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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1944)
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE TWO COP CHOOSES DEI Y-BR1CKER PARTY TICKET (Continued from Page One) the hoat of friends which I have ' here for Thomas E. Dewey for president of the United States." No sooner had Bricker turn ed from the platform than Chair man Joseph W. Martin of Massa chusetts announced: "I now introduce Senator Ball of Minnesota." Ball led the cam paign in behalf of Lt. Command er Harold E. Stassen for presi dent. He said: "Ours has been a clean fight. ,We are proud of Commander Stassen. "As long a there was the slightest chance of Stassen's nom ination we were determined to present his name to this conven tion. Governor Bricker's elo quent statement has eliminated any chance that existed. Minne sota's delegation has therefore decided not to present Stassen's name to thii convention." Representative Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, another "fav orite son," f-.llowed Senator Ball and pledged his support to Dewey. . , "Hue and now I want to offer my hands and ray heart my sup port and my energy, to what I baUere is a great winning ticket In this decisive year of 144, Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, and Cot. John W. Bricker of Ohio." D" ktan said. ; Gov. Leverett SaltonstaU of Massachusetts next seconded Dewey's nomination, declaring Dewey "is proving himself daily as governor of our largest state, t Rep. Leonard W. Hall of New York, in another seconding Speech, predicted "the next con gress will be republican the next president must be a repub lican. r' . If Dewey had not already been assured of the nomination, his followers would have clinched U when they began handing out blue cardboard fans. Alabama, first state on the oall for nominations, yielded to Nebraska whose Governor Grla Jfold had been named to place pewey's name In nomination. Nebraska Yields Nebraska, in turn, yielded to Ohio and state after state pass ed on the roll call to move to ward swift approval of Dewey, then Bricker. When Minnesota was called, fcowever, a voice rang out from ine delegation: ft- "Minnesota hae a mnrHHnr ' The Minn eso tans were sticking to their decision to place in nom ination the name of their former lovernor. Stassen. , When Ohio was reached on the von can, me cnairman ot the Delegation sang out: fOhio passes." Thus the plan unfolded for uricxer i nomination for the vice Presidency. After the state call, Grlswold look over the speaker's platform and made hi sneech in DnWi behalf, drawing applause almost Immediately by declaring: "We are here to bring Wash ington, D. C. back into the iuuon." s Demonstration Governor Griswold's closing mention of the name of Thomas E. Dewey, set off the first big demonstration of the convention, i Bands blared "Hail Michigan." State standard after state stanrl. frd bobbed out into the jam packed aisles. m There was a veritable forest Pf posters bearing Dewey's pic Jure. ( Martin tried to bring order iter me demonstration had gone bn for 8 minutes but he was un successful. Brass bands started Off again lust below hi. rial. J. Finally, after 20 minutes. Mar gin resiorea oraer. uut tne noise started all over again when Bricker strode out on the plat form. Even while Bricker was with drawing from the presidential jiBis, some ot nis die-hard sup porters were shouting: "Don't quit, John!" Then, when the Ohioan's de cision was made irrevocable. Ball strode up to announce that Minnesota was withdrawing the pame of Stassen in the interest pf unity.- f Gov. Edward Martin of Penn sylvania, placed Bricker's name in nomination for vice presi dent, declaring: f. '-'We named a young and vlg crous and courageous young man to lead us in the battle jms tall. He needs a man with similar qualifications to assist mm. 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Get Carter's Little Liver Pills ' today only tSi. You'll be glad you did. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued From Page One) STORE, principles must always be more important than men. The platiorm win nave us a ay soon. www 0 much for politics, which on ' this day is only one of our in terests. At Cherbourg, were irani icallv restoring the port facilities while clearing out the remaining Germans. At Caen, a clanking tank battle, one of the greatest of the war, is developing. Mont somerv is reaching for more ELBOW ROOM in the invasion beach head. It will be needed for the great er forces we'll be able to pour in through the port wc ve jusi taken. FINLAND goes ALL-GERMAN handed over to Hitler by Its leaders WITHOUT PARLIA MENT APPROVAL. (The Fin- ntsh oarliament Is the equivalent of our congress.) German troops swarm in Helsinki. Mannerheim. Finland s indis pensable man, a former high ranking officer of the CZAR who hates communist Russia more than he loves Finland, makes the decision and calls in the Gcr- COUR Russian armies, paced by unprecedented Russian air power, converge on Minsk. Be yond Minsk lies Warsaw. Be yond Warsaw lies Berlin. THE Infantry battle on Salpan still rages. We have the edge, but hard fighting still lies ahead. The Japs have a stranglehold on Hengyang. Beyond Hengyang, rcacnca u v one il vuuia a ww railroads, lies Kweiling. Beyond Kweiling lies KUNMING. U. S. air' headquarters in China. Be yond Kunming lies Chungking. Beaten on the sea, the Japs are throwing their all into the land fighting in China. GOP Farm Plank Given Approval CHICAGO. June 38 (AV-Earl C. Smith, vice president of the American farm Bureau jeaera tion, said in a statement today the agricultural plank adopted for the republican platform "is sauaactory. 'Literally Interpreted and sympathetically put Into action. me plan is adequate to meet tne problems connected with the farm situation." he said. Smith last - week presented farm bureau recommendations to the republican general plat form committee and a subcom mittee on agriculture. Damo Hopes For California Win ' WASHTOrsmv .tun. in tan Senator Chandler (D-Ky.) said KJaay xnai ne oenevea a uewey- nHr-Irm- tlf-lrt nmitlil rnaUa - weaker republican campaign than a Dewey-Warren ticket wouia nave provided. "The rennmli-anc sr. mhobii. trating most of their strength where they already had it," Chandler said at the White Mouse after talking with Presl dent Roosevelt. "I think we can take Califor nia away from them," ' LIONS MEET PORTLAND, June 28 OP) A. J. crose, Salem, Robert Fish er. Eueene and R V T Portland, were elected district governors at me annual state convention of the Lions club here vextarHav Tinrhmmtmw House in Lincoln county was selected as tne 1845 convention site. Back From Convention Re turning home Monday from the Lion's convention in Portland were Walter Wiesendanger, John Sandmeyer and M. E. Nic odemus. While in Portland the group visited the Oregon ship yards. FUNERALS BESSIE B. DUNBAB "nriwi ior roe laie Bessie B. Dunbar, who passed awajr In this city brief illness will be htld In the Klrst . Lliult"' rmw ivki ai ninth, on Thursday. Junt 39, UM4 t 3 p. m. with tna nv UMuoiHt w u...i.i officiating. Friendi are invited. En- ImMhmant BMtl.l -t i . . " jnaiwotcunii i nosy, ,lin,L30-1M4 -t 3:30 m- The remains will be forwarded via Ritflway .express AMNTV An T-h.iv.Ku -- I ...... - ' . .v.., evening w P. m. Ammemtnu art under the di rection of the Earl WhiUock I-uneral Home of thii city. EBSKIfr BCAL The funeral service for the late Krsliln seal, who passed away in Orovllle, wui an wnamy. dune 2.1, will taKe place from the Community church at 30, lttt, at 2 p. m. The Rev. Z. J. Tunlns and Iva Clark offldatlnf. The commitment service and interment will follow In the family plot In the Chief Sehonchln cemetery. There will be a morning service commencing at 10 o'clock. Friends are respectfully Invited to attend the services. Ward s Klamath Funeral Home In charge of the ar rangements. OBITUARY MAX WEI8S Max WelM, a resident of San fran cfKo. Call., pawed away In thi city on Tuesday, June 37, 1044, following a brief Illness. The deceased was a native of Budapest. Hungary, and was aged 64 years 3 months and 30 days when called. He was a member of the Jew ish Faith, also a member of the Pacific Coast Showman association. Besides Ills wife. stella of Sn Francisco, Calif., he Is survived by ona brother, Morris of nkw yoric -iiy, n. y. Tne runersi serv ice will take place on Thursday. June 20, 1044. at 11:30 a, m. from the chapel of Ward's Klamath Funeral Home, 911 Hlah street. The Rev. Kunnt V. HivnM of the Community Conrrefstfonal church officiating-. Friends are Invited to at- tena. Tne remains win be forwarded via Railway Express on Thursday eve ning, to Eucene. Ore., whm cromatlnn will take place at the Eugene Cremator ium. tlon a man of real courage, starting back in that little log house where he was born, and carried out as governor of the great state of Ohio," NAZI TROOPS SWARM ACROSS PUPPET LAND (Continued from Page One) Helsinki to. confer with Ryti and Foreign Minister Sir Henri Ram say. ll was uncertain whether von Ribbculrop still was in Helsinki, although one icport said he had been seen dining yesterday noon at an exclusive restaurant, the Savoy. He was understood to have given a dinner IrsI night at which Finland's total collab oration with Germany was form alized. All through the nesotlations. lt was said, the Finnish parlia ment was uninformed of the pro ceedings, a duplication ot the ac tions oi Kyti and his associates when Finland went to war with Russia in 1941. Relations between the United States and Finland were describ ed as on "day to day" basis. A break In relations between the United States and Finland seems certain, reliable sources said tonight in view of the lolnt declaration ot solidarity be tween Helsinki and Berlin. No instructions had reached Hel sinki from Washington, how ever. P . (Continued From Page One) of Salpan. Tokyo radio said, de claring that from 60 to 100 craft struck at the Islands still in enemy hands. These were the third attacks in four days on Guam and Rota, suggesting that the U. S. navy was clearing the way lor expansion of Its holdings In the Marianas, which are 1500 miles from Japan. Yap Hit From Air Coupled with the reported Guam-Rota raids was an air blow at Yap from Gen. Douglas MacArthurs bouthwest pacific theater. Yap, 250 miles northeast ot Palau in the Carolines, was slug ged with 35 tons of bombs, pre sumably to insure that Japanese air forces there are kept from interfering with the Saipan op erations 7uo miles to the north. It was Yap's third raid in week and 30 enemy planes rose to meet it. Eight were downed. The Americans lost a Liberator. Airman Active MacArthur's airmen bombed Palau and Woleai. wrecked a Jap freighter off Boeroe island west of New Guinea, damaged three other vessels in the East Indies, and attacked Manokwari, rxoemtoor, we wan and their old favorite, Rabaul. The Japanese retaliated with a 10-ton raid on Biak island's Mokmer airdrome, inflicting minor casualties. Myltkyina was still under heavy attack by Lt. Gen. Joseoh Stilwell's troops, and a support ing Chinese force cut the Burma road below Lungllng, which the Chinese are trying to recapture. The Chinese who captured Mo- gaung moved six miles north' east and took NamtL Classified Ads Bring Results. Contlnnorji shew Dally Opens 12 M .HI 4IJ Vl III rfofaas devll dogs art ii actios sgaisl w SECOND BIG HIT "W.OMAN RAIDERS 0F ZAMBOANGA" CLAM STRANGLEHOLD HENGYANG Service Men to Get Free Seots Joe Hicks, chairman of the Klamath county Filth War Loan drive, announced Wediu-sday that all service men and women who entered the armed forces from this county will bo given free reserved seats to tho stauo show July 8. Tickets to the show for serv ice men and women nuiy be ob tained at bond heudqtiurtors, 7S5 Main. RUSSIANS PERIL MINSK; BRITISH DRIVE PROCEEDS (Continued rrom P8 One) in the campaign, Caen Is 120 miles from Paris. Bsllnsry Hit Tho first threo-way shuttle bombing oi an enemy target wns disclosed. Britain-based U. S. Fortresses which bombed Berlin and flew to Russian buses rose Irom the soviet fields and bomb ed a Polish oil refinery and luml ed In Italy, all within a week. Allied casualties in tne invas ion were announced as (0.5411 Of these 34,163 were Amrrirnn, 13.572 British and 2815 Cunii dian. Of the Amerlcnn losses, 3082 were killed, 13,121 wounded and 7039 musing. Ocrmnn ens ualties are above 70,000. As salvage experts restored the great Cherbourg harbor, the Ul s cleared tne port arsvnnl ot Germans and reduced a few other doomed pockets in detail Resistance, utlttent German resistance stiffened appreciably in Italy althoush numerous villages wcro captur ed. Including San Vlnccnzo, 32 miles below Llvomo. Mediter ranean air forces in two days destroyed 100 planes in Italy, the Balkans and Austria. Clouds of 750 or more Ameri can heavy bombers in a triple attack today pounded three mr dromes near Laon, the Soar- bracken rail yards and targets near pans. Germany reported bombers over the southwest relch. By night 1000 RAF heavies struck two rail centers south and east of Paris and Pas-dc-Calais robot bomb-launchlnc sites from which tha i'oe tormented south- em England. Allied air com manders said the Germans had an "acute shortage of oil. BLACKmOT ?Hnhr .Inn. W) Mrs. Hazel K. Brown, wom en's supervisor at Idaho's mental nnimiTai nr wn. .ran ttMi hu a jury last night of charges of neglecting lemaie paiicnis. ; y t'v;'" " ' y4 'ti jk-i w . 1 ' f It i. t r si. s mm wm m siimirk ANNE BAXTER WHHAM EYTHB MICHAEL OiSHE A f .TONIGHT WAR BOND PREMIERE ADMISSION BY BOND TICKETS ONLY SCHOOL CHIEFS F E Stanley Woodruff, principal ot KUHS, and Arnold Uralupp, city superintendent of schools, made a trip to Dorrls Tuesday afternoon to find out further In formation about tho proposed transfer of tho Dorrls high school students to KUHS. Flfty-aight boys and girls would be attending high school hoie under the proposed plan, according to Woodruff. There would bo 17 freshmen, 12 soph omores, 15 Juniors and 14 seni ors entering. Woodruff said that whether Klumath can accopt the pupils or not depends for tho most part on the teacher situation. Ho said that tho prlntcpal of the Dorrls high school, Ralph Kmier, and one teacher, Mis. Grayson, may be able to tench here, thus alleviating tho sltua 1 1 o n, Kauer teaches social studies, and Mrs. Grayson is an instructor in English. Tho students attending from Dorrls would have to pay tui tion bocuuso ot the added cost of maintaining them. Another problem, Woodruff suld, is tho question of the seni ors graduating it thoy attend for the full year. There would bo a technicality of whether the seniors would graduate from Dorrls high school or from KUHS. Tho Oregon require ments are quite a bit different from the California education laws. Man Nabbed Here Taken to Utah John A. Zollurs. who has been held here under 9300 cash bail on a fugitive warrant. Is being returned to Tooele coun ty, Utah, by a Utah deputy sheriff. Zollars is wanted In Utah on a charge ot failure to support minor children. In court here this week, he waived prelim inary hearing and signed extra dition papers. Quake Noted by Spokane Station SPOKANE, Wash.. June 28 W An earthquake described as "very heavy" was recorded at 1:08 a. m. (PWT) today by the seismograph at Mt. St. Michael's Scholastlcate, school officials re ported. The direction and approxi mate distance from Spokane couia not be determined. MAKE STUDIO ORRIS SCHEM UUT OP THE-PAITH OF THISTGtREvwOUT OP THE COURAGE OP THIS MAN;-.-. COMBS iTHE INTIMATE LOVE STORY OP A SOLDIBRI. A .ivt I V V' A ik-' A MAN'S STORY'OF FIGHTING MENVIN THEK GUN:THUNV DERING HOUR OF GIORYIIA WOMAN'S STORY OF POUNOl' JNG HEARTS... IN JHAT IAST STOIEN.HOUR TOGETHER l l7i,.i! Ml. KLirrani Theatre Opens At 7 P. Dewey Leaves For Chicago (Continued from Page One) near Pawling, Dutchts county. Members of the executive mansion staff said Mrt. Dewey appeared tired when she re turned to Albany last night from the Dewey farm. Preparations were completed far a nulck trip to the airport, seven miles distant, where the plane remained ready, An au tomobile caravan containing the governor's entourage was to be preceded by motorcycle police. The caravan wai to stop at the capllol to nick tip members of Dewey's staff not at the man sion. Tho capitol If only four blocks away, Imogene Fisher, who Is charg ed Willi first degreo murder in connection with the fatal stab bing last Saturday night ot Wat kin Davis, was arraigned In Jus tice court Tuesday. She waived preliminary hearing. Mrs. Fisher, who Is from Beatty. Is accused, according to authorities, ot stabbing Davis several times with a pocket knife at a drinking party Involv ing six Klamath Indians near tho Economy Wrecking company on South Sixth street. Davis' body was discovered by an em ploye of the wrecking yards early Sunday morning. Final hearings on the new 1844-43 county euogei were neio Wednesday In the county court room to make necessary adlusv ments before the budget goes Into effect July 1. Hearings lasted all morning ana pari ot me aiternoon. Miners Walk Out In Wage Dispute PITTSBURGH. June 21 im- More than 3B00 minora In four' "captive" bituminous coal mines of two steel corporations walked out today over demands for Day-1 ment of 930 vacation wages stip ulated In tha United Mine Work ers contract. Company spokesmen said a number of miners do not qualify for the 930 vacation pay under terms of tha contract, and that tha strikes centered around de mand of this group. Haas Norland Fire Insurance. 1 m,m M. I ii . 1 I 1 I LI I sl Added Attraction Som ottKe Oeens lis e Bom om OeeM I U Thursday Laugh Scream Roar ot stri a Wfxuiaj uioes i Attorn And on The Same Hit Program TMHIIJIil 'Sit VJ oeeoinHTrte 'I m UNOBiaUSItl 1 l ,,t trrI MMIMMaKI S'j-J J NARRV NAVeiN 1 1 M i 1 1 1 1 i I J 1 1 TV I M WIN w UU HIHI Box Office Opens 8:4S STARTS TODAY SILVIA SIDNEY IN- "ONE THIRD OF THE NATION" Ends Today At llolh Tlienlros "And The Angels Sing" Dorothy Lamour Bsrty Hutton Frsd MacMurray I I u Starts Thursday Two Big Hits "V IUIH (Zi no , 0 i wiuum Y StNOIX .w, v eUl. I'M mmm . MPMSlSi 0 law