Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 13, 1953, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
SATURDAY, JUNE 13, 1953
' , PRANK JENKIN3
,..J, " '
r tntered u second class matter at
' All All m let nn itina . I
. ibuo uiiucr act 01 uongress. March a. 1179
MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED MESS
It irS!00!18? pres ta euUUed exclusively to the use (or publication
wvt uowj pnraw in
MAIL V--.-.
, I month ; gi.35
t montha $ 6.50
ye" , IIM
BILLBOARD
By BILL JENKINS
The Old West had a brief flash
of glory again last Thursday, and
the queen candidates and their es
corts bad a wonderful time.
The occasion was the annual
. queen's outing, held this year at
me Liskey Ranch un the VBlley.
- And If you think there wasn't plen
: ty of fun and excitement you
cnould have been along.
Everything in the way of fun
and games, from the start right on
tnrougn to the wlndup.
Mabel Liskey did It up brown,
. as only the Liskey'n can. and bull.
, dozed out a road from the feed
lot well up on the high, rocky
. ridges tack of the ranch, where
a tent and. tables were set up on
a promontory affording a view of
two valleys, the distant . ranches
and the rolling hills of Foe Valley
and the foothills.
The queens and their horses took
off from the fairgrounds with Keith
Rice, one of the rodeo directors,
furnishing a truck to haul 'em and
Dale "Two Uun" Mattoon out to
lend a hand, along with a few
other directors who stood around
and eave good advice.
Having gotten them off, Charley
Read took off in bis pickup . to
letch the Sheriff's Fosse s chuck
wagon, the fancy one with built
In stoves and all the trimmings,
Anyhoo, we all wound up at the
' ranch and from there the trip real
ly got off. The queens and their
Caddie Club escort rode off Into the
hills escorted by a pair of the
younger Liskeys while the rest of
us . checked the ranchhouse and
picked up little Items like water,
mnt," pop, emu oeans, etc.
Then off Into the hills and up to
the picnic spot. All well and going
smoothly. Left the picnic spot to
neaa oacc lor town and found the
chuck wagon kitty-cornered across
the road halfway up with one wheel
leaning over at a discouraging an
gle and a well broken axle.
At least we had a few advan
tages that the old pioneers didn't
have when they crossed the plains.
We sat down and waited while a
ranch truck oame up with a weld
ing outfit on It and an expert to
. run it. After great deal of grunt
ing, Jacking, hammering and use
of a cutting torch a weld-was
finally achieved In a temporary.
lasnion. -
How temporary we didn't know.
With cheers amid cloud of dust we
took off again, only to collapse In
a few yards with the axle dangling
again.
: From here on out It was the
CAUGHT IN
By DEB ADDISON .
THIS IS A MEMORABLE time. It
. wiu be remembered as the Coro
nation Month, when "Lllllbet" be
came Queen Elizabeth II of Eng
land. It will be remembered as the
month of the armistice of the Ko
rean War and-or the third anniver
sary of same. Yesterday, June 13,
was remembered as the 100th an
niversary of the discovery of Cra
ter Lake.' Tomorrow, June 14, will
be remembered as the 50th anni
versary of the day Bob Sproat, an
emigrant from Scotland, sailed past
the Statue of Liberty en route to
, Boise, Idaho. It further will be
remembered as the 23th annlver-
. eary of the time that Bob Sproat,
Idaho sheep man, arrived In Klam
ath Falls to enter the furniture
business. It still further will be
remembered as that nasty, wet
spring when people said that the
atomlo explosions raised hob with
the weather.
IN SPITE OF THE millions of her
loyal subjeots who crowded Lon
don to see the coronation, there
probably were more people in oth
er parts of the world who saw
Elizabeth get her crown through
electronics and celluloid. TV sent
it all over the--world: now you can
get a front row seat and see It in
color In a movie theater.
Friends who saw the coronation
on TV In San Francisco and Fort
land said that here, for once, was
something good on video. They
said that the commentary by Sir
Lawrence Olivier, the knighted ac
tor, was something that cannot be
tied.
And that brings up an Ameri
canism which is one of the typical
tilings that mukes a typical British
er look down his august nose at us.
The British provided a perfect tele
cast, which gave a better view of
the ceremony than any of the lords
and ladles had, fend turned It loose
to the world for the good of the
empire. The American TV net
works than sold the "show" to ad
vertising sponsors.
The British didn't think it quite
cricket to show Her Royal High
ness kneeling at the Stone of Scone
and then flash on a deodorant
commercial on the horrors ol BO.
LET'S SWITCH from memorable
events to very prosaic, but very
Important, events: school board
elections. On Monday, the 15th,
' voters in the city elementary dis
trict and in the county district will
elect new school board member
each.
The polls for the city elementary
. voting will be at Fremont school,
open from 3:00 until 8:00. Voters
will choos between Mrs, L. A.
I Lethal Murphy and Hal Oeiger.
Mrs. Murphy Is a housewife and
community worker, the wife of
PICTURI rSAMDJO
BILL JENKINS ' '
Managing Editor
the post olce ol Klamath Falls, Ore.,
-
tms newspaper ai weu as all AP newt.
BX CABBIES
1 month $1.35
months f 1.19
l year $16.30
pioneer spirit, and Jack Liskey
came through like a pioneer. He
dashed back to the ranch, rum
maged about until he found a cou
ple of Hardwood beams, a few as
sorted chains and a tool kit and
came back up. Then a rig was
fixed that differed not a whit from
the skids that our forefathers used
when a wheel broke on one of their
Cones toga wagons. The beams
were jammed under the ruptured
wheel, the end was boosted over
the bumper of a pickup, a hole
bored through them and jack han
dle inserted to keep 'em clinging
to the bumper and In no time at
all the make shift rig was whisked
up to tlie picnic site. :
From there on out It was a mat
ter of eating, drinking hot coffee
made on the chuck wagon and hav
ing fun. .
A large sized vote of thanks
should certainly go to Mabel and
her hospitality to the girls and the
rest of tne party.
And to an tne people who had
a hand In It. It's one of the big
tnings lor tne gins who form the
royal court of oowboydom. On top
oi Being a lot ol fun.
We might mention the fact there
that there were a few of us up
there with problems. Like Charley
not being able to get the chuck
wagon back .-to. town. Then there
was me, who had pledged to be
back at the office not later than
ten In the morning. With the road
blocked and work to be supervised
couldn't very well make it. now
could I? And then there was B.C.
Stew" Bowie, the manager of the
telephone company. While he's out
there the nhone at the ranch e-oes
on the fritz and we can only get
cans coming in. No outgoing calls.
What a predicament for a phone
oniciai. noi to mention us. or
Oreer Drew, another director, who
was wearing what he calls "track
boots," those crepe soled' cowboy
boots with ventilated tops. He was
wondering if they were fancy
enough and if the tops would let
in dirt. They didn't. And Newt Nel
son and Ray Durfee, who got In
last minute nets as musicians with
guitar and a fiddle to lend that
old Western atmosphere. All that
after helping out with the busted
wagon.
And last, but not least. In the
problem parade. Roy Mumhy and
nant Ring, Doth of whom were
plagued with cars that heated on
the climb. i
Oh well, it was fun. And well
worm it.
THE ROUNDS
"Jack" Murphy, the barber. Clnl.
ger Is the business agent of the
1WA-U1U.
- Foils for the county district elec.
tlon will be at each county elemen
tary school, open from 3:00 until
B.oo. While Clark Abbott and Bill
Burnett both were persuaded to
run for' the county board, 'only
Burnett's name will appear on the
ballot. The petition to make Abbott
a candidate officially didn't get
uirougn me worts in time.
Burnett is an East Langell Val
ley farmer. Abbott Is the Copco
manager at Bly. To vote for Bur
nett, put an X before his name?
to vote for Abbott you'll have to
write his name in and also mark
and X In front of It.
Each county sub-district also will
vote on Its local school committee,
which Is a local advisory board.
The KUHS board election Is not
until a week later, Monday the
22nd. Then voters will go to the
high school to choose between Jack
Unman, running for a second term:
ana bod Thompson, ex-mayor of
the City of Klamath Falls. ;
Those elected to each of the three
boards will serve 5-year terms. :
Don't ever, ever bellyache about
taxes (most local tax money goes
to the schools) or about the way
our schools are run unless you get
out and vote for the candidate of
your choice.
Bulgaria Joins
Rioting Czechs
VIENNA 11 Unconfirmed re
ports reaching Vienna Friday said
riots, demonstrations and strikes
are still sweeping Communist Che
choslovakia and that similar dis
turbances have broken out In Bul
garia. The reports, lacking authorita
tive confirmation, claim that
Czech workers at Moravska Os
travacapital of the n a 1 1 o n's
"Ruhr Valley" and in Bratislava,
capital of Sovakla, have rioted and
clashed with police since troops
suppressed a near-revolution in
Pilsen, June 1 to 5.
Overworked, under . nourished
miners, angered by the loss of
their savings and reduction of
their buying power through a dras
tlo currency reform on May so,
were reported to have torn down
pictures of Stalin and Lenin in the
mines. They allegedly pasted up
photographs of Thomas o. Mssa
ryk and Eduard Benes, Czech Re
publican heroes now discredited
by the Communist regime.
-! DC Read
SPOT ADS
-you art!
(rTheyll Do It Every Time
i.ON THIS WE EV OF XJR Jtl ZteMyZ, aTcW- BE X
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WORKERS WAHT KXiTOrM W. WJJt SRs" UMAzfixSMA
THIS AU.I6AT0R BRIEF C4SE- H V" , HOME 7 J lffisi 1 J you BOTH WrtP
fsf isrrtf f5l6 BUSINESS BRAIN'S
v. Wfo&&y XSzm Picks out the gifts for
i : ajCNw flmmW HORSES PUT 00T TO PASTURE
XLHttf , jKHPjf'' JUAklX AMD A Tift HfTLOiS UMT
Along Nature's
Trail
By Ken McLeod
One hundred years have passed
since the young prospector, John
Westly' HUunan, on June 12.' 1853.
became the first white man ' of
record to look down upon Oregon's
cnoisest jcweii tne .lake - now
called "Crater:". To Hlllman goes
the honor of discovery, but in
searcning tne record one wonders
to what extent the honor Is truly
accoraea among the manv discov
erers of Oregon's famous lake. The
first man reaps the harvest, how
ever, it may not be beyond the
realm or possibility that some long
ana lorgotten trapper may have
been there before him. ..
The story of the many "discov
eries" of the Jewell of the Cascades
has been told before but I will
chance the risk of becoming a
bore and review the steps of dis
covery. It was late May or . early
June in 1863, the people of Jack
sonville heard a rumor that a
party , of Yreka miners had, dis
covered the famous "Lost Cabin"
mine a fabulously rich -"lost"
prospect supposed to be located
somewhere In the headwaters of
the Rogue or Umpqua Rivers. '
The Yreka miners were at that
very moment n their way ; to
"locate" the Oregon gold. Rumor
fired the rivalry of the hoys of
Jacksonville and so a party was
nastily organized to set out In pur
suit of the . Callfomians. O. C.
Stearns, who was well acquainted
with many of the members of the
Jacksonville trailing group, has
called the party the "Loudon-Hill.
man-McManus" party and states
mat wnne Jonn Hlllman was
member of the party he was not
the leader, to which post later
writers nave elected him.
Both the Yreka and the pursuing
Jacksonville group returned home
unsuccessful hi the quest of the
laouious" treasure thev sought
and even Hillman's discovery
passea unnoticed as being the
priceless gem of the mountains
nut merely a geological curlositv
of little value to men who sought
out oniy goia. Actual publicity re
garding this treasure of the Gas.
cades fell to the lot of other "dis-
coverers.". Stearns states tliat.
'The persons who claimed to have
first seen Crater Lake allowed 31
years to elapse before their claims
were presented to the public and
men only through another party."
The Jacksonville nartv renorted
their find to the people at home
and called ft the "Deep Blue Lake."
Apparently they practically forgot
the incident for no further publicity
appears to come from that source.
The lack of public interest is at
tributed by Stearns to the fact
that, "no paper was then published
in Oregon south of Oregon Citv."
Stearns then accuses the "dis
coverers" of lack of Imagination
and appreciation of this wonder
of Nature by stating, "As a matter
of historical truth, few peoDle
heard of the lake from any of
these reported discoverers, and
they did not really know where it
was located as they were lost
at the time of stumbling onto it.
and for several days thereafter."
The second dlscoverv of the lake
fell to Sessions Nye - and party.
another group of gold miners re
turning to Jacksonville from the
newly discovered John Day mines.
The date was October 21, 1862, and
ccoraing to steams. "Mr. Nye
states that he and his party was
told of the finding of a 'mysterious
and deep lake' somewhere In the
Cascade range, several years pre
viously by James and John Hlll
man." The Hillman's apparently
had joined the Sessions party at
the Klamkth Marsh during ' their
eastward trip to the John Day
country but did not return home
with them. The miners discovered
the lake by taking short-cut from
tho Klamath Marsh to Jacksonville
rather than going south through
Indian country to the Southern
Emigrant Road, the "Applegate
Trail." ... , v -
John Sessions later wrote a hnf
account of havln? wn i
and stated, -Tht waters were of
a deep blue color, causing us to
name it 'Blue Lake' while others
,ta .the J?rty c,lleo 'Hole
In the Ground. " ...
The third dlM?nvirw ru t-
lot Of J. M. Corhrtt anri
. Smith, numbers of Company
I. 1st., Oregon Infantry under
Captain F. B. Sprague, while the
w was nuiiding the wagon
road from Fort Klamath to Union
HOTELS
waiiRri HOLLAND
IUGINI, OKI. MiHMD
Thoroughly Modem
Mrs. J. E. Early
and Joe Early
Proprietors
THE DOCTOR SAYS
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D.
A correspondent writes ti.at.she
has been afflicted with poison ivy
at least once a year ever since she
has been in the United States for
the past 15 years. I might say
that being afflicted with poison
ivy is not restricted to those who
have come from elsewhere; many
native-born, who frequently should
know better, get into the same
trouble.
Poison Ivy grows only in North
American from Canada to Mexico.
It . is entirely absent from other
parts of the world. There is no
poison Ivy season, as the stalk is
dangerous in winter even when
the leaves are not growing. In
summer, however, more people
are out of doors and hence more
likely to be exposed to this poi
sonous skin irritant.
Thousands of neonl develon a
blistery Irritation of the akin
every year, either through pure
careie&snesa or because they do
not know enough to recognize
poison ivy when they see it. It
has been estimated that 350,000
people get Into trouble with poi
son ivy each year and that th
total time lost is In the neighbor
hood of 600,000 days.
Everyone should learn to rec
ognize the three-pointed . leaves
SAM DAWSON
NEW YORK Wl The day of
the fully automatic factory is
drawing closer because ot these
acveiopmg factors:
Automatic machine tools, still
being perfected.
New "brain machines" to solve
production problems quickly.
Wider use of control Instruments.
And devices for quick and ac
curate measurements and analysis,
such as spectrochemistry, radioac
tive tracers, and X-ray.
"Oilmen estimate there arc some
50,000 control instruments that now
guide U.S. oil refineries, reducing
to an an nut automatic pattern
the highly complicated processes
of deriving many products from
crude on.
The fully automatic machine tool
Is now possible and certain to be
perfected, in the opinion of Walter
Balrd, president of Baird Assoc!'
ates of Cambridge, Mass., maker
of direct reading spectrometers.
spectrochemistry analyzes al
loys and organic compounds by
measuring the wave length of light
emitted or aosoroed Dy atoms or
molecules present.
Spectrometers, for example, are
used by steel companies to analyze
In five minutes the metal and min
eral content of molten steel be
fore pouring time. The older meth
od was to burn the mix and photo
graph the colors of the various ele
ments. Spectrometers can also analyze
fertilizers, Insecticides, fungicides.
milk concentrates, butter, cheese,
Creek. Corbett and Smith discover
ed the lake on' Aug. 1, 1865, while
hunting to supply their camp with
meat. Stearns tens us mat "Later
in the same month the lake was
visited by Capt. Sprague, Sergeant
Stearns and civilians Bybee. Ford.
Coats and Cluggage."
The Oregon Sentinel printed a
letter' by Capt. Sprague giving the
details of this discovery and the
account of the first descent of the
rim by O. A. Stearns and Peyton
Ford. This party christened the
lake "Lake Majesty" and Stearns
states It was so known and visited
by hundreds of people the next
four years, steams states.
'Cant. Suranue blazed trail in
the lake from the wagon road he
built, and over this road and trail
traveled the first visitors who
went with the expectation of see
ing this wonder."
Stearns had a small nnininn
the "discoverers" of the lake. He
comments. "Not on of ih.
called discoverers ever re-vlslted
me iaxe or seemed to realize its
value to the state until Capt
Sprague gave It a name and
established Its exact location."
MITCH'S Grocery
OPEN SUNDAYS
7:30 o.m. to 10:00 p.m.
7 Day Week
9th & Lincoln Ph. 2-2676
S & H Green Stomps
NOW GSVEN WiTK
ALL PURCHASES
Free DELIVERY
n--"- J8y Jimmy Hario
of poison ivy, since much of the
trouble comes from failure : to
know them. Some people are
more sensitive to this poisoning
of the skin than others, but any
one may fall a victim.
I have heard people boast that
they never get poison ivy. Sooner
or later if they continue to ex
pose themselves they usually re
gret wis ooasi. u is wen known
that people who have seemed
safe for a great many years may
come down when they least ex
pect it. ...
On the other hand, a few peo
ple are extremely sensitive to
poison Ivy and can- develop
symptoms even if they -stand in
tne smoke from a fire in whlrh
poison ivy is being burned. This
is oecause tne smoke nartlcles
carry tiny droplets of the oil
from poison ivy.
There Is no wire, quick cure for
ivy poisoning, several nreDara.
tions which can be put on the skin
are neipiul. The best policy to fol
low Is to avoid the ivy plants.
If a person should come in
contact with a plant and know it.
thorough washing with soap and
water two or three times should
ne carried out, followed by rinsing
careiuiiy aiier eacn wasn: Many
cases are serious enough to re
quire a doctor's care..
many beveracres. oila and fnL. Tt
quickly measures the various ele
ments present in grains, colorants,
preservatives, meat, eggs, yeast,
and vegetables. ,
Radioactive tracers, a recent de
velopment provided by atomic
piles, are being increasingly used
in industry to let an operator "see"
quickly what is going on inside
machines, growing plants, or pipe
lines.
College Boy Sued
For $315,000 ;
YAKIMA Wi More than $315,
000 was asked for in three person
al injury suits filed In Yakima
County Superior Court Friday
against Roy Rhode of Pendleton,
Ore., a Washington State College
student.
Rhode was the driver of a car
which struck three motorcycles 21
miles northeast of Dayton May 3,
killing two persons. The suits were
filed by three Hermiston. Ore., res
idents for medical expenses and
Injuries suffered in the smashup.
Mrs. Omega Shaw and Mrs. Prls
cllla Kathleen Knudeson, whose
husbands were killed in the acci
dent, each asked damaees of 1104.-
000. They were riding tandem with
their husbands at the time of the
accident.
Leslie Davis Anderson, 32, seeks
total damaees of 1105 ooo for med
ical expenses, loss of wages and
personal Injuries.
Rhode and a woman companion
were Injured.
ooooooooo
Saturday
June 13
Music by
"Four
Notes"
DANCE
Malin
Dancino
. .
10:00 'til 2:00
ooooooooo
It Happened This Way
New Pine Creek
( , By IRVIN FARIS "
' Jupiter Pluvlus. - The elements
plus the geological -processes oi
erosion continue lo harass the
ranchers and residents of the val
ley, for It rained again I No driz
zlln' foolln' and In cloud-burst pro
portions especially last Saturday
night. Until :30 p.m. I was out In
it treadin' water and building water-trails:
retrieving wood that
was floatin' away or rentln' two
cabins;, and all the while trying to
get ready for grange thus work
ing again time.
T'was Just a big trying! Puzzling
me most was trayin' to tUure out
why a perfectly good gas stove
vent pipe should leak down water
when it projected at least 18 inches
above the roof. But it rained and
bounced and I mopped at a most
embarrassing moment clothes
soaked and face red I
Localltes who were checking the
precipitation said it rained one inch
Saturday. I would have believed
them if they'd said it rained a foot
for I was standing "two (eet in"
it as it splattered and ran by in
rivulets with a drenching steadi
ness, r
Several local farmers have re
ported some damage over the week
endr-especiauy . at the canyon
mouths where our local streams
(Pine Creek, Kelly Creek, Cotton
wood and Myrtle Creeks) empty
their bellies full of rocks, silt and
debris, a the first bend of the chan
nel In the valley floor. The dam
age has been mostly in tne form
of washing out gullies down through
grain fields. Kelly Creek over
flowed It's banks and ran across
the highwy at the Leebmann ranch
and part of a hillside slid into Jim
Vincent s irrigation ditch and scat
tered the water out across his
field. At Cottonwood, Carmen Flem
ing's concrete - division headgate
washed out and the main channel
filled up with boulders. The creek
cut a new channel out around and
on down through his feed-lot just
below the Bill Allen ranch. It did
some damage to his alfalla field
and went on down to over-flow
across the old highway (now a coun
ty road) and made gullies m a cor
ner of Charlie Vincent's grain land,
lying between the old and the new
highway.
Raging Pine Creek washed out
the old highway bridge down by
the Ernest Robnett place which, to
save his premises from being flood
ed should tt drop down on (he up
stream side, had to be suspended
with longer stringers. If this had
not been done his yard had a good
chance of being washed away and
doing considerable damage. The
bridge is considered unsafe for ira
flc. Everyone is crying for more
sunshine and less moisture in this
area ' as the continued . wetness
stands a good chance q rotting
some ot the seed. Some of the
fields In the lower lands have not
all been planted yet nor will they
be if dryer weather does not come
soon. But the Weather Man, being
of antiquity and unchangeable. Is
without the modern press-button
facilities, so the rain continues out
of control.
Brother Don and Louis Gar
vin of Los Vegas, Nevada and San
ta Rosa, California respectively,
Mrs. Leone Miles of Susanvllle, Cal
ifornia and a nephew, Ed Murray
and wife, of Daly City, California,
spent last weekend visiting with
Mrs, , Frankie Williams and also
with her and their mother, Mrs.
Sallle Garvin at the Alturas Hos
pital. ,
Rex has one of those trl-motored
Fords with a corrugated aluminum
body which he bought for $4,500.
He has been offered as high as
$14,000 by a Mexican mining out
tit who wanted something huge but I
nimble for short, heavy hauls into I
mountainous country. Rex uses it
to Charter hunters and fishermen
to difficult mountain recluses.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Cloud re
turned last Wednesday from Port
land where they disposed of their
beef for 23c - per lb.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Nidever, for
mer residents of New Pine Creek,
lmui.net it always en the job!
With one of our well-thought-out
progrenu to protect you, you can
he tare of 'round tho clock pro
lection. It's lom.thini no one
should he without. , '
19
mm
4-4
General Iniuronct
Aiieciatti
ab Cautemaker,
After April 1, Grace J Charles
Eaten will welcome you to their
Hotel; im First Avenue.
in
' dropped in last Saturday to say
hello while here on a visit with
Joe Ayoutt and family. Earl is
now piling lumber at a sawmill In
Klamath Falls.
Leoiia Robnett was- a week
end visitor with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Robnett.
Now wa have heard everything
Dept: Mr. and Mrs. Dan Fox de
cided to go to Lakevlew last Sat
urday evening to have dinner and
get a little retaxauou away from
their business the Shamrock Tav
ern. At the Leehmwin bridge
about a mile and a half or so
north of town, they wrecked their
green Packard.
Causer Angle worms. Yes sir
It's a fact. The earth worms were
so thick on the highway that when
Dan just barely touched his power
breaks to slow down a bit, his
brand new Packard suddenly got
kittenish, like as if the highway
had been greased. Belore ne couia
say, "Look out!1 bis machine had
swapped ends and side-swiped the
west bridge railing, taking out a
Bttst. His car was now headed back
toward New. Pine Creek so they
decided, since that was the way
the car seemed to want to go
fled back Home. .
I believed the story for this rca
son I'd been doing quite a bit of
spading on my corner lot lately
and I discovered that because the
ground was so wet, the angle
worms had, in numerous instances
crawled out of the ground and four
or five in a bunch had entwined
themselves in the clumps of grass
Just oft the ground I guess so
they could breath better and dry
their skins a bit. So apparently the
worms, having, held a meeting
amongst them, decided to move en
masse, out upon the highway where
the water had drained off some
In quest of dryer higher ground.
Anyway when- the Foxes first
told their story it fell on the ears
of a few skeptics whose curiosity
urged them to hop into their cars
and proceed to the Kelly Creek
bridge for first hand Information.
Yep! Sure enough! there were scil
lions of worms and the Doubting
Thomases, following Mrs. Fox's ad
vice, had brought along shovels
and a tub and they brought back
nearly half a tub full of big Juicy
worms which they planted In the
worm patch back of the Shamrock
so kept for the convenience of
fellows who want worms in a hur
ry to go fishin.'
' GREAT THOROUGHBRED
OCEANPORT, N.J. Ufi Mori
mouth Park's "Salvator Mile," one
of 18 stakes events on the 1953 rac
ing schedule, honors one of Mon.
mouth's mightiest thoroughbreds.
During three years of campaign
itg, Salvator was defeated only
'hree jtlmes. He, proved his mettle
in 1830 when he raced a mile
against time over the Monmouth
straightaway to establish a speed
marie tor the distance of 1:355V
ELECT
Letha Murphy
to
City Elementary School Board
VOTE AT ' ' ..r;
FREMONT SCHOOL, MONDAY, 2-8 P. M.
IT- 1 V -
i t i l v
A woman and mother
is needed to work with
teachers and students
I fiove worked on church proiectt. Red Cro$$,
LihT.Un?7.?heBt' F'S.rno,L",er,Girl Scouts
PZZ Ub. f" fBt:Teh". brents and '
, II I .li. ehoo,1.or '"oit important of
oil, l teel that a womon needed to visit clasi-
iJTJL! -i j ,nf0 ,he.1,,ib'"e ond cafeterias.
- --j . C,ed' vou w.'" hoy? a bB0'd three
v Mrs. L. A. (Letha) Murphy
Bruce Biossat
President Eisenhower will never
speak with the golden tones for
which Franklin D. Roosevelt was
famous. And yet he may prove
himself a more effective perform,
er in his direct appeals to tha
nation, ,
In his first major radio address
to the people not long back the
President spoke with impressive'
simplicity, earnestness, and fo-ce-fulness.
The speech rang with'no
oratorical flourishes and bore few
marks of the elocutionist's art
But it had the impact of con.
vlction. The President made most
people feel he desired fervently to
serve them well, to be a wise and
careful guardian of thoir hones.
- Now Mr. Eisenhower has supply
mented this with his first nation
wide television talk to America
And, once again the effect upon
the listening public must have '
been powerful.
The President found an Infnrm.i
note for his TV appearance. He
sat with four of his cabinet mem
bers, and in the course of the
half hour gave" each a chance to
say a few things about the opera,
tlon of his department. He him
self made some opening nmi
remarks and then acted there
after as a sort of moderator, nut.
ting in an occasional question '
making the bridge to the i nnt
speaker.
In this role, this time at least
he was not wholly at his ease'
He fidgeted a bit, and there was
a little stiffness to the give and
take with the cabinet members
Now and then one could see the
clear stamn of the nrofessionai
TV stagers, who probably thought
they were putting on Just another
panel show.
Nevertheless, the performance
represented a friendly reaching
into the homes of Americans, to
ten mem pmiiuy wnai me govern
ment is doing about some of their-
problems. It humanized the fed
eral establishment, reducing it for
a brief span from a ponderous,
Impersonal, gray monster to m
faces of a few Individuals
This is perhaps the "fireside
chat" with camera. And - since
TV's role in last year's campaign
was admittedly strong, few would
doubt that the fireside chat thus
modernized may turn out to be
the President's most potent weapon
in marshaling public support.
Coronation Film
Starts Sunday
"A Oueen Is Crownerl" th n-.
tual picture story of the corona
tion of Queen Elizabeth II. will
be shown in Klamath Falls start
ing Sunday at the Esquire theater,
it was announced by Bert Hanson,
The picture is a full length fea
ture in technicolor. It follows the
actual steps of the coronation, cnn.
densing the highlights of the four
hour ceremony into a one hour
show". 1
Klamath Falls, along with Port.
land, Is one of the few cities get
ting the coronation films on this
first release date, Henson said.
the
n San Diego, California