Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 14, 1944, Page 2, Image 2

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    Novambar U .
PACE TWO
Oldest Voter
Engineers Trdub
BEDS BUTTLE WAY
? TO RAILROAD CITY
:?"R',w.''s
MANILA. AIRFIELDS
HERALD ,AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
Old So!, ArHsf, Paints a Smoke Picture
... I1K-
I . P'J
(Continued from Page One!
from the northeast after crossing
tha'Tisza river apparently had
made solid contact with the mam
forces of Marshal Rodion . Mai
inoviky's second Ukrainian
army, and were aiding in draw
ing, the assault line close to Jasi
bereny from the east, west and
south. .
Strong Resistance
'Front dispatches said the Ger
mans resisted strongly, using
Panther tanks and flame throw
era in an attempt to wipe out
advanced Russian infantry ele
ments. .. ..
Despite the fierceness of the
enemy opposition, the Russians
captured at least 10 towns, in
cluding the rail terminal of Jas
zapati, 11 miles east of Jasiber
eny and 45 miles east of Buda-
P6(Moscow dispatches made no
mention today of Russian forces
previously reported in the south
ern outskirts of Buda pelt. -A
German broadcaster. Col. trnsi
von Hammer, said the Russians
at Dunaharaszti, opposite Csepel
island, five mncs soum ui ..-.
capital.)
Wisconsin Back
Dies of Injuries
NEW YORK. Nov. 14 tfV
Two football players died of in
juries and a third still is m seri
ous condition following the
sport's most tragic weekend since
the rules were revised in the in
terest of player-safety a decade
and a half ago.
Allen Shafer, 17-year-old Uni
versity of Wisconsin quarter
back, died an hour after suffer
ing internal injuries in the last
half of the Badger-Iowa game at
Madison, Wis. .. ,
Lloyd Motes, 17-year-old sen
ior at Landier high of Macon,
Ga., died Sunday of a fractured
vertebrae In his neck, suffered
when throwing a block in a game
Friday night.
Bob Hellinghausen. 20-year-old
center on the Tulsa univer
sity team, underwent an opera
tion for the removal of a lacer
ated spleen yesterday. He was
injured in the game with -Southwestern
of Texas Saturday. ;
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
. (Continued From Page One)
Imaginary THRONE OF
FRANCE; has been arrested
after crossing over from Spain.
It has been more than a
century since France had a king,
but the HOPE OF ROYALTY
still lives there. -
Negroes Charged ..
With Kidnapping
' SEATTLE, Nov. 14 (Pi
Charges of kidnaping and trans
portation across a state line of
Morris Mays,- young negro ship
yard worker from Vancouver,
Wash., were placed against three
negroes before U. S. Commis
sioner Stuart Elliott in Tacoma
yesterday, Leland V. Boardman,
special agent in charge of the Se
attle federal bureau ot investi
gation, reported last night.
Boardman identified the three
as Laman Tolliver, Earl White
and Rudell Cumbie.
Let the DOCTOR
write it...
Don't try to "write your
own prescription" - and
don't rely en old-fashion.d,
hit-or-miss "horn, rem
edies." In i h i trying
tlmts, sickness is a sabo
teur. We can't afford to'
tak chances, to dilly-dally-and
delay. Tim. is too val
uable to. wast .van a mo
ment. ... .
When you are 111, eon-'
suit t responsible Physic
Ian Immediately.
CURRI N'S
. i FOR. DRUGS,
840,aln . .. Ph., 4514
) J."
VHYQUIIITUPLETS
always do this for
CHEST GOLDS!
To Promptly RtRtv CavcMnf
Son Throat ana Aching Mucin
WtionMer the Qulntuplsts eiteh cold
thclrchMU, throtusnd hiekt rarubbed
Jjtb Muiterol. Powtrtully ootblo
Musfsrolt not only promptly relieve,
eouihe, ore throst, aching chest mueclee
du. to eolile but ALSO helps brink up
eoncnllan in upper bronchial trset, nou
ana throat. WotuUrfulforgrowiwpBttool
la 8
Strengths
' 1 1
A cameraman's alertness for beauty resulted in the unusual photo above, which shows smoke from
burning autumn leaves merging into brilliant sunlight that filters through the trees in one of
Cleveland s paries.
United Opens Case
For Added Service
SAN FRANCISCO,. Nov. 14
liP) Arguments to 'support its
application for - permission to
serve 24 more' western cities
while adding 145 miles to its
existing routes were begun yes
terday by the United Air Lines
before "the civil aeronautics
board examiners.
The cities included: - -Oregon
Klamath Falls,
Bend. North Bend, Marshfi'eld,
The Dalles, Astoria and Baker.
Washington Chehalis, Cert
tralia. Olympia, Hoquiam, Aber
deen and Yakima.
Idaho Lewiston. Clarkston,
Gooding and Twin Falls.
OBITUARY
BYRON ALFRED CRUMB
Byron Alfred Crumb, (or the last 11
years a resident of Tulelake. Calif.,
passed away at his lale residence on
Monday. November 13, 1M4. at 13:30
p. m. following an Illness of six week.
He was a native of Waseca county,
Minn.,, and at the time of hli.,deAth
waft a Red 04 years, 6 months and 29
days. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Ida
Crumb of Tulelake. Calif.: one son.
Wilbur, U. S. army: one daughter, Joyce
Crumb. Tulelake. Calif.: three brothers.
A. J. of Wen a tehee. Wash., E. J. of
Trinidad. Wash., and Walter Crumb of
naymond. Mont.: three sisters. Mrs. C.
C. Crippen of Big Fork, Minn.. Mrs.
Joe Beck told of Minot, N, D. and Mrs.
R. L. Adams of Moscow. Idaho. The
romatns rest in the Earl Whltlock Fu
neral home. Pine at Sixth, where friends
may call. -Notice -of funeral to be an
nounced in this issue of the paper.
FUNERAL
' 1 JUNIATA TALLMAW
Funeral rtrvlces for the late Juniata
Tallman who passed away at the home,
of her daughter. Mrs. Reinhold Klatt;
4103 Summers lane, this city, will be
held in the chapel of the Earl Whit
lock Funeral home, . Pine street at
Sixth, on Thursday, November Iff, 1841
at 1:30 p. m. with the Rev. David F.
Bamett Jr.. pastor of the First Pres
byteriairchurch of this city officiating.
Commitment services and Interment
family . plot m Bedfleld cemetery.
Friends axe Invited.
Postponed E. P. Ivory, chair
man of the democratic central
committee, announces the post
ponement of the central commit
tee and Klamath County Demo
cratic club meeting scheduled
for tonight, Tuesday, .to Friday,
November 17 at 8 p. m., in the
circuit court room, courthouse.
Matters of business are to be act
ed upon, and committeemen and
club members are requested to
be in attendance.
McCarry Recovers
! From Accident
i
I Cecil M. "Mac" McCarty, drl
; vcr for Victory cab who suffered
injuries when his car struck a
Great Northern freight at the Al-
tamont crossing early Monday
morning, was reported recover
ing satisfactorily at his home,
123 Pershing way.
McCarty was able to be up
Tuesday, according to his wife.
He was moved Monday from the
Klamath naval air station dis
pensary. AMM 2c Robert Mc-
Murray, USN, passenger in the
cab, was released from the dis
pensary Tuesday morning.
Attend Meeting U. E. Reedcr,
county judge, Wally Hector,
county engineer, Mae K. Short,
county clerk. John R. Reber and
Fred L. Pope, commissioners
left Tuesday for Portland to at
tend the convention of county
officers of the state of Oregon.
Returns Mrs. Madge Mc
Laren, secretary oi J. H. Carn
ahan, city attorney, has returned
from a trip to Calgary, Canada,
where she was called after the
death of her mother.
WEATHER
MDd,r, November 13. 1011
EuKene
Klamath Ttllt .
Sacramento
North Bend
Portland .
meaiora
Reno
San Francisco
Seattle .
.in Trace
. 42 32 .00
..M M Trac
. S3 3 .00
. 49 .11 .00
. SO 24 .00
.46 2 .00
. 96 43
.43 37
Ethel Barrymore
'Greatly Improved'
NEW YORK, Nov. 14 (P)
Ethel Barrymore, actress who
was taken to the Flower Fifth
Avenue hospital yesterday suf
fering congestion of the lungs,
is "greatly improved." her phy
sician, Dr. Louis Rene Kauf
man, said today.
Miss Barrymore missed her
first New York stage appear
ance in 50 years when she be
came ill with grippe last Fri
day night. Performances of
"Embezzled Heaven" have been
cancelled pending her return to
the cast.
' Insure your car with Hani
Norland, 118 North 7th St. Phon
6060.
(Continued from Tago One)
ed Slates navat base, were the
objectives.
Some Damage
The Japanese D o m e I news
agency said yesterday's raids
resulted in "some damage to
our warships ' but grouno m
cllltie.1 were "undamaged."
In addition to the Manila and
Cavito areas, the Japancso said
"about 80 carrier-bused planes
took part in a raid on Clark
field."
The Japanese communique
added:
"After about one hour s vio
lent aerial buttle, our air force
shot down several tons of
planes, Including 10 uncertain.
However, our side also suffered
a valuable sacrifice of one
piano bv self-blasting and four
which did not return to the
base."
Tokyo claimed the American
planes came from a task force.
dlllW FULLS
TO .JAPFIGHTERS
(Continued from Pago One)
Liuchow on the Yungning road.
Fall of Yungning would leave
the Japanese only U0 miles to
go to establish a link between
Manchuria and their forces in
French Indo-Chlna.
One Japanese column was
moving northwest on the Hwang-si-Kwcichow
railroad, in a
thrust aimed at Locheng, 4S
miles northwest of Liuchow. It
was not clear as yet whether
this represented the beginning
of a drive toward Kweichow
province, or merely was Intend
ed to establish a screen to safe
guard the enemy's right flank.
Woman Fractures
Skull in Fall
Mrs. Orville L. Sutton, 2410
Oregon, is in Klamath Valley
hospital suffering from a skull
fracture and broken jaw re
ceived when she fell from her
car early Sunday morning.
Sutton, DiGiorgio Fruit cor
poration employe, was driving
his wlfo home at 2:30 a. m. from
Lakcshore inn where she is cm-
Sloyed as cook. A neighbor,
Irs. Hazel Holmes who Is also
employed at Lakeshore, was
louowing in tier car and the
three were en route to town to
eat. Mrs. Sutton leaned out of
her car to see if Mrs. Holmes
was following, when she lost
her balance and fell to the pave
ment. Her attending physician
said she was , semi-conscious
Tuesday. The accident occurred
200 feet from their home, Sut
ton said.
Classified Ads Bring Result!.
-..1
(NBA TtUphao)
On of ths nation's few contcrnnr.
lam to fiutl a ballot In 1044 elections,
Mrs. KIlMbfth Allen Wood, lot.
Eagle Rack, Calif., signs the rrrlsm
at her polling place. A descendant
or Ethan Allen. Revolutionary War
fcero, Mrs. Wood cast her vole tor
. Dowey.
USO Issues Call
For Magazines
There is an urgent call issued
by USO for magazines to be dis
tributed in hospital trains as they
pass through Klamuth Falls.
Ail magazines may be leu it l
USO. the service renter on Main
street and they will be distribut
ed from that point. Especially
nceciea, omciais said, were pic
ture magazines, funny books mid
the pocket edition of popular fiction.
(Continued from Page One)
Promlrr Still In may consider
wliclht'i' kui'Ii iillliincus cun iinor
uut within the framework ol the
piiipiisetl future world security
organization.
foreseen in Plan
(The Times of London suld I lie
Id of a western Euitipoiin bloc
wnuld full directly within the
category of "regional arrange
infills or agcnclos" for,, nuiliite
iiiiiu'u til pence it ml security fore
M't'ii in llio Dumbarton Oaks'
plan.
("WrsttMii Europo, Including
Britain, Is, as American opinion
has conio Increasingly to recog
nize, an milor bastion of the de
fense of the western hnnil
sphere." said the Times. "The
strengthening of this bastion is
a decisive interest of the Ameri
can nations as well ns of the
whole British commonwealth.")
An official quarter In Paris
said British and French accord
on the desirability of postwar re
gional security pacts was attend
ed by nlinllfiratlons that su"h
pacts must he part of tho general
peiu-o structure and not In op
position eventually to other
blocs.
Merrill
Weather Man Says
Skios to Be Bright
Anrilhn,, .n.,11 nt 1... t.fl,Ufr
weather was . promised for the
Klamath basin with "clear today,
tonight and Wednesday, slightly
warmer In the daytime" the fore
cast d.v tnc u. b. weatherman.
Another seasonal low was
Mr. and Mrs. George Offleld
have had as recent guests two
grandsons, John Fletcher with
the V-12 naval training program
at Rouldcr, Colo., and Fred
Fletcher Jr., with V-5 naval
training program stationed at
Perue, Nelir. The boys are sons
of Mr. and Mrs. Fred D. Fletch
er, Klamath Falls. Home also
while recovering from a reeont
Illness hits been Mrs. Fannette
Offield Hodges, student at South
ern Oregon Colloge of Educa
tion, Ashland. Mrs. Hodges will
graduato In December.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ilunnl
cult and two children, Eleanor
and John, who have been living
In Las Angeles have returned to
Merrill to live.
Mrs. Cora Rycraft Is seriously
ill at the home of her daughter,
Mrs. Roy McNeill On the state
line following heart attack
suffered early this week. Mrs.
i
chalked up Tuesday morning
when the mercury fell to 22 de
grees at 8 o'clock. This was
coldest since last April 17, when
a minimum of 21 was recorded.
It was 10 above zero for the sec
ond morning, according to an tin
flclnl reading at tho Marine Barracks.
(, ii n 'a 'i ... ' 'tf '.f. i aaaaafl A
wiipt. Villi Tlntlry. , .3
around end. intend, to tfj
Oeorgi. Ten, to unbeaten
son. Enjm.cn p0Jf IMJ
p'obk'mA.i7, "a?" "CI
Atlanta, Nov. 25. '
Rycraft has made lirhomhiii
for several years.
Schools of Merrill and Milii
will observe a two-day Tluj
giving vacation, beginnlnt ,
Turkey day, Novprnoer 2
Classes will reopen Moniii
morning. November 27, It iu
announced thli week by Grow
Elliott, principal of the Mere!
high school.
BVBOJf ALFRED' CRUMB
Funeral lervlees for the late Byron
Alfred Crumb who patted away at hit
residence In Tulelake. Calif., on Mon
day, November 13. 1044. followlns an
tllnelt of tlx weeke. will be held In
the chapel of the Larl Whltlock Fu
neral home. Pine at sixth, on Thurt
day, November 10,-1944 at 3 p.- m. un
der tho auspices of the Church of
Jetut Chrltt o( Latter Day Salnti. Com
mitment services and Interment Link
vllle cemelery. Friends are invited.
Like to help run
trains at $220
base pay?
Work for a company whoia
biggest Job is still ahead
This Is a iob for a man who
wants not only good pay, but
really interesting work ... for
a man who's sincere and rcli-'
able. The job: Brakcman with
S.P. No experience needed to
start; we train you in short order-.
. You . help operate trains
. . . make a team with the Con
ductor and Engineer. You get
around, keen the war trains
rolling through. You work with
a company whose biggest war
job is still ahead carrying the
tremendous war load for the
stepped-up push against Japan.
Frankly this is a Job that gets
In your blood . . . makes you
feel that railroading is different
from anything else. Fine pen
sion plan. RailroaM pass privil
eges. Medical service. 'Good
people to work wlth Investi
gate today. Student switchmen
(to switch cars) needad also.
1220 per month altar short
training.
S or write Trainmaster,
S. P. Station, Klamath Falls,
or your nearest S. P. Agent.
iS!i:ii.i.fmiiit
I Ml iM2 it (Ml :
BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:45 P.M. .
STARTS TODAY
THIS PISTOL PACKING PAPAl
sT
iiV 0TT0 KRUGER lT
i tn X JACK BUCHANAN f f
. ' JK JACK LARUE 1 I
Si Y'PW"1 WITHEy J
Sll? & Another Hit
ft I fiWflfiui DE8IBN FOR 1
, wjIMjj&i" ! Ttrrorftlnf two noli on 1 1 -
HKMTY ft.MTDOX
WILLIAM OVLC
ROBERT KEILJMD
OLOai niANKLIM
Box, Office Opens l;30 (t4S
-ENDS-TODAY
SPENCER TRACY'S
GRANDEST R0LE1
Half god, half dtmonl
A boHle-oxe In hit fists I
A laugh on hit Hps I
A oraerf screen advniur
, lit rtCHNKOLQKI
s.
UK
yo
Continuous Show Daily
Box Office Opens 12:30
NEW
TODAY
lBaaMBaMMlMlc1
UP-PERISCOPE!
CARy JOHN
GRANT - GARFIELD
SECOND HIT-
CTWP7T!73
Phena 4967
Box Offlct Opsni li30-MI
-AND-
Box Offlct Optnt l:ti
NOW
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muiical
tpiaih :
In
TECHNI.
COLOXI
,V. swrht--" '.,15
RED SKE
4.tii :i: , with
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SMITH ,,,::
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