PAGE TWO WITNESS SAYS BLANK ON SHOOTING (Continued From Pffge One) worked. He told of his first mar riage, and the death of his first wife. He said he started to work here for the Weyerhaeuser Tim ber company and in 1929 went to Bly, where he obtained a job with the Ewauna Box company Met at Dance It was In 1932, he said, he met Erma White at a dance at Bly He met her again at Bly when he was working for the Yamsay Land and Cattle company. Later, he said, he met her again on a hunting trip, when he gave her a deer. From then on, he said. their acquaintance grew. Titus said Erma visited him frequently when he was in the hospital after losing his arm in a woodsaw accident. He testified he received $2400 in cash and monthly payments as compensa tion for the accident, and -that he gave Mrs. White, by that time Mrs. Carstenson, $800 to go Into business at Bly. . Marriage Told . The defendant said Mrs. Cars tenson approached him with re gard to marriage, and they were wed on February 27, 1937. Titus at that time was working as cook at the county jail. Titus said they prospered, bought more property, and ev erything was "fine" until she started drinking. The first real trouble they had, he said, oc curred after a man named Des mond took a room in the Titus building. He claimed he saw Mrs. Titus come out of Des mond's room in an intoxicated condition. . Desmond Difficulties Titus asserted that Desmond then moved to another place. His wife, he said, would stay away from home all night on various occasions. Later, he said, he found Mrs. Titus had gone with Desmond on several occasions. The defendant said he discov ered that Mrs. Titus was making frequent telephone calls from Bly, where Titus was telephone agent, to various hotels in Klam ath Falls. Titus testified his wife's drink ing led to trouble in the opera tion of the liquor agency which he held at Bly. , State Rests ' The state rested its case Fri day afternoon about two o'clock and defense proceedings were opened with the testimony of two state police officers, Hugo Leyva and then Mark Sullivan, who had known both Mr. and Mrs. Titus for several years. Defense Attorney J. C. O'Neill, attempting to bring- out that Titus was temporarily deranged at the time of the alleged shoot ing, questioned the two men as to whether they had noticed any change in the defendant's de meanor or behavior previous to the shootings. Both Leyva and Sullivan said they thought that he was less cheerful and rather despondent. It was also brought out under questioning that Mrs. Etta Meek, Erma's aunt, had asked both men Ends Tonight! . "Little Joe - The Wrangler" tn "Moonlight in Havana" ' TOMORROW! 2nd Smash Hitl Excitement Thrllli Daring Adventure! HUMPHREY BOGART H THE THRU MfSQUlTURS P , Q. ON A RAMPAGE!' U 1 1 at one time to talk to Erma about her drinking. Distinguish Right L. Orth Sisemore in cross ex amination asked the two wit nesses whether they thought Titus during his period of de spondency was able to distin guish right from wrong. Both men said they thought he could : John O'Neill, who lived across the street from the Titus resi dence, testified that he had last seen Titus in his wife s confec tionary about a quarter to twelve on the night of the shout ing fray. He said that Titus talk ed to several persons in the store and seemed to be a little ex cited. Knew of Trouble - The witness further testified that he knew that there had been trouble between the Titus couple and that the defendant had acted sadder and that he did not talk and joke as he used to, He said that Mrs. Titus had been gone from Bly for a few days before the fourteenth. . Charles E. Seavey was brought to the stand to testify as to long distance telephone calls made be tween Bly and Redding and Bly and Klamath Falls. The name, Desmond, appeared on many of the long distance call slips read by Seavey. ''A'- . Tells of Visit;;;:"., A friend of the Titus family and resident of Bly, L. L. Grif fin, said that Erma and Desmond came to visit at his home one evening, and that they had been drinking. Griffin said that Titus had once wanted to borrow a pis tol from him. When asked if he had loaned the gun to the defen dant, the witness said no. Mrs. George Stevens, operator of the Kern hotel, was next called to the stand by the de fense. From a registration card which she had with her, Mrs. Stevens read that a T. E. Des mond had stayed at her hotel from December 2 to December IS. She said that he occupied a room, on the. second floor. She continued that Mrs. Erma Titus and Mrs. Etta Meek had stayed in room 15 on the other side of the hotel on December eighth and ninth. Registers at Hotel Operator of the Lake hotel. Mrs. Hazel Roney,; stated that Erma Titus, registered under the name of Mrs. H. A. Holmes, had stayed at that hotel from Janu ary 10 to the 16th in room 28. She said that Desmond had stay ed in her hotel some time in De cember, but was not staying there at the time when Mrs Titus was a tenant there. BAM ATTACK (Continued From Page One) : assault on the Velizh sector be tween Smolensk and Velikie Lu- ki. The Germans admitted a break-through, but said the red soldiers were later thrown back. The midday communique said the German attack on the Donets front, south, of Balakleya, was thrown back after a short en gagement. The Germans left 60 dead and a great quantity of abandoned arms, it said. OcctorOu PUCKER UP JOIN l ;-. UNE 20 SET AS DEADLINE (Continued From Page One) Monday, June 7, up to and In cluding June 20. This action was taken to protect your union and its membership. Let each mem ber cooperate with this policy, "By order of the national pol icy committee." The telegram was signed by President John L. Lewis, vice president John O Leary and Thomas Kennedy, secretary treasurer. , , Truce Seen ;' Although the message did not use the word truce, the effect of the June 20 limitation ap peared to be the equivalent of a truce. Operators as well as miners pointedly criticized the war la bor board today after being ad vised that the board is insisting on a strict interpretation of its order' that contract negotiations shall not go forward until the men return to work. ; Ready for Talks Both sides declared their readi ness to proceed with bargaining but Ezra Van Horn, conference chairman, said he had been ad vised that the board would , not recognize the negotiation!) until coal production is resumed; Van Horn, said the conference, there fore, recessed and that mean while efforts would be made to get the board to relent Charles O'Neill, who Is spokes man for the . Northern Appala chian operators, said the WLB was "a wholly unwarranted and unnecessary obstruction of this conference." Lewis commented that "we regard the action of the board, as reported by chairman Van Horn, as being mischievious and malicious and complete notifi cation of our . previous appraisal of the board s actions. ALGIERS, June 5 CP) The Stars and Stripes, American sol dier newspaper, in its North Af rican edition published today a survey of comments of U. S troops on the strikes back home, especially the coal mine walk out. (The survey obviously- was conducted before it was known that the mine union had ordered the strikers back to work on Monday.) ; ; "Almost 90 per cent of the men urged drastic government action against the strike leaders as well, as against the strikers themselves," , the army news paper said. PITTSBURGH. June 5 MP) The Carnegie-Illinois Steel corporation,- biggest, subsidiary of the U. S. Steel corporation, re ported today eleven of its blast furnaces have been closed be cause of a lack of beehive coke, production of which stopped dur ing the coal strike. . If it's a "frozen" article you need,' advertise for a used . one in the classified. J FOR DECISION THE FOX IS BACK AGAIN! THE FUN REP P00D IT IN DIXIE! -HaH'iaMVHveBavevwwHBBejwwpwaW1 HE'S A FEARLESS, DAUNTLESS, UNERRING CRMME BUSTER WHO FAINTS AT THE WORD "MURDERI" RED'S A SUPER STUPOR-SUUTH IN THE rtlNNIEST PICTURE HE WAS EVER SCARED on mxtiQ ANN Rimirornpn.ftrnDftr RaMrorirr.ftirv iiDoct DIANA LEWIS PETER WHITNEY "Starts Tonight at Midnight HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Japs Bury Ashes Of Instigator of , Pearl Harbor Blow By The Associated Frm . , The ashes of Fleet Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto were buried in the cemetery of Tama village near yTokyo, today after a cost ly and impressive state ccro mony intended to perpetuate the hero legend of the man who designed the attack on Pearl Harbor. ' SMOTHERED BY (Continued From Page One) ed by a formation of enemy fighters, four of which were shot down. In Cairo, Col. Keltlf K, Comh ton of St.' Joseph, Mo., who led the Grottalgie attack, said he rarely had seen more accurate bombing. "There were scores of fires which sent great pillars of black smoke Into the sky," he recalled, "we completely smothered the area with bursts." .Crewmen said a number of grounded ' aircraft were de stroyed. ir '(Continued From Page One) honor of naming the June fight er planes added an interesting feature to the program.. While sales at the time were not heavy, Kiwanis bond lead ers, Bert S c h u 1 1 x and Don Drury, said they, felt the show was well worth while in drama tizing the bond campaign and building up- interest in the in-. ter-town competition that will produce results later in the month. Many of the purchases were made by Klamath Falls people and were credited to Henley, Merrill, Malta, Chiloquin-Fort Klamath and Gilchrist. Bly Beqtty, K e n o, Sprague River and Bonanza purchasers failed to show up, but Kiwanis sup porters of those towns promised they would make, -up for that deficiency with increased activi ties in the next few days. All bond purchasers in the county were reminded to mark on their bond applications the name of the town to .which they want the purchases credit ed.' ; Inadvertently, the names : of Elmer Balsiger ' and Elbert Veatch, Henley s Kiwanian team. were left out of yesterday's story. They reported they are already in there pitching. aiic vp.cDB mcv lias nima, peculiar growths on the roots. STIFF Ml GHOTTALGIE 4 n . v2N I. JTIVAN SIMOM '"Sy i "isr HSU! mm heads ARGENTINA'S GOVERNMENT (Continued From Page One) taken to carry on'l the aims of the military movemont. . Lives Lost Argentina's one-day revolution cost the lives of about SO soldiers, it was disclosed today as the new military junta headed by pro ally Gen. Arturo Rawson ban ned all celebration of the over throw of President Ramon Cas tillo's government and ordered the country back to work. 1 Leaders of the revolt slept la to In the pink-tinted government house after attending a wake for the soldiers, who were killed in yesterday's only serious clash at the naval engineering school. It previously . had been an nounced that only one soldier and 14 civilians were killed as 7000 troops under Rawson marched into the city and forced Castillo and his cabinet to floe. Castillo Flats The Argentino minesweeper Drummond, bearing Castillo and two of his ministers, moored at 11:55 p. m. today at La Plata, Buenos Aires province, after more than 24 hours of roaming the Rio de La Plata. Admiral Bustamento was re ported in command of the war craft, which Castillo-declared yesterday io bo the scat of his government. Buenos Aires was back almost to normal. Shops were open and complete order prevailed. On lookers crowded the plaza de Mayo, but they wore prevented by a military guard from pass ing alongside government house. No Celebration The last official, orders given by General Rawson before the dawn spiked any plans there might have been for a celebra tion. He said today would not be a holiday and that all public officials should attend to their jobs. A strict censorship had been Irs of m first DRAMA TO CAPTURE THE FLAME AND FURY OF THE AFRKAM OFFENSIVE! Here is a story written out of the Mood, sweat and tears of today's war in the desert! It is the story of . the love, the courage, the faith thai keeps every soldier march ing ..: FIGHTING! rl ing..: FIGHTING! : fl 1 'I .-.,...'7 h ' rvi - F0MDA f M.WN0'HARA I I in JOHN BROPHY'S Immortal war romance W I r i- THOMAS MITCHELL r)f I H ' ALLYN JOSLYN REGINALD GARDINER JZ ' 7 ir tyjJX'A iV DfrteJic by JOHN STAHl ' Avt ''v. ' Last Daylm J Jf.. .V I I I , m TARZAN'S TRIUMPH" IP Xf ll S 3QJ JWKIK ' FRANCES GIFFORD t' 1 SwAlls clamped on all publications and communications, Police in tlio provinco of Sun Juan arreslud editors of tho novvspuper La Ac cion bevausu it unnouiired tho revolt on bill boards. Mows of the revolt apparently was re ceived calmly throughout the country, though troops woro re stricted tu tliolr burrucka as a safety measure Total mobilization of lubor unci power, which tukos every citizen without distinction, servos as a political Instrument for the ex clusion of opposition. Gorman propaganda is in tlio difficult po sition of having to try to arouse enthusiasm for on economic sys tem which they had considered bolsltovtsm and tho essence of non-culture Woltwocho, Swiss newspaper. Always read the classified ads 'rillN'li WW IM Knowt Tm aJnw luiilt I! 'Xiti nine 1 1 BISHOP vvvwMassaBMaaaaaaaaai TOMORROW! . Music Botigi '"'- Romance and Laughil ', Ir Too Many GiHs,; II starring ' 11 I ( LUCILLE BALL - RICHARD CARLSON ' 11 II ANN MILLER - EDDIE BRACKEN II U Fronces Longford - U ,Ji arm Li" Bock's bakery has rcnowed a contruct with tho Bakery and Confectionery Workers' local, No.' 3B'J, ACL, embracing tho 48-hour week basis, roeom mended by President Roosevelt, it was disclosed Saturday. Glenn Jones, Beck's manager, mild tho bakery had been vlr tupHy on a 48-hour basis In the last year. Straight time Is paid for tho first 40 hours end time, and-n-hnlf for overtime Ho said ho was pleased to renew tho contract with (lie union, Lake Michigan inch tide has thrco- Last Day 'War Against Mn. Hadlty" 10 "SADDLES AND SAGEBRUSH MM Ci i June 5, 1048 rNDS TONIGHTh"TJ "Road to Morocco cnouv N0ll lAMOUR Tomorrow! :.; ;TW0 ): FIRST RUN -ACTION HITS! Mora Funl Mora Laughil With th EAST BIDE KID8I 2nd Action Bptctali Thrills and . . Adventure Pscktd with Danger and Excittmtntl TOMORROW! LEO. CORCIYTV HUNTZ HAU 1)J 1 jZV 1 . biddv fSP r t n n n i - I WMKtltH 1 eiiimMu Ka-gTT-.,