Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 14, 1946)
Hew Mediation Plan Offered WASHINGTON, March 14 (P) Senator Morse ;(R-Ore.) said to day he believed a mediation icrvice outside .the labor depart ment would give both sides in a labor dispute more confidence. Such a plan is contained in a bill drawn by a drafting com mittee to be presented to the full labor committee, of which Morse Is a member, today. The bill is a substitute for the house Case bill. Morso said he led the fight for the separate mediation service and that it won by only one vote. "I based my motion," Morse told a reporter, "on the argu ment that both labor and indus try, particularly industry, will have greater confidence in medi ation if it is independent of con trol by the secretary of labor. I feel the secretary of labor would be in better, position to appear before an impartial board as sponsor of. labor or on any issue if he has freedom of action. "The board's position as an impartial body would be de stroyed if it is under the control of the secretary.- Setting up an impartial board does not Impair the secretary's authority,", Luncheon To Launch Membership Drive A luncheon scheduled ' for Friday noon in the Pelican party room will be the spring board launching of the Klam ath County chamber of com merce 1946 membership drive. The campaign, for new mem bers has been divided into two teams, "Farmers ' . and City Slickers" but ' members may work on their own without be ing on either team and several enticing awards are being of fered to those signing the great est number of new members. Quota is 600 new members and the deadline for signing this number is April 10 mak ing less than a month to ac complish the job. A tentative Victory luncheon will conclude the campaign ao cording to present plans. OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLI ''here's yww I've sort "DECkB MS2G.HOOPLB. VOLS VJlKi. WE: A.GR.EE TO 25 PERCENT QONZD BOOST. NfeM COCJKs MURDERING US BV ivlri I r r fil cam -AMIS. HOWS, r-UY It- WOtotolbLt. i- ANVTHING YOU "DYING WANT TO ADD -f IF TWlS IS A. TELEGRAM UET'6 KEEP IT "SHORT AMD 50BBV, BOT VME OUGWTA ' 5AY THE FOOD tastes like a . BLACKSMITH'S APRON i E.GAD.' 3UST TACUl OM. AIAOS PlKES FOB. YOUR GLOWING rRESEMCc THAT SHOULD evocniTt UP.O PCTI Ps. ES, MARTHA mill 1 I AIC TUNT i ill. l.u tu , nr v . "AW05 PINES"' A. lerT "x 3-lH Market Quotations Muslin is named after the city of Mosul, where it first was made. INVISIBLE' LIQUID Pnmptiy ReHtra Misery and Helps Heal Ugly skin rashes Bern's a Doctor's antiseptic formula Zemo a stainless liquid which appears inviribis on skio yet so highly medi cated that first applications relieve itching, burning of simple skin rashes, Eczema, Athlete's Foot and similar skin and scalp irritations due to external cause. Zemoisbackedbyan amazing rec ord of success! First trial convinces. In 3 ZEMO l At any drugstore. LOOK OUT FOR PltHVORKsS Recent medical reports rereal that an amaxinr number of children (and jjrown upb too) may be victims of Pin-Worcni often without suspecting what is wronrt And the pesta, Hvinr inaid tht human bodr. can cause real distress. So watch out for the warning sipns that mar mean Pin-Worms especially the asjitrar&tinr rectal itch. Get JAYNE'S P-W and follow the directions. f-W is the Pin-Worm treatment devel oped in the laboratories of Dr. D. Jayne A on, after years of patient research. The mall, easy-to-takc lW tablets act fn a special way to remove Piii-Worms. Ask your druggists PW Jtor Pin-Worms 1 How To Relieve Bronchitis Creomulsion relieves sromrjtlv be cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you b bottle of Creomulsion with the un derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you axe to have your money bade CREOMULSION or Coughs. ChestCoIds, Bronchitis i NEW YORK. March 14 fAPt Selected stocks operated in the recovery column today although many market pivouls continued to iek lower levels. Transfers of around 1 .000.000 shares compared with 1,610.000 Wednesday. Closing Quotations: American Can 1B2 Am Tel Si Tel 188 Anaconda ..: 44s Caltf Packing 40 Commonwealth Sc Sou 3U Curtis-Wright Sls General Electric General Motors Gt Nor Ry pfd Kennccott ......... Long-Bell "A" 43. 71 Va 37 ..... 51 1, Montsomerv Ward Nash-Kelv .... 21 N V Central 21a Northern Pacific : . 28t Pac Gas t El . 43 J C Penney .. 52T Sears Roebuck . .. .... 41' Southern Pacific i MHi Standard Brands 46V Studebaker 28i Sunshine Mining ... 18 Union Oil Calif 24 Union Pacific ; ....15U4 U S Steel - 81 Warner Pictures , 38i Potatoes PORTLAND. Ore.. March 13 f API- Potatoes: local Burba nk, 33.00-3.50 cental; Idaho, $3.50-4.00 cental: Deschutes. 100s, No. 1, 94.00 cental; 25s, . 31.08; 15a t cents. . ' LOS ANGELES. March 14 fAP-lTSDA, Potatoes: 3 broken, 37 unbroken cars on track; arrivals Idaho 15, Utah 5. California 2. Oregon 1, Colorado 1; two cars arrived by truck; market dull. SAN PRAVCISCO. March 14 fAP- USDAr Potatoes: old stock 8 broken. 21 unbroken cars on track; arrivals Idaho 7. Oregon 2, California 5: new stock: 1 car on track; arrivals Florida market about steady : Klamath and Idaho Russets No. 1 size A $3.60; No. 2 size A 32.50. CHICAGO. March 14 fAP-USDAt Potatoes: arrivals 173. on track 207, total U. S. shipments 1318. Old stocks: suonlies moderate, demand slow, market dull. New stocks: supplies moderate, de mand slow, market dull. Idaho Russet Burbanks V. S. No. 1, 33.35-3.80; Col orado Red McCIures U. S. No. 1. 33.25: Minnesota and North Dakota Cobblers commercial 32.20; Florida 50 lb. sacks Bliss Truimphs U. S. No. 1, $2.10-2.25. LIVESTOCK DENVER. March 14 'fAP-ITSDA Sal able and total sheep 9300; market active: slaughter lambs 25 cents higher; around 30 loads choice wooled Colorado! 315.35; flat or memo: few strictly good -choice $15.15: - good-choice wooled truck-ins 314.75; several good lots SI 4.50; medium- gooa i.j.du-j..zo; siaugnter ewes strong to 25 cents higher; good-choice $7.50 8.00; common-medium $8.50-7.00; few good-choice feeding lambs steady at $15.00-50. SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. Mnrh 14 fAP-USDAt Salable cattle 50. calves none; generally steady; carload lots steers, heifers and range cows absent; few heavy dairy tvoe cows Sll.oo-30: cutter-common cows $8.50-10.50; few can- ncr o.uu a own; common-gooa sausage ouim 9iv.w-i.w; caives nominal, quot able top $16.00. Salable hoss 200; (oaHv f wnnA. choice 200-300 lb. barrows and gilts $15.80: odd good sows $15.03; medium good feeder pigs $15.80-16.50. Salable sheep 300; old crop lambs weak; two decks good 102 lb. wooled Inmtui S 13 .Ml sorted with common lambs $12.00; generally 50 cents to $1.00 lower tnan two weens ago; mcaium-guoa awe quoted $5.50-7.50. PORTLAND. Ore.. Msrch 14 (AP USDAi Salable cattle 100, total 130; salable and total calves 23; market sctive. fully steady but quality mostly canner-common; odd medium steers up to $13.25: common grades mostly $12.00 13,50: cutter-common heifers S9.00-12.50: canner and cutter cows $7.50-9.50; fnt dairy type cows to $11.00: medium beef cows to $12 00; comnton-fairly good bulls $d.00-12.00; medium-good vealers $14.00 16.00; choice salable $16.50; culls down to 37.00. Salable hogs 50, total 500: market active, steady: barrows and gilts largely $13.80; odd 330 lb. $13.50; good sows $15.03: choice 95 lb. feeder pigs $15.50. Salable sheep none, total 1200; market quotable steady: good-choice lambs sal able around $14.50-13.00; good ewea quotable to $6.50. CHICAGO. Match 14 (AP-USDAl Salable hogs 5500. total 10.500; active. ttrlv trrwwi and choice barrows and gilts. $14.85 ceiling; sows. $14.10 celling Salable cattle 4500. total 5000; salable calves 600. total 600; general market steady; peddling attitude however in buying all classes; most fed steers 313.00 16.75; top 317.35 but nothing strictly choice here; best heifers $16.50; most 314.75-16.00; outsiders and local small killers took most of crop, big packers concentrating mainly on cows and heif ers: ' beef bulls active at $13.30-14.33; sausage offerings mainly $12.00-13.25; very weak offering In vealers at $16.50; market standing 50 cents lower for week to date: stock cattle again very scarce. Bala Die aneep tow; unai ww; very active early sales slaughter lambs fully steady to 30 cents higher, mostly 15 to 39 cents up; two toaas sinewy iuuu aim choice fed wooled Colorado $15.65; four loads good and choice Colorado $13.50; one load $13.25. some held above $15.63; slaughter ewes steady: scattered lots good and choice natives to $8.00; fed medium to good wooled yearlings $12.00. WHEAT CHICAGO. March 14 AP Oats and May rye were under moderate pressure most of the time today, but all wheat futures were back at celling prices in a light trade. Gains of V to ? of a cent a bushel shortly after the start of trading but September and December wheat back at the maximum quotations along with May and July. The reinstatement of the top allowable figures completed the re covery of around 2 cents a bushel which the grain lost In a general sell-off a week ago. Wheat unchanged to ic higher than yesterday's finish, all deliveries at 31.83W celling: corn unchanged at $1.21 '-j ceiling bid; oats Vc down to Uc up. May B3c ceiling: rye unchanged to 14C lower. May $2.13t-3; barley un changed. May $1.26 ' ceiling bid. WEATHER Euffene Klamath Falli - Sacramento Portland , Reno San Francisco Seattle Medord Red BluI Max. , 53 36 58 . 52 ..47 32 M 4S 58 Mln. Preclp. .11 .00 Trace Trace Trace .00 .03 Trace .00 west portion today aprcadin( to north east portion tonight. Slightly warmer In southwest portion today and over state tomorrow. Friday light showers. ?hn ,ou,nwMt n'' decreasing to- HOBTHEHtf CALIFORNIA Generally clear today and tonight: cloudy Friday with rain northern portion reaching southern portion In afternoon or ovenlngi rising daytime temperatures: moderato to iresn southwesterly wina on cwii. VITAL STATISTICS LILLY norn at Klamath Valley hoj. nltaL Klamath rails. Ore.. March 13, 1S48, to Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Lilly. 837 Mitchell, a boy. Weight: 3 pounds 13 ounces. OBITUARY FRANCIS KDWARU PARKKR Frances Edward Parker, a resident of Merrill. Ore., for the last 14 years pained away near Wood river on Tuesday, March 12. .1946. lie was a native or Sacramento. Calif., and at the time of his death was aged 33 years 6 month! and 14 days, surviving are nts wtte, Mrs. Edith Parker, one son. Edward Francis Parker and one brother, Dalton Parker all of Merrill, Ore. The remains rest in the Earl Whit lock Funeral home, Pine at 6th, where friends may call af ter 12 noon Friday. Notice of funersl to be announced in this issue ot the paper. FUNERAL FRANCIS EDWARD PARIfKR Funeral services for the late Francis Edward Parker of Merrill. Ore., who passed away near Wood river on Tues day. March 12. 1946. will b held in the First Presbyterian church at Merrill. ore.,- on Saturday luarcn is. at 2 p. m.. with the Rev. David J. Fergu son, paitor, officiating. Commitment services and Interment family plot IOOF cemetery. Merrill, Ore. Arrangements are under the direction of the Earl Whit lock Funeral home of this cfty. Friends are invited. Churchill Silent On Stalin Blast NEW YORK, March 14 W) Winston Churchill remained si lent today on accusations leveled against him by Generalissimo Stalin as he whipped into shape a 30-minute speech ho will de liver tomorrow night at an of ficial New York: city dinner. The . Mutual broadcasting sys tem - said ' the former "British prime; minister would discuss "latest developments" in connec tion with his recent Fulton, Mo., address. He is scheduled to start speaking at 7:30 p. m., PST. Stalin charged Churchill yes terday with working for a "war with the USSR" and with telling "lies" in his Missouri talk. Visiting Clarence W. Ward, recently discharged from the U. S. navy, is visiting here for a short time with his grand mother, Mrs. Marguerite Ward, 925 High. He was accompanied to Klamath Falls by Dean Still wagon',' army veteran. Both young men reside at Alhambra, Calif. : Clarence plans to enroll at the University of Oregon for the spring term. Thousands of mea and women bare found that time-tested Stuart Tablets bring quick, happ; relief to sleep-robbing symptoms ot acid indigestion easiness, and upset atom acb. Taste delicious, easy tc take no mixing, no bottle. Try them harv a food night's sleep and wake up. like a $1,000,000. Out genuine Stuart Tablets at your druggist only 25c, oOc, or S1.20 under mak er's positive money-back guarantee Does Distress Of lMd,cFEf,1ALE WEAKNESS Make You Feel "A Wreck" On Such Days? , Do rou suiter from monthly cramps, headache, backache, feel nervous, i Jittery, cranky, "on edge" at suoh times duo to functional periodic disturbances? Then try Lydla E. Plnkham's vcnetttble Compound to relieve suoh symptoms. Plnkham's Compound nois Monr. than relieve such monthly pain. It also relieves accompanying tired, weak feelings of such nature. It has a soothing effect on one of woman's most Important organs. Taken thruout the month Pink, mm s Compound helps build up re slstanco against such symptoms. It's also a great stomachic tonic I LyDIH.PINKHAM,Seot lib IjijiHfl Continuoui Daily, Open 12:30 -ENDS TODAY! ii Bins 2 Mat) Crosby H "We're I Not T Dressing" $f West "Night . After Night" Starts Friday! A Beautiful Girl in a Haute of HAUNTING HORROR! THRILLS! FOX INFORMATION DIAL 1414 01 4567 DOORS OPEN 6:45 a- m at. sv!".l 'PLUS! Rhythm and Action on the Range 1 JJaatJdlwf L,&rrg lf-i : L4K . rttvaW.l'' Si na avlfs JIMMY; WAKIIIV . C tt"lantrVHITE Urraim MMH. ; v OPA Blasted For Suit Lack WASHINGTON, Mureh 14 (W) A congressional commlttoo to day again heard OPA blamed for the shortuKt! of men's suits, nnd ono retailer duclarud "everything OPA touches dips." Arthur Besae, president of the National Association of Wool Manufacturers, asserted the principal reason for the suit shortugo Is the maximum avcraKo price prouram of OPA. lie proposed drastic revision of OPA policies. Ho mid Wade G, McCargo. Richmond, Va., department store operator, appeared before the house banking committed, which Is considering legislation to extend price control laws, McCargo said: "Everything OPA touches dies. Everything they tako hold of disappears from the legiti mate market and reappears In the black market. "From the cradle to the grave OPA is denying goods for our customers. We are out of dia pers. Last week a customer wanted a white shirt to bury his father In, but wo didn't have It." 10 Senior Students On Honor Roll LAKEVIEW, March 14 Ten members of the . senior class placed on the six weeks' honor roll at Lakcvicw high school, with the sophomores and fresh men getting five each and the juniors failing to place. Seniors: Myrna Perry 1, Alice Harvey 1.25, Elaine Turner 1.33. Wanda Buchor 1.5, Mario Do herty 1.5, Norma Allen 1.(17, Mary Nelson 1.67, Cherry Taylor 1.67, Nola Frakea 1.75, James Moe 1.75. Sophomores: Bob Ogle 1.25, Mary Lou Reynolds 1.6, Naomi Hart 1.75, Martha Singleton 1.75, Ora Lee. Wlman 1.75. Freshmen: Wilda Vincent 1.75, Billy Waters 1.75, Breda Lynch 2, Mildred McLaln 2, Helen Mc Kinney 2. Gee Whii, Ain't People Ignorant! WINTER PARK. Fla March H P) Because- of lack of education, three fourths of all the world's peo ple "would not be able to read the Atlantic charter or any other charter even if you ' put it in their own Ian guage," says Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas. Ho made the statement to reporters in declaring that to preserve peace In the atomic ago, the present Unit ed Nations charter should be amended so that the nations of the world would be weld ed into a world federation "with powers to act as a whole rather than as indi vidual sovereign states." , But to assure the success of such a world organization; he said, "one of the most im portant programs would be the education of the people" in the meaning and objec tives of the federation. . 1 Plywood Plant Remains Closed SPRINGFIELD, Ore., Marcli 14 (i) The Springfield Ply. wood corporation plant was still closed , today becauso the CIO had not removed picket lines and A CI i workers continued to refuse to break through tho lines. A meeting culled by the ACI. yesterday afternoon brought 23 former CIO workers Into the AFL, but failed to break up the strike. Another meeting was scheduled this afternoon. The CIO picket lino was placed around tho wartime strikebound plant because of a recent NLHH election that go VP tho AFL group tho bargaining right for all em ployes. Hokkaido, one of the Japanese home Islands, has almost one fourth of Japan's total home Is land area. Thursday, March 14, U4t USO Program Set Tonight The USO will end 17 months' service In Klamutli Fall with a special closing ceremony tonight. Presonl for the progrum will bo Maj. Henry oKerner. regional supervisor of the Salvutlon Armv bo Maj. Henry Koerner, roglomil supervisor of the National Cath olic Community service, and Her nice O'Denny, director of tho USO in Modford. Master of core, monies will be Clarenco Humble, chairman of the USO operating committee, Special aorvleo awards will bo given to volunteer workers In recognition of their efforts. All volunteers Including the junior and senior hostesses will be present, HEKli . ' : nh.,. Masaaaasaaaaasisaassaaasaaa mm U I TilToday! Doors Open 8:49 i. BBBK W.m" JssfaWiaajaav. M aV I I - J WOUR kV" J Y 7-. 4 iuy yj Kfr OH J-i (MA'AMS 44 Jl! M l IV. America Series "Great Lejcea" 'You Hit The Spot" Musical Parade Latest News Quickiilt,.. Mlrr.in-,. ?p1 ciotw mi ivi,J mi nrmin. work .. mm -OooriOp,M Vlth Sctnii Adutlly Filmed on the M "Life In A Nudist Cor Authinticl Unbelievabli!!: For Adult. Wjl : T0NIGHT!7& ON THE STAGE! tWsl I -3:00P.M.- hrBi THE I : Who ".lamath County Papers See And Hear These Semi-Finals Winners! W. Win? IT' CHARLES (BUD) SELBY PHYLLIS DEAN MICKA SUSAN GANS ALYCE WELLS ORA LEE and MADELINE WIMAN ""AT Who rr-sasBsaslsW. sal - ; Jli ii iW :r: ' W Win! ,".!! Hist" II - The Grand Prize! it Broadlcast' Over KFJI if. if. if. . if. if. ALL EXPENSE PAID TRIP TO HOLLYWOOD! with " . " , ' . . Mutual Broadcasting Co. Radio Audition. Paramount Studio Screen Test! (2nd Prize $25.00 Victory Bond) , No Advance In Admis X X X X T ' n ' f s f T . . f - T