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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 19, 1945)
CHURCH TO jfflR CANDIDATE UW-Jt Z nnt I. .1,1 a -- L". cinjrcn in : honor 'Tin b.? I X the ven "K iffl my-- ,.urdl churcn - Vrdof' h the Prl K7 pastor. The t.Z .IntllS Win I new nth 1v , hi? e " "s ,,'da tho I ut iirnmnn A. Mor Ida. n rnn First Mull". B DDI' . Wnrl. Dinner t rlmirls 111- louily chnnuo u cloc irdlnlly mndo .mini lw ... fobri pastor Lcntiii each HIV for of will and WhIU Sundays ..,.nj ib nu I" nn "Four 1 fuiry .. K he board ".."tir. .17 P e Miner. in west. v- V- EOewga Smnlioy. of the Stroot rry Mr. ieorge ur-H News T .. Mt?c -rim ?T.S",h mot .1 En's. The pronlric.it. V" "n.j (h.. mentlntf Inttn. w1Jr .v .U ... in mby;.toct hlir , In ESon for our club. Our f.idsomoiuKK'-1"'""" let ng is bu'"" m, of Betty Brandcjsky. lour nwcwn. " i . . . LEY IEWINO FOR fuirTORY CLUB t,,v. - ... lap of fourth grudo Kil ls tMllta 1 sewill, Kluu. tr lint meeting, the fol- officers wcro chosen: ht, Joan McPhcrson; vice Li Knra Mfekei- SecrO- l:bir Cornctt; song lend C. rjnhiim vnll Imrli.r run iuivmm.i.i .- - Btnrt. njtt.ra rnnnplnr ice Stewart, Shirloy New- ,tk Ctn nli- nHu Run. u a gur locm icuuur. irn project win n nccaio ft'ow we are making pin- are planning a vaicnuno a Km hM at th hnmn nf rl,.. Hannon, news reporter, I... ........ IiBTA DLWiHU L.L,UB uiinmi Tit, ourrjiiu jiuuu fedtr, Mrs. Bill Steele. line girls have completed Idle case nnd pin-cushion, I now workinff nn lunrh ii Ell!. and Jcanette line a duct. Thrt arnnn le club songs nnd yells. cre miiae lor n vnlen- ny to be he d Frlrlnv. p 16, at Shnstn school. pt nusiun, news reporter, Chemult Fred Farrnr of Seattle rtttp lK r ii - . -. in ..nuinuii ai ine her parents, Mr. and R. Thompson, recently. y Anderson left Che- tumil ...UK u ii . i,v "cr inomer, - ... in triiiia vvaun. lAamw nnrl 1VfM. n i- uvuu inurnnay, iPson was visitor I ThiirtrU.. ti.i -.-.auaj, rcoruarv 10, kH "Vh"1" -lues- wmon made a busl 'P to Klamath Falls. lV 1 8 1 1 t ' inompson and Robert i in, g1ono, 10 Roscburg h .Ti !.""vc.r oi cena- fcd i ii VaRSi lnJurcd hl C?J, . unable to drive. u .... ucgn nrivlng the f of Chemult orRnn. b pCcombor 14 for &.JS.e " name r.",.a members tiro: I,,'" "- President; Mrs. Ion. .r. waeni; Mrs. t Mr. V"U- mra. lv. V' russell, Mrs. I Hash i,A McClure. Mrs. J. Belle- ITiiS'eld. Mrs. lOlvera TA.ufVB' and k ,?i.lh.e c'nb mcetii fconih. "n Th"doys I now uet Mileage H an0lo.rlst8' "!. IwUn. r"C or ownc i' 7rthvacdioVac-mtrc l Sutmrnhnrn. 1 can TC!i" 8tomatl. in few m?Slled fay Nothny.mlnule- Fits "utacturers, the sih rburtor Co M?. St., wanwal in hf, " wl will in. it to t Bnd helP in u . others. Th... ...in' rrit them60 Parculars U. S. Naval Leader 150 HORIZONTAL I Pictured commandant U 6. 3rd No. . vol District. 3 Model ' 4 On account (lib.) 5 Heccde 6 Lock opener Hear Admiral 7 And (Lutln) 8 Lend 11 Excitement 0 Muke a 12 Aid ml'itiil'.e 13 Nullve molal 10 Affirmative . ICltpii US ARMY S(&lBI j 14 Duration 16Por 17 Prevents 15 Crazy 10 Prohibit 20 2000 pounds 1R Man 17 Stable 20 Tantalum (symbol) 21 Oleum (ab.) n Now 23 Ontario (ab.) 23Stnve part ' 2 Solltury (pi.) 28 Ha Is high- 24 Sodium ranking officer HOVlrKlnla (ab.) 31 Music not" 32Ktolrs 30 Canvas shelters 38 Lubricant 30 Distress signal 40 Owed 41 Sheep's call 43 Average 45 Fxdamatlnn 47 Perambulator 80 Skill 81 Skin opening 83 Measures of cloth 84 He is one of the U. S. Na- VERTICAL 1 Tangle 2 Lyric poem (symbol) 25 Thallium (symbol) 27 Short sleep 20 Exist 32 Therefore 33 Palm lily 34 Shock 3r Snare 3fl Toward 37 Steamship (ab.) 40 Facts 42 Space 43 Spoil 44 Before 4.1 Coal scuttle 40 Provide with weapons 4H Every 40 Manuscripts (ab.) M Fother j 82 East Indies (ab.) IK 13 I 14 15 16 17 I 8 II 110 n sriz tth i? ;rjb if r fL' f ffl n nr. h Ji i aii , ii ii ii -Zj 35 3b il 1 1 1 y TTFi tr 1 1 1 w A I-1 I I II 1 I II I w mil, i ii iiiiiiii; em Langell Valley Robert Svern has returned from the vctcruiis' hospital at Roscburg. He spent the week end nt the Kllgorc home In up per Lungell volley. Mrs, 1)111 Burnett spent Tues day with Mrs. Orn Johnson. Corn Lrnvllt visited at non onzn Friday with Mrs. Mary Dearborn and Mrs, Owen I'cp pie. Mr. and Mrs. Herb Jones and Kenneth of Uonnnzn spent Sun day with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Jones and daughter. Mrs. Mory Smith spent sev eral days at Bonanza with Mrs. Mary Dearborn. Mrs. Ray Dnvls and Don Den nis left Tuesday for Kansas to visit relatives and friends. She will visit her brother and fami ly at Denver en route. . Frnnk Pcpple is visiting his daughter and son-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jones of Chi cago. Mr. and' "Mrs. Orn Johnson spent Wednesday and Thursday with the Frailer, nnd Mrs. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Reg Thomas nnd family spent Sunday, with Mr. and Mrs. Lester Lcavltt and family. Mr. and Mrs. Enrl Cochran left Tuesday to spend several days on the coast. Myrtle Johnson spent Monday at Bonanza with Mary Dear born. L. A. Conslans returned to Lnkcview Saturday. He will stay with his grand-children while his daughter, Mrs. Bill Harblcson receives medical care in San Francisco. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Brown and children of Ccdarville, Calif., aro visiting relatives and friends In Langell valley and Bonanza. Malcolm Tcare and his cous in, W. G. Tcare of Moose Jaw, Canada, returned recently from a trip to San Francisco ond Los Angeles, by way of Bishop and Reno. They were snowbound In the Sierras for several hours on the way home. W. C. Tcare left for his home on Thursday. Mrs. Bill Burnett and Monte spent several days in Klamath Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Pcpple arrived Friday from Los Ange les. Cliff Is on furlough after three years overseas. His broth er, Howard Pcpple of Seattle, arrived the same day to visit Cliff and other relatives. Portland cement docs not come from Portland or any part of the United States, but from England. Until 1800, farming methods remained much as they had been in the days of Julius Caesar. There arc aljout 1200 farm implement factories In the Unit ed States. PROMPTLY RELIEVES TORTURE OP STUBBORN SKIN IRRITATIONS 'extra-strength' liquid great success! If you're discouraged about hard to re liovflcczcma, moriaais, athlete's footand ahnilar skin frriuitiono du. to external rnujMj apply Extra Strength Zomo. Kirat applications relieve itching and burnins. Zcmo also altla healing. A Doc tor's highly medicated, trul6l liquid nold at all drugstores. VkT"ala(J Kirat trial convinces! V'lyiV WASHINGTON, Feb. 19 P) An effort will bo made by the Oregon delegation to obtain, in the scnnle, funds for establish ment of a nnlional cemetery in Portland, Oregon. Rep. Angell (R-Orc.) told a re porter that the request will be made on the basis of a recent act of the Oregon legislature auth orizing purchase of a site by the slate. Tho army, he said, has described the site as "exception ally fine." Refusal of the house appropria tions committee to include an appropriation In the war depart ment functions bill, Angel! said, was based on the president's statement in 1041. While he approved the hill to establish the Portland cemetery, he would not approve the appropriations of funds for purchase of a site. Now that the site has been made available by the stale, Angcll said, the Oregon delega tion will ask about $6311,000, the estimated cost of laying out and landscaping the property, build ing roads and custodians' quart ers. The government, he said, already has authority to accept the land for this purpose. Gin Goes on State . Liquor Ration List PORTLAND, Feb. 10 (P) uin went on the ration list in Ore. lion today. Ration cards limit monthly purchases to two bottles of whisky, or two bottles of gin, or one bottle of each. Hugh Kirk' Patrick, chairman of the Oregon liquor control commission, laid the gin action to reduction of supply. Citizenship Medal Presented to Dana PORTLAND, Feb. 10 F) The second citizenship medal ever awarded by the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Oregon depart ment, has been presented to Marshall Dana, editor of the Oregon Journal editorial page. The medal was for Dana's work In civic and state activities. The first medal was given to the late Portland mayor, George L. Baker. - A group of pheasants Is known as a nide. - HOLD EVERYTHING! r ' -iff rr-n a .' i i I CCM. IM4I VStSZSL "The history room is more com fortablelet's sleep in there!" Mt. Laki Mr. and Mrs. George Berry and daughters left Sunday for Chico, Calif., where they will make their future home. They sold their farm last fall to Karl Dehlinger. Mrs. Estella Hill has returned from a two months' visit with her sister, Mrs. Hotrnkiss at Pasadena, Calif. On the return trip she spent several days with Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Griffith at iRoseville, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd of Bly 0 THE BEST1 B. F. Goodrich SILVERTOWNS All popular slid avail- bfa now as aaiy weakly paymtafi. Via our certificate today! Official Tfre Isipecrer Dick B. Miller Co. SILVERTOWNS Goodrich Tire B. F. Cor. 7th and Klamath Ph. 4103 e m WR1GLEVS M H - 6 T 2HLt to assfiS hoffla Ior the fin. th!iS shon us sine ,. spirit of our Armed Force. gum wo c"J; sailors overseas can d Merchant bax g0 thattne he no ldSrf,U our ti W hve now used P. U BaWng the U Doublemint "nd njulcy gum of overseas. h. w nore che"r0r anyone - There will "J,, V flavors hree . ruarantee of ' ' ttiiU- TvUlan-needs. merit a- d . ii a nno w" t . u.n eu j f i bvoi B ium to help Vfterln thl g- ".J 8 These wrappers will be empty until further notice. spent the weekend at the home or tneir daughter, Mrs, Albert Kcady. Mrs. T. D. Jackson has re sumed her teaching at the Hen ley grade school after a recent illness. The community extends deep est sympathy to the relatives of tho late C. R. DcLap In their be reavement. Mrs. Fanny Chcyne left last week for Sacramento, Calif. Donald Dixon, the youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Shaw Dixon of Santa Rosa, Calif., visited at the home of his uncle, T. P. Dix on and family one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. Arch Rutter, who recently sold their farm, have moved to Klamath Falls, where they purchased a home. BACKT SIDE? CHEST? Heat relieve muicle pIni qvieily, lively. To get welcome, continued hut relief, for dayt, right at (he tore tpot. apply one hit: Johnion't RED CROSS PLASTER or the heavier, warmer JohntWi Back Plaster. , . . The mild, active rnedicstioo cently hraii the back, iijri up blood circu lation, fight conceit ion, eaaei paio. . , Warm cloth covering retaini body heat, pre led i back againtt chill int;. provide cootin uotii support. . . .Try tliii clean, eaiy, proved way to "heat treat" aimple backache aod oilier rnuicular paini TODAV. (In cik of chronic backache, ire your doctor.) . , Alwaya imitt on the GENUINE, made by Johnion ic Johnion. RED CROSS PIASTER fH BACK PLASTER Menday. T. It, 1(41 mnixo Aim kiws icvnr James Russell Lowell was the god-father of Virginia Woolf, English novelist, critic and m sayist. There are enough efgi in one codfish to produce more than billion pounds of fish, if each egg hatched and matured. CUM IMICtE MRSMM qnlikly aaa.4 by P,r oraMM'soid-ttaMaaunoa state la(iaTaiepWlj aijSwataaj aaUai'iiaai liiiaM.Miiiiltmn tenM. l.nbaalaSt. KJlrl, PEN QTRu IHI I'iM n MV'TII llfti U1 i ,r in clton, coMfti skins . . . packs a pimory supply off vitamin C In Desert Grapefruit Fall flavor and statfol iole. are packed into tnii goiaoa fruit from the ArTzotia Californi. desert. Plus plenty of vitamin C I Half a DeaertGrapefruit gives yon a primary supply of this needed vitamin. Spoon into a snnahine rich Desert Grapefruit to morrow. Taste the natural' colored golden segments, the fraih, tangy jniea. Ana discover tie healthful good eating stored for yon ia Desert Grapefruit. j designed for that new UNCLUTTERED; NECKLINE in Botany's worsted, a fine hard finished all-wool ma terial. Lime, Sea foam Harlequin Pink, Gold, Powder. 3650 Mint