Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 13, 1945, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    laiNECORPS r-m
IEW OFFICERS 3
, , 11, the Morln
K ')i'irr,,,1 or,lun;
re tho hi"., where
k ',7 Installed
rKr WKe ' .
s'lnlev. marine of the
i'iM commandant,
;,1 liiVd U' turn over H.n
ft )... i-rrcmoiiv.
Kiletrt a brief wuiji.
kilml aim iun
l"on' . .
,,, for me iuu.ru "
"' . . ,h., n.M'(l. mid
5. "rV
ncuro Vrcroatlnn equipment
marines " "," "'";
c'k, li Klamath rails.
-n.se tlif membership of
... Ai-rrv murine
Ix'-marlno Is " member In
standing.
Ilcers elected (or 1045 ere
Id CrC((0ry, cnni.nKinmiM.
..iu,.u .,,lni vli'M com
T A. Cai'.imonla. Inn-
See commandant: Lawrence
ilon, cmci o. awn;
.on Jr.. chaplain: 'led
Mrnntllll lit . imil!
If Sajoncc, ndjulont nnd
1 marine or i
I..- t kfl tnuv fin MR nv
III W jv ' ' " -
cling my of the above of
ik Miirlun flfti-t-Mt-k .
tre will be n general meet-
n tMc near iiuuru, mm uh
lies are urged to attend.
will be announced later.
it Japanese
live In Hood River
BOD niVEtt. Jan. 13 7P
the local American l,ciiiiin
came out In open oppo.il
lo the return of Japanese-
tlcana arrived nt their val
fiomei quietly todny.
y Sato and r, isoii ot parte
and M. Asal of lower Hood
r valley were not molested
ti they reached here on an
morning trnin. '
e Lesion has railed ape.
(meeting for Monday nlalil
ftconsldcr ita action In re
fine the name of Japanese
Irion soldiers from the
ity honor roll.
yo Claims Japs
ik Battleship
XNDON. Jan. 13 7TV A
lo cllipatch to the German
agency, DNB, clolmcd to-
It that Japanese aubmnrlna
in American battleship In
Hack on a group of war-
yesterday in waters weit
mon.
fere wait no allied confirms
ot inc claim.
narla AerXnrfA uiiv nit T.......
fv houra before the United
is.
IS YOUR
DUTY
mhI JiiMiJ
RITA WHISENANT
Utmti Cmmitoleslit
Olio morn (Mnty
Fant lo loll
rt Cream and Dny Lotion,
snnrtl T i ,
J uoraiory products
"breath.
Il'a some
k out of the
f" of ros-
Irs , . . hni
fining close-
in n e c t n d
I SRF. Ii't
jpuckaciiiiiof
s wonttroua
m and lo-
lu'VE heard of the lovely
jkwoo( pottery, 1 know
" . . well, SllF la
" unnlng jars designed
- ot tins fnmous
' The lntlnn Ik i.. .
. VHKO.IItrn U,.lll. ...!
"J. uiifi inn nrAniM i
tmnd Jtflllnitta it
II lOVn In 1. mi.. MnM
IS Brn r i
ti,. KKHr removablo
. S 80 wllen you've
UP the ten u,iw.t..i
,h.,. '""Ull, lllRO Oil
r "1 Uny Juk'jusI made to
n Wiir bedroom, kitchen,
vhre In tho house.
'
' h mBde tip t,c,0 jRr,
ami ,0,t blu. '
;my white, ,o you CBn buy
1 wim an rtvM lA
put
by
not
loiiu
mi m
MID-HOLIDAY WEDDING
Margaret Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mra. J. J. Lcwla, was
married on December iu to Vnlae I.. Ulrleh of this city, In a
ceremony wi.ien win pr-riormeu ai ( o cioik. Mrs. uiricn Is a
indent at the University of Washington In Seattle, where ahe
will graduate In June of this year. Comart
Social
Calendar
Mnlr. Jentitry II
flPW fcullve iKiard lo ml l T;.V)
p. m, Willi lihll nrixner h'tieif
144ar, Jtnuerr M
Will Urn lll rhepter, t)IIK. tn ment
it WHIairl hotel, 12,16 p. m., (or no
ttuil Itinvlteni),
He1ne4ir, Jinuirr 17
Meeting of Widittnliy club t pirlth
how of Bi, Paul i cliurrh.
If(niroe roncerl apoiuorfil hy the
KlemeiM Community Concert (mode
lion. Pellcen theatre, p. m.
Thurslr. Jenuery It
Meeting ot Weiiiietdey Club tt SI.
Paul perlih hnu.
Atlur4r. Jenuerjf ft
Winter littrin cltih, iu p. m.. neetnee
Cnlf tiil Country flub.
Mreiing of the Klamath county Ore
gon ttlete Twarhar'e AuurUtlun lit high
ecrtool cafeteria at 12 noun.
Wegneigey, Jatncerr II
Reeuler iiietlng nf th liojourntr at
th WilUrtl hntef at l ift p. in A no
hntM luncheon before the meeting U
upliutial.
Htttrttr. January tt
Annual Doer nlwr her if a HMmtflrert hy
Klamath fall Woman t.lliniiy rlub.
Wtllaid h"ll. Tea chairman. Mti.
!tniert A Thrimpeon. Dridie chairman.
Mr. Uo N. Hull.
lan1T, February IS
Mr. Oeorg H. K. Moarheail to iptak
before) Ltluary club at 2 p. in.
sVdrtfi4a, t-euruary t
HUM-h tittle BymphOfiy nomored hy
tho Klamath Community Concert o
t tt ion, I'elican theaut. 0 p. m.
nr4nti4ay, Merrb 1
Oorothy Moitor iu concert aponaoriKl
hy Klamath Community Concert two
elation, 1'eiirati theatre, p. m.
$ i
Bridge Club
DLY Nlsha Haclley enter
tnlncd the Urldgo club on Fri
day evening, January S. He
frcshmc.its wcro served later lo
Jessie Glfford, llolcn bmltn,
Hetty Armstrong, Mnrlu Hughes,
ILfl.rl.-rl f -nrlUil-tcfhl K.li7Jltirlll
Campbell and Tliclmu Abbott. I
High scores were lieu, oy iicicu
Smilli and Uctly Armstrong.
8 S 8.
In a candlelight ceremony on
Now Year's tve, December 31,
Maynard Frederick Dlekroeger
of the Marine Barracks, and
Jean Mnthllda Chnmpane, of La
Crosse, Wis., were married at tho
Klamath Lutheran church, the
Hcv. S. M. Topncss reading the
double ring service.
The couple was attended by
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Carraway Jr.
They will reside at 326 rinc.
8
Genevieve Heup, dnuchlcr of
Mr, and Mrs. A. P. Heup of
trlamn.h PnlU VL'flft Onft of foiir
girls to be pledged to tho Alpha
Cinmnin ucnn sororny on hid
University of Oregon campus
at the end of winter Icrm rush-
'"K' 8
The William lJllt chapter,
Daughters of tho British Empire,
will meet for a no-hostess lunch
eon on Tuesday, January IB, at
12:15 o'clork at the Willard
hotel. An Invitation is extend
ed lo any woman of British an
cestry or birth to attend the
luncheon,
8
Past. Orarlrs of the Royal
Neighbors nf America, will meet
at Ilic hnmn of Mrs. Anna Wool
aver, 15Jlfl Sargent, Monday, Jan
uary IS, at 7:30 o'clock.
8 8 8
Mrs. D. V. Kuykendall of fl4
California will be hostess to the
members nf Ilie Art Needlework
club on Wednesday nftcrnoon,
January 17, at 2 o'clock.
Tho Jewish calendar has 383
dnys; Julius Caesar's, 305 dnys;
Mohomotan, 355 days; Tho Gre
gorian calendar today Is used In
all Christian countries except
Russia
Today On The
Western Front
By Th Aaiociatad Praia
Canadion 1st army. No
change reported.
British 2nd army: Pursued
the Germans from tho west
ern end of their dwindling Ar
dennes salient.
U. S. 8th army: No change
In Rocr lino reported; aided
other Americans In drive
against northern German Ar
dennes flank.
U. S. lit army: Drove hard
through snowy forests on
Toutfullzc, menacing last Ger
man escape route.
U. 8. 3rd army: Drove on
Houffallze from the south.
U. S. 7th army: Lost Oct
ing, five miles southwest of
Saarbruckrit; reoceuplcd Al
thorn, south of Bltchc.
French lat army: Clashed
with Germans' armor below
Strasbourg on Rhine.
Dairy
Richard Brown is visiting his
sister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Blohm of
Portland, for a few days,
Mrs. William Bell Is In the
Hillside hospital for a few days
while sho receives medical
treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Turner
and daughter, Kathleen, arrived
homo this week from Arkansas,
where Turner has been station
ed with tho nrmy. He recently
received a medical discharge.
Mrs. Oilvo FrnloyajMrs. Edith
Thatcher and Jimmy Williams
spent Christmas Day with Mrs.
Marie Fraley of Klamath Falls.
Mr. and Mrs. C. 11. Sewald
returned homo on Wednesday
evening from Portland where
they spent the New Year's holi
da with rclntlvcs and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kolb
and son, Raymond, Mrs. Doris
Adams and Sharon and Dukle
spent New Year's Day wltli
friends in McCloud and Duns
muir, Calif.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Blotch
cr and family spent the holidays
with Mrs. Blotcber's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. William Bell of
Dairy. Betty Blntchcr Is still
remaining with her grandpar
ents. Jack Clark, who recontly en
listed in tho navy, left on De
cember 24 for Induction, and is
stationed In California.
Delegates to Log
Confab Leave Seaside
SEASIDE, ure.. ..an.
The 1000-odd delegates to the
racmc Logging congress ncaaca
homeward today after calUns for
government-financed research in
the lumber Industry.
Declaring thai the timber fu
ture rests upon scientific discov
eries, western lumbermen voted
..iiimttitdv In nrpA pnnt-rpgKinn.
al and stale legislation of re
search In logging anct mining
methods and new wood uses.
Tho resolution passed after
chemists demonstrated new ply
woods, airplane parts, and house
hold equipment devolopcd in
wood laboratories.
Michael Arlcn, the English
novelist, was born Dikran Ku
yumjian, at Rtutchuk, Bulgaria,
o Armenian parents.
"ELKS WELCOME AMERICA'S' NUMBER ONE WAR MOTHER
Saturday, Jan. 13, 14
HERALD AND MEWS FIVE
LONDON. Jan. 13 W) Near-
ly 1400 American warpluut-s
from bases In Britain pounded
seven vital rail bridges spanning
the 1(1. ino along u luu-mllo
stretch from Bli.gen to Karls-
runo toaay. i ncy were continu
ing an aerial offcnslvo aimed at
turning the river Into a barrier
soallng off nazl armies west of
It.
More than (100 Flying Fort
resses and Liberators and 400
Mustangs and Thunderbolts at
tacked tin- double and single
Irack bridges. Tho targets were
al Rudeshelm, Worms, Mann
helm. Germershelm, Karlsruhe
and Mainz.
Frelghl yards at Rlsclioffshelm
near Mainz and at KalsvrKlau
tcrn, 45 miles southwest, also
were bombed.
Last night British Lancastcrs
dropped 0-ton bombs on U-boat
pens at Bergen, Norway, Three
of the big bombers were re
ported missing.
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued from Pago One)
water to crow to get to the south
ern end of Luzon, as against the
long and dangerous sea road by
which our Immense convoys
must reach Llngaycn gulf, bul it
la still beyond belief tnai incy
could have been disastrously sur
prised by our choice ol ttie
northern ocacl.es.
We'll be wise If we assume
that they have a lot of strength
up there, and that fighting on a
scale hitherto unknown in the
Pacific will develop shortly.
9
THE Japs mutt have known
frrtm Ittn firxt that ,nnnp nr
later we'd come back. They've
had nearly three years to get
ready for this battle that has
been inevitable from the begin
ning. They have had, until re
cently, uninterrupted lines for
assembling there large numbers
of men and masses of material.
Let s not fool ourselves. There
will be real fighting before Ma
nila falls to us. We'll win, but
it won't be an easy victory.
WHAT will tho Jap fleet do?
" It came back hard at Lcyte.
We must assume tnal wnat is
left of It which is enough to
have real striking power will
come back hard now.
If It doesn't
Well, if it doesn't thcra will
be a screw loose in the Jap war
machine.
THE news from Europe con
timifc tn Innlr l.nllar
The Germans arc apparently
stopped in inc Belgian ouige,
but are still making some dis
turbing progress in thotsouth.
-We on Iho homo front" caivt' help
wondering how much strength
we had .to divert from the Saar
front in order to stop Die enemy
push into Belgium. Time will
tell.
As this is written, Iho Russians
haven't yet won the battle of
Budapest. We'll feel belter when
they do.
V.t-wxymiiiim'i-fi Ml,
'i t "
, 4 lit tf.
' 'J I i .
' ,
Mrs. Leo F. Van Couiren of St. touts. Mo, designated by the Mother's
Commemorative League as "America's Number One War Mother" is wel
comed it D. P. O. Elks F'sternal Center in New York City, while on Sixth
War Bond Tour. She is the mother of three girls and nine boys all in the
Armed Forces of the United States. Phorigrnph shows, left to right, jamc
R. Nicholson, Chairman of the Elks War Comminion; Pfc. Helen Van
Coutrcn of the Woman's Army Corps; Mrs. Van Coutrcn; and Chief Petty
Officer Vincent Van Couiren of the United States Navy, on leave after a
tour of duty in South Pacific waters.
In Nov., 1888, Mrs. George
Hirsch of Dallas, Tex., gave
birth to six children, four being
boys and two girls, according to
the Daily Telegraph in London.
Egypt has been forced to cur
tail production of cotton, its
main crop, and turn to food pro
duction because of war conditions.
Not Yet, Not Yet
Arc Postor's Men
Navy Recruits
BAINBRIDGE. Md Jan. 13
(7I'i Tony Pastor and his
band arrived right on time
at the Pcrryville, Md., rail
road station, en route to Baln
hrldfie to entertain blue
jackets at the naval training
center.
A big shore patrolman,
spotting Pastor at tho head
of his musicians, shouted:
"Hey, buddy, arc you In
cliurtfc of this here draft of
recruits?"
"Not yet," said Tony with
out breaking stride as he
headed for the depot exit,
"Not yet."
E
Textile Mill Razed
By AvAysterious Fire
. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 13 m
A six -alarm fire of undeter
mined origin leveled' a three
story textile mill here loday,
destroying quantities of war
material and causing damage
estimated by plant officials at
about $1,000,000. -
Unidentified Girl
Commits Suicide
PORTLAND, Jan. 13 iVPI
An unidentified girl leaped to
her death from the Broadway
bridge early this morning.
Police, notified by a man
walking across the bridge at
the same time, recovered the
girl's body about an hour later.
CHANCE, Md., Jan. 13 (P)
State police early today took
into custody two young negroaa
as suspects in an outbreak of
violence in which one white
ma.i was shot to death, another
was wounded and two women
were assaulted.
State police headquarters In
Baltimore announced the arrests
after troopers who had rushed
Into this Maryland eastern shore
area Into yesterday afternoon
and last night had aplrited th
suspects to safety across the
Chesapeake bay.
The scries r)f attacks and
shootings, the first of which
took place around 8:30 O'clock
yesterday afternoon, occurred
over a five-hour period, police
said. State police announced
these victims:
Kenneth Willing of Chance,
wounded in the head after he
sought to frighten away two
negroes who were found tam
pering with his boat.
Peggy Price. 16, beaten by
two negroes shortly afterwards.
Ada White of Chance, about
40, choked hy a negro as she
closed her store.
Raynor Graham. Deal Island
oyster packing plant proprietor
found shot to death In his au
tomobile. -
Later, police gave the negroes'
names as Wclton Jones, 18, and
Holbrook Jones, 15, brothers,
oyster workers.
Cuba supplies a quarter of the
world's sugar supply.
There are less than 34,000
whites in the Belgian Congo.
PILES
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO f AIM NO HOSPITALIZATION
Ntt Im mt Tlma
Parmantnt aaiatul
DR. E. M. MARSHA
cairspraella PhraleUn
ta Urn. Ita Iw.lr. ThMira B.ia.
fkaaa Me
SI r 1
WlMOANDWtATrlff
LOTION
HtlWaMSDSKlN
6AINSTItOUHNJg
ANOOtAPPINOWOM
WINR COLD AND
JW.SWESAlSOAS
KWNtWION BASE
PR POWDER..
ii - -ii ill fs- i aaa btid nAiuncir. H a -i-
s .x an i-WKSti ii
W I II 1 air. .H j Trim l 'f I I
,,A I imm
EAGIES yj'YVYTf s
Your 1945 Entcrtoinment ' y; , ,
. Projram StarU Off With HlP
a Bang Thii Saturday
S REG. 8-OZ. 11.00 SIZ1
Dancing Every Saturday X rSOr.
Night for the Membcrr TOlx.MriT . S1ZP
, and Their Ladies 1 Hrt
X. Dnlv f
20- un. vfi i mi
WmM
well
. i -
See flowers from tropical gardens . . . gay little posies
' , . all wonders of nature! Prints from the pen' of an
artist! Stylish crepes and smooth flowing jerseys, with
cap sleeves, draped hip lines, smart little bows. Wonder
ful colors. All prices from
8.95 to 29.00
mJlg.J,,t "n "Mod in-
on. ' u" ?uu .roy
k i u"LHUSe. frankly
T P e?setl . . nd that
u nappy,
RITA
8nB M.tv.
AflmiitiAn J m I M 11 I m.1 I r
X free uukkiw a
X FOR DRUGS
'r . , 140 Main j Phona 4S-14