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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 24, 1943)
July 21 1043 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE THREE ' Leaves lor Denver Corporal Dli'V llowurd, who haa been vlnltlnu will) hid parents, Mr. hikI Mm. llululi Howard and lila (later M:iry Juno of 10(13 Kldorudo atrcot, returned on Wvdnoaduy by plnno to Lowry field lit Denvor. Ho had boon hero on a alx-dny urlouifh, On tho wuy buck, ho wua a puasmijl i' i- In tlio suina plnun with Mrs. franklin 13. Hooaovolt who hua boon In Souttlo. Nephew Din Mra, S, Luiion lioul received word of tho clcutli of hor ncphow, Koltli Korr, Ho wua tukon prlaonor by tho Jup- noao and died In a prison camp of mulnrlii. Ho la the aon of Mr. and Mra. F. A. Kerr of Los An Kolea and tho fnmlly has vlaltcd hero often. YouiiK Kerr Joined tho ulr corpa In 1041 and was S'2 when ho died. AcctpUd by Marines John Keller, aon of Mr. and Mra. Swim tiokvlal of 2850 Bisbeo street, hua been accepted by the United States marina corpa nnd will bo given basic training In Sun Dlrgo. Nclter went through Klamuth Falls Satur cluy on hla way aouth. Saattle Visit Mra. Fern Shoop, In chnrgo of tho fuel oil nppltcutlona at tho war price and rationing board, will leave over tho weekend to visit her husband, Lieutenant Ted Shoop In Seattle for two weeks. Hero for Weekend Mrs. W. E. Lamm of Modoc Point, and chulrman of tho bond snkn radio committee for this month, la spending " weekend in Klam "ath Falls doing bond sales work Auction Bonds E. P. Ivory will go to lily Saturday evening to unction off bonds at dance. Accompanying him will bo Mr and Mra. Stephen Sabo, Mra. Ste phen Sabo Jr., Mr. and Mra. Lee McMullen and daughter, Francos Leo McMullen. On Fishing Trip W. E. Lamm and duughter Wlnnifred, of Modoc Point, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Hollln Watt of l'rlncvllle, aro enjoying flailing trip on tho McKenzIo river over tho weekend. Leave Wednesday Don Drury, local industrialist who has accepted an Important luin- )bcr post in Mexico City,, plana to leave on Wednesday morn ing for tho south. Ststtr Visits Nora Sullivan Is back at her position at Long's after a three-weeks vacation. Her sister, Mrs. Sadla Lax ton of Seattlo la visiting her and an other sinter, Mrs. W. O. Dnlton. Returns Here Harold Ash ley, county schools' clerk, re turned hero Saturday morning after spending a few days in Portland on business. Bond Sales Meeting Tho July bond sales cxeculivo com mittee met Friday evening in the county courtrooms to make fur ther bond selling plans. Contemplate Move About August 1, the district office of tho IWA-CIO will move from lihclr present location to 007 Klamuth avenue. Home From Coast Ed Bell Mid Huns Norlund and families arc homo after a vacation stay nt Whito flock, on the northern California coast. On Vacation Rudy Jacobs, Klumuth Falls business man, is fmcwIiiiK a few days on vuca tion on the northern California const. From Lake Henry Moc, chief clerk at the war price and rationing board, will re turn to his office Monday fol lowing a week spent at his cabin nt Odcll lake. On Trip Mr. and Mrs. Henry Scnion of Henley wero iiwiiy irom nomo on a short vacation triD Saturday. MAIL CLOSING TIME (Effective July 14, 1943) Train 19 Southboundi 6 p. m. Train 20 Northbound) 11 a. m. Train 17 Southboundi 7 a. m. Train 18 Northbound) 10 p. m, Medford Stage, Westbound, S p. m Evening Airmail, Stages to Alturaa, Ashland, Lake- view and Rocky Point 7 a. m. J.akevlow first-class mall only, w closing at 7 p. m. Eagles Auxiliary The Eaglas auxiliary nnd drum corps arc sponsoring their regular Satur day night danco tonight in the KC hall. Music will bo by Estln Klgor and his orchestra nnd the public Is invited. Penney Horn John Penney, local potato man, Is homo after sovcrul weeks spoilt on potato buslnoaa In the mid-California area. Visitor In Klamath Dr. F. E. Trotman of Morrill was vis itor in town Saturday. THREE MINOR FIRES REPORTED IN CITY Lato Friday afternoon and Saturday the fire department wus called three times to put out sovcrul minor fires. At 8:28 Friday evening tlioy were called to 1633 East Main street to put out car body fire. The car was burning in lot belonging to the Potts Ma chlno company; however, no other dumago was done. At 0:02 Saturday morning the hook and ladder was called to tho Klamath Billiards on Main street to extinguish a small fire caused by grease burning out In the back of an oven. There waa no damugc. At 1:07 Saturday afternoon, tho firemen wero called to Con ger avenue to put out a grass flro there. No property damugc was done. STEEL MILL STRIKE SETTLED QUICKLY JOHNSTOWN, Pa., July 24 P) Quick settlement of a day-old atrlke of aomo 1.800 open hearth and mill workers of tho Bethle hem steel corporation last night averted a possible shutdown of the plant employing many thous ands. After conferences with labor mediators and army navy repre sentatives, officials of the CIO united steel workers union rec ommended that the men return Work was resumed with the 11 p. m. shift Eugene Maurice, exectutive director for CIO distrlce 12, said the strike resulted from the company's suspension of an em ploye who was a member of the union grievance committee, Maurice-said tho man appeared beforo the union meeting and asked that tho strike be called off. By D. HAROLD OLIVER WASHINGTON, July 24 P) The foundation for a 1S44 plat form from which to challenge tho three-term new deal s pow er will bo sought by national republican leaders at a meeting September 6 and 7 at Mackinac- Island, Mich. Invited to attend aro the 49 COP members of tho official republican postwar advisory council organized by National Chairman Harrison E. Spang- ler last May. While Spongier does not expect the group , to hear non-members now, after subcommittees have been set up, men like Wendell L. Will kic, 1940 GOP presidential nominee, former President Her bert Hoover, and Alf M. Lan- don, the party's 1936 standard bearer, will be consultod, he sum. Wallace Hits at. "Idealist" Charge DETROIT; July 24 (P) Vice President Henrv A U'niu arrivins in Detroit in rii a major speech Sunday, said to day at a press conference that "certain American fascists clal I'm an idealist. I ask them look to thcmaelven nnrf nalr they havo done 'as much to put moir meais tnto practice." Wallace declared thnt he was proud to be called an "Idealist Although he used the term "American fascists" several times during his press confor enco ho did not Identify any Individual as such. EAGLES ATTEND MIXED DANCE AT EAGLE'S HALL Saturday Night, July 24 OLD TIME AND ROUND DANCES Admission! Ladiea lOci Men 50o SHEPHERD'S ORCHESTRA Proflta lo Help Complete New Aeria Hall TROOPS FACE 1 OB ARMY GAMES A FIELD HEADQUARTERS, CENTRAL OREGON MANEU VER AREA, July 24 (P) Di visional commanders and their troops faced theoretical prob lems today In the first moss op eration of the army's war gamos In central Oregon, This maneuver phase con cerna divisional strategy and tactics. It will show the results of the division's training in gurrison, determine whether Its basic training for field opera tions has been adequate, prove the ability of commanders leadership for the larger ma neuvers this summer and fall which will be warfaro Itself except for the use of live am munition. Nerve center of these opera tions is corps headquarters a schoolhouse where maps of the tactical area hang over the blackboards on which Oregon youngsters figured their sums in arithmetic last year. Dust moves in clouds as Jeeps and dispatch riders roar up to headquarters and messengers scurry inside the trim white building where all movements are charted and coordinated. In the field a division faces an army that exists only on paper. Flags are shifted to show the opposing army's movements In lieu of troops. On the move ments of these flags tho dlvl slon's tactics and strategy de pend. The flags force changes in operations compel the di visional troops to halt at a cer tain objective, retreat, advance, dig In. Without ever seeing an "ene my" even In simulated combat, the division is forced Into every conceivable tactical movement that might be necessary on for eign soil. T IN WOME VANCOUVER, July 24 (IP) Police said today that John Stan ley Kendall, 32, Is being sought for questioning in connection with the death of Mrs. Violet Alberta Morrison, 40, whose bul let-riddled body was found In a downtown rooming house late yesterday. Police reported the room was rented to a man who registered as "J. Kendall." Mrs. Morrison was shot In the head and side, police said, and oowdcr burns on the body Indi cated the shots had been fired at close rango. Because no weap on had been found in the room, police added, they concluded she had been murdered. The woman was dead about nine hours when found. U. S. Bombers Hit Germans in Norway For First Time . LONDON, July 24 (IP) Heavy United States bombers attacked Norway for the first time by daylight today, an official U. S, headquarters communique an nounced. Large formations of big planes flew a round trip of 1200 miles farther than if raiding Berlin in carrying out the assault along the cast coast less than j loo miles soutn or. usio. Tho communique did not specify the targets. Neither did the bulletin an nounce the plane losses, if any. The principal target, however, was reported to be a factory at Hcroya on the Langesunds fjord a mile and a half south of Pors grunn. Lampreys have a sucking disk on their snout which enables them to climb dam walls. PI LE$ SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO PAIN - NO HOSPITAUXATION No Lots of Tim Pormanwnt rmuMiI DR. E. M. MARSHA Ohlropraotlo PhyeleiM ttfi No, Tib - iKtuIre Thutrt llftf. 7Pf Market Quotations Am Car & Fdy 291 Am Tel it Tol 188 Anaconda 28 i Calif Packing 28. Cat Tractor 83 Commonwealth & Sou ....1310 General Electric 381 General Motors 84 i Gt Nor Ry pfd 311 Illinois Central 14) Int Harvester 71 Kennecott : 33s Lockheed 201 Nash-Kelv .". 121 N V Central 18i Northern Pacific 181 Pac Gas & El 291 Packard Motor . 44 J C Penney 99 271 19s 111 Penna R R .... Republic Steel Richfield Oil .. Safeway Stores 47 Sears Roebuck 88 Southern Pacific 291 Standard Brands 71 Sunshine Mining .... . 8 Trans-America 8 Union Pacific 1021 U S Steel 88 i Warner Pictures 14 J LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. July 24 (PMWFA) Cattle:, for five days 1000, compared Fri day week ago: active, generally steady, week's top, half-load ahort-feds $14.80; good 980 lb. grass steers $14.00; bulk medi um steers $ 13.28-13.78; two loads 885 lb. Mexicans $11.50. Two loads grass 812 lb. heifers $14.00. Grass fat heavy cows $10.50-11.00, aged medium $9.50-10.00; cutters $8.00; few .ou; coiorea v.uo-v.30; can- ners $6.00-6.80; weak to 25c lower; common to cutter bulls $9.00; medium $10.00-10.80, heavy $11.28. Calves: for five days 1900 compared Friday week ago: generally 25c higher closing top and bulk good and choice 200-240 lb. barrows and gilts $14.75; good sows $13.98 down. Sheep: for five days 12,300; compared ' Friday week ago: good to choice 25c lower, me dium to common shorn and wooled 50c to $1.00 lower; good clearance. Week's extreme tops eight decks $15.00-15.25; medi um to good $14.00-14.50. Shorn lambs medium to choice $12.00 14.25 late, common $11.00 11.50; bulk medium to choice shorn ' yearlings . $10.50-12.50; cull to good shorn ewea $2.50 6.60. CHICAGO, July 24 (PHWFA Salable hogs 500, total 10,000; nominally steady; not enough good and choice hogs to make a market; quotable top $14.28; shippers took none; compared week ago: hogs 25c, sows 10-15c higher. Salable cattle 400; calves 100;, compared . Friday last week: strictly good and choice steers steady, to strong, all oth ers 25c lower, with command and medium grades 25-S0c down; all grades stock cattle largely 50c lower, slow at de cline; medium to good fed heif ers 25-4 0c lower, strictly good I "Co-ed" KV Garter Belt , Rayon Marquisette, doubled for longer wear, satin ribbon trim and lace edging. Attractively finished throughout. "Flt-4-siie" feature at back double row of eyalata. and choice kinds steady; cows steady to 25c lower, canncrs and cutters showing full de cline; bulls unevenly $.50-1.00 lower; vcalers strong; extreme top choice to- prlmo fed, steers $16.85, next highest price $16.78; "practical top on highly finished . light and medium weight steers $16.50, best year lings $16.45, with bulk fed steers and yearlings $14.00 $16.28; grassy and shortfed kinds turning at $11.00-13.80; choice to prime 880 lb, heifers reached $16.00, bulk however, $13.80-18.80; cutter cows closed at $9.25 down; most fat cows at $11.80-12.50, and weighty sausage bulls at $14.35 down; vcalers $14.50-15.50. Salable sheep 10, total 2100; compared Friday last week: na tive spring lambs 25-S0c higher, yearlings strong, sheep strong to 23c higher; top native spring lambs $18.65 to small killers at midweek, packer top $15.50 early, $15.35 at close; bulk me dium to choice native spring lambs $14.00-15.50, throwout kinds downward to $12.50 and occasionally to $10.00; top yearlings $14.60 to small kill- ers. other medium 10 cnoice fj A 7TRnn : . ' T " II ' , others aownwaro hi ...u occasionally ... PORTLAND, Ore., July 24 (AP-USDA) CATTLE: For; week salable 2035; calves 310; ; compared week ago general mar- ket 25-50 cents lower, lower I grades off most with most de cline after Monday; some stock- ers and bulls unsold late; good-; choice fed steers $15.00-16.00;; grassers $14.00 down early, most- j ly $12.50 down to $10.00 late;; stockers $10.00-11.00, early to $12.50; grass fat heifers $12.50. down; canner and cutter cows 5.75-7.50 late, fat dairy type to $8.50. grass fat beef cows $10.00 to $10.50, carloads to $11.25 ear ly with odd young cows at $11.50 to $12.00; medium to good bulls' early $11.00-12.50, none sold late; good to choice vcalers $14 ; In Slsftn rarlv Inn SIS.OO. i gIVSVJhJ. v "fcvn ........ market 35-50 cents above last lbs. $14.50; Thursday's top $14.65 1 freely; heavier and lighter weights penalized 50c-$1.25 or more; good sows largely $10.50, feeder pigs closed $15.00 down, around $2.25 under week ago. SHEEP: For week salable 3. 700; spring lambs around 50 lower, ewes steady; good to choice ospringers late $12.50 to $12.75, early bulk $13.00 to $13.25. extreme top $13.50; feed ers $10.00 down to $9.00, few eastern Oregon to 10.50; year lings unevenly $8.00 to $11.50; good ewes $5.00-5.50. few $5.75, common down to $2.00. ' '- ; ; i Medium Bombers Attack Mandalay Docks in Burma NEW DELHI, July 24 OP) American Mitchell medium bombers attacked Japanese river shipping and the dock area at Mandalay in Burma yesterday, scoring near hits on five large river boats and starting fires among enemy storage buildings, a U. S. communique reported today. New Hampshire is a town in Ohio. Phone 5188 133 South 8th St. Potatoes CHICAGO, July 24 (IP) Po tatoes: arrivals 129; on track 237; total U. S. shipments 876; supplies moderate, demand fair, market weaker; California Long Whites U. S. No. 1, $4.25; Ore gon Bliss Triumphs U. S. No. 1, $4.00; Idaho Bliss Triumphs U. S. No. 1, $3.90; Nebraska Red Warbas U. S. No. 1, $3.65 70; Arkansas Bliss Triumphs U. S. No. 1, $2.78; Missouri Cobblers $1.75-2.35; ' Virginia Cobblers $1.25-2.00. BOSTON WOOL BOSTON, July 24 (AP-USDA) Lack of offerings of foreign wools and absence of demand for fine and half blood domes tic wools combined to make a very quiet wool market in Bos ton this past week. Approxi mately 60,000,000 pounds of wool have been appraised for purchase by commodity credit corporation to date. Re-sale of these wools to manufacturers have ' been active for medium grades. I" the last 75 year,, about 100 i monarchs, presidents, princes . and other mgh oHiclals of have been murdered Snare wan. ,0 Thee pi - stock of ,r . j:;?.. d tor UtafcWI EIGHTEENTH SEMI-ANNUAL ' Showing Condition of aIOKI FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS FIRS I utAMATH ",00M A8SETS ,1.285412.2 ' rurnilure and "S;"" .... t wh'1 ,ki. finite. would b. " Cash on Hand ano Sarins - ivsljRED SAV1SOS i.,. Loans .. .. Inauranc. R rwHts p'" - tua.il oih.r ibiim. , - I I UAttUTlES ......... $1,837,352.82 I I I: incompi.t.1 a- """" ,.msm I Chas. I. Robrt RoMrlt Hrr D. D. Road"1 RHdtr OloU-nS Gl.nHout . UMTIOW You Will Note Assets Are r mm slim 540 Main St. then buy iOfflS j F AT KENO EYED Because of difficulty In ob taining teachers, a recommenda tion to close the high school at Keno next year will be put be fore the county school board at its next meeting early in August. Should the recommendation go through, transportation will be provided for taking the stu dents to Klamath Union high school. There are approximately 30 high school pupils from that locality. With the suburban youngsters added, KUHS should have just about the same registration as last year, it has been estimated. Keno grade schools will con tinue as usual. If It's a "frozen" article you need, advertise for a used one in the classified. Vf""' ,mmni CLOSURE 0 H GH Mi first: :."zr "Vwr Si-m.rKh 1 I - LOAD " , a Lfvsnft tO r-a-j a? ::';:"totito w ac..-M Ju0. , --rT' """"" -"Vt era it-- - l " Vinmf I OA I ...... ..a - ; .OTuiu. .' $9,674.54 I I f a iindirided P"lt!..v::i"V.''."d JS"S DIRECTORS fted HeUbronner PeicY E,n Sunlit Oroetry . r " That Nearly a Half Million of Our in Federal Government Bonds iQ3X33'1 IZDfTJID TTHSptUJ i-UHJt iC72 VITAL STATISTICS FISHER Born at Klamath Valley hospital, Klamath Falls. Ore., on July 22, 1943, to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fisher, 725 Owens street, a boy. Weight: 7 pounds 4a ounces, Classified Ads Bring Results. NO ! Ration Points ' Needed! HEN-L-BISIUT 2-Lb. Package 33e Comsioa All Vitamina Known to Be EiMonsl to Dog. Healta . Made With U.S. Gon. lasptcaed ' Horse Meat Coupon apuu In Son FranelMo Ssamuior, July U taout. MURPHEY'S SEED STORE 834 Klamath ' . . Phon.) 5195 ol u ,,1 I 33,uua. 1 I r mm. II 8,505.17 I I 12,800-00 , I 4M.77S.S5 I ..... I ' 8,141.08 I 31,783.80 I ...... I 108,074.40 I I . "$1,852,814.08 I I ; u B&0.07 I I ' - i . 3,989-88 I 8 5.898.78 I I $1,952,614.0$ I Clifton Richmond I Alfred Collier ,, UM MoukHnS C. S. Robtrtaon . ImurenM a . . I