Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, December 03, 1942, Page 9, Image 9

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    Dwujitar 8, 1042
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE NINE
COOL-HEADED
T
SAVES
6
AU
By OLAND NOHQAAnD
TWELFTH U. 8. AMI FOIICE
UEADQUAKTEHS, AiKorln, Dio.
1 (IJnlnytid) (A') A cool-himdnd
AniiTk'iin dKlitcr pilot unci thu
cmiiuKumm two-man crow of u
1 luht bninhnr imvcd alx incninurti
of a U, S. medium bomber'a
crew, forced down yrniturdny
dorp In nxlx territory nonr
Ciubi'ii, TiiiiInIii, nflcr Ihclr plunu
wiin hit by unli-ulrcriift flic.
Tha medium bomber, pllatml
by SiicoihI Lieut, Diivld L, Float-
r, llou.iton, Tex., win In a icrnup
which bombed im nli'dromo, bur
rucks iiud rnllroud yardx nt
Ciiibon. Sovornl plimttit wpro hit
by the Itittmito ntill-ulrcrnft flro.
Unhurt
Floetor'g pinna received n hit
In the on H I no mid was forced to
Jnnd aovernl miles from Cnbca
Circling above, Lieut. E. V.
Humphrey of Flint, Mich., xuw
th. crnnh nnd watched tha nix
crewman wulk iiwny unhurt, 11a
ipollcd the locnllty cnrcfully nnd
then flow back to his blue.
Lieut. Leo lliiwcl, Jr., of Sent-
tie. volunteered to ntlempt n re
cue In a light United Stiitca
bomber, sccompnnled by Bomb
Bdler Lieut. Frank II. Donnelley
of Jnmny City, N. J, Limit.
Humphrey nnd Cupt. M. J.
Mourno of LiiGrnnKo, III., flew
escorting P-3B.
Arab Signaled
Hnwel Inndcd his IlKhl bomb
r on n rnuifh .'leld nnd took on
the nix marooned filers nod then
linccd the problem of hoUIiik hln
ovorlondod plnno Into the air
inln dciplta the bnd terrnln
nd nppronchlnu dnrkneiui. One
Important need wiu n marker at
the end of tha field to show tlio
end of thi improvised runway,
A white-robed Arab UKrecd to
tnnd thnro at a bencon and a
few minutes lutor the nix hnppy
men were belnR congratulated nt
their homo field.
Those rescued In addition to
Tloetor wera Second Lieut. Al'
lan L. Houser, Jr., co-pllot, (nd
dress unnvnllnble); Second Lieut
Vernon C. Scogln, Wllmar, Ark.j
Sergt. George F. Doran, Musca
tine, la.; Sergt. Itiiy Dnvlllu,
Houston, Tex., and Sergt Herb
ert u. Fellschmnn, Canby, Oro.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 3 (P)
Viva wounded Oregon soldiers
war decorated here this week
or their parts In the Initial
American landings In French
North Africa November 8.
They wore among tho 102
wounded returned for hospital
liatlon. Lieut. Gen, Leslie J
JVtcNnlr, commanding general of
tha nrmy ground forces, present
ed tho purple henrt awnrd to
each.
The Oregon men (Including
tha battle area In which each
was wounded and their home
towns) were:
Robert L. Betholl, private, in
fnntry, Fcdnla, Aumsvlllc; Beryl
Butters, comornl. Infnntrv. Fe.
duln, Eugene; Donald W. Davis,
private, miontry, unsnuinnca,
Grande; John W, Larson, prl
vnto, first clnss, Infantry, Fa
data, Baker; Roy E. Potter, cor
poral, infantry, i cdnln, Salem,
Ten Enlist Here
For Training In
U. S. Marine Corps
Ten more prospective leather
recks have been enlisted at the
Klnmnth Fnlls marine corps re
criiltlng station recently.
They aro Robert Cox, Francis
M. Elsberry, William II, Filey,
Vernon E. House, Chnrles E. Do
Long, Vinnl E. Straw, Rnymond
W. Rover nnd Glenn S. Scott,
all of Klnmnth Fnlls.
From Morrill, Dwnyno B. Cuse
enlisted; from Bonanza, John W,
rim-if
It's Cold in Kentucky
iit iiuiiiiiiuuimiuiiiiii. ,.n. ,,u,j,
J? to
vv '-mi
Fur-decked Fort Knox tank crow member needs his big mltta be-
cnuso he takes port of his training In a "room kopt nt an even t
temperature of 30 below xoro. At other times ho swelters in hot
. box, where tho thermomelor regularly reads 120 degrees.
Forest War
A Broadcast .
And now, ladles and gentle
men, wo shall turn to our short-
wave listening posts ovorsens,
where our reporters with bark
on will tell you about tho fight
ing forests of other lands. Coma
In, England! ...
. . . This Is tho'Forest of Dean,
in Gloucestershire, England's
first and largest Nnllonnl Forest
Park. Thrco centuries ngo nil of
the old ouks but ona wero cut
from the 20,000 acres of tho For
est of Dean. This one, called
the Newlnnds Onk, yet stands, In
Its ngu of a thousand years, with
n younger forest or great ouks
about it.
In the earth bencnth the Forest
of Denn are coal mines. Timbers
cut from tho onks frnme tunnels
nnd slopes, where men labor to
koi-p conl rolling out to steel
mills nnd wnr plants. Crews of
women work In the famed for
est, cutting up boughs and stems
nnd burnfng charcoal from them,
nnd tho charcoal goes to tho steel
mills.
In Cumberland nnd In Scot
land thousands of axes arc
swinging from the brawny nrms
of Engineer troops called Forest
Fusiliers, to produco wood for
war . , .
Timber Slave at
And now, a report from an un
derground short-wnve station In
Germany.'
Jenn Buson, torn from his fnnv
lly nnd a bit of wooded land in
tho Vosgcs Mountains of France,
nnd Louis Knrsnk from tho pin-
erics of Polnnd, nre fnlllng pines
(or Hitler In tho Black Forest of
Nazi Gcrmnny. From daylight
to dark they chop nnd snw under
bayonets. They arc fed thin soup
made of potatoes, rutnbngns nnd
cabbage, with ersatz bread. Tho
Frenchman may have hope. The
Polo has nono. His homo was
burned, his wife nnd children
murdered. Ho works as a ma
chine works a broken machine,
Wood Is the life of tho Nazi
wnr monster. Wood gas propels
motor enrs, tractors nnd trucks.-
Wood mnkes planes, explosives
bridges, ships, railroad cars.
Chemistry makes wool-like cloth
ing from wood cellulose, and s
thousand other such substitutes
Proteins nro distilled from' wood
for cnttlo feed. Let tho forests
of Germany bo burned Into blnck
snags, nnd tho Nnzls would bo
forcod to surrender within 60
days. ...
Whoro Loggers are Women . .
Como in, Moscow arc the
forests fighting in Russia? , ,
The Red Army fights with
wood. Plywood fighting planes
knlfo out of winter skies to
machine-gun tho Nazis In their
holes, Timber boats and barges
keep tho giant traffic of men
nnd munitions rolling on the
Volga. Timber streams to the
Front for pontoon bridges, for
tank traps, for fortifications, for
dugouts, for field base hospitals
and tho roods through mud
and marshes aro kept usable
with timber corduroyl Tho
homes of Moscow and other cen
tcrs nro kept warm with wood
fuel, leaving coal for the wnr
plants.
Women full tho pines, get out
the logs and saw tho lumber, for
the most part. Tho women of
Russlu fight with axes and saws
as their men fight with machines
nnd guns. . . ,
Wood for Zeros ...
Whnt do wo hear from tho
Philippines? ... In our islands
the J iips have taken over the
t'inber Industries, and shiploads
of logs nnd squares move stead
ily to the sawmills and plywood
plants of Osaka. Here Filipino
men of tho woods nro enslaved.
like tho Poles In Germany, at
the work of producing wood to
make the Zeros of . tho Japs,
Their only hope is in Mac-
Arthur's, "I came through, and
I shall return." . . .
Wood for Mac Arthur ...
Como In, Australia, and let us
hear an example of how wood is
helping the fighting return of
MacArthur and his men . . . This
report is from a spot in tho for
ests of Tasmania, whore a giant
swamp gum is about to fall. For
two and a half dnys a pair of
timber-fullers, with axes and an
eight-foot crosscut saw, have
been working to bring this giant
gum to earth and send it to war.
Tho scarf cut alone is six feet
and six Inches deep. The diam
eter, nt tho height of tho cut, is
15 feet, five inches they're
driving in the wedges "Tim-ber-r-ri"
is tho shout and the
great gum crashes down I . , .
Thnt sounds so much like home
let's cnll it home, and sign off.
Read Classified Aas for Results
III
The students at the Junior
high school wil hold a program
and carnival at the Fremont
school building Friday evening,
December 4. Tha program con
sists of a one-act play and band
numbers, which will begin al
7:30 o'clock.
The program will be followed
by a carnival In tho girls gym
nasium with everything from
tho fjsh pond to hot dogs. At
0:15 there will bo a "smoker'
of five matches of boxing.
The Junior high band under
tho direction of Andrew Loney,
presents:
I
March "Promotion" Chenctte
II
Serenade ... Lillya
III
Blue Moon" Ribble
IV
"Song of the Rose" Weber
V
March "Honor Band" Weber
The Dramatics club offers
one-act play, directed by Orpha
Hudson.
"The Initiation"
Cast;
Billy Allan Murdock
Wally Charles Selby
Jim. Galileo Castillo
Al William Badorek
Joe James Crosslcy
John .Gaylord Uplngton
Jean Marilyn O'Neill
Betty Ruth Landry
Bertha Barbara Lambert
Marjorlo Louise Langworthy
Jesslo Gwenyth Moore
Sue Katherine Newman
Roso Maxine Goddard
Wilda Norma Smith
Paul Dolton of Klamath Falls,
chairman of tho administrative
committee of the Oregon-Califor
nia Potato Marketing Agree
ment program, has been appoint
ed to the national farm products
marketing and merchandising
committee by Roy F. Hendrick-
son, administrator of the agri
cultural marketing administra
tion.
. The committee will "examine
and appraise, in the light of war
time developments, marketing
problems to bo met in moving
agricultural products as , they
como to market," according to
word received here.
Dalton is one of three Oregon
Inns named on the committee.
BRING IN YOUR
MUSKRAT SKINS
: We will make
your iur coat
to your measure.
C U M M I N Q S
FUR SHOP
US So. 7th St.
Red Cross
Notes
By ROSE POOLE
Publicity Chairman
Word has come to us of the
great need for speeding up our
shipment of dressings. Especial
ly Is there a crying need for
sponges. Our shipments to the
army depots fall far short of
meeting the need. This is partly
duo to many new chapters just
starting their programs and
partly-to the fact that gauze has
been held up in shipment to our
larger chapters. But it does
mean that each chapter must
call in all the forces that can
bo mustered in order to get this
Job done. We must not let up
on our standards of work, but
wo must try to bring more wo
men into the program, which
will mean more days of work
ana longer nours.
Klamath has sent many men
to the armed forces; don't you
think it will hearten these men
to know that the women of
Klamath are making a sincere
effort in dally work for the Red
Cross? These dressings that we
make here may go to our own
boys; if not, to others who are
just as dear to another woman.
News from Pomona grange!
On November 14 a program was
put on by the grange at the Alta-
mont school, featuring a patri
otic rally. E. A. Boyd was in
charge. A free-will offering was
given which amounted to $15.32
uood workl
Our quota of comfort kits Is
still unfilled. Theso are the last
pieces of equipment given to
our fighting men before they
embark for overseas duty. The
kits are filled with necessary
articles, such as soap, cigarettes,
shoe polishing cloths, writing
pads and pencils, chewing gum,
40-inch shoe laces, razor blades,
sewing kit, etc. The bags after
ward serve the men in uniform
as a place to put their personal
possessions, their letters, their
cherished photographs.
The cost of filling one com
fort kit by the Red Cross is
$1.50. Stop in at Red Cross
headquarters on your lunch hour
or next time you are downtown
and look them over; we are sure
you would like to send at least
one. But do it now so they'll
have their comfort kit for Christ
mas.
PLANT
SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 3 (IP)
permission to build and operate
a new $25,030,000 hydro-electric
power plant and supply system
on the Pit river north of Shasta
dam was granted the Pacific
Gas and Electric company by
the California railroad commis
sion Tuesday.
The plant, to be known as Pit
No. 5, will cost $21,280,000. The
company expects to spend $3
750,000 more on improvements
to substations at Newwark and
Contra Costa.
The federal power commission
granted the company a license
for the plant last July, and it has
obtained county franchises. .
Klamath Has 1000 Pounds
To Go on Scrap Metal Quota
One thousand tons of scrap
iron, quite a pile of stuff, must
be in by December 31 in order
that Klamath's quota of 4000
tons be met, according to Bob
McCambridge, county salvage
chairman.
: To date 3000 tons of scrap
have been gathered up all over
the county. This figure does not
include any estimates but actual
weights of materials shipped
from this area, McCambridge
.stated. This does not include
scrap piled up in school yards
or at the collection centers at
the present time.
McCambridge urged Klamath
residents to continue their ef
forts despite winter and said
that schools were stilL actively
engaged in gathering the scrap.
Farmers were asked to gather
scrap and when they came into
town to leave it at the center
located at Sixth and Commercial
streets, or to leave it a1 centers
designated at Sewart-Lenox,
Merrill or Malin.
Children Praised .
From January 1 to November
30, this year, 5395.14 tons o
scrap has been , shipped from
Klamath county. This includes
No. 2 scrap, cast and metals.
P I L E S
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO PAIN NO HOSPITALIZATION
No Lot. of Tim. .
Parmanent RmuIUI
OR. E. M. MARSHA
Chlropractlo Phyalclan
M No. Ill, glqulra Thealra Bids.
Phon. 7055
215.31) tons of rubber not Iv
eluding the rubber obtalnod in
the oil companies' drive, nnd
30.4 tons of rags. Sixty-six tons
of paper, no longer collected,
was also shipped from hero, nnd
some 1052 pounds of fut.
The state salvage committee
has reported on the fine work
done by school children during
the national scrap harvest. To
tal collection in the state, 7,500,
000 pounds; total amount of
money received to date from sale
of scrap, $3353.09. Disposition
of the funds includes donations
to the Red Cross, purchase of
school radios, play equipment,
USO, stamps and bonds, athletic
equipment, library books, Futuro
Farmers, funds for the purchase
of a fire truck, Junior Red Cross,
civilian defense, observation
posts and other worthwhile pro
jects. i aaa
Canadian Mothers
Say 'Buckley's Best for
Children's Coughs'
Coughs Due To Colds or
Bronchial Irritations
Compounded from rate. Cnnndlin Pint
Julsfim nnd other soothln hentlnjt Ingro-dif-ntt
Buckley'i CANADIOL Mixture I
different from anything you've ever tried.
Ost a mnll bottle today. You'll find H
o.uifikJr loosens up thick ehntrfns phlegm,
soothen trw membrane nnd makes brenth
injr. ensier. Onft or two nips and hnrrt cough
in? spasm erase i, Thousands of Canadian
Mothers know Its worth nnd wouldn't
dreim of fftcinjr. a Cnnadlsn winter without
: It. They know how good it ta. Your drug
gist his th$ reinarkiihi Canadian discovery,
0tleberry Bro. fiuper Cut Rate Drug.
T
IT MAKES THE SALAD i
RUSHMORE MEMORIAL
Tho Itushmore Memorial In
the Black Hills of South Dakota
portray tho likeness of Wnsh
ington, Jeffarson, Lincoln and
Theodore Roosevelt,
NOW -SHE
SHOPS
"GASH AND CARRY"
Without Painful Backache
Many luffvrere relieve nagging bueknohi
qufeldy. ones they dlaoover that the. renj
hum of thtlr trouhlo may h tired kldniyi.
Tv Wdneyn aro Nature chief way of uk
hf the exfler aeldn and wnn( out of tin
blood. Tbsy help moat people, pas about &
plain a day.
When Unorder of Itldnnv function twrmll
poiBonoiii matter to remnin In your Wood, it
inny cmuae ndftghig bnokaehe, rhomnatln pnlna,
leg nalaa. lonji of pep nnd eneray, ffottlng up
plglit, awelllng, ptifDnein under tho even,
beadnnhea and dleHlneaa. Frequent, or erartty
Enaaagei with, nmnrting and burning aotnn
men ihowi there ia Aomothiug wrong with
your kldneyi) or bladder.
' Don't waftl Ak your dnignl-t for Donn'a
FMllf ueed nuocepafully by mllllona for over
0 yea re. They givo linpny relief and will help
the Jfl mllei of kidney tubea flush out poison
poi VMM from your blood. Get Doan'a I'lUi.
PALACE MARKET
GROCERIES AND MEATS
Phon 4109 A Horn Ownd Stor 524 Main Bt. Fr DolWory Mon Wtd. & : Bt.
Fren Parking . . . Cuitomer Parking Let at Sth and Pin . WRarjUgjvMcJ;hTm
Due to the tire shortage and gas rationing
we will deliver only three days a week
Monday, Wednesday and, Saturday
Cranberries . . Lb. 23c
Brussel Sprouts, lb. 15c
U. 8. No. 1 '' '
Potatoes ... 10 lbs. 39c
8PECIALS FOR FRIDAY and SATURDAY
Bon.l.ti
Veal Stew
Lb. 29c
. .
Pot Roast
Lb. 29c
Shoulder
Lamb Chops . Lb. 29c
SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY nd SATURDAY t
Del Mont.
Prunes
No. 21 can
23c
Royal Gelatiq
All Flavor!
3 lor
17c
Wheaties
2 for
23c
Klick
Soap
Powder
Pkg ;
23c
Griffin's Var Brito
Wax
Quart Can
87c
Wadh.m'i
Sweet Potatoes
l-Lb., 2-Oi.
Can
21c
Monarch
Stewed Onions
No. 2
Can
21c
PBBP!H?SB
YoijL.n?n- . ran Brando
! i . jn n i n a i unt m .it 11 nil iiji ifei i h
Greated by (3raftsmeri,
FACTORY TO YO
; ' Th ffort of your .yen in overcoming heiy, distorted j
Imagat cauwd by eyeitrain makes your body end
'. mind fired create! Visual Tension.? Good virion
; fleshes sherp, distinct images to your mind easily n
vwHhout sffort leh ypu act with unhampered spaed'
Ti and action, v- B SAFE SURE! See the registated ,
optomernsr.er your, nearesi jimroora upimiw;
store. Tor complete eye examination NOW!
i
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v. . 5 . m iSa.-iiri...-,, ...2 m.. -...... 1
i . 1 , ,Al
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Enjoy Jhe (resh Alert" Vision Rightfully Yours! The J
Guaranteed Glosses You Need, at a Price You Can Pay
No Interest v;
No Red Tape
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TOLD IF
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GLASSES ARE NOT NEEDED!
The West's Largest
Manuftulunng Sf Dhfimsixg Opttctant
OREGON'''
WASHINGTON
715 MAIN STREET KLAMATH FALLS
Dr. Wm. B. Slddem, Reglitored Optometrist In Charge