PACE FOUR MALCOLM EPLEY ManAKina Editor riMNK JENKINS Editor oJtSd. Klin.itl.. Llkt. Modoc. 8Uklou counts A temporary combination ol th. Svenln Herald and th. Kl.mTuY New Published v.r afternoon MC.pl Sund.y mt Y.n.d. and Pin. etrwte. Klamath r.U.. Oreion. by 11. B.8 PublUhln, Co. .nd th. New. PubU.Mm Company. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: monln lc By mill y.ir $7.50 By mill .6 months $3.25 ear J60O eir l Member. Associsted Preae Member Audit Bureau Circulation in -nrri J EPLEY Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY A J EMBERS of Klamath's legislative dclcga KA iim, on (his weekend to Salem for the Monday opening of the 1045 session. Anticipated j, nccnmlnlv marked dv H many important ana i-uuuu- versial issues, including such matters as tax legislation, bus and truck law changes, unem ployment compensation ques tions, a bigger cut in state, Imoney for schools, and a lot of others. I ! The three members of the 'Klamath delegation are prop !erly classified as "interesting itieoDle." Two of them, Senator ! Marshall Cornett and Repre sentative Henry Semon, are veterans in Salem's I legislative halls, while the third, Rose M. Poole, lis a freshman representative and the first J woman ever sent to the legislature from this i district. ' You'll be hearing quite a bit about these ,'people in the next 60 days, and a little per. 'sonal information about them seems to be in t order today. i 'Marshall Cornett SENATOR CORNETT is a native of Kentucky, and was raised in that state. When he icawio to Oregon he located at Astoria, and J later went to Alaska as superintendent of a t cannery. , He came to Klamath Falls in 1928, 'working briefly as an employe of the Southern Pacific company and then going into the oil business. He was long engaged in oil distribu l tion here, and is still owner of a number of i service stations. He also was head of an auto i mobile dealership firm here for a number of i years. His business and property interests now J include part ownership of a radio broadcasting firm operating stations in northeastern Oregon. J Big, good-looking, and successful, Cornett quickly won friends and prestige when he went J to the senate four years ago. His committee i appointments In the 1942 session included chair- manship of the roads and highways committee, i vice-chairmanship of forestry and forest pro J ducts, and membership on a number of others including industries and irrigation. He is a supporter of Senator Howard Belton, almost i cortain- to be named president of the 1945 senate, and undoubtedly will receive similarly i important committee appointments this year. J Cornett represents not only Klamath county, it but Deschutes Crook, Jefferson and iake coun Jties, all in the 17th district. He believes, with i other fair-minded people, that the 17th district should be divided, giving central Oregon a senator and Klamath, or Klamath and Lake to J gether, a senator. . Although there are serious .obstacles to this, division because of its effect on other districts, the justice of the plan will I eventually bring it about. , t . . . ; Henry Semon REPRESENTATIVE SEMON Is one of the oldest members,' in point of service, in the i lower house. He ran first in 1932 as an indc j pendent, and since has been regularly re-elected i as a conservative democrat. Possessing ex- ceptional native intelligence, business judgment, , and a. sense of public responsibility, Semon j stands high . in . legislative and other state , circles. ' , I After knocking about in the southwest as j carpenter and farm worker, Semon came to r Klamath county in 1910, attracted by reports of J what agriculture here would do under the then i new irrigation development. His first farm was in the Stukel mountain area, partially dry, i and he had some years of tough sledding before he moved to his present Henley home and , made it one of the most successful farms of j the valley. He first grew potatoes on the old , place in 1911, and has been in the f-r-tfront i as a potato grower. i Semon has held many important committee j jobs in the legislature, and for a number of , terms has served as either chairman or vice i chairman of the highly important ways and J means committee. He undoubtedly will hold i one post or the other in the 1945 session, i - . ; Rose Poole A PLEASING personality, personal attractive ness and business ability will help Klam- ' ath's neophyte legislator, Rose Poole, to get i along famously at Salem. She necessarily will i have to feel her way at the start, but she will , have good advice and it won't take her long to i learn the legislative ropes. . J Mrs. Poole has spent 34 years in Klamath t county. She once homestcaded on the west side of Upper Klamath lake, worked for nine i years as office manager of the Klamath De- J velopment company when it was in its hey-day of property development here, and since 1017 ; has been identified with the theatre business , here. She and her husband, the late Harry Poole, opened their first operation in the old , Liberty theatre (now the Vox) in 1917, and ! owned and operated numerous theatre enter prises hero and at Chiloquln. They built the Pelican, making it one of the finest small-city theatres in the west. The Klamnlh feminine legislator has been assigned to seat 13 in the house. She likes that, because she regards 13 as her lucky number, and the seat is next to that of Representative Semon, her colleague and good friend. She is the first republican to represent Klamath county in the lower house since 1934. (The last republican prior to her election was the late Ralph Horan.) Mrs. Poole and Henry Semon represent the 32nd district, which is Klamath county alone. News Behind the News By PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, Jan. 5 The thinking Mr. Byrnes, assistant president, came out straight for honest equal treatment of "The Avcrys and Pclrillos alike" in the public Inter est. , Advocacy of equal justice for unions as well as managements, started an immediate contro versy within the administration. Mr. Byrnes had said one way to accomplish like Justice was through congressional enactment of a law opening the courts to both parties. At once War Laoor ooara uavis twno mo Pctrillos get away with defiance of his board but got the troops in upon the Averles) said such a law would tie enforcement up in the courts and hinder his purpose of adjusting labor disputes. Thus the old political game of rag-ma-tag pro ceeds into a new phase. At the time Petrillo was defying WLB, and maintaining his victorious strike against its order, Mr. Roosevelt claimed there was no law to make Petrillo obey. Thus the public must pay a few cents tribute on every record it buys forever to Mr. Petrillo, for no service what ever in its interest. B Law Existed UT there was a law which would have brought him to terms this very war labor board act. True enough, congress did not in tend the act should be used to , "seize" labor unions as Montgomery Ward has been seized. Yet the administration stretched the intent of congress to a rather far-fetched interpretation to get the army into Montgomery Ward. Congress said the seizure power should not be used ex cept in "a war industry." The retail stores of Montgomery Ward would hardly seem to be war industries. The public knows what kind of goods it buys from those mail order and department store houses garden implements, clothes, practically everything saleable, except war industry pro ducts. Yet Attorney General Biddle legalized the seizure by ruling the stores as war in dustries. Economic Stabilizer Vinson established ex actly the same government position on the Petrillo strike. He publicly denounced the musicians' walkout as impeding the war effort. Mr. Roosevelt thus could have seized a radio station by stretching the la wno further than in the Montgomery Ward case. If he had,- Petrillo and his unions would have been subject to penalties, fines and jail for not working. Army officers could have moved in upon Petrillo's office, demanded his books, issued orders to him to send his men back to work. It could operate his union or any other striking union in the same loose way Montgom ery Ward is being directed. What the government needs is not a law, but the desire to act, which has been absent so far. Outward Implications SOME outward signs imply Byrnes was merely allowed to speak his personal mind in ex pectation that the labor board would block him in congress or otherwise, and the matter shoved down to a plane of endless controversy without action. I do not think so. The government had got itself into such an unreasonable and dangerous labor situation, something will have to be done. Take the Monkey Ward case, as it should be called, because it has without doubt resembled from the beginning a drama in a monkey house more than adult human action. The real reason the government went in there this time was to give the workers a raise. That is the main physical change discernible in the initial action. The management, em ployes, and business were left (while conform ing) substantially the same as before, with the one main difference the workers got a raise. But the government's excuse for moving was that a strike there was impeding the war el fort, or threatening to. Yet it did not move against strikers. It seized . the management. The workers cheered when the government came in. Thus the government has got itself into a position where it must serve the unions, more than the public. If Monkey Ward had cheated the public on prices, it would be taken to court. But if it "cheats" the union, (not saying it did) the government seizes it. . . Have Most Power THE unions thus have more power than either the government or the public. They cannot lose. If the WLB decision goes against them, they can do what Petrillo did, hang on until the companies are forced to pay. If they win WLB, the army will enforce the decision. Even a labor government like this one will not long care to play second fiddle to union leaders. The unions are clearly getting out of its hand and power beyond its legal reach, with a wave of strikes expected by everyone as soon as V-E day. Therefore I look for Mr. Roosevelt, one way or another, to seek and get more power, or at least more of a legal excise from congress, to keep the unions in line his line. He is now a prisoner in theirs. Postpone Hospital j Treatment, Warns i Governor Snell ' PORTLAND, Jan. 5 (VP) , Oregon residents should post i pone hospital treatments and , operations that can wait, be J cause "our boys wounded in bat i tie cannot wait," Governor Earl I Snell said today. J He urged fullest attendance at 1 a conference of the state nurs j ing council for war service here tomorrow night, where methods Elastic Suspenders Button or Klip-mds OREGON WOOLEN STORE Main at 8th " " - " --n-ir,r.ivwM kwhhmju by which Oregon can meet the army's critical need for more nurses will be discussed. Civilians can help greatly by serving as nurses' aides and or derlies, releasing nurses for the front, Governor Snell said. Why Thousands of Doctors -j Have Prescribed Pertussin m .eS6!!1J!!w.ib! sooi hl!n "u. sands upon thousands of Doctors have prescribed it for eo many wars. Pertuwln acts at one, to nuSnmw fh I"LW- 88te ni effective for both old and young. Inexpensive! HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON . SIDE GLANCES rVldoy, Jonuary 3( . CO... tusy wr tuvKt. kc t. m. .to. u. s est, orr. V ...! lin In wrvrrv nhotll it cook OP llOllSeillllill. with all your experience on K. P. mid policing np the barracks !" Market Quotations NEW YOnK. Jan. 5 (AP Stocks gen erally developed further trreauliirity in lodny's market and. while assorted mil and Industrials did fairly well, many fender slipped into minus territory. Closing quotations: American Can 92-t Am Cor & Fdy .... - atl' Am Tel & Tel ...... 184', Anaconda .U) Calif Packing 28 Cat Tractor 51 ' Comomnwcalth St Sou ll.'Iti Curtls.wn got General Electric General Motors Gt Nor Ry pfd Illinois Central lut Harvester Kennecoti Lockheed ., Long-Bell "A" MontKomery Ward . Nash-Kelv N Y Central Northern Pacific Pac 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 V S Steel Warner Pictures .04'. .. 10' ... Mii ...104 - 42'a ... 20'. ... ... U 'a ... 21 , ...117 ... 0P ... 13! Potatoes CHICAGO, Jan. 3 'AP-VFA Potatoes arrivals 38: on track 137; total U. S. shipments 1005; old stocks, supplies light, for Idaho Russets, market ihgtttiy weak er; for utility grades firm at ceiling for U. S. No. 1; for other western stocks market firm at ceiling: for best quality northern stock market firm at ceiling; Idaho Russet Burbanks U. S. No. 1. $3.45-57; Colorado Red McClures U. S. No. 1. S3. 37; Michigan Green Mountain U. S. No. I. S3.25: Minnesota and North Dakota Bliss Triumphs and Cobblers commercial $2.90: Florida 50 b. sacks Bliss Triumphs U. S. No. 1, S5.16 per hundredweight. LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. Jan. 5 (AP-WFAi Cattle 25; steer and heifers absent, quoted fully steady; cows 25-50 cents higher past four days: for week's receipts 750: good to choice fed steers quoted SI5.50-lfi.00, few medium range cows $11.00-12.25, common S9.M-ll.uo. cullers $7.50-8.73. cannera S5.23-7.00; medium sausage hulls $10.00-10.30. Calves none, nominal; -choice vealeri quoted $14.00.1-1.50; for week receipts 30. Hogs 30, steady; good to choice 200 270 lb. barrows and gilts $15.73: odd good sows $14.00.14.20; for week's receipt I05!i; good clearance. Sheep none; choice full woolcd lambs f) noted Si 5.50 or above; good to choice full woolcd ewes $6.507.00. PORTLAND. Ore.. Jan, 5 AP-WFAl--Salahto and total cattle 15; calve 10: mostly a cleanup market but demand nrond; few sales steady: odd steers $13.00; heavy fed steers $10.23; few cut ter heifers today $7.00-8.00; canner rutter cows 5.00-7.00: good beef cows up to $12.00; common-medium bulls $8.00 B.OO: good heavy beef bull quotable to $11.00; good-choice vealert salable 313.50 14.30 or above. Salable hogs 100, total 300: market very active, fullv steady: good-''houp 170-270 lbs. $I3.7.r.: tW 2BO-2f0 lbn. $15 00; f;ood 400 lbs. $13.75: medium-good heav er weights down to $13.00; few good 02 lb. feeder pigs $14 25. Salable sneep none: market nominal: food-choice wooled lambs salable $13.75 4 23; top lata Thursday $14.23; good wea quotable up to $R.00. CHICAGO, Jan. 5 'AP-WFA Salable hogs 13.000; total 23.000; fairly active, steady to strong on barrows and gills, steady on xows, good and choice barrows and gills 100 lbs. and over $14.80.14.70: top $14.73; few good and choice 150-1WI lb. $1400-14 80; virtually all fat sows at $14.00 celling; rnmptete clearance, Salable cattle 3000; tola! flUOO: salable calves 700: total 700; good beef cows steady to 23 cents lower, bulk going on shipper account: hulk receipts comprise cows, mostly middle grade beef cows an-; Rubber Raincoats Jackets or Full-Length OREGON WOOLEN STORE 800 Main Friendly Helpfulness To Every Creed and Pun Ward's Klamath Funeral Home Marguerite M. Ward and Sons AMBULANCE SERVICE 925 High Phone 3334 1 ""' HEAR James Elliott Griggs Petty Officer Second Class United States Coast Guard FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY 7:30 P. M. Sunday, 11 A. M. Klamath Revival Center Mitchell Street at ShaiU Way ' KlaMtiath's jjto-' i;-":!'r;l!,' t'i!!i:!'ii::!,'!'Jl!:!!ii!ll!il!!!!li!l Hiiiil'i l liii m III, i ;! i ii i l W'Mli miii!aiigJliBl;3i From the Klamath Republican January 5. 1905 The Women's club Is going to establish a free reading room in Klamath f alls, according to Mrs W. S. Wordcn, president. Hon. John S. Shook, joint state representative, has left for tne legislature. TO ' nn.. rinlnh C Ci'ousc of As toria will bo tho speakor at the lnmimiuel Haplisi cnumi. and High, Sunday, January 7. at both the morning and evening services. Rev. Crouse l coming as a candidate for the pastorate of this church, and it is to do nopcu that a large number of members and friends will be present at both of the sorvlces. Rev. Crouss came to Oregon from Denver, Colo., where ho was a pastor for a number of years. Ho was ordained In Colo rado and waa In service for sev eral years there before coming to Oregon. Sunday afternoon, following the morning service of January 24, there will be a potluck din ner followed by a meeting to consider the calling of a pastor. All members are asked to be present with Dr. Starring speak er at that service. Klamath Church Directo k .1 i-h.l.l The Rev. James Millar of Port land, who is Hlvlnc a series of lectures In the Klamath Falls area, will be the guest preacher at the morning service at the first Methodist church on bun day at 11 a. ni., according to an announcement made by the Rev. Victor Phillips, minister of the cnurcn. Dr. Millar Is field renrcsenta' tlvc for the Oregon Council of Churches. He has served various churches as pastor, was for some years professor of Bible litera ture at tho College of Idaho, LMflwiMl, la., and has been ac tive in the field of religious edu cation throughout the western states. Dr. Millar Is a forceful speak er and the mitllic is rorHinliv in. vltcd to hear him at the t"lrst Methodist church on Sunday morning. , From the Evening Herald January S. 193S Frank Ward, 67, Klamath pioneer, died last night. Sale of the Maguire building, 8th and Main, to Larson Broth ers, contractors, was announced today by J. F. Maguire. Correspondent Says Men Will Return Fit PORTLAND, Jan, 5 P) Dr. Daniel A. Poling, war corres pondent for the Christian Sci ence Monitor and Time mag azine, predicted today that most fighting men would return physically and morally as fit as when they left. He warned, however, that the home front hasn't begun to equal the effort on the war fronts. cannert And cutters, the.e 2S-30 cent lower, cutter. S8.00 down: most good cows $13.0014.00; All other classes largely steady. Top yearllnf steers SI7.2S. Sev eral low S14.00-10.00: heifers very searce. fairly brnnd clearance stock cattle this week at $0.30-12.30 mosUy, choice fleshy feeders to $13.23. Salable sheep 5000: total 9000: esrly sales all classes steady but market not fully established on fat lambs; odd lots Rood and choice natives $13.00-13.23; medium kind $14.00 and common aorl outs $11.00-12.00; load lots good and choice fed woolcd western tnnibs held around 13.00; load Rood and choice fed yearling wethers $13.30. two year olds out at $11.30: odd Iota good and choice native ewes $7.33-7.30. WHEAT CHICACIO. Jnn. 3 (APt-Griln market were dull nnd price changes were small today. Moit of the futurei Hit wn about Heady. Wheit was off nearly cent at ona time but recovered when com mini on house buying developel. Corn started firm and was up half a cent at th openlnjr when commission houses were the best buy en. Sales of rye were mostly In small lota nnd the market was quiet, Oats rallied shortly before the dor when brokers with northwestern con nectlonn offered some support. At the finish wheat was ' to "e lower than yesterday's close. May si.tVi'i. Corn was unchanged. May I.I2'j. 0U were up '.i to 'Vc, Mav Telling The Editor Letters) printed here smasf net ee mere than loa werde In length, muet be writ' l.n legibly on ONI 1101 of the osper only, and muet be signed. Cefltrlbullefle lellowlng Iheee rule, are warmly eiel KLAMATH FALLS. Ore. (To tho Editor, answering "One of tho Vanishing American" of Bcatty, Oregon). Born in North America nearly 75 years ago of "paleface" parentage, 1 have never In my liftimc seem a more justified protest put In more tol erant language than yours pub lished in the Herald and News of December 28. Please accept the congratulations of, at least one white American upon your ability to stato your position in such a manner that can only bring credit to your tribe. "Red Man": Regardless of all the unjust intolerance heaped upon you by the white men who took your country away from you, you still nave a very ma terial superiority over us if you have sense of humor to apprc ciatc. it. You can actually laugh at the white man for taking this coun try away from you since ho has to scratch like the very devil to maKC a Dare living off it while, if you so dispose, you can live far better, and without effort on your part, on the Drocccds from the sale of the natural resources ot your reservation. JOHN P. SHEPPARD. SHOE OIL SHOE GREASE OREGON WOOLEN STORE Main at 8th Service Men's Chapel 325 MAIN ST. Services Every Night at 7:30 o'clock Enjoy the singing and special music . . . come down and meet some real friends. Servic SUNDAY-2 P. M. Hear Mr. E. C. Cramblitt Civilian Personnel Director at the Klamath Falls Naval Air Station Service Men's Chapel Sponsored by Klamath Fall Churches and Christian Business Men ah niemhers anil Mr mis are emend I..! and .-orillal ivllau" I" at ilunday morning aeivk-1 ke 10 a ni.l Blldb sl"di set mutt anil worship, II .11. .id in. downturn ...i. tune a in. ni.. I'uimmin i evening servi.-.. il in the KO Hall ovei li, 1 1.43 n-Mnik t.utialeil tlie liainuuw . '"'. ""!:.'. m , w,.,n sat i tee. IHIS a. l, , , glen Lutheran WM IHalt Vlelor A. rhuu flume eiil.l. Divine wniiiiij "!i I"' ; ........ .... Alters. L rr.'.;. ,ooi; io . ... BWinlni worship. U "J ffi. ..I mat i in To. ni , venitii rviitj T !T m Sllrt weth ' Mluwihlp. Wt4- ril rrefcUMM Uliitrh N lh luil I'.. v lvld F Bur rttll Jr.. nntor. 833 ri n. unuim MlVphuM fell Khi?i,U.S" Cn. ur.hln Hi U a. Ill flirt thlU(l KIV tfeavor roup el W p. m. K limit. KvrlTftl t'enltr Warren D Comb. ilor JlumUv uhool- to nv Hornmi night irvlc. T-w p m tflnMd hmi rridij' Choir prllc Tiurd. 6 p. m. Phone t t lac rati II Ml Klghlti end High Pu.uUv Mm: t J mm WekiU Mm'- . ... rtevi end fint rriily ("n. 3 to t m and from T JO to JO P-m. The talreiun Armr rminh end Ktuneth. Company mtel ing 10 e m. Mollneu mMling II m CvngtUtie meeting i ni rhuredey end Seturdey P m Orric-ri in ctirg Major nd Mre W.Rotwall. Klmiik Itjtbvra Crow and Crecnt H M. lupnei p. it or. rtMldmre IIM Ciweni. phone ftunrtiv irhool at 0 45 a nv Divine worlilp at II m tiler choir rahearial Wednesday at JT.5Q P- m. riril Pribrtrlo. Merrill Mnrnlng lervloe. U o clock. David J Ferguion. minuter. LaiMr-Ut? lUlnli The Church of Jenii ChrUI at Irallei Dav ftaints hold ihalf wrvira in tht i.ditor.um at the city library h and Klamath. Priaihoed maelinf fjimrta ment-ea el 10 5o Karrnmont mettlng at g ocltwh flunday avonlng E K nur rowa. branch preiidenl, phone ojJ or mi. ... rMliftm nillna flev William Ingannll. paatnr. IVI Wantland Sunday aelionl. 0 a ni. morning aervlf. U o'clorh HI p m.l vangellatlo avvlca. 1 ... Klamath Temnl ion? IMn Danlti ft Andanon. pevlor tiitwl .hnnl 0 43 a m Uonillig wor ahtp llam Ovarfcnmera arvU- n .V n m tail truxiiitm 3 n Ktatllo pro gram KFJt Saturday 0 P m Kvatt Hi tic aorvlce 143 D m.j Wedneadey night, prayer ma tin rint Rapilal N gth at Waihlngton Rev Cefll C Brown ntor ttMidenre. UT ridoradu Phona 14.18 rtible arhool. 1 45 a m Morning worahtp. II o clock Baptial training union, d 1 p. m Evening r vtce. 1:30 o'clock. Mid-week prayer. Wedneaday. 7.M p. m. Choir tahaartal. Wadneaday. an p. m- a Charcb ef Ike Fiavarene Garden and Mariut. Sunday arrtool 9:44 a tp . worahip. 11 a m depart mon'al meetlnca. 0 4ft; Cvangellaiic, 7 43 p. m.i mid-week prer. Welnday 7:4A p m Paitor. Berlrand T laleraun 03U Mkrtln phone 4070 a Aian)bl at Itev A Harold l'nlng. paalnr. 746 Oak. Sunday ichool. 0 45 a in . emion II a m.i Vnung peopl, 6 JO p. m Rvau ilUllo meeting. 7 30 p m. Tuaaday 7.00 p. m., prayer maetlng. Thureday 7 30 p. m.. preaching. a Unlen Cleipal Mlilfi Located at 231 Commercial Siitor Caroline M. Tlmma. atr. teUten-. 317 Klam in. Suniliv achuol. 10 a. tn . R reaching, 11 a. nt. Illble rim, 0 p, in. tra A. narnnet. teacher evening ervlce. 7:.W p. m . long. I'ra)er meet ing, Wcdneaday. 7;.t p. m. a Blhle napllal Wlard al Idella a corner. Keith P field, pailor. Worahip, II a. m. tllhle training arhool, Q 43 a m. evening ervlce. 1:43 p. m. Wedneday prayer aervtce, 7:44 p m. a I. Piel'i fplirepat Cberrh Rev Y C W i tie n bath, rector. Corner Jeff anon and Ith Sunday aervlcea. Holy communion. 00 a. ni. Cnurch rhool. D 43 a m. Viral Sunday of earn month Holy communin al 11.00 a m and atl ntHer Sundaya morning prayer and aermnn at 11 on a. m. Holy Day and (Uinta Day a, Holy Communion, looo a m. a a a Apeatelle Paltn 320 N Bin Sunday acnool. 1.10 a m Morning devotion. 11 a. m Rvangelliile aervlce. 7:43 p. m. Wednesday and frl day, I p, m. ( Commit ally Cotigref atlenal Oarden between Fait Main and Merlin Church ichool 0:43 a. ni., lervlce, II a. m.. Comradea of the Way. fl p. m.( community hall. Servicea every Sunday. I'lHHit TtT.1. Ulvlnt) vvniiiiti, il K .lay 4 it in. Chlldien'i S'A "y k-ltkl (IhHrtth ami e"lifs.t k.s t Hint and Waslilngtun SundajV p at viva II oVIook kunday ihf a m 'I'ealltinuilal maelinia K?, al K p m. ree ChrUiiait htS ing room locaiad gi on Hub, ' 1 ikurth ef rragfeialve P-ai, V n nine iiaaiiiti f lai of mealing iihail(Ti I; t M-im tu JJ.1 Main, Komti i . F- aervlr. p in , lai tuie Uy ka. X lean Krli Wedneadey. 7 p 1 H l.lliiety 0n for landitif 6f' H Paktor a lealdence too Milthafi N ttll All ire 4al(.itia It tafffc et rhri.t 2H- wanuan'i. iwiniatan, a.. I. umtrt. p.is rrnni, iiio drive, pnone jobs nittie aimj ernton and ioiiiniunlon. t Z fe noon. Kvenlng aarvica. 71, ' lrllea Klbla tlaaa. Thuriday i TV rrldav nibla itudy T jo p. m. X (Ji invltaitun lo all. 3 Ml l.aht rieibrlerlen rtev Hugh T MIUhelniAra Woraluu. 0 43 ft. m n.hle ictv a nt Cnrlailan Kndeavor. Mo . Cuine oul to any ol thee laivkai I Ikutrk ef Oag WOT Divltion. Itev, If M niif,. lair. nuri'n arnooi. iu i m . Ing aert-ka 11 a ni VLll. lja? praachlftg aervlie, T 45 p m. o rraa Malkediai i-J South Ninth ftav M Hughaa. paator. Sunday ivrtoei . a m. iiomar riunei, lupariaiaWi and YPMS at T P n. Cvanaalm at 7. 43 p m Thunday avanlni u prayer mitunf flral MeUedlil N loih and High ftev Vuiet nunuiar Andrew ton, Jr.. invi mualc Mr John O'Connof. Mintkter'i raaldanc. loot lligx v Worahip II m Sunday aehool, t 4ft a m. Malttodial Youth rallowahlp, eiq day, 7 pm. Hftl Cbrlattea pine al 9th. later Howard Hut em Bible acnool. a 4a a, nv uaJti dell au.erlnundenL Vlnrnlna wnnihlD 11 oVIork Evening aervu-e. 0 .10 o'clock enfc Christian Htnleavor meeting. f Cvangellaiie aervire, t p aawHih.tiav AgvetilUI Habluillt M-li'Kil aturdaa IJi at cnurcn. bjj norm win rati m Aldertnn apaaka at the II a m aji Trayer imiudi magnwou. i m tMMiaaal Haellal ttth and High. Rev J T Miim iodj ijiicoia rnone Mia (.gorwell director of muaie U rhnni a 43 a m aaoming mvmxi m m Yotina neonla. 0 30 p m la ervtre 7 SO p m. Midweek tai Wednesday 130 p. m. a a Altamaal Preaayieriaa) Junior hleh arhool S tlft tH matt Itev Hugh T Mllrhalmara ta tllhle arhool. 3 a m worwi m lunlor Crtriatlen rn)aat Sm Sigma rt eoeiaiy. a w m aih lha min4 Chareb Chrial j O Jorgenken. paatnr. taV n aih Service Sunday. II i Mn.Aini. wnraKin and 7 43 evttaw aerrvlrea Wednesday midweek ar al 7:43 p m Saturday mgni pnwi pralae at 7 43 CARD Of THANM Wa wlah fo extend our ainfert nation for lha acta nr im mK of avmpatnv ana vm i.uiiril (t..r.t iifforinaa for evt bereavement, lh laa f r hm 1 mat in r anutj Karl Dlkkln Mr, R. t. McM Mike Dlakln First Church of Chriit, Scientist A hr.nrb f The M.l.sr reenk rtr.l Vharrh r ( lirl.t. ar.sl4i nesl... Mass, teih ss Waskl.itM Service N.n4.r Hrli.el :fe .. las. Sender e.rvle. II a. sn. leel J.. t, "O.!" ff.e-n..d.T ...nln, s.r.lr. I t Xr.aini nmmm. Itl Msle IU MIS STmitT THE CHRISTIAN SCiM TEXTBOOK SCIENCE and HEALTH With Key to tht Scripts by Mary Baker Edfl moy ba read or purcM t tlia Christian Science Rtading Rooms 1023 MeJn 8t. MIRACLES THE NEW TESTAMENT SANCTIONS MEDICAL At In MetJ. f!l2 Chriit leys the sick need a physlclen. ( Col. 4:14 Luke Is celled I rhvilcl.n. In 2 Tim. 4:20 M left Trophumui at Miletus sick. Why didn't he heel It bodily curing wss a pert ot Ood's blesslngT In 1 t Ii23 Paul prescribes wine tor Indigestion. Modern hill" here no use for those Scriptures, which mske their doctrl" look suiplcious. H healers are right and they re lint" in meir work they should begin a campaign agalml " doctors at once, lor they art doing mort harm II"1 Infldols. Tht lact that tht Bible recommends a rim' to help nature and Christ recognised physicians, as we h'i nown, is enough to refute the false doctrine of the M1 healers, M. LLOYD SMITH, Evangelist CHURCH OF CHRIST 2205 Wantland Ays. Klamath Falls. Oregon.