I
' m.rlnoi wounded' in
',V, Lt tl J'l''c"
' wrd presented
" s",,,rt!My
4V ,. ml tho Marine
"Sv Colonel Bernard
Lrfne Barracks com-
,M Commander Uwoll
('"'..if uSNR (MC) sen
i'' i'olllccr. nd MJor
r..xocutive of
Viht detachment
!"T iiieits 0" 1,18 r"
""uK were Congress-rftockm-n
and Slat,
fflw M"na11 Cr'
R, Thorpe and CW R.
'''"snh.rti read the clta
Honored n.
'HlTitlio name of tho
1 1 The mcdnli were
on by Congreiimnn
mui..
i LEFT FUNK
;oetInued from Page One) -,
wtit of captured Potscrl
timed ' annihilating
'5m,n dlvl.lona pinned
aHh.. Baltic. In Latvia
niu lows continued to
i lowird Rllia, the commu
te which wai recorded here
tin wvlot monitor, report-
Hi II I difficult country for
j, md Russian Infantry
Hlf U winning the battle,
.titof ever cloier to Eaat
tw rllt flowing deep rlv
irtre the acano of today'a
I battleground south of the
Hiim lakes the Hug where
falls -into tho Vistula north
ffimw and the Blcbrza. a
KUry of the Narew .weal
j northwest of Blalystok.
- Crossing Naar
Kra were no Indications
ii ih Riiulans hnvn rroMcd
fa river, but it not these
failloni are In tho offing.
nil mush into uic uermana'
: flaruc stands out as one of
best msneuvcrs of the war
Vinhil Kloltn. who llwavi
fiithe game of a crafty box-
A mow was inrown in alter
I insmu hsrl linim inrfwrl ti
ft his main defense to the
rruuian-umuaiiian iron-
Dtip Panttrstlon
liontlonal news noured In
o the Estonian front as Gen.
fa Mulcnnlriov followed up
orciK-inrougn aoutnwcst ol
v and penetrated "deep In
twmv rear." a Rpd Slur
fetch said.
lumiooridcrits said the Ror.
fn threw In a new division
t region of captured Pet
ri md that It received ono of
pwwii Dealings. of the cam
Holly Rldce.
pa Qualified voters, and only
r 'nq in mo last clcc-
bod On The Door
Post
In...
I;' ?ou, carcd at Ehud?
5 'cSJcd "ll8 '0 angel of
'"1 Will Ct mi tnnlffl.l
r JS?!' . you. "for I
I id. a DUl 'he blood
IT.ffPO't and God prom
Ep When 1 see the blood I
HJ? .?vcr you and the
Id.!1 not bc UP" you
I l.nrt y.y2u" whc 1 "lto
L'n?h' ypt- ' Quit your
It'll 'hud. Tho h nnrl I. n,
W mot. .i.a i m dnlKhl' th0
Cd Of Fa'J10. "J"1 b0r"
' on ih ,Kgrypt- ,from Phar
" hat 1 h '".I 'V10 C"P-
,i ... v In tho ritnnnn
T' " one of God's Dconl
l wh .?i.paM. and now
t?C.Chrl0.rhC,U?0 uDder
ft. be 5ShL!!!b .ot
' ' on'anVh.at '"y covered
we T altars- And,
P, nd of u,G,1 ln day of
"uere ft n- uiiiw:
8 vPn nnmc under
Nw v. n. . arnng men,
Thank Public Tho Veterans
of foreign Wan auxiliary to
l'ullcun post 13(13, through their
hospital cliKlrinun, Mrs, W, E.
Urljlhtmuii, annlstvd by Mrs, A,
A. Myers, wish to thank the pub
lic which responded no generous
ly to tho reuueat for miiunzliii-n
books and phonograph records
for tho Marino llarracks. On
Thursday. 00 gornn urns worn
taken to tho barracks fur tin.
window uoxck. aim our dozen
ullidlull worn also taken tin. Kucli
mourn mo nospnai committee
win visit ine oarracks with
books and magazines,
N will. . ,D0 aavod."
Piifc T bl"s you with
But ?iy.ln with 11
Christ r:1?1, Bo cleared.
ote hour
hS? If We ni H.ow "nal1
Wllon?" nc8loct so' great
L'.L8'.W. MePh..-.'. '.
Nasarane Church Rov. and
Mrs. John Cochrane, missionar
ies of the Church of tho Nni,r.
eno to Argentina, now tourinu
tho nation In the Interest of the
missionary enterprise, will speak
t tho local church Sunday eve
ning: at B o'clock, Rev. Cnnhrnn
la acquainted with tho Issues of
tno state anpartmonts or both na
tions and has boen Interviewed
frequently on the Issues In-
voivcav -
Vlstt Hera Lt. W. E. Kan..
with tho army air corps station
ed at Fresno, has hoen visiting
here with his grandmother, Mrs.
im. v, iong oi independence
street, and friends. Also here
la AMM 2c Robert E, Kangas.
wno is visiiniK wan nis wire and
rrionns. ho una recently re
turned from the South Pacific.
Larssm III Eugene Larsen,
manager of the Wlnema hotel,
la at the Hillside hospital where
ho has been receiving treatment
following a heart .attack on
Wednesday evening at his
home, his condition was report
ed as 'Improved.
Ramsey Here Former KUIlfl
Coach Frank Ramsey and Ills
wlfo and two children are In
Klamath Falls from Grants Pass.
Ramsey .Is on a short furlough
from his marine boot cumn and
ho expects to, bo transferred to
another camp soon.
Conaressman to Latv Con.
gressmnn Lowell Stockman and
Mrs. Stockman will leave Sun
day for Bend. Congressman
Stockman unci Stale Senator
Marshall Comclt wero guests to
day at lunch at the Klamath
Falls Marino Barracks.
' To Conduct Bsrvlces Rev.
O. A. Schmidt ot tho Bethlehem
Lutheran church in Portland Is
in Klamath Falls and will con
duct a service at the Klamath
Lutheran church Sunday, Au
gust 3, at 11 a. m.
GOP CENT!
C01ITIEE
SETS1EETING
It was announced today by
Frank Z. Ilowurd, chulnnuii of
the Klamiitli county republican
central committee, that Dm Ural
regular meeting of tliu couunlt
teo sin co Its orxunl.ntioii in
June. will, bo held ut 8 p. m.
on Wednesday, August 23, 101-t.
In tho circuit court room of the
county court house. Precinct
committeemen unci committee
women are urged to bo present.
Central committee meetings
havo not been held curlier be
cause there have been so many
nrcclnct vacancies to bo filled,
l'ho meeting of August 23 will
be an Important one. ut which
appointments to precinct vuciin.
clcs will bo confirmed by the
committee us a whole, and at
which general cuinpulgn strate
gy will bo discussed.
After routlno committee, busi
ness hus been liiken cure of,
there will bo an address by u
prominent republican. Several
prospective speukcrs have been
approached for political ad
dresses here, and announcement
as to which ono will talk at
this time will bo muda inter.
NAZ S
I
E
HC
SI
Civil Air Patrol Chief War
rant Officer Davis of the Ma
rine Barracks will speak to the
civil air patrol Monday evening
at 8 p. m. on military courtesy.
Tho meeting will tako placo In
room 203 at the high school.
Eagles Auxiliary The Eagles
auxiliary drum corps will prac
tice Monday evening at 7:30 in
the lower FOE hall. Officers
and drill team will practice at
8:30 In the upper FOE hall.
In Hospital Mrs. Elmer. Lan
gcr Is a patient at Hlllsldo hos
pital whero she Is recovering
from an appendicitis operation
which she underwent about a
week ago. ; ' ,
. Alcorn Hera Sergeant Mal
vern Alcorn arrived home from
Georgia Saturday, for - a - few
days' visit with his mother, Mrs.
A. T. Hoffman of .Wocus.
Visit Here Mr. and Mrs. C.
B. Drako of Portland, and their
small son', Junior, were house
guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. E.
Drake hero last week.'
Com North Mrs. Charles
Stark was called to Everett,
Wash., last night. Her father,
Percy. Pharr,. is seriously 111. '
' From Chicago Mr. and Mrs.
D. A. Wcldler of Chicago, -arrived
in Klamath Falls Friday on
a business trip. -
Grass Fire At 4:02 p. m. Fri
day, tho fire department was
called to Main' and' Division' to
put-out a grass fire. - , ,
On Vacation Manager Lcs
Wright of the stato liquor store
is nway from tho store lor a short
vacation period. , , .
In Poriland-rFrcd. Heilbron
ner is in Portland attending the
Legion convention.
May Have Vlsltors-Wyatt
Padgett is at the Hillside hospi
tal and may have visitors now.
Steel plants of the United
States can produce almost as
much steel as the rest of the
world put together. (
E
TALI CITY
(Continued on Pugc Three)
Fuchs, who was the German gar
rison commander at Florence
had fluhtlim under him mini
chutisU, engineers nnd "various
fascist squads organised by the
notorious Povollnl" (Alcssnndro
Fuvollni. Mussolini s minister nl
culture) who Infiltrated Into
houses south of the river as sni
pers. The allied command an
nounced that it now was nnsslble
for the allies to help civilians
in mo northern part or the citv
who under the Gcrmnns hud
been short of food, water and
medical supplies.
Somo snipers still were being
cncounicrca insiao me city.
Explosion, Fire
Kills 12 People
SHAWNEETOWN, 111., Aug.
12'1Hj Twclvo persons, six of
thorn children, died In an explo
sion and fire in old Shawnco-
town. lust nluht.
Tho accident occurred when
gasoline fumes held inside the
Ohio river levee burst into 300
foot flames killing three men
working on nenr-by storage
tanks and burning tg death the
occupants of two houses. All
who died In the houses nnd one
of the workmen were members
of ono family.
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued From Pgo One)
alung Eusl Prussia's Bultlc coast.
As soon us nazl forces hud been
drawn there to MEET IT, they
lilt with TWO ARMIES from the
south, in Poland. Today's dls-
pinches report Hint (Jcrinun ur-
mor, which had been mussed
along the Uultic'to stop the Rus
sians there, Is being shifted
r&vr.iwsiiijY to me south to
meet tho NEW danger.
.
I7VERY tennis player ' knows
tlml urlw.n l.r, .. ..! hi. ,.r.
poiicnt running frantically from
one side of the court to the
other, IryliiK to meet well-placed
shots, he has him whero he
WANTS HIM. and tho end Isn't
far off.
11 looks liko Hitler Is getting
to that point now.
...
SOME significant statistics:
In the 48 hours up to mid
night inursciuy, our Amcricuns
in Franco took more than 10,000
Gorman prisoners. Tlmt is be
ginning to look like demoralization.
From 0 o clock this morning
ui to niid-uftcrnoon. allied flithl-
cr-bombcrs in France destroyed
13 locomotives and 103U rail
road curs. In the week ending
tocluy. they huvo destroyed or
domuged 587 locomotives and
44f)0 rullroud curs.
In a wur of movement where
transportation means every
thing, thut is something.
...
WITH tho buttle of France
" rushing to its crisis, the but
tle of the pay-off ruges furiously
In Washington (its objective is
VOTES).
The New Deal-sponsored Mur-ray-Kilgore
bill (which included
$3S a week post-war pay for
war workers us compared with
tho GI bill of rights bill's $25 u
week for service men) comes up
in tho senate, and gets swumped
under a torrent of -udverse votes.
This morning's Washington
dispatches report that the New
Dealers arc turning desperately
to the house in the hope of sav
inu their caso there, but that sev
eral members of the house ways
and meuns committee have an
nounced that they arc AGAINST
tho Murray-Kllgore bill and FOR
the Gcorfjc state righjs plan.
(The Gcoruo state rights plan
proposes weekly payments of
$13 to $22 out of regular unem
ployment Insurance funds. The
Murrnv-Klliioro oaymcnts would
have been made out of DIRECT
federal appropriations.)
THE cynic's conclusion Is that
the soldier vote is NOW re-
nnvfXnA In fnntTPrt nit mhre im.
prcssivo than the war worker
vote.
ROAD
GRANT
APPROVED
BY
1
One Dead, Two Hurl
In Collision of
Cattle, Motorcycle
PORTLAND, Aug. 12 MP)
One person is dead and two oth
ers injured following a collision
of a motorcycle with cattle on
tho highway near Lapinc yester
day. Roy C. Johnson, 34, flight In
structor at Tulare, Calif., died
after lib motorcycle crashed into
a herd of cattle. His wife and
smull son were slightly injured.
They were en route to visit rela
tives in Washington.
If It's a "frozen" article you
need, advertise for a used one
ln tho classified.
Tho federal government has
ul located $1B,7H.12 for building
and reconditioning roads in the
vicinity of the airport, work
mude necessary by the enlarge
ment und construction of the
Klamath naval ulr station, it was
disclosed toduy by tho county
court.
This amount Is about $0000
more than the original allocu
tion.
County EnKlncer Walley Hec
tor said thut irom the federal al
locution will come 80 ner cent
ot the cost ot construction of a
market roud along the west side
of the tracks west of tho airport.
About a nine or roaci was built
here. The government agreed
io pay ior u zq-ioot road, but
the county extended the width to
30 feet because of heavy use of
mo roaci.
Government moncv will also
help stand the cost of recondi
tioning bummers lane, which
was badly broken un bv heaw
truck tralflc durinc the construc
tion period. Summers lane has
been re-oiled and Is now in cood
shnnc. county officials said.
uounty Juduo U. E. Rceder
said that there is considerable
talk ot tho need of an underpass
on Washburn way and the Great
Northern tracks. Seven tracks
cross the highway at this point.
Such an undernass will nrohahlv
be considered as a post-war proj-
ISLANDS SOUTH
OF JAPAN
001
RAID
Path Back to Work Clear
For 30,000 Idle Workers
By Th Associated Press
The path back to work ap
parently wos cleared today for
more than half of some 00,000
workers idlo because of labor
disputes.
Twenty-five thousand' over-thc-rood
truck drivers in eight
midwest states were under both
government and AFL union in
structions to return to work ot
onco with Uncle Sam as their
new boss.
, Seven thousand CIO United
Auto Workers strikers at Gen
eral Motors' Chevrolet gear and
axle division, Detroit, were ad
vised by a mass meeting of their
own union to go back to the
job Monday.
President Roosevelt last night
ordered seizure of 103 midwest
trucking companies in eight
states and the office of defense
transportation took over at
12:01 a. m. today. Minneapolis
became headquarters for Ellis
T; Longenccker, ODT highway
transportation director, who
will run tho linos for Uncle
Sam.
He will keep control until a
dispute between the AFL Inter
national Brotherhood of Team
sters and the Midwest Opera
tors association is settled. The
drivers walked out a week ago
after the employers refused to
pay a 7-ccnts-an-hour wage In
crease ordered by tho war labor
board. Under government oper
ation tho men will bc paid the
increase.
ODT officials Indicated it
might not bc feasible to get the
trucks rolling until Monday.
But Thomas E. Flynn, acting
president of the teamsters
union, said it was in full accord
with the seizure and "our men
arc instructed to return to work
at once."
In Detroit Walter Rcuther,
vice president o the CIO-UAW,
said 2300 of tho Chevrolet
strikers voted "00 per cent" to
return to work in compliance
with a WLB order.
A similar mass meeting was
planned in Detroit today in ef
forts to end a stoppage of 3300
at the B r 1 g g s Manufacturing
company.
Besides about 35,000 affected
in these three major disputes,
there wore some 25,000 idle in
20 other, controversies, includ
ing 4000 in the continuing
Montreal, Que., tramways stop
page. :
(Continued from Page One)
Nipponese planes based on Hal
malinra'ii hlirrl hit nirtinXA
Nimitz' press release on' the
raid at lum .lima an iclun.4 nu..t
halfway between Saipan and
iuikju, aiu oeverai enemy
fighters attempted to intercept
Our force but rltri nn Hnmnnn 1
though anti-aircraft iire caused
iniiiur aamage to tnree Libera
tors."
Attnrlr nn Mill
He also reported an attack by
more than Inn mnrinn ninnn- ...
----- - - ...v, uiana ui l
Mill, nn pnpmv.hnlrl .fnti
. ....j hw id me
Marshalls which has been by-
yewaeu since last rcbruary.
itinini i miii- wiii.-f.i ..o . a t
-,..-' l . . . (UIJUll
with the disclosui - that Australian-flown
fil'hlAre nnn
.... - - n - - .j duimcu UUU
Japanese staging a parade at the
gamine Hiroxomo near Sorone
northwest Dutch New Guinea
flew low to kill many of them
and chased the rest in panic
from tlie open fields.
FUNERAL
' CARMEMTA SflARPB
Hta Sharp who passed away In this
city on Monday. August 7. 1944. follow
ing an extended illness, were h?ld in
the chapel of the Earl Whitlock Funeral
home. Pine at Sixth. Friday. August 11.'
1044, at 11 a. ni. Commitment services
and interment followed In Keno ceme
tery, Acno, ure.
Bull In Bleachers
Adds Excitement
CALDWELL, Idaho, Aug.
12 (P A Brahma bull spilled
its rider at a rodeo last night,
jumped a fence and attacked
a woman in tho bleachers.
Mrs. J. H. Lempser of
llomedale, Idaho, was taken
to a hospital suffering from
bruises and shock.
Other spectators scattered,
but the bull was captured.
CONFAB SET
ON fl-STATE
Tl
IK ST!
MYSTERY PUSH
DOUBLETHREAT
TO NAZI ARMY
(Continued from Page One)
thcr attempt on the part of the
board to shift the blame for the
present predicament from itself
to the motor carriers," he said.
Union Approves
Thomas E. Flynn, acting presi
dent of the International Broth
erhood of Teamsters (AFL) said
his organization was fully in ac
cord with the seizure of the
truck properties. In making his
statement in Indianapolis, Flynn
said, "our men are instructed to
return to work at once."
The drivers walked out a week
ago when their employers refus
ed to pay a seven-cents-an-hour
wage increase ordered by the
war labor board, contending they
could not afford to pay the in
crease unless the government ex
tended them financial relief.
Under the government seizure
the men will be paid the author
ized wage increase from 12:01
a. m. today but back pay for last
November when the WLB order
was returned will be given to
the drivers only from future net
operating revenue of each comp
any, (Jol. j. Monroe Johnson, di
rector of ODT, said.
E
OBITUARY
JOHN ROBERT IIF.RSHBEHGER
' John Robert llershbercer. a resident
of Klamath Fatls, Ore., for the last 34
years, passed away In this city on Sat
urday. AUKU3I J2, at s: . m.. lol-
lowing a brief Illness. He was a native
of Berlin. Ohio, and at the time of his
death was aged S3 yearn and 10 days.
Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Alice B.
Hcrshberger: a daughter. June, and a
son, Ronald Hcrshberger. all of this city,
also four brothers. Emit, Emory, Fred
and Lester Hershbergcr. all In the cast.
He was a member of Klamath Falls
lodge No. 1247 BPOE. The remains rest
in the Earl Whltlock Funeral home. Pine
at Sixth. Notice of funeral to be an
nounced at a later date.
Classified Ads Bring Results
(Continued from Page One)
here. He had recently opened a
new restaurant between Fourth
and Fifth on Main street.
Mr. Hershbergcr was active in
the Elks lodge for many years,
ana was interested in other fra
ternal ajid civic affairs.
Survivors include his wife,
Alice, and their children, June,
13, and Konald. 12. He was a na
tive of Berlin, Ohio, where he
was born on October 12, 1890.
The remains are at Whitlock's,
and funeral arrangements will be
announced later.
Medical Aids Fired
To "Lost Battalion"
ON THE MORTAIN SECTOR
IN. FRANCE, Aug. 12 (JP)
American long torn 155's deliv
ering me instead of death, fired
shells filled with blood plasma,
iiiuipiuiie anu suhh arugs to a
"lost battalion" fighting on a
hill behind German lines.
For five days the battalion of
an American infantry division
fought behind enemy lines, caus
ing great havoc and refusing two
demands to surrender from Hit
ler's prize SS trooDs. Thev were
supplied by food in "dive-bomb
ing" by P-47 .Thunderbolts, and
with medical supplies by long
10m aruiiery sneiis. -
Fountain pens and automatic
pencils used 2800 tons of steel
during 1941, enough for 430,
000 shells for 75 mm. field
guns.
The French Foreign Legion,
created in 1831, originally was
intended for service, in Africa
and the French colonial empire.
(Continued from Page One)
German concentration locked In
heavy fighting south of Caen and
north of Faiaise, 42 miles from
the reported tip of the American
spearhead.
British and Canadian armies
along this northern flank punch
ed out new gains. The British
advanced 2500 yards to within
5000 yards of the enemy bastion
of Condc-Sur-Moircau, 11 miles
southwest of the Thury - Har
the Caen pocket. The enemy,
however, recaptured a bitterly
fought hill farther north.
The squeeze on this area was
continued by Americans from
the south, but a front dispatch
said this U. S. thrust above of
Le Mans was meeting strong resistance.
Yanks Reach Alencon
German renorts said the Amer
icans had reached Alencon, 30
miles above Le Mans.
Even as the allies pressed in
on this coffin-shaped, 30-mile
corridor extending west of the
Orne, the Germans were report
ed rjouring in reinforcements
despite crippled transport. Front
dispatches saici tney naa orders
to withdraw only on autnoriza
tion from Hitler's headquarters.
On the Breton peninsula the
Germans hit out from besieged
Brest this morning in a small
counterattack. They were appar
ently reconnaissance thrusts ton
test u. b. offensive positions at
the ble port, hammered oy HAi
heavy bombers tms morning.
1U.UUU .prisoners
Headquarters said U. S. troops
h3d taken more than 10,000 pris
oners in 48 hours up to Thurs
day midnieht.
The break across the Loire 10
miles into southern France was
made Friday simultaneously
with, sudden raids by a special
force of tactical bombers along
the Mediterranean coast 450
miles to the southeast.
It was timed with a bomb
raid along more than 40
miles of the French and Italian
Rivieras by Italy-based war-
planes striking at pillboxes, bun
emplacements and radio stations
of enemy coastal defenses. This
blow was reminiscent of pre-in-vasion
air raids on the French
channel area.
Loira Not Base
Lt Gen. Omar N. Bradley's
drive across the Loire had great
implications, but the possibili
ties of the allies' course in this
area may not be speculated up
on at present.
It was the first sign, however.
that the allies did not intend to
base their southern flank on the
Loire river, stretching inland
from the base of Brittany almost
to Paris, but were starting to
bite a chunk out of huge- and
thinly-defended southern France
an area roughly four times
that of the - northwest . Seme
Loire corner which they now
dominate.
Social Diseases
Reported In County
More social ' disease - cases
were reported in Klamath coun
ty than in any other county in
the state except Multnomah
during the week ending August
9, 1944, according to a report
sent out by the. Oregon btate
board of healtn.
Except for seven cases of
venereal disease, no communi
cable disease cases in Klamath
county were on record for the
week. -
. Lake county-was one of eight
counties to report an absence
of any sort bf contagious disease
during the one-week, period.
State Handling of
Compensation Urged
By Senator Cordon
WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 (P
Senator Cordon (R-Ore.) who
hastened back to Washington to
take part in the enactment ot
reconversion legislation, says he
favors the bill of Senator
George (D-Ga.) to turn handling
of unemployment compensation
over to the states.
Cordon said on his return
that he planned to discuss with
government officials at once
his recommendation that lamb
be removed from rationing in
Oregon to relieve markets now
glutted with the meat. Unless
this is done, he said, a serious
injury will be done producers.
T
TQ NATION TONIGHT
(Continued from Page One) .
dress, but he told a news con
ference in Honolulu on July 29
that he would report to the
nation on his Pacific visit his
first war tour this year.
Mr. Roosevelt was aecompan
ied into the Pacific by Admiral
William D. Leahy, a member of
the joint chiefs of staff, and
other high ranking White House
military advisors. The entire
party which left Washington
with the president July 13 did
not go with him to the Aleu
tians. News Delayed
The fact that the president
had gone from his three-day
Hawaiian inspection on north
to Alaska to look over the Aleu
tians became public last night
with the release of delayed dis
patches dated a week ago yes
terday. Norman Bell, Associated Press
correspondent at an Aleutian
island base, quoted Mr. Roose
velt as saying he was thrilled
and gratified by his visit there
vhich, like Pearl Harbor, saw
him for the first time since the
war began.
"Incredible Speed"
Bell said Mr. Roosevelt sa
luted members of the armed
forces participating in the Aleu
tian campaign and military con
structions there. He termed in
credible the speed with -which
the Japanese were driven' out
and the islands converted into
offensive bases.
Apparently Mr. Roosevelt's
reaction to the Aleutian devel- '
opments was identical to the
enthusiasm with which he view
ed the land, sea and air fight
ing might at Hawaii. While he
was in Honolulu the president
expressed amazement at the
changes made on the island
which Jap bombs littered with
the dead and wreckage that
plunged this nation into war
on December 7, 1941. Scars of
the Japanese raid were gone
long before Mr. Roosevelt arrived.
Star Show Lives
Up to Notices
The "shooting star a minute"
guaranteed by astronomers for
display in the skies Friday night
lived up to advance notices,
according to star gazers who
watched the heavens last night.
At times, however, it was
hard to distinguish between the
heavenly bodies and the num
erous planes practicing night
flying in the area.
WE HAVE IT!
" WHAT?. :: Christianity in Action!
MUCDC9 Tne bri9htest sPot in Klamath -Falls
WnfcKfc vvhere you see the star and sign, -
, ; NOW! Two great meetings Sunday
; WHEN 7 1 1 :00 A. M. and 7:45 P. M.
APOSTOLIC FAITH CHURCH
( ' . '.. , ; 228 N. 8th Street ,
. . Sunday School 9:30 A. M. '
Wadnsaday and Friday Services 8:00 P. M -
Attend Church Sunday
First Baptist Church
8th and Washington Sis.
"The Church With a Message"
Cecil C. Brown. Pastor
11:00 A. M. Morning Worship :
8:00 P. M. Evening Worship
2:00 P, M. Memorial Service for
Sgt. Alex Sundburg -
9:45 A. M. Sunday School Classes
for All Ages
.:".:.' ' - . . i -'
6:45 ; P. M. Training Union for All
Groups
The Only Missionary Baptist- Church in
Southern Oregon '.- .
DEVELOPING '
ENLARGING
. - PRINTING
- PHOTO SERVICE .
211 Underwood Bldg. -
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Ninth and Pine
"'S'
Church edifice
9 t the. Ue&U Klamath tyalU
Sunday 10:50 A. M.
. ..' . .'- sermon: :
"Behavior of Men In -
, . . ' f the House, of God" . ' ' '
Sunday 7:45 P. M.
sermon:
. . . "Wanted Men" , . . , . -,-
Soloist Miss Virginia Beckman
A faendUf. cUwicU
udteto many uMtlUip. ..
Howard F. Hutchins, Pastor
- A WELCOME TO YOU!
I 'i 111 1, 0 -ri: wo"cy noaa.