Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1946)
760 Vets Unemployed In County There are approximately 760 unemployed veterani in Klam ath county at the present time, Jack Almeter, manager of the United States employment serv ice office said today. This figure was computed from the best information avail able at the office, from which it was also estimated that 3000 men from this county have been discharged since the end of the war. During December, 1945,' 323 veterans registered for employ ment, Almeter said, and in Jan uary, 1946, they registered at the rate of 15 to 20 per day. Some of the men discharged are going back to school or to prewar jobs and some are en joying a voluntary rest period before going back to work. These, of course, are not includ ed in the number of estimated unemployed, as they have nev er registered for employment. Besides veterans, a number of other citizens are also on the non-working list and applying ' for unemployment compensa tion, as was expected when war plants closed down. Many of these civilians were in the non working class before the war and are ' glad to take a back seat now the younger men are coming home, Almeter said. Slack Period The major industries in the area, lumber and agriculture, being at a slack period now also contribute to the unem ployment situation. Industrial expansion in the district is for - the most part dependent on ma terials and favorable weather, and although an ambitious con struction program is planned, construction is still being held up by weather, . reconversion and strikes and agricultural work cannot progress until xreezing aanger is pusi. A trend toward greater em ployment is expected, however, about March and April, Alme ter said. ; Buddies Contribute To Memorial Fund fiVl M' rfr- V x -m ! Yeoman 1c Dale M. Mathis of the coast guard presents Carrol B.1 Howe (left), Henley prin cipal, with an $800 check presented by shipmates of James O. McKeehan' (Insert) who lost his life in the Pacific. The money will be added to other donations to create a monument for Henley men who died in World War II. . $800 Collected By Buddies Of Dead Henley Boy Added To Fund To Erect Monumeni Ranger Given Job Promotion Acting Forest Supervisor HV E. Pyles of the Modoc national forest, announced last week the promotion and assignment of District Ranger Byron B. Beat tie to. the regional office, divi sion of personnel management, in San Francisco. Beattie has been the district ranger of the Happy Camp- district, with headquarters at Canby, for al most two years. His new assign ment will be largely in the field of training fire personnel for which he has had consider? able previous experience. James E. Sowder, returning from military furlough, is be . ing assigned to fill the district ranger vacancy at Canby. He is expected to assume his new duties by February 4. Prior' to entering the navy June 7, 1943, Sowder was administrative as sistant in the Alturas office of the Modoc forest. In a way, Sowder is "going back home" in that he occupied the Happy Camp ranger position prior to his assignment as administra tive assistant. PFC Robustelli -Receives Discharge PFC Richard Robustelli of Klamath Falls is home with a discharge after 26 months in the service with overseas "duty in Italy. Robustelli spent six and ''one half months on the frontline as a rifleman, but escaped injury. He saw action in the Po valley, northern Apennines and the Rome-Arno areas. While in Italy, Robustelli paid a visit to a brother of Otto Sari, Klamath restaurateur. For 45 days Sari's brother and his wife lived in an air raid shelter, little : more than a hole in the ground, getting out only occasionally at nigni. xne lamny escaped un scathed. Robustelli trained with the 65th division and went overseas as a replacement with the 34th division. SON-IN-LAW AND DAD ARE REGULAR iNd More Constipation Now They, Eat Famous fiereaj Constipated' Harsh" laxatives got you feeling down? Then read this sincere, unsolicited letter: KfcbUlGG S ALL-BRAN everyday. Never have mny trouble now. Told rov .therein. h ?'"' Now he take. ALL.BR an and he the ime reiulta J do. He I 82 yean youn." N. Manoo, 16 bULk Street, Mettuen. Uui. . IT i , . ... ' a"('!"'i v ,? ;B constipation doe to lack of bulk in the diet, you may never have to take another tTSJKJ1 eat Bn one of KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN every day and drink plenty of water. Try 'or ten days. If not completely satisfied, send the empty carton to Kellogg's of Battle Creek and get ALL-BRAN is not a purgative, its one of nature's finest sources of gentle-acting bulk, which helps promote normal Jaxation! It's a wholesome cereal made from the vital outer layers of wheat Eat ALL-BRAN every day either as cereal or in muffins. . Got ALL-BRAN at. your gro cer's. Made by Kellogg's of Battle Creek and Omaha. A check for $800, the money collected by the shipmates of a Henley boy who died in the Pacific, has been added to a fund now being collected to erect a monument in memory of the seven boys of that community who lost their lives in the war. The check was turned over to Carrol Howe, principal of Hen ley school Dy yeoman ic Dale M. Mathis who was in the coast guard outfit overseas with James O. McKeehan of Henley. McKeehan was killed while landing supplies on Baker island in the South Pacific September 19, 1944. He was knocked over board from, a landing boat in' heavy seas and his body never recovered. Members of the coast guard unit contributed the $800 and turned it over to Mathis with in structions to see that it was used as a memorial- to McKeehan, who was very popular in his out fit Mathis was returned to the United States in December and came here to deliver the money on his way home to Denver, Colo., on leave. The check was made out to S. E. Enman, treasurer of the committee arranging the monu ment which is to be placed in front of Henley school. In addition to McKeehan, for mer students who lost their lives in the war are Bob Cameron who was killed on Guadalcanal, Charles Semon with the para troops in Normandy, Bob Ham ilton at Kasserine pass, North -HERE'S REAL FAST PROLONGED RELIEF FROM MUSCULAR ACHES-PAINS 'When yon suffer from aching, stiff, sore muscles, lumbago misery or neuritis pains rub on Musterole tor fast and prolonged relief which continues all while It remains on your skint Musterole offers all the advan tages of a warming, stimulating mustard plaster yet is so much easier to apply Just rub It onl Musterole immediately starts right In to relieve aching soreness. It ac tually helps break up the painful congestion localized there and checks the Irritation. All drugstores. Africa, ' Lloyd Barnes in North Africa, Rollo Cheyne in the Marianas and Bob Bunnell in Germany. Enman, a veteran of the first World War, Bob Norris and Don Manning, World War II veterans, are on the monument commit tee. INJURIES FATAL SILVEBTON, Jan. 29 (Pi Mrs. Velma Dunn, 52, died yes terday from injuries received Saturday night when she was struck by an automobile. She leaves a widower, Leslie Dunn, and four children. Stromberg-C a r 1 s o n Radios. Derby's Music Co. Offer Made By Newsman PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 29 (if) A Texas newspaperman must want to get into the mail order butter business. Police Bureau Recorder Harry Ludington be lieved today. Ludington said a letter from Henry Edwards, Troup, Texas, Weekly Banner manager, offered to mail a pound of butter to the Tacoma, housewife who phoned Portland police and asked if but ter buying prospects were worth driving the xau miles to fori land. Edwards asked for her ad dress, explaining he read about the woman's plight in an Associ ated Press news report. The pound of butter "will cost her 60 cents, plus postage," Edwards wrote,- adding "P. S. We are serious." DIAL 3400 rr STANDARD CLEANERS Free City-Wide DELIVERY SERVICE You will profit by our years of experience in the dry cleaning business. ' . , 1409 Esplanade ; Mr. and Mrs. C I. Buckley. Owners - RADIO SALES & SERVICE All Work SuuntHl Electric Appliances New and Used Goods Phone 3704 MERRILL EXCHANGE Dam I HBSW,K" w CLOSED, V Sat. THURSDAY ) O TO TAKE INVENTORY Feb. Z . . . J Malin .Victim j - j Dancing 9 till 2 . ' "' ''., ' .Music by THE Cl,'ca9ans iTnwmariimnnv? mm W A Two Killed By Gunfire YAKIMA. Wash.. Jan. 29 UP) A man and a woman were killed, and another man was wounded last night, as shots were fired in a basement room of a Yakima home. The dead are Glen WUlnrd Colllcott. 27. and Mrs. Bemico Johnson Setness, 25, both shot uirougn me nearu Wlllard Sanford, brothor-ln-law of Colllcott, was wounded in the chest and left arm. but crawled from the scene of the shooting to his car and drove to the home of a neighbor who called police. Investigating police sulci San ford told them Colllcott hnd been keeping company with Mrs. Setness. He said Doth hnd been previously married, and both had two children. Police said Sanford, under treatment in a hospital, told them that Colllcott turned the gun on himself after shooting Mrs. Setness and Sanford, the shooting occurred at the home of Ben. F. Johnson, 66, father of Mrs. Setness, while her two children were upstairs in the house. Three Hurt When Auto Hits Train PORTLAND, Jan. 29 (if) Three persons were injured, none seriously, when un auto collided with a slow moving freight train here last night. Police reported Mrs. Teresa Penner, 32, Portland, auto driv er, received chest injuries and Flashes Of Life OVERWORK PORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 20 (If) Municipal Judge A. E. Wheolook asked tliu dufuiulnnt, charged with intoxication, his occupa tion. "Interior decorating," replied tlio prisoner. "Postman's holiday, eh" re marked the Judge, and fined hlin $20 for "too much interior dec orating." HOMELESS MARYSVILLE, Kns., Jan. 20 (IP) The housing shortage plays no favorites, Mnrysvtlle's No. 2 fire truck Is being "evicted" becauso the owner of tho .building wants to convert the property. scalp laceration. Charles McCoy, 34, Sheridan, suffered lacerations of tho nose and right knee, and his wife Rosa, cut about tho face. RADIO REPAIR Quick Guaranteed Service Good Stock of TUBES J. J. Zeman. Technician ZEMAN'S Tuesday, Jan. II. 1 141 HERALD AND NEWfTlX Housing Units Will Be Moved POHTLAND, Jan. 20 (!') Vacant units from tlio Guild's Lnkq HnunlnK project hero prob ably will be moved "In a couple of months" to Eugono and Cor vallls, the Orcgoiilnn said today.' The nowspapar said E. S. Fos ter of tho regional federal hous- ln administration reported In a telephone call from Seattle that the Guild's Lnko liouites probably would fill rcuuasts for 100 units at the University of Oregon and ISO units lit Oregon State college. Removal would nliiHiUuneoui ly oloar n Oulld's Lnko site for construction of anphalt and chain plants, Fouler sitld tho moving would be financed by tho PPHAj site and utilities furnished by the, educutlonul Institutional . t Blromborg-C a r 1 s o n Radios, Derby's Muslo Co. ' J. M. Croriin, M. D. announces the opening of of f jces at 203-207 Odd Fellows Bldg., 432 Main St.; for the practice of medicine. Phone 8334 : A- R-TRIPLE" Advert! nin fi rnoNi 1171.' , ;.4;'' :' NiwsrAr..ADio : j, 1116 No. 9th Phone 7522 1 I II OK 142 , V '.V-i'4 V OIMCT MAIL . j . I ! Aoitu rrm MnUimf)r Wt I II ' 1 ! I V TOP CT THE TANK FERM11IA!UQN GIVES IT'S UN U yJT , ?Sr J"' Yu can jFpfZp "f?Z .XljriO ri xfre of silk so can you 'ifM:yiW tast " lighter, more-deli- I cote "Top o' The Tank Tex- 1 E&7 C 2??50 "Triii ture" of Columbia Ale. TXA. -Pfr- ' --f- If you are one of Jemany thousands who enjoy Colombia Ale, J jj Li but have wondered howgot its delightfully different'tjxture' per. O S V haps we can explain. '.-.:, , . o ff A completely dtferenWeinp pL,$ is employed in Mi the brewing of ' Columbia' Ale. 1tSHfy0ffured, unusual-acting type - I f ' IV V . of surface or "top" yeast, is used to activate the brew. Unlike other I I IlJtl4 1 I yeasts this variety floats buoyantly at the top of the tank and the I , iT(viy I I fermenting action is downward from the top, rather than upward from I lcJsftl' l I the bottom. ( I W1L I This distinctly different method, of fermentation results In the dis- )e' I 9kML Axfif I tincfly' different "texture" of Columbia Ale, the lighter, smoother, more I if . kJwwm 3 I delicate "Top o' The Tank Texture" which so many enjoy but find diffi , Q I W? ffljjr 3$t I cult .to explain. . S' I IfffW j)3 tlBlW I If you are not among the thousafiSs who enjoy this unysual bev- I iLcl jrTiall I erage try a bottle today. Sip it ptybur favorite tavern, or take a few IS g iQjfttTrfQ II bottles home. You'll find it. delightful before, or with, dinneron summer O if m'TZaL - 11 outings, or at bedtime. Your gues'ts will enjoy it, too. 4 III fnMMtwvQvt I . All taverns, beverage stores and g roce" j V I 1 ' A Jr orftmork of II I I -1 "" Cefumblo trewerlet, Inc. I f I I AVAILABLE AT YOUR FAVORITE TAVERN OR GROCER'S U U L feiMut.Aaiiaaiw " nn ,...Wiwi "' uriHiH unw.irn wi. ..i i 1