Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 28, 1943, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
Mar S8, 1941
Flood Waters Reach Kansas, Farms Flooded; Many Homeless
It Can Do Everything Except Fly
' .4 3
TO
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A
I I I 1hilWiWIII 1 1 1 HI 1 ,1 I
(Continued From Page One)
(Continued From Page One)
GERMAN WAR
REDS
NAZIS
mwm 11 wj
INDUSTRY HIT
RO
WAR
BY DUSK RAID
IN KUBAN ARE
f ... .
Duesseldorf, both described as
"of very great strength."
Continues
The offensive was continued
by daylight today, RAF fight
ers sweeping out at dawn to
ward northern France.
At Jena, the speedy Mosqui
toes struck chiefly at the Carl
zelss Instrument factory and the
Schott glass works. First re
ports said both were sharply
damaged. The works are rated
as the most important of j their
kind In Germany.
Mosquito Raid
Darting out 500 miles from
their British bases, two forma
tions of the Mosquitoes reached
Jena just before dark and
swooped down through a bal
loon barrage to 200 feet to make
the attack despite intense op
position from ground guns.
Three bombers were lost,
British fighters on patrol
, sweeps over northern France
and Belgium soon after dusk
last night destroyed two enemy
fighters and shot up communi
cations targets. One pilot was
credited with attacking two lo
comotives, bombing canal lock
fates, damaging two tugs and
a barge and strafing a contin
gent of German troops.
Britain passed the night with'
ut a single assault
If you want to sell it phone
The Herald and New "want
ads," S124.
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. 6-1 3m
WILL PAY CASH for 20 acres
of alfalfa land in alfalfa. No
buildings. Close in. R. C.
Prudhomme, 5102 So. 6th St
. Phone 4943. t 5-29
WANTED Woman to care for
child in own home, 9 to 6
week days. Preferably St.
Francis Park. Apply evenings
4435 Boardman. 5-29
TWO NEW REFRIGERATORS,
17 cubic foot capacity, espe
cially suitable for ranch, dairy
or restaurant No priority
needed. J325. Merit Washing
Machine Service, 611 South
6th. 5-26
Near Tower Theatre
' Two-bedroom plastered house
With bath, dinette, glassed rear
porch, concrete foundation, ga
rage, gravelled drive, lawn and
trees. Lot 37x100 to alley, on
hard surfaced street. Price only
9iuu, terms.
Bogue Dale
Real Estate and Real Insurance
120 S. 9th Tel. 6972
JERSEY COW FOR SALE Six
gallon. Nice family cow. 1833
Derby St. 5-29
FOR SALE OR TRADE Truck-
load of registered Hereford
bulls, yearlings and up. S. P
Stockyards. Phone 9038. W.
R. Brauner. 6-30
WANTED One cook, two wait
resses. Top salaries and board
Apply in person. Klamath Bil
liards, 630 Main. 5-29
MIDDLE-AGED HOUSEKEEP
ER wants work. Room, board,
nd wages, preferably no chil
dren. Phone 7242. 5-30
FOR RENT Adults. 3-room un
furnished, newly renovated
house. Shower, Phone 6322
daytimes. Call 622 Lowell
evenings or Sunday. 5-29
PONDOSA APTS. Klamath
ana Market Sts. 6-27m
Hot Springs Home
Good two-bedroom with fin.
ished basement, wood burning
furnace, fireplace, dandy yard
for children away from traffic
nd other hazards. Excellent
view of the city and out of the
"Black Snow" area.
Bogue Dale
Real Estate and Real Insurance
120 S. 9th Tel. 6972
FOR SALE 8-room modern
house, concrete foundation,
large lot. Three blocks from
Mills school, 2437 Garden St,
Call Friday or Saturday 6:30
to :ao p, m., 2 to 4:30 p. m
Sunday. 5.29
FOR SALE OR TRADE Pure
bred Shire stallion, 5 years
old; gray work mare, 1700 lbs,
8 years old, nice and gentle;
black saddle mare, 8 years
01a, 1200 lbs, well reined and
gentle. Will trade any or all
for cattle, hogs or sheep.
Phone 5426. 703 North 9th.
i 8-2B
Hood wntera spreading through the Midwest have already tenoned as far west as Kansas, flooding fnrmn and
halting train traffic Above Is a farm northeast of Cot feyvlUe, Kans,, completely surrounded by unruly Vcrdi-
gris River waters. Official 17. S. Army Air Force photo.
Harding Pays
Unsung Heroes of Raids
Captain John Harding, vet'
eran Flying Fortress pilot, paid
high tribute in a talk to the
Elks lodge Thursday night to the
unsung heroes of the bombing
raids the enlisted men and
non-coms in the bomber crews.
His gunners and bombardiers
get little publicity, they have
tough jobs, and they share the
risks, but they don't complain
and they perform their tasks
magnificently, the former Klam
ath football player told his au
dience.
Recalling a raid from an Afri
can base where several of the
crew were hurt and one was kill
ed, he said that not a whimper
came from the wounded men.
Harding and his co-pilot were
struggling to keep their crippled
plane aloft, and it was not un-
Tulelake Area
Gets Mexican
Farm Laborers
(Continued From Page One)
Yakima. Wash. He has also had
considers eie experience with
prison parolees.
Although there is some lan-
guage amicuiiy, iuitcneu re
ports that the Mexicans are as
cooperative as any men he has
ever worked with.
To cite an example, the man
ager says, even though he does
not say anything to them, the
men volunteer to clean up the
quarters, wash dishes, and gen
erally make themselves as use
ful as possible during thelr
spare time.
The men are housed and fed
army style, sleeping in barracks
and eating in a central hall. No
Mexican families are in the
camp. All the men are either
single or have left their fami
lies behind.
Farmers in the Tulelake re
gion who have the Mexican la
borers working for them are
French Johnson, G. W. Osburn
and sons, Dan Crawford, Ben
Schulti, C. L. Vernon, Weston
Lyons, C. W. Fensler, Paul
Snyder, M. M. McConnell, Vern
Frailey. Clifford Schuck. E. R.
Long, O. C. Hedgepath.
rne Mexicans have been
brought to this locality mainly
tnrougn the efforts of Chester
Main, president of the Tulelake
orowers' association. I
Norma Pins Wings on Husband
IZ ? i x
Movie Star Norma
her husband, En.lan Mh A,
u 'ft, ' ' rvfen
mi rtil
frSfrJita? I E a"",pU ' ,h ,U,,0n ,00k
approvingly. Ensign Arrouga was ski champion of the inter-
national Olympics held In Oarmany.
Tribuie to
til the situation had cleared that
one of the men called him up
to tell him that another was bad
ly hurt. The informant said not
a word about his own wounds.
'With men like that fighting
for you, you can t lose this war,'
he declared.
Harding said he had done a
stint as waist gunner, and he
knew what the man at that post
goes through. The temperature,
he said, dropped to 45 degrees
below zero.
The speaker gave the Elks a
story of a typical bombing raid
in which he described 100 Fly
tag Fortresses flying in forma-
Hon over the Mediterranean,
down on the "deck" a few feet
above the water. He said he was
at the tail end of the group, and
tne signt 01 those massive ma
chines spread out before him
was unforgettable.
Harding answered many ques
tions put to him by the mem
bers of the audience concernine
types of planes, day and night
bombing, the American bomb-
sight, etc.
Lieutenant Charles Zumr,
xuamatn tails man now with
the anti-aircraft service in Texas,
paid a visit to his home lodge
ana 101a 01 nis service experi-
ences.
Bilbo Ready to
Conduct Filibuster
For Poll Tax Bill
WASHINGTON, May 28 (IP)
Senator Theodore Gilmore Bil
bo of Poplarville, Miss., took a
deep breath today and an
nounced he is ready to conduct
an 18-month, one-man filibuster
against the anti-poll tax bill if,
and when it is called up in the
senate.
He came right out and said
"filibuster," too. Some states
men shy away from the word
even while engaging in oratory
patently designed to kill time
but not the little democrat
from Poplarville who helped
talk to death a similar measure
in the closing days of last ses
sion.
Eighteen states. Alaska. Ha
waii and Puerto Rico require full
cmzensnip as a requirement to
taking examinations to nractice
medicine.
ST..' "Z.lV.a. TKff "
PEACE RETURNS TO
(Continued From Page One)
dissatisfaction with war labor
board handling of wage disputes
Production virtually halted
at the Marlin Rockwell ball and
roller bearing plant, largest war
production factory In James
town, N. Y where 1800 CIO
United Automobile Workers Join
ed in a strike unauthorized by
tne union. The men protested
hiring of workers from outside
at what they said were higher
wages than they received.
The American Federation of
Labor, meanwhile, lost one of its
most powerful allies. The Inter
national Association of Machin
ists announced it would with
draw from the federation May
31, contending its jurisdictional
rights over certain work, involv
ing the carpenters' union, had
not been protected by the AFL.
Their ranks number about the
same as the United Mine Work
ers now seeking to return to
membership in the AFL.
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS .
(Continued From Page One)
ently last) Jap group on Attu.
The Japs, via the Tokyo radio,
are muddying the news waters
and trying to make Americans
believe that Washington is lying
to them.
Listen, if you like, to the Jan
radio. You'll find it amusing
at times and a bit ridiculous at
others. But keep your fingers
crossed. Remember the Japs
are seeking only to poison our
minds NEVER to inform us.
""THERE has been no word at
A -M f is... - 1 1
, 44u.il omnia jui uHjrs, una
little enough from China, where
the Japs are pushing an expedi
tion up the Yangtze river toward
Chungking and sending out raid
ing parties into the rice prov
inces to the south seeking to
destroy China's principal food
supply.
This Jap expedition seems to
be basically similar in its pur
pose to Sherman's march to the
sea in our own war between tho
states.
THERE are times when no
news is good news. Here on
the Pacific Coast, we have the
reeling that lack of news from
the Japs in China and Burma
bodes no good for our side.
We hope, of course, we are
wrong as to that.
'J'HE Jap has been strangely
quiet for a long time, which
more or less naturally leads us
to suspect that he may be up to
something big.
Again, we can only hope we
are wrong.
Hans Norland Auto Insurance,
NEW TODAY
on mo
ROY
ROGERS
1INDA HAVII
"OABBY" HAYIS
2ND HIT
aionai
IAHDERJ
f, tOM
COP-WAT
lANDOttH
100 IT lf
tzmxa
quiet on the remaining sectors
ot tne eastern front.' )
Both the midnight and tho
noon communiques were silent
on the fighting northeast of
Novorossisk, where the German
radio declared nt least 10 Rus
sian divisions and a great wedge
of tanks was trying to batter
through a narrow sector under
cover of more than 200 planes,
Temporary Gains
Tho German broadcast said the
Russians scored temporary gains
yesterday which were wiped out
in German counterattacks by
nightfall.
Front line dispatches, how
ever, declared the red army had
repelled a big group of enemy
Infantry trying to Improve its
positions and said the red air
force and the German plane
fleet were fighting great battles
in the same area.
The Russians reported, they
warded off the nazts, downing 64
German planes In one day and
losing only 13 Russian craft
meanwhile.
West of Rostov the red army
was reported to have taken the
initiative in violent local com
bats which resulted In the cap
ture or an Important hill and a
general improvement of the Rus
sian position.
Picnickers Drop
Like Flies From
Poisoned Food
OLYMPIA, May 28 (;P A
laboratory report was awaited to
day on the source of apparent
food poisoning which caused par
ticipants In a rural school picnic
near here yesterday to "drop
like flies on the school ground."
An estimated 100 Dersons out
of approximately 145 at the Mc
Lane school's year-end celebra
tion were stricken shortly after
partaking of the picnic lunch.
Seventeen were brought to an
Olympic hospital for overnight
confinement.
Dr. Reed Ingham said the ail
ment was some form of food
poisoning, but declined to ex
press an opinion as to the source.
Fire Threatens
Oakland Shipyards
OAKLAND. Calif.. Mav 28 IIP
A six-alarm fire in Oakland's
warehouse district today swept
over a square city block and
threatened the huge Moore Dry
dock company shipyards.
Every available piece of fire
fighting equipment in the city
uirnea out to light the blaze.
I he lire enveloped a lumber
mill, the Western Paper and Box
company yards and the ware
house of the Grandma Baking
company at Fifth and Magnolia
streets.
Three Escape From
Prison Flax Yard
SALEM, Ore., May 28 (P)
Three prisoners escaped from
the Oregon state penitentiary
flax yard here at mid-afternoon
today.
Two of them overpowered a
guard, forced him into car and
took him with them. Prison au
thorities identified the two es
capees In the car as Merlin Gene
Kensler unH rmla 1-1
. " uixin,
Cann. The guard was Identified
oniy as reeman.
NlWt MUII0AL N0VILTV
BTHV
f RECORD DAYlX
Latent thing in pilot training Is this motorized pre-fllnht trainer
which enn bunk, turn, and otherwise simulate actusl night. Oper
ating on a pivot, the tiny ship never leaves the ground, attains
"speed" of 40 milos per hour.
Mississippi Waters
Slowly Recede After
All-Time High Mark
(Continued From Pags One)
slppl was receding above Cape
Girardeau tho danger there was
not past. The rcmninlna leveos
he said, were saturated and a
sudden washout could put thous
ands of additional acres under
water.
The crest of the Arkansas
was moving on from Little
Rock to Pine Bluff, Ark., after
Inundating SO blocks of the for
mer city,
Below Pine Bluff the stream
is flanked by huge levees that
the army engineers believed
would be able to hold It.
Military Affairs
Committee Downs
Kilday Draft Bill
WASHINGTON. May 28 (Pi
The senate military affairs com
mittee today practically killed
tne Kilday bill which would
have put selective service quotas
on a statewide basis, established
induction categories with fathers
last, and set aside Manpower
Director McNutt's recent work-
or-fight order.
Without a dissenting vote, the
committee agreed to "lay the bill
on the table." Chuirmnn Rcy.
nolds (D-N.C.) remarked that 009
times out of 1000 a tabled bill
never was brought up again.
"In fact, you might say thu
bill was voted down," he said.
Eden Promises
Ail-Out Bombings
Of Italy, Germany
PORTSMOUTH, England, May
28 HP) Foreign Secretary An
thony Eden declared today that
Germany and Italy would bo
bombed "until tho utter defeat
of the nazl and fascist regimes
ana an they stond for."
Ho emphasized particularly
mat Italy "now lies wide open
to air attack" and that attack
"will be pressed home by all
tne means in our power.
Jury to Consider
Baby Smothering
MEDFORD, Oru May 28 (IP)
With the closing defense argu
ments completed, the case of Til
lie Michalski. 22. nf Rlevelnnri.
on trial on a first degree murder
charge in connection with the
smothering of her 10-wccks-old
son, was cxpccica to go (0 the
jury today.
Bv I Doors
Now! p?
lt30-6i4S
CARTOON
NOVELTY
NEWS
r
("!r I
DIKKKlt I
1 'OHM' "'I
SALES TAX VIEWED
TO
(Continued From Page One)
ure and the two bodies will
vote on it next weok.
Compromise Seen
Leaders expect the comnro
mlse to win quick approval of
nouse aim senato. Authorita
tive sources said however that
tho three house confurees who
voted against the plan would 110
ciown ilia line in opposition to
it. They wore Reps. Dlnscll
(DMich.), Disney (DOkla.) and
Cooper (D-Tenn.).
If passed and approved by
president Roosevelt, the com
promise bill would yield, ac
cording to treasury estimates,
$3,006,000,000 more In the 1044
fiscal year than present rev
enue.
Mayo Announces
Candidacy for
Engelbright Post
ANGELS CAMP, Calif., May
28 OP) State Senator Jesse
Mayo, Calaveras county publish
er, today announced his candi
dacy for, the unexpired congres
sional term of the late Rep.
Harry Englcbrlght.
Mrs.' Grace Jackson Englc
brlght, widow of the late con
gressman, announced her can
didacy yesterday. Both are re
publicans, but they will run as
independents at a special elec
tion in the second congressional
district In conformity with state
law.
I believe the government will
have greater power after tho
war and that this power will be
used In some way to Integrate
and not to destroy Individual
ism. Atty. Oen. Francis Bid-die.
VO' 0 TURBANI
IIN4 Maam'lp.'h J
CROSBHOPE
A Paramount Picture
PELICAN
U.S. TROOPS
ATTACK POCKET
N E AHKOHIES
(Continued From Page One)
ell medium bombers and War
hawk (Curtiis P-40) flghtere
made three attacks on Klska,
bombing the Japanese main
camp area and runwuy, Numer
ous hits wero observed.
In an utlark on Klska (re
ported In linvy department com
munique number 301) the War
hawk fighters participation were
manned by Royal Canadian air
force pilots,"
The navy Issued no reports on
Attu fighting later than Wednes
day. A spokesman said, howev
er, that "every bit of Informa
tion we have Indicates It Is continuing."
Allied Bombers
Slash Anew at
Sardinian Bases
(Continued From Page One)
ensued. The Marauder gunners
shot down seven of the attackers.
Tho P-40 Warhawk escort ac
counted for six others.
The only American loss In the
buttle, In which enemy fighters
pursued the bombers to within
29 miles of the North African
count, was aWurhawk which fell
Into the sea. The pilot was res
cued.
Post-War Farm
Prices Concern
Food Conference
(Continued From Page One)
assure farm lenders that the pro
gram being projected here was
based on the premise that farm
ers would get equitable prices
for a "much greater output of
commodities than heretofore pro
duced."
NEW
TODAY
STARTS
MIDNIGHT SATURDAY
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