Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 03, 1943, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
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FRANK JENKINS
Bdtlor
A ttrrry eomhlitatloa f the Krtnlrtf Hrald and
' lha Klttnith Kcwi. rubltth'd wjr aftrncvn nropft
Sunday it Kiplantde and Tint treat, Klamath Full,
OrtjfOfl, t7 the Herald PubUnhljif Co. tod th Klamath
Neva Pti blurting Company
Fntmd a etrand elan matter at the pcMfl rf
Klamath Fall, Or., en Aiifuat . 1K uodr art of
eoncma, XI arch , jfr.
Htmbtr of Audit
Brimo Or CiBcutArtoir
ltrranld Nationally hj
Wiar-HottiDAT Co., Ikc
Ian FranHico, Jfw Tork, !
aula, Ch learn, TVrtUnd. Loa
Anjla,
MALCOLM ETLEY
Jonainj; Editor
SB "..V
It
EPLEY
Today's Roundup
Br MALCOLM EPLEY
ROSE POOLE wai In our office yesterday
with some Hed Cross publicity. We de
tectcd a look of worry and concern on her
4 . face. It didn't take much
" questioning to find out what
iff-" was the matter.
3 Klamath county, she told us.
JSv is way behind In its Red
5 will find the figures In Mrs.
Poolo's story elsewhere in to-'
day's paper, and they do not
look good. They show that this
county's Red Cross production
quota for 1942 has not yet
been completed, and that will
be necessary before the 1943 quota work can
tart.
What has happened to our women who tew
is probably the same thing that happens to all
of us In connection with war work. We blow
hot and cold.
Right after Pearl Harbor, when we had just
been shocked into a realization of the sig
nificance of war to our country, we all pitched
in and did an effective job on civilian defense,
Red Cross, and other phases of war work. But
as time wore on, and we became accustomed
to the new situation, interest dropped off.
Sentiment of the American people now fluc
tuates violently between optimism and pessi
mism. Give us a little good news, and we
begin to act as if the war were about over.
There were people, for instance, who thought
that the recent Casablanca conference announce
ment was going to be an armistice.
To a degree, our interest in war work fluc
tuates along with these changes in sentiment.
It is difficult to keep up the pressure, but it is
important that we do so.
Distillers' Big Job
A GREAT many people, we believe, are like
ourselves in not knowing heretofore the
extent of the contribution to the war effort
being made by the American distilled spirits
industry. A lot of folks have the idea the dis
tillers are going right along producing whiskey
and gin and nothing else in the war period.
This happens to be far from the truth. The
whole industry is now completing the job of
converting its facilities for producing grain
alcohol for the war program.
And grain alcohol is a vitally important war
material. It is the basic chemical for the
manufacture of smokeless powder, synthetic
rubber and chemical warfare materials. It is
used in the manufacture of hundreds of pro
ducts for military and essential civilian needs.
It is indispensable to the chemical Industry,
which in turn is essential to war production.
Hence, it is clear that we have to have a
lot of grain alcohol to carry on this fight.
And we are getting it from the distilleries.
Twenty-five of them, representing more than
half of the industry's total capacity, are working
24 hours a day, seven days a week, turning out
grain alcohol. The remaining 100 distilleries
are being converted rapidly and in the mean
time are producing high wines for redistillation
at ether plants into grain alcohol.
The industry is producing enough alcohol to
supply the army ordnance department with full
requirements of alcohol for smokeless powder,
and to supply the chemical warfare service.
It is providing lend-lease alcohol and helping
build up a government stockpile. It is pre
paring to supply the huge need for alcohol for
synthetic rubber.
That's the story. The Industry is doing a
big and successful job for the war effort.
What about whiskey supplies? It is true that
whiskey production will cease until the in
dustry has filled the vital demand for alcohol.
But because whiskey stock laid away for ma
turing will be available, there will be whiskey
for normal requirements for more than three
years.
members already had announced their Inten
tions, and there were three to six mora who
refused to say how they would vote, but pri
vately had tipped the opposition to count them
in. These democrats furnished the margin of
defeat.
The timing of the announcement of opposi
tion by another democratic city boss, Ed Crump,
of Memphis, Just a few hours before Flynn
backed out has led to a general public assump
tion that Mr. Crump was the giant killer. The
tallies show Flynn would have been defeated
without the opposition of Mr, Crump's ' two
senators, McKellar and Stewart.
The amazing fact that one city machinist
wanted to take credit for slaying another in
the same party, has caused observers here to
look for reasons, in additiou to the moral ones
Mr. Crump stressed in a statement.
One story is that Mr. Crump had not been
getting much patronage out of the New Deal
for some time past. But the one most generally
accepted is that Mr. Crump was getting even
for what the New Dealers tried to do to his
candidate, Senator Stewart in the last election.
It is said by a senator in a position to know
that the administration's so-called "TVA group"
and other Roosevelt followers in Tennessee, put
Mi. Stewart about 18,000 votes behind coming
into Memphis. In short, the New Deal had de- j
feated Mr. Crump in all Tennessee except in his
nome city. There, Sen. Stewart enjoyed such
amazing popularity or something that he was
able to amass a lead of 35,000 and win the
state as a whole.
Mr. Crump is now even for that one.
SIDE GLANCES
com im rr up. aptwei. mtrnmnMon 0-3
HAY FUND
B LLOKEHED BY
C OF G G R LI LI F'
"Folks in this town didn't tuke me seriously till I jjot
into the Marines and made a name for myself live mili
tary life sure beats delivering groceries lM
EDWARD FLYNN
Tearful Situation
News Behind ihe News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Feb. 3 The Bronx ex-boss,
Edward J. Flynn, withdrew from a dip
lcraatic career for many a reason other than
the one announced, namely,
that he wished to avoid a po
litical fight, embarrassing to
Mr. Roosevelt, in the senate.
The fight was over. A close
tally by a competent senator
showed the line-up against
Flynn's confirmation to be
about 50 to 35, with 11 sen
ators expected to be absent on
the roll call.
Mr. Flynn was defeated, not
by the reoublicans. as he nub.
licly proclaimed, but by 10 to 14 democratic
senators. Seven or eight of his own party
. ft
m
MALLON
Squeeze Play
W iOST tearful pathos of the whole event
IVI however, lay in the peculiar manner in
which Mr. Flynn was even squeezed into re
signing as demo-ft..
committceman dur- '" '
ing the senate "";
fight. Vl- '
He had resigned
as national chair- jw
man and was p
proudly accepting
the ambassadorship L, - V
to Australia, but N
he did not intend I jSp-P )
to let his old com
rade, (now enemy)
Jim Farley, get
hands on the im
portant New York
committee post.
Farley's state com'
mittee would name the successor, and deep
shudders would have run down through the
Bronx organization.
But certain democratic senators here pro
fessed great interest in the Hatch act, the new
law which attempts in a very restrained way to
keep public office holders from holding political
jobs on the side.
The Flynn nomination as ambassador was
then in the senate foreign relations committee,
and these Hatch act adherents were threatening
to vote against Mr. Flynn unless he resigned the
national committee post as well as the cnair
manship. They were very serious about the
point, or seemed to be.
So Mr. Flynn had to resign hurriedly from
the committee and take the bitter medicine of
letting Farley name his successor, in order to
get his ambassador nomination out or tne sen
ate foreign relations committee. This he did
barely by a margin of 13 to 10 (two senators,
the two particularly Interested in the Hatcn act,
would have changed the result.)
After he had been shed of all his political
raiment and left like a bare waif it became
apparent that the Australian cut-away coat was
to be denied him. Ah, such naked woe. He
lost everything.
Complete Rooking Job
THIS complete job of rooking Mr. FJynn
seemed inspired, in the main, by the
revulsion of the senate majority against the
naming of a city boss to a high diplomatic war
post. The vote would have been about the
same if Mr. Crump had been named ambassador
to England.
The substantial opposition also seemed to
think (and said in private) that the defeat of
Flynn would bring a salutary national effect by
expressing the new independence of congress
and its decision no longer to be a rubber stamp.
The paving block incident and the other speci
fic charges against Flynn apparently made little
or no difference. Senators were amused by Mr.
Flynn's exceptional unawareness in not know
ing that city paving blocks In his city were
being put on his estate, etc., but his defense
was air-tight from the legal standpoint, at least.
Medford to Discuss
Rationing Tonight
At Parents' Meeting
Rationing and its relation to
the buying public will be the
subject of a talk by T. M. Med
ford, district manager of Safe
way Stores, to the Parent and
Patrons club of KUHS tonight.
The meeting will start at 8
o'clock at the Little' Theatre Off
Mon Claire, the new high school
theatre.
The KUHS band will furnish
entertainment and business ac
tivities of the Parents and Pa
tron club will be taken up.
Mrs. Cyril Cook, program chair
man, is in charge of arrange
ments. , : ' I
Kaiser Leases
Port at The Dalles
PORTLAND, Feb. 3 UP) The
maritime commission office here
said today the Kaiser Vancouver
shipyards had leased the port of
The Dalles general cargo termi
nal at The Dalles.
. The terminal is to be used for
storage of ship supplies and
equipment.
LOW BID
MEDFORD, Feb. 8 (P) Low
bid of $271,674 on a 125-unlt
housing project was submitted
by Malarkey and company, Port
land, the Jackson county housing
authority said today.
FUNERAL
JEFF CALVIN WHITAKER
Funeral services for the late
Jeff Calvin Whltaker, who pass
ed away in this city on Tues
day, February 2, 1943 following
an illness of five days will be
held In the First Christian
church, Pine street at Ninth, on
Thursday, February 3, 1943 at
2 p. m. under the auspices of
Klamath Lodge No. 77 A. F. and
A. M. Entombment River View
Mausoleum, Portland, Ore. The
remains will be forwarded via
Southern Pacific company on
Thursday evening. Arrangements
are under the direction of the
About That Income Tax
INCOME FROM RENTS AND
ROYALTIES
Many taxpayers derive Income
from rents and royalties. Such
income is shown in item 6 of
the return Form 1040. Only the
net Income or loss is shown
in item 6; that is, the difference
between the total amount re
ceived in revenue from the prop
erty less the total amount of the
ordinary and necessary expenses
incurred. An explanation of in
come, chargeable expenses, and
the kind of property, must ic
shown in Schedule B of the re
turn.
The "kind of property'' might
be indicated as a farm, dwelling,
store building, or the like. The
chargeable expenses are shown
under three headings, as (a) de
preciation allowable, (b) repairs,
and (c) other expenses. Where
depreciation is claimed, a fur
ther explanation is required in
Schedule J (Explanation of De
duction for Depreciation Claims).
Repairs and other expenses must
also be explained and itemized
A distinction must be made be
tween expenditures for mainten
ance and repairs and expendi
tures lor replacements, improve
ments, and alterations. Replace
ment expense, to the extent that
the replacements arrest deterior
ation and appreciably prolong
the life of the property, is not
chargeable against rental income
for the year, but is chargeable
to capital or the depreciation
reserve. Only the cost of inci
dental repairs which neither ma
terially add to the value of the
property nor appreciably pro
long its life, but serve to keep
it ip an ordinary efficient oper
ating condition, may be deducted
as repair expense in Schedule B.
The distinction between what
is an improvement and an al
teration, and what is a repair, is
not always clear, and has been
the subject of many rulings and
decisions. The cost of painting
the outside of a house used for
business purposes (rental) and
the cost of painting and paper
ing the inside, for instance, aro
regarded as repairs, deductible
as expense in Schedule B. Tho
replacement of a roof or a change
in the, heating plant, plumbing
system, or other major alter
ation, is regarded as in the na
ture of a capital expenditure
and is not deductible as repair
expense in Schedule B.
Among "other expenses" de
ductible in Schedule B are such
Items as the cost of janitor serv
ice, and the like, as well as taxes
and interest expense. If taxes
and Interest are deducted as
"other expenses," they may not
be deducted under the separate
items of taxes and interest in
the return.
Where a dwelling is partly
rented and partly occupied by
the taxpayer, only those ex
penses chargeable to tha rented
portion are deductible. In the
case of a two-family dwclllnf.
for instance, one-half of which
is occupied by the owner, or-
dinarily one-half of the depre
ciation allowable, repairs and
other expenses, would be de
ductible from the rent received.
Royalties are, in general, the
earnings from copyrights, pat
ents, good will, trade marks.
formulas, and the like, as well
as from mineral properties. In
the case of royalties from min
eral properties the statute pro
vides for certain allowable de
pletion expense depending upon
the nature of the property and
other factors, and the amounts
deducted may not exceed the
statutory limitations.
I
Kinmain ennmner or com
mere legislative committee has
approved and referred to the
highways committee 1IB 218 In
the Oregon legislature, which is
the cities' bill seeking a part of
the state highway fund for city
streets. The highways commit
tee has not yet acted.
This measure provided that
the cities' share of tho hltihway
fund shall be up to 15 per cent
of that fluid, but that $10,000,
000 shall remain for highway
department operating expenses,
Mayor John Houston, who is
on the legislative committee of
the Leagu. of Oregon Cities, ap
peared before the chamber logis
lative committee when It con.iki
ered the measure. He also ap
peared at the chamber directors'
meeting Wednesday, stating that
tho chief purpose behind the
measure is to afford relief and
protection for city property tax
payers.
The city, Mayor Houston said,
has a heavy investment in its
streets, and he added that uso of
state funds in maintenance work
is justified because about one
third of highway department
revenue comes from gasoline
used In driving on city streets.
The chamber of commerce do!
Icy in tho past has been to oppose
any shift In tho uso or highway
funds from state highway pur
poses, and If the legislative couv
mittee's action receives final ap.
proval it will be ,n departure
from this policy, it was pointed
out at Wednesday s directors'
meeting.
Director William Ganong of
tne legislative committee point
cd out, however, that tho present
proposal differs lnomo respect
from others in tho post which tho
chamber has not endorsed.
ine ci: amber of commerce
went on record favoring tho
county salary increase bill now
before the legislature. This
would provide a straight $25 a
month increase for elective coun
ty officials and the Linkvllle
justice of the peace.
Portia nders Get
Still Another
Meat Racoon
PORTLAND, Feb. 3 (IP)
Racoon is the latest beef sub
stitute to appear on the Port
land market.
The first offerings of the
south's famous delicacy were
shipped In by a farmer of the
McMinnville area and initial
prices were 55 cents a pound for
the fore quarters and 56 cents
for hind quarters.
OBITUARY
LOVIS O. ROSE
Lovis G. Rose, for the last 15
years a resident of Kiamatn
Falls, Ore., passed away in this
city on Tuesday, February 2,
1943 at 9:45 a. m. following an
illness of three weeks. He was
a native of Edf jord, Norway, and
at the time of his death was
aged 84 years 8 months and 29
days. Surviving are his wife,
Mrs. Sylvia Rose; two sons,
Leonard A. and Lewis S. Rose,
and one daughter, Mrs. Clara
Burdett, all of Medford, Ore.
The remains rest in tha Earl
Whltlock Funeral home, Pine
street at Sixth. Notice of fu
neral to be announced later.
Unless we are prepared to
take our coats off and work and
keep on working unless we arc
prepared, above all, to work
with all kinds of human beings
we can expect nothing but
disillusionment. President
Everett Case of Colgate U,
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued From Page One)
facture these metals Into the
tools of war. We have mighty
sawmills to make lumber out of
our trees.
And so on.
TT is the money saved up by our
capitalists and invested In
these tools of industry that has
enabled us to have them for use
NOW, in our time of need.
TTHE efficient Industrial system
that is serving us and our
allies so well In this war emer
gency is made up of labor, cap
ital and brains (both manage
ment brains and scientific
brains.)
Not Just any one of them,
but ALL OF THEM.
They are all essential, and tha
more efficiently they work to
gether the ' more effective our
Industrial system will be. We
can't get along without ANY of
them.
That Is a good thing to re
member in times such as these.
Japan's next move will be to
retreat and keep on retreating.
A start has been made. Tha al
lies ara in a definitely better
position than they were a year
ago. Adml. William F. Halsey.
IS EPILEPSY INHERITED?
WHAT CAUSES IT? v
A bookltt ctntiininf th opinion of fm
oui doeton on this Inttrntlng nbloet will
b unt FREE, wh;i thy Int. to ny mdtr
Earl Whitlock Funeral home of writing to -. Educational Oivltion, 535
this city. tM Ay. Ntwynt, h, Y, Pfeh. "
HEMORRHOIDS (Piles)
Hernli (Rupture), Fissure ir fistula
Book disorder Impair fvmt
keeltb eUloleaoy eiralBf
power. For 30 ye are we av
uocflftiallr tret: ted thoa
&da o( pstopl (or thai all
naata. No hotpttal opart
Jioa, No eosllaauaat. Mo
lOUOf Una from WBfk. Gall
(or ax ml &ttea or aand for
YRIK daioriptlT BoeUat
Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC
Phyttcln ant Brgn
V. I. Car. I. lurstMa aad Oft ad Ava.
Talephoaa XAst3018, Perth ad, Oreao
"A.I. B.'IJ..
rn ouiiaer
Has a Brand New
Idea for the Army
TACOMA, Feb. 3 fP) Paul
Satko. who made maritime his
tory when his home made "ark"'
carried him and his brood from
Tacoma to Juneau, Alaska, In
1040, said Just before leaving
here today for Cheyenne, Wyo.,
"on business" that he has com
pleted plans for a monster land
ship capable of traveling over
any terrain.
His device, he said, would
make roads needless strips
across the earth's surface. Io
said that his device doesn't look
or operate like a tank, but that
It represents that type of un
stoppable force. It would, he
said, snap off trees like dead
ferns and could be built to carry
as much as 10,000 tons. He snlcl
he has offered details to the
army for war use.
Two More Bodies
Found in Ruins
Of Sanitarium -
SEATTLE, Feb. (P) The
death list in Sunday's Lake For
est sanitarium fire reached 32
today when bodies of Alfred
Smith and Mrs. Rose Aycrsman
were found In the ruins.
Only 17 of the 40 inmates of
the institution survived the
blaze.
Expaeted Homo Mrs. E. D.
Lamb and Mrs. A. G. Proctor
are expected home from Port
land Wednesday night after at
tending a board meeting of the
Oregon State Federation of
Garden clubs of which Mrs.
Lamb Is president and Mrs. Proc
tor, secretary and treasurer.
Spoalc W.ll of tha Weather . . .
"The tilings I've lienril snld
about thi weather in the woods
theso past two weeks have made
me ears hum and Jaws blush,
old as I am." snld Lurrlly, the
hullrook, peeling out his shuck
window nt a clump of snow
liirion Uoiiglns firs. "And It luii
give me to think on the Inborn
ingratitude of the human race.
If thi-re Is anythln' the people
of this nrck of tho woods have
to be thitnkful for, It's their
weather. Hut a trifle ot snow
and n bit ot frcrzu, and, as the
poet snys, then It's benefits for
got and friends remembered not,
"All sununrr everybody con
corned with tho woods and war
loggin', from glncmls and ad
mirals on down, was on tenter
hooks ond worse with the fear
of forest fires. Tho weather
showed a true patriotic spirit.
No sooner did fire hazard hfiiln
to build up than It would rain
all summer that was the
story. And the weather man
aged tho rain Just right for
prime slush burnln' In Ihe fall.
"But did tho weather get any
praise and thuuksglvlu' (or such
patriotic service, when all was
dono and over and no longer a
war secret? Indeed not. Folks
gonerully took the credit to
themselves, Wo wus uskln' for
weather trouble. And ut lust
tho weather let us luwo it.
"I'm talkln' for tho Speak
Well of tho Weather League,"
said Lurrlty. "So fur I'm tho or
ganization, but It's wide open to
all. The league Is a sore need of
tho country. I'll tell you why."
Our Waathor Grows Timbor . ,
Larrity slowly filled a pipe,
his shaggy brows knit in phil
osophic meditation. Ho raked a
stove match on his tin pants, lit
up. and spoke on.
'without the common run of
great tlmbcr-growln' weather
we've had hero for no one
knows how long, we'd hove no
woods to work and live In," he
said, "All the while it's been
Just right to produce and repro
duce tho wonderful Douglas fir
trac, to make the forests, both
old and young, wo luwo now
'Geiitlo -the ruin, light the
snow, cool and dump the sum
mors, easy the winds, for the
most part. And so we had, have,
and will havo a great forest. It
has built up our own country,
most of Ciillforny, good parts
of other states, mid has helped
to build in (limn lands. The
(orost here gave us ships and
broitght in. the, rails, paid the
taxui. to provide the omazln'
and wonderful luxury o( poli
ticians, niuclo home markets for
the farmer's prunes and beans,
and now is doln' the world's
biggest war Job in the way o(
timber. All stands mainly as the
work o(. our weiilher.
'But let It be dry for too long
in the summer, or snow and
freeze a bit too much In the win
ter, and nothln' is too horrible
for us to speak against this won
derful weather o( ours. It's a
cryin' shame and slniul scan
dal." .
Politics In the Woods . , .
When I was a young logger
in tho Lakes states," Lurrity
went on, "tho weather was given
its proper rank by ono and all
in the timber business. In that
time politics had hardly any
place at all. A politician runnin'
(or office, with his main plank
beln' on how he would do great
Dungs with the forest when
elected, would havo been hoot
ed off the stump. But now it's
entirely different. Any little
man with a political bug feels
free to sound off on what won
ders he could do for and with
the country's hunnerds of mil
lions of acres of forests, once
he gets into office and has a
law passed.
So much of that has come
up in the woods that people gin
crally have come to think more
about political law as the main
thing In 'tho forest thon of the
rule of tho weather and how to
make the best of It.
My Speak Wei" of the
Weather League Is a first mod
est step to correct this parlous
situation. The first Job is on
forest fires. More and more peo
ple nre Iruvln' this problem to
politicians and Ihelr hills and
nets, What we need la for tha
people tn- forglt all such rub
bag and keep the weather In
their minds summer long, with
dun rvspeek mid esteem, and
with proper consideration when
it runs low In Its humidity.
And then simply to help the
weather out by takln' due cars
with (Ire, Hut I (ear I'm chailn'
a wild gnnse," sighed Larrity,
"Politics Is so appealln'."
OUR
MR)
SERVICE
SIIKPPARD FIELD, Tex
LI. Marvin C. Davis of the army
inedlcul corps, a physician who
formerly had offices in the Medi
cal Dental building, Klamath
Falls, Ore., has arlved at Shep
pard field to unstima now duties.
Ha Is n graduate of the Univer
sity of Missouri and Stanford
university's inedlcul school,
...
Among aviation cadets at Ran
dolph field, Tex., who have com
pleted basic flying training and
aro now In the second phase of
flight Instruction, Is Anton M.
Suly Jr.. 22, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Anton M. Suty of Merrill,
'""!' 111 :i ,'! :..'!!. I!" ,-'!.. j::1,1,;;,?
Kt tti twill's
From tho files 40 yeans
ipiii ogo an4 .10 r afiiC
ar;,' i ,,;; ni'-i i'v-'ii i -I, 'iii :r;liiMiii
From The Klamath Republican
February 6, 1803
Ask a Mudford or an Ashland
dealer where he gets his best
beef, potatoes, butter, cheese,
etc., and ho will tell you he gets
them from Klamath county. If
he has a Klamath county prod
uct for sale, ho labels It s such,
for it has long since attained
a rep;;'otlon (or quality that
makes It sell readily at a top
price.
.... . ,
The Ashlund Record laments
(he prospective moral deteroria
tion of Ashland from promised
accessions In the way of unde
sirable resorts. Let Ashland re
flect on the fate o( Sodom and
Gomorrah ond try and be good,
(1042 Note: 40 years makes a
lot of difference).
...
C. C. Low, whose housa
burned down, has received his
insuranco check.
...
From The Klamath Nows
Fob. 3. 1933
Edison Duffy, Klamath In
dian, today was charged with
murder In Ihn second degree In
connection with tho brutal beat
ing which caused the death of
Joscphlno Jackson, Indian wom
an, near Beatty.
...
Condition of C. A. Dunn, who
has been 111 for several days,
is reported much improved.
CHECKI
LOS ANGELES, (PI - "Tha
Russians are winning the war
because they are all good chess
players," says Al Horowitz, In
ternational master ot the game.
Both war and chess require
logic, sound reasoning, lmaglna
tion and daring, he insists.
And chess games In Moscow
weren't even Interrupted by tha
siege of that city Inst year, ht
said; "they played even though
they had to do It practically
underground."
Culinary Alliance The culi
nary alliance will meet at 3:30
p. m. Thursday at the new hall,
422 Main street.
BY SPECIAL REQUEST!
(lale Antt Bdhin
WILL CONTINUE HER
January Fur Sale
ANOTHER 10 DAYS!
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS!
Save
To
u'50
Furs for His Woman By Woman"