Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, December 20, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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    PACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
$eral& ani.$Ur$ News Behind the News
FRANK JENKINS MALCOLM FPLCY
Editor Miuaginf Editor
Xntcrvd second clan tnatttr at th pottofflc of Klamath
Fall. Or., on Auxuat 30. 1006. undar act of conjraaa.
Marcb ft. 1678
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
.jnonin 15c By mall
year I7 M By mall
8 months 93 3S
ar $6.00
By earrlar .
Br carrier .
OuUlda Klamath, Lake, Modoc. BUklyou counUea I7 W
A tamporary combination of tha Evantnc Herald and tha
Klamath Nawa. Publlahad a vary afternoon except Sunday
at Eplanad and Plna atreau. Klamath Falli. Oregon, by th
Herald Pu blli hint Co, and tha Nawa Publlhln Company.
Member,
Aaaoclatad Praaa
Member Audit
Bureau Circulation
ri
w
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
BACK of the county court's protest against a
proposed national forest land acquisition in
Klamath county is a serious and growing con
cern over the extension of fed- k
eral ownership of more and t?-
more Klamath county area.
Concern over similar situa
tions in other counties has
made federal ownership of
otherwise taxable real estate a
matter of widespread discus
sion in the west. The Klamath
action will have the effect of
forcing the issue to the front
and should help bring about
an understanding and, eventu- Br.J
any, action mat will help EPLET
solve the problems involved.
Wo think the court is to be commended for
taking this step in the interest of Klamath
county.
What Is Proposed
THE proposal against which the court protests
is shown in a legal notice which has been
running in The Herald and News for several
weeks. The Shevlin-Hixon people, who own
extensive stands of land in northern Klamath,
. in this proposition offer to the forest service
about 16,000 acres, in exchange for an equal
value of timber on national forest lands.
If the transaction goes through, the 16,000
acres would go into federal ownership, and
would be removed from the tax rolls of
Klamath county. Court members say that al
ready 48,000 acres of such land has been
removed from tax rolls in this county by this
process.
A point in the proposed deal that particularly
interested the court is that the legal notice
provides, for permission to Shevlin-Hixon to log
timber from the land until the end of 1949.
This indicates that this is not strictly cut-over
land, but is land on which there is still taxable
timber. Completion of the deal would take this
timber off the Klamath rolls.
Shrinkage of taxable valuations piles more
and more taxes on farms, surviving private
timber, city property, and utilities.
Deadline Met
WHEN national forest men were here re
cently, we discussed land exchange ques
tions with them at some length. They feel, of
course, that the benefits to be derived from
federal forest control of the lands outweigh
the disadvantages, and they promised to give
interested local people a brief in support of
this contention, and this will be reviewed when
it arrives.
In the meantime, the Shevlin-Hixon exchange
was in the process of consummation. The dead
line for protest was December 23. The county
court moved in time to bring the issue to a
head as it applies to this particular transaction.
Today's Bible Verses
(From Pulm CI)
A Pulm of David
I will sing of mercy and judgment: unto thee,
O Lord, will I sing.
I will behave myself wisely in a perfect way.
0 when will thou come unto me? I will walk
within my house with a perfect heart.
I will set no wicked thing before mine eyes:
1 hate the work of them that tufn aside; it shall
not cleave to me.
A forward heart shall depart from me: I will
not know a wicked person.
Whoso privily slandereth his neighbor; him
will I cut off: him that hath a high look and a
proud heart will not I suffer.
Mine eyes shall be upon the faithful of the
land, that they may dwell with me: he that
walkcth in perfect way, he shall serve me.
He that worketh deceit shall not dwell within
my house: he that telleth lies shall not tarry in
my sight.
I will early destroy all the wicked of the
land; that I may cut off all wicked doers from
the city of the Lord.
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, Dec. 20 Queer doings
have taken the singe here. Mr. Roosevelt
did not veto the bill preventing another 1 and
1 per cent hike for worker and management in
social security taxes. A veto mcssago had been
written for him by his social security board.
Assistant President James Byrnes tipped con
gressmen definitely the veto would come.
The average stereotyped interpretation is that
the president is getting somewhat moro con
servative. I do not think so. Congress was
ready to pass the bill over a veto, had the
votes in line. The president could not stop it.
His action therefore simply implies he has
reached the age where ho is not interested in
provoking losing fights (or at least this one)
for political purposes only.
Those who think he has gone conservative
on social security will be dismayed next month
when ho sets forth a ClO-ish program for its
radical expansion.
New Deal Revolt
BUT the queerest of all new goings-on is the
antiadministration revolt of the Guffey
Pcpper New Dealers, resisting Mr. Roosevelt's
appointees to the Stettinlus regime in the slate
department. The revoltcrs are the ones who
claimed, for 12 previous New Deal years, that
anyone was practically a fascist for questioning
Mr. Roosevelt on anything.
A republican who has watched the progress
of their unnatural conduct from across the
aisle surmises they are trying to convince Mr.
R. they won the election for him, and he must
do as they say.
I doubt the full implication of this analysis,
as the men involved are not Borahs, lone
wolves or of a strongly independent character.
Joe Guffey is a 69-year-old professional poli
tician, whose biography in the congressional
directory (where congressmen generally set forth
all the glories of their careers for constituents to
see) is tersely this:
"Joseph F. Guffey, democrat, Pittsburgh, Ta.,
unmarried."
Just as his record is unmarred by any opposi
tion to CIO obviously Mr. Guffey is not burn
ing with anything inside for the future world.
To characterize him. I would say he is wholly
at the service of CIO, to burn as it burns, to
flicker as it flickers and nothing else. That
is where the votes are in Pennsylvania, or at
least Guffey's votes.
The 44-year-old Pepper is a different proposi
tion. This Floridian reflects no clow from
Florida, but mostly things from the newspaper
PM in New York, the Marshall Field escape
from too many millions.
This fire does not burn or glow but erupts
like a volcano. To say that it has a definite
line or destination would require clairvoyance.
Bitter About Churchill
FOR instance, it and Pepper were bitter about
Churchill when he tried to stop the com
munists in Greece. Yet they were just as bit
ter when he did the opposite and gave in to
the communists in Poland. To say they are
half communists (as many people do) is to state
the matter too mildly, and inaccurately.
True, I judge they would rather have a com
munist regime than a bankers' or British re
gime in Greece or anywhere. But, they do
not hate riches, only certain riches.
Among the state department appointees none
is as rich as Field except Will Clayton. You'
might surmise Clayton does not have the proper
revulsion against his money as Field docs,
but then neither does Ickcs, whom they love,
and whose million or more never caused him
the slightest nausea. Nor is their ideology of
tne world any easier to define.
For years they have claimed the Roosevelt
foreign policy was the mark of true interna
tionalism and true liberalism, but they always
hated Mr. Hull, a League of Nations interna
tionalist, who made the policy. Now they arc
opposing senate confirmation of the six interna
tionalists who are on their own side of the
fence, yet a few days earlier they approved
Stettinius, who recommended these men, al
though he is probably about as rich as Mr.
Roosevelt.
One thing they think they are clear on is
their "cause of the common man," but their
stands generally favor the common man in the
CIO unions, less than the common man in the
AFL or the commonest man of all outside their
small radical group. I do not think they know
what they want.
If, as the republican surmises, it is to prove
to Mr. R. that confusion of this volcanic nature
won the last election and not Mr. Roosevelt
or the war situation which caused so many
people opposing his policies to vote for him,
the democratic senate is resisting it. And, if it
represents CIO pressure through Guffey to
needle Mr. Roosevelt gently in a losing fight,
Mr. Roosevelt will furnish the answer in future
actions. It seems to me he is getting tired and
inconsiderate of pressure.
SIDE GLANCES
111 Ir
wmn.
i-iv v.'.? -'-Mr
i. tu tv wrt DiC T. M MO. U. - AT. Oft.
Gl 5 RETAKE
TOMi
TO POSITIONS
"Now we'll have lo buy your cousin something quick I
How about an umbrella that will remind them to
return the one they borrowed lust fulll"
Telling
The Editor
Letter printed hare ntuat not be more
thin W word in length, mutt be writ
ten Ufibly on ONI SIDI or Ilia pzzi
only, and must be eigned. Contribution
toHowinj thee ml, are warmly
CITY BRIEFS
(Continued From Page One)
was a focal point of one of four
Grriniiu ilnvi'K.
Hold by Yanki
Stuvulnt mid SI. Villi, whrro
mmin American ti'nopu were
pocketed, at Inst report jjtlll
wore In U. S. hands.
While I tie German awault
hud lost its (list speed, there
whs mi iciisiin to Mippoto the
enemy may nut have made still
further c.i ins beyond his four
initial penetrations o( five to 20
miles lulu Belgium and Luxem
bourg. But by now l.t. Gcn. Courtney
II. IIoiIkos' minor and Infantry
hud been thrown Into the breach
and the Grriniiu were running
Into i differ battUi every hour.
Tide Cheneei
(A CBS frontline broadcast re
ported "the first Klrniuht mllen
tlnn that at some points the lids
of battle is bediming to chunge
In our favor." The broadcast
said that "at several points tha
vieiuiHiis mane no progress to
(lay, and ono of the German
spearhead was pushed back
several thousand yard by one of
win vciernn divisions. 1
ilio Germans wero pouring
Infantry In buhlnd the swift ar
mored columns that penetrated
mat army lines.
About Socialists
PORTLAND, Ore. iTo the
Editor) I have a letter from
Norman Thomas in which he
says that he was interviewed
recently by the Associated Press
and later was shown u copy ot
a release thut was already in
the mails. For the most part it
was correct, but the statement
that he said "the Socialist party
was politically dead" is not
true. His letter summarizes
what he said as follows:
"It is enormously important
to build in America a party
like the Canadian C. C. F. 1 do
not think that that can be done
immediately, or until the objec
tive situation changes, but much
preliminary work can be done
now. The Socialist party, where
it is strong enough, will con
tinue its electoral work in state
and local campaigns. Every
where it will push its even
more important educational
work. It is premature to say
what can and should be dune
on the national electoral field
by the party in 1048. Every rca.
sonablc effort should be made
to further a coalition of forces
on the order of the C. C. F.
which Is genuinely a democra
tic socialist party. To build such
a party here, the socialist party
must live and extend its work.
II such a party cannot bo built,
more than over the socialist
party must live and extend its
work. The best answer to false
statements o r mis-statements
about the party is the work we
do. Fortunately, as I told the
A. P. reporter, the last cam
paign strengthened the party
organizationally."
Thank you very much for the
courtesy extended in making
this correction.
R. D. Snyder.
For the Socialist
Party of Oregon.
i To Meot Landowners in the
i Shasta View irrigation district
will hold a meeting, Thursday,
December 21, ut 8 u. m.. at Ma-
1 in. The purpose ol the meeting
is to discuss a druft of an amen
datory contract with the federal
bureau of reclamation, which
will lead to the reorganization
ot the irrigation district.
From Corvallii Mrs, Bessie I
v., II f... ;.. ...... i ... 1
...... it.ui vui vnni.1, Iiiuiliei III
Mrs. Winnifred K. Glllen, counly
home demonstration uncut, is In
Klamath Fulls visiting her
daughter over the holidays at
her residence ut 1850 Lerov.
Mrs. Kcil will return to Corvu'l
lis, January 1,
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued from Page One)
is happening to the other fellow
is VITAL in warfare. We
mustn't tip the Germans off to
anything that will be useful to
them.
. Hence our rigid tightening of
the censorship.
WHEN we don't know what Is
" h s y rt a m I ,. .... tr m
For example:
The New York stock market
has a sinking spell today.
Prices fall sharply. The fall is
attributed in the dispatches to
UNCERTAINTY following the
practically complete blackout of
news from the western front.
When stock market gamblers
get scared they SELL.
IT doesn't matter much what
llBnMn. 4m 1 U . t t
"-ci"" inn eiutit mar
ket gamblers, for In war time
they are only LEECHES on the
productive system.
But this stock market fainting
spell DOES illustrate quite clear
ly how public opinion reacts.
When there is NO NEWS, we
iedr me worst.
CENSORSHIP is irksome, but
no one in his right senses
criticises legitimate military cen
sorship that is designed to keep
useful military information from
the enemy. That just has to be.
The team that tips off its plavs
in me omer team wiins o
GAMES.
Political censorship is another
matter.
The future of the world would
GOOD HEALTH
Your Oreof est Poiienon
Heoeda II by bain relieved
el Hemorrhoid (pile), Fle-
uia, fiiituo, nemia inup.
lure). Our method ol treat,
ntnt without hespttal op.
ration luecoiifuflr uitd
lor S3 roan. Uboral crodlt
tornf. Call tor oxaraitetlon
or m4 lot fKS 6oorJl.'
Osm fvonnjr, Men., WW., frl, 7 lo l,3t
Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC
Myjcten mrti Svroooa
If. E. Cor. E. Burntldo anil Grand In.
Tolopbooo EAit39g, Portland 14. Oroaon
2r
A PAGEANT PLAY
will be preiented
Wrdneid.r. Derrmbcr 20
8:00 p. m.
Pilgrim Holinaii Church
2303 Wonllond
Tbo rublli; ! Invited
Rev. w. M. Incerioll
be MUCH brighter if then. wir
no such thing as censorship in
poimcai maucrs including in
ternational power politics whose
workings we are beginning to
sec in Europe.
Army Colonel Takes
Duty At Boeing
SEATTLE, Dec. 20 (IP) With
Jurisdiction over all aircraft fac
tories in Oregon and Washing
ton, Col. Harlcy S. Jones, U. S.
army air forces, has assumed
duty at Boeing aircraft factory
here as the two-state representa
tive of the technical service com
mand, the Boeing news service
announced yrslerdav.
Lemon Juica Recipe
Checks Rheumatic
Pain Quickly
Tf voo tuffrr from rbeum.tle. rtfirttle or
K ,r."iKW '"J' """' lDnMve boroo
...ptt"Si J0"""""" uilo. Cift pin.
5 i??"01""!. lo-weeb i.Vpiy,
. il ' t.S J..'..?.'"' '" ' lMe t
Z,Vi'mu 'l-Pl1lil rnmu r.
I"! to try II li toll) by your dnitiut iSSi
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY THEATED
NO PAIN . NO HOSPITAUZATIOh
No Lou of Tim
Permanent Reenltal
DR. E. M. MARSHA
... Cblronreetlo Fbrilelen
n Hm. 71b fciqolre Tbtetro Bids.
Pbono 7nl
Merchants Warned
About Cashing
Treasury Checks
Klamath merchants were
warned by the United Slates
treasury this week to use caution
in .cashing treasury checks of
which some S.IO.000,000 are is
sued each month.
Merchants worn lold lo either
know the endorser personally
or to request an obsolute identi
fication, Persons cashing forged
checks of this type have no re
course and must take the loss,
they are advised.
Woman Injured As
Stove Explodes
Mrs. Agnes Lund, nhoul 45,
suffered second degree burns
about the face, arms and hands
when a gs stove she was oper
ating at the Buffalo lunch, S.
8th, exploded at about 4:30 p. m.
Tue.day.
Mrs. Lund is a patient at
Klamath Vallcv hosnital where
her condition is reported satis
factory, She lives at the Shasta
View trailer camp.
From Portland Lt. John
Walker i nd Sgl. Burton Silver
man, both connected with the
army recruiting office In Port
land, were in Klamath Falls
Wednesday In connection with
army recruiting activities.
On Vacation Robert H. La
mott, Boy Scout executive of the
Modoc area council, is now on
his annual vacation, but scout
headquarters will remain open.
Horn on Lv Corporal
Lawrence Mitchell, U. S. ma
rines, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
T. Mitchell nf the Eleventh
Street grocery, is home on leave
after 28 months in the South
Pacific. He was in the fighting
on Guam and In the Marshalls.
ne is a lormor student of Fair-
view grado school n id Klamath
union nign school, and plans to
cnler Oregon State when he re
turns from the service.
To R.turn Horn Mrs. Don
Fisher, who has been a patient
at Klamath Valley hospital for
the past two weeks receiving
treatment for a badly injured
eg received while on duty nl
Jrcmont school, will leave the
hospital Wednesday afternoon
for Lava Beds national monu
ment to join her husband for
the holidays. Sho is quite im
proved. Fisher is custodian at
the lava beds.
OBITUARY
M.MKS COME PITZriKRAI.n
(wt. .rii.',,"";iii,"r '"
d.iy. Drremlirr In. lint at ,23 . ,,,
following a hrlf llllirx H- .
tin .f ?,rcr1'- U,"n "t "i
I mc of hi. ili-alh ws agrti .17 voai,
tlx month, ami M ,i...
file Wife. Mr.. Moil riiunralri ..1 n.i.
Il.v: Hirer r,n. J.imr, Wilfred (It,.
erflld. m.rdiaot m.rln.' I, ,., ..
MlleraJd of Hill rlly; ono dauililir.
f.crn M- rl''""ld of Ihla cltv; a ii-Iit
Mr. M.1V r'rnnln of ITii.nl.. in.,..
brother. VlMor of Plennni flrove. Utah:
. ,nk nf Portland. Ore., and Stanley
of C00111H1-, Ore., and two (randrhtlrlren.
Mr. Fllzftorald wai a member of Herbert
ApplegMc Camp No. 2.1. I.SWV. Tho
i'miiio. roil in iiiq Karl Wliltlorb
Funeral homo. Pino al Sixth. Notice ot
fllneral to ha annnimr.H i tl..
inuo of the paper.
CAitn or THANKS
Wo Wlnh to oxtanH ,n,r h.rir.ll
thanks and appreciation for tho acta nf
klndneu, tho mei.aaea nf lympathy
and tho beautiful floral offerlma lor
our beloved.
Mr. II. A. Talbot and family.
10
BATTLE TO ELAS
(Continued From Page One)
ments largely dominated the
scene, uowever, witn the proba
bility of an early acceptance of
Archbishop Duiiinskiiios as regent.
A telegram from Premier
ueorge I'lipanclrcou s cabinet lo
King Cicorgo II in London rec
ommended that the rule be
tunica over lo Damii.klnn
1 regent. Thcmlstoklos Sonhoulls.
elderly Greek statesman, sent
similar message, and the nicnt
of the king was awaited.
Practice Bomb Found
In Seattle District
SEATTLE, Dec. 20 (Pj A
live practice bomb found behind
an apartment ncor the down
town business district was drop
ped accidentally by a Canadian
air force searching plane over
Seatllo - recently, army officials
said today.
A boy at play, Dick Newell,
found the device last night and
thought he had nn "airplane."
But a neighbor recognized it
and, amid some excitement in
tho district, took il to the lUlo
patrol office.
Army officials identified it
after contacting Canadian auth
orities' and the bomb disposal
unit al Auburn was called In.
The stale patrol was told it hid
enough of a charge to damage)
a largo building.
Today On The
Western Front
By Th Aisoclaltd Pr
Cun.dlin Ut and Brliiih
2nd tumttu Heavy inoilar
fire, sudden patrol activity,
Indicate Cierniim altempl in
keep sector buxy, prevail! re
inforcements from moving
1011II1.
U. 8. Bth armyi Lino nloiig
Hoer river unchanged.
U. 8. lit irmyi Headquar
ter!, admitting "situation Is
grave," dliieluscd Cieriniui
dinks, Infantry penelrnted
flvo to 20 mill's lulu (iiirman
Unci in Belgium and Luxem
bourg at four places up n
Monday noon. American up.
prnrccl to bo holding flunks
of coiinter.offen.ilvo which
may be German nlliitil nt.
tempi lo crack western front.
V. 8. 3rd irmyt I'lenml all
bill east fringe of Dillengeiij
made gains In Saarliiiitcrii
arrn.
U. S. 7th rmyi Threw back
t w 0 llroiig eouiiterthrusU
northwest of Wlssombourg.
Fremcli III irmyi Captured
Ammerschwlhr, four miles
northwcbt of Colinar and
turned back alr-supporled
counterattack norlh of Am-mertchwihr.
OUT FOR 11
mi
(f'onthi
''"111 1W e, .
c,,lri. n. 11 ';. Al'f ot to.
v"1 f""'"i iw Toki
and till y do"
,0 Vt.. 1 w l'hn-'Phiirti. ' "
,., (,,, .... .. ; .. ,
piane.i. ""pant.
Bombed Iila
nn I Jill, v ii., 1 ,1.. .
and numberi , ,T,' ?P"
me cniiM. N 1 u 1, . 0i
'"""I ' he' 0 ft
I heir tracer, ,,,," '"""lb
direction. i.. 'rom .1
' tilts tlefeHM. ,. "T.J" clou
, Hit! previtiin nliihi ,;;''
tier the . onmiiind ", ,l,B; S
honilifil N..Kyil"'l,':.
' llt.Ml. ...... I. .1 . -"UUID I
hul twlcf-hit
(Continued from Pago One)
the
Shlinotio.sl
Wont Of
touching off n
r.t . 'Jl
with blue Ktee,, , 721
111 11)1)0 feel. "
Passenger Train
Delayed For Hour,
PORTLAND. Ore. Dec in J
The Spokane. Poril.a: ? '.1
att ! Nn ." ft.
Spokitue WT.SSZ,'
hours io,y ,v dfritiZ ,
''' II'i' V,i lev, Wiih'T
chief dinwicher dlitoSr h
n.e.r ,,;?'!!:i5nf..5cu""i .i
"'"la line ,
, in. lodiy, th,
cleared nt 4 111 u
iMHItcllrr ,;,,. -,c , ,'';
11 V ';rK""fl 2:11 p- if
son and White Siilmoo.'
British soldier to defend
King s prerogative."
Replying to vitriolic criti
cisms In which ono Inborlto
shouted "There may be civil war
In Britain" Eden laid Britain's
only error In Greece win in not
taklns the troop of her allies
into that country along with her
own.
No Quaillon
lie said there was no fines-1 RrftfL. 1,
Hon of Britain' armed inlerven. BrorhCrS MCCt After
inrotGaiS'"wl,1,oul co""u 24 Years' Separation
The government would "wel
come quarterly meeting be
tween Hie foreign lecrclurlrs of
tho great powers as they ucd lo
havo before lo deal with umc
of these mailer," Kdcn sold.
"The prime minister and I havo
old over and over again thai
Ihcy would gq anywhere."
He denied impllcatloni that
British policy wai dictated by
spheres of influence, and said
Britain was "seeking nothing for
ourselves In Greece neither
strategic advantage, nor eco
nomic advantage or any other
advantage of that kind at all."
If it'i a "froien" arllclo vou
need, advertise for a uied one
In the classified. .
COTTAGE CinOVF., Dec iV
frP) For M-vernl monlhi Chii!il
i.wirri nun sola tawlint 1
Oral George C'lnrk, knowl'
hlin only a "Mr, Clark."
At a lodBc Initiation alter
cd by both men. the men Imr
they were brother who hidii
ureti each other (or 24 yein
Their family wits broken up is1
separated in Michigan.
Like to boss
railroad cars
around?
Really make 'cm move and put
em where vou wnni . a...i
have a switch engine to do the
shoving for you? And work with
a good engine crew . . . and
left thai U'nr frnil.l - J
VITAL STATISTICS I',?0." train, prurlng I J? win.
.......v., ,11,, ii your joo ir you
want It: Switchman wild South
ern Pacific at about $220 base
pay. (Overtime can make it a
lot more). No experience lo
start. We train you in a few
day, pay you an allowance
while training . , . make you a
full-fledged railroader. Ifs a
very Important job, this. We've
got lo keep those war trains
humping. And we've got a
whalo of a job ahead of us
which means, lots of work
ahead for you. Many other Jobs
open.
See or write Trainmaitcr,
S. P. Station, Klamath Talli.
or your niareit 8. P. Agent.
Knizo -norn at Kl.m.lh Valley hm.
nltal. Klnmalh rail., Ore.. December
in. IU14. lo l.t. anil Mr. I'nllHn Krlto.
l.jkcliorn drive, a lrt. Welsnii T
pound. 10 ounce.
WIC'KKllMIAM-norn at Kl.m.lh Vel.
Iry ho.nital. Klemath relu. Ore.. Ue.
rember 10. 1DH. lo Mr. ami Mr.. Gerald
Wlrkrrhani, 1.111 Avalon. a boy. Wlnl:
7 pound. 14 uuncea.
FUNERALS
, jonci imrsK.tr
funeral lerv.cei for the lata John
rtru.aey, who pai.ed away In this rlly
lue.day. Derember 111. 11)44 fnllowlnl
a brlnf nine., will lie held In Itie Chanel
of the rrl Whltlock runeral home,
i-ina at noun, iniuimv, u.remher 31,
UM1 at 4 n m. with tho llev. Daniel
11, Aiidei.on of the Klamath Temple
of thl. rlly offlrlatlnl. rotnmllnient
rervlce. and Interment Mnkvllla cem
etery, friend, era invited.
CDWIN "ivLZO I.UCAI
Kiineral aervlce. for the late Edwin
Alio l.ucaa. who na.ned away In haiem,
OrcBon on flundev, December 17. 11144
will be held In lha rh.pel nf tha tarl
WhlHock runeral home. Pine at aixlh.
Thlirillav, lleremher 21. ll44 at 2:30
p. ni. with the rtcv. Cecil C. Jlrnwn of
the Klrit Bapll.t ehurrh nf thle eltv
nfflclatln. Commllment lervlcai anif
Interment family plot In l.lnkvllla cam
ctery, rrlcnda are Invited.
If It's a "frozen" article you
need, advertise for a uied one
In the classified.
low Mood Art One
Related To Constipation
Yrl, ilrprruri! elates Ami rHulipt'
tioaoflriicotiiBctiirrlTakeiNilutl
Itrmrily (Mt Tibleu), Cooltiu
rhrmicalf.no mineral, no ohisdoV
di0rrfnt. Pmfly trrrnHe-i
combination of 10vrf(blltn4
rnii foimuUlrtl over 40 vetm
Dncontcil or cniidy coIm, IhoiH
lion Ii eit jwtnlnblo, tliorouib, yrt
gcniln, n millioni of Mt
prnvrd. Crt s '4 Cominnf B
Cstitiun: l ako only is direct!
HI n-HIOHfi TO00rVJllWM
ALL-VEGETABLE lAXATm
m
mmml
ONE WORD SUGGESTION'
FOR ACID INDIQESTIvN
To Mew Mothers
m..;.L I
w-. r" n
fit fury Uthing of Em
iW, Marfoif. rVe UtrW f 1
Givi your bob quicft tVmf
from
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CT0 From Montoomery Vard on North 8th
r I IWBB
For Hi Christmas
A Sport Shirt
Ltrsi leleetlon in
bluei, t a n i, browns,
grayi and marooni.
$2.50 to $7.50
DREW'S MANSTORE
703 Main St.
Educational
Insurance
?
AT
YOUH
jjo-Ut Jl. jfouli&H
KKI'IIKSr.NtlNH Tlir.
EQUITABLE LIFE
Asiuranc Society '
114 N. lib rkene '"J
ANNOUNCING
OPENING OF
Cold Storage Locker Plant
Individual Locker Are Now Ready
Thoi who have leckart reiervad
pleaie call for numberi
BRATTON PACKING CO.
P. O. Box 1208 ' Keno Road Phone S3S!
Apostasy Is Possible
A faithful child of God, on who bilicvii In Him. J"j
accept Him, and hai been pnrdonod, cm cm" b
boli.v.r. Wa are made partaken of Chrlit eendlllon "Y
H.b. 3iM, "If W( hold fait the boBlinlna of our
firm unto the end." 2 Pet. MO, "Wtioreion, I"" ., .,,
the more dilieence to make your calling and eleel on i
for If ye do thei thlngi, y ihnll nover 'urob'' ,
pro.id.nti are elected in Novombor but limy d no1 " j .
preildant In fact till Janurry 111, the inouauriiion i
It I poulbl for ueh mtn to vlolal. th 01 ,
eounlry In luch a way and never become pridn.
Chrlitlan It elected here, but he hai lo llv In "h
Ood'i lawi and heaven' comlltulion until deilh tMn
election back yonder, when he obeyed the gopj i .
will be lure when he I Inauguraled Into tin 9'f cn '
of our Father' home where all lean will b wlpd ,w '
"8AVE YOURSELVES FROM THIS CROOKED 01
ERATION." Acl 2:40.
M. LLOYD SMITH. Ev.ng'""'
CHURCH OF CHRIST
2205 Wanlland At.
Klamath Fall, Orogon.