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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1943)
HERALD AKD NEWS, KL'AWATH FALLS. OREGON Tilly 20. IMS Mimbtr of Tut Amociatkb Pun Tha Aaaodalaa' fraaa U nl ml; mIIIM to tha um of ra. publication of all Bawa diinatctiaa tnMti is 1 or aoi othwviM erdld IB thla parr. (nil ! the lotfil Bwt'pubtlthd tharalfl. All rlihta of republication ol apaclal alapatchaa ara tlx t aarvad. FRANK JENKINS Bditor A tamperary eoaablaatloa af lha feaetat raid iM aha Klamath Kama. Puoltibad arary aftarftooa axtrna. Suflday at Baplaoada and Plna atrtata, Klamath Falla, Oretoa, by tba llara'd fubl latitat Co. and tba Klamath Hava PublUhloi Company Xntarad aa aaeoad alaaa nattar at tba poatofftea of Ilamatb Falla. Ora.. aa Auatut to, IPOS aadar aet el amtraas, Harab a, lara. Jafambar t AeaiT Bcsuv Or CncoLAtn lapraaaatad KaNaaailr by Wtar-HauiuT Co., Iks. taa Fraartaco. Kav Tort, attla. Cbloatv, Fwtlaad. laa Aitalaa, MALCOLM BPLBT JfaMt Editor Traveling Through News Behind ihe News EPLEY By MALCOLM EPLEY CHICAGO. III., (Special Correspondence) A quick atop here and we're heading west. Homesickness has caught up with ua and we would much ratner oe at mam and Esplanade streets, Klam ath Falls, than at LaSalle and Van Buren streets, where this is written. That's honest talk, folks. We would like to see a lew faces we know when we go out on the street. Coming west from Boston, we made a swing through Can ada, sliding into this noisy city on the Canadian National and the Grand Trunk trains that were found not nearly so crowded as those in the "states." Getting in and out of Canada is a simple process. Going in, Canadian immigration and customs officials ask you a few questions about birth and intentions. American officials do a somewhat more thorough job of it, but In our case at least it was no bother at all. Perhaps our through ticket, showing a mere curve into . Canada while en- route west, helped. . But we were in the neighboring country to ed by a terrific downpour. It occurred at Mon treal. There we stood, a block from the rail 'way station, our train slated to leave in five minutes, and nothing to do but make run i or it. We did and we ran into more rain drops than we've seen since we were in a cloudburst on Hart mountain. The tropical worsted suit, wmcn we oougni in lu amain rails, nung line a dishrag from our palpitating form as we entered the station. Tne train, 01 course, cuan t leave for 20 minutes, when the rain had com pletely stopped. That tropical worsted, Incidentally, has really suffered on this jaunt. We wore it to see the Cards play the Braves in a doubleheader at Boston. It rained out the second game and gave us and that darned suit a wet wash be tween grandstand and streetcar. And valet service is neither quick nor dependable for traveling people these days. As most readers know, nearly everybody is bilingual in Montreal. It was uncanny, the way the information clerk at our station talked to us in perfect English, answered the telephone in speedy French, and returned to his English to finish his conversation with us. The signs on streets and elsewhere axe in both English and French, as are the railway timetables. You don't have to be in Canada long to get evidences of the political feeling between French leading article in a Canadian magazine we picked up told about a cabinet member who is French Canadian to the core, but still is able to talk to the Protestant English and to under stand their point of view. This man is so v-Mfl u:i : 1 i t i . "r" ij iuiuBuu tic cw ive a smgie speecn alternating in both languages and make it interesting for all listeners. a a a- a No Beef Steak THIS isn't our line, but well move over into the shopping news. Things you see in plenty in New York, Boston and Chicago, but are scarce back home: whiskey, luggage and candy. Shopping for food, one finds little of rationed meat offered on the restaurant menus. They all run strong to chicken and sea food. Usually you'll find a steak listed in an inconspicuous spot, costing $3 or better just to discourage you. This scribe hasn't sunk a tooth into a piece of solid beef since he left Klamath Falls. In small shops along the shabbier streets a great play is made on things that attract serv ice men. Here in Chicago we came on a spot where for 29 cents you can have your name printed in a boxcar type headline on the front of a newspaper called "The Chicago Page." Sample headlines: JONES BROTHERS HIT CHICAGO BEWARE GIRLS! BOB SMITH JOINS NAVY WAR TO END SOON. Nearby is a trick shop where you can buy Mexican jumping beans, vanishing cigarettes, magic coins, etc. enough equipment for staging a whole show a la Chuck Seavey. a a a Memorial WITH a few hours to spare here in Chicago, we visited the beautiful memorial build ing on Sheridan road, constructed by the BPO Elks in honor of their soldier dead. It is an outstanding architectural and artistic achieve ment, worthy of a visit by anyone coming to Chicago. That shortened our time for writing this column. We're taking the North Coast Limited tonight for a better land, and here's calling it 30 for what will be one of the last installments of these chronicles. By PAUL MALLOW. WASHINGTON, July 20 Mr. Roosevelt's action In the Wallace-Jones controversy seemed offhand as if he had at long-last knocked couple of officious heads to gether, but the subterranean implications were of far great er significance. Mr. Roosevelt klUed the Wallace global economy policy. He not only killed it, but he t v I buriea it wim one paragrapn SviV I of ni executiv" order requlr- VSp''' I lng tn vice president to get approval for any foreign step after August 15 in writing from "a majority of the (Byrnes) war mobilization committee," not mere ly Mobilizer Byrnes himself and even the writing would have to be filed with Secretary of State Hull. In effect, Mr. Roosevelt passed temporary control over foreign planning to the much more conservative majority of the war mobilization committee, and gave the equally conservative Mr. Hull at least a prior knowledge of what is to be done. The new economic warfare director, Leo T. Crowley, is an able man, respected by all factions, but is also on the conservative side, as far as conservatism goes in the New Deal. Fundamentally he is a banker by experience and practice. He will function aa such at the .head of economic warfare, not as a world re former. Thus passe th the Milo Perkins regime which originated the quart of milk a day theory for all cannibals, headhunters, and pygmies. Thus arise th the post war prospect of. feeding on the basis of need rather, than altered diets, and upon our ability to help reasonable re habilitation rather than on a world WPA. Has Mr. Roosevelt heard the winds in the country lately? Is this the first step of a change of front to make the- government con form to popular public opinion? Inner government officials think so. They know the argument between Messrs. Wallace and Jones ran far deeper than the superficial ities mentioned in public, and really involved ' basic post-war policy. To them, it also con firms what they formerly suspected, namely that Mr. Wallace will not be on the fourth term ticket.. What the president will need in the way of a running mate next year is a southern farm bloc democrat, who -can bring him quietude from the restless south and support from or ganized farm bloc elements. It seems very likely the center of post war economics will now shift to Mr. Hull's state department and to Mr. Lehman' food relief. Both have been functioning on the subject, and Lehman will shortly seek a half billion dollars. The elimination of Wallace raises the dignity of their efforts and cut off a tangent which out-glamored them. It should also eliminate at least 50 per cent of the chaos enveloping the ' subject. a Stockpiling Favors Britain THE Wallace board of economic warfare has been accused, justly or unjustly, of having favored Great Britain to the detriment of all other world nations in its stockpiling and world economic policies. Britain needs help less than other smaller nations involved. Whether th change will mean any alteration in this Wallace design is not yet clear. Essentially, however, capitalism is a self interested as human nature, in profit for self, not only individually but nationally. You can't run capitalism on globaloney. If Mr. Roose velt intends to accept these realizations, it will no doubt be evident in steps soon to come. On the other side, the president's action took away from Jesse Jones not only his war materials corporations, but his pre-war export import bank, which, his adversaries in the gov ernment long had wished to release, from his clutches. The conservative Mr. Jones is thus shorn of much power, henceforth to be used by more amendable and pliable Roosevelt agents. a a a a Job-Sharing UNFORTUNATELY, no one believes the change will be followed through to the extent that the other government officials, holding four or more important positions on the average, may be cut down to their main duties. It is said that Interior secretary, Mr. Ickes, for instance, has so many other Jobs that he hires two secretaries for the special purpose of keeping himself informed as to what they are. All the jobs taken away from Wallace and Jones were in addition to their regular ap pointed duties. Finally, wouldn't it be Interesting if Mr. Roosevelt left Mr. Willkie holding the "one world" sack. SIDE GLANCES Oregon News Notes . By The Associated Press The Portland police bureau appealed for more patrolmen, complaining there are 51 vacan cies, but only 17 eligible appli cants ... A logging truck and a passenger automobile collided in Oregon City, killing George C. Howard, 76, Oregon City real estate dealer, driver of the automobile. Members of the state postwar planning committee suggested in a Portland meeting that sub committees be set up to study federal, state, county, municipal and industrial problems . . . Fire broke out in a Portland liquor store, but was extin guished, to the obvious relief of spectators, without loss . ... Crystal J. Walker, 3, struck by an automobile May 24, died in Portland, the city's 25th traffic fatality of the year. To stop squeaking from the auto fan belt, apply paraffin wax to the belt every 1000 or 1500 miles. Classified Ads Bring Results. Chiloquin The Chiloquin Boy Scouts are now at Boy Scout camp at Camp Makualla, Crescent lake. They left July 18 and will return July 25. The local Boy Scouts are plan ning to distribute numerous dis plays throughout the Chiloquin business section for the collec tion of rags, keys, tin cans, etc. The public is urged to make this campaign a success. - Mrs. Olaf T. Erickson and Mrs. K. L. Zierlein of Lamm's camp were shopping in Chilo quin Wednesday. Mrs. Minato and Gina Minato OBet.aq rr mjt aaaa. we. T. it. aaa. q 1mt. cwr. TUfl "1 hone it isn't misleading: to Ihe neichbors all the new things you've been buying since 1 got thai little war contract l" Simple Precautions Stop Swimming Pool Infections Dr. Masters' Health Column ar DR. THOMAS D. MASTERS . Swimming, although a pastime enioved hv millions of nertnl Is often an extremely dangerous recreation. However, a few sim ple rules and precautions if fol lowedwill akliminatia mnri n the disadvantages to be found in in is tpon. In the water, man is out of hia natural almnr. anrl Mn. stantly at a disadvantage, regard less ot nis ability as a swimmer. The story of the good swimmer who drowned because he failed to gauge the current, or was caught in an undertow, is time worn. Swimming requires more than physical effort. To be safe, the swimmer must know his lim itations as well as the peculiari ties of the element he deals with. BEACHES CARRY THREATS Beaches and the water in which many people swim and in mis activity as well as others, man remains gregarious may crjr inner inreats to health and life. - Ringworm infections like ath lete's foot Dlasue the iwimmar even before he gets a toe wet. When he dives into the water h. encounters germs capable of pro ducing boils and other skin in fections, throat infections, tonsil litis, and middle-ear infections. If he possesses a sensitive nose and throat, subject to hay fever or other allergies, the added in sult of the water may cause con gestion of the eyes and nose, with sneezing and profuse nasal discharge that resembles true hay fever. But even if he escapes all these, and comes out to rest on the beach, the sun may inflict severe damage to his skin! Despite these dangers and an noyances, swimming is called a pleasant and healthful recrea tion, and for the great majority it is, because the advantages out weigh the risks. PRECAUTIONS Fortunately, the risks In swimming can be reduced by simple precautions. Allergic swimmers, and those who have had previous ear infections, should keep their heads out of the water while swimming, and should not try to dive. Rubber and cotton ear tampons are not always sufficient protection against either pressure or pene tration by water. . Swallowing or clearing the Basal passages tn or out of water tends to permit infection to take hold in the sinuses, middle ear, and even the gastro-intestlnal tract. . Above all, the swimmer should remember the old admonition to wait at least two hours after meals to allow the digestion of food before swimming, if he wishes to eliminate the fear of sudden cramping. KLAMATH GIR L SCOUTS NOW LA GAMP Two loads of happy Girl Scouts left Klamath Foils for Camp Esther Applegate at Lake o' the Woods on Sunday, July 18, They were accompanied In the two buses by Mrs. J. K Reno and Mrs. Jeanette Brown. The girls, many of whom hud not been to camp for two years, were greeted by the counselors who had gone to camp three days in advance in order to re ceive pre-enmp training on the camp site. They were undor the direction of Camp Director Mrs. Dent Savage. On the first day the girls en. joyed a chicken dinner at the lodge followed by a camp fire in tne evening. - Counselors for the two weeks ot camp are Mrs. Darrell Stol berg, Mrs. L. A. Murphy, Mrs. Barbara Luellan, Mrs. Robert Weir, Charlotte Wales, Dorothy Uhlig and Louiso Mitchell. Wife Receives Wings for Husband, Killed Training Merrill WAR KITCHEN RYE PANCAKES MAKE STURDY MORNING MEAL By OAYNOR MADDOX Use pancakes right through the worker's year for a good send-off early in the morning. They are particularly valuable when made of wholegrain flours and enriched with egg, milk and other nutritious elements such as molasses. You can use ready-to-mix pan cake flours for quick breakfast. Add egg and milk to these to give them "carry on value." There are waffle and biscuit-pre pared mixes, too, to make break fast taste more inviting and to give the day a substantial begin ning. - Rye Pancakes (without fat) One cup flour, 1 cup rye meal, 1 cup sour milk or buttermilk, 1 teaspoon soda, i cup molasses, 1 beaten egg. Mix and sift flour and meal. Add sour milk with soda stir red in it until it foams. Add mo lasses and beat well. Add beat en egg and stir in well. Drop by tablespoonfuls on greased hot griddle. When bubbly, turn and bake other side. Serve hot with syrup or molasses. , Corn Meal . Griddle Cakes One and one-half cups enrich-1 ed corn meal, ) cup flour, 4 tea spoons baking powder, I tea spoon salt, 1 cup water, 1 cup mux, 1 tablespoon molasses, 1 beaten egg, 1 tablespon melted margarine. Mix and sift dry ingredients. Add water; milk and molasses gradually, then well-beaten egg. Beat thoroughly; add melted margarine last. Drop by table spoonfuls on greased hot griddle or neavy iron frying pan. Cook on one side. When puffed, full of bubbles and cooked on edges, turn and cook on other side. Serve with syrup, molasses, hon ey or jam. TOMORROW'S MENU (Eat the Basic 7 Every Day) BREAKFAST: Stewed strawberries and rhubarb, corn meal griddle cakes, sy rup, coffee, milk. LUNCHEON: Omelet with creamed green peas, Yadishes, wholewheat bread, . butter or fortified margarine, nut cook ies, tea, milk. DINNER: Beef liver and vegetable stew, baked . pota toes, bread, butter or fortified margarine, romalne and toma to salad, blueberry pudding, lemon sauce, tea, milk. were in Klamath Falls Thursday on business. The Mecca pool hall has been Improved by the addition of new floor. E. H. Radtke and his wife left for Portland Wednesday on their vacation. Radtke is the local railroad agent. He is being re lieved by H. A. Green. John Hessig of Klamath Falls, owner of the Hessig block in Chiloquin, was in Chiloquin Wednesday on business. Courthouse Records Justice Court Joe Herkshan. Drunk in a public place. $10 or five days. Dorothy Mildred Vowell. No operator's license. Fined (5.50, Roderick Austin Means. Dis orderly conduct. Fined $50. Classified Ads Bring Results. DOCILE SAN FRANCISCO, VP) The group of captured German sold iers he helped escort to the Unit ed' States behaved very well, said First Lieut. Oscar Slattebo. In fact, one of them insisted on learning how long it would take to get first citizenship papers. Touring season has become the time when everybody is ready to go but the automobile. WARNING. BIWARI Ot DonELVJonns Roundworm! lnalda you or your child aan cauaa real troubla. And you may not know what ta wrong;. Warninf alana ara l "pleky" appatfta, narvouanaaa, unaaar gtomaeh. Itching parta. Oat Jarna'a Vannlfua riant way I JAYNE'B la Antarlu'a lauing pro prietary worm madlelna t uaad by mllitona. Acta sanlly yat axpala roundworm!. Ba aura you tat JAYNB'S VIB 111X110 1 1 Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Clemens have received word from tlicir nephew. Staff Sgt. Porter Clem ens, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Clemens. Klamath Falls, that he has been awarded the Oak Leaf and the "A" medals for recent mcritorius action. Clem ens, who enlisted soon after wht was declared, is a rear gunner cn a Fortress and has been in England since last March. He wrote to relatives saying that he had been in a hospital in England for three weeks but did not say that he had been hospitalized becauso of wounds. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Clemens had as weekend guests their son Gerald Clemens and Mrs. Clemens of Klamath Falls. Clemens is a teacher in the Mills school. Miss Pauline Clem ens, employed in the Southern Pacific freight office in Klam ath Falls also spent the week end with her parents. C. E. Sharp, manager of the Merrill mill, accompanied by Martin Winther, left Monday on a business trip to Redmond. Mr. and Mrs. Don Barnes had as guests Thursday Barnes' brother. Sergeant Elmer Barnes and their mother, Mrs. Jennie Barnes, M e d ( o r d. Sergeant Barnes is stationed with the U. S. army at Camp Briggs, Tex. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Reed had as their guest last week their daughter Hazel, who has been employed in the shipyards at Portland. They accompanied her north by train Sunday to spend a few days. Virginia Sharp la assisUng at the Ben Franklin variety store. Sergeant Harold King, for merly of Merrill, was homo on furlough this week from Con necticut. He was employed on the J. Frank Adams ranch at one time. He 4s the son of Mrs. John Hancock and was a guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hancock. Dr. C. O. Prentice has an nounced sale of his 220-acre ranch north of Merrill to Claude Shuck, Merrill. One hundred and seventy acres of the ranch Is under irrigation. The salo in cluded the 1943 crop and part of the equipment. Consideration was approximately $40,000. Egg Prices Start Upswing, Says OPA LOS ANGELES, July 20 UP) Hold on to your hens, 'cause here we go again 73 cents a dozen for eggs by October. That will be the maximum price of large Grade A eggs in Class 1 stores of this vicinity, says the OPA, crediting the In crease to the approaching sea sonal slump in egg production. The advance will be gradual, with the first increase in maxi mum prices due next Thursday from 58 to 59 cents a dozen, OPA Price Attorney Abraham Gottfried announced. Mrs. John Wilbur Yeoman of 4753 Shasta way, whose young husband was killed In a plane crush In early June, has n reived the flyer's wings, a gift from Major Thomas A, Leo, United States nrmy air corps, Santa Ana, Calif. The following letter was sent Mrs. Yeoman this past week: "Gcnerul H. H. Arnold, com manding general of the army air forces, has directed thut the en closed wing be presented to you In honor of John Wilbur Yeo. man, who gava his Ufa In I ruin ing ta become pilot In the army air forces. This Insignia windJ have been Ills badge of arhlrjjjj ment on the completion of his training. "You ran rightly share the pride which would have been his on receiving these wlnn. Thn army air forces present them in honor of his memory," Ycomun's pnrouls, Mr. and Mrs, John W, Yeoman, reticle at the Cascade apurtinonU. Food Shortage Hits Nation's Poultry CHICAGO. July '20 (ZD Thore Is a shortugo of food for tho mitlon's poultry, a poultry executive, said today and ho urged the general punllo "not to try to ruiKO ouoy ciiickoiis. Don M. Turnbull. Kunsus City, assistant executive secretury of the International uuoy chicks nsnneintinn. mi Id "tlirtru Is more poultry in tho country now than wo can feed. He said production on chicks hv i hp country's 10.000 hatcher ies would total approximately one and one-nan oniioo inn year, an increase of 300 million over lost year. LANGELL VALLEY Drain ago of the High lako area on the west side of Lungell valley was considered by the Lungell Volley sail conservation district board of supervisors at their regular meeting July 10. The engineering surveys for thi.i drainuge proposal have been completed by the district and a meeting of landowners will be called when this data Is ready to submit to the landowners for their consideration and approval The proposed drain will affect some 1500 acres on IS farms In this area. Formers present ot tho meet ing wero Lloyd Gift, Wes Dear born, R. E. Thomas and W. J. Burnctte. L. W. "Pot" Engstrom was present at tho meeting. Eng strom recently arrived from Lewiston, Ida., to bo the new dis trict conservationist to work with farmers on conservation plans, engineering and other work in tho district. Keno Mrs. W. E. llatlon and two small children of Wlnslow. Ariz., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Powell and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Powell of Keno. Mrs. Hatton is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Powell. She plans to be In Keno and Klamath Falls for about two weeks. Mrs. C. C. Huskinsnn returned home on Friday night from a month's visit with her porents, Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Goss of Mc Allister, Okla., and with other relatives in Dallas, Tex.i and Los Angeles, Calif. Mrs. Steve Popoff of Sheridan, Calif., was a recent visitor for a week at tho home ot Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Sohrakoff. She Is Sohrakoff's sister. Mrs. Roland Angus of Klam ath Falls visited her porents, Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Powell and other relatives In Keno this week. Mr. and Mrs. Frank High of Brookings, Ore., ore visitors at the home of Mrs. High's son, Winficld Seavcr. Mrs. Foster Seavcr of Ash land, was visiting friends in this community this week, coming over from Ashlond with Mr. and Mrs. Frank High. Mr. and Mrs. High had been guests of the Sea vcr family in Ashland earlier In tho week. REASON PORTLAND, Ore., (P) Rich ard S. Sherman, 18, was ordered to jail to servo out a $175 fine for speeding and driving without a license. Then the judge heard his story and released him. Sher man explained he had to speed or bo lato for army induction. lUiildlng and remodeling hits taken a slight swing upward dur ing the summer months. There were 10 permits approved at the city council meeting on Monduav night. Those okayed wore: Mike G. Brunncr. Addition to residence, 2214 Reclamation street. Cost. $150. R. B. llnclley. New foundation, 34U Murtiu street. Coal, $125. Richard B. Maxwell. Exten sion on buscmcnt garage, 1032 I'orllund street. Cost, SI 30. Adrian C. Smith. Install bni.4 ment and add one room, 1815 Es planade street. Cost, SHOO. M. E. Doty. Reroof Crater rooms, North Second street. Cost, $300. Leo N. Huls. Remodol Van's Camera shop, 727 Main street. Cost. $150. Leo N. Huls. Repair de-Icing plant fire damage at SP railroad. Cost, $1250. Suburban Lumber company. Reroof residence at 738 Plum street. Cost. 5200. Roy B. Early for HnwiiA Barnnisel agency. New floor tit business building at 1008-1010 Main street. Cost, $125. A. L. Gralapp. Interior re modeling at Fremont school cafe, teria, Eighth and High streets. Cost, $400. Langell Valley Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown and daughter of Tulelako, Calif., visited on Friday with his sister and family, tho Wesley Dear borns. Rov. and Mrs. J. Henry Thorn as arrived Monday from Berke ley, Calif., to spend a month with their son Reginald, and family. George Smith of Yuba City, Calif., Is hero looking after hjL bees, and visiting his mothrQ Mrs. Mary Smith and his sister, Bessie Frazier. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Culn of Klamath Falls and his mother, Mrs. Ross Cain of Brookings, Ore., were dinner guests on Mon day evening at the Bill Burnett home. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Leavltt and family visited on Thursday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Smith and family. Mrs. Mae Gale and Mrs. Lela Murray will entertain the Lan gell Volley Women's club at the Gale home on July 22 when the ladies will do Red Cross sewing. Everyone is cordially Invited tn attend. Meeting starts at 2 o'clock. Margaret and Marilyn Dear born spent Thursday and Friday in Klamath Falls. Helen Dear born stayed with the Johnsons. Mrs. Claude Shuck of Tulgaa. lake and Mrs. Clifford Shuck O Merrill, visited friends In Lan gell valley on Monday. Mrs. Alice Peatross and Mrs. Cora Leavitt spent Tuesday with Mrs. Mary Dearborn and Mrs. Grace Dearborn. Doris Leavitt spent Mondny night with her aunt end uncle, the Ora Johnsons. Our friends have long known what our enemies are learning today, that the promises of the United Stales are always kept and our pledges are always re deemed. President Roosevelt. ' PILE S SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO PAIN - NO HOSPITALIZATION No Loaa af Tlma parmanant Raaultal DR. E. Ma MARSHA Dhfraarietle s-tivelelen IM He, 7th - isaulre Theatre Idf. nonr irrs C. B. Shropshire Portland Evangelist CHURCH OF CHRIST Big Tent Meetings Two blocks past Tower Theatre on So. 6th, Klamath Falls, Oregon Sermons Direct from the Bible July 18th through August 8th i Evenings 8t00 to 9i00 P, M, Dally Daily Radio Program 5:30 to 5:45 1 c;