PACE TWO HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON MINUTES' BODIES (Continued from Pace One) Lc Hoi and Hcdvig Samuelsoii, ncr roonimal.es in Phoenix, Ariz., and sending tile dismembered bodies in a trunk to Los Ange les in 1831. , Even as a sercanung hotel maid set off an intensive city wide police search yesterday, the second victim was dying in an other hostelry a few blocks away. She was Mrs. Lillian Johnson, about 38, wife of a merchant sea man now reported in the South Pacific. . . . Found stretched on a bed, she dad been slashed from the breasts to the pelvic region. "Pur Cussedness" Lt. McGarry said Wilson re lated that he hit her, then slashed her with a raior "for some reason just pure cussed ncss, I guess." Both the operator of the first hotel and a bellboy at the second had identified Wilson as the com panion, first of Mrs. Griffin and later of Mrs. Johnson, in register ing at the two hotels. . Wilson was booked on suspi cion of murder. At first he sul lenly maintained his innocence despite bloodstains on his hands and shoes. In his pocket, police said they found a razor. Remov ing his shirt they discovered scratches on his back as though made by a woman's fingernails m a frantic ctcam struggle. Studied Chemistry Then crime technicians began combing - the six-foot, blond haired suspect's mustache for blood particles and Wilson, dis closing he had worked as a phar macist and had studied chemis try, suddenly exclaimed:. "That's, it! You'll find that when you mix those particles with a certain amount of water that the hemogloben of the blood can be determined and com pared." , .' '. " . ' i "'. " Burma Boss a its k l" ! v 'Jy Lt.-Gen. Sir Oliver W. M. Lccse, above, "has been named commander-in-chief of the British nth Army group, now fighting in Burma, in the shake-up fol lowing the recent recall of Gen. Joseph W. SulwetL SALEM. Nov.' 16 W) Mrs. Lillian Johnson, who -was- slain in Los Angeles yesterday, was ar rested in S-lem in 1933 on a charge of passing bad checks, state police said today. . ' She . was arrested under the alias of Mrs. D. Lewis. She was not prosecuted, but was returned to San Francisco as she had es caped from a California penal in stitution.. . ... EDITORIALS ON NEWS : (Continued From. Page One). munications lifeline to Chung king and inner China. . The Japs arc possibly figuring on PLUGGING it again FARTH ER UP. .' .XoiuS-.map " will UU the story,'.-" ---. . .. . .. - THERE'S-another tale today: -' Dutch officials in Washing' ton announce-that they are be ginning8t -ohce-lo recruit an ARMY OF -'.THEIR OWN to lib erate the Dutch East Indies from Jap rule. That's something else for the little yellow men to think about not. right, away, for it will take the Dutch a long time to get into action. It's' merely an indica tion of the avalanche that is building up to OVERWHELM THE JAPS sooner or later. Expense Accounts Of Candidates to Be Filed Soon ' Campaign expense accounts of-candidates for city and coun ty offices must be filed at the county clerk's office within a 15-day period following election. The first two accounts arc on file now, showing that Charles DeLap spent $123 on his suc cessful campaign for the office of county clerk. Angus Newton, who -became councilman-from Ward 1 yesterday when he toss ed a coin with Matt Finnigan to settle a ie-vote, spent S20 to advertise his candidacy dux ing the campaign period. Earthquake Felt In Bay Counties OAKLAND, Calif., Nov. 16 (iPl A sharp earthquake was felt at various points in east bay counties at 11:05 a. m. PWT today. There was no report of dam age. . . University of California re corded the quake at 11:04:52. It was described as "very small," and centered from 5 to 10 miles from the university's recording instrument. . New Pine Creek At the big grange meeting held last Saturday night Ray mond Fisher was elected grange master, winninc over two other candidates, present incumbent Ray Bishop and Winifred Dunl gan. DuniKau was elected over seer: Fannie Fisher, lecturer: Fred Fisher, treasurer: Harve Sanders, secretary; Lee Perry, steward: Cecil Batman, assistant steward: Alpha Smith, chaplain: Bill Allen, gatekeeper; Corda Perry, ceres; Evelyn Cundiff, pomoua: Donna llammerslcy. Flora: lmogene Batman, lady as sistant steward; Erma Sanders, musicians, with Daisy Fleming as assistant. Ray Bishop was voted on the executive commit tee, taking the place of his fath er. Bill Bishop. Dancing, fol lowed the business meeting and a big feed with everyone having a good time. Daisy Fleming played the piano. The Home Ec club met at the grange hall October 31, with seven members present and one visitor, Daisy Fleming, who Join ed. The meeting was called to order by the president, Mrs. Elizabeth Alexander. Plans were made for the Harvest Festival to be held on December 9. There will be a fancy work booth with Alpha Smith as chairman and Allie Hammerslcy, Sadie Keller and Ethel Deter assisting. A harvest booth will be taken care of by Mary Snider, assisted by Daisy Fleming and Edna Mul key. A bundle booth will be attended by Lydia Bishop, as sisted by Mrs. Ella Oliver and Grace Bernard. A fortune tell ing booth will be conducted by Mrs. Erbie Hammersley, assist ed by Mrs. Amie Cloud and Mrs. Lillian Rcid. A cider and cof fee booth will be managed by Mrs. Fannie Fisher, assisted by some girls. Mrs. Thelma Butler is chairman of the supper com mittee with Mrs. Dorothy Blunt and Mrs. Fair Hammersley as assistants. The president of ,thc club has asked all members who have taken dish towels to make, to finish them and leave them at the post office. The ladies are all working hard to make the bazaar one of the biggest and best. Dancing will follow the festivities it is planned. ' Mrs. Lydia bishop was act ing hostess for Mrs. Kay tiisnop who could not attend. Jello with whipped cream, cookies and cof fee was served for refreshments. The Needle club met at the home of Mrs. Jack Moffitt week ago last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Earnest Robnett and daughter, Leona and Mr. and Mrs. Leo Mulkey attended the burial ceremonies of their father, Ben F. Cloud, ago 92, near Chlco, Calif., last Monday. Mrs.' Leala Porter returned homo with them to visit for a while with relatives here. Mrs. Frank Alexander left lust Tuesday morning for Reno whore she was to moot her mother and together they will Journey to Salt Lake City to visit a sister there lor about three weeks. This will be thu first time in about 25 ycurs that Mrs. Alexander has been rbaek to her old home city. The Happy Hour club met at the home of Mrs. Uclbert Cloud last Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Carrol Cloud as hostess. Eleven members and one guest, Mrs. Leala Porter were present. Mis. Eunice Cogburn won first prize in the amusement contest and Mrs. Cora Vincent second. Gin-gcr-brcad with whipped cream and home made cider was served for refreshments. The nest meeting will be held at the same home with Mrs. Clara Cloud be ing hostess. Earl Rogers, who has served 35 months overseas in the South Pacific, is home on a 17-day furlough. Earl was among the first boys to leave Lake-view around three years ago and has been in almost continuous serv ice ever since with no furloughs. He was in two major buttles in New Guinea and at Guam. He is quite glad to be home and visit old friends. He was a New. Pine Creek visitor last Saturday eve ning. Earl worked for Marshall Ayres on the Walt Lcehinan ranch before being inducted in to the army. The state, Evert Rcid and Earnest Robnett are putting in together and are installing a concrete ho.adgate over at the old Baker place at their dividing ditch. This will be a much need ed improvement over the old delapidated wooden hendgate which is being replaced. The work is being done largely by the county road crew and ma chinery under the supervision of the water master, Mr. Cam eron, and supervisor George Per kins. The location of the new headgate will be a few feet south of the old one as the creek chan nel was straightened at that point and cut deeper so as to carry the spring flood waters. Seedy Style tt i v V"t jt t The "hat" Kathleen Young nt Seattle holds atop her . hood looks prctly seedy and why shouldn't It? It's scedpod of , giant sunflower. Jap Alien Permitted To Live In Sacramento SACRAMENTO, Nov. 16 (V) The Sacramento Bee said today Unit the first foreign horn Jap anese known to have been granted permission to return to Sacramento has been back in the city about two weeks. He is K. Osada, 65. who for 30 years operated a real estate office and farm labor contract ing company here. Permission for his return from the Topaz, Utah, Japanese camp, the paper said, was granted by federal of ficials duo to the illness of his wife, a Caucasian. The paper said the federal bureau o( investigation cheeked Osada's papers nnd found them in approved form. The permit, the paper said, apparently gives Osada the right to reside here indefinitely. -MEN AND WOMEN IN .-' rr-ri it rr ; jtKV Lt 'il NISEI WOUNDED TULKLAKE A war depart ment announcement made public hero tills week by the WHA, lists the niunes of two soldiers with next or kin living in the Tide lake segregation center as wounded in action in the Medi terranean area, Thu men are Pvt. Ichiro B. Kulo, sun ul Uiuitsu and liiit.su Kuto, Tho family formerly lived in Hrodorick. Calif. The young man was wounded, .July 22. in Italy. 1st Sgt. William K. Ishlda, son of Jlsnncla Ishlda, formerly of Siicriimento, was wounded In ac tion In lata July, also in Italy, GUNNER GUNN RETURNS TULELAKE Word has been received by friends hero that Sgt. Warren Gunn, formerly of Tulelake and Merrill, who has been overseas since last April, has been returned to tho United States from the European thea ter of war. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Gunn, former residents of this community. Young Gunn has been serving as a gunner on a bomber and has completed Ills required num ber of missions, it was learned. His family now lives in Los An geles. Dean of Women At University Dies HOLD EVERYTHING! ( I Ml HI MUKI ' 1 II tQ U p HI on Nornb.r "1 understand the lounge car people built this one!" Ends Tonight "Destination Tokyo' SPECS, SIGN OF CULTURE Wearing spectacles was con sidered a mark of education in China 2000 years before the art of making -glasses became gen erally known. OBjTUARY CHARLES SHERMAN WALDBIP JB. Charles Sherman Waldrip Jr.. a former resident of Klamath county, Oregon, but or the last 22 yean maktmz his horn In Tulelake. Calif.. --passed away near .nai cuy on luesaay, November 14. 1944. He was a native of Mexico, and at the Vjrte of his death was aged 51 yearn .1 months and 12 days. Surviving are Ills wife. Mrs. Minola Waldrip of Tule lake, Calif.; four sons. Lt, Sherman T. Waldrip. Fort Knox, Kentucky, William M. Waldrip S.2C.. San Diego, Calif Thomas E. and John W. Waldrip of Tulelake. Calif.; his father, Charles Sher man Waldrip Sr.. Long Beach, - Calif.; three brothers. Elmer Waldrip of Tule lake. Calif., John and Russell of Suland. Calif.; eight listers, Mrs. Mabel Wilsey of Modesto, Calif., Mrs. Margaret Al lison of Long Beach. Calif.. Mrs. Ida Reynolds of Omak. Wash., Mrs. Sadie Ca berth of Suland. Calif., Mrs. Hazel Faltu of Kellogg, Ida.. Mrs. Helen Clark. Clarkson. Wash., and Miss Laura Wal drip. Suland. Calif. Mr. Waldrip was m,ember of Malin lodge. No.'. 194 . t A' . M Tne remains rest In Whltlock Funeral home. Pine at Sixth, where friends may call after 4 P. m. Friday Notice of funeral t be announced in this issue of the paper. rUiNcKALS CHARLES SHERMAN WALDBIP JB. Shermfln Wnldrip Jr., who ptmcd away near Tulelake. Calif., on Tuejday. No. chapel of the F.url Whlllock Funeral home. Pine al Sixth, on Saturday. No vember 18. 1044 at S p. m. y,th thVnev. mien Bronson of the Community Presbv. If-,'..'; cnu'c" ,' Tulelake. Calif., of. flelatlng. Commitment aervlces and In- etery, Poo Valley. Oregon. THOMAS HAM, AM. EN Th!f"i?"i."i'!fr1 ""rv'c" 'T lh late A.,? ?. 'If" AU'"' w,, PMed away In thl rlty November 10. 1044. will be held In Apnland. Ore.. In the Mt. View rem. n. hi. oaiuruay. November JR. Commitment servlcca will follow In the family plot there. Arrangement! "It "I"1 direction of Ward'a Klam ath Funeral home of this city. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On CrcomtiMon relieves promptly be rftusfi it goes right to tho seat of the trouble to help loosen Riid expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, In flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Crcomulsion with the un derstanding you must like the way It julekly allays the cough or you are 10 have your money back. CREOMULSION or Coueht. Ojest Coldi, Bronchitis "ivnunu IE "ft J . "n' Mil II SKCOND HIT II VW Y ATT t.i. .', 'Jl I .. ..... " . .. II - ..... Eijjir I - linndnlohf hwfinihnnrf II in r-Ul T I FRinilY - CATIIRnAY 1 TfTTi M II IHMIl I VII I VKVII I UlUSH 4 ill Pnmrtc Aflnmn I JLnOTl'nl EUGENE. Ore, Nov. lfl M'l; , j g, l'L.I'll . ricm, of women al the Ut.i- niW 'Ajf loWfjj vcrsity of Oregon, died nt a hos- M Of TH p 1 1 ii I here lodiiy, only lit) hours .-,- "v crvfU , w nfter the detilh of her luisbund. , I " Victor ifv - ? Dr. Charles Leslie Sehwerini!. I J.". ,7 SI inRV C us i A haarl nllnplr luln 'l'll.Hav : V Xf ' 4TI ' J STONES FROM SKY I was fatal to Dr. Schweritig, 40, a 1 0 ""rl m V Scientists wore amonjj the Inst Eukciio dentist, j I " JK - 0EKHER Lwy g to admit the possibility of stones Dean of women slnee ln.l l.' I ' 1 tf Euiene fj fallinu from tho sky, as in the Mrs. Seliwerinu was acting dean I jiV tttf.'KW rAUETTE 1" T Ml case of meteorites, and not until from I930I034. She joined the i B4Kwff f .''Sl mmm l" If tlie early part of the. 19th cen- universily staff In 1U2B as assist- fvJ t'S t Jj Itury was it conceded generally, ant dean. IV Wv''atWC flTAJI LL rSlW- Box Office Opens 1:30-6:13 f$ YY I? JF". B MINSDN V' STARTS TODAY W . , ' TffSB MJ - Another Thrill Hit - SL- SYM JOSMMS JXJ? f l. 4' DAnmc.ivc.Tmv...cTm I f MARGUERITE CHAPMAN EDGAR BUCHANAN C fVWvW! Wty iC 1. .oCHILUNG YOU AGAIN IN g ra " ui..ji.n. , uim i itm " fcSV m I "Wm.Zy x I I second QS&llkfBP- ill arttv. afrfd u ' it i i " ymemtrriiMTtnc w a , n v yvx i im wuii lews i hi . m.m wwmrwmr hw ui ua . c. j u i nun ii m m n ic a -m uiiv ' a " t I'" ' L - ' ; F l - seO-X Conlimiovis Show Daily Open 12:30 Seareanfin . . In Canada t0 B.!P Ironi "clla uviil" J, ,,,, taw' mil. will 1k.h ,,,Jv: 'IllC mini ii'ii,i ',. '",fl by a k" linnliiii seeiintv r,"ll U ld today u . "'""liuff OIIiiwii rulrn C' ineni fii rit'ln Ik durli i i"ov- soon the inac-hlnny ft nel on depends t" lalt III lllit miw... ,.i "w 0U rnk. llOX ("Iff,,-,. r v "i ns u..5 NEW TODAY AN EPIC r-3 OF THE xJk BOISTEROUS.1 BRAWLING OLD WEST! Mi i i