PACE TWO HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON NAZIS REPORT SURRENDER OF TOILS' (Continued from Face One) ntHl fighting. He said Lt. Gen. Sir Miles Dcmpscy's column from Uie south had thus far fail ed to reach "the remnants of the British first airborne divi sion in the area of Amncm. Stilt Urgent . rrtainlv there was nothing In the fierce British effort to build up a broader supply life line to the north mat wouio in dicate any lessened urgency to pushing power up to the. Rhine. In a swift advance northeast of Eindhoven the Tommies drove through Deurne and Helniond and on 15 miles north to Oploo and Mill, forging a second sup ply line parallel to the first and reaching from Eindhoven almost to Nijmcgen. This provided a buffer against German attacks from the east against the main supply road, but it was still subject to hard German pressure from the west. Fight to Kluve Ten miles to the southeast, British and American forces fought through the forest ap proaches to Kleve, northern bas tion of the Siegfried line, in a double-headed invasion of the reich from Holland. , (A wholly unconfirmed French broadcast said Kleve, eight miles inside Germany, had fallen). Records Shattered At 9th Annual Livestock Show (Continued from Page One) pound and closed with Earl Ager of Tulelake paying $2.50 per pound for the animal, or a total of $237.50. Liskey brothers topped all bids for the grand champion Hereford raised dj Lois Lea Kan dra, Merrill, by paying SI per pound for the lu3u-pound ani mal. Representative Henry Semon, Henley farmer, paid $2.25 per pound, or $180, for the grand champion Southdown, grown by Edith Gift The reserve cham pion Hampshire brought SI per found, Klamath Packing paying 139. This was the re-sale lamb. 1st. Lincoln. Betty Brandjesxr, grow er. $1.15, 9146.05, C. O. Bronson. Sjuyer lor Peyton company. lit Shropshire, Ruth Peyton. 41.10, $115.50, Klamath Ice and Storage. 2nd Hampshire. Betty Brandjeaky, S1.05. $123.80. Ewauna Box. 3rd Hampshire. Donald Quick, S1.00. $133, Currln's for Drugs. 4th Hampshire, Betty Brandjeaky, S3 cents, SB9.45. Scott Warren. 5th Hampshire. Betty Brandjeaky, 85 cents, $99.45, Reed Tractor. 6th Hampshire, Patricia Noonan, 85 cents, $102, Kerns Implement. 7th Hampshire, Joan Noonan, $1.25. $116,25. Klamath Furniture. 8th Hampshire. Robert Burleigh, $1.25, $137.50, Reed Tractor. 9th Hampshire, Stanley McClellan. $2 50, $237.50. Earl Ager. Tulelake. Pen of three. 1st Lincoln. Betty Brand jesky, 35 cents, $121.45. Reed Tractor. Pen of three, 1st Hampshire, Betty Brandjeaky, 45 cents, $174.60, Tulana Farms. Pen of three. 2nd Hampshire. Donald Clark. 45 cents. $150.30, Pacific. Co operaUve Supply. Pen of three, 3rd Hampshire, Elsie oioui, 40 cenu, feitcan caic. Pen of three. 4th Hampshire. Stanley McClellan, 35 cents, $106.40, Lombard Motors. One fat hog was offered as the first animal for sale. The 1st Hampshire tra sold by Larry Gourley at 55 cents, total of $120.45, to Lee Hendricks lor Drugs. BEEF STEERS Grand 'champion Hereford, Lois Lea Kandra. $1.00. $1030, Llskey Brothers. Reserve champion Angus, Dale Web ber. 80 cents, $796. Dick B. MtUer. Champion Shorthorn, Shirley Masten, 83 cent. $637.44, Balslger Motor. ' 1st Light Hereford. Jo Ann Kandra, 05 cents. $344.70. Reed Tractor. 1 1st Light Angus, Jerry Masten, 54 ccnls. $407.10. Ewauna Box. " 2nd Heavy Hereford, Vernon Haley. WW.,.,, n. u, inonenson. : 2nd light Hereford. Bill Hill, 70 cents. $605.50. Lombard Motors. 3rd heavy Hereford. Dorothy Hagel ' atein. 62 cents. S60.7n. Win.m. s-. ; 3rd Ilaht Hereford. Jerry Smalley, 51 w.i.a, ma.ii, n, rvauna. i 4lh heavy Hereford, Dorothy Hagel- statn, 73 cents, $763, Raed Tractor. 4lh light Hereford. Merle llasklns, 50 rents, $ad7. Sears Roebuck. 3th heavy Hereford. Honnte Tralman. 52 rents, $500.76. Kerns Implement. 5th light Hereford. Ellleen Noonan, 53 cents. $533.13, H. D. Mortoiuon, Pol lean Bay. 6th heavy Hereford, Ttuth Hagelsteln, 55 cents. $333 15. Earl Ager. Tulelake. 6th light Hereford. Llla Wlnebarger. 61 cents. Slim ml, Weyerhaeuser, 7th heavy Hereford. Jaequelyn Kyler, 49 cents. SS63.S0. Safeway. 7th light Hereford. Iltlcry Wtnobargar, 61 cent,. Mt0 55. Weyerhaeuser. Slh heavy Hereford. Danny Barry, 46 cents. SM3.R2. Balslger Oil. 8th hravy Hereford. Jack DeVaul, 53 cents. .Mi7 03. Ewauna Box. 10th heavy Hereford, Edwtth Gift, 55 cents. $.VJ8. S.iieway. 11th heavy Urn-lord. I-aura Lou Hill. 61 cents, .MV). Herald. News. Purchase of Miss Hill's steer brought new blood into the bid ding as this is the first time The Herald and News has participat ed in the Junior Livestock show. Sifted stock was offered in . the sheds to interested buyers, j this stock considered not quite good enough by tlie judges to view with fat stuff that went into the arena. This particular lot went to the following: Angus. Dale Webber, grower, pur chased by Emll's at $230.10. Shorthorn. Donald Clark. $161.40, Wey arhnuser. Hereford. Evelyn Haynes, $238.20, Lamm Lumber company. Hereford. Virginia Masten. $343.70. Emll's. Hereford. Carl Rajnus. $246.M, Lamm Lumber company. Hereford. Delmer Haskins, $277.20. Weyerhaeuser. Hereford. Charles Sullivan. $271.50. Weyerliauser. Closure of Schools Eyed to Alleviate Shortage of Labor (Continued from Page One) the farms, migrant agricultural labor, Mexican nationals, and wai prisoners still indicated to the committee that a definite shortage exists and should be made up from every possible source. It was requested that all resi dents of the Klamath basin who can possibly spare the time, should register at the farm labor office at Klamath Falls and Tule lake for full or part-time work. The Klamath office is at 116 S. 6th, and Clyde James is in charge; the Tulelake office is in the center of Tulelake with W. H. Anderson in charge. Growers are urged to put in their re quests for labor several days in advance so that all possible la bor may be recruited and avail able for them. The potato harvest got under way earlier than normal, with maximum digging starting the last of this week, and peak dig ging pe-aps will be reached by Monday. It was pointed out that shipments to date have broken all records with a total of 86 cars in a single day last week, requiring the use of a large num ber of workers in the grading and sorting crews, further de creasing harvest help in the fields. Growers exneet heaw shipments to continue through out the harvest season, due to snortage of potatoes in the Paci fic coast markets. - - From May, 1939, to June, 1944, Pan American clippers carried 60.000 passengers, traveled 10.. 000,000 miles and traversed the Atlantic 2000 times. TANK BYPASS Jfl POSITIONS ONPEULIU (Continued from Pago One) ing, exploded so violently that the attacking plane was tossed 300 feot. Other southwest planes sank n lO.Ouu-lon Japanese tanker and damaged a 300U-ton freighter in Dutch Celebes, while airdromes on that island and Coram were hit with 122 tons of bombs. Adm. Nimitz announced a to tal of 7313 Japanese were killed on Peleliu through Sunday and an estimated 975 on Angiiur, six miles southward, where the 81st army division continued mop ping Up operations. Elements of the 81st have re inforced the Peleliu marines, but apparently they have not yet seen action in the main north western battle zone. j Eighth Army Crosses Rubicon ROME. Sent. 26 (,TI The eighth armv has hammered across the historic Rubicon and the allied commander in the Mediterranean expressed hope today tnc crossing will lead, as with a famous commander in the past, to a decisive victory for allied forces in Italy. Crossing of the little stream which f :csar made famous came after German counterattacks slowed advances both of the fifth and eighth armies. The Rubicon Hows into the Adriatic just north of Rimini. Emergency landing mats for theaters of operation where equipment must be carried by air are now made from alum- num alloy, which weighs about 50 per cent less than similar steel mats. EDITORIALS ON NEWS (Continued From Pso One) bombers dropped 3500 tons on the niuij. In the Pacific, a 300-ton raid is still a big one. When the time conies tas tl will) that we drop on the Japs the iinmense timingo (hat wo now drop regularly and syste matically on the niizls, the little yellow men will begin to real ize what they are up against. e AN THE home front, the po litical buttle entered a new phase when FDR came down on Saturday night from the remote heights on which he had planned to sit us the essential eonununder-in-chiof mid .started close infighting in the ring. Dewey came right back at him last night. One suspects that he had been sitting impatiently, with his pockets full o( ammunition and his finger on the trigger, wait ing for the chance. He was ob viously well prepared, and it doesn't seem reasonable that he could have got it all together since Saturday night. TT WAS a good nose-punching, A body-Jolting speech, UTTER LY unlike anything that came from Landon or Willkic. and it is quite certain that Republi cans LOVED it. It changed NO diehard Roosevelt votes, of course. That can't bo done at this stage, lt brought no hcw-to-thc-llne Re publican votes, which were all FOR Dewey, anyway. Its political effect will depend upon the number of In-between-crs who may have been influ enced one way or the other. AT LEAST, it proved that Dewey is no set-up. FDR, politically astute, had already recognized that fact, which is why he came down so promptly from the Olympian heights he had planned to occupy through out the campaign. There will probably be few pretty flowers for Ferdinand to sniff during the remainder of this campaign. POLITICAL history tolls us 1 that campaigns that get down to fundamentals that Americans UKLIKV15 IN lire like Hal. Lincoln's first cam paign was no rose-tossing con test. e e "yillS writer, who entered this campaign expecting merely to volo AGAINST FDK and one man government, Is rapidly reaching the point where he can vote sincerely FOR DEWEY. Restoration of Integrity Called For by Dewey (Continued from Pago One) democratic national committee that tho U. S. census figures on unemployment us of March, 1040, were 8,000,000 "and this included everybody over the oge of 14 who was out of school and looking for work." Gov, Dewey said the 10,000. 000 figure was that of the American Federation of Lit-bor. The GOP nominee's special train carried him to Sapulpa, where after a welcoming cele bration on the high school stops for Mrs. Dewey, tho New York governor and his wife planned a brief visit with the hitter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Orlu Hull. Next stop was Tulsa for a series of conferences, after which the special was to leave for Albany, N. Y. But all of this was an anti climax to Dewey's, punching comeback in reply to what he described as the president's "speech of mud-slinging, ridi cule and wise cracks," which the New York governor contended "plumbed the depths of dema gogy by dragging into this cam paign the names of Hitler and Goebbels x x." Disclaiming any Intent to use such tactics, the bushy-browed republican nominee asserted "the winning of this war and the achievement of a people's peace arc too sacred to be cast off with frivolous language." Former Klamath Man Loses Life In Weed Hotal Fire (Continued from Paga One) New York, guest, who was sealed in the lobby when ho no ticed smoke seeping through the walls. Uob Fish was tho clerk on i.uty. The, Duusmtilr fire depart ment, aided by a largo vuluiitevr crew, responded to an limn at H 40 p. in , iinit called for aid (rum Mt. Sluialtt nnd Weed. Kle ve n huso lines wero luid nnd for two hours the (no burned furi ously. At midnight the blaze was under control and Sunday til about noon, wo. kers wero able to go through tho debris and chaired tlinbe In search of vic tims. Taylor's body was found In his room on the third lour. Mays was foil. id on (he fourth Hour. Until men were fully clothed. Wont In Hlitory Elmer Jenks, editor of the Dunsinulr News, culled the blaze Ilia worst (ire In the history of the northern California town and the only one to take life. Jenks described several incidents of heroism on the pint of firemen who rescued guests, truppod when they returned to their rooms for their belongings. Hill lirunner. retired SP con ductor 'ho mode his home ot the Weed hotel, suffered a slightly burned left hand. Gerhard Ayotle, another SP employe, suf fered bud cuts. Trapped by Fir One Weed hotel guest, Austin II. Dudger. ruilroad employe, was on the street at the time the fire was i t ported, lto ran to the sec ond flo.r to gather his pcrsonul possessions and found ho could not retreat, lie went up to the third floor, found his position there precarious and ascended to the fourth. Firemen rescued him by using a bidder which reached only to the third floor and plac ing n shorter one atop the other. Dlancho Fowler, SP omploye and hotel resident, was rescued In the same manner by firemen as she leaned from tho fourth flo. ! -'nil Sacramento avenue Town Turns Out The town of Dunsinulr turned out to aid In fighting '.ho fire. The "'nolnvs a fire chief and CONTINUOUS SHOW i Box TODAY An WEDNES Office Opens 12:30 DAY rcrrnm PHO.NE 456! Box Office Open 1:30-6:45 -AND- Box Office Opens 1:30-6:4$ v NOW . Vr,', . .. :V-MZZ1 V -'- Tfc' V3 t 71 nITT W' M Mm T if A ik rV-jj Aloxi"sMITHl ' Donald CRISP 1tfTS 1 Alan HALE W Alan HALE. mi f aikwg rnoNc aw I Box Office Open 6:45 -Ends-Wednesday HATB'JAPSl YEAH... HE'S. GOT A REASON l They're keeping ' him' away from the girl he kissed good-bye yesterday . . . spoiling tomorrow's dreams. and today's way of life! let N OUR STAGE! N PERSON! The Famous Western Movie Star ATOM With His WONDER HORSE m ADMISSION Adults 50c Children . Under 12 . . . FEDERAL TAX INCLUDED Servicemen tfl In Uniform . . ON THE SCREEN mm iiiKaisn R 1 IukM jI Fftli'inTiH'.'iBlHllimil 1 ta:. iunt clilcf and till other llt'h) Is volunteer, A barber hn oc ctipyitiu iiuui tr in In one corner ot tho bulldluu, whs thu only portion of the aliueluro not tlu stroyed. USD rnoinn In an ndjolni" btilldl'i were din lined bv wilier but work Is i!uin on theio n usiiiil, ,'enks mill. Iitisa of the Weed litilel puis tiiiilo a strain on the Inwu of DiiiiMimli- wlileh, like all towns In war time, needs every avail able room to handle peiinnnciil and transient Iruiln. U. S. Ships to End Calls in Argentine Ports WASHINGTON. Sept. 2(1 (,1'i In u new eriu kdowu on Arsen Una. the United States govern nient hiu iiidered Aincriciin (lui; ships to stop (M 11 1 hi at Ai'Keu tlna iioi'ls on 1 1 1 1 1- homeward voyniioH, The order Is reported to become effective October I, The move apparently was de sliined vli'tinilly to nit off lin noils from Aruentliui to tin Unlleil Slutos. In thin coitnee Hon, It wan eiiorted that recent pureluises of Arnontliir corn flu ffed purposes either hail been delivered to the United Stales or were en route, Trout Shuts Out Philadelphia 6-0 OKTItOlT. Mich. Sept '.t t.l'i rani tl)iy) Trout turned In his 17th victory iniahua U riiv feuljt today .i he hurled a six. hitter to hut out the Philadel phia Athletics II to (I. The victory pushed the De troit Tillers a half Kumo nlieiui of the St. Luubi Drowns In the torrid American leinjue Inn cIiukc. The Browns play the lloMton Hed Sox IoiiIkIiI. Soplomber 26, i nrnn m.. "tub Hill) POCKET ID! EST "'"""nurd Irn,,, ,, wel of Tulii,,,, " comnumiip,,, oull",,,4v ,","."""' f v. (,! ? 'n.th eiiptured the ,m.M .'" roim, mile, norii, , . ' '.urk, I lioider. M,,, I ' ' "uns,r)i, On Hi . .. I ""1(1 A. ti..v.mv', army has nw ,...... "ipitil Purlanl ,,,, ; " Ml nl eommuimne iJ ",n lliilllleeil , (n ,.,nl 111 ..in. i)2 a,;,;,,,:;; 'ZJXtm (OiithWMt eoa:,l, ' on ,h eri,. ' I hal .lie miV'u,, wax lominu In II,.' i lc. ""I dure (he I'M,,,,,,,,, , ' " ""' I".,,,,',-,,,,., wV' eiiptuied (,e ,,,, orl r(" h .vkl. lilldwiiy ,e wrrn T. ' anil HaniiMilii 'lluu Hilton In Critical Condition, Report lnh;re7T"!:''"l,:l'H day ,,iKl.twitlw.,,,;,nnrrl'l"' at the Dntlwn.iil Ulir c'."" reinaiiiid enlunl, nci-ordirie I 111 on , ulteiidm,; phyjirun Hilton. Iliii l.kf, iinv'. ploye. is a( HilKuie timi, a. i Is eoiiM'iiiu, only ui iniervaii h l.i under, tnml ,min fractured ykull. Hilton hiui em t. la.llleil A-h llrlng HfUn tin! i l I : ' mi Box Office Opens 6:45 P. M. TdiirW WEDNESDAY ISPAHSLEDSUEPEISESl I I SECOND BIG HT ANEW f Insu jss . I uai vr fe. luriiiial mrAmi . GOES DOWN ' IN HISTORY! T"'' f.n L 4 jji '8 Tom NEAL Am SAVAGE J. Carrel NAISH