JAiiiiL11134a4!- PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON' Where Government Wasted Millions T M-VjTfsii ssSPCf'SBlE.W 'Vu,.imiiii c-V7 Tir3.. .. mm Fn-n FIGHT RAGES i I Lnl liHiiiLU , .....-T.. i Duvcipjii cn - ; .. - ;.-...,...r -vv-. j,?irS INS 1 I III JIUnL LU fe5E-32ES mm DEFENSE ZONE mm Jes Peek was named physical , ductllon supervisor of ll local chools and several other per sonnel changes were made at meetings of the city elementary and high school boards Monday night. Peak was at one time element ary school physical education di rector. More recently, he has been on the high school P. . staff. He is now studying at the navy physical education school 1 St. Mary s college at Moraga. At Monday night's meeting, leave was granted Dorothy Bailey, higli school teacher, from her instructional duties. Instead, she will become sec retary to Superintendent Arnold Graiapp. The high school board granted leaves to Vernon Kuykendall and Donald Golding, who have Joined the .naval service, and elected Jennine Withers of Sacra mento, Calif., to teach physical education In the high school. The elementary school board received three resignations, as follows: Kareen Dunton, physical edu cation teacher at Roosevelt school, to accept a position with a private firm in Portland. Mane Doern, Conger school, -yto accept a position at Salem. ' Delia Weber, music teacher at Fairview school, to accept a con tract In the Medford schools. The board elected Mrs. Nell McKay Locke, now principal of the Leavenworth school, Leaven worth, Wash., to a position as special clinic teacher replacing Solvig Erickson, resigned. Luella Olson, Bend, was ' named to teach girls' physical education at Roosevelt school. Mrs. Doris Frederick was elected music teacher in the elementary system. Executions, Unrest Sweep ' Nazified Europe (Continued from Page One) Bible for attacks on German sol diers were brought to light. Underground reports from Belgium and Holland told of new preparations by the Ger mans against a possible allied . invasion. One report said a high nazi officer in Belgium had been au thorized to apply the torch to everything in sight if the Ger mans were forced to retreat be fore the allied armies. Other dispatches said the nazls in Holland had begun or- ' ganizlng a Dutch home guard because of the invasion threat, while in Norway, new trouble was brewing as the notorious Vidkun Quisling, nazi-lnstalled premier, ordered the dissolution . of the provisional church coun cil organized by dissident bishops. A BBC ,. broadcast said the Germans were staging large- scale invasion exercises . in Norway, climaxed by a big pa rade of goose-stepping nazi sol diera through Bergen, on the Norwegian west coast, the chief center of opposition to the Ger mans and the Quisling govern ment. In Belgium, German authori ties were reported to have ar rested 20 more hostages in re prisals for recent explosions in the Liege district It is much easier to remove automobile spark plugs when they are cool. The RAF likes its Hamburg burned to a crisp. ' THIS ACT OF MERCY Is repeated many times a day in pharmacies throughout tho land where trained scientists compound and dispense the remedies that bring relief to the suffering. Currin's takes pride in their role of easing pain and saving lives. When loved ones are In danger, rely on your doc tor's advice and judgement not on your neighbors' good Intentions. CURRIN'S FOR DRUGS "Th Ith and Main . Throwing awav $20,000,000 In New Orleans ampOuiicung o. riciurca ore a v, o, j-,v.,.. ...,.. . .,,., ...... ... - terlal ordered but not to be used, because construction of the company's plant addition has been halted. Armv Show Returns in senu-ieureiiient since Hie death ut his vile. ClarH GaBle is seen nore with Actress Eette Darts before they appeared In a Los Angrles broad cast exclusively to American soldiers In toreign lands. It Is O sole's first photographed appearance since his wife, Carole Lombard, died In a plans crash. Courthouse Records TUESDAY Marriage Applications HORTON-WEEKS. Dclbcrt Al bert Horton, 26, millworker. Resident of Chiloquin. native of Washington. Addie Weeks, 27, housekeeper. Resident of Chil oquin, native of Oregon. McCURRY-EDMONDS. Mar shall Andrew McCurry, 58. hotel worker. Resident of Benton county, Ark., native of Arkansas. Dora Bell Edmonds, 42, house wife. Resident of Klamath Falls, native of Kansas. SIEWERT-CRAWFORD. Alan Albert Siewert, 22, student. Resident of Salem, native of Ore gon. Harriet Crawford, 21, student. Resident of Salem, na tive of Oregon. Complaints Filed J. C. O'Neill versus Paul L. Mascotte. Suit to collect 545 with attorney fees and costs. John Irwin, attorney for plain tiff. C. E. Howie versus Eva Marie Howie. Suit for divorce. Charge, desertion. Couple mar ried in Reno, Nev., July 2, 1939. William Kuykendall, attorney for plaintiff. Helen Hanks versus Dan Hanks. Suit for divorce. Charge, desertion. Couple mar ried in Klamath Falls, May 27, 1939. Plaintiff asks custody of minor child. J. C. O'Neill, at torney for plaintiff. J. C. O'Neill versus F. L. Vin cent and W. W. Vincent. Suit to collect $400 with interest and attorney fees. John Irwin, at torney for plaintiff. Justice Court R. T. Gustafson and Ed Stal- Hngs. Obtaining money by false pretenses. Case dismissed on Friendly Drua Store" Phone 4614 MERCY V JJuiL ComsUL y Jf federal funds, the Maritime Commission canceled an order given the Gnh!e to His Public motion of complaining witness i and district attorney. j , t- miff r-i :,!.. : due Lt. imee, rvi mining iiic to escape. Fined $100 and $7.20 costs. $90 suspended. Beryl Mickey Dwan. No op-1 orator's license. $5.50 bond for-! feited. j Ricardo Rodriguez. No oper-1 ator's license. $5.50 bond for-1 feited. Clarence William Albrecht. No operator's license. $5.50 bond forfeited. Victor Leroy Orcwilcr. No operator's license. Fined $5.50. Rae Clarence Gordy. No chauffeur's license. Fined $5.50. Earl George Gruell. No op erator's license. Fined $5.50. George Young. Unlawful sale of alcoholic liquor. Fined S50 and put in six months proba tion. (Continued from Page One) tions they now practiced on the Japs. "During recent combat exer cises lieutenants led their pla toons through and under barbed wire against an objective while expert riflemen fired live bul lets just above the heads of the crawling marines. "In preparation for such strenuous work, marines aboard transports on the long voyage over- spent hours in hand-to-hand combat work. Knives, small arms, and ju jltsu were important in shipboard, training in preparation for eventual jungle warfare." RENO LICENSEE RENO, Aug. 11 W Marriage licenses issued here included: Clayton G. Roney, 42, and Hazel Vinson, 48, both Klamath Falls. The difference between a crack fighter and a cracked fighter may be just a glass jaw. Herald and News want ads reach 40,000 Individuals. Some one wants what you have to sell. Advertise in tho classified. There will be a PUBLIC DANCE Every Saturday Night at the EAGLES HALL GOOD MUSIC Cents 50c Lsdloi 28c T L : ft if i 1 E (Continued from Page One) the two plants of tho Cleveland Graphite Bronze Co., major pro ducer of warplane parts. William Bullock, union busi ness agent, termed the work stoppage a "labor holiday" called in protest against "discrimin atory discharges" and said Idle ness .of 4000 of the company's 5000 employes "completely shut down" the plants. A company spokesman who refused to be quoted by name, confirmed that 4000 were out and the plants "virtually shut down," but said some employes remained at their jobs and others had returned to work, James L. Myers, executive vice president of the company, warned-in a statement that "un less our production can be re sumed within a few hours, build ers of aircraft engines through out the United States will be slowed down or stopped olto- gcthcr." Editorials on News (Continued From Page One) along truly modern and enlight ened lines. It is because they are ON TOP that they are getting the blame. You are gullible indeed if you believe the Japs will do better by India and its people than the British have done. ' . TRUE freedom and its rewards are not BROUGHT to people. They are the desirable results of things WORKED r'OR. They come from the inside out not from the outside in. TN Moscow today U. S.-Ambas-sador-to-Russia Standley says: "I have not found the slight est indication that the Russians have any idea of QUITTING." His statement puts into words this fear that is in every mind in every allied country: "Will the Russians QUIT?" They quit once. Will they quit again? yHEN the Russians quit In " 1917, they had little enough to fight for and even less to FIGHT WITH. Whole divisions were going Into the trenches without even guns In their hands. A government that sends its men helpless and unarmed into battle to be slaughtered by the enemy isn't much to fight for. , This writer has a strong idea that what Russia does will be de termined chiefly by the Russians' belief and FAITH in what they are fighting for, QLIVER CROMWELL voiced one of the great truths when he said: . - "Give me (as a fighter) a rustic in homespun who knows what he is fighting for and LOVES WHAT HE KNOWS." WHEN the allies win, It will be because their peoples know what they are fighting for and love what they know. When the axis autocrats lose, It will be because their peoples HAVE NO LOVE for what they are fighting for. "Want-ads" resultsl cost little bring CARD OF THANKS Many thanks for the many acts of kjndness and beautiful flowers. MRS. C. A. HILL. Friendly Helpfulness To Every Creed and Purs Ward's Klamath Funeral Home Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Ward, Owners Wlllard Ward, Mgr. 825 High Phone 3334 (Continued from Fag One) arate German columns were within 60 miles of the Novoroi skisk and Tuapse naval bases as tho invaders spread out through the northern foothills of the Caucasus mountains. Front line dispatches said the Germans were showering para chute troops behind the Rusln lines ncr Kotelnlkovski, 95 miles below Stalingrad, but laid the aerial Invaders were, being promptly moppea up. Military advices pictured the whole region from Kletskaya, 75 miles northwest to Stalingrad to the south as a land of flames, with the cherry orchards and steppe homes of the Cossacks smashed and burning and the skies darkened by mass flights of nazi planes. Stalingrad Crisis In the battle of the Don river bend, before Stalingrad, the nazi command asserted that Marshal Semeon Timoshenko't defenders were "driven together In nar row space where they faced annihilation. To the north, in the Rzhev sec tor 130 miles west of Moscow, the Germans acknowledged that thoy wero fighting a "heavy de- lensivu battle,' with the red armies, newly reinforced, press' mg a strong attack. At mid-day, after bitter all- night fighting, red army head quarters conceded that the nazlt had broken a new gap in the Russian defenses at Armavir, 180 miles below Rostov, Meanwhile, U. S. Ambassador Admiral William H. Standley said in Moscow that the Rus sians had three lines of defense the present one, the Volga and the Urals "and the Germans have not yet reached the Volga Ambassador Standley said he had found "not the slightest in dication .that the Russians have any idcB of quilting." In the batue of ugypt, Italian field headquarters reported in creased air and ground activity. Sir Claude J. Auchinleck s imperial British armies held Field Marshal Erwin Rommel's invaders at bay on the El Ala mcln front, 7s miles west of Alexandria. Two Killed, Three Injured in Auto Crash Near Yreka YREKA, Calif., Aug. - (P) A state guardsman and a Yreka high school girl were killed to day and two other guardsmen and another girl were injured gravely in an automobile accl dent north of here. The dead: Richard Blankhelm, 20, of Redding; Bessie Atteberry, 17, of Yreka. The injured, all in the Siski you General hospital: Charles Nelson, 19, of Hot Springs; Ed ward Evans, 21, of Oakland, and Rita Kelly, 17, of Yreka. - Coroner Jess Treadway said their automobile overturned on highway 99, eight miles north of here, as the men were return ing to their station near Yreka, Indian Makes Gallant Record SOMEWHERE IN AUSTRAL IA, Aug. 11 OP) Mortally wounded, Sgt. Ralph Sam, a full-blooded American Indian, emptied his pistol at a Japanese Zero which attacked his bomber and shot-away his right hand, making it impossible for him to manipulate the bomber's guns, Sam was gunner aboard the bomber piloted by Lieut John Hill of Texas, and received the silver star posthumously for bravery. He lost much blood on the return flight to hll base and died a few days later. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY MODERN three-room furnished apartment, gas equipped. 1550 Martin St. Phone 6945. 4159K COOL ROOM, close In, $2.50 week. Also apartment. Phone 7058. 8-11 WANT Housekeeper or main tenance couple for business woman, Los Angeles. Must drive. Phone 6431. 3-13 WANTED Potato digger with power take-off. W, D. Ding ler, Rt. 1, Box 802. 8-13 HORSES FOR SALE Cheap. W. D, Dingier, Rt. 1, Box 802. 8-13 WANTED Experienced fur saleswoman. Phone 6431. 8-13 HAVE FURNITURE VAN going to Marshfleld early Thursday via Medford. Can handle most any size lots from Klamath Fails for way points or Marsh field. Phone 742S by Wednes day noon, , 8-11 WANTED Three tons second cutting alfalfa, baled, Phone B031. 4349WJnterAve. 8-15 STRIAMLINED -This I I'ncle Sim's new and Imnrovcd M ' abrupt mlci make It a more dlfllcull target. Turret AQUATIC P AC E A N T 48 Mi tales holdlnr ribbons In L F (Continued from Pago One) which lie athwart the vital allied supply lines to Australia. Widening assaults by allied bombers were reported striking at the Japanese on the fringes of the main battle theater as United Nations fliers blasted Ra baul, New Britain, northwest of the Solomons. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's headquarters said 13 and possi bly 19 Japanese planes had been destroyed In the last three days at Rabaul, while allied bombers hit three enemy vessels Includ ing a largo destroyer off Dutch Timor. Aside from tho Solomons, other ground fighting was de veloping in New Guinea, where the allies drove back enemy troops In the Kokoda sector, 80 miles east of tho key United Na tions base at Port Moresby, FUNERAL MELVIN EVERETT CONLEY Funeral services for the Into Mclvln Everett Conlcy who passed away at Newell, Cnllf., on Monday, August 10, 1942 fol lowing a brief illness, will be held In the Bonanza church at Bonanza, Ore., on Wednesday, August 12, 1042, with the Rev. Arthur Charles Bntes of the First Christian church of this city offi ciating. Commitment services and Interment family pint In the Bonanza cemetery. Friends aro Invited. Arrangements aro un der the direction of the Enrl Whltlock Funeral homo of this city. OBITUARY MELVIN EVEBETT CONLEY Mclvln Everett Cnnloy, a resi dent of Langell Valley, Ore., passed away at Newell, Cnllf., on Monday, August 10, 1942, at 12:22 p. m., following an Illness of three days. He was n nallve NAVA 0 EES COVE 1 AREA if -Lornllnj-Orer; and "atrtlie'limel n . RY Elywi Knox (renter) apprars a ceremony opening a new swimming of his dentil win aged 18 years 9 months and 27 ilnys. Surviv ing are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil E. Conlcy of Langell Valley, Ore.; one brother, Rob ert Conlcy, of Langell Valley, Ore., and one sister, Mrs. Har old Cox of this city; tho grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. William J. DcVaul of Paisley, Ore., and Mrs. J. G. Conlcy of Halsey, Ore. Tho remolns rest In the Enrl Whitlock funeral home, Pine street at Sixth. Notice of funeral to be announced in this Issue of the paper. 10 Hospital Ships Now in Pacific Japs Tell Mexico MEXICO CITY, Aug. 11 fP The Japanese government has in formed Mexico that ten Japanese hospltol ships are operating In the Pacific and should not be attacked. The marlno ministry, reporting the Japanese mcssngc, said it came through the foreign mln- NOW! WAflHfi IROS. Mwtri MH,M, M CHARLES COBUBK-nmMHI-HUll ItlMfE " CXTnA EMU. Q0L6MAN lltd BAND POPIVI OAnTOON TRAVIU'TOUn lATSST- HSWt' ; MiiiBM ii i-ii, rami C 1 SI - 4 Unk. Lower silhouette and n holds a 75 mm. tun. tVPliilfiMni It nil t ii ir tik AujkdMMUsM with some of reprruntallvM pool In Los Angeles, Csltf. Istry but did not say how It was transmitted, The Jnpanese, who did not say where the hospital vessels were moving, said they expected the ships to be safe under the pro visions of International Inw. H E Y, FO L KS ife Hare's the Biggest Show of the Week! LAUGH3I THRILLSI HOMANCEI MYSTERYI All In 1 Supor Showl FREDRIC MARCH VIRGINIA BRUCE TMREGOEy MY HEART, With PATSY KELLY ALAN MOWBRAY NEW TODAY! Pint Tan AMY TIMII m -n 2nd Top Footuro! II II & 11 " 25c I