Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 01, 1945, Image 4

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    rOUH HERALD AND NEWS
Thursday. Much 1, 1948
I RANK JENKLNS MALCOLM EPLEV
editor Managing Editor -
femDorary comblnaUon or the Evening Herald and the
riarnatli Ncn. Published every afternoon except Sunday
V Esolanade and Pin. elreeu. Klamath Falls. Oregon, by Ih.
lerald Publishing Co. and tb News Publishing Company.
SUBSCHIPTION BATES:
l -carrier montb 75c By mall 4 month! 3.23
Iv carrier sear 7 SO D.v mall year $8.00
iutaid. Klamath. Lako. Modoc. Siskiyou counUes ycar STOP
Member.
Associated Press
Member Audit
' Bureau Circulation
EPLET
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLEY
THE American Red Cross drive in Klamath
Falls started today with a kick-off break
fast for workers. Let us suggest here that local
people give promptly and gen
erously, to make the work of
Ihese public-spirited canvas
ters as easy as possible. Solici
tation is not exactly pleasant
work; those who are spared
ihould add to their contribu
tions in gratification that they
do not have to solicit.
We do not believe it is neces
sary to write at great length
here about the 'worthiness of
the Red Cross. Every reader
knows the story welt, every
reader knows there is a war on, and every
reader knows that the Red Cross needs more
now than ever before. .. .
Let's do our part NOW for the 'Red Cross,
wholeheartedly and with gratitude that we have
opportunity to give something to this grand
cause.
Police Public Relations
YESTERDAY, a lady acquaintance .of ours was
driving her car on Main street, in the
center of the business district, -.when a loud
bang reported a blow-out" at the -left rear.
She stopped. A police car "came' up im
mediately, and the oincer' advised the driver to
move on there's a law against double parking-
::-jrv- r .;' z
"I will if you will help mq with my flat
tire," she said. is
The officer's foot went down on the acceler
ator, and that was that. She was left to get
along as best she could, with her car obstructing
traffic.
Well, we called the acting chief of police,
Orville Hamilton, and offered the' gentle sug
gestion that policemen should-bfe helpful to
the public particularly -to women in distress.
In this case, we contended, the officer should
at least have helped the woman get her car
into a parking place off the street.
Chief Hamilton agreed with us, although he
pointed out that in this instance the officer may
have been justified because he was running
the only patrol car in operation at the time
and should not permit himself to be immobilized
for any length of time.
But Chief Hamilton, who is new on the job,
went on to say-that he intends to make help
fulness and courtesy to the public a major
principle in the operation of the police depart
ment here. He already has asked policemen to
give aid to citizens caught in traffic with flat
tires as an aftermath of yesterday's incident.
That sort of thing will do more than anything
else to create good public relations for-the Klam
ath Falls police department, which needs some
good public relations. We believe the chief
and his men are sincere in their plans to do
something about it.
Dairy
BONNEVILLE administration recently got out
. one of those picture maps of the northwest.
It was displayed to us proudly the other day
by a Bonneville agent.
We looked, of course, for the illustrations at
Klamath Falls, expecting a ' mill, a hunter, a
potato,- or something tynical of our area. But
to our surprise, the only picture there shows a
large dairy barn, so located that it stands be
side the spot on the map marking the town
of Dairy.
We are wondering If the artist knows any
thing about this area.
News Behind the News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, March 1 Argentina's ab
sence from the American family circle
at Mexico City came immediately following the
snub of Mr. Roosevelt implied by Gen. De
Gaulle's declination to meet him in Algiers.
These events after Livadla have bestirred an
effusion of news comment, both official and
private. Our relations with the stronger small
nations are being deplored, the tactics of our
state department criticized and the situation
commonly described as "a mess."
There have been comments dealing with Mr.
Roosevelt's personal spoofing of De Gaulle in
the past, and their rather apparent dislike for
each other or, in the case of Argentina,
criticism has conte from men like Mr. Sumner
Welles, who decry the Hull policy of standing
our ground against fascism there as elsewhere,
and who want to kiss the Latins and toss them
posies in the form of our money and economic
favors.
a a
Tried Kissing Game
WELL, we tried the kissing game on De
Gaulle, or rather Mr. Churchill did.
Churchill picked him off a' refugee raft and
backed him to the extent (I am informed al
though the figure has never been published) of
$30,000,000. Churchill also backed his grossly
mismanaged and wholly uninformed initial at
tack upon the Atlantic African coast.
When we liberated Paris with American and
British blood, De Gaulle's first speech was an
astonishing disclosure of his thoughts, paying
great tribute to the French and acting almost
as if he and his followers had freed France
with some help from the United States and
the British (mentioned in only one paragraph,
as I recall.)
With thousands of our dead lying in the soil
.of the lowlands and France, on the eve of the
Livadia conference, De Gaulle went off to
Moscow and made what seemed to amount to a
separate deal with Stalin, later publicly sulking
because he was not invited to Livadia.
. .
Works Against Us
NOW what would you do with a situation
like this? De Gaulle is playing a game of
working the Russians against us, before our
costly struggle for France is over. He is not
doing it slyly, but obnoxiously, combatively.
Whether Messrs. Roosevelt and Churchill
ruffled his sensitive feelings or not, the situa
tion is plainly too vital to our cause to let it
run into worse developments. My judgment is
no solution can be found until De Gaulle is out
of French leadership. -
We should have friends in France advocating
our cause at the top. . The Russians have. They
even have a communist newspaper in Paris.
But there is no Roosevelt or Churchill party
, or newspapers there or elsewhere in Europe.
If we are going to join in every European
''argument for all time to come, as the Livadia
agreement provides, we have stumbled at once
upon a, grave defect in our diplomatic system
which will be the ruination of our efforts.
We need advocates, local champions in France
and every one of these countries, if our cause
is not to be lost. The British are skilled, and
at least partly represented, in ; most European
nations outside of Russia.
Already De Gaulle has practically told us by
his actions he no longer considers us the world
leaders, and he has not treated us like a major
nation. If other nations follow that line, in
.truth we will, not be a world leader or a
. major influence.
If these are harsh words the time for them
is now, not later when our cause has failed
from these defects.
a
Argentine Tactics
C O also with Argentina. The Hull resistance
J : to that nation, which has been fascist in its
sympathies and actions until lately was designed,
I believe, in the confident expectation that when
Germany and Japan were defeated, the bad boy
of the Americas would have to be good. She
would then be compelled to come around. She
would have no other place to go.
These tactics, before Mexico City, were sup
posed to bring her into that gathering, and
indeed she came around considerably in threat
ening war on Germany a few days before the
meeting.
At the' root of Argentine diplomacy is the
fact that the British buy her goods; they have
bought the entire beef crop for years, and thus
they nave an economic hold on the nation,
which we do not have.
But we are not defenseless, we have great
strength elsewhere in Latin America. In the
end Argentina must come into this realm in
her own political self-interest.
This is the most critical period of American
diplomacy.- What we accomplish in the next
year or two will determine me course 01 tne
world, perhaps for generations. We can still
win the war ana lose the peace.
Posey-tossing - and money-giving cannot buy
the world In its current revolutionary state,
Those are the counsels of weakness. Criticism,
unless constructive, . cannot help. What we
need is will and skill. , '
ilijliilBPIili
m
om the files
IKUftF.'oitfNlO,
';;!illiij!H!E;'iilHII
iiiuiiiiiiiaPi ii iffl'l In
UUHJ
From the Klamath Herald
March 1, 1935.
Action by the state relief
authorities today nad prevented
complete stoppage of the Klam
ath county relief program. The
work program was at a .starid
still, however. -
Merrill American Legion post
has established an upland game
refuge immediately west of the
Merrill city limits.
From the Klamath Republican
March 2, 1905
Articles of incorporation have
been filed with the secretary of
ttate by the Klamath Falls Light
and Power company with a cap
ital of $4000. The incorporators
are Rufus S. Moore, Evan R.
Reams, Josie N. Baldwin and
Helen Gates.
f'.'A
9
UK
Tuousamla of men and women
skto xouna tbaf time-tested
oman Tablets brief Quick,
nappy renei to sleep-robbing
jruiiJioniB oi acta lOOlf eetlOO,
KBESineM. and utMMt
ach. Ta.to delielou., eaiy to
take no mlfln. nn tiAMI 1
ihC2S Iiava a onnit Hint.,'- ...
and wake up in the morning feeling
like a J 1. 000,000. Oet genuine
Stuart Tableta at your druggist
Only 25c, 60c, or SI .20 under male
ei'e nroili money-back guarantee.
Courthouse Records
MarrUra Licensee
KRATJS-WALTERS. Harry D. Kraus.
33. USMC. NaUva of Chicago. W. Real
dent of Klamath Falls, Ore. Laura Lee
Walters, 32. bookkeeper. Native of Cali
fornia. Resident of Klamath rails. Ore.
DAVIS-WILLARDING. Virgil M. Davis.
23. U. s. navy. Native of Howell coun
ty. Mo. Resident of Tulsa. Okla.
Thelma Juanlta WUlardinjt. IS. house
wife. Native of Merlin, Ore. Resident
of Medford, Ore.
SUTLIFF-FISHER. Stanley Olin Sut
llff Jr., 23, USMC. NaUva of New
York. Resident of Brooklyn, N. Y. Mary
Ann Fisher, 16, student. NaUve of
Illinois. Resident of Klamath Falls,
Ore.
. CRONQUIST-8TZWART. Robert H.
Cronquist, 24. laborer. Native of St.
Paul, Minn. Resident of St. Paul,
Minn. Elizabeth Ann Stewart, 22, in
spector. Native of Minnesota. Resident
of St Paul. Minn.
IVY-KNAPP. Raphael Paul Ivy, 21,
U. S. navy.- Native of Arkansas. Resi
dent -of Jonesboro, .Ark. Ruth Edith
Knapp, 24. office worker. NaUve of
minors. Resident of Chicago, 111.
Complaints Filed
James D. Van Dollen vs. Viola N. Van
Dellen. Suit for divorce. Charge, de
sertion. Plaintiff seeks custody of minor
child. Couple married - at Republic,
Wash., May 14. 1940. J. C. O'Neill, at.
torney for plainUff.
Frances Hult va. Jvar. J. Hult. Suit
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO FAIN NO HOSPITALIZATION
No Loss of Time
PermaoeDI ttesoltsl
DR. E. M. MARSHA
Cbtroprmetle PbyttcUn
4 No 7 lb - Eiqnire Tboalr Bldt
Phono 7M6
for divorce. Charge, cruel and Inhuman
treatment. Cmiole married In Klamath
Falls. Or., August 28, 1837. Plaintiff
seeks 97s .support money eacn monin
and custody of two minor children.
Merrymaa. and Napier attorneys for
puuniux.
Florence B. Frey v. Lloyd D. Fray
Suit for divorce. Charge, cruel and In
human treatment. Co a pie married at
Klamath Falls. Ore., March 6. 1931.
Plaintiff seeks custody of three , minor
children and support money of f 100
eacn monia. , w. uneui, attorney xor
Justice Court
Paul Kern Buck, operating automobile
wiuiuui vum rco ugau cine, 90.su.
Sidney Jay Hill, violation of basic
ruie. fine, aio.ou.
Joe Patrick McClane. operating motor
Verne. wiuiuui clearance lamps, t uie,
5.50.
James Frank Clark, hunttn in wild
animals without a license. Fine, 105
"-'" v o luipeuueu, ttu uays sus-
pended.
Joe Patrick McClane, operating auto
530 without one red IMit.- Fine,
Floyd He rue n Leslie, unlawfully hunt-
" w njno enimais protectee, oy low,
Fine. 100 and costs, 30 days suspended,
Allen Adding Machines
iPriden Calculator!
Royal Typewriter .
Desks Chairs - Files
For thot hard-to-get Items
PIONEER PRINTING
AND STATIONERY CO.
124 So. 9th Klamath Palis
EVENING CLASSES
Monday and Thursday
From 7:00 to 9:30 P. M,
Bookkeeping Typing Spelling
Shorthand (both Thomas Natural and Gregg)
Office Machines
KLAMATH BUSINESS COLLEGE
733 Pine St. Corner of 8th Phone 4760
SIDE GLANCES
posit ins cr as aroc., WCT T. M. .to. u. a pat. or. .3' .
"A ten-cent tip? Hm! His wire must be nlonfi will) him
this trip, and he's trying to crowd her in on his expense
account I"
Telling
The Editor
Lsttars pnnltd h.ra must not ba mora
than MS atords In length, muat ba writ
ten lalibly on ONI Biol at tha paper
only, and must be signed. Contributions
following thee, rulee, ara warmly w.h
USE OUR WATER
MAUN, Ore., (To the Editor)
Nov comes Fred D. Fletcher
with suggestions as to what we
should do to retain our water,
which arc partly good and part
ly bad.
His advice that we should Im
mediately get full, factual infor
mation as to what our resources
in irrigable land are, is good:
but his advice that we should
capitulate to California now, be
cause she is too big for us, that
we should use this factual infor
mation to negotiate with Califor
nia (or whoever) to let us keep a
part of our own water, is bad,
I think I can suggest a better
course.
First, (this is our defensive
strategy) I suggest that we gat
the factual information as Mr.
Fletcher suggests and have it
ready to use at any time, any
where, to oppose any change in
existing water laws, state or fed
eral. Mr. Fletcher is right in saying
the whole thing boils down to
who owns the water, the states
or the federal government, but
all existing laws and all court
decisions are in our favor, i. e.,
that the states own it. Congress
will not lightly or quickly over
turn the rule it itself established
70 years ago upon which all of
the present development of the
west has been made; and if an
attempt is made to get it to do so,
it will not be Oregon's four rep
resentatives against California's
25, nor Oregon's two senators
against California's two, it will
be all of the senators and repre
sentatives of the 10 other west
ern states against a part of Cali
fornia's representation. These
states have known for some time
that this issue must be faced and
are ready for it, with Colorado
in the lead.
I think if a showdown came,
California would find that she
had more to lose by overturning
this rule than she had to gain In
the small amount of water she
could get from the Klamath
How To Relieve
Bronchitis
Creomulslon relieves promptly be
cause It goes right to the seal of the
trouble to help loosen and expel
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
soothe and heal raw, tender, In
flamed bronchial mucous mem
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creomulslon with the un
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you are
to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
Market
Quotations
NXW YOnr. aiarcn ni , , "
mirk.! max a head elart. on March, to
day by rValsler n( new nuns tor nii r.
thin seven yaara with eleels anil Plvoljl
Industrial, again proviuma
"'iflollng quotation.!
American ju
Anarnnna . ...
Call! Parkins - 2
rt Tractor - - 0,:
?-,..,.nu..lll. A,
Curtis-Wright ,
General Kiocirio
General Mulnr.
at Nor ny ma
minnia fanlral ....
int Hervester
Kenneeou H
tang-Hell "A
Montgomery W
NjihKolv
N v central ..
Northern Pacific
lac aas g 11 ...
Packard Motor .
ii . u n
Itepuhllc Sleei ...
niciirieia
Sou
ird
Seffwey Htore.
a,-, Aoehorlr ,
H7,
M
Bl
...... .Kl
...... 33 1
Jls
...... M
Ill
a"'.
..... aau
. 37
33
... I"i
e.Ht
sienrlard nrands - JJ's
Sunshine Mining . !' :
Trans-Amerlca llf
union uu van, "tT,,i-
Union PacUlo "-'iJ '
II S Steel n
Werner Pictures '
Potatoes
SAN rrtANCISCO, March 1 (API-
Potatoes: a oroaen. a uhoivhh vmtm u
track: arrivals Idaho l! no .alee.
I.OS ANGELES. Marcn 1 !AP-wrA
Potatoes: a broken, in unbroken care on
frBk- arrlvalaCallfornla 1. Idaho 3.
Maine 1. Utah 3, one car by truck front
Idaho; no eaias.
river in Oregon. She can get
twice as much from the same
river by diverting it farther
down, within her own border.
And how about Chanter 250,
Oregon Laws, 1D23, which pro
hibits the storage in Oregon of
water to be used In another state
for either irrigation or power?
Was not our legislature within
its constitutional rights when it
enacted this law?
Altogether, any agency has a
long legal-political row to hoo
before it can get our wuter.
In the meantime, I suggest
that we. a united community,
start NOW on tho more positive
strategv.of putting our present
ly surplus wuter to WORK. Cer
tainly it will be easier to keep
water wo are using, or ready to
use, than to hold it in reserve
for some hypothetical future ex
pansion. How can wo do this? It Is not
hard. First, let the united com
munity, every agency In It, in
sist that the reclamation bureau
do the things necessary to bring
every acre of land in the Tulc
lake area into use as quickly as
possible, in family-sized farms in
private ownership. This will
take a lot of water. It could
have been done years ago had
this community not been either
apathetic or opposed.
Incidentally, In this, whenever
there is any difference of opin
ion as to whether any area of
land shall be used to raise a hu
man family or a duck family, let
the preference be given to the
human family.
. Second, let "the whole com
munity aid in the formation as
quickly as possible of the public
utility district that will bring
here the cheapest power In the
world so that we can start as
quickly as may be to bring our
thousands of acres of upland Into
profitable use through the appli
cation of water.
Let us be so situated when
the next outfit comes along and
asks us for the core of our apple
we can say "Sorry, there ain't
goin' to be no core."
A. M. THOMAS .
Trail ea atow.lg.wi na
lie far. ttn.OO! ootnmoh
him grades Jio.oo.13.udi canner anrj cui
medium
good tea
laail
in mi
I
U rniwi ill Mt.U.AOl shslls dnwit In in
fat dairy Oi onwi f UViMOl.no, mstllum
lu RiMia iivci rY" .". mil man mm
In muim! hulls U 00.1,1 001 good lo cl.olcs
VKMlflrH tU.MMilMM odd bitid f.0 00.
KrtlHl.1i. ho tfa BOO, InUI Aftdi inn
aiMk-a. stssLlyi iflod to c io r 17U-3)U lit.
l.l.7fli hsnvi'r and IlijhUr wslgMs sn do
itoiM suwri ii.i.i'.wuwj "'"" vnoiua
err Iff nljS nuotabta lrtTV!-17 0,
NnlahU ahenn 100. tolil .131.1 markat
nut toady; fw good to cholca tin lit.
wnolsd imnlit common to naillum
fQ.uiw.uuj goon awss Aiauia 40
feltsfUHaa,
B2rr.,!i..i1i
Mad fii if
SOUTH VAN rilANRinCO. March I
mr-n r v-smiw. Mines iiwiiv, maiiiurn
to good staari uuittad f U ftO lO OO. Mod-
Mltll li . i won, wootl
rows rj Bu.iji.iNi. lanntra aim ciutara
1 mi,u nil Common In flood aatinaaa
bulla IIO 0U-1U 0O. Calvasi puna. Nominal,
"ml 10 tmoicq vaaiara qiiuim vis.uu
Id (Hi.
llnifai salattla 100. rirm. tw pachagai
50a -a7! Hi. (r"1 In cttnlv harrows and
!iiu si a.Tn, una maamm 10 gooa sows
13 Otl-U.OO,
tOiavni Ubt nm. Wrm, Qtvtd (a
cluiira woulsil lamlm quoUd 10 00-17.00.
MetuUlli 10 gtKu mwwm fi.uu-vo.
iiiiifls-y'ER
. Nntlharn c.inr. - 1
munlflpai curt toS -
Stanley Unrlln. ,7.
nnnicd JiicIko. ' ,llon"7, J
WHEAT
l.lllnvivi. nisnit mi i i niin.iiinill
short cnvrrlng and comntlislon Itauia
btivlng stlimilatad hv tha sirvngth ut
iMicuilTlas and Inflation psychology ra
aulled Mi gnlns that rangsd in mora than
a rent In iraln futurea markst today.
Tho antlra Itat was on tha up ilda with
ry In the laad and about ll canu
higher at lime. lroMl vaahlng oautcrt
a miniir raactinn naar mldaaslon hut
wits (nllnwed by agdraulvo buying that
flaiAblUhad naw hlsh for tha day.
Mnma of tha short oovartnar waa
nrompiert W Canadian anthargo, (
ftirtiva today and until (urthor notice, on
rail aniimtlM ir pais, nancy anu ryi
in tha United H tat PS. Tha act on wi
tnkpo to rsllova an gout frvlgh! rar
ItOltflktO.
Aat tna finish whAt WU V to 1 rmit
hisl.T than yesterday's clo. May
1 iU. Corn waa up H to Ho, May
M I.Vi-,. Oats wra St to ,o hlgh-r,
Mav (.(?. Itv was up H to lfc, May
tl U'. Harlay wis H to la higher.
May t wi.
If ti'it u 'trozttn articriv yo-i
uccmI. ddvcrtlso for used out
In tho clnnniflrd.
.hr?.''..'.!!!.'
council voted 'Hly' U
If
el
a
Approxl mt,iT I
house, nro bulli ny,cMlJ
yonrjn normal 3
CHICAOO. March I fAP-WFA Pola
toa: arrivals 43. on track IK) total U. H.
ahipnianta OTJ: old slock; otrarlngs very
light, doniaud axrds avallahlv track
offerlnia. mnrkal strong: few alwk: unit
available today s inarHci; iai wouimn
ilv inarkf! firm at rallltilt: Idaho Htit
et llurlxinks. U. S. No. t. utility
grad. :i :U; Nebraska UlU Triumph,
commercial. $,I Jd. North DaknU l.ll
Trlumprw. commercial. M lO-.t l; aw-i
lock, 00-413; Cobtilera. aecd atock.
S.l.80; Wlaconiln Chlppowai, U. 8. No. 1,
SJ.10: Flurlrta Wlti. tacka. Itllss Tri
UinplU. U. 8. No. 1, K DU-gt BA.
LIVESTOCK
CHICAOO, March 1 (AP-WrA. flal
able hogs UiXW; total Ui.tm; avllve. fully
steady; gitod and choice barrows and
gilt 140 Iht. Up at SH.74 i-cllinu, good
and choice sows at $14.00, complete clear
ance. SaUblf cattts fJooO; total 0.)o0: salable
calves 700: total 700; acme ttade on ail
claucs catlle, steers ami heifers fully
steady: largely Id M ld.00 with rhult a
long yearllnga at 110.60. lleifer HJio
13.90; cows strong lo shade higner and
bulls strong to 33 cents up: beef cows
$! 50-1.1 30. ranners and cutlers 7.30
P33: weighty aaUMgc bulla up to I14O0
wtth beef bulla a high as 9M.73; cltolca
vcalrrs lfl 00 down.
Salable hecp 3VX); total 1000: nothing
done on fat Ismha. aiklng fully strstly
or up to tloDo for good and choice
offering, moat rariy old in to in renia
lower: other classes very scarce, nominal
ly steadv; fw common to good native
ewes W-0O-9 33j choice quoleoTto M 30.
POHTteANO. Ore.. March 1 (AP-WrAI
Salable cattle 230. tot.il 4.10; calves sal
able and total 33: market leas active,
but moatly stradv: some saU weaker:
few fed aleers S13.73-I0.OO, common to
SPECIAL STEAK uTJ
unm
outhornFtldd Chkkt,
60c MERCHANT'S
Includ., Soup . iZ
P"rt - rM
WofMetAMj
Mol Tlck.U iTsovii
j tor 15.00
From where I sit ... Joe Mi
America Has its
Portrait Painted
Dan Mnscon'H cousin, an honott-to-Bootlnois
artist, enmo to our
town. And when ho hoard wo
worn liavlng weenie roant, he
nskctl coukl ho cotne nnd bring
his p;lnta.
After he got tlirongh working
on lil rnnvni...he had nice
plrturo of u enjoying onr
Hrlvrri nn you rotiltl oak for...
complrtn to the laat little detnll
...from Molly Ilurlle'g dlmplM
to the fun at oa Ed Carey' (Isuia
of beer.
"I'm calling !t a portrait of
America," Dan's cousin says. '
And fi-om whera l u l
couldn't hnvs i better tic:
wneuior us s wccnlt rotKa
our town or a Bquaredinnsj!
Wisconsin farm. lfiliir.,j
Amcrliii-n jrt o( our nrif
oorunens, our love ( liay
pleasant living.
Bcrttnse ear riiht t nb
trmprrnln brreraue like l
a pnrt of our AmrrifMkrrea
oi prmortal ItTedon,
Ko. 107 of a Strict
Copjritht, IMS, frJW Suiet BmmraejJ
BIBLE (1
Do All Churches
Teach the Truth?
"Beloved, believe not
every Spirit, but prove .the
spirits, whether they are of
God; because many - (alse
prophets are gone out into
the world." (I John, 4il).
R. I. GIBBS, MinUter.
Church of Christ
3205 Wantland Ave.
WE HAVE MOVED
To a New Office Location at
625 PINE ST.
Esquire Theatre Bldg. (
As your local FARMERS INSURANCE CROUP Represen
tatives, we invite you to come In and bring your Auto
mobile, Truck and Fire insurance problems.
A. E. HOLDS
B25 Pine St.
Esquire Theatre Bldg.
Phone 6923
FARMERS AUTOMOBILE
Inter-INSURANCE Exchange
TRUCK INSURANCE EXCHANGE
FIRE INSURANCE EXCHANGE
Ralph R.' Macartney, Jr,
604 Medical-Dental Building
Telephone 6261
INVESTMENTS
STOCKS and BONDS
Affiliated With .
John Galbraith & Co .
Portland, Oregon
ANEW SERVICE
All quotations and all executions on
purchases and sales of listed stocks
are handled through a Member of
the New York Stock Exchange and
associate member of the New York
Curb Exchange. '
Telephone 6261
CLIP A-N-D M-A-l-t
RALPH R. MACARTNEY, Jr.
Investment Stocks and Bonds
604 Medical-Dental Bldg.
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Check
Afflllnlcd with
. John Galbraith It Co.
Portland, Ore.
D I would like you to mail me free of charge a report on the
following stocks1
Post-war building and supply industry.
Post-war automobile Industry.
NAME
ADDRESS
Sta tistica I Service Avai I able