HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PACE FOUR
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maims
aw
j carrlar r-v-tM
SUBSCRIPTION RATES!
tantli 7S By mall
Mr uy man
months t&3S
year M1
Modoc SJaklrou coun'iaa year ' 00
.t-al aceond clan raattar at tha poatoffloa ol Klamath
S$Fn SAiSilt 30. loos, undar act or cuwrau.
" Mr
March 5. H7
Mam bar.
Aaaodatad Praaa
Membar Audit
Bureau Circulation
EPLEY
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
PROBABLY a good many people, like this
scribe, have been wondering what a S92.000
rifl. ramie is like, since it was disclosed the
other day that such was the
low bid for the 25-target range
to be constructed at the
Marine Barracks.
So today we ambled across
Esplanade street to the office
of Lt. John M. Babcock, the
officer in charge of construc
tion. A rifleman, which we
sre not, or an engineer, which
we are not, could probably
have gotten a lot more out of
a look at the blueprints for
this elaborate range, but we'll
tell a little about ,. 4 , ,.
The range will be located to the east of the
water tanks, which stand on the hill to the
east of the Marine Barracks. The 500-yard
firing apron, in fact, will be right at the tanks,
and the men will shoot across to the targets
on a hillside.
There will be three firing aprons 500 yards
from the targets, 300 yards from the targets,
and 200 yards from the targets. Identical con
crete aprons will be constructed at these firing
points.
; Back of the 500-yard pit will be a rifle stor
age building, featuring work benches and facil
ities for repair and cleaning the weapons. This
building, as well as most other structures at the
range, will be constructed of reinforced con
crete. Other buildings will include target stor
age facilities at the target pits, and two ready
magazines.
The most elaborate construction will take
place on the hillside where the targets will be
raised for marine marksmen. Here will be
concrete lined pits, in which the men will work
who pull the targets up on pulleys. These ele
vator devices wjjl be worked by hand, and
when one target comes down, another will
raise. Paper targets will go up, fitted into
pine frames 6 feet 2 inches by 5 feet 8 inches in
dimensions.
A small road or big path will be constructed
along one side of the range to facilitate travel
to the various firing points and to the target
pits.
A close look at the plans reveals many con
struction details, such as benches for the target
men to sit on and a canopy or shield to keep
rocks or chips, which might be loosened by the
firing at the hillside, from rolling down into
the pits and "conking" their heads.
' The $92,000, of course, is an investment- in
marine marksmanship, a vitally important train
ing feature.
What will happen to such a layout after the
war can be only a guess, but it doesn't appear
likely to lend itself to any purpose but rifle
practice. This amateur hunter, who has stood
in a glade in the Gearhart country and fired
ineffectually at a deer in plain sight, can see
where some of the local deer seekers might
do themselves some good with rifle practice.
But maybe a tin can on a fence post would
serve the purpose just as well for them. Their
shooting business isn't so important to the na
tion's welfare.
What Of It?
WHILE we're on the subject of the Marine
Barracks, let's take note momentarily of
the occasional diseussion here as to whether
there is a possibility of any of the civilian popu
lation contracting malaria or filariasis because
of the location in this area of men who have a
history of one or the other of these maladies.
The best medjeal advice on the subject is
that such danger is very slight, and that there
"iayirtually no chance of any serious spread of
the tropical diseases under local conditions.
Both maladies must be spread by mosquitoes,
and cannot be transmitted by personal contact.
But it occurs to us that any expression of
serious public concern on this question is, in
poor tagte. What of it if you or. I, who haven't
had to face bullets, who haven't had to lie in
wet swamps or foxholes in South Pacific
tropics, who haven't had to give up our civilian
freedoms for hard military discipline, should
happen to pick up a little malaria because it
was necessary to locate, somewhere, a place for
training and treatment of marines who con
tracted these maladies? That's a long and in
volved sentence, but If you'll read It again, we
believe you'll get what we mean and will agrcu
with us.
SIDE GLANCES
MALCOLM EPLEY
Majiaaina Editor
a taavenrr combination at tha Evsmtni HaraJd and tha
KlZnaUl Nana. Publlahad avaij aiurnoon exoapt Sunday
ItMIaBlanada and Pina etraata, Klamath rails Oregon, by tha
taraldPublUhlng Co. and tha N a w a Publlahlng Company.
IJELI
News Behind the News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Aug. 25 Business econom
ists are brooding again about a post-war
depression, laying a tear-stained emphasis upon
the millions Ol unemployed to in
ka nx-ttnr-lnH U'hni. till hOVS I
come home and people gen
erally believe this.
They are not uo on their
figures. The boys will not bo
coming homo very fast after
the war is done.
Plans for a gradual demob
ilization to require perhaps
two or more years already
have been made by the armed
While these have not
been advertised, they have MALLON
been told verbally to the senate post-war com
mittee. ...
The war department (undersecretary) esti
mated 200,000 to 250.000 men each month is
the maximum possible for discharge after Eur
ope nnd then only in case the British can
furnish the shipping in the north Atlantic.
Policing obligations in Germany, France,
Italy, the Lowlands will require a considerable
force for an indefinite period. After the peace
with Japan, 11 or 12 months more will be
required to get army men back from the rest
of the world (just considering technical and
shipping requirements, without a view to polic
ing policy.)
a
Navy Less Optimistic
THE navy is even less optimistic. No navy
forces can be demobilized until Japan is
defeated (the present navy secretary says). Then
probably 2,000,000 can be let go within 18 to
24 months.
This means demobilization is likely to be
limited to 200,000 to 250,000 for a year after
the war in Europe ends and continue as seep
age, not a flood, for another two or three years.
Industry certainly can reconvert fully to
peace in a year. Thus the picture of millions
of service men being dumped out upon the
world for a year or so after the War, waiting for
industry to get started seems wholly unreal.
A depression springing from this phase of the
matter seems extraordinarily imaginative.
The war labor board is still pursuing its
sweet manpower ways of making a man in a
labor union immune to practically every law
of man or nature. Its latest is a decision hold
ing, in the Firestone Tire and Rubber case, that
"all employees including employees who have
been discharged for dishonesty or insubordina
tion shall be entitled to receive vacation bene
fits." . . In short, thieves who have looted the com
pany safe must be given vacation pay when
ilischarged, merely because they belong' to a
union. The unioneer may be sent to jail for his
theft, but he will get his extra two or three
weeks vacation pay, or whatever an honest,
good worker is entitled to, under the contract,
not even being required to. use it to make
restitution for the money or goods he has
stolen.
It is a wonder the board did not order him
to be paid overtime while robbing the safe.
Thus preceedeth justice under WLB in this year
of our Lord, 1944.
The decision was rendered as a brief order
July 10, and escaped public notice, as do so
many minor, intricately-worded orders issued
from that mighty tribunal, which now apparent
ly is working on a revision of the Ten Com
mandments. Now what they need next in their process
of repealing Moses is to make adultery a sub
ject, for special compensation to members of
unions only.
a a
Novel Resolution
MONTANA'S New Dealing Senator Murray
who seems to sponsor peculiar legislation
desired by the administration or CIO (he
espoused the Murray-Kilgore bill to give war
workers a bigger unemployment compensation
than soldiers) introduced a novel resolution in
the senate.
Although a senate commerce sub-committee
had been working on post-war air policy for
many months, Murray proposed that the sub
ject be taken out of its hands and given to a
commission to be appointed by the president
at a cost of $100,000. The commission would be
lined up to contain only one senator and one
representative, but four from the administration
executive branch, and six air industrialists.
Prying senators think the real author of the
resolution is State Undersecretary Berle, who
dickered in London with Lord Beaverbrook for
a time on post-war air policy, with both claim
ing nothing done. Berle leans more toward
sharing the air with the world, rather than
pressing existing American supremacy (as the
senators want )
Apparently the administration sought slickly
through Murray to sidetrack -the senate, but
the plan will not work. The Murray resolution
has no chance of adoption.
cow, iw tv mi sinvrei. ne.r, m. bio, u. t. PftT. W. ' '
Klamath Church Direct
"You mean you bought thnt hnt todny? Thnl's one on
nie I thought you bumped your head getting oil a bus.1"
Jap Exclusion
Asked by Grange
PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 25
Exclusion of persons of Japan
ese ancestry from U. S. citizen
ship end deportation at the war's
elope was demanded Thursday
by the masters of granges in
five western states.
A statement ratified by
grange executive committees in
the five states, claimed that per
sons of Japanese ancestry are
incapable of becoming assimi
'lated in American communities.
The masters, who said they rep
resent 125.000 farm Deonle nf
Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Mon
tana and California, said the
resolution would be sent to their
congressional delegations.
Classified Ads Bring Resulta.
Pendleton Youth
Center to Open
PENDLETON, Aug. 25 (JF
Pendleton's new $40,000 youth
recreation center for junior and
senior high school students and
alumni will open September 1,
Mayor Sprague Carter an
nounced today.
The center will occupy the
former USO clubrooms here and
utilize the USO equipment.
Mrs. Glenna Jones of Hermis-
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO PAIN NO HOSPITALIZATION
No Lola of Tina
Permanent Beinltat
DR. E. M. MARSHA
Chlropraetlo Physician
rzo No. 7th Esquire Thaatr. Bldg.
Phone M
ton, who has been in charge of
civilian USO work at the new
town of Ordnance for several
months, will be paid supervisor
of the center, while Raymond
Ramming, Pendleton business
man, will be chairman of the
advisory council, Carter reported.
Flashes of
Life
By Tha Associated Pros
SURPRISE BIRTH
WABASH, Ind. Sharon Reed
of LaFontainc was expecting his
jersey cow so caivc in July, and
she did.
Ho was not exnectins her to
have another offspring 37 days
later, out sne aia.
The two calves, normal In
every respect, have identical
markngs.
PERSISTE
WILLIAMSPORT, . a. A lo
cal motorist has a market for his
automobile any time he decides
to sell. Daily for the past few
weeks a prospective buyer has
left his name, address and this
note tied to the auto: "I need a
car like yours."
a a
SWAP
BOISE, Idaho "Let's see
your driver's license," ordered
Patrolman Ted Dicus.
"Let's see your draft registra
tion card," retorted Lt. Col. Nor
man B. Adkison, Idaho's selec
tive service executive officer.
Both produced the proper cre
dentials, but the patrolman had
the last word. He gave Adkison
a ticket for ignoring a stop sign.
a m
CURIOUS
LEWIS, Kans. Mrs. Harold
Allegre admits her feminine cur
iosity is aroused.
She received a letter from a
soldier overseas which said, "I
suppose you've heard a lot about
." That's ail there was to it.
The censor had whacked off the
rest.
a a a
MANHATTAN BEACH. Calif.
A new father and grandfather
and on the same day.
. That's what happened to
Grandpa-Daddy Harry L. White,
whose son-in-law. C. D. O'Dell of
Fresno, Calif., telegraphed:
"Ruth in hospital. Baby boy
born last night.
White promptly replied:
"Mom in hospital, too. Baby
boy born last night."
RECORD CATCH RECORDED
ASTORIA, Ore., Aug. 25 W)
A packing company today re
corded its largest Albacore tuna
delivery of the season 44,917
pounds brought in by Ole Ar
seth and H. R. Stamness, Seattle
fishermen.
Friendly
Helpfulness
To Evazy
Cited and Purs
Ward's Klamath
Funeral Home
Marguerite M. Ward
and Sons
AMBULANCE
SERVICE -
925 High Phono 3334
rA Gem of Thought From Idella's i
-Thar war two sisters named Kraek .
Clad only Jn barrels from knees to neck.
Said one, "You know Dell,
For something phony we fell,
I'll bat them sailors had a marked Deck."
Playing Cards . . . . . . .
AT IDELLA'S
. 39c
MOM MM
448 S. etto
FREE!
THIS WEEK ONLY
rXOWr.it PLANTS POB FALL PLANTING
IP YOU'LL ENCLOSE 25 CENTS TO COVEB POSTAOE AND BANDLINO
To advertlM our new stock of lovely ornairn-ntal flower, and ehruba for
four yard W " " 0Ur cholc"1 perennial, to decorate
1 Belladonna Delphinium. A beinllful .bade ef iky blue, llowarnf
' In June and Juljr and uiaallr araln In Iha Fall.
1 Boie Dawn. Two lo Ibree feel. Rare new varlalr developed at oof
nursery, silver pink Mowers on lonr fraceful alemi. Very bardr.
1 Anlhemli Kelwsy Hardy Marfuerlte. Two feet. A free riowerlni perennial
wllb beautifully cut foliate and yellow daisy shaped flowers borne
durlnr entire srawlnr season. Especially valuable fer cuiln far
beuquets.
In order that you may see what atronf, well-rooted floweri and ahrube
we will have for Pall plantlns, we will aend you these three bright
colored ornamentals If you order this week. Thcie aro ready for ahlp
ment immediately.
Enclose s ciqls lo cover poilare and handling and send your
request to
CLARK GARDNER
PEBENNIAL SPECIALIST
111 American Bulldlnr
Rev. Karl Faulkner, former
missionary to the Jews in Po
land, will speak at the 11 o'clock
worship hour at the Biblo Bap
tist church, South Sixth and
Wiard on Sunday.
At the evening service at 8 p.
m. he will speak and show pic
tures of the Jewish work in Pol
and Hungary and Carpathia at
the Immanuel Baptist church,
Eleventh and High.
Rev. Faulkner, graduate of
the Bible Institute of Los Ange
les and of Lewis and Clark col
lege in Portland, was a mission
ary in Poland from 1936 until
the Germans over-ran the coun
try. He was interned in Germany
for six months and later repa
triated, since his arrival in the
United States he has been con
ducting a Jewish mission in the
city of Portland.
Cannery. Operators
Need 6000 Workers
SALEM. Aug. 25 (Pi Six
thousand workers will be needed
in Salem canneries by mid-Sop-
leinucr. cannery operators sam
last night at a meeting with labor
leaders, army officers, school and
civic officials.
The operators asked that the
school ODCnintr. set for Ssntem-
ber 18, be delayed a few weeks,
out scnool -officials said it would
be impossible.
The delegates to the meeting
agreed to launch an Intensive
drive to recruit local labor.
The labor situation is much
worse than last year because few
soldiers now are available to do
cannery work.
at Inn t.lltlltirBU
lim lliglk Victor A. Hrhuli. pwlor.
Phono 07M. Dtvtn worihlii. lt m.j
Sunday wliool, m Choir. Thui-
dy ft P- nt. Chlldroni ronnrmtton
dau. 0:30 to UiJOim.il the parvonatf.
riral Cvnnl
Walnut, IMum BMT, AMwrt U
Dwlht. pastor, tfunday trhool, U a. m.:
mom lug worihlp. 11 a. m.i Young pao-
intflting, 1 p. m.i ru'J'
):4A p. m. Mld-waak (tlluwthlp, Wail
naaday, 7:43 p. in.
Community Con irn I leu a I
Uardan txstwojn Kail Main and Marlln.
Kv. Kugena V llayuaa. pa tor. Church
chool. P 4i a. m : aarvlr. 11 a nt.;
CotwadM ol tha Way. d p. m.( commun
ity hall.
Church at Iha Naiartna
Oartloj. and Martin. Kunday achool.
0:45 a. m.j worh. p. 11 a. m.i depart
mental tncotlnici, 0.4.1; KvangelUtlc, 7:43
p. m.j niid-vek prayar, Wat.uvtday. 7 4A
Km. l'tor. Uvrirand f. l'alariun. tUU
artin, pttona 4tu.
AMambly flsd
Hav. A. Harold ran Inf. pallor, 74
Oak. Sunday achool, 0.43 a. m-; mum.
11 a. m.i Young paopla, 6:30 p. m. Kvan
rllttlo maating, 7:Ji) p. m. Tuaaday
7;30 p. m.. prayar ineatlng; Thursday
7:30 p, m preaching,
Had oo Point tUplM
Community Million
Sunday achool, 10 a. m., worihlp aarv
lea. U;l& a. in.
o a
Klamalb Rarlral ConUr
ltna Mitchell at a ha at a way. Nov.
War ton p. Combo, potior. Sunday
tctuol, 10 a. m Morning aorviro. 11
a. m. EvangalUHc. 7 30 p. ni. Waek
nlyht lervlro. 7:50 p. m. Wodnoiday ami
irrnlay Choir practice Thuraday, 0
(x nu Phona 3t
rtnl ChrlMlaa
Pina at OUu Howard Hutch.ni, mln
later. Ulbla ichool. B 43 a. m. Stanlty Ken
dall, upartntendi'iit.
Morning worship. It o'clock.
Evening acrvlrco, 0 30 o'clock With Iha
Christian Endeavor meetings
Svangallatio eervlca, 7:30 p. m.
rint Roptltt
N. Btl. at Washington. Itev. Cecil C
Urowa, no nor. Keaitlenca, 9Jt Eldorado.
Phona 7 4 via Bible ochool, t;43 a. m.
Morning wonhlp. 11 o'clock. Oaptut
training union, 0:13 p. m. Evening ser
vice. 7:30 oclock. Mid-week prayer.
Uedneoday, 7:30 p, m. Choir rehear,
Wedneeday, 8 30 p. in.
rull fleipil Chapel
J. Q. Jorgctuon, pat tor. Located at
133 N. 4th. Service bunday, 11 a. m.
morning womhip and 7:43 evangelistic
servlcei. Wednesday, midweek services
at 7:43 p. m. Saturday night prayer and I
praise at 7.43.
Alt mot. I fresbyterlaa I
Junior high school. S. 6th and Sum. '
fn,- Kov. Hugh T. Mlichelmore. pastor.
Ulbla school, p:43 a. m. Worship, 11
a. in. Junior Chrtatlan Frix-aw.. lui
E" -V.. B'm p' .'lcty. O.30 p. m., 4431
ft. 0th. the manse.
Apoitollo Faith
Sua N. dth. Sunday school. a. m.
Morning devotion. 11 a. m. Evangelistic
service. 7:43 p. m. Wednesday and rn
day, 0 p. m.
rattl's EpUrepsI Church
Rev. r. C Wusonbach, rector. Corner
Jefferson and 8th.
Sunday services. Holy communion, a on
a. nt Church school. D oo a, m. rim
Sunday of each month Holy communion
oi ii w a. m. anu an outer Sundays,
morning prayer and sermon at 11:00 a.
m. Holy Davs and fUlnt riavm. MM
Communion. 10 00 a. ni.
There will N no svrvtcee during August
but ihey will resume on Sunday, Sep
tember X
see
Latter-Pay Calais
Tha Church of Jetua ChHit of Latter
Day Salnu hold their services In the
auditorium of tha city library, Sth and
Klamath. Priesthood meeting Sunday
morning at 0 13. Sunday school com
menret at 10:30. Sacrament meeting at
B o'clock Sunday evening. E. E. flur
rows, branch oreeldenL nhona aaoa or
0721.
o
Klamath Temple
1007 Pina. Danlol B. Andsrsnn. Maine
Sunday school. 9 43 a. m. Morning war-
nip. i a. m. vvercomeri service. o:3q
p. m Jail meetings. 3 p. m. Radio pro
gram, KFJ1, Saturday, 0:30 p. m. Evan
gelist!.? eervlca 7:43 p. m.i Wednesday
night oraver meeting.
a
Ease tha tortntatinc
I itch ot uoburn. with
I aoothioa Mexaana. Ifa
itdi baft abeorb moisture on
Iha gluB, ten tha caijga of beat
raah. Memos, alto guard your
irritated kin from painful chaf
ing; of cirdles. collars and other
clothing. Yotit coats little. Get
M EX SAN A
VvfOQTHINQ MCQICATfP POWPfR.
First
Church of Christ,
Scientist
A branch af The M.lher Chflreh, The
rlril Church ol Chrlsl, gelanilli, la
Beaten. Mass,
101b an4 Waialacoa
Service
Sapder Icbeel t:lt a. m.
Bandar ervlca U a. m.
Subject. Ail,. 37 "CllltlST JtlVS"
Wedneaday erenlof a.rrlc. t p. m.
R.adlni Reonj, 1051 Malt St,
ENROLL NOW
with th
Klamath Business College
for
ClaiiAl Opening
Sspttmber S
Present Location 325 Main
Phon 4760
Gqrden Between Eaii Main and Martin
11:00 q. m. Service of Worship
Conducted by
KENNETH LAMBIE
Addrcm by
F. O. SMALL
A CORDIAL WELCOME AWAITS YOU!
5ujn V. Hqynet, Minister
riral Nslhorltil
N. tuth and High. Itev, Victor tMUtllpt,
minister. Andrew Umey. Jr., dlrectnr ni
music. Mrs, John O'Connor, organist.
Ministers residence. 1003 High. T.
phone 3WH
Worship. 11 a. m.
Sunday sclmul. Q 4A a. m.
Mathudlat Youth rellowshlp. each Sun
day, 7 p. m. 9 t i
rirsl Prsshylsrlan Cliurrh
N, tiih and I'liie. Ilev, David T. liar.
net). Jr.. pastor. 0,1.1 N. nth. Church
ipippimne i.mi, uinia fiioni i vmn a. in.;
wmship at II a. in. Threa Christian En
deavor groups at o 30 p. m,
Saorsd lltarl
Kighth and High atrats.
Sunday W ; 7. ft, UK) and tie m
Ilolv Day Masses! 0. 0 and U J0 a. in.
Weekday Mass: H a. ni.
Coultsons! Saturdays, Evas of Holy
days and first Friday from 3 to 4 u. in
and from 7:3U lo o au p. in.
s 4
Church ef Clad
IJ07 nivlslon. II rv. H. M. hlggcia. pat.
tor Church school, in a m. Prearh
tng eervlca. II a. in. VI Jl. 0:30 p. in.,
preaching service, 7:49 p. nt.
rirsl Charrh af tlud
Attamont and Do la wars. nv, Q. W
Gelwlla. oaslor. Sunday school, p. 4.1
a m Morning devotions. 11 o cluck
Vnune pt)tiie's servire. ft ( t m.
Preaching. 7;.ni n. m. I'rayer service
Wednesday, 7iJ0 p. m.
Ssventb'Pay Advenllsl
fUbbath school Saturdays. so a. m
at church. (U.t N. Ulh. Taslnr ftaafUy
siwaks at the 11 a. in. sorvtce. prayer
mealing. Wednesday. 7 44 p. m.
Free Meiliedlsl tfaurrtt
43(1 a. 0th, Itev. June Horning Miller,
phone MM. fiumtey school, 1T a. in,;
mnrning service II a. m; snng and
J raise at 7.90 p. mj evening worship at
p. in.
a
The llalvellen Army
rmirth and Klamath. Company meet
ing 10 a- m. Ikdlnvks meeting II a. m
EvsngelUllr meeting A n m Thursday
and Haturday A p. m Ofhrn In charge.
Major and Mis. W. Ilnswall.
Chgroh af Christ
330A Wantland. Mlnlilers. Raymond
I. Ulnhe. 3 l.ll WanllAitd. nhune 411411,
and M. Uuyd ttmlth, TJJ7 Allainnni
drive, phone WJM, liihle study. 10 a, m.
sarmon and communion, u a. ni to 13
noon. Everting services. 7:4a o'clock;
Ladles Bible clasa. Thursday, 3 o. m
rnday Bible study. T 4a p. m. A hearty
invitation to all.
e e
framsnusl Vsplltl
11th and High Rev J T. Chlsum
Kstor 1003 Lincoln. Phone 0410 c c
gvrwell. director of music. Sunday
school. D:4S a m. Morning worship, II
a. m. Young people, fl -TO p m. Evening
eervlca, 7:90 p m. Midweek prayer.
Wednasdav. 7 90 p. m.
:...'..! and8."1'"!.. I
M'l.'a 11,1,11,1 ' '
r...b,,,1.','
..." "mil t J!...
"llt.lllp u , , B,""?l,
l anni m.iiii,,.
IX in. niuu,
Kl.msla l..lh..
Clm.nb .1 '''"
Clnwilieri mi,
Flowers
Flower Shop
724 Pine Fh, jW
CRATER LAKE!
Is Prettier Than The Picture.
And
CRATER LAKE FLOUR
Is Better Than The Advertiiing!
Try bitch of hom. mad. bread nd '
watch him tmlla.
BUY IT AT YOUR GROCER'S
Made in Klamath Falls by
PACIFIC SUPPLY COOPERATIVE
Can You Qualify?
Ilero Is Your
present and postwar
opportunity
DIESEL. MECHANIC
SERVICE-MAN
TROUBLE SHOOTER
OPERATOR
SERVICE.MANAGER
DEMONSTRATOR PARTJMW
For full information reaardina our
TRAINING and PLACEMENT SERVICE, J
fill out and mail following coupon
Nm
Strttt
Clly Slit
But tim to 111 ma . A. M t'H
Intarttata Training Strvlea
WaatharW Buildlna
Portland 14, Oragon
&H Relief ojtAeSypiitii
ASTHMA
atd
HAY FEVER
INHALATION THBBAFT
with
SOLUTION "A"
Immadiata relief from the spasma oivt
chial asthma. Prompt relief from
tressing Bymptoma of hay fever.
Simple and pleasant to user c0.nX!j.'
harmleBB when toaed according to w
tions.
Unconditional refund agreement. Jj
fund made if results of a trial perJOO "
not satisfactory. ;
LEE HENDRICKS
'Your Neighborhood Drugaiit
'.ml' '
Seattle t, Wash
BVt WAB BONPSI
BACH THE ATTACKI
2212 So. 6th St.
1
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