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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 2, 1945)
TWO MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE IMEBFORDi-TRIBUNE Dally BMpt Saturday published by ' MKDFOBD PBiNTWO CO. iT- North Tir St- " BOBERT W. HIIHU Editor, j KBNES1 FA, OILSTKA, Manager. HXHB GRIV, AdvertUlnS Mr. ARTHUR PERRY, Sunday Editor MRS OLIVE ; STARCHER. Soc. Editor "VIa"." LATHAM. Circulation Mltr. a. I.dnendent Newapaper fcntered a eecond claw m""w.t jdedford. Orecon. under Act ol March 3, loiy. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mall In Advancer tally and Sunday one year -..M 90 Daily and Sunday-aix montha 4 00 Daily and Sunday-thre. mot. 810 Dally and Sunday one month .79 By Carrier In Advance Medford, ByAhiand, Central Point. Jackaon vUleVcold Hill, Phoenix. Talent, and I on motor routei: Dally and Sunday one year..0.oo ! Dally and Sunday one month .? All terma cafh In advance. Official Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper of JacKion County United Praia full Haled Wire . MEMBER Of AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS Advertlalna Repreientatlve WWT-HOLUDAY COMPANY. INC. Office! In New York, Chicago, De troit, San Franclico, Loa Angelea. Se ettle. Portland, St. Loula, Atlanta, Vancouver. B. C. MtmU OnECW)NisMIE PUBUSHEw4$E)lATI0ll Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry Washlneton bureaucrats re port the phony famine in food and meat will be well in hand early next January, under OPA guidance. Let no vile partisan tell vou this has anything to do with the spring primary elec tions, and there will be plenty of canning sugar for the 1946 elections, as last year. . Passenger rocket planes when peace comes, will cross the At lantic in 40 minutes, Inventors predict. This Will be a great im provement over the pioneer criminal getting away from the sheriff, on a hand-car. e a "Another tough reconversion problem will be getting the women out of the war plants into the kitchen or from nuts to soup, as it were." (Cincin nati Enquirer.) There will be no looking for a dishrag at $3 per hour. e e e The annual rodeo is now his tory. The horseflesh, all sleek nd fat, has returned to the pas ture and the plow. Citizens also rejoice. They no longer wear the cowboy boots, that made them walk like their feet hurt, The mercury rose to 99 de grees yes. It was so hot nobody remembered how cold their fect got last January. e e NOSTRILS ASSAILED (Pallcan Bay News) The astonishing odor on dis trict highways last week has been traced to Art Lawn's old Ford. It seems he bought a bag of flshmeal In Eureka recent ly, placed it in the back of his car and forgot about it. Some body turned a hose on the car and the fishmcol got wet. Lawn, wrinkled his nose for days, and complained that everybody in the district was using evll-smclllng fertilizer." A fight to the death will take place tonight at the Klamath Kails armory when George Wag near takes on Antnne Leone In a grudge tiff. (Klamath Falls News-Herald.) The winner will pay all funeral expenses. Grasshopper control is now agitating agriculturists of the state. It is expected to be a little better than weed control, and not as good as liquor control. The ODT. recommends people celebrate the Fourth "with pic nice in their own back-yards". All signs indicate this is a fine idea, for the other fiinuly. e e e THE MESS IN NORWAY "We came upon a group of Oermans at this point who 'Kni ficd a hotel was but a couple of miles down the road. We sped for it as fas as the rarllied air would drive the engine and arrived in the nick of time. Some hundred Germans were occupying the buildings around the main hotel building. They were cooking great hunks of meat and giving one another tlio Nail salute. All English captain who dropped in because of clutch trouble almost exploded when he was given a Nazi salute and -German privates in a truck honked at him to move his car out of the way. Since thcro were only ourselves and three resist ance troopers on the scene it was not practical to make an issue of this state of-affairs, which is typical of the situation in Now way." N. Y. Herald-Tribune.) Fewer than 100,000 farms were electrified prior to 1930. The total today Js 2,600.000. with plans under way for the extension of lines to a million more three days after final V Py. Monday July 2, 1943 How About Fish? We believe it is about time to stop fighting over fish and try to solve the problem if it CAN be solved. And some of the best autnoruies in me counu-y say it can be. r!nR rprtainlv this evei'lastinc feud between the istjj nn hoth sides instead of solving or ameliorating the problem, And it gets nowhere. TiYi- tVio fish'prmpn insist and the fanners insist the ,s unioco: onmo mutual rrrniind is reacnea wnere com- DU UUiVOQ ...vw - o mon sense and reason can have some play, there are p-oino- to be some laws and perhaps some heads, broken, in these here parts. CO instead of fighting, the should get together, pernaps witn represema of tiia nonnlo pnll in thp. bpst exnerts on fish and 11 VLd Ul HIV. j ' w . w , w - 1- - in-igation that the country can provide, and see if some way can't be found whereby : 1. More water can be secured for irrigation in Southern Oregon, o na nf Snntnprn assets, game fishing, can NOT destroyed. We know what the raaicais on doui siues wm say . "It CAN'T be done!" Tf tVio waters nf Southern Oregon are to be pre- oomrort oa fishino- streams tion can't be extended, and the increased productivity of the soil has come to an end. IS that TRUE? There is the whole.question in three Franklv this department KNOW. There must be experts who do know. Then why hnrlHlp and determine once what CAN be done, and what CAN'T be? WITH that fact scientifically determined the future flmirso will hp plpar. Until it is determined, there is no way of knowing what should be or should not How About India? Rnnalfinrr nf radicals we see bv the latest DrCSS reports that Comrade Nehru recently released from jail, is on his way to Simla to discuss with British officials a new political set-up in India. Mr. Nehru represents the radical nationalists in mat, strange and tragic country, who, in the judgment of this department, do the true cause of national better ment more harm than good. FOR they are uncompromising perfectionists. Ihey naiat nn ovmnrt ri in or or nntVlintr: theV Want to CUt nft fVnm firent Hritain entirely, or not at all. No middle ground, no compromise will be accepted. One can't help but admire such spirit ana aevouon to an ideal, but it is, at least as we see it, entirely impractical. FOR with the situation what it is, the only way to secure absolute and immediate independence for India would be to adopt the course that the American colonies adopted and FIGHT for it. But what earthly charfce would India have in a con test with Great Britain? None at all 1 flreat Hritain ennld nut ravnliirinn nv ni-mnrl revolt and half a dozen battleships, of long delay if not complete abandonment 01 domin ion status for India, much less her independence. THERE are the facts. Why the Indian nationalists nf.irA t Tirtr-m iVa ham ia nno nf t.ViA nolifclCfll ICIUOC l,W ICWIUKU HIVII. vox I mysteries of the present international situation. On the other hand, the British government has offerer! Dominion status to India, a modified form it is true, but a great advance the past half century ; and the latest proposals ay uen eral Wavcll go even further in the direction of self-government The official delegation from India at tne &an a ran- cisco conference a group and intelligent men by the fnvnr ni'pentnnee of sneh ft Nehru group, also represented there unofficially have completely changed purn what they would term a "maKcsniit compro mise. IT is really too bad, for India ! Tf ever the familiar adatre that 4 'half a loaf is better than none at all" had truth and application, it has in the case 01 India at the present time. For certainly if India spurns "half a loaf" at the Simla conference she is going to get nothing for a long, long time I Year Necessary To Restore Damage To W estminster Abbey London (U.R) it will take at least a year to restore the esti mated over half-million dollars damage Westminster Abbey suf fered during London's air blitzes. It was recently disclosed by Westminster's Dean, Dr. P. dc Lahillicre. Despite the heavy damage done by Hitler's bombs, the Dean said, "the Abbey has not lost a single feature of historic Inter est. Five of the Abbey houses were lust, including my own, and merely aggravate it. . - the farmers are all wrong, fishermen are all wrong; extremists on both sides Orpp - on's createst natural be preserved, or at least , anv waters. then irriga- doubts it, but does not in this country, however, not get these experts in a and for all, what is true, be done. down anv sort of Indian with one Sflliad of bombei'S with the inevitable result over the colonial set-up of of extremely well educated way, will undoubtedly nronosal. but unless the their poncy, iney wouiu the Cloisters and Little Cloisters suffered, as well as the buildings of Westminster School and the Choir School." Dr. de Labilllere said that the Abbey's vors night was that of Mny 10. 194.1, when 30 Incciidt aries fell on the roof all but one of which were extinguished. The one incendiary fell in an in accessible place and set (ire to the roof. The oldest stained-glass win dow was removed from the Ab bey at the beginning of the war, while others, loft In place, es caped serious damage. The fa mous organ escaped with slight damage. News Behind The News By Paul Mallon - Washington, July 2 Two senators were talking over the San Francisco peace formula. One wondered what steps the! present aamin istration would take to sell it to the people, observing that If Mr. Roose velt were alive there would no doubt be a great pressure pro paga n d a Paul aiauoo drive organiz ed to herald the document as the greatest ad vancement of man since the 10 commandants and perhaps even greater. The second senator correctly concluded that Messrs. Truman and Stettlnius are modestly put ting forward their program, lay ing, no great claims for it, and allowing it to speak for itself. Indeed, the inner congression al sentiment seems generally to run to the theory that while this formula certainly does not guar antee either peace or security, no alternative improvement is possible now. Thus, the majority opinion concludes the document might as well be ratified to see what Mr. Stettlnius and the other world organization leaders can work out of it. e e TPHE San Francisco conference did not materially alter the Dumbarton Oaks scheme. Its main work was the building up of the economic and social coun cil and adoption of the trustee ship system. Basically the peace keeping project was left without change, to-wit: The security council, backed by the chiefs of staff of the five big United Nations, will not have an international police force. To stop an aggressor, it will order nations to take mili tary measures. The council itself may take economic steps to isolate an of fender, but the big five nations specifically retain the right to veto any action and an objection by any one of them can break down the whole peace formula. This veto right was retained at San Francisco over the pro test of the small nations, because the big three (Russia, Britain and the United States) have the only formidable sea, air and land forces and they did not want the other eight smaller nations on the council ordering their armies around. This formula, then, is purely tentative, and how much it will amount to remains for future events to determine. , Surely it should stop little wars, but it does not even pretend anything more than hope for avoiding big ones. Indeed, It recognizes realisti cally the facts of international life and is far away from the fancy projects advanced earlier in the war by some officials of this government to promote "one world," a - quart of-milk-a-day, etc. 'T'HE idealism of the document is centered largely I:, the eco nomic and social council, but even there restraint is notice able. The charter gives this council the obligation of promot ing "human rights and funda mental freedoms for, and with out distinction as to race, sex. language or religion." It docs not mention freedom of press, which certainly is a fundamental freedom. Of what good is freedom of language without freedom to use it? It seems a full pledge for our con stitutional liberties was avoided, possibly for fear of embarrassing contrasts with the Russian sys tem of political use of its press under dictatorship. e e . THE nnvy seems to have caused Mr. Stettlnius to mod erate his trusteeship notions to some vague extent not clear in the text. It appears a special category for bases in "strategic areas' has been created, but whether we will get ownership of the Jap islands for ourselves Is not plainly settled. There are many other apparent defects in the scheme which may lead to future trouble. A possibility of conflict be tween the general assembly of all the nations and the security council is apparent, although the council will dominate and can force any important action. Most of the voting Is to be done by two-thirds, which raises the pros pect that action desired by the malorlty conceivably could fail and no decision may be reached In some cases. Certainly action is likely to be limited to what everyone wants. This is not a particularly nw world envisioned by the charter. It is merely a continuance of Uie war world co-operation policy of the United Nations into the peace, providing them with very loose working arrangement. The really Important Influence for peace or war will be wielded by the big three in the develop ment of their future foreign poli cies. Inside or outside this or ganization. Clntn time for Mundajr Tr Late in l uatw? s ;m aaiurdaj anex noon .aw nijijwiw.'iw'fl'j..-! l-.fi " "O It V, ' 1 tt -' I h A( Flight o Time Mediord and Jackson Co. His tory from the files of the Mai) Tribune 10. 20 and 34 years ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY July 2. 1935 (It was Tuesday) Japan provoking Manchuria border clashes, Russia asserts. . House reverses self and passes bill to abolish utility holding companies. Fair and warmer. High 76, low 44 degrees. Jerry Jerome to announce Fourth of July bouts at Ashland. Out of season deer slayer fined in Jacksonville justice court. Dr. Leroy G. tlce here. Jensen to prac- TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY July 2. 1925 (It was Thursday) Santa Barbara wrecked by earthquake, to rebuild as model city. Lakeview reports shocks. Fair. High 88, low 81 de grees. Hundreds of Medford people leave for hills and coast to cele brate Fourth. Housewives urged to lay in supplies for over Sun day. Careless fishermen cause fire near Rogue River. - - Union Creek ready for big tourist season. THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO TODAY July 2. 1911 (It was Sunday) Medford spending million dol lars for new buildings this year. They are the Hotel Medford, the Mail Tribune, Crater Lake gar age, Sparta building. Queen Ann (Roosevelt) school, the Jackson school and A. A. Davis building. California is shaken by earth quake. Expect 5,000 visitors at Crater Lake this year. Livestock Portland. Or Jnlv 2 fTTP. Livestock. Cattle 1300, calves 300, market active, largely 25 centa higher, no fed steers available, best grangers 13.50-15.73; common-medium grade 11.50-15: heifers 10 50-13.00; canners and Cutter COWS 6. 30-8 50: tfrnnx fat beef cows, 11-13.00; load young cows to la.so: medium-good sausage bulls, 0 30-1150; beef bulls to 13 00; good choice vealers 1450-16.00. Hogs 250. market steadv. barrows and gilts 15.75; sous 15.00; choice feed- pigs up to 22.30. Sheen 2000. market slow, snrlnv lairiDs .ju cems tower; gooa ana choice grades 13.25-13.75; few 14.00; common crades down to 10.00. me dium-good yearlings 10.50; good ewes o.vu; cuwi aown 10 a.uu. Chicago, July 2 (UP (WFAl L.iventocK: Hogs anon. Active, fully steady; good ana cnoice barrows and Kilts 140 lbs. and ud at 14 73 ceilins: good and choice sows at 14 00. cattle: le.ouu caivrs; iooo. red steers and yearlings 10 to 15 centa higher; active at advance; top 18-00: bulk 15.50 to 17 50; common and me dium grade In moderate supply: most southwest grass steers 14.00 down. hef: 1300. Market steanv. goon and choice sorins lambs in 33: buck 1.00 less; medium ana gooa i4.au io 15.50. Portland Produce Portland. July 2 (UP) Whole sale Market Prices: rnhhnee Wn Ma WAIia 1C in. Corn California Bantam $6-6 30 box 6 doz. n.trllr Local No. 1 45c. Lettuce The Dalles, local 3't, 3 crate. Onions Red. $3 25: Yellow 3 25. Peas No. 1 3 73-4 00 per hamper, Rnlnnrh Locnl $2.35. ' Tomatoes Local hothouse 30-35C lb. California $3.75 lug Potatoes New California No. 1 S3 90 sack: Washington cobblers 3 85; Bliss Triumphs 3 85 sack. Chicago Wheat Chlraso July 3. (UP) Wheat Open Hlah Low Close July ldT'i IBH!, 1T. 16Bt Sept. ..in3, inn in,', nrc. ..IB.V, mj'i 164'. May .164, 164', 163'a m r flAIKY PRICKS 13 "i 1H.V 164! San Franc-Leo. July 2 (UP) Dfllrv Market: Butter: 93 aeore 43'i, OH cor 42i rhM: I.naf 2R 2. trlolea 27 2. Fi-aa: Laree arnrte A 44 j, medium trade A 41 umall grade A 31)' large grade B 41 Wall Street New York, July 2 (U.R) Utilities rose today to a new hioh since March 10. 1937. to feature a Eencrally higher, mod erately active stock market ses sion. Common stocks in the utility section had small net Rains with heavy trading in the low-priced issues. Preliminary closing Dow- Ill I NO RATION FIRESTONE STORES 214 So. Riverside Jones stock averages: Industrials 165.90, up 0.61: railroad 60.73, up 0.11; utility 33.35, up 0.22; 65 stocks 64.20, up 0.22. Sales totaled 1,380,000 shares compared with 2,020,000 Friday. Today's closing prices on selected stocks: American Tel. & Tel. j 174Vs Anaconda . . 34V4 Chrysler Ill Curtiss Wright . 7!s General Electric 42-14 General Motors . 68 Montgomery Ward .. 61'4 Penn. R. R 39& Phillips Petroleum .-.. . 50's J. C. Penney ...118 Radio 13U 53 43 Southern Pacific Standard Oil of Calif. Texas Gulf Sulphur 43V4 Transamerlca 13'8 United Aircrafts 31 U. S. Rubber 58' U. S. Steel 68V4 Prospect Prospect, July 2. The home of Mrs. Richard Tubman at Union Creek, was scene of the closing meeting of Prospect home extension unit, June 22. Picnic lunch under the trees, followed the morning social hour. A- business session was held in the afternoon, and Mrs. Virginia Wait, acting demonstra tion agent, of Medford, installed the new officers. Mrs. Ditsworth presented them with rosebud corsages. Mrs. Everett Shafer is chairman; Mrs. Charles Fanger, vice-chairman; Mrs. Richard Tubman, secretary; Mrs. Anna Sink, treasurer, and Mrs. Elmer Clemens, librarian. A fishing, swimming, and pic nic party was held at Casey's State Park June 24. Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jant zer and sons Robert and Carl, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hazzard, of Central Point, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Clemens and daughter Dorothy, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Neece, Miss Donna Shadley, Mr. and Mrs. Dana F. Cushing, and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Kelley. At the annual school meeting last week, Earl Ulrich was elect ed director for the three year term, and Tracy Boothby will finish the year of the term of Charles B. Broomfield, who re signed. Thomas A. Carlton is chairman of the board for the coming year. The school board appointed Mrs. Charles Fanger as school clerk, following the resignation of Mrs. Rose J. Kel ley, who served in that capacity for the past nine years. Jimmie Lenderman visited two days this week with his friend, Dale Winkle of Shady Cove. Pvt. and Mrs. Stanford Pear son are parents of their first child, a son, born at Community hospital in Medford, June 26. Pvt. Pearson is at Okinawa. The baby boy is also the first grand child of his only grandparent, Mrs. Frances Pearson of Pros pect. Prospect school district held the budget meeting. at th$ school gym, June 25, 'with small attend ance. The budget was adopted with six votes for and none against. Recent visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lenderman at R-C Village (formerly Jantzer Village) was their son and new daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Roy J. Lenderman Jr. of San Francisco. They returned to the bay area, June 27. Young Len derman, who is In the navy, has been recently granted three months shore leave. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Ncece and Miss Donna Sharley recent ly made a trip to their former home at Gilchrist, where they rented their house, and brought a load of furniture to their home here. Frank X. Jantzer returned from Junction City the first of the week, where he spent a few days visiting his son Vernon and daughter Patricia. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Ditsworth left June 27, for Soda Springs, near Lake Creek, where they have rented a cabin for a week. Mrs. Emma Hurt of Portland has accepted a position at Griove's Prospect resort. Miss Evelyn Ditsworth's pic ture appeared In the June 26 issue of the Oregon Journal, taken with the Veteran's Hospi tal group, when President Tru man visited there this week. Miss Ditsworth is stenographer on the office staff In the Admin istration building. SAVE YOUR TIRES WITH 7irc$tonc Factory-Method RECAPPING C.70 Free Inspection! Prompt terrlcet Drive la today your tires may be st the danger point) CIRTIMCATI NIIOED Medford Phon 4757 OBITUARY LORENZO G. JOHNSON Lorenzo Guy Johnson, a resi dent of Central Point for 19 years, passed away Sunday at a local hospital. He was born In Audubon county, Iowa, Jan. 29, 1899 and came to Oregon in 1926. Surviving are his wife, and two sons, Sgt. Lorenzo C. John son, Fort Mead, Md., Burl C. Johnson, Central Point; three daughters, Mrs. Lois E. Sfmmons, Medford, Mrs. Doris V. Hughes and Ruth Johnson, Central Point; two grandsons, Elvin and Terrence Simmons, Medford; his mother, Mrs. J. W. Call, Rogue River; four brothers, James V. Johnson and Donald W. Johnson, Astoria, Ore., Paul W. Johnson, Corning, Cal., and Robert W. Johnson with the army overseas; three sisters, Mrs. Clara Cardin, Rogue River, Mrs. Daltie Dole, Astoria, and Mrs. Velma Duni gan, Medford. Funeral services will be con ducted from the Perl Funeral Home Tuesday at 2 p. m., the Rev. Rolf Hansen officiating. Interment will be in Central Point cemetery. JOHN BARTHOLOMEW John Bartholomew, an em ploye of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Burgoyne since his arrival here 12 years ago, passed away at a local hospital Sunday. He was a great admirer of horses, and had taken care of them for years. He was born in Russia, Aril 7, 1872, coming to the UJ.ted States when he was 18 yed.s of age. ,' He leaves no relativ.fi. Funeral services will be con ducted from the Perl Funeral Home Thursday at 3:30 p. m. with the Rev. Father George R. Turney, rector of Saint Mark's Episcopal church, officiating. In terment will be in Siskiyou Me morial Park. ROSELLA DEJARNETT Mrs. Rosella DeJarnett, wife of John DeJarnett, Phoenix, passed away early Sunday at home. She had been ill but a short time. She was born in Min neapolis, Kansas, on Feb. 17, 1879, and had made her home in southern Oregon for 38 years. Besides her husband, . she leaves a daughter, Mrs. C. L Hockersmlth, Phoenix; two grandsons, two brothers, Wm Woodruff, Los Angeles, and Charles Woodruff, Kansas; and a sister, Mrs. Lynn Addlott, Colorado. Christian ' Science services will be read in the Conger- Morris chapel at 2 p.m. -Thursday with interment in Siskiyou Memorial Park. ' WILLARD THOMPSON Willard E. Thompson, 68, who moved here recently from Mich' igan, passed away unexpectedly Sunday in a local hospital. Ar rangements are in care of the Conger-Morris chapel and will be announced later. SARAH JANE CARMAN Mrs. Sarah Jane Carman passed away unexpectedly Sat urday evening at her home on Ross Lane. She had made her home in this community for 24 years. Arrangements arc in care of the Conger-Morris chapel, and will be announced later. MABEL A. BENNETT Mrs. Mabel Ann Bennett, wife of E. Carl Bennett, Sr., passed away at her home, 343 S. Grape, Sunday evening. She was a na tive of southern Oregon. Ar rangements in care of the Conger-Morris chapel, are awaiting word from a son, Eugene, sta tioned in the Pacific. HOLLYWOOD SEQUEL - Hollywood, July 2. U.R) i Movie Director Mervyn Leroy and his wife, the former Doris! Warner, daughter of Producer Harry L. Warner, today were headed toward divorce. The couple has two children. PREFERRED By SO MANY.... Because personal service Is never governed by price. Distinctive But Nor Expensive v SINCE 1888 CONGER -MORRIS FUNERAL PARLORS Sixth and West Main St. AMBULANCE SERVICE Office ef the County Coroner PHONE 3147 H. W. Conger Carlos W. Morrto JEEP WORK SHOP AT JUNIOR HIGH Junior Red Cross officials to day opened the "Jeep" work shop at the Junior high school with Mrs. James Medlay in charge. Continuing until Aug. 17,. the shop will be open from 9 a. m. to 12 noon, Monday to Friday. The work shop at the Junior Red Cross headquarters in the Holly building is open daily from 1 to 3 p. m with special classes also held from 10 a. m. to 12 on Wednesdays and Fridays. AH Medford children or adults are urged by Red Cross officials to glv any .available time to aid ing with the work of the shops, where articles are made for wounded servicemen confined In army and navy hospitals. At the "Jeep" shop game kits, checkerboards, chessmen, Chin ese checkers, puzzles, wooden writing boards, ash trays and lap trays will be made. Port folios, posters, Christmas cards and menu covers will be made at the headquarter work shop, with knittinj classes a special activity on Wednesday and Friday. Sixteen game kits made by the Junior Red Cross were sent to the hospital ship "Comfort" re cently, a victim of bombing by a Jap suicide pilot. Junior high school boys are especially asked to work on 100 more of these game kits to Ije made this sum mer. Canes and crutches brought to the shop for use of wounded servicemen are being polished and repaired for immediate ship ment to service hospitals, accord ing to Miss Vera Humphrey, chairman of Junior Red Cross activities. Die Mall Tribune Want Ads. WANTED At Once! Sheet Rock Men $1.50 per hour HALVE RS EN Construction Co. Klamath Falls, Oregon CLOSED JULY 2-3-4 Office Stationery & Supply Co. IS YOUR CAR FOR SALE? SEE HUMPHREY NOW for a HIGH GASH PRICE! HUMPHREY MOTORS USED CAR EXCHANGE 33 S. Riverside Ave.