was making Its maiden
llight.
T8 Hospital
Work Planned
SALEM 11 Bills will be opened
May 8 on the 11100.000 building pro
ject at the Oregon HtnU Tuborcu
loala Hospital here, the Stato Board
of Control said Tueaday,
The project calls for 'adding a
floor to the main hospital building
and construction of an employes'
dormitory.
The board decided to convert the
heating plant at the atate hospital
from noKHcd fuel to oil at a cost
of t24,ooo. Hie board aald hogged
fuel I be coming scarce, and llial
It might disappear within two .
years. Most other state hutltulolu
use hogged fuel. 4
River Blasts
Ruled Out
PORTLAND I There will be
no more explosions In the Columbia
River at The Dalles dam site
until the annual aalmon run Is
over.
Col. T. II. Lipscomb, district
army engineer, said Tuesday the
next blast would not coma until
late October, after the fall aalmon
migration.
Engineers set off three under
water explosions this year before
the salmon runs sttirted. The larg
est was Sunday when rock was
loosened In preparing a power
house site.
Ing taken as gauges of national sen
timent. If slate parly leaders do not rec
ognlte Ihe signs of a popular de
sire for a bigger, clearer voice in
the choice of tlirlr presidential nom
inees, the people one day soon are
likely to write In a vote Ihat will
blast the party braaa right out of
their comfortable aeala.
personalized
South 6th Street Branch
Merrill Branch