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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (May 30, 1944)
PACE FIVE Allies Clean Up In Cassino What Pre-lnvasion Bombing Does BLOWS BATTER 4 I 7 l..! : in HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. ORECON IffSOIFFEl rJr TWO yiUM"-iumi tew!' ft : Isms &'-'-' - t iAfk: , Lu" -1 TO JOB MOVE NAZIS EUROPE (Continue from Pago One) lu n rchcurlne of Binnuiiiu mi nn '"lfil' Lowcry. nld' u'mrA district council was Kmeml H't the CIO union EX buck I.) their job.. 4fCirK 7. nt Iwn Efnms lo President RooHovcIt K m. ho Intervene, lo rind I""! 1 ' .1 r.. II,., ,1 Kiinln. - ifii wti rl "tirucllcal- . ,11 of i'9.000 CIO woodwork t. ii the district" nro refusing H?..., Laid two rcasonublc f ,11,1101)11 ore tJimftlblo. . Solutions iTlml Hi" NWL3 reopon ........ wl ruin on tho ov- Lco 'submitted nillicr than on ut procedure. . iwi mw -dUltrlUl lUIIIUUIIIi ,.,,,,,,. -.t..- r.,nrfsi,rtlntlveH of the timber operators make a sub- iiinllnl wimo o""i. miujKti i" Mwil f H' lubor board. 11 -mi..... I,,ulnni. II Mill ullll. L (he 1WA council Ihon could kfCOminCIKI U'lll mo wumi'in u hrk on tle-lr Jobs, pending a ui"-., ii... L-neuiry "I mo nru council, f I. ...I ,,l,.hl II, Ml nnnrnyi. Million1 . .T. . i ' 1 ' , ..i.K. "i; mill AI L lumber work- in now nro Idle. C.SATTLK. Mny 30 (?) n- L..iim, nf ri'kcrvc stork to "nn f""""., .... rffOlinim iiiiimnw,,, vwu',.v, ,iiii iho armed services' tiro- Iivmloii requirements hnvo miido umber, PUIP n"11 pi'pcr i'iT w" i ...rronl V niOSt-CrlllCUl 1)111101,111.1. Imivaii'H war nroducllon author- HIPS 101C1 IIUITVIL'WCIII IICIW IU- .. ., COI. niariin iucuuihicii, uriny hcadquurli'm fluff forest pro inrla chief, mild "our present Sottltwek l.i log". 1' wo don t clour need hero In the Pacific orthwcit, It b'te rlKlit Into our rtlllcry program." He wid llio production loso Hut lo llio current sawmill kilkouta threntons the entire nrtm rv. t.o onei nicuon- Inrll wtld llio army times au io 60 per rent of woodii product 'liy diri'cl purcnuae ana un uu (iillonnl i.'t per cenl throimh nihpr olloaitlons, such as war In cujlricis and packing. EVKRETT. Mnv 30 (IP) Kvcrclfn lumber outlook eon- iinucj to crow brlKhtor. Mon iljy nlRht came nn announce men! that tho employes of the Cinyon Lumber company pinn lo return lo work Vcdncday morning. The move will leave onlv (he Walton Lumber com- iany and tho William Hulbert Mill company inncllvo ncro. RE I (Continued from Page One) iunla was organized by Cnntaln Scrtilo Eni l(uo Clron, Francisco .-vnzann Luuuo, Alfonso Larrca Alba, Kfraln Cainacho Santos, Pcilro Antonio Saao, Annul Fell iino Uojas, and Pedro Pablo "lues baucrlzo. Thry appointed Maj. Manuel Antonio Hidalgo as mllitary-clv-jlinn head of Guayaquil, and said ncy Ihcmsclvns would act only In nn advisory cnpnclly. They Issued a proclamation saying tnclr movcinont was supported by Student..! nnrl Inlinr lniinll? and announced tholr intention of railing elections. PLASTIC! shop Bni.M A new nhlQtl. vnn fnt- mitn'n 'Hin Wnilll.ll'B rrrtmn Koo linmt Mevclopod which retains the 3me riRidlly and consequent wa king case of other solo ma '"lalf. yet at the same time Is jxiapieieiy Impervious to mols 'c and keeps a better appear- nce, On Board : 1 -A i V 5 AV I nan., t . 'eclor I. V: 1B assistant dl Ptow,0' homWBA' segregation moH 8t T1'la. has b.en P'obinr,?? 'J1 military board woto L h d0Bt,, of s- K- Oko- 'ntr V.T VBCU, "hot by a 't b.- "nnouncomant has ; "n mada by tha board. L&ite 'PJwf x:y, - TJ'h & ' A v'p-: An alllod bulldoior pool lo work in lront of tho Hotol dc Hoios in Camlno on tho da after the capture of Iho city. In iho background is Hangman's mil, whore hoavy lighting occurred earlior In tha campaign. (AP wlropholo). Nazi Prisoners Watch Var From Roa'dsiaV .'fyi tkl fESfi: V -- HiSv, - 'v- (At4 Hudio iticpnoioj Oorman prisoners of war sit on Italian roadside watching Allied armored vehicles speed onward to form Junc tion between Filth and Eighth Armies Uio Junction Uicy hud lought so many months to prevent. j Determined Correspondent Swims After Landing Craft Pushing Toward Biak hie By ASAHEL BUSH SOUTHWEST PACIFIC AD VA N C ED HEADQUARTERS, New Guinea, May 30 (!) After a reasonably uneventful landing, it looked ns if a real fight wero brewing for Biak island, and Associated Press Correspondent Spencer Davis was determined to be on hand to give it coverage. It was near the end of the Invasion day. Tank -carrying ships were unloaded and pre paring lo withdraw. All the other American, newspapermen and all but one Australian in tho press party already had gona aboard ship, Davis a llttlo man with mer ry eyes nnd a quick smile had gone aboard, too temporarily. While ho was out following n patrol earlier In the day, a bull dozer buried his typewriter and other equipment he had left on the beach. Now he was using the ship's typewriter . to turn out his first duy story. Maj. Norman H. Myers of Burlington, Vt., army press re lations officer accompanying tho party, said Davis was with in a few lines of finishing his story when a dozen Jnpancso E lanes appeared nnd started omblng nnd strafing his and other LST bouts. Tho general quarters alarm rang throughout tho vessel. Her dlcsel engines churned under full power, to drive the ship oft the beach into the more maneuvernble area ot open wa ter. Hundreds ot i anti-ulrcratt guns opened fire on tho Japa nese. Four wore shot down. Through this excitement Dnvis kept pounding until he finished the story and handed It to Myers. Then he dashed for the bow of tho ship, where ho found tho gates still open and the ramp down. By now the LST was a hun dred yards -offshore. But with out hesitation Davis dived off the ramn and started swimming toward tho beach. Myers said Davis' course Ihroueh tho water wound past tho blazing wrcckngb ot three Japanese planes, then up the Developing Printing Enlarging UNDERWOOD'S PHOTO SERVICE 211 Underwood BIdg. beach past the smashed rem nants of a fourth. The major and others re turned here today. As far as they know. Davis is still fol lowing the battle ot Biak island. Since then the conflict has giv en evidences of developing into a full-scale campaign. Davis is following It without a typewrilcr and without equip ment. He has only the determin ation to keep after a good story. Daddy Longlogs' Gonoalogy The daddy longlogs is known in different parts of the world as havest spider, pseudo-spider and shepherd spider, yet it is not a spider at all, but a relative of. the scorpion. Ground Battlo Abovo Clouds Tho "Battle Abovo the Clouds" was fought during the Civil' War. It was the Battle ot Chattanooga, In which General Hooker gained the summit of Lookout Moun tain. ANTS, SNAILS JUNGLE DIET Lost in a Solomon Island jun gle, a Marine flyer, Lieut. Rich ard R. Amerine, lived on red ants and snails for several days, and killed three Japs in evading capture. Blast Furnaces Fowor Now ' The United States has fewer blast furnaces in operation to day than ever before, but they are. bigger and bettor and have a greater capacity of production. Mate's Heart Taken to Gravo England's Sweetheart Abbey derives Us name from the fact that Devorguilu, who founded it, had tho heart of her husband, whose death preceded hers by eight years in 1269, buried with herln her town tomb. If It's a "frozen" article vou need, advertise for a used one in tho classified. EETSET (Continued from Page One) llcans and one Independent, headed by Chairman Connally (D-Tex.) of the foreign relations committee. Encouraged . Throughout the five meetings, Hull said, "we -had frank and fruitful discussions ... I am def initely encouraged and am ready to proceed, witn the approval of tho president, with informal discussions on this subject with Great Britain. Russia and China and then with governments of other United Nations." Meanwhile, he said, he would continue to talk with congression al leaders and would keep "wide-open the door of non partisanship." Doctors Want FDR o To Keep Healthy WASHINGTON, May 30 (Pi Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt said today that the president's doctors want him to keep the gains in health which ho has made re cently. - One of the recommendations, the First Lady told her press conference, is that the president should not work "till all hours of the night and not make every meal a working time." Cornstalk Uses 400 Lbs. Water A single stalk of corn in ono growing season will lift more than 400 pounds of water from the ground and expel it through its leaves. , (Continued From Page One) German plunc plants in Austria, Poland and central Germany de stroyed 108 nazi interceptors at the cost of 55 bombers and 25 lesser planes. The Russians bombed German airdromes in Romania and said they destroyed or damaged 60 more enemy planes. The Germans struck southern England. A neutral said the Germans in western Europe had dispersed thousands of small military units over France to cope with invad ing air troops. If so, this achieves one of the principal objectives of that arm of Gen. Eisenhower's masses. The Russian front still was quiet. Night Action Gunfire and starshclls sig nalled night action in the Dover straits. Radio Moscow said the Germans had uncovered an anti Hitler organization in Denmark Including a group of nazi of ficers and police officials. A revolt In Ecuador overthrew President Carlos Arroyo Del Rio who took refuge in the U. S. embassy. The Germans still clung to the Via Casilina below Rome and held on by their teeth to Val montone and Lanuvio. Paced by French cruiser shells, British forces took a lateral road west of Carroceto and advanced toward the western anchor of the German Rome line at Campo Tcmini. 18 miles due south of the capital. On the main front, the cmlith army whipped past Pofi where the white flag flew. The fifth army alone has cap tured 12,000 prisoners, not counting those of the eighth. The captives said German casual ties were extremely heavy. Al lied planes flew 3000 sorties from Italy yesterday, hitting the battleline, communications be tween Rome and Florence, Aus tria and Yugoslavia. UIW By Oscar S. Nissen, P. T. counietor Amorlcnn pltyBlo-Thornpy InstlttKa : Massage Medical Gymnastics llonllh riitlhn Ullr Vlolot Rayt ftpflolalitlnf In Musoultr, Joint. Circular, ind Nerve Conditions for IS Years. (Since Mill), ! Olfloo llnumi 9 to B, or by Appointment 'HO Njerlh Sth St. Phono 5558s IDEAL I for I Summer Wear! All Wool Gabardine suite I! Good-looking 4950 9 I double and H single-broasted models in 9 brown and tan. fl Our Stock Is Complete. H I I Make Your Selection H DREW'NSTORE j (Continued From Page One) with an address in which he emphasized the pioneer back ground of Klamath county and compared early-day sacrifices with those in this war. Representatives of organiza tions were then called upon by Chairman Fred Heilbronner to lay wreaths at the foot of the shaft, the rifle salute was fired, and taps closed the services. Tho parade then moved to Link ville cemetery for final rites. Myitkyina Noose Tightened; Allies -Pass Kamaing (Continued from Page One) They were getting increased air support from American airmen, who bombed Tengchung. In the Southwest Pacific a ma jor battle appeared shaping up lor the Mokmer airdrome on Biak island in the Schoutens. As the tough sixth army men inched ahead to within two miles of the airbase important because it is less than 900 miles from the Philippines Japanese resistance rose. Allied headquarters sug gested that the enemy ,. miscalcu lating where the Biak landings were to come, was - regrouping for perhaps the hardest fight of the New Guinea campaign.. Aerial Support : Allied airmen lent support by hammering enemy airfields in the surrounding sea area, includ ing Manokwari, Babo, Noemfoor and Japen. ' . Ponape, 440 miles east of Truk in the Central Pacific, was hit with the heaviest weight of ex plosives dropped on it in 24 raids this month, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz announced. In beleaguered China, tho Jap anese expanded their two-sided offensive with a new surge south ward from Yoyang .in Yunan province. They aimed at Siang yin, 30 miles north of Changsha, apparently to protect their drive to seize the Hankow-Canto rail road. Yesterday (Monday) the Chinese reported the enemy had advanced 27 miles toward Changsha in three days. 13 Billion, Month's Income Total U. S. income in Decem ber, 1943, was $13,500,000,000. tJLu Mir -V-jI 5 V r 1 ;tJ.- jfTiVi.j Kit . A". .iv.TJ ..,, The photos above present pictorial evidence of the almost unbelievable destruction that can be wrought by Allied bombers on German military targets in a single attack. The "before" photo, at left, above, shows huge tank and truck depot at Mailly, France before an RAF night attack. The other is the "after" scene, result of a rain of 1500 tons of explosive and incendiary bombs. Note individual buildings in "before" photo and then try and find them in the other. SIM FIVE YANKS, SAYS REPORT (Continued from Page One) German people when they are treating child killers as they de serve. These Anglo-American war methods must be stopped. Airmen cannot contend they are acting as soldiers under orders." It contended further that re cent allied fighter sweeps had been directed against field workers and women and chil dren riding on trains. Strikes Rise During 1944 the rose WASHINGTON, May 30 The number of strikes in first four months of 1944 more than 42 per cent over the corresponding period of 194d, bureau of labor statistics rec ords showed today. The bureau reported that strikes beginning in April of this year totalled 435 and in volved 155,000 workers, result ing in 580,000 man-days of idle ness, or .08 per cent of the available working time. WEEKLY OVERSEAS MAIL At present about 25,000,000 pieces of mail are being dis patched overseas from the Unit ed State every week. Insurance policies to fit your needs. Hans Norland, 118 North 7th Street. PILES SUCCESSFULLY TREATED NO PAIN NO HOSPITALIZATION No Loss of Time Permanent Resnltel DR. E. M. MARSHA Chiropractic Physician 228 No, 7th Esquire Thestr Bid Phone 7066 ' An Army Truck Serves as an Ambulance to tAt.i rf IT Five soldiers wounded In tha Mediterranean theater are traniportecl to a North African hospital on litters placed aboard a small Army truck. An Army doctor and tha drirar stand beside the vehicle. The Army needa many more doctors to gire our fighting men the best possible medical care. NEW PRESIDENT PORTLAND, May 30 () Dr. Thompson L. Shannon, Portland, is newly-elected pres ident of the Oregon Mental Hy giene society. He succeeds Dr. John L. Haskins of Portland. ISLANDERS LIKE 'EM LOUD American soldiers have found that, next to cheap baubles, col ored shirts have the highest bar gaining value among : Pacific island natives. : Mountain's Moisture Varies"' .. In'1884, 90 inches of rain and melted snow fell on Mount Ham ilton, Calif.; in 1885, only 18 inches of moisture fell at the same place. V GROUNDHOG HAS "ALIASES' Whistler, woodchuck, Canada marmot, whistle-pig, chuck, thickwood ' badger, moonack, woodshock. monax, and ground pig are other names for the groundhog. MIX WITH WATER-DRY IN 1 HOUR! h SPEED-EASY MIS'' j ' WALL FINISH So easy to usejust thin with water; One coat is usually enough even over wallpaper. You can use the roomaimost immcai stelyj WASHABLE: 235 CMS GALLON DOES THE AVERAGE ROOM fa Gal. This Ad Good for OCj '0n 1 Gallon of Speed-Easy Until "" June 30. Ona to a Family , ' ' Listen to Dupont's "Cavalcade of America" KPO and KFI Mondays at 8:30 p. m- ' ' F. R. HAUGER 515 Market Open All Day Saturday . j Phone 7221 DISTINCTIVE APPAREI Phone 8222 901 Mail TAILORED TO fi The crisp, clean coolness of cotton tailors miraculously. Those good sharp pleats, clean cut lapels give a girl a band-box look that worth more than a mint in Summer. .ibis"' -, 7.95 .illH.ll.SI""! J -""ia mrw-rr n