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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1945)
l fOtm HERALD AND NEW3 (tmlb anb $tv$ News FRANK JENKINS MALCOLM EPLET Editor Managing Editor A Urn port ry combination of th Evening Herald and lh Klamath Newt, Published every afternoon except Sunday El Eiplnada and Pin streets. Klamath jfaila. Oregon, by th arald Publishing Co. and Uit Ntws Publishing Company, Member, Associated Prs Today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY FOR an example of delay and involved pro cedure that make the public disgusted with the courts, we have the case of Earl JHeuvel. 1 This unpleasant case is of iiinuciinl tuihlin Intftrost be cause Mr. Hcuvel held a pub- lie office of great responsibil lity at the time of the alleged acts of which he is accused. J Until it is cleared, one way or !the other, it constitutes a cloud on the eood name of this com Jmunity. It is therefore desirable that It be handled in - the courts both fairly and expeditiously. EPLEY l We have no personal opin- J Ion on the guilt or innocence of the former police chief. But we do have a very definite idea that one or the other ought to be estab I llshed as quickly as possible. If a local public official did wrong while he ! was in office, he ought to be punished. If he t is wrongfully accused, he ought to be cleared. I And SOON, in either case. Mr. Heuvel was indicted on January 26, 1945. . He disappeared from this community at that time, and by that fact effected a long delay. He was returned to Klamath county jail on June 28. In view of the period already elapsed, it i would seem that no time would be lost In I concluding this case. I Instead, we have had repeated delays, spring- I - nnj ....... r I mg irom one cause ur aituuici, ' Heuvel is again out on bail and i expected to come up for trial until midOctober. There is no assurance it will be We do not say that the various I" lay in this case are not according to legal Hoyle. Sure they are. But legal Hoyle in this instance permits too much cunctation. Here is a case that ought to be brought to a quick conclusion. The public has a right to expect all concerned t to cooperate in getting It over with. ; Those Store Fronts . . . "HOSE bright signs on' Main street fronts I I are making a difference in our town, t For a long time, anyone who took the trouble to look at store fronts across the street above i the show windows would have been pretty j sadly Impressed. They were terrible, with a I few notable exceptions. But the modernization trend that has hit the I downtown section calls for brilliant, shining j facades, with huge neon letters in script that I illuminate a big slice of the surrounding area. !They are changing the whole atmosphere of the business district to the good! Excepting Klamath avenue and a corner or two on Main, most of the regular street light jlng in the business district is woefully inade ' quate. The private lighting, provided by those bright neons, goes a 'long way to take "care of the deficiency. Our congratulations to the progressive firms that are doing this job. I .-. Spud Shipping Starts "THE first carload of potatoes has- left the I basin to signalize the opening of the 1945 1 1946 shipping season. Early potatoes, which will be going out in I the next three weeks, promise fine quality and yield. As for the general trend of the rest of the crop, a lot will depend upon the weather J breaks between now and September 20. One I of those protracted growing seasons would be J a grand thing this year. Our potatoes had a pretty rough start, due . to late spring rains. They won't be up to some I Of the high yield crops of recent years, but this j country has become accustomed to such remark i able crops that one which may be rated down J here would still outclass the spuds grown in many other places. It's a great country! The War Today By DeWITT MacKENZIE Associated Press War Analyst The vast reverence which the Japanese people have for their God-emperor is being demon strated daily as the Tokyo gov ernment proceeds cautiously iwith the dangerous task of im plementing lis capitulation to j me aiues aan-,, it h e militarists are against it, land because the (general public Us undergoing a terrible shock, having been led 1 to believe that Nippon was winning - the (Jap Beliefs Nnuf fhie rmi Jerence has noth- MacKENZIE ing to do with Hirohlto's caDa- bilities. It would still be there Is he were a moron. It resU in he fact that the Dermic belipve hey are ruled by a divine being a living uoa. i ney ve be lieved it since 660 B. C, when, Recording to legend, the first emperor ascended the . throne. The mikado is the last word in he life of the Jap. Actually A GEM of An amorous O. I. named Ben Was making love to a French gal when A shot came thru the wall. H loudly did bawl, "Lady, here's that darn War again." Miles Nervine If You're Jumpy From Doc and .delta's Drug Store Phon 8466 evident, and Member Audit Bureau Circulation come the New course upon 'Isms Loosed VTof1 the edies and isms Pandora's box, loudly, as if Employment Measure B appears in tive ways in aim uu ui. his case is not tried then. causes of de- Hirohito has been more or less of a figurehead but even the greatest and most progressive of nis subjects approach his pres ence with diffidence. Mikado's Power We see an excellent example of the mikado's power in the at titude of Field Marshal Count Juichi Terauchi, Japanese com mander in Southeast Asia. De spite Tokyo's capitulation, the count refused to surrender to Admiral Lord Louis Mountbat ten until the emperor himself had given the word. There have been similar cases in other fight ing zones. This is a situation which can't be brushed aside lightly a fact that the allied leaders recognize. It's all very well to shout "Hang the Mikado" as more than a few are doing but it would be a perilous experiment to commit such violence on the primitive ideas of Japan. Four Freedoms Moreover, there are a lot of allied folk who believe we should be outraging our own ideals if we struck down the head of a religion. One of the reasons which imnpllort our American forefathers to come here from EuroDe was to secure freedom of worship. The second of the late President Roosevelt's four freedoms Is "freedom of every person to worship God in j his own way everywhere in the world." i Sure, I know that oDens tin the I yuuauun oi worsnipping taise gods but let's not go into that here. If the people of Japan want to continue the Shinto re ligion we can't slnn I npm hv force. We can't ston them hv THOUGHT - Thunday. Aug. 23. 1945 Behind The News By PAUL MALLON A ASHINGTON, Aug. 23 The unity Mr. V T Truman established seems fast disappear ing from the scene upon which it was first most effective In congress. The preliminary peacetime haggling is evolv ing into the samo old bitter, uncompromising and destructive struggle for control, and the natural backwash of such political wars in times of crisis, elements of uncertainty and confusion are beginning to appear. It may be Deal all over again If it runs the which it is beginning. 1AT started it is discernible. The end war brought all the patent rem of the New Deal days out of winging freely and fluttering they had never been defeated or caged. Even the oia-agc pension groups (as an nounced by California's Senator Downey, the Townsend advocate) considered peace the oc casion to start what is known as "a drive" for its fandangled economic ideas. A social secur ity fight is the second planned step of the assembling session (hearings next week) and behind it is the cooped-up program to kill free enterprise in medicine by socializing doctors, provide golden spoons for all mouths from the cradle to the grave, and such. UT the essence of the re-developing struggle stark simplicity in the compara which the full employment bill and the Burton-Ball-Hatch bill are being handled. The full employment measure is a labor unions bill requiring the government to furnish jobs while the Burton-Ball-Hatch meas ure calls for a reasonable pro-labor reorganiza tion of the unpopular Wagner act system. The unions bill, under the leadership of New Dealing Chairman Wagner of the banking com mittee, is being launched with a promotional campaign, while the union reform has been hidden, with trumpets, under abuse heaped upon it by the unions. Bill Stymied IT is true Mr. Wagner's show did not get off to a sensational start. The first day's parade of witnesses broke down with an epidemic of flat tires. The New Dealers had planned to get it off to a rousing start by having General Omar Bradley, fresh from victorious fields in France, promote the idea. He made it rather plain he did not know much about the bill, as he had been at his veterans post only a short time. Advocates from veterans organizations talked most of promoting free enterprise and employment (rather than unemployment) al though one endorsed the measure. Ohios Senator Burton says his thus-stymied bill to inject logic into the Wagner act has met a good response from the rank and file of people, even in the unions, where many work ers want labor to assume its responsibilities. But he and other moderates have secured no place for themselves on the congressional agenda, although they think something more punitive to the unions . than they want an anti-closed shop bill or drastic labor curtailment measure will come unless a moderate reform course is followed. Congressmen Alarmed THE tendencies in these events have fright ened many congressmen. One senator, whose name I withhold, has been led to believe socialism is thus coming up rampant to seize this government also, or work some kind of revolution in it, fresh from its war victory. I do not think his is a common viewpoint yet in congress but all are aroused by the efforts of class groups to wrest economic control into their own hands and destroy the pattern which brought victory and few congressmen profess to see the outcome. One thing is plainly visible Mr. Truman has a job on his hands, lest he lose the reins of control to pressure groups as Mr. Roosevelt did. " He is getting to the time when he must fight to defend the unity he first achieved. removing their emperor, because Shinto is bigger than he is. Religions Hold The late Turkish dictator, the great Kemal Ataturk, abolished the caliphate in 1924 and kicked the caliph out. But that didn't halt Mohammedanism. Ataturk even abolished the fez, which was essential to the Mohamme dan in worship because it had no brim and he could prostrate him self till his forehead touched the ground. Ataturk introduced western hats with brims, but the faithful found a way to beat that. I saw them in an Ankara mosque wearing American caps, with the visors turned around back, the way American base ball catchers wear them. Then there's another point: If we use the big stick to uproot Shinto, on the ground that it's an improper religion, we are taking in a lot of territory. After that do we deal with the Con fucianism of China, with Budd hism, with Hinduism and what not? The best answer to all this NOTICE Due to the Slabwood Shortage No More Slabs Will Be Sold At The Ackley Mill PEYTON & CO. 915 Market SIDE GLANCES Jl PI oowt ft rM snmet. HC T. u. 1. rr 8's "Look nt him. Mom! lie just loafs out here in Hie kitchen and grins ever since you said I was the only one you could (rust with Ihe dishes I" Market Quotations NEW YORK. An. 33 lAPl-Lane rale buying of motor spread to rail and Industrial stocks in today's market ana itiieO favorites one to five points, some to peaks (or 1943 or longer. Closing quotations: American Can . 98 Am Car Kdy , , M- Am Tel it Tel 179 Anaconda . 33 Calif Packing 31 Cat Trad or ... - A3 Commonwealth & Sou H Curtis-Wncht ....... a General Electric , 45i General Motors Gt Nor Ry pfd Illinois Central Int Harvester Kennecott Lockheed .. 40 ,., 31 M .. Mfc B, .... 194 64 ..- 20S 34 34 Lonf-Bell A" Montgomery Ward Nash-Ketv ..... S Y Central Northern Pacific Pac Gas & El Packard Motor . 40 - TV 120 - 35', 33 S - tlS ... 304 -JW ... 45 - 31 - 13'. - 13 31 , ...1X1 J C Penney , Penna R R Republic Stl Richfield Oil Safewav Stores Sears Roebuck ,., Southern Pacific Standard Brands Sunshine Signing Trans-Amerira Union Oil Calif Union Pacific V S Steet .. Warner Pictures , 10'a Potatoes CHICAGO. Aug. 33 (AP-WTAi Pota toes: arrivals BO. on track 141, total U. S. shipments 707. New stocks: supplies modem!, de mand good for best stock, slow for others, market slightly stronger for best stock, dull for others: California Long Whites. U. S. No. 1, 13.35; Nebraska Red Warbas. V. S. No. 1, t2.73-2.EK; Idaho Russet Burbanks. U. S. No. 1, $3.35: Washington Long Whites, U. 8. No. L'13.35. UIVESTOCK DENVER. Aug. 33 fAP-WFA) Sheep receipts 2500, total 3600; market active, steady with Wednesday's best time; choice trucked In slaughter spring lambs S14.7S-1S.00; two loads 9S lb. Colorados $14.85: good-choice truck I ni $13.75-14.33; few medium-good 913.00-50; bulk shorn slaughter ewes tS.SO-6.SO; several lota strictly good choice No. 1 or all shorn pelts S6.75; medium-good 6067 lb. trucked in fed lambs $13.00-50. PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 33 IAP-WTAt Salable and total cattle ISO. calves SO: market more dependable, fully steady; few common steers $1 1.00-12 50; me dlum steers and heifer to 613.00; few common-medium heifers $10.50-13.00; cut ters down to $A.OO: canner-cutter cowi largely f6.00-B.00; fat dairy type cows to 69.00; medium beef cows to $1100; medium good sausage bulls S8.50-ll.00: common bulls down to 68.50: good grade calves up to $14.00; choice light vealers quotable to 614.50 and above. Salable hogs 50, total 125: market ctlve, steady; barrows and gilts 615.75; sows $15.00; feeder pigs scarce. Salable and total sheen 600; market steady; two lots mostly choice B3-Q4 lb, lambs $13.50; medfum-good grades $13.00 50; shorn Iambs 811.00; common grades $0.00-10.00; good shorn yearlings 610.00; good ewes $3.50-0.00; culls down to $2.00. CHICAGO. Aug. 23 fAP-WTAi Sal able hogs 4500. total P000; active and fully steady; good and choice burrows and gilts at 140 lbs. up at 614.73 cell ing; good and choice sows at $14.00; complete clearance. Salable cattle 5000. total 6000; salable calves 700. total 700: general market steady; fairly active on good and choice steers and comparable heifers: strictly choice offerings absent; top 61T.00, odd probably is that if western Ideas and ideals are presented to the Japanese people in the most fa vorable light, we may win them over to our way of thinking. We must remember that, after all, they are largely primitive peo pie who literally are generations behind our times. And it's only a little over three hundred years ago that some of us were burn ing witches at the stake. Phone 5149 head 616.00, the celling; bulk fed steers slO-OO-W.50: but short feus sellings up to $1600; common and medium gtuci-i uw-ia.w. rst netfera aruuna sit. jo, common and medium grasser sioou- 13-Ou, mostly $U,00-1J Qu. cutler rows SA.za auwn, strong ueignis m.w fl.Ta; very few beef cows above 61J.0U bulk 69.25-1200; practical top weignty miummv uuiik wvw, nenvy mi duiis tit.ati; vest er fully 2S rents lowvr at f IS 00 down. Salable sheep 20Wt total 4300; native pnng lambs slow, early sales about steady; shorn slaughter ewes steady: other classes practically absent! several sales good to choice native spring lambs $1X75, bucks discounted $1.0u; uniformly good and choice kinds held 914.00 slightly above: some mixed medium to choice offerings $13 50. commufi scirl outs 610-00-lLlXJ; shorn native ewes Sti.-V) down, three doubles common and me dium Washingtons 65-6. SOITM SAN FKANC1SCO. Aug. S3 (AP-WFAi Salable and total rattle 7A. caives 23; market generally steady; me di urn -good steers saiable 614 30-15 30: and above; one load mixed 912 lb. good cows and heifers $16 33; lightly sorted 614 13; common cows 6l0.0O-Tl.00; csnner cutler 67.00-9.00; common-good sauage bulls 610 50-12-30: calves steady; few package medium 300-340 lb. calves 613.30; sorted 1)1 00. Salable and total hogs 100: market firm; few barrows and gilts $13.73; old good sows 613 00; few packages good feeder pigs 623.00. Salable and total sheep 3000; quality Scncrally common-medium; late ycsler ay package good 74 lb. lambs $13-73; extrcme top; choice absent quotable to 614.00; medium-good yearlings 611-00-1X00; common-good ewes 63.0O-6.30. WHEAT CHICAGO. Au. U lAPi Or(n fu tures climbed (or the third ilraight dy today, stimulated by strong New YorK stocks and reports of export demand and poor European crops. Rye was up around 2 cants a bu.hsl at times, while wheat gains were frac tional moat of lh session. Barley ad vanced more than 2 cants a bushel on reports that Canada has banned exports of this cereal. Wheat purchases by houses with south western cash connections were believed to roflect mora sales to th commodity credit corporation, which ts buying wheat (or export. Moat prices slipped fractionally near the close. Wheat closed t.c lower to So higher than the previous finish. Sep tember flfltv,, corn was unchanged to He lower. September 37'c. Hye was tic off to ISc up, September ft.CTH-S and barley was It. to 3Sc higher. Sep. tember S1.00'.. Logging Camps Open For Day And A Half OLYMPIA, Aug. 23 MP) Western Washington togging operations were opened (or a half day's work today on orders from the state forest office. State Forester T. S. Good year, who imposed a closure on all logging and industrial opera tions in wooded areas Tuesday, said weather conditions have improved sufficiently to permit a "safe" half day's work. Camps are to close again at noon today. CEILING ON PRUNES WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 fP) An average grower price of $55 a ton for fresh prunes will be used in determining processors' ceiling prices for the 1945 packs of can, frozen and preserved fresh prunes. 7 - ' V New Si I Cream Deodorant Safely helps Stop Perspiration I, Does nor Irritiie skin. Doef not rot tlrciw! or men's shirt. 2 Prevents under-srm odor. Helps stop perspiration safely. 3 ApufC,wnitt,intiieptjCitijn less vanishing cream. 4a No waiting to dry. Can be used right after shivinR. B Awarded Approval Seal of American IruntuteofLjunder ing harmless to fabric. Use Arrid regularly, 39 ond WMsstM MORI MEN AND WOMEN Ull ARRID THAN NV OTHII DtOOOf ANT Interacting Vacation Anno Milium hits returned from h 10' day vacation, to Iut position on Iho dt'SK at the Wlnuniu hotel. She stopped in Eugene on her way to I'ortiuntl and linct lunch Willi Mr. and Mrs. Guy Harmon, former Klamath Falls residents. In l'ortliind she met a friend from Oakland whom she hadn't seen for .several years, From University Dale Hint' .inker, Ph.M 1c. and Jim Con roy, USN, spent last weekend visiting relatives in Klamath Fulls. Dale Is a pre-medlcal stu dent nt Willamette university, Snlcm, and Jim Is taking deck officers training there. On Furlounh SSrI. Bill Bayless, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hayless, Is here on a 30-day furlough visiting with his parents and with his wife and baby. He has been in Italy for seven months with the 10th Mountain division. Reporter VUlti Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Nelson of Yreka. Calif., were in town last weckend visit ing with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Llndberg. Iris Nelson ia a former Herald and News reporter. Special Program A incclal proiirnm, "Whut's the Name of ''hilt Kfinif " IL'ill hjv Mr.tM.I Thursday night at 8 o'clock at ino usu. mere will be prizes and dancing and refreshments JUIl'l. Back To Duty Cpl. Charles F. Snyder, who has been home from overseas duty on a 30-day furlough, left Tuesday for Fort Lewis. 'Wash., where ho wi re. celve further assignment. Visits Huiband Mrs. Pete Soltziuiicr and son returned Fri day from Chicnuo. She has been visiting with her husband in r londn. until he was transferred to Utah. Visit In Blr Mr. and Mrs. Bob Canoy, with their daughter, Mrs. Pete Scltzinger, and her son. Freddie, spent Sunday In Bly. They were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. II. Ross. Annual Visit Juno Hersh- berger has returned from her annual visit at tho home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Marsh of Duns- mulr. Calif. She was away ten days. In San Joig Mrs. Frank Kll- lian, 724 Mitchell, has joined her daughter, Gladys. In San Jose. Calif., where they are now making their home. Kllllun ex pects to Join his family later. Meeting There, will ba an executive board meeting of the Klamath community fund, Mon day afternoon at 3 p. m. Irl S. McSherry. executive dlroctor of the Oregon war chest, will be present. German PWs To Harvest Bean Crop CORVALLIS, Aug. 23 Mi Assignment of 598 German pris oners of war to bean fields in Marion, Polk and Yamhill coun ties will be temporary and to help short growers, state fnrm labor Supervisor J. R, Beck said today. The men started harvesting today on 12 mid-Willamctto val ley farms through an arrange ment with ninth service com mand officers at Camp Adair. They will work seven days. Beck reported, but will not be available after that, according to present plans. Beck said the prisoners were assigned after efforts to recruit civilian labor failed. . -WATCHES WATERPROOF IS JEWEL SHOCK PHOOF LUMINOUS DIAL NON-MAGNETIC . STAINLESS STEEL CASE COFFEE MAKER SET Product of GEN. ELECTRIC ' S PIECES MIRROR TRAY ASST COLORS OPA CEILING 6.9S NOW ONLY Diamond Rings Pearls Pocket Watches L.ockeJs i d:m. Musical Boxes Lapel Kins Mtn,, ind Women., Earrings Rings Men's and Ladies' Expansion Bands Ladies' Wrist Men's Wrist Watches Watches $26.60 and up $26.95 and up U-LAINE JEWELRY LOCATED EMPORIUM 618 EXTREMELY On Leave U. Wlllliuu E. Sweet arrived In New York on August 14 Horn duly In England. Franco, Dolglum, Holland mid Germany, ami came to Klamath Fulls on Monday, August 20, to spend a 30-day luavu with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. W, S. sweet or 134U wiuora. M. Sweet took part In tho Euro pean campaign landing on D bay. He wears the Purple Heart. On Leava Dorothy Mao Pom roy, S 1c USN, is home on leave visiting with her parents, Mr, and Mrs, Paul Sexton, 4(115 Can non nventio until September 7, She enlisted in Juiuiiny, 1 U44, and is stationed In tho fleet post office, San Diego. Meeting Friendship camp Vn II Hllll nt Ilia W,,u..l Klnl I, l,r of Anieiieii will hold Its regular meeiiug rrttiay, August 24, at p. in., In the KG hull at 401) Main street. Members are urged to atlenil uiul iiiltlnu Ni-lulihitra are always welcome. Material Her Volunteers are needed at the American Hcrt Cross to cut material for gar ments to bu sent to the Philip pines. ina.se working on slip pers are asked to turn them in as soon us possible to the Red Cross hcudttiiirtcrg. Card Partr Women of Die Moose will hold a card party in the Moose hall Friday, August 24,' at 2 p. in. This will bo the fourth of the series and the pub lic Is cordially invited to at tend. To Eureka Mr, and Mrs. De vere Helfrlch and daughters, Do lorns and Darlcs, will spend the weekend In Eureka. Helfrlch will photograph the round-up to be held there. Visit Here Sgt. B. A. Rogglo and family from Reno, Nev., visited here Ust weekend at the home of his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. John A. Raffetlo, 1948 Portland. Rggglo is on a 30-day furlough. Meeting There will be a meeting of the Service Wives in the USO lounge tonight at 7:30. All wives of servicemen are In vited. Refreshments will be served. To Visit Parents Mrs. AI C, Friesen will leave this weekend for a visit with her parents In Salem where she plans to do some canning and preserving. Field Inspection The second field Inspection of potatoes for geH petrliflraf Inn u.111 V.. durtl-rt nvt ub u,ti. V XI Jackman will again bo here." Dane Saturday Women of the Moose are inviting members ond guests to a dance to be hold Saturday night In the Moose hall. Visit Perenta Mi- nn.t .r. Russell Crandnll of Yreka snent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. w. wranoall, 219 Eldorado. Visits Parents Mrs. Roy Rti. kala of Texas Is visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lekberg, of this city. Recoverina Mrs P. V Plnlr. elt is recovering from major sur- Urrv at Hillside hnenltnl .nH I. able to receive visitors. Men. Women! Old at 40,50,60! WantPep? Want to Feel Ysars Younger? Do ynt tilanw sihsuilMt. woraHit (MUof an uT Thottuti'li tintnid st what links (ppi.n Up Itt IMtrM hut done), i 'onUini lonta msny tttA ai in, JSO, AO, (or tw1r n!4 toWty tMcaitaa I'.w In iron; atao up pile vtiarntr, ralMgm, piinaphoru. i& in, Uwfuetorr ill oow nl JUfl ity (hirei Tnntf Tsbkt for oaw pap, jrouof sf fMlIng, ibis ru tHy. Ai 4rg ilofti avsrywhara In K la ma In falls, ftl Whllma Drug 4 Walfrsan'a. 00 roi pi" i LMI Fed. Tax $5.95 MAIN LOW PRICES Granddaughter Phones "p,,, starting In go to Sunday schoii! now,'.' Uiree-yeur.old Joyce Ann St I'll I Hi told her gl'iiuilinollii.n Mis. Klslu lleeht of Kliimut. Falls, over a long dlstiinre phnnt call Sunday morning. Mrs. John Strand Jr., of Wisconsin phoned her niolhei', Mrs, lleclil. upon th Inslstiiut'e of Joyce Ann who couldn't wait to imparl her good news by mall, J Navy Meeting M. Mniilvii Bryan has returned from a trip to San Francisco where she met her liushand, Knxlgit Donning Urynn. Mrs. Bryan left Khun, sill Falls the morning of Augin 14 and arrived In the bay city In time for the V-J celebralloui Knilgn Brynn hncl a few duyi leave In port and has relumed to sea duly, To Valley Mr. anil Mrj Waller .lU.imnn have sold their home on Hechiinallnn and hnvi gone lo the Itngue river valley to make their future honnt. While there they visited with old friends from Kliiinnlli Fnllj, Mr. and Mrs. S, L, Burnett, novy of Grants Pass. In Lebanon Mrs. Floru I,Iih. sey and nephew, Ronald lleniii berger, have returned from t visit with Walter Lhulney mid family In Lebanon, Ore. 1 i Maor Surgery Mrs. Bud Lee of Dairy Is in Klamath VnU ley hospital where she will tin dergo major surgery. ', Radio Programs lC II Mutual. Don Lee ""1 Thurs. Evenlna, Aug. 33, 194J :M p. m. It.btl.l il a t I . r, K.aa ill li l n a a r It. nr. la aia, lulu tar. .n4. I 10 T I I I I Tun. , M (II. nr. II. ran .'. I lit N Mlll. N.ai I t;16 nine. O S th Nsll.n 1 liSS Hsl.a H.l.r. II. n. Vl Jim II . ) I 1. S... 1 IS K.a Mii.r :M It I I I . I llrMmm.ua' K M N.. R.sa4l Friday. Aug. 24. 1945 I It.aa M . I a t .as M.I. SI,. ' 1H n.aa Ham. I a w a 1. M.Wr. tils H..I flats Ms M . a 1 1 a Ills ilmlla Tim. im l.l.na M.I. aal.i m r i Ho rts.a.. i ia T.s, it r.r Tims i i f f r. tiee I I I I a as Lans, N.ws ill H I r I t I tl.wa.r : a.tilii M.tla.a I II V.M.I! la vas If ia Wat tlsatl Tax. ' 11:11 r a r m 1 .n a a a M.rkaj tl.a.rl. , l:a p. m. K.art l.r V.. ' il J a a a a smll " til A 1 if 1 1 a. Ma.lral. " Mail. Taal aa.rkl. tin V.. risk tm :lt t'aar.fl Tim rM Hun a Rail . IS T.a Tlma I IS Klaa H.aa.tl 4 M rail. a 1 .!, Jr., N.a. . 1:11 It . a Mill.., . N.aa I It l.r.l ) I Tl t T.filra ; 4lU Kliailp Ta.atrs Tlma ll.a m.aa it. .Sr. N.a. I:ll H.m.lhlnr ta T.Ik Ab.al tfc st.nlh.l.lam M.ulilsln..r. Iilt Car. rl Mla lalar.s MM tllrh A J.sa. al. 11:11 .l.ns.r af alu.le 11:11 N.aa 11:11 Kll.lll Maala lia liar. . N.w. Silk HHH.IIH.il i :! t.m Mil IlU SUM Mil WHS S. C. MITCHELL WINEMA HOTEL Fri. and Sat., Aug, 24-25 100 to 8:00 P. M. NO TTIY PACK NO ATTlRV WIRII NO TTIItY CASI NO IATTIIIY OAHMINTI MONO-PAC 'A (lit wilaM el moit heerlna eldi CLEAR NOISELESS HEARING ite cats' er (tie lion noim. PLUG-IN TUBES, itluilvt with Ballon., msl rapalrl ilmpl ' end Ineipentlve. Auurt con llnuoui ervlee free Demonstration No Obligation r::r.-x.:.v.r.Li S. C. Mitchell. 214 Miner Bldg. Eugent, Oregon. Mail. . a t.w fill V.xrlall' kasllri as Iks Nia i.ll.ai'H.araa Hil. Mi mm """ JtATl Member Jimn N. Taft k; Aiioclntoi, 611 Lumbermen'!' Bldg., Portland 4, Oregon. "Serving the Hard ot Hearing Sine 1934" , . . t