Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 10, 1948, Page 2, Image 2

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    HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
SATURDAY, JAN. 10, 1948
JACI TWO
I Phone 326 ft.!? ,
Knda Taay
In Tin Tla Jr. la
"Law of the Wolf"
and
Dana Andrtwa
In "Boomerang
Caailaasaa Bhawa Dally Fram
!: P. M.
TOMORROW
Humphrey Btrt
In Ltarea RmH
"DARK PASSAGE"
ALSO
Aollan WMlfri
'Thunder-Gap Outlows"
44
End! Today
Oantlnaoai fthowi From
ISM P. M.
CaaUnaana Show Snnday From
1230 P. M.
TOMORROW
a"- ...
tit
mvmaaorqcrsiiiii
GONE WITH THE WIND
St TtXBMCOLOC
Clark Gableii
mux au,u
HOTARDoDcHaVILLANV
vVrVIENLUGH-s
BEMEMBER THESE
FEATVKK TIMES
SUNDAY
IK t-M r. M.
LWeck Daya
afaUsaoa Doora Opott lt:N
Foawra at 1M 9- m.
Ooa Ira Shaw at 8:M P. M.
TODAY ONLY
ContinBoas Shows from 1Z-M a.m.
Ol THE STAGE S4 P. H.
"Shoot The Works"
AND
KMlira Thriller
"SONG OF
THE DRIFTER"
ENDS TODAY
Conttavou Shvwi from 1XM p.m.
I Phone 8484 jjl
I Phone 4567 l.
n
At
TOMORROW
Con Unseal 8bwt from IS&fl p.m.
Midnight' Preview
Tb fit Deeri Op list p.m.
at
Etqv'r Theatre Only
-DAVAcnDn
1 ANDREWS
rM FONDA
I -
wM Petty Ann Owimt
. a ink WM
M - 6
Added Traala I
"FOOTnALL FANFAKE" I
Color Cartoon - News H
Speculation
Probe May
Go Deeper
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 Mi
Chairman Ferguson IK-Mirh.) said
today hU senate committee invcatl
gating commodity speculation wants
to know more about conversations
Edwin W. Pauley had with two
cabinet members about the time he
completed a profitable market deal
last August.
The committee probably will call
Secretary of Agriculture Anderson
and Robert E. Hannrran. until re
cently postmaster general and head
of the democratic national commit
tee, to tell of their talks with Pauley
at his Hawaiian estate, Ferguson
told a reporter.
He said no date has been set for
reopening the Pauley angle.
Harold E. Stassen, the former gov
ernor of Minnesota now campaign
ing for the republican presidential
nomination, told Ferguson's ap
propriations subcommittee yester
day that administration Insiders
including Pauley have been In the
markets to the extent of about S20,
000.000 and have profited by ap
proximately $4,000,000 since the end
of the war. He said Pauley alone
made $1,000,000.
Stassen said he has information
on about 11 big traders in the ad
ministration or closely related to it.
"I will not name them until I am
ready to back It up with positive
proof," he said.
Stassen said congress should pass
a law barring all government em
ployes from buying stocks, bonds or
commodities of a speculative na
ture. There is nothing illegal about
such activities under present law.
Stassen declined to name the
government employes who, he said,
gave him the first "crucial Informa
tion" which led him to name Paul
ey, now a special assistant to Sec
retary of the Army Koyall, as a
speculator.
Although Pauley was not in the
government last August, Stassen
i said, he was not only an Insider but
was "in the very center of the in
side." Pauley took the army de
partment Job September 3.
Russia Still
Fears Bomb
BRYN MAWR, Pa.. Jan. 10 UrV
The only reason Russia has not
seized the Dardanelles and the Ara
bian oil fields is because the United
States has possession of the atomic
bomb, says John M. Hancock, gen
eral manager of the U. S. atomic
energy commission.
He told a meeting sponsored by
Bryrt Mawr and Haverford colleges
last night that "we don't dare do
less than to make as many bombs
as we can."
Hancock said he realized "these
are brutal statements" but added
that he thought his point of view
"realistic."
He pointed out the impasse cre
ated by Russia's refusal to agree
to a system of free international in
spection of atomic energy plants
and declared:
"If we can't get worldwide con
trol, we must get a system less than
world wide, guaranteeing every na
tion signing the agreement not to
use the bomb unless armed troops
cross their border."
He said atomic bombs will be used
unless they are outlawed by a wide
system and admonished.
"We shouldn't see preparations
for war going on and wait until it
is too late we should recognize the
fact early and hit early."
He added that "as of this date
there is no reason for the United
States to be concerned about the
discovery of any quantity of
uranium in territory we don't con
trol." He expressed the belief "no other
nation can build the bomb for years
and years."
Historical Group
Wins Award
The Klamath Historical society
has been granted an award cer
tificate by the American Association
for State and Local History, the
citation recognizing distinctive con
tribution by the Klamath group to
local historical interest and knowl
edge. The particular incident which
drew the award was a point tour of
the Modoc battlefield In May, 1946,
with the Siskiyou County Historical
society.
Grower Offers
Navajos Work
WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 iP) A
Oresham, Ore., berry packer said
he would establish a work camp
near Oresham for 200 to 300 Navajo
Indians If they could be obtained
for the May-October picking sea
son. A. W. O'Connell told a reporter
that he had conferred yesterday
with William E. Warne, assistant
secretary of the Interior, on the
plan. He added that James Stew
art, Navajo reservation superin
tendent, would take the matter up
with the tribal council In the next
few months.
Tito Presented
With Grandson
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Jan. 10
(P) Marshal Tito was presented
with a grandson, weight 10 pounds,
the day after Christmas, It was
learned today. The baby was born to
the pretty Russian wife of Zharko,
Tito's oldest son.
Details of the private life of Tito
and his family do not appear In
print here. Government officials
who could be reached said they did
not know of the birth. There was
no Information on the first name
of the new grandson.
On the market Is t new com
mercial solvent which moth proofs
and dry cleans clothing simultaneously.
Grange
t rs
1 'isv
L. Alva Lewis. Klamath Falls poultrymnn. was Installed as president
of Shasta View grange at a ceremony held Thursday night at Shasta
school.
L. Alva Lewis
Heads Grange
L. Alva Lewis was installed as
president of the Shasta View grange
at a ceremony conducted by Rex
High, county deputy grange master
at the Shasta school Thursday
night.
Marian Lewis was installed as
overseer. Pauline Christen as lec
turer, A. E. Bergloff as steward.
Elton Fishbeck as assistant steward,
and Anna McCormack as chaplain.
Ada Barleen is the newly-installed
treasurer: Eola Wryn. sec
retary; Ruth Matthews, gatekeeper:
Louis La Salle. Ceres; Nellie E.
Lewis. Pomona: Delphene Burgloff,
Flora: Alma Baker, lady assistant
steward.
Serving on the executive commit
tee for the ensuing year will be
Fred Lewis. Clara Caseday and
Floyd Hoover.
WAA Freezes
Explosives
ASBURY PARK. N. J.. Jan. 10
UP) All undelivered orders of sur
plus army explosives were frozen
today by the New York region of
the war assets administration and
the New Jersey and New York state
police bad confiscated from 126 to
135 tons of explosives which they
said had been gathered by Zionists
for illegal shipment to Palestine.
Police said the remainder of a
199-ton consignment of explosives
still was missing.
Three trucks containing 67 tons
of highly-explosive cyclonite blocks
were seized late yesterday In Ulster
county, N. Y. This seizure followed
discovery of a cache of 59 tons of
explosives in a warehouse here and
in a farmhouse in nearby Wall
township Thursday night and yes
terday. Some 5200 combat knives origi
nally made for the U. S. navy and
a quantity of first-aid kits also were
found in the warehouse.
The freeze order was described by
John R. Campbell, WAA regional
director, as a "precautionary meas
ure" against "any possible illegal
handling of explosives. In coopera
tion with the normal police powers
of local and federal governments."
The uncertainty In the exact num
ber of tons seized arose when state
police and Monmouth County Prose
cutor J. Victor Carton placed the
total confiscated here at 59 tons
and navy public relations authori
ties said the batch weighed 68 tons
when it was unloaded at the Earle
ammunition depot in Leonardo for
safe-keeping.
Federal Savings
Declares Dividends
LAKEVTEW, Jan. 10 The Lake
view Federal Savings and Loan as
sociation declared its 26th semi
annual dividend for the period July
1 to December 31, 1947, at the rate
of three per cent per annum. This
rate Is being consecutively main
tained. The association has made the
greatest progress during 1947 that
It has ever made in any one year.
Its assets Increased 27 per cent over
1946.
Mail Equipment
Due In Lakeview
LAKEVIEW, Jan, 10 Lakeview
city mall delivery will get under
way as soon as necessary equipment
arrives, It was announced by Post
master Fred Peate who said that
the equipment was ordered Novem
ber 21 by the fourth assistant post
master general and should arrive at
any time.
Peate said that he has lined up
the two carriers necessary and has
arranged for hire of a truck for
parcel post delivery.
24 HOUR SERVICE
for
Top Quality Heating Oils
Dependable Check and Fill Service
Larry Gotrget
BASIN OIL CO.
1.130 Klamath (Former Location M. Si M. Market)
Office Phone 6696 Nlrhts, Sundays, Holidays Phone 6041
President
k.x ,
Junior Farmers'
Banquet Slated
Francis Skinner. 4-H club agent
for Klamath county Is program
chairman for the Junior Farmers'
banquet which will be held Tuesday.
8 p. m.. at the Pelican cafe.
This is ladies' night and each
man may bring one or more wom
en. Reservations should be in as
soon as possible with Pat McKay,
4-H club office secretary.
No Wedding
For Mihai
LAUSANNE. Switzerland, Jan. 10
(jP) Waj. Jacques Vergotli. aide to
ex-King Mihal of Romania, declared
today that "for the moment" there
Is not going to be any wedding for
Mihal and Princess Anne of Bourbon-Parma.
He said In an interview that the
former monarch might "eventually''
marry Princess Anne, whom he
"really loves" and who Is Ideally
suited to be his wife "but no wed
ding for the moment."
He hinted broadly that the former
monarch's advisers are opposed to
the marriage, at least for now.
Vergotti said Michael's unofficial
engagement was "another reason"
why he was forced from the throne,
because the communist-dominated
Romanian government wanted to
forestall an "upsurge of the king's
popularity" which would have fol
lowed a royal wedding and make his
removal more difficult.
Marriage while he was king would
have been in his favor, the aide
said, but marriage now would "give
the wrong Impression."
Princess Anne, who was en route
to Join Mihai in Switzerland, left
her train at Liege. Belgium, this
morning and set out by automobile
for Luxembourg, where she said she
would spend some time to "have a
little rest." She gave no explanation
of the apparent change In plans.
This Skunk Was
In Tight Spot
BISMARCK. N. D.. Jan. 10 yPt A
flashing object, shining brightly In
the sun and bobbing up and down
on a Bismarck airport runway, at
tracted the attention of Raymond
w. Helnemeyer of Bismarck.
It suddenly began moving toward
a hangar. Hememeycr took a closer
look, saw what It was, grabbed a
21 caliber pistol and fired.
Stopped In its tracks was a skunk
estimated weight at 10 pounds
with its head tightly wedged In a
small fruit Jar.
Locomotive Upset
Injures Eight
BOSTON, Jan. 10 (IP) At least
eight persons were taken to a hos
pital and more than 50 others
shaken today when the locomotive
of a Providence to Boston train
overturned at the Back Bay sta
tion. First reports from the New Haven
railroad Indicated 63 persons had
been hospitalized but a check
showed only eight persons were
taken to city hospital.
A railroad spokesman said later
the other passengers were not be
lieved Injured seriously.
Eighty per cent of the men Join
Ing the United States navy are
working at full or part-time Jobs at
the time they enlist.
IRRIGATION SYSTEMS
SoM lonllf bf
J. W. KERNS
Wool Growers
Eye Future
PORTLAND, Jim. 10 (VI The
Oregon Wool Growers' association
went into the second day of Its
annual convention line todny wall
talk of the future dominating the
meeting.
Delegates heard yesterday of a
national decrrnst In the site ol
sheep flocks and were told by C, M.
Jones, secretary of the National
Wool dowers' association, that
Oregon's decrease of 63 per cent was
the heaviest of any state.
Jones suld, however, that research
In new wool processes may hull the
downward trend, lie cited studies
on slutiik-proollng, moUi-prooling,
reuse resistance and better usage
of wool by-products.
Ira D. Stuggs, slate president, as
serted wool was the key to the sheep
Industry's success without it, sale
of sheep would be unprofitable.
Willamette valley growers accept
ed his proposal to contribute a fee
of 75 cents a carload of lambs to
finance a national publicity cam
paign on lamb as meat.
Sen. Wayne L. Morse in his speech
blamed Industry for Inflation, and
asked reinstatement of federal con
trols. "Industry's lucreuse in prices con
sistently have been about double
that needed to meet wuge Increases,"
he said.
Farmers Day
Set Jan. 24
The 14th annual Farmers and
Stockmen's Day will be held Sat
urday. January 24. at the Oregon
Vocational school with the noon
banquet In the mess hall.
Registration will start at It a. m.
at OVS. Secretary-Treasurer Lee 8.
McMullen of Klamath Production
Credit association, announced. The
program which will embody the an
nual financial report, election of
two directors for terms of three
years each, and an address by J. W.
Hradley, secretary for the Produc
tion Credit corporation of Spoknne,
Wash.
There will be music and enter
tainment during the luncheon and
the business will be taken up at Its
elate. McMullen said.
OVS Director Winston D. Purvlne
is slated to say a few words to the
group and accommodations are
being made for 500 luncheon guests.
E. A. Geary and Lee Holliday are
the two directors whose terms ex
pire this year.
Passengers
Leave Ship
TOKYO. Jan. 10 (fP) Passengers
of the stricken Russian ship Dvlna
are being transferred to a Soviet
destroyer and on escort vessel tn
the waters off Northeast Japan, the
U. S. navy reported todoy.
The novy said there was no In
dication how many of the Dvlna's
reported 780 passengers had been
rescued. The reports, radioed to
the navy from Japanese vessels at
the scene, said the passengers were
being transferred to the Soviet ships
via small boats.
The reports did not Identify the
passengers by nationality, or say
whether women and children were
among them.
The Japanese vessels among
eight which were standing by the
Dvlna 150 miles east of the south
ern tip of Hokkaido reported calm
seas. The Dvlna tind been lashed
by 50-foot waves since her first dis
tress calls Wednesday night.
Earlier today, a Soviet rescue ves
sel succeeded in putting a pump
aboard the leaking and floundering
vessel. A spokesman for the Rus
sian mission in Japan said this had
greatly Improved the prospects of
towing the Dvlna to port.
Lumber Union
Officials Meet
PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 10 P
CIO lumber union officials met
here today to discuss possible wage
demands. Their session followed the
break-up of wage discussions by
AFL negotiators and Western Ore
gon and Washington fir Industry
employers.
CIO delegates from Washington,
Oregon, California, Idaho and part
oi Montana were present.
The AFL-employer session ended
yesterday after two days in which a
union spokesman said "no progress"
was made. No future meeting was
scheduled.
Under discussion was a November
request for a 30-cent hourly wage
Increase. It would boost the fir
Industry minimum generally to
1.62',4 an hour.
YOUR
YOU
IT
Need If
Needs
THAT MEANS:
k Regular Inspections
if Regular Lubrications
Regular Adjustments
For teal car conservation end continued maximum per
formance have your car checked now by our skilled, trained
mechanics
with
modern tools end eaulpment
at this eonvenlent location
en Klamath Avenue, Where 8th Street Ends
Odell Motor Co.
Phone 4149
District Manager
a"'
W. V. ('riddle, district manuirr
for Cition Oil company, prraldrd
at tile annua! banquet at the Wll
lard hold Thursday night.
Easter To Face
Grand Jury
Justice of the Peace J. A. Ma-
honry said Friday he was binding
William Jucksou Krister, Culllornlii
street grocer, over to the grand Jury
on a charge of assault with a dun
gcrotis weapon.
A preliminary hearing was con
ducted for Easter yesterday. He Is
accused of shooting and sllKhlly
wounding Richard Gnsklns, a neigh
bor, during an argument at the
store December 6.
The grand Jury is due for active
session January 19. Eastrr is tree
on $1000 ball.
Ashley Appointed
To Greyhound Job
Ross W. Ashley has been appoint
ed a superintendent of Pacific Grey
hound bus lines, according to an an
nouncement made by F. W, Acker-
man, president of the company.
Ashley will make his headquarters
in Reno and will have charge of
operations south of Reno. In addi
tion he will have charge of the
service to Klamath Falls, now oper
ated by OCWN Stages, as soon as
Greyhound takes over Uiat line.
Greyhound's application to as
sume the OCArN line has been ap
proved by the Interstate commerce
commission. ,
Four-H News
The reorganizations! meeting of
the Olene Ilia-karoo was held at
the home of Jerry Muslen on Wed
nesday. The meeting was called to order
by acting chairman and Rex High,
leoder.
Officers were elected with Helen
Webber, president: Jerry Mosten.
Joy Ross and Jean Tucker as vice
presidents; Jackie Marshall, secre
tary: Duayne Kester. treasurer.
The January meeting was held at
the home of Jackie Marshall. Jan
uary 4, 1948, and refreshment were
served at the close of the business.
Joy Ross was appointed as scribe
for the club.
Cancer Expert
Still In Russia
MOSCOW, Jan. 10 M'r-Dr. Ells
Berven, Swedish cancer specialist,
still was In Moscow txtay, although
he had planned to return to Stock
holm today or Monday, If possible
by plane.
Dr. Berven was called to Mos
cow last week for consultation on a
"serious cancer case." The -message
did not give the name of the patient.
The Swedish press speculated that
the patient might be Prime Minis
ter Stalin. Swiss newspapers this
week published stories Inquiring
whether Stalin was dead. The Rus
sian embassy In London and Tass
said he was not.)
- KNAPP SHOES -
Complete line for both drew
or work. Shorn for men
ttnd women, direct from
factory to you. Cushioned
for comfort Any lait you
require. For a perfect fit
and complete na tUf actions
aare middle-man's profit
Ptf Rfflttr Rhuft Roy Knapp
J. O. KENNETT
229 East Main Phone 820S
CAR
For Essential Driving.
Essential Service
jW' 'iY-)
iIJ'i'tlH ItaiSil hum mVtaM
SP Slates
Expansion
I04H will be ii your of excep
tional )t nixi Ity for Hunt hern the.
gun, ammllng to Hoy Linden, ter
ritory manager lor Union Oil cum
puny. The company hits an ex
panded program for development of
its service la tile motoring public
In this area In anticipation of
hravy tourist travel this year.
At a banquet Thursday evening
at the Wlllurd hotel some 75 deal
ers mid representatives were guests
of W. V. Crlddle, district mummer,
The Union Oil company's 194B sales
and advertising program wus pre
sented by a group from Los Angeles,
headed by C V,. (Ted) Itulliboiw,
sales services, head office, and Mike
Corcoran, repienrntlng the com
puny's advertising agency, Foole,
Cono and Drilling, Newspapers par
ticularly will be used to Inorouno
tourist travel and colored postcards
of scenic Southern Oregon spoil
will again be available through nil
Union Oil dealers.
4100Spif
Cars Snipped
Approxlinutely 4100 carloads of
potatoes have been shipped nut of
the Kliimulh basin up until Friday,
with the price still hovering be
tween $3.75 and $4 loaded, same
as was bring puld last week locally.
The estimated total crop for tills
current seuson was between live
and six thousand carloads, In con
trast to some l'.'.OOO carloads shipped
from the Klamath basin In years
past.
Klamath l-A ruvtets were quoted
ut $5 per hundred pounds on the
I.os Angeles market today, while No.
1 russets were bringing between
$4 80 unit $5 on the Portland mar
ket. Those figures Include ship,
plug, commissions and the like.
Washington Man
Said Big Trader
WASHINGTON. Jan. 10 i,l - Kit
wurd S. Small of Yakima. Wash..
whs. one ol 340 so-colled "big
traders'' ill cotton, cottonseed and
wool totw futures whose names were
made public yesterday by Secretary
of Agriculture Anderson.
Their market transactions cov
ered a 23-month period ending No
vember 30, 1B47.
The list, 11th Issued by Anderson
In connection with a congressional
Inquiry on simulators, did not
give the market position of the
traders, but merely listed their
names and addresses. Trading In
commodities is not Illegal.
Lakeview Bank
Deposits Up
LAKEVIEW. Jan. 10-Iloth de
posits and loans at the Lakeview
branch of the First National Bank
of Portland showed substantial In
creases at the end of - 1947 over
figures of the previous year, It was
announced this week by C. P.
Sulder, manager of the branch.
As of December 31, 1047. deposits
totaled $7.MU27.44. Snider said,
and loans totaled $1.858J10M. The
deposits represent an Increase ol
half a million dollars, and the loans
an increase of $450,000.
Classic I Ads Bring Results
Proiarve Those Valuobla
Papers and Documents
Let Us Copy Them
lp to STxil" 0
Underwood's Camera Shop
727 Main Phone 7053
WATCH REPAIRING
WE ARE NOW IN A POSITION TO
GIVE YOU ONE WEEK SERVICE ON
YOUR WATCH WORK.
F. W. BERTRAM
629 Main Street
V-
WW "
life
', f s ' II
"WE'RE STILL
IN BUSINESS . ; .
Even though the recent explosion reduced our building
to ruins!"
Come into our temporary office with your sewage dis
posal problem. We've got strong, long lasting, quality
sewer pipe and drain tile to take care of all your needs.
Come In this week or call 4265.
Klamath Concrete Pipe Co,
80S Marker
Klamath Basin -j
Potato Shipments
(In Carload)
11)47-40 lllld-1
January ... 1 .HI
Month lo Dale JM MS
Nraaon lo Pule 40111 tint
CHICAGO. Jan. V AIMIHDAI
I'olutoea: toUl U, H. slilpmeuls
1005; arrivals 83: on track 133: sup
plies light: demand good, especially
lor best large stocks; market firm:
Idaho Itusscl llurbanks U. H. Nu. 1
$505-505; Minnesota-North Dakota
Ited HUer Valley Cobblers $3 BU,
llllss Triumphs $3 10, led varlrtlrs
$3.50.
LIVESTOCK
CHICAGO, Jan. 10 Ml itlHDAI
Salable hogs 500. Inllll 5MI0 irntl
muted! rumpiiii'il work ago: biinnwa
and gills all weights gimi'iiilly fully
sleuily: sows around Bllo higher.
Hiilabla caltlo 500 InMliniili'ill;
uiMlm-ul liitirkitl. viru tiellvn. IIRIInllV
ut new high prlcrs on crop, led
steers and yearlings, Including
yruillng hellers, our-fl 00 up; rows
$1.00-2.00 higher, uml bulls 6(W-$I 00
up: vealers $2 00 higher: slock rat
tle strong In 50c higher: choice to
prime 1200 lb. steers reached $41 25,
record high; choice yearlings $41 on;
choice steers and yearlings $38 00
upward: medium to good steers
$34tK)-:ii)0(i: medium to good hell
ers $23 011-38 IH), lllgll-rlliili e 1015 III
hellers uncovered second high ut
$38 00; most good ami choice hrifera
$37.00.34 00: cutler rows $lnT
down: strtetly good brcf rows reach- J
ed $35.00: mast roimnnn and inr
(hum rows $17 00-2U00: heavy sau
sage bulls went on to $32 50, stand
out weighty beef bulls to $25 00 and
choice vealers to $34 00: good and
choice slnekers mid meaty feeders
$23 00-25.50, with good In choice
half-fat 1000-1050 lb. short turns
$2800-2850.
Salable sheep 2UO0 irstliiiutrdi;
compared week uko: alatighler
lambs around $1.50 lower: ewes and
yearlings 50-75c higher: week's top
wiKtled liimbs $28 85, closing top
$25 00 with bulk good and rhnlre tor'
week $25 00-28 75: medium and good
wool skins $33 00-25 00; good and
rhotre led cllpel lamtM. No. 1 lrlts
lo fall shorn $75 50-20 00: good tn
choice fed yearling wethers $21 50
22 50; cull In choice slaughter cues
$8 50-12 25: I wo loads good and
choice around DO lb. shearing lambs
$24.75.
NOT llint.K MKNTHiNl.n
The bruin Is not rnrntlnttfd In
the Hlhle. Only In modern limes
has this organ's function been
known. Aristotle, learned Orerk.
believed Its purpose was to cool the
blood.
II Hlfll to improve
7J
CLEM JOYER
1415 Martin Thone 561 J
HAROLD BRITTELL
1221 Reclamation
Phone 5R45
ill?
WJ tttC haw rants, MM.
Klamath Falls' Oldest Jewelers
1
Phone 4265