Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1943)
July 21. 1043 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE SEVEW i 0 O MOOSE GIF L L i Frank J. Lulled, tupreme ! I! (i v o r it o r, Loyal Order of i Moose, will pity h vliilt to tlir : Kliimiitli loduo on Frlduy, i July 2:1, en roulo to Moose Mivurt, 111. ! Ufflt'cm o tha lodiie here ' Miiti-ri tlml they fuel fortunate . Unit L Hi' I I'ii Itinerary Included ) Kluinntli Fulls, and prepare i lion (or program In hl lion- VISITS LQCA DOGE FRIDAY ' or 11 ro bring mode. Including ! dims lultliitluu to ba held at the ; hull on Pino trect Frldiiy eve . nlng. ! Lullull Is considered one o( the lending fraternallsts of the Qcw Knglund slates, and he li hi authority In the manufac ' lure of textile. Ho wai born In 1BIH ut IturlliiKton, VI. i On April 14. 1010. ho joined tho Loyul Order of Mooso at ! llnnton, Mass., Iod(o No. 347, transferring hi membership oflcr llio wnr to Wallhiuri, Mum., IoiIko No. 1018, Ho filled ; nil the chair of tho lodge, re . celved ull tho higher degree of ; the order, and In 1037 win elected supremo councilman. At tho 1U41 convention In Indian apolis, ho wa unanimously ; elected supreme Junior govern- or, nnd win elected to hit pre ent office at tho 1042 conven- ; tlon at Mooiieheart. ! In addition to the high office thut he hold In tho Mooso, he In pii.it exalted ruler of the Elk, post president of tha Eagle and aunt officer of tho Modern Voodmen of America, FCC, SAYS CRM WASHINGTON, July 21 T. A. M. Craven, member of tho federal communication com n.iMli.n InM thft Cfill lnVeStlffftt i luu commltleo today that FCC Chairman Jome L. Fly largely dominate commission affair. Tho testimony prompted E. L. rnri.u rnnmiiitee counsel, to churgr that Kly "oiwumos and ' usurps" power that should be exercised by tlio lull evon-mom Ainhrnmmlulnn. " Clmlrmnn Cox (D-Ga.) told the commltleo ho wa gelling Infor- ,iIW (lint "hronrirastcrs big and little live In mortal fear of the commission and thai it Itrnnititia nnwerii are bcins used "to destroy free rndlo and free speech. Gnrey remarKea xnai commission actlvltlt are aneci Ing the free press but did not amplify his observation. OPEN-DOOR POLICY GREAT FALLS, Mont., P)- . There wcro no hitching posts, o two cowboy tied their horse to , the back door of a cafe. The horse went away. The proprietor also went away lo ask polico about getting him another door- Have a Coca fmilmth Ssfjtl 1 aMB Jllllif 1 cJuit friendly abbreviations. That' B VUlJ )$ W l, 1 rWRM :h you hear CbclaMW. . . , . or how to make friends at home or abroad Tpf"y' S,!V When the American soldier overseas meets up with Coca-Cola, it's like meet ing an old pal. Haw at "Coit", says he to a stranger, and In three words he has made a new buddy. From Minneapolis to Melbourne, Coca-Cola stands for the pause that refreshes has become the mark of the good neighbor, the high-sign of the friendly-minded his spread from Atlanta to the Seven Seas. IOTTICD UNDIIt' AUTHORITY OP THI COCA-COIA COMPANY IV COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF KLAMATH FALLS 665 Spring St. . phon 8832 .Visits Here Frank 3. LaBall. lunriml aov- rnor of tha Loyal Order of Moo, will visit ih Klamath lodge on Friday. July 23. WILLIAM BDTHWELL DIES HERE TUESDAY William Addison Bothwell, 84 died at 6:15 p. m. Tuesduy al tho homo of hi daughter, Mrs Glenn Kent, 737 Pacific Terraco. Mr. Bothwell had mado hi homo In thl city for the past four years, Final rites will ba held next week In Rockford, 111., and bur In I will take place In the family plot at tho ildo of Mr. Bothwell. Mr. Kent and her daughter, Joy, will accompany tho remain!" to Rockford on Friday. William Bothwell wa born In Ontario, Canada, August 31, 1858. son of William Bothwell a Methodist minister. He was married In 1872 to Rachel Scott Sho died In January, 1036 Dur- ing hi lifetime Mr. Bothwell wa Interested In dairying and for many years wa an outland ing cheese maker In the Platte ville. Wis., area. For eight years the Bothwell family lived In Rockford. Active In the Methodist church during his long life, Mr. Both' well wa also a member of the Masonic lodge and tho Order of the Eastern Star. He wa not in robust health .during his year apent here and hi primary in terest wa In his grandchildren. In addition to his daughter, Mrs. Kent, Mr. Bothwell Is sur vived by a second daughter, Mrs, Violot Colloton of Mllwnukle, Wis-, and two sons, Ord Both' well of Minonk, III., and Arthur Bothwell of Chicago. Tho four children will attend rites In Rockford, Mrs. Kent stated. There will be a funeral serv ice held at Ward's Funeral Homo chapel Thursday at 2 p. m., it was announced. New German Gun , Shells England LONDON, July 21 () A new German gun of exceptional range has shelled the English coast thrco times recently from the French coast across the channel, it was learned today The gun Is reported to have greater range than any the Germans are known to have concentrated near Calais the nearest point to England. - Cola Howdy, MUNDT BLASTS T 10 WRA JAPS WASHINGTON. July 21 (P) Terming expenditure of public funds for teaching Japanese and Judo ut war relocation centers indefensible, Representative Mundt (R-S.D.) contends such practices should be discontinued. Mundt, a member oi tne Dies subcommittee investigating the Japuncso problem, said In a statement published in the Con gressional Record today that war relocation authority (WRA) officials Informed tha subcom mittee-several hundred dollars monthly 1 being (pent lor such purposes. This, the congressman de clared, is "a glaring example of what not to do if relocation renters are to crvo a Ameri canization unit for the people of Japuncso ancestry who are confinod in them. Describing Judo as a form of Jupuncso military training in which participant are trained to malm or kill their adversar ies, Mundt declared that use of public funds for such instruc tion Is "about as sensible as It would be to use taxpayers' money to provldo textbook in sabotage." FBI Investigates Freight Derailment MONROEVILLE, O., July 21 (Pi Federal bureau of invcstlga. lion agents today sought the cause of the derailment and ex plosion of a munitions-laden Wheeling and Lake Erie freight train which showered thl city of 1200 Willi shell fragment and brought local civilian defense workers Into action to protect the citizenry. Train officials said one of three "transients" seen riding the train before the explosion was killed and that another was missing and believed dead. The only body found was burned be yond recognition. The explosion occurred late Sunday when the munitions cars left the tracks, dragging 14 others along. Propeller blades are painted black to reduce reflected glare on tho pilots eyes and tho air plane's visibility to the enemy, and tipped with yellow to mako tha blades sufficiently visible at close range to offer greater safety when the plane is ground ed at its base. it I a. 1 AG JUDO Neighbor, 'round the world Dangerous Dan Turns on Author Like Frankenstein VANCOUVER, B. C, July 21 (CP) The famous Danger ous Dan McGrcw I a Frank enstein monster to his crea tor Robert W, Service, In Van couver attending the meeting of the Canadian Author' as sociation. "I've been touring USO camps In the United States," Service said in an interview today. "Tho men always yell at me, 'Give U Dan McGrew.' I recife it but I'm sick of it. I wa ilck of It a soon as I fin ished writing It." SOLDIERS ID BE USED AS MINERS WASHINGTON, July 21 W) Miner of vital metal are need-1 ed so badly that 4300 soldier who know something about the ! trade will be mustered out for 1 Jobs in the larger-producing ' mines. ! Tho disclosure wa made yes- terday by Robert P, Patterson, 1 acting secretary of war, who nii th mllifurv nrnffram was : being Jeopardised by manpower , shortages in copper, line anu , molybdenum mines. Soldiers will be released through the ninth service com- j mand at Fort Douglas, Utah. Where possible those in the scrv- i ice less than three months will be selected. Any men slated to go overseas soon will not be eligible for release. ; The shift from uniform to mln.r ran will ha voluntary: none of the men have to do it unlffc thiv want to. Patterson emphasized. Once they are back in the mine, tney win re ci vilians not under army turis- diction, but subject to recall if condition change. Mill Razed by Fire As Rail Cars Block Fire Department R1DGEFIELD, Wash., July 21 (P) Fire destroyed completely the Braille brothers lumber mill here lato last night and slightly damaged tho shingle plant. . J. L. Bratlic, president, esti mated loss at $150,000. Tho fire broke out of the dry kilns and got a roaring itart. The Ridgefield volunteer fire de partment was unable to reach the mill at once because the road was blocked for 20 minutes by two logging trains. SUGAR hign-sign i j fANEvJ aW.fl 1 lilt fcMtVa "More and Better1' Local Produce Comes to Market "More and belter" li tho opin ion of Klamath Ball storekeep ers on local .fruit and vegetable produce. "There I more home grown green stuff in the stores this year than there wai last," one store manager declared, ' and It' of much better quality." Some of the local fruit and vegetables now obtainable at grocery stores are peas, turnips, lettuce, spinach, onions, radishes, currants and strawberries. Lettuce is 100 per cent home grown now, one retailer said, and some growers are shipping their lettuce to outside markets. Home grown potatoes are start ing to appear in the markets, and will increase In quantity. The average quality of Klam ath raised table greens and fruits is far better than that which is being shipped in. Most of the turnip, currant, itraw Etide Til i-1! r-TTt . i rn for the. Wi,"0KM KrA (v z T ' . 1. WHAT IS THE SHANGRI-LA? carrier to b built with War Saving Stamps purchased this month ... to bomb Tokyo io destruction! 2. WHAT ABOUT THE JEEPS? swTi1 Get Your Sears One-stop Shopping Center makes it easy to buy all your needs at once . . . including Stamps berries and lettuce which you'll buy from the grocer is grown not fur from town. Some Victory gardeners, those persons who receive tho Victory garden rate from the California Oregon Power company, have been selling produce from their back yard plots, it I rumored. This Is not pcrmissable under the garden rate program, accord ing to Copco officials, and Is in violation of the rule. Offenders are doing so unwittingly, it was observed, but in order to keep the rate It is necessary that food stuffs grown under the Victory garden program be used only for home consumption. Alphonso I, in 1147, aided by French, German and English crusaders, helped establish Por tuguese independence from the Moor by seizing Lisbon. in co Joaps bo brought her thi Thursday. Friday and Sat urday by the retail merchants committee of ih chamber of commerce to stimulate tho Stamp sal. Don't Forget Bond Purchases The woman of Soroptimist and B. P. W. clubs, who ar sponsoring tho bond drive this month, need tha help of every individual. Our men on foreign soil ar giving everything. Back them up with Bonds! Free Jeep Ride Ticket Investigation Made In Army Plane Crash PORTLAND, July 21 fP) Portland army air base officials investigated today the unex plained crash of a two-motored transport that plummeted in a sharp dive onto a Columbia river Island near here, killing the four men aboard. Witnesses said black smoke was seen to pour from the plane shortly before It crashed from a height of 700 feet yesterday. The wreckage burned.- ' The air base said two officers and two enlisted men were Pi LES SUCCESSFULLY TREATED HO PAIN - NO HOSPITALIZATION H. UN at Tim Permanent Rewiul DR. L M. MARSHA Mraaraetie mm m Haatfu- - saoum THutra sua, Hnr JMI 3. WHO CAN RIDE IN A JEEP? SMoS worth of War Stamps this weak will b given a fraa rid by a soldier. You can gat free rid ticket with each 12.00 Stamp purchase. 4. WHERE ARE TICKETS with each $2.00 Stamp purchase, at any store in town. All merchants are selling Stamps, and ask that you take part of youl change in War Stamps. at Sears or Any Other aboard, but name were not dis closed at once, MEAT GOES FAR WITH ALL-BRr.II "BRAIIBURGERS" Here a new way to Mm that oM i favorite, the tuunbunnr. Make it wU- xauoaa'a all-hum to stntoh tha' mu supply, to give in popular 1 burger now Interest, and to aeei all-mam's nutritional beneata wui ota proteins, carbohydrates, lull and mineral. J tuba's AA-Itm leee 2 Uajpeoneatlt tMJtmoa pappet 2 Uhlnpoon. 1 tablespoon - : hoppd pane I 1 rap milk 4 : cup catsup 7 I I nip K.lkjrt I ' solaced onion J cup K.ltoeaf All-Bna 1 poind sroaad beef onion, pareley, milk, eataup aac All-Bran. Let soak until moat of mo la tura Is taken up. Add beef and rntst thoroughly. Shape Into 12 patties. Bake In hot oven 460'P.) about M mlnutea or broil about 30 minute. Yield: 6 servings (U 3Va Inch bras aargen.) SOLD? A ticket I Retail Store! r it - .OltUTheC-CCe.,