PAGE SIT April 14. lf48 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Midland Cmpite PROGRAM MELD 10 OBSERVE IL TULELAKE Public schoolj week will be observed with a program Friday night, April 16, In the high school gymnasium with elementary schools of Tule- lake and Winema and the Tule- lake high school participating Charles K. Wiese will be master of ceremonies. Carr and TiO' Siesta, because of gasoline short ages, will not take part as in past years. The high school band Is sched uled for several numbers, Pattie Jean Johnson, high school stu dent body president, will review enlistments of high school boys in the armed forces and the itory of the recent successful tale of savings stamps and bonds will be told. A military guard from Newell will add color to the patriotic theme of the program with Cap tain W. C. Maples to be pre sented also. Students of the Winema school accompanied by the Winema school orchestra will offer a wooden shoe dance and a group of songs. Tulelake primary children un der the supervision of Ruth Boyd will give a play and a ser ies of short poems will be given by Miss Heberlie's grade. Work of the students will be on display and the public as in other years is cordially invited. Langell Valley . Goldie Pauk of Poe valley, spent the weekend with Lorraine and Mildred Martin. Gordon Givan of Bonanza, visited over the weekend with Melvin Mech am. Mrs. Effie Gilman of The Dalles, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Walter Smith and family. Her daughter, Mrs. Lester Moore and Kathleen of Merrill, visited at the Smith's on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dearborn were dinner guests on Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Revell. Mr. and Mrs. Bud Peterson of Los Angeles, have purchased home on Summers lane. On Sun day they, visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Nork. Mrs. Vir ginia Herlihy and children of Klamath Falls, also spent Sun day with her parents, the Norks. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Horn of Bonanza, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Horn and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ora Johnson en tertained Mr. and Mrs. Mike Dearborn at dinner on Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Dear- born and Mrs. Mary Dearborn entertained Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dearborn and Mr. and Mrs. Ora Johnson at dinner on Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Whitting ton of Bend, spent several days with her brother and sister-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. S. T. Robison, Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Teare and Mrs. Mary Leidy visited at Henley on Sunday with Mrs. Minnie Schooler. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Panter, Mrs. Claude Murray and Mrs. Florence Botkins, visited Sunday at Malin with Mr. and Mrs. Shorty Lee. Chiloquin Noel Deets and Ray Byrnes of Klamath Falls were visiting friends in Chiloquin Sunday. Gene Curial, who enlisted in the navy last fall, was in Chilo quin Monday on a brief furlough. He was a graduate of Chiloquin high school with the class of '41. Local Indians have begun trout fishing at the government dam. Dwight Kircher of Sprague River, was in Chiloquin Sunday. Local Boy Scouts and Camp Fire Girls piled and burned brush on the Gienger ranch over the weekend. Because of labor shortages on ranches, their help was greatly appreciated. . SHORT STORY TOPEKA. Kas . Wicim i a closed cafe: "No cook "No meat "No more eat." WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE- ViAtxf Ciloml-Am! You'll Jump Out of W in the Momin Ruin' to Go .ir4r.i"T ?"u,1 IJ"' n 'hOTt 8 Pint, of M l ulc into your bomlj every diy. II thla iiImJ fl " 'rly, your food m.y not SVr 1 Lra,y 'u,t dMy fn " . Th H.?!!?.U? J?r onuwh. You mt eon liSi puiilc m' WorW tfi.mlf'?" Kx",.l't C.rtw'. ttlU. tZnJl K' .,0 Hp ol bll. flow. lOf Irmly to mk you M "up .nil up." EBrtlr In raildnq 1ll How frly. Art lor LttMrt Litu, Urw PflU. JO ud 85. SCHDC IE Poe Valley-Olene Extension Unit Holds Meeting POE VALLEY Olene Home Extension unit held its April meeting at the Rex High home in Poe Valley on April 9. There were fourteen members pres ent. This was a very interest ing meeting and the demonstra tion of preparing and serving of war-time buffet meals was under the direction of Mrs. Winnifred Gillen. There will be just one more meeting for this season which will be held at the Olene hall on May 14 This will be an afternoon meet ing starting at 1:30 p. m. The subject will be "Care and Re pair of Electrical Equipment in the Home." The following officers were re-elected for the ensuing year at the April meeting: Mrs. Frank Sullivan, chairman; Mrs, Curtis Gebhardt, vice chair man, and Mrs. Beau Tucker, secretary. Olene Mrs. George Stevenson is now at her home on the Lake- view highway. She returned the early part of last week from a fortnight spent at Rich ardson Springs. Mrs. Basil Brown Is in the Hillside hospital, where she is reported to be getting along nicely following a major opera tion performed last week. Mrs. Paul S e t z e r, Mrs. Brown's mother, from Astoria, is stay ing at the Brown home. Mrs. Frank Sullivan of North Poe Valley is rapidly improv ing from the effects of a badly infected arm. Mr. Sullivan has also been quite ill with the flu but is now much better. Jack-Marshall had the mis fortune of having a horse fall with him Sunday, with Jack sustaining an ankle : injury. Mrs. O. L. Brown went to town Sunday and brought her sister, Mrs. Henry Grimes, home to remain a week while recovering from a severe throat infection. Mrs. Grimes has been ill for several weeks. Mrs. Curtis Gebhardt was a dinner guest at the Marion Barnes home on Saturday eve ning. Later the Barnes , accom panied by Mrs. Gebhart, at tended the show, "Yankee Doo dle Dandy," in Klamath Falls. The occasion was Mr. Barnes' birthday. Bonanza Mrs. F. W. Brown entertained two tables of bridge at her home on Wednesday. . Guests present were, Mrs. Alva Maxwell, Mrs. Claude Bechdoldt, Mrs. William Bechdoldt, Mrs. Fred Mullennax, Mrs. Betty Pepple, Mrs. Jack Horton, Mrs. Birdie Burk and the hostess. Mrs. Mullennax re ceived high score and Mrs. Pep ple second high, with the travel ing prize going to Mrs. Claude Bechdoldt. The Bonanza-Langell Valley Garden club met at the home of Mrs. Fred Mullennax on Friday, April 9. Mrs. Margaret Lamb and Mrs. Ruth Proctor of Klam- th Falls, were guest speakers. The club voted to join the Ore gon Federation of Garden Clubs. The next meeting will be held at the Library clubhouse on April 23 with Mrs. Ed Gowen the hostess. Mr. and Mrs. George Boyd of Bly were Bonanza visitors on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Horton and Mrs. Birdie Burk left Sunday for fmmm I k- .A supports Ml f I THE BOYS AT OUR PIAHT SWEAfc YOU Ak aA )) ' I THE BEST COOK IH THE UNO. 1 WHEN THE REAL SECRET OF J lrV f IS KHOWlHfrTHE RIGHT WM ! AfeuA a trip to San Francisco. They expect to be gone about a week. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schmor and son, Bobby, spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leon ard Ritter at Hildebrand. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Beebe and daughter Vera Mae were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs, F, W. Brown and Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Gubser have returned from a trip south and are visiting with relatives. Merrill Rebekahs,. To Attend State Convention Soon MERRILL Mrs. Mae Ander son, Klamath Falls and Mrs. Mary Pope, past noble grand of the Rebekah lodge of Merrill, will attend the state Rebekah convention convening in Port land, May 18-19. Alternates elected were Mrs. Maud Faus and Mrs. Neta Stevenson. Beth Robley, who left recently to join the WAACs, was present ed with a farewell gift by Mrs Anderson. Mrs. Eva Bowman, Mrs. Uel Dillard and Mrs. Audrey Lewis, as a program committee, pre sented Ronnie Trotman, Donald Bowman and Mervyne and Jim- mie Shuck, Merrill accordion artists. Sale of Poppies Planned by Malm American Legion MALIN Mrs. Mary Elzner was hostess to the auxiliary of the Malin Legion post at the Ap ril meeting, when plans were made for sale of 400 poppies the Saturday before Memorial day. Mrs. Irene Trout will function as chairman of the sale. Present for the evening were Mrs. A. E. Street, Mrs. Helen Loosley, Mrs. S. R. Woodley, Mrs. Irene Trout, Mrs. Ethel Hamilton, Mrs. Agnes Schrein er. Mrs. Alice Nyhart and Mrs. Ethel Roberts. Hager Mr. and Mrs. F. Volcher, chil dren and friends were callers at the Kohler home here Sunday. H. McNoise spent Sunday with his family at Chiloquin, Oregon Martin and . Larry Snyder spent Saturday in Klamath Falls. Douglas Kohler was absent from school Tuesday due to a bad cold. Rowe Klnny of Olene was a business visitor at Hager Mon day. Raymond Overson Jr. of Shasta way was in this commun ity Saturday calling on friends. Nearly every farmer has a tractor or team in the fields now, getting the land ready for seed ing. Merrill The Lost River Garden club will meet Tuesday afternoon, April 27, at the home of Mrs. Willard Smith. Mrs. W. C. Bail ey, who previously had planned to entertain the club, will be un able to do so. Mrs. Lewis Kan dra, president, is at present in San Francisco. She was accom panied south by her daughter, Lois. Mrs. Ray Oehlerich and her mother, Mrs. Grace Hughes, were Klamath Falls shoppers Saturday. More than a billion dollars' worth of minerals have been mined from the mountains of Nevada to date. Sea Lightning 1 1 Lightning-shaped band of burn ine oil trails this Jnp transport rafter allied 'bombers blastedMt 'astern 'in Bismarck Sea. Draft Boards Get Appeals From Men Who Want to Fight SALEM, April 14 (IP) Selec tive service appeal boards have received many appeals from men who have been deferred for oc cupational reasons and who want to fight, state selective service headquarters said today. , Most of the appeals, however, are filed by men who want de ferment. JUST A MEMORY TEXAS CITY, Tex. UP) Mrs Paul Hurd recalls longingly that lovely beef roast she bought along with butter, coffee and other rationed foods. Someone stole her car and the food in it. Houston police found the car. later, parked in front of a house. The burglar, they said, had broken into the house lone enough to cook and eat the Hurd groceries. t , MUSICAL BACHS There were eight genera tions of musicians in the Bach family. Twenty-nine members of the family, beginning with Wert Bach in 1550. attained eminence in this field. Johann Sebastian Bach reached the greatest fame of all. SOLUTION INDEPENDENCE, Kas.. UP) City officials, harassed by com plaints of Victory gardeners, ad vertised for a dog catcher man or woman. Mrs. Nellie Cannon responded. She is it. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our manv friends; also Ewauna Co. and employees, Superior Troy Laundry and Beck Bakery, for their kindness and beautiful floral offerings at the time of our recent bereavement and loss of our beloved husband and father, son-in-law and brother-in-law. Mrs. Arthur Edwin Smith and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Smith and family. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dean and family. Many Tomato To Grow, Prepared by U. S, Department o! Agriculture for NEA Service No matter how si mill your Vic tory garden is, it should liuvo a few tomato plants. People with good sized gardens wil want to allot considerable spaco to them. Tho reasons for such emphasis aro the many points this native American vegetable has In its favor. I For one thing, tho tmouto will grow under a great variety of conditions, and almost any home gardener can produce a crop with fertile soil and sufficient moist ure. From the standpoint of good nourishment, the tomato Is tops. It Is ono of our richest sources of vitamins A, B, and C. It is likely to be present on tho majority of pantry shelves this winter because It is the only veg etable that can bo canned sufcly without n steum pressure cooker. Over most of the upper south and the north, the tomato is suited to spring, summer and autumn culture. In tho extreme south, it is included in winter gardens. Under most conditions, a liberal application of manure and commercial fertilizer will suffice for a good crop. BUY STARTED PLANTS Experienced gardeners often prefer to start their own tomato plants in tho house, but the aver age city or suburban gardener probably will find it more con venient to purchase strong, healthy plants from a profession al grower. It is estimated that under rea sonably favorable conditions, 15 plants will supply one person with all the tomatoes he can cat fresh during the growing season, and produce enough surplus to allow 15-20 quarts to be canned. Twenty quarts are the equivalent of about 30 No. 2 cans from the grocery store. For early tomatoes, the varie ties recommended are Earlianna. Bonny Best, and Pritchard. For medium and late plantings, the disease-resistant Marglobe is a good choice, with Rutgers and Stone also recommended as sturdy varieties. From its tropical ancestors, the modern tomato has inherited a sensitiveness to cold, so plants should not be set out until all danger of frost has passed. Tho Department of Agriculture's suggestions for tomato culture by the home gardener center around staking and pruning the plants to a single stem, or two stems at the most. Set the plants about two feet apart and train them to stakes four or five feet long and about an inch and a half in diameter. Under this plan, the plants are easy to cultivate and the toma toes, which do not touch tho ground, are kept clean and ripen earlier. Tie the main stem to the supporting stake with soft twine or small strips of old cotton cloth. Loop the string around the stake so it will not slip down and then tic loosely below a leaf node so the stem will be supported but not Injured by binding or in any other wav. CUTWORM COLLARS The pruning is a simple matter of pinching out the side shoots as they appear. Pinch them out HEMORRHOIDS (Piles) Hemia (Rupture), Fissure or Fistula Bach dliordrt Impttr your power. For 30 yri have I uecatatuiiy irid toon aandi ol popl for lha menlt. No hot oil tl erai Moo. Wo confinement. No loti ol time from work. Call for examination or or! lor- a na a daicilpttr Booklet. Open r anno i, Mon Wf M.,7h BiSO Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC Phyletan and 8urtfcn K. f. Cor. E. Burn ilde end Ora ad Ay. Telephone EAat 3918, Portland, Oregon R.T7 &2 Varieties Prove Easy Heavy-bearing, Viiamin'rich Here's a horticultural triumph the new Pan-Amorlcan to mato. W. 8. Fort, vegetable brooder of the U. S. department of agriculture, Is holding a cron botwoon the Marglobe and South American variety. at the point where they Join the main stem. Tho tomatoes will appear on the opposite side where thcro is no leuf. Many gardeners lake precau tions against cutworms by put ting paper collars around their tomato plants when setting them out. All you need to do this Is a pin and a strip of paper about four inches wide, so rigid the cut worm can't walk up it. The col lar should go down in the dirt about an Inch. If tomato plants get good care, they will bear throughout the season, except where the intense midsummer heat of tho south kills them. In theso areas gard eners plant late crops for full use. MAYBE THEY CAN'T MOVE BOISE, Ida., (.1') Yes, there's a gasoline rationing out here, Clerk Fred R. Bagley dis covered auto parking meter col lections last month topped March, 1042, by $400. Nearly 100 years ago, Napol eon III made the prophecy that aluminum would revolutionize transportation. Welcome in peace.,, more welcome in war work I N letter after letter from ItrMif Imrvirlflnf Kjf "rirt lrtt in providing energy-giving refresh ment for workers ... In helping output and morale. Of cource, workers In war plants welcome a rest -pause ... with Ice -cold Coca-Cola to make it the pause that rcfreihcs. Ice-cold Coca-Cola quenches thirst. But It goes further to add pure, wholesome refreshment that you feel and enjoy. Made with a finished art, Coca-Cola has a taste all its own ... a goodness you always welcome. Popularity with war-workers has made Coca-Cola the symbol of the rest-pause. And remcmbcrt only The Coca-Cola Company produces Coca-Cola. Letter! from plant manager! from coait to coutt cmpha. lite that the little moment for an Ice-cold Coca-Cola means a lot to worker! In lvnr plant!. It'i a refreshing moment on the minny ilde of things , . . way to tiim to refreshment without turning from work. ri v t iau -"V A A breathing ipell, a reit-patue and Ice-cold Coca-Cola. Contentment comes when you connect with a Coke. BOTTLED UNDtS. AUtHOSITV OP THI COCA-COIA COMf ANY IY ... COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF KLAMATH FALLS 685 Spring 81. ' t i. r Few Victory Model Pressure Cookers Will Be Available CORVALLIS, April 14 Ml Some new Victory model pres sure cookers will bo available for homo" canning this year on a strictly rationed basis, ft. IV Taylor, chairman of Oregon's USDA war board, said today. Approximately 150,000 "Vic tory model" pressure conkers will be manufactured compnred with n normal annual output of 250,000 and only 64,000 In 1U42. SUCCESS KANSAS CITY, (P) F. II. MncDnnnld, member of the war bond sales committee, rehearsed his sales talk while getting n haircut. The barber listened politely and wrote out a check for $2000 worth of bonds. Every war bond you buy will furnish more power with which to turn the lights on again all over the world. Denver, Colo., was named for ucneral James W. Denver, a former governor of Kansas. war plants and I Crfr f(t nV The I J HELL URGES BIG OLD-AGE PENSION WASHINGTON. April 14 W) Immediate consideration of n liberalized old-age pension plan Is advocated by Hcprectilutlv Angell tit-Ore.) as a necessity for citizens of (10 years or mora and us a guard against Inflation. Angell told the home In a speech that tha monthly average of paymontx under the social sr. ctirlly act Is now $23 a month and "of all persons (10 years of ago or over, four fifths get lens than a minimum for decency uiiil- health." "The Income of these old peo plo is frozen, but the living costs for their slinplo fare, clothing and shelter have Increased by leaps and bounds," he added, Oregon Service Men Can Obtain Tax Exemptions SALEM, April 14 (!) Oregnrf) men In tha armed forces during any part of last year can obtain the additional $3000 Income tax exemption allowed by tha legis lature to any man In tho armed forces, tho stale tax commission said today. Many soldiers, who are enti tled to the extra exemption, al ready huvo paid their taxes. These men should send nollen to tho tax commission and they'll get refunds In ono or two montlis. Without tho written no tice, the refunds would be de layed for a year or more. DID THE JOKE8 OO TOOf HOLLYWOOD, M") Come dian Dob ilopa'i show at the Kingman, Ariz., army gunnery school ended too late last night for him to get plana or trn' sleeper accommodations hack t' his Hollywood movie job. So his sponsors sent him horn in a hired ambulance. The United Slates has approxi mately 43 per rent of the total number of radio sets In the world. Weary Feet Perk Up With Ice-Mint Treat Whfn ft tarn, lV(Hie illnf n4 wf nr tlt U lriur. don't lut ffon nrt rtt nlliln. Hub n Itltln lee-Mini. rtti wMi. r ftmIil. (U pnel(f tMrtrilna exun fori h-lp tlrfte thp fit mti pain rlftil mtl . , , llr1 mui'le rUt In vraloful rllrf. A wot lil ftf li(Trrvfir tn fr mlnq(e. IViW Ir-Mlrtl htlt vftm up tntn ftr.il) rl lfl.it ion, (id frwt hippy lUy. Ihlsf JcoHlnl Your dfuifUl Km lc-,MJnt. JL!riPS!iV' ii U f"7M best is mj always the better buy I v -4