Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, December 06, 1944, Page 3, Image 3

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    't.mb.r 6, 1944
IPP05IT1 TO
ITfflPID
. FRANK FHAWLEY
l ANUBLM. Dec. 8 (It
Ws " ,i hut ho ronrc-
ft&t AltoinV Fred
I. lo.lnv unnounccd liis
1 . will not oppose u defonnc
fco for dismissal of the
noiw-y assault case. .
5; ntnlcmont which ho in
n .. . .milv In tho trlul.
27.! . Mvurs, to incorporate In
foment o" '"court
Sn wiltahVwwTuiUltoi
rfcntn tho defense
CJ , went Into Its second
fBtJcrlur Judge Arthur
! ,0ld newsmen that he
f id aimounco his ruling at
S tomorrow morning.
I. read them a statement In
SI' c pointed out that the
Si i uy either on Its own
I n or upon tho motion of
Id ilrlcl attorney ond In the
ihirui co of Justice, order on
in no dismissed, x
ai- " II, a r.Minon for
dSnlssol must bo set forth
he mlnuies ui "; y.""
it W".k,.,h3
;m cmpni""'""' -
" wi host served
'dismissal of tho Indictment.
I,, added miu wuu.
me district attorney to
5" the dismlssui motion, us
S o, tho defense lawyers.
$, "court denied motion by
J prosecution for dismissal
jj,voy In presentation of tho
; 5 CIISU.
an Reduction
t to Affect West
fast Producers
I.ium iim. fl (IF) The
Srnmciil order to reduce
11945 Bean crop win nuv m
1 nrtnl urnuers. dole
, Bt the nnnuul convention
tho Oregon biiue neon uron
j issociulion wero told here
dtadoy.
flicy suld Hint 05 per cent of
7.I....I Inhnr mntlv women.
i thal.growers will rely even
itc on women In 1045.
Jtw ollicers oi mo associa
i ire:
garry L. Stewart, West Stay
t president; Ejner Hcnlze
Untf f'itv. vlrn - nrosident
1 li. L, l'earcy, Salem, secrc-
if-trcasurer.
josevelt Nominates
Jde For Promotion
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
1 ;i
i
ASIIINGTON. Dec. 0 (I1)
talent Roosevelt todny nom
id his niivul aide, Hour Ad
(jl Wilson Hrownr for the
i of vico iidmlrnl on tho
y's retired list,
grown reached the retire
81 ngc of 84 December 1. Ho
f put on the retired list but
edlntely recalled to active
4 lo contimio as presiden
tial. r. Roosevelt also nominated
jhodorc Ellory W. Stone.
icr president or Postal Tclc-
and now a member of tho
n armistice commission, to
rear admiral.
INSPECT BCHnnt.
(SCOW, Dec. (!) Gen.
iaillle nnd f.pn. A nlmnn
tc Juln, French chief of
immy inspected tho red
artlllnrv 5rl1r.nl Midi
It Offlrnr rnnrliifitnil H.m
jth lenders on tho tour.
OMEN IN
SiSERVfCF&i!
WALTERS RETURNS
M Cpl. Juck Wallern, son of tho
. iiii in vruiiurs, wno recent
.'::.VU,V.V.1.1. 11,0 fpr'ww
v r w uitizcn-1, J'-",?
snip awnrci lor t t
having mvuii
tfntlB 111 Mm ......... M .4
loo. wim hnmn I AwP
Oil furlllliuh ro. rit.
cently. Ho vis
ited his wlfo and
small son, Jim
my Deo, at 2215
Wantlund, and
his mother and
father at 035
Allnmnnt
Cpl. Walters is stationed at
ffn-l ! . ...111. . l ......
i ,-viiua, Willi n 1UI1K OCHUOy
,.r linlhilltin II.. -.,.. n
U........U... 41.-1111 HITU II,
Kentucky Monday, November
TAKACS GETS WINGS
Richard August Tnkaes, 21
of Merrill, has received the sil
vcr wings of an t;'i
umiy mr lurces
pilot and was
sworn in as a v
ingiii omcer at "
ceremonies a t h '
Napier Field,? 'f
Ala,, an od- 'f
vanced Minute v' i $
engine pilot . '.'CHA -school
of tho fc- XW '
A A F training .,iVS
coMimond. Son 11
01 Mr. and Mrs. Vi;
Joint J. Takacs ifr
of Merrill. VD . l A-
Takacs Is a graduate of Malln
high school, whero ho was a
mcmbcY of tho football and
track teams.
HARRELL TRAINS
Hoyt J. llnrrcll. son of Mr.
and Mrs. William M. llurrcll of
3114 LaVernc, has arrived at
uowen Held, Idaho, to begin
final combat training as a navi
gator on a B-24 bomber crew,
Prior to his entry Into the
armed forces the young officer
Was employed as a clerk for
the Southern Pacific railroad
In Klamath Falls.
VALK SENDS POEM
Cpl. Bernard Volk of Klom
alh Falls, former employe of
weycrnacuscr company, recent
ly sent tho following poem, au
thor unknown, to his wife, Map
gurct Volk. lie hos been in the
scrvato three years and has been
stationed In India during the
past tour months.
THE MEN WHO ARE
FORGOTTEN
Down where there arc no Ten
Commandments,
And a man can raise a thirst,
Live the outcasts of civilization,
The victims of life at lis worst.
Hero in this tropical country
Aro tho men that God forgot,
Who battles tho ever present
' fever,
The Itch and jungle rot.
No one knows they are living,
And nobody gives a damn.
Back homo they aro soon for
gotten, These soldiers of Undo Sam.
Living with dirty nations,
Down in the sweltering zone.
Up in those damn damp moun
tains,
Thousands of miles from home.
No place to go on payday,
To squander their meager pay,
No whero to raise hell for an
evening,
CrtESIIAM, Ore.. Dec. 6 (IF)-
Churchmen In this town blrtlv
place of Oregon Antt-Japancsc
Inc. today condemned tho at
tempt of fcl low-residents to.de
privo JuponcKo Americans of
their citizenship rights.
Mooting hero after farmers
oud businessmen launched a
move lo prevent return of Jap-aneso-Aint'iiciuiH,
tho Ministerial
association declared thut clti.
zona should not bo Judged by
ancestry,
'llio ministers endorsed a 1043
suuenient of President Roose
velt Hint "Americanism Is a mat
ter of tho mind and heart.
Amerieunism is not and never
wus o matter of race and ances
try.
SPOKANE. Doc. 6 fPl Evi
dence of resistance "with threats
of violence' to tho return of
evicted Jupancse to the Pacific
coast is, oecordlng to Roger N.
Baldwin, New York, director of
the American Civil Liberties
union, "confined to farm com
pctltOUi. In tho agricultural vnl.
leys of California, Oregon and
wosiungion.
"The opposition of some
American Legion posts reflects
only this farm competition.
Everywhere in tho cities, the
niyiu jupancsc-Americans will
apparently oe accepted as a mat
lor of course, provided their re
turn to homes nnrl inhR tc hnn.
died by the government in an
orderly fashion," ho declared in
a press stntcmcnt made after a
lour oi military areas from Ari
zona to Honttlc.
Baldwin asserted that "every-
wih:iu un mo coast mo return
oi mo evicted population-of Jap
ancse ancestry is oximeter! hnrt.
ly, either by decision of the su-
pi erne court or by army orders,
Only work and sweat every
uiiy.
Vermin at night on their pillows,
ma in. a no aocior can cure
Hell. Ilo! Wo'ro nnf r-nnulM.
Just soldiers on foreign tour.
There is Just one small conso
lation,
GntllPi nrmtnrl anA T ...ill lf
....i. nttti iv.t
When Wl din un'll nn 4n
ror we vo served our time in
ncu.
Author Unknown
nasi80
Now You Can Have More
of this Famous Whiskey
, GREAT NEWS for the friends and friends
' lo-be of the whiskey with tho Grand Old
Canadian Name! We're thipping moreand '1
more to this ttate! You'll soon see Corby's on
the shelf more often it's prewar quality,
available to those who prefer a fine light
bodied sociable blend. Ask for it next time.'.
w4 Grand Old Canadian tfamc"
PRODUCED IN THE U. S. A3
.undr Iht dlrtcl svptrvltion of
' our exotrf Canadian blender .
, 86 Proof-60.4K Grain Neutral Spirits
MS. IARCIAY k CO. UMITED, MORIA, UtINOIS
CORBYS !
Missing
, 'V i-
U, xlfXTW' ' I. 1 i. i
if "f-
its , ". j0tmp ,
J. r fi'fj,
I, li "H 1
(NBA Tclephoto)
Mrs. Cleo Manning Morgan, cousin
of screen actress Lucille Ball, report
ed missing with a feminine compan
ion while en routo to Hollywood
from La Junta, Colo. Police of five
Western states have organized in
tensive search.
SCOUTS TAKE PART
More than 200 Boy Scouts and
their leaders took part in the
Klamath district rally at the
armory Tuesday night. Winning
troops in competitive scoutcrafi
were as follows:
Event 1 2 3
Tower building 2 18 50
Uniform dressing race 16 18 SO
Life line relay race 2 3 0
Bugling contest 18 16 3
Firo by friction 18
Pup tent erection 2 18 5
Lloyd Prock, district commit
teeman, was in charge of the
rally, assisted by his staff of dis
trict officers. Ribbon awards
wero made to the winning
troops.
Oregonians Shoot
Down Nazi Planes
LONDON, Dec. 6 (IP) Three
Oregonians wore credited with
shooting down two nazi fighters
each in air battles over Berlin
yesterday.
They were Lt. Clifford T. Ash
by, Nyssa; .Capt. Merla Coons,
Gresham; and Lt. Gordon L.
Doolittle, Portland.
PACE THREi
Morton Salt Agent
Dies In Eugene
Walter Simmons, S7, for i2
years traveling this territory for
Morton Salt company, died
early Monday morning at Sacred
Heart hospital in Eugene, fol
lowing a stroke. Final rites
were held from Brandstetter and
Simon mortuary in Eugene, and
burial will take place in Minne
sota. Mr. Simmons, who made
his homo in Eugene, was well
known to merchants in the
Klamath basin,
In addition to his wife, Iva,
Mr. Simmons is survived by his
mother.
Fruit Workers Vote
On Strike In Eugene
u employes oi me cugene
Fruit Growers association can
neries here and at Junction City
were to cast a strike vote here
today, conducted by the nation
al labor relations board.
The AFL union claims that
the company has failed to estab
lish a bracket classification of
wages, to adjust certain women's
3
Jobs, and to respect seniority'''
lists In hiring and tiring. '
All three charges are denied;
by the company. . .
Iron or steel plants are lo
cated in 28 states of the Union.
4 THIS MR
AJA PACKAGE flTSL
iTIRIE
Rayon Dress Shirts
Sheeplined Slippers
Leather Coats
Dress Shirts
.Wool Shirts
For
Jhristmo
Wool Sox
Billfolds
Oregon Woolen Store
Main at 81h
Phone 6873
9s
r.Vinnea trie rn Mouse, a w" a
.dark blouse, a c torget your ve
332100.
Co'orfuf Classic
fiK IIITfi
u m meii .m.
M
Pleated and gored stylet In wool, flan
nel, tweed, crepe, menswear fabric,
and novelty rayons. Sizes 9-17, 24-32.
JUMPERS
The Jaunty Jumper retains Its popu
larity with the school and office
crowd this -season ' . . In all wool,
part-wool, and rayon gabardine. Size
12 to 20.
SLACK Suits
795toM95
Designed for comfort, smartness, ana
service. Warm-hued winter tones
and practical dark ones. Sizes 12-20.
M f J b I.! -
I I I fBf ''
H ml
limit
WINMAWV till II ' l
i
Precisely Tailored
SLACKS
398 to 595
Expertly cut and - man-tailored fot
fine fit and long wear. Crease-resist-Ing
flannels. Waist sizes 24 to 34.
, Y0I LEND Y0I1
''3toney
TREY GIVE TNEII
Lives t 4
Keep Bombs W
Falling! -. -