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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1944)
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PACE MINI &E SCHEDULED ii 1 1" - 'St iii LrL-Onrden produce lBlLu"r.i isuu and r yi. nl. and elllrnniplnnlnow. .ho ncin f ',,', i ,h(. Iwiaji Kr relief work. Mm. fcrfSd5"n ls gcncr"1 f''u will lrl CBch riHy "L . d anyone having l.blci or V'"V'.. . ," "VcKoncooV ;n j , una, Nellie Hnskliw l presl- i. rc",ct..i- Mpt lull ( the ciuu " Sflck l publicity chairman It) h. fort Klamath Lt Nicholson Is PH .1 the Hillside hospital, L k ii convalescing satis- riv irvii' " , '"ilnrm.d nut WOOk, suddenly fltrlck- h while on a business trip Ltvlllo tho first part of wistakon to Klamnth mpdlcnl caro which U in ihp mnlor operation. L Robert E. Gordon re ft a,t week from Duns- Cllll.i Wlicru Olio aJvuv 1 1 i 1 1 n a nor two Men, M11. Dick Jocklh Sin. waucr j o 11 ( mm ironies. .nri Mrs. Roy Wlmcr of Lvillc and their .rind. Ihter, Diana rtuegg, 01 i-ori- ipenl WO i-iuuur jLny uui- ol.HinB hero ot the home heir lon-ltvlaw, daughter mindson, Mr. and Mm. El Zumbrun nnd Hon Bllllc, hing Monday afternoon to Wle. . ., llllim A. rage la rcporica t out of danger following a til IliacK ot 11 lilt' .13 wniun confined mm 10 a aiocKton, B., hospital for over a week. ind Mm. i'ago, iormony oi Klamath. Iiuvo both been Lyed in Stockton for some I, ind expect to return to k home here at the end of Out Our Way By J. R. William ( COME HO VeithJc ( IT WOULDN'T WITH VOU EIGHTH 1 AT to L:ITHERJ GRADE ElMSTElMS VOL) GOT . ) FIVEER-, C -L THE ANSWERS I'M STUPID J SIX TIMES V ' BOWJ tW "TH' NUMB MMETIES--A . 'EVERYDAY II V CIGAR-STORE IWDIAM OW . ,1. I AM'TrfRUGN V CASTERS COME OLIT WITH V; , I MEVEE SKIPPED) )T"SAV IT; Jy 'JrSif' $tiSA MOVE THIS IS WO fZ& " RAWCH--WE HAVE ) Ii, ind Mn. J. E. Malmgrcm children are viaiUnu Here fi it tho home ot Mrs; birem's parents, Mr. and . e. u. Brmcoc, at me uris nnch. On Labor Day. Carl, iawi son of Mr. and Mrs. laiirem, was Injured when door 01 the car in wmcn nc rldlns with his arandfuthor it own. and tho child was Inra to the ground and hit the rear wheel before Bris could stop the car. He was tdlitely taken to Klamath , 1 whero an X-ray showed a 4 hired pelvis. Ho wl,U re J n it the home of his grand w mil until ho has recovered k 1.1. I.I..... ...1.11 LI. . II llll IHjUr.Yi W1111U 1110 11M1- expect to leave in a snort for Yakima. Wash., where fmtrem will take charge of turner 1 ranch. Ho was pre sty employed as ranch fore by Llskcv Brother at Poe ley. Mrs. Malmgrcm is the per Vlnnlo Briscoe, w e 1 1 lTi local girl. pri. jtonert Williams and ill ton. Jim. are also v s tins the home of her parents at 1 Briscoe ranch. Mrs. Wll- W huiband, U. Williams, rmy air corns, ls receiv- in advanced course of train In New Mexico. Mrs. Wll. M Is the former Ruby Brls- I. Sister nf Mr. Malmrnv fd, Glenn Smith ipent iimo ncre Sunday ana fiy with his parents, Mr. I Mn. WnIkv Smith anrl Uy, while on 72-hour leave a Fort Ebey, Washington, e he Is stationed with a 't artillery unit ol the U. S. y. 'I'l. E. M. Brattain and son, 0. BCCOmnnnlrtrl ku M,, Al. KB. Castel, Sr., and the PlUUn hnntmcfitodtai Mr nrA I' Virgil Brattain and daugh I llca of San Francisco, r& PM Monday evening from MVleW. Ulh.ra ll.n,, ..l.llnrl i'Uvei and attended the Lake- Round-Up. f.nd Mrs. Frank Edwards med Wednesday evening ion they visited relatives at fr"" and Brownsville, firs. R. n vo.. 1 m.. &a ... ," v n, null, aim rnia. r Nichols were Klamath Falls f uns visitors Thursday. Var. "ntll recently employed ha I. K erv" (U in Riv ... u . . X u i, ft . -J, n h c 1 c ito una "into tho garage business j nls brother. Mrs. Varnum rn .Je,,r daughter. Audrey, "to loin him soon in Bly, Z" 'hey wni make their permanently. and Mm Bow nrrmn 7'15 p.m. LOWELL THOMAS NEWS TIME NLEE-MUTUAL of California and son, Alun Hay, spent the Lubor 13ny weekend visiting rel atives at Dlllurd, Ore. The benefit dance held here Saturday night, sponsored by tho CI club to raise funds for supplying local service men with Christmas gifts, was a huge success both financially and socially. A capacity crowd attended, and the Hereford calf donated by the club was won by Lorcn Miller, Jr. Twenty five marines from the hospital barracks in Klamath Falls were special guests of the occasion, and were lodged overnight in various Fort Klamath homes. On Sunday, a picnic was held for tho marine visitors, the af fair being sponsored by the Fort Klamath Grange. Ideal weather marked the picnic, which was held at George Den ton's park north of Fort Klamath, William and Emll Zumbrun are spending the week in Port land on a business trip. School started September S with Mrs. Anna Strahan being again employed as teacher for the local four primary grades, the remainder of the Fort Klam ath pupils taking tho bus for Chlloquln grade and high schools. Carl Wilson of Fort Klamath Is the school bus driver this year, and Is also employed on the Chlloquln high school fac ulty as shop and manual train ing Instructor as well as in structor in mathematics. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Slscmore mado a business trip to. Lake view Wednesday. ' Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ferguson and son John expect to leave soon for Prlnevlllc, where Fer guson will be employed as school bus driver. For tho past several years ho has been fore man of the Sand Creek patrol of the Oregon state highway commission on Sun mountain. His successor Is Wayno Wright, who has been transferred to the Sand creek division from Quartz mountain. John Orth, brother of Henry Orth, of Fort Klamath and for mer local resident, ls reported to be very seriously ill at his home in Jacksonville, Ore. . Dave Nnnh hns sold his Klam- ath marsh ranch to Mr. and Mrs. Denver Parks and has moved back to his Fort Klam ath residence. C. L. Bllnkenstaff finished haying Friday. Shasta View Mrs. Effle McEwon of Eld ridge, Calif., is a patient at Klamath Valley hospital with a broken arm and leg and chest injuries as a result of a recent bus accident. Mrs. McEwcn was en route to the Martin Bridges home hero where she had planned to spend her . two weeks' vacation, She Is a nurse al a children's home at Eld ridge Pat Crause has been confined to his home this past week as a result of an injury to his foot wncn ne dropped a du-pound weight on it while working in the woods. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Aubrey and Maxine, Roy, Patsy, Nancy and Linda left Thursday for their new horn- at Cottage Grove. They have sold their property at 2106 Madison to w. H. Wright who Is moving his family here from Texas. Mrs. Harriett Baird, mother of Mrs. Ralph Aubrey, has gone to reside with another daugh ter, Mrs. R. B. Steers, of 3300 Anderson. Mrs. Kate Reed of Emmett, Ida., ls a guest in the Martin Bridges home. New personnel of Shasta school include the principal, Elton Fishback; Ellen Brown, fourth grade teacher; Mrs. Dick inson, third grade; Mrs. Claw son, fifth grade.- Also new are Mrs. Berry and Mrs. Stone in the school cafeteria and Mr. Poole as school Janitor. While reading her home town paper. Mrs. U. G. Simmon smiled over the following odd item. It wa doubly humorous 10 ner lor Mrs. vvaison is ner ni e c e and, although she had written of her trip home, she had failed to mention the loss of Michael, and Mrs. Simpson would not have known of it had she not read it in the Oma ha, Neb., newspaper: "MINNEAPOLIS (UP) Mrs. Windsor Watson, Edmonton, Alia., Canada, had so many children she didn't know what to do, so, entirely by oversight, she left Michael at the station Sunday night. "Halfway to St. Paul, Mrs. Watson finished checking up on her family, It was determined through a great deal of tele phoning that Michael was at po lice headquarters. Then another train was delayed at Minneapo lis, until Michael and a police woman could ride to St. Paul and a family reunion. "The Watson family then con tinued their trip to Worthing ton, Minn., for a vacation which Mrs. Watson said' she already had needed." STAFF HONORED PORTLAND. Sept. 13 MP) The editorial staff of the Oregon Journal was honored at the launching of the tanker Battle Mountain, at the Kaiser Swan Is land shipyard last night. Louise Aaron, the newspaper's marine editor, christened the ship. The tanker, Fort Wood, will be dedl cated to employes of the Oregon, ian, Saturday. ITCRII and Art tough or dry. olttn find lonied-for lt lit! In tha eland, comiomni tenon of OINTMENT r AND SOAP RESItlOL'! Employes of the Gilchrist Lumber company, Gilchrist, will decide finally whether they will retain their present affiliation with the 1WA-CIO or change over to the Carpenters and Join ers, AFL, at a run-off election slated for this Friday, Septem ber 16. Neither union received a majority of tho vole. at the first election held August 24, when returns ran 21 votes for the AFL, 33 for no union, and 41 for the CIO. Petitions have been sent in re questing similar elections at Beatty and Bly lumber camps by which employes will be permit ted to chose between the two un ions, it was announced today by H. R. Haddock, who heads the Lumber and Sawmill Workers' branch of the AFL here. Hildebrand The fifth day of a heat wave was recorded at the Yonna sta tion on Saturday when the tem perature climbed to 97, the hot test day of the year. Mrs. Theodore Flackus was transacting business in Klamath Falls Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rueck called on friends and transacted business in the Merrill district Tuesday. School started on Tuesday with Mrs. Frank Challis driving the school bus from Hildebrand to Bonanza. , . Mr. and Mrs. D. Hoefler and children, Floyd, Roy, Gloria and Wanda of Klamath Falls, and Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Welch and children, Clarene, Loy, Elton and Eddie of Sprague River, visited on Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Michael and brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Michael. Mrs. Mattie Patterson and son Ellis of Orcutt, Calif., ar rived in Hildebrand Wednesday morning to visit her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs, T. P. Michael. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ritter were transacting business. Klamath Falls on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Emilo Egert and Mr. and Mrs.- Vernon Heath of Klamath Falls visited on Sun. day with Mr. and Mrs. Leonard JRitter and family. Mrs. W o 0 d r o w Nelson of Klamath Falls was a business visitor in Hildebrand Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Michael had as their dinner guests on GOOD HEALTH Your Orrfcf Pwthm lUgaJn It by bslaa rtllT4 of HamcmholtU (Pil), Fu-i . ni..l. ttiniU l Hun- tun. f. Our n'athod ol trawl- Bitot without hoipital op. tonai. Coll w mroialBertloB ration fuc?Mhiflr wd for 33 Tatars. Liboral ertdtt torni. Coil w mnrmtumioa or Bnd for .fUES twoklot. Opn Evttingt, Mon., Wto., Frf., 7 le 8i3f Dr. C.J. DEAN CLINIC Phyikten mn Srfoa V. t. Cor. t. luniitdo tn4 Or and A,' Tl.phoo EA1 3318. Portlojil 14. Oiao Wednesday evening Mrs. Mattie Patterson and son Ellis of Or cutt, Calif.. Mr. and Mrs. Byron. Mr. Welch and children, Elton, Eddie, Loy and Clarene of Eprague River, ' and Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Michael. Jack Bradley hauled grain to the mill in Klamath Falls on Friday and Saturday. . Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Munday and daughter Virginia of Klam ntn Falls visited on Sunday at the Michael home. Charles Flackus of Klamath Falls visited or Friday at the Fred Schmoe home. Billy Drew was a Klamath Falls visitor on Friday. Jack Bradley, accompanied by his sister, Mrs. Frank Chal lis, transacted business in Klam ath Falls on Friday. Leonard Ritter had the mis fortune of getting one of his fingers cut off while working en his combine last Friday. He was taken to Klamath Falls for medical care. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ritter were visitors in Sprague River on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Michael and Mrs. Mattie Patterson and son Ellis of Orcutt, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Michael vis ited on Friday at the D. Hoefler home in Klamath Falls. ' Mrs. Leonard Ritter and daughter Clara visited on Fri day with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ritter. Joe Sullivan of Olene has been hauling grain lor S. K. Hartzler to the mill in Klamath Falls. : Mr. - and Mrs. Ernest Ritter visited on Saturday evening at the Michael home. Red Gaskill and daughter Delia of Paisley visited on Wed nesday afternoon at the Michael home, driving to Klamath Falls in the evening where Red re ceived medical attention. They returned home Friday. NO SALT RATIONING Salt is one of the most vital' war materials, but it will never need to be rationed. The United States alone ha3 an almost in exhaustible supply, which in cludes the world's largest salt mine at Retsof, N. Y., which is 1000 acres in . area and 1073 feet in depth. Alien Adding Machines Friden Calculators Royal Typewriters . Desks - Chairs - Files ' For those hard-to-get items PIONEER PRINTING AND STATIONERY CO. 124 So. 9th Klamath Falls ALIEN SENTENCED TO COUNTY JAIL NEWELL Toshla Yuasa, 44, Japanese alien formerly of Oak land, Calif., was sentenced Tues-, day at the Tulelake center by acting project director, Harry. L. Black, to serve 60 days in jail for receiving stolen property, ac cording to the war relocation authority. Fifty days of the sentence were suspended. Yuasa admittedly bought a watch ' from another Japanese resident of the center with the knowledge that the watch had been found and that no attempt had been made to find the own er. He will serve his sentence in the Klamath county Jail in Klamath Falls. Re-Survey of House Situation In Eugene Appealed EUGENE, Sept. 13 (P) Eu gene realtors have protested an appeal by the chamber of com merce to the national housing authority for a resurvey of housing conditions. "We don't need any survey to know there is a housing shortage," declared Loyall Rugh, president of the Eugene realty board. He said 300 houses are needed immediately. MAKING BEESWAX Beeswax begins as a secretion in the bee's glands. With its hind legs, the Insect removes the substance, brings it up to the mouth, where it is mixed with saliva and chewed into a consistency suitable for build ing honeycomb. U.S.-CHINESE HOSPITAL Located in San Francisco's Chinatown, the only Chinese hospital in the United States is mobilized as Chinatown's of ficial medical center in case of disaster. Man Crushed Under Lumber Carrier MARSHFIELD, Sept. 13 (VP) Funeral services were being ar ranged today for Roy Lee Ren fro, 43, sawmill employe, who was fatally crushed under a lumber carrier he was operat ing on a dock here late Monday. He was pinned in three feet of water when the carrier top- Eled off the dock. His head was rought to the surface immedi ately but it took rescuers two hours to free him completely. He was a resident of suburban Bunker Hill. Proves Wonderful For Itching Skin To soothe itching, burning skin, apply medicated liquid ZEMO a Doctor a formula backed by 85 years continu ous success I For ringworm symptoms, eczema, athlete's foot or blemishes due to external cause, apply ZEMO freely. ZEMO promptly relieves and also aida healing. Over 25,000,000 packages sold. One trial convinces. 8 different sizes. JEIVIO TUNS Oo you bave poor digestion? Do you (eel headachy after eating? Do you get sour or upset easily? Do yoo (eel tired listless? Do you feel headachy and upset due to loour oerh lach dav. Nature must nraduee about! two pints of a vital digestive juice to; help digest your food. If Nature falls, J 'our food may remain undigested 1 oaving you headachy and irritable. - Therefore, you must increase the flotf of this digestive juice. Carter's Little Liver Pills increase this flow quickly often ia as little as 80 minutes. And poorly digested fi ana napi digested pro To (eel cheerful appy again your food must bej iy. you're on the road to feeling better. - Don't- deoend on artificial aida counteract Indigestion when Carter's Little Liver Fills aid digestion after Na ture'a own order. Take Carter's Llttlaf Liver Pills as directed. Get them at anv drugstore. Only 10 and 25. It's CM. ore TONITE Cfll'OKE iTAVnn B3 HIGHWAY T SOUTH EVRY WOMAN LIKES TO S-t-iSr'- ' ' AT IIOMII -' 'ylV! What batlar way Hian to war a t-T ' . I ! J '" flattering houjeeoot during thoi JP tJs-sssr'JbW V ' precious leisure, hours after work? Par- f"" 1 ft!r PPll . haps q pry print rayon erepa like tho flJ-U.J JEXJv! one sketched. Wards hov to many "Sv j I JtmMjS ) j kvely ones to 'choose from lr rfy ontgomeiVard 1 Ull HPU.W wor and civilian Directing the continuous II. w of at norn9. J I -...,.. America's fronts opt . , '"3 ! 10 f0 t- -T -? 4 wiijtMtmijtwiiiatf'lmt i ,wsKsfeiiSS.iawe 1 J TiiiT t I II THE RAILROADS ARE THE BACKBONE OF OFFENSE IISIIN TO "YOUR AMERICA" ON YOUR FAVORITE N. .' C. STATION IVIRY SATURDAY ,2 -Fv M. FACIItC WAR TIM1