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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1954)
PAGE FOUR FRANK JENKIN3 . ' BILL JENKINS ( Editor . . . Managing Editor. Enured as second clasi matter at tlie post office at Klamath Falla, Ore., on August 20, 1906, under act of Congress. March 8. 1819 Mt.MHKK OF THE ASSOCIATE! PRESS The Associated Press la entitled exclusively to the .use for publication of all local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news SUBSCRIPTION HATES MAIL 1 Month , $ 135 8 Months I 6 SO . 1 Year ..$1100 BILLBOARD By BILL JENKINS t n,. ioihi.r on nn Henart, ment we learn that In last Sun- ' day's pigeon races here the bird of Bobby Matt came In well! ahead of that of his dad, Cecil, . i, ,i ,,,, t ihpl winning bird was picked by Cecil for the bov. Oh well, guess credit has to go where credit is due. C. B. Matt has been racing pigeons for a good many years now, is an ex president of the club and has the know how that a man needs. He aughta be able to pick a winner. Rumor also nas it mat ne wouia like the boy to so into partnership with him, but that the other club I member feel that the boy is do-1 ing alright racing on his own. If anyone Is Interested in pigeon racing you are more ttuin wel-1 come at any of the local lofts to-1 morrow to watch the birds come home from Lapine, a 100 mile race. And If you think there Isn't any- thing to watching a bunch of pi geons you have another think coming. It's really quite an art. 'Specially watching the rollers go through their paces on a good windy day. i Sticking to traditions depart ment: Frank Fleet, the Ice king, Is faithful to his calling. He doesn't have an electric rafiiger ator In the house. Has a mon strous big ice chest Instead. Information for Frank: So do we. althoiiBh we cheat a little. We have both and our Ice . chest Isn't as big as Ills by better than a hundred pounds capacity. CAUGHT IN By DEB ADDISON THE BOSS touched on a very tender subject in "The Day's News" Thursday In discussing the matter of inviting outsiders in to catch our fish and , shoot our game. The Oregon? State Highway Commission tourist advertising program, for which he is an ad visory director,' very rlshtly tells the world about" Oregon's magni f'.oent scenery, variety of natural wonders and fine highways, but very carefully retrains lrom men tioning that expendable commod ity fish and game. A great deul of the criticism of chambers of commerce Is d! reeled at the frequent boisterous and wide open Invitations to come in and shoot the birds and deer and catch the fish. Such actions make local nlinrods, fishermen and farmers see red. The Klamath County Chamber of Commerce In recent years has seen the liBht on' this score. Its share of the Southern Oregon Hospitality Unlimited advertising program aimed at Calllornia va cationers this spring told of scen ery and roads, not fish. The "Yel low Peril" was Invited to come, look and loaf, only. This dogma of the tin can tour Is, is part fallacy however, The ouldoorsman who betouls his own WABHINOTON L It is up to , President Elsenhower now to sign into law, and ho probably will, the bill Just passed, by Congress to guarantee balky witnesses Immu nity to ledcral prosecution If they answer questions about subversion. This measure, If It becomes law, almost certainly will hove a stormy history and perhaps a sensational one. It will be fought in the courts at unconstitutional. If It works, it may lead to startling disclosures about communism. ! The, bill goes like this: 1. It is aimed mainly at Comniu- uisls, past or present. Immunity can be given only to witnesses in cases involving copirucy to over- j throw lh government, treason, 1 spying, and sedition. Immunity j cannot be given for any other kind ' of offense. 2. A witness can't get Immunity i for the. asking. He must tlrst re fuse to testify by mvoling the Filth ' Amendment which soys a man can't be compelled to say anything which might Incrlmiuaie him. I 3. Hie Immunity can be given ; only to a Filth Amendment wit- nesa appearing bctore a conuies- ; sional committor, a federal giand ' Jury or a federal court and only ! If his testimony is Important. ' ' 4. The Immunity cunt be granted at all unless two-tl-.l.ds of the lull I committee before which lie has . , I Once the committee approves, then 5. The committee lelf cant grant the Immunity. It mii-t ask a federal Judge to du so. The at torney general has no vela even though he objects, perhaps because he hod been preparing to bring 1 the witness to trial soon. 1 Once the witness gets Immunity ' he cannot thereafter be prose-1 cuted In federal court for any i answers to questions. 6. But. once given Immunity, tlie w itness must answer questions. If : LAWNS t Inw prli-r? You ran'l alw. h.va both. Vt da quality work and fur nl.ti ovrnlhiiif. Wo guaranlta a toot aland of tra.al Phana 4?aii. LAKESH0RE GARDENS NURSERY JAMES MARLOW BY CARRIER 1 Month J 1.35 t Months S 8.10 1 Year U6.20 Prank Tucker, back from one ! of his Jaunts -around the countr.-, informs us that If Were alf n t n-" deer this year than any other In history hell be mildly surprised. You have to drive wiih one loot on the brake these days "c The newest addition to Klam ath's tfatering spots held its for mal opening on Thursday under the direction of manager Charlie Malin. Nice spot, -nice guys lo tcrve "you. Deke Spearins and Clifl Nelson, and a brand new ,Kn'- for a brand new room ,h(. p0v;-Wow Room. According to Charlie they had i mte'ided to Just let it go as r , lounge because Ihey already I'.ad a sign for that, but too many i people mistook the sign to meo the rest rooms. Now they have a real fancy bow and arrow over j the doorway, And inside a pipe of peace. Just in case. Oscar Klttredge. our candidate for the legislature, took off yes terday for a tour of the district. Whether or not Oscar kncwi all the niflnes ol the people, the cor rect highway numbers, the names of the hotels and what not we wouldn't know. But we are posi tive he knows all the good fishing streams and hunting areas. And that's good. We have con siderable more confidence In a man who has gotten out and around and seen the country at first hand than we do those ca reer politicians who concentrate solely on people and politics. THE ROUNDS nest doesn't always come from afar and doesn't necessarily con fine his activities to the areas along paved highways. This column ran Into a horrible example last weekend. . .rather, hiked Into the horrible example. A couple of exploratory one-day hikes into the Skyline Trail coun tiy previously had located a couple of small lakes with satis factorily willing and numerous trout lor further negotiation. Sell congratulation on seeking and sweating out this locale was in order. Satisfaction with the for pst planners in setting aside such primitive areas lo travel by Dob bin and Shank's Ponies only was expressed. A return overnight trip was planned. To moke a long story short and to spore the vile adjectives, the long toll up the trail through the singing, primitive forest revealed this: The fish were largely gone ex cept for five large trout that had been oaught, cleaned and left to rot In the shallows; the virgin glade at the head of the lake was strewn with bottles, tin cans and oilier refuse; the beach trail had been used for a bathroom I Our guess Is that those who had despoiled and befouled this place were not fancy tourists lrom Southern California, he ifpuins the Immunity, Insisting that under the Fifth Amendment he still doesn't have to answer questions, he can be cited for con tempt of Congress, tried, and, If convicted. Jailed. 7. Tlie procedure Is slightly dif ferent when a Fifth Amendment witness refuses to answer ques tions before a federal grand Jury or In federal court. In that cose a U.S. District Attorney, with tlie approval of his bo, the Attorney General, may ask a federal Judge to grant immunity. It the witness still prefers the Fifth Amendment to Immunity, he can be cited for contempt of coun, tried, and, II found guilty. Jailed. Tills Is where the trouble will arise: The new law says only that the witness could never be prosecuted by the federal government for any federal crime related to his testi mony. It does not say the some wit ness could not be prosecuted In a slate court. For example: suppose lie admitted committing a federal crime and a state had a law mak ing the same otfense a state crime, too. Tlie slate couldn't use his fed eral testimony In a slate court jj,,Y "u" ""3 " n,, Lu .... ...... .u"im uic a, Mir use ins irucr- al testimony os a lead on which 10 gather evidence which to trv i mm In a slate court? There's no -inswer. And there won't be until ... L. ' ' - i J d. .",prem' Curt me dny e'v" i The lirst "Bimreme Court test miKhl come the first time a wit ness received Immunity from a federal Judge but kepi silent under the Filth Amendment and was Jailed for contempt. He could oiRtie: This new legislation was an at tempt lo get around Ihe Fifth Amendment s protection and even INSPKC'T Ol H Air-Cooled Offices Why perspire all summer? Home spaee open upstairs on Main Slrert. DREWS MANSTORE They'll Do It Every Ri ooncTOUe.TUe- BILL MAKES A SATURDAY WORNING CALL"" AND SETS TMIS ROUTINE- f(ttii HUSBAND GETS l FE WENT DOwM- hT fe- BEHOMEABCXJT LJk AM' TOOK ALL THE g iJSSSSS ? I ONE O'CLOCK-CAM fc iX WTH J? YOU COME BACK j .31 ALONG NATURE'S TRAIL by KEN McLEOD No region that has ever produced "gold" has ever escaped Its quota of lost-mine stories. The Klamath Region is no exception for Its story of the fabulous "Lost Cabin" mine Is to be found in every corner of our far-flung area. It was search for the 'Lost Cabin" that led to the discovery of Crater Lake, a story which has been given in this I column. Likewise we have carried tho story ot the "Lost Cabin." told by Joaquin Miller. "Lost camn stories are legion, even down In the lower reaches of the Klamath Re gion do we find the "Lost Cabin" story in tlie "Lost Cabin" diggln's of old Klamath County (Del Norte.) Fabulous lost mines are to be found scattered oil the way from our Oregon Country down into the barren regions of the deserts of the Southwest. It has been said that there are at least some 75 famous legends of gold mines that have been discovered and then lost. Their locations are often placed in the most unlikely places, for after all, the old story Is that "gold Is where you find It." Sometimes some of these fabulous mines have had their roots in fact, but prob ably more often the basis has been fiction. Some of the fabulous mines may hove been discovered and worked, their discoverers little rea lizing that their find, at one time, was the actual site of some fam ous legend. Who has not been intrigued by the story ot the "Blue Bucket" of Oregon; the "Lost Dutchman" of the Superstition range of Arizona; the old "Ounslghl" of the Pano mints of Death Valley: the "Peg Leg" of the Son Bernardino des ert; the "Soldier" of the Arizona Oilas; the "Phantom" of Colorado; and oi'r famous "Lost Cabin?" These famous phantoms of fortune beckon every lover of history and the outdoors for you might be the fortunate person to discover one of the fabulous deposits of "gold." Many intensive and costly searches have been made over the. many years since these famous mines were allegedly discovered and then lost. Another "Lost Cabin" story Is to be found In the dusty flies of the Shasta Courier, of June. 1858. which reads; J "A young miner not satisfied with ; what he had, dared to cross the mountains to the coast. The lonely gold seeker struck It rich, the earth yielding the yellow treasure In abundance. He built a cabin and panned for gold. Each day It was hidden from possible thieving eyes. Vet's Mailbag To speed up processing of GI home loans, Veterans Administra tion has asked supervised lenders lo process GI loons without ob taining VA approval in advance. Banks, savings and loan associ ations and Insurance companies, supervised by federal or state banking authorities, originate more than 50 per cent of all GI home loans. VA gives them the privilege of making loans wlthoui advance approval by VA and then coming to VA for guaranty. Non-supervised lenders, mostly mortgage brokers, must still get prior approval of VA before mak ing GI loans. A. a result of the easing of tlie OI mortgage money market since the beginning of the year, the number of home loan applications has increased sharply. During June. VA received 464.239 loon ap- plications which was a 75 per cent , Increase over the 26.454 received in June 1953. In view of the Increasing work loads m VA offices and the de sirability of closing GI loans with the least possible delay. VA asked supervised lenders w-ho have been tpuriinn In In.n annllratinn vni- va s prior approval to reconsider inrir pracuces. va empnasizen inai as long as the price of the property does not VA emphasized that as long as exceed the reasonable value set bv VA appraisal and the veieran is eligible, there Is no need for contacting VA In routine cases un til after the loan has been closed and fully disbursed. destroy It by forcing a man to testify against himself and against Ins will. LAZY SUE "Tomorrow"! . Spud Picker Todov!" LEWIS MFG. CO. i HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Time COLLECTOR, 30 BACK 4MD SETS THIS SONG AHD DANC2- I I " -V " si For months he toiled and reaped. Then he was discovered by a prowl ing Indian, left for dead at his cabin door. Somehow escaping he made his way, wounded as he was, to civilization. There Just befoie passing away, he divulged to friends the spot of his cabin and the fabulous sum cacned away. To this day, old prospectors will tell you. that the 'Lost Cabin' mine is somewhere In the French Hill dis trict of Del Norte county, though it has not been located." , Thus the undefinable location spreads from place to place In our region from the area about Crater Lake, to Mount Shasta, to the Pa cific Coast. Wherever gold is found so is legend and it is only natural that the "Lost Cabin" should ap pear In the Coast Range of the Klamath Area. Gold mining on the coast started out in the old Klam ath County back in 1852 and was carried on successfully Until the Rogue River Indian wars made mining a hazardous occupation. Placer diggings on the Smith and the Klamath River, the black sands of the ocean beach, hydraulic min ing at Happy Camp, Sailors' Dig gings. Althouse Creek, and other locations produced gold in paying quantities. The great boom ended as sudden ly as it started with the war years of the sixties, desolation settled up on the country. The "Del Norte Triplicate" writes in a nostalgic mood: "In spite of the desolation, there was something fascinating about the ghost camps of Del Norte those Hell-defying diggln's where humanity by the hundreds existed j In tin shacks, naper huts, or brush lean-tos on the banks of some mountain stream. The crumbling ruins of a log cabin with Its door wide open, sagging, hanging by an old leather hinge; a deserted, silent camp where no longer wisps of smoke swirled from soot-darkened mud chimneys; the big ore dump of a prospestor's dream: the wind ing switchback trail, climbing the slope into the unknown; the horse shoe, threadlike trail grown up with brush: scenes once full of ac tion, Ihe air echoing the tap of the miner's pick, the thud of the woodsman's axe. the throaty song of humanity. Places once the habi tat of some human, now desolate, forsaken. Circumstances had taken their toll In disappointment." In such surroundings with such a background of memories. It is a natural tor the legend of the "Lost Cabin" to remain a ghost of the "golden era" of the past. QUESTION OF THE WEEK: Q. My mother and father are de pendent on me. If I go to school under the Korean GI bill, could I count them as dependents, for GI olllowance purposes? Or arc the dependency allowances limited to wives and children? A. Under the law, you would be permitted to include your par ents as dependents, so long as they are in fact dependent on you. Malin Club Host To 4-H Members Klamath County 4-H Club mem bers, leaders and their families were guests of the Malln live stock clubs Sunoay, August 8, ai thj Malin Park. Three hundred aiiu live 4-H'ers enjoyed the pot luck supper and swimming party. Malin livestock cluo leaders Wayne Fisk, Truett Weatherby, Earl Wilson. Elmont K e n y o n, Keith Gentry and Ted Gordon in tend to make this an annual event. 2 1 4 6 0 A K R 0 W KIAMTH FALLS lilt nniiia 1 By Jimmy Hatlo HE GOESIT 7 PAt ... . HAL BOYLE ; NEW YORK W Some people I orueve ;award J. Touhey Jr. ought to get the Medal of Honor. But tha U.S. Army, when it gave oig td his goodby papers, stamped the word "undesirable' oi. them. This still grieves Touhev He doesn't like being regarded as an unaesiraoie Hero. "Either the Army should take mc back Into the service, or give me an honorable discharge," he saia. The point at issue is whether Touhey was right or wrong in knocking down eight Russian soldiers in Vienna five years ago. "They say I caused an inter national Incident," remarked Ed. "But I say the Russians started It. They got no right to push a man around and call him a spy. They got what they deserved." The 8-foot-l former military po liceman now weighs 350, and he feels sad in every pound. But he was a mere 240-pound broth of a boy, not quite 20 when the event happened that ruined his military career. "I never got to tell my side of the story at the time," he com plained. Here is his version: "I had spent a month in the hospital with athlete's foot. When I got out I stopped at a bar. I drank a bottle of cognac maybe more. "I must have drunk It too fast because when I left the bar to go to the barracks I got on the wrong streetcar and fell asleep. When I woke up I saw I was In the In ternational zone and got off. "I was feeling bad and leaned against the wall oi the Imperial Hotel, holding my stomach. It was a Russian hotel. A Russian offic er and two armed sentries came out . and made me go into tlie ho- j tel. The officer called me a spy and said I had been taking pic turs of Soviet porsounel. Then they stood me against a wall and forc ibly searched me. They were pret ty rough The Russian officer said he still 1'iought I was a spy, even though he saw I didn't have any camera. Mc said I must have handed the camera to someone passing by. "Then he said he was going to turn me over to the American mil itary police. I got scared. I thought it was a trick that he would take me to the Russian zone, and I'd never get back. "I made a bee-line for the door. A sentry put his bayonet to my stomach. I knocked it awuy. an(' the Russian officer grabbed m from behind. That's when I went berserk. I saw red." Touhey turned' aijd kneed the of ficer, who cried out, and then Rus sain soldiers poured In from every side. Working with both fists and on iron chair. Touhey mowed them down. They overwhelmed him once, but he broke free and I crashed through a plate glass door before another wave of Rus- sian reinforcements finolly ground - cu him They broke three of my ribs, put a 3-inch gash In my head, and kicked out four of my teeth," Touh ey recalled. "They also spit In my face and called me a capitalistic dog." International military police, at tracted by the uproar, then came into the hotel and broke up the struggle. "The Russians put the whole blame on me." Touhey recalled -...-... ...II.. -U.ii T'n ft-a,.- imeH a colonel's skull and broken two guys Jaws Ed admits he made one serious error on that lateful morning. "I shouldnt have drunk that cognac so fast." he said. "But I didn't start any trouble with the Russians. They did. And If I was In the same situation again. I'd do the same thing. The Russians are no good. "When I was in -the hospital lat er, one of our generals visited me and said, 'As an o.'ftcer I have to bawl you out, but as a man I'd LOST RIVER RANCH 150 Hampshire and Suffolk Yearling Rams Registered H amp 'and Suffolk EWES for SALE Top Quality Rt. 2 lox 795 Telling the Editor TLME CHANGE The calendar reform that Is being promoted by a society with the intention of simplifying our present method of reckoning by making the days of tht week come on the same day of the month Is not what it seems to be for the method used to ac complish that breaks the cycle o! the week. The plan is to begin tha year on Sunday and have the weeks come In regular -order when December 30 will 'be Satur. day, then their plan is to call nrember 31st. vear day and not a day of the week, then call the next day, which Is really Mon day, Sunday, then continue In that cider excepting leap year when another day will be added be tween June and July. Thus the cycle of- the week be broken which has been Observed from the creation of the earth ex cept for short periods by certain nations, one of which was France which tried to substitute a holiday every ten days for the weekly evele, but ttm only lasted a short time and Russia tried a similar plan but had to abandon it. The cycle ot the week was marked off at creation by the ob servance, of the sevemn any bath and the cycle of the week is mentioned in Genesis before the giving of the ten comnvnarnents on Mt. Sinai' and I have a list of seventeen of the languages of Europe and Asia, which yet oa the seventh day. the day we call Saturday, sabbath. 8ome of them have done so before there ever was a rfew. Millions observe Sunday in hon or of Christ's ressurrection but those promoters propose to make them take another day except on occasional years. . .m.. M.himmidn' observe Frl- j... . marred day. Jews andi Seventh Day Adventists observe from sunset Friday to sunset Sat urday as sacred time and a large class will continue to do so re gardless of the reform calendar. Several nations have already voted to adopt the proposed cal endar when It Is accepted by the United Nations so the change is well on the way but so far it has been voted down by the United that perhaps time has been lost and we do not know the true cycle oi me " -tronomers tell us that is impos ible lor they can tell the exact time an eclipse took place thou sands of years ago and just where l, ..... uiathl. n-: -ineir keeDS exact time i. . true science and should not be confused with astrology whicn is n,unHar ran be made bet ter without breaking the weekly cycle and I am for It. but we do not neeo more ---- world, lor we have enough now. F, L. Chllwood Fliers Group To Visit KF luncheon Sunday at the Pilots' Lounge at the airport will honor a group of private tilers irom i Sacramento. Thls group represents the eighth annual air tour, co-sponsorea oy the Sacramento Couniy Sheriff's Air Squadron and the Sacramento Chamber of Commerce, me chamber's aviation committee's chairman. Thores Johnson, has been in charge of flight plans In Sacramento. The flying businessmen from the California cap'.tal plan to leave Saturday and make a luncn- eon stop at Medford and spend the night at Eugene where a ception and dinner Is planned for them. They are expected here in time for luch Sunday. i About 25 local and company ships plan to participate in the flight and will carry some 30 chamber members in addition to the pilots. Total mileage for the flight will be nearly 850 miles for the two- ! day trip. This is the first time the flight has been made into Gre gon, aunougn tne group nas oeen n,,a In Ttftnn T .fl t VP.T1. tH" in. . ......... . " --r- eluded stops at Bakersfield. Santa Barbara and Monterey, j Several city and county officials I will accompany the group and it I Is expected that a representative group of Klamath Falls business men will be on hand to greet ! them. H. O. Juckeland, chairman in charge of aviation for the j AM4ai rii!llAi Klainath Countv Chamber of! "OlCr lrillcr : Commerce, is in charge of local arrangements. like to shake your hand.'" But Touhey, unemployed since he was laid off by a steel miU recently, believes the Army ought to take him back or give htm an honorable discharge. "In three years with the Army I never went AWOL once, he said. "I understand they even were considering giving me a good conduct ribbon at the time this whole thing happened." and Breeding Phono 7714 or 784 Devoted GOC Member Finds Time For Many Activities Dorothy Louise Stewort was born Into a life of service. The oldest of 10 children, she began serving oth ers right in her own family. Just as soon as she grew tall enough to lift a broom, dry the dishes, and help her mother raise her young- n DOROTHY LOUISE STEWART er brothers and sisters. But Dor othy was glad to do her bit while she was growing up. Dorothy Stewart was born on a little farm near Fargo, North Da kota, January 11, 1911, Her parents were William L. and Bertha John son, (both now deceased). Later she and her family moved to Al berta, Canada, and lived on a farm near Mlnburn. It was on this farm that she learned to be a trick rider- on her trusted pony, and readly accepted the challenge of competing with other performers In .many of Canada's famous ro deos. Dorothy attended the same school In Canada, with Jerry Amb ler, one time resident of Klamath Basin, now a rodeo and movie star in Hollywood. In January of 1928. she met John Campbell Stewart at a dance held in the country schoolhouse near LMinburn, Canada. In August of the same year she became the bride of Stewart, the wedding taking place in the home of the bride s parents, --rjSfO aW I 1 5" THE DOCTOR SAYS By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D. "My hearing Iras been affected by noises in the ears." "For a long time I have been troubled with spells of dizziness. I am deaf in one ear. One doctor diagnosed my trouble as Meniere's disease. Can anything be done for roaring and hissing noises in the ears? This drives me almost crazy at times." These and many other similar let ters reflect the widespread difficult ty which people have from what Is probably Meniere's disease (there are, of course, other possible couses for these difficulties but in this col umn I am dealing exclusively with the condition known as Meniere's disease). Meniere's disease, or Meniere's syndrome as It Is sometimes called, is a rather loose name used to cover several different kinds of dis orders in the inner portion of the ear, the , symptoms of which are much alike. It was first described over a hun dred years ago by Prosper Meniere, a Frenchman, who gave it Its name. Occasionally, the symptoms which make up Meniere's syndrome are the result of tumors, injury, frac tures, or infection, for example, but In most cases the cause is not so obvious. m general it is considered to be Student Killed' On Laundry Job BERLIN, Md. Wl William Lee Dickson, a 17-year-old Berlin High School student, was killed yester- aay uucu no siuck ins aim lino a drying machine in the laundry where he had a summer job. W. Ryder Jones, manager of the ! c-ac.. i nunrirv nhnin tnwi ! ..... . , ., I aumoriues ne couia give no reason for the youth's action. Dr. Herman Robbins, Worcester County medical examiner, said the boy died of shock and loss of blood. Tlie whirling machine jerked oil the arm at the shoulder. Strikes Oil DENISON, Tex. 11 A water i well driller, completing a well l2 j miles soutneast of Dcnlson. struck : oil Instead of water recently, Driller J. L. McClure shut the j well down Aug. 7 after balling up a bucket of crude oil from 282 feet. He got in touch with the properly .owner. Jack Winburn. who swore him to secrecy until the find could be confirmed "We still need water,' laughed. Winburn WIRE YOUR HOME FOR ELECTRIC HEAT! NO FIRE NO SOOT NO SMOKE RESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL INDUSTRIAL WIRING John M. Owens ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Shop Locoted of 6840 South Sixth SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1954 '' Later, In 1930, they moved to Ta. coma, Washington. Five children were born t them, among them one set of twins, James Allen and Janet Ann. Mrs. Stewart's busy life as wife and mother, didn't, prevent her from accepting new challenges. She is one of aviation's pioneer women pilots, having held a pilot's license for over 15 years, along with her husband John, who Is also a licensed pilot. Together they make many cross country flights and participate in "fly away break fast" flights with other basin fly. ers. During World War n, Dorothy and her husband were actively en gaged in Civil Air Patrol flying, she as a Second Lieutenant and her husband a First Lieutenant. When Dorothy Stewart learned the Ground observer Corps needed more volunteers to man the tower at- the "airport, the fact she lived over 30 miles from the tower didn't stop her lrom accepting a new challenge, so again she entered the field of service to her country. Her oldest' son Bill, signed her up for duty (Bill is a Ground Observer also and with her youngest son, James (the twin) drove her an the way from Kirk to stand her two hour per week watch. The re turn trip home made her car speedometer register a little over 100 miles she had driven to do her part, with many other Ground Or servers who feel it their duty to assist the A'r Force in keeping a constant vigilance in the air to safe guard the American way of life. When Sgt. Donald Trainer, USAF, stationed here to advise and help direct the activities of the Ground Observer Corps of the Ba sin, learned the story of Mrs, Stew art's long drive and willingness to serve her country he immediately set out to lessen the burden for her, and today, Dorothy Louise Stewart is supervisor of a new post right at her own home In Kirk, and her husband John Is chief ob server. The new post was set into action June 28, the call letters PNI1B. The post. is operating on a 24 hour schedule, with the coopera tion of the Southern Pacific Rail road Company allowing the use of their special, telephone system. You too, can be a Ground Observer, and your country needs your help. Dial 3272 or 6871 for further Infor mation, the result of accumulation of fluid or dropsy in the deep portion of the ear called the labyrinth. This dropsical condition does not develop In young people, but be comes more and more common st affer the age of 45. It usually involves one ear at first. Actually the attacks of diz ziness generally bother patients more than the unpleasant noises or even the loss of hearing. The treatment of Meniere's syn drome not due to accumulation of fluid or dropsy depends on what can be done for the original cause. In the case of Meniere's disease of the dropsical variety, the prob lem is difficult. Many victims find that drinking a lot of fluids tends to bring on an attack. As a result some forms of treatment are aimed at reducing the Intake of fluid or trying to remove as much fluid from the body as possible. Several medical treatments have been tried. Surgery Is also em ployed with success In some cases and not in others. Surgical treat ment is lable to bring varying de grees of relief. Unless people fall and hurt them selves as a result of dizziness, Men iere's syndrome is more annoying and uncomfortable than It is dan gerous. This form of dizziness does not interfere with activities or bodily functions except those related to balance and hearin. Nevertheless it produces a lot of distress and bet ter measures of treatment are bad ly needed. QUICKIES By Ken Reynold "That Herald and Newt Want Ad I used - sure keeps me busy!" PICTURt FRAMING PHONE 7350 or 8245 or 8608 m Mate at. iia I4