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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 27, 1952)
PAGE FOUR tttALl AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OKlXiON TUKSDAV, MAY 27, !ir,2 FRANK JENKINS Editor Entered second c!au matter at tha post office of Klamath Falls, Ore, on August SO, 1906, under act of Congress, March 8, 1879 MEMBER OF TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication of al! the local oewa prlnteo in this newspaper as well as all AP new. SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' MAIL i , M CARRIER 1 month , 1SS 1 month 135 C month! $ 6.50 6 months 10 ' i year $11.00 1 year . $16 30 BILL - By BILL i Now that summer seems to be : here at last land we hope that statement stands up) the time has come to wander around a bit in either the heat of the day or the cool of the evening, whichever you happen to prefer; If you have anv spark left the effort wlU pay you well. Honest v it will! Get out of the stufry routine and see what is going on In the world around you. Sound advice, beueve It or' not. There is more to life than sitting in the accustomed old chair and letting the world (to from ear to ear-through the radio. For Instance: '' If you have been up the road along the Upper Lake lately you will have noticed a lew changes. Way up toward the -end of the; "lake you'll find some construction that may hold you -up. from time t nm- The tail end of the Job of straightening oui';the highway along what used to be that . tortuous, two lane horror that cost us thirty five seconds 'on the way , to Portland -er-nanor - : "'. II you were going slowly enough - ot the time you would nrnimhlv have seen a tame (I assume) beat on a Chain at Hamil ton's, the popular cafe, and truek stop on the , lake. . He (or she) wanders around looking iriendiv but so far. I haven't -had time to stop and find out. Plin to do that one of these days, y A little further up the road -you come across the old historical marker. It used to stand at the end of the stone rail on the old viewpoint where you rounded Al coina Point. Now it is on the flat- ' lands, bordering the lake and look ing impressive against a backdrop ' of the westeide hills and Mt. Pitt. " But a trifle further on you run into stark tragedy. You turn off a Algoma at a 'sign that says Algoma Dist. and head up toward the old viewpoint. Tie spot where you could see Shasta to the south. Pitt looming up starkly white over the purple of the lakeside hills, the long stretch of the lake with both islands making blots on the blue ' -water and the long and . endless succession of birds that are always hovering over the lake or tirelessly patroling' its shores. ' ,? You head ud for a very short "instance indeed. Because the road, ud to the vewpoint .11 blocked-: Very emphatically First there is a sign that sava 'road closed.'' iThen are several sturdy highway posts set in the concrete, with .enougn room, nowever, iur .; soueeze past, but now some to Sage Sideglanees V There wouldn't be much point in taklngr 'census W the places one may stop- over mgm us nc motors through the country. Not unless It could -be worked out on a continuing basis, sort of like the perpetual inventories that stores keep; those that tell every night just how many hammer handles are in stock. , On some highway routes a short age of cabin and motel sites is threatened, so rapidly and thickly are they springing up. It all started when a few thrifty housewives thought of a new use lor their seldom occupied guest rooms and hung out -a shingle. The pioneers didnt have too easy going. j ' Their first guests were mostly ' thrifty traveling salesmen whose jobs demanded that. they pay their own expenses out of their 'ora- tnissions. They saw a chance to cut their costs and became the thrifty ladies' earliest customers. Thrift met thrift, and a new in dustry was born.! , , A sizable industry It has become, but it is not the universal bedtime ' bargain that it was In the begin i ning. Plenty of roadside stopping ; places now get hotel prices, often J more. These live largely on the convenience of the turn in and the morning getaway. SURPRISE '. .. i Omitting the' wide open spaces, ' It is likely that any motorist would be as surprised as I was ii he 1 counted the places to lodge along a 100-milv stretch of an average through highway. , - I surely . missed many, yet just by glancing from side to side as I sped along and estimating their ; capacity, I counted acoommoda- tlons for 325 couples - in ' motets, cabins and private homes. Within the distance there are not 325 I hotel rooms; nor could there be, lor the motor tourist business- is ; too seasonal and uncertain. , - Driving alone can be a lor.e : some task, particularly year after year over the same route. Counting : cabins, four-legged animals and red-headed girls is one way to ! break the monotony. I have i another, which I must have got ; from my railroading dad. ... : It Is a timetable and fixed sched- tile between points. A set time be- tween landmarks makes it kind o' fun. It has the effect of turning an oft driven 100 miles into six to a dozen relatively short errands , and makes you dead sure -of your time of arrival at your destination,; I without forcing your , speed Just i because the road is clcor.'-w . ;. Traffic-will not always let ymf- WURLITZER A magnificent oiano. Many ; levtly styles and Hnlihsi to choose from. ' LOUIS R; MANN- PIANO CO. : 120 No. 7th BILL JENKINS Managing Editor BOARD JENKINS thoughtless soul (probablv acting undt r orders has run a bulldoicr across the road and cut a very effective trench. Nothing short of a jeep or a tractor will pull across this obstruction. And so another landmark of the old Klamath country is gone. At few spots in the west will you find a more magnificent sight than that from the Algoma vewpoint (circa 1949) looking either north or south. Just what the purpose is in blocking tills road off when it should have becu kept open and advertised I have vet to learn. But I'll do my. damndest to find out; ' But. passing on from that, which is a future fight, vou can go on up to Barclay Springs and always count on llnoing a luu turnout 01 fishermen and cameramen hang ing around. Almost any hour of the oay. And if you want you can go even further. At tliis Doint I stoo this trave logue because tomorrow I'm plan ning on going all the way up the west side of the lake and seeing if that road is as pretty as it used to be. ' All of which reminds me that the Herald and News is planning to start the travelogues again. Thev once proved a popular fea ture and we would like to see if our readers still like 'em. So. if Vou. have any pet ideas, any thoughts about a trip that takes no more than two days at'the out side, please drop us a card and' let us know. Those of you who ue not familiar with the travelogue will recognize it from' the name. We send out a staff member armeC with a car. plenty of gas, a camera ana an imagination and .el nun roam around the country taking pictures and making observations. These are faithfully recorded for vou in case you wish to try the same trip on a Sunday or a week end. So if you have any ideas piease send 'em along to us and we ll do cur best to see that the sections are covered. And wen appreciate any suggestions as to points of interest along the way. mat we. might miss. ' Congratulations ; to Harry Cilk and the opening of his new venture. Harry has taken over the Armorv Fountain and will be your genial host at that popular spot .rora here on out. All ine iuc in Mi world. Harrv. (To tnose initi ated in the ways of the press the place is known as the Hanging Gardens.) i keep , to your schedule but seven trips out of ten there won't be a minutes variation oetween pouus, nor five minutes' variation in 100 miles. But there's a Joker to it. xou must lay our your timetable based upon traffic regulations and speed limits or yoti're kidding yourscif and risking your neck. A score of tests over a certain familiar 104 miles have failed to show more than 15 minutes' differ ence between observing the law and flirting with death. Fifteen minutes against a tombstone are too big odds to give the undertaker. Will Rogers one said, "A fool motorist will race an express train to beat it over a crossing then stop at the first hot dog stand." EDUCATION It was through keeping the kids occupied on long motor trips that I learned something about modem education. We were playing the alphabet game; building the alph bet from letters found on road signs. A child of sufficient age to read and write and do a fair Job of multiplication lost the game be cause she didn't know her ABC s. Unless she got off to a flying start and wasn't interrupted she was all bawled up on the rotation of the letters ot tne aipnaoet. Which set me off on my mono logue. The kids I grew ud with had learned the alphabet off a bread and milk plate or a set of blocks before they started in school and they'd learned to wash the dishes and bring in the wood too. on well, what's tne use? Merchants Face Tax Charges SAN FRANCISCO W Two Caltlornians owners of the Central Market and Del Monte Meat Co.. of Portland, Ore., are to be tried this fall on charges of Income tax evasion. . They are Dante M. Tognoli, Fairfax. Calif., and Frank J. De Benedettl, San Rafael, Calif. Tognoli is accused of evading $130,941 in 1944-45 taxes and lie. Benedetti of evading $65,718 lor me same year. Federal Judge Louise E. Good man Monday set Tosnoli's trisl for Aug. 11 and DeBcnedettl's for Sept. 15. (Jj, ,, Friendly II ' ' Helpfulness llll Ev!Bry ; Creed and Purie I ' Ward's K la moth I Funeral Home W Marguerite M. Ward U ' -' -and Sons . i P 925 High Phone 3334 I They'll Do It Every Time TV uejo rJirTUFV BFMS TO AlS WL'HIS HEW BUS rTOACTlCALLY. RAH OM WATER"" , ,i t-,' 17 s-s i csv T fiSCY fiOOO UKE A WATCH ' rc&T wvs wr. r THE MARKaTT J hWBJ I ET IT BROKEN IN, X ' WASHINGTON W The signlpgi grins was not much of an alliance, by the U. S.. Britain, and France ' And such an alliance without Ger of a peace treaty with Germany many, with Its great resources and is the . latest scene in a great ml- manpower, particularly if Oermany era drama. 'I were left loose to tie up with Rus- This treaty is part of a desire' otTsia someday, might be worse than the West to build :such strength no alliance at all. that the Soviet Commissars would ! So It was decided to take two be forced into peace by fear of : steps almost simultaneously : what faced tbtm if they tried war.. Sign a -peace treaty and tj) let In the Easlefh Zone of Germany.'! Germany -re-arm a bit and gt occupied by Russia,, about 18 mil- i-tmo the Western military alliance. lion Germans live under the Com- munist thumb. The three westmi Zones occupied" by" the U, S'.-.-Bri tain, and France have SO million Germans, and that Western area of Germany is the greatest indus trial center in Europe. When ,it became clear Russia wouldn't let divided Germany re unite except under Russian tenru. the West let the Germans In their zones form the Western German Republic. It is with that Republic not Rus siandominated Eastern Germany that the peace treaty is made It is not a complete treaty. The West didn't agree to relinquish all control. . - RESERVATIONS For instance, it "reserved ' the right to intervene if the Western German Republic was threatened with overthrow by internal revolt. In other words if the Communists tried revolution, the West could step in. But the peace treaty itself is only preliminary to another scene which will.be acted out: Letting Germany re-arm and- put troops in an international army. ' ' When Russia had become too menacing, the West made tho North Atlantic Pact, a military al liance among the nations ringing the ocean. But this alliance without Med NEW YORK WPi It is hard to be hopeful about the future of. Eu rope's venturesome six nation army. The diplomats hall this as a great striped-pants victory, but it is not in the bag as yet, and it remains to beeen whether the all-European army ever will march up a hill and down. Even after the diplomats okay the creation of this strange hydra headed military creature the parlia ments back home have to vote the men and money to make it a real ity. Until thev do so this effort to re store stability in Europe must be catalogued only in the realm of Justice Chief Takes Office WASHINGTON W James P. McGranery took office as attorney general Tuesday and said law vio lators will be "apprehended, prose cuted, and convicted." But, McGranery said, this will be done "with due protection -, of their civil rights as guaranteed by the constitution, without the terror harvest of the witch-hunt, . and without the tumult and chaos that follow in the wake of reckless charges and baseless accusations." McGranery took the oath of office at a time when the Justice Depart ment is being investigated by' a House committee headed by Rep. Chelf (D.-Ky.). The department has come under frequent attack by critics who say in and out of Congress that it has been lax in uncovering and prose cuting wrongdoing in the govern ment. Portland. Dog , ; Judged Tops, i TACOMA U) A biack cocker spaniel from Portland wort best-of-show honors Sunday at the Tacoma dog show. The top laurel winner, after tak ing bporting group honors, , was international champion . Land-0 Trail Blazler, owned By ' .(he "Flo Bob Kennels of Portland. ' ,. ' 1 LEE HENDRICKS "Tout Neighborhood Druggist" IS NOW OPEN FROM 9A:M;to9P.Mo EVERYDAY INCLUDING SUNDAY 7 . tAt-iiN AMLBA9E OCT ! ' Six nations on the continent arc to -supply -troops for the Interna tional army to this extern: France. 14 divisions: Germany and Italy, 13 each: and five tor Holland. Bel gium, and Luxembourg. Total: 34 divisions. But agreement on the treaty and the troops is being made only bv the foreign ministers of the various countries Involved. None of it Is complete until the Parliaments ol those countries approve. BATTLE There may be a bitter struggle over this, particularly in France which distrusts German troops ol any kind, and in Germany where neutralists, pacificists and ultra nationalists want neither agree ment. - " N,o dne predicts what lies ahead. Trouble there will be. surely. Rus sia will try to block the agree ments from going into effect. Com munists have threatened trouble. In another age the public's inter- est here would be fastened on what's i hsppenlng in Germany. But it's '. being done quietly and seems tar away. It has to compel with too many other events. Still, time may prove that In this raid-twentieth century drama noth ing as more Important for the direction toe play takes than what is happening in Germany. (Boyk ' verbal good will. There are some basic facts that make it doubtful it will ever be a successful army. Geo. Eisenhower has thrown the tremendous weight of his personal ity behind the project after first deciding it wouldn't work. CONTRIBUTORS Most Americans can't even name the six nations who will contribute men to this 1,000,000-man force. They are France. West Oermany, Italy. Luxembourg, Belgium, and The Netherlands. Significantly, the French are scared to death of the West Ger mans, who are supposed to contrib ute 400,000 men, and the West Ger mans are reluctant as the devil to be committed to this effort be cause they really want to see saw between the United States and Russia until they can unite all Germans under one Hag and one government. For political reasdns at home no major statesmen in either Britain or the United States has come out boldly in favor of making British aril American troops constituent parts of the European army. But, looking at the cold facts of history, it is hard to see how a real European army can be welded without making both British Em pire and American troops an in tegral part of that army. They are In It, ol course, as sepa rate entitles, by virtue of their membership in NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. But this half-partnership by two world powers, Britain and America, makes the smaller six nations of Europe feel a bit like catspaws be fore the vast power of Soviet Rus sia. FEARS They have two fears fear of a esurgent Germany, fear of the Russian bear. ... Even with Britain and America saying, "don't worry, we'll back you,", tbey would rather both coun tries came' in as full partners, committed to mutual security to their last -man, pound, and dollar. Many professional military men will view the proposed united Eu ropean army with misgivings, until both Britain and the United States cpmes Into it all the way. So far they have pledged troops to It but they really, haven't Joined the army. And ny army must be a unit to 'be a real military force. There Is only one real internation al army in existence now It Is fighting under the United Nation's flag in Korea.. l. I S THIS DCUUCTXJ-.. I - Ell AAKT aJai cii :f I X tARSe-HOtf COME Z Y IK H5U Buy SO JMlrti Tl J lfl rtjea.rvs s, i 'I If Oi i.l A ri ' By Jimmy llatlo . JTOT-WHEM WE IS GALLED DorttJ TO THE INCOME TAX OFFICE TO r-ew JTEVISLISTEM i or ona op i I J08S-WH4TA OAS EIGHT AULES PER LLON SIX IN TRAFFIC .The Doctor "', oavs - 'v' i By DR. E. P. JORDAN This column Is started with a quotation from a rather extraordi nary letter received from a reader. She says: "1 have always had trouble keep ing my weight down, and lately have been hiking Dills that help tu kill the appetite. Alter some time I consulted a doctor because of some menstrual disturbances. He told n,e I was all right and advised no treatment, but told me I should consult a psychlnlri.it. "Of course, I refused, and lctt down. Kill Insulted, so thut I tor- K0, lt ,,. ntm tng-, , hd bt,cn InkhiK the pills. Do vou think thnt they would "dry up a person's blood?" , This Is the kind of story which irrliines doctors no end. Here la a reader who, without advice, took drugs when she could not know whether they would have anv harm ful effects or not though whether they would 'dry ud a person's blood" Is extremely doubtful. Then, when she went to the doe tor who found no physical condition responsible, she did not tell him the whole story biwI was Insulted when he recommended that (he consult a psychiatrist. It Is quite well known that manv persons suffering from overweiirht may have some mental cause which is at least partly responsible. If the doctor she consulted felt that a psychiatrist might be able to help her In her problems. Includ ing that of overweight, she should certainly not be Insulted, but rea lise that he is only giving the best advice he can. People who are Irving to lose weight often fool themselves bv sticking strictlv to their diet most of the time but eating between meals. They sav to themselves, 'I Just won't count this." Also, many people sav that thev eat practically nothing at all. What thev mean Is that thev eat a small breakfast and small lunch, but at dinner oh boy I Urvler these cir cumstances no wonder they do not lose as they think they ought to. Now the foods which can be turned into human fat most easily are animal or vegetable fats, such as fat meat, butter or margarine, and the starches or carbohydrate foods which include grains, grain cereals, sugar and potatoes. Foods such as these can be cut out of the diet pr at least taken in small quantities. They can be re placed with lean meat, fish, tow' vegetables and fruits which are not too sweet. This is what Is called a high protein, low starch and fat diet. Potatoes Bring Record Price CHARLOTTETOWN. P. E. I.f Potatoes are bringing 15 a bag here, the highest price In Prince Edward Island's history. Approximately 6,300 carloads have been shipped from the province since the season started and Chairman D. A. Mc Donald of the Island Potato Mar keting Board has estimated that only 100 carloads are left. Baker Losing Many Teachers BAKER Wl Forty per cent'of the rural school teachers in Baker County will leave their lobs this month to take better paying posi tions elsewhere. Twenty of 60 teaching Jobs In rural schools will be vacant at the end of the school year. Myrtle Lee. rountv school superintendent. says only a few of these have been filled. REVIVAL SERVICES V Reverend W. H. PRATT, Evangelist Also Showing Slide pictures of his recent visit, to Palestine' 'Mill Ruth Sutttr In hr ef '-. singing!! EVERY NIGHT AT 8 P.M. May 23 t Juris 1 PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH 2301 Wonllond Ave. 0. D. WEAVER, Patter A Cordial invitation to all A great many Republican leaders acknowledge Hint It Is no cinch tu break into a winning Democratic coalition and captuio tho presi dency. But every lour years lline are always soma who slip very easily into a mood ot complacency. How it is possible to be simm about vlotory prospects after five straight defeats in imlluitnl elec tions is. something the disinterested onlooker could not readily explain. On would Imagine that complacen cy was an attitude to bo antici pated only alter a string of suc cesses, - Tha year 1903 Li no exception. There are those who feel that cor ruption in government, high prices, high taxes and assorted other mat ters are enough bv themselves to produce a Republican triumph, KNOW BETTKIt But the parly hard-heads know better. They're aware thnt despite all the symptoms of disintegration, there is no proof yet that the Drm ocratlc coalition Is going to full apart. They know that any Demo cratic candidate who can avoid ser ious defections In the southern wing of the party Is nutomatlciillv tough lo bent . He nveds onlv 113 electoral votes 111 tho rel of Ihr country lo win. A Republican must get all the necessary 36ti outside the South In most Instances. Moreover. It Is almost axiomatic In politics that a partv riding the crest of a prosperity wave, as the Democrats are today, Is a stiff ad-vri'Hnry. diuqh Heavens Abovo- Over the wide expanse ol the heavens there are scattered here and there manv chnrmitit llltii stellar groups made up ol small stars which alone aiu not v-iy noticeable but which collectively present striking conllguraltoiu. One such group, Corvua the Crow, olten attracts the attention of can. ual observers, who Inqtiuc reiird lug Its Identity. At present ll should not be lit nil dllflcult lo locale this rule coiiMcllailon.. At round 0 p.m. standard tune, or 10 p.m. dnvlu'il tune, the bright yellow planet Saturn Is easily ...polled well up in the Southern sky. Almon below Saturn we instantly slant a leu! sided figure, not quite a so,uiue but more nearly like the bowl ol a dtpper open toward the lett. Its four principal stars are all ol about the same brightness. They ure dimmer than most of the stms In the familiar Big Dipper, which Is now alnin.it overhead, but rre about like the star where the handle of the Big Dipper Joins iho bowl. Nestling verv close to Delta, the star In the upper left-hand corner of our four-sided figure, we (Ind.a rewaro no was givrn an ever anoUier and much smaller star, lasting abodo among the slars of We might assume this is the beak Uo southern sky. of the crow, but the ancient star- Whatever the origin of the gazers decreed It otherwise. As! naming of this constellation, It they outlined this dark-colored bird I forma a most attractive little ihe star below the lower right-! group on the Southern heavens, hand corner ol our four-sided ITelescoplcally, Dell becomes figure 'served as the beak. He is ! double, the two slars making a thus tjpped up with his tall high I beautiful contrast in color of yel and Ms head low. 'low and purple. n"Tih'. Consumers Group Fights Private Utility Ad Policy By STERLING F. GREKM WASHINGTON I The electric Consumers Conference Tuesday was drafting a demand that pri vate utilities be barred from charging their customers for tho cost of "propaganda and advertis ing aimed against public power. The newly organized conference was urged by President Truman Monday lo fight what he called a most vicious campaign by pn. vate power monopolies." Truman aaid he Is thinking of asking his new attorney general, James P. McGranery. to Investi gate whether power companies are violating the Corrupt Practices Act in charging their "propagan da" costs to the consumer and nt the same time by labeling them operating costs reducing their tax payments. conference officials sain mis question already was before a committee on principles named nt Monday s opening session ot ins public power, labor, farm and rural electrification groups. A res olution covering the question will be submitted for approval, thoy Indicated. Murray D. Lincoln, conference chairman and president of the Cooperative League of the United States, Asked the fiOO delegates a so' to organize a fight to pre serve the preference clause In federal power laws. This clause, now under attack in Congress, guarantees to stato, municipal and cooperative groups a priority In the purchase of power from federal nydro-clcctric devel opments. Private utilities, he said, not only arc pressing Congress to re vise the preference clause but also to limit the sale of power to cus tomers who can build transmis sion lines. This move, Lincoln said, would insure that only private utilities got the power. IMS mMm IHI HIIMOIT SUI UNI Klamath Art. Phon. 607 i 04 0 This time, In addition to all these dlflluultles, the Itt'tmbllcuiui liavo tu luce nut only an uniiusllton .nomi nee but a luuuli and tumble oaiif pulgner who will be standing beside him throwing Ills best imuchca, Tho mum : 1 In i i v S Truman. ii mi i) iin ri.it Tne President's rtrrnt plntform npiH'nritni'cs leave no doubt lie will bo swinging linm Hie floor Urn vein-. If nnvbodv thinks his blows don't hurt, he ought lo recall 1MB, Mr. Truman has a gilt for (Tiling catch-words, for biting phrnsrs that iTilter with the voters and get under the opposition's skin. This kniick Is still with htm. When he .tscenda the plntform, he very conveniently avoids the top ics mnbnrrnaatng to him, What pul Itlclnn does not? Hut it should not be thought, therefore, thnt he ll drstroyliig his effectiveness. All 111 evldrnre MiKgeMs the contrary. Republicans who are not afrnld to add up the sum of llielr obslnclrs had best Include Mr, Truman In Hie list. Ho Is plrutv tough to coin but, as the record plnlnlv nhows In various Novembers tinting bnck to IlKli. If thev want to denl with him, Ihev verv llkrlv will have to do more than highlight the embarrass ing matters he skims over. They'll have lo drum up some good an swers lo the charges he delivers with those dnmnulng punch lines You can't Ignore the blows thnt I hurt and still expect to win In a ' lirerze. (phusdi Our Crow Is usually pictured as standing on and pecking down at Hvdrn, tho very long wnter sii.ike, which now stretches across a '.arue expunge ol the southern evening sky. As wiih ninny ol the .-on-Mi'linlion figure, it may be rather dillicult to see the creature mip posedly depleted by these stars. The Bticlents are credited with vivid Imaginations. The mythology of Corvus Is varied. Dr. Mcnzel ol Harvard ol srrvalory. suggests thut this say Crow nmy huvo represented a storm bird, or even a large sun spot group sometimes visible to the unaided eye aud resembling a dark-colored Hying bird. One story represents the crow as originally being ol a light rolor, but as he was a tale-beaivr "tils prating tongue had changed hl'n quite to sooty blae'-- from the purest white." Another relates how the goi Apollo, suspecting nit love. Coronls, of being untrue lo nl'n, sent corvus to spy on tier, Corvus. carefully carrying out his ! mission, reported that Apollo's I suspicions were well founded. As Representatives from various parts of the country reported on their local public vs. private power battles. Ken O. Whltaker, administrative assistant to the Electric Power Board of Chattanooga, Tenn., said not more than 10 of the MS muni cipal and cooperative groups dis tributing TVA (Tennessee Valley Authority) power in his own area could provide transmission lines if TVA were barred from building them. Private utilities are perfectly willing to let the government build generating plants "If they can buy the power,' he said, adding: "It Just so happens that there Is about 2 'i to 3 "j times as much profit In the distribution of elec tricity as there is In the genera tion." "It Is unbellevcable that they could make the progress since the, election of 1948 that they have made," Whltaker said. "The rea son that they have been able to make It has been due to the over confidence and laziness on the part of the peonlo that are In the non profit utility business." Coming June 1st CRATER LAKE MILK In tha world't most convanltnl patkagtt Canco containers or Quarontttd by Good Housekeeping . , . commended by Par ent! Magann ' outrmltH r MK Hfttlf HMpiM f Jrv WW!1 , 11 ,i 111;1 ! , i'l 1 m. 1 t r'..i:iiw ,i,U.ui, ! 'i llli ll ll ill 111 I I I i .1 lly MARY IXIAN Chapter Twu of the lives ol la seniors will uomo lu u close at the graduation exercises tonight in the rliicird Heart Church. Knur yonis mto Ihey closed Chapter on,.. Irs villi! behind eight .Venn (it nruile school, Now. aller lour wouilei hi high school years Chapter Two la Mulshed, and Chnptcr Three nl tlinlr alory In about to begin. w many this will be lurihrrliig their education nt college, though (or oili er It will be work. It In a night that has long brrn awaited, but as lite nine draws near when Ihoy shrill step Inrwnrit to receive their diplomas, the uumi limes Ihoy have hud and the manv dear friends they have marie, will make II tlllllrull lor them lo sav "gondbve" to Burred Heart Acad emy. Hill even mnio illttlculi will It be Inr the Juniors, Moitlinnmres, and Freshmen lo ny liuewell to this class nt '53. Yes, ll Is with iiiiiuy regrets ol "I'll miss you, ' thnt ihrv wish them Uie bent ul luck always. Touioiruw itltcrnnnn Hie girls will gather In the school auditorium to see a nuivie, iiiiick iioiu.-- Turn, on Thuisdny the students will ku to school In the morning to rwlr.e llielr report cards for the lust lime this year. Ho once again Hie Huoicd llmm Notebook Is closed lor nno'lior ye.u 1 hope you have enjoyed lenajum them as much us 1 have cni,yd willing lliein. Hep ya' next yeur. KANT FISH rllll.ADKl.l'IHA I It... . tropical Hsli n a hobby thut enn easily ert out ol liund, cxpliiinni Jules Corolls lo Zoning llourd of Adjustment olllclals. 'ihev niulu. ply so last you huvo to find wars to get rid o them, he mid ll 1ms been selling them and ,-ven Hiving some uwny to iicbihborv He seeks n use permit In cornier lion Willi his fish enlerprlso In tlm busemeul of his home. ... And the talk ot the town is today's low price for a DUGAN & MEST 522 So. 6th St. v Klamath Falls I i 7t- v i wvjl BP mm