HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS,' OREGON
iACE THRU
,. i ,clurt Mm. Murlori
""".hW- 'rueHiluy mid Wed
'""''ilvli i? Unity Lucliirus In
rv club'""1""' Hpooli.l
' ,br ILrt will l' presented
"!(VKc ? Tuesday night and
f 'rhcro will lo bo a Ice
for 'Wednesday afternoon.
. Corp Members of the
D,!i Aiixllinry Drum corns
fnrsVUco Wednesday, July
" .Pi 10 i m. 1110 low,,r
All ; t Ninth '"" W'"ult'
IE I"1' iniln-1 who have
l,tffrMk.Kl la brim
in the hull. Any new mom.
fffl 0 "ti ",, to h In tho drum
td tonlUMidtho po.
c.
All hmtlllT
Uf'WZ '., .v nluht. July
S; lor tho rirt mt
KN.. "d In-Uill
ft tn"'." iih nff corn. Tho
riinV tain beheld 1,1 1,10 Vem
fc'cre wheru dliiuor will be
. Mm. J. D.
,llcr Briim'y. i,mllm.
; churcli, returned from
! 1 o- thi wind. ..t tho first
ScmOrJioi. Bnptbt
KmplHt week.
ll wfllard hotel t" "-
US, luncheon. At 1:40 wo
Iridloano pin- " ' 7,7
i and a I nowcunii-ie iu v...
re welcome.
.... u f-n,-ll Thn Worn-
L', Council of tho First Christ-
In chuwnwi i
rit ro urxen ' ....
urn (or the new year win
lulllncd.
........ K. W. Rlrker of
I nl" ---
larcui, Iowa, who has been vis
r .. uJ. Mr. K J. Garner
L Portland street, hns led nftor
10 day vbll Hero lo return iu
Icr home.
t.ji 1M Thn Klnmath
iuUieron Ladles Aid will meet
'uesday cvcnlnK, July 11. at 8
clock in mo cnurcn pnriorn
iihMr Annn Ovunrd and Juno
iincarrow o hostesses. .
n.111 T.m Dra.f.llra Thn
irAtrutriiv Hnhnlrnh lnrlun drill
am will practice ior initiation
nil lit 1-3(1 n. m. All members
re urged to bo present.
To Met Thursday The auxll-
fery and chcvnllcrs of Cnnton
.rator will hold their July meet
n Thursday evening, 8 o'clock,
t tho 100K hall. Refreshments
rill bo served nt tho close of
pe evening.
Lettes Arthur W. Sell nimn In
lolnj to Porllnnd on Thursday
w aiicna n meeting or tho Oro-
ion siaio Highway commission.
violin Bond Sales
10 Per Cent Over
ifth Loan Quota
Th0 Mnlln ...li.. 1
'" viiiuiiuiiiijr - went
fver Its E bond quota by 30
Wccrit in the Fifth War Loan
Ki'ut ended, according to
tan n '
Thn Mailt
hi . i. ' y ni'nn, mayor
pIMalin. The quoin set for the
p E bonds pul'chn80 valuo
CI'Mlflcd Ads Bring Bnsi.l't,'
Enters Navy Kenneth h. Dor-
ouuli. son of Mr, unci Mrs, Lionel
li, borouiih, left June 3D for nnvv
V-12 triilnliiu at Wllliimutlo unl-
vcrslly In Bnlum,
Barracks Lunchaon Members
of tho city council nro invited
to luncheon at tho Marino liur
ritcks this Wodnesduy,
Service Men
and Women
Home on Leave
Men nnd women In service
who nro home and whose iiumcs
iippeiir In the column tolling of
servicemen Homo on lenvo muy
nick up their pusses lo .tiny
theatre In Klnmnth Falls by call
Iuk at editorial room of the
News and Herald before 3 p. in.
Theso pnsseji nro Issued through
tho courtesy of Lloyd Lnmb of
tho Northwestern . Theatres.
Pfc. Boy Hawkins from Me
Chord Field, Wash. Here until
July 20.
...
CMM Charles S. Chastaln
from the .South Atlantic. Here
until July 12.
.
B2e John Magulra from Far
rauut, Idaho. Hero until July 20.
.
Pvt. James Rumolhart from
Cuinp Sannln, Texas. Hero un
til July 17.
Cpl. Oary Carmlchael from
Camp Adair, Oro. Hero until
July IS.
SSgt. John W. Rice from
Shcppnrd t leld, Texas. Hero un
til July 20.
First Lt. Robert H. Alexander
from North Africa. Hero until
Tuesday, July 28.
Lt. D. T. Job from Pacos,
Texas. Hero until Saturday,
July 15.
Pt. R. J. Duffy from Camp
Ruckcr, Ala. Hero until Wed
nesday, July 12.
Multnomah County
Fair Scheduled
CRESIIAM, July 11 (IP)
Multnomah county's 38th. an.
mini fair wlll.be held August
21-27, with a record number, of
exhibits, A, H.- Len,- secretary.
mannner, said today, H will -be
tho county's third successive
wurtlmo fair.
Two Nebraska cattle breeders
have Indicated interest in show
inn at tho fair, and other live
stock men and producers from
many sections of tho country
will competo, Lea added. Harry
Atkins, Davenport, Neb., secre
tary of tho American Poultry
association, will Judgo tho poul
try exhibits .
Woodburn Parolee
Sought by Police
PORTLAND, July U (P) A
JO-ycorold pnrolco from. Wood
burn reformatory wns sought by
slulo police today following' a re
port by Mrs. Violet Wolfcr of the
Conby district that he threatened
her with a revolver nnd demand
ed money. Tho youth, employed
by her farmer husband, feigned
illness until Mr, Wolfcr left the
house, she said.
HI
BULLETIN FOR
EGANNERS
DISTRIBUTED
Klnmulh county homcmakors
who uro busily "putting up" tho
fruits and vegetables of local vic
tory gardens may toko advantage
of a useful, up-to-the-minute gov
ernment bulletin on "Homo Con
ning of Frulls and Vegetables,"
which Is being distributed this
week In the Klamath Falls area,
according to Wlnnlfred K. allien,
homo demonstration agent.
Tho bulletin, printed by the
Bureau of Human Nutrition and
Homo Economics of tho U. S. de
partment of Agriculture, con
tnlns drawings and pictures of
tho most efficient way to pro
cess foods by tho hot water both
and pressure cookor canning
methods.
Theso seven points for canning
success nro considered so import
ant by the authors of tho book
let thot they are printed on the
cover:
Try
Pioneer Printing ;
for thoat hsud-to-iret tOm NUpUnjr
Mohlni fliaplei Taper Cllpi
Thumb Tacti All Metal Arch rllea
134 South Pth
Telephone 7412
Mini Note: Our dlstUlerlea sure now producing alcohol for
M uss by tho govomment No whiskey baa been made
inco October, lsua. n, k..u hlaklea vou now onjoy u
Throo Feathers blonded whlskoy wr drawn from our ovt
"muusmng Inventories. , " '
Three Featfwra.Dlitrlbutori. In& New . York
60 cane products neutral petti
1. Can only fresh food, In tip
top condition.
2. Have food, Jnrs, everything
used in canning thoroughly
clean.
3. Work quickly, so as to can
"freshness."
4. Heat food hot enough nnd
long enough to make bacteria
and other organisms harmless, so
they won't "work" In tho food
and maka it spoil.
5. Follow up-to-date directions
and timetables, backed up by
scientific research.
8. Make sure Jars are scaled
airtight, to keep spoilage organ
Isms outside.
7. Store canned food In a cool,
dark, dry place.
"Home Canning of Fruits and
Vegetables" will bo mailed to
homcmnkcrs upon request, or
will be distributed from the of
flee of the home demonstration
agent, 208 Federal building.
Barracks Removal
Contract Awarded
PORTLAND, July 11 (fl -Contract
for purchase and re
nt o v a I of two barracks type
buildings and an elevated water
tower at Charleston, Ore., near
Marshfleld, has been awarded
to the Pacific Wrecking com
pany, Marshfleld, the army en
gineers said today.
Tho company bid $718 for
the buildings, butlt by the engi
neers in, 1942-43. They will be
removed within 30 days.
If It's a "frozen" article you
need, advertise for a used one
in tho classified.
OUR MEN AND WOMEN
IN SERVICE
tav feb it It
Five-Star Mother and Sons
Lv
i IL
I 1
HOME 0;f LEAVE 1st Lt.
Robert H. Alexander, son of Mr.
and Mrs. W. H. Alexander, 1644
Manzanita street, has just re
turned home from North Africa
where he has been stationed for
tho past 13 months with the air
transport command. This is his
first time home slnco entering
tho services in October, 1041.
Ho Joined his wife, the former
Christine Pearson of Mcdford, in
Oakland and is now visiting rela
tives and friends here.
Lt. Alexander is a graduate of
Klamnth Union high school with
the class of 1937.
He will report to Nashville
Tennessee, for reassignment,
HOME CCM Charles S. Chas
taln is in Klamath Falls on leave
for a short while visiting with
his friends and relatives here. He
has been in the South Atlantic
for' 16 months. He was raised
here arid graduated from KUHS
in 1923.
FIVE BONS Mr. and Mrs. Al
bert Bnrrett of the Keno highway
nuvu nvc sons in , me armed
" forces, three in
the army .and
two In the navy.
Mrs. Barrett - is
shown here with
her boys.' PFC
Clifton, . 31, ' is
stationed some
where in. Aus
tralia with the
army,, and PFC
Lewis,, .28, .re
turned early in
May. . from., two
years in ,. the
South Pacific
with a US army
rcconnalsance outfit which serv
ed In New Guinea. PFC Irwin
25, is with the coast artillery in
Hawaii. AMM 2c Marvin. 22. is
at Corpus Christ!, Tex., with the
naval air corps and S 2c Lenin,
zu, is at i arragut, Ida.
.' .
Seaman 1C Lane. A; Smith
arrived home for a visit with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.. L. A.
Smith, on Wednesday, June 28.
Smith has recently been in ser
vice in the southwest Pacific.
He has been on the sea for eight
months, he reports. Seaman Lane
Smith is a gun pointer.
While home on, leave,- Lane
was married to Louellen Proctor
NEW
HOUSE SLIPPERS
The Kind For
Summer Comfort
$2.95
No Stamp Required
DREW'S MANSTORE
. 733 Main
ATTEHTIOffi
eu. home catiac!
If.wa oil pitch In, 1944 will see-tha
greatest food production in our..history.
But that will require your help;
It's up to you to: l.; grow every ounce
of food you possibly can; 2. use all the
food you grow; 3. can your food by the'
proper and safe methods.
Every ounce of home-canned food is
urgently needed. Your Government begs
you not only to match what you did last
year but, If possible, to better your 1 943
' record.' ' .
Put up .'fruits and -tomatoes by-the
boiling-water both method a safe and
. satisfactory method for these foods.
But before you begin your: 1944 "can-'
nlng : of - all other vegetables, ' Good
Housekeeping wants to tell you how to
avoid a danger that may occur. in home
canned : food a danger recognized' by
many authorities, including the, U. S.
Department of Agriculture.
That -danger' is botulinus food poison
ing! .." . :
Botulinus poisoning comes . from bac
teria that live In the soil, and cling to
vegetables. It is rare but it isn't con
fined to just a few parts of the country,
as some people think. .
Botulinus germs may be on -the food
you cah. iThey must be destroyed. When
ever these bacteria are present ;ln .tha
food , and -are not destroye'd during the
canning process, they gradually produce
a-toxin which-is poisonous.
It takes hotter-thaniboiling heaK'to '
kill botulinus germs. .Neither hot-wciter ..
bath nor open-kettle-canning provides
enough heat to destroy them.' That ; is
why we advise: the only safe way to-con ,
low-acid vegetables which means, all
vegetables except tomatoes is-by the
correct use of a pressure cooker!-.", v;
If you don't already owniaj pressure)',
cooker, you'll be glad to know that the
Government is allowing the -manufacture
of 400,000 new. cookersfor:'Sale .
this summer, without priorities.
If you can't buy, a pressure, cooker,.,
borrow your neighbor's . . .or .'perhaps'
you'll find one available through a com- .
munity canning group. If not, ;form .your ;
own community group, . and buy one. '
To be safe, don't con ' low-acid vege
tables any other woy. '
We take this opportunity-to.'issue -'two ;
further warnings: 1. , Oven, cqrining' Js
dangerous. It has : caused many1 serious
accidents to persons and - to ,i property. '
Shun it! 2. All ; home-canned " foods
should be ' examined carefully when .
opened. If there is. evidence. of spoilage,
the food should not be used.- NEVER
TASTE to discover spoilage.! -
By all means, put up every ..biinca -of
surplus food you' possibly -can. ;,
Our armed forces and the; hungry '
nations of the earth need tho bene
fits of our abundance.
Good Housekeeping Magazine
The Homemakers' Bureau of Standards .V
-(-.'. . , ',.-' v. t .
'For further up-to-the-minute Information about really safe can-'
ning methods and ;how to avoid botulism, write Good House-
keeping Institute, 959 Eighth . Avenue, New York 19, N. Y.
formerly of Klamath Falls. Mr.
and Mrs. Smith left on July Bth
for Salem, Mrs. Smith's present
home. After a few days' visit
there Smith will go direct to
report for duty at a California
port Lane has lived in Keno
for-a humber of years, gradu
ating from the Keno high school
in 1942.
;
By Staff Sergeant Wallace R.
McLaln of Clendale. Calif., a
. Marine Corps Combat Corres-
, ponaent.
MARINE CORPS AIR DEPOT.
MIRAMAR. Calif.. July 11 A
Japanese antiaircraft shell ex
ploding inches away from nis
torpedo bomber, showering it
with shrapnel, gave Marine Cor
poral Robert Li. wood. 19. a tur
ret gunner and son of George
G. Wood of 2164 Wiard street,
Klamath Falls, Ore., his biggest
scare in 3D combat missions.
Home from action in three
South Pacific campaigns. Cor
poral Wood told of his narrow
squeak while raiding Rabaul
last March.
"The plane bounced about 50
feet when the shell burst Just
ou our lett wing." he said. "We
wore directly over the airstrip,
iiying low.
aneu fragments came
through the. fuselage and we
shook like Jelly but my pilot re
covered normal flight. It really
gave 'us - something to worry
about for a few moments."
: ' Corporal Wood was a member
of tne "Kockettes" first marine
squadron to use planes armed
with rockets against the Japs.
Damaging attacks were flown
against Kahili, Buka Passage,
navieng ana itaoaul.
' The latter Jap base. Corooral
Wood said, provided toughest op
position on these raids.
- "In all ten-missions against
itaoaui it was rough going," he
declared. "We had to fly low
and the ack-ack was plenty
inicK . irom tne ground and
from ships in the harbor. Our
fighter, planes reduced the pres
sure considerably, however, by
noiaing on me &eros.
Corporal Wood regards his
first bombing attack upon Jap
shipping , in Simpson Harbor, Ra-
Daul, as most impressive because
he saw four Zeros shot down in
flames.-
- "Some of the Zeros made runs
on our plane," he said, "but be-
School Boards Fill Posts
For Coming Year at Meet;
Several vacancies In the
school system were filled last
night at a Joint meeting .of the
district 1 and 2 school boards.
Lowell Kaup, former princi
pal of Pelican and Roosevelt
grade schools, Is in line to be
principal of -Fremont junior
high and grade schools,- replac
ing Paul Angstcad who was
named assistant principal of
Klamath Union high school.
Angstead replaces Harold
Tcale who was given a full
time position as vocational -education
instructor. John Best was
named to the music assignment
formerly held by John O'Con
ner, who accepted a commis
sion in the navy. Best, is a
graduate of tho University of
Idaho school of music, and last
taught at Evanston, Ida.,
Dave Bridge - was appointed
assistant principal for junior
high and Fremont grade school.
Bridge has been working as
city recreation officer. Verne
Speirs was named principal of
Roosevelt grade school. This
leaves a vacancy in the princl
palship of . Riverside grade
school.
Evelyn Ickes, who taught at
Rickreall, Ore., Gudrun Sliter
of North Dakota, and Mrs. Elsie
Barnes all were named to teach
ing positions. Nell Locke was
appointed director of special
education embracing all phases
Of teaching handicapped chil
dren. ' Mrs. Jeanette Brown's resig
nation, due to illness, was ac
cepted and she was granted a
release. Mrs. Brown taught art
fore I could get In a shot our
fighters beat me to them.
1 W-QiinlWrrS.' Havj
Jointly at the high school anal
junior high. . . .
Ralph Kauer, principal o
Dorris high school, and Willlan
Hagelsteln of the Dorrls school
board attended the meeting ana
discussed plans whereby Dorrta.
students would be admitted to
KUHS for the 1944-1945 school
year for half a year or possibly
a full year. ......
Ed Robinson - was ' elected
chairman of district 1 board
and Nelson Reed ' was electee!
chairman of district 2 board.
The assembly line of one Dee
troit war plant where Helldive
airplane wings are turned out
la 338 feet longer than a -mil
long, and employs workers of
21 nationalities working., side)
by side: ... . , '
.. . i
Classified ads get results..1
m . mm jv " aa" . mi t. ---y, -
-. . a' "- fqEl mimwj.f.. -'5j nnMimrrimmiimi p iru " i -t n-rr j i
" .33 "-j ll
J9 A
Tractor i Training gives you a complete and tfibrbugh wonnng -'
knowledge of tractor and Diesel work that will . qualify you forf
-' thousands of good paying opportunities now and after the war. You lose -no
time on your present job. Selections are now being made in THIS :
AREA for Tractor Training and Placement service. Write for full details .
and qualifications today! ; ','-
REAP THESE LETTERS FROM MEN WHO SUCCEEDED
""1 cm never thank you too
Siuch for the wonderful
nowledgo of Diesel and
tractor training and the
position you got for ine with
- Eheppherd Tractor Equip
ment Co."
Henry I. Schults,
' 3S23 3. Flower St.,
Angeiea, uai.
"TTS training; has been
worth a thousand dollars to -me.
You take up where X
had been In the dark on the
theory of Diesel power."
Pete Hlgfce,
T828 N. Washburne, .
. Portland, Ore.
"Last vear I came to Ore
gon Shipyards and trained
while on that Job. TT3
training le clear, right to
the point. It got me thl
job where 1 can ee an un
limited future."
"Bernie" Egeland,
Cummins Diesel Service,
PorUand, Ore.
SELECTIONS BEING MADE NOW. FOR TRAINING AND PLACEMENT
MIT H tmmmr m , m -t - , m m. i ..... ..... . -
TRACTOR TRAINING SERVICE, 610 Mad BIdg., PonUad , Ore.
, I want to enter the tractor and Diesel fleld.Pleasa give me full Information.
".ri---Address
Ait-SZX. Present Occupation .'J';.',::?:1:
Bhltt Wprlnj t::r.'r:r..'.?:.Best Time to swJ--ijJ!i