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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1952)
PAGr? SIX IIKRALD AND NRWS. KLAMATH KAUS, OHKGON TIIUnSPAY. AUGUST 21, 10.12 FRANK JENKINS Editor ' BILL JLNKINS Manailng Editor Zntsred Moond class matter at the post office of Klamath FalU, Ore., on August 30, 1906, under act of Congress, March (, mi MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Aaaociated Prei tt entitled exclusively to the use for publication of all the local newt printed In thu newspaper as well at all AP uet. I month , ( months I year ..- MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES BY CARRIER t I.S5 I month t US SO 6 months t 8.10 $11.00 1 year 16.20 BILL-BOARD By BILL JENKINS They'll Do It Every Time " - By Jimmy II.ulo About this time of year the lull of suuuue. tx-kui ,u itr v faint trace of autumn is noted In the weather, the high country soft woods are slowly beginning to dress tor the fall color show, the squirrels have finished their winter nests and stored their food supply, and the restless local ducks and geese are wheeling through the crisp skies In preparation lor their long (light south. Just as restless as the ducks are the hunters. They gather tn groups in speculate as to what kind of a season we will have this year. They discuss the report from Ducks Unlimited that never In the history ot that orgamzauon have tne Cana dian and Alaskan nesting grounds looked so fertile. We read of the Fish and Wildlife estimates that the duck population has gained materially due to good nesting and leeaing conuiUons in tne norai. . local report comes In from the Lower Klamath area telling us that botulism, that dread 'limber neck" disease that strikes down ducks by the thousands, has been held to a minimum, onlv slight occurences ot the disease- appearing among the hundreds of thousands of ducks and geese nesting there. And they all hope for the same thing. A season that opens earlier than in the past. One that will give us a chance to shoot a bird or two wnue wey are here Instead of waiting for the freeze-up that sends the birds wing ing for the warm valleys of the Sacramento Valley. Of course along with the open ing of the season, whenever It is, will come the age old problems. The major one being that of the hunter-landowner relationship. Most common complaint beard today is "Oh hell, there just isn't any place left to hunt anymore un less vou belong to a fancy duck club." And in many cases the complaint Is justified. There are many areas of land that should be open to public for shooting that has been closed for purely selfish reasons. There are large areas of Vitus took A 25 worth ofctAtJCes REALLY COULD USE IT, WITH EliHT KIDS AMD ALL"" TH. .rC ..HlJ uv" IN THE Z X- HALL ftorut' chs uc . n-ro ....... ,,w.nu IV, UV fner. And there are a few plain old knotheads who post land be cause they can't stand to see any one hunt and have a little fun. But, balanced against that pitiful handful of hard guys are a multi tude of landowners who are glad to have vou hunt on their place if they are convinced that vou're a sportsman and not a trigger- happy gamehog who shoots with out care or warning. There are a great many men owning land who will obligingly point out the best places to hunt on their land, where to go to get there, and they'll may-! be tell vou to leave a certain covey of quail or pheasants alone. Or j not bother the ducks on a certain pond. You go along with them and they'll go along with you. On the whole, most of the land owners are a bunch of swell sports men, And 11 tney post uieir ianu it Is In the main to keep oft the Ignorant, the careless, the hoggish and the everbearing. And because there are a certain number of bums in the world of sport who don't care for the rights ot others all the rest of us have to suffer. It shouldn't be that way. And it won't 11 we u all do our pert. If we'll all be wardens on our own. Nobody likes to be a tattletale and go running to teacher with tales every time we see an other person break a rule. But if we'd all take steps to prevent need less destruction, unsportsmanlike behavior and property damage (crippled or dead livestock, broken fences, torn up dikes, etc.) I think that complaint of no place to hunt would be largely eradicated. Organized sportsmen's clubs over the nation have proven largelv in effectual in the past in ironing out these difficulties. It's too big a lob for any club or gathering of clubs. It's a Job fore every individual gunner to tackle and settle. We have a great outdoor country here in the Klamath area. There Is more bunting and fishing than In almost any other comer of the United States Let's keep It that P S ii,:- THIS 15 THE ) -v. VJf' 'TSfOnA $f OM.V WAV WE'LL 4 w9ri i 1 tlHlI J Truman Calls For New Blood But Says . He Knows Of No Mess In Washington (Da . .fl. $Adan . Nearly everybody has heard the Klamath county lying under Tay- way. and open for all of us to lor grazing act jurisdiction that are shoot. And enjoy, open to the public, but are none- Remember, it's up to you. Not theless posted in an arbitrary man- the other fellow. expression "30-30 vision." but few people know Just what It means. Q Please explain how the eye- sisui raung ju-ju vision is derived? K. L. M. A A person who can read a cer tain stsnaard-slzed letter on a chart 30 feet away is said to have 30-30 vision. If the next larger letter can oe reaa, uie vision is said to be 30-30, eic. Ordinarily, someone is considered to have normal abilitv to see If he has 30-30 vision In each eye. tj My mother, who Is getting on . ?ctra, nas naa several strokes In the past years. She suffers no pain and has no difficulty except some paralysis, and she gets quite depressed. Isn't this depressslon normal? So many older folks have mese strokes. Do tney come with age. certain strains, health habits. or what causes them? Reader. A It Is certainly normal to be depressed if one cannot move around as well as one did form erly. A stroke does come as a rule with age and is a reflection of the tact that the arteries are not as elastic as they used to be. This results either tn blood leak ing out of them into the brain or a clot forming in one of these blood vessels. If the amount of bleeding is slight or the clot Involves only a small vessel, someone who has a stroke may recover to a con siderable degree, and the paralysis may be only slight. Q My husband Is troubled with granular lids around his eyes. Can anything be done about this? Mrs. H. C. A Granular lids can usually be treated successfully with one or more medicated ointments. How. ever, someone sufferUig from such a condition should have the eyes examined to be sure that eye strain or some other condition Is not also present. Q Do you think it advisable for a highly nervous person to gel pregnant? This person loves chil dren and would like two boys, but sne is airaid ot labor. Reader A This person might get two girls Instead of two bovs. Love of children is not enough to make a gooo motner. witnout more infor mation on the nature of the "ner vousness" It Is impossible tn tell whether this person could bear and raise healthy, stable children. u wnat Is folliculitis? H. o A This Is infection ot the hair follicles from which it gets 1 1 s name. Severe folllcultls can occur as well as mild cases, with which nearly everyone has bad some ex perience. r ,i i ' IP- NEW YORK HI The reason women get more things done than men is that they know better now to make a fuel of themselves. There Is no fuel like an old fuel, and the oldest and best fuel isn't wood, coal or oil. It is anger plain old inner anger. Notice how a woman operates. If she has a distasteful Job to do, the first thing she does is get ail steamed up about it. Let us suppose the chore her conscience tells her she should be doing is her semi-annual house cleaning. A man faced with this task says, I ought to tidy up this Joint, and I will, one oi tnese aays, but I feel awful tired today." And be doesn't get around to shoveling out the debris until it wreaiens to amotner nun. But a woman says, "I hate the way this place looks." She is angry at it, ana tne anger gives ner energy, and soon we oust ana tur. niture are flying. By the time her anger Is worn out, sne can coiiapse on a spick-and-span couch in a house that is shiny-bright. That is why men are secretly afraid of women because of the power of anger they have. Few obstacles can sxana oeiore tne flaming energy ot a wrathful lady at peak cry. A wise man, however, can exer cise some influence over a woman if he cunningly learns to channel her Ire in the right direction. Instead of coaxing her to do something he wants, he might find it better to make her so mad she can't help doing It In spite of her self. A friend of mine worked this ruse successfully in getting his wife to pack her suit case in time to catch a train for their vacation trip. He pulled out his watch and pointed at It. She dwadled. He pleaded. She dwadled. He begged. She yawned. Finally, he picked up one of her favorite dresses and said: "Well. I forbid you to take this aiong. u makes you look me Queen Victoria on a picnic." "Oh. it does?" she snarled. 'Til wear what I want to, smarty!" in a tempestuous burst of energy. she packed the suitcase, snapped it snut. They caugnt the train, "As a matter of fact, she was so angry she wouldn't speak to me for a week but is that altogether bad?" recalled the husband. "But I learned a lesson: If you want to get a wile anywhere on time, first get her mad. Ruflfe her feathers, then smooth them later." That is sound psychology, up to a point, oi course some wives, when they get mad, just go into anoiner room ana lock tne aoor. No rule works with all of them. And, ot course, it usually works the other way. A woman uses her anger to whammy a man into obey ing her whim. Many a fellow is prodded into success in life only because of the long slow burn of his wife over the fact the husband next door is get ting ahead faster. Her wrath feeds his will, and he rises in the world on borrowed fuel. There is another inner fuel, as old as anger. It Is called fear. Anger Is a fighting fuel, fear is the fuel for running away. You need both to live. I may be a traitor to my sex. but it seems to me that women keep these two tuels in better bal ance than men. Tney are less likely to be overwhelmed by either. They know better when to be angruy nrave, wnen to be cautious ly afraid. But. man or woman, nobody ever became a star In the human race until he learned how to make the right kind of fuel himself. PROTEST KLAMATH FALLS May I take a tew minutes of your time to in quire as to whether there is a law against running over animals and leaving them in the road to die, without stopping to see if some help can't be given them? Yesterday afternoon on Michigan Ave, some fugitive from a hard top race roared nonchalantly down the street, about 50 miles per, and ran over a puppy. He continued on his merry way without even hesitating, and left the little fel low to thrash around in the street until he finally belched out the last of his blood and mercifully died. II you happen to read this article, you In- the Oldsmoblle (or am I expecting too much of you, you certainly must not be able to read or you'd know there at least is a law against driving that fast in a residential district.) I only wish you could have been there and seen that little group of children, standing around with horrified ex pressions, wanting to help their pet, but not quite knowing how, it might have left the impression on your mind that It did on the rest of us. Puppies, In some ways are like children, insofar as Irresponsibility is concerned. And they are all apt to dash out into the street with out thinking of the consequences, but If you and the rest of your kind would drive sensibly, all this grief and heartache could be avoid ed. It's too bad that you weren't the one who had to explain to those children as to why this had to be. They wouldn't understand, they only know their playmate Is gone and probably will never be able to erase from their mind the sight of his gasping for breath and lying there in a pool of blood, while you and your Ilk continue to drive like maniacs without the slightest inter ference. Give yourself a pat on the back buster, you're lucky It wasn't a child, you might really have some explaining to do then. (I'd like to perform that little chore tor you with a ball bat, you'd have a rea son for acting like you were Jet propelled then.) This Is only the third time In as many months that we've had to look at a pet out In the street mangled because speed demons in sist on making a speed-way out of Michigan Ave., and it's getting a wee nit tiresome. Youra very truly. Anonymous but Unanimous Modoc Wild Area Grows District Ranger Don Eular of the South Fork District reports that tins week several of the lust ro naming roads into the Wild Area are being posted. Since the crea llon of the Wild Area, that part of Hie Modoc National Forest has been closed to travel by motor ve hicles. It Is open, however, to foot uud horseback travel. There will be no exceptions to the posting which Is to serve as warning to travelers by motor vehicles. Violators of the closure are subject to prosecution uuuer Foaerai The Wild Area was created by the will of the public to preserve the primitive environment ol that part of the Warner Mountains. Wnen such an area is set aside tne people may be affected both favor ably and unfavorably. There are many arguments on ooln s.ues ol the establishment of primitive areas. Being created bv the desire of the people, these areas can also be abolished bv Uie people. This can be done through process of committee representation and pub lic hearing. Modoc National Forest officials ask the cooperation of local peo ple to abide bv the closure. Bv lOl (ll.A B. CORNELL WASlllNli'l'ON 14) President Truman said Thursday there ought to be sums new blond In Uie Dem ocrallo parly but he knows of no mesa In Washington, At a nowa commence Willi Ihe accent on polities, Truman aald lie hiul no comment on the way Ihe Democratic candidates, tlov. Adlal Stevenson and Ben. John Spark- man, nave started their campaign, He an 111 too that: He doesn't have to read what tho opposition sava he knows ahead of time whnl It Is going to snv and It's all wrong. He llitnks he knows more about lite government than anyone in the Lulled Slates. Certainly Stevenson can have the advantage of the good research which lol tilled hit own campaign apeechoa In 1048. Hleveiison run have all Ilio Information he wants and to can Oen, Uwlghl D. Kl seiihowrr. Ihe KepuUllcan presi dential nominee. Truman aald he will give them the truth and II Ihey want to use tt. It's up tn them. While the Democratic purlv can stand aoitie new blood, that doesn't nipan we are going back on whnl the Democratic parlv hat done In the past 30 years. There was no comment on Spark man's stntement thai the recent steel atrlke had .linen mishandled. Nor did Uie President with to go Into anv detail on the Incidents Involving daughter Margaret. See- Stevenson Starts Work For Western Campaign Molalla Girl In Contest BERKELEY. Calif. 1 Ann Rlddtngs of Molalla, Ore. will rep resent Oregon Slate College in the seventh annual Berkeley football icsuvai, bent. ltwi. She will competo for the title of "Miss Football" agalast repre sentatives or seven other universi ties. The winner will reign over the Berkeley festival at the open ing ot tne inter-coucgiate football season. Miss Ridings, 10, Uie daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold p. Rid ings Is a sophomore at OSC. By DON WHITEHEAD MINOCQUA. Wis. W-Oov. Adlnl Stevenson blocked out the rouuh drolls today ol the 10 or 13 speeches he will make on a hard drlviug tour next month to win the Western vote In the November election. This campaign mav onen Sent. 5 In Denver, Colo., tho headquar ters of his opponent, OOP presi dential nominee Dwlght D. Elsen- to tne I'acillc Northwest and Call- lornla. Stevenson planned to sleep late and mix a Utile llshlng, boating ann just plain loating with his speech writing. He alto agreed to another newt conference today. Yester i ty. the Democratic ores- Identlal nominee told reporters he leels "very cumlortable" about his chanets for beating Eisenhow er. But he said the greatest ob stacle In his path Is Uie Repub lican argument that It's "time for a change'' m administration. Btoveuson and his lieutenants have clearly Indicated that in com butting UUs argument Uiey will hammer on Uie counter-argument that Stevenson's election would be a change In faces and In approach to policies. He said yesterday he would deal with corruption "ruthlessly" If elected. "I always have and I al ways will," he added. And he went on to tay that the beat way to deal with what ho hus called "a mess in Washington" would be to nairnj quslilied anil Incorruptible men to guverumcul Jobs thus eliminating the wrong doing before and not alter It happens, Asked If It would be a deslrnblo thing to have Elsenhower direct ing America's forolgn policy, Ste venson replied: "I don't know that I shall address myself lo his un desirability for anything. I don' I think I will." Stevenson reiterated he thinks foreign policy the grealest problem lacing mo nation. - ine destiny ot the United States and the free world are at slake." he said, "and U a a problem Unit will confront us for years to come." Ho was asked to expund on wlial he had meant last week when he wrote a letter lo Editor Tom Hum phrey of the (Portland) Oregon journal in wnicn lie referred to a "mess in Washington." Stevenson said he was only re peating a phrase that Humphrey had used In a letter to him when he relerred to a "mess." But then he oonceded that the conviction ol wrongdoers was proof there had been a mesa and he said: "Crime, corruption and misconduct are messy wherever they are." School Board Votes To Employ Negro Teacher BREMERTON If The rural icuaslona. Alter the open session. Central Kitsap School Board the board voted to rescind the con changed Its mind again Wednes-1 'ract. One board member Ole day night and voted to go ahead $ .eusnn. commented that harmony Ike's 'Middle Way' Plan Draws Republican Cheers AB7 WASHINGTON, IsV-Because the bers think they have a say, It Communists always want a fairly small, rigidly disciplined organiza tion, not everyone in Russia is a member of the party. Out of a population of more than 300 million people, probably not more than 10 million are permittee to oeiong, The number may be smaller. Be fore he's admitted, a wouio-ne member Is screened. Party mem bers must vouch for him. And after he's In his work and loyalty to the party are watched and examined. But the Russian Communists, who set the style for Communists everywhere, protest they have a really democratic setup. Theoretically, all party members are expected to argue sincerely on any issue the party is trying to decide. But, once tne decision is made by majority vote, they must Obey the party's win absolutely. Actually, the decisions are made at the top by Stalin and his hand picked lieutenants who form the Politburo, which runs the party. Since the party runs Russia, the Politburo runs the whole show. But if the Politburo Just kept on doing this Indefinitely from with in the Kremlin walla, withnnt pretending to let the party mem-1 couldn't keep up the democratic fiction very long. So Stalin and his friends decided long ago there should be a national congress every three years. But they got pretty careless about it. The last was held In 1939. Yesterday announcement was made In Moscow that there'd be another congress, the first In 13 years, in October. Why now? The usual guessing game started in the Western capitals. Stalin has never been considered a Confidential Charley. So there will not necessarily be any con nection between the real reasons for the congress and any reasons Stalin may give for calling It, be- lore or alter. So the guesses will ramrn from the most ominous and sinister Com munist motives to a simple desire on Stalin's part to keep up demo cratic appearances or tighten the strings on party members getting careless. The only amusing note in the news that the Politburo will be "Praesldlum." The onlv nnsslhl effect this can have is the added difficulty of spelling Politburo un- der the new name. By EDWIN B. HAAKINSON WASHINGTON W) Dwlght D. Elsenhower's theme of "the middle way" for his presidential cam paign drew cheers today from three Republican senators. Sen. Karl E. Mundt of South Dakota said Elsenhower's cam paign klckoff at Boise, Idaho, yes terday sets a "sound sense of di rection for the coming campaign." "Millions of Independent voters arid constitutional Democrats will welcome the opportunity to support a candidate pledged to our tradi tional American concepts," Mundt said. Sen. Bourke B. Hlckenlooper of Iowa called the Elsenhower speech "extremely sound" and added: "He believes that In order to go forward the American people must be freed from the extreme views of the leftwlngers on one hand and the so-called complete reactionaries on the other. ' " Sen. Wallace F. Bennett of Utah said he could support everything that Eisenhower listed as - goals for the American people. He added that the address would have a special appeal to Westerners. "Westerners don't want the fed eral government to turn us Into reservation Indians," Bennett said. 'We want Elsenhower's attitude carried out in proposals for re clamation ana power developments." In plunking for "the straight road down the middle, the oath of progress" in government, Elsen hower promised to avoid both "re actionary" and "radical" paths. The OOP presidential nominee said the middle wav assumes that all Americans "have now accepted and will forever support what we call social gains. . Among tnese ne included such m SOIASY or.JOscan a FOR i ill m inn I things as adequate old age secu rity, workers' Insurance against unemployment, "equal opportuni ties for everybody" regardless of race, religion or national origin; decent housing and "the rights of each- of us to esrn what he can and to save it as far as taxes will let him." "The facile arguments of the leftists are now the doctrine of the party In nower nroof thai, it has been too long in power," Elsen- oower saia in nis prepared text. Mundt called this an "Indictment of the Partv in power for their studied efforts to push and pull America rar 10 tne ieit oi center." Bennett said the Democrats prob ably will try to label Elsenhower as a "rightwinger because the mid die of the road he proclaims ac tually Is to the right of the Dem ocratic party line." "We have been on th far left so long that anyone who advocates the middle way is attacked as a reactionary," Bennett added. "I know because I have been." Hlckenlooper ald the speech was a "general foundation for El senhower's political philosophy" and predicted It would win support of a majority of voters In the Nov. i prcsiaenuai election. State Truck Man Speaks MERRILL Bert Trask. publlo relations representative for state truckers, was guest speaker at Monday evening's meeting of the Merrill Lions CI ub. He told of the effect of heavy trucks on the high way, and also on the tax imposed on truckers. Following the business meeting, Dick Jansen entertained at the piano, and Denny Curie presented a group of songs. Vice-president Charles Van presided In the ab sence of president Hnrvev Denham. Twenty-two members and the fol lowing guests were present: Mr. and Mrs. Bert Trask. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Jansen. Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Curie and son Denny, and Mrs, John Kirbv. The next meeting will be Sept. 3. Germans Like Long Cigarettes BERLIN im V. B. Army post exchange stores In Germany have been told to cut down sales of king sized cigarettes to stem the flow of the coveted "longies" to the German black market. King-sized types are a premium priced Item on the black mart, where they bring a seller IB marks IS4.28) per carton. Regular size cigarettes yield 15 to 16 marks oo cents or so less. PX employes said an Army sur vey showed that between 36 and 40 per cent of all cigarettes sold re cently In Army stores In Oermany have been king-sized. The long variety accounts tor only about 8 per cent of total sales In the U.S. auh tne employment of a Negro school teacher. Board members said Ester Wll- fong, 33. of La Grande. Ore., will leach the sixth grade In the Central Kitsap Junior High School at near by 8Uverdale. The school district la about 10 miles outside this U.S. Navy yard city, and about two-thirds of Its residents are Navy yard employes. The board voted to withdraw Its action of the previous night, which was lo rescind the contract tend ered the male teacher Aug. 13. District Supt. Carl F. Jenne aald the vote to reaffirm WIKong's con tract was unanimous Just as the previous night's contract-rescinding action had been. Jenne aald the reversal followed a meeting with James H. Huev. high school principal, and Glen Mansfield, executive secretary of the Washington State Board Against Discrimination In Employ ment. The original hiring of Wllfong stirred a conlroversv. The board held a public meeting Tuesday night and heard pro and con dla- ret Ervlce and Swedish newspa pers. In response In a question, Tru man said he hadn't made any per sonal mutinies but hud read re ports regarding charges III Ihe Swedish pro.'ia that Hcurel Service men accompanying Ills daughter tiau to iisu .oua.iiu.u.'.d ittuu. He aald no new Instructions are phi lined for the Secret Service itiiuiuj bivulliu II" iu u.w.ij light and don't need any. On another liiteriiallunal matter, Tiuiiiuii nuu lumimii 10 say auoiii the calling of a new Communal puitv Congress in Moscow, siting it up as none ol Ins business. At one iMilut, lie took a swipe at the Hiituiduv Kveiilng I'usl, say lug It la ulwuvs wrong, 'Hint wan III response to an In quiry whether he Intends to ans wer an article In Uie inagaslna Unit said he guvn the country false iinoi illation uuoiit a siam short age. Truman said he hadn't read the article and didn't Intond lo. He said ho almost never reads tho l'ust because It always la wrung. Asscd iioa no know.-,, whether ne got a brlrtliig on aiii-h things, the Piesldriit said all ho needs to do Is look at the table of contents and lie knows, Another line of "mentioning cen tered on an exchungo uf corres pondence between uoveruor Stev enson and a Portland newspaper edllor which relerred lo "the mesa in Washington." Truman said he had no comment because ho knew nothing of anv mess. A reixirter noted that Stevenson has said suiiietlilim "lo the effect that he wauls lo bring a refresh ening of what's going on for 30 venrs." It was then that Truman spoke of lutusing new blood Into the Dem ocratic party while declaring there will be no turning bark on what the parlv has done lor 30 years. While the questions were popping along similar lines, tossing at Tru man what the Democratic candi dales have been saying, he was asked whether "you have any feel ing of being a target." lie said he cau l possibly be a target on the Democratic side be cause he Is the kev "f the cam palgn. Of course he will be a tar ed of Elsenhower and Ills conoris, Truman said, As to how he Is a campaign kev. he said Ilio Democratic partv must run on the record of Truman and Roosevelt administrations. was needed because "there's our school bond Issue lo think of." Svenson made the motion Wednesday night to reverse the previous night's decision against the teacher. Jenne said Earlier. Wllfong aald he planned lo go to Silverdale at Uie start of Ihe school year; that he had a valid contract and "I Intend to hold Uie school board to It." He ex pressed surprise at Ihe board's ac tion, explaining that he thought the issue had been settled before he received, signed and returned his contract. Wllfong la a 1653 graduate of Eastern Oregon College. Bremerton, the county's main clly. has a woman Negro teacher. Bremerton Is In a school district bv Itself. Cornerstone Gets Mislaid SPOKANE. Wash. Iff Lost: one 30-ton carload of granite. In cluding the cornerstone for the Federul Savings and Loan Associa tion's new building. The associating had Invited lis laying ceremonies, scheduled to day. Bui It had to cancel the event. There was no stone. The carload of granite started west from Minnesota more than a month ago. Fidelity olllclals be lieve Uiey've located the stone on a railway aiding at Havre, Monl. . No lalml set ellewed It tf'ea . , eoae are elftoa-heisd and fereer lea. Carter's Collection Agency Ph. all! 411 Mala State Man Seeks Job 8ALEM W The State Civil Service Commission henrd an ap peal for reinstatement Wednesday from Ernest P. Kelly, discharged Aug. 1 and an appraiser with the State Veterans Affairs office. Kelly, who had worked for the office since Apgll, 1948, had been released for "inability to work with fellow employes." Kelly charged the dismissal was the result of Inter-olflce politics. The commission dismissed an appeal from Neal Buxton, Pendle ton, who had requested a hearing after being discharged from his Job as hospital aide at the East em Oregon State Hospital. Bux ton was not present tor the hearing. INDUSTRIAL DEATHS DROP ROME I Newly released sta tistics disclose that 3,04 Italian workers died In 1961 In Industrial accidents compared to 3,114 deaths in 1050. However, there were 683,- 1951, an Increase of 48,933 over the previous year. SATURDAY NIGHT AUGUST 23 MALSN All Western Music By TOMMY and HIS RAINBOW MELODY BOYS Admission: $1' per perion Donclnq 10 'till 2 Standard Time OLD HOUSE SOLD DE3 MOINES Wl The house built In 1018 lor the late E. T. Meredith, Secretary of Agriculture under President Wilson, has been sold for (32,000. Boasting seven bedrooms and seven bathrooms on the two upper floors. It had been vacant for about two years. INDIANS GET OIL DIVIDEND CARDSTON, Canada 11 Indiana of the Blood Reservation near here have Just received their first divi dend from the sale of their oil rights. The initial dividend was $21,000. Several companies now are making tents on the reservation and two oil wells are being drilled. People DO TOO read small space ads - you are! WASHTUBS BEST BUYS KFJI 7:30 a.m. Old? Get Pep, Vim with Iron, Calcium, Vitamin B, Mtru urnRirU of w; m. rtnn't ix tn. YVUiflLTl ft wr-(, worn-our.Pi-hnui'Ml. Tiki) nwci. Contain! tonic 0(10 ntflded itfLfr 40-by b"1ln larklni Iron; plo ('! eltim, Vtmmlo Bi 1'hotmandt now ImI Jirnpy, fara ywnin. tin Ottre Twin TaWttaTOIA Y. Trial Ua r.u httlt. Or BAVF, MONI'.Y-f at rn. lu 1110 alifl nniy W " WH" Wvlnii ak tOMiry DopuJu, noon-? lag Loovotnj alia. Al ill Urag itori verrwhert- in Klamath rails, al Parleii Fred Tuelburner" Says: 'PERFECTION is Your GREATEST Home Heafer Value!1 51 "Floor-Flo" Blower Excluitva2fcWr"PHot Uses less than Vl ep of ell per hour, A real fuel-taverl failly mad FULLY AUTO MATIC by addition of- the. nottat control. IT HBRE TODAYI Spreads carpet of warm ale aerate rhe floor, as pleasant as a summer braeial Mere comfort en lest fuel. EASY PAYMENT MAN! Fred H. Heilbronner 821 Spring St. "Fuel, that Satisfy" Plus Servica Sine 1919 Phone 4153 ,