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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1944)
PACE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON GOP CANDIDATE UPPER AT RAIL YARD (Continued from Pago One) San Francisco at 11:11 a. in pwt Inrlav after a rousing re ception by crowds in front of the republican 50,001 club. The train, delayed beyond its scheduled slarunK time, was 10 make the first slop at EuRene, Ore. at 2:30 p. m., with a possible platform appearance of the re- publican nominee. Dewey Unrulllod Dewoy, unruffled by two cs rnncs vustcrdav from serious in- jury, reviewed a speech to be delivered in San Francisco to morrow night outlining the re publican program of "freedom and security for all." Cheered lustily for his asser tion here last night that there is no "indispensable man," the GOP presidential nominee prom ised to tell tomorrow's audience "the philosophy by which 1 be lieve we can achieve our two great goals for America, freedom and security lor an. Cheering Crowd Without, referring to a train wreck, which had delayed his arrival for several hours or to a narrow escape when the auto bringing him here swerved to avoid a trucK, Dewey tow a cheering crowd of about 7000 persons in the ice coliseum here that in the making of "a people's peace" there could be no "in-J dispensable . man. His campaign train was re paired overnight so that he could resume his journey south today. A sympathetic throng rose to its feet' stamping the wooden floor underneath and yelling it self hoarse last night when he declared: No More Pretense "Let's have no more pretense about indispensable men. There are no indispensable men. If our republic after ISO years of self-government is dependent upon me enaiess continuance of one man in office, then the hopes which animated the men who fought for the declaration of independence and the con stitution have indeed come to nothing." "The peace we seek," he de clared, "must not hang by the slender thread of personal ac quaintance of any two or three men. The pages of history are littered with treaties proclaim ing permanent pea.ee made priv ately by rulers of nations and quickly broken.- ' -. Too Important "This cause is too important to De trusted to discredited methods or to be- dependent up on the life span' and continued friendship, of two' or three in dividuals.": -''-..-'-. The New v York governor's reference to the -"two or three men" apparently was to ' Presi dent Roosevelt.-r Prime Minister Churchill of Great' Britain, and Premier Stalin of Russia.. . His allusion to the "life span" was in line with his previous assertions that the present demo cratic administration is "old and tired." President Roosevelt is 62, Dewey is 42. Big Applause Greeted with a two-minute ovation, Dewey drew the big gest applause of his speech with this assertion: "My opponent claims to be indispensable to peace and pros perity. In other words, ' he claims that the- United States and the world cannot get along without him. He has chosen this as the issue of the campaign. I accept the issue and I chal lenge it." ! The plain fact was, Dewey asserted, that 12 years of new deal administration 'has given O fcS i' i aaa 6.00-16 l TOO 1 Main Street Store 527 Main . Ph. 3234 Service Men and Women Home on Leave Pvt. Anthony W, Crapo from Pnrt f nitric Wnh H".r until Scutemucr 23. MM 2c Hap David from Alcu tian islands. Here until October 10. RT 3c Jack Peek from Treas. ure Island, Calif. . Here until September 29. Tho abovo service pcoplo are entitled to free passes to the lo cal theatres and free fountain service at Lort River dairy by courtesy of Lloyd Lamb of the theatres and R. C. Woodruff of the dairy. Pleaso call at The Herald and News office (ask for Paul Haines) for your courtesy tickets. P0U1D RUHR GATE (Continued from Page One) hours. It merged solidly with parachute-glider soldiers drop ped near Nijmegen on the waal Knine. The Britisn were appar ently battling on to link with still other sky troops 10 miles farther norm on tne upper branch of the river near Arn- hem. . The Siegfried line was being outflanked. The path was open ing for a wheeling offensive across the flatlands of northern Germany. Nazis in southwestern Holland were menaced with en trapment Americans struck fierce Ger man resistance in the invasion of Germany, and in their offensives from the Nancy-Mctz line and toward the Belfort gap farther south. But two doughboy col umns ' had thrust 20 miles or more : beyond Nancy toward Strasbourg . - In Boulogne .- . With the bie supply port of Brest on Brittany peninsula in U. b. hands. Canadians battled into the channel port of Bou logne. An unconfirmed Algiers broadcast said Boulogne's garri son already had surrendered. The whole Netherlands front was developing into a potential vast , new - trap for the enemy. The lower Rhine defenses had been turned by the assault from tne sny and the ground power- drive of the British. Allied war- planes battered at a German rush of reinforcements into The Netherlands and other points alone the front. With the British" push under way, meld Marsnaf sir Bernard Montgomery, in overall com mand of ground armies on the northern front, declared there was "no doubt" the war against miier wouia eno tnis year. inc uritisn drive enveloped Eindhoven, and stabbed on 45 miles farther north, joining men oi tne riryt allied airborne army at or near Nijmegen. They per- naps were already united up with the pocket of allied sol diers at Arnhem. Uerman resistance tichtened considerably. Heinrich Himmler was reported to have visited Ger man, units in Holland ureine stiffest resistance." But the two allied armies were steadily en larging their stand, blocking most of the roads to Rotterdam and Amsterdam. The Paris radio said even the Utrecht line of re treat had been cut by allied landings from planes. CIRCUS RECORD KANSAS CITY. Sent t.n I1P n. oaraum ano uaiiey-Kingllng Brothers circus attendant ord, established at Concordia, Kas., 20 years ago, was broken last night when 16,604 attended the "bieeest show nn onrth" n Kansas City's Ruppert stadium. this country a continuous dem onstration of quarreling, dis sension and disunity." BOX OFFICE iji! i m ; ft liny LAST TIMES TODAY 'GANGS INCORPORATED" WITH ALAN LADD Also - "JUNGLE MAN" -STARTS THURSDAY" COMPANION HIT WARRICK CARROLL HtUn REED L PRELIMINARIES (Continued from Page One) ration board office is not pre nared in answer these Questions. The rent control chief spoke tndnv at a meeting of the board of directors of the chamber of commerce, attended by some landlords and realty board mem bers. No Refund He said that while rents which have advanced will be rolled back to the level of Oc tober 1, 1943, no refund will bo remiired. Regarding property rented subseciuently to the freeze date, and not rented on that date, he said surveys will be made to establish prevailing rent prices for that type ol quarters ano those will be the maximum rent als under tho control system. Information Promised How adjustments will be made to eliminate inequities and other details was discussed informally by Gage, who said that this in formation will be brought out in the press and at public meet ings. The Klamath civil service of fice announced today that typ ists and stenographers will be needed at the rent control of fices by October 1, and that in terested persons should get in touch with Eugene Liljevquist, at the civil service office, Third ana Mam streets. BE WASHINGTON. Sept. 20 UP The state department has reason to believe, Senator Wallgren (D Wash.) was informed todav. that conditions in Japanese prison camps outside the Philippines are not so bad as feared; Replying to- Wallgren's In uiry as to stens taken bv the American eovernment to aid prisoners In the camns. Secretary of State Hull quoted a statement from General Wainwright who said that conditions in his camp at Formosa were "as good as can be reasonably expected." neutral observers are not al lowed to visit camps in the Phil ippines and information on con ditions in camps there is defi cient, Hull wrote, but reports on camps elsewhere in the Janan- ese-controlled territory "indicate mai conniuons are noi as bad as we had feared they would be." Since June I, Hull said, the Japanese government agreed to permit prisoners in the Philip pines to receive financial relief and the Swiss government has been instructed to furnish the maximum allowed, about $10 a month. A similar arrangement re cently has been agreed to for American prisoners and civilian internees in the Dutch East In dies, Hull said. Hull added the American Red Cross is attempting to forward small packets of concentrated vitamins and medicines. Dworshak Blasts Manpower Usage WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 (P) Rep. Dworshak (R-Ida.) asserts that the federal government! has constantly adderl m ilians to the payroll and thus nas not oeen cooperating in the best use of the nation's man power." Reports of the civil service commission- show, he told the house yesterday, that the gov ernment had 3,323,302 civilians on ns payrou July 31, or about xuu.uuu more tnan a year pre vious. OPENS 6.45 RENTCONTRO UNDERWAY HERE EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued From Ptge One) where we had important al bases which we have had to abandon. TURNING back to the home front, Dewey levels his Inst night speech in Portland at the indispensable m a n, with especial emphasis on the point that peace made by indispens able men is unlikely to be permanent. He told his audience: "The peace we seek must not hung by the slender thread of PERSONAL ACQUAINTANCE of any two or three men. The pages of history nro littered with treaties proclulmiiig permanent peace made PRIVATELY by rulers of nations and QUICKLY BKUlfcIN." . THE grandiose pence made by Napoleon and Alexander I of Kussm. on a rait out n the mid die of the river Niemcn. for example. Less than half a dozen years afterward, these two Indis pensable men who mado the peace between them were fight ng cacn other tooth and nan. DEACE, to be permanent, must have its roots firmly Imbed ded in the soil of the PEOPLE'S desires and convictions. There is lusting pence be- twecn Cnnndn and tho United States; NOT because any set of indispensable men got together and made it, but because the people of the United States and Canada WANT peace. and RE FUSE to tolerate even the Idea of war with each other. This peace doesn't depend on who is premier of Canada or presiden of the united States. NO LEADER in cither country could break It. He would bo tossed out instantly if he tried. U. S.-Canadian oeacc goes down to me grass roots. Finland Faces Tough Task Meeting Allied Peace Terms (Continued from Pago One) pact requires that airfield in southern and southwestern Fin land be placed temporarily at the disposal of the allies. Ihe loss of territory to Russia was the so. .st point to the Finns and the first Item mentioned by Von Born in his broadcast re view. Declaring that "Scotembor lfl. 1944, will be one of the hardest ays ol our history, the actinc prime minister announced that the armistice called for immedi ate restoration of the Russian- Finnish border fixed after the 104-day winter war of 1939-1040. Karelia Lot: "Thus Karelia in lnf ' nM Von Born. Karelia, the arpa nni-tViwnt nf Leningrad and west and north of Lake Ladoga, includes the city of Viipuri and is the most industrially developed region of Finland. Li that area lives more than 10 per cent of Finland's pre 1940 oopulaticn. outright Ceding The agreement also nrnviHri for the outright ceding to Russia of the Petsano area in the far north, with its port and rich nickel mines, and tho lndncr fr 50 years of the Porkkala penin sula, with its naval base on the Finnish gulf, for use as a mili. lary region. in cash, Finland must nnv reparations totaling 5300,000.000 (American) within six years. Von Born disclosed this was onlv alf what tho Rnssi nm. hurl asked in the futile peace ncgotla- iiyno i.i.-,!. opiiiiK, om ne added that "it is relatively hen vior uian any demand for repara tions mado on any country after the last grea' war." If iff! a '"frnTfln- Qt.ttn1 ...... need. aHvtrticn far a ,..f ...... in the classified. T.UNE 8484 I Box Office Opens 6:45 -Starts Thursday- FUN-FIILEU FIESTA! TilHPICO tarrtftfl ' EDWARD G. ROBINSON LYNN 1111 VICTOR MclAOUW ' Lafost Newt; . ROY ftsJlOGERS -2ND HIT- THRIIlSl35jrw I CHILIS! ff ' I SUSPENSE!? I J ROMANCE! -JL-, Vl 1 YANKS SPEED END (Continued from Page One) on that portion of Mludnuao which is nearest to Murotul. Pocket Remnants In a communique last night at I'eun Harbor, Acini, cnvsiur w. Nlmltz announced that fllst division troops hold two-thirds of Angnur, southernmost of the f'alaus and have pocketed rem nants of the small Jnnnne.io gur- rison. On heavily-defended Pclellu island, marine captors of thu prized airdrome were credited in ntficml reports with control ung most ol the cast const but tound tho going rough againM uipanese pillbox and trench po sitions In the center and on (he west. That covered developments hrough Monday. U. S. time (Tuesday at the invasion scene). Late Reports (Today. Pnlnu time, in n Blue network broadcast from Polo! in, John Cooper, representing the combined American networks said the leathernecks have seized all but the north tip of the island. He said the nortlon still in enemy hands did not rep resent too serious a problem and already naval shelling of Nipponese positions has been discontinued. (Cooper reported the Japanese have not been able to uet u single plane through the curtain of American aircraft ruling tho skies over Pclellu). Jept Concerned Japan's concern over the (lun ger to the Philippines presented oy (viorotai was suggested by MacArthur's report today of a n i r d unsuccessful attcmnt of enemy planes to deal a sncuk, night-shielded blow at that base. MacArthur s announcement of allied air activities included n 145-ton pounding of often-raid ed Dutch Celebes. Nimitz' com munique told of strikes at Shu- mushu and Paramushlro in the Kunlcj, including the strafing of an enemy destroyer, and n uigie plane raid on iwo Jlmn n the Volcano Islands. 7S0 miles south-of Tokyo. Stork Has Tough Day At Zoo Rhino Born CHICAGO, Sept. 20 M) The stork at the Brookfield zoo was bit weary today. Births re ported within the last 24 hours included a 43-pound baby rhin oceros, said by zoo officials to be the second rhino ever born in captivity; a baby zebra, a gazelle, and a kudu. Director Robert Bean de scribed the baby rhino, whose mother, Mary, weighs 3000 pounds, as the "most beautiful ugly baby In the world." He said the first baby born in cap tivity was at the zoo three years ago. Army Transport Long Overdue ANCHORAGE. Alaska. Sent. 20 PP) An army transport plane with 18 passengers and three crew members aboard was over. due yesterday on a flight from Anchorage to Fairbanks, the army transport command an nounced. The last radio rennrt snlrl (hi plane was flying at 6000 feet, by instrument, through rough air and icing conditions. No other details were given. tillll-H rOH INFORMATION PHONE 4S67 BOX OFFICE OPENS 1.30 6:45 Starts fZsM Thwofidtr picture of all v?H NV-C)1. tlmt . . , htr to steal your JT&O iJ h 'y h,ort awqy end thrill KcSS yor Democrats Campaign For Soldier Vote POPLAR BLUFF, Mo., Sepl 20 iA'i Democrats are cam milunhw fnf thnti tiektiL In hit tors to suldicr Irom Chicago, it was confirmed lodny ns nil lifter ninth to such n let tor being mude public Here. Tho Chicago Times suld that Mnvor Edwurd J. Kelly mild thul nun o Hum 130,000 letters ..( t.nl it I "Wit hnlli.VA lluti Din Miilrlliu-N want to volu fur Uoosevell unci wo re happy to assist thorn in oh Kilning nppllcnllons tor bnllotn," he was quoted ns saying. "II in a vim'v Ntl-itiiL' mmenl nmi ,1,111, I,., I I, If, I Ii ll-lll lllll tllll Mil,. gal," said did vol- bnltoii, Mis souri republican rnnirmnn, sum coiu'erniug the letter sent to him In St. Louis from hero. Two more $1000 checks cume into the coii.inunity fund Tues day, boosting the total amount collected to $27,175, not quite half of the uuotii set for the drive. Morrison knudscn comiiiiny sent In ono of the cheeks, and Kestcison Lumber company do nated the other. Wi-diiesHav norm a sound truck started t' tiring tho streets, with Lynn Hoyeroit urging the public over a loud-sueuker to contribute now to the commun ity fund. Tho truck will visit Industrial plts..ts in and around Klamath Fulls. Servicemen Asked To VFW Shindig All murines and sullnrs who have been oversells and are stu- ttoned in this vicinity arc Invited to un eiiterluininuiil sponsored by the VFW at the hluli school auditor: un, Thursday evening at h p, m. All men wliu lui vo been In service overseas und have been discharged may bring their discharge and also bo admitted. Jean Holln. who was chosen Miss Klamath, will sing, and there will also be accordion playing and tap (lancing. The ladles of the auxiliary w 11 fur nish refreshment. Vrw member anil lad es of the auxiliary will not meet in their regular rooms, but will come In the nin-lllnrttim. iciepnone ion Box Office Opens 1i30-8i45 AND Box OfJtcv Oponi 6:45 -ENDS TODAY- " THURSDAY! (Con tinned from Page One) llllrl I.lltillnlllu uiirt tim, n It... lor the remaining steps nf the iimiiinii intensive, expected to Ijn bigger than nnyiliiitg In dale Devolonmelll.H may be exnerleii front II o Gulf of Finland to i iigunitiviii, The heavlnnl nuiiiM tili,i..i !.. Latvia occurred noutheiiKl nf Itlgn, with CJeu. Ivan flagrant. Inn's forces Hiiinsltiiiu ftiruMn-.i -in miles on u 7fl-mlli front, sending the Germans reeling bnek Into tho. Latvian capital. Mure than 20011 place fell In that area within our days. Tho rln.tiiKl iimii'niiKli ln mM officially disclosed, came with tho capture of Kokavn nn it,.. west bank of Hut bnugnvii (Dviita) river six miles sou II. (if tho city. A soviet communique said the German lhm- i,,i orders "not to retreat n lnL.,. step" but they lost more than whole front, tho Germans have lost 070 tanks and 31)0 plnne.i. United Air Linos Asks Another Trip PORTLAND. Sent. 2n lai nni riitiiiii itir u film rin u rnliiiri trin nlnnit thn t... been mude to tho civil aeronau tics uoani, united Air Lines an nouiievd today. Kffcctlve Uelobei- 1. Ihe nm posed extra trip would leave Portland at !):.!,! n. in. and ar rive at Los Angeles nt 1 1:30 p. m. i no norwioounci tugni would lenvn l.n Anuelti til n n m arriving at Portland nt 1:42 p. in. WEATHER Tui4. Krplimbtr 19. lull Man. Mm. free In .14 M ,(KJ 7ii :u ,tui Klamnth Knlli North Dentl , I'orlUnti . Mcfoitl Keno . . .,. Sam rrAttcUco Q3HD Box Office Opens 1:30-6:45 -- ENDS -TODAY MR GRf ATEST DRAMATIC TRIUMPH! STARTS -THURSDAY It will stun i you with' Its startling candorl """'. BONITA OKANVIUI KINT SMITH JEAN IROOKS OLINN VMNON TUSA MIND freest by VAl WTOM 1 2nd Big Hit -- AMAZING NEW KIND OF MURDER-THRILLER! nau jruu re mere wnen tne fatal snot is fired E iw eeWr..w.:ky4J Early Ck,l.4T Mo,l,n9 o Fore,, m hii.llll:M'l'eitlvJ 1 1 1 i 1 1 n to Hy qJ The nii. . Hki..'I " mil u'i ... . iii-u Hervico li .. 7" U i tim mnlllnu . POui?1 In. I oHiir n j.i, poMihint,,., ,2S POWEFt8 OP THrTr' ?.!'!!: ' 'thid'ta!i Sllner of the ZT,Edltt d . .... . .. vull. rt . pciu-iies for Hu "'".'Ii eontli.ued untlj" Life A W" I, r Mf 3J .,,V"." ""tltdllM Mop the nd a i a,. " m 4 hern ,ol(i A""le Contlnuaui Show Box Olllu, 0pm, 1H) Nw Poying 1:1 i - '-'IIC mm wis t WSJm .T.iif I ..ltd T.EOKUC ..,tkJE' a HALE TOBIAS'" 2nd Hit "Yellow Canary" ''''-if StarrinB ,; : ANNA NEAGtt and kiwi i",':' I'JIil.im