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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1945)
To Meet Tho ISukIch iiuxlll. try will nut liolil a munllng Tuesday nlulil, Ixil will hold a ragulur mooting Frlduy nlulil In tlia uppor FUlCliull wllh ull pust niaduui presidents vuiiduotlnu the mealing. Drill tun in mid punt murium! will iinietlco Wednes day lllillit ul U Pi hi, Members of Ilia Muxlllury uro Invilod lo lionet tlio oiiturliilnmiMit unci hove refreshments wllh tliu iierlo Tuesduy night utter tlio aerie meeting. To Name Daliaatts Aerie No, iiUUO fraternal Order o( Ku Ulna will hold iimiilniillon unci election (if dcleKiitcs to the atuto convimtlini nt tlio ri'Kiilur moot lull Tuesday nlilhl, October II, lit 7:48 III Urn upper FOB hull ut lllh mid Wiilnut, 'I'll (i convention will ln hold In Kimono Novem ber B-D-IU. Forty two delegates will ho chicled. Lutharan Laagua Young pco-j pics iciiuuu oi ciuinutn burner un church will hnve n fellowship laii(iiol ul tho church parlors on luoxiuy in u .iu p, in. Tho Hov. Kuiiviild r'nunke. liili'rnutloniil Luther Icawie ovaniit-llsl, will ho npeuKcr ul ilic hummel mid all crwurd will speak In the mull torlum. Tin: public It Invited tu hour him, OWAC Thrro will bo un Im porting business nicollng of tho O r o It o u Women's Ambulance corpn ut tho armory Tuesday lilllht ul H o'clock. All member aro urued lo iiltend and bo pre pared to pick up their cor;i pic tures. R9-D sanitary napkin with th "Cushion Center" 2 pkgs. 39e IMi mmiVIo filtr" tonilructlon gtvH y CUSHION COMPORT on( maxlnuai pro t1 Ion Mh by Ida M D TI3JUI " BREAD IS AT ITS BEST WHEN Ts7foUt4!p'?U44 BREAD IS AT ITS BEST WHEN TS'?KwudK'?'udl BREAD IS AT ITS BEST WHEN ITS TfotHAtf "jtlttA BREAD IS AT ITS BEST when ir s "TKviHUf 'PxctA BREAD IS AT ITS BEST WHEN Xr&lfotH&tp'P'UAt BREAD IS AT ITS BEST WHEN ITS TfoyiKiHf 'pXCtt BREAD IS AT ITS BEST In Euflank llmtnu Moot umi of Mm, lislher Nucl ut tliu' city L'lCIK UllltC, lllllt lUl'elVCU u medical dlschiugii rum t h o Unltvd KUiU'H nuvy mill in now In Eugene wheiu ho In u student of dentistry ul llie University uf Oregon, lln In muklug IiIh homo with hln father, Ur. Paul M. Noel, former Kliimuth Full don lint whu 1 1 n.i opened unices In Kugciiu. Don Noel, Jimmy's brollior, him unlisted In Ihu nuvy mid In uwulllng order, lln In ex pected home the curly purl of UiIb week (ruin Kugciiu whore he la visiting. Expactad Hara Hob Jester, hIkiiiiIiiiuu 2e, Unlled Stales nuvy, Ik expected hero tho ourly purl of the week mid has been discharged from tho nuvy under tho point system. Jester, noil ut Mm. Kollh K. Ambrose 4aO N. 3rd, hint been In tho nuvy since Iimuiiry 1, 1042, and has boon on duly In tho Aliunde Iheiilrr of wur. Ho will roinuiu hero for a hIioiI time. To Alaska Dr. Charles V. rtuith und Frnnk Hokup lefl to dny for Henttlo by unto where Ihey will tukc n plane to Ketch! kiln, Ahmkn. They pluii u two weeK' visit with Cliff und Hutu llomic, Thoy will return by bout lo Seattle, uccoinpunled by tho lloifucH, who will miike their homo In Khimiitli Fulls. They urc former residents of this clly. Arrival Homo Cpl, Ernest T. Lurson Jr., son of Mr. und Mrs. Ernest T. Lurson, 3U41 Muck, urrlved hero Sunday morning from Ouklund, Cull!. Cpl. Lur son tins Just returned from Jap nn where ho was held lis n Jup uncsc prisoner of wur since I'curl llurbor, From Bay Area Mrs. Olive Van Kirk of tho Evans apart nients has returned from her vucutlon spent In the buy nreii. Returning with her wus her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Merrick, who will muko their homo in Klum nth Falls. Daughter Born Mr. and Mrs. Moss Un Kin net uro parents of a buby girl born Saturday morn ing at Klamuth Valley hospital. The Utile girl weighed eight and a half pounds. Grnndpurcnts ore Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Collier of Pino Grove. Returns Mrs. Clair A. Luse, 434 N. 6th, returned homo Fri day night following a three months' visit in Manhattan, Has., with her parents. Mrs. Lie-e's sister, Elizabeth Swart, accom panied her to Klamuth Falls for an extended visit. Weekends Here Dorothy Rlggs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rlggs of Lakcshore drive, spent tho weekend here from tho University of Oregon ai tugene. . To Visit Coast Malcolm Ep ley, district deputy grand exalt ed ruler of tho Elks, will onv of ficial visits to Multifield lodge on Wednesday night and Rose burg lodga on Thursday, night. Home From Coast - Wyatt Padgett, local Insurance man, is homo after a business trip to the soumwcsicru urcgon coast. OBITUARY HAftRiKT tincrrA Mll.t.m Harriet Hebecca Millar, a resident ot Klamath FalU for Iho pail eight yeara, paMrtl away in tnli clly Monday, October 8. IMJ at U a. m. She waa a native o( Dayton. Ohio, and was aged 87 yeara, 0 months and 3 daya at the time o( her paulng. She la aurvlvad by I he follow ing, ivur una, itaipn r.. ana oy t,. Miller of Klamath rlt llarrv mnA Clarence Miller of WUcoruln: a daughter. Minn oi nymcuae, inuiana; two brothers. Ilert Zimmerman of Hamoa, Calif., Leilla .Imuicrmatt of Dremerton, wmn.i i j irandchlldrrn, 10 grcut grandchildren and one f reat-great-irand child. The remalm reit at Ward'e nianuiin runerai iionie, two High, funeral notice appeara in thli Iwue, FUNERAL HARbikt HKnrrnA mii t re Kuneral crvtcea for the lale Harriet nebecca Miller, who paired awny In thli city Monday. October 0, 11)45 will be held in ine rnapei oi warn i Kiamnth Funeral iiome, va nign, inurtaay, uciober 11, 1045 at 1:30 D. m. With flmv. Mnursirrt r llutchlna of the First Chrtitlan church officiating. Concluding lervlcee and In terment wilt be held In Llnkvllle cem- nir,v rrnnoj ara respeciiuuy invuea to auffiQi Taste treats, too... CAKES AND PwU PASTRIES FOR HANDICAPPED In conjunction with I'rcsldont Truman's pruclumution declar ing October 7-13 as national "Employ tho I'hyslcully Ilundl cupped week, Governor Eurl Snell hns linked the cooperation of employment officers and busi ness managers. Wllh tho expectation of hun dreds of veterans roturnlng to IIiIn liri'ti liinfllelinnr,rl hv 1lifi wur from holding regulur Jobs, I employers uro asked to look over llioir present stuffs and muko ad justments to use these men whero they cun, Jack Aluieter, manugcr of the locul U. S, employment office, stilted today thut 012 physically hundlcupped men huve boon pluced through his office since Iho first of tlio ycur. Not all wore veterans, but cuch of thorn wus uvulluble only fur a selec tive lob due to sumo handicap. "This Indlcutca that a physi cally hundlcupped person Is defi nitely employable when proper ly pluced,'' Aluieter said. Al the present llino the cm ployment office flics aro cleared of those on a handlcuppod atutus, but with the return soon of thou- sands of veterans, there will un doubtedly be mnny who will be able only lo hold selective posi tions. Employers ore asked to keep tills In mind, and wherever pos sible to use strong mon only for positions requiring their ability, and use veterans when possible for desk Jobs and In places whore physical strength Is not the main purl of the Job. When a handicapped person applies at the employment of fice, his case is thoroughly stud ied by the officers. They keep in mind his aptitude, his emo tional and physical stamina, and the extent of his training. Eugene Hunter Fined For Two Violations LAKEVIEW, (Special) Charles D. Rogers of Eugene, hunting near Fremont Point last Sunday, left a campflre burning and was picked up by forest of ficials. Brought before Justice of the Peace Johnson of Paisley, he was fined $13. Adding to his miseries, Rogers had In his pos session a deer shot by another party and tagged with Mrs. Rog ers' deer tag. She wasn't even In the county. Ho paid another $30 for this violation, and tho party who shot the deer was nicked for $25. Sandquist Appointed Malheur Co. Agent LAKEVIEW, (Special) Harry Sandquist has accepted Malheur county's Invitation to become its county agent, but inasmuch as his job as manager of the Lnkvlcw Water Users association docs not expire unlit next Feb ruary, he will divide Ills time be tween Ontario and Lakevlew. Sandquist will continue to make his home in Lakevlew un til about the first of the year, when the1 family will move to Ontario, headquarters for the Malheur county agent. 4- Now Points For Used Fats Industrial fats far short of last year! We are almost down to the bottom of the barrel. The nation's industrial fat supply is millions of pounds less ' than it was in 1944. We need fully as much as last year to help make the soaps and other civilian goods you want and need so badly. So . . . If you want more soap and soap- flakes : : : if you're dreaming of nylons, sheets, cotton fabrics and want them to hurry back to the store counter . . . you can help by saving those used kitchen fats as you never saved before I Save every drop, every day 1 So skim and scraps and scoop just as you did so faithfully before V-J Day. It is a peace time job now job that will help you. And to prove how important it is, your government has increased the point bonus. So help meet this nation's need by con tinuing to save used fats. Fire Prevention Week Parade Set Tuesday As a feature of "Flro Preven tion Week," which started Sun day, flro trucks und equipment Irom the Marino Barracks, nav al air station, Klamath Forest Protective association, und city fire trucks will purude down Muln street nt noon Tuesduy, Fire Chief Keith Ambrose Is giving talks lo city schools this week und showing movies of fire prevention methods. Tho Junior chumbor of corn morco Is also sponsoring un es say content this week in the be given to tho winner by the city grade schools. A prize win Underwriter's association. IN KF TONIGHT One of the best received or chestras here in Klamath Fulls was Ray Hcrbcck who made an appeurance here a little over a month ago. According to Baldy Evans, a grcut number of people expressed the desire of hearing him again. Ray end his "Music With Romance'1 will again be featured at the armory tonight. He has just completed a tour of the nortnwest and is on his way to Sun Francisco. ' where ho opens at the Golden Gate thea tre Wednesday ntgnt lor three weeks, Being featured by Hcrbcck to night are Roy Cordcll and Eileen Wilson, vocalists. During the war Miss Wilson had her own program which was shortwaved all over the world to the boys In the service. Cordcll will be remembered as the genial, good looking fellow who had the girls screaming with his Imita tions of Sinatra. Dancing tonight will start at 9 and continue until 1. Oregonians Observe Four Special Weeks SALEM, Oct. 8 VP) Oregon citizens have the difficult job this week of observing four spe cial weeks at the request of Gov ernor Earl Snell. He has set aside this week as Employ-the-Physically-Handl-cepped Week, Health Aid Week, and Fire Prevention Week. Today he also asked that it be observed as Optimist Week, say ing Americans should "adjust our own differences and work together for the good of the na tion in a spirit of cooperation and understanding." At Hillside Mrs. William Spanglcr, 2027 - Del Moro, has been ill and Is receiving medi cal treatment at Hillside, hospital. IIS MAIN BTUEET Help Increase Supplies of Other Peacetime Products More Used Fats These fats are vitally necessary to help speed greater supplies of soaps and hundreds of other things like new cars, electric washers, irons, refrigerators and tires. Industry must have these fats ... to help get to you more quickly the peacetime products you've been longing to have for years! FORMER LAKEVIEW LAKEVIEW, (Special) Word wus received here by relatives that Virgil Bruttuin, lurmcr resi dent uf L.uke county, had died recently In Mexico City, where he uuu his wile and daughter were visiting. They were un a trip through the southwest und Mexico when Bruttuin contract ed typhoid fever. Death fol lowed shortly, und the body wus cremated In Mexico City, and the ashes returned to the Sun Francisco home. Mr. llruttuln was well-known throughout Lake county. He wus born here 47 years ago, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Eldon M. Bruttuin, who took up tho first claim in the Silver Lake valley. The senior Mr. Bratlain wus at one time Judge of Lake county and registrar of tho United Stutcs land office here. Surviving besides his wife and daughter, is a brother, Eldon Bratlain Jr., of Fort Klamuth. Paul Rrultnln of Paislcv is an uncln and Mrs. Willard Duncan I uf Lakevlew is an aunt of the de ceased. Klamath Falls Girl Chosen Cheer Leader UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, Oct. 8 (Special) Doro thy Davis, niece of Mrs. Ivan Farris of Klamath Falls, was one of three University of Oregon women selected as alternates lor the university rally squad on the campus last week. Purpose of the squad, which is composed of 12 members, is to assist the yell king in leading cheering sections at athletic events and rallies, and to promote school spirit. 4-H Achievement Awards Listed, Oregon State college certifi cates of achievement for five 100 per cent 4-H club projects in Klamath county, were received today by Mrs. Beulah Holland, acting 4-H club agent. These certificates will be pre sented for sewing 1-A to Mrs. Maurice Kennedy and Mrs. J. H. Plymalc; cooking 1 to Mrs. Dale West; cooking 2 to Mrs. T. G. Zinn with Mrs. A. P, Egan; clothing 1-A to Mrs. Elton Fish back. The motorist is short-sighted indeed who yields to the urge for a long-delayed trip without reasoning that the tires of his car are in no condition to with stand such - travel. Cheyenne, Wyo., State Tribune. WHY BE FAT Get slimmer without exercise You may lo pound, nd hiv. s moie .lender, tticWul tiiure. No exrrdtlni. NoLutlvet. Nodron. Wllh Uiii AYDS pln you den t cut oul ny meal., urch, po uioct. neU ot butttr. you im ply cut Uwm down. It'. eier hen you enloy delldoul mln fortified) AYDS bdoct malt. Try .Lr,i i.. bo. ol AVDS. JW.r tmlf oolr ll.ii! Money back oa Um yry Sirt bos U re ota't set mulu. Pbon CUBRrV'S FOR DRUGS WAGGONER DRUG CO Tear O.l Thl. Ad A. A Reminder Soap and By Saving V- Mexican Arrested For Liquor Violation Jesus George Jora, a Mexican who allegedly was getting $10 a fifth for his merchandise, was arrested today on a charge of selling liquor to Indians. Indian Officer John Arkell, assisted by city police, made tho arrest ut Jura's residence, 1122 Adams. Arkell said the liquor alleged ly sold by Jara was not Oregon liquor store whiskey, and pre sumably came from somewhere In California. Jara, he said, is an old offender, having been in trouble before on similar charges. Price Lists Miniature price lists of meat prices will be giv en to housewives at the price desk in the OPA offices. These lists are purse size and will be given free of charge. If It's WARMTH You Want . . . You Want a Cold Resistant Fashion Park PARGORA OVERCOAT Complete protection with out heavy, bulky weight. Made of Guanaco and Angora yarns. Luxurious toft texture with the assur ance of satisfying service. $55 J DREW'S MANSTORE 733 Main St. Cape Leather Cossack-Style jacket. Pliable Leather Allows Free Mo tion! Fully, Comfortably Lined! Slide Fastener Closing! Three Useful Pockets! Brown, Black. 36-46. MEN'S LEATHER SURCOAT Fine quality soft cape leather in a rich brown color made up in the popular surcoat style with warm muff pockets. Belted style with zipper clo- 1 JL75 sure. Full rayon lined. IO Sizes 36 to 46. PLAID and WARM! Wl ft Sit. , , mm ZIPPER FRONT PLAID COSSACK Heavy-weight fabric, well firmly sewn. 25" long. Green,' Maroon, Brown, 36 to 48. Monday, Oct , 1943 Radio Program Harold Tcalo will speak on the OPA radio program Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 over KFJI. His topic will be "Homebuilding In the Post war Era." , Classified Ads Bring Results Good beer There is something about the clean taste and refreshing quality of OLYMPIA that satisfies and refreshes. 7i the that makes OLYMPIA OLYMPIA, MEN'S cut, Blue, .498 Sires Button up pull the belt pocketsl T 9- m-.fr WW J -7 HERALD AND NEWS FIVE PILES Water" f so good DRCVmS COMPANY V WASHINGTON, U.S. A. j ivai 9 3 r 32-INCH PLAID MACKINAW'S this double brcastcr, m AA tightly, use muff 'v , " SUCCESSFULLY TREATED KO PAIN NO HOSPITAMaATION N. I..H .1 Tin. f.rM.a.BI ft.e.11 DR. E. M. MARSHA Cklr.pra.tl. Pkr.Ul.a U Na. Ilk - Rra.lr. Tkult. IIM Pk IMS MAIN f 1,0011