PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALIS. OREGON MT 18. 1MI OUR MEN AND WOMEN IN SERVICE 1 1 1 1 GRADUATES Howard Burrell of Klamath Falls Is included among the members of a recent huge graduating class at the Har tlngen, Tex., aer ial gunnery school. . Howard Is one of the men chosen to fill I V the s 1 o t s in f bomber crews. He will sit in the front row ' f aerial combat liui.'tnf UAn. lemma m.w . v- jeance recently r -admonished by General H. H. Arnold, commander of the air forces. He received his diploma and silver gunner's wings at the brief exercises.- As soon as he finishes another brief technical course, he will receive his sergeant's chevrons. , PROMOTED Martin J. Mc Grath ' of the United States M a r in e s and stationed, at,, Bremerton,! Wash, has . just I been promoted I to private first class. He enlist-- cd in . June,' i .1942, and wasrv j. Kill, tJ WUijMJ Dieeo i or nis MHv basic training. j .While there, Mot? .Grath .was -awarded ah ex- ,'s( pert rifleman's! ,r medal. He was! transferred to I Xm last summer, Pfc. McGrath is the brother of Delia McGrath of Klamath Falls. I .. ... . .... - Sgt.-: 3r Zi.- (Jimmie) Richey who recently" returned from 14 months service with the AAC in the southwest Pacific visited with his father,- mother and friends in Klamath Falls and also with the O. J. Severin fam ily in Yreka. - Mrs. Severin is his aunt : Jimmie Is now In Nashville, Tenn., where he has qualified for flight training and is waiting to be sent to flying school. t Sgt. Bob Richey has lust com' pleted the course in aerial gun nery at Harlinghi, Texas, and received the Silver wings award ed to aerial gunners. At pres ent he -is stationed at AAB, Salt Lake City, where he will take a course-in advanced arma ment' i . , A new class of aviation cadets, eager for the second phase of their flight instruction, has ar rived at : the Garden City army air field in. Kansas. From Oregon comes Aviation Cadet Don F. Ta ber of this city, a former UCLA student where he trained with the ROTA. Don is a former Long Bell Lumber company employe. He has one brother, Roy Taber, now in the quartermaster corps Cadet Taber completed primary flight training at Cimarron field, OKla. FORT MYERS, Fla. Sgt. Carl M. Scott,, son of Mrs. Lenora Scott, 523 Prescott street, Klam ath Falls, was graduated Mon day from the army air forces flexible gunnery school at Fort Myers, Fla. Sgt. Scott entered the army eight months ago and has completed the radio school at Madison, Wis., and radar course at Boca Raton, Fla. As a civilian he was a baker. Corporal Fred H. Stabler, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Stabler, 2007 Modoc street, Klamath Falls, has been enrolled in a spe cial course of instruction at the Signal corps school at Camp Murphy, Fla. Cpl. Stabler was selected for this specialized train ing on the basis of his aptitude. pr- r ONLY A j 'The More the efv Merrier" Hos a l"Din9,e" i ' Starts Qv W2d) ' Midnight ?Sjtff Saturday : PELICAN r 'JEAnSX J ;' :im'- " CHARLES TO SAN DIEGO Rollo F. Eng land, 20, naval reserve, eon of Mr. and Mrs. R. F. England of 919 East Main street, will leave tonight, Thursday, for San Diego to report at the navy base there. He has been graduated from a 12-weeks navy aerogr a p h e r's school at Lake wood, N. J a semi - independ ent unit of the naval air sta tion, navy's to rn o u s lighter-than-air base at Lakehurst. He has been vanced to the petty officer rating of aerographer's mate third class. England served as photographer at The Herald and News before enlisting December 7, 1942, and is a graduate of Klamath Union high school. He has been visiting his family for a week. Promoted to corporal earlier this week was Irby E. Hosea, 42, of 314 . Washington street, Klamath Falls. Hosea is at the naval air station in Seattle. He enlisted in the marine corps a year ago this month for guard duty at shore establishments. Irwin E. Campbell, former res ident of Klamath Falls, is now instructing aviation cadets at Sequoia Field, Visalia, Calif. His wife, Carrie, and two children Mi TODAY Doors Open 1i30-6:46 97 , ,,st3 Iff 1 Is? ft ,'-'" f ' ' D are -now making their home in Visalia. Campbell is the son ot Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Campbell, prominent ranchers and pioneers of the county. . . Promotion of Mark I. Hnnna, headquarters battery. Camp Mackall, N. C, to the rank of corporal was announced this week by Lt. Col. Quandt, com manding officer. Fighting units of the 11th airborne division will move into combat by para chutes, transports and glider planes. The 11th, among the first division to be assigned this role in the U. S. military history, is now undergoing intensive I training in airborne tactics at I Camp Mackall, , Corp.: iianna is the son o Mr. and Mrs. Ted i Blanchard of 2027 Earle street, Klamath Falls. Promotion from private first class to corporal was announced today for Jeffery W. Brown of 2025 Vine street, Klamath Falls, by Colonel Edgar R. Todd, com manding officer of the Stutt gart army air field, Stuttgart, Ark., where Cpl. Brown, is sta tioned. - ON SUBMARINE DUTY Henry E. Mbnagan, second class seaman, is in submarine duty in the Pacific. He is the son of Jean Elliott, 747 Alameda street, Klamath Falls, who temporarily is in Portland helping to build ships as a welder. Monagan formerly worked for the South ern Pacific. '. Easter greetings in poetic form reached friends from Keith Ru conich, now in New Guinea where he has been stationed since last September. Keith now holds the rank of sergeant in the United States army. He is a for mer salesman for Standard HQ3IH Z i-nflffin'siiiiM Brands and well known in this city. PT GUNNER Morgan E. Brown is a gunner, first class, on the famous PT boats which made his tory in the early days of the South Pacific war. He Is still serving in Hint area according to 1 word received here. Two broth ers are also in the service, Don ald, signalman, 2c, somewhere in the Pacific theatre of war, and Jimmy, who has just completed training in the navy hospital corps at Farragut, Idaho. They are sons of Mrs. W. L. Goodwin of this city, and grandsons -of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Morgan, 5108 Avalon street, Klamath Falls. The steel production capacity of the British Empire is approxi mately 20,600,000 net tons per year. "TufaA ;..;. Vats The gratest air spectacle ever made with the RAFI KH Itw iklM wHfi (tie itlhmtmif ( tlw OAF end t ,000 plonM loadxt' with dtttruttlent Ths dscrfMiig reafj (f ttw ok-of ever the chaniwl k . . targat tlghftd Iwavy -ofc praying luddtn'dtoth OMB fcWAYI r. . 9t craih end thundr omJ Itr1 ef Iwe-ton blofk-butttrl en farsolf: Menwwaml bgmf . flack gtttlng tNI HITI MOTOt OONtl tOSINO ALTITUOII Bll OUT In wsrM'i moil xtHtng odvniuri -.endyou'n Hnnttlhn tvryholr. tuHhg Mcem Youllntvttforgtt III ADDED HITS "Road to Tokyo" Color Cartoon News Events Oregon News Notes By Th Associated Press OPA district headquarter wtirned buyers of rental prop erty that eviction certificates must be obtained from rent con trol offices before tenant can bo ordered to vacate. , . . The Silvcrton city council announced a $40,000 water filtration plant as post-war project. . , . Mar ion Whitmer's $25,000 breach of promise suit against Phil Brady. Portland Inbor leader and state representative, opened in Port land circuit court Karl Ernst, San Francisco, was named music director of the Portland public school system as the school board began consid eration of a proposed 1943-44 budget of $7,060,067, an increase of $1,076,388. . . . Portland Cir cuit Judgo A. C. Dickson award ed Sarah Elizabeth Kern, Min neapolis, $13,000 accrued ali mony and support money from the estate of Don Kern, former McMinnville district resident. Navy recruiting headquarters at Portland announced the en listment of Charles A. Rentz, Drain; Frederick Cummins, Dun- HI LAST DAY H 'The Other Woman and 'Keep 'Em Lauging" New TOMORROW D0UIU HORROR SHOWl PTTTrm s i IIIV 1 1 Wl W I I woman made who has been 'I with John Howard Ggl No. 2 I oiosai HOIMII 1 J. CAHOl NAIfH terrors of enemy occu- I ' ; pation. See her story 4 ' and the story she made of she wanted., D.,K.t b, rn ftn Play by DudUy Nichols STARTS Tomorrow dee; Charlie C. Mayhugh, Eu gene; George N. Fredoen, John M. Single, Robort L. Thompson, Grants Pass; John S. Turnbull Sr., Salem; Franklin P. Mitchell Jr., Wolf Creek; Donald E. Fry, Ends Tonight i infflil'i'li M "STRANQI PIUPLS" Jlljl NlKlUU l l Natlm llll Ill TOMORROW II 0 THRILLER I 111 FILLERS I ill ARNOLD . HARDING . REEOl 1 wt JOEL McCREA lA 4S95j? . Latest War J Prices This Engagement ADDED HITS News Erenis - "Minstrel Dars" s '" IH'llj irnTf.. Color Cartoon Kewe i j -Tgr- r I III I I I J W I for love, forced to J f of the man . ,,e, the man CHIRLES LAUGBTON rtrn ii . .. GEORGE SANDERS KENT SMITH r . ... ' A WAN RENOIR PtcduCtfoti - Corvallis; Em II J. Thontdyke, Dayton; Frank J. Jackson Jr., Mill City; Merle G. Trumbly, West Salem Portland coast guard recruiters announced that LeRoy F. Bnlousek, Lebanon, and Lyle D. Vim Dyke, Salem, have enlisted. MOVES 1 TOWER TODAY .... IT'S A BUT IT'S SUCH Doors Open 6:45 iver.', . - i, - - . ,:, ,, f i ' t, t. : ' -.'ft MAURE'ESv n?ri ii a WALTER SLEZAK ' UNA O'CONNOR - DUDLEY NlLtiVU The Caravan Is built mostly of nnii-esnenunl materials; Is a eaf go currier which mny be wtd m un ambulance and troop treat port, Insure with and BE sure. Ill If, 7th Si, SCANDAL! A PLEASURE! 0 i f FLASH! 1 "its me runniest VPbntN hi Yeerel . ,jyA ... JiUftM Mi I h iiT I T j I ft (Cm v. m 1 tf ENDS TONIGHT Joan Crawford John Wayne In "REUNION IN FRANCE" ; nrauMHiiiisim j DOORS OPEN 1:30 and 6:45