'J t flMlS mm : .tin T -ur i (Contfnued.from Pag On) ' but thse ar 'being smashed, a " Pfavda dispatch from the Black ' ffcet' declared, l- '" . .""ftlnforcmntt '; Th communist party i news paper Mid Russian! wer striking t-eTmri-rieitf ports with' gun- DOats; iorpedoboats and planes. Tremendous new forces of men and machines were reported moving up to bolster the axis as sault upon Stalingrad. ! " Pravda said , the Germans, hurrying ammunition, food and fuel to their' forces fighting be tween the pba' and the Volga, were'ii using squadrons of trans port ; planes 'and ' long lines of trucks guardedly tanks." " Central Front Silence A searing ' heat wave beat dSsWLupon this front and soviet dispatches said the only relief found by soldiers fighting across the sun-parched Steppes was in . the partial shade provided by smoke rising from the battle iiei'ds. The midnight communique made ho reference to the Rus sians' central front offensive, but said that soviet troops on the neighboring Kalinin front had captured three settlements in fighting whieh.eost the Ger mans BOO casualties. ;. . Draft Boards to Pool Single, Men Throughout State (Continued from Page One) rhehv4'-' established In the de pendents 'allowance act Registrant having wives and children, "or children alone, with whom, a - "bdhafide home" is maintained, and who were mar rled' before -December 8, 1941, at f--tlme - when- selection, for . service was hot Imminent, will not be placed In class' 1-A, avail ablftHor . immediate induction, Hershey assured?" --.! He declaredj however, that as need 'for occupational defer ment", expire,, single men and other, not conforming . to the . type .currently being inducted. ; Iaoealoafds. were. Instructed ' tt,lrt(the teconsld-eratto.M-JtWistrintrin, classes Z-tfjjf.Jtfjji have collateral . - dependents'"' ; - Registrants-with collateral de penderlU," Herehey " said, ' are to be inducted ahead of men who maiHtin''bona-fide family homes: "' ' " Collateral dependents Include wivesvor children with whom the registrant "does not maintain a family 'relationship, and other persons "supported" by him. Hershey declared that of reg istrants between - 18 .'" and 20 'years "only those who have actually :-'.aehed their: 20th birthday are subject to call un- til sucjr'JIme as congress may ' modify the law." - Four Persons, Viftirniin'Canby Crash, - Identified . ' AX,TURAS;'CaKf.:; Sept. 1 -VP) Coroner Frank Kerr said today -that' fourpfcrsons killed in an automobile crash yesterday near Canby had been identified as: : Francis" Holbrook, 37, of Xnktown, sj'D.i ' Wfns.: Darlene Faye Holbrook, . 17, ;hle wife, daughter of Mr. . and Airs. E. F. McDonald of Sioux' City, Iowa: "' : . Mrs, Myrna Jordon, 18, of . SioUX;,C,ity; . ,;, .. Jim S.ti.nwise of Tulelake, Mo- . aoc county, The automobile, registered to Mrsi. Jordotjbut, Coroner Kerr said', apparently driven by Mrs. '. Holbrooke, ; skidded from the roadway and crashed into a tree. WCTEC Organizer Visits in Valley LANGELL V. A LLE Y A noted .: WCTU? ';brganizer - and speaker, Mrs, Julia Bevis of San Francisco, spenp Friday evening in Lsngell Valley with Mrs. Harry Frailer; ; Mrs. Bevis, who is assistant secretary to;Jfrs. Taft, president 6f the California WCTU, organ id a group at Tulelake on Fri day, and was joined there by Mrs,- Frazier who brought her to Iange)l,-,Va)ley,.!Mr.,-Bevis left ttr lnVttie-eveTiIng to- visit her nephew at Eugene. Friendly Helpfulness To Evary..- ,Cr4 .-and Purs . Ward's Klamath Funeral Home Mr, and Mrs. A. A. Ward, - -"- -6wnrs Wlllird Ward. Mgr. IIS High Phona 3334 0 FRONT Though Uie Germans crush ihcad in the Caucasus, Ihc attached to the northern fleet Call It Klamath Falls Junior High School Now It's Klamath Falls Junior high school. 1 That, according to Arnold Gralapp, city school superinten dent, is the proper name for the new. junior high school estab lished this year in the Fremont school building. All eighth graders of the city NEW YORK, Sept. 1 That ' college football season . you've been hearing so much about gets under way today with the "official" opening of practice in most sections . . . And here are a few problems for you to pon der: Pre-season practice will be on a one-session schedule at a lot of schools where the acade mic speed-up has changed the usual opening dates; and what about late practice sessions in the dimout areas where the coaches can't turn on the lights? . . . And while you're at it, what team will be known as "Army" West Point, the Army All Stars (East and West units) or the camp teams that survive the blitz against spectator sports? . . . If the folks in Washington are serious about cancelling the Army Navy game at Philadel phia, why not let them- play without spectators and make the most of the broadcast that has been sold for $100,000? ONE-MINUTE SPORTS PAGE vt'i.f ' 'V (f "i " i y, r 1 I Sports Briefs kJY Hu9h V J L 1 Ugh! Norbtrt Rtsmsr, a guard, brinai down Walter fedora, ambi tious halfback, as profatiional licks on grounds of Hun Junior IN DARKNESS OF DEFEAT, RUSSIA FIGHTS ON attend this school. Fremont grade school con tinues in the same building, and Is known by its old name, the superintendent said. Klamath Falls junior high school on Tuesday had an en rollment of 212. a gain of 10 over the first day's figure. 5 Out of 101.103 spectators at the Bears-All Stars game at Chi cago Friday, not one was thoughtful enough to correct Commissioner Elmer Layden when he persisted in calling the most valuable player award he was presenting to Don Hutson the "All-Star trophy". . . . Ac cording to the American field service, which has Just r e ceived a $10,000 donation from Tom Yawkey, Tom's Boston Red Sox are second In the American league . "behind the New York Giants, MOUSETRAP PLAY Earl (Fuzz) Merritt, football coach at Pomona college (Calif.) you remember his water boy who became a passing sensation last fall went shopping the other day with Mrs. Merritt . . , During the tour he paused to in spect the mechanical magic of a mousetrap that was causing passers-by to beat a path to a store window . . . "Why don't you buy a couple, Earl? " sug gested Mrs. Merritt. "You could train them to play guard." AGRICULTURAL NOTE Larry MacPhail, boss man of the Dodgers, recently won a couple of blue ribbons at s Maryland fair with his Aber deen Angus cattle . . . Bill Terry of the Giants has a fine herd of ; Jerseys . . . and Leo Durocher, Frank Frisch and Jimmy Dykes have been known to raise a beef now and then. - I' Brooklyn Dodgers get in arly school, Princeton. s yW f. HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Russinns elsewhere continue set out on niflht reconnaissance. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY ROSEWAY DRIVE Modern 8-room home with finished basement, furnace and fireplace. Nice yard with lawn, flowers and shrubs. Price 5JB30, terms. Bogue Dale, Realtor 120 S. 9th St. Dial 6972 9-1 TRADE IN YOUR OLD SUIT as payment on new. Orres Tailor Shop. 9-1 ALTERATIONS of all kinds for men. women. Johnsen Tailors, 128 So. 8th (next to Pelican theatre). B-30 A COMPLETE Business Course, or a Stenographic Course. Bookkeeping taught as an in dividual subject. Higher ac counting, Consult the Klamath Business College, 228 N. 7th street, next to the i squire theatre. v ; it. 91 WILL PAY CASH for surplus ride or revolver ammunition. The Gun Store, 714 Main. 9-7 LARGE HOUSE in town, close in; also two houses on Shasta way.. P. C. Carlson. Shasta way and Peterson. Call after 6 p. m. 9-3 LARGE FAT HENS 20c pound live weight. 4349 Winter ave nue after 5 P. m. 9-5 FOR SALE--Twb-bedroom mo dcrn home, almost new, on bus line,. Hardwood floors H acre ground, fenced In, ir rlgatlon, big garage. Pay like rent. 4835 South 6th. 8-1 FOR SALE 350 grain and po tato sacks, 2045 Arthur. 9-1 SPENL'IABOR DAY where fishing is excellent and sad dle horses available. House keeping cabins, all conven iences, beautiful surroundings. Accessible by train or bus. Write or phone for reserva tions. Wilderness Ranch, Crescent Lake, Ore. 9-5 3-ROOM furnished house. No dogs. $17.50. Inquire 2237 California at Front St. 9-6 FOUR-ROOM furnished duplex. 2235 Eberlein. Ph. 5469. 0-3 FOR SALE Wood range. Extra good, 2903 Summers lane. 9-3 FIVE-ROOM furnished house in desirable location. References required. Inquire 216 Main, Apt. 7. 9-3 TWO ROOMS with batb. Fur nished. 221 Spring. 9-7 OLD JOSEF KLOTZ VIOLIN, fine, full tone, $85, worth dou ble. At Derby's. 9-3 WANTED Woman or girl to care for children and light housework. Would take girl wishing to attend business college nights. Wages, board and room. Phone 3280 morn ings or evenings. 9-2 YOU WILL NEVER HAVE a mora opportune time than the present to prepare for good positions' in business 6r gov ernment scrviee. Consult In terstate Business College at once. 432 Main, 9-1 The "New Order" is working so well in captive Belgium that the nazl radio in Brussels has had to warn Belgians not to try to escape, on pain of death. The nazls warned the Belgians that If any did maka good an escape, t h 1 r relatives would face reprisals, There is a nrloritv on time these days, Just as on every thing else. Dr. Erwln Adman, Columbia professor. -rilWH"l V M 7 rO to hold. Here nmrinca T (Continued from Page One) behind the move. Four posslbil' ities some of them contradic tory were suggested by the ex perts, who withheld the use ol their names: 1. That Hidcki Tolo wa fol lowing a program already vaguely discernible before tlit attack on Pearl Harbor; that is, the concentration of dictatorial powers in the hands of the premier. - 2. That Shigcnorl Togo, as the man who handled the prelimin ary negotiations leading up to Japan's non-aggression pact with Russia, has been sholved to clear the way for a renunciation of that pact and an attack on Siberia. Myttiiieatlon , 3. That Togo, closely assoc iated with the-policy of collab oration with Germany, has bcon shelved to clear the way for a more independent Japanese war policy . a policy of exploiting Japanese conquests in the Pa cific and leaving it to tho Ger mans to wear themselves out against Russia unaided. 4. That Premier Tojo, in drop ping his foreign minister and taking over the direction of foreign affairs himself, was In dulging In the same strategy of mystlllcatlon so successfully em ployed last November whfit American attention was con centrated on Japanese In or near indo China at the very moment Japan's aircraft carriers were secretly steaming toward pearl Harbor, Nation-Wide Meat Ration Set to Begin in 4 Months (Continued from Page One) will be 6,000,000,000 pounds, Wickard said. "On top of that, our civilian population, with the highest in comes on record, working hard er than ever before, want moro meat than ever bofore," he add ed. "They would take about 21 billion pounds this year. "The total demand adds up to more than the total Supply, 27 billion pounds of demand; 24 billion pounds of supply. Pending the installation of ra tioning machinory, packers' salqs for civilian use will be curbed by a war production board order assigning marketing quotas. The order, expected In about two weeks, will apply to beef, veal pork, iamb, mutton and sausage. 8ERVICE DEPT. Hard luck tale; Lieut, Eddie Duchln, who was one of the first to contribute to the special army emergency relief fund, had two of those $100 tickets for the Bears-All Stars grid gam and he had a date, but he couldn't get leave from the naval train ing school at Northwestern U . , , More good news for the Camp Croft (S. C.) golfers; Jim mlc Murphy, sports ed. of the Canton, 111. Ledger, wires that he's shipping them ten dozen balls and tho lake at the Canton Country club will be dragged to recover more . , . Says Jim mle: "Hope the boys get a mil lion." ' When In Mcdford Stay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modern 'Jo and Ann EarUy Proprietors E JAPS LEFT IN (Continued from Pag One) evidence of the stoutntss of the Australian land forces, La Attacked Gen. MacArlhur's bombers dropped ten tons of explosives on the Lae airdrome, leaving It smoking and battered. Medium and light bombers were credited with general de struction of (he Lae airdrome installation. "Ten tons of bombs wrr droppd among groundtd enemy aircraft, buildings and installa tions," It ws announced. "Five largo fuel dumps, many build ings and many aircraft on the ground were destroyed. Fires were vlilbl 30 mile away. Th enemy did not attempt to Inter cept our plane. All our planes returned." Material Abandoned United States D-17 and B-26 bombers delivered the attack on Lae, starting fires visible for 30 miles mid damaging a number of grounded planes. The enemy was caught by surprise because no planes rose to intercept and only meager ground fire was thrown up. The Aussies at Milne bay re ported the Japanese abandoned large quantities of material. In on spot, 50 dead enemy troops were found. The belief was xprssed that the Japanese who fled by war ship Saturday night had been hard pressed, becaus the enemy seldom leave bodies, for religi ous reasons, and because valu able notebooks, papers and maps often are found on th corpus. Talking Slide-Film Available for Local Distribution The town of Lidice. Czecho slovak!, which was typical community of liberty-loving peo ple before the wrath of nazl re tribution wiped it from the fact of the earth, I the subject of a talking illde-film which Is now available for local distribution through A. M. Collier, county cnalrman of the Oregon War Savings staff. Through the medium of pic tures and narrative, entitled "Th Free American Way," this presentation brings home to every American the full horror of life under Hitler s terrorists. and points out the vital heed-for Investment in war bonds as an effective mean of Insuring against the repetition of such an atrocity here. The presentation was produced by the Coca-Cola company for the treasury depart ment. IRA Attack on Yank, British Troops Rumored (Continued from Page One) United States force In northern Ireland an act of aggression made It clear that "this Illegal organization has been preparing for attack on members of the armed forces of the crown, police and United State forces sta tioned In northern Ireland." Police said 17 persons had been detained for questioning as all available officer concentrat ed on Investigation of plot which, they said, had reaohed a point where th organization was able to amass explosive enough to wreck half this UlsUr capital. Two Minor Auto Crashes Reported To Police Monday Two minor automobile acci dents wore reported by police has having occurred on Monday, both Involving parking inoldents. A police report stated that J. W. Sander and W. E. Estea each sustained slight damage to hi car at 8 p. m. when Sanders was parking his automobile on Klam ath avenue between Ninth and Eleventh streets. Estes was said to have struck Sanders' car as he drove past. J. A. Balcom and Wlnnlfred K. Glllen collided at Main and Esplanade at 12 noon whn Mrs. Glllen started to Icava th curb after having been parked . In front of th Safwy store. Iniure your jewelry with Hans Norland, 118 North 7th. Far School SHIAFFIft'S Pens $1 up VAN'S CAMERA SHOP 727 Mala ' Phen Silt PLANES STRAF MILNEBAY AREA Editorials on News (Continued from Pag One) and his Job is taken over by Premier General Togo. What It means can only be guessed. Some of the guesscra minx mam gotllhii femly for tho iung expected attack on Siberia, fithurs that it Is an exuresalun of discontent with Japan's lack of success in the (liming in in Solomons. Onlv the Jan high command KNOWS what It means. HITLER, iMikll, ou t'..i 03- the fourth year of the war, call on the German people to make the "h lu host of their sncrincos In tho year that Is beginning. That is routine, of course, but interesting as Indicating how uars are (ought with one eye always on the peopl at horn, Vfri are warned today that meat will be rationed In the United Sillies In about four months. Demand Is abend of supply, running at the rute of about 27 billion pounds a year, Prospective supply seems to be about 24 billion pounds. Tho rationing won t be severe, prr.MMit plans Indicating about '21 pounds per person per week, A bit of advice Is in order here! DON'T try to eat all the meat you can lay hands on In tlia next four months before rationing begins. The time for things like that Is passing. RASH OF STIES (Continued from Pag On) SO, United Mine Worker of Amerlra, told a mass meeting of th truckers last night. "If you stay out for four days you will paralyt th whole coke situation. The timber workers, who supply post in the mines, arc 100 per cent behind you. "Stick to It and I'll take your case up with John L. Lewis. There Is one man who will get action for you." Lewis Is president of the United Mine Workers, whose Journal In an editorial last week stated "very bluntly, that we do not believe the war board, as presently constituted, possesses the understanding and the In' dustrial experience and know ledge of human equations to bo trusted with this overall respon sibillty" of setting up a wugo program. Daiies-Caiifornia Highway Section Opens Next Week Th re-located section of Tho Dalles-California highway Just north of Klamath Fall will be open for travel some time next week, possibly by Labor day, according to C. A. Dunn, tho state highway commission's con tractor on this Job. Oiling was delayed by tho priority situation but the oil has arrived now and is being placed on the new roadway which crosses the Wocus and Graham flats, parallel to the Southern Pacific railroad. The distance of the reloca tion, from Terminal City to AI goma hill, is approximately five miles, and the distance saved is nearly a mile. The new work eliminates the curving road through the sottlemont of Wocus and Shady Pine. It has been my privilege to see som of our newest and most secret weapons in per formance at an army proving ground and I agree with high est army official that the axis is due for shock. Rop. Mar tin F. Smith, Washington. . A recent development In medlcnl research Is said to definitely cure mnlnrin, long a scourge In certain sections of the country. Three small pills a day for five dnys and the symptoms disappear. It Is nlso claimed that four pills a week during the malarial season will serve to prevent tho malady. All of the fruits of medical research are avallahlo to you through your family physlclnn, Ho should be your sanctuary In case of Illness, your pro tection against the wiles and artifices of th unprincipled peddler of fakes and nostrums. CURRIN'S FOR DRUGS th and Main Ruptembr-r 1. 1941 LIS TO SUPPORT" T The high school athletic uro gram whs discussed lit Tuesday' luncheon of the Lions club, and the club decided to glvo full support to th pi'iiuriim lu every pukslblo wuy this your. Frank Itmnsey, high school fuotbull couch, tuld the Lions that prospects are good at tho high sellout this year. Cub EUuii Dmiiul pienoiiiiril a short picture on war savings. (nests at the mooting wore Old Roiives, Jiiek Myer, Krcd CoKliui, l.eo Jacobs, Vincent Webb mid Iliiiiixoy, Huffman Injured In Lumber Accident . A brokan ankle and elicit In juries were sustained by Jim Huffman when lumber car rlcr tinned over with him at the Crater Lake Lumber and Box compuiiy at Spraguo River this morning, It was learned from hoapllul alleiuliinls. Huffman wus brought by am bulance to the hopltal at 10:13 a. m., but the lime mill further details of the accident were not available. The full extent of his injuries has not been deter mined and he Is not permitted visitors at the present time. Hello-Red I mello-IUhlte ma, fVlnei to Americo'i own lait . with th luicioui flavor of rip grapetl Just iwtel nough. Wonderful at dinner llm . . . at portfeil Etpoclally delightful when thllled for an hour In your refrigerator. Enjoy this delicious treat tonight I "Th FrUndly Drug Store" ' Phon 4814 LJf l m m Ml I MTTUi t IN VrtR 0 i