Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1944)
PACE FOUR HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON If ralil antl SeUrS News Behind the News n- DB.T1T. M1I.LOH CRANK JENKINS M ALCOLM EPLET Editor Managing Editor a. remrwrarv comolnatton of tha Evening Herald and the Klamath New Published avail afternoon except Sunday aYlaned "and Plna streela Klamath Falls Oregon, by tha Har"ri Publishing Co and tha N a w Publishing Company. Bv carrier year ' 5 By mail J' j-v oJuldo Klamath. Lake Modoe Sl.klyou coun'la. --year 7 00 .morh elan matter at the poitofflce of Klamath 5aro" 'on0 ''Mcb,rt7nder c' co SUBSCRIPTION RATES: .0 month! 93.29 .year o.uu Member, Associated PreM Member Audit Bureau Circulation Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY - THERE is much powerful guessing going around about town on the date for Hitler's Germany to fold up. Opinions range generally from Labor Day weeKena on through the fall, and few ap- "V -1 parently believe the nazis win be in the fight after Christ mas. We have not heard, how ever, of any general commun ity preparations for (or against) V-Day. There is a good deal of talk about personal plans for hell-raising, and if only half of this materializes it will put November 11, 1918, ,n ,unvi& frtK 4Viaf cnrl nf thtno Serious significance of the occasion will prob ably be pretty well over-shadowed by hilarity. There .will probably be a few people who pray in thankfulness and for strength and wisdom In making a lasting peace. But not many. Most people appeal to the Almighty when they are in trouble; when the goose hangs high, they forget. EPLEV Joint Driye FOR a number of years,' there has been talk here of combining public financial drives into one big campaign .that will eliminate re peated demands upon our people and will make it easier for the public-spirited men and women who work on these drives. IThis year; it is going to be tried. A "com munity fund" program has been developed by an executive committee headed by J. V. Owens, long identified . with succesf ul war bond drives in Klamath county. John Ebinger, who suc cessfully handled the drive for the Boy. Scout Girl Scout-Campfire fund last year, has consent ed to become drive chairman. The executive committee includes representatives- of labor, business and agriculture. The set-up seems okeh and the time ripe for 'successful effort of this nature. It will take substantial contributions from the public, but the money is here and the causes deserving. Test Year IF THIS method of meeting these public drive quotas is successful this year, it may be con tinued indefinitely here. If it fails,' the com munity fund idea will probably be killed here for a long time to come, and local people will be "touched" repeatedly each year for the various beneficiaries. People' who' believe "In the" community' fund Idea are-urged to support it , vigorously this year. . " Klamath naval air station gets- bigger by the day, and an occasional visitor is surprised at the progress .made jn developing the field between his visits? Next big project out there will be another v hangar,-, to - be constructed from a lighter-than-air "hangar to be moved here from the midwest. -, ,- - . a ; a '. We're deep In the fire season now, with no serious blazes to date. Continued caution is in order; it may help to make this one of the best seasons on record. . That goes particularly for smokers who forget the hazard and throw burn ing cigarette butts out of car windows,-. That is one of the worst dangers of the' fire season. - Bv PAUL MALLON A ASHINGTON, Aug. lOThe heavy toll in VV the primaries reflects some dogged, des. perate, lnsld fighting which does not appear on me surface. Congressmen returning from the political battlefields back home continue to report little public' interest. One senator says people thought it an im position for him to talk at all They did not listen to speeches, and voting everywhere is light. . Yet those citizens who are primarily interested in poli tics, and also those who make MALLON it their trade, are anything but apathetic, Judging from the senatorial mor tality rate. Interpretations are difficult and confused. ' Some authorities are interpreting the recent de feat of well-known Senator Bennett Clark to his isolationism.. It may have been that, but it also may have been an accumulation of per sonal things which damaged his popularity, pos sibly also the fact that he was In with National Chairman Hannegan now, which seemed a light change of character for him. Most probably, the Influence of a St Louis newspaper was Important against him, claim ing he would vote against any post-war settle ment because of his father's grudge against Woodrow Wilson. I suspect it was mainly be cause ha was seldom on the job. a Holman and Smith FAMILIAR Cotton Ed Smith's defeat was at tributed to his opposition to the New. Deal (and unquestionably the New Deal won that race), but I suspect the fact that he is over 75 years of age had much to do with it. He just could not organize as he formerly did against the long-planned New Deal bulk organizing of Olin Johnson. Senator Rufus Holman lost in Oregon, and this too is said to be a victory against isola tionism, but it also may have been due . to personal prestige. As far as isolationism versus internationalism is concerned, the score so far stands exactly even. Defeated or not running for reelection are the so-called anti-internationalists, Clark of Idaho and Reynolds, of North Carolina, as well as Holman, and Clark of Missouri. But the successful list of anti-internationalists includes Nye, Gillette of Iowa, Gurney of South Dakota, Tobey of New Hampshire (and notably Rep. Ham Fish, whose victory is at tributed mainly to the personal sympathy en gendered by his heavy opposition which made him an underdog). Mrs. Caraway, on the other hand, who supported the FDR policy, was defeated. Dead Argument Here's .a -welcome to warmer' weather., safer for .our crops, It's WHAT this plainly shows Is that the argu ment is dead.. This was evident before the primaries, in fact before the war when both Nye and Tobey announced they were for world cooperation. The stands taken by Roosevelt and Dewey for the national fray also show the only re maining argument may develop between ideal istic or practical cooperation with the . world, not whether there should be cooperation Many false symptoms, therefore, are being "read into the results. -Two real ones stand out truly, in my opinion. . Primaries are largely organizational fights. The man with the best organization usually wins, especially when voting is light and in terest low. It is plain from-the results that inner political organization has developed far beyond . what we have known before. (This will be true also nationally with Dewey spending the bulk of his labors so- far in organization, and Demo cratic Chairman Hannegan calling for house-to-house canvasses.) But wherever the organization explanation does not hold true, the heavy turn-over is a sign people are thinking things out, for a change. The thoughts of most citizens may be across the seas, but those who have enough direct interest in primaries to cast a vote seem to have made it their business to know who stays on the job in the senate chamber and whose prestige in the senate is high. " Flashes of Life By The Associated Press BE PREPARED ! ADA,- Okla. Scoutmaster Otis Stockton had a hard time convincing members of his troop that they should learn now to administer artificial resmration, ' But he's happy he persisted. While on' a swimming party, Stockton became exhausted and sank. His scouts pulled him out and brought him back to con sciousness after applying arti- uciai respiration for zu minutes. m m RATION POINTS GLENNS FERRY, Ida. When the local rationing board award ed Mrs. W. C. Ruberry extra sugar lor canning, she returned the favor by presenting clerks with a juicy berry pie. ' COMPLETE SET 1BLENCOE, la In World War l, Ssgt. Carl Atkinson took a luger pistol from one of several German prisoners he rounded ud the night before armistice. Re turning home, he gave the pistol to his brother-injaw, O. H. Hale, remarking: '"Some day your son will have to go back and iinish the job." The Hales just heard from their son, Sgt. Harold Hale, over seas six months and now in Nor mandy, who wrote: "Tell Uncle Carl, I took a hol ster off a nazl last week that fits the gun he gave me." a ADDED AUTHORITY BUTTE, Mont. If a Flying Fortress needs any more author ity than its bombs and .50 cali ber machine guns, one of the big bombers in England now has It Capt. George W. Warren of Anaconda, Mont, wrote Sheriff Al McLeod of Butte that his ship needed a good luck piece. It has one now; pinned on its nose. The sheriff sent his silver badge, a a a TIME LIMIT SEATTLE Mrs. Gladys H. Shanbeck, a housewife, won an uncontested divorce after she testified that her husband, four times married, once told her: "Six years is enough to live with any woman." a a a ; OPA'S FAVORITE njr n j , '. in. nrewer arove in irom Cali fornia, filled up the tank of his alltnmnliila nnri Viao4w4 w Von- sas City- and no gasoline ra tion coupons cnangea nanas. Brewer, a defense worker, burns kerosene in his 1921 model sieam-ariven car. a a CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS TOPEKA, Kans. Pvt. Lee Kans.; who was wounded in the .uaiian campaign and now Is a patient in Winter General hos pital, gives this advice to those uuniing guts tor service men: . "Anything to eat," and adds: -."You haven't got time to shave or play checkers in combat." r A Gem of Thought From Idella's 1 There was a young follow named Spaa Thoro is only one kmda gal for mo She. must bo Witty and Fine , And have a figure divine HECK ha don't want one HE wants three. Phone 8468 Up Stick AT IDELLA'S ". -7 484S S. 6th Br AUSTIN BEALMEAR LONDON, Aug. 10 (JP) Fleets of American heavy bomb ers from England and Italy struck today at fuel and trans port facilities around Paris and, for the second time in a dozen hours, at the great Romanian oil center of .Ploesti. . Upwards of 500 Flying Fort resses and Liberators, escorted by Mustangs and Lightnings, started fires licking at the re fineries, tank cars and derricks 35 miles north of Bucharest Some installations 19 milas northwest of Ploesti also were bombed in this 13th attack from Italy on the major spring of nazl oil. The Germans used smoke screens, causing the filers from Italy to bomb by instrument. Several enemy fighters were de stroyed after the armada broke through a screen of interceptors and loosed their explosives in a storm of intense flak. Classified Ads Bring Results. SIDE GLANCES con. iW4 tv w soviet, me. T.n.w.tt.T. off. I "I turn those political poll-takers over lo my wife nowo- I days they get more opinions from her than they bar- gain fori Market Quotations NEW YORK. Aug. 10 (API Stock! worked at cross purposes In today's mar ket with the recently racing baby motors losing further steam and low-priced utilities responding to renewed specu lative interest. Closing QUotauons: American Can 89 Am Car & rdy MY, Am Tel & Tel j 162 H Anaconda Calif Packing Cat Trac..tor Commonwealth & Curtis-Wright General Electric General Motors w Gt Nor Ry pfd Illinois Central Inl Harvester Kennecott , . Lockheed Long-Bell "A" Montgomery Ward Nash-Kelv N Y Central Northern Pacific Pae Gas & El Packard Motor Penna R R . Republic Steel Safeway Stores Scars Roebuck Southern Psclfle H Standard Brands . Sunshine Mining n Trans-America Union PacUlc U S Steel Warner ficturea . 36 . 38K . 90 . 1 . 38S - 63 Va 38", - 17 Is 7l - 31 '1 . 16's . iota - - 13 - 19H . - 33'.s - S'i - . lOtt 31 . tlH 39', 29 ' "j V, -10SU, - MS laie Potatoes CHICAGO. All. 10 AP-WTA Pota toes, arrivali 60; on track 123; total U. 8. shipments 396; supplies moderate; for U. S. No. 1 good quality demand very good, market firm at celling. Market In confusion on central, western and southern stock account of chance In ceiling: other stocks slow. dull. Idaho Bliss Triumphs U. S. No. 1. 53.70. Loo Whites standard grade S3.58; Nebraska Red Warbas U. 3. No. 1. $3 99-4.11; Com mercials 13.88; Texaa Cobblers U. 8. No. 1, $3.89. LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. "tO CAP-WFA- Cattle: - salable 300. Steady to 15 cents lower; three cars good 1170 1204 lb. north coast rva.mu tffr 914.85 straight: half ear young grass cows $12.00. load medium 1000 lb. cows $10.00 light sorted at $9.00. canners and cutters mostly- $5.00-8.00. Few common bulls $8.50-9.00. Calves: IS. Steady. Few choice vealers quoted $14.00-14.50. nags: saiaoie JUU. Slow, some Dldl 25-50 cents lower; partial clearance. Few packages good and choice 1 BO-240 lb. at $15.73, celling price, other $10. SO down. Sowi weak, very few here. Sheep: salable 700. Undertone steady; late yesterday six decks good and choice wooiea tamos v13.35-1a.30, few decks medium to good shorn lambs $12.00-12.50: shorn medium to good yearlings $10,33- out to gooa ewes i.w-.ou. PORTLAND, Or., Aug. 10 (A-WFA) Salable and total cattle 250: caivaa 50; market less but generally steady: few common-medium grass steers $10.00- 13.00; some held higher; common-medium beef heifers $9.00-11.00; cutters down to $6.50: canner-cutter cows $5,006.50; shelly cows down to $4.50; fat dairy tvoe cows S7.00-8.00: medium flood beef cows 98-50-10.25; common-medium bulls $7.00-8.50; good-choice vealers $14.00 15.00; common grades down to $8.00. Salable nogs 500, total 600, market active, fully steady; good-choice 180-240 lbs. $15.75; 241-270 lbs. $15.00; heavier weights down to 913.50; light lights $12.50-14.00; good sows largely $11.00-30; light weights $12.00; good-choice 107 lb, feeder plgi 912-50. Salable sheen ooo: total 70o: market active, steady; good-choice shorn lambs $10.60; trucked in wooled lambs $12.00; large 'lots 81 lb. range lambs $12.75; medium-good lambs $10.50-11.50; com mon grades around $0.00; culls down to $7.00 and below; few medium-good yearling! $9.00-50; older wethers down to 94.00; good ewes salable 93.25-50. CHICAGO. Aug. 10 AP-WT A) Salable hoes n.000 total 15.000: closed active with complete clearance fully steady; top and bulk good and choice 160-240 lbs. at 914.75. the celling; weights over 240 lbs. at $14.00; all sows except few big weights and medium grades also at 914.00; good and choice hogs under 160 lbs. extremely scarce. Salable cattle 5000; salable calves 1000: meagre supply choice steers and yearlings steady with Wednesday's de cline; all others 25 cent Instance 50 cents lower; medium and good grade predominated In crop, mainly grassers and short-feds; top 917.50, but nothing strictly choice here; bulk $13.00-10.50; heifers steady to 35 cents lower; cows FISHING - SWIMMING BOATING Enjoy this year's vacation close io home'- . , at Lake o9 the Woods Resort Oroearir Hare, service station, ledge and re.l.oront new open, larvlng good food at reasonable prices. Bring your ration books. Lodge Is open for ' cenolnr. 2S-paisenger pleasnre boat In operation. Good road. Many cablna completely furnished. Hot and cold showers. Fishing Is truly tba best la years. OPEN FOR HUNTING SEASON. MAKE RESERVATIONS EARLY J, and bulls 15 to 35 cents down; vest on steady; most medium to good grade steers, comparable heifers, and practical ly all grade cows 30-75 cent lower than week ago; sizable supply all grassy classes taken off market. Salable sheep 2000; total 5000; all classes slow, very few early sales, bid ding steady to 23 cents lower on native spring lambs; deck uniformly good and choice natives bid $14.23 but held around $14.50, most bids $13.75 on small lot of good but not choice native springers, cull and common light weights dull at $5.00-10.00: short load common shorn yearlings held above $9.00; asking $4.73 5.25 for mixed medium, to choice shorn native ewes. WHEAT CHICAGO. Aug. 10 (API drain futures advanced In early dealings today as hot. dry weather continued over drought-damaged portions of the corn belt east of the Mississippi, but oats and rye fell off later on commission house and professional selling. Wheat showed Independent strength. Many traders lightened commitments pending tha governments report on crop conditions particularly corn on August t. which la released after tha market cloae. One trade authority asserted the report would not Include effocta of the last 10 days of heat and drought. He added tha corn crop was so spotted an estimate was worth less than normally. Wheat closed tsc lower to He higher, September S1.S3'.. oats war ft to c off. September Sae. rye was V. to Sc down. September 91.03-4, and barley was unchanged to tie higher, September Roosevelt Finishes Strategy Talks With MacArthur, Nimitz "(Continued-from Page One) going to give the Islands their independence.' Our goal still is uncondition al surrender for all our enemies, he said. Whatever is required, he continued, we are going right through to clean up the Japan ese. A reporter asked if new Jap anese offensives- would develop soon and the president said yes, but reminded his listeners that soon is a relative term and that strategy is a constantly shifting thing; . During his stay here the pres ident visited virtually every military operation on the island from a deadly advanced train ing course in jungle fighting to the hospital cots of the wounded from Sainan and the Marshalls. He reviewed the seventh dlvl' sion, veterans of Attu, Kiska and Kwajaleln. He made seven brief talks In two days, frequently delivered to servicemen who looked up from their jobs in surprise to see the president of .the United States rolling up In a jeep-escorted open touring car. His trip to Hawaii was a close ly guarded secret, but rows of islanders and servicemen lined the streets every time the presi dential party moved through Honolulu headed for one of the many nearby military reserva tions. VITAL STATISTICS PORTLAND, . Aug., 10 (JP) Twice as many births as deaths were recorded In Oregon in the first six months of this year, the state board of health said today. There were 12,395 births, 6933 deaths. ! ' In ?ly -Frances Moll of Klam ath Falls spent the weekend vis iting friends in Bly. . ANOTHER NEW PLASTIC A new featherweight plastic, which expands to 30 times its normal size in 10 minutes, has been develuoped which promises to have many peace-time applica tions especially as an insulator. FDR ACTION POSSIBLE III THUCK STRIKE Bv Tha Asioclutod Proai Bviwctill 88.UIIU tliul 74.000 workers wore idle tmlny on llio nation's trouult'd Inluu' front, with President Koo.it-velt report ed rcmly to net to end mi i'IkM stiile trucking striku Involving mi army-estimated l!.t,UU0 dri vers. WiisliiiiKlon ii n d Industry source.s Indicated Knvernineiit in tervention was probable lit the strike, which litis hulled over Ihe-rotid shipments in lit least eight midwest states. I'lesum abiy, White House action would precede actual taking over by tho army or the office of defense transportation. Tho country's next largest strike w.is at live plants of thu Wriijlit Aeronautical corporation in tliu l'ulcrsou, N. J., area, where company spokesman es timated the number idle at more than 3200, while union officials placed the liKiiro at 20,000. Two men were injured, one stabbed Willi u screw-driver, in quarrels ouUldo the plants. Meanwhile, thu wur labor board summoned officials of tho United Auto Workers union and its local 235, to a hearing toriav to explain why a strike of 7000 employes at Ilia Chevrolet gcur and axle division plant'of Gen eral Motors in Detroit continued despite a baek-to-work order. Tho army issued un ultimatum to moro tlinn 700 sinking em ployes of tlio Pennsylvania truck lines in the Hurrlsburg area, ordering them to start mov ing strike-bound water miiterinls immediately or have the army take over. A walkout of 523 persons nt tho Todd-Houston Shipbuilding corporation, Houston, Tex., end ed today, and a strike of 00 crane operators at the Bethle hem shipyard, Baltimore, was termed "apparently ended" by the company. There were nt least two "dor en moro disputes in the United States, and the Montreal, Que bec tramway system continued idle. Tolling The Editor Letter primed Mr muet not be mere than too words In Itniih, must be writ ten legibly on OHg Slog ol the p.pf only, ,nd mutt be xn.d. Contributions following Uhss rules, are wern)lv wet eomed. Sunday Latlnoit and Crime TIONESTA. Calif., (To the Editor) After reading so mnny articles on tho increaso of Ju venile delinquency, and knowing that this is one of the largest problems confronting fathers and mothers today, the law en forcement officers look to the many church organizations to help solve this problem and we know they have the right idea. Christian training Is the only education that gives our youth the knowledge of good and bad. If all of the fathers and mothers would cooperate with us In put ting over this Christian program we could soon stamp out this awful crime. But so far we have not been able to get the cooperation of all the fnthors and mothers. Tho sad part is we find mnny chil dren that would gladly attend church and Sunday school if their mothers could get them ready on Sunday mnrnlnc. REV. B. W. JOHNSON, Tlonesta, Calif. The ttoad to Berlin s TFm '---""---"----' -i-i-i-.-.-.-ir.-iiinnnnan. By Tha Associated Preig 1 Hussiant Front: 322 miles (measured from eastern suburbs of Warsaw). 2 Italian Front: 603 miles (measured from Florence), 3 French Front: 626 miles (measured from Soignolles). PHOTO "EYE" FINDS FIRES Photoelectric smoke-dctcctlng apparatus now provides for ships at sea the same fire-warning sys tem that is installed in many modern buildings, by drawing samples of air from over 30 dif ferent parts of the ship to a fire detecting cabinet located in the wheelhouse. . WELDING WIRE OUTPUT UP Production of steel welding wire in 1943 rose approximately 45 per cent above the 1942 fig ure for a record total of 1,166, 400,000 pounds. NEW kind of ASPIRIN tablet doesn't upset stomach Jr7HEN you need quick relief from ptJn.doyounesiuietoulteejplrJo fctctast It leave,-you. with an uptet stomach? If to. this new medical dl corefT, SUPBRINi If "Jrjat wh the doctor ordered" for you. v Superln Is niMn pirn contain the June pure, safe aspirin you have long known but developed by doctor In g special way for those upjet by aspirin In its ordinary form, Thta now kind of aspirin tablet dlnolves nor quickly, let die plri get rigl)t at tha job of relieving piin, reduce the addiqr of ordinals; aspirin, god does not Irritate or npjet ilomacb ever, after repeated dotel. Tear hl out to remind yon to get Superln today, so you can have It or hand when headaches, cold, etc., ulke Sea hnw milck-lv Ir relieve pain how yfjSjJWSjv fine you feel after fak. (fwmbutibfv inn. AtvourdruMlM's. V.-rWi IV and 39. Army's 'Sub-Sea Soldiers' -.'...y-.'. ... L--Mv -. V , Sa av. ,i L aaasaalsaBaBr mm , .-afarn u itu- 1 r U. S. Army diving unit, believed to bo tho only one Krni kept busy clearing rivers and cunnls of mini's mul imilcrwair, a strumous. Unit works from en LCVP (landing cruti vehlchsS personnel). In background, diver's tender Cpl. John (iorothkn j llrooklyn, N. Y.. helps diver Sgt. James 1'iice. of n Tonn., don his helmet before going down to Inspect cnnal tad . i EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued From Psgo One) down the Nurcw, might OUT FLANK all of Kti.it Prussia, cut tinu ill to thu Uultlc nt Dntuli!. or somewhere in that neighbor hood.) V V V TUG German are reported flahllno f rnnl Ic-jt 1 1 V in rltf.,nrt the "holy soil" of East Prussia with every. ablo-bodicd man and woman between the ages of IS and 65 drafted to dig trenches. Tho Russians rcnorl that for nlno days In n 'row they've knocked out MO It 10 than 100 Gcrmim tanks per day. That's mowing 'cm down! a a a GOEBDELS, scraping desper ntelv thn bottom of thn mnn. nower barrel, decrees that house servants must go into the army or war work and orders sharp reduction of railroad and postal employees. Ho bans ALL meet ings not connected wltn llio war effort. a a a IN the Pacific today, FOR makes 1 1 w nuM'l Ho Is "disclosed" to be In Hawaii conferring with Mac Arthur. Nimitz and Halsey. He snys MacArthur is going back to the Philippines adding that ha COULD go cither by north Africa or more directly. Ho thinks tho Jap will hit hard with NEW offensives SOON, but points out that "soon" Is a rel ative term. llo wishes everybody at homo could see the great things going on in Hawaii which evorybody would like well enough to do, but can't get there. HE'S all tho commander-ln-rhiffunvr. rift nnlilli-nl questions with the airy answer thai ncs too far removed from politics to know much about it. Ho gets a "nice" telegram from Truman probably NOT a congratulatory message. e e a INCIDENTAL note: A Fnla camo along for the ride, but got caught in the Hawaiian dog quarantine and .had to stay aboard the cruiser on which the party came. one correspondent (probably with tonguo in cheek) observes that NO EXCEPTIONS are to bo mado in Fnla's case thus lead lng the cynics to suspect that the exception made in the case of the Presidential telegram con gratulating Trumnn on his nomi nation isn't regarded as having gained any votes. SUMMER CAMP PUNS GOMPLET Plans for the junior summer camp t Uko Te Woods are now complete u Dnvu lliidue, city director dt, wi.inr inose who hn registered to keep the lollom Information in mind. The group will leave from iJ rear of Klamath Union hi nciiuui t o u. in., nillKlliy, A' list 13. Husc.i will he 1,,,,,' for triiiispurlnllim for Ihe bp tluggngt) will be nut by tru, and every boy is urgni in his bauuiiua Into n ni-ur h-. which will still he on pwl Wt MIU 7IIU 1,1 lliu ll io, A list of neecssnrv moo! and a dully .icln'ilulc have N-I sent out to tnose who rcgljterH inosc who are colne sht remember lo (ako a lunch ti tncir first mcni. Hans Norland Insurine. North 7th. Phone 6060. fisnrTIC RADIO BP.OADCAI1 m I KFJI 10 P. M. )) DON Iff MUllftt NltWOltJ Announcing The Opening of The New WftTOOfl lib 124 South 7th Street O Service Men Welcome