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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1943)
PAGE SIX HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Aufftiiit 18, 1943 WILLKIE SAYS REPUBLICANS SHOULD 11 RUSHVILLE, Ind.. Aug. 13 OP Wendell L. Willkie ays the republican party "should and can win" the 1944 elections with "a constructive, liberal domes tie program of expanding econ omy" and "a realistic foreign policy." The 1940 GOP presidential nominee declared "no party was ever presented with such an ex citing challenge as is offered to the republican party today nor , with such an opportunity." His remarks were contained in a 1 statement issued as he talked with republican leaders of the eighth Indiana congressional dis trict yesterday. He said he disagreed with re cent suggestions that if the war continued beyond next year the Roosevelt administration "will inevitably be returned to pow er," and added: "As a matter of fact, for the successful conclusion of the war, the necessary rehabilitation of the country after the war is over, and the enlightened con duct of our foreign policy, the republican party should and can win the next presidential and ! congressional elections. "But, In order to win, we re- j publicans must present to' the people constructive, liberal do mestic program of expanding economy, developed primarily through the forces of private ini tiative with an unequitable dis tribution of the profits and so- cial benefits among labor, agri culture and industry." Willkie said that the GOP must forsake "the tempting no tion that it can win by the amal gamation of the dissident groups in America" the "narrow na tionalists," the "economically selfish," and those unwilling to sacrifice in time of war. VEGETABLES FOR The use of vegetable crops will be stressed this year in the school lunch program, Mrs. Win nifred K. Gillen, home demon stration agent, announced today, This decision . was made at a meeting of the Klamath county nutrition committee. Plans have been made by the committee to have films avail able toward the last of the month on the canning and stor ing of vegetables. These films will help . families use garden supplies wisely and will supple ment information given at the food preservation meetings this summer. The appointment of Mrs. Paul Landry to have charge of the city school cafeterias was an nounced at the meeting by Arn- oim Gralapp. Klamath Falls is the only city in the state, said Mrs. Gillen, to have a general direct- r of public school cafeterias. Those attending the meeting were Mrs. John McFee, Mrs. John Kerns, Mrs. Myrtle Cald well, Mrs. Marjorie Brissenden, Mrs. Isabel le Brixner, Mrs. Al- tha Urquhart, Mrs. Winn if red Gillen, Mrs. Lydia Howard. Alice Stout, Alice Johnson, Ber niece Peterson, Clifford Jenkins, Dr. Peter Rozendal, Arnold Gra lapp, Fred Peterson and Lynn Roycroft. I Seagoing Pig Big Problem To Ship's Butcher, Baker SAN FRANCISCO, Aug.13 W) The seagoing pig on the Pacific grunted trustfully between a butcher and baker here today, unworried over the problem it presented. Peter Marich'of Colma, Calif., the butcher on the former trans Pacific liner now in government Proves Wonderful For Itching Skin To soothe itching, burning skin, apply medicated liquid ZEMO a Doctor s formula backed by 30 years continu oussuccess! For ringworm symptoms, eczema, athlete's foot or blemishes due to external cause, apply ZEMO freely. Soon the discomfort should disappear. Over 25,000,000 packages ffianr,OB,y85t ZEMO DANCE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT SICATELAND SIS Klamath Ave. Music Pappy Gordon's Oregon Hillbillies Auspices Veterans of Foreign Wars General Pat ton and Sicilian Cardinal 3frf-:-:' 1 r T r.e - a i, T (NBA rW.pAolo' General George 8. Patton Jr right, m a letter to the people of Sicily, assuring them that liberation, not enslavement, was the aim of the Allied armies, stated: 'Here In Palermo we have established excellent relations with His Eminence, the Cardinal, and, through him, with the Church. Above, Pat ton, an Episcopalian, chats with Cardinal Lavitrano la Pa lermo alter capture of the dqr by U. 8. forces. WAR KITCHEN NOW YOU CAN AFFORD STRONG ICED COFFEE Br GAYNOR MADDOZ The recent Increase in your coffee ration means - you can now serve strong, clear, iced coffee during the August "dog days." But learn how to get the best iced coffee from your val uable supply. There are two methods. The first is really the best, according to iced coffee epicures. Make your coffee double strength by your favorite method. Use 2 heaping tablespoons for each fl ounce measuring cup of water. Fill tall glasses with ice; pour the freshly made hot coffee into the glass. For the other method, make regular strength coffee, using 1 heaping tablespoon for every cup water. When done, pour into glass jar. cover and cool. Place in refrigerator. To serve. pour into tall glasses, half filled with ice. To celebrate the Increase In coffee supplies and the success of your victory garden, give a porch supper. With the iced cof fee, serve a Mexican salad and crisp rolls. Mexican Salad (Serves 6) One-quarter cup salad oil. 1 clove garlic, 1 cup diced bread, cup diced celery or cucum ber, 1 cup diced cooked potato, 14 cup finely chopped onion, H cup finely chopped carrot, 2 tablespoons minced sweet pep per, 1 cup cooked string beans. 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon chili powder, 2 tablespoons vinegar. neat l tablespoon salad oil. add garlic, and cook the diced bread until light brown. Re move from heat, remove garlic, and add remaining oil and in gredients and mix well. Serve in large salad bowl with lettuce or watercress. For a light porch supper, to be served with iced coffee, try a salad of greens combined with carrot sticks, turnip sticks, caul iflower buds and radishes, serv ed with slices of whole wheat and butter or fortified margar ine. war service, and Herman Keller of Alameda, Calif., the baker, said they had become too fond of the pig answering to the name of "Souie" to end "her" career as a roast. "Souie" can't land, because the government (agricultural depart ment quarantine or something) won't let her and, so the cook and the baker said, she can't be put off at her former South Pa cific island home for the same reason. ' She was picked up by the ship's crew last April, a little pig. But she now weighs around 100 pounds and she's growing fast. Keller said she eats anything from stew to ice cream. She has, all to herself, the kennel quar ters on the ship which used to house the pedigreed dogs of wealthy passengers. 4 1 1 4 Ail- I . . MENU (Eat the Basic 7 Everr Day) BREAKFAST; Grapes, .blueberry griddle cakes, sugar, fortified margarine, toast, coffee, milk. LUNCH: Vegetable soup, soybean crackers, chopped tongue sandwiches, jelly sand wiches, whole apple, tea, milk. . DINNER: Cream of tomato soup in cups, whole wheat bread croutons, cold cuts, Mexican salad, warmed en riched hard rolls, butter or fortified margarine, sliced peaches, nut cookies, iced cof fee, milk. Cereals are one of the Basic Seven Foods. Portland Produce FOB.TLAJTD. Or.. Act. U f AF) BUT' TER AA fidt prtaU.afilie, eartoaa. 47l4e: A trad prtata. n,e. cartont, 47c; O grada BlTTERFAT-nrat qn.lltr. nailamn of . of 1 per not acldltjr. deliTered at Port land. tt-S&ic lb.; premium quality, max imum of Jo of 1 per era! arlditjr. SS-Ue lb. : ralley root and cointrr polata. Jc ii!" " " ""B" """id qaalltj -- h irawr III,, or RMU-C ID. CHEESE Selllof prlca to Portland retail- urraon inpieu. IVC io.; loaf. 30c lb. FOb! to wnoltaalera, I7e tt-i loaf, tfije EGOS Trfcea to fetailm. f a aii re, ai.c; A mdtom. ille: A amau, wit m rriet to prodooin: A do ' - - - LIVE POCT.TRT BuTtaf print: Xo. 1 trad Lienors broiler. n ia u . m ooiorro irrera ondr r- to tea.. 29e: Lrrnora nna, nndrr I!, lb... tsuc; orer S6 lb!.. tHie; oolorrd Vn.. 4 to I lb., tHjt: owr lbt ic; old rooakra, 11540 DRESSED TrKKWYH sum... Country dreaaed breeder hen. J0-32o lb. BABBITS Goreroment celling Avmm country killed to relallera, 41c lb.; lira pnev u proaucera, IC 10. OXIOXS-Creeii. M0e dotes bonefcei Valla Walla, $tM per SO-lb. bag. nrATOE sear Yakima Gam. so. I- OrnJM. 1 I mm .. ... ' wusTsr meats Rollback prist to ,cMlirri vounirj-aiiieo nog, oeat batcaera. izu-ltv D.. IBC: vr era. 11 1 tTic; B, IJ'ic; C, ir?4e; rail, ljuc; can! nrr-cutter cowa. Hijo lb.; bulla, eanner. cutler. l(4c: lamb, AA. Mc; A. i4e: B. C'ic; C. JOlje; e, FS. IJiJc; medium. HAY Wnoletala prleea nominal: Alfalfa, So. J or hetur. VaM; No. 1 Montana timothy, S3.Q9; Ko. I graaa hay, SR.OO; oat-retch. la.OOMOO ton, ralley point; timothy (railey), IU.00 ton; dorer, B5.0O- After the war, millions of hardened and brutalized young men will be still eager to exert their terror against any German who tries to co-operate loyally with the rest of the world. More over, the active part of the Ger man people with few exceptions are wim Hitler. Dr. F. w. For ester, expatriated German edu cator. Mosquitos are having their day and keeping us from having our night. We should kick about not hav ing pleasure drives! Look what Russia has done to Hitler's. Classified Ads Bring Results. m up This Onion So good and handy, -Makes manyfoodt Taste fine w Xoaiuc SAtiN, f ONION SAlf I CHtY SAIT V SVO SAIT ' VtlASONINOV MabkeU and financial LATE BIDDING STIFFENS ALL MARKET PRICES Br VICTOR EUBANK NEW YORK. Aug. 13 rP A litUe late bidding stiffened prices generally in today's stock market although anything re sembling recovery rush failed to materialize. .Sluggishness prevailed from the start and the aggregate of around 400,000 shares was one of the smallest of the past year. The ticker tape frequently idled for a minute or so at a time. Pepsi-Cola and Eastman Ko dak got up 2 or so each and lesser improvement was shown for U. S. Steel. Chrysler, Willys Overland, U. S. Rubber, Santa Fe, Southern Pacific Sears Roe buck, Montgomery Ward, Inter national Harvester, Westing house, General Electric, Texas Co., Standard Oil (NJ) and In ternational Telephone. Closing quotations: American Can 84 Am Car it Fdy 371 Am Tel & Tel 154 Anaconda 23 i Calif Packing 26 Cat Tractor 231 Comm'nw'lth Sou ....1116 General Electric 371 General Motors ; .. 31) Gt.Nor Ry pfd , 27 1 Illinois Central 12 Int Harvester 88 Kennecott 301 Lockheed 17s Montgomery Ward 461 Nash-Kelv .. 12 N Y Central 131 Northern Pacific 141 Pac Gas It El Packard Motor Penna R R Republic Steel Safeway Stores Sears Roebuck Southern Pacific . Standard Brands . Sunshine Mining Trans-America Union Oil Calif Union Pacific U S Steel Warner Pictures CourthouM Records Complaints Filed Martha L. Thiel versus Louis J. Thiel. Suit for divorce, charge cruel and inhuman treatment Couple married in Denver, Colo., May 25, 1932. Plaintiff asks custody of one minor child. J. C. O'Neill, attorney for plaintiff. Justice Court Thomas V. Nealy. Violation of the basic rule. Fined $29, $10 suspended. Bob Clarence Miller. Failure to stop at stop sign. Fined $7. Classified Ads Bring Results. . 13 Years Of Negatives On File! Since 1930 Kennell-Ellis Has Kept All Negatives On Pile For Your Convenience Come In . . . Look Them Over And Order From Those Old Proofs You May Hove Forgotten! Kennell-Ellis ' U. I. Rata Bank Bldg., Main and Ita Phone 2S2 Salt end dandl Schilling IUr ANOTHf IONS TODAY Potatoes CHICAGO, Aug. IS (rP) Po tatoes, arrivals 114; on track 212; total US shipments TOO; supplies moderate; demand rath' er slow for Bliss Triumphs and Red Warbas; market steady for others; market weaker in all sec tions. Idaho Bliss Triumphs $3.13; Idaho Russet-Burbanks $3.50; Washington R u s s e t-Burbanks $3.46; Nebraska Red Warbas $3.9S-$3.0S; Nebraska Cobblers $2.83; Wisconsin Bliss Triumphs $2.80; Virginia Cobblers $2.73. LIVESTOCK SO. SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 13 (AP-WFA) Cattle 173. For week, steers fully 25c lower, ac tual top medium to good grass steers $13.73, several loads feed ers $11.30-12.10; fat cows $11.00 11.50. Odd weighty bulls $11.00. Calves: None; nominal. Hogs none; nominal. Thurs day's closing top $13.80; good sows $13.30. Sheep 800. Barely steady; for week, receipts 7400; lambs un evenly steady to 25c higher, week's bulk good to choice $13.00-14.13, bulk medium to good shorn $11.00-13.00; shorn ewes 23c higher, bulk $3.00-8.83. CHICAGO, Aug. 13 (rP) Sal able hogs 9500; total 15000; weights under 140 lbs. opened steady to 10c higher; later trado slow, 13-25c lower on all weights and sows including several loads weighing under 240 lbs.; good and choice 170-340 lbs. $1,465 95; top $13.00; late top $14.75; 250-280 lbs. $14.15-14 50; 280 350 lbs. $13.85-14.25; 140-70 lbs. $13.73-14.75; good and choice 350-550 lbs. sows $13.00-50; few choice sows 300 lbs. and under up to $13.73. Salable cattle 1000; salable calves 400; strictly good and choice fed steers and yearlings not reliably wanted; bulk taken off market; fee loads medium to low good grade $12.50-14.75; best $13.25; eastern order de mand very narrow; heifers scarce but dull; beef cows con tinued weak at 15c lower prices than late last week, mainly $10.00-12.00; canners, cutter and common beef cows active and firm; however, at $8.25-10.00; f LjM A pound of - mcmJ golden west Wy) in the temporaiy J heavy bulls active; fully steady at $13.73-14.23; light bulls well cleaned up; steady today at $9.00-12.80; vealers firm at $15.00-16.00. Salable sheep 1000; total 6500; fat lambs opening about steady; some bids on native spring lambs 28a lower; bidding around $13.00-14.00 on medium and good native spring lambs; top $14.50 paid for part deck good to choice native lambs to small killers and for two double choice around 93 lbs. Colorado fed Cal ifornia spring lambs with No. 1 skins carrying few full shorn; few common to medium native spring lambs around $11.00 12.00; few sheep steady, shorn native slaughter ewes $6.00-7.00; bulk at outside. PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 13 (V) (U. S. Dept. Agr.) Cattle Sal able 25, total ISO; calves salable 10, total 25, mostly clean-up market, steady. Grass stccri $9.00-11.50; week's best grassers $14.00; best fed steers, $15.25; few common to cutter cows $6.00-7.00; common - medium bulls $8.50-9.00; good bulls quotable to $10.50 and above; common-medium vealers $0.00 11.50, good-choice salable lo $13.00-14.00; odd grass calves $12.00. Hogs Salable 50, total 550: market about steady. Good choice 190-220 lb. $15 23: 240 285 lb. $13.73-14.75; good 400 500 lb. sows $11.00; good-choice 110 lb. feeder pigs $15.50. Sheep Salable 150, total 200; good choice spring lambs $11.50; strictly sorted kinds quotable to $11.75; or above few good ewes $5.25; goodlcholce grades salable to $6.00; sizeable lot common-good ewes unsold. "FURNACE OF THE FUTURE" By utilizing a down-draft prin ciple, a home "furnace of the fu ture" designed at the University of Illinois Is said to eliminate all smoke, and to utilize the heat value of smoke and gases to such an extent that savings of one-half in the amount of fuel consumed are possible. It seems that only a nice, cool, quiet smoke will quiet that rest less feeling which men who stop smoking have. If It's a "frozen need, advertise for In the classified article you a used on WE'VE SOLVED TWO unusual coffee' problems,, caused by the government's severe restrictions on the use of glass for coffee packaging, and the lifting of coffee rationing. First: what to use for a package! This is answered by the glassine-lined bag. Second: how to insure freshness and flavor! Speedy delivery to your grocer, in small quantities, is now a part of our service, for our roasting plant is located in this area. Here's how you can help patriotically "Let every Other pound you buy, be the wartime package".Thc price will be slightly lower than the glass jar. ' Drip or Regular Grind of course! (Goldeni West (Mfee JEMI WEST .IT'S GOLDEN WEST COFFEE Life? Pet pooch "Angina Pectoris" tnkes a xmhath with mltrM, Either Williams, Hollywood starlet and former national swimming champion. WHEAT CHICAGO. Aug. 13 ) Gain ing more than a rent at times, ryo led a recovery In grain prices today. Activity was on a small scale and the advance In rye was considered a technical development in view of the sharp decline which has occurred in Hint grain over recent sessions. Strength of wheat at Minne apolis, where good mill buying wos reported, gnve Iho local market a firm undertone. Some buying here wn.i also credited to milling account. Scattered de mand for oats disclosed a scar city of offerings and the market held firm. . At the close wheat was 1 i A Doa s be sure it's I (SH PURE CANE SUGAR SUGAR insist on (3dH () Market Prices for Gardeners MHTI.ANn, Auf. II (Art-PrlNt ift Rat Sl'la fartttrra market tmtayi AITIKH i,.i,.iareiil, Nl.Ui Orareo. aleln. li tM but. AI'RIlllllt-Vaalma. M pr lllh. tmi, I'lllHIIIK Il.iun.l l)ie, ti lt.). to rtala. IIK4NH- Uleen, e tII". Io Ib.i Ora. aim Olanta, -! Ib.ihnue, I0 lu llntaa, II W lua. CANTAUH'TEH Tha Pallel alamlaiili. 11 rialr. I'AIO.lriiOWRK (Rrorrall)-Mn, u, 111. 1111. t. u tn No. I. . IOHN -Niirlhweat, M rrata, Itmir VKIIM AKI.KH-ltrfli. le (, buHi'liril rarmla, 10 to An, hunrhie, l.rTrri K n. i, ii.io i rule. UHIANIIKHHIKA -Nh. I, rr.le, I'KAH I. .c.l, . U matt. MIS bill. I'Ktl'IIM- Itiwhnter, II SO I.Tt hn,i Sua am builiel. 'KH'MU,Nn. I, II. U I M bni. M'lNAI'll leiral, II U I II mat,,. h..i HAIHAIIKS Ka. I ipllni, tail, tut i-t. bum-It e,. ItlU IIAItlt-rield. II kl. IS'lOMt-.llraeii 0e 4ni buachai. IHKilt:lllllK HMO erale. hi KAWI1KII1IIKK St.u-khtlt, M em., ollief. K T. ViH'SilliHlrtirn-Iwal II rr.le. rnTAl"l:-". II. II MI.II orania b-i, ALLOYING MADE VISIBLE Something never before the actual mingling of Ulaa? metals to form an alloy is now visible by a "thin film" procexs. The process shows In seconds what formerly took months to learn, namely, how rapidly one motnl diffuses Into another. higher, September $1,431, De cembcr $1,431, oats were I t higher, September 681-1. and rye was up 1-11, Srptembrr 971-1. All Wool Sports Coati and Slacks Fall Colors Bis 34 to 4$ RUDY'S MEN'S SHOP, Ilk uat Male)