nnnnni
MUUL
BOARD
HOLDS FIRST
MEETING HERE
Ration Point! Given
Cafes By Mistake
PORTLAND, Oro., July 10
()Kestaurents at Tho Danes
obtained exim rouon pouiw ujr
mistake, Dlntrlct OPA Director
McDannoll Brown iiild today.
Drown mid llio local ration
board t h o r e misunderstood
orders and Issued points which
will bo charged sgainsi wis
cafes' noxt period quota.
E. 8. noblnion, chairman of
district ono. and Nulsoii Hoed,
cliulrmun o( tho )ilh school dis
trict, presided lit tho first of
(IuIhI meeting- of the year of the
Ki-i.nnl l.nnrif Monday ovonlnii.
Both men aro continuing In tliono
pol.
During the meeting J. Percy
Wnili wns nifnln named clerk
and Wilson Wlloy aiialn named
attorney for both bourdn. Tho
it h Nliiiinnni imrl Urn F rut Na
tional bunk" woro named de
positors for fundi. . ..
ti luiliflliiu addition at the
Fremont Junior high achool was
discussed and It wu announced
that tho WPB approval had been
recolvod for construction. Bids
r nnu halntf submitted and
will be opened on July 20 at
7:30 In the office of the tora
at tho high scnooi duiioiiik.
1'lnn may Go ohtnlnel at the of'
fke of Howurd Perrln, architect
ii.i..r ilalrlnt one. Durrell E
Potter waa named principal at
Hlversldo achool; Kothryn Her
rla to an art position at tho
. , Junior high; Mrs. Gladys Blng
1 (mm. physical education at the
JunlAr high; and Miss Kathryn
Irvine and Miss Edna Hehn wore
named to upper Krado appoint
ment. , .
ni.irlnt nna also rjurchascd
from the special Improvement
(miH 117.000 worth of 2i per
cent U. S. bonds. This cornea
from tho fund tho district voted
last year for a 8-year period.
Business In tho high school
district Included granting t
year'i lcovo of absence to Mrs
I uriiin n'Nnlll Hun to 111 health
t-riwnrrl J. Rvnn was named
nhvslcal education Instructor
and assistant coach for fall
tulntnr. nrl anrlnff SDOrU.
Nelson Reed and Ken Klahn
were named on a committee to
study Improvements in aressina
room facilities and enlargement
of athletic field facilities.
A. R. Dickson and C. 8. El
Hot were named to atudy the
Janitor pay schedule lor tho conv
ln -hoof vear.
Tho meeting was the first one
for Jack; Schulie, tho new mem
ber of tho elementary achool
board.
NAMED AT MEETING
(Continued From Pago One)
1mvIm tha work hero "In the
V Interesta of ataff unity" and did
not amplify the statement.. The
operations committee adopted a
resolution warmly praising him
for his work as director of the
Klamath program.
On Staff
Paid member of tho staff
here now aro Franklin, director;
Amiitant Director Ann Dirks'
melcr. in chargo of work for
tha Wavos and service wives;
Alice Miles, assistant to the
director; Mae King Conradi
toff aide and snack bar man
ager; Dannie Hull, offlca sec
rctary. Franklin and Miss Miles era
paid by Salvation Army; Miss
DIrksmclcr is paid oy tno na
tional Cathollo Community SerV'
ice; Mrs. Conradi, Mlmt Hall, and
the paniiors, aro paid py uau.
At tha operations commlttea
meeting, a budget of $12,064 for
Hie period from July 1 to De
cember si, mat wos proposed.
Expenditures In the first half of
the vcar total SI 1.983.
It was brought out that an ex-
Rr-cicd miiux oi marines 10 ne
lamath Marine Barracks from
navv convalescent hospitals will
bring increased attendance at
tho USO.
:.h.t
E. H. "Tommy" Thompson,
manager of tho Klamath U. 8.
Nnilonnl bank, has lust returned
from a trip east, wlioro ho at
tended grudualo school or pann
ing at Hutgori university, Now
Brunswick, N. J.
Thompson, who waa trans
ferred hero from Salom last
January, is ono of four men sent
by the bonk from uregon iu
attend tho three-year course at
Rutgers, with a two-week session
each year. Tills is Thompson's'
second year. The othor three
men fronvOrcgon aro from PorU
land. ...
Bank managers attending tno
class this yeor como from 30
states and two men from Puerto
Rico also attended.
Thompson spent a montn on
the trip, visiting In Washington,
D. C. and Now York City after
the class was over. He found
train travel fairly comfortable
anrf. not too crowded, he. said,
but reported high temperatures
In eastern cities, and said it was
good to get back to "cool Oregon,
where there are not so many
PPle!' ' . ..",.
lloiei conamons in new twin
were crowded, Thompson said,
with the military taking over so
many of. the bigger, hostelrles.
SENATE OPENS
DEBUTE OYER
USE OF TROOPS
(Continued From Pag One)
tor the constitutional practices
nt I fill vi-fln '
"Tho president has had the
rlolii in ! the armed forces in
tliu national intorest and that Is
a complcto analogy with- this
charter." .' ' ; ...
Milllkin aaid that raised tha
question of the ultimate author
ity nf the American delegate
and "Is It not time to meet that
uisuo head-on now, not wnen me
Implementing atututei. come
up?" ' .
Connelly Disagree
Chairman Connelly (D-Tex.)
disagreed sharply, and on the
question of such reservations he
told Milllkin that he hai the
right to offer any reservations
"If you can get the votes."
Milllkin laid ho was not at
tempting to debate, but wai lim
ply asking questions. The ex
chanue occurred while tho com
mittee was questioning Dr. Leo
Jap Joumali si
Criticizes Nips
SAN FRANCISCO, - July 10
(p) The dean of Japanese Jour
nalists today severely criticized
the Nipponese government for
failure to toll its people the
stark truth about the Ion? of
vital Pacific islands, Tokyo
radio reoorted.
Soho Tokutoml opposed the
government's policy . "which
slnco Guadalcanal has tended to
dismiss the loss of strategic
islands with superficial opti
mism." The enemy broadcast, record
ed by tho federal communlca
tlona commission, said Toku
torn I emphasized the fall of Sal'
pan last July, recalling that
JaDanese authorities at the time
lulled the nation with the as
surance that loss of a tiny Cen
tral Pacific island should cause
nn worrv. -. ..
"Everybody now Knows wnai
the loss of Salpan meant to
Japan," Tokutoml wrote in the
newspaper mainicni.
More than 13.000 persons In
the United States take ineir own
lives each year.
(Continued from Page One)
Camp Newell were on mop-up
and patrol Tuesday. .
Sinco the start of tho dry
lightning storma Sunday aevon
other fires In the same general
viclnltv Have been reported,
none aerloua as yet. . More are
expected as weather continues
warm and llgmning storms per
sist, ' '
A drv. liihtning storm Mon
day afternoon started one fire
on the Klamath Indian reserva
tion four miles south of Sprague
River that threatened to be se
rious -for a t!mo before it was
put under control. It had cov
ered about 29 acres.
Eight new fires wers started
In the Blv area by Monday's
storms, but all wcro undor cpn-
trol Tuesday, Klamatn .forest
Protective association reported
that all crews wero alerted for
new atorms Tuesday afternoon.
Klamath Falls city fire de-
Panvnlikv. slate denariment ex
pert on the . United Nations
treaty. .
Paavolsky1 told Mllllken that.
If the security council would not
know In advance what It could
count on In the way of troops
from the United States; "the pur
pose of the whole treaty would
bo defeated."
Transfer of Marines .
From Convalescent .
Hospitals Ordered
(Continued From Page One).
ton In an effort to bring about
more complete use of the in-
stallatlon, regarded ' as. one of
the finest military post In the
west. Capt. Ioweii T. . logge
shall.. USNR. ranking medical
officer, will go to Washington
late this month for conferences,
and it is expected tho n.fdicnl
nroeram will be expanded In
connection with the wider mis
sion of the post. -
Removed From-List
The new order makea It pos
Ihln to retain ail key personnel
at the Barracks to maintain1 the
program for the Influx of new
men. These . men have been
taken off the transfer list.
Announcement of tho new
plans for tho post directed at
tention today to tho need for
ranld completion of military
and civilian housing units here,
and it waa expected this matter
will bo elven the attention of
Iho chamber of commerce nous-
iug committee Immediately,
Classified Ads Bring Results
lartment was called a little af-
grass fira storting on tho north
ter noon today to put out a
end of Eldorado and were on
the lookout for grass fires which
might start -with tho. advent of
dry weather.
Piles ! On! !
But He SMILES, Now
wl u Hi m I'M Sims lormul. (iM
br dortoi-i KUunctlvely st noted Thorn
ton Minor Clinic SurorWac QUICK
twlllntlro relief ol Hla. Itch, o."""'
Kelps soften nd tends to 'Shrink well
lnOet tube Thornton A Mlaofs Retttl
. . . . nunlM A Ulnar Reelu
SuppceltorlM; If not dellshted wlUl this
IXJCTORB' wr. low eoet le refunded.
AC an gooa orua khu mrrwim
House Asks
Italy's Joining
. WASHINGTON. July 10 (VP)
hhe house foreign affairs com
mlttea voted today to ask the
president to "use his good of
fices" to the end that Italy bo
wlnvltcd Into tho United' Nations.
' Tho former axis pnrtner la
now treated diplomatically as a
"co-belligerent," which holds it
short of full ally status.
Classified Ads Bring Rsiults.
DEVELOPING
ENLARCINC '
PRINTING .
PHOTO SERVICE ,
311 Und.rwood Bldj.
He Reads ft From Tie Bible
C. E. Fritts
- Church of. Christ
Evangelist '
. Is known as
'THE MAN
OPEN BIBLE''
Hear Him Daily at 8:00 P. M.
TENT MEETINGS
' en South Sixth Streor
, Two blocks bayond "th Tower"
Promoted by 1
THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
' 2205 Wantland .
" -Klamoth Fold, Oregon . ,
RECORD
BLOW
AGAINST JAPS
IDE FROM I
(Continued from Page One)
lean-announced blowi yesterday
which neutralized airdromes in
these areas in preparation for
the carrier strike and knocked
out 26 interceptor.
- Dutch troorx from Java and
the West Indies Joined the
southeast Borneo Invasion with
two amphibious operations in
the urDer reaches of Ballkpapan
bay, solidifying allied control
over the oil harbor. ' Austral
ians who landed at Ballkpapan
ten dava aao probed toward oil
fields against Japanese road
block made of flaming oil
drums and guarded by coastal
guns.
Chinese troop drove Into the
heart of the Wolfram' mining
area, vital to the allied steel in-'
dustry, capturing Tayu approxi
mately 175 miles northeast of
Canton. They pursued retreat
ing Japanese toward the former
U. S. air base at Kanhsien. Oth
er Nipponese were reported
counterattacking In the area.
Man Posts Bail For
No Driver's License
Only one traffic arrest was
made by city police yesterday.
John Dodson of Bonanza posted
5 bail for failure to have an
operator's license.
Mildred Pyeatt, 121 N. 11th,
waa Involved in a traffic acci
dent yesterday .with, a car
driven by Evelyn Malloy, 240 E.
Main. The collision occurred at
Klamath and 9th. No arrest was
made by clfy police.
Seven drunk and one drunk
and disorderly case appeared In
police court thi morning. Three
additional oxunKs pauea out.
Tuesday, July 10, 194S
HERALD AND MEWS'
THHElj
Mat Tear SCNO . HeeSqierlere
Louie Polio Famous -
Sleepy Hollow Motel
IK mil east of Reno.
Look for the Burro.
Phone Spark 2674, '
Six Building Permits 1
Issued By Council , I
Six building permit were ap
proved by Klamath city council
at the meeting Monday evening,
including building and repairs
amounting to $3575. .
fcrmlts were granted for
building a woodshed at 227 Lin
coln, to cost 6100. to Mrs. Mvrtle
Vowell; an addition to a building,
hi o. un, ouu, tan t. wnue,
Uptown Cleaners.
New roof, 2234 White, $100,
Joe Ybarra; remodel residence
and build new foundation. 1111
California, 6500, L. H. Gibson;
remodel, 1502 Sargent, 62000,
M. uieason; repair Bedroom,
427 S., Eldorado, $75, Louis
Johns.
NOW AVAILABLE
(To All Oeere) ,
Adding Machines
.. Calculators -New
Royal Typewriters
' DESKS CBAS FUSS
- ' Serriee AU Meefctaee
PIONEER PRINTING
AND. STATIONERY CO.
122-124 S. 9th, Klamath Falls
" SOONOY STALIN CONFER "
MOSCOW, July 10 (ffj Ch
neso.-Premler-T.-V. Soong, here
for eonferencea with soviet of
ffcials oh' Chinese-Russian r
latlons, had hla fourth talk witfc
Premier . .Generalissimo Stalin
.tost night.' . ..;
Your' '
Property '
Is Not
Bankable
Security
Until
it Is protected by good
Insurance, and we
write insurance ': that
banks want.
Hans Norland
Insurance Agency
rir Auto Cuutlur ' .
118 N. 7th Ph. 6060
E.tinfliiniiiiiijmiiiBiiifiit.imiiiUMiuiiiifiiiiniiitiDiiiiiiijii
Farmers Attention!
1 We kill, dress and chill your hogs 'ic per pound.
We cure and imoke your ham and bacon 5c per
pound.'. '.',.,)
We have the best, facilicles., Our work is guaran
teed. WHY PAY MORE? .
JOHNSON
THEJWMJPOPjT
1 'arVIW)Wto,H
PACKING CO.
OF HONORBILT
f0) ;M1
JON
Now is your chance to save on many furniture needs during Sears Pre-
Inventory Clearance. Quantities limited on most items. -
2-PIECE LIVING ROOM SET
06
Heavy tapestry covera In mod
ern American design. Pre-war.
quality steal spring. Only 1 left ;
. Regularly priced 249.95
219'
2-PIECE LIVING ROOM SET
88
Choice . cover over hardwood
frames. Pre-war ' quality ateel
springs. Only 3 sets lafc
Regularly 'priced 199.95
.167
SWING ROCKER
Havy hardwood frama. Mohair cov
er. Havy steal springs. An . axcap
tlonal value priced at 84.95. Now only
39
77
SUPER-SPECIAL
Extra BedrrRolls Away,
IV
Just the thing
for. that extra
room.
Reg. 24.13
19
88
It's 5 us t thatl
When not in use
a a . comfort
able bed it folds
compact! f -and
can be . rolled
out of aight.
All ateel frame,
link spring.
Complete .with
comfortable cot
ton felt ,mat-
4-PIECE BEDROOM SET
Birdseye. maple . finish with,
hardwood Interior. Plate glass
mirror, drop canter vanity, twin
' beds. Begulax price 159.95, now
'only.
128
88
5-PIECE DINETTE SETS
- Hardwood In' bleach finish with op
; holstared seat In chairs. Hagular price
Was low at 49.95, now only ' . -
36
88
JUNIOR SIZE CRIBS
iTory finish with drop ' sides and
steel link springs. Sturdily made and
was cheap at 29.95. Now only -
17
77
SWING ROCKERS
Choice of Mohair sr Friese covers.
Double ..doweled hardwood .i frame.'
Steel spring construction. Was 89.95,
now only
46
46
; , STUDENT
BRIDGE LAMPS
UNFINISHED PLAY PEN
Maple ; finish with handy ' book
half. Complete with-clip on shade.
Adjustable .boighth. . These sold at
9.95. Now only
.. , '! :", ' ......
4
99
Heavy floor1 with , sturdy hinged- side'
for folding. ,40 Inches lquare. Paint, it
yourself. These were 7.49, now ; .
377
COMFY CLUB CHAIRS
Barrell type club with floral design
. tapestry .cover. . Regularly priced at
49.95, now
37
88
LARGE SIZE SHAG RUGS
A beautiful zug for your bedroom,.
S'x9',alae In solid colors woven on a
heavy canvas back.' Were 39.95, now
26
' FOLDING ,
BABY CARRIAGE
: Regular Price 18.95
NOW
14
88
Black leatherette covering, sturdily
made with Reel wheels and rubber
tire. Folds for storing or carrying
In the car. Limited quantity.
LARGE FRAMED PICTURES
Glass covered with heavy molded frame.
Floral subjects suitable for any living
room. Were 5.95. Now1.
Heavy HAND-HOOKED RUGS
J99
Imported - and ' domestic hand hooped
zug in floral designs. In good taste in
any room. Slse 24"x48". Were 12.95,
.now : ',
36x60 inch, size wefe 22.95-TWow i.!
24x48 Inch slxe were 11.95 Now ...
88 v : '
.-eaiesa'aL . C
6.99 . Sf00
SMALL FRAMED PICTURES
Molded frames and glass covered,
sorted ' subjects. -that Were 3.98..
priced at only
As-Now
VII
I
WHITE FRAMED MIRRORS
10x12 inch slse with white enameled ' 18j7
frames. Priced cheap originally at '.J II
Mow-while thay.last avoqly iTX fct? "f:
"SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR '
133 SOUTH 8TH STREET; ll r
. TELEPHONE 5188 ,
iwur mwnirsAwa
PHONE 5323