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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1944)
M foil?) Pay's Sews By FRANK JENKINS irllK great tank bultlo nt Caen I M- nn Tim tlrltliili orn throwing a plnccr around the embattled town. IU laws todny pnly ELEVEN MILKS apart. jOMMEL li scared; In reported PRICE 5 CENTS h- runhlntr lit) S I R A (rom deep In nOM IV In f- If rimitrvM i HnH itvitn flprmnnv A British aUiff officer miys the Rrrmnni aro committing EVERY PIECE OF ARMOn (usually mt'iiiiliilf tnnkn) they have In the rcn hut so fur haven't even denied our linen Ho says the nails UP to ,,ow nnvo ,)C'" hrlnK l,iu up reinforcement by nluhl but todny nro muvlng In by DAY- L'o'i'r ' planes are slaughtering them, knocking out 100 vehicles ihlJ morning uEItE, however, l the snher- M I.... .l,l,.HuM- Sn NARROW li our ton-hold on the Normandy inure Hint tho British battlshlp llmlney I backing up tho Hrltl.li : .... II.,.. thrnu I 111 ulu'lls II) mile Inland Into the allocking German mi.- i.,f..iiirv battle on Salnnn I Is tlll tough. (It takes time lo kill 20.000 holedup Jups.) Tho adjacent Mariana Wands of Guam. Tlnlan and Rota, to the south, aro being bombed. V. l.lnnria in ihn llfirth. "alio gelling It Yap, WELL lo Ihe soumwcsi, i.., 'j i... ... l..nH.hnnrl New Guinea bombers, who report stirring up a hornet I neiit oi jap lignicn. Red Armies Prepare For Attack On Minsk By EDDY GILMORE MObLUW, June JU IAI-J rea army mm. .-v K.w..a .v.--, river northeast of Minsk, while engineers of two soviet armies hurried pontoons into place r . i i ... I .Lrt Ia Unfnra tha Ahito Pi.cctr.ri rnniTnl lor moss crossings ot ine losr naiuiui - " .j .1. aaa. c if ttro trnrri ctrnnn liprmnn forces on the west Meld aispoicnes saia me iirsi ui ni ....... - bonk and from artillery positions west of the river, but there were no indications that the , , , LI- a- aI.a a rtnnA 1-lArO retreating nazis wouia db odio io muisc u ji- . ... " . .. -i .u. ntaunw to Minck nnneoreo onen. Althouqn tno iignnng was inuii, me yu.-..-, - r, i- .. 7. ? cinrn-nui.t Yok and medium bombers kept up a round-the-clock. aerial offensive against ine wunermg wen, ...wv.... i GLANCE at your map will toll you wnai we re ounm " why. Thee lland contltutc a 7"' .. ,'!! hnvs to FORCE before we can nu me rniiippui ,nd CHINA fully hard and iucceii- In Th Shania-Cancade Wonderland Juk 30, 1944 Max. (Jun 29) 90 Min. PrecipiUtion lut 24 . houn Stream yar to date Normal .11.1 Lut year Foreeaitt Fair. . 50 .....90 9.99 ..17.78 KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1944 Number 10198 Radio Network to Help Fortit Protection Where Russians Drive Against Nazis rru. fnft ..!- kv.nailftcd. for the Jap can iorrkiri;Bnn ium pUneii Into them AT NIGH from their homeland. We have to TAKE them. WE have to force tho gate, be the Jbo arc moving heaven and earth lo clean u ...i ni rhlna before wo can Mrrr.tiuA fore lo bear Your map will tell you how bo 1 and, when we begin to land on v.mii . .. it (And how we ll ml them If wo loso thorn beforo wo can got ashore.) , , , THE Russians aro fighting on tho Ucrexlna river, northeast of Minsk. . .. , ll was at tho Borcilna that Napoleon's Idiotic Invasion of Russia finally and utterly col lapsed. The remnant of his Grand Army had struggled back that far from Moscow through tho bitter winds and tho drift ng snows of tho terrible Russian winter Tho Russians wore hang ing on his flanks, but not attack- 1UK III miw. . in- t. ....... .unro in weak nis riviitiiun-M , i they wcro physically unable to get across tho little r yor. m Iho Berezina thawed the follow ing spring, thousands of frozen French bodies were uncovcrcu Tho stench, when they decom posed In tho warm soring sun poisoned the air for miles around nnuv ii. i irnole venture Ihat W u.i....nl hnneful nostr Revolution Franco by spllim iaivia j, V.I.I-.lulyAlO V k'"-.! V livi . ,:Vr j jT . STATUTf MlUS " xT- h? RUSSIA L- . "Vr ?tS MOGILEVlIT 2nd Wfciic Ru.w I ' , '4---'J : ' ,"IIM"""1 auai li a" " 1 . ..... n mlu art bat Arrows Indicate wner. uoom , -itiIie- terlna aqalnst G..rn.n :mm.nd(AP wlr.photo). tlons are tna sin 01 Task Force Strikes Jap fsfands in New attack n.. unnMlN BELL Associated Press Foreign StafT 111111 a w a W TASK FORCE IN THE NORTH PACIFIC, Juno 26 (') (ueiayoa;- vu' t fog-prowling task force blazed like roaring wraiths of destruc tion In a now attack second In two weeks on japans rvunie Islands todny. ' rn v. 4 --rint a mnrn nn om V chin ping and the Kurnbu-Zokl air- dromo III me soumcru cuu ui Pnrnmushiro Lslnnd. wnuo larger snips Domunra- hor best blood with "ch prMign 1.1 fncA (fit (toll? . Tho answer, written on tne . - i.i.tnu u hrutailv simple ONE-MAN government Napoleon was rncT "V" Napoleon had been bitten by the ufl of POWER. The bile of tho power bug is fatal, for the dis ease that follows warps and i,i.i. minds like the dope habit. THE Russians, in at least four columns, aro converging on Minsk. Tho dispatches relate Hint "gront gwnrms of Storrno vlks, Vnks and medium Russian bombers nro keeping up a round-the-clock offensive against tho This startling statement stands out from the cabled reports. .n j 1 nn1 rnnturca soared near tho lBO.OOJ 1 mark for tho PAST t'lVij aio. DON'T Jump to any premature conclusion that the Russja"? wl 1 bo n ucrun m T. M. . 1 ir.ri in Russia no. inn uuiii""'?,' r i are probably falling back to a now; line somowhero in Poland ana pay ng ine peiwiw ing too long. Their resistance iwfil stiffen when tho new lino is reached. vtb 1 -I. f rAlnllnns with Finland todny. Finland has gone ALL-OVER to Germany "thus formally admitting to the world." State Secretary Hulls ' . 1. .. 1 .i.A Una "now entered a hard and fast military partnership wlin nazi um., irrevocable throughout the wnr, . 1- - nt rirfhllnir the alMes of tho United States, la alliance with tho enemies 01 mo United States. , ' . 11. .11 I'TMu netlon was nun mivtn. ...h . )nlrr.n ullhnilt recourse to the established DEMOCRATIC PRO fiRnnnir. nt Finland and respon .1L111... , Ik.. nnnflAnimnees must rest solely on the Finnish government. ( THE Finnish government, to all intents and purposes, is Minister's Talk Sets Stage for Armour's Return wiCHINP.TnN .Innn 30 IA") A mnnnnh hv War Minister JUH11 n A l-ffnntimi in whieh he urged his country to prepare . . I ... 1. 1 .... t IUn lor an lneviuium wm. stage todny for the return this weekend 01 Amoassauur nui man Armour from Buenos Aires T1 . r annntn ,1 1 TPPT 1 Tl t Jr. gcntlna to prepare for war was .. i. t..a in nt T.n Plntn. Ar- IIIIIUU UUIIC V " - - - . centlna. but received little at tention in tniS UUUIIHJ utvouo of tho great flood of invasion . V .nlnaotiH horO OV iho utile dcDartmcnt and aroused especial interest among American oiticiais. . , T-Bone Steaks Boost Bond Safe niuvnv niTV .limn an IP .lll IU" wi - Canyon City was over the top 1 ill. virtu war r.nnn drive to daythanks chiefly to T-bone stcnKB. . Rcstauralour ueorgu .;- "j ihnt Ms inn s nana iiiiuu,iv. . stenk specinlty would be served only to war dohu Result: Canyon City was the first Grant county community to reach its oono. quui. 50,000 Nazis Killed in Russia i.nNDON. June 30 (P) Moscow announced tonight BO UUU uermaiio "- . tV" Zi),uuu tHRcii ." -. r" flrst White Russinn front be tween June a " . un tne seuunu - front, the Russian broadcast said, 30,000 Germans were killed and 3250 captured. ed shore installations, destroyers struck at enemy ships and boats between Kurabu and Sulibachl off the eastern Paramushiro coast. ' Fleet Run Down a ii.kifl knal loot nnlblv n 113II1IIK i,v,w - ii making catches for the Suribachi canneries, was vinonnj " j .. u. IUn tnelr nrrp. uuwii uy , , . .. This was a direct diow hi i innA cnnnlv n finh major KlUJiiijr -..i-i-.rf and rice form the principal items of the Japanese aict. au minuivs iri.A UnmhaMmnnt lasted near i.. on mii.i.in0 Ktit iho fflotrnvers were in action: much longer their five-inch guns Dialing away i t.n niMUf ot thp flRhlntf fleet in niv 1 1 r. - - . v 7-- and other seagoing craft. . There was some return iirc r .1.1m nnA ehnrH. hilt thp tiUIII oiupj, " - - - tn.1, fnrm c mn V hriinhed aside the opposition of torpedo boats or otner small war vessels and vanished into the fog as sud- rlnntv DC It haH anneared. No shiD The fog gave me ibsk xorce (Continuea on rage iwoj Casualty Figures On Sai pan Given in A cuTMP.TnH .Tnnn 30 fyPl- nna'"-w't a n.innn nact,nitip nn Sainan i s 1 a n d in the Western Pacific Mariapas total B75I4 including 1474 men killed, 7400 wounded and 878 missing. Admiral Chester W. Nlmitz, n irl f 1 ..nl rnramntlltpr in Chief. I-Ul-Ii". a.- r i snid that no accurate estimate of Japanese casualties in the fight ing through sugar cane fields, jungle and over rough terrain is possible, but that at least 4951 T n AtaA That many nave Deen ouneu by American troops on oaipan. "A great many Japanese dead I " hn enlH. "hnvn been carried back by the retreat ing enemy troops. . TkA CcoUno oaM 71 tiqtI planes were downed in 24 hours. The biggest crossings were hpnHprl hv staffs of Gen. Ivan Chcrniakovsky's third White Kusstan army ano oen. ivan noaramlnn1! first Raltic Armv. all veterans of quick crossings under fire. Moves Rapidly CM..IV.,ifpef nt Min1r thft first Whltn Diiecian armv nf thp new- ly-made Marshal Konstantin K. tokossovsky, a tail scnoiany veteran of the last war, was moving rapidly up the valley of the Pitch toward Minsk, crack ing an important outer defense line, ot tne city Vnb'oeenvslrv'R fiffhterc leav ing the Berezina river far be hind them, nave opened a gate way down the Gomel - Minsk highway ano railway mm ilanes ot uoi. oen. oi nvmwuu leruci I.. Rudenko providing a MurApini, cnrh as seldom has been - seen in this 'war. Assumes Importance mu 4 ormv' twn.!iiried out- flanking movements pn-tb the north of Minsk which al ready has "severed tne .. city s northern railway and one of the south toward Baranowicie ., fnr thp Germans a more serious Importance. The nortnernmost swihk beneath Polotsk and reached positions 10 miles from this im portant communications center, while another group got to pointa 11 miles from the rail- Transient Hurt In SP Accident m L ( ., firtt.'-i --a-imiiiii m Htmmi mmmMMmrmMMMMmmmmmmmmmmmmmnMmmn'MnnwMinnnTrirTWKrTTnrm ALLIES POUND SALIENT INTO - . i vi -i v,-, AUrfiva tinrmnrl. nr. ThU oicture shows Charles Ogi: manager ox vim x4wnu- vv - - " siding at e3-Up controU of th. new radio ndlng ec.iTing apparatus. juyt t p : .is -z alJ fAiniAT i-rjnti adiouuna Lank ZlTr. . . . . ,- in tne ouices ox uo anuouwu w. wy.a-. - . ; -3 ll P u. d. on urn 7IllSmTI0NS T . t i-rieov n tmn sietit. was IUC llij ----. t-l..Mp TTrlrint mnminff 111 the tllJUl tv - , cAi.4nem Puniffi- vards when lumber In a freight car in which he was riding was oeuevea iu have shifted, injuring the man s The coiorea man was raiiuvw to the Klamath Valley hospital where he is under treatment. It is not known where ne is irom Airmen Reach Rim of Gorge GRAND CANYON, Ariz., June 20 (P) Dr. Harold C. Bryant, su- National park, said today that .U nrmv oirmpn Ulhd had hCGfl uuee .. . " J " . trapped in- the great gorge since June 21 had reached the north """The men are well," Dr. Bry ant said. ' ' The three filers, wno para chuted from a disabled bomber nn tcnintprf Tnntn nlsteau. were led to safety by two experienced canyon cnmDers wno enierea me chasm yesterday. nr nrvnnt eniH thp men would be returned to the south rim, a . . r 1 one K.llan 1.1, n distance oi sumu mnvo mj circuitous route, placed on a ninna on.1 f I nwn in Kinsman. Ariz., army air iieia ioiukhv. Radio Network Aids in 4 FofttFvrf r otection radio communications 'riet'&inek '-..jother.'' state '-total ENEMY LINES . : . . i . - . i British Within Eleven - Miles of Caen Br WES GALLAGHER 55TTPREME HEADQUARTERS ALLIED EXPEDITIONARY FORCE, June 30 (P) Marshal Erwin Rommel- has brought en. tlrely iresn reserves mio or mandv but the allies have ham mered, a "considerable salient" into e n e m y lines soumweav ui Caen, supreme headquarters an nounced tonight. - " Advance elements of Lt. Gen. Miles C Dempsey's British sec ond ' army, thrusting on' both sides of Caen, re reported within 11 miles of drawing a cir cle about that port, the seventh 1. CAn ..' U1VBI HUyUIMUl UI A-IOIA.C. " '.'Satisfactory ',;' . The Vltuatibn was described by 'headquarters as "altogether sat Isfactoryv" : ; Field dispatches said Rom. mel's. effort to smash the salient Detween tne uoon ano urne riv ers had been a ."complete fail, tire:.' Although a nazi counter-attack on Dempsey's right Hank, last night drove the British back more pu b imie in tne initial stages. . ; .. ... i He f . Casualties ' Headauartera' said thp Hpr. maim mifferprl "vprv hpaw pn Haitian" in IIiami AAimlAw.!,..!.. ...... . ... bviuiKiaiiwns. andi field, dispatches estimated i i . j . . .. . umi iwu uucii enemy lanKa were knocked out or crippled. . ru j : : i -n " - V i .it: uti man xauiu saiu X1UI1M mel's' tanks -were under com- mana oi uen. ueyer von senwep- WnhMV .millfarv oHqnltA . T j..mMM8I n.j. n.muiv ui UVU. don before the war.) From newly captured Marce. let. Gen.; Sir Bernard I. Monti gomery's troops struck due east toward Caen in a thrust that menaced one of the city's main airfields.' At -last ' reports allied .' frnnrlniial. nn: Patra nwi ' inAeuTWr.Tnw .Tun., fl itP) The United Slates tinauy orusc tc .nuiinne with Finland today. declaring that Scandinavian country to De a puypei. vi uermany.- A tnw n.aafhprincr manv dinlo- .11... o - matic crises during the three years in whicn r inland ana nus sia have been at war, this gov Ai.mY.ant thrnnph thp state de partment, made the break. laiven rBuui A .UI. anQrtmpnt nfflpinl at auiic nil"" ......... - ut hanHo4 tn thp Finnish charge d'affairs, Alexander Thes; left last remaining xieisiniu representative here his pass port and a note from Secretary Hull giving the reasons for the break. x Hull stated that tne recent m- ntrntinn nf flnmiiin trnnns into inland witn tne consent oi ine Finnish government and German infiltration into the councils of 4u. Finni.1. ftmrprnmpnt ripnrivpH LUC x imiiaii 6i"v" ...- tt: i i c lil.Ai.fi, nt DKlmn nnH r 11 11(1 1 1U 111 uuci . J - ......... . reduced the government of the n t rinlnnj .tn tha unn. nepuuiiu ui J.11HOI1U v.. dition of a puppet of nazi Ger iiiaiijr. . The break marKS tne ena oi many efforts over a .period of It-ontinueo on rage j.wi No Whiskey Bonus For Oregonidns onnTT.AND. June 30 A) n : ...... ...ill not rpppive. a Jl tgUliituia - whiskey bonus in July, the state liquor control cunumaiuu .aaaa Indav Permit-holders will be limited to the quart of whiskey permit ted under ration quotas. In May i T.ma thp pnmmissinn allotted an extra fifth of "bonus" whis key. ... i' ......acinar '-erratpffic - OOintS wuin. i".""6 - 'J throughout Klamatlj, forest areas will facilitate fire protection in the woods this summer. - Central station " for', sending j a mpfinases was set IU1U icwsmuu o . up this week in the offices of the Klamath Forest Protective association on Conger avenue. with a sending aeriai iuwk" there and . receiving .apparatus .nnntarl nil thrpft tuEh DOleS On the hills west of the city. .r The forestry station nere iiaa t aii lattarc icoiBi On one iiie i.qn i . .... . . hand, communication is main- Klamath County Reaches Two-Thirds of Bond Goal ', Two-thirds of the K 1 a m a t h county E bond goal has been reached- in the Fifth War Loan drive, and $45,000 a day to the end of the drive period will put the county over the top, it was announced today by Joe Hicks, general chairman of the Kiwan- Is-sponsoreo campaign. KLAMATH service men army, navy and marine corps are home-hungry. They live In barracks that are com fortable but can't be like an honest-to-goodness home. So, these service men will welcome the chance to go to your home on one of the Fourth of July hoWays as your guest for lunch or. dinner. Arrange to take one or more service men to the rodeo, too. , "Don? forg the army men .t Tulelake Twenty-five of thorn hove been released to visit Klamath Falls. Calf 910 Immediately, and make the arrangements. Mr,rp than 6000 tickets have been issued for the bond-buyers trir. to thp Marine Barracks Sun day, indicating the activity in E bond sales. Tickets win oe iucu through Sunday and, anyone who has purchased bonds during the drive is entitled to tickets. Coun try bond purcnasers, unapie iu get into town to get uueu, get them irom communis u Hirks said that the premiere i i nt "Thp F.vp nf St. 5 now in s w . .r. in.k nt tha Pplirnn theatre this ui ii i .1 . . " . .... . , wppk had Droved an effective . .. . . i ti-i, bond-buying stimulus, mm ets for the stage show set for the yi i T..U, i; Ig.iipH tn pxtra J-eilVnli owij 7 i $100 bond purchasers, are about gone, fayrou savings eiiiici, can find out from their employ ers how to obtain these tickets, r. pop. an tn S500 bond buyers. . A special bond sale feature at the Elks lodge -inursuuof jujv ed In sales of $12,425 in E bonds. FDR Signs Bill For Freedom of Phiiippines w a r-TTTXT-TrM Tunc. 30 (FP) Legislation pledging the United vaders from the Philippines and to -grant , the lsianas men iuu : i nnan- nc. ennrv as normal lIlUClTCUUCiivi. " '. ; . i. (.,nf nne nan tit 16- governiiieiiw XM.-"- ---- -- stored-was signeu iwpj j nant WnnPVPlt. . . "it. i nnntamnlated that as soon as conditions warrant," Mr ii : J in nn aApnmn!inv. Kooseveit saiu m -- ing statement, "civil government will De set .up uuww llOnai oillteia. . , The legislation is embodied in two congressional resolutions, the first making possible earlier independence ior uie -11aa11,, oat fnr Jlllv 4. 1946 and the second authorizing a joint economic commission to consider tne renaoiuiuu ui ure Philippines. Finns Begin General Strike wmnniruftTur .Tiinp 30 (IP O i UWUIW""ip " " , The Free Danish Press service reported today tnat a general strike had started in Copen haopn pinsin? down all traffic from the main passenger and freight stations, suspending sureei car service ana snuiung an suups nnH' hanks. A German troops train leaving the main station Just before the strike was reported wrecked by an pxrilosion. . The report said patriots dem onstrated last nignt, overiuriiiiig street cars which were used as harrinaripe nffainct .pfforts nf OC- ciipying Germans to quell the disturDances. AnAvtmanf ctatinns thrnilffhAut the' state, and on the other the contact.is maoe witn sets locaiea in various parts of the Klamath area.- .-. v.- ... ltfain. lnpat ctaf inn-rinihts - are Yainax butte, Parker mountain lnnlrnut .r-hncp mniintain lOO jr. n,it shaVp hnttp lookout. "Wey erhaeuser "Camp' ,4 and King's Uabin. it is also possioie to coni mun ipatp-with nortablp' sets. oh firp linps'.ponstructibii iobsand other field activities.;- . ', :. ; i- One- automobile is equipped iwith 'receiving and sending ap paratus.;,' ' : '; .". i." -1 1 AmI... M.n.MoK.'nlii)U unantn ugiv, iiioiitif,.. Klamath .Forest Protective' assc- n. At, aa .mn tnn.mmn oMin .18 wauuii) mm . r almnAif .nnwillff if C HCpflllnPial. ' . - A demonstration occurxeo. on the first day the network-was in operation. Bob Benson, working north ot mover station on ..a road job, cut the fingers of one hand. Loren Close, his foreman, radioed immediately 10 iiieuiiB ((Continued on rage wo) Inner Tubes to Be Ration Free- WA RVrrNriTfSpr. . June 30 :WP The. off ice of price administra tion today oruereo. tne reniuvtu from rationing of all tire Inner lUDes, eiiecuve lumuaw. . : Tt alcn annnilllPpH that' S tOtal of 3,900,000 new passenger car tires nave , Deen aiiuutiicu rationing .. in July and August, an increase, of 50,000 - tires in both months over tne June quota. . ... - . - .."' '" y-"'.--' -' -taaaa - t,,Ka . invpnlnrles. are now sufficiently large to sup ply the needs or an ,moiur, OPA said, in- eliminating the re- Aiiiramant fnr rationing Oertifi- cates. Tubes were brought un der rationing in January,, wki, along with tires. ' - . Mercury Hits New High Here :--T will -ur'prp warm Thursday. you had good reason .to be,: The 1I1C1I.U1J ui- " .'. " a " summer when the thermometer reached an official 90 degrees. Minimum for the same day was 50 degrees and there was no precipitation. Minesweeper Sunk OH Coast ' -rinrtlnv-a'-T.mA an:,. a " J -ui". . ii u n j coastal minesweeper was sunk in Mlliln.n.!fk... -i . vessel.:off Cuttyhunk last night AAA ' l W. AlAAHA AAA' X1..A AAA... aim :.vvu uiiAa cuu live view members:-: of the - former are missing,-the navy announced to day... . First naval district headquart ers;said that the commanding of- Iaaa aa aa11aaa a. .1 ' lllCl ffUHl'SJA-CIIUSlOU 1IICII ui uie minesweeper were -picked up by. uavai aim uunai guaiu icaiiuv- craft. The destroyer escort aid ed. and. assisted m the search for others. " The. navy said the destroyer escort suffered no apparent damage,. Germans Flee North In Italy :-r ROME, June: 30 :(IP) Ger. man troops of Italy's west coast. KaaaUIaA ntt AAAtAA JlflJ AAAtKl' ward yesterday and the Ameri cans, in swift pursuit, reached the vicinity of iCecma, only -20 airline miles south of the port Ot .L,ivorno (iiegnorn;,. amea headquarters said- today, v - American jarmored- torces iar theccinland -stabbed to withia seven -miles .of the - historic city!; of Siena, 31 miles below Floiy. $nce, and French troops on their . right were only 10 miles from the same -target. At the same time strong ene my resistance began cracking under, neavy eignm auny av tacks and British forces, stream-Ino- northward. - cantured the - nicturesdue Lake Trasimeno , r r HaIIaaa rinl T.an-n town- OI' V.aailgilUiic -w af . which had been - a nazi sea plane base as well as a strong point. It is the site of the fa mous castle of the Knights of Malta. n Brownell Elected Head of GOP National Committee ntTTP A Tuna .30 . fiPrTpr. unifiuu. uu... i- -. - bert Brownell, Jr., 40-year-old New York lawyer, was una ui mously elected chairman of the Republican National committee today to direct the presidential campaign oi ov. x u u m Dewey.. " " f Drlnr tn tha Plpetion. DeWeV addressed the committee Infor mally and declared tne repuDii can party would remain united nnenita what hp palled - "devisive efforts" on the part of the pres ent national administration. . Siirepprla Iowan. T3t.ninpll eitAAppHq- HarriRnn E. Cnanslpr: nf P p H a r RanldS. Ia.. WHO was named cnairman in cember, 1942, after the resigna tion of Rep. Joseph W. Martin, Jr.. of Massachusetts. ; Subsequently, Brownell an no u n c e d the appaintment of spangier, tne mium uiauiu j as .general' counsel for the com mittee. Bpangier nuivreua Dietcner. . The new cnaurman nas pn aIaIaa ,i,lth npwpv in nnlltic.1 , aaaui.iiiM.u ...... r for 14 years. A native of Peru, Neb., he was graduated witn ingu honors from the University of Nebraska and Yale law school. i. organii A nmati Nam Vnrk nfatA lnf Islator, he has a reputation for his ability to organize political campaigns.. . Brownell was the choice of Governor Dewey and had the en dorsement also ot governor jonn W. Brisker of Ohio, Dewey's running mate. Other national committee of ficers elected included three new vice chairmen: Warner W.. Schroeder of Illinois; Mrs. Hor ace' A. Sayre of Oklahoma, and (Continued on Ff.ge Two) , ii'' v t Wi i : ! (Continued on rage iww