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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1943)
Aujfimt 27, 10415 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE THREH SOITS OPEN DRIVE 5 AREA (Continued on Pago Two) Ilia flunk of Russlun forces mlvnncliiK tlirouuli tho Ukrulno In an unsuccessful , effort to check tlio rud army's prouross went of Khurkov, It was an nounced todny, ' (A Gorman military corres pondent Kiild today that tho ItiiHsluns hud opened an Import ant new drlvo In tho northern Ukrulno, north and south of Sovsk. Tho attack opened with strong artillery and bomber dipport yeidorduy aim "vory lolcnt battles developed In the entire depth of German posi tion)," euld tho correspondent, Col. Ernest von Hammer, In a Merlin broadcast dispatch re curded by Tho Associated Press. Another Finger (An offensive at Scvsk, 88 miles south of Bryansk would provide another finger In tho Itiiwilan hand closing on the Ukraine, It Is betweon the drives now In progress on Bry inuk and west of Kharkov In an area that has been relatively quiet sinco last winter'! sovlot offensive.) A front line dispatch to the army newspaper lied Star said the enemy concentrated Infim try and tanks along the sidos TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LLOYD W. puSK Contractor no uuiHirr. uemoaeung. 1021 Arthur St. Phone 3405 B-12m of sulionts which tho Kussluns hud driven Into their lines and launched u number of stiff counter-attacks. Attacks Rspulsed Tho red urmy repulsed the at tacks, tho dispatch said and con tinued thu reckless udvunco which yostorduy covorod an other throe and a half miles, (A German communique, broadcast by Berlin and record ed l,i i'Iio Associated I'rcss, sulci Russlun troops supported by tanks and plunos uttucked south and wost of Kharkov yesterduy but were repulsed with the loss of more than 100 tanks. (Tho Germans said their troops made a thrust ugulnst the flunk of rod urmy forces attack ing on the Mills front, repelling the Russians and Inflicting heuvy losses, and halted soviet attacks ncur I .yum with a scries of counter blows. No Breakthrough (A Russian attack southwest and west of Oral did not suc ceed In achieving a break through 'despite tho employ ment of extraordinarily strong air forces," the nuzl bulletin said. It added that altogether 218 Russian tunks wero destroy ed In yestorday's fighting.) In addition to yesterdays three and a half mllo westward advance which the Russians mado in the Kharkov region toward the nails' Dnieper river defenses, soviet forces wore dis closed to have struck duo south In a new flanking maneuver. Armour May Be Successor to Welles' Post (Continued From Pago One) sentative. There were authorita tive reports today, however, that Welles definitely was out of the diplomatic picture and tho llkcll hood of a future assignment was slim Indeed. HAVE YOUR RUGS and furnl turn cleaned beforo the fall rush. Cleaned either at shop or at your home. Also floors waxed. Phone 8879. DOREMUS RUO CLEANERS PHONE 8313 for Qunllty, Dis tilled, Clean burning ASSO CIATED BURNER OILS, Every gallon a full gallon of hent energy. BALSIGER OIL COMPANY. 8-3 lm FOR THE BETTER grades of furl oils, accurate, metered deliveries, try Fred H. Hall bronncr, 821 Spring street telephnno 4153. Distributor Shell Heating Oils. 913m WANTED 100 fur coats to re model and alter. Mrs. Greg ory. PENNY CLEANERS , 602 Main 8-27 GOOD INVESTMENT 8 good houses, well located In food district; furniture In four of the houses. Always rented Income $118 per month. Excep tional value. Full price $8300, J. E. HOSKING 517 Main Phone 3211 COMPLETE service men's gift dept., ut Rudy s Men s-Shop, llth and Main. 0-20m RUTH DICKSON announces Vcrlu McCabe is now at the a. Star rieuuty Salon, formerly with Bolto's Bounty Shop, For appointment phone 8280. 433 Main street. 8-30 FOR RENT New 3-room fur nlshcd uportment, below River side school, $35. Also 3-room furnished house on East Main $30. Inquire Drew's Munstore ; 3383tf 100 WOOL SWEATERS, slip, overs and coats, $3.05 to $0.05 sizes 34 to 40. Rudy's Men's Shop, (1th and Main. 0-25m Hot Water Heated Apartment House Ideal location, Natural hot wtitcr heat, no pumping expense. Six apartments. Income $200 per month. Always full. A real in. vestment. Full price $10,000 $5000 will handle. O J. E. HOSKING 517 Main Phono 3211 LOST Ration Book No. 1. Nel lio Rf. Alvarez, Qulncy, Calif, Present address, Rt. 3, Box 62 8-30 LOST Ration Book No. 1. Lor raine King, 2528 Vine. 8-30 BOARD AND ROOM students, Good home. Closo In. , 523 Lincoln. ' 8-2 WANTED Bids on well drilling Job. Leo Sugchorn, Tulolako, Cnlif. 9-10 Friendly Helpfulness To Every ) Creed and Purs Ward's Klamath Funeral Home Mrs. A. A. Ward, owner Wlllard Ward, U. S. Navy, Manager Arthur W. Larstn, Acting Mgr. 925 High Phone 3334 POSSEMEMBERS TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY ATTENTION STAMP BUYERS! Wanted at Once COAT HANGERS Wire 3c, paper or wood lc, brought in. New City Laundry Corner 4th and Klamath 3420lf EXTRA LARGE 3-room apart ment. 8080. 2210 South 0th. 9-2 FOR RENT Small house, base ment, garage, near a bus line, Phone 8032. 8-30 WANTED TO RENT Modern 2-bedroom, furnished house References. Phone 5408. 8-28 FOR RENT 3-room unfurnished house and garage. 3114 Crosby St. 8-30 I'ltuvm parity zurnisnca apart ment with garage, $11. 2335 Shasta way. 8-27 BE SMART and IMPROVE YOUR KNOWLEDGE of Busi ness Office Ability. KLAM ATI! BUSINESS COLLEGE, 325 Main street, across from the courthouse. 8-27 FOR SALE 10-foot Rumley combine, overhauled and in good shape. Prlco $400. J. E Whitlutch, 3 miles northwest of Malin. Ph. 105. 8-30 3-ROOM HOUSE, Mills addition Price reasonable. Closo to bus and school. Mrs. Moore. Ph 4480. 8-30 FOR RENT New 3-room fur nished apartment, below Riv erside school, $35. Drew's Manstorc. 3403tf MILLS ADDITION Ncorly new, largo 4-room home, well located In Mills add I Hon. Utility room, hardwood floors, insulation, storm windows and many other attractive fca turcs. Nice yard with lawn, flowers, shrubs, etc. Full price only $3900. J. E. HOSKING 517 Main Phone 3211 ASSISTANT PARTS and service man wanted. Anderson Auto Service. 8-30 FOR SALE Truck, U-ton flat bed. Single tires In rear. Ideal for use on farm. Good rubber, Write Box 3518 In care of Heruld-Ncws. . 3518tf FOR SALE Silver fox fur neck : piece. Worth $85. Will take , $35. Phono 3508. 8-30 '39 CHEVROLET Master Deluxo, 1936 Ford coupe. Rt. 3, Box 1009, Rabbit Flat, 31 miles north on old highway. 8-30 buy BONDS AUGUST DRIVE Sheriff's posse members have bought about $3000 in war bonds In tho lust two days In an effort to assist tho American Legion in reaching the Klumuth bond quotu, Members of the posse were urged by Sheriff Low on Fri day to make still further effort beforo tho deudline passes bat urduy night. A bond auction Is slutcd for Saturday evening at 7:30 o'clock ut Eighth and Muin streets. Va rious merchandise articles will be offered and somo surprises are promised. About $3000 was raised in an auction conducted by Leo Jacobs at a Legion meeting at Malin Frlduy night. People's Revolt" Sweeps Denmark; Nazis Stalemated (Continued from Page One) borg, where the populution Join ed those of otner cities m pro testing uguinst the lack of dis cipline by German soldiers. The Danes uccuscd anuny soldiers of attacking without provocation and hustling hund grenudes Into crowds of persons who refused to disperse when ordered. Authorities Confer Danish and German author ities liavo been conferring alt week on the revolt, which start ed on August 10, and tho nazl ambassudor to Denmark, Wer ner Best went to Berlin several days ago to report on tho situ ation. It was reported that Best would not return to Den mark and that Gen. Hermann von Hunneckon, commander of tho German occupation army, would institute somo form of military rule in a further at tempt to preserve order. It was understood here that Danish government leaders told the Germans that tho Danes would make no further con cessions. Siskiyou Milk Delivered After Six-Day Lay Off (Continued from Page One) crease of two cents a quart of 111 UK. At a meeting last night In Mount Shasta, attended by state agricultural department repre sentatives, OPA officials, dairy men, producers and the public, an understanding . was reached that deliveries would continue until September 13, pending con sidcration of tho demand for the two-cent increase, bringing the prico to 16 cents a quart for the consumer. Germans Feel Weight of U. S. Bombs in France (Continued From Page One) and tho labor ministry to Kra kow. American marauder medium bombers with a Spitfire escort paid a bombing visit lato yester day afternoon to nozi airdromes at Caen in Normandy. Good bombing results were reported. Ono Canadian Spitfire blasted two enemy fighters out of the sky. A Reuters dispatch from Stockholm which quoted a tra veler from Germany, said the nazi reich chancellory was hit In the saturation bombing of Berlin by the RAF Monday night. Italians Blasted As U. S. Airmen Resume Raids (Continued From Page One) : coincided with announcement of new bombardments of the Ital ian mainland by British warships and tho enemy's first serious at tack on Algiers in two and a half months. Algiers Bombed A few planes penetrated Al giers' defenses, dropping bombs in and near the city shortly be fore dawn, The damage was offi cially termed negligible and throti of tho raidors were shot down. There were a few casual ties. Classified Ads Bring Results. Badoglio's Hair ' Grays as Italians ' Descend on Rome (Continued From Page One) anti-fascist political prisoners who hud bcon released after Mussolini's downfall. When this heavy-handed sys tem of restoring order became obvious, a number of these for mer prisoners of fascism and en emies of Germany packed their bugs and went to Rome. This in flux began weeks beforo Italy's unilateral declaration that Rome wus on open city. I Installation of machinery at the dehydration plant will soon begin, it was learned Friday in a letter from the Paulus Broth ers Packing company of Salem to the chamber of commerce here. The letter explained that the delay In the establishment of the plant here was due to diffi culty in securing priorities for equipment. It expressed regret that the company bad not been able to start construction earl ler, but said that they were now ready to go ahead with the installing of equipment as all necessary plans had already been lined up, Russians Welcome French Committee To Allied Fold (Continued from Page One) statement issued August 24 said that "full reports of the decisions (at the Quebec -conference) so far as they affect the war against Germany and Italy will be furn ished to the soviet government." The United States and Great Britain accorded the committee limited wartime recognition as administrative agency In French overseas territories which acknowledge its authority, but not as "a government of France or of tho French empire." Q'lililfi be tvrm it's PURE CANE SUGAR insist on ,J'J GUI SUGAR (CANE) - WASHINGTON, Aug. 27 (P) Official reports to the depart ment of state indicate that French leaders In North Africa are "pleased and satisfied" with the recognition extended to the French national committee of liberation. Secretary of State Cordcll Hull said today. ' "., He told his press conference that reports from Algiers show that tho French regard the steps taken following the Quebec con ference as a sound basis for a thoroughly happy and satisfac tory understanding on an expand ing basis. Air Raids Leave Da Vinci Mural LONDON, Aug. 27 (IP) A Reuters dispatch from Switzer land today said the renowned mural, "The Last Supper," of Leonardo Da Vinci escaped dam age In recent RAF raids on Milan, but the walls of the Santa Maria Delle Grazic church where it is housed were reported near collapse. Tricycle Problem Stumps FBI Man PORTLAND, Aug. 27 (IP) FBI Agent Russell P. Kramer ad mitted today he was stumped. Kramer, chief of FBIs office here, has been trying for three weeks to run down a tricycle. But no luck. And his three-year-old son, Rusty, is expecting it from Santa Claus. : , . s NEPHEW KILLED Mrs. Fred Lckburg of Klam ath Falls has received word that her nephew. Stuff Sergeant Ern est A. Lckburg of Boring, Ore gon, was killed In action in the Southwest Pacific on August 2 His motner is Mrs. August Lckburg of Boring, Sergeant L e k b u r g was 23 years old and had been in the army for three years. He was sta tioned with the supply room of the Infantry. Young Lckburg attended Lln- field college at McMinnville for a short time before he entered the army. He has visited In Klamath Falls several times. Night Flames Level Old Shaw-Bertram Mill Buildings (Continued from Page One) mediately of saving the mill and boiler house, and devoted their efforts to protecting the feeding sheds and hay and stopping spot fires in the surrounding grass lands. Fire in a water tower was extinguished, and a build ing containing several motors, located close to the boiler house was saved. Pol Burns Copco's No. 4 transmission line passed over the edge of the fire area and soon a two-pole tower supporting the line was burning at the top. The tower finally fell, but the lines had been deadened to avoid danger from live wires. Copco reported only a few service connections were out because of the fire, and serv ice was quickly restored. Origin of the fire was unde termined. Salvage operators had been working in the boiler house. according to O Connor. Several days ago, fire from a salvage blow torch had started in saw dust some distance from the mill. Red Hot Stacks Work of taking down two smokestacks above the boiler house has been under way for some time. The stacks grew red hot in last night's fire, but did not fall. Two wooden spars at tached to the lower stack caught on fire, and a burning rope swung flames crazily around the middle part of this stack. Equipment in the boiler house was being removed for shipment to the Potlatch Forests mill in Idahof am) to the .Clover Creek Lumber company in Kortheru California. Weyerhaeuser Tim ber company had sold this equip ment. Buys Mill Weyerhaeuser acquired the mill property about a year ago from Long-Bell Lumber com pany, and immediately began dismantling the plant. Long-Bell had operated a mill there for sev eral years. The mill plant was. built in 1923 by the Shaw-Bertram Lumber company, which acquired the site from the old Chelsea Box company. O'Connor had planned to use the mill and other sheds for a butchering plant he planned for the future in connection with his livestock operations there. O'Connor today asked that all persons who helped fight the fire be told of his sincere apprecia tion qf .their efforts. They saved his feed and newly-built sheds, he said. Sheriff's officers, the county fire department, Klamath Forest Protective association men, O' Connor's own crew, and many others Joined In fighting the blaze. Fall Downstairs Probable Cause of Farnsworth Death HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 27 (IP) A fall downstairs at his New Hampshire farmhouse last June probably caused the death Wed nesday of Arthur Farnsworth, husband of Film Actress Bctte Davis, Dr. Paul Moore has an nounced following an autopsy. Farnsworth was found uncon scious on a Hollywood boule vard sidewalk Monday, and died without emerging from the com atose state, the physician said. Time Extended to Apply for Refunds WASHINGTON, Aug. 27 (IP) The treasury announced today that congressional leaders have agreed to a proposal to give cor porations additional time to ap ply for refunds under section 722 of the excess profits tax act. Former PUC Lawyer In Jap Prison Camp PORTLAND, Aug. 27 (IP) Major Eugene E. Laird, former attorney for the public utilities commission at Salem, informed his wife by letter today that he is Interned in a Japanese prison camp at Zentsuji on the island of Shikoku. (Continued from Page One) completed, the military unit will be reduced to about 800 men and 29 officers. Soldiers Come Soon The incoming soldiers will de train at Tulelake, beginning next week. The Tulelake Cadettes will set up a canteen at the station, and will provide refreshments for the Incoming troops. Assisting in this work will be the Tulelake Legion auxiliary, the church guild, and the Winema club. Courthouse Floors Being Cleaned The floors of all the court house offices, the courtroom and the halls are all being cleaned and waxed this week by the Doremus rug and furni ture cleaners. With the completion of the painting of the circuit court room and judge's chambers Thursday, painters began work on the tax collector's office. Last on the painting list will be the county court rooms. Other offices in the court house were refinlshed a few months ago. Hamilton Pleads Guilty to Charges Of Extortion DENVER, Aug. 27 (IP) Han? Kendall Hamilton, 66, who gave) himself up In Denver a week ago) on a federal complaint charging violation of extortion laws, haa pleaded guilty before U. S. Com mlssloner Harold S Oakau In, writing a threatening letter to a Modesto, Calif,, lumber mill offi cial and will be taken to San Francisco for trial within a few days. The arrest was disclosed only today. Has Operation Batty Lou Waller, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Waller of Pelican City, was operated on Thursday for ap pendicitis. She Is now recover Ing In the Hillside hospital. Permanents Duirt Machine Waves Helen Curtis and Rilling Koolerwave Machlnelesi Palace Beauty Shop 626 Main St. Phon 3511 ALMA McLEAN, Manager. WORKERS! 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S.ZES: 9 fo IS, tf foy.ene'M fKim tf.e group. " 19 95 Popular boy's coat in e b o i c of single and double-breasted styles, some with velveteen collars. Fabrics include fleeces, cavalry twill. coverts. Shetland types, suede cloth, melton, monotone tweeds, Harris-type tweed and nubby boucle. Newest fall shades of nude. King tan, brown, R. A. F. . blue and navy. Casual styles for dressy and spectator sports wear in lises 9 to IS and 10 to 20. ' - V Casual Felt HATS The perfect companion! for casual fall clothes and campus togst Classic casual felts with smart details such as laced brims, novelty ' tu king and colorful embroidery. All new fall colors ... all sixes. ' -Seors Jlorei have police) or marked filing prlf t in compliance with Government rtgvfofioni ROEBUCK AND CO 133 S. Brh St. Phone SIM BUY WAR BONDS