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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1944)
' PACE EIGHT HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON C0M1I0S1KT 25 HOMEMADE PIES Marine Raider Leader in Hospital The Commando Center would like very much to have about 25 homemade pies on Saturday to serve to the servicemen vis itors over the weeKencl, it as announced today by Mrs.- May Conradirassistant director at the 'Center The need for such home cooked foods as pies, cakes and cookies is greater now man ever wmi so many men stationed here, Mrs. Conradi said, because these boys are hungry for pastries such as their motners mane, Some idea of the quantities of food used at the center can be derived from figures obtained for the one month of June when servings totaled 332 gallons of milk, 858 dozen cooKies, ii.jaa cups of coffee, 1340 pieces of homemade cake, 217 dozen eggs, 21 pounds sandwich meat, 148 pounds boiling beef, besides hams, hens, ducks and turkeys. xnis is me nrsi time me um' mandos have especially request ed contributions of pies to add a bit of variety to the weekend menus for visiting servicemen. Keno Mrs. Tom Brown has returned , liome after having received medical treatment at a Klamath Falls hospital for several days, t Mrs. Walter S. Foster and little son left for. Twin Falls, Ida., on Tuesday. They will visit there with Mrs. Foster's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clark Brown. Before returning to Keno, Mrs. Foster and baby plan to go to Grass Valley, Calif., for a visit with relgtives of Mrs. Foster. They expect to , be gone about three weeks. ' Mrs. L. Lummus submit ted to an appendix operation Saturday . afternoon at the Klamath. Valley hospital. She is reported to be getting along well. ..." Mrs. Charles McKeen of Ash land is visiting at the home of her husband's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. McKeen. Mrs. George M. Ager is re ceiving medical care at the -Klamath Valley hospital. --- Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Parker and children are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Lummus. Mrs. Parker is a sis ter of Mrs. Lummus. The Park ers plan on making their home in this 'community. They came here from Texas. " Frank, Gregory and Freddie McKeen were operated on for ; the removal of their tonsils on "Tuesday at the Klamath Valley .hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Freer and children are new residents of ; Keno- from- Arkansas. OBITUARIES MART ELIZABETH MATT ' "Any Elizabeth Matt, for the last 40 Tears a resident of Klamath Falls, Ore., passed away at her late residence, 1493 Wilford on Wednesday, July 19, 1944 at 1 10:20 p. m. following an illness of six weeKi. sne was a native of Logansport, .Indiana and at the time of her death was aged 78 years 6 months and 24 . days. Surviving are two sons: Clarence A. of Portland, Ore., and Cecil B. Matt of this city; three daughters, Mrs. Emma Sutton, Pomona, Calif., and Mrs. Frances .Harrison, Klamath Falls, Ore., and Mrs. 'Fred A. Gaucher of San Francisco, Calif.; . three sisters, Mrs. Millie Folsom, Mrs. John Matney and Mrs. Ellen Herlihy, all of this city; one brother, Mike Galar neau of Grants Pass. Ore.; seven grand- wuuuxcu w two ureal granacnnaren. Mrs. Matt was a member of Sacred Heart church, Third Order of St Fran St. Joseph Union and St. Mary's Altar Society. The remains rest In the nmuotR i unenu nome. Fine n ,"in' wnere trlends may call after 12 noon, Friday. Notice of funeral to be announced in the next "u mi paper. r v v isaBsssaag (NEA Tehphdto) U. CoL Evans Carlson, 48-year-old leader of famous Marina Raiders, who was wounded while carrying injured enlisted man to safety on Sal pan, greets two Marines who fought with him at Guadalcanal, Pvt. Rich ard R. Wall (left), Wellington, Tex, and CpL Qlen R. Mohler, Fort . Wayne, IncL, as he convalesces at San Diego Naval Hospital. Shakeups, Quarrels Seen Among German Officers By The Associated Pratt LONDON. July 20 (fP) Re ports of bitter quarreling among German officers, of reck less disagreement over strateev and policy, and of still another shakeup in the structure of the high command in the west, ech oed from within embattled Eu rope today as the nazis strug gled desperately in the grip of massive inree-iront war. From Germanv itself, in a broadcast of DNB, official Ger man news agency, came a re port that Joseph Grohe, 42, a high officer of Hitler's elite guard, had been named "reich commissioner of the occupied territories of Belgium and northern France" replacing the military commander.- The same report said an infantry general named Grase had been given military command of the area. In Moscow the Dress Quoted captured Gen. Edmund Hof- meister, who commanded the 41st German tank corps, as say ing: "The defeat in White Russia is an example of the talentless command of Hitler; When Marshals Braughitsch, List and Von Runstedt and others tried to point out errors, they were aiscnargea. In Greece, six nazi officers died in a shooting affray rising out of a quarrel during a re cent conference, tne Greek gov ernment announced at Cairo. Five officers died in a hotel in Athens during the conference wnen pistol shots were ex changed, and the sixth, chief administrative officer for the peoeponnesus, was said to have been shot down by SS guards as he fled. Still . another report said Austrian Col. Fritse, Ath ens provost marshal, had been executed for speaking against the German command. The Moscow account on dis affection among the top leaders of the high command said the constant disagreement cost a heavy German toll. The German high command has lost more than 30 general officers, either killed or cap tured, since June 6. In the shift in the command of Holland and Belgium, Hitler now has turned over to the eestarjo the onlv area in German-occupied terri tory not previously governed by Quislings or political commissars. BESSIE MAY THDMPMV i.f"'VMy Thompson, a resident of Malln, Oregon, for the past eight years. j-T: . , -" J uiai ciiy on Wednes day. July 19. 1844 at 8:13 a. m. The de- teeaRM mi a ni4l.. tt.1i 522. "S," years. 1 month and 24 wnii.1" cal.,e& .Besides her widower William W. of Malta. Ore., she Is sur SXe?.S,?n "O". Clarence M. Thomp son of MaIta; one daughter. Mrs. Bernlce ij X?".; JPfmath Falls; two sisters. MI- iJd SDllIer. Holton. Kansas and f.,L- sP,n"'-.Tnln. Nebraska. J? ,!wi,gi;ndd,K"h,r- Tno remains Klamath Funeral home. 23 High, where friends may call after J,,Jl;m'.tur1y- .Ju,y ' Notice of funeral arrangements will be announced i ' CABD OF THANKS ...UK,. W'J to extend our heartfelt and neighbors for the acts of klndn... " J "r oeiovea mother, Ki".. nd arindraoUier, Mrs. Justine ' JKiiS? VtnT" Sthmor and &mllvnd Mr- Wm- SPrKs and &mlly'","M- V 4- Heath lnd " ' 1 JJXiiJ1"1 Mr"- Eail -AUred and . John Schmor Mr. and Mrs. Emll Egert Herman Schmor 5 yu Wfnt to sell It phone j Vr m " ewg "want "UP, 3X24. New Japanese Premiers Have Military Background By GLENN BABB Associated Press Foreign Newt Editor The new joint premiers-desig nate oi japan, Gen. Kuniaki Koiso and Admiral Mitsumasa Yonai, rank among the power ful seniors of the Japanese fight ing services. Both have been staunch proponents of warlike expansion, and their choice in dicates that Japan will continue firmly controlled by the military although one-man rule such as Premier General Tojo gave her apparently is ended. They have been colleagues before in a short-lived cabinet which Yonai headed in 1940. Koiso, 64, long considered one of the toughest and ablest of Japanese generals, came first to world notice in 1932 as chief of staff of the Kwantung army, then engaged in the conquest of Manchuria in defiance of the League of Nations and the ex pressed disapproval of the United States. Later he served as com mander in chief of the army in Korea and turned to politics in 1940 when he joined the Yonai cabinet as minister of overseas affairs. This was the department charged with direction of ex pansion abroad and Koiso was largely responsible for framing the policies that turned the tide of Japanese aggression south ward toward the rich Asiatic col onies of France and The Nether lands. This was at the time Hitler's victories in Europe had practically cut those colonies adrift. Koiso became governor gen eral of Korea, long a training post for Japanese premiers, May 2H, l4Z. Yonai, also 64, is a former commander in chief of the Jap anese combined lioet and Known as a strong adherent to the tra ditional naval policy of south' ward expansion. Aside from lu's 1CW I11UI1II13 Ul ptClllllTMUU 111 1940 his career has followed the normal course of a Japanese navai otticer s, from graduation from the naval academy in 1901 through a rising series of commands to membership in the supreme war council. Shorty A Mirey Man Is He WASHINGTON, July 20 The navy disclosed today that the escort aircraft carrier Long Island, first of the now large fleet of such craft, had a part in' the historic battle of Midway. ; The Long Island, with . her little covey of planes, served as backstop for the main American carrier task forces which defeat ed the Japanese fleet bound for Hawaii in 1942. Her planes flew cover for a force of surface war- snips. Navy men. recalling the baby iiat-iop s outlines at the time she appeared in .pacific waters, ex pressed wonder that she wasn't sent to the bottom by mistake. Converted from the former Lin er Mormacmail, the Long Island then had a foreshortened flight uctv wiiuuui an lsiana present ing an appearance almost iden- iitai wiin many oi Japan's air craft carriers. The Long Island's record since her conversion in 1941 has been built on her pioneer work against cuciiiy suDmarines in the Atlan tic, ine navy said today that composite one," first air squad ron of the Long Island, was dis banded recently after receivine a nrpcitontinl -:i-u... . contributing to the sinking probable sinking or serious dam age of more subs than any team in naval history. If it's a "frozen" need, advertise for in the classified. article vou a used one OLD-FASHIONED J FLAVORS IN ONE! A mustard Ihorseradish "a rc-ia JT' -L . J " -anrr- v. 4 The British Tommy nt right is pretty smnll compared to the tnll Heinies in front of him, but he has the situation well in hmid. Wi pictured herding in two prisoners he captured in Caen battle. Brief Demo Platform Set For Test in Convention Bv ERNEST B. VACCARO CHICAGO. July 20 VP) The shortest platform the demo cratic party ever had" was writ ten by tho drafting committee early today and set for a test in tho afternoon before the conven tion, on the seething racial issue. The document was reported to embody a "permanent peace" plank, assumed to have President Roosevelt's approval, calling for American participation in an as sociation of nations with the use of arms if necessary to control warlike nations. Torn between demands for racial anti-discrimination legis lation, poll tax repeal and a fed eral law against lynching on the one hand, and southern in sistence on maintenance of white supremacy" on the other. the party planksters toiled far into the morning to complete the drafting of party principles and philosophies. Tho draft was completed nt 3 a. m. after action by the plat form committee, it goes to the full convention. The contents then will be Riven to the press. Asked nbout the rncinl plank, Senator Pepper of Florida snlil "any document in which more than one person collaborate is not satisfactory to every one." but he said "we have a good Dlatform. The Florldan said the docu ment was "stretched" a little be yond "post card size," but that it is the shortest platform the democratic party ever had." In 1940 the democratic plat form ran around 4000 words: this year's republican draft was about 4500v Tennessee s delegation, steered by Senator Kenneth D. McKcllar, Postwar Ambitions of fjQ1 Pilots to Be "Civilians"' By ELMONT WAITE ABOARD A CARIUKH, Cen tral Pacific, July iDclityatl) . ( Ask navy tUvrn what they're going to bo lifter war mid most of tlicm shout happily: Civilians." Somo pilots who nmdo Midi n reiniirkiiblo combat record -in nlr group 18, for Instance plan to continue navy careers. But not all. , What tort of civilian careers ti,n nihors will seek remains n tnntnllilng question for nuiny, "Tho trouble In, war Just doesn't fit o mini for n.v peaoo tlmo Job," told U. )K) O. B. Pace, smnll town lawyer from Lacon, III., who uecamq.nn avia tion gunnery officer. "I'vo been trying to got those iilrednle.i (pilots) to go buck to school and wrllo this wholo bust nes oil as n loss forget tho un- nlnn.nl.l thinUM rtmtmh't till ulciiiiant ones, but Just coll It n loss or nine," tiva lituf f-iitl if tin mimtv ..H..AA Intnl-nnaiM T.I .Ttmma apitii;, . ........ .. j j bert, 26, Ottumwn, la., fighter pnoi. A unnnri Ini-rtnfln rtllnt T.t ft.i rfuiflnrf Q nt-tlna PrM-ttnnrl Ore., has about decided to finish his other year aim a nnn oi college. threatened to Join the southern rovolt against President Hoone vclt'g rcnomliintlon, If the pint form declaration on tho neuro question is not suitable. "td llkn to u,.i ill( I nvlntlon" hVidr,J i-vu iniicn ciwiiico for 1hn flight mirm-onni , . ...in win noi )0 ,,.:.( (Iron. '"obit, these," says l.i. C''"'J N Biixlnr. 111,,,,.,. ...m(lr.KJ Baxter. lliMin,i dr: II.. - a. ini I"! HHYH llt'V llftii. 1 v l"k quickly. rSi have mntiiri-d Vv3 SUGAR a3 si SVS Durkee't Margarlae b made by id improved process which cburas the pure vegetable oils right in with the fresh pasteur ized skim milk. IN foods end ON them, you'll love the flavor of Durkce's Margarine) FMA0 . . COOK . . MKI . . rtT I flafi V. Pnrtirlt tarommniLl A in ih U, S. Nu tniioafoodftuttrSt' Coffee iiiit Schilling COFFEE Something you can count on Schilling flavor Notice Polly Ann Bakery Will Be Open For Business Monday, July 24 AS IQW Af , II a pint Sra to b aura VOU uL. m i- mliHitai, mix LONDONDERRY, wgar ! mporattd nlllg or any crnm IkatwiH wklp. WMp, Irmt, Dial's all. (to coating, no rt-wklpplng. Smooth, . let trystali. (u m or lUm milk ford.lWoui fronitdHnrfi.) I pig. tONDONDCMY makos 4 pints, any flavor. Ask your groan far LONDON PHrf. If ha eVxs Hflt tarru If. uaJ faf 7 paekagti and 20 lailsnu..... M Mtwonl trw(, Son frond k J, GcM. BECAUSE 'They are SABINlZiD" mm mil Freth and full flavored a wonderful treat because they are Sablnlzed the remarkable new method that means better, fresher potato chips at leading grocers. Ask for Blue Bell ' when you want that grand potato flavor. fresh fruits and vegetable; Potatoes u s Shatter Whites .... 10 Lbt. dC Grapefruits3 10c Oranges . .' Sunkisl, Juice Site ... Lb. 10c String Beans ,0 Fsney Blue Lake 2 Lbt. 2C Boysenberries t, Crate ....... $2.49 SAVE PAPER1 When Ifs ponlhle, plcasa brine your wn sacks, thopplnt ba(s or olhr oon l.lncr. when Ton shop at Emll1.! You can also help by returning paste board Protein """'"'"'y "" alners. ""' b""rl 's llmlled and manataclurer, .,. desperately l at"d ol ased containers. Thanks! Meeo Peas (5 pfs.) No. 303 tin ne Rosedale Peas (5 pts.) No. 2 tin i4e Sunshine Orange Juice, 46-oz. 1.! . ... mc Sunshine Orange Juice, No. 2 tin .......20c Dr. Phillips Blended Juice, 46-oz. tin. ...45c Tomato Juice, Del Rogue (18 pts.) 46-oz. tin....24c Potato Chips CRISCO SHORTENING 3 lb. glais 68c TILLAMOOK , CHEESE . 10 Point! Lb. 37e BORAXO Hand Cleaner 10 ok. pkg. 2 for 25c PDCIU 8w"t't Quality Luncheon Meat. 1 Buy now and tare points. lJ-Ot. Tin FRUIT JARS, Kerr Reg. PRUNES PINEAPPLE GRAPE JUICE Quart Santa Clara Pkg. ; ;, 43 Polnti. Uktlele. No. 2M Tin 10 Polnti. Churchti, Pint Bottle Beeville Honey, 3 lb. glass....... .......85e Marmalade, Tropical, 2 lb. jar 44c Fisher's Biskit Mix, ge. pkg 29e Ovaltine, plain or , chocolate, small gl. 37c Cream of Wheat Cereal, 28-oz. pkg. 22c Kellogg's All Bran, large pkg. 18c Nestle Cocoa, Va-lb. pkg. 21c Olives, Libby's, small rioe. at. iar 23r Bisquick, Ige. pkg.......31c 33c .,T.A,NG39c Ravioli, Riviera, 16-oz. Jar....! 15c Syrup, Lumbor Jack, 24-et. bot,..27e Oyttert, C.C. brand, 7"a-o. tln..42 Lux Flakes, pkg 1 Rinto, pkg ..23e Lux Toilet Soap, cake,... 3 for 1 ( " QUALITY CHOICE MEATS Boiling Beef Lb. 21c Bacon 28c Ground Beef Lb 29c Pork Roast Lb. 31c Pork Steak u, 31c Sausage Lb,...:.,29c Jonet Colored Fryeri, Grtd . A Beef and J Veal