I WICDNKSDAY, FF.BIUMrtY 20, 1032 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. ORKOON PAOB ELEVEN w i . I .-. re. v i: i M n "ItlMlllll- r I I llllMllltlllllVll'in llil IIWWMMMMM....WMPMMMMZl!S3fci ' ttCk SQUARE DANCE QUARTET which will perform tomorrow night at the "Leap Year" production, scheduled for the KUJIS auditorium Thursday at 8 p.m. (L to r) Anna Bowles, Marilyn Stonehurg, Marilyn Benson and Nancy Antic. The production is under the direc tion of Mrs. U. B. Blomquist. I'aul Brocknian designed and silk printed the skirts. 30 Head Set For Annual Gilt Sale Thirty (I1U have been cnnslKiird to the miuuiil Oreuon purebred Hwlni'Krowera AMoolallnn silt tale net lor the County Full grounds Feb. an. ' Tlie awlne will be registered and II nhould furrow In March or April, ccordlng to OPBOA Sfey. Ben Newell. Among eonolKnmeilt are lli-re. ford, Durum, Yorkshires, Poland Chilian, Hpotted Poland, Cluster Whiten, Burkshlrci and Hamp shire. 'Hie Kale time In 12:30 p.m. with Dob Ilhodea auctoncerlng. Newell Kuld the two previous anlei thla season at Balcm and I I.aOrnnde have averaea leas Uinn aalea In pant years, althoimh I difrnand has been itood (or audi Uip quality breeding animals as those. Thla year, he aald, top Burin from the Klamath area have be- vonalgned to the sale. Including j aomc from the herd ot Bryant Williams and Earl Wilson. OSCX Station Checks Swine Where doe awlne production fit into Urn farming picture In Ore gon? The answer to that one la the latest goal of agricultural econ omics at the Oregon State college experiment, station, With Oregon swine numbers at their lowest ebb In 80 years, hog rnlfcen have become concerned about the future of the buslneHs. They have asked the OHC exper iment station to point out the rea sons for this decline. First steps In the project already have been taken. Information has been collected from commercial swine producers In eastern Oregon, central Oregon and Willamette val ley swine raising centers. Economists will analyze the data to determine how efficiently Ore gon swine producers arc operat ing. Oregon's position In the pork producing competition with the midwest alto will be considered. If possible, a model plan will be net up to represent a more el ective approach to awlne produc tion In Oregon. Preliminary results of the study are expected to be available for consideration of agricultural lead ers at the statewide agricultural planning conference at OSC In March. Proper Fertilization Gives Better Hay Crop With present high hay prices many farmers face a serious feed problem. Yet on many farms It Is possible to buy good hay for March and April delivery at 110 per ton delivered on the farm. This buy Is available to those who can use nitrogen fertllzer on es tablished grasa seeding, the coun ty agents office reports. With present fertilizer prices, f worth of nitrogen fertilizer should Bennett Recall Move Pushed PORTLAND IPi Proponents of a recall movement against City Commissioner J. E. Bennett have tiled more than half the number of signatures necessary to put the recall on the May 16 ballot. Some 1.225 signatures were filed with the city auditor Tuesdav. That brought the total numoer niea to ! 14344. Some 25,770 are needed. Bennett has been abusive to ! some Portland residents In his con duct of city affairs, the recall pe titions contend. bring an Increased yearly yield of grass equal to a half ton of hay. Money can be made by fertilising earlier than usual this year and, with weather permitting, applica tions can be marie in the Wil lamette Valley in early February and In Eastern Oregon as soon as the ground is thawed out, possibly March. On Western Oregon grasses, a minimum application of 40 pounds of actual nitrogen per acre should be made. Thla would be supplied by 200 pounds of ammonium sul fate or the equivalent In other ni trogen fertilzers. In eastern Ore gon the minimum application should total 30 pounds of nitrogen per acre. For these early applica tions, fertilizers carrying nitrogen In the ammonia form will give the best results. These Include am monium sulfate and ammonium phosphate. There Is no point In wasting fer tilizer on poor seeding. All bunch- L a. profitable response and so will an nual ryegrass. Little response can be expected from bent or blue grass. Because of the high feed prices this year, aubatantlal acreages of crested wheatgrass In eastern Ore gon can be made to produce prof liable early feed with a nitrogen application. KidneySlow-Down May Bring Restless Nights . Whtn kidney funetlon ilowf Ami, mint folk eomplaln of naif In barkerhe, hd aehei, dlulnM end Iom of PP end mtrir Don't aufler ratlins nlfhU with tht dl comfort If raducad kldnar function U tin you down-dua to such torn m on vault mm atraM and strain, over-eiertlon or axpo ura tooold. Minor bladdar Irritations dua to cold or wroni diet mar causa getting up Bight or frequent pans go. Don't nsglaat your kid nay a If thaaa condi tions bother you. Try Doan'a Pills mild diuretic. Heed auaeesafully by mllllona fur over 60 yeara. It's amatlng how many tint Doan'a give happf relief from thaaa dlaeom forta-helpthe 15 mlleeof kidney tubes and Al tera flush out wait. Get Dean's rills todayl South San Francisco Residents Condemned For Ousting Family farrowing Caution Necessary ( flecords Indicate that one-third fr more small pigs die before eiitilng time. So certain precau tions are Importtint nt tills seusou fit farrowing approaches. Among 'the things Unit hrlp to save young Jin Is clean January condition!. CT.ie sow should be placed In the ; furrowing pen several claya bplorc Jiirrowmg and the pen should have v Ijcpii properly denned and chain J eel i'l before Iho sow was placed a ' Immediately following fiirrowtnti .Die ow i lu a feverish- omichton i -,1111(1 Nhould be fed carefully lor k the first few days 111 order to be , ''ture of establishing a good milk iflow. 'Ilie first day after farrow. k1 'lug. she should receive no feed. I', ihiit have water accessible, She j jfhould then be fed carefully for i Jnevcrnl days on feeds more or less t .'laxative. A ration containing a r t high percentage of wheat bran la f .;very helpful at this time and the & iwheat bran should be gradually E -'icplaced with other feeds as she jtloic that feverish condition. , Sows at farrowing time should ji fhc kept In pens at a temperature r s between 50 and 00 degrees K. Small f 'plgs and sow are more comforl j ;sble under those conditions. . Itemember that the saving of i , five pigs saved represents the profit ft :? pay expenses and that more than Si live pgs saved represents the pro ' in the business. r? m SINGAPORE iP) Tlie Malayan Vegetarian Society has scheduled a monthly dinner meeting, at wheh Do meat will be served. 'Iho non-meat-eaters nl.'O have announced their decision to look Into the possi bility of starting an exclusively vegetarian restaurant In Singaore. SAN FRANCISCO Wl-The South Kan Francisco City Council Monday night unanimously approved a res olution condemning the nil-while ..Soulhwood tract residents who vol- rl auulnM. admlttliiK a Chinese I faintly. Public and press reaction be came nearly worldwide. Some resi dents nt the South San Francisco tract started a move to reverse, the ! 174-28 ballot by which Sing Shrug. j his wile and 2 year old son were voted out. ! Hheng slarted it by Inviting a "Democratic ballul" on his ad mission to Ihe tract, where he'd made a Vl.ObO payment on a $12,000 home. lie Is an airline mechanic and former Chinese .Nationalist army oflicer. O. Nt. Itrown, spokesman for n Soulhwood group reeking reversal ol the Saturday vote declared: "A lot of us are still Christians who believe in Clod and are glad to have any honorable man living ; among us." I Wioiig,.2d..tMld he had received I oilers ol 30 homes In the Bay area. ! Oregon. Wichita, Kansas, and In Idlana. But he wanted to live In South Run Francisco near his Job. In Hong Kong, China, the Hor.g Kong Standard said Sheng was Uie victim of his "enduring faith in all tlie Democratic balderdash on which the world has of late been led." The Standard, owned by Chinese millionaire Aw Boon Haw. Is nor mally pro-American and anti-Corn-nnmist. The paper commented that Sing Sheng "Is as much to blame as his would-be neighbors" when he was voted nut last Saturday In an election he himself proposed. "The Ideals of Democracy, like the Ideals of Christianity, are to I be nurtured, not be lightly ex perimented with," the newspaper said. "In spile of the miracles one reads of In the Bible, no one is supposed to trv to work miracles in every dBy life." Big Cheese Future Seen COMVAM.IB m The Oregon Coast has a big future In cheese production. CI. If. Wllster, head of dairy manufacturing at Oregon Slate College, predicted Tuesday. It la doubtful if any other area In this country has natural con ditions more favorable for cheese production, he told the Oregon Dairy Manufacturers Association at the annual convention here. He said the coast slates alone offer a market for millions of iwunds of cheese yesrly. but only i cheddar, collage and small amounts of blue and swiss cheese now arc made In Oregon. II. Z. Price. Moliler, won the Cheddar cheese contest with a score of 95.5 followed by Wilfred Lommcn. Nehalcm, 65; John Frank, Mount Angel, 94.6: Angus McDonald. Coos Bay, 94; and Basil Tone, Tillamook. 93 5. Charles M. Rover, Coos Bay, won the cold storage butter contest with a score of 94.5, followed by Loran Kdlund, Curlv's Dairy. Sa lem. 94 SS: C. S. Korsmo. dais kanle, 0315; William L. Johnson, McMinnvllle. 93.5. McDonald approved WASHINGTON I The Senate Banklncr Committee" Tuesday ap proved by a 7 lo 3 vote President Truman's nomination of Harry A. McDonald to be administrator of Ihe Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Rich Estate Heirs Sought PORTLAND IIP A Portlani attorney is looking for the legal owners of the Income from a mil lion dollar trust fund. . The owners are blood relative.' of Mrs. Mary Voght or Mrs. Mar Raret Donahue Brady, both of whom lived In Portland before their deaths. The attorney, David Fain, said the fund was established in 1935 by Mra. Voght. Her will left the incomo from the trust to her daughter, Mrs. Lucille Voght Heillg. ' " In the will Mrs. VorM said that In the event of her daughter's death, the money was to go to "blood relative of my deceased mother or myself." Mrs. Brady was Mrs. Voght's mother. Mrs. Heillg died last November In a house fire In California. Since then Fain has been looking for legal heirs. So far he has not located any. "The search may lead all the wav to Ireland where her forebears lived." he said. Fair District Board Named TULKI.AKE Appointments of eight directors to serve on the board of directors of the newly created agricultural 10-A fair dis trict In the Tulelake Basin have been confirmed by Oov. Earl War ren, according to word reaching hern today. They are Arnold Criss. Macdoel. fermer: William O. Hagelsteln, president of the Butte Valley State Bank. Dorrla; P. C. Bergman, Tulelake businessman: W. J. Shep ard, local manager of the California-Oregon Power Co.: Verne llemstrccl, Smlth-Hughcs teacher, Tulelnke high school: Paul Christy, Chester J. Moln and E. Webb Staunton, Tulelake farmers. The new board will meet in the near future to elect a president and to hire a fair manager. Tlie fair district created by leg- i Islatlve action will embrace parts ol Modoc- ana Siskiyou counties in i the Tulelake area and Butte Val ley. I Thirty acrea of land south of Tulelake Is available for grounds and 56.000 has been set aside by the State Legislature for payment of cash premiums and to help pay salary of a manager. At present the Department of Fi nance. State of California, and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation are negotiating jointly for a 26-year-lcase on the grounds. A. E. Snyder, director of fairs and exposition in California will be Invited to assist the board in plans for construction of building and other details pertinent to es tablishing the annual exposition. The Tulelake Rotary club, spon sor of the annual 4-H and Future Farmer of America Junior Live stock Show will continue in that capacity. The club carried the ball for promotion of the fair district through the legislature with the support of other local groups. Plans-for fair here were pushed because of distances to be traveled lo county fairs at Yreka and Cedar Give Chicks a Good Start COUNCIL CANDIDATE PORTLAND lTl The first can didate to file for Portland city com missioner is Stanley W. Earl. Heavy Snow May Threaten Homes MEDFORD I Record winter snows may be threatening re sort homes In the southern Cas cade Mountain regions. W. T. Frost of the bnow Survey said Tuesday that snows ' were heavier this year than they were four years ago when owners made trips in snow tractors to shovel off their roofs. ON ATOM BOMBING ROUTE MONTREAL W If there is an atomic war Montreal is "Canadian target No. 1. and we cannot expect the enemy to by-pass us." said Brig. J. Guy Oauvreau, Montreal civil defense head. "Bombers on their way from Murmansk to New York do not have to detour to visit Montreal," he noted. Feed CROWN CHICK STARTER for stronger, healthier chicks. Crown is a complete, adequately fortified chick ration to be fed during the first six weeks. In mash or pellet form, CROWN CHICK STARTER is readily digestible and easy for chicks to assimilate for good health and normal growth. LABORATORY TESTED FARM PROVEN All Crown feeds are constantly improved and thor oughly checked by trained laboratory technicians for efficiency in meeting a particular, feed need. Crown feeds are economical, too! Start your next breed ef chicks en CROWN CHICK STARTER M '(BuMl cut and wrap your beef and pork for your locker AncJ we still cure your ho mi and bacon SMOKE HOUSE 427 Market A. G. "Butch" Zweigart Klamath Falls Phone 7060 Your Local Dealer For CROWN FEEDS OREG., LTD. 734 South 6th Phone 4197 Klamath Falls, Oregon ft ... if you attend V JOHN DEERE DAY! THE TIME. All Day Tomorrow! Thurs. Fob. 21 THE PLACE 1410 So. 6th in Klamath Falls In cooporation with John Deere, we've, arranged a big day tomorrow full of entertainment, reffeshmentt and pro fit. Plenty of variety movies, new farming ideas, new equipment on dis play . . . and a chance, to visit with all your friends and neighbors. Be herej for sure! Crater Lake Machinery Co. 1410 South 6th Phone 2-2544 A CARLOAD OF SAVINGS ! T FENCE f 0SIS ...if you buy before March 20 O 7 ft. post (5 clips) ... O 6V2 ft. post (5 clips) . O 6 ft. post (5 clips) ... $88.10 per 100 (Regular $97.00) $81,74 per 100 (Regular $90.00) ' $76.38 per 100 (Regular $84.00) NOW IN STOCK! O 2 and 4 point Barbed Wire ' O 26 inch Woven Wire , vN MURPHEY'S SEED STORE USED Drastically Reduced MUST CLEAR ' IMMEDIATELY pick out your needs::: SAVE SOME MONEY International SP Combine 1947 Model, Bulk tank & Sacker 1950 MH Clipper-Combine, Bulk tank No. 26 MH 834 ft. Combine, Bulk tank 1 948 A 6 Combine ,' : r' 9 ft. Case Combine 1947 No. 30 Oliver Combine, Bulk tank and 2 headers: 1-10 ft. with pickup reef and 1-6 ft. with pickup reef '.M? No. 30 Oliver Combine, 2 headers, 1-10 ft. with pickup reel, 1-6 ft; witrf pickup reel. Sacker platform ' 12A John Deere Combine '': .-,:.') 'r A-6 6 ft. Case Combine ".."-'""'''.V: k No. 17 16J4 ft. John Deere Combine 1 -: No. 62 6 ft. I-H Combine Bulk tank li No. 36 John Deere Combine 16 Yi f 66$ header No. 7 John Deere Combine ' " AC Tractor - rj:;r MH 4 wheel drive tractor v i I 1948 DC Case tractor (RC) ; j 1 949 LA Case Tractor y MH No. 30 Tractor (RC) ".U SC Case Tractor. 1939 Cha llenger Tractor (M-H) ' ' Ford two way plow 7 ft. International Disc Harrow Buck rake for Model M tractor VS. -is ;W International Potato Digger, single row Jeep Semi Trailer and 5th wheel 1950 model if' Single row John Deere Potato Digger International Hammer Mill pipe ond cyclone ' 2 row Iron Age Potato Planter Hume Love pickup reel (12 ft.) Ai GW FARM SUPPLY the Home of Mastey-Harris Farm Machinery1 3049 South 6th ' ' ' ' fhftih$Ui ft 834 Klamath Ave. Phone 3443