Folminiy B, 10-13 PAGE THBEB SEATTLE NAMED FOR REGIONAL LABOR BOARD SEATTLE, Fob. 8 (!) A re gional labor board which will have final authority In US por cant of tha euscs o( lnhor dis putes In Washington, Or oil on Mini Alaska will bu set tip huro within a month, Wnyno L, Morso, public member of tho wnr labor Ixiii itl, mild horo lust night. Tho regional bourd will bo net up nuclei' tho WLH'a decentral isation plan which will Iriivo tho nntluniil board nn a sort of su premo court of liibor relations, Morav, deun of tho Unlv. rnlty of Oregon law achool, on leave of absence to aorvo the WLU, cx plained. Appeal Right "I want to not ncrosa to both labor and Industry that In moat cases tho regional board will have final authority," Morse mid. "Partlea have the right to ap peal from a regional decision, but except in rare caaca effect Ing Induatry ouLildo tho terri tory, tho regional bourda will ro main the final authority." Tha Seattle board will be act up by Morao, Dclmont Carat CIO official representing labor, and rtoger Laphnm of tho Amor icuivlliiwniliin St.amahlp com pnny, representing Induatry, Public Invited to Attend Evangelistic Bible Conference The people of Klamath Kails nro Invited, beginning Tuesday February 0, to the Diblo Baptlat church mid-whiter Evangelistic Bible conference which will be conducted by Roy L. Brown, one of the outstanding Bible teach era In America. He Illustrates each mcaaage with a large col ored chart. Brown li In demand by all the large city churchea and taber nacles, aa well aa moat of the outstanding aummer conferenc es. Last aummer he waa with Porcy Crawford and the "Young People'a Church of the Air" at Plncbrook. lie can be heard each evening, Tuesday through Satur day, at 8 o'clock and Sunday, February M, at 10 a. m., and 7:30 p. m., with a mass meeting 'at 3 p. m. A apecinl meeting will be hold ' for membora of all the ladles Bible ctaaaea of the city Wednes day at 2 p. ni., nt the Covenant church on Klamath avenue near Ninth atrcet, to which the public la Invited. ' The Bible Baptist church Is lo cated on Wiard at South Sixth atreet, take city bus to Idclla's corner. War Bond Quota Again Topped in Lake County LAKEVIEW (Special) Lake county again kept up its record (or lopping quota sales In war bonds when tho totals for January were recorded hist week. Tho scries E quota which was $49,470 was beaten to tho tune of $03,708.30, according to County Chairman Rtiy Harlan, Under tho Victory Bond drive, which docs not Includo scries E, tho tax scries totaled $302.08; ( series F, $02.30, and scries C, $000. The totals of the amounts turned In from tho schools had not yot been compiled, accord ing to County School Superin tendent Anne Spraguc, but she Indicated thut an outstanding Job had been done throughout the schools of tho county in tha snlo of bonds and stamps for January, Precipitation in Lake County for January Well Up LAKEVIEW (Special) Precipitation figures for Janu ary of this your wcro well over those for tho two previous years, according to a report Just made by Mrs. George Down, official weather recorder. There woro 4.00 Inches of moisture lust month as against 2,30 inches in 1042 and 2.40 inches in 1041, A comparison for tho heavi est precipitation months of tho past three years shows tho fol lowing: 1040, October 2.11 No vember 2.10, December 1.03 and January ('41) 2.40; 1041, Octo ber 1.83, November ,1.33, De cember 3,22, and January ('42) 2.30; 1042, October .67, Novem ber 2.72, December 3.30, and January ('43) 4.00. It is not enough to vlow the futuro with sober confidence. Wo should view tho futuro with burning halo and bitter resolvo, London' editorial. Gas on Stomach lUlhmd In I nlmtlti r 4mM tmh miner bk Uhift tirfij itfltnirh irltl rutin pilnfut. iii(Toct ln iNi, tnur ilfimirh nrol hmrthura, iloclrwn nmullr pmr-rlhfi inn fMiMt.nrltni mmllrlnw Imrmn tor Mmptninitlo rMlof-vrfcrillMnti Hkn thmn In Ult.ni Tihliifl, Nr miiT llnll-im hrlnn rr-mfnU In )l(T0f rttufutwtili to m for doublfe niuoejr bitk, Mo, Scientist Gives Crater Lake's Formation After Extensive Studies By DOniS PAYNE "One of the most important contributions from geological aclonco In rr)iit ycurs la repre sented by tho work Jual com pleted by Dr. Howell Williams of tho University of California on the origin of Crater lake." This la tho opinion cxpreaacd by Dr. John C. Merrlam, presi dent emeritus of the Carnegie Institution of Washington and sulci to bo the best Informed aclontlst in tho' United States. "Since tho Crater Luko region is one of tho greutcal assets and attractions of tho Northwest, the publication of ' theso studies meuns a definite addition to the value of una of Oregon's finest possessions," he pointed out. "Tho results of tills concentrated research by ono of tho world's best trained and most exper ienced students in tills field Is WILLIAMS FIELD, CIIAND LKR.Arlz. M. K. McAuley, son of W". C. McAuley, 71B Califor nia avenue, Klamath Falls, Ore., has just been promoted to the rank of first lieutenant. Lt. McAuley, 23 years old, was mado a second lieutenant In March, 1042, at Luko field. Ariz. Ip civilian life ho was a student at Klamath Union high achool and attended Oregon Stuto col lege. 1.AK PVIIfW Cr.nr.l,.l U-.l was received here this week of tho promotion of Major Kenneth Baker, son-in-law of Mr. and Mra. Mungo Lyons, to lieutenant colonel in tho US army. Baker has been located at Fort Sill, Okla., for tho past two years. Ho entered the army In 1040 with commission as sec ond lieutenant and since that time has made the outstanding record of four promotions, lie was graduated from . Oregon State college In 1033 and work ed as educational advisor at the Bly and other CCC camps. Mrs. Baker was formerly Jean Lyons of this city. They hove two small daughters, and the entire family is located at Fort Sill. Baker is tho son of Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Baker of Mllwauklc. Dick Nord, lD-y ear-old son of Mrs. Ivy Nord of 007 High street, was graduated as flying staff sergeant on Thursday, February 4. from Tyndall field, Fla., and lias been transferred to Colum bia, S. C, according to word re ceived by his mother. Mrs. Nord was advised that Dick's furlough would be too short for a visit home, and she left Saturday night by stage to meet her son in Chicago. She plans to arrive there Tuesday night for at least a three-day visit. Young Nord is a graduuto of Sacred Heart acad emy, played suxophono in varl- ous ' Klamath orchestras, and joined tho army air corps In July of 1042. Jlmmio Mayfleld. son of Mrs. Glenn Thomas, has Just been transferred to tho ferry com mond at Memphis, Tonn., after finishing his basic training in tho air corps at St. Petersburg, Fla. Lake County Birth Rate Shows Increase Over Year 1941 LAKEVIEW. (Special) There woro 27 moro babies born in Lake county during 1042 than 1041, according to the report re ceived from tho Oregon state board of health. A total of 183 were born in 1S42 and ISO the previous year. - In comparing the month of December for tho two years, 1042 shows 23 births against 8 I 1841. Tho report on deaths shows there wcro 12 moro in '42 than '41, A total of 07 was reported for tho past year and 83 for the year previous. Six deaths were listed for last December as against ono in 1041. , Slick Pavement Bothers Firemen On Call to Hill Slick-pavement gave firemen a little trouble Sunday evening when they wore called to tho top or Riverside hill at 6:30 o'clock to extinguish a fire at tho E. P, Black residence, 114 South Rog ers. Owner of the building Is C. W. Frost; , Firemen said occupants were melting some sort of wax In tho basement when , the fire oc curred. , There was somo dam age. ' Keen Vni ehl.i mi! Hnlnu around with n sour face onlv gets you into' n pickle. : Story of of interest to those residing In tl lit t region, to those who come to Crater luko aa visitors, and to students of volcanoes the world over." Slight of build, yet a dynamo of energy, Dr. Williams Is no urm-chuir thoorlst. Day after duy ho dared tho dangers and put, forth the exertion Involved In scrambling diugonully up and down the Inner walls of the Crater Luko rim until he had oxumincd and mapped every ex posed formation. Dr. Williams spent weeks trumping tho surrounding area studying the deposition of vol-1 canlc pumice by meuns of bores! drilled far beneath tho surface.) He sweated his way to the sum-! mils of dozens of volcanic cones' In tho vicinity, making notes of his observation. To assure the comprehensiveness of his work, he circled the Pacific ocean, studying the principal of vol canoes of tlio culdcra or basin typo represented by Crater lake. Dr. WHJiums has assembled tho results of his atudlea In two books, one written In non-tcch-nlcal language for the layman and ono in greater detail for scientific use. They are "Crater Lake: The Story of Its Origin," published by the University of California Prcaa and "The Geol ogy of Crater Lake Notional Park, Oregon." published by the Carnegie Institution of Washing ton. Both are unusually well written and beautifully illus trated. That Dr. Williams' work at Crater lake has received wide recognition, is Indicated by the translation of ono of his books into the Spanish language at the request of tha Pan-American In stitute of Geography and His tory. This was done with a view to throwing additional light upon study of-tho numerous vol canoes in Mexico and the coun tries to the south. It is ono of many phases of coopcratlvo re search being carried on by scien tists of tho United States and of neighboring countries. Dr. Williams' publications arc also hailed as outstanding con tributions to tho growing body of literature which enhances ap preciation of nature through un derstanding of its processes. F. L. Polk, Wilson's Secretary of State, Passes in New York new york; Feb.' 8 wj Frank Lyon Polk, 71, acting sec retary of state during the Wil son administration, died yester day at his" Fifth avenue homo after a short illness. Undersecretary of state from 1013 to 1020, Polk headed the American delegation to tho Paris peace conference after the last war when President Wilson and Secretary of State Lansing returned home. A great nephew of James K. Polk, 11th president of tho Unit ed States, was a native of New York City and a graduate of Co lumbia university. Ho was a vet eran of tho Spanish-American war and a practicing lawyer, ac tive In his law firm until last week. Surviving, besides his widow, are three sons and two daugh ters. J. H. Schneeberger Injured Sunday In Ranch Accident J. If. Schneeberger, Klamath rancher living on route 2, suf fered a painful injury and frac ture of the upper left arm short ly before noon Sunday when he was struck by a bull. Schneeberger said the bull butted him in the arm while he was pasturing the animal at tho family ranch. He is a patient at Klamath Valley, hospital: LONG DISTANCE DATE DENTON, Tex. W) Hosscin Soroosh met the girl after a 17,000-mile trip. Four years ago Miss Poggy Lipscomb, then a junior in high school, picked Soroosh's name from a list of , pen pals fur nished by tho American Gpllogc of Teheran. She .never expected to keep up the correspondence, or to moot her correspondent from far off Iran but she did. Soroosji has arrived to take a course in radio engineering at the University of Texas in Aus tin. Said Miss Lipscomb, now r student at tho Texas State col lege for women here: "He's very nice." When peace Is declared, Wash ington, must again become the brldgo of our ship of state not the gun turrets, engine room and galley combined. Gov. Lcvcrctt Saltonstall of Massa chusetts. PIMPLED SKIN Usn Bnntlaantlo I.otlon, famous nierilcntnri nenvrier banc, so llolpful to plmplr-tt Irrllntftfl Blltt, when due In nx-lnrnnl rnanos. You'll lovo It. I'rainoloa Hklnbonuty Rklnrnrn. I il-oo f in I tni Iiik ronililiMtlon slindos, Flesli, Ilrunotto, Cream. 3(ip, 6oo. ANTIEPTIC LOTION Oregon Senators Split on Vote For Josh Lee PORTLAND, Feb. 8 in') Wur bond sules In Oregon reuehed a new high of $10,300,000 for Jnnuary, Stuto Administrator David W, Kccles reported Sat urday. Lunn county Willi $427,431 led all counties except Mult nomah to put the state's sules for moro than $100,000 over the quota for the month, Kccles said. Folks now realize that "Com-mander-ln-Chlcf of the Armed Forces" is not just an honorary title. IT'S PATRIOTIC to save! rf-nU' - I iiiTTyi ii i . i f i " mm Baa - aas m t t jrffA'm v t-m. . L T ?Jg? 1 WcoUOfle IsfSK W' InV m Worth 60e Yard WmA FELT BASE V ALkL Gir -ilBV" -.-A-:- SS-SKlf.- Zi&f aUC1VW fft Un Q florals, hooks, tile i - &&ffi?X $JJ ntr Ifi00W - . MU and novelty "design," k JSr nbe c0!Tm- lV ' -- , " -'..'...? . . . for any room inc.t It ,, J .-j. ;rc,'d t oor - -x- ' ' - " ,- 11 your housel Buy now' V V i ; hi'M WindowlShades ; ' I W' I Pit Closely woven muslin, linseed oil SrjPiwfUt Js J STYLES IACH M ' Washable SHADE looking shades made of wash able fibers. Straight hemmed and mount ed on metal trimmed roller. Economical! Special! 18x36 Mats Worth up to 2!ic each . . . made of good quality felt base and cut just tho right size for those worn spots on your floorl Limit 3 to a customer. Hurry! America's Food Supply Has Really Gone to War ABOARD A NEW U. S. BAT TLESHIP AT SEA, (Delayed) (A') The bacon, coffee, sugar, beef that once were abundant in corner groceries and meat mar kets huve gono to war to provide strength for the figtiting men. A casting of accounts of tho supply office toduy showed con sumption of seven tons of food a duy on the buttlewagon. Topping the list of foodstuffs were 117,000 pounds of beef stcuks and roasts consumed by the crew In a recent month. That's only a start through 38c the foodstuffs purchased during the month by the supply officer. Coffee? As much as any man wants and any time he wants lt. To fill that order 5383 pounds wcro used In one month. Supplemental beverages ac counted for 60 pounds of tea and 273 gallons of cocoa. Sweetening for the coffee and for pies, canes, cereals required 13,700 pounds of sugar. In addition sweet-craving seamen bought 71,868 candy bars in a iiC9lllC!! TPT- rr. j 7 ri unuuo i Lovely multi-color florals in a knit- (lJ , . ' , A,over (orfl ted textured fabric. Washable 4 . tlOpKinS rUttCm dtslgn in a fits most styles of choirs ond sofas. pu,DAeQ i4Q hf:ie.kS!Si: Deep box-pleated skirt oil around! CHAIR SOFA colon. . Buy Home Furnishings on Easy single month to munch between meals. Take a look at these other major Items In the supply pur chases: Bacon 2054 pounds; ham 2052 pounds', pork 2500 pounds; chic ken 2600 pounds; veal 5000 pounds; turkey 3000 pounds; milk 1331 gallons fresh, 1810 pounds powdered and 8241 pounds evaporated; potatoes 36, 881 pounds; turnips, carrots, other fresh vegetables, 35,083 pounds. Those foodstuffs with fruit and fruit Juices and green vegetables, when available, go into three full meats a day for every man aboard. In addition men stand ing night watches receive extra nciniuea OLiruuvLiid orth tin.. 1 -yitra With lunches of sandwiches and cot foo at their posts. . The supply officer frowns on canned goods won't use them unless it is absolutely necessary and boasts thut the cold stor age rooms can handle provision for weeks and weeks. With all the abundance of. food it costs about $1000 day to feed the men of this battle ship there's littlo waste, Says the supply officer. "If a man is found throwing food away, tho master-at-arms will make him sit down again and eat it all." A maglcia.. got out of a locked safe in thirty seconds. We d love to sco one in a crowded street r. .'. innnurno 5-Pc. Breakfast Set 19.95. C95 (tlnUAnL".SHt ON Tidii. ... '.C , . . ervin-t .. ifv. j "''iiy oe Payments! :.'.s..., J..-....-