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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1944)
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON PACE SEVEN 0m mm Aug. 25 P)-Mire W riwl by t""'H t"'lc' tl"lcJ . luv t ti'ii nurw ! f1 "rl,,..M.ii.l .la- IUI llerl II Wliciro jiy P- i,.tudctl four nlrcriift l'U I c r force "' teWiho robot ewseSil Llbm-nt-f I he r Hue- k s rdV or ood LW Wd. tnruoU I,. , bomber wuH-iHuur W, I)""'1"1 " synthetic "'I plant. VAdtlfl. Oennun air- 1 1 0 II ' m and Ncubriindciiburtf. , , German lf 'or'--0 l..ttn i- imhi. blast- Jhn In Franco iiml Bel fa nWU, continuing "y 2? oficiwlvo Hi w h I c I; rfU (ioiii Hrlliiln mid ft" yesterday id vital Kdiulrlnl UirK.rU flop) 1UC 10 WO uumuwo. .Partisan View M On For t Organization Unucd from Pnge One) Mjcd on the projected Vtcurlty organization In some Amori- r..t... trt hnnrl nenco con- t( problems over to tlmt itifl representatives uit3 ic I to have urouiiiu a struiiK .ii.. irnm lh London M.nl lltlll tilt! "liClUltlQ- tl 'lho wnr" mint ba sop. (tora tho organization oi ttt. Ruiilin Vlow Rusiinru have taken tho ill work not cunnoct- tertly with tho settlement titriuuonoi uiaputcs nun atrvntlon of nenco should Ladled by International IT other limn tho security y, although thoy almost Inly would nnvo to uo co- led witn it. eomercei came to the their first work-week to ils their secretarial stnff tied with paper work that It roup of tho delegate! fi to go to Now York for texend. full doyi of conferring ;ti enouuh progress that pry of State Hull called partisan group or senate relation! committeemen report today. Also In tho aorning ho arranged to hi) third session in three with John Foster Dulles. Thomas E. Dewey's foreign idvisor. ton Still Head WPB, Roosevelt Jtt of Change inUnued from Pogo Ono) pon'i own cutback and re union, machinery by 20 Atmosphere Blasted "harmonv" nlmnsnherr? further blasted bv Wilson's lion that War Mobilization lor jamcs F, Byrnos hod "to noison to proceed 1 the rcconverftirtn rprnm. itloru of the Bnrucli-Hnn- tPOrt of Kohrtinrv. hut Pi didn't leurn of Byrnes' mini tess inun 30 days ftS1 c,1?.ared 'ht he and t witn mo story that we Ik j- i Deon "constantly i. "i"8 ,uncK reconversion, "I big business and othor ' WJIP olely untrue." Not- . Ulli J K"""IIBl IU VIII" ..lu4n Pub'io'y and forco w the reports, ho assorted, w promises were "never, "fried out." XL'10 d"vs 8o started nnvJiA w nit I, "S ,navy mi,n named .rj'JfT18" ' Wilson's mufiS, reply t0 W"- iiro Cab Company ""ed In Portland nTLtoN?' Au?' 5 MV-Pw if thtor to ncf?roes was Cof Lclly commission by Mco h. g,Sc,?, wh0 .c'nimod 5Apdo 8ott,n8 'Ihattnp ,..ni u .' meras Rented 1 ' mm. Movie "Ictor1. for Iont Pit kic "loped . PrlnUci Novelties k SoUVOtllr. Grng Cardi " A Occasion. PHOTOS WHILE u WAIT Rltrve In,.. -""' MFKT ANIV .WOMEN IN S1SERVICE PECEIVE LETTER Mr. und Mrs. J. L. Nendel of 211) K. Main recently received a letter from tholr son James D. Nendel who, with Ills brother Hubert, is stu- Robert Nondol Jamos Nondol Honed In Kniilund. Hubert Nundel Is with the air force and his mission Is secret. James' letter Is as follows: July 31, 104-1 Dour Folks: Hero goes for another loiter. I huvcii'l written to you for u few days because the last three duys I've bi-en on pii.-.s. 1 got u five day leave which 1 spunt in London. I still have two days of my pass left but I think I will spend it heru in the barracks and get a good rc.st.- Loudon Is really ciuitc the place. Yesterday we hired u cab und went on a slitht seeing tour of tho city. It sure wus In teresting to sec all the things we'vo rcud about since grade school, Here are a few of the things wo saw: We sk'w Hyde Park, Bucking hum Paluco, London Bridge, bl. Paul's Cuthodrul, the Tower ot London, tho governmental build ings, tho Bourses of parliament, the mini, etc., Downing street, tue place where the Queen's mother lives, the place where the Prlnco of Wales used to live, Big Ben (tho largest clock in the world) und downs of otiier monuments, buildings, etc. tiiat I can't remember. Oh yes, among them wii Westminister Abbey and blocks of houses that were standing since Dickens time. They looked Just like tile pictures In tho books, with their pointed gables, sloping outward toward the street. I would huvo liked to have hud llino to go through many ol ihosc things, but 1 dlun't. One tiling I'm golns to go through is the Tower ol London "net the old castle that it's in. Lverytiung Is in there Just as It was in the days of old; all tho old armor, the dungeons, and the moat around the whole place. Alt in all, It was well worth the time seeing It. All of the buildings In London look so old, but most of them oro nice on the Inside. Tho taxis nro really something to sec. You'vo probably seen pictures of them olther In the movies or olsewhero. They look like they should, have a horse In front of them Instead of a motor, but It's surprising how they get around. I had a nice bunch of mail waiting for mo when I got back today, Thnt was the main reason I wus anxious to get back to tho base. That mull Is the most Im portant thing In tho lives of all the boys over here. I don't think thore's a ono who wouldn't gladly miss a mcol for one letter, and when I say miss a mcnl, over here that Is something. If you miss a meal here, you don't stop In and buv a sandwich or some thing to tide you over. If you miss ono you do without until tho next meal. Evon In tho cities the restaurants are only onon at certain hours. Usuully from IV";.1' to ''bio In tho morning, 1 :' to three in the afternoon and six to nine nt night. Every thing Is closed by ten o'clock, even tin, night clubs. You can Jiure seo nil kinds of peoplo in Loncion, You can walk down the wtreet und see soldiers from over" urmy, nuvy und murines In tho allied nations. Even In dliiii, Chinese, French, Belglun anil miiiiy others. Wrile soon und often. As ever, JIM, AN EIGHTH AIR FORCE KKHVICK COMMAND STA TION, Englund Sergeant Wil I lam Bickers, sou of Mr. und Mrs. Wllllum Bickers, Modoc Point, Ore., Is a crew chief in clmrgii of salvaging battle-dum-uged B-17 Flying Fortresses of tho Eighth Air Force at this strategic air depot bomber re pair base. Sergeant Bickers was gradu ated from the Chllociuin high school in 10.4ft, und prior to his entry Into the nillltury Bervlcc September 11, 1041 at Portlund, Oregon ho wus employed In u sawmill. He has been stutloned In the European theater of opcr utlons 25 months. Paul Newton Hurvcy, 21, son of Lewis ft. Hurvey of 2327 Klumuth Fulls.F won his nnvy "wings of gold" und win com missioned a n o n s I g n In thu naval reserve this week fol lowing complc-f Hon of tho prc-i, training course fcky tit the naval air I training center, ' Pcnsacola, Flo.,-w the "Annapolis f of the Air." .- Iluving been designated a nuval nvlutor. Ensign Hurvcy will go on active duly at one of tho navy's ulr operatlonul train ing centers beforo being as signed to a combat zone. ... FORT BENNING, Ga. Pvt. Walter Knnpp, brother of E. F. Knupp of 2312 Darrow, Klam ath Foils, has won the rlRht to wear the wIiirs und boots of the U. S. army puralroops. Mrs. Jesso L. Cohca, daughter of Mrs. F. W. Brown of Bo nanza, has rccolvcd word that her husband, Captain Jesse Co hca, has been awarded the Pur ple Heart for Injuries received in action in the Italian theater. Cupluln Cohea Is in a hospital In Rome. Steal Products Output Up . - , p,aaI r.,-ft,if1a In OIIIPIIIVIIUI U' OW- U.UHMVW ... tho first quarter of 1044 estab lished a new record of 17,615,000 net tons, on increase of 1.3 per cent over the 17,370,000 tons shipped in the final quarter of 1U43. i a as. m DON LEE-MUTUAL. LOWELlf THOMAS NEWS TIME Standard of California Fall Weather Prevails' Mercury Rise in Prospeci Weather of the Indian sum mer variety prcvuilcd in the Khimnth rmintrv Irtflnv with In. dlcutions that higher nightly temperatures muy bo In pros pect. Mercury touched 30 degrees over Thursdiiy night, two dc- Service Men and Women Home on Leave S 1e Nelion Abbott from the South Pacific. Here until Sep tember 2. Cpl. John C. Farrell from the South Pucific. Hero until Sep tember 8. Cpl. Charles D. Peck from Camp Campbell, Ky. Hero until September 1. Cpl. Thurman Parrlsh from Camp Polk, La. Here until Sep tember S. Pvt. Rodney Vore from San Luis Obispo, Calif. Here until September 1. Pvt. Richard Hoigsmlth from Camp Roberts, Culif. Here un til September 3. The ubovo service people arc entitled to free passes to the lo cal theatres and free fountain service at Lost River dairy by courtesy of Lloyd Lamb of the theatres and R. C. Woodruff of tho dairy. Please call at The' Herald and News office (ask for Scott Reed) for your courtesy tickets. OBITUARIES HENRY KBNEST NEW irenry Erncat New. for the pott IS yeart a resident of Klamath Falli, Ore., punned awnv In tlila city Thunday, August 24, 1044 at 0:20 p. m., following a inns lllnei. He wot a native of Leavenworth county, Kaniaa and wui osed 7t yean. 0 months and 9 day; when called, lie Is survived by hla wife. Stltie U. New, 1703 Oregon avenue, Klamath Falls, Oro. The remiins are to he forwarded to San Francisco. Calif, tonight on train Wo 10. at 7.40 p. m. whrro tho requiem mass Is to be cele brated, followed by Interment 4n. com mitment In the family plot in 41olv Cross Memorial Park. Ward's Klamath Funeral home of :h!s city la In marge of arrangements here, and McAvoy V O'Hcre. funeral directors. 2031 Market street, will endurt the memorial serv Icoa In San Francisco. CLARENCE CLENTON MOODT Clarence Clenton Moody, a resident of Tennnnt, Calif., for tho last three months passed away in Tulelalte, Calif., on Thursday, August 24, 1044 at 12:30 a. m. following a brief illness. He was a na tlvo of Merrlmac. Texas and at the time of his death was agod 41 years, 0 months and 13 days. Surviving is one sister. Mrs. Mabel Barry of Sriur. Texas. The remains rest In tho Erl Whltlork Fu neral home. Pine at Sixth. Notice of funeral to ba announeed at a later date. grees higher than the previous night. It was a cool night in town, however, and smoke rose from a number of fireplace chimneys. No reports of frost damage were received from the county agent's office or the reclama tion bureau. The bureau was told that evidences of frost were noted in somo parts of the Alta mont district, and one private thermometer In the Lower Klam ath lake district showed a read ing below freezing. Forecasts for Oregon prom ised warmer "cast of tho Cas cades" und a local report at the reclamation office confirmed that prospeci, Increase In Tire Chains Impossible WASHINGTON, Aug. 2S fP) Production of tire chains for civilian uso can't be increased In the Immediate future, the war production board said to day. A recent order authorized manufacturers to resume civil ian production as local condi tions permit, but WPB reported so long as war supplies remain critically short present quotas will prevail. 82-Year-Old Held On Bigamy Charge ONTARIO, Ore., Aug. 24 (P) An 82-year-old man who ad mitted marrying two women in the last three years began serv ing an eight-month sentence to day on a bigamy charge. - - Edward J. Wilson, service sta tion operator, told circuit court he married Maude Richardson in 1041. Then this summer he had a June wedding, and mar ried Dorothy Lear. Private, Commercial Flying Resumed LOS ANGELES, Aug. 215 OF) Private and commercial flying has been resumed at Grand Cen tral air terminal for the first time since the Pearl Harbor at tack, Major C. C. Moseley, air port lessee, announced yester day. Maj. Moseley said the fourth tics administration have now ap air force and the civil aeronau- proved resumption of point-to- poini civilian iiying in tne pa cific coast combat zone. If it's a "frozen" article you need, advertise for a used one in the classified. Like Biscuits? Try a Sack of BOQUET FLOUR Ask For It At Your Grocer' o Made in Klamath Falls by PACIFIC SUPPLY COOPERATIVE worths Br fure It's PURE CANE SUGAR insitt onf IN IINIRY-PACK!D CONTAINERS SUGAR tN. : f iib mm imH MALLORY'S W MARKET Morrill-Lakoview Jet. n n u Telephone 4620 FARMERS' PRICES Steer Beef, by the half . lb. 25c Cut, Wrapped, and Put tn Your Locker NO POINTS lb. 15c lb. 27c lb. 19c Beef Liver Pork Steak . . Ground Beef . Pork Sausage . . . lb. 19c Large Ranch Eggs . 2 dox. 79c Fresh Tomatoes . . 2 lbs. 25c Klamath County Meat Only They're Here! SifUndHiaJi NEW Fluorescent Fixture For Commercial and Industrial Installations Not An Aasembled Job But Every Part Made, Guaranteed . and Put Together by SYLVAN I A CORP. Pioneers of Fluorescent Lighting and Owners of Most Baste Patents Covering Same SYLVANIA OFFERS YOU . . . NOW 0 Easy Installation 0 Easy Lamp Replacement ' Optional Easy Cut-Out Starters A POST-WAR JOB Available Now At Your Dealers or ' -. F. R. H AUGER SIS Market St. Open AH Day Saturday Phone 7221 AT ASIAN THEATER LONDON. Aug. 25 (IP) Ad miral Lord Louis Mountbattcn has returned to his post as head of the allied command in south east Asia after a series of con ferences in London with British and' American leaders during which plans were made to step up the war against Japan, It was disclosed today. Mountbattcn's visit here coin cided in part with that of James V. Forrestal, U. S, navy secre tary. Lord Mountbattcn said his men were fighting an often fanatical foe over some of the world's worst terrain and that the allied hardships in his the ater largely were unnoticed by the "folks back home." He declined to forecast fu ture operations. Instead he re viewed to a press conference the campaign which has been hampered by lack of landing craft, withdrawn for use at Anzio and France. He said the loss of their vehicles meant a revision of his plans "on a less ambitious scale," aimed at clear ing the Japanese from northeast Burma and thus improving the supply situation for China and Major Gen. Claire L. Chen nault's "very effective" U. S. 14th air force. Fighting in Burma in 1044 cost the Japanese a minimum of 42,000 killed and the allies 10, 000 killed, 3000 missing and 27,000 wounded, he said. Lord Mountbattcn said a quarter mil lion casualties had been suffer ed from sickness, chiefly malaria and dysentery. One of the principal develop ments in southeast Asia opera tions, he said, was the use of air supply which several times enabled isolated garrisons to keep fighting and foil one of the favorite Japanese means of attack. High-Grade Gas Use Predicted PORTLAND, Aug. 25 (P) Postwar motorists will be able to buy a high grade octane gaso line, better than the 87-90 octane prewar variety used in airplane engines, an engineering execu tive told delegates to the society of automotive engineers meet ing here. F. S. Baster, vice president of the White Motor Co., Cleveland, Ohio, also told the 200 delegates that postwar engines would take advantage of wartime improvements. French Deplore Shearing Episodes as Mob Actions By HAL BOYLE CHARTRES, France, Aug. 16 (Delayed) (IP) These episodes of the French shearing the hair off their women is a manifesta tion of mob spirit which is spectacularly supported by many elements of the French nation, but there are also many people who deplore the incidents. I watched today as 30 unhappy women submitted to head shav ings because they were afraid of the jeering, yelling mob behind them. Afterward they were led in shame through the streets. Most of them were lumpy, ugly creatures who certainly conferred no great distinction on the nazis by consorting with en enmy occupation troops. Yet the French have reasons for hating these women. "We felt that France was truly ended when our women even these women took up with the Germans," said one French man. A French major with four rows of ribbons on his chest watched the women being shaved without a trace ol sympathy in his gray eyes. "We hate them because Frenchmen are dead because of these women," he said. He and other Frenchmen be lieve that the gossip of these women to German soldier friends led to the capture and death of many resistance leaders. Yet there is a large portion of the population who believe that this mob justice is not a true solution. . They feel that the guilty should be punished by lawful trial rather than hap hazard shearing of suspected women. . Standing near these 30 miser- When in Medford Stay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modern Joe and Anne Earloy Proprietors able women who had just been shorn In Cnartres was Jacqueline Frelat, 24, who had just been freed after spending a month In a German prison for befriending an allied airman. She had more reason to despise these women than did many of the others, but she deplored the shearing as pun ishment because it was emotional rather than reasoned. She was unable to keep from laughing a little at the sight of these hairless women, but she shook her own tresses and said, "yes, it is funny, but at the same time disgusting. It is not that I feel sorry for those women. I feel more sorry for the people who are cutting off their hair. "Those women do not matter They are women for soldiers, "But I do not like what is be ing done to them in this wild manner. In France we have a tradition of liberty. These pec pie are excited. What they are doing is stupid. Tomorrow they will be quiet and stay In their homes." It is reported that more than 40 per cent of the wealth of the United States is controlled by women. HARTFORD Accident nd Indemnity Company INSURANCE LB. WAITERS General Insurance Agency FIRE . . . AUTOMOBILE 615 Main St. Phone 41S3 r - This Pure gives delicate bouquet to favorite desserts Schilling: X mmmmmmimm.mmmr j 8th and Main : ' o CANVAS GLOVES O Elastic Work Suspenders . O NITE SHIRTS PAJAMAS O Wool Mackinaws , Wool Jackets ' . ' o : TIN COATS TIN PANTS Leather Coats O. 25 50 " WOOL UNION SUITS . O Wool Soeks O .:: SLICKERS Oregon Woolen Store FRESH from the Gardens KIG vegetables are brought in during the cool of the night far your early . election. Don't forget jars and lids for canning. Can at home far victory! EaS?V jjl 12-oz. 21 Can 3 33c FISHER'S BISKIT MIX 2-lb. box 33c TOMATO SAUCE Hunt's Supreme 2 for 11c PANCAKE FLOUR Jolly Joan. Special 15c MUSHROOM SAUCE 8-ox. jar 13c KREAMED HONEY 14-or. jar 35c RANCHO SOUP, 2 for 15c PEANUT BUTTER Mb. jar 25e Sunbrite Cleanser 5c jpjj 2 for MOTHER'S QUICK OATS ' (Premium) .. Ig. pkg. 32c HOMELIKE FLOUR 25-lb. bag 1.18 SUNBLEST MUSTARD Pt. jar 15e CHEEZIT JR. Pkg. 12c Fisher's Poultry and Dairy Feeds at All K. I. G. Stores Or Call the Warehouse Phone 8271 '.. , " ' , 1 Klamath I nd e pendent Grocers COMMUNITY GROCER? FIFTH AVENUE GROCERY JOE'S MARKET AND GROCERT LAPS1.EV GROCERY LIEN'S CASH STORE . MAC'S STORE .1 PASTEGA'S GROCERY ROBINSON'S MARKET . SHASTA VIEW GROCERY TWIN GIRLS GROCERY BALLOU GENERAL STORE, "i M. , BOROUGHS OROCEBY. Ipr. Bhr.r. . RENO STORE. Kena ' . MICKEY'S roOD MARKET Oklf ., rnone 7187