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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1945)
FOUR HERALD AND NEWS Wednesday. Juno 13 1945 ralb anil 2?Ur News Behind The News FRANK JZNKmS MALCOLM PLt Kdltor Manaslns Kdlior A lamporar combination ol tt Evanlns Harald and Um Klamath Nawa Punllshad avanf fWrnoon asc.pt Bundaj at laplanada and Ptna alraau Klamain falls Onion. I lb. Harald Publishing Co and tha Nawa r-ubllardna Company. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: m'.ntn Too By mall ja.i ?S0 By mall months S3.S3 yaar MOO .Outalda Klamath. Laka. Modoc SUklyou eountlaa -Jtaax (TOO Bnlarad u atcoad clan miliar al tba poatolflM of Klamalb Falla. Or, oa Ausust 90 1900 undar act oi coosraaa, March a. ins Mambar, AwocUUd Praaa Mambar Audit Bureau Circulation Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY NOT merely alliterative, but Indicative of a highly worthy objective, is the name ap plied to a new committee of the chamber of commerce. It is the "Cleaner iirm winmipmm Since Klamath was on the receiving end of a nasty crack in a national magazine some time ago, there have been evi dences of awakening interest in property improvement and general cleanliness in the com munity. As we said here at the time, the magazine writer must have gotten the impression he re ported. It was a superficial EPLEY observation, to be sure, but if superficial im pressions are what he said they are, we should move in and change them. That, we presume. Is the objective of the "Cleaner Klamath" com mittee. While we are on the subject, how about the city dump on the Old Fort Klamath road the access road to the Marine Barracks? The dump still presents a most unfortunate sight to the traveler on this now-important thoroughfare.. Surely some plan can be worked out that will eliminate this landscape blot. We Need The Service IN a recent trip through the northwest, Presi dent Patterson of United Airlines discussed in many communities plans for improved air service in the near future. He told Senator Marshall Cornett of Klamath Falls that United is hopeful of receiving approval of its appli cations for service to Klamath in the near future. The civil aeronautics board cannot with justi fication hold off much longer the authorization of air service to Klamath Falls. Several appli cations to provide that service are before the board, two of them by main line operators. Local people have refrained from favoring one' or the other of these operations, but they are within their rights in urging the CAB to act favorably and without delay in authorizing main line air service here. - ; Klamath has always been heavily productive of air passenger, air express and airmail busi ness. A lot of this business has been carried on here despite the miserable service caused by the lack of main line plane stops here. Business and industry here generally have suf fered handicaps that can and should be elim- " inated at the earliest possible date by institu tion of main line, plane service to this city. It does not seem possible the CAB will con tinue much longer in withholding such service from this busy industrial, agricultural and mili tary center, Be There THURSDAY is Flag Day. It is the day set aside for tribute to the banner that sym bolizes everything American. . It will be . a grand thing if every Klamathlte who has a flag ' will fly it tomorrow from bis home or place . of business. The principal feature of the local observance' will be the Elks Flag Day ceremonies to be By PAUL MALLON WASHINGTON, Juno 13 Without fan fare or even an audible mute note of the bugles, Mr. Truman has eased the handling of European food over to the army, as much as possible. The rumbling congressional distrust of United Nations relief and rehabilitation administration and all the other government bureaus directly or remotely connected with a planned ideologi cal distribution of foodstuffs abroad Is un questionably what inspired the casing process. The sidling away from them may be gradual .and limited. ' UNRRA has $430,000,000, and has few men in some Balkan nations like Yugoslavia, behind the reach of our army. But our skilled army supply men are in France, Belgium, Hol land, Italy and our part of Germany. They knew enough about their business to supply a victory. Therefore it Is Quite natural and logical for this government to utilize their distribution facilities, rather than to prod into action the half-dormant UNRRA, with its notions of handl ine food in a political way, gaining lip-prestige for America from doughnuts. The change no doubt will be popular even among the hungry in Europe, as UNRRA has not been able to reach many with much (note Italy for a prime example.) Remember Mr. Hoover's visit to Mr. Truman a few weeks back The meeting was scaled air tight against publicity or speculation in public, and no mention of it has been made since the former European food administrator walked out and told news-men that, in view of his own presidential experience in the White House with talking callers, they could never get anything about this conference from hiin. a Unlikely Story STORIES were published that Mr. Truman O might have offered Mr. Hoover the European feeding job. This is extremely uniiKeiy. mr. Hoover's age (70) would exclude him from con sidering or accepting such a vigorous task. My information is that the subject never came up. The real purpose of the meeting was to dis cuss who could handle this botched European food job best. Singularly, both the republican' ex-president who did it so successfully last time he won International fame that eventually put him in the White House, and the new demo cratic president agreed this time the only agency fitted to undertake it was the army. It has the shipping facilities, the know-how, and, in cidentally, most of the available food for the purpose. The political phase may not have been dis cussed between the two. Yet it seems to me the fairest and cleanest Job which could be done along this line in Europe will be the most popular, will gain us the most permanent friend liness, and in this connection, also the army qualifies best. The shortage of all foodstuffs in this country today also precludes any reasonable possibility of going through with the New Dealers' pro gram of improving the diet of everyone every where. Indeed, the improvement of our diet at home has been turned by events into a primary administration responsibility. Yet I hear New Dealers here maintaining that this nation is eating better today than ever in its history and they can contrive figures to shed a truthful light on this impossibility, a No More Pork Chops THEIR story is that the underprivileged are buying and eating more. They mention negroes. Yet all the negroes I' know are in the same thin soup as every other citizen, un able to get more than a spare bone for it Their most famed food was pork chops (and I have heard New Dealers in years past shed verbal tears because negroes had to eat this meat of less nutritious content than beef), but they get no pork chops now. ' No matter how high the NDS may pile their statistics, they cannot disprove the fact that few stores in my little town near here have had any meat,: except bologna, since last Wednesday and the A&P closed its butcher counters last SIDE GLANCES MWOaai m Hta MFVXXW T. at, ato. . a. WT. Off. -U "Spmetinies I think ens rationing isn't so bud we don't buy tiny more antiques we can t curry home! Market Quotations NEW YORK. Jun 13 (AP AlrcmfU led a selective advance In today's stock market but nu me rout plvotala lot I ground or remained unchanged. Clot In r Quotation: American Can -- fr?S Am Lr At ray i i Am Tel it Tel 173 Anaconda 34 Cat Tractor "'i commonweal in tV sou , Curtis -Wrlthl General Electric General Motors - Gt Nor Tty pfd ..... Illinois Central Int Harvester Kennecott v Lockheed Long-Bell "A" Montgomery Ward Nash-Ketv Y Central Northern Pacific Pac Gas A El ..... Packard Motor ............ Penna R B - Republic Steel Richfield Oil . w . W a tt'S a M , 10 , 83 . . . 23 14 Southern Pacific . Standard Brands . Sunshine Mlnlnr Trans-America Union Oil Calif . Union Pacific U S Steel Warner Picture .. - 40 ... 34lfc 12 - mi 231, .laot, - ftR'. 10s Potatoes held In front of the Elks temple, Third and ' Saturday. Talk of diets to privileged or under- Main. Opening the Droeram will- be drills hv the Marine Barracks drum and bugle corps, and Marine Barracks drill team. This will take place in front of the courthouse at 7 p. m.' . This community feature Is representative of fine cooperation by the Marine Barracks ad ministration and the participating officers and men. The marines are in Portland today. They will leave there Thursday morning, and on 'a stop in Eugene will give a down-town show aimed at helping boost war bond sales in Lane county. privileged becomes onerous when only bologna can be obtained by anyone, and a grade greatly inferior to pre-war at that. But to a New Dealer, everything is a class problem and a social question and there is no side to anything except the one they have taken. They cannot get their minds accustomed to working with' bare larders and overtaxed treasuries. , Theirs is a give away philosophy which is trying to survive a have not era. -. No: doubt they will start ricocheting a few shots at Mr. Truman for turning a worthy but Coming on to Klamath in the afternoon, the JSJ." Ver l l"e U"'!Clal Crourm will nrrluo cr l a!. . "'. k. 1 . - ... mic iu kia,c pan in the Flag Day exercises. Here's hoping Klamath folks turn out in laree numbers to welcome them, and to witness the colorful pageantry of the Flag Day exercises. - If so, they could well be invited to turn them selves strictly to a . diet of their own words. Then they might have an abundance, but they would starve to death, for there are no vita mins in their verbosity or their statistics. OBITUARIES MAY?.-ART, A nvr Mi dt ,,,.,,... i.Jf??i? M' S"1 Weblr. tot the ftjfi el"!i monUu resident ot Poe Valley. Oregon, pasted away at the home of his daughter, Mrs. H. c. Gil bert on Tuesday, June 12. 1045 at 6:45 a. m. following an extended lllneaa. and a,-,h.",imef 64 yeora. 8 montha and 5 daya. Sur viving are hla wife, Mr.. Edna M. r?Lf,r "l' ??uPhU!r' H. C Gilbert of Poe Va ley, Oregon: hu mother. Mn. Jennie Wheeler and two M.hE' mTV. """J," Twle Mr. ?i.h?J?UH!B: ' Laconla. New S&l; JbS remain, re.t In the Ii'hWh!Sfk Fu,ncf" Home. Pine at Sixth. Notice of funeral to be an nounced in thin Issue. EDWARD PAIEMENT Edward Palement a resident of Red ? V'txd away in this city on Monday, June 11, 1945 at 11:45 a. in following an nine., of one week. He aW.1v .'lm. CrMlt' ol" ft the time of hi. death wa aged 37 year, and one day. Tho remain, re.t Kne at suih. WhlUock Funeral Horn" CLABENCE SHIELDS ROBERTSOV .,cJ',renc syl." Robertson, a resident f Klamath Falls for the oast 18 years o 45, . 8,15 H- m He was a native f Brownstown, Ind. and was and 65 ear. and 17 days at the U me of his M.slng. He was a member of the Klamath FaMs AT. & A.M. No. 77; man iS'Zu0' S!' ,b?,rd managers and elder ft the rirjl Christian church and wis ttiperlnlendent of the Sunday school for .? .yeV,:,p"' President of the Oregon late Saving, and Loan league: director B ihe.. rt'", Home Loan bank " Fi'l"" member of Klam- Mh Falls Rotary club. He Is sur- 2vr! y .'I'V."' Mr- c- s- "obertaon I i..ii-.ii rau., one aon, Jiaro d' .. BoberUon with the U. S. army sta- PILES SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO PAIN NO HOSPITALIZATION Na Lose of Time Permanent Reaoitet OR. E. M. MARSHA Chlrapraelle Pbrslcl.n xe BTav 11a Caqolre Tbaalra Bigg, Paona ?eag VfJi Ln c,l!,um: " "laughters, Mrs. Janice S.ndmeyer of Klamalfi Falfs and ! Blehn of Seattle. Wash.; three slaters. Sarah Robertson of In dianapolis, fnd., Daisy Rgfcertson of ScouCurg, Ind.. and Mrs.ErV liaa?. ?f. Wl.con.ln; one brother, BoyaT Robert n .'Jrown.town,. Ind.: and three im.?.chi,dr,!n- Th remains rest at Word Klamath Funeral Home. 025 Hlgn. FUNERAL MATNABD ADELBERT WEBSTER d,1Srt wb.ter. who passed away at r!T.Jl!me S' h.'f ,duhter. Mrs. H. C. le b1n.F,!K Y'"' on Tueday, June J?in S?i.,?i,0.,l,!t " extended lllne.. S " f?.!""1 Community hall In Poe Valley on rrtday. June 15, 1945 at T!!- I- Y"h ,."..Rev.- Bertrand r. Peter, .on. potor of the Nazarene church of !?'! C"X "'nelln. Commitment serv i5e?J."nd Interment family plot in Bed field cemetery. Trlends are Invited. iWWiJff under the direction fi,,h",.Earl WhlUock Funeral Home of this city. EXPERIMENTS The U. S. department of ag riculture makes numerous ex periments with weed seeds to determine their power to germi nate after being buried for long periods. ; ! - - RECOVERING t PORTLAND, June 13 (Pi Rt. Rev. Benjamin D. Dagwell, Episcopal bishop of Oregon, was reported "doing well" in a Port land hospital today after major surgery. He was expected to be confined several weeks. SHIRLEY TO BE GRADUATED LOS ANGELES, June 13 (P) Movie Actress Shirley Temple will be graduated from high school today at the Westlake school for girls. She's 17. If It's a "frozen" article you need, advertise for a used ona ln the classified. Boric Acid Mixture Good For Sore Eyes Thousands troubled with tired. Inflamed, burning. Itching or sticky eyes praise LavopUk, a refreshing mixture of boric add and other beneficial Ingredients. Soothe granulated eyelids. Must sat isfy or money refunded. 30 years suc cess.. 'Thousands praise It. Get Lav opUk today. At all drug atores. HEAR HEARING AID Friday, June 15 Bertram's Jewelry Store 629 Main Street Without ' Battery Wires No Leg Straps New "AH-in-One" No B?.?e,y. Harne" .. Donotone, rs m s n s.ibgk"i. Acousticoni and others', slightly used, at qreat diicount. For Hopeleis Cases HEAR with the CUSTOM BUILT GEM. Youri Taken in Trade. Batteries lor All Aides. CHICAGO. June la (AP-WFA Pola toea: arrivals 42, on track 54. total U. S. shipments 826. New storka: offerings very light, d. msnd exceeds available supply, market firm at celling, price, lower account of new ceilings: nothing offered today's track market, no track Bales reDorted. California 10O-lb. sacks of Long whites. U. S. No. 1. sue A. S4.29. commercial. Size A. (4.19: V. S. No. 1. siia B. S4.S9: California 1 00-lb. sscka of Bliss Tri umphs, u. s. No. I. sua A, M 2; u. B. No. 1, sis B. tl.ta. LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. June 13 (AP-WrA) Callle: ulihl lAO. Ron. erslly steady. Good fed atcen quoted 910.50, packag; 1180 b. grail medium steers S13.SO: odd medium era hatfers 912.00 to feed-lot. Good grata cows 913.00-30, medium 91 1.00-12 00, common 910.00-30, canners and cutter active, 97.00-9.00. Common to food sausage bulls 110.00.13.00. Calves: 23. ttanA vealers 913,00 down. Hogs: salable 100. Firm: few packages good and choice 200-300 lb. barrows and gilts 915.73; odd good sows 915 00. Sheep: salable . 1200. Active, fully steady; good to choice 00 lb. spring lambs 914.73 sorted 30 head at 913 30. Cull to good ewes quoted 93-30-0.30. PORTLAND. June 13 fAP-WFA. Salable and total cattle 123: calvea 33; market rather slow, but mostly steady; common -medium grades steers 912.30 13.00; odd head to 91000; stock era 913 W 14.00; common-medium heifers mostly 911. 30-13. M: odd head to 913.00: canner cutter cows 97.00-0.90; (at dairy type Poor Digestion? 35 Headachy? Da Sour or Upset? Tired-Listless? Do you feel headachy and uptet due to poorly digested food? To feel cheerful and nappy again your food must b digested properly. Each day. Nature must produce about two pin la of a vital digestive juice to belp dlftest your food. If Nature fails, Giur food may remain undigested aving you headachy and irritable. Therefore, you must increase the flow of this digestive juice. Carter's Little Liver Pills increase this flow quickly often in as little aa 80 minute. And, you're on the road to feeling better. Don't depend on artificial aids to counteract indigestion-when Carter's Little Liver Pills aid digestion after Na ture's own order. Take Carter's Little Uver Pills as directed Cat tbem at any drugstore. Only 25tf. 9IO.00-U.00; ndlum ht bulls quotable i3.so; giKKi-cnoice veaiere sieauy Sift M.lftXo. C.l.hU 1 V. lntl .V mark! active, steady at celling: at! farrowt and Silts 913.73: few lows Slaw; g(KKl oiu m lb, stags H. 0O-3O wiih 70 lb. dixk; choice 7o.it lb. feeder i-ift Ml. 00. Salable sheep :t3U: total IKK), market lei active but mostly steady: gixxi cholre spring lau.Ua largely 914.00, few IliM; one special lot common grades down to 910(10: medium-good ahnrit old ertio 9I3.0O-I3.00: cominort down to 910 00; giMHt shorn e,wf 9S.73 7.00; comniot) grades down to 94.00. CMICAOO, June lJiAP-WFA-SaUble hnn liMtu lolal IS 0K: active. Ill lY steady: griod and choh'e ttarrown and ilia at l4lt.lK un at 114 73: afowd and choice sows at 914.00; complete clear ance. Mailable eattle 14.000. total UJOCO: sal able calves 1000. total 1000: strtrlly choice fed atvrr and yearling teadv, all others weak to 33 cents, mnatly to to 13 cents lower: largely steer run: g.KMl and choice grade predominate; top 91B.00 paid for I-lb. averaiea; tteit earllnics 917 HO; best heifers si7 70: mil fed steers 913.7317. 30: medium and g.xt beet cows 13 to 23 rents lower, others and cutlers steady; bulls fully 33 rentt lower: vealers steady at HUSO down: stock eattle active l J 00-13 00 mostly. Salable sheep 1300. total 0300; -t-terrd early sales steady bill Utile done clipped lamb: scattered lots native spring lambs 914 .30-19 00 according li Jrade, fat bucks discounted 91 00; part eck Just-good clipped lambs fall shorn relta 913 00. with buck lambs out al 14.00: other cllDoed lambs wllh mixed No. 1 and fall shorn pells held above sia uu: common to cnoice anocn native ewea 9e30-s.oa WHEAT CHICAGO June 13 lAPt Rye was un more than four cents a bushel. July and fteolember corn traded at the 91 in1- celling, and other grain futures markets ere firm to strong today. Rye advanced to new highs for the season and at Winnipeg the brown cereal was up as much as 2S cenls. Commit ston home bought steadily and the market absorbed without difficulty large offerings that came out on the bulge. Throughout the day the trade In rye was brisk. Trade reports the war pro- duclton board would deny distillers per mission to use corn during the July whiskey nollday and a growing realisa tion of the strong stalUtiral position of rye were factors behind the trade. At the finish wheat was to I'iC hlaher than yesterday' close. July 91 68i. Com was unchanged to up H.c, Julv 91 Ifltfc. Oats were to l'.c higher. July 0i-e. Rye was up 2' to 4Sc. July fi.43Vt.4ft. Barley was to ivtc higher, July 13, SEVEN SAFE WALLA WALLA. June 13 m Seven men of a crew of eight parachuted to safety when it B-24 bomber from Walln Wnlla army air field crashed near midnight last night 13 miles northwest of here, the base com mand announced today. Search for the eighth member is proceeding. Brenda Will You Step Out With Me Tonight? X know I've been an awful grouch not tak ing you any place lately. Dut after standing air day at my new Job, rny feet darn near killed ma with callouses nd burning. Now I've reformed or rather my feet nave thanks to the medicinal Iee-MInt you ad vised Never tried anything that teemed to draw the pain and Are right out so fast and the way it htlpe soften callouses Is no body's business I Been able to gat soma ex tra overtime money so what do you aay, Ict'a go dancing tonight. You can at? oa my Ice-Mint feet all you want. HEALTH 70YOUI Cornet ftarto'. Colon Allmmnf Hamorrholda (Pllaa), ria. Jialula, Hatnla (Rup- . tj .am-abllffy to aor Ilia. Our caalhod ol Iraotrasnt without hospital opsralion aucca.alullr anplorsd lor 33 r.ots. Ub.iol ci.dll tarns. Coll lor examination or sand lor FREE fcooUat. Opan tnnkgt, Um., Wtd., frl., 7 lo l,X Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC fkyali raw anal rfea) W. R'Cor. E. Bumalda miOtmi Art. ' Tal.pliCTi.ESjtWie, Portland U, Or.oa SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT . . . . . COAL ; Mort popl will havt to dtptnd upon eotl lor htlno and cooking thii ytar than vr bfor. Tht mint! muit movo coal NOW. during tha lummer monthi to dealers and consume becauie they cannot itora any large quantities. We can deliver coal to you now in large quantitiet and keep re-ordering from the rhlnei to repleniih our itock. BUT. this winter tha lituation will be the reverie. Govern mental aganciei and War Induatriei will be served lint, and if there ii any coal left, the local dealer will only get a part ot hli quota. We will be weeks behind on deliveries when that time comei. ' FRED H. HEILBRONNER "Fuels That Satisfy" Plus Service Sine 1918 Branch Yard Merrill 821 Spring St. Telephone 80 Telephone 41S3 James B. Stephens, who Is I tho county Jtill In ' fine for driving a motor vehicle while drunk, was operatliis piMsciiKcr bus to the Murine Borrucks when clrcumstunces led to his arrest, according to Capt. C. J. Sladler. provost marshal at tho Barracks. Stephens la aliened to have been driving u bus loaded with piisjiciiKers on the Old Fort road Saturday night on a tr p to tho Barracks. Ho was ob viously drunk, Stndler slated, when ho stopped the bus for an unknown reason, a mnrlno took over unci drove the vohlcle the remaining distance to the ,,.) uflmrn llin utile llltard Wl kinformed of the circumstances. WO Edward Kron, assistant provost marshal, was called and Stephens was taken lo Ihe guard house. While tho murine who had driven tho bus was report ing tho Incident to Ihe officer of tho day, Stephens fled, said Sladler. Kron spotted him walk- I.... .In,,. .Ih. rnMrl InitlrlA the Barracks about flvo minutes h.tx.. nnrl uli'knrl him un. He was taken buck and given a sobriety examination ana louna to bo very drunk. Ho was then turned over lo slit to police who booked him and placed him In the county jail, lie appeared beforo Justice J. A. Mahoney In justlco court Monday and was sentenced to 100 days In Jull or a $200 fine. Telling The Editor latlara arlnlaa hart moat aal a, tntn than IH wM In linath, must ba tan Kslals an ONS Slot at tha napar anlr, ana mvai ka St ansa, Oant.iautian, hllaolne UM rwtaa, art arml, amain h l.aoiililMl'il'HiliLliil N.l.li, Wli'.ifflU !' i'1W, From The Klamath Republican, ' June I. 1905 The city council this week granted a franchise to A. 11. Naftzuer for a street railway In Klamath Falls, to be completed by tho .time a steam railroad comes In hero. a a . Merrill now has one of 'the finest creameries in this sec tion. - " ; a a . . . From The Klamath Herald, June 13, 193S The city-wide recreation pro gram will open this week. Carl Cook heads tha committee In charge. Mrs. Ethel Hoagland Is in charge ol ulrls. and Vern Spclrs in charge of boys. HARVEST AT.PEAK : G RES 1 1 AM, Junrr 13 (t) The strawberry harvest hero was reported at It peak today, and the Grcsham 'berry growers co operative called for 73 more processing workers, .-OF ROSEBURQ GETS BANK ROSEBURG. Juno 13 (ZD Tho opening of the Douglas county state bank has given Roseburg its second bank, with T. B. Garrison at president. ODD VIOLIN A violin was made by a Cali fornia chef out of leftover chicken, fish, soup, and turkey rjones. Tnc instrument is so ac curately designed that it vi brates in rcsponso to the human voice. AIRPLANE PILOTS and PASSENGERS " Life Insurance Is available I to you now at very reason able rates. B .JL your i I 3 Jut Jf. JloultoH I I asretscNTiNo thb EQUITABLE LIFE Asiuronce Society 111 N. Ilk fa.na sill AT FLAO DAY. 1945 O wave, Old Glory, wave to day O'er a nation while we pray, God keep thee ever great and freo Proud symbol of our liberty. Let your red and whtto ami blue no a plcdgo forever true; A badgo ot courage, for the brave, A beacon shining to tha slave, For wo who live boncath it's Inio Let us consecrate ourselves anew To make that banner ever bo A symbol of freedom and equal ity. Wave ye bars of red and while Sword of Justlco, crown'd by might. Shine yo stars against Ihe blue To honor thy sons who died for you. Today pay tribute to tho brave Marines Who carry our flag through war's grim scenes; Braved Surabachl's flaming hell To place it on that wartorn shell. Old Glory keep flying till man's work Is done. Your stars will outshine every Rising Sun, As freemen unite in earnest en deavor To keep those bars flying for ever and ever. Fly on. proud bannor, forever unstain'd Pride of a nation by God or dained, Thine Is the light that cannot fall; Our hope, our faith, our Holy Grail. Mrs. Ruby Roclgcrs. Classified Ads Bring Results. DMID IS AT ITSM tor SANDWICHES wit Id vim 1 aa . r a wm m asrecscNTiNo thb II J I in h. iik sin 1 1 mmmmammmLmmm'1 r-Nr. nnm rTirTlff unir uviis iuii 11 mm Mum Freih'ond full flavoretl-oi wonderful treat baeauiJ they or Sablntx'ed-lhe remarkable new methott that meant better, freiher potato Mpi-at leading Sroceri?Ak for' Blue Bell Jhen youwoM ttrqt grant) W II -.m aiJ,J2,,"ia n.cdfrT,S last year. irU Inst year, t,, ,'1, 'Mi I''IrttMt'N M. I. aTZ. aaad IfcXlanwiMiilafcj, ,UUsHISUI(WUlM, 1 Jll