Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 17, 1944, Page 8, Image 8

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    PACE EIGHT
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
Octobi
Temperature Hits
High in Politics;
FDR Slates Speech
By Tht Associated Pri
President Roosevelt has decid
ed to deliver a major address in
Philadelphia the night of Octo
ber 27, exactly a week after Gov.
Thomas E. Dewey's bid for the
keystone state's 35 electoral
votes. ,,, , ,
Mr. Roosevelt will speak from
Shibe (baseball) park, Governor
Dewey from a Pittsburgh ar
mory. David L. Lawrence, democrat
ic national committeeman for
Pennsylvania, today announced
arrangements for the president s
first away-from-Washington cam
paign address after a White
House conference attended by
other members of Businessmen
for Roosevelt, Inc.
The organization, Lawrence
said, was formed in August "to
make articulate what we know
to be the political view of the
great mass of business people."
Names Called
The political temperature al
ready had climbed today under
hot applications by Governor
Dewey and Senator Truman,
Dewey calling the Roosevelt ad
ministration "the most spectacu
lar collection of incompetent peo
ple who ever held public office,"
and Truman labeling Dewey a
"fence straddler" with a low
opinion of American capacity.
Also warming things up were
Interior Secretary Ickes and
Rep. Clare Boothe Luce. Ickes
said the republican presidential
candidate's "one principle is to
do whatever is necessary to be
elected."
Hitlerian Committee
Mrs. Luce, saying the CIO po
litical action committee was "Hit
lerian in concept" and stemmed
"from the philosophy of Karl
Marx," declared that this group
of Roosevelt supporters "is nazi
German sauerkraut with soviet
"Russian dressing."
Truman, running for vice
president with Mr. Roosevelt on
the democratic ticket, speaking
in Los Angeles, also posed some
questions. Saying that "for six
years the republican candidate
has been seeking the presiden
cy," he asked:
"Do you remember the' repub
lican candidate as a courageous
leader who took strong stands. . .
that were proved correct by sub
sequent events? Or do you re
member him as an office seeker
dealing in platitudes and sitting
on the fence waiting to find out
which way to jump?"
"Sights Too Low" ;
In 1940, Truman said, Dewey
pooh-poohed the president's goal
of 50,000 planes, whereas "we
are building airplanes at ... .
twice the number Mr. Dewey
said was impossible." Truman
drew the conclusion that "under
a president like the republican
candidate, we would have set our
sights too low."
Ickes, in his speech at Newark,
N. J., likewise called Dewey a
straddler, saying "the republican
word weavers and advertising
experts are trying to persuade
you to accept an ersatz, synthe
tic Mr. Dewey of luminous con
victions." Mrs. Luce's appearance was be
fore a Pittsburgh audience, to
which she said, "Mr. Dewey's op
ponent is indeed indispensable to
the communist-controlled politi
cal action committee."
In Washington today, R. J.
Thomas, president of the CIO
United Auto Workers and treas
urer of the national citizens poli
tical action committee, said in a
(Armii statement that Mrs. Luce
had asked PAC support for her
own campaign and now "seems
tO DC glVIMS uviiiuiiBininwii
another playwright's lines: 'Hell
hath no fury like a woman
scorned.' " ..',,'.
Gov. John W. Bricker, the re
publican vice presidential candi
date, said in an address prepared
for a Santa Ana, Cnlif., appear
ance that reconversion "like the
task of winning the war must be
on a nationwide basis."
Noting suggestions that when
Rnrmnnv falls, industries in the
east could be switched to civil
ian output while tne wesi con
tinues to turn out weapons,
Bricker asserted that victory
over Japan "is the responsibility
of all our country. Any other
policy would delay the day of fi
nal victory."
Local Draft Board
Has Anniversary
Klamath county selective serv
ice boards one and two, along
with otiier draft boards through
out the country, Monday ob
served their fourth birthday. Oc
tober 16, 1940, was the day the
selective service system official
ly went into effect and was the
date of the first registration all
over the country.
Six Klamath county men were
appointed by the governor four
years ago to serve on the two
local draft boards and with the
exception of one, membership on
both boards is still the same. H.
N. Moe was forced to resign as a
member of board one, because of
ill health.
On the two boards at present
are: board one C. O. Dryden,
chairman, Alfred D. Collier, sec
retary, and Godfrey C. Blohm.
Board two Fred H. Heilbron-
Stetson
Hats
Litest Fall drew hati
now being shown in
all colon and tiiei.
From $7.50-
DREW'S MANSTORE
733 Main
Flashes of
Life
By Tht Aiiociattd Prill
THRIFTY
PATERSON, N. J., A stran
oer. who identified himself as
Charles Werramann, 82, last a
resident of Clifton, N. J., walked
into headquarters and told po
lion ho had nn nlnee to CO.
Police said ho had a check for
$50 in his pocket and ?lu,5UU in
war bonds.
DOCUMENTED
SALT LAKE CITY Superin
tendent of Mails J. W. Bram-
brough has received a protest to
hi rnlp hm-riiu registration of
overseas love letters on grounds
they are not important docu
ments. Wrote eight GI's from
the South Pacific:
"Put yourself .in a soldier's
place. Imagine you are In a fox
hole, hungry and wet. Which
would you rather have, a docu
ment or a letter from home?"
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
PAYETTE, Idano Business
men and dehydrating plant em
ployes packed lunches this week
or went hungry.
The community's two sand
wich shops closed for lack of
help. And nothing has been
heard of the town's two cafe
operators, who shut down tem
porarily two weeks ago with the
announcement they would re
sume after the deer season.
JOHN B. KEESEE
ner, chairman, Frank J. Schmitz,
secretary, and S. P. Delilingcr.
Holding the clerks' positions
for the two boards for the entire
four years have been Ted Case,
clerk of board one, and Mrs.
Mary Case, board two clerk.
Vote
For
DOROTHEA
BUCK
Democratic Candidate For
County Commissioner
r (V V
NEW kind of
ASPIRIN tablet
doesn't upset stomach
TOTHEN you need quick relief from
W pain, do you hesitate to take aspirin
because it leaves you with an upset
stomach? If so, this new medical dis
covery, SUPERIN, is "just what the
doctor ordered" for you.
Supertn It aspirin plus contains the
same pure, safe aspirin you have long
known but developed by doctors in a
special way for those upset by aspirin
in its ordinary form.
This new kind of aspirin tablet dissolve
more quickly, lets the aspirin get right
at the job of relieving pain, reduces the
acidity of ordinary aspirin, and does
not irritate or upset stomach even
after repeated doses.
Tear this out to remind you to get
Superin today, so you can have it on
hand when hea cliches, colds, etc., strike
See how quickly it
relieves pain how
fine you feel after tak
ing. At your druggist's,
15f and 39.
"v n
mm
Senator
Harry S. Truman
Candidate For
Vice-President
Will Arrive In
th Falls
WEDNESDAY MORNING
October 18
At 7:30 A. M.
via Southern Pacific Train 'Oregonian
To Meet Klamath People
And Deliver a
PLATFORM ADDRESS
At 7:45 A. M,
All Klamath Falls Voters Are Invited To Be Present
John B. Kcesec, who spent
many years in Bonanza and Kla
math Falls, died October 6, at
Providence hospital in Portland,
following an nttack of pneu
monia. Mr. Kecsce was born In Cor
vallis on May 17, 1883, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Kecsce.
Ho attended schools at Bonanza
and in this city. Tho greater part
of his life was spent' in Oregon.
Survivors include one sister, Mrs
A. B. Wade; his stepmother, Mrs.
Rose E. Keesee; three brothers,
Vernon and William, all of Kla
math Falls, and Wayne of Med-
ford, A hair-sister, Mrs. Olon
Gulley of Klamath Fulls, also
survives.
Services for Mr. Kecsco were
held at Cellar's mortuary in Port
land with cremation at tho Lin
coln crematorium.
POLITICAL NOTE
MISSOURI CITY, Mo. C. Q.
Shaw is moving to Liberty, Mo.,
which means Missouri City will
have to find a new mayor. Shaw
'haii held the job for .'in yenrit,
Head Colds
for folk
wHhinlrfly
Quirk relief from th
an I (tly. encesy stuffy
distress of head colds
la what you want. Bo
try Va-tro-nol - few,
drops up each nostril
to reduce congestion,
tootho.lrrltatlonl And
Va-tro-nol also helps
prevent many colda
r mm HwlArim if iimwI
rxjr;r VICKS VA-TRO-NOL
mm
r 17,
Iff
If:
norm
150
"III, OII'OJII
Cheerful hrfui
Drink, mlukl wllli Cii Dry
Wuinr cvon louni bolter, "1in
TOINT C'AHIIONATION" (lv,"
Ilium a iparklo ymi ran hear.,
Ilvclliion Hut Uiti,' "
IS
RY WATEj
CANADAK1)RY Um t
v w w m av n
- ' i i - i i 1 1 1 I i
-
'''.I '.' J
V:,,: J Jmvrf fij&4
M' ii? li ."H ') K.
, : p ,:"
Y7un A Mi
Sen. Harry S. Truman I I ft . , ' '. '
... i J : ''V-
Here is a group of coats collected one by one ;
carefully . painstakingly. First the fabrics
were chosen ? . then the furs. If you are one of .
those with a keen appreciation of true quality
and the peak of fashion .' '.' . if you have deter
mined to have a truly glorious coat this year . '.' '
one that will serve you with beauty and warmth
'. .'you've come to the end of your quest with
one of. these.
l!,l
In
Tt. Adv. br Klimalh Coonljf Democrallo Cenlr.l CommllU. I , I
r
I ;.