Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 02, 1943, Page 3, Image 3

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    March 2, 1043
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE THREB
FOREST FIRES
GORES
4 SHOW
WASHINGTON, March 2 (')
Forest flics In (ho nurlliweat (In
clined 2B per cent lnt year com
pared to tho 1DH7-41 iivt'niiio, duo
to Icaa lightning, tlio preliminary
imtlnniil foroal (Iro roiroril, pre
sented at a house appropriations
aiib-cwmnlltvo liPiirlnu on u de
ficiency iipproprintlon bill,
iliowii. Avri'iiHu burned was1 ill
nioiit double noniiiil, liowcvnr.
Tho OrcKun-Wnnhlniitun ro
glon hud tho moat (Iron 10(10,
or which H:m wcro cauaud by
lightning, 2150 by man. Tho
1UU7-41 nvoraga Is IBIia, Twcilvo
of tho flroa worn larger than
:IU0 acrea, and (Mill! acres were
burned over Inaldo iiational for
ests. Montana Socond
Tho greatest arcu destroyed
waa In Utah, Nevada, Southern
Idaho and Western Wyoming
where 55,372 acroa wcro burned
with tho comparatively amall
number of 732 flrea. Of these
401 wore from lljfhtlihiK, 241
man-caused, Tho avcrago la
800. This section also had the
moat big flrca: 22 larger than
300 acroa In extent.
Montana and Iduho wcro sec
ond In tho number of fires
1040, but only ono waa larger
than 300 acrea, Lightning
caused 867, man 173, at a coat
In acroa of 1940. Tho four-year
average number of flrea la 1040,
Tho only region that did nut
have considerably less flrea waa
Colorado, Nebraska, South Da
kota and Wyoming.
Lightning u a u a 1 1 y causes
6508 flrea throughout tho west
yearly, Perry Thompson, chief
of tho foreat aervlco flro con
trol, atated. Last year there
were but 4348.
Illinois man of 08 says a good
rule for longevity la. do all bus
iness on a cash basis. In other
words, don't worry.
Would-Bc Nazi Super-Men Russians Captured Em
K "ty . 7 fa f
.., ''S3, ''4 .
(ItSA TtUphotot
This U probably as sorry a bunch ot war prisoners as you've run across. They are a lew of me uiousanoa
of Clormun prisoners taken by Uio Hussion Anny In recent sweeping gains that are driving the vaunted Nad
"super-men" from Red territory.
Courthouse Records
Justice Court
Charles Albert Hendricks, no
operator's license, $5.30 paid.
Joseph George Scott Jr., oper
ating In revoked period, $50
paid,
Tony James Zupan, no opera
tor's license, $5.50 paid.
Marlon David, no operator's
license, $3.30 paid,
Charles Ephrlam Krost, no
operator's license, $5.50, tlmo to
pay.
William Benjamin Aildlcman,
no operator's license, $5.50 paid.
Joo Snyder Jr., no operator's
license, $3.50 paid.
Alvln Oscar King, no opera
tor's license, $3.50 paid.
Jesse Allen Wallers, no opera
tor's license, $5.50 paid.
Leslie Andrew Van Clcve, no
operator's license, $5.50 paid.
Clifford Henry Scoggius, no
operator's license, $3.50 bail for
feited. Dale Frederick Hcrrlngahaw,
void foreign license, $5.50 bail
forfeited.
Prince Ludwic Wallan, Inade
quate brakes, $7 paid.
Auburn Shade Nelson, no
operator's license, $5.50 paid.
Archie Cannady Chipp, one
headlight, $5.50 paid.
Louis Lucallcn Rcnn, no oper
ator's license, $3.50 paid.
Walter William Collins, no
operator's license, $5.50 paid.
Robert William Thill, no oper
ator's license, $5.50 paid.
William Latt Freer, no opera
tor's license, $5.50 forfeited.
Loren Frederick Meeker, per
mitting unlicensed minor to
operate car, $5.50 paid.
Lura Lavernnc Hart, no opera
tor's license, $5.50 paid.
Colletlo Dorothy Parker, no
operator's license, $5.50, time to
pay.
Kldon Loyd Kookcn, driving
In revoked period, $30, time to
pay.
Emit Victor Scdlacek, failing
to post proof of financial respon
sibility, $25 paid.
Carl Lee, no operator's license,
$5.50 paid.
Wilfred Elliott Lamm, no ve
hicle license, $5.50 paid.
Willie Clinton Jackson,
charged with larceny from the
person, bond $500 or $1000 prop
crty, waived preliminary hear
ing, committed. '
Dorothy Margaret Lucht, no
tall light, $5.50 suspended.
Dclmar E. Lee, no operator's
license, $5.30 paid.
Clarence Stanley Thomas, ang
ling without license, $32.20 fine
and costs, suspended if license
secured.
One of the army's huge land
planes has 410 square feet of
cotton and linen cloth, on Its
ailerons the equivalent of 7V4
bed sheets of average size.
T
BE LISTED FOR DDT
Owners of commercial motor
vehicles were reminded today
by Marshall E. Nauman, district
manager of ODT that all "Idle"
trucks, buses and other vehicles
except taxicabs, rental cars,
ambulances and hearses must
be reported to the office of de
fense transportation.
Reports should be made on
ODT CWN-3, a simple, single
sheet form of only eight ques
tions which can be obtained
from and should be returned to
the Mcdford district ODT office.
Owners are required to list all
commercial motor vehicles which
were Idle during the last 14 days
ot the month. The report should
be filed within five days after
the last day of the month cover
ed by the form.
Green Injured in
20-Foor Fall From
Box Factory Roof
Earl Green, 58, employed by
Crater Lake Lumber and Box
company at Sprague River, was
brought to Klamath Valley hos
pital early Monday afternoon
suffering from injuries received
when he fell 20 feet from the top
of the box factory.
Green was cleaning out a
drain pipe at the time of the ac
cident. He suffered a broken
left hip and arm, broken right
wrist and bruises. His condition
is thought serious.
One pound, or 31 tablespoons
ful, of waste cooking fats will
produce the glycerine, processed
as an explosive, required to fire
four 37mm. anti-aircraft shells.
PI LES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO PAIN - NO HOSPITALIZATION
Ho Lom of Tlmo
Poraumnt Rooulul
OR, E. M. MARSHA
CMropraetlo MirtMaa
m Nc rtti - (oquiro Thoaira (ids.
) o II
SO
THE RECORD SINCE PEARL HARBOR
For the Armed Forces -More than
one million anil a hall icrvicr men have
received, through the Field Stall, practi
eal help in personal prohlemi. The Red
Croat ia with them in training and at the
front. For morale and recreation, over one
hundred Red Cross Clubs have been ei
tabliihrd for ovencaa troops, There are
more than five thouiand workers in the field.
Civilian Relief -Almnt sixty million
dollars in war relief has been administered
in every allied country. Food, clothing,
medicinal supplies have gone to Great
Britain, Russia, China, Africa for Polish
and Greek refugee), and many others.
Thousands oi packages to prisoners nf
war have been safely delivered through
cooperation with the International Red
Cron in Switzerland,
The Home Front -Training our people
to meet the needs of war. Millions of
First Aid Courses. Hundreds of thousands
trained in Home Nursing and Nutrition
Courses, Thousands enlisted as Nurses'
Aides and in Motor and Canteen and Staff
Assistant Corps,
More than one million and a half blood
donations through Red Cross collection
centers and the distribution of the life
saving Plasma wherever needed.
Chapter Production rooms from coast-to-cnast
providing surgical dressings for
the wounded, kit bags lor the fighters and
tons of clothing for relief.
The Red Cross record in this war is on
that we Americans may well be proud of
and support.
Your uonars help ri make possible tnt
ATvlERICAlMVRED CROSS
going to shock you!"
Because I'm going to hit right from the)
ihoulder, starting now.
"Out there, our boys are fighting, and they're
falling. Not one or two at a time, picked off by
a nice clean bullet. But fifty at a time in the
roaring, flaming hell of a shell burst.
"Out there, they aren't walking around in clean
white uniforms on neat decks. They're running
and slipping around on the bloody heaving flanks
of a carrier foundering in a sea of oil with her
guts torn out.
"They're not lying in cool, immaculate hospital
beds with pretty nurses to hold their hands.
They're flat on their backs on cold steel taking
a smoke and waiting for a doctor to get through
with the seriously wounded. '
"Out there, they're fighting and they're f allingbut
they're winningl And get this straight they're
not complaining. But I want you to know what
they're up against. I want you to know they
look to you to give them in your way the same
full measure of help and devotion they get unasked
from their own shipmates.
"And you can help them by giving generously
to the Red Cross.
"If you had seen the faces of men pulled naked
from the sea as they received kit bags and ciga
rettes handed out on the spot, by Red Cross
Field Directors you'd know what I mean I"
On every front the Red Cross presses forward. .
Each day, the need increases for your support.
Your Chapter is raising its Second War Fund in
March. Give more this year give double if
you can.
make possible' the
bis
This ad published for Klamatn
County Chapter American
Rod Cross by
alsiger IMor Co,
Red Cross Drive
Starts March 8
Quota$30,600
Uncle Sam's Wax Museum
11 ;-r-sim !iii)iii,iii,y;;jw'j-' '
mat- i u - r I
m
r
Lined up for ready reference at the War Department's quartermas
ter depot in Philadelphia are models wearing fome of the many typea
of uniforms used by. our Army. (Picture by photo section, Phila
delphia O. M. depot.)
Work Resumed at
Alcoa Plant After
Week-Long Strike
CLEVELAND, March 2 (IP)
Ingot production was resumed
Monday at the Aluminum Co. o
America Smelter plant, closed
Jobs. The company suspondod
third-shift operations pending re
placement of 82 striken dlt
charged for ignoring prevloua
WLB orders to work or be fired,
Ersklno added.
by a strike for the past week, as
employes returned to work un-!
der a third order by the regional j
war labor board. j
E. G. Erskine, works man-
ager, said about 50 furnace tend- j
ers reported on the first shift i
and nearly 30 second-shift em-'
ployes agreed to return to their i
A
Boomerang
A bargain in
surance company
will no doubt
make a largtun
settlement when
you have a claim
"The Courthouse ts Juat Aorota
Main Strut From Our OllleV'
, lim
1 1
at SEARS...
New SPRING
SIZES 12 to 13 -YOUR CHOICI
A gay new jacket that
can be teamed up with
skirts.slaeksortailored
frocks! These classic
;i,vman-tailored and little-'
Vfaoysfyles include bold,
colorful plaids, Shet
land weaves and part-
wool flannels. Rayon
yoke hninas. l
A
i m mm
A GRAND
ARkAY OF
FAVORITES!
WOMEN'S SKIRTS
$
MoTyrteux-pleot . . . k!ck-p!eat . .". 4-gore . 2-pockef
dirndl . . . end the new sports "jhortie" skirts I Pastel
plaids in blue, beige aqua or maize. Cavalry twill in
copen, cqua or beige. Spun rayons In black, navy, beige,
eopen. aqua . . . solids or hair-line stripes. Also rayon
iersey :n black, brown. Kelly, red, beige and maize.
Sizes 24 to 30 and 9 to 1 5. ' UbW for fitr cenl.nl
New Spring
BLOUSES
$1.29
Tailored and Dressy styles, rayon
crepes, multifilament rayon crepes,
rayon jersey or satin and Rayon
Sheers. Classic tailored shirts; short
or long sleeves. White, ro.e, powder,
maize, beige, red, Kelly, brown, and
iripes. Sizes 32 to 3&
J
Newest Styles f lwft Friul
n.45
133 South 8th
Sport style's casuals and dresi-up nsril
New high crowns, novelty details, hand
stitching, ribbon trims and flattering vtUil
Every color and every headslit.
Scars stores aava posttd or marktel ceilinf iriets la ;
plianca witk lOTtrnmaal raialalions,
ROEBUCK AND CO.
Phone 5188
i