Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 17, 1944, Page 1, Image 1

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    PIEMAN
HUM
rui
Lon-
J tint
fcrtineiii. .....,i,.Hn i i n
r'lS".!... of hun
I14 I onus In H'o Aachen
IrU "". i ,f now armor-
rw i from the Moselle
r "K, lie weight of IN-
LldlOlU'"1'"' V......I.. IN 1IOL.
lORV." , .
itiiMtE nro ft-'W progress rc-
The ncv". .',.,, ,. whuro
cn Ul uiul IHIwmnies
"c iTihtlnK mounter io
Sd'.hc"" 8OI..0 two mllM.
" A DUG-1N rc
' y; Tho Gennuim huvo
"" nr'.ltnc l w 1 1 1 Tiger
fflV bo-ton o.
Tho Drltlfli 2nd army, fight;
In Holland In i" of
I ,,, ..i. l,nr wntch I1U.
fhu'drlvcn the Germans buck
I K MM river. Tho German
E,iir, Kit l 8 morning mm
t .l ock ii Hkely to be
Scdlro "In . few day.
iiurnE Is speculation today
fhit wound two million men
flilhlliiK on the western
ItTlmlf million Germans
jUll Ion mid hlf le-
'
lore men to attack llinn to dc
lend. , , ,
L. i. .nfitiin thnt we won'
1 ,et much dialled news right
iwy. e won i
fosGermons are short of planes
Irtn'l joIiik to tell them any
ilng useful.
liirrnvrulNr: nnlnt to the
f conclusion that this Is THE
I When SIX ARMIES MOVE
IT ONCE, It s bound 10 do Dig
.ur n,..,Un nrn l 11 1 batter
f lug nt Budapest. News of the
Iihling thero is seamy hub
L u., H'e n fnlrlv Wife COn
imion that when tho Russians
lit saying little they're ngniing
rrl. That nas occn mcir cu
m so for.
. JENKINS
'p'rur,li from a
Soon, P'O'i'b'y., '
.rliet the. u b , ,...,
,. . WO .""
o.r-
1IH
this
e i
(THERE Isn't much now from
it Ihn Plilllnnlnrs. The flllht-
ijn! at Ormnc has been slowed
y torrential tropical rains. I he
umber of Jap ships wo smocked
i Manila bny me tirsi 01 mo
eclc has been raised to 16
wo more than previously re-
loncd,
FHUNGKING says today the
Japs are pushing on WEST
torn Uhnn, DEEl'EK into in
tMOK Ch nn.
The bs c of the s tuat on still
Wests thnt their nurnoso Is
P KnocK China comnlctcly out
maybe' take possession of It)
Fiore wo can gel tliero 10 ncip
Itclivcly.
Ihcy must foresee ultimate
f ol their south Pacific Island
pipirc that was seized In the
flays when thev had the
orld bv tho tall. Thpir Innl.
pi NEXT decision would be to
tcllFC to n pnntinrtnlnl nmnlrn
f mcy can (mnybc) defend
i
fOKYO radio tells today of
i more u-2B rcconnuissanco
pp before bombing) flights
f tr Jnpnn and muttcj-s nerv
rly about "nlr raid dlsnsters
view of the novltiihilltv of
'i.-reaio enemy air assaults.
HE Weather is bad on ALL
wit Battlefronts torrential
m tho south Pacific and
now and mud, wltli low'
'a'g cioucis, in Europe,
'HERE Is a new scare story
Way,
Loildnil Jl,l1 SlnxMinlm
Pr that tllD flnrmnno nrn fit.
H UD sul
inching devices In order to
R,"r lrgo cities along the
Jhe stories MAY bo true
'.iiioir nrosent mnnrl tlinpn
24th Division
Menaces Limon,
Key to Ormoc
By C. YATES McDANIEL
GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS. Philippines,
Nov. 17 (I') Stubbornly dlndd, shell blasted Limon, key to
the Ormoc road, wis within grasp of weather beaten units ol
the 24lh U. 8. dlvlilon today they took virtual control of dom
inating Breakneck ridge.
Fred Hompion, Aasociated Press war correspondent with the
24th, reported American units coming down the slopes of Break
neck ridge from the west had advanced lo within 1000 yards ot
the Ormoc valley village.
Other American units on the ast were held up by Japanese
strongly entrenched In ravines and gullies.
Another 24th division force Is behind the Japanese on the
Ormoc roed, two and a half miles south of Limon, but has not
been able to cut the road entirely because of heavy Japanese
concentrations on a hillside commanding the highway. The Jap
anese have not been able to use the road either, because me
Americans are keeping it under continual mortar and machine
gun fire.
With Amcricnn long-range ar-
nothing muci, tho mzi
lUc i iii 10 . mad doslt
oil the harm on us
A rftn.A.j . . ....
.-.in.-iua WO r will trv nnv.
ig nun ik.
tnr, i iiiciuro WO gel
Wo top, controlling nazls Is
" "I a cornori-rl PAnm ...1
, ,
N the homo front. Tlmo man.
cnt ini i , wncn jj uu
(Con 'L1S voiing-mnchlno-
,-mion lJIlgU Two)
'oosikiVl Named
'"n Minister
;STK0CKHOI M, Nov. 17
Imo mi.i T.'Km was
in,
named
todnv
met.
a shit. ur .0I 'n nnd
"nakeun 0f ii. .,,.
' VPlnHK.. "-"-' u l.i
!fmor (iaTmP!"C0. onvy Bnd
:lPaiM 8) l'','cmlcr who pnr
lilch l d ..."'S, ncgollntlons
t,L V, ,0 the Moscow.HpIuIii.
fiu C tri' n"skivl succeeds
Ma 4h" ,"Bnron Cnrl Gus-
In The ShaHta-Caacade Wonderland
Novflmbir 17, 1011
Ifl) 46 MIb. l
Mx. (Nor.
freclpltitlon last SI boar ..00
Htream yer to dU
Normal t.00 Lstt year 1.11
orccaaii isicar.
Oreroni Ooen
Tulclakc: Open
tfatur-ay Shootlnf lloura
...5:20
PRICE 5 CENTS
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1944
Number 10317
L
1 ID
E
BY BHENNAN
CAHQQN HERE
Aid Safety Program
rj r-ij Wfwy$m mv i
Brcnnan and Cahoon, contrac
tors, were low bidders on the
Marine Tnrracks' expansion with
a bid of $1,026,833. Bids were
opened at 2 p. m. Friday at the
U. S. navy construction office
here.
Second low bid was submitted
by Morrison Knudscn Twalts
with 1,075,400. Other bids are
as follows:''-"1'
Wnale. Campion. $1,156,480;
MacDunald and Kohn Inc., $1.-
185,700; Johnson, urane ana r i-
pcr, $1,217,133.
Lt. J. M. Bobcock, navy offi
cer In charge of construction,
said Friday that all mas win dc
forwarded to the bureau of yards
and docks, Washington D. C,
where they will be subject to
cheek. Awnrds should bo made
within 10 days and tho navy of
fices hero will bo notified Immediately.
Kyunns on nrocram ai me ma
rine Bnrrncks Includes 12 bar
racks, 6 barracks storehouses, an
extension lo tho stornge build
ing, gatehouse, swimming pool
and utilities for theso buildings.
Tri-Power Meet
Takes Priority
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 (P)
President Roosevelt made clear
today thnt his protected meeting
with Primo Minister Churchill
and Premier Stnlln would tnKC
priority ever his hope of visit
ing Paris.
He indlenled also that his
Churchlll-Slnlin meeting might
bo at some point far removed
from the French capital.
Mr. Roosevelt told his news
conference he hoped some day to
accept an invitation lrom ucn.
Charles do Gaulle to visit Paris.
But nt the present time, he said,
it Is more Important to see the
prime minister and there is a
question of geography which
comes i.i, too.
Japs Saved, War
Prisoners Sunk
LONDON, Nov. 17 (P) The
Japanese saved their own na
tionals from a sinking transport
off Singapore In September but
left 1300 British and Australian
prisoners of war to die in the
sen, War Secretary Sir James
Qrlgg told tho house of com
mons today.
Amcricnn submarine crews
which torpedoed tho transport
risked their lives to save the pris
oners, but a majority drowned,
he said. One hundred and fifty
survivors have arrived in Eng
Innd. Mrs. Short Finds
Stranger's Body
VANCOUVER, Wnsh., Nov. 17
(fllMrs. Mae K. Short, Klnm
nth Fnlls, was recovering today
from the shock of visiting her
brother. ....
She walked into his home yes
tertlay to find a stranger whom
neither .'ie nor her brother ever
saw before lying dead on the
Tho dead man was Identified
as Aubrey C. Nanny, shipyard
worker, and Mrs. Short's broth
er, Thomas Kemp, said he must
havo walked Into the house for
protection against the rain. An
autopsy was ordered to deter
mine the cause of death.
tlllerv hammering the 20-milc
corridor which remains to the
Japanese, and American air
fluhtcrs raniilng tho skies over
head, enemy dead mounted
steadily.
Rains were slowing the action,
though. Gen. Douglas Mac
Arthur rcoortcd In his daily com
municate, and a Japanese sniper
bullet wounded Brig. G e n.
Claudius M. Easley, assistant
commander of the 88th division.
First wounded
-General Easley, a colorful
Texan, was tramping through
front line positions when he was
struck. He was the first Ameri
can general officer to be wound
ed in this campaign.
General MacArthur an
nounced complete occupation of
liny Pcgun island in the Mapia
group Just northwest of New
Guinea, thus eliminating Japa
nese aerial watchers able to ob
serve operations on" tho Amerl-"
can bombing route to the Phllip
(Continued on Page Two)
Ffoor Put Uncfer
Sale Price of
Hitler Pictures
NEW YORK, Nov. 17 (P) A
Berlin dispatch in the Swedish
newspaper Tlgnlngen declared
that under a new decree pictures
of Hitler "may not be sold for
less than 45 rciclismark ($11 pre
war rate)".
Tho dispatch reported today
to the office of war information,
said the measure was taken
since offers to sell Hitler pictures
"havo been particularly numer
ous during recent weeks."
Air Station
Medico Detached
Cmdr. B. G. Bailey, senior
medical officer at the Klamath
naval air station, was detached
Thursday and has left the sta
tion to report for overseas duty.
His transfer was announced Fri
day morning by Cmdr. R. R.
Darron.
Cmdr. Bailey has been at the
station since March, 1944, when
ho roported for duly as senior
medical officer. His replace
ment is expected within the next
few weeks. Cmdr. Darron stated.
This is Dr. Bailey's second over
seas assignment. Prior to com
ing to Klamath rails he was sta
tioned with a- hospital unit in the
South Pacific. Dr. Bailey made
many friends among the medical
nrofosslon here. He was given
a farewell at the Pelican party
room last Monday nignt. ur.
and Mrs. Bailey made their home
at 4518 Crosby during their resi
dence here.
Puttina uo one of the numerous safeiv poiters on display throughout the city' this week are,
left to right, Sid King, Adsm LeFor, Charles Finch and L. R. Thompson. King and LeFor are
here from the Oregon traffic ' safety division in Salem to assist Finch, Junior chamber of com
merce director in charge of safety, and Drive Chairman Thompson in putting over the annual
Jaycee traffic safety week. -
TAKEN BY DEATH
HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 17 m
Sudden death has claimed Boake
Carter, 46-ycar-old radio - com
mentator, whose frequently pro
vocative program won him thou
sands of friends' and opponents.
He appeared to be In good
health but complained of feeling
ill after his daily program for
Mutual Bi'oaddastlng systenryes
terday. Taken to a doctor's of
fice, he suffered a stroke and
died shortly after he was admit
ted to Hollywood Presbyterian
hospital. '
Dr. Elmer Belt said that Car
tcr came into his office complain
ing he had been suffering from
a kidney ailment and that he had
the first such attack, eight days
ago in Kansas City.
Had Convulsion
The physician said that while
Carter- was being examined and
was on an X-ray table he had a
(Continued on rage iwoi
Duane Cassidy
Missing in Reich
SSgt. Duane A. Cassidy, 28,
United States army air corps,
is reported missing in action
over Germany, according to
word received Friday by Cas
sidv's fiancee. Martha Givan.
Cassidy has been overseas for
the past four months. Ho is a
former eniDlovc of Ivory Pine
mills at Bly. Cassidy's mother
is Mrs. Florence uassmy oi
Gooding, Ida. He enlisted in the
air corps soon alter yean Har
bor. '
Too Many Calls
To Barracks
Due to heavy traffic on the
Marine Barracks switchboard,
and the general inconvenience
to officers and men, the post
signal officer requested today
that calls to the Barracks be
limited to emergency use
only.
Business has been greatly
retarded and important offi
cial communications have
-been -held up in the past due
to unnecessary personal calls,
it was asserted. Compliance
of the public is requested.
Cotton Ed Smith
Dies at Home
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 (IP)
Democratic Senator Ellison Du
rant (Cotton Ed) Smith, of South
Carolina, dean of the senate and
uncompromising anti-new dealer,
died today In Lynchburg, S. C.
Tho 80-ycar-old veteran passed
nway from coronary thrombosis
at his plantation nome, aangie-wood.
A chunky, colorful figure with
gray mustache, Smith by last
August had served longer in the
senate than any other member
in history 3S years.
Election Officials Deny
Use of Profanity by FDR
HYDE PARK, Nov. 17 (fF)
Five election officials denied to
day ' that President Roosevelt
used profanity when a voting
machine Jammed while he was
casting his ballot hero on elec
tion day.
A news magazine (Time), de
scribing the president's visit to
tho polling place, said;
"From . the green-curtnlned
voting booth came a clank of
gears as the main control lever
Jerked Irritably back and forth.
Then a voice, familiar to all of
tho U. S. and to most of the
world, snoke distinctly from be
hind the curtains; 'The god
damned thing won't work'."
Thomas L. Leonard, democrat
ic inspector, said "I was the
nerson nearest to the president
because I was tending tho ma
chine. He did not use any pro
fane language at any time.
"'What' ha said was, 'Tom,
JAP CRUISER SUNK
what's the matter with this
thing? It doesn't work. Oh, it's
all right now'."
Leonard said "the president
was delayed only a moment
when the lever failed to swing
completely over. The president
talked through the curtain and
did not come out of the booth
until after ho had completed vot
ing. I was not more than two
feet away. I doubt if tho specta
tors who were further away
could hear what he said to me."
Mrs. George Upright, a repub
lican Inspector, said l never
heard him say a word when the
voting machine failed to work."
Mrs. Reta Lasher. reDublican
gatekeeper, said "All he said
was that the machine did not
work. .
Kit.. n..,rt1K. P....... .Aiit,1t.
1V11.1. ijuuira oins!!.,, ,tMMi.-
can inspector, and Mildred M.
Todd, democratic inspector, said
they did not hear the president
say anything,
U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEAD
QUARTERS, Pearl Harbor, Nov.
17 (p) Adm. Chester W. Nim-
itz, revising previous figures up
ward, announced that third fleet
carrier planes sank a cruiser,
four destroyers and 11 cargo
vessels and oil tankers in their
November 12 raid on Manila.
The liEht cruiser previously
reported as damaged was known
to nave sunK, Nimitz sam in a
communique yesterday. Return
ing pilots also originally report
ed only two destroyers suiik
and said the merchantmen were
either destroyed or left sinking,
Four torpedoes also were sent
into a floating drydock, believed
to be the 500-foot Admiral
Dewey, which the Americans
scuttled before Manila s fall,
The Japanese evidently raised it.
The Pacific commander re
ported a series of aerial strikes
lrom Haha and Iwo islands, in
the Bonin and Volcano groups,
to by-nassed islands in the north
ern Palaus. A bomb hit was
scored on a small cargo vessel at
Iwo and a possible hit was made
on a medium-sized mercnantman
at Haha. The latter island is
some 650 miles south of Tokyo.
Third Woman May
Have Been Victim
LOS ANGELES. Nov. 17 (P)
Otto Steve Wilson, 31-year-old
janitor, was held incommuni
cado today in the mutilation
slayings of two women while
police attempted to determine
if he had planned to lure a
third woman to the same fate,
Detectives said they would
question a woman who was seen
chatting with Wilson at a bar
shortly after tho bodies of the
two other women were discov
ered Wednesday. While talking
to the third woman Wilson was
handcuffed and arrested by
natrolman.
Capt. Thad Brown, head of
the police homicide bureau, snid
Wilson, discharged navy phar
macist's mate, told him he
"didn't know what 1 might have
dono to her." Her name was
not disclosed
Iceland's Queen
Ship Downed
REYKJAVIK, Nov. 17 ffl
Iceland's largest passenger ship,
tho 1542-ton Godafoss, has been
sunk by a German U-boat in Ice
landic waters with loss of 24
lives, it was announced today. .
E
DAYTON. O.. Nov. 17 W
Union-affiliated telephone opera
tors waiKed out early today in a
sudden protest against employ
ment, of out-of-town personnel
and two hours later operators at
uoiumous and Toledo quit work
in aii expression of sympathy. :
Paul Denning, ' commercial
manager at Columbus, said, at
least 50 per cent of his long dis
stance operators were absent at
9:30 a. m. (EWT), and operators
saia tney were accepting emer
gency -calls only. -. Local calls,
nandied through the dial system,
were not disrupted.
600 Affected
Jeanette Reedy of Dayton,
president of the southwestern
area council of the Ohio Federa-
, An nf 'I'AlanhnnA WnlrAe am
independent union, said about
600 of Dayton s operators were
affected. There was no immedi
ate count on the number out at
Columbus.
Miss Reedy said she had as
surances" that other locals of the
federation would quit work, too,
f ields near
- Dayton and Columbus are in
the heart of the vital industrial
ized midwest, and the army air
forces' two important fields
Wright and Patterson are Just
outside uayton. - .
There was no immediate indi
cation of how generally the
strike would affect service. Au-
(Continued on Page Two)
PAC to Continue
Under CIO Ruling
' CHICAGO, Nov.' 17 (P The
CIO executive board unanimous
ly recommended today the con
tinuation of the CIO political
action committee and designs
tion of its chairman. Sidney Hill-
man, and other officers to con
tinue in their present positions.
REDS PIERCE
MAIN DEFENSE
OF BUDAPEST
Rail Station Taken,
Junctions Menaced -.
. By Soviet Units
FIRST ARMY
ER1VES TWO
E
Si
Ninth Captures Long"
Lines of Nazi
Prisoners
LONDON. Nov. 17 UP) Rus
sian -troops have pierced the
main German defense line 10
miles east of Budapest, captur
ing the rail station of Byomro,
and in a pivot northeast of the
besieged caoital today threaten
ed the key railway junctions of
ooaouo . and Hatvan.
Far to the northeast other
units of Marshal Rodion Y. Ma-
linovsky s second Ukraine army
struck to within five miles of
Miskolc, Hungary's fifth city.
which is now exposed to red
army artillery fixe.
. , Cross Railway
Battling- alone the roads lead
ing around Budapest to Austria,
tne Kussians- yesterday crossed
the Budapest-Miskolc railway at
Yamosgyork' in a 12-mile ad
vance from Jaszbereny and
were moving toward Hatvan,
Moscow announced last night.
The threat to .Godollo, less
than 10 miles northeast of Bud
apest, developed when powerful
soviet tank and infantry forces
swept through a town less than
ii miles southeast. - uodoiio
governs road and rail routes to
Vienna and central Slovakia.
. Trap Threatens
The capture of Vamosgyork.
where several trains and am
munition stores were seized
also .threatened the entrapment
of German and Hungarian
forces still clinging to the cen
tral- section, of the .Budapest-
Miskolc trunk-line.
In .the frontal assault east of
Budapest, the Gyomro rail sta
tion-was captured in a bitterly-
contested . three mile advance.
Gvomro village, a mile to the
south and described by Berlin
as the southeastern anchor ot
the axis defense arc around Bud
apest, -was under violent attack,
Berlin reported.
Meanwhile, a midnight soviet
war bulletin indicated the red
air force ; had begun to track
down the German fleet hiding
(Continued from Page one)
Church Asks
Stern Gang Oust
LONDON, Nov. 17 (JP Prime
Minister Churchill called upon
the Jews of Palestine today -to
cast out and crush the terrorist
Stern gang and warned that
continuance of its activities
would menace the future of
Zionism.
Denouncing the assassination
of Lord Moyne, British resident
minister for the Middle East, as
a "shameful crime which has
shocked -the world," the prime
minister told commons:
"It has affected none more
strongly than those like myself
who in the past have been the
consistent friends of the Jews
and constant architects of their
future.
By WILLIAM FRYE
LONDON, Nov. 17 (Pi Ger
man lines sagged under twin of-:
fensives in the Rhineland today!;
as me iirsi u. . army drove for
ward two miles toward Duren"
and the ninth army bagged long"
lines of prisoners. s
Lt. Gen. Courtnev H. Hndoea'
first army infantry and armorjt
siasnea to a point six miles west
of Duren, important industrial-'
town 20 miles west of Cologne,"
despite sjeet and rainstorms. 'r'
Germany's western lines rock- ,'
ed to the thunder of hundreds of '
guns in the Aachen sector, the, '
smash of new armored columns'
from the Moselle bridgeheads,
the weight of increasing attacks "
in Holland as the allies made a"'
supreme bid for victory. . . . a,
Two Million Men -
Perhaps 2,000,000 men wereT"
arrayed in battle on both sidesa.
in the critical test of German-
staying power.
Lt. Gen. William H. Simpson's
ninth army increased the presf
sure of the attack in its second3
day north of Aachen, front linef-.
dispatches said, captured several '
more towns and turned back a"
Tiger tank counterattack.
Break Made '
A German military .comments.
tor late in the afternoon said a
break had been made in the Ger-
man lines near Stolberg, and a?
dispatch from the front said "
breaks appeared to have been-,
made at several places. - vi
x,ong streams of battle-shat--tered
German prisoners lined the'.!
roads back to American prison
cages. - m
Flight after flight of Thunder
bolt fighterbombers streaked un-,'
aer cioua layers from the fronts n
orou canal -
To the north the British!
crossed the Zig canal, after jlear-
ii.onunuea on f age Two) pr
Subs to Launch ;
Bombs to U. S.,
Rumors Indicate
LONDON. Nov. 17 tfPi Re."
ports that .' the Germans have
been fitting up submarines with
launching devices capable of di
recting flying -bombs aealnst '
American, cities have been cur-
rent in -T ondon and Stockholm
for tne past 24 hours.
Walter Farr,- London Daily
Mail : correspondent in Stock
holm, "broke" the story but tho
same report was current In Lon
don many hours before it could
be pu! 'ished. Farr said both
surface and underwater vessels
were, leing fitted along - the
Norwegian coast as robot bomb
launchc 's. The London report
mentioned only submarines.
Farr said he was informed that
both the U-boats and surface
craft were fitted to fire robot
bombs from their decks "against
such targets as New York, Phila
delphia or towns farther inland
in America."
Strand Outlines Desperate
Need for College Buildings
A desperate need for building
construction at Oregon higher
educational institutions was de
scribed today by Dr. A. L.
Strand, president of Oregon
State college, in a talk at the
luncheon meeting of the Klam
ath Rotary club.
Outlining .the problem at Ore
gon State, which he said is di
rectly applicable to the Uni
versity of Oregon and to some
extent to the other higher
schools, the Corvallis president
declared that "for 17 years, the
state of Oregon certainly hasn't
strained itself to provide ade
quate buildings for its colleges."
He showed that in the 17
years, state building appropria
tions have been virtually nil,
and most of the money for such
fiurposes has come from build
ng ;.fces assessed upon students.
Serious Problem
The building problem as he
described it is especially serious
in view of the probable heavy
demands, upon the institutions
for education as men and women
return from the armed services.
At Oregoh State. Dr. Strand said,
the - increase in enrollment ap
pears likely to rise sharply, pos
sibly from 2000 to 7000.
He presented a chart Which
showed the rise and decline of
college enrollment. After per-
I iods of decline, such as has oc
curred during the war, there
have invariably been sharp rises,
and that may be expected mis
time, he said.
Strono Interest
Oregon, he pointed out, has
125.000 men in the armed serv
ices. Of these, 50,000 are under
26 years of age. He estimated
that nerhaos 25.000 will be in
terested in education, and from
10,000 to 15,000 may seek higher
education in Oregon schools.
Questionnaires have shown
strong interest among veterans
in forestry, agriculture and en
gineering, indicating a heavy de
mand upon the college.
ur. strand sam mat an sta
tistics point to a vigorous in
terest among Oregon people in
the welfare of schools. This
state Is third or fourth in the
nation in educational level of its
people, and first in the percent
age of young people in higher
institutions.- If the people of the
state learn tne real plant proD
lems at the state schools, he said,
he is certain they will insist up
on tne necessary action to solve
them.
Good Plant Essential
' Dr. Strand said he is not niac
ins building values above staff,
but that a good plant is essential
to an effective educational iob.
He told how buildings at both
(Continued on Page Two)
Executive Group
Named for Drive
Mvrle C. Adams, chairman of
the 6th War Loan drive, spon
sored by the Lions club, and
slated to open, November 20, has
announced the members of the
executive committee.
Andrew Collier, chairman of
the Klamath county war finance
committee, is chairman ex-officio
of the Lions' drive. Other mem
bers of the committee are J.
Vern Owens, vice chairman;
Paul E. Skeen, newspaper adver
tising; Everett c. vanderpool,
city schools; H. B. Ashley, coun
ty schools; Walt Wiesendanger,
Bob Henry, Elton Disher, and R.
E. Hooker, small businesses and
employes; Clarence A. Humble,
organizations; A, V. Moore, cor
porations; , Hi. Mums, special
events; E. A. Geary, agriculture;
Charles H. Mack, payroll sav
ings; Roy Rakestraw, bond head
quarters; George P. Davis, Klam
ath area suppliers; Kobert n. La.
mott, Boy Scouts, resldentlali
Paul A. Lee, publicity, news
paper and radio; Dr. Peter H.
Rozendal, professional; J. A.
Souther, retail merchants; Earl
Redman, clean up; Rose Poole,
women's activities.
Beton Assured :
Head Senate Post
PORTLAND, Nov. 17 (P)-j
The leadership of Oregon's nexl
legislature was assured today,
with Sen. Howard Belton of Cani
by as president of the senate ana
Rep. Eugene Marsh of McMinn
vllle as speaker of the house. .
The two men hold pledges o
more than enough votes to guati
antee their election at the leglsj ,
lative. caucus January 7, and
avoid a repetition of the 1941
deadlock which delayed Gover
nor Snell'g inauguration tw
days. . ; ,