Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 25, 1945, Page 11, Image 11

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    Shop and SAopA
,ryr-rTr f "
I ' uimil. the
I ciuliil'Pli',r nounctmenl ol that reoptnlna
Y.,,n sulnt or . . i wougiii i a near uy to-
vt. , l. I Juld.'f u vld.ntly they .r.n't
CtlOre ! expected to open
about February (, or theraabouli
And II 1 wr you I d watch
aaveriiiemenii lor Hit an
he
VV.r. i
tlirwr"
$2.00 1,1
f babies. ' ' ?"',,
f Iihs received
At a w.
II
n r- i... mi ili'l ay.
Ml. V"am " ci nul. rdv la Itala a dtWlntl.
T, d now limn ver
""'. . .lion to-
linW ,.i :lt Shun ..
:! ' ,,,mh.-r iiieiiilt 1 1 days huve you teen tho
adorable new pink huts for
Sprint in llic window ut
Lung , . , well, there are
mora insido . . . And white onci
ol t ho tamo typo, too.
They're tho tlrsl-of-lhc-scuson
. . . And tho curly huts lire
..I,.,,.,.. II, A I,-.! ,,.!., ,.,.rl f..J..
'v crovr on dellciito luro 1 1, 0 wjilcst selection of
hi, In i- ' ; stylet ... a point inui u menu
mid nn" children, nl of nilno In Sun Francisco, who
And liny Kolil l"1'1 Is buyer for tho hut depurl-
.' ' - l,.li,r, 111 $.1.70. ......I ..I nn. n II.. .(..,..
I and GUI &l'l Bl there, illustrated to mo lon
2 Strcft. ago . . . (I've chocked on thai
ii number of yours, mid It hat
i alwnva been truel)
innut. SAt22- ,n c" vou haven't seen
, i ...... i,vn nr. Ilttlo about thorn . . . Tlioy
tnewl0,T,w.i Shin w"" 0,"d '". wr
" T"C, .iw uva ,f". ''ll"0- lrl". cl "
k'c,0.t'':l",r many caacs . . . And nro ex-
Iron, urn i " cepllonully oxclimlvo lookinK.
fblousci, ni'tts or new V . f . , f ,ruln
lly Is iii'W. hBU uovt)ro(i Wt, fwqr, oil
over . . . Or should 1 call
thnm nil-over flower hats?
arc chocks, " !'
prima "i"1 i'"
V' rin w o lhn", n"-"Vor flowor hats? . . ,
1 ' A", , , ,, e eS Anyway, I ho flower, nro pink,
I1'"' 0, ,a S while, violet and bluo . . . And
hi '1 ou'ie ? nighty cute.. .
li,l,l imuulne a bloiiM-
!(o up In . . . l'rlccd
9 te?-"i.
avn nup uiu i.hb . s... . . (.
,.i..ii.. .u.ri. ihul nirrei.
If IV(,H o....- -
Ji-hIv . . . And some IJ
irii with cloliiihltul
or all-around pii-nin
price rnniio ol SJ.uu
on Iho balcony nre
tcaili of new sweat-
iljlc and all fhndc
go up 10 siu.uo ,
i a ipcclul deal
16 on lot that are
ta or inonworn
pent of the new "Jog.
tkcU, In two luno and
(tame In, too . . . Be-
the other Jackets that
ed since tho (irat ol
. IncludlnR tho fanv
If you hnvon't iltoppod LonK'i
for hum yel, you'ro mlnxlnit a
benutlful nelpetlon . . . Prlcea
T
UK now pun rayon "casual"
tlre.ixes al why tula aro
Hurling . . . And so (lis
tlnctlvo and flatterlnc for
mora $7.05 or $0.05, that
I looked the prices over sov-
on Jnckrt that ia o "nl Umcs before I was sura
fcr golf, rldlnif, skllnR, wnn "' m Ke.
Aitvjr vviiiu id ,i ,11,9, ,,,unv
go on lonuor, bul I ""'m u"1"111"' "d dlntlnclivo,
You'll have to see Ulut 0llcl dolluriUo nolka (lots
if . . At The Town ln n" 'ne P,",'' shades.
kh and Main Slrcots. . O0 oroases nave duj-
UI 4t4 illC-WM UUWII IMC iruiu,
A QflC aonio tailored collnrs, some
nilATA aiuuro necklines, and aome V-
nccKS . . , inoto nre tno one
piece, and cost from $7.05 to
$0.03.
But I fell, myself, for a 2
piecer in n print Hint is worked
out awfully cleverly in cutting,
has extondcd-shniilder sleeves,
nnd buttons tin tho hnck of the
fcro one of the many Jacket . . . And Is $7.95.
Iio lias aaked lor West- Thine like that are so hnrd
Overdo In Kliimnth to exnlnin. thnimh . . . Whv
'Mc's II tin that a hie don't vnn Hrnn In nt Whvliil'
Int of It hus arrived nnd sco them, yourself? . . .
trlns For Drugs . . . Ninth and Main Street.
du don't know about
to explain . . , The
Jimdotion mukc-up is
cam Uiat comos in six
1 stays on Just about
V you don't hnuo II,,,.
new makeup in tho
h" u' d",ni)cri vor
.. ...u wuitr uno pai
. . Then you pat
'. nnd put on fresh
U..,. ..
, nieresung . . .
My lllht in weight
111 In rn n, a ....
y one simnc . . . f.
oundallon, and as
Jliado of the founda
ve used.
was designed by the
7'mr hrolhera of
h,, iu """""r Pho
Kh,,..n.,0,Y10 lony
i-V.r . 11 Wll per
Lrc .""'I "oclal wear
ni I T ''3l)
o m 5t" f!,r mo'li
"'I Use on v a iim
(' take away tho
- u 1 airccta . , .
0 Where you cn 8ct
at n In,. ...... . .
,or br (Ice ni.. .
110, or r. "
P "lock f y" look
;UCK of (jiuncs nt
c mes for chIt,rc
lcii",' S Mnio
Rww n "!,lw "'an
crr1"1"8. Mon-
I , 'on, par.
,2S7 u" .',. From
te,,':,'iyln8
i . D Mono flnl.h
o 11 ? 10 merely
mow Y-" damn
,nlll' card, ,m'
ln's '"" 'on: .
- . -mi mam
r
Studio. o Beauty
HAVE you over noticed how
much faster your hair dries
under a beauty shop drier
when you don t uso wave
act? ... It makes at least
hnlf nn hour's difference in
mine, and that is a grent com
fort. Tho chief reason why a wav
ing solution has to be used to
set hair is tho absence of curl
, . . Either natural or "porman
ont," so called ... So it pays,
In tlmo saved and frequency of
hnlr-do appointments, to have a
permanont wavo as soon as you
need one.
Fern Short and I looked up
tho date of Easter, the other
dny , . . It's April First, this
year, In case you don't know,
yourself . . , And she remarked
that tho last two woeks In
March the Studio of Beauty,
which sho owns, will bo swamp
ed with permanent wnvo ap
pointments. Sho said she hates to sea the
' shop awiimpcd, and tries to sec
to it that no appointments arc
"worked In" . . . Because that's
a sure way to skimp on some
customer . , . But when a Rood
customer Just simply HAS to
hnvo nn appointment on a ccr-'
lain dny, every onco In a while
she gives in against her better
'Judgment.
Fern snld that lots of gals
wait too' long for a permanent,
nnywny , , , They'd look much
hotter and be moro satisfied
with tho looks of their hair if
they'd get a now one even a
few weeks earlier , . , And she
said ahe hopes that a number
who nro plnnnlng on perman
ents "Just before Easter" will
make their appointments dur
ing February, nt least five or
six woeks before Easier.
I guess she's right when she
snys thnt tho customers really
got moro porsonnllred service
when the shop Isn't swamped
with hnpolntmonts,
Incidentally, Tim Studio of
Bfauty now gives two kinds of
Rilling cold waves, In addition
to tho famous Rilling Kooler
wnve . , , And, of course, all
tho different klnda of machine
and machlneloss pcrmanents In
Iho widely varying prlca ranges
nvnllnble.
And I'd suggest you call 71 SI
before long nnd make an ap
' nolntmont for one of them . .
In Fcbruarvl
,vyo,MEH ii
..." -r
MOSES GRADUATED
COHI'US CHHISTI. Toxaa
Owen Patrick Moses, ton of Mr.
and Mrs. finnrui,
J. Moses, of T. 1 FErSZS!
uutod recently J'jL ' ?
from tho imvullW J-- !
air tralnlngU4vpr
bases, Corpus I V-i . W '
Chrlstl. and was Wife1. . F
c o m m Isslnned i
an nnslRn In the
U, S. naval io
serve. lie Is a form
or student of the
Oreiton btnlo 'J
college, Corvallis,
f
DUNN IN PARATROOPERS
RFC Hugh S. Dunn, 22, son
of Mrs. C. U. Hayes of 321 Broad,
It a member of tho fumoua DtHth
para cmiic in- ,):
went Into Ilol.,'
liind In the early l
dnys of t h a t f, ::Z?tk
was woiiiuli-d
and has been In
a honplUil in
Paris, he has ad
vised his moth
er. He hopes
to return to
Klamath Falls
Immediately up
on his trniiMfvr
to the United
Suites. Dunn sent his mother a
R ii per published In Mijmcgcn,
athorhinds, "The All American
r'araglldc," published for the
benefit of American troops as
a grateful gesture by the Hoi
landers. A picture of Nijmcgcn
bridge, one of the main object
ives of the Dutch invasion, stories
of how the paratroopers dropped
out of "the peaceful Sunday
afternoon skies to libcrato the
key Nljmegen sector," descrip
tions of airborne landings by
glider and parachute, were In
cluded In the four-page paper,
OPENS GATES
WITH THE FIFTH ARMY.
ITALY Fifteen minutes of
skillful maneuvering by a cor
poral with a bulldozer opened
the gate to Uvcrgnano, bulwark
of a stubborn C.ern.Rn defense on
highway No, 65, south of Bolog
na in northern Italy, recently.
The short operation under
cover of darkness was a success
ful climax to planning and co
ordination between tho division
combat engineers, Infantry and
artillery. It succeeded where
two previous attempts to fill the
crater had fulled. It cleared the
way for tho capture of Llverg
nano, lying in a saddle a nar
row bottleneck between hills and
escarpments. .
U. Colonel Wlllinm C. Holloy
of Klamath Falls, Ore., engineer
battulion commander, arranged
and carried out his plan. Besides
the artillery, ho obtained secur
ity of foot troops north of the
crater. When reconnaissance was
complete and the dozer was
ready, Hoi ley called for tho ar
tillory fire.
Cpl. Archie Chlldcrs slipped
the dozer Into gear and dug the
dirt from tho sido of tho hill,
funning it Into the hole, ArtU
ery pounded the area in front,
blasts echoing through tho hills.
The Job was over In 15 minutes,
and tanks and light supporting
weapons rolled ovor the patched
up road.
RICE REPORTS
BIO SPRING, Texas 2nd Lt.
Gala F. Rice has just reported
for duty at the Big Spring bom
bardier tvbool of tho AAF train
ing command to begin his bom
bardier training, it was an
nounced by Col. Ralph C. Rock
wood, commanding officer of the
school,
Lt. Rice Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. J, B. Rice, Chtloquin, He
received his degree from Oregon
State college, lie is taking this
course as a student officer and,
upon completion, will rocclvc
the wings of a rated bombardier.
, ALCORN OUNS ON FOHT
AN EIGHTH AIR FORCE
BOMBER STATION, England
KH William L. Aluoru, of Klam
ath Falls, tm MMmitfrMimm
turret gunner- -on
tho H17 Fly S, pit,,
lug Fortress
"Sturdustor" ofSf
the .Oath bom ft
b a r d in o n t
HI UUJ, 14,1 eiKuui
air force compo
nent, is here
seen togged out
In flying clolhei.
us ho prepares
to Join his crew
In another lit a
vy bombing lit-
tuck on vltul nnr.l turgcts In Ger
many, or in support of udvancc.i
by allied ground forces on the
continent.
Sgt, Alcorn, already holder of
the Air Modal with one Ouk Leaf
Cluster, is u member of tho Fort
rest group cominundcd by Col,
Jack E. Shuck of Casper, Wyo.,
and Monroe, Conn., which led
the first American bombing at
tack on turgets in Berlin. The
05th wui singly cited by the
president for its outstanding
bombing of railroad marshalling
yards at Minister, Germany, in
October, llM.'l, unci us u unit of
the distinguished third bomburd
mcnt tILvbion, the group also
1 in red in a presidential citation
given the entire division for its
historic England-Afrlcu .shuttle
bombing of an Important Mcssur
schmitt fightur plane plant at Re,
goiihburg, Germany, in August,
1043.
Sgt. Alcorn is the son of Mrs.
Helen E. Huffman of route 3,
Klamath Fulls.
'
LESLIE PROMOTED
CAMP HOBEHTS, Colif.
Promotion of Thomas L. Leslie,
135 Sheldon, to corporal, hits
been announced at this infantry
replacement truinlng center.
Cpl. Leslie Is assigned to com
pany D, 7Uth battalion, where he
Is serving as squad leudcr nnd
instructor.
MITCHELL WRITES
Mrs. Elmer Waldrlp of Tule
lake has received a New Year's
reeling In a form letter tent her
y her ton, Gone Mitchell. EM
!le, US navy. In the letter
Mitoncii tens or action in trie
South Pacific on Christmas
while you were laying tho ores.
cuts out around the Christmas
tree." In deacrlblng the bom
bardment of an Island and the
destruction of Japanose thins,
Mitchell said "we spent Chrlst-
inus or J 044 firing theso guns so
we could be togather as toon us
possible for a big Christmus at
homo."
SONS IN SERVICE
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Pex, 2036
Vine, have two sons in service.
Pvt. Richard W. Pex is in tho
quartermasters corps of the
1 jtiH'.m
Er 1
Unueci Siaies army, and at lust
report was somewhere In Bel
glum. Radio Technician 3c
Juck J. Pox' home port is at
present on the east coast. Both
boys were graduated from the
Klamath Falls city schools and
from Klamath Union high
school.
HANSON REPORTS
KEESLER FIELD, Biloxi,
Miss. Pvt. Walter Hanson Jr.,
son of Walter Hanson, 4135 Alta
mont drive, Klamath Falls, has
reported to Keeslcr field to take
the army air forces training
command examinations to deter
mine his qualifications as a pre
aviation cadet.
CABTTL GETS DrCC
NINTH AIR FORCE HEAD
QUARTERS, France On August
23, 1044, First Lieutenant Alfred
B. Casio), Jr., Ft. Klamath, Ore.,
dive-bombed his P-38 Lightning
flghter-bomlior to destroy a pon-
v4 ?
itimril mtAtjiiJlSk
toon bridge used by the Ger
muns escaping the Falalse pocket
in France, and then swooped low
in five successive low-level straf
ing attacks to knock out more
than 20 enemy vehicles.
For his "outstanding achieve
ment," Lt. Csstcl received the
Distinguished Flying Cross.
Brigadier General Victor H.
Strahm, deputy commander of
the ninth air force, pins the
medal on the fighter-bomber
pilot. The ceremony took place
immediately prior to the lieuten
ant's departure on combat leave
to the states.
Lt. . Castel then a second
lieutenant was out on an armed
reconnaissance mission when he
spotted the German motor col
umns escaping across the Seine
river. "Displaying outstanding
courage and exceptional flying
skill," the citation read, "Lt.
Castel dove through violent en
emy barrages to destroy the
bridge and cut off the enemy
from retreat."
Although the primary objec
tive had been accomplished, Lt.
Thursday, Jan. 25, 1(45
HERALD AND NEWS ELEVEN
Castel remained In the area to
strafe the enemy motor traffic,
despite withering ground fire.
Tho citntion credited him with
"keen devotion to duty and ag
gressiveness." Lt, Castel is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred B. Castel, Ft. Klam
ath, and his wife, Wanda, lives
at Klamath Falls. He is a vet
eran of 108 combat hours and 60
missions. In addition to the DFC,
he wears tiie Air Medal with nine
Ouk Leaf clusters, and the cov
eted Silver Star, which he earned
on August 25 when he shot down
threo Meraerschmidt 100s over
Complegne, France. He scored
his victories without benefit of
gun sights.
(Lt. Castel Is now In Fort
Klamath visiting with his wife
and parents).
EDWARDS IN INDIES
PFC Ralph Edwards, who is
serving with the U. S. army en
gineers as an automotive me
chanic somewhere in the East
Indies, writes
that he is more
than busy and
not able to an
swer all of his
noit welcome
letters from
friends in
Klamath Falls.
Edwards claims
that mall is
what a 1 1 the
fighting men
long for when
they are over
seas. He especi
ally wants to
say hello to his friends at the
Weyernaeuscr Timber company,
WORK PANTS
BLACK JEANS
OREGON WOOLEN STORE
Main and Sth
and states that he will be abla
to tell them tome interesting
stories when he returns.
Edwards is the husband of
Mrs. Ann Edwards of 312 N.
11th, who will leave soon for
a visit at her home in Little
Rock, Ark,
BERSETH INSTRUCTS
Sgt. Carney Borsoth, son of
Olaf Berseth of Grants Pass, and
Mrs. P. M. Martinson, 803 Mitch
ell, is an instructor in field ar
tillery at Fort Sill, Okla.
Berseth has been in the army
for about three years, and was
recently home on a 10-day fur
lough. Before entering the serv
ice, ho was employed ln a mill
at White Horse, Calif.
The Big Inch oil line from Tex
as to the east coast is powered
by more than 100,000 horse
power in electric motors. .
LOCAL WOMEN GET
THOUSANDS OF
EXTRA RED POINTS
Every day, precious red points
are being paid to housewives who
turn In used taU to their butch
ers. Becaust this country Is faced
with a possible fat shortage,
these used kitchen fats are even
more urgently needed to make
medicines, synthetic rubber, gun
powder, soaps, paints and a
hundred other essentials on the
battlefield and borne front.
Every woman can help towards
final Victory by saving every
drop of used fats each Urns the
cooks. Even a spoonful is worth
salvaging. Won't you keep saving
until final Victory over both
Germany and Japan?
Mr. Machinist,
put your
calipers
on this job
See if it doesn't measure up to
something batter than most Jobs.
We mean this Machinist's Job
with Southern Pacific ... In
our shops or roundhouses. Here,
you work on locomotives ,.. .
with good equipment . . . -and
with men who can. fit 'om
smooth and close, This Is rail
roading on tho ground floor ; . ,
keeping 'em rolling for the enor
mous war load which S. P. will
bo carrying for a long time.
Good wages regular R. R.
standard. Good work appreci
ated. Good working conditions.
R..R. pass privileges. Flna peti
tion plan. Medical and hospital
services, A good Job for good
machinist no railroad expcrlt
ence required. Mny other good
Jobs open.
St or write Trainmaster,
g, P. Station, Klamath Falls,
or your nearest S. P. Agent
WEALTH
OF THE
WEST
it SPtED THl VICTORY BUY WAR BOND!
First th Corared Wagon and the Pony
ExprsM. Than the Golden Spike oi the
first transcontinental railroads, th billowing taUi oi full rigged schooners, and the
churning ol tom-whMUm In ban and riven. . . . Now what was once the 'Tar
West" is linked io remote corner of the world by Ihe miracle of modem trans
portation. Hard-iurtaced hlghwayi, fleet trucks, and superb motor coach systems
eovei the nation and make next door neighbors oi city and farm. Stream-lined
railway transportation dwaris a continent and giant air transports, circle the world
with ihe speed oi the sun. Today these marvels oi transporiaiion, many oi them
western-produced, are ihe arteries oi ihe nation's war effort. When peace returns
they will put the markets oi the world at ihe very door step oi our glorious West
SICKS' BREWING COMPANY
SALIM, OREGON
Proud to be among the famous
OntjoB Trade-Maks U Slekt' Se
lect Sew.
A SICK?
QUAUTV
PRODUCT
wtw.'iii'!iiiMt.iiw.lliiviii'j4iui'i;iktij
1