HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE THREH LUMBER GETS Hawaii Japs Inducted Into Army Service Hunting U-Boats E TiL ml " SET BY DPI 3 1 T r March 24, 11M3 C PC V r I" uj: SERVICE 13 if 'f'Jy . 4 l i ji , ,. a . WASHINGTON, Murch 24 (P) Tlio offlco of price udinltiUtru tlon ling announced a Collins price on lunihor, effective April i!3. Prices on most logs and "bolts" not covorcd by previous regula tions will bo pegged on tlio September-October, 1)42 uvoriiKO. Not Included in tlio iictlon lire ' pulp for tlio niiimifiit'turo of pulp 'products, boiiuolu or Cullfornlo "redwood logs, posts, pi I Iiirh mid 'went count log mid pi'lino grudo 'hind wood logs. Tlio I "Jit two ol ready uro under ceilings. Tlio nctlun whs tiikcn, llui of 'flee of wnr liifurmullon explain- ' rcl, to end a serious threat to all lumber and lumber product prlco structured and ceilings caused by advance of as much as 125 per cent for logs since Octobor. The OPA reported tliut high prices In thomsclvcs had failed to provido the Incentive to draw men buck Into the woods or to "encourage logging contractors to incrcuno production. Ruthcr, it whs cxplulncd, the high log prices presented a windfall to slumpugo owners, placed log pur chasers and contractors In an In secure position and threatened all lumber and luinbor products ceilings. Beth Robley Waits Call to WAACs After Enlistment in North Merrill will be represented in tlio women's army by Beth Hoblcy, It was rovculed Satur day by Portland's WAAC recruit ing liendqriirters as her enlist ment was announced. She re turned to Morrill to await her call to active duty. A graduate of Merrill high school, sho was president of the Girls Athletic association and the Girls' League. Sho hopes to bo assigned to communications duty In tlio army. Miss Hoblcy lias been telepbono operator at Merrill (or tlio pn.it four years. Sho is the daughter of Carl J. Robley of Klamath Falls. Parliamentarians to Meet With Rotary MALIN Vincent Kruml, win ner of tha Malin, Bonanza, lion ley, Lukcvlcw Kuluro Furmers of America public speaking con test held lu.it month at Henley, and members of the Malln par liamentary team will bo guests, April 2, of the Klumuth Falls Hotury club at luncheon. Kruml is competing this week at tlio stuto meet in Portland. He will speak on food produc tion for victory. His speech and a round of parllamontury proced ure will bo offered for Rotary en tertainment. The boys were guests of the Tulcluke Rotary club recently. NAZIS STRIP BUILDINGS Dr. Walter BcrUch, the nazl boss behind tho Czech govern ment at Prague, has ordered all copper and alloy fittings of bridges and buildings, excluding objects of piirtlculnr artistic and historic value, to bo surrendered to tlio German authorities, OVERWORKED TREADLES Danish women members of tlio United Presbyterian church at Portland, Ore, have sent out an SOS for repairs on machines they luivc been using for Red Cross sewing. yil MAD THE WAR NEWS tVERY DAY YET WE KMOW WITHOUT LOOKING- - V I WHEN MEALS ARE MADE WITH THESE riHEFoVoTn Tl W) 1 WHtEDTOASIt j 'i'f'UMMjijk. As a Una of his grinning buddies wall behind him, tills young Jnpnncss U. 8, Army volunteer gets his blood test as the finish to his physical axunilnnllnn at an Induction station In Hawaii. The youths are being In ducted Into tha AJA combat regiment now taking shapo In tho Inlands. Funeral Services Held for Pioneer DAMASCUS, March 24 (AP) Funeral services wore held here today for John Duvld Chilwood, Oregon pioneer who died Sunday. Born in 1B53 near Burnt riv er In a wugon train from Iowa, Chilwood has lived for 40 years on land his father homcsteuded hero in lUfiS. Ho formerly farmed near Dallas and was or ganizer and past master of Dal las, Damascus, Pleasant Valley and Suit Creek granges. Four duughtors, three sons and a brother survive. OBITUARY MARY EMMA RHODES Mary Emma Rhodes, a resi dent of Klamath Falls for the lust 20 years, passed away at the homo of her son, Frank Blair, 4009 llomcdule road, Tuesday evening, March 23, 1043. The deceased was a na tive of Marietta, Gu., and wus uged 72 years and three days when called. Besides her sou sho Is survived by three broth ers: Robert Mohon of Birming ham, Ala.; Wiley Mohon of Go galusa, La., and Arzo Mohon of Elllsvllle, Miss. One sister, Mrs. Joso Boundrant, of Bogu luss, , La.; two granddaughters, Mrs. Carl Yancey and Margaret Blair of Klamath Falls, Two great grandchildren, Robert and Betty Yancey of Klumuth Falls. The remains rest at Wards Klamath Funeral home, 025 High street, where friends may call. Notice of funeral ar rangements will bo announced elsewhere in this Issuo of the paper. FUNERAL MARY EMMA RHODES The funeral service for the late Mary Emma Rhodes, who passed away In this city on Tues day, March 23, will take place from the chapel of Wards Klam ath Funeral Home, 025 High street, Thursday afternoon at 2:30. The Rev. William Rice of the Immanucl Baptist church will officiate. Commitment services and Interment will fol low in Llnkvillc cemetery. Friends arc invited to attend. ARTIST KNIGHTS King Charles I, of England, knighted two famous Dutch art ists, Rubens and Van Dyck. The latter Is said to have painted 36 portraits of tho English mon arch. , ftfi .. iii m" i if Ti nun i m f On the Muddy Roads of North Africa The old Army mule comes Into Its own as a beast of burden In North Africa where heavy weather and muddy roads bog down motor transports. Oreqon News Notes By The Associated Press The cast ond west coasts of this country will be bombed "if only by a suicide squad," Ken neth Holder, export director for a British clothing manufacturer, predicted in a speech before, the Portland Klwanis club . . . Pa cific Northwest college publicity directors, meeting in Portland, elected Erwin H. Schweibcrt of the College of Idaho as district chairman, and heard speakers urge that the colleges treat mil itary trainees on the campus like regular student body members. A maritime commission guard, Fred C. Reifcr, 47, Canby, fell from a Portland pier and drowned In the Willamette river . . . Low bid on- construc tion of 110 dormitory units and a community building at tho Portlimd army air base Svas $08,1)40, submitted by Knott, Rogers & Dunbar, Portland. Federal Judge Cluudo McCol- loch ordered Martin R. Rinko, sfK !-M V ,Wlfc MmMAtvStmii" '9 26, removed from Portland to Yakima, where he is wanted on a charge of violating the selec tive service act . . . Friends lcorncd of the death in Los An gclcs of Paul H. Sroat, formerly associated with the Capital City bank in Salem. J. J. Quillin, Portland niunl cipol judge, ordered Robert G. Noonun, 45, held for the grand jury on a charge of assault and robbery in connection with a pharmacy hold-up . . . Federal agents accused William A. C Dent,' 28, with illegally donning a navy uniform in Portland so he could get into a service dance . , . The navy announced in Portland it needed college grad' nates, from 30 to 40 years old, who havo had extensive exper ience as trial lawyers or investi gators. , Motor vehicles consume an average of 28 gallons of gasoline to each gallon of lubricating oil. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn.Pri vuto John Coulum of Klamath Falls, Ore., son of Mr. and Mrs. it. Ray Coulum, 1884 Melrose street, has arrived at the Uni versity ol Minnesota, for course in army air force instruction lasting approximately five months prior to his appoint ment as an aviation cadet in the army air forces. FORT DES MOINES, la. Auxiliary Nona McCallough of 423 Plum street, Klamath Falls, Ore., has completed basic train ing at the First Women's Army Auxiliary Corps training cen ter here, and has been selected for specialist training in motor transport school. Aviation Cadet Donald I. Klein, Ellingson Lumber com pany, Kcno, has been advanced from pre-flight training to an army air force primary flying field, according to word from San Antonio, Tex., aviation cadet center. Primary school is anoth er step toward silver wings and commission .-s an officer. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., March 18 Private Clyde M. Horslcy, 20, of Bonanza, Ore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Horslcy, Box 136, Bonanza, Ore., has arrived at the University of Minnesota, for course in army air force instruc tion lasting approximately five months prior to his appointment as an aviation cadet in the army air forces. During this period he will take numerous academic courses, as well as elementary flying training. Upon completion of the course he will be classi fied as a pilot, navigator or bom bardier and go on to schools of the flying training command for training in these specialties. . Word has been received here from San Francisco that Keith Howell, who' graduated . from KUHS with the class of 1042, has received his appointment in the Merchant Marine, U. S. Na val Reserve. He is taking his basic training at San Mateo, Calif! Keith is the son of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Howell, former residents of this city, where Howell was in the automotive business. !. . ' ,. It's Corp. Chester A. Bunnell Jr., instead of PFC, according to word received by the soldier's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Bun nell of Weyerhaeuser. Corp. Bunnell is now serving as supply man with - the military police somewhere in North Africa. PRAYING TREE The praying palm of Farid pore, India, bowed down each evening as the temple bells were calling the people to prayer. It was later found that temperature was responsible for the peculiar actions of the tree. NO GREEN FEATHERS Black, red and yellow are the only pigment colors found on any bird. Other colors and combina tions are due to harmonized re fractions of light striking the surface of the feathers. Tho , armed forces, the men who are going into actual com bat, have placed their house in order. Their spirit and their pro gram are all that patriotism and careful planning can effect. Secretary of War Henry L. Stim- son. Birds, insects, mammals and plants all produce wax. , . Early Bird te.'vn Ono of the first and youngest of the notion's victory garden' ers, 4-year-old Nancy Squires of Newport News, Va., totes the tools to get the job started al though early spring climate still calls for heavy coat,: : Lifi.M-Ha 4 r cttSi PT- boat swift terror of the seas submarines. The N.-yy mosquito Fire Laddies Dust Off 1916 Ruling for Advice on Dance The fire department ordi nance, No. 374, drawn up on March 7, 1016, when J. B. Ma son was the mayor of the town, and A. L. Leavitt was the police judge, was dusted off at a meet ing of the council Monday night, and Section 17 was repealed. This had to do with firemen giv ing dances, and that's what 1943 fire laddies want to do. The old ordinance, which con tinues in effect, has a number of out moded features. Among oth er things it sets forth that the boys must have regular drills and exercises once every two weeks and the fire chief must keep a check on this. Strength of the department was limited to a chief and assist ant chief with 10 additional fire Courthouse Records Marriages GRANDY-REASONS Donald Arthur Grandy, 21, farmer. Na tive of Minnesota, resident of Midland. Corrine Reasons, 16, waitress. Native of Arkansas, resident of Klamath Falls. Complaints Filed Caroline Hines versus Rich ard Hoskinson. .Suit for remov al as trustee. Henry E. Perkins, attorney for plaintiff. Elza V. McCourry versus Wil ma McCourry. Suit for divorce, charge desertion. Couple mar 1 j-"jJti?k eklms through the creamy Caribbean on the lookout lor lurking boat is armed with machine guns, torpedoes and depth charges. men paid at the rate of $1 per call, with $1 for each additional hour on duty. . Rules call for members of the fire department to attend "all fires and alarms in the city, rid ing on the apparatus both going and returning" and they must "exert their greatest energy" while at the fire. "In no case shall fatigue from duty at a previous fire be ac cepted as an excuse for failure to answer an alarm," they set forth some 27 years ago. And the firemen couldn't "sell, loan or give awa:r any of the fire ap paratus" any more than they can today. Furthermore, firemen weren't allowed to "cuss" at the fire station or while on duty, nor could they engage in alterca tions. ried in Medford, 1943. F. O. Small, attorney for plaintiff. Justice Court Charles Monroe Allbritton. Four in front seat. Fined $7. Earl Thomas Farlow. Operat ing a motor vehicle without one red light.. Fined $5.50. ,.- David Charles Haskett. Drunk in public place. $10 bail forfeit ed. Roy Rowland Shimmel. Drunk on public highway. $10 bail for feited. - 1 Irving Bauman was 1940 U. S. corn husking champion. 1 1 i ill li i i 1" r " Th "CARNIVAL lindtl AN outiUndtnK drtu sandal. Cool and comfortable In blik mnti and dotaktn. The "RIO" Pump. A bfautirut combination of gabardine and doMkm snowing the South Amirioan Influence. Comblnet ityli, btauty and III. El doMkm showing the South I 0 i . Tiaw f American Influence. Comblnet JuO, I LJLVwCtA m 4 style, btautr nd III. TyT) 1 U $8.95 . . . I I "Every paic has the magic Foot Delight Cushion m iV glorious secret of lively jitt that ntvtr ttft Jm i ( V. S. Kami Photo from. NtAl Debts Reduced Over One-Half in Oregon SALEM, March . 24 (AP) . Oregon's bonded debt will ba reduced to $25,014,195 on April 1, compared with $66,062,810 15 years ago, State Treasurer Leslie M. Scott said today. On April 1, Scott will pay off $2,334,838 of highway, veter ans, and irrigation bonds; The payments will reduce outstanding highway bonds to $9,441,750, veterans bonds to $14,775,000, irrigation bonds to $1,697,445, .and state board of higher education bonds to $1 400,500. FORECAST COLDER CRANBROOK, B. C. (iTO Colder than a loan shark'! heart! Cranbrook had 98.6 inches of snow; 12 February days of sub zero weather and only 10 Jan uary days that were above zero.. One day in January it was, 41 ' degrees below zero, lowest mark , in 13 years. . CARD OF THANKS . ' We wish to express our sincer thanks to the many friends for their kind expressions of sym pathy and the many beautiful floral offerings tendered us dur ing our recent bereavement, and especially to the fellow workers at Lamm's Camp, Yamsay, Ore. The Family of Jack Carson "Cullen Corson," . Redwood City, Calif. , - . ir i i' i " "f v i f it "t i - r w iiiwfcwi j '"i "1 ma M tl $8.95 I '1