Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 01, 1942, Page 2, Image 2

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    fAGB TWO
' HERALD 'AND NEWS, ITX'AMATH TALL5. OREGON
This Is the Kind of Heroism That Wilt Beat the Axis
'Miracle Ship' Gets First Test
aajaajaa.
N ATTACK TO
. -ivv.,.. J." . i,Wx r
TT,' a
I
J
1Q-MILE GAIN
: CARDS LEVEL'
SERIES WITH
1 4-3 VICTORY
SOVIETS
GAIN
'NtsT- -- !rvf
REPORTED
T
NEW
NLA
w
v . , rj-
aa apa m ht a a t a .
a ':
t ; . (Continued from Page One)
t Not only did Slaughter help
win the game, but he Just as
urely aaved it In the Yankees
half of the ninth. Bill Dickey
' opened the Inning with a single
that Jimmy Brown couldn't
handle. Tuck Stainback ran for
him and when Buddy Hassctt
followed with a hard tingle
into right, Stainback kept run
ning right on for third.
Slaughter from well back cut
JC55 nueciacuiar peg to
George Kurowskl, who took the
ball standing on the bag and
alapped it on Stainback. With-
out Slaughter's magnificent
heave, the Yanks would have
had men on first and third with
none out. As it was, young
Beazley got pinch-hitter Red
Ruffing on a flv to right and
forced Bizzuto to roll to Marion
for the out that ended the con
test.
Beazley allowed the Yankees
10 hits in all, but was right in
- the clutches and left seven
stranded on the bases. Bonham,
ace of the Yank staff, yielded
only six safeties.
Beazley, pitching his first
. world series game, turned in a
. fine performance to square the
play-off for the down-trodden
. Nationals. He was in hot water
almost constantly, the Yankees
I getting at least one runner on
i base in each of the first five
innings. But it wasn't until the
eighth that Johnny yielded a
ecore. -
i With two out. Hoy Cullenbine
opened the Yank rally with
a tingle t" Ji ,..y
Brown, Card second-baseman,
and stole second as Joe Di
Maggio looked over a strike.
DiMeg sent him home with a
hard hit to right,' and then
Keller stepped up and blasted
Beazley first pitch onto the
right lleld pavilion roof.
PRICE BILL VOTE
(Continued from l'age One)
in the house bill, lor'eontlnua.
tion of a floor under farm prices
sor Uuts. years altar the war.
Speaker- Raybum said today
bouse action on the senate ver
sion of anti-inflation legislation
would be delayed until tomor
row, to' give members time to
consider its provisions, and then
the legislation probably would
be tent to a joint house-senate
committee to compose differ
ences. The senate bill embraces less
rigid stipulations that the house
bill on "the inclusion of farm
labor costs in the establish
ment of agricultural price ceil
ings., -
Now It's Pins
That Have the
Shoppers Worried
. (Continued from Page One)
upsweep isn't going to like the
come-down. ' , .
A check with local 10-cent
stores Thursday morning re
vealed a shortage of hairpins
and a total lack of .common
pins, safety pins and needles.
In one case customers were Urn"
ited to five cards of "bobbies"
and 25 cents worth of hairpins.
In another store the limit was
one box of about 100 hairpins
to a customer, and a limit of
one page of plain pins, two of
safeties, and one package of
needles. Only most stores didn't
have any, thank you!
Consignments of pins, which
heretofore have lasted about
a month, now disappear in less
than a week's time.
Somebody is going to come
out with a yipn dinper If th
government doesn't look into
the safety pin situation, say
the young fry.
TOO LATE TO
CLASSIFY
WANTED Large unfurnished
room. Clots In, and in private
home. Phone 7387. 10-1
i 1839 SIX-CYLINDER HUDSON
Deluxe Convertible. Radio,
' heater, spotlight, mechanical-
! lyA-l. $495. 1421 Wall. 10-3
WANTED Lady to work four
hours evenings. Experience
not necessary. Sari's Restau
rant. 10-2
4-ROOM unfurnished house,
Fireplace, '. fenced yard, gar
age, $25. Phone 5835 after
' 6:80 p. m. . ' .'. 10-3
FOR SALE Fruit jars. 332 N.
10th. ' . 10-2
HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS
Everything furnished. $4 and
; up;; 109 Ni-Broad. 10-7
vtw
(NBA Ttltpholo)
Braving death In bllsterlni heat and blinding tmoke. a ship's earptnter oo a n. 8. tanker torpedoed some
where in the Atlantic moves down a flame-twiited ladder fighting a fire back across the deck of his ship. With
flaming oil and salt water surging about his (tot, this fir fighter is symbolic of tht kind of bravery and heroism
that (fill defeat the Axis. In this ease, the heroism was rewarded when the ship was 'aved, towed to port and
repairs started that will put her back In serrio. OMieui n, & Mary photo.
ALASKA RQAu
AH ON
UPM1
Significance of the Alaska
highway in the defense of the
North American continent
against the Japanese was dis
cussed by Hugh Matter, public
relations director of the Union
Oil company, in a talk to the Ki
wanis club Thursday noon.
Matter outlined a possible Jap
plan of attack, which would In'
elude the conquest of the eastern
part of Siberia and a jump by
air to the Mackenzie river coun
try of northern Canada. The
Alaska highway, he said, has
been planned to forestall such
strategy and to send the mater
ials and tools of war rolling into
that country.
He traced the history of the
Alaska highway movement back
to the early part of this century.
Lieut. Emily Hathaway of the
WAAC spoke to the Kiwanians
oh that organization, outlining
;its objectives and what has been
accomplished so far.- ; - 4
Captain Sullivan of the air
corps told the club that the air
corps is seriously in need of
mechanics and urged public co
operation In meeting this need.
I. J. Olson was chairman of
the day.
County Draft
Board Calls
Dates Named
Klamath county draft board
calls dates were revealed today
by the local selective service of
fice. '
The office said that Board 1
will send men on November 3
and 17 and. Board 2 on Novem
ber 9 and 24.
The November quotas for
each board are approximately
the tame size as those of preced
ing months.
Dunked Bobby
Nnt a CVrnnondc, just s Guild
ford, England, bobby having
tough time of it In the borough's
annual police swimming meet
1
5K
r
STILL SMILES-dmpH.
plenty of war work and other
worries, President Roosevelt
keens imllfor.
m it
I 1 .XfeS.;--.(.vT
Speaks Here
fee
ta
1,
Hugh Metier, above, direc
tor of public relations for the
Union Oil company,, spoka en
the Alaska highway to the KI
wanls club Thursday noon and
was to address an evening meet,
ing of the Lions club Thursday
evening at the Willaid hotel.
SFJELL CAMPAIGN
First meeting for the Snell-for
Governor committee was held
Wednesday night with Ed Osten-
dorf named to replace Robert
A. Thompson who reported Sun
day night for duty with the
armed forces.
Ostendorf announced that the
following would serve as offi
cers and committee chairmen
with members of the commit
tees to be named later. E. M.
Chilc'ote will act as treasurer,
Lois Stewart, secretary; Paul O.
Landry, finance; Elmer Balsiger,
publicity; Arthur S c h a u p p,
rules; Marshall E. Comett, fi
nance; R. D. Eller, speakers;
George P. Davis, radio.
Snell headquarters will open
at 116 South Eighth street Mon
day, October 5, the campaign
to open on that day with a radio
address, the time to be.announc
ed later.
Chairman Ostendorf stated he
would be glad to have the as
sistance of any persons In the
county willing to serve on the
committee in the support of
Earl Snell.
20,000 Oregoniam
Guard Against
Surprise Attack
PORTLAND, Oct. 1 W)
Twenty thousand Oregonians sta
tioned at 500 listening posts in
the western part of the state
guard against surprise air at
tack night and day.
Lieut. Ken Postlewalte, fourth
fighter command public relations
officer, Utavtibing the organiza
tion of volunteer watchers, said
the identity of any aircraft
should be established within five
minutes of the time it was
sighted.
Insurance, nothing but n
suranee, Hans Norland. Ill
North 7th.
NOW
SHE SHOPS
"CASH AND CAHfflr
Without Painful Backaeh
Meny euffmri relieve Beutaf beekacbe
ijuirUy. once tlvry discover that the rmi
euM of hHr trouhle mar b llrM kWoT
The ludntys are Nttturee eblcf way of tak
!ni1 ifLStwa BC,,,i D out of the
blood. They help tnott people paes about I
pints a osy,
Vibn di(OTr3T f VMnw ftjtWtoti permfti
pHsono'ie mtr to remsfa io your blood, It
tnty caUM nRgiof bMkh, fhfuoutlo pel at,
I'g paint, lou of pfp eod enrryt gMtfnf up
Sifhte, snreUinu, piiffinete under tba tyea,
eadacbea and dliiiocM. Frequent or acsnty
8iM8ff-fl with emirtioB and burnlDf eome
mee eho-re thera it something roo iriti
your kldneji or bladder.
Don't wait! Ask your drujeltt for Dote'e
Pins, ad iue-iftiiv by mrilione for over
iO yean. They aive h!ppv relief end htp
Ibe 16 mil of kidney tvbH fl'iih mit poiion
oue watta from your blood. Get Dome PlUa. .
; r
WHITE HOUSE TELLS
(Continued From Page One)
ber 17, and returned shortly
after noon today, completing a
trip of 8754 miles, during which
he inspected army and navy
bases, shipyards, tank, airplane
and then producing plants,
army, navy and marine train
ing centers, supply depot and
embarkation points.
"The president traveled from
Washington through Michigan,
Illinois, Wisconsin, Mln .ota,
on west through North Dakota,
Montana, and Idaho to Wash
ington, down the length of the
racmc coast and returned
through the southwest, Arizona.
New Mexico, Texas to Louisiana
and thence to Washington stop
ping at amy cantonments In
Mississippi and South Carolina,
Rep. Halleck (R-Ind.) said In
the. house today that the "sup
pression" of news of the trip
was io a aegree "neither neces
sary nor desirable" and added
that "the political Implications"
of the Journey "will bo very
discernible."
Saturday is 'V .fiv ,
Deadline for '
Registration
(Continued from Page One)
Rural Credits Loan Fund ar
ticle.
An amendment specifying ex
clusive uses of gasoline and
motor vehicle taxes.
An amendment authorizing
regulation by law of voting
privilege lorieiture.
Referendum on the cigarette
tax pill.
Referendum on a bill re
striding and prohlbK.'ng net
inning coastal streanv and
bays.
An Initiative petition for a
bill distributing surplus funds
to school districts, reducing
taxes therein.
A measure to restrict herds
from running at large in the
Bonanza and Langell valley pre
cincts. Colfax Worker
Confesses Slaying
Of Aged Widow
AUBURN, Calif., Oct. 1 (Pi
Sheriff Charles Silva said today
Glenard Brown, 18-year-old Col
fax goat farm worker, confessed
he murdered Mrs. Ada Belle
Turner, 78, widow of a former
Colfax city councilman, In the
basement of her Colfax home
last Sunday.
Silva said the youth, held In
Placer county Jail here since
Monday, sent for him this morn
ing and admitted killing the Col
fax woman.
Brown wat arrested here on
tips that he had been seen at
the Turner home Sunday wear,
ing a blood-spattered shirt. Of
ficers later found his smeared
shirt soaking in water, but
Brown told them he had killed
two deer and was spattered with
blood when he tried to dispose
of the carcasses.
"Ttie nuetlty that . . .
Ilftad Clapper . . . I We
knack of trenelattne;
aeme event Into eoun4
on the very day
that people want to
bear about It."
rme Mitin
011(1
Clapper
Analyzes the News
TONIGHT 7 P. M.
KFJI
. SPONSORED BY
WHITE OWl CIGARS
wavm
m aaf
1
(Continued from Page One)
to the northern section of Stal
ingrad scene of the grave new
threat and asserted that nazl
gunners had destroyed 08 out
of 100 tanks, mostly of British
and American-make, which led
a soviet counterattack farther
north,
Brighter Picture
The new German thrust, en
gineered by the ruthless Field
Marshal Siegmund List, succes
sor to Marshal Fedor von Bock,
wat reported striking into Stal
ingrad's industrialized north
west suburbs, where the in
vaders launched a ISO-tank as
sault Monday.
In the central Caucasus, so
viet troop: guarding the ap
proaches to tho Grozny oil
fields were declared officially
to be "repelling all enemy at
tacks and inflicting heavy loss
es." In two days, the Russian
command said, about 1300 Ger
mans were killed and 28 nazl
tanks crippled or burned out.
PRODUCTION OFF
(Continued From Pago One)
Hon requirements plan, or
"PRP," would bo retained for
only 25 to 35 per cent of the
total armament Industry. It has
a "definite place" In those
branches of production where
material is handled on the basis
of inventory such as ball bear
ings, rivets, nails, and the lesser
ingredients of the war machine
whose production can not be
scheduled on an item by Item
basis, he explained.
WPB reported yesterday that
allotments of materials for the
civilian economy had been strip
ped down to absolute essentials
in dividing up the nation's total
supply among military and civil
ian claimants for the next three
months. ;
: Nelson' told- the press confer
ence, 'however, Jhat it probably
would bo "four or five months",
before consumers would feel the
effect of the reductions.
Copies of Weekly
Headlining FDR
Visit Destroyed
SEATTLE, Oct. 1 (P) Gov
ernment authorities here dis
closed today that nearly 30,000
copies of the Aero Mechanic,
weekly publication of the aero
nautical district No. 7S1, were
seized and destroyed September
Z because they headlined Pres
ident Roosevelt's secret visit to
the Boeing Aircraft company
plant September 22.
The daily press here had ob
served a complete silence until
the White House today author
ized publication of the fact the
president had visited the Pacific
northwest.
W. N. Mahlum, editor of the
union weekly, said he had re
ceived no warning against pub
lishing the news of the presi
dent's visit; that he had read
the voluntary censorship code
but noted no restrictions- on the
president's movements.
SLEEPY
CHAPEL HILL, N. C, VP)
Lieut. Comdr. James (Sleepy)
Crowley, formerly of Fordham
but now in charge of the North
Carolina Pre-Fllghters, tells new
comers he got his njekname dur-.
Ing his Notre Dame college days
"because I could sleep all right
In the mornings and nights but
I used to roll and toss something
terrible in the afternoon."
NOW ttndtrttm
Cream Deodorant
safely
Stops Persptratton
m Does not roc drrsiti of rnen'l
ihiru. Does not irritate skin
24 Nowiiiine.ro dry, Cinbcuicd
(i.ht after shaving.
. Inittnely stop penpimion for
1 to 3 dtyi. Prevents odor.
4. A pure, white, jtreaielcM,
luinleii veniihinx cream,
f. Awarded Approval Seal of
American Institute of launder
in for being harmless to
tirmc
jinniD
fabric
"ZT . 39sj.r
e . i
I tit A Itlenltoln)
Shipbuilder Henry J. KalMr two-wevk "miracle ship." tin Jcvvph N.
Teal, built, launched and delivered In Portland, was a beehive of activ
ity on th day of Its trial run Jiuit before. bclnR put Into service. This
picture, mads while the 1000-ton veiucl . mnklng Its mile shakedown
run, shows painters swarming over the ship, putUng on the llnal touches
before the lest was completed.
1,000 New Yorkers
Already at worn
In Kaiser Yards
VANCOUVER-. Wash.. Oct I
(P) The second tralnloud of
easterners arrived here todny for
work in the Henry J. Ktilser
-'' - ( e Portland-Vancouver
area.
S? ' '1' ,.-. ilm'( i
r when you can (have x : ; -i
K SO MUCH FOR SO L ITT t'fi 'V; j
3 mrnkK FALL SUITS I
iiai xai
merman's Mens Store
Headquarters for Clipper Craft America's Only Nationally Radio Advertised
Men's Clothes
Approximately 500 were
aboard the second Kaiser special
train, bringing to slightly more
tlmn 1000 the total of shipyard
workers recruited In New York
and other eastern Industrial arras
lo reach here.
Almost all members of the
first contingent, which arrived
Wednesday, were at work today.
Todoy whether you spend a lor or a little, you want to be
sure of getting the MOST lor every dollar. So join tho
millions who wear Clipper. Craft Suits. Enjoy finer tailoring,
richer fabrics, smarter styling . , . paying far leu than you'd
expect. Wo can give you thlt outstanding value because
of tht nation-wide Clipper Craft Plan, whertby we eomblno
our purchasing power with 67 leading stores,
YOU get tho savings of scientifically planned production,
and coast to coast distribution, at maintained, nationally
advertised prices. Get YOUR Clipper Craft Suit from our'
new assortment of multiple-stripe worsteds; Paca-Moor Shet
land!; sturdy Coverts; and heathery Twoedi.
(Continued from Page One)
highwatrr mark of the enemy
advance. Tho ridge wat recall
tured Tuesday.
Bridge Bombsd
Nauro Is nbiuit 42 miles air
lino norlhi'nl of Port Moresby.
but la about (10 mill's from MmU
vltnl allied base by trail
Allied heavy bombers Contln
lied to pound Buna, main Jap;
nese coastal base 78 miles nocJ
cast or Nauro, and the Intermj
ate depot of Kokoda. . fa,
Heavy demolition bombs also
wero dropped on both endt of
Walropl bridge, spanning the
deep gorge of the Krnnetl river
on the enemy t vital supply . line
The bridge, a repeated target of
aerial attack, was left tagging
and badly damaged, the com
munique said.
British Air Raid
Toll Held 47,305
LONDON, Oct. 1 W) Air fl
raids during the first three years V
of the war killed 47,305 British 1
civilians and Injured 55,856 suf- V
flclcntly to require hospital
treatment. Home Security Mln-
Inter Herbert Morrison told the
house of commons today.
In the grenter London area, h
said, 20,110 were killed " an
20.071 Injured
4
n
ii
COMINGld
VICTORY I