Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, December 26, 1944, Page 3, Image 3

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    ,.mber 26, 1944
HERALD AND NEWS.' KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PACE THREE
i SERVICE
KN VISIT USD
fllER HOLIDAY
. ,,(lSi 5000 Hfl-vlcc !
UnSO center on Main
'' t ...i vnrimiH nrilill hr.a-
......I win." . . . '
.1... ..Ilv II 11IICI U) II' IIU
ildiiy Kilr It lo thoso peo-
Canucks Take 1
Canafe Navglio
HOMK, Dec. 20 (I'l C.'i ,n
rociliH, slrlklng nut from llu-ir
bridgehead over till! Cmiiilu Nliv
din on the Adrlnllc flunk f the
lliilliin front Imvi! captured IIiik-
sella, III inllc.i niirlhwi-.it of n.
llcdheld Hiiviiiiiii, lu-adciuartcrs
aillliiuniTcl tnihiy,
Thu Canadians were reported
In Iiiivii imsliiil in, n K,rl iiu.
lance beyond Itu.u'ltii to witliln
wo nines ni AliiiiiMnc on the
niivciinii rcnaia highway.
GERMANS WIPE
OUT ST. KITH
STRONGHOLD
"n,, BuiKluy lliu Junior chain-
-r at ConlUHTlU ll uv. i ....
?'.. ... I'lmlor Ulld Moll
'rv"f.. .!, iinv. thu Masons
nv. t-""
J KllslcNI niur lllllK' ":
,1110 . .. ii..., ,i l,llulil ..r.
t-w'iil I'1" churches Christmas
'..III. .Ill Wllini'll MIM'Vl'il
: ,, n,
ircuKii'M - "
Iliv , ,,
Close- to iU"
i.,..ii..d lo suend Christmas
I'L private homes In Khun
Ui Fnllti mill only four families'
t,IIC.ll. Wl'll! IIOl I'll"1", lot'
LIS0 slated-
.not I Sunday una mummy uvc
u . . .tit.. it.. ..........il i.nf.
!... Mf-ltllllllKIJ' ,,. ....v.. .....
I,': i.i worn served ill llic
Iiiin and Sunday seven hams
S cnrvicl from thu tables.
Illirkcy was in1-" imw.-i ..i'.m-
ny. . ...
NotlCCtlblO Ol WIO tuilivi uvri
.v.i.imin were ina milliner.,
-i.ii.i i ......I....
vflvC-1 linn cnuuicii ui "
who wrro loKi-Hii-i "
rl of the fttl-r. stationed lit
.itrhv ll.tlllllllliuiiiit win; nvv-
n their Infiinl sons and dmigh
, for tho flrt time, und the
liSO center became tneir nonie
!ar the day.
i,E. I. MM
E8
(Continued from I'ago One)
killed In iiiiliiuiuliilc .siniislnips.
Tin; nnlloniil jiiiliMy council's es
lllnnle lor the period Iroin mld
nlKht Friday In Induy was about
l!7:i inolor vehicle liitalilics. In
IIMM, Hie Christinas linlliliiy Irnl
fle toll was 2HI nl thu tnlnl of
violent dentils.
riline ei'iishen. fires. fnllK.
lionllnK, drnwnlnu mid other
violent lorni ol denlli were re-
purled IhrniiKhoiit the eoiintry
lis the tuition observed the lone
weekend ivnl period.
Piano Smoihoi
Three seiiirnte plane mulish
lips cost Hie lives of 20 persons,
Ineludlnij III soldiers In nn iirmy
Iriiuspiirt flyiiix o Mlnneiipolis
who were killed when the ship
crashed neiir llnrrisburij. I'n.
Five other iirniy fliers lost their
lives In ii pliinc crush lit HldKely,
Tenn.. .wlille five servicemen
were killed in u crash of n trans
port plane near Indianapolis.
Of the total violent deaths, f4
weru recorded as from miscel
laneous causes. 80 re.sulllni! from
fires and one from wealher. liy
stale. California reported the
most number of fatalities 47.
ineliidiiiK S8 traffic deaths.
Pennsylvania ranked second
with 27, mid New York, third
with 22.
(Continued from Pune One)
from the Meuse and 14 from the
jullini; northcusl corner of
I'Vcnce. Clney and Cellos ure
six miles apart.
Tile security news cloak cov
ered any I miner proijrcss these
lliru.st.s may have inudu since
Sunday niitlit. At latest reports
a miuic was raxing in this Ken
oral area, witli the Germans
bulldiuK up forces west of Roche
fort and south of Marche. The
deep Sunday itains came after
the Invaders had been held al
most to a standstill fur 4H hours.
Allied planes hit iiKiiin today
at the German columns, and up
in noon the ninth tactical air
lone aloiii' had deslroycd six
tanks, six armored vehicles and
2H7 inolor vehicles, besides
downuiif 22 enemy planes.
Officers Killed
In 6-29 Crash
21ST U. S. BOMBER COM
MAND, Siiipsn, Dec. 3 (Delayed)
il'l The second B-20 downed
in air combat over Tokvo car
ried two colonels, a major and
nine others to almost certain
death today.
Those lost Included Col. By
ron Elias Brui!!!c, 25, son-in-law
of the late Mai. Gen. Clarence L.
Tinker. Col. Richard Thomas
King Jr., 2(1, and Ma). Robert
l-'lnnd Goldsworthy, 27, of Ro
salia, Wash., the pilot.
'Robin Hood'
Victim Kills Self
NEW YORK, Dec. 28 W) Os
car H. Cropper, 87, owner of a
leather goods firm where a secre
tary recently was accused of
"Robin Hood" thefts to give em
ployes pay raises, plunged to his
death today from his ninth floor
hotel suite, police reported,
Gronner left notes to his wife
and his attorney,- police said, in
which he had written: "Thefts
have ruined me."
He was head of Cropper, Inc.,
from which Mrs. Madeline Dun
nlgan, 22, was accused on De
cember 8 of taking between $30,
000 and $40,000, She is under
arrest on a charge of grand larceny.
Assistant District Attorney
Francis X Clark said that Mrs.
Dunnigan told him she increased
one fellow employe's salary from
y.iO to $5S a wecK, and anotner
from $3 to $15 a day. One friend
received $25 weekly, and Mrs.
Dunnigan, who earned $40 -. a
week, used some of the money to
purchase clothes for herself,
Clark said.
ml PLANES
Merrill
(Continued from Pngo One)
Thursday at 1:20 p. in., with the
hrbllun science cniircn in
harue. iniermeni win ue in
Unkvllle cemetery by tho side
I her husband.
n udcllllon 10 a nroinrr, u.
PWcy Wells of Kinmaui runs,
Mm. Aeklcy Is survived by three
ulcrs. Mrs. ,. r. I'ayne, nsu
ind; Mrs. Catherine Cole of San
'rinclsco, nnd mrs. cniny niiiiie
.1 Wllllts, Calif.
New Cold Wave
Hits Midwest
By Tho Aiioclstod Pron
A new cold wave with bitter
bflow zero temperatures hit the
-nidwcst today. 1 ho mercury
lunged far below the rero read-
ni in the Dakotas, Minnesota,
Nebraska, Wisconsin. Iowa,
wthern and central Illinois,
rtht-rn Indiana, upper Mlchl
:tn and portions of Ohio.
Rockford. III.. 75 miles north-
went of Chicago, reported 22 be-
iw as the coldest nn tno mi-
jgo weather bureau s map.
Women of the Moose, Mer
rill chapter, No. 18, met Decem
ber 111 with eight officers in
the chairs. '
Klve candidates, Violet Kunz,
Geneva Vansell, Donna Hodges,
Eleanor Noel and Francis Hunt
ing were initialed.
Mrs. Connie llughcy, chair
man of the Moosehavcn com
mittee, was in charge of the
program.
the lodge Is sponsoring a
,i iiw.,r ,.i,ii,ir,.n I., ihi. ernfle ' member in tho
Tulelake
Brno next wi
k vacatlo
'' with he
,Mrs. E. Webb
Republics of
America to Meet
WASHINGTON, Dec. 28 (IP)
Foreign minister of the Amer
ican republics except Argen
tina will meet prior to a united
nations conference on worm security.
This was learned today from
a high official who would not
be quoted by name. Time and
place for the meeting will be
disclosed witliln the next few
days.
HOSE BAG
ST. LOUIS, Dec. 28 (Pi Mrs.
Boyd Rogers, daughters of Gov.
f orrcst (J. uonneu, asxed tor
two pairs of hose at a depart
ment store and received a paper
bag from tne cierx.
Returning home, she found tne
store had been frantically look
ing for her. Inside the bag sup
posed to contain the hose was
$1000 of the store's money.
SHIPS BLAST
JAP ISLE BASE
(Continued From Page One)
Iwo's coastal defenses, and that
shore batteries "offered some
return fire.
He added that none of the
American vessels was damaged
Vessel Sunk
A Japanese destroyer escort
vessel was caught by the raiders
and sunk by shcllfire. Also de
stroyed were an enemy patrol
craft and a medium landing
snip. -
The heavy bombers were es
corted by Lightning fighters.
which strafed Iwo Jimas air
strips and harassed shore de
fenscs. Opposition was light,
one enemy plane was destroyed
on the ground and six others
damaged. Anti-aircraft fire was
rnenirpr,
BRONCHIAL IRRITATIONS
of oolda quickly relieved by
Pcnotro Grandma's old-time
mutton suet idea developed by
modern scieuco into a counter-
irritnnt viitviriititnf nnlvn. Onlv
zoc, aouoio supply aoo, iet kNtm
PEN ETRO
BASE RICH IN MUTTON SUET
Former Klamath Man
Dies In Medford
Worth (Mack) McVey died
suddenly in Medford on Satur
day evening. He was aged about
76 years at the time of his
death.
He formerly owned a fox
farm four miles north of Modoc
Point, and made many friends
in Klamath county, during the
time he was here.
McVey is survived by two
sons, one who Is living in Brem
erton, Wash., and the other in
San Diego.
If it's a "frozen" article von
need, advertise for a used one
n the classified.
I
(Continued from Page One)
vasion October 20, and a total
of 27 warships and 41 trans
ports sunk as 10 convoys seek
ing to reinforce the besieged
Lcyte garrison were smashed.
The totals did not include ene
my losses In the naval battle of
Lcyte gulf October 25.
Classified Arts hnnw fti-stiit
SWEET MAIL
HEADQUARTERS THIRTY
FIRST DIVISION, MOROTAI
ISLAND, Dec. 28 (VP) Never
was the mail from home any
sweeter than that received re
cently by an infantry outpost of
mis "uixie division.
The bundle of letters, dropped
from a cub delivery plane Just at.
chow time, fell into a syrup pot.
It was rescued by Sgt. Harold
Bank of Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Gas on Stomach
lUlMvcd in S omaus r 4Mt tot mm; kk
When nctu itamub tcld ciuui pilnful. luffocat
Itif (ii, our loroich and heartburn, doctor. unjll
preirrtrw ihi fiHi-ti-tlni nttdlclnM known f
jnipuiLitlo relief nedlelnu Ilka iboM In BU-cm
TiMeU. No laittlte. Btdl-ni farlnn comfort In
JlffermuinbolMt to u for double soot? btck. U
ilOMARClr J
I
1 B
-1
WO other MOMUrCH fOODMI H M
Peptl-Coia Company, Long Island City, N. Y.
Franchised Bottler: Klamath Falls Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co.
M.alin
Mrs. Charles E.
(Floronco Staunton, Junior at
Stanford university, will arrive
mo next week lo spend a iwo-
on during the loll-
her parents. Mr. and
Webb Staunton.
'Mrs. Byrd C. Hcllz, manager
the Marchag theater, has an-
unccd plans for her annual
nstmiiH nnrtv for nchnnl ehil-
Jen, to be presented Friday
Wiling, December 22, at 10
i'i la. A film feature planned
iiccinlly for children will be
own.
iChri.itmas vacation for nuutls
'I Carr school will begin Friday,
fceemher 90. with flnnc'it In hn
Hsumed January 2. Children
"til present a Christmas program
i'l 8 p. in. on tho closing day.
kind of
ASPIRIN tablet
; doesn't upset stomach
r.-Jimw T When you need
; quickrclicffrom
pnm, ao you
hesitnto to take
aspirin becnusc
it lonvcfl you
with nn upset
Btomnclt? If so,
fhla now merli-
l.W!i44J ,llu,.
ptJPEniN. is "just what tho doc-
vraerca lor you.
'Suparln It aiplrln plus contains!
snmo puro, snfo aspirin you
TO long known but dovoloped
5ooctors in a Rnncinl way for
e upset by aanlrin In its ordi
, 7 furm.
rM naw Idnd of aspirin tablet
'jw vra morn quickly,, lets the
Wirt get right at .tho jol) of ro-Ii-nff
P"'"' ""luces tho aoldity of
I"nary aspirin, and does not ir
'4te or unflpt nt.nrri nch riven after
pat tloscs.
Ihla oul to remind you to
iV-OUnOI-irt Inrlni. nnluill.nnlinVII
fjn hnnrl when I'loacfnchcH, colds,
Q: strike Soo how quickly It
"vca pnm how
school gymnasium the evening
of Friday. December 22.
Delia Martin, youngest daugh
ter of Mrs. William Arnold and
Harry Martin, Is home from the
University of Oregon for the
Christmas holiday season. She
Is majoring in chemistry. The
family received word this week
of the recent serious illness of
their oldest daughter, Vivian,
In New York City where she
has been teaching at Columbia
university. Her marriage was
lo have been an event of No
vember 25, and a few hours
prior to the date she was strick
en with an attack of infantile
paralysis. Recent word from the
cast Indicated that she is Im
proving. Louise Fothcrlngham, daugh
ter of Mrs. Harriett Fothcrlng
ham. arrived homo Wednesday
from Woodland, Calif., where
she Is leaching. The family will
have Christinas dinner wun .
Mrs. Fotheringliam's daughter,
Mrs. William Colt and family ,
in Klamath Falls,
Walter Folheringham lias
nnrrlinscd the blacksmith shop
owned by Fred Faus and plans
at some future oaic 10 rcinum-i ,
it for a cabinet shop. I
Mrs. F.dith DcLnp, Salt Lake;
City, will arrive this week to
spend the holidays with her ;
daughter. Mrs. Scott McKcndrce
and family.
Robert Trolmim, freshman at
the University of Oregon, is
home for the holidays with his
parents. Dr. and Mrs. Frank b.
Trotmnn, ,
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hcaton,
formerly Merrill residents who
left here about two years ago
for Ihc bay area, have returned
to Merrill lo resume manage
ment of their service station.
Mr. and Mrs. Denson, who have
been In charge, left recently for
the Willamette valley,
Heaton was employed as a
machinist for a lime at Val ejo
where Mrs. Heaton was employ
ed in Ihc post office. More re
cently they have been at Miners
vllln'ln California.
Blake, faculty
Mai in high
school will leave December 21
for Richmond, Calif., called by
the serious illness of her father,
John Lc Grand. She will re
main over the holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Kallna,
Springfield, will arrive here to
spend Christmas with Kalina's
parents. Mayor and Mrs. A.
Kalina who will be hosts at a
family dinner on Christmas Day.
Places will be marked for the
guests from Springfield, Mr.
and Mrs. Mervyne Wilde, Mr.
and Mrs. Vaclav Kalina and two
children, Mr. and Mrs. Louis
Kalina and children and for the
hosts.
Rudolph Kolina is co-manager
with Fred Konschot, former
Klamath Falls man of the Pepsi
Cola bottling works in Spring
field. f Inivlflerl ai Rrlnc Result
1
npR.Atyourrlrug- JITCj
ill tRMmaliM
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO PAIN NO linSI'ITAI.I.ATION
Nn l.ft Af Tlmt
PermtneM Kemilltl
DR. E. M. MARSHA
Cnlreprarilto Phri,ln
Itt N b - Knnlre ThiMr (lids
Phnna IMS
Eddie Eittreim's
Steak House
12B South 7th St.
Grilled Steaks
Merchants' Lunch, 60c
4
Hamburgers Barbequ
Chili
OPEN 24 HOURS
mum
1 1 '
fl?VltlMIMIIlltMWIiUWWWM'"F I
1 OAtl I
B" With
I MADELINE MAHONEY
1 and
I DAIII CWIflART :
General
Paints
Imperial
Wallpaper
SIS Main St.
Phone 3829
DEVELOPING
ENLARGING
PRINTING
PHOTO SERVICE
211 Underwood Bldg.
"Allen Adding Machines
Friden Calculators
Royal Typewriters
Desks Chairs Files
For those hard-to-gt items
PIONEER PRINTING
AND STATIONERY CO.
This Is the night to look your loveliest.
To greet the new year in your grandest
manner.. We have a beautiful collection
of new formal evening dresses and din
ner gowns. -
124 Bo. 8lh Klamath Fails
IB LJ
)MliUUUHM