PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
July T. 194S
U. S. CRACKS
DOIHND
iCTIIITIES
'. (Continued from Paga One)
leorge C. Sweeney, who fixed
tail at $50,000, supplanting the
lme amount set yesterday when
Kunze was arraigned on a war
rant charging the violations.
Nominally defunct since the
outbreak of the war between the
United States and Germany, the
bund was charged in the Indict
ments with continuing certain
acts which Correa said con
firmed a belief that the bund
was operating with underground
tactics.
Correa said that numerous
singing societies in the Yorkville
section of New York and else
where had taken over bund ac
tivities and continued to foster
naii beliefs. He said these would
be the subject of further inves
tigation. 1
Militant Organisation
' Correa said that under the
cioak of the name "militant or
ganization of free Americans,"
the bund organization sought to
further the political and propa
ganda aims of the German reich.
. The indictments strike at lead
ers in New York, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania, Illinois, Minne
sota, Indiana, Washington state
and California.
One indictment alleged that
on Oct. 1, 1940, a command was
issued over the name of Kunze
to all bundists which technically
urged compliance with the selec
tive service act but added:
"We represent the standpoint,
however, that an induction in
the military service is not justi
fied as far as it concerns bund
members:' and American Ger
' mans, for in the selective service
: law the citizenship rights of
bund members and the defend
'. era of Germandom are unconsti
tutionally severed, ;
j. "livery man, if he can, will re
fuse to do military duty until
this law and all other laws of the
country and of the states which
confine the citizenship rights of
bund members are revoked."
Correa declined . to say how
many bundists inducted into the.
army had followed the com
mand, but did say that army of
ficials had arrested a number of
men who said they would not
fight against the German father.
land. " -
X i
', .Wines to America's own taste
' . with the luscious flavor of
:' ripe grapesl Just sweet enough.
' Wonderful at dinner time . , .
at parties! Etpocialty delightful
when chilled for an hour in your
refrigerator. Enjoy this delicious
treat ionighfl
All ,Mk
Of
mellD-Red ft
niEllD. White
I jfI r"'i ll'l!:lifliPlin'''j
S. csufossis
I MnutATTiKnaf
Jitti A tin 11
Nazis Open Caucasus Drive
v. moscov "- I RUSSIA
"W" 77 O 2QO
' SARATOV
KHARKOy VW
TAGANROG aSJ :VV
SEVASTOPOL NsT 52? t,
BLACK SEA' c A v cjVv
-S' " BATUMjSk & S
TURKEY
Germans have thrown more than 1,000,000 troops Into a hug
wheeling operation aimed at th Caucasus, a London military
informant said. Fighting cantered east of Kursk (shaded), where
the Germans claimed Tuesday to have taken Vorontih (1), rail
center, from which they could swing south (broken arrow), to
ward Caucasus, white arrows
sibility of other German drives
seen.
'Sea Dog's' Ship Torpedoed
-TV .
SsC--
I .-' s'W
I
rV' TtUphoto)
A forlorn sight Is Mickey, above, a sea dog In distress, as he awaits rescue
while the merchant ship on which be was mascot sinks after being tor
pedoed. The Coast Guard saved him, though.
Rommells Wait
Grand Jury
Wayne Earl Rommell, 26, and
his wife, Edith Marie, 21, this
afternoon reclined in the Klam
ath county jailhouse pending
grand jury investigation of a
charge of larceny placed against
them on the complaint of Frank
Brown, negro.
Arrested last week and lodg
ed in the bastille, their re
incarceration this morning fol
lowed a preliminary hearing in
justice court during which Dis
trict Attorney Orth Sisemore
for the state and U. S. Balen
tine for the defense presented
their arguments.
The pair is charged with the
theft of $65 In cash, three tires
Something New
i me juuuituii, cai, siupjaia ui tne
kit jW saafcsaJW
. u voting youAi, ubuxq oi uuuoing mcrcnant ves
sels on ways and sliding them to sea, a hole is dug in the ground, ships are
built in it, water poured Into the hole and the snip is floated out. acre s
a general view ol toe shipyard with a vessel under construction lu It "Ded."
mark Russian counter-moves. Pos
In Black sea area (2), also were
r at.. .-
in Jail for
Investigation
and tubes, two wheels, three
blankets, one pair of brown
pants, one pair of gray pants,
one pair of black shoes and one
shirt from Brown, who gave
the hitchhiking duo a ride from
south of Redding,' Calif., to
near cnemult, Ore.
Brown's story said a scuffle
in the car near Chcmult was
followed by the conveyance
winding up In a ditch. Later
Brown charged, the Rommells
returned to the scene and made
off with the listed loot, while
he slept In a Chemult motor
court.
Bond was reset at $1000 cash
or $2000 property for each of
the accused.
in Ship Building
i
i-acuic arme oo. someUung new
AXiS
CLAIMS
SOVIET RAIL
(Continued from Page One)
the enemy was thrown from his
positions on a broad front."
This may be the start of
northern pincers movement
against Moscow, synchronized
with the southern sweep through
Voronezh, some SOU miles below
the soviet capital.
The terrific harvest of Casual
ties was reflected in Russian dis-
patches declaring that six trains
totalling 247 cars, jammed with
nazl wounded, had been seen
moving to the rear.
Westward Trend
While the Russians battled
desperately to stem the gravest
threat of the year. Gen. Sir
Claude Auchinleck's British im
perial armies sought to develop
a westward trend In the 14-day
old battle of Egypt.
A steady stream of troops,
tanks and guns was reported
moving up to the front, in the
El Alamein sector 65 miles west
of Alexandria, and dispatches
said it was believed that a token
force of American tank soldiers
was fighting alongside the Brit
ish.
The American tankists, it was
disclosed, had already met and
defeated a German panzer force
in a baptismal skirmish In the
Libyan desert June 12, knocking
out at least nine German tanks
without suffering any casualties
themselves.
Dispatches from Cairo said the
Americans, who escaped from
Tobruk before the Germans cap
tured that British stronghold.
were originally scheduled to re
turn to the United States to ap
ply lessons experienced in the
desert, but because of the Ger
man drive into Egypt they were
ordered to remain with the Brit'
lsh.
Aerial dogfights and heavy
artillery battles marked the criti
cal struggle on the Mediterran
ean coastal mesa yesterday. It
was reported, with big guns
rumbling constantly throughout
the day and night.
SPAATZ TO HEAD
(Continued from Page One)
ated planes missing from the
July 4 raid were:
Sergeant James W. Wright of
Stockton, Calif.
Second Lieut. Frederick
Loehrl of Seattle.
Second Lieut. Marshall Draper
of Beverley Hills, Calif., Ser
geant Robert Whitham of Cen-
tralia, Wash., members of one
crew; Second Lieut. William C
Lynn of Los Angeles, Second
Lieut. Boyd Grand of Louisiana
(home town not given),. Sergeant
William Murphy of Baltimore,
Md., and Sergeant Charles Kra-
marewicz of Norwich, Conn.,
members of the other crew.
The first plane was shot down
by anti-aircraft fire and was seen
to crash, said the headquarters
announcement, while the second
"probably met the same fate, al
though when last seen by mem
bers of the raid it was flying
over the target."
FDR Says Tires
May Have to Be
Commandeered
(Continued From Page One)
rubber problem could be solved
without gasoline rationing
throughout the country. But he
remarked that if he lived next
to an oil well, and had new
tires and some spares, he did
not see why he should not use
his car for necessary business
purposes.
To a question as to wnetner
he thought the use of cars for
business purposes could be had
without gasoline rationing, the
chief executive said that depend
ed on how long tires would lat.
It was at that point that he
went on to assert that all auto
mobile tires might have to be
taken over.
Big Sugar Users
Urged to Register
Institutional and Industrial
sugar users were warned today
they must register at once for
their July and August allot
ments, the Klamath county war
price and rationing board said.
The office said a notice from
the state rationing administra
tor urged that registration be
completed as soon as possible,
The local ration board office,
at 323 Main street, will be open
week days from 9:30 a. m. to
4:30 p. m., and from 9:30 a. m.
to noon on Saturday.
CENTER TAKEN
I ymjV'lr II Our of Your Oill I
'iiWffltfrn A 1 Klamath Oil Co. ' m
L "! 1 ' ' ' ml- n hm Phon. 8404 mmmm
'Over There' Is Ireland in This Case
i4 fe(rs
IfftA itttpkotol
Here's the first picture of U. 8. warships destroyers In this esse t a
new base at Londonderry, Ireland. Members of a ship's crew chat In
the foreground on another destroyer while standing between depth
bombs.
I
I
I
ftr " f 7-4 T1'1"-'?' j j It
-v1 ' ' i v If'-' J iTrVji
Unis is tne Dow cna oi one of uie holes in which the Pacific Brldgo Co. Is
now building ships. When the vessel Is completed, the locks at right or
opened, water pours in and the new merchantman is floated Into the
stream lor uttuig. Freiasncaied ships built by this sub-tea level method
will be cumpieuu la goout a mouui, consuucUou Is less Hazardous and
JU19 graving aoca lauucomg gi'Hi't'atra uuugcroujt, gtcaaea saipwoys.
Compromise Plan
Proposed for rood
Handlers' Exams
(Continued From Page One)
would pay only for the examina
tion of steady employes.
School Teachers Pay
He pointed out, also, that
school teachers and beauticians
pay for their own examinations
in order to handle their jobs
under the law.
"By making tho maximum
cost of the examination $3, we
gave the employes special pro
tection, he said. As a matter
of fact, the personal value of an
examination every six months Is
easily worth tho $3."
Dr. Mnssny stated Hint sani
tary Inspections of local restau
rants show a number of such
places where conditions are un
satisfactory. He indicated that
examination of the people
handling the food and dishes in
restaurants would improve this
situation.
City councllmen recently torn--
porarily shelved tho foodhand-
lcrs ordinance after union objec
tions to employes paying the
fees, and employer objections to
paying tho fee for workers. .
Action Asked
Monday night, Mayor John
Houston told the council It
should cither shelve the ordl-'
nanco permanently or do some
thing about it.
Finally, after periods of
sllenco in which nono of the
councllmen offered any addi
tional comment, Mnyor Houston
referred tho question to the
health committee, which Is
headed by Councilman A. H.
Bu.ismon.
Councilman Cantrnll said he
was Vnfrald that, ns things stand
now, we will not get tho right
kind of cooperation to make the
ordlnanco work, evmi if we
adopt It"
MARCH FIELD, Calif., July 7
OP) Discovery Sunday of the
bodies of Maj,,Gcn, Herbert A.
Darguo and Capt. James O.
Leavltt on Kldd mountain, near
Big Pine, Calif., left only one of
the six still missing since the
crash of an army transport last
December 12, ,
TOO LATE TO
CLASSIFY
ELECTRIC Lighting Fixtures.
Mark Smith & Co., 155 E.
Main Street,
Phono 8370.
Klamath
Falls.
7-7
251 EAST MAIN 3 rooms and
dinette, unfurnished except
stoves. $27.50. Dial 6D72, 9
a. m. to 5:30 p. m. 7-9
YOU HAVE
roll for a
Interstate
432 Main.
TIME yet to en
summer course at
Business College,
7-7
FIRST-CLASS MECHANIC and
body man. Steady Job. An
derson Auto Electric, 632 Wal
nut. 7-9
FOR SALE 5-room modern
house, furnished or unfur
nished, or will trade for base
, mont house. Phono 0840. 7-9
WANTED Experienced house
keeper, 18 to 40. Phone 3517.
: 3246U
FOR RENT Furnished house.
Clfcan, modern. Close in. Ph.
8320. 7-7
4-ROOM furnished house, $37.50.
815 Mitchell. 7-11
MOTORCYCLE FOR SALE
Cheap. 304 So. 4th. 7-7
WILL INTERVIEW women, 18
to 25, for retail store sales
work. Do not apply If return-
. ing to school in fall or for
any reason that would pre
vent you being permanent.
Phone 4544 for appointment.
7-7
When in Mediord
- 8tay at
HOTEL HOLLAND
Thoroughly Modern
Joe and Anne Earlty
Proprietors
E
MERRILL Mrs. Hazel Mc
Nelll, chief operator for svvoral
years in thn local olden of the
Columbia Utilities Tclvphono
company, has bean promotud to
the office of traveling chief and
In the futuru will bo In charge
of offices both at Morrill and
at Tulelake.
Mrs. Merle Jones will act as
assistant chief operator In the
Tulelake office with Mrs. Bessie
Ponhall as evening chief oper
ator. At Merrill Mrs. lleiou
Donnelly, also a long tlma cm
ploya of tho company will serve
as assistant chief with Beth
Robloy to continue serving on
tho staff. Mrs. Madge Ahem
who was at one time norms
nnntly employed In the Merrill
offico and who has assisted
Intervals mnro recently will
also be added to the staff fol
lowing completion of her pres
ent employment at tho Kurd J,
Twalts Construction company
at tho Japanese reception cen
ter at Tuleliikn.
John W. Klrby, Klamath
Falls, general manniior of the
Columbia Utilities company, In
a recent letter to subscribers
pledged continued effort to op
erate all telephone lines as rn
pably as possible during tho
present pressure on telephone
service due to war conditions
and tho chnngo In personnel was
made to comply with that poli
cy. (Continued from Pago One)
sales of government-held stocks
of grain.
By a roll call vote announced
as 185 to SO, the members de
feated a motion by Chairman
Cannon (D-Mo.) of the appro
priations committee to Insist
that the senate agree to the pro
hibition which President Roose
velt and administration leaders
have opposed.
GETS 15 JUNE CALLS
. Fire Chief Keith K. Ambrose,
in his report -to tho city council
Monday night, disclosed that the
local fire department had an
swered 15 calls during the
month of June, two of which
were false.
The sound value of tho prop
erty at risk in these fires was
$312,250, of which $234,350
worth was covered by insur
ance. Tho actual damage by fire
cost a total of $030.41, with
$502.36 of this collected from
Insurance
Forty-soven Inspections . were
made, six hazards removed and
104 firo permits granted.
Homing Pigeons
Alight Here
- Stato pollco reported Tuesday
they have received calls on sev
eral homing pigeons which have
alighted at Klamath Falls.
They said that upon Investi
gation they learcd that pigeon
clubs have been releasing plgo
ons here for flights to Califor
nia but that a number of the
pigeons which are young and
Inexperienced have descended
here.
.'1 ' Enjoy a Graat
Show In
j COOL COMFORT! I
4TH BIG
LAUGH DAY!
Tha Funniest
Picture Ever
Filmedl
X,
A rmint Pleturi Willi
GALE SONDERGAARD
GEORGE ZUCC0
Wrcteit br JinNfV UHFIttft
Defense
Calendar
Civilian Defense Class Fir
Defuusu A and U will be the sub
ject of this evening's meeting In
tile KUliS auditorium nt 7:30.
Two films, "Fighting the Firs i
Bomb" and "Forest Protection,"
will be shown, Kpimltmoou Ig
nition of whltn phosphorus will
ulso be demonstrated.
Editorials on Newt
(Continued From Pug Ono)
VVusliliitltun is lavish Willi kind
words.
President Huonevolt lulls Chi
ang Kul-ahck tho U. S. and ClilnjTf
will tight on as biulliris in urmi
until tha puwer of Tokyo in tint
Pacific Is cumplutuly crushed. In
a Joint order of the day read to
all army and navy forces, War
Secretary Stlmson and Navy Sec
retary Knox saluto the Chinese
as comrudes-ln-arma and say
their tenacious courage is "an In
spiration for all defender of de
mocracy on every front."
yllE courteous but renllstlo
Chinese acknowledge tha
kind words but Intimute strong
ly they'd rnther have American
wnrplnnei.
General Shu Shlh-Mlng, Chi
nese military attache in Wash
ington, says: "A force of only 500
warplanea of all types would on
able China to launch an offen
sive. The facilities, including gas
oline, aro still available "4J
bases remain from which Jnpnrr
could bo bombed."
Ho adds:
"Tho United States and China
could knock Japan out this year
If full American power were con
centrated In tho Pacific. If the
Japanese aro allowed to consoli
date their gains, It may tako a
long time to defeat them."
He concludes:
"Russia is sure to stay In th
fight but there Is always tho dan
ger that (without help) China
may bo knocked out. Besides, If
Japan Is disposed of the problem
of supplying Russia will bo
solved."
RENO LICENSES
RENO, July 7 AP Marring,
licenses Issued hero Monday lif
eluded: Alfred Grimm, 21), and
Gertrude Pnrkor, 18, both Klam
ath Falls; Bill Dunficy, 21, Gold
Hill, and La Vonno C. Miles. 18,
Grants Pass; Keith Slovens, 21,
and Man Goroy, 10, both Med-
fnrd: warren R. F.lllnRsworth,
39, and Laura Weir, 38, both
Klamath Kails.
Discriminating buysrs of In
surance patronise Hans Norlsnd,
118 North 7th.
Doors Open at 6:45
SEE THEM
TODAY!
and TOMORROW ONLY!
You'll Never
Louder Than
Laugh
at
f IS A P4ci RIOT.,.,.'
' A MINm Uwfki Mm thy tort's Uti '
' V JlS
Is
mm
THE
1!L
i wm
ii -
the rs
I LA "IZjrl,
tir""'
M .
AND)
spine $?
TINGLING iV,, I
THRILLS ,rj Zi
await .H
you In (ff
ft.E0. "Exploring
VfKRX Space"
' j,tOHO
Hu News