PAGE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON May U, 1048 FIST FIGHTS BREAKOUT AT AKRON IRKS (Continued From Page One) discussions with unnamed lead en of the union locals. Spontaneous The unions at the Firestone Tire & Rubber Co., the B. F. Goodrich Co. and the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. declared meanwhile in a newspaper ad vertisement that the work slop page "was quite spontaneous" after a war labor board wage decision, and added: . "An adequate machinery must be set up for the prompt and just settlement of grievanc es. Knowledge that this has not been done has caused the stop page. Confidence that it is be ing done will start production just as quickly again." Production Resumed These developments came as full production was resumed at the General Tire & Rubber Co., not directly affected by the WLB decision limiting wage in creases to three cents an nour, five cents less than approved by a WLB panel under the "Little Steel" formula. Partial production also re sumed at the Goodyear plants aa the company reported be tween SO and 75 per cent of its first-shift workers reported at 6 a. m. C overly Away Director Har vey Coverly of the Tulelake war relocation center is away from the project until June 5. Last Day 2 Hits! "GERONIMO" and "LIFE BEGINS AT 8:30" Tomorrow GINGER ROGERS l f BOB BURNS and "VARSITY SHOW" TUB lM .I.T.nl r '( UIOK POWELL V' Warlna'i Pinmvlvinlina HS For Ihoa information DIAL 4567 l H Now 4fe)av If Kg Laugh Hill JM?- 2 & i MICKEY ff & I R00NEY,N .-V?" M now p i$ Tht Vurt Molt 41 y 1 y jz i m oa'y'i Mickey Rooney g j j g& and m 'Cheyenne Roundup' 4- is Tomorrow .3j TH Big Army Mutlcal f I ptiilll'.'l"fo $a now I AfMiRDfH r I 1 "Shorlock Holmes i m ec,et Weopon" M Nabisco Jack Watson (left). National Super Market examine packages of Nabisco Shredded Wheat on the occasion of the products' Golden Anniversary. This cereal, which has proved popular with four generations of Americans, was consumed in 1942 in a quantity which, with biscuits laid end to end, would more than reach around the world. TO LEAD NEXT Klamath Kiwanis club direc tors voted Monday noon to place the Kiwanis club at the head of the war bond drive in Klamath Falls in, June. The club will lead the cam paign for a bond goal expected to be about $300,000, and also will do special work on payroll allotments. President Ed Ostendorf ap pointed three committees in charge. They are: Finance Keva Hutchinson, Lester Offield, Bert Thomas, E. S. Veatch and R. W. Oldenburg. Public affairs L. Orth Sise- more, Ray Bigger, K. M. Moty and F. E. Brake. National affairs Don Drury, John Ebinger, Burge Mason, Frank Howard and Chet Irving. These committees will meet at the Elk hotel at noon Tuesday to make further plans, for opening the campaign. Announcements will be made after that meeting concerning these plans. FOR SOVIET BASE (Continued From Page One) sian assault to be launched on Orel from Kursk.) Slight overnight improvements in Russian positions in the Ku ban area north of Novorossisk and at Lisichansk on the Donets river were reported in front line dispatches. Artillery action in the Kuban was the first men tioned there since Saturday. The great aerial warfare and assaults on supplies and com munications continued with 313 planes bagged during the week past at a cost of 61 Russian air craft, the midnight communique said. Rush Reinforcements The Germans continued rush ing reinforcements to the front in virtually every sector, piling more guns, men and tanks into areas where the long-expected summer blows may fall at any lime. Scouting, a possible prelude to heavy land action, was re ported in the Kuban, the Sevsk area, and in the Smolensk area of the western front. The recon. nalssance units destroyed sud- ply dumps, equipment, pillboxes ana mock houses, and took pri soners and supplies, the noon communique said. MILITARY FUNERAL MORS LEO BECK A military funeral will be ac corded Aviation Cadet Leo L. Beck, Jr., victim of an airplane accident last week, with the serv ices held at Whitlock's at 3 p. m. Tuesday, The body of Cadet Beck ar rived here Sunday, accompanied by Aviation Cadet Edgar George Malchow of War Eaele field. Lancaster, Calif., where Cadet Beck lost his life. E. E. Burroughs of the Latter Day Saints church will conduct the services. Soldiers from a nearby military post will assist, and there will be a firing squad at the grave. Part of the blBme for the Jump in potato price is due to the demand fcr seed potatoes. The eyes have it. KIMS CLUB BOND CAMPAIGN Celebrates Golden Anniversary Biicuit company, and Hal Mason, anlstant manager of Emll's EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued From Page One) the hope of union of the French factions. ' OEMI-OFFICIAL Chinese "sources" say the Japs are preparing what appears to be a large-scale offensive along the Yangtze river, aimed perhaps at Chungking itself. The Jap job is to knock China out before we can get there to help. ' THERE'S a big 41-hours-long state dinner in the Kremlin in Moscow. Our Joseph Davies. who car ried a letter from FDR to Stalin, sits on Stalin's right, and pro poses as a toast that ruined Stal ingrad be left as it is as a memor ial and a lesson, and a NEW city built four or five miles up or down the Volga. He speaks for 20 minutes along this line. The dispatches do not mention whether the Russians sparked to his suggestion. u. 3. AMBASSADOR to Mos cow Standley says in toast that friendship and co operation are a two-way affair (meaning, presumably, that both sides must give and take), which sounds like good sense. What the Russians said in re ply to Standley's toast (if any thing) isn t reported in the dis patches, but British Ambassador Sir Archibald John Clark Kerr comes back with a toast OKing the idea. THE party wound up with an nine, ,v.a,. A.,,,, womu uu Davies recent book "Mission to Moscow." The dispatches relate that Stalin, who had an inter preter handy, "seemed to enjoy the film greatly. If you've ever attended one of these formal good-will affairs, where everybody is determined to be nice to everybody else if it breaks a leg, you'll under stand. Stalin may have been bored stiff (as one Is apt to be with these long films that follow an already tiresomely long dinner and talkfest) but his obvious de termination to be friendly and cheerful regardless of the cost in boredom is significant and en couraging. There's plenty of evidence that he doesn't hesitate to blow up when he feels that way. 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 4193. Distributor Shell Heating Oils. 6-I3m FOR SALE 3-day-old heifer calf; also fat hog, ready to butcher. 8102 So. 8th St. Ph. 4043. 6-25 FOR SALE Cookstove with coils, radio-phonograph com bination, bedroom suite, Inner spring mattress, coil springs, electric washer, 7 ft, refriger ator. Marvin Say, Modoc Point. 8-26 FOR SALE 1940 DeSoto coupe. Phone 3074 or call at 1904 Etna street between 9 a. m. and 4 p. m. B-26 APARTMENT, close in, $37.80, light and water furnished. Small house, East Main, $22.60. Drew's Manstore. 8-29 LOST Gas ration book A. George L. Britt, Weyerhaeuser. 8-26 FOR RENT Sleeping apartment. Private bath. 319 East Main. Phono 4805. 4706U HIGH SCHOOL COMMERCIAL GRADUATES may put on some "finishing touches" at Interstate Business College This entitles you to the free service of our employment de partment. 432 Main. 8-24 IP AHU TROOPS BEAT (Continued From Pace One) fighter is missing. Another fight er was shot down, but the pilot was rescued." Success Not Told The navy gave no indication of whether the bombers succeed ed in their mission, presumed to have been bombing and strafing of American troops battling Jap anese ground forces on Attu. It was assumed by some offi cials, however, that the bombing flight was intercepted before it had opportunity to attack the ground forces. As in the first bombing raid there was no official word on the base from which the enemy bombers were operating. How ever, it was assumed that they came either from Paramushiro or from a carrier. Most fish have teeth, which they shed many times during their lives. New teeth are al ways grown to replace the old ones. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOUND Stray cow, white face, branded D 33 on right side. Rt 3, Box 604. Call 9193 days or 6997 nights. W. Waggoner. 5-27 FOR LEASE Large store room with full basement in Willits building, 430 Main, formerly, occupied by Balin Furniture Co. Inquire 503 Klamath ave nue. Phone 5880. 5-29 LOST Gas ration book belong ing to H. E. Hitson, Bonanza. 5-26 WANT TO RENT Two-bedroom apartment or house near S. P. depot. Write 1129 Walnut. 8-25 FOR SALE 4-inch power planer and motor, excellent condi tion. 4205 Bryant. 5-24 LARGE 3-room apartment 5686, 2219 So. 6th. 5-29 WANTED Hauling for flat bed truck. Phone 3927. 5-28 MESSENGERS WANTED Over 16 years. Postal Telegraph. 8-28 WANTED Experienced pen marker; laundry workers, ex perienced or Inexperienced. New City Laundry. Call In person. 8-28 GIRL, 13, wants work caring for children. Phone 6701. . 5-26 MALE HELP WANTED Seven- years or older to inspect re frigerator cars and make re ports. Part tirne work. Apply wfjs Co., at GN freight office, 5-26 HOUSEKEEPER to care for two children while mother works $40 per month, 1 day week off. Phone 6749 before noon or call at 3703 Altamont Drive after 8 p. m. 5-29 WANTED Good restaurant cook, 1 to 9 p, m. Phone 8493 between 8 and 9 p. m. 8-25 FOR SALE One week old bull calf; 8-year old saddle marc; cows and heifers. 8704 Ava lon St. 5-24 CLOSE IN furnished apartment, 2 rooms, bath. 636 N. 8th. 8-29 LOST Gas book A. Delia Wooden, 2141 Patterson St. 8-26 PIMPLED SKIN Uaa Bantlaaptlc Lotion, famous fnedlc-ated eowdflr baae, ao helpful to plmpltd lrrllatad akin, when due to external mmm. You'll love It. PrOmntJia Blfink..ntw BbnAn.. Three fiatterlns complexion ahad?i.' Fleah, Brunette, Cream, loo, SOo. TUtPTIC LOTION T BY GREATEST AIRJTTACK (Continued From Page One) ful, although accurate observa tion was obscured by clouds of smoke and flame. The raid was carried out In excellent weather. The magnitude of last night's operations became apparent early In the evening when wutcu- ers on the channel coast saw the procession of bombers pass non stop for two hours toward their targets. It gave life to the words of Winston Churchill before the American congress last weok suggesting that Germany and Italy might be bombed out of the war: Churchill's Words "Opinion .is divided as whether the use of air power could, by itself, bring about the collapse of Germany or Italy The experiment is well worth trying so long as other method are not excluded. Well, there is certainly no harm in finding out. But, however that may bo we are all agreed that the dam age done to the enemy's war po tential is enormous. - Neatly coordinated with the devastation in the Ruhr were powerful new blows against Italy by allied planes based in North Africa and the Middle East. The main targets were the rocky island outpost of Fantel- leria and the San Giovanni ferry terminal in Italy, leading to be sieged Sicily. 26th Raid This was the Mlh raid on Dortmund since the war started and the second saturation raid on tho city this year. In the two attacks, more than 3500 tons of bombs were dropped at the cost of 68 bombers. . The city was hit once In 1942 as part of general attack on ' the Ruhr, mission in which 11 planes were lost. . ' Three bombings in 1941 and 20 in 1940 were described as puny missions compared to the scale of present bombings. One pilot on last night's raid described the Inferno thus: "At one point during the raid there .was such a curtain of smoke overhanging Dortmund that it appeared to be a tornado cloud forming. Bright red fires danced in and out of this haze.' By The Associated Press London quarters said today the total of more than 2000 tons of bombs dropped on Fort- mund by the RAF. in the great est air attack in history last night was almost five times the amount dumped by the Ger mans in their greatest raid up on London April 16, 1941 which was calculated at just under 430 tons. It was eight times the 250 tons of explosives dropped by nazi airmen upon Coventry No vember 14, 1940. a raid which killed 300 persons and injured hundreds. Our Privilege By EARL WHITLOCK It is our privilege, during these most trying times, to re move a burden from heart al ready sorely 73 burdened and to lighten the load on shoul ders already bowed. That, after all, is what we are for a firm to turn to in the most ser ious emergency which human ity knows. A firm to look to for every flne-ness of service which has been evolved, by the mortuary profession, in its long, upward march toward higher standards. A firm to look to for unvarying rever ence, for never-failing distinc tion, for the ultimate, in beauty And a firm to look to, for all these things, at a price that- is always most considerate of the patrons financial limitations, Inspection and tho miking of arrangements in advance of ac tual need, are growing customs among forward-thinking folks, And you are welcome, at any time, to come In to discuss your probable requirements and to learn how beautiful a ceremon ial can be arranged for a very low cost. We Invite you to visit with the flowers In Memory Garden next Monday. Mr. Whltlock of the Earl Whltlock Funeral Home will comment on Memor ial Day. DOR MUNDHIT Davies Asks to Make Stalingrad Soviet Memorial (Continued From Pago One) who has just returned to Mos cow. Witnesses said Slulin who had an interpreter ut his ldo appeared to enjoy tho film Im mensely. Attending the dinner in tho Kremlin were a long list of hlitli soviet officials, who Included Foreign Comnilssur Vywchcsluv Mololov, Marshal Klemrntl Vor- oshllov, Air Marshal A. Novlkov, Admiral Nikolai G. Kuznotzov. Foreign Trade Conmilssnr A. 1, Mlkoyan and Stnto Defense Chairman Molinkov. The Red Cross is lnniigiii'llng a training clau in child cure open to all high school and Jun ior high school girls each morn ing this week from 0 o'clock un til 12 noon. The four-day course will In struct the girls in the care of children so that they will be able to obtain summer work In homes throughout Klamath Falls and the surrounding area. Fol lowing the course, some sort of employment agency will be set up so girls will be able to find employment. Classes will be held, In the Red Cross headquarters, starting Tuesday morning. ON HIGH AND IMPARTIAL V nnranB are proved less irritating to the nose and throat What happened when emokcrs chnngctl to Philip Morris? Here il is from clinical tests by doctors hi?h in their pro fession! Every rnso of irritation of nose or throat, duo to nmolc ing, cleared up completely or definitely improved. BRANDS , . ST ll.L Till! SAME rni-iimr. -'w I Tfl BLOCK BUSTING BATTERS PANTELLE R I A (Continued From Pago One) medium bombers hud been de stroyed on tho ground In a Mar auder raid on tho Oeclinomuium till- fluid of Sardinia Krlduy. Sardinian tiirgutx were blasted again by bomb-currying Lightn ing fighters yesterday ami u Mid dle Ka.-it communique disclosed that heavy MAT bombers smash ed Sutuiduy night at the lurry terminal of Sun Giovanni, on the toe of tho Italian boot. Tho allied bomb shower on Puntellerla, which lies in thu center of the Slellian channel, followed a well-laid pattern. Tho fighters and bombers carried out their Assignments with a pre cision that loft wusto and wreck- ago in their wukc. Highlights of the Island s day: (1) P--I0 Wurhawks attacked coastal gun emplacements. (2) B-25 Mitchells dumped their loads of explosives on the docks with an accuracy official ly described a.s excellent, llonibi hit medium-sized supply ship and four small craft, one of which exploded. Warehouses on tho south side of the harbor were set afire. CD B-26 Marauders and bomb-currylug Wiirhnwks struck BID MFlfffl AlffflOlItt. These distinguished doctors re ported their findings in medi cnl joiirnnls, to inform other doctors, To you proof that finer tasting Philip Monnis are much ensicr on the nose nnd thront far loss irritating! FIWSII, flNER tLAVOniil) SMOKE I'AilKAGK CHANGES at the air field, destroying build. Inii, pilling Hi dispersal area and scoring hits on both sides oQ tho bivouac area. w 4 The HAF'i two-engined Wellingtons took tip the work la the str-studdod night, dropping two-Ion demolition bombs and some lighter explosives on the air field and Installation of the huibor urea, starting a largo flu Fourteen Dead In Wreck of Crack Pennsylvania Train (Conl Inued From Page One) mile l""d limit on a 14dngrea curve. "Early chucks show Ihut the equipment and track were In good condition,"- the official said In a statement, "but defl nlte Indications are that the train was moving fuster than tho authorlied speed limit when tho derailment occurred." Investigations Start Investigations wore begun by the rnllrond, local officials and the federal bureau of investiga tion. Most of the piiMongurs only few hours before had been enjoying a guy holiday at shoraQ resorts. Many hud Just left sons and sweethearts stationed at At-, luntlc City. Tho engine, pulling 15-car train, left the rails on a sharp curve. Dimmed down an em bankment, dragging four of the curs behind it. The Toronto bourd of control requires city chauffeurs to wear derbies Insteud of raps. Hans Norland Aulo Insurance. DESPI TK KB