HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PA'GR SEYEJT 0 President and Falla Enjoy Concert SECURE YOUR COLD WEATHER NEEDS NOW - FOR NEXT FALL Join Moe's Lay-away Mny 12, 1043 JAYCEES OPEN CAMPAIGN TO CLEAN, PAINT CHURCH WILL f OPEN SCHOOL1 FDR CHILDREN Tim minimi cliNiu-lip, n hit-up. i ui i in 1 1 in IK1 opened Moil day, Mny 1U, under Uio apounor lii) ul thu Junior cIiiiiiiIkm- of, ciiiinni'i'ixi, with tliu iivuwucl pur pnM) ul iiliuhslilnn jCIro luiiiinln, mltiilmi Iiuini' iiccldt'iiLs, unci I'liiiiliiiilini! ii i imi 1 1 1 1 ii i y cnndl IIuik tiirutiKhuul thu cily tu miiku 11 u In-tliM' plnco In which tu livo. An umiuI, llio ichoul children of Kliiniuth 1'iilln will pluy Iciitlinu lulu by Uikinu purl In Uiu m hunl cunli'xl. In this con tr.it thu children ma issued sllpt (niuiH-iiillni; viuloiu Jobs which limy be performed. They mo Qt kivcii week hi which tu coin-pli-to thu work und ft It In tholr cmitot nlips. At thu end of thiit tiiini thu thp.s ma collected und chrckud by coininlllco from the Junior cliunihcr uf coininercu. '1 he winning nchdul receive a cup which In thclm for Ilia cnsil ini! yeiu-. Thin your thu Jnycvn liiivo Kdunirrtccd the room which 1 1 at thu liiMhrnt point total per cnpitii, an iiftcrnoon lit a innvlnii plcttiro thcutro, free of chin KM to tint children. It iniiken no difference whether thin room Is In thu umo auliuol which wiim the cup or not, ko ono of the .schools which trulls behind the leader may produce the win nine, room, This ciinipuliin, however, Is not limited to thu contest between the schools. Every citizen, mun, wnniini or child should do. ills purl to help fulfill llio purposes Q. outlined above. It is especially Important now to diminish ccl- dents, fire i, by rcpuirlnR porches, fences, stairway, .A M4 (NF.A Tehphoto) While on a tour of military basts throughout the country, President rtooMvcIl and tin eifr-present KOlty, Falla, atopped at Ft, Rllcy, KM., and were (reeled with a concert liven by the men ot the post. Here they all on Die rear platform of lha President's train and enjoy the musla, Former Tunis Consul Tells Of German-Italian Hatred clrimlim nttics. yards and vacant lois. The plantiiiK of trees, shrubs and lawns, and the, paint Ink' and clenniiiK up of houses and other buildliiKs will be a hlK step in the beautifying of Klam ath Falls. By NOLAND BOP.GAAHD TUNIS, Muy 10 (Delayed) ()) Italian troops who already tinted their German comrades-ln-armi und wero furiously angry when they Summer Fill-Up Of Oil Explained Consumers who desire fo take adviintnidi of the summer fill-up plan for fuel oil, for heating or lint waler purposes, und who have n storage capacity of 150 Kallons or more, mny now ap ply to the local War Price and Hationlnc board for coupon to make such a fill-up. No panic ulnr form la necessary, and the application can be made In per son or by mail by simply making the request lmmcdlntely, OPA official remind the con' (tuner, however, that the sum mer fill-up ration is part of next year's allotment. OPA expressed the hopo that many consumers with tho lnrger capacity tank will take advantage of this plan during tho summer in order to relieve tho stnrago facilities of tho dealer. heard Hint Nuzl Field Marsha! Erwln Rommel was withdrawn from Africa to save him from responsibility for the axis de- "On the night the American troops got lo Djcdcida. the Ger mans were ready to evacuate," he said. "Their general staff had their bags all packed at the hotel Majestic" (in which this dispatch is being Written) "and planes were ready to leave with them The Community Congregation al church will establish through out the summer month a school or children whoso parents arc working If there is a popular demand for such a school. This school would operate six day each week and would begin early in the morning and close after the parents had returned from work. At present It Is planned to care for children from six to 1Z years of age with the opening of a de partment for younger children if tho registration warrants such action. At all times during the day competent supervisors and in structors will be in charge of the children. The program will in clude such vacation-time activi ties as craft and art work, com munity singing, dramatics, games, dory hours, hikes, picnics and worship. Additional Information may be had by calling Rev. Eugene V. ilaynes at 5226 or contacting him at 2160 Garden avenue. baclo In Tunisia, It was reported jfor Italy. Evory fighting soldier PRACTICAL KANSAS CITY, (P) Reginald Plumridgo, TWA pilot from Val ley Stream, Long Island, N. Y., bought 10 pounds of potatoes, washed them and placed them In his traveling kit. His wlfo hnd requested them as a Mother a Day gift. "We haven't been able to buy potatoes on Long Island for thrco weeks," ho explained. Gorgeous Grabfe t 'I t A fa (; S) ' 'ijl ) t-',; Hetty arable's swim suit proves ' t-'ven mo current clothes con servation trend is not without) It attraction. here today. "All during the time they were in Tunisia, the Germans and Italians would not speak to each other," said Lcland R. A. Smith, formerly of Portland, Ore., who served as United State consul in Tunis for eight years preced ing the war. Smith hud been held under arrest at his home In the Tunis suburb of La Marsa for the past six months. "Italians and Germans were never seen together on the streets," he said, "and refused to frequent the same hotels and cafes. "Italians living In Tunis are confident that the peoplo of Italy won't stand much more and be lieve that a revolution is brew ing." Smith disclosed for the first lime Just how close the allied gnmblo on reaching Tunis with a small expeditionary force early In December came to success. Champoeg Park to Get Dress-Up as Oregon Shrine PORTLAND. May 12 (IP) Champoeg park is going to be dressed up in a style befitting an Oregon shrine. So said tho stalo highway com mission, which will take over on June 9 the maintenance of the site where Oregon's first pro visional government was formed 100 years ago. Commissioners announced the state park superintendent has selected one of hi experienced men as the park caretaker, and agreed that a qualified curator should run the museum of Ore gon history there. They a i d approximately $5000 will be spent this year In salaries and improvements. Ship Crock-Ups Not Caused by Use of Defective Steel WASHINGTON, May 12 W) Investigation of ship structural was assistant military attache at- i failures has furnished no inaiea- Bucharcst from 1918 to 1920 and tlon so far that they have been caused by defective steel, Chair man Jackson (D-Wash.) of the nd every gun they had was sent Into the line. "The distant gunfire rattled the windows of my house. But then gunfire faded and we knew the allied forces had been driven back." Smith was a captain In the U. S. army in the first World war, serving as liaison officer with the Ercnch army and won the French Legion of Honor. Ho represented the United States with the southern white Russian army and was wounded near Rostov. After eight years as U. S. con sul at Tunis, he was consul at Praha for a year and a half, then retired and settled at Nice, France, where he was corres pondent for tho New York Her ald Tribune until he returned with his wife to Tunis a short time before French resistance I to the Germans collapsed. OWI Prefers Blondes, But Save Your Tresses, Girls! By KARL BAUMAN WASHINGTON, May 12 OP) The office of war Information like blondes as well as the next fellow, but it doesn't need any of their hair honest! So, Blondic, put away the scissors and relax. An avalanche of parcels con taining everything from single strands to sizeable hanks fol lowed a report that OWI wanted long blonde tresses for war pro duction purposes. Since it hud no use for the hair, OWI scurried about and found that the Washington In stitute of Technology, College Park, Md which has a war con tract, could uso a limited quan tity In making weather Instru ment. Tho hair and a few bales of correspondence went to this compnny. .For hair that Is ac cepteel the price I $1 an ounce, payable In war bonds. OWI reported that Its blonde hair correspondent Indicated "an Intense desire to make a con tribution to the war effort," only a few of them asking any pay ment. From a Massachusetts- town camo a shocbox lined with blonde tresses, tho donor ex plaining that she hnd lost a cousin in North Africa and she was giving the government "a most treasured possession" to help win rovenge. In Albuquorquc, IN. M., tho Dazed Woman Steps Off 300-Foot Bank PORTLAND, Mny 12 (P) Dazed from Injuries she had Just suffered in an automobile acci dent, TliercsB L. Ilcsch, 19, Port land CHfo waitress, stumbled over a nun-toot precipice near Crown Point on the Columbia River highway curly todHy unci was killed. Deputy Sheriff Art Bowe said nn automobile driven by W. W. Knight, 36, Portland, went out of control, struck a heavy guard railing, was thrown against a deep bank and turned over. state office of OWI, from which an appeal for blondo hair origi nated, asserted emphatically that the call for hair had been stop ped. Keen Raffcrty, chief of the Albuquerque OWI office, was reported ill at a hospital by his staff and was not available for comment. Raffcrty's office said, how ever, that the call for tresses had resulted In a rush of mail which brought hair In packages, en velopes and paper sacks. A refrigerator Is where you put dishes containing a little food when you don't want to wash them. house merchant marine subcom mittee probing the problem said yesterday. Jackson said the evidence In dicated that tho several report ed cases of vessels "cracking up" yvoro due to so-called "locked up" stresses, resulting from pro cedure followed in mass produc tion, and that "bugs" developed in the process were being Ironed out. Cities League Opens Session PORTLAND, May 12 IP) The League ot Oregon Cities and the Oregon Finance Officers as sociation opened a Joint session here today. City attorneys, finance officers and utility managers held sep arate conferences today. George Yantis of the national resources planning board will speak to morrow. MILLIONS OF JOBS More than one out of every four new workers In essential war plants in 1942 were hired through the U. S. employment service, which made 10,000,000 placement all told. , Anti-aircraft guns protect us from enemy attack by air. It takes 1060 $50 war bonds, at only $37.50 each, to build one. ' CORTLAND. ORISON Hundreds are using our thrifty Lay-away Plan to secure their bedding needs. Only 10 down on any purchase few? jWik IALANCE IN SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS Wool-o-the-West Reveille BLANKETS Produced by the famous Portland Woolen Mills and constructed to comply with government regulations. Woven to give maximum warmth and long wear. 72x90 size. 64 selected virgin wool TTt ivvtQC ea. 12 rayon for silky (ofrnes 20 tint combed cotton in the warp ASSORTED SOLID TONES Also in deep-tones in 75 wool and 75 cotton 72x84 at 10.95 Fieldcrest Celamar BLANKETS Celamar blankets by Marshall-Field are created of 50 celanese rayon, 25 fine wool, .and 25 cotton. Firm ly woven for long wear and e long full nap for warmth. Full slie wide latin binding. Solid touts in pastel and deep tones. Fieldcrest Mar-Ray BLANKETS 'Rich pastel solid tones and jacquard floral patterns. A heavy weight long nap blanket of super warmth. rayon and f OK ea. 10 wool 65 25 cotton. All colors Special Double 10 Wool BLANKETS Warm wearable Fieldcrest quality blan kets, full 72x84 size. Firmly woven twill finish, plaid designs in three colors. 7Q Excellent values at X Down-Filled COMFORTERS Beautiful lustrous satin in lovely trapunto designs. Ex pertly quilted of finest snag-proof and feather-proof sat in. Deep-tones and pastel colors. 72x84. IT Use Our Lay-Away Plan To Secure Any Comforter 25 Down, 75 Goose Feather Pillows An excellent quality pillow with fine feather-proof linen finish ticking. Quantity is limited purchase early. 95 USE OUR CLUB PLAN lea. Secure Your Cotton Blankets Now.. For Next Fall Double Plaid Sheet Blankets nxn, an eoior,, Pair .... Heavy White Sheet Blankets 80x95. Eeh Single White Sheet Blankets 70)(84i fIn, qainr, Etej, 90 Wool Gray Camp 198 Blankets Mxe2( Wh, thiy la,t( Mch 2!9 1 79 339 4 macs TUt WOMAN'S STCftE,iNc i