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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1954)
PAGE SIX HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON FRANK JENKINS BILL JENKINS Editor Managing Editor . Entered a second class matter at the post otfice of Klamath Falls, Ore., on August 30, 1908 under act ol congress, Marcn a, iniv 1 ' ' MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PKESS The Associated treks la entitled exclusively to the use for publication Lof all the local newi printed in this newspaper as well as all AP news. . SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BY CAKRIER 1 month $1.35 1 month 135 6 months ........ 6.50 6 months $ 8.10 1 year .,,....,... $11,00 I year .!(. BILLBOARD Br BILL JENKINS Who said the Republicans toeren"t a tough and resourceful 'bunch'.- They sure are. As wit- ess a series of phone calls and janipulations around here yester Alonir about noon or shortly at- ;cr, ju.-t' about the time that every fcne had gone to lunch, we got a all from a frantic GOP chairman h Salem wanlinji to know if we new-anything about a film. "The 3rd Congress," which was sup- fcosed in be in Salem but seemed be tn Kin in nth Falls. VVc didn't but offered to do a tl'c slcuthinff. Called Wyatt pad- ;rtt as the top man in the know. ynU was in Chiloquin. Got Genc- f Duncan away from her covet- lunch Hour and lound out mai !ioyd Wynne of. our own KFLW as the man. bashed in to find fit Floyd hnd dashed out to lunch t before our entry Into the I rne. Phoned his home. No an-1 cr. Tried every restaurant in ; pvn. No luck. I On the meantime, two more calls bin salcm. So We waited until r-nne got back, found out that the 1 n was here alright, and slated use at the regular Thursday icllng. Just a case of dates being bed up. But, and here's the crux of the io!e thing, the chap In Salcm Inted the strip so badly he went iid ana sent a plane down here to pick up Ihe film. With a promise that it would be on the bus and headed for Klamath not later than midnight last night. Who said people don't take their politics seriously? , The Midwest Travel Writers As sociation has named the Oregon Travel Information Division as a fourth place winner In their annual list of awards. Carl Jordan, the long, likeable and hard working boss of the state outfit, got a placquc to that effect. Only unit West of the Mississippi to win men tion of any kind. Congratulations, Carl, and all that. Although, we think It might be a little more effective if Oregon were to award some enterprising group in the Midwest a similar placnuc. Alter all, they have to work harder nt getting people to visit their area than we do. We always have to remember, even though that old idea that any thing from Iho East Is better than the things at home, that we live in God's chosen land, the great beautiful Pacific Northwest. It's only' natural that people should want to come out hero and sec some of our country. And the tour ist trade is gratifying. So you see we don't have to work as hard at enticing outsiders as other areas Shucks, we've got Just about every thing we could want right here at home, why travel? They'll Do It Every Time By Jimmy Hatlo J7ROM WHAT THE PROSPECTIVE EMPLOYER zXPECTED-MISS POTHOOKS DAY DREAMED A BEAUTIFUL I SETUP Z l wuoi IAKC ZOO VNORDS Y I f FERMWUTEP4TTR4CTTVE?) ""K C7 Xgfr HAE CAR ? KNOWLEDGE i - 1 ffSlTr f i OP SPANISM ? YES I 1 . Ifi N THINK I HAVE JUST J I,- 1 fMTjNe Fihwjj61-' vxt'y -i JJ' iwk sulfa And what I --lm L v'1-m " , '? 'ISJS1! ' WRfTlUS 6AL? WELL rpjjix LAST STOP ON W COME CM-GET A WIS6LE Mo?&s TOBACCO 4 ON LOTS OP LETTERS RTT M tu?H FTSfc. juice koao" n .. 58n7Mm82M The Doctor Says JAMES MARLOW fASHINGTON W President, inhowcr lost his first labor pilot ! bi Secretary of Labor Martin Durkln, head ot the Ai'L fibers Union, went over the and rowed ashore. lien Durkin quit last September laid he had worked lor months White House aides on changea ih the President could ask Con- lo make in the Taft-Hartley r act. said he had agreement from White House on 19 proposals that the White House then ked out. Eisenhower then de- breaking hts word to any asso & Monday Elsenhower, probably the help of his new secretary nor, James P, Mitchell, sent lo tress suggested changes which been described as totaling 14. Ltually in some paragraphs of pi less age several Ideas were leased or suggested. An ex- ifition of the 19 changes Durkln Id about and the ones just of- by Eisenhower show: Durkin version and the El- bwer message parallel each in eight cases; Eisenhower ku three ideas not mentioned lurk in; Durkin had eight sug bns Ignored by Elsenhower; of Eisenhower's suggestions hp four of Durkin's. are the eight parallel pro- her an employer nor a union negotiate on anything during pie of it contract unless the ct Itself provides lor a re- bloyers in casual or tempo- industries should be free to into prehiring agreements unions, ns should be relieved of re- fcillty tor unauthorized acts Ir individual members. r the present law the Na- Labor Relations Board must or an injunction against ary boycott but this should irrellonary with the board, bndnry boycotts should be lied In certain cases, as when n ploy cr docs "larmcd-out nor a struck employer, kolf of union dues could con- mill revoked in writing by Iployc, ireinenls lot a union s suing formation on Hs flnancis be simnlltlcd hhower urged clarilicatlon of ' so slates won't be deprived rights to deal with state nclcs and announced k under way on conflicts be .state and ledcrai juristic lui'Kin suggested clarification and federal jurisdiction, I was the overlap: ihowcr asked power to tell thug boards in national nt-y strike threats to make Tondniions on a wcltlcmrnt. rxpir-iscd hope that by this President could make u r f. c s 1 1 o n s on national nine.1". howrr urged that employers as nnion leaders be ve to tnke an anti-Communist burkln urged abolishing the .t i rely. lliower Rtiggested a study to Ittrr ways of safeguarding . Iffire funds. Durkin su-t 'nail employers be allowed r ;Ur right to participate unl h mdling. ; a Ktiie Li in progresn Ei r iivf cd barring anolher union or the employer from calling lor an election to get rid of the striking union, lor lour months in tne case of the other union and -a year lor the employer. Durkin's version would have forbade any such election for four months. These were suggestions not In Durkin's version but made by Elsenhower; The mediation service must step in whenever an injunction has been Issued in a labor dlsnute: the act should be clarified on the free speech rights of employers and un ions; the government should take a vote of workers, when a strike is Involved, on whether they want uiu Hinne. These were suggestions in Dur kin's version but omitted by Elsenhower: States should have jurisdiction over small employers who are now covered by the T-H Act but Ignored oy me nlhb; the act should be changed to let some people now classed as supervisors and there fore barred from unions become eligible for membership; an exam ination should be made of the way me INL.HH administers the act; where there is a union shon con tract the union should be allowed to fire a member who gives the employer confidential union infor mation or is reasonably believed iinned with communism; the act should say clearly a boss can notifv a union about Job openings so the union can send him applicants; the act should be clarified on job quali fications for employment, such ss length of experience; unions and employers should be permitted to notify each other within 30 days, instead of the present 60, of inten tion to end a contract; during the life of a union shop contract ihflvu should be no vote among the em ployes on whether they want thp umun snop. BRUCE BIOSSAT A fretthman Republican from 'again and again before duplicating New Jersey, Itcp. lector Frelina- huyscn, wants - to create a- jqint committee to study' Conrrrcs. No doubt this proposal will be regarded as a bold piece of el and overlapping committees. A case . once presented should not have to be argued afresh the fol lowing week or month. The prescht system of roll calls, iromciy uy nis vcicran coucagues quorum call etc., creaks wiih on the Hill, and the chances oi Uge. There is perhaps no greater It getting anywhere are probably tillef of congressional time. All slim. Nevertheless, Frellnghuysen : oveP tne colintrv. state leeislatm-ns is on the right track. Cong. -ess did approve a major reorganization for Itself In 194G, eliminating many outmoded com mittee arrangements and otherwise Introducing a streamlined facade.. But there is still vast room for im provement. , , It is not too harsh to say that Congress Is one of the most inef ficient organizations in ihe United States. The lawmakers are always very eager to investigate things.. They search out subversion, corruption and inefficiency in many seg ments of American life. And they would surely be appalled if they found In some other organization the inefficiency that marks their own operations. Frellnghuysen pin-points some of these weak spots. Congress wastes countless hours on minor .matters while Important bills are delayed or shelved. A more expeditious way of handling secondary legis lation is needed, Congress fritters away the time of top administration executives by requiring them to repeat testimony use more modern methods of vot ing, tnan .does Congress. : DoHpite-. some Improvements, Confess still is poorly equipped to deal with the nation's budget. Sel dom can It vote Intelligently on appropriations. It needs a bigger slaf La study budget affairs. The House keeps a pretty good rein on debate, but in the Senate virtually anything goes. There ought to be some means of curb ing senators who insist that the world Is panting to hear their eight and twelve-hour dissertations on everything from Communism on girls' hockey teams to the raising of tropical fish in Russia. Senators seem to feel they must Along Nature's Trail By Ken McLeod inciusii-lal pollution lus forlu nuie.y been spared aom me Klaii. am Klvtr up lo tile piesent time, However, it may not be long belore the people of the Klamatn River wateisnecl win Have to face the problems imposed by this moat vextn'r subject. Industrial wastes in this country are a far more vexing problem than that of muni cipal sewaw-. The wastes from our industries are as varied and complex as American Industry it self. One of the advantages of tlie Klamatn River drainage area that has been seriously discussed is that this country, comparatively sparse ly settled, could offer a place of industries that had vexing pollu tlonary problems and conflicts with densely populated urban areas. It has been argued that perhaps our porous pumic-! lands might offer a earn each year the Senate's right to the title, greatest deliberative body in the world." If any other talk endlessly and polntlessly to possible storage place for Industrial wastes inai cannot be discharged into river watercourses. Perhaps some of our small rockv vallevs outfit talked that much, they'd call ! could bo dammed for Ihe storage ii a oeuaiing society. . If enough Frelinghuysens will only speak up, then the lawmakers may be moved to look at them selves as critically as they now look at everybody else. HAL BOYLE "Dead" Son Found Alive FAIRBANKS, Alaska W A mother found her "dead" son alive Tuesday. Ihe case of mistaken Identity came to light alter Mrs. Florence Thompson arrived here Horn Ta coma. Wash., to make funeral ar rangements lor the son, Gerald, 2;i. Authorities had notiticd her that Gerald had been found dead In a cabin last Sunday. He and his town mate, Gary Allen Young, 21, also of Taconui, who was found uncon scious nearby, were vtJtims oi somn sort ol poisoning or ot gas fumes irom ft stove, a doctor said. The man identified as Young was taken lo a hospital where ho was placed on the critical list. Alter the flight here with anoth er f son, Robert, Mrs. Thompson called at the hospital to see the boy she had been told was Gary. She entered the hospital room Tuesday, spotted ihe unconscious figure on the bed and after a mo ment shouted: "That's my son!" The original Identification was made by Thompson's fiancee, au thorities said. They explained that recognition was difficult because the two men were badly swol len and their faces and chests were a bright red. NEW YORK UP) Tenors are gelling almost as scarce as larks at the North Pole. Not bathroom tenors. Too many of them. But real tenors, opera tenors, are in short supply. It's got ioivu! of them worried. "In the entire world today there ' are only 10 tenors who can niixh major dramatic roles with author lty," said Ramon Vlnay, a former baritone who became ft tenor by accident rather than intent. "As a result we have' lo travel like mad, and we arc getting tlrod. And some of us are showing voice strain." Tills may not appear much of a traitcdy to the average man, who ordinarily doesn't list tenors among the earth's major blcsslngd, but when a few top tenors go hoarse it is a real blow to ihe world of serious music, Some fol low has tn hit all those high noics and kiss the dying soprano, or how can the opera go on? i And It isn't as easy as it looks, "Before a new production we re hearse for about three weens, said Vhviy, who keeps In shape by weight lhlmg. "And believe me live hours on the stage of the Mc' tropolilan Opera is like 12 hours on the docks. It s like pusmng a street car 20 blocks. You come home and drop dead." All tenors are unusual but even among his fellow tenors Vinay Is a standout. He is a big bear-like man who looks like Luis Firpo, the former South American heavy weight boxer. Vlnay was born in Chile, raised in France, and started his career pushing a broom in ft Mexico City department store. He also worked as a trnvcling salesman and a medicine box manufacturer, before ho srtilcd down as a baritone in a small Mexican touring - opeva company. One night the regular tenor re fused to go on. Vinay cleared his' throat, sang Ihe role and learned he was a nalurril tenor. "I like it better." he said, smil Inc. "The baritone is always the villian and never gets to kiss tno soprano. The tenor does. He is the hero and the sopranos are gelling pleasanler to kiss every year. "But ihe audience require more now than in the old days. Thiy not only expect you to be able to sing. You must also net and look the part," Vinay. who starred in the Wag norma festival at Bayrcuth, Ger many, now travels up to 50.0U0 nulrs n vear in America and Eu rope. n keeps apartments here and in Mllnn, but lives most of the year in hotel rooms. "Many people don't know how to leel at home in a hotel room," he said. "But home Is a state of mind. You Just have to know how to make yourself comfortable." Vinay makes himself com fortable by toting along a medicine ball which he blithely bounces agulnst " the wall when he needs exercise. He sometimes also packs a five-foot telescope astronomy is one of his hobbles and if he be comes bored he sets it up by the hotel window and scans the stars. "It is very easy in this world to lose your sense of proportion," he said. "But when you look at the heavens through ft telescope H reduces your personal problems of success or failure. It will give any one a better perspective on his own importance yes, even a tenor. All successful people have pri vate fears, but Vinay grinned when I nuked him what he was most afraid or. "A cold." he said. Tenors are not to be sneezed at particularly when they are six feet tall and weigh 220 pounds. Treaty Plan Draws Blast of harmful pollutants. These and many other possibilities Dave been onerccl In discussion of problems regarding industrial expansion within the Klamath area. American industry Is knowji the world over for its volume ol outnui and its technological aggressive ness, wastes ol all kinds accom pany Its production: and inten. sive laboratory research and exper imentation plus actual tests and pilot plants In the field are required 10 ascertain the most economical methods of treating them to re- duce their harmful effects or to convert them to useful by products. Industrial waste consists general ly of oiis, acids, cntinicais greases, mineral salts, lignin, and animal and vegetauie material some virulent, other noxious, and still others merely nauseous and of tensive to the eye and nose. When our business leaders go out into the lield to invite industry to come and settle in our community they cannot pick and choose on the basis of pollulionary objections they can only hang out the latch string and be hopclul some industry win use it. So lar as I can determine there has been very little actual thoug.il expended on the pollutionary dan gers or basic problems that will be involved should some large in dustrial enterprise entertain plans to locate here. The State Sanitary Authority has given some thought to this problem because the author ity would be directly concerned would be involved, however, this thinking is on a state-wide level and Is not a guiding influence in local community thinking. I The State Authority as well as the United States Public Health Service is concerned because of what might occur to the Klamath River both as a state problem and an interstate problem since some By KDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D. Medlcme, I am happy to say. continues to make progress so that the first question in today's group can be answered more encourag ingly than few years ago. Q Please say something about the Invisible lens and whether It would damage the eye. My daugh ter has started using It and I am worried. M. R. A This presumably refers to a ground-glass contact lens which it fitted directly over Ihe pupil of the eye for the correction of vision. It has been In use quite a number of years, and has been valuable, particularly for those people whose occupations made It inconvenient for them to use the usual type oi eyeglasses. They are somewhat ex pensive and require a good deal of care in order to avoid irritating the eye, but I understand that new developments are making them much more satisfactory In every respect. 0 Crude black molasses has been referred to as the wonder food due to the fact that It has so much potassium salt. What Is your opin ion of taking molasses regularly wun your meals? B. A . A It might be hazardous for someone with diabetes or somr- othi-r condition in which molasses was undesirable. My own opinio:; Is thst It is not necessary to main- I lain health or good nutrition, ami I I personally would not eat It with my meals regularly unless I was i paid generously for doing so. I Q My 12-year-old daughter had t ear trouble when she was one year old. At four she had her toiisils ana adenoids out, but a few years ago the adenoids got large again and were treated with radium in stead of bv surgery. Her ear trou ble has stopped, but not lone ago she had a slight case of bulbar polio and I am worrying mvse'.f sick as to whether It was wise In allow this radium treatment and whether It may cause cancer. Mrs. D. A It sounds as though the rad ium treatments were lust what your daughter needed, i do not know of any evidence that this could have contributed to the do. velopment of her polio, and do not mime you need to fear cancer ti is gratifying that her polio was so slight and that her ear has lm. proved. Both you and her doctor seem 10 nave done well bv her O It seems that my colon has fallen quite low diagonally across the abdomen. It then comes un to the third rib on the left side which forces it to make a sharp turn be fore continuing. Should It renuire anv special medical attention in oraer to maintain good health? A There Is considerable inHivM. ual variation in the position of the large colon inside the abdomen. It seems most unlikely that the con dition described should require any WEDNESDAY, JANUARY M Election Hungry Solons Keep Eye On McCarthy Pla By JACK BIXL WASHINGTON -Some Repub licans with an eye on the Novem ber elections lalked fondly today of sen. McCarthy s proposal to set a 100 per cent parity price goal lor their new farm program. The Wisconsin Republican, step ping momentarily out oi his role as the Senate's most vocal Com munist hunter, appeared as a champion of the farmer with a plan to hike the 75 to 90 per cent flexible price supports suggested by President Eisenhower. The senator said in an Inter view he had touched oif a heated discussion of the subject at a con ference of all Republican senators yesterday because he thinks gov ernment supports should not go OL. l. la -i.r rent. Thev "ought to go higher than 90 per cent, per haps even above 1C0 per cciu ui nn,.i,., .r,ortliv eniri ntldintr: "I have no fight with presioem Eisenhower." rt. ........ tim tn&.t pamnai.n V.i wmhmver said ihe farmer is en titled to full parity mat is. mu .-hut tirA'fo ,,nt eninv tn write anything into a nxeo iaw that can't be changed, ine kc- "a farm program aimed at full parity prices lor all farm prod- not pledge government supports at WASHINGTON 11 The pro posed constitutional amendment ol of these industrial wastes are high- Sen. Brieker (R-Oluoi on treaty- ly poisonous and corrosive. Others making powers was described to-' are even more damaguig to water day by John W. Davis, 1924 Demo-1 quality than sewage, cratlc presidential nominee, as "an Sanitary engineers have a meas- impediment to our obtaining and bring stick for determining the industrial waste. malntnlnuig peace. amount of pollution in water this is ni uiey can "Oxygen Demand mis uxygen Demand" is the measure oi the amount of air re- quueo. 10 decompose the organic waste Included in the water. This type of pollution is quite different from that of the pollution usually . .ci,cu io as contamination o potential disease carrvintr it,i,... for which, the sanitary experts have no criterion of measurement since water is either contami nated or it isn't There is no such thing as being 50 per cent con taminated or 25 per cent contam- naicn as it is in the case of their measure of pollution. lilts "oxygen demand" figure is a convenient method of comparing the pollutional effect of industrial waste with sewage. It reveals that tne oxygen demand for decomnos. Ing meat packing house waste, for example, may run ten times high er than that of ordinary sewage. The total pollution load now car ried by the waters ot the natinn. including both domestic and Indus trial waste, is conservatively esti mated to exceed the raw untreated sewage from a population of MO million people. By sheer coinci dence this figure happens to he equal to our present population. The question then arises: Don't we have plants treating sewage and industrial waste? We do, of course over 9.000 ot t'icin, and if we did not have these plants the pollution pouring into our streams and lakes and bays would probably be equal to the sewage from a pop ulation of a00.OO0.C0o people. It is waste from industry which accounts for this seeming ana chronism: a waste problem equal to the population of the country in spite of thousands of treatment plants because more than half this 150 million population load is due to tne "oxygen demand" o that level. n.rltu ic . n.-in. .... formula, taid by law to glv.iiJ mi-, a fail' return nn th-.- in relation to prices of ihilSM buy. The government, uLl w.w ucvitcs, not J ports prices of basic crooj .l pel l-cm ui pa'"?. Sen. Mundt tR-sni doesn't think the farmer. ..1 ui ucaiuic auriuui is 5UCh ,1 senhower outlined in his nety piugiam itiuuun.v. Sen. Young (R-NDl sijj kl separate interview that Ujd Ul.v a men M Kcuing some bfcj ing among other Republicitjl xuuiii; okiu urn. wnue Ue aiiliuue vu una nua Oiner tfm als was jelling he would m - his bill to continue the main, J 90 per cent supports for ," field crops which EisenhoTO ommentlcd be abandoned t1;.l in tne case or looacco. Young said he had told fau b publican colleagues, however t If the Democrats offered sa j proposal as some have IndirrJ they would he didn't think g Republicans wouia vote ftgainjt J Sen. Wiley (R-wis) said be i, interested in getting a suinr, of 90 per cent supports for iij products but he certainly woticl oppose Mcuarinys iuo per t proposal. SAM DAWSON NEW YORK W1 Cheerful news breaks through the business clouds here and there today. In a week that has a full quota of bad news s t o r in s, political brawls, layoffs, production cuts, and gloomy forecasts the follow ing cheerful items shine all the brighter: Merchants report their January Long Ride Postponed DENVER Ml A stay in the nearby Golden, Colo., jail has caused Ralph E. Hume to postpone a trip by horseback from Denver to St. I ,oi i is. The 38-year-old sleelworkcr had planned to leave here yesterday astride his Arabian mare Blue. Eul Monday he was given a 90-day jail sentence in the theft of an electric saw last Aug. 6. Mrs. Hume and their son Robert, 12, left in December to stay tem porarily with relatives in Chester field, Mo., just outside St. Louis. Hume planned to join them there with the help of Blue. He figured the cost of shipping her back by truck would be too expensive. The Denver Chamber of Com merce had arranged a big sendoif tor Hume yesterday morning. But tne senaou party was left holding the bag. Hume said he plans lo proceed with the trip "the day they let mc oui. sales are pulling In the custonJ and the dollars. New York l ment store sales last week to the same 1953 period by 1 cent. Philadelphia stores h$m volume live per cem aneadoil year ago. lx3 Angeles storei i port a seven per cent frainw Francisco chalked up a four y. cent increase, Out-of-town buyers are flocd to New York. Hotels report l vals and reservations as biH bigger tnan a year ago. Four trade shows running t week In New York report ud expected number of buyers ittel ing. and a surprising amount oUI ders being taken. Merchants u pa rent y cleared their stocks fil ly well before Christmas, or il encouraged by current cleami sales, and are in an open-lc-':! position now. The women's sportswear ill says attendance is 20 per tf greater than last January. Ortl ing is reported heavy. At the House Dress Xhstlltl exhibit, demand is reported strJ for nouse and casual street crti cs. I Ten accessory industries l holding their annual main floor l cessories show. They report c tume jewelry ordering heavitrl wan handbag.f getting tne i biggest volume. The Underwear-Neclieee Arl ciation trade show reports burJ running above expectations. All four shows report firm n ders being placed for delivena nvpr fli npxt fio davs. Th Kiel years the trend was to hold 1 such ordering until all the marlfll have been shopped by reiauen. I PRAISE SAN FRANCISCO (JF) Bishop William C. Martin, president of the National Council of Churches, arrived from Korea Tuesday night and said "the army is doing all that could be asked'" to satisfy the spiritual needs of American troops. Martin was reporting on his just-complcted tour of the Korean iront. I .ri.ll IIHt Hltl Oil i nrt l ftlU ElBl t P pun "I aim Pt u...j A.. Choral 1 LOUIS R. MANN PIAMO ClI 120 N. 7th Davis, now a New York City lawyer, set forth his opposition in a telegram lo Sen. Kefauvcr (D Teiin. Ketauver put it in the Con gressional Record. The proposed amendment' would prevent treaties Irom becoming ef fective as domestic law in the ab sence of implementing legislation j by Congress. It also would prevent treaties from being usrd lo enlarue tne legislative authority of Con gress, requiring action by the in dividual states in some cases. FASTEST KNOWN RELIEF FOR GAS ON STOMACH THVNK HEAVENS' MMt atlicVs r rid indrcrtticn. Wtim il ihikts tike BrlNaix tattloti. The'y ronum ih fipiftmc tnedicinM known tj doctm lor (hr iclipr of he-tlbiirn d J WW rrfundrd bv Hflt-an.1. Oi(lchur, N. V, If not Min ded. OH Bell-atu !o-dy. Ail druiitsu. 3M m u us 4tu or 70J Complete ALUMINUM STORM WINDOW I DOOR SERVICE FREE ESTIMATES Fiberqloj Insulation No down Payment 36 Mo. to Cay KUHLMAN Insulation 430 RIVERSIDE All Winter Garments ? V2 PRICE Contigntrt not viihinf thtir win Mr torment! toltl for half orict r advised to tick thtm up. The CLOTHES MART DON'T MISS DREWS f.lanstore E SALE ! Not jmt o limited lole! Every ihoe, boot in our itock it reduced to save you money. Don't mist this sale! ENTIRE STOCK Nunn-Bush and Edgerton SHOES ARE ON SALE SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT DURING OUR STOREWIDE SALE Tremendous savings In suits, topcoats and hun dreds of items in men's and boy s wear at Drews Manstore. 733 Main. COMING SAT., JAN. 16th TO THE RED mm DORRIS, CALIF. "THE BILLY BARTON SHOW" STARRING Billy Barton World famous singing irar and America's top song writer. Writ er of such great hits oi A Dear John Letter Forgive Me John A Deer John and Marsha Letter I Leva You A Heartbreak Ago and mony mora great Na tional hits. Now recording for Abbott records. ... BILLY BARTON ALSO WANDA WAYNE America's most beautiful and western" singer now on King records . . , heard AND FEATURING SINGING STAR TEX DOYLE and JOHNNY GRIMES ... and his MELODY MOUNTAIN BOYS, his great do"" and show band. Stars of Abbott records. See and h' this great show with the country's top entertainers. DANCING 10 till 2 ADMISSION 1.50 (tax incl.) 12S 1 9th Omr 1:00 'til 1:00 Phono 334