Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, July 01, 1949, Page 6, Image 6

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    PACI SIX
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. ORECON
FRIDAY, JULY 1, Uf
glu
MAIjCOLM IP1JTT
Msnasln S,iilof
rawraa as memt tfm mm al ttf office of (limiK
mUa. Ore.. M Auu.l SO tue, iudr act of eonaraM.
Marc TO
mauu or tmi aeaociAtaia rasas
TS AMMUM4 PfW M MUUM aClU.IV.J lO MS
nv reeubuouoa a all th local im vUM la IBM Mr-
peBV. U All A MWt
thla week-end should take th pledge now to do
nothing that snUht hum a fir. That got, too, tor
paopl who txpict limply to Hrt on tht open high
way. Roadside fire starting from burning tobacco
hare caused ter.lbl holocaust.
Let i not have u.r mora Wooley creeks.
These Days
SUBSCRIPTION ft ATI It
niwiui II J Br mtui
.MMiiti 11 S By mill
Month
Nr iiu u
JUL
EPLET
he says art
Today's Roundup
By MALCOLM EPLET
AN old Klanuthlt. K. Bugarman. hat made him
elf tht unofficial but faithful watchdog of
Ban Francisco retail market in Uieir treatment of
Klamath potatoes. K waa her
this week, and ho had awit In
teresting and lomewhat dlaturb
Ing thing! to report
Deeply loyal to th old home
town and lu products, K alvays
aaka for Klamath potato. And
thlt baa happened:
Ha walka Into a market and
loot! around. No aign of Klam
ath potatoes. He approaches a
clerk and asks for Klamath spuds.
Th clerk looka a little con
futed and goe over to the boat
at th vegetable department.
Th boaa points (o a batch of
poUtoea marked "Idaho." Those.
Klamath.
This haa happened several times, enough to eon
Tlnc K that either Klamath poUtoea are being sold
as Idaho, or Klamath spuds are not being offered
as generously as they should be on the S F. markets.
Inasmuch as several thousand carloads of Klamath
potatoes go to San Francisco each year, the first
conclusion seems most likely to be accurate.
From this, tt Is further fair to conclude that
Idaho pots toes hare established such prestige that
th demand for them leads market men to offer
other pots tors under th Idaho name. Klamath Is
aim ply not doing enough to maintain and improve
th prestige of Klamath potatoes in th areas
where thousands of carloads an marketed.
This brings us to another report irom K. Sugar
man, a familiar story about th mixing of grade
of Klamath poUtoea offered down there. K say
that h geu aom pretty sorry messes sometime
when he buys Klamath poUtoea. Re knows the fin
product, and he Is burned up about It.
Th spuds are shipped out of her as No. l's.
but It Is quit plain that Inferior grade are mixed
with the good ones down there, and the housewife
that get something Ilk that under th nam of
Klamath isnt likely to ask for It again.
This Is a problem that haa received a great deal
of attention here among groweia and Others In
terested In th welfare of our poUto Industry. There
haa been talk of marketing high grade spuds In dis
tinctive package which cant be tampered with, and
aom of this has bean done. Other methods of
attacking the problem are under consideration.
Perhaps, out of the new Oregon poUto commis
sion set-up, step can b taken to advertise Klamath
Potatoes and to protect them from tnuhfmjiinf at
the market points. The stories told by our un
official scout tn San Francisco point to conditions
that definitely must be remedied, and call for th
careful consideration of th tin of action to be
followed.
K. Bugarman. incidentally, might well be estab
lished a a regular contact man and observer for
th Klamath basin potato Industry to the San
Francisco area. He is Intensely Interested, he Is
retired and haa th time to do It, and he Is a
competent business man who knows merchandising.
Here's a guess he'd Just lov to make that contri
bution. .
Worth If (
THE other day this column carried a description
of th ugly burn on Wooley creek above Summer
lake, resulting from th campflr of a careless
hunter at the opening of the 1M deer season.
The story attracted considerable attention, du to
th familiarity of Klamath people with th region
and their realization of what fir can do to a tin
forest.
Thi coming week-end, the forest win be In ex
ceptional danger of Just the aort of devasUUon that
caused such havoc on Wooley creek. People will be
flocking to the woods to large numbers over the
double holiday, the temputlon to shoot firecrackers
and other fireworks will be great, and there win be
eampflre and smokers evervwhere.
Every person who plan, to visit the open country works. I shall give other soon
By GEOMtiK E. SOKOLSKT
FOR a matter of 13 years. I lived under th condi
tion known as extraterritoriality and a nlc thing
It waa for those immune to th law of th land.
Although we lived and worked In China, no law
of that country applied to ua; no Chinee pollr
could Interfere with us or molest us. True, w were
subject to the authority ot th American consul
general and th American court, but neither Institu
tion was effectively organised or manned to do
much about police matters. A fellow could Just
about do as he saw fit and aa hit conscience per
mitted. Most Americans and Britishers behaved themselves,
but some did not I knew a fellow who specialised
in Importing heroin and cocaine Into China. He em
ployed various devices casket, tombstones. Inner
tube and other means. Another made quit a
fortune (hipping opium down the Yangtst river.
If a business firm got Itself registered under a
foreign flag. It enjoyed th "treaty righu" ot that
country. Including extraterritoriality.
A thriving business waa don by foreign consular
offices In selling cltlseruhip to Chinese. Rich
Chinese liked the protection ot "treaty rights." so
that th Chines government could not police them,
although they bad been born In China and had
never left th country. They made private deal
with the consuls through foreign lawyers and. al
though no on was ever able to prove tt, many
European and Latin American consul obviously did
well by themselves.
Chinese Reversal
PRECISELY th right which I enjoyed tor 13
years In China are now by agreement and act of
congress enjoyed not only by those delegated to
UN. but by 834 persons, some ot whom are maid
servants, cooks and chauffeurs, and by a vast num
ber ot UN employees. It Is amusing that whereas
tor years the -Chinese fought to have extraterri
toriality abolished in their country. 1i Chinese enjoy
those rights tn the United Sutes because they are
attached to the United Nations.
The following list shows how many nationals of
different countries enjoy these "treaty righu":
Afghanistan 4: Argentine M; Australia 23; Belgium
: BollvU 4: Braul 33: Byelorussian Soviet Socialist
Republic 1: Canada 38: Chile 15: China 73: Columbia
33: Cosu Rica t: Cuba t: Czechoslovakia Den
mark 13: Dominican Republic T: Ecuador 7: Egypt
11; France 81; Oreece 8: Guatemala 3: Haiti 4::
India 10: Iran 7: Israel 8: Mexico 13: Netherlands
IS: New Zealand 10: Norway 13: Pakistan 7: Panama
10; Peru 8: Philippine 3: Poland 11: Saudi Arabia
3: Sweden 10: Syria 4; Turkey 30: Ukrainian Soviet
Socialist Republic 10: Union ot South Africa 10:
Union of Soviet Socialist Republic 43: United King
dom 144: Uruguay 3: Venezuela 18: Yugoslavia 13.
Th list shows a vast variety of persons who are
not subject to any kind of American law, not even
speeding laws, or who cannot be sued for damage,
except perhaps In the United SUtes supreme court,
even If they rob a shopkeeper or run over someone
with their automobile. Thi Includes household em
ployees, maids, stenographers, clerks, messengers.
chauffeurs, switchboard operators, servant, cooks,
etc, who for some reason are classified as minor
diplomat.
a
How It Works
I NOTE no American on this list although Ameri
cana employed by th United Nations are exempt
from paying Income taxes on their salaries. In spite
of the fact that other Americans do pay income
taxes, including United SUtes government official.
However, an employee need not belong to the
country that employs him or her to get these
special privileges. Just to give a few example tn
alphabetical order, Afghanisun employs a Dutch
lady; the Argentine has French and Italian em
ployees: Australia employs some Canadians: Belgium
some Swiss; Bolivia, an Argentinian: and so It ewes.
All these people are exempt from American laws,
federal, state and municipal, by agreement between
the United SUtes and the United Nations, and by
sell passed by the 78th and 80th congresses. The
wife of th Chilean representative to the United
Nations, Mrs. Santa Crux, a year ago, ran down Mrs.
Friedberg to Great Neck, Long Island, but thus far
Mrs. SanU Cms ha had the law on her aide and
Mrs. Friedberg 1 paying doctor's bills on her own
without recourse. This is one example of how It
SIDE GLANCES
UK t
1
7-1
tor. it t
HA MtWCL BMC T. M. Ma V- 1 Ml. M,
! The World Today!
DtWITT MACKENZIE
AF foreign Affaire Analyst
"The moonlight nights art wonderful and there, are lots of
nice boy here it's the mosquitoes that are going to
make an old maid out of me!"
Static
By RED 111 RD
i
-V. i- ...
M'St ' ft". V
1 ft -r-V r'-WH -
i 1 V' , '
mm, Vj
THE DOCTOR SAYS
Trichinosis Threat Told
By EDYTIX F. JORDAN, M. D.
n linen for NEA Service
A tiny animal parasite which Is
cause of a rather common disease
known a trichinosis. Infection
comes most often from eating im
properly cooked pork or pork pro
ducts. Cooking destroys these tiny
animal parasites but infected meat
which has not been entirely heated
through frequently conuina live
trlchlnellae.
A recent outbreak reported from
Iowa is typical. Members of a
Ladies Aid group gathered together
for their regular bi-monthly meet
ing, at which sandwiches were
erved, made from mixed ham,
hard-boiled eirgs and mayonnaise.
The butcher shop had prepared the
mat by grinding up a large sausage
which was said to be "a cheap
type of sandwich meat which sells
rapidly."
Symptoms Developed
The meat was eaten on December
15. 1848. The first active signs be
gin to appear Just before the
Christmas holidays. Patient eom
pUined of cramps to the abdomen,
diarrhea, nausea, and chills and
fever.
Later, pains In the muscles set
In with stiffness of the neck, puffl
ness under the eyes, ano swelling
of the gUnds of the neck. The
reason for the muscular symptoms
U that these tiny animal parasite
muscle.
Thi kind of outbreak of trich-
inosis is all too common. Certainly
the best aafeguard against this dis
ease other than attacking it In
hogs and careful Inspection of meat
which of course re the reponslblH
ty of hog raisers and aanlUry In
spectors relatively) is throrougb
cooking of all pork product.
Note: Dr. Jordsn Is unable to
answer Individual questions from
reader. However, each day he will
answer one of the most frequently
asked questions In his column.
The Doctor Answers
QUESTION: What can be done
to halt the growth of my 11-year-old
girl who Is five feet seven Inches
ull?
AN8WER: Unfortunately there la
no satisfactory method tor slowing
down growth of this kind. The
greater psrt of girl's growth,
however, is over st the age of 13
or 13, and It I comparatively alow
after that time.
Tnls is Ralf I. Paddock, who
carries th vocal chre for Vic
Distad'a band a; Cal-Ore.
Paddock I known as -Rip1 (his
initials, that ls
fUlul Introduction for some lime.
'Scum the delay. Rip.
I wonder If there's anything
Reno Brown can't do and well.
According to publicity which has
reached thla drsk. site's a versatile
gall If ahe can fry bacon and
ecus with dispatch, shea Ui with
your wnterl
Well, the bank was broken re
cently but there U be glioo In the
pot lonlnht on the 'Break the
Bank" program. A New York City
fireman and his wife will return
toiughl to try to build the fifty
Iron men they accumulated on lal
weeks program. They're Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Qrlfftn. of Long Island.
Tune: 8 p. m. ABC, KFLW.
On to weightier ma Iters on ABC
"Two Billion Strong" moves Into
the airwaves at a new time start
ing Saturday. 8:30 p. m. Its the
personalized story of the United
Nations and aril worth listening
to.
Well, let s turn th dial now to
KFJI.
"Fir at Snapping Turtle Bend"
Is the Interesting title of the Cisco
Kids experiences tonight on Mu
tual. Thats 7:30 to 8.00 p. m.
DOYLE'S COLUMN
m
m
Hal Boris
I
I
I
I
1.......... .............
This Is Canada's big day annl
vtrsary dl her advent aa a nation 81
years ago, Happy birthday, neign
burl
Miythlng which la close to the
heart of Canada la close U) Uie heal t
ot America. Thu It I with f
lections te res arils that extend
our greetings cruaa a boundary
which, alter all. la only an Imaginary
lln so lar aa i
fraternal lerllnii I S
are concerned. I ,'' a
It pleaaes us I t W
all interna w lftmViTl
two naUona are t t J f. I
one, aliliotign
each la Jraloua
of Its sever
is my.
Tl prld In
sovereignty, by
the way. Is auitie
thin Ui ba ra-
m m b r d by f.... k f. .. J
well - meaning Markriuia
but foolish folk who babble about
the two natlona Joining under one
flag. That Just isn't In the cards,
and It isn't necessary to unity of
purpos or the friendship winch w
cherls'l.
Our big nrighbor ibitger than we
are territorially) haa every right to
be proud on thla "Independence
Day." Kighty-lwo years la very
brief period for a nation to ac
complish what Canada has. Aa this
column recently pointed out, Can
ada has played a leading role in Uie
revolution of th British common
wealth into an association of
wholly Independent nations,
tiuod tor HI his
The Canadians always have stood
solidly for Uieir rlalils. I'm remind
ed of World War I. when I aaw
much of th dominion troops m
rrance. Th Canadians loos, no
nonsense from anybody. To empha
sis una, when a body of uirlr
soldiers took up a uew position In
the line Uieir first business ordinar
ily waa to take oil Uieir tunica and
engane th English on either aide
lu a batli of Itsta. One that waa
settled the Canadian donned their
tunica and turned alte.iuon to the
Oermana.
That same spirit Impelled Uir
Canadian government to fight a
great batli for separate representa
tion lu the League of NaUona
battle whuh ah win. Finally In
m.li the historic stalute of West
minuter waa born in London, pro
viding that th "dominion are
autonomous communiuea."
Thus, while none of th com
monwealth natlona la more proud
of lu old world heriuge than is
Canada, ahe ha developed a person
ality of her own in the new world.
If th columnut Mvmi in ,ii,,k
ith considerable assurance about i nrti l00"1 lor m whe.s 1 apenl
Gotham, Says Boyle, Is a
Still Picture Of America '
By H ai, novi.R
NEW YOKK, June 30 (V-Oh. I
trll you Ntw York I a wonderful
place.
It must be fin or there wouldn't
be so many people crowded her to
gether to enjoy It.
It's really a terrible place to visit
or dl In. but a grand town to llv In.
For here th poor man haa mur
age, and flghu for his rights. He's
s good a
millionaire any
day, and he II
alay up all night
In trll you why.
Yes, rich or
poor, you r Just
another number
here, and aome
times It a pleas,
ant to wonder
whether you're
8 8 7 8.341 or
maybe l.s&.7i)8
Who cares?
There la on
tiling sure: you
can never be Mr. Number One. Be
reus nobody Is big enough to ba
lealiy Important on thla fli Island
You have to belong to It It ran
never belong to you. This la s man's
town, and II I rut for slie. It has
oulgrown everybody who ever lived
In It and It s still growing.
And the people who llv In II are
trowing, ton. Th fal-volred lour-
ista come here and look around and
shake their heads and leave again
saving. "After all, New York City
isn't America."
But New York City la America.
and Ihrre la no town mora Ameri
can. Hits uie her people are really
aorklng toward th kind of democ
racy the rest of the country reads
about in high school civics books.
There are only few rltlea In Hi
world that are really cillea London
for courage. Parla for lovvlHiru
Calcutta fur misery. Hhanghai for
sin, Rom for healing and hurt.
i TELLING
ITHE EDITOR
LHr ettau asra at 1
(haa saa . ka I
I atliua Utiaif ONS Bins at lh
frarl lt ASP Sllliatsa Ss 1
I falsa Bra .arail .alaaaia. I
THANK FROM NILS
KLAMATH f AIXS. Or. .To Ui
Editor) flcaa allow m th us of
your column to publicly eiprrsa my
sincere appreciation and Uianka to
the many people who worked so
Alliens for blue skies, Cairo for gold
ond Intrigue. Naples for a merry
heart an a dlrly far, Berlin, th
tomb and womb and anvil of war,
Moscow for mockery of human
rlghla, and Washington, where ev
ery man who haa been elaUd twlre
ran hop for a mart's monument.
Breadth f Mind
And. of course, there aia smaller
rltlra with a breadth of mindsay
Philadelphia, aay Ht. Louis, say Bal
1 1 more, aay New Orleans, aay Ban
Fienrlaca. Hi city with th singing
rame, or Boston, the only place I
know where nobody hollers aaalnat
7 lulls. They ate ell old rltlra. each
n.aiked bv an antique bigotry or
prejudice of Ita own and stamped by
an Individual rareleaa freedom, too,
all old rltlra are.
Wrap them all together and you'll
almost have New York but not
quite.
For there la nothing aa tremen
dous as this tremendous village.
America's long dream pushed Into
few Btiuar miles of struggle and
trope, where people mm Ilk mnlea
underground and hop in term of
to ers.
Never day dawns here bill my
spun feels taller on th way it
work from seeing the Fmplre Hial
building shoulder th morning mlat
comforting aa fairy tale In an hour
of fear. And never an evening aim
Inks down without my spirit weary
ing from the alght of aome ugliness
Inat dwells her, too. In men and
buildings.
Oh. but they're trowing belter,
the men and th buildings and th'
city they make up. Here If you hava k
a prejudl. you have to keep It
silent. Because If vou say II out
loud, the other fellow will haul vou
Into court, and th Judae will fin
vou and make you feel ashamed.
Pom day there won't be even a
s"enl prejudio left here, and th
ea winds will wash over a clean
rity. all the way from Hlaten Island
lo the Bronx.
New York Is opportunity. They
put th Htat lie of Liberty In the
right place, and more and more th
old girl feets she belongs her. Una
still holds her lamp before th gold
en door, and th door la New Yerk
fitv. where all ho enter find honvi
nd welcome and Uie equal chanr
that all men ask.
to
. He also plays
, th clarinet and
tenor and alto
sax.
music Isn has
been around
tool
He's skippered
several bands,
was with Tiny
Hill tor a year.
During his suy
with Hill, he
was pUying and
Red Hard vocalizing In the
Green Room at th Hotel Edison
and on th all-time Hit Parade for
Lucky Strike from Carnegie Hall.
Both ot these spou are in New
York.
Personal note about Rip: His
home is Frankfort. Indiana. WiU
celebrate hi sixth wedding anni
versary come September 15. His
wife. Helen, la from Jackson. Mich
igan. His daughter, Sherri, Is three
years old.
Rip has been promised this of-
This sounds Ilk a nice pitch, al
though not new.
A disgruntled husband trie to
get rid of his wife by Uie simple
This versatile ' "?'!"' "'i11 ,' "'
That s on KFJI tonight. 8 30 to
I 55. The name of the program:
"Mysterious Traveler" . . . the
drama Is called "She Walks With
Death.'
IIADIO PltOGHAMS
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KFLW Slates
New Show In
Epley Spot
Tuesday and Thursday nights at
1.18 o'clock will be the time for a
special civic program on radio sta
tion KFLW for the month of July.
Malcolm Epley, who usually con
ducts the Managing Editor's Report
on those evenings, is going on vaca
tion from his radio assignment for
the mid-summer month. The Her
ald and News, sponsor of the pro
g'sm. Is turning the time over to
Manager Charles Stark of the
chamber of commerce, who will
make It a special presentation of
matter of community service In
terest.
The chamber's new industrial pro
motion objective, the work of Its
various committees, and other mat
ters of general community welfare,
will be covered under the new
scheme.
Epley will be back with the Man
lng Editor's Report In August.
Chocolate Town
Strike Averted
HERSHEY, Pa, July 1 (-Rsl-dents
of Hershey breathed easier
today after a mass meeting of AKL
union members voted unanimously
to postpone a strike thst would have
crippled thla chocolate town start
ing tomorrow morning.
John O. Shearer, president of iM,
Bakery and Confectionery Interna
tional Workers union. Informed Fed
eral Mediator O. Harry Young yes
terday that union members had
voted to delay their scheduled walk
out until July 18.
Quick Service
By Flying
Repairman
Quick service) I
That's the motto of Cascade Home
Furnishing servicemen, aided by a I
pretty bookkeeper.
Yesterdsy. a service call came
from the Timber Mountain Inn at
feres In northern Modoc, county.
While Vern Owens, manager, and
John Fee back, his service man. were
considering the long, hot drives to
the Inn. Betty Oant. th bookkeeper,
offered to fly Feebaek down and
back In her club plane.
No sooner said than done, and the
Fair were on their way. Forty min
utes after leaving Klamath Falls
the Taylorcraft swooped to a land
u.g on the airstrip in front ot th
irn.
A short Job on th electric range,
sod another 40 minutes saw the
rr.lr back home.
Miss Oant, who became Interested
in flying recently, Is a member of a
local flying club and owns an Inter
est In the little two-seater.
"No," says Owens. "We ren't
planning sir service for the entire
basin, but it sure comes In handy."
ORC Meeting To
Be Held July 12
The first ORC meeting of the new
year has been slated for July 13, it
432 Main, for 8 pm. Instead of the
previously named July 8 date.
It will be a pay meeting for all
members of the ground force reserve
officers.
th Canadian people. It la perhaps
with Justification. Among Uie fond
est memories of my boyhood are
me many day apent on th old
homestead which by Scotch great
grandfather heard out of th New
munawirk lorest back In th
eighteenth century.
Hia community became th Scotch
ridge a settlement of Uod-fearlng,
hard working Presbyterians. Those
mere the Oaya when th pastor of
the old kirk used to preach sermons
three hours long, and hsd a alaaa
of Scotch whiskey on th pulpit to
neip mm tiong when hslf wsy
through.
Sine those dsys I have loured
Canada and talked with (oiks In all
parla of Uie country. On cannot
fall to com away with th Im
pression of an upright, aturdy. Dro-
gresaive. kindly people. Theirs Is a
friendship worth cultivating and
cherishing.
It is good to know that Canada
and America, by agreement of our
government, stand together In de.
fens of th Western Hemisphere.
Shakespeare
festival To
Be Held
The ninth annual presentation of
the Oregon Shakespearean Festival
Is slated for August 2-34 In Ashland.
Five plays by William Shake
fpeere will be shown one a night,
nightly except Sundays, so that vis
itors mar enjoy a week In the vi
cinity and see all the performances
This year's festival will Include
"Romeo and Juliet." "Richard H."
"Othello." "Mldaiimmer N I g h I s
Dream," "The Taming of the
ISnrew." The schedule presents the
plavs on different nights each week
lth the picturesque outdoor stage
'.he setting.
Director Angus L. Bowmer of the
frstlvsl aasnrlstlon ha arranged
the presentations with a thought to
tourist visitation, making Ashland
htadnuarters for trips to scenic
point In Oregon with th evening
P'T to top off each vacation day.
y GLIN I. INMAN
Far rs-Ci.l.'s who raswsaiber
a night recently on Buck creek, tt
is unfortunat when the Ihlngs
happen to people who lov th great
outdoors aa much as I do but, in my
particular case, I got cramp In my
leg. and realised that I could not Army Ufa aa being lawgbe lhaa
......... . ,urcmTO w ing leap-frog la a eaeiaa
spend th. night on th creek nd i pauh. the raeenl alary ml low
at no lime waa I lost. i being encouraged u ew
I particularly want to esprese my I ihemaelvee In K. r. sweat
appreciation to Mr. H. H. Ogle. . m ,h, br,dln
manager of th Klamath Forest j -nahr. Thea lad. wer glvea
Pro t ecu v association, and his em- ! an r.ira .,'. t.,i..k i
ployea and aaaoriate. In thla work. I ,,, M. lor i,iat tmm4
They have a splendid organisation Midlefa. A three-alar general
arlually amlled l Ihrm a a i
said, "( e looa and don I .lar
.how ap at your ramp entll
yow'v seen th alible f the
rllf." They probably didn't ar
any sight that lopped that.
He'll bet Ihey etperled revrlll
la wak them any mlnalr. Won
der how yoa about enllal.
and too often the general public
doea not realise the service thai or
ganisations of thla kind ar render
ing to the community. They worked
all night long and through walkie
talkie telephone communications,
were In constant contact with their
organisation in Klamath Falls. In
this particular Instance, they dem
onstrated that they are prepared to n
might .riT" T em'rt'm'y Th N'UoB'
I also want to publicly ,pre my IT?1 J JJ",
sincere .ppreci.t.on to my good 'J "l?
friend. Mr. William Hunt, and all 1 1" ttlll eiJh
th. other many friend, who were .' ""' mak'
concerned about me at the time. M um " u T
In closing, while I am passing raerw July w Toa
around thanks, let me also express I " Ju" reminder to drive
my appreciation to you for using 1 rarH hrer ya go. Deo I
Don't miss a good bet - shop the
Want Ads every dsyl It pays!
JOHN DEERE No. S94
SIDE RAKE
ON RUBBER . . $365.80
Midland Equipment Co.
SSI a sib rkaaa aril
your column.
Yours very truly.
LEO N. HULS.
There r more ultra-violet rays
in afternoon than In morning sunshine.
lei an accident mar year boll.
day pleasure. And villi yea
think of e I pert aula repairs at
reasonable prices remember I.N
MAN MOTOR CO 4:4 Boetb
lh HI. Phone 1718.
First Church of Christ, Scientist
A kraark of Taa Malb.r rkafrb. Tks Vital flank of frlal. aVWall.l,
la Beale. M.S..
18th and Waahlngton
Services.- Hundsy Hervlre, II: a. m.
Hunday School, ll:M a. m.
Uedneaday Evening Meeting, 8:88 o'clock.
Lesion-Sermon Subject July 3
"God"
Christian Science Reading Room
1021 Main 81.
RADIO BROADCAST - MONDAY, 5:45 P. M. - KFLW,
Subject, "Wilh God All Thjngl Aro Pouiblo" .
i
l0 Off
There's a TYPB and SIZE
of JOHN DEERE TRACTOR
Far Every Farming Need
Midland Equipment Co.
First Christian Church
C. W. Rwope, Minister
July 2, 1949
Ninth and Fin
At morning worship the Paalor will preach on
'The Declaration of Independence'
Kvenlng sermon aubjeel:
The Constitution of the
United States'
Th evening worship program will feature a reading, "America,
th Beautiful," by Misa Marilyn Kendall, after which the hymn,
"America, lh Beautiful," will be presented by the Kendall fam
lly quartette. Veteran., service men and patriotic organisation
Invited to worship with us on thea occasions.
First Christian Church, 9th & Pine. All Welcome
Revival Now In Progress
At
The Full Gospel Mission
Juir Off Altomont on Maryland
U-Jl .l- .JLj
Conducted by
REV.
WAYNE BATEMAN
of Yakima, Washington
Preaching and singing th
way you like to hear It. W
proy for tha lick any tlm.
EVERY NIGHT
EXCEPT MONDAY
INI r.al.r.