Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, September 13, 1943, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
September IS. 104$
T
E
' (Continued From Page One) ,
Australian landing 'from Amer
ican nival craft on the Huon
gulf, September 4, and ,the ap
parent inability of the' enemy
to smash an' allied bridgehead
on the Lae side of the wide,
wift - flow-ing Bubu river
seemed a clear demonstration
of the decisive success of the
allied command's strategy.
That strategy was to- weaken
Lae garrison to a point where
it could not hope to fight its
way free of an allied trap, set
by the Australian American
drive to Salamaua, and sprung
by the seaborne landings north
and airborne landings west on
Lae.
Drive at Town
After seizing the airfield, the
Australians drove, north and
east toward Salamaua, . two
miles away, and made a fresh
contact with the enemy along
a Jutting ridge a mile and a
half north of the airdrome.
At the same time seaborne
allied troops from the east and
airborne forces from the north
west slowly closed their lines
on Lae, 18 miles above Sala-
maua and, except for that tot
tering base, the only remaining
Japanese position of conse
quence anywhere along the
178-mile rim of Huon gulf.
TOO LATE TO
CLASSIFY
COMPLETE service men's gift
dept., at Rudy's Hen's Shop,
6th and Main. -. - . B-20m
LLOYD W. RUSK Contractor
and Builder. Remodeling.
1621 Arthur St- Phone 3405.
9-12m
FOR THE BETTER grades of
fuel oils, accurate, metered
deliveries, try Fred H. Heil
bronner, 821' Spring street,
telephone 4153. Distributor
Shell Heating Oils. 9-13m
WANTED Car sweepers. Wom
en or men. Apply Western
Fruit Express 'ptlice, Great
. ''Northern depot- 9-10
PHONE 8318 for Quality, Dis-
' tilled, Clean burning ASSO
CIATED BURNER OILS,
Every gallon a full gallon of
. heat energy. BALSIGER OIL
COMPANY. , , 8-3 Qm
. : SOLD OUT
Have real buyers for homes and
ranches. Can guarantee sale if
price is within reason. .,
"SEE
425 Pine
" COLLINS:.-
-,, CT' Phone 8384
1' ' . 3246tf
IF YOU WANT the best in a
good hotel, site, facing the
S. P. passenger depot, entire
block,
;. "SEE" COLLINS.
425 Pine Phone 8364
3541-tf
FOR SALE OR TRADE for
farm in Klamath vicinity, 228
acres near Eugene, including
million feet saw timber, IS
acres farmland with two
cabins, 80 acres open land
and oak timber. Lee Taylor,
Rt. 3, Eugene.
WANTED Contractor to oper
ate commissary' and cook
house. Tiller Mill St Lumber
Co., Medford, Ore. 9-18
RADIO EQUIPMENT for sale.
Have about $300 radio testing
equipment used sets, parts,
etc. someone interested in ra
dio may have for $100 -cash.
' 4349 Winter avenue after 4:30
p. m. 9-18
ONE-ROOM furnished -. apart
ment. 7Qg jNortn Btn. - 9-1
IF YOU NEED A CARPENTER
Dial 4270..- 9-18
FOR SALE 30-30 carbine with
1 box of shells, 650. Gun is
not new but in good shape.
5102 So. 6th. -'- 9-13
LOST Male Springer spaniel,
zt months old, brown, and
white. Lost Saturday after 8
o'clock. 1724 Ivory. Phone
6088. , . . 9.14
WANTED Bookkeeper familiar
with lumbering. Permanent
position. Chauncey Florey.
Phone 6197, Medford. 4203tf
FOR SALE 1924 Dodge pickup,
needs battery, fair tires, good
motor, $30 cash as is. 4349
Winter avenue, after 4:30 p. m.
" 9-18
FOR RENT 6-room unfurnished
Jiouse, modern. 619 Klamath.
9-14
FOR RENT 3-room furnished
house on East Main, $30.
Drew's Manstore. ' 9-18
FO SALE 1923 Buick touring.
. Fair tires, good condition. See
owner, 160 Esst Main. $40.
01 A
111
ALL!
D HANDS
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued From Psce One)
emy ships, so that if captured
they won't be IMMEDIATELY
useful. Their gun calibers are
different, for example, so that
we can't use our ammunition in
them.
By grabbing Taranto, we get
(probably) not only ' stores of
Italian naval ammunition to use
in' Italian guns, but Italian
MACHINERY with which to re
pair Italian ships and make mora
ammunition.
From Taranto, we boomed
across the heel of the boot to
Brindlsi, thus gaining possession
of one side of the narrow strait
of Otranto, leading into the
Adriatic.
.
AS a highly significant follow
.. th. Tt.ll... n.tnr lr-
cldent, we learn today that
HEAVY UNITS of the British
fleet have ALREADY been dis
pitched (via Sues) to the Far
East in preparation for the
Burma drive against the Japs as
soon as the monsoon rains end.
TPHE Russians are still pushing
ahead, and are reported today
within artillery range of Bry
ansk. There's little news from
the Sea of Azov front, but no indication-that
the Russians have
been checked there.
TTHE Germans apparently
grabbed the island of Rhodes,
in the Italian Dodecanese group,
lust off the Turkish coast We
bombed Rhodes twice over the
weekend.
THERE'S a rumor today of
fighting In Outer Mongolia,
which is under Russian protec
tion. The Japs also report
(without confirmation from us)
that their outposts in the Kurlles
have been hit again by 18 of our
bombers. '
Day by day, we're closing in
on Salamaua and Lae. '
FUNERALS
CHARLES WILLIAM SEEDS
The funeral service for the
late Charles William Seeds, who
passed away in this city on Sep
tember 10, will take place from
the chapel of Ward's Klamath
Funeral home, 925 High street
on Tuesday afternoon at 2
o'clock, the Rev. William Rice of
the Immanuel Baptist church officiating.-
Commitment services
and interment will follow in
Linkville cemetery. Friends are
invited to attend.
DR. FRANK H. DAY
The funeral service for the
late Dr. Frank H. Day, who
passed away in this city on Sep
tember 7, will take place from
the chapel of Ward's Klamath
Funeral home, 928 High street on
Tuesday morning. September 14
at 11 o'clock. The Rev. A. Theo
dore Smith, D. D. of the Presby
terian church will officiate. Com
mitment .services and interment
will follow in Linkville ceme
tery. Friends are invited.
RICHARD L ELAND HOWELL
The funeral service for the
late Richard Leland Howell, who
passed away In this city on Sep
tember 9, took place in Linkville
cemetery on Monday morning,
September 13, at 10:30 o'clock.
The Rev. Daniel Anderson of the
Klamath Temple officiated.
Ward's Klamath Funeral home
in charge.
Terror Depletes
Pro-Nazi Ranks In
Vichy Government
MADRID, Sept. 18 VP) Re
ports reaching here today from
the French border said many of
the Vichy government's pro-Ger
man employes were quietly van
ishing under fear of assassination
and that German domination was
nearing an end.
Hundreds departed .in recent
days, the reports said, with none
leaving forwarding addresses.
Others who did not leave soon
enough after receiving threaten
ing letters were sent to hospitals
or cemeteries, the reports said.
French newspapers reachine
Spain told of "terrorism" in
France. ';.-...;
NEVER FAILS
WESTERLY, R. I. W) Po
liceman Joseph Delaney, doing
special- duty at Misquamicut
beach, knew what to do when
five-year-old boy was report
ed missing.
He sounded the fire siren. The
movement he saw inu the bushes
near the fire station a moment
later was the missing youngster,
coming out to see what all the
excitement was about.
WHAT'S A STOP SIGN1
DES MOINES, la., VP) A 49-year-old
Iowan appeared at the
statehouse for a driver's test with
his new car.
The examiner looked askance
when the driver sped through the
first stop sign, then crabbed
wheel when the novice' whizzed
wrougn the second.
"Don't you watch th tn
signs?" the examiner demanded.
"Can't watch the signs and the
other cars too," was the driver's
comment.
One belief of Flit T.ianrf.r.
is that if they are not tattmwH
theycannot. enter. Paradise.
BERLIN RADIO
CHORTLES OVER
RELEASE STORY
(Continued from Page One)
saying that "the prestige of the
national fascist government
would be greatly strengthened
by Mussolini's liberation."
Paper Report
The German paper. Zwoelfuhr
Blatt the radio said, declared
the action "deprived the allies
of a pawn."
What use the Germans intend
ed to make of Mussolini, after
his 49 days of confinement away
from his balcony at Palazzo
Venezia remained to be seen,
but it was likely that he might
be restored as a puppet dictator
in the nazi-controlled territory in
northern Italy.
Details of the reported rescue
were still lacking, but a Berlin
communique last night said that
ha had been freed by parachute
troops, security service men, and
armed members of the S. S.
British la Dark
The British foreign office
stated it had no information on
the whereabouts of Mussolini
and at no time had he ever been
in British-American hands.
Because of this, officials here
discounted reports that he had
been taken by German para
chute troops in Sicily.
Some officials tended to dis
count the value of his reported
release, arguing that if Mussolini
did set up a puppet fascist regime
the Italian people, thoroughly
sick of war and fascism, would
pay little attention to it.
Unofficially the German claim
apparently was accented here.
for the British Broadcasting cor
poration, in a radio news bul
letin to the Italian people, said
that Mussolini had been released
by the Germans and added that
Premier Badoglio and King Vit
torio Emanuele "are safe at an
undisclosed place on Italian
soil." . -
mere was no official con
firmation of either statement
nowever, from any allied source.
Mussolini s whereabouts have
been more or less of a mystery
since nis sudden fall, but it is
believed in London that he has
been held a prisoner in the Pon
tine islands off the west coast
of Italy. , t , ... 1
BERN, Switzerland. Sent 13
VP) The Swiss Telegraph agen
cy said in a dispatch from the
Swiss frontier town of Chiasso
today that Benito Mussolini was
liberated by German parachut
ists from his detention place
near raiermo, Sicily.
The agency's report, which
was not confirmed, said Musso
lini was taken to Palermo at the
time Premier Marshal Pietro
Badoglio and King Vittorio
Emanuele left Rome,
OBITUARIES
REV. GILBERT D.' BROWN
Rev. Gilbert D. Brown, a resi
dent of Klamath Agency, Ore.,
for the last year, passed away in
that community on Sunday, Sep-
lernoer m, 1843. The deceased
was a native of New York and
was aged 72 years, , 3 months
when called. Survivins are his
wife, Ida, of Klamath Agency; a
son, Gerald, of Des Moines, la.;
inree oaugniers, Mrs. Vivian
Fobes of Council Bluff. Ia.. Mrs.
i-atnenne Dalton of Lincoln,
Neb., and Mrs. Marjorie Miller
of San Gabriel, Calif; and a
brother, Will Brown of Tex. The
deceased was the retired Metho
dist minister of the Fort Klam
ath and Chiloquin Methodist
churches. He has also been a
member of the South Dakota
Methodist conference for the last
51 years. The remains rest at
Ward's Klamath Funeral home,
925 High street. Funeral ar
rangements will be announced
later.
MARGARITO Z. LARA
Margarito Z. Lara, a resident
of this community for the last
few weeks, passed away in this
city on Monday, September 13,
1943. The deceased was a na
tive of Mexico. The remains rest
at Ward's Klamath Funeral
home, 928 High street Funeral
arrangements are pending word
from relatives in Mexico.
JOHN G. DUNNINGTON
.John G. Dunnington, a resi
dent of this city for the last 22
years, passed away in this city on
Sunday, September 12, 1943. The
deceased was a native of Harney
county, Ore., and was aeed 88
years, 1 month and 23 days when
called. Besides his wife. Delia of
Klamath Falls, he is survived bv
a daughter, Mrs. Margaret Gel
haar of Klamath Falls: a ltr
Gertrude Dunnington of Seattle,
Wash.; three brothers, Thomas
and Clifford of Jacksonville.
Ore., and Clinton of the United
States army, North Africa. The
remains rest at Ward's Klamath
Funeral home, 928 High street
Funeral arrangements will be
announced later.
Mount Shasta was first ascend
ed by Capt. E, D. Pearce, a Yreka
merchant, who, made the climb
in September 1884.
More Italian
Battleships, Subs,
Carriers at Malta
cruisers, eight destroyers and
14 submarines arrived at Malta
late last week, shortly after the
armistice was announced.
A dispatch from Madrid,
however, said that an Italian-
cruiser and four other warships,
destroyers and gunboats, had
been interned at Port Mahon in
the Balearics for overstaying
the 24-hour leave as provided
oy international law. .
Two other Italian destroyers,
the dispatch said, departed
from Pollensa, Mallorca, one of
the Balearic islands, last night
alter landing 28 wounded.
Cruisers Join
Seven of Italy's 10 known
cruisers have joined the allies
and seven Italian warships re
ported to have put in previous
ly at the Balearics before head
ing for an allied port may
nave included others.
ami unaccounted for are
more than halt of the Italian
submarine fleet which was be
lieved to have numbered be
tween 80 and 60, some of which
were understood to have been
operating in the Atlantic ocean.
Malta dispatches said that
Admiral Bagliria, commander
of the fleet, went down with
the Roma and that another of
ficer aboard the cruiser Eugen-
io di Savoia became flag off!
cer and brought the fleet to
Malta.
T
BIG BOND
E
Oregon Mutual Life Insur
ance company announced Mon
day that it had allotted $80,000
for purchase of- a Third War
Loan bond to Klamath county.
This is part of a $2,000,000
purchase to be made in the
Third War Loan campaign in
the state by the insurance com
pany, which is represented lo
cally by Lynn Roycroft.
In a letter to E. B. Hall, gen
eral bond, chairman, the vice
president of the company, W.
P. Stalnaker. stated:
"We have always received a
substantial business from the
people of Klamath county and
believe that we are justified in
alloting a portion of our cur
rent war bond purchase to
your community."
The company's purchase will
go toward purchase of a Liber
ty freighter.
Charged with unlawfully en
tering a motor vehicle, Robert
Thompson, a negro, was fined
$25 - and $6.95 court costs in
justice court late last week.
Telling the owner of an auto
mobile which was for sale, that
he had a buyer for the car.
Thompson got in and drove off,
presumably to try it out the
owner thought. Some time
passed and when Thompson
and the car did not come back,
the car owner became worried.
He notified authorities and
Thompson was picked up across
the California line.
Under questioning Thompson
said that he had not tried to
steal the car but was taking it
to the prospective buyer who
lived in California.
Thompson was fined court
costs and $25, some of the lat
ter fine going to pay the car
owner for gas, etc., used on the
trip.
Japs Battle With
Russ-Protected
Mongolians
CHUNGKING, Sept. 12 (De
layed) VP) Brisk clashes be
tween Japanese forces and the
troops of Outer Mongolia, which
is under Russian protection, were
reported today by the central
news agency.
The site of the fighting was
given as the boundary of Inner
and Outer Mongolia, north of
Pallingmiao, which is 300 miles
northwest of Peiping.
NOW PLAYING
Alice Fare John Payne
Cesar Romero
"Week-End In
Havana"
In Technicolor
OREGON I
BUYS
LOAN
BR
NEGRO FID FOR
UNLAWFUL ENTRY
NAZIS RESIST
FIFTH ARMY'S
HILL THRUSTS
(Continued From Page One)
first German parachute division
had been encountered in the
push up the Adriatic shore, but
whether these were the forces
remaining to oppose the advance
was not stated.
The main bodies of ' enemy
troops in Southern Italy were
still converging toward the big
Naples-Salerno battle, however,
and it was there that the crucial
action was being fought.
Heavy Fighting
"Very, heavy fighting contin
ues in the area of the fifth army
at Salerno," said the commun
ique. 'The Germans are resist
ing desperately our determined
thrusts to break through tholr
positions."
Lt. Gen. Mark w. Claries
chief of staff in this critical
battle, allied headquarters dis
closed, is 44-year-old Ma. Gen.
Alfred M. Gruenther of Platte,
Neb., rated among the United
States army's smartest tacticians
and organizers.
Nasls Punch
(Also indicating fierce fight
ing in the Salerno area, the Ger
man communique said nazi
troops were throwing hard
punches of their own in the
northern part of the battle area
and threw back allied forces "to
the town and coastal strip"
presumably Salerno.
at was conceded, nowever.
that the allied forces southeast
of Salerno were making strong
thrusts "to' break through moun
tain positions east of the coastal
plain.")
Enemy troop movements on
the highways toward Salerno
were heavily 'attacked all day
yesterday by allied dive-bombers
and strafers which raxed con.
voys ranging up to 200 vehicles
streaming northward toward the
fight
Air Resistance . -.
The importance the nazi com
mand attached to preventing a
further enlargement of Gen,
Clark's foothold Immediately
south of Naples also was shown
by the continued presence over
the battle area of large numoers
of enemy bombers and fighters,
both dav and night.
Enemy broadcasts, too, said
the defending forces were well
entrenched on higher ground
and conceded that the fighting
was srim.
While the fighting raged un
abated, the day brought no
further Information of the situa
tion inside the areas of Italy held
by . the Germans, nor of the
whereabouts or fate of three men
who had leading rotes in drag
ging the country through three
years of unsuccessful war and
then to unconditional surrender
Benito Mussolini, King Vit
torla Emanuele and . Premier
Marshal Pietro Badoglio.
NEW YORK, Sept 13 (IP)
Violent fightin is takin place be
tween Italians and Germans in
the Albanian port of'Durazzo,
across the Adriatic from Brln-
disi, and all Italian naval units
in the vicinity have been scut
tled, a London broadcast said
today. The report was recorded
by CBS. '
"The Italian garrison at Tir
ana (the Albanian capital) is of
fering stiff resistance," the broad
cast added.
Chiang Elected
China President
CHUNGKING, Sept. 13 VP)
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek
was elected president of China
to succeed the late Dr. Lin Sen
at a meeting of the Kuomintang
central executive committee to
day. Under a revision of the na
tional government's organic law
adopted Saturday Chiang be
comes, as president, commander-in-chief
of China's land, air and
naval forces.
Pontiac was an American In
dian chief of the Ottawa tribe.
NOW!
Doors Open
1)30 -6:45
'tt.YoutHiiittr
-te am
OQffiD
COM
C r Aa
Coal Miners Needed
In Western States
WASHINGTON. Sunt, t fJPl
Paul V. McNutt, chairman of
the war manpower commission
IWMC), said in orders sent to.
day to United States employ
ment service (USES) offices that
a minimum of 3000 men must
be recruited immediately to
meet a shortage 01 coal miners
in five western states,
The order, which went to
more thun 1500 employment
service offices. itateH lint vital
war production cannot bo main
tained unless tha mlnera ara
supplied at once. Mines for
wnicn work-ers are sought are
in Colorado, Montana, Utah,
Washington and Wyoming,,
ITS
OF RED ARTILLERY
(Continued from Page One)
Near Junction
In other fresh successes all
along the front the communique
said the Russians driving toward
the Konotop-Klcv railway had
reached a point only 12 miles
from the junction city of Nezhln,
thus putting the red army only
84 miles from the Ukraine cap
ital at ruev. .
More than 90 localities fell to
the swift Russian units chasing
the Germans out of the Donets
basin toward the Dnieper river
bond. One recaptured district
center, Bolshaya Yanlsol, lies 40
miles west and slightly south of
Stalino.
Roslavl, midway between
Bryansk and Smolensk on the
central front, alio was threaten
ed by soviet units that which
pnuched out a gain of nearly
four miles during the day.
Roslavl is 80 miles northwest of
Bryansk.
Nasls Dasperate
The greatest German effort
to hold back the powerful Rus
sian drive was exerted along
the southernmost sector of the
front where enemy tanks and
infantry were desperately striv
ing to keep the Russians away
from the narrow land outlets.
The Germans here were re
ported to have attempted to
stem the Russians along prevl
ously prepared defense p o s i
tlons, but the red army broke
through at several places. The
nails launched numerous futile
counter-attacks.
Night Attacks
Even night attacks which are
rare for the Germans are being
launched, the party newspaper
Pravda reported, but the Rus
sians beat them off, inflicted
heavy losses and the soviet ad
vance continued.
(The German communique
recorded by the Associated
Press from a Berlin broadcast
id German land and naval
forces had liquidated Russian
detachments which landed in
the Novorosslsk. area of the Ku
ban peninsula.)
Near City
Soviet troops which were
pushing their way through the
thick Bryansk forests were
gradually converging, mean
while, on the city from the
north, east and south.
After capturing Belye Ber-
ega which is only 12 miles due
east of Bryansk, the Russians
repulsed an enemy counter-attack
and pushed ahead through
minefields over felled trees.
The last two remaining rail
ways out of Bryansk, leading
to Gomel and Smolensk, were
under, threat, of being severed
by the Russian forces which
were steadily pushing their
way through the northwest and
southwest approaches of the'
city.
He recovered 46 softballs
from the canal near the athletic
field.
NOW
Doors Open 1)30 6i45
I ZWV L AMOUR 1
l & Mir)f! R.ytWt i
IV 'Billy it Welfe A
J"vn t h 1 ciiis'
raw
Kurile Islands
Blasted by U. S.
Bombs, Say Japs
NEW YORK, Sept. 18 OP)
The Japanese Domel agency
said in a broadcast today that
18 American bombers attacked
Japanese installations in the
northern Kurile Islands yester
day, Tha broadcast was record
ed by the federal communlca
tlons commission.
The Kurlles stretch north'
ward from Japan and Include
tha principal North Pacific
naval base at Paramushlro.
Domel admitted that two
Japanose transports were set
afire but said damage to land
Installations was ' "extremely
light" Land batteries and army
and navy airmen shot down
many American planes, the
broadcast said, adding that Jap
anese losses consisted of one
plane.
A subsequent Domel English
languago broadcast recorded by
the federal communications
commission claimed that eight
and probably nine American
planes were shot down In the
attack which the dispatch said
occurred early yesterday morn
ing. The Japanese Indicated that
12 of the U. S. planes ware
B-25 Mitchell medium bombers.
AM IN
CAMP ABBOT, Ore., Sept
15 VP) Thousands of troops
rolled onto the central Oregon
plateau today to begin the at
tack In gigantic war games
scheduled to continue for two
months. -
The first problem for the at
tacking "red" army under Maj.
Gen. Gilbert R. Cook is to find
the defending "blues," com
manded by Maj. Gen. James L.
Bradley.
This msy be no easy matter.
The maneuver area la a 10,000
square mile area of rlm-rock,
swamplands, timbered moun
tains, lakes and desert. Tha
blues, who set out last week to
take up defending positions, are
generally believed to be deploy
ed In the high desert some 150
miles to the east.
Once the mock battle Is join
ed, the troops will experiment
with the latest war tactics, as
reported by high-ranking offic
ers from the Mediterranean and
South Pacific areas.
Maj. Gen. Alexander M.
Patch, commander of the fourth
corps, is conducting the man
euvers, which are so extensive
approximately 1500 umpires
and 75,000 troops will be In
volved. Officers said the size
of each force, however, is a
military secret
Ventura Fugitive
Picked Up Here
Kenneth Donahoo, allegedly
fugitive ' from justice from
Ventura county, Calif., where
he is charged with larceny, was
picked up by law enforcement
officers here last week on a
fugitive complaint
Donahoo was out of jail Mon
day after his ball of $2500 had
been filed. J. C. O'Neill is at
torney for the defendant.
rrrrra-TU
e Last Day
"CASABLANCA"
"SALUDOS AMIOOS"
TOMORROW
till '.!
REUS BEG N
IR
IS
f 405vL for-
3 j -. ALL
y Jsy ,, ' rjj
f fokI
, 2ND BIO HIT iS 11
ymm HOLMES It 1
SNELL TELLS '
OF MICHIGAN
GOP MEETING
SALEM, Sept. IS VP) The re
publican post-war advisory com
mlttee, which met at Macklnao
Island, Mich., last week adopted
"a very courageous, forward,
looking statement of policies and
principles," Governor Earl Snell
said on his return to Snlom to
day from the meotlng.
The governor was out of the
state 10 days. He will leave
late this week for Denver, where
western governors will discuss
railroad freight rates,
"Aside from all-out contribu
tion In the winning of the wj
:6
1 r
at the earliest posslblo data;
the governor continued, Die
publican committee adopted an
affirmative position In connec
tion with the much-discussed
question of post-war participa
tion by the United States In
world organization looking tea,
permanent peace, realizing, of
course, the Importance of main
taining the sovereignty ot tho
United States.
Prior to the republican meet
ing, Governor Snoll -proalded In
Chicago at the national forestry
committee meeting of the gov
ernors' conference.
SENTENCES GIVEN
James Guerln and Charles
Leon Derocher, found guilty In
Justice court Friday, of selling al
coholic liquor, have been fined
$150 or 75 days each by Justice
of the Peace J. A. Mahoney.
The six man jury in each case,
found the defendant guilty after
a short trial. The Guerin trial
was held Krlday morning and the
Derocher case in the afternoon.
At the trial two men from
the Oregon state liquor commis
sion testified thsl the two de
fendants sold them alcoholic li
quor (n Joly. '
- . e
WORTH THE EFFORT
HARTFORD. Conn. (P)
Sure, said Mrs. Florence Ros-
nlck to her air raid warden, she
wanted to buy- a war bond hrt
all sha had was a collection of
pennies. v .
It took 20 other wardens to
count out the 3750 pennies for
ner so bond.
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
BLACK FOOT, Idaho HP)
'Stubby," a terrier, today had
a . softball autographed by tha
president of the Flackfoot Soft
ball league in recognition of
the dog's performance.
Seventeen per cent of 1941
traffic fatalities occurred be
tween 5 p. m. Saturday and 4
a. m. Sunday.
The native home of the Merino
breed of sheep is in Spain.
Lightning never strikts In
tha same place twice. Hans Nor
land Fire Insurance. Ill N. 7th.
Continuous From 1:00 P,
Lsst Day
"Holiday Inn"
"Heart of the
Golden West'
St e its Tomorrow
Ml YOU HAVI
NUMB Of IN
ONI ORIAT
SHOWI
IN LIQUOR CJIS$
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