Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 05, 1945, Page 8, Image 8

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    EIGHT HERALD AND MEWS
RFL PUZZLED
1 OVER LAYOFFS
LABOR LACK
.': PORTLAND, Ore.. Feb. 5 (fl
Kfembers of the AFL Boilermak
ers' union here, puzzled because i
mnr than 3000 shiDvard work -
ers in this area were laid off last ' j.fftrSl-m iwm!y precincts hrta
week while congress debated a -j ym rioctwwi 5v)i.
work-or-fight legislation, are de- result -ail ir$ n.i 3t-
manding action, Business Afect wt iisj-jtstries in Ijoutsvillf
Ralph Calhoun said today. j,nfi thiwichrun he mnly n-rcf
"There isn't any thirds I cars ordered closed iar wn hnnrs.
tell them," he stated reJactactiy. sj. inuiins "this reciure
'They're out oa a limb,"' Sine mem.
manj' of those dismissed bad jk
inonev. he has (Lives away -snare VEIX TRAVELED
than I made in tie Jast wee.." ; SJViKAXE, F-b. S !P
raiKrttin m feeln jnfsa wash :x-.t.ni Vi-mu')t hnri hm- jmrse
families eat."
One company raid kins jnare
emploves wouid be discuirtsed
everv" week, the oifsciij djs-
closed. He called tie itbor
shortage here "as pbey as
crutch."
Calhoun and a Vnired Saaws
employment service reOTsecta-
five devoted most of Sitaroty
to conferences with 23 ,aflea
welders laid off at the era ci
that morning s gravej ara scu..
at Albina engine and madiise
works, builder of sub-chasers. ;
He declared afterward tbati
while there is a manpower short- (
age, emphasizing the word ;
'man, ' there is not a vrana
shortage. The women, who have
been working in shipyards a long
time, would be retained if they
were needed, Calhoun said, add
ing that men are being fired,
too.
Willamette Iron and Steel cor
poration, meanwhile, reported
hiring 1300 more workers in the
last two months and needing
more to build CVE carriers. No
worker classifications were spec
ified, however.
Air Station Needs
More Auto Mechanics
The Klamath naval air station
is in immediate need of qualified
auto mechanics, and all those
not engaged in an essential in
dustry are urged to apply dt
calling at the civil service com
jjnission at the US employment
.office or by phoning 61 1 6.
The local air station is also in
irreat need of other skilled la-
-"vDore.5, ana anyone intrreaieu
jinay make inquiries by calling
burglar Licks Point
Problem by Thefts
PORTLAND, Feb. 5 (TV-The
"Jjurglar who broke into the
JStop-And-Save grocery here has
rationing licked, for the pres
ent at least.
He hauled off 200 pounds of
sugar, a case of butter, 20
pounds of veal, a case of coffee
and 500 red tokens.
fa 11 T
UUA.TWMLlOWn
A Treaty Kept
; By EARL WHITLOCK - -Recently
there was paid by
the Government to the mem
bers of the Six Nations' Indian
tribes, in New r
York State, the t
annual issue of
$3300 worth of
calico. This in I
accordance with '
an old Treaty
dating away !
18th century, f
The payment is
made to insure
the peaceful be
havior of those
Indians, which isn't much of a
problem now, because they are
all busy and successful citizens.
But it is one of the very few
Indian treaties which the Gov
ernment has lived up to possi
bly because in this case, the
cost of virtue was so small.
And it is interesting to re
. ;flect that the only colonists
ever to settle here who never
had any Indian trouble at all,
were the Quakers who, under
the guidance of the good Wil
liam Perm and their own con
sciences, tried the experiment
of treating the Indians accord
ing to the Golden Rule. And it
worked so well that while oth
er colonists went to their
church, of a Sunday, heavily
armed and looking fearfully
over their -shoulders, the Quak
crs confidently turned their
kids over to the nearest Indian
squaw to care for, and went
peacefully on their way.
Remarkable principle that
Golden Rulel
- Next Monday Mr. Whltlock
bf the Earl Whitlock Funeral
Home will comment on Abra
ham Lincoln.
ZZSTrulove'
Meat Cutting
-.' and
Curing Plant
I W cut and wrap meat
for your lockers and
smoka your hami and
bacom
Phon42B2 819 E. Main
cm
Mendir. Th. , M4J I
Flashes of
Life
BLOOD BANKER
MAVCH CHIXK. Pa FeK
5 (.j, Friends call Fvmk- Chw:
Ed MeGinley, a 2ivxsnow the
"one-man bjood har.k" of Fn
ther valley.
He's given T pints f r.
blood to the Red Ooss,
MIXORITr ROX.ES
' vmij isfl xvaics in Tii tiny
swilen tram a -pnrk-ea -cur Inst
jmbor.
, j. jt$ .hn; ;now. "With f:
rtmit B -notr- irom a snlrtier: 'J
immg 5hs beneath the t -of a
truck 4n Jtlilv."
i
; EXH"
siUT LAKE CITT. Feb. S
jjOiw chnTf!ori with drunfciM
sias Snnnfi 'new twit? jo p ot;5
r.ts 's -crowrlod iiii. fid
ij-,
we ihe jnnrnrs. '
... ;
intBrsjn HT i
LOS AXvSELSS. Fs-b. 5 C-J- i
yransc itTS. Marfine: Koff en- ',
s-eia, 4. toja ccuce taat ner !
14-montiss-oia graajachiid. wnom ,
cKa t.fvin while the uar
IrlnTgadefa! Military intelligence officials
bile while she was shopping. tare anxious to contact persons
Next day she told police to I who have lived in enemy
i;5 sh hH inst re. 'occupied territory in the Far
membered that she had left the
youngster at the home of friends
the day before.
BONER
KANSAS CITY, Feb. 5 VP)
Sports Writer Ernie Mehl wond
ers what the thief thought who
broke into his car, tore into a
well wrapped package and
found
A bone that Mehl was taking
to one of his Collie dog friends.
REASON
KANSAS CITY. Kas., Feb. 5
W) A man called at the ration
board to ask why only part of
the gasoline ration he had re
quested was granted.
"Good heavens man," the
board member shouted, "don't
you know there's a war on?"
"Naturally," the caller re
plied. "You ask 475 miles a month.
You have to get riders."
"I can't get riders."
"There's a war on, and you
can t Bet riders?
"No. I can't. If you'd read
my application you would know
why.
"Why?"
"I haul garbage."
Sno-Cat Testing Set
In Medford
MEDFORD, Feb. 5 UP) A
unique "sno-cat," machine de
signed by E. M. Tucker, Grass
Valley, Calif., a former Medford
resident, for snow travel, will be
tested here February 20.
Army engineers including
snow survey Chief J. C. Marr,
Idaho, and power company, wild
life service, and forest service
representatives from southern
Oregon and northern California
will watch the tests.
11 -Die in Portland
From Diseases
PORTLAND. Feb. 5 fjFi
Portland had 11 deaths from
communicable diseases last
week, City Health Officer
Thomas L. Mcador said todav.
There were 143 new cases re
ported. A non-resident eirl was
aamiuea to the isolation hospital
, u : 1 : 1 1
mm iiiiamuc pdidiyais.
For
Commercial
Refrigeration
SALES ond SERVICE
See
Karl Urquhart
Refrigeration
Equipment Co.
611 Klamath
Phone 6455
With JIMMY LYTELL'S ORCHESTRA
THE LISTENING LADY & DAVID ROSS
IVrJI Friday T
PrewnLd by the Coca-Cola Bottling Co. of Klamalh Falls
NAS Executive
6
Lt. Ccdr. H. G. Athertoo.
rsS. Jsti aha enr w aiu ;
mcuUt oihwr oi ;
the KUaata Mtil air station,
Ke was rorsseriy at Canton is-,
land. Ceatral Facitie. wh h
was tM-cuave ciisoer with th
liirtl air facility for six months, i
d c-riar to that time served
IT scaths at the saral air sta-i
tisa at Saneoi. Hawaii, as op-;
ratics officer at that base. I
-
DATA ON FAR EAST
DEEDED BY ARMY
East since 1930, it was an-
nounced today.
Pictures, maps, information as
to terrain, military installations,
bridges, etc., are particularly
valuable, and persons having
such information were asked to
contact military intelligence
men at the following address:
Military Intelligence,
Post oifice box 951,
Portland 7, Oregon.
Those who have visited or
lived in Far Eastern territory
should write, telling when they
were in the area, what informa
tion they possess, and how they
may be contacted.
$230,000 Netted by
Co-Op. Creamery
McMINNVILLE, Feb. 5 OP)
The Farmers Cooperative cream
ery here netted more than $230,
000 from sales of nearly $2,000,
000 in the fiscal year ending De
cember 1, 1944, the annual re
port shows.
Patrons' interests for 1940-42,
totaling more than $61,000, were
distributed to about 1000 mem
bers, who also voted to increase
the firm s capitalization by
$75,000.
Land Used in Battle
Maneuvers Returned
BEND, Feb. 5 UP) Hundreds
of thousands of acres used in the
"Battle of Central Oregon"
1943 military maneuvers which
attracted as many as 10,000 sol
diers to Bend some weekends
arc being returned to the own
ers. Transfer of the property to
about 4000 land-owners, mostly
mid-state stockmen, will take at
least a month, reported Lt. John
R. Lindsey, in charge of the of
fice here.
The city of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
has more streets than. any other
city.
V 4. - ;
it
W i
CJ WEDNESDAY
r : SWIGART I
THEATRE-GOERS, MS
Theutre-Koera of Klamntlt
Falls contributed $2523.98 to the
MurWi or Dimes infantile uartiLv-
sis campaUn, accoWing to Lloyd
Lamb, local manager for North
west theatres.
Lmb said the fund will be
trans-nitted to Neul East of San
Francisco, northern California
head of the campaign for thea-
1 tres. and half will then go to the
national fund and half will be
! returned to Klamath county.
The theatre contributions will
apply on the Klamath county
quota.
' Tne warcn oi uimes was ncn
: er by S2i3.Tl. as the result of
: contributions by the Klamath
'naval air station personnel the
; past two weeks. Of this amount.
! S 7.25 was contributed by the .
! NAAF t Lakeview.
Cotitainers were placed at
various points at the station and
a part of the fund was gained
through a senior BCXJ dinner
dance Saturday night. Station
personnel also prepared 2300 let-'
tors for matlins. assisting the ;
wunt- chapter. Chaplain O. W.
Jones was in charge of the
March of Dimes program.
Multnomah College
Separated from YM
PORTLAND. Feb. 5 i.P)
Multnomah college has been sep
arated from the Young Men s
Christian association and will
operate as a separate financial
unit without help from the com
munity chest.
While the college will continue
relations with the YMCA, it will
be operated by its own board of
regents. Postwar development
of the trade school and junior
college, which now has an en
rollment of 569, was a major
reason for the change.
The community chest voted
$15,000 to enable the school to
bridge the gap between now and
establishment of its own finan
cial -program.
";f ' : I V ' s " Carlyo coutouricr perfection ... tliat (liens-
' " ' "i i t maknr finish to all details. en and unseen.
l flL 2. the fine Carlyo fabrics, cut on tlioroughbrca Jyy?
fi I W. tliat good Carlyo sliouldcr, subtly rounded J- J.m.
40 ' fiv' : "" '"'"e n'c scu''llurn' l'1'n5 or 1
W 'Cvffi il&Z it 4. that Carlyo precision of cut- 3fffi ffK
i f Z(J3&l wil that reduces alterations down to I 2il I'w-
M JbJ?rU f Mhlll oraclically nothing. 'AyfrW VUf I
mm
Mcjm 111
Hi I ii ' 1,, J if VI -Vi Vv ' r)l.i...wr;
:i m 'l i I , mpmng chuic mih iiam
St' I f In ti B t -it I JWl WO Mt pique buttons, pip
M Y i km t kti m V m , ,. i'"i"'l-w'24 .95
iimplc and oii'M-quietly tic tlljj Vl ' Jkdlffly Ml
A Kant with Us piping, button) ' w f f ' 1 X, Ti A . V llfr' i
ft' and belt a gold leather, usfd y . U ' '3 I (U J l
The War
.At a Glance
By Th Associated Pri
Th Wtsttrn Frontt First
army reported through double-row
Siegfried line east of
Monschati, 28 miles Irom
Rhine: third army deepens
Siegfried wedge to south:
French-American troops com
press Germans' Colmur poc
ket. Th Russian Front: Soviets
drive toward Oder bend 30
miles from Berlin beyond
by-passed Kustriu: Germans
report Oder crossing attempt
foiled: red armies mass along
hug stretch of river.
Th Italian Front: Fifth
army retakes ground lost in
December near west coast:
strong pativl actions mark
front below Bologna.
To Pacific Fronts Ameri
cans take half of Manila, uiul
speed complete liberation of
capital: 3700 internees, large
ly American, freed: Tokyo im
ports new Philippines landing
on jolo" island.
Portland Hit by New
Outbreak of Fever
PORTLAND. Feb. 5 l.PV After
several weeks in which no cases
of undulant fever were reported,
Portland has been hit by a new
outbreak.
There were nine cases Satur
day on top of five reported Fri
day, when the lull ended.
DEVELOPING
ENLARGING
PRINTING
PHOTO SERVICE
211 Undorwood Bldg.
Y "i O)
ill
There litis been much morn
precipitation In tlio Kliininlli ba
sin arcu Hum In oilier portions
of tho slate, according to W. 1.
Frost, engineer with the soil con
servation service with liciidinuir
ters In Medford.
Frost has been In chiirgo of ro
cent snow surveys throughout
this section of tlto stulo uiul re
ports that tho wulorshcd Is well
wetted under the snow puck unci
that this Is a fuvorublc factor to
a runoff from the pack, which
is equivalent to lust year.
On the Strawberry snow
course, located on tho watershed
divide between Gooso Inko and
Lost river, thuro nro 10 Inches
of snow with flvo Inches of
water In the snow, lie reported,
This Is a heavier density titan
has been measured there In some
time, ho said.
Cab Driver Chases
Down Hit, Run Car
PORTLAND. Feb. 5 (!') An
nlert tnxlcab driver today was
credited with chasing down 11 car
that struck and killed a pedes
trian yesterday morning, llien
raced away.
Allan Hobson, the cabbie, said
he saw the nuto strike Ernest
N. Hupp, SO, who died shortly
afterward. Ho forced the car,
driven by Victor A. Lincoln, 44,
to the curb after a wild chase
through downtown Portland.
Lincoln, charged with negli
gent homicide and drunken
driving, Is in Jail on $3900 bull.
Allen Adding Machines
Friden Calculator!
Royal Typowritort
Desks Chain Filos .
For thos hard-to-got Items
PIONEER PRINTING
AND STATIONERY CO.
124 So, 9th Klamath Falls
JSvliat makes every Carlyo classic so' exactly right for timet
and places in your life ... so truly indispensable?
Navy Man on Leave
Saws Off Thumb
A 10-day leave given. 8 1c
Frank Wood, USN, to visit his
wife and son Frank, In Klamath
Kills, ended 111 hospitalization
fur Wood whu cut off tho thumb
of his right hand Thursday whllu
uin'ratlng a wood saw, Wood,
visiting at thu lionut of Ills fath
er and mother-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs, John Gardner, 10311 High,
was using a buzz-saw when Ills
glove was caught In tho m.tch
uierv. Wood was given treatment at
Klamath Valley hospital and
Friday moved to thu Klamath
mival air sUitlon dispensary. Ho
has been In tho navy for tho past
year, stationed at both San Diego
and Treasure Island.
PBY Repair School
Set for Tongue Point
ASTORIA, Feb, 8 ')
Tongue Point miviil air station
soon will open a school training
men to service and repair 1'ltY
flying boats, Cimlr, II. J. Me
Nulty, commanding officer, said
today,
The eight-week course will ac
commodate about 101)11 enlisted
men anil 70 officers. There will
be an instructing staff of 23 of
ficers and 225 enlisted moil.
Activity at tho station will bo
the greatest since departure of
Us PHY siiuiidroiis III 1042.
If It's a "frozen" article von
need, ndvortlso for a used ono
in the classified.
Just ltevelvi'ill
MEN'S
DRESS GLOVES
Navy Grey Suedo
Natural Acorn Pigskins
KurUncd Brown Capesklns
All Sizes. S4.50 to $3.95
DREW'S MANSTORE
733 Main V
, TOlH'LANiTTT '
c,,l,! ! i.i.mhT'i
wjir ri 1... v Km
mm tomorrow. TlielrT?
.ion. "bra, 1 r&'N
ern coiistllnc fh..?.1'
wu er power n,,.,,
111 tne sen In all con.i.
e. Chang m,U WjH
E"?, :flu" iboTJ
modeV;,1v;r,az,,0iN
gravity flow lrrlmti ,w1
which U 21)00 vmJ. M
stated. " " w,
WISE Bl
i. in. . ii
,w, MUU...iSa motoHl
Oflcl.1 Tlr.
Dick B. Miller
SILVERT0WN5
I B. i. Goodrich tlw
Cor. 7th and KUmilh ft.
1
1
KC
I