Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 21, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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    PACE FOUR
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
rSANK JINKIN1 MALCOLM EPUY
Editor Maneini Iditoc
A tamixvrarT eesiMnatlea at tha Craitn Herald and
KUmetiwaT Publish aver .ft. moon wce.pl Sunday
" ll ZEmZTvi IPIne etreata. Kl.rn.Ul ralle. Onwi, by the
gd "ubUrtSi Co. and U. mi PublUhine Company.
UBSCUPTIOK RAT
B7 Mtmt "Tit
monlh n By tr.au ,
aEttldTlUMMth. uKTI Slritlyca
zrw&
Today's Roundup
Br MALCOLM EPLEY
ACTION of the state supreme court in up
holding the conviction of Robert E. Lee
Folkes as the "L)Ower ia nam
ally , closes a case that was a
nationwide sensation with a
definite Klamath angle. Bar
ring a re-hearing, there re
mains only the detail of carry
ing out the penalty imposed
by the lower court.
This blood-curdling incident
broke on the consciousness of
Oregon and the nation one
winter morning, when the
wires carried the first reports
that a navy bride had been
brutally murdered in a sleeper EPLEY
berth on a southbound train near Albany.
The locale of the murder was a moving train,
and before the forces of law could get or
ganized, the train had crossed the snowy Cas
cades and had reached Klamath Falls. It was
held here for several hours for searching and
examination of the cars, and questioning of
passengen and crew. It was here that evidence
was gathered pointing to Folkes, a dining car
second cook, as the possible murderer, but he
was not arrested until the train reached Los
, Angeles.
The trial was held at Albany, in the county
where the actual slaying occurred. ' District
Attorney L. Orth Sisemore of Klamath county,
as a special prosecutor, assisted in the success
ful handling of the state's case against Folkes.
The case was one that put Oregon justice to
the test before the nation, because of the wide
spread publicity it received. The color issue,
which might have arisen in a less tolerant state,
! had no part in this matter. The trial was soberly
. and fairly conducted, the result was carefully
; reviewed by a most competent and fair-minded
, supreme court, and the unfortunate and grue-
some case now approaches its end with justice
' vindicated.
!
- Kimball Forest and Park
i THERE has been a widespread response to our
J I suggestion that the Yawkey tract, now a
, state forest, be re-named in memory of the
late Jackson F. Kimball, pioneer Klamath tim
, ber man. A number of local organizations have
supported tht proposal, and commendatory
V messages have come from "Portland and other
J outside points.
i . The matter will be before the state board of
; forestry on June 27. We hope for a favorable
, decision, and we feel that both the forest itself,
and the park area around the head of Wood
i river, might well be named for the late, beloved
( Klamath man.
We had occasion recently to drive through
the Yawkey tract, which, among foresters, is
) regarded as one of the finest Ponderosa pine
growing areas in the west The tract is really
a northern, wooded extension of the beautiful
i Wood River valley. Although it has been log
J ged, there is still considerable timber there,
t with many park-like vistas and beautiful Sun
; creek adding to its attractions. The possibil
, Hies of Ponderosa reforestation here are great,
and what is to be done along that line would
! have pleased Jack Kimball Immensely.
' Enough, Please
REASON for that woody feeling we've had
for so long was suddenly clear to us last
! night when we heard Eddie Burroughs do a
swell job of singing "Trees."
'. Remember, that line about the tree that
'-"intimately lives with rain?"
A dozen years or so 'ago we left the Willam
ette valley for a brighter Klamath clime and
jubilantly bade farewell to Willamette valley
weather. Now the darned stuff has caught up
with us.
Some time ago we met Cattleman Bill Dalton
Five Million Men Overseas
By 7945, Says McNarney
WASHINGTON, June 21 (VP)
Lt Gen. Joseph T. McNarney,
deputy chief of staff, won't pre
dict when the war will end.
And, although this country will
have an overseas fighting force
of 5,000,000 men by the end of
the year, "the movement will
likely continue at a high rate
during 1945."
McNarney's testimony before
the senate appropriations com
mittee considering a house
approved $49,107,785,795 meas
ure to finance the war depart
ment during the fiscal year
starting July 1 was made nublie
today.
, : "I wish I could tell you how
long it will take us to liberate
Europe and to crush our foes in
the Pacific," he told the sen
ators, but "no man can at this
moment predict with accuracy
the time it will take.
"I can assure you, however,
hat as our forces go into battle,
they have every advantage which
it has been humanly possible to
provide. That they will win is1
p-A Gem of Thought From .delta's i
There is a young fellow named Diss -
Who makes drinking his only Bin
You can tell when he's drunk
Because the poor Clunk
; Always looks in a mirror to see who he is.
Smoked Glasses . . . , . . . 25c
u a am
AT IDELLA'S
S month, na
; urn
countea voar tTM
Aews
Member Audit
Bureau ClrculaUoa
Europe this summer.
The most respected military
authorities here share the
hope that the European end is
a matter of months, but they
are not predicting. To them
this is just the beginning of
the final military operations.
These are the early stages of
the planned crushing blows.
Look at the front pages.
The operations which formerly
were reported in two or three
muruerei,
etc. And in
mm
just started.
Dummy Luftwaffe?
IF the robot
ing with a plea
is no other, the
The British
only an attack
age.
The rocket
it has not been
certain. We hope that it can
be done in the minimum amount
of time with the minimum num
ber of casualties, and at the
minimum expense.
"We have today the greatest
army the United States has ever
mobilized. It is well-trained,
equipped with superior weapons
and deployed world-wide. It is
now definitely on the offensive
on all fronts.
McNarney said the 3,608,000
soldiers now deployed outside
the United States exceed by
more than 1.600.000 men the
peak overseas strength in World
War I and are only 350.000 men
short of equalling - the entire
strength of the army at the close
of the last war.
The officer testified that the
army is making every effort to
keep boys out of overseas in
fantry service until they are at
icasi iv.
Senator Gurney (R-S.D.) had
remarked that "we are getting
quite a kick back" because, he
said, the war department made
J
PbOD S4M
down by tha Pelican, after uveral weeki of
early spring drought.
"Pray for ratn," said Bill.
We did, and ever since we've been praying
it would stop. But the Lord just heard u the
first time. ,
Maybe it was a prayer from bearded scribe
named Epley, at the suggestion of a robed herd
master named Dalton, that started the deluge
which set Noah afloat.
5eAW ffte News
By PAUL MALLON
WASHINGTON, June 21 Mr. Churchill
must have been in a good humor when
he hopefully predicted the end of the war in
different headlines " now mon- MALLON
opolize practically all the columns, so far flung
have the battlefields grown in the past week.
And they will grow more.
As daring as the European invasion, was
the attack upon Saipan. Up to that point, we
had been merely on the outer fringes of the
Jap defensive line. With that thrust, we
plunged into the very heart of it, bypassing
all the naval strongholds dotted out southward
and eastward in the Pacific (Truk, Palau,
Yap, etc.)
Brilliant Strategy
THERE was not the usual island hopping, but
an enlightened and brilliant strategy de
signed to put our bombers within easier range
of Tokyo and over, all the Jap shipping through
which she sustains her war empire.
It was feasible only because we have been
dominating the sea lines and thus could supply
such an advanced force, or at least we have
the right to suspect' we can, because we put
war ships and transports safely into action
there with the invading force. Unless the Jap
fleet comes out of hiding to fight a decisive
battle, that condition will continue.
The details of the fighting were at first held
back, probably even from Washington, because
this is only one knife thrust in a general
scheme of attack, just one phase upon which
further developments rest .Consequently, it
must be assumed the authorities wisely awaited
a decisive break in the fighting.
Stiff ait Resistance
SO also with Franca to some extent. The bulk
of our army has been held out of Nor
mandy, in a similarly threatening manner. In
Italy, the nazis are attempting from time to
time to stiffen their resistance at a few strong
points, but at other times, they are soft
Thus it is impossible to guess accurately on
the end of . the war. So much depends on
factors concerning which we may have an opin
ion, but which are not facts, such tnings as
' German military and civilian morale on which
there are oscillating signs, the missing Luftwaffe,
the Pacific, the real attack has
plane assault on England is the
I dummy Luftwaffe Her Goering was address
to fight to the death ana mere
robot attack itself is a sign of
German desperation. It is a silly method of
warfare, for which the only excuse is a desire
to spread consternation with indiscriminate kill
In and destruction. .
were so upset about it because
it is psychologically disturbing even . to the
imperturbable to see those aimless plane-loads
of explosives flying overhead, uncontrolled at
a rate of about 15 or more an nour, day ana
nifiht. But from a military standpoint, it is
upon impregnable British cour
planes are constructed cheaply,
but must use much material which goes into
planes, and every one shot out fails to come
back. Therefore, intrinsically, it is just a very
expensive, aimless expenditure of material by
a nation already on the verge of defeat for that
very reason, and so short of air material that
able to put up an air force.
"a verv definite statement" when
the draft age was reduced to 18
that youths of tnat age wouia De
given at least a year's training
before being sent overseas.
Reports keep coming in, Gur
ney added, ot ooys wno nave
been in the army only a few
weeks finding themselves fight
ing in Italy with the result that
the gooa laitn ot tne war depart
ment as well as the law-makers
is beine challenged.
McNarney said he believed an
examination of the record would
show the war department never
had promised that no 18-year-
olds would be used as replace
ments, but added:
I have a rule in the army
ground forces that no young man
under 19 years of age assigned
to the infantry, will be sent
overseas. If he is in an artillery
unit or service unit that rule
does not apply."
He noted that army service
forces get about six months'
training but that they are not
normally engaged in active fight
ing. In some instances, he said,
younger men were taken from
replacement training centers and
sent overseas but that was be
cause of enforced demands at the
fronts and the fact that selective
service did not call or furnish
18-year-olds for several months.
The NATS (naval air trans
port . service) was formed five
days after Pearl Harbor with a
nucleus of seven planes.
A species of clam erowine In
the South Seas weighs twice as
much as a man.
When in Msdloid
Star at
HOTEL HOLLAND
Thoroughly Modern
Joe and Ann Esrley
Proprietors
SIDE GLANCES
wt iw mm. t t. .m in n, ,,
"Oh, I forgo r to straighten
after they
Market
Quotations
NEW YORK. June 31 (AP Selected
liquor eheree turned reeutint tn tht
lock market today after loalni pert
of their sltabla early game, scored on
announcement of a whiskey-making holi
day" would be perm I tied the companies
which have bean making alcohol lor
war.
Cloalnf quotation!:
American Can - ,, , ,- L. MH
Am Car it Tdy - - 3Sf
Am tci at tu , , "
Anaconda
. K'i
. SIS
.
. 8',
Calu Pack in H
Cat Tractor .
Commonwealth Js
Curtis-Wright
General electric
General Motors .
Gt Nor Rr pfd
. MS
Illinois lemrai
Int Harvester
Kennecott ,
Lockheed
Long-Bell A"
Montgomery Ward
Naah-Kelv
N Y Central
Northern Pacific
Pac Gas El
. m,
. Tat
. 31 S
. IS
. Io,
, 4
. 1'
. !
, 33N
. S
. M'i
, ISli
. '
. toy,
. M
. an.
. 301',
. an
Pickard Motor .
renna ft R .
Republic Steal H
Richfield Oil
Safeway 8 tores
Scars Roebuck
Routharn ptcifle
8t.nd.r4 Brand.
Sunehlne Mining
TTan.-Am.ne.
Union Oil C.U(
union pacific
u a su.i
-iiot.
Warner PicturM
, 13
Potatoes
CHICAGO. June 31 (AP-WTA Pota
toes, arrivals 103: on track 104; total
U. S. shipments 1007: supplies moderate;
demand moderate: for California Long
Whites market firm to slightly strong
on best stock: for Triumphs V. S. all
sections market firm; California Long
Whites V. B. No. 1. 9345.05; AH ion
Bllsa Triumphs U. 8. No. 1. 94.50.07;
Louisiana Bits Triumphs U. ft. No. 1.
94.ru: Texas Bliss Triumphs U. 6. No.
1, 93-90.
WHEAT
CHICAGO. June 31 (API The pressure
of a record wheat crop and prospects
for heavy yields of all small grains was
felt In the market today and all grain
future wars) lower In a bearish and
quiet trade.
Commission house liquidation, hedging
sales and Indications that less what may
be required by distillers of Industrial
alcohol all tended to lower prices of
future of that grain.
Bye suffered losses comparable to
those of wheat when It was reported
the war production board may abandon
plans to require distillers to use about
a million bushel's of rye a month In the
manufacture of Industrial alcohol.
Wheat closed 3 to inc lower than
yesterday. J uly 1 1 .M V . Oa u were
off 1 to l'sc. July 744c. Rye was off
lv to 3c. July 91.07H-''4. Barley was
H to le lower, July S121H. -
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. June 31
fAP-WFAl cattle: aoo. Fully steady
odd 900 lb. good steers 910.00 to killers,
two loads fleshy 040 lb. and 1013 lb.
913.00-13.50 to feeders, load common 710
lb. stock steers 910.00; few medium half'
ers 910.00-11.00; good cows 91 2.00-12,30,
common sv.oo-g.ao. cutters it rone 97.00
8.00, canners limited 95.00-7.00. Calves:
25. Fully steady; good to choice vealers
st.uu-i.oo.
Hots: 300. Around 5 cents h cher:
several loads good to choice 180-370 lbs.
barrows and gMU 915.00. few 300 lb.
si3 u. Most gooa sows w.ao-sra.
Sheee: 2.VW. For week to date 12.000,
rood clearance. Lata yesterday, double
cholra 83 lb. north coast lambs 914.50.
today, decK choice B3 lb. 914.75 sorted
to oer cent at 913.75. Yesterday, around
300 yearlings medium to good 910.50
12.50, about SO cents higher; shorn awes
quoiea f2.uu-o.iw.
CHICAGO. June 21 fAP-RFA) Salable
nogs i v ow: total iiom: slow, steady on
good and choice 180-270 lb. 913.75, the
top: otner weights strong: sows strong
io iu cents nianer: aooa ana cnoice zmo-
330 lb. 91105-12.15. heavier weights
aownwarq io sji.w (or 40U id. averages
good and choice 300-550 lb. sows 910.W
89; approximately 15.000 unsold.
Salable cattle 10.000: salable ealvesi
800; strictly good and choice fed steers
and yearlings, Including yearling half-
en. sieaay io strong, mostly steady;
both classes fairly active: too steers
917.00; bulk 914.50-17.15; bulk heifers
913.50-10.50. best around 917.00; largely
steer and heifer run; however, all ex
cept strictly dry cows weak to 10 cents
lower; cutters 98.75 down; most grass fat
cow ,wjj,o; ory oiierings to 14.00;
all weighty bulls fully steady, with heavy
sausage onenngs to a 1 2,70, and heavy
fat bulls to 914.70; light grassy bulls
dull at 910.00 down; vealers steady at
i".w a own; biock came siow at sjl.uu
13.00 mostly.
Salable sheep 1000; total 3500; spring
YOU WOMEN WHO SUFFER FROMv
HUT HASHES
If otl auffar from hot flMhat,
weak, nerroiu IrrlUbla ftellnim, ra
a bit blua at timet duo to tha (una.
tlonal "middle-age" period pacull&r
to women try lydle, B. Plnlcham'a
veKaiamfl uompouna to relieve such
tod tome,
Ipt future! Follow
label direction..
it net
LYDU E. PINKHAM'S eSSSS
out the boys' obstacle course ,
went to bed!"
lambs very scarce, Matured sales 16
cents lower; shorn lambs steady; old
crop wooled limb active; shorn awee
weak to 95 cents lower; suable lot good
and choice native spring lambs 9li.fi.
with bucks discounted 91 w; load medium
to mostly good shorn lambs No, 1 pelta
913.U. load largely medium 93 lb, clip
per Na 1 pelt 913.00; few shorn lamue
and yearlings 912 13-50, medium to choice
shorn awe 90" .oo-T.oo. cull and flommoa
tt4hl weights 93-90-A.oo,
PORTLAND. Ore,. June 31 (AP-WFAI
Salable and total cattle 300; calves 30;
market slow on bulls and common cows;
other classes only moderately active,
Rent rally steady: few common steers
trgelJr on looker account 99.90-9.19;
odd head 910.50-11. ti; rvttcr-common
sows 9&0O-4.30; shells 94.50 downi fat
dairy type cows to 97 00; few common
medium beef cows 91 50-9 50 j young
cows up to 910 50; medium good bulls
99 .00-9 35; common grades (. down;
good heavy beef bulls quotable to 910 00
or above; good choice vealert 914.90
Salable hogs BOO, tots! 990; holdover
950; market slow tale, only light re
ductlon in holdover now in prospect:
sale generally steady; good-choice 190
370 lb. 9I3.TS: 390-300 lbs. 91190; light
lights If 15-11 00; ftW 1 TO-173 lbs. Up IO
91 J 00. good sow 94.0040; few light
weights To 99 00: good tXMb. fteder pigs
99.73; choice quo labia to 9990.
Salable sheep 400; market uneven;
good -choice spring lambs and awe
active, steady; other classes slow; good
choice springer mostly 913 90: few
tot up to 913.03: common-medium grade
9100013-50; common-medium shorn old
crop lamb 99 00-10.50; few wooled lamhe
to 9 1 1 50; good ewe 94-00; common
grade down to 93 33.
Telling
Tlt? Editor
lattar avfalt.S hwa nwat nl M mart
thin too waraa m lanim. nwat ka rtt"
in laiitilr en OHI tlOl al tha up
Kir, uK mual ba altmd. OMIrlMiUana
fotkmlnf lhaaa rulM, Bra mm, ar
"PRISONER Or WAR"
A prisoner ot war they gay,
in he.
And yet, I know hU spirit
oars,
Hia soul is free,
I know he prays.
It seems I hear him, softly
say
"Don't worry Mom, God knows
best
He keeps his own,
And I am His!"
A Prisoner's Mom.
Klamath County.
Social Hygiene
Lecture Series
To Begin Monday
Mrs. George Moorehead, field
secretary for the C. E. Brown
trust' of the division of social
hygiene education of the Univer
sity of Oregon medical school In
Portland, will be in Klamath
Falls Monday to conduct the
first of a scries of six social hy
giene lectures.
The course Is to be given pri
marily for the Junior hostesses
of the Klamath Military Service
committee, but any other girls
between the ages of 16 and 23
years are invited to attend. The
course will bo given at the high
scnooi, inc exact time to bo an
nounced later this week.
Chiropractors
Elect Officers
PORTLAND, June 21 W) Dr.
A. R. Hedges, Mcdford, Is the
newly elected president of the
uregon Association of Chiroprac
tic Physicians.
Other new officcm: nr. .T w
Sarscnt. Portland, vlncnrpulrinnt-
Dr. Charles H. Rhodes, Portland',
rcujuuii y-ucuBurcr; ur. noy u,
Dunn. Roscbure. chanlnlm Tlr n
D. Kutchum, Bend, rcpresenta-
live to ino national cniropractlc
uaBomauon,
In Town Thomas W. Delzell,
former resident of this city, Is a
business visitor in this citv thl.
WCCK.
Classified Ads Bring Rpsulta.
HEMORRHOIDS (Piles)
Rirnii (Rupture), fitsun 01 Fistslt
Jiteb rfleotdeis Impair voui
eclth-efllo enoy earning
power. For 30 rrs we luva
enoosssfuliv treated thon
ends ol people for these alt
weats. No hospital opera
Hob, Ho oottflaemeot. No
iois of tine free) work. Call
for examination or send for,
MIS desorlpttve Booklet
Qpen ivningi, Won., Wed,, fH, 7 fe 8.30
Dr. C. J. DEAN CLINIC
Viyeleen and Murfon
. Cot. . BoraMde and Qtaael Ave.
TAYLOR S LEAD
INCREASES IN
IDAHO BALLOT
BOISE, Idaho, Juna 31 Wl
Glen H, Taylor, former cowboy
minstrel and strong backer of
President .Roosevelt, appeared
certain of Idaho s democratic u
S. senate nomination today a
official returns from 17 outlyln
precincts in Irlnlio county
brought his lead ovrr Incumbent
D. Worth Clark to 178 votes.
With 838 of 845 precincts re
porting, Taylor held 10,722 to
Clark's 10,844.
With only seven of tha state'
84S precincts threo In Bonn'
dary county and four In Cassia
county mill to roport, it p
pears unlikely that Clark can
pick up the votes necessary for
ins renomination.
Secretary of State George Cur
tis said the official county can
vass returns were coming In so
slowly that the stato board of
canvassers would be unable to
meot until Monday. It Is suppos
ed to meet Saturday and certify
me results by Monday.
mini moon or pocateuo sd
peared to be democratic nominee
for state treasurer, with a 13B'
vote lead for 807 precincts over
cora elevens or Twin rails.
James Keating of Harrison
held a 151-vole lead In 810 pre-
cincu in tno race ror republican
secretary of state nomination
against Myrtle Davls-Wlcki of
Boise.
Frank Langley of Conor d1'
Alene led E. G. Elliott of Boise
by 247 votes for democratic at
torney general nomination.
BULLETIN REPORTS
KLAMATH DISEASES
With BO oer cent of tha doe.
tors reporting, Klamath county
showed two casos of mump and
14 cases of gonorrhea for tha
week ending June 10, according
to the health bulletin Issued by
me uregon state board of Health
The most noteworthy Item In
the bulletin was the total of 60
cases of syphillls reported -for
me state at large, it was the
highest total for the disease reg
istered since venereal disease
was first reported In Oregon on
a weexiy oasis, early in 1843.
Scarlet fever throughout the
state leu off 71 per cent during
the week, touching the lowest
point for this disease since last
November.
Measles came up slightly lost
week, although It was 42 per
cent unaer mo 1B peaK Which
was rcacnea last montn.
Nazi Bodies Drift
Into Bosporus
ISTANBUL. June 21 vTn
"Hundreds" of bodies of German
soldiers, apparently from troop
iian.puru sunic oy me Kussians
in me BiacK sea, are drifting Irv
io tne Bosporus, ii waa reported
tuuny.
WEATHER
Mex. Mm. PrerlD
en 7 ft.1 Trer.
r. ..... ran m.. l
tekevlew M 44
Norih liend w.,. n &s
Portland , ... 71 flt
Iteddlnu 7.1 m Ti
Wno , . m M
nan rrant so u i. ni
'" 00 m Traea
VITAL STATISTICS
ALLPHINR-Bern at Klamalh Valley
hfWDIIal. Klamalh rails fln n
Allphlne. Spreaue Hlver, a flrU Weight,
pounita 12 ounrea.
UI!AN-Bom at Klamath Vail., hH.
u, io nr, ana Mra. nuMeii it
pllal, Klamath ralla. ore., on June 21.
IM4. Io Mr. anil Mr,. Ralph llran. SOS
wwnna. a ain, weight! 7 pound,
ounrei.
SAWCEDO-Born at Klamalh Valley
rvDltal. Juna tn. loaa. m m. u..
Jeaua fiawredo, Algoma. a girl. Welghli
S pnunda 3 ounrea.
MARTIN Horn at Klamalh Valley
hoapltal. Juna 20. IIM4. Io Mr. and Mra.
i. n. martin, am Hooaevelt. a girl,
Weleht: S pound, '4 ounce,.
RCHir.-Dorn at Klamath Valley ho,,
pllal, June 20. 1M4. to Mr. and Mr.
Kdward chle. 15.17 WIKord,
a girl.
nraigm: a pounoa 11' ounce,,
OBITUARY
GERALD IIEAN HOLZIIOUSE
Gerald Dean Holzhottaer, a lifelong
BiunM, , rtianiNin county, paeeen away
In lh a city on Tua.riav. Juna !tn mil
The deceaaed waa a native or Klamath
na ann waa agea 7 year, and 21
day, when called. Be.ldea hla parent.
Mr. end Mra. Irvln C. Holzhoilaer ol
Poe Velley. he la aurvlved by hla ma
ternal grandfather. J. B. Hope of I'oe
Valley and e paternal grandmother, Mra.
John Holzhoueer. alio of Poe Valley.
Tht remain, reat at Ward'e Klamalh
funeral Home, 02S High alreet, where
The funeral aervlce will lake place from
ncnaa may can anar i n. m th.imhbu
... u.m.iii..i, an m roe valley on
Friday. June 2.1, IIM. at 2 p. m. with
the nev. Howard lliilnhln n k. ai...
Chrlatlan church of thl. city officiating.
Commitment aervlcea and Interment will
follow In the family nlnL of th nHfArrf
"ernetery. Frlenda are respectfully In.
...... u a.ioiiu in. aarvicee.
WORKERS! WHO SUFFER
FACTORY' ITCH
SKM RASHES
lame promptly raSnat lertaral
Flrstsppllcatlonaof wonderful soothls,
medlcatedijiiWZrn-.o a Doctor's for.
muls promptly relieve Inteoae iteb
aod burnloi of tlmplo skin rushes, er.
soma and similar akin and scalp lrrlta
tlona due to external causa. Zamo also
aids healing. Backed by 85 years' sue
ceesl Clean, stainless, invisible Zemo
won't show oa skin.
8 different elr.na. 7 11 III Q
SILENT STAR
, HORIZONTAL
i, Pictured
S Paradise
4 Lair
5 Area measure
silent dim star
10 High card
13 Duck
0 Courageous
1 Rxlit
14 Russian city
15 Rule of ordsr l'mboollke '
16 Arabian gulf r,,M
17 Run away Aluminum
It Scale of pay ,?rm'xl
16 Half an em J?Wlngllke part
30 Bright color, i '"
91 Paring 13 r email
asillii " )7 Iron (symbol) jSHein;
i-f ...' ..V " 'r
24 South Amer- ?"u'" tbbr.) SSDonke.
lea (Rbbr)
30 Rodent
35 Has on '
39 Tamle
33 Be Indebted
' 33 A paces
34Dagllk part
38 Operatic solo
30 Decay
31 Heroic
33 Famous opera
34 Part of circle
St By way of
3Trilaa
39 Paid eiotlcej
40 Steamship
(abbr.)
41 Inquire
43 Skill
48 Musical l)v
48 Abound
48 Island
81 Celebration
53 Auricle
54 Appeal
58 Toot path
58 Creak letter
57 Malt drinks
58 Deserves
VERTICAL
I I Beverme
1 Conceals
II II ii
I1 ' It CI II ii
k n
Primary Election Totals
Give Official Results
SALEM
complete figures (or Oregon's
primary election May 10 were
reloased by the stale depart
ment today, showing that 54
per cent of registered republi
cans and .IB per cent of the
democrats cast ballots.
The official totals follow:
United Stales Senator, (our
year term-
Republicans Guv Cordon
88,860. Charles A. Sprague
044. Henn Black 6108. John
McBrlde 8065. Democrat Wil.
lis Mahoney 72.067.
United States Senator, six-
year term-
Republicans Wayne L.
Morse 70,716. Rufuc C. Holman
60,436. Earl E. risher 12,341.
Democrats Eda-ar W. Smith
49.672. W a Iter W. Whllbeck
28,882.
Congressman, Finn District
Republicans James W. Moll
28.231. Dan Harmon 14.528.
Democrat O. Henry Oleen 18..
874.
Congressman, Second Dis
trict . .
Republican Lowell Stock
man 17.025. Democrat C. J.
Shorb 8070.
Congreuman, Third District-Republican
Homer D. An-
gell 47,287. Democrats Lester
Sheeley 22.726, Nicholas L.
Granoff 14.878.
Congressman. Fourth Dis
trict-
Republican Harris Ells
worth 22,004. Democrat Floyd
K. Dover 10,371.
Slate Treasurer Republican
110.048. Democrat Wllllnm
T. Lambert 71.248.
Attorney General
Courthouit Rccortii
MtrrUgM
COTK-Mrl.lKII I'm nit ErlwarH CoU
71, V. A. ntvy, Nftitv o( MMrriuMiu,
rmnl of Aoamr. , Wrtia M
Mrt.uh. 30. wiir. Nativa ot OkU
homa, rir1ni ti( ftcatil.
rOHKMAN-OMOUNUtt. Wilbur Thorn a
r ore mart, m, ranfhar. Naiiva or Ml
wuri, rMl(lnt ol Crcni Ctiy. Nallte
Ituih (Jrminrti.. M, conk Nalv nt
llllnoli, rtMMeni of Crirnl CUy, Cllf.
Maya Chaiiain vtnui Joa H. Ch
tain. Hull for divorca. eharaa rrtiol ami
Inhuman iraatrrtani, Coupla marrltxl in
Vancouver. Waih.. March l, iw.
Kiatniiri atitt rMt oral Inn nt mal1n
nam. Maya aillwaii. J. C. O Nalll, (
tomay for plaintiff.
Mnbaru ll. Oumm vinui A I von K
Otimm. tun for divorro, rharv
and inhuman iroatmant. Tmipia mar
rlad in llano, January I J. 1042. Plain
Uff atlii rualody of nnm minor child:
Us . tuianuna, itornay for plamtllf.
Jaillra Caarl
Blrdla Andarann. No twanilor'i II'
nhm. rlntd ia no,
Hohorl Utnry Ilunnall. No muffler.
rinod MM,
FUNERALS
TOMAiHO AMADKO AMRIIOOKTTI
Funaral tarvlraa for lha lata TomailO
Amadeo Ambrointtl, who paaaatl away
In thl city on Monday. Juno 13.
wen hald In Link v ill ramaUrv on Tues
day. "Juno 30, 1044 at 1:30 p. m. with
commit man! aarvloaa and Intarmant fol
lowing. Arraniamanta war undar the
direction of the Earl WhIUock Funeral
Home ol thli oily.
MiMnr.n bdna nArr
Funeral eorvlcea for the late Mildred
Edna llarff of Mt. Hebron, Calif,, who
paaied away In Dorria on Sunday, June
U, J 044 will he held In lha chapel of
the Golden dale Undertaking company,
1AM California, flan franeUen. Friday,
June 33, 1044 at 2 p. m. Commitment
Rorvlcea and Interment In Ml. OUvel
Memorial Park. The remalm were
forwarded via Railway EnDrMi Agency
on Tueaday evenlnf at 7:40 p, m. Ar
rangamenia ware under tha rflreotlon of
tha Earl Whltlnek runaral Homa of thli
elty.
Stomteh mlibthtrlnt? Soothing
FEPTO-aiiMOl, will help calm It
down. For years msny doctors have
recommended PKPTO-BiSMOL for re
iaf of sour, sickish upsat stomach.
oorf and dan food. Helps
retard Intestinal fermentation and
simple diarrhea. Whan your stomach
is queaay, unaaay and upiat . . . take
MPTo-aiSMOL.
a Norwich monver
OFF VOUft
PGB0?
V
??? "lrbodl..i
"Mineral , :"olni?;
.'ooL.
"All
38 lluue ink
"I Broiki. ,
38 Male .i...-1
MirJ
Murder c,ol 4 rathe,
Exclamation "
I I I I I II I 1" ll I L. law
il a 'r
r Rr rrl;-
sr rjsif .
r -VStflrS"
June 10 Pl FlnnL ncpubllcstuj-CM,.,
golden, (lMCBkj
Republicans rW(T uu,
Slasscn 0001, Wlllki.S
Vice Preiidtnt-
Rcpubllcant-Wifftii iu
Mawen 3133, Brick. r
Dewey f2B, Wlllkl. IU. t
ocrala Wsllsca 10.441. M
ley 318, Bsybum J7.
Republican National Cossi
teeman
Jl 1 1 .h -"' CtU "
Charles L. Pilne 43.04T.
Democrailc National Coo
Iceman
Lew Wsllsca J4.5TJ. Hwri
tatourelle 28,619, CUmal
Hyde. 28.830.
Republican National Coot
teewoman Mra. Oforal,
Gorllnscr 103,(86.
Democratic National Cil
miltcewoman
Noncy Honeyman Rutasi
47,039, Emily r. Ed 11,
The army's oldest j!tp,aisa!
"Cramps." has bn ttrai
ovrr to the SmlUuonUg b
tullon.
7:15,
DON LEE.MDPJUJ
LOWELL
THOMAS,
NEWS-
TIME
Get IN on thij
Invasion- j
Wlin own""
JoU J. J
EQUITABLE UK
A.iurenc SotW
Let's
I
00.
TONITE
SS3TW,SI