Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 27, 1943, Page 9, Image 9

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    May 26, 1043
' HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE NIN1 .
C
e
No need to let
meat rationing
affect your dog
Sea thnt your don Kln Ilia
maximum amount of animal
protein ollowed by tho kov
eminent . , , mokk Hum mini
mum requirements not by
mnny nutrltlonut ntithnrllles.
In addition, oko-php pro.
vldes KVEKV known minernl
nd vitamin doRi Nr.i'.D for
growth and vlorl flront for
dngi of AM. flues. Anil tlicy
LOVIC Itl
KCONOMICAL, ol0. Kfld us
directed, two boxes meai.
FORM OKO-rup nro nil you need
buy to feed nn avenge nor
mal 15-pound dog for a wgKKl
Alto available in RIBBON FORM
MADtIN BATIK CRHK ti
IC SIS
BRE
A FROM
IFL IN FIGHT
WASHINGTON, Muy 27 Ml
Tim Intcrnntlonal Association of
Machinists with a reputed mom
lii'inlilp well over hnlf million,
iiiinoiincnd loduy It I quitting
tho American Federation of Lo
bur ik of Muy 31 becauso of a
lontf utiindliiK Jurisdictional row.
Tim AFL, thus lout almost the
n m o numerical stronKth It
Htoiitln to Kuln by the proiipectlve
ri'iidiiiltlniicn of John L. Lewis'
United Mlno Worker".
Tho Jurisdictional fight In
volve chiefly William L. Hutch
osnn'a Carpenters union, which
tlin machinists contend has been
"muscling; In" on Its field with
tho annctlon of the AFL execu
tlvn council.
Machinists' President Harvey
W. brown mild tho break after
4R yenm' affilintlon in regret
lublc, but "If we are going to
rnntinun to Ret a beating wa are
not going to pny for It."
Tho Machinists' per capita tax
payment to the AFL have aver
nged about $00,000 n year. The
union has been growing ropldly,
however, becuiuo of organiza
tion in the aircraft field and tax
Aching,
Stiff Muscles?
Two v throe application of Moon!
mrrotd Oil attar oponlna up tho pocaa
with a ood hoi towal awf In flftaan min
ute th pain trvl wanaw It tatad. A
few more application at rafular interval!
arvd tha tnrrfeu goa you t raal raiiof.
It's wonderful tormula thtt com
htnatton tti vumM oii with camphor and
ott er ntlwp" to good that thouMnd of
boiMoa tro wd annualry.
Monn- tmarain mi it, giMwn)m ra
i gtva real ufU'actlon or money back.
One-Legged Flyer
Lou ot a leg during Uie Dieppe
raid didn't ground Col. Loren B.
HlLlalnger of El Poso, Tex., the
flnt one-legged flyer In the
V. S. air force. Now wearing
an artificial limb, he Is (hows
leaving nil puma In England.
payment on the full, claimed
membership would substontlolly
exceed $60,000.
Brown snld the IAM would re
main Independent, "with the
hope that the machinist will be
given the name consideration as
other unions."
Some of the Germans cap
tured In North Africa may be
shipped to New York. Hitler
promised them that visit some
time ago.
SMART BUTCHER LINENS
PASTELS . . . PRINT CONTRASTS
COLORFUL JERSEY PRINTS
CREPES WITH SMALL DESIGNS
CHARMING BLACKS . . . NAVIES
MANY 2-PIECE FASHIONS
Prints . . . Solids . . . Contrasts g J F j
GAY CHECKS . . . PLAIDS . . . STRIPES NTplr
GINGHAM . . . SPUH RAYON . . . SHARKSKIN ) I J 1
BUTCHER UNEN . . , SEERSUCKER . . . PIQUE 1 I
S , WAR If,
SUITS BNDS fir
10 AND C0ATS V iAMf
lVJEACH DRESSMAKER and MAN. f J W JW
I TAILORED SUITS -CHES. f f f ff
9 ' TERFIELD and BOY COATS W jf 6ir
Main
Oregon News Notes
By The Associated Press
First shipment of pig iron
from Henry Kaiser's new Fon-
Una, Calif., steel mills arrived
In Portland yesterday for use in
making castings for marine en-
fines for Liberty freighters buUt
In his Oregon Shipbuilding cor
poration shipyard . . .
Harry E. Mabce, 17. Wil
lamette, died of Injuries suffered
when he was truck by a moving
arm of a boring drill at Commer
cial Iron Sc Steel Works In Port
land Wednesday , . . Frost and
hall damage and a 24 per cent
cut In acreage will reduce Ore
gon's strawberry crop by one-
third, the department of agricul
ture's Portland bureau pre
dicted , , ,
Portland's school bourd decid
ed to keep some 20 schools open
throughout the summer in the in
terest of children of mothers em
ployed In war plants . . . Vern
C. Osborn, Polk county farmer,
was awarded $27,300 by a fed
eral Jury in Portland for 368
acres of land taken over by the
government in construction of
Camp Adair,
Park Service Gives
Up Diamond Lake
Addition to Areas
WASHINGTON, May 27 P)
The national park service, says
Director Newton B. Drury, has
no plans for seeking to bring
new areas under its Jurisdiction.
Drury made this plain yester
day to the house public lands
committee, which is studying a
bill to nullify President Roose
velt's action in creating the Jack
son Hole national monument in
Wyoming by proclamation. Rep.
Mott (R-Ore.), had asked wheth
er the park service had "other
such schemes affecting other
areas."
When Mott asked particularly
about the possibility of adding
Diamond lake to Crater Lake na
tional park, the director replied:
"We have given that up."
Anthracite reserves at Shansl
are estimated at more than 500
billion tons, half the coal in all
China.
Always read the classified ads I A tank hat 8000 part.
Malting lea can't kill tporkla In
drinks mad with
CANADA DRY WATER
ITS "PIN-POINT CAR iO NATION" 1AWI
P.8. Its tpcclal formula malcM any drink taita batttr ,
I
1-- '.-V I 1 P
r - v.- - 1 I I
I ' , f I
i u a A
1 i r '
r 1 , - ' a ' ' I!
faithfully
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