PACE TWO
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
trap
ON GERM'S
SEVENTH ARMY
(Continued from Page One)
lean armored and Infantry spear
heads sweeping in a 250-mile arc
through Le Mans, converged up
on the German flank and rear in
a sudden twist to the north. This
swing took the Americans
through Alencon, Sees and
Argentan, only 18 miles south
of the Canadian first army five
miles above Falaise and the gap
began to close.
Now the American armored
"hammer" was beating the Ger
mans against the Canadian-Brit
ish anvil" below Len.
Von Kludt Doomed
Field Marshal Guenther von
Kluge's defense of France south
of the Seine appeared doomed
as his forces squirmed under
frightful punisnment to pun out
through the suddenly narrowed
gap.
Practically all his escape roads
toward tne seine were out. Al
lied air forces were pouncing on
every movement of the Ger
mans, wrecking hundreds of
' locomotives and thousands of
rail cars. Not a single wagon
or Bicycle was immune from at
tack from the swarms of air
craft which buzzed over the bat
tle area in endless processions.
- Koads that remained open
were under allied shellfire, and
it appeared that only new Ger
man armies could stem the Nor
mandy tide.
However, Von Kluge already
had drawn on 40 of the 60 or
65 divisions he was believed to
have had in France at the start
of the invasion. British staff of
ficers yesterday said the allies
already had contacted 40 divi
sions.
Of these 15 already have been
counted as destroyed or badly
cut up in tne Deacnnead battles,
the bt -. Lo breakthrough, the
Brittany-sweep and the terrific
oatues in the hedgegrows below
Caen.
Meanwhile, there still was no
news of any allied operations
east oi, remans toward Paris,
nor from the spearhead which
crossed the Loire three days ago
ana sirucs souwward 1U miles.
The allied trap, 30 or more
miles deep, was 100 miles west
of Paris, but it seemed unlikely
Von . Kluge's shattered forces
could put up any further de-
lense, on an effective scale, of
the 20,000 square mile - area
through which the American
whirlwind had swept in the past
ue River
Rev. and Mrsl' PeHlt a'nt '-i.it.
dren left Tuewiav - far
raiif ...i r. - t:.. .
v., nuocBtt. rerai will be
pastor of- church; Here hold
ing services for the tabernacle
uu pcuiur is cnosen is Rev
George Jenson.
Mr. and Mrs. Lendle Story
and children-drove tn fi,.
over theweekend to visit lela-
-i"ey were accompanied
j o r-ugng xiaxeview.
House guests in the J. H. Spit
zer nome over th j
were Mr: and Mrs. Paul Quack;
enbush from Chiloquin. Mrs'
Quackenbush is a sister of Spit-
Fred Peterson, county school
superintendent, was here Mon
da?m "? interest of the school.
Mr and Mrs, Bill Pugh have
.uuteu tu uutj oi tne Borough
cabins.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Beard have
moved here from Klamath Falls
w uib property tney recently
purchased from Bill Pool. :
Rev. C. G. Evans was a busi
ness visitor In Sprague River
Mrs. NeU' Crate has returned
to Klamath Falls after spending
a few days here. 8
- - " ""uu6ii grocery tor
a few days, while Mrs. Borough
is in i Klamath Falls with her
daughter Myrta, who is receiv-
ue mciuiitii avienuon. .
riS2.a CanUni- "clerk In the
Gienger grocery, is taking a
week's vacation. Clerking in her
Place Is Mrs.Nadine Aran"
.Oswald Pisanl of Portland vls-
' "ffli mrs.-Mario Carnini
nd daughter Gloria, for several
days. . r .
Mr. and Mrs. Mario Carnini
and daughter Gloria, drove to
Medford Sunday,- . accompanied
by Bobby Bottjer, who returned
Obtains Divorce
"4 ' f
REDS PREPARE
ALLDUTPUNCH
(NEA Ttltohoto)
Shirley Evans Hassau, blonde, 23-
year-old film player, who once
charged that Actor Enrol Flynn was
father ol her baby daugnter. smucs
in Los Angeles court after she von
divorce from Henry Hassau, vocalist
and ex-SeaDee.
(Continued from Page One)
at Detroit, where 7000 returned
to their shifts at General Mo
tors Chevrolet Gear and Axle
division and 3300 employes of
the Briggs Manufacturing com
pany reported for work: and at
Muncie, Ind., where 3000 Borg
Warner workers were on the
job again.
The .largest remaining dis
pute kept 4000 workers idle at
the Philadelphia & Reading Co.
mines at Shenandoah, Pa.
.Elsewhere, lboo workers
were out at International Har
vester, Canton, 111.; 1400 in
three woodworking plants at
Dubuque, la., and 1200 at the
St. Louis Car company. St.
Louis.
Twentv other labor disnutes
involving about -8200 workers
remained unsettled. ,
WASHINGTON. Aug. 14 P
President - Roosevelt directed
Navy Secretary Forrestal today
to take over nominal control of
five machine shops in San Fran
cisco where an AFL machinists
lodge, has- defied war-Lab or
board orders for several months.
The: union leadershin had re
fused to lift a ban on overtime
and Sunday work. WLB- offi
cials have termed this a "limit
ed, strike - because the work
week was limited by the union
to 48 hours.
Biddle Blasts
Trust Violators :
PORTLAND. Aug. 14 (JP)
The justice department will
move against all cases of anti
trust law violation, including
the western railroads, U. S. Attorney-General
Francis Biddle
declared . here.
I abhor regulation bv the
government of production and
prices," Biddle told an audience
Saturday night. "But if prices
are to be fixed, the public will
not permit them to be fixed by
me persons wno mane tne tirof.
its." .'.
to her home after spending two
months in Sprague River work
ing in the Wooden Box cafe.
Mrs. Kollo Moore has return.
ed from Lewiston. Idaho. She
has been away two weeks visit
ing net mother
Gale and Terrv Leener nr
I....... . i : . .
wc waning biieir granaparents
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Hall: ...
BuddV- Bowers fa hero frnm
Eugene - with his father, Joe
jsowers. ; r -. (
Mrs. Dwieht Kircher was here
on Friday visiting .Mrs. , Ella
Grob and friends.
Norma Hall. is here from Per.
lana visiting her parents, . Mr.
and Mrs. Ivan Hall. : Norma will
return to Portland in about twn
weens and will attend . school
there, the coming term.
Bobby Bottier. Gloria Pamtnl
and- M. Carnini are havintr thi
wetau. . . .
I
ft ft ft ft ft ft ft
ft. ft ft ft ft ft ft :
ft ft ft(Fj)ft
ft ft ft- lft ft ft
ft ft II ti-kti ;.
.' O '-r I.
ft '-k it ft ft ft ft
ft-ft ft ft ft ft ft .
ON EAST FRONT
(Continued from Page One)
lines, capturing 530 settlements
and forcing throe rivers, the Na
rcw, the upper Bur and the
Biebrza, crossed Sunday. Prog
ress here was one of the major
strategic victories of the sum
mer campaign, for the Germans
had mounted massive counter
attacks in futile attempts to de
stroy this threatening wing of
KOKossovsKy s forces.
' Rokossovsky's army group
was pressing north and north
westward on a 65-mile front
from the Bug northwest of War
saw. The important communi
cations centers of Lomza, Os
trow and Ostroleka lay within
his grasp, and there are virtual
ly no other large towns before
the East Prussian frontier.
At the same time, a soviet
communique disclosed that the
twin armies of Kokossovsky and
Gen. G. F. Zakharov, whose
mammoth drive to outflank War
saw on a 100-mile front has
reached almost the entire length
of the Warsaw-Bailystok rail
road, had cleared the Germans
from more than 180 settlements
northeast of the Polish capital,
The Russians announced Gen.
Andrei Yeremenko's second Bal
tic army, now almost half way
across Latvia, had killed or cap
tured nearly 70,000 Germans in
a month, boosting to 609,526 the
nazi casualties inflicted in the
summer offensive.
New Philippine President Sworn In
f
rap.
L .
f f V -A
INEA Trlrnholo)
Vice President Sergio Osmcna (rlsht) of the PhUlpplne Commoncal(h. takes onth ot oHUo as second pruN
dent oftoe PhilpinM ioUowing dc.th of PresWenl Manuel Luis Quezon. U. 8. Supreme- Comt JuaUco Robcit
Jackson administers the oatli in Washington,
LONDON, Aug. 14 (Pi Bus-
sian troops have captured the
town and railway station of
Antsla, 57 miles inside Estonia
and 16 miles from the impor
tant rail junction of Valea. the
soviet communique announced
tonight.
More than 100 inhahiteri In.
calities were taken in this ac
tion in the sector southwest and
west of Pskov. Two other rail
stations were seized.
Capture of tne iortress town
of Osowiec, Polish communica
tions center 15 miles south of
the Masurian lake reeinn of
East Prussia, was announced to
night by Marshal Stalin in an
order of the day.
Japs Can't Be
Trusted, FR Says
In Seattle Talk
(Continued from Page One)
the Society of Nations which
seek- permanent peace a n d
whose word we can take!"
Throughout his trip, which
lasted "Just a " month until he
docked at the yard - here, the
president kept in close touch
with the war on all fronts, and
he assured his hearers that "The
war is well in hand, in this vast
(Pacific) area."
- "But," he added, "I cannot tell
you, if I knew,- when the war
will be over either in Europe or
in the Far . East or the war'
against Japan.
"It will be over sooner if the
people of this country will main
tain the making of the necessary
supplies and ships and planes "
The president d
his prepared address to pay a
compliment to the press and ra
dio of America, which kent h
secret of his Pacific tour until it
was cnueu, mougn tne press as
sociations and many newspapers
had known of the trip from its
start 'A' mnn . , , .
r--. . "'w"u iimacie ne
termed the fact so many groups
and organizations would work
so closely under a purely volun-
i-cijauianip coue.
Box Office Opens 1-30 - 6:45
ENDS
TUESDAY
'ondo'
on""1
M LA
U"i ...
John GARFIELD
Paul HENKEID
Sydney GREENSTREET
Eleanoi PARKER
VI
Edmund Gwenn
Georae Tobias '
Georae Conlouris l
i aye cmerson
Drive Started
On Jaywalking
A drive to stop jaywalking
and walking against "walk and
wait" signals is being started
this week by the local police
department and the Traffic
Safety council.
There is a city ordinance
which makes it unlawful to jay
walk between cross walks or
block corners on any street in
Klamath Falls and to walk
against stop signals.
Violators will be arrested and
fined after being brought to po
lice court.
POINT VALUES
ON MEAT MID
FISH CHANGED
The date of the Public Utili
ties, commission's hearing on a
raise in rates for the Klamath
Heating company has been
changed from Aucust 15 to
August 16 at the city hall. .
xne nearings will start at 10
a. m. in the council chambers
of the city hall and officials of
tne commission will be here to
conduct the meeting.
Japs Attempt to
Cope With Raids "
NEW YORK. Aug. 14 F)
The Tokyo radio said today the
Japan Industrial Machinery Con
trol .association had. decided to
set up a supervisory and "effici
ency" office empowered to order
"divisional shifts and . other
emergency shifts" in' machine
tool factories "to cope with the
enemy air raids."
In the broadcast, directed to
North America in English and
recorded by the federal com
munications commission, Tokyo
said the office would be a "sub
structure". of the control associa
tion and would be a "war pro
duction corporation."
Hans Norland. Auto Injur
ance. Phone 6060.
The War' Price and Rnllon
board has announced new point
values on meals and fish.
Pork is again rationed. New
point values for the different
cuts are as follows: Center chops,
eight points per pound: end
chops, four points; tenderloin,
eight points: sliced hnm with
bone in, nine points: sliced ham.
boneless, nine points; roasts,
loin end cuts, four, points: cen
ter cuts, eight points: ham,
whole or half, five points; ham,
butt end. five points: hnm,
shank end. two points: bonclcs
ham, whole or half, six points.
Canned fish points are as fol
lows: oysters, two points per
pound; salmon, six points: sar
dines, four points; shrimp, six
points; tuna, six points, and
yellow tail, six points.
Young Grid Star
Born to Jay Mercer
EUGENE, Aug. 14 M1) -Jay
Mercer, former blocking back
at Oregon State college and the
New York Pro. Giants, couldn't
find enough cigars in Eugene to
pass around to his friends, but
announced to one and all the
arrival, this week of a young
blocking back in the family.
James Richard, weighing 7
pounds, 3 ounces, arrived this
week. The Mercers also have
two daughters.
The former Eugene high and
Jefferson (Portland) high slar
athlete, does not plan to return
to the Giants this season be
cause of a leg injury that
brought him a m-e d i c a 1 dis
charge from tho U. S. navy.
Continuous Show Daily From 12:30 .
NOW PLAYING
ACTION... A'PLENTY!
Tutsan RAIDERS
TUESDAY
"THE GHOST
GOES WEST"
SECOND BIG BUT,
"SCARLET
PllyfPERNAL"
PLUS -v-LATEST
WORLD NEWS'
Scores Injured in
N. Y. Park Fire
FORT LF.E. N. J., Aug. 14 (A'i
Most o( Pulisurics amusement
park was n smouldering ruin to
day after a fire in which 150 or
more persons were injured or
affected by smoke and ii Sunday
afternoon crowd estimated at
25,000 was sent stampeding.
Several spectueular rescues
were effected as flumes swepl
the popular resort atop the Pali
sades opposite 120th slreet, New
York.
Scores of those injured or over
come were treated at three hos
pitals, and others were cared
for by rescue and first aid squads
and volunteers.
Irving Rosenthal, tho proprie
tor, estimated damage to the
park ut $1,500,000 and said It
would be closed for tho remain
der of tile season.
JUNIOR POLICE
EH STEAK
ILL BE HELD
ON AUGUST 22
American Legion steak feed all
set for Tuesday, August 22, at
0:30 p. m, i jMooro park, l!ur
iH'cued beef will be jiuh.slltuletl
for tho famous steaks that have
been mi popular In the past, bo.
cause uf tho rationing.
In addition to tho barbecued
beef, there will bo all the trim
ming and refreshments that go
to make up a real leglun feed,
All Legionnaires and their wives
and guests uru tuned to attend.
Admission will bo $1.00 per platu.
legionnaires iroiu neighboring
posts are Invited.
General chairman this vcar Is
Sgt. Le.H Kinley, And other mem
bers of the committee are A. II.
Hussman, Harold Uuucli, Jack
Gallagher llerinlc Foster, Hob
MeCihehey, Oscar Nlssen, Eurl
lemnlar, Clyde Thonmson und
Wall Wlcscmlungor.
Installation of officers for the
coming year will follow tho
steak feed which will Include
Merrill Post No. 80 and Malln
Post No. 84, us well u.t Klamath
Post No. II. It Is honed that
Jack Marls newly elected dis
trict commander of District No.
4, from Sulherlin, will bo pres
ent as Installing officer.
There will bo no rcxular meet-
lug of Klamath Post on Tuesday.
August IS.
EDITORIALS
NEWS N
(Continued lV J
ii for ti, .... .. ""M
lug for Mm .i
Ei"-t Prtisvn, . .. .""-'Wlvi .l
v. I..., .: ""w "a
Mimi;i, Ifll-.i,... . -UYM .
,"el''d on III , Tj,,?slllll(,
Iiiiiii l!:t , .", ""''"inn.
to
Juno 211 a ,V,:;''" ,i,1
iy at U0U,52(. MoicJ
A duplex ut 421 and' 423
North Seventh street has been
sold by Bogue Dale, Klamath
Pulls real estate man, to Mr.
and Mrs. Lester Offleld.
Tho Offields hiivo lived at
123 North Seventh, so this
necessitates no movo for them.
Dalo, who purcliusu'd the Peli
can Auto court on Highway 07
north of town last January. hn
moved from 421 North Seventh
to tho auto court.
'I'll" sands In liii:..... . 1
appear In 1, . , . ' UtiJ
Ihcy finals '." ".'N oui'1
..
TN tho Purine. D,
Phlllm.l ,' U.JVK. In
fnnr 11 I. .?'. " I,l1
. '-i "liriu,,,...
" " ui the IVii,,",7,t1
press conference w",
put (he heal r1 Wail
us we ran." " Jit J
............ ..... ., ...
upicil to Insure wlniih
Ho menllniw n, . 1 "K.P
U. S. u.i-v J ...'"""""lib
Jan ho,, el a "u""lln
II., 1. .11 .. .
movents headcJiV
Hlf!"i"'''rrt,J
' ," ,.J Jy
Ma.'ilmHsandtjr
cost uf nllllM A .i. "
lie .I,N. "u"' l
'"l'hi.i war Is a hcw
fni lliit I .. i''rcii
know hnw much thev can Ti?
before they ll,.,nv Ii, th'pjj
the home front: s
11.. 1.. ..1 - 1
been iinnoyiiiK iwi,.5 ,
nnriierv Iw ,lr l
11.cn s ihev .as
n,..;r 1. 1
.... . (in iii ine old f.
ileud, days, sen,,, hill would hi,
solved the problem promptly
popping the little rascals tv'to
'lliat way is OUT.
I ho nuuuigi-r of Uie A
nursery coinnlains 0 ,c lU,
""": hs.simh winch w-i
in u piiiiiiu hi us niicit men -j
trup squirrel und l,h m,.l
Coeur d'Alenc, Icluliu prrtur
ably to drop nllirr nuts on oil
bullies until trapped niinia t-,
Ktftlt fill Kltmilt-l,..r.t
t
nrllK siiliitlnu of our proHrJ
Vnu see U sn miirl, MflaJ
COMPHL'ATKD in IIimo mftirr
(lays than lu the older, ifopj.
nays.
11 you want in sell it pnerj
The Herald and News i:
Junior Police enmp for boys
over the age of 7 Is officially
underway with tho manv bov's
having left Sunday morning by
dus 10 reacn me campsite at
Luko 0' tho Woods.
Registrations for- thc- canv
hud totaled 03' boys by Satur
day morning and tho number
was still climbing.
Putting up bird houses is not
a modern idea the Indians
hung up gourds for nesting
martins.
II Nil MIAMI
Box Office Opens 6:45
LAST -TIMES'
mm ay-
falwiry Wait tMMH
AND
SPAT O'BRIEN . RANDOLPH SCOTT
STADTS
TUESDAY,
Uvfi iiogu' AW
ilHGIIM XtAfliV
ALSO
mmm
-ARTHUR LAKE.
mn4 lonll Carter tynna RoberU
(Mm
Phono 4007
Dux Offlco Opens 1-30
0:45
Box Offlco Opens 0:49
NOV: PLAYING
AT,.'
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