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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1952)
PAGEroim lIERAt.ll ANI NEWS. Kf.AMATH FAT.T.S. OREGON S ATI IRDAV. AUGUST MO, 11)52 .JfraUan&8Urj$; FRANK JENKINS Editor Entered ircond class matter at the post office of Klamath Falls. Ore., on August 20, 1806, under act of Congress, March 8, 1879 MEMBKRS OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication ot all Uia local news printed In tins newspaper as well as all At1 uews. SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BV CARRIER 1 month S l.SS 1 month t 1.35 6 months 6-50 6 months 8.10 1 year - U.0O 1 year $16.20 BILL-BOARD By BILL The other day we were lament ing the passing of the old Algoina viewpoint on the Upper Lake. Which started a chain of thoughts going through our minds on the passing of various landmarks around us. Memory is a pretty short thing. But It doesn't seem like so very long ago. when you stop and con centrate, that we were bemoaning the fate of another high-placed scenic landmark: The view of the Wood River Valley from Sun Mountain on old US 97 when it took off from the Fort Klamath Junction and headed out for the hill and Sand Creek on the other side. The first wails that went up over this road were evoked when some of the big old pines studding its sides were sawed down and carted off to make houses. We all railed and ranted and wept large and ealty tears over this desecration of natural beauty. But once the trees were down we were all well pleased by the ultimate result, plenty of limber was left standing and now, with some of the big ones gone, you had a view fiom the road that gave you all of the valley, the beauty of the winding, crystal clear stream and on down to Klamath Lake in the back ground. All was well and good. Then came the new highway that bypassed Sun Mountian and 6aved minutes on the road north. No longer did we drive the hill in nasty weather. No more fighting the snow and ice in the winter. But, on the other hand, no more drink ing the beauty of the valley from this vantage point Our mind set in motion by these thoughts we went up there the oth er day to see if the snow gates had been opened. They had. And there It was that We rediscovered an other thing that memory had slipped over in the past few years Kimball Park. Sitting there, all alone and lonely now that the traffic whizzes by many miles away over a new road, the park nestles in the shad ow of Sun Mountin, reflecting her CAUGHT in Charles Epaminondas Seavey is about to perform his final and greatest feat of magic for the bene lit of Klamath audiences a disap pearing trick. We're sorry to see Chuck leave. It's not just that he's been man ager of the telephone company here for the past 16 years and now well have to get acquainted with the new man. Chuck Seavey has been a regu lar Klamath guy. He has been one of the most active members of the big Elks Lodge. It's, PER Seavey. He's been a working Ki wanian. Getting back to Uie magic, Sea vey is an accomplished amateur magician and has lent his talents to many a Klamath audience young and old. The Seaveys were married while here and their two children are native daughters. Our guess was that it would be a little tough for him to leave. A street corner con versation with Chuck the other day confirmed this . , . and ex plained what is luring him away. He will become a member of a sort of general staff of the com pany in Portland one of 10 or 12 top administrative officers. His new assignment will give him plenty of elbow room. He will work out a sort of mobile, one man World's Fair exhibit to the wonders of telephone science and this, we don't doubt for a minute, will be blended with some of the old Seavey magic. Come to think of it, the man will be roving ambassador of PT&T, so you'd better get set for another, reappearing, magic trick some months hence. Speaking of magic: Chewing gum Is still S cents a package, for the same size, same quality pack. Same as in pre New Deal days. Another kind of a magician was in the other day, telling us about magic with battery acid. The man, Roger G. Ake of Goshen, Calif., has a rig that sprays sulphuric acid on alkali spots in farm land which im mediately converts the dead spots Into productive soil. B Cartful th lift you tavi may be your ewnl Spomond In Hi Interest of your lately by .Herald and' News' BILL, JENKINS Managing Editor JENKINS trees in the Ice cold river thai bubbles out of the side of th mountain there. The water is s clear as to be almost unbelievable When the area was logged th biggest trees around the spur, were saved, and the second growt. has already started to creep down toward the water's edge again. The state set the lnnd aside as a public park to honor the hue Jack Kimball. They built tables and fireplaces for the people to use. Roads were bulldozed through the soft pumice dirt to make ac cess easy. And then we moved the high way away from it and took away the heavy travel. But perhaps it wasnt such a bad move at that. Now there is peace and quiet there. No danger from speeding cars ripping around the curve on screaming tires. Only the noise of occasional picnickers is heard now. And not many of them, to judge from the appearance ot uie place. That it was once a busy park you can see. The tin can tourists have dimpled the sanay oea or uie river with a rare collection of beer cans, old plates, bottles, broken silverware, can openers. hubcaps and what have you. But in time the river will cover up these insults to her dignity. And the tall grass has grown over the tractor tracks that were torn in the sod during the logging seasons of past years. The dust has settled ouietly on tne old logging roao. ana now it is a peaceful place to sit and dream. If you are looking for a scenic spot within easy reach of Klam ath Falls or any other Basin point, all on the pavement, and affording all the facilities you could reason ably demand this is your spot. There isn't a prettier park in the state than Kimball Park. But beautv suffers alone. It needs ad miration. And that's what it de serves from us, the people around, who ought to visit it more fre quently. The ROUNDS By'Dta-AODISON c Ake has worked at this since 1947, hasn't burned himself or anyone else up, and has developed quite a business. He designed the spray truck himself. A big black iron tank holds the acid. He uses 93.2 per cent, nearly pure sulphuric acid. "If you remember your chem istry," he said, which we didn't, "you know that black iron will hold the pure stuff. If it were half acid and half water it would eat right through. "We have to be very careful to keep people away from it. It looks just like water. We have to be sure that farmers keep their dogs away from the operation, too. A dog got into a freshly treated area once. It burned his pads, but he got over it." Ake charges $50 a ton to apply the acid. That makes the cost too high to treat whole areas, but it can be economically used to treat alkali spots in productive fields, because any yield off such spots is velvet. He will apply about 5000 tons of sulphuric acid on farm lands this year, some of it in the Klamath Basin. That's battery acid magic on a large scale. THANKS KLAMATH FALLS I would like to take this means in which to publicly thank the Stewart-Lenox Fire Department, and also the neighbors who came so promptly and worked so hard to save the buildings on our property, and to control the grass fire which broke out in our neighborhood last week. I also want to thank the boys and children who did their part too. I am sure I am expressing the thankfulness of the other people in the neighborhood too, because if this fire had not been controlled quickly, it could have endangered many nomes. Mrs. O. G. Hirengen Hli brand ntw car Wa running fin Until thai kit On Highway 91 They'll Do It Every VoO COULD CATCH THAT EMPTY CA8 IF OU'D HUSTLE OK WHis it I BUT VOL) FIGURE- Mi I mm !f KB7.UIT SHAFER, mM2C& WVlCjS i , i I I .! cKcd NEW YORK Ifl Girls, our success formula tor today is sim ple: "Stay in there and keep pitch ing those curves." The symbol of this vibrant max im is Marilyn Monroe, who has proved an ambitious girl doesn't have to come to the big city to get ahead. She can do it in her own home town. At nine Marilyn earned five cents a month spending money setting tables in a Los Angeles orphans home. At 2t. in the nearbv film atudio where she now has to wait on no body, she draws down $750 a week. In Hollywood, where she is rated as one of the most sultry discov eries since the late Jean Harlow, this naturally is considered peon age. "They keep saying that one of these days they'll tear up my con tract and write me a better one," she said. "And one of these days I wish they would." She arrived for our luncheon ap pointment in good time well before dusk. "They keep me so busy," she complained, "Sorry I'm so late." She turned her wide blue eyes on me. and I had an uneasy feel ing they would melt and drip on the table. Then she sat down beside me real close and I had an uneasy feeling that maybe I'd melt. "I was having my hair fixed in my hotel room, and all I had on was a towel," she said, and added carefully "a small towel. "Some reporters were on the other side of the door asking me questions. And such questions! They wanted to know If I knew how many stomachs' a cow had, and they seemed real surprised when I gave them the right an swer four. "Then they asked me If I knew what heat was? I told them sure heat is something that is gene rated. Isn't that right?" Marilyn, who recently was In a (Oh. . (p. Mrs. K. asks a number of ques tions about birthmarks, and since there are few things which worry parents more than these skin de fects on their children, the subject is well worth discussing. Mrs. K. says, among other things, that she has heard of sev eral methods of having birthmarks removed, and wants to know which is the best and safest way. Unfortunately, this question cannot be given an absolute an swer, since there are several kinds of birthmarks: and since birth marks vary in size and location the way in which they should be treated Is Influenced by all of these factors. Fortunately, many birthmarks are so small, covered with hair, or placed in such an inconspicuous part of the body that they do not require any treatment. Some birthmarks are made up of numerous tiny blood vessels In the skm. Such a "mark" Is cauen a hemangioma. Some are level with the surface Family Wins Ocean Fight BOSTON 11 A Harvard University-bound New Zealand physi cian and his family "down to our last can of bully beef" have ar rived In Peru aboard their 48-foot ketch after battling the stormy Pa cific on an 11-week voyage. Dr. R. A. Davis wrote Harvard officials In a letter received yes terday that hurricane-force winds lashed the vessel on its 6,750-mile trip from Wellington, New Zealand. The Mlru, with Davis, 34, his wife Lydia and their sons, John, 10, and Timothy, 5, and two New Zealand crewmen aboard, limped Into Callao, Peru, last Monday. After her fuel oil tanks ran dry, the craft crawled Into port with her auxiliary engine running Jerk ily on kerosene from the galley stove. Her sails were torn In the long bout with raging .winds. Davis, who will do graduate work at the Harvard School of Pub lic Health, will head the ketch to ward Boston on her final 3,000 mile leg tomorrow. Time J ENOU6M-C48S COME AlOti&- ill II (Boijk film called "Monkey Buslnrss. rather enjoys people who lake her for a real life dumb blonde. She Is dumb the same way Mae West is. At the moment she Is rather amazed by the public interest in her disclosure that she never wears brassieres, girdles or any other form of underclothing, and sleeps rnw except for a nightly dab of perfume. "It's more comfortable not to wear underclothing, and I don't like to feel wrinkles." she said. "What's so unusual about that? Vou must know a lot of girls who do the same thing and who put on perfume before going to sleep." (Editor's note: If Bnyle does, he never mentioned It before.) Miss Monroe feels most Ameri can women should follow her ex ample and emancipate themselves trom oras, corsets, mid girdles. "But. first, some of them ought to exercise." she said, "In order to be ... to be . . . you know . . . firm. I exercise with light weights myself. "I lie on my back with my arms overhead and lift the weights 15 times. It Is a kind of pull against gravity. I guess. I used to walk a lot, too. Walking up a steep hill is the best thhig for a woman's legs." But what about the subject on the minds of 10.000,000 girls this leap year how to catch a hus band? Marilyn, whose own mar riage at 16 didn't last, guve two simple rules: "1. A girl should follow her In stincts. "2. That will about take care of things, as Instincts are Im portant." As for sex. la current events topic most movie stars and base ball players usually have opinions on). Miss Monroe said: "Truthfully. I've never given It a second thought." And she was gone before I thought of asking her what her first thought was. Qohdan of the skin but have a dnrk pur plish color which gives them the common name of port wine mark. Others made up of blood vessels are raised above the skin level and are soft and spongy. Tnesc are called strawberry marks. This type may occur anywhere, but It is particularly common around the lip or tongue. Another common variety of birthmark made up of blood ves sels is irregularly shaped and slightly raised. It is called a spi der nevus because the blood ves sels at the center look like the body of a spider while the smaller ones passing outward resemble its legs. There are various ways of treat ing port wine nevus- or birth marks, all aimed at closing off the blood vessels in them, so that blood ceases to flow through. Car bon dioxide snow may be used for the small ones. These birthmarks require deli cate handling, however, as there is some danger of leaving an abnormal skin after the port wine birthmark has been destroyed. Radium treatment is effective, also, in some cases. There Is also a treatment with what Is called the Grenz ray which Is sometimes helpful. The same kinds of treat ment can be considered for the strawberry mark, or the spider nevus. The proper treatment for a birthmark depends on the location, the size, and the particular variety of the defect. What should or should not be done for a' particular birth mark is best decided by a physi cian who Is thoroughly familiar with all the factors involved. Ballot Measure Bars Rainmakers MEDFORD tm The Moisture Conservation League's measure to ban cloud-seeding Is the only Initi ative measure which will appear on the Jackson County election ballot this fall. If approved by voters, the mea sure would make cloud-seeking for weather control purposes Illegal. Larqctt piano stock in this part of the West Knabe Kimball Wurlifzer By Jimmy llatlo oui IMC? INC ALL. FILLED -WURSA-WHTRA- IT SO HAPPENS EVERy SIN'oLE TWE.' Stevenson May Urge T-H Repeal By HKL.MAN MO It IN SPRINOFIELD, III. l.fl-Gov. Art ist Stevenson began drafting a set of Labor Day speeches today, and speculation has again arisen as to whether he will come out for repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act. The Democratic presidential con dldate returned to Spriugneld from New York late yesterday. He leaves Monday morning by air for Grand Ropitl.. Mich., and goes from there to Detroit. Pon tiac and Film. His talks will deal mainly with labor problems, an aide sold. Some political observers believe he may mako Labor Day the occasion for advocating repeal of the Taft-Hartley Law. The governor told reporters re cently: "It would seem to me Hint the area of agreement to attain the objectives of equal justice for em ployer and employe is enlarging. And mavbe It Is better to remove the political symbolism ot the name, 'Taft-Hartley' by repeal. "What we need an what the country wants, however, I the re sultand that Is much more im portant to me Uian the method by which It Is attained." The foray Into Michigan opens Stevenson's second major trip of the campaign. After the four appearances there, he Is scheduled to go to Denver. Minneapolis, Kasxon, Minn., Chey enne, Wyo.. and then to Washing ton, Oregon, California, Arizona and New Mexico. Stevenson said he was "very much pleosed" with the results of his two days of speeches and meetings in and around New York. But his campaign manager, Wil son Wyatt, said "The New York trip created more confidence than we feel is good for us at this carlv stage In the campaign." Stevenson said his emphasis on civil rights legislation, stated In the New York talks, was not a strategic maneuver designed to force Gen. Dwlght D. Elsenhower, his Republican opponent, Into the open on that question. Elsenhower begins a campaign swing through the Southern stales next week. "I went down to make some set speeches," he said, "and I said what I had to say at each ol them." Warships Seek Blasted Tug TOKYO W Three U. S. warships began an almost immediate search Inst Wednesday midnight for sur vivors of the Navy tug Sarsl, which hit a mine off Korea and sank without a chance to call lor help, the Navy said today. Quickness of the search probably was largely responsible for 92 of the tug's 07 crewmen being saved. Four of the survivors due at the Sascbo Navy Base, Southern Japan today were seriously hurt. The Navy said two crewmen were killed and three missing. The 205-foot Sarsl sank in 120 feet of water within 20 minutes after hitting the mine three miles off Hungnam, the Korean East Coast port from U. N. forces wero evacuated during the first Commu nist offensive In December, lObl). The Navy said the explosion de stroyed the Sarsl's communication equipment. But the captnlns of the destroyer Body and minesweepers Zeal and Competent became con cerned when they could not make radio contact with the Barsl and began an Immediate search. The three ships arrived at the scene of the disaster within 30 minutes. Those killed were Identified e Steward 20 Hampton Curtis Carter and Chief Quartermaster Raymond Shirley Parrlsh, both of San Diego. Missing were Radarman 3C Rob ert T. Slattcry, Mllford, Mass.; Damage Controlman 1C Charles H. Kunsch Jr., Omaha, Neb., and Yeoman 3C Hubert N. Dcmarcst, Parslppany, N. J. For a Useful Gift . . . Shop Vloght's Pioneer Office Supply, 620 Main. Registration Opens Sept. 2 KLAMATH KINDERGARTEN Pre-School Training Limited Truman Assumes Major Campaign Role IlKil m watt it t A 111. yvnn uisciosure or wmsuc-ziop nan By i itNiis r n. V At (MtO WASHINGTON i, President Truman assumed a major role In the 111.12 Democrat lo campaign to day wllh disclosure nl his first "whistle stop" schedule Monday mid Tuesday and n Western speak ing cligaitctncnt III October. From all Indications, Truman Is going lo stump just as hold fur Oov, Adlal Slevensiui'N election ami with all his glve-'eui-hell fla vor as If he were i-utuilug himself. Stevenson reportedly favors a less active role lur Ihe President. Hut Truman told a news con ference last week Kteveusoll must run on the record of the Roosevelt and Truman administrations. And he Intends to try lo sell that record lo the inters, Hl first major prepared address Louisiana Electors Bolt Over Tidelands Oil Issue lly SAM JOHNSON NEW ORLEANS ifl Six of Louisiana's 10 Democratic presi deniial electors have resumed In prolr.sl to Gov. Adlal Htovcmon's stand against state ownership of rich oil-bearing llileliituls. The four remaining electors have Indicated thev have no intentions of bolting. Onlv one ot the resigned electors has been replaced as vet. In the latest revolt, Neville Lew of New Orleans unit Edward V. p a v y of Opelousas vesterdav lolned four other electors who had previously resigned. Gov. titevensou declared recently Ibut he agreed Willi President Tru inan's veto of a bill that would hnvo given the stales title lo the lutein nds. Lew. in his letter of resignation, asserted : ". . . There conies a time when there can be no iurlher compro mise and ttlut period has now been reached. "I li'ive been a lifelong Demo crat, and I Intend to remain a Democrat, but I cannot place a IHilKlcal parlv above the principle of slate sovereignly as wrllten Into the Constitution of the United Bates." Pnvv advised N. B. Carstarphen of Shrevenort. chairman ot Ihe mate urnincralc Centrnl commit tee, that he was resigning and said: "I feel the best Interest of Ihe penDle of our country as a whole and the state ot Louisiana In par GOP Soys Foreign Policy Is No. 7 Campaign Issue WASHINGTON W A Repub lican committee ot which Sen. Hub ert Toft Is chairman has put out a cunipaign program listing for eign policy as the number one Is sue of this election year. The Ho - page loose - leaf pom. phlet was prepared under the di rection of George II. K. Hnilth, who Is permanent staff director of the Senate Republican Policy Committee. Although Taft Is the chairman of iiuu coiuniiuee, u ua uov aiiuwu whether he had a direct hand In outlining the pamphlet. The Ohio senator has been va cationing In Canada since .the Re publican convention lost month. The Policy committee docu ment, entitled "Background Mater ial on Ma lor Campaign Issues In 1052," lists as kev Issues In addi tion to foreign policy; Corruption In government, com munists In government, extiendt lures and economv. civil rights, and tho record of Republicans In recent sesnlon ol the Conirres.. Here are come of the tilings ihe document has to sav: "Twenty years i.. Democratic rule of American foreign policy Senator Lodge Raps Adlai For Insincere Doubletalk NEW YORK Wl Sen. Henry Cubot Lodge Jr. Frldav denounced as a "pious. Insincere pieco of double talk" Gov, Adlal E. Eleven son's statement Thursday night against congressional Hlibusteni. The Massachusetts senotor. who was chairman of Gen. Dwlght D. Eiscnhowvr'B presidential cam paign advisory committee, said the Democrats had controlled the Sen ate for four years and had "done nothing about It." Stevenson sold Thursday that If elected president he would use whatever Influence he might have "to get tho Senato lo change its rules under which filibusters nave killed civil rights legislation." The Democratic presidential nominee said "the sound of tire less voices Is the price we pay for the right to hear the music of our own opinions. But there Is also a moment at which democracy must prove Its capacity to act. Every man has a right to be heard, but no man has tho right to strangle democracy with a single set ot vo cal chords." Lodge told a news conference at Elsenhower's headquarters that the Democratic presidential nom inee had said Thursday night In a speech that he was proud to have Sen. John J. Sparkman of Ala bama as a running mote and only hoped that he could keep up with him. Declaring Sparkman expressed strong opposition to a civil rights program in Mobile, Ala., speech RADIOS BEST BUYS KFJI 7:30 a.m. Enrollment will be mode at tl Stl p, in., EST, Monday III the Spoils Aleuii at Milwaukee under Joint rlo-AIT, auspices. That trip In Milwaukee blossomed llils week Into a foniilil oble stopplnii lour, Announcement Unit he will spenk Oct. 1 at the dedication ot the Hungry Horse Dam In Western Montana came yesterday, aluim with Hie Labor Hay Itinerary vlili-n lllilU-ules possibly seven otl-tlie. cull talks from ihe back plaKuiin o! his special tialii. The I'resldeiii is expected lo make Ihe Montana trip by special train, too, mid thei'n ale lucreiisini: Indication that tour also would develop Into a "whistle slop" drive. Kioin now on nut, Ihe Demo crude National Committee limy ticular will not be served bv the election ol Uov. Htevetison." Htresslng Ihe lliiancial loss t tint Louisiana. Texas, and Cullloniln might suiter if the lederal uovein- liiem retains comioi in uir (in shore lotuU, Paw estimated Lou isiana s income uom iiueianii on royalties would earn the stale all estimated 30 million dollars a vear. Hie electors' revolt is part ot the polltlrnl turmoil 111 Louisiana Hint prompted Gov. Robert Kenuoii lo declare yesterday: "For all practical purposes Lou- an lar as the November elecllnu is concerned, nemier nnriv inn Mifely mark Luulsoita In Its column." Louisiana last went Itepuuiican III HTM. Many Louisiana anil Southern Democrots oimose the national Democratic niailorm. mirilcului lv Its stand on tidelands and Its plonk that rails for teilerol action In Ihe Held ot civil rluhts. Tills uroim contends the civil rights problem Is one for the stale lo solve To lake odvnnuee of Mils split In nemoeralle ranks. Louisiana 'Republican hove pledoed an In tensive camnolen lo eonture voles of dl'sntlsfted Democrat nod In- ttienenoeni voiers mr viru. i.wiu.i, I Elsenhower. Republican preslden illnl nominee. Elsenhower has advocated state I ownership ol Ihe tidelnnds and ol I lowing the stales to settle the civil 'rtiihls problem. has been a failure." 'Mere substitution of Stevenson for Truman" would mean no change at all In policies of the fed eral government. Oov. Adlal Stevenson, the Dem ocratic nominee, owe. hi nomi nation and support to "powerful bureaucrat and the special Inter est Rroups." "Orntt, bribery, favoritism and other forms ot moral and criminal crookedness have existed for the en tire 20 yearn of the Hoosevelt-Tru-man reglmo'ln varying degrees. "This sore against the public Interest and national welfare has been permitted to fester until to day its poison has been disclosed to tnlnt the administration from top to bottom. " "Pretilent Truman set the tone for the moral degeneration which marks the administration." Rise of Communists "to power In United States government dates from the first term of Franklin D. Roosevelt." "The Democratic party did not put n single civil rights measure on the statute books" during the past 20 years. April 17. 1050. Lodge said Steven son "con keep up with him all right If that's as fur as he's going on civil rights." Lodge, holding the news con ference breaklastlng with Elsen hower, snld the general had ex pressed hlmseli very airongiy in favor of curbing filibusters. "He Is for every measure that will promote civil rights without deleatlng Us own purpose," Lodge said. Lodge noted that If he won his own campaign for reelection In Massachusetts and that If the Re publicans obtained a majority In the Senate, he would become chalr iin of tho Senate Rules Commit tee. "I will fight filibuster as long as It takes to end Jlllbusleis, ' Lodge sold. "It never hns been done and I am tho boy who wants to do It." He snld he would call hearings In January to get a change In the rules to eliminate llllbusteih and expressed confidence that such a proposnl could he placed on the Senate calendar within a month after the hearings bogon. THE f EIGHT COMPLETE CLEANING AND POLISHING UNITS IN ONE Repairs on all makes of vacuum cleaners Pick Up and Delivery cauZ-0131 VVAyAVVVvAAVA)VJV No. 3 Lytton St., Klamath pay Truman's expenses because It will lie dllllcult lor thn I'resldent to I ii Ik without even-tiling he says being labeled political. Ail exception Is nuide by lh White House lo a aclieiiulril talk Truman will moke In I'hlladelphia Hept, HI at it luncheon III coiuirullnn with the Hireling of Ihe American Hospital A'tsoclallon, Apparently the bulk or Truman' political Hotels, If Hot all of them, will be bv npeelul Hum. 11 will cost the National Committee less Tni'ie might he criticism of the use ol the White House plane, Um "Independence," for navel to talks politic III, On the other hand costs for Tru man's Havel by Irani ar not licnvv. The bullet-proof prlvata car hi which he travels Is owned bv lite government, and the only ex-prn-.r involved In Ihe payment of lu llisl clats fares for the occu. pants of the private car. Any overflow of Tiuitiau ntaffri pay first class lure and Pullman ai-coinnioilollons. A bhr hltato ot Ilia cost Is paid by newspaper, radio, news inagolue correspondent, television (inner men who gu along to cover Ihe trip. They bava lo pay first cla.-. fain plus th regulur chin ti lor their di awing lOullls, Fores o Hie Secret Hervlce men who go along aro paid by Um law llu-ir Job calls for lliem i0 be Willi Ihe Pleslilellt at all times, Tt union appeared likely to ntai t his litlkn Monday when the presi dentin I special rolls lino I'lllsliuruli al 7.M a. in., Fill'. Wliern Mayor David Lawrence, lleituierntli. no. I (loiinl coiiiiiiitlreiuan, will lead a I delegation lu iho President's pri- atr car. Another hack platform nppear I anco may be expected at Crest ; Hue, Ohm, at U.o.i p. in., KMT. Moiuluy. Tuesday In Iks on Ihe way 'back to Washington were In the cards for five West Virginia points ! I'urkei sbill g, I J 41 p. in., KHT; : Clarksburg, 2 iS p, m., Grafton. 3 Is p. in . Keyser. U p. in. and I Morim ibui n, 7 5S p. in. Trillium will talk with a deleua- lion wlien the train leaches Cm cllinoll at 8 Si) . in , KHT. Tue. day, but Hie While House said Ihe physical setup there virtually rules out n speech. Truman will leave Washincinn I Sunday at II M p. m , KHT, and j return nl O ttl p. ni . KrlT. Tuesday, lie Is due lu Milwaukee al S p, in , KHT. Monday (or a slay ol cxacllr 2!j hours. Adlai, Nixon To See Oregon Two leading figure In the presi dential campaign are to campaign in Oregon In September. Hen. Hichord Nixon of California, Republican vice presidential nom inee, will lour Western Oregon and arrive In Portland Sepi. 20. He In scheduled to speak at OOP pic Uie next dav. Ills first atop In Oregon will bo at Ashland Sept. 10. from there he will go to Mcdford tor a night lueech. The next dv he will speak at Roseburg, Eugene, Albany and Salem. . ' " ' ; Gov. Adlal Stevenson of Illlnoli, Democratic, presidential candidate, will spenk In Portland tot. 8. then go to Seattle for an evening ad dress. Commissioner Back To Work PENDLETON Wl Edward J. Bell, on leave of absence for the past year, will resume his duuei a administrator of tho Oregon Wheat Commission next week. He has been In Manila working wllh the government.', Point Four program. He returned lo his fam ily hero last week but left for Wash ington. D. C, to report on the Mo nila project. He expects to return to Oregon Sunday, 1)1 KE mX'OV'LHK.n CANNKS. Franco (Pi The Duke of Windsor has recovered from hi recent gout attack report! Swed ish doctor back from Blarrau where he gnvo tho royol Brllon dolly gymnastic exercises. The physician ald the iluko plans to return to Paris Sept. 15. THINKING OF CARPET? High Slylcd Wools Luxuriant Cottons Wall to Woll Room Sizci WE WILL SAVE YOU MONEY! See STAN PARK FOR CARPET PRICED TO YOUR BUDGET "A Phone call will bring temples to your homt" W. WAYNE MARTIN 194S So. 6th Ph. 8370 "We're Floor Covering By Trode" Falls, Ore. h 'r Other Leading Make Pianos Low Prices, Low Terms Rent a Piano Rent and Apply Plan Louis R. Mann Piano Co. 120 N. 7th Hammond Organ SEWING MACHINE SERVICE and EXCHANGE revii.utft " DUO(Mft ) 211 E. Main Ph. 3672 or 2-0251 422 Main St. Phone 6771 7