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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 28, 1945)
ROUND III! IP TO ISLES . t .. .. 1. TTnl, 9ft tWi ..i .. vitf Aliint mi. IC In rfon'l want to romnln 'fist A "sku becm.Hu It 'Tmul wltl.lt. u few r h barren laluncln from KcywcroevjiciiHtod when I ...ilKSO llVUIIUll HI" ,.1,-u- P r ..uii.mer of 1042. I ftulcr, heml ' l'10 offlcu Ki affairs, ""Id ho had Kd ptaiH will, the army ffl r,.inm tho natives navy i . a .....i... Ihfl tlirC SlJUUICHfti Allium. I Z, In .whirl, they hiivo ' 'I'lirlp homes nro nt i "".."i... .i,in Knshei'o. Un '. . .V.I.I Allr.i iilw Alfii, I, hikoim"i ,.i..ni Officer Mnrlov kit or B" "'"" :." .,.. .., Krfrnctliiii for tho office of in ..t.-. t.. n inairs win . tllh thcni Hiipp.lica unci nui- nnrl robullclhlR V. Teachers will accompany Ll'hKit lull. Fouler mild, l h ni Atka. wlwro the ben bururu ui'-ii nwiin-n Hours miu' -v LrlMn evacuees now or In a . i. armea wviu- r:ri!i8:l!:i.Blii'lliifjll!!ljj!iiljlll I fill SGSSODL Comment 1 I B. JUANITA SHINN rjr tfU Jiliiiv-i, it sirinui lit S, him been utMmca to rep. it KUHS In the Amoricnn jn orator!- W-xjm-i Tm com f'f) in In the l Itrn section TO & iVV rcKiuiiin n .-"i in Ash-ry.- In Mnrrll. it winner or . -,4 : , (contest goes i j lortlind to V I . . 1 L ...... l..nl. etc in MIC MlllU ,1111113. national winner win re an iwnril of $1000. t way there la to bo tin Ita ly to make athletic awards. It and trophy nwnrds arc made at that lime. Iroday, March 1, tho Poll litall will begin Its series Idle, programs for this sc Ir. The broadcast will bo KWI from 8:30 until 8:40. h semester a new group idents study radio speech, ire trained to prepare and ni a weekly broadcast. JH'T IMPAIR AMATEUR STANDING .WAUKEE Those nifty . unuorms wort; uy navy hi and dental trainees at kicllc university have their pamagc. Tho other evening r In t Chicago hotol lobby W Herb Engel, forward of whop DnsKctbnll team and mm to carry her baK Engcl obliod,, ond ' tho face crlmsrtneH luhtm Un fl declined hor tip. . Secretary of the Navy Visits I wo Ji ima V' V . r t -tar ! Ui W-'JrV: 1 ,--f.-' r- r Illrf fir L S KltrS'ZhT,? "iT""!",' "rfU,,d U-,ac"' H"w"""1 B"1"' imMC,Sve,"b!e"r',!;'o'JLa hoL'i 'Amcrleu,! nAt!" M.iri.je,, Mt. Surlbnchl .In background, to , . uuniii tu ouii i rnncisco oy u. is. wavy roaio-ielepnoio. First I :Sorated Prisoners Ar.:.Vin U. S. h Air : S.W' Si' S Tii... ii...a. ...... . j . . . fvti4 Teienhalo) ,.. u,,n.i-,n. iHcuiixn ncrc ni oan rranclsco press conrnrenco, arc tho first men rescued b f?!?nto?r,? .rm "'V '""U"0U5 JnPinese prlton camp, Cubanntunn. to return to the United State lft U. r iRlit: Lieutenant Eiirl O. BoumBnrdner. Yonkcrs. N. Y.; Lieutenant Geonro W. Green, Auburn Ala Lieutenant E.n.nct Ma.uH.n. WorUUnnton. Minn. Their first sight ot tho U. B, U.ey agrcci loXd "a little, bit ol Heaven," SLATED III 1ST WASHINGTON. Feb. 28 lFl HcnrltiKii by a senate nubile lands .subcommittee on proposed Increases In grazing fees will open in Salt Lake City on March 8. While the hearings will deal primarily with the grazing fee Increase recommended by Di rector C. L. Forsling, testimony tilso will be received on other public land matters such as the status of potash reserves in southeastern Utah. The hearings presently sched uled: Stilt Lake Clly, March 8. 0, 10; Ely, March 12, 13, 14; Boise, March 10,. 20. Tho committee hopes to sit also in New Mexico, Arizona, Oregon and Colorado. Members of tho subcommittee arc Chairman McCarran and Senators Robertson i (R-Wvo.), Cordon (R-Ore.), Taylor (D-Ida.) and Murdock (D-Utah). Why Thousands of Doctors Have Prescribed (DUE TO .COLDS) Pertussin must be good when thou sands upon thousands of Doctors lmvo prescribed it for so many years. Pertussin nets at once to relievo your coughing. It loosens and makes phlegm enster to raise. 6afo and elective for both old and young, Inexpensive! Poor Digestion? 65 Headachy? SourbrUpsetrbq Tired-Listless? Do you foci headachy nnd upnot due to' poorly digested food? To feel cheerful nnd happy acain your food must bo digested properly, JKach dny, Nature must produce about two pints of a vital digestive juieo to help digest your food, if Nature fails, your food may remain undigested leaving you headachy and irritable, Thorcforo, you must incroaso tho flow of this digestive juico. Carter's Littlo Liver Pills increase this flow quickly often in as littlo &s 80 minutes. And, you're on tho rond to feeling better. Don't depend on artificial aids to counteract indigestion when Carter's Littlo Liver Pills aid digestion after Na- turo'u own order. Tnko Carter's Little . Liver Pills ns directed. Got them at any drugstore. Only 25. . Let's all refresh... Have a Coca-Cola or being friendly along the way Tho spirit of camaraderie of the open road is summed up In the three 'ds Have a Coke. At stops, everyone steps up to the familiar red cooler fr the friendly refreshment of ice-cold Coca-Cola. America's streets and 'ghways are dotted with such places that invite you to pause and refresh Wllh Coke. Wherever you go, Coca-Cola stands for the pause that refreshes, Vmbol of friendly refreshment., BOTTLED UNDfft AUTHORITY Of THI COCA-COIA COMPANY, IY COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF KLAMATH FALLS ' 65 Spring St, Phona 5632 Yeu naturally hoar Ccca.Col , called by its friendly abbreviation Toko". Both mean the quality prat iuujj uct of The Coca-Cola Company. GETS JUL TEPil FOR TRY Id LOSE JOB An effort to bo dismissed from his job backfired today for Frank J. Workman, former em ploye of Moeller's greenhouse, who was sentenced to serve six months at hard labor at Rocky Butte in custody of the Mult nomah county jail in addition to a fine of $500. Workman entered a plea of guilty in circuit court to the charge of giving away writings of obBccne character. The 30-year-old greenhouse worker had previously told the court he wrote the obscene note hoping that it "would get him fired olf the job." The court advised Workman that "It was too bad" he could not be charged as an habitual criminal. Workman admitted serving a one to 15-year sentence in 1030 at the Monroe state re formatory in Washington on a burglary charge, a five-year to life sontencc for burglary in Yroka, at the California state prison. of which time he served from 1032 to 1937, and five years of a one to 15-yoar sentence for burglary at Folsom prison in California from 1937 to 1942. On the latter charge he was sent up from Sonoma county. The charge on which he was Indicted by the Klamath county grand jury is not a felony, and the court demanded the max imum sentence. He was turned over to Sheriff Lloyd L. Low. Workman told the court he had two children, five and three years of age. He will serve his sentence in Multnomah county, as Sheriff Low advised the court there was no room for the pris oner in the county jail. Man Confesses Being 'Broken Match' Thief COQUILLE, Feb. 28 OP) John Robert Harbough, 20, sen tenced to seven years in the state penitentiary on a larceny charge yesterday, has confessed to being Portland's long-sought "broken match burglar," Co quille state police said today. Officers reported Harbough has admitted a long series of Portland thefts, last of which was at the home of Edward Blyth.- Losses were $2250 in Jewelry, $80 in traveler's checks, and $92 in miscellaneous articles. Judge Dal King pronounced sentence. Wadnetdar, Feb. 28, 1945 HERALD AND NEWS NINE ' Points Accusing Fingsr Tfw'S "w;2P. vf'T 1 ..-A (NEA Teienhalo) Beside a Manila building. J. E. Hoover, former Wllliamsport, Pa., resi dent and a leader among Filipino guerrillas during Japanese occupation, points an accusing finger at a Chinese-Filipino charged with being a Jap spy. Signal Corps photo. Service Men and Women Home on Leave Leonard Cone from Lab Canada. Here until March Sgt. rador, 13. . CMM R. Fox from South Pa cific. - Here for 15 days.- The above service people are entitled to free passes to the local theatres and free fountain service at Lost River dau-y by courtesy of Lloyd Lamb of the theatres and R. C. Woodruff of the dairy. Please call at The Herald and News office (ask for Paul Haines) for your courtesy tickets. If it's a "frozen need, advertise for in the classified. article vou a used one Classified Ads Bring Results. Art Your Tri SMOOTH CUT BRUISED? Let na d tormina if you ore licibl far new tireal Prompt inapectioa. Official Tire Inspection Dick B. Miller Co, S1LVERTOWNS 1 B. f. Goodrich Tires 1 Cor. 7th and Klamath Ph. 4103 Sailor Shot On Way Back to Ship : PORTLAND. Fob. 28 (M , Claude A. Uldridge, 22-year-old sailor, was in a hospital here to day with a bullet wound. Police said a detective agency guard snot him in the arm last night near tne mngsiey Lumper com pany. Kldridge and Thomas E. Gill, another seaman, were heading lor wieir snip, moorea near tne company, when a guard ordered them off the premises, pdlice re- ' ported. Officers said Gill was ' struck in the face with a gun. 1 Later the sailors came back with two coast guardsmen, and ' another guard who had relieved the other fired, striking Eld ridge, police said. ' New artificial plastic eyes, de signed and manufactured by three American army dental of ficers, are now being produced for wounded veterans and sol dier inductees with glass eyes. The plastic eyes hold advantages over glass eyes in that they can be made to very closely resemble human eyes, allow a more natur al freedom of movement, and are practically indestructible, where as glass eyes are easily broken. I af t . .". made with CINCH WAFFLf MIX. Each package contains AIL necessary ingredients. Jus) add. . water, mix and bake. Here's a Ireatl Crisp CINCH wofflea -. drenched with syrup and top -ped with chop ped walnuts. t -Mi rv. "V.. B5WD tA mm ; What Your ' RED CROSS DoHcsrs Wl Provide Klamath County's Red Cross Drive Begins March 1 We At Home Can Afford To Give Generously S5 S3 $19 S15 S20 S25 S75 $100 $500 (1050 4 kit bags for embarking troops A showing of a feature film to hospitalized servicemen. : . Support of Red Cross services all over tho world for one second. . s 100 messages' in inquiry and reply between an American and a relative in any enemy country. . :. v Coffee and doughnuts for 600 air pilots after a bombing mission; - A capfure parcel given to an American prisoner-of. war soon after reaching an enemy camp. - An Arts and Skills Unit in a Military. Hos pital in the U. S. for one month. . All costs of one Red Cross Clubmobile over seas for one day . Collection of blood for 100 transfusions to wounded servicemen. Support of a Red Cross Overseas Club for Servicemen for one day. . Training for 100. soldiers and sailors to give life saving instruction to our armed forces. Red Cross services of Field Directors In Army and Navy Camps and in Combat Zones throughout the world for one quarter of an ' hour. . . . I'". This ad published In co operation with the Klam ath County Chapter, Amer- -Jean Red Cross, by KICKYS JEWLERS gpgK7yj' ped walnuts, j' j' Pp '" Try .One. - -- Corn Bread - $ pSSSg22 ' - and Cfneh mrrrra Hot Cakes,: ; w .0145 Tin C-C Co,.