Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 21, 1944, Page 2, Image 2

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    HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PACE TWO
Trailers Here For Stop-Gap Housing
0
LEADERS
START WORK
r ' 1 ' ' ' ' '
NOW
0 CAMPAIGN
F
PWraH?BB TOQQE
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.Ml 47
HOUSE
1 JVUtV JSI II Special!
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I? HOUSEJAINT Kcccivcd
M A f0 OUrSKWKTt I 1
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1 :sr i I PUMPS
faetion, Whit. Ud "AINTING GUIDE Q
$j ""S Reg. .
I' ' 25 wALUfV I Pr-W'r Qu"l,y
IT SALE! I SL
te rgv'; 1 CASSEROLE
B'i3 SSS tJ I Guaranteed for two year .
' ' j Sg I against ota heat break
I XUNCOEON SET . 1 "py.,
I Regularly 4.15 3,49) I JlJ
'3 Caput serric foe fow. Old fuhiontd kabiuJl I i-, 17
j-J pattern in sparkling, oven-proof glass with delleaU I fl TA V EL KIT
ii? blue tint, ferric includes rentable disk, dessert I VV I 95 "I 4ft
m dto,plrttr,gM .. I I LJri
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f F H slmnUted leather. Mlse-
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kW . . . 114? VW TqU rW WW
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jGtSrjT' T0"" arehers or beginners. 1 1
K Includes 4-foot hardwood bow. El fTtllftv line
i.j foM arrows in cardboard qnlTer, 1'MllV "
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f; WI IOAN YOU TIRES ffi wSZ ?J?
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Main Street Store, 527 Main St., Ph. 3234
Until Vtki . Hwm ukh tuttrd Cmki md lit tkMtnt Symtknt Otiiimt, Mondt, ttmltp, mt K.B.C
By Th AuociaUd Praa
Republican leaders at Chicugo
started work today on drnitiiiB
a platform designod to help the
campaign to put tlicir candidnto
In tho White House a cnndldntc
the party chairman says will be
named by next Wednesday.
That is tho third day of the
p a rt y ' a national convention
which starts Monday; Chairman
Harrison E. SpnKKler settled on
it in a prediction there will be
no balloting deadlock.
From tho various campatfin
headquarters of presidential pos
sibilities, meanwhile, there con
tinued to flow expressions of
praise for their men.
Roy D. Moore, for Governor
John W. Bricker of Ohio, sold
"the responsible leaders of the
Dewey forces are, as convention
ncars, retreating" . from what
Moore called fantastic claims.
J. Russel Sprague, for Dewey,
commented "we are confident of
the results."
Victor Johnson, for Lt. Comdr.
Harold E, Stassen, said the form
er Minnesota governor "is the
only one who talks" the language
of voter under 40 In and out of
the service.
Also In Chicago, the anti
fourth term organization Ameri
can democratic national commit
tee voted to call a convention of
all organizations opposed to the
renominatlon of President Roose
velt. It voted down a once-approved
recommendation that the
republicans nominate a coalition
ticket such at Bricker and Harry
F. Byrd, Virginia democratic
senator.
Other political developments:
Supporters in congress of Rep.
Everett Dlrksen of Illinois an
nounced they, would present his
name to the republican conven
tion for the vice presidential
nomination.
Dirksen aald In an NBC radio
speech last night that the Roose
velt administration has started
"collectivism on th march" in
America.
The North Carolina delegation
in the house of representatives
formally recommend that the
democrats nominate Gov. J. M.
Broughton ot the Tor Heel state
for the job Vice President Wal
lace now holds.
Sidney Bones of Los Aneoles,
negro member of California's re
publican state central committee,
called on Governor Dewey at Al
bany to outline plans for a na
tionwide drive fo pile up the
negro vote for the republican
ticket. Bones called his visit vory
satisfactory.
ISCL
WASHINGTON, June 21 (P)
Admiral Ernest J. King, navy
commander-in-chief just returned
from European conferences and
an Inspection of the Invasion
coast, disclosed today the com
mands and assignments of eight
U. S. task fleets.
At a news conference, he de
scribed the numerically designat
ed units as task fleets equipped
to carry out any type of opera
tion. He said that originally the
system of command called for
task units, then for larger task
groups, then task forces. The
task forces were combined to
form the numerical fleets, or
"task fleets."
He announced the commands
and assignments of these eight
task fleets:
Pacific Third fleet, Admiral
William F. Halsey, Jr.; fifth
fleet, Admiral Raymond E.
Spruance; seventh fleet, Vice
Admiral Thomas Kineaid, in
the southwest Pacific; ninth
fleet, Vice Admiral Frank Jack
Fletcher, Aleutians.
Atlantic and Eu rone an
Fourth flpt. Vlrn
Jonas Ingraham. Smith A4inn,i.
eighth fleet, Vice Admiral Honry
n c w 1 1 1, jvieaucranean;
iweuui neei, Aamirai Harold R.
Stark, European waters; tenth
fleet, Admiral King, anti-submarine
rneratfnn
. "Thev a all taBb fn... h
iving saia, "ana vary in com
position, according to the work
they have in hand."
Willamette Waste
Survey Proposed
PORTLANn. .Tiino 91 lar, A
survev n waul Hf.hacA4 u..
Oregon municipalities into the
wuiameue river and its trlbu
taries wan nrnnniteH hv ih mttm
sanitary authority today as pre
liminary to cleaning up the
river system.
Representatives of the au
thority and the League of Ore
eon Citiei will ennftr with Clnxi.
ernor Earl Snell at Salem to
morrow to request J9000 for
the survey. Oregon State col
lege has offered to provide ex
perts In refuse disposal prob
lems for the study.
SHIP CHRISTENED
VANCOUVER, Wash., June
20 (P) The first of 27 troop
ships to be built by the Kaiser
yard here was christened today
by Mrs. J. Wallace Neighbor,
wife of the medical director of
Northern Permanente hospital.
The ship was named S. 8.
Oconto for a Wisconsin county.
If you want to sell lt phone
The Herald and Newi ''want
ads," 3124.
. ii i i I yttf-'Tv.- f-"wi
T M "v,nli..)llrir"'''
-"
Tki. niotor ihnwi law ol th trailer houioi which hv bn moved htr te b t un
nar th fdrl row houilnq project, to tk r of houilnq nda Umporarily until th mar
prmnnt structures r completed. Th trailer sit adjoins th row-housing sit nar th
southeast city limits. Utilities for th trailer! are now being Installed.
IT
DEED IN TRIAL
WASHINGTON, Jun 21 (IP)
Judge Edward C. Elcher today
denied a dofonse motion for a
dlrcctod verdict of acquittal for
the 20 defendants in the mass
sedition conspiracy trial.
Eichor announced the dec I
sion at the opening of today's
session. The trial, now In Its
10th wcok, still is In tho pre
liminary testimony stage.
Defense attorneys based their
arguments laraelv on the su
preme court's recent Hartzol
decision, in that case tne iriou
nal reversed the conviction of
Elmer Hartzel under the 1017
espionage act on the ground the
prosecution had failed to prove
"specific intent" to impair the
morale of the armed force
through circulation of pamph
lets. In the present trial, the 29
defendants are accused ot con
spiring among themselves and
with nazi officials In Germany
to undermine the morale of the
armed forces and to set up a
nazi typ of government her.
Eicher said a reading and re
reading ot the Hartzel decision
led him to the conclusion that
the supreme court had in mind
"independent publications by
citizens, without any association
with foreign sources. "
Committee to
Decide On Mackinac
Island Resolution
WASHINGTON, June 21 (T)
A terse, streamlined vorslun of
tho foreign policy (Induration
worked out by republican lead
ers at Mnrkinnc i.iIiiihI, Mich.,
lust Septrinber will bo present
ed to tho party's resolutions
committee at Chicago Friday
with the unanimous backing of
a slx-membcr subcommittee.
The Mackinac declaration
called for "renonsiblo partic
ipation by tho United Slates In
post-war cooperative organiza
tion among snvrrnigu nations
to prevent mllllury aggression
and to attain permanent pr
with organized justice in a free
world."
GENERAL KILLED
WITH TIIK U. S. NINTH
TROOP CAHHir.lt COMMAND,
June 10 (Delayed)-1) Mrl.
Urn. Don K. Pratt. command.
or of air-borne troops, was
killed In Franc on I)-Doy
when his Glider one of the
first downmade a crash land
ing, pilots returning to this
base reported,
Soldiers Solve
Manpower Problem
PORTLAND, Ore!. Jun 21
rP) Sailors and soldlor who
want fatter paychecks than Un
cle Sam can furnish aro solving
the manpower shortage for a
Portland war plant.
W. L. Swearlngen,! manager
of the B, P. John Furniture cor
poration, now 80 per cent con
verted to war mnterlals, dis
closed today that 1000 service
men have pinch-hlt at the plant
during the past year.
The soldiers, given working
permission by the AFL local
after lt found union members
were too scarce to keep the
filant running, earn OS cents an
lour. Some G.I.'s come lust
once. Others turn up every time
they get a pass.
Bea Oirica Omui 1:11 4:11
- ENDS -TONIGHT
Starts -Thursday
tim gne FROMTI
T'fV.yaUW
t riANCIt ll UHWI
Maim tm u mairiw
On Th Samt Program
ACTrONI SU5PFNS
ROMANCEI
gPWARD a.
ROBINSON
IrMM.VkterJMesU
4
Tiinpi
iiT
tm x. a
CO
Ends Today
"Once Upon A Time"
Gary Grant - Janet Blair - James Gleason
I
I
Thursday
i
I tl fay
At Micnael D SHU
5 . i... euioi rv
nilllB dninLbi
WALKER
Gint 10CKHART
Plus Solactod Short
Subjects and News
I
I
Thursday
i cotiw
- ---ai-m
P
IVANS
AlKKTSOH
1 i i ii ii r i i
Second Big Hit -
ii
I aawaawaasaaaaaaaaaaaaHaaMaaiaaaai I l ' m a. I vnrm
k Second Hit
Box Olflc.
Viiifcni ,3 iHBiMiiaiMHuaiiaii WUbH'-'J
STARTS TODAY
Hedy LaMar
in
ECSTACf"
ic Another Aee Hit jc
I ) " ji JTMMY ROOTM NOAH BEEHY. Jit. . JOB M T. k
111 ' ' I" 1 ' ) MARlOHrE WOODWORTH . MmlUlkuiUliJAmU InDak
" a MTMI
I At
0
tsss
SATURDAY flNHT
On Our Stag I
In Person!
Brad King
and his
Saddle
Pals
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