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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 23, 1945)
UD GROWERS ISLIKE WET WTHER HERE Lie growers whose crops of wlth rango men on tlio ""iu. nndito mowers .lXc""ii ,,u. ted. Cnoii county Beiit. alpted. J? "vcaUici- hns caused con- Cimost 100 per com ai a L.nt Tnrsdny. J,.,.,,. s uboiit 10 days be- i 'of the rniiin, Hendorson tleno rot hns bcon reported tain Cinpn I' I .11 nl mvprnl dnvs nftor IcintM would catisct almost rot. If warm weather followi thn ahowari, no damaia should occur, tho utont ld, as jirowth will progress iinmediute- No brluht promises of undilut ed sunshine aro liold out, how ever, by weather forecasters for this area. Honor Inspection Set For Academy PORTLAND, May 23 UP) Honor Inspection al which olie Hill Mllltury academy cadet will bo appointed to Wcj.1 Point and another to Annupolla wus being conducted today by two fort Bonnlng, Ga army offic ers. Col. Grady D. Epps and Lt. Col. Choster P. Hartford will be at the school three days. STURDY STEED BUDA, 111., May 22 (IP) The Karl Fosters' old, graying mare la Just whul sho used to he. The Fosters have no gnsollne worries for tholr marc, "Pot," takes them for bugxy rides us briskly as she did more than 2ft yoars ago whon tho Foslors were' courting. "Pel" Is 32 years old, one of the oldest active marcs in the midwest. Classified Ads Bring Results. TO FEATURE BONDS Main streot In Klamath Falls will entice window shoppers on Memorial Day when merchants decorate In keeping with the 7th War Loan. Special dis plays of war trophies and sou venirs will be used and mer chants arc asked to set aside at least one ontire window for this purpose. Those having war souvenirs are asked to call Catherine Brumbaugh, 3252; Ann Rick bell, 3151, or Jewell Cantrall of the Camp Flro Girls, and lt would be appreciated. Posters and material are available at bond headquarters, 8tli and Main. Windows put In for Memorial Day should re main throughout June, if pos sible, the committee asks. OPERATORS MEET PORTLAND, May 23 UP) Oregon Association of Beauty .-jiiuM uwncrs una uperaiors will open a two-day meeting here Sunday at which officers will be elected. mVond full flovored- jEo7drful tralbecouie lhya7e"Sablnlz'ed;ihe temarkable new-matnexl potato chips ol leading faretMorBtuelell then you wont that orond Ipetoro'flovocj" Potato Chips mm LONGM1RE TRAINS TStft. Albert Longmlre, 27, son ot Mrs. A. Longmlre, 715 Owens, is completing his train ing as a B-2U assistant crew chief witli a Superfortress group at the McCook army air Held, Neb., before departing for over seas destination. gt. Longmire attended Klamath Union high schol and Oakland Polytechnic school of engineering, and was later employed as a brakeman by the Soulncrn Pacific. . JONES TO ARRIVE Orland Bert Jones, AMM 2c, will arrive this week from action in the South Pacific. His moth er, Mrs. B. K. Bchnke, 3347 Homcdale, received a telegram from him from Oakland Monday. Jones has been in the service four years, and this is his first leave home during that time. He has been in the Asiatic theater ot operations lor 19 months. FORWARDS LETTER ' Pvt. Gary Woodard, who has served with Gen. Terry Allen's Timbcrwolves throughout the European campaign, has for warded to his family here a cony of a letter which General Allen sent to members of the division at tho end of six months' continuous combat for the division. After reviewing the long cam paign. Gen. Allen said that "bat tle accomplishments of the Tim berwolf division have been char acterized by the tenacity, skill, teamwork and devotion to duty of all combat and service ele ments, and by the efficient func tioning of all staff sections. I am proud to have commanded the Tlmbcrwolf division through its final year of training and six months of arduous combat." Pvt. Woodard is a former Safeway employe here whose home is at 4107 Bisbce. GRIMES TRAINS James Grigsby Grimes, 18, seaman 2c, USNR, of Klamath Falls, Ore., has arrived at the naval training center, Norfolk, Va., to undergo training for duties aboard a new destroyer of the Atlantic fleet. Son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Grimes. 1434 Canby, Klamath Falls, he has a brother, Henry Jr., 34, a private in the army. He attended Klamath Tin inn high school. RECEIVED BY POPE VATICAN CITY. Mnv 23 PY Pone Pills XTT inHav Rep. Eugene Worley (D-Tox). in a 15-minute private audience. CLIPPING SERVICE r. Goodrich B. Miller Co. pi nd KUmith i none uoa Farmers Attention! We kill, dress and chill your hogs c per pound. We cure and tmoke your ham and bacen Sc per pound. We have the best facilities. Our work is guaran- ' teed. WHY PAY MORE? JOHNSON PACKING CO. THE HOME OF QUALITY MEATS PHONE 5323 A clipping service, maintained throughout the 6th War Loan by Girl Scouts of Klamath Falls at the request of the United States treasury department, was so successful that the girls were asked to repeat this service for the 7th War Loan, it was learned today. Mrs. L. A. Murphy, In charge of tho clipping, was advised Tuesday that material clipped during the 6th War Loan was so highly satisfactory that Klamath Falls Girl Scouts had been chosen as one of the few places in the country to repeat lor me rvngnty vtn." name of the newspaper, town and state, is printed on each clipping sent to the treasury department, Mrs. Murphy stated. Alaska C of C Backs Northern Air Routes ' ANCHORAGE. Alaska. Mav 23 UP) The Anchorage chamber of commerce voted yesterday to request the Alaska development board to intervene in the North Pacific hearing before the civil aeronautics board in favor of granting northern air routes to Alaska carriers. The chamber contends the newly created board's purpose is to encourage and foster develop ment of Alaska economy. Certif ication of Alaskan carriers for routes to the United States, the resolution said, would be a ben efit to the entire territory through development of the aviation industry within Alaska. Salem Bans Long Cigarette Lines SALEM, May 23 '(IP) The long cigarette lines that . form twice daily in front of the Fred Meyer store here will no longer be permitted, city police said today citing a long-forgotten city ordinance which makes it illegal to block a sidewalk. The store said no. more cig arettes would be sold until a new method of disposing them can be figured out. Adjacent stores complained that the lines blocked access to their stores. Election Ordered For Logging Camp WASHINGTON, May :23 VP) Wayne Hale, owner of a logging camp near McKenzie Bridge, Ore., was ordered today by the national - labor relations board to hold a collective bargaining election by June 19. The CIO has asked to repre sent ' both truck drivers and maintenance employes, and the AFL seeks to represent truck drivers. ' The' company is" not now unionized. NLRB Rules On Plywood Workers WASHINGTON, May 23 (&) ine navionai laoor relations board ruled tnriav fhaf mnl of a plywood company with an iiiuuMi'wiue uiiiqh contract cannot be represented by a com peting union. In a case brought by the AFL, the hoard hold that Knrincf iM Plywood corporation's workers am not constitute a permissible bargaining unit. Springfield Plywood, Spring- field ftr ! a momhnn t a nit,. wood and door manufacturers industrial committee, which has a general contract with the CIO covering many Oregon and Washington plywood firms. Alaskan Flags To Fly At Half Staff JUNEAU, Alaska, May 23 UP) Flags in Alaska will be flown at half staff until sunset Thurs day at the request of Gov. Ernest R. Gruening in respect for the most Rev. Joseph Ra phael Crimont, Catholic bishop of Alaska, who died Sunday. The Rev. William G. Levas scur will deliver the sermon at last rites Thursday and Bishop Crimont's automatic successor, Bishop Walter James Fitzgerald will act as celebrant. The body, which will lie in state Wednes day from 2 to 10 p. m. at St. Anne hospital, will be laid to rest in a church crypt at the Shrine of St. Terose on Shire island, 17 miles from Juneau. Land Board Asks Support Of Measure SALEM, May 23 (P) The state land board petitioned the Oregon delegation in congress today to give support to a reso lution which would guarantee that states may keep their titles to all tidelands and to lands within three miles of coasts. The federal department of the interior had planned to grant an oil lease in California tide lands, prompting, states to pro test that the federal govern ment has no claim to such lands. Wednesday, May 23. 1S45 HERALD AND NEWS SEVEH Test Well Drilled For Irrigation THE DALLES, May 23 UP) A 16-lnch test well is being drilled near tho mouth of Three Mile creek by the Orchard Irri gation co-operative, which seeks irrigation water for 4000 acres of fruit land. Two more wells will be drilled if the test is satisfactory, President. H. G. Miller said. Sponsors hope for a 5000-gal-Ion per minute flow. Water must be pumped 650 feet above the well top to supply the or chards, Miller stated. Classified Ads Bring Results. Classified Ads Bring; Results. MADE ESFECIALLY TO RELIEVE TORTURE AND KILL 0ERMS THAT CAUSE f ATHLETE'S FOOT Flrtt applications of wonderful aoothlnrv highly medicated liquid Zemo promptly relieve itchy soreness between cracked peclia toes. Then Zemo on contact kills germs that causa and apread . Athlete's Foot. - Zemo is a Doctor's antiseptic formula with an a roaiing record of succeas. Zemet really works tba first trial convinces.' Clean, stainleas. At all drugstore. Send ' Zerao to boya in service.. 2aQ BEGINNING and ADVANCED CLASSES for the Summer start June 4, and . continue through July . and August. That speedy, snappy easy-to-learn THOMAS natural shorthand, or a brush-up in GREGG. . We teach typing, bookkeep ing, and office machines also. Arrange now for enrollment June 4. - Klamath Business College " 733 Pine Street '?-; - Corner. of 8th mm f i I rvi hmbform EM I 194 3 i He 0 fl -Jin- ' 3 ii ' 1 n (Vi!m l:l T: S Li . DEPENDABLE ifTDODGE-PLYMOUTH 424 S. 6th Lombard Motors Peanuts 'n popcorn 'n... Have a Coke i I field day for fun under the Big Top pbody loves a circus; Eferybody comes for fun. From big city to small "J a red letter 'day a day when everyone wears a smile and joins in' friendly good nature and neighborlincss. Have a Coke are words heard ound, for the circus is the time to relax and enjoy yourself; And nothing Ptt Invented to help you do just that better than Ice-cold Coca-Cola! . one now .' j - lOriLin llunaa antunairv ni tut rnfA.COLA COA'AMV IV fOCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF KLAMATH FALLS "Coke"" Coca-Cola You naturally hear Coca.C61a' called by its friendly abbreviation , "Coke. Both mean the quality prod uct or me coca-Cola Company. 7 TH .WAR- I AN SPECIAL EVENT DON'T HOLD OFF-BUY YOUR BONDS NOW!!! GO TO BOTH!!! May 30th-U.S. MARINE SHOW, Pelican Theatre fienerfll Public G,nera' "Emission $100 bond; reserve scats $300 . ' WenCr0' MB,,, bond, bought between May 7th (VE Day) and May - ' 30th. Tickets at Bond Headquarters, 8th and Main Streets. Pavroll Bond RuVtarC 0n 9enetal Emission ticket for each 1 Y WIS UWIIU WUJTCI a, j10o bond purchased between April 9th -and May 30th. Obtainable from your Treasury Representative. These bonds may' ; ' . ' . be used either for this show OR for reserved seat at "This Is Your Infantry" (how NOT FOR BOTH. . .. June 5tlr- THIS IS YOUR INFANTRY" SHOW; Modoc Field c - ....... r j ' Puhlie 0,n,rs' admission $25.00 Tjond, purchased after; , rHDilWa May.24th. Reserved seats $100.00 bond, purchased ' i May 7th to June Sth AND NOT USED FOR MARINE SHOW. DiuraII PnJ DmiAHri Gloni' admission to regular "ten. per rayroii Bona Buyers . eenUr, 0MLY. Reid ,., , ti00 bend purehese'd between April 9th and June Sth,, AND NOT USED FOR MA ' RING SHOW. Obtainable from your Treasury Representative. Bring In Your Bond So That Serial Number on Same May Be Recorded on Ticket Stubs The Pelican Theatre can seat only 1500 people so bring in your bond early. Ir will be a case of "first come, first served" for both of these special events. r Is Spring St. ; Phone 8632 O IvMTkeC-CCe..