HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PACE EIGHT SHASTA VIEW DISTRICT MAY RE-ORGANIZE Flashes of Life Twenty-six landowners in the Shasta View irrigation district met Thursday at Malin to con sidcr the possibility of reorgan izing the district and to nego tiate an amendatory contract with the federal bureau of recla mation. All landowners present were unanimous in their opinion that the district should be reorgan ized and an amendatory contract negotiated with the government. A committee was appointed to represent tiie landowners in the area, including Frank Paygr, Sr., J. E. Whitlatch and Kenneth Wilson. An attorney will bo en gaged to ad.vise the committee on reorganization of tin district and the committee also pl&ns to con tact the Oregon secretary of state at Salem for further infor mation on the problem. . SEW PINE CREEK The com munity was shocked to learn that L'orvin Vinyard was found lying dead in the office of his blacksmith shop last Saturday. The body was found by Roy Partin when he was making a business call. Partin notitied attendants at the local telephone office at Faris store of the trag edy. Vinyard apparently died of a heart attack while on his feet, holding a wrench in his right hand and his pipe in his left. He wore his glasses, and never moved after falling for ward on his face. Some think the five weeks' sickness he had prior to his passing may have weakened his heart. At the age of 73 .he was still active and continued, to operate his blacksmith shop, which he had run for nearly half a cen tury. In conjunction with his blacksmithing he sold farm equipment and bought grain for the Farmer's Exchange in AHu ras, and was well known throughout this valley, Warner valley, Paisley and the greater part of Lake and Modoc counties. Being one of the oldest resi dents of this community, having served faithfully until the last, Corvin Vinyard will be remem bered by New Pine Creekers as a man of strong convictions, dutiful, and always ready to lend a helping hand for civic better ment or to one in trouble. He is survived by his wife, Hazel; two brothers. Virgil and Will E., the former of Yuba City, Calif., and the latter of Red Bluff, Calif.; five sisters, Mrs. Mary Miller of New Pine Creek Mrs. AUie Bactell of Lake City, Mrs. Sadie Woodcock of Rose burg, and Misses Ettie and Net tie Vinyard, the twins of the family, who are retired school teachers living in Los Angeles, and one daughter, Olive, of Santa Rosa, Calif. By The Associated Press COOLED OFF AUBURN. N. Y.. Dec. 22 (.-V) "How to keep warm in a snow bank" was to be demonstrated lit a cumii trainini? mill's of the Cayuga county Boy Scout coun cil. The course was postponed because of a snowstorm. STRAW IN THE WINDJ ATLANTA, Dec. 22 t.-P This city saw its first "no help want ed'' sign in a blue moon today. It hung outside the office of Postmaster Lon Livingston. He says he's already hired all the extra Christmas help he needs. LIVELY CONFUSION OKLAHOMA CITY, Dec. 22 (,!) Mrs, C. W. Lively told po lice her 22-month-old son and the family car had been kid- ,t,l,lln e),A wns shrmnim!. The police radio warned otticers to De on tne iookoui. An hour later, Mr. and Mrs. t fnonri th hnhv in the car, parked in the right alley not me wrong one whc sm had first looked. jjuuk. f 1' - - , be cancelled, two patrolmen drove up, ordered the Livelys to stop. Lively was so excited he couldn't comply immediately. Patrolman had their revolvers drawn just as the patrol car radio blared forth the cancel lation. - - RUGGED DRUGGIST miroin Pnln Dpr. 22 IJP) The complaining witness cx- i . .i Hni;u n,anilrnti piainca iu iuw un.; tv. ...v,nr hn aclrpri for chance for a half-dollar to get stamps from a machine in a drug store, the druggist iwisiea n min, 1 1 i,im not thn rtnnr and uuaitcu ,,iit vmi. ..... , --- bnnxiinl him to . the sidewalk, breaking his watch. Tne oruggisi got a mi and lectured on business methods. NICKED BY ST. NICK rnrAWA Til T"lw 92 tiP W 1 1 . ., v ' TeAr.U Armetrnnif filling Stft jwkh" - n p r , tion operator was busy in the Christmas rusn ana aiuu i iik time to scrutinize a check given him hv a customer in payment for gasoline. jie goi a ciittiite oiw.' carefully later, however, when IhA nhoi-tr UrflC rptumed bV 8 bank, marked "no account." The payee? . sania v,iaus. Truck Load Limit Will Continue SALEM. Dec. 22 VP) The state highway commission does not intend to change its present enforcement of truck load limits until a better system is present ed, a delegation of Lane county logging operators was told by the commission's chairman, T. H. Banfield. Banfield said the commission would consider any nlan to re lieve log truckers some 200 of whom staged a walkout in Lane county Wednesday but that it must protect the state's bridges and roads. 100 HURT ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Dec. 22 (P One hundred passen gers on a southbound Alaska railroad train taking University of Alaska students home for the holidays were cut and bruised and three received back injur ies in a derailment north of Nenana yesterday. All cars were derailed and two went into a ditch. o Refrigeration Equipment Co. Karl Urquhart 611 Klamath Phons 6455 For Commercial Refrigeration SALES and SERVICE Wanted: Men who'd like to work with trains If you'd like to help run trains . . . to worK witn tne conduc tor and engineer ... if you'd like to go places and do a job which is really important, you'll want to look into this job of Brakeman with Southern Pa cific. We train you for it in a few days (and you're paid while training). The pay, by any stan dard, is very good. It's an inter esting )od . . . with men you 11 like. And with a comrjanv whose biggest job begins when Germany is finished moving the war load against Japan. If you're steady, reliable ... a man who looks ahead and who wants a real connection with a big, progressive outfit, this should be your job. Fine pen sion plan. R.R. pass privileges. Medical services. Many extras. Many other jobs open. Sea or writ Trainmaster, S. P. Station, Klamath Falls, or your nearest S. P. Agent IMLORY'S V' MARKET Merrill-Lakeview Jet. U Telephone 4620 CHRISTMAS and We Will Remain Open Sunday of Coin Cupful . s-v 1 ; a : '. I , hi t A $ r, tkti'.nii'niiiiiiiiiii Doris Peterson, Goose Girl of infield, proudly exhibits gorgeous trophy which went to owner of winner of flrst running of $75,000 mile-and-a-quartcr Hollywood Pork Gold Cup in four years. Big southern California number closed most spectacular all-out War Funds mcctiiiB since Pearl Harbor. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued from Page One) meeting almost NO ground re sistance. Our Mindoro air fields, put into shape in FIVE DAYS, are already functioning. Our B-29s steadily bomb Japan. Pictures disclose that in a little more than a week more than 670,000 square feet of the roofage of one of the big Mitsu bishi aircraft plants at Nagoya have been burned off. That won't stop the war, but it doesn't help Jap production. CHUNGKING says today that large numbers of Jap labor ers have been conscripted to MOVE WAR INDUSTRIES from the Jap islands to Manchuria. (Our B-29s have been bombing Manchuria also.) The Jap diet (stooge parliament) is meeting in places where its members can RUN QUICKLY to air raid shel ters. The Pacific war is going well. BRITISH PLAN DRAFT LONDON, Dec. 22 A) The British will draft 250.000 more men for the army in the "com ing months" than -was previous ly planned, Prime - Minister Churchill's office announced tonight. Paper Resumes European Edition PARIS, Dec. 22 WT The European edition of the New York Herald-Tribune resumed publication today. Founded, in 1887 by James Gordon Bennett Jr., then pro prietor of the old New York Her ald, tne paper was pumisnco throughout the last world war but suspended in this war just before the Germans marched into Paris. It came out today as a four page edition. Some people could reduce by living within their means. The Uoad to Mterlin By Th AtiocUUd Prtu 1 Western front; 301 miles from mMi' Duron). 2 Russian front: 304 miles (from north of Warsaw). 3 Huniitirinn front: 400 miles (from north of Szob). 4 Italian front: S30 miles (from Mozzano). T. B. Test Trailer Arrives In State PORTLAND. Dec. 22 (fll A luberculosls-test trailer, which will travel through Oregon next year giving free X-niy chest examinations, was delivered to day to tho Oregon Tuberculosis association, The $13,000 vehicle, bought with Christmas soul funds, in cludes u dressing room, X-ray room, and dark room mid has equipment to take 120 X-rays an hour. Swiss See Last Nazi Gamble BERN. Dec. 21 (Delayed) (V) Swiss press comment on the German offensive in the west reflects a belief hero that the drive is n last desperate gamble by the Germans to stave off impending defeat. A lead editorial In Die Welt mochc of Zurich describes the offensive as "a retiirclliiK move ment" that can only delay but not alter tho outcome of the war. DeLap Head of Merrill Club MERRILL Riley DcLnn. man ager of the Merrill branch, First i National Bank of Portland, has S been elected president of the! Merrill Service club. Co-officers j are Joseph S. Bally, vice prrsi-: dent, manager of tho Merrill office of the Shell Oil company. 1 and Attorney Thomas W. Chat burn who was re-elected. ! Dr. D. J. Ferguson brought the Christmas message to the club this week. ! T A was verdict of "unavoidable" returned by tho coroner's Jury following an Inquest held Friday morning In i-oiiiu'clion with the arc Mental death of J. C. Fitzgerald. He died Tuesday of injuries sustained w li e n struck by a ear operated by Kit sign G. U. Law. Ensign Law testified 111 Ills own behalf and his story was substantiated by Ensluu Richard J. l'etlpus, passenger In the Law car at the lituu of tho accident. The men wero en route tu tho station fur their regular (lying hours. Until aro duo to go over seas soon, it Is understood. Udell Olson, city police offi cer, told the Jury that Ensign Law's car was In good condition ut the time and that tho ma chine came tu a full stop with in 10 feet, According to Ensign Law, Mr. Fitzgerald stepped from the rear of u parked cur three feet from thu Law ma chine. Members of the Jury wero Gene Larson, Allen Sloan, John Marliii, Frank Lowell, II. 11. Ashley ami A. 11. Collins. Dr. George II. Adlcr, Klamath county coroner, conducted tho inquest. Bolivia -is the principal world producer of antimony ore. Service Men and Women Home on Leave S 2c Chariot E. Smith fnn Sun Diego, Hero until Decem ber 2.1. 82 c Wlllrod Erlckion from Sun Diego, Calif. Hero until De cember 23. BJ.'c Alfrod V. LaBarg from Washington, D, C. Hero until December 2(1, Tho above service peoplo ro entitled to freo passes to tho l ror mi .nrimmai HICKOK BELTS and ' SUSPENDERS 51 to S3 ervleu ul I. " ,u 'f (,,, courtesy u( uuydTt diK"J healie, ami , yS '("'"li ofj lleiuld in... an. I M .... CUM i .1 "I no -i ,:;"'f.u vn i - Separately or In Beta DREW'S MANSTORE 733 Main W r1 T71 R K TRULOVE'S Chicken Center . , '""""POM J u S. ARMY HOSPITALS NEED 11 Womon From' KLAMATH FALL? to lorvn . MEDICAL TECHNIC J vou o n..Mll, ' con b trained , ou or, quollllMlWlWlN onioned .o on Almy ImmeJiolcly ofter bo.k irain Aik ol ycur noortuu.j. RECRUMINGSUTION. tift HUASEI OMOy, ATTENTION a E C -2!i SUFFERERS Have you used soothing, mtdi catcd Kcstnol to relieve the itching and burning? For 45 years a comfort to many such sufferers it should help you. Quick and gentle in action, with long-lasting effect. Try it! ' w v i p m wm . "jliiL'lllU JrvggitH Received TODAY ! I ! For Last-Minute Shoppori Luxurious PAJAMAS In Beautiful Colors and Patterns $10 and $12.50 (Quantity Limited) STORE FOR MEN Cor, Sth and Main Yi Christmas Eve Sunday livening Dec. 24th Music by PAPPY GORDON and his I Oregon Hillbillies uancing y in z "Eddie Eiftroim's Steak House 126 South 7th St Grilled Steaks Merchants' Lunch, 60c Hnmburgors Barb.qua ChUl OPEN 24 HOURS 919 E. Main Phone 4282 DUCKS GEESE HENS FRYERS TURKEYS n. Mory E. Horrlu nrl S 'Sgt. Ey.lyn DilUj,, Special Medical Deoh WAC Recruiter! Will Interview Eligible Women Fiom KLAMATH FAILS WAC Recruiting utrice Pott Olllc Bid), Dec. 22-23 Only Serve as a Medical Technic, in tho WAC This ad ipomortd byi BALSIGER MOTOR CO. Q. 5 a Qi f SEE MARJ0RIE REYNOLDS IN PARAMOUNT'S "MINISTRY OF FEAR" Here's a challenge from Marjoric Reynolds! Got a moment for fun and a )cn to know more about coffee? Spend that moment with M.ujorie Reynolds and M. J. B.'s popul:ir Coffee Quii! Just run through (he questions and choose answers that seem right to you. Then check your score ng.iimt Marjories (may the best coflce-(uuzcr win!). Cor rcct answers are printed below. Whan London's first coffee houio wa opened, In 1652, coffee told for ; : : 50c per lb: $30 per lb. $5 per lb. , Whq said: Coffee should bo "black as the devil, hot as hall, pure as an angol, gontlo as love"? Q Talleyrand Q George Washingloh I Shakotpoare The various coffees in M.J. B.'s famous blend are blended before roasting to : :i 1 Increase coffoe volumo 1 make packing easier I mix essence-oils undor heat Long before coffee was a drink It was used by African tribesmen as , ll a building material a solid fooo r a substltule for salt and popper JfWL . ;V:' 1 yd fjt , t v " - rr i ' i J J n K"'-- ft.. i '. : x w '''v, K 1 f 3 1 t -iV.t',T.,t 1 i u.U. M...A I ; oM aiieillom toirttlh1"1""!. . . Cottce Quit. Correct smneri, In nnler, are! fW P" mix tntntt-o'ili umltr htuli lolld ooA.) Mlt!'"' Tull, mcllowrlch collcc flavor brought to you peak frcshncss-thm1, M.J.B.I We guarn ) can't buy finer cofTcc. To make sure you enjoy the goodness of this superb blend wc every single pound In gloss, using the l8hMl urn of any coffee. Try M. j. M Make your erf with the same care you've used in the Fst"' you'll know tycw uMfcYKafe Of tact cup Double your money back if you don't agree It's the finest coffoe you Idttcdt