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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1944)
PACE TWO Midland Zntfute Aeiul Langell Volley Mr. and Mrs. Ray Jones of Klamath Falls spent the weekend with his sister and family, the Bay Marchants. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Dearborn and Mark were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Monroe. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Leavitt were afternoon visitors at the Monroe home. Tom Hatten is in Klamath Valley hospital recovering from i severe attack of rheumatic fever. Mrs. Anna Bradburn enjoyed luncheon Monday with Mrs. Edith Turnage of Bonanza. Everyone is reminded of the Langell Valley-Bonanza Garden club flower show to be held at the library in Bonanza on Sep tember 1. Prizes will be given for old fashioned, living room and kitchen bouquets, miniatures under five inches, house plants, vines, grasses and seed pods and vegetable arrangement, best veg etable display, most artistic ar rangement of vegetable and most comic. The most popular vote, will decide the sweepstake prize. Tea will be served during the show from '3 until 5. Displays must be in by 2 o'clock. Every one is cordially invited. Judges will be Ruth Mullenax, Belle Ross and Lorrayne Phair. Bes sie Frazier is general chairman of the show. . Mrs Mflrv Dearborn. Mrs. Lester Leavitt and Mary visited Tuesday with Mrs. Mary Leidy and Mrs. Warren Mason and Marilyn. They also visited Mrs. Anna Bradburn. Deepest sympathy is extended to Mrs. Lena Horton and other relatives of Jack Horton, who passed away Sunday morning. Sympathy is also extended to Mrs. Jones and Mildred on the death of their husband - and father. O. B. Newton sold his ranch and will move to the coast in the near future. Mr. and Mrs. Elliott House have returned from Medford where they spent the past week with Mr. and Mrs. Irwin House. Elliott House is feeling ,much improved from a recent illness. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bailey of Merrill were Saturday .din ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Brown and family. : Thursday afternoon and . eve ning visitors at the Les Leavitt home were Mrs. , Vera Bram well and Margery, Mrs.. Lor rayne Phair and children- Mrs. Owen Pepple, Sc 1c ancf Mrs. Church Wells, Bill Burnett, Mrs. Eva Roberts, Mrs. Claude Murray , and Mr. and Mrs. Al bert Dearborn and family. Mr. and Mrs.: Tyndall Robi son spent Tuesday at Merrill with, his brother, Walter. Robi son, and family. .... Mr. ' and Mrs. Leland Harris and daughters were dinner guests on Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Owen Pepple and Ted. Mr. and ! Mrs. Dave . Turner left Tuesday for their home in San Francisco after visiting rel atives and -friends in Langell Valley and-. Bonanza. Y . Mrs. Malcolm Teare returned home Sunday from Klamath Falls where she has been receiv ing medical care the past 10 days. Her daughter and family, the Clifford Jacksons, brought her home. , Diane Anderson returned to Cfrpjrrc I BOX OFFICE OPENS 1:30 - 6:45 x PLAYING y I MJRTHFtl WHIRL S ii if I - of comes J 'Tf-XJ : l TV. i I ;BOM4NCB.;.ON , fa jTl I i epoint- . jpf y( I SECOND FEATURE I ft FPCAR BARRIER pS Ca i J SCRrS ofXsM J her home in Klamath Falls aft er spending several weeks with Mrs. Bill Burnett and family. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Murray left Saturday to- spend several days at the coast. Peggy Monroe, Barbara Owens and Harriett Ann Davig were luncheon guests of Mrs. Bessie Frazier Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Leland Harris and family left Saturday for their home at Oakland, Calif., after visiting her parents, the Allan E. Gales. Mrs. Mary Dearborn and Mrs. Cora Leavitt were luncheon guests of Mrs. Mary Smith and Mrs. Bessie Frazier Wednesday. The Langell , Valley Women's club 'will meet at the home of Mrs. Bessie Frazier August 24. Mrs. Virginia Thomas will be the co-hostess, everyone is cor dially invited. Chiloquin PFC Alfco Minato, who is an aerial gunner in the army air force, has recently been assigned to a bomber crew ot a a-t L.1D erator. He is now stationed at an air field near Jasper, Wyo. Donald (Shorty) Taylor, who is in the United States marines is home now on a furlough. He has been in the South Pacific for about two years and has seen a lot of action. He was wounded some time ago and is now walk ing around on crutches. Richard John was in Portland last week taking his physical ex amination for the army. He in tends to go in about 20 days. Richard enlisted into the army August 1. Wayne Hatchen, Herb Hall and Dan Laney recently enlisted in the navy and have already taken their physical examination. They expect to leave in the near fu ture. The local Boy Scouts returned from the Boy Scout camp at Crescent lake recently. The local Boy Scouts, Mr. and Mrs. C. Louis, V. Norval, Mr. and Mrs. Hurland, John Louis, Eddy Bradlaueck and Roy Lewis spent a day of swimming, boat ing and surf-board riding at Nep tune park, which is located on Upper Klamath lake. ,The local Boy Scout troop No. 30 will have a scrap paper and rag collection. August 29, 30 and 31. ' . There will be a big CIO union dance at the high 'school gym nasium. Several prizes will be given during the events. The public is urged to attend. Virginia Savage, a former resi dent here, is visiting friends and former school mates here. She now resides in.Marshfield.Ore. .Dale Webber is now staying with his brother Getald Webber. He intends to stay -here all week and then he will go .back home to Klamath Falls. .-; - George Mathews and William McDonald have recently been employed -by- the- Klamath Ice and Storage Co., of Chiloquin. Jack Dacon .was a Klamath Falls business visitor last Satur day. . ' 300.000,000 TONS ORE During 1941-43 - more than 300,000,000 gross tons of iron ore were shipped from U. S. mines, the eauivalent of a full four years' shipment at the maxi mum pre-war level. nc jFi Poe Valley The Glen Kcster family were visitors at the Frank Kester home Sunday. Some of the young people went swimming at t lie Harpold dam Sunday. Mrs. Haines took them ud there. Losson and Irvln Ross are do ing some combining. Florence-Nork of LanKell val Icy and Mary Louise llames and Louis van Meter cauca on ocr aldine Martin Saturday after noon. Zetta Sullivan and young son moved a hay baler down the road Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Ben Nork and son Benny, and her sister and niece, were callers m tne valley Irom Klnnv ath Falls Sunday evening. Mrs. Nork just returned from Port land where she lett Ben in the Good Samaritan hospital. He had another operation on, his leg as it was not ncaimg properly. She said he was getting along fine and was in good spirits when she left him. Arthur Schaupp has a lovely crop of wheat on his ranch this year. Louise Van Meter was a caller at the Hallio Haines home, Sun day afternoon. Among tho shoppers in Klam ath Falls from the valley Satur day were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Nork and Dale Van Meter, Mr. and Mrs. Losson Ross and grand daughter Joyce. Little Victor (Sonny) Nork of Klamath Falls, is spending a few days in the valley at the home of his grandparents, the Joe Norks. Vic Brown and Buck Rodgcrs moved their combine back home from near Klamath Falls, where they were combining some grain. Mary Louise Haines called on Louise Van Meter Saturday. Florence Nork of Langell valley also called on her Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Vic Brown went to Klamath Falls Saturday night where they attended a movie. Bo Tucker plowed up some of his potatoes which did not turn out well recently. The Clarence Webber family and Maggie Webber were callers at the Eddie Roberts' home Sun day afternoon. Chet Barton has several head of young white deer on his big ranch this summer. He also has a lot of wheat in shock, ready for threshing. Mr. Zuckerman had an irriga tion ditch dug on his ranch here which he bought from Vic Brown this spring. Early Shipments Of Potatoes Moved Between 12 and 13 thousand cars of spuds will be shipped out of the Klamath area this year, it is estimated by Southern Pacific officials. The first two cars of Klamath potatoes moved Wednesday out of Stronghold bound for Oak land markets, but the heavy shipment will not start until next month. Iced refrigerator cars are used for the shipment of the early, thin-skinned potatoes, but later crops will go in dry refrigerator cars. - If it's a "frozen" article you need, advertise for a used one in the classified. Phone 4S67 Box Office Opens 1:30 - 6:45 NOW PLAYING ROMANCE ... that echoes the heart-beats of all young lovers today! Mr present ' IX I ofDover i irene'dunne 1 A CLARENCE BROWN M 1 PRODUCTION !lM 1 and wltli tqS 1 RODDY McDOWALL $f l FRANK MORGAN jff WL VAN JOHNSON g T C. AUBREY SMITH Op 1 DAME MAY WHIT TV jflK GLADYS COOPER JOf, HERALD AND NEWS, Fort Klamath Lois Fox relurned last week to her homo in rort Klamath after spending some of her vacation visiting at Redmond, Ore., with her grandmother, Mrs. Laura Moore, who accompanied Lois Home on the bus trip. Airs. Moore returned Sunday to her home in Redmond, after visiting hero a few days with her son-m-law, daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Purl Fox und children. Mrs. Carolyn Mueller of Wil liams, Calif., is visiting hern lit the home ot ncr daughter, Airs. John Cauhapc. Aviation Radioman Loyal L. Heath and his wife were calling on friends here last week while en route to Klamath Falls from Diamond lake, where they spent a few d a y s on a camping and fishing trip. Heath is a former Fort Klamath youth, h o m c on furlough from the South Pacific, where he has been on active duty with the U. S. navy. His marriage to Deloirainc Mark wardt was an event of August 4 at the Markwardl home in Chil oquin. He will report at Ala meda, Calif., within a few days for further duty with the navy, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Blickeu staff and . daughter, Yvonne, were Klamath Falls visitors on Thursday. Other local residents spending the day in Klamath Falls included Mrs. Alfred B. Castel, Sr.. Mrs. Eldon Brattain and Mrs. Joe Taylor. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hartley and son, James, of Prineville were visitors here Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Loosley. Mrs. Mary Looslev, mother of Mrs. Hartley nnrf R S. Loosley. is at present receiv ing medical treatment at a Klam ath Falls hospital. Air. and Mrs. Alvin CoDclnnri and daughter, Joyce, left Sunday for Eugene where they will visit relatives until they are able to obtain boat accommodajions to Ketchikan, Alaska, where they will make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bishop are moving this week into the Copeland res idence here, which they have leased. George M. Denton is abln in ho around again after being con fined to his home with severe in juries received over a week ago when he was thrown from his norsc. ine animal caught his foot in a nlank of a briHun ni (hi-. Denton ranch, became fright ened and bolted, causing tho sad dle cinch to break and throwine Denton, whose injuries, while extremely painful, were not ser ious. Mrs. Nora Souther hue i-b. turned from Portland, where she has been convalescing for some time from a major opera tion which she underwent in July. Mrs. Bob Cable returner! Wednesday from Eugene, where she has been hospitalized for muaicai ooscrvaiion ana care for some time. She is reported to be in better health as a result of ner stay in the hospital. Dean Corbin of stnrtctnn. Calif,, is visiting here at the home of his grandmother, Mre. Lona Bennett. Another grand son, Clifford Whitlatch, re turned last week from Stockton, where he has been at the Corhin home for the past two months. Mr. ana Mrs. Harry StcDhen- son and two children returned Friday to their home in Vallejo, Calif., after enjoying a few days' visit uere at me nomc oi ner sis- : ftt NMIM CONTINUOUS SHOW NEW IE. leBARRON, Mitch AWES Lou BRING LATEST 2 V-Sa-N SPARKLES WITH j& -r , f f JOYFUL RHYTHM "SV' 1 AuY. Lvly J COMPANION FEATURE SUSTER IN KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Vs. Clare Luce Margaret E. Connors, above, 29-year-old Bridgeport. Conn., attorney, was nominated by ac clamation to oppose Rep. Clar Boothc Luce, Republican candi date for re-election T (Continued from Page One) Romanian prisoners In a single day, and sent spearheads to less than 100 miles from Plocstl and slightly more than that from Bucharest. Front dispatches said red army tankmen, as liberators and not conquerors, cruised through hundreds of northern Romanian towns and villages, followed by sweaty, dusty col umns of singing Infantry. Red army political- officers, carrying out tho official Rus sian position, explained to Ro manian soldiers and civilians that liquidation of German forces in the country must be achieved before military opera tions cease and an armistice can be concluded. Civilian populations literally cried for joy on hearing, of a second promise by the soviet government not to annex Ro manian territory, change its ex isting social regime or harm its independence, dispatches said. Tartu Taktn At the other end of the ex tended eastern front soviet forces captured Tartu In Es tonia and edged within strik ing distance of tho German bas tion at Lomza in Poland, near the East Prussian frontier. The : 47,000 casualties an nounced at midnight brought to 853,886 the number of enemy troops announced as killed or captured in the Russian sum mer offensives since June 23. The 28th German general was captured. tor, Mrs. "William Sicgcl, and family. KM SU M tWI DAILY FROM 12:30 TODAY with James ELLISON Walter CATLETT FR1CK and FRACK UTTLEFIELO WORLD NEWS CRABBE REDS ORDER R11IIT0 JOIN BATTLE (Continued from Pago One) was reported In now peace over tures. , The Gcr m a n communique told of the sniggering military and political blow which w n Romania's about-face in these words: "In the southeast sector of the eastern front, our hoops are dis engaging themselves toward the Prut and Slret rivers, After parts of Romanian troops had censed In fight, many cue m y tanks were destroyed. Moscow reported that Roman ians, who previously hud desert ed, told advancing Russian troois that Germans machine gunned them for retreating and that they, tho Romanians, in turn, killed their ini.l military masters.' Mt. Laki The community regrets to hear that Mrs. Ji-stla Kaylor Is confined to tho Klamath Valley hospital receiving trentmcnts for Injuries suffered In n fall last week. All wish her a speedy recovery. Congratulations are being ex tended to the parent!) of two new citizens of this community who arrived recently at the Hill side hospilul. They are Mr. and Mrs. L. 13. Dawson whose son, Leslie Burton, arrived on Au gust 3, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Neeso whose daughter arrived August 21. Ethel Dixon left Wednesday for Reno, Nov., where she Is a member of tho University of Ne vada faculty. School will open August 2H. Mrs. Harold Dchllnger return ed last weekend from Ashland, Ore., where she visited with her sister. Her mother. Mrs. B. W. Short, and sister, Mrs. Frcy Bey. mcr of Hager, also returned home last weekend. Tho community extends heart iest congratulations to Lt. and Mrs. Paul Whitlatch, who wore married last week In Klamath Falls. The young couple left Monday night by motor after a community shower, for Okla homa City, Okla., where Lt. mmm Box Office Optni'6i45 Last Times ' TODAY THE U. S. GOVT. AND GREAT BRITAIN PRESENT "Tunisian Victory" SATURDAY ONLY IfANKEE ACTION! ALSO "RED" IS RIDINO THE Actio. TRAIL! rami AND ,- f POM "HID"- j BARRY I LYNN MERRICK -f ; MOAH BEER V J 8 -iMv nniut Whitlatch will resume his train, lug In tho army ulr corps, Best wishes for a speedy re covery are extended to Jesse Johnson who underwent mi nmorguiicy opcratUm at tho 11111- sldn hospilul lust wook, lluury Somon and lnujfhlei' mill son-lu-hiw, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Thompson, ni'o at the Lake o' the Woods tills week re pairing tho summer homo lh'y rci't-niiy purcnascd iroin nir. Whltlock. Portugal Ends Vichy Relations LISBON. Aug. 2H (!) Portu. gal ceased diplomatic nihil Ions with Ilie Vichy government of Marshal Henri Philippe Pulutn last night on Ihc basis of IVtuln's reported statement that ho con. sldmod himself n prisoner of the Gi't'miiug. Pii'vloimly Swltoiliind mid Sweden similarly ended diplo matic relations with Putaln's government. Etfllu Auxiliary Tlu-ro will ho a regular moetlnu of the Kiiulrs iiuxlliury Friday night at ft ll. in. Ill t)u, hmf-r WW.' I, nil Thoro will be nn Initiation of cnnoinatrs mil members are not required to wear formal. Mem ber. uolnu tn llt'nrt Miiiirlnv asked to utlimd as final nrr'aimi-- mems lor me trip will bo iiiikIv at this time. Classified Ads llrlng ItesulU BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:45 LAST TIMES TQUPA L4SaSk ATWOOrWICKSTERSCOBESKlKI KfJXl IoIuuiy uthw.Iw mm CAPTURES!! ilERIIl (Continued (rom - . r.illr.,,,,1. .,. ,. . ""WW: cm. oul American IM7 ti r.l enemy Bllll " '".'nil trlv miles 11,11(1 , .,: '?",ciiltll - Ithom, vn "V'K1 and other .-on,,,, J 'dlJ KOI? In the lire,, m'1 3 unci mines, u iim lower Itlm,,,. ",e t ol EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Cnntlm( Frol, iKHomllng hi. .-.Hkel co.n i "nny for the lat , ,? has been lnlkl,... i. '. ... 'N 1 "WUUI, Hum Norl.nd ri !, J lono 6060. Pho If VWWMff . Jo. DIVL1M ALSO LORNA GRAY IN 'WE GIRL WHO DARED" AT.. ONLY: PISTOL PACKIN' PAPA!! RkJ His rhyriim rwift whh a rollicking riitinf' renegadel 1 1 A3 (CHARLEsj STARRETT 3k MILLS BR05. i - w- SCOTLAND YARD LATEST NEWS j (WUTTLAW JtvSTIPHANII BACHILOR LATEST NEWS S. AUInIT SMITH