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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1952)
t AGE SIX UKR.M.n ANO NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OKKC.ON WEDNESDAY. .HINT. 18. 1PM Hatlo immi 1 hey 11 Do It Lvcry Time By i y "wz. . j sr. 7 v-r-3 FRANK JENKINS alitor Entered M second class matter it th post office of Klamath Falls, Or, on August 20, 1908, under act of Congress, March 8, 1170 MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Die Associated Press la entitled exclusively to the use for publication I ail trie local news printed in this newspaper as well as all AP newt. SUBSCRIPTION RATES MAIL BT CARRIER J month $ 1.35 1 month I 133 month! , , , $ 6.50 6 months $ 8 10 1 year 611.00 1 year 816.30 Jhank Sage Sideglances- I swear to heaven that 1 11 never tick my amateur engineering neck out again as Ions as I live. Every time I end up with anoiher wing on tile family domicile. No woman ever Rot a new thins that she didn't have to have somelhmg else new to ko with It. The fine old fellow who came twice a week for years ana cariea garbage away from our Summer place took sick last Winter and Isn't able to do any more. Garbage disposal became our number one problem to be solved before green corn and watermelon time arrives. A garbage disposal unit in the sink was indicated and smarty eays, "That's a cinch, just leave it to me." I have lived to rue the words. A cinch my eye. Here's what happened: The unit under tne sina. to cosi a hundred bucks or so. ended uplwe rarely get more than two In a Summer kitchen that's the j weeks of "really not wtsmer mm amRteuri nas Deen golax by his equal of and more handy than the I no impression on them. 0vn rules. one we went all out for in town; I I Taft breeied into the presidential and It hooks right onto another kip- I could feel it coming and it race wjln coatlails flying. He py kitchen that could serve a small ; did. "Just put a work shelf and ; tt.amec ,j,e presidencv. He an hotel; two stoves, two sinks. twoiCRbinet along side that dandy b'ginounced for lt is, Oct. 17. He long work ledges and cupboards; smk and there's still room at the , starled to work for lt right awav. everything Is duplicated except me refrloerator and dish washer. It just smacked another cipner on my orig- lnal estimate. That's how much of a cinch lt turned out to be. ' Seems It's risky to empty gar bage Into your regular septic tank. So we dug a big hole, sunk a big tank in lt and ran a separate sewer line to the house. Two hundred more bucks went Into the hole but that was Just the beginning. .' The sewer line passed right under the latticed back porch: so whv muss up the lovely sink in the kitchen? Okav. I fell for a small clop sink on tbe porch with a cold water tap. all that was needed, and the garbage gadget under it. 1 Seeing there was to be a new sink anvwav. the women urged why not make it a regular one; swell place to prepare vegetables and the like. The little slop sink became an enameled sink 42 inches long. i Well, with such a nice big sink, of course I'd run a hot water line to lt; Just the place to wash greasy pots and pans, right over the gar page machine. I called the plumber Oh. . p. ' A. H. J. says, 'We hear people cay 'his blood count Is low,' but what Is It that Is low? Is lt the red corpuscles? What Is the normal blood count?" : Today, a complete medical ex amination almost always includes the removal of a small amount of blood, and the testing of this blood In various ways for the three most common kinds of blood examina tion, namely, counting the red and coloring matter, or hemoglobin. Only a small amount of blood V necessary usually a drop from the ear or linger is all that Is needed for other tests, larger amounts of course may be needed. Third Party Proposed , SEASIDE, Ore. W A third political party made up of union laborers was proposed at the Ore gon Federation of Labor conven tion here. The resolution, Introduced Tues day by members of the Portland AFL Typographical Union, called the present parties "instruments of big business" and said that with them in power there BDoeared to be little prospect of repealing the. iait-iiartiey Act a laDor law op posed by unions because of restric tions lt imposes. Delegates will vote on the resolu tion later. They approved resolutions ask ing: : Construction of an intermediate prison for young law breakers. Higher limits on earnings under social security. Accident compensation for ap prentices. : Extension of state accident in surance to cover all employes. Higher unemployment and injury compensation. . Increased pay for Jurors. Teachers and other public em ployes Introduced a series of reso lutions calling for Improved condi tions and changes In federal and state labor laws. Merchants Help With Berries 'J ST. HELENS Iffl Merchant here closed their shops at noon Wednesday and went to the straw berry fields to help pick the quick ripening crop. There are about 800 pickers working the 1,000 acres of fields round the city, but the Chamber of Commerce says 500 more are heeded. Helps Heal And Clear Itchy Skin flash! Flrit anollestlnn nt Mcrlilv meMpainA Ztmo prow it promptly relieves itch ing, burning of enema, rashes, ath lete s root, psoriasis and similar sur face skin and scalp irritation!. Zemo tops scratching and so aids healing. Then aee how aulcklv kin a near, ouy extra titrtngth Zemo for ZEMO stubborn cases.. BILL JENKINS Managing Editor Jupp .back. But the bit sink crowded the works a bit. So we tore out the side of the porch and extended It three feet. We were about to re place the 15 feet of salvaged lat tice, screen and door when some more ideas occurred to the ladles In waiting. Thev had no notion that the ad dition of 3 x 16 feet would provide I so much more room on the porch. ineir ioea F . & oarnng oummrr kiitucu n i make." 1 I rebelled, "wnat in neu is mat kitchen in there but a summer kitchen: we only live here in the Summer." I said. "Oh. but in really hot weather we could do all of our cooking out there." said Fanny, mm Annaoe- hind ner proaainx nrr uu. '"-- emj j0r an electric stove, wnv. Anna, we wouldn't have to use the bottled gas stove insiae le hardly at we'd save. ' ' all. Just think what That's the oavoff." I roared. will give us luice and how about an electric stove smack up against that lattice work?" "But it isn't going to be a porch any more, cooed Fanny. "It'll be a room all closed in." Just like that, our back porch be came a 10 x 16 room. It has four big windows in it that can be opened when it gets "really hot and closed when we won't be liv ing there ans-way. Our area now devoted to kitchens Is about the size of one of those (10.000 GI houses that are going up. Rnmpthincr awful good to eat bet ter be coming out of the flossy layout. When Fete cnristenen weni ana t irk he had no idea what he let me In for. I'm getting worded up lor the day when my lovin womenfolk screw up the nerve to say: "We can't have all this stuff standing around in the kitchen. We have got to have a back porch." $oAdan Mr, J. Is undoubtedly correct when he suspects that saying the blood count is low probably refers to the number of red blood cor puscles. There are about five million red cells in a measured small amount of blood called a cubic millimeter. There are about 700 white cells in the same amount of blood. Both kinds of cells are counted under a microscope. If the red cells are far below normal, anemia is present. The kind of anemia and deter mination of its severity also re quires examination of the coloring matter of hemoglobin. By putting the results of the examination of the red cells and of the hemoglobin together and by staining thin films of blood on a glass slide and looking at it under the microscope, doctors can tell what forms of anemia are present. The white cells are also impor tant both their numbers and other characteristics. There may be too few white cells and this is not a good sign if infection is present in the body. The number of white cells is usually increased in infections and in some other conditions. The number of white cells pres ent, for example, is helpfull in making a diagnosis of acute ap pendicitis. The white cells are in creased and are abnormal In other ways in leukemia. There are many other things which the blood can show about the condition of the body. With out them many diseases would re main undiagnosed or improperly treated. KFPA Foresters Quell Blaze KFPA foresters downed a one acre blaze north of the Ivory Pine Mill near Bly Monday afternoon. The fire was reported by a sheep man working in that area. 'Unloaded' Gun Kills Child PORTLAND Wl John Richard son 12, was showing his new rifle to a group of friends Tuesday. He "unloaded" the gun, play fully pointed lt at tha head of William Pence, 9, and pulled the trigger, police said. The gun fired, killing the Pence boy outright. W, G. Richardson had given the rifle to his son as a gift. He told police he had warned the boy never to use the gun unless his parents were around. Thev were not at home Tuesday. M3Z , ... and elhtr racial diiordtri, Coon and Stomach AM manti, Huptuf (Htrnia) TREATED WITHOUT HOS PITAL OPERATION. Our foundtt f DoKrlptivt 1 Writ m Call THE DEAN CLINIC 0n 10 until S Monday through Friday. Unit 1 1 p.m. Monday, Wadnoiday and Friday Chiropractic Phyitclant ... la ovr 43rd yoara 9026 NORTHIAIT 1ANDY tOULIVARO Tlthw Hit att Pflt-mJ 14, Or. rfVEVE 8EEM ASStoMED SEE I LM OVER lei WO0L0NT KICK IM Jf K COVER IMS BUlLWia WORSECW ESTER-AfJO ) FIFTX CMMTS TO l i ewe iHt unihu w I AlKcADr KICKED J I havb s eove. town w I CHAWTY OWVE .HOW M MY F1FT 8UCM OOtO-PLATEP.' TUAT J I AWCM CM WE PUT OJ W OVER THERE-lM FACT. 1 1 GUVS TlcWTef? THAU Ll I COM4 ICR ? )O0 MAT II MY WIFE IS Ol TU I V DcMPJRE PIASTER !y J- LATER F KXJ WSWI V SUPfOrTT THE X' )l J gjlMfasMaMajsjsMMal " NIM'H AIU Otlt VRHtl UliUffi cwiqa ABC's WASHINGTON W Sen. Tatt has done all tt)e ,nmKS you could expect u professional politician toihe was a Republican until Jan. 7. do. Gen. Elsenhower, the political speechmaking. lining up support. surrounding nimseu wun oia-ume politicians. At that time the insiders prob ably knew where Eisenhower stood but the public didn't even know Fat Content In Milk Cut PORTLAND i.fl Milk will be thinner and Its fixed minimum price will be higher in three East ern Oregon Counties under milk marketing orders announced Tues day by the State Board of Agri culture. The orders affect Baker, Union and Malheur Counties. In Baker and Union Counties the butterfat content of milk will be reduced from the maximum of 3. per cent to 3.6. The less-rich milk Will sell at not less than 20 cents at the wholesale level and 23 at retail. That is a one-cent boost. Producers are to receive an eight cent increase per pound of butter fat from 04 cents to S1.02 and will get 12.18 per hundredweight for miik compared with the $2 they now receive. The order goes into effect July 1. In Malheur County the butterfat content of milk will be reduced from 4.3 per cent to 3.6 and the minimum price will go up 2 cents to 19 cents a quart wholesale and 21 cents retail, it has been selling at 18 and 20. Producers prices were set at 84 cents a pound for butter fat and 32 a hundred weight for milk. The new orders also provide that marketing quotas are to be deter mined by a formula using figures of milk poundage and butterfat production. Heretofore, allocations have been determined solely on the basis of butterfat poundage. Big Bull Stops Train VTDALIA, Ga. Wl A 1,500-pound Hereford bull stopped a crack freight train cold in an encounter near here Tuesday. The diesel powered locomotive and eight cars of the Georgia and Florida Railroad freighter, the Blue Goose, piled matchwood style across the tracks after meeting the bull headon. The bull, owned by Cannie S. Oapis, a stock farmer, was killed. Casualty List Released WASHINGTON Wl The Defense Department Wednesday identified 88 additional casualties of the Ko rean war. A new list (No. 588) reported 12 killed. 74 wounded, one Injured and one missing. Our Plan Your Car Needs Ask About It---USE IT FOR EVERY. THING!! mm i. mum m. H 7th and Klamath WxUilaw ; whether he was Republican or Democrat. He didn't say openly At the same time he said he'd accept a "clear-cut call to duty" meaning the presidency but In sisted he wouldn't quit his Job in Europe to run for it. When he later resigned, he said his Job in Europe was done. Meanwhile, knowing what time means In lining up delegates for the convention. Eisenhower's cam paign manager. Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts, started the drive for him last November. The high-speed speechmaking Taft has been doing since Inst October is onlv a stepped-up ver sion of what he's been doing for years. His face, his voice and his attitudes have long been known. You like him or you don't, you agree or you don't. Not so with Elsenhower. Except for some speeches he made while he was president of Columbia Uni versity, . Eisenhower's Ideas on doings at home were unknown to most people. He didn't talk on domestic stuff while In uniform. All of these things, in the end, mav win him the Republican nom ination and the presidencv. And mavbe they won't. Now that he's back he's working hard for the nomination although six months ago he said he wouldn't. When he held his first news con ference at Abilene. Kans.. two weeks ago some of his advisers were Jittery until It was over. Then thev said thev felt he did fine. The conference came one day after his first political speech, which wasn't unanimously consid ered fine around the country. El senhower had help on that one. Mavbe he fell he couldn't do worse If he had no hem at all. At any rate in his Detroit speech Saturdav he took pains to sav he had torn up all the things that had been written for him to say and would Just go on his own. New Bike Is First Prize The best and most originally dec orated bicycle in the Bike Safety Parade to be held this Friday un der sponsorship of Montgonery Ward and Co. will receive a O.E. Sealed Beam Bicycle as first prize. Olher valuable prizes, for second through eighth places, will be a Gep Glass casting rod, Cortland Challenge tennis racket. Marty Mar ion Jr. baseball glove. Sun Rubber basketball, bike basket, chrome goose horn and bike saddle cover. 1 cannot stress too much the importance of and need for safe bicycle riding In Klamath Falls." said Mayor Robert Thompson. In urging boys and girls to Join the Bicycle Safety Parade. t The mayor. Bob Bonney and Frank Tucker will act as Judges in the spectacular parade. In addition to the prizes donated bv Wards, free Coca-Cola will be given to an contestants who have registered for the parade before the deadline on June 19 at 5:30 p.m. Registrations are being taken ev ery day by Chuck Smith, manager of the sporting goods department of Montgomery Ward and Co. All prizes are now on exhibition In Wards store, Including the grand prize G. E. Sealed Beam bike. Budget Covers OLDS - CADILLAC MlS WIFE'S .NOT Osl AtiY CCWUIITTte .' BUT I KNCW A WME IN MORSEChESTET? TXO HE HE KICKS mi ' W0DOJT ids THETyPt BELIEVE VESHAIFWS BWPUEDOeSTOWSe SALARY TO OMWry DRIVES 4 I cjAwry, look ANO eiVES AT HIS INLCWt RAKE cMME- yfa'fiknv If 1(LK1MS BOOT THE OfFCt TIQHTViXD AS HE IVES THE OMWry COLLECTIONS THE OLD RuiJ-AOUr)0 XIX. State May Own Frats PORTLAND Wl The Stale Board of Higher Education would become the landlord of fraternities and sororities under a plan pro posed bv Dr. Harry K. Newburn, president of the University of Ore gon. Newburn suggested Tuesdny at a meeting of the board that the state build fraternity houses and lease or rent them. He said living organizations at the University were finding it Impossible to build and Increasing ly difficult to maintain buildings. To ease the situation, he sug gested that the board lend Its credit for bonds to pav for half the construction costs, with gifts pay ing for the other half. He pointed out that more dona tions could be expected under the plan because the gifts could be deducted from income tascs. He said that If the plan were adopted, the board eventually would have to take over all living organisations and that would amount to a considerable Invest ment. Some arrangement would have to be found to compensate the towns of Eugene and Corvallls for the taxes they would lose If the fraternity and sorority houses be came state-owned and therefore withdrawn from the city tax rolls, he said. Chancellor Charles D. Byrne said the board wanted to study the proposal more fully and sug gested that It be put In writing. The board's building committee postponed until Aug. 13 the bid opening dale for the proposed teaching hosnltal at the University Medical School In Portland. Shrine Group Names Head PORTLAND Wl Mrs. Thomas Luke of Portland Is the new na tional ruler of the women's Shrine organization. Daughters of the Nile. She was elected here Tuesday at the group's 36th annual conven tion. Other officers: Mrs. Ruth Rocho, Detroit. Mich., supreme princess; Mrs. Helen V. Drake. San Fran cisco, and Mrs. Charlotte E. Nolte. Baltimore, Md.. princesses: Mrs. Helen F. Cramer, Buffalo. N. Y., recorder, and Mrs. Laura McGre gor, Butte, Mont., banker. Modoc Lookouts On The Job ALTURAS All lookouts of Mo doc National Forest are In opera tion, according to the forest head quarters here. Evelyn Hicks la manning Happy Camp lookout for her tenth season as a Modoc lookout, and Shirley Pangborn Is undertaking her sec ond season. Mr. and Mrs. Carlev are serving on Sugar Hill, Mr. and Mrs. How ard Rooer are on Blue Mountain north of Canby, high school student Don Pollard is stationed tempor arily atop Manzanlta Mountain, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bunstelrt are on Timber Mountain, between Can- by and Tulelake. All Ph. 4103 By RKLMAN MORIN (Substituting fur IUI llnylr) NEW YORK Wl Dwloht El.srn. bower's mother was not there when he came home to Abilene Lli. oilier clny. She has gone now. tne spun of her. though, tha very essence of this woman, Is so strong that It breathes Iron) every corner of their home. Indeed, the old house Is a perfect self-porlrall, something l made and colored forever with the rich, deep shades o( personality. Her niece, Mrs. Ray Etheiiiiiilnn, still lives up the road a way. She cans ner "Aunt ina." "She must have been very strong," I said, "as a person." "Blie was," Mrs. Kthrrltuilon said. "Of them all, Aunt Ida was the most vivid, the dominant one. Of course, you wouldn't think It to look at her." In the photographs of ner as a young woman, her chin Is sum!! and pointed. Theio is n llrmnesa about her mouth, and yet tlw faintest shadow ol a smile, too Her hair is thick and It looks dark in the picture. In her eyes, there Is that sumo Intlmutlon ol a smile, something lelt rutlicr than seen. Her eyebrows ate high and (lurk, and they give her uii arch, knowing expression. This expression must have been very marked on her Inco when she pretended not to notice that the boys had taken her bread dough from the old Pennsylvania Dutch dough tray In the kltchrn, rolled It Into balls and were playing catch behind her buck. And all her life she pretended not to recognise tho nickname. "Ike." although every one of the boys and not Dwlght, alone was known as "Ike" at one time or another. "Ike?", she would say, sweetly. "Who Is Ike?" She was an Intensely religious woman. The family Bible, with the names of her sons and their birth dates, lies open In the living room. In the book shelves are fallen editions ol "Blblo Studies." "Our Beacon Light." "The Life ot Christ." and "Religious Denomina tions." Framed mottos from the Bible hong above the two brass bra steads In the room she kept for herself and her husbuud. All this Is Just as II was when she went away for the last lime. Except for one thing, and tills Is a thing she would not have permitted. If she had been there because she never allowed things to lay around. Her wedding dress, or white silk and lace, lies dia gonally across her bed lor visitors to see. It Is a site 9. She was a small woman. Yet, she maintained a home for five boys and a man. bv herself. She made some o( their clothes on the sewing machine In the bed room, handled the family washing, baked her own bread and pies, and stirred up cauldrons 01 a mysterious dish called "pudding meat." The way ol molting it acems to have been lost. "And so Aunt Ido never was able to go out very much." says Mrs. Ethcrlnglon. "She was always at home. I don't think she wanted to to away from the house." She had an egg - worming dish In the kitchen, with four holders for the eggs, but she used It to keep her money In. The siuoll household expenses were paid out of this dish. "Later in life." her son said, at Abilene, "I learned that we were very poor." They may have lacked for money, at times, but their home was a treasure house of good living, for warmth and comfort and books and music she tried, to teach each of the five boys the piano and especially of a woman's loving care. It Is all there today. And so Is she. POST SOLD BOSTON Wi Sale of the 121 year old Boston Post to John Fox, 45-year-old Boston financier, was announced Tuesday night. I FREE personalized checks 'Yours to enjoy. . . PERSONALIZED CHECKS from The First' National Bank of Portland. Add prestige and friendline to allj your business transactions by paying bills this cotrrenlent way. They art t theck and double-check ... the stubs a sccoftl ofj expenses., .cancelled checks your receipts. j-tf( Open your regular personal checking account 'Any Time; 10 to 5, SIX DAYS A WEEK, including Saturday.. .your name' and address printed TREE at The l:irst National. ' I Because of the way Hi" lss"f was brnarhrd, Ihe iiilrsllun ol America's air power has been plunged Into the thick ol polities. This Is unfortunate, slnco tho strategic aspects ought lo tran scend politics. Senator Tall began the current dlsrusslou by asserting that our only safe course Is lo create olr strength "Mifllclent lo control tho air over Ihls eounliy, over the oceans which miitouikI this con tinent nntl able to deliver atom bombs on nuxHlon cities. " He feels that America's "land generals'' have blocked the adop tion ol audi a uollcy. He clearly believes that proper oliess upon air ikiwer will do awuy with the need for a large land force and that the net result will bo sounder and cheaper military security. Now there Is probably not n competent "land general" In this country who would deny the domi nant role of air power In any future war. And certainly Ihe air generals would like to see a vast expansion ot their forces for both olfeiiMve and defensive use. Bill It Is also likely Ihot no qualified olr general believes thai even Ihe happiest enlargement of air power he can envisage would make Ihls nation sale without ac comnunvinu land power. It has been Mild again and ogiilu j uui oimoipnuv ii noes ihu h-h'i I on those who simply do not wish j to believe It: olr experts aro con I vluced you cannot count on deliver I lug the atom bomb effectively by Henley Boy Suffers Burns One of the most dangerous lire hazards ol all time, the explosive combination nf a small child and a btix ol matches, combined again veslertlnv to put u Klnmuth C'uun ly child In the hospital. I Hurt la thirteen year old Edward Clark ol rural llrnlev. Ho sulfered polnlul burns to his onus, legs and bndv when the mutches he was pluvlng with Ignited nearbv weeds which In turn set the lad's clolhcs on lire i Tlie Inluied bov H the son of Mr. and Mrs. l.uwreuce Olurk. Klnmuth CV.uiuv Hherlll Red Urn ton, who inveslluiiled Uie mishap, said the bov's parrots told him the youngster was plnvtng with the I mulches trying to drive mosquitoes 1 away. J Hospital attendants said voung iClurk's condition was polnlul but nni serious. He was lakrn lo Klnm ulh Valley hospital by Kolcr'a am bulance. I STEAM rUMP, 7 ' i 4'. DupUi, brsn fitted. I STIAM PUMP, 7 '. " Duplav. pltin fiMad. I STEAM PUMP, 16 " i V Dupl brslt fitttd. II". 1 PIRI PUMP, Chryiltr compl.l. wils 2-whl trtiitr, 4" luction holt nd 2 raali of 2 'A " fir hoi. also avellabls IDCIS. CAISIAGI, CUT OM iWi, IIIU tWl. ITIAU IN&INIS, COMNtllSOSJ. OUJ, SOU CA1IS. I1C Telephone: Did Glsier at Cortege Grove 943 (Oregon) Or Willo WI DULIEN STEEL PRODUCTS INC. OF WASH. 9265 East Marginal Way Seattle 8, Washington as personal as... ST NATIONAL RAM If ( OF PORTLAND Tfie Urk If ttayi OPEN 10 TO S SIX DAYS A WIIK for nw eomsalue. UTi iifto omoon roorrm" mi d.p,h iMaM cmim reliance only on long-range bomb ers. They are currently dublnua about Ihe place ot tha giant bomber In, that task. They Insist that medlum-rango bombers would Inevitably carry a big part of tha burden. Medium-range bombers mean bases closer lo potential Russian targets than the continental United Hlntes or even any rlalm of Islands In mlri-Alnntlc, They mean bases In Europe and North Africa. And bases cannot lis held by olr power alone. They are land. Thry must be protected by land forces, and not necessarily thoaa of the country whoa territory la Involved. This la juat rock-bottom loei from which no competent military strategist, whatever his belief In air power, attempt to escope. There la no evidence, either, that a colossal air lorce would save Uie country money. Tin cost of planes alone Is stnggnrftlg today. Hut beyond Ihul there would have to be a huge allotment of man power to rover olr crews, mainte nance and administration. Even our present air force demands a million men. To rclv lully upon air power, too, would put the late of Europe s great rlllrs In the hands o long range bombers whose usefulness in any new war Is uncertain. Naturally we should encourage Uie Kuroprans lo fight a land war on the continent should It rome with oil they can muster. YeP,, slnco our own security Is Involved In the solely of Europe, It would seem sensible lo have some share In Ihe ground defense. Beyond these purely selfish enn Hldrrollons, we still consider the Kuroprons our It lends and Allies. What assurance Is It lo (Item to be told: "Never mind If tho Hussiaus pour across your border and bomb your cities. We'll bomb their cities lo ruins." Especially since no one who has anything lo do with really em ploying air power believes a war could bo fought successfully that way. GREYHOUND More Travel Extras No Ixira Coif I x Vtl bir vilut! Mors itivlci to mo ft' pucu hunt bum. Beit dilvsu. Crwots Ihe travel lesder . . . choon Cisyrtounol 4 Expresses Daily to PORTLAND and Ststtle from Klsmsth Falll PLUS MANY REGULAR SCHEDULES DAILY Complete Service ta All America Aqent, J, K. Soyra 904 Klomoth Phont) SS21 KLAMATH FALLS BRANCH SOUTH 6th STREET BRANCH