Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 15, 1945, Page 3, Image 3

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    f
i
. j ifHnin Pnuo One)
Utlnucu -...
north "' WVLTlZi
!" . nil t 10 SOU"""' -
0 ...t shaped rc- r,'P-
nuns .,.,v. from
. of n.ortl.. when.
l ".t lie llr Kiiut nioun-
bel cvcd to bo In
F'" Tmtuhis nl HH.'0' V""-
' id I'rcs Wm' ContT
l Yanks raptured B.iti;m
;h,Im lt.m'. t there - the
Iniiinci o( material auiin-
5 SWEEP
lER LUZON;
13 SCATTER
FICEBS SEARCH
I MURDER MOTIVE
,nllmicil From Pane One)
his dcnlli. Seventeen cent.
.1-1. mill Ill-rSimUl CIICKl
I found on tlio num.
j Registered
Ln wiu In KctKcmont, S. D.,
homo, on jummi
ortlund jonuary i. !
.... .llr...llu III Kllllll.
fallitu he wm reentered at
al rooming house the nlKhlii
imiorv 8 and It, officers mild,
ri. Mnry KwIiik. widow of
victim, won expected In
nith t'nlls Into loduy from
rmonl, according to ware. .
lliought otliem were nccom-
EH1H IIVI t.v, v.
II,., anlrl ll,lV Wtrrt tmeillll
tin's movement just prior to
Icslh. They were mill not
whether the mini nan neon
ctrly that morning or Thurs
night as It had mined Inter-
ally over i n a i perum.
m'-tnf hlnti un i-ntn.Knntc tri
lid time ho was found.
.Ins nod ueen employed mm
fill At Llskcy's Poe valley
1 and at Ivory Pino mid of-
also s.ild he worked for a
limn t l,A nill,riMl T .,,.
(company mill nt Otlchrlst,
bntlnued From Pago One)
taken all the baiting I
going to and I stubbed
Arkoll said ho thmnttit
irlng knife was used, mid
Lorctta showed signs of o
lug.
Ivors Is about 40 yenr of
imd works In the Clilloqiiln
IS a COwhnnH. !tn rr-fimrfl
Ive olllcera Information and
Nltd the stubbing to "John
Irse Assigned to
for Committee
ASHINGTON. Jan. IS (IPs
fcnmcnt of Sen. Wnyno L.
e (H-Oro.) to tlio acnato lu-
ICOmmillPn rirmu Inunmliln
pent from both present and
I muur uoura mourners,
austry and public member
r eniircasca ueucr. morse
'"..Wng to the committee
ti on the WLB. They pre
d fill Wnrb ...... .1.1 . I
" " wuuiu IUUMI1UU
smontrtrnte Insistence Hint
o uccwcti on tho basis of
timer man dioc pressure,
'" MAIN ITRCRT
Air Giant Spans Nation in 6 Hours
. l . v. v lw ( n,4t- 'm!!
mffrAi ill
.'.
i . , )"
Known M Hit 0-1)7, tills Boeing-built, doublo-deckcd version of the B-39 Buper-Fortress Is credited with (ly
ing Ilia 'mii mlh'S (ruin Braitlo la Wuhlngton In lix lluurs and tlireo minutes, an uverage speed of 38a mile
per hour. 'Jlie first bomber converted to a transport which Ills Into post-war plans while meeting military
needs during tlio war will bo known as the atrato-crulser In a commercial model. The giant ship it 110 feet
long, lias wlngnpread of 141 feet, can carry 100 troops and equipment 3600 miles. .
OBITUARIES
EDITORIALS ON
NEWS
(Continued from Piiiio One)
Importance of tlio guerrillas In
tlio Philippine when we leurncd.
how completely they dominated
tlio northern shores of Mindan
ao so completely that the Jups
hud no iilrfiulds left thera from
which to attack our convoys
pnslii westward from I.oylc
gulf on their way to a lauding
on Mlndoro.
SINCE the bin German count-er-offcuxlvu
In lielgittm, we
have been hearing rather per
sistently of fnlluru of our Intel
Hltciico there (which may or muy
not be true). Tina has given us
here on the home front a glimpiiu
of the importance of intelli
gence work In biillln, Nothing
can be more valunblu than ac
curate knowledge of whul the
enemy is doing,
In 111 advuueo Into Luzon,
MacArthur can expect great
help In the way of accurato ro
poriii of what the enemy Is do
ing from the Filipino guerrillas.
T UZON is now Isolnted not only
" from the rest of the Philip
pines but from Japan itself. Our
navy bus taken cure of that. If
this blockade tan bo continued,
and there is no sound reason to
think it can't be, the little yel
low men will have to fight there
with what they have.
Uut it is as near a certainty
a anything cun be that they
bavo a LOT. for tlireo years
they hnvo been getting ready to
fight this battle. They must have
pig
A NIW HIPMINT OP
PRINTED
COTTON
CLOTHS
Big and lllllo
pattsrns In
sturdy, wash
fail cottonl
79-
IVIontgomery
JVard
'BEST BUY IN TOWN'
16-INCH
Green Douglas
Red Fir Slabs
for
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
S5.75 Load
Plenty of heart wood In thai slab for ImmadlaU
1 1 and to stretch iha un rfrv wond and Pros lo loas.
B"y avral load at this low prlc.
Fred H. Heilbronner
Ftlftli That e.i.t..r nt... ioiq fc
Urge number of men and am
ple supplies on Luzon,
'HE situation In Europe grow
lnulv hnl1,t- T)im l,lt n-l.
gin ii push seems definitely stop-
pcu. tt d ii waicn now to sea u
the Germans attack somewhere
else, in another attempt to do
what they failed to accomplish
in Belgium.
Tho Russians appeur to be
gradually getting the upper
hand in Budapest, and arc hold
ing their lines between the Hun
garian capital and Vienna.
Union Men Renew
No-Strike Pledge
KANSAS CITY, Jan, 15 (VP)
Tho 19-man executive council
of tlio International Brother
hood of Boilermaker, Iron Ship
Builders and Helpers of Amer
ica opened today with a resolu
tion renewing the no-strlke
pledge and opposing "any at
tempt to scrap the shipbuilding
Industry such as took place
alter world war I.
NEAR5
I
H0UFFAL1ZE
DEFENSh POST
(Continued From Pago One)
Laroche, lopping off another seg
ment of the virtually emptied
western end of the salient.
Strong German forces includ
ing many rescued tanks were
spotted behind the new line. It
was not apparent whether Field
Murshul Von Rundsledt would
try for a stand or usa the forces
to shield a continued retreat
into the shelter of the Siegfried
line.
Since the nnzi marshal struck
a month ago tomorrow, he has
lost at least 37,81)4 prisoners
alone. Gen. Eisenhower's arm
ies have taken 844,801 prisoners
since Invading Normandy List
June 6.
In Nutcracker
At supreme headquarters, it
was said that the Ourthc river
line which the Germans hud
hoped to hold had been smashed
to smitnercen and that Hour
fulizc was in an allied . nutcracker.
Beyond the Ourthc, the Salm
river line before St. Villi and
the German frontier Itself was
cracking.
In the Karlsruhe corner of
France, the steadily reinforced
Germans twice assaulted the
American 7th army at Hatten,
10 miles northeast of Hagucnau.
Tho first attack was beaten back;
fighting continued in the second
with tilts Americans holding dog
gedly to th Ma'.'ot line fort
ress town. Hafiucmiu was shell
ed by a German 280-millimctcr
railroad gun.
(Continued From Page One)
to Malin when something flew
In his eye. He told the father
that he saw the bay horse when
ho was 20 feet from the animal
and that ho attempted to swerve
the car but aideswiped the horse.
Tho animal had a broken leg and
cut hip and was later destroyed,
Howe sold.-
Brought to Klamath
The children were rushed to
Dr. F. M. Trout in Malin where
they were treated and their
parents called. Later they were
moved to Klamath Valley hos
pital where they were admitted
at 11:30 p. m.
Hodge is a former Mcdford
resident and is living at Hat
field while grading potatoes.
BRONCHIAL IRRITATIONS
oi coltu quickly relieved by
j'cneiro uranuma old time
mutton rniet idea developed by
inooern science into a counter- .
irritant. VQDoHzintriialvo.Onlv
sfioc, uoudio iuppiy ic uct I tfETttoi
PEN ETRQ
BASE RICH IM MUTTON 5UU
mi
Monday, Jan. IS, IMS
HERALD AND NEWS THREE
REDS BATTLE
NAZIS ALONG
EASTERN AREA
(Continued from Page One)
other new attacks, an Associat
ed Press dispatch from Moscow
said there were signs "the red
army may shortly engage every
division on the eastern front In
some of the heaviest battles of
the Russian-German war, eclips
ing perhaps anything the Soviets
have yet thrown against the
nazis."
If It's a "frozen" article vou
need, advertise for a used one
In the classified.
Building Materials
! . Composition and Cedar
SHINGLES
Insulating Wall Panel
by
Armstrong Cork Company
CERTAINTEED ROOFING
ACME PAINTS, LIN-X
Suburban
Lumber Co.
Phono 7709 "
Japs Claim U. S. I
Bombs Shrine 1
, ....,
By Tho Associated Pros .
Japanese propagandist, today
claimed American Superfortress
raiders yesterday bombed ','the
outer shrine of the Ise grand
shrine" and called upon the peo
ple of Nippon to form them"
selves Into "one ball of lira". In,-,
indignation. -,.
1
GRACIE ALLEN . HARPS
AGAIN I What will Gracla harp '
on tonight? Tha guest itar'a
nerves? George's terrible cigars?
Or just George? You can nerer"
tell. So gat George Burns and
Grade Allan on your radio this
evening and laugh - your head
ofil Guest star: Alan Ladd. KBL.
8:30 p. m 1160 on your -dial.
r " ' ''
tuimLJ- i rill n mt M'ummmmmmimmmmmm '
... ,-u..;,. . .
J .... '
Norm Tessner, 403 E, Center St., Anaheim, Calif.
Worm Tessner lias a Si,000 ktt
of fools
i i
1 Norm Tessner is a Unioh Oil well puller. Like any other
skilled workman, Norm has to have, tools. The principal
"tool" in his case is a portable rig which pulls the tubing
and the pump out of the wells. Without that rig Norm sim
ply couldn't practice his trade. . .
2 So In order to use his skill, Union first had to pro
vide him with a portable derrick and machine that cost
$35,000. At first glance this may seem like a lot of money.
But it takes even more than that to provide working equip
mentor each employee in the Union Oil Company.
3 Of coue,!t.onlytakesa$90typewritertoprovidethe,
working equipment for a stenographer. But on the other,
hand, it takes a $4,000,000 refining unit to make jobs for just
25 stillmen. And if the company is going to function as a
unit, one phase of the work is just as necessary as the other."
4 So the Union Oil stockholders have actually invested
$39,504 (in refineries, ships, tools, rigs, oil lands, etc.) tor
' every one -of the 7,869 employees in the company. This
figure shows how drastically the machine age has altered
American life.
5 75 years ago almost any man could buy what simple
tools he needed himself. Today.in many industries toolscost
so much the individual simply can't finance them. The an
swer is multiple ownership - pooling the money of a lot
of people. (In Union's case, 31,375 stockholders have helped
finance our equipment.)
6 0feourst,somecuntriesfonnthesepoolsby4fcert
ment oumership. But in America we form them under legal
agreements known as corporations. For that way, we can
preserve the freedom of the individual.the efficiency of a free
economy and that. all-important human incentive-.
competition.
union oil eorPAnv
01 CAUf OR II I A
This series, sponsored by the people of Union Oil Company, ts dedicated to
a discussion of how and why American business functions. Wehopeyou U
feel free to send in any suggestions or criticisms you have to offer. Wrtte:
The President, Union Oil Co., Union Oil Bldg.. Los Angeles 14. Calf.
AMERICA'S titlH FREEDOM II E R E E ENTERMISI
S,,rln St. phon, 4153