Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 19, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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    PACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
MALCOLM EPLEY
Managing Editor
IHANK JENWNi
a -nnn combination or tha Evening Herald and the
Nws? Published every afternoon except Sunday
K.'i?nada7id IPInl streets. Klamath Falls, Oregon, by Uia
S!"pub'l.hm'g Co. and tb. N.w. Publlahlng Company.
" oiraccniDTintJ RATES:
month 15o By mall 8 months .2S
SSSSnS SIsU-u c-oun'le. e.r S7.O0
second clan matter at the postorfice Klamath
and Oct. 1st, it is probable that many service
men, especially those overseas, will vote the
federal ballot. It may be that after casting the
federal ballot, the service man's county ballot
will arrive. He can vote it too but if both
are received, only one, the county ballot will
be counted.
Registration requirements are waived for men
and women in service, both for voting the
county and the federal ballots. However, they
must be eligible to vote: age 21, citizens, resi
dents of state and county when they entered
the service, and not previously convicted of
felony.
Member.
Associated Proa
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
FROM the "It Seems to Me" column of former
Gov. Charles Sprague in the Salem States
man we are borrowing today a valuable sum
mary of facts about ballots
for men and women in serv
ice. Here is a schedule form that
may be useful to Klamath peo
ple in advising their relatives
in the service on the manner
of voting this year:
Sept. 22: Closing date for
nominations to public office.
Clerks certify ballot forms for
printers.
Sept. 23: Printers complete
printing i of ballots as rapidly EPLEY
as possible. County clerks mail same to service
men or others eligible who have requested same.
Oct 27: Last day requests for absentee county
ballots may be filled by county clerks.
Hot. 7: Election day. Absentee ballot must be
in hands of county clerk so he can turn it over
to precinct election boards for counting on
election day. Absentee ballots should be in
clerk's hands by Nov. 1st or 2nd to be safe.
Federal Ballot The federal law provides for
a federal ballot which men and women in serv
ice may 1 vote under certain conditions. This
ballot lists only national offices: president and
vice president and their electors; senators and
congressmen. The conditions are, first, that the
person is eligible to vote in his state and county
election; second, that by
Sept. 1 he has requested his county ballot,
and that by
Oct. 1 the county ballot has not been received.
Request Necessary ' :
GOVERNOR SPRAGUE continue.
"This means that to vote in this election "
the voter in service MUST request a county
ballot. He can send bis request to the secretary ,
of state (giving name of his county and precinct)
or of his county clerk. . If he changes his ad
dress subsequent to ' making this request he
should advise his county clerk of the change.
"If the service man or woman fails, to request
a county ballot, he will not get one; and unless
he makes this request by Sept. 1st he cannot
vote the substitute federal ballot.
"Up to Oct. 27th he can request a county
ballot. In any event his ballot must be in the
hands of the county clerk time enough before
election day, Nov. 7, to be transmitted to the -election
board for counting. 1
.... "Folks at home should advise relatives in
the service to send in their requests for county
ballots AT ONCE, direct to the county clerk or
secretary of state. The requests will be kept on
file, and envelopes addressed for prompt mail
ing after Sept. 22nd. If the county ballot has
been requested on or before Sept. 1st and has
not been received up to Oct. 1st tl service
man or woman may "tote a federal ballot.
Short Period.
I lfINCE there is only' about a week tetween
ej
the date of final order for ballot printing
The War Today
By DeWITT MacKENZIE
Associated Press War Analyst
THE allied two-front vise is tightening its
death-grip on Hitler in a big way, with the
new and devastating offensives launched simul
taneously in the eastern theater and in Nor
mandy.
Berlin itself admits that this is the show,
down. A government-controlled nazi commenta
tor, viewing this fresh onslaught, declared that
the war would be decided in less than three
months.
The powerful allied offensive in Normandy
may be the beginning of our major effort to
break out of the peninsula onto the open road
to Paris. The British and Canadians have
achieved a notable gain by smashing the- nazi
defenses in the strategic Caen sector gateway
to the hinterland. And the Americans have
added another fine contribution by the cap
ture of St. Lo at the other end of the flaming
battleline.
Blazes Trail
AGAIN air power has blazed the way. The
Normandy offensive was preceded by a
terrific aerial bombardment by more than 2000
warplanes. Significant indeed is the fact that
there was no opposition from German planes.
Over on the Russian front the red armies
have swelled their already furious offensive to
a scale which is likely to precipitate the grand
crisis of the Russo-German war.
A new drive launched by the Russians in
southeastern Poland, in the Lwow sector, has
set the entire long front to rocking clear up
to the Baltic states. If you will get out your
maps for a moment we will take a quick
glance at the main points involved ' in the
upheaval.
-a-
Baltic Hold Threatened .
IN the north the Russians are forcing back the
center of the Hitlerite line defending ' the
Baltic states. The German hold on the Baltics
'is endangered and a great body of nazi troops is
threatened with being cut off.
Just below there the fuehrer's harassed leg
ions are defending the "hold German soil" of
East Prussia with their backs against the
frontier. -. ... -
A little farther south the red forces are ham
mering along the rolling plain which lies in the
gap between the Okluv Frbnimen rivers and
forms one of the great avenues into the heart
of Poland. In' this gap lies the big railway cen
ter of Bialzstok. '
Below this is another-operation, of .vast im
portance a drive towards the famous fortified
city of Brest Litovsk which is the hub of a net
work of railways. This is the chief anchor of
the entire nazi line. Its fall would be. a
catastrophe for Hitler. . '.
And finally' we have the new red blow t- a
powerful drive towards Lwow, another vital
railway center. This old city stands as a
sentinel on one of the thoroughfares leading
to the Polish capital. ...'
This is the grimly precarious1 position of
Hitler's armies.
SIDE GLANCES
Molten Lava From Mexican
Volcano Engulfs Two Towns
By ALBERT NOEL
MEXICO CITY, July 19 ()
Millions of tons of molten lava
pouring along a 25-mile front
from Paricutin, Mexico's new
born volcano, have engulfed two
towns and are threatening to
wipe out three others.
Paricutin, the town from
which the volcano takes its name,
and Parangaricutiro, already are
buried.
The lava is moving 200 yards
a day toward Zacan, San Fran
cisco, Pariban and Zirosto, which
have been partly evacuated.
Residents also are leaving other
towns farther ahead.
Highways leading from the
doomed region, 200 miles west
of here, are crammed with car
avans of Tarascan Indians
swarming to higher ground with
such belongings animals and
household effects as they could
nastily scrape together. .
tarthshakmg explosions are
heard at more or less regular
intervals trom the elevated cen
ter of the sea of lava. At each
explosion a higher wave of
melted stone pushed out from the
volcano, Born in .February, 1943.
Nothing- is now visible of the
town of Paricutin Tarascan
name for San Juan except the
towers ana root or the church,
which are expected to fall at any
time.
The five-feet-thick walls of the
famous church of Our Lord of
Miracles in Parangaricutiro have
been warped, melted or caved
in by the lava, which has com
pletely filled the church.
Dewey, Wadsworth Agree
On Postwar Army Strength
AI.RANV 1M V Tl 10 m
. Hep. James W. Wadsworth, Jr.,
co-author of the selective service
act said today that he and Gov
ernor Dewey are "in agreement"
that what he termed the weaken
ing of United States military
strength after s World . War I
' "should not happen again."
Wadsworth, an overnight guest
of the republican presidential
nominee, told i reporters they
, "discussed generally having this
.country made strong and kept
strong after the war.Y' . r
Asked the trend of their" con
: versation, Wadsworth, former
. chairman of the senate military,
affairs, committee, said if was
"by contrast with 1920-22 when
we sank our navy, cut our army
, down and promised Japan we
would 'hot fortify some Pacific
laicuius.
"The governor and I are in
agreement that sort of thing
should not happen again," Wads
worth asserted.
Declaring their talk included
discussion of post-war military
bases and many other subjects
involving security, Wadsworth
said he and Dewey covered gen
erally what he termed "the high
desirability of maintaining our
military strength so as to be
not only secure but influential."
Meantime the pattern of Gov
ernor Dewey's "front veranda"
summer campaign to seat himself
in the White House appeared to
hinge on party organization.
Observers of tho i.onnMi,n
picMueiuiai nominee s political
methods said it had become ao-
parent the' 42-year-old governor
was laying tne foundation of his
election drive on the time-tested
formula of state and local bartv
,ieamworK. .
They based . their conclusions
on Dewey's almost uninterrupted
post-convention series of huddles
with GOP congressional leaders.
I A Gem of Thought From .delta's a
. Said a young fellow named Gretter,
Who is a really observing go-getter,
r The Government may regulate the length of a skirt
But we will bet our clothes and our shirt
, They can't -tighten up on the Sweats. -
Leg Make-up, . . . . 25c
Phone 8468 JJ ID ELLA'S S. 6th
-What A qal!
conn
. . MJ AO t 1
Cluripri flmnntf tVia 1 A7n flBlaM.iM
. . . o ..... - u uGicgaica
to the democratic national con
vention are nine governors, 18
senators and 24 congressmen, to
&ethpr With thl-dO pakinat mnM
bers Attorney General Francis
Biddle; Secretary of the Inter
ior, Harold L. Ickes and Post
master ueneral Frank C. Walk
er.
;;. " i5. "v6 Mouses
are' Vice-President Henry A.
nouauK ana me mayors ot two
cities Edward J. Kelly, Chicago
1 Fannl. TT T
uu iiaiift iieteuc, kersey uiiy,
N. .1 War Mannnilror fAmmJ,.
sioner Paul McNutt also is a dele
gate, as is Philip Murray, presi
dent of the Congress of Industrial
Organizations (CIO), who tops a
group of 40 union delegates,
many of the American Federa-
wuu tu jjaoor memDers.
Pnnrpcpntino ih
are 25 doctors and 23 bankers,
iiaiiitea Dy zh state, county, city
and federal officials. Scores of
women will be on the convention
iiyur aesignatea oniy under the
all-embracing title "housewives."
If WP ean't finri a watt , mi
. " .7 lu I NallC
OUr Vniinifstpra mnea VinnliU -
one, aec um meunanizea society
go into retrograde instead of ad
vancing. Maj.-Gen. Lewis B.
Hershev. selenfivp nnrxrina ji.
rector.
YOU CAN'T BEAT
this to relieve TORTURE of
ATHLETE'S FOOT
Many Dractfsta Say I
First applications of wonderful sootHne,
lilhly medicated liquid Zemo promptly
aootha Itchy soreness between cracked
peeling ton and on contact actually kill
the germs that moat commonly cauae
and epread Athlete's Foot. .
Sfamn la n Tlnftnr'a fnvm.tla u
86 years' amazing success. Zemo really
works the first trial convinces. At all
aruEBGores.
eo iaq av m stavict. wc. t. w ate u s p-y.-
"I don'l understand ull the hullabaloo nbout manpower
when, we girls cun turn out n nice job like tlmt !"
Market
Quotations
Br BERNARD S. O'HARA
NEW YORK. July 19 (APi Stocks
moved forward moderately today on
Improved support attar two teutons of
fairly sharp declines.
American
Am Car at Fdy
Am Tel as Tel
Anaconda -..
Calif Packlns ....
(;at Tractor
Commonwealth At Sou
uurus-wngnt
General Electric
General Motors .
Gt nor Ry old .
Illinois Central .
Int Harvester
Kennecott -
Lockheed
Lons-Bell "A"
Montgomery wara
nasn-Keiv
N v central
Northern Pacltto
Pac Gas & El
Packard Motor
Penna R R .
Republic Steel
Richfield Oil
Safeway Stores .
Sears Roebuck
Southern Pacific
Standard Brands ..
Sunshine Mining
union mi ijaui
union raciuc m.
U S Steel
Warner Pictures
- S3i
41
...lea's
... 2U-,
28
51 ,
la
3'a
. 38'.
. 64 'i
. 37 V.
. 18i
. 78
. 32t
. 17.
. io,
. 48
- IS
20V,
mi
. 32H
- SVs
.. 31
JO
- 10
. 5314.
96
32',
.. 32H
- 10
- 20'a
-.109'..
. 60, ',
. 1
Potatoes
CHICAGO. July 10 (AP-WFA Pota
toei. arrivals 46; on track 135; total U. S.
ihfprnents 478; supplies light; demand
moderate; for red stock market strong;
for Missouri cobblers market about
steady; Washington Pontlacs U. S. No.
i. -S9.7&; ua i norma ixmg - wnite com
merclals $4.00; Missouri cobblers fair to
generally good quality $2.00-2.50;
Kansas cobblers fair quality 92.15;
Virginia cobblers U. S. No. 1, 93.50.
WHEAT
CHICAGO; July 19 (AP) Grain
futures eased back to near yesterday's
close In late trading today after having
held-firm to strong through most of the
session. ...
Hedging pressure In the wheat pit re
flected heavy receipts of Brain at south-
western 'market and lower prices at
Kansas City.
Wheat closed Vc higher. to He lower
than yesterday's finish. July $1.573ij.
Oats were unchanged to ic higher, July
78c. Rye was V to c -higher, July
91.10. Barley was up Vi to c, July
l.s074.
LIVESTOCK
CHICAGO, July 19 (AP-WFA1 Salable
hogs 14,000; total 19,000; market active
on all weights and sows, particularly on
sows; weights 160-370 lbs. strong, heav
ier weights and sows very uneven but
generally 10-35 cents higher; weights
under 180 lbs. scarce; top 913.85 paid
freely, bulk good and choice 190-270 lbs.
913.75-80; 380-300 lbs. mostly 913.00-13.50;
330-350 lbs. $12.65-13.15; few 350 and up
912.25-75: good and choice 350-550 lb.
sows 91160-90, choice lighter weights
as high as 912.10; good clearance.
Salable cattle 10,000; salable calves
1000; fed steers and yearlings and fed
heifers 1015 cents higher, active at ad
vance; top steers 917.65, new high on
crop, and highest for July since 1910;
next highest price 917.80. best yearlings
917.40; bulk fat steer 914.75-17-10; top
heifer 917.35; bulk 913.75-18.50; cows
strong, Instances higher on beef cows;
cutters $7.75 down; most beef cows
98.25-11,00; weighty shipper type bulls
scarce steady, but all grassy offerings
went at $9.50 down to 97.50; vealers
steady at $15.00 down; stock cattle con
tinued slow, steady.
Salable sheep 1500; total 0000; market
rather stow and dreggy, few early sales
spring lambs and shorn ewes mostly
steady; odd lot good and choice native
springers 914.00-14.50; latter price top,
with bucks discounted $1.00; medium
and good springers 912.00-13.50, light
cull kind quotable to 99.00 and below:
small lost shorn native ewe 94.00-5.75
according to grade.
PORTLAND. Ore., July 19 fAP-WFAl
Cattler salable and total 200; calves 85;
market very slow, many sales on clean
up basis; canner and cutter cows fully
50 cents below Monday; ciittcr to com
mon steers 25-50 cents off: medium-good
cattle quotable steady. Few cutter to
common steers $6.50-10.50; cutter to com
mon heifers 95.25-10.00; medium beef
ZEMO
'. ' Til NO
Da yw havs poor digsstlon?
Do ju (ill biadacby iftir latins?
Di yon fit sour tr ipstt tuily?
OiyMfiilUriJ-listliu?
Do you feel headachy and upset due to
poorly digested food? To feel cheerful
and happy again your food must be
digested properly.
Each day. Nature must produce about
two pltite of a vital digestive Juice to
help digest your food. If Nature falls;
your food may remain undigested '
leaJ!int you headachy and Irritable. '
.Therefore, you muet increase the flow
r i ,S'"V Juice. Carter's Little)
Liver Pills Increase this flow quickly
often In as little as 80 minutes. And,
you re on the road to feeling better.
Don t depend on artificial aide to
counteract Indigestion when Carter's
Little Liver Pills aid digestion after Na
ture a own order. Take Carter'a Little
Liver Pilla as directed. Get them at any
drugitoie. Only 10 and 26f.
heifers to $11.30: canner and cutter cows
$4.00-9.30: fat dairy ttpe cows up to
$6.00 and above: few common to med
ium beef cows 7.oo-iu.ou; common.
medium bulls $7.50-8.23; good bulls up to
$0.30; good-cholco vealers $14.00-13.00.
odd head $13.30.
Hogs: salable and total 600: holdovers
400: market steady with late Tuesday
or 25 cents lower than earlier that day;
strictly good-choice 160-230 tb. weights
largely $14.23; few $14.33; merely good
and fat type lno-200 lb. mostly $14.00:
280-300 lb. stuff at $12.00; light lights
$11.50-12.00; few 1IW-170 lb. $12.30-U.OO:
good SOWS $8.50-9.30. lightweights to
$10.30; good-choice feeder pigs $11.30-
Sheep: salable and total 200: holdovers
1200: market slow; partial clearance
about steady with last week: good
choice spring .lambs $11.30-12.00; com
mon grades largely $8.00-0.30: sliable
supply unsold; culls down to $3.00: med-lum-eood
yrarllnas S8.00-9.30: awes so
cents lower at $.1.50 down; common
grades down to $1.30.
VITAL STATISTICS
BALL Born at Klamath Valley hos
pital, Klamath Falls. Ore., on July 17.
1044. to Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Hull. 107
Old Fort Road, a girl. Weight: 6 pounds
ounces.
GRILL O Born at Klamath Vallev hos
pital, Klamath Falls. Ore., on July 17,
1944. to Mr. and Mrs. I. A- Grillo. 231
North Sixth, a boy. Weight: 5 pounds
HUFFMAN Born at Klamath Valtey
hospital, Klamath Falls, Ore., on July
17. 1044. to Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Huff
man. Pelican Bay Lumber company, a
boy. Weight: 6 pounds 8 ounces.
MUSSELMAN Born at Klamath Val
ley hospital. Klamath Falls. Ore., on
July 13, 1944. to Mr. and Mrs. B. A.
Musselman. 4011 Biibee. a girl. Weight:
7 pounds 10 ounces.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of W. B. Barnes acknowl
edge with grateful appreciation all kind
expressions of sympnthy extended us In
me toss oi our oeioveo wue ana mother.
W. B. Barnes
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Barnes
and family
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Kennett.
and family
Major Zed W. Barnes
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to extend our thanks and
appreciation to our friends and neigh
bors for the acts of klndneis for th
sympathy and beautiful floral offerings
iur uuf uciovea twins.
Mr. and Mrs. R. M, Arnhart
and family. ,
Courthouse Records
Marriages
M1LLER-W1NEBAROER. Charles Fred
erick Miller, 23. meat cutter. Native
of Oregon, resident of Stockton, Calif.
Willa Maxino Winebargcr, Id, book
keeper. Native of Oregon, resident of
Merrill.
B LAWK FIELD - HARDBERGER. Leon
Parry Blankfleld, 31, merchant seaman.
Native of New York, resident of Jackson
ville, Fla. Carol M. Hardberger, 27,
home economics teacher. Native of
Louisiana, resident of Pinehurst Inn.
Complaint! Filed
Barbara Adalync Stephenson versus
Clifford Lynn Stephenson. Suit for di
vorce, charge cruel and Inhuman treat
menl. Couplo married in Welser, Ida,,
December 21, 1D33. U. S, Balentine, at
torney for plaintiff.
Justice Court
Albert James Downing. No warn Ins
device. Fined $5.50,
Glen Howard Hart No tail light
Fined (3.50.
Glen Howard Hart, No clearance
lamps. Fined $5.50.
Lawrence Earl Ericks. No head lights.
Fined $5.50.
Edward Aaron Cook man. Drunk on
public highway. Fined $20 or 10 days.
WEATHER
Eugene
Klamath Falls
North Bend
Portland
Reddlns
jteno
Max. Min. Prcclp.
...04
,..104
54
53 .
01
on
San Francisco .87
Seattle 05
Telling
The Editor
Letters printed hare moat net ba mor,
than $00 word. In length, must bs writ
ten legibly on ONI (IDI ol the paps'
only, snd must ba timed. Oonlrlbullona
tallowing theta rule,, art warmly wtl-oomed,
A PARAPHRASE
Thcro Is happiness In the
heart of him who prizes right
conscienco nbovo public opin
ion, integrity over persomil
gain, and who refuses to make
compromise with principle, even
thouKh bv overy conventional
standard Ills lifo miuht bo judg
ed a failure.
Real human happiness Is tho
result of tho practice of virtue.
Ponce and contentment are born
of self-discipline. They seek (or
happiness in vain who in their
quest lose their own soul. The
possession of riches cannot com
pensate for the torturiiiK reali
zation that they were won at
the price of honor. No position
in society can bring joy to the
man who realizes that ho ob
tained it tho wrong way and
who knows his life is a living
lie.
Only the truth can make men
frco and happy. Tho truth is
contained in the teachings of
Jesus Christ. Ho is our model,
the perfect ONBinplar of noble
human conduct. Ho is a plan
for living and those who fol
low Him become not merely
good but perfect as our heaven
ly Father is perfect. Our reason
aDprovcs of the divine way,
and we make progress in moral
excellence when wo cooperate
with tho grace of God. We be
como better human beings. Our
health, our wealth, our culture
will have rational purposo and
a real meaning In our progress
along the way of moral perfec
tion. Tho ultimate goal will be
reached when wo oro united
for all eternity with God. Then
our portion will be perfect and
complete happiness.
When people are united in
bonds of mutual consideration
and respond to the promptings
of a common interest, they at
tract happiness and content
ment. Love conditions them for
success, and they are blessed of
God.
Whoever sunders the bonds
of human brotherhood and sets
people against one another Is
evil. Christianity was never In
tended to work automatically,
but through the rational under
standing and willing coopera
tion of mankind. There are
cleavages among us that render
it difficult for us to reach a
common mind and to muster a
common, will cleavages based
on race and creed, cleavages
caused by nationality, c 1 e a v
ages between rich and poor,
worker and employer, producer
and consumer, farmer and city
dweller. Cleavages rise which
separate brother from brother
and keep apart what should be
kept together barriers that
prevent the most of us from
enjoying what belongs to most
of us.
Membership In a church does
not require that we isolate our
selves from those of our neigh
bors whose persuasions differ
from ours. It does not confine
us within the walls of a ghetto.
It Imposes on us an obligation
of taking an active part as a
good- citizen in the activities
that promote the general . wel
fare of the community, the na
tion and the world at large.
Outside of our church there arc
multitudes of men and women
who are people of good will
whose lives give evidence of
the noble ideals they cherish
and who are intensely devoted
to everything that promises of
human happiness. They live in
accord with the rights as they
understand them, and frequent
ly put us who have so many
Z. XH E 1
U-flEAT
In taking that hot feeling out of sun
burn, soothingheatraBh, and irritated
chafed skin, thousands are finding out
how to boat the heat with Mexsnna,
thesoothincmedicated powder. Mox
sana contains several ingredients rec
ommended by specialists for these dis
comforts. Costs little. Even greater
savings in larger sizes. Got Mexsana.
: Ml OUUtUIKN Kit Ull 01 Ml,
,. Continuous Show From 11:00 A. M.
FRIDAY and SATURDAY Onl
1) ?
, .t
Smiley (Frog) Burnette
In Person On Our Stage
Direct From Hollywood
snlrttuHl advantage! to shams.
.f . it.. tiiAu An nnt bemnB
to our church, but In their
hearts they are uuoueu wnn
the spirit of Jesus Christ and
niu doing His work to tho beat
of their ability.
In a nation like ours, whuro
wo arc in a minority, we must
cooperate with high-minded
pcoplo who aro not of our be
lief if we expect to exert a
good I n ( I u e n c o on society.
Christ was not a separatist; He
went about doing good and did
not allow artificial barriers to
bar His mission, Christianity Is
a leaven working In society,
not a subjugating force, Wher
ever men and women aro band
ed ttmether for tho promotion
of human benefit, Christ Is In
tho midst ot them, and we
should be ranged at His sldo.
A. F. JOKNS,
34(1 Division SI.
FRAGMENTS
isy Loom Curry Smith
I liuvo two stars thaUshlno up
on my door.
They speak alike of woll be-
loveu ones.
My heart is sad: but oh, such
nride to know -
Thev were not called. Each
gave himself! My sons!
Ponderosa Plywood
Markups Restored
To Higher Levels
WASHINGTON. July 10 (IP)
The mark-ups for Jobbers and
retailers of ponderosa pino ply
wood woro restored today to
the higher levels which pre
vailed ocforo May 11, when ply
wood of that species was
brought under the controls cov
ering Douglas fir plywood.
Tho office of prlco adminis
tration action is effective July
24. Jobbers' mark-ups will be
30 and 40 per cent respectively
for large and small sales, In
stead ot the present 20 and 25
per cent. Retailers marK-ups
will be 50 and 00 per cent re
spectively, compared with the
present Ji i-a ana a per cent,
Government Eggs
Now Stock Feed
PORTLAND, Ore., July 10 (IP)
About 000 cases of government
eggs havo been converted into
stock feed or destroyed hero re
cently, the Oregonlan said to
day. The newspaper quoted Claude
L. Reiser, an official of the food
distribution administration, as
reporting the eggs unfit for hu
man consumption from spoilage
In storage and transit from the
midwest. The paper valued the
eggs at more than $13,000.
Nicotine Dust
Scarce In Oregon
CORVALLIS, July IB OP)
Scarcity of nicotine dust this
year necessitates efficient use if
gests arc to be controlled, Dr.
on C. Mote, head of entomology
at Oregon Stato college, warned
today.
The most efficient way to ap
ply dust is to operate only at
night or in early morning when
air movement Is tho least, Dr.
Mote said, Material is largely
wasted, he said, when dusting is
attempted with even a light
breeze. '
HEMORRHOIDS (Piles)
Hernia (Rupture), fissure 01 FlitBli
Snob dlaoidaie Impair vottt
hetlth llloletiev eualno a
powai. roi wymii we new l
uqaviiiuiiT ii-aia loon
tend of people lot Ibeio ell
. . ti.l
tlon. No oonllaemDi. No
kH ol tits Item woik. Cell
lor Minlnatloa or Mod lor 4
TRIE daacilDtlv BoaklaL
Open fvaniigi, Men,, Wad,, hi, 7 H Ii30
Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC
Phytlctmn and turfon
W. K. Coi. E Burn tide aDd Giaad At.
Telephone lAet 301 a Port) and. Oreqo
aaa.. w
LUMBER GrIeb?
ORDERED BYlrf.
the
WASHINGTON. ju,y ,.
in win nfAri,.i! . Mv ID ft!
rday banned t ,u" 0
ados of white ,,k ,
;rpit pino, sugar ?
bile pine.' whl i , lnt: '
press in iho iiiniiur,,;, (
pes of produci,,. "ocur,
J'i0.0"0"'? "! nrohlkin.
, - any lUlllUei- cxr.iTI
II Dnri .1
beech, maple, p,,,.,
in ,1, tl,,,,..
.w. i,h.
Lumber from mm, ,.
ess than 8000 board M
s exomiit frn. , il...' .ItM
Tho following"
sncc cs nrn nrf......ir"
fir; numbcViiTnl TCM
red cypres ton Inrhw ifl
bear g'r
""."".v lumber
WHEATSTOCKLHQ
LOWER IlSf
WASHINGTON, July it
Tho agriculture iiiTOiiim,;
nouncpd today Hint wheat,
on July 1 in the four K
exporting countries vg
States. Canada. Argentini,
Australia aro c.iilmnied Vi
878,000,000 bushels below J
record suodIIcs r iinn ,1,..;
year, but still well nbow
average of prewar yesrs. '
Total stocks were ulirt
1,170,000,000 bushels S
with 1,748,000,1)110 lt ytTl
with an average of 457,000
for the five pre-war ycarj, m
Tho decline of m'nrtvnn.J
from a year ago, the ml
change In carryover suimiis.1
one year's tlmo on record. 3
suited In part from the ,nA
1043 wheat harvest in ih.il
countries and in part trom J
largo demand for wheat (orM
Ing and other non food purpcJ
Good harvest prospects (oitj
now crop indicate 111c catntii
n year from now will rrmiu
approximately the level ol j-A
a, sov.
Dry Cell Battery
Material Released
WASHINGTON, July It i
In order to Increase the miiJ
tacture of dry cell bittira
urgontly needed for wjr p
Coses, tho War Produtta
oard today removed III 9
strlcllons on tho mo of in
steel, copper and copper ilkri
in their production. Slight nl
taxation was provided sIm A
the restrictions on the tixil
aluminum, copper, zinc, is
and steel in tho mamitactunl
flashlights and other porta
electric light. -
If you want to sell It pw
The Herald and Nwi "rot
ads," 3124.
r
I VACATION TIMEf
can bring J
I
can bring
ACCIDENTS!
It's smart to bl
proreefod
SotH Jf. JUilt
I RKI-RESENTINO Till '
I MUTUAL BENEFIT II
Health and Accident I
LAtt n.. or umana 1
111 N. aaaJakfi
I
WHICH CHURCH?
fr
OF the more than 250 ehurchti In America, which
did Christ build? and of which one is He thf hiu'
That he did not build all of them is cortain. for ovn I
child knows that Jesus could not
true, and teach so many difforsnt
contradictory doctrines. No churcti
willing to accept as truth, the doct'iM
of another church which contrsm
something they teach. It may M
all cannot alike, but whsn w
people contradict each othor, "
cannot be right. That all churche
tradlct each other in points of J
trine is a fact that cannot be ueeJ
fully denied. When two dlff"
churches contradict each other in e
1.1 .hi 1 it. r iham a
teaching error. John warned that wnj
soever gooth onward and abide"!
in the teaching of Christ hath tn
God, arid Paul taught that if ft
should nr.nrh Hlff.rnt aospel
that, which he preached, let him be accursed. The tW!
which makes different churches is dlfforent toachin "
all taught the name, all would be members of the ""
church. n ..
Jesus said, "Upon this rock Twill build MY church,
is a presumptious sin to claim that Jesus is the head of "
churches. That would make him the director of all the w"
doctrines of the world. The head directs the body, and t
body is the church. (Col. I1I8) If Jesus is the hoad of
the churches, then he directs all the churches. Who i
Ing to accept this doctrine? Surely no one will be so W"
sistent. .. ..
The great need of today Is for' all churches to give JjJ
their party names, forsake their man-made croeds,
human practices, and preach only the gospel of Christ,
Jus'b mmbe of the church ot Christ. ,
Tho big tent Is up again, and the meetings are being,
" auDjeci tomgnt will be "Heeoncinau""-
C. B. Shropshire,
Portland,
Evangelist
CHURCH OF CHRIST
BIG TENT MEETING
Two Block Pait Tower Theatre) On South Sixth