HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PACE SEVEN
PIEWS
1GE WALLACE
TO QUIT RAGE
" D-Day Casualty
--. -Mil ia' ' t:. ,1
, .nflrniod Hie l"Hf on
HI'lJ It Mr. Roosevelt's
'"5ii, exuriiMlo" of favor.
i ho would volo ' for
' ,c "nT,mliiiillon.
.tiiiK with tho
' JH chatted mid yollcn
of the
.bar o(UT convention
err! ng scneainon
ttUdwrnS F. Kelly of
, S-vdt" imd bringing
' r. 'i.. ,u from
t and nu","v",;r
Jtti convention floor.
Lb, prevloiuly regarded
r.m. f.r lh nf fieri
lino icuwvin ---: (
:hch WoIIhcu iirrlved thin
SSui. withdrawal
'dent Roosevelt," nearly two
. . it... , ..nnHnn lUfltf
.ihorllntlvo report mm Mr
aevfll con,m"-,'i,- ,
ll Chairman itoocri t.. imn-
In nil orcinrence iur osiibiui
nfamed an rhnlnnnn of
r investigating "Truman
lUtc"uiid the Pacific
iwtner becamo nt
he jrounami nwn over o an
liwpreme court.
o I I
V i .
4- - '
ff- &-i,-1eVnHgMaTr3
mber Compiles
lor Directory
directory of local boy and
between tho ages of 0 and
can who want to do odd
during the summer month
been compiled al tno cnanv
ol commerce ana anyone
In iny Iydo of work he
ti done and which thews
igiten could do, U urged to
5193.
ke bovi will mow lawns.
wood, work In garden and
in out garages nuionu other
m. Tho i rli llttcd are will'
to take care of children and
other Jobs of which they
cioable. Applicant for job
t wen iitua by uniricu Dy
tumor cnamocr oi com1
kt which ii ipontorlng the
lot employment plan.
Bftoon Leaves
nalem '
pputy Sheriff Dnle Mattoon
ncuncsooy mornuiK for Sa
Where ho tnnlr- iwn nrlmn
incuicKQn ouiie penucntlnry.
i"cn io owom oy Walloon
V AIUC 1C UUrkpr wn rnnli,
a two-yenr aentoneo nn r
relarlv nnt in n
fie and Dolphiu Leo Robert-
1 Wild WDi inn ananil
- ... ml iivuii Hi mica
In liter plcadlna guilty to n
hi -w..w-
Ill "frnuirt'1 i-l.l .....
In ' net f J
hy not
nr
W.IIT
Jmunotimefor L.I.wiy
Wlh-There'iiorauchtoU
"WlWhjrnotnukoupyour
W here ami now. Say to
Jnd. "I WILL l.o well!-'
"a Hart tome aotlou to
"kltlutrcolntlnn a reality.
m una your Unotor
HMtonl.. I,: . .i
TOUl. Call on him till, very ;
74Ktl.lil,rrtnif,
(Kinney can ,1, wo
WHO command for our
W reliable compounding.
WIN'S FOR DRUGS
840 Main
Phone 45 H
Flrat Llautanant Donald F
Turner, ion of Mra. John Hale
of Homedale road, waa report
ed killed In the tnvaalon of
r,iHi.i r.n .Inn H. Vftuna Tor.
ner enllated In the army from
Klamatn ran in January,
1042, and hai been In England
since November, 1043. He waa
nrartuata of Woodland hiah
achool tn Woodland, Waah., and
after that worked a a linotype
operator for the Mllwaukle Re
view, In Mllwaukle. Ore. He
ha two ttepbrother in the
erTle. and hi grandmother.
Mr. W. J. Merritt, lives at
Hayward, Calif.
TROOPS DRIVE
FIVE MILES
T
DWARD PARIS
AFTER EXPLOSION
(Continued From Page One)
Orne In tho first days of the In-
vnaion Dy tho British slxili air
borne division.
Push Southwest
In twin thrust from this areu.
ono prong of attack uushud
southwest ulong the east bank
of tho Orne into Caen's southern
suburb of Voucolles, and anothur
hit south of Dcmouvllle be.
tween Caen and Troarn to tiio
east to protect tho flank. Both
mads excellent progress, and,
with lu flank secure, tho arnv
orcd column advancing along the
urno turned south and hum
mcrod straight Into tho plain be
yond.
In air operation today, the
eighth U. 8. air force announced
tho destruction of S3 German
plunes, 17 aloft and 30 aground
Gen. Sir Bernard L. Mont
gomery told a press conference
tiwu tno aiiic naa captured ou,
000 Gorman and buried 8000
in Normandy and added:
Writ Off 156.000
"It's a reasonable conjecture
that we have written off 130,000
Germans.
On the western portion of the
Normandy front American units
mopped up and occupied stni'
logic St. Lo, cutting off a force
of Gormans in a salient two and
ono-half miles deep north of the
town. The Yanks also cut the
St. Lo-Porlers road between tho
Tnute and Vlre river south of
the viilngo of Amlgny, which Is
in American nonas.
Pull Back
A front dispatch said the Ger
mans had pulled back one to two
miles along most sectors of the
48-mlle American front. After
withdrawing to ridges south of
at, Lo, tho nazl periodically
shelled the towns rubbled
(Ireot.
Field reports told of long lines
of tanks, armored cars and
trucks, bumper to bumper for
miics, moving up Dcnind urmstv
Canadian spearheads in the
Caen area. Many German posi
tion were overrun or by-passed;
a growing stream of prisoners
and German wounded flowed
toward the rear.
I
ii
'T iff I I aV r
(Continued From Page One)
proxlmullon of the known death
toll:
Two hundred to 2S0 navy en
listed mon.
Nino naval officer.
Sovcnty maritime commission
seamen.
Thirty-six member or navy
armed guard crew.
Five coast guardsmen.
Three civilian railroad work
ers. Additions Possible
Additional deaths were quite
possible. An exact count of the
dead was difficult because tho
explosions were so terrific they
killed without leaving a traco
of Identification. Only four
bodies had been recovered last
night. .
Most of tho navy enlisted
men were killed whilo londlng
the ammunition ships. Many
seamen and members of tho
navy gun crew died aboard tho
vcssols. Others were killed or
Injured whon the barracks, a
mllB away, was shattered.
Twisted hull of the two
freighters, tho now 10,000-ton
Qulnault Victory and tho 7300
ton Liberty ship K. A. Bryan,
protruded today from tho chan
nel offshore from tho torn dock
area which gave the appear
ance, as a war correspondent
put it, of Tnrnwa Islond in tho
Morshalls after an American
nnval shelling. '
Johnson Trial Set
For Monday
Trial has been et for Monday,
July 24, In Justice court for Fern
Mofvlna Johnson of 1140 Pine,
who ha pleaded not guilty to
a charge of driving whilo under
tho influence of intoxicating
liquor.
The defendant we arrested
Monday on tho drunk driving
chargo, She posted $130 ball.
Assisting Zoo Bruce, former
ly of the Star Boauly shop, is
now assisting Boa Hlnes at the
vanity Beauty shop.
PILES
I SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO r A1N . NO liqsrrrrtnuuwmii
No Lava OI Tima
Pwinanant KmdIUI
DR. E. M. MARSHA
!kltiHlla Phvalr lin
tt No. lib Ksqofre Tboatra Ma
mono 7DDn
1 r
BANK
BY MAIL!
j
1
mi
Eft
torn
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued From Pag One)
plane and plan to deliver hi
acceptance speech from overseas
Dy raaio. .
It leaked first last nlaht when
a Colorado congressman predict
ed in a speccn in nis homo siato
that "the President will bo in
England in tho next few days, If
he Is not now there, and will
make his acceptance speech from
overseas." Tho story got on tho
wire by accident and was
promptly and MANDATORILY
killed, but this mornlna the
Washington censorship approved
It for publication,
Later in the morning. Demo
cratic headquarters In Chicago
announced: "President Roosevelt
is expected to address tho Demo
cratic convention by radio to
morrow (Thursday) night."
I no uiiiciigo schedule, call for
his nomination tomorrow afternoon.
qrHE battle for the No. 2 place
is the convention highlight.
It' a stop-Wallace (if possible)
affair. There's a story out to
day that if he can't have Wallace,
tun i second cnoices are Sen
ator Truman of Missouri and
Supreme Court Justice Douglas.
wauace is on tnc ground and
fighting tooth and nail.
IJYRNES, mentioned previously
as one of the leading con
tenders, take himself out of the
race today, writing to Senator
Baybank. of South Carolina: "In
deference to the wishes of the
President, I am NOT a candi
date."
THE color Issue is the big plat
form flohl nur.horlftli.lno in
noise at least .the foreign policy
plank. It I complicated by the
political fact that the leader
are trying to corral both colored
and white votes.
Fifth Army Takes
Livorno From
Retreating Nazis
(Continued on Page Two)
one of Italy's best harbors. ' It
Is the nearest port to the Yugo
slav coast across the Adriatic,
Prisoner Taken
More than 2000 prisoners and
large quantities of war material
were taKen by the roltsn troops,
who today were pursuing the re
treating enemy relentlessly
northward.
The fall of Ancona came after
a 79-mile advance against stub
born resistance offered by two
German divisions which finally
were forced to retire when the
Poles smashed through their
lines west of the city.
Yanks Drive Wedge
Further inland, as the result
of a swift advance, American
troops drove a wedgo between
German forces south of the Arno
by capturing the town of Pontc
dera and cutting the direct east
west road between Pisa and
Florence
In the central sector of the
front, British troops of the fifth
army made new gains west of
Arezzo, sweeping across the
Arno by capturing the town of
Pontcdora and cutting the direct
cast-west road between Pisa and
Florence.
In the central ector of the
front, British troops of the fifth
army made new gain west of
Arezzo, sweeping across the
Arno river on a front of six
miles. An allied communique
said the British seized the town
of Montevarchl, 15 mile west
of Arezzo,
The essential ' question Is
whether the great powers are
willing to give the peoples of
Kuropo freedom to work out their
own solutions, or whether they
will try to prevent far-reaching
change for the sake of social
and economic statu quo. Dr.
Kan Simons, director New York
school of social researcn.
French Destroy
Fuel Supplies
PORTBOU, Spain, July 10 (JP)
French patriot organizations
have turned their energies
against the German's dwindling
fuel supplies throughout France,
destroying gasoline, oil and coal
already stored or en route to
dumps and irabotaglng mines and
production plants, border reports
said today.
"This i only the beginning,"
declared a former Vichy official
who crossed this frontier to safe
ty after the nazis identified him
as being in league with the pa
triots. "We plan to continue until
the only motive power the Ger
man have is their own feet."
Fires, Minor Crop
Damage Caused by
Electrical Storm
(Continued From Page One)
the forest service had crews out
today. .
Foresters said that sleeper
fires will probably show up for
several days as an aftermath of
the thunder storm.
Crop damage in the Merrlll
Malln district is not too serious
and most damage seems to be
done to small gardens which
were beaten down by the hall
which accompanied the storm.
Storm General
Several of the city streets were
being cleaned Wednesday morn
ing after the heavy rain had
washed dirt from some of the
unpeved street on the hills
around town.
The storm seemed general In
many parts of Oregon, including
the Willamette valley, and cli
maxed one of the hottest days
of the summer.
The one thing that can unite
men of all races is the gospel
of peace, the only genuine re
lationship between human be
ings that can keep them hu
man Rev. Paul Sherer, New
York pastor.
Handkerchiefs thrown Into one
vent of "Old Handkerchief" gey
ser in Yellowstone Park are re
turned by eruption through
different vent.
OFFENSE IN BALTIC
(Continued from Page One)
more than 700 populated places
in this new push.
Seventh Offensive
Seven great soviet offensives
now have been launched since
June 23.
Stalin ordered ZOO salvoes
from 224 sun to mark the suc
cesses oi tnis oiiensive, wnicn
drove forward even as Russ an
forces to the south in Old Po
land were crashing the outer de
fenses of the great fortress city
of Brest Lllovsk on the Bug river
Cross Curxon Line
Other red army troons were
reported to have crossed the uur-
zon line la mi lex to me norm.
The fresh Russian offensive in
Old 'Poland, disclosed only yes
terday, already had curried to
the 1839 German-Polish demarca
tion line from where Hitler
launched his attack on the soviet
union in l)J4l. Moscow an
nounced that troops of the first
UKraininn army group has seized
Skomorokhl, on the east bank
of the River Bug five miles
above Sokol. This section of the
Bug was part of the 1930 bound
ary. Sweep on Lwow
The Russian drive was declar
ed to be sweeping upon Lwow,
old Polish rail center of 317,700,
like a tidal wave. Moscow at mid
night reported red army forces
22 miles northeast and 21 miles
east of the city.
Court Upholds
U. S. in Case
WASHINGTON, .July 19
The United States court of ap
peals today upheld government
contentions in the Montgomery
Ward case that directives of the
war labor board are not subject
to court review, reversing a de
cision of the district court.
The government had asked
the lower court to dismiss
Montgomery Ward's suit against
the WLB because in the deci
sion of the employers' group of
motor freight carriers against
the WLB the court of appeals
had held that WLB directives
were not subject to judicial review.
U. S. Battleships
Destroy Japanese
Defenses on Guam
(Continued From Page One)
ammunition and fuel are being
snotted by bombers off Halma-
hera island, indicative of enemy
concern over outpost .defenses
for the Philippines. MacArthur
said today his air patrols left a
3000-ton freighter-transport afire
and dead in the water in tnai vi
cinity Tuesday.
Yesterday he reDorted the
sinking within 10 minutes of an
other such bombed ship, jam'
med with enemy troops and sup
plies.
On British New Guinea. 787
Nipponese have been killed re
cently in the unsuccessful at
tempt to break out of a MacAr-
tnur-set trap west oi wewaic.
The Germans' food situation
cannot be termed critical yet, but
the first signs of a situation com
parable to 1917 are beginning to
appear. A nnusn iooa expert.
An 82 -year, old Tennessee
woman has never seen an auto
No wonder she lived that long.
Platform Drafters Eye
World Organization Plank
By ERNEST B. VACCAHO
CHICAGO, July 19 (A) Mrs.
J. Borden Harrimon appealed to
democratic plutform drafters to
day for a declaration on inter
national organization armed with
police powers to enforce its de
cisions. Asserting the American people
will condemn those "who play
political tag with the future of
the world,' the former minister
to Norway declared that what the
people want "is an endorsement
of the good old American prin
ciple of collective security."
A tense behind - the - scenes
struggle over the racial issue be
deviled the platform committee
as it drove public hearings to
ward a close wltn a forum on
foreign policy.
Mrs. Harriman, speaking for
Americans united for world or
ganization, said croups uphold
ing her viewpoint, do not pro
pose to leave their case "in the
rarefied atmosphere of academic
a
gentlemen" who "mumble into
their beards" over intricate
point.
Ely Culbertson, the bridge ex
pert, speaxing lor tne iignt lor
total peace," organization, pro
posed: A permanent voluntary inter
national organization based on
renouncing wars of aggression,
and which will preserve sover
eign rights and provide fair reD-
resentation of member states in
a federative government, with
power limited "to common col
lective defense against aggres
sors ana supported Dy an inter
national police force."
As the hearings went on into
the afternoon, committeemen
gave every private indication
that the final choice for a for
eign plank already is settled on
and that it has Secretary of
State Hulls approval and pre
sumably that of the president.
This is a proposal of approxi
mately 300 words prepared by
Senator Tom Connally of Texas,
chairman of the senate foreign
relations committee, which re
portedly calls for the use of force
to prevent aggression and keep
tne peace.
Fire Breaks Out
At Kennell-Ellis
A fire In the filing room of
Kenncll-EUis photographers in
the United States National bank
building Wednesday morning
brought out the fire department
at 9:18 a. m.
Tho department reported that
some films were damaged and
there was some - slight smoka
damage. It is not known how the
fire started. ,
SHAKER
DISTRESS
When aomothing you've aatea
causes simple diarrhea, take tooth'
Inn fepto-bismol. Recommended
by many physicians. It is non
laxative, non-alkaline, pleasant-tasting.
Brings tentla relief help re
tard gas formation. Tastes good atnd
does good. Ask your druggist for
Pepto-bismol when your stomach',
is upset.
A NORWICH PRODUCT
J. H. Dalen of Lakevlew was
slightly injured early Wednesday
morning when he fell asleep at
the wheel of his car near Olene
on his way back to Lakeview
after bringing his son to Klam
ath Falls to catch a train.
Dalen, a Lakeview lumber
man, brought his son who is in
the navy, to Klamath Falls Tues
day night to catch a train but
the train did not arrive until
Wednesday morning. After put.
ting his son on the train, he
started back to Lakeview and it
was then that he fell asleep, ac
cording to the sheriffs office.
He was taken to Klamath Val
ley hospital where he was to be
released Wednesday afternoon.
Grants Pass Man
Cool In Heat Wave
GRANTS PASS, July 19 MP)
Howardd Bennett was plenty
cool despite the hot weather but
be didn t like his surroundings.
He had accidently locked him
self in the meat storage refng
erator of his grocery store. He
finally escaped by tearing out a
neavy glass door.
Diaper Hash
H't anHki aow quickly and tantlv,
;'3.l iffy, Hehy atlnil k
by M applylni, fatally .i!KKY
' : The New Permanent Location :
IE
Helen's Beauty Shop
1056 Shasta Way
Just Across th Street From Our
' Old Addreis 4077 Shasta War ' '
We Will Be Closed This Week
But Will Be
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
at our new shop on
Monday, July 24th
SAME PHONE NUMBER 8200
Customer wishing appointments fox
ntxt waek should phone now.
Classified Ads Bring Results.
To a responsible
man with 2 or 3
children
It's no fun being a breadwin
ner unless you've got a real
job. Right now. Southern Pa
cific has a special - opening as
Brakeman for the right man.
You need to be steady and re
liable because this is a respon
sible job. The work is both
vital and interesting. As a
Brakeman you work on trains,
help operate them, help keep
war materials moving. You get
around, meet people and get
good money doing it. After a
couDle of weeks or so of train-
ing, you'll make over $200
monthly at base pay. (Some
Brakemen make considerably
more.) This is an important job
with a permanent company
even though it taKes no experi
ence to start.
See or write Trainmaster, S.
P. Station, Klamath Falls, or
your nearest S. P. Agent,
,V 111 V i. l l I
til y , r7 U
r.isiiS.i. e P 1 lVpj"' ioaiiUjLI
'
'mm'-'" ' '$655;;'i'0
.utttl
tr.1
Com!"1
, f lonr.'
voo
.ad..
ah
The To
a
wn
Main at Fifth
-n
!,O0t- .
Shop
Have a "Coke" You're home again
- ... or getting back among the folks
The biggest moment on earth to a fighting man ia when he returns home. And
one of the things that makes him feel at home Is the old familiar phrase...
Htv "Co". With Coca-Cola, ice-cold, in your refrigerator, you can make any
fighting man, including your own, feel he's back with his friends. From the
border to the Gulf, Coca-Cola stands for the pause that refreshes, has become
a symbol of friendly living. .
IOTTIID UNDER AUTHOtlTY Of TH8 COCA-COtA COMPANY IT
COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF KLAMATH FALLS
665 Spring ; Phone S832
:i "Coke'' Coca-Cola
it? natural for popular name
to acquire friendly abbrevia
rlons. That'a why you heat :
Coca-Col tailed "Coke"
.OI'-UTh.C-CCo..
V.',:.: