PAGE TWO MiMaHd Ei MAUN Prosperity chapter, 160, Order of the Eastern Star, met In the Masonic hall Thurs day evening, March eleventh, with Mrs. Hazel Kallna, worthy matron, and Joe Halousek, wor thy patron, presiding. Obliga tion night was observed with Mrs. Marlon Wilson graciously taking part, passing one hun dred per cent the proficiency test . Mrs. Wilson will be given spe cial recognition by the worthy (rand matron of Oregon, Mrs. Marjorle Simpson of Portland. Among the eleven guests pres ent from Tulelake chapter, 159, wm Mrs. Beulah Wiese, deputy grand matron of the fourth dis trict of California, Order of the Eastern Star; Mrs. Ruth Boyd, worthy matron, and Olney Rudd, worthy patron. ;,The social club of Prosperity chapter met February 25 at the home of Mrs. Vaclav Kalina. The hostess served delicious re freshments following the busi ness meeting to Mrs. Helen Ot toman, Mrs. Margaret Jacobs, Mrs. Hazel Bowman, Mrs. Glad ys Halousek, Mrs. Ann Fruits, Mrs. Madge Carey, Mrs. Leah Street, Mrs. Agnes Schreiner, .Mrs. Marlon Wilson, Mrs. Flor ence DeMerritt. Mrs. W. Robl son and Mrs. Alma Coulson. The next meeting of the social club will be with Mrs. Ann Fruits of Merrill on Thursday, March 25. A pot luck luncheon is planned for noon and all vis iting members are corcuauy in vited to attend. , Lincoln Mrs. Carol Converse enter tained the Happy Hour S and G club at her home Wednesday. 1. M. "Mac" McBride return ed home from Vancouver, Wash., last Thursday. ' The logging roads are being cleared of snow to aid in dry ing so logging operations can tart soon. - 1 - The women of the PTA met at the home of Mrs. Hazel Gert son, Wednesday evening to plan the program for the box social April 2. - - The 13th birthday of Lorraine Converse, March 8, was cele brated on March 7 at her home with a party of school chums and their parents.;,, Cake and Ice cream were served the fol lowing guests: -Lois and, Lucille Jtouton, Barbara Gertson, Evlyn Johnson. Annella Converse, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Gertson, Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Johnson and small son, Frankie, and Mr. and Mrs. Carol Converse and con, Roger. Malin Red Cross Needs Sewing Help MALIN Help is needed for Red Cross sewing and anyone, who can assist is asked to see Mrs.' - Vaclav Kalina. - Material for men's nightshirts has al- ready been cut out and the work if not difficult. Interest in the work must be continued if Ma- lin's quota is filled. i Mlil't'jjlj smaa i rrr'Tiy LAST DAY . "Trail Blazers" and . , ' . "Laugh Your Blues Away" TOMORROW! 2 Action Packed Hits M .'.v.'fiWj ? iiitfaTV-1 -lev: nazing Action ,0 'Son VYr BENNETT s. M s kesl,6Broo,(S Ai ly 2nd -r'V,-i Big n'MJ Hltl , J. Action) Thrlllsl "Raiders 1 I of the 1 Wesf High School Closes May 15 at Tulelake TULELAKE Tulelake high school will close May 15, earli est date In many years. Stu dents attended classes on Satur day and eliminated the Easter vacation in order to complete required work on time. The only exception to Saturday classes Is the Saturday before Easter when classes will not be held. Plans for the end of the year have not been completed. Tulelake William Wilson, of the New ell military unit, who is criti cally ill at Camp White, Med ford, is reported no better. Young Wilson, who submitted to a major operation, has re ceived several blood transfu sions In the last 10 days. Mrs. Wilson, the former Bette Camp bell, and his mother, who flew to his bedside from Texas, are with him. Mrs. Lyle Haas returned Thursday night from Santa Ana where she has been with her husband since January. Haas, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Haas, has completed his pre-flight work and will be transferred soon to some other training cen ter. He is training as a mechanic in the army air corps. Previous to enlisting he was shop fore man for the Tulelake Reporter. Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Haas have with them this week their daughter Evelyn, who is now attending school in the bay area. Jack Golden who has been attending the University of Southern' California visited briefly this week with Dean Callas at the University of Ore gon. Both young men are wait ing for calls to army service. Principal George Reiben will attend the state convention for school principals to be held the last of April In Hollywood if! present plans carry. ' Jl'HlllrHilL ' cm ittrnniiTMii run m no iui yy Continuous Shows Saturdays and Sundays STARTS TONIGHT AT MIDNIGHT! Uitewv A V :LJ4l to! ..ov tT IDA UMNO DENNIS MORGAN TnANTFSTTP Bl lir. WALT DISNI BEATS QUOTA SET MERRILL Merrill's Red Cross war fund quota was top ped with a bang at noon Friday. E. E. Kilpatrlck, chairman, an nounced that $624.06 had been turned In. Mr. Kilpatrlck voiced appreciation to all who had as sisted this week giving credit to the high school students who so licited $300 of the total. The drive will continue until the end of March and those who have not been contacted per sonally may leave contributions at the post office. Assisting Kilpatrlck were Vir ginia Sharp, Janice McCollum, Willa Winebarger, Wilma John son, Betty Turner, iizaDetn Dennehy and Jean Lodge, high school girls. John Stolt, Vivian Cunningham, Ruth E. King, uel Dillard and Alonzo Hodges also assisted. Chemult Mrs. Don Bertram of Bend spent one day last week visit ing with her parents in Che mult Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Bailey and. family have moved from Chemult to Alturas, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Jackson and son were visitors in Che mult over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Van Hise and Mr. and- Mrs. Race of Che mult went to Bend on business last week. John Biggs, son of Corporal Virgil Biggs, is visiting at the home of his grandparents In Fresno, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Ohsburne of Chemult were visitors in. Klam ath Falls last Thursday. Miss Ruth Thompson of Bend spent last week at the home of her parents in Chemult with tonsilitis. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Hawkins 2 5) 1 - " V bi ran m - f-ir -V " i Mi. J'' iu, JACK CARSON. GLADYS GEORGE J !Y CARTOON! Novelty - "King of the 49W HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON General Warmth Knitted cap and warm clothing keep Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhow er, chief of allied operations In North Africa, in smiling mood on air tour of Tunisian front. Octogenarian Has Second Child Since Passing 80 Years SPRINGFIELD, Ore., March 13 (iP) James Franklin Ellison, who will be 83 March 30, chuck led today as he looked fondly at his 29-year-old wife and a 8-day-old son. It was his second son since be became an octogenarian and his fourth child since he married for the second time at the age of 72. It was his 11th child all told, he said, explaining he had seven children by a former marriage and has outlived all but one. The newest Ellison arrived after Mrs. Ellison drove all the way from their truck farm to town for a doctor. The father, who came here from Tennessee 53 years ago, doesn't drive. and family spent three days last week with her parents in Che mult Mrs. Brader of Chemult made a business trip to roruana last week. LAST DAY! Uratu VOUNQ Brian AH8RNS 'A '.Night to Remember nd HAY FOOT" B tsnauaamMtom I ftcaTv Af ) CAPTI JACK TO SELL BONDS HERE Captain Jack will be homo Sunday after a war saving foray into Lane county whore he sold $131,000 of war savings bonds. The bantam rooster, started on his bond-raising career by tne local notary club, is coming home to help union labor in Its bond driva and will be present at Sunday's formal opening of the new homo of the Eagles lodge at Ninth and Walnut streets. An auction will be held at the Eagles, the first of a series to help organized labor buy a subchaser for Klamuth county In the March-April bond drive. Auctions will be held at Malin, Fort Klamath, Chiloquln, Bly, Bonanza, Sprague River, Mer rill, Henley, Keno, and possibly other points. Jack Henry will be auctioneer at the Eagles Sunday afternoon. A huge crowd is expected at the event. Synthetic Rubber Production Aired By Vice President ' WASHINGTON, March 13 (IP) Vice President Wallace declared today that whether the United States continues to produce syn thetic rubber In commercial quantities after the war ought to depend on its ability to meet price competition from a tariff free natural product. The vice president told The Associated Press he agreed with Senator Vandenberg (R-Mich.) that the final decision on the maintenance or postwar aban donment of plants now under construction rests with congress. The question hinges. Wallace said, on whether congress wants to protect the synthetic product with a tariff that would raise tne price of tires to motorists. RIGHT NOW! Continuous from 12:30 D more on a second honeymoon... with vMolly' first talking butterflies . and gorgeous Ginnyl JTHE GREAT GlLUtttoLttU inaroiu raw Isabel Randolph as 'Upp "Morttair Snenr anil D1V HIlHLfc HI ai nni produced and Directed by Mrs. UODV. GlldV: f - , Ray , , , Wimple and J.--. maf towns, morgan r Oregon News Notes By The Assoolattd Press Washington observers believe Gormnny maybe defeated this year and the war end within two yeare, Palmer Hoyt, Ore- gonian publisher told the Port' land realty board on his return from the capital , . . Karl L, Janouch, Rogue River national forest supervisor, reported at Medford that stockmen have killed all but a handful of the more than 200 wild horses that roamed the upper Applcgate country, raiding alfalfa fields, kicking down fences and killing calves. Capt. Charles Gilman, 44, as sistant merchant marine Inspec tor of Hulls, died In Portland . . . A two-automobile collision on the Pacific highway near Milwaukie killed Leslie F. Hoi liday, 54, Mullno, and Injured three others . . . The' Portland OPA said 420,345 persons reg istered for ration book 2 In Multnomah county, an Increase of 52,959 over the May regis tration for ration book , 1. Governor Snell asked Inactive as well as active graduate nurses to register In the national inventory of registered nurses . , , The Portland office of war Information said 223 miles of access roads to mines, quarries and forests had been approved for Oregon at an estimated cost of $790,275, although the spe cific projects have not been named. At Mount Vernon in eastern Oregon, gasoline exploded while Mrs. Abble Stockdale, 65, was siphoning It, burning her crit ically and destroying her house. Portland city officials warned that dogs, licensed or unli censed, would be picked up if they run loose over Victory gardens , . . Housing officials In Portland appealed to mem bers of the city's 350 churches to ease the housing shortage by opening rooms to war workers frr-M Radio's two tot fun' teams join forces again for a hit eoen riotous than their "Look Who's Lauqhina"l . lovel gets the lowdown on Fibber's high flnancel the loose flock of i D1I1U ALLAN Mdrtimr Csdwaladcr , . , vnil'LL NEVER f 0RQET THIS PICTUREl Glnny, and add Joy tn4 I , . , A marriage license was Is sued In Portland to Robert V. Lorenz, Sulem, and Marian E. Baldwin, Portland. Oregon Bauxite to Be Investigated WASHINGTON, March 13 UP) Senator McNary said today a proposed $2,175,000 fund tor In vestigation of bauxite and alun Ite ores and aluminum clays would be used partly In Oregon. The fund was favored by the senate appropriations committee, but still needs congressional approval. Last Timet Tonight Lone Wolf In "ONI DANGIROUS NIGHT" KM IWOUUmHI Starts SUNDAY 2 TERRIFIC HITS! ". : A TROUBLE A " ' ; heading for 1 -v f " 'Plenty more! M pS tl ! 1 "liiyS THIS LMJOK With FAY BAINTER REOINAL OWEN -AllO-rOMYI OAKTOON NIWS Sham Tediy n4 Tonwrrawl NEW TOMORROW! 2 First Run Treats! h tS? " W m J i ami A Ww loft HUBBARD . TERRY Hirtki - Ion O'DRISCOLL , BROWN They Pierce Deep Into nmtf March 13, 1043 y&toria-Worrenton Shipyards Destroyed By Fire Last Night ASTORIA, March 18 OP) The main building of the As-torla-Worrenton shipyards was destroyed by fire of undeterm ined origin last night. O. R. McNall, company president, esti mated loss at 9100,000. Wings of the building and the ship ways, whore hulls of two navy tugs are under con struction, were saved by the Warronton fire department and coast guardsmen. If your dealer Is out for the duration, advertise for a used one In the want-ads. Den Berry In "CYCLONf KIO" Ml IU M H 1 And "THE LONDON BLACKOUT MURDERS" No osffing m rankig . . . end no erlorlt; priority dp- 1 Crime! 'X' LAST DAY . THE MARCH OF TIME 20 "How To Play. Baseball',', Latest Newt ;