Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, August 28, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    PACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON
rsANK JimUNI MALCOLM rPL.IV
Editor Managing Cdltor
A tamporerr aomblnalion of tha binlm Herald and the
fcinath News. Published aval J afternoon H Sunday
JiEaolanade and Pin streets. Klamath rail;. Oregon, by the
JtorSd Publianlni Co, and tha N a w a Publishing Company.
By earriar
By carrier year STSO By mau )r ;"
QUUint Kiamaiu. """JJ
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
montn I9a By maU
.6 month! IS SS
year saoo
Mam bar.
Associated Praa
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
EPLEY
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
REPORTS from the Tulelake segregation cen
ter indicate a declining cockiness on the
part of Japanese partisans living there.
Unless the WRA has been completely fooled,
(it has freed all troublemakers
from the stockade) the danger
of hell-raising inside the pro
ject has been dissipated.
This is a considerable change
from conditions of only a few
weeks ago, when murder
was committed at the project
and occupants of the stockade
went on a hunger strike in
tended, no doubt, to disturb
tranquility in the colony. It
appeared even as late as that
that serious trouble might oc
cur again at the center.
If it is true that the potential troublemakers
down here are changing their ways, it seems
entirely plausible that war news from the Pa
cific may have something to do with it. The
war is going against Japan, and it is only
natural that Japanese partisans everywhere will
begin cooling off. Japs at Tulelake whose loy
alty to Japan is more than a mere technicality
must recognize their peculiarly unfavorable
position if Japan loses the war. They get the
war news, and they cannot escape the con
clusion that that is exactly what is going to
happen.
A Department Returns
SPACE conditions permit a renewal this week
of the "Klamath Yesterdays" department on
this page, discontinued some months ago after
it was forced out of the paper many times by
newsprint shortages. We hope the return of this
little feature is welcomed by our readers.
Such editorial page departments are fairly .
common among small city newspapers. We
have arbitrarily chosen 40 years ago, and 10
years ago, for these reminiscences, with the
thought that the former will give a little pic
ture of Klamath Falls in its early, hinterland
town stage, and the latter will recall a period
within the recollection of a large percentage of
the present residents of the community,
r Forty years ago, Klamath Falls was a town,
of . some 1500. It had started to grow away
from the cluster of buildings around Link river
which was old Linkville, but the business dis
trict was generally concentrated on the river
side of Sixth street corner, along Main.
There was no railroad here yet, and steamboat
transportation on Upper Klamath lake and
Klamath river below town was in its heyday.
Reclamation had not gotten underway, but
canals were In the building stage; agriculture
was still pretty well confined to livestock oper
ations. That, in brief, was Klamath Falls in the
era from which news items will appear daily in
the 40-years-ago column.
Ten years ago, Klamath Falls was just fight
ing its way out of the depression. Physically,
it was much like the city of today, but a lot
of improvements have been made around town
since then, and the suburbs have grown tre
mendously. Mayor Willis Mahoney was in the
saddle then. Potato growing dominated the agri
cultural picture, and the mills were just getting
back into full operation after the depression
lull.
Reading the old files, 1934 papers do not
reflect for us the glamor of 1904 but things
that are closer and more familiar never have
the glamor attached to those farther away. On
top of that, the contrast with conditions of to
day is much greater in the 40-years-ago deoart
ment. . , .
a a a
Briefs From the Pocket File
POLICE JUDGE HAROLD FRANEY, an old
marine, has done a fine job for the Marine
Corps again since the establishment here of the
Marine Barracks ... He has helped establish
the enlisted men's club and worked vigorously
for hospitality for marines . . . Mayor John
Houston's prospect of freedom from political
worries seems to have improved his golf . . .
He shot a 39 and a 42 at Reames Sunday . . .
He was one of a foursome which cracked out
four birdies on one hole the fourth . . . Other
players participating in this unique feat were
Moon Mullis, Harley Hull and Dr. John Merry.
, man . . . Captain Carpenter, new arrival in the
officers' corps at the Marine Barracks, is an
accomplished fly fisherman who has written
fishing columns for newspapers ... If what
they say is true about the way he was casting
flies into the best holes on Wood river the other
day, his assignment here was bad news for
Klamath trout.
tif
SIDE GLANCES
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Aug. 28 The democratic
senators chirruped choruses of denuncia
tion at Governor Dewey upon his demand for
small nations' protection in the post-war world
then suddenly they went
quiet.
Tom Connelly, their foreign
relations chairman, had said at
first that Dewey had staged a
Luftwaffe attack upon the
Dumbarton conference. A few
days later he was. beaming be
nignly upon the republicans,
and saying in a senate speech
they had been exceptionally
cooperative on foreign policy.
The change Is attriDuiaDie
to State Secretary Hull. Mr. MALLON
Hull was the first to realize indeed he seems
still the only one now firmly to insist that
a peace Imposed by a majority will not endure
even among the United Nations; that the oppo
sition will one day get into power here, per
haps soon; that unity at home as well as among
the' nations of the world is essential if any
thine constructive is to eventuate. He has been
the leading force for restraint in an emotional
world debate.
a a
Politics, Confusion
BUT the matter is constantly being pushed off
the plane he wants, into politics and con
fusion. Comes now the foreign policy associa
tion, for instance, thinking to defend him
against Dewey.
In an involved and circuitous collection of
assertions, it seems to conclude Dewey is wrong
and small nations can only be protected through
domination by the Big Four powers.
Furthermore, two columnists who are sup
posed to be outstanding international experts,
have entered a radio debate which whirls the
whole issue into vortex.
The ousted Hull assitant, Mr. Welles and Mr.
Hull's constant kibitzer, Mr. Lippmann, (whose
recommendations on international affairs have
never been followed by any government in any
Instance as far back as my memory runs though
he sells them to the public three times a week
and in books annually) these two, as I say,
have become hopelessly involved in such tech
nicalities as the respective degree of sovereign
ties of Japan and Germany in post-war.
These developments take a simple proposi
tion and stretch it to monstrous incongruities.
The proposition was this, before all these
stretchrnen took hold of it and it still is this:
a a a
Way To Protect Rights
DEWEY urged that the interests of small na
tions be better protected and suggested a
specific way to do it. He recommended that the
Dumbarton Oaks conference keep the military
world setup separate from economic agreements.
He and Mr. Dulles, in their conferences, started
searching for a way in which small nations
would not be over-ridden by the power of the
Big Four, and they hit upon this formula.
Their reasoning is rather obvious. A small
nation is a small nation and no one proposes
to make them all big. The military might of the
world will remain, after the war, largely with
Russia and the United States, not with small
nations, and not even with Britain and China.
No peace can change' that. .
Also Russia and the United States will have
the greatest political power in the world. This
is a fact of geography, industry, raw materials,
manpower. It cannot be altered by the peace
either.
Now Mr. Hull proposed to protect the small
nations by safeguarding their sovereignty. This
is largely a negative guarantee, but a powerful
one. It would transfer the American conception
of individuality to the world. People in this
country are not actually born equal, as the
Declaration of Independence says, but they have
equal rights in law.
No Monopoly
HULL proposes there will be no monopoly of
raw material and economic and financial
domination by the Big Four, but Dewey says
this Hull hope is too vague (Indeed financial
domination already has been hinted by the Bret
ton Woods conference, although the oil agree
ment might possibly develop more in line with
Hull policy.)
Dewey goes farther and says the Hull way
will not be effective, that a more certain way to
accompusn tne result is to keep the arrange
ments for world security separate from world
trade, finance, etc. In short he says, do not use
your military domination in politics, economics,
trade; put them on a more equal plane.
The only question is whether the Dumbarton
conference will choose that way, or the way the
Russians seem to want to go. Neither the Rus
sians nor British seem to want as much freedom
for small nations as either Dewey or Hull.
They favor" collective security, collective eco
nomics, collective finance, collective trade.
All politics and confusion aside, the facts
suggest Dewey has made a constructive demand
upon the conference, and Hull knows it and is
using it. I suspect Hull cares more about getting
his peace treaty ratified in the senate, than
about presidential politics.
cow, iw Iv w soviet, sse. . at ate. o. a. esi.ors.
"Harvey doesn't complain about taxes, high prices or
anything he's so happy and henlthv thai sometimes 1
think he's in a rut f"
Market
Quotations
NEW YORK. Aug. 38 (API Assorted
stock market favorites crawled toward
a recovery ahelf In today's session of
another 5-day week but many leaders
continued to doia at sllfhtly lewer
Closing quotations:
can
American
Am car & Fdy
Am Tel & Tel
Anaconda ..
Calif Packing
Cat Tractor
Commonwealth Ac Sou
Curtis-WriKht
General Electric .
General Motors
Gt Nor By pfd
Illinois Central
Int Harvester ,., .
Kennecott
Lockheed .. ....
Long-Bell "A"
Montgomery Ward
Naih-Kelv
N Y Central
Northern Pacific .
Pac Gas & El
Packard Motor
Penna R R
Republic Steel .
Ntcniieia un
Sears Roebuck
01 i
.. 0,
1I13
JS',
so
l
M
61H
3a1 ,
14' .
Til's
331
- 7'.
mi;
Southern Pacific .
Standard Brands
Sunshine Mining .
Trans-America
Union Oil Calif .
Union Pacific
U S Steel
Warner Pictures .
lii'i
. 19
.... 13
.
81
. SO',
. 10.
18
108
3.
la'i
Potatoes
1000; moderately active: fed Ur and
yearling! teidy to 23 ;t.U hither; ship
per demand broad; early top 91(3.35 on
lx loads medium weight fleer, two
tuada held higher, bulk good and choice
fed tteeri mid ymrltni: $15.50-ifi 0O;
medium grass and short fed steers SI 2 30-
14.65; two loads choice yearling heifer
viT.w; an ne iters t.ceay to strong ana
cows strong to hade higher; medium and
good beef cows 9)1,50-13.50; bulk common
to medium cows u.wii.im, cannon i
cutters 95.50-7,25: btl Mi ili-one. com man
and medium W. 00-10.50, few good sausage
onus eii.uua.i.au; veaiere uncnangca mi
13 00 down.
Salable sheep 2000: total 6500: market
opening steady on slauahter lambs and
ewes: good and choice native springers
mostly 9M.30-73; medium and good large
ly cuu ana common m.ui
10.50; horn native ewes mcuily 5 73
down: one double SO lb. fed Texas lamb
and yearlings mostly medium and good
wun jvo. i pens siraigni at vii.ou.
WHEAT
CHICAGO. Aug- 28 (API Septum ber
wheat dipped fractionally under the
pressure of profit taking today but the
deferred contracts held firm. Kye w
urm in a siuggim trade and outside in
feresl In both markets was llaht.
Some felling of September ats was
regarded as Mouldatlon of a toiu line.
Selling of the May contract, trade
sources reported waa hedging against
further purchases of Canadian grain.
Trader attributed the light trade In
rve to conflicting market factor and fear
or operator io extend their pos t ons he
cauia of the uncertainly of September
rye.
At the close wheat V.r tower to
e nixher than Saturday a finish Hmn-
t ember S18R1. Oats were unchanged to
c ntgner. aepiemner nir: rve was
to 1L,C, September tl.Ofli; Rarlrv
was 'sc lower to ic higher. September
CHICAGO. Aug. 38 (AP-WrA Pota
toes, arrivals 220: on track 262: total
U. S. fhlpmenti. Saturday 769; Sunday
38: supplies moderate: for western stocK
demand good market firm at celling;
lor best quality northern stock demand
food, market steady; idano Kusset Bur
banks U. S. No. 1. 13.68-76: Bliss Tri
umphs U. S. No. 1. S3.08; Colorado Bliff
Trlumohs U. S No. 1. 83.31: North Da
kota Bliss Triumph It. S. No. 1. S2.65-
70; Commercials S2.30-B5: Cobb era U. S.
No. 1. 12.70-73: Wtconsln Blfss Triumphs
V. a No. 1. S3.30-60; Chippewa U. S.
Courthouse Records
Marrlares
. CHAWTORD-MANNING. James Beas
ley Crawford. 25. V. S. navy, native of
Tennessee, resident of Klamath Falls.
Geraldlne LaVeme Manning, 23, teller,
native and resident of Klamath Falls.
HOGE-COIXINSON. Milton H. Hoge,
39, auditor, native of Washington, D. c..
resident of San Francisco. Jessamine
Collinson, 38. secretary, native of Texas,
resident of San Francisco.
BALLARD-CLINTON. William Eugene
Ballard, 24. U. S. navy, native and resi
dent of Newport, Ark. Grace Evelyn
Clinton, 24. typist, native of Arkansas,
resident of Klamath Falls.
GOINES-BURCH. Warren Charles
Golnes, 23, student, native and resident
of Madison. Wis. Wanda Burch. 21,
student, native of Florida, resident of
Cave Junction, Ore.
COE-FRANK. Maurice 'William Coe,
31. U. S. marines, native of Michigan,
resident of Klamath Falls. Pauline
Louise Frank. 26. clerical worker, native
of Michigan, resident of Klamath Falls.
Justice Court
John Wallls Woman, driving molor
fehlcle under Influence of intoxicating
liquor. Fined 100.
Jack Elle. failing to deliver regUtra
rinedCri00 mircn'r of automobile.
Richard Eugene Casildy, falling to
procure operator's license. Fined S5.S0.
Earl Joseph Baldwin, being intoxicated
on public highway. Fined 13.
Carl B. Sammls. Batting fire on forest
land without permit Fined 25.
OBITUARY
. JOCELE CLEMENTINE ROS8
Jocele Clementina Ross, the infant
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ross of
Chiloquin. Oregon passed away In this
city on Sunday, August 27, 1044 at 2:10
arrfollowlng a brief illness. She was
When In Modioid .
Stay t
HOTEL HOLLAND
Thoroughly Modarn
Jo and Anna Earlay
Proprietor!
native of Klamath Falls, Oregon and
at the time of her death was aged 6
days. Surviving besides her parents are
the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William
O'Rourke of Minnesota. The remains
rest in the Earl Whltlock Funeral home.
Pine at Sixth. Notice of funeral will
appear fn the next issue of this paper.
LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND. Ore.. Aug. 08 (AP-WTA
Cattle alable 3400: total 3600; calves sal
able and total 630: market moderately
active-steady; around one load 1100-
1123 lb. good-choice steer $15.00; one
load good g raisers $14.30; mostly medium
good loads S13.oo-14.00; common-medium
$9.00-12-50; medium heifers 10. 73-11 .00:
common-medium 80.00-io.30: strictly good
young cowa 810.50-11.00; medium-good
89.00-10.00; common 87.00-8.50; canncr and
cutters 84.50-6.73: medium-good bulls
88.00-9.30; vealera rather flow; good
choice 813.50-13.00; common-medium
10.00-13.00; culls down to 87.00.
Hogs salable and total 3000; market
active: butcher (trades steady; feeder
pigs strong? to 23 cents higher: top 813.73
on good-choice 180-240 lbs.: 241-270 lb.
mostly 813.00; heavier 813.30-14.00; light
lights 813.50-14.30: most feeder pigs
813.00-13.23: sows 812.00-30; choice lighter
weights 812.75-13.00; few stags 8l0.no.
Sheep salable 2600, total 3000: market
opened slow; few , good-choice spring
lambs about steady: most bids weak on
plainer grades; good and choice wooled
sprinsf lambs 812.25-30; medium-good
811.00-50: sizable lots common 810.00;
few medium-good yearlings 88.00-fl.30;
good ewe up to 83-00.
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. Aug. 28
'AP-WFA Cattle: salable IOO0. Fairly
steady. Fed steers salable 814.30-15.00.
Common to medium feeder steers 811.00
12.00. She-stock active. Two cars med
ium range heifers 812-00. About five
cars good range cows 811.80-12.00. Sorted
medium 810 00-11.00: common 89.00-9.30:
cutters package good heavy calves 813.50.
Hogs: salable 300. Fullv steady. Few
loads rood to choice 180-240 lb. barrows
and gilts 813.73! Bulk good sows IIXDO.
Odd head 813.23.
Sheep: salable 3000. Choice aver 80
lbs. wooled lambs absent. Mostly med
ium to good lambs, slow. Nothing scaled
early. Shorn ewes quoted 81.00-4.30.
CHICAGO. Aug. 28 AP-WFAl Salable
hogs 9000; total 13.000; active, complete
clearance early: fullv nladv: good and
choice 130-240 lbs. 814.75: weights over
240 lbs. and all rood and chnlco anus
814.00: few medium to choice 120-140
lbs. 812.30-14.50.
Salable cattle 13.000; salable calves
i A Gem of Thought From Idella's a
There was an Old Maid named Crowna
visiting a Nudist Colony near town.
When a young Gal walked put
The Old Maid looked up and gasped
GREAT HEAVENS Isn't that Fanny Brown.
Leg Make-up
25c
Riant net
AT IDELLA'S
What a QaU
4MS i. 8th
WE RESUME
DANCING'
At the
ARMORY
Wed. Night
Dancing 8:30 until 12:00
Baldy's Band
featuring
Mary Paul
Mahoney Swigar.
WEATHER
Sundajr. A mint J7, mti
Max. Mtn. Precln.
Eugene , f2 .V) .no
Kiamain rails 04 at
Medford lno .it
North Bend flu 32 .no
Portland m .m
neno
San Tranclsco
Seattle
, 7fl
.83
37
.00
VITAL STATISTICS
NORMS Born at Klimalh Villnv hos
pital, Klamath Falls. Ore., on August 31.
1944, to Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Norrls.
Chiloquin, a girl. Walght: 0 pounds 3
ounce.
WOODSON Born at Klamath Vallav
hospital, Klamath Pall. Orr., on August
26. 1044. to Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Wood
son. Route 2. Box MO, a boy. Weight:
6 pounds l.vt ounces.
RACHMACHER Rorn at Hlllilde hos
pital. Klamath Falls. Ore., on Augu.t
27. 1M4. to Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rach
macher. Merrill, a girl. Weight: 7
pounds 3'. ounces.
MARTIN Born at Hlllilde hospital.
Klamath Falls. Ore., on Auaust M 1044.
to Mrs. Larry Martin, widow of late
Larry Martin. Route 2. Box 76Q, a girl.
Weight: S pounds 8 ounces.
Commission Calls
For Bids on Old
Equipment, Scrap
SALEM, Aug. 28 (IP) The
highway commission will re
ceive at its September 11 meet
ing in Portland, bids for pur
chase of obsolete equipment,
parts and scrap materials lo
cated at department equipment
Elants at Salem, Klamath Falls,
a Grande and Coquille.
Stubborn Pin Makes
Bowler Tear Hair
BRIDGEPORT, Conn., Aug. 28
(P) Petty Officer Paul Hollv
(USN), bowling in a duckpin
game here, scored a strike but
one pin keot sninninz on the
alley and. to everyone s amaze
ment,, set itself up again.
A search of the rule book dis
closed nothing to cover the situa
tion, ana other bowlers decided
Holly would have to shoot for
the lone Din. He missed, with
both the second and third balls,
and wound up with a nine box.
f Ai FLIERS
Fill;'!
ON GERMANS
LONDON. Aug. 28 (.1') -American
fightors and figltltM
bombers flew thousunds of sort
lrt. r,.m,i Ihn wnl tmtfiv hpiilhu
tip fleeing Cit'rmnn troops, llielr
nlrporis una irnnopan inriiuir:
all through northern r'rinirr
the low countries and as far in
in I'litciiiiniv ii Krunkftirt.
Striking up from Ititly, strong
fovce.i of lienvy u. a. oonioors
l-ilntlArt thn MimihliM'h!ltini nil
refinery in Austria, tho Srony
refinery In Hungary on tho
Diinubo 50 miles northwest of
Budapest; tho Mlskolct rail
yards 100 miles northeast of
Diutiincst: the Aviso viaduct
and tho Ora bridge on tho Bren-
,. nn . rntl ItttM in nrtrthrtrtl
Italy. The Hungarian rail tar
gets were at Junction of lines
Into surrenderee! nomunin onn
ll,,...nlrtM,l fyfti.hn.lnl.itUIn and
were in tactical support of tho
swimy a a v a n c i n g missmn
armies.
Preliminary reports from
British anil French bases
showed thnt iiboul 300 Ameri
can fighters alono hud shot up
11 troop trulns, more limn 200
locomotives, oil tanks, barges,
radio, flak emplacements, radio
towers and power stations. This
cavalry of the sky destroyed
SOU freight cars and damaged
1000 more.
They exploded an ammuni
tion train carrying many tons
of explosives near Budenvllle
with a blast started by a ma
chinegun bullet which Jarred
the countryside for miles
around, '
Fortresses ai)d Liberators
from Italy bombed the oil
plants In Austria and Hungary
through smoke screens. Fires
and explosions blanketed tho
rail targets. A rail bridge over
tli. Ti7;i river SS miles south-
e a s,t of Budapest received a
good pattern ot nomas, stop
ping for a time traffic from
Hungary to the southeast.
Tactical planes operating with
the seventh army In southern
France bombed three bridges
near Lyon.
Other planes bombed the Vll
lafranca Di Verona airdrome
10 miles southwest of Vernona
r,,-,A horKni- ftirl I it If.a nl Imnorlll
and Savona on the Italian Ri
viera.
Southern California
Blackened by Fires
LOS ANGELES, Aug. 28 tTl
Approximately 23,000 acres of
southern California britshland
lay blackened today from a sc
ries of fires.
Soldiers, marines and U. S.
forestry crews were fighting a
blaze which hnd swept some iO,-
000 acres in the Santa Ynoz, vol
ley near Santa Barbara.
Other crews controlled flames
thnt coursed over thousands of
acres In the foothills near San
Bernardino and the Gavlola
Pass region north of Santa Bar
bara. About 300 ambulatory
patients, who had been evacuat
ed, returned to tho Arrowhead
Springs hotel, navy convalescent
hospital north ot ban Bernar
dino.
Chevalier Reported
Killed by Maquis
LONDON. Aug. 28 i7P
Maurice Chevalier, Fronch film
actor, was killed by French
Maquis last Friday, a Reuters
dispatch from Paris said yester
day. There was no confirmation
In other dispatches from the
capital, or from French head
quarters in London.
Chevalier s wide smile, straw
hat and Parisian sians ware
familiar to many American film
audiences. Ho had made appear
ances many times in German-
occupied Paris, .according to re
ports relayed from Franco after
its capitulation.
Https fittirt ttanma MONTHLY
FEMALE PAIN
You who Buffer Buob pain with tired,
nervous, "drugged out" feellnire
ell duo to functional periodic dli
turbancce etart at once try Lydlt
IS. Pink hum' VcgntAbln Compound
to relievo such symptoms. Medo
especially for women it Kr.ly na
ture A loo grand stomschlo tonlo,
Follow label directions.
LYDIA E. PINK HAM'S
w iwnruurw
Can You Qualify?
Hero Is Your
present and. postwar
opportunity
DIESEL MECHANIC
SERVICE-MAN
TROUBLE SHOOTER
OPERATOR
SERVICE-MANAGER
DEMONSTRATOR PARTSMAN
For full information regarding our
TRAINING and PLACEMENT SERVICE,
fill out and mail following coupon -
Nam .
Straet '
City 8,ate "
.Best tlma to is ma A. M p. M.
'nterstate Training Sorvlc?
, Weatharly Building
Portland 14, Oregon
ti;nm;inimiiTrriHMi:m;mw,wwwii
fill M, M.J
WilWil'iiiii
mmmM
From tha Klamath Nowi
Aug. 28. 1934
Local pnoplo iiuvo tha Klum
nth American Legion drum
corps a rousliiK ovation upon
Its return today from the As.
torla department convention
witli the sluto drum corps
championship. Mayor Mahoney
matto an address from a bu
iiaifo wauoti at the station.
Thirty forest fires were set
by IlKhtnlnK which played over
tho Klaimith country lust nluht,
From th Klamath Republican
Aug. 18, 1804
This is the best time to see
Crutor lake. With u liiihl rln.
one can drive from Fort Klam
ath to tho lako lit four hours;
tho return run be madn in
thrre. Thero is plenty of Brass
feed for horses, and the files
and mosquitoes uro nearly all
none. Nothing lins ever been
written that will adequately de
scribe tho superb beauty of the
country surrounding Fort
tuamatn.
a a
Tha new sawmill nt Odessa
Is now running full tlmo,
t
The small sailing yacht "Mar
guerite is near completion at
Odessa and will soon make her
maiden trip to tha Falls.
sciiiil
OVER HOUSEi
'"''ohllu,, '"Hi I?
'Klsliili,,,, w" '" retjj j
rule, cummu'MtSa
Hermit eviVu1" toffil
'uon
nine wm.i.i hu.:i
IMMisatlrM? -.'rPloymfsi1.
wl,:,,..!:" -PonsoreH ,1
-. .... .. iiicaiii. piini i. '
ou"J":!!!!i"' H
Proved n,eM1f ' S
oral nmiovi "Veret.
A(linlii...i
h iV; ." mo anuu, 1
.....,..11 in nivm
entirely lnih. ? !
both "."
BOISE. Idaho. Aug. 28 (Pi
Gov. C. A. Uottolfsvii hus asked
tho war production board s lum
ber division director, J. i'liilip
Boyd, tu Investigate the" condi
tion of Idaho's small mills.
burlier Dotlolfseii protested.
on behulf of north Iduho lumber
mill operators, that a WPU order
curtailed output oj all mills ex
cept thoso producing lumber
meeting army requirements.
lie Mild Idaho mills produc
tion wus needed for crating agri
cultural products.
lioyti replied that farmers In
Idaho have certificates for ft,.
(1(10,000 feet in August and September.
Bottolfsen. howovcr. asserted
that "many of these small mills
are far remove) from centers of
Mipulutlon Issuance of cer-
Iflcotcs as suggested does not
channel' tho production equitably."
Police Hunt Man
For Murder of
Young Stepdaughter
THE DALLES. Ore.. Aug. 28
iiV) Slate, police and sheriff's
deputies continued a hunt in
sagebrush country 85 miles
southeast of here today for
Charles Wilson, 45, Antelor",
who disappeared following the
fatal shooting of his 13-year-old
stepdaughter.
M. W. Wilkinson, district at
torney of Wasco county, said
Mrs. Wilson told him her hus
band came home Intoxicated
from The Dulles Saturday
night, started an argument and
fired a pistol as she lay In bed
with her daughter. The bullet
clipped tha mother's finger and
struck the girl In the chest, Wil
kinson said.
CAao or THANKS
Wa with lo sxnrAss rmr aDDrfuHaltnn
to our (rtanrfs and nalghhors for tha
acla of kindness, axprcsslons of sym
lovely floral offerings aatand.
during our racant beraavo-
d lo
msnt.
Mrs. Jackson tforton
I.. A. Ilnrtan
Charles Horlon
Sirs. J. O. Hamaker
Mrs. Birdie Ourk
sl SI ' .1
tin HHHUUy.
will pur
gold In your pockets
whon thera it
silver in your hair
In both the .r1"!
The Religious SpiiJ
orowt
By EAHL VVHlTLOCt
Hie sennln nl ii.. .
Stales for yt-,r, offered ml
for guldiinre. onlv fl
of certain "leg.
Motive dnvi."
T odiv tiicy
pray for wl.
dom at tho
opening of each
session, If you
will notice,
thero l more
religious news
in tho papers
than, there used
to be and thrre
are more rcllg.
Ions programs
on the oir.
And this rcvlv ol riM
feeling all over Ihe t-l
doesn't sr-cm to be thtkiiytj
"hits the sawdust trail." M
is no muss ny.ncrls iboutB.1
stead, It Is tho spirit of id
who, piuieri nnrt unnid
turns to a lovlaj juretl
guidance.
Look in tho bookitoraJ
on Ihe mugaiin standi and J
will see mora books nd cJ
zines on spiritual mitttnu
have been published Inmyp
vlmis generation. Pfoplf i
buying these and rcadlmttt
Perplexed by vsjt, worlds
lug events, they turn Lacm
liigty toward the rtemiltril
"Memory Garden il fotM
Comfort.
1
Next Mondnv Mr. Whift
of tho Earl Whltlock ruw
Homo will comment on 1
Other Fellow."
ll
AT
YOUH
J$Sb.
I foA off. Mudot I
EQUITABLE LIFE
-Assurance Society
JIT
rowi
SEftmi
FOR
MOVING
...
immmm
WW;
PHONE 4151 I
Broad
tttttwttmttttmmt
FOR SALE
To Be Moved or Wrecked
Time Office
2B'x 10'
Plus Porches
Located nt
SunmiwrN Laiio Kntranc
Naval Air Station
Bids will be received at our ofe
in the Balsiger Building
until September 1
To Impecr call at our office for P''
MORRI50N-KNUDSEN CO.
FORD J. TWAITSCO.
lutiiiiiiiujiiuuwiumiummnmttr