Docnmber 23, 1941 THE EVENING HERALD, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE SEVEN DAUGHTERS AT ROTARY LUNCH Show Your Individuality With These AT TULELAKE TtJLEUAKE From m11 diuulitor In high chain to grown up young ladloi, every slnylo Itotiry dad had daugh Ur and some who had no daugh ter! of tholr own "squired" bor rowed daughter at (ha first an nual Daughter and Futhtr lunch nan Monday at which members o( tho local Rotary club were host. The day wm a gala event for many o( the young gutit who greoted one of the moot popular Santa Clause to visit Tulelaks. Santa camu with a well filled pack and distributed glfti even to the hosts. The annex of the Tuleleka Community Presbyterl- an church where the dinner was served by the Community guild wn a bower of Christmas ever- greeni, red and green ChrUtmai candle highlighted by a glow Ins, glittering Christmas tree, that duizled oven the high chair small fnlki), blood daughters of R. M. Prior. Rev. Cleorge At mond and the borrowed Baby Mats that A. A. Rodenberger In troduced. George Relben, principal of the high school had a hli guaala hi deushter-ln-law. Mr. Don ald Relben. 8an Francisco, for merly Mary France Johnon. W. H. Anderon alo had a mnr- rled daughter guest, Mr. Bill Bond. Tulelake, formerly Jean Anderaon. Four young women who for the nam year have served ko tary luncheon, Marjorle Lar sen. Harriett Coiilcon. Dorothy Thomaa and Caroline Byckmen, and five young women who aang tho grund old Christmas carol. Edna Maria Orltfitn. Mary uug gan. Natalie Welch, Joyce Turn' baugh and Tatty Oentry alio were remembered by Santa and were.gueita of the club. Ml Gentry offered two ac- eordion number, "Silent Night and an encore during tha lunch' eon hour. Place were marked for fifty guests. Santa In distributing hi gift questioned cloaely conduct of aome of tha member and only hi generoilty gave presents to A. A. Rodenberger, J. w. car Dale, C. C. Spear and Floyd A Boyd. All admitted they had been "not o good" during tha pait twelve month but prom' ied better bohavlour In tha year ahead. P. C. Bergeman, program chairman for the day wa not ao Hire either that ha deierved gift. There will be no meeting next week, tha next luncheon being acheduled for January 7 whan J. W. Carlisle will be chairman 3-Month Job Nullified by Blackout Rule OLYMPIA, Wah., Dec. 23 UP) For mora than three month Leonard Huber labored to create a lighted religious ipectacle for a Chrlitmai eaion Illumination contest. Atop a tower on a hill, he ere ated the figure of a shining angel. Below in the yard, life- size figure portrayed the na tlvlty iceno. Then last weekend the contest wa cancelled because of war. But Hubnr did not feel his In bor on the "Peace on Earth aymbol we in vnln. Mo estimat ed mora than 8000 persons drove to see the by-rond display Sun day night. Until long past mid night, mony of them dropped to their knee In a drenching rain ? mm &g Household Art by I Allr-Brook Transportation liews tan. mt. Meuwow PATTERN 7158 He'll be lust a Dleasod with. News, these "personal" linen a )he s. Tha mart "HI" and "Her" vogue In linen help each one know whose towel 1 whose. Pat tern 7 1 SB contain a trans fer pattern of 12 motif averag ing :1x6l Inches; Illustrations of stltchr To obtain this pattern send 10 cert In coin to The Herald and Easiest Stltchery Beautifies jf loweis Pillow Case Quickly Household Art Dept , Klamath Fail Do pot send this picture, but keep It and the num ber for reference. Ba lura to wrap coin securely, as a loos coin often dip out of tha en velope. Requost for pattern should read, "Send pattern No to lOllowed by your nam and address RAILWAY LP MOVEMENTS OF MLITAR! UNIT Vital Part of Any Education Is Daily Newspaper Reading In the 12 month ending with August this year, military move ment aggregating 2,080,077 pas senger were handled by U. S railroad. Special train service wa operated to take care of about two-third of tha total movement of army and navy personnel. wnne military passenger movement ha been large, It relation to the total amount of passenger service performed by the railroads is not to Impres sive. The railroads performed pproximately 22 billion passeng er mile of service In 1838, when tha military movement was rela tively uninfluenced by. the na tional defense program. Assum- Br RUTH MILLET The excuse of many women for knowing less than men about what is going on in tha world I that they are so busy with homemaklng that they u t haven't time to keep up. , But a survey Just made by tha campus newspaper of a large mldwestern college would Indi cate that It is Just an excuse and not a reason. For the survey showed that In tha men' dormitories there wa one newspaper covering world events for every 23 men living there but only one new, paper for every 85 co-ed In tha women' dormttorie. That I pretty good lgn that women lag behind men In their Interest In world affairs even before they have any homemak lng responsibilities to take up their time. It Indicate also, that given the same chance at an edu cation a men, women ara (till leu Interested than men In what i happening outside their own small social group. And even though those col lege men ara far ahead of tha women when It come to ap parent Interest In world affair, their record I disgraceful. EDUCATION 8HOULD INCLUDE NEWS When there 1 only ona news paper for 23 men, the amount of time any of them can spend reading it Is far too limited for a person who la spending four year and several thousand dol lar getting an "education. For no matter how much he learns from text book, no stu dent could hope to emerge from college a well-liucmed person If for four year hi knowledge of world affair had coma from "headline tklmming." That 1 something that Dad- who Is footing the bill for hi son's or daughter' education- ought to think about. If ha can icrapa up the cash to send hi boy to college, he ought to scrape a little harder and subscribe to a newspaper for him. And It might give an Interested aunt an idea. What hotter Christ mas gift for a college student than a subscription to this news paper? One that a student won't have to wait to read until 22 or 84 other students have fin Ished glancing at tha headlines, I WASHINGTON. Dec. 23 m Two of tha men who will help write tha next big tax bill said today that the new blow might fall heaviest on corporation and individual incomes, rather than on tha hundreds of articles sub ject to excise levies. Representative Duncan (D-Mo.)-said "We already apparently have coma pretty close to in voking tha law of diminishing re turns, and on many of tha com modities now subject to the ex cise tax, wa can't afford to add still further burdens. Rep, Reed (R-N.Y.) agreed and added that diversion of many basic materials to the defense program would remove, at tha source, the primary material for many article now (ubject to ex cise. These two members of tha house ways and means commit tee emphasised, however, that the committee would not meet until after the first of the year to consider even tentative pro. grams. January 19 appeared likely data for the start of hear ings on whatever specific sug gestions treasury and congress ional tax experts may evolve Treasury Secretary Morgenthau recently asked tha committee to prepare a bill for new billions of dollar. SPRAQUES' ION TO WED SALEM, Dec. 23 W) Mr. and Mr. Charlea Elwood Dull of Maplawood, N.' J., announced tha engagement today of their daughter, Mis Mary Lou Dull, to Ensign Wallace A. Sprague of Seattle, son of Governor and Mrs. Charles A Sprague. Insurance records show that since 1922 there hag been re duction of three to five pound in tha average weight of woman, in v-rwm 1 $2JS HrtiHir fj fgr" I OF GOLDEN GOODNESS AGED INTO THIS GRAND WHISKEY! H took Mather Nster te hnereve grand whltktyl Now taste the 4d4 rlohneaa and mallawaets fciN year ef aanml agatngl Christmas DANCE MAUN Broadway Hall Thursday Iva Dec. 25 Music by Baldy Evans and hit Orchtstra Dancing 10 to I I j Admission: I I Cants $1 Ladlai Frtt I Ing that army and navy person nel I transported, on the aver age for other passengers, the military movement this year will account for a smaller propor tion of the total than mott peo ple will luapect. The average passenger nam last year was about B2 miles, a new high. On tha basis of trans porting approximately two mil lion members of the army and navy personnel an average dis tance four times greater than the average for all passengers last year would account for less than 2 per cent of the total passenger miles now anticipated for this year. Japanese First Oahu Air Raid Victim HONOLULU, Dec. 23 AP Ohau island's first air raid shel ter victim was a Japanese alien, Motor Patrolman Edward Pu ulel said that Susumu Katamaya, 40, was crushed to death Sunday by a 300-pound stone which rol led into the cava he and a neigh' bor, Teuusaku Koizumi, were digging out of a hillside a refuge from air attack. The accident occurred at Wa- iau, 10 mile north of Honolulu. Koizumi, 43, wa seriously injured. The bridge of Varollus is lo cated in the brain and is a band of nerve matter connecting the right and left parts of the cerebellum. SP E Formation of a Southern Pa cific railroad civilian defense unit to cooperate with the Klam ath Falls defense organization was announced Monday. The group, headed by Coordl- nator Alfred P. Condrey, Is composed entirely of SP em ployes and will function within the confines of the SP system Their work will be separate from that of tha county defense system but will be done in con- Junction with the county setup. Unit division and their chair men follow: Protective police, Adrian C, Smith, chief, E. T. Blankenship, captain; fire-demolition, W. A. Roberts, chief; rescue-first aid evacuaton, Walter F. Brown, chairman; aircraft observers, J. A. Burke, chairman. Medical Dr. E. D. Johnson, chairman. Utilities electrical, B. F. Brown, chairman; water and fuel, Jess Smith, chairman. Communication telephone and telegraph, Ralph Reed, chairman; transportation, H, A. Sprague, chairman. Planning morale, Paul W. Jones, chairman; publicity, Har vey Teala, chairman; registra tion, E. A. Bechtcl, chairman. tha state property tax unneces sary, said there probably would ba no stata property tax during ma iiacai year beginning July 1. Tha 1841 income, tax receipts excluded timates by l,821r 088. , State Tax Levy Filed Monday SALEM, Dec. 23 AP) The state tax levy for the first lx month of 1942, first in history In which there is no property tax for state purposes including ele mentary schools, was filed by tha state tax commission Monday, The commission, announcing that increased income and inher itance tax receipts would make Read the Classified paga I DIAL GIFT X THEATRE SCRIP I 3AVI 20 I I THEATRE SCRIP I BOOKS V Th PtHem, Trei, 40 TOPCOATS ON SALE FOR $15 i DREW'S MANSTORE Slfrfi Ifi) ll q5" ijlSJiiJy'lS' &. FREE DELIVERY DIAL 3133 Price Effective . Tua. . Wad. 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