Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 03, 1943, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Mnrch 3, 1043
PAGE HVB
o
Commlaaloned Bob Nlco
drnuia, nun of Mr. unci Mm. M.
K. Nlcodomus of, 72U llnsoway
drive, is expected linro Wodnos
lny ii I u 1 1 1 or Thursday morning
following hla graduation Krlcluy
from Cniup Leo, Vo., where he
wus commissioned a second lieu
li'i in nl In the U. S. army, lie
llii'ii goes In Cump Wurrnn near
Cheyenne, Wyo, Youiik Nlco
domus win among the (Irat to
leave here two yearn ago for
Kort Sli'vi'im, Ore., Willi tlm Ore
lion Niitliuuil (Juurd. I In left in
November for C'iim Lee whore
he linn been studying alnco tluil
time. '
From Boolean Mia. rtulnh
W. Uockmlor Jr., of Spokmio, no
conipiftiltNl by her young aim,
Ralph 3rd, arrived the ourly
purl of the week for a vlnlt with
her parents, Mr. and Mra, Karl
Whltlock, Mra. Uoekinler pinna
to leave within several weeka to
join her husband, who la In
InilnliiK with the United Stutoa
army air corpa lit Santa Ana,
Ciillf. She will then return hore
for n lenijthy visit. Mra. Bock
inter la the former Unwn Kvorltt
of thla city.
Heturns Mra. Myrtle Cald
well, aenlor nurse at the Kism
et li county health unit, attend
ed a m-vtlng of aonlor nurses
In Portland Friday, returning
here Sunday. She waa accom
panied north by Annla Slruth
era, public health nurse, and
several sum 1 1 children who woro
taken to Or. Lucaa, attendlnR
physician of the crippled chil
dren's service.
" Expocts Transfar Orlle ;'Tun
ney" Kennerly, young son of
Mr. and Mra. O. A. Kennerly of
233S Darrow avenue, writea
homo that ho expecta to be trans
ferred aoon from Fort Logan,
Colo. Ho hna complotod his work
In the clerical department of the
U. S. army air corpa.
Nam Hostesaes Hostess com
mltteo for the Friday afternoon
meeting of the Eastern Star So
cial club at the Masonic temple
at 1:49 o'clock was announced
thla week aa Mra. II. C. Donncy,
Mrs. Victor M. Palmer. Mra. Ar
dia Hamilton and Mra. W. J.
Stelnmetz,
Transferred Lt. Glenn Reck
nrd, former employe of the First
National bank, la spending a
abort furlough with hla wife,
Jilra. Melon Reckard, Lt, Reck
ird la being transferred to San
Francisco, where he will be a
member of the quartermaster
corps.
Improving Enrl Green, Cra
ter Lake Lumber and Box com
pany omployo, who suffored
painful Injuries In a fall from
the box Inctory roof, waa re
ported resting comfortably early
Wednesday. He la a patient at
Klamath Valley hospital.
Correction The Orville
Davis of Hc-nlty, arrcatcd on a
drunk driving charge recently,
la not the Orville Davis of 1804
Homcdalo road, employe of the
Big Lakca Box company, lt waa
nnnouncod Wednesday.
k Program Postponed The Dad's
)ilght program to be given Fri
day of thla week by the Mothers'
club of Sacred Heart academy,
will be postponed one week and
Is now scheduled for Friday,
March 12, it was announced.
Dinner The Shrine club will
sponsor a dinner meeting and
program tonight, Wednesday, at
0:30 o'clock at the Wlllard hotel.
All members are asked to attend,
Vlalta PFC Robert Morrison
Is visiting lila parents, Dr. and
Mrs. C. E. Morrison, while on
furlough from Camp Hale, Colo.
Pvt. Morrison is in the 87th
mountain Infantry, an instruc
tor In the akl troops.
Return Mr, and Mr. Harry
Pclrl Sr., have returned from a
Jwo months' stay In San Fran
cisco and are now at homo In
the Audloy apartments. Both
are grently Improved In health.
Visitor Roger Walsh of Seat
tle, formorly with the district
attorney's office hore, Is visiting
with his sister, Mrs. Merit Smith
of this city and his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Walsh of Title-lake.
Visiting Mrs. Peter Callse of
Merrill, Is visiting nt the home
of Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Stlen,
026 Klamnth avenue.
WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE-
Without Clom.l-AiiJ You'll Jump Out el
Bed In the Mominf Rtrin' te Ce
i i?'h." J'" 'hmlt r" out shout I pints of
J 'l Into ynur howtli ewry day. If this
la not flnwlni fwly, your W may mt
. . '""I; 11 ""J' iu,t dwy In the bowels. Thou
1" . Y"ur torairb. Ynu at eon-
fHV"' ,You 'Ml "ink and the worlit
look ntinb . '
la
r i.. iS,? goofl, old Csrler'a I.lttU
I.iyor 1' lit to gut UlfM 8 plnta ol bile flow
nil freoly to mako you feel "u and up."
YnJIi l('-aa.toifey, Taka a directed.
E'.?1?,"'? jn making lillo How freely. Aale
-" a uiue Llvor rills. 104 and S6rf.
To Return Horn Pvt. Wll
mor D, Baker, United States
army, called here by plane from
Honolulu to attend funeral serv
ices fur James M. Baker, his
father, will leave Wednesday for
the Islands.
Visitor Mrs. Jack Morrison
and daughtor Jill, arrived Tuva
day to visit with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Bayleas, and
Morrison's parents, Dr. and Mrs.
C. E, Morrison. The visitors Uvo
in Tillamook.
Dinner Faculty wlvea of
Klamath Union High school will
entertain at dinner at the Pelican
party room Friday night at 7:30
o'clock for mombera of the faculty.
Buying Mrs. Larry Whytal of
Whytal'a store la on a buying
trip in San Francisco and expect
ed homo this week.
Has Flu Marshall Kyestone,
member of the city police de
partment, la 111 at his home suf
fering from a severe attack of
influenza.
Returns Walter Thorne, pa
trolman with tho local police
department, has rocovered from
an eight-day attack of Influonza
and la now back on hla beat.
In Hospital Jack Carson of
the Arcade hotel was moved by
ambulance to Klamath Valley
hospital Tuesday suffering from
an attack of Illness.
At Home E. A. "Taxi''
Thomas, city engineer, continues
confined to hla home on Pacific
Terrace. Thomas has been ill
for the past two months.
De Long Mail
To Tulelalce R. D. Eller,
Klamath Falls Insurance man,
made a brief business visit to
Tulclako Wednesday. .
roriT.ouri
Information
1011
MAIL CLOSING TIME
(Effective Fab. IS, 1943)
Train 19 Southbound! 6 p. m.
Train 20 Northboundi 11 a. m.
Train 17 Southbound) 7 a. m.
Train IB Northboundi 10 p. m.
Medford Stage, Westbound, 3i30
p. m., Evening Airmail.
Stages to Alturaa, Ashland, Lake-
view and Rocky Point, 7 a. m.
Auxiliary Members of the
Eagles auxiliary will hold a reg
ular business meeting, Thursday
at 8 p. m., in the new location of
the Eagles lodgo at Ninth street
and Walnut avenue.
Speaker Rev. A. T. Frykman
will speak tonight, Wednesday,
at the First Covenant church,
112.1 Walnut avenue, at 7:45
o'clock. Rev, Frykman repre
sents the Covenant church in re
gard to the commission of evan
gelism. An invitation is extend
ed to the public to hear Rev.
Frykman. Members of the
church are enthusiastic in their
praise of him.
Rebekah Lodge Prosperity
chapter, Rebekah lodge, will
meet in IOOF hall, Thursday,
March 4, at 7:30 p. m. There
will be entertainment following
the business meeting,
Degree Klamath lodge No.
137, IOOF, will confer the initia
tory degree on several candi
dates, Friday evening, March 8.
Bonanza lodge, No. 143, will pay
m
Pvt. Al De Long reada from
ladder-lop a 10-foot letter he
received at Camp Kohler, Calif.
The letter la algned by many
movie celebrlllea who knew bim
as a Beverly Hills entertainer.
a visit to Klamath Falls, bring
ing several candidates with him
All members of the lodge are
urged to attend and visiting
members are welcome.
VFW Regular meeting of
Pelican Post 1383, VFW, will be
held Thursday, March 4 at 8
p. m. in the KC hall. Election
of Post offlcors for the ensuing
year will be held at this meeting
and matters of importance to all
Post members will bo discussed
and acted upon. All members
arc urged to turn out and take
an active part.
Study G r o u p The Senior
Study Group of the Congrega
tional church will meet in the
social hall Friday, March S at
1:30 p. m. Mrs. Naomi Pres
ton of the U. S. Employment
service is to speak on 'The
Churches of South America."
Special guests at this meeting
will be the members of the Jun
ior Study Group, and all women
of the community interested In
this subject are Invited to attend.
At the close of the meeting Mrs.
L. R. Harvey and Mary Eckstein
will serve tea.
VFW Auxiliary The aux
iliary of VFW will sponsor the
second in a series of pinochle
parties Thursday afternoon at
the KC hall. Dessert luncheon
will be at 1:30, cards at 2 o'clock.
The public is invited. Men are
welcome.
VFW Meet The auxiliary of
the VFW will meet Thursday
evening at the library. Fifth and
Klamath streets. Girls interest
ed In joining the friendship club
are asked to be present at 7
o'clock.
Civil Air Patrol CAP will
meet tonight (Wednesday) at
7:45 o'clock at 2009 South Sixth
street. Members are asked to
bring applications for radio
telephone licenses.
Remember all Die canned
meat you knew you could fall
back on when other things were
rationed? Just a memory!
SENATE VOTES
PINBAL
L
IC1E TAX
Sandy South Sea Beaches
Are Bad Places for Subs
By PAUL W. HARVEY Jr.
SALEM, March 3 (I' Ore
gon's old ago pension recipients
were virtually assured today
that their average month
ly old ago pension would be
raised from $25 to $38 within
the next two ycara, the senate
passing 17 to 13 a bill to levy a
$50 annual tax on pinball games
and a $10 tax on coin-operated
phonographs
The senate previously had de
feated the measure by the same
vote. The bill, Introduced by
Rep. John Stcclhammcr, Salem,
would raise about Sl,uU0,0"0 a
year. It now goes back to the
house, the senate having cut the
phonograph tax from $25 to $10.
Oppose Pinball Tax
The house passed 32 to 28 the
Burke bill to give liquor stores
a monopoly on the sale of forti
fied wines, which now are sold
in privately-owned wine, groc
ery and drug stores, Tho bill
would go to the governor, ex
cept that an effort probably will
be made to reconsider it.
Opposing the pinball tax bill,
Sen. Thomas R. Mahoncy, Port
land, charged that the bill was
"concocted in the minds of rack
eteers in Portland who want to
legalize pinball games by put
ting the seal of the state on
them," while other objectors said
that the bill would Invade the
rights of cities, which already
tax them.
"No" Votes Cast
Supporters said the money Is
needed for pensions, and that
the bill does not tax illegal pin
ball games. It taxes only those
used for amusement only.
Those voting against the bill
were Booth, Chessman, Cornctt,
Ellis, Fisher, Lynch, Mahoncy,
Parkinson, Patterson, Walker,
Wallace, Walsh and Wheeler.
Tax Vota Tomorrow
The senate assessment and tax-
TACOMA, March 3 (I")
TIkmo gleaming sandy beaches
of South sea story fame may be
fine for swimming but in war
time they're no place for maneu
vering under water in a sub
marine. Tho noiscst July fourth Lieut.
Franz Hoskins, American sub
marine officer and former Uni
versity of Washington swimming
captain ever expects to go
through was spent in such a lo
cation last year.
It happened "several thousand
miles west" of San Francisco.
Early on the fourth, before day
light came to the ocean, tho
American sub maneuvered into
an enemy-held bay and directed
a torpedo at the silhouette of a
Jap ship. Immediately two oth
er vessels returned fire with
their deck guns, according to
Hoskins, now spending with his
parents hero his first home leave
since Pearl Harbor.
Japs In Bay
The sub and the enemy spar
red around in tho bay until near
ly noon, the sub getting in sever
al good licks, when a Jap plane
, Pi LES- i
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED I
NO PAIN - NO HOSPITALISATION I
No U el Time I
Parmananl Ungual I
DR. E. M. MARSHA
Ohirepraatle ptiraislaw I
m Nt, Tit, - itaulrt Thaaire aids. I
Ptww nn I
Will pay $1,000.00 reward for information leading
to the or rest end conviction of tho party or parties,
who stole, on or about January 14th to 28th, 1943,
from our field at the Poe Valley Ranch, tlx purebred
hoifen about 12 months old, no ear mark or brand.
Liskey Brothers
1945 Auburn Street Phone 4479
Klamath Falls, Oregon
came overhead and dropped a
bomb.
"We took her down right
now," said Hoskins, "and we
stayed down. The thing that
mystified us was how those Jap
planes coming over every 20
minutes from a nearby base,
were able to keep plunking 'ash
cans' right above us no matter
where wo went. We twisted
and turned and still they kept
riKht above us. Fortunately we
were too deep for them to reach
us but every burst sounded like
a gang of blacksmiths were
pounding at us.
Batter 31 Hours
"We took that battering for 3i
hours before we finally discov
ered, by chart, we were in a bay
with a white sandy bottom,
which left us exposed to Jap
planes wherever we went. It
was like dropping pebbles on the
family gold fish. We weathered
It and got away but you can bet
we no longer yearned for sandy
beaches."
The unassuming young offi
cer, prematurely gray, estimated
he has traveled over 75,000 miles
by sub.
U-Boat Second Best
aaaMaseajpjSiaiiiiwliiis.11111
f IS &
i m K
atlon committee recommended
passage of the three bills amend
ing the initiative, passed by the
voters last November, to give
surplus income tax revenues to
school districts to reduce prop
erty taxes. The amendments
provide that the districts be lim
ited to a total of $4,000,000 in
any one year, ana would reduce
property taxes about 10 per cent.
The senate's version of the in
come tax reduction bill, which
calls for a reduction of about
30 per cent beginning with pay
ments made next year, probably
will be considered by the senate
tomorrow. The house bill would
cut them 10 per cent with this
year's payments, and 11.62 per
cent starting next year.
If synthetic rubber plants are
not completed on schedule, the
rubber stock pile may fall be
low the critical figure of 120,-
000 tons in the fall of the year.
Always read the classified ads,
TAXES TO WORSE
PORTLAND, March 3 (JP) j
Jack Salo, 54, started out for the ;
internal revenue office and!
things went from taxes to worse,
He stood in line so long he got i
hungry. When he went out to ;
cat, he was bashed over the head
by a convivial stranger swinging
a bottle. Salo went home with a ;
scalp wound and a thunderous!
headache. ;
(NEA TeUphalo)
Another German U-boat In the At
lantic went to Iti grave when the
U. S. destroyer of Commander Ham
ilton W. Howe, above, skillfully
! dodged an enemy torpedo and sank
me sub mat tired lt. The sinking
was announced by Secy, of Navy
Frank Knox. Official C. 8. Navy
photo.
One of mankind's first inven
tions is said to have been a long
bone toothpick.
High School
Students Given
Tuberculin Test
One hundred and sixteen high
school students were given the
tuberculin test Monday by Dr.
Peter H. Rozendal, Klamath
county health officor, who said
the survey was mado when one
active case of tuborculosls had
been picked up recently.
The testa were read Wednes
day, Rozendal stated. All health
programs In city and county
schools have progressed satisfac
torily this year, lt was said.
A fundamental of an effective
peace Is the assurance of those
men who are fighting our bat
tles that when they come home
they will find a country with
an economy firm enough and
fair enough to provide jobs for
all who are willing to work.
President Roosevelt.
A large proportion of major
assembly breakdowns are due
to neglect of lubrication of mo
tor vehicles.
Dr. A. A. Soul6, M.Dj
Medicine St Surgery , ' ,
(Diseases of the Heart) '
1949 Main
Phones 7323, 531 '
No. ans. S913
A device that fits on the ac
celerator has been developed
which warns drivers when they
have reached a speed of 35
miles an hour. It also helps pre
vent jack-rabbit starts. It is not
to be confused with a governor,
since it does not lock the speed
at a certain limit.
Dehydration in 1943 will take
four times as many vegetables
as in 1942 and most of this de
hydrated food will go for army
and lend-lease needs.
You Women Who Suffer From
7 FLASHES then
mmv EFEEUUGS
During 38 to 52 Years
V. of Age!
If you-Uke so many women be
tween the ages of 38 and 52
sufler from hot flashes, weak,
tired, dizzy, nervous feelings, dis
tress of "irregularities", are blue
at times-due to the functional
middle age period in a woman's
life-start al once-icy Lydia E.
Pinknam's Vegetable Compound.
Lydia Plnkham'a Compound Is
amoiu to relieve such distress.
Taken regutarly-lt helps build up
resistance against such annoying
symptoms.
It also Is a fine stomachic tonic!
Thousands upon thousands
have reported benefits. Alsa
effective for younger women to)
help relieve distress of monthly
functional disturbances. Follow
label directions. Worth trying.
-Ja:JM:U'..JSlaw
JFH--- -rtr'V-.1v-'--'- "V, :K sT V.'Jt. ' t.T.i -'Jlk X aataafsaaaaw
M A
"11 t
tA At
4. J!
!V i
oodnight,
BillBi
Hello, Bill Brady, 'way out there
f
I guess the mailman must be mad at us because he
hasn't brought a letter since the day you went away.
And if he doesn't ring the doorbell soon, I think my
heart will break.
' There isn't much to tell, tonight, except since all my
letters seem to go astray, I've found another way to
say 'I love you.'
Last night I joined the Red Cross. .
I'm not anybody there. Just one more woman
cutting dressings, rolling bandages, packing Red Cross
kits hoping the. men we love will never need them,
but hoping more that they aren't past the need.
I'll be a Staff Assistant before long, Bill. In a very
military uniform. I can hear'you chuckle, my darling.
I don't mind the extra hours. To me, time isn't
measured by the ticking of a clock it lags or races
with the beating of my heart. So time at work is
short, because I know that you would have me very
busy. I can hear you say "Chin up, and get on with
the job."
Good nieht, Bill Brady. Out there . . . somewhere.
The Red Cross is shoulder-to-shoulder with our fighting
nun from training camp to the front lines.
All over the world, wherever it can reach, it is carrying
relief supplies, clothing and medicines to war victims.
In this second year of War, the needs increase. You can
help with time and money. March is the War Fund month.
Give more this year.
ssa ae
Your UOliars help ry make posstDte ine
AMERICAN ?RED CROSS
make possible the
This ad published for the Klamath County Chapter American Red Cross by
Long's, Inc. Your Store, Inc. ; Pelican Cafe