PAGE TEN HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON E MPLOYEHS TO MONEY BY NEW RA T Experience rating will save employers more than two mil' lion dollars in contributions on 1943 payrolls, according to an analysis made public today by the state unemployment com' pensatlon commission. ' Based on last year's reports, 3805 employers qualifying for reduced rates will pay approxl' mately $2,181,000 less than at the normal 2.7 per cent, in a dition 1157 concerns will-save about $264,000 because the "ceiling" has eliminated penalty rates. Taxable payrolls reported by covered firms for 1942 were $534,228,939, an . Increase of nearly 58 per cent from the $339,033,906 reported for 1941 Last year's total was more than double the $247,636,634 payrolls for 1940. Average contribution rate of the 9060 firms employing four or more workers is estimated to be about 2.3 per cent for 1943 This compares with 2.4 per cent last year. Under the present Jaw, reduced rates go to those firms maintaining a ' reserve ratio of more than 8 per cent of the annual average payroll, Red Cross Noies It may be of interest to Klam ath Falls theatre goers to know the result of the collections which were taken in the theatres during the week . of the Red (Cross theatre drive. Today, the check for the total amount was turned over to our local Eed Cross chapter and the amount was $1325.22. which gave grand boost to our War Fund drive quota. Not only is your Red Cross chapter appreciative but the Klamath theatres would like , this opportunity to thank all those who so generously do- nated. . , , Please note: If you are listed as "next to kin" on any service man s record, and should move to another locality, be sure and leave your forwarding or emer gency address with your post of fice here. Thousands of vital messages concerning service- men, as well as a large number of undelivered allotment' checks have been returned to Washing ton from all parts of the country in the past few months, stamped Unclaimed. The Red Cross makes every attempt to trace the persons, to whom the messages were orig inally sent, at the request of the war and navy departments. However,, please do your part in leaving your address where your serviceman's message can be sent to you. Here's another new Red Cross service: Escort vessels of the British and other allied navies are now being equipped with Red Cross emergency clothing kits for rescued seamen, identi cal to those supplied to the U. S. navy and coast guard. Including a dozen items for personal use, slacks, underwear, sweatshirts, ' socks, sandals, and assorted toi let articles and necessities, these kits have proven a genuine boon to men rescued from lifeboats and rafts after long days of hard ship and torture. Convicted Husband Slayer Gets Finaj Pardon in Idaho BOISE, Idaho, April. 21 ,(S)-r The last strings that attached mrs. tiyaa soutnara, convicted poison slayer of the fourth of . ner six nusDanas, to the Idaho prison, were severed today. The state pardons board made final a conditional pardon grant ed . Mrs. Southard 18 months ago. The middle-aged woman- has spent ner tree months quietly on her sister's farm at Nyssa, Ore. Mrs. Southard's prison career included an escape -over the walls and freedom : for 30 months during which she mar ried a sixth time. Husband No. 6 obtained an annulment after ner arrest. . In 1923, tiny scout planes were built to be used in runs. Ing ahead of submarines and Uncling victims and then flv big back to the submarine and cmg taken aboard again. HEMORRHOIDS (Piles) Hirnia (ftupton), Fissure or Fistula ouon aiiordtri Inpalr font unds ei people (or thai .III tion. No oonflntnant. No ih oiiintRomwork, Call ' MaminaHoB oi sand for IRIS daiorfBliv HMb. Open f venngt, Mon., Wco., frt, 7 fo Bt$0 Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC PftyalcKi end turfo M. I. Cor. E. Burnilct. and Grind At. T.l.phoa. KA.I 3B1B, Portlmd, Or.jon rTT;ls scunni Ni l,'!! . I 'I II III '"I I'll II I Will I I Ml II 'I'HI' isil Jwti'Nrttl j1 nn' i pot lllllllllilll'lllift By ANITA GWYN CAMPBELL The Home Economics club has carried on its drive for waste fats, used silk and nylon for some time. The final day for contributions is April 29. Eighty pounds of fats and 92 i pounds of silk and nylon have been collected. Frances GJevre is president of the club. The rent mon ey for caps and gowns is being collected this week by home room representatives. Twenty- five cents will be returned after I commencement if you don't wish to keep the tassle. Plans are getting underway for the Junior-Senior prom, Fri day. April 30, at 8:30 p. m. Committee heads will be an. nounced later. A new display entitled "Easter Parade," is arranged . in the showcase. The latest styles in Easter bonnets are also exhibit ed. Bettie Hopkins 3,577,970 Betty McKinney 2,582,675 Vivian Dirschl 3,252.395 Sally Mueller 2,946,633 Say, it looks as If the seniors are going to have some tough competition from the sopho mores. RENO LICENSES RENO, April 21 (P) Marriage licenses issued yesterday includ ed: J. F. Adams Jr., 52, Merrill, and Ruth S, Turner, 48, Klamath Falls; Kenneth R. Moore. 35, and Stacy M. Engbloom, 35, both Klamath Falls. LEGION AIDS UN MS ES TRAINING Mrs. Al Longmlre, national defense chairman of the Ameri can Legion auxiliary, has just been advised that the sum of $50,000 was set aside by the na tional executive committee of the American Legion, to be used in aiding women between the ages of 18 and 33 years to enter nurses training or to complete a nurses training course. This is not a loan, advises Mrs. Longmlre, but amounts up to $250 will be given to student nurses already enrolled in an ac credited school of nursing who find themselves so lacking in funds that they would have to withdraw from school, and to young women having completed high school and whose character requirements have boen ap proved and accepted by an ac credited school of nursing, and who, without financial aid, could not enter training to become nurses. ' Application forms and further information may be obtained by contacting Mrs. Longmlre at 715 Owens street, or by calling at the Legion hall. MIXUP CHARLOTTE. N. r cal Mrs. Richard Kent Jr., received a letter from Limit Rlfhnrri Kent Jr., an army flier In the oouinwesi taenia area, saying he enjoyed her many loiters, "I'm nlensprl with li nnnvlinte of yourself" and he was sorry he wasn't her husband, but really, he was a bachelor. YOll ffllP.Ori it- th lnll.M were Intended for her husband Lieut. Richard Kent Jr., an army flier on duty in the South west Pacific. Big Douglas Fir Log Taken From North Bend Area NORTH BEND, Wash., April 21 W) The biggest Douglas fir log ever taken out of the North Bend area by truck received a state patrol escort yesterday to a Lake Washington boom. The 200-foot giant, felled a month ago, was 10 H feet In diameter at the base. It was cut Into 20-foot sections for the long haul. The four marketable sections went to the Elliott Bay Lumber company for plywood. OUR YOUNGER GENERATION DENVER, rn rvmir,.nH John Armbeck, 9, placed a mat tress atop a downtown garage, climbed to the roof of a business building nearby, took a long run and jumped Into space. Hurtling 30 feet, he missed the mattress, hit the garage roof and caromed off another 15 feet to tho alley pavement. Physicians trrnli-H him far slight head Injury. April 21, 194 Blockvood and Slabs Now ii tho time to buy your Blockwood and Green Pine Slab. Prompt deliveries mode. 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