Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1943)
PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON January 2fl, 1948 IMPORTANT WAR r- PLANS SAYS (Continued From Page One) win Rommel's forces and occu pied the town of Zauia SO miles west of Tripoli. French Enter Tripoli 'While the bulk of Rommel's legions apparently had retreated Into Tunisia and joined the axis Tunisian forces command of Col.-Cen. Jurgen von Arnim, axis rearguards were reported still filtering through Zuara, 65 miles west of Tripoli, under vio lent bombing and machine-gunning assault by allied war planes. ' Simultaneously, ' fighting French headquarters announced that Brig.-Gen. Jacques Ler clerc's columns had entered Tripoli after a 1200-mile drive across the Sahara dessert from Lake Chad in the heart of Equa torial Africa. In Russia - On the soviet front, Russia's armies drove their battle lines closer to the great German base at Rostov and deeper Into the Ukraine today, spurred by Pre mier Joseph Stalin's rallying ' cry: ' ' "Forward! To the routing of the German invaders and their expulsion over the boundaries of our motherland!" Usually taciturn, Stalin warm ly praised the red armies, de claring they had driven 245 miles, captured more than 200, 000 prisoners and routed 102 divisions perhaps 1,000,000 to 1,500,000 troops in their two-months-old winter" offensive. Soviet dispatches today said Russian guerillas were operat ing "in the Rostov area" and credited them with wiping out 200 axis troops, destroying guns, trucks and other equipment, and recapturing 1200 head of cattle and 3500 sheep ' seized by the Germans from collective farms. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY OIL TO BURN For Union heating oils phone 8404, Klam ath Oil Co., 615 Klamath Ave. ' l-30m FOR A BETTER WEARING . Shirt with a better fit, try Van Heusen! In whites -and colors. Rudy's Men's Shop. --, , . 2-20 CHIMNEY SWEEP Furnaces vacuum cleaned. Phone 7149. 1-26 OIL BURNER Service. Tufts. Phone 7149.- J. A. 1-26 FOR QUICK SALE One 3-burn-er oil stove $14; one shower bath $9; one vapor bath cab inet $9; 75 feet of rubber hose; 1 load of wood. 146 E. Main. 1-27 SEVERAL. MARRIED WOMEN have enrolled at Interstate Business College the past few days. 432 Main. 1-26 S ROOMS, furnished, close in. Inquire 116 No. 5th or 620 Washington. 1-28 LOST Earring of two silver .... balls. Return to News-Herald or phone 3124. 1-30 WANTED Used pianos. Spot cash. Louis R. Mann, tuner, Derby's, 120 N. 7th. Phone 4519 or 7175. 2-25 FOR RENT 3-room modern house. Stoves, linoleum, water : furnished. $15 per mo. A. Jordanger, Shady Pine. 1-27 WANTED Housekeeper. May go home nights. 900 Owens. 1-28 SEWING Alterations, Button holes. Phone 8076. 1-28 SHAPED, LONDON'S f f M Your doctor adds at least seven years of study to his high school education. Then he spends one or more years In a hospital with little or no compensation. Is it not reasonable to believe that he Is better qualified to advise you In matters of health than your well-meaning friends who have not had this education and experience? When you do not feel well there are two safe things to do. First, consult your physician. Then bring his prescription to us for expert compounding. CURRIN'S "The Friendly Drug Store" 8 th and Main Commander J Undersecretary of War Rob ert Patterson disclosed that Ma, Gen. Alexander Patch is ia command of army ground troops that have replaced the marines on Guadalcanal in the Solomons. Gen. Patch relieved Ma. Gen. Alexander Vande- grift not quite a month ago. U. S. PLANES (Continued From Page One) stronghold in New Britain, a major source of supply and rein forcement for Japanese troops in northeast New Guinea and in the Solomons. Jap Ship Hit Dispatches said allied night bombers, darting in low despite intense anti-aircraft fire, blasted a 2000-ton vessel believed to be a munitions ship and set tower ing flames that lighted- the en tire Rabaul harbor area. Another ', medium-sized Jap anese ship was bombed at a harbor wharf and left with a gaping hole in its side. Other allied planes dropped 1000-pound bombs on the Jap anese base at Lae, New Guinea, inflicting heavy damage, and strafed targets' at Salamaua, Finschafen and Gasmata. , Japanese raiders countered with small attacks on allied air dromes at Milne and Port Mores by in lower New Guinea. SET FOR OU (continued From Page One), the prospect of some of these facilities being required for war service in other areas likewise dictates as a prudent course at least a mild restriction upon the consumption of heating oiL" Ten of the 12 printed forms necessary to start the rationing program already are in the hands of OPA officials in Washington and Oregon and the other two will arrive shortly, OPA said. OPA workers already have been' trained on the scene in the com--plex rationing machinery. In general, the system of ra tioning will be the same as that installed in the 30 eastern and midwestern states, with some "simplifications which.have been learned by experience." The same stamps will be used, how ever, and the forms will be al most identical. For immediate coverage call Hans Norland Insurance Agency, 717B. FOR DRUGS TURN BACK JAP DIVE BOMBERS JEFFERS FLAYS EXPEDITERS' OF.. PROGRAM (Continued From Page One) their three "must" programs aviation gasoline, chemical war fare plants and naval escort ves sels. Jeffers was applauded by his Baltimore audience but not by the office of war information in Washington which noted the ad ministrator's remarks were not submitted in advance to OWI for clearance a procedure which is followed to head oft inter-agency strife. Jeffers said he didn't think it was necessary because he spoke at a "question and answer affair. Money Troubles Meantime, the task of raising new revenue to help counter balance a national debt heading toward the $210,000,000,000 mark confronted the house ways and means committee. Legislation to boost the debt limit from $125,000,000,000 to the higher figure will claim first attention of the committee at the opening meeting Thursday. Manpower Talked The Ruml pay-as-you-go tax plan or a modified version also was scheduled for early consid eration. Committee members ex pressed general agreement that taxes, must be collected on a current basis with deductions similar to those for the victory tax being taken from each wage- earner's pay check. Opinion was divided, however, on the best procedure. The manpower problem also continued to harass lawmakers. Senator Gurney (R-SJD.), scof fing at proposals for ceilings on armed force personnel, asked a substantial increase- in the basic 40-hour week to permit a shift ing of 6,000,000 workers from industry to the farms. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued From Page One) planes against us to be destroyed. it seems odd that they keep it up. But people who: profess to know the Japs say they'll be likely to continue to do it. It's a matter of FACE, these people say. The Japs can't admit they're stopped anywhere. Maybe. Let's wait and see. . -.- ANOTHER explanation is that the Japs are consolidating the empire; they've already seized an empire rich in all the strategio materials . (rubber, tin, etc.;) they've been short on. When they get it consolidated, they'll be ready, to fight again on a big scale. , -- -- - A NYWAY, the more Jap ships -n-n -Inl. UA U4... I. ...til l for us. The Jap empire is an ISLAND empire, and ships' are still vitally necessary for the maintenance of -island bases. . --..-. JfEEP an eye on Burma where news is scarce but fighting is going on. Burma is our route to China, and we mustn't allow China to' become discouraged and drop out of the war. Things are bound to happen, sooner or later, in Burma. - TTSE of fuel oU is to be de- . creased in Oregon and Wash ington. That means, one guesses, that more tankers are to be moved to the Atlantic, to carry gasoline to our forces in Africa and elsewhere on that side. Dealer snortages put new value on used merchandise. Cash in on your "junk" through a classified ad. Phone 3124. A doctor says the feminine ability to weep at will is a gift. Is one and often gets one. Women in our war industry plants wear slacks, which in dicate they are not slackers. It's a lot more fun to give than lend and often costs about the same.' l.i. .1111. . Beej-Kn "THE GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY" and 'VENGEANCE of WEST" 2 Swell Hits! TH! mm MACS'SANDT'UON tttCt ANNI.6WYNNI ROIflT MIGE M m ml Fighting Reds Win Back Big Area 71 FINLAND BoWe 5eo Storeys Ruo V l;:.uiu.i-'l"..l.1 N on Awn '-''; . POLAND i Gorman-Russian Una, June, 1 Ml RUMANIA" BULGARIA In one month of counterattack this winter the Russians have regained even more territory than they did in the Initial period of their 1941-42. offensive. Map shows progress of Soviet drives begun in mid- ; December against Germans in Velikle Lura-Rshev and Rostov-Stalingrad-Caucasus sectors. Note that !. Nazis nude relatively no gains in north during 1942 and have lost nearly half of area seized in south. I Moiher Blames Frances Farmer Break-Down SEATTLE, Jan. 26 CP) Ac tress Frances Farmer Is "just suffering from nervous exhaus tion," her mother, Mrs. Lillian Farmer, declared here yesterday on her return from a hurried trip to see her daughter in Holly wood. Mrs. Farmer said in an inter view that "consistently being cast as a professional harlot in pictures has been the principal cause of an acute case of nervous exhaustion." ! - The actress caused an uproar 10 days ago by battling a police man in a fight- which followed Bridge Suggests Boost in Price of Bike License Better hurry and get your bike licenses, before, they Jump to 90 cents. ' That's the advice of Dave Bridge, city recreational officer, who suggested to the city coun- ITUiWOOD PORTLAND, Jan. 26 OP) David Eccles, Oregon deputy solid fuels coordinator, said to day rationing of wood in this area is unnecessary. ; " On Washington reports that a wood rationing plan would be invoked in 32 Oregon and Wash ington cities, he commented: "It is ill-advised and unnecessary. Eccles said his office had not been informed of the OPA plan as reported from Washington nor had it been consulted re. cently on the desirability of ra tioning. OPA has sent fuel experts here from time to time to in vestigate the wool fuel situa tion, Eccles said, describing one of them as a '.'former oil man from Boston who didn't know what bogged fuel was." A SHAMROCK IN BIS HEART la Jul Hill! GENTLEMAN. EftKOL FLYKN ALEXIS SMITH tfiefc Carton . Aim Hit lra! Color Cartoon Brtvlty r v. mm rrn P 1 (IJ jftf!lll : ii rJF I g 1 v-.- 1 Owl kKuk s4P ROS l .V v.m K M i Vl Farthut German Krainaar Sevoitopell, jA" Black Sua TURKEY Casting for her police court hearing for pro bation violation in a drunken driving case.-- She was ordered to a convalescent home after a sanity hearing. "She'll be there six months,' Mrs. Farmer said. "And when she gets out there will be no more of those miserable roles. Everyone familiar with acting knows that Frances shouldn't be cast in the kind of pictures she's been given. ,' "There was one called 'South of' Pago Pago.' Frances said, 'Mamma, when I saw myself in that I felt contaminated and de graded." cil Monday night the Increase in bicycle licenses to operators within the city limits. The coun cil voiced approval of the In crease and Bridge and City At torney Joe Carnahan were working out a proposition Tuesday afternoon. Bridge explained to city fath ers the intricate three-way filing system necessary on bike license cataloguing and also suggested that some penalty be imposed on those who are late in obtain ing licenses or disregard the tags altogether. Thus far the 25-cent bicycle license is good for two years. The proposed in crease to SO cents would also run for a two-year period. it NEW TODAY Come Along On the Oriental Intrigue! . . Adventure in Peking! IT'S A THRILLER! Wm First Showing IRENE HERVEY WM.GARGAN in A OQcaCttfl wltfc FELIX BASCH . DONALD STUART Musical! 2ND HIT Gay! . . i in Counter Drive REGAINED BY RUSSIANS fTl In rint Month of to it buiYnr's Wlntor Campaign In tint Month el Thh U Year's Wlntor Campaign Today's BarHe Una Armavh Bo turn Mllw 200 s Fred Dingier, 02, for the past 40 years a well known farmer of the Klamath section, died January 23 in the University o 1 California hospital, San Francisco, fol lowing an ex tended illness. M r . Dingier was born Feb ruary 3, 1880, in Casscl, Ger many, coming to New York at Mr. Dingier the age of 21 yu..s. r'or more than a year he traveled over the United States and finally took over a homestead in Ante lope valley near Swan lake in Klamath county, settling there in 1902. Mr. Dingier and Mag gie Ncubert, member of a pio neer Swan lake family, were married in 1910 and shortly after , left for Algoma where they made their home. After several years' residence In the Algoma area they moved to Henley. Mrs. Dingier died in 1920. In May, 1922, Fred Ding ier and Anna Winterkamp were married and continued living at the Henley home. Surviving relatives Include Mrs. Dingier, seven children, Henry and Fred of Tennant, Calif., Otto of Klamath Falls and William of Henley, and two daughters, Mrs. Louise Rey nolds and Mrs. Elsie Mock of Klamath Falls. Funeral services will be held Most Exciting . Treachery! Trip of and. l"t'r" $ l -jj II... . st. 1 -e Ti . i tc-ToronoMn- it-- WgBT I juorgi0YlK3n I rrf. Ill . H'-.'"m-zm"w i . :. : rYITTil h ' 1 iSciSEf IS ,? ') Clair Trevor Donald Woods in "BIG TOWN GIRL' Potatoes CHICAGO, Jan. 28 (AP- USDA) Potatoes, arrivals 87 on track 170; total US shipments 810: old stock, supplies light trading very light as receivers not opening cars for inspection; market steady; new stock, sup piles modorute demand . vety slow, markot about steady; Idaho Russet Burbnnks US No. 1, $3.00-071; Colorado Red Mo- Clures US No. 1, $2.80-05; Min nesota and North Dakota Bliss Triumphs commercials $2,221 28; Wisconsin Rurals commer cials $2.20-35; Worbas US No. 1, $2.40; Florida bushel baskot Bliss Triumphs US No. 1, $2.51 65 per bushel. SAN' FRANCISCO. Jan. 20 (AP-USDA) Potatoes: 8 Collfor nla, 12 Idaho, 1 Oregon, 1 Flor ida arrived, 1 by truck; 18 bro ken, C2 unbroken cars on track; no sales reported. LOS ANGELES, Jan. 28 (AP USDA) Potatoes: 1 California, 8 Idaho, 1 Nevada arrived, 2 by truck, 8 diverted; markot strong er, Idaho Russets No. 1, $2.83- 70, one car $2.78, 2 cars $2.60; No. 2, $2.00. GETS SHORT SHRIFT (Continued From Pogo One) law was begun today by the house taxation and revenue com mittee, which will decide whoth er Income taxes should bo re duced, and whether they should be paid by deductions from sal ary checks. FUNERAL FREDERICK DINGLER Tho funeral service for the Into Frederick Dingier, resldont ol the Henloy district, who passed awoy in San Francisco, Cnlli., on Saturday, January 23, 1843, win take place from the chapol oi Ward's Klamath Fu neral homo, 929 High street, on Thursday, January 28, 1043, at 2 p. m. The Rev. L. K. Johnson ol the Klnmath Lutheran church will officiate. The commitment service and Interment will fol low in the family plot in the Llnkvillo cemetery. Friends are respectfully Invited to attend. POLICE SEEK MOTIVE PORTLAND. Ore., Jan. 28 (JFI Police searched for a motive to day In the slaying of a young woman and a 83-year-old man. They were, found unconscious In a rooming house hallway yes terday and both died before po lice could question them. Detective Clyde Sanders said Mrs. Irene Cahill. 28, wife of an army sergeant overseas, was wounded twice In the abdomen and once In the head. Johan Edward Wall In, shipyard ma chinist, was shot once In the head. A .22 caliber automatic was between them. Two broken vases indicated a struggle. Thursday at 2 p. m. from Wards with Interment in the Llnkvllle cemetery. NEW TODAY! A New Type of Star In a New Kind of Hit! X New STAR f A 1 It born. . I Hollywood's Ly. Newest J Heart "V? ThroW I JeanQkWl Tf ("LADY WITH RED HAIR" J MIMAMJOPKINS I I . CUratE BAII8 J 1 rjcuBuort uoiiwiarw II umnmit wiim fy NDIGTMENTS RETURNED Id SHIP GAS E WASHINGTON, Jan. 38 (P) Attornoy Conoral Blddle an nounced today that a, federal grand Jury at Newark, N. J had Indicted the Mnrlno Maintenance corporation of Bayonne, N. J,, and two porsons on accusations that they collected more than $(100,000 in overcharges and fraudulent feci In tho conversion and repair of 12 ships used In tho service to North Africa and Russia, 13 Counts ft The Individuals were named as Oregory Korond of New York, president of the company, and Russell W. Mlchenor of Dumont, N, J., former treasurer. Biddle said that the alleged fraud was on contracts with the marltlmo commission totaling t,H $2,034,886. The Indictment was In 13 counts, he said, ono of which charged conspiracy to present falsa claims while each of the othor 12 dealt with speclflo charges Involving a single ship. The justice department al ready has Instituted proceedings to recover all of tho money al leged to have been fraudulently obtained, Bkldle said. L REPEAL PORTLAND. Jan. 26 m The milk consumers' committee today urged revision or reDeal of the state milk control law. In a lettei addressed to the state legislature, the committee, a n independent organization headed by Jcsslo M. Short, Port land, advocated that the milk board's power to establish retail prices bo abolished. Legislators were ursed "at tho very least to revise the law to permit price fixing only to producers." Comment on senate bill No. 6, to abolish the board and put the board's functions under the stato department of agriculture wos:. "Slmnlv transferrins ll ad ministration to another arjnAlrw tee would give the public in sufficient- assurance of remedy oi innerent and potential de fects." IT STAYS ffOk THE 5TH DAYH . . BUT HURRYl The Grandest Love Story of The Year! 'ATT DOESNT ASK " QUESTIONS... J it takes .',s, what it ("S - '.j wiril! s ' 1 V 6Mm Coopor'. Bcmibi Brafirifl COMING SOON ilk PATIIC KNOWIK r -A In.. 'i - in m . "V . VVHUAM OAROAN laUw AUMITTON JCIOMI COWAN WUUM BIMDIX mown flouti if V uiowio jioua. II 2 Phone 4514 Pft0lly lilt " j 'v