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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1942)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON June 8, 104 NO DETAILS OF ATTACK m OUT (Continued from Pago One) enter without a permit. The army established Fort Mears on Unalaska island. Trie uutcn Mar bor naval air station was com missioned September 1, 1941 with Comdr. W. N. Updegrafl as station commander. Unalaska island is separated from the mainland by Unimak pass, through which all ships bound to Nome, Bristol Bay and other Bering sea and Arctic points must pass. The shortest "great circle" route across the Pacific from Puget Sound to ' the Orient would also take ships through the pass to travel sev eral hundred miles in the more protected Bering sea. Because charts of the outer Aleutians ' have not been fully completed, few ships have taken that route. ' In Pacific maritime circles, however, the story- has been current for years that the Jap anese had such charts and used the route. A Japanese freighter, . whose hull and wreckage re mained several years on rocks near Dutch Harbor, lent cred ence to the account. Keeping the geography of the ; North Pacific straight, here are approximate distances: v - --' San Francisco to Dutch Har bor, 2833 miles. - i Seattle to Dutch Harbor, 1968 miles. Dutch Harbor to' Attu and Near islands, at outer tip of Aleutians, 900 miles. Attu to" the northern tip of the Japanese island chain, 675 miles. Attu to Kamchatka (Russian) Peninsula, 650 miles. Kiska island (outer Aleutians) to Tokyo, 2210 miles. The towns of Dutch Harbor and Unalaska are two miles : apart across an inlet. Dutch . Harbor has a fine land-locked . harbor and Unalaska harbor is also sheltered and safe. Health Nurse Hurt In Auto Crash Ellen Stadius, 520 North Tenth street. Klamath eountv health nurse, suffered from a severely ! bruised hip and shock, when she was injured in an intersection - collision at Vine Avnn nnri rtt. vision street at 2 p. m. Wednes-j aay. ' ; Driver of the second car was ' Forest Dean Collins, 4049 Dela 1 ware street, according to city police. Both cars were badly damaged. Miss Stadius was moved to her home. I Starts TOMORROW! The Screen's GREATEST DOUBLE CHILL AND LAUGH SHOW! fiMnk gl'MV I P n:1lmSfFTPi& ful floral remembrances of our Clyde Smith. Sale of liquor to gM3fMMiSSSMtim departed daughter, Barbara. Indians. Sentenced to SO days li&r JmmW3jWli They have aided us greatly in in the county Jail. " J. W'Mm'fMSVm T,"1- ,nxjl J-TiHaf.-- bearing our loss. Leland Lawrence Hunter. No fpiifWCwW Jw&Z &mfim&Vr vZg&UK CWl 'JtfuYT -r , Major Earl F. Bradfield operator's license. Fined $5.50. fefejfjr,., ' mSBSmM W'fflifalfiSM A$?m iMtffflillBm wMR Jill-Mi " femlly. Fred Lester Fults. Excessive - THRILLS! CHPISI HORROR! 81 ' Mint mnimVV-.w; Sei" 9 HBHrai taAjJJGH HMMffiS liTS'jfc or Fiend? ap J---.A-..- -v 0 he keeps amSi , L mMtlwslKS f mm in ' IVV AND PROWLS " Y f-i V TMlfe- iXf av- J. mlfflifr - jKm' AT NIGHT IN N4Y A V - JllPjS -Sss&Sl&SI gy, 2k ll JH BUSKIN OF j t' 5 . i r.m nmiPH WmW9 mm ; NORTH thl i hoSUJ c- S ' wm fcPif tb"h wMposTr" paul kelly J c ann n eagle Biue&a,6'. m rf51r vSLtyl 2 HOSE HOBART VIRGINIA GREY '? tf i - In I if.u w- Mmm$VtfJ$' 'W5' - M ,-xv 'i- "Wfe- TOM CONWAY " FELIX BRESSART '"SCi1 . . . . . . Eighth Wlf . "pWE? ,ifi ;- Cl . sssjSmua , Wrf "BACKSTAGE" Bob.";rVouB ' " W L MP v n who came '-Vv i PHL Jfit "3 vyx Su" 'llteSW ,omw UN0" AU,H0,I,Y ' m coe-ei I .111 TOSUPPPP" Ifts yJ.il III : 1 VlftiJ .-BPOHTINO .''hMUm COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF KLAMATH FALLS I ?.tJV ' TO SUPPER E VrXJ I Jk X m 'l' 1 1 BLOcr" ijflKl SP"H 8t. Phone B63J J Schooling 1 for Japanese Centers Agreed Upon (Continued From Pago One) northeastern California, with a capacity of 11,000. About 6000 are expected to be living there by June 23. Manzanar, at Lone Pine in southern California, the first camp to be opened has a present population of 9500, five hundred less than its capacity. The largest relocation at Pos ton, Ariz., on the Colorado river, with a total capacity of 20,000, now has a population of 7000 One near Sacaton, Ariz., with a potential population of 10,000 is nearing completion. The other three, each with a capacity of 10,000, are to be situated near Gooding, Idaho; in the Shoshone area northeast of Cody, Wyo.; and at Rohwer, in southeastern Arkansas, BILL IW PROCESS (Continued from Page One) addition to those already au thorized for construction, in its last official disclosure of strength in October of last year. tne navy reported 346 fighting ships in service and 347 build ing. a ne nouse appropriations com mittee sent to the floor todav a supplemental n a v y, marine corps and coast guard supply bill calling for $654,999,740 in direct appropriations 'and $1,- 037,300,000 in contract authori zation, of which $887,500,000 was earmarked for submarine construction. Just how many submarines this would provide for has never been disclosed officially, . but semi-official estimates were that it would add upwards, of 100 long-range undersea raiders to the fleet. OBITUARY ARD (ART) LOY HAGERMAN Ard (Art) Loy Hagerman, for the last 14 months a resident of Klamath Falls, Ore., passed awav in this Citv Wednrsrtav June 3, 1942, at 3:30 a. m. He was a n&uve of Tulsa, Okia., ana at the time of his death was aeed 42 vear 0 mnntho and 3. days. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Eula Hagerman, and a aaugnier, Dee Ann Hagerman Of this citv? hie father Ham, Hagerman of Longview, Wash, ana one orotner, Carl of Hat Creek. Calif. The mmnim .- in the Earl Whitlock Funeral Home, Pine street at Sixth. No tice of funeral to be announced later. II T W Don't V i 11 I Miss It! fJSj BRITISH IP UP AT ESSEN (Continued From Page One) small fires and causing some damage and casualties. Canterbury Named The German high command, in its broadcast communique, identified the target as the cathedral city of Canterbury, where, it said, 10,000 incendiary bombs and other bombs of "heavy and the heaviest call' bcrs" were dropped. It was. the second raid in three nights on Canterbury. While it was emphasized, that the RAF struck in force, an authoritative statement said "the scale of operations was not comparable with that of the previous night." "A good deal of smoke and ground haze made observation difficult, but the weather was good and the results are be lieved to be satisfactory," the statement said. The air ministry news service said night fighters and bomb ers, which have run interference for the new-scale British night forays, again took up the offen sive last night with raids on air bases, factories, railway lines and army units irom Hol land to Britanny. CHINESE BATTLE TD L (Continued From Page One) of Japan's Chekiang province lines with the recapture of Yangki and heavy rains bogged the invasion offensive yesterday, the Central News Agency said today. Flood waters washed away a number of bridges and damaged roads to impede the movement of heavy equipment in this drive south westward from Hangchow, which is synchronized with pushes against Chinese railways and potential air bases from Kwangtung and Tunnan prov inces, south and west. Joseph to Take Officer Training . Irving Joseph, for many years assistant manager at K. Sugar man's, has volunteered for of ficer's training and will leave here with a June Klamath coun ty draft group for Portland next Monday, it was learned to day. In Portland Joseph will be inducted into the army and sent to a training center for a basic training course. Later he will be transferred to an offi cer's candidate school. His name was erroneously listed in this paper as one of the June 8 draft group. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our many friends' in Klamath county for their expressions of sympathy, their kindness and their wonder ful floral remembrances of our departed daughter, Barbara. They have aided us greatly in bearing our loss. Major Earl F. Bradfield and family. NJf m Courthouse Records WEDNESDAY Complaints Filed Marie Walters Dlckerson ver sus William Armcl Dickerson. Suit for divorce. Charge, cruel and inhuman treatment. Couple married in Murfreesboro, Ark., November 9, 1940. Plaintiff asks property settlement. J. C. O'Neill, attorney for plaintiff. Lloyd F. Halm versus Martha Hahn. Suit for dtvorco. Charge cruel and Inhuman treatment. Couple married in College Point, Long bland, N, Y.. August 7 1920. Plaintiff asks property settlement. J. C. O'Nolll, attor ney for plaintiff. Emanuel Travis Hatfield ver sus Helen Marie Hatfield. Suit for divorce. Couple miirrlcd in Klamath Falls, September 6, 1933. Plaintiff asks custody of minor child. Edward B. Ashurst, attorney for plaintiff. Anna Belle Gates versus George W. Gates. Suit for di vorce. Couple married in Mcd ford, August 10. 1935. Plaintiff asks custody of minor child. Merryman and Napier, attorneys for plaintiff. Margaret Lowell versus Frank V. Lowell. Suit for divorce. Charge, desertioi. Couple mar ried in Klamath Falls, Novem ber 29, 1925. Plaintiff asks cus tody of minor child, support money, property settlement rati fication. A. w. Schaupp, attor ney for plaintiff. Swan Lake Moulding com pany versus Raymond Allen and Mary Allen, husband and wife. Suit to collect $532.43 with in terest and costs. William Ga- nong, attorney for plaintiff. Marriage Applications JOHNSON-MA YH E W. HJol- mar Arthur Johnson, 21, sales man. Resident of Klamath Falls, native of Wisconsin. Catherine Genevieve Mayhew, 20, book keeper. Resident of Klamath Falls, native of California. BAXTER-HOUGH. Raymond Thomas Baxter, 24, draftsman. Resident of Seattle, native ol North Dakota. Ruth Helen Hough, 21, teacher. Resident of Klamath Falls, native of Oregon. Justice Court Ernest Raymond Sawyer. No operator's license. Fined $10. Kenneth Elwood Bill. Lar ceny. Waived preliminary hear ing. Bond set at $1000 cash or $2000 property. Bound over to grand jury. Committed to coun ty Jail. Charles Welch Owens. Driv ing while under the influence of intoxicating liquor. Sentenc ed to 50 days in the county Jail. Nellie Lorraine Crystal. No operator's license. $5.50 bond forfeited. Louis Jiminez. No.PUC per mit. $10 bond forfeited. Elva Henry. No operator's II cense.'Fined $5.50. Mike Sherrick. Driving while under the influence of intoxi cating liquor. Fined $100 and sentenced to 10 days in the county jail. ' Elsie Elizabeth Stang. No op erator's license. Fined $5 50. Homer Andrew Johnson. No clearance lights. Fined $25 sus pended, $19.50 of which was suspended. Vernon Eugene House. No muffler. Fined $10, suspended. Robert Edwin Cheyne. No muffler. Fined $5.50, suspend ed. Harold A. Cyr. No operator's license. Fined $5.50. James Ethridge Godowa. Driv ing during revoked period. Sentenced to 25 days in the county jail. Clyde Smith. Sale of liquor to Indians. Sentenced to 50 days in the county jail. Leland Lawrence Hunter. No operator's license. Fined $5.50. Fred Lester Fults. Excessive PI GUILTY OF AH GIRL ESCAPE Margaret Lantz and Jnmvs Hutchinson were convicted by a circuit court jury Wednesday afternoon on a charge of Biding a confined person to escape. Judge David R. Vandenberg said he would pronounce sen tence Saturday morning. Mrs. Lantz and Hutchinson were charged with aiding in the escape of a daughter of Mrs. Lantz, who was held at the county farm on a juvenile court order us an alleged delinquent, April 9. The atnto presented evidence to show that on the evening of April 9, Mrs. Lantz and Hutch inson cruised in a cnb on the roads near the county farm, and picked up the girl who had run away from the farm. Later, it was shown, they took the girl to Tiih'lake, and local au thorities have not yet found trace of hor. Mrs. Lantz and Hutchinson were later arrested on the charge, which is an indictable misdemeanor and carries a pos sible county jail sentence. . District Attorney L. Orth Sisemoro and his deputy, Clar ence Humble, handled the prosccntion. Defense attorneys were A. C. Yaden and George Chastain. Six Allied Ships Sunk in Bengal Bay on April 6 (Continued from Pngo One) sunk In the Bny of Bengal, off India, on April 6. The navy said: "Seven survivors of a United States merchant vessel which was shelled and sunk by Japa nese warships in the Bay of Bengal April 6, 1942, have been landed at Norfolk, Va. "This was the only United States merchant ship Involved In the action, although six other United Nations merchant vessels were shelled and sunk by the same Japanese ships during the engagement." Mrs. Newton Now Deputy Treasurer Mrs. Annabclle Newton has assumed her duties as new dep uty treasurer of Klamath county, under appointment by Treasurer Chester Langslct. She succeeds W. G. Houston, who resigned to become sec retary of the Klamath Falls Elks lodge. width vehicle. Fined $10, sus pended. George H. Harndcn. Assault and battery. Case dismissed on motion of complaining witness. George Dewey Courvillc. Al coholic liquor in possession. Sentenced to 25 days in the county jaiL Thedore Dickson. Improper muffler. Fined $5.50. Navy Recruits to Be Here for Sunday Ceremony Chief Gunner's Mate F. R, Duncan received word from headquarters Wednesday Unit local men Joining the navy be tween now and Saturday will go immediately to Portland and re turn for Sunday's "Avenge Pearl Harbor" ceremony, to bo held ut the Elks lodge rooms at 11 a, m. If personal business presses, Dunran said, tlio men may get Icavo to remain hero until June 15. Arrangements for the Pearl Harbor ceremonies will be an nounced In full Thursday. (Continued from Page One) Kalinin fronts were officially repori.cd todav to have cost the Germans 950 'killed. Tho soviet information bureau said soviet troops repulsed sev eral counterattacks on the Ka linin front, northwest of Mos cow, destroyed three German tanks and four guns, blew up an ammunition dump, wiped out (ISO Germans and look some prisoners. Red army artillerymen wero declared to have killed 30(1 Ger mans, knocked nine nuzl but teries out of action mid destroy ed an ammunition dump on the southern front. Purported German Confession Bares Nazi Spy Effort (Continued from Pago One) Router, 56, German born Bever ly Hills art dealer, are charged with failure to register as Ger man agents and conspiring to transmit to Germany informa tion concerning national defense preparations. Mrs. Gros said In a purported statement read In court that be fore they wore married Dr. Gros told her she could earn $200 a month for one to five hours' work a week clipping articles about US military and naval af fairs, airplane production, ship sailings and compiling lists of key defenso positions in Califor nia. "Helmut asked me to become a German agent," a quotation from her diary read. "I did not accept." When, after their marriage, the statement said, she threaten ed to tell tho FBI of hor hus band's activities, Dr. Gros told her the gcstnpo had agents "all over the United States" and harm would come to her If she exposed him. The couple sat holding hands throughout the court session. She said Dr. Gros told her he not only had aided the nazls In dbtalning control of Germany, but onco had posed as a French military officer to carry money to German spies in Paris, posed as a priest on a similar mission in Poland, and was dropped by parachuto to deliver a message to nazi agents there. Before Knowing that fir policy, call Hans Norland, 7178. Editorials on News (Continued From Page One) general realization of axil fond noss for holidays as a time to pull something. In other part, It la duo to rum ors that havu been going uround about a Jap fleet somewhere In tho Pacific, hanging out In the fog and waiting (or a good op portunity to amid o!f its planes. War mid rumors gu together. ' KJOllODY is seared. Everybody Is a little pleased. Secretly, of course. Excitement Is always pleasant. And nobody really be lieves tho Japs are going to strike, lint It's fun to think they MIGHT. And the possibility of It Is over present. If you wnnl to got a dirty look, Just suggest that If the little yellow men DO come Ihey will bo mora likely to hit at the groat airplane factories at Los Angeles and Snn Dicg. Nobody, ANYWHKHE, wants to think his town Isn't Important enough to be bombed, That goes fur tho big cities just the same as the tank towns. Babe Gets Ration Book on Natal Day Helen Guy Hancock has her own sugar rationing book but she won't be sprinkling sugar on her cereal for quite some time to come. Helen Gay's father. W. B. Ilescock of Fort Kliumith, visit ad the sugar rationing board to obtain a book for his small daughter. That was nt 3 p. m. Tuesday. Helen Gay arrived at the Ilescock home at 8 o'clock Hint morning. She is the sixth child In the family. RENO LICENSE RENO, June 3 (;T Marriage licenses Issued here Included: J. V. Murphy, 32, and Augusta Vaughn, 23, both Klamath Fulls. RESTAURANT PLAN SALEM. June 3 (AP) Salem restaurant operators tentative ly agreed last night that at least one restaurant will remain closed on one day each week, because of shortages of some foods and equipment. Cute a the) 0 dlckent-and only$IOO I Um eVllfenef CURRIN'S Klnmath's Drug and 9th and Main -y v 7 AXIS SUPPLY FORT , TAKEN BY 111$ (Continued from Pugo One) British had shifted to the offen sive, swinging for a knockout against tho battered axis forcei as the wildest of all tho seo-snw buttles of Libya stretched Into Its second week. Rotunda Segnoll Is 44 mllm west of Knlghlsbrldgo, the !o eit trull crossing which now I In east of the center of fighting. The wur bulletin said a consid erable part of the action yester duy was In the area west ol Ktiightsbrldge. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY OIL TO BURN For Union heitt. Ing oils phone 8404, Klnmuth Oil Co., (11.1 Klumalh, 030mL REDUCED price on Nu-DoiV Demonstration garments. Myr tle 11. Jlnnetle, Merrill, Ore. Phone 0005. Oft 2-ltOOM APARTMENT Kur nlslied. $21 month. See Jack at Pnstlme. 8 8 100 WOOL Is what you get In suits tailored to your meniurn incuts. Woolens sold by yard. Orres Tailor Shop, across from Montgomery Ward. 8 3 NICELY FURNISHED ROOM Close in, Also apt, I'none 7058. 83 INTERSTATE BUSINESS COI, LEGE enrolled a large num ber of new students In tin new clauses orgnnlzod thli week. You may Join then, classes any time. 432 Mn SMALL 2-KOOM APT. Her mosa Apts. Adults only. 1421 Esplanade. H7JU toil RENT Largo modern cnbin, partly furnished, 2134 So. 6th. 8 4 rOK SALE OR TRADE 50(k chick electric brooder. Trad for calf or weaner pig. 4341 , Winter Ave. 8 A "pick-romp" for your complex Ion-anil your purie. Only ft for this gny-st-spr ins ruclugt ol Tuny matched Lipstick nd Compact Rouge Both In new pink plattie raw Choke of 7 high faihioa (hades, for DRUGS Cosmetic Center Phone 4914 7 $m , jTf .MaaWLGattt illW -BBBBBB IFsT 1 VVll 1