HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON j5ocmb., , PACE FOUR I RANK JINKJMt MALCOLM EPtXi Editor Uanaftns Editor Entarad aa aaoood alas mattar at tha poatofito oX Klam. Tall. On- on Auauat SO. 190. under aot of eonaTaa. Marcfc S. lire SUBSCRIPTION RATES; y carrlar niontn 75c By mall " month aa.35 if carrlar T 17 60 Br mall Jtr WOO Outalda Klamath. La, a, Modoc aUaklyou counUaa -you HM Mtmbar. Aoclatad Proas Mambar Audit Bureau Circulation (From Hebrews XI and XII) Now faith is the substance of things huped for, the evidence of things not seen. Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God. so that things which are seen were not made of tilings which do appear. . Wherefore, lift up 'your hands which hang down, and the feeble knees; And make straight paths for your feet, lest that which is lame be turned out of the way. Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord, Today's Roundup News Behind the News EPLEY By MALCOLM EPLEY ON the occasion of a business visit to Med ford this week, we were reminded that one of the real "success stories" of American enterprise is the Christmas package project operated by a number of fruit companies of the nearby Rogue valley capi tal. Unfortunately, we lacked time to visit any of the plants now busily engaged in pack ing and shipping the Christ mas boxes, but we were told something of the immense suc cess of this undertaking. It has added substantially to the value of the Medford pear crop, It has increased employment In the Rogue center tremendously, and it is now so well established that Christmas gift packing may be regarded as a permanent Industry and a prosperous one. The project rests on the simple fact that people will gladly pay more for a product that is attractively packaged. Applying this idea as an answer to the annual dilemma of millions of Americans what to give for Christmas? the Medford people have really gone to town. They pack pears, other excellent fruits, jams, jellies, etc., into baskets and boxes, and the customer can order one of these gifts without a bit of concern for the size of the recipient's collar or feet, the color of his hair, his habits or hobbies. Everybody eats. The response has been nationwide, and the Medford experience must carry a lesson for other . communities which have products that may lend themselves to special packaging and promotion. The Medford people, incidentally, haven't spared the horses on advertising. o State Title NEEDLESS to say, people In Medford are enthusiastic over the Black Tornado's state grid title. Bob Ruhl of the Mall Tribune, who suffered greatly in 1943 when he came over here and saw the Tornado take a bad beating from the Klamath Pelicans, is football-happy again. We told Bob that, believe it or not, many Klamath folks including our sports writer were pulling for Medford to take La Grande in the state finals. Maybe, we admitted, it was because Medford had beaten Klamath this year " 21 to 0, and we would feel better if our conquer or were of state championship calibre. Maybe Southern Oregon spirit, which really exists, had something to do with it. Anyhow, the Black Tornado had many good wishers hereabouts when it went into the finals, and the outcome was welcomed in these parts. That gives Klamath a defending state charrmion to beat next year. o o Camp White MEDFORDITES are hopeful that something of importance will yet be done with Camp White, the once-jammed military post which now houses war prisoners and a relative handful of troops. The fact the big camp has not been listed as surplus is regarded as a basis for optimism. -- The Camp White hospital set-up is especially complete and Impressive, and there is much hope in Medford that this may be made the nucleus for a future program at the big camp. A prominent Medfordite joined us in our be lief that politics has had nothing to do with the de-activation of three camps in Oregon White, Adair and Abbot. He opined it was strictly based on military decisions in keeping with the trend of the training program and the war. By PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, Dec. 6 Swift moving daily news from the German front tells of vil lages continuously taken or rivers crossed only rarely of a loss of ground, by us. This buoyant information beclouds from the general public an appreciation of the fact that after months of the hardest kind of effort (since early Septem ber) we arc today only 10 to 12 miles inside Germany in the Aachen area, and only a mile or two inside with our deepest penetration in the south (Saar). We are just up to or barely into the Siegfried line of German defense, r Take Control THE professional soldiers have taken over lead ership in nazidom and are playing with extraordinary skill their desperate suicidal game of delaying us near the border until spring. Inside Germany they are ardently drilling the old men and 15-year-old boys procured by their last-ditch levies upon the people. This show is being run by Runstedt, a crafty Prussian general. Wherever Hitler (sick, in sane, dead) is he is not directing this savage skilled defense which has turned the very na ture of the war. To give you an example how it goes (from the detailed reports of the fight ing now available here), Gen. Patton could not get the German defenses until the Metz forts were captured, as mountains up to 3000 feet protect either side. He picked one to take first, named Driant, five miles south of Metz. Our gallant attacking force, under cover of artillery fire, got up the hill, into the moat, took one corner of the fort. We poured fuel oil .down the vents, set fire to them. Flame throwers blistered the interior of every gun mount. Both sides used grenades, bazookas, machine guns and we used dyna mite and 1000-pound bombs for ten. days and ten nights. Then we had to withdraw and wait for more power to be gathered. The nazis had a road down the other side of the hill, poured in each night to take the place of all we killed during the day. Not until the overwhelming power came, was Patton able to capture these initial outposts of the German defense system. Original Scheme OUR original scheme for German conquest was skillfully conceived at the Dutch salient. With the most spectacular air opera tion in history, we sent more than 10,000 men in 1000 gliders and transports from 25 airfields in Britain to get the Masstricht bridgehead with its four-lane concrete highway into northern Germany. That was last September 17. We have not taken it yet. All the world now knows our oilier two air borne divisions could not get up to Arnheim on the four-lane road to open the route for supplies, and only 2000 of the furthest men jscaped. Otherwise we would have ridden down that four-lane road Into northern Ger many, deployed our tanks beyond the defenses and might today be in Berlin. The Germans have troops, too remember that. The bulk of their Baltic armies got out by water. They even got their men out of Fin land. The Russians have taken some prisoners in the last three months, but no armies. By these means, the nazis have successfully turned the war into a tree-to-tree, house-to-house struggle which history may account the most bitterly contested campaign of all time. - We are accumulating more and more power a tank possibly for every machine gun, five men for every one (our landings have certainly placed over 3,000,000 men on the western end of the continent already) to big-gun, outman and dynamite our way through. This is cer tainly the time to buy bonds. SIDE GLANCES - ...mm mf t t ho. u. m. Ml. Of- tax ... i ..... t..fa ic pfinllv ivnrr.rfl nboilt mv weight or thinks I'm outdoing her in meat and butter I when she asks me every day what 1 had for lunch 1 Market Quotations NEW YORK. Dee. 8 fAPt Stock de veloped an Irregular tone today after a steady opening In which a number of pivotel tiiduttriali rcfUtcrcd modest gains. Closing quotation: American Can - )!' Am Cur & Fdy .U1. Am Tel & Tel - ... ...lwi'i Anaconda .... 21 Calif Packing .... Cat Tractor .. . 30 Comomnwcalth it Sou ......... . Curt.i-Wri.jht 01 5:i General Electric General Motors .. - S3'.? Gt Nor By pfd Illinois Central - !' Int Harvester . Kennecott M Lockheed '. 2Hfc Montnomery Ward Nash-Kelv ..,...,.,.., N Y Central Northern Pacific . Pao Gas & El Packard Motor . Penna R R Republic Steel . Richfield Oil Safeway Stores ....... Sears Roebuck Southern Pacific Standard Brands Sunshine Mining Trans-America - Union Oil Calif Union Pacific U S Steel Warner Pictures - 5'. ... 31 U m ... 34 - 37 - - 9l' - WW - 19 -11H - bU 14 From Other Editors RECLAMATION BUREAU QUESTIONS (Bend Bulletin) fhe question was raised here yesterday whether the bureau of reclamation will continue In the future to be the same outstand ing engineering organization that it has been in the past. It can continue though the strug gle wiu De a nara one. it may be turned into a bureau whose purpose will be the accomplish ment of new administration DOli cies with engineering functions given a suDorainate role. The various valley authorities proposed by President Roosevelt offer a threat to the bureau as they do to the corps of army engineers. These are the two federal agencies that hitherto nave dealt with reclamation, as sociated power development, flood control and navigation. In any valley where an authority is set up there will be nothing Jeft for either bureau or corps. They will wither on the vine and, obviously, the bureau will see an end to its engineering activity. Another threat to the main tenance of high bureau stand ards is found in the need that win develop for rapid expan GOOD HEALTH Your Greofeif Possession Raafrin It by bain? raHafed al Hamorrholda (Pllai), Fla mitt, Fistula, Harnla IRup tuiai. Our mathod of iraat snent without hospital op- raiion auccattiuiiT uaea lor 33 yaar. Liberal ciadtt farms, call lor mcamtnatlon or .and (or FREE fcooklat. Optn rVam'ngt, Molt., Wad., fVt., 7 fo 0,90 Dr. C. J. DEAN CLINIC Phystttan and Svrgaom K. S. Cor. E. Burnsldc and Qraod Arw Tolephon EfUt 3918, Porllaml 14, Of ego sion if large reclamation devel opmehts are undertaken after tne war. Hundreds of new engi neers will be required and though, given time, such large numbers can be shaken down in to the organization it will be a job. The most serious threat to the future of the bureau, however, is the policy now pursued by which key positions are. given to individuals with little or no previous experience in reclama tion. Power, rather than irriga tion, seems to be the factor on which qualifications are judged and there is an appearance of making the bureau an orsaniza- tion for the development of pub lic power rainer man tne recla mation of land. Water users will fight any misuse of the bureau if it comes to their attention but there is a question whether damage may not be done before they learn of It. Pioneer Days Rifle Found by Lake Man REWn Doe R im A days' rifle bearing the date 1830 has been found near here by bod neai, nortnern iaKe coun ty resident. ThA fllnflnrlr tn1197lA.lno.Hlna gun has the letters STLH and the name E. White cut in the metal Ni.nl niflriwl 11 ,n flinen " - . WJ blVK to the old horse ranch in the ton kock country, CHY SCHOOLS SET The grade schools and junior nigh school ennstmas concert, previously given in the Method ist church, will be presented this year in the high school auditor ium Thursday evening, Decem ber 14, at 7:30 p. m. This concert and pageant is under the direction of Lillie Darby, elementary vocal super visor in the nublic schools, who is assisted by the music teachers in the various buildings. Ihe concert will feature a grade school chorus of 350 voices with all schools participating. The removal of this program to the high school auditorium will enable many to attend who have not heretofore been able to do so. This is a complementary concert and is tne comoinea grade schools' Christmas pre sentation for the community. DAMAGE GREATER GRANTS PASS, Dec. 6 (P) rire damage in tne fcisKiyou na tional forest was greater lost summer than In 1943, Curtis Price, assistant supervisor, said today. More than one-half the 17 fires were man-caused, he said, with one major blaze burning 032 acres and another 292 acres. Potatoes cline all killing classes rtfalntd: bulls strain lo 33 cants higher and vealers strong at 13.50 down; stock catUa more Sala'hta sheep 4000: total shttp 10.000; slaughter lambs slow, scat tared early sales about steady, few good and choice native ewes and wether lambs U00; good and choice fed westerns hald slightly above JU.33: odd Iota common light wooled native lambs $11,00 down: 3 odd and choice slaughter ewes W.75 .00; common and medium 94.9U-0.30. WHEAT ill nueBflf 11111 CHICAGO. Dec. 8 ( A P. WrA) "Pota toes: total shiDments 840: arrivals 113. on track 220; supplies moderate, for V. S. No. 1 Idaho Russets demand moderate, market steady at celling prevailing: for other western stock demand moderate. market steady at celling: for nortnern stock, demand slow, market steady for best quality, dull for other stocK: ma no Russet Bur banks U. S. No. 1, J3.51-3.52; Colorado Red McClurcs U. S. No. 1 , 53.23.37: Nebraska Bliss Triumphs V. 3. Na 1, 93 27-3.30; Minnesota and North Dakota Bliss Triumphs commercl.il S2.23-3.A0; Cobblers commercials 92.40; Maine rvaianains u. a. no. u o.u. , LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 6 (AP.WFAI Cattlft: 200 Stead V to strong; part load good' fed steer otic red. range cows quoccn w.w-w.wu. sum mon SB.50-10.30. few cutters 98.00-fl.30. canners 9fl.00-7.00. Calves; none. Late xueioay, ioaa to gooq cnoice .wu id. slaughter calves 913.73. Hogs: 300. Steady: good and choice 200-270 lb. barrows and gills 914.73; sows 23 cents lower, good 913.00. shfon: inAO. Mnstlv southern Oretion and California: choice absent. Good full.wnnled auoted 814.00. medium to good 912.0013.00; common to good ewes PORTLAND. Ore.. Dec, 8 (AP.WFA Salable and total cattle .too, cnlves SO; market active, fullv steady excent Jate slow on canner cows; sorted load and oca lot gooa iieers aii.au; common murilum run 10.0O-1 2.00: common' medium heifers sa.0CMl.30; light dairy type heifers down to $3.30; cannercutter cowt 94.50-6.50; shells down to 94.00; fat dairy type cows 97.30-8.30; medium beef cows $0.30-10.50: common-medium bulls $7.00-8.50; good heavy beef bulls up to 910.50; good-choice vealers 9I3MM4.00; common-medium grades 98.00-12.00; grass calves salable 912.30 down. Salable and total hogs 200; market active, strong to as cents nigner: gooa- chnlca 1SO-240 lbs. 913.00-23: 230-270 lbs. 914.00-30; few 150-170 lbs. 913.30-14.00; good sows 913.00.25: light weigh U to 313.30; tew ngni reeaer pigs unsoia; sood-cholce salable 912.09-13.00 or above, Salable and total sheep 600; market fully steady at week's advance; good wooled lamb 913.00; strictly good-choice grades salable to 913 50; common down to 90.00; one deck good-choice 83 tb. fed shorn lambs No. 1 pelts 813.23; sizable o-nnd 72 1h. truck Ins 912.30: medium yearlings 90.00; good ewes 94.00-29; short aecK common-meaium snorn ewes bj.uu. CHICAGO. Dec. 0 (API Grain futures markets iclllcd back today after two days of bullish trading and lows ranged from minor fractions to more than a cent a bushel. December corn wa in depenUenlly steady. Volume of the trade was off sharply and brokers said the down-trend In dlcated all markets had been weakened by extensive short covering yesterday ana Aionaay. Rv mfffared from a laa In btivlnc m tervst. Local traders turned sellers late in the session, encouraged by the setback in corn, A sharply limited demand waa the fenture of the wheat trade. At the cloie wheat was H to 1 cent lower than yes Unisys finish. December 91.VSi. Corn was He h,lghcr to He lower, December Sl.ian. Oats were off U to He. December 00 He. Rye waa t to lUc lower. December 91.llasv4. Darley waa off H to ltijC. December VITAL STATISTICS COIIXER Born at Klamath Vallay hoaplul, Klamath Talla. Or., Dreatnbar 3. le-M, to Mr. anil Mn. rrad Cicxllar. S. Riveraide, a boy. Waifht: S pound taa ounces. HOAGLAND Bom at Klamath Vallay hoapltal, Klamath ralla, Ore.. December 3. 1044, to Mr. and Mre. Fred Hoacland, 3026 Portland, a girl. Weight: a pound. 3 ounce. OWENS Born ai mamauivaner n pllal, Klamath ralU. Ore.. December I, In44. to Mr. and Mn. N. W. Owans. 2.119 Applciale, a Ctrl. Welfht: T pounds 13Yi ounces. . . SINGLETON Born at Klamath Valley hospital. Klamath Kails. Ore.. December 1. 1944. to Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Slnlleton, aia Main, a boy. Wciflll: 7 pounds 6 ounces. - DENNIS Bom at Klamath Valley hoa pltal. Klamath rails. Ore.. Oecember 1. 1044, to Mr. and Mrs. William B. Dennla. 3&37 Boardman, a boy. Welfht: 7 !an-nnm at Klamath Valley hospital. Klamath Falls. Ore., December 3. 1044, to Mr. and Mrs. H. I. Badr. uorris, L.am., a iwr. .,.' . S ounces. ..... BREWER Born at Klamath Vallw hospital, Klamath Falls. Ore.. December 3. 1044, lo Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Brewer. 234 Spring, a boy. Welfht: 11 pounds 3Vl.S!'": ,... k . hospital. Klamath Falls. Ore.. December , in,, t. Mr. anil Mra. II. D. Chliltr. 3323 LaVerne, a boy. Welfht: pound 3HAWKWS-ivm at Klamath Vallay hospital. Klamath Falls. Ore., December 3. 1944. to Mr. and Mr. Robert Hawkins. 124 Homeoaie. a uoy. "".".'. V L .r..ua. .nHn .1 Kl.mitn Val ev haa. pllal, Klamath Falls. Ore.. December 4. 1044. to Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Adam, routa 1 box sao. city, a boy. Welfht: 7 pounds e) ounces. ..... t a -tv- n.r. at STlamath Val ay ho pllal, Klamath Falls. Or... December a. 1044. to Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Aten. (Jf Kane, a boy. Welfht: 7 pound 7Va ounce. In 1810 Napoleon I offered a reward of 1,000,000 francs to any Inventor who devised the best machinery or spinning flue yarn. CHICAGO, Dec. 0 IAP-WFAI Salable hofls 13.000: total 21.000: fairly active. weight 270 lbs. and less IS to 20 cents higher, weights over 270 lbs. steady to 10 cant higher, ows 10 to 1.3 centa nigner, food ana cnoice iuu-zu ids. jh.oj-I4.13. top (14 20: good and choice 130-180 lbs. $13 30-14 00: good and choice hogs over 270 lbs. (14.00: good and choice 300-500 lb. sows (13.00-14.00; complete clearance. Salable cattle 7300: total 7300: salable calves 100O; total calve 1000: fed steers and yaarltng 23 to 40 cents higher, holfera shared steer advance: trade ac. live; cows In predominant supply, but market slrong to 23 cents higher; top (18.00 paid for 50 choice yearlings; belt weighty steers (17.75: bulk steers (14.30. 17.05; liberal share last week's sharp da. From the Klamath Hapublican Dacambcr 8, 18U4 Hervtiy Llndley, of the Kluni ath l.uko Railroad, was a visitor In Klamath foils the first of the week, accompanied by ticurutury McCornack and Pacific Coast Manager Long, Of the Woyor haeuaer Lumbar company, one of the largest In the world, with headquarters In Wisconsin. Tlio purpose of the visit was not matte public but prominent poi son on the Inside claim that tho visit was very significant to Klamath Falls and Klamath county. It Is claimed that -this party was prompted In visiting Klam ath Fulls by the recent inturuit taken in this section by the Weed railroad representatives. Klam ath county la willing for Just as many railroaders to entur hur territory as may desire. She has resources ample to supply every one that will come, and her pro ducts aro increasing and bid lair to leap to Incalculable propor tions. From the Klamath News December 6. 1934 Vice President Percy Murray of the chamber of commerce last night warmly praised the junior chamber for projects it Is ad vancing In bclialf of the com munity. Orth Siscmore presid ed at the meeting. Klamath store windows are all ready for Christmas opening Friday night. Baling of Wool Clip To Save Freight Cost PORTLAND, Dec. 8 (JP) Bui. Ing of the northwest wool clip before shipment conipressiiiK the wool into half the space now used wns proposed here today as a possible method of reducing freight costs. Northwest wool growers mot here with representatives of the war food administration and the stato public utilities commission to discuss current wool rail ship ment rates. The National Wool association and tho department at agricul ture have asked the Interstate commerce commission to reopen hearings on wool freight costs. Savings, Loan Men To Hold Conference PORTLAND. Dec. 6 (PI Members of tho Oregon savings and loan league will meet hero Friday and Saturday (or. tneir annual business conference. Major tonics for considera tion will be financing tho ex- Cected record volume of postwar ulldlng, and loans to veterans. Classified feu Bring. Results Poor Digestion? 55 Headachy? Sour or Upset? Tired-Listless? Do you feel headachy and upaat dua to poorly digested food? To feci cheerful and happy attain your food must ba digested properly. Each day, Naluro must produn about two pints ot a vital digestive juice to help digest your food. II Nature fallt, your food may remain undlgeated- leaving you headachy and Irritable. , Therefore, you must increaee the fW of this digeetivo ulce. Carter's Little Liver Pills increase this flow quickly often In aa littlo aa 30 minutes. And, you're on the road to feeling better. Don't depend on artificial alda to counteract Indigestion when CarUir'a Little Liver Pill aid digestion attar Na. turo'a own order. Take Carter'a Little Liver Pills as directed. Get them at any drugstore. Only 10 and 26u To The Parents An Everlasting Xmo Gift is a Business Course tor your son or daughter. We offer a Complete Business Course, and we Do teach that Snappy Up-to-the-Minuto Thomas Natural Shorthand and Speed Typing. Klamath Business College 733 Pin Street . Corner of 8tb Phone 4760 Grandma Switches Millions of Mothers To Her Mutton Suet Idea For Chest Colds Pioneer grandma liked to "rub colds" with a "home rub" contain ing mutton suet. Such a rub was her "old reliable" for relieving chest muscle tightness, soothing bron chial Irritation, loosening phlegm, checking coughing, casing ating of chapped lips and nostrils. Today science has modernized this princi ple with Penetro, tho salvo with a base containing thin same old fash ioned mutton suet, plus 5 active in irredients so now Grandma's old idea is switching millions to thin newer relief that la being hailed all over America, YouH like Penetro the first time you feel it spread smoothly on chest, throat, back Its mutton suet makes it melt Instantly, vanish quickly. It frets to work 8 ways at once to make you and your children more comfortable (l)Penetro re lievca colds' pain as its mutton suet helps carry medication to nerval ends in the skin. (2) Relieve muscular tightnoss and congestion through counter-irritation (in-el-caned blood How). (3) Loosens phlegm, eases coughing through pleasant inhalation of instantly re leased vapors. You'll feel relief so rnilckty- painful misery eases, courrhing Is lessened, phlegm loosened, chest rawness soothed. You'll rest more comfortably, give nature chance to restore vitality through sound sleep. That's why so many mothers thank Grandma for her Idea praise science for perfecting it and buy Penetro at druggists everywhere. Relieve your cheat cold miseries as millions are dolnp; today get your jar of white, ensy-to-use I'cnctro, i Starts Seal Sale' J Officially opening the 38th an-! 1 nual Christmas Seal Sulo of J the National Tuberculosis Ai- 1 aoclatlon, President lluoaovelt I becomes tho first purchaser J of the 104.4 seal as he accepts a sheet from Postmaster Gen- (!J eral Frank C. Walker at the rU White Hon V: n ' T V Ail! V 's. A vtkj 6. 1,1. m . t ! n at A laV..'" J mum s-r . waxi Recruiting Officer Visits Station Here Lt. Comdr. John F. Hlctilcr, officer in chuiuo ot tho muln nuvnl recruiting station In Port land, was In Klamath Falls Tues day on a routlno inspection of the local naval recruiting office In tho federal building, lie was accompanied by Stanley Church, rndln tochnlclaii specialist. While ht'ro, litclili-r stressed tho liniiurtiinco of procuring qualified men for the Seabees and also the Importance of the radio technician protirmn now In progress, lie further staled that nppllcatloits for WAVKS are still being accepted by naval recruiters. Mrs. Don Fisher Hurt At School Mrs. Don Fisher, teacher at Fremont, Is recovering In Klii ii nth Valley hospital from an In jury to her right hip, suffered Monday morning when one of the boy students ran Into her during tho beforc-school play period, The accident occurred In the gymnasium. Mrs. Fisher, wlfo of Don Fisher, custodian of tho Lava Beds national monument, wns moved to the hospital Immedi ately nfter the accident. IP Externally Cauied imples To clttnia tntly ullave sort. Itchy tpott and to hiilan halln,isly on 5tcrt a Fire But OnceaYeatf; Burnt Coal, Briquet), U tologi, Wood. Semi-A matic, Majaiint Fill Holds 100 Lbi, Coot. --33-J f"silt.a. aV'-,. H IT TA.M SI m UlnRmmoH g aWftiftr . tto aro closing out : stock of cool Hovel, (t yours today at this barjt'i price. Fred H. Heilbroniic! "Fuel Thai Bailiff Since 1919 821 Spring St. Phoaa IUl Branch Yaid si Mmffl 'VarsTrMMMMiZZasii araia. i in ! i ) mi. J" 's u " I sy 'jx "" 1 i ill"liwj - ;'' THE UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK .' 1 .... . 1 V - ,i V" ;- -v-. 3 Hr.iJnin.t)ii J. pwtonal war and ttar. firing You ovi prthvi gaioUM and pwtonal war and ttar. firing w at cot to you your nwr it motbox by mailing your chaxfc. for oVpo.r J" Sp('0' Bank.bv.Moll fiveop"' KLAMATH FALLS BRANCH 27 BranehoM In Oregon Member F. 0. .JC