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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1945)
fUmodtllng Boat Club Ren Schullr. In remodeling t ho Tiilc Inku bunt club building, gd tlng ready (or the opening of duck luiliilliu aiiuson October 13. The club hue 10(1 members in cluding prominent California bualness men mid Hollywood movie stura, Indications polnl to axcollonl hunting this full, Rationing four. pound pack age! nf Cenlennlul puncuko flour m deleted I r o in community pricing for llio present. Thci ntiw celling price mi No. 2 cutis ol Dnl Rogue and ynllow f riM-otinio pouohea In group OPA storea No. 1 In HI cents, while Ihu price at group No. 2 itoroi la MO cent. South Dakota Picnic Tim tin mm) South Dukulii picnic will bo held l Monro park nn Sunday, Augiwt 111, ut ft) ii. in. All (or mer residents of South Unkota are Invited to attend. Each purty In asked to bring a picnic lunch. Coffee will be served. All In need of trnniiportatlon aro asked to call B0I3. Injured Zoo Uruce, Pellcnn hotel, who Is employed at the Vanity bcuuty (hop, fall down a flight of t a I r ii Saturday, and was tnki'n to Klnnmlli valley hospital for treatment for a gaud on her head. Daughters Of Nile The Dauithtere of the Nile will meet on Tuesday afternoon at 1:30 lit the homo of Mm. l.oren Palmer ton, 840 Pnclflc Torrnce, to new for the Shrine Hospital for Crip, pled Children In Portland. Improving Front Sheldon Brumbaugh, architect, who did the work of remodeling the pub lic health center building, 104(1 Main, lust year, la In charge of landscaping the ground In (rout of the building. OPA Broadcast Mrs. K. K. Loosley of the League o( Worn- ... Vnlar mnA Uul flnKd-l I Payne, U8MC, will apeak on raise roonons nonui ine over the werKiy broadcast on Tuesday at 3:30 p. m. TOt Meeting The Prater nal Order of Eagles will meet on Tuosdav at 7;4S p. m. In the upper EOE hall. There will be entertainment and refreahments after the meeting. Eagles Auxiliary The Eagles auxiliary will hold Ita regular meeting on Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock in the lower FOR hall at Bih and Walnut. There will be entertainment and refresh menta. Hospitalised Stanley Bow den, of the Standard Oil com pany In Chlloquin. la convalesc ing at Hillside hospital after aurgery. He la expected to be able to leave the hospital Thurs day. Meeting The Altamont Vic tory 4-H'era are tn meet at the home of their leader, Mm. Ivan Crumpacker, on 21(11) Madison on Tuesday at 2 p. in., for the last meeting. Undergoes Surgery George Be rum, 7-year-old son of Mra. Emma Barnes, of 1048 Owens, has undergone major surgery at Klamath Valley hospital and la now recovering. Vacation to South Annia Struthera, public health nurse, will leave Tueaday for Los An- f elea where she will spend her wo-weck vacation with rela tive! and friends, Trlendly C I r e I e Arbhur Stone will be hostess to the Friendly Circle Thursday. Au gust 16, at her home, 2204 Dar row, and Violet Vance will be co-hoatesa. Week at Diamond Mrs. Ada Sparretorn la spending the week at Diamond lake as a guest of Mr. and Mra. J. B. Reed at their lake cabin. To San Francisco Patsy Lar aon. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Larson. 148 Octavls. la spending a two-weeks' vacation in San Francisco. On Trip Jean Oatendorf, daughter of Mr. and Mm. Ed Oatendorf, of Pacific Terrace, left Saturday for a two-week visit to Portland and Salem. Russian River Mrs. MlUiccnt weat, public health nurse, and her daughter, Jean, of Merrill, are on vacation at Russian Rivor, Calif. Footprlnteri There will ba a meeting of tho Footprlntora at the Willard hotel on Wednesday, August IB. st 7:30. This la the first meeting of the new year. Medical Care Tom Garrett, ol Tulolake, la at Klamath Val ley hospital receiving medical care. On Vacation Mr. and Mm. Dave Snyder and family are on tweweeka' vacation, They re. side at 1501 Eldorado, 'IIIVISIBU' LIQUID Promptly Relieve Mltery arid Help Heal Ugly SKIN RASHES Hara'! a Dootor'a snHsaptlo formula Zem stainless Kcutt which appetra tnrftftts on skin yet an hlfhly madl ested that first applleaUotia rallave Itehlng, burning of simple slrin Tasnss, Emms, Athlate'a Foot and almllar aHa and wslp IrriuMone due to itrnl canst. Zeraols backed by so smailng r ordef sueoMsl First trial wnvfnws. loS size. At any drugstore, T yj Q Vliltori Paul Ilnnlln, dnpuly V. K, nuirnhiil front Modfnrd, Ins sons, Wnrrnii mid Donald, and Kiitlierlne Kleely were vinllorn on Sunday nt the home of Mr. and Mm. 1,. J. Brink, 2241 Orchard. Senior ClraU KrUliiy, Auguiit 17, the renlor circle of the Com munity Congregational church will hold a potluck plrnlit nt the home of Mm. W. C. Little, 2444 Orchard way. Ml 12:,IU u in. Mary lCcknteln and Mm. J. II, I'ox will assist and coffee will bu pi'ovldud. Rebekah Meeting Prosperity Hebekiih lodge will meet In reg ular amnion Thursday, Auguat 10, at II p. in., In the IOOP hull, and apeclul entertainment him been planned for the aoelal hour following the luminous meciing. Rar-f4 t-laarl fin Atlllllttl IF, Cntliollca llirnughnul the world will celebrate the ream ol tnc Aaaumpllon of Our Bleaacd Lady Inln hf.;,vt.n Klnr It la a hnlldnv of obligation there will bo four miiaaoR at u, 7, a and u:ju. To Mtot The Schoolmates club will meet with Mm. Will Wood, 2R9 Pacific Terrace, Fri day, August 18. at 2 p. m. T ... A water carnival Saturday morning concluded boya' 4-rl camp ai Lako o' the Woods. In cluded in the curnivul were row boat races and contests in free style swimming, diving and lloatlng. Hoys who learned to swim during the week Ml camn under Instructor Cpl. Jtooeit Hender son, of the Murine Ilnrraeks. par tlt'lniitfd In the cventa. Hender son also acted as lifeguard and Instructed classes In target prac tice. Excellent marksmanship was shown In the shooting contest which was part of the flnul pro gram at camp, with Hob Schicf ersteln'a score of 80 winning him first pluce. David Coski was second with a scoro of 87 and Leo Olson third with 81 out of a possible 100. Several cases of homesick ness, unknown during 4-H girls' week, developed among the boya, with some of the younger lads packing their belongings ana starling otr down the road Bly Jack Harrison made a busl ness trip to Portland over the weekend. Sarah McMillan was in Klam ath Falls on business last week Janet Prolsmnn spent the weekend In Klamath Falls with friends. A Kroun of girls who at tended 4-H camp at Lake o' the wooda returned homo .Saturday evening. Enjoying comp for A week were Darlene Hadley. Marie and Nnncy Tlbblts, And rey Johnson, Bernlece Morris, Pat Snodgrass. Freda Schlicht and Marvel Jonesrhelt. Mr. and Mra. Ervin Neil and three children of Roseburg. vis ited at the Garl Madison home on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Smith and children went to Aahland on Saturday where they will visit relatives, smith returned Sun. rlnv tn rncnmi, wnrlr Miiryclle McMillan, of Brem erton, Wash., arrived here Sun day to spend a two-week vaca tion with her parents, Mr. and Mm. Rosa McMillan. Grade Myers ia spending the month with relatives at Los An gclos. PICKINO BEGINS MEDFORD, Aug. 13 WP) Rogue river orchards will begin picking tomorrow, with most of the crop destined for the fresh fruit market rather than for California and Willamette valley canneries, County Agent C. B. cordy said today. Estimates of the date when American supplies of high grade, readily tiscablo Iron ore In tho United Stotos will be ex hausted range from 10 to 40 years in the future. YOUR SERVICE it ' un moving f SWAGS lCAl CASTAS PHONE 4151 848 Broad St.. Klamath Falls KAISER YARD FEELS BLOW OF WWY CUT-BACK PORTLAND, Ore., Aug, 111 tA'i Slnpimildera said today work on vessels now on the way, repairs and special peacetime building auu conversion would keep pay rolls busy until the end of the year. Cancellation of contracts for eight CVE-105 type escort car rlera at the Kaiaer Vuncouver yard was the first major set-back in this urea under the navy's cur tailment program. The only yard not likely to bo hard hit by V-Duy cutbacks Is Albina Engine and Machine Works, now building four lum ber cargo ships lor postwar coastwise trade and 20, smaller Island vessels for the Nether lands East indies government. Commercial Iron Worka has six 100-foot harbor tugs on the ways and Gunderaon Brothers has four 85-foot tuga In varloua atagea of completion. A sixth is being outfitted. The Kulser yards reported vic tories and three APS transports under construction at Oregon shipyard, 12 C-4 transports at Vancouver and eight T2 tankers at Swan Island. Outfitting firma may complete exlating contracts, yard men be lieved. Falsa Flash Catches Portlanders Napping PORTLAND, Aug. 13 W) Portlanders were caught nap ping on the false United Press news flash of Japanese surren der and before any celebration could gain headway it was snuffed out. A few hundred theatre-goers down town, where the prema ture flash was thrown on the screen, ran Into the street cheer ing wildly. Some servicemen cheered on street corners and a few whistles blew in district plants, but the almost Immediate reaction of the erroneous flash halted fes tivities. V-J Day To Cause No Slack For USO PORTLAND, Aug. 13 m -Staffs of scrvicemens centers here expect to be busier than ever in the months Just after V Day, officials said today. Activity will not be Black ened, said the Portland USO council, reporting all USO cen ters will stay open "as long as the need Is Justified." A council spokesman said attendance at all unit had been steadily Increas ing for months. STORK TO VISIT HOLLYWOOD. Aug. 13 A Songstress Deanna Durbln is ex pecting a baby next spring, prob ably in March, she announced last night. The 23-year-old actress was married last June 13 to Film Producer Felix Jackson. Miss Durbln was divorced in December, 1943, from Vaughn Paul after nearly five years of marriage. y j0 Spends Leave Here ejeajjyi(itjeWa)K I' it ' I WL,f V, J it L.. French L. Johnson, who saw acilon over Germany, will spend his leave with his par ents at Tulelake. E AFTER 92 MISSIONS TULELAKE Lieut. French E. Johnson, fighter-bomber pilot with the U. S. 8th air lorce in Germany. Is home on leave, He arrived In New York a week ago on the Queen Mary and will spend his leave with his par ents. Mr. and Mrs. French John son and his sister, Mrs. Lion Kie ben. He wears two Presidential cl tntions, has added 16 Oak Leaf clusters to his air meaai ana the Croix de Guerre. He was flight leader for his squadron and flew 02 missions with only one minor acciaeni Thl occurred when he flew his plane into an apple tree while strafing. A graduate of the Tulelake high school in 184Z. ne was ai tending Oregon State college when he enlisted. At the end of his leave he will reoort to Marysville, Calif and later to LaJunta, Colo, for further training in the ctfl theater. State Ram Sales Schedules Told LAKEVIEW Ram sale time is approaching in Oregon with the tnrcc big sales again sched uled starting with the oldest one st Pendleton August 17, fol lowed by tne one at Albany on August 27 and ending with the Lakevlew sale September 14. The Southern Oregon Ram sale at Lakevlew will offer 225 rams made up of Suffolks, Hampshires, Romeldales, Ram- bouillets and crossbred. Sifting committees at each sale make sure that only high quality ant mals arc offered, says H. A Llndgrcn, extension livestock fieldmsn at OSC. It is said that the idea of driv ing cattle from Texas to the rail road in Kansas came after' the Civil war from a livestock deal er in Illinois named Joseph Mo Coy. wmmmmmmmmmmmmm:A,mmm Dress up In dots 'tween work-day and dream land! Fine polka dot rayon trimmed with white cordege piping. White polka dot on powder blue, aqua, rose, navy, red and royal, COAT $7.50 TROUSIRS $4.45 THE SIT $11.95 GIFTS SHOWERED Oil HEiMSEL BY NATION BATTLE CREEK, Mich., Aug. 13 lP) A grateful nation yes terday ihnwered more than $60.- 000 on Master SergeBnt Freder ick Henscl. only American sol dier to lose both arms and legs in action in this war. The money, representing for the most part donations from people in Michigan, Illinois and the sergeant's home state of Kentucky, was presented to Sgt. Hcnacl at the Percy Jones Gen eral hoapllal, where he hoi been a patient for five weeks. It highlighted the sergeant's observance of his third wedding anniversary end meant a realiza tion of his ambition to own a chicken farm when he is re leased from the army. It really was a gala occasion for the plucky 27-year-old Ken tucky GI, for it Included his first wheelchair ride through the hospital grounds. It marked the first time he had been out of bed since he was wounded on Okinawa In June. Group Elects Seattle Man EUGENE) Ore., Aug. 13 UP) A wn. chdMI GAnftlp Kiirreeded Paul Marshail, Tacoma, as presi dent of Active international terdoy as the group closed a two day convention. Jim McCallum, Bremerton, Wash., was named first vice president, and Robert Moore, Sacramento, Calif., second vice president. Host Roy Copping, president of the Eugene club. POIU ULIli"." - possible help to returning war veterans. , . The organization covers clubs Washington. Cali fornia and Canada. Liquor Rationing To Be Continued ClTATTT.tr All. 13 Wl Liquor rationing will continue for "a considerable time" after V-J Day, and an adequate supply of Scotch and bonded whiskeys is not expected for two or three years. Rear Adm. Luther E. Gregory, chairman of the state liquor control board, said today. "The state's rationing system is based on distilling restric tions of the federal government, and Bny relaxation will depend on the government," he said. AUCTION CANCELLED PORTLAND, Aug. 13 VP) A western pine auction Involv ing 30 million feet of lumber, scheduled for Spokane tomor row, 'will not be held because of the "turn of events in the war," a procurement official an nounced today. WJ-ATHER Sg utter Aufflit 11, Max. Kujrcn 73 Klamith Falls ......84 Sacramento North Bend I Portland . 70 IMS Mm. 4S .00 .00 S sa as Reno . .00 Tnct Tree .00 .00 San Francisco . Seattle Medford Red Blurt s ...as ss Washington and Oregon Clear today, tonight and Tuesday, except morning cloudlneu In weat portion: lltUe change In temperature: moderate northwesterly winds off coaiL Seattle Board Continues Draft SEATTLE, Aug. 13 W) Draft calls are continuing according to schedule, although V-J day la "very likely" to bring a change In the procedure, Capt. Patrick Henry Wlnaton, atate director of aelective service, said today. The state's August call of 1003 men Is expected to be met this week, Captain Winston said, and plans are being made to induct 1040 men in September. GRAIN FROM BLAZE Lack of wind and quick action on the part of German prisoners of war probably saved hundreds of ripened grain when a truck caught fire at Canby's Bay, Lava Beds area, Saturday. About 8 p. m. Saturday when men were quitting work, a truck belonging to Bill Kandra Jr. caught fire, destroying 100 sacks of barley and threatening sur rounding acres of tinder-dry standing grain. The fire was spotted almost Immediately by Don C. Fisher, custodian of Lava Beds national monument, who called the fire lookout. When fire fighters ar rived shortly after, they found German war prisoners working In the vicinity had dug a fire trail about the truck. Scratching frantically with their bare hands and any Implements at hand, they dug an effective fire trail, preventing the fire from spread ing. Cause of the fire In the truck was undetermined. Atom Bombs Fair Exchange For Japs PORTLAND, Aug. 13 fP) A minister who, with his wife, hid from the Japanese in the Philip pines for three and a half years, declared here atom bombs are a fair reply to Japanese cruelty. "Anythlne's fair." said the Hev. S. D. Lommasson. "They asked for it and they're getting it." Mr. Lommasson had been tn the PhlliDoines since 1914. his wife since 1911. The U. S. army finally liberated the region in which they were hiding. , i-r j J W j Monday, Aug. 13, 194S Despondent Soldier May Have Set Portland Blaze PORTLAND, Aug. 13 (P) Detective M. A. McMeoken sold today a soldier despondent over Impending divorce may have set a fire in which he and his three small children died. The homicide squad awaited a coroner's verdict in the death Saturday of Carl M. Graham, 34; Nancy, 3 years, Harvey, 2 years, and Howard, about 9 months. Firemen said they ap peared to have suffocated from smoke, since none was burned. The home was partially de stroyed. OPENED HERE TODAY The little shop at 737 Main, formerly occupied by Evergreen Studios, opened today as a pic ture frame shop operated by Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hooks. The shop, called the 'Cameo," has been entirely remodeled. Greeting cards, stationery and pictures will be sold but the main service will be picture framing. All the new stock has not yet been unpacked, Hooks said. Hooks come to Klamath Falls from Los Angeles 20 years ago and has made his home here ever since. He was associated with art and gift merchandising in the southern city and has operated an art and gift shop here for the past eight years. Previous to that he operated the Manhattan lunch, now the Busy Bee, which he opened during the depression. Classified Ads Brine Results DEVELOPING ENLARGING PRINTING KHd&uuoodb. PHOTO SERVICE 211 Underwood Bide;. 7) Who but Cymonette would do a sleeve like this? A perfect wool gabardine suit fashioned by this lead ing designer. HERALD AND NEWS TIVK Several hours after the blue Mrs. Graham, hysterical, cam to police headquarters. She laid she and her husband had quar reled the evenlna before in night club and she had spent the night with friends. Detective O. M. O'Leary said uianuui, in a note iouna in tne houae, threatened to kill a mala acquaintance of Mrs. Graham 11 no over iouna mem togemer. Police ounatlrtnert flnl BlamaM Shapiro, 29. A rough draft of a win, apparently scriODiea only a few hours before the fire, also was leu, u Leary reported. The body of Graham, who had been hnmA nn nrlmitfh urn covered behind a davenport where the fire started, firemen said. This Indicated he may pur poseiy nave gone lo a.spoi noi affording an exit, they said. NOW AVAILABLE (Te All Usera) Adding Machines Calculators New Royal Typewriter DESKS CHAIRS riLIS Service en All Maehlnee PIONEER PRINTING AND STATIONERY CO. 122-124 8. 9th, Klamath falls Gabardine SHIRTS with 3 Buttons or Single Buttons Part Wool All Wool $5.95 to $10 Colorsi ' . Blue, axey, tan. maroon, brown. Ilnea llll KANSTORE MS Mala St. ' LdbewsJ A, I