Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 19, 1943, Page 7, Image 7

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    Mnrch 19, 1948
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE SEVEN
REFRIGERATORS
WILL
BE
FOR
WASHINGTON, March 10 (PC)
WPB Chairman Donald M. Nel
mn (Hid today some civilian
Items whwt production has been
hulled "for the durllon" would
he brought back Into production
to oupply essential civilian needs.
Household refrigerators prob
ably will ba nmong the Items,
Nclion told press conforenco,
because the food shortage de
mands additional refrigeration
I'acllltlr. The war production
'board I rcvlowlng the whole
field of connumor good with
mumifiu'turcra and sellers, be
added, to leurn which other
Item ere moat urgontly needed,
"We bellovo It la Important
that the things which aro essen
tiul to a sound but leun civilian
economy be provldod," tht WPB
chief (aid, "Added emphaiU hai
to be given to the production
of thlngii which contribute to
clvlllnn health, communication
and trnnsporlntlon. Wo are study
ing to find the proper method!
of, providing those things."
A part of Its progrum, WPB
expects to strengthen Its office
of clvlllnn supply and make It
" a strong clulmunt for the needs
of the civilian economy," Nel
son said, i
Ho described as untrue, how
ever, reports that WPB had of
fered the directorship of the
clvlllnn supply office either to
Willnrd Thorp, trustee of the As-
Jiocintcd Gas and Electrlo com
pany, or Emll Schram, president
of the New York stock exchange.
SENATE APPROVES
I
WASHINGTON, March 10 W)
Legislation 1 1 permit the sale of
100, 000.000 bushels of government-held
vheal to be used as
feed by livestock, poultry and
milk producers was passed today
by tho senate and sent to the
White House.
Not a protest was raised when
Senator Smith (D-S. C.) asked
unanimous consent for consider
ation of the legislation and Sen.
McNary (R-Oro.), the minority
lleader, Joined In tho request for
Immediate passage.
A reported crisis In the live
stock, poultry and dairy Indus
tries precipitated the quick action.
Teit of a Good
Faller Proved, by
Two Bend Loggers
BEND, March 10 (P) Harry
Fuller and Fred Campbell
proved the old woods adoge that
a good faller can drive stake
with the trunk of a falling tree.
They felled big pin tree
which had become unsafe In a
residential block. They had to
Iny It down between a tavern
and the residence of Dr. J. C.
JVandervert with a 10-18-foot
margin for error.
After taking off the heaviest
brunches they foiled the big pine
without so much as brushing
cither structure. ,
BLIGHT EXAGGERATION
VANCOUVER, Wash., March
10 (I') Frank McMnnua and 199
other big-hearted shipyard
'guards at Knlser yard here
should have remembered what
Mark Twain said about slight ex
aggeration. They took up a col
lection for the widow of Guard
Ernest Boock, who, somebody
wild, had died of pneumonia. Mc
Manus, it was revoaled today,
was counting the $160 cash in a
pleasant glow of good-deed-done
fooling a 'couple of nights ago
when Boock walked In, recov
ered and ready for duty.
The Russian people doubtless
now are giving Ambassador
Slandlcy good measure a mil
lion thanks for thousands of
tanks.
Nazis Rushing Heavy Supplies Into Tunisia Battle
T
T
(NEA TtUphoto)
Here's another reason the Axis Is still tough In North Africa. Nasi caption ei this picture which reached the
V. a. Uirouvh Portunnl. said this big tank tor Rommel wu unloaded at an unannounced Mediterranean
eeaport.
War Woofer
VH'
Prince, eog belonging to Cleve
land war worker, indicates he'd
like a little quiet around here.
Lt. General Arnold
Promoted to Rank
Of Full General
WASHINGTON, March 10 (P)
Lieutenant General Henry H.
Arnold, commander of tho army
air forces, was nominated by
President Roosevelt today for
promotion to the rank of full
general.
Arnold holds the permanent
rank of major goncral, and he
will rank as a full general tem
porarily, during the period of
the war.
XEEP 'EM ROLLIN'
EFFINGHAM, 111 (AP)
Burglars who broke into Ef
fingham high school cracked
the safe and stole money and
war stamps, but they missed
the big loot the school's "jeep
fund."
Students had collected $600
to buy a Jeep for the army,
then matched their patriotism
with prudence, put the money
in the bank,
Being broke Is no Joke yet
It's something to write home
about.
TRUCKS FOR RENT
You Drive Move Yourself
Save M Long and
Short Trips
STILES' BEACON SERVICE
Phone 8304 1201 East Main
Lusito "Kill and Kill"
Kindled in Allied Fliers
PORTLAND, March 10 (P)
The lust to "kill and kill and
kill" has been kindled In Amerl
canaviators in Africa, Lt. Wil
liam R. Young, Portland flier
who was cited for bravery after
the Kasserlne pass battle, wrote
his mother.
"Tonight not all of us are re
turned to await a new day," he
wrote his mother, Mrs. Charles
Fletcher, "but by God's right
there are a hundred filthy Ger
mans for each of us. We did a
good Job today. I find myself
cold with the urge to kill and
kill and kill , . . Nothing more
important."
Elsewhere the flier wrote:
"Perhaps a bullet or a piece of
flak has my name on it, and
some German will laugh as my
plane falls, but by the skill I am
rapidly acquiring, his kind will
have paid tenfold for my death."
James B, Reese, acting district
rationing officer, Klamath Falls
district office of the OPA, an
nounced today that William Pen
dleton, regional shoe rationing
executive from San Francisco,
will attend the meeting of shoe
dealers tonight at 8 o'clock In the
offices of the OPA, Balsigor
building. Pendleton is one of
tho 12 men who wrote the shoe
rationing regulations for the
United States while in Wash
ington D. C.
Mrs. Alto T. Pruitt, district of
fice shoe rationing representa
tive, will conduct the meeting,
which is being held for the pur
pose of acquainting shoe dealers
with the pa't they play In the
shoe ration banking program, A
general discussion of the shoe ra
tioning program is to be held,
and the OPA representatives
will answer questions relating to
rationing problems of the shoe
industry. A cordial invitation
to attend is extended to all Shoe
dealers.
Power Opponents
Have Until June 9
To Get Signatures
OLYMPIA, Wash., March 10
W) Opponents of initiative J2,
the public power measure, have
until midnight, June 0 to obtain
30,000 legal signatures to refer
endum petitions to put the mat
ter before the people in the 1944
general election.
Fences and hedges are what
fail to keep kids in their own
back yards.
On the Ball
w L
' i it " ,
It's a Loolu. That's the name of
this strapless, sleeveless bathing
suit worn by Lucille Ball as her
answer to clothes conservation.
Always read the classified ads,
LAST YEAR'S TOTAL
WASHINGTON, March 10 0P)
March Income tax collections
have reached $1,835,333,710, the
treasury reported today, forging
well ahead of last year's corre
sponding period.
The figures In the treasury's
daily statement for March 17
which compare with March 18
of last year, showed collections
for the day of $452,905,355,
which was a drop of around $60,-
000,000 from the peak of March
18.
Since the fiscal began July 1,
the treasury has taken in $7,
432,703,080, which compares
with $3,011,430,648 in the cor
responding period of the 1042
fiscal year.
Income tax collections for the
first 16 days of March compared
with $1,671,301,218 on March 18,
1042.
Bailey, Duffy
Admit Burglaries
In Klamath Falls
- SALEM, March 10 UP) Burg
laries for goods ranging all the
way from army insignia and
clothing to firearms and automo
biles in Salem, Corvallis, Eu
gene, Lakeview, Klamath Falls
and Portland, were traced to
and admitted by Kenneth Wil
liam Bailey and Ronald William
Duffy before the two were turn
ed oved to two deputy JJ. S,
marshals here Thursday, City
Police Inspector Hobart Kigglns
declared today.
U. S. Bombers Hit
Naples Twice With
Unobserved Results
CAIRO, March 10 (P) Liber.
ator bombers of the ninth Unit
ed States air force attacked Na
ples twice yestorday, ones dur
ing daylight and again after
darkness fell, an American com
munique announced today.
"Results of both attacks war
unobserved due to solid cloud
cover over the target," the war
bulletin said.'
(The Italian high command
said "enemy planes dropped
bombs on the outskirts and on
the neighborhood of Naples and
in Syracuse province without
causing casualties.")
WITH COUPON j I J J
BIG 8-OZ. BOX S0ILAX PVl
Kaeugfc make front 4 to Jt
gale, of that wonderful I
Soilai aotatloa for a huo- Jj j
ISiPjS I EMM
AljOUR STOtC
Iwtt M boa sf sMUgf TsUPJL
F. R. Hauger
Building Material
SIS Market
OSC Prexy Pleased
With Albany as
Laboratory Site
CORVALLIS, March 10 W
Pcsident A. L. Strand and oth
er officials at Oregon State col
lege expressed gratification to
day at the selection of the old
Albany college site as the loca
tion for the new U. S. Bureau
of Mines laboratory. Proximity
of the college with Its engineer
ing laboratories and its technical
library is known to hove been
an Important factor in the selec
tion. Pine Lumber Orders
Up for This Week
PORTLAND, Ore., March 10
(Pi Pine lumber orders, ship
ments and production were up
for the week ending March 13,
the Western Pine association re
ported today.
Orders for the wfek totaled
67,881,000 board feet as com
pared with 88,004,000 for the
previous week and 73,008,000
for the corresponding week last
year. Similar comparisons of
shipments were 64,400,000, 64,
368,000 and 73,424,000; produc
tion, 88.871,000, 53,673,000 and
80,003,000.
Medals Authorized
For Hurricane Heros
VICTORIA, Tex., March 10 P)
President Roosevelt has author
ized the awarding of the Sol
dier's Medal to 11 volunteers
who remained on Matagorda is
land last August' to brave the
fury of a hurricane and guard,
government property.
. Tentative plans call for the
medals to be presented to Ma
jor Curtis W. Handley and 10
enlisted men next Saturday on
the island.
The youth of the nation are
doing a grand job in the fight
ing forces, and I think today the
one question we have got to
ask ourselves is: Are we going
to be worthy of those boys who
are out there fighting. WPB
Chairman Donald M. Nelson.
Always read the classified ads.
4
ELK'S
ST. PATRICK'S
DANCE
10 to 1, Saturday Night
March 20th
PAPPY GORDON'S ORCHESTRA
Elks and Their Ladies Only
9
Chocolate Nut Fudge
Cake 69c
Two loyers of chocolate cake iced with on old
foshionisd chocolate icing, with nuts in the
cake and in the icing.
ASSORTED
Danish Pastries
40c doz.
Sliced Date Drops
2 doz. 25c
NEXT WEEK'S
SPECIALTY BREAD
100 Wholewheat
J I
leatl
CHERAHY
" Hand
Lotion
IB-os.
SPECIAL
11.50 Slse
$100
I
250
Cytamin
VITAMIN
Capsules
$89
BUBBLE
BATH
25c
and
S1.00
$1.00
Bi-So-Dol
ANTACID
POWDER 1
$1.75 Ayer Night Cream, Special $1.00
1 lb. Supermalt Vitamin Concentrate ......$1.25
1 lb. Similae ..........89e -
$1.00 Albolene Cleansing Cream 89e
100 Bexel (Vitamin B) Capsules ..$1.98
75e Dextrl Maltose 63e
Qt. Squibb Mineral Oil 89c
$1.00 Extol Antiseptic .'. 89e
$1.00 Unguentlne . 89c
Loreis . . . 440i 25e
Cashmere Bouquet Soap, 10c Bar ......3 for 27e
Colgate Perfumed Soaps, 6c Bar, per do. 65c
Olive Oil, 8 ex. ; ...89c
60e Sal Hepatica . 9e
60c Bromo Seltzer 49c
Derma Regis Hair Tonle ......................$ 1.00
50c Calox Tooth Powder . 43c
50c Lyons Tooth Powder ..................33c
50c Soyo Bean Shampoo ............................ 39c
50e Lyiol 47e
$1.25 Saraka 98e
$1.00 l-Y Ironized Yeait Tobi .79e
$1.00 Boby Oil (J & J) 89e
60c Mum . . 49e
50c Pablum 39e
100 Anacln Tablets 98c
$1.00 Albagar Laxative 79e
5 lbs. Epsom Salt ..31e
Aydt Vitamin Candy, 1 lb. $2.25
1 pt. Hydrogen Peroxide, 10 Vol 40c
75e Vaseline Hair Tonic ......63c
Box Stationery . 49e to $1.50
Squibb't Cod Liver Oil, 20 $1.69
S.T. 37 Antiseptic 59e
Qt. Milk of Magnesia 59e
Witch Haiel Extract (pt.) ......... ....50e
Squibb Chocolate VHarose
60c r
I ALKA " f
sELTZER.fi
7 49c:f
100
ABDO
Capsules
$239
WRISLEY
BATH SOAP
4 BARS
$100
I
(Malted Milk Substitute) 12 ox.
43e
KOTEX
CIGARETTES
Camels, Old Golds,
Cheaters, Lucktes,
Ralelghs, Kools
Wings, Domlnos,
Sensations, Avalons
54s
: aapej Bkt w a
7 7V A U 2,26c P.S 2,23c ,
C I Carton $1.28 Carton $1.05 I
89c
RUG CO.
NINTH AND MAIN STS.
AirMailC.
I Stationery 1
50c &