Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 07, 1944, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    HERALD AND NEWS) KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON
PACE PIVI
a
...niciion -":. . :
!'"n,inul'r Jo in . uoinior. 01
ccr I" !' ,, ,iuirli.t. will ha
WSiVluy r.r a ruutino In-
fi fA Hu will bo accompanied
Feuiiley Church, ilrst.clwwi
Commuiulor Bollilor
PS il "ii Inspection tour of
feX''KJ 1,1 1,10 ,ul0'
I MHiln"ry SooUty Tho Kiilh-
!niho Altiimonl Probytorlnn
r.hu.byl,
P"'. . . ..i lln.wlnn will ho nr.
Led by Mr. Huuh T. Mllchol
C A covered dish lunchoon
,...1.1 l nnnn.
IK )0 111""
........ ilnnal Circles Thi
, .. l Monlnr flrflrH fit
hurcti win "
ill 21'"" ulirilKll. rmuiy, untie
I (or a poiluck luncheon nt 1
i m Olid mi inuwi" io niviicn
. .(Vend. Kolls nnd butter will
l( provided by the commlttoo.
!, for Air Corps Phil
!llolim, son 01 mr, nnn ivirs. u.
Blohm. In IcuvliiH Tuesday
renins for Monterey, Cullf.,
er duly wllh the niniy air
orol. r'rom ,l,crc 1,0 wl" "
to Buckley Field, Colo. Blohm
n been o student at Oregon
I tile college.
Dpirtmnl Callad The lire
cpsrimcnt was cnllcd to 000
IvIjIoii street Tuesday evening
here there was nil ovcrhenled
i itove In n lioime occupied by
imej O'Kccfc. There was no
mute reported.
I Junll The Juvenile of
he Neluhbors of Woodcraft will
Intel r'rltiity, Juno 0, nt the home
i( me senior km"1"'"" mm. v..
). Dryden, 610 N. Jlth, at 2
i. m,
Mot Mr. and Mrs Bert
iocklcby, lonK time renldenU
,f Klamath Falls, left Wcdneit
liy lo iniike Ihelr homo In Ouk
md, Cnllf. Mm. Norklcby Is a
nece of Mr. and Mrs. II. N.
Sloe.
From Tacoma Mr, n w
Peaso and sons R o n u I d and
Duvld of Tacoma arrived Tucs
duy from Tucomu and aro vlslt-
iiih wiin roiuuves hero. They
are stavlns nl lh hmi r.i k.r
liter, Mrs. E. H. Tillman, 2113
mnoison.
Pollca Court In police court
Wodnciidiiy morning there ap
peared nix drunks, one man
churned with selling llciuor to
Indians, one drunk and disor
derly, one Indlnn charged with
possession of liquor, and five
truffle ticket cases,
Olflca to Closa The navy re-
Thursday afternoon and Friday,
accordlni to Dan Schrclhnr rn-
crultlng specialist. Schrciber
will make a trip to Lakcvlew for
racruiuiiK purposes.
To Bpokin May Phlnney
loft Wednesday to spend the
summer with relatives In Spo
kane.
Humes Hostoisei Hostesses
it the Keames Golf and Coun
try club Friday will be Mrs.
Bl. si. Moe and Mrs. peter Al
SlxrUon. The first tournament
jfor the Lamm trophy will bo
played,
Rtturns Horn Jean Under-
kood, daughter of Mr. nnd Mrs.
II. Underwood, returned
homo from Stevens college
pucsdny. Jcun hns complotcd
per first year llicro.
Buying Trip J. A. Souther
oi moe i sioro leit Saturday lor
Bcame on a buying trip.
Visitor Mrs. Anna Bradburn
bf Lower Lanuell valloy was a
fcmlnevi visitor in Klnmnth
falls Ttiesdnv.
WASHINGTON. June 7 P
Montgomery Ward and com
pany officials today indicated
sharp opposition lo a new war
labor board order to continue
terms of the old CIO contract
in Its Chicago plant until a new
one is ncuotlatcd.
Stuart Unll, tho firm's chief
counsol appearing before the
house committee Investigating
tho plant seizure by the govern
ment, told reporters that unless
there is some new element "we
don't see why wo should chnngc
our principles."
Chairman Scwell L. Avery
said he preferred to wait until
ho sees the WLB orders, but he
did not disagree with Ball.
John A. Barr, labor relations
official for the company, told
the committee the firm does
not intond to sign any contract
that contains a requirement
that union membership be
maintained. That he styled
only a "compromise that leads
to a closed shop.
Burr said later he did not In
tend his testimony to apply to
tho specific WLB ordor mode
yesterday.
KLAMATH PEOPLE
D
Ma Vlttmoth nrnnle took
41 fill J I" I "
advantago of tho opportunity to
attend church services lucsany
In special observances oi u
nu It urna rrnnrted bv the
viamnih MinUlprlnl Hssociatton.
Most Klamath f ans cnurcnes
were open all day for tho con-
nlnM nt ihntte who wished
to offer special prayers lor
those taking part In tho Invas
ion landings.
RUSSIA GETS LIGHT
LOWELL
THOMAS
MM
DON LEE-MUTUAL
,KAIE Portland . KJIST Astoria
JBNO Bend . KFII Klsmath Falls
"OOS Marthfleld . KSLM Salem '
JMR Roseburs KWII. Albany
"ORE Billions . KUIN OranU Past
KWLK Longvlew, Washington
A
-a fc-
f '
.s
wiouTwr-TVIM .Tnnn 7 (ft) .
Transfer of an American light
cruiser to Russia unaor iena-
lease was conlirmoa loaay ay
rt.nlMfln Walch m.MnfiS.) of
the senate naval affairs com
mittee. . .
Title to the vessol, ne saia,
In thA UnltpH Stntns.
Senator Bridges (R-N.H.) told
the senate May 23 he had heard
that "one or more" units of the
United Statea navy had been
transferred to tho U.S.S.R. He
1.1 K tn hnnn linnhln to ffet
either a confirmation or denial,
and that ho thought the Ameri
can people and their congress
"are entitled to know the
truth." ,
VITAL STATISTICS
SOLIK-Bom t KUmnth Valley hoj
pint. Klamath rails. Op;., on June, T.
IM4, lo Mr. and Mn. s:imr O. Solta.
1410 Lookout, a boy. Welsht: S pound!
1114 ouneae.
Dock Areas At Port of LeHavre, France
This Is a view of tha dock araas of tho Franch port of LaHavro near when allied forces
landed In tholr invasion of tho mainland. (AP wiraphoto).
E
to 113.90. ind hflvy fat bulli to 14.S0;
bulk tauiago bull! H0.7S-12.O0; vcalers
ttaady at lt).oo down; Uiin stock cattle
continued alow.
Salable cheep 1000; total 3000: active,
trong; odd loU native spring lamb
910.00 down; two toadi medium and
good dirty pelted around 88 lb. N
braaka old stock wooled lambs $18.00;
load medium and good around 77 lb.
ahnrn lambs with No. 1 and. 3 pelU
13,00; shorn native ewes 7.7S down.
Sir VICTOR KUBAN K
KEW YORK. June 7 (APi-Peaca-
ratad soeclaltlas resisted lata profit
cashing In tha stock market today hut
rails, under pressure throughout, gave
ground.
Iowerprlcfld motors, after trying to
add to their Tuesday galnt, illpped oc
casionally toward tha close as did iteels.
and support dwindled for air lines and
olla which attracted early bidding.
Price changes were fractional In most
riwi, Dealings droppflfl far oeiow me
DDy level and totaled aooui bou,imj
shares.
Leader In iveral erouos managed to
touch new highs for the year or longer
although manv later hacked away.
Anead most or tne nay were mewnn
Warner, Crane Co.. Twin Coach. Chrys
ler, Wtllys-Overland. Studehaker. Amer
ican Atrllnni. United Air Lines. Stand
ard Oil IN. J.I. Houston Oil, General
Electric and Rears noeoucK.
c oe n auotations:
American Can 00f,
Amerlran Car eV Toundry 34"
American Telephone it Telegraph, .loon
Anaconda , . M"
California packing 27V4
Caterpillar Tractor 48
Commonwealth 4c Southern - -- H
.
. 60i
. 33V'
.
. 74
. M'.
. 14
. 10
. 464
. 14S
. IT.
. MS
. 33 V
-
' 20 i
17'
4'4
- !2
Ctirtli-Wrtsht
General Electric ,.,
General Motors
Great Northern Bsllwey pfd
Illinois central
International Harvester
Kennecott
Lockheed .
Long-Bell "A"
Montgomery Ward
Naih-Kelvtnator
N. Y. Central
Northern Pacific
Pacific Gas V Electric
Packard Motor
PcnnHylvanta Railroad
Republic 5tel
Richfield Oil
Safeway Stores ,
Scars RoemicK
Southern Pacific
Htandard Brands
Sunshine Mining
Trans-America
Union Oil California .
Union Pacific
U. S. Steel , ,
Warner Pictures
30H
- l"4
in-
ioa'.i
LIVESTOCK
SO. SAN rRANCISCO. June T CAP
fS MM N I -CATTLE 78. Load lota steers,
heifen. and Mood ranee cows absent,
few common cowa f 9.00-10. 00. about
three loada cutters and canncrs oirerea,
undertone dull and weak, mostly on
clean-up basis, fO.90'8.00. Bulla weaK,
few medium 1 10.00. common $9.00, can
nam 17. BO. Calvca hone.
Hnr.fl arU). Steadv: few loads sood to
choice 160-370 lb. barrowa and gilts
114.75; odd good sows 0.o0.
SHEEP 12M. Choice lambs fully
steady: deck 87 lb. $15.00. common to
good weak, largely t3,00-i4.00; ahorn
ewes quoted M.w aown.
CHICAGO. June 7 fAP-WTA-Salable
noa-a 17.000: total ao.ooo: very, aiow,
steady on all weights; aowa around 10c
lower; good and choice 160-370 lbs.
913.78. top; 380-330 be. Sll.80-13.15;
choice around 450 lb. barrows around
911.00; good and choice 100-170 its.
si 2.23-13.00: medium to good grade 160-
330 lbs. til. 50-13.00; good and choice
300-030 ID. SOWS flU.DU-BO, 10 W C no ICC
light weights to 911.00; approximately
33,000 unsold, comprising around 75 per
Mnt auDOort hoai.
Salable cattle 13,000: salable calves
800; fed steers and yearlings weak to
35c lower; mostly 1018o off; strictly
fed steer and yearling run with better
Trades predominating: top ir.;: i
era! loads. 917.10-35: bulk SL4.50-1G.B3:
all erades now 35 -50c under late last
week excepting strictly top cattle: heif
ers 10-180 lower, belt 117.00 duik bis.ou.
18.38; cows very scarce, active, steady;
bulls steady to ISe higher, beef bulls
showing advance; weighty sausage bulls
Potatoes
CHICAGO. June 7 (AP-WTAIPoUtoes,
arrivals, 130: on track 283; total U. S.
hipmenls IHOB; supplies moderate; de-
man a now; mimct wntmty
California Long Whites U. S. No. I,
it 1S..IM- irlmna Rllaa Trlumnhs U.' D,
No. 1, 34.49; Louisiana Bliss Triumphs
u. . no. i, j.do-,jj.
WEATHER
Eug.n.
lakcvlew
. 73
. 73
North Bend .. S7
I'orlland , 72
Ileddlng Ml
llono . o.
tian Francisco u1
ScalUo 71
Mat. Hln. Fr.elp.
.. 78 43 .00
SS
49
.00
.07
.00
.00
.00
.00
Tl
I Red Skelron
In Army Now
The county court Wednesday
issued a resolution in the mat
ter of the' establishment of a
state park on the land lmmeJ
iatcly surrounding the head of
Wood river, recently acquired
by the Oregon State Board of
Forestry.
The resolution provides that
the county court petition the
Oregon State Board of Forestry
to set aside that area as a state
park and that the park be nam
ed In memory of Jackson r.
Kimball, pioneer tlmberman of
this community.
A cony of the resolution, sign
ed by County Judge U. E. Reed-
cr and County commissioners
John H. Rebcr and Fred L.
Pope, will be sent to the fores
try board this week.
Au enrlv a January. 1043. the
Luftwaffe employed a jet-pro-1
pelled interceptor plane effcc-
tively against RAF bombers at,
Brunswick. Its rate of climb Was :
41 miles a minute 400 per cent
better than our fighter planes.
LOS ANGELES, June 7 UP)
Comedian Richard "Red" Skel
ton, who side-stepped the wed
ding march two months ago, is
in the army now.
Ho became a member of the
armed forces today and was
sent to Fort MacArthur, where
the army will determine how it
can best use the 30-year-old
funny man.
Skelton and Muriel Morris
Call, blond model, took out a
marriage license last April but
later called off tho wedding.
Sixteen months ago he was di
vorced by Edna Mario Skelton,
who continued in her Job aa
his gag wrltor afterward. .
Within four years of the end
of hostilities there will probably
be some 300,000 civilian plants
in service. . ' '
In proportion to Its population,
Alaska has 100 times as m a n y
airplanes as the United 3 t a t a i
proper.
CHICAOQ'. Juna 7 TAP) A weak un
dertona pravaded the grain market to-
aay wnn lower once, reiiociing u
of demand for futuree following yester
day's lubftantlal short covering. Trad
ing was qul.t and attempted rallies en
countered commission nouse scums-
In late trading wheat showed pro
nounced weakness with the deferred i
futures at new lows for the season.
There was some mill buying near the !
middle of the session but when this de
mand was met selling Increased and the
recession continued. Favorable .warl
news, and beginning of the harvest of a '
big winter wheat crop were responsible
for the bearish sentiment.
The rye market broke sharply under
local pressure and commission house
selling. Oats were down In eympathy
with wheat.
Wheat closed 2 to 2e lower than
yesterday, July $1.60. Oata were off
Ic "to lHc, July 74t4-,,c. Bye was
off 2V.c to 3'.c. July fl.OS-I.0SM. Bar
ley was lo to ISc lower, July S1.1BH.
Developing - Printing
Enlarging
UNDERWOOD'S
PHOTO SERVICE
211 Underwood Bldg.
For Your Cooperating With Us
And Your Uncle Sam
You Deserve
A Pat
On the Back
By fighting the Black Market
. . . recapping old tires .. .
driving carefully observing all
conservation measures strassad
by our government, you help
keep your ear rolling and lh
Nips running!
BODY V0RK
MOTOR WORK
BRAKES
STEERING
DICK B MILLER CO.
GOOD AUTOMOBILE SERVICE
Car. 7th and Klamath Phone 4103
OBITUARY
LEE JENKS AUKINS -Lee
Jenka Adklns, a resident of Biy.
Oregon, passed away In tills city on
Tuesday. June S, 1044, at 13 p. m.
Tha deceased was a native of Oregon
and was aged 40 years. 4 months and
20 days wnen called. He Is survived
by two brothers. O. C. Adklns of Carls
bad. Calif., and Lillian Adklns, San
Diego. Calif., and one sister, Mrs. M.
A. Justasson. also of San Diego, Calif.
Tho remains rest at Ward's Klamath
Funeral Home. 025 High St. Notice of
funeral arrangements will be announced
later. '
Serve with the Navy's
MEDICAL CORPS!
OSCAR CLYDE LUCAS '
Oscar Clyde Lucas, a resident of
Bend, Ore., but lor the last month
making his homo In Klamath rails,
passed away in this city on Tuesday,
June e, 1044 at 7:30 p. m. He was a
native of Nodaway county. Mo., and
at the time of his death was aged 58
years and 23 days, surviving are his
wife. Mrs. Lucy Lucas of Bend. Ore.;
two daughters, Mrs. Esther Ferneau and
Mrs. llen Coburn of. Bend, Ore.; two
sons, Owen and Forrest Lucas of Broth
ers, Ore.; five brothers. Earl and Harry
of Los Angeles, Calif., Leon of Texas.
Ernest of St. Louis, Mo., and Orten
Lucas of Wichita, Kas.; four sisters. Mrs.
Nellie McMillan and Mrs. Faye Htckey
of Los Angeles, Calif.; Mrs. Minerva
Schoff of Wichita, Kas.. and Mrs. Eliza
beth Tackett of Oklahoma. The re
mains rest In tho Earl Whltlock Fu
neral Home. Pine street at Sixth. No
tice of funeral to be announced at a
later dato.
VITAL STATISTICS
HODGES Born at Klamath Valley hos
pital, Klamath Falls, Ore., on June 7,
1044, lo Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Hodges, Box
202, Merrill, a boy. Weight: 7 pounds
6Vi ounces.
For Dad
An
All-Wool
SWEATER
For that Cool Evening.
AU Colors.
RUDY'S snop"
OAD OF THANKS
We do heartily extend to the friends
and people of Bly and Ivory Pine our
sincere appreciation for their kindness
and sympathy . In our recent bcreava-
WATTS AND CASWWM,
PltMVORf.lS
Now can be Beaten!
The miseries of Pln.Wortos hJs
kSJwrT for centuries, and many doctor,
have sought a way to djal with this dread,
ful peat that Uvea and growa Inside too
hTX'?tn'.nk. to an VO'.fi
dtooovery, n? ond Alonly fft JfMj-
Jayne Sen, Amerloa's leading iPKlallstt
Jn worm memolnee. .
jour ehlld to eurfer Jn allencei with th
embarrassing rectal tar, caused by rinj
Worms, or to take ehar,"f on the real
distress they eften ereate. The small, easy,
to-taks . P-W tableta act In a apaclli war
Jiit Pln-V?orms. " d'u f?r,J
package of P-W and follow tha ilmple dt.
reetlona carefully.
It la easy to remember i f -Wf or Wn-Worms I
TRUCKERS!
The Teamster's Union
Urges You to Attend
The
Meeting
SYNTHETIC RUBBER
. ' and Other.
TRUCK TIRE PROBLEMS
WILLARD HOTtL 7 P. M.
(Dinner)
Get your tickets from Frank Victory, at tha
First National Bank, or at Willard Hottl :
Heavy equiomenl lire problems will b discussed by
Dir. J H. Hadrich. ODT Tira Specialist
Become a
NAVY NURSE
. The Navy Nurse Corps offers you the opportunity to serve
your country with recognized professional standing as a com- -
missioned officer in the Navy. The Navy Nurse
serves in base, hospitals overseas and in the
United States, on Naval transports and Hospi
tal Ships, and in Hospital Corps Training'
Schools. The present Naval expansion has
caused an urgent cjemand for more and more Navy Nurses.
If you are a registered nurse between the ages of 21 and 40,
single, and in good health you are needed.
.'APPLY: Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, Navy Depart-"
ment, Washington, D. C, your local Red Cross Nurse Pro
curement Office, or 703 Market Street, San Francisco.
GREYHOUND SERVES, TOO
Greyhound provides transportation for all branches of America's
military forces, including Navy Nurses and Hospital Corps Waves,
on duty... on leaves and furloughs., .
Practically every camp and training center throughout the country
where service men and women are stationed is served by Greyhound,
and often we are called upon for special emergency service in trans
porting wounded of both Army and Navy to military hospitals. .
We are proud of out important war work on the home front now
nd are planning a new era in bus transportation when victory is won.
Join the
WAVES
America's pioneer women loaded guns
for their men in the struggle to establish
our continent. Today the Navy's Medical
Department needs your help in "keeping .
as many men at as many guns as many
days as possible." As a Hospital Corps
WAVE you will help our disabled fight
ing men to regain their health and speed
them back to active duty . . . release male
corpsmen for vital service in combat
areas. ..help to shorten the war. ..lay the
foundation for a post-war career.
' The need is urgent...if you are between
20 and 36, feel temperamentally suited to
humanitarian service, are not engaged in
essential war work. ..you can fill an inter
esting and specialized job in the Hospital
Corps. Previous experience unnecessary.
Apply today at any Office of Naval Officer
Procurement or Navy Recruiting Station.
SERVING THE NATION WITH DEPENDABLE TRANSPORTATION
jr.
Tll'sjrliat)M((iy;iMgtatiJ