ictober 16, l?-4 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PACE THREg: IFQK MEET NORTH OFNAZIPOST Continued from r One) .jounced today. ' ' i ii. mare 01 unnormuuHu '."Ccl doom. Mn ll ,cc! Amerran gun ryimni '.. . , ,,, . in. !, I ZTm " Aiiwrlcm Had 111"'". tuff!" lout before ip'hrtrwl from till. biw h. French city iM'l1: prnuInK the irllljn , I'"""'" exnedl- IcrB""" V 1.1." "tod l, Vlm'.....i.,. inileA throo II" P"ra. n i .rlrfuo. rkl HO - i IS ' c on. Vie.. fc, frontier, wrro ton- IT Ureal U ""' "'" it v. ... ii. u'ralorn InllMliy " ",v '"."ih". tor Ao.w.xp inadiana were waning 'll b.tlle for tho open l..g J Antwerp " i"'i'i"j aVj, In S wimi.i -" AC 111 " ..ni.,,1 frnitl ll at clearing the snowy f . u,iiiir. Hunremo IS uc.''" ".j ii.; itl. VHZ. comprl.in the fL' l ... .....I thn aev. American army, had Led momentum" In the d Ice north of tlio Belforl nap. alm were " lint; resistance uiumh ,1 and several town, wore cd." Includlim Baccara . nvillc. Fontcnoy and Freml lalne, the bulletin stated. EDITORIALS ON NEWS :ontlnued From Page Ono) ch Pravdn In Moscow de bts as the "key to Norway, hus Germany'! satellites In NOIITH arc beginning to nbh. t t , IE battle of Aachen con linun In undiminished fury, ee tlmea In 24 hour, tho man) have counter-attacked Americana Ihero ferociously nt apparently are losing rath itian Knlnlns ground aa (II Ma K'.e tins lorcnoon y have CLOSED the escape idor out of the city to the that the Gcrmana have been ting open. ill i fair bums that Germany hitler, In fact, alnco he acema to D i hp commanucr-in- rt aa well n tho political of tho nazl atatc) has do- to make Aachen another Ingrad. liar knows with the par- riy clear vision or hind that the frightful losses he tred in TRYING to take nprad bled him white and him the wnr. So (nrcsum- i) his madmon'a brain has him that the thtno in Hn la IAKE US DO LIKEWISE at mtn. RE closing in alowlv on he great port of Antworn. M DOSjesslon will miitrilnllv fen our supply lino to tho ncrmnn iront. At Mclz, finally clvrn nn Irvlnu in Fort brlnnt. whnan mm. ted underground defenses proven too costly for us to even With mnH.rn knn.li. artlllcrV. fWa'll nrr.Hi.hl,, ljnlt II In the Russian man- The Uiuid to Ihrlln By The Aasocl.t.d Pr.aa 1. Wcslurn front: 302 miles ((ruin wi'nt of IJiui'ii.) 2. ltiiMilnii front: 310 miles (from Wiirsuw.) 3. Iliilliin front: BUU miles (from LIvvrgiiHiio.) Mfled Ada Bring RhsuIU. One hundred and eighty cars, nlxilil M.000 huxes of near huve lici'ii shipped hero from the Koiiun Klver viiliry to uc stored In transit hero ut tlio Klamath Ico and btorauo comuuny, uccnrd Inn to Geiirgo A. Myers, assist ant munagi'i- ut tim firm, The last carlot arrived Sunday. As tlio marki-ts cunnnt bundle llio pears liiimedlutely after they are picKeo, iney are stored Here and shipped out us I hey nro need ed. Some cnrlou Imve been sent out iillvndy to enstern murkets and to the army tiurlermut,ter department. It is expected that all of mn pears will Do out by tlio first of the year. Pears are sent here from the American Krult Growers, near Creek orchards, Crystal Springs Packing company, Heter Krult company mid Myron Hoot and company of Medford. Immunization of Children Slated Pro-school children and those of the lower grades who reside at the mlKrutory camp on the Merrill city limit, will be Im munized iiuiilnsl diphtheria to night, Monday, according to Dr. Peter II. Kozcndnl, Klamath county health officer. Death look mi Infant at t h c camp Inst week and a aocond cuso of diphtheria sent on 8- year-nld girl to the county Isola tion hospital. She Is Improving. No now case. Imve occurred. Dr. Kozenclnl staled. School children were not permitted to leave the enmp upon word thnt the disease hud occurred there. Cooperative Miller Returns From Confab Bernard King, head miller at the Plieifif Kimtilv Pnnnn.ii 1 1 ., n just returned from n three-day' cuiucrcncu oi mo nonnwosi mil ler, association. Tim meetintr wn ,lnuilnl In discussion of postwar operations. wio uaa-and insinuation of now and Improved machinery, and tho over-all Improvement of mill ing techniques. King's eldest son, Francis King, also attended tho Portland meeting as representative of a Portland milling machinery II rm SAVES CHILDREN OLYMPIA, Oct. 16 yi'i A 24-year-old mother, Mrs. Ivnr Carlson, plunged Into tho icy waters of tho bny here Saturday and saved her two boys, age seven and eight after a rowbont In which tho pair were playing overturned. uIlI VOTE FOR C. J. SH0R6 FOR CONGRESS U.S. SILENT. ON FORMOSA F IGHT REPOR T (Continued from Pago One) repllng force of SO Japanese fighters. Them wa no announcement of American olr losses, Nlmltz said "only superficial damage was done to our surface ships" in tho Manila bay area raids Sunday, Tokyo radio reported today that jnpuneso naval and air force, driving homo attacks on American carrier forces off For mosa and the Philippines have knocked out score, of U. S. ships and set buck the "Impending In vasion of tho Philippines by at icnsi iwo monuis. Claim, of victory reported In various Jubilant Japanese broad casts varied from 40 to 52 U. S. wurshlpi sunk or damugod. Im perial communiques listed 40, in cluding 11 alrcrnft carriers sunk and six damaged. The broadcasts. Includinff a report thnt the long elusive Nip ponese fleet had at last come out of hiding and was pursuing the u, a, uisK jorco nceing from Formosa, wero unconfirmed by allied sources. Dunsmuir Girls Fatally Shot (Continued from Page One) car. A few moment, after they entered the house they heard a report and ncard Vivian Jean scream. Seeing the 3-year-old was shot In the head, the father picked her up and started In ills car for Hurnoy. Ho dcvrl oped car trouble and en route the 1 1 tic girl died. A short time after the father started, tho mother noticed that Vivian Jean was a so wounded and her screams, at first at tributed to fright, were caused by a wound In the abdomen, lioth little girls were standing In the doorway of tho Russell homo at the time the shot was fired. Tho mother then started for Burney In a second car, her machine also dcvcloned trou ble, but she finally reached the hospital with the 6-year-old, who died on arrival, Tho Ruff family has lived at the government- housing project in Dunsmuir for three months, during which time the father has been employed by the SP. Two other children,, a 5-year-old son and a 9-month-old daughter, survive. Final rite, were hold In Shasta coun ty following an Investigation by Deputy Coroner Glenn R. Linn of Redding, to whom the little boy told his story, de claring he had not meant to hurt hi. little sisters." Regular MMtln. of Scot llih all tonlfht. Masonic hall. 8 p, m. l.IO N. 1IIILS Vonarabla Ma.lar. Paschall Hodges Hurt in Italy MKnrtlLT, Pvt. Pascholl Hodges was wounded In action in Italy, according to word re ceived by member, of hi. fam ily hero this weekend. No de tails were available. Hodges' wife Is tho former Marjorio Hartlerodo of this place, and his parents arc Mr, and Mrs. Churlcs Hodges, also of Merrill. A brother. Pierce, is stationed with the U. S. navy ut Karrugut, Idu. Hodges wa. inducted September 14, 1043, and went overseas In May of this year. Prior to hi. induc tion he was ono of tho owners of tho Hodges store. o Refrigeration Equipment Co. Karl Urquhirt SU Klamath Phono I45J Fo Commercial Refrigeration . SALES and SERVICE I Vitazfattf 7Somcn& J War's kmr Paea.Makern, tatting naw production m.rkl, find rclaiallon In a p.m. drink mada better br PM da tue. "- TM Ii belter . . . a whUkc). of nmiMial mcllownm. and Snr I ".Tor. It offera Prewar Merit Ins lllaliball or Manhattan ' 1 I ... old.faihloned exeellenca In an Old-Kaihloned ajlaat. . ' . I lfh fsn'l PM . . . ll fan's an Evmlng "J- jSV YOU TOO CAN FIGHT BY GIVING ri',rod.iel.Corp,N.Y. Blwidud Whl.r. .. Proof. MfAStrtdaM Whl.lny, 49fj CralnWalnl Spirits. T SEIZE LIVEHIO (Contlnuod from Pago One) garia Just north of highway 9 the Rimini-Bologna highway. Forty prisoners wero taken. Tho Canadians also took Gam bcttola. across the Scolo Rlgossa canal north of the Rimini-Bologna railway, and advanced 1000 yords beyond tho town against light resistance. In the hills south of Cesenn a general advance of about 1000 yards wos made and a number of Important terrain feature, and 140 Germans were captured northwest of Carpin cta. OBITUARY m.ORIA ntRTIIA JOIIANSON Gloria B.rtha Johan.on. a rldnt of Oil. community for lh la.t twenty-five year. pa.Md awar In thl. rlty on Sun day. October 13. 1044 at 12:03 a. m. fol lowing an lllnc. of ooe week. Rha wa. a native of Blue Valley. Nebra.ka and at the time of her death wa. aged fll year, and B month.. Surviving are thre Uler.. Mr. Leo S.gehorn of Tulelake. California. Mm. If. E. Melnecke of Santa Roaa. California and Mellnda Alexander of Washington, D. C: Three brother., Seldon C. Alexander or Billing Mon tana. Wayne F. of San FraneLco. Call- lomia ana John c. Alexander of Pitta burgh. California. The remain, ret In the Karl Whlllork Funeral Home. Pine ai nixtn. notice of funeral to be an nounced In the next luue oi thia paper. Gloria Bertha Johnnson, for 25 yours a resident of Klamath Fulls, Tuleluko and Mncdocl, Calif., died In a hospital here Sunday shortly after midnight following a ono week's illness. Mrs. Johanson's husband, fa niillurly known as "Alusko John," preceded her In death by one ycor. Mrs. Johonon was a native of Blue Vullcy, Ncb and at tho time of her dcuth was 61 year, of age' She and her hus band opcruted the Macdocl ho tel and later a tavern at Tulc hike, Mrs. Johnnson is survived by three listers and three brothers, one of her sisters be ing Mrs. Leo Sugchom of Tule lake. Funeral announcements will be made by Whitlock's. German Sea Escape Route Cut by Red Capture of Port (Continued from Pate One) acknowledged that Russian troops and Yanks and Marshal Tito s Yugoslav partisans had fought their way Into the city after reaching the outskirts Saturday. Berlin implied also that other soviet troops had crossed into German East Prussia on a 27 mile front in the Mcmcl terri tory. Moscow announced red army troops had advanced three miles west of the fallen Latvian cap ital, Riga, as Uiey steadily herd ed nazis into the narrow trap sprung when the soviet first Bal tic army reached the Lithuanian coast north of Mcmel. Cooper Visits Forrest Cooper, Lakevicw attorney and long a state war bond assistant administrator, was a Klamath Falls visitor Monday. If it's a "frozen" article you need, advertise for a used one in tho classified. . Everything You'll Need Plane Smashes Into Coquille; Fliers Killed COQUILLE, Ore.. Oct. 16 M'l Three navy filers are dead and live civilians were in hospitals today, victims of a plane that cra-ihed and tore through a row of houses in this western Oregon town. The plane plowed into a resi dential district near the high school, witnesses said. The chim neys ut two houses were sheared, as well as porches from two more. A grocery store was hit and then the plane exploded, sot ting firo to another house. Dun Rogers, a civilian, was critically hurt. A man and his wife were taken to a Myrtle Point hospital, badly hurt. The fourth victim was an unidenti fied baby. Clarence Osika, former prin cipal of the high school, had his leg broken by flying fragments from tho plane. Property damage is high, state police here declared. Several blocks of the area was declared out of bounds to spectators and roped off by naval authorities, who refused to answer questions. Jury for Trial Of Coplin Chosen Orbic Coptin went on trial Monday morning in circuit court to answer charges of statutory rape, involving a young local girl. Jurors selected before noon Monday morning were as fol lows: Desty M. Kleincger, Carl A. Young, Orris G. Vroman, Jane A. Howell, Glen B. Inman, Ber tha M. Eastbum, Ross R. John ston, Viola Gregory, Charles A. Wright, Greta M. Brewbaker, Roland E. Oakes and Mabel G. Foster Attorney for the defense is U. S. Balcntine. The prosecu tion is being conducted by Dis trict Attorney L. Orth Sisemore and Deputy District Attorney Clarence Humble. Presiding in the case is Circuit Judge David R. Vandenberg. (Continued from Page One) of the week just how the situa tion stood. Digging was at its peak this week but there was a sharp de cline in buying. Shippers said that not only was it impossible to ship in "reefers" since the October 2 freeze, but there was also a visible shortage of boxcars. OF WEATHER ftundar, October 13, mil I . Max. Min. Prtclp.i Filt?n .,-, 04 41 .00 Kiimnth Fall 07 , H.1 .00a Snrramrnlo 70 47 .Otli Nnrlh fiend fll PnrttftiKl .71 mrnrora He no Sun PrancUco aSeattle .. HI 30 3d Hans Norland Auto Iniuranct. Phon 6060. IMVOUS1 Calen Staley Howell, seaman first class attached to the Klam ath naval air station, died Sun day morning of a gunshot wound. It was learned that Howell was found fatally wounded, with his service revolver in his lap. He died about two hours later. A navy board is investigating the tragedy. Mowcll s home was at Billings, : Mont. NORWEGIANS CREDITED ! PENDLETON, Oct. 16 (IP) Norway's merchant marine is' credited with transporting 50 per ; cent of the gasoline used by the ! RAF in tho battle of Britain,': Bjarnc Ursin, Norwegian consul! at Boston, Mass., guest of a ; Pendleton family, said here to-1 day. . j I Classified Ads Bring Results . 1 la your ntomach on the warpath from war litter, worry and overwork? Sufferer from jumpy, nervous indi geition find that pepto-bismou help bring prompt relief from heart burn, distress after meals, gas on tha , stornarh. Tastes good and does good. Ask your druggist for PEPTO-BIBMOL -when your stomach is upset.- A NORWICH PRODUCT Gas on Stomach lUlMFtai m S auomHts r alawbU ytwy oMotf back tVltta titans itcskicb add rtwi painful, loffoeat tnr m. wur atanarh and heartburn, doctor t rouallr prewrJtuj the futMt-artfnr nedlelnn known for tjrmptnniatic relief mullein like thoi In Bell-ioa Tablet. No Inatlrt. Bell-arts brine, ramfnrt In jmjcrieutnbotUe to tu for double maor back. SSe. Is Your Club Looking for a DANCE Orchestra ? Call Me If You Ar. Possibly I Can Help "Baldy" Evans For Fall and Winter Under One Roof! " , . .. . i Buy from 6ur Retail Stocks Buy from Our New Fall Catalog Save tlmt whan you ahijtil Sav. money on Fall and Winter n.c.ial tl.a back.d by S.an f.moua guar ant..l Should you not find things you n.d In our large r.tail atocka, top at our Catalog Sal.a Depart-' tn.nt. Moat .v.rything, now avail ablt to civilians, will b. found in our big new Fall and Wlnttr cata log. With everything under on. roof, ONE-STOP SHOPPING la the aai.st way to buyl . . See Swatches of New Catalog Materials S w a tch books, containing sam ples of catalog fabrics, . permit you to a., and feel . goods . be fore you order. 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