tober 1944 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON. PACE FIVE r urn All nnr I,C,,,,I invited lo lcn(l a die urt' . . , nd meeting; riulti ,'. w, , rtP1.? .... .... Lureii Mwen. W.1 .-.. ...I.. ii mvm1 air din- 'Wa lrc..5..ry. Thin an ...Yi.nl was prrnnroualy Kr he !" " I'l A- Tho K will i. hrld t Joseph iiier icnour. .rrf.n Group Members of '"rden ru- . of tho Kl.m- Rlli Woiii.iii' Xlrry club I ijc'l Monday. October "ii until library Prm There will be . ,( builnew meellni. and a m A. II. HUM""'" wl11 i perennials. Member! tl(0 "v.n."'.;. SSUu"!. made .1 ,h. rmorr ii..-..-- unior HoitMA danre at nnvn air "" " V, nhrr 10. Buiei aiic city iiui i y "a Smith Hostesses may bring irr clrlJ. but mini check In e .... ...Ilk Ihrlr HMliad Icn btlore scunm on - iturni M)or Zed Barnei arrcliiiB friends In Klamath Tuesday P' h return tn 21 vrari spew in -mihii im I. with the U. S. army air U. I lint-A wllh his filth. jW. B. Barnei. S. 8th -atrcet. or Birnes Inn two weeks before reporting tor turincr lump 81 Tho war it amp bond sale it Fremont il on Tueidav amounted lo .79. iccordlng to a report e today. ,, Thunday The St. 'i Women'i auxiliary will it Thunday at I p. m. l the of Mn. Gaylord Uplnc 1910 Portland. Mrs. Kay in will be co hostess. . mehtr Hart L. J. llorton. lock rancher, was In Mam- Fills Wednesday on hunt havint lo do with the rom-Cil-Oreson Hereford how alc. Returns Mr. and Mrs. Wil bur A. Jnnri, 20.1 llljtli, have re turned from t 10-day vlilt with their children, Mr. mid Mrs, Lawrence W. Mehaffey,, Anil ochi Mr. and Mrs. Carl Newbury, Walnut Creek, and Mr. and Mia. Wilbur Jones of Pltlaljiire, Calif. Mrs. Jones alio vlilted her granddaughters. Mary I'at and Rusanna Newbury, students at Kathrrlne Branson school at Hon., Calif. Woman of tht Moost The hnmemaklng committee of the Women of The Moose will meet Friday, October 20, In the Mooso hall at 12:30 p. m., for t potluck luncheon and business meeting, with Maude Sergant, chairman of the committee In charge. At 2 p. m. that after noon, there will be a curd party In the hall, the fourth of the se ries, to which the public is invited. Auxiliary to Meat The aux- lllary lo the Veterans of Foreign Wurs will meet Thursday eve ning, October 10, In the library clubroom at 8 p. m. There will 1m Initiation and all officers and membera of the drill team should wear uniforms. Follow ing the meeting, the auxiliary will have luncheon with mem ber! of the post. Jobs Daughters A regular meeting of Jobs Daughters will be held In the Masonic temple. Thursday at 8 p. m. At 4:13 fi. in., there will be practice for nltlatlon and officers and choir member! are urged to be prompt. Supper for officers and choir membera has been ar ranged to follow practice. Rebekah Lodge There will be regular meeting of Prosper ity Rebekah lodge, ThursdRV, October 10, at 8 p. m., in the IOOF hall, and following the meeting, refreshments will be served by Rose Jones and Char lotte Martin. Formal! will not be worn. Support Fund Short Given County Schools Klamath cuunly schools this week are to be given approxi mately .$87,0(11), their share of tho first half payment of the $8,000,000 annual state school support fund. A total of $2,500,. 000 Is being sent out by the state to all Oregon counties for school use, The remulning $2,000,000 will be distributed next April 15. This It the second year that such grnnta are being made to Oregon counties' school sys tems. The $5,000,000 Is a part of surplus from itate income tax funds. State allocations in the past two years have materially re duced local school taxes all over Oregon. Foresters Plan Short Cut Road GRANTS PASS, Oct. 18 VP) A rood which will shorten the route from here to Agness by 73 miles was being planned today by forestry officials. The road, which will link the Eaton valley and the end of a mud now being constructed along the south fork of the Co ciulllc river, Is expected to be completed next year. Project Attorney Transferred TULKLAKE Alan Campbell, project attorney at the Tulelake segregation center, left this week for Manzanar center to assume dutlci as project attorney. It has been announced by the WRA. Louis Noycs. formerly connect ed with the WRA solicitor'! of fice in Washington D. C, will succeed him. Visiting Htrt Lynn W. Mes mltch, former resident of Klam ath Falls, Is here visiting friends and relative!. f'ABO or THANKS We wuh lo extend our heartfelt thank., mil appreciation for the acta of klnrinrM. the meMaaea of eympalhy and the beautiful noral offarlnga for our Beloved muhand anil father. Mre Plena Hrl.fn. and remits L.av. for Home Capt. and Mrs. A. W. Learning and son Billy, left Monday after visit ing his parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Crimes, 3033 Shasta way. Capt. Learning will return to McCaw hospital at Walla Walla, Wash., for further treatment. Villtor Mrs. C. A. Harder of Cornelius, Ore., is visiting here with her son-in-law and daugh ter. Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Schendel, 2348 Orchard, and their Infant son, Utephen, and young daughter, Deanna. o Refrigeration Equipment Co. Karl Urquhait eil Klamath Phont 8485 For Commercial Refrigeration SALES and SERVICI FOULGER'5 Jewelry-Neckline Blouses . A luscious array of white blousei to spotlight every suit! . . Tueks, ruffles, bows a . . for all-year wear. $3.50 to $4.95 SCUFFS by Joyce $2.4 Rose or blue lulled cotton. printed Posies , Joyce'i ously With . and marvel, comfor- ,al1e padded oles. Non-rationed niNTiROArinr.H $2.95 Bright "n black ""Valine tv Foulgers SIS Main Toothache Fosters Home Town Talk Addition to small world Hems: Don Smith, RDM 3c, U. S. navy, had a toothache. Right down In the South Pacific. Ho was acnt to tick bay where a navy dentist peered Into his mouth and promptly yanked a wisdom tooth with eclat. "Where you from, young ster?" asked the officer. "Klamath Fallt, Oregon," replied Don. Whereupon Lt. Albert O. Roenlcke, also of Klamath Falls, literally lumped In the dentist chair with his patient, and they fell to extolling the virtues of their home town and swapping newi from their respective families. Don Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Smith, 931 Prospect. Southern Pacific Reduces Debt Southern Pacific company has reduced its debt, exclusive of change: in icrial equipment obligations, by more than $100, 000,000, or more than 25 per cent, since early 1040, President A. T. Mercler said in announc ing plans for refunding a por tion of the non-callable Central Pacific Railway company first refunding mortgage bonds that will mature August 1, 1040, Reduction of the funded debt since 1040 is principally respon sible, it was pointed out, for reducing annual fixed eharges by more than $7,300,000, or by more than 23 per cent below the 1030 level. Castor oil now Is in use as a brake fluid In the army's new 2'-ton motor vehicles. Go West, Young Woman If You Want to Find a Man By FRANCIS J, KELLY Washington, Oct. is tPi The census bureau gave out to day with some husband-hunting figures as disconcerting to the thoughful bobby sox girl as a migraine headache to a hungry wood pecker. There are only about 1.700.000 unmarried men between the ages of 20 and 34 years in civilian life today and grab a firm brace on your hope chest some 4,000,000 unmarried women In the same age group. That Is only 425-thousandths of a man apiece, if all the women have matrimony on their minds, and the population prcdicters have no reason to suspect that many of them don't. For the first time In history, this erstwhile he-man republic has a feminine majority. Mar ried and single, civilian and sol dier, the bureau estimates there arc 600,000 more women over 21 than there arc men. The bureau figures the war boom in marriages is about over, until the boys come home. Then, if the trend of World War 1 re peats itself, look for a sharp spurt in the orange blossom and bridal veil trade. The marriage rate of 10.5 per thousand in 1030 marched up to 13.1 in 1042, but slumped to 11.8 last year. The bureau's latest figures show the median age of bride- I To New Mothers i Give yovr bob quick reJitf from (iSe fivy ilthma of r JU CAf Orr lueae J grooms was 24.8 years, or brides 21.8. Statistically, that means that when Johnny comes march ing home he's ant to fall for the little babe down the street rather than one of his former high school classmates. For the girls who want to do something constructive about getting a husband, the charts point toward the west rather than the east, and to the small towns rather than the cities. Here in Washington, for in stance, the competition is pretty rugged with only 91.9 men for every 100 women. In New York the ratio is more favorable 100,4 per 100 but conditions Improve rapidly os a girl goes west. Chicago has a rate of 102.7 to 100; Detroit 110.1, Oklahoma City 102.3 and Sacramento 113.3 men per 100 women. New Eng land averages 97 men for each 1UU women, compared with 11.4 in Idaho, 114.8 in Montana, 118.7 in Wyoming and 125.4 in Ne vada. For girls really fearful of withering on the matrimonial vine, there's always Alaska, where the men outnumber the women 145.7 to 100. If it'i a "frozen" article you need, advertise for a used one in the classified. Merchants Cautioned Against Bad Checks With the coming of fall, us ually comes bad check season In Klamath county and merchants are warned by the district attor ney and sheriff's offices to be particularly cautious in cashing checks. Bad check writing, always In existence, seems to increase in the autumn. District Attorney L. Orth Siscmore laid. In the last six months of 1943. according to the records, 51 bad checks were brought to the at-1 tention of authorities here. Amount on the checks on file are anywhere from $1 to J1425. Klamath Falls, li badly In need of t 120-ban accordion, The men would like to get hold of one ai loon as posaible, and if anyone hai such an ac cordion, if they would contact PFC William K. Bledsoe, H com. pany, Marine Barracks, it would bo much appreciated. Classifier An. Bring Raaulta Marine Barracks Band Needs Accordion The Marine Barracks band, which has been exceptionally generous to the townspeople of Fur Fall Wear! ARROW ntj -A- MANHATTAN SHIRTS TIES Ntw.st pitt.rnt tlwtyt tvalltblt. All ilitt. From 82.24. DREW'S MANSTORE 733 Main PILES SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO rAIN . NO HOSPITALIZATION No Loaa of Time farmaoeol Beau. tat DR. E. M. MARSHA Chlrvpraetto Physician tt Nm. 71 Esquire TbeeUre Bldg Pben ?et Baked Bean Supper Klamath Lutheran Church Cross and Crtictnt Strttti Thursday, October 19, 6:00 P. M. MENU Komt Baked Btam Ctbbage Salad Applt Pit Adults, 50 Ctnti Boiten Brawn Brtad Hot Bell! Cofftt Childrtn. 35 Cent Switchmen make about $220 base pay Here's a eb with a locomotive to help you vr. switching cirs from N.Y.Central, Union Pi cine, Pennsylvania Lines every road in the cation '. . . loaded with war materials. No ex perience to start ... we train you in 2 weeks or so. You'll work with an engine crew, get around, keep things moving. Brakeman one of S.P.' finest jobs We train yw in short order. You help operate trains, team up with the Conductor and Engi neer. This is railroading as you'll like it. Good gang to work with. About $220 base pay. You see the country, ride the trains, keep the war traffic piling through. If you're a sincere, reli able man, here la a job you will want. Good jobs for an good craftsmen MiyM yo'r a Boilermaker, Pipefitter, Black smith, Welder, Carpenter, Sheet Metal Work er, Plumber, Electrician, or Painter. Maybe you want to get with a big, established com ptoy with plenty of work. Okeh. You're the nan for a fob at S. P. We need all kinds of craftsmen. And no railroad experience needed. Work for a company whose biggest job begins wfien Germany is finished Jhese jobs with Southern Pacific are for men with something on the ball . .'. for men who like to really "belong" to a good outfit and who give as much as they get. We can't make you vice-president overnight. And we don't pay super-inflated wages. We pay good wages. We're not supermen here . . . just human, everyday railroaders who get along swell together. We've got a whale of a lot of work ahead . . . handling the enormous war traffic for the all-out Push against Japan. We've got interesting work, the kind that gets in your blood and sticks. Some jobs require experience, many don't. One thing sure: there's a fine job here for you if you're a man who wants t good job. Look 'em over, then come in and see us. Machinists work on fine equipment at St P. -JSL 0r shop! and rovndhousts are well equipped. You work on locomotives, cars, rolling stock. Pistons, driving wheels, valves here's where you see the inside of railroading. Your work is vitally important. Regular R.R. wages and real men to work with. Remember, S.P. is in business to stay. Plenty of work aheadl No matter what job you want we have it Whether ye'd like to handle freight or a type, writer, tickets or track work, there is definitely a good job for you at S.P. Clerks, warehouse men, commissary workers, station and yard workers, delivcrymen, shop workers you've got a real "pick" here. And a chance to go places when you're on the job. Handy with your hands? Here's a Helper's job Tea work in the big S.P. shops with skilled craftsmen who know their stuff. You can learn a fine craft and really learn it here. Liberal age limits. No experience needed to stare New, higher wages. If you want to get into, something good, here it is. By all means look into this now while the opportunity remain. Here are a few of the many jobs open at S. P. today Welden Bloektmlths Peintere Deliverymen Carmen Tele9rpher . Boilermakers Plumber Shop Worker Brakemen $,orM Helper Pipefitter ' Warehousemen e HJW Machiniete Mechanic Switchmen Supplymen Ilectrician Yard Clerk Coach Cleaner Driller Helper all craft Sheet Metal Worker See or write Trainmaster, S. P. Station, Klamath Falls, or your nearest S. P. agent. tTo) "A good outfit If to work for"