Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 28, 1944, Page 2, Image 2

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    October 28,
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
'ACE TWO
lENTi ASKS
IERICAII CONFAB
(Continued from Page One)
nado In a note handed by the
Argentine charge d affaires in
tVasliington, Rodotfo Gareia-Ar-
. i - n.. imm-iaii nmnn.
as. 10 me r-ii;"i" .
rUHUntinnt Possible
The statement declared the
tonference would afford all
:ountries "an opportunity to ex-
plain uieir (juuuo v
"Thus they will have available
111 the elements inaispeiisu"
!or judgment on which to act
with full knowledge of the case.
Only a correct statement of the
oroblem can take into account
ihe external actions which mark
he international conduct of a
:ountrv and not the presumed in
tentions attributable to one
group or another."
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 (.?
The state department today said
It had received no communica
tion from the Argentine govern
ment suggesting a conference of
foreign ministers of the Ameri
can republicans.
Tt ... onnnnnroH that if SUCU
a communication is received, the
United States win aci upon "
onlv after exchanging views
with the other western hemi
sphere governments.
POLICE DELAYED
The council controversy over
' the police department, which
burst into the open last Monday
night, will probably not be re
vived officially until a week
from next Monday. Unless
Mayor John Houston calls a
special meeting Monday night,
the regular council meeting will
not be held because it is a "fifth
Monday" of the month.
Mayor Houston remarked to
day that he feels that Chief of
Police Earl Heuvel has done a
good job, and added that it is his
intention to keep Heuvel as chief
until his term expires at the first
of the year. "Of course, mis
takes have been made," said
Houston. "Everybody makes
them. But under the difficult
circumstances which have pre
vailed, I think Chief Heuvel and
the department have served the
city well." "
REDS OPEN FIRE
IT
Bulgaria Signs
Armistice Terms
MOSCOW. Oct. 28 M5) An of
ficial announcement tonight
said that Bulgaria had signed an
armistice with thu allies.
(A Moscow broadcast, reported
by the federal communications
commission, saia me armistice
agreement came at the conclu
sion of two days of negotiations
in the Russian capital between
representatives of Russia. Brit
ain and the United States and the
Bulgarian delegation.
(Continued from Pace One)
the cast, the Breda-Tilburg road
was cut, and Breda itself was
a target for converging columns
of Polish and Canadian troops.
4. Tilburg was in the hands
of British troops, who got a tu
multuous welcome from the
Dutch population, although a
few snipers still clung to the
western fringes of the city.
5. North of Tilburg, an ar
mor and infantry slash carried
through Loon Op Zand and
headed for Oostcrhout on the
escape route from Breda to the
Geertruidenberg bridge over
the Maas. Here the British were
only six miles from the Maas.
F. D. Roosevelt
(Continued from Pace One)
iticians are stating that the re
publicans in the congress would
cooperate with a republican
president in establishing a world
organization for peace clearly
intimating that they would not
cooperate toward the same end
in the event of a democratic
victory."
'That," it seems to me. is a
deliberate and indefensible ef
fort," he said, "to place political
advantage not only above de
votion t o country, but also
above our very deep desire to
avoid the death and destruction
which would be caused by fu
ture wars.
(Continued from Pago One)
preparations for . the major op
eration. The drive began with twin
thrusts down bull) sides of the
Hunau-Kwangsi railway, which
lashed at Chinese defenses from
14 to 17 miles cast of Kweilin.
Still another column swung
soulhwestward from Kwimg
vang, 50 miles cast northeast of
kweilin, with the ultimate aim
of joining the general attack
and bringing under two-sided
pressure the city which the Chi
nese have said would prove
"China's Stalingrad."
Mov To Outflank
As the Japanese blasted their
way down the railway, a sup
porting column moved to out
llank Kweilin from the west.
The Chinese said fighting raged
at all points of the attack.
In a move to protect the left
flank of this offensive, a Japa
nese force based in the Hunan
iMtiiiM tnvirn nf Yimumilll. 75
miles cast of Kweilin, jabbed
southward across me rwwangsi
border against Fuchwan, 35
miles distant.
On the west river front, the
Chinese said, another new Japa-
nn rlritrf, rtlin rtf tWfl .'ItlllPd
at the American air base city
of Liuchow, 95 miles southwest
of Kweilin, had sprung west-
.9r 1ft rttilnc hrtvnnH its hace
at Pingnam. The other push to-
warn ijiutnuw ia uuui
pri from the KweiDine area.
southeast of Liuchow.
New Assignment
Set for Stilwell
WASHINGTON. Oct. 28 UV)
General Stilwell has been re
called from his triple command
in the Far East and will be given
"a new and important, but at
present, undisclosed assignment."
Stilwells recall was an
nounced by the While House. A
few minutes later, the war de
partment added that he was
headed for an important new
post.
(Continued from Page One)
pathian mountains by way of
the Uzok pass for an accelerated
effort to reach the isolated
Czechoslovak patriot resistance
forcres at Banska Bystrica, 140
miles west, now linked with the
allies only by plane.
Twenty-five miles north of
Umgvar other units of Petrov's
army penetrated six miles into
Slovakia, capturing the town of
Starina, in the Ciroka valley
nine miles northwest of Ulic,
taken along with 48 other localities.
Thomas E. Dewey
(Continued from Page One)
scarcity theories and shrinking
economy of the new deal years.
"We must go forward and de
velop the great American mar
ket for our farm products
through improved diet for the
American people. If we can
keep set on this objective we
shall need, not a reduction, but
an increase in food productions.
We must not go back to those
dismal days in the middle age
of the new deal when two fam
ilies out of five in America were
living at the undernourished,
level of less than S2f a wbpU- "
. Although the president spoke
in x-iiimueipiiiii last nigm, tne
GOP candidate made no direct
attempt to answer any of his
opponent's statements, except to
repeat his assertion that there
was "bickering, chaos and con-!
fusion in Washington" and to j
. .. ..... uuii.ana iiltuu-
tion to ' bring our fighting men
home promptly when victory is
achieved."
Lt. Col. Van Orden
Arrives For Duty
J. (Continued from Pago One)
March, 1028, and was commis
sioned a second lieutenant.
Tour of Duty
His marine corps service in
cludes a tour of duty in Haiti, in
Cuba, sea duty on the USS Okla
homa, and as commander of rifle
ranges at Cape May, N. J., Wake
field, Mass., and Quantico, Va.
Since Pearl Harbor, the lieu
tenant colonel has served on Sa
moa, Guadalcanal and Now Zea
land with the third marines be
fore the Bougainville campaign.
; Col. Van Orden's outfit took
fiart In 75 per cent of the actual
ine fighting on Bougainville,
and the stocky, 38-year-old offi
cer's ability and courage won for
him the Navy Cross.
' Though slightly wounded by
machine gun fire on D-Day, No
vember 1, 1943, he stayed in the
front lines at Cape Torokina.
Ho was also outstanding for
his leadership and example in
the recent Guam campaign, and
was returned to the states short
ly after Guam became an Ameri
can possession again.
If It's a "frozen" article you
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