is MEN AND WOMEN UK r 7 rrnirc . .,-m 'That Buzzard Wai This Long!" Tuesday, Jan. 23, 1145 HERALD AND NEWS SEVEN Burma Buzzard Blasis Way Into Cockpit Injures Three LinU LESSONS IN SPANISH 111 i n i IV ill J to k k 1 VMAKEB TBMH i... n. a. y , .1... a-.' fcllKr ij-:. , Fc' ii...: 1)1101 1 anu Hied le inent- ml will iyssiuw.,"- icrvw fcftol 111. fn.ou. Utl. ell- LhmWf enll"n r,''n(J"' ,cvcmciH in Advancing k "'. .' J...I .,,,.niV I) on L forward eUnin.ti. of I ?. i subjected to n & counterattack. Pvt. lwird oberw.llo, pur- " . J first ni t ID llorca. Althoimli ho was lly unoer mj o, transmitting '"'; the cannon imi Purito (Iro to be l)rotnt jon the enemy. J II. devo- j.,,,. iijumu vc till' Id courKcou actions con- I nrln V in II1IT Slll.- I lllllin J . " .ui,mj nt tho enemy ibwv n - - . ' md wore creuu 10 mm I to the armed forces of led Slates." is participated In tho bat- Oermnny. no uuo mm ,'irdcd tho combat infnn badge, awarded tor ex ,ry conduct In action the enemy In mojor Lai since May 13, 1044. liimldt has been a soldier irmy llnco Induction 18, 1943. I'rlor to indue was employed as n mo- nlnr f.ir Ihn Ilk' I.nkim inpany it Kluniuth Kails. IGEBSOLL COOKS AF BASK IN THE MAR- l-Roy 0. Ingcrsoll, 21, pain rul). a cook for a n of aviation engineers, all nlRht niter his biillul- nra on a alratcgic Island 41lanu, so that Ills men .ivc hot coffee for break men can stand the heat. bid, Insects and Japs," nld II, out they ve Kol to lit coffee and wood food. fl part of tho buttle is up ll Is tho ton of Rev. and M. Intersil. 2X03 Wnnt- Ilamath Foils. Ilia wife, i lives In Lincoln. Nebr red the army In March, iANDRUM CITED EIGHTH Allt FORCE !t STATION, Knuland In r nnH Mr. tr n i 2734 Derby, Klamath uccu awaraca tne Air w meritorious achieve- Wh l nni-l..l. l , . uiiuua T - wBupica coniinen PPc, It recently was an ji ?i lh? eommnndlng m o cignin mr force. Ctatnn ,,n...-....i... ,Aj . "-i'iiiiii,vniH 'JM rend In part: "Tho wuuess aim skill dls- bv th nrn i. i uiiiuti- upon paslons reflect great i'" iiimseii and tho i-s oi i no United t.. ,. "'"j uomnnrci- wiuuii nign school im4"V.)NITALY ttt0, ...c'n. at In S. i " ..n, 10 i urn,,: ;? ' mclud- armT 11 '"8 w"h ho .In snif,24 ""'"bird, and f n ScW. 2515 Wlord. te,"ATED.. Mon' :r ' ! f. and 1 ii nr .I . ?1Z Walnut, Ir ?'"un't from the Lfe"'?'W?. un. kri. .:( "" '" "cia, ono irmv Tr Ul8 01 119 Klntl dmy alr 'orocs training o sol Isnlfvln, ,?al,r of ver H' cir-l, . 118 8 mtm- rabor mbllt crcw of an E?I.0w!! S,,e Mo'a,r"""-ISfflil-mon ,1rlhlt wrl. 1 kT i . ,-i: I a HIUL18 OVERSEAS t'lFTKENTII ARMY AIR FORCES IN ITALY 2nd Lt JikimiIi ',. IIIIIIh. 211, Itimband of Mm. Ji'iinne (lliirkeu) mills, Llb by, Mont., leceutly nri'lvnd over Henri mid Iiiis Joined a lAth AAF lJ-24 grotiii. LI. mills Is a co-pllot and is iiwnltlnil Ills first combat mis sion. Ho uutered tliu iinny In Kebriinry, 1 04U, mill uiiiduuted from pilul training iimf meinved Ills commluliin and wlniii in Ap ril, 11)44, lie underwent '.he training phases lit Tonnpiih, Nov,, before ho loft the stales Into In November for oversells service. lllllls attended tho University of Oregon for two years, whuro liu majored In busliic.is ndmlnls trillion, H i id was umployecl as manager for tho Orrguii Knulp nielli comjiany In Kliiinnth tolls, Ore., brforo he entered tho army, llo la a member of the Lions club. Junior chamber of commerce, Elks and Sportsmen's iissociauon, an in momiitn runs. HOOUE TRAINS Second Lt, Hlchurd S. Hogue, son of Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Wesley Hogue, Tuleluke, Is coin- p I e 1 1 n g h I s mitjpryi training on a -! ' l( i Liberator bomb f J y ; or ai mo ru-i,' oblo army iilrB s . , $ K5? base. Pueblo. B. i. ,'. r-..t l.i. lM tl,Mff a k niiultlnliir nf hiRSt crew, and is be ing fitted as a valuable mem ber of a combat "team" that will curry tho fight Into enemy territory. Lt. 1 Iokiio entered the service In September. 1040. Ills wife, Dorothy Mario Hogue, lives at 53-llt S. lit It St., Klamath Fulls. LAAHS GIVEN CLUSTER AN EIGHTH AIR FORCE BOMBER STATION, England William Laahs. 22. of Klamath Falls, has been awarded the second Oak Leaf Cluster to the Air Medal, equivalent to the third award of tho medal, for "eourugo, coolness and skill" displayed while on bombing at tacks over Germany, Tho air. man Is a navigator In the 4flQth bombing group, a B-17 Flying Fortress unit of tho Eighth Air Force. Lt. Lanhs Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Lnulis Jr., of 1100 Pine. Prior to entering the army air forces In July, 1042, he was employed as a lumber grader for the Lamm Lumber company. SACHER COMMENDED 15TH ARMY AIR FORCE IN ITALY SSgt. Raymond H. Sncher, 27. of route 3, Klamath Fulls, turret specialist with a H-24 Liberator bomber group, has been commended by Brig. Gen. Fay R. Upthcgrovc, of Oleun, N. Y commanding gen eral of a 13th nir forco wing. "Through closo cooperation with various activities and co ordination of effort," the letter to his commundlng officer stated, "armament personnel huvo con tributed highly to tho excellent standard of aircraft maintenance being achieved In your group," HOME FROM ALEUTIANS Tho 13th naval district has an nounced names of two Klamath Fulls men home on leave after nine montlis' service In tho Aleu tians with patrol bombing squad ron Ul. They arc William W. Stuurl, 271 (i Derby, and Jack W. Sorcnson, Alt 1c, J101 Mitchell. Tho squadron flew more than 6000 hours, as much as 1300 hours In a singlo month, and three missions wcro special flights to the Japanese-held Ku riles. Two of the squadron's Cutallnu crews wero lost during the nlno months of operations in what was termed "tho toughest flying weather In tho world." One plane crashed off Attn whllo nttcmptiug to rescue tho crow of a navy Ventura bombor. BARKER AWARDED SSgt. Lnwrcnco E. Barker, 20, Klnmuth Falls, waist gunner on a B-17 Flying Fortress, has been awarded tho second Oak Leaf cluster to tho Air Medal at an eighth nlr force bomber sta tion In EnHlnnd. Sgt. Barker is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Alvard of Eureka Springs, Ark. Prior to entering tho air forco In August, 1041, Barker was en gaged as a dicscl operator in Klamath Falls. He received his Runner's wings In January, 1044, at Laredo, Tex. BUTTER AT A PRICE FARRAGUT, Ida. Even nt a military Institution, butler some times becomes scarce, and there fore demands a high "price." At tho navnl hospital hero recently, an accordion player was traded by one ward to another for two pals of butter, Joe B. Baker, Klnmnth Falls, an un-patlcnt recuperating from an illness, returned to his ward, Want Rallaf From ARTHRITIS PAINS? Try Tysmol on ThU Monty Back QuaranUo ff you ire mifffrlnic from the Mh hi mr point of nrihritli, rhnmMIn( Kdntlra or neurltl, iro today And buy ft tube of Tyntrtol nt any good drug tore. Apply thla dnllitbtrul absorbent to the pari that hurta and watch ra nulti, You should aee a difference after the. very lint application. flhmild Tyamol fall to Klve aatlafao Hon by ntllnvlna; tho tortnrlnpc pains, oronuN or atlffnons In nnm'lna or JIro" mcnta, juat return empty tuba and the manufacturer will refund your money. Ton will And Tyamol pleasantly dis tinctive amnna: pronnrntiona of It a olnaa. Uuarnnteeri to no frna from nar oo t Ira and dope. 8nld by tending oub Slsta everywhere, Caution: Uae only a Irani d. Alwaya In mock at taw nniio am w 'a''i', a . . -;'" '::: Lt. William M. Tavanntr, son of Mr. and Mra. H. K. Tavanner, 703 N. 8th, grins from his bad as Lt. William C. Pool of Rhondalo, Tox., sits by his side in a U. S. army hospital in North Burma, comparing notas on tha aisa of tha bunard that craihad through tha windshield of the C-47 as thty war carrying food to Chlnose troops on the Bhamo front. Both officers, members of a tanth air force combat cargo unit, operating under the AAF In tha India-Burma theater, aufftrad concuaalona and lacerationa aa a raault ol their encounter with tha large bird. Lt. Tav anner returned to hla home in Klamath Folia January 5. and left January 21, for Santa. Ana and Santa Monica, Calif., raplacemont centers. C-0, after attending a movie at the hospital auditorium. "You II havo to go over to ward C-7," the nurse In charge told him. "You've been trans ferred." "Why?" asked Baker. (He is an apprentice seaman and for got he Is not supposed to ask the reason for orders.) "Because if you don't go, we'll have to pay back tho two pals of butler we borrowed from them. And besides they want to hear somo of your accordion music," replied the nurse. Baker and his accordion went. PINNEY IN SANTA ANA SANTA ANA, Calif. Sgt. Ja bez Murray Plnncy, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Plnncy of 1428 Summers lane, Klamath Falls, Is now at the AAF redistribution station here, after 'serving 38 months as an armorer with a B 24 Liberator bomber group with the loth air forco In India and Australia. Sgt. Plnncy, a former student of the Blanco, Colo., high school, has been awarded iho Presiden tial Unit citation and the Chlna-Burma-Indla theater ribbon with two major battle stars. He en tered the service In January, 1041 and went, overseas In No vember, 1041, Whllo at the Santa Ana army air base, a station of the person nel distribution command, re turned combat veterans receive a complete physical exam, re classification of their military skills and assignments to domes tic stations of the AAF, MUELLER GETS MEDAL 15T1I AFF IN ITALY Shown above is Sgt. John W. Mueller (right), 10, receiving tho Air 4 V?' viw vrv. iy.tv i i, . i Medal from Lt. Col. Jack L. Randolph (left), group com mander of Fort Worth, Tex., "for mcritorius achievement while participating in sustained opera tional aclivitic.1 against the en emy." Son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Mueller, 231 N, 6th, Klamath Falls. Ore., he Is serving us ball turret gunner with a 15th AAF B-20 Liberator heavy bombard ment group based in Italy. Mueller Joined the USAAF .TunA 8. llMK. and won his gun- 1 ncr's wings at Kingman, Ariz., (Ed. Note: Lt, Tavcnncr ar rived home January 5 to visit his parenta, Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Tavunner, 703 N. Blh. Ho left Sunday with his bride, the for mer Kay Schlothaucr. Jap planes and the monsoons arcn t the only enemies pilots of the army air forces in the India Burma theater have to battle. A largo buzzard recently crashed through the windshield May 1, 1944. He arrived in Italy last September. Mueller's group has been cited twice by the war department for outstanding performances in the Mediterranean theater of operations. HAMILTON TRAINS PFC Bert W. Hamilton, tail gunner, of San Bernardino, Calif., will soon complete an in tensive course in combat flying at the Alexandria army airfield, Alexandria, La., and in ths near future he will go overseas to a combat area. He is a member of a Flying Fortress crew trained by the second army air force, which has the task of readying four-engine bomber crews for overseas duly. PFC Hamilton is the son of Mrs. D. E. Hamilton of 1720 El dorado, Klamath Falls. His wife is the former Mclva Anderson. She and a six-year-old son are with him at Alexandria, La. HOUSE BREAKS RECORDS AN AIR SERVICE COM MAND DEPOT IN ENGLAND When new battle tactics dictate last-minute changes in combat airplanes, Sgt. Ervin D. House, son of Mrs. Violet House, of 1814 Etna, Klamath Falls, steps up his record-shattering output. Before Joining the army in November, 184Z, he was employed as a hooker Dy Willir.m Kaymond logging contractor. His brother, Sgt. Vernon E. Hous-?, is serving in the marine corps. McCOURRY DRIVES AN AIR SERVICE COM MAND ORDNANCE DEPOT IN ENGLAND PFC Elza V. Mc Courry of Rt. 2, Box 693, Klam ath Falls, Ore., is a driver who gets his bombs through because he knows what makes his truck tick. He was recently awarded a certificate of proficiency after completing a special course on the maintenance of the big trucks which haul bombs and gasoline to the Fortresses blast ing Germany. PFC McCourryis the brother of Mrs. E. H. Perry of Rl. 2, Box 603, Klamath Falls, Ore. Before entering the air forces in March, 1942, he was employ ed by Hurry Taxi Cab company in Klamath Falls, as a cab driver, STEWART CITED 15TH AAF IN ITALY SSgt. Robert P. Stewart, 25, Klamath Falls, radio-gunner in a B-24 Liberator squadron, has been authorized to wear the dis tinguished unit badge as a mem ber of a heavy bombardment group which was recently cited by the war department ior "outstanding performance o f duty in armed conflict with the enemy. Sergeant Stewart attended Klamath Union high school. He entered the army air corps in beptember, 1940, and since that time has graduated from radio school, at Sioux Falls, S. D., and gunnery school, at Yuma, Ariz. His mother, Mrs. Elizabeth L. Stewart, resides at route 6, Klamath Falls. BOGNER TRAINS SAN ANTONIO AVIATION CADET CENTER, TEX. At the San Antonio aviation cadet cen ter, potential pilots, bombardiers and navigators are receiving pre- flight training to prepare them for aerial instruction and duties as aircrew members in the army air forces. Cadets in the present class from Oregon include Victor Otto Bogner, 341 Hillside, Klamath Falla. . Classified Ads Bring Results. Help Build the B-29 SUPERFORTRESS (THE BIG NEW BOEING BOMBER) Boeing Representative Now Interviewing In Klamath Falls ... Frse transportation to Seattle, Washington. k Men especially needed. Physically qualified women also eligible. Good pay Excellent working conditions. You will be paid while training. Help build America's most needed big bomber. - i DON'T DELAY! APPLY AT THE UNITED STATES EMPLOYMENT SERVICE OrflCE OF THE WAR MANPOWER COMMISSION, 242 MAIN STREET . Those engaged in essential war work need not apply. : wif urns ro vicmr of a plane high over dense Bur ma jungle, struck the co-pilot's head, knocking him unconscious, glanced off to strike the pilot above the right ear with enough force to make a large wound, and scattered splinters of glass that caused a third man severe eye wounds, A food-dropping mission to the Chinese troops on the Bharno front was the objective of Lt. William M. Tavenner, Klamath Falls, and Lt. William C. Pool, Thorndale, Tex., members of a 10th air force combat cargo unit, when the Burma buzzard suddenly smashed into the cock pit of their C-47. The two lieutenants had Just changed seats, Pool taking the pilot's seat and Tavenner the co pilot's. Lt. Pool saw the bird Just m time to shout at Tavenner, who jerked away, thus avoiding being struck full in the face by the buzzard. Lt. Pool, although bleeding profusely, stayed at the controls while TSgt. Rudolph Meduna of Weston, Nebr., and the "kick er" crew carried Lt, Tavenner, who was knocked unconscious by tho blow, to the rear of the plane. After administering first aid, TSgt. Meduna returned to the cockpit and took the co-pilot's scat. In spite of painful eye in juries, he took over the controls of the plane for about 20 min utes. After completing the food dropping mission, the men flew more than 100 miles to a 10th air force strip, where an ambu lance was waiting. Both lieuten ants were treated for concussion and severe lacerations at the field hospital. Whether the buzzard was con vinced that the U. S. 10th air force has achieved air superior ity over Burma could not be de termined. It lay dead in the cockpit. When In Mediord Stay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modern Jo and Ann Earley Proprietors DEVELOPING ENLARGING ' PRINTING ' PHOTO SERVICE 211 Underwood Bldg. 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