Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 29, 1945, Image 7

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    i.ikovlow Several Klum-
ncn connected with for
wlll ito lo Lukcvlew Frl
idcinoon for u meeting of
Ehu.stii-Cnticnclu sub-section
, American Society of For-
- l Ill l. ll.n
rjril"UM win fu tuu ilium
p( the LillKuviuw mcming.
nr.liiu Include Tom Orr.
r- 1 1 Murk. Malcolm En.
fohn Sarglngon, Fred Cloul
,d II. H. Oi(lo.
L Entertainment Tlio
f. Buxlllnry will meet Frl
March DO, ut 8 p. m. In tho
vol-'. II. Special music
vocal immuers uy mr. una
Carl Liogurwcn win uu u
h-Q 01 UIU UVUHIIIK. 1IIU1
VUUIIir loauu niuuuiiK uieru
u ii nnccliil Easter piirty.
konc Is ui'Hcd lo como out
r i ii.,,,.
gift'!
L.nr Dlnntr Tho Moth-
club or mo oacrca jicbii
my ' sponsoring a pot
dinner for Diid's nlKhl,
jy, April 2. It will l)o held
i nnr a i nun in u.du p. in.
parents of nttidcnta attend-
llnC BtllUWHIjr wiu wtuiwii;
bd to attend. An intercst
fcrogrnm given by the ntu
V ...ill rlltti (tin fllnmip
i - rtar n..i i f..wi
fmt www uvuj till VI
la Ry cumc homo from
.in. (nut wrekond to Round
hf vacution wtlh their
Eer. Dotty will graduate In
I and Murtha is a freshman
bi M.lna -Tha next rca
! Vu- "n.
ty PTA will bo hold Mon-
Lirn Red Crow room at 418
Z Dortntu intnrrnted In PTA
h. - . ------ - -
k aro Invited to attend.
NttVV Rvimi iir-i ...
Kl',?,Ul'; ''V""""1 I'owcrs, of
f: v-")"uk ucrtwisl ii of
rulclllkn urn III..I. i n .
pf Lakevicw will liike quulify
K examinations l Portland
for Urn U. b. navy this weekend.
Ihoy will return homo after the
cxuins tn iiuiiii ,,, i .
for boot training m Su DiuK0
Dane Tim Pvihti... cii...
ura RnoiiNnrlnu m, ni.i.ii .1
on irldiiy night, March 30, at
UK! KC hull, in cooperation
wiui 1110 midnight curfew law.
dancing will begin ut 8:30 and
invited 1H'b iH
Moosa Diinr? Tl,n T . 1
dor of Miu,u i ., :..i....
Miml-fornial spring d a 11 c o, on
i , V1 rc n 3i, nt the
Moose hull at 8 o'clock. All
menihem nnrl rnn,ninu i
vlled. " '"
PTA Council The next reg
ulur meeting of the Klamulh
County Council of PTA will be
held on Monday, April 2, at 2
p. in. In the upstairs rooms of
tho Red Cross building. Any In
terested parents will bo wel
come. Servlcos Maundy Thursday
services will be held tonight,
Thursday, at St. Paul's Episco
pal church at 7:30 o'clock.
Thero will be celebration of
holy communion and consecra
tion of tho chalice and paten.
On Lsava John Nogglc,
HA2C, United States navy, ar
rived home tills week from San
Diego where ho has completed
his boot training. Nogglc is vis
iting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Noggle, 2440 Homcdalc.
And No Points Needed
fife
SOIL IN THIS
AREA PLOWED
pay under the rental system, 89
cents per acre foot.
County road equipment is
eliminating high ground in a
1000-foot cut east of the Bonanza
market road at no cost to the
farmers under the system, since
the gravel being taken out is
used to surface county roads. The
f:ravel pit, of excellent quality
ight material Is on the John
Craven place.
The pumps, ordered through a
Klamath Falls implement con
cern, are expected to arrive for
installation by May 1.
How long is it since you vc seen as much .meat- as appears In the
iiorc-winmiw pictured ooovc? K-ratlon-consclous Cpls. Noble J.
Dawson, o( Los Angeles, Calif., and Pearne Tharpe, of Tangent,.
Ore., give It the cyo as they walk through Morphage, Franca.
id
J
T
ip the Red Cross at
Mil Siaoi
DISTINCTIVE APPAREL
Phono 8222 901 Main
74
Sox
In onion skin.
A d J u s table
head size
black, brown,
navy, red and
beige.
You've scon the Sissy SBllor. Here is the new
version, sponsored, by Mademoiselle with a stun
ning veil and a velvet ribbon to be worn dog
collar fashion. ' 7 50
Exclusive with u '. '
WASHINGTON, March 20 (P)
American combat casualties re
ported since Pearl Harbor
nearcd tho 900,000-mark today
with the army setting its losses
at lau.uu.
The latest navy report added
02.810 to the army toll, making
the aggregate 872,862. This was
an increase of 13,275 from the
preceding week s report.
Secretary of War Stimson said
me army s total was based on
reports through March 21.
A breakdown on tho army's
casualties and corresponalng fig
ures for last week:
Killed, 153,702 and 150,310;
wounded. 473,609 and 464.731:
missing, 86,355 and 88,208; pris
oners, uh.zh and 04,430. Of 'the
wounded, 243,508 have returned
to duty.
Similar figures for the navy:
Killed. 35,750 and 35,342;
wounded. 42,302 and 41,882;
missing, 10,500 and 10,417; pris
oners, 4267 and 4266.
Stimson also estimated' Japa
nese casualties in the entire Phil
ippine campaign at more than
300.000. He said that 172,083
of the enemy had been counted
killed and that the remainder of
the estimated losses rcDrcscntcd
(he uncounted killed on land,
losses at sea, those seriously
wounded and the 2500 Japanese
who have been taken prisoner.
He gave no report on Ameri
can casualties in tho campaign.
Expeetod Home Albert Lane
of tho Cummings Fur shop,- 115
S. . 7th. is exoccted homo Fri
day nlglit from Portland where
he has been receiving medical
attention for some time.
Horn On Leave Roy Al-
bers, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. C.
Albcrs of 2323 Orchard, is home
until Annl 1.' after 10 months
of duty in both the Atlantic
and Pacific theaters of war.
Breakfast Postponed The
brcokfast of the Alumni com
mittee of the Women of the
Moose, scheduled to be held
Sunday, April 1', has been post
poned until further notice.
$5000 on Hand
FflsJ
Judy Holley shows oil Oscai
and Minnie, $5000 prize-winning
chinchillas, after the furry
rodents took top honors in the
recent second annual Calilor
nit Chinchilla Ranchers' Club
show at Inglewood,' Calif.
MALIN Some of Klamath
county's richest farm soil . is
rolling this spring behind plows
of farmers who plan to add to
the nation's supply of potatoes,
grain and other farm products.
The land, approximately 3000
acres of it, lies north of the
Merrlll-Malln highway in the
Malin district and this season
v ill be irrigated, it is expected,
for the first time in Beveral
years. :
Back in 1022, water was cut
out of the "A" canal on the cast
end of the area and pumped to
some of the land following or
ganization of the Shasta View
Irrigation district. Some 7000
acres was under ditch. For vari
ous reasons, it became increas
ingly difficult to battle the Drob-
lems of irrigation under the sys
tem and tne land total was- cut
in 1927 to 4000 acres. A small
part of this has since been under
water irrigated by private
pumps and those originally in
stalled. . ...
Several months ago. land
owners who have farmed the
land in crops that could be
grown with seasonal moisture,
met for a reorganization, rjlede-
ing financial support for con
struction of necessary ditches
and installation of pumps large
cnougn to serve tne 3UUU acres
tnat were to lorm tne re-organized
district.
This week the quarter-mile ad.
dition to tho "A canal will be
completed by a California con
struction company. Machinery is
on the ground for work on later
als and the California Oregon
Power company is surveying for
installation of two lines, one i
mile and one i mile stretch that
will take power to the two lifts
where pumps will carry the
water to higher levels.
Four pumps,of auger type will
boost the water to the two levels,
the total lift being 95 feet. In
stallation cost of pumps will be
$10,000 and building of the
ditches will cost $3500, the cost
to be apportioned among the
farmers on a land ratio. Four
reservoirs at widely distributed
points will be used to store
water at. night, since the pumps
will be' operated continuously,
this water to be. drawn for use
aiso.
Water will be received on
rental basis' from the U. S. bu
reau of reclamation this year in
lieu of a contract which is to be
ready before another irrigation
system.
Under contract a $34 per acre
water right will be assessed, this
to run over a 40-year period,
water rights to be paid only on
good producing land. Users -will
Aluminum Contract;
Draws Heavy Fire -'
WASHINGTON, March 28 P)
Announcement of a new, gov
ernment contract with a Canad
ian Aluminum company " prom
ised today to stir up' as much
objection from western - con
gressmen as the original deal.
Fred M. Vinson, as federal
loan administrator, announced
last night that a contract under
which Aluminum Union, Ltd.,
would furnish 250,000,000
pounds of aluminum has! been
signed by Metals Reserve , cor
poration. . . ;
FUNERAL
IDA MAY SAMSON
- Funeral services for the lat' tda.Ma?
Salmon, who passed away in this city
Sunday, March 23, wilt be held from th
chapel of Ward's Klamath Funeral Home,
925 High. Friday. March 30, 1945, at
2 p, m. with the Rev. David Barnatt of
ine rirsi rrrjuytcnan cnurcn omc lut
ing. Concluding service! and cremation
will fake place from the Poole-Larcen
Funeral Home In Euvene, Ore. Friends
are respectfully invited to attend the
service.
Charming offering for a woman of tsile a gift nox of
Alexandra do MarWf's Water Nymph Toilet Water..
In three distinct fragrances: ethereal Virgin Flower,
exuberant Spring Goddess, : and spicy Woodland
Sntine. .$2.00 the box. ,
To complement the Toilet Waters, a box of velvet
Bath Ptfwder in your choice of the Water. Nymph
'cents. $2.25 the b ox.
, PIu Federal Tax , ' .
Croft
Easter Lilies
Our lily bulbs were grown at
Harbor, Oregon, on the Oregon
coast, and forced . into bloom
for Easter, 1945, in our own
greenhouses. . ;
SELECT YOUR LILY EARLY,
POSITIVELY NO DELIVERIES
Klamath Flower Shop
1211 Main St. "
OF
Thursday, March 29. 194S
HERALD AND NEWSSCVEN
ONE-MAN USO
WASHINGTON. March 29 im
Ma, Gen. Lucius D. Clay, who
has been with the office of war
mobilization and reconversion,
was designated today to take
charge of civil -affairs in Ger
many when that country is occu
pied. .
President Roosevelt made the
announcement.
The apoointment. the White
House said, was by Gen. George
C. Marshall, army chief of staff.
Clay will be deputy to Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower, the an
nouncement asserted, "to have
charge of civil affairs when Gen
eral Eisenhower, as supreme
commander, assumes control
under the arrangement agreed
upon for the occupation of Ger
many." . - ,
Clay had served at Eisenhow
er's headquarters before we went
to OMWB as deputy director
under James F. Byrnes.
The presidential announce
ment said that Eisenhower had
asked for Clay's assignment over
civil atlalrs tnree weeks ago but
that it was delayed because
Marshall had agreed to let him
remain with OMWR until
April 1.
. '"iiii win
rtAM4W0RTS LIMITED PtO'
TTUfcm
William
Perm
Sltmiect Whttkey, M ptol, 1
Ut araln neutral Mfi J
I 800DISHAM WORT ITD J
Peoria, Illinois nj
nil. ii liiHijpw. . - -
fefP; mfi
A light interlude is enjoyed by these doughfools of the U. S. lib
Army as they pause on their drive through Cologne to listen to al
one-man USO show put on by Pvt Charles Fisch, of Sidney, N. YJ
. Abandoned phonograph and records furnished the music.
Instantly relief from distress of
bead colds starts to come the mo
ment you put a little Va-tro-nol up
each nostril. It soothes irritation,
reduces swelling, relieves conges
tion. Also helps prevent many
Mifela-OiilyPfoss Drops 4k
W4ntetRIWbereyi3j7
MdirH4tonso!VIlXS VA'TDO'CIOL
THE STORE WITH THE GLASS DOOR
r w
GLORIOUS PASTELS
COLORFUL PRINTS
FRILLY NAVY OR BLACK
GIVE TO THE RED CROSS
DRESSMAKER OR TAILORED SUITS
LONG OR SHORT COATS
COLORS TO FLATTER YOU
Hie Our oCayaway pia
I) 95
EACH
OPEN SATURDAYS
UNTIL 8:00 P. M.