Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 20, 1944, Page 7, Image 7

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    HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON
PACE SEVEN
tSL
liftLLED
fl NEWS, SUN
US COURT
FrhcaJO &un " ,,, ...nrnme
iv.-j ppii5 i "rr- . .
as "a news gathering
1 will' an actual and
;J5"JSw"r Ihnt cannot bo
"t-r contended that ex-
DSPV. ..rnrrnri itnon
In American
fivius
'elm'prc.iciiU d a brief as n
's, a,, court In connection
L' vernmont'. cWII nil
u i'lilch seeks lo change
Kj.lnw Of 111" AP.
S .aid II l"01!1:
!P1 iho AP or access to
Vlk. After lho wore
f h i Sun told Ho coiir ,
Itmnlnint with he
?ine charging the AP
)f.l. nuil.trust luws.
f thr.;e.Jmlo fodcrn
lit the. oi ..,,
I Jinh ncinill members to
L &tHlvo effect of
F i iiinn fur membership.
IS MA", however, t hut
So f t new. cooperative
Strict admission on other
A The lupromo court Is
uld next monlh to begin a
Sun "riling AP s news
Unit ic iine
El"? activities of AP mem.
told the iriuuiiiu.
ie combination of so grout
Liorily of the Amorlciin
Iffnnnllna their Individ-
LJiMr collccllvo news
tint fuclWlcs ereatos
(Sil'incF potential power
cannot be equalled. No
Anifnc.n n
ihllt the exclusive features
i cm nvu-p...
Lid resources.
Sashes of
fe
Yanks Asked to Dig Into
Pockets for $74 Billion
WASHINGTON. Nov. 20 fPi
Tlio Ulh Wur Loan drive began
luciay wun inn government ask
ing AniuricuiiH to din Into thnlr
pockets for nnnther $14,000,000,
000 to keep the attack rolling.
President Hooscvcll. no nlerilv
reminding tlio nullon Hint "the
war Is nut over no, nut by many
n foully battle," hint night eltcd
figures showing Hint 14 billions
will scaivuly pay the cost of glo
bal wur for two months.
At tho present rate, hn mild In
h wur bond address broadcast
from Uiu While, lluu.se, the wur Is
Tin Associated Pre..
W YORK. Nov. 20 P)
Iwiy customer dropped
US in ail uuii-uiim." ""ti-
lll, hiving irouuio ex-
trig It, died io venemeni
f help that a police emer-
quad wa summoned,
police anl.ted sympa
lljr when they understood
liable nature of the par
carton of cigarettes.
SITE CATASTROPHE
B ANGELES, Nov. 20 inn
Iraiy is Marching for the
(presumably young) oi
which was darting around
b feet. An army piano
lf, clipped the string, and
! Down came the kite.
I army, announced Lt. G.
ttDsnlel, Is willing to pay
By damage..
I
j STRANGE CASE
y'VER, Nov. 20 m In
f in a month Mrs. Louln
kith has received these tele-
Irom the wnr department
fnlnf her son, Pvt. Gerald
in:
Pvt. Bolen was missing
m In France on Soptcm-
Iff days Inter, that he was
ht wis missing In action
is.
he was safe again.
WEt.t. nriKP
IVXR, Nov. 20 m V. E.
mcr from a hunt, open
tmnk of his automobile
Is out some pheasants.
W struck a match. Gas-
'. the fuel tank flnrcd
aly damaged the car,
M tie pheasants
to a
NUMEnni.nnv
HA, Nov. 20 (P) He
register for the na-
tonvention of tho Asso-
oi Attorneys General
Mme is Doubles," he
mini U Qlnrtl. M.
, .v u,,,k,ui,, IC
Pi I woman at the desk,
nnna blngles, Omnhn
' M commerce conven
, registered M. Ray
Virgin" nev "cn
t'J'ff0' "n Japanese
' tho Phllllplnes; there
fr. (uo receiving sets
1V nn. .... ....
li "JWyen in Industry,
lM. . " concontratcd
Attention
Eagles
Tl,f Will B,
ACTION
Trustees
Nay Night,
TOber2Tst
I'ill.ll'l'l'lll' .'Il''l:l'il-n-l'....ill
!!IG!I SCHOOL
"' i ' 1 ' i 1 : '!""i .his 'in1 iim in i : hi i
iiiiiiiiw,.rioTi ana !
rE III!
! i ' . : ! : I ' 1 1 1 : : -: -i . : ; i . I i I ! ? ' 1 1 ? : ll.il :
By JUANITA SHINN
At ii MicccK.ituI blockiiiK dunce
held Friday nlKhl In the glrln'
gym, Kiiye lilehn with her pink
sueka adorned with block polka
dots won tho prl?.c for the loud
est sucks.
According to Ivor Strld. nicsi-
dent of (he Future Craftsmen
club, tho boys sold I III) tickets of
the 200 that thev hnd printed.
The "Handbook for Persons
Learning to pjwim.
Drive" was dl"-rfu-.y3
IrihlllKri In h.im-FV-JT
rooms mis morn
lug. They were
left for students
by the speiikcrK
who were nt the
school on Friday
spenklng to the
students on traf
fic snfety, jf.
Within threol.'siJ'ii'lil
hours nftcr school started this
morning, the high school came
one-third of the way toward
meeting its bond quota for the
ttth Wur Lonn drive. The quota
Is $3000 this yenr, being consid
erably less than the Inst drive.
Howovo', It Is felt thnt the stu
dents can more than double their
quota. If the opening day of the
drive Is nny Indication.
Wednesday noon the home
room, will each hold n stnmn
.ale. At some future date. It is
hoped thnt there will be a con
test held within the school to en
courage stamp sales.
tic.
-ELECT
TO
costing $7,500,000,000 In Novem
beror about $280,000,000 a
day.
"That Is why every bond you
buy Is so Important, 1 the presi
dent emphuslzcd. "While we
have every reason to bo proud of
what has been done even opti
mistic about tho ultimate out
come wo have no reason to be
complacent about the tough road
that lies ahead."
Sumo Idea of the dividends
this huge investment is paying
came from Navy Secretary For
rental, llo told a Minneapolis
war bond rally that, among other
thing:), the- money the navy bus
spent liicc 1040 helped sink 1400
unemy ships, destroy 10,000 en
emy planes, and drive the Jap
anese from over 11,000,000 square
miles of the Pacific area.
In New York, Rear Admiral
Monroe Kelly, commandant of
the third naval district, opened
Unit city's $3,607,500,000 cam
paign with a pica to replace "ap
proximately $100,000,000 worth
of ships" he said wero lost in the
recent Philippine sea buttle.
ivioro than 100,000 persons
I timed out in Chicago yesterday
to sec 400 marines demonstrate
modern assault tactics at a war
bond show, and there will be
similar shows In a hundred other
cities. In Uultiinore, it was an
nounced that 75 per cent of the
tickets available to the public
for the December 2 Army-Navy
football game would be sold to
purchasers of $25 bonds.
Trensury officials estimated
Ihnt nt least $5,000,000,000 of the
bond goal would come out of the
pockets of the average citizen.
Voluntcvr solicitors, about 8,
000,000 of them In the nation,
will ring doorbells In house-to-house
canvasses for buyers.
Blake Draws Plans
For Safety Council
PORTLAND. Nov. 20 (P)
Roland P. Blake, senior safety
engineer of the department of
labor, spent last week here
helping the state industrial ac
cident commission draw prelim
inary plans for the formation
of a state safety council.
Blake stated that Oregon has
one of the highest occupational
accident rates of any state In
the country. He said 60,000 lost
time injuries were reported In
the logging Industry alone In
1H43, with an average time-loss
of 13 da vs.
CHILDREN'S COLDS' COUGHINB.
auiokly rliovfld by Penetro
rtndmft'iold'time mutton suat
idea developed by modorn Kiflm
jntoarountoMrritMUvaroriiio
IvMthnf.t-irinoanninir ArtmfnrfJ
ins relief. 25c. double tiitt 36c
nc u r'rn n fe?
SI CONTAIN MUTTON SUET
TULELAKE Warren Woyno
Johnson, 46, veteran of World
War II, was found dead in his
bed at noon Saturday In a small
house which he occupied on the
Lava Beds road. Discovery was
made by Mark Howard, 2003
Summers lane, Klamath Fulls.
Death was attributed to natural
causes.
Johnson, a native of Chippewa
Lake, Mich., was a machinist by
trade. Ho received a medical dis
charge from tho United States
army in 1043, according to Chief
of Police Frank Rhodes of Tule
lake. Johnson had been trapping
In this area,
The Ifugno rice terraces of
northern Luzon In the Philip
pines are considered ono of the
great engineering foals of the
world.
Bobby Soxers Lift
Goods From Stores
PORTLAND, Nov. 20 UP)
Shoplifting by Innocent faced
girls In bobby socks and sweat
ers has become a major prob
lem in Portland retail stores,
police reported today.
The Portland Retail Trade as
sociation launched an investi
gation after store executives re
ported confessions of high
school youngsters that In their
circles "it's smart to steal."
Juvenile officials said the
young shoplifters, who take
chiefly sweaters, scarfs and
"Junk jewelry," are not under
privileged children. Some come
from prominent families.
One department store report
ed that out of 19 shoplifters de
tected in a nine-day period, 17
were juveniles. A 12 and a 14-year-old
girl, detected with $150
of pilfered merchandise, told
detectives they were on their
way to school when one girl
suggested: "Let's skip school to
day and go downtown and shoplift."
The trees of Norway Include
pine, spruce, birch, willow, as
pen, rowan, ash, elm, lime, oak,
beech and black alder.
HARTFORD
Aeeideot and Indemnity Company
INSURANCE
T. B. NATTERS
General Insurance Agency
FIRE . . . AUTOMOBILE
61S Main St.
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO PAIN . NO HOSPITALIZATION
N. Lou af Tlma
Parmaatnl Kaaaltal
DR. E. M. MARSHA
Cblripraallo Phyttelan
t N. Ilk Ktqnlre TtaMtr Sldf
rbn .
Classified Ads Bring Result!.
NATURAL LOOKING CURLS
PERMANENT WAVE
Yet, it Uu I You can now five
jrourtdf a marveloue permanent
wave, cooi-iy, cnmiorianiy, at '
home, eaty aa puttinf your halt t
up in culei. The amazing '
contain everythinf you rvd. Accept tvt tuh
atitutta. but iraratuntheKcnuimCittVm-Kuri.
Complete, only 59 cent. pay no more. Over
5 million tnld. Saf lor every type ol hair. At
Wagffonnr Drug and all drug atoraa.
159'
in the 4-or.
Family Jar
PASTE
SHOE
POLISH
Wayne L. Morse, former dean
of law at the University of Ore
gon and successful candidate to
the United States senate, will be
in Klamath Kails, Monday, No
vember 27, and will discuss prob
lems of this region with interest
ed persons, he advised Frank Z.
Howard, chairman of the repub
lican central committee.
Morse is slated to address Par
ents and Patrons at Klamath Un
ion high school Monday night.
Howard said that headquarters
for Morse would be announced
later in tho week.
Fire Takes Life
Of Elderly Woman
PORTLAND, Nov. 20 (P)
Fire believed lo have started In
a closet between tho basement
and kitchen of her two-story
frame dwelling took the life Sat
urday of Mrs. Bertha Hughy, 75,
who lived alone here.
A son, Lloyd C. Hughy, Port
land, survives.
Now Many Wear
FALSE TEETH
With Little Worry
Eat. talk, laugh or nrcifl without
foar of l nil-cure false teeth dropping,
lipping or wahhllng. FASTEKTU holds
plates firmer and more comfortably.
Thin pleasant powder has no gummy,
gooey, pasty taMe or feeling. Doesn't
ration nausea. M'a alkaline (nonncldt.
Checka "plate odor" idcnture breath).
Get FASTKICTK at any drug itore.
tA A
f HORAGt I
CO v ret. x?m rmrt Lul t,T$
PHONE 4151
645 Broad St., Klamath Fall.
jVa . ,u,i i,i uijbw'
kJSa
'ONE OF AMERICA .
f IKE SHOES FOR MEN
A custom-grade oxford In a smart
half-brogue pattern. "Strand" last.
Style 21 $14.50
BIT STEATJR1TS TTdDUD m I
M
wE
IM1
N
Sponsored By
The Klamath Falls lions Club
Assisted by Many Other Public Spirited
Citizens of the Klamath Basin
To IRaise ODidd
, IS)
w
This Adrariltamant
Cenirlbuted by
Klamath rails
Business .
PICK THE SECURITY
THAT'S BEST FOR YOU
insoent ft Sov,ng,
wur namt bnmdlt
on a $roo Bond of tb
fighting Sixth War Loan!
Help get it over-put the Sixth War Loan
over Buy an Extra $IOO War Bond Nowl
m o is l ssthore
PRESENT
TO VOTE
717 Main St.