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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 30, 1944)
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON May 30 PACE TWO UK GOP FACTIONS BEGIN BATTLE neuvo cnmn.ili. Boomtown, U. S. A. After the War Sultry Spring lr Undo,,, T.a . f, S wi'Klcm li,. urged ,h3 Hlenllenl fon.lun T,'.t iJ US. INERTIA to elimlmii,, .," '""' (u "Halm,. Tuflt!. Sl eiinimilun !,. , Publicans irnuT.i ."V Ut lb. of thlr uriM n aPol national enlli,l...:'"lll puni-war world, ' n lb i . 'VIUMftn i Whllo Llllwln ROME Til FALL DEWEY FLAYS CLARK AS FOR CHAIRMAN MEMORIAL TALK ASWAR COMES HERSHEY, Pa., May 30 JP) Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York says Americans "must not again sit on the side lines as mere observers and com mentators" while new war lords grow strong. The leading figure In the re publican presidential nomina tion picture told the 36lh Gov ernors' conference in an address last night that "Our people are united upon the proposition that our foreign affairs must be so conducted that disasters like the present one will not recur. . . . The people are determined to join In preventing future wars." Holding that civilians are "worried about inefficiencies and bungling" on the home front, Dewey said: "While there has been a maze of regimentation, some neces sary, some inexcusable, our strength at home has come whol ly from the genius of our free men in industry and tne aevouon of our workers and farmers to their jobs. Our success or fail ure after the war will depend on whether we, as a nation, take to heart the lesson the war has taueht us. "If we permit the continuance of the regimentation which some so earnestly desire, we snail tan, We cannot practice in peace the centralization which brought to talitarianism to our enemies and be either free or successful." Saying they offered the "fresh, confident leadership the nation needs, Dewey told, the governors: "You are ideally placed to see that all possible functions of gov ernment in this country will pro ceed close to their source that source is the people. ' "With the help of the driving Influence of the men in this room, there will be a determina tion never to permit that con centration of national power which would wipe out our re publican system and substitute a disguised totalitarianism." j Dewey asserted that in the pre-war years "We had a 10-year depression, ended only by the Kieverish and deadly stimulus of wa. . . . No material reason was Adequate to explain what hap-' Jened." J The task of political leaders. $e said, is to unity "to keep and build our new found faith in our . Selves, our kin, our country and ffi our God." ' The New York Governor said Sis state had locked up a surplus 01 i63,uuu,uuu for use on "nec essary deferred works" after the war, in order that necessary ex penditures may be made without (he burden of taxes. Earlier in the day, Dewey remained silent flurlng a discussion of the feder al government's role in any post war public works program. Fair chanc of poit-war comiback; lltti war -activity ' fm Wartime aaira probably I Hmponrf Goose Lake Box feets Army-Navy Production Award WASHINGTON, May 30 (IP) J tie Goose Lake Box company f Lakeview, Ore., has been granted the army-navy produc tion award, the army announced. 5 APPLE COMMITTEE WASHINGTON, May 30 (IP) Seuben G. Benz of Yakima, Paul Scea of Wenatchee and J. E. Klarhe of Hood River, Ore., were Ippointed to a nine-man apple industry advisory committee by he office of price administra Jon yesterday. i ACTION POSTPONED J SEATTLE, May 30 P) Rep resentatives of 100,000 Oregon and Washington boilermakers postponed action until Wednes day on a proposed consolidation f their membership into one district lodge, delegates said last fight. Mao above shows probable post-war population trtnds in 137 important metropolitan county areas. It is an interpretation, by Modern Industry, of a forecast made by Dr. Philip M. Hauser, assistant director U. S. Bureau of the Census. For your post-war planning of living or doing business in a war boomed area, you can, Dr. Hauser has found, generally figure that if a county has shown strong growth from 1920 to 1940, its chances of holding wartime population increase, or of making comeback after wartime decline are good. But if growth from 1920 to 1940 has been small, or has fallen off, the county will have difficulty in holding wartime increase. Action on the community cannery project, proposed for Klamath county and now being thoroughly investigated by local civic groups, went into the hands of the chamber of com merce last Friday morning, when members of the industrial and agricultural committees took the matter, under advise ment. . Chief among the questions still to be settled before a can nery which everyone in the county will be able to use for his own produce can become a reality was that of financing. There is some talk of financ ing through private funds, part ly for purposes of conserving badly .needed war-time food sup plies, partly as an experiment to determine whether the type of - crops grown in the county and the length of the growing season are adaptable to com mercial canning.' Should this be proven true, a canning venture might be visualized' as a post war industrial venture. Thought was given the possi bility that the cannery might be financed through coopera tive, pooling of funds for the initial construction costs and for the running expenses. This method has been followed in other similar Oregon ventures with good results. Government aid can not be extended to Klamath county this year except for paying the salary of a supervisor, provid ed that he, or she, is employed in vocational agricultural work in the county all year round. The committees referred the cannery question to the main body of the chamber of com merce for further consideration. Mrs. Dorothy Rapp of the war food administration distri bution office will come to Klamath Falls on Wednesday to confer with chamber of com merce representatives and mem bers of the nutrition committee on the cannery proposal. Human Flesh Taste Acquired Man's flesh is not a natural food for any animal, but most man-eaters develop the taste through same unusual incident, or late in life when unable to catch any other prey. Crabs Arboreal at Mealtime Hawaiian crabs climb coco nut trees, nip off the nuts, climb down and extract the meat inside the nuts through the "eyes" of the nut. Flashes of Life By The Associated Press SPEEDY JUSTICE ROSEVILLE, Calif. Clyde E. Garnett, 25, told Judge Al B. Broyer, who fined him for motor cycling at 70 per, that he was surprised that the police had been able to catch him. "The cops chased me before," he mused, "but . they never caught me." "I'll solve that mystery for you," confided the judge. "They have a new squad car. ... A very good car. Fifty dollars, please." . - THAT'S THE SPIRIT NEW PORT BEACH, Calif A spirited war bond drive has been planned for June 12. Liquor dealers have pledged several nundred quarts or liquor, to go in one, two and six bottle lots to persons buying the most bonds during the rally. SNAKE ALIVEI PARIS, IU. Came time to re tire, and Mrs. Allen Stigler grab bed a dark object on the bed and started to toss it aside, assuming it was some household article. . Her screams brought her hus band, who promptly disposed of the object a live, 14-inch garter snake. SHORTAGE FORT DOUGLAS, Utah The machine age hasn't produced enough maintenance workers for at least one type of apparatus, the ninth service command re ports. It's an electroencephalegraphic machine, a thingamajig to mea sure brain waves. DELAYED ACTION SALT LAKE CITY A divorce decree granted May 7, 1898, was recorded this week. Attaches said the decree bad been put aside because it was improperly signed, and it wasn't discovered until a 1944 spring houseclean ing. Both parties had remarried. CLASS EVENT CHAMPAIGN, 111. Second grader Donald Evans was proud of his new possession a robin's egg and he promptly brought it to school to display to his class mates. But Donald didn't anticipate that the egg, which he placed on a ledge near a window, would hatch. His teacher quickly sent the young bird to the high school biology class and hoped the students could keep it alive. What Happens When Geraldine Finds A Silken Slip In Hubby's Pocket! What Trouble Just a Little Wisp of Lingerie May Cause Between Friends! What Explanation Hubby Makes Whei Wifey Spots Him Under Mabel's Bed! -:SEE she see w in mabel's room' SUNDAY immm 7 Author Shot Down . In European Raid A LIBERATOR BASE IN BRITAIN. May 30 (V) Lt. Col. Beirne E. Lay, Jr., of Washing ton, D. C, who wrote the movie "I Wanted Wings" was shot down while leading a Liberator group in a recent raid on Europe, lt was revealed today. Fellow fliers said they saw parachutes open from the flak riddled plane and believed he had a good chance, of escaping. Lay came to England with the first American fliers. After a tour in charge of motion picture work he returned to the United States, formed a new Liberator group, and brought it over. CONVOY ARRIVES LONDON, May 30 A con voy loaded heavily with new United States invasion weapons arrived safely recently in Britain, it was announced today. By EDWARD KENNEDY ' '.ZIO, Italy, Muy 30 W) The fifth army will lake Homo "before many days have passed," Lt. Gen. Mark W. Clark declared in rn address nt Memorial Day r .vices hero today. The fifth army honored Us dond on the former beachhead in Memorial Day .services at nn American cemetery as guns in the battle for Rome rumbled a few miles away. "Wo now stand on' the thresh hold of Rome," said Clark in a brief address before placing n wreath. "Before many days luivo passed we shall hnvo freed his first of the European capitals from nazi domination." Before the fifth army com mander stretched countless rows o white crosses broken by the Jewish star of David here and there thousands of graves neat ly laid out in plots of 12 graves square, the resting places of sol diers who paid with their lives for the holding of the '-zio beachhead. Most of the graves in this cemetery are American, but there are also burled here some of the British and Canadian who fell near the American sec tor. There were new graves, dug but not filled, and even as the service was going on trucks were bringing the bodies that will be buried in them. "I want you to feel as I do," Clark said. "This is not a mo ment of sadness or sorrow but rather an Inspiration to spur us on to the task which has been set for us. We should use their aspirations and fighting spirit to drive us forward as Americans have always dono in the pust and as men of the fifth army have done "in Italy for the last nino months at Salerno, at Na ples, across the Volturno, along the Garigliano and in the Anzlu beachhead. "With God's help, we shall carry on the task which they be gan." Soldiers of every unit of the . jk at - J y irVV m It's the sort of thing Hint Imp in Lon Angrk's. Conies spring, comes n press nuenta, niicst for "Miss SprlnK of 11144."; Ho found her, loo in tho por-' sonnble person of 19-yenr-old1 Tyrn Vaudin, above, who wonl title in Illuo Book Model Guild beauty contest. - beachhead force were present. Beside Clark stood the Texan, MaJ. Gen. Luclnn K. Truscotl, who was in commurul of the beachhead forces until Clark ar rived. Classified Ads Bring Results. By JACK BELL WASHINGTON, May 30 (!') A bnttlo for the chairmanship of tho republican platform commit teo showed signs of (loveloplng toriny with factions lining up be hind AU M. Lttmlnn, the I (Kill presidential immliico, Scnntor Robi'i t T ft of Ohio and Senator Warren Austin of Vermont. Tim resolutions group, muclo up of two convention doleiiates from each statu, will meet In Chicugu one week In advance of tho June 2d presidential nominat ing convention to olect officers and begin hcurlngs on proponed platform planks. While tho committee may well decide to pick a chairman who lias nut been Identified too closet ly with such controversial Issues as International pout-war peace collaboration, thero nlrrudy Is i'llfl New York ',, leading Wu, ' JWiMi, , imnil,,,,!!,,,,, ,h1, , lot HUIIH ill consulted," umi i .! i pro, mould he told any a report opo.inK Ouj inlltee. If f,lr ".."'"ittji Taft, who I, John W. Hrlcker oToh l', nomlnatl,,,,, Wll( ,' 1 ' d that Dewey ' , tlv? nuHliilutVj; I milted ulmut i. t "dried thai u, y;M Ask your DOCTOR about US You liv iwrilrt) rfattAtlfifK in your rtiyirim, YK cr,il m yon uliaiiM, ttU iiflrlnrei rcKwntiurnUatlnna rmitiprnlnR ytwr ltrtlitt umi tvrlfare. 'Hum wo utf you ta fk ItU rmuurl on m nutter nf ftut liiipnrlwMV. JTmcTtfHian rfwrmarjr. 1U trlt yni that w nulnttla im IiIkIw-I ctliifal miuludit Umi c otv ircirrillou U ea. wHHHlrl prrrMr u iliwld; that UiO (wilj- fwh, pi lliat out ftrnuBfw, our w iro imrtci-llnL Phono 4S14 CURRIN'S For DRUGS 840 Moin St. iX!UII Telephone 4567 Box Office Opens 1:30-8:45 Ends Wednesday you I f'Mj won't S-r-( ' , forget iinmiiiii'M BOX OFFICE OPENS EVENINGS 6:45 TONIGHT liiijiLiji'jiiy CONTINUOUS SHOWS SAT.SUH BOX OFFICE OPENS 11)0 WEDNESDAY -THURSDAY LULUBELLE i SCOTryA Telephone 4572 Box Office Opem 1:30-6:45 -ENDS-WEDNESDAY If BORN J ROBERT WALKER DONNA MID KIINAN WTNN ROIIKT IINCHIIY IM MOUUTKM HU MM M 4lt BOX OFFICE OPENS EVENINGS 6:45 2 Wig MVis STARTS WhtH U , Jlit last JfifSL " O and give &Sff Ki V fOOTt J -ft. SECOND BIG HIT Continuou. Shows Dally Box OHico Open, 12:30 Mew a, -Ttr'." Today WAS AN ARMY MANEUVERI A If ) Ste MM?... ,:, h&i?i J A PROPOSITION WAS ) If I ' ' , 11 ANOTHER ' BIG HIT gA "FJGHTING XyWJ