HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON Fobnmry 8, ltM With Simplified Form.1040-A for Incomes of $3000 or LESS Received from Wages, Salaries, Dividends, Interest and Annuities' Boy Scouts Meon Business' KEEP THESE 4 FACTS IN MIND Only OThings to Do 'Yti2r I Indicate your family iloiui. Read your lax dlnctlyj from (tit tabU, Mo Difficult Figuring No Complicated Calculations PAGE TEKT BRITONS ASK INVASION OF EUROPE NOW NIT By JAMES KINO LONDON. Feb. 8 (ff) Prime Minister Churchill's return from his 10,000-mile air tour of North Africa and the middle east touched off today new demands for speeding the invasion of Eu rope while the Russians have the Germans rocking on their heels. Every cry sounded the warn ing that not an hour must be lost. The conservative times set the pace with the declaration that "if the moment cannot be seized before the impetus of the Rus sian advance is exhausted, the enemy may gain breathing space for recuperation and be enabled to carry on the struggle into an other year." Wattes No Time Lord Beaverbrook's Daily Ex press said: "Already the Russian offensive has gone on for many weeks longer than any previous offensive. The resources of Brit ain and America must make ready to take over the burden. They must lose not a day and not an hour." -ai-vmim The prime minister, home from-significant conferences in Casablanca, Cairo, Adana and Algiers, showed he was wasting no time as he met with ministers within a few hours of his ar rival for discussions which con tinued well, into this morning. He reached England yesterday In an American-built Liberator bomber flown by his American pilot, Capt William Van Der Kloot of Sarasota, Fla. He came to London by special train, being greeted at Faddington station by Mrs. Churchill and other mem bers of his family, government officials and diplomats. Four-H News THE THREE K'S The Keno Klothing Klub held its fifth meeting January 29. Cle da Sacks, our yell leader, led the pledge, and also several 4-H yells. Betty House led a few of the popular 4-H songs. Gloria Fitzsimmons, our president, call ed the business meeting to or der. She explained that due to causes beyond our control last week's meeting was postponed, Mrs. Scherer and Mrs. Fitzsim mons explained how to pin a pattern on piece of. material. Donna Ltyton volunteered to give in example of what had just been explained. We next de cided on a few things we should watch for when buying material. In judging our handbags ' in group one, Velma Boroughs re ceived honorable mention and Bonnie Jean Sievers second; for third place it was a tie between Lois- Boroughs and Kathleen Johnston; fourth place went to Patsy Ward, and fifth to Eleanor Simmers. In group H Gloria Fitzsimmons got first and Louel la Bondeaus second. Patsy Ward, news reporter. . VICTORY KNITTERS ' Our leader is Mrs. E. F. An dersen. The president is Ida Cun ial, vice president is Irene La Salle, secretary is Joyce Shul mire, song leader is Virginia Reeves. The refreshment com mittee is Karen Andersen, and yell leader is Jan Barkdoll. News repo-ter is Phyllis Case. There are seven in the club, and we are knitting purses and caps (or ourselves. Phyllis Case, news reporter. MERRILL COOKING CLUB The Merrill 4-H Cooking club had it's first meeting Monday, January 18. The officers elected were as follows: President, Do lores Steele; vice president, Mary Lou O'Connor; secretary, Betty Turner; news reporter, Peggy Farrell; song and yell queen, Lois. Lee Kandra. A suit able name will be selected our next meeting. Peggy Farrell, news reporter. AFL Boilermakers' Squabble Back in Hands of Union 1 PORTLAND, Feb. 8 (P) The squabble over offices in the huge Portland AFL Boilermakers union is back in the hands of the union again today. A. E. Jordan and John Bigot, who , said they were elected to office in December, filed suit to oust incumbent officers. . Circuit Judge James W. Craw ford denied their petition Satur day, advising them to exhaust their courses of action within union rules before undertaking court action. Meanwhile international offi cers opened an investigation of ths disputed election. 1 I STETSON HATS Are Now In at DREW'S MANSTORE wA&S-ic? -'ft-. "Toughen up, buckle down and carry on to victory.' Is the Boy Scout major task this year. Their 1.570.000 members are in the conflict to the hilt on the home front, doing everything boys of Scout age can do to help win the war speedily and a just peace permanently. KLAMATH TO P Carrying out the slogan "toughen up, and buckle down," Boy Scouts of the Klamath Basin district will begin an intensive war service training program this week which will carry on through the year. Under the direction of C. S. Eliot, all troops in the local council wilr enter a program of stringent physical and mental activities designed to strength en present troops. Starting new troops where institutions have requested permission, will also be part of the victory drive, Award To Be Given Throughout the district ral lies, banquets, and courts of hon or will be held this week to ob serve National Boy Scout week. Klamath's court of honor will oc cur Tuesday, February 16, at 7:30 p. m. at the Elks lodge. Hosts for the evening will be Sea Scout ship 100, the "Elk," with Reverend L. K. Johnson in charge of arrangements. Chief event of the evening will be the awarding to Yeoman Bill Lofdahl of one of the rarest sea scout badges, the special long cruise award. All scout troops will be present, and the public is cordially invited. Dl J. ARKELL Dan J. Arkell, 29, skipper of the crab fishing boat, "Trux cella," and his mate, Max Kin cart, both of Reedsport, lost their lives in a coastal storm which swept the North Umpqua river country February 1. Young Ar kell was the son of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Arkell of Klamath Agency who returned from Reedsport this weekend after the coast guard advised them they had given up all hope of recov ering the bodies. Arkell was a graduate of La Grande high school and had been fishing off the coast for the past two years. He was owner of the "Truxcella." He Is survived by his wife, Iris, and a 4-year-old daughter, Karen, both residents of Lakeside where Mrs. Arkell teaches school. Kincart is also survived by his wife in Reeds port. ,. Skipper Arkell is also sur vived by two sisters, Mrs. Louis Burgoyne of Portland and Mrs. Fred B. Morse of Corvallis, two step-sisters, Mrs. Robert J. Luse, 873 California avenue, this city, and Mrs. Marshall Kellem, Red mond. Any man hired by the United States in time of war to manu facture essential armament or equipment who willfully deliv ers defective products is as guilty - of treason as were the Chicago relatives and friends of Hitler's saboteurs. Rep. Mich ael A. Fclghan of Ohio. . . : PemetrO Many ubots any "first use Is "evclntion." Hosabocoof old fsehionod mutton miot, Grandma's favorite. Gonnr oiisjar26y,doubloupply36)!. Demand atainlou Peuetro, COLDS' COUGHING. SNIFFLES, SCOUTS BEGIN RQGRAM Dr. J. O. Kinnaman, archaeo logical expert, starts the second week of a series of lectures in Klamath Temple church at 7:45 p. m. Monday. The services have been heard by interested crowds and the attendance has increased nightly, according to the pastor, the Rev. Daniel B. Anderson. Dr. Kinnaman's subjects cover a wide range of archaeological and theological lore. Following Is a list of his sub jects: Monday, "Moses and the Pharoh's Daughter." Tuesday, "Trailing the Exodus." Wednes day, "The Great Pyramid at Gi zeh. a Miracle In Stone." Thursday "Daniel In the Lion's Den;" Saturday, "The Cross, It's Origin and Ultimate Destiny." Sunday, 11 a. m., "Jesus On Trial Today;" 7:30 p. m., "King Tut and His R e 1 a t i o n to the Bible." Dr. Kinnaman at this time will give his personal testi mony as to God's power. Many of these lectures are illustrated. Services start promptly at 7:45 o'clock each night. TO ADJUST RATES PORTLAND. Feb. 8 (TP) The OWI announced Saturday that the west coast lumber commis sion has given lumber operators permission to adjust piece rates for buckers and fallers without prior approval by the commis sion. The written consent of the workers must be obtained, how ever, and the employer must re port the adjustment to the com mission which reserves the right to modify or revoke the adjust ment. The order affects all logging operations in Oregon, Washing ton, Idaho, California and west ern Montana. It was made to maintain the same total wages for buckers and fallers when they are moved from a good tract of timber to a poorer one, the OWI said. Number of Nazi Subs Increasing, Warns Secretary WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (P) There are more German sub marines at sea than there were even last June, when they ran up their highest record of mer chant ship sinkings, Secretary of the Navy Knox said Saturday, in declaring that the U-boat re mains this country's most serious menace in the Atlantic. Knox told a press conference there was "no question at all but that Hitler is counting on the submarine war in the At lantic for his major sea effort of the war." He is devoting all available construction facilities to sub marines, Knox said, and is put ting more and more of the craft into operation. P i L E S SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO PAIN - NO HOSPITALIZATION No Loia ol Tims Permanent Reaulttl DR. E. M. MARSHA Ghlropraelle Phyilelan tiO No. Ilh - Etqulro Thiatri lid Phone net By JAMES MARLOW AND GEORGE ZIELKE WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 F) These things you can count on, so far as your income tax is con cerned: 1. You'll have to pay more this year than ever before. 2. You'll have to file by March 15 a return showing what your 1942 income was. 3. Unless congress takes some action quickly (and congress usually deliberates quite a while on tax matters) you'll have to make your March IS quarterly payment and probably the June 25 installment on the basis of the increased rates voted by con gress last year. 4. If congress does make a change later, any money you pay on or before March will apply on what you owe. So, the treasury and congressional lead ers say, you won't lose by pay ing on that basis now. One other thing seems fairly certain: ' After July 1, undoubtedly some portion of your paycheck will be deducted to provide at least part of your payments on the tax for 1943. President Roosevelt, the treasury and 4 good many congressmen are on record in favor of a pay-os-you-earn principle. If you keep these things in mind, the tax experts say, you won't be apt to be lulled by day dreams that you'll get out of paying increased taxes this year and for years to come. DEATH COMES TO LIU LOS ANGELES, Feb. 8 (P Death has taken Dr. A. H. Gl annlni, 69, .known as the "An gel" of the motion picture in dustry to the extent of millions in loans even in the early days when the "flickers" were re garded by other financiers as pretty poor risks. Dr. Giannini, who with his brother, A. P. Giannini, develop ed the Great Bank of America National Trust & Savings asso ciation, suffered a fatal heart at tack yesterday while attending a meeting of Loyola university's board of regents. His career encompassed also the realms of medicine and civ ic betterment. He served as sur geon in the Spanish-American war and helped fight a threat ened typhus epidemic after San Francisco's 1906 earthquake. He was a strong supporter of the Los Angeles Philharmonic society and other cultural and educational groups. , Stephan Must Die, Rules Court in Treason Appeal CINCINNATI, Feb. 8 (IP) The U. S. circuit court of ap peals Saturday upheld a Detroit district court death sentence on Max Stephen' for allegedly aid ing a German aviator in' his flight from a Canadian prison camp. . U. S. District Judge Tuttle ordered Stephan, a restaurant owner, to be hanged November 13, 1942, after his conviction for harboring and giving aid to Oberleutnant Hans Peter Krug of the German air force. The sentence was stayed pending ap peal. :L The 21-page decision, given1, by Presiding Judge Ben Hicks, upheld the ' government conten tion that Stephan had-committed treason by taking .Krug into his home. Counsel for Stephan contend ed in arguing the case before a five-judge court here in Decem ber that he merely befriended Krug and that Krug'a testimony was worthless because, as a nazl he had no conception of : the meaning of an oath. . Willamette River , Subsides; flood Danger Passed PORTLAND, Feb. 8 (TP) The Willamette river subsided today, and the Portland weather bur eau said the danger of another flood had passed. The Santiam river went three feet over the 14-foot flood level at Jefferson yesterday, then be gan dropping rapidly. ' - The weather bureau predicted a continued fall in the level of the Willamette and its tribu taries. 1 More Comfort Wearing FALSE TEETH Tier It a pl-manl mhj in nvercomit loom plfitu discomfort. FABTKETH, an Improved powder, prink If rf on tipper . and lower pliUci IioMr tliem flrirtT no that tliry foci mom com fori shift. No Binnrny, goony, nifty inn to or fading. U'n alkaline (non nHfl). Hon not iour. Cliockn "plain odor" frfenturt breath). Qtt FA8TEKTH today at an drug itore. roMi 104a a OPTIONAL VNITID STATtS INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAX RETURN triu una uu u nun porno or um im it cmioa (OH UiUXNT A1ANS) UfOa!Vt ON TMt OUH IUU IP exou vvm a not mou thin ixm am u utU . IIOM ULUT, WACO. MTUttMM, otuut. AM) iminu " nWKMtVIMT-a MM1tr 1 paV)aJb tiu ii HiTrw I m ' w -a - n utm w uwx - - 'lii,1' ' in"; -"r-Vr OKOU INCOME Utia AIXOWAMC FO PUtWDt NTa JT t y-- (3X wrif-a I INCOME SMJtCT TO ' f- I ltt7. ATUak lftCyUAa,aC4kUoU4U ,.. ..mjjAj --90 OQf ! iw. Ik rmAm i4l Ik Man U U wmmJ l to ik." 4m hl mM.Ii In wnbtal iwill M. aA a f-AK uW Mull lt I1 h l l-Mo! UraCiaiiajilii b.i -fa fcil Wi mi ttrt li law h 1 Use the Simplified form 1040 A-Yocan.qetjt NOW from your Employer or Your Local INTERNAL REVENUE OFFICE ' Treasury Offers Simpler Form to Income Taxpayers The Federal Treasury is offer- Ing again this year to people whose 1942 income was $3000 or less, a simplified income tax form which may be filled out In five minutes or less. This is known as Form 1040-A. It may be used by any taxpayer whose $3000-or-lcss income came wholly from wages or salary, dividends, interest or annuities. Last year when this time saver was first introduced, over 10,000,000 Individual income tax returns were filed on it. People who had previously spent hours working over the regular report-form were enthusiastic about the ease and speed with which they could now complete their annual income tax chore. This year, with an estimated 12,000,000 new taxpayers filing for the first time, the Bureau of Internal Revenue confidently expects that nearly 20,000,000 taxpayers will benefit from this short-cut way, saving in the ag gregate - millions of hours of time and innumerable head aches. - . . Incidentally, this simplified Form 1040-A is also a boon to the Internal Revenue bureau, for it greatly reduces the amount of time previously spent with so many millions of tax payers in answering questions and helping them make out their returns. A glance at the picture shows how quick and simple Form 1040-A makes this income, tax filing Job. There are only 6 things for, Mr., and Mrs. Tax payer to do; write down their names, address and occupation, the names of their dependents, the amount of income received during the year, the amount of deduction allowed on account of dependents; check the square that shows their family status (whether married or singlo, etc.).. Then they simply read from the form exactly , . what their tax is, and write it down on the return. That's all there is to It, and it is over in a few short min utes. Then the' taxpayer just signs, makes his payment, and the job is done. This year the return docs not even have to be notarized, congress having de cided in its tax-streamlining pro gram that people should be spared that bother and expense This form has no entries for deductions, since average deduc tions, including the earned in come credit, have been allowed for in figuring the taxes in the table. It is to be noted that people whose legal deductions are unusually largo would prob- Relief At Last For Your Cough Oreomulslon relloves promptly be cause it goes light to tho seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature soothe and heal raw, tender, in flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you ft bottle of Oreomulslon with the un derstanding you must llko tho way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Cheit Coldi, Bronchitis CAUNDAH tlAK 1943 fat. Kami IM iTlt.V i ' laUl tatfM " IIMIIaliailMalaaal ably pay less tax by using the longer Form 1040, But for most people in the $3000-and-undor bracket, Form 1040-A is not only a time saver, but a money saver, too. In splto of the fact that dur ing the last two years tho In ternal Rcvcnuo bureau has In creased its personnel, they will undoubtedly, be rushed and crowded, as March 15th ap proaches, by the great increase in taxpayers necessitated by wortimo high employment and wartime low tax exemptions. So people who file early will be doing themselves a favor, as well as making a real contribu tion to tho smooth working of the nation's tax machinery. Blanks are ready now and may be obtained from all local In ternal Rcvcnuo offices, also at most banks and at many places of employment. Deadline for filing returns is March 15, 1943, and returns coming in late subject tho tardy filer to a penalty. So on every count, it's smart to filo early and avoid tho rush. 100 Homeless as Fire Sweeps Juneau Apartment House JUNEAU, Alaska, Feb. 8 W) One hundred persons were left homeless and their personal be longings lost In a fire which destroyed the old three story Cliff apartments Saturday night. Over 100 men battled the blaze four hours to keep it from spreading in a high wind to the federal jail and other near by buildings. The apartment was of frame construction and housed 20 families. The flames spread so rapidly no attempt was made to rescue personal belong ings. The building Is owned by Gar IN Umaaai am M 'f ' BEAN RAG for meal TOP SIDE for the .0 v Jc CAMELS ARET" I J TOPS WITH ME J y M THEYVE GOT WHAT A TlfeifiV IT TAKES IN J R,CH FLAVOR nun w mn m uu i m. it man ana I, -. M aa tmt at ha) Ml I ml . O , Xjafia-WaaJJUHl O imoKuiihiimMMiwiiHutiii lmlmm h.l Ml Nmh IIIni V UMn teni iiai iak H 1 i "i is TS I TB Ti ts la b i I H "E i! I B IS IH I! 1:3 B B B 13 .is s s m is in is s m w in e iq IH 2 I li I IS 15 la (H H liiH El B 13 E S E E 11.12 IS IS! Ill fi IB B E SU HI SBil lJ2iliJ2l J & & HI IH IH JS a B B rt BS-4SB Si BjB 2S 11! S JS IS llSWttlittf m tlH J3 E ii! rSl? i3 it I 13 12 E E 111 B 13 B IS E IS 12 II! , I m B S E IH 13 1:2 !H E K 13 12 IH IH I tiH t!R 15 B IH US 13 18 S E mm urn IN 111 t i r- -iif- iuiMbtfairih wii r Umlk m nl -.ni"i. land Boggman who estimated the loss at $20,000, partially covered by Insurance. The homeless families found temporary shelter In church basements and in private homes. YOU'LL BI TOLD FRANKLY IF KEEP EYES SPARKLING! Good vision moons sporkllng eyes . . . hopoy oyei! Ba Sofa , , . SURE! See copoblo, registered optometrist here for complete eye examination NOW! PAY NOTHING DOWN ONLY $1 A WEEK NO INTEREST . . NO EXTRAS . . NO RED TAPE aw mm m mm m mm TheWest's Manufacturing and Dispensing Opticians OREGON WASHINGTON . UTAH IDAH 715 Main St., Klamath Falls Dr. Wm. B. Slddens Registered Optometrist in Charge. THE NAVY they V mm a a am pennsnt DITTY BOX highest fuU deck CAMEL' mat m mt unxmt tun t I imi ml wU -t U. m ft , . Q kW Mat fcantlaj m W tW eMatMM IkHHlr If you (workers) fall you win become slaves like tho French, the Dutch and the other peoples of Europe and Asia. - Eddie Rlckenbackcr to Detroit war workers. GLASSES ARE NOT NEEDED 0 - - m m m. mm m --m-m Loraost -Uir say: v for tha hn aallnr tiiel to r" for the box tnllor mei to keep penonil posicuiont for tho Navy man's favorite clguette FIRST IN THIttnVICtl The fsvorlte cigarette with men In the Navy, Armjrj Marines, and Conit Guard Ii Camel. (Ba.ed on actual isles records In Canteens and Post Exchange!.)