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About The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1940)
.PAGE FOURTEEN Malketi and QituiHxrial STOCK MARKET TO GET NEW YORK. June 21 (P) Stock market dealings almost came to a halt today, and prices shifted narrowly, as many traders remained inactive pend ing publication of the German French armistice details. ; Apathy, prevailing at the start, continued during the re mainder of the session and trans fers, for the five hours, approxi mated 300,000 shares, one of the smallest aggregates in nearly a year. Gains and losses of frac tions were pretty evenly split at the close. - Steels were aided by another boost in the scrap metal. Motors kept their balance along with a handful of specialties, rails, mo tors and utilities. ' Resistant were U. S. Steel, Bethlehem, Chrysler, General Motors, Douglas Aircraft, United Aircraft, Glenn Martin, Allied Chemical, Consolidated Edison, Johns-Manville, Eastman Kodak, Brooklyn - Manhattan Transit, Santa Fe and N. Y. Central. Air Reduction 391 Alaska Juneau 4 Al Chem & Dye 151 Allied Stores 6 Am Pow tt Lt 31 Am Rad Sta San 5i Am Roll Mills 1U Am Smelt tt Ref 37 Am Tel it Tel 1561 Am Water Works 81 Am Zinc L & S 5 Anaconda - 21 -Armour 111 5 Atchison 15! Bait & Ohio 31 Bendix A via ', 281 Beth Steel 781 Boeing Airp , , , 141 Borden 181 Borge-Warner 151 Budd Mfg 31 Calif Packing 18 Callahan Z L 11 Calumet Hec . Si Canadian Pacific 3 Case (J I) 491 Cat Tractor 471 Celanese , , 251 Cert-Teed 41 Ches tt Ohio 361 Chrysler 631 Col Gas tt El , 51 Com') Solvents 91 Comm'nw'lth tt Sou li Consol Edison 261 Consol Oil . 61 Cont'l Can 411 Corn Products .... 50 Crown Zellerbach '. 141 Curtis Wright 7g Doug Aircraft 71 Dupont De N 162 Eastman Kodak 125 Zl Pow tt Lt 41 General Electric 311 General Foods 401 Gen Gas tt El "A" 616 General Motors 431 Gillette 41 Goodyear Tire 151 Gt Nor Ry pfd 21J Hecker Prod 81 Holland Furnace ' 231 Hudson Motors , 31 Illinois Central 71 Insp Copper 9 Int Harvester , ,, , 45 Int Nick Can 221 Int Pap & P pfd 47J Int Tel tt Tel 31 Johns Manville 53 Kennecott 28 Lib O Ford 331 Llgg Myers "B" 961 Loew's 231 Lorlllard P 201 Montgomery Ward . 391 Nash-Kelv 4 J Nat'l Biscuit 181 Nat'l Cash 111 Ml I Without wolKng...Poy bock hi SoiV payment, fitted to your liv . tome. Your cor need not be fully j ; told for. Reduce your preient payment!, Why not ailc utl Commercial Finance Corporation lis Seetk V it, Kluwta run hM 3265 Lkieu 11-223 SLOWS PEACE REPORT mm Notice to Bidders of Rodeo Concessions Bids are In order until 6 p. m., Friday. June 21, for xcluslv drinks, tats, cigarettes, novelties, at Fair grounds, July 4, 8, 6, 7, and Exhibit building dances, July 3, 4, 5, 6. Certified check must accompany bid. Further Information at headquarters, 8th and Walnut. --Rodeo Committee. 131 20 7i 111 181 5! Ohio Oil 6 Otis Steel Pac Gas tt El .. Packard Motor Penney (J C) Penna R R Phelps Dodge Phillips Pet Proctor tc Gamble . Pressed Steel Car . Pub Svc N J Pullman 81 281 ..- S ... 821 .. 181 ... 281 SU .... 591 91 34! 201 41 161 7 171 361 71 411 711 81 26 81 5! 11 181 22! 331 71 7 8 II 37 301 91 41 41 69 12! 791 391 Radio Rayonier Rem Rand Republic Steel Reynolds Tob "B" Richfield Oil Safeway Stores . Scars Roebuck Shell Union Sou Cal Edison .. Southern Pacific Standard Brands Standard Gas tt El Stand Oil Calif Stand Oil Ind .... Stand Oil N J Stone tt Webster . Studebaker .. Sunshine Mining . Sup Oil Texas Corp Texas Gulf Sulphur . Tidewater Asso Oil Timken Roll Bearing Trans-America Union Carbide Union Oil Calif Union Pacific United Aircraft United Airlines - 161 United Corporation . 2 63 111 201 80 52i 32 United Fruit ... United Gas Imp U S Rubber ... U S Rubber pfd U S Steel Vanadium Walworth Warner Pictures Western Union . Westinghouse White Motor Woolworth - 31 21 17 . 921 9 - 321 Portland Produce PORTLAND, Ore., June 21 UP) BUTTER prints, A grade 32c lb. in parchment .wrap pers, 33c in cartons; B grade 31c in parchment wrappers, 32c in cartons. BUTTERFAT First quality. maximum of .6 to 1 per cent acidity delivered in Portland. 29-29JC lb.; premium quality 301-31c; valley routes and coun try, points 2c .less. or 271c lb.; second quality 2c under first or 27ic lb. CHEESE Selling price to Portland retailers: Tillamook triplets, 19c lb.; load 20c lb FOB. Price to wholesalers, trip lets 17c lb.; loaf 18c FOB Tula, mook. EGGS Buying prices: extras large 15-18c lb.; standards large 14c; extras medium 13c; Do standards 13c doz. COUNTRY MEATS Selling price to retailers: country-killed hogs, best butchers 125-150 lbs. 8-8 Vic: vealers fanev 13V4.14- lb.; light thin 10-12c; heavy 10- 11c; lambs spring 16c; yearlings 10-12c: ewes 4-6 c lb.: eood Cutter cows 10c Ih ' nnnpr cows 9c lb.; bulls 11-1 2c lb. L.1VE POULTRY Buying price: No. 1, grade: Leghorn broilers 11-2 lbs., 14c; fryer under 3 lbs. 15c; fryers 2!- '!7c; leghorn hens over 31 lbr 's. 16c; roasters over 4 lb 12c; leghorn hens under 3 'A lbs. 10c; colored hens over 5 lbs. 13c: colored hens 4 lbs. to 8 lbs. 13c; old roosters 5c. DRESSED TURKEYS ; Sel ling prices: hens No. 1. 131-14c lb.; toms 9-1 0c. ONIONS Oregon No. 1 $2.15 50-lb. bag: new wax. sl.25: red $2.00. NEW POTATOES California Whites 50's. $1.10: 100's. S2.03- 2.15. POTATOES Deschutes 2 2.1- Klamath Falls S2.25 rwt lnral whites 90c box; Mai In $2.25 cental; southern yams S2.40-2.50 crate. HAY Sellinff nrlps In retail. ers: alfalfa No. 1, $15.50 ton; oat-vetch $13.00 ton; clover $11.00 ton; timothy eastern Ore gon $17.00-18.00 ton: vallov timothy $14.00 ton Portland. wool--1940 eastern Oregon range 26-28 c; crossbred 30c; Willamette valley 12 months 32c lb. Lnnlcintf fnr Rjroaintf Tmi to the Classified paee. Nat'l Dairy Prod .. Nat'l Dist Nat'l Pow tt Lt ..- N Y Central North Amer Co ...... Northern Pacific . THE Chicago. June 21 UP) Wheat prices advanced fractionally in a quiet trade today as dealers awaited developments in Europe, for a cue to future market ac tivity. Less favorable crop reports, including receipt of wheat sam ples from southeastern Indiana bearing heavy infestaton of black stem rust, continued to attract attention. Price gains were small and were wiped out frequently. Closing wheat figures were un changed to ic higher compared with yesterday, July 781-lc, Sep tember 781-lc; corn 1-ic up, July 621-1, September 60c; oats unchanged to ic higher. S. F. LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, June 21. (AP-USDA) - Hogs, salable 100; steady; 3 packages 192-222 lb. Californias $6.10, sorted 166 lbs. at $5.60; odd packing, sows $4.10. Cattle, salable none; steers nominally steady; desirable grass kinds $8.00-75, fed steers quoted up to $10.00; young cows and heifers absent, fair inquiry, mostly $6.50-7.50. Calves: sal able none; nominal; good to choice vealers quoted $10.50 11.00. Sheep, salable 757, steady; long deck choice 79 lb. north coast lambs $8.90; packages of shorn lambs 73-77 lbs. $7.85 8.15; market supply this week at 13,000 head new record; lambs closing 50c lower; shorn ewes steady, mostly $1.00-3.00. WOOL MARKET BOSTON, June 21 (AP-USDA) Demand for wool was rather slow in Boston today although inquiries from mill buyers were being received by houses. In view of the slower demand sale prices were mostly slightly easier than earlier In the week on a few lines. Country-packed three-eighths and quarter blood bright fleece wools were selling at 39-40 cents. In the grease, delivered to users. Good French combing length fine territory wools in original bags were mov in at 85-86 cents, scoured basis. Offerings at these prices, how ever, were ' comparatively, restricted. Sport Briefs By EDDIE BRIETZ JEW YORK, June 21 UP) Louis goes to Atlantic City today to brush up on his golf until Baer and Galento collide, July 2. Joe ordered his favorite golf pro to fly from Detroit and join him . . . Well, ain't it about time somebody yelled "Break up the Browns!" . . . Two from the Yanks and four from the Red Sox . . . Looks like the Browns won't need those seven extra night dates. At the rate they're going . they'll soon be self supporting . . . Louis flung 34 "Joe Louis specials" in the seventh and eighth heats last night and everyone of them hurt Billy Conn as much as they did Godoy, even if Conn was sitting in the fourth .row. e e Heavyweights Bob Sikes and Neville Beech and lightweight Tippy Larkin all learned to box in CCC camps . . . Beg Pardon Dept.: We certainly stepped into one when we said Dizzy Dean got one vote for the Texas league all-star team. As a matter of fact, he's No. 1 choice for the starting pitcher. From the mail we got, every fan in the league is on the Dean bandwagon, root ing hard for his comeback, e e TODAY'S GUEST STAR Harold C. Burr, N. Y. Post: "The moccasin telegraph from the Indians' dugout has it Oscar Vitt is being permitted to finish out the season to save the club's face ... It's believed this was common knowledge among the disgruntled players when they called off their demands to have Vitt burned at the stake." e e e The fellow who stepped off a trans-continental plane here yesterday was not Baron Gott fried Von Cramm, the German tennis star, as the radios blared. It was Owen Anderson, Califor nia player who was carrying a racquet with the baron's name prominently inscribed on the press. Von Cramm gave Ander son the racquet several years ago, before he got in dutch with the nazis . . . Coach Al Ulbrick son took his Washington U. crew, Poughkeepsie winners, on a tour of the big fair yesterday. Aeronautical material amount ing to $25,480,817 was export ed from the United States dur ing January, 1940. Extra dry?Txy Wleland's Ex tra Palel Extra' wetl Extra good! NEWS AND THE HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS, Consolation for ft w V I , tfSn fVS TtUphole) President Albert Lebrun of France visits a Purls hospital to console vic tim! of a Narl air raid on Paris, during which a thousand bombs were dropped, hundreds were killed and wounded. Picture was one of the first received in the United States by Clipper plane following this raid on the beloved French city. Heart Beats Charge Blood With Electricity, Report By HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE Associated Press Science Editor SEATTLE, June 21 A dis covery that the heart is a power house of negative electricity was announced to the American As sociation for the Advancement of Science here today. The discovery was Interpreted by its authors as a new explan ation of the workings of metabol ism, which is the energy pro duction of living tissues. The negative electricity dis covery was reported Jointly by Dr. George W. Crile, surgeon, Dr. Otto Glasser, physicist, and Daniel P. Quiring, anatomist, of Cleveland. They measured the electrical charge on the red corpuscles of the blood. This charge, they said, is a negative electrical po tential, averaging in animals four thousandths of a volt. Their experiments showed that the red corpuscles take on the charge as a result of the heart beat. They doubled the voltage to eight thousandths, merely by speeding up the heart beat with adrenalin. By many other means, some mechanical, they slowed or speeded the heart. Always there was a rise or fall of electrical potential of the red cells with the heart rate. Dr. Crile said this explains for the first time why all the body is electrically negative, while the brain and nervous system are electrically positive. The negatively charged red corpus cles, three trillion in number, travel through 62,000 miles of capillaries and in so doing trans fer some of their negative charge to the tissues. The brain and nerve tissues meanwhile remain positive be cause they take up oxygen at a more rapid rate than any other body tissues. The result, said Dr. Crile, is a difference of potential, or elec- In This Corner By GEORGE KIRKSEY UalM Fmi Stiff Cermet-bat NEW YORK, June 21 (UP) The all-star major league game which will be played at St. Louis July 9 promises to be notable for one thing even be fore it's played. That's the end of the Yankees domination of the American league team. Last year's game was pretty close to an all-Yankee affair since the American league team, which won 3-1, was composed of six players off Joe McCarthy's world champions, five of which finished the game. Of the 25 players on the American league squad there were nine Yanks. The Yanks will be lucky to get as many as five players on this year's squad and it's doubt ful if more than one or two of them will be in the starting line up. It's a new order of things in the American league with the old Yankee standbys going down the last long mile. The managers In both leagues are now sending In their selec tions to their respective league presidents who'll announce the teams on July 1. If the pilots stick to form this season and not past performances and repu tations of other years only four Yankees will bo on the squad, They are Pitcher Monte Pear son, and Outfielders Job Dl Maggio, George Selkirk and Charlie Keller. Despite his pres ent batting mark of about .300 Joe DIMagglo definitely belongs on the squad. Selkirk has play ed the most consistent ball for the Yanks but Keller, weak against lefthanders, has exhibit ed some powerful hitting against righthanders. Of this group only DIMagglo is likely to start the game unless Pearson should get the pitching assignment. . Paris Bomb Victims trical tension, between the brain and nerves on ono side and the tissues on the other. Speeding the heart, as in work, raises the potential so that the system can almost instantly do more work. The potential drops with Illness and fatigue, and dis appears with death. JUNIOR POLICE DIRECT TRAFFIC Junior police officers, trained by Police Officer Tom Judge, directed traffic during the bi cycle parade sponsored by Mont gomery Ward company early Friday afternoon, it was an nounced by the department. The young officers are expect ed to assist during the Fourth of July festivities, and motorists and pedestrians alike are asked to help in any way possible with the work outlined for the young men. LEGAL NOTICES NATIONAL FOREST TIMBER FOR SALE Sealed bids will be received by the Regional Forester, U.S. Forest Service, "'60 Market Street, San Francisco, California, up to and including August 1, 1940, for all the live timber marked for cutting, -and all merchantable dead timber lo cated on an area embracing about 50,000 acres within Town ship 43, 44, and 45 North, Ranges 8 and 9 East, M.D.M.. Modoc National Forest, California, esti mated to be 100,000 M feet b.m., more or less, of ponderosa pine timber. No bid will be consid ered of less than $2 00 per M feet for merchantable timber, and of less than $.50 per M feet for material, unmerchantable because of size, to be taken at the option of the purchaser, and for material, unmerchantable because of defect, also optional, if charged for; but increases in the price bid for optional ma terial will not be considered in making an award. In addition, the purchaser will be required to make deposits to cover the cost to the United States for fire hazard reduction work at the rate of 50c per M feet b.m., and to make deposits for reforesta tion and other silvicultural work on this sale area at the rate of 25c per M feet b.m., both such deposits to be on the basis of the actual scale of merchantable material. Stumpage rates, to be adjusted every three years. $5,000.00 must be deposited with each bid, to be applied on the purchase price, refunded or re tained in part as liquidated dam ages, according to conditions of sale. The right to reject any and all bids reserved. This will involve light selective cutting. Before bids are' submitted, full information concerning the tim ber, the conditions of sale, and the submission of bids should be obtained from the Regional Forester, San Francisco, or the Forest Supervisor, Alturas, Cali fornia. M 25; J 21; JY 19. No. 86. CALL FOR BIDS Silver Lake School District No. 14 calls for bids for the following work: Gymnasium to be covered over old wall with Rustic with building paper be tween walls. Approximately 3600 sq. ft. surface, same to have three coats of paint. Also school house roof to be covered with one coat of preservative. Time limit to enter bids; July 8, 1940. Board reserves right to re ject all bids. All bids to be sent to Steele Gowdy, chairman, Silver Lake, Ore. . . ' - ' ' Date: June 20, 1940, C. A. WATERHOUSE, ... Clerk. J 21-22-24-25-26-27. No. 101. ORE. Lost and Found LOST Small boy lost coin purse at Regatta, Sunday ..Con tained $1. Man was seen to pick It Hip. Please return, to News-Heraid omca ana re store boy's faith In human na ture. ai35tf Oenerai honcee SPECIAL Monday through Thursday only. Regular $2.95 permanent wave $1.80. North western Beauty College. 9-22 NU-BONE CORSETIERRE Phone 4896, Hortense Peter son. 7-17 SKATINO FOR LADIES only Tuesdays and Fridays, start Ing 2 p. m. Poole's Roller drome. 6-30 Save 25 of your insurance premiums. Preferred risks, both fire and automobile, are eligible, R. C. DALE 120 So. 9th St Phone 6972 7-19 Personals SPECIAL Monday through Saturday, $3.95 special oil per manent wave complete $2.50. Northwestern Beauty College. 6-22 FREE MARCELS every Mon day, Tuesday aand Wednes day. Northwestern Beauty College. 7-Bmtf MEN, WOMENI WANT VIM7 Stimulants, tonics In Oatrex tablets pep up bodies lacking Vitamin Bl, Iron, Calcium. Phosphorus. 33c size today only 29c. First package satis fies or maker refunds low price. Call, write Whitman Drug and all other good drug stores. 6-30 Transportation Go By Motor Coach Shortest Route - Lowest Fares to Northern Points One Round Way Trip Spokane ...$l 1.00 $20.05 Boise, Ida. 10.00 18.10 Portland 5.90 10.65 Seattle . 8.40 14.65 Mt. Hood Stages, Inc. Busses Leave 1:00 P. M. Greyhound Depot Phone 5521 7-20-mtf 10 Services GLASS Duplate Safety Glass, window glass, plate and mirrors, resll verlng. Kimball's Glass Shop, 827 Walnut Phone 7378. 7-6mtf FOR SEWING, alterations and remodeling see Mrs. Harney. Phone 3682. 2111 Darrow 6-24 DESIGNING, Dressmaking, Al . terations. Grace Smart Pell can Theatre Building. Tele phone 7187. 7-3 FLOOR SANDING Old floors refinlshed. Norman Fraley. Phone 4001. 7-17mtf WRINGER ROLLS Washing machine and vacuum cleaner parts for all makes. Merit Washing Machine Service, 709 South 6th. 7-16mtf CARPENTER Building, re modeling. Phone 3505. 6-25 MATTRESSES REBUILT $2 Davenport and chair reuphol stered $1,7.50. Economy Mat tress 4c Upholstering Co., 2313 South 6th. Dial 6568. 6-26 DRESSMAKING, hemstitching, buttons, buckles covered, al terations on new and old clothing. Mrs. H. M. Allender, 731 Main, room 216. Phone 7263. 7-16mtf PAPERHANGINO, PAINTING, Kalsominlng. Phone 6848. Melvin E. Frost. - . 7-15mtf LAWNMOWERS SHARPENED $1.00. Poole's Bike Shop. 6-22 CURTAINS home laundered and stretched. Reasonable. Phone 5647. 7-llmtf FREDRICK'S Scientlfio Vapor izer Scalp Treatment 75 cents. Free marcels. ' Phone '3883. Modernistic Beauty College; 2189tf MOVED Conners Service Co. We. fix that radio. 2007 So. 6th. Phone 6878. 6-23U IRONING 60c dozen pieces. Will call and deliver. Phone 6337. 28tf DOREMUS Rug and Furniture Cleaners, 2012 Orchard, phone . 6875. 7-5 RHOADS' WINDOW CLEAN ERS Floors refinlshed, wax ed, polished. Kalsomlned, pa pered walls cleaned. Phone 4768. 7-3, FLOOR SANDING and refinish ing. Clifford Golden, phone 3922. 6-Slmtf FLOORS Sanding, refinlshlng, old floors cleaned and polish, pel, All electric machine. S. H. Brunker. Phone. 7991V ' 7-7 er-lcee PAINTING PAPERHANGING R. E. Simmons. Phona 6704. 7-8 PAINTING PAPERHANGING Interior decorating. Fred Laughton, Master Painter. Phona 6879. 7-8mtf PAINTING, PAPERHANGINO, kalsominlng, house painting and roof staining. Dial 6060. C. A. Konsella. 7-13mtf LAWNMOWERS, saws, Indian motorcycles, Cushman auto glides and general repairing. Bodenhamera, 351-3 East Main. 714 HOUSECLEAN1NG Art Bene dict, 6848. 6-21 PAINTING, KALSOMINING II. L. Brown. Phone 4220. 7-10mtf PAINTINO, KALSOMINING Papering a specialty. C. .C. Hyde. Phone 3324 or 0062. 7-20 12 Educational LEARN the beauty profession under the pleasant environ ment of the Modernistic Beauty College. ' Employment assured. 21B0tf 13 Health CONVALESCENT HOME Fac ing park, Llthla water. Ash land, Ore. Room, board $10.00 per week. Cabins, apartments for rent, reasonable. 7-6 DENTAL PLATES repaired. Usually 1 to 3 hrurs. Dr. Gordon Lrdlngham. 6-29 U Help Wanted, female WOMAN for general housework. 3 Prescott street. 6-21 WANTED Experienced house keeper on ranch, $20. Eva Adams, Tulclake. 6-21 WANTED Woman for general housework on ranch. Rt. 1. Box 637. 6-22 WANTED Girl, between 18 and 22, for housework. Fam ily of four. Good home and good wages. Permanent. News Herald. Box 2946. 6-24 la Help Wanted, Male MAN ABOUT 30 as salesman. Should have own car and be able to sell mechanical sup plies. Salary and commission basis. Give experience and references. News-Herald, Box 2692. 6-24 II Situations Wanted SHIPMAN NURSERY Chil dren cared for day. week, month. Phone 7363. 1913 Wantland. 7-19mtf MILKER, hand or mechanical, desires work on dairy ranch. Reference. Room 19, Lake Hotel. 6-26 HOUR Work. 4246. 6-20 MEDICAL SECRETARY wishes position. Box 2615, News Herald. 6-24 ALL-AROUND BAKER wants job. Call Roy Dysert, Tulc lake. Calif. ' 6-22 EXPERIENCED WOMAN, small child, wishes work on ranch or for crew. 1304 Wordcn. Rosella Wooden. 6-24 20 Room and Board ROOM AND BOARD 304 So. 4th St 6-26 ROOM AND BOARD In private home. 1004 Eldorado. Dial 3851. 6-24 ROOM AND BOARD Modern home, 1327 Sargent 6-23 BOARD AND ROOM Private home with home privileges, shower, laundry. Phone 7272, . 700 Mitchell. . 6-25 BOARD AND. ROOM Private shower. $a week. 723 Klam ath.'. 7-17 ROOM AND BOARD for, three gentlemen. 523 Lincoln. Dial 4254. ' g.22 ROOM, BOARD, garage. 614 Walnut. ' ; . 7-26mtf 1028 JEFFERSON Nice room, close In, e x c e 1 1 e n t food. Single or double. Dial 4765. 7-2 BOARD AND ROOM 1545 Sar gent 6-23 ROOM and Board. Gentleman or two. 939 Lincoln. Phone 6897. 965tf ROOM, Board, laundry, $35. Two week's credit if employ ed. 801 Martin. 6-24 22 Rooms for Rent VACANCY 134' No. 3rd. 7-6 CLAREMONT 228 No. 4th. All outside, newly decorated mod ern rooms. Free parking. . . . 8-5mtf NICE ROOMS for gentlemen. 829 High. Phoone 5244. 6-26 ROOM for gentleman In modern home. Phone 4667. 6-21 COOL DOUBLE ROOM Crescent. 1204 6-26 ROOM FOR RENT for gentle man. '614 N. 10th. . 6-26 TWO DESIRABLE ROOMS .414 Walnut ., ' 824 10 June 21, 19401 1 12 Rooms For Rent LAKE HOTEL Clean, modern rooms, $3 and $4 per week. 8 23 ROOM for ono or two gentle, men. $2.50 for one, $4 for two. 60S Eldorado. 6-24 ROOM 020 Lincoln. 2006t( NICELY fiimlahed housekeep ing room. 248 broad. 2SU8lf VACANCY 1 034 High. 7-20 24 Apartments For Rent 4-ROOM unfurnished apartment. Water and range. Children welcome. 1U-0 Lexington, 6-22 SMALL now furnished apart ment, garage. Ilrnt and w. tor. Clone in. 531 N. 11 Ih. 6 22 LIGHT housekeeping, ever thing furnished, summi-r rates. K. D. Apts., 1405 Miiln. 623 3-ROOM unfurnished apt., air conditioned, electric range, frlgidnlre. Call between 3:30 and 7:30 p. m., SOS No. Otli. 6 22 VACANCY Etiplnnurio Courts, furnished. 6 30mlf FOR RENT 2-room furnished Apt., D20 Wnlnut. 0-21 PARK AITS. Furnished Apl everything furnished. 8 21 VACANCY Rex Arms. 7-12 VACANCY Summer rates. 410 N. 10th. 7 13 VACANCY Furnished apart ment. Adults only. Villa Mar quise. 1320 Onk. 1277tf CASCADE APARTMENT HOTEL Completely furnish. I ed. Convenient hold service. Day, week or month. 62Unilf APARTMENT 710 Muln. next to Pino Tree theiitrc. 8 22 FURNISHED AIT., also room for lucly. S37 High. 22lf TWO -ROOM APARTMENT 813 Pine. , 6 22 FOR RENT Close-In 3-room apartment. Electric refriger ator and stove, lnnerspring mattress. 628 Oak St. St. St. Francis Apartments. 6 22 2 AND 3-ROOM furnished apart ments. 1803 Main. 6 20 VACANCY Small two rooms, furnished. Adults. 325 Com mercial. 6-22 LARGE COOL ROOM with kitchenette. 248 Broad. 23l)Blf , NICELY FURNISHED one-roonT apartment Adults. 804 N. 9th. 2014tf VACANCY Inquire 1403 Main. 624 FOR RENT Apt Alpha Apis. Phono 4322. lSUStt 3-ROOM modern apartment. In quire 201 East Main. 2 1 OOtf FURNISHED housekeeping room Fairfield Apts., 210 Main. 6-22 FURNISHED one-room apart ment with bath, gas for cook ing. $4.50 week. 220 So. 4th. 6 24 TWO-ROOM furnished apart, ment, close In, 40S No. 3rd. 6-27 APT. FOR RENT Alr-coolcd. Court View Hotel. Also sleep-k Ing room. 0-2V 2-ROOM furnished apt, $22.50. Electric range. Inquire 1118 Walnut afternoons. 6-23 28 Houses For Rent FOR RENT Unfurnished twe bedroom house. 2121 Had. Cllffc. 6-22 FURNISHED modern cottages and cabins, Reasonable rates. Altamont Auto Camp, So. 6th. 7-10 3-ROOM furnished house, $27.50. Villa Marquis, 1320 Oak. 2041 If 28 Miscellaneous For Rent FOR RENT Small business lo. cation. 1132 Main. 6-23 IRRIGATED MEADOW PAS' TURE D RANCH, DORRIS. T. J. MURRAY. 6-22 J MEADOW PASTURE for rent or sale, plenty feed and water. Wm. Lambert, Round Inkc, Ashland route. 6-21 30 Real Estate For Sale FOR SALE OR TRADE for Klamath county property: 200 acres timber land ir Idaho. All clear, estimated 2 million feet yellow pine and fir. News Herald, Box 2583. 0-21 FOR SALE 4-room house 4002 So. 6th, or phone 3043. 6-22 WONDERFUL HOME In Ash. land Joining Llthla park, 15 acres, 20 cherry trees, 24 poach trees, 5 English wal nuts, 3 fig trees (one bearing), 1 acre berries (mammoth nel son), grapes, 300 strawberry plants, 6-room modern house, woodshed, garage, , electric v range,' cabin and apartment r now rented. $3000. $1000 down. Geo. KrniinH, Rt. 3, llox 60, Klnmalh Fulls.. . .. 0-21