SI I'M IZADETHAN BUQAIl l!Cll Kll7.lll)l!t!l of England introduced sugar Into her J,, tl ii mldillu o' I ho Kllh HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, ORECON PACE THM ecu Jury. Prior to Hint lime, the 1 "V,V'1 Ul"nl produced wuh mainly lined f,. medicinal pur- POSOH. ' t!litlflPfl Aim Bring flcsulta. 101 IMUIMAIIONOIMIIM 0I4IW tjij.-- Contlnuoui Bhow Box Oiflce Oponi 12:30 P, M, TODAY ONLY HOIDONTOYOUR HATS...HENRY AND DIZZY ARE LOOSE AGAINI - SSL 2ND BIG HiT "ACES WILD' With HARRY CAREY Ewauna Employe In Hospital K. C. Shoi'rlok, for the pirst 10 .vein's employed us millwright at lOwmiim Dox company, wuh ad milled (o KliiiiinUl Valley hospi till Friday at I p. in. for medical treatment. She-nick was found uncon scious at the mill, but his con dition Is Improved and lie was permitted to return to his home early Saturday afternoon. Q3MHXD CONTINUOUS SHOW 12:30 -- Ends --Today IMELY! TRUTHFUL! . "SMITH a tt W l HIT TOM CONWAY DEADLINE FOR INDEPENDEN AUDREY LONG 15 PASSED FRIDAY Candidates for both city and county offices in the November election had completed their fil ings and a check with the clerks shows no local independent can didates taking advantage of this privilege. Deadline for inde pendent filings was Friday. Last of the candidates to flic was Marvin Shepherd who sub mitted his petitions to the city clerk's office ul 3:30 p. m. Fri day. Shepherd is one of four candidates for mayor. Secretary of State Robert S. Farrcll Jr.. Saturday certified to County Clerk Mao K. Short tile state ballot upon which vot ers will make their selections of men and measures in the November ballot. Most ballots arc already in the printer's forms waiting only the names of last-minute candi dates before the "overseas edi tion" is run off. This is the same ballot as that used in the homo counties of servicemen and women, but printed im mediately for overseas mailing. According to County Clerk Short the following independent candidates have filed with Sec retary of State Farrcll: Presi dent, Claude A. Watson: vice president, Andrew Johnson; presidential electors, E. F. Aiken, D. L. Fenwick, R. T. Fine, Edith Haworth, W. M. Hcacock, and L. Wesley John son. Mrs. O'Malley Named Secretary Of 50,001 Club Mrs. Blanche O'Malley has been named full time secretary of the 50,001 club and may be reached at the offices of the GOP headquarters at 313 Main from a. m. to 12 noon, and from 1 p. m. until 5 p. m., every day oui ounaay. sne will give in formation to any persons inter ested in the club and camoaien Buttons arc now ready for sale and anyone who has purchased a card and docs not have a hut. ton may get one if he will stop di me ouices. uun I inuuuj jnuYT ja i . - aunt. , ... . .... .... r-r-r,- ---w urcri u ju r. m. :1 i Ve "fun -filled story WCA. H HhfflrV of men who were ft MM'' M i srinjmw&m&ismximm -..v X.SvX tnicriairimt:i , wv Jam to Drink For Wounded Buddy mm wm&mm a. , r t-tsnaautitjixjr J, d A marine on Peleliu, in the Palau islands, braves enemy sniper iire to qive a drink to a wounded buddy who fell as the first marine division went ashore in the Jap-mandated islands. (AP photo from marine corps). Beiween-Halves Show Has Thrills for Big Crowd Agaiast the fresh green of Mo doe field, members of the Klam ath Union high school band, twirlers and Pep Peppers, be tween halves at Friday night's game, presented a thrilling "Cav alcade of the United Nations" in one of the finest displays seen in the Pelican bowl. The band entered the field with trumpets playing the fan fare based on the Victory Theme of Beethoven's 5th Symphony. Forming a V, the band played various United Nations' airs, and vocal numbers were sung by Steve Stone, "The Marseillaise," France; "Kuomintang," China, vocalist, Carl Lewis; Russian hymn, vocalist, Aiyce Wells; "Rule Britannia," Great Britain, by the band: "Battle Hymn of the Republic, United btates, vo calist, Dorothy Howry. The band has 43 new members this year, and the marching band has been increased to 80 players. The new drum major is Covell Barnstable, new drum majorette is Uloria Mayficld. btudent con ductor is Steve Stone, and twirl ers. all new this year, are Joanne Abner, Irma Beasley, Genevieve Gehrman, Shirley Mazier, June Marie Murphy and Sherrie Owens. Credit for this fine perform ance goes to Andrew Loney Jr.. director of music in the school system. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued From Pago One) man defense In northern Italy is finally beginning to crumble. GENERAL BOR, leading the Polish underground forces in Warsaw, tells today (via radio) of heavy fighting on the WEST bank of the Vistula, where, he says, Russian units arc LANDING inside the city. Mos cow still has nothing to say about developments here. T'HE Russians have taken ''nlMnn. in F.qtnnia. and arn fighting in the edges of Riga, in Latvia. (These are the ports by wnicn tne uermans surround ed in the Baltic states might escape by sea.) Russian minesweepers are clear ing a path in the Baltic for the Russian fleet to come out, and planes from the Russian carriers are swarming in and sinking German troop ships in Tallinn harbor. Far to the south, the Russians are crossing the Romanian bor der into Hungary, with open plains ahead of them clear to Budapest and on into Austria. I he net is closing on nitler Germany from all sides. CAVE for the nervous mutter " ings of the Jap radio, the Pacific is quiet in the news to day. Tokyo (via the air waves) pro claims: "An American Invasion would offer us the one chance in a thousand years when we could, with one strategic blow, bring complete destruction to our enemy" (the idea being to get the big bum up close and knock him for a loop, as many a flagging ring fighter has hoped to do.) The Jap radio propagandists sneak admirably of the "burn ing spirit of our naval units on the spot (chiefly, so far. burning desire to keep out of the way of the superior American navy.) ON BANKS OR, NEDERltl! Airborne Troops Hopping Mad ai Surrender Demand By STANLEY MAXTED Representing the Combined Allied Press WITH ALLIED AIRBORNE FORCES IN THE ARNHEM AREA, 5 p. m. Sept. 22 (Delayed) (IP) On this sixth day in this mortar and shell riven pocket the airborne troops are hourly becoming more amazing to me. This morning enemy loud speakers again blared out in clumsy English asking these men to surrender. It was a silly thing to do. It made these chaps hopping mad. You should have heard their language. men ine wnoio area was in tensively shelled and mortared for the rest of the morning. Our commpnder walked around among his men as coolly as though it was their regimental sports day. The guts of these In .. r , ' - .i'-.ri si-m rlrrrrf Theeal hefollowed from the Mississippi the ends of the earth! airborne troops is wonderful. As I write, it seems there is no point of the compass from which we cannot get martared or shelled or machine-gunned or sniped. One part of the peri meter is held by sergeants the glider pilots. Every one of them is a sergeant or staff sergeant. The medical corps is on the job right around- the clock. Theirs is a particular sort of courage. Some 943 prisoners have come in today iust Germans who have had enough and are stun ned by the cold ferocity of the men who do not know what to quit means. The artillery of the second army has come into ranee and engaged enemy targets today. It was sheer music. We hope the urcnestra swells, we are pretty sure it will. Cina M. Brookfield, for more than 31 years a resident of Klamath Falls, died in a Klam ath Falls hospital Friday eve ning following an illness of two years. Mrs. BrooKlieid is survived by her husband, George E., and one daughter, Alma Sweetman, 749 N. 9th. she leaves scores of friends to mourn her pass ing. Mrs. Brookfields interest was in her family and her home. Two sons preceded Mrs. Brookfield in death. George was killed in a train accident in 1918, and Wilfred, familiarly known as Happy." was Killed in an automobile accident here in 1926. Mrs. Brookfield was a member of the Macabce lodge. Final rites will be held from Whitlock's chapel at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday with interment in the Linkvillc ' cemetery. FRS FACT I BF (Continued from Page One) inations in the first instance, the democratic party, acting through a regularly convened convention, withdrew the nom inations." Harry Seay, chairman of the state democratic executive com mittee, in a statement at Dallas said "This is a great victory. It ends all question as to where the electoral vote will go. "I hope this will end the internal strife in the party and that all Texas democrats can get together in n harmonious cam paign." "The court has spoken and I will abide by the ruling of the court," said Latham. SEES LAST CHANGE TROY, N. Y.;, Sept. 23 (ff) When the war is over this coun try will have "one more chance to prove that our form of gov ernment is best," declares Vice President Henry A. Wallace. . Wallace, speaking last night at a rally sponsored by a united labor committee for Roosevelt, asserted "There is one more opportunity to show that free enterprise is progress," and add ed: "After this war there will not be unemployment in Russia. We've got to do as well as they. We must do better or else step back." . If, after the war, "we have unemployment or if we drop our standard of living," he stat ed, "remember that the people affected will not stand for it. They took it once after the last war,, but they know-now that it is unnecessary and that it can be prevented." He called for a strong liberal party to unite farmers, working men and business men "into a single group for a single pur pose, avoiding "dastardly in fluences which he said republi cans used in the past to set farmers against workers and both against industry. FORT KLAMATH In a love ly nuptial ceremony Friday eve ning, September 8, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Davies of 249 Roosevelt street, in Poca- tello, Ida., their daughter, Mary Jean Davies, was married to Marine Platoon Sergeant Sam uel Emerson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willard Beckman of 419 North Garfield street, formerly of Fort Klamath, where for many years Beckman was em ployed in the Crater Lake park service. Judge Isaac McDougall offi ciated at the ceremony. The bride was attended by her sister, Marie Davis, as maid of honor, and by Priscilla De vaney as bridesmaid. Miss Davies wore a gown of pink net with a gardenia corsage. Miss Devaney wore a blue gown and Miss Cotant, the pianist, was attired in yellow. Both had gardenia corsages. Willard Beck man, father of the bridegroom, was best man. A reception honoring the couple was held after the wed ding. The table was centered with a two-tier cake decorated with a marine and bride and an American flag. White tapers and bouquets of sweet peas also decorated the refreshment table. The bridegroom recently re turned from serving overseas 32 months, having participated in four major battles. He en tered the service three years ago from Fort Klamath after having attended school at Hon Klamath, Uhuoquin and Klam ath Falls. Platoon Sgt. Emerson left Saturday for Seattle, and will be joined there by his bride in a week. (Continued from Page One) bolstered the drive to the touMt bend of the Ncdcr Rhine, acting as infantry support for the a-' mored column, made up of one o uruaurs linest tank regimente.l ' The drive eased a situation! " which was described authorlterl tively last night as critical. Aitl full strength, the encircled divi-J ' sion probably totaled 8000 men.) Mor-.ie is high," the division- al commander radioed late lastr night. "We will hold out." in the rising battle for War-)- saw, "heavy fighting is going on ' in sectors of the western bankl (ot the Vestula) where soviet units are landing," said ' broad cast communique from the Pol-' ish partisan commander, Gen. Bor. Moscow remained silent . on the action. .- . i Gulf Opened ; i The Gulf of Finland was oneri. : ed to the soviet Baltic fleet byl ine rea army s capture or. Tal linn, Estonia capital which wai ? made a military port by Peter the Great. A city of 137,792 . population, red tiled towers and " cobbled streets nearly 200 miles west of Leningrad, it was won yesterd-.y by Marshal Leonid A. Govorov's forces in a drive which swept up 800 other com- : munities. .s. Moscow disDatches said Rmut-r sian troops were battling within.' tne outer defenses of Riga, Lat-.-. vian capital, 170 miles south of -Tallinn, in .the campaign to wipe ; out German Baltic armies. -,- Red army tanks were reported sweeping close to the Romanian Hungarian frontier in a battle of ' the plains. Among cities seized was Arad, important road and . rail junction 10 miles from the, hnrrfpf nnH 19.9. milpe cmitHoaef. ' of Budapest, the Hungarian capi In Italy a Dincer action aimed- at Bologna was developed; against Field Marshal Gen. Al bert Kesselririg's cracked Gothic' line. U. S. fifth army troops struck to the threshold of Futa Pass, 29 miles below Bologna, with the ; capture of Monte Citerna a h d Monte Tronale. Units of the. British eighth army, which tore, up the Gothic line's Adriatic an-1 chor by the seizure of Rimini, -turns northwestward for a 73-. 1 mile push toward Bologna, a city:-, of 190,000 through which pass nazi escape routes to Trieste ancU. the Brenner Pass. , "Fair skies, warmer days and cool nights" ahead, according to the prediction of tho U. S. wea therman. Maximum temperature Friday reached 72 degrees and contin ued Indlnn summer weather was anticipated with pleasure for the weekend. Saturday at 1:30, the mercury had advanced to 73 degrees. TO BOOST SAFETY PORTLAND. SeDt. 23 ?) A committee representing the CIO International Woodworkers of Amnripa nnd emnloves outlined n tentative program today for safer working conditions in the noVthwest lumber industry.. Tho nlan included: Establishment of a 10-man labor-management committee to report findings on unsafe conditions. Complete monthly inspection of each operation. Periodic checkups to assure In jured workmen of medical care, worKmen s compensation, ana re habilitation training if needed. Union officials termed the plan "an important step In safety program for which we have been fighting a long time, A union demand that Oregon employers be forced to operate under the stnte compensation act was rejected two weeks ago by E BOSTON. Sept. 23 (P) Gov. John W. Bricker declared today that the United States should assume the leadership in organ izing to preserve the peace, and recommended mat a worio court be established. "Incipient wars must be put down by persuasion or econom ic pressure, the republican vice presidential candidate told his party's Massachusetts conven tion. "When this can not be done," he added in a prepared text released by his campaign staff, "our country must be willing to join with others if necessary to prevent small wars from be comins big ones." A program for preserving the peace, the Ohio governor assert ed, should include and attack "the very causes of war tne problems of currency, of credit, ot markets, of trade relations, boundaries and a hundred other problems." Doris Cromwell In Seamen's Service NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 23 (ff) Doris Duke Cromwell, after a training period here, has left for overseas service in the unit ed seamen's service.. Frank Bancroft, gulf coast di rector of the united seamen's service, said today that the to bacco heiress had left New Or leans a week ago to sail from New York. While here she was engaged in familiarizing herself with the policies and practices of the USS. U.S. BY JAP PUPPET! (Continued from Page One) - al governors as commanders, of conscripts in the provinces. . Tokyo boasted that the forth-; coming American invasion' of J the islands would give the Jap-j anese a chance "with one strate- gic blow" to "bring complete destruction to the enemy." The broadcaster presumably meant i that Japan's elusive fleet would" at last come out to fight.; ! . .: - . The fleet has .been, leaving ; all the fighting . to, imperial' ground forces which are over- running Chinese armies on thet: continent, and putting up a bit- ter defense on Peleliu island; in i southern Palau. 600 miles east v of the Philippines. - ' A flotilla of seven Japanese!! barges trying to bring aid to the Peleliu garrison, was de- molished by an American gun-J boat and carrier planes. ,' "The enemy continued to re-' sist bitterly from heavily forti- fied defense positions on Um-t qrbrogol mountain," Adm. Ches- fer W. Nimitz reported as the! invasion went into its ninth day,:i U. S. carrier and land-basedi bombers, ruling the skies southlj of the Philippines, knocked out, eight Japanese vessels and rout- ed a convoy of 12 small freight-J ers. Only encouraging allied news from the Orient continued to" come from Burma where 'Chi nese patrols were reported op-i erating seven miles from the1" China border about 25 milesj southeast of the former Jap-n anese base of Myitkyina. ' Stockman and Ellsworth Lunch i Wirh Eisenhower . 5 PARIS, Sept. 23 fP) Three" Pacific northwest congressmen arrived here yesterday from Nor-" mandy. 5 They were Hams Ellsworths and Lowell Stockman of Oregon," and Walt Horan of Washington,; all republicans, and included ln a party of 10 which complained recently the-army was keeping them from taking a look at the1 U. S. war effort in France, 3 After lunching with Gon. Dwight D. Eisenhower, they' were given a briefing on tho sup1 ply and tactical situation by Lt. Gen. John C. H. Lee, deputy commander and commanding general of the service of supplies. LEGAL NOTICES IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF TUB STATE OF OREGON. FOR KLAMATH COUNTY. IN THE MATTKR OF THE ESTATE O? NELLIE E. SHULMin.;. Decerned. Notico hereby Riven that I havi filed my Flnnl Account as Admlnlntntot of the Estate of Nellie E. Shulmlre, de ceased, and that the Court hai let October 17. 1044, at the hour of 10:00. A. M. ns tho time for the hearing of ob jections to nld final account and tn settlement thereof. Dated this 8th dny of September 1044. DANIEL E. SHULM1RE, AnminiBiraior. S. P-J 5-23.30; Q. 7 NO the war labor board.