Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 13, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    t AGE SIX
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
TUESDAY. MAY 13. 1052
FRANK JENKINS
SUltor
BILL JENKINS
Managing Editor
Entered u second clus matter at the post office ol Klsmath Fulls, Ore,
on August SO, 1906, under ct of Congress, March I, 1B"
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use (or publication
t i! the local new printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news.
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BILL-BOARD
By BILL JENKINS
Took a run down Dairy way
the other day and found the out
lines ol the country about the
earns but a lot of water standing
around In what I remembered as
dust pits In past years. At least
there is no complaint about lack
of the thin stuff.
All you really have to do to find
out pretty much what is going on
in the area is s.t around BUI
Ryser's tavern and pretty soon the
whole sang will wander In to see
what is koiuk on.
Talk about fishing runs high.
followed by admiring statements
made about Bill's new dog, a hus
ky looking Chesapeake he picked
up In Prlnevllle a few days ago.
Anyway, It's a pleasant soot to
kill a few hours.
Discussion on the city measures
gets hotter and notter as time
goes on. Despite an almost ghostly
lack of interest in the primary
election this year. People are
Interested In the ptesidential race
and that's about all.
I might state here and now that
while I won't take issue with the
national picture I would like to
put my two cents worth in on one
local measure. Let's keep the
park board where it is and not
cut it under the thumb of the city
council in an advisory capacity.
There has been tremendous
amount of work done by the intra
oers of the park uroup who have
all served on a voluntary basis
and ii would be a sin and a
shame to see It wasted by break
ing ud this smoota runnmg organ
isation. I presume it Is almost safe now
to stop worrying shout any road-
blocking snow storms. But there
is another weather menace coming
along that holds almost the same
potemis lor mental agony, i reier
of course to the terrible decision
the gardeners must make from
time to time as to whether to
water the lawn or wait for a
rain? Like last night. I was
watering a few shrubs and plants
for mv mother while she was away
on a tiip. It looked like rain all
day. the barometer dropped stead
ily, the clouds racked up in everv
corner of the sky, but as this is
written (Mondav night) there has
been no ram and ... so the plants
were watered. If that, plus the
fact that Hale washed his car to
day, doesn't bring on at least a
light sprinkle I'll Quit.
They'll Do It Every Time
By Jimmy llatlo
f AT BKANO-NBvy HOUSE W $32,0OO S OUT V- Vg!
Bi i old house is ) ( mut co ou -m 'm;
Af&SXC jF&STl REBUILD THE CM(?5E
WO- TWEV -itOSW' -iZL I WATERPR30F THE CELLW H HV
BOUSMT THE LSSK-&Sf WlMT w KML.LFWPER
OLD OME AtiD fjt MFy&tY .tttll THROOeHOOT'-yES.AU.xfJ
SPENY ABOUT 0&SWSf R3R 9,SOO KXJ'RE ,
K''S FIXIMS WGXaSaMS, COHrW RAVE A HOUSE ) .4.
nj up
CAUGHT InThs ROUNDS
I oh. - IMAAt
When are we going to get tele
vision in Klamath? the man asked.
That's one of those questions to
which you can't givj a pat answer,
but the besi advice is not to bold
your breath nor to start buying
any TV receiver sets.
All I know about TV is what Bud
Chandler tells me, and he says
that the earliest likely date is some
time in 1955. And there are a lot
of "Ifs" to be hurdled in those
three years.
You can't expect to stop, look
and listen to television until there
is a local station. That's because
the TV wave, or impulse or what
ever it is, follows a straight line;
it won't bend over mountains.
TV. in a way, is following the
course of regular radio, but is do
ing it faster.
(Radio and TV both are governed
by, and licenses to broadcast are
issued by, the Federal Communica
tions Commission, as set up by the
Congress.)
Radio, until about 1939 or '40.
was a sanctioned monopoly in most
towns, because engineering stand
ards restricted the number of sta
tions in the country to about 1000.
Then a change in philosophy
came from the Congress and. af
ter the wartime freeze, many more
station allocations were made.
Engineering standards gave way
to the call for more stations in the
' public interest, and 1.300 more li
censes have been granted since
1945.
The FCC first followed engineer
ing advice and said there would
be only 1000 television broadcasters
Then it appeared that more were
reeded in the public interest, so
all TV applications were frozen in
1948 and the engineers were told
to go over it again.
They did, and came up with the
answer that twice that many TV
stations could be put on the air.
' About the middle of Am-il, then,
the commission thawed the freeze
and again are accenting applica
tions. It set 90 days to receive ap
plications before anv were consid
ered. It is estimated that it will take
seven years to go through all the
applications for all channels avail
able and make the decisions that
will give the green light to get
ting on the air.
In the engineering to ultimately
allow a maximum of 2000 look and
listen stations on the air, Klamath
Falls is down for one.
It is Questionable if a TV opera
tion would be a paying proposition
in a lown tnis size. The FCC looks
on a monopoly (one station only)
town with a strong eye toward
community service.
For these reasons (we're Quoting
Bud) it appears that some kind
of a broad eommunilv cornorAtinn
is needed to field a local TV out-
out.
(uniiie tne Gems, its success
would not be tied in with what
might happen in the rest of a local
league nor with whether the weath
er is good or bad in May.)
It is a fact that there are local
people who are locking at some
such type of organizaton.
II seme such Plan were worked
out. or if some other type of ap
plication were made for a TV li
cense, and if one were granted
within the normal chances of time
expectancy, withou; the rules be
ing changed in the meantime then
you might have a look at televi
sion in 19S5.
f I " i'V '-l. i i iiiiiiinrr
k 5-W -v25!L ;Vw. . 1 Mijm
k l : (V- ',!' I ' ill iP'a w
Of course, there are some who
can'i hardly" wait until the
screens begin to flicker: there are
otners who threaten to move to
Pokegama if the tom-fool business
comes to Klamath.
Tou both can keep your shirts
on for a spell yet.
FISHING WAS PRETTY GOOD Sunday on Upper Klamath Lake, at least for the Mo
Gill family. They snagged this string of 11 fish, weighing from three to eight, pounds,
trolling. Left to right are Gary, his father Leonard McGill, and the younger member of
the family, Ronnie.
dial Bok
In advance of the Massachusetts
primary. Senator Taft declared it
would be a "fair test." There is
considerable reason to believe it
was Just that, and the result dem
onstrated that General Eisenhower
was the overwhelming choice of
those who cast Republican ballots.
The general's total, in excess of
zto.uuu voies, was me largest write
in ever recorded by any candi
date anywhere. It surpassed the
peak established only a week be
fore by Taft in Pennsylvania 173k
wo.
In the matter of delegates, Eisen
hower captured 27 of 28 GOP seats
. in 14 districts and is assured of
at least two of the 10-at-large dele
gates. Taft spokesmen in the state
indicated they could not be happy
with winning less than 12 of the
28 district spots.
The factors which made Massa
chusetts a reasonably fair test were
these:
Neither Taft nor Eisenhower was
on the ballot. Both had to be writ
ten in.
SUPPORT
Neither candidate had the bene
fit oi an incumbent state adminis
tration, which could throw power
ful strength one way or the other.
An active campaign was made
on behalf of both men. Taft car
ried his own case to the Massa
chusetts voters, and Eisenhower's
was borne by a number of the lead
ing figures in his camp.
Elsenhower had the advantages
that went with the support of both
Massachusetts senators Lodge, his
campaign manager, and Saltonstall,
(I
Friendly
Helpfulness
To tvery
Creed and Puna
Ward's Klamath
Funeral Home
Marguerite M, Ward
and Som
925 High Phone 3334
But several prominent Republicans
in the state favored Taft.
This is the balanced part of the
picture. But despite the fact that
Taft and a lot of others considered
the equalizing factors predominant,
it is only proper to point out one
major disadvantage the senator
confronted. Massachusetts, like
other eastern seaboard states, has
a heavy tilt toward the internation
alist viewpoint. And this whole re
gion has not proved top Taft ter
ritory. EARLY WINS
Eisenhower earlier had triumphed
in Hew Hampshire, New Jersey,
Mew York and Maine, and had
rolled up a-big popular victory in
Pennsylvania even though not col
lecting that state's delegates (thev
are largely uncommitted).
As this was Taft's drawback In
the East, so it was Elsenhower's
tnat midwestern states like Nebras
ka and Illinois are strongholds of
isolationist feeling.
In the end however. Eisenhower'
Massachusetts victory should not
be minimized. For his obvious
strength in the east cannot be over
looked by a party which needs a
tremendous pile-up of electoral
votes next November to balance the
inevitable southern and southwest
ern backlog the Democrats can
command.
The Massachusetts result pushes
Taft Into something of a defensive
position. It now remains to be seen
wnetner by his late-season perform
ance in Ohio, West Virginia and
South Dakota he can regain an of
fensive posture.
KANSAS CITY Wl It is a long
roaa oaci to cnuanooa. it is hard
to find the way.
Coming back to the home of his
boyhood, a man finds it hard to
forgive the changes. He has a
vague resentment that things don't
stay just as he left them. . . Just
as he holds them in memory.
He misses the neighbors who
have died or moved away. Who cut
aown tnat tree in the back yard
he climbed as a kid? The patch
of blue sky looks bare and new.
And the elm tree in the front yard.
How did it ever get that tall?
Somehow he feels a stranger In
the old house, lonesome because it
has changed as much as he has.
He has lost some hair and got a
new false tooth.
And It has been singled, papered,
and modernized with a new sink,
another bathroom and a fine gas
furnace.
LOST FEELING
I always have this lost feeling
momentarily when I return to visit
our family home here. It is old
enough to be getting hardening of
the rafters.
But instead it Is getting disgrace
fully younger and younger looking
as I get more and more middle
aged. Why should a man age and
a house grow young? What kind of
a world is that?
The nicest thing In our old home
right now is my 8-year-old niece,
Kathy, the prettiest cowboy in the
block.
Kathy Is at an age when she Is
losing her belief in the Easter
bunny but still has a firm faith in
the Angels.
"I prayed you would come back
I Wi-ne-ma Coffee
Quality Food At Reasonable Prices
ML 2F'ed' 'Ho$pitolitv '
and you did,' she told me. "I
used to pray when you were away
at the war or somewhere, and you
came back then, too."
Although Kathy Is glad to see
me, the thing she really likes best
about my visits is that I sleep in
her bed and she gets to sleep with
her grandma, which is a great
privilege.
We had a big family reunion
dinner the other evening. Everyone
ate hearlly, and after we all went
to bed the house began to vibrate
from the snoring, a Boyle family
trait. Finally mother Joined the
chorus.
Little Kathy Immediately began
to shake her.
"Grandma. Grandma, wake up!"
she cried. "You sound just like a
lion!"
There Is nothing like children to
keep a house from growing old, and
I guess It Is Kathy who keeps our
house vital and young.
She has as her own room now the
room in which dad and mother
slept when they first moved there
with five children more than 30
years ago.
One morning I awoke early and
went downstairs. The steps still
creaked betrayingly, just as they
had years before when any of the
boys tried to creep silently up them
after coming home late.
PRISONER
Sitting alone In the silent living
room, a room full of old family
memories of qunr. Js and kindness,
tears and warmth, I had the feeling
of being a prisoner between two
worlds the restless present and
the lost, unchangeable past.
I walked to the big, old-fashioned
front door and looked out. Up the
street came two young boys de
livering the Sunday newspapers.
They looked like brothers, and
they were Jostling each other and
laughing.
Thirty years ago my older broth
er, Edward, and I had walked
through the dawn streets this same
way, laughing, Jostling and arguing
as we threw the morning papers
kerplunk I on the front porches.
I stepped out on the porch and
pickeid up our paper. The two boys
looked at me curiously, then walked
on. I watched them go, and It was
as If I stood on a little platform
In time watching myself and my
brother live together again a lost
morning part of our lives.
Somehow It gave me the thing
every one comes back to find, and
when I went inside the door I felt
at home at last, and at peace with
the past.
RARE CARVINGS EXHIBITED
GAINESVILLE, Fla. m The
University of Florida has opened
an exhibit of carved wooden ani
mals made by the lost tribe of
Calusa Indians, a powerful Florida
tribe of the 15th Century.
QanxM Wxthlow
AlIC's '. 1
WASHINGTON (. In the aliwl
dispute which was argued Momliiv
tint buprrme Cuvirt emi uo M'eiitl
ihliiR.i without deciding flatly uit
iliv unsit' uiicMhiii udoie It: Tim
constitutional limits on a Prc.il
dent. Usually the com'. dop."n't hand
down ix aliiMle, flat opinion on
broad constitutional uuesllou.i. In
stead, It decides speclllc Issue
which may be a part of a broad
problem without running head-uu
Into the problem itself,
lor example, this court has
lin ndl. Hi case after case Involving
the wtoe QurMUm f aeureuatlon
uf Nefiioea. It has never ruled on.
wnetner aeureitalKw as a whole
Is good, bad, constitutional or unconstitutional.
KAMl'Lrn
It has ruled on sneclllc examples
of scK'runlhm uronnht belnre It.
It has aald Negroes must not be
force. I to ride In the rear of buses
crosslnit state lines.
And It has i-o ruled that Negrnea
now ure admitted to while gradu
ate schools in Hie Smith wilhaut
saving Negroes had to be admitted
to ulmr high ami grammar
schools. When It got a case Invol
ving graduate schools. It limited
Its ruling to graduate schools.
And. without Hlvluv an opinion
of anv kind, the court can send
(he steel rilsjule back lo the U.S.
Court of Appeals or even to Dis
trict Judge Dnvld Pine for more
arguments or findings. It was Pine
who suld the President exceeded
his power In seising the mils and
ordered them gven back.
II It wants to give an opinion, I
Ihe couit could do so quickly. Per
haps In cliivs. Muvbe In weeks,
I Or it iTUUI t.i-liiv Us opinion Ii II
I was long delayed a filoel aetlle-
nicnl hiltilu iiieu make un opinion
I unnecessary,
I lie pi ouli'in Hint goes lo the
court as the heart of Ihe steel
disimln la thin:
Does Die President have special
built-in but Invisible powers ulvliui
him authority lo sel.ii prlvato prop
erty when he says he Is anting
for the general wellnro In an emor
nmwv'i Nothing In law or the Constitu
tion va va siiroilloaly he has such
a rlRht. At the name time, nothing
In the Constitution says he doesn't.
The Justice Department lawyers
representing President T r u m a n
don't argue anymore as thev did
before Judge Pine, who turned
them down that there are no
lluills mi a President i power.
EMfc'IMiKNCY
In their brief filed with the court
last week thev suld'
"Wo contend onlv that In a situ
ation ul national emergency the
President has Authority under the
Constitution, and subject to consti
tutional limitations, to take action
of this type necessary lo meet the
emergency."
This Is the theory of Inherent
Dowers: That there Is plenty of
power, not written out In AMO
fashion In the Constitution for any
President to draw upon for the
nation's good.
While Oils represents the big
problem before Ihe court, there
are a number of Issues which,
while related to the main one.
could be settled bv the court with
out tackling the main one.
Oh. . P. Qohdan
A correspondent writes that
she has a neurosis of tear and
Is alwavs depressefl with everv
Hi mt. tthe suys that she has been
fighting this horrible thing for
years and wonders what can be
done about It.
Now. fear, can be either normal
or abnormal. Doubtleas. there are
few living n-.traons who have not
sometime Deen airs in in me pres
ence ol real risk, but when there
exists a fear of something which is
imaKlnerv. or whirl: carries only
slight danger, the reaction is railed
a phobia or oosession.
In severe cases which persons
cannot overcame bv themselves.
this mav ba . svmwtom of real
mental disease, anr. the aid of a
psvchlatrlst should be sought.
There are minv kinds ol tears ana
I shall mention onlv a lew ol them
What has it Cost to
Operate the
Community Lounge?
The cost far the fast fiical year
was $4953.43, and we served
13,757 ptuani. Many mora
people can -ba accommodated at
only a slight Incraaia In cost.
Fd. Adv.-l)onlinni
U Servlct Ltaffiie.
1925
Graduote Monmouth
College, Illinois
1925- 1926
Instructor of Bus. Ed,
KUHS
1926- 1946
20 years Paymaster
' Ewauno Box Co,
1946-1952
Now Forming of Mt,
Lakl.
Mirrlril ltr(l Rprr1
and i hnoti-fl .1 ilaiirh-
of nur own n Mia
ninrr (-niiarea.
Ihreri
Paid in adv. by
Mr. Dickion
Arthur R. (Maj.)
DICKSON
Republican
Candidate for
ASSESSOR
Courteous,
Honest,
Efficient
Navy Charges
Favor Sought
PEARL HARBOR tl A Naw
n-n.a.tn- InM a -nliW. , r I In I
that wealthy seaman Bruce 8. Hop
Diner tried to net "fleet regulations
changed to fit his case."
The peacetime lumber executive
from Port Newark. N. J.. Is chamc
n'ltk .nn.nlrl.n In pnmilloln Ouln.l
Naw discipline and with trying lo
puouciy aiscrcuu ma buiiciiui vi-fleers.
The trial Is aft outgrowth of the
manner In which Hopping has
.nn.nlAlnMl aKnnl lit NmW KVNlem
which he says la shot through with
Drass Douno inequality.
rmrir Richard J. Bleman of
niaVnshnrcr in . the nroKecutor.
told the court Hopping used fellow
crewmen on the U. 8. 8. Reclaimer
in an ellort to aiscreau nis com
M.nins nffimr T.t Marlon C.
Kllpati.ck of Watervllet. N. Y.
Klloatrlck testified Hopping loin
the salvage ship on Dec. 31, 1951,
After she had oeen cnangra im
.u.. IVnrH War TT Intn a first
H iciji, ui .
..hit .i iha fleet after aha
had performed every lob she was
called to ao in tne r.urri,
. . .and less than a month before
she neaded home.'
Kllpalrlck said Hopping asked for
shore duty after he had been
aboard six weeks.
The officer said that was not
enough sea duty to qualify Hop
ping for a transfer so his request
was turned down.
i. u ..inn nt I'na frlnt linmnn
m tlic uK,i.i.n - -
Bleman said he would show Hop-
plng's subsequent ocnavior won
malicious in lntcn. and based on
lnsufflcent grounds.
Young Driver
Hospitalized
KNOXVILLE, Tcnn., tD Paul
Geoffrey Carlisle, 2, was hospital
ized Monday with 14 stitches In
his head after the car he was guid
ing crashed into a door.
Paul ran nis toy car imo a
French door at his home Sunday.
The door came down and Paul
wound up on the floor with his
head through a glass pane and a
large pain in his neaa.
I One fear is called acrophobia,
which Is tear of great heights. This
i seems to be unite common prob
! aby so much ao that It Is almost
"normal.'' There Is another fear
called bathophobla. which m e a n s
fear ol great dentin. It Is really
' meant the way It sounds it could
be common enouan among child-
drenl
There are other phnblss alth
jlong and a.Mr.r l.shlnn names and
even rlranui- meanlnas. At the
'risk of making thin sound like a
1 11M, hrre are a leu: Mtilphobla-
(ear of bees; aulomvsophobla
I ieur ot being tlnv; blbllophobla
dislike of books: cherophobia
I tear of galelv, ami necrophobia, or
fear ol death. Obviously, the last
is a Irar which nearly everyone
has. It la a true phobia onlv when
a person thinks about death almost
constantly.
Real phobias make the victims
miserable and cm completely
domlnnle their lives and point of
vew. Even when the nature of
lenr leems humorous to the out
sider. It Is a constant source of an
noyance to Ihe person Involved
and ceuses untold rrental distress.
Should anything be done about
these abnormal fears? The answer
is yes. II possible. But being
afraid of somethlnt Is abnormal
only wren It is excessive and there
Is no good reason for that fear.
School Chief's
Spelling Off
LOS ANGELES I School 8u.
nerlntendent Alexander J. Btod
dard has derided what ahould bt
done with 600.000 report cards that
came back from the primer witn
misspellings.
He recommended to the Board
of Education Monday that some be
used as office duplicates In secon
dary achools and the rest, correct
ed by hand, be Issued lo ellmcn-
tary school students.
When the cards came out sever
al weeks ago the "U" and "A" in
"language" were transposed and
the second "S' was missing from
"semester.' Seems the school sys
tem's proof reader hadn't noticed
the errors.
Concluding his report to the
school board, Stoddard said:
"There are two words, "language"
und semester," that we hope no
one of our generation will ever mis
spell again."
Stoddard apparently didn't proof
read his copy. It's "misspell," not
"mlspell."
Man Slays
Four In
Bus Melee
CLRVKLANI) Ml A 'JO-yoat-old
Negro told police Tucmlay he
didn't menu lo shoo! linen bun
iassnii'i's a nil a pollcoinall to
death on a crowded mis.
"I was Just shouting to scare,"
police quoted Lawrence llnldnby as
saying. "Then I couldn't slop alioot
luu." k'arller In the allernnon, he aald,
ho drank a quart of wine and
two cups of buer In a tavern.
Ooldsby, unemployed, grabbed a
gun from Patrolman Eiiucue I).
Slliichcumb'a holster Monday dur
ing the evening rush hour.
Htlurlicomb, t6, had boarded the
bus alter the bus driver complain
ed that Uoldsby was alnueliig llio
hair of a woman passenger.
Then Ooldsby shot Sllnchcomli
and two women passengera, one of
them the woman whne hull he
had singed. A allay bullet killed
a man passenger. All uf the dead
wore while.
Charged with first degree mur
der Tuesday and hurried into court,
Ooldsby screamed.' "Mercy mer
cy have mercy on incl"
The extreme penally lor murder
Is death In Ohio's electric chair.
As OolilMiv llnl-hi'd sllnolllu:
among Ilia till passrniirrs lammed
Into the Euclid Avenue bus, his
weapon choked empty. Then three
men overpowered hint and lien I
him savaiiely. W
One ol the three. Ted Connors.
2 gave this report:
I saw Ooldsby urab the cop's
gun, whirl and shoot the girl whose
hnlr had been singed.
"She collapsed. ... I dived back
of another aeat and hoard live1
shots.
"A fellow had grabbed Ooldsby.
. . I went up and held him
around the neck and shinned him
with my list."
While the men pinned the slay,
er In the driver's aeat and beat
him. Ihe 00 - HO terrified bus pas
sengers crouohrd behind seat-.,
scrambled through windows, or
pushed inward the closed doors.
Dead were:
Patrolman Eugene D. Btlnrh
comb, 65
Miss Annaliellr Frankle 2t.
whose yell .- "My hair Is burning."
halted the bus.
Mrs. Helen omrlsnn, 60. friend
and co . lactory worker of Miss
Frankle.
William J. Powers, about Itfl, tor
mer Chicago and Washington law
yer, who hesded the Federal Con
tllutlonal Law Association ol lie-troll.
Cattlemen Open
Convention
PRINFVILI.E i - The Ore.on
Cattlemen's Association convention
opened here Monday and prepared
to greet campaigners for the Re
publican presidential nomination.
Gov. Earl Warren of California
waa scheduled to attend a buckcroo
breakfnal Tuesday. Gov. Hhennnn
Adams of New Hampshire also
was expected to stump lor General
Elsenhower.
The convention's 10 committees
Monday drafted resolutions to be
f (resented. A proposed federnt f
ands granlng tenancy act was to
be discussed.
YES! Ptoplt Do nud Small Adit
AND Mia TflK I INSIST IN
Bread and Pastries
tlp Thl
Klamath Paltry Shop
tts mis r. ski
Wtddlnr A Itlrlhdsr Csksi On Order
IV. Dtllvnr All Ordari
KTIIOIII.K 1IKMI.I)
WASIIINOTON i - 'Hie tin-
fircmn Court Monday denied a n-w
learlng to Fred Stroble. Los An-
teles grandfather sentenced lo
death for Ihe sex alaylng of a six-
year-oia girl.
fiiioopi 4 1
ilJBROv
BOURffDN
STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY
Proof
"Miracle Drug"
say SURIN Users
Pains of Arthritis, Rheumatism,
Neuritis, Lumbago, Bursitis.!.
Relief Can Start In Minutes
Tkere't no internal dosing with SURIN,
Nothing to. a wallow ant) wait anxioutlf
for rellf. You Imply apply HUH1N
right at the point of pain and bleeied
relief iart as penetration beneath the
kin (rets under way, Of couree there 'a
a rennon for this wonder-working new
external fast pain relief medicine.
tt'$ mtthacholint, a recent chemical
horn of rexearch In a great laboratory.
It actn xpeedily to aid penetration of
BURrN'n pain-qurjtllng ingredient.
Metharholine uliocauiei rieenar. lonirer.
laitinr pain relief and Increased ipeed'
un of loral hlood nunnlv.
Twtr on rhronlr rheumellM In lira nnl
vrtHr hoapital It brought fMt rllf to 7A
pat.jnrj unit In home-for tho-URM 77, To
tallr dlfferfnl from oM-fuBhlrmrd mm and
IlnfmcnU, modern NURIN hrlntrn fnnttr rt
IW, longor without burning or bllritrin(ri
wftnont unnWiant odnr or great., film ply
month on SURIN at the point of neln and
fwlpdn In minute). Money-back at your
drug atom If HIFItlN doftn't relieve muicl
pain faiter and better thnn anything you've
ever lined. A gtneroun Jar rout $1,28. BUH1N
it not a fiure for any of fhe eonditimta.
McKetieA ft ReMifpe, Cue,, IrlrfgefMrt 9. Cem.
PAYLESS DRUG
80S Main I
KUHS Radio Speech Students Present
PELICANA
RADIO FAIR
Sponsored by Klomoth Falls Exchange Club
Gala stage show of school
talent
Radio Dealers Display of
New trends
New KASRU Emergency Unit
Demonstration
MILLS AUDITORIUM
WEDNESDAY EVENING
MAY 14
ADMISSION FREE
DOORS OPEN 6:30 SHOW AT 8 (DovDqht)
. COCA COLA BOTTLING CO. ol Klamath Fall,
if
V