PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON April 0, 1048 1 1 DEMO LE ADER5 OF (Continued From Page One) charged James P. Byrnes, the economic stabilization director, with assuming the role of "the master strategist" tn a back stage battle by the administration for the more than one-third support Jt will need on a roll call to sus tain the veto. Byrnes Figures Byrnes' name also figures In proceedings of the agriculture committee, which after threats it would issue subpoenas to compel attendance of witnesses, finally got Price Administrator Prentiss Brown and Secretary or Agricui' ture Wickard before It an hour late for testimony on the Pace bill to boost parity standards by including all farm labor costs. Wickard told committee mem bers he had not come earlier when he was advised by Byrnes that Brown and Chester Davis, the food administrator, were not going to appear. Brown was told by the committee to be on hand Thursday morning for testi mony and excused till then. Brown and Secretary of Agri culture Wickard agreed to ap pear after Chairman Smith (D S. C.) described their failure to appear as a refusal and raised the possibility of subpoenaeing them. Committee Meets The committee met to consider the administration-opposed Pace bill to include farm labor costs in computations of parity prices, even as the senate approached a vote on overriding President Roosevelt's veto of the Bankhead bill to prohibit deduction of gov ernment benefit payments before fixing parity price ceilings. The author of the latter bill, Senator Bankhead (D-Ala.), said today the outcome of the at - tempt to override is in doubt Senate Majority Leader Bark ley said he had reported to Presi dent Roosevelt at a White House conference 'today that the chance of substantiating the veto "looks fairly good." . , Newt Welcome : He remarked that he thought some good news probably would be welcomed by the president. . , "Disrespect toward a senate committee" was charged to Brown and Wickard by Chap man Smith, but aides of the two officials denied this. Manning Shaw, executive as sistant to Brown, told reporters he had sought to have the price administrator excused from ap pearing before the committee to day because of other engage ments, and suggested that he ap pear later in the week, prefer ably Thursday. VITAL STATISTICS CHOCKTOOT Born at Light-foot- hospital, Klamath Falls. Ore., April 1, 1943, to Mrs. Rena Chocktoot, Beatty, Ore., a boy. Weight: 6 pounds 12 ounces. RENO DIVORCES RENO. Nev., April 6 (P) Di vorce suits filed here included: Neva B. Parker vs. Orvill R. Parker of Red Bluff, Calif.; mar ried PaisleyOre., Sept. 28, 1916; cruelty; granted. DON'T BE IMPATIENT KEEP WELL There it no substitute for health DON'T BE IMPATIENT If you have to watt a little longer to tee your doctor at hit office, don't grow Impa tient. Remember that he it carrying on tome of the work of other doctort who are in the armed forces. More than 30,000 doctort are now in the service. So, be patient, and do everything you possibly can to keep well. Your doctor'! nr. I tcrlptlon li com I mand to ui ta um. Ilth the hlaheii vn ... - - prescription service. CUMIN'S FOR DRUGS "Th Frltndlv Dru Rtnr." 8th end Main Phone 4514 CONFIDENT VETO SUPPORT i as Potatoes SAN FRANCISCO, April 6 (AP-USDA) Potatoes: 2 Califor nia, 3 Oregon, 21 Idaho arrived, 8 unbroken, 3 broken cars on track; no sales reported. LOS ANGELES, April fl (AP USDA) Potatoes: 1 California, 1 Florida, 1 Idaho arrived, IS un broken, 7 broken cars on track; one car arrived by truck; no sales reported. CHICAGO, April 6 (AP USDA) Potatoes: arrivals 56; on track 74; total U. S. ship ments S04; old stock; supplies vary light, track trading light; market stronger and unsettled; Wyoming Bliss Triumphs com mercials seed stock $3.95, table stock $3.49; Minnesota and North Dakota Bliss Triumphs commercials seed stock $3.25 55; U. S. No. 1, seed stock $3.63; Early Ohios commercials seed stock $3.56-65; Idaho Rus set Burbanks U. S. No. 1, $4.00; Maine Katahdins and Chippewas U. S. No. 1, $4.00. Missionary Circle The Kath- ryn Beattie Missionary circle will meet at the home of Mr. H. D. Bundeson, 2744 Altamont drive, on Friday, April 9, at 10:30 a. m. Special speakers will be Mr. and Mrs. R. E. McNaughton, missionaries from Japan. There is to be paper bag lunch. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR THE BETTER grades of fuel oils, accurate, metered de liveries, try Fred H. Heilbron ner, 821 Spring street, tele phone 4153. Distributor Shell Heating Oils. 4-30 FURNACES vacuum cleaned. Phone 7149. 4-10 CHIMNEY SWEEP 7149. Phone 4-10 OIL BURNER SERVICE Phone 7149. V. : 4-10 YOU CAN finish your home in beautiful tile, plank, and in sulation board; sheetrock or beaver board. .. Install new floors, finish interiors with no down payment Payments as low as $5.00 per month. Cope land Yards, 66 Main, phone 3197. 4-12 3-ROOM HOUSE, on pavement, $18. Call 6750. ..: 4-7 CALL 6750 for concrete work on your cemetery lot 4-12 FOR SALE 4-room house with i acre land. Shade and ber ries. Inquire 4079 Shasta way. 4-8 FOR SALE OR RENT 41 acres, good potato ground. 2219 Etna St. 4-8 FOR RENT Unfurnished two bedroom house. Hardwood floors. $16 if rented this week. Call 705 Uerllngs, near Upham. 4-8 FOR SALE Super Charger speed boat, 16 ft., Cruiserette ; type, six cyL motor. Also , small rowboat Phone 5551. 4-6 2-BEDROOM HOUSE Floor covering, gas range and heater, garage. $27.50. Adults. No pets. 2310 Orchard. Also 3-room, new, gas range, floor covering, garage, $22.50. Adults. 2312 Orchard. Phone . 4376. 4-8 FOR SALE 720-acre stock and grain ranch. Large house, barn, other buildings, all in good shape. 130 acres under cultivation. Spring water. Theo. W. Flackus, Dairy, Ore. 4-8 WANTED Woman or girl for light housework. Stay nights. .. Phone 3280 or call at 610 N. 11th street. 4-7 2731 Altamont Drive Nearly new, modern two-bed-door home with utility room, at tached naraffp. mitri nnf firo. place, lots of shrubs, flowers, fine lawn front and rear, gar den spot, etc. ' Price $3100. Terms. Drive by or see Bogue Dale 120 S. 9th St. Dial 6972 4-8 Hurry! . . Don't Delay! Poort Open 1:30 - 6:45 pffiimi TbiMigfitiistNttilDriRi if All Tim! ROBERT BRIAN IHILUn UUNLtVT ! Charles LAUGHTON I 1 uitirrn nnriiuiii with nHUCn OKCnnAn Ntm irvj Moult oartoon I N&. ' 1 W ... 11 T SET FOR GABESBLAST (Continued From Page One) Hurricane pilots who attacked quartet of tri - motored Italian Torpedo planes attempting to sink allied shipping off the Al gerian coast. ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, April 6 (If) Thirty-one enemy planes, 18 of them big Junkers transports be lieved bearing gasoline and sup plies to Marshal Rommel's Tu nisian army, were sent crashing into the sea by American Lightnings yesterday during one of the greatest air battles in this theater. In the course of the battle, which began with an allied at tack on a sea convey, an enemy destroyer was blown up and sev eral other ships were hit and set ablaze, a communique from Gen Dwight D. Eisenhower's head quarters announced. Land Patrols While land activities consisted of intense patrol operations with no major engagements develop ing, the air war continued at a fiery pace and resulted in the shooting down of 48 German and Italian planes the biggest bag the allies have scored in a single day in the Tunisian campaign. The British and Americans lost 12 of their aircraft. (The German radio, in a broad cast recorded by The Associated Press, said, however, that com petent Berlin quarters expected a "new mass attack" in Tunisia in all sectors south, central and north. (An important height, which the high command declared had been captured by the Germans, was said in a broadcast to be west of Kairouan in the central sector J ELECTS OFFICERS Officers for the coming year were elected by the Junior cham ber of commerce Monday night. Newly elected were Bob O'Sullivan, president, E. P. Lee, vice president, Dan Farris, secre tary, A. E. Woodruff, treasurer. Directors for the year are Wil liam Morander, Don Potter, El ton Smith, Paul Lee, James Perkin, Richard Maxwell, Troy. Cook and Ed Schneebecic. POTATO SHIPMENT TOTAL HITS 7211 Klamath basin potato ship ments have reached a total of 7211 carloads for the 1942-43 shipping season. Reports from the office of State-Federal Inspector Ross Au brey show that spud shipments reached 7170 prior to April 1. Thirty-two cars have been ship ped since that day. Shipments are considerably ahead of last year to date. OBITUARY HARRY OTTO HUGHES Harry Otto Hushes, for the last eighteen years a resident of (jedarville, California, passed away in this city on Tuesday, April 8. 1943 at 8 a. m. follow. ing an illness of several days. He was a native of Illinois and at the time of his death was aged 60 years and 23 davs. Survivins are his wife, Mrs. Emllie Hughes oi cedarville, California, and one brother, Victor Hughes of Fresno. California. The rmnln rest in the Earl Whitlock Fu neral Home, Pine street at Sixth. Notice of funeral to be an nounced at a later date. EIGH EW HURRY! LEAVES SOON! L. ' j? v?W 5., i f I u j i r ' 1 1 1 mi I 2i hszj w. vt n i i b i i i i i j r Bw'sr "Er in PrieesI POPULAR I0IINCI ToNV JL A JL J iii:iiiUliiiii.L.m!jiilli,Lgm, r, ,. ., TT , ,X , .... ':;.,i Hamilton Named Assistant Chief (Continued From Page One) Each councilman will appoint one Individual to serve on the committee, which Is scheduled to hold its first meeting some time the early part of May. Also the council was told ot the coming League of Oregon Cities convention which will take place May 12 and 13 at Portland this year. The council allowed a request of Foster and Kleiser to put up two signs, one on Oregon avenue and one on East Main street just this side ot Shepherd's music store. A broken down fence located on city property on Johnson between Fulton and Delta streets was referred to acting city engi neer, Frank Howard, who will report on it at next Monday's meeting. ENEMY SHIPPING BOMBED Of RAF (Continued From Page One) dium and two small ships about 10 miles north of Dieppe, hit ting the target with all its bombs and setting the leading craft afire. "R-Boats" Hit Four enemy "R-boats" were reported attacked with cannon fire near Le Touquet, and flashes of flame were said to have followed hits on two of them. RAF fighter planes returned over the channel from the direc tion, of northern France today, indicating new attacks on the German- occupied continent. Bombers also were believed to have been among the planes but they were hidden In clouds and only the heavy hum of their mo tors could be heard. U. S. army headquarters an nounced today that photographs showed Fortresses and Libera tors made many direct hits on the Erla Plane Engine Works in the Antwerp raid yesterday and that the resutling fires burned out the main building. Buildings Fired Many other buildings were set afire and heavy explosives dam aged several parts of the plant. The. nearby Gervaert Photo graphio Products plant, north west of the Erla Works, also was badly hit and the main building set afire. i The Erla plant was a small target compared with the great Renault factory outside Paris so successfully bombed by Ameri can aerial fighters Sunday, but is an important depot for repair ing slngle-engined German fight er planes operating on the west ern front. In peacetime, the plant manufactured Minerva au tomobiles. Antwerp Fired The German-controlled Paris radio, meanwhile, reported that large fires and great destruction were caused in Antwerp by the big force on American Flying Fortresses and Liberators which bombed the Erla Airplane Re pair works near that city yester day. The raid, said the broadcast. which was recorded by The As sociated Press, caused the death of 221 persons and Injured 385. The same source reported that casualties resulting from a mighty American air raid Sun day on the Renault Armament works near Paris had killed 300 persons and injured more than 700, From Chicago Don Weldler of the Weldler Lumber com pany, Chicago, is here on a busi ness visit to the Palmerton Lum ber company, with which his firm has connections. Esquire ECONOMY DRIVE PUTS CONGRESS ON LESS MONEY WASHINGTON, April 6 P) The Capitol Hill economy drive struck home today as the house appropriations committee recom mendation that congress get along with less money during the fiscal year starting next July 1 than It had for the current year. The congressional share of a $40,659,273 appropriation bill for the legislative establishment and the judiciary reported by the committee was $3,083,528 for the senate and $9,527,598 (or the house, an overall reduction ot $217,374 from current year fundi and $113,000 below budget esti mates. Other Items recommendod In cluded $2,070,680 tor the archi tect of the capltol, $3,886,360 for the library of congress, $8,422, 500 for the government printing office, $635,200 for the supreme court, $740,110 for miscellaneous courts, $10,758,300 for district courts and courts of appeals, and $267,800 for United States court administration. The total in the bill was $3,166,819 below current year appropriations and $1,145,077 below budget estimates. Reductions recommended by the committee ranged all the way from elimination ot 48 of fices of clerks of district courts to refusal ot funds requested by the architect to paint the capltol dome. The paint job, the com mittee commented, could be put off another year In difference to the war effort and the shortage ot materials. "The bill as presented li re duced to a pure malntenance- and-operatlon basis," the com mittee observed. (Continued from Page One) "in consequence of losses suffer ed on the day before.". Local Importance ("Fighting activity of local hnportance only," it, said, "was reported from the remaining front sectors." (In connection with the re ported Kuban operations, the Berlin radio broadcast a trans ocean dispatch asserting that German positions in this area were strongly consolidated.. ("Large parts of the German army, which, during the autumn and early winter were stationed In tho Caucasus, had been with drawn to the region of the Ku ban bridgehead so that German troops there would have at their disposal particularly strong ar maments for defense," the trans ocean dispatch said Threatening Cloud (This defense position was called by the broadcast a "threat ening cloud" over soviet posi tions in the Caucasus. The dis patch claimed 230 Russians were killed, more than 250 captured and 13 tanks destroyed in the latest action, and predicted new Russian attempts to break the German strong point.) This Kuban country itself of fers many natural obstacles to speedy progress, including salty marshes and swamps. Tho Kuban river is wide and at this time of year overflows its banks, flooding or washing away many roads. If it's a "frozen" article you need, advertise for used one in the classified, Soon! torn m Erybo)l Mart's the AH-Out, M-AnwHcM MstkalTrtafflph f M Twer OPA Indicts Seven Firms With Black Market Meat Sale NEWARK, N. J., April 6 (V) New Jersey headquartors of the office of price administration announced today seven mid west mul now corporations and 11 Individuals had been indict' ed here on charges of conspir acy to violate on a nation-wide scale federal regulations govern ing meat prices and quotut. Tho Indictments were re turned by a federal grand jury here last Tuesday and Impound ed since then. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued From Page One) table exceptions, management and labor aro staying on the job voluntarily and working in co operation with the government to win the war. That Is strong tsetlmony to the realism and sin cerity of purpose of the American people." MO one Is wholly satisfied with what we have accomplished In tho 16 months we have been at war, but that is largely due to the fact that tho task wo faced on December 7, 1941, was so Im mense that even the miracles of production we have brought about are not sufficient to meet the needs that exist, When we need so badly to do the Impossible, we can't bo smug ly satisfied merely with a re markable record. W7E ought to reallie, however, that tho remarkable record we have made Is duo WHOLLY to the co-operation we have been able to bring about and not at all to the quarreling and the back biting and the buck-passing we have indulged in, COME day the war will be over. " When it ends, we will face another task almost as hugo at that we are now engsgod In. When that time comes, It will again be co-operation that will enable us to meet and overcome the difficulties we will face when we tackle the job of rebuilding our country AND A WORLD that have been sadly wrecked by war. PROM where wo sit now, It looks very much at if this generation and the next will NEVER be able to afford the luxury of quarreling and fighting and refusing to co-operate. In the situations we will bo called upon to fnce, such things will be plain, inexcusable EX TRAVAGANCES. Arraignment Set In Baby Slaying MEDFORD. Ore., April 6 VP) District Attorney George W. Ncilson said today Sgt. Bernard J. Lotka, 23, and his common law wlfc. Tllllo Mlchnnalskl, 22, both of Cleveland, O., will bo arraigned In justice court tomor row on charges of first-degree murder In the slaying of their 10-wcck-old son. Lotka and Miss Michanalskl will not be permitted to see each other, Nellson said, until the case Is placed before the Jackson county grand jury. The Jury will be called early next week. Willard Ward Here Willard Ward, pharmacist's mate in the navy with headquarters at Se attle, is spending a few days here. New Today! 2 Swell Treats Hit A COUPLE OF CHAMPS! Tumi li ml " S3 t .j Vy y fc& ""2nd To n- ! 1 n .' -V 4! R ' j Quit Newt"''" - Stowaway -",,-'f -;v1 r"Ff.Tf Jtmcs Edward Peltory, 14, ot Chnrleston, W. Vu , found to he townwoy with draftees bound for Great Lakes, III., wat given a chocolnte br and sent home to await his seventeenth birth day, when he con join th Navy. THREE-HOUR RAID (Continued From Page One) dung stubbornly to the neigh borhood of Kavleng, New Ire land, ck'.spito a three-day allied bomber pounding which was re ported yusterday to .have "de stroyed or dispersed" one con centration, Allied airmen sank or severe ly damaged seven enemy wur craft and flvo cargo ships In the Kavleng raids but recon naissance yesterday disclosed both warships and merchantmen wcro in tho area again. A light cruiser, probably ono of those hit Sunday, . wat reported aground on the bench. Roosevelt to Study More Machinery For Farmers WASHINGTON, April 6 (ZD Speaker Rnyburn (D-Tex.) said today President Roosevelt had Informed congressional leaden at o White ilou.io conference that he would give his porsonal atten tion to the problems of obtaining more allotments for farm mach inery, "The thought Is to get In creased production of farm equipment and wider distribu tion," Rayburn told roportcrs. "Tho president Is going to give his personal attention to the question of having more Iron and steel allotcd to tho manufactur ers of such machinery." IOtmfM!UtKWlllIIM4IH itfppir; 2 SMASH HITS , . lit, SCAT TERGOOD tarring EXHIBIT STRENGTH (Continued From Poge Ono) round-trip flights ot 1000 mlloi or moro.) A communique from U. S. hnadquurters ould today that photographs showed heuvy de struction in the raid Sunday on an oil refinery below Itangooii. A pnworhoute, distillation building and oil tanks were hjt, Tho refinery, dostroyed when the allies lot tills area to the Japanese, had Just been rocon- , struclcd und had been expected to supply badly-needed oil sup pllet for the enemy, i Vlilt Mendaltv While tho British wore blast ing at Rangoon at the southern end ot tho main north-south rail way yesterday, the American filers visited Mandulay tt Its northern end on mission of ficially described li "success ful." Liberators on thlt American j raid scored hits on railway sJ buildings and track tidings. Largo fires Indicated an oil dump also felt the weight of bombs. An ontl-oircraft battery, firing from insldo Fort Duffer in, was destroyed. CONFIRMED WASHINGTON, April 6 W) Tho senate confirmed today the noniinution of Edward M. Con nelly at United Stutet attorney for tho eastern district of Wash- Ington. Ho succeeds Lyle D. Keith, resigned. Insurance, nothing but insur ance, Hani Norland. 118 North 7th. BHrf Opin 1 1 - ' III I u MVSTtnV ISA KAIDln" tsor fon hioht" TOMORROW! It's that "icaHorbram" again . . . mor riotous (ban verl I with JUDY CANOVA ' FRANCIS IEDERER ttiraucncim . INO IMAIH NITI New Today BACK AGAIN! GUY KIBBEE tt fi i I I i 9