Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 06, 1944, Page 1, Image 1

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It
MM W
lav's Sews
.mis 1PNKINS
r.,r..V.n.w today Isn't
IT. didn't break tlirouKh uiu
JJ AKM-,-,. r.
rUTo 5 Invasion HK" J'K
H ti iroiii ho Vllltilto of
ilerdoy. , .
! . .'pANWllIl-K. stopped for the
MEA ,,i im the north, wo
? Ih NEW drive (torn our
iJT. S Uw SOUTH of Aachen
aflhcr. I mtlo to imtlcato
,1 PIIH I'
iTHtn- . , nlvE Tim
rnY.,V.i"
.-..e nil
$is'no bust.
.... n.m.ii I'tmtlmia to rcliv
lr " .i.-i. Nllmt'Ueil snllrnl
slr-borno troops m woll us
Fwllch this Nljmegon
I u,cl .,:.. . imnortiint part
,i. wir 119 was Miivv. 7
C Mlhlol nhool In lh l'"a
tittoWvo (mining of tho tart
l..,nrllilip ti In
.'. i . . ... .1,,'l.hnriineM with
Sh l i UrllLh flHht to holU
ft i d tho fierceness, of the
iimnsii efforts U into on.
L,.r .i llllle break today.
iW . wither CLE
iurhrn. permitting aur Pl'"l' to
I', to the fighting in bl
9S"2.' ..,..llw.. Iin.n't
Th. nrnriiiu n"" -
i.nt Mi.ti. whero our In
anlrvmen cllnu grimly . to tho
SURFACE of Fort Drlunl in me
ace of coiivernniHi mrm u--"-....,..,
Urn (mm nearby &or
nan forts mid o on digging for
he nul holed up In the Intricate
unnel system neiow me siuunu,
kviVLL be wire II In litis west
i" urnii iiBhUni! wn keep our
i s 1 s n e e remembering Nor.
Insndy. when wo wire slopped
igaln nn ogam wntn wu
hi. Germnn lino bill finally
IlROKE THROUGH.
It wo II do us wen nrre on inc
homo front n our boys are do-
n on the bloody troniiors oi
lermnny, victory will ultimately
c ours,
V"Nlhe other sldo of Europe.
fJ II,. nrnFiiH nf rirlvlllO tllO
azls back to their home fortress
.alls iocs on NOT spectacularly
)tlt STEADILY.
The Hum Wins are 111 tho out'
Skirts of Belgrade. At BelKradu
llicy will cut the great main-line
tallrnad by which tho Germans
fount ol mere in tno unman
limit et out If they itel out.
jEjIlninles of tho number of
ncsc (jcrmnns run irom oigni
a 25 divisions, indicating that
fie don't really know how many
nero rc.)
Russian renorts suiicc.it that
JNcow has already written
luncnry off and Is now looking
)N UEYONU to Austria whero
iioiwiBjIs, are being Invited to
fo-opernto wllh Kussla In throw
ins oil the German yoke.
Moscow Is pictured ns bellcv
Ins that the Hunuarlnn hnmo
front may collupxu nl any mo.
ncni as uuigarln did,
N tho Pacific, around 40 of our
Liberators linmh .Inn nil In.
Jiallallons nl Bnllkpnpnn again.
no m uinbhuuhtku by
KhlCrj (bl'i'HIi.n nf llw. rllultuwi.l
fnrt niect 4U Jap Zeros mid the
cuvlcit fink of Hie Pacific war.
I n tone Jnn bomber flew In
wnl of our Liberators and gave
ne Jnn nnfi.nlrpi-T.ri ..-
A. . .... k f.t,l'.' Wtl
fw ground the HANGE by radio
"'""li. the flak was AC
J-URATE ns u.,.ll . i,nn..
. ...i.r me jnp mtos were shot
flOWll bV 1 11. I,nnr. ',. ...
fombers. Seven Lihnrnlnr urnrn
But n lot nr i,. ..n ........
nln .,..i " " v"
r ,, OIIIUIM:,
. . A
1TN lk. i . . . . .
4J ' ' " "u,no ironi, tn Ills sec
levdi DOII,lenl speech, KTJR
evidently worr ed hv ,.,,1.1 1 .,.
Mness nbout Illiimn., 1.1.
in ..ii.-.. .
Minr,.1'".. action commltloc)
iiinn. U4j;,rtsoliilnu communist
SIP0!"1- "0 says:
i hnw. ...... . . . .
hot iLi.- - .
nv n. lnc sttppori or
" person nr urn...,
n pnrrtm... 1 buiiiiiuiiuu
Ihor "n "m T fnsclRm or nny
"cr forclm, Idcolouv which
onunued on Pago Thrco)
in Thn Shanla-Cniieade Wonderland
!l!S'lfl,JJ1!ll!ilPiljiit!!iPiiiil!,ii
It? ii sNIg1
October 6.1944
Msx. (Oct. 4) . 68 Mln.
Precipitstion last 24 hours ;
Stream year to date
Normal .13 Last year
Forecasti Clear. ..... .
.38
.00
..00
.00
PRICE 5 CENTS
KLAMATW f-'ALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY,
Allies Take
Greek Port;
Seal Off Gulf
HOME, Oct. 6 (Vl'l Allied land forces of the Adriatic have
sealed oil the entrance to the jull ol Corinth In their Greek
Invasion by capturing the fortllled port ol Hlon, allied head
quarters announced today. Official Greek reports indicated that
more than nail the Peloponnesus was securely tn the hands ol
British troops and Greek patriots.
Greek Premlor George Papandreou said in a statement that
a minister of his cabinet had visited Trlpolis where "security
battalions" Greeks lighting on the side of the Germans had
surrendered to British ollicers without any skirmish."
Trlpolis, In the east central Peloponnesus, Is 60 miles south-
cast of ruptured Pntral on the
golf of. uorlnlli and 73 miles
BAL1KPAP ATI OIL
By SPENCER DAVIS
A L L 1 K U IlKADyU AKTF.nS,
NKW UUINKA. Oct. 0 (!') Gen.
nnuiiiiiK MncArlhur disclosed to-
duy that n second crippling blow
was dealt Japan's big source of
nvlutlun gasoline nnd lubricating
nil at Uallkpupan Tuesday by
Liberator bombers, seven 01
which were lost In fierce sky
battles with 40 Zeros.
At least 11) and perhaps 24 of
the enemy planes were shot
down during a battle of more
than an hour over the Borneo
baso while 40 tons of concentrat
ed explosives touched off huge
ulusts among refineries and
storage tanks.
Freighters Sunk
The coiniiiuiiloue also reported
ulna enemv freighters sunk or
damaged during raids by allied
planes against the southern Phil
ippines. Ambolna and Curani.
Yesterday's communique 1 had
listed 111 ocean-going vessels ss
vletimi nf bomblncs. .
A communique; last night et
Pearl Harbor by Adm, CljcMer
W. Nlmlli told of' the bombing
of a Japanese destroyor and s
large cargo ship near I wo Jlma,
In tho Volcano Islands, 700 miles
south of Tokyo. It did not claim
fli.v were sunk.
NlmlU' communique brought
(Continued on Pago Tlircoj
Airplane Engine
Plant Blasted
LONDON, Oct. fl II) A fleet
of more than 1200 American
iipnw hnmlirrt nttnekerl an air
plane engine plant In Berlin and
numerous other Industrial objec
tives nnd airdromes In Germany
today.
sirnne forces nf British heavy
bombers dumped a profusion of
two-ton bombs and more man
IISO.OOO Incendiaries last night
on Snarbrucken, a major run
center and arsenal In the SleR
fried line behind Melz. Enemy
broadcasts said It was a terror
raid.
British Mosquito before dawn
gave the German capital a sam
ple of the heavier shower of ex
plosives rained by one large
force of the four-englncd Ameri
can planes in daylight..
No Gas Burned,
Says Killer Kane
BOISK, Idaho, Oct. 6 (VP)
Col. John R. Kane, Gowcn field
station commandant, today
rclterntcd a previous denial
that low grade gasoline was be
ing destroyed at the baso ns
charged by Representative
White (D-Idaho) In congress.
Kane, known for leading air
raids over tho Pluestl, Romania,
oild fields, declared:
"The only Justifiable accusa
tion concerning tho burning of
gasoline by . 'Killer Kane' can
bo made by tho pcoplo of
Ploestl, Romania."
"An Investigation Is welcome
nt Gowcn field," ho told reporters,
Marines vs. California
Modot
Not.
15
17
16
23.
2
21
U
24
27
13
0 ,
c Field, Saturday, 2 P. M.
Leathernecks Ramblers
Namot Pot. Names Not.
Darnell LER Unger 75
Taylor LTR Conrad 24
yrne LCR Cameron , 25
Golden C B. Johnson 28
O'Connor RCL Beverly . 22
Hazon RTL Lo Rond 63
QPin REL Giorlich 69
Albritton QB ' Snook 98
R. Walters LHR .. Cornell .82
J. Walters RHL Kirstene 37
La Poglla FB Edmonston 89
HomlH cui j nunt t-lork, referee; Marble Look, umpire;
Dr d !!' heod linesman; George Peters, field judge;
90 Wright, timekeeper.
southwest of Athens.
K Ion wus overwhelmed In an
eastward advanco along tho gulf
of Corinth from Patral.
Visits Kalamal
Tho Creek announcement
also said the government mem
ber, landing from tho island of
Kylhera, off Greece's south
coast, also had visited Kalamai
on tho southwest coast.
This indicated tho territory
Intervening between Kalamai
and Trlpolis was virtually free
Ol uermans.
Battalions Surrender
Enemy security battalions
hove surrendered at a number
of other points in Greece, a
communique said. Fifteen hun
dred prisoners were taken at
Patral alone.
Immediately after seizing
Rlon, seven miles up the coast
from Pntrnl, the British turned
enemy coastal guns captured
there against largo numbers of
small craft in which the Ger
mans were trying to flee nortlv
wnrd across tho gulf of Corinth
An official statement said good
results were obtained in this
shelling.
Boy Falls Under
Car, Hurt$Arm
Five-yoar-old Gilbert Spald
lug, son .of Mr. and Mrs. Ed
ward Spalding of 1450 Home
dalo, hud his arm crushed and
received brultes on his body,
when ho was pulled under bis
father's car- by a rope tied
around his waist. Tho rone
caught in tho moving wheels of
uic VCI1IC10.
Gllbort and his brothor, Gall
who Is eight, were ploying
"horse" wlille they walked
down the roud to meet their
father, fcdward Spalding, when
ho returned from work Thurs
day night. Tho older boy had
tied n rope around his . little
brother, and lie held one end
of it as they climbed on the run
iilng board to rldo the short dis
tance homo with their father.
When Gall occldcntly dropped
tho rope, it caught in the wheels
of the car and pulled Gilbert
Into the road, where tho car
ran over his arm,
Beats Cards
Jack Kramer. Brownie Hurler,
who struck out 10 Cardinals In
today's game at Sportsman's
park to beat the National loague
champs 6-2 and glvo the Browns
2 to 1 edge In the world series.
The USO has definitely ac
cepted Klamath Fulls' invitation
to .set up a service center here,
reports Clarence Humble, chair
man of the Klsmnlh Military
Service committee, who has Just
returned from a regional USO
mcctinn held in San Francisco
last week.
A recommendation ns to the
administration of the Klamath
USO center was drawn up at
the regional meeting and sent
into the national directors for
unnrova). If tho recommends-
Uirougn,, the - ccntar
the Salvation. ..Army,, as: direct
ing agency, and tho . National
Jewish Welfare society, 'flic wo
men s division of the National
Catholic society will have desk
space, and the Travelers' Aid
society will be granted office
room to perform their typo, of
service ncro, Mumble stated
Explains Choice
These organizations ' w e re
chosen for the direction of USO
activity here. Humble explained
because the regional directors
felt that they had available the
type of officials suitable to nan-
die the operation of Klamath's
center,
The recommendations will be
submitted to the national board
In New York on October 18,
Humble snld, and if it is ap
proved, oificials irom the above
named organizations should be
here in Klumuth Falls by Moa
day, October 23
A big problem under consider
ation at tho meeting was the
(Continued on Page Three)
"Fear Propaganda" Spread
By GOP, Charges Roosevelt
By D. HAROLD OLIVER
Associated Press Staff Writer
WASHINGTON. Oct. 0 Presi
dent Roosevelt, saying his repub
lican opponents arc spreading
"fear propaganda" in stating his
administration is plotting to give
the communists control of tho
Kovernmcnt, disowned commun
istic support for his fourth term
bid in a rndlo address last night.
Employing such spiked phrases
as "rabble rousers," "political
propagandists" and "bigots," Mr.
Roosevelt declared:
"I have never sought, nnd I
do not welcome tho support of
any person or group committed
lo communism, ui iiii,,,, u,
nnv other foreign Ideology
wliicli would undermine the
American system of government
or tho American system of free
competitive enterprise and pri
vate property." ,
The democratic candldnto em
phasized that this "docs not in
tin. lmst interfere" with Amer
ica's friendly relations with the
soviet union, nnauig: mo kuhi
of economy that suits the Rus
inn nnnnln is their own affair.
Ho devoted a largo part of his
.fpnnrt camnalen speech de
signed primarily as a "get out
tho vote" appeal to references
to communism in opposition
speeches. He did not mention
names, but snld it was a "source
of regret to all decant Americans
that some political propagand
ists are dragging red herrings
across the trail of this national
election." , .
"ror cxampiu, no iwtciicu,
"Inhor baiters and bigots and
some- politicians use tho term
communism' . loosely, and apply
ii in everv nroaresslve sociol
measure . ond to .the views of
ovcry foreign born citizen with
whom they disagree.
"They forgot that we In the
BROWNS LEAD
SERIES TILTS
2
MM
IN
Red Birds. Held to
Hits by Kramer;
10 Strike Out,
By JACK HAND
SPORTSMAN'S PARK, St.
Louis, Oct. 6 fP) The St. Louis
Browns scored four runs in tne
third inning and added two more
in the seventh to ' defeat the
Cardinals, 6 to 2, today and take
a two games to one game lead
in . the world series before a
crowd of 34,737. . . .
Jack Kramer held the Red
Birds to seven hits and struck
out 10 men to make his world
series debut 1 a sensational suc
cess. Ted Wilks, a rookie right
hander, from Columbus, was
charged with the defeat after
being knocked out of the box on
five straight singles in the third
frame.-
' Futile Attempt '"
Billy Southworth called on
four of his young righthanders
in a futile attempt to stop the
Brownies' attack. Although er
rors were responsible for both
Cardinals runs, the Browns, de
fense tightened in the late in
nings - when danger threatened
and right fielder Gene Moore
made two brilliant catches to
help Kramer out of trouble In
the eighth..- " .
Moore's long running catch-on
Whltcy Kurowski's drive while
going directly .into, the sun, prob
ably saved the game in. the. eighth
lion KOCS
here will be Jointly, operated byWkefrCoopcrrs long double had
United States arc all descended
from immigrants (all except the
Indians); and there is no better
proof of fact than the heroic
names on our casualty lists, i.
The president referred to n
statement by Chairman Ander-'
son (D-N.M.) of the house com
mittee on campaign expenditures
that 13 republicans in congress
had recently sent free through
the mails more than 3,000,000
copies of n colleague's speech
requiring more than 18 tons of
scarce and expensive paper and
at the taxpayers' expense."
This document, Mr. Roosevelt
added, "says that the 'red spectre
oi communism is stinking our
country from cast to west, from
north to south' the charge being
that tho Roosevelt administra
tion is part of a gigantic plot to
sell our democracy out to the
communists." .. ... , ,
brought. Manager Luke Sewell
from, tne dugout lor a consults
tion with his hurler. .Kramer
(Continued on Page Three)
No Chance of
Car Release, .
Says Taylor
:Wprd has been received by
(J. A. Henderson, county agent,
to the effect that there is no
chance of more refrigeration cars
being released for the spud ship
ments at present.
The shortage of refrigeration
cars for commercial use in the
nation Is general and growers
are urged to ship in box cars un
til better equipment is available.
as an uninterrupted flow of
Klamath Falls potatoes is necessary.
It was asserted by C. W. Tay
lor, agent for tno interstate com
merce commission in Chicago,
that there is a relatively short
haul on local spuds and that the
minimum temperatures is . not
low enough to cause damage. to
tno sntpments. :
Yanks Hammer
Three-Mile Gain
By WILLIAM B. KING '
' ROME, Oct. 6 (fl1) American
fifth army troops hammered out
gainsi up to tiirce-miles yester
day over the rain-bogged, moun
tainous terrain on tne ' ap
proaches to tne fo vaiiey. xncy
captured the road junction of
Loiano, less than 14 miles south
of Bologna on-the main road
from Florence, allied headquar
ters announced today. '
The . nazls threw reinforce
ments of experienced Austrian
and-German Alpino troops into
the central sector adjacent to the
highway and unloosed fierce ar
tillery barrages. But on both
sides of the road tho allies push
ed ahead against the stiff resist
ance and despite the foul weath
er. , - " . i. .
Today On The Western Front
By The Associated Press
U. S. first army After being driven from Bcggendorf by
a furious German counterattack, launches a new attack of Its
own, strongly supported by hundreds of fighter bombers, at
Gellenkirchen, three miles north of Ubath.
U. S. third army Breached the -Siegfried line north of
Nancy, and faced artillery cross-fire, as it clung to its thin hold
on Fort Driant. '
U, S. seventh army Was duelling with German artillery
along . the approach to the Belfort gap, after having been
forced to give up a slim hbld on a fort five miles south of
Metz, on the extreme southern end of the front.
Canadian first army, Let go with a tremendous aerial
attack the moment a truce ended to permit evacuation of
civilians from Dunkerque, and was expected to follow through
with a land assault on that last nazi stronghold on the channel.
. . .British second army Threw back three more counter
attacks at the. western tip of the Holland corridor, while
Canadians advanced behind sheets of fire to cross the Leopold
canal in Belgium.- - - 1 - .
ATTACK HITS
NEAR
GAINS MILE
Withdrawals Made at
,. Beggendorf,
Ubach
Red Forces Invade
Hungary; TakeMako
LONDON, Oct. 6 Wl Russian troops have invaded Hungary
from Romania, Moscow announced tonight.
The broadcast Russian communique said soviet forces which
crossed the border north and northwest of the Romanian town of
Arad had captured various railway stations, including the junc
tion of Mako IS miles east of Sieged, and more than 100 other
populated places.
There have been frequent unofficial reports recently that
the red army was fighting in Hungary, but this was the first
official announcement. -
The communique also dis-
VICTORY THIS YEAR
IMOWli
By STERLING F. GREEN
WASHINGTON. Oct. 6 VP)
The failure of allied, airborne
troops at Arnhem, in the bpin-ion-of-OWI
Director-Elmer Da
vis, makes' "more remote" the
chances of victory in. Europe this
year.- . . , - ,
Davis -said the "Arnhem af-
fan""hacT made' out of date an
office of .war information report
which. had predicted- Germany
would go down -"before,, or not
long after,, the end of 1944.. ,.,
Heroic ' Struggle : '
He referred to the heroic 11
day . struggle to hold a bridge
head across the-Rhine at-Arn
hem,, Holland, against superior
lorccs. ' . . . -
"Everybody '.agrees." - Davis
told reporters yesterday, that the
defeat of the heroic airborne di
vision makes German collapse
"more remote than when our re
port was put together three
weeks ago.
keaieea (Jut
The report was not intended
for publication, but it "leaked"
after 8000 copies were prepared
and some 4000 were distributed
to persons in the advertising busi
ness. '
Bombers Pound
Kurile Island
' By The Associated Press
Twelve American Liberators
bombed Kita island Thursday
morning in the deepest reported
penetration of tne R.uriie islands,
the Japanese Domci (News) agen
cy said today.
The broadcast, recorded by the
federal communications commis
sion, claimed that two attacking
planes were shot down in "a
fierce air battle."
closed a . beachhead, 25 miles
wide and 15 miles deep had
been won on the Estonian island
of -Saare; one- of a erouo of
Iomx guarding the entrances to
the gulf'of Finland and Riga.
mubtjuw;- uct. e tf) kus-
sian and Yugoslav troops fought
the Germans in the outskirts of
Belgrade today and front dis
patches indicated patrols had
crossed to the south bank' of
the Danube from- . captured
Fancevo, less than nine miles
from the capital. .
' Marshal .Tito was reported
near the front and it was be
lieved troops of.. his army of
national liberation would be the
first formally to enter the for
tified citv of 267.000.
' Pravda said other allied Sla
vic troops had. reached the vic
inity of Nis, 130 miles south
east of Belerade. where the Bel
grade-Athens-Salonika and Bel-
graae-sovia railroads meet. - .
- In northern Yugoslavia along
the Tisza river, other Russian
troops-were 'less than 30 miles
across flat Hungarian frontier
country from the second largest
.Hungarian city, Szeged, im
periled frohtally from Romania
as well. ...
Yanks Welcome
To Occupy Bases,
Says Aussie
MELBOURNE, Australia,
Oct. 10 fP) Australia and Brit
ain would be glad to see Ameri
can occupation bases in the
Pacific, Sir. Keith Murdock
leading Australian newspaper
publisher, said today..
Murdock, chairman : of . the
Australian - American coopera
tion movement, said in an ad
dress that the United States
had no-territorial ambitions in
the ' Pacific islands north of
Australia, but he had no doubt
American military, leaders
would recommend establishing
bases there. .
By JAMES M. LONG
LONDON, Oct. 6 (P) U. S.
first army forces, supported by
hundreds of planes and guns,
struck a solid new blow today
southeast of Aachen which car
ried through the dark lanes of
Hurtgen forest to within six
miles of Duren 20 miles from
Cologne on the Rhine.
The new attack' gained nearly
a mile, in coordination with
other first army units which
were locked in some of the fierc
est fighting of the Siegfried line
battle in the Ubach breach, north
of Aachen. - . -
Reach Outskirts 7
Armor from the latter forces
curled behind the broken main
Siegfried line of steel and con
crete and reached tne southern
outskirts of Gellenkirchen in a
three-mile push.
The fighting was as hot as any
experienced at the Anzio beach
head, veterans . of that Italian
battleground said, and before the
new gams were registered tne
Americans had given ground at
two places, impelled by the heav
iest armored counterattacks yet
thrown into the contest inside
Germany. .. . , :
Temporary Withdrawal - -
The first of these setbacks was
at Beggendorf, about a mile and
a quarter east of Ubach, but
was only temporary. The Amer
icans were forced to give up the
town in see-saw fighting early
in the day, but fought their way
back in later and tonight they
held it with a firm grasp. .
. The other was one and a half
miles south .of Ubach where the
Yanks were driven off the top
of a hill. But they held on to
the lower slopes and braced with,
the - aid of powerful , allied air
support which took advantage
of : the first clear weather -in- a
.Week to blast destructively- at
German armor. i , '. -
Hurtgen Forest
The first army's new attack
was sprung through the pine
carpeted six-mile-wide Hurtgeii
forest. The town of Hurtgeii lies
at its eastern edge, nine miles
southeast of Aachen. . i '
''We have been past the first
belt of the Siegfried line of de
fense for the last two weeks
we now are on our way through
the second," said an officer. ..
Deadline Slated
For Saturday on
Registrations
Klamath . county people who
have not registered to vote, or
whose registration is not in
order, have until Saturday at 5
p. m. to take care of this mat
ter. '
. The county clerk's office will
be open this evening until 9 p.
m., and on Saturday until 5
p. m. for registration. Voters
may also register at Beatty,
Bly, Bonanza, Chiloquin, Cres
cent Lake, Malin, Gilchrist,
Merrill, Plevna and Yamsay
with local registration at those
places.
Those who fall to register,
or whose registration is de
fective, will not be - able to
vote -in -the. general election
November 7. '
Hunters Come Upon Plone Wreckage
Wreckage Identified as
Remains; of Army Plane
. Airplane wreckage found , In
the deep woods In wostcrn Klam
ath county this.wck by two dc6r
hunters had been definitely iden
tified today as the dynamited
remains of a single-motored
army plane which crashed Ap
ril 14 of this year In an accident
which was reported at that time.
The pilot, Lt. Adolf Rogers,
was killed in the April 14 crash,
and Captain William H. Law
rence of the army air corps sur
vived. '
Tho deer hunters, Al Rider and
Bob Boldlschnr, enmo upon the
wreckage In the woods and re
ported to Sheriff Lloyd Low,
who headed a party which went
to Iho scene ot the crash near
Buck lake. Low's party soon dis
covered evidence that the wreck
age had been previously inspect
ed and photographed, and later
Investigation, identified it-as the
remains of the Vultce trainer
that went down in April.
Bones found by Rider and Bol
dlschar are apparently the. re
mains of an animal, and bv coin
cidence were lying on the spot
where the plane crashed. There
was about two feet 'of snow on
the ground in April, and the
bones apparently were under the
snow when navy and army men
looked over the wrock. decided
it could not be .salvaged, and dy
namited it. -i
It turned out io be the remains of an already reported wreck, when this, parry went to
spot , near Buck lake where hunters had come upon twisted plane wreckage In the deep woods.
In the picture) Constable Gary Coiad, Hunter Al Rider, Deputy Sheriff Jack Franoy, Hunter Bob
Boldlschar, and Sheriff Lloyd Low. The plane, a Vultee trainer, fell last April 14, killing the
pilot but only Injuring a passenger.
... f